Fresh coat of paint

Transcription

Fresh coat of paint
OPENING DAY WINS FOR TIGERS, BREWERS
yourdailyglobe.com
— page 9
DAILY GLOBE
Tuesday, April 2, 2013
75 cents
BUDGET HEARINGS
Northern Wisconsin shut out
on biennial budget hearings
MADISON, Wis. — State Sen.
Robert Jauch, D-Poplar, is calling on the Joint Committee on
Finance co-chairs to schedule an
additional budget hearing in
northern Wisconsin.
Four hearings were previously
scheduled, none north of Wisconsin 29.
“The decision by the finance
chairs to schedule the four budget hearings no farther north
than Highway 29 is an insult to
citizens of the far north who have
reason to believe that lawmakers
think Highway 29 is the Wisconsin North coast,” Jauch charged.
“Citizens of northern Wisconsin feel isolated,” he said.
The farthest some citizens in
southern Wisconsin
will
travel is an
hour and half,
while citizens
in the far north
must travel up
to four hours to
be
given
a
chance to talk,
Robert Jauch he said.
“No bill is
more important
than the biennial budget and the
hearings provide one chance for
citizens to speak directly to the
Finance members in hopes of
influencing the budget. Citizens
in central and southern Wisconsin will have their chance. Those
who live in the north will not,”
Jauch said.
Jauch said in 1985, Finance
Committee leaders implemented
statewide public hearings to
enable committee members to be
more familiar with all regions of
the state. “I have eagerly traveled to other regions of the state
to learn about their unique challenges and listen to the citizens
express their concerns. I just
can’t figure out why it is so hard
to do the same thing for those
who live in the north,” he said.
“Earlier this year, their sense
of isolation was confirmed when
HEARINGS
—
page 5
W E AT H E R
Forecast calls
for winter to
continue
By RALPH ANSAMI
[email protected]
IRONWOOD — The morning
of the first day of April mirrored
much of March on the Gogebic
Range, namely unseasonably cold
weather with snow flurries.
Monday’s cold weather followed a windy, blustery Easter
Sunday, with the thermometer
dipping below 32 degrees for most
of the day.
Spring arrived on the calendar
more than a week ago, but the 10day National Weather Service
forecast didn’t hold much hope of
balmy weather any time soon, as
the warmest reading in the forecast was 45 degrees on Thursday.
There was a 50 percent chance
of snow today and snow was also
possible for Saturday.
An overnight low of 18 degrees
was recorded for the 24-hour period to 7 a.m. Monday at the Gogebic-Iron Wastewater Treatment
Plant on Cloverland Drive.
There was a total of .31 inch of
rain over the weekend, bringing
the precipitation total for March
to an ever 2 inches, compared to
the long-term norm of 1.98 inches. The rain reduced snow on the
ground to 16 inches, but it wasn’t
enough to cause any major flooding across the area.
The Ironwood Public Safety
Department received some weekend reports of poor driving conditions resulting from the melting
snow. A vehicle became stuck in
Cortney Ofstad/Daily Globe
THE NORTH entrance to the Iron County Memorial Building is one of the projects completed through the
Iron County Memorial Building Restoration Committee in Hurley over the past year, including new paint
and carpeting.
Fresh coat of paint
n Iron County Memorial
Building receives fresh update
By CORTNEY OFSTAD
[email protected]
HURLEY — Big projects continue to be
marked off the “to-do” list for the Iron County
Memorial Building Restoration Committee.
According to volunteer Dorothy Walesewicz,
the project started as a way to preserve a county landmark.
“I know that we’re not the only ones that didn’t want to see that building torn down,” Walesewicz said. “We wanted to see that building still
standing and operating.”
Many improvements came with paint and a
brush.
“Paint can do wonders,” Walesewicz said.
Other projects included the chimney being
repaired, bathroom remodeling, a new bar in the
main hall, new windows, installing a tankless
hot water heater and kitchen remodeling.
New lights were also included and carpeting
and vinyl floors were installed in the north
entrance.
Despite all of the projects that have been completed, there are still a few more left to do. The
main focus will be on the outside of the building,
including repairing the sidewalks, upgrading
the outside surface of the building and painting.
The biggest project that still remains is new
flooring for about $20,000 to install.
BUILDING
—
FORECAST
page 5
—
page 5
Michael Thill/Daily Globe
MAYOR RICHARD Bolen, second from left, addresses the Wakefield
City Council Monday. From left are council member Ted Finco,
Bolen, new council member Charles Picoldi, city manager John Siira,
deputy clerk Erin Berg and city attorney Mike Pope. Not pictured is
council member Joseph DelFavero.
Wakefield council swears in
new member, approves
engineering for dam update
By MICHAEL THILL
[email protected]
WAKEFIELD — The Wakefield City Council swore in
longtime resident Charles
Picoldi Monday, to fill an unexpired term vacated by a resignation.
A seat on the council became
available when April Rauh
resigned her position in March.
One application, from Picoldi,
was received by the city to fill
the vacancy.
The council is now comprised of Joseph DelFavero,
Ted Finco, Picoldi, Jason White
and Mayor Richard Bolen.
The council approved GEI
Consultants to complete the
engineering design for the
city’s upcoming project to
update the dam at Sunday
Lake’s northeast corner.
Wakefield was recently
approved for one of six Michigan Department of Natural
Resources’ dam management
grants for 2013. The MDNR
and the Michigan Department
of Environmental Quality
reviewed 23 applications for
the $2.35 million in grant funding that was available.
The city will contribute a 10
percent local share of the
$77,000 project cost.
City manager John Siira
said GEI has assisted the city
in all of the project planning to
date. With the engineering
design and grant agreement
now in the works, he said he
hopes that work on the project
could begin as soon as August.
WAKEFIELD
—
page 5
IRON COUNTY
Committee discusses possible fundraisers
By CORTNEY OFSTAD
[email protected]
HURLEY — The Iron County Memorial Building Restoration Committee
discussed future fundraisers during a
meeting at the Iron County Courthouse
on Monday.
Fundraising chair Dorothy Walesewicz spoke to the committee about
the possibility of hosting a fundraiser in
conjunction with the Memorial Day
events in the area.
“It would be a great time to have an
open house and let the community see
the work that has been done,” Wale-
sewicz said.
Each year, the Hurley American
Legion and Hurley Veterans of Foreign
Wars group rotate on organizing the
parade and ceremony and hosting a
meal afterwards.
This year, the VFW is in charge of
the event, but committee members said
that they would get in touch with the
VFW to let the committee host the meal
afterwards.
Different options were discussed,
FUNDRAISERS
—
Daily Globe Inc.
118 E. McLeod Ave.
PO Box 548
Ironwood, MI 49938
yourdailyglobe.com
906-932-2211
Cortney Ofstad/Daily Globe
page 5
W E AT H E R
C O N TA C T U S
Vol. 94, Ed. 77
IRON COUNTY Memorial
Building Restoration
Committee members Joe
Walesewicz, Bill Thomas,
Paul Mullard, Dan
Stephani and Bob
Traczyk discuss an agenda item during a meeting on Monday at the
Iron County Courthouse
in Hurley. Committee
member Louis Valle is
missing from the photo.
TODAY
Snow possible
—Details, page 2
High
Low
Monday
Year ago today
High
Low
High
Low
Records
30
21
55
40
76 (2010)
0 (1975)
Precipitation
To 7 a.m. Monday: none
Snowfall:
none
Season’s snow: 163.7 in.
Snow year ago:
112.8
On ground:
16 in.
INSIDE
FLOWER POWER
Wakefield greenhouse full of
budding plants despite lingering winter weather
—Business, page 6
INDEX
Business . . . . . . . . . . .6
Classifieds . . . . . .11-13
Comics . . . . . . . . . . .10
Community . . . . . . . . .3
Obituaries . . . . . . . . . .8
Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . .4
Sports . . . . . . . . . .9,14
AREANATION
2 l TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013
Colorado prosecutors seek
execution in theater attack
FIVE-DAY FORECAST FOR IRONWOOD
TODAY
WEDNESDAY
Snow Possible
Mostly Sunny
Winds: 10-15 mph NW
FRIDAY
Partly Cloudy
31º
40º
13º
28º
THURSDAY
22º
40º
Winds: Light winds
35º
Winds: Light winds
Sunrise . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6:35 a.m.
Sunset . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7:31 p.m.
Moonrise . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1:51 a.m.
Moonset . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11:15 a.m.
NATIONAL WEATHER
Ashland
Duluth
Eau Claire
Escanaba
Grand Rapids
Green Bay
Madison
Marquette
Rhinelander
St. Paul
Wausau
MOON PHASES
Last
New
First
Full
4/2
4/10
4/18
4/25
Today
33/13 s
33/15 s
35/12 s
32/16 pc
37/22 pc
36/20 s
37/20 s
28/19 sn
31/10 pc
37/22 s
33/12 s
Wed.
43/31
39/30
45/31
36/28
41/27
40/29
46/29
36/32
40/26
49/34
42/27
Today
40/25 s
70/50 t
48/30 s
69/55 s
47/31 s
84/59 s
85/60 s
58/46 sh
Chicago
Dallas
Kansas City
Los Angeles
New York
Orlando
Phoenix
Seattle
REGIONAL WEATHER
Temperature
High . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .30
Low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21
Precipitation
Yesterday . . . . . . . . . . . . none
Winds: 10-15 mph W
SUN AND MOON
Marenisco
28/11
Watersmeet
2
28/9
Minocqua
30/9
ALMANAC
25º
36º
Today we will see partly cloudy skies with a
50% chance of snow, high temperature of
28º, humidity of 43%. Northwest wind 10 to
15 mph. New snow accumulation of less than
a half inch possible.
45
Wakefield
28/13
Bessemer
Hurley 28/13
29/12
51
Mercer
30/9
Manitowish
29/10
Upson
30/14
23º
OUTLOOK
Bergland
28/14
Ironwood
28/13
Mostly Cloudy
Winds: 5-10 mph NW
Ontonagon
28/16
Saxon
32/15
SATURDAY
Partly Cloudy
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
s
Wed.
46/31
51/45
53/37
76/57
47/32
83/64
90/63
62/46
Weather (Wx): cl/cloudy; fl/flurries; pc/partly cloudy;
ra/rain; rs/rain & snow; s/sunny; sh/showers;
sn/snow; t/thunderstorms; w/windy
s
sh
s
s
s
s
s
pc
?
WEATHER TRIVIA
What is the coldest city in the lower
48 states?
Answer: Butte, Mont., where temperatures drop
below zero 223 days a year.
Ashland
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CENTENNIAL, Colo. (AP) —
For James Holmes, “justice is
death,” prosecutors said Monday
in announcing they will seek his
execution if he is convicted in the
Colorado movie theater attack
that killed 12 people.
The decision — disclosed in
court just days after prosecutors
publicly rejected Holmes’ offer to
plead guilty if they took the death
penalty off the table — elevated
the already sensational case to a
new level and could cause it to
drag on for years.
“It’s my determination and my
intention that in this case, for
James Eagan Holmes, justice is
death,” District Attorney George
Brauchler said, adding that he
had discussed the case with 60
people who lost relatives in the
July 20 shooting rampage by a
gunman in a gas mask and body
armor during a midnight showing
of the latest Batman movie.
There was no audible reaction
from the 25-year-old former neuroscience graduate student, who
sat with his back to reporters, or
from victims’ families in the courtroom. Holmes’ parents sat side by
side in the gallery, clutching
hands with fingers intertwined.
The decision had been widely
predicted by legal analysts.
Within minutes of it becoming
official, the trial was pushed back
from August to next February and
Judge William B. Sylvester
removed himself from the case,
saying that now that the charges
carry the death penalty they will
take years to resolve and he does
not have the time to devote to such
a drawn-out matter.
Despite the potential for more
delays, some of those who lost
loved ones were happy with prosecutors’ decision.
“I had a huge adrenaline rush,”
said Bryan Beard, whose best
friend Alex Sullivan was killed in
the attack. “I love the choice. I love
Wisconsin casinos bring in less; too many facilities?
APPLETON, Wis. (AP) —
Opponents of gambling expansion are arguing a 5 percent revenue drop at Wisconsin’s 20
Indian casinos from 2007 to
2011 is evidence the state has
reached its saturation point for
casinos. But a tribe trying to
open a new casino in Kenosha is
blaming the economy.
Gamblers wagered nearly
$16 billion at Wisconsin casinos
last year, or $282 million less
than the amount wagered in
2007, The Post-Crescent of
Appleton reported. Wisconsin’s
gambling revenue has declined
along with betting — to about
$1.2 billion in 2011, down nearly 5 percent from 2007, according to a February report from
the Casino City’s Indian Gaming Industry.
The numbers show there are
“more than enough (gaming)
opportunities out there,” said
Brian Nemoir, the executive
director of Enough Already WI,
a coalition opposed to the expansion of off-reservation gambling.
“The desire to participate in
gambling is a personal decision,
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but at the same time, the costs
associated with it and the effect
on society cause concerns.”
Menominee tribe spokeswoman Lisa Waukau says that as the
economy bounces back, people
will be looking for more places to
play.
“I don’t think we’ve reached
the saturation point,” she said.
“The people in northeastern
Wisconsin and the surrounding
area like to gamble.”
The Menominee have operated a casino in Keshena since the
late 1980s and the tribe is now
seeking federal approval to open
an off-reservation gaming facility in Kenosha.
One indicator that approximates how many people are
gambling is the number of calls
to the Wisconsin Council on
Problem Gambling. Rose Gruber, the council’s executive
director, said it fielded 14,464
calls last year, a 7 percent
increase from 2011. Those who
sought help had an average debt
of $38,500.
“What we’ve seen with our
helpline in the last few years —
with the economy down — is
them gambling more because
there is a sense of desperation,”
Gruber said.
New casinos have been proposed in Beloit, Sheboygan and
Shullsburg. But the Menominee
tribe’s proposal in Kenosha,
which has been in the works for
years, seems to be closer to
fruition than the others.
The tribe’s plan, which is
awaiting action by the federal
Bureau of Indian Affairs, was
dealt a recent setback when
Gov. Scott Walker said all 11
Wisconsin tribes must agree
before any new off-reservation
casino could be opened in the
state. Federal law requires the
governor’s approval.
Waukau said she was surprised by Walker’s stance.
“Our attitude has always
been that there’s room for everybody at the table,” she said.
“And we would never keep
another tribe from doing well —
ever. We’re talking 3,000 good
jobs with benefits.”
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Associated Press
SHERRY DELANEY, right, hugs Arlene Holmes, center, as Robert
Holmes, left, looks on as they leave the courthouse in Centennial, Colo.,
on Monday after attending hearings in the case against their son Aurora theater shooting suspect James Holmes. The prosecution
announced they would seek the death penalty against Holmes.
it, I love it.” He added: “I hope I’m
in the room when he dies.”
But the prospect of a longer
legal battle troubled others such
as Pierce O’Farrill, who was shot
three times.
“It could be 10 or 15 years
before he’s executed. I would be in
my 40s and I’m planning to have a
family, and the thought of having
to look back and reliving everything at that point in my life, it
would be difficult,” he said.
Legal observers said Holmes’
lawyers publicly offered a guilty
plea in what may have been a bid
to gain support among victims’
families for a deal that would
spare them a painful trial and
lengthy appeals.
The prosecution and the
defense could still reach a deal
before the case goes to trial.
Holmes’ lawyers have indicated in court papers that they may
instead pursue a defense of not
guilty by reason of insanity. But
that carries great risk: Prosecutors could argue that Holmes
methodically planned his attack,
casing the theater, stockpiling
weapons and booby-trapping his
apartment with explosives.
The judge newly assigned to
the case, Carlos Samour Jr.,
warned defense lawyers that if
they want to change Holmes’ plea,
the longer they wait the harder it
will be to convince him to accept it.
If Holmes is found not guilty by
reason of insanity, he will be sent
to the state mental hospital, then
returned to prison after treatment.
Briefly
Report predicts ever-bigger
Lake Erie algae blooms
Powerball winner resolves
$30k child support debt
TRAVERSE CITY (AP) — It
was the largest algae bloom in
Lake Erie’s recorded history — a
scummy, toxic blob that oozed
across nearly one-fifth of the
lake’s surface during the summer
and fall of 2011. It sucked oxygen
from the water, clogged boat
motors and washed ashore in rotting masses that turned beachgoers’ stomachs.
It was also likely an omen of
things to come, experts said in a
study released Monday. The
warming climate and modern
farming practices are creating
ideal conditions for gigantic algae
formations on Lake Erie, which
could be potentially disastrous to
the surrounding area’s multi-billion-dollar tourist economy. The
shallowest and southernmost of
the Great Lakes, Erie contains
just 2 percent of their combined
waters but about half their fish.
According to the report, which
was compiled by more than two
dozen scientists, the 2011 runaway bloom was fueled by phosphorus-laden fertilizers that
were swept from corn and soybean fields during heavy rainstorms. Weak currents and calm
winds prevented churning and
flushing that could have shortcircuited its rampant growth.
PATERSON, N.J. (AP) — A
former bodega owner who will be
pocketing $152 million in lottery
winnings has coughed up $30,000
in back child support with a
promise from his lawyer he will
“do what’s right for his children.”
A judge on Monday gave Pedro
Quezada some advice and a
warning when he appeared in
court in a sweatshirt and sneakers.
“There are going to be a lot of
people who are going to ask you
to invest in things because of
your good fortune,” state Superior Court Judge Ernest Caposela
told Quezada, “but investing in
your children is the wisest investment you can make.”
The 44-year-old Quezada, clad
in a gray sweatshirt, dark blue
pants and sneakers, used a Spanish translator during the court
hearing and told Caposela that
the three children would be living
with him from now on. The children’s mother didn’t attend the
hearing. She lives out of state,
Caposela said, but didn’t say
where.
Quezada left the courthouse without commenting, but his lawyer,
Paul Fernandez, said his client
wanted to put the matter behind him
and move on with his life.
Jury cancelation
HURLEY — A jury trial, scheduled for April 9 at 9:30 a.m., has
been canceled, according to a release from Iron County Circuit Court.
A rescheduled date was not listed in the release.
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COMMUNITY
TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013
l
3
Ontonagon Habitat seeks
board members, volunteers
Submitted photo
A.D. JOHNSTON High School students smile after competing in the fourth annual Northern Michigan University Upper Peninsula High School Math Challenge March 23 in Marquette. The event included individual
problems, group problems and three relay problems completed by the same team of four. Bessemer students attended for the first year and were among 28 four-person teams. First, second and third place went
to teams from Houghton, Lake Linden and Calumet respectively. Bessemer’s team of Samm Lehmann, Mark
Montonati, Hannah Douglass and Jess Mazzon placed eighth; a team with Daniel Noren, Kevin Gerovac, Zack
Mazurek and Daniel Trekas took ninth place; and a team with Sarah Trudgeon, Harmony Osborn, Alex Hooyman and Paul Buerger placed 12th. Valerie Rowe competed as an individual. Pictured are, from left, first row:
Douglass, Rowe, Osborn and Hooyman; second row: Noren, Montonati, Mazzon, Trudgeon, Mazurek,
Trekas, Buerger, Lehmann and Gerovac.
Art group sets watercolor workshop
IRONWOOD — The Range Art Association will
sponsor a watercolor painting workshop Tuesday,
April 23, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Downtown Art
Place in Ironwood.
The class, lead by artist Karen Lenhart, of
Watersmeet, is geared for all watercolor painters.
Attendees will work on landscapes and may add an
animal or bird if desired.
Due to limited class size, advance registration is
required. “A list of materials will be provided after
you sign up, but in general, most painters have
watercolor materials now,” RAA member Gail
Kniska said. Registration is $25 for RAA members
and $30 for nonmembers.
For more information, or to register, call Kniska
at 715-561-2072.
Community calendar
Email calendar items and community news to [email protected]. For more information,
call Community Editor Michelle
Thomasini at 906-932-2211.
Today
Weight Watchers, Knights of
Columbus, Ironwood; 6:30 a.m.
weigh-in, 7 a.m. meeting; 5 p.m.
weigh-in, 5:30 p.m. meeting.
TOPS, 8:30 a.m. weigh-in, 9 a.m.
meeting, Hurley Senior Center.
Free GED Tutoring, 9 a.m.-noon
and 6-10 p.m., Gogebic County
Community Schools, 304 E. Iron St.,
Bessemer. 906-663-4888.
Gogebic County Veterans Service Officer, 9:30-11:30 a.m., Ironwood Memorial Building. 906-6671110.
Church Women United, 10 a.m.,
planning meeting, St. Paul Lutheran
Church, Ironwood.
Winter Sale, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., St.
Vincent de Paul, Bessemer. 906663-0089.
Alcoholics Anonymous, noon,
Salem Lutheran Church, Ironwood.
area74.org.
“It’s a Spring Thing,” National
Children’s Book Day afternoon, 1
p.m., for preschool through second
grade, Ironwood Carnegie Library.
Register at 906-932-0203.
Cribbage, 1 p.m., Mercer (Wis.)
Public Library. 715-476-2366.
Adult Education Class, 4-7
p.m., high school library, Hurley K-12
School. 715-561-3306 or 715-5614900, ext 258.
Disabled American Veterans, 6
p.m., American Legion club rooms,
Ironwood Memorial Building.
National Finnish American Festival Chorus, 6:30 p.m., Little Finland, Kimball, Wis.
Al-Anon, 6:30 p.m., Salem
Lutheran Church, Ironwood.
Alcoholics Anonymous, 7:30
p.m., Episcopal Church of the Transfiguration, Ironwood. area74.org.
Government
Gogebic-Iron
Wastewater
Authority and Board, 2 p.m., joint
special board meeting, treatment
facility, Ironwood.
Ironwood Housing Commission, 4 p.m., Pioneer Park Apartments, Ironwood.
Wednesday, April 3
Christian Men of the Northland,
6:30 a.m., Uptown Cafe, Ironwood.
Walk-in Clinic, 8:30 a.m.-noon,
Iron County Health Department,
Hurley. 715-561-2191.
Treasure Room, 9 a.m.-noon, at
Iron County Food Pantry, 72 Michigan Ave., Montreal, Wis. 715-5614450.
Winter Sale, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., St.
Vincent de Paul, Bessemer. 906663-0089.
Alcoholics Anonymous, open
meeting, noon, Salem Lutheran
Church, Ironwood. area74.org.
DOVE Support Group, noon-2
p.m. 906-932-4990.
Iron County Veterans Service
Officer, 1-3 p.m., Mercer (Wis.)
Town Hall. 715-561-2190.
Bloodmobile Blood Drive, 2-5
p.m., Aspirus Ontonagon Hospital.
906-884-8157 for appointments.
4-H Exploration Days Meeting,
4:30 p.m., Michigan State Unviersity-Extension office, Bessemer. 906663-4045.
Michigan Department of Natural Resources Fisheries Division
Public Meeting, 6-8 p.m., to discuss
local fishing regulations, Gogebic
Community College, Ironwood
Township.
Awana Clubs Ministry, 6:208:05 p.m., Bible study, games and
more for kids age 3 through sixth
grade, Range Community Bible
Church, Hurley. 715-561-4355 or
906-932-5775.
Bessemer Booster Club, 6:30
p.m., A.D. Johnston High School.
Bessemer Chamber of Commerce, 7 p.m., Downtown Development Authority office, Bessemer City
Hall.
People for Peace, 7 p.m. EDT,
Episcopal Church of Ascension, 501
Houghton St., Ontonagon.
Alcoholics Anonymous, 7:30
p.m., Sharon Lutheran Church,
Bessemer. area74.org.
Government
Iron County Human Services
Personnel Committee, 9 a.m.,
courthouse, Hurley.
Ironwood Economic Development Corporation, 10 a.m., Ironwood Memorial Building.
Iron County Land Conservation Committee, 3 p.m., Forestry
and Highway building, Hurley.
Ironwood Planning Commission, 5:30 p.m., Ironwood Memorial
Building.
Thursday, April 4
Gogebic County Veterans Service Officer, 10:30-11:30 a.m.,
Wakefield City Hall; 1-2 p.m.,
Watersmeet Township; 2:45-3:15
p.m., Marenisco Township. 906-6671110.
Alcoholics Anonymous, noon,
Salem Lutheran Church, Ironwood.
Grief Support Group, 2 p.m.,
The Inn Bed and Breakfast, Montreal, Wis. 906-663-0308.
“Awesome Blossoms” Art Project, 2 p.m., for third through sixth
grade, Ironwood Carnegie Library.
Register at 906-932-0203.
Spaghetti and Meatball Meal, 47 p.m., $7, American Legion Post 27,
Bessemer. 906-667-0422 for free
delivery to Bessemer area.
Paul Revere Patriots, formerly
UpNorth Tea Party Patriots, 5:30
p.m., Solin Center, Room B-22,
Gogebic Community College, Ironwood.
Bessemer Lions Club, 6 p.m.,
Elk and Hound Restaurant, Ironwood.
Custom Picture Framing!!!
SPRING CLEANING SALE APRIL 15TH-26TH
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Cherry Ridge Picture Framing
824 E. Cloverland Dr. 906-364-3779
M-Thur: 10-5pm / Sat: 10-Noon
Knights of Columbus 4th
Degree Pere Menard Assembly
#471, 6 p.m. business meeting, KC
Hall, Ironwood.
DOVE Bingo, 6 p.m. play; 5 p.m.
card sales, Aurora Athletic Club,
Ironwood.
Knights of Columbus Council
#1396, 6:30 p.m. business meeting,
KC Hall, Ironwood.
Alcoholics Anonymous, 6:30
p.m., First Presbyterian Church,
Hurley. area74.org.
iHeart Youth Ministries, 7 p.m.,
teens to mid-20s; Lighthouse Faith
Center, Ironwood.
Government
Western U.P. Substance Abuse
Services Coordinating Agency
governing board, 5 p.m. EDT,
Twilly’s, Bruce Crossing.
Friday, April 5
Mercer Food Pantry, noon-1
p.m., Railroad Street, Mercer, Wis.
Emergencies: 715-476-7655.
Alcoholics
Anonymous/AlAnon, noon, Salem Lutheran
Church, Ironwood. area74.org.
Fish Fry, 3:30-8 p.m., Bessemer
VFW; eat in or carry-out. 906-6670812.
Fish Fry, 4-8:30 p.m., Ironwood
American Legion Post 5; eat in or
takeout. Wheelchair accessible;
906-932-3612.
Alcoholics Anonymous, 7:30
p.m., Our Lady of Peace Catholic
Church, Ironwood. area74.org.
Saturday, April 6
Treasure Room, 9 a.m.-noon, at
Iron County Food Pantry, 72 Michigan Ave., Montreal, Wis.
Friends of the Ironwood
Carnegie Library, 10 a.m., at the
library.
Alcoholics Anonymous, 11
a.m., Salem Lutheran Church, Ironwood. area74.org.
Alcoholics
Anonymous
Women’s Group, 5 p.m., Salem
Lutheran, Ironwood. area74.org.
“Sound of Music” Singalong,
6:30 p.m., Historic Ironwood Theatre. 906-932-0618 or ironwoodtheatre.net.
Gogebic Community College
Basketball Scholarship Fundraiser, 7 p.m., Iron Nugget, Hurley.
Sunday, April 7
Gogebic-Iron County Paisano
Club Spring Dinner Get-together,
1 p.m., Jackson’s La Panetteria,
Bessemer. Reservations required to
715-561-2459 by April 3.
Alcoholics Anonymous, 1 p.m.,
closed meeting, Salem Lutheran
Church, Ironwood.
ONTONAGON — Ontonagon
County Habitat for Humanity is
seeking new board members.
The group is looking for a volunteer to serve on the board and
lead the chapter in acquiring
property and another new member for family support. The family support board member will
work with potential families
looking for a Habitat home and
those already selected to get a
Habitat home.
Habitat for Humanity provides homes for families unable
to secure conventional financing.
for Humanity is families helping
families, and whether it is the
current home our volunteers are
working on, or a future home,
we’re looking for people to lend a
hand,” Neider said.
Habitat for Humanity meets
the fourth Tuesday of each
month at 6:30 p.m. EDT in the
basement of St. Paul’s Lutheran
Church in Ontonagon.
For more information, including how to become a board member or volunteer or apply for a
home, call Neider at 906-8842404.
Obamas welcome children to annual Easter Egg Roll
WASHINGTON (AP) — An
amused
President
Barack
Obama read a children’s book to
a gathering of boys and girls at
the White House, then peppered
them with questions: Had any of
them lost a tooth? Had any
climbed trees? Had any fallen
after climbing?
It was all part of the annual
White House Easter Egg Roll,
which attracted 30,000 children
and parents to the Executive
Mansion’s South Lawn on Monday for a day of festivities.
Obama, with his dog Bo seated beside him, narrated the popular illustrated book “Chicka
Chicka Boom Boom” about
alphabet letters and their adventures climbing up a coconut tree.
“So clearly the alphabet is full
of troublemakers,” the president
concluded after offering his rendition.
Moments earlier, speaking
from the White House’s Truman
Balcony, Obama thanked the
crowd on the sunny springtime
day before joining in the egg roll.
Obama high-fived the contestants and consoled 5-year-old
Donovan Frazier of Scranton,
Pa., who was sitting on the
ground in tears.
“What’s wrong?” the president
asked, scooping him into a hug.
The president also joined professional basketball players for a
game of hoops with several children. He joined the WNBA team
with a couple little girls, and
their group was twice victorious
in a shoot-out against the boys.
Obama was less successful on
his own — taking 15 tries to sink
a basket. “Oh, man,” he said
after a free throw teetered on the
rim and fell out.
“The president doesn’t get to
practice probably as much as
he’d like to,” Obama’s press secretary, Jay Carney, later told
reporters.
On a day that kids devote to
bunny-shaped chocolates and
jelly beans, first lady Michelle
Obama was able to stress her
mission of physical fitness and
healthy eating habits.
“Eat your vegetables,” she
declared, after reading “Cloudy
with a Chance of Meatballs” to
children in a story time area nestled under a tree. The couple’s
daughters, Malia and Sasha,
shared reading “Brown Bear,
Brown Bear, What Do You See?”
Mrs. Obama also joined chef
Anne Burrell of the Food Network and TV anchor Al Roker at
Associated Press
PRESIDENT BARACK Obama and first lady Michelle Obama watch as
children participate in the annual Easter Egg Roll on the South Lawn of
the White House in Washington Monday.
the Kids’ Kitchen. The group
sang, “put a little love in your
food,” as they prepared orecchiette with broccoli rabe pesto. The
first lady said the ear-shaped
pasta with vegetables, Italian
sausage and nuts was a grownup, sophisticated alternative to
spaghetti.
The South Lawn was transformed into a kaleidoscope of colors as boys and girls played
games to the sounds of kids’
show tunes, snacked on apples
and got a chance to meet professional athletes and entertainers.
The White House confirmed
that among the thousands of
families at the egg roll were some
from Newtown, Conn., where a
mass school shooting took place
in December. They did not offer
additional details, citing privacy
reasons.
The festivities came off
despite earlier warnings from
the White House that budget
battles could have forced the
event’s cancellation. White
House tours have been called off
because of government-wide
spending cuts.
One highlight of this year’s
event was the “Eggtivity Zone,”
in which athletes and coaches
helped teach kids how to play
sports. Among the stars were
Minnesota Vikings running back
Adrian Peterson, NASCAR driver Danica Patrick, gymnast John
Orozco and Washington Wizards
Manitowish Waters bike trail construction to continue
MANITOWISH
WATERS,
Wis. — Manitowish Waters Bike
Trail Inc. announced construction will soon begin on the
newest portions of its trail system.
Phases 2 and 3 of construction
will be start from Red Feather
Road to North Lakeland School
in the spring and finishing
touches will be made on Phase 1
construction.
All trail building so far has
been funded by private donations, a news release said.
Fundraising efforts will contin-
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Ontonagon Habitat for Humanity has built homes in the past,
but the Christian-based chapter
now focuses on rehabilitating
and remodeling homes to fit
needs of chosen families.
The Ontonagon chapter is
also seeking volunteers to work
on a home on Minnesota Street
in Ontonagon. “A family has
been selected to help with the
home, but more volunteers are
needed,” said the Rev. Howard
Neider, president of the Ontonagon chapter.
“The concept behind Habitat
202 E. Cloverland Dr., Ironwood, MI 49938
ue.
The group’s goal is to connect
trails to the Boulder JunctionSayner trail system, making
Manitowish Waters a trail system destination, the release said.
Donations may be sent to Citizens Bank, Manitowish Waters
Bike Trail Inc., P.O. Box 326,
Manitowish Waters WI 54545.
2010 DODGE 2500
CREW CAB 4X4
point guard John Wall.
Two of the younger celebrities
in Monday’s lineup were Oscarnominated actress Quvenzhane
Wallis, star of “Beasts of the
Southern Wild,” and Robby
Novak, who plays “Kid President” in a series of popular
YouTube videos. Elmo, Jordin
Sparks, The Wanted, Austin
Mahone, Coco Jones and other
“Sesame Street” Muppets also
performed.
The National Park Service,
which organizes the event, says
it’s largely funded by sales of
commemorative wooden eggs,
plus some private donations. The
park service would not say how
much the event costs.
Look for These
Inserts in
Tomorrow’s
Daily Globe
Holiday Stationstores
Dollar General
(selected areas)
Little Caesar’s
(selected areas)
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4 l TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013
THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM
DAILY GLOBE
Sue Mizell, Publisher
Larry Holcombe, Managing Editor
In Their Opinion
Michigan needs
courage at Capitol
The dodging and weaving at the Capitol over Gov. Rick
Snyder’s proposals for raising $1.2 billion to improve
Michigan’s roads and bridges is disappointing. It’s time
for politicians and the Michiganders they represent to
accept the fact that people pay for the roads one way or
another.
Act now to raise enough revenue to bring the state’s
infrastructure to an acceptable level, or act later and be
forced to raise even more revenue as even more miles of
roads have been allowed to fall into even worse levels of
disrepair.
Pay now, through gas taxes and registration fees, or
pay now and later through the ever-increasing costs of
vehicle repairs brought about by the potholes and ruts
that will grace increasingly higher percentages of Michigan roadways going forward.
There’s no question that Michiganders will bear the
increased costs of bringing their roads up to par. And one
reason those costs are so high now is that lawmakers
have steadfastly avoided dealing with this problem for
decades. Not since 1997 has the gas tax been raised. Occasional forays into addressing the problems gain some
momentum, then invariably stall out as lawmakers
refuse to commit to the necessary act of raising the money
needed to pay for roads.
The longer Michigan delays, the higher the costs will
be. That is a certainty. The prudent course is to act now,
without delay, to set things on the right track.
The void is breathtaking.
Yes, there is some room to discuss the mix of revenue
sources. What mix from vehicle fees, what mix from taxes
and from what sort of taxes.
But while discussing, keep these facts top of mind:
— Michigan’s roads are consistently ranked among the
worst in the nation. The share of the state’s roads rated
in “poor” condition rose to 35 percent in 2011, up from 10
percent in 2004, according to the Michigan Transportation Asset Management Council.
— Poor condition of Michigan roads plays a part in up
to one-third of the state’s fatal or serious traffic accidents.
— Substandard roads may cost the average Michigan
driver more than $500 a year in repair bills.
At some point all that adds up to a state that doesn’t
care about the damage it causes its economy by letting
roads crumble. Or about the growing financial burden it
places on future generations to fix those roads. It’s time to
find some courage and get this done.
—Lansing State Journal, March 25
legislators
Michigan
Gov. Rick Snyder, P.O. Box
30013, Lansing MI 48909, phone
517-373-3400, fax 517-335-6863.
Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., SR269 Russell Office Building, U.S.
Senate, Washington DC 20510,
phone 202-224-6221, fax 202-2241388.
Sen. Debbie Stabenow, DMich., 133 Hart Senate Office
Building, U.S. Senate, Washington DC 20510, phone 202-2244822.
U.S. Rep. Dan Benishek, RCrystal Falls, 514 Cannon House
Office Building, Washington DC
20515, phone 202-225-4735, fax
202-225-4710.
State Sen. Tom Casperson, REscanaba, 705 Farnum Building,
P.O. Box 30036, Lansing MI 489097536, phone 517-373-7840, fax 517373-3932.
State Rep. Scott Dianda, DCalumet, S-1489 House Office
Building, P.O. Box 30014, Lansing
MI 48909, phone 517-373-0850, fax
517-373-9303.
OPINION
GOP’s Agema out of step with party
Wisconsin
Gov. Scott Walker, Office of the
Governor, 115 East Capitol, Madison
WI 53702, phone 608-266-1212.
Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., 386
Russell Senate Office Building,
Washington DC 20510, phone 202224-5323.
Sen. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wis., 1
Russell Courtyard, Washington D.C.
20510, phone 202-224-5653; Madison office, 14 W. Mifflin St., Suite
207, Madison WI 53703, phone 608264-5338.
U.S. Rep. Sean Duffy, R-Ashland, 1208 Longworth House Office
Building, Washington DC 20515,
phone 202-225-3365, fax 202-2253240.
State Sen. Robert Jauch, DPoplar, 415 South, State Capitol,
P.O. Box 7882, Madison WI 537077882, phone 608-266-3510, toll free
800-469-6562, fax 608-266-3580.
State Rep. Janet Bewley, DAshland, Room 420 North, State
Capitol, P.O. Box 8953, Madison WI
53708, phone 608-266-7690 or 888534-0074, fax 608-282-3674.
Every state gets one Republican National
Committeeman, and Michigan has had some
notable ones who long performed with distinction but were not always in step with
party leadership.
Longest-serving in the post was Chuck
Yob, originally of Grand Rapids and now of
Hesperia, who was elected in 1989 and
served 19 years. He was an early supporter
of Gov. Rick Snyder, who recently designated him as the next chairman of the Mackinac Island Park Commission — an interesting move since ex-Gov. John Engler once
dumped Yob on the commission after he
defied Engler on a state convention nomination.
Yob succeeded National Committeeman
Pete Secchia of East Grand Rapids (appointed U.S. ambassador to Italy), who was not
always chummy with GOP Gov. William G.
Milliken. Earlier, National Committeeman
Peter B. Fletcher of Ypsilanti was a Milliken
ally.
Now comes brand new Republican
National Committeeman Dave Agema of
Grandville, a former three-term state representative who decidedly is out of step with
the Michigan and national GOP as they
wisely try to broaden party appeal.
Agema has scoffed at demands that he
resign over an anti-gay posting on his Facebook page of an online article (not authored
by him) that condemns gays’ “filthy lifestyle”
and portrays them as promiscuous and
prone to transmitting sexual diseases.
Those demands have been effectively —
at least so far as media splash — spurred by
Dennis Lennox, 28, a Grand Traverse County Republican precinct delegate and former
Cheboygan County Drain Commissioner
who tends to rock political boats where ever
he is, including his days as a student at Central Michigan University.
Among the dozens of emails I have
received from Lennox, a columnist for the
yourdailyglobe.com
Published daily Monday - Saturday
(except Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day,
Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year’s Day)
George
Weeks
Michigan’s committeewomen
Michigan Politics
Mount Pleasant Morning Sun, on the subject is a statement signed by 20 other
Republicans
condemning
Agema’s
“deplorable actions” and calling for his resignation.
It said: “We do not have confidence in Mr.
Agema representing the best interests of our
fellow Michigan Republicans and as a result
ask him to resign from his seat on the
Republican National Committee.”
Subsequently, some county GOP leaders
joined in against Agema and on Friday,
GOP House Speaker Jase Bolger’s office said
he disassociated himself from Agema’s posting. As well he should.
On its Friday report on the issue, The
Detroit News said, “State and national
Republican officials released statements
calling for tolerance and condemning hatred
while not calling for Agema’s ouster.”
On Saturday, the paper’s editorial page
editor, Nolan Finley, wrote: “There may be
defensible reasons to oppose gay marriage,
but hatred and ignorance aren’t among
them.” He said Agema “revealed himself as
hateful and ignorant in reposting on his
Facebook page an article attributing to
homosexuals all manner of deviant characteristics, calling them unclean and blaming
them for half the nation’s murders. It’s vile
They also have created recent political
stir. Democratic National Committeewoman
Debbie Dingell, a Wayne State University
trustee and wife of U.S. Rep. John Dingell of
Dearborn, and Republican National Committeewoman Terri Lynn Land of Grand
Rapids, former secretary of state, get mention and poll well as possible contenders in
2014 for the U.S. Senate seat to be vacated
by Democrat Carl Levin.
But pollster Steve Mitchell, whose March
19-21 survey of many possibilities had the
two women in a virtual tie in a general election, said, as quoted in the Detroit Free
Press: “Neither party has an edge in the
general election. None of the candidates
have high statewide name ID, which is one
of the reasons there is no clear-cut frontrunner.”
The two politically-savvy women do well
in a mix that includes some congressmen. If
either of them run and should be elected as
junior senator to Democrat Debbie
Stabenow, Michigan could be one of four
states with two female senators — the current ones being California, New Hampshire
and Washington.
George Weeks, a member of the Michigan Journalism Hall of Fame, for 22 years
was the political columnist for The Detroit
News and previously with UPI as Lansing
bureau chief and foreign editor in Washington. His weekly Michigan Politics column is
syndicated by Superior Features.
Today in history
The Associated Press
Today is Tuesday, April 2, the
92nd day of 2013. There are 273
days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History
On April 2, 1863, during the Civil
War, the Richmond Bread Riot erupted in the Confederate capital as a
mob made up mostly of women, outraged over food shortages and rising
prices, attacked and looted stores.
On this Date
In 1513, Spanish explorer Juan
Ponce de Leon and his expedition
landed in present-day Florida.
(Some historians say the landing
actually occurred the next day, on
April 3.)
In 1792, Congress passed the
Coinage Act, which authorized
establishment of the U.S. Mint.
In 1800, Ludwig van Beethoven
premiered his Symphony No. 1 in C
major, Op. 21, in Vienna.
In 1860, the first Italian Parliament met at Turin.
In 1912, the just-completed RMS
Titanic left Belfast to begin its sea trials eight days before the start of its
ill-fated maiden voyage.
In 1917, President Woodrow Wilson asked Congress to declare war
against Germany, saying, “The world
must be made safe for democracy.”
(Congress declared war four days
later.)
In 1932, aviator Charles A. Lindbergh and John F. Condon went to a
cemetery in The Bronx, N.Y., where
Condon turned over $50,000 to a
man in exchange for Lindbergh’s kidnapped son. (The child, who was not
returned, was found dead the following month.)
In 1942, Glenn Miller and his
orchestra recorded “American
Patrol” at the RCA Victor studios in
Hollywood.
In 1956, the soap operas “As the
World Turns” and “The Edge of
Night” premiered on CBS-TV.
In 1968, the science-fiction film
“2001: A Space Odyssey,” produced
and directed by Stanley Kubrick, had
its world premiere in Washington
D.C.
In 1974, French President
Georges Pompidou died in Paris.
In 1982, several thousand troops
from Argentina seized the disputed
Falkland Islands, located in the
south Atlantic, from Britain. (Britain
seized the islands back the following
June.)
Ten years ago: During the Iraq
War, American forces fought their
way to within sight of the Baghdad
skyline. A bomb blast near a wharf in
the southern Philippine city of Davao
killed 16.
Five years ago: President
George W. Bush suffered a diplomatic setback when NATO allies
rebuffed his pleas to put former Soviet republics Ukraine and Georgia on
the path toward membership. Irish
Prime Minister Bertie Ahern, who’d
helped broker peace in Northern Ireland but couldn’t survive a scandal
over his collection of cash from businessmen, announced he would
resign.
One year ago: A gunman killed
seven people at Oikos University, a
Christian school in Oakland, Calif.
(Suspected gunman One Goh was
found not mentally fit for trial until
deemed competent.) President
Barack Obama challenged the U.S.
Supreme Court to uphold his health
care overhaul during a Rose Garden
news
conference.
The
U.S.
Supreme Court ruled, 5-4, that jailers may perform invasive strip
searches on people arrested even
for minor offenses. Five-time All-Star
Reggie Miller joined longtime NBA
coach Don Nelson and college
standout Ralph Sampson as part of
a 12-member class to be inducted
into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. Kentucky won its
eighth men’s national NCAA basketball title, holding off Kansas for a 6759 victory.
Today’s Birthdays: Actress
Sharon Acker is 78. Singer Leon
Russell is 71. Jazz musician Larry
Coryell is 70. Actress Linda Hunt is
68. Singer Emmylou Harris is 66.
Social critic and author Camille
Paglia is 66. Actress Pamela Reed is
64. Rock musician Dave Robinson
(The Cars) is 60. Country singer
Buddy Jewell is 52. Actor Christopher Meloni is 52. Singer Keren
Woodward (Bananarama) is 52.
Country singer Billy Dean is 51.
Actor Clark Gregg is 51. Actress
Jana Marie Hupp is 49. Rock musician Greg Camp is 46. Rock musician Tony Fredianelli (Third Eye
Blind) is 44. Actress Roselyn
Sanchez is 40. Country singer Jill
King is 38. Actor Adam Rodriguez is
38. Actor Jeremy Garrett is 37. Actor
Michael Fassbender is 36. Rock
musician Jesse Carmichael (Maroon
5) is 34. Singer Lee Dewyze (TV:
“American Idol”) is 27. Actor Jesse
Plemons is 25. Singer Aaron Kelly
(TV: “American Idol”) is 20.
Thought for Today: “We crucify
ourselves between two thieves:
regret for yesterday and fear of
tomorrow.” — Fulton Oursler, American journalist and author (18931952).
MALLARD FILLMORE
DOONESBURY
DAILY GLOBE
garbage, and it may have passed for mainstream thought on homosexuality at one
time in this country, but that time is long
past.
“The Republican Party’s time will pass as
well if it allows neanderthals such as Agema
to continue speaking under its name.”
Well said by a man who was my editor
long ago.
Award Winning Newspaper
POSTMASTER – Send changes of addresses to:
The Daily Globe, P.O. Box 548, 118 E. McLeod Ave., Ironwood, MI 49938
PUBLISHER
Sue Mizell
MANAGING EDITOR
Larry Holcombe
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Gary Pennington
CIRCULATION
Marissa Casari
EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT/ACCOUNTING
Jenna Martilla
CLASSIFIED /LEGAL ADVERTISING
Becky Torro
LEAD PRESS
Bill Westerman
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THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM
Wood product manufacturer
gears up for production
By JAN TUCKER
[email protected]
ONTONAGON — Global
Woodsticks, LLC in White Pine
is gearing up for production of
wood products, according to the
Ontonagon County Economic
Partnership chairman Frank
Wardynski.
Wardynski told the OCEP on
Monday that the company has
received over 300 applications for
work and is presently working on
obtaining the wood necessary for
production. The company is located in the former Custom Metals
Building in White Pine.
Wardynski also informed the
OCEP that a group is looking for
farmers interested in growing
various varieties of cabbage on
about 150-200 acres of land.
The chairman said he has
been contacted by someone interested in developing a business
involving growing cabbage.
Interested parties can contact
Wardynski at the Ontonagon
Michigan
State
University
Extension office.
Wardynski apologized to the
OCEP, since the meeting was to
have had either a telephone conference or face-to-face conversation with State Rep. Scott Dianda (D-Calumet). He said he has
been unable to reach Dianda
during the day.
According to Wardynski, he
hoped to emphasize to Dianda
the need for someone to work
either part or full time on economic development for the county. He praised the volunteers
who currently do the work,
despite having full-time jobs, to
try and develop economic opportunities.
In the past the group has discussed the possibility of a water
bottling plant, but the chairman
noted that a business plan
showed the need to capture a
larger market to make such a
plant financially successful.
Grants to develop infrastructure that would support more
agriculture in the western Upper
Peninsula were discussed. Wardynski said that several counties
or planning units could be
involved. It is necessary, he said,
to find methods of capturing bigger markets and getting grains
or other agriculture products to
markets in a less expensive way,
such as by rail or barges.
In
other
action,
Janis
Burgess, chair of the O.K. Team,
informed the group that the
team is working at the monthly
simply soup dinners and has
plans to clean up the White Pine
Mall for the Woman’s Expo and
clean up the Folk School for
spring.
HEARINGS
From page 1
the majority party refused to
hold a hearing on the mining bill
in northern Wisconsin, where
the mine would be located.
Scheduling a fifth hearing in the
north is the responsible way to
assure these citizens that their
voice is not going to be ignored as
a matter of practice,” he said.
Jauch said he’s certain there
are plenty of communities that
would “love to host the hearing
and welcome the committee
members and guests willing.”
The Joint Finance Committee
has scheduled the following
hearings on the biennial budget
bill
—Thursday: Greendale High
School Auditorium, 10 a.m. to 6
p.m.
—Monday, April 8: Green
Bay, Lambeau Field Atrium, 10
a.m. to 5 p.m.
—Wednesday, April 10: Lake
Delton, Crystal Grand Music
Theatre, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
—Thursday, April 18: Baldwin, Baldwin-Woodville High
School Auditorium, 10 a.m. to 5
p.m.
—Ralph Ansami
snow and ice ruts in the middle of
the roadway on Northland
Avenue Thursday.
On Friday, Washington Street
was reported “nearly impassable”
and a big sinkhole was called to
the attention of the public works
department on Friday at 138 E.
Michigan St.
NIE
6,000 Syrians killed in
March, deadliest month yet
BEIRUT (AP) — March was
the bloodiest month yet in Syria’s
2-year-old conflict with more than
6,000 documented deaths, a leading anti-regime activist group said
Monday, blaming the increase on
heavier shelling and more violent
clashes.
Rami Abdul-Rahman, who
heads the Syrian Observatory for
Human Rights, said the increased
toll is likely incomplete because
both the Syrian army and the
1.2013 NIE Thanks Sponsors 6x5_Layout 1
rebel groups fighting President
Bashar Assad’s government often
N
E W S PA P E R
I
underreport their dead in the civil
war.
“Both sides are hiding information,” Abdul-Rahman said by
phone from Britain, where his
group is based. “It is very difficult
to get correct info on the fighters
because they don’t want the information to hurt morale.”
The numbers, while provided
by only one group, support the
appraisal of the conflict offered by
many Syria watchers: The civil
war is largely a military stalemate
that is destroying the country’s
social11:17
fabric
and
taking
a huge toll
3/6/13
AM
Page
1
on civilians.
N
E
D U C AT I O N
5
By RALPH ANSAMI
[email protected]
Cortney Ofstad/Daily Globe
REPLACING THE bar in the Iron County Memorial Building has been crossed of the “to do” list as part of
restoration project in Hurley. Many projects still need to be finished, including installing new flooring and
improving the outside of the building.
BUILDING
From page 1
Bowling and fundraisers
Recently,
the
American
Legion came to the Iron County
Finance Committee for help in
running the bowling alley in the
basement of the Memorial
Building. The county awarded
the group $4,000 to continue
operations this summer, however, according to Joe Walesewicz,
a future decision will have to be
made about keeping the bowling
alley open.
“The upstairs of the building
pays for itself with rentals, so
we won’t close that,” he said.
“However, we’re losing money
on the bowling alley. Bowling is
done, with many leagues shrinking or going away all together.
Come this fall, if there is a lack
of interest in bowling, we’ll
decide on whether we’ll close the
bowling alley.”
Another hurdle is continuing
to raise funds for the restoration
project. According to Dorothy
Walesewicz, fundraisers are
being planned for this spring
and summer.
The first fundraiser will be
April 16 from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
at the Iron Nugget. The meal
will include a bowl of chili and a
baked potato bar, with all of the
fixings. The cost is $6 per person
and tickets can be purchased
from any committee member.
“All of the proceeds go to the
restoration project,” Dorothy
Walesewicz said.
For more information on
the committee, the restoration
project or the American Legion,
contact Joe or Dorothy Walesewicz at 715-561-2459.
From page 1
including hosting a pancake
breakfast before the parade, or a
brat feed afterwards.
“With the parade being at 10
a.m., you are not going to have a
lot time to have something before
hand,” committee member Louis
Valle said.
It was tentatively set to host a
brat feed after the event, pending
decisions from the VFW and
Legion members on allowing the
meal to happen and allowing the
event to take place at the Memorial Building.
Other options were mentioned, including pizza or pasty
parties at the building during the
year, a teen dance once school is
out and more.
Other business
Former committee member
Sharon Ofstad sent in her resignation from the committee, and
it was discussed by members on
how to replace her.
Committee
chair
Paul
Mullard said that Ofstad was
placed on the committee by the
county chairman, so it should be
up to the county board to find a
replacement, if the board wishes.
“I would like to see another
committee member added,”
Mullard said.
Mullard also thanked the Iron
County Finance Committee for
giving $4,000 to the American
Legion to keep the bowling alley
running through the spring and
summer.
Treasurer Joe Walesewicz
updated the committee on the
finance report, and said that
there was $8,316 in the account.
The next meeting was set for
May 6 at 4 p.m. at the courthouse.
WAKEFIELD
There was also a report of a flooded basement Saturday morning at
221 W. Tamarack St. and sewer
backup Sunday at 117 Poplar St.
March produced 31 inches of
snow in Ironwood, compared to the
100-year average of 24.9 inches.
The average temperature in
Ironwood for March was 19.8
degrees, well below the long-term
average of 25.1.
l
News station
hooked by April
Fools prank
FUNDRAISERS
FORECAST
From page 1
TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013
From page 1
With this year’s heavy snowfall and the spring thaw occurring later than last year’s, the
city has been paying close attention to the rate of snow melt.
Lingering cold temperatures
have helped so far to prevent a
rapid melt and rising lake levels.
In other business, the council:
—Voted to extend the city’s
agreement with the Gogebic
County Sheriff’s Department
for police services. Under the
two-year contract, the city will
pay $92,040 for the first fiscal
year and $92,664 for the second.
This is up from the city’s current
rate of $91,520. Wakefield and
Bessemer each pay the same rate
for sheriff’s department services.
—Heard that spring work has
started on the city’s ongoing
sewer project, which it hopes to
wrap up this year.
—Approved city of Ironwood
code enforcement official Jason
Alonen to continue as Wakefield’s code enforcement officer.
The contract is for two years and
includes rates of $28.56 per hour
for the first year and $29.13 per
hour for the second.
Wakefield was billed a total of
$1,134 for code enforcement services for 2012.
—Approved William Saily to
continue as building inspector.
Saily will be paid $550 per
month from April 2013 to Jan.
2014 and $200 per month from
Lottery
Monday
Michigan
Midday Daily 3: 2-1-8
Midday Daily 4: 4-3-9-6
Daily 3: 6-4-1
Daily 4: 7-8-2-9
Fantasy 5: 05-17-28-33-34
Keno: 02-07-14-22-23-24-28-2933-34-39-40-41-42-50-51-55-59-6366-69-79
Wisconsin
SuperCash: 01-05-20-21-26-32
Badger 5: 06-11-21-27-31
Daily Pick 3: 3-7-5
Daily Pick 4: 7-1-0-3
January to April 2014. To date,
the city has issued no building
permits for the 2013 construction season.
—Approved a contribution of
$1200 to the Gogebic-Ontonagon Community Action Agency for the 2013-’14 fiscal year.
This represents an increase
from the yearly amount of
$1,150 the city has contributed
since 2010.
—Heard that the city’s website has been updated. The site
can be found at cityofwakefield.org.
Any decent April Fools prank
is one that falls close enough to
reality to hook some gullible targets.
That was the case on Sunday
evening when Fox 21-TV of
Duluth reported some “BREAKING NEWS” on its 9 p.m. program.
The Fox anchor “broke” the
shocking news that the little
town of Ely, Minn., had banned
all social media so that its residents and visitors would spend
more time outdoors.
The mayor of the city, Ross
Petersen, had announced the
mandatory ban would take effect
on April 1, 2013.
The short bulletin on Fox-21
wasn’t backed up with any follow-up, nor a disclaimer later in
the half-hour that it was merely
an obvious April Fools prank.
On a slow news day, the TV
news gatherers fell hook, bait
and sinker for the ruse.
More details surfaced on the
prank Monday, with the mayor
saying the city didn’t need Facebook, with its big bulletin board
over the grocery store, nor Twitter, when the town contains at
least 140 characters of its own.
Petersen fessed up that the
prank was meant to raise awareness of Ely’s great outdoors,
“where only the birds tweet,”
and how much time people spend
online, rather than appreciating
nature and in actual face-to-face
communication
with
other
human beings.
“The only thing online here is
a fish. We’ve got a million acres
of exclusive content, and hundreds of sites you can visit,”
Petersen said.
It seems Linda Fryer, administrative director of the Ey
Chamber of Commerce, had
some input into the prank in an
effort to attract people to the
area.
Of course, urging residents to
power down and get outside and
enjoy nature on an Easter weekend when the temperature barely edged above freezing, with bitter cold north winds, might not
have been the best timing for the
prank.
It hooked Fox-21, however,
and the station will probably
undertake more background
checking on Ely news in the
future.
How does
Pizza and Caesar
sound for dinner?
Liberty Bell Chalet
Restaurant: Mon.-Thurs. 11-2; 7 Days a Week at 4 p.m.
Italian Market: Mon.-Sat. 10-7; Closed Sunday
Sunday Lake Supermarket
Settler’s Co-Op
Rockland Depot
Little Caesars
Liberty Bell Chalet
Temperature Control Services
Cane Funeral Home
Daily Globe
Thank You To Our Current Sponsors of
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Wakefield, MI
Hurley, WI
NIE
Bruce Crossing, MI
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NEWSPAPERS
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Ironwood, MI
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Name:
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BUSINESS
6 l TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013
THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM
Spring stock takes root for area growers
n Lake’s Flower Cabin cultivates buds,
blooms despite lingering winter weather
By MICHAEL THILL
[email protected]
WAKEFIELD — While Easter
weekend saw the heavy covering of
snow linger on the Gogebic Range,
greenhouses at Lake’s Flower
Cabin were full of the first budding
plants and blooming flowers of
spring.
With the help of climate controls,
reds, yellows, pinks and greens are
taking hold, in contrast to the
whites and grays still trying to hold
on to the landscape outside. Lake’s
began planting inventory at the
beginning of March, preparing for
gardeners and flower enthusiasts
waiting for the spring thaw to
progress.
Chris and Mandy Lake started
the business on County Road 519,
about a mile north of M-28, in 2010.
Mandy said a lot of advance work
goes into getting ready for the
planting season.
“I do all my planning in the fall —
how many seeds I’m ordering, soil
and how many flowers,” she said.
The flower cabin, which includes
four greenhouses, will be open for
business beginning May 3 and is
taking advance orders.
“People are calling in for specific
hanging baskets now, trees and
shrubs,” Mandy said. “People are
asking questions and ordering for
spring.”
The greenhouses hold a wide
variety of vegetables, geraniums,
annual flowers, hanging baskets,
perennials, trees and shrubs.
Lake’s also offers custom planters,
potting soil and some yard and garden accessories.
Mandy said they will be supplying the city of Ironwood with hanging baskets again this year for the
downtown.
“We’re getting ready for spring,
even though it doesn’t quite look
like it outside,” she said.
The flower cabin has a Facebook
page, which Mandy said she usually updates each week once they
start planting.
She said they plan to be open
this year from May 3 until the end
of June. Hours will be Mondays
through Saturdays from 9 a.m. to 5
p.m. and Sundays from 9-3.
For more information on
Lake’s Flower Cabin, call 906-3640669,
or
email
[email protected].
MANDY LAKE helps her son, Joey, transplant tomato seedlings Saturday in one of the greenhouses at
Lake’s Flower Cabin in Wakefield. Flowers are starting to bloom at Lake’s, which started planting its inventory the beginningTof March.
Michael Thill/Daily Globe
with the
DAILY GLOBE
Stock market
Stocks dip after
manufacturing growth
slows
NEW YORK (AP) — The
stock market got off to a slow
start in April, edging lower
after the Standard and Poor’s
500 index eclipsed its all-time
high last week.
The main catalyst was a
slowdown in U.S. manufacturing growth last month. The
decline in the Institute for Supply Management’s benchmark
manufacturing index for March
was worse than economists had
forecast. Stocks started falling
shortly after the report came
out at 10 a.m. and stayed lower
the rest of the day.
The Dow Jones industrial
average closed 5.69 points, or
0.04
percent,
lower
at
14,572.85. The Standard &
Poor’s 500 index dropped 7.02
points, or 0.5 percent, to
1,562.17.
Industrial companies fell 1
percent, the most in the S&P.
3M, which makes Post-it notes,
industrial products and construction materials, fell 66
cents, or 0.6 percent, to $105.65.
Caterpillar, a maker of construction and mining equipment, dropped $1.33, or 1.5 percent, to $85.64.
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HEALTH
THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM
Exercise classes set in Mercer
MERCER, Wis. — A new session of weight lifting classes will begin Monday, April 8, at the Mercer Community Center.
Classes meet each Monday and Thursday with
three class times: 12:45-2 p.m., 2:45-4 p.m. and 56:15 p.m. Each class meets for 12 weeks. Leg
weights up to 10 pounds and hand weights up to 15
pounds are provided.
The classes are open to all adults with a fee of
$36 per person.
Free aerobics DVD classes will be held at the
Mercer Community Center each Wednesday from
1-2 p.m. and 5-6 p.m. The class may take a brisk
walk, weather permitting.
For more information, call Gerri Reynolds at
715-476-3720.
Associated Press
A RAW asparagus, mushroom and parsley salad with nuts is served on a plate in Concord, N.H.
Salad embraces fresh, crisp
flavor of raw asparagus
By SARA MOULTON
Associated Press
The first time I ate raw asparagus was during the ‘80s at an Italian restaurant in New York.
Someone else must have pushed
me to order it because until then
the only asparagus I’d ever
encountered was steamed and
buttered, and I really liked it just
that way. Raw asparagus? Must
be bland and boring.
Then I noticed that the vegetable in question was the centerpiece of a salad dressed with fresh
lemon juice, extra-virgin olive oil
and a sprinkling of shaved Parmigiano-Reggiano. Well, shoot, a
piece of cotton would taste good
with that kind of treatment, so I
took a chance. To my surprise, the
dish was wonderfully flavorful
and refreshing. Crunchy, too.
With asparagus season upon
us, I thought it might be fun to
recreate that salad with a few lipsmacking extras.
First, a couple of tips about
buying the star of this show. At
the store, asparagus should be
stored vertically, stem down in ice
or water. They’re probably not in
great shape if you find them
stacked sideways and on top of
each other, so keep looking. Make
sure the tips are tight and
smooth, not open and feathery,
and that the stalks are firm and
smooth.
Size-wise, I’ve never met an
asparagus I didn’t like, whether
it’s thin as a pencil or thick as a
hot dog. For this recipe, though, I
recommend the thicker guys. Yes,
you’ll have to peel the stalk (that
outer layer on thick stalks is
unappealingly tough), but they’re
much easier to thinly slice than
the pencil-necked guys.
Then it’s on to the button
mushrooms. Sure, they seem ordinary compared to their various
designer cousins, but they’re absolutely delicious raw and they also
happen to be quite affordable.
Just be sure to purchase only the
firmest, whitest, tightest specimens. No gills showing, please. A
button mushroom becomes flabby
as it ages. Your salad wants it
firm.
I’ve also tossed in some leaves
of fresh flat-leaf parsley, and not
merely as a garnish, but as a full
partner to the other ingredients.
In fact, almost any fresh herb —
including parsley, basil, mint,
cilantro, chives, chervil or dill —
can play a similarly robust role in
a salad.
Lastly, we have pistachio nuts,
my favorites. I love them for their
flavor, but — at only 4 calories per
nut — they’re also a boon to the
diet-conscious. Of course, you
could swap in walnuts, almonds,
cashews or pecans if you wanted.
They’re all sources of healthy fat.
In the end, this spring salad —
an exciting and satisfying alternative to the basic green salad — is
all about simple, good ingredients.
And, topped off with grilled
shrimp or chicken, you could call
it dinner.
———
Raw asparagus, mushroom
and parsley salad with nuts
and Parmesan
Start to finish: 30 minutes
Servings: 4
Kosher Salt and ground black pepper
1 tablespoon lemon juice
1 1/2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
1/2 pound asparagus, tough stems
trimmed and discarded (peeled if
thicker than 1/3 inch)
1 cup flat-leaf parsley leaves
4 ounces firm white button mushrooms, thinly sliced
1/3 cup pistachios or chopped toasted
walnuts
1 ounce shaved Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese
In a large bowl, combine a
hefty pinch of salt, some black
pepper and the lemon juice.
Whisk until the salt is dissolved,
then add the oil in a stream,
whisking. Set aside.
Lay the asparagus flat on a
cutting board and slice a few
stalks at a time very thin on a
diagonal to create thin oblong
slices. Add to the salad bowl along
with the parsley, mushrooms and
pistachios or walnuts. Toss well to
coat with the dressing. Divide the
salad among 4 serving plates and
top each portion with some of the
cheese.
Nutrition information per serving: 160 calories; 120 calories
from fat (75 percent of total calories); 14 g fat (2.5 g saturated; 0 g
trans fats); 5 mg cholesterol; 6 g
carbohydrate; 3 g fiber; 2 g sugar;
7 g protein; 260 mg sodium.
Sara Moulton was executive
chef at Gourmet magazine for
nearly 25 years, and spent a
decade hosting several Food Network shows. She currently stars
in public television’s “Sara’s
Weeknight Meals” and has written three cookbooks, including
“Sara Moulton’s Everyday Family
Dinners.”
LANSING (AP) — Young children in Michigan with
autism spectrum disorders are now able to receive treatment coverage through Medicaid.
The Michigan Department of Community Health
announced Monday that children ages 18 months to 5
years can begin receiving coverage for applied behavior
analysis services through Medicaid and MIChild programs.
Applied behavior analysis teaches skills by breaking
them down into smaller skills so they are easier to learn.
The Health Department says the treatment can improve
behavior, communication and social skills especially during early childhood.
Since October, Michigan insurance companies have
been required to provide coverage for autism services
for children through the age of 18.
The department says within the first year the state
expects to provide about 1,600 children with autism with
applied behavior analysis services.
Vermont is first state to post health
insurance rates
MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) — Vermont has become the
first state to let people without health insurance see how
much they would pay to get coverage through the federal health overhaul beginning next year.
The state released proposed rates Monday. Examples show that a family of four with an annual income of
$32,000 would pay $45 a month out of pocket. A single
person making $40,000 would pay $317 a month.
Vermont’s rates aren’t expected to affect other
states’. Andy Hyman of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation says more states are expected to release theirs
over the next month or so.
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Take family approach to
healthy eating, physical activity
By GAYLE COLEMAN
Special to the Daily Globe
Research shows that family members’ health
and well-being is affected by the environment in
the home. That’s why taking a family approach to
healthy eating and physical activity can be beneficial.
Parents have the greatest influence on their
children’s health behaviors, including food choices
and activity patterns, while children’s behaviors
can influence the food and activity choices that parents make. For example, some parents report only
buying or serving vegetables that they know their
children like, even if it means serving a very limited variety of vegetables.
Here are some suggestions for taking a family
approach to eating and physical activity.
— Eat together as often as possible. Studies
show that teens who ate at least five meals a week
with their families consumed more fruits, vegetables and calcium-rich foods; had fewer soft drinks;
and were less likely to smoke, drink alcohol or use
drugs. “Family meals” range from all family members sitting down to dinner to just a few members
sharing breakfast.
— Make physical activity a fun, family event. Go
for a walk, dance or play an active game of tag.
Play a round-robin movement game by designating
areas of a room or hallway for different exercises
and rotating through the exercises. For example,
one person might start at the sit-ups area, another
at the marching-in-place area and someone else at
the stretching area. After a few minutes, everyone
moves to a different area.
— Be a role model. Children learn from their
parents. If you enjoy being physically active and
are willing to try foods that are new to you, there’s
a good chance that your children will be, too.
— Buy healthy foods and beverages you want
your family to eat. If children are hungry and all of
the foods available for snacks are healthy choices
such as fruit, raw veggies, low-fat milk and wholegrain cereal, then they will choose a healthy snack.
Similarly, children are more likely to drink low-fat
milk, juice and water when those drinks are more
readily available than soda and other sugary beverages.
— Plan meals and prepare foods with children.
Children are more likely to taste and eat meals
that they help to plan or prepare. Even young children can help in deciding which green vegetable to
have or stirring a fruit salad. Plus, they will learn
how to plan and prepare meals.
— Grow foods together. Children also are more
likely to taste and eat foods that they help to grow.
Even if it’s just a container garden with a tomato
plant or leafy greens, children will learn how vegetables grow and your family will have fresh veggies to eat.
— Make the same meal for all family members.
If children are routinely expected to eat the same
healthy foods as the rest of the family, then they
will learn to like these foods. On the other hand, if
children are allowed to demand pizza when everyone else is having spaghetti, the stage is set to
encourage picky eating.
— Remember that parents are responsible for
providing food for their children, but children are
responsible for deciding how much they will eat.
It’s normal for children to have a big appetite one
day and not be very hungry the next day. Studies
suggest that pressuring children to eat certain
foods, clean their plates, or stop eating before they
feel full can lead to unpleasant power struggles. In
the long run, children are likely to reject foods they
are forced to eat.
For more information, call the Iron County UWExtension office at 715-561-2695; check out the
Active Families section of the “Let’s Move” campaign at letsmove.gov/active-families; or get tips
from the “ChooseMyPlate” guidance system at
choosemyplate.gov/healthy-eating-tips/tentips.html.
Gayle Coleman is a nutrition education program specialist with the University of WisconsinExtension in Madison.
Woman makes film to encourage organ donations
MILWAUKEE (AP) — A Wisconsin woman who donated a
kidney to a stranger has made a
film about her experience to
encourage others, particularly
minorities, to also donate.
Natasha Coe, 33, told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel that
she decided to donate a kidney
after her ex-boyfriend’s uncle
died after kidney failure. She
posted an offer on Facebook in
February 2010.
“After reading an article and
recent events that have happened, I think I may donate one
of my kidneys,” she wrote. “If
anyone knows someone on the
waiting list for one, let me know
... And I’m serious (for once).”
A few hours later, she heard
from a former high school classmate, whose stepmother needed
a kidney. Debbie Will, 60, of
Greenfield, suffered kidney failure after her second child was
born in the 1970s. Her sister
donated a kidney to her in 1979,
but it gave out in March 2008.
Will had survived by having dialysis five days a week, for three to
four hours at a time.
A quick blood test showed that
Coe and Will were a match, both
B positive. But the donation didn’t happen right away, as there
were some medical complications.
When the surgery was finally
set, Coe showed up with a film
crew.
“I was moved so much by
BUDGET DOLLAR
& Cash Liquidators
hearing Debbie’s story,” she said.
“I wanted to be able to do something more. What if we film it?”
Coe, who is biracial, said she
also thought a documentary
could help raise awareness
among minorities. Twenty-nine
percent of the people on waiting
lists for an organ donation are
African-Americans.
Organ recipients and donors
do not have to be of the same race
or ethnicity, according to the
U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services.
Coe’s friend, photographer
and wardrobe stylist Sheila
Teruty, served as the film’s director. She said the toughest part of
the project was seeing her friend
in pain.
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AREANATION
8 l TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013
Record
POLICE REPORTS
City of Ironwood
Reports of garbage from cans
being scattered on some city streets
were received by the Ironwood Public Safety Department over the
weekend.
A Friday complaint said garbage
cans on Birch Street appeared to
have been struck by a vehicle and
garbage was strewn all over the
streets.
A similar report was received
from First National Street.
ACCIDENTS
City of Ironwood
IPSD officers investigated about
a half-dozen two-vehicle traffic accidents over the weekend, with most
involving minor damage.
———
A Sunday accident on Country
Club Road resulted in moderate
damage to two vehicles.
Laurie Schenk, 49, of 331
Kennedy St., was northbound on the
roadway, attempting to make a left
hand turn into an Elk and Hound
restaurant parking lot. She didn’t
see a second vehicle driven by
Joanne Kuula, 55, of Michigan
Avenue, and Schenk turned in front
of it, causing a collision, according
to an IPSD report.
There were no injuries, according
to the report.
———
The IPSD was investigating a
Monday morning complaint that a
utility pole in front of the McKevittPatrick Funeral Home on Lowell
Street had been struck and damaged by an apparent hit-run vehicle.
The complaint was received
around 10:30 a.m.
ACCIDENTS
Iron County, Wis.
Joy Lynn Kantala, 57, of Ironwood, backed into a vehicle owned
by William Dean Peterson, 55, of
Ironwood, on Monday at 12:13 p.m.,
according to an Iron County Sheriff’s
Department report.
According to the report, the accident took place in the parking lot at
the Iron County Community Credit
Union in Kimball.
Kantala’s vehicle sustained
minor damage to the rear bumper,
and Peterson’s vehicle sustained
minor damage to the driver-side
door.
———
Eric James Fields, 33, of
Rochester, Minn., struck a deer with
his vehicle on Sunday at 10:55 p.m.,
according to an ICSD report.
According to the report, the accident took place on WI-77 near
Ottawa Street in Montreal. Fields’
vehicle sustained minor damage to
the right front end.
Wisconsin officials
warn fishermen of
thin ice
MADISON, Wis. (AP) —
Recent warm weather has made
ice on some Wisconsin lakes
unsafe, and officials warned fishermen to be wary after several
broke through over the weekend.
Rescue crews pulled two fishermen from Lake Mendota on
Sunday and responded to three
other calls of breakthroughs as
well, the Wisconsin State Journal reported Monday.
All the rescued anglers were
OK, but authorities said their
experience should make others
wary of the thawing ice.
Dane County Lt. Gerald
Hundt said the most dangerous
areas were near the mouths of
rivers and natural springs
because flowing water prevents
thick ice from forming.
“These areas are often the
most dangerous and have the
thinnest foundations of ice present, yet appear to be indistinguishable from those thicker
areas of ice around it,” Hundt
said in a news release. “If you
decide to go out on one of the
area lakes, we recommend having appropriate flotation and life
saving devices present, such as
ice picks and life preservers.”
Waukesha County Sheriff’s
Lt. Paul Renkas told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel that
part of the problem with breakthroughs is that people are trying to squeeze in as much fishing
as possible before the season
ends.
“Where we end up with a
problem is a quick thaw. This
year it appears we’re having a
slow thaw. People don’t realize
the ice is thawing quicker than it
appears,” Renkas said.
Fishermen had to have their
shanties off the ice by March 3
under state law, but they are
allowed to continue fishing after
that at their own risk.
THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM
In Tribute
George F. Hanisko
Associated Press
VISITORS TO New York’s Coney Island walk on the boardwalk past the open businesses Saturday.
NYC’s Coney Island hopes for
rebound after Sandy
NEW YORK (AP) — At the
beginning of each tourist season,
the entrepreneurs who pitch the
thrill rides, hot dogs, sideshows
and souvenirs at gritty Coney
Island gather along its famous
boardwalk to pray for two
things: good weather and large
crowds.
Never have they prayed harder than now.
Five months after Superstorm
Sandy’s surge swamped New
York City’s most storied beach
destination, many businesses
are pinning their hopes on a
strong season to help them make
up for the hundreds of thousands of dollars they have spent
to get back up and running.
“We’re almost dead, but we’re
open,” said D.J. Vourderis,
whose family owns and operates
Deno’s Famous Wonder Wheel
Amusement Park. “We’ve built
it; now we’re just waiting for
them to come.”
Vourderis logged 92 hours the
week leading up to Palm Sunday, when Brooklyn Borough
President Marty Markowitz
smashed a bottle of egg cream on
the famous Cyclone roller coaster to officially christen the new
season at Coney Island — not
really an island, but an American institution on a peninsula
where, at the turn of the 20th
century, it became one of the
country’s largest and most popular amusement areas.
The late October storm ravaged Vourderis’ business, and he
was forced to replace all the corroded relays, circuits, breakers
and wiring on the Ferris wheel.
The family has borrowed to stay
afloat and is about $500,000 in
the red after paying for the
repairs to the iconic 1920 Wonder Wheel, replacing 24 new
bumper cars and redesigning the
entire inside of the Spook-ARama ride, which was waterlogged.
The boardwalk itself was left
largely unscathed — but storm
surge below the wooden planks
flooded storage areas used by
the Wonder Wheel park, with
water reaching as high as 5 feet
in some places, submerging
equipment stowed away during
the off season. The Wonder
Wheel, like other seasonal businesses, was already due to close
around the time of the Oct. 29
storm, so the time off was spent
making repairs.
“It’s going to take years to get
us back to where we were,” said
Vourderis, standing over hundreds of mint-green quarters
that were oxidized so severely
that banks won’t accept them
without first having them
cleaned in bleach. “I’m trying to
look at the glass half full.”
Some Coney Island staples
that have been shut since the
hurricane have no choice. The
flagship Nathan’s Famous hot
dog stand won’t reopen until
Memorial Day. The New York
Aquarium will reopen, only partially, in late spring. And the
Brooklyn Cyclones baseball
team is set for its June 18 home
opener, though it’s unclear
whether its damaged field will
be replaced with sod or artificial
turf.
Gordon Lee’s Eldorado Auto
Skooter on Surf Avenue has an
arcade room with nearly 40 percent fewer arcade games, after
salt water ruined much of the
machinery.
“I’m functional at this point,”
said Lee, demonstrating a metal
coin wrapper that can no longer
turn because its bearings have
seized from corrosion. “Look, I’m
open and operational. Am I 100
percent operational? No.”
Suspicion in DA death shifts to white supremacists
KAUFMAN, Texas (AP) — Suspicion in the slayings of a Texas district attorney and his wife shifted Monday to a violent white supremacist prison
gang that was the focus of a December law enforcement bulletin warning that its members might try
to attack police or prosecutors.
The weekend deaths of Kaufman County District
Attorney Mike McLelland and his wife, who were
found fatally shot in their home, were especially jarring because they happened just a couple of months
after one of the county’s assistant district attorneys,
Mark Hasse, was killed near his courthouse office.
And less than two weeks ago, Colorado’s prison
chief was shot to death at his front door, apparently by a white supremacist ex-convict who died in a
shootout with deputies after fleeing to Texas.
The Aryan Brotherhood of Texas has been in the
state’s prison system since the 1980s, when it began
as a white supremacist gang that protected its
members and ran illegal activities, including drug
distribution, according to Terry Pelz, a former
Texas prison warden and expert on the gang.
The group, which has a long history of violence
and retribution, is now believed to have more than
4,000 members in and out of prison who deal in a
variety of criminal enterprises, including prostitu-
tion, robbery and murder.
It has a paramilitary structure with five factions
around the state, Pelz said. Each faction has a general, who is part of a steering committee known as
the “Wheel,” which controls all criminal aspects of
the gang, according to court papers.
Four top leaders of the group were indicted in
October for crimes ranging from murder to drug
trafficking. Two months later, authorities issued
the bulletin warning that the gang might try to
retaliate against law enforcement for the investigation that also led to the arrest of 30 other members.
At the time, prosecutors called the indictments
“a devastating blow to the leadership” of the gang.
Pelz said the indictments might have fragmented
the gang’s leadership.
Hasse’s death on Jan. 31 came the same day as
the first guilty pleas were entered in the indictment. No arrests have been made in his killing.
McLelland was part of a multi-agency task force
that investigated the Aryan Brotherhood with help
from the FBI, the Drug Enforcement Administration and police in Houston and Fort Worth. McLelland and his wife, Cynthia, were found shot to
death Saturday in their rural home just outside the
town of Forney, about 20 miles from Dallas.
BESSEMER, Mich. — George F. Hanisko, of Bessemer,
passed away unexpectedly Saturday, March 30, 2013, at the
age of 93.
George was born on Aug. 24, 1919, in Ironwood, the son of Louis and Mary (Prosek)
Hanisko.
He proudly served his country in the U.S.
Army Medical Detachment, 317th Field
Artillery Battalion during World War II, and
was honorably discharged on Jan. 9, 1946, as a
technician fourth grade.
On Oct. 18, 1955, George was united in marriage with Shirley Ann Lotzer at St. Ambrose
George F.
Catholic Church in Ironwood, by the late Rev.
Hanisko
Conrad Dishaw.
1919 — 2013
He was a member of St. Sebastian Catholic
Church and a life member of the Veterans of
Foreign Wars Post 3673 in Bessemer.
George enjoyed farming, vegetable gardening and horseback riding.
He was a blacksmith at the Peterson Mine
Veteran
and White Pine Copper Co.
George is survived by his beloved wife,
Shirley; two sons, Thomas (Verline), Mount Shasta, Calif., and
Walter (Diane), Sturgeon Bay, Wis.; seven grandchildren; four
great-grandchildren; numerous nieces and nephews; and other
loving relatives.
He was preceded in death by his parents; four brothers,
John, Julius, Joseph and Albert; and four sisters, Sophie
Smaltz, Ann Smaltz, Mary Drover and Margaret Kuklenski.
A Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated on Friday,
April 5, at 11 a.m., preceded by visitation at 10 a.m., at St.
Sebastian Catholic Church, with the Rev. Ben Hasse, celebrant.
Following the Mass, military rites will take place at the
church under the auspices of Bessemer American Legion Post
27 and Bessemer VFW Post 3673 Honor Guard.
Lunch will be served in Father Swoboda Hall at the church
following the military honors.
Rite of Committal and burial will take place in Sunset Acres
Cemetery, Ironwood Township.
Memorial contributions may be made to St. Sebastian
Catholic Church, 210 E. Iron St., Bessemer MI 49911.
Lakeside Memorial Chapel in Wakefield is assisting the
family. Condolences may be sent online at lakesidememorialchapel.com.
Betty I. Pikka
WAKEFIELD, Mich. — Betty I. Pikka, a longtime resident
of Wakefield, passed away peacefully Monday, April 1, 2013,
at the age of 84.
Funeral services will be held on Thursday, April 4, at 11
a.m., preceded by visitation at 10 a.m., at Our Redeemer
Lutheran Church in Bessemer, with the Rev. Timothy J.
Steckling officiating.
Lunch will be served in the church fellowship hall following
the service.
Burial will take place in Lakeside Cemetery, Wakefield.
A complete obituary will be published in Wednesday’s edition of the Daily Globe.
Lakeside Memorial Chapel in Wakefield is assisting the
family. Condolences may be sent online at lakesidememorialchapel.com.
Wisconsin among states
where drug cartels
expanding
CHICAGO (AP) — Law
enforcement authorities say
Mexican drug cartel operatives
who once stuck close to the U.S.Mexico border are establishing a
greater presence in the Upper
Midwest.
They point to the case of Jose
Gonzalez-Zavala, who court documents say was dispatched to
the United States by the La
Familia cartel. The former taxi
driver moved into a middle-class
neighborhood in Joliet, Ill., in
2008. Court records say that
from there, he oversaw wholesale
shipments of cocaine in Illinois,
Wisconsin and Indiana.
Wiretap transcripts show
Gonzalez-Zavala called unidentified cartel boss in Mexico almost
every day to check in and discuss
business.
The
Drug
Enforcement
Administration says about 230
American communities reported
some level of cartel presence in
2008, but that number had
climbed to more than 1,200 by
2011.
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sports040213_Layout 1 4/1/13 11:39 PM Page 1
SPORTS
THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM
TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013
Brrr!
By JIM LITKE
AP Sports Columnist
The photograph of Kevin
Ware in a hospital bed with the
NCAA regional championship
trophy propped up alongside like
a giant get-well card makes it all
easier to take.
Tigers win
at frigid
Target Field
Commentary
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Justin
Verlander and the Detroit Tigers
are restocked for a run at another
World Series.
Some cold air at the start of the
season wasn’t about to deter them.
Verlander won on opening day
for the first time in six tries, striking out seven over five shutout
innings at frosty Target Field,
sending the defending American
League champions past the Minnesota Twins 4-2 on Monday.
“When I was warming up in the
sun, I was like, ‘I could have come
out in short sleeves. This isn’t that
bad.’ As soon as the shade set in, it
was a totally different ball game. It
was miserable,” said Verlander,
who gave up three hits and two
walks.
With the game-time tempera-
—
page 14
Associated Press
DETROIT TIGERS’ Prince Fielder hits a double in the first inning of an opening day game against the Minnesota Twins’ Monday in Minneapolis.
Brewers
walk off to
first victory
Associated Press
MILWAUKEE BREWERS’ Jonathan Lucroy, left, celebrates with Rickie Weeks, right, and other teammates
after Lucroy’s game-winning sacrifice fly against the Colorado Rockies in the 11th inning Monday in Milwaukee. The Brewers won 5-4.
9
Trophy meant more
than any get-well card
O P E N I N G D AY
TIGERS
l
MILWAUKEE
(AP)
—
Jonathan Lucroy was mobbed by
his jubilant teammates as the
crowd of 45,781 saluted the catcher with a big “Luuuuuuc” that
reverberated throughout Miller
Park.
For the first time in years, the
Milwaukee Brewers and their
hearty fans capped off opening
day with a win.
Lucroy hit a sacrifice fly in the
10th inning and the Brewers beat
Colorado 5-4 on Monday, ruining
the first game for new Rockies
manager Walt Weiss.
“We just continued to compete,
continue to stay optimistic, stay
positive,” Ryan Braun said. “We
know eventually we’re going to
find a way to score runs. It’s a
great sign that we were able to
come back and win a game like
this.”
It was Milwaukee’s first win in
the opener since it beat the Chicago Cubs 4-3 in 10 innings at
Wrigley Field on March 31, 2008.
The Brewers hadn’t won a home
game on opening day for six years,
providing a compelling reason for
BREWERS
—
page 14
But hours earlier, in those
first few heartbeats after his leg
snapped grotesquely in a corner
of the frame as CBS televised
Sunday’s Midwest regional final
between his Louisville team and
Duke, no one dared look. Even
CBS couldn’t.
Its cameras lingered first on
Duke’s Tyler Thornton, who had
just made the 3-point shot on the
same play — freezing momentarily, covering his eyes with his
hand, and then looking back to
be sure what he had seen only
from the edge of his peripheral
vision actually happened.
Then Thornton grimaced, covered his heart with both hands,
and as the camera shot widened
to take in the expressions of
shock and anguish among
Ware’s teammates on the
Louisville bench and in the
stands, there was no longer any
doubt.
“I got sick to my stomach, and
I’m kind of the resident authority on broken legs,” said former
NFL quarterback Joe Theismann, who suffered a similar
compound fracture on a Monday
Night Football game in 1985. “A
lot came rushing back. I still
remember what everything
looked like when it happened,
still feel the moisture on my back
lying on the grass, the large second hand on the scoreboard
sweeping. Everything.”
Theismann sent Ware a text
almost immediately and followed
up in a brief phone conversation
Monday.
“I just offered any help I
could, maybe with the psychological and emotional aspects of the
rehab down the road. It’s not
something you’d put on a
resume, but I believe being able
to talk to somebody who’s been
through that might help.
“And Kevin sounded good.
He’s in a good place. He’s going
to get the best medical attention,
and I’m sure, he’s already got
way more attention than he
needs. ... Remember, the Internet barely existed in 1985. Back
then, you got hurt, you went to
the hospital, started to rehab
and tried to come back. Not
many people paid much attention. This went worldwide in a
matter of seconds,” Theismann
said.
The injury to Ware’s right leg
caused the tibia to poke out from
Ware resting after surgery
By The Associated Press
Kevin Ware is already up and
walking, and he’s got a nice souvenir to keep him company until
he’s cleared to return to Louisville.
Cardinals coach Rick Pitino
brought the Midwest Regional
championship trophy when he visited Ware, who remains hospitalized after surgery to repair a gruesome fracture in his right leg.
“He was real excited about (the
trophy),” Pitino said after visiting
Ware again Monday morning. “I
said to him, ‘You want me to bring
it back or stay with you?’ He said,
‘It’s staying with me.’ I said, ‘All
right, just make sure you don’t
lose it.’”
During a 2-hour surgery Sunday night, doctors reset Ware’s
broken tibia and inserted a rod
into the bone. Because the bone
broke through the skin, Pitino said
doctors are monitoring Ware to
make sure no infection develops.
If there are no complications, he
should be released Tuesday.
Before Ware was wheeled off
the court on a stretcher, he repeatedly urged the Cardinals to “just
go win the game.” The Cardinals
did, beating Duke 85-63 to reach
their second straight Final Four,
and they said afterward there was
no way they could have let Ware
down.
his shin — and like Theismann’s.
As curiosity and dread competed
for attention in the minds of
viewers, CBS gave its producers
roughly 40 seconds to watch the
replays, decide whether to show
the play again, and if so, in how
much detail.
They settled on one replay
from the other end of the court, a
second from the original angle,
and no more. Sean McManus,
the head of CBS Sports, said,
“We did not try to highlight it. I
think we did the right thing.”
Agreed. But that didn’t stop
the photos, videos and exchanges
on social media from exploding
instantaneously. A day later,
after Louisville coach Rick Pitino
visited the recuperating Ware
and reported that he left the trophy behind with this instruction
— “’Just make sure you don’t
lose it’” — the story still simmers.
The initial reaction, explained
Syracuse professor of popular
culture Robert Thompson, is
simply a sign of the times. On
the other hand, the continuing
interest in the story shows how
little
human
nature
has
changed.
“Neither of those mean we’re
terrible people. I think it speaks
more to this need we feel now to
bear witness. Look at the technology that’s in place. Couple it
with the image of a human body
WARE
—
page 14
M I C H I GA N I N T H E F I N A L F O U R
Basketball a hit again on Michigan campus
Jason Juno/Daily Globe
MICHIGAN’S TREY Burke (3) was named to the Associated Press AllAmerica team Monday.
Michigan’s Burke an All-American
By The Associated Press
Doug
McDermott
made
Creighton history last season
when he was selected as the
school’s first player on the AP AllAmerica team. Now he’s done it
again.
The 6-foot-8 junior forward, the
second-leading scorer in Division
I, was a repeat selection Monday,
the 51st player to earn the honor
in consecutive seasons.
“It’s pretty crazy. I couldn’t
expect to have as good a year as I
did,” said McDermott, who averaged 23.1 points and 7.5 rebounds
while shooting 56.1 percent from
the field and 49.7 percent from 3-
point range.
Trey Burke of Michigan and
Otto Porter Jr. of Georgetown tied
as the leading vote-getters for
first team, while Victor Oladipo of
Indiana and Kelly Olynyk of Gonzaga were the other players
selected.
Burke and Porter both received
62 first-team votes and 319 points
from the same 65-member national media panel that selects the
weekly Top 25. Voting was on a 53-1 basis and was completed
before the NCAA tournament.
BURKE
—
page 14
ANN ARBOR (AP) — Perhaps the best sign
that Michigan’s basketball program was moving in the right direction came not last weekend
in the NCAA tournament, but about a month
ago toward the end of the regular season.
The Wolverines had just lost to Penn State,
a low point during a February stretch that also
included a 23-point loss to rival Michigan State.
The Wolverines found their character questioned and their prospects for a successful postseason suddenly doubted.
But in a way, the angst was a good sign. This
Michigan team had raised expectations in Ann
Arbor — and it wasn’t too late for Trey Burke
and his teammates to reach them.
Now with a Final Four berth, they have.
“This team has faced a lot of adversity this
year, and a lot of people doubted us to get to
this point,” Burke said. “A lot of people said we
were too young, we weren’t tough enough. But
I definitely think that’s why we played with a
chip on our shoulder over the last couple of
weeks.”
Michigan is headed to the Final Four for the
first time since 1993, when Chris Webber and
the Fab Five lost in the NCAA title game for
the second consecutive year. The Wolverines
were on the verge of elimination when Burke
made what was probably the shot of the tournament, a long 3-pointer to send their regional
semifinal against Kansas into overtime. After
winning that game, Michigan routed Florida
79-59.
It’s fitting that the Wolverines made it back
to the Final Four now, because 2013 is a significant year for the Michigan program. A federal
investigation revealed that a booster gave Webber and three non-Fab Five players more than
$600,000 while they were student-athletes, and
the NCAA forced the school to dissociate from
them until this year.
The dissociation officially ends in May, but
the school hasn’t said much about what that
will mean. Michigan’s relationship with the
Fab Five has been complex. Sanctions related
to that era cast a cloud over the program for
years, but the on-court success achieved by
Webber, Jalen Rose and the rest of that group
Associated Press
MICHIGAN CELEBRATES with the trophy after a regional final game against Florida Sunday in
Arlington, Texas. Michigan won 79-59 to advance to the Final Four.
remains a significant — and positive — part of
the program’s history.
The current Wolverines are young. Burke is
a sophomore and Tim Hardaway Jr. is a junior,
but freshmen Glenn Robinson III, Mitch
McGary, Nik Stauskas, Spike Albrecht and
Caris LeVert have all played important roles.
To make room for all those talented newcomers, some more experienced players have had to
accept limited playing time. Coach John Beilein
compared the situation to what happened two
decades ago, when the Fab Five arrived and
other players needed to adjust.
“We had a young man Matt Vogrich who
was a starter, was a sixth or seventh man for
three of his four years here. Now he’s all of a
sudden a scout team guy, has stepped back. We
had Eso Akunne, a senior, could be playing at
Division I at a lot of mid-majors, here he is running our scout team,” Beilein said. “There’s a
lot of sacrifices that era with the Fab Five —
‘I’ve got to step back for the team.’ That takes a
lot of sacrifice. I’m sure the guys that did that,
I’m sure the Fab Five is very appreciative of
that during that time, because I know the
coaches would be.”
Last year, Michigan shared its first Big Ten
title since 1986. The Wolverines couldn’t pull
off a repeat, missing out on another tie for first
when a last-second shot rolled off the rim
against Indiana in the regular-season finale.
That only gave Michigan more motivation
going into Sunday’s regional final.
MICHIGAN
—
page 14
10 l TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013
DEFLOCKED
MOTHER GOOSE & GRIMM
BORN LOSER
ALLEY OOP
FOR BETTER OR WORSE
FRANK & ERNEST
GET FUZZY
BEETLE BAILEY
ZITS
THE GRIZZWELLS
COMICS
THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM
Father struggles with PTSD after war in Iraq
Dear Annie: My father, my
brothers and I all served during
Operation Iraqi Freedom. Only
my father and I deployed to combat areas.
Dad retired five years ago and
is showing drastic symptoms of
PTSD. He is stockpiling food and
medical supplies and keeps trying to get my wife and me to “prepare” for when “it all hits the
fan.” He spends hours a day
obsessively watching the news
and getting angry at the television. Our children used to spend
time unsupervised with my parents, but that stopped when I
found a loaded handgun in his
bathroom cabinet.
My mother has broached the
topic of therapy, and I’ve offered
to go with him, as I’ve been
wrestling with some mild PTSD
issues myself. But my brothers
intercede every time and say
YOUR
HOROSCOPE
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL
Your Birthday
Tuesday, April 2, 2013
In coming months, you could be luckier than usual in bringing things to successful conclusions. Although you
should be able to depend on Lady Luck’s
help, you must also lend a hand.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) — Be
extremely careful that you don’t achieve
your purposes at the expense of someone else. It would severely damage your
image.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) — Usually you can do quite well in partnership
situations, but this isn’t likely to be the
case if your aims differ considerably from
the other party.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) — A
potentially profitable endeavor that has
been dormant for quite some time could
become active, but you’ll need to
redesign it in order to capitalize on it.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) — Don’t
get too closely involved with someone
who has a dubious reputation. Take plenty of time to really find out what your
potential partners are all about.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) — If you’re
giving a price quote for a job or service,
be sure your estimated cost is as accurate as possible. If not, you might work
very hard but earn little.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — When
required to manage a serious situation
for another, don’t treat it indifferently. If
you make a mistake, everyone will pay.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) — If you’re
not on top of things, someone might
seize the reins and make a decision in
his or her best interests, not yours.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) —
Guard against an inclination to hold on to
an idea long after it has proven to be
unproductive. It’s important to think on
your feet and change your mindset to
suit new circumstances.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) —
Strive to be logical when making an
assessment that would directly affect
your financial position. It would likely
prove to be disastrous to put all of your
hopes on Lady Luck.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — In
order to be a true leader, you must not be
afraid to take charge of situations, even if
you don’t have a lot personally invested
in their outcome.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) —
Several important objectives can be
achieved today, provided you don’t trip
over your own feet. Chances are it will be
self-inflicted obstacles that will be your
nemesis.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) — Be
careful, because a well-intentioned
friend might offer you some advice that,
if you treat it as gospel, could prove to be
costly. Listen to more than one source for
counsel.
COPYRIGHT 2013 United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.
HERMAN
Annie’s
Mailbox
Dad’s fine and it’s no big deal,
and they convince him not to go.
I believe this is dangerous. I’ve
been unable to find any home
counseling services, and even our
pastor says this is out of his
realm of expertise. What other
options are out there? — New
York Son
Dear Son: You may have better luck getting your father to
accept help if you approach this
as a possible medical problem,
rather than a psychiatric issue.
We also suggest you ask him to
join you for an exercise or yoga
class, which can be useful for
some PTSD sufferers. Also,
please contact the VA’s National
Center for PTSD (ptsd.va.gov) or
Military One Source (militaryonesource.mil) at 1-800-3429647, and ask to speak to a counselor or get a referral to local military treatment facilities.
Dear Annie: My maternal
grandparents passed within
months of each other. My mother
hated her parents and kept them
away from us. I never knew them
well.
I’m in my late 20s and have
never been an emotional person.
I went to my grandparents’
funerals out of respect, but my
sister went overboard, sobbing
and moaning during the service
even though she knew them less
than I did. For weeks after, she
emailed and texted me saying
she couldn’t sleep and that she’d
never “fill the hole” the loss represented.
My sister and my parents say
I’m heartless because I didn’t
respond this way. My mother
actually upbraided me for not
weeping sufficiently. People
grieve in different ways. How do
I nicely ask them to please stop
crying on me because it’s making
me uncomfortable? — Not
Grieving That Much
Dear Grieving: Unless someone is crying on you day after
day, please try to tolerate what
you can, and then gently extricate yourself. Pat them on the
shoulder. Get them a seat. Ask if
they need a tissue. Then walk
away. You don’t have to demonstrate such obvious mourning
yourself. You are right that
everyone grieves differently, and
you are not obligated to put on a
show. But it would be useful to
learn how to convey sympathy to
others, whether or not you
believe they deserve it.
Dear Annie: I was surprised
to learn that people register for
housewarming gifts. I thought
housewarming gifts were something simple like a loaf of bread,
a bottle of wine or flowers. A
neighbor brought me a cutting
from a cactus that has bloomed
on time for more than 40 years.
Maybe I’m old-fashioned, but I
thought you furnished your
house yourself as you were able
over the years. — Canaan,
Conn.
Dear Canaan: Most guests
bring gifts to a housewarming. A
registry is a bit much, but there
is nothing wrong with having a
friend or relative make suggestions when asked.
Dear Readers: We are carrying on Ann Landers’ tradition
that April 2 be set aside as Reconciliation Day, a time to make
the first move toward mending
broken relationships. It also
would be the day on which we
agree to accept the olive branch
extended by a former friend or
estranged family member and do
our best to start over.
Annie’s Mailbox is written
by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy
Sugar, longtime editors of the
Ann Landers column. Please
email your questions to [email protected], or write
to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators
Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.
DAILY GLOBE CROSSWORD
SPEED BUMP
TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013
THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM
DAILY GLOBE
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DAILY GLOBE
THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM
TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013
l
13
sports040213_Layout 1 4/1/13 11:39 PM Page 2
14 l TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2013
DAILY GLOBE SCOREBOARD
Basketball
NIT
At Madison Square Garden
New York
Semifinals
Tuesday, April 2
BYU (24-11) vs. Baylor (21-14), 7 p.m.
Maryland (25-12) vs. Iowa (24-12), 9:30
p.m.
Championship
Thursday, April 4
Semifinal winners, 9 p.m.
FINAL FOUR
At The Georgia Dome
Atlanta
National Semifinals
Saturday, April 6
Louisville (33-5) vs. Wichita State (308), 6:09 p.m.
Michigan (30-7) vs. Syracuse (30-9),
8:49 p.m.
National Championship
Monday, April 8
Semifinal winners, 9 p.m.
NCAA WOMEN'S
TOURNAMENT
All Times EDT
OKLAHOMA CITY REGIONAL
Tuesday, April 2
Regional Championship
Tennessee (27-7) vs. Louisville (27-8),
9 p.m.
SPOKANE REGIONAL
Regional Championship
Monday, April 1
California 65, Georgia 62, OT
NORFOLK REGIONAL
Regional Championship
Tuesday, April 2
Notre Dame (34-1) vs. Duke (33-2), 7
p.m.
BRIDGEPORT REGIONAL
Regional Championship
Monday, April 1
Connecticut 83, Kentucky 53
NBA
All Times EDT
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W
L
Pct GB
x-New York
46
26
.639 —
x-Brooklyn
42
31
.575 4½
Boston
38
36
.514
9
Philadelphia
30
43
.411 16½
Toronto
27
47
.365 20
Southeast Division
W
L
Pct GB
z-Miami
58
15
.795 —
x-Atlanta
42
33
.560 17
Washington
27
46
.370 31
Orlando
19
56
.253 40
Charlotte
17
57
.230 41½
Central Division
W
L
Pct GB
x-Indiana
47
27
.635 —
x-Chicago
40
32
.556
6
Milwaukee
36
37
.493 10½
Detroit
25
50
.333 22½
Cleveland
22
51
.301 24½
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Southwest Division
W
L
Pct GB
x-San Antonio 55
19
.743 —
x-Memphis
50
24
.676
5
Houston
41
33
.554 14
Dallas
36
37
.493 18½
New Orleans 26
48
.351 29
Northwest Division
W
L
Pct GB
x-Oklahoma City54
20
.730 —
x-Denver
50
24
.676
4
Utah
38
36
.514 16
Portland
33
40
.452 20½
Minnesota
27
46
.370 26½
Pacific Division
W
L
Pct GB
x-L.A. Clippers 49
25
.662 —
Golden State 42
32
.568
7
L.A. Lakers
38
36
.514 11
Sacramento
27
47
.365 22
Phoenix
23
51
.311 26
x-clinched playoff spot
z-clinched conference
Monday’s Games
Detroit 108, Toronto 98
Atlanta 102, Cleveland 94
Houston 111, Orlando 103
Memphis 92, San Antonio 90
Minnesota 110, Boston 100
Milwaukee 131, Charlotte 102
Portland at Utah
Indiana at L.A. Clippers
Tuesday’s Games
Chicago at Washington, 7 p.m.
New York at Miami, 8 p.m.
Dallas at L.A. Lakers, 10:30 p.m.
Wednesday’s Games
Brooklyn at Cleveland, 7 p.m.
New York at Atlanta, 7 p.m.
Philadelphia at Charlotte, 7 p.m.
Washington at Toronto, 7 p.m.
Detroit at Boston, 7:30 p.m.
Minnesota at Milwaukee, 8 p.m.
Orlando at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m.
Denver at Utah, 9 p.m.
Memphis at Portland, 10 p.m.
Houston at Sacramento, 10 p.m.
New Orleans at Golden State, 10:30
p.m.
Phoenix at L.A. Clippers, 10:30 p.m.
PISTONS BOX
DETROIT (108)
Singler 1-5 2-2 5, Monroe 10-18 4-4 24,
Drummond 2-5 0-2 4, Calderon 8-12 2-3
19, Knight 2-8 0-0 5, Jerebko 6-8 3-4 15,
Middleton 5-6 0-0 11, Villanueva 2-5 3-4
7, Stuckey 7-10 1-2 18. Totals 43-77 1521 108.
TORONTO (98)
Gay 13-18 4-4 34, Johnson 2-5 2-2 6,
Valanciunas 8-14 1-2 17, Lowry 4-9 0-0 9,
DeRozan 7-17 1-2 15, Anderson 3-8 0-0
7, Ross 0-1 0-0 0, Acy 2-3 0-0 4, Telfair 26 0-0 6. Totals 41-81 8-10 98.
Detroit
25 29 21
33 — 108
Toronto
24 31 24
19 — 98
3-Point Goals—Detroit 7-15 (Stuckey
3-3, Singler 1-1, Calderon 1-2, Middleton
1-2, Knight 1-4, Jerebko 0-1, Villanueva
0-2), Toronto 8-21 (Gay 4-4, Telfair 2-5,
Anderson 1-4, Lowry 1-5, DeRozan 0-3).
Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Detroit
41 (Jerebko 6), Toronto 41 (DeRozan 7).
Assists—Detroit 24 (Calderon 9), Toronto
24 (Lowry 7). Total Fouls—Detroit 17,
Toronto 17. Technicals—Valanciunas.
A—17,115 (19,800).
BUCKS BOX
CHARLOTTE (102)
Taylor 3-7 0-0 7, McRoberts 2-8 4-4 8,
Biyombo 2-5 0-0 4, Walker 8-11 11-13 27,
Henderson 6-11 5-6 17, Adrien 2-3 0-1 4,
Gordon 6-8 0-0 14, Thomas 5-9 1-2 13,
Pargo 3-10 1-2 8, Williams 0-1 0-0 0.
Totals 37-73 22-28 102.
MILWAUKEE (131)
Daniels 2-4 0-0 4, Ilyasova 8-13 2-2 22,
Sanders 11-19 2-4 24, Jennings 6-15 3-3
19, Ellis 7-14 2-2 19, Dunleavy 6-14 2-2
15, Redick 8-12 2-2 20, Udoh 1-4 2-2 4,
Henson 1-2 0-0 2, Ayon 1-2 0-0 2, Smith
0-1 0-0 0. Totals 51-100 15-17 131.
Charlotte 25 35 24
18 — 102
Milwaukee 29 40 31
31 — 131
3-Point Goals—Charlotte 6-19 (Gordon
2-3, Thomas 2-4, Taylor 1-3, Pargo 1-4,
Henderson 0-1, McRoberts 0-1, Walker 03), Milwaukee 14-27 (Ilyasova 4-4, Jennings 4-9, Ellis 3-5, Redick 2-5, Dunleavy
1-4). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—
Charlotte 42 (McRoberts 10), Milwaukee
51 (Sanders 13). Assists—Charlotte 18
(Walker 6), Milwaukee 32 (Ellis 14). Total
Fouls—Charlotte 20, Milwaukee 21.
Technicals—Henderson.
A—15,315
(18,717).
NHL
MICHIGAN
From page 9
“Coach Beilein before the game
said, ‘Hey, we have another opportunity to cut down the nets,’”
Hardaway said. “We got a second
opportunity, and everybody just
got fired up and came out ready to
go.”
Despite the occasional disappointment along the way,
Wolverines fans have come to
appreciate this skilled, athletic
TIGERS
From page 9
ture at 35 degrees and the wind
blowing at 17 mph, fans had to
bundle up. But opening day is
always a draw, as evidenced by the
announced crowd of 38,282, officially a sellout by Twins guidelines.
“We got one under our belt, and
what I’m happiest about the temperature is going to be in the 50s
on Wednesday so that will be a little bit better for both teams,”
Tigers manager Jim Leyland said.
With Verlander’s $180 million,
seven-year contract that could
keep the right-hander with the
Tigers through 2020 only a few
days old, Leyland took the safe
route by removing him after those
five dominant innings.
Doubles by Joe Mauer and
Justin Morneau were the only
signs of resistance by the Twins,
who haven’t beaten Verlander (10) since April 27, 2010. The former
AL MVP and Cy Young winner,
who threw 91 pitches, is 8-0 with a
1.71 ERA in nine starts during
that span.
BREWERS
From page 9
the thousands of fans who tailgated for hours before Monday’s first
pitch to continue celebrating
Lucroy’s well-placed fly ball when
they returned to the parking lots
around the ballpark.
Rickie Weeks sparked the winning rally when he stole second
after he was hit by a pitch with one
out. Adam Ottavino (0-1) then
issued an intentional walk to
Braun and lost Aramis Ramirez to
another walk before Lucroy ended
the game with a fly ball to center
field.
“The thing that hurt was the hit
batter,” Ottavino said. “I had him
0-1 and tried to come inside. I just
nicked his foot and it started all
the trouble.”
Ramirez also had a two-run
double in Milwaukee’s three-run
eighth inning, and Jim Henderson
(1-0) worked a perfect 10th after
John Axford blew a save opportunity on his 30th birthday.
Troy Tulowitzki, Carlos Gonzalez and Dexter Fowler homered for
Colorado, which wasted a terrific
start by Jhoulys Chacin. Fowler
had three hits, and Tulowitzki and
Gonzalez each had two.
GA
84
100
86
113
108
GA
84
75
76
100
113
GA
110
101
101
103
125
“We were facing their No. 1
pitcher. We connected the ball
pretty well against him,” Gonzalez
said. “It was just one bad inning in
the eighth inning and that was it.
We have to feel good about ourselves. We battled the whole game.
That happens sometimes. There
has to be a loser.”
Chacin pitched 6 2-3 innings of
one-run ball and the Rockies carried a 3-1 lead into the eighth
inning. But it all fell apart in a
hurry.
Braun drove in a run with an
infield single to shortstop before
Ramirez sent a 2-2 pitch from
Wilton Lopez into the left-field corner, picking up right where he left
off last season when he led the
National League with 50 doubles.
Norichika Aoki trotted home
from third and Braun came all the
way around from first, raising his
right arm in celebration as he
crossed the plate with the goahead run.
“I was hoping a cloud would
come through,” said Ramirez, who
had to deal with some shadows on
the field before his key hit. “I got
lucky.”
But Axford yielded a first-pitch
homer to Fowler after he struck
Colorado
0
0
2 — 2
Detroit
1
2
0 — 3
First Period—1, Detroit, Abdelkader 7
(Franzen, Kronwall), 15:57. Penalties—
Andersson, Det (high-sticking), 16:14;
Ericsson, Det (slashing), 19:38.
Second Period—2, Detroit, Cleary 8
(Franzen, Datsyuk), 6:28 (pp). 3, Detroit,
Brunner 11 (Nyquist), 9:54. Penalties—
Barrie, Col (slashing), 6:06.
Third Period—4, Colorado, McGinn 7
(Mitchell, McLeod), 5:52 (pp). 5, Colorado, Duchene 14, 18:42. Penalties—
Kindl, Det (slashing), 4:32; Palushaj, Col
(delay of game), 13:03.
Shots on Goal—Colorado 10-5-9—24.
Detroit 9-7-4—20.
Power-play opportunities—Colorado 1
of 3; Detroit 1 of 2.
Goalies—Colorado, Varlamov 10-17-3
(13 shots-10 saves), Giguere (9:54 second, 7-7). Detroit, Howard 15-10-4 (2422).
A—20,066 (20,066). T—2:25.
group. The recently renovated
Crisler Center has become a
place to be, even at a school with
football and hockey teams with
their own big followings.
Late Sunday night, a few hundred fans gathered outside Crisler
to greet the team bus when the
Wolverines returned from their
win over Florida in Texas.
Detroit
“I argued a little bit and tried to
get back in there, but I understand,” said Verlander, who had
four no-decisions and one defeat in
five previous openers.
Leyland described the move as
a “no-brainer” to remove his ace so
soon.
“I’m not going to do anything
silly. There’s no question in my
mind that was the best move to
make for the Tiger organization,”
Leyland said, adding: “He’s a little
more secure than I am, but I’m
going to make the decisions.”
First baseman Prince Fielder,
wearing a black ski mask on his
head, had two hits and an RBI to
help spoil Vance Worley’s first
start for the Twins, who left 12
runners on, including the bases
loaded in the seventh.
Phil Coke got the last two outs
for the first save by the Tigers’
closer committee that’s succeeding
Jose Valverde, who became a free
agent and is still unsigned. Drew
Smyly gave up a run on a wild
pitch in the sixth inning and
another on an RBI single by Ryan
Doumit in the seventh, but Al
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
GP W LOT Pts GF GA
Chicago
35 27 5 3 57 119 76
Detroit
36 18 13 5 41 94 94
St. Louis
34 18 14 2 38 98 94
Columbus 36 15 14 7 37 87 97
Nashville
36 14 14 8 36 89 99
Northwest Division
GP W LOT Pts GF GA
Minnesota 35 21 12 2 44 98 90
Vancouver 35 19 10 6 44 92 90
Edmonton 34 14 13 7 35 87 95
Calgary
33 13 16 4 30 93 114
Colorado
35 12 19 4 28 86 111
Pacific Division
GP W LOT Pts GF GA
Anaheim
36 24 7 5 53 111 90
Los Angeles 35 20 12 3 43 103 88
San Jose 34 17 11 6 40 85 84
Dallas
35 16 16 3 35 94 107
Phoenix
35 14 15 6 34 94 101
NOTE: Two points for a win, one point
for overtime loss.
Monday’s Games
Chicago 3, Nashville 2, SO
N.Y. Islanders 3, New Jersey 1
N.Y. Rangers 4, Winnipeg 2
Montreal 4, Carolina 1
Detroit 3, Colorado 2
St. Louis 4, Minnesota 1
Anaheim 4, Dallas 0
Calgary at Edmonton
Vancouver at San Jose
Tuesday’s Games
Ottawa at Boston, 7 p.m.
Winnipeg at N.Y. Islanders, 7 p.m.
Washington at Carolina, 7 p.m.
Buffalo at Pittsburgh, 7:30 p.m.
Florida at Tampa Bay, 7:30 p.m.
Colorado at Nashville, 8 p.m.
Los Angeles at Phoenix, 10 p.m.
Wednesday’s Games
Pittsburgh at N.Y. Rangers, 7:30 p.m.
Montreal at Philadelphia, 7:30 p.m.
Edmonton at Calgary, 10 p.m.
Dallas at Anaheim, 10 p.m.
Minnesota at San Jose, 10:30 p.m.
RED WINGS SUMS
Hockey
All Times EDT
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
GP W LOT Pts GF
Pittsburgh 36 28 8 0 56 123
New Jersey 36 15 12 9 39 89
N.Y. Rangers35 17 15 3 37 82
N.Y. Islanders36 17 16 3 37 103
Philadelphia 35 15 17 3 33 95
Northeast Division
GP W LOT Pts GF
Montreal
35 23 7 5 51 111
Boston
34 22 8 4 48 97
Ottawa
35 19 10 6 44 89
Toronto
36 20 12 4 44 112
Buffalo
36 13 17 6 32 94
Southeast Division
GP W LOT Pts GF
Winnipeg 37 18 17 2 38 91
Carolina
34 16 16 2 34 93
Washington 35 16 17 2 34 102
Tampa Bay 34 15 18 1 31 110
Florida
36 11 19 6 28 88
SPORTS
TIGERS 4, TWINS 2
Minnesota
h bi
ab r h bi
AJcksn cf
1 0 Hicks cf
4 0 0 0
TrHntr rf
2 0 Mauer c
4 1 2 0
MiCarr 3b
0 1 Wlngh lf
5 0 1 0
Fielder 1b
2 1 Mornea 1b 4 0 1 0
VMrtnz dh
0 0 Doumit dh 5 0 1 1
Dirks lf
0 0 Plouffe 3b
4 1 1 0
JhPerlt ss
2 0 Parmel rf
2 0 0 0
Avila c
0 0 Dozier 2b
3 0 0 0
Infante 2b
2 1 Flormn ss
2 0 1 0
WRmrz ph
0 0
EEscor ss
0 0
Totals
9 3 Totals
35 2 7 1
Detroit
210
000
010 — 4
Minnesota
000
001
100 — 2
E—Mi.Cabrera (1), Florimon (1). DP—Minnesota 1.
LOB—Detroit 8, Minnesota 12. 2B—Tor.Hunter (1),
Fielder (1), Mauer (1), Morneau (1), Plouffe (1). SB—
Jh.Peralta (1). S—Dirks.
IP H
R ER BB SO
Detroit
Verlander W,1-0
5 3
0
0
2
7
Smyly H,1
1 1/3 3
2
2
3
1
Alburquerque H,1 2/3 1
0
0
0
2
Benoit H,1
1 1/3 0
0
0
1
1
Coke S,1-1
2/3 0
0
0
0
1
Minnesota
Worley L,0-1
6 8
3
3
1
3
Fien
1 0
0
0
0
3
Duensing
2/3 1
1
1
2
1
Roenicke
1 1/3 0
0
0
0
1
WP—Smyly, Worley, Roenicke.
T—3:28. A—38,282 (39,021).
ab
5
5
5
4
3
2
3
4
4
1
1
35
r
1
0
1
1
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
4
Alburquerque struck out Trevor
Plouffe and Chris Parmelee to finish that inning and strand three
men.
“We did just what we told
everybody we were going to be
doing: We mixed and matched,”
Leyland said.
BREWERS 5, ROCKIES 4, 10 INNINGS
Colorado
Milwaukee
ab r h bi
ab r h bi
Fowler cf
5 1 3 1 Aoki rf
4 2 1 1
Rutledg 2b
5 0 1 0 Weeks 2b
4 2 2 0
CGnzlz lf
5 2 2 1 Braun lf
4 1 1 1
Tlwtzk ss
5 1 2 2 ArRmr 3b
4 0 2 2
Cuddyr rf
5 0 0 0 Lucroy c
4 0 0 1
Helton 1b
3 0 0 0 AlGnzlz 1b 2 0 0 0
Rosario c
4 0 2 0 CGomz cf
4 0 0 0
Nelson 3b
4 0 1 0 Segura ss
4 0 2 0
Chacin p
3 0 1 0 Gallard p
2 0 0 0
Belisle p
0 0 0 0 Figaro p
0 0 0 0
WLopez p
0 0 0 0 Badnhp p
0 0 0 0
EYong ph
1 0 0 0 LSchfr ph
1 0 0 0
Brothrs p
0 0 0 0 Axford p
0 0 0 0
Ottavin p
0 0 0 0 KDavis ph 1 0 0 0
Hndrsn p
0 0 0 0
Totals
40 4 12 4 Totals
34 5 8 5
Colorado 002
010
001
0 — 4
Milwaukee 001
000
030
1 — 5
Two outs when winning run scored.
DP—Milwaukee 1. LOB—Colorado 7, Milwaukee 7.
2B—Ar.Ramirez (1). HR—Fowler (1), C.Gonzalez (1),
Tulowitzki (1), Aoki (1). SB—Weeks (1). CS—C.Gomez
(1). SF—Lucroy.
IP
H
R ER BB SO
Colorado
Chacin
6 2/3
3
1
1
3
6
Belisle H,1
1/3
0
0
0
0
0
W.Lopez BS,1-1 1
4
3
3
0
0
Brothers
1
1
0
0
0
1
Ottavino L,0-1 2/3
0
1
1
2
1
Milwaukee
Gallardo
5
10
3
3
1
3
Figaro
2
1
0
0
0
2
Badenhop
1
0
0
0
0
2
Axford BS,1-1
1
1
1
1
0
3
Henderson W,1-0 1
0
0
0
0
1
HBP—by Ottavino (Weeks).
T—3:13. A—45,781 (41,900).
out the first two batters in the
ninth. Axford, who blew nine save
opportunities a year ago, was
booed as he trudged off the mound
after striking out Josh Rutledge to
end the inning.
THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM
Roundup
GCC fundraiser set for
Saturday night
IRONWOOD — The Gogebic
Community College basketball
scholarship fundraiser will be held
Saturday at 7 p.m. at the Iron
Nugget in Hurley.
Tickets are $20 per person or $35
per couple. Drawings for door prizes
and raffle prizes will be held throughout the evening. Hors d’oeuvres will
be provided.
People may purchase tickets at
the Iron Nugget Saturday evening.
Local bowlers compete in
Wisconsin state bowling
tournament
MILWAUKEE — The Wisco-Mich
Bowling Association along with 11
bowlers from Ewen, which is in the
Copper Country Association, took
part in the Wisconsin State Women’s
Bowling Association Tournament last
month in Milwaukee.
Bowlers came from across the
Gogebic Range.
Grand Duchess pins were awarded to Sandra Rowoldt, Bessemer,
and Minerva Stephani, Gile, for
being 70 years or older and still
attending tournaments. Rowoldt
received a plaque for 25 years or
more of attending tournaments.
Nancy Berg also received a plaque
for 30 years of attendance.
Karen Tenlen of Montreal bowled
left-handed because of a hand
injury. Adrien Livingston won a bowling ball in a raffle and gave it to new
bowler Allie Gustafson, of Ewen,
who started this year.
The event is in Weston, Wis.,
next year. Stephani said local
bowlers look forward to the event
each year.
RESULTS
Nancy Berg, Bessemer: 174, 180, 474 series in team
event; 181 and 486 series in singles event.
Linda Gembolis, Wakefield: 187, team event.
Chris Bergquist, Ironwood: 189 game, 522 series in
team event; 208 game, 480 series in doubles event,
earned 200 pin.
Nancy Carli, Montreal: 213, 185, 200 games, a 598
series in team event; 190, 204 games, 564 series in doubles event; 506 series in singles, earned 200 pin.
Mary Korpela, Ironwood: 183 game in doubles.
Gina Lidwikowski, Ironwood: 168 game, 444 series in
doubles; 193 in singles game.
Wendy Meldrum, Bessemer: 196, 186, 180 games,
562 series in singles event.
Kris Carlson, Ironwood: 173 game, 459 series in singles.
Amy Leoni, Gile: 198 game in team event; 200 game,
515 series in doubles; 511 series in singles, earned 200
pin.
Sue Kaffine, Pence: 191 game, 467 series team event;
439 series in doubles; 452 series in singles.
Vicky Haanpaa, Ironwood: 472 series team event; 201
game, 484 series in doubles; 201 game, 484 series in singles; earned 200 pin.
Peggy Comparin, Ironwood: 199 game, 465 series in
doubles; 166 game, 437 series in singles; earned 175 pin
for bowling over her average.
Michelle Fink, Hurley: 156 game and 399 series in doubles; 121 game and 329 series in singles; earned award
for 50 pions over her average of 106.
Diane Kuehnl, Ewen: 200 game and 523 series in doubles; earned 200 pin.
Barb Greene, Ewen: 158 game, 441 series in team;
average of 113; earned an award for series being over
average.
Adriene Livingston, Ewen: 175 game in team event;
earned pin for over average (111).
Judy Bugni, Mercer: 470 series in team event; 178
game in doubles.
Kathy Viebach, Hurley: 487 series in team event.
The Miller Lite team rolled a high series of 699 in team
event. Members are Nancy Berg, Sandra Rowoldt, Linda
Gembolis and Chris Bergquist.
Monroe scores 24, Pistons
beat Raptors 108-98
TORONTO (AP) — A big effort
from Detroit’s bench ensured a
happy ending to Jose Calderon’s
homecoming party.
Greg Monroe scored 24 points,
Calderon had 19 points and nine
assists against his former team, and
the Pistons snapped a three-game
losing streak by beating the Toronto
Raptors 108-98 on Monday night.
Rodney Stuckey scored 18
points, Jonas Jerebko had 15 and
rookie Khris Middleton added 11 as
the Pistons won for just the third time
in 19 games.
Stuckey, Jerebko and Middleton
combined for 29 of Detroit’s 33
fourth-quarter points.
“That fourth quarter group was
tremendous,”
Pistons
coach
Lawrence Frank said. “Great ball
movement, really good spacing,
very unselfish basketball. Each of
those guys really, really impacted
the game.”
Sanders scores careerhigh 24, Bucks rout
Bobcats
MILWAUKEE (AP) — Larry
Sanders had a career-high 24 points
and 13 rebounds as Milwaukee
cruised to a 131-102 victory over the
Charlotte Bobcats on Monday night
for the Bucks’ highest scoring total in
more than four years.
Monta Ellis had 19 points, a
career-high 14 assists and six steals
to help Milwaukee pull 1 1/2 games
behind seventh-place Boston in the
Eastern Conference playoff race. The
Celtics lost to Minnesota on Monday.
Ersan Ilyasova added 22 points
for the Bucks, J.J. Redick scored 20,
and Brandon Jennings 19. Milwaukee, which had lost five of six,
remained solidly in the eighth position
in the East, with a six-game lead over
idle Philadelphia.
Kemba Walker scored 27 points to
lead the Bobcats, and Gerald Henderson had 17.
Red Wings hold on to
beat Avalanche 3-2
DETROIT (AP) — Damien Brun-
WARE
From page 9
doing something that seems so
alien in that instant — something that’s both disturbing AND
striking — and there’s this
almost creepy desire to watch it
over and over again,” he said.
“And you know, we’ve seen car
crashes in NASCAR races and
terrible collisions in the NFL,
and in a sense, that’s become
part of the narrative. That’s not
the case with basketball, which is
a big part of what made it so jarring,” Thompson added. “Just
look at his teammates’ reaction in
the moment after. But then you
know they rallied and won the
game for him. That’s what’s
shoring this whole thing up —
this continuing fascination —
especially since, so far, it looks
like a happy ending is within
reach.”
And with luck, Ware’s story
will play out that way. Pitino
reported the surgery was successful and that, barring an infection,
Ware will be back in Louisville in
time for the charter flight to the
Final Four in Atlanta, which happens to be Ware’s hometown.
“Kevin had a good night. He’s
not in a whole lot of pain,” Pitino
said during a conference all Monday. “I know right before the
surgery, when he was able to
watch the players at the press
conference, the nurses and doctors told me that was the first
time he broke down and cried,
when the players were talking
about him.”
Those of us old enough to witness Theismann’s injury remember that it wasn’t until Giants
linebacker Lawrence Taylor panicked that anyone — ABC’s production and broadcast crews
included — had any idea how bad
the Redskins’ quarterback had
been hurt. ABC quickly put up
replays,
seemingly
more
impressed by its ability to show a
reverse-angle of the hit than by
the damage it caused.
It wasn’t until it came back
from a commercial break and was
about to show the replay a third
ner ended his 15-game scoring
drought and Jimmy Howard made a
late save to help the Detroit Red
Wings hold off the Colorado
Avalanche 3-2 on Monday night.
Justin Abdelkader scored late in
the first period, Danny Cleary put
Detroit ahead by two at 6:28 of the
second and Brunner had a one-timer
a few minutes later.
The Red Wings, coming off a 7-1
loss to Chicago, allowed a 3-0 lead
to turn into a one-goal game.
Colorado avoided a shutout with
a power-play goal at 14:08 of the
third period when Jamie McGinn’s
backhander from between the circles sailed over a sprawling Howard.
Avalanche forward Cody McLeod
checked Detroit defenseman Brendan Smith into Howard, who couldn’t
get off the ice in time to get in a position to stop McGinn’s shot.
Colorado pulled goaltender JeanSebastien Giguere, who had
replaced Semyon Varlamov, and the
extra skater paid off. Matt Duchene
scored to make it 3-2 with 1:18 left,
but Howard’s glove save with 7 seconds left prevented PA Parenteau
from sending it to overtime.
Howard finished with 22 saves for
Detroit, which had lost two straight.
Detroit captain Henrik Zetterberg
missed his second straight game
with a groin injury and is day-to-day.
Raiders acquire QB Matt
Flynn from Seahawks
ALAMEDA, Calif. (AP) — The
Oakland Raiders are changing
directions at quarterback once
again.
The Raiders acquired Seattle
backup Matt Flynn on Monday for
draft picks, bringing an end to Carson Palmer’s brief tenure as starter
in Oakland even before they are
done paying the steep price they
dealt to acquire him.
“Matt’s one of those guys, even
though he hasn’t had a lot of opportunities, when he’s had those opportunities, he’s made the most out of
those chances,” Raiders coach Dennis Allen said. “We feel real good
about that, and feel real good about
getting a young prospect at quarterback.”
Oakland will send a fifth-round
pick in 2014 and a conditional pick in
2015 to Seattle. Flynn will compete
with Terrelle Pryor for the starting job
with Palmer on his way out of Oakland.
After showing promise as a backup with the Packers, Flynn signed a
three-year, $26 million deal with the
Seahawks, but failed to beat out
rookie Russell Wilson for the starting
job and quickly became expendable.
time, that the network warned
viewers of the graphic nature of
the video. The way the various
depictions of Ware’s injury quickly bounced around the globe may
have left some wishing that even
that simple warning was attached
beforehand.
“We’ve become an ‘I-want-toknow-it-now’ culture,” Theismann
said. “But for all the attention at
the moment, it’s his emotions that
Kevin will have to deal with at
some point, and mostly on his
own. That’s where his teammates
will come in. There will be plenty
people offering help, but if you’ve
ever competed at any level, you
know you wind up playing and
trying to win for somebody.
“His teammates showed that
by the way they finished the Duke
game. It’s the guys you laugh and
sweat and bleed and cry alongside
that will give him the encouragement to fight back. Just before I
got off the phone, I told him, ‘A
year from now, you’ll be the comeback player of the year,’ and he
said, ‘I’m going to work for it.’ I
told him I’d be watching.”
He won’t be the only one.
Jim Litke is a national sports columnist for The Associated Press. Write to him at jlitke(at)ap.org and follow
him at twitter.com/JimLitke.
BURKE
From page 9
Oladipo got 58 first-team votes and 306 points.
McDermott had 44 first-team votes and 279 points,
one more than Olynyk’s total points. The Gonzaga
junior got 47 first-team votes.
Burke, a 6-0 sophomore point guard, had an
impressive individual season while running a
team that at times had four freshmen on the court
with him.
“That’s like a quarterback that’s got his offensive tackle’s a freshman, his wide receiver is a
freshman, and his running back is a freshman,
2012-13 AP All-America
Teams
Statistics through March 17
First Team
Trey Burke, Michigan, 6-0, 190, sophomore, Columbus, Ohio, 19.2 ppg, 3.1 rpg,
6.7 apg, 40.1 3-pt fg pct, 1.6 steals, 35.2
minutes (62 first-team votes, 319 total
points)
Otto Porter Jr., Georgetown, 6-8, 205,
sophomore, Morley, Mo., 16.3 ppg, 7.4
rpg, 42.7 3 pt-fg pct, 1.9 steals, 35.3 minutes (62, 319)
Victor Oladipo, Indiana, 6-5, 214,
junior, Upper Marlboro, Md., 13.6 ppg, 6.4
rpg, 59.9 fg pct, 44.3 3-pt fg pct, 2.2 steals
(58, 306)
Doug McDermott, Creighton, 6-8, 225,
junior, Ames, Iowa, 23.1 ppg, 7.5 rpg,
56.1 fg pct, 49.7 3-pt fg pct, 86.0 ft pct
(44, 279)
Kelly Olynyk, Gonzaga, 7-0, 238,
junior, Kamloops, British Columbia, 17.5
ppg, 7.2 rpg, 65.2 fg pct (47, 278)
Second Team
Marcus Smart, Oklahoma State, 6-4,
225, freshman, Flower Mound, Texas,
15.4 ppg, 5.7 rpg, 4.2 apg, 2.9 steals (11,
190)
Cody Zeller, Indiana, 7-0, 240, sophomore, Washington, Ind., 16.9 ppg, 8.2
rpg, 57.3 fg pct, 1.3 blocks (7, 178)
Mason Plumlee, Duke, 6-10, 235,
senior, Warsaw, Ind., 17.2 ppg, 10.2 rpg,
2.0 apg, 59.2 fg pct, 1.5 blocks (9, 164)
Shane Larkin, Miami, 5-11, 176, sophomore, Orlando, Fla., 14.2 ppg, 3.9 rpg, 4.3
apg, 40.1 3-pt fg pct, 2.0 steals, 36.3 minutes (5, 152)
Ben McLemore, Kansas, 6-5, 195,
freshman, St. Louis, 16.4 ppg, 5.3 rpg, 2.0
apg, 50.7 fg pct, 43.7 3-pt fg pct, 86.7 ft
pct (5, 146)
Third Team
DeShaun Thomas, Ohio State, 6-7,
215, junior, Fort Wayne, Ind., 19.5 ppg,
and he still leads them to wins,” said Wolverines
coach John Beilein, using an analogy from the
sport his school loves. “So he’s taken a lot on as far
as leadership. Quiet leadership now, but it’s been
huge for us.”
Burke averaged 19.2 points, 3.1 rebounds and
6.7 assists and shot 40.1 percent on 3-point
attempts. He is Michigan’s fifth All-America and
first since Chris Webber in 1993.
“Every now and then you think about individual accolades, and that was definitely a goal of mine
coming into my freshman year,” Burke said. “I didn’t
know it would be this quick, but it happens.”
6.2 rpg, 83.6 ft pct, 35.3 minutes (3, 122)
Jeff Withey, Kansas, 7-0, 235, senior,
San Diego, 13.6 ppg, 8.4 rpg, 57.8 fg pct,
3.8 blocks (5, 114)
Russ Smith, Louisville, 6-0, 165, junior,
Brooklyn, N.Y., 18.1 ppg, 3.6 rpg, 3.0 apg,
2.0 steals (2, 80)
Erick Green, Virginia Tech, 6-3, 185,
senior, Winchester, Va., 25.0 ppg, 4.0
rpg, 3.8 apg, 36.4 minutes (1, 46)
Nate Wolters, South Dakota State, 6-4,
190, senior, St. Cloud, Minn., 22.5 ppg,
5.6 rpg, 5.8 apg, 1.7 steals, 37.9 minutes
(0, 36)
Honorable Mention
Kyle Barone, Idaho; Jerrelle Benimon,
Towson; Anthony Bennett, UNLV; Tommy
Brenton, Stony Brook; Sherwood Brown,
Florida Gulf Coast; Isaiah Canaan, Murray State; Kentavious Caldwell-Pope,
Georgia; Michael Carter-Williams, Syracuse; Ian Clark, Belmont; Jake Cohen,
Davidson.
Jack Cooley, Notre Dame; D.J. Cooper,
Ohio; Allen Crabbe, California; Aaron
Craft, Ohio State; Seth Curry, Duke;
Matthew Dellavedova, Saint Mary’s;
Gorgui Dieng, Louisville; James Ennis,
Long Beach State; Chris Flores, NJIT;
Jamal Franklin, San Diego State.
Ian Hummer, Princeton; Colton Iverson, Colorado State; Joe Jackson, Memphis; Kareem Jamar, Montana; Lamont
Jones, Iona; Ray McCallum, Detroit; Rodney McGruder, Kansas State; Shabazz
Muhammad, UCLA; Erik Murphy, Florida
(1 first-team vote); Mike Muscala, Bucknell.
Stan Okoye, VMI; Jamal Olasewere,
LIU Brooklyn; Phil Pressey, Missouri;
Augustine Rubit, South Alabama; Peyton
Siva, Louisville (1); Taylor Smith, Stephen
F. Austin; Omar Strong, Texas Southern;
Kendall Williams, New Mexico; Pendarvis
Williams, Norfolk State; Khalif Wyatt,
Temple.