Dorothy`s - The Pilot News

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Dorothy`s - The Pilot News
LOCAL
S P O R T S Section B
Back to School
John Glenn
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Marshall County, Indiana’s community news source since 1851
Friday, July 31, 2015
Volume 165 Issue No. 179 50¢
Last day to file for office is Monday, August 3
By rachael herBert-Varchetto
Staff Writer
MARSHALL COUNTY — The list of
nominees filing for town conventions is
growing for the upcoming elections in
August for towns in the county.
According to state code, August 3 at noon
is the deadline for filing declarations of
candidacy for town conventions for town
office whose population is less than 3,500
people.
The last day to hold a town convention is
Friday, August 21.
In Argos, Edward Barcus, republican,
and Dustin Johnson, democrat, have filed
for the council. As of July 29, Juli Stauffer
has also filed as a republican for the coun-
cil.
For Clerk-Treasurer, Patty Jones, incumbent republican, is running against
Lisa Mullaney, also a republican. Kelli
VanDerWeele has filed for the same position on the democrat ticket.
Bourbon’s Clerk-Treasurer incumbent
democrat Kimberly Berger runs unopposed.
For council, Philip Hanley and Larry
Zombie Project: DI students
work to clean up the cemetery
By James master
Staff Writer
BOURBON — Have you
ever walked through a cemetery and noticed gravestones that were dirty, broken, misaligned, and maybe
even vandalized?
Well, there is a group of
youths in Bourbon that is
fixing that problem in their
local cemeteries. The Zombie
Project, a group of five or
six local youths, are a part
of Destination Imagination,
Inc. Destination Imagination
is a nonprofit organization
that provides project-based
educational programs to
foster creativity and innovation in students.
This is the third year
for the project to work at
maintaining cemeteries in
the Bourbon area. Caitlyn
Ihnen and Sidney Pflueger,
8th and 9th graders, have
been with the project since
the beginning. When asked
how they decided on fixing up cemeteries, Pflueger
explained that “we had a
team member, before he quit
our team, we were walking around here, saw a cemetery, and there were tilted
stones and so he was like
‘let’s fix this’.”
“Most teenagers are
out there breaking stuff”
Pflueger remarked about
the project. “We’re not like
that, we don’t want to be
tied in with the people that
Wattenbarger are returning republicans.
Karen Heim is running as the incumbent
unopposed republican for clerk-treasurer,
while for council, Jean Rakich, a republican,
runs along with Joel Samuelson, a libertarian.
Lapaz has incumbent democrats Lorraine
Dove and Roger Ecker running on the
council.
Earthworks
annual ‘Farm
to Fork’ dinner
tickets go on
sale August 4
By James master
Staff Writer
PHOTO/ JAMES MASTER
Bourbon youths volunteering in the Community Destination Imagination project aimed
at maintaining the gravestones in Odd Fellows Cemetery located in Bourbon. Shown is
Caitlyn Ihnen, Miles, Josh Taylor, Matthew Hefner.
are breaking stuff so we’re
going to repair stuff that
other teenagers have broke.”
Ihnen added, “It’s kind of
fun, we get to know a lot of
things that even adults don’t
know. You know a lot of
things about cemeteries that
people just normally know.”
When asked why teenagers should join a project within Destination
Imagination,
Pflueger
responded, “We actually
learn real life problems in
DI. It teaches you how to get
along with people.”
Destination Imagination
serves also as a community
outreach program designed
to get teenagers involved
with their community and
with their community leaders.
Lisa Eiser, DI Coordinator,
talked a little about what the
youths learn by maintaining
the gravestones. “Watching
them as we go through
the cemetery and they see
things destroyed, sometimes
blatant destruction, it upsets
them. They feel like they
should be protecting their
history,” Eiser went on to
say, “They read articles to
find out more about the cemeteries and about how some
of the people passed away.
They realize how important
life is and not to take things
for granted.”
Saturday, July 25, was one
See Zombie, page A2
MARSHALL COUNTY — The third annual Earthworks
fundraiser Farm to Fork Dinner event and auction is taking
place this September. This is the third year for this fundraiser which will benefit Earthworks’ programs for children.
It is also the 25th celebration of the founding of Earthworks.
A three course plated meal will be prepared and served by
Executive Chef, Brad Hindsley. Hindsley owns and operates
the Spire restaurant which promotes farm fresh foods from
local farmers. His restaurant only uses products within a 200
mile radius of his location in LaPorte. Entertainment will
be provided by The Deans List, a jazz combo, and Harpist
Beth Pare.
This event is going to be at the Aker Farm on 13th Road on
Tuesday Aug. 29. Some of the items being auctioned include:
A quarter of Ancilla Beef, a dinner table for six at The Spire
Restaurant at LaPorte, four tickets for the Notre Dame vs
University of Massachusetts.
Earthworks is an environmental learning center sponsored by the Poor Handmaids of Jesus Christ. Earthworks
began in 1989 by a group of individuals that were dedicated
to modeling a responsible and sustainable way of living.
Over the course of a quarter century, Earthworks has
a variety of programs that are directed by the belief that
people must learn to live sustainably. The Earthworks campus located in Donaldson is as diverse as the programs they
offer. There are wetlands, a small lake and a forest and has
herb and vegetable gardens, a teaching greenhouse, and a
diverse selection of domestic farm animals.
Tickets go on sale Aug. 4th and are being sold online at
earthworksonline.org for $60.
Haeck and Good theft cases
progressing through courts
ADA celebrates 25 years as law
By rachael herBertVarchetto
Staff Writer
MARSHALL COUNTY — Sunday July
26 marked the twenty-fifth year since the
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) was
signed into law by President George H.W.
Bush.
The ADA is a comprehensive piece of civil
rights legislation that prohibits discrimination and ensures that people with disabilities have the same rights and opportunities
as everyone else in America.
the Act was modeled after the Civil Rights
Act of 1964, an act that prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, sex,
or national origin.
In order to be under the protection of
the ADA, a person must have a disability
that is defined under the ADA. The ADA
defines a disability as a physical or mental
impairment that limits one or more major
life activities substantially, someone that
has a history or record of an impairment, or
MARSHALL COUNTY —
Court proceedings for two
cases in Marshall County
concerning theft are slowly
making their way through
the courts.
Neal
Haeck,
who
was the director of the
Marshall County Highway
Department, is facing an
indictment for theft through
a grand jury in 2012 and
2013.
According
to
court
records, Haeck “did knowingly or internationally exert
unauthorized control over
the property of Marshall
County government, to wit:
approximately $12,351.41”
in an indictment charge
from September of 2014.
According to Marshall
County Prosecutor Nelson
Chipman, the case has
been delayed as Haeck has
changed lawyers.
Haeck’s lawyers had 60
days from the change of
lawyer to reach a plea deal
by August 27.
Chipman stated that if it is
not set by that date, it will be
set for trial.
On the front of Michael
Good, things are progressing similarly.
Good was charged with
By James master
Staff Writer
theft, a class D felony, concerning the sale of scrap
materials for $9,017.12 from
the property of Marshall
County
Solid
Waste
Management District, also
known as the Recycling
Depot. The theft is alleged
to have occurred between
January 1, 2012 and April
30, 2014.
“Court records show that
he has a plea deadline and
status hearing for September
24. I expect some movement
before then, but that’s the
deadline that the court put
on it for [the defense] to
do something,” explained
Chipman.
See Theft, page A2
Office hours Weekdays 8-5
936-3101
1-800-933-0356
[email protected]
Sports: 936-3104
[email protected]
Celebrating our
someone who is perceived by others as having such an impairment.
In Marshall County, there are three group
homes, two in Bremen and on in Plymouth,
ran by Cardinal Services of Indiana that
provide disabled adults with assistance
with daily living requirements. These adults
live with other residents with similar abilities. The clients are encouraged to be selfsufficient and as independent as possible.
Residents work, are active in the community, and participate in day programs offered
by Cardinal Services.
Cardinal Services operate fourteen homes
in Indiana.
“The people that we serve experienced
better service” in regards to the ADA that
was signed into law in 1990 says Marcie
Arndt, adult services director for Cardinal
Services in Marshall, Cass, and Fulton
Counties. Some of those services were better transportation, wheel chair accessibility,
even dressing rooms were enlarged to pro-
See ADA, page A2
37th Year in Business!
July 24-August 2, 2015
Dorothy’s
25% Off Storewide*
*Off regular price. Some store exclusions apply. Not valid with any other coupons or discounts.
1414 Pilgrim Lane, Pilgrim Place Shopping Center
Plymouth, IN • 574-936-9497
Page A2
ADA, from front
vide more room for those that need the additional room to
move around. Another benefit that was came from the ADA
was the change in employment.
The Americans with Disabilities Act “changed the face of
employment since 1976” Arndt added. Many new programs
for jobs were created, job coaches to help clients find jobs,
vocational rehabilitation also help find jobs. All of these were
in part due to the creation of the Americans with Disabilities
Act.
The disabled were not the only ones that benefited from
the act. Businesses were also granted certain benefits including tax credits and deductions. According to ada.gov, to
assist businesses with complying with the ADA, Section 44
of the IRS Code grants a tax credit for small businesses and
Section 190 grants a tax deduction for all other businesses.
Walgreens has employed their Retail Employees with
Disabilities Initiative (REDI). REDI partners store managers
with job coaches and employment candidates from community organizations and vocational rehabilitation agencies. Those that complete the four week program receive a
“recommended for hire” status that is applicable beyond
Walgreens.
Marshall-Starke Development Center is a not-for-profit
organization that provides rehabilitative, educational and
vocational services to developmentally disabled individuals. They have a program called Community Employment
Services. According to their website they currently serve 64
individuals, 27 of them being from Marshall County. The
average number of hours worked per week was 29 while the
hourly wage was on average $9.12.
Comittee plans
‘Heroin is Here’ event
By James master
Staff Writer
MARSHALL COUNTY
— The Marshall County
Committee for a Drug and
Tobacco Free Indiana met for
a special meeting July 28.
There were two purposes
for the meeting. The first was
to iron out the details for the
event they are organizing
called Heroin is Here. Heroin
is Here promotes the awareness of the growing threat of
heroin in Northern Indiana.
It will take place on Sept. 30
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Activities include guest
speaker Dr. Mann Spitler, a
representative from the Drug
Enforcement Agency (DEA),
a panel for questions and
answers, and other specialists
to talk about the deadly con-
sequences of heroin and other
substance addictions.
This is a free event that
will be held at Plymouth
Wesleyan Church.
The other purpose for
meeting was about whether
or not the committee would
have a demonstration at the
Farmers Market at the end of
August. The demonstration
would be to place a pair of
fatal vision goggles on children and have them drive
through a test with a golf cart.
The purpose of this demonstration would be to show the
effect of drugs and alcohol
when driving. After talking
about different options and
venues for this event, they
settled on putting the demonstration at the Haunted
Grounds event held by the
Plymouth Parks Department
this October.
In Memory
Leonard Lee Fish
March 13, 1941 – July 31, 2008
Our lives go on without you
But nothing is the same
We have to hide our heartache
When someone speaks your name
Sad are the hearts that love you
Silent are the tears that fall
Living without you is the hardest
part of all
You did so many things for us
Your heart was so kind and true
And when we needed someone
We could always count on you
The special years will not return
When we are all together
But with the love in our hearts
You will walk with us forever
Local
Obituaries
Pilot News • Friday, July 31, 2015
Daniel A. Rensberger
Ruth J. DePoy
Oct. 21, 1929 - July 29, 2015
CULVER — Ruth J. DePoy, age 85, of Culver, passed
away Wednesday, July 29, 2015 at Miller’s Merry Manor,
Culver. Ruth was born to George and Sarah (Hahn) Hood
on Oct. 21, 1929, both deceased. Ruth was a homemaker
and loved her family. She is survived by daughter, Claudia
and Tom Biggins of Plymouth; son, Phillip and Evelyn
DePoy of Culver; son, John and Pam DePoy of Knox, 10
grandchildren; 13 great-grandchildren; five great-greatgrandchildren; and sister, Jean Spoor of Culver. She was
preceded in death by her husband, George DePoy; son,
Michael DePoy; and a daughter, Christine DePoy; and three
brothers.
Visitation will be Saturday, Aug. 1, 2015 from 10 a.m.-12
p.m. CDT at the M.C. Smith Funeral Home.
Funeral services will be Aug. 1, 2015 at 12 p.m. CDT at
the M.C. Smith Funeral Home. Burial will take place at the
Winamac Cemetery.
Death Notice
Patricia D. Smith
July 30, 2015
BREMEN — Patricia D. Smith, 75, of Bremen, died July
30, 2015 in Signature Health Care of Bremen.
Arrangements are pending with Mishler Funeral Home,
Bremen.
Theft, from front
He does not expect the case to go to trial, but does expect
it to be resolved soon.
“We’re frustrated with what they are doing right now,” he
explained of the Haeck case. “Switching lawyers midstream
delays the case unnecessarily. We are prepared to try it if
they want to try it.”
Grand jury proceedings are more involved than normal
court cases. The state presents evidence in a secret proceeding to six individuals who were chosen from a pool of 18
who decide if the person on trial should be charged. Those
that can testify are notified that the do have the right to
decline based on the fifth amendment.
Nelson could say no more concerning the cases, as he is
bound legally from revealing anything that goes on during
the grand jury proceedings until a decision is made.
Both men are presumed innocent until proven guilty in
the eyes of law.
Zombie, from front
of the public work days. Volunteers from the community
were encouraged to come out with their gloves, shovels,
and their can do attitude to help the youth group. Their next
public work day will be Aug. 15 and plan to work rain or
shine.
As of the end of June, the group has cleaned 29 gravestones and reset 7 of them.
Destination Imagination holds a global competition for
all of the groups participating in the organization. In order
to get to Globals, each team has to pass Regionals and State
wide competitions. Each group is giving a skit, play, presentation, or a different activity each year to perform at each
level of competition.
For more information on The Zombie Project check out
their Facebook page “The Zombie Project”.
Oct. 13, 1951 – July 30, 2015
LAKEVILLE — Daniel A. Rensberger, 63, surrounded by
his loving family went to be with the Lord on Thursday, July
30, 2015 at 4:49 a.m. of natural causes due to complications from major surgery.
Born in South Bend on Oct. 13,
1951, Daniel was the son of Loren
R. and Dixie L. (Betz) Rensberger.
He graduated from LaVille High
School with the class of 1970, and
also graduated from Indiana State
University in 1974.
On Sept. 21, 1974, Daniel was
united in marriage to Vicki L. Ames
in the Church of the Brethren in
Bremen officiated by Jack Kline and Henry Weber. Dan is
a member of the Church of the Brethren in Bremen.
Dan lived a full and wonderful life. He umpired for the
Lakeville & LaPaz youth baseball & softball leagues in the
‘70s & ‘80s. He loved to watch the girls college softball
tournament on TV. He was a volunteer for the Marshall
County Red Cross for over 30 years. Dan worked in the
family business, Rensberger Oil Co. from 1980 till 2002
when it was sold to Yoder Oil Co. (Dan’s Dad started
Rensberger Oil on Oct. 13, 1952, Dan’s 1st birthday.) Dan
was currently employed at Fiserv in South Bend from 2002
till present.
Dan loved to cook. He had cooked the Church’s
Christmas Dinners for many years. Dan would organize,
buy food and cook the meals for family & friends that would
go to the wilds of the Upper Peninsula. They went for over
10 years to the U.P. Dan won him & his wife a one week
all-expense paid trip to Paris, France in 2009. He had submitted his Candy Bar Puffs (a puff pastry recipe) online on
a whim for a chance to win the trip. During the trip Dan and
his wife were able to go to a Cook’n with Class for free and
made five different kinds of patisseries taught by a certified
Cordon Blue Patisserie Chef.
He loved to work on his computer, running power point
for church on Sunday mornings and when needed at wedding and funerals. He also had been the church’s Financial
Secretary for over 10 years.
Dan has been an active member of the St. Joseph
County Tea Party Patriots for over five years. He was their
membership coordinator and treasurer.
Daniel is survived by his loving wife of 40 years, Vicki
of Lakeville and their twin sons: Nathan J. (Elizabeth)
Rensberger and Scot D. (Jina) Rensberger both of
Plymouth. Five grandchildren: Matthew, Sarah, Anna,
Haley, and Zachary. He is also survived by a brother
Dennis R. (Donita) Rensberger. {Dan & Dennis, brothers
married sisters Vicki & Donita Ames} Also surviving is his
father Loren and mother-in-law Lavera Ames.
He was preceded in death by his mother Dixie Lee and
father-in-law Don Ames.
A celebration of Dan’s life will be held and announced at
a later date.
The family would like to express their appreciation to the
ICU team at Memorial Hospital and Center for Hospice
Care. Memorial contributions can be made to: Bremen
Church of the Brethren by going online to: www.bremencob.com or by mail to 921 Woodies Lane, Bremen, IN
46506 or to The Center for Hospice Care, 111 Sunnybrook
Court, South Bend, IN 46637-3437.
Condolences may be sent to
the family through the website:
www.johnson-danielson.com
The Johnson-Danielson Funeral
Home, Plymouth is assisting with
arrangements.
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Pilot News • Friday, July 31, 2015
Local
Page A3
John Glenn School Corporation
Welcome back, John Glenn students
Students in grades K-12 in the John Glenn School
Corporation will attend their first day of classes Monday,
Aug. 10. Times are as follows:
John Glenn High School 8 a.m. – 3 p.m. Dismissal
North Liberty Elementary School 7:53 a.m. – 2:45 p.m.
Dismissal (Elementary students who walk home are dismissed at 2:48 p.m.)
Urey Middle School 7:55 A.M. – 2:50 p.m. Dismissal
Walkerton Elementary School 7:53 a.m. – 2:45 p.m.
Dismissal (Elementary students who walk home are dismissed at 2:50 p.m.)
Lunches will cost $1.80 per day for grades K through six
and $2.05 per day for grades seven through 12. Breakfast,
which is served at all four schools, will cost $1.25 for grades
one through twelve.
John Glenn School Corporation is excited to announce
that parents now have the option of registering their child
online, without coming in to each building to do so. Online
registration also allows parents to apply for textbook assistance and to pay their fees from home. Parents can register online by logging into their JGSC Harmony account.
Parents are still welcome to come in to each school for
onsite registration if they prefer.
Students attending John Glenn High School, North Liberty
Elementary School, Urey Middle School, and Walkerton
Elementary School will register on the following days:
ONLINE Registration opened on July 27; there will only
be one day of in-school registration.
Monday, Aug. 3, 2015, 12:30 to 7 p.m.
(ALL schools will be using computer stations during registration, allowing for quick updates of student data.)
Students enrolling in kindergarten must be five years of
age on or before Aug. 1. Kindergarten students must submit a legal birth certificate and a completed physical form.
Kindergarten classes start on Monday, Aug. 10.
Students new to the John Glenn School Corporation
should contact the guidance department at the Middle
School and High School; Walkerton Elementary and North
Liberty Elementary students should contact their school
office for registration information. All incoming kindergarten students and students new to the Corporation must
have inoculations up-to-date.
Parents should be prepared to pay textbook rental and fee
costs upon registration. Following is a schedule of textbook
rental fees:
Elementary
Kindergarten $112.00
Grade 1
$151.00
Grade 2
$144.00
Grade 3
$131.00
Grade 4
$123.00
Grade 5
$130.00
Grade 6
$118.00
Middle
Grades 7 and 8: $148.00
Grades 7 and 8 in band: $155.50
High School — $148 plus any additional specialty classes
which may incur a fee.
Information regarding the purchase of supplemental
student medical coverage will be available at registration
at each school.
The School Corporation does not carry medical insurance
on students.
Students participating in athletics at all grade levels must
show proof of medical insurance or purchase the supplemental student medical coverage. The high school athletic
department does not provide medical insurance on student
athletes.
Parents and students should check at school during registration for changes in their bus route. If you have questions
about your bus driver or pick-up times, call Cindy King at
the Superintendent’s office, 574-586-3129, ext. 8508, or your
driver.
If you have any questions, call:
John Glenn High School
574-586-3195
North Liberty Elementary School
574-656-8123
Urey Middle School
574-586-3184
Walkerton Elementary School
574-586-3186
Superintendent’s Office
574-586-3129
2015-2016 Registration
JGSC registration is available online July 27 and on-site
Aug. 3, 12:30-7 p.m.
The John Glenn School Corporation no longer charges a
transfer tuition fee for out of district students, and is now
accepting out of district transfer students. Interested persons
should complete this form and email it to [email protected].
in.us. (Download the form, save it to your computer, and
then type your responses.)
Contact information
North Liberty Elementary School
400 School Drive, North Liberty, IN 46554
PH 574-656-8123 Fax 574-656-8345
Mr. Romer, Principal
[email protected]
Mrs. Cummings, Assistant Principal
[email protected]
Mrs. Heiser, Counselor
[email protected]
Walkerton Elementary School
805 Washington St., Walkerton, IN 46574
PH: 574-586-3186 Fax 574-586-3280
Tim Davis, Principal
[email protected]
Rebecca Cummings, Assistant Principal
[email protected]
Melanie Heiser, Counselor
[email protected]
Urey Middle School
407 Washington St., Walkerton, IN 46574
Phone: 574-586-3184
Fax: 574-586-3714
Mark Maudlin, Principal
[email protected]
Gerry Brown, Athletic Director
[email protected]
Donia Hudgen, Guidance Counselor
dhudgen@jgcs/k12.in.us
John Glenn High School
201 John Glenn Drive, Walkerton, IN 46574
Phone 574-586-3195 Fax 574-586-3905
William Morton, Principal
[email protected]
Christopher Winchell, Assistant Principal
[email protected]
Chris Manering, Athletic Director
[email protected]
Beth Schmeltz, Guidance Counselor (A-K)
[email protected]
Sarah Rippy, Guidance Counselor (L-Z)
[email protected]
Early Childhood Special Needs Preschool Services
Who? Any preschooler, who is at least
three and will not turn five by August 1st
residing in the John Glenn School District or
Union North School District.
What? A referral to the John Glenn School
Corporation preschool program can be
made any time of the year. Evaluations are
completed prior to the child’s third birthday
or within 50 school days.
When? Morning Session 8:00 a.m. to 10:30
a.m. Afternoon Session 12:00 p.m. to 2:30
p.m. The classroom currently has one preschool teacher and two classroom assistants.
Where? Walkerton Elementary School,
805 Washington Street, Walkerton, IN 46574
(574) 586-3186
Why? Research suggests that early childhood services promote grade school success!
R.A.I.S.E Preschoolers...
R-REFER – Referrals can be made by anyone. Parents, community agencies, physi-
cians, daycare, family and friends can refer
your child.
A-ASSESS – Assessments may need to be
completed to evaluate a child’s ability to
communicate, to learn, get along with others, manage their behaviors, and/or move
around their environment.
I-IDENTIFY – Individual needs and areas
of eligibility may need to be identified.
Speech, language, developmental delays
and/or areas of specific need will be used
to develop individualized educational programs.
S-SERVICE – Direct and/or indirect services may be offered to meet a child’s needs
in the areas of communication, overall
development, occupational therapy, physical therapy, or transportation.
E-Educate – Consultation with staff and
families, walk-in services, developmental
preschools, transportation, and transition-
ing of services into the public schools are
all services used to support student success.
Service Options...
Consultation Services:
Consultation services are available for
students when minimal support is warranted.
Walk – in Therapy:
Occupational therapy, physical therapy and/or speech services will generally
be provided at each preschooler’s home
school. The length and duration of these
less restrictive services will be determined
at the child’s case conference.
Speech Only Therapy:
Is available at the preschooler’s home
school. Sessions may be individual or small
group and are generally 20-30 minutes long
once or twice a week.
Developmental
Early
Childhood
Preschool:
Koontz Lake Market
& Catering
Full Service Meat Department • Custom Cuts Available
574-586-7222
Owners: Randy & Kris Kafantaris
Have a
great ye
ar!
Charlie
Bigg
Chicke s
n
Eligibility for this program is determined
at the case conference based on the degree
of delay and the amount of service needed.
Additional Community Resources...
First Steps – Early childhood services
from birth to age three, based on your
child’s needs.
Early Head Start – Early childhood services from birth to age three, based on the
family’s financial need.
Head Start – Preschool services for children age three to kindergarten, financial
need and child’s needs are considered.
Private Preschools – Community preschool programs may be an option some
families choose to consider.
Contact Information...
Kathy Snyder
[email protected]
574-586-3186
Back to School
Page A4
Pilot News • Friday, July 31, 2015
John Glenn School Corporation
Walkerton Elementary school supply list
Kindergarten
2—Bottle elmers glue
3 Boxes of crayons
1 Pkg #2 pencils
2 Pink erasers
1 Folders
Pencil box
2 Box of tissues
1 Roll paper towels
1 Bottle hand sanitizer
1 Bx gallon ziptop bags/boys only
1 Bx sandwich ziptop bags/girls only
Easy to play recess game ( pls place your
child’ s name on the game )
Backpack ( no rolling )
1st grade
1-4Oz elmers glue ( white )
1 24Ct box of crayons
1 Pkg expo dri-erase markers
2 Pkg #2 pencils ( ticonderoga or american
best) – replace weekly
1 Lg pink eraser
1 Pocket folder
Fiskars scissors
Pencil box
2 Lg box of tissues
1 Disinfectant wipes
Easy to play recess game
( Place your child ’ s name on the game )
Backpack ( no rolling )
Art shirt
2nd grade
4 Glue sticks
1 Box of crayons or colored pencils
1 Pkg expo dry erase markers
1 Pkg highlighters
1 Pkg #2 pencils
2 Pink erasers
2 Pocket folders
Scissors
1 Composition notebook
2 Large box tissue
Easy to play recess game
(Pls place your child ’ s name on the game )
Art shirt
Ear buds—optional
Do not bring: pencils boxes, sharpeners,
liquid glue, mechanical pencils
3rd grade
4 Glue sticks
1 Box 24 ct crayons
1 Box fine line crayola markers
1 Pkg of expo dry erase markers
1 Dry erase eraser
#2 Pencils ( replace often )
1 Lg pink eraser
3 Bottom pocket folders
Ear buds
2 Box of tissues
1 Box of either quart//gallon ziplock bags
Do not bring: pencil boxes, sharpeners,
3ring binders, trapper keepers,
Or mechanical pencils
4th grade
Mechanical pencils with extra lead
Crayons and colored pencils/markers
2 Boxes of #2 pencils
2 Packs of erasers
5 Spiral bond notebooks
6 Plastic folders
2 Binders or 1 trapper keeper
Pack of dry erase markers
Ear buds
2 Boxes of tissues
1 Pencil pouch/case
5th grade
Dry erase markers
2 Doz #2 pencils or
Mechanical pencils with extra lead
2 Red pens
3 Pkg wide ruled paper
7 Pocket folders
2 Perforated spiral notebooks
2 Boxes tissues
Ear buds
Do not bring: gel pens. Plastic covered
pencils, compasses, or rolling backpacks
6th grade
Colored pencils
2 Doz #2 pencils
Erasers
2 Pkg wide ruled paper
5 Pocket folders
1 1 1/2 Or 2 ” 3 ring binder
1 Spiral notebook
2 Boxes of tissues
Ear buds
Art
K-—art shirt & clorox wipes
1St—art shirt & box of tissues
2Nd—art shirt & box of tissues
3Rd—art shirt & roll of paper towels
4Th—art shirt & roll of paper towels
5Th—art shirt & roll of paper towels
6Th—art shirt & roll of paper towels
Pe
Proper dress for pe is particularly important for your child ’ s safety.
Please be aware of the days your child ’ s
class attends pe so that they may be dressed
comfortably. Each class attends pe twice a
week.
Gr k-4 - tennis shoes are required. Students
without gym shoes will not be allowed to
participate
Gr5-6—students will change clothes for
pe.
Each student should have comfortable
shorts or sweats, a shirt and tennis shoes.
School clothes will not work for pe and pe
clothes will not be worn for school.
Music
Just bring your beautiful voices!
Mrs. Rizek ’ s class
1 Pkg expo dry erase markers
My first pencils #2 yellow ticonderoga
8 Pkg crayons or washable markers
Self opening scissors
Glue sticks
Head phones
Stylist
4 Boxes of tissues
2 Disinfectant wipes
2 Bottles hand sanitizer
Snacks
Paper towels
Mrs. Bogard’ s high ability
Ha reading
2 ” Binder
Subject dividers
1 Pkg filler paper
2 Dry erase markers
1 Pkg 3x5 index cards
1 Composition notebook
Pre-algebra
2 ” Binder
1 Pkg filler paper
1 Pkg pencils
1 Scientific calculator
2 Dry erase markers
1 Red pen
1 Composition notebook
Donations of disinfectant wipes are always
welcome for any room in the building.
North Liberty Elementary school supply list
The following items are needed by
all students:
2 Boxes sharpened pencils #2 yellow only
4 Regular boxes facial tissue (1 for art)
3 Containers of clorox wipes (1 for art)
1 Bottle of hand sanitizer
One ream of white copy paper is requested for each child
Gym shoes (write name in shoes please)
Art shirt for painting
3Rd –6th grade assignment planners will
be provided
Kindergarten
1 Mead brand five star 2 pocket stay put
folder
Plastic pencil box
Fiskars brand safety scissors
1 Pkg of expo dry erase markers (black)
10 White glue sticks
1 Yellow highlighter
1 Pink eraser
1 Roll paper towels
1 Package multicolor construction paper
1 Box gallon zip loc baggies
1 Box quart zip loc baggies
1st grade
4 Large glue sticks
24 Pencils (sharpened, please, plain yellow only. Fancy new types of pencils do not
sharpen well.)
Scissors (children’s fiskars brand is best)
2 Boxes of crayons (16 or 24 count)
1 Pack of highlighters
1 Pkg magic erasers
2 Dry erase markers
4 Mead brand five star 3 pocket stay put
folders
Please do not label any of your child’s
supplies
2nd grade
1 School box (approximately 8 x 5 inches)
1 Pair of pointed scissors
6 Glue sticks
4 Regular size eraser
2 Boxes of crayons (24 count) no larger
counts, please!
1 School bag or back pack
3 Pronged pocket folders (no trapper
keepers or ring binders)
4 Expo brand dry erase markers (black
only)
1 Composition notebook (100 sheet wide
rule)
1 Pack of highlighters
3rd grade
1 Box crayons, 24 count only
School box, standard size, snap shut
(about 8 1/2” x 5 1/2”)
2 Pocket folders
Glue (elmer’s white glue, preferably no
glue sticks)
Scissors (fiskars are best)
1 Highlighter
2 Expo dry erase markers
Ear buds in a baggie
1 Spiral notebook
4th grade
1 Highlighter
4 Glue sticks
1 Box of crayons 24 pack
2 Pink erasers
1 Pkg colored pencils
2 Five packs expo dry erase markers (big)
2” Binder
1 Package of 8 dividers
Scissors
3 Plastic hole punched folders 1 yellow, 1
blue, 1 green (no prongs)
1 Small supply pouch (the kind that zips
is best)
Ear buds – small enough for pouch
1 Pkg post it notes
1 White board erase
5th grade
1 Highlighter wedge tip
2 Erasers pink 2x1
4 Folders with prongs
1-12 Ct.Pkg colored pencils or 24 pkg
crayons
1 Glue stick 1.27 Oz
3 Pkgs wide ruled loose leaf paper
4 Spiral notebooks
4 2-Pocket folders no prongs
2 Blue pens & 2 red pens
1 Zippered pencil pouch (no boxes,
please)
8 Dry erase markers
1 Pair of scissors
1 White board eraser
1 Package post –it- notes (square ones)
1 Composition notebook without spiral
(usually black & white)
No binders, please
Ear buds (small enough for pencil pouch)
6th grade
1 1” Inch binder with the plastic overlay
on the front. (For language classes)
3 Packages of 8 tab dividers with inserts
1 2” Binder (no trapper keepers to carry
from class to class)
6 Plain pocket folders with metal prongs
2 Packages wide lined writing paper
2 Highlighters
2 Black dry erase markers (used every
day in math)
1 Pencil bag or case
2 Black or blue erasable pens
2 Bottles Elmer’s glue
1 Red grading pen
4 Spiral notebooks for reading, social
studies, science, math
High ability supplies
Reading:
2” Ring binder
1 Pkg. Filler paper
1 Pencil pouch
1 Set subject dividers
2 Dry erase markers
2 Pkg. 3X5 index cards
1 Pkg. Pencils 1 eraser
1 Composition notebook
Pre algebra:
2” Ring binder
1 Pkg. Filler paper
1 Pencil pouch
1 Pkg. Pencils
1 Scientific calculator
1 Composition notebook
1 Red pen
Music supplies
The fourth grade students will do a unit
of study playing the recorder. The school
has enough recorders to outfit the class.
Some students elect to purchase their own
instrument for personal hygiene reasons, or
to have the ability to play at home.
Order forms for recorder kits will be
available, the cost of ranges between $5
and $7.
Art classes
Students in grades k-6 meet every week.
If each family could donate one or two of
the following it would help.
Quart size ziploc bags, dish soap, and
glue sticks
Pilot file Photo/Rachael heRbeRt-VaRchetto
John Glenn School Corporation Superintendent Richard Reese, far left, speaks during a March 18 school board meeting. School board members include Curt Pletcher — president; Bob Borlik — vice president; Janice Ryan — secretary; Dennis Holland — member; Tom McCormick — member; Jeff Johnson — member; and William Groves — member.
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Pilot News • Friday, July 31, 2015
Back to School
Page A5
John Glenn School Corporation
High ability learners
Urey Middle School supply list
7th Grade Supply List
1 ream of copy paper
3 boxes of tissues for
Homeroom
4 dry erase markers
Blue / Black ink pens only
#2 pencils (2 dozen)
Ruler with inches and
metric (6 or 12 inch length)
Protractor
Colored pencils: One set
of 24
8 pocket folders—One for
each class
Loose leaf paper or notebooks with perforated paper
(no spiral notebooks)
Scientific
Calculator
(Texas Instruments recommended)
Highlighter (must be
Sharpie or Bic)
Kneaded eraser (for Art)
Glue stick
Index cards—3x5 lined
P.E. clothes: t-shirt, gym
shorts, tennis shoes, socks,
deodorant
Trapper
Keeper
or
Expanding File Folder
Perforated loose leaf
paper or notebooks
Many students choose to
use a backpack; however,
the rolling backpacks do
not fit in the lockers. Also
remember to get asthma
inhalers filled if your child
needs one available for P.E.
8th Grade Supply List
1 ream of copy paper
Scientific
calculator
(Recommended:
Texas
Instrument)
3 boxes of tissues, 1 pkg.
loose leaf paper, & 1 pkg.
of 10-count pencils for your
Homeroom
#2 pencils
Colored pencils: One set
of 24
12 pocket folders—One
for each class
Notebook for Math class
3-ring binder for Lang.
Arts
1 package of Dividers
(5sections) for Language
Arts
White rubber eraser for
art
Index cards—100 lined—3
packs!!!
PE clothes: t-shirt, gym
shorts, tennis shoes, socks,
deodorant
2-pack of glue sticks
Ear buds/Headphones for
computers
2-Black Dry erase markers
(one for math)
Many students choose to
use a backpack; however,
the rolling backpacks do
not fit in the lockers. Also
remember to get asthma
inhalers filled if your child
needs one available for P.E.
Please replace supplies
as needed throughout the
year!!
Urey Middle School - sports
Cheerleading
The first practice will be held in the Urey cafeteria
from 3-4 p.m. Date TBA
Cross Country
The first practice will be held at John Glenn starting Aug.
11 from 3-4:30 p.m. Transportation is being worked on for
North Liberty students.
High Ability Definition
High ability students shall be considered those who:
1) Performs at, or shows the potential for performing at, an outstanding
level of accomplishment in at least
(1) domain, math or language arts,
when compared to other students of
the same age, experience, or environment and
2) is characterized by exceptional
gifts, talents, motivations or interests.
High ability children need to have
educational experiences which help
them meet their full potential.
To qualify for these service options,
students must meet specified criteria
as established by the corporation.
Program Goals
To provide high ability students
with learning experiences that aide in
the development of their academic,
psychological and social needs.
1. Provide a continuous level of
challenge through various curricular
modifications in the regular classroom
grades K-12.
a.) Objective 1- Grades 6-8 will have
an accelerated math curriculum based
on the student’s pre-assessment scores
and ability.
b.) Objective 2- Grades 4-6 will have
an enrichment class in language arts
which extends the curriculum in depth
and breadth.
c.) Objective 3- Grades 7-12 will
offer acceleration in mathematics
d.)
Objective 4- Differentiated
instruction grades K-12
2. Support the emotional needs of
high ability learners
Students will participate in groups,
lead by the guidance counselor,
designed to support the specific needs
of high ability learners.
3.
Provide a differentiated curriculum that responds to the academic
needs of high ability students
a.) Objective 1- Assess the overall curriculum quality for high ability
students using the NAGC Curriculum
Division’s rubric for assessing award
winning curriculum.
b.) Objective 2- Teachers will receive
training on differentiated instruction
for high ability learners
Identification Process
Nomination
and
Screening
Procedures
All students not previously identified are screened for the high ability program at John Glenn School
Corporation as described below for
the specific grade levels. Any student moving into the district will
be assessed at that time. Other students also may be assessed on appeal.
Nominations are accepted by teachers, parents, and students and will
be reviewed and screened in a timely
fashion. The same procedure shall be
used as outlined below.
Grades K-6
Step One: The high ability coordinator administers the OLSAT and
TOMAGS to all students grades K, 3, 6.
Step Two: Students K-2 participate in
mClass while students 3-6 participate
in Acuity. Any students scoring at or
above the 80th percentile will be given
Terra Nova.
Step Three: All results are turned
in to the high ability coordinator who
norms the scores and records them on
student profile sheets.
Step Four: Identification committee
and high ability coordinator meet and
review student profiles. Any student
receiving a score at or above the 95th
percentile on OLSAT, TOMAGS, and/
or Terra Nova, in Language Arts, Math,
or both, will be identified as High
Ability for that domain.
Step Five: Students falling within
the standard error of measure for these
tests will have their teachers observe
and rate students using SIGS. The
scores will be used to reflect a norm of
the John Glenn School Corporation. . If
their information is strong enough, the
student may be identified.
Step Six: Parents are notified of
their child’s evaluations and invited to
the high ability or general education
program. If they chose to participate
in the high ability program a parent
meeting is arranged with the coordinator to review the high ability programs
and answer questions the parents may
have in regards to the high ability
program.
Step Seven: School is notified of students who will be participating in the
high ability program.
Grades 7-12
Students will be grouped in clusters
with students of like abilities. They
will participate in honors classes and
be highly encouraged to participate
in AP classes in grades 9-12. A need
assessment will determine appropriate
general education classroom accommodations for students. Such accommodations may be but are not limited
to: compacting, acceleration, or enrichment.
Transferring to John Glenn
The John Glenn School Corporation no longer charges a transfer tuition fee for
out of district students, and is now accepting out of district transfer students.
An out-of-district transfer form may be found at www.jgsc.k12.in.us
Football
Equipment pick up will be Aug. 4 at Urey from 3-4:30 p.m.
The first practice will be Aug. 10 from 3-5:30 p.m. at Urey.
Volleyball
Both the seventh and eighth grades will start practice
on Aug. 11. The eighth will practice from 3-4:30 p.m. The
seventh will practice from 4:30-6 p.m.
Bullying Policy
Bullying is defined as “overt, unwanted, repeated acts
or gestures, including verbal or written communications or
images transmitted in any manner (including digitally or
electronically), physical act committed, aggression, or any
other behaviors that are committed by a student or group of
students against another student with the intent to harass,
ridicule, humiliate, intimidate, or harm the targeted student
and create for the targeted student an objectively hostile
school environment.” Bullying is grounds for suspension
and the rule applies when a student is on school grounds
immediately before or during school hours, immediately
after school hours or at any other time when the school is
being used by a school group; off school grounds at a school
activity, function or event; traveling to or from school or a
school activity, function, or event; when the individual committing the bullying behavior and any of the intended targets of the bullying behavior are students attending a school
within a school corporation; or using property or equipment
provided by the school.
All acts of bullying should be reported to a staff member
with whom the student feels comfortable talking. Reports of
bullying will then be relayed to the Principal (or his/her designee) for investigation. The parents of both students will
be contacted if it is appropriate. Students will be educated
on the effects and consequences bullying has on all parties
involved. The staff at UMS helps limit bullying by being a
presence in the hallway between classes, before school, and
after school.
Cafeteria prices
2015-16
Breakfast
Elementary Regular $1.25
Secondary Regular $1.25
Reduced (Fed. Reg.) $.30
Adult $1.50
Milk
Students $.35
Adults $.50
Lunch
Elementary Regular $1.80
Secondary Regular $2.05
Reduced (Fed. Reg.) $.40
Adult $3.00
John Glenn students broadcast live from the studio.
Photo Provided
Bob’s
Italian Beef • Homemade Sausage
Country
Special Cuts • Deli • Catering
Store &
Meat Market
ROBERT NYARI - owner
656-8011
306 S. Reed Street • North Liberty, IN 46554
Back to School
Page A6
Pilot News • Friday, July 31, 2015
John Glenn School Corporation
Soccer complex and other changes
On July 7, 2015, the John Glenn School Corporation voted
unanimously (7-0) to proceed with the construction of the
soccer complex on high school grounds. In the next week
or so, construction will begin across Georgia Street on the
west side of the high school where three new football/soccer practice fields will go. The practice fields will be located
directly south of the Methodist Church.
Once the timber on the land is cleared, excavation, irrigation and seeding will commence. Geyer Construction, out
of Lakeville, will handle the work for the practice fields for
$422,345. It will be completed within 90 days.
Excavation, irrigation and seeding of the actual soccer playing field, which will be located where the current football practice field lies, will begin as soon as the
Falcons’ high school football season concludes in the fall.
Construction of restrooms, a concession stand and press box
as well as installation of a scoreboard, bleachers and lights
will begin in the spring/summer of 2016. The proposed cost
of the second phase is estimated at around $500,000, making
the entire cost of the soccer complex project near $1 million.
Renovation on the high school track is almost completed.
The old track was ground down about 12 -13” and compacted to create a new base; then 4” of new asphalt was
added on top. A rubber coating will be added soon, along
with freshly painted lines. Parking lots at all four buildings
have been refreshed with newly painted lines.
A new community tennis league has been started, utilizing the recently updated tennis courts. This past year, the
high school tennis courts were completely refurbished and
lighting was added.
This past year, the visitors’ bleachers on the high school
football field were replaced to include all new aluminum
benches and an updated press box.
New stage lighting has been added in the John Glenn
High School Auditorium; the Project Lead the Way classroom has been updated; a new 900 square foot classroom
has been created to serve the ever-growing Agriculture
class; and the gymnasium has been painted to reflect the
change in athletic conferences from the NSC (which no longer exists) to the NIC (Northern Indiana Conference).
A new broadcasting studio has been built at the high
school to provide a new Communications curriculum. Tricia
Sloma, of WNDU-Channel 16, recently visited John Glenn
High School’s new Broadcasting studio to offer advice and
helpful tips to the Communications students. Ms. Sloma
commented that she was impressed with the studio and the
modern equipment being utilized in the studio. Students
enrolled in the Communications class will be producing a
live broadcast daily as part of their curriculum. (pictures
attached)
****************************************************************
*********************
Urey Middle School is adding a new course, Automation
and Robotics, for 8th graders in the Industrial Technology/
Project Lead the Way (PLTW) program. During this 12 week
course students will explore the history and development of
automation and robotics in our world. Students will use 3-D
printing and software to design, build, and program robots
to do specifically designed tasks.
****************************************************************
*********************
John Glenn’s Custodians have been busy updating lighting in all buildings with bright, economical LED bulbs, as
well as updating ceiling tiles in the elementary buildings.
Walkerton Elementary recently saw some much-needed
repairs with repaving and striping to the west and north
parking lots, giving the school a fresh, new look. A pavilion
was added to the playground this past school year as part of
an Eagle Scout project by Coda Hensley.
North Liberty Elementary will welcome two new teachers and John Glenn High School will be adding new teachers in Social Studies (two), English, and Special Education,
as well as a new secretary.
A John Glenn broadcasting student is ready to give a report.
Responsible Use of
Technology
The John Glenn School Corporation believes that the use
of computer networked services, email, and the Internet
have become, if used appropriately, an integral part of
an engaging, student-centered, and collaborative learning
environment. It is understood that all of our computer networked services are provided exclusively for educational
purposes.
The John Glenn School Corporation filters all internet traffic for the purpose of safeguarding staff and students from
harmful content. The John Glenn School Corporation also
provides supervision and education related to appropriate
online behavior, including interacting with other individuals on social networking websites and in chat rooms, and
regarding cyberbullying awareness and response. However,
it is still the responsibility of all computer users to make
sure they comply with providing a safe and secure learning
environment when using technology. The District encourages parents/guardians to supervise their child(ren) when
using technologies from home.
CLEAR: highlights the important points contained in
John Glenn School Corporation Responsible Use Policy.
CLEAR
C — onsiderate, People in our community reflect a
diverse set of customs, values and points of view. Digital
communication should be respectful, polite and considerate
of others.
L — egal &
E — thical, Respect copyright laws by copying media
including text, music and videos only with permission and
by crediting and citing the source where the information
was found. It is a good general practice to link to others’
work rather than reproduce it. Respect the privacy of others, ask permission before taking photographs, video or
audio recordings. Illegally copied or downloaded software,
files, picture s, music or games may not be used on JGSC
computers.
A — ppropriate , School technology is used for educational purposes and only appropriate words and images
may be used and viewed. If inappropriate material are
viewed or received, it is the responsibility of the recipient
to delete them.
R — esponsible, Ensure that care is taken with all hardware, software, shared resources (i.e. printers, scanners)
and use of the school network, so as to prevent damage or
misuse whether intentional or not; your actions should not
inhibit the work of others. Personal information and passwords will be kept private.
DIGITAL CITIZENSHIP
Students must follow the six conditions of being a good
digital citizen:
1 — RESPECT YOURSELF.
I will show respect for myself through my actions. I will
select online names that are appropriate. I will consider the
information and images that I post online. I will consider
what personal information about life, experience, experi-
Photo Provided
mentation or relationships I post. I will NOT be obscene. I
will not visit sites that are degrading, pornographic, racist,
or inappropriate.
2 — PROTECT YOURSELF.
I will ensure that the information, images, and materials I
post online will not put me at risk. I will not publish my personal details, contact details, or schedule of my activities.
I will report any attacks or inappropriate behavior directed
at me. I will protect passwords, accounts, and resources.
3 — RESPECT OTHERS.
I will show respect to others. I will not use electronic
mediums to antagonize, bully, harass or stalk other people. I
will show respect for other people in my choice of websites.
I will not abuse my rights of access and I will not ether other
people’s private spaces or areas.
4 — PROTECT OTHERS.
I will protect others by reporting abuse, not forwarding
inappropriate materials or communications; I will moderate
unacceptable materials and conversations.
5 — RESPECT INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY.
I will request permission to use resources. I will suitably
cite any and all use of websites, books, media, etc. I will
acknowledge all primary sources. I will validate information. I will use and abide by the fair use rules.
6 — PROTECT INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
I will request to use the software and media others produce. I will use free and open source alternatives rather than
pirating software. I will purchase, license, and register all
software. I will purchase my music and media, and refrain
from distributing these in a manner that violates their
licenses. I will act with integrity.
Make this your best school year ever!
Good luck!
O’CONNOR DELIVERY SERVICE INC.
PO Box 602, North Liberty, IN • Phone: 574-910-2525 • Email: [email protected]
Owned & operated by Jeff & Tracy O’Connor
Fair Prices With Our Customer’s Needs In Mind
Pilot News • Friday, July 31, 2015
Arts & Entertainment
Page A7
‘The Breaking Point’ review
Photo Provided
Marshall County Church Orchestra director Don Harness
discusses “tuning” with orchestra members before a recent
concert held at the Hamlet United Methodist Church.
MCCO announces
concert schedule
PLYMOUTH — The Marshall County Church Orchestra
(MCCO) is in the full swing of its summer schedule and
recently played at the Hamlet United Methodist Church. The
orchestra is under the direction of Don Harness of Plymouth.
The group enjoys playing at Hamlet because of the great
reception from the church people and the wonderful acoustics in the church building. During the concert the MCCO
played a variety of classical, gospel, contemporary and
patriotic music. The audience was particularly moved by
the rousing march of the “Stars and Stripes Forever” and
stood during Sousa March. They remained standing for the
conclusion of the concert while the orchestra played the
emotional “God Bless America”.
The MCCO is always accepting new members. The orchestra is made up of volunteer musicians of various ages and
musical abilities. The MCCO has received a $400 grant from
the Marshall County Community Foundation to purchase
music for the “Celebrations at Lincoln Center” concert, which
will educate the audience about the history of Indiana, its
writings and its music. Harness is in the process of planning
this concert for June 2016. He invites any instrumental musician to join the present MCCO group for this spectacular
event. Vocalists, narrators and orators will also be needed. For
more information call Harness at 574-936-7357.
Upcoming MCCO concerts include:
Saturday, Aug. 8, 12 p.m. — Faith Baptist Church
Thursday, Aug. 13, 7 p.m. — Fairfield Garden Courts
Friday, Sept. 4, 7 p.m. — Blueberry Festival/Jefferson
Stage
Friday, Sept. 11, 6:30 p.m. — River Park Square/
Community Wide Concert sponsored by The Well
Saturday, Sept. 12, 9 a.m. — Plymouth Farmers’ Market
Saturday, Oct. 31, 7 p.m. — Marshall County Historical
Museum
Thursday and Friday, Nov. 12 and 13 at 7 p.m. Concert &
Dessert/Christos’ Banquet Center
When it comes to your job, you’re a
crackerjack.
You have quite the reputation for
doing your best, in fact, which is
why colleagues come to you for help.
Nobody busts a move like you: smooth,
efficient and done right. Yep, when it
comes to your job, you can’t be beat.
Except when you can. Except when
everything points somewhere else
and you’re ripped off-track, as in the
new novel “The Breaking Point” by
Jefferson Bass.
Within the philanthropic world,
Richard Janus was known for his
speed.
When tragedy occurred anywhere
in the world, before most governmental entities could even get organized,
Janus was on the scene aboard his private jet filled with water, first aid, and
other supplies. Earthquake, tornado,
hurricane, flood, it didn’t matter; Janus’
humanitarian efforts helped save lives.
It was therefore a shock to his supporters and donors when Janus lost his.
The fireball was, by all accounts,
huge: that’s what happens when a
Citation jet slams into the side of a
mountain near San Diego at 400 miles
an hour. There wasn’t much of Richard
Janus left to identify, but the FBI needed
the best forensic expert they could hire
to try. They contacted Dr. Bill Brockton.
As a leader in forensic anthropology
and the founder of the U of Tennessee’s
Body Farm, Brockton was well-known
for his expertise in identifying bodies
and determining time of death. The
Janus case, however — and Brockton
The Bookworm Sez
By Terri Schlichenmeyer
hesitated to call it a “case,” since it
seemed to have been an accident —
would almost bust his chops.
Judging by a nearly full set of teeth
found at the site, Janus had been killed
by the crash; a second set of teeth
momentarily sidelined the investigation, but were explained by a bizarre
coincidence. Janus, during his nighttime flight, had apparently missed a
mountain and died for his mistake. But
then reports surfaced that Brockton
had missed an important dental clue,
and the media howled…
Brockton was used to that. Media
loved their scandals, after all, but the
onslaught in California and new allegations back home were almost unbearable — especially when another, more
deadly bombshell entered his life.
Having read quite a number of the
Body Farm novels, I have to say that I
was surprised by “The Breaking Point.”
Authors Jon Jefferson and Dr. Bill
Bass (who write together under this collective pseudonym) step back in time
here to give fans a bit of history for their
hero, Brockton, in a twist that takes a
little getting used to but turns out to be
rich in story. Not only is that a bonus for
anyone who’s familiar with this smart,
authentic (Bass was the creator of the
“The Breaking Point”
by Jefferson Bass
c.2015, William Morrow
$26.99 / $33.50 Canada,
384 pages
real-life Body Farm) investigator, but it
also makes this book a great place for
new fans to start the series.
Bursting with red herrings and
creepy bad guys (and a hint of the
next book, perhaps?), this mysterythriller is a whodunit lover’s dream. Be
warned though: start a novel like “The
Breaking Point,” and it could crack
your schedule.
Terri Schlichenmeyer of The Bookworm
Sez, LLC is based out of LaCrosse, Wis.
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Page A8
Pilot News • Friday, July 31, 2015
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Friday, July 31, 2015 • Page B1
Sports
Contact us: email [email protected] or call 574-936-3104
Ohio State suspends
Red Sox snap White Sox
Bosa, Marshall,
streak; Tigers edge Orioles, 9-8 2 others for opener
MCT file phoTo
The St. Louis Cardinals’ Matt Carpenter (13) is congratulated as he returns to the dugout after hitting a two-run home run
in the third inning against the Kansas City Royals on July 23, 2015, at Busch Stadium in St. Louis. Carpenter went 4 for
5 with two home runs and four RBIs against the Rockies Thursday.
RED SOX 8, WHITE SOX 2
BOSTON (AP) — Xander
Bogaerts and David Ortiz
each had three hits and
Boston beat Chris Sale, snapping Chicago’s seven-game
winning streak.
Knuckleballer
Steven
Wright (4-4) pitched seven
effective innings in Boston’s
third win in 15 games. Brock
Holt had a two-run single in
a four-run sixth.
Jose Abreu hit a two-run
homer in the first for the
White Sox, who head home
for a weekend series against
the Yankees after a 7-1 road
trip moved them into contention for an AL wild-card
spot.
The first five batters
reached in Boston’s four-run
sixth before Sale (9-6) was
lifted. He allowed seven runs
and 12 hits in his worst start
since April.
CUBS 5, BREWERS 2
MILWAUKEE (AP) —
Anthony Rizzo hit a threerun homer with two out
in the eighth inning, and
Chicago beat Milwaukee.
The Cubs won for the
third time in four games
since they were swept in a
weekend series against lowly
Philadelphia. Rizzo finished
with three hits and Dexter
Fowler went 2 for 4.
Jimmy Nelson pitched
seven innings of two-hit ball
for Milwaukee, but Chicago
rallied in the eighth. Addison
Russell and Fowler singled
against Jeremy Jeffress before
Will Smith (4-2) came in.
Smith retired his first two
batters, but Rizzo connected
for his 18th homer to give the
Cubs a 3-2 lead.
TIGERS 9, ORIOLES 8
BALTIMORE (AP) —
Yoenis Cespedes homered
and drove in three runs
and Detroit beat Baltimore
after shifting into rebuilding
mode by trading two of their
best pitchers.
Mired in fourth place
in the AL Central, Detroit
dealt starter David Price to
Toronto and closer Joakim
Soria to Pittsburgh the day
before the non-waiver trade
deadline.
General manager Dave
Dombrowski
conceded,
“I would much rather be
acquiring than I would be
trading. But it’s just where
we are at this point.”
After an active day of dealing, the Tigers kept busy on
the bases. Detroit finished
with 16 hits, including three
apiece by Cespedes, Ian
Kinsler and Jose Iglesias.
The Tigers led 7-0 in the
fourth inning and 9-2 in
the sixth before surviving
Baltimore’s comeback bid.
as St. Louis beat Colorado.
Carpenter went 4 for 5
with four RBIs after moving back to the leadoff spot.
It was his first career multihomer game and he has
a career-high 12 home runs
this season.
Jhonny Peralta’s two-run
single off Rockies closer John
Axford tied the game at 8-all
and Garcia’s walk scored
Kolten Wong as the Cardinals
recorded their seventh walkoff win of the season.
Axford (3-5) took his third
loss in his last four outings.
Cardinals starter Carlos
Martinez gave up five runs
on 10 hits in five innings.
Carlos Villanueva (4-3)
earned the win.
Luke Gregerson (4-1)
pitched a scoreless ninth for
the win.
Scott Kazmir allowed three
hits and struck out five in 7
2/3 scoreless innings in the
first start for the Astros in
his hometown and his second since a trade from the
Oakland Athletics.
PADRES 8, METS 7
NEW YORK (AP) — Justin
Upton hit a three-run homer
through a driving rain with
two outs in the ninth inning,
and San Diego stunned New
York, overcoming a sixrun deficit during a game
delayed nearly four hours by
two storms.
With a darkening sky overhead, Jeurys Familia entered
ASTROS 3, ANGELS 0
with a 7-5 lead and got
HOUSTON (AP) — Jason two quick outs in the ninth
Castro hit a three-run homer before a torrential downpour
with two outs in the ninth stopped play. Frustrated,
inning to give the Houston the Mets closer stood on the
Astros a 3-0 victory and a mound as the other players
three-game sweep of the Los cleared the field.
Angeles Angels on Thursday
When play resumed 44
night.
minutes later, Derrick Norris
The win moves first-place fell behind 0-2 before sinHouston two games ahead gling for his career-high fifth
of the Angels in the AL West. hit. Matt Kemp singled as the
It was 0-0 to start the bot- rain began again and Upton,
tom of the ninth inning. Jed in what could be his final atLowrie drew a walk off Jose bat with the Padres, sent the
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — Beijing was selected
Alvarez (2-2) with one out first pitch soaring to rightbefore a two-out single by center for San Diego’s first Friday to host the 2022 Winter Olympics, becoming the first
CARDINALS 9, ROCKIES 8 Marwin Gonzalez. Castro lead.
city awarded both the winter and summer games.
ST. LOUIS (AP) — Matt
Beijing narrowly defeated Almaty, Kazakhstan, in a vote of
then launched his two-out
Afrer Yangervis Solarte
Carpenter hit a pair of home
shot off Fernando Salas into grounded out, play was halt- the International Olympic Committee. The vote was surprisruns and Greg Garcia’s basesingly close: 44-40.
the seats in right field to give
loaded walk capped a threeThe Chinese capital, which hosted the 2008 Summer
Houston the win.
See Snap, Page B2
run rally in the ninth inning
Olympics, came in to the vote as the strong favorite, despite
its lack of natural snow.
The secret vote was conducted by paper ballot, after the first
electronic vote experienced technical faults with the tablets.
Beijing was seen by the IOC as a safe, reliable choice that
also offered vast commercial opportunities in a new winter
sports market of more than 300 million people in northern
“What you have there is basically raw sewage.
China.
Almaty had hoped to bring the games to Central Asia for
It’s all the water from the toilets and the showers and
the first time, but was a lesser-known quantity and viewed
whatever people put down their sinks, all mixed up,
as a riskier choice by IOC members. Kazakh Prime Minister
Karim Massimov made a last-minute impassioned plea for
and it’s going out into the beach waters.”
the IOC to be “brave” and give the games to his country, but
it wasn’t enough.
Marine biologist John Griffith on the open waters around Rio de Janeiro, The contest was a study in contrasts between the world’s
where Olympic water sport athletes will compete in 2016 most populous nation and a former Soviet republic seeking to
establish itself on the world stage. China’s size and political
and economic might was a big advantage against its northing and diarrhea.
“I’ve had high tempera- virologist Fernando Spilki, western neighbor, which became independent in 1991.
These ailments could tures and problems with my who carried out the testing,
Beijing and Almaty had both been considered longshots
knock an athlete out for stomach,” Hussl said. “It’s and his university of “seek- when the 2022 bid race opened two years ago. But they were
days, potentially curtailing always one day completely ing notoriety.”
the only two candidates left after four European cities —
Olympics dreams and the in bed and then usually not
Spilki, a respected scien- including Oslo and Stockholm — pulled out for political or
years of hard training behind sailing for two or three days.” tist who is a board member financial reasons.
them.
Water pollution has long of the Brazilian Society for
Beijing plans to use several venues from the 2008 Olympics,
“This is by far the worst plagued Brazil’s urban areas, Virology and editor of its sci- including the “Bird’s Nest” stadium and “Water Cube”
water quality we’ve ever where most sewage isn’t col- entific journal, is not being arena. But the snow and sliding events would be at venues
seen in our sailing careers,” lected, let alone treated. In paid by the AP to conduct in Yangqing and Zhangjiakou, 60 and 140 kilometers (40 and
said Ivan Bulaja, a coach for Rio, much of the waste runs the testing.
90 miles) outside Beijing. A planned high-speed rail line to
the Austrian team, which through open-air ditches to
The environmental agen- Zhangjiakou is supposed to cut travel time to 50 minutes.
has spent months training fetid streams and rivers that cy’s note underscored its
China’s mountain venues also rely heavily on man-made
on the Guanabara Bay. “I am feed the Olympic water sites position that the Olympic snow, which was considered one of the bid’s main weaknesses
quite sure if you swim in this and blight the city’s picture waters are safe, “with the and one that was the target of Almaty’s “Keeping it Real”
water and it goes into your postcard beaches.
exception of the Marina da slogan. Almaty is surrounded by towering mountains and
mouth or nose that quite a
The Rio de Janeiro state Gloria,” where sailing com- plenty of natural snow, but Beijing bid leaders insisted they
lot of bad things are coming environmental
agen- petitions will kick off and have sufficient water supplies and snow-making equipment
inside your body.”
cy released a statement which as recently as May for ideal skiing conditions.
Sailor David Hussl has Thursday questioning the
See Water, Page B2
See Beijing, Page B2
already fallen ill.
AP’s testing and accused
AP Investigation: Filthy Rio water a threat at 2016 Olympics
RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) —
The waters where Olympians
will compete in swimming
and boating events next summer in South America’s first
games are rife with human
sewage and present a serious
health risk for athletes, an
Associated Press investigation has found.
The AP analysis of water
quality revealed dangerously high levels of viruses
and bacteria from sewage in
venues where athletes will
compete in water sports.
Nevertheless, an Olympic
official said Thursday there
are no plans to monitor for
viruses, which many experts
consider the biggest problem.
In the first independent
comprehensive testing for
both viruses and bacteria at
the Olympic sites, the AP
conducted four rounds of
tests starting in March. The
results have alarmed international experts and dismayed
competitors training in Rio,
some of whom have already
fallen ill with fevers, vomit-
CHICAGO (AP) — Ohio State will face one of its toughest tests of the season without its best defensive player and
three talented receivers.
The Buckeyes suspended All-America defensive end
Joey Bosa, receiver Corey Smith and H-backs Jalin Marshall
and Dontre Wilson for their opening game at Virginia Tech
because of unspecified violation of athletic department
policies.
“Violation of team policies,” Buckeyes coach Urban
Meyer said Thursday at Big Ten media days. “That’s as far
as I’ll go.”
Meyer did say the violations had nothing to do with
players breaking any laws. He said he has known for a
while that the suspensions were coming and that he is “100
percent supportive” of the policies.
Ohio State opens its season Labor Day night in Blacksburg,
Virginia, looking to avenge a 35-21 loss to the Hokies. The
Buckeyes have won 13 straight since.
“We’re pushing forward,” Meyer said. “We’re playing
an extremely talented team on the road in a tough environment.”
Bosa had 13 1/2 sacks as a sophomore and enters his
junior year as one of the top NFL prospects in college football.
Meyer said the Buckeyes will look toward sophomore
Jalyn Holmes and redshirt freshmen Sam Hubbard and
Darius Slade to help pick up the slack for Bosa.
Marshall was second on the team in receptions as a freshman with 38 and was also the team’s best punt returner.
Wilson and Smith combined for 41 catches for 555 yards.
The Buckeyes were ranked No. 1 in the preseason coaches’ poll released Thursday and are likely to be top-ranked in
The Associated Press preseason Top 25 when it is released
Aug. 23.
Ohio State brings back most of its key players from last
year’s team, which bounced back from a September loss to
the Hokies in Columbus to win the first College Football
Playoff. Bosa might be the best of the Buckeyes. He had 21
tackles for loss last season, including a game-ending sack in
overtime against Penn State.
Marshall was a versatile playmaker the Buckeyes lined
up all over the field, including at quarterback at times.
Wilson, a junior, plays a similar role for Ohio State. A foot
injury against Michigan State in November cut his season
short and kept him out of spring practice.
Smith, a senior, is in his second season with Ohio State
after transferring from junior college.
“This is just another obstacle,” linebacker Joshua Perry
said. “As we say in the building, this is just another E we’ve
got to respond to.” Perry said E is for event.
The Buckeyes will likely have a new addition at H-Back
when preseason practice starts in August. Braxton Miller
has said he will switch from quarterback to receiver, which
could help make up for the losses there.
Meyer said the transition of Miller to receiver was a plan
B that’s been in the works for about a month and a half. The
coach he will personally work with Miller when preseason
practice starts before it the staff determines the best way to
use the two-time Big Ten player of the year.
“He’s one of the best athletes I’ve ever coached,” Meyer
said. “He’s got an incredible first step. Above all else, you
say it’s time to win or lose time, and he’s not going to lose.”
Beijing selected to host
2022 Winter Olympics
Sports
Page B2
Sports Briefs
Pilot News • Friday, July 31, 2015
Snap cont. from Page B1
T-ball
ed again, this time for 2:52.
Craig Kimbrel then was perfect in a 5-minute ninth for
his 30th save, in front of just
PLYMOUTH — Plymouth Junior League baseball is cooper- several hundred fans.
ating with Bruce’s Big Grill BBQ to have a T-Ball awards day RANGERS 7, YANKEES 6
and fundraiser Aug. 1.
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP)
Bruce’s will supply hot dogs and chips for t-ballers, and the — Josh Hamilton delivered
Plymouth Junior League will be selling tickets for a pulled a game-ending RBI single
pork barbecue meal that includes a sandwich, cole slaw and with two outs in the ninth
baked beans for $8 apiece. Tickets can be purchased via the inning and Texas beat AL
league’s Facebook page or by calling or texting Ryan Carroll East-leading New York.
at 574-930-60607. You can also email Carroll at ryanbronwynHamilton also had a [email protected] to place an order. Include name, number run homer for the Rangers,
of tickets and a field that the tickets can be delivered to when who scored the winning run
making orders.
after a wild ninth to split the
Payment can be made out to Plymouth Junior League, Inc. four-game series.
and will be collected upon delivery of tickets.
Delino DeShields drew a
leadoff
walk in the ninth off
Basketball
Nick Goody, who was making his major league debut.
DONALDSON — The Ancilla College men’s basketball Yankees closer Andrew
team will be hosting a 3 on 3 basketball tournament during Miller (0-2) got Elvis Andrus
out on a deep fly ball before
the 2015 Marshall County Blueberry Festival.
The tournament will be held on Saturday and Sunday of the DeShields became the second
festival and is open to four different age groups for both boys out when he was hit on the
and girls. The cost to participate is $75 and registration is now foot by Leonys Martin’s hard
shot while running the bases.
open for the event.
Martin went to second on
To register, contact Butcher at [email protected]
to obtain a registration form or visit the Marshall County Adrian Beltre’s walk and
Blueberry Festival website at www.blueberryfestival.org.
Plymouth Junior League t-ball
awards day and fundraiser
Ancilla hosting 3 on 3 tourney
scored when Hamilton singled to right.
Mark Teixeira homered
twice for the Yankees, and
Brian McCann also went
deep.
INDIANS 3, ATHLETICS 1
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP)
— Carlos Carrasco threw a
two-hitter, Carlos Santana
hit a two-run homer and
Cleveland beat Oakland.
Francisco Lindor had two
hits for the Indians, who won
their second straight following a six-game losing streak.
Josh Reddick doubled in a
first-inning run for the A’s,
who have lost six of their last
seven.
Carrasco did not allow a
hit after Reddick’s double,
facing one over the minimum from that point. He
walked one and struck out
seven. He was coming off his
worst start of the season in
which he allowed six runs in
four innings.
Chris Bassitt (0-4) gave up
three runs, his season high,
on six hits. He walked one
and struck out a season-best
six.
TWINS 9, MARINERS 5
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) —
Eddie Rosario finished a
single shy of the cycle and
drove in three runs to help
Minnesota snap a four-game
skid with a victory over
Seattle.
Aaron Hicks and Brian
Dozier also homered for the
Twins, who had lost 10 of
their previous 12 games. Phil
Hughes (10-6) gave up five
runs on 10 hits and struck
out five in five innings and
Joe Mauer extended his hitting streak to 11 games.
Austin Jackson and Seth
Smith hit two-run homers
for the Mariners, who traded outfielder Dustin Ackley
to the New York Yankees
before the game. J.A. Happ
(4-6) gave up seven runs —
six earned — on nine hits in
3 1/3 innings.
Patriot Golf Day
Outing at Swan Lake
PLYMOUTH — Swan Lake Resort will host a Patriot Golf
Day Outing on Sunday, Aug. 9. The outing will raise funds for
the Folds of Honor, which provides money for post-secondary
education for the children and spouses of soldiers that have
been disabled or killed in service to their country. The event
begins with a 2 p.m. shotgun start.
Entry fee is $100 and includes golf, dinner, a prize fund and
a donation to the Folds of Honor Foundation.
To sign up, call the Swan Lake golf shop at 574-935-5680,
ext. 750.
Volleyball
Corvilla Glow in the Dark
Volleyball Tournament
MISHAWAKA — Corvilla will host its 15th Annual Glow
in the Dark Volleyball Tournament at Outpost Sports in
Mishawaka on Saturday, Aug. 15.
Registration fee is $25 per person or $150 for six person,
co-ed team (four men, two women). Each player receives a
glow in the dark tank top, refreshments and plenty of guaranteed playing time. Registration begins at 6 p.m., and play will
start at 7 p.m.
There are two divisions available — one for players who
just want to have fun and a more competitive division for
hard-core players. Trophies and prizes will be awarded to the
top two teams in each division.
All tournament proceeds benefit Corvilla, a local non-profit
organization that provides services to people with developmental disabilities.
Call Diana Dolde at 574-289-9779 between 8 a.m. and 4
p.m. or email her at [email protected] for more details and
registration forms.
Jr high sports
Lincoln, Riverside start dates
PLYMOUTH — The Lincoln Junior High and Riverside
Intermediate School have announced their sports starting
dates for the fall season. Athletes must have all required
paperwork turned in to participate in practices.
Cross country for sixth through eighth grades will begin
Aug. 3 from 3:30 to 4:45 p.m. in Centennial Park at the
Freyman Shelter behind the tennis courts.
Football for seventh and eighth grades will issue equipment
July 31 at Lincoln Junior High. Eighth graders will receive
their equipment at 4 p.m., and seventh graders will get theirs
at 5 p.m.
First practice for football will take place Aug. 3 from 3:30
to 5 p.m.
Volleyball for sixth graders will hold its first practice Aug.
11 from 3:15 to 5 p.m.
Seventh and eighth grade volleyball players will have their
first practice Aug. 10 from 3:30 to 5 p.m.
was six times above Brazil’s
legal limit for fecal coliforms.
In June, it was slightly above
the limit.
The agency did not mention that the government’s
own data shows that on
eight occasions this year,
most recently on June 25, the
waters in Copacabana Beach
where long-distance swim
events will be held spiked
above the legal bacteria limits — considered unsafe for
bathers.
Mario Moscatelli, a biologist who has spent 20 years
lobbying for a cleanup of
Rio’s waterways, said the
state environmental agency
was trying to divert attention
from the serious pollution
problem affecting water.
“For years now we’ve
seen the flow of raw sewage, which contains fecal
coliforms and other bacteria, viruses, protozoa and
an infinite number of pathogenic microorganisms that
can cause everything from
ringworm to hepatitis,”
Moscatelli said.
Dr. Richard Budgett,
medical director for the
International
Olympic
Committee, said after seeing
the AP findings that IOC and
Brazilian authorities would
stick to their program of testing only for bacteria to determine whether the water is
safe, as that is the accepted
norm globally.
“We’ve had reassuranc-
es from the World Health
Organization and others that
there is no significant risk to
athlete health,” he told the
AP on the sidelines of an IOC
meeting in Malaysia.
WHO didn’t respond
to repeated emailed and
phoned requests for comment.
Budgett’s advice for athletes who will compete in
the virus-laden waters?
“Washing your hands is an
extremely important part of
reducing the risk of infection
of any sort,” he said.
Water experts say such
safeguards aren’t enough
to protect athletes who get
drenched during competitions and have an almost certain chance of being infected
by the viruses entering their
mouths, nose, cuts on skin or
any opening of the body.
Brazilian authorities had
pledged that a major overhaul of the city’s waterways would be among the
Olympics’ most significant
legacies. But the stench of
raw sewage still greets
travelers arriving at Rio’s
international airport. Prime
beaches remain deserted
because the surf is thick with
putrid sludge, and periodic
die-offs leave the Olympic
lake littered with rotting fish.
More than 10,000 athletes
hailing from over 200 countries are expected to compete in the Aug. 5-21, 2016,
games. Nearly 1,400 of them
will come into contact with
waters contaminated by
rampant sewage pollution as
they sail in the Guanabara
Bay; swim off of Copacabana
Beach; and canoe and row
on the brackish waters of
the Rodrigo de Freitas Lake.
Starting next week, hundreds of athletes will take to
the waters in Olympic trial
events.
The AP’s tests over five
months found not one venue
fit for swimming or boating,
according to international
experts, who say it’s too late
for a cleanup.
“What you have there
is basically raw sewage,”
said John Griffith, a marine
biologist at the independent
Southern California Coastal
Water Research Project.
Griffith examined the protocols, methodology and
results of the AP tests. “It’s
all the water from the toilets and the showers and
whatever people put down
their sinks, all mixed up, and
it’s going out into the beach
waters.”
In the U.S., Griffith said,
areas with such levels of contamination “would be shut
down immediately.”
Many water and health
experts in the U.S. and
Europe are pushing regulatory agencies to include
viral testing in determining
water quality. But Leonardo
Daemon, coordinator of
water quality monitoring
for Rio state’s environmental
agency, said Brazilian regulations are based on bacteria
levels.
“What would be the standard that should be followed
for the quantity of virus?
Because the presence or
absence of virus in the water
... needs to have a standard, a
limit,” he said.
Spilki, the Brazilian virologist, carried out four rounds
of viral and bacterial water
testing for the AP, collecting samples at three Olympic
sites.
His testing looked for
three different types of
human adenovirus that are
typical “markers” of human
sewage in Brazil. In addition,
he tested for enteroviruses,
the most common cause of
upper respiratory tract infections in the young, which can
also lead to brain and heart
ailments. He also tested for
rotavirus, the main cause of
gastroenteritis globally.
The test results consistently found high counts of
active and infectious human
adenoviruses, which cause
explosive diarrhea, violent
vomiting, respiratory trouble
and other illnesses.
The concentrations of the
human adenoviruses were
roughly equivalent to that
seen in raw sewage.
IOC considers China a safer,
more dependable choice.
“We’ve heard the sentiment that if you do not
select Almaty, then you, the
IOC, can ‘sleep well at night’
for the next seven years,”
Massimov said. “I find that a
curious statement.”
Massimov said the IOC
has been “brave” in the past,
including by challenging
apartheid in South Africa,
going to Moscow for the
1980 Games at the height of
the Cold War and giving the
games to Beijing in 2008.
“In each case, you were
right,” he said. “So today, we
ask you to have faith in us,
to have faith in Kazakhstan.
Our request is not simply
based on blind faith. It is
based on facts, the facts that
you need to make an historic
decision — historic not only
for Kazakhstan, but for the
Olympic Movement as well.”
Beijing’s
presentation
played much less on emotion and sought mainly to
reinforce the pitch that China
can be counted on to deliver,
as it did for the IOC in 2008.
“Hosting the 2022 Olympic
Winter Games in Beijing
will encourage 300 million
Chinese, particularly the
country’s young people, to
participate in ice and snow
sports,” Vice Premier Liu
Yandong said.
Beijing cont. from Page B1
The vote came after final
45-minute presentations by
each bid city.
Almaty was bidding for
a second time, but this is
the first time it made it to
the vote after being cut in
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the preliminary stage for the
2014 Games.
“Almaty is not a risky
choice for 2022,” Massimov
told the IOC delegates.
“In fact, we are quite the
opposite. ... We are a golden
opportunity to prove that
smaller, advancing nations
can successfully host the
Winter Games.”
Almaty portrayed its bid as
one that goes back to the tradition of the Winter Games,
showing videos featuring
towering peaks and deep
snow and stressing that all
venues are within a 30-kilometer (18-mile) radius.
Massimov
directly
addressed the idea that the
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CINCINNATI (AP) —
Brandon Phillips hit a pair
of three-run homers and
drove in a career-high seven
runs, powering the Reds to a
victory that kept Pittsburgh
winless in Cincinnati this
season.
The Reds opened the
season with a three-game
sweep of the Pirates at
Great American Ball Park.
They improved to 4-0 on
Thursday night by taking
advantage of struggling A.J.
Burnett (8-5), sending the
Pirates to their most lopsided loss of the season.
Pittsburgh hadn’t allowed
so many runs since a 15-5
loss to Arizona on Aug. 17,
2013.
Marlon Byrd also hit a
three-run homer, and Jay
Bruce drove in three runs
with a sacrifice fly and a
double as the Reds improved
to 8-2 overall against the
Pirates this season.
Water cont. from Page B1
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Pilot News
www.thepilotnews.com
Pilot News • Friday, July 31, 2015
Opinion
LEFT: Photo of Plymouth
High School’s first band in
which Raymond Walburn
(seated front row right behind
drum) was a member. This
photo was taken in front of
the old Washington School.
Raymond might have been
in his junior year of high
school. Old Washington
School was situated at
Washington and Plum
Streets where Garden Court
West is now. Also pictured
are: first row: from left, Gus
Kuhn, William Hendricks,
Darmon Rhinehart, Glen
Butler, (unknown), Walburn
(circled); second row: Lloyd
Bowell, Dewey Shambaugh,
Lawrence Hensel, Fred
Kuhn, John Eckhart; standing left: R.A. Randall, superintendent; top row: Wick
Harris, Lester Zumbaugh,
Hubert Tanner, Harry Knott
and Reed Parker; standing
right: Earl McLaughlin, John
Southworth and Lloyd Hill.
Page B3
Indiana historic low voter
turnout and need for reform
INDIANAPOLIS — Indiana Republican Chairman Jeff
Cardwell journeyed to El Salvador last February as an
e l e c t i o n
observer and
was moved
when he saw
thousands of
folks spend
days
walking to polling
places, waiting
By
hours in line
B
rian Howey
to vote. When
the election
concluded the International Institute for Democratic and
Electoral Assistance reported just under 50 percent voted.
He returned to the Hoosier state, where in the 2014 elections
just 27.7 percent voted, one of the worst rates in the nation.
A New York Times analysis of that election using different
criterion rated Indiana 50th. “Everybody is concerned about
low voter turnout,” Cardwell said. “It’s not a political issue,
it’s an American issue. We have a great country and we need
to increase voter turnout.”
The concept of stewardship means leaving things in better
shape than you found them. For many in the current generation of political and policy leadership in Indiana, they’ve
witnessed a steep decline in voter participation. It is time
that Indiana’s public servants, from Gov. Mike Pence down
to the 150 members of the General Assembly, address our
democracy in atrophy.
What are the solutions?
Some would be easy. Our 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. voting day is
the shortest in the nation. Expanding it to 8 p.m. is a nobrainer and gives working folks a bigger window to vote.
Indiana shuts down its over registration 29 days before the
election, when people are just beginning to pay attention to
campaigns. States with Election Day or on-site registration
see turnouts 5 to 7 percent higher, according to a University
of Florida researcher. Eighteen-year-old voters could automatically be registered.
And then there are the maps. Of the 435 U.S. House seats,
56 are considered competitive, but not one is in Indiana. There
y ike oys
were 54 seats in the Indiana General Assembly that were
unopposed in 2014. And in 2012, while President Obama
received 44 percent of the vote in Indiana, Hoosiers elected
ilot ews onsultant
seven Republicans and two Democrats to the U.S. House, 40
Republicans to the Indiana Senate compared to 10 Democrats,
and 71 Republicans to the Indiana House, compared to 29
Democrats. As you can see, the percentages are distorted.
In 2011, House and Senate Republicans drew the new
Congressional and legislative maps adhering to benchmarks
advocated by former Secretary of State Todd Rokita. The
new districts were compact, kept communities of interest
together, for the most part respected county and school
district lines, and “nested” two House seats in one Senate
seat. But the maps were politically generated, and while the
Washington Post reported that Indiana and Nevada had the
least “gerrymandered” maps, the outcomes are still out of
whack. In the April Howey Politics Indiana Poll conducted
by Bellwether Research’s Christine Matthews, 32 percent
identified as Republican, 29 percent Democrats (those
numbers rose to 41 percent Republican with leaners and 36
percent Democrats with leaners), while 24 percent described
themselves as independent.
From the perspective of Tom Sugar, a former campaign
manager, communications director and chief of staff to
Gov./Sen. Evan Bayh, Indiana should opt for the Iowa system which uses an independent redistricting commission
that creates maps without the partisan data that Indiana
used in 2011, and Democrats used in 2001 and 1991 (both
parties have played this game).
“The outcomes are decided well in advance,” said Sugar.
“When you have unopposed candidates running, that
removes that choice. That removes the motivation that
ABOVE: This photo is pro- someone has to get involved in the process.”
moting the 1941 Paramount
Sugar has forged a “No Politics Plan” that is seeking an
picture “Louisiana Purchase” independent redistricting commission in Indiana. “We have
with Raymond Walburn, left, to structurally reform the system,” Sugar said.
Bob Hope, Donald McBride
Iowa moved to the independent commission in 1980
and Frank Albertson.
and it created a system of many more competitive races.
In 2012, President Obama received 52 percent of the Iowa
LEFT: A formal photo of vote, while Democrats controlled the Iowa Senate 26-24, and
Raymond Walburn.
Republicans controlled the Iowa House 53-47. The congressional delegation is more evenly split.
In a July 24 letter to State Rep. Jerry Torr and State Sen.
Brandt Hershman, who chair the Special Interim Study
Committee on Redistricting, Sugar wrote, “Iowa has consistently produced some of the most competitive elections in the
country and the partisan makeup of their legislature has closely mirrored the attitudes and values of Iowans. Politics has no
Walburn died in 1969 in New York City at the age of 81 fol- place in it. Under Iowa law, it is illegal to use voter identification, past political performance or even the home addresses of
lowing an extended illness.
incumbents when designing district boundaries.”
Well, there you have it folks — a famous stage and
Indiana Democratic Chairman John Zody charges that
movie actor from good old Plymouth, Indiana. I hope you legislative Republicans have purposely thwarted election
enjoyed this history trip down memory lane.
reforms and have tried to suppress turnout. “There are things
you could change, but unfortunately Republicans at the
Statehouse keep making worse our election laws,” Zody said.
HAVE A WONDERFUL WEEKEND and
Chairman Cardwell didn’t have an opinion on a redisMAY GOD BLESS
tricting commission, though Republican House Speaker
Brian Bosma is open to the idea and authored the study
POP QUIZ: OK folks here is an oldie but goody: What committee bill with House Democratic Leader Scott Pelath.
is the theme song of the Glenn Miller Band? If you get Senate Republicans, which have controlled that chamber for
this one — maybe you can clean out the spit valve on his 45 out of the last 47 years, have been resistant to change.
“All issues need to be discussed,” Cardwell said. “We need
trombone.
to look at all opportunities to engage participation.”
The answer to the last POP QUIZ. The question was In
Elections should be won on ideas and quality candidates,
the sitcom “The Andy Griffith Show” What was the name of not slanted, politically generated maps.
one of Barney’s girlfriends that was always talked about but
The columnist publishes at www.howeypolitics.com. Find him
never seen? ANSWER: Juanita. Oh, by golly, if you got
on
Twitter @hwypol.
this one you could win a free breakfast at Mayberry’s
“Blue Bird Diner”.
The howey
PoliTical
rePorT
A famous actor born in . . .
Plymouth, Indiana? Yup!
I
bet you don’t know who that would be — but if
you do know who it is — HOORAY for you.
You would have to be just a tad older than
(ahem) 85 to maybe remember seeing him in
silent films and then “talkies”. His name? Oh
yeah his name. Now let’s see u m m m now I’ve got it — it
is none other than the 5-foot-10 Raymond Walburn. Yup,
Raymond was born right here in good old Plymouth,
Indiana on Sept. 9, 1887. Wow! That’s more than a couple of
months ago. Nonetheless a famous actor WAS born in
Plymouth. What? You want to know more about Raymond
Walburn? OK here we go: YOU ASKED FOR IT! Oh, by the
way in doing the research of Raymond it didn’t give much
information about his father or for that matter not much
about his mother or his early life.
Raymond did attend old Washington school and he was
in the class of 1905 but doing the research didn’t show
where he graduated. The reason might be was he moved to
Oakland, Calif. with his actress mother when he was 18 and
he might have moved before graduation. Raymond was a
character actor and is one of those actors whose name may
have slipped through the memory cracks over time, but
whose valued contribution to ‘30s and ‘40s comedy films
certainly warrants a reminder to us — especially since he is
from Plymouth.
He began his stage debut in Oakland where he appeared
in Shakespeare’s Macbeth where he made a whopping $5
per week. He immediately established himself as a comic
actor when he inadvertently “flubbed” his line which read
“Fillet of a fenny snake” but when he gave his line it came
out as: “Fillet of a funny snake”. The crowd laughed and
laughed. A comic character actor was born
The following year, Raymond was acting in stock theater
in San Francisco, where the old adage “the show must go
on” was tested to the utmost when one of his performances
was interrupted by the 1906 earthquake. In 1911, (Ray
would have been 24 years old) he made his Broadway bow
in the play “Greyhound” which was a flop, as were
Raymond’s subsequent New York appearances over the
next five years. But with patience, perseverance and sweet
oil — he finally managed to latch onto a hit when he was
cast in the long-running “Come Out of the Kitchen”.
Raymond’s acting career was interrupted by World War
I when he served his country in the U.S. heavy artillery
corps from 1919 to 1922. Following his World War I service,
he hit his stride as a Broadway laugh getter and knee slapper starring in the original production of George Kelly’s
“The Show Off”.
In 1928, now 27 years old, he took a stab at the movies
and then in 1934 Walburn whose trademark portrayed the
bombastic, stuffed shirt, bulgy eyes, snub nose, arched
brows a trimmed mustache and lovable fraud characterizations, Raymond somewhat resembles the“Mr. Monopoly”
character. His acting ability became a favorite of the famous
directors Frank Capra and Preston Sturges he then became
a full-time actor. In 1949 he was given an opportunity to star
in Monogram’s movie series “Henry”. He was in movies
with stars like — Gary Cooper, Spencer Tracy, Katharine
Hepburn, Bing Crosby, Bob Hope, and Harold Lloyd.
Now 75 Raymond revived his Broadway career in 1962
when he was persuaded by producer Harold Prince to play
Erronious with Zero Mostel in “A Funny Thing Happened
On the Way to the Forum”.
RAYMOND WALBURN TRIVIA
While playing the juvenile lead in the play “Come Out of
the Kitchen” starring Ruth Chatterton, Walburn was called
to military duty. He joined the heavy artillery corps where
he trained at Fort Hamilton, N.Y. and, during his first leave,
returned to the theater to visit. The management, in a spurt
of patriotism, allowed him to play his old part in uniform
that night.
His first Broadway show “The Greyhound” (1912) was
deemed a huge hit but its run was cut short by the “Titanic”
disaster.
Raymond Walburn made 87 pictures in 21 years. Not
bad for a fellow from a Plymouth, Indiana is it?
Following the death of his first wife Gertrude (affectionately known as Trudy), he more or less retired, but found
happiness again when he married a family friend, Jane
Davis.
Shoe
My View FroM The
PiloT house
B M B
P n C
Well, that’s it for now ... so until next time ... this is my
view from the Pilot House.
Mike Boys is a lifelong Marshall County resident, former newspaper owner and former public officeholder. The dictionary defines
a Pilot House as “an enclosed area on the bridge of a ship, from
which the vessel is guided.” His views, opinions and news appear
every other Friday on the Pilot News Opinion page. To contact
Mr. Boys online, email [email protected].
Pilot News
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Page B4
Pilot News • Friday, July 31, 2015
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Fun & Advice
Pilot News • Friday, July 31, 2015
Page B5
Some extra nutritional support
Dustin
BY MICHAEL ROIZEN, M.D.,
AND MEHMET OZ, M.D.
When the Portland Thorns’
star player, Tobin Heath,
isn’t scoring goals for the
U.S. World Cup Champion
Women’s Soccer League
team, she and other women
soccer players across the U.S.
and Canada are trying to figure out how to supplement
their income. While playing
on the national team, you
earn a living wage, but back
on a local team, salaries run
between $6,000 and $30,000
per season.
Clearly, for WSL members,
supplemental income can
mean the difference between
being able to play the sport
they love or not. And the
same may be true for supple-
Blondie
mental vitamins. The little
extra nutritional support
they provide can keep you in
the game and help you stay
active and healthy in the face
of less than perfect diets.
According to the Cleveland
Clinic, four supplements are
key to keeping you in top
form, when taken in combination with ditching the
Five Food Felons (sugar- and
syrup-added foods, processed grains, and red and
processed meats) and while
opting for five to nine serv-
ings of produce daily, lean
protein, and 100 percent
whole grains.
Multivitamins with minerals. Multivites help compensate for nutrient-poor food,
and they help counter digestive woes that limit absorption of nutrients.
Omega-3 fatty acids. Both
algal oil and fish oil containing DHA (900 mg of DHA
is what you want daily) can
help protect your joints, eyes
and brain.
Vitamin D-3. Get your levels checked — in the meantime take 2,000 IU daily.
Probiotics. Look for probiotics containing a spore form
of bacillus coagulans GBI30, 6086 and/or lactobacillus
GG.
Chuckle of the day...
Why do they lock gas station bathrooms? Are they afraid someone will
clean them?
Boyfriend reveals that his ‘soul mate’ died years ago
DEAR ABBY: I have been close to my best
friend for three years. A year ago we decided
to date. We have a wonderful relationship
on almost every level. The only issue I have
is that he’s reluctant to open up about his
past. He is a very private person, and I
know it’s because
of his upbringing.
This has sparked
many
debates
between us that
have ended less
than pleasantly.
Recently,
he
did open up, and
when he did, he
dropped a bomb.
He asked me if I
believed in soul
mates, and I said
By Jeanne PhilliPs
yes. Then he told
me about how in
his past there was a girl he loved very much.
Sadly, she died. He said he sees this girl as his
soul mate, but he doesn’t think it lessens any
of his love for me.
This was the first time he opened up to me.
Now that it has sunk in, I’m hurt. I already
have self-confidence issues, and I worry that
since I am not her, I’m not enough. I can’t live
up to a dead woman.
I always thought I could change his closed
ways, but now, knowing the cause, I fear
there is nothing I can do to help him. Can
someone have two soul mates? — NOT HIS
SOUL MATE
DEAR NOT HIS SOUL MATE: Please do
not allow your self-confidence issues to ruin
Dear Abby
your relationship, because from where I sit,
it appears you’re looking for a way to push
this man away. So what if he had a romance
that ended tragically? She’s dead — gone!
And you’re very much alive. Stop competing
with her.
He doesn’t need your help; he needs someone who will accept him the way he is and
love him for it.
******
DEAR ABBY: I am the treasurer for my
high school’s upcoming 50th reunion. My
senior class was large — more than 550 students. My problem is, 280 students have not
responded to our monthly emails or newsletters.
It takes a lot of time and effort to put on a
reunion. We have been working on it for two
years. I realize some classmates hated their
senior year. Not all of us had a perfect time.
But would you remind people that a simple
yes or no works well?
Frankly, I don’t know why anyone would
say no, unless medical or financial issues
prevented them from attending. Can you
comment? — READY FOR THE REUNION
DEAR READY: Yes. There may be other
reasons why some graduates don’t wish to
attend their high school reunion. They live
far away, or there is no one they particularly
want to see.
Rather than work yourself into a lather, in
your next communication to the graduates,
specify that only those who have responded to the invitation can be accommodated
“because the committee is making arrangements for which they need an exact head
count.”
Subscribe
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County’s
Community
News Source
today!
Call
1-800-933-0356
Or
visit our office
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Downtown Plymouth
Couch theater — DVD previews
By Sam Struckhoff
DOG OF THE WEEK
“Hot Pursuit” (PG-13) — This no-laugh
riot gives us something original by taking the Bickering Buddies on the Run formula, heading it with two likable female
talents, and then somehow making it SO
ANNOYING. Cooper (Reese Witherspoon)
is an uptight Nervous Nelly cop placed
in charge of Daniella (Sofia Vergara), the
vivacious wife of a drug kingpin, who’s
set to testify at an upcoming big-deal court
case. Wacky circumstances make the Shrill
Couple the target of both cops and gangsters
as they try to get to Dallas alive.
Witherspoon is short and Vergara has a
funny accent. That’s the joke that gets run
into the ground over a very brief run-time.
When the movie isn’t polishing that bit of
comedy gold, there’s usually a great deal of
shrieking, tired cliches and humorless chatter to pass the time.
PICKS OF THE WEEK
“Match” (R) — Patrick Stewart runs the
screen as Tobi Powell, a Juilliard dance
instructor with a big personality layered
over a more complicated man. He’s asked
for an interview by Lisa (Carla Gugino),
who is writing her dissertation about the
1960s dance scene in New York. Lisa’s husband, Mike (Matthew Lillard), also comes
along from Seattle, and through his involvement it seems there might be some other
motive behind the interview. As the questions probe deeper into Tobi’s personal
past, conflict shakes the dynamic between
the three characters. While the movie has
some issues associated with stage-to-movie
adaptations, it’s nothing that overshadows
the performances.
****
“I Am Big Bird: The Caroll Spinney
Story” (PG) — For more than 45 years,
Carroll Spinney has been the life behind
the felt of some of the world’s favorite children’s characters. This documentary goes
into the career and mindset of the man who
continues to suit up and play Big Bird into
his 80s. The story touches on the early days
of Jim Henson and the Muppets, Spinney’s
rough early years and the personal doubts
that almost pushed him out when he was
just getting started. It shows how Spinney
is the soul inside Big Bird’s gentle, curious,
huggable nature. It’s a touching, well-made
tribute that gets you right in the childhood.
****
“Patch Town” (NR) — A worker in a
comedically bleak factory, Jon (Rob Ramsay)
looks like a Cabbage Patch doll grown to
uncomfortable adulthood — curly puff hair,
plump cheeks, baby-angel eyes with a splash
of innocent cheerfulness. Unfortunately, he
works on an assembly line, pulling goocovered babies out of cabbages, then sending them off to be given as living dolls. Jon
comes to the earth-shattering realization
that he’s a discarded doll, and decides to
escape the factory and seek out the girl who
was once his “Mommy,” but has now grown
up. This bizarre and unexpected darkish
comedy is well worth checking out.
TV RELEASES
“WWE: Very Best of Nitro Vol. 3”
“Haikyu!! Collection 2”
“Strawberry Shortcake: Berry Tales”
(c) 2015 King Features Synd., Inc.
Hints From Heloise and Sudoku every day in the Classifieds
50C01-1507-AD-10
IN THE MATTER OF
Page B6
THE ADOPTION OF
ABIGAIL ANN MONET
LEWIS, Female
SUMMONS BY
PUBLICATION
NOTICE TO JACOB
EUGENE BANKS
Jacob Eugene Banks,
who is the putative father of ABIGAIL ANN
MONET LEWIS, born
to Mary Elizabeth Gibson, on the 28th day of
July, 2008, is hereby
notified that a Petition
for Adoption of ABIGAL ANN MONET
LEWIS was filed in the
Office of the Clerk of
the Marshall Circuit
Court, Courthouse,
211 W. Madison St.,
Plymouth, Indiana, on
the 22 day of July,
2015. The cause is titled “In the Matter of
the Adoption of ABIGAL ANN MONET
LEWIS in Cause Number
50C01-1507-AD-10.
The whereabouts of
Jacob Eugene Banks
are presently unknown.
If J a c o b
Eugene
Banks seeks to contest the adoption of the
child, he must file a
Tree trimming, topping, stump
removal, firetowood,Contest
Motion
top soil, demolition, excavating/trucking.
Adoption in accorFully Insured.
dance with Indiana law
574-936-5818
in the above named
Court, not later than
thirty (30)
days after
116
116
the date of last publicaLegals
Legals
tion of this notice.
STATE OF INDIANA
If J a c o b
Eugene
MARSHALL COUNTY
Banks does not file a
SS:
Motion to Contest
IN THE MARSHALL
Adoption, the Court will
CIRCUIT COURT
hear and determine the
CAUSE
NO.
Petition for Adoption in
50C01-1507-AD-10
his absence.
IN THE MATTER OF
Said hearing on the
THE ADOPTION OF
Petition for Adoption
ABIGAIL ANN MONET
will occur not earlier
LEWIS, Female
than (30) days after the
SUMMONS BY
date of last publication
PUBLICATION
of this notice.
NOTICE TO JACOB
Dated at Plymouth, InEUGENE BANKS
diana, this 22 day of
Jacob Eugene Banks,
July, 2015.
who is the putative faDeborah VanDeMark,
ther of ABIGAIL ANN
Clerk
MONET LEWIS, born
Marshall Circuit Court
to Mary Elizabeth GibJames E. Easterday,
son, on the 28th day of
#6644-50
July, 2008, is hereby
EASTERDAY | HOUIN
notified that a Petition
LLP
for Adoption of ABI300 E Jefferson St.
GAL ANN MONET
PO BOX 188
LEWIS was filed in the
Plymouth, IN 46563
Office of the Clerk of
(574) 936-4100
July 24, 30, August 7, 2015
the Marshall Circuit
PN7861 hspaxlp
Court, Courthouse,
211 W. Madison St.,
165
Plymouth, Indiana, on
Business
the 22 day of July,
2015. The cause is tiOpportunities
tled “In the Matter of
the Adoption of ABIBUSINESS
FOR
GAL ANN MONET
SALE! Lakeside Auto
LEWIS in Cause NumSupply in Culver.
ber
Owner
retiring.
50C01-1507-AD-10.
574-842-3658
The whereabouts of
Jacob Eugene Banks
170
are presently unknown.
Help
Wanted
If J a c o b
Eugene
DAYS INN HOTEL
Banks seeks to conPLYMOUTH NEED
test the adoption of the
FRONT DESK CLERK
child, he must file a
APPLY IN PERSON,
Motion to Contest
2229 N. MICHIGAN
Adoption in accorST,
dance with Indiana law
in the above named
FURNITURE SALES
Court, not later than
position available:
thirty (30) days after
Part-time. Sales expethe date of last publicarience necessary. Bantion of this notice.
fitch Interiors, Call AlIf J a c o b
Eugene
lan (219)670-0549
Banks does not file a
FARM STORES
Motion SMITH
to Contest
Adoption,
the Court
will for a Service Shop
is needing
individual
hear and
determine
theto work on small engine
Repairman.
Able
Petitionrepairs,
for Adoption
in position 25-30 hours
part-time
his absence.
a week.
Said Apply
hearing
on the at Smith Farm Store
in person
Petition1917
for N.
Adoption
Michigan St, Plymouth IN.
will occur not earlier
than (30) days after the
date of last publication
of this notice.
Dated at Plymouth, Indiana, this 22 day of
July, 2015.
PRODUCTION
TECHNICIAN
Deborah
VanDeMark,
Clerk
DuPont Pioneer is seeking a Production
Marshall
Circuit Court
Technician
responsible for monitoring
James E. Easterday,
automated
equipment
for various processes.
#6644-50
Other duties
include: harvest; return &
EASTERDAY
| HOUIN
rework; conditioning; warehousing; and
LLP
300gathering
E Jefferson
St.
data.
PO BOX 188
A HighINSchool
Plymouth,
46563 diploma and one year
experience
(574)
936-4100or equivalent required. Must be
Classifieds
Pilot News • Friday, July 31, 2015
Classifieds
the pilot news group
Hooters
Tree Service
July 24, 30, August 7, 2015
willing
to
work in all weather conditions and
PN7861 hspaxlp
be able to lift up to 60lbs. Required to work
shift work and overtime hours including
weekends during seasonal peaks.
For more information and to apply,
search for job 6073 online:
www.pioneer.com/careers
EOE/AA Race, Sex, Religion, National Origin, Veteran, Disability
monday - friday 8:00am - 5:00pm est
PHONE - 574-936-3101 | FAX - 574-936-7491 | OFFICE - 214 N. Michigan St., Plymouth
www.thepilotnews.com
Place your ad online - 24 hours a day, 7 days a week
featured advertisers
TV ANTENNAS I NSTALLED
TROUBLE SHOOTING
TV TOWERS PAINTED
TV T OWERS REMOVED
574-721-9794
If you would like to be a featured advertiser, please call 936-3101.
170
Help Wanted
170
Help Wanted
170
Help Wanted
200 Apartments
for Rent
230 Office Space
/ Rent / Lease
325
Garage Sales
SANDBLASTER/LABORER FULL-TIME
Sandblaster. Must be
dependable/no experience. Starting pay
9$-10$ per hour. Apply
at SIC 555 Michigan St
Lakeville M-F 8-12:30
Graphic Artist
The Pilot News Group
is in serach of a part
time graphic artist.
Must has INDesign expereince. For more information contact Greg
at 574-936-3101 or
email
[email protected]
WENDY’S OF Plymouth is hiring day
shifts and closing positions for applicants 18
years or older. Open
availability required.
Apply in person or online at snagajob.com.
2BR APARTMENTS
Apply at Westgate Village. (574)936-4465
EHO
FOR RENT: Office
Space, 440 E. Jefferson Street, Plymouth.
Call (574)935-4190 for
appointment.
FREE 1ST MONTH
LAND SURVEYING
firm in Plymouth has
an opening for a Cad
Draftsman w/field experience. Competitive
pay scale w/benefits.
Reply to Box 352, PO
Box 220, Plymouth, IN
46563
PLYMOUTH
17247
TOMAHAWK
TRAIL
07-31-2015 8:00 AM
3:00 PM Multi-Family
Yard Sale Variety of
household deco. and
items, baby clothes,
hunting items 7/31/15
& 8/01/15 8am to 3pm
(574) 936-1636 [email protected]
DRIVER
TRAINEES
NEEDED NOW!
TESOL PART TIME
INSTRUCTOR Grace
College is searching
for a Part-time instructor for two evening TESOL courses starting
fall, 2015. Requires a
Master's Degree in TESOL, professional
and/or teaching experience in this field and a
commitment to the
mission and values of
an evangelical Christian institution. Faculty
Application and reference request forms
can be downloaded at
www.grace.edu
BAY VALLEY Foods
is Hiring! Seasonal
work could last through
October General labor
($8/hr), Machine ops &
stackers ($9.10), line
leader
($16/hr).
1st and 2nd shift Apply
1430 Western Ave,
Plymouth M-Th 8-11
am
EEOM/F/Vets/Disab
Circulation Assistant
Manager
The PIlot News Group
is looking for someone
to help in our Circulation Department 35-40
hours per week including some Saturdays.
Must have dependable
transportation. Looking
for someone who is
detailed
and likes
challenges.
Hourly
wage. If interested
please send resume to
[email protected] or stop by
and fill out application
214 N. Michigan
Street, Plymouth.
MILLER’S MERRY
Manor of Culver has a
Part
Time
Laundry/Housekeeping
position available. Interested
persons
should apply Monday
through Friday from
8am to 4pm; ask for
Marian Reinhold.
PART-TIME
FRONT-DESK, weekend/holidays and computer skills a must. Apply at Super 8.
PRE-SCHOOL
TEACHER and Assistant Teacher needed
for Marshall County
Head Start. Associate
Degree in Early Childhood Education preferred.
Successful
candidate will provide
leadership and guidance to develop appropriate classroom experience for young children. Please apply in
person or send resume to Teacher,
MSDC, 1901 Pidco Dr,
Plymouth, IN 46563.
No
phone
calls
please. EOE.
F AULKNER FABRICATING, INC.
is hiring
Experienced Steel Fabricators and
Production Welders.
We offer competitive wages and benefits
to qualified applicants.
Apply in person at:
Faulkner Fabricating, Inc.
4050 Lincoln Highway
Bourbon, IN 46504
now hiring!
If you want to work for a company
that appreciates what you do in a
loving, caring environment, then
you want to join our team. We
offer top competitive pay for the
following positions:
Full time Housekeeping/Laundry
Full time Evening shift RN
Full time Night shift LPN
Full time & Part Time CNAs Evening/Night Shift
Bus Driver (CDL certified)
175
Drivers Wanted
Learn to drive for
US XPRESS
Earn $850 per week!
No experience
needed! Be trained
and based locally!
US Xpress can
cover costs!
BREMEN, Lake of-the
Woods. 1&2BR
in
quiet neighborhood.
$115 to $125/weekly.
(269)240-7734
GARDEN VIEW Condos - 525 S. Michigan 1 bedroom with garage. Seniors only.
574-936-4487
MALLARD LAKE
APARTMENTS
Christmas in July
Receive One Month
Free
574-936-0004
1-800-882-7364
HIRING
EXPERIENCED truck drivers
with a Class A CDL.
New
equipment!
Home 3 nights per
week and on weekends, up to 42¢ per
mile, $20 drop. Safety
and recruiting bonuses
available. 2,800 miles
plus per week. Apply
in person at Oasis Lifestyle, 1400 Pidco
Drive, Plymouth
NOW HIRING drivers:
Regional work, home
every weekend and often during the week.
Great pay, retirement
plan, vacation pay, access to insurance
available. Dump experience a plus. Must
have 3 years experience and clean CDL-A.
(574)842-4743
200 Apartments
for Rent
NICE CLEAN Plymouth 1BR apartment
(all utilities included).
No smoking/pets. Call
574-952-3155
2 BR, 1 BR, Studios
FREE RENT Specials!
(574) 936-3496
www.valueproperties.net
PARKVIEW PLACE at
302 Novelty. Senior
independent living. 1
bedroom.
Call
574-936-4487
207
Duplex for Rent
KOONTZ-LAKE: 2-BR
Duplex, stove/fridge
furnished,
1-year
lease. Service animals
only. (574)586-7150
(574)279-1357
215 Mobile Homes
/ Lots / Rent
2BR TRAILER: Knox.
No pets/No Smoking.
Fenced yard. Refrigerator/stove provided.
(574) 772-5297
MULTIPLE OFFICE
SPACES AVAILABLE!
Walnut Street Center
Plymouth
(574)935-5418
No LEASE
245
Wanted to Rent
LOOKING TO RENT
Professional couple
seeking house or apt
to rent from Sept to
April. Have one dog.
Willing to pay additional deposit for allowing pet. Excellent references. (574) 298-0302
260 Mobile Homes
/ Lots / Sale
FOR
SALE/LAND
Contract 16x80 3-Bedroom mobile-home on
1 acre. Culver schools.
(574)242-9784.
265 Lots / Land
For Sale
LAKEFRONT:
2-ACRES,
wooded.
Plymouth. $275,000.
Lakefront, PO BOX
163, Plymouth, IN
46563
300
Pets & Supplies
FREE KITTENS to
good homes only. Litter
trained.
(574)334-0006
325
Garage Sales
PLYMOUTH:
2008 Felix Pl.,
July 31 and August 1,
8am-5pm. Household
items, clothes, and lots
more!
LOCAL EMPLOYER SEEKING
qualified materials manager for manufacturing environment. Successful
candidate will meet customer requirements by developing, implementing
and evaluating purchasing policies and procedures; negotiate contracts
for materials, evaluate materials and managing staff. Candidates to have
minimum of 5 years of experience in a related position.
Please submit your resume via email: [email protected]
Make money by
Making a difference.
When you donate blood plasma at Octapharma Plasma, you help
in the creation of life-changing medicines, while putting a little extra
money in your pocket.
New donors earn up to $250
for the first five donations.
Apply in person at Life Care Center of Rochester
827 W. 13th St Rochester, IN 46975
or call Monica Martin at 765-480-0542
2102 S. Michigan St., South Bend • 574.234.9568
octapharmaplasma.com
Must be 18-64 years of age & in good health • Have valid picture ID, proof of Social
Security number & current residence postmarked within 30 days
BCI Is Searching For A
CNC Maintenance Technician
When you join our team, here's what you can expect:
• Access to our Onsite, No Cash Wellness Center for Employees & Families
• Stable, Safe Working Environment • 401k Participation
Job Skills Required:
• Computer/electronic systems background
(DOC, Windows, AutoCad & Allen Bradley, Frauc, Mazaltol & Haas Controls)
• Basic knowledge of electrical, fluid power, DVAC, welding, & mechanical systems
With over 4 years without a lost time accident, BCI offers a safe stable
working environment. We encourage you to visit our website at
www.BremenCastings.com and complete an application today.
Hoosier Racing Tire Corp., is seeking Production Employees
for 2nd and 3rd shifts. Benefits include:
• Starting pay up to $15.40 • Shift incentives • Department incentives
• Regularly scheduled pay increases • 1-1/2 year pay up to $19.90
• 40-hour work week • Overtime available • Paid lunch .
• Excellent health, dental, vision, prescription, life, short-term and long-term
disability insurance • 401(k) Plan with company match, fully vested
• Paid holidays • Paid vacations • Paid time off for perfect attendance after
one month • Quality training program • Great discounts on Hoosier apparel
If you are interested in becoming part of our winning team, are motivated
and a quality minded person who has the ability to work safely in a clean,
smoke and drug free manufacturing environment, we invite you to apply in
person at:
HOOSIER RACING TIRE CORP.
2307 Pidco Drive , Plymouth, IN 46563
Visit www.hoosiertire.com for more company information
PLYMOUTH 247
EVERGREEN DR
07-30-2015 8:00 AM
4:00 PM Thurs &
Fri-Cultivator, Armoire,
Freezer, TV Ctr, Kids
John Deer Tractor,
Bratz & Barbie, BabyAlive, name brand
clothes, a LOT of
home decor, kid bikes,
DS games, many toys,
Angry Bird bdrm set,
Coach purse & more!
ARGOS, 115 North
Michigan Street (Purple Building), August
1-2, noon-6pm INDOOR FLEA MARKET Start your treasure hunt here! Something for everyone!
Great prices! Unique
items!
ARGOS: 15710 Michigan Road. SATURDAY
ONLY! 8am-? RAIN
OR SHINE Namebrand
clothes (Boys- 5-6 &
10-16. Girls-: 8-12 &
Women’s), futon, recliner, washer, gas
dryer, American Girl
Doll, knick-knacks,
TV’s, Longerber at low
prices and more!
BREMEN: 502 East
Maple Street, July
30-31 and August 1,
8am-5pm. Lots of fishing gear, decorating
items, clothes, shoes,
purses left over from
the Bremen Hospital
Auxiliary Used Purse
Sale
and
more!
POMEROY SALE
PLYMOUTH,
3035 N. 1200 E. (
*Corner of 9th (300n)
and Marshall/Starke
County line *1 mile
south of 30 (Donaldson) on Union Road
*Then right on 9th
Road (west) to county
line). Friday August 31
and Saturday September 1, 8am-6pm. Original art pieces, men’s,
ladies, and junior
clothes, children’s
chairs, Little Tyke
kitchen, tools, grinder
wheels, tackle-box,
poles, 60” projection
TV, 27” TV’s, kitchen
supplies, new omelet
maker, Comic books,
wolverine claws, etc.
misc. Large misc.
“MAKE OFFER” table.
Much more!
PLYMOUTH:
10560 Del-lo-me
Lane, July 30-31 &
August 1, 8am-4pm.
Antiques, furniture, gas
dryer, fishing equipment, collectibles, Hargrove pictures, garden
items, Toys, crafts,
canning jars, adult
clothing, tons of misc.
items!
PLYMOUTH:
1215 Solomon Ct,,
July 30-31 and August
1, 9am-? Large new
birdcage, lots of bicycles, books, tools,
kitchen wears, clothes,
New Pine adjustable
drafting table w/side table, and lots more!
PLYMOUTH: 444
Alexander Street,
Friday 7/31, 8am-5pm
&
Saturday
8/1,
8am-4pm
MOVING
SALE
Household
goods, miscellaneous
items, holiday items
and lots more!
Pilot News • Friday, July 31, 2015
HINTS FROM HELOISE
Water Safety for Kids
Dear Readers: It’s water
time for summertime! You
and yours may be swimming, playing, floating
and wading in a pool, lake,
river, ocean, water park or
pond. Water is inviting this
time of year, but can also
be dangerous in some instances. Please read through the following hints so
you or someone you love DOESN’T become a sad
statistic.
Statistically, a child under the age of 4
has a higher probability of dying by drowning because of an accident than any other unintentional
way.
--DO swim in pairs. DON’T let anyone
(especially children) swim alone.
--DO NOT leave children alone in or
around water. Ever! Even for 30 seconds!
--Teach children to swim. Heloise
Here: At a minimum, teach them to float on their
back. If they ever get into trouble, tell them float!
--DON’T check email, text or do other
distracting tasks while watching children! DO,
however, have a phone close in case of emergency.
--If a child is missing, look in the water
first! Don’t wait!
My thanks to The American Red
Cross, PoolSafely.gov and SafeKids.org for these
combined Safe Hints for Safe Swimming. I added
one or two of mine also. -- Heloise
TRAVEL HINT
Dear Heloise: This is regarding the
hint about buying postcards to use for a photo album. (Heloise here: To use as dividers in the al-
Classifieds
325
Garage Sales
bum.) While traveling, before taking pictures daily
or visiting a new place, I take a photo on my smartphone. I photograph a sign, building or some landmark that shows where we are, what city, country,
etc. When I review my photos or print them out, I
have a guide as to where or what we were doing.
-- Kay, sent via email
DONATE CARRIER
Dear Heloise: My parents’ cat died
of old age, and they didn’t want another cat right
away because they are moving. They didn’t know
what to do with the pet carrier. I called my veterinarian’s office to see if they could use it. They
gladly took it and said it’s nice to have extras when
a client doesn’t have one or needs to borrow one.
-- Bianca from California, via email
A purr-fect hint! Readers, if you have
carriers, beds, blankets, leashes, etc., that are no
longer needed, please check with an animal shelter, rescue group or vet’s office. They will probably take them. -- Heloise
NO CLEAN UP
Dear Heloise: I have a beard and when
I trim it, little hairs get all over the sink and counter. To help keep the bathroom cleaner, I lay a sheet
of newspaper on the counter and trim over that.
Just fold up the newspaper and throw it away. -Bill R. from Alaska, via email
DRYING RACK
Dear Heloise: We had screens replaced
on our house, and some were in pretty good shape.
I cleaned them up and use them around the house.
One way is as a drying rack for my sweaters and
clothes I hand wash. -- Katherine R., Ft. Worth
TX
(c)2015 by King Features Syndicate Inc.
RESIDENTIAL SUPPORT STAFF
Assisting disabled individuals in their home
environment. Must be able to work evenings,
nights, and/or weekends. High School diploma
or G.E.D. required. Current/valid Indiana Driver’s
license, good driving record and proof of auto
insurance a must. Ability to travel within the
county and occasionally out of county. Ability to
pass Drug/Alcohol, TB, First Aid, Criminal History
and CPR required. Benefits may be available.
Apply in person, no phone calls please. EOE
Marshall Starke Development Center
325
Garage Sales
325
Garage Sales
PLYMOUTH:
12510
Hillside
Drive (OakCrest Subdivision), July 31 &
August 1, 8am-2pm
LARGE
GARAGE
SALE Harley gear,
welder, exercise bike,
bar chairs, baby
clothes, tools, and lots
of misc. household
items!
PLYMOUTH:
12747 Peach Rd.,
July 30-31, 8am-?&
August
1,
8am-1pm.
LOCKWOOD
GARAGE
SALE Antique coffee
table, radio controlled
airplane kits, new craft
supplies, cast iron skillets,
Tupperware,
Pampered
Chef,
KaKadu Traders Australia Drover, old
books, new speakers,
stamping supplies, Tiara glassware, ice
spoon augers, rocking
horse, Christmas decor
and many items for
25¢
When you are looking for
a deal, be sure to check
your classifieds.
1901 Pidco Drive, Plymouth, IN
ATTENTION TRACTOR TRAILER DRIVERS
DRIVING INSTRUCTORS NEEDED!
Truck driver training group seeks Driving Instructors for its South Bend
facility. F/T & P/T available; Class A CDL with verifiable experience
required. Excellent pay & benefits; No overnight travel, Off on weekends!
Call 1-800-370-7364, fax (478) 994-0946 or email
[email protected]
REPUBLIC SERVICES IS SEEKING
a daytime route driver. The route run 5 days a week, Monday thru Friday,
some Saturdays required. Class B CDL is required with good driving record
and attendance record. Must be capable of lifting 35 pounds repeatedly.
We offer competitive pay, safety bonus, and benefits including:
• Medical, Dental, Life, Disability, and Vision Insurance
• Pension Plan
• Uniforms
Prior experience is a plus but not mandatory.
Apply Online at republicservices.com
We are an equal opportunity employer
M/F/D/V
CNC MACHINISTS, 2ND SHIFT
Culver Tool, located in Plymouth IN, is a major provider of implants for
the orthopedic industry. We have opportunities for CNC machinists on
2nd shift. Positions require a minimum of 1 year experience. Candidate
must have working knowledge of shop mathematics, good documentation
practices and interpersonal skills. Candidates must also be willing to
work overtime as needed. On the job training will be providing for
qualifying candidates.
Competitive pay based on experience and abilities. Group medical
insurance and 401k benefits provided along with a family oriented
work environment.
Please send Resume to [email protected]
or PO Box 970, Plymouth, IN 46563
Page B7
PLYMOUTH: 814
W Adams St. (behind Quick Clean off of
Jefferson), Friday &
Saturday, 8:30a,-?
TONS OF BACK TO
SCHOOL
NAME
BRAND CLOTHES:
Abercrombie, Hollister,
Silvers, Justice, Harley, etc., Household
items, shoes, designer
purses: Coach, Vera
Bradley,
Dooney,
thirty-one, etc. Don’t
miss this sale. Cash
only! NO LARGE
BILLS
frustrated!
Contact one of
these business
professionals
to help you.
PLYMOUTH:
TRINITY United
Methodist Church
Parking Lot (425 S.
Michigan, July 31,
8am-4pm and August
1st, 8am-noon. ALL
PROCEEDS GO TO
THE
DISAVED
AMERICAN VETERANS AUXIALLY TO
HELP VETERIANS
AND THEIR FAMILIES
Books, glassware, craft supplies
and lots more!
385
Food/Produce
ALL YOU can pick
Blueberries at Beech
Road Blueberry Farm!
Mon.-Sat., 7am-7pm.
Between Wyatt &
Wakarusa, S. on
Beech
Road.
(574)633-4583
390
Wanted to Buy
BUYING COIN
Collections, Silver
& Gold Items
(574)209-1001
WANTED: 3-4BDR
home. 0.75 acres or
more. 1-year lease
then pay-off. Lost
home due to disability
(574)274-0842
(574)784-2613
400
Automobiles
2007 CHEVROLET
TRAILBLAZER
$5,500 OBO GREAT
SUV, GREAT PERKS!
(574) 806-1347
440
Boats &
Accessories
WENONAH FISHERMAN 14ft Royalex Canoe, 58lbs.. Stored inside, great shape.
$400/OBO
(574)936-7622
NEWSPAPERS
Bringing
learning
to life.
NEED HELP
with a JOB!
Contact one of these
business professionals!
To subscribe
call
936-3101
Bargain
Finders
Where every item, every day is
50or less
$
155
Bargain Hunters
155
Bargain Hunters
155
Bargain Hunters
17 PAIRS of jeans,leggings, shorts- 3T girls
$17 574-952-6008
2 PACK-N-PLAYS one
w/bassinet $20 each
574-952-6008
DOLLS, ANTIQUE collectibles, and porcelain
$5-$35 574-546-5861
2 HIGH chairs $20
each 574-952-6008
48 LONG and short
sleeve shirts $48
574-952-6008
LAWNBOY $50 OBO
Self propelled, runs
good. (574)936-5214
Business & service Directory
498
Audio/Video
505
Carpets/Rugs
510
Cleaning Services
TV ANTENNAS I NSTALLED
Benefiel’s
CleanRite Cleaning Service
TROUBLE SHOOTING
TV TOWERS PAINTED
TV T OWERS REMOVED
574-721-9794
Carpet Cleaning Services
Residential & Commercial
Carpet & Upholstery Professional Cleaning
David Benefiel
Owner - Operator
574-780-2723
Plymouth
499
Body Repair
510
Cleaning Services
Patch N Paint
MARKLEY SERVICES
Tom & Debbie Green
We are here to help with all
your cleaning needs.
[email protected]
574-936-3255 • 574-952-2545
www.patchnpaint.co
16975 W. 10B Rd.
Plymouth
Servicing Since 1993
574-546-4583
580
Lawn/Garden
Lawn Mowing
Commercial and
Residential
Shrub Trimming
Mulching
Spring & Fall
Clean-ups
%ST s """ s #HAMBER -EMBER
Homes, Businesses,
Apts & Windows
)NSURED s "ONDED
574-586-9614
574-274-2424
BEST OF
Marshall
County
2015
1st
James Shoemaker, Owner
Place
Dawn Gorby-Verhaeghe - Owner
www.cleanritecleaning.com
574-952-8238
Angel’s Cleaning
Service
%0$- 2UBBER s !NY 3IZE
Construction Clean Up
Rental Properties
Homes | Offices | Apartments
Insured | Free Estimates
Lowest Prices
Call Angel at
574-249-8892
525
Contractors
CLASSIFIEDS WORK
PUT THEM TO
WORK FOR YOU!
530
Decks
DON’T MOVE, IMPROVE!
New construction, additions,
remodels, roofs & more!
(574) 300-9903
www.homeforceinc.com
525
Contractors
545
Excavating
EXCAVATING
SEPTIC PUMPING
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
s 3EWER $RAIN #LEANING
FREE $ELIVERY s (UGE )NVENTORY
42- %NTERPRISES s 3OUTH "END
(574) 246-1922 (574) 329-9294
590
Paving
629
Small Appliance Repair
Markley
Appliance
Repair
Servicing most
brands
574-546-4583
Certified Technician
650
Tree Services
Hooters
Tree Service
Tree trimming, topping, stump removal, fire wood,
top soil, demolition, excavating/trucking.
Fully Insured.
574-936-5818
Manns Paving & Seal Coating LLC
Jay Stone
14501 Lincoln Hwy.
Plymouth, IN 46563
www.stoneexcavating.com (574)
935-5456
565 Home
Improvement / Remodel
Livinghouse
Construction
2EMODELING s (OME )MPROVEMENT
!DDITIONS s (OME -AINTENANCE
'ENERAL #ARPENTRY 3ERVICES
574-­936-­1119
Residential and Commercial
$RIVEWAYS s &ARM ,ANES s ,OTS s #HIP 3EAL
0ARKING s !SPHALT -ILL 2EPAIR s !SPHALT 2EGRINDS
&REE %STIMATES s &ULLY )NSURED
www.mannspaving.com
Serving all of Northern Indiana
605
Roof/Siding/Gutter
Johnny’s Roofing
“Serving Marshall County since 1972!”
Shingle & Flat Roofs
Roof Repairs
28EXPERIENCE
YEARS
Tree & Stump Removal
Tree Trimming
FREE ESTIMATES
574-930-0576 574-930-0581
Classifieds... connecting
you to the customers you
574-892-5007
JL Home
want to reach. To find out
Improvements
Whether you are look- more about advertising in
This & That, Remodel & Build,
ing for a new career or
Decks & Fences, Power Washing &
just a part-time job, be your local classifieds, call
Hauling. “Why pay more?”
sure to check the clas- a local sales representa(574)936-4818 or
sifieds for the latest! tive at 936-3101.
(574)304-4743 *Insured*
Reach over 98,000 potential customers every week in the Community Classified Business & Service Directory for as little as
$115.00 a month. Call 574-936-3101 or 800-933-0356 to place your ad today!
Reading the newspaper is a great
way for students to
improve their reading skills as well
as their knowledge
of current events!
Spend a little now, save a lot later.
Local
Page B8
Pilot News • Friday, July 31, 2015
Community Calendar
Proudly presents in Elkhart, Indiana
Listing of area events
in many stores as well as gadget demos
and food samplings. Local restaurants will
stay open late with dinner specials — hand
dipped ice cream. The local “perennial garden” will stay open late with a drawing at
the gardens. Blood pressure checks, kids
finger printing, canine, balloon artist and
local D.J. are part of the event. There is also
the chance to be entered in a drawing for a
42-inch flat screen TV or an 8-inch tablet by
visiting participating businesses.
TODAY
• Plymouth Elks Lodge will be serving
Friday night specials from 5-8 p.m. Menu
is fish (all you can eat), chicken, baked
pork chop, jumbo shrimp, and prime rib.
Carryouts available by calling 574-935-5511.
• Walkerton Area Chamber of Commerce
is hosting “Wander Walkerton” from 4-7
p.m. Come and enjoy kids games, bounce
house, local stores open late with drawings
FRIDAY AUGUST 14, 2015 • 7:30 PM
Free Movies
Tickets
THE LERNER THEATRE • ELKHART, INDIANA
The Nut Job
On-line
www.foellingertheatre.org
By Phone
Foellinger
Theatre
2014
Wed June 15 9:00 pm
Surly, a curmudgeon, independent squirrel is banished from his
park and forced to survive in the city. Lucky for him, he stumbles
on the one thing that may be able to save his life, and the rest of
park community, as they gear up for winter. PG
(260) 427-6000
The Pilot News is offering a special advertising package if
you place your garage sale ad to run on August 6, 7 & 8
(260) 427-6715
Box office is open from 6:00-10:00 p.m. on concert days. Tickets
may be purchased in person or by phone.
705 E. State Blvd.
Fort Wayne, IN 46805
On sale now at the Lerner Theatre Box Office, charge by phone 574/293-4469 or
In Person
Frozen online
Wed Julywww.thelerner.com,
2 9:00 pm
Orbit Music / Mishawaka,
Fort Wayne Parks & Recreation Department
705 E. State Blvd., Fort Wayne, IN
Sisters Elsa and Anna enjoy an idyllic life in the enchanted
Monday-Friday, 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
Audio
/ State Road 933 North-South Bend,
kingdom
ruled by their parents until Elsa’sSpecialists
magical ability to create ice and snow around her proves a threat to those she loves.
Foellinger Theatre
Emerging for her own coronation after several years
of selfKarma
Records / Plymouth & Warsaw
3411 Sherman Blvd., Fort Wayne, IN
imposed isolation, Elsa flees in distress when her uncontrollable
powers transform the kingdom into a frozen realm. PG
For $25 you get...
H 35 words to describe your sale
H Placement on our garage sale map on Thursday (Plymouth ads only)
H Ad
place on our website
Free
Movies
H 3 days (August 6, 7 & 8) in the Pilot News under garage sales
Proudly
Monsters
University
Wed July 9 9:00 pmpresents in Fort Wayne, Indiana
2015 SUMMER CONCERT SERIES!
• FORT WAYNE, INDIANA
CLINT
BLACK
Tickets
Country Music Legend!
On-line
www.foellingertheatre.org
Fort Wayne Parks & Recreation Department
705 E. State Blvd., Fort Wayne, IN
Monday-Friday, 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
FRIDAY AUGUST 28, 2015 • 7:30 PM
zz
TOP
life into one of warmth and laughter. G
DON
McLEAN
Wed July 30 9:00 pm
An ordinary LEGO mini-figure, mistakenly thought to be the
extraordinary Master-Builder, is recruited to join a quest to stop
an evil LEGO tyrant from gluing the universe together. PG
Despicable Me 2
The 2014 concert series at Foellinger Theatre was made possible
with the support of the Lincoln Financial Foundation as well as the
individual concert sponsors listed below.
Wed August 6 9:00 pm
Wed August 13 9:00 pm
Join us for the 75th anniversary of this film’s Hollywood debut on
August 15, 1939. Kansas girl Dorothy Gale and her dog, Toto,
are whisked by a tornado into the magical land of Oz where
Dorothy joins the Tin Man, the Scarecrow, and the Cowardly Lion
on an adventure down the Yellow Brick Road to persuade the
Wizard to help her find her way home. G
Parks & Recreation
BUS
(260) 427-6000
Monsters University
July 2
9:00 pm
Wed
July 9
9:00 pm
Take a trip back in time to when star Monsters, Inc. employees Mike and Sulley were just two promising young students at
Monsters University in this frightfully fun Disney/Pixar prequel.
When their heated competition to be the most fearsome in their
class gets out of hand the pair find themselves ejected from the
prestigious Scare Program. G
Saving Mr. Banks
Wed
July 16
9:00 pm
Tom Hanks and Emma Thompson bring to life the untold true
story about the origins of one of the most treasured Disney classics of all time: Mary Poppins. When author P.L. Travers reluctantly agrees to let Walt Disney film her classic children’s novel,
she clashes with everyone from the songwriting Sherman brothers
to Disney himself. PG-13
Mary Poppins
Wed
July 23
9:00 pm
This Disney classic tells the tale of a nanny who alights on the
dysfunctional Banks family and transforms their fractured home
life into one of warmth and laughter. G
The Lego Movie
Wed
July 30
9:00 pm
An ordinary LEGO mini-figure, mistakenly thought to be the
extraordinary Master-Builder, is recruited to join a quest to stop
an evil LEGO tyrant from gluing the universe together. PG
Despicable Me 2
Wed
August 6
9:00 pm
In this sequel to the wildly successful 2010 animated picture,
Gru the ex-scheming evildoer-turned-parental figure, is recruited
by the Anti-Villain League to help deal with a powerful new super
criminal. PG
The Wizard of Oz
www.foellingertheatre.org
Box Office
(260) 427-6715
Wed
Sisters Elsa and Anna enjoy an idyllic life in the enchanted
kingdom ruled by their parents until Elsa’s magical ability to create ice and snow around her proves a threat to those she loves.
Emerging for her own coronation after several years of selfimposed isolation, Elsa flees in distress when her uncontrollable
powers transform the kingdom into a frozen realm. PG
________ ________ ________ ________ ________ ________ ________
________ ________ ________ ________ ________ ________ ________
________ ________ ________ ________ ________ ________ ________
________ ________ ________ ________ ________ ________ ________
________ ________ ________ ________ ________ ________ ________
Name: _______________________________________________________
Address: ______________________________________________________
City/State/Zip Code: ______________________________________________
Phone Number: _________________________________________________
Karma Records / Plymouth & Warsaw Charge by
phone 260/427-6000 or online www.foellingertheatre.org
Free movies sponsored by
WOODEN NICKEL RECORDS
ON
SA LE
NO W !
9:00 pm
$25 NATIONAL GARAGE SALE DAY PACKAGE
aiting . . .
w
n
e
e
b
e
v
’
u
Yo er SEPTEMBER
FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 4 • 7 30 PM SUNDAY
27, 2015 • 7:30 PM
like this!
m
m
u
s
a
r
o
f
On sale now at Fort Wayne Parks Office, all 3 Wooden Nickel Records locations,
In this sequel to the wildly successful 2010 animated picture,
Gru the ex-scheming evildoer-turned-parental figure, is recruited
by the Anti-Vil ain League to help deal with a powerful new super
criminal. PG
The Wizard of Oz
Frozen
Concerts in shaded background are reserved seating only
All other ticketed and free concerts
are open seating. We accept Visa, MasterCard and Discover.
“The little ol’ band
from bleacher
Texas!”
(including
seats).
“American Pie”
June 15
Fill out coupon below or come in and place your ad with Stephanie.
214 N. Michigan St., Plymouth, IN 46563
574-936-3101
Foellinger Theatre
3411 Sherman Blvd., Fort Wayne, IN
(260) 427-6715
Box office is open from 6:00-10:00 p.m. on concert days. Tickets
may be purchased in person or by phone.
This Disney classic tells the tale of a nanny who alights on the
SUNDAY AUGUST
2, 2015 • 7:30 PM
dysfunctional Banks family and transforms their fractured home
Wed
Surly, a curmudgeon, independent squirrel is banished from his
park and forced to survive in the city. Lucky for him, he stumbles
on the one thing that may be able to save his life, and the rest of
park community, as they gear up for winter. PG
(260) 427-6000
In Person
THE TEMPTATIONS
Mary Poppins
Wed July 23 9:00 pm
The Lego Movie
The Nut Job
By Phone
705 E. State Blvd.
Fort Wayne, IN 46805
Take a trip back in time to when star Monsters, Inc. employees Mike and Sulley were just two promising young students at
Concerts in shaded background are reserved seating only
FOELLINGER
Monsters University in this frightfully fun Disney/Pixar prequelTHEATRE
.
(including bleacher seats).
All other ticketed and free concerts
When their heated competition to be the most fearsome in their
are open seating. We accept Visa, MasterCard and Discover.
class gets out of hand the pair find themselves ejected from the
HIS
VINTAGE
prestigious Scare Program. G
The 2014Tconcert
series at Foel!linger Theatre was made possible
Y
CAR
NofDtheA
witS
h theU
support
Lincoln Financial Foundation as well as the
Saving Mr. Banks
Wed July 16 9:00 pm
DISPLAY!
individual concert sponsors listed below.
Tom Hanks and Emma Thompson bring to life the untold true
story about the origins of one of the most treasured Disney classics of all time: Mary Poppins. When author P.L. Travers reluctantly agrees to let Walt Disney film her classic children’s novel,
she clashes with everyone from the songwriting Sherman brothers
WITH SPECIAL GUEST
to Disney himself. PG-13
Wed
August 13 9:00 pm
Join us for the 75th anniversary of this film’s Hollywood debut on
August 15, 1939. Kansas girl Dorothy Gale and her dog, Toto,
are whisked by a tornado into the magical land of Oz where
Dorothy joins the Tin Man, the Scarecrow, and the Cowardly Lion
on an adventure down the Yellow Brick Road to persuade the
Wizard to help her find her way home. G
TRIP
FROM SOUTH BEND & FORT WAYNE
to DETROIT, MICHIGAN!
TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 8, 2015
FORD FIELD, DETROIT MICHIGAN
Free movies sponsored by
Ads must be
pre-paid
Bus trip packages on sale now at
Orbit Music/Mishawaka
and
Wooden Nickel Records/Fort Wayne
Deadline:
Tuesdays at
Noon
DISCOVER JEFFERSONInSTREET
Plymouth
Find a world of local services, shopping & eateries from
BODY
SHOP
Brockey Insurance
Agency
Larry E. Brockey II, Agent
Complete Auto Body & Frame • Repairs and Painting
Auto Glass Replacement & Repairs
Auto • Home • Business • Life
Cell: 574-933-1100
Serving the community since 1956.
www.BrockeyInsurance.com • [email protected]
CULVER
624 E. Lake Shore Dr.
Culver Office: 574-842-2388
FREE ESTIMATES
FENDER WORK - WELDING - FIBERGLASS - FOREIGN & DOMESTIC
574-540-2155
www.pnpawnshop.com
1842 W. Jefferson Street
Plymouth, IN 46563
Always Buying Gold, Silver, Electronics, Coins, Tools & Much More
Music Store • Coin Shop • Knife Dealer • Game Store • Jewelry Store
Private Appointments Available • Fast Cash Loans & Great Deals!
Store Hours
Monday-Friday 9-6 • Saturday 10-3 • Closed Sunday
We can get you out
and on the road!
We now offer
rentals while your
vehicle is being
repaired.
Vinnie Carnegie
CARS
VANS
TRUCKS
SUVS
PLYMOUTH
1300 W Jefferson
Plymouth Office: 574-355-3335
Small, Medium & Heavy
Duty Wreckers
HEAVY DUTY RECOVERY
PRICED RIGHT!
Have a look at 1601 W. Jefferson
935-4900
Jump Start • Lock Outs • Tire Changes • Tractor and Trailer Repair
Pest Management Professionals
1839 W. Jefferson St., Plymouth
574-936-7879
Jamaica Me Tan
and
Jamaica Artistic Salon and Spa
FINANCING
AVAILABLE
35 YEARS
IN BUSINESS
1230 Lincoln Hwy. East, Plymouth
574-936-8094 Fax: 574-936-1558
WWW.LINCOLNWAYAUTO.COM
Back to School
Special
1/2 price tans
thru August 31
Go back in style
with a fresh cut
and color from
our salon!
1000 W. Jefferson St., Plymouth • 936-1480
14717 Lincoln Hwy. • Plymouth, IN 46563
574-936-9484 • 1-800-905-2004
1604 West Jefferson St., Plymouth
574-936-2780
Doug Feece, Owner
Carnegie Towing
& Emergency Road Service
BURT’S
East to West!
865 E. Jefferson St., Plymouth
574-936-4081