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WASHINGTON

TIMES HERALD
www.washtimesherald.com

Minor
accidents
result from
increased
train traffic

Saturday, April 23, 2016

One dollar

State school vouchers have conflicting impact


MIKE GRANT
TIMES HERALD

Whether it is statewide or locally, the


school voucher program is having a rapidly
growing impact on schools and funding.
The Indiana Department of Education has
issued its 2016 Choice Scholarship report.
The program has changed considerably
from when it first began. One thing for
certain is that there are more students than
ever involved in the School Choice program.
The first round of vouchers in Indiana
involved 3,911 students in the school year
2011-2012. This school year, that number
has expanded to 32,686. That growth is
not surprising, said Barr-Reeve School Superintendent Travis Madison. When the
program began there were very specific
rules for students to follow to qualify for
vouchers. Those seem to get loosened every
year.
One of the specific reasons for the creation of the voucher program was to give
parents of children who were in a public
school district that was failing an option to
attend a private or charter school. The
IDOE reports that less than 1 percent of all
students involved in the voucher program
are in a failing school district.
Not only has the number of students
been growing, but the amount of money
going with them is increasing. In the first
year of the program $16.2 million went
with the vouchers. This school year the
amount is estimated at $134.7 million. The
funding is a sore spot with public school
officials, including Madison.
At the end of the day the pie is the pie
and there is only so much money to go

Motorists warned to
stay alert near tracks
MIKE GRANT
TIMES HERALD

In the last week there have been


two train-vehicle accidents in Daviess County. But no one was seriously injured in either crash. The
accidents are the first involving a
train in quite some time in the
county and it marks the first time
there have been multiple accidents
involving trains in an even longer
time.
The most recent accident involved a tractor on CR 450E late
Wednesday.
A tractor came out of a field
and pulled right into the path of
the train, said Daviess County
Sheriff Jerry Harbstreit. The accident did some property damage,
but we were fortunate there were
no serious injuries.
We were lucky on the one we
had the other day, said Washington Police Chief Todd Church.
That one involved a truck and
while it did a lot of damage to the
vehicle, the driver managed to
walk away.
The city accident happened
April 14 at the crossing on South
Meridian Street.

>> See TRAINS

// Page A2

Pinwheels for
prevention
shines light on
child abuse
Event Tuesday will
focus on ending child
abuse and neglect

CHOOL VOUCHER

>> See VOUCHERS

// Page A2

Melody Brunson |

VOUCHERS GROWING IMPACT

Times Herald

SOPHOMORE
SKYLORE
MOWERY AND
CHASE
BAUMERT, a
junior, leave
Washington
Catholic High
School on Friday
afternoon
as school
dismissed.

Statewide Voucher Program Participation by


Grade Level
Year
K.
1-8
9-12
Total
2011-2012
0
3,172
739
3,911
2012-2013
0
7,607 1,532 9,139
2013-2014 1,285 15,512 3,012 19,809
2014-2015 1,809 21,658 5,681 29,148
2015-2016 1,775 23,912 6,999 32,686

*Source: Indiana Department of Education

LINDSAY OWENS
TIMES HERALD

April is Prevent Child Abuse


Awareness Month and on Tuesday,
from 5 p.m. until 7 p.m., Pinwheels
for Prevention at the Park will
take over Washingtons Eastside
Park in hopes of bringing awareness to the signs and effects of
child abuse.
Child abuse knows no boundaries and affects children of every
race, age, gender and socioeconomic background. This monthlong campaign to raise awareness
provides a chance for communities to come together at special
events, like the one locally Tuesday, to not only educate on the resources to combat the issue but
also honor those affected by abuse
and neglect.

>> See ABUSE

// Page A3

COMING TUESDAY
City Council: Zoning
Amendments

Mumps can cause more than just puffy cheeks


LINDSAY OWENS
TIMES HERALD

Mumps. Its caused by a virus that affects the glands that produce salvia, but
its not something that most people
worry about contracting anymore
thanks to measles, mumps and rubella
(MMR) vaccinations most receive when
they are 12- to 15-months-old and again

before starting school.


A recent influx in the number of cases
of mumps diagnosed in the Hoosier
State already this year is causing health
officials, including the Daviess County
Health Department, to educate the community about the signs of the infectious
disease best known for causing puffy
cheeks.
We just want people to know that

CALL US! 254-0480


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Circulation . . . . . . . . . . Ext. 131

mumps can be a very serious disease


that can have long-tern complications,
said county health educator Jeanette
Hughes. Most of the outbreaks have
most commonly occurred in places
where people have had prolonged close
contact with a person who has the
mumps such as classrooms, playing on

>> See MUMPS

ONLINE NOW
College is worth it. Who should pay for it?
Farmers remain hopeful despite drop in cattle market prices

// Page A3

MORE INFORMATION
For more information
about the mumps or to
schedule MMR
vaccinations, contact
the Daviess County
Health Department at
812-254-8666.

A2

news

SATURDAY, APRIL 23, 2016

WASHINGTON

TIMES HERALD

WASHINGTON TIMES HERALD

BARR-REEVE PROM ROYALTY ANNOUNCED

The Times-Herald was established in 1867


and now published Tuesday through Saturday,
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2016
COMMUNITY NEWSPAPERS HOLDINGS, INC.

Todd Lancaster | Times Herald

BARR-REEVE will hold their Jr./Sr. Prom this evening , with Grand March beginning at 7 p.m. in the high school gymnasium. This years theme will
be Once Upon a Time.
LEFT PHOTO: Senior candidates for queen and king. Pictured front (from left): Courtney Pruett, Baley Gabhart, Kendra Yoder, Jurnee Davis, Bethanie
Knepp. Back row: Eric Graber, Logan James, Gage Miller, Trevor Yoder and Adam Graber.
RIGHT PHOTO: Junior candidates for princess and prince. Pictured front (from left): Hanna Pettersen, Eren Ueyama, Amy Wittmer, Leah Bullock and
Peyton Lengacher. Back row: Jonathan Walker, Hawk Royer, Jasper Groen, Evan Helms and Will Scott.

Vouchers ...
<< CONTINUED from Page A1
around, he said. At the
same time the state can find
money for vouchers, a lot of
public schools are being
asked to do with less. Our
basic funding is still at 20082009 levels. The state says
there is only so much money
that can go into education.
Public education is cut and
vouchers continue to grow.
WC SEES IMPACT
OF VOUCHERS

The program has had a


significant impact on one
area school. The IDOE report
shows that during the first
year of the program Washington Catholic had 22
voucher students at the elementary and 16 at the Middle-Senior High School. This
year that number had grown
to 114 in the elementary and
94 at the Middle-Senior High.
We feel the program benefits Washington Catholic,
said W.C. Middle-High School
Principal Karie Craney. It
helps give families some options when it comes to education. I believe our enrollment has increased some as
the result of the availability
of vouchers.
Prior to vouchers, Washington Catholic relied almost
exclusively on tuition, fundraising and support from the
Church to cover the expense
of the school. Our tuition
was always under the cost of
providing an education, said

re-routing some of their trains


across the Midwest, said
<< CONTINUED from Page A1 Washington Mayor Joe Wellman. It is a result of their
The driver said the lights scheduling.
were flashing and he looked
and he did not see the train EVEN MORE TRAINS
and pulled right in front of it, EXPECTED
Community leaders are ansaid Church.
Officials believe the acci- ticipating a growth of train
dents may be the result of traffic. The addition of a new
some increased train traffic in siding on the east side of
Washington. The community Washington with a cross-dock
at one time was full of trains facility is expected to add to
rolling through town, but in the train traffic in the commurecent years the traffic had nity.
We think there will be indwindled to a coal train running through every once in a creased rail activity as we see
the east side of town and the
awhile.
For awhile we had hardly area around I-69 grow, said
any trains coming through, Wellman.
In addition, the railroad has
said Church. With so few
trains, I think people got com- been limited on some of the
placent. Even when the cross- cars they can send through
ings would activate, it seemed Washington because of the
like it was mostly mainte- height of the 15th Street
nance crews making their way Bridge.
They cannot run double
through.
The CSX tracks though are stack cars through Washington
beginning to see some addi- now because the bridge is too
low to the tracks, said Daviess
tional traffic.
We know that east-went County Highway Supervisor
line has had limited traffic, but Phil Cornelius. We are workit appears to be picking up, ing on a project to replace that
bridge and raise the height.
said Harbstreit.
Engineering work on the
Just being here in town, we
have noticed some additional project is already under way,
and the county is negotiating
train traffic, added Church.
Washington officials say the with CSX on its potential parincrease is a result of some ticipation in the work. Construction is planned to begin
routing changes by CSX.
We met with CSX and they next year and then take an
are changing their traffic and additional year to complete.

Trains ...

TUNE-IN

Craney. We have raised our


tuition since the program began. It allows us to provide a
little more for the students.
The Choice Scholarship
programs growth at WC has
risen every year. The state
e s t i m a t e s $ 4 97, 1 0 9 i n
voucher funds will be going
to the elementary this year,
with another $431,899 going
to the Middle-High School.
That money has certainly
helped Washington Catholic,
said Craney. It helps take
some of the struggle off the
school.
While the struggle may be
coming off the private and
charter schools, Madison
(who is a Washington Catholic alumni) says the change
has meant short-changing
public school kids without
any proof that the students
are getting a better education.
There is no study I can
find that vouchers help kids
get a better education, said
Madison. Many of these
schools have their own missions and they should be
paying their own way, and as
far as charter schools go, that
is simply a for-profit industry.
Madison believes it is time
to put the brakes on the
voucher program in Indiana.
I am concerned about the
impact the continued expansion of this program will
have, he said. I just dont
think we should short change
any public school kid just to
fund this program.

People got used


to not having
trains around.
They are back
and people have
to be alert for
them.
TODD CHURCH
Washington police chief

That will open up the line


through Washington, but it
wont open up everything
throught Daviess County, said
Cornelius. The bridge over
the railroad in Montgomery is
also too low to accomodate the
double stack cars. We are also
looking at that bridge in the
future.
Meanwhile, authorities are
encouraging the public to get
into the mind that more trains
are coming through and that
means motorists need to exercise additional caution at the
crossings.
You absolutely have to pay
attention, said Harbstreit.
Whether there are crossing
arms or just a stop sign, drivers need to use extra caution
at railroad crossings. You have
to remember that any time a
vehicle collides with a train,
the train will win.
People got used to not having trains around, said
Church. They are back and
people have to be alert for
them.

967JACKFM.COM

DLC Media, Inc. Radio Stations

AREA BRIEFS
Area youth
to appear on
Chopped Junior
Haley Mattes, 12, the
daughter of Amy Sellers of
Evansville and Beau Mattes
of Washington, will appear
on the Food Network show
Chopped Junior Tuesday at
8 p.m. The show will feature
several celebrity judges and
the young chefs will compete
for a $10,000 prize. Check
out the season two casting
videos at www.foodnetwork.
com/shows/chopped-junior.
html and look for the Casting Dough Business video to
learn more about Mattes.
Look for more on Mattes
and what her experience on
the show was like in an upcoming edition of the Times
Herald.

mances of the same show.


The first show will begin at
1:30 p.m. and the second
show begins at 4:30 p.m.
Tickets for the show are $5
for adults; ages 12 and under
are $3; ages 4 and under are
free if they want to sit on
laps. You may purchase a
DVD of the concert for $20
or a Blu-Ray for $22 at the
show. Snacks will be sold
during intermission.

Tuesday in the Commissioners Room at the courthouse.


Items included on the
agenda: Umbaugh contract
for services; release of funds
for ADA project; ADA bids
awarded; storage agreement
lease; RSVP and Daviess
County fair board budget requests.

Washington City
Council will
meet Monday

The Villages at Oak Ridge


will sponsor a caregivers day
off Tuesday at 1 p.m., with
registration beginning at
12:30 p.m. The free event includes lunch. RSVP by calling 812-254-3800.

Washington City Council


will meet at 6:30 p.m. Monday in Council Chambers,
200 Harned Ave. Items included on the agenda: ordinances amending the zoning
code and rezoning Troy Road
property; VS Engineering
Business 50 proposal; discusSAFS activities
sion of pavement asset maninclude bingo
agement plan.
The Board of Public Works
Senior activities next week
and Safety will meet followat the Washington Senior
ing the City Council. Items
and Family Services, 211 E.
included on the agenda: disMain St., include:
Monday Elder Fraud and cussion/approval of salary/
position changes in electric
bingo 10 a.m.
Tuesday Games, puzzles, and police departments;
open bids on Piankeshaw
cards, 10 a.m.
Trail re-construction project;
Wednesday Bingo, 10
backhoe lease for wastewater
a.m.
department.
Thursday Crochet Club,
1 p.m.
Child abuse
Friday Tree bingo, 10
a.m.
awareness event
The Elder Fraud seminar
and bingo will be presented to be held Tuesday
by Jennifer Stefancik, a PurPinwheels for Prevention
due University Extension ed- will be held a from 5 p.m. to
ucator. Learn how to protect 7 p.m. Tuesday at Eastside
yourself, family and friends
Park. This child abuse awarefrom fraud.
ness prevention event will
include free food, presentaLoogootee choir
tion and drawings for prize
bicycles. Local agencies will
presents a
also be present.

concert Sunday

The Loogootee choir department will be presenting


Fire and Ice in the high
school auditorium Sunday.
There will be two perfor-

DC Commissioners
to meet Tuesday
Daviess County Commissioners will meet at 9 a.m.

Caregivers day
off on Tuesday

Four Rivers
board will meet
The Daviess/Martin Four
Rivers board will meet at 6
p.m. Tuesday at the Daviess
County division conference
room in Washington. The
agenda will be posted at
both offices in Washington
and Loogootee.

DC Solid Waste
board will meet
The Daviess County Solid
Waste District board will
meet at 8:30 a.m. Tuesday in
the Commissioners Room at
the courthouse. Items on the
agenda include acceptance of
the prior meeting minutes
and approval of claims.

Health Department
offers testing
Daviess County Health Department, 303 E. Hefron St.,
offers sexual transmitted infection clinic daily from 7:30
a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Also offered
are HIV and Hepatitis C testing the second Monday of
each month from noon to 4
p.m. Testing is free and confidential. Call 812-254-8666
for an appointment. Walk-ins
are also welcomed.

local and state

WASHINGTON TIMES HERALD

OBITUARIES
RICHARD SLAVEN
May 24, 1928 April 21, 2016

ODON - Richard H. Slaven,


87, passed away peacefully
Thursday at the Jasper Memorial Hospital.
Richard was
b or n in Daviess County
May 24, 1928,
to James and
Lona (Simpson) Slaven. He
married the
love of his life, Ruth (Cunningham) Slaven, on April 20,
1947.
Richard worked many jobs
throughout his life which included bricklayer, carpenter,
farmer, fireman, and Odon
Town Marshall for 25 years.
Richard was named Fireman
of the Year after serving for 15
years. He served two terms on
the North Daviess School
Board and served as the
Grand Marshall of the Odon
Old Settlers Parade in 2014.
Richard was a 66-year member of the Eastenr Star Chapter 341 and Moore Lodge 303
of the Odon Masonic lodge.
He was also a member of the
Hadi Shrine and Scottish Rite.
He also started the trend of
taking the buses to the circus.
In his spare time, Richard
loved to mushroom hunt, feed
the birds and squirrels, ride on
his golf cart and make yard
decorations for the public to
view.
Survivors include his son,
Richard (Chris) D. Slaven, Jr.
of Odon; daughters Pam Wininger of Odon and Brooksie
(James) Shuppert of Cincinnati, Ohio; four grandchildren;
and nine great-grandchildren.
Richard was preceded in
death by his parents; his wife
Ruth; six brothers; and five
sisters.
A Masonic Memorial service is scheduled for 6:30 p.m.
Sunday followed by an Eastern Star service at the Meng
Family Funeral Home in
Odon.
Funeral services will be
held at 10 a.m. Monday at the
Meng Family Funeral Home,
with Rick Tribby officiating.
Richard will be laid to rest in
Walnut Hill Cemetery in Odon
Family and friends may call
at the funeral home on Sunday from 4 p.m. until 8 p.m.
and Monday from 9 a.m. until
the time of service at 10 a.m.
The Slaven family has entrusted all arrangements to
James W. Meng Jr. and the
Meng Family Funeral Home
in Odon. Online condolences
may be sent to www.mengfuneralhome.com.

ROBERT MILES
SOLLIDAY
SATELLITE BEACH, Fla. Robert Miles Solliday was
born in Washington, son of
Wilma Miles Solliday and Luther Solliday. He graduated
from Odon High School, attended Vincennes University
and served in the U.S. Air
Force. He is survived by his
wife, Marjorie Tomey Solliday,
daughters Shannon Martin
and Jennifer Perduto, four
grandchildren, one greatgrandchild, nieces and nephews, and his beloved Westie,
Duke. In remembrance, please
consider a donation to your
local animal shelter.

FUNERAL NOTICES
WILLIAM BUD HAND
The funeral for William Bud
Hand was Thursday at Free
Methodist Church, with Pastor
William Stotts and Rev. Dr. Fred
White officiating.
Pallbearers were William
Butch White, Billy Gene Clark,
Larry Watkins, Fred White, Brent
Clark and Mark William Richardson. Honorary pallbearers were
Dalelen Hand, Roger Allen
Hand, Alixandra Edwards,
Amber Hand Stillions and William ONeil Edwards.

SATURDAY, APRIL 23, 2016

A3

STATE BRIEFS
Overdose epidemic
calls for discussion
FRANKFORT A small
central Indiana city has convened a panel of local stakeholders who will meet next
week to discuss an alarming
rise in drug overdoses.
Frankfort Police Chief Troy
Bacon tells the (Lafayette)
Journal & Courier that the
overdoses have reached epidemic proportions. He says
the city has seen a 133 percent surge in overdoses this
year, from nine at the same

$435 million for transportation infrastructure maintenance funds.


Gov. Mike Pences office
says the money will be distributed on Friday. The
money comes from local option income tax distributions
that counties, cities and
towns can use under a plan
signed into law last month.

time last year to 21 as of


April 19.
Clinton County Coroner
Amanda Abbott says four
people died of drug overdoses last year in the county.
She says her office is awaiting toxicology results on four
potential overdoses that occurred since April 1.

State receives funds


for transportation

Crops survive low


temps in early April

INDIANAPOLIS State officials say local governments


across Indiana will receive

WEST LAFAYETTE Purdue agricultural experts say

Mumps ...
<< CONTINUED from Page A1
the same sports teams, and
living in the same dorms.
As of today, there have
been over 70 diagnosed
cases of the mumps in Indiana, most on college campuses, including 24 at Butler, 22 at Indiana University, eight at Purdue and
five at IUPUI.
According to the Center
for Disease Control, mumps
is spread through salvia or
mucus from the mouth,
nose, or throat when one
coughs or sneezes or shares
drinks or eating utinsels,
making college campuses a
ideal place.
Hughes said those with
the mumps can spread the
diease for up to two days
before and five days after
the symptoms develop
meaning that the mumps
can be spread before someone begins to feel sick. The
symptoms, which most
commonly start with fever,
headache, muscle ache,
tiredness and loss of appetite, often lead to puffy
cheeks and swollen jaws
due to an immflamation of
the savilia glands under the
ears.
Some people who get
mumps have very mild
symptoms and dont realize
they have the disease, said
Hughes. However, mumps
can occassionally cause
complications, especially in
adults.
Those complications can
include encephalitis, meningitis, deafness and inflammation of the testicles,
ovaries or breasts according to the CDC, but by receiving the MMR vaccination, the odds of contracting
the mumps decrease.
The MMR vaccine prevents most cases of mumps
and complications caused
by the disease, said
Hughes, adding that CDC
reports that two doses of
the MMR vaccine are 88
percent effective preventing
the disease and one dose is
78 percent effective.
Students attending college and other post-secondary institutions who do not
have proof of vaccination,
as well as those traveling
internationally need to
have two doses of MMR at
least 28 days apart and
those born after 1957, who
have never had mumps or
have not been vaccinated,
should get at least one dose
of the vaccine.
Covered by most health
insurance plans, the MMR
vaccine is available at the
Daviess County Health Department. Those who do
not have insurance or insurance that covers the vaccine for children or adults
can receive a free MMR
vaccine at the health department located at 303 E.
Hefron St., Washington.

Indianas winter wheat, forage and fruit crops appear to


have survived cold weather
earlier in April.
Temperatures fell below
freezing throughout the state
during a ten-day cold snap
from April 2-12.
Fruit trees had already
started to bud in southern Indiana and the low temperatures brought fears of crop
loss. But extension specialists
say while there was a little
bit of damage there was
nothing severe enough to reduce yield.

Man pleas guilty


to drug killings
INDIANAPOLIS An Indianapolis man has been sentenced to four consecutive life
terms after his February
guilty plea to four drug-related killings spared him a
possible death sentence.
Kenneth Rackemann told
the Marion County court he
didnt mean it to happen
before he was sentenced Friday for the Feb. 20, 2014, fatal shootings at a drug house.
The Associated Press

POLICE REPORT
CITY REPORT
FRIDAY
2:03 a.m. - The Daviess
Community Hospital Emergency Room reported it was
treating a male who had been
involved in a moped accident
around 10 p.m. on West Van
Trees Street that had not been
reported to police.
9:47 a.m. - A woman at 507
Vance St. reported someone
got inside a vehicle at her
home and took paperwork and
a flashlight.
10:14 a.m. - Police received
a report at 1014 W. Main St.
that someone broke a window
and got into a car. The burglar
went through a diaper bag and
stole some clothing.
11 a.m. - A resident reported
three tires slashed on a vehicle
at 506 N. Meridian St.
12:09 p.m. - Officers were
called to a report of a fight in

the basement of building five at


900 S. Meridian St.
12:14 p.m. - Police were
called to investigate a report of
a breaking and entering at
801Jefferson St.
12:39 p.m. - Officers investigated a report of vandalism at
1202 W. Van Trees St.

nue. No injuries were reported


but the accident caused water
to leak all over the area near
the intersection.

THURSDAY

6:23 a.m. - A caller on CR


350S, Washington, reported
when he came to work, all the
office cubicles and the cash
drawer had been gone through.
12:03 p.m. - A man reported
someone was trespassing in
his woods on CR 1475N near
Odon.
1:20 p.m. - Deputies were
called to investigate an accident on CR 75N near Loogootee where a truck was damaged and the second vehicle
left the scene.
2:21 p.m. - A deputy
reported his commission had
been involved in an accident in

3:30 p.m. - Police received a


report that a car had two tires
slashed while parked next to
the city pool on Bedford Road.
7:32 p.m. - Officers were
called to assist deputies at an
accident at Oak Grove Road
and CR 240W. The vehicle had
struck a utility pole and flipped
over and the driver fled the
scene on foot. Authorities later
found him at a residence on
Bent Avenue.
10:18 p.m. - Police were
called to an accident where a
truck his a fire hydrant at the
corner of SR 57 and Viola Ave-

COUNTY
REPORT
FRIDAY

the jail parking lot on Northeast


Fourth Street. He requested a
Washington City Police officer
fill out the accident report.

THURSDAY
9:39 p.m. - A caller on CR
1250E, Odon, requested extra
patrol after some items in his
garage had been tampered
with.

ARRESTS
Jennifer Sandoval, 37, Washington, was arrested Thursday
by Washington police on a warrant for petition to revoke a
suspended sentence. Bond
was set at $200,000.
Craig Roark, 45, Washington
was arrested Thursday by the
Daviess County Sheriffs
Department on two counts of
operating a vehicle while intoxicated .15 percent or higher and
leaving the scene of the property damage accident.
Total Jail Population: 159

BIRTHS
AEDRIA ROACH

long.
He is welcomed by Kendal,
9, and Kaitlyn, 6.

April 11, 2016


Shaneah Roach and Sean
Shartzer announce the birth of
their daughter, Aedria Layne
Roach.
She was born at 8:33 a.m.
April 11 at Daviess Community
Hospital. She weighed 8 lbs., 1
oz. and was 20 1/2 inches
long.
She is welcomed by Ellycia
Shartzer, 9, Mariah Danford, 8,
and Cas Danford, 2.
Grandparents are James Hay
Jr., Sheila Owens, Monte
Owens, all of Washington, and
Laura and Leslie Payne of
Bicknell.

MARTHA RABER
April 12, 2016
Chris and Naomi Ruth Raber
of Montgomery announce the
birth of their daughter, Martha
Leann Raber.
She was born at 5:30 a.m.
April 12 at Daviess Community
Hospital. She weighed 8 lbs., 2
ozs. and was 19 1/2 inces long.
She is welcomed by Jennifer,
14, Joshua, 13, Darla, 12,
Loretta, 10, Joanna, 9,
Rebekah, 7, Kristina, 5, and
Jacob, 2.
Grandparents are Joe and
Rosemary Raber and Paul
Raber, all of Montgomery, and
the late Rosa Jean Raber.

PHEONIX AKERS
April 11, 2016
David Jay Akers and Taylor
Renee Jensen announce the
birth of their son, Pheonix
Ryland Akers.
He was born at 11:55 p.m.
April 11 at Daviess Community
Hospital. He weighed 8 lbs., 9
ozs. and was 20 1/2 inches

SKYLAR OMALEY
April 12, 2016
Alicia and Derek OMaley
announce the birth of their
daugher, Skylar Elaine OMaley.
She was born at 1:01 p.m.
April 12 at Daviess Community

the community will have a


chance to grab a bite to eat,
see presentations, meet with
local angencies and have the
opportunity to win a bicycle.
One local agency that will
be taking part in the annual
event is Daviess Court Appointed Special Advocates for
Children or CASA. Headed by
Shelby McDannald, the
agency uses trained volunteers to advocate for children
who otherwise would not
have a voice in the court system.
Those interested in becoming a CASA will have an op-

Abuse ...
<< CONTINUED from Page A1
Each day our agency must
respond to reports of tragic
abuse and neglect, said Indiana Department of Child Services Director Mary Beth
Bonaventura, in a media release. This month gives us
an opportunity to highlight
community resources to help
at-risk parents and ultimately
keep children safe.
During the Pinwheels for
Prevention at the Park event,

Hospital. She weighed 6 lbs., 3


ozs.
She is welcomed by Alexis
OMaley, 6, and Addley OMaley, 1 1/2.
Grandparents are Jim and
Shelly OMaley and Trish and
Chris Later.

JAZLYN BERMEJO
April 13, 2016
Diana and Alvaro Bermejo
announce the birth of their
daughter, Jazlyn Esmeralda
Bermego.
She was born April 13 at
Daviess Community Hospital.
She weighed 8 lbs., 10 ozs.
and was 20 1/2 inches long.
She is welcomed by Juan,
Jackeline, Elizabeth and
Gerardo.
Grandparents are Maria and
David of Chicago, Illinois, and
Maria Socorro and Ramon of
Michoacan, Mexico.

of their daughter, Maggie Elizabeth Stoll.


She was born at 3:06 p.m.
April 14 at Daviess Community
Hospital. She weighed 8 lbs.,
11 ozs. and was 22 inches
long.
She is welcomed by Adam,
9, Isaiah, 7, Elijah, 5, and
Gabriel, 4 1/2.
Grandparents are Larry and
Esther Stoll and Marvin and
Fanny Eicher, all of Loogootee.

PEYTON ELSEY

April 14, 2016


Willis and Rosetta Stoll of
Loogootee announce the birth

April 15, 2016


Tyler and Kelsey Elsey
announce the birth of their
daughter, Peyton Renee Elsey.
She was born at 2:54 p.m.
April 15 at Daviess Community
Hospital. She weighed 6 lbs.,
13 ozs. and was 19 inches
long.
She is welcomed by Bentley,
4.
Grandparents are James
Elsey, Kevin and Dena Fricke,
Thomas and Robin McDonald,
and the late William Riley.

portunity to learn more about


what we do, said McDannald, noting that CASA volunteers do not make decisions
on cases but rather provide
information to assist the
courts in making those decisions. Its very rewarding and
we will be starting another
training class soon for those
wanting to help be a voice for
children.
Pinwheels, according to the
Prevent Chid Abuse Indiana
website, were introduced as
the national symbol for child
abuse prevention in 2008 and
the pinwheels, with their

child-like whimsy, represent


Americas efforts to change
the way the country not only
thinks about prevention, but
focuses on community activities and public policies that
prioritize prevention from the
start to make sure child abuse
and neglect dont happen.
Since the inception of the
pinwheel, over 1 million have
been displayed in special pinwheel gardens that typically
reflect the number of births
in a community or the number of children served by local agencies.

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Right Here
at Home

perspectives
www.washtimesherald.com

Saturday

TIMES HERALD

A6
April 23, 2016

WASHINGTON

TIMES HERALD
Ron Smith

Melody Brunson

Publisher

General Manager/Editor

Todd Lancaster
Assistant Editor

SHARED VIEW

Tubman
reflects nations
spirit, values
and history
bolitionist. Union spy. The
face of the $20 bill.
Thats quite a journey for a
woman born into slavery in
1822.
Harriet Tubman, a hero of the
Underground Railroad, will replace
Andrew Jackson, the nations seventh president, on the $20 bill, a
Treasury official revealed Wednesday. The comments came a few
hours ahead of an official announcement by Treasury Secretary
Jacob Lew, who detailed changes to
the $20, $10 and $5 bills slated for
2020, in time for the centennial of
womens suffrage and the 19th
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
In addition to Alexander Hamilton remaining on the $10, the most
notable shakeup is the TubmanJackson swap, and its a long overdue reflection of the contributions
women have made to this nation.
Tubman will be the first woman on
U.S. paper currency in the past 100
years.
A campaign to make the change
proposed 15 women to replace Jackson. The broader list, which included Sojourner Truth and Susan
B. Anthony, was narrowed to four
finalists: Eleanor Roosevelt, Rosa
Parks, Wilma Mankiller and Tubman.
The other three finalists were undeniably worthy, reflective of our
values, traditions and history.
Roosevelt was the longest serving
first lady as well as a diplomat and
activist. Parks is a noted icon of the
civil rights movement. And Mankiller was the first female chief of
the Cherokee nation.
But Tubman rises above the rest
as the embodiment of the American
spirit, a symbol of courage and freedom. She ferried hundreds of slaves
to freedom through the Railroad, recruited men for the raid on Harpers
Ferry, was a spy and armed scout
for the Union Army and, later in
life, was active in the struggle for
womens suffrage.
Theres some real irony in the fact
that slave owners enraged by Tubmans actions once offered a reward
for her capture. A reward that, starting in 2020, would be paid with
currency bearing her likeness.
The irony would undoubtedly
amuse Tubman. But how would she
view the honor?
The feisty humanitarian, who saw
the fall of slavery and was still waiting for women to gain the right to
vote at her death in 1913, would
probably simply say, What took
you so long?
What, indeed.

ONLINE POLL
NEW QUESTION
Do you agree with the change to
replace Andrew Jackson with Harriet Tubman on the $20 bill?
Yes
No
Not sure

VOTE AT
www.washtimesherald.com

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Letters to the Editor, Washington
Times Herald, P.O. Box 471, Washington, IN 47501. 300 words or less, some
exceptions. Must be verifiable.
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PERSPECTIVES PAGE
Material labeled Our View is the
official opinion of this newspaper,
regardless of the author. Material
labeled Shared View, is an opinion
written by another newspaper with a
view shared by the Times Heralds editorial board.
Bylined columns are the opinions of
the authors, but not necessarily the
opinion of the newspaper. Letters to
the Editor are the opinions of the
author.

The Saudis practice mafia tactics


T
he Mafia, in its heyday, ran
lucrative protection rackets.
Pay them and your business
would be kept safe from
unforeseen threats. Dont pay
them and your business might go
up in smoke with you inside.
Today, things are more sophisticated.
The New York Times reports that
Saudi Arabia, playing the role of
Mafia extortionist, has threatened to
...sell off hundreds of billions of
dollars worth of American assets
held by the kingdom if Congress
passes a bill that would allow the
Saudi government to be held responsible in American courts for
any role in the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.
The Saudis are estimated to hold
about $750 billion in treasury securities and other assets in the U.S.
and the concern is that they might
sell them before American courts
could impose a freeze. The Obama
administration opposes the bill, saying it could potentially open the
kingdom to lawsuits from relatives
of the dead and injured. So?
Why do the Saudis oppose this
bill, which enjoys bipartisan support? Could it be because, as many
believe, they helped facilitate the
greatest mass murder in American
history? Fifteen of the 19 men involved in the terrorist plot were
Saudi citizens and that country promotes the most extreme form of Islam known as Wahhabism.

Cal Thomas
SYNDICATED COLUMNIST

Adding to the suspicion that there


is more to be learned about Saudi
Arabias role are 28 pages contained
in the 9-11 Commissions report
censored by the Bush administration for national security reasons.
Need more? According to government documents obtained by Judicial Watch, 160 subjects of the
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, including
but not limited to members of the
House of Saud and/or members of
the bin Laden family fled the U.S.
(on chartered planes when all other
aircraft were grounded) between
September 11, 2001 and September
15, 2001.
In an April 10 appearance on the
CBS program 60 Minutes, former
Florida Democratic Sen. Bob Graham, who chaired the Senate Select
Committee on Intelligence at the
time the report was being written,
said: I think it is implausible to believe that 19 people, most of whom
didnt speak English, most of whom
had never been in the United States
before, many of whom didnt have
a high school education, couldve

carried out such a complicated task citizens at legal risk because other
without some support from within nations might retaliate with similar
the United States.
legislation. The difference is that
Graham thinks the hijackers reU.S. citizens are not hijacking
ceived active support and guidance planes and committing mass murfrom rich Saudis, Saudi charities
der in other countries. The bills
and top members of the Saudi gov- sponsors, notes The New York
ernment.
Times, have said that the legislaThis is a matter that is easily retion is purposely drawn very narsolved by releasing the 28 pages.
rowly involving only attacks on
The relatives of the
American soil to
dead have a right
reduce the prospect
The relatives of
to know who
that other nations
funded the terrorist the dead have a
might try to fight
attack that killed
back.
right to know
their loved ones.
For too long Rewho funded the
Justice demands it
publican and
terrorist attack
and if compensaDemocratic admintion is awarded, the that killed their
istrations have igSaudis, who have
nored the actions
loved ones.
made billions from
teachings of
Justice demands and
oil sales to the
Saudi Arabia, inWest, can afford it. it and if
cluding textbooks
The intent of the compensation is
used in Islamic
Senate bill is to
schools that deniawarded, the
clarify the immugrate Jews and
nity normally given Saudis, who have other infidels and
to foreign governmade billions
the building of
ments. It says such
mosques that some
from
oil
sales
to
immunity should
imams are using to
not apply when na- the West, can
spread hate and retions are found cul- afford it.
cruit suicide bombpable of commiters.
ting terrorist atThis bipartisan bill should pass,
tacks that kill Americans on U.S.
and if the president vetoes it, he
soil.
should explain his reason to the
The Obama administration
families of the dead.
claims that weakening the immunity law could put U.S. corporations, Readers may email Cal Thomas at
the American government and its
tcaeditors@tribpub.com.

Christians should look at veto as a victory


f you are at all disappointed
with the final decision made in
Tennessee to reject the Bible as
the states official book, Id
challenge you to think a little
deeper as to why. It seems as
Christians that we have
sometimes seen it as our duty to
be louder than government
systems, trying to make what we
like to market as influence into
what everyone else considers law.
However, decisions like the one
made on the floor of the Tennessee
House on Wednesday to veto a bill
that would make the Bible the
states official book are just one way
God can show us where our place
is in this whole thing called evangelism.
This bill has been on the floor
since the beginning of April and
was initiated by supporters in February in an effort to memorialize
the book that has supported a multi
-million dollar publishing industry
in Tennessee. While Gov. Haslam
made the statement that making
the Bible the states official book
would trivialize the text, the real
concern is what trivializing the text
says about our perception of God. If
you believe in the Bible as the in-

Cass Tyler
LOCAL COLUMNIST

spired word of God and the text to


its point of beginning, trivializing
the text implies a lack of faith in
the God who wrote it and his
power to reveal himself without
help.
Impressing convictions made by
faith into the realm of the law is exactly what Jesus came to abolish.
Law cannot save, only punish. Tennessees official book being the Bible does not increase the entire
states chances of salvation any
more than Indianas state beverage
being water means that the entire
state of Indiana stays fully hydrated.
No, putting Christianity into government would be the passive, easy
way out. In fact, it was the old way
out that left many condemned to
hell.

Sadly, this debate was between Christian


brothers and sisters and provided a very
loud spotlight for division, which was the
loss here for Christian witness. The good
news of the gospel is unity. The result of a
bill like this passing, would be the
indignation of Christians and non-Christians
alike and a wimpy soapbox of pride,
masked by the illusion of doing good for
bill supporters.
The other side of the argument
says that they seek to honor the
economic and historic impact of the
Bible in Tennessee, not necessarily
promote its religious influence or
spiritual significance. Well, also be
assured God was not out to make
an economic impact with the Bible
and he himself needs no commemoration. As a test of faith, Jesus asks
individuals to give up all of their
personal possessions on more than
one occasion and God declares
himself as the beginning and the
end, of everything.
Sadly, this debate was between
Christian brothers and sisters and
provided a very loud spotlight for
division, which was the loss here

for Christian witness. The good


news of the gospel is unity. The result of a bill like this passing, would
be the indignation of Christians and
non-Christians alike and a wimpy
soapbox of pride, masked by the illusion of doing good for bill supporters.
However, be at peace, even
amidst the noise, because there is
much more noise to come. Look at
Gov. Haslams standing veto as a
victory and a small way God has
chosen to preserve His own name,
without help. Recognize political
Christianity as the enemy of a gospel that needs no additional platform, because it is the power of
God himself.

state

WASHINGTON TIMES HERALD

SATURDAY, APRIL 23, 2016

A7

Mark Curry | Howey Politics IN

REPUBLICAN PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE Ted Cruz waives


to the crowd at a campaign stop.

Cruz seeks fertile


ground in Indiana
MAUREEN HAYDEN
CNHI STATE REPORTER

INDIANAPOLIS -- Presidential candidate Ted Cruzs efforts


to make inroads in Indiana
started before he made his first
campaign appearances here
Thursday.
A week ago, he dispatched
his father, Rafael, a retired pastor, to preach to a crowd of establishment Republicans at a
Lincoln Day Dinner in New
Albany -- one of many stops
made over the past month.
Clark County Commissioner
Jack Coffman was won over.
Thats why he dished out $150
to see the GOP candidate in
person, at a private dinner
Thursday for well-heeled Republicans in Indianapolis.
The event, the Indiana Republican Spring Dinner hosted
by Gov. Mike Pence, was the
first of several planned Indiana
visits for Cruz before the May 3
primary.
I feel like we need a strong
moral leader now more than
ever, Coffman said. We need
someone seeking guidance
from God.
For Coffman and evangelical
Christians like him, the socially
conservative Cruz is the best
countering force to the blustery
candidacy of billionaire Donald Trump.
Trump rolled into Indianapolis on Wednesday for a rally at
the State Fairgrounds, beating
Cruz to the state by a day.
But Cruz supporters are hoping to defeat Trump both in the
critical ground game before
the Indiana primary and in
wooing GOP delegates to the
national convention in the
event Trump doesnt clinch the
nomination before then.
They see Indiana as fertile
ground: A place where they
can win over some moderate
Republicans who bristle at the
thought of Trump, while also
mobilizing evangelical supporters and the tea party forces
that endorsed him early.
On Thursday at the state
dinner, Cruz mocked front-runner Trump for running a superficial campaign based on rhetoric, not policy.
Its easy to talk about making America great again, Cruz
said, referring to the Trump
slogan. You can even put that
on a baseball cap.
Calling the GOP faithful at
the dinner patriots who love
their country, he went on to
promise the receptive dinner
audience that he, not Trump,
had the best shot of knocking
off the likely Democratic nominee, Hillary Clinton.
Donald is not the best candidate to go head to head with
Hillary, he said. If Donald is
our candidate, we lose by double digits.
Cruz said the result would
be disastrous for Republicans,
likely leading to a loss of the
Republican control of the Senate which has confirmation
power over the future U.S. Supreme Court candidates.
His speech to the dinner
crowd was laced with conservative Republican talking
points. He promised, if elected,
to abolish the Internal Revenue
Service, institute a flat tax for
all, eliminate what he called
locust-like environmental regulators, and repeal every word
of Obamacare.
He also pledged to put an
end to amnesty for illegal immigrants and cut off any welfare benefits that have come
their way.
All those promises evoked
applause from the crowd of
800 party loyalists, including
Pence.Cruz started his day in
Indiana at the popular Shapiros Deli in Indianapolis before meeting privately with

Pence at the governors residence to seek his endorsement.


Trump did the same when
he was here, accompanied by
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie,
who endorsed Trump last
month.
Pence, whos up for re-election in November, faces a fractured state party thats split in
its support among Trump, Cruz
and Ohio Gov. John Kasich,
whos won only one state -his own.
So a Pence endorsement
might not be forthcoming.
But Cruzs appearance on
stage with Pence at the state
party dinner sends a signal:
Hes the only presidential candidate to accept the governors
invitation to attend the dinner.
PENCE CONNECTION
INTENTIONAL

Political scientist Joe Losco,


head of the Bowen Center for
Public Affairs at Ball State University, says Cruzs symbolic
connection to Pence is intentional. Both men are deeply religious social conservatives
whove actively opposed samesex marriage and gay rights.
They appeal to the same
base, Losco said.
Among Pences biggest supporters are the Indiana Family
Institute and the Indiana Pastors Alliance, both of which actively supported the so-called
religious freedom law that
critics saw as a license to discriminate.
Leaders of those organizations, Curt Smith and Ron
Johnson, are also the Cruz
campaigners who arranged for
Cruzs father to speak to conservative church groups around
Indiana.
How strong the Cruz support
is in Indiana unclear: Theres
been no public polling on the
presidential race in the state.
But Losco said a December
poll taken by the Bowen Center might shed some light:
About 25 percent of Hoosiers
said gay rights and same-sex
marriage significantly conflicted with their religious
views.
Thats a solid base, but still
limited.
I think there is a ceiling for
his support here, Losco said.
NEGATING TRUMPS APPEAL

Crux supporters, meanwhile,


are working hard to negate
Trumps appeal as the angry,
anti-establishment candidate.
In Kosciusko County, a
mostly rural area west of Fort
Wayne, Cruzs local campaign
chairwoman, Teresa Martin,
mobilized a small army last
weekend to create a wave of
Cruz yard signs.
Martin joined the campaign
because she liked Cruzs past
work as Texas solicitor general
taking an aggressive stand
against illegal immigration.
And she admires how, as a U.S.
senator, he led the October
2013 government shutdown in
a failed attempt to defund the
Affordable Care Act, also
known as Obamacare.
Hes fought the Establishment, she said. Hes done everything to fix the problems
that Trump is screaming
about.
Hoosiers will soon start seeing that message on the airwaves.
The Washington, D.C.-based
Club for Growth, a conservative stronghold led by former
Indiana congressman David
McIntosh, has just launched a
$1.5 million ad campaign targeting Trump.
It promotes a Vote Cruz
message as the best way to
torpedo Trumps chances of
earning the 1,237 national convention delegates he needs to
nail down the nomination on
the first ballot.

Marda Johnson | CNHI News Service

TWO PASSENGERS escaped serious injury Thursday when their plane went down at Indianapolis Executive Airport at
606 N CR1200E.

Two hurt in plane crash near Indy airport


A single-engine aircraft
crashed into a field about a
half-mile east of Indianapolis
Executive Airport in far eastern Boone County about 5:15
p.m. Thursday.
Both the pilot and a passenger were taken to St. Vincent
Hospital with non-life threatening injuries.
The plane crashed across
CR 1200E near the Palomino
Ballroom, about sixth-tenths
of a mile south of SR 32.
Boone County Sheriff Mike
Nielsen said the crash was
called in by a passerby who

said they were stopped by


someone saying they had just
been in a plane crash.
Nielsen said the passengers
were identified the pilot instructor as Ronald W. McCormick, 70, and flight student
was a 17-year-old juvenile
male, both were transported to
St. Vincent Hospital with non
-life threatening injuries. The
plane, a 2011 single engine
Cessna, was based at the airport and registered to Eagle
Flyers, an aircraft rental service.
Nielsen said the National

Tr a n s p o r t a t i o n S a f e t y
Board and the FAA will complete the investigation and determine the cause. But based
on an initial interview with
the pilot and witnesses driving
by at the time of the wreck,
the cause appears to
be weather related as a storm
was passing through the area
at the time.
These are two very lucky
people, Nielsen said.
A fuel leak from the plane
was contained by booms
placed by Zionsville Fire Department firefighters.

The airport is owned by the


Hamilton County Airport Authority. Its main runway is
5,500 feet long and runs northsouth. About 95 aircraft use
the airport each day, according
to information from the Federal Aviation Administration.
About 65 aircraft, including
seven multi-engine and 12 jet
craft, are based at the airport.
Zionsville Fire Department,
Boone County Sheriffs Department, Zionsville Police
Department responded to the
scene.
CNHI News Service Report

Purdue freezes tuition for 5th straight year


WEST LAFAYETTE (AP)
Purdue University has decided to freeze tuition for the
fifth consecutive year.
President Mitch Daniels
announced Wednesday at a
Purdue Student Government
meeting that tuition and fees
will remain flat through the
2017-2018 school year. That
means resident tuition will
stay at about $10,000, out-ofstate students will continue to
pay about $28,800, and inter-

national student tuition will


remain at about $30,800.
Were looking in every
place, and I think theres
plenty more to do, to reduce
the non-essential spending,
Daniels said.
He said the university has
saved a significant amount of
money by buying smarter,
building efficiently, modernizing its health plan, using
existing resources carefully
and cutting back on adminis-

trative costs. But he said Purdue has still been able to


grow faculty and research
and increase pay at faster
rates than other universities.
Daniels assured students
that the tuition freeze wont
come at the expense of faculty and staff.
He also announced at the
meeting that Purdue will offer a 2.5 percent merit pool
increase to university employees this year. The pool

was increased by 3.5 percent


last year.
It is absolutely our job to
concentrate the resources of
this place on teaching the
students and researching for
the future and thats what
were going to do, Daniels
said.
Purdue has saved its students $134 million over the
first three years of the tuition
freeze, according to a statement from the university.

Health chief: Use Flint 2 counties seek OK for


to address lead paint needle exchange programs
INDIANAPOLIS (AP)
Flint, Michigans lead-contaminated water cr isis
presents an opportunity for
Indiana public health advocates to shine a spotlight on
the much larger health
threat children face from
lead-based paint in old
homes, Indianas health
commissioner said Thursday.
Dr. Jerome Adams urged
about 100 people who attended the annual Indiana
Lead Forum to ride the
wave of public interest in
Flints cr isis and help
spread the word about how
parents can lower their
childrens risk of exposure
to lead in paint, dust and
soil in and around older
homes.
Many of you have been
wanting to talk about lead
for decades, and lets be
honest youve been largely
ignored, unfortunately, he

told the Indianapolis gathering. While theres nothing good about what happened in Flint, it is an opportunity because now
people are talking about
lead.
About 90 percent of Indianas child lead poisoning
cases are caused by lead in
and around older homes,
with lead in water accounting for the remaining 10
percent, said Mary Hollingsworth, the drinking water
chief for the Indiana Department of Environmental
Management.
The federal government
banned lead-based residential paints in 1978. But Adams said nearly two-thirds
of Indianas homes were
built before 1980, putting
many children at risk if
those homes arent tested
for lead or children living
there arent screened for
lead exposure.

RICHMOND (AP) Two Indiana counties are seeking


permission from the state to
begin or continue needle exchange programs in an effort
to slow the spread of hepatitis
C and HIV among narcotic
drug users.
Commissioners in Wayne
and Scott counties voted unanimously Wednesday in favor of
their respective needle exchanges.
Wayne County has been
planning for its proposed exchange since 2015, when a local official declared a health
emergency due to the number
of HIV and hepatitis C infections. Scott County, where the
states first exchange was established after last years HIV
outbreak, wants to continue its
exchange for the second year.
Both counties must submit
paperwork, including a form
explaining other ways they
have tried to combat the viruses, before they can receive

permission from the Indiana


State Department of Health for
the exchanges.
If its request to set up an exchange is approved, the Wayne
County Health Department
would arrange a location for
two hours each month where
opiate users could turn in used
syringes and needles, and receive a safety box with new
syringes and needles.
Last year, four Indiana counties Fayette, Madison, Monroe and Scott won state approval to operate needle exchanges for one year under a
new state law.
A request by Clark County
to run an exchange is pending
with the state health commissioners office. Beth Meyerson,
co-director of the Rural Center
for AIDS/STD Prevention at
Indiana University, expects
more than 20 other Indiana
counties to eventually seek
state approval to run needle
exchanges.

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weather

SATURDAY, APRIL 23, 2016

WASHINGTON TIMES HERALD

Washington Times Herald Weather


Today

Sunday

National Map for Today

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Sunny

Sunny

Scat'd T-storms

Isolated T-storms

Scat'd T-storms

70 49

78 58

77 56

73 51

72 45

Regional Weather Forecast

Local Forecast
Today we will see sunny skies with a high
of 70, humidity of 43%. Northeast wind 3
to 8 mph. The record high for today is 90
set in 1925. Expect clear skies tonight with
an overnight low of 49.

Shown is todays weather. Temperatures are todays highs and tonights lows.

Bicknell
70 / 49
Vincennes
70 / 50 Washington

Odon
70 / 48
Loogootee
70 / 49
French Lick
71 / 49

70 / 49
Petersburg
71 / 50

Princeton
71 / 51

Around Our State


Today

City
Bloomington .
Columbus . . .
Elkhart . . . . . .
Fort Wayne . .
Gary . . . . . . . .
Indianapolis. .

Hi/Lo
. 68/47
. 68/46
. 64/43
. 62/42
. 58/45
. 67/46

Wx
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High Temperature. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73
Low Temperature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
Precipitation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.22"

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. .6:59
. .8:34
.10:00
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a.m.
p.m.
p.m.
a.m.

Pollen

Sunday

Hi/Lo
77/58
77/56
73/54
72/53
75/56
76/57

Today

Wx
s
s
s
s
s
s

City
Kokomo . . . .
Lafayette . . .
Muncie . . . . .
Richmond . .
South Bend .
Terre Haute .

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Hi/Lo
. 65/46
. 66/47
. 64/45
. 68/45
. 63/44
. 68/48

Wx
s. .
s. .
s. .
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s. .

Sunday

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Hi/Lo
75/57
76/57
75/56
74/53
74/54
78/58

Wx
s
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s

Todays Pollen Level ...............................High


Source: pollen.com

White River
Location
Newberry
Petersburg

L
L

This map shows high temperatures,


type of precipitation expected and
location of frontal systems at noon.

Cold Front

High: 102 in Death Valley, Calif.

Statistics for Thursday

Sunrise today . .
Sunset tonight .
Moonrise today .
Moonset today .

Stationary Front

Warm Front

Low Pressure

High Pressure

National Extremes

Almanac

Sun and Moon

Huntingburg
72 / 50

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

Today
6.68 ft.
11.53 ft.

RURITAN MAKES DONATION TO


WASHINGTON POWER HOUSE

Current Flow
6,510 ft3/sec.
18,300 ft3/sec.

Across the Nation


Today

Hi/Lo
Atlanta . . . . . .78/56
Baltimore . . . .70/48
Boston . . . . . .61/41
Charlotte . . . .78/55
Chicago . . . . .59/48
Dallas . . . . . . .83/62
Denver . . . . . .76/43
Detroit . . . . . .57/39
Honolulu . . . .85/73
Las Vegas . . .77/62
Los Angeles .72/58
Miami . . . . . . .83/72
Minneapolis. .73/55
New Orleans .79/65
New York . . . .66/46
Oklahoma City 79/59
Orlando . . . . .85/65
St. Louis . . . .73/57
San Francisco 64/51

Around the World

Sunday

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Hi/Lo Wx
80/58 s
68/56 s
54/42 s
81/58 s
76/57 s
78/66 t
66/41 s
66/49 pc
86/73 s
83/62 s
73/57 s
82/72 s
68/45 t
80/68 s
61/49 s
77/61 pc
84/66 s
81/62 s
64/49 s

Today

Athens . . . .
Baghdad . .
Beijing . . . .
Cairo . . . . .
Hong Kong
London . . .
Mexico City
Montreal. . .
Moscow . . .
Nassau. . . .
Paris. . . . . .
Rome . . . . .
Seoul . . . . .
Stockholm .
Tokyo . . . . .

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Hi/Lo
.72/61
.95/70
.72/46
.97/66
.77/73
.50/37
.70/52
.52/28
.52/34
.77/75
.50/36
.63/55
.64/45
.45/30
.70/57

Wx
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pc .

Sunday

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Hi/Lo Wx
73/57 s
100/75 s
82/59 s
100/77 s
75/73 t
48/36 pc
77/48 s
48/36 s
54/43 s
77/73 s
50/36 pc
64/48 sh
68/45 s
45/28 pc
61/55 ra

Weather (Wx)FOFORXG\XUULHV
pc/partly cloudy; r/rain; rs/rain & snow;
s/sunny; sh/showers; sn/snow;
t/thunderstorms; w/windy

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
SUNDAY
Alcoholics Anonymous, 8
p.m., Central Christian Church,
10 W. Van Trees St.
Lighthouse Recovery Center worship service, 9:15
a.m., Harvest Community Fellowship, 200 W. Main St.
Lighthouse Recovery Center worship service, 9:30 a.m.
and noon, Victory Tabernacle,
1419 W. Walnut St.
Lighthouse Recovery Center addiction/recovery worship service, 7 p.m., Victory
Tabernacle, 1419 W. Walnut St.
The Compassionate
Friends meets the second
Sunday of every month at
Daviess Community Hospital, 3
p.m. For more information, call
812-582-3920.

MONDAY

Photo Provided

Wx
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sh .
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s .
s .
s .
s .
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sh .
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mc .
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s .

Low: 9 in Mount Washington, N.H.

Tops IN 1417, Monroe City,


2 p.m., room No. 11, The Blue
Jeans Community Center.
Weight Loss Group, Washington, 5 p.m., Carnegie Public
Library, 300 W. Main St.
GED class, 5:30 p.m. to
8:30 p.m., Central Christian
Church, N.W. First and VanTrees streets.
Divorce Care, meet, 7 p.m.,
The Barn, Odon.

12-Step Christian Recovery


Class, 7 p.m. at The Storehouse, 111 W. Main St., 812444-9775.
New Creation Addiction
Support Group, meet, 7 p.m.,
back of Alfordsville United
Methodist Church.
Parenting class, 7 p.m.
Lighthouse Recovery Center
for Women, 311 E. Main St.
Bible study, 9:30 a.m.,
Lighthouse Recovery Center
for Men, 1276E 250N.
Inspection and house
meeting, 6:30 p.m., Lighthouse Recovery Center for
Men, 1276E 250N.
Release and re-integration
class, 8 p.m., Lighthouse
Recovery Center for Men,
1276E 250N.
Narcotics Anonymous,
noon, Christ United Methodist
Church, 104 N. Meridian St.
Alcoholics Anonymous, 7
p.m., Westminster Presbyterian
Church, 110 N.E. Second St.

TUESDAY
Friendly Slimmers Weight
Club, 4 p.m., Carnegie Public
Library, 300 W. Main St.
Adult Basic Education and
GED prep, Head Start, 2103
Cosby Road, 12:30 p.m. to 3

p.m. For more information, call


812-888-4119.
Celebrate Recovery, Christian 12-step recovery group,
7 p.m., The Barn, 108 W. Main
St., Odon.
Alcoholics Anonymous, 8
p.m., Big Book study, Central
Christian Church, 10 W. VanTrees St.
Socialization class, 11 a.m.,
Lighthouse Recovery Center
for Women, 311 E. Main St.
12 Steps program, 7 p.m.,
Lighthouse Recovery Center
for Women, 311 E. Main St.
12 Steps program, 7 p.m.,
Mens Lighthouse Recovery
Center, 1276E 250N.
Narcotics Anonymous, 7
p.m. to 8 p.m., Christ United
Methodist Church, 104 N.
Meridian St.
Daviess County Solid
Waste board, meet, 8:30 a.m.,
Commissioners Room, courthouse.
Daviess/Martin Four Rivers
board, meet, 6 p.m., Daviess
County division conference
room.
Daviess County Commissioners, meet, 9 a.m., Commissioners Room, courthouse.
Washington City Council,
meet, 6:30 p.m., Council
Chambers, 200 Harned Ave.

CLINT YOUNG, board member and secretary of the Washington Power House, left,
accepts a donation check from the Montgomery Ruritan Club represented by Club
President David Graber. The Ruritan Club, in keeping with their tradition of supporting
charitable causes and organizations in the local community, made the donation
to support of the fourth annual PowerHouse Spring Banquet to be held this Saturday,
April 23rd in the atrium of the Antioch Christian Church at 6:00 pm. Anyone desiring
more information concerning this fund raiser or to make a donation should contact
Nathanial Rainey, Executive Director of the Washington PowerHouse.

WAYS TO HELP OTHERS


who come in hungry for food
and friendship. Often, meeting physical needs first opens
The Furniture Connection, doors to focus on any other
need the teens may have. We
a program of CONNECare looking for volunteers to
TIONS, is collecting used furprovide an after school meal
niture and working applifor approximately 40 kids
ances to be given to families once a month. We also have
in need. Please call CONseveral projects that need a
NECTIONS at 812-257-2650 handyman, if you are good at
to donate your used furniture fixing things, please consider
and working appliances, all
volunteering at the Power
donations are tax deductible. House! For information, call
CONNECTIONS is a free in- 812-254-7693.
formation and referral service assisting those in need
Adult Literacy
of finding valuable resources
The Adult Literacy Prowithin Daviess County.
gram through the Washington Public Library is needing
Power House
volunteers to help adults
A non-profit teen center at learn to read or improve
709 E. Main St., Washington, their reading skills. Volunteers must be at least 16
serves teens in grades 7-12

The Furniture
Connection

years of age if still in school


or adults older than 16 must
have a high school diploma
or GED and should be able
to commit to two hours a
week. Please call Teresa at
the Library at 812-254-4586.

Posting to Ways
To Help Others
If you represent an agency,
ministry, or church serving
anywhere in Daviess County
that is in need of donations
or volunteers, you may send
a posting request to Ways To
Help Others at P.O. Box
1014, Washington IN 47501,
or email ways2helpothers@
hotmail.com. For more information call Connections at
812-257-2650.

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TIMES HERALD

sports

washtimesherald.com
Saturday

www.washtimesherald.com

Arrieta reaching new


heights, along with Cubs
CINCINNATI (AP) When he
went to the Chicago Cubs as part of
a trade that included bonus slots for
international players, Jake Arrieta
was convinced hed someday do
great things.
Three years later, hes celebrating
no-hitter No. 2. And his Cubs are on
the rise, too, trading their loser label for the top spot in the majors.
Arrieta allowed only six balls hit
out of the infield on Thursday night
while no-hitting the Cincinnati
Reds 16-0, a gem as clean and as
dominating as it gets. It was the
first no-hitter of the season in
Major League Baseball and
his second in 11 regular
season starts he also
stymied the Dodgers 2-0
on Aug. 30 as the highlight of his Cy Young season.
Every time he goes out
there, hes got no-hit stuff, Reds
outfielder Jay Bruce said. Hes arguably the best pitcher in the game
today.
And his Cubs have the best
record in the majors at 12-4, which
is their best start since 1970. Theyre
building on their wild-card playoff
appearance last season with an ace
who is doing things that no one except him envisioned when Chicago
got him in a trade with Baltimore
midway through the 2013 season.
The Cubs sent pitcher Scott Feldman and catcher Steve Clevenger to
the Orioles for pitcher Pedro Strop,
two international signing bonus
slots, and Arrieta, who had a 5.46
career ERA.

SPORTS COLUMNS, MORE SCORES

I envisioned pitching like this,


even when I had a (5.46 ERA) in
Baltimore, Arrieta said. I expected
to get to this point at some point,
regardless of how long it took or
what I had to go through to get
there.
I had visualizations of throwing
no-hitters or throwing shutouts. So
now its starting to happen for me. I
dont take any of it for granted.
Hes on one of the best stretches
of pitching in Cubs history.
Arrieta has won each of his first
four starts, the first Cub to do that
since Greg Maddux in 2006.
And it goes much farther
back.
He won the NL Cy
Young by going 22-6 last
season two more wins
than he had during his
four seasons with Baltimore.
On Thursday night, he added to
his club record with a 24th straight
quality start hes 19-1 with a 0.86
ERA since June 21.
In his last 16 regular season
starts, hes 15-0 with a 0.53 ERA,
allowing only seven earned runs in
119 1/3 innings. He hasnt allowed
a run in his last 18 2/3 innings.
Arrieta is so good that his latest
no-hitter didnt meet his usual standard for the first six innings. He
walked three one more than he
had in his three previous starts
combined and threw 85 pitches.
Manager Joe Maddon had decided
to leave him out there as long as he
was working on a no-hitter.

>> See ARIETTA

// Page B2

B1
April 23, 2016

PRUETT TO PLAY AT OAKLAND CITY

Todd Lancaster | Times Herald

BARR-REEVE SENIOR Courtney Pruett signed her letter of intent to play volleyball at Oakland City
University on Friday.
I really liked the small school setting at Oakland City. When I went there, I felt like everyone knew each
other, said Pruett. It helped to know (former Viking teammates) Jenna (Knepp) and Cori (Cummings) will
still be there. Im really excited about playing with them.
Her 4-year record with the Lady Vikings was 101-14 and was a member of the 2013 state championship
team. Courtney ranks 3rd in all-time digs with 1272, and had 275 service points and had 43 aces last
season.
I have had Courtney for the last three years and I am so proud of her, said B-R coach Amber DeCoursey.
She shows so much emotion on the floor and that just helped us so many times. I am looking forward to
watching her play at the next level.
Front row (from left): Maria Purett (mother), Courtney Pruett, and Mike Pruett (father). Back row: Barr-Reeve
Athletic Director Aaron Ash, Barr-Reeve Varsity Volleyball Coach Amber DeCoursey, and Barr-Reeve High
School Principal Jeff Doyle

Fleetwood outduels Graber

for WHS win

Colts begin
to look at
changes for
2016 season
GEORGE BREMER
CNHI NEWS

Todd Lancaster | Times Herald

HATCHET BILLY FLEETWOOD delivers to the plate against Barr-Reeve on Friday.


TODD LANCASTER
TIMES HERALD

Although it took over two weeks


for the Barr-Reeve Vikings (6-7) and
Washington Hatchets (6-6) to complete their storm-postponed game
from the first week of the season,
the game was well worth the wait.
Although the first inning was an
offense-fueled outing from the
Hatchets, the game turned into a
pitchers duel between Hatchet Billy
Fleetwood and Viking Adam
Graber, with Fleetwood and the
Hatchets coming away with the 3-1
win.
In the previous outing, 40 mph
winds and sideways rain stopped
the 11-3 Hatchet lead on April 6
and returned the game to 0-0 on
Friday.
However, the fresh start also gave
WHS a chance to use sophomore
Fleetwood in his first start.
Frankly, coming back from Jasper on Thursday, we had no idea
what we were going to do, said

WHS coach Steve Reed.


It was Ben Lamberts turn but he
was a sore. Kaden Pfender was on a
college visit today and Jake Bedwell
went against Jasper. To get a complete-game win from Fleetwood
was more than what I could have
asked for.
He did a great job and we
needed that to get us turned
around.
Although Fleetwood gave up a
hit to Logan James in the first, he
retired the Vikings without incident.
The Hatchets then found one
solid inning of offense in the bottom of the first, as Adam Graber
gave up singles to Austin Moody,
Jeremiah Kirsch, Zach Scheid and
Ben Lambert to post a 3-0 lead, in
spite of stranding three runners.
Washington did a nice job of
swinging the bat in the first, but
some of those balls could have
been right at someone and things
would have looked a little different, said B-R coach Joe Rade-

macher.
The difference between Adam in
the first, and from the second
through the fifth, was he was able
to get out in front of hitters and
Washington could sit back and wait
on pitches.
Fleetwood then had a strong second matched by Graber who picked
up a pair of strikeouts to keep
WHS off the board. The Hatchet
defense helped out Fleetwood in
the third, as both Moody and Kirsch
chased down long fly balls as B-R
remained scoreless through three.
WHS threatened again in the
third with a walk to Lambert and
Caleb Carricos second hit of the
night. However, Trevor Yoder made
a pair of nice plays at third and
kept the Hatchets off the scoreboard.
Graber continued to get stronger
as the game wore on. He threw 51
pitches in the first two innings, but
only 26 in innings, three and four.
B-R got on the board in the top of
the fifth as Mitch Wagler reached

on a fielders choice followed by


three straight singles from Kolten
Graber, Shane Miller and Trent
Graber to make it 3-1. The game
turned though, when Fleetwood
was able to get a ground ball back
at the box and he was able to start
a double play that ended the threat
and limited B-R to just one run.
WHS loaded the bases in the
bottom of the fifth, but just like
Fleetwood, Graber was able to get a
ground ball to get out of trouble
with a force at the plate.
Wagler took over for Graber in
the sixth and it looked like Scheid
would have his fourth home run of
the season, but a nice catch from
James at the wall stopped it from
going over or turning into extra
bases.
Fleetwood did put two runners
on in the seventh, but was able to
still come away with the complete
game win.
WHS and B-R are both off for the
weekend, with WHS hosting Mt.
Carmel (Ill.) on Monday.

INDIANAPOLIS Andrew Lucks


health promises to be a long-running
theme throughout the Indianapolis
Colts offseason.
Or at least until he signs an expected record-breaking new contract
and diverts a bit of the attention.
The 26-year-old quarterback, of
course, missed nine games last season with an array of injuries including a lacerated kidney. He said he
felt good when he met with the media for the first time since the end of
the 2015 campaign, but he also
raised a few eyebrows with some
blunt self-evaluation.
I still have some work to do certainly, Luck said. That being said,
youre always working to get better.
Youre always working to feel better.
Youre always working to be in better
shape, to be more
physically fit, so
thats still a process.
Some took those
comments and other similar statements as a sign perhaps all is not
well with the face of the franchise.
General manager Ryan Grigson
quickly shot down such speculation
Wednesday, answering even before a
question could be completed.
Let me cut you off, Grigson said.
Hes fine, alright, hes fine. Hes fine.
Hes fine.
We had a process that he was to
follow in the offseason. Coach (Chuck
Pagano), myself, Mr. (Jim) Irsay was
privy to it. Hes just meticulously, in
an Andrew Luck-type way, going
through his rehab and strengthening
program to a T. He is going to be
fine.
CHUD IN CHARGE

Rob Chudzinski took the reins as


offensive coordinator last November
and promptly cycled through five
different quarterbacks under center.
He had Andrew Luck for one
game, Matt Hasselbeck for parts of
six more, Charlie Whitehurst in four
relief appearances and finally Josh
Freeman and Ryan Lindley in the
season finale.
Coupled with the usual in-season
challenges, there was no time to install his system.
That began to change this week
with the opening of the Colts offseason training activities. Players are

>> See COLTS

// Page B2

B2

sports

SATURDAY, APRIL 23, 2016

scoreboard
LOCAL GOLF
The April Mayflower Blossom Tournament
country oaks golf club
Par 72
1st Phil Eyler,John Chapman,Vernon
Knepp,Ed Summers(-17); 2nd Phil Culver, Les
Potts, J.J. Jones(-16); 3rd Jr. Byron, Charles
Buxton, Tom McAtee, Skip Ackerman(-14);
4th Phil Hand,Tony Wease,Bill Walton(-13);
T-5th Dennis Hardman, Mark Goodman, Glen
Gilley,Richard Tarr(-12); T-5th Phil Troutman,
Jim Martin, Ernie Kingery, Joe Allen(-12); 7th
Leroy Streepy, Henry Cox, Jerry Sanders, Larry
Stafford(-9); 8th Tom Walker, Ron Parsons, Ron
Sparks(-5); T-9th Linus Buchheit, Dick Lemon,
Rick Mosier, Jack Nickless(-4); T-9th Mike
Anderson, Calvin Guy, Delbert Stoll, Morris
Cornelius(-4); T-11th Tom Sanders, John Walker,
Garth Riffey, Denny Brown(-3); T-11th Tom Alvey,
Jack Butcher, Art Neiswanger, Jim Eckerle(-3)

MLB
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Thursdays Games
Seattle 10, Cleveland 7, 10 innings
Tampa Bay 12, Boston 8
Minnesota 8, Milwaukee 1
L.A. Angels 3, Chicago White Sox 2
Oakland 7, N.Y. Yankees 3
Baltimore 3, Toronto 2
Kansas City 4, Detroit 0
Texas 7, Houston 4
Fridays Games
Minnesota at Washington, 7:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m.
Oakland at Toronto, 7:07 p.m.
Cleveland at Detroit, 7:10 p.m.
Boston at Houston, 8:10 p.m.
Texas at Chicago White Sox, 8:10 p.m.
Baltimore at Kansas City, 8:15 p.m.
Seattle at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m.
Saturdays Games
Minnesota (Hughes 1-2) at Washington
(Roark 1-2), 1:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Andriese 0-0) at N.Y. Yankees
(Tanaka 1-0), 1:05 p.m.
Oakland (Bassitt 0-0) at Toronto (Happ 2-0),
1:07 p.m.
Cleveland (Kluber 0-3) at Detroit (An.Sanchez
2-1), 1:10 p.m.
Texas (Lewis 1-0) at Chicago White Sox
(Rodon 1-2), 2:10 p.m.
Boston (Buchholz 0-1) at Houston (Fiers 1-1),
4:05 p.m.
Baltimore (Worley 1-0) at Kansas City (Medlen
1-0), 7:15 p.m.
Seattle (F.Hernandez 1-1) at L.A. Angels
(Santiago 1-0), 9:05 p.m.
Sundays Games
Tampa Bay at N.Y. Yankees, 1:05 p.m.
Oakland at Toronto, 1:07 p.m.
Cleveland at Detroit, 1:10 p.m.
Minnesota at Washington, 1:35 p.m.
Texas at Chicago White Sox, 2:10 p.m.
Baltimore at Kansas City, 2:15 p.m.
Seattle at L.A. Angels, 3:35 p.m.
Boston at Houston, 8:05 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Thursdays Games
L.A. Dodgers 2, Atlanta 1, 10 innings
Miami 5, Washington 1
Minnesota 8, Milwaukee 1
Arizona 6, San Francisco 2
Chicago Cubs 16, Cincinnati 0
Pittsburgh 11, San Diego 1
Fridays Games
Minnesota at Washington, 7:05 p.m.
Chicago Cubs at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at Atlanta, 7:35 p.m.
Philadelphia at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at Colorado, 8:40 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Arizona, 9:40 p.m.
Miami at San Francisco, 10:15 p.m.
St. Louis at San Diego, 10:40 p.m.
Saturdays Games
Minnesota (Hughes 1-2) at Washington
(Roark 1-2), 1:05 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Lackey 3-0) at Cincinnati
(Straily 0-0), 7:10 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Matz 1-1) at Atlanta (Chacin 0-0),
7:10 p.m.
Philadelphia (Morton 1-1) at Milwaukee (Ch.
Anderson 1-1), 7:10 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers (Maeda 2-0) at Colorado
(Chatwood 2-1), 8:10 p.m.
Pittsburgh (Nicasio 2-1) at Arizona (R.De La
Rosa 1-3), 8:10 p.m.
St. Louis (Wacha 1-0) at San Diego
(Undecided), 8:40 p.m.
Miami (Fernandez 1-1) at San Francisco
(Peavy 0-1), 9:05 p.m.
Sundays Games
Chicago Cubs at Cincinnati, 1:10 p.m.
Minnesota at Washington, 1:35 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at Atlanta, 1:35 p.m.
Philadelphia at Milwaukee, 2:10 p.m.
Miami at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at Colorado, 4:10 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Arizona, 4:10 p.m.
St. Louis at San Diego, 4:40 p.m.

NBA PLAYOFFS
All Times EDT
FIRST ROUND
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
Saturday, April 16
Thursday, April 21
Oklahoma City 131, Dallas 102, Oklahoma

Arrieta ...
<< CONTINUED from Page B1
You never want to interfere
with anybodys greatness,
Maddon said.
He didnt have to second-guess himself. Sensing
that another no-hitter was
possible, Arrieta bore down in
the last three innings. He finished with six strikeouts and
four walks. He finished it with
Eugenio Suarezs routine fly
to right field on his 119th
pitch as thousands of Cubs
fans in the crowd of 16,497
cheered at Great American
Ball Park.
What can I say? manager
Joe Maddon said. Man, it was
spectacular.

Colts ...
<< CONTINUED from Page B1

LOCAL SCHEDULE
SATURDAY
Tennis
Washington Invitational, 10
a.m.
Loogootee Invitational, 10
a.m.
Baseball
Heritage Hills at Loogootee,
noon
Softball
North Central at
Loogootee, noon

MONDAY
Tennis
White River Valley at North
Daviess, 4:45 p.m.
Forest Park at Barr-Reeve,
4:30 p.m.
Loogootee at Owen Valley,
5 p.m.
Golf
North Daviess at BarrReeve, 5 p.m.
Washington Catholic at
Princeton/North Knox, 5
p.m.
Softball
Linton at North Daviess, 5
p.m.
Wood Memorial at
Washington, 6 p.m.
Loogootee at Forest Park,
5:30 p.m.
Baseball
Barr-Reeve at Gibson
Southern, 6:30 p.m.
Mt. Carmel, Ill. at
Washington, 5:30 p.m.
Girls Track
Pike Central at Washington,
5 p.m.
Track
Washington Catholic at
Wood Memorial, 6 p.m.
City leads series 2-1
Toronto 101, Indiana 85, Toronto leads series
2-1
Houston 97, Golden State 96, Golden State
leads series 2-1
Friday, April 22
Cleveland at Detroit, 7 p.m.
Atlanta at Boston, 8 p.m.
San Antonio at Memphis, 9:30 p.m.
Saturday, April 23
Toronto at Indiana, 3 p.m.
Miami at Charlotte, 5:30 p.m.
Oklahoma City at Dallas, 8 p.m.
L.A. Clippers at Portland, 10:30 p.m.
Sunday, April 24
San Antonio at Memphis, 1 p.m.
Golden State at Houston, 3:30 p.m.
Atlanta at Boston, 6 p.m.
Cleveland at Detroit, 8:30 p.m.

NHL PLAYOFFS
All Times EDT
FIRST ROUND
(Best-of-7)
(x-if necessary)
Thursday, April 21
Pittsburgh 5, N.Y. Rangers 0, Pittsburgh leads
series 3-1
Tampa Bay 1, Detroit 0, Tampa Bay wins
series 4-1
Anaheim 4, Nashville 1, series tied 2-2
Chicago 4, St. Louis 3, 2OT, St. Louis leads
series 3-2
Friday, April 22
Philadelphia at Washington, 7 p.m.
N.Y. Islanders at Florida, 8 p.m.
Minnesota at Dallas, 9:30 p.m.
San Jose at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.
Saturday, April 23
N.Y. Rangers at Pittsburgh, 3 p.m.
Nashville at Anaheim, 6 p.m.
St. Louis at Chicago, 8 p.m.
Sunday, April 24
Florida at N.Y. Islanders, TBA
x-Washington at Philadelphia, TBA
x-Dallas at Minnesota, TBA
x-Los Angeles at San Jose, TBA

The Reds hadnt been held


hitless in a regular-season
game since 1971, when Rick
Wise did it for Philadelphia at
Riverfront Stadium. In the
2010 NL playoffs, Roy Halladay of the Phillies pitched a
no-hitter against Cincinnati.
Arrieta joins several others
who have thrown a pair of
no-hitters in the last decade.
The 30-year-old righty is on
the list with Max Scherzer,
Justin Verlander, Tim Lincecum and the Reds Homer
Bailey, who threw the only
other no-hitter at Great American Ball Park on July 2, 2013,
against the Giants.
The only other Cubs pitcher
to throw a pair of no-hitters
since 1900 was Ken Holtzman,
who did it in 1969 and 1971.
Mathis typically has an offseason conversation or two with
Ravens counterpart Terrell
Suggs, but he hasnt gotten
the opportunity yet this year.
So the only info he has on
the new boss comes from the
first few days of conditioning
and Monachinos reputation.
From what I hear, hes a
no-nonsense type of guy, Mathis said. Loves pass rush. So
hes alright with me.

immersing themselves in
Chuds playbook and laying
the foundation for the 2016
season.
This is the time where we
get to know one another and
also got to get this offense
down, wide receiver T.Y. Hilton said. When we hit the
field, we hit the field running
and not thinking. As long as STRENGTH OF SCHEDULE
The regular season schedule
were playing fast, nobody
released last week includes
should stop us.
game s on Thanksgiving,
GOOD IMPRESSION
Christmas Eve and New Years
Chudzinski is not the only Day. The Colts also are schednew coordinator in town. For- uled to play in London for the
mer Baltimore Ravens line- first time against the Jaguars
backers coach Ted Monachino on Oct. 2.
Its a daunting slate, but
takes over the defensive reins,
replacing Greg Manusky who nothing veteran kicker Adam
held the role for the past four Vinatieri hasnt grown accusyears.
tomed to over the past 20 seaOutside linebacker Robert sons.

WASHINGTON TIMES HERALD

SPORTS BRIEFS
WHS coach Bill Ricke.
Max Lancaster shot 44, followed by Reid Neff with a 45.
Zane Meinhart shot 51 to
complete the team scoring.
Cam Osmon shot 51 and JJ
Brown, 55, but their scores
were not used in the team total.
Their Friday match with
Loogootee at Boggs was postponed to Monday.

ing to Brooke Shafer 6-1, 4-6,


4-6.
In doubles action, Haven
Lunsford and Caitlyn Riester
EVANSVILLE - The Washdefeated Paige Patterson and
ington Hatchets golf team
Rachel Stiles 6-1, 6-2. Neida
played Thursday evening at
Revolorio and Allison LamCambridge against Gibson
bert held off Emma Autt and
Southern and lost 168-177.
Olivia Walker to win the first
Senior Conset 6-4. The second set the
nor Brown
duo finished at the net with
was co-medaldeep volleys and powerful
ist with a oneoverheads.
over par score
We have played a lot of
Lady Hatchets
of 37.
matches the past week and a
Connor had
half. Neida and Ally made it
down Princeton
two birdies in Connor Brown
known early that they were
The Lady Hatchet tennis
his round and
going to fight for every point.
team was able to hold off the Their aggressiveness was the
played really
well today. He was really the rain and the Princeton Tigers. difference in the match. I
only bright spot in the lineup The girls improved to 7-3 and thought Gissele ended the
2-0 in the conference.
today. We played in the rain
week on a high note winning
Elizabeth Stallman defor almost half of the round
her last two matches. She
and I think that some of our feated Keaton Whetstone 6-0, seems to be moving better
guys lost their focus. We have 6-0. Gissele Santos defeated
on the court and putting
Abigail Wallace 6-3, 6-4. Lau- more power into her ground
little margin for error this
season and need everyone to ren Boyd fought until the
strokes, said WHS coach
Brian Hancock.
stay mentally sharp, said
end, but came up short los-

Brown shoots
37 at Cambridge

WHS took all the reserve


matches with Cheyenne Bene
winning 6-3; Rae
Theine and Ellie Theine, 6-2,
6-3; Ellie Theine, 6-2; Rae
Theine, 6-2; Kenzi Lunsford
and Emily Ramsey, 6-0, 6-1.

Hatchets baseball
loses to Jasper
JASPER - The Washington
Hatchet baseball team (4-5)
dropped a conference game
to Jasper on Thursday, 9-2.
Jasper scored all nine runs
in the first four innings,
handing senior Jake Bedwell
the loss.
Both of WHSs runs came
from a seventh inning blast
of the bat by senior Zach Scheid, his third home run of
the season. WHS also had a
pair of hits from junior
Austin Walden, one of which
was a double.

Raptors seize series after Pacers limp Game 3 effort


TODD AARON
GOLDEN
TRIBUNE-STAR

INDIANAPOLIS With Indiana Pacers fans decked out


in gold inside a Bankers Life
Fieldhouse c auldron on
Thursday, the hope for the
Pacers was that the Toronto
Raptors, a franchise noted for
NBA playoff failure, would
wilt under the pressure of
trying to regain playoff initiative on the road.
Few would have guessed
that it was the Pacers that
succumbed to the moment.
A limp first-half effort from the Pacers
allowed the Raptors
to seize the game, the
d a y, a n d p l a yo f f
home-court advantage
away from Indiana. The Raptors surged in the first half
and didnt look back on their
way to a 101-85 Eastern Conference First Round Game 3
victory in front of an unamused sellout crowd of
18,165.
The Raptors, the two-seed
in the Eastern Conference,
took a 2-1 series lead over the
seventh-seeded Pacers, who
were never at the races on
their home floor.
We definitely didnt do our
job. This sucks. We didnt do
our job. We didnt take care of

business on our home-court,


Pacers forward Paul George
said.
George led the Pacers with
25 points and 10 rebounds.
Myles Turner scored 17 and
George Hill had 13 points.
Kyle Lowry and DeMar DeRozan co-led the Raptors with
21 points.
Th e Pa c e r s w e r e o u t
-worked by the Raptors in the
paint -- Toronto had a 45-38
rebounding edge. The Raptors
out-shot the Pacers from the
field -- 41.5 percent for Toronto, 38.2 percent for Indiana. The Pacers had 17 turnovers to the Raptors 11.
All told, it was a
comprehensive victory
for Toronto.
Outside of a tit-fortat start, in which the
Pacers grabbed a 9-8 lead
by scoring on four of their five
first possessions, the Pacers
offensive engines were offsound. The Raptors anticipated taking a first punch.
They knew their response
would dictate the game.
The way they came out
upped our intensity. They
came out super-high with a
lot of intensity. We had to
match that. We knew theyd
come out like that. We knew
we had to match and go backand-forth with them, Lowry
said.
Toronto took the bull by the

TORONTO 2, INDIANA 1
(Best of 7)
x-if necessary
Saturday, April 16: Indiana
100, Toronto 90
Monday, April 18: Toronto
98, Indiana 87
Thursday, April 21:
Toronto 101, Indiana 85
Saturday, April 23: Toronto
at Indiana, 3 p.m.
Tuesday, April 26: Indiana
at Toronto, TBA
x-Friday, April 29: Toronto
at Indiana, TBA
x-Sunday, May 1: Indiana
at Toronto, TBA

horns with a 9-2 run to take


the lead and then rode out a
first-quarter drought, partly
because Indianas drought
was worse. The Pacers had a
stretch where they scored just
once in 11 possessions, but
trailing by just seven at the
first quarter break, it seemed
Indiana might ride out its
troubles.
Truth is, Indiana troubles
were just beginning. George
was the only Pacer who could
produce any offense, and even
he struggled, missing six of
his first nine shots. His saving
grace was getting to the line
six times in the first half, converting them all.
As for the rest of the Pacers? There was no silver lining to a half in which the

team outside of George shot 8


of 26, allowed Toronto eight
offensive rebounds, and had
11 turnovers. All of this despite the fact that Toronto
center Jonas Valanciunas
spent much of the first half in
stir with foul trouble.
We were lost out there. We
were playing on one side of
the floor and Toronto is a
team that can defend one side
of the floor very well, George
Hill said.
Four of those turnovers
came in a five-possession
nightmare stretch late in the
first half as Toronto pushed its
lead to 53-30. Boos rained
down from the gold-clad faithful, and though the Pacers
scored the last six points of
the first half, a 53-36 halftime
deficit did little to mollify the
angst.
The Raptors would ultimately score 26 points off of
the Pacers giveaways.
It was unforced errors.
They forced a few, but a lot of
them were us just not being
there [mentally], George Hill
said.
Game 4 will be played at 3
p.m. on Saturday at Bankers
Life Fieldhouse. It will be televised on TNT.
Were not coming out aggressive enough. Were not
coming out swinging. That
has to change, Solomon Hill
said.

WASHINGTON TIMES HERALD

comics and features

SATURDAY, APRIL 23, 2016

B3

Classifieds

B4 Saturday, April 23, 2016

Please Call: 1-800-234-4113 or 812-254-0480, Option 2


Fax: 812-254-7517
Online: www.indianaexchange.com

Custom Staffing
Services

JOB FAIR

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couple excited to adopt share
our hearts with your precious
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ADDITIONAL REAL ESTATE Auctions can also be found in the Real


Estate for Sale section under Real
Estate Auctions.

IMPORTANT
PLEASE READ your ad the first
day it is published. The Washington Times-Herald will only be
responsible for the first incorrect insertion of the advertisement.
IT IS ILLEGAL for companies doing business by phone to promise
you a loan and ask you to for pay
for it before they deliver. For more
info call 1/-877-FTC-HELP. A public service message from the Federal Trade Commission and the
Washing Times-Herald.

Location:
Custom Staffing Services
515 Vigo St.
Vincennes, Indiana 47591
Date:
Tuesday, April 26th
Time:
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Current positions available
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812-523-1515
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AUTO BODY TECHNICIAN


Green's Body Shop in
Loogootee is now hiring

AUTO BODY TECHNICIANS.

515 Vigo St.


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WASHINGTON TIMES HERALD

brought to you by

TO PLACE AN AD

ADOPT: DEVOTED COUPLE


longs to adopt a baby, promising endless love and a secure
future with Alissa & David
1-800-388-5121
Expenses paid.

B1

Classifieds

JOB
FAIRS!

1PM 4pm
WorkOne in
Washington, IN
April 4th, 11th, 18th & 25th

Potential for Temp to Hire


After 45 Days!
Long Term
Production, Welding, Warehouse and More
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raise every six months!

Or send resume to:

SHOP HERE FOR great deals!

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HELP WANTED

THE GLENDALE FISH


AND WILDLIFE AREA
Has a job opening for a
Summer/Intermittent Position.
Access to the job posting
and a job description
are available at:
www.in.gov/spd/careers/
Job ID is 602020

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time and money.
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read them!
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HELP WANTED

LOCAL FUNERAL HOME


is seeking a Part-Time
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a week or up to 16 hours
per week. Competitive
pay. Must be flexible to
work around funeral
home's service and
visitation schedule.
Please send resumes to:
Box 5650
c/o Washington Times-Herald
P.O. Box 471
Washington, IN 47501
IF YOU HAVE unused items
sitting around. Call Classifieds
& turn them into cash!
1-812-254-0480

HELP WANTED

LOCAL FUNERAL HOME


seeking a professional
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No degree necessary. Up
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duties include setting up
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skills and be a team player.
Professional attire is required.
Please send resumes to:
Box 0297
c/o Washington Times-Herald
P.O. Box 471
Washington, IN 47501

WASHINGTON NURSING CENTER IS HIRING


Hiring Nurses for Day Shift and
Part-Time Night Shift Nurses

Depending on experience, Nurses can earn up to


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Also hiring in the Dietary Department.


Full-Time Cook needed.
Please stop in to complete an application.
Call for more information: 812-254-5117

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B2

Classifieds

WASHINGTON TIMES HERALD

PUBLISHER'S NOTICE: ALL real


estate advertised in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing
Act of 1968 which makes it illegal
to advertise any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on
race, color, religion, sex, disability,
familial status or national origin, or
any intention to make any such
preference, limitation or discrimination. Familial status includes
children under the age of 18 living
with parents or legal custodians,
pregnant women and people securing custody of children under
18. This newspaper will not
knowingly accept any advertising
for real estate which is in violation
of the law. Our readers are hereby
informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on a equal opportunity basis.
Please notify The Fair Housing
Council at 1-800-927-9275. EHO.

HELP WANTED

WE are looking for a


motivated individual to fill
our Store Manager Position.
We are looking for an
individual with great communication skills and an eye for
detail. Applicants must be
well-organized and possess a
positive attitude. Customer
service skills are a must.
Applicants must also possess
a clean driving record.
Apply by sending resume to:
Box 3837
c/o Washington Times-Herald
P.O. Box 471
Washington, IN 47501

United States Gypsum


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wallboard and gypsum
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applications for the following
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Production OperatorsBoard Department
Apply on line to:
www.usg.com/careers
Complete benefit package,
medical, dental, vision,
401k, retirement
EOE M/F/D/V

WE WANT YOU TO USE


YOUR FULL POTENTIAL
We want you to bring your
customer service experience to
HUTSON INC. We recognize
that our success as a company
is dependent upon having the
best and most capable people
working together to satisfy our
customers. We believe that
through providing excellent
training, compensation and
culture, we can provide our
employees and customers with
the highest level of satisfaction
and pride.
Let our NEWBERRY, IN
location be your starting point.
Our AFTERMARKET
AMBASSADOR is a PARTTIME role that will provide parts
and service support as needed.
The Ambassador will build
brand awareness by
representing Hutson and
assisting during company
events. They will also be
involved in promotional
programs and community and
in-store activities; this individual
must have a flexible work
schedule. This role requires 510 yrs of customer service
experience in agriculture or a
related field, an ability to
positively engage the public,
knowledge of the local area,
excellent communication skills,
an outgoing personality, basic
computer skills and an active
driver's license.
You can find further details and
apply for this position and many
others online at
careers.hutsoninc.com
or send your resume to:
recruiting@hutsoninc.com.

EMCARE IS
CURRENTLY SEEKING

FULL-TIME FLOAT PHYSICIANS


for Gibson General Hospital and
Daviess Community Hospital!!!

BIG YARD SALE

Saturday, April 23rd


9:00 AM - ???
Corner of E National
Hwy & Meridian St.
Kitchen Stove, Rocking Chair,
Microwave, Bar Stools, Coffee
Table, End Tables, Home Interior,
Handmade NEW Colts Corn Toss
Game, Crafts, New Jewelry
Armoire, Cookbooks, Christmas
Decor, Toys, And Lots Of Misc.

HUGE YARD SALE!!


April
23rd.
Saturday,
9am-?? 905 E. Main.
MOVING SALE
SATURDAY, APRIL 23RD
8:00 AM - ???
6 E MAPLE STREET
WASHINGTON
EVERYTHING MUST GO!!!
MULTI FAMILY SALE! 312 Hillside
Dr. Fri. 3-7; Sat 8-12. Boys/Girls
clothes up to sz 5, shoes, TOYS!,
stroller, baby items, lots women's
clothes/shoes, new health/beauty,
home/kitchen items, Willow Tree,
Kindle, craft items, holiday, A Must
See!
SATURDAY 4/23 8AM 2pm
2228 Troy Rd., (6th house on left
after bypass) Wooden toddler bed,
pak play and lots of
miscellaneous
SEVERAL FAMILIES
YARD SALE
Saturday, April 23, 8 am - 12 pm
208 SE 11th Street
Washington, IN
Shoes, Baby & Toddler Girls'
Clothing, Sizes 10 - 12 Girls'
Clothing, 6 - 7 Boys' Clothing,
Women's Clothing

CONTACT INFORMATION

Name: Doreen Laessig


Phone: (215) 442-5070
Mobile: (215) 264-9960
Doreen.Laessig@emcare.com
CLASSIFIEDS 1-812-254-0480.

CLASSIFIEDS
WILL SAVE you
time and money.
Use and
read them!
Call Classifieds at
1-812-254-0480

CAPEHART MANOR

FOR RENT

NOW LEASING
1 BEDROOM APARTMENTS

FURNISHED 1
BEDROOM APARTMENT,
2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE,
3 BEDROOM HOME

Ages 50 yrs and older or


disabled. Income based.

812-254-6851

FOR RENT

300 N West St.


Odon, IN 47562
812-636-4996

VERY nice 3BR, 2BA home on


north side of Washington.
References & lease required.
$900/mo + dep.

ALL utilities included.


Within walking distance to
grocery store, restaurants,
and doctors offices. Pet friendly

812-257-4278

HOME FOR RENT

2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH
EASTSIDE LOCATION.
CENTRAL AIR
$475/MONTH PLUS DEPOSIT

812-254-6843

BOATS AND MARINE equipment


can be sold quickly when you
place a Classified ad with Classifieds packages. Showcase your
items to over a half-million readers
daily. Call Classifieds today at
1-812-254-0480 for the results you
want tomorrow.

OFFICE WITH OFF street parking.


520 East VanTrees
812-254-2654

CALL CLASSIFIEDS
TO PLACE
YOUR AD

TODAY!

1-812-254-0480

510 E. South Street 254-1973

Anna Lou
Chapman
486-6031
Broker/Owner

Kim
Thompson
257-9584

Bill
Turner
259-1484

Mary
Wade
259-4390

Heather
Pierce
617-1538

Mary
Norris
698-7089

Jerry
Durnil
444-9695

MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE

MLS

2 & 3 BR HOMES FOR RENT


OR SALE ON CONTRACT.

Your Hometown Professional

www.remax.com

For more information


call 812-486-8196

SPACE AVAILABLE

Space Available - Washington, IN


FREE RENT FOR NEW TENANTS
Please Call Lauren @ 800-558-7692 ext 205

Classic Realty

749 E 100 S
TING

NEW LIS

Edge of town location! 3bed, 3bath brick home features spacious kitchen
w/ appl. to stay, living rm, family rm w/ frpl, office, bonus rm above
grg, 13 x 41 4 season room, inground pool, att. 3car grg, & 40x28
pole bldg, too many amenities to mention, & all situated on 8.35+
acres. $389,000 Call Anna Lou @ 486-6031
1708 E 675 S
TING

NEW LIS

www.century21classicrealty.com

Alfalfa Hay Also For Sale!!!

Shelley
Brinson
486-8317

Paula
Potts
617-0701

Kelly
Smith
444-9199

Stephanie
McClure
698-2144

Ashley
Igleheart
486-8408

FISH TO STOCK YOUR POND


available at
Dinky's Auction Center
May 6th from 3-7:30pm.
Shady Lane Fish Farm
618-584-3517

Come to the country & take a look at this brick & vinyl home situated on
15.8 acres. This home features 2Bed, 3bath, office, jacuzzi tub & walkin closet in master, open floor plan, kitchen w/ breakfast bar & appl to
stay, great room, full walk-out fin bsmt w/ kitchen, bath & family room, &
att. 2car grg. Property also includes 40 x 62 shop, 28x24 horse barn,
& 12 x 13 log cabin. Property has new furnace/CA, water heater, roof,
flooring, faucets, paint, custom blinds, garage doors, too much to list!
$334,500 Call Anna Lou @ 486-6031 MLS#201615657
9412 N 100 E

STUNNING: Custom brick home in desirable NE area offers grand


2-story entry, dining rm w/columns, living rm w/gas fplace, family
rm w/view of in-ground pool, kitchen w/cherry cabinets, large island,
walk-in pantry, & breakfast nook, large main level master suite, laundry/mudrm & 1/2 bath, 3 addnl BR upstairs each w/private bath, large
5th BR that could be used as family or game rm, walkout basm w/
built-ins, full bath, large rec area, kitchenette, & stg + oversized 3-car
grg w/addnl stg. MLS#201612923

Now Open

2108 State Street, Washington, IN 254-5204

Simple Treasures
Gift Shop

Home Dcor, Candles,


Lamps, Rugs, Curtains,
Pictures, Jewelry, Textiles,
Flowers, Candle Warmers,
St. Louis Cardinal Merchandise & so much more.

13,000 annual patient visits


7 Bed ED with "quick care"
walk in clinic
Emergency air ambulance
service
8 hr APP coverage per day
------------------------------------------

3 BEDROOM, 1 BATH
HOUSE WITH GARAGE
2198 S. SR 57, Washington
Stove & fridge provided.
$695/Mo. + $795/Dep.
1year lease.
302-930-8556

B5

RE/MAX Real Estate

SHOP
THE ADS
Buy Classifieds
for the best deals on
appliances and home
items.
1-812-254-0480

3 x 4 x 8 Large Square Bales


Cell: 812-444-9071
Office: 812-254-6809
----------------------------

12,300 annual ED volume


24 Hours of Physician Coverage
12 ED rooms, including a Trauma Room and a Cardiac Room
CPSI EMR

Daviess Community Hospital


is located in Washington, IN

SEEKING FARM LAND to rent


in Daviess, Knox, Greene, Sullivan and surrounding counties.
Top prices paid, References
available. 812-887-1438

I BUY HOUSES
ANY CONDITION OR AREA
CASH - CONFIDENTIAL
CLOSE QUICKLY
Even if over financed.
jjtite47501@yahoo.com
812-674-2280

CUSTOM
BALING SERVICES

BC/BE EM or IM/FP
with ED experience
------------------------------------------

Gibson General Hospital


is located in Princeton, IN

FOR SALE

HOUSE WITH LARGE LOT


On Washington's West Side.
504 Lincoln Street
No contracts or rent
to own options!!!
Quality, Donaldson-built,
3 Bedroom, 1 Bath,
Living Room, Dining Room,
Kitchen, and One-Car
Attached Garage. Newer
roof and gas furnace.
Move in ready with fresh
paint and new carpet.
Price is $84,000
Call 812-254-2184

YARD SALE Saturday April 23,


8:00a.m. to 2:00p.m.
1113
Grand Avenue (west of hospital)
lots of miscellaneous, purses
(including
Vera
Bradley),
dvd's/cd's, books, Willow Tree,
Nascar, milkglass, Wii and PS3
games, shoes (mostly women's
10), clothing of all sizes, including lots of plus sizes. Priced to
sell!

618 West Elnora St. (Hwy 58),


Odon, Indiana 47562
812-636-9636
Tuesday Friday
10:00am 5:00pm
Saturday 10:00am 3:00pm

REQUIREMENTS:

Saturday, April 23, 2016

CLASSIFIED PACKAGES
CALL 1-812-254-0480.

IT COSTS VERY
little to place a
classified ad.
And it makes a
lot of sense!
Please call
Classifieds at
1-812-254-0480.

WE CAN HELP YOU


WITH THE
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
"ABC S"
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
OF PLACING
A CLASSIFIED AD.
Call
Classifieds today!
1-812-254-0480

Mary Roark,

RICE

NEW P

Country setting for this 3BR, 2BA ranch home, w/ master suite, eat-in
kitchen w/island, appl. to stay, laundry on main level, finished bsmt,
lots of storage, invisible fencing for your pets, & 2 car att. grg, all
situated on 3.692 acres, Dont miss this one! $179,900
Call Heather 617-1538 MLS#201552862

TING

Broker

105 E Oak Street

NEW LIS

812-486-6363

NEW LISTING! 8 ORCHARD ROAD Gorgeous large Boggs lake front location
on this spacious ranch. Over 2,200 square feet plus a sun room and finished
basement. 3 Bedrooms and 2 Full baths on first level. Recreation room 1/2
bath and other rooms in basement. 3 Car attached garage, plus large detached
building with loft. Hot tub room, garden spot. Dock with lift. Great room has
large stone fireplace. Wide doors for handicap access. Full appliances, most
newer. Furnace 2015, Roof 2015. A wonderful year round vacation home on a
county maintained road. $350,000 CALL TOM MLS#201615609

3 bedrm, 1bath stone home with over 1600 sq.ft, att. 2 car grg & det.
2 car grg., situated on .64 acre in town. $79,900
Call Anna Lou @ 486-6031 MLS#201616276
2004 Memorial Ave.
TING

NEW LIS

NEW LISTING! 3 DEWEY AVE. Room to grow in this 5 bedroom, 2.5


bath, with updates, new roof, 2 car attached garage, and storage shed.
$79,900 CALL ANGIE MLS#201614235

Angie
Clinton

Janice
Jamie
Kim
Williams Chapman Metzger

Bob
Wake

Tim
Nolan

Sherri
OBrian

Tom
Wagner

Melissa
Heldt

812-257-1708 812-486-8738 812-486-8555 812-259-1092 812-486-6287 812-486-6409 812-617-0255 812-486-6783 812-617-0133

Nice eastside neighborhood steps from city park and all it has to offer.
Home has newer roof, furnace, and water heater, ready for paint,
flooring and kitchen make over. $44,900
Call Jerry Durnil @ 444-9695 MLS#201615632

PHONE A PROFESSIONAL

GENERAL REPAIR

HOME IMPROVEMENT

TREES & TURF

PHONE 812-254-0480
TO LIST YOUR BUSINESS
IN THIS GUIDE!

TREES & TURF

TREES & TURF

B6

classifieds/features

SATURDAY, APRIL 23, 2016

A+ CLEANING/
PAINTING SERVICES

INSURED - REASONABLE Rates


References Available
Free Estimates

One Call Does It All!


Roof Cleaning
(non-pressure)
Cedar-sided cleaning
and staining
Pressure washing
(decks and driveways)
Painting
Gutter Cleaning
****Free Estimates****
****& Senior Discounts****
Find Us On Facebook!
A+ Cleaning/Painting Services

FOR SALE
2005 WHITE
1 TON CHEVY TRUCK,
11 FOOT BED
WITH GOOSE NECK BALL,
96,000 miles.
812-881-8752

Phone: 812-254-2073
or 812-698-1159

ARVIN CRUSHED STONE

HEATERS
LOOK!!!! MP39 HAULING
has the best prices for junk
cars and trucks.
Paying Top Dollar!
Call 812-661-7878 anytime

IT COSTS VERY
little to place a
classified ad.
And it makes a
lot of sense!
Please call
Classifieds at
1-812-254-0480.

WE CAN HELP YOU


WITH THE
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
"ABC S"
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
OF PLACING
A CLASSIFIED AD.
Call
Classifieds today!
1-812-254-0480

VACUUMS

SEWING MACHINES

Visit Us Online!
www.lokgeneral.wix.com/lokgeneral

SALES SERVICE
REPAIR PARTS
LOK General Store LLC
623 W Elnora St.
Odon, IN 47562

(812) 636-0196
IF YOU HAVE unused items
sitting around. Call
Classifieds & turn them
into cash! 1-812-254-0480

Dr. Keith Roach


SYNDICATED COLUMNIST

Insulin levels in Type 2 diabetics usually are higher than


they are in people without diabetes. However, the body
has a decreased ability to secrete large amounts of insulin in response to sugar intake than normal people,
which is why high blood
sugar after ingesting sugar is
a way of diagnosing the condition early.
Sugar is a simple carbohydrate, and refined carbohydrates or starches, such as
pasta and potatoes, are chemically long strings of sugar
molecules, which the body
can rapidly turn into sugar.
So, you and your husband
are both partially right. When
combined with protein (as in
whole grains) or eaten with
fat, complex carbohydrates
like starches are absorbed
more slowly and are less
likely to cause stress to the
pancreas. It is thought that

JOE MCMULLEN

Dear Abby
SYNDICATED COLUMNIST

who inquires about our relationship? We have enjoyed


each others company so
much. We just want to grow
older together. KISSING
COUSIN
DEAR COUSIN: No announcements are necessary.
If you are asked, just smile
and say you are both happy,
healthy and enjoying each
others company. Eventually,
theyll get the picture.
DEAR ABBY: I found my
birth parents 18 years ago. I
always knew I had an older
sister. The parents who
adopted me are both gone
now. They were great parents.
Now that I have recon-

RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL


REMODELING & RESTORATION!
Call Rick at 812-254-1141.

STUTZMAN'S ENCLOSURES
AWNINGS, SCREENED
PORCHES, 3 & 4 SEASON
PATIO ROOMS.
812-295-4904

Clock Service & Repair


Wall Mantle Cuckoo
Modern Antique
Housecalls on Grandfather

Piano Tuning & Repair


Upright Spinet Studio
Console Grand

Tri-Axle Loads
Competitive Prices!!!
All Sizes of Crushed Stone!
Sand Gravel Topsoil etc.
PICKED-UP OR DELIVERED
Hwy 231 S. mile Loogootee
812-295-4115

LHR LAWN SOLUTIONS


Experienced Lawn Care Needs
Commercial and
Residential Mowing
Free Estimates!!!
Call Shannon at:
812-787-2559

RAY'S LAWN CARE

Accepting New Customers


For Mowing & Trim!!!
Dependable - Quality Service
Reasonable Prices
Owner: Jerry Maddox

BONNIE LEASING INC.

812-259-5958

LOOGOOTEE, IN
Crushed Stone, Top Soil,
Pea Gravel, Mortar Sand,
Fill Sand, and/or Dirt.
TRI-AXLE LOADS SAVE!!!
812-295-2395
or 800-487-8345
Let us rock the world
you walk on!!!

ABIGAIL'S CLASSIC STITCHES


Alterations & Mending
35 years experience
Free pickup, Delivery in
Washington & Petersburg.
812-698-1046

CALL 5 COUNTY
HOME REPAIR

JILL'S ALTERATIONS
AND EMBROIDERY

812-254-4390

FORMAL DRESSES,
JEANS HEMMED, ZIPPERS.
ALL TYPES OF SEWING
& MENDING!
EMBROIDERED GIFTS
& UNIFORMS.
MEMORIAL ITEMS.

For all types of carpentry


repairs. Over 20 years
of local experience.
We offer Senior Discounts!

SHOP HERE FOR great deals!

Place Classifieds
at 1-812-254-0480

Authorized Howard Miller &


Ridgeway Repair Center

www.jmcmullen.com
Vincennes, IN
812-886-3998

reducing insulin requirements from the pancreas by


eating less simple and refined carbohydrates reduces
the likelihood of developing
diabetes, even in someone
who has a genetic predisposition. It is critical to keep
weight in a normal range,
since obesity itself causes insulin resistance and predisposes a person to diabetes.
Carrots and green beans do
have natural sugar, but they
also contain fiber. They have
a minimal effect on raising
blood sugar. Some fruits are
so high in sugar that they
should be eaten only in moderation. These include figs,
mangoes, grapes and dates.
Diabetes has become epidemic in North America. The
booklet on it provides insight
on its diagnosis and treatment. Readers can order a
copy by writing: Dr. Roach
Book No. 402, 628 Virginia
Dr., Orlando, FL 32803. Enclose a check or money order
(no cash) for $4.75 U.S./$6
Can. with the recipients
printed name and address.
Please allow four weeks for
delivery.
DEAR DR. ROACH: My
friend got trichomonas. She
doesnt know from whom
she got it. We know it is sex-

ually transmitted, but what is


it? Where did it come from?
Her doctor put her on
Flagyl 500, then tinidazole,
but they didnt seem to work.
Do you have any advice?
R.R.
ANSWER: Trichomonas is
a very common sexually
transmitted infection. Worldwide, there are over 50 million cases per year. Trichomonas is a protozoan, a
parasite related to an
amoeba. The only known
place it lives is in the human
genital tract. It is spread sexually. Most people have no
symptoms, but if symptoms
are present, they usually include pain, itching and burning. Women may have a vaginal discharge.
If untreated, trichomonas
can persist for years, so your
friend may have acquired it a
long time ago. The most
common treatment is metronidazole (Flagyl), 2,000 mg as
a single dose. Resistance has
been described, but only 1
percent of trichomonas is resistant to tinidazole. If your
friend is having persistent
symptoms, making certain of
the diagnosis with new laboratory techniques and referral to a specialist may be
necessary.

Cousins look forward to growing old as couple


EAR ABBY: I am a
retired widower. After
my wife died, my first
cousin Julia invited
me to visit her in Florida
over the winter. Shes seven
years my junior, divorced,
lives alone and is a
successful Realtor. We had a
good time during the two
months I was there.
The next summer I invited
Julia to my home. We had a
great time together, but then
she had to return to Florida
for business. I visited her last
winter and one evening
while relaxing and watching
a movie, we became intimate. It seemed so natural.
After that, I moved from the
guest room into hers.
Julia is now contemplating
retirement. We are planning
for me to sell my home and
move in with her. We are not
thinking about marriage or
commingling our funds and
assets. Our legal documents
are in order.
Abby, what would you suggest we say to our children,
other relatives or anyone else

LEFFLER REMODELING
Visit lefflerremodeling.com

Tree Trimming Tree Removal


Stump Removal
www.getreeservice.com
Office: (812) 354-6119
Cell: (812) 354-4541

Sugar, carbs both play role in diabetes


EAR DR. ROACH: My
husband and I are at
odds about sugar and
other carbohydrates as
a cause of diabetes. I say its
sugar; he says
carbohydrates. Why not just
eliminate all sugars, I say to
myself? We live in the good
ol South the diabetes
belt of the U.S. where
sugar exists in all foods.
Soon someone shall start
injecting sugar into carrots
and green beans. M. and
G.S.
ANSWER: There are two
major forms of diabetes,
Type 1 and Type 2. Type 1
most commonly occurs in
children and adolescents, and
is related to an autoimmune
destruction of the cells in the
pancreas that secrete insulin.
People with Type 1 diabetes
almost always need insulin
injections. Excess sugar intake probably has no bearing
on the development of Type
1 diabetes.
Type 2 diabetes is epidemic
not only in the Southern U.S.,
but also in Mexico and increasingly in all industrialized countries. The exact reason for Type 2 diabetes remains incompletely understood, but certainly it has to
do with resistance to insulin.

WASHINGTON TIMES HERALD

nected with my birth mom


and siblings, I have a large
family two sisters and two
brothers. I have a great relationship with my baby sister;
its like were twins. The
problem is, the older sister
demands to be the center of
attention all the time.
I have tried to understand
her, but every time we get together we end up mad at
each other. Its like she thinks
Im trying to take her place
in the family, which Im not.
I enjoy spending time with
my baby sister, but we cant
spend much time together
because she lives in another
state and its hard for either
of us to travel. When I do get
to go there, the older one
makes it so unpleasant that I
dont even want to go. How
can I get over this or care
less about her crap? Thanks!
MIDDLE SISTER IN THE
WEST
DEAR MIDDLE SISTER:
You might care less about
your older sisters attitude if
you understand she behaves
that way because she may be

feeling threatened. By being


nasty shes trying to protect
her turf. That you and the
younger one have bonded
like twins makes her feel
excluded. Try to resent her
less, sympathize more, and
make her feel included. However, if that doesnt work, see
less of her so she cant ruin
the visit.
Dear Abby is written by Abigail
Van Buren, also known as Jeanne
Phillips, and was founded by her
mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact
Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com
or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069.
For an excellent guide to
becoming a better conversationalist
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.)

CHERRY TREE STORAGE.


Storage units available.
Mike Owens 812-254-2538.
FIRST MONTH FREE!
13 NEW STORAGE UNITS!
5X10 and 10x10 units available.
CALL HOOVER SELF STORAGE
812-254-3320 or 812-486-6161.

STOWAWAY STORAGE
A home away from home to
stowaway your belongings!
2 Blocks behind the
First National Bank of Odon
in Montgomery.
5' x 12' units - $30/month
10' x 12' units - $60/month
12' x 24' units - $70/month

812-486-9159
CLASSIFIEDS 1-812-254-0480.

SHOP
THE ADS
Buy Classifieds
for the best deals on
appliances and home
items.
1-812-254-0480

CLASSIFIEDS
WILL SAVE you
time and money.
Use and
read them!
Call Classifieds at
1-812-254-0480
NEED TO SELL
BABY
FURNITURE?
Let us help
you create
an ad
that will
*ATTRACT*
a buyer.
Call
the
CLASSIFIEDS
today!
1-812-254-0480.

812-254-0288

HOROSCOPE
HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Sunday, April 24, 2016:
This year you break patterns
and are able to relate a lot more
closely to different individuals.
You also gain confidence in your
ability to judge situations and
people. If you are single, you
wont settle for anything but an
intimate relationship, yet you
realize that this request might
not be reasonable on the first
few dates.
The Stars Show the Kind of
Day Youll Have: 5-Dynamic;
4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult

ARIES (MARCH 21-APRIL 19)


You express a
strong sense of direction, as
you know what you want to
achieve. You have your drive
and vision working together.
You could make the impossible
possible. If you can, make calls
to someone at a distance whom
you care about. Tonight: Read
between the lines.
This Week: Consider your
options carefully before
announcing what you think.

TAURUS (APRIL 20-MAY 20)


A discussion could
become easier between you
and someone else if you have
only the two of you alone in a
room together. Be aware of the
level of anger you might be
swallowing and how this suppressed feeling seems to be
coloring your conversations.
Tonight: Love the moment.
This Week: You do best when
working with individuals and not
groups.

GEMINI (MAY 21-JUNE 20)


You might want to
handle a personal situation early
on. Others will go along with
your wishes for the sake of
peace. Make sure they are really
OK with your choices; otherwise, there could be a problem
at the last minute. Tonight: Go
along with someone elses
ideas.
This Week: Others seek you
out.

CANCER (JUNE 21-JULY 22)


You might be
exhausted from recent
demands. Take some time to
yourself before something happens or someone tries to distract you. Know when you have
had enough of it all. Some
much-needed personal time will
do you good. Tonight: Put your
feet up and relax.
This Week: You feel as if there
is nothing you can do to ease
another persons path.

LEO (JULY 23-AUG. 22)


You might want to
understand what is happening
behind the scenes with a child.
This person isnt as transparent
as you would like. Assume that
its nothing of importance, and
remain positive. Youll be surprised by what happens as a
result. Tonight: Let the good
times roll!
This Week: Your creativity
soars to a new level.

VIRGO (AUG. 23-SEPT. 22)


Youll feel as if you
have heard and done enough
for a while. Opting for some
downtime close to home would
be smart. In any case, you need
some time to re-energize as
well. Make this a lazy day at
home. Do whatever makes your

Jacqueline Bigar
SYNDICATED COLUMNIST
perfect day. Tonight: Order
some Chinese food.
This Week: Tension builds.

LIBRA (SEPT. 23-OCT. 22)


You could be tired
and withdrawn. How you see a
personal matter could change
radically once you have a discussion with a certain person.
Dont push him or her too hard
by asking intrusive questions.
Respond to a neighbor who has
some gossip for you. Tonight:
Return calls.
This Week: Conversations
surround you.

SCORPIO (OCT. 23-NOV. 21)


You could be in a situation where you want to be heard
loud and clear; however, other
matters fuzz up your day. Youll
opt to pay bills before heading
out the door. Maintain your
sense of humor and youll
cruise through the day. Tonight:
Treat a friend to a movie.
This Week: Be aware of the
costs of proceeding as you
have been.

SAGITTARIUS (NOV. 22-DEC. 21)


Youll re-energize as
you rarely do. If a child
becomes mouthy, youll make it
clear that his or her rudeness is
unacceptable. Read between
the lines with a frustrated person, as he or she often has a
great plan and strong drive.
Tonight: Make the most of the
moment.
This Week: You start Monday
in a perfect mood. Keep smiling!

CAPRICORN (DEC. 22-JAN. 19)


What goes up must
come down. After a few intense
days, dont be surprised to find
that you could be out of sorts.
Understand that these feelings
are the result of the past few
days. Take advantage of the
moment. Indulge in a nap or
two. Tonight: Where your friends
are.
This Week: You are in a position where you need to wait.

AQUARIUS (JAN. 20-FEB. 18)


You could be in the
mood to get out with your
friends. You have been diligent
about getting everything done
that youve needed to. It might
be a little late to start your
weekend, but proceed as if this
is Friday! Consider taking Monday off. Tonight: Cheer a friend
on.
This Week: Express appreciation for those around you Monday and Tuesday.

PISCES (FEB. 19-MARCH 20)


Others look to you for
suggestions and a change of
direction. You are able to meet
someone elses demand, which
could be good for you in the
long run. When money
becomes an issue, support
yourself in what you deem is
fair; you are likely to get it.
Tonight: A must appearance.
This Week: Take charge.

business

WASHINGTON TIMES HERALD

B7

SATURDAY, APRIL 23, 2016

Trumps Twitter provokes Filing may be complete,


huge following, trouble but tax planning is ongoing
cideTM, and just a week ago,
he quoted a message from an
account with a user name that
alluded to masturbation. Many
of the accounts with which he
interacts use hazy identities or
images of models widely circulated on the internet.
Whoever these mysterious
users are, they sometimes provide Trump with information
that migrates into his social
media assertions, campaign
speeches and media interviews.
A few cases in point:
After Donald Trump was
attacked for low poll numbers
among women, he retweeted a
supporter noting that he is
supported by 15,000 womens
groups.
To demonstrate grassroots opposition to the Republican delegate selection process, he cited a backer who
described 1 million protest
messages on postcards that
had been sent to the Republican National Committee.
After a man rushed the

WASHINGTON (AP) Donald Trump says theres genius


in his tweets, but his wife
wishes he would stop.
Melania Trump was asked
Thursday on NBCs Today
show what habit she wishes
he would give up. Lets see,
she said, pausing. The tweeting.
Trumps approach to Twitter
has been as unorthodox as his
presidential campaign: unpredictable and unfiltered, sometimes brilliant and occasionally typographically challenged. He has celebrated the
support of scores of accounts
on the social media service
that appear almost solely dedicated to him.
But Trumps habit has also
come with collateral damage
mostly because of the billionaires penchant for elevating
the comments of his fans to
his 7.7 million followers, oftentimes without apparent concern for the source.
He has twice cited an account called WhiteGeno-

he countdown for filing


2015 tax returns is
finished, and the taxes
are off to Washington.
While some Americans
have already cashed refund
checks, other families had
to grin and bear the burden
of the marginal tax rate.
There are two tax systems
at play in the U.S., and some
politicians proclaim there is
one system for the rich and
another for the poor. But the
reality is there is one tax
code for the informed and
one for the uninformed.
Start a conversation about
taxes, and it quickly becomes
clear that many people dont
understand their returns or
how taxes work. Everyone
with earned income (a job)
pays into Social Security and
Medicare. Those contributions are never returned nor
deferred when you put
money in a retirement plan
like a 401(k) or IRA. This
creates plenty of frustration
when you hear that over half
of Americans dont pay any
taxes. But that oft-quoted
statement is wrong. What is
true is that about half of U.S.
tax returns use the marginal
tax brackets.
Your tax return is similar
to a symphony where instruments work in unison. Although I cant tell you what
musician is playing especially well, even my tone
deaf ears can identify the instrument that is out of tune!
Your tax return works the
same way, in which one line
works with the next. Just one

stage at a Michigan Trump


rally, Trump repeated on television a followers assertion
that the man had ties to the
Islamic State group.
To dispel the suggestion
that he didnt treat women as
equals, he retransmitted a supporters statement that the
Trump Organizations executives are predominantly female.
There is no evidence bearing
out any of these claims.
A spokeswoman for Trumps
campaign declined immediately to answer the APs questions about Trumps Twitter
activity.
One common theme for a
mention, quote or retweet appears to be praise for Trump
or harsh words for his rivals.
Texas Sen. Ted Cruz is one of
the most prominent current
targets.
One such infamous retweet
was a meme mocking Heidi
Cruzs appearance in comparison to a photo of glamorous
Melania Trump.

Crites joins quality control at GPC


Water as a water quality specialist supervisor; and most
recently at Bristol Myers/Astra
Zeneca as the
associate man- Glenda Crites
ager in QC Microbiology.
Grain Processing Corpora-

Glenda Crites has joined the


quality control department at
Grain Processing Corporation
as a microbiologist. She
earned her Bachelor of Science degree in microbiology
from Southern Illinois University.
Crites worked at Cook Pharmica as the microbiology supervisor; at Indiana American

tion is a major manufacturer


of grain neutral spirits, food
and pharmaceutical starches,
industrial starches, maltodextrins and corn syrup solids,
specialty products, and feed
ingredients. The company, a
subsidiary of Kent Corporation, markets its products
worldwide.

Tax planning is a
central part of
financial planning
and needs to be
conducted
before Dec. 31,
Big Joe Clark
not April of the
BUSINESS COLUMNIST
following year. ...
The number of
bad financial decision during
the year can create an input individuals who
spend countless
that creates negative consequences on the rest of your
hours on
return.
investment
Albert Einstein described
statements but
insanity as doing the same
thing over and over while
disregard their
expecting a different result.
1040 tax return
Every year individuals pick
is staggering.
up their taxes from their
CPA firms, and gasp at the
amount owed. Then they
complain, scribble their
names on a check, file the return in a drawer and repeat
the process the next year. Insanity!
Tax planning is a central
part of financial planning
and needs to be conducted
before Dec. 31, not April of
the following year. April is
the season to tax report. The
number of individuals who
spend countless hours on investment statements but disregard their 1040 tax return
is staggering. In my humble
opinion, there is no entity
that will separate most
American families from their
retirement more dramatically
than the IRS. Markets go up
and down but rarely does the
IRS send a check back!
As we conduct financial

planning in 2016, our objective is to be as tax savvy as


possible. Pay attention to line
43 on your tax return and
find out how much income
was actually subject to taxation. Once you know that
number, you can make some
very important decisions including whether you should
consider a Roth IRA or contribute to a college fund. The
IRS provides us a rule book
but it is our job to use those
rules to create the best possible scenario during the year
so that our accountants can
provide savvy tax reporting
next April.
Joseph Big Joe Clark,
whose column is published
Saturdays, is a certified financial
planner. He can be reached at
bigjoe@yourlifeafterwork.com.

THE WEEK IN REVIEW


THERE ARE NO DO-OVERS AT RETIREMENT.
&DOO

Alex Knepp, CPA, CFP


Vice President, Sr. Financial Consultant

(812)254-5909

IRUUHWLUHPHQWSODQQLQJWRGD\

Securities offered through LPL Financial, Member FINRA/SIPC.


Insurance products offered through LPL Financial or its licensed affiliates.
Not FDIC Insured
No Bank Guarantee
May Lose Value
Not a Deposit
Not Insured by any Federal Government Agency

WEEKLY STOCK EXCHANGE HIGHLIGHTS

NYSE
10,511.02 +155.46

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)


Name
Last
Cvent
35.30
NGL EnPt 13.33
BonanzaCE 3.50
CalifRescs 2.28
CrestEq rs 18.19
HlthSth wt 2.13
Hi-Crush
7.48
MidcstEn
7.00
SunCokeEn 11.36
FairmSant 3.86

Chg
+14.00
+5.11
+1.28
+.78
+6.02
+.63
+1.97
+1.81
+2.85
+.96

%Chg
+65.7
+62.2
+57.7
+52.0
+49.5
+42.0
+35.8
+34.9
+33.5
+33.1

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)


Name
CSVInvNG
NatrlGroc
Intrexon
DrxNGBear
DxSPOGBr s
TrueBlue
PrUltShNG
ITT Ed
PrUSOGEx
DxEnBear

Last
13.88
13.35
29.01
12.04
7.41
21.02
156.12
2.39
19.09
16.98

Chg %Chg
-6.70 -32.6
-6.35 -32.2
-8.95 -23.6
-3.59 -23.0
-2.18 -22.7
-5.88 -21.9
-43.53 -21.8
-.46 -16.1
-3.54 -15.6
-3.10 -15.4

NASDAQ
4,906.23 -31.99

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)


Name
LegacyRes
UniPixel
LegcyR pf
LegcyR pfB
AMD
YulongE n
CymaBay
EV Engy
TxCapB wt
Wintrust wt

Last
2.17
2.19
5.72
5.71
3.99
4.75
2.37
2.83
30.15
28.13

Chg
+.97
+.75
+1.89
+1.88
+1.29
+1.49
+.74
+.83
+8.61
+7.67

%Chg
+80.8
+52.1
+49.4
+49.1
+47.8
+45.7
+45.4
+41.5
+40.0
+37.5

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)


Name
Last Chg %Chg
Chaisma n 3.83 -6.34 -62.3
CalumetSp 4.85 -5.42 -52.8
AccVIXdn rs 4.99 -3.60 -41.9
ArgosTher 7.25 -3.72 -33.9
SareptaTh 14.95 -6.15 -29.1
ApldOptoel 11.59 -4.23 -26.7
SmLEDS rs 2.41 -.79 -24.7
HercOffs n 2.16 -.68 -23.9
GtBasSci rs 3.38 -1.05 -23.7
VestRMII h 2.25 -.65 -22.4

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)


Name
BkofAm
FrptMcM
Vale SA
Petrobras
ChesEng
EgyTrEq s
GenElec
Pfizer
FordM
WhitingPet

Vol (00)
5020817
2823838
2393152
1884857
1823673
1816676
1642952
1604925
1573711
1567470

Last Chg
15.11 +1.11
11.67 +.81
5.42 +.13
7.20 +.48
6.55 +.52
11.66 +2.71
30.76 -.27
33.27 +.77
13.61 +.67
11.21 +.54

Name
SiriusXM
Microsoft
Apple Inc
AMD
Intel
Netflix s
Facebook
MicronT
FrontierCm
Cisco

Vol (00) Last Chg


2526292 3.96 +.06
2467687 51.78 -3.87
1872509 105.68 -4.17
1783285 3.99 +1.29
1680086 31.64 +.18
1482173 95.90-15.61
1303089 110.56 +.92
1007044 10.66 -.03
965782 5.63 +.22
960107 28.15 +.25

DIARY

DIARY
Advanced
Declined
New Highs
New Lows
Total issues
Unchanged
Volume

2,153
1,010
318
20
3,206
43
18,893,466,821

Advanced
Declined
New Highs
New Lows
Total issues
Unchanged
Volume

1,872
1,062
183
72
3,033
99
8,884,490,713

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST


Name

Ex

AES Corp NY
AT&T Inc NY
AMD
Nasd
Alcoa
NY
Ambev
NY
Apple Inc Nasd
ArcelorMit NY
BkofAm
NY
B iPVixST NY
BarrickG
NY
BrMySq
NY
CSX
Nasd
CalifRescs NY
CntryLink NY
ChesEng NY
Cisco
Nasd
Citigroup
NY
CocaCola NY
CSVelIVST Nasd
CSVLgCrd rs NY
CSVixSh rs Nasd
DenburyR NY
DirDGldBr NY
DukeEngy NY
EliLilly
NY
EnCana g NY
EgyTrEq s NY
ENSCO
NY
Facebook Nasd
FordM
NY
FrptMcM
NY
FrontierCm Nasd
GenElec
NY
GenMotors NY
Gerdau
NY
GerABcp Nasd
HP Inc
NY
iShBrazil
NY
iShJapan NY
iShSilver
NY
iShChinaLC NY
iShEMkts NY
iS Eafe
NY
iShR2K
NY
Intel
Nasd
ItauUnibH NY

Div

Wk Wk YTD
Last Chg %Chg %Chg

.44 11.18 -.07 -0.6 +16.8


1.92 38.07 -.41 -1.1 +10.6
... 3.99 +1.29 +47.8 +39.0
.12 10.40 +.39 +3.9 +5.4
.19 5.33 -.01 -0.2 +19.5
2.08 105.68 -4.17 -3.8
+.4
... 5.68 +.10 +1.8 +76.7
.20 15.11 +1.11 +7.9 -10.2
... 16.00 -.93 -5.5 -20.4
.08 16.12 +.48 +3.1 +118.4
1.52 70.68 +2.63 +3.9 +2.7
.72 27.53 +1.60 +6.2 +6.1
... 2.28 +.78 +52.0 -2.1
2.16 31.39 -.87 -2.7 +24.8
... 6.55 +.52 +8.6 +45.6
1.04 28.15 +.25 +0.9 +4.5
.20 46.97 +2.05 +4.6 -9.2
1.40 44.54 -1.56 -3.4 +3.7
... 27.74 +1.44 +5.5 +7.5
... 27.81 +3.45 +14.2
...
... 3.54 -.45 -11.3 -43.5
... 4.09 +.91 +28.6 +102.5
... 2.04 -.17 -7.7 -87.7
3.30 77.01 -2.99 -3.7 +7.9
2.04 77.83 +2.30 +3.0 -7.6
.06 7.47 +.80 +12.0 +46.8
1.14 11.66 +2.71 +30.3 -15.1
.60 11.90 +2.00 +20.2 -22.7
... 110.56 +.92 +0.8 +5.6
.60 13.61 +.67 +5.2 -3.4
... 11.67 +.81 +7.5 +72.4
.42 5.63 +.22 +4.1 +20.6
.92 30.76 -.27 -0.9 -1.3
1.52 32.18 +1.62 +5.3 -5.4
.07 2.14 -.07 -3.2 +78.3
.72 34.06 +1.02 +3.1 +2.2
.50 12.61 +.09 +0.7 +6.5
1.03 28.04 -.55 -1.9 +35.6
.13 12.21 +.43 +3.7
+.7
... 16.14 +.68 +4.4 +22.4
.76 34.35 -.13 -0.4 -2.7
.84 34.54 -.03 -0.1 +7.3
1.70 59.54 +1.24 +2.1 +1.4
1.73 114.11 +1.66 +1.5 +1.3
1.04 31.64 +.18 +0.6 -8.2
.45 8.85 -.44 -4.7 +36.2

Name
Ex
JPMorgCh NY
Keycorp
NY
KimballInt Nasd
KindMorg NY
Kinross g NY
MarathnO NY
MktVGold NY
MicronT
Nasd
Microsoft Nasd
MorgStan NY
Netflix s
Nasd
OldNBcp Nasd
Petrobras NY
Pfizer
NY
PwShs QQQ Nasd
PUVixST rs NY
RegionsFn NY
S&P500ETF NY
SpdrOGEx NY
SeadrillLtd NY
SiriusXM Nasd
SwstnEngy NY
SP CnSt
NY
SP Engy
NY
SPDR Fncl NY
SP Util
NY
SunEdison NY
TeckRes g NY
Transocn NY
Twitter
NY
US OilFd NY
USSteel
NY
Vale SA
NY
Vale SA pf NY
ValeantPh NY
VerizonCm NY
WalMart
NY
WeathfIntl NY
WellsFargo NY
Whrlpl
NY
WhitingPet NY
WmsCos NY
Yahoo
Nasd
Yamana g NY

Wk Wk YTD
Div Last Chg %Chg %Chg
1.76 63.97 +2.10 +3.4 -2.5
.30 12.58 +.88 +7.5 -4.6
.22 11.60 +.16 +1.4 +18.7
.50 18.12 -.04 -0.2 +21.4
... 4.64 +.39 +9.2 +154.9
.20 14.34 +1.33 +10.2 +13.9
.12 22.59 +.39 +1.8 +64.7
... 10.66 -.03 -0.3 -24.7
1.44 51.78 -3.87 -7.0 -6.7
.60 27.70 +1.94 +7.5 -12.9
... 95.90-15.61 -14.0 -16.2
.52 13.01 +.46 +3.7 -4.1
... 7.20 +.48 +7.1 +67.4
1.20 33.27 +.77 +2.4 +3.1
1.52 108.98 -1.66 -1.5 -2.6
... 15.51 -1.93 -11.1 -45.3
.26 9.34 +.60 +6.9 -2.7
4.13 208.97 +1.19 +0.6 +2.5
.73 35.37 +2.81 +8.6 +17.0
... 4.03 +.21 +5.5 +18.9
... 3.96 +.06 +1.5 -2.7
... 12.27 +1.78 +17.0 +72.6
1.28 51.96 -1.08 -2.0 +2.9
2.04 67.04 +3.50 +5.5 +11.1
.46 23.55 +.65 +2.8 -1.2
1.55 47.35 -1.54 -3.2 +9.4
...
.34 -.03 -8.9 -93.4
.10 10.40 +1.90 +22.4 +169.4
... 10.79 +1.07 +11.0 -12.8
... 17.23 -.35 -2.0 -25.5
... 10.76 +.51 +5.0 -2.2
.20 19.56 +.32 +1.7 +145.1
.29 5.42 +.13 +2.5 +64.7
.29 4.28 +.28 +7.0 +67.8
... 35.98 +3.84 +11.9 -64.6
2.26 50.55 -.80 -1.6 +9.4
2.00 68.72 -.34 -0.5 +12.1
... 8.29 +.68 +8.9 -1.2
1.50 50.62 +2.37 +4.9 -6.9
3.60 187.31 +.91 +0.5 +27.5
... 11.21 +.54 +5.1 +18.8
2.56 19.54 +1.99 +11.3 -24.0
... 37.48 +.97 +2.7 +12.7
.06 4.26 +.23 +5.7 +129.0

Stock Footnotes: g = Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h = Does not meet continued-listing standards. lf = Late filing with SEC.
n = New in past 52 weeks. pf = Preferred. rs = Stock has undergone a reverse stock split of at least 50 percent within the past year. rt = Right
to buy security at a specified price. s = Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the last year. un = Units. vj = In bankruptcy or receivership.
wd = When distributed. wi = When issued. wt = Warrants. Gainers and Losers must be worth at least $2 to be listed in tables at left. Most
Actives must be worth at least $1. Volume in hundreds of shares. Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.

STOCK MARKET INDEXES


52-Week
High
Low
18,351.36
8,953.18
672.28
11,254.87
5,231.94
2,134.72
1,551.28
22,537.15
1,296.00
6,803.00

15,370.33
6,403.31
539.96
8,937.99
4,209.76
1,810.10
1,215.14
18,462.43
943.09
5,394.93

Last

Wk
Chg

18,003.75
8,085.98
639.52
10,511.02
4,906.23
2,091.58
1,477.05
21,622.04
1,146.69
6,276.60

+106.29
+107.75
-22.98
+155.46
-31.99
+10.85
+12.28
+158.51
+15.77
+29.32

Name
Dow Jones Industrials
Dow Jones Transportation
Dow Jones Utilities
NYSE Composite
Nasdaq Composite
S&P 500
S&P MidCap
Wilshire 5000
Russell 2000
Lipper Growth Index

MONEY RATES
Prime Rate
Discount Rate
Federal Funds Rate
Treasuries
3-month
6-month
5-year
10-year
30-year

Last
3.50
1.00
.25-.50
0.22
0.36
1.36
1.89
2.70

0.21
0.34
1.27
1.75
2.58

Australia
Britain
Canada
Euro
Japan
Mexico
Switzerlnd

-.42
-8.94
+6.98
-6.09
-3.65
-1.23
-3.70
-3.61
-9.53
-5.62

Day Ago

Pvs Day

1.2971
1.4407
1.2683
.8893
111.67
17.4396
.9787

1.2912
1.4326
1.2725
.8853
109.53
17.4984
.9741

British pound expressed in U.S. dollars. All others


show dollar in foreign currency.

MUTUAL FUNDS
Name

Total Assets
Obj ($Mlns) NAV

4-wk

Vanguard 500Adml
Vanguard TotStIAdm
Vanguard InstIdxI
Vanguard TotStIdx
Vanguard InstPlus
Vanguard TotIntl
Fidelity Contra
American Funds IncAmerA m
American Funds GrthAmA m
American Funds CapIncBuA m
Vanguard WelltnAdm
Vanguard TotBdAdml
Vanguard TotStIIns
PIMCO TotRetIs
Vanguard IntlStkIdxIPls
American Funds InvCoAmA m
Dodge & Cox IntlStk
Dodge & Cox Stock
Fidelity Spartan 500IdxAdvtg
American Funds CpWldGrIA m

LB
LB
LB
LB
LB
FB
LG
MA
LG
IH
MA
CI
LB
CI
FB
LB
FB
LV
LB
WS

+2.2
+2.5
+2.2
+2.5
+2.2
+3.5
+2.1
+1.7
+3.2
+1.3
+2.6
+0.9
+2.5
+0.9
+3.5
+3.0
+4.4
+3.8
+2.2
+2.4

157,669
130,499
107,919
97,470
91,159
79,217
76,127
72,059
71,429
70,197
68,698
64,930
63,095
58,519
57,142
55,698
53,802
53,766
52,991
51,801

193.11
51.99
191.21
51.97
191.23
14.90
97.94
20.87
41.27
57.85
65.70
10.88
51.99
10.17
99.68
35.22
36.91
163.68
73.59
44.17

Total Return/Rank
Pct Min Init
12-mo
5-year Load
Invt
+1.4/A
-0.4/C
+1.4/A
-0.5/C
+1.4/A
-9.7/C
+0.8/A
-0.2/A
-1.0/B
-2.1/A
+1.7/A
+1.9/A
-0.4/C
+0.5/D
-9.6/C
+0.7/B
-17.3/E
-3.0/C
+1.4/A
-5.7/C

+11.7/A
+11.2/B
+11.7/A
+11.1/B
+11.7/A
+0.6/D
+11.3/B
+7.8/A
+10.7/B
+6.3/A
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NL 10,000
NL 10,000
NL 5,000,000
NL
3,000
NL200,000,000
NL
3,000
NL
2,500
5.75
250
5.75
250
5.75
250
NL 50,000
NL 10,000
NL 5,000,000
NL 1,000,000
NL100,000,000
5.75
250
NL
2,500
NL
2,500
NL 10,000
5.75
250

CA -Conservative Allocation, CI -Intermediate-Term Bond, ES -Europe Stock, FB -Foreign Large Blend, FG -Foreign LargeGrowth, FV -Foreign Large
Value, IH -World Allocation, LB -Large Blend, LG -Large Growth, LV -Large Value, MA -Moderate Allocation, MB -Mid-Cap Blend, MV - Mid-Cap Value,
SH -Specialty-heath, WS -World Stock, Total Return: Chng in NAV with dividends reinvested. Rank: How fund performed vs. others with same objective: A is in top 20%, E in bottom 20%. Min Init Invt: Minimum $ needed to invest in fund. Source: Morningstar.

Financial Advisor

812-254-1340

+.59 +3.32
+1.35 +7.69
-3.47 +10.68
+1.50 +3.62
-.65 -2.02
+.52 +2.33
+.84 +5.61
+.74 +2.15
+1.39
+.95
+.47 -1.95

CURRENCIES
Pvs Week
3.50
1.00
.25-.50

Alan Bubalo
310 S.E. 21st St., Washington, IN 47501

Wk
YTD 12-mo
%Chg %Chg %Chg

www.edwardjones.com
Member SIPC

B8

entertainment

SATURDAY, APRIL 23, 2016

WASHINGTON TIMES HERALD

A time for doves to cry

No more ties? Spelling


Bee to get harder words

Princes own
words describe
mixed feelings
about the web

WASHINGTON (AP) After two straight years of ties,


the Scripps National Spelling
Bee is adding more sting:
The championship rounds
will last longer, and the
words will be harder.
The bee, now televised in
prime time by ESPN, has
exploded in popularity over
the past two decades. And
the spellers have gotten increasingly savvy. So instead
of sticking to a list of 25
championship words selected weeks earlier, the final
rounds could have as many
as 75 words. And the organizers can choose harder
words on the fly if the spellers dont appear to be struggling.
As difficult as those words
offered those co-champions
were, we had a more difficult section in our word list,
but we couldnt go to them
because our rules bound us
to stick to that 25-word
championship word section,
Paige Kimble, the bees executive director, told The Associated Press.
Before 2014, the system
worked well enough. There
hadnt been a tie in more
than 50 years. And the tie
two years ago was a bit of a
fluke: Both spellers got one
of the championship words
wrong, but since they misspelled back-to-back, the bee
continued.
Then last year, Vanya Shivashankar and Gokul Venkatachalam, both veteran
spellers who had come close
in previous bees, plowed
through the championship
words with ease. Gokuls last
word was nunatak, which
means a hill or mountain
surrounded by glacial ice. He
spelled it in one second,
Kimble said.
Current and former spellers applauded the changes,
saying the hardest words
should be last. On occasion,
championship words have
left veteran spellers underwhelmed. Tejas Muthussamy, 13, of Glen Allen, Virginia, and Sylvie Lamon-

LOS ANGELES (AP)


Prince had a fraught relationship with the Internet,
and mourning fans searching YouTube to remember
his greatest years might be
disappointed to find out
that much of it isnt there.
For good reason: he was
adamant about protecting
his copyrights, owned the
song publishing rights to
his music, and vigorously
pursued online outlets that
used it without permission.
In the wake of his death
on Thursday, heres a quick
recap of three things Prince
said over the years that describe his view of the role of
artists in an era of high
technology.

Google Image

Prince

Princes death raises numerous


questions about prior health
M I N N E A P O L I S (AP)
There were no obvious signs
of trauma on Princes body
when he was found unresponsive at his home in suburban
Minneapolis, and suicide isnt
suspected in the musicians
death, the local sheriff said
Friday.
Carver County Sheriff Jim
Olson said during news conference that the investigation
was ongoing, but that there
were no obvious signs of
trauma on the body and we
have no reason to believe this
was a suicide. He said the
57-year-old musician was last
seen around 8 p.m. Wednesday, about 12 hours before he
was found dead.
Despite his debauched stage
pre sence and erotic ally
charged music, Prince had a
reputation for clean living and
an ability to put on shows that
were electrifying in their athleticism.
But after his death following a series of canceled shows,
a reported emergency plane
landing for medical treatment
and a subdued hometown appearance questions are being raised about whether he
was hiding health problems
from his fans.
An autopsy was completed
Friday to determine what
caused the death of the Purple Rain superstar, though
officials said it could take days
or weeks before results are
released. Prince was found
unresponsive in an elevator
on the first floor of his Paisley
Park compound in suburban
Minneapolis and could not be
revived, sheriffs officials said.
Prince had spoken about
struggling with childhood epilepsy, and friends said he had
hip trouble. His former per-

THE INTERNETS
COMPLETELY OVER.

In a July 2010 interview


with Daily Mirror reporter
Peter Willis, Prince says hes
releasing his album
20TEN to Daily Mirror
readers as a CD for free. In
the interview, he complains
that outlets like iTunes
dont pay advances for music and compares the Internet to a passing fad like
MTV.
DOES HE HAVE AN
IPHONE? HELL, NO.

Prince not only disdains


the Internet, he forgoes the
tools to access it. Asked in a
July 2013 story by V Magazines Vanessa Grigoriadis
if he owns an iPhone,
Prince responds : Are you
serious? Hell, no. He then
mimics a high-voiced
woman who has lost hers.
He also touts the pleasures
of listening to Joni Mitchell
on vinyl.
SPOTIFY WASNT PAYING,
SO YOU GOTTA SHUT IT
DOWN.

In an interview with Ebonys Miles Marshall Lewis


published in December,
Prince explains why hes removing his music from
most streaming services
and putting it all on Tidal.
But the interview is removed at Princes request,
according to Billboard and
all that remains on Ebonys
website now is Princes insistence that artist ownership of the means of distribution is important. Where
we finally get into a position to run things we all
should help.

cussionist, Sheila E., told The


Associated Press that Prince
suffered the effects from years
of jumping off risers and
speakers on stage while wearing high heels.
There was always something kind of bothering him,
as it does all of us, she said. I
hurt every single day. You
know were like athletes, we
train, and we get hurt all the
time. We have so many injuries.
Despite problems with his
hip and knee, Prince kept
doing it because he loved doing it and it was something no
one was doing, she said.
Princes cousin Chazz Smith
said he could not comment on
reports about Princes health
and would not say when he
last saw his cousin.
I can tell you this: What I
know is that he was perfectly
healthy, said Smith, who
formed a band with Prince
when they were kids.
Smith said Prince swore off
drugs and alcohol as a kid,
and the group they played
with saw a lot of music greats
fall, so we decided to never
get into that stuff, and no one
did.
Minnesota authorities declined at the Friday news conference to say what may have
been taken from Princes
home after his death, or to
discuss a report that the musician suffered a drug overdose
less than a week before he
died.
Carver County Sheriff Jim
Olson and a medical examiners office spokeswoman refused to comment Friday
when asked about prescription drugs or a possible overdose. Celebrity website TMZ.
com, citing multiple un-

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named sources, has reported


that Prince received treatment
for a painkiller overdose while
traveling home from concerts
in Atlanta last week.
TMZ also cited unidentified
sources in reporting last week
that Prince fell ill as he returned to Minneapolis early
on April 15, and that his flight
made an emergency landing
in Moline, Illinois, where he
was briefly hospitalized.
Asked whether Princes
flight made such a landing at
the Quad City Airport in Moline, public safety manager
Jeff Patterson said Friday that
a private Falcon 900 plane
made a medical diversion
landing at 1:17 a.m. that day.
He said the plane requested
an ambulance at the airport
and a patient was taken to the
hospital.
Patterson would not identify
the patient or the planes
owner, or provide the aircrafts
tail number.
Representatives for Prince
have not responded to requests from The Associated
Press for comment on the reports.

tagne, 13, of Lakewood, Colorado, finalists last year who


are returning, both said
tougher words were used
earlier in the finals.
The 25 words on the
championship word list just
tend to be a little bit easier
than the other words theyve
used right before that, Sylvie said. I dont really know
why.
The changes mean the
bee, which usually wraps up
between 10 and 11 p.m. on
the last day, could run later
this year. Tejas said hes trying to prepare for the May
24-26 championship by practicing late at night.
Kimble said one proposed
change she rejected was to
simply continue the bee as
long as it takes to declare a
single champion.
We did not want the specter of the championship being determined by the endurance level of a young
child, she said. This years
spellers range from 6 to 14
years old.
There will also be bigger
rewards. The first-place cash
prize is rising from $30,000
to $40,000, while second
place will now get $30,000
and third place, $20,000. The
big jumps for second and
third place reflect the possibility that spellers could get
more words right than any
previous winners and still
not win, Kimble said. If there
are co-champions again,
each gets $40,000.
Another change welcomed
by spellers: The bee will no
longer have a second written
spelling and vocabulary test
that was used to help determine the finalists. The test
was unpopular partly because spellers could be eliminated without getting a
word wrong onstage. Kimble
said that could confuse TV
viewers, left to wonder why
a favorite speller was suddenly gone.
This year, there will be up
to 50 spellers competing on
the last day, and all will be
considered finalists.

RE-ELECT

Dennis
Helms

The singers death came two


weeks after he canceled concerts in Atlanta, saying he

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