the news sun – november 16, 2013

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Index Classifieds................................. B7-B8 Life..................................................... A3 Obituaries......................................... A4 Opinion ............................................. A5 Sports......................................... B1-B3 Weather............................................ A6 TV/Comics ....................................... B6 The News Sun P.O. Box 39, 102 N. Main St. Kendallville, IN 46755 Telephone: (260) 347-0400 Fax: (260) 347-2693 Classifieds: (toll free) (877) 791-7877 Circulation: (260) 347-0400 or (800) 717-4679 Info Vol. 104 No. 316 GOOD MORNING First Victory Veteran Lakers bash Bethany Page B1 Indiana Blowout Yogi gets 26 as Hoosiers rip Samford Page B1 Weather Cloudy, chance of rain, high in the upper 50s. Low tonight 52. Page A6 SATURDAY November 16, 2013 Lou Ann Homan-Saylor ‘Life Stories’ chance to record experiences Page A5 Kendallville, Indiana Serving Noble & LaGrange Counties kpcnews.com 75 cents Coming Sunday 50 Years Later Nov. 22 will be the 50th anniversary of the day that U.S. president John F. Kennedy was shot and killed. Read memories of that tragic day and about the library that honors this legend. On Sunday’s C1 and C2. Clip and Save Find $111 in coupon savings in Sunday’s newspaper. Inside Today The Festival of Trees is coming up on Nov. 23. Read about this special annual event that helps area hospice patients in a special section inside today’s newspaper. State sues over fish kill in 2012 MUNCIE (AP) — Three Delaware County residents are being sued by the state over a 2012 fish kill whose cause had eluded state investigators. Indiana’s lawsuit against David, Mary and Adam Howell seeks more than $2,000 in damages plus investigative costs for the June 2012 fish kill. More than 5,800 fish died downstream of two drainage tiles that empty into Bell Creek from Delaware County fields the Howells farm. The lawsuit states Adam Howell told investigators about weed killers and other chemicals that had been applied to those fields. BY GRACE HOUSHOLDER KENDALLVILLE — Building on past success, the Kendallville Mayor’s Youth Advisory Council is helping with fundraising efforts to save the Strand Theatre from closing. “They have been working to help organize several local fundraisers between now and the end of the year to reach their goal of raising $20,000 toward the $110,000 needed to purchase new digital equipment to keep the Strand in operation,” said MYAC coordinator Kristen Johnson. Some of the events and activi- ties are: • Saturday, Nov. 23, 9 a.m.— Save the Strand 5K at Bixler Lake Park, organized by local runner Teela Gibson. Participants may pre-register at runindiana.com. • Dec. 4-20 — MYAC members will be selling ornament sponsorships for the Christmas tree on display at City Hall. Ornament sponsorships may be purchased for $5, $15 or $25 (small, medium or large) to honor a friend, family member, business or loved one. All of the proceeds will be donated to the Save the Strand fund. Ornaments may be ordered by contacting Kristen Johnson at 318-0001 or online at kendallvillemyac.org. • Thursday, Dec. 5, 5-8 p.m. — 20 percent of all food and drink purchases at Pizza Forum in Kendallville will be donated to the Save the Strand fund. A coupon is required. • Saturday, Dec. 7, all day — Shadow Bowl will donate 25 cents from every game played throughout the day to the Save the Strand fund, plus shoe rental is just $1 for all bowlers. Reserva- tions are recommended. • Saturday, Dec. 7, noon–2:30 p.m. — During the Kendall- ville Christmas Parade, MYAC members will be selling popcorn at the downtown popcorn stand and hosting a bake sale and hot cocoa bar outside the Chamber of Commerce. All proceeds will be donated to the Save the Strand fund. • Tuesday, Dec. 10, 5 p.m. to closing — Ten percent of all food and drink purchases at Youth group working to save Strand MATT GETTS A wrecker operator loads an Auburn man’s moped onto his truck bed after a fatal crash on S.R. 3 just south of DeKalb C.R. 70 near LaOtto early Friday morning. LAOTTO — An Auburn man died after his moped collided with a pickup truck Friday morning on S.R. 3, south of LaOtto, Indiana State Police said. Scott Albright, 43, was taken to Parkview Regional Medical Center in Fort Wayne, where he later died as a result of the injuries sustained in the crash, police said. Senior Trooper Marc Leatherman investigated the crash that occurred Friday at approx- imately 6:50 a.m. His prelimi- nary investigation showed that a Yamaha moped operated by Albright was traveling northbound on S.R. 3, just south of DeKalb C.R. 70. Police believe Albright was riding just into the driving lane, on or near the fog line, when he was sideswiped by a northbound Ford F-150 pickup truck driven by John Wilson Jr., 45 of Fort Wayne. Wilson was not injured in the crash. Police said Albright was not wearing a helmet, Assisting state police at the scene were the DeKalb and Allen county sheriffs’ departments, the Huntertown and LaOtto fire departments and Huntertown EMS. This story was posted on kpcnews.com at 11:35 a.m. Friday. Man killed in moped crash ALBION — Ira “Skip” Schlot- terback is resigning as Noble Township trustee effective Dec. 1, Noble County Republican Chairman Randy Kirkpatrick said Friday. A Republican caucus to elect a new trustee will take place Saturday, Nov. 30, at 9 a.m. at the Noble Township Fire Department, 3199 S. S.R. 109, Albion. Two precinct committeemen, Schlotter- back and Scott Zeigler, are eligible to participate in the caucus. Any Republican who wishes to be considered for the office of Noble Township trustee must complete Form CEB-5 and return it to Kirkpatrick no later than 72 hours before the caucus. The completed form may be mailed or hand-delivered to: 8928 N. State Road 5, Ligonier, IN 46767. Anyone with questions may call Kirkpatrick at 894-4451 or 402-6534, or send an email message to rlkpatrick55@gmail. Township trustee steps down MUNCIE (AP) — Ball State University was partially locked down for hours Friday after several witnesses reported hearing someone shouting “gun!” in a campus building, prompting a police search that ended with no sign of a weapon or armed person. The university sent an all-clear notice about 7:50 p.m. Friday, some three hours after issuing an alert reporting a “possible armed assailant” near the Muncie campus’ Student Recreation and Wellness Center. The all-clear notice said the campus was secure. Ball State spokesman Tony Proudfoot said multiple witnesses alerted campus police after hearing someone repeatedly shout “gun!” on the Recreation and Wellness Building’s third-floor running track. He said the search of several buildings on the campus about 60 miles northeast of Indianapolis turned up no sign of a weapon. “We’re very pleased that this turned out to be no threat to the campus,” he said. “We didn’t find any safety issues.” Proudfoot said only four buildings on the 700-acre campus that contains 100 buildings were affected by the security alert as campus police, Muncie police and Indiana State Police troopers conducted sweeps through those buildings. Junior Krystal Palmer, an art education major from Dayton, Ohio, said she had been locked in a classroom during the police sweep. She expressed concern that she learned about the incident through other students before the university sent its alert. She said there have been other cases where the campus alert was delayed. “Usually it’s fine because it’s not anything big, but other times we’ve found out from social media before we’ve gotten the message, which is kind of scary because it might not be soon enough,” she said. Scare at BSU WASHINGTON (AP) — Brushing aside a White House veto threat, the Republican-con- trolled House voted by a healthy bipartisan majority Friday to weaken a core component of “Obamacare” and permit the sale of individual health coverage that falls short of requirements in the law. In all, 39 Democrats broke ranks and supported the legisla- tion, a total that underscored the growing importance of the issue in the weeks since millions of cancellation notices went out to consumers covered by plans deemed inadequate under govern- ment rules. The final vote was 261-157 as lawmakers clashed over an issue likely to be at the heart of next year’s midterm elections. The measure faces an uncertain fate in the Senate, where Democrats seeking re-election in 2014 are leading a move for generally similar legislation. “For the last six weeks the White House stood idly by ignoring the pleas of millions,” said Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich., chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee and lead sponsor of the legislation. “Our straightforward, one-page bill says, if you like your current coverage, you should be able to keep it. The president should heed his own advice and work with us, the Congress, as the founders intended, not around the legislative process.” But Democrats said the measure was just another in a long line of attacks on the health care bill from Republicans who have voted repeatedly to repeal it. “It would take away the core protections of that law. It creates an entire shadow market of substandard health care plans,” said Rep. Henry Waxman of California. The vote came shortly before President Barack Obama welcomed insurance company CEOs to a White House meeting, and one day after he announced a shift toward making good on his oft-repeated promise that anyone liking his pre-Obamacare coverage would be able to keep it. In brief opening remarks, he did not refer to the House vote, and showed no give in his commitment to the program known by his name. “Because of choice and competition, a whole lot of Americans who have always seen health insurance out of reach are going to be in a position to purchase it,” he said. The events capped a remark- able series of politically inspired maneuvers in recent days. The president and lawmakers in both parties have sought to position themselves as allies of consumers who are receiving cancellation notices — yet have made no move to cooperate on legislation that could require those consumers’ coverage to be renewed if they wanted to keep it. House wants sale of substandard coverage AP House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio speaks about President Obama’s health care law after Republican lawmakers met at the Republican National Committee headquarters earlier this week. SEE STRAND, PAGE A6

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

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Index•

Classifi eds ................................. B7-B8Life ..................................................... A3Obituaries ......................................... A4Opinion ............................................. A5Sports......................................... B1-B3Weather............................................ A6TV/Comics .......................................B6

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

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

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

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

Info•

Vol. 104 No. 316

GOOD MORNING

First VictoryVeteran Lakersbash Bethany Page B1

Indiana BlowoutYogi gets 26 as

Hoosiers rip Samford Page B1

Weather Cloudy, chance of rain, high in the upper 50s. Low

tonight 52.Page A6

SATURDAYNovember 16, 2013

Lou Ann Homan-Saylor‘Life Stories’ chance

to record experiences Page A5

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

ComingSunday

50 Years LaterNov. 22 will be the 50th anniversary of the day

that U.S. president John F. Kennedy was shot and killed. Read memories of that tragic day and about the library that honors this

legend. On Sunday’s C1 and C2.

Clip and SaveFind $111 in coupon savings in Sunday’s

newspaper.

Inside TodayThe Festival of Trees is coming up on Nov. 23. Read about this special annual event that helps area hospice patients in a special section inside today’s newspaper.

State sues overfi sh kill in 2012

MUNCIE (AP) — Three Delaware County residents are being sued by the state over a 2012 fi sh kill whose cause had eluded state investigators.

Indiana’s lawsuit against David, Mary and Adam Howell seeks more than $2,000 in damages plus investigative costs for the June 2012 fi sh kill.

More than 5,800 fi sh died downstream of two drainage tiles that empty into Bell Creek from Delaware County fi elds the Howells farm. The lawsuit states Adam Howell told investigators about weed killers and other chemicals that had been applied to those fi elds.

BY GRACE HOUSHOLDERKENDALLVILLE — Building

on past success, the Kendallville Mayor’s Youth Advisory Council is helping with fundraising efforts to save the Strand Theatre from closing.

“They have been working to help organize several local fundraisers between now and the end of the year to reach their goal of raising $20,000 toward the $110,000 needed to purchase new digital equipment to keep the Strand in operation,” said MYAC coordinator Kristen Johnson.

Some of the events and activi-ties are:

• Saturday, Nov. 23, 9 a.m.— Save the Strand 5K at Bixler Lake Park, organized by local runner Teela Gibson. Participants may pre-register at runindiana.com.

• Dec. 4-20 — MYAC members will be selling ornament sponsorships for the Christmas tree on display at City Hall. Ornament sponsorships may be purchased for $5, $15 or $25 (small, medium or large) to honor a friend, family member, business or loved one. All of the proceeds

will be donated to the Save the Strand fund. Ornaments may be ordered by contacting Kristen Johnson at 318-0001 or online at kendallvillemyac.org.

• Thursday, Dec. 5, 5-8 p.m. — 20 percent of all food and drink purchases at Pizza Forum in Kendallville will be donated to the Save the Strand fund. A coupon is required.

• Saturday, Dec. 7, all day — Shadow Bowl will donate 25 cents from every game played throughout the day to the Save the Strand fund, plus shoe rental is

just $1 for all bowlers. Reserva-tions are recommended.

• Saturday, Dec. 7, noon–2:30 p.m. — During the Kendall-ville Christmas Parade, MYAC members will be selling popcorn at the downtown popcorn stand and hosting a bake sale and hot cocoa bar outside the Chamber of Commerce. All proceeds will be donated to the Save the Strand fund.

• Tuesday, Dec. 10, 5 p.m. to closing — Ten percent of all food and drink purchases at

Youth group working to save Strand

MATT GETTS

A wrecker operator loads an Auburn man’s moped onto his truck bed after a fatal crash on

S.R. 3 just south of DeKalb C.R. 70 near LaOtto early Friday morning.

LAOTTO — An Auburn man died after his moped collided with a pickup truck Friday morning on S.R. 3, south of LaOtto, Indiana State Police said.

Scott Albright, 43, was taken to Parkview Regional Medical Center in Fort Wayne, where he later died as a result of the injuries sustained in the crash, police said.

Senior Trooper Marc Leatherman investigated the crash

that occurred Friday at approx-imately 6:50 a.m. His prelimi-nary investigation showed that a Yamaha moped operated by Albright was traveling northbound on S.R. 3, just south of DeKalb C.R. 70.

Police believe Albright was riding just into the driving lane, on or near the fog line, when he was sideswiped by a northbound Ford F-150 pickup truck driven by John Wilson Jr., 45 of Fort

Wayne. Wilson was not injured in the crash.

Police said Albright was not wearing a helmet,

Assisting state police at the scene were the DeKalb and Allen county sheriffs’ departments, the Huntertown and LaOtto fi re departments and Huntertown EMS.

This story was posted on kpcnews.com at 11:35 a.m. Friday.

Man killed in moped crash

ALBION — Ira “Skip” Schlot-terback is resigning as Noble Township trustee effective Dec. 1, Noble County Republican Chairman Randy Kirkpatrick said Friday.

A Republican caucus to elect a new trustee will take place Saturday, Nov. 30, at 9 a.m. at the

Noble Township Fire Department, 3199 S. S.R. 109, Albion. Two precinct committeemen, Schlotter-back and Scott Zeigler, are eligible to participate in the caucus.

Any Republican who wishes to be considered for the offi ce of Noble Township trustee must complete Form CEB-5 and return

it to Kirkpatrick no later than 72 hours before the caucus. The completed form may be mailed or hand-delivered to: 8928 N. State Road 5, Ligonier, IN 46767. Anyone with questions may call Kirkpatrick at 894-4451 or 402-6534, or send an email message to rlkpatrick55@gmail.

Township trustee steps down

MUNCIE (AP) — Ball State University was partially locked down for hours Friday after several witnesses reported hearing someone shouting “gun!” in a campus building, prompting a police search that ended with no sign of a weapon or armed person.

The university sent an all-clear notice about 7:50 p.m. Friday, some three hours after issuing an alert reporting a “possible armed assailant” near the Muncie campus’ Student Recreation and Wellness Center. The all-clear notice said the campus was secure.

Ball State spokesman Tony Proudfoot said multiple witnesses alerted campus police after hearing someone repeatedly shout “gun!” on the Recreation and Wellness Building’s third-fl oor running track. He said the search of several buildings on the campus about 60 miles northeast of Indianapolis turned up no sign of a weapon.

“We’re very pleased that this turned out to be no threat to the campus,” he said. “We didn’t fi nd any safety issues.”

Proudfoot said only four buildings on the 700-acre campus that contains 100 buildings were affected by the security alert as campus police, Muncie police and Indiana State Police troopers conducted sweeps through those buildings.

Junior Krystal Palmer, an art education major from Dayton, Ohio, said she had been locked in a classroom during the police sweep. She expressed concern that she learned about the incident through other students before the university sent its alert. She said there have been other cases where the campus alert was delayed.

“Usually it’s fi ne because it’s not anything big, but other times we’ve found out from social media before we’ve gotten the message, which is kind of scary because it might not be soon enough,” she said.

Scareat BSU

WASHINGTON (AP) — Brushing aside a White House veto threat, the Republican-con-trolled House voted by a healthy bipartisan majority Friday to weaken a core component of “Obamacare” and permit the sale of individual health coverage that falls short of requirements in the law.

In all, 39 Democrats broke ranks and supported the legisla-tion, a total that underscored the growing importance of the issue in the weeks since millions of cancellation notices went out to consumers covered by plans deemed inadequate under govern-ment rules.

The fi nal vote was 261-157 as lawmakers clashed over an issue likely to be at the heart of next year’s midterm elections. The measure faces an uncertain fate in the Senate, where Democrats seeking re-election in 2014 are leading a move for generally similar legislation.

“For the last six weeks the White House stood idly by ignoring the pleas of millions,” said Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich., chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee and lead

sponsor of the legislation.“Our straightforward, one-page

bill says, if you like your current coverage, you should be able to keep it. The president should heed his own advice and work with us, the Congress, as the founders intended, not around the legislative process.”

But Democrats said the measure was just another in a long line of attacks on the health care bill from Republicans who have voted repeatedly to repeal it.

“It would take away the core protections of that law. It creates an entire shadow market of substandard health care plans,” said Rep. Henry Waxman of California.

The vote came shortly before President Barack Obama welcomed insurance company CEOs to a White House meeting, and one day after he announced a shift toward making good on his oft-repeated promise that anyone liking his pre-Obamacare coverage would be able to keep it.

In brief opening remarks, he did not refer to the House vote, and showed no give in his commitment to the program

known by his name. “Because of choice and competition, a whole lot of Americans who have always seen health insurance out of reach are going to be in a position to purchase it,” he said.

The events capped a remark-able series of politically inspired maneuvers in recent days. The

president and lawmakers in both parties have sought to position themselves as allies of consumers who are receiving cancellation notices — yet have made no move to cooperate on legislation that could require those consumers’ coverage to be renewed if they wanted to keep it.

House wants sale of substandard coverage

AP

House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio speaks about President Obama’s health care law after Republican lawmakers met at the Republican National Committee headquarters earlier this week.

SEE STRAND, PAGE A6

Hunters breakfast being served today ASHLEY — The Ashley Fire Department will serve a hunters breakfast today from 4-9 a.m. at the fi re station. The menu includes pan-cakes, sausage, biscuis and gravy. Proceeds will benefi t Austin King, a local student.

Fair board hosting craft event Sunday

KENDALLVILLE — The Noble County Community Fair Board will host a Cozy Cabin Craft Celebration Sunday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Log Building on the fairgrounds in Kendallville.

Twenty-fi ve crafters will offer high-quality handmade items for sale. Homemade cookies and candy will be offered for $5 per pound. Soup and sandwiches also will be available.

For more information, contact Carleigh Pankop at 318-2405 or [email protected].

Regional Roundup•

Briefs•

A2 THE NEWS SUN kpcnews.com AREA • STATE •

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2013

Myers Real Estate & Personal Property

AUCTIONSATURDAY, NOV. 23, 2013 AT 10 AM

315 W. 9TH ST., AUBURN, INNice four bedroom, one bath home.

Endless possibilities, investment potential!

Call for inspection.Food will be available on site.

Buyer’s premium applies to all sales.

www.jerniganauctions.com

OWNER: THELMA MYERS

ANTIQUES - COLLECTIBLES TOOLS - HOUSEHOLD

ABSOLUTE AUCTION MINIMUM BID $20,000

2536 E. Skinner Lake North Dr., AlbionQuality-attention to detail-custom LAKEFRONT home-a piece of heaven on earth! Enjoy semi-privately situated, distinctive abode w/multitude of amenities & features! Boasts awesome views, sunsets, fishing, boating & skiing 1-4 p.m.! Low utilities, taxes & easy maintenance=affordability! Hardwood, ceramic, granite, natural wood abounds =character & charm!! MLS #201317543. Only $149,900!

Dial 312-4882 Dep HornbergerText 242-4323 Tina Gilbert

N

NEW LI

STING

260-312-4882Dep Hornberger

L2240 S 445 E, ROYER LAKE

Unique lakefront, privacy galore w/spacious ranch attach. 2+ car garage, 40x24 pole barn & 3/4 acre total land. Enjoy boating, swimming, fishing & viewing 2 lakes. Home sits back surrounded by woods on 2-sides & fence on other, at end of cul-de-sac. $179,900. MLS#532578. DIRECTIONS: SR 3 to 100S, W past stop to 400E, S to 200S, E to 445S, S to property.

OPEN SUN.

2-4 PM

N

OPEN SUN.

1-3 PM

409 CHISWELL RUN, AVILLA

Totally refreshed with new carpet, paint, landscaping and appliances. Nice 3 BR, 2 BA ranch includes master suite, large eat-in kitchen, cathedral ceil-ing in living room and large closets. $112,500. DIRECTIONS: West of Old 3 on 100 E (Albion St. in Avilla) to Cranberry Acres, south on Old Bog to Chiswell Run; turn right.

Hosted By:

260-242-7366Andy Treesh

N

OPEN SUN.

1-3 PM

223 AUTUMN HILLS, AVILLA

This 3 BR, 2 BA home is waiting for new owners. Split BR floor plan with an open concept with kitchen and living room. Appli-ances stay. $92,900. DIRECTIONS: SR 3 south to Old SR 3, S to stoplight, east to Demske Acres, S on Autumn Hills Dr. to property.

Hosted By:

260-347-5176Terri Deming

308 S. Oak St., KendallvilleTurn-of-century charmer! Original woodwork with plenty of detail.Updated mechanicals, all appliances, fenced yard, large patio, inviting covered porch and great location. It’s all here in this 4 BR, 2 BA home that has been lovingly cared for. Come see for yourself. $112,500.

260-349-8850Anita Hess

N

1390 N 750 E, AvillaBeautiful log home nestled in 5.69 acres of woods. Open floor plan. Exposed beams, knotty pine walls and hardwood floors throughout. Roomy kitchen w/all appliances included. 2-story stone fireplace ac-cents main living area. Full BA w/laundry and a BR also on the main floor. Full basement. $183,500.

260-349-8850Anita Hess

N

310 Laurelwood Lane, KendallvillePrestigious, elegant and comfortable describes this 5 BR villa at Cob-blestone Golf Course! Custom-built with all the bells and whistles you’ve dreamed of. 4-1/2 BA, fireplace, grand living room w/fantastic views of the pond. Full walk-out finished basement w/wet bar, built-in entertainment wall, in-law suite & rec room. $304,500.

260-349-8850Anita Hess

N

VILLA

615 Miner Rd., AvillaWell-kept ranch home on a walk-out basement, 10 acres of land. Split floor plan. Large eat-in kitchen, appliances included. 3 BR, which are large and roomy. Basement w/family room area, 1/2 bath 2nd kitchen and walk-out patio. Insulated pole barn w/loft area and workshop. $284,500.

260-349-8850Anita Hess

N

10 ACRES

NEW LI

STING

NEW LI

STING

N

SUNDAY

12-2

PM

437 CHISWELL RUN, AVILLA

Well-maintained 3 BR, 2 BA home in Cranberry Acres. Master en suite with tiled bath/shower, cathedral ceiling in great room. Large lot with concrete patio. Professionally landscaped with mature plants. You’ll feel right at home here! $116,000. DIRECTIONS: West through Avilla on Albion St. to Cranberry Acres, left on Old Bog Rd., right on Chiswell Run to property.

Hosted by: Charity Middleton“The Noll Team”

260-348-6822

L

OPEN

SAT. 2-4

PM

7740 E 500 S, WOLCOTTVILLE

Country setting with a couple outbuildings on 2 acres, 4 BRs that are nice size and 2 BAs. The kitchen has a lot of cabinetry. There is a woodburning fireplace and den. New price $89,900. DIREC-TIONS: From South Milford, take SR 3 north, turn west onto 500 S. Go about 1/4 mile.

Hosted By:

260-343-8511Dean Rummel

D > DeKalb

N > Noble

S > Steuben

L > LaGrange

E > Elkhart

A > Allen

W > Whitley

K > Kosciusko

M > Michigan

O > Ohio

L O C A T O R K E Y

Open Homes

GRACE HOUSHOLDER

International Education Week preparationsCentral Noble Middle School social studies teacher Randy Handshoe met with East Noble AFS YES students Thursday to prepare for the day they will spend at Central Noble Middle School. Wednesday they will spend the school day with the middle school students as part of International Education Week activities. From left are Cathy Linsenmayer,

AFS YES volunteer; Abdoo of Egypt; Handshoe; Lubna of Pakistan; Monique of South Africa and Omar of Palestine. Not pictured is Jasmine of Indonesia, who had play practice. Lubna is a student at Northrop High School; the other four AFS YES students are East Noble High School students.

LIGONIER — Students and staff at West Noble Middle School are taking part in a Month of Giving. All proceeds go to the school’s new Benevolence Fund to help students and families with fi nancial emergencies.

Special events are raising money for the fund, including a penny pitch, bake sale, dress-up days, talent show and a silent auction for special-themed gift baskets.

“We are also selling raffl e tickets to turn Gene Teel, our school’s athletic director, into a giant ice cream sundae,” said Karena Wilkinson, music teacher.

The new fund will be used to help families with emergencies such as house

fi res, medical situations and other special needs.

The talent show is set for Monday at 7 p.m. at the middle school, featuring students on stage. Admission is $2 or $5 for an entire family, and preschoolers will be admitted free. Anyone bringing a canned food item will receive $1 off the admission price.

All next week will feature dress-up days when students are being asked to bring in donations. The class that raises the most money will have a chance to turn Teel into an ice cream sundae.

A silent auction for gift baskets will be held at the talent show. Anyone in the community wishing to donate items to include in the gift baskets may drop them off at the middle school any time Monday.

For more details, contact Wilkinson at 894-3191, ext. 2330 or ext. 3710, by email at [email protected], or on her Facebook page.

WN students raising money for new Benevolence Fund

Honor sought for Pond

FORT WAYNE — The Allen County Board of Commissioners has passed a resolution asking the Indiana General Assembly to name a portion of U.S. 24 in honor of former Rep. Phyllis Pond of New Haven, our news partner, NewsChannel 15, reports.

Pond passed away Sept. 22. She was elected to the state House of Represen-tatives in 1978 and was the longest-serving female legislator in Indiana’s history.

The commissioners asked that the section of U.S. 24 between U.S. 30 east of New Haven and State Line Road be designated as the “Representative Phyllis J. Pond Memorial Highway.” The resolution will be

submitted to the General Assembly for consideration when it convenes in January.

Suspect charged with murder

VAN WERT, Ohio — A woman suspected in a double shooting that killed one person was arrested Friday, our news partner, NewsChannel 15, reports.

Police had been looking for Tamera K. Menke since Thursday evening, when the shooting took place. Menke was charged with murder Friday for allegedly causing the death of Barbara Robinson.

A man involved in the shooting was in stable condition at a Fort Wayne hospital after being shot in the thigh. The incident is under investigation.

Two Indiana girls possible human traffi cking victims

INDIANAPOLIS — Two teenage girls from Central Indiana were returned home safely after an FBI spokes-person in Chicago said they were “possible victims of human traffi cking,” our news partner, NewsChannel 15, reports.

Yorktown Police Depart-ment patrolman Blake Barnard told WISH-TV a 14-year-old from Yorktown and a 16-year-old from Muncie were both reported as runaways at the end of October.

Barnard said the 14-year-old’s family came to the police department, with photos from Facebook and Instagram. Then, they found more pictures on an escort website in Chicago.

Former teacher, coach charged

HUNTINGTON — Sexual battery and battery charges were fi led against a former Huntington North High School teacher Friday, our news partner, NewsChannel 15, reports.

WANE-TV reports a woman accused Donald Cotton, 68, of inappro-priately touching her in the school’s parking lot on Aug. 29. On Sept. 9, a second woman called the Huntington Police Depart-ment, alleging Cotton had touched her inappropriately when he was her teacher and coach at HNHS in 2005.

The woman apparently reported “feeling uncomfort-able” to the principal and athletic director at HNHS shortly after the incident happened.

Monday, Nov. 18Noble County Board of

Commissioners meets at 8:30 a.m. in the Commis-sioners Room of the Noble County Courthouse.

Tuesday, Nov. 19Central Noble

Community School Corp. Board of Education meets at 7 p.m. in the corporation offi ces, 200 E. Main St., Albion.

Wednesday, Nov. 20Noble County Board

of Commissioners meets

in executive session at 1:30 p.m. in the Commissioners Room of the Noble County Courthouse.

Government Calendar•

Middle School talent show, special events set for Monday

THE NEWS SUNTHE NEWS SUN (USPS 292-440)

102 N. Main St., Kendallville, IN 46755

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Monthly: $18.00 3 Months: $54.00 6 Months: $108.00 1 Year: $216.00Published by KPC Media Group Inc. at

102 N. Main St.Kendallville, IN 46755.

Published every day except New Year’s Day, Memorial Day,

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POSTMASTER: Send address changes to:

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Area Activities•

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2013 kpcnews.com A3

Presale Tickets are available at: Auburn Classic Florist, Carbaugh Jewelers,

Country Lane General Store, Family Chiropractic Associates, Legacy Hallmark,

The Paper Gourmet, The Sprinkling Can,or by calling 925-6686

Christmas StrollWe will be collecting eyeglasses and hearing aids

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Italian Grille is opening at 11:00 a.m. that day & donating a portion of their proceeds back to our club.

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Sat., Nov. 23 • 10:00 a.m.-8:00 p.m.

• Tour five beautifully decorated Auburn area homes and four businesses.

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TodayAnnual Holiday

Bazaar: All types of crafts items and vendor merchan-dise will be offered. For more information contact Crystal Keck at 582-6359. Orange Township Govern-ment Center, 101 Warrener Drive, Rome City. 9 a.m.

Holiday Bazaar: Cookie walk, crafts, holiday decorations and more. Cafe offering hot chicken, barbecue pork, sloppy joe and coney dog sandwiches, salads, pies, apple dumplings and beverages. Rome City United Methodist Church, 297 Washington St., Rome City. 9 a.m.

Luckey Hospital Museum: The Luckey Hospital Museum began when Dr. James E. Luckey’s great-nieces Mary and Shirley decided to open a small museum to display their private collec-tion. Both are retired RNs and have been collecting obsolete medical equipment for years. The collection has grown and expanded to include the entire fi rst fl oor of the former hospital. Tours available by calling 635-2490 or 635-2256. Luckey Hospital Museum, U.S. 33 and S.R. 109, Wolf Lake. 10 a.m.

Yu-Gi-Oh: Stop in for the sanctioned Yu-Gi-Oh Tournament and battle your buddies. There is a $2 tournament fee that should be paid at the door, or you can pay a $5 fee and receive a pack of cards. Cossy ID cards are suggested. Prizes will be given to the top three players. Kendallville Public Library, 221 S. Park Ave., Kendallville. 10 a.m. 343-2010

Rome City Holiday House Walk: Rome City Chamber of Commerce annual Holiday House Walk. Featured homes: Tony and Tracey Freiburger, Jack and Martha Evans, Dave and Cindy Wick, Dawn O’Connor and Holly Goneau. For more information go to romeci tychamber.com. Downtown Rome City, Rome City. 10 a.m.

Holiday Craft Bazaar and Bake Sale: The American Legion Post 86 Women’s Auxiliary presents The Holiday Bazaar and Bake Sale. Concessions will be available. American Legion Post 86, South Main Street, Kendallville. 10 a.m.

Narcotics Anonymous Meeting: Narcotics Anonymous is a fellow-ship for those who have a problem with any drug, legal or illegal, including alcohol. This ‘‘open’’

meeting may be attended by anyone, but we ask that verbal participation be limited to those who have (or who think they may have) a problem with drugs. For more information, call 427-9113 or go to na.org. Club Recovery, 1110 E. Dowling St., Kendallville. 12:30 p.m.

Zumba Fundraiser: For all ages. $5 for students and $10 for adults. In auxiliary gym. Proceeds to the East Noble Wrestling Team. East Noble High School, 901 Garden St., Kendallville. 3:30 p.m. 347-7167

Chicken and Noodle Dinner: Chicken and noodle and all the trimmings. Carry-outs available. Calvary United Methodist Church, 125 Cherry St., Avilla. 4:30 p.m.

Sunday, Nov. 17Bingo: Bingo games.

Warm ups at 12:30 pm and games at 1:30 p.m. Sponsored by the Sylvan Lake Improvement Associa-tion. Rome City Bingo Hall, S.R. 9, Rome City. 12:30 p.m.

DivorceCare: 13-week program with videos, discussion and support for separated or divorced. For more information, call 347-0056. Trinity Church United Methodist, 229 S. State St., Kendallville. 5:30 p.m.

Monday, Nov. 18Bingo: For senior

citizens every Monday. Noble County Council on Aging, 111 Cedar St., Kendallville. Noon

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

Pinterest Basics: Do you know how to pin favorite things like books, food, places to visit and more in your very own online bulletin board? Learn Pinterest basics such as setting up an account, following favorite pinners (like the library) and searching for places to add. Registration is required. Kendallville Public Library, 221 S. Park Ave., Kendall-ville. 1 p.m. 343-2010

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

Lego Quest: Stop

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

Follow Your Family Roots: How do you Follow Your Family Roots? Attend this family tree chart tutorial to fi nd out. Our genealogy specialist and adult depart-ment staff will be available to help you fi ll in your family tree. Registration is required. Kendallville Public Library, 221 S. Park Ave., Kendallville. 5 p.m. 343-2010

Zumba Class: Free Zumba classes at Presence Sacred Heart Home in Avilla Indiana run from 6:30 p.m. to 7:25 p.m. each Monday and Thursday. Presence Sacred Heart Home, 515 N. Main St., Avilla. 6 p.m. 897-2841

Little River Chorus rehearsal: Little River Chorus of Sweet Adelines International, a national barbershop organization for women, rehearses every Monday. The group is open to new members. For more information, call 475-5482. Fairview Missionary Church, 525 E. C.R. 200N, Angola. 6 p.m.

Noble County Republican Womens Club: Dinner meeting for $5. Guests welcome. RSVP to Shelley Mawhorter at 636-2893 [email protected] Noble County Public Library Central, 813 E. Main St., Albion. 6 p.m.

Healthcare Reform Update: January 2014 and Health Care Reform is just around the corner —what does it mean? Rex Whitten from Insurance Trustees will give an informational overview of the effects and timeline of the Patient Protection and Afford-able Care Act (Health-care Reform). You will learn how to determine: If you could be subject to penalties, what triggers penalties, how penalties are calculated, what mandates are on the table, the defi nitions of Market-place/Exchange and more. Kendallville Public Library, 221 S. Park Ave., Kendall-ville. 6 p.m. 343-2010

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For a detailed listing of churches in your area, log on to

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The family of Betty Kistler wish to thank Young Funeral Home, Lutheran Life

Villages, especially the nurses and aides who took such good care of her.

Also Vicar Mark Huston, andPastor Mike Wakeland for their prayers

and kind words during the funeral.

Thank you to everyone for their flowers, memorials, messages, calls, cards and

prayers during these difficult days.

~Betty Kistler Family

PHOTO CONTRIBUTED

Members of the Alpha Associate Chapter of Tri Kappa met Nov. 6 at the home of Debra Hockley, left. They collected towels for Noble House for the November philanthropy project. With Hockely are Sue Sherer, center, Philan-

thropy Committee member, and Fran Moran, October meeting committee member. Also serving on the committee were Bonnie DeCamp and Carol Platt who were unable to attend the meeting.

KENDALLVILLE — Members of the Alpha Associate Chapter of Tri Kappa met Nov. 6 at the home of Debra Hockley. Fran Moran, Bonnie DeCamp and Carol Platt served on the planning committee.

Chapter president Mary Lash opened the meeting by thanking the 13 Alpha members who assisted at the recent Province 10 conven-tion held in Kendallville. Province 10 offi cer Gwen Long-Lucas and state Tri Kappa president Kathryn Dory also sent their compli-ments and thank yous to the three Kendallville chapters for hosting the convention.

Lash had the winning entry in the Wearable Fabric Fine Arts catagory, and her entry will now be entered at the state Tri Kappa convention.

Thank you notes were received from Families for Freedom for a donation and adopting a local serviceman who is serving overseas, and from Common Grace for a recent donation. The family of deceased member Mary King thanked the chapter for the memorial gift to the Tri Kappa State Memorial Fund. They indicated they were pleased to fi nd out all

monies sent to the Memorial Fund are used to provide emergency funds to Indiana college students.

Sue Sherer, reporting for the Philanthropy Committee, thanked the members for the 29 boxes of cereal donated to the Food Pantry after the October meeting, and for the cash for the committee to donate a gift card to Riley Hospital. She also thanked members for the 27 bath towels for the Noble House, which was the November philanthropy project.

Riley Hospital is in great need for fleece blankets for babies. Although this is a year round need the state has asked all Tri Kappas, and others, to help. Sue Sherer handed out the pattern and directions

how to make the “No Sew Fleece Blanket,” explaining this blanket is easily made in five steps. Any person interested, and needing the directions may get them from an Alpha member.

Scholarship chairman Ginny Sparks announced it is time to receive names for the Tri Kappa State Scholarships. Applicants must be a sophomore or junior in college and be an outstanding student in their field of study. To make inquiries about applying, please call Ginny Sparks at 347-5131 as soon as possible.

The next meeting will be the annual Charistmas party, which will be held at the home of Jane Roush on Dec. 4.

Sorority donates towelsas philanthropy project

Amy Oberlin, c/o KPC Media Group, P.O. Box 39, Kendallville, IN 46755e-mail: [email protected]

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Marjory Crill-ScottFORT WAYNE —

Marjorie E. Crill-Scott, 84, passed away Thursday, November 14, 2013.

Born in Ashley, Ind., Marjorie was the daughter

of John and Aileen Brand.

She was a professor at IPFW for 30 years teaching psychiatric nursing.

Marjorie had the opportunity to serve

tireless fulfi lling hours in the community, involving herself in Hospice, Widowed to Widowed, Heart Associ-ation, Nurses Associa-tions, Amicus Club, High Hopes Clown Club, and Lincolnshire Church of the Brethern.

Surviving are her husband, Avon “Scotty” Scott of Fort Wayne; a son, Michael (Paula) Crill of Fort Wayne; a daughter, Connie (Richard) Thiel of Port Orange, Fla.; her stepchildren, Del (Sylvia) Scott, Duane (Kathy) Scott, Delora (Ed) Hartsock, and Diane (Steve) Michael; her brothers, Jack (Helen) Brand and Max (Yvonne) Brand; her sisters, Mary Alice (Ladean) Dick, Jean (Robert) Bowman and Janet (Robert) Steury; fi ve grandchildren; fi ve step-grandchildren; and one great- grandchild.

Marjorie was preceded in death by her fi rst husband, Charles Crill, and brother, Tom Brand.

Services are at 2 p.m. Monday at D.O. McComb & Sons Lakeside Park Funeral

Home, 1140 Lake Ave., with calling 1 hour prior.

Calling also will be from 2-5 and 7-9 p.m. Sunday at the funeral home.

Burial will be in Greenlawn Memorial Park.

Memorials may be made to the Alzheimer’s Associ-ation, Visiting Nurse or Lincolnshire Church of the Brethren.

To sign the online guest book, go to www.mccombandsons.com.

Zela HoxhaANGOLA — Zela Mary

Hoxha was born Tuesday, November 12, 2013, at 2:05 p.m. at Dupont Hospital in Fort Wayne, Indiana. She passed away at 2:08 p.m. Tuesday, November 12, 2013, at the hospital.

She is survived by her parents, Angie and Fehim (Druley) Hoxha of Angola, Indiana; a grandmother, Kathleen Deuter of Angola, Indiana; and grandparents, Zela and Shaip Hoxha of Kosova.

She was preceded in death by a cousin Cade Druley.

Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Monday, November 18, 2013, at Beams Funeral Home in Fremont, Indiana, with Pastor Jared Bignell of the Sonlight Community Church offi ci-ating.

Burial will be at Lakeside Cemetery in Fremont, Indiana.

The family requests in lieu of fl owers, that cards and letters be sent to the family in care of Angie and Fehim Hoxha, 616 B. Northcross Street, Angola, Indiana 46703.

Condolences may be sent online to www.beamsfuneral home.com.

Carol WarmbierTHREE OAKS, Mich.

— Carol Warmbier, 73, of Three Oaks and formerly of Angola, Ind., died Monday, Nov. 11, 2013, at Providence Hospital in Novi, Mich., following a

six-month courageous battle with multiple health issues beginning with a fall on May 18.

After graduating from high

school, she continued her education at Western Michigan University where she met her future husband, Daniel Warmbier. On January 29, 1961, they married in Angola, Ind., and graduated together in 1963.

Mrs. Warmbier taught fi ve years in Caro, Mich., and two years in Angola, Ind., before moving to Three Oaks Township in 1970, and Carol began teaching at the River Valley Public School System. Amazingly, Carol was certifi ed to teach any grade from kinder-garten through 12th at River Valley. She received her master’s degree in school administration in 1995 and served as principal at River Valley Middle-High School for three years before retiring in 2001.

Carol was a crossword puzzle afi cionado and an avid reader. “Ann of Green Gables” was her favorite book. She was devoted to her family and was so proud of her children’s and grandchildren’s achieve-ments. She stayed well connected with Dan’s many relatives as well. She always

put others needs before her own.

She was born July 23, 1940, to Charles and Irene Skove. Her father survives in Angola, Ind. Her mother died in 2002.

Also surviving are her husband, Dan; two daughters, Marie Warmbi-er-Smith of Pleasant Lake, Ind., and Yvonne Warmbi-er-Ramp of Northville, Mich.; and three grandchil-dren.

She was also preceded in death by a son, Jason Skove Warmbier who died in 2008 from injuries he sustained in an auto accident.

Funeral services were held Friday, Nov. 15, 2013, at 11 a.m at the Pleasant View Church of Christ in Angola. Graveside services followed at Circle Hill Cemetery in Angola.

Memorials are to the Jason Warmbier Memorial Scholarship in care of River Valley High School, 15480 Three Oaks Road, Three Oaks, MI 49128.

Pobocik Funeral Home in Three Oaks, Mich., was in charge of arrangements.

To send online condolences go to www.pobocik.com.

Baby boy BaughmanFREMONT — Baby boy

Baughman, son of Jacob J. and Heather M. (Bevins) Baughman of Fremont, was stillborn at 6:10 a.m. Thursday, November 14, 2013, at Cameron Memorial Community Hospital in Angola, Indiana.

There will be no services.Memorials are to the

family.Beams Funeral Home

in Fremont is in charge of arrangements.

Norman SellsKENDALLVILLE —

Norman Sells, age 62, of Kendallville, died on Wednesday, November 13, 2013, at Parkview Regional Medical Center in Fort Wayne, Indiana.

Mr. Sells was born in Garrett, Kentucky, on April 1, 1951, to the late Curtis and Martha Sells.

Norman was

employed with Norfolk & Southern Railroad as a conductor for more than 30 years.

He enjoyed hunting, fi shing and sitting by the campfi re.

Survivors include his wife, Deborah Sells of Kendallville; a daughter, Lea Taylor of Kendallville; two grandchildren, Zachary and Christina Taylor, both of Kendallville; two sons, Kirk Sells and Kevin Sells; one brother; and several sisters.

He was also preceded in death by one brother, Herman, and two sisters, Freda and Bonita.

Visitation will be Sunday, November 17, 2013, from 2-5 p.m. at Hite Funeral Home in Kendallville.

Funeral services will be Monday, November 18, 2013, at 1 p.m. at Hite Funeral Home. Offi ciating the funeral service will be Rev. Charles Mosley.

Burial will be at Orange Cemetery near Rome City.

Preferred memorials may be made to family.

Send a condolence to the family at www.hitefuneral home.com.

Deaths & Funerals •

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2013A4 kpcnews.com AREA • NATION •

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DEARBORN HEIGHTS, Mich. (AP) — A suburban Detroit homeowner was charged Friday with second-degree murder in the death of a 19-year-old woman who was shot in the face while on his front porch nearly two weeks ago.

Theodore P. Wafer, 54, of Dearborn Heights, also faces a manslaughter charge in the death of Renisha McBride, who was killed in the early-morning hours on Nov. 2, Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy said.

Police say McBride, a former high school cheerleader, was shot a couple hours after being involved in a nearby car accident. Family members say she likely approached Wafer’s home for help.

The shooting has drawn attention from civil rights groups who called for a thorough investigation and believe race was a factor in the shooting — McBride was black; prosecutors said Wafer is white. Some have drawn comparisons between this case and that of Trayvon Martin, the 17-year-old Florida boy shot in 2012 by a suspicious neighbor.

But Worthy insisted Friday that race wasn’t relevant in her decision to fi le charges and wouldn’t compare the case to Martin’s death.

“It’s always interesting to me what the public makes their decisions on when it comes to one way or another,” Worthy said. “We have the facts. We have the evidence. We make our decision on that and that alone.

“In this case, the charging decision has nothing whatever to do with the race of the parties. Whether it becomes relevant later on in the case, I don’t know. I’m not clairvoyant,” she said.

Homeowner charged in deadly porch shooting

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A local resident uses scrap lumber, Friday, to build a gate where their homes stood last week, in Taclaban, Leyte province, central Philippines. A week after the typhoon struck the

Philippines, sounds of hammers and saws hitting nails and cutting wood start to echo through destroyed neighborhoods, giving a sense of home for those who have nowhere to go.

AP

Monica McBride and Walter Ray Simmons, the parents of Renisha McBride, address the media during a news conference in Southfi eld, Mich., Friday. Their daughter was shot on Nov. 2 in the face on Theodore P. Wafer’s front porch in Dearborn Heights.

GUIUAN, Philippines (AP) — People swept dirt from the pews and wiped clean the mud-cov-ered, ornate tile fl oors of a church. The sound of hammers hitting nails and the buzzing of chain saws reverberated in the streets. Debris was piled on corners and set ablaze.

And amid all this activity, a stream of bodies continued their fi nal journey toward a hillside mass grave where nearly 170 had been buried by Friday afternoon.

One week after Typhoon Haiyan razed the eastern part of the Philippines, killing thousands and leaving at least 600,000

homeless, resilient residents of the disaster zone were rebuilding their lives and those of their neighbors.

An international aid effort gathered steam, highlighted by the helicopter drops conducted from the American aircraft carrier USS George Washington. But the storm victims moved ahead — with or without help from their government or foreign aid groups.

Peter Degrido, a coast guard reserve, was one of the 35 workers trying to move an overturned passenger bus from a road leading to the airport in Guiuan (GEE-won), a town on Samar island. They hitched the bus to a truck with steel cables and made slow progress. Ahead of them lay many downed electricity poles that must be moved next.

Philippine town starts rebuilding

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FIND DIRECT LINKS TO THESE BUSINESSES ON THE OBITUARY PAGE OF

THE ONLINE EDITIONS AT:kpcnews.com

The News Sun welcomes letters to the Voice of the People column. All letters must be submitted with the author’s signature, address and telephone number. The News Sun reserves the right to reject or edit letters on the basis of libel, poor taste or repetition. Mail or deliver letters to The News Sun, 102 N. Main St., P.O. Box 39, Kendallville, IN 46755. Letters may be emailed to [email protected] Please do not send letters as attachments.

Letter Policy

THE NEWS SUN kpcnews.com A5SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2013

I didn’t know what a libertarian was when I started reporting. I was just another liberal. I knew the Republicans were icky, and Democrats were more like me — except they didn’t care about debt.

I had no idea there was an actual movement of thinking people who want to honor the principles of the Founders — liberty and limited government. It took me a long time to wake up.

Now more Americans have woken up, say Matt Welch and Nick Gillespie, editors of Reason magazine.

“Poll after poll show you that Americans are much more fi scally conservative than their elected representatives,” says Welch. “A majority of

Americans thinks that we should balance the budget. Seventy-fi ve percent think that we should not raise the debt ceiling … Growing majorities — especially young people — are more socially tolerant. They think that we should legalize marijuana … they’re in favor of gay marriage.”

Gillespie argues that some of the change comes from people seeing how the private sector offers us more options that we like, while govern-ment fails.

“The 21st century has been a demonstration project of how Republicans and conservatives screw things up, under the Bush years, and now we have the Obama version — the liberal Democrat version of screwing everything up … you go to Amazon.com, you have a good experience and you get all sorts of interesting stuff. When you go to a government website, not so much.”

It changes minds, they argue, when people see this is a strong pattern, not just the result of isolated mistakes unique to Obamacare or another specifi c government project.

But do people realize that it’s a strong pattern? I don’t think so. I wrote “No, They Can’t: Why Government Fails — But Individ-uals Succeed” because I worry most Americans instinctively trust central planning. The sponta-neous order of the invisible hand is harder to grasp. The invisible hand is … invisible.

Maybe that’s why leftists fear liberty. A sarcastic online video scares people by calling Somalia a “libertarian paradise.” (It isn’t. Libertarianism assumes private property and rule of law.) One of my Fox colleagues, Bill O’Reilly, calls my libertarian views “desper-ately wrong” and says “you’re living in a world of theory!”

But Gillespie says even people who don’t understand the theory at least see what the invisible hand produces. “Where people do things voluntarily and in free markets, everything is getting better, (but] when you go to this old model of command and control, things are terrible.” True. But while Gillespie, Welsh and I — and maybe you readers — pay attention to that, I suspect that the promises of the central planners will fool most people most of the time.

Politicians fool us with offers of free goodies like cheaper health care and “cures” for social problems, like the War on Drugs. They fool us with their promises to “contain” China, Iran, al-Qaida, etc. and “build democracy” in the Middle East.

If libertarian-leaning politicians express doubt, they may be condemned by others in their own party.

Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, and Rep. Justin Amash, R-Mich., fi libustered until President Obama responded to their questions about drone strikes. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., called them “wacko birds.”

After some politicians criticized NSA spying, Gov. Chris Christie said, “This strain of libertarianism is a very dangerous thought.”

Mainstream conservative pundit Fred Barnes tells me Ron Paul is “deluded” because he wants to shrink the military. Barnes says we’re not seeing a new libertarian era, just a libertarian “blip.” He points out that even government programs Ronald Reagan railed against are still with us 30 years later — and suggests that they probably aren’t going away.

I’m not optimistic about most people recognizing liberty’s benefi ts. Old politicians — and old voters collecting Social Security — may never change their minds. But libertari-anism is growing fastest among the young, and groups like Students for Liberty give me hope. These young people certainly know more about liberty than I did at their age.

Maybe they will avoid prior generations’ big-government mistakes. Maybe.

JOHN STOSSEL is host of “Stossel” on the Fox Business Network. He’s the author of “Give Me a Break” and of “Myth, Lies, and Downright Stupidity.” More information at johnstossel.com. To read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit creators.com.

Libertarian era or blip?

JOHN

STOSSEL

One of my Fox colleagues, Bill O’Reilly,

calls my libertarian views “desperately

wrong” and says “you’re living in a world of

theory!”

Letters To The Editor•

Junior Achievement of Noble County thanks Albion JA Bowl-A-Thon supporters

To the editor:On behalf of the Junior Achievement of Noble County Board

of Directors, I’d like to thank everyone who participated in, supported and/or donated to the Albion JA Bowl-A-Thon held on Nov. 9.

The $3,000 raised helps support programs and materials used in teaching Junior Achievement in our local Noble County schools. The role of Junior Achievement is to inspire and educate young people to value the free enterprise system, learn more about business, economics and personal fi nance as well as be workforce ready.

Thank you to the team sponsors: Noble REMC (two teams); World Class Wire & Cable; North Ridge Village Nursing & Rehab Center; Albion Elementary; Noble County Public Library; Brazzell Funeral Home; and QSI Automation Inc.

Several area businesses and organizations graciously contrib-uted prizes which award participants who raise funds. Thanks to the following: Noble REMC, North Ridge Village Nursing & Rehab, Campbell & Fetter Bank, Community State Bank, All Printing & Publications, Parkview Noble Hospital, Albion Dairy Queen, Doc’s Do It Best Hardware, Albion Subway, Pizza Hut, Albion Bowl, Lily of the Valley, Unique Boutique, Albion Village Foods, HAWK Radio, Palm Bay Tanning & Hair, Fort Wayne Children’s Zoo, QSI Automation, Albion Pizza Depot and Portside Pizza.

A big thank you to everyone who participated, supported and/or donated to the event. Your support will positively affect thousands of students in our area schools and is greatly appreci-ated!

Kevin DreibelbisJA Albion Bowl-A-Thon chairman

Avilla-LaOtto Christmas Bureau says thank you for dinner support

To the editor:The Avilla-LaOtto Christmas Bureau would like to extend

our heartfelt gratitude to all of the individuals, businesses and

organizations who gave so much of themselves to families in need this Christmas.

A very warm thank you to all of those who came together for our “Annual Thanksgiving Dinner” held at St. James restau-rant: the St. James restaurant owners, management and staff, LaOtto Meats for smoking the turkeys, McDonald’s, Presence Sacred Heart Home, Impact Institute, Gordon Food Service, Stanz Foodservice, Fort Wayne Paper and the Avilla–LaOtto area churches. This year we served over 400 dinners and raised over $3,800.

Also, a special thank you to the community for their support in attending and giving. Without the support of all these wonderful people and businesses, we could not provide half of what we do to make Christmas a reality for so many families in our community. Thank you and may God bless you during this Christmas season.

Rev. Doug and Amy HarrisArk of Avilla Assembly of God

Avilla-LaOtto Christmas Bureau

The 2nd Amendment means lessTo the editor:A hand gun has no hate. Obama does.A knife has no power. Feinstein does.A shotgun has no brain. The same for Biden.A rifl e has no common sense. Same for Pelosi.A sword is not a threat. Holder is.People protected by other people with weapons advocating

disarming citizens (not criminal) are people to be wary of. When the protected people have political infl uence and/or elected positions, wary no longer applies. Fear is now a serious consideration.

The 2nd Amendment means less than the constitution itself to those before mentioned.

When the constitution is no longer between the people and the government and the government is no longer of the people but of government itself, we must endure what is presently occurring throughout the united socialist republic of America.

Monty StrawserLaGrange

I wait patiently in the hall pacing the fl oor, taking deep breaths and thinking about what I should do. A friend of mine opens the door and walks into the hallway.

“How was it?” I ask.She nods and leaves the building. I

am next. The door opens and my name is called. I stand up straight and walk into the room. As I take my seat I notice a box of Kleenex on the table next to me. I smile timidly and make a joke. The two women are busy with other things, but they laugh with me. Finally they are ready.

“How long do I have?” I ask. They nod in agreement and tell me I have an hour. I sigh deeply; so little time with so much to say. They hand me the headphones and I place them over my head and adjust them to be comfortable. The microphone on the table is also adjusted to catch all the words that will tumble out of me.

On this day I am recording my life stories, well at least a few of them, to be preserved under the umbrella of the “Life Stories” project. I begin and before I know it, the hour is over. The women are smiling at me. They did not need to encourage me or give me ideas; my stories fell like tumbling water.

The “Life Stories” project is the brainchild of the Indiana Historical Society, WFYI (Indianapolis) and Storytelling Arts of Indiana. The director of the project, Ellen Munds, is the director of Storytelling Arts of Indiana. The purpose is to record our stories, save them digitally, share small clips and provide each teller with a CD of his/her own stories.

I not only love this project, I am honored to have been able to tell my story. What story did I tell from the thousands that weave through my life? It was an easy

decision for me. I told stories of Windy Hill Farm. I told how we found the farm on a foggy day and how we built our own house from the cobblestones in the fi eld and the wood we hauled from Pennsylvania.

I told the story of children growing up with responsibilities that shaped their lives to this day.

My friend and videog-rapher, Ken Oguss, called to tell me my clip was ready to view. I could hardly wait to see it. Ken’s job is to edit each piece and pull out a short clip for viewing. He chose wisely.

In the clip I am telling the story of our fi rst autumn on the farm. We had no money, but we had gardens full of vegetables stored in the canning jars, placed in the root

cellar, and some that stayed nestled in the ground. Our fi rst year we grew massive amounts of pumpkins. I had this wonderful idea of selling pumpkin pies for $3 a pie. There was no Internet or Facebook, and I cannot even remember how the word got out since I was a new girl in town. Somehow, I ended up with 30 orders. I baked 30 pies each for $3. This endeavor included chopping up each pumpkin, cooking it down, making my own piecrust and preparing all the pies without indoor plumbing or electricity. This money was used to purchase a pony for my boys that Christmas. My family tells this story every year, but now it is recorded along with my other farm stories.

This project is not just for storytellers, it is for all folks who want their stories and voices recorded for their families.

It is almost Thanksgiving. On this day we share pumpkin pies, turkeys, and stories. Perhaps you have not been asked to tell stories for a project such as this. We are hoping that “Life Stories” will come our way in the future. In the meantime we all have phones and cameras which are perfectly capable of capturing voices, videos and photos.

Most of all we do has stories. Now is the time to share them as winter settles across the land giving rest to fi elds and work. Take the time during this season of gratefulness and family to listen to those stories, write them down, or record them. Record the voices of your children telling stories as well.

Thanks to all the folks involved in the “Life Stories” project. Laura Ingalls Wilder said it best, “We tell our stories to remember when today is a long time ago.”

LOU ANN HOMAN-SAYLOR lives in Angola at the White Picket Gardens where you can fi nd her gardening or writing late into the night under the light of her frayed scarlet lamp. She is a sto-ryteller, teacher, writer, actress and a collector of front porch stories.

Take the time to record your stories

LOU ANNHOMAN-SAYLOR

Most of all we do has stories. Now is the time to share them as winter settles across the land giving rest to

fi elds and work.

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Today's ForecastSaturday, Nov. 16

City/RegionHigh | Low tempsForecast for

Chicago59° | 41° South Bend

57° | 37°Fort Wayne

55° | 36°

Lafayette57° | 41°

Indianapolis63° | 39°

Terre Haute63° | 41°

Evansville64° | 45° Louisville

64° | 46°

Sunrise Sunday 7:32 a.m.

Sunset Sunday 5:20 p.m.

Cloudy with a chance of rain today. Tempera-tures will be in the high 50s. Low tonight of 52. Sunday skies will be cloudy and temperatures will warm to 66 degrees. Rain is expected with a possibility of storms. Lows will be in the mid-50s. Highs will be in the 50 on Monday with lows dropping to 29.

Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy

National forecastForecast highs for Saturday, Nov. 16

Fronts PressureCold Warm Stationary Low High

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

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

Local HI 49 LO 38 PRC. 0Fort Wayne HI 49 LO 39 PRC. 0

South Bend HI 48 LO 39 PRC. 0Indianapolis HI 50 LO 41 PRC. 0

Friday’s Statistics

BY AMY [email protected]

ANGOLA — Alleged killer Mafuz Huq will be in Steuben Superior Court Friday for pretrial hearings in two cases and a motion to move the murder proceed-ings out of the Steuben County courts.

Friday at 9 a.m., a hearing is set on Huq’s motion for a change of venue. Pretrial hearings will also be held in the 1988 murder case, which includes a Class D felony count of intimidation, and a 1988 burglary case, in which Huq is charged with three Class C felony counts of burglary and three Class D felony counts of theft. A trial is on the Superior Court calendar to start Dec. 9 and run through Dec. 13 in the murder case.

Huq, 47, is accused in the Aug. 9, 1989, death of Todd Kelley in Hamilton. Huq — who was extradited from New Delhi this year after being on the lam for more than 20 years — has an Indianapolis attorney

and Angola attorney Linda Wagoner. Wagoner has

asked for a change of venue due to pretrial publicity that spanned most of northeastern Indiana. She said the case would have

to be taken many counties away to assure Huq receives a fair trial.

The murder case, in which Huq allegedly killed his ex-girlfriend’s new boyfriend, has been kept alive through local lore and national airing on “America’s Most Wanted.” It again hit the limelight when Huq was arrested overseas and the long process began of returning him to the United States. He had been living in Bangla-desh, the home country of his parents, under the assumed name of Asif ul Huq, say investigators. He was arrested in February 2011 when he traveled to

New Delhi.Huq could receive life in

prison or death for murder. The case was fi led as part of an existing intimidation case. On July 25, 1989, Huq allegedly told his ex-girl-friend he would kill her if she was dating someone else.

In addition, Huq faces three Class C felony burglary charges, each carrying up to an eight-year prison sentence, and three Class D felony charges of theft. Huq allegedly acted as a look-out on two occasions while another man robbed the safe at a Fremont area truck stop where Huq was working. The burglaries occurred on Aug. 1, 1988, and Sept. 9, 1988, with more than $12,000 in total reported missing.

The third burglary alleges Huq broke into the home of a family friend in Angola’s Reddington Heights while his parents were holding a dinner party, taking $114,000 in jewelry from two jewelry boxes and a safe.

Accused killer returnsto Steuben court Friday

Huq

Gridiron Grill and Bar will be donated to the Save the Strand fund. A coupon is required.

• Wednesday, Dec. 11, 11 a.m. to closing — Ten percent of all food and drink purchases at Dawson’s American Grill will be donated to the Save the Strand fund. A coupon is required.

The MYAC group is working on scheduling other fundraisers and contacting

other donors.People may donate to the

Save the Strand fund online at kendallvillestrand.com or mail a donation to: Noble County Community Founda-tion, 1599 Lincolnway South, Ligonier, IN 46767 (put “Save the Strand” on check).

In addition to the Strand fundraiser, the MYAC group has taken on a campaign to educate the community about the many risk factors facing their peers. MYAC members

will be writing a column for this newspaper each month to discuss various topics — such as teen dating violence, drug and alcohol use and bullying. The group has also partnered with Drug Free Noble County to create public service announce-ments, including videos and radio PSAs, to encourage their peers to make smart choices and avoid risky behaviors.

This year’s MYAC members are Sam Meyer,

president; Nick Hostler, vice president; Carmen Johnson, treasurer; Alyssa Claymiller, secretary; Nate Kiersey/Zion Moulder, historians; Samantha Williams, youth council member; and Allison Hostler, Hailey Meyer, Tiffany Wilson and Lucas Graden.

For coupons, more information or an applica-tion to join MYAC, contact Johnson, any MYAC member or Mayor Handshoe at 347-0352.

STRAND: Group also making pressures facing today’s youth knownFROM PAGE A1

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H IG H SCHOOLG I R LS BAS KETBALL East Noble at Eastside, 1 p.m. Bethany Christ ian at West Noble, 6 p.m. Fremont at Lake-wood Park, 6 p.m. Prair ie Heights at Elkhart Christ ian, 6 p.m. F.W. North Side at DeKalb, 6:15 p.m. Lakeland Christ ian at The Howe School , 7 p.m.COLLEG ECROSS COU NTRY Trine in NCAA Divi-sion I I I Great Lakes Regional at Calvin: women’s race, 11 a.m. ; men’s race, 12:30 p.m.WR E STLI NG Trine Open, 9 a .m.FOOTBALL Trine at Alma, 1 p.m.WOMEN’S BASKETBALL Trine in consola-tion game at Wilm-ington’s (Ohio) Da-mon’s/Hampton Inn Tip-Off Tournament, t ime TBA

Area Events•

BLOOMINGTON (AP) — A young Indiana team saw on fi lm that it could play so much better. When the Hoosiers next review tape, they’ll have a hard time fi nding room for improvement.

Yogi Ferrell scored a career-high 26 points and added six assists to lead undefeated Indiana to a 105-59 rout of Samford on Friday. The Hoosiers led by as many as 51 points and are 3-0 for the fourth time in four seasons.

On Tuesday, the Hoosiers survived a last-second shot to pull out a tougher-than-expected, 73-72 victory over LIU-Brooklyn. They had no such troubles after two days of intensive study with coach Tom Crean.

“The Brooklyn game was a big wakeup call,” Ferrell said. “We noticed we had some things to work on. We worked on those. We tried to get an inside presence. We were looking to play inside-out. It really showed tonight.”

Indiana shot 57.1 percent from the fi eld, scored 56 points in the paint and outrebounded Samford 53-32. Noah Vonleh contributed 13 points and 10 rebounds, his third straight double-double to begin his college career, to help the Hoosiers improve to 10-0 all-time against Southern Conference opponents.

“The way we played the other night was a recipe for disaster,” Crean said. “It’s not like

we got any older these past couple days. I’m very encouraged by how our team responded. We did very little physical work on the fl oor. To a man, everybody improved.”

Undermanned Samford (1-2) fell behind quickly and never challenged. Indiana took a 10-point lead less than fi ve minutes into the game, went up 16 two minutes later and led by 20 for the fi rst time with 12:17 remaining in the half. The Bulldogs never got closer than 18 after that and trailed by at least 28 throughout the second half.

Defensively, Indiana blocked 10 shots and limited Samford to 29.9 percent shooting. Second-year coach Bennie Seltzer cringed as his players struggled with the Hoosiers’ abundant length, quickness and agility.

“That’s probably the most athletic team I’ve seen in a very long time,” said Seltzer, an assistant for four seasons at Indiana under Crean. “Those kids can switch in and out of all fi ve positions. That’s not normal.”

The Hoosiers made offense look even easier. Fourteen of their 18 baskets in the fi rst half came on dunks, layups and tip-ins. In the opening half, Indiana missed 17 shots and fi ve live ball free throws. On those 22 opportu-nities, the Hoosiers grabbed 12 offensive rebounds.

Nine Hoosiers scored at least six points in a balanced effort.

Hooisers win big

BY JAMES FISHERjfi [email protected]

LAGRANGE — When Lakeland’s Abi Thompson looks at the lineup around her on the fl oor, she sees familiar faces.

“We really know each other on the fl oor,” said the Lakeland junior, who scored a game-high 14 points as Lakeland defeated Bethany Christian 52-23 on Friday. “This year we have a lot of people contributing and it makes it tougher for other team’s defenses.”

The Lakers bring almost everyone back from last year’s team.

“We only lost two from last year,” said Lakeland coach Sheila Moore. “It’s

my second year here and the kids are starting to buy into the system.”

It was the second game of the season for both squads. The Bruins opened on Tuesday under eight-year coach Krysten Parson with a 39-27 win at Jimtown. Lakeland also opened its season on the road, falling 42-32 at Goshen.

Thompson led the Lakers in scoring and rebounding last season as a sophomore. She averaged nearly 12 points per game and had nine points and six rebounds to lead Lakeland in both categories during Tuesday’s opener with Goshen.

Seniors Ashtin Kaminer

and Carlee Richardson also bring lots of experi-ence into the new season. Kaminer averaged 6.3 points per game last season and led the team in assists. She fi nished Friday’s game with three points and had fi ve points and a team-high four steals in the opener at Goshen. Richardson scored seven points in Friday’s win and had six points and fi ve rebounds in the Goshen game.

Among the other seniors on the team are Michaela Moore, Blake Mullet, Amanda Miller and Cori Vaughn. Vaughn had eight points on Friday against Bethany Christian.

Lakers bring back experience

AP

Indiana’s Hanner Mosquerra-Perea (12) dunks between Samford’s Tim Williams, left, and Brandon Roberts during Friday’s game. The Hoosiers moved to 3-0 with a 105-59 win.

AP

Indiana Pacers forward David West, center, is fouled after grabbing a rebound during Friday’s game with the Milwaukee Bucks. The Pacers won 104-77 to move to 9-0 this season.

SEE HOOSIERS, PAGE B2

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Indiana’s Roy Hibbert had the perfect knockout combination Friday night.

On offense, he made all but two shots. On defense, he protected the rim. At the free-throw line, he couldn’t miss and no matter what the Bucks tried to stop the former All-Star center, nothing worked.

Hibbert fi nished with season-highs of 24 points and eight blocks and added 10 rebounds to lead unbeaten Indiana past Milwaukee 104-77 — the Pacers’ most lopsided rout in a 9-0 start.

“We have expectations and we want to win,” Hibbert said. “We want to play deep, deep into the playoffs. You gain confi dence with your teammates when we’re all on the same page and we all have one goal. Some guys on this team before were just trying to get a paycheck and go home and then chilling on the beach and sip mojitos or something like that. That’s not us. “

Pacers keep streak alive with rout

DETROIT (AP) — The Washington Capitals are the latest team to take advantage of the Detroit Red Wings’ generosity at home.

Nicklas Backstrom scored the only goal of the shootout, and the Capitals rallied from a two-goal defi cit to beat the Red Wings 4-3 on Friday night.

It was the Detroit’s seventh consecutive home loss and its 11th straight overtime loss at Joe Louis Arena.

“Very surprising. It just goes to show you how fi ckle the game is,” said Washington coach Adam Oates, who began his Hall of Fame playing career with Detroit in the mid-1980s. “The same team could win a zillion in a row.”

Brooks Laich, and Alex Ovechkin added goals, and Michale Latta scored his fi rst in the NHL for Washington. Braden Holtby made 30 saves.

Caps win over Red Wings

JAMES FISHER

Lakeland’s Abi Thompson looks inside during Friday’s 52-23 victory over Bethany Christian. Thompson led Lakeland with 14 points in the victory. SEE LAKERS, PAGE B2

SEE PACERS, PAGE B2 SEE WINGS, PAGE B2

B2 THE NEWS SUN kpcnews.com SPORTS •

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2013

EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) — Adreian Payne scored 26 points and No. 2 Michigan State avoided a stunning upset Friday night, holding off Columbia 62-53 in the fi nal minutes.

The Spartans (3-0) beat top-ranked Kentucky earlier in the week, and they’ll have a chance to move to the top of next week’s AP Top 25, but only after trailing for a majority of the second half against the poised, patient Lions (1-2).

Maodo Lo had 12 points for Columbia.

Michigan State scored the game’s fi rst nine points, but the Spartans trailed 26-22 at halftime and didn’t lead again until Gary Harris’ three-point play put Michigan State ahead 49-46 with 7:28 to go.

The Spartans held Columbia

without a fi eld goal for the fi nal 4:27.

No. 3 Louisville 99, Cornell 54Kevin Ware scored quickly in

his return for No. 3 Louisville and the defending NCAA champion Cardinals beat Cornell for their school-record 19th straight win.

Ware shattered his leg during last season’s Midwest Regional fi nal. He played in an exhibition this season, then sat out the fi rst two games for the Cardinals (3-0).

Ware had fi ve points and two rebounds in 13 minutes. He scored just 17 seconds after checking in with 14:06 left in the fi rst half, splitting defenders on a drive to cap a 20-point run that put Louisville ahead 22-2.

Wayne Blackshear led the Cardinals (3-0) with 20 points. Chane Behanan added 13 points

and 12 rebounds.Nolan Cressler scored 10 points

for Cornell (0-4).No. 4 Duke 97,

Florida Atlantic 64Rodney Hood scored a career-

high 28 points, Jabari Parker added 21 and No. 4 Duke routed Florida Atlantic.

Parker had his third straight 20-point performance and also got 10 rebounds. He became the fi rst freshman in coach Mike Krzyze-wski’s 34 seasons at Duke to begin his career with three consec-utive 20-point games.

Andre Dawkins had 17 points for Duke. The Blue Devils (2-1) bounced back from a 94-83 loss to No. 5 Kansas.

Pablo Bertone had 17 points to lead FAU (1-2).

The Blue Devils have won 103

straight nonconference games at Cameron Indoor Stadium. The last non-ACC team to beat them there was the 2000 St. John’s team whose coach, Mike Jarvis, is now in charge at FAU.

No. 8 Oklahoma State 97, Arkansas-Pine Bluff 63

Phil Forte and Markel Brown each scored 22 points and No. 8 Oklahoma State beat Arkansas-Pine Bluff.

Marcus Smart added 16 points for the Cowboys (3-0). Le’Bryan Nash had nine points and a game-high eight rebounds.

The Cowboys led by 12 early in the second half before going on a 32-4 run, with four 3s by Forte making it 82-42.

Tevin Hammond scored 15 points for the Lions (2-1). DeAndre McIntyre and Davon

Haynes each added 13.No. 12 North Carolina 62,

Holy Cross 54Marcus Paige scored a career-

high 23 points to help No. 12 North Carolina push its way past Holy Cross in the Hall of Fame Tipoff Tournament.

Paige scored 16 points after halftime and joined with fellow sophomore Brice Johnson to give the Tar Heels (2-0) the spark they needed to break free from a 35-all tie.

Johnson fi nished with 12 points for his second double-fi gure scoring output in two games for UNC, which again played without leading scorer P.J. Hairston and senior guard Leslie McDonald due to NCAA eligibility concerns.

Malachi Alexander scored 13 to lead Holy Cross (1-2).

Spartans hold off upset-minded Columbia

Juniors Becca Levitz and Nicole McKibben are also part of the experienced returning lineup. Levitz averaged six points per game last season and was among the team leaders in steals and assists. Levitz struck with 11 points on Friday.

“We’ve been really working hard on defense,” Moore said.

That showed on Friday. After giving up the opening bucket of the game, the Lakers didn’t allow another point until the fi nal moments of the quarter. The effort gave Lakeland a quick 11-3 lead.

“We came out, didn’t want to underestimate them, and wanted to show them what we have,” Thompson said. “We just really stepped it up on defense. It’s different than it has felt the last few years at Lakeland. It feels really good.”

In between Bethany’s fi rst-period scores, the Lakers scored 11 unanswered points, six from Thompson. Richardson hit a triple and Levitz also scored a bucket.

A putback basket by Mackenzie Loy took the margin to double-digits for the fi rst time as the second stanza began.

Lakeland would close the half with a Thompson bucket and two steals and scores by Levitz to lead 22-10 at the break.

The margin went to over 20 with a 7-0 run midway through the third period. Thompson had two buckets during the run, with Levitz, Vaughn and Molly Landers

also coming through with points.

The Lakers took a commanding 39-18 lead into the fi nal quarter.

“The kids played hard from the fi rst to the fourth quarter,” Moore said. “Hard work is starting to pay off.”

Lakeland will take to the road for fi ve of its next six games, beginning next Tuesday at Wawasee. The Lakers are home on Friday in the team’s NECC opener, then play away games at Central Noble, Angola, East Noble and Fremont.

LAKERS: Bethany limited to 3 points in 1st quarterFROM PAGE B1

JAMES FISHER

Lakeland coach Sheila Moore talks with her team during a time out on Friday.

JAMES FISHER

Lakeland’s Ashtin Kaminer brings the ball upcourt during Friday’s victory over Bethany Christian.

They got 43 points from their bench. Indiana repeatedly attacked the rim, pushed the ball in transition and earned 41 free throws, making 27.

Orchestrating it all was Ferrell, who made 8 of 11 shots and hit a career-high fi ve 3-pointers in seven attempts. He only needed to play 25 minutes to lead Indiana to its highest point total since scoring 107 against Howard on Dec. 19, 2011.

“Yogi had his best game at Indiana,” Crean said. “You could see it coming the way he absorbed fi lm from Tuesday. He let the

game come to him. He made the game easier and better for everyone else.”

After leading 54-25 at halftime, Indiana barely eased up despite working in more reserves. Thirteen Hoosiers played in the fi rst half. By night’s end, all 18 players had seen action.

Evan Gordon and Troy Williams had 10 points apiece for Indiana. Hanner Mosquera-Perea added a career-high eight points, including a thunderous, one-handed putback dunk in the second half.

Constantly winning battles for position down low, Vonleh became the fi rst Hoosier to begin a

season with three straight double-doubles since D.J. White in 2007-08.

Samford was led by 15 points from Tyler Hood. The Bulldogs, picked to fi nish fourth in the Southern Conference, have gone seven straight seasons without a winning record.

“Bennie’s a warrior,” Crean said. “I know what he’s about. He knows the game so well. It’s going to be there for them, there’s no question about it.”

With 1:47 remaining, Crean stopped the game following a timeout and took a microphone to say a few words in honor of longtime offi cial Ed Hightower.

HOOSIERS: All 18 players see action during gameFROM PAGE B1

The Capitals rallied from a 3-1 defi cit in the third period to tie the game and send it into overtime.

“It’s a huge win. That’s a good team,” said Ovechkin, who trimmed the led to 3-2 early in the third. “Everyone knows what they have out there and how good they are. They got a 3-1 lead, and we kept pushing.”

Johan Franzen had two goals and an assist, and Danny DeKeyser had a goal and an assist for Detroit. Jakub Kindl had two assists, and Jimmy Howard made 34 saves.

“Same thing, same outcome but we can’t get frustrated, can’t get discouraged,” Howard said. “Somehow, some way keep a positive mind frame in here and just continue to keep going out there and working because we’re doing a lot of good things.

“It’s tough to take over a game for a full 60 minutes. There’s going to be waves and ups and downs. Mistakes happen, we’re just going to have to fi nd a way to overcome them.”

Latta tied it 3-3 with 8:06 left in regulation when he poked in a loose puck from just outside the slot.

“Obviously nice to get it when it meant so much, and not a 7-0 game,” Latta said.

Ovechkin had brought Washington within 3-2 at 3:19 of the third period with his 15th goal. He beat Howard with a one-timed shot from the bottom of the left circle.

DeKeyser’s power-play goal with 18 seconds

remaining in the second period gave Detroit a 3-1 lead. He put in a one-timed shot from the right circle for his second goal.

Holtby made a spectac-ular toe save — with the puck right along the goal line — on Tomas Tatar’s wraparound attempt with 5:50 left in the first period.

Laich opened the scoring 5:50 into the game when he backhanded in his own rebound after skating in off the right wing following a turnover by DeKeyser in the neutral zone.

Franzen then scored twice to put Detroit ahead.

His power-play goal with 4:08 left in the fi rst tied it at 1. He beat Holtby with a screened snap shot from the left circle. Franzen struck again with 2:18 left when he put in a one-timed shot from the bottom of the left circle for his fourth goal of the season.

Kings 2, Devils 0Dwight King and Anze

Kopitar scored third-pe-riod goals, and Ben Scrivens made 26 saves to lift Los Angeles over New Jersey.

King’s sixth goal of the season came at 13:08. Defenseman Jake Muzzin’s drive from the left point was redirected by King, standing in front of goalie Cory Schneider.

Kopitar scored an empty-net goal with 2.9 seconds left. Schneider made 19 saves.

It was the Kings’ first visit to New Jersey since they beat the Devils in the 2012 Stanley Cup finals.

Penguins 4, Predators 1James Neal and Brandon

Sutter each had a goal and an assist, and Pittsburgh snapped a three-game losing streak by beating Nashville.

Playing in his fourth game of the season, Neal — a former 40-goal scorer — netted his fi rst of the season late in the fi rst period to give the Penguins a lead they didn’t relinquish against the road-weary Predators.

Nashville lost the fi nal four of a franchise-record, 17-day, seven-game trip. Gabriel Bourque scored 2:28 in but the Predators were held to fewer than two goals for the fourth consec-utive game.

Pascal Dupuis and Kris Letang also scored, and Evgeni Malkin extended his point streak to six with two assists for Pittsburgh. Marc-Andre Fleury made 17 saves to improve to 8-2 at home.

The Penguins have held opponents under three goals in seven of eight games.

Nashville fell to 7-1-2 when scoring fi rst.

Senators 4, Bruins 2Jason Spezza, Jared

Cowen and Bobby Ryan scored third-period goals, and Ottawa earned a comeback victory against Boston.

The Senators ended the Bruins’ 11-game winning streak in Ottawa.

Chris Neil also scored for the Senators (8-7-4), who were coming off a 5-0 loss to the Philadelphia Flyers.

Craig Anderson was solid in stopping 30 shots.

WINGS: Franzen has two goals and one assistFROM PAGE B1

Hibbert was referring to the teams he played on when he fi rst arrived in Indy.

There’s no doubt that philosophy has changed. On Friday, the Pacers followed the same blue-collar script they’ve used to win their fi rst nine.

Milwaukee had a season-low point total, fi nished well below its season average of 93.7 points, and shot just 34.1 percent against the league’s No. 1 defense. It’s the fourth time Indiana has held an opponent to 80 or fewer points this season and it’s the second time this week.

Now, after becoming the fi rst team in the league to start 9-0 since Dallas in 2002-03, Indiana has a chance to reach even more milestones.

The defending Central Division champs head to Chicago on Saturday with a chance to become the 14th team in league history to go 10-0 and they can break the longest winning streak in the franchise’s NBA history. Indiana also won nine straight from Nov. 2-22 in 2002. Another win also would put them on the precipice of the longest winning streak in Pacers history (11), which stretches all the way back to 1972-73, when they were still in the ABA.

About the only bad move coach Frank Vogel made Friday was pulling Hibbert early rather than allowing him to try and become the second Pacers player this

week to post a triple-double.Hibbert, true to form,

didn’t care. He’d rather beat Chicago anyway for the second time in 10 days and at least lock up a tie in the season series against their fi ercest division rival.

“You know what? I look at the bigger picture. We have Chicago tomorrow, might as well just get a little bit a rest,” Hibbert said. “A triple-double would have been great, but one of these times, everything’s going to line-up, the stars, moon, sun, everything’s going to line up and I’ll have one of those.”

So Hibbert focused on his job.

While Indiana’s top scorer Paul George struggled to get open in the fi rst half, Hibbert scorched the Bucks for 14 points, seven rebounds and fi ve blocks in just 15 minutes. After making halftime adjustments, the Bucks still couldn’t stop the 7-foot-2 center, whom Vogel called the early front-runner for defensive player of the year.

And this time, Hibbert was just as profi cient on the offensive end. He knocked down 8 of 10 shots from the fi eld, made all eight of his free throws and dominated the matchup with feisty Zaza Pachulia, who played with a sore right foot.

“We threw what we had at him, but it didn’t seem to affect him at all,” Bucks coach Larry Drew said. “You try to take something away and you give something else up. They

played well. That team’s playing really well.”

George fi nished with 22 points, 17 in the second half. Lance Stephenson, who had his fi rst triple double Monday night, had 11 points and four rebounds during a game in which the Pacers fell behind twice in the fi rst quarter, for just 64 seconds.

Injury-riddled Milwaukee (2-6) has now dropped four straight. O.J. Mayo led the Bucks with 20 points, and his only teammates to reach double fi gures were Khris Middleton and Gary Neal, who each had 11.

They just didn’t have a chance against the league’s hottest team.

Coming off of a three-day break, Indiana started sluggishly, then used an 11-2 run to put Milwaukee in a 21-14 hole. The Pacers never looked back.

Indiana closed the fi rst quarter on an 8-3 spurt to make it 31-21, extended the lead to 53-37 at the half and then pulled away in the third quarter when George accounted for six points in a 7-2 spurt and George and Hibbert accounted for all seven points in a 7-0 spurt to make it 68-53.

Milwaukee never got closer than 11 again.

“Every game could be the difference between home-court advantage and not having home-court advantage,” Vogel said. “It doesn’t matter. We’re on a mission and we’re trying to put ourselves in best possible position come playoff time. “

PACERS: Indiana considers every game importantFROM PAGE B1

SPORTS BRIEFS•

Jimmie Johnson has 6th NASCAR title well within reach

HOMESTEAD, Fla. (AP) — There was no trash talking, no attempts at mind games. If there was tension or nerves, nobody could tell.

In one of the tamest NASCAR title contenders’ news conferences in recent memory, Matt Kenseth and Kevin Harvick kept it light and breezy as they discussed their championship chances against Jimmie Johnson.

Why? “Maybe because he’s ahead by 28 points?” Kenseth said. “If he was building his own engine, I’d be messing with him right now.”

Alas, Johnson won’t be building his own engine for the season fi nale at Homestead-Miami Speedway, where he needs only to fi nish 23rd or better to win his sixth Sprint Cup title. For Johnson, who has a 4.66 average fi nish through the fi rst nine Chase races, it’s an easy Sunday drive.

“I think Jimmie could run (23rd) through the grass or with three wheels,” Kenseth said. “He’s going to have to have a mechanical problem or crash to make something happen.”

But nothing is a given in auto racing, as Johnson learned last year as he raced Brad Keselowski for the title.

Johnson went in to the penultimate race with a seven-point lead in the standings only to suffer a tire failure at Phoenix. It gave Keselowski a slight lead going into the fi nale, but Johnson had a mechanical failure that handed Keselowski his fi rst championship.

Johnson, who reeled off a record fi ve titles from 2006 through 2010, came up empty for a second consecutive year.

“Last year was a good lesson for me, and I think I’m carrying some of that experience now in dealing with this,” Johnson said. “We felt like things were going our way, we have the points lead, we go to Phoenix, the wheels fall off, literally.”

Tony Stewart tells a story from one of his sprint car championships when he went into the fi nale third in the standings with only a mathematical chance at winning the title. The driver second in the standings broke an oil fi lter early and blew up, then Stewart passed the points leader during the race, circled back around to the spot of the pass and saw the leader had crashed.

Prep Girls BasketballAttica 65, N. Montgomery 42Benton Central 59, Seeger 40Bluffton 27, Manchester 24Boone Grove 28, Calumet 23Brown Co. 75, Edinburgh 26Caston 43, LaCrosse 26Clay City 75, Eminence 21Clinton Central 45, University 28Columbia City 81, Whitko 68Columbus North 57, Martinsville 35Corydon 53, Perry Central 41Covenant Christian 48, Cascade 46Covington 49, S. Newton 20DeKalb 45, Angola 38Dubois 34, Orleans 27Ev. Central 56, Mt. Vernon (Posey) 52Floyd Central 77, Ev. Harrison 69Franklin 69, Greensburg 39Glenn 58, Argos 37Greenfi eld 50, Cambridge City 22Indiana Deaf 99, Indpls Fall Creek 9Indpls Manual 46, Indpls Metro 36Indpls Perry Meridian 48, Decatur Central 39Jac-Cen-Del 57, Rising Sun 31Jay Co. 35, Monroe Central 28Jeffersonville 65, N. Harrison 46Knightstown 57, Indian Creek 42Kokomo 51, Northwestern 41Lakeland 52, Bethany Christian 23Lakeland Christian 42, S. Bend Career Academy 10LaPorte 108, S. Bend Clay 31Lawrence Central 56, Indpls Northwest 12Lawrenceburg 62, S. Ripley 47Leo 65, Carroll (Ft. Wayne) 61Liberty Christian 60, Christel House Academy 38Logansport 74, McCutcheon 49Madison 74, Switzerland Co. 37Marion 65, Madison-Grant 30Mooresville 42, Indpls N. Central 39Morristown 53, Southmont 51Mt. Vernon (Fortville) 48, Conners-ville 33Muncie Central 60, Delta 35Munster 47, Chesterton 41N. Decatur 50, Union Co. 24Noblesville 75, Hamilton Hts. 59NorthWood 51, S. Bend Washington 48Plainfi eld 55, Danville 44Princeton 65, Ev. Bosse 51Randolph Southern 79, Wes-Del 11Richmond 80, Centerville 36Rochester 57, Culver Academy 41S. Bend Adams 88, Michigan City 28S. Knox 45, Pike Central 35Scottsburg 82, Jennings Co. 47Seymour 60, Silver Creek 40Taylor 44, N. Miami 34Tri-West 57, Crawfordsville 41Triton 70, N. Judson 32Triton Central 87, Indpls Park Tudor 10Union City 45, Seton Catholic 27W. Central 48, Morgan Twp. 22Wabash 52, Mississinewa 28Westview 61, Wawasee 46Henryville Tip-Off TournamentPool PlayPool AHenryville 58, Clarksville 28Pool BCrothersville 41, Madison Shawe 38Providence 67, Christian Academy 26Terre Haute Tip-Off TournamentChampionshipTerre Haute North 58, Terre Haute South 45

Indiana HS Football PlayoffsSemistatesCLASS 6ACarmel 28, Penn 13Warren Central 12, Center Grove 7RegionalsCLASS 5AConcord 34, Mishawaka 14Westfi eld 36, Ft. Wayne Snider 7Indpls Cathedral 56, Whiteland 28Terre Haute North 56, Bloomington North 21CLASS 4AE. Chicago 38, New Prairie 37, OTFt. Wayne Dwenger 42, New Haven 7New Palestine 27, Indpls Chatard 14Columbus East 42, Jasper 0CLASS 3AAndrean 27, Jimtown 7W. Lafayette 25, FW Concordia 21Indpls Brebeuf 38, Guerin Catholic 17Gibson Southern 44, Brownstown 29CLASS 2ARensselaer 24, Bremen 0Tipton 56, Oak Hill 2Indpls Ritter 28, Indpls Scecina 14Paoli 24, Southridge 20CLASS 1AWinamac 28, Pioneer 14Tri-Central 28, S. Adams 7Eastern Hancock 29, S. Putnam 14Linton 47, Fountain Central 28

NASCAR Sprint Cup Ford EcoBoost 400 Lineup

After Friday qualifying; race SundayAt Homestead-Miami SpeedwayHomestead, Fla.Lap length: 1.5 miles(Car number in parentheses)1. (20) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 177.667 mph.2. (78) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 177.445.3. (22) Joey Logano, Ford, 177.282.4. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 177.061.5. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 176.846.6. (29) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 176.655.7. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 176.598.8. (56) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 176.436.9. (17) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 176.436.10. (55) Elliott Sadler, Toyota, 176.413.11. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 176.355.12. (27) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 176.355.13. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 176.304.14. (31) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 175.747.15. (39) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 175.73.16. (16) Greg Biffl e, Ford, 175.69.17. (21) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 175.507.18. (99) Carl Edwards, Ford, 175.433.19. (43) Aric Almirola, Ford, 175.376.20. (51) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 175.353.21. (88) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 175.347.22. (14) Mark Martin, Chevrolet, 175.273.23. (9) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 175.109.24. (10) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 175.092.25. (15) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 174.78.26. (24) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 174.61.27. (42) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 174.537.28. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 174.329.29. (34) David Ragan, Ford, 174.317.30. (30) Parker Kligerman, Toyota, 173.171.31. (38) David Gilliland, Ford, 173.099.32. (83) David Reutimann, Toyota, 172.563.33. (93) Travis Kvapil, Toyota, 172.287.34. (98) Michael McDowell, Ford, 172.26.35. (35) Josh Wise, Ford, 172.046.36. (47) A J Allmendinger, Toyota, 171.734.37. (36) J.J. Yeley, Chevrolet, Owner Points.38. (7) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, Owner Points.39. (33) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, Owner Points.40. (13) Casey Mears, Ford, Owner Points.41. (32) Ken Schrader, Ford, Owner Points.42. (87) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, Owner Points.43. (40) Tony Raines, Chevrolet, Owner Points.

NASCAR Camping World Trucks Ford EcoBoost 200

Friday’s resultsAt Homestead-Miami SpeedwayHomestead, Fla.Lap length: 1.5 miles(Start position in parentheses)1. (12) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 148 laps, 136.8 rating, 0 points.2. (1) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 148, 138.5, 44.3. (15) Jeb Burton, Chevrolet, 148, 113.4, 41.4. (13) Brendan Gaughan, Chevrolet, 148, 104.1, 40.

5. (11) Ron Hornaday Jr., Chevrolet, 148, 96.5, 0.6. (14) John Wes Townley, Toyota, 148, 89.6, 38.7. (20) German Quiroga, Toyota, 148, 92.9, 37.8. (5) Ross Chastain, Ford, 148, 84.2, 37.9. (19) Timothy Peters, Toyota, 148, 77.4, 35.10. (9) Cale Gale, Chevrolet, 148, 79.9, 34.11. (10) Miguel Paludo, Chevrolet, 148, 71.5, 33.12. (22) Ryan Sieg, Chevrolet, 148, 70.8, 32.13. (6) James Buescher, Chevrolet, 148, 82.8, 31.14. (3) Ty Dillon, Chevrolet, 148, 102.4, 30.15. (18) Darrell Wallace Jr., Toyota, 148, 76, 29.16. (2) Johnny Sauter, Toyota, 148, 101, 29.17. (30) Jimmy Weller III, Toyota, 148, 46.3, 27.18. (26) Jeff Agnew, Chevrolet, 148, 45, 26.19. (32) B.J. McLeod, Chevrolet, 148, 40.7, 25.20. (7) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 148, 88.6, 0.21. (8) Matt Crafton, Toyota, 148, 97.7, 24.22. (16) Max Gresham, Chevrolet, 148, 63.9, 22.23. (21) Dakoda Armstrong, Chevrolet, 148, 54.2, 21.24. (27) Frank Kimmel, Toyota, 148, 50.6, 20.25. (28) Mason Mingus, Chevrolet, 148, 49.8, 19.26. (34) D.J. Kennington, Chevrolet, 147, 35.7, 18.27. (25) Joey Coulter, Toyota, 142, 54.6, 17.28. (35) Norm Benning, Chevrolet, 140, 31.5, 16.29. (23) Brennan Newberry, Chevrolet, accident, 135, 49.6, 15.30. (17) Ben Kennedy, Chevrolet, engine, 103, 53.5, 14.31. (4) Nelson Piquet Jr., Chevrolet, accident, 101, 63.1, 0.32. (33) Spencer Gallagher, Chevrolet, accident, 101, 40, 12.33. (24) Chad McCumbee, Ford, power steering, 42, 36.5, 11.34. (36) Travis Kvapil, Chevrolet, rear gear, 5, 31.1, 0.35. (29) Chris Jones, Chevrolet, transmission, 3, 29.7, 9.36. (31) J.J. Yeley, Toyota, fuel pump, 2, 28.7, 0.Race StatisticsAverage Speed of Race Winner: 109.225 mph.Time of Race: 2 hours, 1 minute, 57 seconds.Margin of Victory: 0.081 seconds.Caution Flags: 8 for 37 laps.Lead Changes: 13 among 6 drivers.Lap Leaders: R.Blaney 1-8; J.Sauter 9-10; R.Blaney 11-49; M.Crafton 50-61; R.Blaney 62-65; K.Busch 66-77; R.Blaney 78-93; K.Busch 94-96; R.Chastain 97-98; K.Busch 99-112; A.Dillon 113-114; K.Busch 115; A.Dillon 116; K.Busch 117-148.Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led): R.Blaney, 4 times for 67 laps; K.Busch, 5 times for 62 laps; M.Crafton, 1 time for 12 laps; A.Dillon, 2 times for 3 laps; R.Chastain, 1 time for 2 laps; J.Sauter, 1 time for 2 laps.Top 10 in Points: 1. M.Crafton, 804; 2. T.Dillon, 764; 3. J.Buescher, 761; 4. J.Sauter, 732; 5. J.Burton, 731; 6. R.Blaney, 726; 7. B.Gaughan, 717; 8. D.Wallace Jr., 704; 9. M.Paludo, 697; 10. T.Peters, 683.

Men’s College BasketballEASTAlderson-Broaddus 66, Shippensburg 57Fordham 80, Lehigh 72Hartford 74, Fairleigh Dickinson 60Harvard 76, Howard 44Mt. St. Vincent 67, Centenary (NJ) 65NJIT 89, Army 85Rhode Island 72, NC A&T 59Salisbury 86, Washington (Md.) 73St. John’s 73, Wagner 57Thiel 72, Lynchburg 69Utica 82, St. Lawrence 81William Paterson 96, FDU-Florham 77SOUTHAlbany (Ga.) 100, Georgia College 98, 3OTAsbury at WV Parkersburg, ccd.Berea 84, Va. Intermont 67Blue Mountain 82, Southern Poly St. 64Charlotte 83, Elon 69Duke 97, FAU 64Emory & Henry 89, Huntingdon 73Erskine 75, Toccoa Falls 47Florida Gulf Coast 70, Furman 69Georgia Tech 80, Georgia 71Louisville 99, Cornell 54McNeese St. 92, Louisiana College 83Norfolk St. 92, Virginia Union 84North Carolina 62, Holy Cross 54Northwestern St. 111, Auburn 92Old Dominion 70, Murray St. 60Randolph 77, Christendom 35Southern Wesleyan 64, Spring Hill 58UNC Asheville 67, Coll. of Charleston 58, OTUNC Pembroke 76, Limestone 64UT-Martin 79, Rochester (Mich.) 64Vanderbilt 80, Lipscomb 69Virginia Tech 79, W. Carolina 61Wake Forest 69, Presbyterian 48MIDWESTBradley 77, Chicago St. 64Indiana 105, Samford 59James Madison 60, N. Illinois 55Michigan St. 62, Columbia 53Milwaukee 64, San Jose St. 61Minn. St.-Mankato 94, Waldorf 50Minn.-Crookston 76, Northland 68South Florida 75, Bowling Green 61St. Ambrose 111, Indiana-East 95Wayne (Neb.) 85, Mount Marty 64Xavier 79, Morehead St. 56SOUTHWESTArkansas 76, Louisiana-Lafayette 63Cleveland St. 83, Texas-Arlington 73Oklahoma St. 97, Ark.-Pine Bluff 63Texas 72, Stephen F. Austin 62Texas A&M 68, Rice 65Texas A&M-CC 72, IPFW 71Texas-Pan American 81, Tennessee Tech 78FAR WESTArizona St. 88, Idaho St. 60Boise St. 110, Simpson (Cal.) 53TOURNAMENTCarson-Newman ClassicFirst RoundCarson-Newman 97, Barton 69Tusculum 110, Trevecca Nazarene 106

IU Basketball SummaryINDIANA 105, SAMFORD 59SAMFORD (1-2)T. Williams 3-8 4-6 10, Hood 5-11 2-5 15, Wilson 0-4 0-0 0, Miller 0-6 0-0 0, Kelly 3-9 1-2 10, Enechionyia 0-1 0-0 0, Roberts 2-8 2-3 6, I. Williams 4-10 1-1 10, Thompson 0-0 0-0 0, Bailey 0-1 2-2 2, Capps 1-3 0-1 2, Adams 1-2 0-0 2, Bradley 1-4 0-0 2, Ikezu 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 20-67 12-20 59.INDIANA (3-0)Sheehey 2-3 2-2 6, Vonleh 3-7 7-9 13, Williams 5-9 0-1 10, Ferrell 8-11 5-7 26, Hollowell 3-5 0-1 7, Calomeris 1-1 0-0 2, Marlin 0-0 0-0 0, Gordon 3-6 4-8 10, Mosquera-Perea 3-6 2-2 8, Etherington 0-2 0-0 0, Davis 3-4 1-3 7, Wayer 0-1 0-0 0, Fagan 0-0 0-0 0, Robinson 2-2 3-4 7, Howard 0-0 0-0 0, Hartman 2-3 1-2 5, Jurkin 0-1 2-2 2, Fischer 1-2 0-0 2. Totals 36-63 27-41 105.Halftime—Indiana 54-25. 3-Point Goals—Samford 7-25 (Hood 3-5, Kelly 3-7, I. Williams 1-4, Capps 0-1, Bailey 0-1, Roberts 0-3, Miller 0-4), Indiana 6-15 (Ferrell 5-7, Hollowell 1-1, Sheehey 0-1, Wayer 0-1, Etherington 0-1, Hartman 0-1, Vonleh 0-1, Williams 0-1, Gordon 0-1). Fouled Out—Bradley, Capps. Rebounds—Samford 32 (T. Williams 9), Indiana 53 (Vonleh 10). Assists—Samford 14 (Wilson 7), Indiana 9 (Ferrell 6). Total Fouls—Samford 28, Indiana 17. A—17,472.

NFL StandingsAMERICAN CONFERENCEEast W L T Pct PF PANew England 7 2 0 .778 234 175N.Y. Jets 5 4 0 .556 169 231Miami 4 5 0 .444 193 209Buffalo 3 7 0 .300 199 259

South W L T Pct PF PAIndianapolis 7 3 0 .700 252 220Tennessee 4 6 0 .400 227 226Houston 2 7 0 .222 170 248Jacksonville 1 8 0 .111 115 291North W L T Pct PF PACincinnati 6 4 0 .600 234 186Cleveland 4 5 0 .444 172 197Baltimore 4 5 0 .444 188 189Pittsburgh 3 6 0 .333 179 218West W L T Pct PF PAKansas City 9 0 0 1.000 215 111Denver 8 1 0 .889 371 238San Diego 4 5 0 .444 212 202Oakland 3 6 0 .333 166 223NATIONAL CONFERENCEEast W L T Pct PF PADallas 5 5 0 .500 274 258Philadelphia 5 5 0 .500 252 244N.Y. Giants 3 6 0 .333 165 243Washington 3 6 0 .333 230 287South W L T Pct PF PANew Orleans 7 2 0 .778 265 163Carolina 6 3 0 .667 214 115Atlanta 2 7 0 .222 186 251Tampa Bay 1 8 0 .111 146 209North W L T Pct PF PADetroit 6 3 0 .667 238 216Chicago 5 4 0 .556 259 247Green Bay 5 4 0 .556 245 212Minnesota 2 7 0 .222 220 279West W L T Pct PF PASeattle 9 1 0 .900 265 159San Francisco 6 3 0 .667 227 155Arizona 5 4 0 .556 187 198St. Louis 4 6 0 .400 224 234Thursday, Nov. 14Indianapolis 30, Tennessee 27Sunday, Nov. 17Baltimore at Chicago, 1 p.m.Oakland at Houston, 1 p.m.N.Y. Jets at Buffalo, 1 p.m.Atlanta at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m.Detroit at Pittsburgh, 1 p.m.Washington at Philadelphia, 1 p.m.Cleveland at Cincinnati, 1 p.m.Arizona at Jacksonville, 1 p.m.San Diego at Miami, 4:05 p.m.Minnesota at Seattle, 4:25 p.m.San Francisco at New Orleans, 4:25 p.m.Green Bay at N.Y. Giants, 4:25 p.m.Kansas City at Denver, 8:30 p.m.Open: Dallas, St. LouisMonday, Nov. 18New England at Carolina, 8:40 p.m.Thursday, Nov. 21New Orleans at Atlanta, 8:25 p.m.Sunday, Nov. 24Minnesota at Green Bay, 1 p.m.Jacksonville at Houston, 1 p.m.San Diego at Kansas City, 1 p.m.Chicago at St. Louis, 1 p.m.Pittsburgh at Cleveland, 1 p.m.Tampa Bay at Detroit, 1 p.m.N.Y. Jets at Baltimore, 1 p.m.Carolina at Miami, 1 p.m.Tennessee at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.Indianapolis at Arizona, 4:05 p.m.Dallas at N.Y. Giants, 4:25 p.m.Denver at New England, 8:30 p.m.Open: Buffalo, Cincinnati, Philadelphia, SeattleMonday, Nov. 25San Francisco at Washington, 8:40 p.m.

NFL Colts SummaryLate Thursdayat Nashville, Tenn.Indianapolis 0 6 17 7—30Tennessee 14 3 0 10—27First QuarterTen—C.Johnson 30 run (Bironas kick), 11:36.Ten—C.Johnson 7 run (Bironas kick), 4:06.Second QuarterInd—FG Vinatieri 48, 11:26.Ten—FG Bironas 25, 2:32.Ind—FG Vinatieri 30, :00.Third QuarterInd—D.Brown 6 run (Vinatieri kick), 8:33.Ind—Luck 11 run (Vinatieri kick), 7:36.Ind—FG Vinatieri 50, 1:27.Fourth QuarterTen—FG Bironas 38, 11:39.Ind—D.Brown 11 run (Vinatieri kick), 3:01.Ten—Walker 19 pass from Fitzpatrick (Bironas kick), 1:54.A—69,143.Team Statistics Ind TenFirst downs 24 20Total Net Yards 366 340Rushes-yards 32-137 24-122Passing 229 218Punt Returns 2-15 1-4Kickoff Returns 4-76 3-63Interceptions Ret. 0-0 0-0Comp-Att-Int 23-36-0 22-28-0Sacked-Yards Lost 1-3 2-4Punts 3-37.0 3-39.0Fumbles-Lost 0-0 1-1Penalties-Yards 5-51 4-34Time of Possession 32:23 27:37INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHING—Indianapolis, D.Brown 14-80, Luck 9-31, Richardson 8-22, Havili 1-4. Tennessee, C.Johnson 17-86, Fitzpatrick 4-26, Greene 3-10.PASSING—Indianapolis, Luck 23-36-0-232. Tenn., Fitzpatrick 22-28-0-222.RECEIVING—Ind., Fleener 8-107, Hilton 5-44, Richardson 5-31, D.Brown 1-14, Saunders 1-11, Heyward-Bey 1-10, Havili 1-9, Whalen 1-6. Tenn., Walker 10-91, Wright 9-80, Washington 2-53, C.Johnson 1-(minus 2).MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.

NBA StandingsEASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division W L Pct GBPhiladelphia 5 5 .500 —Toronto 4 6 .400 1Boston 4 6 .400 1New York 3 5 .375 1Brooklyn 2 5 .286 1½Southeast Division W L Pct GBMiami 6 3 .667 —Atlanta 5 4 .556 1Charlotte 5 4 .556 1Orlando 4 5 .444 2Washington 2 6 .250 3½Central Division W L Pct GBIndiana 9 0 1.000 —Chicago 4 3 .571 4Cleveland 3 7 .300 6½Detroit 2 5 .286 6Milwaukee 2 6 .250 6½WESTERN CONFERENCESouthwest Division W L Pct GBSan Antonio 9 1 .900 —Houston 6 4 .600 3Dallas 5 4 .556 3½Memphis 3 5 .375 5New Orleans 3 6 .333 5½Northwest Division W L Pct GBPortland 7 2 .778 —Oklahoma City 5 3 .625 1½Minnesota 6 4 .600 1½Denver 4 4 .500 2½Utah 1 9 .100 6½Pacifi c Division W L Pct GBL.A. Clippers 6 3 .667 —Golden State 6 3 .667 —Phoenix 5 3 .625 ½L.A. Lakers 4 6 .400 2½Sacramento 2 5 .286 3Thursday’s GamesHouston 109, New York 106Golden State 116, Oklahoma City 115Friday’s GamesIndiana 104, Milwaukee 77Chicago 96, Toronto 80Portland 109, Boston 96Charlotte 86, Cleveland 80Miami 110, Dallas 104Atlanta 113, Philadelphia 103Denver 117, Minnesota 113San Antonio 91, Utah 82Brooklyn at Phoenix, lateMemphis at L.A. Lakers, lateDetroit at Sacramento, lateSaturday’s GamesDallas at Orlando, 7 p.m.Cleveland at Washington, 7 p.m.Miami at Charlotte, 7 p.m.Atlanta at New York, 7:30 p.m.Indiana at Chicago, 8 p.m.Boston at Minnesota, 8 p.m.Denver at Houston, 8 p.m.Philadelphia at New Orleans, 8 p.m.Oklahoma City at Milwaukee, 8:30 p.m.Utah at Golden State, 10:30 p.m.Brooklyn at L.A. Clippers, 10:30 p.m.

Sunday’s GamesPortland at Toronto, 1 p.m.Memphis at Sacramento, 6 p.m.Detroit at L.A. Lakers, 9:30 p.m.

NBA Pacers SummaryMILWAUKEE (77)Middleton 5-13 0-0 11, Pachulia 2-14 0-0 4, Udoh 1-3 0-0 2, Wolters 4-11 0-0 8, Mayo 7-17 3-3 20, Henson 3-8 2-2 8, Neal 4-12 0-0 11, Raduljica 0-2 4-6 4, Ridnour 2-6 0-0 4, Antetok-ounmpo 2-2 0-0 5. Totals 30-88 9-11 77.INDIANA (104)George 10-18 0-0 22, West 2-3 3-4 7, Hibbert 8-10 8-8 24, G.Hill 4-13 0-0 9, Stephenson 4-10 3-4 11, S.Hill 0-2 2-2 2, Scola 3-7 2-2 8, Watson 3-3 0-0 6, Mahinmi 1-3 0-0 2, Johnson 3-5 1-1 7, Copeland 2-4 0-0 6, Sloan 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 40-79 19-21 104.Milwaukee 21 16 24 16— 77Indiana 31 21 23 29—1043-Point Goals—Milwaukee 8-16 (Neal 3-5, Mayo 3-5, Antetokounmpo 1-1, Middleton 1-3, Wolters 0-2), Indiana 5-16 (Copeland 2-2, George 2-8, G.Hill 1-3, Stephenson 0-1, S.Hill 0-2). Rebounds—Milwaukee 49 (Pachulia 11), Indiana 52 (Hibbert 10). Assists—Milwaukee 14 (Wolters 5), Indiana 14 (G.Hill 5). Total Fouls—Milwaukee 24, Indiana 20. Technicals—George. A—16,202 (18,165).

NHL StandingsEASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GATampa Bay 19 14 5 0 28 61 44Boston 19 12 6 1 25 53 36Detroit 20 9 5 6 24 50 55Toronto 19 11 7 1 23 53 45Montreal 20 10 8 2 22 52 44Ottawa 19 8 7 4 20 57 58Florida 20 4 12 4 12 42 69Buffalo 21 5 15 1 11 39 64Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAPittsburgh 19 12 7 0 24 55 43Washington 20 11 8 1 23 65 58Carolina 19 8 7 4 20 37 51N.Y. Rangers 18 9 9 0 18 41 49New Jersey 19 6 8 5 17 38 48N.Y. Islanders 20 7 10 3 17 56 64Philadelphia 19 7 10 2 16 35 48Columbus 19 6 10 3 15 48 56WESTERN CONFERENCECentral Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAChicago 19 13 2 4 30 71 53Colorado 18 14 4 0 28 58 37Minnesota 20 12 4 4 28 53 43St. Louis 17 12 2 3 27 61 40Dallas 19 10 7 2 22 56 55Winnipeg 21 10 9 2 22 56 59Nashville 19 8 9 2 18 39 61Pacifi c Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAAnaheim 22 15 5 2 32 71 56San Jose 19 12 2 5 29 68 44Phoenix 20 13 4 3 29 67 63Los Angeles 20 13 6 1 27 57 46Vancouver 21 11 7 3 25 55 56Calgary 19 6 10 3 15 52 71Edmonton 20 4 14 2 10 48 78NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss.Thursday’s GamesChicago 5, Phoenix 4, SOBoston 3, Columbus 2, OTLos Angeles 3, N.Y. Islanders 2Tampa Bay 5, Anaheim 1St. Louis 7, Colorado 3Dallas 7, Calgary 3San Jose 2, Vancouver 1, OTFriday’s GamesCarolina 3, Anaheim 2, SOMontreal 3, Columbus 2, SOWashington 4, Detroit 3, SOWinnipeg 3, Philadelphia 2, SOBuffalo 3, Toronto 1Los Angeles 2, New Jersey 0Pittsburgh 4, Nashville 1Ottawa 4, Boston 2Minnesota 3, Florida 2San Jose at Edmonton, lateSaturday’s GamesBuffalo at Toronto, 7 p.m.N.Y. Rangers at Montreal, 7 p.m.Pittsburgh at New Jersey, 7 p.m.Detroit at N.Y. Islanders, 7 p.m.Carolina at St. Louis, 8 p.m.Chicago at Nashville, 8 p.m.Tampa Bay at Phoenix, 8 p.m.Florida at Colorado, 9 p.m.Edmonton at Calgary, 10 p.m.Sunday’s GamesColumbus at Ottawa, 1 p.m.St. Louis at Washington, 6 p.m.Los Angeles at N.Y. Rangers, 7 p.m.San Jose at Chicago, 7 p.m.Winnipeg at Minnesota, 8 p.m.Dallas at Vancouver, 8 p.m.

NHL Red Wings SummaryWashington 1 0 2 0—4Detroit 2 1 0 0—3Washington won shootout 1-0First Period—1, Washington, Laich 3 (Oleksy), 5:50. 2, Detroit, Franzen 3 (Kindl, DeKeyser), 15:52 (pp). 3, Detroit, Franzen 4 (Tatar, Helm), 18:10.Second Period—4, Detroit, DeKeyser 2 (Franzen, Kindl), 19:42 (pp).3rd Period—5, Wash., Ovechkin 15 (Johansson, Backstrom), 3:19. 6, Wsh., Latta 1 (Carlson, Alzner), 11:54.Overtime—None.Shootout—Wash. 1 (Grabovski NG, Ovechkin NG, Backstrom G), Detroit 0 (Datsyuk NG, Franzen NG, Bertuzzi NG).Shots on Goal—Washington 11-8-11-3—33. Detroit 12-13-8-4—37.Goalies—Washington, Holtby. Detroit, Howard. A—20,066 (20,066). T—2:40.

ECHL StandingsEASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division GP W L OL SL Pts GF GAReading 10 6 4 0 0 12 26 19Wheeling 11 5 5 0 1 11 27 27Elmira 10 3 7 0 0 6 21 32North Division GP W L OL SL Pts GF GACincinnati 10 8 2 0 0 16 40 28Evansville 9 6 1 0 2 14 28 27Fort Wayne 10 4 4 0 2 10 30 35Toledo 11 4 5 2 0 10 32 37Kalamazoo 8 3 4 0 1 7 22 25South Division GP W L OL SL Pts GF GASCarolina 11 9 0 1 1 20 39 25Florida 13 9 2 1 1 20 53 37Orlando 13 8 4 0 1 17 43 35Greenville 12 4 7 0 1 9 23 32Gwinnett 13 4 9 0 0 8 29 42WESTERN CONFERENCEMountain Division GP W L OL SL Pts GF GAAlaska 11 9 2 0 0 18 44 15Colorado 9 6 2 1 0 13 30 21Idaho 10 4 4 1 1 10 30 37Utah 9 3 4 1 1 8 19 26Pacifi c Division GP W L OL SL Pts GF GAOntario 11 6 1 1 3 16 34 30Stockton 10 7 3 0 0 14 35 23San Fran. 10 4 5 1 0 9 16 30Las Vegas 10 3 7 0 0 6 20 32Bakersfi eld 11 1 9 0 1 3 16 42NOTE: Two points are awarded for a win, one point for an overtime or shootout loss.Friday’s GamesFlorida 3, Gwinnett 0Wheeling 5, Elmira 1Kalamazoo 2, Reading 1Cincinnati 2, Greenville 1, SOFort Wayne 5, Toledo 4, OTOrlando 5, Evansville 4, SOOntario at Stockton, lateIdaho at San Francisco, lateLas Vegas at Alaska, lateSaturday’s GamesElmira at Wheeling, 7 p.m.Florida at South Carolina, 7:05 p.m.Cincinnati at Kalamazoo, 7:30 p.m.Greenville at Fort Wayne, 7:35 p.m.Orlando at Evansville, 8:15 p.m.Colorado at Utah, 9:05 p.m.Ontario at Bakersfi eld, 10 p.m.Idaho at San Francisco, 10:30 p.m.Las Vegas at Alaska, 11:15 p.m.Sunday’s GamesGwinnett at South Carolina, 3 p.m.Ontario at San Francisco, 5:15 p.m.Reading at Toledo, 5:15 p.m.Bakersfi eld at Stockton, 7 p.m.Las Vegas at Alaska, 7:05 p.m.

College Football ScheduleSaturday, Nov. 16EASTRichmond (4-6) at Delaware (7-3), NoonPenn (4-4) at Harvard (7-1), NoonPurdue (1-8) at Penn St. (5-4), Noon

Sacred Heart (9-2) at Robert Morris (5-4), NoonCincinnati (7-2) at Rutgers (5-3), NoonWagner (2-8) at St. Francis (Pa.) (4-5), NoonUCF (7-1) at Temple (1-8), NoonCCSU (4-6) at Duquesne (5-4), 12:10 p.m.NC State (3-6) at Boston College (5-4), 12:30 p.m.Dartmouth (4-4) at Brown (5-3), 12:30 p.m.Rhode Island (3-8) at Maine (9-1), 12:30 p.m.North Carolina (4-5) at Pittsburgh (5-4), 12:30 p.m.Georgetown (1-8) at Bucknell (4-5), 1 p.m.Lehigh (7-2) at Colgate (4-6), 1 p.m.Columbia (0-8) at Cornell (1-7), 1 p.m.Mercer (9-1) at Marist (7-3), 1 p.m.Yale (5-3) at Princeton (7-1), 1 p.m.Akron (3-7) at UMass (1-8), 1 p.m.New Hampshire (5-4) at Albany (NY) (1-9), 3:30 p.m.Fordham (10-0) at Lafayette (3-6), 3:30 p.m.South Alabama (3-5) at Navy (5-4), 3:30 p.m.SOUTHTroy (5-5) at Mississippi (6-3), NoonKentucky (2-7) at Vanderbilt (5-4), 12:21 p.m.FAU (3-6) at Southern Miss. (0-9), 12:30 p.m.Maryland (5-4) at Virginia Tech (7-3), 12:30 p.m.Presbyterian (3-6) at Coastal Carolina (9-1), 1 p.m.UT-Martin (6-4) at E. Kentucky (6-4), 1 p.m.Stetson (2-7) at Jacksonville (4-6), 1 p.m.Butler (8-3) at Morehead St. (3-7), 1 p.m.Savannah St. (1-10) at NC A&T (5-4), 1 p.m.Campbell (2-8) at Old Dominion (7-3), 1 p.m.VMI (2-8) at The Citadel (4-6), 1 p.m.Charleston Southern (9-2) at Gardner-Webb (5-5), 1:30 p.m.Towson (8-2) at William & Mary (7-3), 1:30 p.m.Appalachian St. (2-8) at Wofford (5-4), 1:30 p.m.Ark.-Pine Bluff (2-7) at Alabama A&M (3-7), 2 p.m.SE Missouri (2-8) at Austin Peay (0-10), 2 p.m.UAB (2-7) at East Carolina (7-2), 2 p.m.Delaware St. (4-5) at Florida A&M (3-7), 2 p.m.Louisiana-Lafayette (7-2) at Georgia St. (0-9), 2 p.m.Alabama St. (6-4) at MVSU (2-8), 2 p.m.Norfolk St. (3-7) at NC Central (4-6), 2 p.m.Georgia Southern (5-4) at Elon (2-8), 3 p.m.Alcorn St. (8-3) at Jackson St. (7-2), 3 p.m.Chattanooga (8-2) at Samford (6-4), 3 p.m.Murray St. (5-5) at Tennessee St. (8-3), 3 p.m.Georgia (6-3) at Auburn (9-1), 3:30 p.m.Miami (7-2) at Duke (7-2), 3:30 p.m.Syracuse (5-4) at Florida St. (9-0), 3:30 p.m.Stony Brook (3-6) at James Madison (6-4), 3:30 p.m.Hampton (4-6) at Bethune-Cookman (8-2), 4 p.m.Cent. Arkansas (5-5) at Nicholls St. (4-6), 4 p.m.Sam Houston St. (8-2) at SE Louisiana (8-2), 4 p.m.Houston (7-2) at Louisville (8-1), 7 p.m.Florida (4-5) at South Carolina (7-2), 7 p.m.Memphis (2-6) at South Florida (2-6), 7 p.m.Alabama (9-0) at Mississippi St. (4-5), 7:45 p.m.Northwestern St. (5-5) at McNeese St. (8-2), 8 p.m.MIDWESTOhio St. (9-0) at Illinois (3-6), NoonWest Virginia (4-6) at Kansas (2-7), NoonCent. Michigan (3-6) at W. Michigan (1-9), NoonIndiana (4-5) at Wisconsin (7-2), NoonN. Iowa (5-5) at Missouri St. (5-6), 2 p.m.S. Dakota St. (6-4) at South Dakota (4-6), 2 p.m.Dayton (6-4) at Valparaiso (1-9), 2 p.m.N. Dakota St. (9-0) at Youngstown St. (8-2), 2 p.m.W. Illinois (3-7) at Indiana St. (1-9), 2:05 p.m.Illinois St. (5-5) at S. Illinois (5-5), 3 p.m.TCU (4-6) at Kansas St. (5-4), 3:30 p.m.Michigan St. (8-1) at Nebraska (7-2), 3:30 p.m.Michigan (6-3) at Northwestern (4-5), 3:30 p.m.SOUTHWESTIowa St. (1-8) at Oklahoma (7-2), NoonAbilene Christian (5-5) at Prairie View (5-5), 2 p.m.UConn (0-8) at SMU (3-5), 3 p.m.Oklahoma St. (8-1) at Texas (7-2), 3:30 p.m.Stephen F. Austin (3-7) at Lamar (4-6), 7 p.m.Louisiana Tech (4-5) at Rice (6-3), 7 p.m.Texas St. (6-3) at Arkansas St. (5-4), 7:30 p.m.Texas Tech (7-3) vs. Baylor (8-0) at Arlington, Texas, 8 p.m.FIU (1-8) at UTEP (1-8), 8 p.m.FAR WESTWeber St. (1-9) at Montana (8-2), 2 p.m.Washington St. (4-5) at Arizona (6-3), 2 p.m.Idaho St. (3-7) at BYU (6-3), 3 p.m.E. Washington (8-2) at Cal Poly (5-5), 3:40 p.m.Utah (4-5) at Oregon (8-1), 4 p.m.Drake (6-4) at San Diego (7-3), 4 p.m.Sacramento St. (4-6) at Portland St. (6-4), 4:05 p.m.California (1-9) at Colorado (3-6), 5:30 p.m.Colorado St. (5-5) at New Mexico (3-6), 7 p.m.North Dakota (3-7) at UC Davis (3-7), 7 p.m.Stanford (8-1) at Southern Cal (7-3), 8 p.m.Oregon St. (6-3) at Arizona St. (7-2), 9:30 p.m.Wyoming (4-5) at Boise St. (6-3), 10:15 p.m.San Diego St. (5-4) at Hawaii (0-9), 10:30 p.m.San Jose St. (5-4) at Nevada (3-7), 10:30 p.m.

TransactionsBASEBALLAmerican LeagueTORONTO BLUE JAYS — Agreed to terms with 1B Dan Johnson on a minor league contract.National LeaguePHILADELPHIA PHILLIES — Agreed to terms with LHP Cesar Jimenez on a minor league contract.BASKETBALLNBANBA — Fined N.Y. Knicks G J.R. Smith $25,000 for directing hostile and inappropriate language to another player via his Twitter account.WNBAPHOENIX MERCURY — Named Sandy Brondello coach and vice president of player personnel.FOOTBALLNFLNFL — Fined Atlanta S William Moore $ 2 2 , 0 5 0 , Miami LB Philip Wheeler $ 2 1 , 0 0 0 , Green Bay LB Clay M a t t h e w s and Seattle DE Michael B e n n e t t $15,750 and San Francisco QB Colin Kaepernick $7,875 for their actions in last week’s games.

SCOREBOARD•

kpcnews.com B3SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2013

S PORTS TALK Steuben Sports Talk, ESPN-FM 92.7, 9 a.m.AUTO RACING Formula One, United States Grand Prix qualifying, CNBC, 1 p.m. NASCAR Nationwide, Ford Eco-Boost 300, ESPN, 4:30 p.m.GOLF PGA, OH L Classic , Golf Chan-nel , 2 p.m.COLLEGE FOOTBALL Purdue vs. Penn State, BTN, The Fan 1380 AM, WB NO -FM 100.9, noon Indiana vs. Wisconsin, ESPN2, WAWK-FM 95.5, noon Ohio State vs. Il l inois, ESPN, noon Iowa State vs. Oklahoma, Fox Sports 1, noon Cincinnati vs. Rutgers, ESPNEWS, noon Trine vs. Alma, WEAX-FM 88.3, 12:30 p.m. Michigan State vs. Nebraska, ABC, 3:30 p.m. Syracuse vs. Florida State, ESPN2, 3:30 p.m. Georgia vs. Auburn, CBS, 3:30 p.m. Oklahoma State vs. Texas, Fox, 3:30 p.m. Michigan vs. Northwestern, BTN, 3:30 p.m. South Alabama vs. Navy, CBS Sports, 3:30 p.m. Utah vs. Oregon, Fox Sports 1, 4 p.m. Texas Tech vs. Baylor, Fox, 7 p.m. Florida vs. South Carolina, ESPN2, 7 p.m. Louisiana Tech vs. Rice, CBS Sports, 7 p.m. Alabama vs. Mississippi State, ESPN, 7:45 p.m. Stanford vs. Southern Cal, ABC, 8 p.m. Wyoming vs. Boise State, ESPN2, 10:15 p.m. San Diego State vs. Hawaii, CBS Sports, 10:30 p.m.COLLEGE BASKETBALL Notre Dame vs. Indiana State, The Fan 106.7 FM, 11:40 a.m. Ohio State vs. Marquette, Fox, 1 p.m. IPFW vs. Tennessee Tech, The Fan 1380 AM, 1:45 p.m.NBA BASKETBALL Indiana vs. Chicago, WGN, The Fan 106.7 FM, 8 p.m.

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HENNIKER, N.H. (AP) — When it comes to pairing beer with poultry, Joe Morette isn’t too fussy. His turkeys will drink just about anything.

Morette, who is raising about 50 Thanksgiving turkeys this year, has been giving his birds beer since 1993, when he and his workers popped open a few cans after work on a hot July day. A turkey knocked one over and started drinking, he said, and they’ve been sipping the suds ever since.

Morette, who prefers serving the turkeys lager, insists the beer makes birds

fatter, more fl avorful and juicier.

“Oh, yeah, it’s notice-able,” he said. “It’s not a strong, gamey fl avor, it’s a nice turkey fl avor.”

Longtime customer Dan Bourque, a Manchester attorney, said he hasn’t had a bad bird yet from Morette. He said the turkeys are far superior to the supermarket varieties.

“We fi nd the gravy is much darker, and much tastier,” he said. “The bird overall has a slightly different taste that is very appealing.”

The animal rights group PETA said turkeys shouldn’t be fed beer and that “farmers across the country use questionable practices to keep costs down or to alter the taste of animals’ fl esh because their priority is profi t, not the animals’ welfare.”

But a poultry expert with the University of New Hampshire Cooperative Extension said it is unlikely the birds are suffering.

“I don’t know exactly how much beer each turkey is consuming, but it would have to be a lot in order for it to kind of have the same effect as too much beer on people,” said Carl Majewski, fi eld specialist in food and agriculture. “I imagine it’s not enough to really make ‘em tipsy or anything like that. It’s just enjoying a beer with their meal. Why not?”

Kathi Brock, national director of Humane Heartland, which oversees the treatment of farm animals, said that standards from the American Humane Association don’t prohibit serving beer to animals.

“I consulted with an avian veterinarian who said that while giving beer to

turkeys is not a standard protocol, hops could be benefi cial for the intestinal tract,” Brock said in an email.

Morette’s turkeys are not the fi rst animals to consume alcohol. Japanese farmers have been said to feed cattle beer to stimulate their appetites. And a winemaker and farmer in the south of France have experimented with feeding cows the remainders of pressed grapes to produce meat they’ve dubbed “Vinbovin.”

During one recent feeding, Morette’s birds dipped their beaks repeat-edly into the foamy liquid in a watering trough. A few minutes later, at least one appeared rather dazed, with eyes narrowed to slits and beer dribbling out of its beak. But the rest seemed alert and no worse for the wear.

“Turkeys don’t seem to be the brightest, so they could stumble and you wouldn’t know if they drank too much or not,” Morette said.

Majewski said the additional calories and carbohydrates probably do make the birds a bit bigger, and like anything the birds eat, beer likely has some effect on fl avor. Juiciness is another matter, he said.

“I think it has as much to do with how you cook it rather than what it’s been eating,” he said. “You can take a really well-fed bird and make it not very juicy.”

Majewski, who brews beer at home, also raises chickens. But he has no plans to embrace Morette’s methods.

“Any beer that we have is too good for them, and I’m going to drink it instead,” he said.

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Covering All Of Your Acres

One part of the fall I don’t really look forward to is having to decide on what type of health insurance coverage I and my family will need to use for the following year.

Having just completed my sign-up with Purdue for this next year, I know I will be spending more for health insurance this coming year. Nat Williams, Field Editor for Agrinews Magazine, tells of several farmers in Illinois who are having to take a hard look at their operations and employees and how the Affordable Care Act is going to affect them in the coming year.

Like nearly every other American, Jeff Flamm is uncertain about how the Affordable Care Act will affect him. But he’s

convinced of one thing: It won’t be a positive experi-ence.

Flamm, who operates one of the largest orchards in Illinois, is among a number of farmers who will be doing some extensive math to fi gure out how to manage his business now that the national health care act — often referred to as Obamacare — is being rolled out.

“I can already see how it’s shaping up. It’s not going to be good,” he said. “It’s going to be a nightmare. There will be tons of paperwork. I can see the whole thing blowing up in their face.”

Since many farmers are self-employed, they may be

more likely to deal directly with the provisions of ACA. Others, such as Flamm, who have 50 or more employees, also must decide how to follow the law from the employer side.

Margaret Vaughn, executive director of the Illinois Rural Health Associ-ation, said the impact of the

legislation is still uncertain. Many people who will be most affected are in a holding pattern.

“Most farmers purchase their own private insurance, with the exception of those whose spouses work outside the farm in positions in which their employers provide health insurance which covers their family,” she said.

ACA also will have major implications for Frey Produce in Keenes, one of the state’s largest producers of fresh-market pumpkins. The Wayne County farm employs as many as 400 workers during the peak season, and though many are migrants with government guest worker permits, they are still counted as employees for purposes of the ACA.

That means that the business would have to pay fi nes of $2,800 per employee unless they are all offered a company policy. And because the new law requires a minimum coverage threshold, it would drastically increase costs for the company and

the employees, according to owner Sarah Talley-Frey.

“It would bankrupt our company to send that money for these workers working six months and less,” she said

That may result in reducing hours for seasonal employees and hiring more, so that all fall under the 30-hour work week that — under the law — is considered full time.

“What we’re trying to do now is reduce the contract time period that they’re here for, bringing in a higher number of workers and rotating them out more quickly so that they stay under the threshold of being a part-time employee,” Talley-Frey said. “Most of these guys during the season are used to getting 60 hours a

week. It cuts the amount of time you can give them to less than half.”

Flamm has considered the same thing, but there is

a problem: the available workforce.

“I would consider that, but we’re short-handed all the time anyway,” he said. “When you’ve got somebody willing to come to work, you want them

there. We hardly have enough help to get the job done anyway.”

Talley-Frey said the law may make it more diffi cult to get good workers.

“I think that they’re going to be discouraged because they expect to work the hours that are necessary in our industry,” she said. “It’s unfortunate that this law exists. You’re faced with taking time and energy and

productivity away from what you’re doing for a living.”

The full-time, domestic employees at Frey Farms have employer-sponsored health insurance now, but probably won’t a year from now.

“We’ll have to drop all our domestic employees, because we will be faced with the fi nes for guest workers,” Talley-Frey said.

One thing going for Flamm, Talley-Frey and other ag employers is that they have a year to fi gure out how to deal with the law. That’s because the Obama adminis-tration granted a year’s delay before the employer mandate takes effect.

“We dodged the bullet for one year,” Talley-Frey said. “But we’re going to have to fi gure out a way to make it work.”

Obamacare to have major implications for farmers

ELYSIA

RODGERS

“It’s not going to be good. It’s going to be a

nightmare.”

Jeff Flamm

Illinois Farmer

ELYSIA RODGERS is the agriculture and natural resources director for the Purdue University Cooperative Extension Service in DeKalb County.

JUDY OXENGER JOHNSTON

Equipment at restA Steuben County farmer on CR 600 East takes a break and lets his equipment have some time to cool down after completing

one fi eld of corn harvesting and moving on to the next on a recent fall day.

WEST LAFAYETTE — November is a good time for beef producers to assess their pastures and facili-ties and take care of some routine tasks to prepare their cattle operations for winter, a Purdue Extension beef specialist says.

Cattle are healthier, have more successful pregnancies and have better rates of gain when they have access to quality nutrition and facili-ties during the cold winter months.

One of the fi rst recommen-dations from Ron Lemenager is to assess pastures and hay fi elds and have forages analyzed as soon as possible. Once producers know what they have in terms of forage, they can start to plan their supplemental feeding strate-gies based on animal protein and energy needs.

Common supplements include corn and grain byproducts, such as soybean hulls, corn gluten feed and distiller’s grains.

“The market’s somewhat lower now, and it’s a good time to start checking supple-ment prices,” Lemenager said.

While corn might be an economical energy supple-ment this year, Lemenager said producers need to compare prices and evaluate energy requirements for their herds before deciding.

“Beef producers should ensure there are adequate minerals and vitamins in the diet by providing a high

quality vitamin-mineral mix,” he said. “Minerals are especially important to immune function and reproduction.”

Fall-calving herds are approaching breeding season, which means producers should have their bulls examined for reproduc-tive soundness. Those exams should be conducted as early as possible so bulls that fail have time to recover, and producers have time to replace them when necessary.

If producers plan to synchronize estrus cycles in their cows and heifers, it’s also time to get those programs started.

Prostaglandin plus Melengestrol Acetate (MGA), a progestin product, is usually the cheapest and easiest for heifers, Lemenager said. The combination use of GnRH, CIDR and prosta-glandin works well on cows. Producers should check their artifi cial insemination supplies so they have time to stock up if needed.

“Spring calving isn’t that far away either,” Lemenager said. “It’s a good idea to check calving pens and supplies of pharmaceuticals and commercial colostrum replacements.”

For spring calving herds, now is a good time to wean calves. Producers with fall calving herds might consider early weaning to reduce the amount of supplement needed for lactating cows.

Tips offered for winterizing cattle operations

Farmer improves his turkeys by giving them beer with meals

WEST LAFAYETTE — Holiday shoppers can expect less-expensive turkeys and moderate price increases on other Thanks-giving staples this holiday season, a Purdue Extension agricultural economist says.

In the U.S., average annual food price infl ation is about 2.5 percent, but this year grocery food prices are running just 1 percent higher than 2012 prices.

Note to online editors: A link to a video clip of Purdue Extension agricul-tural economist Corinne Alexander discussing Thanksgiving food prices is at the bottom of this news release. The video can be embedded in your website.

“There’s a lot of good news out there for the consumer. Food price infl ation is very low this year,” Corinne Alexander said.

For the items most commonly associated with Thanksgiving meals, Alexander said some prices will be up a bit and others will be down slightly.

“We’re expecting the overall Thanksgiving meal to be roughly the same price as last year and, potentially depending on what sort of in-store specials are being offered, you might even spend less this year than you did last year on Thanks-giving,” she said.

Turkey, the main item on many Thanksgiving dinner menus, should cost consumers less this year. The U.S. Department of Agriculture is predicting that wholesale prices for Eastern market whole turkeys will be between $1 and $1.06 per pound in the fourth quarter, compared with $1.06 per pound in 2012.

Alexander said it’s important for consumers to remember that the way wholesale prices translate to retail prices depends on individual retailers. The actual price paid also will vary depending on whether a shopper chooses a whole turkey or turkey parts; frozen or fresh birds; fresh, precooked or complete turkey meals; brand names; and the value of store coupons and price specials.

Often grocers will offer turkeys at a deep discount to encourage shoppers to purchase their other Thanks-giving items at a particular store, Alexander said.

“Because turkey is a favorite loss leader, that’s one of those items where savvy shoppers can look to coupons and store specials to really fi nd the best price possible for their Thanks-giving turkey, and then the rest of the items for their Thanksgiving meal,” she said.

Cost of holiday meals should be lower

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Skeletons in desertthought to be thoseof missing family

SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. (AP) — Four skeletons found in shallow graves in the Southern California desert are believed to be those of a San Diego County family that vanished three years ago, police said Friday, resolving one mystery and raising a host of new questions about what happened to the seemingly happy couple and their two young sons.

The McStay family — Joseph, 40, and his 43-year-old wife Summer, and their sons Gianni, 4, and Joseph Jr., 3 — were apparent homicide victims, San Bernardino County Sheriff John McMahon said.

Police now will try to piece together what led the McStays to disappear and end up 100 miles from their home, not far off heavily traveled Interstate 15 connecting San Diego and Las Vegas. The family’s skeletal remains were found Monday by an off-road motorcyclist.

“It’s not really the outcome we were looking for, but it gives us courage to know that they’re together and they’re in a better place,” said Joseph McStay’s brother, Michael, struggling to speak through tears as other family members sobbed at a news conference.

McMahon said investi-gators don’t know many details, including when the McStays were killed, how long the bodies had been in the desert and if they were killed there or elsewhere. Evidence at the scene included some clothing, but McMahon would not say if authorities had found a weapon or whether a cause of death was determined.

New Barlett’s bookhas quotations from African-Americans

NEW YORK (AP) — For the debut Bartlett’s anthology of black quotations, editor Retha Powers wanted to capture the personal, the political and the artistic.

“When you think about black history, you think about touch points like slavery, colonialism, apartheid,” Powers says. “Those are heavy and diffi cult topics. But there also lives being led and poetry being created and plays being written. I wanted to be able to show all of that, the will to create a culture and a life.”

“Bartlett’s Familiar Black Quotations,” which has just been published, reaches back to ancient times and oral cultures and continues right up to rap, Malcolm Gladwell and President Barack Obama.

In a foreword for the new book, the author and critic Henry Louis Gates Jr. notes that compilations of black quotations date back to the 19th century and that the “fi eld has proliferated with a marvelous array of titles.” But, he adds, none of the reference works compares with “the scope of Retha Powers’ collection.”

The 764-page book includes lyrics by Robert Johnson, Smokey Robinson and Jay Z; the humor of Richard Pryor, Chris Rock and Eddie Murphy; the oratory of the Revs. Martin Luther King Jr. and Jesse Jackson; and prose and poetry from Ralph Ellison, Toni Morrison and Maya Angelou. Gates himself gets a few citations.

Powers says the idea for the new Bartlett’s began about seven years ago. She was executive editor of the Quality Paperback Book Club and was having lunch with Little, Brown and Co. editor Deborah Baker (who has since left the company). They were discussing upcoming books when Baker mentioned that a volume of black quotations was planned and wondered if Powers had sugges-tions for who could put it together.

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Miles Scott, dressed as Batkid, right, runs with Batman after saving a damsel in distress in San Francisco Friday. San Francisco turned into Gotham City on Friday, as city offi cials helped fulfi ll Scott’s wish to be “Batkid.” Scott, a

leukemia patient from Tulelake in far Northern California, was called into service on Friday morning by San Francisco Police Chief Greg Suhr to help fi ght crime, The Greater Bay Area Make-A-Wish Foundation says.

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Batkid was fi ghting crime Friday on the mean streets of San Francisco.

With the help of the Make-A-Wish Foundation and the city, 5-year-old Miles Scott, aka Batkid, took off from Union Square in the morning in one of two Batmobiles — black Lamborghinis with Batman decals. Police escorted the Lamborghinis and closed off roads as they sped to their fi rst caper: a damsel in distress on a cable car track.

By midday, the Batkid’s adventure had become a sensation on Twitter, with even the White House chiming in with its support.

At the cable car rescue, hundreds of people jostled for space, as the boy dressed in a Batman costume and accompanied by an adult Batman imperson-ator emerged from the Lamborghini to rescue a

woman. Miles is a leukemia patient who’s now in remission.

He looked overwhelmed and was bashful, though he was seen later in the day giving high-fi ves to onlookers. The damsel sat on the street in a dress and thigh-high black boots. She had a handkerchief around her mouth and her hands were bound behind her back. Batman and Batkid sprang into action, with the aid of a trampoline, as the crowd roared.

They rescued the woman and disabled a plastic replica bomb she was tied to.

The two masked superhe-roes then took off to nab the Riddler as he robbed a downtown bank.

A fl ash mob summoned Batkid later in the day for another crime — the diabol-ical kidnapping of the San Francisco Giants mascot — Lou Seal — by the Penguin. A grateful Mayor Ed Lee

gave Miles a key to the city after the crooks were corralled.

Miles, who lives in Tulelake in far Northern California, didn’t know what was in store for him and thought he was in San Francisco just to get a Batman costume so he could dress like his favorite superhero, KGO-TV reported.

He was diagnosed with leukemia when he was 18 months old and ended treatments in June.

His father, Nick Scott, thanked the Greater Bay Area Make-A-Wish Founda-tion and the estimated 7,000 people who helped make his son’s wish come true.

“All the doctors, nurses and all the other parents that have to deal with the same thing we’re going through. I hope they get a conclusion to their illnesses like we’re getting,” Nick Scott told KGO-TV.

San Francisco crime-freethanks to work of ‘Batkid’

LOS ANGELES (AP) — An airport security offi cer lay helplessly bleeding after a gunman opened fi re at Los Angeles International Airport as paramedics waited 150 yards away because police had not declared the terminal safe to enter, according to two law enforcement offi cials.

It would be 33 minutes before Transportation Security Administration Offi cer Gerardo Hernandez, who was about 20 feet from an exit, would be wheeled out by airport police to an ambulance, said the offi cials, who were briefed on the investigation and spoke on condition of anonymity because the probe was still ongoing into the Nov. 1 shooting.

For all but fi ve of those minutes, there was no threat from the suspected gunman — he had been shot and was in custody, they said.

While it’s not known when Hernandez died or if immediate medical attention could have saved his life, offi cials are examining what conversations took place between police and fi re commanders to determine when it was safe enough to enter and whether paramedics could have gone into the terminal earlier, one of the offi cials said.

The head of the TSA union on Friday said he was appalled at the news. American Federation of Government Employees president J. David Cox Sr. called the situation “very concerning” and said there should be a serious reexamination of TSA security policies.

Formal conclusions could take months, but what’s known raises the possibility that a lack of coordination between police and fi re offi cials prevented speedy treatment for Hernandez and other victims.

TSA workers at LAX

have been wondering the same thing, said Victor Payes, who works at the airport and is president of the local union.

“I basically think there’s a lack of coordination between entities at this airport. That lack of coordination may have led to something that shouldn’t have happened,” Payes said. “We may be talking about Offi cer Hernandez as a survivor.”

Marshall McClain, president of the Los Angeles Airport Peace Offi cers Association, agreed that the incident highlights a failure in coordination and a power struggle between policing agencies. He said there were four command posts set up during the incident and no sense of who had command once the LAPD rolled in.

Representatives of the Los Angeles Police Department, Los Angeles Fire Department and Los Angeles Airport Police said they couldn’t comment on the ongoing investigation until extensive reports are fi nished.

Authorities say that Paul Ciancia entered Terminal 3 with a duffel bag, pulled out an assault rifl e and started shooting. They said he had a note in his bag that said he wanted to “kill TSA” and that he wanted to stir fear in them, criticizing their searches as unconstitutional.

He was shot by airport police offi cers four times, in the mouth and leg, before being taken into custody. He remains in fair condition at a hospital and his doctors will determine when he’s fi t to appear in court.

In the chaotic moments after the gunfi re began, as travelers dove to the ground or scrambled for cover in restaurants and stores, offi cials worried there could be bombs in the terminal and tried to determine whether the gunman had any accomplices.

Paramedics keptaway from victimin LAX shooting

MIAMI (AP) — Stung by conservative backlash earlier this year, Marco Rubio has spent months seemingly trying to convince skeptical fellow Republicans that he’s more than just the Florida senator who championed compre-hensive immigration reform.

He joined the drive to defund President Barack Obama’s health care law, though his voice grew softer as the resulting government shutdown and his party sank in polls. He then turned to championing social issues like legislative prayer.

On Saturday, Rubio will deliver the keynote address at a fundraiser for the Florida Family Policy Council, an evangelical group that led the successful 2008 effort to ban gay marriage in the state. And next week, the potential presidential candidate plans to deliver what aides described as a major foreign policy speech at the conser-vative American Enterprise Institute.

Taken together, Republi-cans say the actions suggest two things: that Rubio is trying to reconnect with activists still smarting over his support for an immigration overhaul that included a path to citizenship for millions of immigrants living here illegally, and that he’s trying to fi nd an issue that resonates with conserva-tives, in the way Texas Sen. Ted Cruz is linked to fi ghting “Obamacare” and Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul to criticizing the president’s use of drone strikes.

That’s important if Rubio wants to stand out in a potentially crowded GOP presidential fi eld, where he is generally viewed as less strident than Cruz and former Sen. Rick Santorum but more conservative than New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie. Rubio’s advisers say the senator long has emphasized his conservative positions and would benefi t from the fact that, unlike others, he’s able to talk

about them in a way that doesn’t turn off voters from other parts of the political spectrum.

“There is still a space in the Republican primary fi eld for someone to emerge as the conservative alterna-tive to Christie,” said Scott Reed, a Republican who ran Bob Dole’s 1996 campaign. “Rubio’s at the front of the line, if he chooses to run.”

To do so successfully, Rubio would need to rekindle the conservative fi re among the tea party voters who elevated an obscure state legislator into a national sensation — and who are poised to help christen the next GOP standard-bearer. Right now, Rubio is so closely associated with the stalled immigration bill that at a conference of conserva-tives this summer he was heckled with cries of “No amnesty!”

These days, he rarely mentions immigration. And after months of arguing for the passage of the compre-

hensive bill he helped write, Rubio says he now favors the piecemeal approach of

House leaders, who have focused primarily on border security and enforcement.

Rubio trying to reconnect with Conservatives

AP

Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., left, accompanied by Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, speaks during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington. Rubio has seemingly spent months trying to convince skeptical Republicans to look at the other issues he’s taken up besides compre-hensive immigration reform.

TORONTO (AP) — Toronto’s City Council voted overwhelmingly Friday to strip Mayor Rob Ford of some of his powers, trying to box in the brash leader who has rebuffed huge pressure to resign over his drinking and drug habits and erratic behavior. Ford vowed to challenge the measure in court.

The motion, approved in a 39-3 vote, suspends Ford’s authority to appoint and dismiss the deputy mayor and his executive committee, which runs the budget process. In a separate vote, the council voted to give the deputy mayor authority to handle any civic

emergency. The effort will continue Monday when the council moves to strip the mayor of most of his remaining powers.

The votes capped another frenzied week of twists and turns in the scandal that has consumed Canada’s largest city and fi nancial capital for months.

Newly released court documents showed that the mayor became the subject of a police investigation after news reports surfaced in May that he had been caught on video smoking crack. In interviews with police, former staffers accused the mayor of frequently drinking on the job, driving

while intoxicated and making sexual advances toward a female staffer.

Most city councilors are frustrated by Ford’s refusal to step aside but they lack the authority to force him out of offi ce unless he is convicted of a crime.

An unusually subdued Ford said he had no choice but to fi ght the motion in court while also saying he understood why the council was taking the measures — a typical display of defi ance followed by a fl ash of remorse.

“If I would have had a mayor conducting themselves the way I have, I would have done exactly the same thing,” Ford said.

Toronto’s mayor punished

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: I try to cook dinner most nights, but by the end of the day, I’m too tired to make sure the meals are balanced. Can you suggest easy ways to incorporate more fruits and vegetables into our dinners?

DEAR READER: When I come home from work, hungry and tired, I’m apt to snack on whatever’s in the fridge. If what I see in the fridge is a slice of pizza, I’ll reach for it. But if I see some hummus to spread on a cracker — a much healthier option than pizza — I’ll snack on that.

In other words, if I’m hungry and tired, I’ll grab what’s convenient and not think a lot about healthy eating. So if you’re like me, you’ll need to be organized to make healthy eating a priority.

Start by scheduling a regular time to plan your weekly menu. Th is will

give you a chance to plan nutritionally balanced meals before the kids start asking, “What’s for dinner?” Make a shopping list to help you stock your kitchen with the

foods you’ll need to cook these healthy meals.

Now that you have a strategy, here are some easy ways to work more produce into your evening meals:

• Roast vegetables. Bake cut vegetables at 375 degrees for 20 to 25 minutes until

they’re lightly browned. You can roast any vegetable — from mushrooms, onions, eggplant and zucchini, to tomatoes, broccoli and

carrots. Enjoy roasted veggies as a side dish or toss them into pasta. At the end of the week, puree left over roasted veggies with chicken broth to make soup.

• Poach vegetables. Boil enough liquid (water or low-sodium chicken broth work well) to cover the vegetables. Add them and turn down the heat. Cook for fi ve to seven minutes, until the vegetables are brightly colored and tender-crisp.

• Smuggle fresh vegeta-bles into main dishes. Add mushrooms, peppers, zucchini or carrots to pasta sauce, casseroles, soup, stews, scrambled eggs and chili.

• Have a salad with dinner most days. Build your salad with dark, leafy greens. Toss in peas, tomatoes, celery, carrots and peppers. Limit yourself to 1 1/2 tablespoons of low-cal-orie dressing.

• Choose fruit — fresh, frozen, stewed or baked — for dessert. It all counts toward your daily produce quota.

Th is won’t be the fi rst time you’ve heard that lots of fruits and vegetables in your diet are healthy. In fact, you may be sick of hearing it. It may sound preachy, and you may even wonder if it’s true. You’ve seen enough recommendations that then get overturned, so perhaps you fi nd it hard to take any nutritional advice seriously.

I understand. But the health benefi ts of diets rich in fruits and vegetables have been demonstrated time and again by high-quality studies involving millions of people. And, yes, I eat a lot of fruits and vegetables myself.

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

Diet rich in fruits, veggies truly healthy

SATURDAY EVENING NOVEMBER 16, 2013 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30

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SHOW (:15) ��� Reindeer Games Ben Affleck. Homeland � The Words ('12) Bradley Cooper. F#ck Nick Cannon SPIKE Cops (:35) Cops (:15) Cops (:50) Cops (:25) Cops Cops Cops Cops (:35) Cops (:10) Cops (:45) CopsSTARZ Movie � Deuce Bigalow: Europea... ����� Looper Joseph Gordon Levitt. Dancing on the Edge (N) SSpartac

TBS Queens Queens Ray Ray Ray FamilyG BigBang BigBang BigBang BigBang BigBang BigBang TLC Cheap Cheap Cheap Cheap Cheap Cheap Untold Stories Untold "Rattled" UUntold Stories TMC (4:50) � Inescapable ����� Carlito's Way ('93) Al Pacino. � The Tortured � CreepTNT (4:30) ��� Unknown Liam Neeson. � Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring Movie

TVLND Cosby Cosby Cosby Cosby BradyB. BradyB. BradyB. BradyB. Ray Ray Ray Ray USA NCIS NCIS "Recruited" MModern Modern Modern Modern Modern Modern Modern Modern VH1 Black Ink Crew �� Dance Flick ('09) Shoshana Bush. ��� Scary Movie Shannon Elizabeth. ���� Bad BoysWGN Law:CI "Slither" HHome Videos Videos Bulls Eye Basketball NBA Indiana Pacers vs. Chicago Bulls (L) NNews

Crossword Puzzle•

On this date Nov. 16: • In 1776, British troops captured Fort Washington in New York during the American Revolution. • In 1959, the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical “The Sound of Music” opened on Broadway in New York City. • In 1966, Dr. Samuel H. Sheppard was acquitted in his second trial of murdering his pregnant wife, Marilyn, in 1954.

Almanac•

B6 kpcnews.com COMICS • TV LISTINGS SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2013

DEAR ABBY: I’m a senior in high school. Every day during lunch, one of my friends goes outside and smokes weed with a couple of his friends. He comes back from lunch with red eyes, smelling of smoke and his behavior indicates that he’s high. I’m not sure if they smoke on or off campus, but I know it isn’t legal at their age (17), and especially not at school. I saw a joint in his pocket a couple of times and he told me to keep it a secret. Abby, this has me very uncomfortable. If he wants me to keep it a secret, he must know it’s wrong. I don’t know how to tell someone or even who I should tell. I know he has depression and weed can “take the edge off ,” but that doesn’t make it OK. What should I do? Should I tell anyone?

And if so, who and how? — FRETTING IN WASHINGTON STATE DEAR FRETTING: It’s surprising to me that your friend returns from lunch showing all of the signs

of being stoned, and none of his teachers have picked up on it. Haven’t his grades suff ered? While it is not uncommon for people who are depressed to try to self-med-icate with

illegal substances, it’s not nearly as successful as dealing with their emotions by talking about them with a medical professional, and

can sometimes make the problem worse. Th e person to confi de this in would be a trusted teacher or school counselor. Please don’t wait. For an excellent guide to becoming a better conver-sationalist and a more sociable person, order “How to Be Popular.” Send your name and mailing address, plus check or money order for $7 (U.S. funds) to: Dear Abby, Popularity Booklet, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447. (Shipping and handling are included in the price.)

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

Marijuana use putsfriend in tough spot

ASK DOCTOR K.

Dr. Anthony

Komaroff

kpcnews.com B7SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2013

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.

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

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

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

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

DIFFICULTY: 4 (of 5) 11-16

EOE

M/F

/D/V

MORE OPTIONS: CHOOSE THE ONE THAT

FITS YOUR NEEDS

Schneider National is Truck Drivers

UP TO $5,000 SIGN-ON BONUS MAY APPLY ($3,750 FOR RECENT GRADS)

Apply online at schneiderjobs.com/newjobsCall John at 219-252-4306 for more event information

FIND YOUR

DRIVEREASON TO

STOP BY OUR HIRING EVENTNovember 19 | 5 - 7 p.m.

Schwan’s Home Service is

NOW HIRING!

In Kendallville INSchwan’s Home Service is now hiring for Route Sales Representatives in your area.

For immediate consideration, please apply online at www.schwansjobs.com Enter Ken-dallville IN in SEARCH JOBS BOX and click go, click on position link and click apply now

or call Scott Davis at 412-666-0174

Seeking : Route Sales Representatives

New Compensation Plan!

Earn Base Wages PLUS Commission and Incentives• Pre-established and Growing Customer Base • Comprehensive Benefi t Options • Paid Vacation • Retirement Savings Program • Employee Discount on Company Products

Roles/Responsibilities

As a Route Sales Representative

You will be responsible for selling a variety of frozen foods to new and existing customers throughout an assigned service area using good sales practices such as: displaying products, calling on all customers, following up on missed/not at home customers and professional demeanor.

Apply at www.schwansjobs.comSchwan’s Home Service, Inc is an Equal Opportunity Employer

Designer/Furniture Sales Consultant At Shipshewana Furniture Company, our Design Sales Consultants provide clients with design expertise and service using the full line of Shipshewana Furniture Company’s home furnishings. The successful Interior Design Sales Consultant will be a self-motivated entrepreneur who has an eye for color, design and home furnishings, as well as the ability to sell design and build rapport with clients to keep them coming back. The designs include space planning, fabric coordination, product selection and overall project design. This consultant will create home furnishing design solutions by selling products that are consistent with the customer’s preference and budget qualifi cations. Must be able to work some holidays and evenings. If this sounds like a position for you,

please send your resume to [email protected] apply in person at The Craft Barn

(across from the Blue Gate Restaurant) and ask for John.

MaintenanceAutomotive manufacturer in northeast

Indiana has the following openingfor a result-oriented Maintenance team member.

Must have extensive industrial electrical knowledge, mechanical aptitude, read/interpret

electrical and electronic circuit diagrams and familiar with computers and programmable

logic controllers.

Experience with preventative maintenance programs and pneumatics.

Must be able to work any shift.We offer a comprehensive benefi t package including Medical, Dental, Vacation, 401K,

Holidays and more.

Qualifi ed candidates should send their resume and salary requirements to:

HUDSON INDUSTRIESATTN: Human Resource Manager

PO Box 426, Hudson, IN [email protected]

EOE

00360316

MANUFACTURING MANUFACTURING SHIFT SUPERVISORSHIFT SUPERVISOR

2nd Shift (2:00 p.m. - 10:00 p.m.)

Fremont, INWe are an industry leading applicator of high-performance coatings, seeking a

motivated individual desiring wide-range responsibilities in a growth-oriented business.

Responsibilities include:• Support plant safety and housekeeping systems.• Ensure process and product quality performance standards.• Oversee 2nd shift operations including manufacturing, shipping, and scheduling.• Direct supervision of all assigned shift employees.• Participation in customer part trials, product development, and continuous quality improvement.• Identify and oversee necessary equipment repairs and maintenance. Complete salary and excellent benefi t package

included. Compensation is commensurate with background and experience.

Please send your resume to:

METAL IMPROVEMENT COMPANY

302 McSwain Drive, 302 McSwain Drive,

P.O. Box 659P.O. Box 659

Fremont, lN 46737Fremont, lN 46737HIRI

NG E

VENT

Tuesday, November 19, 20139 AM - 11:30 AM

Come prepared to interview!Apply at www.leadersstaffing.com

prior to attending the event.Production positions for

Guardian and others needed.

Ligonier Recreational Center520 W. Union St., Ligonier, IN 46767

Every print subscription includes online access to

kpcnews.com

“You’vegot

news!”

ADOPTIONS

❤❤❤ ADOPTION: ❤❤A creative FinanciallySecure Home, LOVE,❤Laughter, Travel,❤Sports, Family awaits1st baby. Expenses

❤❤ paid. Jackie ❤❤

❤ 1-800-775-4013 ❤

LOST

Australian Shepherd,Male, Mostly Blk. somewhi/tan. One blue eye,

one brown, bobbed tail.Lost Lima Road,North of Shoaff(260)705-3414

LOST: 2 Boxer Pup-pies last seen Arvada

Hills area, femalesisters, brindle color.

260 349-9020 Reward

JOB

SJO

BS

EMPLOYMENT

■ ● ■ ● ■Driver

LOCAL ROUTEDRIVER

Brown & SonsFuel Co. Inc.Albion, IN Plant

Qualifications:• CDL Class A or B• Tank & Hazmat

Endorsements• Acceptable MVR

(3 years)• 2 years experience• Stable work history• Must meet all DOT

requirements

Benefits Include:• Health insurance

• 401K retirement withmatching funds

• Vacation• Pay based on

experience

Apply in Person:Compliance

Advantage, LLC116 S. Main Street

Kendallville, IN

EOE

■ ● ■ ● ■

CLASSIFIEDDon’t want the

“treasure” you found while cleaning the attic?

Make a clean sweep ...

advertise your treasures

in the Classifieds.

kpcnews.com

Email:[email protected]

Fax: 260-347-7282

Toll Free:1-877-791-7877

EMPLOYMENT

Drivers

DeliveryDrivers

Now adding ClassA Drivers at Kendall-

ville DistributionCenter. Scheduled

dedicated teamroutes delivering

to America’s finestrestaurants. Four

dispatches weekly.Guaranteed weeklypay and excellent

benefits. EOE

PerformanceFood Group CustomizedDistribution

2930 Performance Dr.Hwy. 6 & Rogers Rd.

KendallvilleCall 24/7

(260) 343-4336(260) 316-4264(260) 343-4317

General

NOW HIRINGCounter Person

for Americlean DryCleaners, part time,

previous experience inretail or clothing a plus.

Apply in person at -100 Growth ParkwayAngola, IN Suite B

(next to Remax)

General

Preferred Auto is looking to Hire a

Lot Porter for its Ken-dallville location. Job

responsibilities includecleaning/detailing

vehicles and transport-ing vehicles to our

other locations. YouMUST have a clean

driving record and beable to pass a

drug/backgroundevaluation. Automotive

knowledge and lightautomotive mechanics

is helpful but notrequired.

Please apply at ourKendallville location at

621 E. North St.

General

Sunny Meadows is Hiring:

• Cook • Caregiver • Housekeeper

2nd & 3rd Shift /PT 28 Hours /Week

Apply in person:

2315 CR. 40Auburn, In 46706

General

TOP NOTCHRESTAURANT

OPENING SOONNow Hiring all positions.

Open interviews -Mon., Tues. & Wed.

Nov. 18, 19 & 20 • 9 - 6207 Touring Rd.

Auburn, IN

Janitorial

Auburn-Garrett$9.00/HR start.

2nd shift. Start time5pm. Approx. 2 hrs.

Mon. and 5 hrs. Thurs.Approx. 2 hrs. Sunday,

noon start.Apply online at

www.thecleaningco.com

Questions?1-888-832-8060

M - F •8 am - 4 pm

SEARCHING FOR THE LATEST NEWS?CLICK ON

EMPLOYMENT

Maintenance

Auburn/GarrettApartment Complexseeking a part time

MaintenanceTechnician.

Previous experiencerequired. Email

resume to:connie@kellerdev

.com or fax to(260) 497-7020.

■ ◆ ■ ◆ ■Office

Part TimeCashier &

Receptionist

Applicants must becustomer service

oriented and able towork weekends.

Experience with filing,cashiering and

answering a multilinetelephone is preferred.

Position includescompetitive wagesand a great work

environment.

Taking applications at:

Harold Chevrolet824 N. Wayne St.

Angola, IN

■ ◆ ■ ◆ ■

■ ● ■ ● ■Technician

Family Dollar is Hiring!

The Family DollarDistribution Center inAshley, IN is looking

for a motivated

TransportationTechnician.

Hiring emphasis on 2nd Shift. Minimum of1 year experience inheavy-duty truck and

trailer maintenance; ora Diesel/Auto TechnicalSchool degree. Must

possess a valid driver’slicense, Class A CDL

preferred. CurrentBrake Certification andproper certification to

perform FHWA inspec-tions preferred. TeamMember will perform

shift work and must bewilling to work overtime,

weekends and/orholidays.

WarehousePositions

To apply to this positionor to see a full list of jobopportunities with Fam-

ily Dollar please visitwww.familydollar

.com/careers.

Family Dollar is anEqual Opportunity

Employer

■ ● ■ ● ■

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

per week! No experi-ence needed!

CDL-Trained andJob Ready in 15 days!

1-800-882-7364

EMPLOYMENT

General1st & 2nd shift CNCMachine openings

Quake Manufacturing islooking for people tosetup/run CNC Ma-chines. Star/CitizenSwiss experience a

plus. Hurco/Haas expe-rience also a plus.

Great compensation,Holidays, vacation,

insurance, 401K.Email, fax, or mail

resume.paulquake@quake

mfg.comFax: 260-432-7868

GeneralLIVE-IN CARETAKERPOSITION--for elderlycouple near Montpelier,

IN. Needed fornights/weekends. Re-sponsibilities include:Personal Care, Cook-ing, Laundry, errands.Compensation: Salaryplus 1BR apartment.

917-327-6402.

GeneralR&R Employment &

R&R Medical StaffingForklift, MechanicallyInclined Machine Op-erators, Heavy Indus-

trial Positions,Inspector/Packers, Pro-duction, Woodworking,

Experienced PatchPainter, P/T Reception-ist, Industrial Painters,Assembly, Experienced

Aluminum Welders,CDL A–Regional,

Warehouse, Dietary,LPN, RN,CNAs

Accepting applicationsfor CNA classes!

Applywww.rremploy-ment.comor call

260-724-4810

RE

NT

AL

SR

EN

TA

LS

APARTMENTRENTAL

GRISWOLD ESTATES

*Restrictions Apply

DEPOSITS START AT $99!

NOW OFFERINGWEEKLY RENTALS!

FREE HEAT!AS THE

TEMPERATURE GOES DOWN SO DOES OUR RENT

(260) 333-5457900 Griswold Ct., Auburn, IN 46706

[email protected]

APARTMENTRENTAL

CROSSWAITCROSSWAITESTATESESTATES

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

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

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

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

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

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

A New ApartmentHome Awaits You at

1 BR $450 $400

2 BR $550 $500

3 BR $600 $550

Carport now available at no extra cost with this

“Winter Special.”This special is good until 12/1/13.

DEERFIELDAPARTMENTS

1998 Deerfi eld Lane, Kendallville

Hours: M-F 8-5260-347-5600

BR

WinterWinterSpecialsSpecials

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

nelsonestates@mrdapartments.commrdapartments.commrdapartments.com

NELSON ESTATESCALL TARA TODAY!CALL TARA TODAY!

NOVEMBER RENT FREE! $0 Application Fee

• Free Heat & Water • Pet Friendly Community

Thanksgiving Thanksgiving Special Special

Open HouseOpen House2 Days Only2 Days Only

Nov. 15th & 16thNov. 15th & 16th

AngolaONE BR APTS.

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

APARTMENTRENTAL

Auburn $99 First Month -2BR-VERY NICE!

SENIORS 50+ $465No Smokers/ No Pets

(260) 925-9525

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

month. Call260-897-3188

Hamilton1 BR apts at Cameron

Village. Rent based onincome. Immediate

occupancy. (260) 443-4125

Kendallville1 BR Apt Downtown$425 (260)341-3221

KendallvilleLarge 2 BR upper apt.

w/ W/D. Call347-2078 or 343-8211

HOMESFOR RENT

Angola-Crooked Lake $500 mo.+ Deposit, New Flooring/ No pets

260-432-1270

Auburn6366 CR 31. 4 BRranch with finished

basement. 3 1/2 BA, 3car garage. $250/WK.Deposit. 10 mi. N of Ft.Wayne. (260) 925-3478

or 260-413-9952

AuburnLand contract, 3 BRgarage, $500/mo.

260 615-2709

Brimfield2/3 BR & 1 BA.

$140 Wk + Dep.(260)349-5402

CorunnaFOR RENT OR SALE:3 BR, 2 full BA, appl.incld., 2-car garage.Nice newer home.

225 Maple St.$650/mo. + util. & dep.

260-515-2194260-414-1258

WaterlooLand contract, 3 BRgarage, $450/mo.

260 615-2709

AT YOUR SERVICEBUSINESS &

PROFESSIONAL

BANKRUPTCYFREE CONSULTATION$25.00 TO STARTPayment Plans, Chapter

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

act as a debt relief agencyunder the BK code

Divorce • DUI •Criminal • BankruptcyGeneral Practice

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

A debt reliefagency under theBankruptcy Code.

HOMEIMPROVEMENT

All PhaseRemodeling

and HandymanService - No Job

too Big or Small !!!Free Estimates

Call Jeff260-854-9071

Qualified & InsuredServing You Since

1990

ROOFING/SIDING

County Line RoofingFREE ESTIMATES

Tear offs, winddamage & reroofs.

Call (260)627-0017

B8 kpcnews.com SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2013

Sudoku Answers 11-16

Fax 260-347-7282 E-mail Classifi [email protected]

THE NEWS SUN THE HERALDREPUBLICAN StarThe

Make The Classifi edsMake The Classifi edsPay Off For You!Pay Off For You!

Play Santa with the great gift ideas you’ll fi nd or pile up some extra Christmas cash when you do your holiday shopping and selling in the classifi eds! Call today to fi nd out how easy it is!

MOBILE HOMESFOR RENT

AvillaCountry, 2 BR, 1 BA

newly remodeled.$550/mo.+ dep.

897-2799 or 318-2440

Hamilton Lake

2 BR, updated, largekitchen & LR, one blockto lake, nice park, oth-

ers available. $450/mo.(260) 488-3163

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

574-202-2181

OFFICE SPACE

AuburnOffice -1100 sq. ft., nice

100 N. Clark St. Call 925-4660

HO

ME

SH

OM

ES

HOMES FOR SALE

All real estateadvertising inthis newspaperis subject to theFair Housing

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

KPC Phone BooksSteuben, DeKalb, Noble/LaGrange

REALLY TRULY LOCAL...

HOMES FOR SALE

Open HouseSun. Nov. 16th • 2-5

9.5 acres, beautiful set-ting, 2+ BR, 2 BA fin-ished basement, at-tached garage, polebarn. Home built in1987. $240,000.

1.7 mi. N of US 6 onNoble-Dekalb County

line (1200E). Call(260) 347-2291

USDA 100% HOMELOANS--USDA 100%Home Loans. Not just1st time buyers! Lowrates! Buy any homeanywhere. Academy

Mortgage Corporation,11119 Lima Road, Fort

Wayne, IN 46818.Call Nick Staker260-494-1111.

NLMS-146802. Somerestrictions may apply.Largest Independent

Mortgage Banker. Indi-ana Corp State Li-cense-10966. CorpNMLS-3113 LO Li-

cense-14894. EqualHousing Lender. (A)

MOBILE HOMESFOR SALE

1984 Skyline ModularHome 24 x 48 “Must bemoved” This is a 3BR,

2 BA Home. It has all ofthe app., stove, fridge,

washer & dryer, & somefurnishings. Big Screen

Sony TV, Furniture.Gas furnace, CA, eve-rything works. 80 Ft. ofNice treated deck. Vinylsiding, good roof, a littlepainting & cleaning youwould have a very nice

affordable home Can show any time!

$18,000 obo. Must sellto build new home.

(260)599-4276

GarrettMOBILE HOMES FORAS LOW AS $550.00

A MONTH - LEASE TOOWN! WE HAVE

2 & 3 BR TO CHOOSEFROM. WE ALSO DO

FINANCING.CALL KATT TODAY

260-357-3331

LAKE PROPERTYFOR SALE

AUCTION3 BR, 2 BA Home

100’ Waterfront lotBig Barbee Chain.

No Reserve.Sat. Dec. 7th @ Noon

Open HousesSun.,Nov. 17 • 12-1:30Mon., Dec. 2 • 5 -6:30

(260)580-3400smauctioneersAU11000012

GA

RA

GE

SALE

SG

AR

AG

E SA

LES

GARAGE SALES

Angola1290 N Hickory LaneNov. 16 & 17 • 10 - 6

MOVING SALEClothes, householditems, tools, books,

9 ft. pool table, 12x16gambrel shed w/ loft.Everything Must Go!!!

Kendallville701 Wakefield Circle

Fri. & Sat. • 8 - 5MOVING SALE

Furniture, antiques,housewares.

ST

UF

FS

TU

FF

MERCHANDISE

Oreck canistersweeper, 1 year old.Mint cond. $100.00

(260) 488-3135

APPLIANCES

30’ Whirlpool GasStove - Self Cleaning

oven, Good Cond. $90(260)925-4203

FURNITURE

Brand NEW in plastic!QUEEN

PILLOWTOPMATTRESS SETCan deliver, $125.

(260) 493-0805

Flexsteel queen sizehide-a-bed. Excellentcond. $200. Chromek-raft table, 42”x 60” w/2

leaves. 4 upholsterchairs w/casters. Good

cond. $200. Call260) 927-1711.

BUILDINGMATERIALS

PIONEER POLEBUILDINGS

Free EstimatesLicensed and Insured

2x6 Trusses45 year WarrantedGalvalume Steel

19 ColorsSince 1976

#1 in MichiganCall Today

1-800-292-0679

FIREWOOD

FREE FIREWOODFOR HAULING -SPLIT

& STACKED FIRE-WOOD (260)243-6046

WANTED TO BUY

Looking for 8 1/2 X 11Creative Memories al-bum. Preferred NIP.Call after 5:00 PM.

260-318-0172.

TIMBER WANTEDAll species of hardwood. Pay before

starting. Walnut needed.

260 349-2685

FARM/GARDEN

APPLES & CIDER Mon.-Sat. • 9-5:30

Sun. • 11-5GW Stroh Orchards

Angola (260) 665-7607

PETS/ANIMALS

15 mo. old AKC Regis-tered. Cre/Bro Poodle

Male. Can be OSACert. Breeder quality.$300 (260)768-8162

FREE To Good Home:Lab/ Husky Mix

Puppies, 9 wks.old. 1stshots, also the mother.(260)582-9554 after 4

FREE TO GOODHOME: Spitz/ Chichua-

hua mix. Spade,White,Female, 6yrs

(260)243-8626

FREE: Female CockerSpaniel mix, crate

trained has not beenwith little kids, 3 years

old. 316-0216

PUPPIES--Starting at$129. Chihuahua mix,Malti-pom, Shih-Tzus,Havanese, Shmorkies,Chihuahuas. Garwick’s

The Pet People:419-795-5711. gar-

wicksthepetpeople.com.Sweaters, coats to keep

them warm! (A)

WH

EE

LS

WH

EE

LS

AUTOMOTIVE/SERVICES

$ WANTED $Junk Cars! Highest

prices pd. Freepickup. 260-705-7610

705-7630

SETSER TRANSPORTAND TOWINGUSED TIRES

Cash for Junk Cars!701 Krueger St.,

K’ville. 260-318-5555

AUTOMOTIVE/SERVICES

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

2008 Mercury MilanLoaded, Clean, Tan

Well Maintained, 87k,$8800 (260)925-0670

1998 Saturn SC2,Auto, ABS, PW Air,

New Tires &Brakes, 155K

$1995.00 OBO260-667-7613

1 & ONLY PLACE TOCALL--to get rid of thatjunk car, truck or van!!

Cash on the spot!Free towing. Call

260-745-8888. (A)

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

260-466-8689

Indiana Auto Auction,Inc.--Huge Repo SaleThursday, Nov. 21st.

Over 100 repossessedunits for sale. Cash

only. $500 deposit perperson required. Regis-ter 8am-9:30am to bid.

No public entry after9:30am. (A)

TRUCKS

1988 Chevy Pick Up$700.

260 316-7652

BOATS/MOTORS

REDUCED: DECKBOAT, TRAILER &

LIFT. $2,225.(260) 413-9998

CAMPERS/RV

26 ft. 2011 Rockwoodmodel 2604. Full fur-

nished, ready to gosouth. Always stored

inside. Excellent cond.$19,500. Call

(260) 927-1711

MERCHANDISEUNDER $50

1 gallon milk can.$30.00

260-349-5402

1 Unit Kitchen CabinetBase 36”x24”, white.

4 drawer, 1 door.$45.00 obo.

Albion, (260) 654-4924

18 cu. ft. GE Refrigera-tor. Runs great.

$25.00. (260) 897-2322

1858 Ball blue garlamp.

$25.00 OBO260-349-5402

1976 Bearcat-8Scanner. 4 band F.M.

$45.00 obo(260) 833-2450

20 Avon Perfumes likenew & unused in origi-

nal boxes. $20.00. Call/text, (260) 336-7774

MERCHANDISEUNDER $50

20” Bike$25.00

(260) 385-2776

2000 White Heavy DutyShower Chair. Already

assembled. $20.00.(260) 636-2356

24” Bike$25.00

(260) 385-2776

25 DVDs, Action & Ro-mance. Excellent cond.

$25.00. Call/text,(260) 336-7774

3 shelf glass TV stand,dark glass holds large

flat screen.$40.00

Call Mike after 2pm260-504-0014

36” Pull Behind LawnSweeper. Good cond.

$35.00. (260) 347-1541

4 - 14” Ford AluminumMag Wheels. $50.00.

Auburn, (260) 920-8676

4 - 225x170 14” tires.Low miles. $40.00.

Auburn (260) 920-8676

4 Ginny Dolls withstands-1 in box.

$20.00 for all260-347-0951

4-Drawer ChestDresser. Needs paint-

ing or refinished.$40.00. Kinderhook, MI

(517) 238-5337

40 piece hose clampset. Never opened,

new. $7.00.(260) 665-2588

5 piece Rod Iron PatioFurniture. $40.00.

(260) 573-5384

78x84 Tan color verticalblinds for sliding or

French door. New inbox. $40.00 obo(260) 347-5268

Anchor 2 gal. Crock$30.00

(260) 908-1772

Anchor 6 gal. Crock$45.00

(260) 908-1772

Antique Oil Cans1 - 4 gal., 1 - 2 gal., &

1 - 1 gal. All 3 for $50.00.(260) 564-4924

Auburn School Year-book. 1935-1939.

1942-1946.Must buy all. $25.00.

(260) 925-2158

Backpack StyleBaby/Toddler Carrierwith stand. $10.00.

Call/text,(260)336-7774

Bag of boys 4T clothes.A few 3T’s. Very nice &

clean. Jeans, sweat-shirts, T-shirts, shorts,

camos, etc. $30.00.(260) 636-2356

Bag of large TeddyBears. All very cute.

$10.00. (260) 636-2356

Beautiful 4 ShelfLighted All Mirrored

Corner Curio Cabinet.$50.00. (260) 357-9023

Beautiful 6.5 ft. DouglasFir Christmas tree.

$50.00 obo.(260) 243-8070

Beautiful Area Rug63”x94”, MimosaLambswool. Blue,

green, mauve. $50.00.(260) 357-9023

Black leather computerdesk chair. Very nice..

$30.00260-495-4124

C Pap machine$50.00

260-925-1156

Cabinet Type Color TV$40.00

(260) 894-4623

Chicago BearsSweatshirt. Size Lg.Looks new. $10.00.

(260) 636-2356

Christmas VillageApprox. 50 pcs. only set

out twice. $40.00.(260) 221-2277

Collection of Christmasmagazines. Festive

recipes, decor., gifts,some vintage. All ingreat cond. $29.00.

(260) 833-4232

Computer Desk22”x47”. Light oak

color. $35.00. (260)357-3640

MERCHANDISEUNDER $50

Crate & Barrel 18”x18”Decorator pillow & in-sert. Style Ammara,

Perfect cond., teal, ter-racotta, pumpkin, sageon natural background,modern lines. $30.00firm. (260) 515-3468

Crate & Barrel 20”x20”Decorator pillow & in-

sert. Style Howell, per-fect cond., teal, terra-cotta, pumpkin, sage,

browns, on natural/neu-tral background, mod-ern lines. $30.00 firm.

(260) 515-3468

Crate & Barrel F/QKivet black & white

Duvet cover. New & inoriginal pkg. Reg. price$129.00. $50.00 firm

(260) 515-3468

Dishwasher, undercounter, white, Whirl-pool. Good condition.

$40.00260-925-4203

Eagle Claw “WaterEagle” 6’ Spincast Rod.$20.00. (260) 665-2588

Electric Hospital Bed$50.00

(260) 385-2776

Electrician’s fish tape200’. Good shape.

$20.00260-925-1156

Formica table w/4chairs.

$25.00 OBO260-349-5402

Fruit Picture32x25 3/4, $10.00.

(260) 908-1772

Futon. “Blue” mattress.Clean, good cond.

$50.00. Brimfield-Albion(260) 564-4924

Gas Turkey Roasterwith tank. $25.00.

(260) 573-5384

Green VariegatedRecliner Chair; rocks.

$50.00 obo(260) 897-2121

Gulbransen Piano& Bench. $50.00.(260) 908-1772

Harley Davidson ZippoLighter, 2009, NIB w/or-ange safety seal. Har-

ley Davidson Bar &Shield #24505, picsavail. $30.00 firm.

(260) 515-3468

Harley Davidson Zippolighter, 2007, new in tinw/orange safety seal,Freedom w/Skull, pics

avail. $30.00 firm(260) 515-3468

Harley Davidson ZippoLighter, 2007, new in tin

w/orange safety seal,Live to Ride #24008.

Pics avail. $30.00 firm. (260) 515-3468

Harley Davidson ZippoLighter. 2007, NIB w/or-ange safety seal. Blackdagger w/HD logo on

brilliand red back-ground, $30.00 firm.

(260) 515-3468

Home Interiors Deerpicture. 19x27”, $10.00.

(260) 908-1772

Kenmore refrigeratorwhite good condition

w/ice maker.$50.00

260-573-9422

Kerosene Heaterwith (new-in-bag) wick.

You need to install.$35.00. Kinderhook, MI

(517) 238-5337

Lot of 40 DVD movies.A big variety of come-dies & action. $40.00

260 909-0147

Mens Dark Tan J.Ferrar dress pants. Size

48x30, never worn.$40.00. (260) 925-0221

MERCHANDISEUNDER $50

Metal Cage3x3x2 ft. plastic bottomwith casters. $40.00.

(260) 385-2776

MIcrowave, white Whirl-pool, above stove.

Good condition.$25.00

260-925-4203

Nice microfiber com-puter desk chair.

$20.00260-495-4124

Nice Wooden RockingChair. Excellent cond.

$35.00. Call/text for pic.Shipshewana,

(260) 350-2373.

Old School Bell17” Diameter. Hashanger, no cradle.

$50.00. (260) 665-2588

Pair of 205/60/R-16tires.

$45.00260-768-9122

Patio Stones24”x24”x1 1/2” - 6 -

$1.00. (260) 833-6427

Quart Jar of Old GameMarbles. $7.00.(260) 854-3668

Roll Top Desk$50.00

(260) 908-1772

Scrub tops~XL. Maincolor is Seal Blue,

Diff. patterns &Characters

$3 ea. (260)636-2356

Sled with wreath andice skates attached.

$20.00260-347-0951

Small Dog Cage with divider. 24” l x 17” w x18”h. Used one month.

$10.00.Avilla, (260) 242-1519

Swivel Rocker ChairRed Crushed Velvet

Excellent cond. $40.00cash. (260) 925-1125

Table saw table.$10.00

260-349-5402

Turkey Smoker$25.00

(260) 573-5384

Used bed mat, HDrubber, Dodge shortbox. Good condition.

$20.00260-925-4203

Used black tonneau,roll-up for

Dodge short box.$10.00

260-925-4203

UV Light Gel Nail Dryerautomatic single w/gels.$19.95. (260) 833-6427

Vera Bradley Tote withumbrella & zipper.

Miller Pink Elephant,new. $50.00. (260)

925-0221

VHS MoviesLot of 34, pics. avail.

$50.00 obo.(260) 515-3468

Vintage GalvanizedCoal Bucket & Coal

Shovel. Both in greatcond. $19.00.

(260) 833-4232

Weight Bench, Bar andiron weights In good

cond. $50.00.(260) 463-2188, ext. 3

Whirpool refrigeratorwhite good condition

w/ice maker.$50.00

260-573-9422

White Decorative BirdCage with 5.5’ stand.

$10.00. Call/text,(260) 336-7774

Women Plus SizeBlouse, size 3X

$5.00. (260) 908-3622

Women Plus SizeBlouse, size 4X

$5.00. (260) 908-3622

MERCHANDISEUNDER $50

Women Plus SizeJeans. Size 26

$5.00. (260) 908-3622

Women Plus SizeJeans. Size 28

$5.00. (260) 908-3622

Wood burning stove$50.00

260-349-5402

Wooden Cabinet w/2doors. Holds DVD’s,VHS’s, CD’s, etc. 3shelves inside & on

doors. 28”hx12”dx231/2” w. Very nice.

$20.00. (260) 636-2356

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