Illinois `hero` ofcer sought hit man to conceal thefts
Transcription
Illinois `hero` ofcer sought hit man to conceal thefts
Below the fold Honoring Vietnam veterans Ernst resolution passes Senate 3A Iowa seeks to get back on top THE HAWK EYE Mostly sunny 38° 51° details, 8B BURLINGTON, IOWA FRIDAY NOVEMBER 6, 2015 Run. Hide. Fight. 1B 179th year — No. 120 75¢ Illinois ‘hero’ officer sought hit man to conceal thefts By DON BABWIN Associated Press John Lovretta/The Hawk Eye Under the watchful eyes of Des Moines County Sheriff’s Lt. Clint Williams, Des Moines County Sheriff Deputy Brad Siegfried, portraying an “active shooter,” makes his way through the basement of the Des Moines County Courthouse during a “Run Hide Fight” training exercise led by Des Moines County Chief Deputy Sheriff Jeff White Thursday at the Des Moines County Courthouse. The scenario was one active shooter, armed with an AR-15 and a .22 pistol shooting rubber pellets. Single-shooter enactment teaches 100 participants to be active, not passive. By KATHLEEN SLOAN [email protected] It wasn’t Halloween, making the mask a likely leftover from the recent holiday, but the AR-15 rifle the actor-shooter held was definitely scarier. The Des Moines County Courthouse shut down at 3:30 p.m. so about 100 employees and some visitors, including state probation officers and local lawyers, could receive “Run Hide Fight” training. The training, created by the city of Houston with Department of Homeland Security guidelines and endorsed by that federal department, seeks to help everyday people respond actively to situations in which an armed assailant enters a public space or private business. It teaches trainees three ways to react to shooters entering a workplace: running, hiding and fighting back. The preferable option is to evacuate the premises immediately and call 911 if there’s John Lovretta/The Hawk Eye a clear path to escape the perpetrator. If not, the next option is to hide in the safest place Anika McVey with the Des Moines County Courthouse Treasurer’s office reaches for possible, making sure to do so quickly and a “weapon” before taking part in “Run Hide Fight” training for Des Moines County Courthouse employees and some visitors, Thursday at the courthouse in Burlington. The quietly to avoid drawing attention. If neither option is available, the last resort scenario was one active shooter, armed with an AR-15 and a .22 pistol shooting rubber See Training on page 4A pellets. Ernst resolution to limit Environmental Protection Agency power passes Senate By ELIZABETH MEYER [email protected] Joni Ernst scored a victory in the Senate Wednesday to limit the powers of the Environmental Protection Agency. The Republican U.S. senator from Iowa introduced the resolution in September to eliminate the expanded Waters of the U.S. — or WOTUS — rule put in place by the Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Ernst to limit pollution in small waterways and wetlands. The resolution passed, 53-44, but still needs approval from the House of Representatives, then must be signed by President Barack Obama, who has threatened a veto. Many farmers, manufacturers and small business owners have criticized the rule arguing the proposed measures could infringe on their land rights and impose fees on conservation efforts. Iowa’s Oldest Newspaper 26 pages, 3 sections FOX LAKE, Ill. — Months before an Illinois police officer staged his suicide to make it seem like he died in the line of duty, subjecting his community to an expensive and fruitless manhunt, he apparently sought a hit man to kill a village administrator he feared would expose him as a thief, a detective told the Associated Press Thursday. Det. Chris Covelli said Lt. Charles Joseph Gliniewicz sent a text in April asking a woman to set up a meeting with a “high-ranking gang member to put a hit on the village manager.” Gliniewicz sent another message in May saying he had thought of “planting things,” which made more sense after investigators found small packages of cocaine in Gliniewicz’s desk after he died, Covelli said. Gliniewicz The drugs were “not linked to any case that we could find,” raising the possibility the lieutenant sought to frame the manager, Anne Marrin, as a drug criminal before she could expose him as an embezzler, the detective said. “We never found any explanation why those drugs were in his desk at the police station,” Covelli said. Investigators also interviewed the gang member and found no evidence the gang member and Gliniewicz ever talked, Covelli said. Gliniewicz sent the texts after Marrin, the village’s first professional administrator, began auditing Fox Lake’s finances, including the Police Explorers program authorities now say the lieutenant had been stealing from for seven years. Marrin told reporters Thursday she believed all of her dealings with Gliniewicz were cordial and never had any sense he was angry with her. She said she didn’t learn about the plots against her until after Gliniewicz’s death. “It’s very unsettling. My concern is my family. It’s quite unbelievable and almost surreal,” she said, adding police have assured her she is safe. Often called “G.I. Joe,” Gliniewicz was a respected figure in the bedroom community of 10,000 people 50 miles north of Chicago. His death Sept. 1, moments after he radioed he was chasing three suspicious men, prompted an intense manhunt involving hundreds of officers and raised fears of cop-killers on the loose. Two months later, authorities announced he in fact killed himself to cover his crimes. Now authorities also are investigating his wife, Melodie, and son, D.J., an official said Thursday. Melodie Gliniewicz helped her husband run the Fox Lake Police Explorer Post, which put young people interested in law enforcement careers through sophisticated training exercises. In a newspaper interview weeks ago, D.J. Gliniewicz, an Army soldier in his 20s, angrily dismissed suggestions his father took his own life. The official, who was briefed on the investigation, spoke with the AP on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the investigation publicly. A second official who was briefed on the investigation told the AP Melodie and D.J. Gliniewicz were recipients of a separate set of incriminating text messages from the lieutenant investigators released Wednesday when they announced the staged suicide. The official also spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the investigation publicly. Business City & Region 7A 3A “The Senate decided to act because it is evident that the EPA did not seriously consider the comments and perspective from those who this rule will directly impact,” Ernst said Thursday during a conference call with Iowa media. “The heart of this debate is how much authority the federal government and unelected bureaucrats should have to regulate what is done on private land,” she continued. “According to an analysis by the Iowa Farm Bureau, this expanded and ambiguous rule would give the EPA the authority to regulate water on 97 percent of the land in Iowa.” Ernst stressed while she acknowledges the EPA has a role to play in certain regulatory aspects, the expanded WOTUS rule would overreach to the point it “threatens the livelihoods of rural communities and middle-class Americans. “Simply put,” Ernst said, “how can these industries flourish when under this rule they will be faced with excessive permitting requirements that will delay future projects and conservation efforts? They can’t.” Sen. Chuck Grassley joined his fellow See Ernst on page 4A Classifieds Corrections 4C 2A Currents Dear Abby 1C 9C See Officer on page 4A Defense bill OK’d by House blocks Obama from closing Guantanamo By DEB RIECHMANN Associated Press WASHINGTON — The House overwhelmingly backed a $607 billion defense bill that would bar President Barack Obama from moving Guantanamo Bay detainees to U.S. prisons, setting up a showdown with Congress over his 2008 campaign pledge to close the Cuban facility. The long-running dispute heated up on Capitol Hill Thursday just hours after the House passed the bill, 370-58, and sent it to the Senate, which plans a vote early next week. Three Republican senators from Kansas, Colorado and South Carolina — states where the administration has explored housing Guantanamo terror suspects — held a news conference to make it clear they will fight to prevent moving them to U.S. soil. Closing the prison was a priority of Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign, and he promised during his first days in office he eventually would shutter Brennan Linsley/Associated Press In this March 30, 2010, file photo, reviewed by the U.S. military, a U.S. trooper stands in the turret of a vehicle with a machine gun, left, as a guard looks out from a tower at the detention facility of Guantanamo Bay U.S. Naval Base in Cuba. The U.S. House of Representatives Thursday overwhelmingly passed a revised $607 billion defense policy bill that restricts President Barack Obama’s efforts to close the military prison at See Defense on page 4A Guantanamo Bay. Deaths Editorial 7B 6A Happenings Iowa & Illinois 7C 6B Sports TV listings 1B 8C Call 1-800-397-1708 for home delivery BURLINGTON, IOWA Friday • November 6, 2015 Winners Lottery drawings for Thursday, Nov. 5, 2015 Iowa Midday games Pick 3: 6-6-9 Pick 4: 8-2-1-2 All or Nothing: 3-6-7-9-11-13-14-17-18-2021-22 Evening games Pick 3: 2-7-8 Pick 4: 8-0-3-8 All or Nothing: 2-3-6-7-8-10-12-14-19-2021-23 llinois Midday games Pick 3: 1-6-1 | Fireball: 9 Pick 4: 2-3-4-8 | Fireball: 9 Lucky Day: 1-6-18-27-35 Evening games Pick 3: 7-0-2 | Fireball: 1 Pick 4: 0-8-5-9 | Fireball: 8 Lucky Day: 7-12-20-31-36 Lotto: 7-15-25-34-46-49 | Extra shot: 11 Missouri Midday games Pick 3: 3-4-0 Pick 4: 6-1-6-6 Evening games Pick 3: 5-0-6 Pick 4: 6-0-5-7 ShowMe Cash: 2-5-8-23-39 Lucky for Life: 3-19-30-41-44 | LB: 15 Corrections & clarifications The Hawk Eye welcomes reader participation in its effort to provide accurate news reports. Readers may bring errors to the newspaper’s attention by calling (319) 754-8461 and asking for Dale Alison, the managing editor. • A resolution the Burlington City Council passed this week promised to limit funding from the successful bond issue referendum to no more than $2.2 million for the new police department purchase and remodel project. The cost of the project remains $5.250 million ($1.2 million to buy US Bank and $4.05 million to renovate and equip it). An editorial Thursday inferred the cost of the project would be limited to $2.2 million. Flint Bottom Road closing Monday for culvert work Flint Bottom Road, onefourth of a mile east of the Kirkendall Road intersection, will be closed to through traffic for culvert work from 8:30 a.m. Monday, to 3 p.m. Tuesday. Your right to know These legal notices can be found today in the Classified section of The Hawk Eye. • Burlington School District • Des Moines County Auditor (USPS 079-960) Issued since 1837 by the Burlington Hawk-Eye Co. Iowa’s Oldest Newspaper 800 S. Main St., P.O. Box 10 Burlington, Iowa 52601-0010 Telephone: (319) 754-8461 or 1-800-397-1708 Fax: (319) 754-6824 Online: thehawkeye.com Missing your paper? If you do not receive your home-delivered copy of The Hawk Eye by 6:30 a.m. on weekdays or 7:30 a.m. weekends and holidays, please call before noon for redelivery. Out-of-town or rural customers will receive either credit or the paper the following day. Your choice. Notify us either by phone or email: • Burlington/West Burlington, 754-8462 • Outside Burlington, 1-800-397-1708 • Email, [email protected] Want to subscribe? • Home delivery is $17.30 per month. • Motor route, mail and Internet rates are available upon request. • Ask about our EZ pay system. Subscription renewal policy: You are in control! If you choose not to use The Hawk Eye’s automatic debit service, your subscription still can be renewed easily. We’ll send you a notice about renewal prior your subscription’s expiration. Respond promptly and your delivery should not be interrupted. If you have signed up for the automatic debit service, The Hawk Eye will renew your subscription automatically on the anniversary of your original subscription. We will send a reminder to the address provided when you started your service, letting you know we will bill your credit or debit card and renew your subscription per your purchase. We will never charge your card/debit card without notifying you first. Member: Verified Audit Circulation Postmaster: Address changes should be sent to The Hawk Eye, P.O. Box 10, Burlington, Iowa 52601-0010. Periodicals postage paid at Burlington, Iowa Printed with soy ink on partially recycled paper THE HAWK EYE !" BURLINGTON, IOWA www.thehawkeye.com CITY & REGION Fairfield man is Iowa Teacher of the Year “Scott Slechta exemplifies the great teaching that is taking place in many Iowa classrooms.” By JOEY AGUIRRE [email protected] FAIRFIELD — A 35-year veteran teacher was named 2016 Iowa Teacher of the Year by Gov. Terry Branstad Wednesday at Fairfield High School. Scott Slechta, 57, has taught English-language arts at Fairfield High School since 1984. “Great teaching is the single most important influence on learning inside schools,” Branstad said. “Scott Slechta exemplifies the great teaching that is taking place in many Iowa classrooms. I am thrilled that he has taken on the role of a mentor specialist in Fairfield as part of Iowa’s new teacher leadership system, which is helping to strengthen instruction across the state.” Slechta is known for challenging students to learn and to push their own boundaries. Perhaps even more important is Slechta challenges himself — after every single lesson — to be a better teacher. He and his wife, Tricia, live in Fairfield and have four children: Margaret Way, Emily, Claire and Price. “Scott Slechta’s commitment to innovation and lifelong learning are an inspiration,” Lt. Gov. Kim Reynolds said. “His tireless focus on how to be a more effective teacher has served his students extraordinarily well and is a model for the new teacher leadership system rolling out across Iowa.” Iowa Department of Education director Ryan Wise echoed those statements. “Great teachers have a monumental impact on their students and challenge their colleagues to keep learning and growing,” Wise said. “The leadership of Scott Slechta and many other Gov. Terry Branstad Iowa Department of Education The Iowa Department of Education’s 2016 Teacher of the Year, Scott Slechta, has a track record of boosting students’ perception of English Language Arts at Fairfield High School. In addition to his English Language Arts classes, he also is a teacher mentor specialist and drama coach. outstanding educators will help guide our state as we work to give all students an excellent education.” The Iowa Teacher of the Year award was established in 1958. The annual program is sponsored by the Iowa Department of Education through an appropriation from the Iowa Legislature. Honorees serve as ambassadors to education and act as liaisons to schools, higher education and organizations across the state. Slechta grew up on an Iowa farm and can recall by name each teacher going back to first grade who inspired him to pursue teaching. In his Teacher of the Year application, Slechta credited other teachers for contributing to his understanding of teaching and learning but said his students have been his main influence. “I work hard on days when teaching isn’t easy. I try even harder on days that are really difficult,” Slechta wrote in his application. “All in all, I hope to teach students curriculum-based knowledge as well as the qualities of persistence and perseverance, dedication and determination, and initiative and wisdom in order to accomplish great things.” Tracy Andermann, an Iowa State University freshman who wrote a letter of support for Slechta during her senior year at Fairfield High School, said Slechta exemplifies the “teaching trifecta:” challenging, creative and caring. “I’ve heard my fellow classmates say that while they didn’t like English, they took Mr. Slechta’s classes because they heard how much he prepares them for the future,” Andermann wrote. “Also, since he is such a good teacher, my peers are rushing to squeeze in as many of his classes as possible into their schedules. They know what a huge opportunity his classes provide.” Slechta likens teaching to everything else that evolves. For instance, Fairfield High School’s aging art-deco structure recently went through a renovation. Effective teach- ing requires the same regular updates. “As a teacher, I undergo deconstruction and rebuilding in what I do and how I do it,” he said. “I create my own blueprint for ‘remodeling and renovation’ that will make me be a better teacher. You need to look at your past to know where you are and where you want to go.” In addition to teaching and directing plays, Slechta is active in his community — last year, he received Fairfield’s Citizen of the Year award for his volunteer services. He enjoys swimming and participating in 5K runs, where his goal is “always to finish, but my second goal is to finish with a good time.” Finalists for the Iowa Department of Education’s 2016 Teacher of the Year are: • Benjamin Chadwick of Grimes, who teaches technology education at Dallas Center-Grimes High School • Louise Fleming of Mount Auburn, an instructional coach at Vinton-Shellsburg High School • Gail Heninger of Bettendorf, who teaches gifted-and-talented students at Davenport’s Central High School • Wade Petersen of Ankeny, who teaches language arts and French at Valley Southwoods Freshman High School in West Des Moines WB audit shows a slowdown in capital projects By KATHLEEN SLOAN [email protected] Most small towns get tagged with a “failure to segregate duties” audit finding because it’s too expensive to hire another person to provide ongoing checks and balances on money recordings and transactions. So it is with West Burlington. The city council received the yearend audit for fiscal year starting July 1, 2014, and ending June 30, 2015, at the Wednesday meeting. CPA Associates performed the audit and have done so for the last 28 years or so, Mayor Hans Trousil said. The first audit finding, failure to segregate duties, was given the equivalent of a D letter-grade — “significant deficiency.” The city could fix the problem without hiring more people, the audit states: “However, the city council and management should continue to provide oversight and direction based upon their direct knowledge of the city’s operations and day-to-day contact with employees to control and safeguard assets.” The city was cited for the same finding in the prior year’s audit. The second audit finding concerns the Open Meetings Act. The city council went into closed session, July 2, 2014, but “the minutes record did not document the specific information regarding the closed session as required by Chapter 21 ... ,” the audit states. The law requires the governmental body to state one of the 12 exemptions under which the meeting is allowed to be closed, and the minutes are supposed to reflect how the discussion was limited to the specified subject matter. But city administrator Dan Gif- WB employee health insurance plan to cost 7 percent more By KATHLEEN SLOAN [email protected] The West Burlington City Council considered two new healthcare plan options at its Wednesday meeting and chose one that will cost nearly 7 percent more than last year’s plan. True North is the city’s agent, and company vice president Josh Budke explained the difference between the two plans. A new plan had to be chosen because Welmark’s “myBlue HSA 3000 Silver” plan no longer is available, Budke said. City administrator Dan Gifford said city employees are guaranteed to pay no more than $500 in deductible and out-ofpocket costs for individuals and $1,000 for families. The city makes up the difference in cost between the purchased plan and that guarantee. For the past 10 years, Gifford said, about 72 percent of employees’ deductible and outof-pocket payments exceed their guaranteed cap. Budke gave the city council figures for the city’s costs during the past 10 years, which ranged between $64,000 and $96,000, averaging about $88,000 a year. Of the two Wellmark replacement plans on offer, one was about $14,000 more expensive but would keep the city’s payments to about $88,000. The second plan would save the city about $32,000 in up-front policy cost, but the higher deductible the city would have to make up for employees would average about $120,000 more, based on 72 percent participation. Gifford said employee participation would have to drop to 35 percent for the second plan to be less expensive, “which isn’t going to happen. We’ve been at at least 70 percent for 10 years.” The city council voted unanimously to purchase the first plan, Wellmark myBlue HSA 3350 Silver, for the year, starting Jan. 1, 2016, for about $213,000. The city heard information about dental plans but wanted more research done and tabled the decision for a future meeting. U nhappy W ith L ow Interest R ates? 3.10% for 5 ye a rs • G uaranteed P rincipal • G uaranteed R ate • Earnings A re Tax Deferred • Lim ited Tim e Jos h ua C loke C a ll (319)758-8484 tod a y for m ore in form a tion ! *Ra te S u b jectto C ha n g e 417448 2A ford said the city’s infraction was different than stated in the audit. He was told the minutes did not reflect a roll-call vote was taken to go into closed session, also required under the Open Meetings Act. The city was cited for two closed-meeting infractions the year before. The third audit finding concerns delinquent utility accounts. “At June 30, 2015, two employees or council members had delinquent utility accounts,” and “they are setting an example to the community by their actions,” the audit stated. The prior year’s audit cited the same finding, but for four employees or council members. The fourth audit finding is “Unsupported credit card expenses.” The city paid $506 in credit-card expenses with no receipts to account for the pay- ments, the audit states. Other financial highlights: • The combined governmental funds totaled $1.8 million, a decrease of $1 million from the year before. • The general fund balance was about $525,000, about $13,000 higher than the prior year’s balance. • The Road Use Tax end-year balance increased about $56,000 to $122,000. • The Local Option Sales Tax collected was nearly $500,000, and 49 percent was transferred into the general fund, the audit states. As required by law, 25 percent went to property-tax relief, to pay off outstanding general obligation debt. The remainder paid for capital projects, equipment, library services, ambulance services and airport authority payments. • The Tax Increment Financ- ing collections decreased by $1.5 million to about $124,000. “The majority of this decrease is due to the city issuing GO bonds in fiscal year 2014 for $3.75 million for a new public works facility and (spending) approximately $2 million for the construction in FY2014. During FY2015, the city spent approximately $1.3 million to complete the project,” the audit states. • The Iowa constitutional debt limit is 5 percent of assessed value of all taxable property within the city limits. West Burlington’s debt limit, which does not include interest, only principal, is about $11 million. The city’s general obligation debt is $5.3 million, well within the limit, the audit states. • The city collected $1 million in regular property taxes and $1.3 million in Tax Increment Financing property taxes. www.thehawkeye.com THE HAWK EYE !" BURLINGTON, IOWA Friday • November 6, 2015 3A CITY & REGION Former Marine seeks recognition for Viet vets Daughters heads local group honoring Vietnam service during Saturday event. By WILLIAM SMITH [email protected] Curt Daughters uses a special greeting whenever he meets a fellow Marine or soldier who served in the Vietnam War. The kind of greeting they should have received after serving their country five decades ago. “When I see a Vietnam veteran, I say ‘Welcome Home.’ They do the same thing for me. We use that because we weren’t really welcomed home,” Daughters said. A Keokuk native who has made his home in Burlington for the past 30 years, Daughters is commandant of the Burlington-based Hamilton-Walters Marine Corps League Detachment 616 — a nonprofit organization best known for the annual Toys for Tots program. The league will celebrate the 240th birthday of the Marine Corps during its annual Birthday Ball at Memorial Auditorium Saturday night, and those who served during the Vietnam War (in or out of country) will receive a special certificate noting their service. The 50th anniversary of the Vietnam War is being commemorated across the country this year, and veterans who didn’t get the recognition they deserved after returning home are getting it now. “We (Vietnam veterans) have a special relationship because of the way the war was looked at,” Daughters said. “We’re pretty close buddies.” Daughters signed up for the Marines in 1964, serving two tours in Vietnam before being discharged in 1968. Like a lot of veterans, the horrors he faced were nearly indescribable. “It was just a hellhole, to be frank about it,” he said. During his first tour, in 1965, John Lovretta/The Hawk Eye Curt Daughters, left, commandant of local Hamilton-Walters Marine Corps League Detachment 616, looks Tuesday through his personal Vietnam War memorabilia, above, at his Burlington home. The League will honor Vietnam vets during its annual Birthday Ball at 7 p.m. Saturday at Memorial Auditorium. Daughters was part of Operation Starlite — the first major U.S. ground battle of the war. More than 5,500 marines destroyed a Vietcong stronghold during the six-day battle, scoring a resounding victory. Ground forces, artillery from Chu Lai, close air support and naval gunfire combined to kill nearly 700 Vietcong soldiers, though it did cost 45 Marines their lives. Another 200 Marines were wounded in the battle. Daughters vividly remembers those who didn’t make it. “There were a lot of dead soldiers. The first refrigerators we got were used to put bodies in,” he said. The heat was oppressive in Vietnam, and the firefights over the course of Daughter’s two tours were chaotic. “The only time we shot anybody is if they were in the way of our fire, which happened a lot of times. People were running all different directions when there was open fire,” Daughters said. “Like they say, war is hell.” The war hadn’t changed much by the time he returned to Vietnam for his second tour of duty in 1968. Once again, Daughters found himself in one of the most famous battles of the war — the Tet Offensive. The communists launched a wave of surprise attacks against military and civilian command centers throughout South Vietnam in the late hours of Jan. 30, 1968. The attack was the largest military operation conducted by either side up to that point in the war. Daughters thought he left behind the hell of war when he returned to Keokuk, but the fallout was waiting for him stateside. The prevalent anti-war sentiment led to disdain toward soldiers who served in the war, and for the first time in American history, returning soldiers did not get the welcome they deserved. “We had so much bad publicity during the Vietnam War,” Daughters said. “When I got back, we were stoned. Several other guys I know who came back got the same thing. They called us baby killers, but that wasn’t true.” Daughters contracted an intestinal disease called amoebiasis during his final year in Vietnam, and it continued to plague him for several years after returning home. He also suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder, but that term didn’t even exist until the 1980s. Daughters was lucky enough to make it out of multiple battles without injury and didn’t start going to the Veterans Administration Health Care hospital in Iowa City until 2009. That’s when he was diagnosed with PTSD. “They take really good of me there,” he said. Daughters started his own auto body shop after returning home from the war, then worked for BNSF before retiring a few years ago. He got involved with the Hamilton-Walters Marine Corps League in 2012 after running across a Toys for Tot drive at Kmart and has embraced the program ever since. Daughters has four children and three grandchildren of his own and can’t stand the idea of a child without presents on Christmas day. “The toy distribution is one of the greatest things I’ve ever seen,” Daughters said. “I really believe in the program.” The Hamilton-Walters Marine Corps League has 67 members, and Daughters wants to expand that by inviting more Marines into the group. In fact, you don’t even have to be a Marine or former Marine to join. “I really want to get our name out there,” Daughters said. “We don’t have any way to contact recently discharged Marines, because we have no way of getting their name or phone number.” In addition to the Toys for Tots program, the Marine Corps League donates to several charitable organizations, provides funds for the Disabled American Veterans van and provides two scholarships a year for area students. “The only requirement we have for the scholarships is the person has to have someone in their family who is a Marine or former Marine,” Daughters said. Those interested in joining can attend the group’s monthly meetings, which take place at 7 p.m. on the second Monday of the month at Memorial Auditorium, or call Daughters at (319) 572-3476. WB to pay $144K for share of GE road improvements Burlington has pledged $500K to the roadwork project. By KATHLEEN SLOAN [email protected] John Lovretta/The Hawk Eye Debris is seen from a 2004 Pontiac Grand Am driven Thursday by Domonick Antawan Hicks when he lost control and ran into Amanda Phillips’ home in Burlington about 9:30 a.m. The car missed Phillips, who was outside, by a few feet. Woman escapes injury when speeding car crashes into house By ANDY HOFFMAN [email protected] A Burlington woman narrowly escaped injury about 9:30 a.m. Thursday when a man lost control of his speeding car and struck her house at 807 S. 12th Street. Amanda Phillips said she was standing on her front porch when she saw a man lose control of his speeding northbound car and swerve directly at her. “I was just standing on my front porch looking at my flowers to see if they needed watering,” she said, obviously shaken. “I looked up because I heard screeching tires, and I saw this car coming right at me. It looked like he had spun around a few times. But I don’t know for sure. “He missed me by about two feet, struck the side of my house and then spun around and the back end of his car hit my neighbor’s house (at 805 S. 12th St.). If I would have been out in my yard a few feet instead of on my porch, I could have been killed.” Phillips said the driver of the car then sped off southbound on 12th Street. The car had major damage to its front end and pieces of the car, including the front license plate, were scattered among the flowers in her yard. Lt. Greg Allen, a Burlington police spokesman, said a 2004 Pontiac Grand Am being driven by Domonick Antawan Hicks, 22, 910 S. 12th St., was operating at a high rate of speed when it struck the two residences. Hicks’ car was located parked about a few blocks away from the accident scene, Allen said. It had major front end damage, and both airbags had been deployed. By the time police arrived in the area, Hicks already had been transported by private vehicle to Great River Medical Center in West Burlington, where he was treated for non-life threatening injuries. Allen said medical center employees notified police a few minutes after the accident Hicks was in the emergency room and appeared to be “very impaired on something.” “An officer went to the medical center, and the driver (Hicks) consented to a blood test to determine his level of intoxication,” Allen said. Results of the blood test were not available Thursday afternoon. Authorities did not say if Hicks was admitted to the medical center or if charges had been filed against him. A spokesman for the Des Moines County jail said Hicks was not in custody at 4 p.m. Thursday. Allen, citing the accident report, said Hicks’ vehicle also struck the residence of Carol Wheeler, who lives at 805 S. 12th St. Allen said the report indicates damage to the Phillips’ home was estimated to be about $4,000. Damage to Wheeler’s residence was listed at $2,500. “It cracked my foundation,” Phillips said at the scene. “I haven’t been down in the basement yet, but I know there must be some damage down there, too.” Allen said the accident remains under investigation and charges could be filed against Hicks in connection with the accident. Fire truck responding to emergency crashes in Cedar Falls Associated Press CEDAR FALLS — Authorities said a fire truck responding to a medical emergency was damaged when it collided with a vehicle in Cedar Falls. The Cedar Falls Fire Department said the fire truck had its emergency lights on and its siren activated Thursday when it collided with a second vehicle that had pulled away from a stop sign. The fire truck received about $4,000 in damages to its front. The second vehicle was towed from the scene. No injuries were reported. The driver of the second vehicle was issued a citation on suspicion of failing to yield at a stop sign. The West Burlington City Council agreed at its Wednesday meeting to partner with the city of Burlington on a Revitalize Iowa’s Sound Economy application to improve roads around the General Electric plant. In a motion that passed unanimously, West Burlington said it would provide $144,000. Burlington has committed to providing $500,000. The whole project would cost about $2.2 million and include upgrades to three stoplights in the area, all on Agency Street. It also includes ripping up and widening GE’s entrance driveway. “The entrance needs work,” said mayor Hans Trousil. The major roadwork proposed is to straighten 2,100 feet of Agency Street in front of the plant, which narrows to four lanes, being five lanes to the east and west. Sidewalks on the north side of Agency on the same stretch are also part of the application. City administrator Dan Gifford said West Burlington owns about 600 feet of the 2,100 feet. Before the vote was taken, Greater Burlington Partnership economic development director David Toyer presented application particulars with Southeast Iowa Regional Planning Commission planner Zach James. Toyer said if the city council approved its part of the application, it would be heard by the Department of Transportation commission Tuesday. The Burlington City Council approved the application Monday. According to RISE program manager Jennifer Kolacia, the state has about $17 million a year in the grant fund to disburse, and it’s not difficult to get an award if the basic requirements are met. The road improvements must be related to a new business or an expanding existing business that is not retail, Kolacia said. The business must be “value-adding,” she said. Nursing homes, for example, would not be value-adding. “The business must draw money from outside of Iowa,” Kolacia said. “It must grow Iowa’s economy.” The grant will pay up to $12,000 per each job created by the new or expanding business, Toyer said. GE announced Wednesday it is bringing back the fourth generation of its medium-voltage switchgear line to the plant, Toyer said, which will create 128 new jobs. Therefore the grant award is potentially $1.54 million, the amount requested in the application. West Burlington has promised to give GE a $186,000 forgivable loan, a 20 percent match to the state’s $930,000 forgivable loan, both relating to the state’s High Quality Jobs program. Des Moines County is giving a $62,000 forgivable loan, related to the retention of 322 existing and the creation of 128 new jobs. “I’d rather they had waited to announce the new line,” city councilman Rod Crowner said. “It’s like people wanting a tax rebate after they’ve built the building.” Trousil, who attended the GE announcement event Wednesday, said the company expressed gratitude for the local governments’ support. O’Malley to speak at Dems event Saturday ‘Friend-Raiser’ at Port of Burlington building will raise money and offer several speakers. By ELIZABETH MEYER [email protected] The Des Moines County Democratic Party will welcome presidential candidate Martin O’Malley to Burlington Saturday to headline its annual fundraiser. The Democrat’s “Fall FriendRaiser” will begin at noon at the Port of Burlington. O’Malley will address the crowd at 1 p.m and take questions following his remarks. “We’ve moved into the next phase of the campaign,” said Kristin Sosanie, Iowa deputy state director of O’Malley for President. “So you will see Gov. O’Malley doing more compare (and) contrast on the issues now as he campaigns around Iowa.” O’Malley has spent more time in the Hawkeye State than any other Democratic candidate — 41 days — yet has struggled to emerge from the mire of third place. According to the latest KBUR-Monmouth College poll conducted at the end of October, O’Malley claims support from 5.4 percent of likely Democratic caucusgoers. “A c t i o n s not words” is the theme O’Malley for this weekend’s remarks as the former Maryland governor works to draw clear differences between himself and the field’s top two candidates, former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt. In a conversation with the Des Moines Register’s editorial board last week, O’Malley said, “I am the one candidate in this Democratic primary now that has executive elected experience. Those years were marked not by words, but by actions — actions that raised the minimum wage, actions that passed marriage equality, the Dream Act and comprehensive gun- safety legislation before there was a consensus to do these things.” O’Malley also will appear for a 3 p.m. meet-and-greet Saturday at 919 Mill St. in Wapello. Other Friend-Raiser speakers scheduled to appear include Andy McGuire, chairman of the Iowa Democratic Party; Danny Homan, president of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Iowa Council 61; U.S. Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y; Iowa candidate for the U.S. Senate Tom Fiegen; Pete D’Alessandro, state director for Sanders’ campaign; state Sen. Tom Courtney, D-Burlington and state Rep. Dennis Cohoon, D-Burlington. There will be live music and a meal of pulled pork sandwiches, cheesy potato casserole, green beans and cake served for those who attend. Tickets are $30 per person, or free with a Des Moines County Democrats sustaining membership. For more information and to RSVP, contact chairwoman Sandy Dockendorff by email at [email protected] or by phone at (319) 750-5294. 4A Friday • November 6, 2015 THE HAWK EYE !" BURLINGTON, IOWA www.thehawkeye.com FROM PAGE ONE John Lovretta/The Hawk Eye Des Moines County Chief Deputy Sheriff Jeff White speaks to employees and visitors before the start of the exercise. John Lovretta/The Hawk Eye Training Continued from page 1A is to fight back aggressively, committing to taking down the shooter. “Fight until you can’t fight any more,” Des Moines County Chief Deputy Sheriff Jeff White said. “I’ve known one officer to sur- vive 17 shots from an AR-15.” White led the exercise at the courthouse, which featured a scenario of one active shooter, armed with an AR-15 and a .22 pistol, which would shoot rubber pellets. To speed things along and give more people exposure, White said two shooters would be going through the building. Participants were given safety goggles and tennis balls because “this training is not for your detriment but for your education, and there are safety precautions at work here,” White said. People went to their usual work locations and the re-enactment unfolded. The AR-15, shooting blanks, fired twice, booming at a softer, lower pitch and the .22, likely because of the shorter barrel, was much louder. The shooter started on the first floor and hit three people. Those shots probably were not fatal, White said during the post-analysis meeting. Then the shooter went upstairs, shooting again on the second floor. There, he hit three actor-customers and likely would have killed them had he been using a real gun. The fourth customer was pulled to safety by a county worker but then was patted down immediately for weapons before being sheltered further. In reflecting on the training, Deputy Corey Whitaker Officer Continued from page 1A Lauren Zumbach/Chicago Tribune A sign honoring Fox Lake Police Lt. Charles Joseph Gliniewicz was defaced Wednesday outside the Fox Lake Police Department in Fox Lake, Ill. Lake County officials confirmed Wednesday Gliniewicz, 52, died Sept. 1 of a self-inflicted gunshot wound. Officials said Gliniewicz carefully staged his death to make it look like he was killed in the line of duty and said he had been stealing for years from a youth program he oversaw. Defense Continued from page 1A the facility, which he argued is costly and gives extremists a recruiting tool. The administration is finalizing a plan on closing the prison, which houses 112 detainees, but hasn’t said when it will share it with Congress. Republicans and some Democrats in Congress have blocked Obama’s effort for years. Sen. Pat Roberts of Kansas Wednesday placed a hold on Obama’s nominee to be the next Army secretary to prevent the president from trying to bypass Congress by using his executive authorities to close the prison. “This administration has continually gone around the Congress and tried to figure out which button to push to irritate Congress the most,” said Roberts, whose state includes Fort Leavenworth. “Well he sure as hell has pushed my button. “As I have said for years and years, we are not going to have terrorists from Gitmo come to Fort Leavenworth, the intellectual center of the Army, or any other location in the United States.” Roberts accused Obama of executive “overreach” and said he would work to continue to withhold congressional funds to move detainees to the United States, which currently is against the law. As he spoke, Roberts got visibly angry. “Why do we even have a Congress,” he shouted, “if the president can issue an executive order on anything and, in this particular case, endanger our national security?” Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina, who visited Guantanamo two weeks ago, said the military prison is a perfect site because it’s hours away from Havana and is surrounded by mountains, water and desert. “To consider a domestic location is, in my opinion, the worst decision for America’s national security,” said Scott, whose state is home to the Naval Consolidated Brig in Charleston, another prospective site for detainees. Sen. Cory Gardner of Colorado said the facility being considered to house Guantanamo detainees in his state is a closed state prison that would cost millions to retrofit. He said the administration has violated current law that bans taxpayer money from being used to “assist in the transfer” of detainees. “It’s hard for me to believe that you can send a team of experts to analyze where you’re going to send detainees to fulfill a campaign promise if you haven’t spent any money,” he said. Roberts said the White House plan has not yet been presented in any detail to the Senate Armed Services Committee. At a separate news conference, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi said she is upset the Republicans have prevented Obama from closing Guantanamo, “which he set out to do, and which he had a plan to do — and he does have a plan to do now.” On Wednesday, White House press secretary Josh Earnest hinted the president might use his executive authority to close the prison. Obama wants to work with Congress to close Guantanamo, but “if Congress continues to refuse,” the president will explore all other options, Earnest said. When asked again Thursday about the prospect of executive action to shut the prison, Earnest said the administration continues to believe Congress should remove the obstacles it has imposed to closing it. He said closing the prison makes national security and fis- The official said Melodie Gliniewicz was the person identified as “Individual #1” in the messages released Wednesday, who at one point suggests in a message she and Joseph Gliniewicz may “need to hide the funds some how.” The official said D.J. Gliniewicz was “Individual #2,” whom the officer appears to scold for spending money on personal items. At one point, the officer warns that person not repaying money to an unspecified account means that person “will be visiting me in JAIL!!” In another message, the officer tells Individual #2 he has thought through many scenarios involving Marrin, “from planting things to the volo bog,” a remote swamp in the area. Authorities officially have refused to identify anyone beyond the lieutenant who is suspected in any crimes. They also declined to identify the woman Gliniewicz texted about the gang hit in April, other than to say she is not in law enforcement. The officer’s wife and four children issued a brief statement Wednesday through their lawyers, saying they were grieving. It did not mention suicide or thefts. The attorneys, Henry Tonigan and Andrew Kelleher, didn’t respond to voicemail and email messages sent Thursday. As the probe into Gliniewicz’s death stretched on, suspicion grew he had killed himself, but investigators publicly treated it as a homicide investigation until cal sense because spending to hold prisoners at Guantanamo far exceeds what the U.S. spends to detain and incarcerate terrorists on U.S. soil. Earnest said there was no veto threat, but the president still must review the bill that passed Thursday. Obama vetoed the original defense policy bill over a larger spending issue. But that dispute was resolved, and Obama signed a bipartisan budget bill Monday that avoids a catastrophic U.S. default and puts off the next round of fighting over federal spending and debt until after next year’s presidential and congressional elections. The defense bill was trimmed by $5 billion to align it with the budget agreement. Among other things, the bill: • Provides a 1.3 percent pay increase to service members and a new retirement option for troops. • Authorizes lethal assistance to Ukraine forces fighting Russian-backed rebels. • Extends a ban on torture to the CIA. • Authorizes the president’s request of $715 million to help Iraqi forces fight Islamic State militants. By LINDA A. JOHNSON Associated Press TRENTON, N.J. — Top U.S. drugmaker Pfizer is increasing its financial assistance to patients, doubling the allowable income level for people to receive dozens of Pfizer medicines for free. The move comes amid fierce criticism of soaring prices for new medications and even old ones with little or no competition. Pfizer Chief Executive Officer Ian Read told the Associated Press in an exclusive interview his company isn’t boosting assistance due to the heightened scrutiny of prices. Instead, he said it’s because more and more people can’t afford needed medicines as insurance plans shift more of their costs onto patients. Pfizer will make an extra 44 medicines free for both uninsured and underinsured patients earning up to four times the federal poverty level. That’s $47,080 annually for a single person and $97,000 for a family of four. announcing Wednesday he shot himself. The lieutenant fired first at his cellphone and ballistics vest, then inserted his handgun inside the vest and fired at his heart. According to the results of the investigation, he then fell forward as he was dying, scraping his face, which could have been an intentional effort to create the appearance of a struggle. Lake County Major Crimes Task Force Commander George Filenko, who led the investigation, said the 30-year police veteran clearly intended to mislead investigators and had the kind of intimate knowledge of crime scenes needed to pull it off. Recovered text messages and other records show Gliniewicz spent the money on mortgage payments, travel expenses, gym memberships, adult websites, withdrawing cash and making loans, Filenko said. Marrin said she pressed Gliniewicz the day before his death to share an inventory of his program’s assets. He responded the next morning, promising to deliver it that afternoon. Instead, he killed himself. Just why he tried to make it look like murder remains unclear. Filenko said he didn’t know whether a suicide finding would prevent his family from receiving benefits. The huge outpouring of grief in the village where the 52-year-old officer had long been a role model has been replaced by a sense of betrayal. Many tributes to their slain hero have come down. Some signs praising “G.I. Joe” have been replaced, one by a poster labeling him “G.I. Joke.” Ernst Continued from page 1A Republican senator in support of Ernst’s resolution in a statement released Wednesday. “The result of this absurd rule is not cleaner water, but a bigger roll of red tape,” he said. “What EPA defines as a ‘navigable river’ could encompass everything from a small pond to trickling creek bed to land that is dry most of the year,” Grassley said. “Under EPA’s definition, WOTUS affects everyone from farmers to construction companies to golf course managers in their day-to-day decision making. “This red tape rule would require permits for just about any changes to land in 97 percent of Iowa. That would discourage common-sense projects to prevent erosion or control runoff, resulting in dirtier water. Talk about Washington being an island surrounded by reality.” Ernst said conversations with Iowa farmers, municipalities and counties showed the necessity of blocking this rule. “This has been one of the No. 1 issues for not only our farmers — but I have heard Pfizer doubling patient income limit for financial assistance, free drug program L a st C h a n c e to ta k e a d v a n ta ge of open h ouse pr ic in g! 56 Y ears and C arpeting C ustom D rapes and Appliances 121 N .B roadway,Stronghurst,IL (309)924-1811 M on.-Fri.8 a.m .-5 p.m . Sat.8 a.m .-noon w w w .b ob s tva n d h om efurn is h in gs .c om from ranchers, I have heard from small businessmen, manufacturers, home builders, road builders — this is a very concerning expanded definition and overreach by the EPA,” she said. “This is not just a farm issue,” she added. “This is an issue that every Iowan will face. Overwhelmingly, they have supported my initiative to get rid of the expanded definition of WOTUS.” U.S. Rep. Dave Loebsack, a Democrat representing Iowa’s 2nd district, which includes Burlington, said a balance must be negotiated between government regulation and environmental protection. “I believe that we have to strike the correct balance between protecting our rivers and streams and making sure our farmers are not over-regulated,” Loebsack said. Broz e n e H Y DR A U LIC SER VIC E B estprices of the y ea r! “A Big Store In A Sm all Tow n” remainded participants, “Passiveness kills us. Take an active approach. That nervousness and anxiousness you were feeling is good stuff — it keeps you smart.” A video clip depicting a similar training is available online at https://www.fbi.gov/ about-us/cirg /active-shooter-and-mass-casualty-incidents/ run-hide-fight-video. 14 0 0 M t. Plea s a ntStreet B u rlingto n, IA 5 2 6 0 1 (319)752-4017 • (309)337-8574 425904 Des Moines County Sheriff’s Deputy Brad Siegfried, portraying an active shooter, makes his way through the basement of the Des Moines County Courthouse. Des Moines County Chief Deputy Sheriff Jeff White, who was leading “Run Hide Fight” training, talks to Des Moines County Courthouse employees, including Des Moines County Budget Director Cheryl McVey, and visitors before the start of the exercise Thursday at the Des Moines County Courthouse in Burlington. The training exercise featured a Sheriff’s deputy portraying the role of an active shooter to help train county employees how to respond to shooter situations. 427732 John Lovretta/The Hawk Eye www.thehawkeye.com THE HAWK EYE !" BURLINGTON, IOWA Friday • November 6, 2015 5A NATION & WORLD Russia, Egypt dismiss suggestions bomb caused crash By GREGORY KATZ Associated Press LONDON — Five days after a Russian jetliner broke apart high above the Sinai, Russia and Egypt dismissed Western suggestions a terrorist bomb may have caused the crash that killed 224 people, saying the speculation was a rush to judgment. British Prime Minister David Cameron, who spoke to the presidents of both countries in the very public dispute, said he had grounded all British flights to and from the Sinai Peninsula because of “intelligence and information” indicating a bomb was the probable reason a Metrojet Airbus A321-200 plane had crashed Saturday in the desert. British and U.S. officials, primarily guided by intelligence intercepts and satellite imagery, gingerly suggested it might have been the work of the extremist Islamic State group and its affiliates in the Sinai. “We don’t know for certain that it was a terrorist bomb ... (but it’s a) strong possibility,” Cameron said. Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi later stood beside him at a news conference following an awkward meeting. Cameron also spoke by phone with Russian President Vladimir Putin to explain concern for the safety of British citizens had led the government to go public with its suspicions about a bomb. Russia and Egypt insist the investigation into the crash must run its course before any conclusion is reached. The Metrojet plane crashed 23 minutes after taking off from the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh for St. Petersburg with mostly Russians aboard. The dispute arose after the U.S. and British intelligence was disclosed Wednesday, just as el-Sissi was heading to London on a previously planned visit — his first as president. Russia complained intelligence gathered by London and Washington about its jetliner has not been made available. If Britain had information about a bomb on the plane, it’s “really shocking” that hasn’t been shared with Russia, said Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova, speaking in Moscow. British officials declined to say what intelligence was shared with other countries. U.S. and British leaders have stopped short of a categorical assignment of blame in the crash, but Cameron said it is “more likely Dmitry Lovetsky/Associated Press A woman holds a portrait of Nina Lushchenko, one of the victims of a plane crash, Thursday during Lushchenko’s funeral at a cemetery in the village of Sitnya, about 50 miles from Veliky Novgorod, a city in northern Russia. Lushchenko, the first victim of Saturday’s plane crash in Egypt, was laid to rest Thursday following a funeral service in a medieval church in Veliky Novgorod. than not” the cause was a bomb. The Islamic State group, which has not generally pursued “spectacular” attacks outside its base in Syria, has claimed responsibility for bringing down the plane, but Russian and Egyptian officials said the claim was not credible. Russia is conducting an air war in Syria against Islamic State militants, who have promised retaliation. Egypt stands to lose millions of dollars from its vital tourism industry. Its tourism minister, Hisham Zaazou, met with British officials in London to persuade them to reconsider the decision to suspend flights to Sharm el-Sheikh, the Egyptian state-run news agency MENA reported. Caught in the middle are thousands of tourists stranded in Sharm el-Sheikh, unable to return home because flights have been suspended due to security concerns. Britain sent a security team to the Sharm el-Sheikh airport to determine what changes are needed to make travel there safe, but Egyptian officials maintain there is nothing wrong with the facility, which each year welcomes thousands of tourists to the resort beside the crystal-clear Red Sea. British Transport Secretary Patrick McLoughlin told Parliament Egypt must put in tighter, long-term security measures before British flights will resume flying there on a regular basis. Short-term measures, including different luggage-handing arrangements, would allow the estimated 20,000 British citizens in the Sharm el-Sheikh area to fly home, he said. El-Sissi said British officials had sent a security team to evaluate the airport 10 months ago and were satisfied with the results. “They checked the security actions, they were happy with that,” he told a Downing Street news conference through an interpreter. Egypt condemned the British travel ban as an overreaction. Minister of Civil Aviation Hossam Kamal insisted the country’s airports meet international security standards and said talk of a bomb was unsupported. “The investigation team does not have yet any evidence or data confirming this hypothesis,” he said. The Kremlin said Putin told Cameron it was necessary to rely on data yielded by the official crash investigation. Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said it was mere speculation to single out one possible explanation at this early point in the inquiry. “One cannot rule out a single theory, but at this point there are no reasons to voice just one theory as reliable — only investigators can do that,” Peskov said in Moscow. Russia’s top aviation official, Alexander Neradko, said investigators are pursuing several theories into the crash, including looking for traces of explosives on victims’ bodies, their baggage and the plane debris, as well as studying other “aspects linked to a possible terrorist attack.” He said the investigation is likely to take several months. Metrojet suspended all flights of Airbus A321 jets in its fleet after the crash. The company has ruled out a pilot error or a technical fault as a possible cause, drawing criticism from Russian officials for speaking with such certainty too soon. Images from U.S. satellites detected heat around the jet just before it went down Saturday, two U.S. officials told the Associated Press. The infrared activity could mean several things, including a bomb blast or an engine exploding because of a mechanical breakdown. Another U.S. official briefed on the Metrojet crash told the AP intercepted communications played a role in the tentative conclusion the Islamic State group’s Sinai affiliate had planted an explosive on the flight. The official added intelligence analysts don’t believe the operation was ordered by Islamic State leaders in Raqqa, Syria, but was possibly planned and executed by its affiliate in the Sinai. The U.S. officials all spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to discuss intelligence matters publicly. Philip Baum, editor of Avia- tion Security International, said a bomb could be placed on a plane in a variety of ways, including by someone with access or by those on catering teams or maintenance crews. “The options are almost too many to consider,” he said in a telephone interview from Gambia. Several airlines announced plans to start flying tourists from Sharm el-Sheikh Friday. EasyJet said it will run nine flights from the Red Sea resort to London and one to Milan, while Monarch will have two scheduled flights and three additional flights. Neither carrier is operating passenger flights from the U.K. to Sharm el-Sheikh. Cameron’s office said additional security measures will be in place, including only allowing passengers to carry hand baggage, while checked luggage will be transported separately. The government has said it could take a week to 10 days to bring home the 20,000 British tourists. Italy’s civil aviation authority said it asked Italian airlines to conduct their own extra security checks at the airport as a precaution. At the airport, travelers lined up as usual for metal detectors, searches of luggage and X-rayed baggage. “Belgium authorities are telling me that it’s not safe in Egypt, and they have to cancel the flight for safety reasons, which I think it is stupid because it is safe and there is no problem at all,” said Belgian tourist Bart Tecker. Anger among travelers may be boiling over. Emma Smyth said there was at least one confrontation between staff at the Aqua Blue hotel and a distraught English family that didn’t want to pay for its extra days of lodging. “The hotel set a charge, and the tourists cannot understand why they are being charged,” she said. “They said they should be allowed to stay, and with that, one man grabbed one of the managers — they ripped his shirt, ripped his name-badge off and everything.” Very different emotions were on display in Russia. In the ancient city of Veliky Novgorod, 100 miles south of St. Petersburg, family and friends said a tearful goodbye to 60-yearold Nina Lushchenko, the first victim to be buried. Study: ‘Happiness advantage’ vanishing for those older than 30 By MARTHA IRVINE Associated Press Jeff Roberson/Associated Press Student Geena Kandel, 21, poses Wednesday for a photo at Washington University in St. Louis. Kandel, a senior at the university, said she and her peers already worry even a good college education won’t be enough to help achieve what their parents have. range gave that response in the 2010s, compared with 28 percent in the early 1970s. There’s also been a notable uptick in “very happy” teens. In the 1970s, for instance, 19 percent of 12th graders chose that response, compared with 23 percent in the 2010s. Adults age 30 and older, however, have seen a five-percentage-point drop, from 38 percent in the early 1970s to 33 percent today. The findings — which are from University of Chicago’s longstanding General Social Survey and the University of Michigan’s Monitoring the Future survey — ring true for Emily Valdez, a 49-year-old mom in Seattle. “I thought that life would be simpler,” she said. “My parents’ marriage, children, child-rearing just seemed — and still seems in their eyes — less fraught with indecision, second-guessing and maybe just less insecurity.” Some said the onslaught of information at our fingertips every day is one factor making us feel overwhelmed. “I think we are no longer keeping up with the Joneses but rather keeping up with the world,” said Satu Halpin, a 37-year-old mother in Olympia, Wash., who tunes out to stay happier. It is, of course, also impossible to ignore the economic downturn in the last decade. Shigehiro Oishi, a researcher at the University of Virginia, has documented a growing dissatisfaction with the widening gap between the wealthy and everyone else. Others have linked unhappiness to “income insecurity.” “The more competitive and market-driven society becomes, the more people are on their own to survive and flourish, the more insecure they are in their dayto-day lives, the more unequal things become — quality of life tends to decline,” said Benjamin Radcliff, a professor of political science at the University of Notre Dame who researched this topic. Twenge, the study’s author, also said beyond income factors, people who were single parents and presumably had fewer social supports said they were less happy. She and her co-authors speculated young people were less stressed by economic factors until they hit adulthood. In addition, Tim Bono, a psychologist at Washington University who teaches and studies happiness, thinks there’s something adults should get more credit. “Some accuse the so-called Millennials of this kind of avoidance, while others point to research and anecdotal evidence that Millennials aren’t in denial, they just are smarter, more connected with each other and more hopeful about changing things,” said Michael Simon, a psychotherapist and school counselor in New Orleans. For his part, Bono at Washington University wants to help his students make changes that lead to happiness. He teaches two classes, including the “Science of Happiness” in which his students learn how they can affect their own sense of well-being. Among other things, Bono advises getting more sleep and exercise, as well as social connection — while avoiding “social comparison,” especially online. Focusing on gratitude also increases happiness, he said. Kandel, the Washington University senior, who’s taken both of Bono’s classes, said the strategies have helped her focus on “How can I still have a rewarding life?” instead of worrying about whether she’ll have, and achieve, as much as her parents. Chris tm a s Clos e o u t 50-75% O FF 427803 Are you happy? Very happy? If you’re in your 30s or older, a new study has found you’re less likely to answer “yes” than your parents were. The findings, published online Thursday in the journal Social Psychological and Personality Science, come on the heels of another recent report that found death rates of middle-aged white Americans have been rising, largely due to suicide and substance abuse. “Age is supposed to bring happiness and contentment. For that not to be true anymore is somewhat shocking,” said Jean Twenge, a professor at San Diego State University who is the study’s lead author. She also wrote the book “Generation Me,” a look at young adults and the attitudes and influences that shaped them. Starting with data in the early 1970s, Twenge and her colleagues found adults 30 and older used to be happier than younger adults and teens. But that “happiness advantage” has declined steadily as the older adults have expressed less satisfaction with their lives and the younger cohort has gotten a little happier. Other experts who study happiness said the findings fit with their own research. They attribute the shift to everything from growing financial pressures — and what some call “economic insecurity” — to the fact real life has been a rude awakening for a generation of young adults who were told they could do anything and are discovering that often isn’t true. Geena Kandel, a senior at Washington University in St. Louis, said she and her peers already worry even a good college education won’t be enough to help achieve what their parents have. “It puts a lot of pressure on people my age,” the 21-year-old said. Before you get too bummed out, consider another finding of the study: One in three of all American adults still report being “very happy.” Twenge and her colleagues found, for instance, 30 percent of those in the 18- to 29-year-old to that “rude awakening” theory for his generation of young adults. A while back, the 32-year-old professor came across a box of school papers and other relics from his past — worksheets, assignments and notes sent home that reinforced “how special I was and how I could do anything I set my mind to.” He found many of the ribbons and trophies he’d received as a kid, not only for winning but for simply participating in sports. “My generation has been bathed in messages of how great we are and how anything is possible for us,” Bono said, noting that mindset easily can lead to disappointment. A 30-year-old father from Texas, who served in the Army before enrolling at the University of Puget Sound in Washington, Daniel Trapp said his life experience has helped him feel happier than some of his peers, “despite the stress that I have in my life.” But he’s noticed “a delay in acceptance of an adult role” from his fellow college students, some of whom have chosen graduate school to avoid the working world. Others wonder if the youngest 3 D ays O nly • N ov.6,7,8 230 S. 3rd H ou rs 10 -3 427696 Page OPINION 6A Friday, November 6, 2015 Burlington, Iowa THE HAWK EYE Since 1837 ! Iowa’s Oldest Newspaper STEVE DELANEY editor and publisher Dale Alison, managing editor Mike Sweet, columnist John Gaines, news content coordinator Our editorial A necessary conversation Revealing the double life of a cop. F Letters Benefits outweigh controversy H ow disappointing to read the BHS administration censored a performance of the play “A Service for Jeremy Wong.” Even more disappointing are the reasons given for the decision. The plot for this play begins with the beating death of a student, who is killed by fellow students. He is killed on account of his sexual orientation. The story then explores how the school deals with its own conflicting emotions and response in the aftermath. So it addresses a contemporary subject, of some relevance to BHS. After all, the school has a responsibility to educate students in an environment free of bullying. Censorship raises issues of concern at any time, because we live in a country that is supposed to embrace free speech, and robust discussion, of controver- sies every day. But, how much more disappointing, to hear the reasons offered by BHS administration to justify the censorship. They do not concern the literary — or artistic — merits of the play. They do not find fault with its value as teaching material. Rather, the play is faulted because its subject is controversial and may result in criticism, by some, of BHS. Never mind there are those of us who would commend the production. Those of us who love the arts in general, and theater in particular, are left scratching our heads. Good art is supposed to confront us where we live. Literature is replete with examples of works that were considered controversial and survived to be considered masterpieces. JAMES BERES Burlington We need a COLA I am writing to express my deep disappointment in the recent announcement there will not be a cost of living increase for Social Security beneficiaries next year. As healthcare costs continue to rise, the strain on seniors like me is becoming unmanageable — especially as previous COLAs have failed to keep pace. Although there is a growing movement in America to expand Social Security, next year’s lack of COLA demands immediate action. Up to 79 percent of likely voters — Democrats, Republicans and Independents — support expanding Social Security benefits and paying for it by asking the wealthy to pay their fair share. It is critical Congress acts now to maintain dignity for seniors and people with disabilities by addressing the lack of a cost of living adjustment next year. People like me are counting on it. DAVID OSBOURNE Burlington Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances. — First Amendment, U.S. Constitution The age of Apollo T he first decade of this millennium was consequential for the Burlington School District. Amid shrinking enrollment fed by a declining population and the inexplicable gravitational pull of open enrollment to a smaller neighbor, a penny sales tax adopted in 1998 paid to overhaul its aging and excessive inventory of school buildings and left the district with five modern elementary attendance centers instead of 10 deteriorating ones. Midway through that construction program, a fire destroyed Horace Mann Middle School and forced the district’s hand on middle school facilities. Aided by insurance money and a renewal of the local option sales tax, the district has opened two brand-new schools for students in grades six, seven and eight. Yet through all that positive energy, an albatross continued to hang around the school district’s neck: the former Burlington High School building that was rechristened Apollo in 1969 when the now-46-year-old “new” high school opened. From then until 2001, when it was shuttered for good, the school descended into a benign form of neglect that finally became malignant. Today, Apollo remains an albatross. The only thing that has changed is the neck. After the school district failed either to demolish it or find a developer with a legitimate plan and pockets deep enough to make it happen, Apollo passed through a succession of owners who didn’t do anything with it from 2002 until the city of Burlington finally obtained ownership earlier this year and now is trying to do what school officials could not. Seeking a developer almost 15 years after the already-decaying schoolhouse didn’t attract one has the feeling of a fool’s errand. It seems likely the city will end up footing the bill for demolition — estimated in 2001 to cost $710,000 (or $939,000 in today’s dollars, according to an inflation calculator based on the Consumer Price Index). Erected in 1910 on a hillside west of downtown, Burlington High School was abandoned in an apparent bid for modernity and room to Craig T. Neises [email protected] grow on the undeveloped southwest corner of the city. That year, when the new BHS opened on Terrace Drive, the old one got its new name, which at the time must have seemed hopeful. After all, it was the Apollo program that was ferrying astronauts to the moon. But like its namesake moon missions, the school flamed out long ago. First it became a ninth-grade attendance center, then served as a fourth middle school. Finally, it was the site of the district’s alternative school program and headquarters of the Great River Area Education Agency. The AEA’s move to new digs on West Avenue closed for good a building that already was mostly in mothballs and the victim of water damage caused by a leaky roof. Looking at the painful example of the still-moldering former elementary school in Middletown, which fell into decay after being sold instead of demolished, the school board at the time ought to have bitten the bullet and torn the old building down. In 2002, as an original plan to remodel or rebuild six elementary school buildings was trimmed to five, the school board even weighed tearing down Apollo and building a new school on the site. After choosing an alternative that preserved Grimes and North Hill schools, however, the district sought salvation from the Iowa City developer who successfully remodeled the former Mercy Hospital building into what is known today as RiverPark Place. That deal fell through, but the developer’s agent stepped in to take the building off the school district’s hands. To paraphrase a little, the road to blight is paved with good intentions. The city’s present-day problem might fairly be laid at the feet of school board members and administrators who were looking to avoid spending almost three-quarters-of-a-milliondollars on something that would do nothing to improve teaching or learning in the district. Although I can see their point, they also were too quick to wash their hands of a costly problem. More difficult to fathom, looking through the lens of hindsight, is why Burlington ever thought it was a good idea in the first place to replace a top-notch school building it already had. From that perspective, responsibility for the boarded-up monstrosity Apollo has become rests firmly with the people who made that decision and who went along with it. Contemplating my own high school in Dubuque, built in 1923; Ottumwa High School, built that same year; and Central High School in Davenport, built in 1907, and all still in use after investments were made over the years to modernize or expand them, I can’t help but shake my head when I think about what Burlington could have if not for a rush to modernity and ample elbow room for things like parking lots and a pool. It would be hard to argue any of the new elementary or middle schools have failed to show themselves to be improvements over what went before, for their students and staffs or their neighborhoods. As for the Apollo building, there is only missed opportunity and a cautionary tale for those who would rush to find renewal through replacement. At this point, though, that’s all water through the roof. The city should cut its losses, demolish Apollo and develop ordinances to prevent this kind of thing happening again. When convictions can’t be trusted D ecades ago, I interviewed an upstate New York attorney who had conducted a sting operation of police engaged in racial profiling. “Police lie,” he declared flatly, as if this were established fact. It was a brazen allegation against people we entrust to protect us, and it challenged the very premise of law enforcement: to uphold the law. But then, the strapping former Marine — a white man who had borne arms for his country and now defended the civil rights of black people — was given to broad assertions. But he did his homework. He had planted investigators at a bus station to watch police interact with random, disembarking long-distance bus riders. He documented black passengers being disproportionately questioned and searched for drugs. And faced with accusations of unlawful conduct, he claimed, officers stretched the facts to put their actions, or a fellow officer’s, in a favorable light. I was reminded of him last week while hearing a lecture by Peter Neufeld, who co-founded the Innocence Project. He talked of officers withholding information or misleading witnesses as factors in the 333 wrongful convictions his organization has gotten overturned; 70 percent were nonwhite. One was a black man who had served 27 years on a life sentence when exonerated through DNA evidence. Donald Gates was convicted of raping and murdering a white law student on her way home from a Washington, D.C., law firm in 1981. Police found his name and picture when searching records for other crimes in the vicinity. He had stolen a briefcase three months earlier. Police then showed his mug shot to another rape and robbery victim whose attacker was also black. She said Gates was the one. That association fell apart when it turned out Gates had been in jail when she was attacked. But police made Gates their prime murder suspect, thanks to a paid informant who told them, in exchange for cases against him being dropped, Gates had approached Doonesbury or a time in September, the top news story in the nation wasn’t about Washington politics or ISIS. It focused on a massive manhunt along the Illinois-Wisconsin border for the presumed killers of a highly regarded police officer in the community of Fox Lake, Ill. The shooting death of Lt. Charles Joseph Gliniewicz, 52, a husband and father of four, was all the sadder because he was just weeks from retiring. Investigators said he was shot twice. One bullet struck his bulletproof vest and the other entered his chest from the side. Alone on patrol, he had radioed he was pursuing three suspicious men, one black and two white. At a time when the nation is engrossed in a painful conversation about police shooting unarmed citizens or shooting as a first response to any threat, Gliniewicz’s death served as a rallying point for police and their supporters who believe they’ve been maligned unfairly by the media and to a greater extent, by the Black Lives Matter movement. The righteous if occasionally misdirected anger of that growing movement was born in the wake of police killing unarmed black Americans in Ferguson, Mo., and other cities. In fact, the victims of questionable police shootings are not exclusively black. That has put politicians on the spot when asked “Do black lives matter or do all lives matter?” The answer, of course, is both. Not everyone finds that satisfactory, though it’s no less true for the honest disagreement. Those who saw a martyr in the popular Lt. Gliniewicz, known affectionately as GI Joe, today are coping with betrayal and disbelief. Investigators announced, no doubt with troubled souls, Gliniewicz was not murdered by attackers who grabbed his gun and shot him. In fact, he committed suicide — and faked his murder — to cover a secret and shameful life. He preferred death, dishonesty, a hero’s funeral and a national outpouring of sympathy to enduring the humiliation awaiting him. City officials discovered — and likely were to reveal — he had been stealing money from the police department’s Explorer Scout troop he supervised. For years, he took the money to pay for trips, his mortgage and porn sites. Forensics and subsequent examination of emails and text messages revealed a man so desperate he even hinted at killing the city official who was onto him. Jim Pasco, executive director of the National Fraternal Order of Police, is as angry as the people who lived in fear of killers on the loose and who believed they had lost a good and heroic member of their police force and community. “This man didn’t just betray himself and his family,” Pasco said. “He betrayed a profession that is sworn to uphold the law.” Yes. he did. But the police investigators who chose to find the truth, no matter how painful and regardless of the damage to their calling, deserve respect for doing so. They have to great degree made up for Lt. Gliniewicz’s deceit, dishonesty and shame. The investigators’ integrity also has contributed positively to the difficult — but necessary — national conversation about police, the people they protect and the value of life. convicted of misconduct, lying or excessive force, unless in federal court. In Polk County, allegations typically are brought before grand juries, which decline to indict based on what the prosecutor tells them. The missteps of sloppy or dishonest officers should not be allowed to impugn the skills, compassion and honor of upstanding ones. But sometimes the problem lies in the culture of a police or prosecutor’s office Rekha Basu where, according to Neufeld, winning convicDes Moines Register tions is viewed as winning at sports. One haunting case, still unresolved, is him in a park and bragged of raping and killthat of Brandon Ellingson, a white 20-yearing the woman. old from Iowa who drowned last year in the Police tested hair samples from Gates custody of Missouri highway police. They had to compare with hairs found on the victim. arrested him on the Lake of the Ozarks on Results were inconclusive. But an FBI crime lab found matching elements. An FBI investi- suspicion of drunken boating. Witnesses saw gator elevated that connection by testifying at an officer with only two days of water training handcuff Ellingson’s wrists behind his back, trial the samples were identical. then slip an already buckled life vest over his Microscopic hair evidence is not concluhead. The vest came off after Ellingson fell sive, said Neufeld, whose organization since into the water. In dispatch recordings after has helped the FBI review its forensic practhe drowning, a highway official was heard tices. Through trial transcripts, they found telling the dispatcher not to include the fact 26 of 28 FBI lab examiners had exaggerated the arresting trooper administered the wrong matches grossly. Half of convictions the proj- flotation device. ect got overturned involved misapplications A special prosecutor declined to file of forensic science. But because lawyers, charges and a jury in a coroner’s inquest judges and jurors are “scientifically illiterate,” deemed Ellingson died of accidental drownwitnesses go unchallenged, Neufeld said. ing. Missouri Highway Sgt. Randy Henry After Gates’ release, the real perpetrator’s accused the prosecutor of showing bias DNA was placed on a national victim-offender toward the highway patrol who, two years database, and led to a janitor working in the earlier, investigated the prosecutor’s son in victim’s office the night of the murder. the rape of a 14-year-old but didn’t charge Seventy-five percent of wrongful convichim. The investigator in that case later tions involve misidentifications by eyewitacknowledged never interviewing the victim nesses. Neufeld faults police for leading vicor suspect. tims or witnesses to identify the wrong people There now are more than 40 state-level through pictures or release of names. Also, Innocence Projects, and Neufeld urged condespite a legal requirement police turn over to tacting those first about wrongful convictions the defense any evidence that might help their because his office is inundated with up to case, he said they often don’t. 1,000 new requests a month. Police seldom are held accountable, Reversing wrongful convictions isn’t just Neufeld argued. He opposes the immunity about freeing innocent people. It’s also about convicting the right ones so they’re not free to from civil lawsuits granted to police and prosecutors. In Iowa, police almost never are commit more crimes. Justice requires truth. www.thehawkeye.com THE HAWK EYE !" BURLINGTON, IOWA Friday • November 6, 2015 7A BUSINESS Stock Close Chg AES Corp 9.88 -.94 AFLAC 64.17 ... AK Steel 2.71 -.09 AMN Hlth 28.88 -.03 AT&T Inc 33.34 -.14 AU Optron 2.99 +.02 AVG Tech 20.26 -3.82 AbbottLab 45.18 ... AbbVie 62.77 -1.03 AberFitc 23.25 +.58 ActivsBliz 37.36 +.37 AMD 2.20 ... Aegon 6.17 -.05 AEtern g h .06 +.00 Aetna 111.27 +2.61 Agnico g 26.39 -1.20 Airgas 96.28 +.17 Akorn lf 29.20 +2.59 Albemarle 49.43 -4.79 AlcatelLuc 4.06 -.05 Alcoa 9.20 -.18 Alere 42.43 -4.37 Alibaba 85.38 -.02 Allergan 309.43 +1.76 AlliantEgy 60.03 -.08 AllscriptH 14.09 -.15 Allstate 63.55 +.66 AllyFincl 19.89 -.49 AlpAlerMLP 13.72 -.12 Altria 58.05 +.02 Amazon 655.65+14.70 Ambarella 54.78 -2.24 Ambev 5.06 ... Amedica h .26 -.01 Ameren 44.02 -.19 AMovilL 17.25 +.02 AmAirlines 45.60 -.03 ACapAgy 17.84 -.20 AmCapLtd 13.71 +.89 AEagleOut 16.61 -.03 AEP 56.49 -.22 AmExp 73.93 -.14 AmIntlGrp 62.00 +1.20 AResidPrp 15.68 -.60 AmTower 100.87 -1.36 AmicusTh 10.12 +.62 Amphenol 54.70 -.23 Anadarko 70.10 -.12 Anavex rs 10.92 -2.38 AnglogldA 7.57 -.27 Annaly 9.61 -.24 AnteroRes 25.03 -.59 Aon plc 94.80 +.34 Apache 49.27 -.12 Apple Inc 120.92 -.56 ApldMatl 16.81 -.06 ArcelorMit 5.46 -.18 ArchDan 43.07 +.05 Archrock 11.99 -.61 ArenaPhm 2.04 -.16 AriadP 6.89 -.24 AsecntSol .14 -.01 AsiaPc 11.25 +.15 AstraZen s 32.52 +.39 Atmel 7.78 -.06 Autodesk 63.49 +5.66 Autohome 31.71 -4.71 AvagoTch 121.06 -3.05 AvisBudg 43.20 -2.03 Avon 3.14 -.31 Axcelis 2.38 -.68 B2gold g 1.05 -.03 BB&T Cp 38.15 +.33 BHP BillLt 32.44 -.99 BP PLC 35.55 -.81 BRF SA 15.20 +.48 Baidu 198.91 +.99 BakrHu 49.88 -1.68 BcoBrad s 5.81 +.14 BcoSantSA 5.61 -.08 BkofAm 17.31 +.30 BkNYMel 43.29 +.70 Barclay 13.99 -.26 B iPVixST 18.44 -.38 BarnesNob 13.51 +.05 BarrickG 7.36 -.21 Baxter s 37.55 -.02 BaytexE g 4.50 -.20 BerkH B 136.57 -.86 BestBuy 35.02 +.54 BBarrett 6.47 +.41 Stock Close Chg BioMedR 23.30 ... BlackBerry 7.60 -.06 Blackstone 33.52 -.23 BluebBio 70.36-19.79 Boeing 147.97 -.22 BonanzaCE 7.42 +.10 BostonSci 18.94 +.27 BreitburnE 2.53 +.06 BrMySq 65.55 -.07 Broadcom 52.19 -.70 BrcdeCm 10.85 +.22 Brookdale 22.98 +.65 BrukerCp 20.29 +.94 Buenavent 5.93 -.29 C&J Engy 4.74 -.92 CA Inc 27.44 -.17 CBS B 47.77 -.18 CF Inds s 46.84 -4.92 CIT Grp 42.53 +.19 CMS Eng 35.83 +.03 CNH Indl 6.95 -.06 CSX 27.25 -.19 CVS Health 99.54 -.03 Cabelas 43.56 +4.03 CblvsnNY 31.95 -.40 CabotO&G 22.64 +.22 Cadence 22.46 +.01 CalifRes n 4.58 -.05 CallGolf 10.02 -.03 CallonPet 8.85 -.22 Calpine 14.88 -.47 Cameron 68.53 -1.14 CampSp 50.40 -.04 CdnNRs gs 25.60 +1.33 CapOne 79.55 -.60 CpstnTur h .22 +.01 CardnlHlth 88.20 +1.62 Carnival 52.90 +.10 Caseys 112.47 +1.21 CastlightH 3.62 -1.68 Caterpillar 74.22 -.33 CedarF 57.61 +1.16 Celestic g 11.26 -.13 Celgene 120.46 -6.71 Cemex 6.45 +.03 Cemig pf 2.10 +.05 CenterPnt 18.51 -.17 CentAl 4.39 +.16 CntryLink 28.71 +.69 Cerner 61.28 -.35 Chemours n 7.52 -.61 CheniereEn 45.60 -1.90 ChesEng 7.52 +.06 Chevron 94.55 -2.22 Chicos 13.77 +.22 Cisco 28.43 -.04 Citigroup 54.15 +.32 CitizFincl 24.61 +.08 CliffsNRs 2.83 -.20 Coach 32.72 +.44 CobaltIEn 8.92 -.23 CocaCola 42.33 +.36 Coeur 2.69 -.15 Cognex 35.01 +.01 CognizTch 67.17 +.35 ColgPalm 67.60 +.12 Comcast 61.81 +.35 CmtyHlt 30.05 +.98 ConchoRes113.20-3.55 ConocoPhil 56.28 -.06 ConsolEngy 8.45 +.33 Constellm 6.55 +1.36 ContlRescs 35.06 +1.86 Corning 19.06 +.19 Costco 156.27 -.88 Coty 28.22 -1.73 CrackerB 135.27 -1.91 CSVLgNG rs 3.93 +.45 CSVLgCrd rs 9.70 -.80 CSVInvNG 11.31 -1.69 CSVelIVST 31.62 +.60 CSVixSh rs 5.96 -.26 CrestwdEq 2.69 -.09 Crocs 10.37 -.47 Ctrip.com 98.88 +2.43 Cummins 106.50 -.26 CypSemi 10.50 -.23 DDR Corp 17.05 +.25 DR Horton 29.40 -.40 DSW Inc 23.33 +.74 Danaher 95.64 -.17 Trans Pacific Trade deal details released Associated Press WASHINGTON — Officials have released details of a sweeping Pacific Rim trade deal, setting the stage for a raucous debate in Congress. Among the questions it poses: Will the pact promote U.S. exports and jobs? Or will it expose more American workers to low-wage competition and give multinational corporations too much power? The United States reached an agreement Oct. 5 on the Trans Pacific Partnership with 11 other Asia-Pacific countries. A member of the TPP, New Zealand, released the complete text on its foreign ministry website Thursday. The move makes public the details of an agreement that critics complained had been forged in secrecy. Under law, President Barack Obama must give the public time to review the text before he signs the agreement and turns it over to Congress for approval. Applications for US jobless aid rise to still-low 267,000 WASHINGTON — More people sought U.S. unemployment benefits last week, though the increase was from a very low level and the figures still point to a healthy job market. The Labor Department said applications for jobless aid rose 12,000 to a seasonally adjusted 267,000. The four-week average, a less volatile measure, dropped 3,750 to 274,750. Applications are a proxy for layoffs, and two weeks ago they plummeted to the lowest level in 42 years. That suggests Americans are enjoying an unprecedented level of job security. The number of people receiving benefits rose 46,000 to 2.26 million. Wall Street Thursday’s indicators 17,863.43 5,127.74 2,099.93 Livestock futures Open High Low CATTLE 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Dec 15 136.65 137.22 133.50 Feb 16 139.12 139.35 135.82 Apr 16 138.20 138.37 135.35 Jun 16 128.92 129.07 126.37 Aug 16 124.25 126.72 124.00 Oct 16 126.42 129.05 126.07 Dec 16 127.70 130.22 127.30 Feb 17 127.42 129.70 127.42 Apr 17 131.50 131.50 129.10 Est. sales 51329,Wed sales 56178 Wed open int 266655,off 17 FEEDER CATTLE 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Nov 15 184.97 185.25 180.17 Jan 16 176.00 176.42 171.20 Mar 16 172.97 172.97 168.12 Apr 16 169.25 173.62 168.95 May 16 172.87 173.42 168.65 Aug 16 169.82 174.35 169.65 Sep 16 172.82 173.02 172.82 Oct 16 173.50 173.50 173.50 Est. sales 7585,Wed sales 6716 Wed open int 34348,up 150 HOGS-Lean 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Dec 15 57.70 58.57 54.87 Feb 16 60.12 60.82 58.02 Apr 16 65.15 65.55 63.37 May 16 69.70 71.12 69.57 Jun 16 74.60 74.60 73.02 Jul 16 73.70 74.55 73.37 Aug 16 73.07 73.87 72.92 Oct 16 64.55 65.42 64.45 Dec 16 63.25 63.55 63.25 Est. sales 38398,Wed sales 40024 Wed open int 203590,up 348 Stock Close Chg GileadSci 107.83 -1.15 GlaxoSKln 42.28 -.32 GluMobile 3.66 -.06 GoDaddy n 32.41 +4.98 Gogo 16.41 +1.51 GoldFLtd 2.49 -.04 Goldcrp g 12.16 -.36 Goodyear 32.71 -.20 GoPro 24.81 -.57 GtBasSci f .06 -.00 Groupon 2.91 -.06 GugShippg 15.31 -.04 GulfportE 30.49 -.89 HCA Hldg 68.59 -.08 HCP Inc 35.81 +.26 HD Supply 30.51 -.33 HNI Corp 44.15 +.82 HP Inc 14.05 -.09 HainCeles s 47.91 -.30 Hallibrtn 38.41 -.80 Hanesbds s 32.84 +.12 HarleyD 49.51 +.64 Hasbro 77.06 +.05 HawaiiEl 29.27 -.03 HrtlndEx 19.73 +.17 HeclaM 2.11 -.08 HeclaM pfB 57.80 -.00 Herbalife 57.47 +1.55 Hershey 87.71 ... Hertz 18.04 -.45 Hess 62.19 +1.77 HP Ent n 13.28 -.38 Hilton 25.67 +.26 HimaxTch 6.18 -.25 HollyFront 50.34 -.48 Hologic 39.96 +.44 HomeDp 125.72 +.34 HomeAway 40.15 +8.11 Honda 32.81 +.72 HonwllIntl 103.60 +.23 HorizPhm 17.26 +.45 Hormel 67.60 +.38 Hortonwk n 16.55 -3.81 HostHotls 17.83 +.22 HoughMH 17.91 -1.91 HuntBncsh 11.33 +.13 Settle 134.40 136.90 136.47 127.45 125.12 127.20 128.42 128.02 129.10 Metals Chg -2.82 -2.75 -1.98 -1.55 -1.58 -1.85 -1.85 -2.18 -2.90 181.62 172.67 170.05 171.05 170.57 171.17 173.02 173.50 -4.53 -5.00 -4.22 -3.70 -3.90 -4.10 -4.88 -4.25 55.40 58.60 63.77 69.57 73.32 73.50 73.10 64.62 63.35 -1.97 -1.42 -1.43 -1.58 -1.28 -1.07 -.72 -.30 -.05 Stock Close Chg Huntsmn 13.32 -.11 IAMGld g 1.55 -.08 ICICI Bk s 8.25 -.24 ION Geoph .36 +.10 iShGold 10.65 -.03 iShBrazil 24.46 +.34 iShEMU 36.88 +.06 iShGerm 26.91 +.06 iSh HK 20.76 -.09 iShJapan 12.43 +.09 iSTaiwn 14.53 -.03 iShSilver 14.30 -.08 iShChinaLC 39.31 +.19 iSCorSP500211.32 -.26 iShEMkts 35.80 +.06 iShACWX 41.88 -.04 iShiBoxIG 115.50 +.03 iSh20 yrT 120.77 -.32 iSh1-3yTB 84.64 ... iS Eafe 61.22 -.11 iShiBxHYB 84.95 -.33 iShNsdqBio331.14-6.49 iSR1KVal 101.58 -.27 iShR2K 118.38 +.09 iShUSPfd 39.30 +.02 iShREst 76.16 +.22 ImpOil g 33.79 -.10 InfoSonic h 1.95 +.74 Infosys s 18.09 -.06 IngerRd 59.91 +.37 InsysTher s 25.43 -.95 Intel 34.00 -.15 IBM 139.89 -1.74 IntPap 42.04 -.47 IntlSpdw 34.79 -.05 Interpublic 22.76 -.24 IntersENT 16.54 -5.15 Invesco 33.89 +.35 InvestBncp 12.73 +.03 iShCorEM 43.35 -.01 ItauUnibH 7.55 +.14 JD.com 28.80 -.47 JPMorgCh 66.44 +.59 JPMAlerian 33.34 -.38 Jarden s 48.41 +.16 JetBlue 25.74 +.71 Open Grain futures High Low CBOT GOLD 100 oz. 100 troy oz- dollars per troy oz Nov 15 Dec 15 Jan 16 Feb 16 Mar 16 Est. sales ,Wed sales 6 Wed open int 1, CBOT SILVER 5000 oz. 5000 troy oz- dollars per troy oz Nov 15 Dec 15 15.010 15.010 14.975 Jan 16 Feb 16 Mar 16 15.028 15.028 15.028 Est. sales 3,Wed sales 1 Wed open int 5,up 1 Stock Close Chg JohnJn 102.33 +.39 JohnsnCtl 45.19 +.19 JoyGlbl 17.70 +.38 JnprNtwk 31.40 -.22 KAR Auct 37.70 -.72 KB Home 13.11 -.13 KKR 18.88 +.43 KC Southn 88.54 +1.46 KateSpade 21.50 +1.76 Keycorp 12.99 +.18 KimbClk 119.88 +.02 Kimco 26.94 +.04 KindMorg 25.91 -.90 KindredHlt 11.82 -2.75 KingDEnt 17.84 +.08 Kinross g 1.88 -.10 Kohls 46.66 +.45 KraftHnz n 75.42 -.40 Kroger s 37.07 +.06 LaQuinta 15.10 -.01 LamResrch 77.07 +.06 Lannett 38.62 -7.54 LaredoPet 12.32 -.39 LVSands 49.55 -.14 Lee Ent 2.07 -.01 LeggPlat 46.32 +.25 LendingC n 14.19 -.43 LennarA 49.07 -.91 LeucNatl 19.34 -.63 LibtyGlobA 45.68 -.09 LibtyGlobC 44.02 -.18 LibQVC A 26.65 -.01 LinnEngy 2.79 -.04 LloydBkg 4.47 -.16 Lowes 73.58 +.48 LumberLiq 16.39 +.74 LyonBas A 94.99 -.43 MBIA 8.15 +.23 MGIC Inv 9.58 +.21 MGM Rsts 23.91 -.12 Macys 50.45 +.01 Magna g s 47.35 -5.51 MagHRes .30 +.03 Mallinckdt 66.51 -4.12 MannKd 2.79 -.20 ManpwrGp 90.91 -2.33 MarathnO 19.00 -.40 MarathPt s 55.65 +.85 MVJrGold 19.67 -.41 MktVGold 14.08 -.54 MV OilSvc 31.37 -.70 MV Semi 54.11 -1.44 MktVRus 17.34 +.01 MartMM 155.33 +9.48 MarvellT lf 8.70 +.08 Masco 29.25 +.23 Mastec 18.69 +.59 MasterCrd 100.69 +.17 Mattel 24.79 -.08 McDnlds 112.85 +.45 MedProp 11.56 +.04 Medtrnic 76.17 +.01 MelcoCrwn 19.01 -.36 MemResDv 16.92 -.61 Merck 55.05 -.48 Methode 34.93 +.03 Settle Chg 1104.4 1104.2 1104.6 1105.2 1105.9 -2.1 -2.0 -2.0 -1.9 -1.9 14.988 14.975 15.001 15.032 15.028 -.075 -.083 -.074 -.074 -.078 Stock Close Chg MetLife 49.90 -.59 MKors 43.49 +.92 Microchp 47.91 -1.08 MicronT 16.51 -.93 Microsoft 54.38 -.02 MidWOne 30.85 +.29 Mobileye 45.90 -2.64 Mondelez 45.88 ... Monsanto 93.96 -.94 MorgStan 33.88 +.48 Mosaic 32.67 -.71 MotrlaSolu 67.40 +2.16 MurphO 31.00 +.58 Mylan NV 44.79 -1.79 NCR Corp 26.96 -.16 NRG Egy 13.58 -.50 NXP Semi 79.50 -.48 Nabors 10.61 -.48 NBGreece .63 -.10 NatGrid 71.05 -.24 NOilVarco 39.50 -.39 Navient 13.23 -.18 NaviosMar 5.37 -.60 Navistar 13.47 +.33 NetApp 34.20 +.38 Netflix s 113.50 -.55 NwGold g 2.39 -.07 NewResid 12.20 +.09 NY CmtyB 16.05 +.08 NewellRub 43.85 -.07 NewfldExp 38.95 +.65 NewmtM 17.50 -1.51 NewsCpA 15.35 -.09 NiSource s 19.56 +.20 NikeB 131.86 +1.50 NipponTT 38.13 +.88 NobleCorp 13.72 -.28 NobleEngy 37.65 -.19 NokiaCp 7.51 -.04 NordicAm 14.59 -.43 NorthropG 186.42 +.25 NStRFn rs 21.53 +1.48 Novavax 7.78 -.27 NovoNord 55.31 +1.72 NuSkin 39.20 -1.09 Nvidia 27.71 -.32 OasisPet 12.84 +.41 OcciPet 75.71 -.05 OfficeDpt 7.70 +.19 Olin 19.40 -.01 OlympStl 9.67 -.80 OmegaHlt 34.64 +.06 OnSmcnd 11.28 -.26 ONEOK 31.37 -2.19 OpkoHlth 9.66 ... Oracle 40.35 -.13 Orange 17.42 +.05 Orexigen 3.20 -.09 OtterTail 26.75 +.02 PDL Bio 4.00 -.46 PG&E Cp 53.72 -.44 PPG s 103.21 -.65 PaloAltNet 159.93 -6.48 PanASlv 7.11 -.29 Pandora 12.45 +.67 PapaJohns 59.76 -.07 Open High Low Settle WHEAT 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Dec 15 524.25 529 520.25 526.25 Mar 16 526.50 530 522 527 May 16 530 532.25 524.50 528.50 Jul 16 529.75 532.25 524 527.50 Sep 16 538.25 538.25 533.75 535.25 Dec 16 552 552 544.75 548.75 Mar 17 557.75 558.75 557.75 558.75 Est. sales 430538,Wed sales 189061 Wed open int 390438,up 2918 CORN 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Dec 15 379.50 379.75 373.75 374.50 Mar 16 387.25 387.50 382 382.75 May 16 393.25 393.50 388.25 389 Jul 16 398 398 393 394 Sep 16 399.50 399.50 395.75 396.50 Dec 16 405.50 405.50 401.25 402.25 Mar 17 415 415 411.25 411.75 May 17 418.50 418.50 417.50 417.50 Est. sales 858026,Wed sales 449268 Wed open int 1347742,off 2757 OATS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Dec 15 226.75 227.25 223.75 224.50 Mar 16 228 229.25 225.25 225.75 May 16 227.25 229 226.50 226.50 Jul 16 233 235 230.75 230.75 Sep 16 233 Dec 16 234.50 Est. sales 1728,Wed sales 1200 Wed open int 11505,up 204 SOYBEANS-MINI 1,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Nov 15 867.75 Jan 16 864 Mar 16 866.25 May 16 871.25 Jul 16 877 Aug 16 876.75 Sep 16 872.75 Nov 16 874 Jan 17 879.50 Mar 17 883.50 Est. sales ,Wed sales 590 Wed open int 6550,up 45 Stock Close Chg ParsleyEn 17.90 +.42 PattUTI 15.80 -.69 Paychex 52.54 +.72 PayPal n 36.71 -.89 PennWst g 1.38 -.10 Penney 8.68 -.18 PeopUtdF 16.43 +.21 PepsiCo 100.61 -.01 PetrbrsA 4.20 -.06 Petrobras 5.17 -.07 Pfizer 34.15 +.01 PhilipMor 88.16 +.09 Phillips66 93.68 +.35 PiperJaf 37.37 ... PitnyBw 21.12 ... PlainsAAP 28.56 -.65 PlainsGP 12.40 -.05 PlatfmSpc 11.89 -.81 PlugPowr h 2.86 -.06 Potash 20.89 -.20 PwshDB 15.01 -.12 PS SrLoan 22.98 +.02 PwShs QQQ114.71 -.31 Praxair 113.38 +.36 PrinFncl 50.93 +.12 ProShtS&P 20.48 +.02 ProUltSP s 66.69 -.15 PrUltPQQQ123.86-1.10 PUVixST rs 26.91 -1.17 PrUCrude rs22.07 -1.03 ProShtVix 61.90 +1.21 ProctGam 76.39 -.67 ProgsvCp 32.38 -.77 ProUShSP 19.24 +.06 PUShtQQQ 28.88 +.19 PShtQQQ 18.00 +.17 PUShtSPX 30.16 +.09 ProspctCap 7.26 -.10 Chg -1.50 -3.25 -4.50 -4.50 -4.50 -4.50 -6 -5.50 -5.25 -5 -4 -4 -4 -4.25 -1.50 -2.25 -2 -1 -.25 +.50 -14.25 -20 -20.25 -20.25 -19.75 -18.75 -16.25 -15 -14.75 -15 Stock Close Chg Prudentl 84.35 -.07 PSEG 40.69 -.40 PulteGrp 18.15 -.19 QEP Res 16.13 +.13 Qorvo n 45.08 -1.49 Qualcom 51.07 -9.19 QuantaSvc 20.73 +.78 QntmDSS 1.05 +.12 Questar 19.85 -.93 Qunar 37.38 -3.61 RPM 46.05 +.04 RSP Perm 26.86 -.47 RadianGrp 14.23 +.33 RLauren 130.50+16.93 RangeRs 35.38 +1.30 Realogy 42.53 +2.84 RegionsFn 9.73 +.14 RepubAir 5.11 -.68 ReynAm s 46.16 +.45 RiceEngy 15.77 -.37 RioTinto 34.94 -1.46 RiteAid 7.83 -.09 RockwlAut 108.95 -.68 RossStrs s 51.54 -.08 Rowan 19.91 -.99 RoyalBk g 58.10 +.37 RoyDShllB 52.70 -1.87 RoyDShllA 52.72 -1.70 RoyGld 40.26 -6.70 Rubicon g .15 -.01 SBA Com 109.75 -7.88 SLM Cp 7.00 -.03 SpdrDJIA 178.64 -.01 SpdrGold 105.64 -.33 S&P500ETF210.15 -.21 SpdrBiot s 70.74 -1.29 SpdrLehHY 36.28 -.09 SpdrS&P RB44.59 +.72 Stock Close Chg SpdrRetl s 46.66 +.25 SpdrOGEx 39.20 +.16 SabreCorp 29.17 -.70 Salesforce 78.71 +.32 SandRdge .44 +.03 SantCUSA 17.76 -.03 Schlmbrg 78.80 -1.51 Schwab 31.57 +.13 ScorpioTk 9.06 +.17 Scotts 67.40 -.09 SeaChange 6.68 -.04 SeadrillLtd 6.80 -.22 SeagateT 38.87 +.06 SearsHldgs 23.53 -.37 SeaWorld 18.30 -1.22 SelCmfrt 25.50 +4.06 SempraEn 104.12 -1.40 Shutterstk 33.38 +5.37 SilvWhtn g 12.97 -.67 SiriusXM 4.12 -.04 Skechers s 29.29 -.71 SkywksSol 80.28 +.10 SolarCity 29.72 -.08 SolarEdg n 22.01 +4.83 SonyCp 28.35 -.10 SouFun 7.33 -.27 SouthnCo 45.63 -.17 SwstAirl 46.67 +.03 SwstnEngy 12.28 +.62 SpectraEn 28.36 -.40 SpiritRltC 10.30 +.04 Sprint 4.68 +.20 Sprouts 23.01 +3.13 SP Matls 45.21 -.23 SP HlthC 72.05 -.23 SP CnSt 49.72 -.01 SP Consum 81.41 +.29 SP Engy 70.16 -.60 SPDR Fncl 24.48 +.10 SP Inds 54.86 +.07 SP Tech 44.19 -.13 SP Util 43.78 -.38 StanBlkDk 107.11 -.17 Staples 13.31 +.27 Starbucks s 62.28 +.32 StarwdHtl 77.75 +.07 StarwdPT 20.88 +.56 StateStr 72.46 +1.19 Statoil ASA 16.49 -.11 StoneEngy 6.85 +.62 StrPathCm 12.81-13.70 Suncor g 29.87 -.39 SunEdison 7.48 -.50 SunocoLog 29.81 +.02 SunTrst 43.39 +.70 SupEnrgy 15.32 -.24 Supvalu 6.59 +.02 Symantec 20.88 -.02 Synchrony 32.61 +.53 SynchFn wi 32.08 +.49 Sysco 41.06 +.27 T-MobileUS39.44 +.58 TCF Fncl 14.83 -.84 TD Ameritr 36.21 -.10 TJX 74.32 +.64 TaiwSemi 22.98 -.57 TakeTwo 33.05 -.98 Target 78.15 +.76 TASER 20.16 -.42 TeckRes g 5.55 -.25 TeekayTnk 6.89 -.34 Tegna 27.19 -.61 TelefBrasil 10.34 -.47 Tenaris 25.52 -.04 TenetHlth 33.62 -.58 Tenneco 54.73 -.38 Teradata 25.58 -4.21 Terex 21.83 -.75 TeslaMot 231.77 +.14 Tesoro 115.40 +.82 TevaPhrm 60.92 -.59 TexInst 57.40 +.45 Textron 41.97 +.11 3D Sys 10.45 -1.04 3M Co 158.99 +.08 Time Inc 18.00 -1.03 TimeWarn 69.43 -2.77 Total SA 50.12 -.13 Toyota 124.86 +1.30 Transocn 15.47 -1.38 Travelport 14.03 -.49 Stock Close Chg TriPointe 12.59 -.22 TriangPet 1.28 -.02 TripAdvis 83.11 +.49 Tronox 5.53 -.93 TumiHldgs 16.89 +.18 21stCFoxA 29.59 -.06 21stCFoxB 29.88 -.02 Twitter 28.66 -.70 TwoHrbInv 8.23 -.39 Tyson 45.60 +.45 USG 24.57 +.66 UltraPt g 5.31 +.05 UnionPac 87.21 -.98 UtdContl 60.30 +.01 UPS B 104.23 +.23 US Bancrp 42.63 +.01 US Cellular 42.69 +.36 US NGas 10.01 +.44 US OilFd 14.48 -.37 USSteel 10.39 -.67 UtdTech 100.80 +.47 UtdhlthGp 116.23 +1.59 VF Corp 69.21 +1.28 Vale SA 4.39 -.17 Vale SA pf 3.64 -.08 ValeantPh 78.77-13.21 ValeroE 71.93 +.83 VangREIT 80.73 +.32 VangAllW 45.68 -.10 VangEmg 35.79 +.05 VangFTSE 38.11 -.05 Ventas 54.19 +.75 Vereit 8.57 +.02 VerizonCm 46.20 +.06 ViacomB 46.78 -1.14 ViadCorp 31.70 -.27 VimpelCm 3.71 +.30 Vipshop 21.14 -.67 Visa s 79.26 +.91 Vodafone 33.06 -.30 Vonage 6.76 -.19 W&T Off 3.78 +.42 WEC Engy 51.68 -.31 WGL Hold 61.67 -.75 WPP plc 113.28 -.97 WPX Engy 8.44 +1.03 Wabash 12.63 +.30 Wabtec 77.44 -2.48 WaferGen .95 -.07 WalMart 58.61 +.24 WalgBoots 85.95 -1.53 WausauPap 10.19 +.02 WeathfIntl 11.06 -.19 WtWatch 16.93 +.43 WellsFargo 54.86 +.28 Welltower 64.92 +.15 Wendys Co 9.71 -.14 WDigital 67.85 -.70 WstnUnion 19.57 +.30 WestRock n 51.38 -1.87 Weyerhsr 31.08 +.16 Whrlpl 158.66 -2.33 WhitingPet 18.81 +.10 WholeFood 30.11 -.65 WmsCos 38.25 -.68 Windstm rs 6.14 -.24 WT EurHdg 61.83 +.19 WTJpHedg 54.45 +.50 WT India 19.95 -.19 WrightMed 21.53 +1.31 XOMA 1.75 +.02 XPO Logis 31.46 +3.51 Xerox 9.63 -.01 Yahoo 35.12 +.05 Yamana g 1.95 -.12 Yandex 15.74 -.26 Yelp 25.05 +.63 YoukuTud 24.37 -.08 YumBrnds 71.17 -.37 ZillowC n 25.79 -1.86 ZionsBcp 29.71 +.60 Ziopharm 12.90 -.46 Zoetis 45.46 -1.09 Zynga 2.58 +.03 Campaign 2016: What Walmart women want Business digest DOW NASDAQ S&P Stock Close Chg Deere 77.93 -.31 DeltaAir 50.54 -.12 DenburyR 4.01 +.04 DBXEafeEq 28.18 +.03 DevonE 47.51 +1.02 Diageo 115.69 -.50 DiamOffsh 23.21 +.17 DiamRk 11.65 -.13 Diebold 36.95 -.30 DirSPBear 16.15 +.06 DxEnBear 20.69 +.56 DxSCBear rs40.46 -.03 DxGBull rs 28.74 -3.36 DxFnBull s 31.68 +.47 DirDGldBr 18.85 +1.85 DrxSCBull 74.12 +.15 DirxEnBull 37.63 -1.01 Discover 56.91 +.54 DiscCmA 29.51 -.79 DiscCmC 27.94 -.67 Disney 113.00 -.25 DollarGen 68.23 +.45 DomRescs 70.24 -.33 DowChm 51.61 +.23 DuPont 64.81 +.54 DuPnt pfA 79.88 ... DuPnt pfB 95.01 -.84 DukeEngy 71.45 -.48 DyaxCp 34.87 -.38 Dynegy 18.98 -1.54 eBay s 29.30 ... EMC Cp 26.04 -.16 EMC Inc s 23.98 -.09 ENI 32.07 -.35 EOG Rescs 86.47 ... Eaton 57.11 +.92 ElPasE pf 47.50 -.50 EldorGld g 3.33 -.07 EliLilly 80.61 -.44 EmersonEl 49.15 -.53 EnCana g 7.97 +.04 Endo Intl 51.70 -8.79 EnerNOC 4.99 -3.14 EgyTrEq s 20.48 -.46 EngyTsfr 42.62 -1.77 Enphase 2.30 -.03 EnPro 51.67 -.17 ENSCO 18.30 -.04 EnteroM h .19 -.10 EntProdPt 27.07 -.32 EqtyRsd 79.16 +.02 Ericsson 9.89 -.07 Evercore 58.50 +2.30 ExactSci h 10.00 +.27 ExamWks 22.68 -6.18 Exelixis 6.14 -.07 Exelon 28.74 -.36 Expedia 137.31 +3.14 ExxonMbl 84.81 -1.17 EyegatePh 4.11 +1.51 Facebook 108.76 +4.82 Fastenal 41.23 +1.01 FedExCp 160.27 +1.27 FiatChrys 14.30 +.04 FidNatInfo 66.18 +.64 FifthThird 19.82 +.34 FireEye 22.46 -6.66 FstData n 16.31 +.17 FstHorizon 14.67 +.18 FstNiagara 10.76 +.14 FT RNG 6.54 +.06 FirstEngy 30.40 -.59 Fitbit n 36.86 -.96 Flexstl 43.93 +.75 Flextrn 11.72 +.02 FlowrsFds 27.00 +.10 FordM 14.57 -.08 Fortinet 33.31 -1.79 FrankRes 41.57 +.44 FreeSea hrs .05 -.01 FrptMcM 11.48 -.54 FrontierCm 4.71 -.07 Gap 28.37 +.35 GenElec 29.64 +.10 GenGrPrp 28.84 +.16 GenMills 57.62 +.33 GenMotors 35.44 +.02 GeneticT rs 3.09 +.18 Genworth 4.42 -.11 Gerdau 1.53 ... GeronCp 3.61 -.16 -4.15 -14.74 -2.38 Area cash grains Reports for Nov. 5 Stockport Elevator (Stockport) Corn $3.58 (spot) $3.55 (new crop) Soybeans $8.57 (spot) $8.48 (new crop) CGB (Wever) Corn $3.69 (spot) $3.77 (open nav) Soybeans $8.63 (spot) $8.68 (open nav) Big River Resources (West Burlington) Corn $3.73 By MARGARET TALEV Bloomberg News WASHINGTON — Key voters dubbed “Walmart moms” have economic concerns that may transcend partisan lines in the 2016 election, and they’re highlighting potential problems for top Democrat Hillary Clinton and Republican Donald Trump ahead of the first presidential nominating contests in Iowa and New Hampshire in February. In focus groups conducted Tuesday night, likely Republican primary voters in New Hampshire and likely Democratic caucus-goers in Iowa cited the national deficit, the U.S. debt to China, insufficient wages, student loans and dysfunctional government among their leading concerns. The Republican women were “overwhelmingly negative about the mood of the country,” said pollster Neil Newhouse, who observed the focus groups. “They’re still stressed by the economy.” The Democratic group sounded “Republican-lite,” rather than like a markedly different group, on “everything from mood of the country, their personal finances, their attitudes toward” Washington dysfunction, he said. The groups were made up of 10 women in each state who have shopped at Walmart in the past month and have at least one child younger than 18 living at home, a swing-vote subgroup in past elections. The organizers, Public Opinion Strategies and Purple Strategies, invited journalists to observe. (Bloomberg Politics also has conducted focus groups with Purple Strategies.) While the groups were too small to represent statistically significant samples, the responses of the women — who agreed to be identified by their first names only — offer insights into voters’ views at this stage of the race. Their comments come as a Quinnipiac University poll shows the economy and jobs are the top concern of Democrats and Republicans nationwide. One caution for Clinton, Newhouse said, is the Democratic focus group was “less engaged.” “There wasn’t an embrace of what a Hillary Clinton presidency would look like and that it was good for them,” he said. Four of those 10 women said they are thinking of supporting Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders. Half said they believed Sanders might defeat Clinton in the primary. Several of the women described Clinton with positive words such as “strong,” “lovable,” Reform Jews approve transgender resolution By MIKE SCHNEIDER Associated Press ORLANDO, Fla. — The largest movement of Judaism in the U.S. passed the most far-reaching resolution in support of transgender rights of any major religious organization, saying Thursday it’s a continuation of a tradition of inclusion in the Reform Jewish movement. Members of the Union for Reform Judaism attending its biennial meeting in Orlando approved the resolution, which calls for congregations and camps to have gender-neutral bathrooms and encourages gender-neutral language at Reform Jewish institutions. It also suggests training on gender issues for religious school staff and encourages advocating on behalf of the transgender community. There was no opposition, though three conference attendees who said they were in favor of the resolution asked if preschools and religious schools would be affected. Union for Reform Judaism leaders said they would be, but they weren’t asking congregations to spend extra money on new facilities. After the resolution passed, most of the 5,000 attendees in the meeting hall stood up and applauded. “Your reaction in this room shows what this movement is about. It makes me very proud,” said Stephen Sacks, chairman of the Union for Reform Judaism’s board. Other religious bodies, such as the Episcopal Church, the United Church of Christ, the Unitarian Universalist Association and the Reconstructionist Rabbinical Association, previously approved resolutions affirming equality for transgender and non-gender-conforming people. The Union for Reform Judaism is offering a one-page pamphlet to help congregations adopt the goals of the resolution. It suggests dividing kids by birth month rather than gender in youth programming and avoiding using gender titles such as “Mr.” or “Mrs.” on name tags or in emails. The resolution doesn’t mandate congregations to do anything, so it will be up to individual synagogues to implement policies to meet the goals of the resolution. Union for Reform Judaism officials said the resolution has been in the works for some time and is part of a tradition of inclusion. The group in 1977 passed a resolution affirming the rights of gays and lesbians. More than 6 million Jews live in the United States. and “intelligent.” But some of the women said they didn’t trust Clinton and don’t think they have much in common with her. They used words such as “shady” and “shifty” to describe her. Most said they did not feel a special affinity for her because she’s a woman. Asked what emotion they would feel if Clinton won the presidency, a couple of the women said hopeful and one said secure, while others said they would feel nervous, worried or unsettled. Sanders’ liabilities included women’s sense they don’t know him well enough to render judgment, as well as concerns about his age. “He’s already old. They’re going to wear him out,” said Annette, a divorced African-American woman who works in sales, about the 74-year-old Sanders and Republicans. A Monmouth University poll conducted from Oct. 22-25 in Iowa found Clinton with a 41 percentage point lead over Sanders. In addition to concerns they shared with the Democratic group, the Republican women also emphasized rising insurance costs, illegal immigration and a desire to undo President Barack Obama’s record. They also expressed a stronger belief 2016 was an important election. The group’s comments indicated the race for the GOP presidential nomination still is wide open. Seven of the 10 women said they haven’t been able to narrow their choice for Republican nominee down to fewer than four candidates. Florida Sen. Marco Rubio held the broadest appeal, with nine of the 10 women saying he is among those they are considering. Former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina was next, with eight say- ing she’s still a contender for their vote, followed by retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson and Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul with seven each. Five said they were still considering Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and four former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush. Only two of the women said they’re open to supporting Trump. A Monmouth University poll conducted Oct. 29-Nov. 1 found Trump in first place in New Hampshire with 26 percent, followed by Carson with 16 percent. “In the beginning I’m thinking, ‘Trump might be good,’” said Jill, a married mother of one who works as a kitchen manager. “Then he started talking,” she said. “He’s so insulting to everyone.” Another participant, Johanna, a customer service worker and mother of two, said her 5-yearold asked if Trump was “joking” because “you can’t talk to people like that.” 8A Friday • November 6, 2015 THE HAWK EYE !" BURLINGTON, IOWA www.thehawkeye.com 427589 SPORTS www.thehawkeye.com T HE HAWK EYE THE HAWK EYE John Bohnenkamp, sports editor (319) 758-8196 or 1-800-397-1708 FAX (319)-754-6824 email: [email protected] www.thehawkeye.com/sports Press Box Hunter retires, hopes to stay in baseball MINNEAPOLIS — Torii Hunter has concluded his playing career of 17-plus major league seasons, including more than a decade with the Minnesota Twins. The 40-year-old has a strong desire to stay in the game, though. “I don’t want to sit out too long. I want to get right back in it,” Hunter said Thursday. Hunter has been transitioning out of the dugout, letting his body recover from the grind of 2,372 major league games. He’s been watching his three sons play college football and catching up on down time with his wife, Katrina, whom he called his “foundation” during a 20-minute reflection on the people who guided his journey. He was up at 4 a.m. to prepare it. “Without you,” Hunter said to his wife, “I wouldn’t have had any success.” From poor kid in Pine Bluff, Arkansas, to first-round draft pick to struggling minor leaguer to fivetime All-Star with nine Gold Glove awards, Hunter has come a long way. There’s still an undiscovered path ahead of him, too. Hunter said he’s already fielded offers from different networks about serving as a television analyst. He has spoken informally with Twins general manager Terry Ryan about a role in the organization and planned to dine with owner Jim Pohlad to further discuss that future. “Going to make him pay,” Hunter said, with one of many familiar quips throughout a 48-minute farewell news conference to match his jersey number with the Twins, the team he was drafted by in 1993, debuted with in 1997 and returned to for one last season in 2015. — Associated Press On the air Today’s sports on TV (Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts) AUTO RACING 11:30 a.m. NBCSN — NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, practice, at Fort Worth, TX 1 p.m. NBCSN — NASCAR XFINITY Series, practice, at Fort Worth, TX 3:30 p.m. FS1 — NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, qualifying, at Fort Worth, TX 5:30 p.m. NBCSN — NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, qualifying, at Fort Worth, TX 7:30 p.m. FS1 — NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, The WinStar World Casino 350, at Fort Worth, TX 1:30 a.m. FS1 — FIA Formula E Championship, at Putrajaya, Malaysia COLLEGE BASKETBALL 5 p.m. ESPNU — Exhibition, Kentucky State at Kentucky COLLEGE FOOTBALL 7 p.m. ESPN2 — Temple at SMU 7 p.m. NBCSN — Cornell at Dartmouth GOLF 12:30 p.m. GOLF — PGA Tour: Sanderson Farms Championship, second-round, at Jackson, Miss. 3:30 p.m. GOLF — Champions Tour: Charles Schwab Cup Championship, second-round, at Scottsdale, Ariz. 9 p.m. GOLF — PGA Tour: WGC-HSBC Champions, thirdround, at Shanghai NBA 7 p.m. ESPN, FSNMW — Miami at Indiana 9:30 p.m. ESPN — Houston at Sacramento SOCCER 1:30 p.m. FS1 — Hertha Berlin at Hannover 96 Today’s sports on radio MEN’S BASKETBALL 6:30 p.m. KHDK (97.3-FM) — St. John’s Prep Academy at SCC 7 p.m. KBUR (1490-AM) — Augustana (S.D.) at Iowa !" BURLINGTON, IOWA 1B Friday • November 6, 2015 Section B Friday, November 6, 2015 Burlington, Iowa COLLEGE WRESTLING Not going anywhere Veteran Hawkeyes seek return to the top. By MATT LEVINS [email protected] IOWA CITY — The University of Iowa wrestling team was in the national championship hunt right up until the very end last year, finally settling for second place behind Big Ten Conference rival Ohio State. That kind of season would be celebrated by most programs in the nation, which would love to just get a sniff of a national title, let alone win one. But this is Iowa, where national team titles, national championships, trophies and gold medals are an expectation, not an exception. So when the Hawkeyes came back from St. Louis with no national championship for the fifth straight year and no individ- ual national champions for the first time since 2011, there was a feeling around the program that the sky was falling. Well, hold your eggs, Chicken Little. The sky isn’t falling and the Iowa wrestling program isn’t going anywhere. With four returning All-Americans, another national qualifier and one wrestler who made a big splash last season, the Hawkeyes are in good hands. And their goals are still the same — win the Big Ten Championship, win the National Duals, crown 10 individual national champions and bring home the 24th national championship in program history. Those are the expectations John Gaines/The Hawk Eye of the Iowa program and those are the standards head coach Iowa wrestlers get instructions before practice from head coach Tom Brands Thursday in the Dan Tom Brands holds his wrestlers Gable Wrestling Complex in Iowa City. Former Mediapolis High School wrestlers and freshmen on to. Just because the Hawkeyes the team Cole Erickson (bottom right) and Steven Holloway (behind Erickson at left) take in the See Hawkeyes page 4B information with the team. NASCAR Kenseth’s suspension upheld Driver loses appeal, will miss next two races. By JENNA FRYER Associated Press ita, who decided against presenting the case to a grand jury for possible charges. “I have repeatedly said that I did nothing wrong,” Kane said in a statement issued by the Blackhawks. “I have respected the legal process and I am glad that this matter has now been closed and I will have nothing further to say going forward.” It’s not immediately clear whether Kane could face disciplinary action from the National Hockey League. Deputy Commissioner Bill Daly said the league wouldn’t comment until reviewing the prosecutor’s findings. At 26, Kane is one of the NHL’s top young stars and has won three Stanley Cup championships in Chicago over the past six years, including last season. He had been in trouble before, too, arrested after an altercation with a cab driver in Buffalo in the summer of 2009. Photos of him partying are easily found CHARLOTTE, N.C. — His appeals rejected, Matt Kenseth defiantly vowed Thursday to race as he always has and accused NASCAR of “unfairly” making an example out of him with a tworace suspension for intentionally wrecking Joey Logano over the weekend at Martinsville. Kenseth will miss the next two races, at Texas and Phoenix, and is eligible to return for the Nov. 22 season finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway. The national motorsports appeals panel denied Kenseth’s appeal Thursday and a few hours later so did final appeals officer Bryan Moss, who did reduce Ke n s e t h’s probation from six months until Kenseth the end of this year. Kenseth said he was “unfairly made the example” because NASCAR had no clear rule on what the penalties are for intentionally wrecking another driver in an act of retaliation. “I am not going to change who I am, I’m not going to change what I stand for, I’m not going to change how I race,” Kenseth said. “I’ve been in this business a long time, I feel I’ve had a pretty good career to this point and I feel like I’m going to continue to have the respect on the race track that I feel I deserve.” NASCAR has not been consistent over the years in punishing drivers who exact revenge. Kenseth was spun out three races ago by Logano as both raced for the win at Kansas, ruining a chance to advance in NASCAR’s championship playoffs. On Sunday, he deliberately crashed into Logano at Martinsville and Logano lost a shot at an automatic berth in the final four. Danica Patrick was fined $50,000 for wrecking another driver in retaliation on Sunday, but it was Kenseth’s penalty that raised eyebrows. Kenseth was harshly punished to deter any driver from doing the same thing, NASCAR chairman Brian France told SiriusXM NASCAR Radio on Wednesday. France referenced the 2013 cheating scandal at Richmond, where Michael Waltrip Racing manipulated a series of events to ensure its driver made the playoffs. France warned the entire industry after Richmond that manipulating races would not be tolerated — and he indicated what Kenseth did at Martinsville fit that category. “Going back to Richmond, we’ve been very clear when anybody in the industry, any driver or participant, intentionally tries to alter the outcome of events or championships, that crosses a different line than a racing problem between two drivers,” France said. “So obviously the significance of what was on the line had to be taken into consideration.” Jeff Gordon was fined $100,000 but avoided suspension See Kane page 5B See Kenseth page 5B Rob Brown/Associated Press Miami’s Dallas Crawford (25) returns a kickoff, which featured multiple laterals before Corn Elder subsequently received the final lateral, to beat Duke 30-27 on Saturday. COLLEGE FOOTBALL Football for the backyard Teams design, practice multiple-lateral kick returns. By ERIC OLSON Associated Press B y now, the eight-lateral kick return for Miami’s winning touchdown over Duke last weekend has joined California’s storied five-lateral “Play To Beat The Band” against Stanford in 1982 in college football lore. Is there actually a way to prepare plays like that? Coaches say end-of-the-game plays can be drawn up and practiced, but the preparation really doesn’t mean much in the heat of the moment. Think of it more like organized chaos. “At some point, it’s all hell broke loose, and someone’s got to run out there and make a play,” Tennessee special teams coach Mark Elder said. “You have your initial plan on what you’re doing, but at some point that thing turns into backyard football Rob Brown/Associated Press like when you’re 10 years old and you’re Miami’s Corn Elder celebrates with tossing the ball around.” teammate Tyriq McCord after scored on a The consensus from interviews with coaches this week was that teams devote kickoff return to defeat Duke. “It’s a divine intervention when that stuff happens. I don’t care how much you execute it, how well you think you executed it in practice, until you get into a live situation with live guys trying to tackle you, you really never know how those plays are going to unfold and what’s going to happen.” — Jay Boulware Oklahoma special teams coordinator time in preseason practice — and a little bit of time every one or two weeks during the season — to working on how to run and defend plays like Miami’s appropriately named “Desperado.” “You can practice it, but you can’t do it organized,” Florida State coach Jimbo See Kickoffs page 2B PRO HOCKEY Blackhawks’ Kane avoids rape charges Charges were dropped because of a lack of credible evidence. By CAROLYN THOMPSON Associated Press BUFFALO, N.Y. — Chicago Blackhawks forward Patrick Kane can finally focus solely on his NHL career after avoiding criminal charges in a rape investigation, with prosecutors ending a bizarre three-month ordeal that put one of hockey’s biggest stars at the center of intense speculation and criticism. Prosecutors announced Thursday they declined to file charges against Kane because of a lack of credible evidence in a case “rife with reasonable doubt.” The accuser signed an affidavit saying she did not want to press charges, prosecutors said. Roland Cercone, a lawyer for the 21-year-old woman who made the accusation, did not return messages seeking com- Charles Rex Arbogast/Associated Press Chicago Blackhawks’ Patrick Kane will not face rape charges, citing a lack of credible evidence and the accuser’s decision to no longer cooperate in the investigation. ment from the Associated Press. A person who answered the accuser’s mother’s cellphone hung up Thursday when contacted by The AP. Erie County District Attorney Frank Sedita said a three-month investigation found that physical and forensic evidence “tend to contradict” the accuser’s claim that she was raped on Aug. 2 at Kane’s offseason home outside Buffalo. “The DNA results lend no corroboration whatsoever to the complainant’s claim,” said Sed- 2B Friday • November 6, 2015 THE HAWK EYE !" BURLINGTON, IOWA www.thehawkeye.com COLLEGE FOOTBALL BASEBALL Alex Brandon/Associated Press Dusty Baker (left) smiles with general manager Mike Rizzo during Thursday’s news conference in Washington. Rob Brown/Associated Press Miami’s Corn Elder (29) scores a touchdown on the final lateral of a kickoff to defeat Duke. Kickoffs Continued from page 1B Fisher said. “That’s instinct and intuition as you go.” Simple principles are emphasized. On the return team, there might be a six-man front, with three blockers on each side. The other five players spread out and trail the man with the ball, giving him options for throwbacks and laterals. Ideally, the ball carrier should lateral before getting hit — to avoid having a knee touch the ground — and to ensure accuracy of the pitch. The play flows toward open field until a tackle is made or a running lane opens. The kick coverage team generally is coached to have four interior players chase the ball while the rest stay disciplined and make sure the play doesn’t break to the outside. “It’s never the same play twice,” Nebraska special teams coordinator Bruce Read said. “It’s very ad lib. So you’re never really able to simulate what’s going to happen.” The chance of success for the return team? “It’s a divine intervention when that stuff happens,” Oklahoma special teams coordinator Jay Boulware said. “I don’t care how much you execute it, how well you think you executed it in practice, until you get into a live situation with live guys trying to tackle you, you really never know how those plays are going to unfold and what’s going to happen.” Specific players are assigned to the last-gasp kick return teams, much like the receivers and defensive backs who make up the so-called “hands” team that fields onside kicks. “There’s a lot of ball-handlers on there,” Boulware said. As amazing as it was, Miami’s 75-yard touchdown that Corn Elder finished against Duke should not have counted. The Atlantic Coast Conference confirmed what many people saw Saturday: a Miami player’s knee was down as he threw one of the laterals, and officials missed a block in the back. Illegal blocks are a risk — and a point of emphasis in coaching defenders — because bodies are turning every which way as the play changes directions. “Stay penalty free,” Arkansas coach Bret Bielema said, “because it could all go for naught if something like that goes through.” Alabama coach Nick Saban said the Miami-Duke game provided a teachable moment, just like Michigan State’s scoop-andscore to beat Michigan a few weeks ago. “Your goal as a coach is to sort of prepare your team for every scenario, every situation that could ever happen in a game,” he said. “I think these crazy-finish games all had sort of a scenario at the end of the game that was obviously the critical factor that made the difference in the game. I think that any time you see this happen — sometimes it happens in the NFL — you bring it to your players’ attention about how important this play is, how important it is to finish or do it correctly.” AP Sports Writers Steve Megargee, Kurt Voigt, Cliff Brunt, John Zenor and Joe Reedy contributed. Big debut for Baylor’s Stidham Bears freshman throws for 419 yards as Baylor stays perfect. By DAVE SKRETTA Associated Press MANHATTAN, Kan. — Jarrett Stidham knew his lack of experience was probably a big reason Baylor was only ranked sixth in the initial College Football Playoff poll this week. In his first start, the freshman showed he can keep the high-powered Bears humming. Stidham threw for 419 yards and three scores in place of the injured Seth Russell, Corey Coleman caught two touchdown passes and No. 2 Baylor held on for a 31-24 victory over pesky Kansas State on Thursday night to prove it isn’t going anywhere. “I think that motivated the whole team, but especially Jarrett,” Baylor running back Devin Chafin said about the rankings. “We definitely came out here with a chip on our shoulder.” Russell broke a bone in his neck two weeks ago against Iowa State and had surgery last Friday, and many wondered how the Bears would handle his loss. And while the Wildcats made sure Stidham’s debut wasn’t easy, the reigning Big 12 co-champions kept their playoff hopes alive. “We feel like our team is a team of survivors,” Baylor coach Art Briles said. “We’ve got a lot of guys who have been through a lot. A lot of coaches who have been through a lot.” They went through a lot Thursday night, too. Kansas State closed to 31-24 on Joe Hubener’s touchdown pass to Deante Burton with 4:07 left, and Chris Callahan’s missed field goal with 51 seconds remaining gave the Wildcats a chance. But on their next play, Hubener threw a lateral to wide receiver Cody Cook, who then threw down the sideline. The sometimes-quarterback’s pass was picked off by Terrell Burt, who managed to get his right foot down inbounds, and the interception stood after an official’s review. Baylor (8-0, 5-0) ran out the clock to drop Kansas State (3-5) to 0-5 in conference play for the first time since 1989, the first sea- Orrin Wagner/Associated Press Baylor quarterback Jarrett Stidham passes to a teammate during Thursday’s game against Kansas State in Manhattan, Kan. son for coach Bill Snyder on the sideline. “We have to do something about being a good football team. The capabilities are there,” he said. “I’ve always believed that, but you have to do something with it. That means you have to develop it. That falls into my lap. I have to help those young guys understand what it takes in order to get off the matt and win a ballgame. I haven’t done that yet.” Hubener ran for 153 yards and two touchdowns, but he was just 12 of 21 for 151 yards with an interception. Charles Jones added 76 yards rushing for Kansas State. Coleman finished with 11 catches for 216 yards, and has a nation-leading 20 TD catches this season, making life a little easier on his 19-year-old quarterback from Stephenville, Texas. Stidham completed his first three passes to lead Baylor on an 81-yard scoring drive to open the game. And after the Wildcats answered with a methodical, 88-yard march that took 10 minutes, Stidham hit KD Cannon with another 55-yard touchdown strike. Meanwhile, the beat-up Wildcats kept making too many mistakes. Hubener fumbled the ball away deep in Baylor territory early in the second quarter, then threw an interception into double coverage on the next possession. Penalties, blown blocking assignments and dropped passes kept scuttling otherwise promising drives. The Bears seemed to put the game out of reach when Stidham threw a short TD pass to Coleman in the third quarter, and Callahan hit a 39-yard field goal in the fourth. But Kansas State kept right on fighting, getting a 34-yard TD run from Hubener before his touchdown toss to Burton. It wasn’t until one last mistake on a trick play that the Wildcats’ fate was sealed. “Coming to into this game, my mindset and the whole team’s mindset was, ‘Hey, we got a chance,’” Kansas State linebacker Elijah Lee said. “We don’t have nothing to lose, and we want to show that we can compete whether our record is bad or good.” While the victory lacked the pizazz of the Bears’ nearly 60-point shellacking of Kansas, or similar blowouts of Texas Tech and West Virginia, it was a solid start to Stidham’s tenure. Baylor was ranked sixth in this week’s initial playoff ranking, due partly to a soft early scheduled but also the uncertainty at quarterback. And while Stidham was far from perfect — he did have a delay of game penalty — he proved to be capably in control most of the game. That bodes well for a season-defining stretch beginning Nov. 14 against 14th-ranked Oklahoma, and continuing with backto-back games at No. 12 Oklahoma State and No. 5 TCU. “People,” Stidham said, “don’t need to be counting us out.” Irish’s Kizer having fun despite close games By TOM COYNE Associated Press SOUTH BEND, Ind. — DeShone Kizer didn’t intend to be a running quarterback at Notre Dame. The 6-foot-4, 230-pound sophomore picked the school because he saw how the Fighting Irish offense ran under Tommy Rees, one of the least mobile quarterbacks in school history, and figured it fit him perfectly. He’s a thrower, not a runner. Someone forgot to tell the Irish coaching staff. Kizer has carried the ball 54 times for 259 yards the past four games, leading the No. 8 Irish (7-1) in rushing in two of those games. Heading into the game Saturday at Pittsburgh (6-2), Kizer is second on the team in rushing with 318 yards on 72 carries, a 4.4 yards per carry average. He rushed for 143 yards against Temple last week, three yards shy of the school record for a quarterback set by Jim Etter against Navy in 1969. That included a 79-yard touchdown run — 74 yards longer than Rees’ career long — in which Kizer expected the whole time to be caught. “You normally get about 25 yards and someone hawks you down from behind, takes out your legs. I peeked up at the (video) screen and I had a couple of yards and I started running for my life and it end up in a touchdown,” he said. Kizer, who grew up a fan of former Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Donovan McNabb, isn’t against running. He has five rushing touchdowns and has become Notre Dame’s best short-yardage runner with Tarean Folston out for the season. “Whatever the coach is going to throw out there for me, I’m going to be prepared to execute,” he said. Teammates are enjoying his success. Center Nick Martin describes Kizer as “sneaky athletic.” Running back C.J. Prosise said Kizer has “shown people he has some speed.” “DeShone is a physical guy. He likes to get in there and lower his pads and run it,” Prosise said. Kizer’s shown he can get it done with his arm also, throwing a game-winning 17-yard touchdown pass to Will Fuller with 2:09 left against Temple last week. He also had a 39-yard TD pass to Fuller with 12 seconds left to beat Virginia. His pass efficiency rating of 152.1 places him 20th in the nation. But he also threw two interceptions in the red zone against Temple that allowed the Owls to stay close. “I’ve got to make better decisions down there,” he said. Baker, Black in talks at same time Contract offer didn’t suit Black for Nationals’ managerial opening. By HOWARD FENDRICH Associated Press WASHINGTON — After the made-for-TV news conference was done, after new Washington Nationals manager Dusty Baker’s name-checks of Bill Walsh, Bill Russell, Nelson Mandela, Stevie Wonder and others, after the team’s owners quickly exited the room, GM Mike Rizzo stood with reporters off to the side and finally offered his version of what happened to the candidacy of Bud Black. Describing what he called “a unique situation,” Rizzo said Thursday the team negotiated contract terms with Black and Baker simultaneously before settling on Baker. “At the end of the day, it did not come down to money, it did not come down to term,” Rizzo said. “It came down to who were we — meaning the general manager-president of the team and ownership — most comfortable with.” He said there were nine candidates in all to replace Matt Williams, Rizzo’s hand-picked choice two years ago but fired the day after the 2015 regular season ended with the Nationals out of the playoffs. Baker and Black were the finalists. “We definitely had financial parameters discussed with (both), at the same time,” Rizzo said, acknowledging that was uncommon. “We felt that was the best track to go by,” Rizzo said, “because sometimes the negotiating process also tells you a lot about the people that you’re negotiating with. As we discussed baseball in the interview process, and parameters in the financial process, we came to the conclusion that Dusty Baker was the perfect guy for us.” The Nationals also agreed to terms with pitching coach Mike Maddux — who was present at Nationals Park on Thursday but, like members of the Lerner family that owns the club, did not speak to reporters — and first base coach Davey Lopes. Rizzo said baseball’s career home run leader, Barry Bonds, a star player under Baker with the San Francisco Giants, has not been discussed as a candidate for hitting coach. Led by Bonds, Baker’s 2002 Giants reached the World Series, and he called winning a championship as a skipper “the exact void I wanted to fill.” Baker reached the postseason seven times total, and with each of his previous teams, including the Chicago Cubs and Cincinnati Reds, who fired him from his most recent job in 2013. At 66, he’s now the second-oldest skipper in the majors behind only the Mets’ Terry Collins, and Baker clearly relished every moment Thursday. When Baker entered the room for the news conference, a series of loud camera clicks greeted his arrival, and he said: “I haven’t heard that in a long time.” When he pulled a white No. 12 Nationals uniform over his pinstriped gray suit for photos, Baker strutted and twirled a bit and explained, with a smile: “My mom used to be a model.” When talking about his philosophies of baseball and life, he referenced advice he’d received from folks such as former NBA player and coach Russell and late NFL coach Walsh — “They told me a team has to be close. ... Love was the key” — and quoted the late Mandela as saying, “You have to listen as well as talk.” Baker even noted that Washington is a perfect city for him, because “I do know quite a few politicians — namely from the President, down.” He is the only black manager currently in the majors, and while Rizzo said that was not a factor in the hiring, Baker himself said: “I feel a sense of responsibility the whole time I’ve been managing, because there haven’t really been many managers of color.” As for the Nationals, Baker noted: “This is my fourth and final team, and beyond compare, this is the best talent.” He will have NL MVP front-runner Bryce Harper, for example. “Hopefully, he can learn from me,” Baker said, “and he might have something he can teach me.” Asked about the dugout dustup between Harper and Nationals closer Jonathan Papelbon — the pitcher grabbed the slugger by the throat during a game, and Williams later said he had no idea exactly what had happened — Baker said he would take steps to prevent that sort of conflict between teammates from reaching a boiling point. “You talk about it,” Baker said. “You get it out in the open, and you don’t let things fester.” Rangers hire new hitting, pitching coaches Associated Press ARLINGTON, Texas — The Rangers hired former reliever Doug Brocail as their pitching coach and Anthony Iapoce as hitting coach Thursday, when they also promoted two Triple-A coaches to complete manager Jeff Banister’s on-field staff for next season. Brocail replaced Mike Maddux, who left the AL West champion Rangers last week after seven seasons when the sides failed to agree on a new contract. Maddux was hired Thursday as pitching coach for new Washington manager Dusty Baker. In his 15 seasons pitching in the majors, Brocail appeared in 626 games for San Diego, Houston, Detroit and Texas, pitching 104 games for the Rangers in 2004-05. He was Houston’s pitching coach from 2011-13, then a special pitching adviser for the Astros in 2014. He was pitching coach at Double-A Corpus Christi last season. Iapoce spent the last three years overseeing the Chicago Cubs’ minor league hitting program as a special assistant to the general manager/player development. Before that, the New York native who played at Lamar University in Texas was Toronto’s roving hitting coordinator from 2010-12, after starting his coach- ing career in the Florida Marlins system from 2006-09. Brad Holman takes over as bullpen coach after being the pitching coach at Triple-A Round Rock, where new assistant coach Justin Mashore also was last season. Holman has been a pitching coach in the Rangers organization for seven seasons, the last three at Triple-A Round Rock. He had previously worked in the Seattle and Pittsburgh organizations. Mashore has been a hitting instructor for the Rangers the past four years, the last two as hitting coach for Round Rock. Hitting coach Dave Magadan left after the season, planning to pursue other jobs closer to his Florida home. Bullpen coach Andy Hawkins resigned at the end of the season to seek other opportunities. Bobby Jones, who had been the Rangers assistant hitting coach, will be the team’s replay coordinator. Jones is the longest-tenured active member of the Rangers’ baseball operations department at 28 years. Third base coach Tony Beasley, bench coach Steve Buechele, first base coach Hector Ortiz and field coordinator Jayce Tingler are returning to the major league staff. www.thehawkeye.com THE HAWK EYE !" BURLINGTON, IOWA Friday • November 6, 2015 3B SCOREBOARD College football SCC vs. St. John’s NW Military Academy Big Ten Time and place — 7 p.m. in Loren Walker Arena Radio — KHDK (97.3-FM) Records — SCC 0-0, St. John’s Northwest Military Academy 2-1 Rankings — Neither team is ranked. SCC lineup — Isiah Graves (G, 6-1, So.), AJ Goss (G, 6-1, So.), Sam McDaniel (F, 6-5, So.), Don Henderson (F, 6-6, So.) Trayvond Massenburg (F, 6-8, So.) SJNMA lineup — not available. — By Ben Schuff Conf All W-L W-L Michigan State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-0 8-0 Ohio State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-0 8-0 Penn State. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-1 7-2 Michigan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-1 6-2 Rutgers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-4 3-5 Indiana. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0-4 4-4 Maryland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0-4 2-6 West Iowa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-0 8-0 Wisconsin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-1 7-2 Northwestern . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-2 6-2 Illinois . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1-3 4-4 Minnesota . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-3 4-4 Purdue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-3 2-6 Nebraska . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-4 3-6 Saturday’s games Illinois at Purdue, 11 a.m. (BTN) Penn State at Northwestern, 11 a.m. (ESPNU) Iowa at Indiana, 2:30 p.m. (ESPN) Rutgers at Michigan, 2:30 p.m. (BTN) Wisconsin at Maryland, 2:30 p.m. (BTN) Michigan State at Nebraska, 7 p.m. (ESPN) Minnesota at Ohio State, 7 p.m. (ABC) Iowa vs. Augustana (S.D.) Time and place — 7:05 p.m. Today, Carver-Hawkeye Arena, Iowa City TV — BTN Plus (online) Radio — KBUR (1490-AM) Record — Exhibition game for both teams. Rankings — Augustana is No. 1 in the NCAA Division II preseason poll. Probable Iowa lineup — Jarrod Uthoff (F, 6-9, Sr., 12.4 ppg.), Adam Woodbury (C, 7-1, Sr., 6.6 ppg.), Anthony Clemmons (G, 6-2, Sr., 4.8 ppg.), Mike Gesell (G, 6-2, Sr., 7.4 ppg.), Peter Jok (G, 6-6, Jr., 7 ppg.) What to watch — Iowa coach Fran McCaffery pointed out that there are two ways to schedule an exhibition game. You can play an easy one where everyone gets to play, or a tough one to prepare your team for the regular season. This could be the latter. Augustana won 31 games last season and is prepared to make a run at the Division II national title. “We have arguably the toughest schedule we’ve played in a long time, so this, I think, would better prepare us for what we’re going to face in the ensuing weeks and not a game that we’re just going to rotate everybody in and not really see where our deficiencies are and how good we can be,” McCaffery said. It’s the last chance for McCaffery to get a look at his team before next Friday’s season opener against Gardner-Webb. — By John Bohnenkamp Local bowling KingPins Youth Bantams — Isaiah Drain 244, Kassen Smith 197, Joseph Rheinschmidt 122. Youth Juniors — Mason Rachowicz 310, Alec Payne 237, Jonathan Holstein 220, Max Hartman 193, Leif Payne. Jaylee Logan 238. Youth Seniors — Dustin Edwards 605, Noah Samuel 450, Blake Greik 432, Brad Levinson 352, Skylar Andrews 349, Caleb Lott 346, Alex Hartman 335, Kody Sargeant 322, Emily Martindale 313, Dakota Peterson 261, Chance Ballard 220. Kelsey Greik 266, Shaela Graves 240. Monday Mixed — Charles Budzyn 662, Jeff Japsen 508, Mike Foster 504, Noah Dellinger 501, Jim Shullaw 439, Mike Bush 433, Nick Valdez 384. Christy Hull 435, Betty Foley 356. BGC Ladies — Becky Adams 482, Lois Fort 423, Jan Genochio 411, Sharon Paskiet 404, Melanie Richardson 387, Shannon Walden 376, Connee Stevens 367, Carolyn Reem 346, Pat Renfro 344, Jan Green 335. Monday River Rollers — Eric Lowe 572, Bob Parmeter 569, Clayton Holden 544, Jack Boeddecker 536, Mike Logan 522, Brad Keester 478, Louis Merschbrock 457, Randy Bergmeier 445, Chester Bowman 445, Dick Nelson 344. Cathy Bergmeier 515, Judy Holden 503, Carrie James 490, Donna Peterie 432, Mary Lee Nickel 428, Ruth Ann Taylor 410, Evelyn Steffen 362. Construction League — Gary Davis 740, Kevin Henkens 683, Brian Salek 683, Dan Kies 654, Kyle Kaestner 649, Matt Cromer 643, Marcus Garcia 635, Matt Lowary 632, Rich Heeter 631, Chuck Brockett 628, Charles Budzyn 625, Ray Rutledge 623, Scott Briggs 619, Aaron Ertz 608, Brandon Dixon 607, Matt Cox 606, Bryce Shannon 605, Chris Braun 594, Marty Bradley 592, Toby Kindig 591, Tony DeJesus 589, Harold Johnson 585, Randy Kester 584, Rick Tansey 583, David Huston 583, Sonny Andrews 581, Chris Drain 580, Travis Lozano 579, Barry Cuthbert 570, Philip Walsh 567, Craig Sweezer 564, Bill Doyle 563, Rick Brockett 555, Jacob Trimble 554, Neki Hind 554, Ben Carpenter 553, Jody Dodson 552, Colin Lieb 550, Bryan Haley 549, Randy Grafton 543, Jeff Hoftender 542, Jim Engel 540, Thomas Rettig 536, Chuck Ward 535, Bill Beriou 535, Jim Farrell 534, Bill Larkins 525, John Wacker 523, Ben Seibert 522, Bill Stellem 510, Bryan Knifton 509, Dar Cooley 507, Ron Brandenburg 506, Dennis Kayser 501. Jerry Lynn 516, Lorri Johnson 504, Heather Trimble 468, Amanda Budzyn 439, Jan Creighton 410, Nikki Jackson 358, Amber Gerst 526, Jamy Rettig 304. FunCity Classic — Kyle Kaestner 737, Kevin Henkens 702, Ed Wilkerson 651, Jim Ferrell 640, Dar Cooley 632, Gary Davis 627, Charles Budzyn 600, Barry Cuthbert 598, Jake Kaestner 592, Ray Reyes 564, Jim Engel 553, Neki Hind 551, Rick Brockett 541. Ladies Major — Kathie Mackie 634, Sara Garcia 562, Donna Hinshaw 537, Rebecca Trimble 531, Mary Lee Nickell 506, Kelly Wills 499, Lorri Johnson 488, Carol Payne 485, Judy Reyes 473, Becky Adams 459, Carol Dermer 453, Wanda Filman 447. Senior Swingers — John Demuth 573, Bill Doyle 547, Joe Sullivan 536, Mike Rosenblatt 497, Jan Wiegard 488, Frankie Reyes 487, Duke Moser 481, Dave Shinn 481, Bob Wright 479, Norm Roelfs 477, Dick Wells 476, Mick Anderson 473. Jo Cramberg 477, Nancy Ramsey 466, Jeanne Keester 455, Karen Zang 414, Elaine Thomes 393, Shari Ryan 378, Vera Anderson 377, Marge Mehmken 371, Chris Hecht 366, Marcia Rosenblatt 354, Sandy Demuth 344, Sharon Parrish 343. Tuesday Earlybirds — Ray Rutledge 620, Sonny Andrews 618, Randy Kester 608, Ray Reyes 605, Tony DeJesus 598, Scott Snyder 589, Ed Wilkerson 583, Harold Johnson 561, Brett Buttz 555, Rick Tansey 532, Kenny VanOrder 528, Rich Heeter 527, Bill Payne 512, Chris Parton 510. Tina Lott 453, Tamela McElroy 361. Fort Madison Seniors — Dave Shinn 570, John Reddick 540, Louie Merschbrock 528, Delbert Kemp 493, Brad Keester 485, Chester Bowman 475, Bob Wright 475, Stan Stinson 459. Sharon Foland 486, Maxine Stotts 475, Pat Stinson 458, Mary Lee Nickell 456, Charlotte Martin 451, Jo Cramberg 443, Jeanne Keester 437, Mary Ann Wolfe 433. Friday Seniors — John Demuth 599, Ed Wilkerson 595, Rick Brockett 595, Frankie Reyes 593, Bob Lieberg 587, Ray Reyes 584, Bill Boyle 568, Jake Kaestner 541, Dave Shinn 538, Jerry Kerkove 522, Paul Beckman 508, Gene Devol 502, Louis Merschbrock 501. Wanda Filman 469, Donna Hinshaw 465, Judy Reyes 438, Elie Koopman 430, Joyce Davis 439, Marge Classen 426, Jeannette Hering 411, Jo Cramberg 408, Joann Gulick 402, Jane Whalen 399, Jo Williams 391, Elaine Thomes 383. Lucky Rollers — Christi Carnaday 524, Amber Pence 520, Jamie Grimes 459, Mary Smith 426, Julie Goudie 421, Penny Furnald 406, Jen Haley 405, Amy Mapel 377, Mindi Bartlett 366, Jen Brissey 362. Henderson County Ladies — Cheryl Corzatt 516, Donna Hinshaw 507, Linda Harrington 474, Linda Brownlee Jr. 465, Teresa Sorenson 453, Carol Elsea 435, Linda Brownlee 414, Jean Dunn 413, Lisa Thompson 405, Tasha Prickett 378. Leisure Belles — Donna Hinshaw 493, Melanie Sullivan 429, Carol Casey 419, Linda Harrington 418, Sharon Lathrop 408, Jean Dunn 406, Debbie Hruby 388, Pat Dunn 388, Carol Elsea 387, Trudy Bergren 380, Linda Springsteen 379, Ada Hubbard 349. PRO GOLF Grace shoots 63 in China By DOUG FERGUSON Associated Press SHANGHAI — The conditions were so soft Thursday in the HSBC Champions that Branden Grace was not surprised by his 9-under 63. And he knew there would be plenty of other players stacked up right behind him. Grace did his part at Sheshan International by making birdies on half of his holes, including his last one at the par-4 ninth. That gave him a one-shot lead over Thorbjorn Olesen, Steven Bowditch and Kevin Kisner, the American playing in China for the first time. “Barely had a breath of wind out there and the golf course is playing probably as easy as it could be playing,” Grace said. “There’s some low scores out there. The guys are playing some great golf, and when you play on greens like this, it helps. You just have to get the ball on the right line, and it goes in. The South African made it sound simple, and it felt that way to most everyone. Thirty players were at 68 or better, a group that included Jordan Spieth, defending champion Bubba Watson and Rory McIlroy, who finally made it to the course after battling food poisoning all week. Dustin Johnson, who won this World Golf Championship two years ago the last time he was here, drilled a 3-wood over the water and onto the green for an eagle on the par-5 second hole on his way to a 67. Danny Willett, second to McIlroy in the Race to Dubai, and Patrick Reed also were at 67. Only 13 players in the 78-man field were over par. That included Adam Scott, who could have been one shot worse if rules officials had not deducted a penalty shot because of the wrong ruling given to Scott. Players were allowed to lift, clean and place their golf balls because of rain in the forecast, and only after Scott did that short of the sixth green did he look back and realize his ball had been in a slight cut of rough. Scott was told to replay his shot, which was the wrong ruling. Officials referred to a decision based on equity that allowed only for the two-shot penalty, and thus he kept his double bogey. Not that it helped his round. He shot 75. Everyone else was going forward as quickly as possible. Olesen opened with five birdies in six holes and reached 6 under with another birdie on the par-5 eighth when he started wondering how low he could go. “All sorts of things went through my mind,” he said. “I thought, ‘Yeah, here we can go really, really low.’ I hit a couple of bad shots. I made bogey on the par 5, which was a little bit silly. Overall, I’m really happy with the round.” Grace went 5-0 in the Presidents Cup last month in South Korea and nearly led the International team to a rare victory. He returned to a reasonable week in Malaysia, then resumed his brand of golf by firing at flags and holing enough putts to post the lowest start ever in this World Golf Championship. East Big 12 Conf All W-L W-L Oklahoma State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-0 8-0 TCU . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-0 8-0 Baylor. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-0 8-0 Oklahoma . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-1 7-1 Iowa State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-3 3-5 Texas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-3 3-5 Texas Tech. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-4 5-4 West Virginia. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0-4 3-4 Kansas State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0-5 3-5 Kansas. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0-5 0-8 Thursday’s game Baylor 31, Kansas State 24 Saturday’s games Texas Tech at West Virginia, 11 a.m. (FS1) TCU at Oklahoma State, 2:30 p.m. (FOX) Iowa State at Oklahoma, 6 p.m. (ESPNU) Kansas at Texas, 7 p.m. Missouri Valley Football Conference Conf All W-L W-L Illinois State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-0 7-1 North Dakota State. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-1 6-2 South Dakota State. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-2 6-2 Western Illinois . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-2 4-4 Indiana State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-3 4-4 Northern Iowa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-3 4-4 South Dakota . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-3 4-4 Youngstown State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-3 4-4 Southern Illinois . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-3 3-5 Missouri State. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0-5 1-7 Saturday’s games Missouri State at Youngstown State, 1 p.m. Southern Illinois at South Dakota, 1 p.m. Illinois State at South Dakota State, 2 p.m. Western Illinois at North Dakota State, 2:30 p.m. Indiana State at Northern Iowa, 4 p.m. Saturday’s games EAST St. Francis (Pa.) (5-3) at CCSU (4-5), 11 a.m. Albany (NY) (2-6) at Delaware (3-5), 11 a.m. Princeton (5-2) at Penn (4-3), 11 a.m. Notre Dame (7-1) at Pittsburgh (6-2), 11 a.m. ETSU (1-7) at Robert Morris (2-6), 11 a.m. Duquesne (6-3) at Sacred Heart (4-4), 11 a.m. Akron (3-5) at UMass (1-7), 11 a.m. Bryant (4-4) at Wagner (0-8), 11 a.m. Texas Tech (5-4) at West Virginia (3-4), 11 a.m. NC State (5-3) at Boston College (3-6), 11:30 a.m. Holy Cross (4-4) at Lehigh (4-4), 11:30 a.m. Villanova (4-4) at Rhode Island (1-7), 11:30 a.m. Brown (4-3) at Yale (4-3), 11:30 a.m. Harvard (7-0) at Columbia (2-5), noon Bucknell (4-4) at Fordham (7-2), noon Colgate (4-4) at Lafayette (1-8), noon Stetson (2-6) at Marist (4-4), noon Howard (1-7) at Stony Brook (2-5), noon Richmond (7-1) at New Hampshire (4-4), 2 p.m. Towson (5-3) at Maine (3-5), 6 p.m. SOUTH William & Mary (6-2) at Elon (3-5), 11 a.m. Charlotte (2-6) at FIU (4-5), 11 a.m. Vanderbilt (3-5) at Florida (7-1), 11 a.m. Kentucky (4-4) at Georgia (5-3), 11 a.m. FAU (2-6) at W. Kentucky (7-2), 11 a.m. Duke (6-2) at North Carolina (7-1), 11 a.m. Syracuse (3-5) at Louisville (4-4), 11:30 a.m. UT Martin (5-3) at E. Kentucky (5-3), noon Florida A&M (1-7) at Hampton (4-5), noon Davidson (1-7) at Jacksonville (6-2), noon Charleston Southern (7-1) at Kennesaw St. (6-2), noon Prep football Dayton (8-0) at Morehead St. (5-3), noon NC A&T (7-1) at SC State (5-3), 12:30 p.m. MVSU (0-9) at Alabama A&M (2-5), 1 p.m. Louisiana-Lafayette (3-4) at Georgia St. (2-5), 1 p.m. Delaware St. (0-8) at NC Central (5-3), 1 p.m. Savannah St. (1-6) at Norfolk St. (2-6), 1 p.m. VMI (2-7) at The Citadel (6-2), 1 p.m. Prairie View (6-2) at Alcorn St. (5-2), 2 p.m. Texas Southern (3-4) at Grambling St. (6-2), 2 p.m. Virginia (3-5) at Miami (5-3), 2 p.m. Clark Atlanta (1-7) at Samford (3-5), 2 p.m. Idaho (3-5) at South Alabama (3-4), 2 p.m. Florida St. (7-1) at Clemson (8-0), 2:30 p.m. Gardner-Webb (3-5) at Coastal Carolina (7-1), 2:30 p.m. Presbyterian (1-7) at Liberty (4-4), 2:30 p.m. North Texas (1-7) at Louisiana Tech (6-3), 2:30 p.m. Wisconsin (7-2) at Maryland (2-6), 2:30 p.m. Marshall (8-1) at Middle Tennessee (3-5), 2:30 p.m. Arkansas (4-4) at Mississippi (7-2), 2:30 p.m. Murray St. (2-6) at Tennessee St. (4-4), 2:30 p.m. Louisiana-Monroe (1-7) at Troy (2-6), 2:30 p.m. Furman (4-4) at W. Carolina (5-3), 2:30 p.m. Morgan St. (4-4) at Bethune-Cookman (7-2), 3 p.m. Chattanooga (7-1) at Mercer (3-5), 3 p.m. South Carolina (3-5) at Tennessee (4-4), 3 p.m. UConn (4-5) at Tulane (2-6), 3 p.m. SE Missouri (3-5) at Austin Peay (0-9), 4 p.m. Alabama St. (4-4) at Jackson St. (3-5), 6 p.m. Sam Houston St. (6-2) at McNeese St. (8-0), 6 p.m. Navy (6-1) at Memphis (8-0), 6 p.m. Abilene Christian (2-6) at Northwestern St. (2-6), 6 p.m. Incarnate Word (4-4) at SE Louisiana (4-4), 6 p.m. South Florida (4-4) at East Carolina (4-5), 6:30 p.m. LSU (7-0) at Alabama (7-1), 7 p.m. MIDWEST Penn St. (7-2) at Northwestern (6-2), 11 a.m. Illinois (4-4) at Purdue (2-6), 11 a.m. Valparaiso (2-6) at Butler (4-4), noon Jacksonville St. (7-1) at E. Illinois (5-3), 1 p.m. S. Illinois (3-5) at South Dakota (4-4), 1 p.m. Missouri St. (1-7) at Youngstown St. (4-4), 1 p.m. E. Michigan (1-8) at Miami (Ohio) (1-8), 1:30 p.m. Illinois St. (7-1) at S. Dakota St. (6-2), 2 p.m. Iowa (8-0) at Indiana (4-4), 2:30 p.m. Rutgers (3-5) at Michigan (6-2), 2:30 p.m. W. Illinois (4-4) at N. Dakota St. (6-2), 2:30 p.m. Indiana St. (4-4) at N. Iowa (4-4), 4 p.m. Michigan St. (8-0) at Nebraska (3-6), 7 p.m. Minnesota (4-4) at Ohio St. (8-0), 7 p.m. SOUTHWEST UCF (0-9) at Tulsa (4-4), 11 a.m. Southern U. (4-4) at Ark.-Pine Bluff (1-7), 2:30 p.m. Stephen F. Austin (3-5) at Cent. Arkansas (5-3), 2:30 p.m. Cincinnati (5-3) at Houston (8-0), 2:30 p.m. TCU (8-0) at Oklahoma St. (8-0), 2:30 p.m. New Mexico St. (1-7) at Texas St. (2-5), 3 p.m. Nicholls St. (1-7) at Lamar (4-4), 6 p.m. Iowa St. (3-5) at Oklahoma (7-1), 6 p.m. Old Dominion (3-5) at UTSA (1-7), 6 p.m. Auburn (4-4) at Texas A&M (6-2), 6:30 p.m. Kansas (0-8) at Texas (3-5), 7 p.m. FAR WEST Stanford (7-1) at Colorado (4-5), noon Portland St. (7-1) at N. Colorado (4-4), 1 p.m. UC Davis (1-7) at Weber St. (4-5), 1 p.m. Campbell (5-4) at San Diego (6-2), 2 p.m. Colorado St. (3-5) at Wyoming (1-8), 2 p.m. Army (2-6) at Air Force (5-3), 2:30 p.m. Utah St. (5-3) at New Mexico (4-4), 2:30 p.m. Arizona St. (4-4) at Washington St. (5-3), 2:30 p.m. S. Utah (6-2) at Montana St. (4-4), 2:40 p.m. UCLA (6-2) at Oregon St. (2-6), 3:30 p.m. Montana (4-4) at Idaho St. (2-6), 3:35 p.m. Hawaii (2-7) at UNLV (2-6), 5 p.m. N. Arizona (5-3) at E. Washington (6-2), 5:05 p.m. Utah (7-1) at Washington (4-4), 6:30 p.m. Sacramento St. (2-6) at Cal Poly (2-6), 8:05 p.m. California (5-3) at Oregon (5-3), 9:30 p.m. Arizona (5-4) at Southern Cal (5-3), 9:30 p.m. NHL Standings, schedule EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts Montreal . . . . . .15 12 2 1 25 Ottawa . . . . . . .13 7 4 2 16 Tampa Bay . . . .15 7 6 2 16 Boston . . . . . . .12 6 5 1 13 Detroit . . . . . . . .12 6 5 1 13 Florida . . . . . . . .12 5 4 3 13 Buffalo . . . . . . .13 5 8 0 10 Toronto . . . . . . .12 2 8 2 6 Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts Washington . . .12 9 3 0 18 N.Y. Rangers . .12 8 2 2 18 N.Y. Islanders . .14 7 4 3 17 Pittsburgh . . . .12 8 4 0 16 New Jersey . . . .12 6 5 1 13 Carolina . . . . . .12 5 7 0 10 Philadelphia . . .12 4 6 2 10 Columbus . . . . .13 3 10 0 6 WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division GP W L OT Pts Dallas . . . . . . . .13 10 3 0 20 St. Louis . . . . . .13 9 3 1 19 Nashville . . . . . .12 8 2 2 18 Winnipeg . . . . .14 8 4 2 18 Minnesota . . . .12 7 3 2 16 Chicago . . . . . . .13 7 5 1 15 Colorado . . . . . .12 4 7 1 9 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts Los Angeles . . .12 8 4 0 16 GF 55 40 38 43 30 34 29 26 GA 27 39 37 40 31 26 39 40 GF 40 36 39 27 29 26 24 30 GA 29 23 35 22 31 34 37 48 GF 46 36 35 42 37 33 33 GA 37 31 27 38 35 32 36 GF GA 29 25 Vancouver . . . .13 6 3 4 16 38 San Jose . . . . . .12 6 6 0 12 33 Arizona . . . . . . .11 5 5 1 11 30 Edmonton . . . . .13 5 8 0 10 36 Anaheim . . . . . .12 3 7 2 8 17 Calgary . . . . . . .13 3 9 1 7 30 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Thursday’s games Ottawa 3, Winnipeg 2, SO Tampa Bay 4, Buffalo 1 Washington 4, Boston 1 Montreal 4, N.Y. Islanders 1 Nashville 3, Minnesota 2 Philadelphia at Calgary Colorado at Arizona Florida at San Jose Columbus at Los Angeles Friday’s games Detroit at Toronto, 6 p.m. Chicago at New Jersey, 6 p.m. Dallas at Carolina, 6 p.m. N.Y. Rangers at Colorado, 8 p.m. Pittsburgh at Edmonton, 8 p.m. Columbus at Anaheim, 9 p.m. Saturday’s games Vancouver at Buffalo, noon Florida at Los Angeles, 3 p.m. Boston at Montreal, 6 p.m. Toronto at Washington, 6 p.m. Ottawa at Carolina, 6 p.m. Philadelphia at Winnipeg, 6 p.m. St. Louis at Nashville, 7 p.m. Tampa Bay at Minnesota, 7 p.m. N.Y. Rangers at Arizona, 8 p.m. Pittsburgh at Calgary, 9 p.m. Anaheim at San Jose, 9:30 p.m. 29 33 32 41 31 56 NBA Standings, schedule EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct Toronto . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5 0 1.000 New York . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 3 .400 Boston . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 3 .250 Philadelphia . . . . . . . . . . . . .0 4 .000 Brooklyn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .0 5 .000 Southeast Division W L Pct Atlanta . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5 1 .833 Washington . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 1 .750 Miami . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 2 .600 Charlotte . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 3 .400 Orlando . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 4 .200 Central Division W L Pct Cleveland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 1 .800 Detroit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 1 .750 Chicago . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 2 .667 Indiana . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 3 .400 Milwaukee . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 3 .400 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct Memphis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 2 .600 San Antonio . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 2 .600 Dallas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 3 .400 Houston . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 3 .400 New Orleans . . . . . . . . . . . . .0 4 .000 Northwest Division W L Pct Portland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 2 .600 Oklahoma City . . . . . . . . . . .3 3 .500 GB — 3 3½ 4½ 5 GB — 1 1½ 2½ 3½ GB — ½ ½ 2 2 GB — — 1 1 2½ GB — ½ Minnesota . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 2 .500 ½ Utah . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 2 .500 ½ Denver . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 2 .500 ½ Pacific Division W L Pct GB Golden State . . . . . . . . . . . .5 0 1.000 — L.A. Clippers . . . . . . . . . . . .4 1 .800 1 Phoenix . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 2 .600 2 Sacramento . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 4 .200 4 L.A. Lakers . . . . . . . . . . . . . .0 4 .000 4½ Thursday’s games Chicago 104, Oklahoma City 98 Miami 96, Minnesota 84 Charlotte 108, Dallas 94 Utah at Denver Memphis at Portland Friday’s games Toronto at Orlando, 6 p.m. Philadelphia at Cleveland, 6:30 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Brooklyn, 6:30 p.m. Washington at Boston, 6:30 p.m. Milwaukee at New York, 6:30 p.m. Atlanta at New Orleans, 7 p.m. Miami at Indiana, 7 p.m. Detroit at Phoenix, 8:30 p.m. Denver at Golden State, 9:30 p.m. Houston at Sacramento, 9:30 p.m. Saturday’s games Minnesota at Chicago, 5 p.m. Orlando at Philadelphia, 6 p.m. Washington at Atlanta, 6:30 p.m. Charlotte at San Antonio, 7:30 p.m. Brooklyn at Milwaukee, 7:30 p.m. New Orleans at Dallas, 7:30 p.m. Memphis at Utah, 8 p.m. Golden State at Sacramento, 9 p.m. Houston at L.A. Clippers, 9:30 p.m. Iowa pairings (All games at 7 p.m. unless noted) QUARTERFINAL ROUND Friday’s games CLASS 4A Cedar Rapids Kennedy (11-0) vs. Cedar Rapids Washington (10-1) at Kingston Stadium West Des Moines Dowlng (10-0) vs. Lewis Central (8-3) at Williams Stadium Iowa City High (8-3) at Bettendorf (10-0) West Des Moines Valley (9-2) at Johnston (9-2) CLASS 3A Decorah (6-5) at West Delaware (11-0) Norwalk (10-1) at Dallas Center-Grimes (9-2) Pella (11-0) at Davenport Assumption (9-2) Webster City (11-0) at Sergeant Bluff-Luton (10-1) CLASS 2A Central Lyon/G-LR (7-4) at Spirit Lake (11-0) Mount Vernon (9-2) at Anamosa (11-0) South Tama County (11-0) at Albia (11-0) Waukon (10-1) at North Fayette Valley (9-2) CLASS 1A Dike-New Hartford (10-1) at St. Ansgar (10-1) Hinton (10-1) at Western Christian (9-2) Van Meter (10-1) at South Central Calhoun (10-1) West Branch (11-0) at Iowa City Regina (10-1) CLASS A Akron-Westfield (9-2) at West Sioux (11-0) Denver (10-1) at Algona Garrigan (11-0) Gladbrook-Reinbeck (9-2) at B-G-M (11-0) Lynnville-Sully (8-3) at Mount Ayr (9-2) 8-PLAYER Colo-Nesco (9-2) at Newell-Fonda (11-0) Don Bosco (9-0) at Central Elkader (11-0) East Mills (9-2) at Glidden-Ralston (10-0) West Bend-Mallard (6-4) at Marcus-Meriden-Cleghorn (10-0) Prep volleyball Iowa state tournament pairings At U.S. Cellular Center, Cedar Rapids CLASS 5A Quarterfinals Tuesday, Nov. 10 12 noon — West Des Moines Dowling (42-5) vs. Dubuque Hempstead (25-11), Court 1 12 noon — Bettendorf (33-2) vs. Iowa City West (27-11), Court 2 2 p.m. — Johnston (29-10) vs. Ankeny Centennial (36-5), Court 1 2 p.m. — Cedar Falls (36-4) vs. Cedar Rapids Kennedy (29-9), Court 2 Semifinals Thursday, Nov. 12 10 a.m. — West Des Moines Dowling/ Dubuque Hempstead winner vs. Johnston/ Ankeny Centennial winner, Court 1 10 a.m. — Bettendorf/Iowa City West winner vs. Cedar Falls/Cedar Rapids Kennedy winner, Court 2 Championship Friday, Nov. 13 10 a.m. — Semifinal winners, Center Court ••• CLASS 4A Quarterfinals Tuesday, Nov. 10 4 p.m. — West Delaware (46-2) vs. Western Dubuque (24-12), Court 1 4 p.m. — Harlan (35-5) vs. Pella (27-10), Court 2 6 p.m. — Marion (31-8) vs. Lewis Central (32-5), Court 1 6 p.m. — Waverly-Shell Rock (42-9) vs. Sioux City Heelan (30-13), Court 2 Semifinals Thursday, Nov. 12 12 noon — West Delaware/Western Dubuque winner vs. Marion/Lewis Central winner, Court 1 12 noon — Harlan/Pella winner vs. Waverly-Shell Rock/Sioux City Heelan winner, Court 2 Championship Friday, Nov. 13 12:15 p.m. — Semifinal winners, Center Court ••• CLASS 3A Quarterfinals Wednesday, Nov. 11 10 a.m. — West Liberty (35-4) vs. Forest City (27-7), Court 1 10 a.m. — Nevada (30-9) vs. Waterloo Columbus (20-14), Court 2 12 noon — Mount Vernon (26-12) vs. Center Point-Urbana (31-7), Court 1 12 noon — Carroll Kuemper (28-3) vs. Sergeant Bluff-Luton (35-11), Court 2 Semifinals Thursday, Nov. 12 2 p.m. — West Liberty/Forest City winner vs. Mount Vernon/Center Point-Urbana winner, Court 1 2 p.m. — Nevada/Waterloo Columbus winner vs. Carroll Kuemper/Sergeant Bluff-Luton winner, Court 2 Championship Friday, Nov. 13 2:30 p.m. — Semifinal winners, Center Court ••• CLASS 2A Quarterfinals Wednesday, Nov. 11 2 p.m. — Western Christian (40-5) vs. Council Bluffs St. Albert (23-6), Court 1 2 p.m. — Unity Christian (36-4) vs. Sumner-Fredericksburg (30-3), Court 2 4 p.m. — West Branch (35-5) vs. Wapsie Valley (31-5), Court 1 4 p.m. — Eddyville-Blakesburg-Fremont (35-2) vs. Dike-New Hartford (37-9), Court 2 Semifinals Thursday, Nov. 12 4 p.m. — Western Christian/Council Bluffs St. Albert winner vs. West Branch/Wapsie Valley winner, Court 1 4 p.m. — Unity Christian/Sumner-Fredericksburg winner vs. Eddyville-Blakesburg-Fremont/Dike-New Hartford winner, Court 2 Championship Friday, Nov. 13 4:45 p.m. — Semifinal winners, Center Court ••• CLASS 1A Quarterfinals Wednesday, Nov. 11 6 p.m. — Sidney (32-1) vs. Springville (31-7), Court 1 6 p.m. — Tripoli (23-14) vs. Grand View Christian (30-12), Court 2 8 p.m. — Central Lyon (32-5) vs. Le Mars Gehlen (23-14), Court 1 8 p.m. — Janesville (24-14) vs. Holy Trinity (31-11), Court 2 Semifinals Thursday, Nov. 12 6 p.m. — Sidney/Springville winner vs. Central Lyon/Le Mars Gehlen winner, Court 1 6 p.m. — Tripoli/Grand View Christian winner vs. Janesville/Holy Trinity winner, Court 2 Championship Friday, Nov. 13 7 p.m. — Semifinal winners, Center Court Transactions Thursday’s moves BASEBALL American League KANSAS CITY ROYALS — Exercised their options on RHP Wade Davis and SS Alcides Escobar. Declined their option on OF Jonny Gomes. Reinstated LHPs Tim Collins, Brian Flynn and Jason Vargas from the 60-day DL. MINNESOTA TWINS — OF Torii Hunter announced his retirement. National League ST. LOUIS CARDINALS — Selected the contract of OF Anthony Garcia from Memphis (PCL). BASKETBALL DALLAS MAVERICKS — Signed coach Rick Carlisle to a five-year contract extension through the 2021-22 season. FOOTBALL National Football League DETROIT LIONS — Fired president Tom Lewand and general manager Martin Mayhew. Named vice president of pro personnel Sheldon White acting general manager and Allison Maki interim chief operating officer. HOCKEY National Hockey League CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS — Reassigned F Ryan Hartman to Rockford (AHL). ST. LOUIS BLUES — Recalled F Zach Pochiro from Quad City (ECHL) to Chicago (AHL). Sports digest Southeast Iowa Volleyball Classic rosters set The Hawk Eye The 22nd Annual Southeast Iowa Volleyball Classic is scheduled for 7 p.m. Saturday at Fairfield High School. The match features the top high school senior volleyball players from southeast Iowa. Selected players were first nominated by their coaches, placed on a ballot and then voted on by the varsity volleyball coaches of the Southeast Conference, SEI Superconference, and Burlington High School. The players selected are: Dakota Durflinger, Cassidy McMartin, and Jessie McElderry from Cardinal; Britany Mathison of Central Lee; Mackenzi Harwood, Kelsey Roberts, and Molly Ryan from Fairfield; Paige Leffler and Kaylin Featheringill of Fort Madison; Madelyn Orton and Rachel Mehmert of Holy Trinity; Allie Massner, Monica Edle, and Olivia Allen from Mediapolis; Josten Boyer, Brandi Allen, Kenadi Schulte, Frankie Johnson, and Emma Pry of New London; Beth Atwood, Cassidy Tolle, Courtney Comstock, and Emily Bemis of Pekin; Wapello’s Mattie Smith; and West Burlington’s Aubrey Schmitt. The coaches for this year’s event are Jerald Harter of Cardinal, David Pieart of Winfield-Mount Union, Ashley Bartels of Pekin, and Fairfield’s Diana Drish. Golf WGC-HSBC Champions Thursday At Sheshan International Golf Club Shanghai Purse: $8.5 million Yardage: 7,261; Par: 72 (36-36) First Round Branden Grace . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32-31—63 Kevin Kisner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32-32—64 Steven Bowditch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32-32—64 Thorbjorn Olesen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30-34—64 Danny Willett . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33-32—65 Patrick Reed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34-31—65 Dustin Johnson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31-34—65 Haotong Li . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34-32—66 Thomas Pieters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34-33—67 Xinjun Zhang . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33-34—67 Harris English . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34-33—67 Russell Knox . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34-33—67 Paul Casey . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35-32—67 Tommy Fleetwood . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34-33—67 Trevor Fisher Jr. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34-33—67 Charl Schwartzel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34-34—68 Daniel Summerhays . . . . . . . . . . . . 36-32—68 Hunter Mahan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35-33—68 Matthew Fitzpatrick . . . . . . . . . . . . 35-33—68 Louis Oosthuizen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33-35—68 Chris Wood . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36-32—68 Jordan Spieth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33-35—68 Bubba Watson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33-35—68 Daniel Berger . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34-34—68 Soren Kjeldsen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33-35—68 Scott Hend . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34-34—68 Sergio Garcia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33-35—68 Richard T. Lee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37-31—68 Rickie Fowler . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34-34—68 Rory McIlroy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34-34—68 Marc Leishman . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34-35—69 James Morrison . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35-34—69 Emiliano Grillo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36-33—69 Byeong Hun An . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36-33—69 Ashun Wu . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35-34—69 Henrik Stenson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33-36—69 Kiradech Aphibarnrat . . . . . . . . . . . 35-34—69 Gary Woodland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34-35—69 Ross Fisher . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34-35—69 Martin Kaymer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34-35—69 S.S.P Chawrasia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35-34—69 Scott Piercy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34-36—70 David Lingmerth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33-37—70 Tyrrell Hatton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34-36—70 Thomas Aiken . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34-36—70 Anirban Lahiri . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33-37—70 Andrew Dodt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33-37—70 Yi Cao . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35-35—70 Andy Sullivan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35-35—70 Alex Noren . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37-33—70 Hiroshi Iwata . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35-35—70 Bernd Wiesberger . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36-34—70 Zecheng Dou . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35-35—70 Danny Lee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36-35—71 Luke Donald . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38-33—71 Wenchong Liang . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36-35—71 Chris Kirk . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35-36—71 Hideki Matsuyama . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36-35—71 Cameron Smith . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36-35—71 Ian Poulter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36-36—72 Kevin Na . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34-38—72 Justin Thomas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36-36—72 Danny Chia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37-35—72 Lee Westwood . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36-36—72 Thongchai Jaidee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35-37—72 Robert Streb . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35-38—73 David Howell . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35-38—73 Greg Chalmers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38-35—73 Miguel Angel Jimenez . . . . . . . . . . . 37-36—73 Satoshi Kodaira . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38-36—74 Shane Lowry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38-36—74 K.T. Kim . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38-36—74 Matt Jones . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39-35—74 Nick Cullen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36-38—74 Adam Scott . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41-34—75 Marc Warren . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37-38—75 Steven Jeffress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39-37—76 Danie van Tonder . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40-37—77 Boxing Fight schedule National TV in parentheses Nov. 6 At The D Hotel & Casino, Las Vegas (SHO), Antoine Douglas vs. Les Sherrington, 10, middleweights. Nov. 7 At Monte Carlo, Juergen Braehmer vs. Thomas Oosthuizen, 12, for Braehmer’s WBA World light heavyweight title; Yonfrez Parejo vs. Zhanat Zhakiyanov, 12, for Parejo’s interim WBA World bantamweight title; David Avanesyan vs. Charlie Navarro, 12, welterweights; Youri Kalenga vs. Roberto Bolonti, 10, cruiserweights; Amor Beladhj Ali vs. Jun Qiu Xiao, 12, junior featherweights. F ootb a ll a tL a m b o’s O PEN TO THE PU BLIC Burger Baskets and a Beer for $10 Drin k S pecia ls Du rin g Ha w ke ye ga m e s , M o n d a y Night Fo o tb a ll a n d Be a rs & Pa c ke rs ga m e s ! 319- 7 52- 0004 w w w .spirithollow .com 427321 Today’s college basketball games 4B Friday • November 6, 2015 THE HAWK EYE !" BURLINGTON, IOWA NFL: WEEK 9 COLLEGE WRESTLING Packers vs. Panthers Rams vs. Vikings Bears vs. Chargers Noon, Sunday Bank of America Stadium Charlotte, N.C. TV: KLJB RECORDS — Green Bay 6-1, Carolina 7-0 OPENING LINE — Packers by 3 SERIES RECORD — Packers lead 9-4 LAST MEETING — Packers beat Panthers 38-17, Oct. 14, 2014 LAST WEEK — Packers lost to Broncos 29-10; Panthers beat Colts 29-26, OT PACKERS OFFENSE — OVERALL (28), RUSH (12), PASS (27) PACKERS DEFENSE — OVERALL (23), RUSH (t25), PASS (17) PANTHERS OFFENSE — OVERALL (19), RUSH (1), PASS (29) PANTHERS DEFENSE — OVERALL (10), RUSH (20), PASS (7) STREAKS, STATS AND NOTES — QB Aaron Rodgers held to 77 yards passing last week by Broncos, lowest mark of career in non-injury game ... Rodgers has won last two games vs. Carolina, throwing five TDs and no INTs. ... RBs Eddie Lacy and James Starks both had TD runs vs. Carolina in last meeting. ... WR Randall Cobb had 121 yards on six catches and TD in last meeting. ... Green Bay is second in NFC with 23 sacks. ... DE Julius Peppers played first eight seasons with Carolina and amassed 81 sacks. Peppers is only player in NFL history with at least 100 sacks and 10 or more interceptions. ... Panthers have won 11 straight regular-season games. ... Carolina looking for first 8-0 start in history. ... QB Cam Newton has 28 games with passing and rushing touchdown, second most in NFL history. ... RB Jonathan Stewart has rushed for 285 yards and three TDs in past three games. ... Panthers have run for 100 or more yards as a team in 18 straight games. ... TE Greg Olsen has four TDs in past five games. ... Since entering NFL in 2012, LB Luke Kuechly leads league with 519 tackles. ... LB Thomas Davis had seven tackles and sack in last meeting with Green Bay. ... Kawann Short is tied for NFL lead in sacks by defensive tackle (four). CB Josh Norman is second in the league in interceptions with four. ... Panthers coming off first overtime win at home ever vs. Indianapolis. Noon, Sunday TCF Bank Stadium, Minneapolis TV: KYOU RECORDS — St. Louis 4-3, Minnesota 5-2 OPENING LINE — Vikings by 3 SERIES RECORD — Vikings lead 25-16-2 LAST MEETING — Vikings beat Rams 34-6, Sept. 7, 2014 LAST WEEK — Rams beat 49ers 27-6; Vikings beat Bears 23-20 RAMS OFFENSE — OVERALL (30), RUSH (3), PASS (32) RAMS DEFENSE — OVERALL (6), RUSH (9), PASS (10) VIKINGS OFFENSE — OVERALL (29), RUSH (5), PASS (30) VIKINGS DEFENSE — OVERALL (7), RUSH (15), PASS (9) STREAKS, STATS AND NOTES: Rams last played in Minnesota in 2006, only loss by Vikings in last five in series, and have visited just twice in last 23 seasons. ... Rams coach Jeff Fisher is 1-6 in career against Vikings. ... In only prior start against Vikings, Rams QB Nick Foles had 428 yards, three TDs and 103.5 passer rating for Eagles in 48-30 loss at Minnesota on Dec. 15, 2013. ... Rams RB Todd Gurley is first rookie in NFL history with four straight games of 125-plus yards rushing. ... Rams tied for second in league with 26 sacks, led by DE Robert Quinn with five. ... Seventh-year Rams LB James Laurinaitis plays first pro game in home state. ... Vikings have won six straight home games. ... Vikings RB Adrian Peterson has 350 yards and three TDs in three career games against Rams. ... Peterson (90.4) ranks second behind Gurley (115.0) in yards rushing per game in NFL. ... Vikings DBs have one interception, by Harrison Smith. ... Blair Walsh has made 13 straight FGs for Vikings. ... Fantasy Tip: Rams WR Tavon Austin has five TDs in last four games, coming off 98 yards receiving, second-highest total of career. Vikings WR Stefon Diggs has been targeted an average of 10 times per game, with 419 yards and two TDs receiving in four games. 7:30 p.m., Monday Qualcomm Stadium, San Diego TV: ESPN Radio: KCPS-AM (1150) RECORDS — Chicago 2-5, San Diego 2-6 OPENING LINE — Chargers by 4 ½ SERIES RECORD — Bears lead 6-5 LAST MEETING — Bears beat Chargers 31-20, Nov. 20, 2011 LAST WEEK — Bears lost to Vikings 23-20; Chargers lost to Ravens 29-26 BEARS OFFENSE — OVERALL (27), RUSH (16), PASS (22). BEARS DEFENSE — OVERALL (9), RUSH (29), PASS (4). CHARGERS OFFENSE — OVERALL (1), RUSH (29), PASS (1). CHARGERS DEFENSE — OVERALL (19), RUSH (27), PASS (13). STREAKS, STATS AND NOTES — ... Bears have won five of last six in series. ... Bears coach John Fox was boss of Chargers coach Mike McCoy at Carolina, Denver. ... Fox is 8-3 vs. Chargers; McCoy facing Bears for first time. ... Bears expected to be without star RB Matt Forte, veteran WR Eddie Royal. Both injured knees in loss to Vikings. ... If Forte is unavailable, rookie Jeremy Langford would carry bigger load. ... Royal was with Chargers last three seasons. ... This could be last prime-time game at Qualcomm Stadium. Chargers plan to file for relocation to Los Angeles area in January; move must be approved by NFL owners. Chargers, Raiders are planning joint $1.7 billion stadium in industrial suburb of Carson if they don’t get new stadiums in home markets. St. Louis Rams also vying for LA market. ... Chargers have been flexed out of Sunday night home game vs. Chiefs on Nov. 22. ... Chargers WR Keenan Allen placed on season-ending injured reserve after lacerating kidney at end of spectacular TD catch in loss at Baltimore. Allen was second in NFL with 67 catches, third with 725 yards. Dontrelle Inman expected to step into starting role. ... Chargers on first four-game losing streak in McCoy’s three seasons. ... Chargers QB Philip Rivers leads NFL with 243 completions, 348 attempts, 2,753 yards, is on pace to rewrite all of team’s season passing records. Week 9 by the numbers Standings, schedule AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA New England . . . . . . . .7 0 0 1.000 249 133 N.Y. Jets . . . . . . . . . . . .4 3 0 .571 172 139 Buffalo . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 4 0 .429 176 173 Miami . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 4 0 .429 154 173 South W L T Pct PF PA Indianapolis . . . . . . . . .3 5 0 .375 173 203 Houston . . . . . . . . . . . .3 5 0 .375 174 205 Jacksonville . . . . . . . . .2 5 0 .286 147 207 Tennessee . . . . . . . . . .1 6 0 .143 125 159 North W L T Pct PF PA Cincinnati . . . . . . . . . . .8 0 0 1.000 229 142 Pittsburgh . . . . . . . . . .4 4 0 .500 168 147 Cleveland . . . . . . . . . . .2 7 0 .222 177 247 Baltimore . . . . . . . . . . .2 6 0 .250 190 214 West W L T Pct PF PA Denver . . . . . . . . . . . . .7 0 0 1.000 168 112 Oakland . . . . . . . . . . . .4 3 0 .571 178 173 Kansas City . . . . . . . . .3 5 0 .375 195 182 San Diego . . . . . . . . . .2 6 0 .250 191 227 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA N.Y. Giants . . . . . . . . . .4 4 0 .500 215 208 Washington . . . . . . . . .3 4 0 .429 148 168 Philadelphia . . . . . . . . .3 4 0 .429 160 137 Dallas . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 5 0 .286 133 171 South W L T Pct PF PA Carolina . . . . . . . . . . . .7 0 0 1.000 191 136 Atlanta . . . . . . . . . . . . .6 2 0 .750 213 173 New Orleans . . . . . . . .4 4 0 .500 213 234 Tampa Bay . . . . . . . . . .3 4 0 .429 163 199 North W L T Pct PF PA Green Bay . . . . . . . . . .6 1 0 .857 174 130 Minnesota . . . . . . . . . .5 2 0 .714 147 122 Chicago . . . . . . . . . . . .2 5 0 .286 140 202 Detroit . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 7 0 .125 149 245 West W L T Pct PF PA Arizona . . . . . . . . . . . . .6 2 0 .750 263 153 St. Louis . . . . . . . . . . . .4 3 0 .571 135 125 Seattle . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 4 0 .500 167 140 San Francisco . . . . . . .2 6 0 .250 109 207 Thursday’s game Cincinnati 31, Cleveland 10 Sunday’s games Tennessee at New Orleans, noon St. Louis at Minnesota, noon Green Bay at Carolina, noon Washington at New England, noon Miami at Buffalo, noon Jacksonville at N.Y. Jets, noon Oakland at Pittsburgh, noon Atlanta at San Francisco, 3:05 p.m. N.Y. Giants at Tampa Bay, 3:05 p.m. Denver at Indianapolis, 3:25 p.m. Philadelphia at Dallas, 7:30 p.m. Open: Arizona, Baltimore, Detroit, Houston, Kansas City, Seattle Monday’s game Chicago at San Diego, 7:30 p.m. Bengals 31, Browns 10 Cle First downs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 Total Net Yards . . . . . . . . . . . . . 213 Rushes-yards . . . . . . . . . . . . 17-69 Cin 23 371 37-152 Passing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 144 219 Punt Returns . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1-0 3-9 Kickoff Returns . . . . . . . . . . . . .2-42 1-13 Interceptions Ret. . . . . . . . . . . . .0-0 0-0 Comp-Att-Int . . . . . . . . . . . .15-33-0 21-27-0 Sacked-Yards Lost . . . . . . . . . .3-24 2-15 Punts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-45.7 3-26.3 Fumbles-Lost . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .0-0 0-0 Penalties-Yards . . . . . . . . . . . . .4-28 2-20 Time of Possession . . . . . . . . .23:57 36:03 Cleveland . . . . . . . . 3 7 0 0 — 10 Cincinnati . . . . . . . . 7 7 3 14 — 31 First Quarter Cin–Eifert 9 pass from Dalton (Nugent kick), 7:08. Cle–FG Coons 27, :06. Second Quarter Cin–Eifert 2 pass from Dalton (Nugent kick), 4:34. Cle–Johnson Jr. 12 pass from Manziel (Coons kick), :19. Third Quarter Cin–FG Nugent 28, 4:05. Fourth Quarter Cin–Sanu 25 run (Nugent kick), 13:26. Cin–Eifert 19 pass from Dalton (Nugent kick), 7:43. A–65,816. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING–Cleveland, Crowell 10-38, Manziel 4-31, Johnson Jr. 3-0. Cincinnati, Bernard 13-72, Hill 15-52, Sanu 1-25, Dalton 6-5, McCarron 2-(minus 2). PASSING–Cleveland, Manziel 15-33-0-168. Cincinnati, Dalton 21-27-0-234. RECEIVING–Cleveland, Bowe 3-31, Crowell 3-26, Benjamin 3-22, Johnson Jr. 2-38, Barnidge 2-35, Dray 1-13, Gabriel 1-3. Cincinnati, M.Jones 5-78, Eifert 5-53, Green 4-53, Sanu 3-25, Bernard 1-14, Burkhead 1-7, Tate 1-4, Hill 1-0. MISSED FIELD GOALS–None. Injury report GREEN BAY PACKERS at CAROLINA PANTHERS — PACKERS: DNP: RB Aaron Ripkowski (illness), CB Quinten Rollins (neck), CB Sam Shields (shoulder). LIMITED: LB Clay Matthews (ankle, knee), WR Ty Montgomery (ankle), LB Nick Perry (shoulder, hand). PANTHERS: DNP: C Ryan Kalil (ankle), CB Josh Norman (illness), G Andrew Norwell (hamstring). LIMITED: DE Mario Addison (shoulder), TE Ed Dickson (hamstring), DT Dwan Edwards (ankle), C Fernando Velasco (shoulder). FULL: LB Shaq Thompson (knee). WASHINGTON REDSKINS at NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS — REDSKINS: DNP: CB Bashaud Breeland (hamstring), DE Jason Hatcher (knee), C Kory Lichtensteiger (neck), TE Anthony McCoy (not injury related). LIMITED: CB Chris Culliver (knee), CB DeAngelo Hall (toe), WR DeSean Jackson (hamstring), LB Ryan Kerrigan (hand). FULL: C Josh LeRibeus (shoulder), LB Perry Riley Jr. (lower leg), LB Keenan Robinson (rib, abdomen), RB Chris Thompson (back). PATRIOTS: DNP: T Marcus Cannon (toe), G Tre’ Jackson (knee), DE Jabaal Sheard (ankle). LIMITED: WR Julian Edelman (knee), RB Dion Lewis (abdomen), WR Keshawn Martin (hamstring), C Shaq Mason (knee), C Ryan Wendell (knee). TENNESSEE TITANS at NEW ORLEANS SAINTS — TITANS: DNP: CB Jason McCourty (groin), CB Blidi Wreh-Wilson (hamstring). FULL: CB Perrish Cox (hamstring), WR Harry Douglas (ribs), QB Marcus Mariota (knee), WR Kendall Wright (knee). SAINTS: DNP: T Terron www.thehawkeye.com Armstead (knee), WR Marques Colston (not injury related), LB Dannell Ellerbe (hip), G Jahri Evans (not injury related), LB Ramon Humber (hamstring), LB Hau’oli Kikaha (ankle), WR Willie Snead (knee), CB Damian Swann (concussion), DT Kevin Williams (not injury related). FULL: LB David Hawthorne (hamstring), CB Keenan Lewis (hip), T Andrus Peat (knee). MIAMI DOLPHINS at BUFFALO BILLS — DOLPHINS: OUT: T Ja’Wuan James (toe). DNP: S Jordan Kovacs (knee), WR DeVante Parker (foot). LIMITED: LB Neville Hewitt (hamstring), CB Brice McCain (knee), LB Koa Misi (foot), LB Spencer Paysinger (shoulder), RB Damien Williams (thumb). FULL: CB Brent Grimes (ribs), S Reshad Jones (shoulder), QB Matt Moore (nose). BILLS: DNP: WR Percy Harvin (knee), DT Kyle Williams (knee). LIMITED: S Corey Graham (groin), LB AJ Tarpley (concussion), WR Sammy Watkins (ankle), DE Mario Williams (knee). FULL: T Seantrel Henderson (concussion), QB Tyrod Taylor (knee), RB Karlos Williams (concussion). ST. LOUIS RAMS at MINNESOTA VIKINGS — RAMS: DNP: T Rob Havenstein (ankle), DE William Hayes (thigh), DE Chris Long (knee), DE Robert Quinn (knee), RB Chase Reynolds (thigh). LIMITED: RB Tre Mason (ankle), S T.J. McDonald (foot). VIKINGS: DNP: LB Anthony Barr (back), C Joe Berger (chest), WR Stefon Diggs (hamstring), DT Sharrif Floyd (knee, ankle), LB Eric Kendricks (ribs). LIMITED: LB Audie Cole (finger), DE Everson Griffen (neck), DT Tom Johnson (knee), DE Justin Trattou (foot). FULL: T T.J. Clemmings (neck), TE Rhett Ellison (concussion). JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS at NEW YORK JETS — JAGUARS: DNP: G Zane Beadles (foot), S Josh Evans (groin), WR Marqise Lee (hamstring). LIMITED: WR Allen Hurns (ankle, thigh), S James Sample (shoulder). FULL: TE Julius Thomas (abdomen). JETS: DNP: G Willie Colon (knee), WR Eric Decker (knee), C Nick Mangold (neck), WR Brandon Marshall (ankle, toe), S Calvin Pryor (ankle), WR Devin Smith (foot). LIMITED: TE Kellen Davis (hand), RB Bilal Powell (ankle), CB Buster Skrine (shoulder, hand). FULL: CB Antonio Cromartie (hip), QB Ryan Fitzpatrick (left thumb), RB Chris Ivory (hamstring), CB Dexter McDougle (ankle, hand), RB Stevan Ridley (knee), QB Geno Smith (left shoulder). OAKLAND RAIDERS at PITTSBURGH STEELERS — RAIDERS: No Data Reported STEELERS: DNP: WR Martavis Bryant (illness), LB Terence Garvin (knee), CB William Gay (not injury related), LB James Harrison (not injury related), TE Heath Miller (not injury related), TE Matt Spaeth (knee), WR Markus Wheaton (ankle). LIMITED: S Will Allen (ankle), DE Stephon Tuitt (knee). FULL: S Mike Mitchell (concussion), QB Mike Vick (hamstring). NEW YORK GIANTS at TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS — GIANTS: DNP: LB Jon Beason (ankle, knee), WR Victor Cruz (calf), S Craig Dahl (neck), TE Larry Donnell (neck), DE Owamagbe Odighizuwa (hamstring), WR Rueben Randle (hamstring), G Geoff Schwartz (ankle), LB J.T. Thomas III (ankle). LIMITED: CB Prince Amukamara (pectoral), RB Orleans Darkwa (back), LB Uani Unga (neck). BUCCANEERS: DNP: WR Vincent Jackson (knee), G Logan Mankins (not injury related), DE Jacquies Smith (ankle), S Major Wright (hamstring). LIMITED: DE William Gholston (knee), DT Gerald McCoy (shoulder), DT Tony McDaniel (groin), TE Austin Seferian-Jenkins (shoulder). John Gaines/The Hawk Eye Iowa junior Cory Clark, the national runner-up at 133 pounds last season, talks with the press during media day Thursday in Iowa City. Hawkeyes Continued from page 1B graduated five senior starters doesn’t change the team’s goals. The sky is not falling. Rather, the sky is the limit. “We’re in the conversation, and I don’t know really where we’re ranked in specific rankings. I know we’re in the three, four range nationally, and three out of the four are Big Ten schools,” Brands said Thursday during the team’s annual media day at Carver-Hawkeye Arena. “And actually probably four out of the five, I mean, with Michigan, Iowa, Penn State and Ohio State. So nothing has changed. We’re after winning a national title, and we’re after winning individual titles, and those goals have been good in the past, and the same usual suspects are good this year, as well. Virginia Tech, they have a team that they’re proud of, so there’s a top six or seven that are real relevant in the landscape. We’ve got to be ready every time out.” The heart of the Hawkeyes’ order starts at 125 pounds, where junior Thomas Gilman is coming off a fourth-place finish at nationals. Fellow junior Cory Clark is at 133, where he was a national runner-up last year. Gilman and Clark have a combined 99-19 record over the their careers, where they give the Hawkeyes a formidable one-two punch at the front end of the lineup. Gilman opens the season ranked fourth at 125, while Clark is second at 133. Gilman compares himself and Clark to former Iowa national champions Matt McDonough and Tony Ramos, who also held down the spots at 125 and 133. “We’re better this year and we’re going to be better the year after that. Really, we’re getting better every day,” Gilman said. “A lot of people give me a hard time or maybe shake their head at that quote. I don’t care. It’s what I think.” Also back is sophomore Brandon Sorensen, who finished fourth at 149 last year. After securing the spot at the Midlands Championships, Sorensen went on a tear, climbing as high as No. 2 in the national rankings while compiling a 13-1 record in dual meets. He is ranked third at 149 and looking to take that next step and become a national champion. “He’s got to realize that he’s got some pretty high-powered, high-potent offense, and he’s got to go-go-go and not just go...go... go. It’s got to be go-go-go, and in a smart way, and I think he can do that,” Brands said. “He’s made progress, as well. But that last match that he wrestled collegiately against Tsirtsis was something where he was waiting to trick the guy, and the first time is when you trick a guy.” Nathan Burak, a two-time All-American at 197, is back for his senior season after finishing seventh at nationals. Burak is 63-32 for his career and has put the questions of a year ago behind him. He opens the season ranked fourth at 197. He is looked to as a leader this season, a role he relishes. “Nathan Burak is a two-time All-American. He’s a senior. He’s a 3.8 student. He’s everything you want your program to be looked upon as,” Brands said. “A lot of times he’s not maybe given enough attention, not that he’s seeking the attention anyway, but when you talk about leadership, you talk about an example of what to look for in a student-athlete, he’s a wrestler that embodies that and represents our program very well.” Junior Sammy Brooks returns at 184, where he was a national qualifier last year with a 29-7 record. Brooks proved to be one of the most exciting performers in the Hawkeyes’ lineup last year and starts the season ranked 11th. Junior Alex Meyer stepped into the lineup last season, filling in for an injured Mike Evans, and posted an 18-7 record, beating two opponents ranked in the top six in the process. This season he Iowa wrestling at a glance Coach — Tom Brands (10th season, 163-16-1 career record) Last year’s record — 17-1 overall (9-0 Big Ten Conference) Last year’s NCAA finish — second Returning starters — 5 Starters lost — 5 Projected lineup: 125 — Thomas Gilman, Jr. 133 — Cory Clark, Jr. 141 — Topher Carton, Jr., Brody Grothus, Sr., Logan Ryan, RFR., or Vince Turk, Fr. 149 — Brandon Sorensen, So. 157 — Edwin Cooper, Sr., Logan Thomsen, So. or Brody Grothus, Sr. 165 — Burke Paddock, RFr. 174 — Alex Meyer, Jr. 184 — Sammy Brooks, Jr. 197 — Nathan Burak, Sr. HWT — Sam Stoll, RFr. Schedule: Nov. 14 — vs. Oklahoma State at Kinnick Stadium, 11 a.m. Nov. 20 — Iowa City Duals vs. Maryland, Grand Canyon, Iowa Central, Cornell College, 11 a.m. Nov. 29 — at Iowa State, 2 p.m. Dec. 4 — vs. South Dakota State, TBA. Dec. 10 — vs. Rutgers, 5 p.m. Dec. 29-30 — at Midlands Championships, Evanston, Ill. Jan. 8 — at Illinois, 7 p.m. Jan. 10 — at Northwestern, 2 p.m. Jan. 15 — at Wisconsin, 2 p.m. Jan. 22 — vs. Purdue, TBA. Jan. 24 — at Nebraska, 2 p.m. Jan. 29 — vs. Minnesota, 8 p.m. Feb. 5 — vs. Indiana, TBA. Feb. 12 — at Montana State-Northern, 8 p.m. Feb. 22 — National Duals, TBA. March 5-6 — Big Ten Championships at Iowa City. March 17-19 — NCAA Championships at New York City. Iowa will be successful if: The openings at 141, 157 and 165 are filled and the wrestlers at those weights can score points. The Hawkeyes will struggle if: The wrestlers at 141, 157 and 165 don’t step up to the challenge and wrestle at a high level. Iowa can ill-afford to give up bonus points at those weights, especially when Stoll is still an unproven commodity at heavyweight. Outlook — Iowa finished second at last year’s national tournament, which would be a fabulous feeling at just about any other school in the country. But this is Iowa, where national championships and national champions are expected, so there is a feeling that the sky is falling. It has been six seasons since the Hawkeyes won the last of their three straight national titles and the Hawkeyes certainly have the potential to be in the mix again this season. With four returning All-Americans in Gilman, Clark, Sorensen and Burak, the Hawkeyes have a solid base to build around. Brooks and Meyer each had solid seasons a year ago, and Stoll has proven himself at the international level in Greco-Roman. The Hawkeyes have some questions to answer at 141, 157 and 165. Just how those questions are addressed will go a long way toward determining just how far this Iowa team goes. is the starter at 174. Sam Stoll steps in at heavyweight for former three-time All-American Bobby Telford. Stoll is accomplished at the international level at Greco-Roman, but has some big shoes to fill, literally and figuratively. That leaves the open spots at 141, 157 and 165, vacated by the graduation of Josh Dziewa, Michael Kelly and Nick Moore. Red-shirt freshman Burke Paddock seems to have the inside track at 165, with Logan Thomsen and Edwin Cooper battling at 157 and Topher Carton, Lgan Ryan, Vince Turk and New London High School graduate Jake Kadel battling for the starting spot at 141. Senior Brody Grothus, who is just returning from off-season surgery, is the wild card. He could land anywhere from 141 to 157. Where Grothus winds up will go a long way toward determining the other spots. “We’re going to wrestle those guys this weekend, and we’re looking for someone to emerge, and this guy right here that you’re looking at has been looking for someone to emerge throughout the fall. That hasn’t really happened, and we need someone — and we’ll see. When the lights are on, maybe guys are better in the competition arena,” Brands said. “A little bit. Maybe not so much competition right now but maybe where you have a couple names there that can do a good job for us. When I say I feel good about our guys, I mean, those guys are — those weight classes are — I feel good about them, but you want someone to emerge and be the world beater.” Iowa won’t have much time to settle its lineup. The Hawkeyes, ranked fourth in the NWCA Division I coaches poll, entertain top-ranked Oklahoma State in a battle of the two winningest programs in college wrestling history on Nov. 14 at Kinnick Stadium in the Grapple on the Gridiron. Nearly 32,000 tickets already have been sold, which would more than double the current national attendance record set two years ago by Penn State “It was very much a team effort with administration, and it was our brainchild, but we’re not the originators. I mean, people have been wrestling outside since the beginning of time, and just so happens it’s the first time it’s been done in Division I,” Brands said. “It’s a big deal because it’s about two storied programs and a rivalry that continues, and these rivalries are getting tougher to schedule just because of the Big Ten getting bigger, and so that’s how it came about.” www.thehawkeye.com THE HAWK EYE !" BURLINGTON, IOWA 5B Friday • November 6, 2015 FROM THE FRONT PAGE Kane Kenseth online. But the assault case brought by a woman he had met at a nightclub was by far the most serious allegation Kane had faced. The high-profile investigation led to Kane’s removal from the cover of a popular NHL video game and fan chants of “She said no!” and “No means no!” during a couple of early road games. “We knew all along that Patrick didn’t do anything wrong,” his agent, Pat Brisson, said in a text to the Associated Press. Kane, the first pick in the 2007 draft, hasn’t shown any signs of distraction on the ice. With a goal and assist in a 6-5 overtime loss to St. Louis on Wednesday night, Kane’s 18 points (eight goals, 10 assists) in 13 games have him ranked third in the NHL’s scoring race. Two of his goals have been game-winners, and he’s tied for the league lead with four power-play goals. Sedita’s decision to not pursue charges came after signs of trouble with the investigation first appeared in September. In a strange series of events, the accuser’s initial attorney, Tom Eoannou, announced that the woman’s mother had found an empty evidence bag in her doorway. The attorney quit the case a short time later, saying he no longer believed the mother’s story. Sedita called the episode — apparently meant to cast doubt on how evidence had been handled — “a bizarre hoax.” It still wasn’t easy for Kane to deal with scrutiny he attracted in both Chicago and hometown of Buffalo. Kane’s day to spend hosting the Stanley Cup was Aug. 8, but he called off a public display of the iconic trophy because of the investigation and instead spent the day with family and friends. He stayed out of sight after the investigation became public, then reported to training camp with the rest of the Blackhawks in September. With the team facing heavy criticism for allowing him to play during the investigation, the star winger was joined by top Blackhawks executives for an awkward news conference where he said he would be absolved of any wrongdoing and brushed aside any questions that touched on the situation. “The very difficult part of this is when you are basically an international sports star, and as a result, a likely target,” Kane’s attorney, Paul Cambria, said Thursday. “And you have to go through three months of reading things in the media that you know are not true, and they’re hurtful things and accusatory things. That’s a very difficult burden to bear.” The Blackhawks were also criticized for allowing Kane to play despite the allegations made against him. “The Chicago Blackhawks organization has taken this matter very seriously and has tried to navigate a very sensitive situation while continually respecting the legal proceedings,” the team said in a statement released Thursday. Kane resisted any public signs of strain or frustration. When asked about the investigation this season, he has mostly stuck with polite comments that he was simply waiting for the prosecutor’s decision. “After a thorough investigation, we agree with the district attorney. We’re not surprised that they did not go forward,” Cambria said. “And I agree that the case is rife with doubt.” for intentionally wrecking Clint Bowyer in a move that ended Bowyer’s 2012 title chances. Reigning champion Kevin Harvick had no action taken against him two weeks ago at Talladega when he triggered a race-ending crash that preserved his spot in the playoffs. France said the only difference between what Kenseth and Patrick did on Sunday were the stakes for Logano, who was on his way to a fourth straight victory and a berth in the championship finale for the second consecutive year. Kenseth, the last series champion before the Chase was introduced in 2004, was uncharacteristically angry after he was wrecked at Kansas. It was no secret he was fuming, but NASCAR, Joe Gibbs Racing and Team Penske all allowed the feud to simmer rather than intervene before Martinsville. Kenseth passed on a chance to knock Logano out of his way earlier Sunday, but he finally snapped after he was wrecked while racing Logano and his Penske teammate Brad Keselowski for position. The teammates had been working together on restarts, strategy that angered other drivers who believed the Penske drivers were monkeying around. Kenseth and Keselowski made contact that sent both cars to the garage, and Kenseth didn’t buy the in-race explanation from Keselowski’s camp that it was an accident. Continued from page 1B Up& Continued from page 1B “ Derik Hamilton/Associated Press Matt Kenseth’s two-race suspension was upheld on Thursday after he wrecked Joey Logano during last week’s race at Martinsville, Va. “I am not going to change who I am, I’m not going to change what I stand for, I’m not going to change how I race. I’ve been in this business a long time, I feel I’ve had a pretty good career to this point and I feel like I’m going to continue to have the respect on the race track that I feel I deserve.” — Matt Kenseth Kenseth then returned to the track in a wrecked car, down nine laps, and drove Logano’s car into the wall as Logano tried to lap him. Instead of winning the race and earning a spot in the finale, Logano is now last in the eight-driver field. France argued that a deliberate wrecking of Logano’s race, and perhaps his season, can’t be tolerated. “I know there’s a lot of discussion about consistency in our penalties and there should be and that’s part of the equation,” N o w o rd er o n lin e a t w w w .theha w keye.co m /tra d itio n ca lls Ow n a P iec e o fHisto ry Tradition Calls” Co m m e m o rative prin to fthe firs t ho m e g am e in the n e w ly re n o vate d Brace w e llStad iu m (Fra m e notincluded) Ju s tin tim e fo rthe ho lid ay s e as o n ,this prin tcaptu re s the e xcite m e n tu n d e rthe lig hts atthe Grayho u n d s ’ firs tho m e g am e Se pte m b e r1 1 ,201 5. Take n fro m a u n iq u e an g le ato p a liftb y a pro fe s s io n alpho to g raphe r,yo u ’llm arve l atthe d e tails fro m the playe rs o n the fie ld to the cro w d in atte n d an ce . Availab le in 4 d iffe re n ts ize s ,e ach prin t co m e s w ith a placard ,als o s u itab le fo rfram in g ,n o tin g the his to ric d e tails o ftim e ,place an d pho to g raphe r. “ Trad itio n Calls ” is an id e alg iftfo rs tu d e n ts ,te ache rs , alu m n a,an yo n e w ith a fo n d n e s s fo rBrace w e llStad iu m . To o rd er yo u r prin t: “ Tra d itio n Ca lls” P rin t O rd er Fo rm (Fra m e notincluded) Your guide for getting up off the couch and out the door in the Great River Region Appearing Sundays and Thursdays in France said. “We issue penalties for two reasons: We’ve got to punish you for what we think you’ve done wrong, and we have to make sure that we deter somebody else from doing exactly what you did or worse. That’s why we can’t be consistent with • O rd e r o n lin e at w w w .the haw ke ye .co m / trad itio n calls • Fillo u tan o rd e r fo rm in pe rs o n at The Haw k Eye o ffice ,800 S. M ain , Bu rlin g to n ,Io w a (Fra m e notincluded) N am e Ad d re s s City State pho n e O rd e r-Price in clu d e s s hippin g an d han d lin g ,tax OR 1 8x1 2 - $52.95 e ach -Q u an tity _______ 24 x1 6 - $82.95 e ach -Q u an tity _______ 30x20 -$1 32.95 e ach -Q u an tity _______ Plea se a llow up to 3 w eeksfordelivery w ithin the United Sta tes; extra shipping tim e required forAPO a nd FPO a ddresses. 36x24 -$223.95 e ach -Q u an tity _______ All pricesinclude ta x, shipping a nd ha ndling w ithin the United Sta tes. THE HAWK EYE Zip e m ailad d re s s • M ailthe o rd e rfo rm at rig htto The Haw k Eye . The deadline to submit baby’s names for Sunday’s newspaper is noon Thursday. Announcements may be mailed to: Baby’s names c/o The Hawk Eye P.O. Box 10 Burlington, Iowa 52601 or sent via email to [email protected] with “Baby’s name” in the subject line. every single penalty because sometimes we’ve got to up the ante with a penalty because we don’t believe the current remedy is a deterrent.” After he was spun out at Kansas, Kenseth argued that it was a cheap move by Logano, who was already assured of advancing to the next round. Other drivers seemed to believe that the arrogance shown by Logano after the spin — he was shoulder-shrug unapologetic — had shattered a driver code. France, however, praised Logano for the shrewdness he showed in chasing a win that blocked one of his top competitors for the title, and the aggression Logano showed to move Kenseth after Kenseth blocked him several times. “To not have to deal with Matt Kenseth, that’s smart,” France said. “You can drive aggressively and if there’s a little bit of contact, then we understand that. There’s nothing new that went on at Kansas that doesn’t go on all the time. Now it was very unfortunate with the circumstances Matt got dealt on that particular day because he needed to win, he was trying to move on in the round, we understand that. What happened, frankly, as I said before, was quintessential NASCAR.” Ifyo u have q u e s tio n s ple as e co n tact The Haw k Eye at 31 9-754 -84 61 o r 800-397-1 708. P la c e yo uro rd erno w ! O R D ER TO TAL _____________ P A YM ENT INF OR M A T ION Che ck Cas h Cre d it Card Paym e n t type : V is a M as te rcard Dis co ve r N am e Nu m b e r Se cu rity Co d e Expiratio n Date Ship Pho to s to : Pick Up Pho to s at The Haw k Eye N am e Ad d re s s City To s u b s crib e call31 9-754 -84 62 o r 1 -800-397-1 708. State Zip 427513 6B Friday • November 6, 2015 THE HAWK EYE !" BURLINGTON, IOWA www.thehawkeye.com IOWA & ILLINOIS Iowa & Illinois digest In Memoriam Key administration lawyer was overpaid, unqualified IOWA CITY — A key lawyer in Gov. Terry Branstad’s administration wasn’t qualified for his position and was paid $22,600 he shouldn’t have received while on military leave, according to a report released Thursday. Department of Administrative Services chief legal counsel Ryan Lamb also failed to record vacation days and was promoted and given major raises even though he didn’t have a résumé on file, State Auditor Mary Mosiman wrote in a report. Lamb, who left the administration last year, was a key figure in a scandal involving confidential settlement agreements reached with departing state employees who had filed grievances alleging a variety of wrongdoing. In some cases, Lamb offered extra compensation if those complaining would agree to keep quiet, a practice Branstad said he was unaware of and later banned. Mosiman’s office launched its review after a whistleblower alleged Lamb was allowed improperly to continue receiving his salary while he was out of state on a lengthy military leave in 2013. Lamb, who serves in the Army Reserves, was accepted as an Army lawyer and received orders to attend training in Georgia and Virginia from June 16 to Oct. 3, 2013. Under state policy, employees on military leave can receive their salaries for up to 30 days per year. After that, they are supposed to use accrued vacation time or go on unpaid status. Instead of following that policy, then-DAS Director Michael Carroll made a verbal arrangement for Lamb to continue acting as DAS chief legal counsel and receiving his salary during the military training, the audit found. That deal allowed Lamb to collect $13,100 in pay and benefits he shouldn’t have while on leave and to obtain an excessive vacation payout of $9,537 when he later left his government job, the audit found. Lamb told auditors he checked his DAS email when possible during the day and worked nights and weekends. But his time sheets falsely reflected he kept a regular schedule, the audit found. During his tenure, Lamb’s time sheets were certified improperly by a personnel assistant and not approved by Lamb and his supervisor as required by policy, the report found. He didn’t record a single vacation day in his 34-month tenure, even when he traveled to Florida to take the bar exam. Kraft Heinz secures tax breaks from Iowa for Davenport plant DES MOINES — Kraft Heinz secured millions in tax breaks from Iowa economic officials Thursday for a new plant in Davenport, one day after the food company announced it planned to close seven factories in the United States and Canada as part of a downsizing that will eliminate 2,600 jobs. The Iowa Economic Development Authority board approved $1.75 million in tax credits and a $3 million forgivable loan. Kraft Heinz, formed by a recent merger, said it will use the financial assistance package to demolish its current plant in Davenport and build a new facility several miles away. The company intends to spend $203 million in the process. Even with the new plant, hundreds of jobs will be lost. Davenport’s current plant, which manufactures Oscar Mayer products and is touted as the world’s largest bologna factory, is one of several the company will shutter during the next two years. That’s part of a restructuring plan to save $1.5 billion in operating costs by the end of 2017. The others slated for closure are in California, Maryland, New York, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Ontario, Canada. H.J. Heinz Co. announced in March it would buy Kraft to create Kraft Heinz. The construction of a new manufacturing plant in Davenport is considered a victory for Iowa officials, who competed with another state to secure a home for the new facility, according to the documents the board reviewed before approving the tax breaks. The documents did not specify the other state. More than 1,200 workers are currently employed at the downtown Davenport plant, which was built in 1915. City officials said the new plant could retain at least 475 full-time jobs. Bruce Berger, director of Davenport’s economic development office, said officials empathized with employees who would be affected. Tim Hynds/Sioux City Journal A makeshift memorial sits outside a home Monday following a fire in Sioux City. One man died of smoke inhalation in the Oct. 30 blaze. Great River offers a class on healthy eating By JOEY AGUIRRE [email protected] WEST BURLINGTON — A doctor’s office never smelled so good. More than 20 women and one man spent Thursday night listening to Health and Wellness Coordinator Jamie Dengler give tips for preparing healthy meals inside the new Healthy Living Clinic’s demonstration kitchen at the Great River Family Practice Clinic in Mercy Plaza at Great River Medical Center. Dengler, who doubles as a body builder, shared her tips and secrets to purchasing healthy food, preparing it and leading a healthier lifestyle. This was the first class of this type at Great River Medical Center, but more are being scheduled. They are open to the community. “I love to get into your lives and see how nutrition can really fulfill whatever is missing,” Dengler said. “Because it seems like once your nutrition is in place, then your brain wakes up, your skin becomes vibrant and you just have a healthy glow about yourself. You have a lot bigger energy to take on life.” Dengler prepared a vegan Mexican bowl with zucchini and a power yogurt parfait and shared her recipes. She said searching Pinterest is a great way to find healthier recipes and foods low in sodium. Don’t go grocery shopping when you’re hungry, Dengler advised, and only buy what you intend to eat in five days. The idea of the class was to cook once, but eat for a week through proper preparation and storage. She recommended baking or grilling two staple meat options — chicken, fish, turkey, etc. — and placing them in containers for the week. Dengler does her food planning on Sundays when she also does laundry. If Sundays don’t work, pick the “slowest day” of the week and cut out two hours for food prep. Then every evening before bed, review the next day. Also, get on an eating schedule and write down everything you eat. If it goes in your mouth, it becomes a meal. “Minimally processed foods,” Dengler said. “I need to eat healthier,” said attendee Renee Workman. “I thought this was very interesting. She has a lot of good ideas about how to plan your diet throughout the week, prepare and plan ahead. I thought it was very interesting and with this being the very first one, it went very well.” Amanda Smalley called the class “brilliant.” She added, “The food was delicious and I love the ideas. My concern is budget It’s not exactly budget-friendly. But if you can work it into your budget, I’d feel healthier. And sodium — I salt everything. Like things that are already salted. I thought it was all about blood pressure, and I don’t have blood pressure issues, but now I know it’s about weight, too.” Technology helps today’s farmers keep up with the times By VIKAAS SHANKER Joliet Herald-News JOLIET, Ill. — Joliet area farmer Dave Kestel set up all the instrumentation in his combine with the intent to harvest about 50 acres of corn before the day was done. As Kestel lowered the harvester claw, he set off on a 4-mph journey translating corn stalks into corn kernels with the simple switch of a joystick. Depending on yield, the machine can cut about 10,000 bushels of corn a day. “You just keep the corn-head on the rows,” Kestel said. “It looks maybe a little difficult at first. But everything is difficult at first, and it gets easy in a while.” Actually, there is little steering involved while on a combine. GPS tracking and steering during the seeding process ensures straight lines. And the joystick used to move the combine forward rests at the target speed. After that, the only issue is how to handle the corners of the farm most efficiently along with fallen stalks. On warm days during the summer and early fall, a constant air-conditioned cabin keeps sweat and humidity from building up. And a hydraulic seat cushion keeps the bumps on the field from reaching the driver. “It can be pretty comfortable in here,” Kestel said. Harvesting crops remains an intensive process. But new technology is making farming easier. A combine and other large farming equipment is made simpler for farmers through several technological enhancements. According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture National Institute of Food and Agriculture, new technology has allowed farmers to identify where to apply seeds, water, fertilizer and pesticides specifically to get the most efficient yield. It’s leading to higher crop productivity, lower costs on water and chemicals, reduced ecological impact, lower chemical runoff into water sources, increased worker safety, safer growing Eric Ginnard/The Herald-News Farmer Dave Kestel waits Oct. 19 for traffic to clear while harvesting corn in New Lenox, Ill. Kestel’s combine harvests eight rows of corn at a time. Depending on yield, the machine can harvest about 10,000 bushels of corn per day. conditions and lower prices. One of the biggest advancements is the use of GPS tracking to map, plan and monitor crops and equipment to farm more efficiently. Kestel doesn’t use GPS technology when driving the combine for harvest. But he does use it for strip tillage, a conservation practice of tilling farms that reduces soil erosion. Before corn is planted, a fertilizer company uses GPS steering in its tractors to automatically treat the soil in 30-inch strips. Then, Kestel uses his own machines and GPS steering to plant the corn atop the strips. “It’s a very efficient way to use fertilizer,” said Kestel, a fourth-generation farmer who has been tilling his land for 17 years. GPS is one of several uses of modern technology to improve an old practice. Another is the use of smartphones as a central source of information for farmers. “We check the markets daily and wind-weather systems for chemical spraying,” said George Beutel, who farms primarily in Kendall County but has 10 acres in Will County between Minooka, Plainfield and Shorewood. Beutel uses the Illinois Farm Bureau app, as well as AccuWeather forecasts, on a daily basis during the growing season. “It’s really helped out local farmers,” said Mark Schneidewind, manager for the Will County Farm Bureau. Schneidewind said the crop yield in Will County is about average. Corn yield is about 160 bushels per acre, and soybean yield is 49 to 50 bushels per acre. Group: Iowa board is limiting public pipeline comments Associated Press DES MOINES — A group that opposes a proposed oil pipeline across Iowa said the regulatory board overseeing whether it gets approved is limiting public comment on the project. Iowa Citizens for Community Improvement said the Iowa Utilities Board will hear comments from only about 200 people when it holds a public hearing in Boone Nov. 12 about the pipeline. At the meeting, people will be given up to two minutes each to speak, and comments will be switched between those who oppose the project and those who support it. Iowa CCI said the setup creates a “false illusion” of equal opposition and support. “It’s clear that IUB is trying to limit public perception on how many Iowans are opposed to the Bakken Pipeline,” Nathan Malachowski, a community organizer for Iowa CCI, said in a statement. Don Tormey, a spokesman for the board, disagreed. “There’s people that are in favor of the pipeline and people who are against it,” he said. “The board has decided that both sides need to have equal time to present their case at the hearing.” “Hopefully the soybeans will be up a little bit more once they replant in drowned-out spots,” Schneidewind said, noting the effect heavy seasonal rains have had on soybean crops. According to a July 2015 report by the USDA, agricultural output across the nation more than doubled since 1948, with less land. Agricultural input — the amount of materials put into growing crop — grew at 0.07 per- cent a year. Agricultural output grew at 1.49 percent per year. The report also found the price of farm machines and crop ingredients fell relative to the cost of farm labor. Agricultural growth has slowed recently, but one of the main drivers for agricultural development has been research and development into farm technologies and processes. www.thehawkeye.com THE HAWK EYE !" BURLINGTON, IOWA Friday • November 6, 2015 7B FOR THE RECORD Officials said savings based on consultants may be less than anticipated. By VANESSA MILLER Cedar Rapids Gazette IOWA CITY — Since the state Board of Regents launched an efficiency review of its public universities nearly two years ago in hopes of saving millions and improving the quality of services and education, it has spent about $5.4 million on consulting fees and expenses. And those costs are expected to grow to at least $5.8 million, according to contracts with the consulting firms still working on the “transparent, inclusive efficiency review.” At the review’s start in early 2014, the board hired Deloitte Consulting to head the project at an initial cost of about $2.4 million. A few months later, the board agreed to pay Deloitte another $1 million for its work on the study’s second phase. As part of its initial contract, Deloitte subcontracted the academic portions of the review to KH Consulting Group. When a scheduling conflict prevented KH from completing the work, the board hired Ad Astra and Pappas Consulting Group to finish the academic assessment. It agreed to pay $100,000 to Ad Astra and $604,000 to Pappas — not including expenses for travel and other related costs. Although Deloitte wanted to help the universities implement their recommendations, the Board of Regents instead agreed to let the universities implement many of the suggestions with the help of two firms new to the project — Huron Consulting Group and Chazey Partners. The board agreed to pay $550,648 for Chazey’s work and $895,000 to Huron. Those contracts — including the $3.5 million paid to Deloitte for both fees and travel — come to about $5.7 million. To date, the board has paid $5.2 million of the contract fees and $165,377 in travel expenses to Huron, Chazey and Pappas. Those travel expenses, broken down, include $94,175 to Chazey, $34,093 to Huron and $37,109 to Pappas, according to Board of Regents spokesman Josh Lehman. “There may be more payments to Huron and Pappas, but Ad Astra and Chazey’s payments are complete,” Lehman said. Deloitte’s initial review of potential efficiencies on the University of Iowa, Iowa State University and University of Northern Iowa campuses projected possible savings of between $30 million to $80 million a year. Officials since have said those projections could be lower and slower to materialize. U of I coaches, surgeons again top state pay list By ERIN JORDAN Cedar Rapids Gazette IOWA CITY — More than $20 million — a good chunk of the state’s $3.2 billion payroll — was paid last year to 16 employees who work within about a square mile of each other on Iowa City’s west side. University of Iowa coaches, doctors and hospital administrators are again Iowa’s highest-paid state employees, with head football coach Kirk Ferentz topping the list at a $3.95 million total salary in the year that ended June 30, according to the state salary database released this week by the Iowa Department of Administrative Services. Behind Ferentz was Fred Hoiberg, Iowa State University’s former basketball coach, paid $2.13 million in fiscal 2015 before he left in June to coach the Chicago Bulls, and Iowa State head football coach Paul Rhoads, at $1.85 million. Two other employees not affiliated with the University of Iowa made the top 20 list with Iowa State President Steven Leath pulling down $835,461 last year, and University of Northern Iowa head basketball coach Ben Jacobson making $795,000. Leath’s pay includes his $500,000 base salary, a $320,461 one-time deferred compensation payout and a $15,000 car allowance, Iowa State reported. More than 60,130 full-time and part-time employees worked for the state in fiscal 2015, with more than half employed by the three state regents universities. The median statewide salary for the public employees last year was $49,367, with the median men’s salary $4,859 higher than that for women. Surgeons and other physicians typically are at the top of the state salary list, with many being paid in part with private money. Peter Gruber, a cardiothoracic surgeon hired in January 2014, was paid $460,047 for working six months of that year. His total compensation for FY15 was $1.2 million, which includes a base salary of $672,000 and $532,992 extra for serving as department chair, University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics reported. Other University of Iowa doctors in the state’s top 20 include Matthew Howard, a neurosurgeon, at $794,045; Joseph Turek, cardiothoracic surgeon, at $764,325; and Bruce Gantz, head of the department of Otolaryngology — Head and Neck Surgery, at $709,159. Iowa head men’s basketball coach Fran McCaffery was paid $1.55 million last year, and head women’s basketball coach Lisa Bluder made $795,776. While other state employees get raises, Gov. Terry Branstad stayed at $130,000. This year, 2,397 state employees were paid more than the governor, compared with 2,294 last year at this time. Annual salaries paid to U.S. governors range from $179,000 in New York to $70,000 in Maine, according to data compiled by the Council on State Governments. Omaha Tribe considers Iowa marijuana operation Associated Press MACY, Neb. — Leaders of the Omaha Tribe in Nebraska are considering land in western Iowa for growing marijuana. Tribal members approved three referendums Tuesday giving the Tribal Council the authority to legalize marijuana for medicinal and recreational use and to grow plants for industrial hemp. The tribe is based in northeast Nebraska, but its reservation extends into Iowa’s Monona County. The Omaha Tribe has operated a casino near Onawa since the early 1990s. Tribal Chairman Vernon Miller said a study will examine whether the business would make financial sense. Miller said the results of Tuesday’s vote showed changing attitudes about marijuana among tribal members, half of whom, he said, are younger than the age of 28. “We were optimistic about how the vote would turn out just because of the progressiveness of the younger generation of our tribal members,” the chairman said. Wehnona Stabler, CEO of the Carl T. Curtis Health Education Center in Macy said the tribe would benefit from medical marijuana as an alternative treatment for cancer, diabetes, epilepsy and post-traumatic stress disorder. “Western medicine that we promote now is not ours. This was forced on us by the government — the Indian Health Service and the Bureau of Indian Affairs,” Stabler said. Stabler said the tribe also has an abundance of hemp that grows wild on its Omaha reservation that can be used. Miller said leaders will watch closely the performance of the Flandreau Santee Sioux’s marijuana resort on its reservation in South Dakota, about 45 miles north of Sioux Falls. Miller said it’s too early to know whether the Omaha Tribe’s casino, Blackbird Bend, could expand into a similar resort. Miller said the tribe will work to ensure any proposed plan would not violate federal or state laws by talking with law enforcement agencies and attorneys in Iowa and Nebraska as the tribe deliberates plans. Deaths Gary N. Hanna Gary Nelson Hanna, 76, of Carthage, Ill., died at 6 a.m. We d n e s d a y, Nov. 4, 2015, at Heritage House in Carthage. Born Oct. 17, 1939, in Batavia, he was the son of Lloyd U. and Mabel K. Humphrey Hanna. Mr. Hanna worked on the family farm raising Black Angus cattle and doing other farm work. He completed school through ninth grade in Ottumwa and lived next to the Wapello County Fairgrounds in Eldon for many years, and starting in 2000, resided at Senior Housing in Dallas City, Ill., North Villa Apartments and Hancock County Nursing Home until 2011, when he settled at Heritage House. He was a member of Des Moines River Primitive Baptist Church near Eldon before moving his membership to Carthage in 1999. Survivors include one nephew, one great-niece and one greatnephew. He was preceded in death by his parents and two brothers, one in infancy. The funeral for Mr. Hanna will be at 11 a.m. Saturday at Carthage Primitive Baptist Church, with Elders Robert Webb and Robbie Webb officiating. Visitation will be one hour prior to the time of service at the church. Burial will be in Moss Ridge Cemetery, Carthage. A memorial has been established for Carthage Primitive Baptist Church or donor’s choice. Printy Funeral Home in Carthage is in charge of arrangements. For the Record Arrests/citations Reports are taken directly from the daily logs of area law enforcement agencies. Some agencies do not differentiate between arrests and citations. Burlington Wednesday 1:39 p.m. 1206 S. Central Ave. Tony Edward Belknap, 30, same address: warrant for failure to appear. 12:25 p.m. 513 N. Main St. Christopher Alan Bindel, 18, 704 S. Central Ave.: warrant for failure to appear. 9:30 a.m. 2701 Meadowbrook Drive. Rebecca Lee Hillman, 15, 848 S. Garfield Ave.; Bryan Alan Piper, 14, 517 Remick St.; Devon A. Slough, 16, 1108 N. Eighth St.; Elizabeth Edgecomb, 16, 333 N. Plane St.; Austin E. Smith, 15, 603 Cameron St.; Steven K. Minner, 15, 1228 Doemland St.; Blake A. Denny, 15, 1724 Louisa St.: all cited for trespass. 8:18 a.m. North Central Avenue and U.S. 34. Tracy Evans, 27, 813 N. Eighth St.: no insurance, interference with official acts with injury, operating a non-registered vehicle and driving while suspended. West Burlington Wednesday 5:04 p.m. Kohl’s, 306 E. Agency Road. Lori Lynne Hicks Schmitz, 40, 1204 Jefferson St., Burlington: fifth-degree theft. Fort Madison Wednesday 5:14 p.m. 4500 block of Avenue O. Jennifer Hershberger, 29, 2112 1/2 Avenue E: driving while suspended and no insurance. Crime watch Reports are taken directly from the daily logs of area law enforcement agencies. Burlington Wednesday Hayes Court and Washington Street. Fight reported at 9:25 p.m. Burlington High School, 421 Terrace Drive. Assault reported at 8:59 p.m. 300 block of South Third Street. Residential burglary reported at 10:35 a.m. 200 block of Hayes Street. Theft reported at 8:27 a.m. 4500 block of Summer Street. Fight reported at 8:21 a.m. Fort Madison Wednesday 4500 block of Avenue O. Injury accident reported at 5:14 p.m. 5800 block of Avenue O. Burglary reported at 4:07 p.m. 5800 block of Avenue O. Theft reported at 11:07 a.m. 5600 block of Avenue O. Vandalism reported at 7:49 a.m. Henry County Wednesday 600 block of North Pine Street, New London. Burglary reported at 12:54 p.m. Elsie I. Burkholder Elsie Irene Burkholder, 87, of Washington,Iowa, died Thursday, Nov. 5, 2015, at United Presbyterian Home in Washington. Born March 14, 1928, near Lockridge, she was the daughter of Harry and Fanny Conrad Reschly. On Sept. 12, 1948, she married Stanley D. Burkholder in Daytonville. Mrs. Burkholder did housework for a number of people while raising her children, was a clerk and then postmaster at Crawfordsville Post Office from 1970 until retiring at the age of 62. She lived in Olds and attended Prospect Country School until the age of 10, when she and her family moved to Crawfordsville and graduated from Crawfordsville High School in 1946. She enjoyed making quilts for her children and grandchildren, working with her flowers and her yard and especially, taking care of her family. Survivors include her husband; three sons, Dwain Burkholder of Ocala, Fla., Steve Burkholder of Cedar Rapids and Warren Burkholder of Marion; three daughters, Jean Molander of WeekiWachee, Fla., Suzanne Smith of Columbus Junction and Marlene Carver of Wayland; 17 grandchildren; 23 great-grandchildren; and three brothers, Marion Reschly of Crawfordsville, Vernon Reschly of Nowata, Okla., and Raymond Reschly of Kalona. She was preceded in death by her parents, three brothers and two sisters. A celebration of Mrs. Burkholder’s live will be at 2:30 p.m. Sunday at Bethel Mennonite Church in rural Wayland, with Pastor Curt Kuhns officiating. Burial will follow in Bethel Cemetery. A memorial has been established for Bethel Mennonite Church. Betty L. Underwood Betty Lee Underwood, 87, of Winfield died Thursday, Nov. 5, 2015, at Sunrise Terrace Care Center in Winfield. Born June 30, 1928, in Winfield, she was the daughter of E. Raymond and Edna Lee Cummings. On June 30, 1947, she married Ronald O. Underwood in Winfield. He died Oct. 30, 2008. Mrs. Underwood worked at W.A. Sheaffer Pen in Mount Pleasant for two years and helped on the family farm. She graduated from Winfield High School and IWC Business College. She was a member of Winfield United Methodist Church; a member and past president of United Methodist Women, American Legion and VFW Auxilliaries; and a member and past matron of O.E.S. She enjoyed flower gardening, reading, family, antiques and, in earlier years, square dancing. Survivors include two daughters, Pamela Ziegenhorn of Muscatine and Carol Bowers of Ames; three sons, Mark Underwood of Wildwood, Mo., Jim Underwood of Winfield and Lee Underwood of Las Vegas.; 10 grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren. Besides her husband, she was preceded in death by her parents and one brother. The funeral for Mrs. Underwood will be at 10:30 a.m. Monday at Winfield United Methodist Church, with the Rev. Randy Moser officiating. Visitation will be from 9 a.m. until the time of service at the church. Interment will follow the service in Winfield-Scott Township Cemetery. Memorials have been established for Winfield United Methodist Church and Lupas Foundation. Honts Funeral Home in Winfield is in charge of arrangements. George Barris, creator of TV’s original Batmobile, dead at 89 Associated Press LOS ANGELES — George Barris, who created television’s original Batmobile, along with scores of other beautifully customized, instantly recognizable vehicles that helped define California car culture, has died at age 89. Carolyn Kratz-Caster Carolyn “Lynn” Ann Kratz-Caster, 85, died Nov. 3, 2015, in Cedar Rapids. Born in 1930 in Burlington, she was the daughter of Delbert J. “Doc” and Isabel M. Kratz. In 1962, she married John Caster. Ms. Kratz-Caster was a graduate teaching assistant at St. Louis University, taught high school science at Fairfield High School and St. Mary’s Academy in Nauvoo, Ill., taught evening classes in needlepoint and embroidery for several years at Burlington High School and was a teacher in Calexico, Calif., from 1982 until retiring in 1995. She attended St. Paul’s Catholic School in Burlington, earned a bachelor of arts degree in music and voice and a bachelor of science degree in biology at Barat College in Lake Forest, Ill., and received her teaching certificate from Iowa Wesleyan College. She and her husband lived in St. Louis and Philadelphia until their divorce, and she returned to Burlington with her children, where she remained for the next 10 years, resided in El Centro, Calif., for 25 years and and spent the remainder of her years at Manorcare in Cedar Rapids. She sang with Bel Canto Chorale and played the organ for St. Patrick’s and St. Paul’s parishes. In younger years, she enjoyed horseback riding, reading, music and golf, and later enjoyed rockhounding, driving her Jeep Cherokee around the desert and to gem shows, going on short cross-country road trips with her two dogs, playing bridge, Mexican food, watching birds outside her window at Manorcare, doing puzzles with friends and roaming the halls in her wheelchair. Survivors include one son, Christopher Caster of Coralville; two daughters, Anne Ricci of Seattle, and Susan Hohbein of Cedar Rapids; eight grandchildren; cousins and great-cousins. A rosary will be recited at 3 p.m. Sunday at Prugh’s Chapel, after which the family will receive friends until 5 p.m. The Funeral Mass for Ms. KratzCaster will be at 1 p.m. Monday at St. Paul’s Catholic Church in Burlington, with Father Bill Rousch as the Celebrant and music provided by Des Moines County Resurrection Choir. Burial will be in Sacred Heart Cemetery. Barris was still in high school in Northern California when he designed his first fully customized car, a 1936 Ford. Two of the most famous were the Batmobile, created for the iconic 1960s TV show, and The Munster’s Koach, built for the television show “The Munsters.” Paid Notice Advanced Planning • Cremation Traditional Services 2620 Mount Pleasant St. Burlington, Iowa 52601 (319) 752-2771 or 1 (800) 631-2771 www.lunningfuneralchapel.com Vera James T h e memorial funeral service for Mrs. Vera James will be 11 a.m. Sat., Nov. 7th at Lunning Chapel. Inurnment will be in Aspen Grove Cemetery. A memorial has been established for Hope Haven. Obituary policy The Hawk Eye publishes standard death notices of Burlington-area residents or former area residents free of charge as part of its news report. Information should be provided by a mortuary. The newspaper also accepts custom obituary advertisements, for which there is a charge. Paid Notice 3940 Division St. Burlington, Iowa 52601 (319) 752-2828 Toll Free 1-877-752-2828 Kenneth Newton T h e graveside committal service and inurnment for Kenneth D. Newton, 90, will be noon Saturday at Aspen Grove Cemetery with Reverend Debra L. Kinney officiating with full military honors to be rendered by the Burlington Area Veterans Honor Guard. Cremation has been entrusted to the care of Prugh-Thielen Crematory. In lieu of flowers, memorials have been established for the First Presbyterian Church and the VFW. Condolences may be sent from www.thielenfuneralhome.com. 163 Years Established 1852 Paid Notice PRUGH FUNERAL SERVICE 317 N. Fourth St., Burlington, Iowa (319) 754-8241 1-800-550-8573 Leona Cooley T h e graveside committal service and interment for Leona “Sis” Cooley, 92, will be 2:00 PM this afternoon at Burlington Memorial Park Cemetery with Chaplain Randy Gearhart officiating. A memorial has been established for the American Cancer Society. Carolyn Kratz-Caster The Funeral Mass for Carolyn Ann Kratz Caster, 85, will be held at St. Paul Catholic Church in Burlington, on Monday, November 9, 2015 at 1 PM with Fr. Bill Roush as the Celebrant. Music will be provided by the Des Moines County Resurrection Choir. Interment will be in Sacred Heart Cemetery. A rosary will be recited in Prugh’s Chapel on Sunday, at 3:00 p.m. following which the family will receive friends until 5:00 p.m. Condolences may be sent to www.prughfuneralservice.com. Russell W. Ralphs The celebration of life for Mr. Russell W. Ralphs will be from 4 until 7 p.m. today at the Port of Burlington. Memorials have been established for Southeast Iowa Parkinson’s Support Group and the Iowa-Illinois Amateur Radio Club. Send a sympathy message at: www.LunningFuneralChapel.com Remembrance Picture Tributes and Funeral Services may be viewed at the respective obituaries of participating families. John W . Hun e rd os s e G enera l Agenta nd B ro k er Fina nc ia l B enefitServic e, LTD . (319)752-2528 8 16 R a m s ey W es tB u rlingto n, IA The deadline to submit baby’s names for Sunday’s newspaper is noon Thursday. Announcements may be mailed to: Baby’s names c/o The Hawk Eye P.O. Box 10 Burlington, Iowa 52601 or sent via email to [email protected] with “Baby’s name” in the subject line. THE HAWK EYE John W . Hun e rd os s e 389295 Regents efficiency review has cost $5.4 million to date 8B Friday • November 6, 2015 THE HAWK EYE !" BURLINGTON, IOWA www.thehawkeye.com NATION & WORLD World news in brief Christie at risk of missing main stage at next GOP debate Associated Press 412724 H ALLOW EEN FOLK ART Weather TODAY forecast for Friday, Nov. 6 Mason City Mason City 48/31 Ames Decorah Waterloo Prairie du Decorah 48/31Chien 06 High: 53° Low: 38° Mostly sunny Madison Madison 48/34 Praire du Chien Dubuque 50/34 Waterloo Rockford 50/33 Dubuque Clinton 50/33 Iowa City Rockford Iowa City Clinton 53/34 Davenport 52/34 53/34 Wapello Ottumwa Davenport Des Moines Oquawka 53/36 53/36 Burlington Wapello Oquawka Peoria Ottumwa 53/36 Peoria Keokuk 53/36 53/34 Burlington 58/39 Kirksville 53/38 KeokukQuincy 56/39 Springfield Springfield Kirksville Quincy 58/39 56/36 58/38 Wind: WNW 15 mph Normal high 57° Record high: 77° (1916) Normal low: 38° Record low: 15° (1991) TOMORROW 07 Ames 52/33 Des Moines High: 53° Low: 32° Mostly sunny Wind: NW 10 mph SATURDAY SUNDAY 08 NEWARK, N.J. — Chris Christie could be bumped from the main stage at next week’s GOP presidential debate, and Bobby Jindal and George Pataki risk being left out altogether. They’re potential victims of poor showings in national polling and the way those surveys are being used. Fox Business is to announce Thursday evening the candidates who will appear on stage in Milwaukee Tuesday, a decision based on a selection of polls. Should the line-ups change from the party’s earlier debates, it will further underscore concerns about the pivotal role such surveys have played in shaping the contest for the GOP nomination. Statistically, there is no significant difference between candidates lumped together near the bottom of the pack in national polls, which typically have a margin of error of 3 percentage points or more. “I tell people, ‘Ignore the national polls and just follow those early states,’ ” said Republican pollster Frank Luntz, who argued early opinion surveys are notoriously unreliable. “Except that now national polls drive the debates, and debates drive the polling.” According to debate criteria issued by Fox last week, candidates must score 2.5 percent or higher in an average of the four most recent major polls conducted through Nov. 4 to be featured in the prime-time debate. David J. Phillip/Associated Press Former President George H.W. Bush, left, applauds April 25, 2013, with Laura Bush after former President George W. Bush’s speech during the dedication of the George W. Bush Presidential Center in Dallas. Elder Bush criticizes Cheney, Rumsfeld in new biography : 57° By NANCY BENAC Associated Press WASHINGTON — Former President George H. W. Bush finally has revealed what he really thinks of his son’s presidency, Sunny faulting George W. Bush for setTomorrow Tomorrow ting an abrasive tone on the world City Hi Lo Otlk City Hi Lo Otlk stage and failing to rein in hawkSUNDAY MONDAY 09 Ames 52 32 pc Madison 50 34 pc ish Vice President Dick Cheney High: 54° Burlington 55 37 pc Mason City 49 31 pc and former Defense chief Donald Carthage 55 39 pc Mount Pleasant54 36 pc Low: 39° Rumsfeld. Cedar Rapids 52 34 pc Oquawka 55 37 pc Mostly sunny Clinton 52 34 pc Ottumwa 53 34 pc In a years-long series of interDavenport 53 36 pc Pella 55 35 pc views with biographer Jon MeaDecorah 48 34 pc Peoria 58 39 pc cham, the elder Bush frowned MONDAY 10 TUESDAY Des Moines 54 37 pc Prairie duChien 50 34 pc on the sometimes “hot rhetoric” Dubuque 50 35 pc Quincy 58 38 pc High: 58° of George W. Bush, saying such Fort Madison 54 37 pc Rockford 54 35 pc Low: 45° Iowa City 53 35 pc Springfield 58 39 pc language may get headlines “but Partly cloudy Keokuk 55 39 pc Wapello 55 37 pc doesn’t necessarily solve the Kidnapped boy learns itdiplomatic Kirksville 56 36 pc Waterloo 51 32 pc problem.” Sun & moon The elder Bush faulted Cheney Almanac | yesterday real name when he and Rumsfeld for their “iron-ass” High/low 69°/54° Today Tomorrow applies to college Normals 57°/38° views, calling Rumsfeld an “arro6:40 a.m. 6:41 a.m. Sunrise Record high 77° (2008) 4:55 p.m. 4:53 p.m. Sunset gant fellow” and saying Cheney VESTAVIA HILLS, Ala. — An Record low 16° (1976) 1:49 a.m. 2:44 a.m. Moonrise Moonrise had changed markedly from the Ohio teenager applying to col2:36 p.m. 3:05 p.m. Moonset Precipitation (through 4 p.m.) 0.00" days when he served in the first Month to date/Normal something starlege discovered 0.00"/0.45" New First Full Last 0.00" Month to date date/Normal tlingto about himself because 31.75"/34.34" of a Bush administration. Quarter Quarter Year 31.75" Year to date As vice president, Cheney discrepancy involving his Social Snow yesterday " 0.45" Normal month-to-date “had his own empire there and Snow monthnumber: to date 34.34" Security his real name. Normal year-to-date " marched to his own drummer,” Nov 11 Nov 19 Nov 25 Dec 3 And he allegedly was snatched Snow season to date the "elder Bush said, adding: “He River stages | yesterday from his mother in Alabama by just became very hard-line and Stage (ft.) Change Flood Stg. his father when he was 5. Site Stage (ft.) Change Flood Stg. Site very different from the Dick Lone Tree 6.79 -0.92 15 Mississippi River Father and son were dis- Cheney I knew and worked with.” 13.13 -0.14 20 Wapello Predominant pollen: Dubuque 9.26 +0.06 17 covered living under assumed Ultimately, the elder Bush Des Moines River Davenport 7.08 +0.12 15 names this week in Cleveland, assigned fault to his son for Ottumwa Muscatine 3.05 -0.14 15 7.78 +0.02 16 where by all accounts 18-year- Cheney’s over-reach and for fosKeosauqua 12.5 -0.01 22 Keithsburg 7.97 0.00 14 +0.02 16 Saint Francisville 7.78 Burlington old Julian Hernandez was98.5 an -1.5 9.67 +0.01 15 tering a global impression of 100.0 Keokuk 5.1 +5.1 16 Skunk River excellent student and had been American inflexibility. 100.0 97.9 -2.1 Brighton NA NA 14 Iowa River well cared for. “It’s not Cheney’s fault, it’s the Augusta 3.05 -0.14 15 Iowa City 11.34 -0.03 22 100.0 99.1 -0.90000000000001 The father, Bobby Hernanpresident’s fault,” the elder Bush dez, 53, was arrested100.0 and faces said. “The buck stops there.” UV Index For all of that, though, the charges that could send him to Pollen count Road conditions Very high elder Bush did not suggest he disToday's allergy levels: .4/low prison for a decade or more. 12 Extreme •Dial 5-1-1 or Authorities are still trying to agreed with his son’s decision to 11 800-288-1047 •Iowa: Predominant Pollen: invade Iraq, saying Iraqi dictator 10 Very high piece together what happened 800-452-4368 •Illinois: Ragweed 9 800-222-6400 •Missouri: Saddam Hussein “is gone, and to the boy during the 13 years he The UV index fore8 .1/low 800-585-7623 •Kansas: Tomorrow's allergy levels: High with him went a lot of brutality was missing. 7 casts the ultraviolet 800-542-0220 •Minnesota: and nastiness and awfulness.” 6 radiation coming 402-471-4533 •Nebraska But some of the bare facts are Source: www.Pollen.com 5 from the sun. The Moderate •Wisconsin: 800-762-3947 The assessments are contained known. He vanished from his 4 higher the number Always up to date 3 the more risk of sun mother’s home in the Birming- in Meacham’s 800-plus-page www.thehawkeye.com/weather 2 Low damage to your skin. ham area in 2002, his father leav- “Destiny and Power,” the fullest or Channel 9/Mediacom 1 account yet of Bush, the only ing a note saying he had taken modern ex-president not to write National forecast map the child, according to authori- a full-length memoir. Meacham, TODAY’S U.S. FORECAST:A cold front will move East, resulting in breezy conditions with a ties. winner of the Pulitzer Prize for chance of showers from the Great Lakes to the Northeast. Scattered showers and The couple were not married. thunderstorms from the Southeast to the southern Plains. Through the years, police International investigated hundreds of posSeattle Falls 55/48 38/25 sible sightings across the counBangor Portland Billings H 61/41 57/44 H 43/29 Boston try. The break in the case didn’t Boise 73/49 49/33 Rapid Detroit Minneapolis New York come until the son started apply- By ANNE M. PETERSON City 67/40 74/53 46/32 45/22 H Lake Salt H San ing to college. Omaha City Chicago Cincinnati Associated Press Francisco 72/40 Washington D.C. 47/30 54/38 Denver 56/32 65/52 Some kind of problem was 77/49 St. Las 47/22 H H Louis Vegas Adidas is offering to help high found with his Social Security 63/42 65/46 Charlotte Albuquerque Los Memphis 76/58 55/32 Oklahoma Angeles schools nationwide drop Native number, and so he approached 73/53 City 75/54 Phoenix 64/42 Atlanta a school counselor, who discov- American mascots. 75/53 77/63 Dallas The athletic shoe and apparel Orlando ered Hernandez was listed as New 72/53 88/71 Orleans maker said Thursday it will proHouston 81/67 missing by the National Center 81/59 vide free design resources to for Missing and Exploited ChilMiami EXTREMES 88/78 dren, District Attorney Brandon schools looking to shelve Native Hottest: 94°, at Laredo, TX Falls in Jefferson County, Ala., American mascots, nicknames, Coolest: 10°, at Mammoth Lakes, CA imagery or symbolism. The told the local media. Today Tomorrow Today Tomorrow German company also pledged City Hi Lo Otlk Hi Lo Otlk City Hi Lo Otlk Hi Lo Otlk to provide financial support to Miami 88 78 pc 87 76 t Atlanta 77 63 t 69 65 t 46 34 s Chicago 54 38 pc 51 31 pc Minneapolis 46 32 pc ensure the cost of changing is Egypt opens tombs 77 63 t Dallas-Ft W. 72 53 pc 67 46 pc New Orleans 81 67 t not prohibitive. to spur interest in New York 74 53 sh 64 45 pc Denver 47 22 pc 55 28 s Adidas announced the ini64 54 s 63 55 pc Detroit 66 40 t 52 34 pc San Fran. archaeological sites tiative in conjunction with the Honolulu 85 77 sh 84 77 sh St. Louis 63 42 pc 59 37 pc White House Tribal Nations ConLos Angeles 78 55 s 80 56 s Wash.,D.C. 77 49 fg 63 44 pc LUXOR, Egypt — Egypt ference. KEY: c=cloudy, dr=drizzle; fg=fog; i=ice; pc=partly cloudy; r=rain; rs=rain/snow; t=thunderstorms; opened three tombs in the Adidas executives were s=sunny; sh=showers; sn=snow; sf=snow flurries; w=windy ancient city of Luxor to the pub- among those attending the conlic for the first time Thursday, ference, which included leaders hoping to spur interest in tour- from the 567 federally recogism despite the shadow of last nized tribes. The company, which has its weekend’s airline crash in the North American headquarters in Sinai Peninsula. The most significant tomb Portland, Ore., also said it will be was that of Huy, Viceroy of Kush a founding member of a coalition under the famed King Tutankha- that addresses Native American mun. Inside the tomb, wall paint- mascots in sports. According to the group ings depict a great festival with southerners from Nubia paying Change the Mascot, about 2,000 tribute, confirming Egypt’s dom- schools nationwide have Native ination and the authority of local American mascots. The advocacy group said rulers. about a dozen schools have Antiquities Minister Mamdropped Native mascots over the douh Eldamaty said the newly past two years and another 20 opened tombs, in the Qurnat are considering a change. Marey area of Luxor, are among Eric Liedtke, Adidas head of the most important ones built global brands, who traveled to for nobles of the New Kingdom conference, said sports must be period, which ended more than inclusive. 3,000 years ago. “Today’s announcement is a The opening, planned before great way for us to offer up our the airline disaster, is part of gov- resources to schools that want ernment plans to highlight new to do what’s right — to adminarchaeological sites to encour- istrators, teachers, students and athletes who want to make a difage tourism. High: 53° Low: 33° 2 his Andrew Jackson biography, daughter Liz Cheney also was “American Lion,” draws on Bush’s “tough” and influential in her diaries and on interviews he con- father’s administration. ducted with Bush from 2006 to As for Rumsfeld, Bush said he 2015. The book is being released had “served the president badly. I publicly Tuesday. don’t like what he did, and I think Jeb Bush, who is running for it hurt the president having his the Republican presidential nom- iron-ass view of everything.” ination, said he hadn’t read the “There’s a lack of humility, a book but showed no inclination lack of seeing what the other guy to echo his father’s criticisms. thinks,” Bush said of Rumsfeld. “My thought was that Dick “He’s more kick ass and take Cheney served my dad really names, take numbers. I think he well,” Bush said in an Associated paid a price for that.” Press interview Thursday in New Rumsfeld responded in a stateHampshire. “As vice president, he served my brother really well. Dif- ment: “Bush 41 is getting up in years and misjudges Bush 43, ferent eras. Different times.” George W. Bush, too, was mea- who I found made his own decisured in his reaction, saying in a sions.” Emails and phone calls to statement he was “proud to have served with Dick Cheney and several contacts for the Cheney Don Rumsfeld. Dick Cheney did a family were not returned immedisuperb job as vice president, and I ately. But Meacham gave Cheney was fortunate to have him by my a chance to respond in the book side throughout my presidency. to Bush’s criticisms. Meacham Don Rumsfeld ably led the Pen- wrote Cheney smiled and murtagon and was an effective secre- mured “fascinating” after reading tary of defense.” a transcript of Bush’s comments. In the book, George W. Bush “No question I was much hardwas asked about his father’s crit- er-line after 9-11,” Cheney said, icisms of his own language and adding the younger Bush wanted allowed his rhetoric had been him to play a significant role on “pretty strong,” but he was unre- national security. pentant on that count. “I do disagree with his putting The elder Bush said he wasn’t it on Lynne and Liz,” he added. sure what had changed Cheney, The book suggests Jeb Bush but added he thought the Sept. isn’t the only member of the cur11 attacks had made him more rent presidential field who long hawkish about the use of U.S. mil- has had an interest in the White itary force abroad. House. The elder Bush said when “Just iron-ass,” the elder Bush he was a presidential candidate said. “His seeming knuckling under to the real hard-charging in 1988, Donald Trump made an guys who want to fight about overture to be his vice presideneverything, use force to get our tial candidate, an idea Bush found 3.05 East.-0.14 15 “strange and unbelievable.” way in the Middle 12.5 -0.01 22 Bush also traces his own evoThe elder Bush also speculated 7.78 +0.02 16 the views of the vice president’s lution in thinking about gay marwife, Lynne, and daughter Liz riage, writing: “Personally, I still may have contributed to Cheney’s believe in traditional marriage. But people should be able to do rightward turn. “Lynne Cheney is a lot of the what they want to do, without diseminence grise here — iron-ass, crimination. People have a right tough as nails, driving,” Bush to be happy. I guess you could say said. “But I don’t know.” He said I have mellowed.” Adidas offers to help eliminate racist mascots The ad content and more features are FREE at thehawkeye.com Check out today’s Legals 000000 Rick Bowmer/Associated Press The Banks High School mascot is shown May 17, 2012, on the wall of the school gym in Banks, Ore. Adidas is offering to help high schools nationwide drop Native American mascots. ference in their lives and in their world,” Liedtke said in a statement to the Associated Press. “Our intention is to help break down any barriers to change — change that can lead to a more respectful and inclusive environment for all American athletes.” The voluntary program would give schools access to the company’s design team for logo rede- sign and uniform design across all sports. It seeks to be a collaborative effort with schools. The use of such mascots has drawn increased attention and controversy in recent years. The NFL’s Washington Redskins have resisted appeals by Native American and civil rights groups to change their name and mascot. Classified advertising inside CURRENTS Section C Friday, November 6, 2015 Burlington, Iowa Signs of history photo by Katy Dodds; illustration by Craig T. Neises/The Hawk Eye Almost a year after concluding a weekly project in The Hawk Eye in 2014 that dug into the stories behind the names on Burlington, West Burlington and Des Moines County streets signs, amateur local historian Mary Krohlow has compiled her writings into a new book, “Streets of Honor: And More Des Moines County Connections.” The map in the background, used on the cover of the book, is of the original plat of Burlington. A street guide in stories New book shares tales of people immortalized in white on green at local street corners. become home,” to work for Benner Tea Co. After its purchase in the 1970s by the Germany-based Aldi grocery store chain, Krohlow went on to work for the company Chain Store Systems and as a Who’s Dill? consultant, performing technical writing and business analysis, and That question, posed now and then by visitors to the Apple Trees doing system development, installations and user support. Museum about the street where the former Des Moines County She retired on Dec. 31, 1999 — just in case fears about the Y2K Historical Society site was located, bug taking down electronic systems piqued in Mary Krohlow, who volunaround the world Jan. 1, 2000, came teered there in the gift shop, an interest “It’s just crammed full of neat stuff.” to pass — and soon became involved in learning more about the histories more deeply in the historical society. behind other names on Burlington Mary Krohlow, Krohlow attributes her interest in street signs. history to her mother, who set an examlocal historian and author But in those days, way back at the ple for it. And to getting older, which she beginning of this century, Krohlow said seems to create an interest in such was a novice amateur historian, and people with more experience things. The realization of her own curiosity came at about the same warned her off, citing the massive volume of work such an undertime a dozen years ago or so when she was being encouraged to join taking would require. The idea never went away, but likewise never the historical society. was acted upon. Until, that is, she was approached by The Hawk In that environment, her interest grew as she learned more. Eye in 2012 for help collecting the same information. Research became a source of excitement, with “Oh my gosh, it’s The result was “They Oughta Name a Street,” a year-long project starting to make sense” moments making up for what otherwise published in 2014 that told dozens of stories about names posted in can be “a lot of drudgery.” white on green at intersections in Burlington, West Burlington and “Streets of Honor” is filled with plenty of “Oh my gosh” moments elsewhere in Des Moines County. that helped her tell the stories of well-known, little-known and Now all that work has been put into a book, “Streets of Honor: unknown people who figured, at least in a small way, in local hisAnd More Des Moines County Connections,” available from Crafts- tory. man Press in Burlington. Included are luminaries such as Iowa Territorial Gov. Robert “It represents a great deal of work, but also a great deal of fun,” Lucas, first chief justice of the Iowa Supreme Court ,Charles Mason, Krohlow said of her first book. and aviation pioneer Art Hartman; relative unknowns like Birdie The 134-page volume features all 52 of Krohlow’s street name Bierworth and Mathias Miller; and in a personal indulgence honarticles covering more than 60 streets, avenues, roads, lanes and oring Krohlow’s Wisconsin hometown, Seymour Street namesake even one boulevard. Also included are items of interest she found Wolcott Seymour. or had the chance to learn more about during her research, among “Which turned out to be a really fascinating street, by the way,” them a variety of local connections to 19th-century Colorado that she said of the latter. take up several pages. Also featured are the combined histories of street names that “It’s just crammed full of neat stuff,” Krohlow said. share a thematic connection: trees, presidents, Native American A Wisconsin native who grew up on a farm not far from Green tribes and, in the case of Gold, Silver and Cash streets, money. Bay, Krohlow started out teaching and took her first job after gradKrohlow’s favorite of all was Higbee Avenue, a short street on uating from Wartburg College in Waverly at Burlington High School, Burlington’s West Hill she chose to research at a busy time because where she taught for two years before going on to pursue a master’s it looked to be an easy knock-off. She already knew George Higbee degree. was an important early investor in Murray Iron Works and intended But after graduate school and a year teaching in Chicago, she left to augment that story with a smattering of personal history. the classroom altogether and returned to Burlington, “which had But it was not the simple story she anticipated. By CRAIG T. NEISES [email protected] ‘Streets of Honor’ signing planned “Streets of Honor: And Other Des Moines County Connections,” a new book by Mary Krohlow featuring a collection of articles she wrote in 2014 featuring the history behind names of Burlington area streets, is now available. The histories originally appeared in The Hawk Eye for its yearlong “They Oughta Name a Street” project. Copies of “Streets of Honor” are for sale at the Des Moines County Heritage Center, the Iowa Store in the Port of Burlington and at Burlington By the Book. Krohlow will sign copies from noon to 4 p.m. Sunday at the 301 Jefferson St. bookstore during the downtown holiday open house. — CRAIG T. NEISES “There were so many surprises along the way in researching that one,” she said. “Exciting surprises.” Higbee, it turned out, was in the Civil War and afterwards was put in charge of the reconstruction of Richmond, Va., the Confederate capitol city torched by Confederate soldiers in the final days of the war. He came to Burlington in the 1870s, but research showed his father, Charles Higbee, was a doctor here and sent young George to boarding school in the East. Charles Higbee, who died in 1844 and lies buried at Aspen Grove Cemetery, was Mormon and spent time in Nauvoo, Ill. and Quincy, Ill. The Higbee family may have had some connection to the deaths of Joseph Smith, the founder of the Mormon faith, and his brother, Hyrum, Krohlow said, and could have died amid the violence that followed the mob killings in Carthage, Ill. That speculation lies outside the pages of “Streets of Honor.” Because after all her research, Krohlow still has unanswered questions. Readers will, too. Questions like, who’s Dill? Krohlow never got around to that one. So to find out, the curious will have to try their own hand at historical research. Or wait and hope there someday might be a “Streets of Honor, Volume 2.” Ea$y Money? Retirement: Medicare (Parts A, B and D) By MARY WEINAND Iowa State University Extension & Outreach What it is: Medicare is the federal health insurance program for people who are age 65 or older and certain younger people with disabilities. Different types of Medicare plans help pay for your in-patient hospital care, doctor visits, outpatient services, home health care, prescription drugs, some care in a skilled nursing facility and much more, depending on the plan or plans you choose. As complicated as that sounds, there’s a single key choice at the core of all your decision-making: Will you go with the original Medicare plan, which is run by the federal government and consists of Parts A and B, or a Medicare Advantage plan (also called Part C) offered by a private insurer and approved by Medicare? How it works: Although Social Security’s full retirement age is no longer 65, you should sign up for Medicare three months before your 65th birthday. You can apply at www.socialsecurity.gov. To get started with Medicare you can complete an authorization form if you want your family or friends to call Medicare on your behalf. Medicare can’t give personal health information about you to anyone unless you give permission in writing first. Why it matters: Medicare Part A (hospital insurance) covers inpatient hospital stays, care in a skilled nursing facility, hospice care, and some home health care. Medicare Part B (medical insurance) covers certain doctors’ services, outpatient care, medical supplies and preventive services. Medicare Part D (prescription drug coverage) adds prescription drug coverage to original Medicare, some Medicare cost plans, some Medicare private-fee-for-service plans and Medicare medical savings account plans. These plans are offered by insurance companies and other private companies approved by Medicare. Medicare Advantage Plans also may offer prescription drug coverage that follows the same rules as Medicare prescription drug plans. Who should care: Once you sign up for Medicare you will receive a list of tests, items and services that are covered no matter where you live. If your test, item, or service isn’t listed, talk to your doctor or other health care provider about why you need certain tests, items or services, and ask if Medicare will cover them. More information: Iowa State University Extension and Outreach Money Blogs tips, blogs.extension.iastate.edu/moneytips; extension publication PM1825A, Retirement Transitions: Strategies for Retirement Income from the “Retirement: Secure Your Future” series at tinyurl.com/p7hko57; the extension website at www.extension. iastate.edu/humansciences; the official Medicare website, www. Medicare.gov; or from the Social Security Administration at tinyurl. com/ncyzapw. Ea$y Money? is a weekly guide to financial topics of importance for individuals and families at all stages of life. Mary M. Weinand is a family resource management field specialist for Iowa State University Extension and Outreach based in Henry County. 2C Friday • November 6, 2015 THE HAWK EYE !" BURLINGTON, IOWA www.thehawkeye.com CURRENTS Chilly winds, hearty soups M y iPhone is telling me its 46 degrees outside, with winds howling at 17 mph. Brr. The what-it-feels-like reading is a blustery 39 degrees. Come March, 46 degrees will feel like beach weather, but at the end of a gorgeous Indian summer, it seems more like pileon-a-parka weather to me. Are you an ant or a grasshopper? The chill in the air makes me busy as an ant wanting to get my autumn agenda tidied up before the first flakes of frozen aqua appear. It’s just too early to type that four letter word, snow. Do you have things on your to-do list that get pushed aside due to lack of time, follow-through or a change of priorities? I do. Trying new soups is one of those. But as I have almost given up on canned soups entirely, I have to roll up my sleeves and make soup if I want that yummy aroma of garlic and simmering chicken soup I am going to scream. Ugh! I know you have seen those badly formed parts of chicken. My garbage disposal, Oscar, used to get them until I discovered my cat, Frankie, loves them. Bon appetite, Frankie. way ever again. Creamy pasta soup This soup is full of surprises. The first one is how easy it is to make. The second surprise is how delicious it is. Even my niece, Katy, the one who dislikes Soup with Suzi tomato soup, and about every I got together with my sister, other food on this planet? She Dietitian Suzi, last week and we had a loved it. If you like lasagna, wonderful time. We cleaned a you’ll love this soup. Magician little, laughed a lot (the movie All you need Lynda Murray “Spy” is hysterical), shopped, 1 23-ounce can tomato soup worked on Christmas gifts 3 cups hot water (the equivwafting through the house. alent of using one empty soup and went out to eat a couple of There is nothing better after can) turning your key in the lock than times. But mostly we cooked. 3 cups milk We promised we’d try some to be met with that welcoming, 1 pounds lean hamburger, new homemade soups. I brought “Dinner is done” smell from a cooked and drained (we used the ingredients. Together we crock pot of homemade delischemed, teamed and screamed grass-fed) ciousness. 2 teaspoons pepper about how good they were. They 1 tablespoon Italian seasonreally were delicious. We were Unwelcomed ingredients ing surprised how easy they were Why do I take the time to 1/2 cup diced fresh onion to make. I will share the recipes chop up onions, veggies, simmer with you, and after you try them, 3 to 4 cloves garlic, minced meats to make my own home1 cup spaghetti noodles, brothen you, too, can convert to a made creations? Because if I ken up into bite-sized pieces better soup eater. have to pick out one more piece 8 ounces low-fat cream I’ll make a bet with you that of chicken that resembles cat you won’t be able to look at “pet cheese (Neufchâtel) 1 cup shredded mozzarella food” canned soups the same food in a can of chicken noodle cheese (for topping) Optional All you do 1. Combine first 8 ingredients until near boiling, on medium-high heat. 2. Add pasta and let simmer 8 to 10 minutes. 3. Add cream cheese and stir through. 4. Serve with mozzarella cheese sprinkled on top. We also added fresh cilantro. Makes 6 generous servings. Will freeze or hold in the refrigerator for several days. White chicken chili We also made this hearty chili. It was a big hit as well. No leftovers is the sign of a good bubbly soup and a happy belly. We prepped and popped in a slow cooker, but if you are so anxious to try it, go ahead, the canned beans are fully cooked and ready for your spoon. All you need 1 tablespoon oil 2 cloves garlic minced 1 medium onion, chopped 2 cups chicken broth 2 cans (15 ounces) Mrs. Grimes white chili beans, drained 2 cups cooked chicken, chopped (We used organic Smart chicken) 1 1/2 cups Monterey Jack cheese, shredded 1/3 cup sour cream (optional) Cilantro as garnish (if desired) All you do • Sauté garlic and onions in oil until tender. • Add chicken broth, beans, chilies, seasonings, and chicken. • Heat in slow cooker 4 to 6 hours. • Prior to serving, melt in cheese. Garnish with sour cream and cilantro. Lynda Murray is an independent dietitian providing private consultation and public speaking services in the Burlington area. Her column appears in Currents the first Friday of each month, or visit her website, www.dietitianmagician.com. More parents staking out digital space for their babies three years ago, Shereem Herndon-Brown had plenty to plan. But one thing he made time for was reserving the twins’ domain names. He can’t help but think By ALISON BOWEN ahead to a time when his chilChicago Tribune dren’s online presence will be a factor in their lives. Becoming a parent includes “I think it’s very, very coma long list of to-dos: stockpiling diapers, building a crib, picking mon these days that parents do it, but I do recognize that we a name. Now some parents are adding need to be responsible with it,” said Herndon-Brown, founder of a variety of online-only tasks Strategic Admissions Advice, a to sweep up digital real estate website offering college admisunder their baby’s name — sions assistance. “We will make before they even hold the birth sure there’s nothing up there certificate. that wouldn’t be something that In the digital age, parents could help are weighing not hinwhether to “Millennial parents them, der them.” snap up a are on social media, Experts domain name say many parfor their baby, and they’re on their ents choose post photos digital devices and to reserve a family memname, bers can click smartphones all the domain perhaps addthrough or ing photos or time. This is very stow for later a blog. Others or create a much a part of their might nab the slot for their name but do lifestyle.” child on social nothing with media sites it, holding it, like Facebook Julia Wang, for example, or Twitter. The Bump for a possible Media and future portparenting folio. Most platforms regulate a experts say securing digital child needs to be at least 13 to space is becoming more combe on social media, said Augusta mon as millennials become Nissly, program coordinator parents. for the Washington, D.C.-based “I see it all the time,” said Dr. Yalda Uhls, a child psychologist Family Online Safety Institute. How this affects a child later and author of “Media Moms and varies and is a bit unpredictable, Digital Dads: A Fact-Not-Fear experts agree. After all, no one Approach to Parenting in the knows what the digital world Digital Age.” Uhls said many parwill look like in 18 years. ents combine their familiarity Another thing many parents with technology and excitement consider? Email. Parents often around a new baby. set up an account to avoid the A 2010 report from online inconvenience, for their child, security company AVG Technolof having to add a jumble of ogies shows that 92 percent of numbers at the end of the email U.S. children under age 2 have address. some type of digital footprint. “They’re kind of thinking A third have information and ahead and trying to lock that in,” photos online within weeks of Wang said. being born, the study found. A It’s a millennial thing: Young similar report from AVG in 2014 parents, especially millennials showed 6 percent of parents had (ages 18 to 34 in 2015), are jumpcreated a social network profile ing on this trend. for a child under 2, and 8 percent “Millennial parents are on made an email address for a social media, and they’re on baby or toddler, a slight increase their digital devices and smartfrom 2010. phones all the time,” Wang said. Although a seemingly natural “This is very much a part of their extension of posting pre-baby lifestyle.” food or vacation snaps, parents A 2014 BabyCenter report might not think through the on millennial moms showed long-term implications. 79 percent use social media at “We always caution that least daily. And in this year’s whenever you’re posting images, BabyCenter “State of Modern (look) at the settings to make Motherhood” report, 63 percent sure you’re sharing it with the of respondents reported using right people you intended to,” their smartphone more since said Julia Wang, site director at pregnancy or birth. The Bump. Most millennial moms and dads have Facebook and InsSecuring a digital birthright tagram accounts, and they When his twins were born might use them more after baby. Websites, social media accounts being reserved for future use. Fotolia How much digital real estate should parents secure for their babies? That’s one of the questions parents face in the digital age. Pause before posting: Wang said Bump message boards often discuss privacy and whether to post infant photos. Indeed, discussing digital expectations and decisions is a great first step for new parents, who are especially vulnerable to the temptation of posting. First, parents need to become fluent in privacy settings. FOSI provides videos on navigating the sometimes-confusing world of Facebook privacy settings and removing your location from Twitter. Common Sense Media, a nonprofit media advocacy group for families, warns of children’s photos falling into the wrong hands, whether through identity theft or showing up on unintended websites. In May, a Utah mother found that photos of her daughter and 9-month-old son had been used on social media with hashtags connected to porn sites. The organization notes that having a password-protected account on photo-sharing sites like Flickr or Photobucket is an option. They also suggest apps that are designed to be privately shared, like Notabli, 23snaps and eFamily. When baby grows up Also, think ahead to when your 13-year-old asks why you posted that bathtub photo when he was a baby. “They’re probably not going to think that’s very funny to have on social media,” Nissly said. Uhls, who also works with Common Sense Media on the digital intersection of parents and children, added it’s hard to later tell teens to be careful online if you didn’t model the same caution. And, she pointed out, it’s nearly impossible to know what your brand-new baby would think. “They don’t even know who their child is. … Are they going to be shy? What are they going to be?” Uhls said. “And by making this choice for them early on, are they cramming them into a box that they may not want to be in?” B e s t Ic e Cre a m Eve r! P um pkin P ie Ice Cream is H ere! C om e in and try it today U p to 22 flavors daily 427650 According to BabyCenter, since becoming pregnant or a mother, 24 percent reported using Facebook more than before, while 33 percent had bumped up logging onto Instagram. “Instagram is really made for the millennial parent because it’s just all about photo sharing,” Wang said. “You see many moms who are the power Instagram users, who love posting photos of their child and styling them.” For sites like Facebook or Twitter, some simply store a name. Others might use a handle to tweet humorous things from baby’s voice — “I tried carrots today!” Having a Facebook site for a baby can be excellent etiquette, Wang noted. If a parent feels she is posting too often on her own page, she can create a page just for baby and her fans. Then, “all those 102 pictures of the baby are really dedicated for the family and close friends that are really interested about all of your baby’s development,” she said. 31 9-754-0970 600 S. Roosevelt,Burlington (N ext to M azzio’s) E a t In or D rive Th rough • M on .-S a t. 10 a .m .-9 p .m ., S un . 1 p .m .-9 p .m . D aily Specials F rida y’s D e a l 13. 00 Ju m bo 1-Toppin g Pizzas $ Dine in • C a rry O u t or Deliv ery M on.-Sat.Lunch Buffet• 11 AM -1:30 PM Tues.Evening B uffet• 5-8 PM D IN E-IN • C ARRYO U T O R D ELIVERY D ining & Entertainm ent Featured Dining Food & Drink Specials 413555 $9 La rg e 1 -Top p ing Pizza s 403303 W EEKEND SPEC IAL 753-0161 616 S . Roos evelt Burlin gton , IA D elivery! Hot& Fa st!! www.thehawkeye.com THE HAWK EYE !" BURLINGTON, IOWA Friday • November 6, 2015 3C CURRENTS Salted caramel feeds craving for salty, sweet By SARAH GISH Kansas City Star Salted caramel is a classic flavor mashup the French mastered centuries ago, but its stateside popularity has bubbled over in recent years. Go to the grocery store, and you’ll find salted caramel-flavored brownie mixes, ice cream, peanut butter — even vodka. Cold Stone Creamery serves a Salted Caramel Frappe, and Starbucks has its Salted Caramel Mocha. Salted caramel could be on track to replace pumpkin spice as the “it” fall flavor. According to data gathered by the healthtracker app MyFitnessPal, pumpkin spice consumption dropped 7.3 percent from 2014 to 2015, while demand for salted caramel products increased by 7 percent. Unlike pumpkin spice, the salty-sweet flavor is enjoyed year-round. And it might have more staying power. Salt and caramel “is one of those classic combinations that will never go out of style,” said Christopher Elbow, the chef who founded Elbow Artisan Chocolates and Glacé Artisan Ice Cream. The best-selling item at Elbow Artisan Chocolates is the Fleur de Sel caramel, a jewel-like orb of chocolate encasing liquid caramel flavored with sel gris, a coarse French sea salt. At Glacé, the top-selling scoop is Fleur de Sel ice cream. Caramel is delicious on its own, Elbow said, but something magic happens when you introduce salt. “Every time I make caramel, I put a little bit of salt in it,” he said. “It really makes that caramel flavor pop.” The type of salt matters. Elbow likes the subtle mineral flavors of sel gris, but other salted caramel recipes call for English Maldon sea salt, which is less bitter than table salt and has pyramid-shaped crystals. Jonathan and Amy Pitcher of Bizz & Weezy Confections sprinkle their popular dark chocolate caramels with Murray River sea salt from Australia. The pink flakes have a touch of earthy minerality that complements the chocolate, Jonathan said. The salted caramel combination is a no-brainer. But making caramel from scratch? That can be tricky. When the Pitchers started making caramel four years ago, they ruined nearly $15,000 of product. Most of the bad batches were burnt. “Caramel can be temperamental if you don’t follow some key rules,” Elbow said. The tricky part is heating the sugar just until it develops its deep caramel flavor — and pulling it from the heat before it turns bitter, crystallizes or burns. Elbow recommends swirling the pan as the caramel cooks. “You never want to stir it, because that promotes crystallization,” Elbow said. But be careful when swirling, because molten sugar is extremely hot. Tim Veith of Ibis Bakery in Lenexa, Kan., who perfected his caramel skills working at Elbow Artisan Chocolates for three years and also is a fan of the swirl method. He recommends cooking sugar with water (the “wet method” as opposed to the “dry method”) and a lid that traps steam and washes sugar granules down the sides of the pot before they can form crystals. “Those one or two crystals can cause the whole batch to turn to a solid mass,” Veith said. Jonathan Pitcher, now a caramel pro, is all about the low-andslow method. He cooks caramel at 275 degrees on an induction range. It takes longer, he said, but the caramel is harder to burn at that heat. Many batches get ruined when the sugar is scorched by the bottom or sides of the pan. If that happens, Pitcher said it’s important to not scrape the sides of the pan. “If you think you’ve ruined it, add more cream” or butter, he said. You might find that it tastes just fine — and even better with a healthy pinch of salt. Caramel pretzel bars Salty pretzels and stickysweet caramel top off these shortbread bars, which will keep up to a week when stored in an airtight container. Makes 32 bars For the shortbread: 1 1/4 cups all-purpose flour 1/4 teaspoon salt 1/2 cup (1 stick) unsalted butter, softened 1/3 cup brown sugar 1 teaspoon vanilla extract For the caramel topping: 3/4 cup (1 1/2 sticks) unsalted butter 1 1/4 cups light brown sugar 1/4 cup honey 1/4 cup maple syrup Tammy Ljungblad/Kansas City Star Caramel pretzel bars. toothpick comes out clean. As soon as the brownies are out of the oven, place the jar of caramel sauce without the lid in a microwave and heat just until it’s pourable. Stir until smooth. Drizzle the caramel evenly over the hot brownies and sprinkle with the sea salt. Cool completely and cut into 12 bars. Per brownie: 476 calories (54 percent from fat), 30 g total fat (18 g saturated), 95 mg cholesterol, 54 g carbohydrates, 5 g protein, 519 mg sodium, 3 g dietary fiber. Source: Barefoot Contessa Foolproof: Recipes You Can Trust (Clarkson Potter 2012) Salted caramel crispy treats Tammy Ljungblad/Kansas City Star Salted caramel brownies. Tammy Ljungblad/Kansas City Star Salted caramel crispy treats. 1/2 teaspoon salt 1 cup heavy cream 6 cups (about 9 ounces) small pretzel twists, lightly broken up To make the shortbread: Position a rack in the center of the oven and preheat to 350 degrees. Line a 9-by-13-inch baking pan with parchment paper, folding paper up and over the sides of the pan. In a small bowl, whisk together flour and salt and set aside. In the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, beat together the butter and brown sugar at medium speed until combined, about 1 minute. Beat in the vanilla, change speed to low, and add the flour-salt mixture. Mix until crumbly, 10-15 seconds. Pat the dough evenly into the bottom of the parchment-lined pan, and prick dough all over with a fork. Bake 15-18 minutes, until just golden brown around the edges. Remove from oven and allow to cool slightly. To make the caramel: In a large saucepan over medium heat, combine the butter, brown sugar, honey, maple syrup and salt. Stir regularly until mixture is foamy and slightly thickened, about 10 minutes. Add cream and cook, stirring occasionally, until a candy thermometer inserted into the caramel registers 240 degrees (soft ball stage), about 11 minutes. Add the crushed pretzels and quickly incorporate into the caramel. Pour the pretzel-caramel mixture over the baked shortbread, spreading the mixture evenly. Return to the oven until the topping is bubbling, 12-15 minutes. Remove from the oven and allow to cool completely. Remove from the baking pan by lifting the edges of the parchment paper; unfold the paper and slice into bars. Per bar: 178 calories (50 percent from fat), 10 g total fat (6 g saturated), 30 mg cholesterol, 21 g carbohydrates, 2 g protein, 177 mg sodium, trace dietary fiber. Source: Saveur Fleur de sel caramels A sprinkling of French sea salt balances the sweetness of homemade caramels. Makes about 40 candies 1 cup heavy cream 5 tablespoons unsalted butter, cut into pieces 1 teaspoon fleur de sel 1 1/2 cups sugar 1/4 cup light corn syrup 1/4 cup water Line bottom and sides of an 8-inch square baking pan with parchment paper, then lightly oil parchment. Bring cream, butter and fleur de sel to a boil in a small saucepan, then remove from heat and set aside. Boil sugar, corn syrup and water in a 3- to 4-quart heavy saucepan, stirring until sugar is dissolved. Boil, without stirring but gently swirling pan, until mixture is a light golden caramel. Carefully stir in cream mixture (mixture will bubble up) and simmer, stirring frequently, until caramel registers 248 degrees on a deep-fat/candy thermometer, 10 to 15 minutes. Pour into baking pan and cool 2 hours. Cut into 1-inch pieces, then wrap each piece in a 4-inch square of wax paper, twisting 2 ends to close. Per candy: 74 calories (47 percent from fat), 4 g total fat (2 g saturated), 12 mg cholesterol, 9 g carbohydrates, trace protein, 58 mg sodium, no dietary fiber. Source: Epicurious Salted caramel brownies How do you up the decadence level of fudge brownies? Add a layer of silky-smooth caramel sauce and a dusting of flaky salt. Makes 12 brownies 1/2 pound (2 sticks) unsalted butter 8 ounces plus 6 ounces semisweet chocolate chips 3 ounces unsweetened chocolate 3 extra-large eggs 1 1/2 tablespoons instant coffee granules 1 tablespoon pure vanilla extract 1 cup plus 2 tablespoons sugar 1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour, divided 1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder 1/2 teaspoon kosher salt 5 to 6 ounces good caramel sauce, such as Fran’s 2 to 3 teaspoons flaked sea salt, such as Maldon Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Butter and flour a 9-by-13-inch baking pan. Melt the butter, 8 ounces of the chocolate chips, and the unsweetened chocolate together in a medium bowl set over simmering water. Allow to cool for 15 minutes. In a large bowl, stir (do not beat) together the eggs, coffee granules, vanilla and sugar. Stir the chocolate mixture into the egg mixture and allow to cool to room temperature. In a medium bowl, sift together 1/2 cup of the flour, the baking powder and salt and add to the chocolate mixture. Toss the remaining 6 ounces of chocolate chips and the remaining 2 tablespoons of flour in a medium bowl and add them to the chocolate mixture. (Note: It is very important to allow the batter to cool before adding the chocolate chips, or the chips will melt and ruin the brownies). Spread evenly in the prepared pan. Bake for 35 minutes, until a Golden caramel deepens the flavor and color of traditional crispy treats. Makes 12 servings Nonstick cooking spray 6 cups crispy rice cereal (about half a 12-ounce box) 1 stick unsalted butter, cut into pieces 1/2 cup dark brown sugar 1/4 cup heavy whipping cream 1 tablespoon light corn syrup 1 teaspoon flaky sea salt, such as Maldon, plus more for sprinkling 1 10-ounce bag mini marshmallows Spray an 8-inch square cake pan with nonstick spray. Put the cereal in a large heatproof bowl and set aside. Melt the butter in a medium saucepan over medium-high heat. Once melted, stir in the brown sugar, heavy whipping cream and corn syrup. Cook until thick and syrupy while stirring frequently, about 7 minutes. Stir in the salt. Turn off the heat and stir in the marshmallows. Keep stirring until the marshmallows are smooth and melted. Quickly pour the caramel-marshmallow sauce over the cereal and stir all together. Pour into the prepared pan and press down with a piece of parchment paper sprayed with nonstick spray. Sprinkle lightly with flaky sea salt. Cool completely, then cut into squares. Per serving: 249 calories (34 percent from fat), 10 g total fat (6 g saturated), 27 mg cholesterol, 41 g carbohydrates, 1 g protein, 318 mg sodium, trace dietary fiber. Source: Foodnetwork.com 4C www.thehawkeye.com Friday • November 6, 2015 Tod a y’s Ad s TH E A D S IN TH IS SEC TIO N A RE C LA SSIFIED BY C A TEG O RY FO R C O N VEN IEN C E TO O U R REA D ERS GENERAL Account Representative/Collector Growth in our company has opened up a position for a Collector to contact customers and assist them in paying their delinquent accounts. Need person who can resolve challenging issues in a calm and professional manner. Collection and/or telemarketing experience preferred but not required. Must be proficient in basic computer skills, ability to perform small mathematic equations, and have the ability to negotiate and problem solve. Base pay plus monthly bonus. Send resume and salary requirements to: Box 870, c/o The Hawk Eye, P.O. Box 10, Burlington, IA 52601 LOCAL CONSTRUCTION Company is looking for a Administrative Assistant Please send resumes to P.O. Box 768 Mt. Pleasant, IA 52641 Iowa State University Extension and Outreach – Des Moines County Regional Local Foods Coordinator Regional Local Foods Coordinator to serve Des Moines, Henry, Lee, and Louisa counties as a catalyst to network and raise awareness of the benefits of local foods and the demand for local foods. Bachelor’s degree plus experience in sustainability, agriculture/local foods systems, or farming/gardening are required. For job description & application procedures visit: http://www.extension.iastate.edu/ desmoines/ or contact Teresa Friedel, (319) 394-9433, [email protected]. Application deadline November 19, 2015. Des Moines County Agricultural Extension District is an EEO/AA employer RESTAURANT Precision Resistive Products has an opening for a in Mediapolis, IA. All interested candidates should possess the following qualifications: • Mechanical aptitude • Experience with industrial maintenance • Ability to read blueprints/ schematics • Electrical/electronic background • Two year degree in a related field NOW ACCEPTING applications for Cooks. Full-time / Part-time position available. Must be available weekends. Apply in person 2-5 daily at GATOR’S GRILL & SPIRITS 3313 Agency St. Burlington, IA Anyone interested in this position should send their resume, in MS Word or text format, to [email protected] NOW ACCEPTING applications for Host/Hostess. Must be available weekends. Apply in person 2-5pm daily at or mail their resume to: PRP, Inc. PO Box 189 Mediapolis, IA 52637 MEDICAL Multiple Positions 2 BEDROOMS, $900 a month + utilities. Available Dec. 1st. Call Alan at 319-572-8784. Dental Specialists of Iowa and Endodontic Associates of Iowa are looking to fill multiple positions for the new Mt Pleasant office. We are looking for certified Dental Assistants to work hand in hand with our doctors, a Sterilization Manager to run the sterilization center for the entire office, and a Receptionist. We are looking for highly motivated individuals with experience both in patient care and working the front desk. If you are looking for an amazing career in dentistry email: [email protected] or call 319-665-2400. CONDOS CONDO FOR sale. Village Cooperative of Burlington, 1431 Cambridge Dr. 3rd floor corner unit. 1200 sq. ft., open floor plan, maintenance free living. 55 years old +. Call Hannah at 319-752-4457 to learn more. DUPLEXES/RENT 2 BEDROOM, new flooring, $580/mo. Appliances furnished. 319-759-2292 HOUSES RENT RESTAURANT SMALL 3 bedroom, Sunnyside area, appliances included, 1 car garage. $750/mo. Call Experienced servers needed in 319-671-0963 our fast paced environment. 2 BEDROOM with fenced yard, Drop off resume at The Bufsingle car garage, appliances falo, 2016 S. Main, Burlington. furnished, all new flooring. No phone calls, please! $675/mo. 319-759-2292 Choose your next career There are lots of Great Buys Read The Hawk Eye Classifieds in today’s Classifieds S.E. Iowa’s #1 Advertising We’re Growing! Check Them Out! Source for New Jobs RIVER TOWN AUCTIONS SUNDAY - 1 p.m. 3017 Flint Hills Dr., 759-7963 www.rivertownauctions.com SEXTON GENERAL AUCTIONS PUBLIC AUCTION OF REAL ESTATE AND HOUSEHOLD: Saturday, Nov. 7, 2005 Vogt, Burlington, Iowa at 10:00 a.m. Real Estate sells at noon. Public Showing Sunday, Oct. 25, 1:00-3:00 p.m. CAROLINE (JOHNNIE) HARRIS, OWNER. Eugene Anderson, Power of Attorney. Eric Benne, Attorney. www.auctionsbysmith.com Check us out on facebook! Dark brown. $4300 (319)330-9988 2015 Honda CR-V Excellent condition, 1600 miles, 4-Cyl, Automatic, CVT,AWD, ABS Braking, Air, Backup Camera, Asking $23,500. 319-752-2446 or [email protected] AUTOS Pulse Auto Salvage Computerized Inventory National Parts Locating JIM 844.847.2161 www.sullivanauctioneers.com AUCTIONS By Smith, L.C. “Your Extra Service Auctioneers” 319-753-2579 www.auctionsbysmith.com ‘02 Sebring, 125K, $2000 ‘98 Pontiac Sunfire, $1800 ‘99 Dodge Magnum, $3000 ‘03 Dodge Caravan, $2000 ‘97 Grand Cherokee, $3500 ‘03 Hyundai Santa Fe, $3500 ‘99 Acura Deluxe, $2000 ‘98 GMC Sonoma, 4cyl. $2000 ‘02 PT Cruiser, 134K, $2500 ‘04 Ford Freestar, $2000 Several other to choose from! 2008 GRAND PRIX Anything with Wheels JOE 1802 Otte Road(319)837-6821 319-470-4198 West Point, IA Pre-Thanksgiving sale!!! 2011 Honda Pilot Touring 4x4 Crystal black/graphite leather. Extra clean local one owner. Loaded with all of the toys. New $41,105. T&N Auto Price $23,795 T&N Auto 202 N. Scofield St. Carthage, IL Call 217-357-3683 TRUCKS 2001 CHEVY S10, 1/2 ton, auto, $5000. (319)750-7256 TONNEAU cover fits a ‘02 Ford Ranger, vinyl roll up, black, 6’x54”, like new, $150. (319)572-4733 2001 FORD RANGER Extended Cab, $1500. Call (217)852-6366. 1994 FORD Ranger, V6, auto, cruise, Power steering, good body and tires. Doesnt run. $500 or best offer. 319-759-7067 NICE TRUCK 4 wheel drive 2011 GMC 1/2 ton, leather, 4 door. $14,000. (319)330-9988. First Medical Equipment 1701 Osborn St., Burlington Iowa Targeted Small Business Employee Owned & Operated JOBS Farmers & Merchants Bank & Trust is seeking a highly motivated individual for the position of Trust Operations Assistant. This position is responsible for performing administrative activities in close relationship to the day-to-day work of F&M’s Trust Services, on the trust processing system. GARAGE SALES And Other Sales BURLINGTON 9037 Koestner St. (By Roller Rink) Fri. & Sat. 8-1pm. 1/2 price sale. Infant to adult clothes, kids shoes, western & romance books, household items, closet/craft door panels, TV, Xmas, desk, Antique pipe stand. 4841 109th Ave. 717 S. 9th St. 503 N. Sunset Dr. Fri., Nov. 6, 4-7 p.m. & Sat., Nov. 7, 8 a.m.-2 p.m. Christmas & home decor, books, womens clothes & coats, bedding, tools & misc. There are lots of Great Buys in today’s Classifieds Check Them Out! is looking for some one to take care of a feeder- finish hog facility near Ft. Madison IA. Maintence and hog experience necessary. Competitive pay based on experience. Call 217-219-0172 Full Time Cook needed Apply in person at New London Specialty Care Des Moines County Agricultural Extension District is an EEO/AA employer 100 Care Circle St. New London, IA (319)367-5753 EOE/AAP Disability and Vets To Place Your Ad in The Hawk Eye Classifieds Call 754-8463 A nim a lT ra nspo rt D river 112 Broadway Street Suite 2 West Burlington, IA (319)752-1232 Local Construction Company is looking for a HR/Safety Representative Please send resume to P.O. Box 768 Mt. Pleasant, IA 52641 Mechanic ZOOM at Fun City is currently accepting applications for a go-cart mechanic who is trustworthy and reliable. Auto mechanic background preferred. Must be available to work some Saturdays. Pre-employment drug test. Apply in person at Human Resources on the second floor above Catfish Bend Casino. 3001 Winegard Dr., Burl. Sell your stuff! TriO a k Fo o ds is seeking ca ndida tes to fill a n im m edia te o pening fo r a fu ll tim e A nim a l D elivery D river o n 1st shift to w o rk o u to f o u r O a kville,Io w a lo ca tio n. O u r a nim a l tra nspo rt drivers w o rk M o nda y – Frida y to receive w ea ned pigs fro m o u r regio na l fa rm s, lo a d / u nlo a d them sa fely,keep a ccu ra te co u nts,deliver them to lo ca l gro w er fa rm s a nd co m plete tra cto r / tra iler clea nu p inclu ding w a shing. A va lid C D L -A , a pro ven sa fe driving histo ry a nd the a bility to w o rk independently a re requ ired. TriO a k em plo yees receive co m petitive pa y a nd pa rticipa te in a stro ng benefits pa cka ge inclu de m edica l / denta l/ visio n insu ra nce,disa bility pla ns,life insu ra nce, pa id tim e o ff,a 401k pla n,pro fitsha ring a nd m o re. Q u a lified ca ndida tes sho u ld a pply a t the a ddress belo w o r ca ll319-766-2230 to requ esta n a pplica tio n: T riO a k F o o ds,Inc. A ttn: H um a n R eso urces P O B o x 68 O a kville,IA 52646 427977 N ow H iring RN Case Manager Full Time LPN A p p ly a t: M ob ile N urs in g S ervic es 705 Ave. G Fort M a d is on , IA Benefits Include • Paid Life Insurance • 401k w ith Em ployer M atch • H ealth,D ental & Vision Insurance EO E Monday-Friday 8 to 5 T he H aw keyePedershaab, an O E M m anufacturer of heavy equip m ent for concrete p ip e industry,located in M ediap olis,IA is seeking to fill the follow ing p ositions: Applicants must be able to pass a background investigation & physical exam, including pre-employment drug test. Applicants must comply with the applicable residency requirements upon employment. M an u factu rin g E n gin eer R esp onsibilities of the p osition include p lanning, devising, and adap ting m ethods to im p rove m anufacturing p roduction, exam ine equip m ent, p rocesses, op erations, and assem bly to determ ine tim e of quality revisions and im p rovem ents, know ledge of m etal fabrication p rocesses, able to p roduce and interp ret engineering draw ings using C A D ,and a thorough understanding of lean m anufacturing theory. Field Service Techn ician EOE/AA R esp onsibilities of the p osition include having a thorough understanding of the follow ing: electrical system s including m otors, A C drives, and control circuits, PL C s and associated com p onents, read electrical and hydraulic schem atics, basic hydraulic and p neum atic circuits and com p onents, electrical and safety codes, and m ust be w illing to travel internationally. DRIVERS Lowboy Driver Wanted Class A CDL Must have experience in mobilization of heavy equipment and OS/OW loads. Competitive pay, health insurance and 401k offered. Please call 319-758-6396 W eld er Fabricators R esp onsibilities of the p osition include fabricating sm all and large m achinery w eldm ents from bluep rints, w eld in all p ositions w ith M IG w elder, set-up w elding and fabrication equip m ent, cut steel w ith oxy/acetylene equip m ent, set-up and use sim p le w elding fixtures and m eet p roduction and quality standards. C N C M achin ists Pleasant M anor R esp onsibilities of the p osition include p rogram ing and op erating C N C m achining centers, set-up and op eration of a range of m achine shop equip m ent including M anual m ills, lathes, and drill p resses, and m eet established p roduction and quality standards. C harge N urse $3000 sign-on bonus! M achin e A ssem bly Techn ician R esp onsibilities include assem bly/routing of electrical system s from schem atics, assem bly of m achinery, and routing of hydraulic and p neum atics, and w elding of structural com p onents from bluep rints. P leasant M anor is currently adding another charge nurse to our staff. C an be fullor part-tim e.Excellent benefits,shift differentialand a new pay scale. Please apply in person at Pleasant M anor 413 N . Broadw ay St. M ount Pleasant, IA Hog Facility Carroll Family Farms Application deadline November 19, 2015. Service route in SE IA and West Central IL. Experience desired in portable fire extinguisher service and restaurant fire system service and installation. Training and Licensing provided. Must be able to pass Pre Employment Background check and drug screening. Valid Driver’s License with acceptable Motor Vehicle Report. Positive attitude, Maintain proper documentation, Strong organizational skills with the ability to learn quickly and mechanical experience helpful. $35,000 - $40,000 plus potential. Call Classifieds 319-754-8463 The Eighth Judicial District Dept. of Correctional Services is looking for a part-time residential officer at the Burlington Residential Facility. Starting pay is $18.47 per hour. Please go to www.8thjdcbc.com and follow the employment link for further details. http://www.extension.iastate.edu/ desmoines/ or contact Teresa Friedel, (319) 394-9433, [email protected]. PERSON TO do Apartment maintenance. Must have experience. Call 319-752-2074 Fri., 9 a.m.-noon. Name brand clothes, home decor & more. WEST BURLINGTON For job description & application procedures visit: ABC FIRE The Des Moines County Sheriff’s Office, is conducting testing as required by the State of Iowa for a deputy position. We will hold the testing on Saturday, December 5th, 2015, at Great Prairie Area Education Agency located at 3601 West Ave, Burlington, IA. All applicants interested in testing with Des Moines County MUST complete an “Application To Test” and return it to: Lieutenant Brett Grimshaw, Des Moines County Sheriff’s Office, 512 N. Main Street, Burlington, Iowa 52601 on or before Thursday, November 19th, 2015, at 4 p.m. An “Application to Test“ can be obtained at the Des Moines County Sheriff’s Office or online at www.dmcounty.com or by calling 319-753-8212. Residential Officer Regional Local Foods Coordinator to serve Des Moines, Henry, Lee, and Louisa counties as a catalyst to network and raise awareness of the benefits of local foods and the demand for local foods. Bachelor’s degree plus experience in sustainability, agriculture/local foods systems, or farming/gardening are required. Send resume or apply in person at DES MOINES COUNTY SHERIFF CIVIL SERVICE TESTING Please go to www.8thjdcbc.com and follow the employment link for further details. Regional Local Foods Coordinator Open Immediately CRIMINAL JUSTICE in Mediapolis, IA. All interested candidates should possess the following qualifications: • Mechanical aptitude • Experience with industrial maintenance • Ability to read blueprints/ schematics • Electrical/electronic background • Two year degree in a related field Iowa State University Extension and Outreach – Des Moines County Minimum requirements: Successful completion of an accredited RN education program and have current state RN licensure. Behavioral Health Nursing experience preferred. Full Time Service Technician c/o Kim Duke P.O. Box 928 Burlington, IA 52601 or by email to: [email protected] Equal Opportunity Employer The Eighth Judicial District Dept. of Correctional Services is looking for a part-time cook at the Burlington Residential Facility. Pay range is $12.55 $17.86 per hour. PRP, Inc. PO Box 189 Mediapolis, IA 52637 1706 W. Agency Rd. West Burlington, IA 52655 Farmers & Merchants Bank & Trust First Shift Maintenance Position [email protected] Attn. Administration Send resume and cover letter by mail to: Cook Precision Resistive Products has an opening for a or mail their resume to: CHC/SEIA The qualified candidate will: Possess the ability to operate various office machines and equipment; knowledge and proficiency in use of a variety of software packages; an extensive understanding of office practices and administrative policies and procedures; the ability to effectively communicate orally and in writing. 1908 South 15th Behavioral Health RN Send cover letter and resume to Duties include preparing correspondence, providing support to Trust Officers, answering telephone calls, maintaining a department calendar, maintaining confidential files, project initiation and coordination, research and report preparation, and daily data entry on trust processing system. GENERAL Anyone interested in this position should send their resume, in MS Word or text format, to Competitive compensation/ benefits package available. Pre-employment drug screening and criminal background check required. No phone calls please. EOE/M/F/D/V Attention to detail necessary. Prior bookkeeping background preferred. WINTERS HERE! Don’t miss out, Fast mover! 2005 Dodge Ram 1500, 4x4, quad cab, SLT. Solid truck, 5.7L, Hemi Magnum, Auto, Full Size, 8ft bed, touring package, newly purchases tires, less then 500 miles, maintained and very reliable truck. 128,538 miles. NADA books around $14,050. Asking $12,500. Many more features. Call 319-768-8274 Ask for Sam or leave a message. Outside Work Apply in person at 217 S. 3rd, Burlington Community Health Centers of Southeastern Iowa, Inc. (CHC/SEIA) is seeking a Full Time Behavioral Health RN for its West Burlington Clinic. Have an Associate's Degree or equivalent plus 2 years' experience. 2209 Northern Dr New Every Up to 40 Hours Trust Operations Assistant Big Sale Continued! MondaySaturday 9-2. Lots of clothes, antiques, ATVs, boats, home Super V8. 59,000 miles. decor, furniture, tools. New 402 N. 2nd St. • $19,900. Call for details things added every day. SomeRome, IA 800-292-0095 319-759-1672. thing for everyone! 2000 LINCOLN LS, 4 door excellent conidtion. All new tires. Super Mega Sale, Furniture, $2500. (319)750-7256 Xmas, new bedding and bas2001 Buick Century - Excellent 1992 RED Topaz, good shape, kets and much, much more. shape. One owner. Everything 4 cyl. 155k miles. 38mpg or Nov. 6 and 7th, 8am-4pm You better, good rubber on tires. new. $2500. Call 319-750-7256 don’t want to miss this sale. $1700. (319)750-7256. See Paul Boles for your next Inventory. Thurs. & Fri., 9 a.m.-4 p.m. car deal!!! Queen size bed, couch, kitchen Day. 319-385-7614 table with leaf, 3 shelf units, Looking for a great deal? Boles Auto Sales dresser, tools, misc. Everything Turn to 3 mi. E. of Mt. Pleasant on Hwy. 34. must go! www.bolesautosales.com The Hawk Eye Classifieds. ! Bellringers Needed BANKING 2005 JAGUAR ONE THE best cars you can buy! GENERAL SUVS Hauling of all air conditioners, campers appliances & metals. AUTOMOTIVE DAN & MR. T’s TRANSMISSION Family Owned since 1979 •Transmissions• •Brakes• •General Repair• •Foreign + Domestic• 319-752-0101 or 800-972-6263 600 S. Main St., Burlington www.deltaservicecenter.com FREE FREE 319-850-7536 AUCTIONEERS Delta Service Center AUTOS FARM EQUIPMENT Sales and Services www.robertstirecenter.com APARTMENTS UNFURN. Cash For Junk Cars Buying batteries Open 7 days a week til 9pm. AUCTIONS 1220 Mt. Pleasant St. Burl. (319)753-6586 GATOR’S GRILL & SPIRITS 3313 Agency St. Burlington, IA AGRICULTURE Cattle Feeders Wellness Services HEALTH/MEDICAL First Shift Maintenance Position AUCTIONEERS large wooden cattle feeders. $950. 319-394-3117 Complete Auto Service Available! HEALTH/ MEDICAL GENERAL 427824 GENERAL Roberts Tire Center DRIVERS DRIVERS NEEDED IMMEDIATELY! All new equipment. Home Every Week. Full Benefits. Full Time/Part Time, Weekends/Seasonal. Packwood, IA LOWEST TURNOVER RATE IN THE INDUSTRY! 1-800-247-1081, (319) 695-3601, www.dickeytransport.com. Successful candidates w ill be a team oriented individual w ith good com m unication skills. C om p etitive salary and excellent benefits available. F or consideration, forw ard resum e or subm it ap p lication to: 427529 NEW TODAY BRAND NEW ADS SERVICE FOR ALL WHEELS Tam i H ibbs, H u m an R esou rce M an ager H aw k eyePed ersh aab 506 S W apello St., M ed iapolis, IA 52637 O r em ail to: th @ h pct.com E .O .E . 427722 www.thehawkeye.com L E GAL S Burlington C om m unity School District 1429 W estAvenue Burlington,Iow a M INUTES M eeting ofthe Board ofEducation October26,2015 Callto Order: The Board of Education held a regular m eeting on M onday, O ctober 26, 2015 in the Board Room of the A dm inistration Building, 1429 W est Avenue. President M arlis Robberts called the m eeting to order at7:00 p.m . In attendance: Bryan Bross, Linda Garw ood,D eborah Hatteberg,M arlis Robberts, and D ean Vickstrom . A bsent: HeatherBrueck and D arven Kendell. Pledge ofA llegiance: The Board and all others present recited the pledge ofallegiance. Adoption ofthe Agenda: D irector G arw ood m oved to approve the agenda. D irector Bross seconded the m otion. It w as approved on a 5-0 voice vote. Public Com m ents: None ConsentAgenda: D irectorBross m oved to approve the consentagenda including paym entofbills previously paid in the am ount of $86,541.72, unpaid bills in the am ountof$210,655.80, PCard purchases-BM O Harris Bank paid in the am ount of $13,103.43 and gifts in the am ount of $31,245.55. D irector Hatteberg seconded the m otion. A specialthanks to Case w as m entioned for their $30,000 donation. The m otion passed on a 5-0 voice vote. CONS ENT AGEND A M inutes ofOctober12,2015 Bills ending October20,2015 FinancialReports Hum an Resources Report Gifts/Grants EM PLOY M ENT Certified S taff: M ichael Carper-Lead Teacher S um m er S chool Coordinator at North Hill Elem entary S chool. $700.00 stipend Novem ber 1, 2015 to June 30, 2016. $5,400.00 stipend July 1, 2016 to August 30,2016. S tacey S eals– M usic-Vocal and M usic Instrum ental at North Hill Elem entary S chool. Increase in contractin the am ount of $500.00 for M usic Instrum ental at Burlington Com m unity High S chool for 5th Grade Band.Effective October12,2015. Coaching S taff: Bill S tew art-Basketball– 8th G rade G irls Coach atA ldo Leopold M iddle S chool,S tep 8, $2,954.03. Effective O ctober 12, 2015. (Position available due to the resignation of Randy Trine.) Jeff K ristensen-Sw im m ing-Head Boys Coach at Burlington Com m unity High S chool, S tep 8, $5,363.89. Effective O ctober 15,2015. (Position available due to the resignation ofJessica M ickey.) S upportS taffPosition: Earnest Turner - Bus A ssociate/Bus M onitor at the Transportation D epartm ent. Class A-05, $10.14/hr., 3 hrs./day, 180 days/yr.,(w hen com plete year)(prorated to 140 days). Effective O ctober 20, 2015. (New position.) REAS S IGNM ENT A aron Kehoe-Reassigned to A t Risk Teacher at Burlington Innovative Learning Academ y due to studentnum bers. D istrict Positive Accom plishm ents: North HillS choolCom m unity Reading Kellie M ason, Tracy W alding, Ian Blanchard, Paxton Vandiver, and A m y Vandiverdiscussed the com m unity reading program they have started at North Hill. They explained thatthey w anted to find a w ay to give som ething back to the com m unity,and find a w ay w here students can spend tim e w ith individuals in their ow n environm ent. They recently w ent to the K lein Center and the children read their books to the elders. Itw as m entioned the appreciation the elders have ofthe children and thatthey are holding a m onster m ash party this Thursday forthe kids. S tudentRepresentative Report Clara Reynen reported thattonightBHS is playing in volleyball regionals. S he noted thatthe them e for tonight’s gam e is cam o and that there w as a lot of excitem ent about the gam e. M s.Reynen also noted she had play practice today and that it is nice to see students that norm ally don’t hang together com e together for the activity. S uperintendent’s Report: M r. Coen reported on the past w eek’s m eetings,the purchase oftw o schoolvehicles, a discussion about A pollo w ith M r. D ick Benne,discussed issues regarding a shortage of substitutes, Transportation vacancy,settlem ents,Houndtim e m eetings, “Lights on A fterschool” kickoffatEd S tone, parent,student,and D istrictissues,and the Red Ribbon W eek kickoffatGrim es. Item s forD iscussion: A thletic TrainerContract– Zach S hay presented to the board the background inform ation on the proposalfor A thletic Trainer S ervices. Tw o proposals w ere received for a three year agreem ent, from G reatRiver Health System s and one from UniversalTherapy G roup. A m eeting w as held betw een M r.S hay,M r.Coen and M r.Reynolds to review the proposals and the recom m endation w as to aw ard the contract to Universal Therapy G roup. D iscussion w as held regarding w hat the deciding factors w ere w ith years ofservice and student physicals being tw o key factors. M r. Jeff Taeger from G reat River Health System s and M r. S cott Leinbach from UniversalTherapy both addressed the board outlining the services to be provided. D irectorRobberts thanked both com panies forsubm itting bids and forthe com m itm ent to Burlington S choolD istrict. D ire cto r G arw ood m ade a m otion to approve the athletic trainer contract w ith Universal Therapy. D irector Hatteberg seconded the m otion. The m otion passed on a 5-0 voice vote. • Teacher Leadership, D istrict M ath Coach – • S haron D entlinger introduced M s. M onica M eyers as the districtm ath coach. M s. M eyers explained that there are approxim ately 82 elem entary, 8 m iddle schooland 9 high schoolteachers to introduce m ath concepts to. S he recently attended a m ath netw ork discussing form ative assessm ents and w illbe attending a nationalconference w ith seven otherteachers for professional developm ent. D iscussion w as held aboutdeveloping continuity across the district,the hindrances in early childhood and the role oftechnology in teaching strategies. •A ffirm ative Action Plan – • Jerem y Tabor presented an overview ofthe district’s affirm ative action plan. The D istrict’s target data and results w ere review ed. M r.Tabordiscussed the em ploym ent application process w ith plans to m ove forw ard w ith new Hum an Resource softw are. The proposed system w ould include an application m odule along w ith a records system ,an evaluation system and perform ance m odule. M r.Taborw ould provide an overview of the services w ith the board and M r. Reynolds w ill review cost savings and analysis. •Edify/A ssess Agreem ent– •S haron D entlingergave an overview of the S kills Iow a program as the districtw ill now use this softw are as our second assessm ent. The softw are is an assessm entprogram ata costof$8 per student. The previous assessm ent used w as S tar and cost about $15 per student. D irector Bross m ade a m otion to approve the contractw ith Edify/A ssess. D irector Garw ood seconded the m otion. The m otion passed on a 5-0 voice vote. •Naviance S ervices – • S haron D entlinger outlined Naviance services. The services are a com prehen- Friday • November 6, 2015 L E GAL S sive approach starting at the 7th grade leveland focus on financialgoals and planning,college preparation,w ork placem ents, and four year planning. The program w ill be paid for through a com bination of21st Century and Perkins funds. Board Com m unications: The m em bers have the opportunity to share item s and events. D irectorGarw ood: Thanked Case fortheir contribution to ourdistrict. D irector Bross: In looking atthe condition ofourbuildings and grounds he is proud of ourfacilities and how they are keptup. He thanked the buildings and grounds staff. D irectorVickstrom : He em phasized thathe appreciates the new s reports looking at testing and how itm ay hurtm ore than help the students. D irectorHatteberg: Rem inded everyone of the orchestra concerttonightand the band concerts Thursday night at both m iddle schools. Thanks to M s.Craig forletting her visit her classroom . S he m entioned the W IN (W hateverINeed) program is up and running and are seeing nice results. D irector Robberts: Thanked everyone in attendance and thanked UniversalTherapy G roup and G reat River Health System s again for their support. It w as noted w e have a great m usic departm ent and that M s. Evans did a great job w ith the Red Ribbon Cerem ony. A rem inder that Hallow een is this w eek and foreveryone to be safe. Adjournm ent: D irector Hatteberg m ade a m otion to adjourn. D irectorVickstrom seconded the m otion. The m otion passed on a 5-0 voice vote. Tim e w as approxim ately 8:25 p.m . M arlis Robberts,Board President Greg Reynolds,S ecretary Burlington Com m unity S choolD istrict Board Report-The Haw k Eye VendorNam e D escription A m ount A Y M CD ONA LD M A INTENA NCE OPER -PLUM BING S UPPLY 635.75 A BBOTT,M /M JA M ES BHS -A P TEST REIM BURS EM ENT 4.00 ACCES S SYSTEM S LEAS ING D W S CH NUTRITION -PURCHAS ED S ERVICES 5,440.00 ACCUS PLIT,INC. BHS GEN ATH -S UPPLIES 160.50 A DVA NCE CHIROPRACTIC CENTER TRA NS STUD ENT S ERV -EM PLOY EE PHYS ICA L 74.00 A DVENTURELA ND INN A D M BUS INES S -TRAVEL OUT D ISTRICT 176.96 A HLERS & COONEY,PC A D M BD OF ED UC -LEGA L S ERVICE 523.00 A IRGAS USA ,LLC S S S CH NUTRITION -K ITCHEN S UPPLIES 2,982.00 A LD EN,JOHN BHS VOLLEY BA LL -PURCHAS ED S ERVICES 120.00 A LLIA NT ENERGY COM PA NY M A INTENA NCE OPER -NATURA L GAS 87,308.72 A M A ZON.COM A L LEVEL I-S UPPLIES 6,835.69 A M ERICA N RA D IATOR,LLC TRA NS STUD ENT S ERV -VEHICLE REPA IR PA RT 2,221.00 A M ES HIGH S CHOOL BHS GEN ATH -STA FF D UES 140.00 A M TRA K NH REA D RECOVERY 210.00 TRAVEL OUT A ND ERS ON-ERICK S ON D A IRY S S S CH NUTRITION -PURCHAS ED FOOD 14,127.41 A NY W EA R A PPA REL BURLINGTON,LLC BHS CROS S COUNTRY -S UPPLIES 560.00 A PPLEBERRY ORCHA RD NH GEN FUND -INST 449.00 PURCH S ERV A RA ND AS M EX ICA N RESTAURA NT BHS A D M IN -TRAVEL OUT D ISTRICT 33.24 A RNOLD REFRIGERATION,INC. BH S CH NUTRITION REPA IR PA RTS 618.85 AS S ETGENIE,INC. A D M TECH S UPPORT -TECH S UPPLIES 5,885.00 AUTO-JET M UFFLER CORPORATION TRA NS STUD ENT S ERV -VEHICLE REPA IR PA RT 1,051.91 AVIS 21ST CENTURY NH -TRAVEL OUT 22.69 BACK GROUND INVESTIGATION BUREAU,LLC A D M HUM A N RES OURCES -PURCHAS E S ERVICES 1,293.00 BA K ER,BRENT BHS FOOTBA LL -PURCHAS ED S ERVICE 216.00 BA K ER,M A RK BHS FOOTBA LL -PURCHAS ED 216.00 S ERVICE BAUER BUILT TIRE CENTER TRA NS STUD ENT S ERV TIRES /TUBES 1,610.26 BAUM ER,TERRY BHS FOOTBA LL -PURCHAS ED S ERVICE 95.00 BEA M ES W ELD ING & REPA IR,INC M A INTENA NCE OPER -M A INT S UPPLIES 21.60 BICK EL’S CYCLING & FITNES S M A INTENA NCE OPER -HVAC ELEC PA RTS 20.97 BIG RIVER POPCORN 21ST CENTURY A L -S UPPLIES 67.68 BLICK A RT M ATERIA LS NH ELEM A RT -S UPPLIES 517.99 BLY THE,TOD D CORS E ELEM PE -TRAVEL IN 6.00 BOLA ND ER,PAULA A L GEN ED -S UPPLIES 100.00 BOLA ND ER,TIM S S A D M IN -TRAVEL OUT D ISTRICT 50.40 BOUGHTON’S TREE S ERVICE M A INTENA NCE OPER -PURCHAS E S ERVICE 3,000.00 BOW EN,ROBERT BHS CROS S COUNTRY -PURCHAS ED S ERVICE 120.00 BP BHS GEN ED -TRAVEL OUT D ISTRIC 50.04 BRA D LEY,TIM OTHY BHS FOOTBA LL -PURCHAS ED S ERVICE 142.00 BRINK LEY,M /M W ILLIA M BHS -A P TEST REIM BURS EM ENT 4.00 BROTHERS ON,A NN BHS -A P TEST REIM BURS EM ENT 4.00 BROW N & SA ENGER,INC. BHS GEN ED -S UPPLIES 30.96 BROZENE HY D RAULIC S ERVICE M A INTENA NCE OPER -PLUM BING S UPPLY 44.56 BURLINGTON BY THE BOOK NH TITLE 1 -S UPPLIES 166.25 BURLINGTON GLAS S CO M A INTENA NCE OPER -M A INT S UPPLIES 52.92 BURLINGTON M UNICIPA L W ATERW ORK S POOL OPER -W ATER & S EW ER 10,014.13 BURLINGTON PEPS ICOLA BHS RENA IS SA NCE STORE S UPPLIES 3,157.41 BURLINGTON TRA ILW AYS BHS ATHLETICS -TRAVEL OUT 2,592.00 BURLINGTON URBA N S ERVICE, ES GEN FUND ACT -INST S UPPLIES 40.00 BURLINGTON URBA N S ERVICE A L LEVEL II-PURCH S ERVICES 24.00 BUTLER,M /M JODY BHS -A P TEST REIM BURS EM ENT 8.00 C-CAT,INC. M A INTENA NCE OPER -PEST CONTROL 2,545.00 C.H.M CGUINES S CO.,INC. M A INTENA NCE OPER -PLUM BING S UPPLY 429.87 CA M ERON,M A RK BHS VOLLEY BA LL -PURCHAS ED S ERVICES 175.00 CA M PBELL,W ENDY 18.30 D EFERRED REVENUE CA ROLINA BIOLOGICA L S UPPLY CO BHS S CIENCE -S UPPLIES 41.45 CA RPER,M ICHA EL A L PROFF D EVEL -TRAVEL OUT 10.30 CA RQUEST AUTO PA RTS TRA NS STUD ENT S ERV -VEHICLE REPA IR PA RT 107.65 L E GAL S CD I BHS INST TECHNOLOGY -TECH S UPPLIES 16,320.08 CD W COM PUTER CENTERS,INC. A D M TECH S UPPORT -TECH S UPPLIES 966.18 CENTURY LINK M A INTENA NCE -TELEPHONE 219.45 CESA 5 A D M TECH S UPPORT -TRAVEL OUT D IST 3,975.00 CHILI’S GRILL & BA R BHS A D M IN -TRAVEL OUT D ISTRICT 20.01 CITY OF BURLINGTON BHS GEN ATH -PURCHAS ED S ERVICES 1,417.50 CITY OF BURLINGTON BHS ST COUNCIL -PURCHAS ED S ERVICE 1,212.50 CLAS S ROOM D IRECT GRIM ES GEN ED -S UPPLIES 359.39 CLINTON HIGH S CHOOL BHS BOYS GOLF -STA FF D UES 125.00 COCHRA N,LIND A S S PD -TRAVEL OUT 7.20 COM FORT S UITES TLC NH -TRAVEL OUT 985.60 CONSTA NT CONTACT CLUB M -OFFICE S UPPLIES 22.50 COUNTRY INN & S UITES ES GEN ED -TRAVEL OUT D ISTRICT 116.48 COURT AVENUE BREW ING COM PA NY, S S A D M IN -TRAVEL OUT D ISTRICT 25.43 COURTNEY,JERRY BHS FOOTBA LL -PURCHAS ED 306.00 S ERVICE CRES CENT ELECTRIC S UPPLY COM PA NY M A INTENA NCE OPER -HVAC ELEC PA RTS 699.83 CUM M INGS,D A N BHS M ID D LE S CHOOL ATH PURCHAS ED S ERV 65.00 CUM M INS CENTRA L POW ER,LLC TRA NS STUD ENT S ERV -M A INT S UPPLIES 495.00 CUS HM A N,ROBIN BHS VOLLEY BA LL -PURCHAS ED S ERVICES 150.00 CY BER INFORM 21ST CENTURTY ES -CONTRACTED S ERVICES 1,074.30 D A FT,D /M W ILLIA M BHS -A P TEST REIM BURS EM ENT 4.00 D A M ERON,M /M JEREM Y BHS -A P TEST REIM BURS EM ENT 4.00 D A NFORTH,D A NE BHS M ID D LE S CHOOL ATH PURCHAS ED S ERV 65.00 D A NFORTH,K IRK BHS M ID D LE S CHOOL ATH PURCHAS ED S ERV 130.00 D AVIS,M IK E BHS VOLLEY BA LL -PURCHAS ED S ERVICES 150.00 D E LA ROSA ,M /M CHRISTOPHER BHS -A P TEST REIM BURS EM ENT 4.00 D ENNIS COM PA NY INC. M A INTENA NCE OPER -HVAC ELEC PA RTS 697.12 D EPA RTM ENT OF ED UCATION TRA NS STUD ENT S ERV -PURCHAS ED S ERVICES 1,320.00 D ES M OINES COUNTY A BSTRACT & TITLE CO. D W LA ND ACQUIS ITION -ATTORNEY FEES 100.00 D ES M OINES COUNTY PUBLIC HEA LTH POOL OPER -PURCHAS ED S ERVICES 408.00 D ES M OINES COUNTY REGIONA L S OLID W ASTE COM M IS S ION M A INTENA NCE OPER -D IS POSA L S ERVICE 40.00 D ES M OINES STA M P M A NUFACTURING CO. CORS E A D M IN -S UPPLIES 57.10 D ES IGN S CIENCE ES GEN ED -S UPPLIES 57.00 D HS CAS HIER 1ST FLOOR STATE M ED ICA ID PAYA BLE 44,324.14 D IA M OND VOGEL PA INT CO BHS ST COUNCIL -S UPPLIES 385.25 D IEW OLD,S ETH BHS M ID D LE S CHOOL ATH PURCHAS ED S ERV 110.00 D IS COUNT S CHOOL S UPPLY BH GEN ED -S UPPLIES 98.25 D IXON,K ENNETH BHS VOLLEY BA LL -PURCHAS ED S ERVICES 175.00 D OD GE,M /M TROY BHS -A P TEST REIM BURS EM ENT 4.00 D RIVE TEK ,LLC BHS D RIVER ED -PURCHAS ED S ERVICES 8,750.00 EBERT S UPPLY CO M A INTENA NCE OPER -CLEA NING PROD 25.20 ED EN,D A RRELL BHS ATHLETICS -TRAVEL OUT 5.71 ED W A RD STONE M ID D LE S CHOOL, ES S CIENCE -S UPPLIES 110.82 EICK HOFF,PAUL BHS GIRLS S W IM -PURCHAS ED S ERVICES 170.00 ELD ER,HEID I A L PROFF D EVEL -TRAVEL OUT 50.10 ELD RID GE PLAYS A ND M US ICA LS BHS M US IC/D RA M A -S UPPLIES 398.95 ELECTRONIC A PPLICATIONS CO.,INC. M A INTENA NCE OPER S UPPLIES 891.23 ELM ORE JR,TOM BHS FOOTBA LL -PURCHAS ED S ERVICE 306.00 ELS M ORE S W IM S HOP BHS GIRLS S W IM -S UPPLIES 1,554.40 ENVIRONM ENTA L M A NAGEM ENT S ERVICES OF IOW A ,INC.(EM S I) BHS BLD G IM P -PURCHAS ED S ERVICE 5,969.78 ES CHER,LA RRY BHS VOLLEY BA LL -PURCHAS ED S ERVICES 150.00 EVERY THING K ITCHENS A L HOM E EC -S UPPLIES 294.98 EY E ON ED UCATION BHS S CIENCE -S UPPLIES 588.44 EY EW AS H D IRECT BHS S CIENCE -S UPPLIES 722.96 FA RM K ING OF BURLINGTON M A INTENA NCE OPER -HVAC ELEC PA RTS 56.97 FAST BREA K TLC NH -TRAVEL OUT 3.11 FASTENA L COM PA NY M A INTENA NCE OPER -M A INT S UPPLIES 75.49 FEINER S UPPLY,INC. BH LEVEL II-S UPPLIES 66.90 FERGUS ON ENTERPRIS ES,INC. M A INTENA NCE OPER -PLUM BING S UPPLY 338.96 FIRST A L TAG -PURCH S ERVICES 450.00 FLINN S CIENTIFIC,INC. 51.00 BHS S CIENCE -S UPPLIES FLINT HILLS GOLF COURS E BHS BOYS GOLF -S UPPLIES 72.00 FLY ING J TRA NS PORTATION VEHICLE OPER FUEL 16.32 FOLLETT S CHOOL S OLUTIONS,INC BHS LIBRA RY -LIBRA RY BOOK S 2,808.05 FOUR CORNERS FUEL ES GEN ED -TRAVEL OUT D ISTRICT 5.19 FOUR S EAS ONS EXCAVATION & LA ND S CA PING,INC. BHS IM P -BRACEW ELL PURCH S ERV 7,173.40 FUTURE PROBLEM S OLVING PROGRA M INTERNATIONA L (FPS PI) NH TAG -S UPPLIES 432.50 GA LLS A D M S UPT -S UPPLIES 830.05 GENERA L BIND ING CORPORATION BH GEN ED -S UPPLIES 324.90 GEORGE’S LAW NM OW ER,INC. M A INTENA NCE OPER S UPPLIES 1,437.00 GERST,CAS S IE 21ST CENTURY A L -TRAVEL OUT 51.90 GLA NCY,D ENNIS BHS M ID D LE S CHOOL ATH PURCHAS ED S ERV 195.00 GOBBLE,EM M A NH GEN ED -TRAVEL IN D ISTRICT 6.90 GOFF S CREEN PRINTING BHS VA RS ITY CLUB S UPPLIES 1,356.00 GOPHER S PORT ES GEN ED -S UPPLIES 280.56 GRA F,GLEN L E GAL S BHS VOLLEY BA LL -PURCHAS ED S ERVICES 130.00 GRAVEL,M /M BRIA N BHS -A P TEST REIM BURS EM ENT 8.00 GREAT PRA IRIE A EA BHS A D M IN -TRAVEL OUT D ISTRICT 3,201.05 GREAT RIVER BUS INES S HEA LTH A D M HUM A N RES OURCES -PURCHAS E S ERVICES 365.00 GREAT RIVER COFFEE-BEVERAGE SYSTEM ES A D M IN -S UPPLIES 102.75 GREENW OOD CLEA NING SYSTEM S M A INTENA NCE OPER EQUIPM ENT 3,024.75 GRIGGS M US IC,INC BHS M US IC -S UPPLIES 911.42 GRIM ES S CHOOL GRIM ES GEN ED -S UPPLIES 93.39 HA IGH,BROCK 16.00 BHS ATHLETICS -TRAVEL OUT HA L LEONA RD CORPORATION LIND M US IC -BHS S UPPLIES 265.00 HA LEY,JACK K BHS ATHLETICS -TRAVEL OUT 21.50 HA PPY JOE’S -BURLINGTON BHS VA RS ITY CLUB -S UPPLIES 58.50 HA RVESTVILLE FA RM , 21ST CENTURY NH -S UPPLIES 126.00 HAW K EY E,THE A D M BD OF ED UC A DVERTIS ING 1,265.76 HAYS PURE W ATER A D M TECH S UPPORT -OFFICE S UPPLIES 70.00 HEINEM A NN CORS E TITLE 1 -S UPPLIES 95.70 HILBY,D A N BHS FOOTBA LL -PURCHAS ED S ERVICE 95.00 HOBA RT S ERVICE ES S CH NUTRITION -REPA IR PA RTS 639.56 HOBBY LOBBY 21ST CENTURY A L -S UPPLIES 120.43 HOHENTHA NER,CHA D BHS M ID D LE S CHOOL ATH PURCHAS ED S ERV 55.00 HOLID AY INN EX PRES S HOTEL & S UITES 21ST CENTURY A L -TRAVEL OUT 299.04 HOLT S UPPLY CO M A INTENA NCE OPER -PLUM BING S UPPLY 567.86 HOUGHTON M IFFLIN HA RCOURT PUBLIS HING CO. A L TITLE VIAS S ES S PURCH S ERV 12,444.89 HUD D LES ON,BRUCE BHS VOLLEY BA LL -PURCHAS ED S ERVICES 130.00 HUFFM A N W ELD ING & M ACHINE/FA RM & HOM E M A INTENA NCE OPER -GROUND S UPPLIES 20.45 HUHOT M ONGOLIA N GRILL BHS GEN ED -TRAVEL OUT 44.13 D ISTRIC HUM A NW A RE USA INC. A LM S LEVEL III-IND IV PURCH S ERVICE 245.00 HUS CHA K ,M /M ROBERT BHS -A P TEST REIM BURS EM ENT 4.00 HY-VEE #1 BHS VA RS ITY CLUB -S UPPLIES 578.28 HY-VEE #2 GRIM ES PS LEVEL IIS UPPLIES 1,448.85 HY-VEE,INC. 21ST CENTURY ES -S UPPLIES 896.88 INNOVATIVE FLUID S,LLC TRA NS STUD ENT S ERV -M A INT S UPPLIES 348.96 INTERSTATE A LL BATTERY CENTER NURS ES -S UPPLIES 179.90 INTERSTATE BATTERIES OF N E M IS S OURI TRA NS STUD ENT S ERV -VEHICLE REPA IR PA RT 234.85 IOW A AS S OCIATION OF S CHOOL BOA RD S A D M HUM A N RES OURCES -PURCHAS E S ERVICES 48.00 IOW A D IES EL INJECTION S ERVICE TRA NS PORTATION VEHICLE OPER FUEL 5,495.15 IOW A FCCLA BHS HERO -PURCHAS ED S ERVICES 300.00 IOW A FREED OM OF INFORM ATION COUNCIL A D M BD OF ED UC -S UPPLIES 20.00 IOW A FUTURE PROBLEM S OLVING PROGRA M NH TAG -S UPPLIES 730.00 IOW A HIGH S CHOOL ATHLETIC AS S OCIATION (IHSA A ) BHS CHEERLEA D ING -S UPPLIES 20.00 IOW A HIGH S CHOOL PRES S AS S OCIATION (IHS PA ) BHS PUBLICATIONS -S UPPLIES 45.00 IOW A M ENNONITE S CHOOL BHS M ID D LE S CHOOL ATH -STA FF D UES 20.00 IOW A PA RK S & RECREATION AS S OCIATION POOL OPER -PURCHAS ED S ERVICES 270.00 IOW A S CHOOLS BUILD ING & GROUND S AS S OCIATION M A INTENA NCE OPER -PURCHAS E S ERVICE 25.00 IOW A TECHNOLOGY STUD ENT AS S OCIATION BHS TECH STUD ENT AS S OC S UPPLIES 120.00 J & M D IS PLAYS BHS FOOTBA LL -S UPPLIES 1,212.50 J & S ELECTRONIC BUS INES S SYSTEM S,INC. BHS GEN ED -PURCHAS ED S ERVICE 2,282.48 J.F.A HERN COM PA NY M A INTENA NCE OPER -PURCHAS E S ERVICE 2,029.70 J.W .PEPPER & S ON,INC. LIND M US IC -BHS S UPPLIES 2,345.33 JACK RIS PUBLIS HING,LLC HOM E S CHOOL AS ST PROG S UPPLIES 114.93 JO A NN FA BRIC A ND CRA FT STORE A LM S LEVEL III-IND IV S UPPLIES 44.91 JOHN D EERE LA ND S CA PES,LLC M A INTENA NCE OPER -GROUND S UPPLIES 13.86 JOHNS ON CONTROLS INC D W BLD G IM P -PURCHAS ED S ERVICE 18,792.00 JONES S CHOOL S UPPLY COM PA NY, INC. A L GEN ED -S UPPLIES 37.75 K AYS ER,TOD D BHS -A P TEST REIM BURS EM ENT 4.00 K EA NE,TINA ES A D M IN -TRAVEL IN 3.36 K EBECCA ED UCATION S ERVICES,INC. S S PS LEVEL III-S UPPLIES 30,554.00 K EM P,M /M ROBERT BHS -A P TEST REIM BURS EM ENT 4.00 K EYSTONE PROD UCTS CO.,INC. BHS BLD G IM P -S UPPLIES 9,500.00 K IM BA LL M ID W EST TRA NS STUD ENT S ERV -TOOLS 183.40 K IW A NIS CLUB OF BURLINGTON CLUB M -OFFICE S UPPLIES 70.00 K LENK ,A ND REW BHS M ID D LE S CHOOL ATH PURCHAS ED S ERV 90.00 KOHL W HOLESA LE S S S CH NUTRITION -PURCHAS ED FOOD 63,607.70 KONE ELEVATOR S ERVICE M A INTENA NCE OPER -PURCHAS E S ERVICE 1,850.00 K ROGM EIER,BILL A D M TECH S UPPORT -PURCHAS E S ERVICES 472.00 K ROLL,K A RIE GRIM ES NURS E -TRAVEL IN 5.70 K ULL,LEN BHS VOLLEY BA LL -PURCHAS ED S ERVICES 150.00 K W IK STA R TLC GRIM ES -TRAVEL OUT 43.10 LA K ES HORE NH LEVEL I-IND IVID PURCH S ERVICE 152.95 LAVEINE SA NITATION S ERVICE M A INTENA NCE OPER -D IS POSA L S ERVICE 3,197.50 LAW S ON PROD UCTS,INC. TRA NS STUD ENT S ERV -M A INT S UPPLIES 24.55 LIFE PROD UCTIONS AUD IO/VID EO S ERVICES BHS D A NCE TEA M -PURCH S ERVICES 100.00 L E GAL S LOGAS,H.S COTT BHS M ID D LE S CHOOL ATH PURCHAS ED S ERV 325.00 LONG,NECOLE BHS -A P TEST REIM BURS EM ENT 4.00 LOUISA COUNTY CONS ERVATION BOA RD BHS RENA IS SA NCE STORE PURCHAS ED S ERV 513.00 LOW E’S HOM E CENTERS,INC. M A INTENA NCE OPER -M A INT S UPPLIES 386.05 LUTTENEGGER,HOLLY BHS ES L -PURCHAS ED S ERVICES 60.00 M A K E M US IC,INC. BURLINGTON ED FOUND -INST S UPPLIES 1,109.40 M A LIK ,K RYSTA L NH GEN ED -TRAVEL IN D ISTRICT 7.20 M A NS K E,GREG BHS M ID D LE S CHOOL ATH PURCHAS ED S ERV 310.00 M AS ON,A LBERT BHS LEVEL III-TRAVEL IN 147.28 M A ZZIO’S PIZZA NH GEN FUND -INST S UPPLIES 141.50 M EA D,M /M LAW RENCE BHS -A P TEST REIM BURS EM ENT 4.00 M ED IACOM NH A D M IN -TELEPHONE 4,532.36 M ENA RD S M A INTENA NCE OPER -PLUM BING S UPPLY 190.06 M ENK E,S HA RON BHS VOLLEY BA LL -PURCHAS ED S ERVICES 120.00 M ID W EST A LA RM S ERVICES BHS IM P -PRO STA RT -PURCH S ERV 710.25 M ID W EST W HEEL COM PA NIES TRA NS STUD ENT S ERV -VEHICLE REPA IR PA RT 714.58 M ILLER,K ATHI NH GEN FUND -INST S UPPLIES 45.00 M INA RD,JOHN BHS M ID D LE S CHOOL ATH PURCHAS ED S ERV 100.00 M ITTY ’S TROPHY CAS E BHS GEN ATH -S UPPLIES 364.75 M ONTICELLO S PORTS INC BHS VOLLEY BA LL -S UPPLIES 104.00 M ORRIS,M /M JOS EPH BHS -A P TEST REIM BURS EM ENT 8.00 M ULTI-HEA LTH SYSTEM S,INC.(M HS ) S S PS LEVEL III-S UPPLIES 388.80 M US IC IN M OTION LIND M US IC -BHS S UPPLIES 109.90 M UTUA L W HEEL COM PA NY TRA NS STUD ENT S ERV -VEHICLE REPA IR PA RT 56.88 NA M E BA RGA IN A D M TECH S UPPORT -PURCHAS E S ERVICES 122.91 NATIONA L AUTIS M RES OURCES NH TITLE 1 -S UPPLIES 9.98 NATIONA L LOUIS UNIVERS ITY GRIM ES PROF D EVEL -PURCH S ERV 450.00 NCTM CORS E TITLE 1 S INA -PURCH S ERVICE 1,165.00 NEFF,M IK E BHS FOOTBA LL -PURCHAS ED S ERVICE 95.00 NEIRA ,ERM ILO BHS M ID D LE S CHOOL ATH PURCHAS ED S ERV 200.00 NEIRA ,NICHOLAS BHS M ID D LE S CHOOL ATH PURCHAS ED S ERV 200.00 NOBLE,ROBERT BHS FOOTBA LL -PURCHAS ED S ERVICE 95.00 NORTH S COTT HIGH S CHOOL BHS VOLLEY BA LL -STA FF D UES 80.00 NOVA FITNES S EQUIPM ENT BHS GEN ATH -S UPPLIES 574.95 OA K TREE PROD UCTS,INC. ES M S LEVEL III-IND IV S UPPLIES 91.18 OFFICE W ORLD,INC. BH GEN ED -S UPPLIES 91.35 OLS ON BROS.CUSTOM S HOP TRA NS STUD ENT S ERV -EQUIP REPA IR PA RTS 75.00 ORIENTA L TRA D ING COM PA NY,INC. GRIM ES ACTIVITY FUND S UPPLIES 121.87 ORTH,CA RRIE NH GEN FUND -INST S UPPLIES 30.00 OTTO-M ATIC W ATER S PECIA LISTS M A INTENA NCE OPER -PLUM BING S UPPLY 170.75 PA ND A EX PRES S 20.12 TLC GRIM ES -TRAVEL OUT PHILLIPS 66 COM PA NY /SY NCB BHS HERO -TRAVEL OUT D ISTRICT 35.98 PHONA K HEA RING SYSTEM S GRIM ES LEVEL III-IND IV S UPPLIES 318.39 PLUM BM ASTER,INC. M A INTENA NCE OPER -PLUM BING S UPPLY 456.61 PRA X A IR BHS I.A .-S UPPLIES 31.11 PROLINE STRIPING NH GEN FUND -INST S UPPLIES 363.00 PURD UM ,A M Y BHS -A P TEST REIM BURS EM ENT 4.00 QUA LITY INN & S UITES EVENT CENTER A D M TECH S UPPORT -TRAVEL OUT D IST 380.65 QUILL GRIM ES GEN ED -S UPPLIES 718.18 QUIZNO’S 11.53 TLC GRIM ES -TRAVEL OUT RA INBOW RES OURCE CENTER,INC. HOM E S CHOOL AS ST PROG S UPPLIES 1,983.25 RA NUM ,BRIA N BHS FOOTBA LL -PURCHAS ED S ERVICE 95.00 REA LLY GOOD STUFF,INC. BH GEN ED -S UPPLIES 178.37 REA LLY GREAT REA D ING COM PA NY, LLC GRIM ES LEVEL I-S UPPLIES 2,158.20 REID,CHERY L BHS CHEERLEA D ING -STA FF D UES 655.00 REM INGTON,S HA NE BHS FOOTBA LL -PURCHAS ED S ERVICE 95.00 REY NEN,M /M PETER BHS -A P TEST REIM BURS EM ENT 8.00 RID D ELL /A LL A M ERICA N S PORTS CORPORATION BHS M ID D LE S CHOOL ATH S UPPLIES 1,886.51 RILEY,M ECCA BHS D A NCE TEA M -PURCH S ERVICES 210.00 RIVERVIEW D ES IGNS BHS CHEERLEA D ING S UPPLIES 728.00 ROBERTS TIRE CENTER CORP TRA NS STUD ENT S ERV TIRES /TUBES 484.52 ROE-K EY ENTERPRIS ES,LLC BHS GEN ATH -S UPPLIES 148.00 ROGERS,STEVE BHS VOLLEY BA LL -PURCHAS ED S ERVICES 300.00 ROW LA ND,M /M M IK E BHS -A P TEST REIM BURS EM ENT 4.00 RS CHOOL TOD AY BHS GEN ED -PURCHAS ED S ERVICE 2,695.00 SA FETY & HEA LTH S UPPLIES CORP. IA REVENUE -S UPPLIES 193.16 S CHOLASTIC,INC. GRIM ES BOX TOPS -INSTRUCTION S UPPLIES 100.00 S CHOOL A D M INISTRATORS OF IOW A (SA I) A D M -D UES & FEES 1,337.00 S CHOOL HEA LTH CORPORATION BA HS NURS E -S UPPLIES 78.76 S CHOOL S PECIA LTY S S GEN ED -S UPPLIES 3,763.08 S EA LS,STACEY S S M US IC -TRAVEL IN 30.45 S ECURITAS S ECURITY S ERVICES USA , INC. BHS GEN ED -PURCHAS ED S ERVICE 554.13 S HA NK S,BILL BHS VOLLEY BA LL -PURCHAS ED S ERVICES 150.00 S HERW OOD COM PA NY BHS GEN ATH -S UPPLIES 1,084.00 S IGNTEC,INC. BHS IM P -PRO STA RT PURCH S ERV 285.00 S M ITH,D A N BHS -A P TEST REIM BURS EM ENT 8.00 S M ITH,TROY A L LEVEL III-TRAVEL IN 684.00 5C L E GAL S S M ITHS ONIA N FOLK W AYS RECORD INGS LIND M US IC -BHS S UPPLIES 74.18 S NY D ER,D OUGLAS K BHS -A P TEST REIM BURS EM ENT143.18 S OUTHEASTERN COM M UNITY COLLEGE (S CC) TRA NS STUD ENT S ERV -PURCHAS ED S ERVICES 1,298.35 STA ND A RD OF BEAVERD A LE,INC M A INTENA NCE OPER -M A INT S UPPLIES 4.78 STA PLES A DVA NTAGE CLUB M -OFFICE S UPPLIES 3,336.03 STA PLES,INC. A L GEN ED -S UPPLIES 766.26 STA R FOOD S ERVICE EQUIPM ENT S S S CH NUTRITION -REPA IR PA RTS 1,024.53 STA RK EY,K ATHERINE GRIM ES LEVEL III-IND IV TRAVEL IN 10.20 STATE PUBLIC POLICY GROUP TLC NH -PURCH S ERVICES 0.00 STAUB,JOE TRA NS STUD ENT S ERV -TRAVEL OUT D ISTRICT 6.03 STEA K ‘N S HA K E TLC NH -TRAVEL OUT 5.82 STERLING COM PUTERS CORP A D M TECH S UPPORT -TECH S UPPLIES 3,695.66 STEVENS,M IK E BHS M ID D LE S CHOOL ATH PURCHAS ED S ERV 110.00 STONEY CREEK HOTEL & CONFERENCE CENTER S S A D M IN -TRAVEL OUT D ISTRICT 122.26 S UBW AY 68.00 21ST CENTURY NH -S UPPLIES S UBW AY BHS GEN ATH -S UPPLIES 404.00 S UBW AY BHS RENA IS SA NCE STORE S UPPLIES 84.00 S UBW AY A D M BUS INES S -TRAVEL OUT D ISTRICT 118.54 S ULEIM A N,S HA DY BHS -A P TEST REIM BURS EM ENT 4.00 S UTCLIFFE,ED W A RD BHS ATHLETICS -TRAVEL OUT 8.00 S W A NS ON,D OUG BHS FOOTBA LL -PURCHAS ED S ERVICE 95.00 S W INK ,M ICHA EL BHS M ID D LE S CHOOL ATH PURCHAS ED S ERV 260.00 TA EGER,JEFFREY BHS FOOTBA LL -PURCHAS ED S ERVICE 306.00 TA RGET TLC NH -TRAVEL OUT 20.01 TA RRENCE,CHA D S BHS VOLLEY BA LL -PURCHAS ED S ERVICES 325.00 TA RRENCE,D UA NE BHS VOLLEY BA LL -PURCHAS ED S ERVICES 475.00 TAY LOR,EM ILY S S M ENTORING -TRAVEL OUT 16.20 TEACHER D IRECT BH GEN ED -S UPPLIES 30.58 TEM PLE’S S PORTING GOOD S BHS GIRLS B-BA LL -S UPPLIES 846.00 TEX AS ROA D HOUS E TLC GRIM ES -TRAVEL OUT 32.87 THOM AS BUS SA LES OF IOW A ,INC TRA NS STUD ENT S ERV -VEHICLE REPA IR PA RT 603.56 TIERNEY BROTHERS BH GEN ED -S UPPLIES 854.95 TIM BERLINE BILLING S ERVICE LLC M ED ICA ID LEVEL IIPS PURCH S ERV 3,322.15 TRAVERS TOOLS IA REVENUE -S UPPLIES 484.97 TRINE,RA NDY BHS BOYS GOLF -S UPPLIES 194.50 TRUE VA LUE HA RD W A RE M A INTENA NCE OPER -M A INT S UPPLIES 292.51 TW O RIVERS INS URA NCE S ERVICES BD OF ED UCATION-GENERA L INS UR 2,164.00 ULINE M A INTENA NCE OPER -GROUND S UPPLIES 425.22 UNIUEC S S PD -TRAVEL OUT 350.00 UNITE PRIVATE NETW ORK S,LLC S S INST TECHNOLOGY PURCH S ERV 19,381.40 UNITED PA RCEL S ERVICE M IS CELLA NEOUS 85.47 UNITY S CHOOL BUS PA RTS TRA NS STUD ENT S ERV -VEHICLE REPA IR PA RT 1,967.77 UNIVERS ITY OF IOW A PROFES S D EVEL NURS ES -PURCH S ERV 597.00 UNIVERS ITY OF NORTHERN IOW A , GRIM ES REA D RECOVERY - PURCH S ERV 7,350.00 US I,INC. BHS LIBRA RY -S UPPLIES 375.79 VA LLEY D ISTRIBUTION CORP TRA NS STUD ENT S ERV -VEHICLE REPA IR PA RT 32.33 VA N M ETER,INC. M A INTENA NCE OPER -HVAC ELEC PA RTS 1,165.99 VA ND US EN,D IA NE BHS -A P TEST REIM BURS EM ENT 4.00 VA NERSTROM ,ELIZA BETH TLC S S -TRAVEL IN 119.58 VERIZON W IRELES S D W S CH NUTRITION TECH S UP-COM P S OFT 627.35 VEX ROBOTICS,INC. A LM S PLTW - EQUIPM ENT 10,724.57 VILLONT,M /M VINCENT BHS -A P TEST REIM BURS EM ENT 4.00 VOYAGER S OPRIS BH GEN FUND -INST S UPPLIES 329.89 W A D E,A PRIL TRA NS STUD ENT S ERV -TRAVEL OUT D ISTRICT 12.39 W AGENBACH,JAY D ON ES M S LEVEL III-IND IV TRAVEL IN 20.40 W A LM A RT STORE 797 BH GEN ED -S UPPLIES 3,168.90 W A LM A RT 21ST CENTURY A L -S UPPLIES 177.48 W A LS H D OOR & HA RD W A RE CO. M A INTENA NCE OPER -M A INT S UPPLIES 1,915.71 W A RD ’S S CIENCE BHS ACTIVITY FUND -S UPPLIES 160.49 W A RNER,M ATTHEW BHS M ID D LE S CHOOL ATH PURCHAS ED S ERV 55.00 W EEK S,GA IL S S NURS E -TRAVEL IN 9.00 W EST BEND INS URA NCE COM PA NY FD S ERVICE W ORK M A N COM P INS 35,911.40 W EST M US IC COM PA NY BHS M US IC -S UPPLIES 8,935.82 W HIS ENA NT,M /M D A RREL BHS -A P TEST REIM BURS EM ENT 4.00 W ILD ERNES S RES ORT A D M TECH S UPPORT -TRAVEL OUT D IST 699.95 W ILS ON PA PER COM PA NY TRA NS STUD ENT S ERV -M A INT S UPPLIES 35.39 W IND STREA M (PA ETEC), M A INTENA NCE -TELEPHONE 89.63 W INTER,JERRY BHS FOOTBA LL -PURCHAS ED S ERVICE 145.00 W INTER,JOHN BHS FOOTBA LL -PURCHAS ED S ERVICE 95.00 W ORK M A N,GA RTH BHS M ID D LE S CHOOL ATH PURCHAS ED S ERV 390.00 W RIGHT,CHERY L BHS GIRLS S W IM -PURCHAS ED S ERVICES 200.00 YA NK EE CA ND LE FUND RA IS ING BHS D A NCE TEA M -S UPPLIES 832.82 YOUNG HOUS E FA M ILY S ERVICES A L ACA D EM IC FOCUS -PURCHAS ED S ERVICES 2,210.85 Y TZEN,CHUCK BHS GIRLS S W IM -PURCHAS ED S ERVICES 150.00 ZA IS ER FA BRICATION,INC. TRA NS STUD ENT S ERV -VEHICLE REPA IR PA RT 223.24 ZIEGLER,M /M A ND REW BHS -A P TEST REIM BURS EM ENT 8.00 Checking AccountTotal: 598,234.26 Novem ber6,2015 -1t 6C www.thehawkeye.com Friday • November 6, 2015 MEDICAL Send resume and salary requirements to: Box 870, c/o The Hawk Eye, P.O. Box 10, Burlington, IA 52601 Self-Reliance is now hiring for the leadership position of Care Manager Community Health Centers of Southeastern Iowa, Inc. (CHC/SEIA) is seekinga full time RN Triage Nurse for its West Burlington facility. Requires active RN license. Competitive compensation/ benefits package available. Pre-employment drug screening and criminal background check required. No phone calls please. EOE/M/F/D/V Send cover letter and resume to CHC/SEIA ATTN: Administration The successful candidate will have: Responsibilities Include but are not limited to: • Following and enforcing organizational rules, policies, procedures. • Provide direction to Direct Care staff. • Coordinate intake process for clients • Assure all documentation is in compliance • Develop community connections, including other service providers; as well as maintaining relationships with referral and funding sources. Those interested should email resume to [email protected]. No phone calls please. Self-Reliance, Inc. 2900 Division St. Burlington, IA Part-Time Merchandiser Refreshment Services Pepsi is currently seeking part-time merchandising employees for daytime, morning shifts (weekday and weekend), to keep retail displays continually stocked with products while maintaining the expectations of all sales/ marketing plans and all company merchandising standards. Requirements include a valid driver’s license, clean background and driving record, and be able to lift up to 60 lbs. Please apply online at http://refreshmentservices pepsi.com/employment/ or in person at 3000 Sylvania Ave. Burlington EOE MEDICAL CNA OR LPN needed for medical back office duties. Current nurse retiring. Nice working environment. No nights or weekends. Part time, could lead to full time. Please send resume to Heartland Foot and Ankle Clinic, PO Box 497, Mt. Pleasant, IA 52641. Clinical Nurse (CMA or LPN) Community Health Centers of Southeastern Iowa, Inc. (CHC/SEIA) is seeking a part time one day a week for pain clinic and PRN for its West Burlington clinic. Minimum requirement: CMA or LPN. Pre-employment drug screening and criminal background check required. No phone calls please. EOE/AA Send cover letter and resume to CHC/SEIA ATTN: Administration 1706 W. Agency Rd. West Burlington, IA 52655 APPLIANCE REPAIR A-1 Appliance Repair Factory Authorized Service Center ---------------------------------- Parts & Service on Most Brands ---------------------------------2825 Mt. Pleasant St. Suite #4, Burlington Looking for enthusiastic and hard-working individuals to join our team in our new shop in Burlington. 319-572-2994 or e-mail: NOW HIRING Cooks! Medical Office Apply in person at Uncle Ronnie’s, 1201 Derek Lincoln Dr. W. Burlington, IA 52655 Please send resume to PO Box 5387 Coralville, IA 52241 CNA’s Dependable &Team Oriented? Full Time Evenings and nights available Competitive Wages, Shift Differential, $1500 sign on bonus Apply to Prairie Ridge Care 608 Prairie Street Mediapolis BECKMAN TV & APPLIANCE RN's up to $45/hour, LPN's up to $37.50/hour, CNA's up to $22.50/hour. Free gas/weekly pay $2000 Bonus. AACO Nursing Agency 1-800-656-4414 Ext. 12. CNA Full Time Apply in person at New London Specialty Care 100 Care Circle St. New London, IA (319)367-5753 EOE/AAP Disability and Vets Full Time RN Apply at 401 S. Birch, Danville or email to [email protected] Danville Care Center CNA’s Competitive wages, shift differential. $1000 Sign On Bonus Apply at 401 S. Birch, Danville or email to [email protected] RESTAURANT Peaches Steakhouse NOW hiring “EXPERIENCED LINE COOKS” Will Pay For Talent. Apply in person at the Comfort Suites Peaches Restaurant 1780 Stonegate Center Dr., Burlington Iowa. -FREE ESTIMATES- Lifetime Transferable Warranty Locally Owned & Operated Serving Southeast Iowa 319-752-7333 www.iowabasement.com Small ads, Small price. BIG RESULTS Call Classifieds Monday-Friday 8 to 5 to place your ad or at www.thehawkeye.com 24/7 Find a New Job Read The Hawk Eye Classifieds HOMES FOR RENT. Marc@Diamond 319-572-4567. www.marcgillette.com SMALL 3 bedroom, Sunnyside area, appliances included, 1 car garage. $750/mo. Call 319-671-0963 3-4 BEDROOM, 1.5 BATH, $1500 per month. No pets, no smoking. Call for appt. to view (319)850-7117. L E GAL S Moving Service HOMES FOR SALE BY OWNER 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch in West Point, 2 car attached garage, family room, full bath in basement, nice location. Will consider contract with $20,000 down. $125,000. 319-470-5800 or 319-470-8091 Choose your next career Read The Hawk Eye Classifieds S.E. Iowa’s #1 Advertising Source for New Jobs Licensed & Insured Highly Recommended Move 1 piece or a household The Furniture Store 209 Harrison • Burlington Call 319-752-4123 Available RV and Boat storage Secured for the winter. Call 319-572-1938. Happy Rock Storage. L E GAL S L E GAL S Apply in person 2-5pm daily at GATOR’S GRILL & SPIRITS 3313 Agency St. Burlington, IA REAL ESTATE Rentals and Sales NOW ACCEPTING applications for Cooks. Full-time / Part-time position available. Must be available weekends. Apply in person 2-5 daily at GATOR’S GRILL & SPIRITS 3313 Agency St. Burlington, IA FAMILY & COMMUNITY LOST & FOUND Lost Great-grandfather's wooden walking cane - Tues day, 9/27 - left in shopping cart at Walmart. Reward! Call 563-332-9390 Got a service to sell? Advertise in The Hawk Eye Classifieds Service Directory APARTMENTS FURN. 1 BEDROOM luxury duplex, corporate furnished apartment. Gas, electric, water, washer & dryer included. $1500 per month. Call 319-768-8335. APARTMENTS UNFURN. WEST BURLINGTON 2 bedroom, lease & deposit, stove and fridge furnished. No pets or smoking. $650/mo. with application. 319-752-2252. 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath fully furnished. 1 bedroom, fully furnished. 17 miles from Wever. 217-453-6092 901 N. 4th. Spacious 1 bedroom, stove, fridge, laundry, no pets. $550. 319-750-3032 2 BEDROOMS, $900 a month + utilities. Available Dec. 1st. Call Alan at 319-572-8784. COMMERCIAL RENT ON ROOSEVELT AVENUE Professional office, beautifully decorated. Parking lot. 1800 sq. ft. Call 319-750-7122 between 9-5pm. Find a New Job L et us bake you a p ie for T hanksgiving! Pum p kin,A p p le,Peach,C herry,Pecan or F rench S ilk. O rd er B y N ov. 20th . C all Stacey at 319-572-8631 Read The Hawk Eye Classifieds BASEMENT REPAIR CONSTRUCTION GARAGE DOORS Southeast Iowa Garage Door Specialists Get the Job Done Right 54 Yrs. of Expert Service • Basement Water Control • Foundation Repair • Bowed/Buckling Walls • Home/Building Settlement • Proven Patented Systems • Hundreds of References • Dealer Trained Install Crews • A+ BBB Rating Free Estimates • References Written Guarantees 319-372-3554 800-541-9433 A.J. & Sons Construction Serving SE Iowa 35 Years Bonded-Licensed-Insured Remodeling • Roofs Siding • Windows • Doors Garages • Pole Buildings Additions • Decks All Phases Concrete Work “WE DO IT ALL” 752-4216 or 601-9711 Is your door ready for winter? Call today to schedule a tune-up. Backed By Unbeatable Service We Service Most Brands 319-752-7147 or toll free at 888-824-DOOR Visit Our Showroom: Local Professionals Since 1960 www.bixservice.com CARPET CLEANING DuraClean By Curt & Renee Ridinger • Carpets • Furniture • • Water Damage Restoration • Home Improvement Inc. Home repairs and/or remodeling inside and out. Manufactured homes included. 30 years experience. 208 Harrison Ave. Burlington, IA 28 Years Ross Hartman, OWNER 309-299-3337 Garage Door Installation Service-Repair Most Brands Construction (319)758-7695 GUTTERS Crushed Limestone Sand • Gravel Carpet & Upholstery Cleaning * Tile & Grout DRY IN 1 HOUR! 319-372-5374 or 1-800-264-5041 COMPUTER SERVICES HERITAGE QUARRY 1445 320th Ave. Wever, IA (319)528-4065 OFFICE: 1444 320th Ave. Wever, IA 52658 (319)528-4065 Doctor John makes House-calls Call Everett today! (319) 752-2046 HANDYMAN Remodeling baths & kitchens, decks, carpentry, drywall, custom cabinets, & hardwood furniture. - INSURED - REFERENCES Reasonable Rates Call Greg 319-931-6892 KITCHENS Gutter Cleaning POWER WASHING - Siding, etc. Gutter & Spout Repair Hand/Power Wash Siding Tree & Brush Trimming Hauling & Other Odd Jobs A.G. Services !"#$%&&%'#($)%*+%,-)*+#)) 319-752-8199 or 850-2607 HANDYMAN Cabinet Refacing New & Custom Built Cabinets Custom Built Laminate and Solid Surface Countertops Professional Installation Serving Burlington & Surrounding Areas ! Those Jobs/Repairs We Refinish & Restore All Types of Furniture & Trunks! Farmer’s Wife Antiques -217-659-3898Terre Haute/Lomax, IL Dethatching Aerating Leaf Removal Gutter Cleaning • Insured • Free Estimates HENKENS LAWN CARE Call Kevin 850-2903 MASONRY M&M Masonry Fall’s Here 20% off Labor Off Your Honey-Do List With One Single Call! Lead Safe Renovator Insured • 30 Yrs. Experience New Inventory. Every Day. Looking for a great deal? Turn to The Hawk Eye Classifieds. Victor Tate, Owner/Operator 319-631-0328 Mowing * Edging Weed Eating * Leaf Removal Shrub/Tree Trimming Residential & Commercial Choose your next career Read The Hawk Eye Classifieds S.E. Iowa’s #1 Advertising Source for New Jobs Interior/Exterior • Insured Quality Work • Reasonable Rates Textured Walls & Ceilings New Construction Painting Special Faux Finishes Staining & Varnishing Deck Sealing Epoxy Floor Coatings Power Washing & Cleaning FREE ESTIMATES 753-1984 PLUMBING Ralls County Clock Company Located at 207 N. Main. Hannibal, MO. Service Tech Available on Fridays Call 319-385-4515 Home Inspections for your peace of mind. www.apexanswers.com Residential, Commercial and Industrial Design/Build-Licensed/Insured Burlington 319-758-7576 Ft. Madison 319-372-8156 VISA, MC, DISC, AMEX Jeff George Plumbing All Your Plumbing Needs Residential & Commercial Insured. 32 Yrs. Experience 319-752-8554 • 572-1461 Pro Plumbing Inc. 705 Maple St. Plumbing • Septic Systems Water Service • Sewer Repair 40 Yrs Exp*Licensed*Insured (319)457-1367 Lane Plumbing & Heating “A Name You Can Trust” Service & Remodeling TOWING 2 Master Licensed Plumbers 319-865-4511 319-754-8424 Toll Free: 877-751-5777 AFFORDABLE RATES 40 YEARS PULLIN’ FOR BURLINGTON PLASTERING & DRYWALL PAINT & WALLCOVERING ROBERT’S PAINTING Starting at Only $75 a room! Painting • Drywall Subfloors • Carpentry Call 319-572-4979 A.J. & Sons Construction Serving SE Iowa 35 Years Bonded-Licensed-Insured 752-4216 or 601-9711 LCK ROOFING & REPAIR You called the rest, now call the best! Senior/Military Discounts Manufacture Warranties Licensed & Insured Credit Cards Accepted 319-457-5705 JM Enterprises Randy VanNiewaal Brian (319)750-2046 ROOFING * New Construction Mark 217-257-0497 (cell) or 217-223-2250 on retaining walls, brick pavers, patios and sidewalks. Low Key Lawn Care M&N Painting Waterproofing Chimney & Foundation Repair www.kitchensolvers.com LANDSCAPING PAINT & WALLCOVERING TUCK POINTING 319-753-2131 LAWN & GARDEN FURNITURE REST. LAWN & GARDEN MISCELLANEOUS 319-753-6314 (319)573-8506 potential employees advertise your job openings in Classifieds HANDYMAN Storm Doors Install & Repair Ceiling Fans • Faucets Small Carpentry Call Larry at U-Design I can make your old computer run like a new one in no time. Weekends, pickup & delivery no extra charge. Reach Iowa’s Best HANDYMAN Expert Clock Repair Call anytime Henry Harris Burlington, IA Serving the surrounding area. We Can Repair WATER CONTROL AND FOUNDATION REPAIR EXECUTIVE HOME, fully furnished, 3 bedrooms, 2 bath. Fully Furnished, 4 bedroom, 2 bath. 17 miles from Wever. 217-653-6092 Kittens 319-931-0230 • Cracked Walls • Bowing Walls • Wet Basements • Foundations DOG KENNEL HOUSES RENT 3 BEDROOM, 1 bath, nice area, new carpet and windows, garage. 1315 Barrett. $850/mo. Not accepting section 8. Call (319)572-1533 Danville Care Center 11194 Twin Ponds Dr., W.B. Wet, Leaky Basements? Farm raised, loved on by kids the day they were born. APR Registered, available December 20, 2015. $500 Call Erin at 319-931-8771 [email protected] 1 BEDROOM, laundry hookups. Deposit and references. $400 plus utilities. No pets. 319-753-1520. 2 BEDROOM, new flooring, $580/mo. Appliances furnished. 319-759-2292 HOMES FOR SALE 2 BEDROOM with fenced yard, AT AUCTION: Two bedroom single car garage, appliances home sells Saturday, Nov. 7, furnished, all new flooring. noon at 2005 Vogt St., Burling$675/mo. 319-759-2292 ton, Iowa. Public Showing SunAVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY, 3 day, Oct. 25, 1:00-3:00 p.m. www.auctionsbysmith.com bedroom home, 2 car garage. $750 a month. 1001 Chalfant. WEST BURLINGTON. 3 bedroom, 1.5 bath, all appliances 319-457-5250. stay including washer & dryer, IN COUNTRY, 3 bedroom, 2+ 1 car garage. 318 Swan. garage. 1 mile from West Bur$73,500. Call 319-572-2749. lington. $700/month. Call 319-754-9337 or 563-299-1738 MOBILE HOMES RENT QUIET LOCATION. Fenced, 2 bedroom, new appliances. ex- 3 BEDROOM mobile home for tra living space. $950 month. rent in Pontoosuc, IL. 2104 S. 16th. (319)371-9955. (319)850-3168. 1 BEDROOM, unfurnished, only Kitchen appliances included. MOVING & STORAGE 217-453-6092 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath, garage, nice area, 1916 Osborn. $950. 319-868-7722 3 men and a truck Multiple Positions Dental Specialists of Iowa and Endodontic Associates of Iowa are looking to fill multiple positions for the new Mt Pleasant office. We are looking for certified Dental Assistants to work hand in hand with our doctors, a Sterilization Manager to run the sterilization center for the entire office, and a Receptionist. We are looking for highly motivated individuals with experience both in patient care and working the front desk. If you are looking for an amazing career in dentistry email: [email protected] or call 319-665-2400. Sales & Service 319-752-4448 BASEMENT REPAIR Chocolate Lab Puppies for Christmas! New 10x10x6' tall 2-door dog kennel. Powder coated steel. We’re Growing! Experienced servers needed in Much sturdier and more attracour fast paced environment. tive than chain link. Paid over $500; asking $350. 750-0184. Drop off resume at The Buffalo, 2016 S. Main, Burlington. No phone calls, please! Kittens, wormed and 1st shot. Litter trained. Would make great mousers, Thanksgiving or X-mas gifts. $10. Phone 319-750-0667 TO GIVE AWAY - 8-10 week old kittens. 2 white with black spots and 1 Tuxedo (black & white). NOW ACCEPTING applicaMale and female. Not barn tions for Host/Hostess. Must cats. (319)750-6414. be available weekends. 319-754-7777 a-1appliancerepairandparts.com HOUSES RENT CONDOS 4 BEDROOM HOUSE for rent or sell on contract. $1400 month CONDO FOR sale. Village Coplus deposit. 104 N. Marshall, operative of Burlington, 1431 Burlington. Now available. Cambridge Dr. 3rd floor corner (319)330-9988. unit. 1200 sq. ft., open floor plan, maintenance free living. TWO-ONE BEDROOM houses 55 years old +. Call Hannah at for rent. Very nice and safe locations. $500 and $600. Ready 319-752-4457 to learn more. now so call for more information. 319-850-8465. DUPLEXES/RENT PETS/SERVICES [email protected] Must be available nights and weekends. Part time help needed in busy medical office in Mt Pleasant. On the job training, ophthalmic/ optometric experience helpful. PETS To apply, please call 1706 W. Agency Rd. West Burlington, IA 52655 for our office in Burlington. A sufficient combination of education and experience in the field. Salary will commensurate with experience BARISTAS HOUSES RENT 418164 Growth in our company has opened up a position for a Collector to contact customers and assist them in paying their delinquent accounts. Need person who can resolve challenging issues in a calm and professional manner. Collection and/or telemarketing experience preferred but not required. Must be proficient in basic computer skills, ability to perform small mathematic equations, and have the ability to negotiate and problem solve. Base pay plus monthly bonus. RN Triage Nurse COMMERCIAL RENT 12 FT. CEILING storage avail- NEAR CRAPO Park. 2 bedable. Multiple loading docks, room, 1 bath, garage. Applitriple net lease 20¢ per square ances, microwave, dishwasher, ft. Can build a office inside new floors. Central air. storage facility to suit your Washer/gas dryer hookup. 1 needs! 35 parking spaces! Call year lease. 1013 Park Ave. 319-750-8200. $850 month plus deposit. (319)457-0844. EEK Account Representative/Collector RESTAURANT PIE tof he W GENERAL Wall & Ceiling Rx Plaster-Drywall-Painting Repairs-Handyman-Remodel 20+ Y.ears • References Licensed • Insured No Job too small!! 319-750-0507 There are lots of Great Buys in today’s Classifieds Check Them Out! * Remodeling * ROOFING * Siding & Windows * Concrete Licensed & Insured 319-750-0263 319-850-6581 Credit Cards Accepted TREE SERVICE All American Tree Service Tim Myers, Owner/Operator Spring Storms are here to stay, Call to Trim Your Trees Today!! Tree Removal • Trimming Stump Grinding • Spraying Transplanting • INSURED Ph: 319-367-2059 Cell: 319-931-0769 [email protected] WINDOW WASHING Timernic Professional Window Cleaning Affordable rates, Call for a quote! John Champagne 319-750-8028 Sell Your Stuff Place your ad online 24/7 thehawkeye.com www.thehawkeye.com 7C Friday • November 6, 2015 The “Go To” place for info YOU need today! read Happs online at livelocalseia.com/todaysads THE CRAZY COYOTE Tag Your Christmas $2 Domestic Bottles Mon-Thurs. 3-6 Tree Early... Come back after Thanksgiving and Wed. A.Y.C.E. Chicken 5-9, choice of 2 sides, cut your fresh tree. Start a family trawhite or dark meat. dition!! MYER’S TREE FARM in Thurs. Crazy’s Steak Night, 8 or 12oz Ribeyes, 18oz Porterhouses with baked potato or fries and Sperry. 319-985-2102.- Adv choice of one side. The unXpected Men’s night, 2 for 1 Wells, $2.50 bottles & more! Featuring Slink Rand, Craig Moore & Fri. Fried Catfish and Walleye, choice of 2 sides Darin Bloomfield. Special Guests: Bluzillion & bread and butter. Capitol Theater, Friday, Nov. 6th @ 7:30 PM Sat. Beef or Chicken Tacos, all day,handmade Tickets $10.00 Capitol Box office, shells. Weird Harold’s & Redtrucktickets.com - Adv. Sun. Kitchen open from 12-6pm. 2505 Mt. Pleasant St. - Adv 4th Annual FOCC Craft & Vendor Fair UNCLE RONNIES Karaoke with Rusty Saturday, 9pm-1am 50¢ wings and $13 buckets of beer for NFL Sunday 1201 Derek Lincoln Dr. - Adv. Big Muddy’s Serving Sushi - Wed. and Fri. Also serving tonight all you can eat whole catfish 710 N. Front, Burl. 319-753-1699 - Adv. Buffalo Wild Wings Burlington in Bloom BRAND NEW MENU! Buffalo Mac and Cheese is Nature’s Elegance Christmas Open House back! 1053 Lawrence, Burl. 319-754-9464. -Adv. Fri., Nov. 6th, 8am-6pm, Sat. Nov. 7th, 8-3pm, RIVERVIEW SPORTSMEN EVENT Sat., Sun. Nov. 8th, 12-4pm. 3214 Division St. - Adv Nov. 7, 5 p.m. at Ike’s Riverfront Tavern, Dallas EAGLE RIDERS BREAKFAST, Sun., Nov. 8th, City, IL. Soups, sandwiches and snacks. Raffles 8 a.m. to 11 a.m Buffet style, all you can eat, and Auction. COME JOIN THE FUN! - Adv. adults $9, children 10 & younger $5. Proceeds go to the Eagle Riders. Public welcome. Eagles Sun. Nov. 8th, 12 - 4pm. 924 Broadway St. W. B. Sat. Nov. 7th from 9am-3pm at West Central Aerie 150, 2727 Mt. Pleasant St. - Adv. Des Moines County Democrats - Adv HS, Biggsville, IL. Over 20 vendors including RONDAVOO Sat. Nov. 7, Noon @ Port of Burlington. Fall Friend-Raiser featuring Democrats, live mu- Thirty-One, Scentsy, Tupperware, Pampered Special Thanksgiving Day Buffet, 11 a.m.-2 p.m. sic and food! Pulled pork sandwiches at 12. Chef Origami Owl, Perfectly Posh, Homemade Taking reservations starting 11/6/15 Sat. from 9am-1pm. No appointment needed. Speakers at 1, including Prez Candidate Martin Crafts and more! - Adv (319)752-5767 - Adv. Pet Bath & Beyond 1109 Summer St. - Adv O’Malley and NY Rep Carolyn Maloney (for Christmas Open House @ NEWSIES at the St. Louis Fox Theatre HRC). Tickets: $30/person at the door. Call Chili/Vegetable Soup Supper & dessert, $6. Crane Hill Antiques Jan. 28. Excellent seats $149 each. 319-750-5294 to reserve your place. Fri. Nov. 6th, 5-8pm, Sat. Nov. 7th 9am-3pm. Sun., Nov. 8th, 5-7 p.m. at Moose Lodge, 2529 Trailways Travel 319-753-2864, ext. 162 - adv Beat The Rush!!! Roger’s Pumpkin Farm, 1.5 miles E. of Lomax, Mt. Pleasant St. - Adv. STEVE’S PLACE - Breakfast Buffet. Start your holiday shopping with IL. (217)449-3486. - Adv. THE BUFFALO TAVERN 8am-Noon on Sat. Nov. 7th. $8. 852 Washington unique fair trade gifts. Nativity THE FAMILY OF DONALD W. McCANNON scenes, household items, coffee, cordially invites you to join in Celebrating His Life FULL Kitchen open Mon-Sat. from 11am-10pm. St. - Adv. chocolate, etc. Give the Gift that Gives Twice! on Nov. 8th at 2:00 p.m. at the Comfort Inn NOW booking Christmas Parties! We accept Iowa Tavern 416 Jefferson St. Hours: M-F 9-4:30pm, Sat. Suites Meeting Room, Burlington, IA. We request credit and debit cards! 2016 S. Main St. - Adv Fri. & Sat. Night - Prime Rib, Catfish & Ribeye 10-2pm - Adv DISNEY ON ICE-TREASURE TROVE-Dec. 5 that you bring your thoughts, prayers, and fond2103 Des Moines Ave. (319)753-2634 - Adv. est memories of Don McCannon. - Adv. Featuring favorite Disney characters for boys & MOOSE LODGE, Friday night Pork Chops. HitHoliday Open House at Clara’s Garden girls! Call Trailways Travel for adult & child pric- man playing 7:30-10:30 pm. 2529 Mt. Pleasant. The Midwest Diva Pageant ing 319-753-2864, ext. 162 - Adv. Adv. Thurs & Fri. 9-5pm, Sat. 9-4pm Nov. 6th, 9pm & Nov. 7th, 8pm Taxidermied Full Body Forest Animals needed SARDUCCI’S Daily Drawings for gift basket. Get a jump start 852 Washington. Tickets available at for Holiday Window display. Call 319-750-4249 Weird Harold’s & The Washington or $10/door on your holiday shopping. Hwy. 61 S. Mediapolis, All you can eat Goulash, $4.99 and Family Dinner Adv starting at $11.79, feeds 4. 337 N. Roosevelt. IA -Adv. - Adv. Compassionate Friends will be meeting Sun. -Adv. Amazing Week at The Washington Nov. 8th in the Spiritual Care Dept at Great SAVANNAH, CHARLESTON, & MORE! River Medical Center at 6:30 pm Thurs.-Nathan Kalish Band with Carr & Glasgow 50-75% OFF • 3 DAYS ONLY Fri.-The NADAS with Sean Costanza Experience Spring at its finest Apr. 1-9! EAGLES AERIE 150 - Fri., Nov. 6th- HamNOV. 6, 7, 8 • 10 A.M. - 3 P.M. Sat.-Matthew J with Aaron Lotzow & DJ Seth GZ Call Trailways Travel 319-753-2864, ext. 162 - burger Night. 6-7:30 p.m. Meat Raffles. 2727 Mt. McCONNELL CO. • 230 S. 3RD ST. - Adv. All shows 8:30 p.m. 306 Washington. - Adv. Adv. Pleasant St. Public welcome. - Adv. Ritters Christmas Open House Dog Nail Trim Special - $10.00 RELAY FOR LIFE Steve’s Place Presents CLOSEOUT • ALL CHRISTMAS HOME FURNISHINGS Today’s Sudoku Solution MISC. DINING ROOM set. Oak table 42x 66, two leaves. China cabinet, 70x80x13, glass shelves, 3 drawers. 4 chairs, 2 arm chairs. Excellent condition. $350.00 319-753-6635. Dining Room Set Table with 3 leaves (extends to 82” oval), 6 chairs, hutch (70” tall x64” long x 20” deep) top has glass display doors. Cherry Wood. $1000. (602)619-1300. Dining Room Set MOVING & STORAGE BERNHARDT 42x64” oak table plus 2 leaves, 6 chairs and 2-piece lighted china buffet. New $4500; sell $1495. Must see. (319)754-8479. Entertainment Center MISC. 2 Frymaster Fryers with built in filter machine and fry dump station. Originally $10,000, Asking $1200. In good working condition. Contact Dave Schnicker at The Maid Rite All Star Diner 319-758-7648 For Sale REALTOR LISTINGS Outstanding! Split level home with 1736 sq. ft. of living space. Home has a new roof in 2014! New carpet, newer kitchen and more! Spacious and open floor plan with a terrific backyard for entertaining or for your 4 legged friend to play. 2173 Meadowbrook Dr. $149,900. Call Gwen Wixom at 319-750-1179 at C21. RECREATION Time For Fun! BOATS & MOTORS Boat House in Harbor at Bluff Harbor Marina. Call 319-750-7122 from 9-4pm SEACREST V Boat, trailer, 25 hp Mercury motor, 15 feet, $6000. Call (319)750-7256 Ethan Allen Oak butler's tray coffee table. $100. 319-750-0505 MUSICAL Corn-Pellet Boiler film camera with carrying case. 50/1.8 lens and additional 2.8 wide angle lens. Used very little. Call (319)753-0419. not road worthy perfect for country bridge $1100. 319-750-0003 166 BTU. New. Half price $3000. Call 319-209-0208. For Sale 4 drawer plastic tackle box, lures, weights, bobbers, etc. (319)457-5250 Wood Clothes Hamper Cigar Boxes 4 wooden $10 319-750-7059 White. $15 (319)385-9917 Solid Oak Board Battery Charger 6”x1”x10’ new solid oak board. $12. 319-572-3826. Fireplace Heater Bar Stools Piano Kimball Exclusive Artist Console, Genuine hard wood walnut, Well maintained. $1000. (319)759-9775 WANTED TO BUY WANTED TO BUY Icemaker Wanted to Buy: TV Antenna (319)754-8180 after 4 p.m. ANTIQUE BABY BEDS Wood. Circa 1930 - for decoration use only. All 4 for $45. (319)572-3826. D O G O F TH E W EEK Ethan Allen Loveseat camelback loveseat. 319-750-0505 MISC. 53’ Flatbed Semi Used exterior steel entry door BRAND NEW White Fiberglass, 1 piece, Coffee Table Only $25. Call evenings with leaded glass window, any 32’x2’, used, $40. 2 pieces, Shark Steam Pocket Mop. 319-752-5862. 20”W x 48”L x 16.5 H $30 size. Call (319)752-7340. 51’x1’, used $60 each & 2 new Never out of box. $35. (319)385-9917 pieces for $75 e a c h . (319)385-9917. Box Fan GRAIN BIN 319-316-2722 Electric. $25. Works good. 32” Exterior Door. 319-316-2722 $10 Can be made into 2 carports or 319-759-4949 (319)385-9917 shed. 15’ diameter. Will load. (319)754-7308. TOOL SHOP brand 5 speed drill 1 wood, swivels has back, like press for sale. Still in the box. new, $40. And 2 wooden bar Wingard, nice, 12’. $30. Wooden Play Blocks $50 Phone 319-750-2930. stools, no back, $10 each. Large plastic tub of old and new 319-316-2722 (319)931-9832. wooden play blocks, $20. WILSON’S Mini Storage next to Corner, Oak with glass doors and up to a 40” TV opening. 900 lb. with a large bin. Used Alliant, 603 S.Roosevelt, 5x10, $175/offer. (319)759-8781 10x10, 10x20, 10x30 753-6929 very little. Call 319-750-7122 NORTHWESTERN Mini Warefrom 9-4 p.m. houses, 5x10, 10x10, 10x20, Cherry dining table, 6 chairs, 12x24, 20x50. (319)754-5778. glass hutch and server. $1000. Call 319-750-0505. Pennsylvania House MISC. CANON A E-1 PROGRAM $300. S ign & DRIVE Nothing Dow n. Nothing O ut ofPocket. Eve n ta x, title , lice nse a nd fe e s a re includ e d ! MISC. Aspen Grove-2 Choice burial plots 2 burial Plots in very desirable, sold out section of Aspen Grove. Grave site 3 & 4. Lot 148, Block 323 "The Oaks" $1,600 Call 830-200-6052 For Sale or Trade Walk - in Bath Tub, New, $5500, sell for $3500 or trade for a pick up truck. Would pay difference if trading was an option. (309)299-2394 181 2 013 H YUND AI E L ANTR A $ This is W ally.A neutered m ale black and w hite corgim ix.Ready to go hom e to his forever friend. Very happy guy thatw ags and “sm iles” a lot! G B 1179 0 • B LA CK,A LL PO WER EQUIPMENT, A LLO Y WHEELS,G LS PA CKA G E SALE PRICE 12,513 $ A 2 008 CH E V Y IM P AL A 115 2 4 0 A • RED,SS! V8 ,LEATHER,SUNRO O F 11,454 $ SALE PRICE PER M O N TH 206 $ B PER M O N TH D es M o ines Co u nty Hu m a ne So c iety 2 0 0 0 N . R o o s evelt•Pho ne 75 3 -8 3 8 9 S he lte r Ho u rs : M o n d a y-Frid a y 3 -6:00 S a tu rd a ys 1-5 • S u n d a ys 1-5 425453 2 012 F OR D F USION 115 0 4 1A • WHITE,G REATWO RK CA R SALE PRICE 12,565 $ 197 $ C PER M O N TH 2 012 D OD GE GR AND CAR AV AN G B 11773 • SILVER,PO WER DO O RS & LIFTG ATE, NAVIG ATIO N,REA R ENTERTA INMENT SALE PRICE 16,495 $ 257 $ C PER M O N TH MOTORCYCLES 2012 KTM XCF350 Excellent condition. Low hours. Adult owned. Well maintained. New condition. $4500 or best offer. (319)750-6008. HARLEY DAVIDSON Side Car with mounts to fit 1998 and up Road King. (309)370-2906 2 009 CH E V Y M AL IB U 15 5 8 8 B • SILVER,LO CA L TRA DE! SUNRO O F,LTPA CKA G E SHOP SALE PRICE 11,315 $ 204 $ B PER M O N TH 264 2 011 CH R YSLE R TOW N & COUNTR Y $ G B 1175 8 • G RAY,TO URING -L, HEATED SEATS,REA R DUA L DVD SALE PRICE 16,964 $ C PER M O N TH From The Region ANTIQUES Oak Gentlemens Dresser Over 100 years old. Good shape (319)385-9917. ELECTRONICS 2 014 CH E V Y CAP TIV A G B 1178 1 • B RO WN,LTZ,HEATED LEATHER,SUNRO O F SALE PRICE 19,475 $ 279 $ A 2 011 F OR D E X P L OR E R G B 1175 3 A • B RO NZE,4 WHEEL DRIVE, 3 RD RO W SEATING PER M O N TH SALE PRICE 21,573 $ 334 $ C PER M O N TH Electronics XBOX $100/offer; assortment of games $5 - $20 per game. 319-457-0831 FIREWOOD E&S FIREWOOD Now Open - All split firewood starting at $45 per load. You haul. Eric 319-457-4626. Firewood 2 013 D OD GE JOUR NE Y G B 11772 • B LA CK,LO A DED! LEATHER, MO O NRO O F,NAVIG ATIO N SALE PRICE 21,450 $ 299 $ A 2 007 D OD GE D AK OTA G B 1178 5 • G RAY,CREW CA B ! 4 WHEEL DRIVE! O NLY 4 2 XXX MILES! PER M O N TH SALE PRICE 16,815 $ 299 $ B PER M O N TH cut to length, you haul. $35 a pickup load. 5384 Madison Ave. (319)750-2233 HOME FURNISHINGS Kern Mattress Outlet Mattress Sets KING: $199 QUEEN: $159 FULL: $129 TWIN: $99 Will Deliver 309-452-7477 2 013 GM C TE R R AIN 16 110 A • G REEN,G M CERTIFIED SALE PRICE 18,720 $ 269 $ PER M O N TH A 2 010 K IA SOUL 115 2 4 1A • RED,PLUS PA CKA G E SALE PRICE 9,115 $ 144 $ C PER M O N TH Hills Used Furniture & Appliance Open Tues.-Sat., 10-5 p.m. We Sell Quality Used Furniture We buy estate items. Call 319-392-4877 Located in Danville, IA Queen Anne Cherry Entry Table Pennsylvania House. $200. (319)750-0505 U sed vehicles (A ) 3.64% for 84 m o.,TTL included.(B ) 3.79% for 66 m o.,TTL included.(C ) 3.04% for 75 m o.,TTL included. 427901 8C www.thehawkeye.com Friday • November 6, 2015 (Solution to today’s puzzle on H aw k Eye H appenings page) Level: Easy M edium H ard S olu tion tips a n d C om pu terProg ra m : w w w.su d oku .com Fillin the grid so thatevery row ,every colum n and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 through 9. That’s allthere is to it! There’s no m ath involved.The grid has num bers,but nothing has to add up to anything else.You solve the puzzle w ith reasoning and logic. It’s fun.It’s challenging.It’s addictive! Solving tim e is typically from 10 to 30 m inutes, depending on your skilland experience. select TV 6:30 7:00 3 KTVO News ABC at 6 (N) 3 KTVO 8 WQAD News 8 8 WQAD at 6PM (N) 6:00 3 Wheel of Fortune “Take Me to Hawaii” (HDTV) (N) Last Man Standing Mike must act like a boss, not a dad. 7:30 4 Local 4 News at 6pm (N) 4 WHBF 7 KHQA News at 7 KHQA Six (N) 4 Entertainment The Amazing Race “Full Speed Ahead, Captain!” (HDTV) (N) Tonight (N) 7 Wheel of Fortune (N) (7:31) Dr. Ken Molly admits to taking a sip of beer. (N) 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 Shark Tank (HDTV) Jimmy Kimmel (9:01) 20/20 (HDTV) and Guillermo Rodriguez. (N) (DVS) 10:00 10:30 11:00 3 KTVO News at (10:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live (HDTV) Bill Murray; Ryan Adams; Misty 10 (N) 8 WQAD News 8 Copeland. at 10PM (N) Blue Bloods “The Bullitt Mustang” (HDTV) A car from a classic film is stolen. (N) 4 Local 4 News (10:35) The Late Show With Steat 10pm (N) phen Colbert (HDTV) Whoopi Gold7 KHQA News at berg; John Kasich. (N) 10 (N) Truth Be Told 6 KWQC TV6 6 Wheel of For- Undateable (HDTV) (N) (Live) “Psychic ChickNews at 6PM (N) tune (N) en” (HDTV) (N) (DVS) Grimm “Clear and Wesen Danger” Dateline NBC “Something Sweet” (HDTV) Nick makes changes to pro- (HDTV) A retired corrections officer is killed. (N) tect his child. (N) (DVS) (10:34) The Tonight Show Starring 6 KWQC TV6 News at 10PM Jimmy Fallon (HDTV) Christoph 10 WGEM News Waltz; Lin-Manuel Miranda. (N) at 10 12 (5:30) PBS New- Iowa Ingredient Washington sHour Week Market to Market Great Performances Retrospective Great Performances Tony Bennett Nightly Business Last Tango in (HDTV) of Chita Rivera’s career. (N) and Lady Gaga perform. Report (N) Halifax 15 The Big Bang Theory The Big Bang Theory MasterChef Junior cooks prepare a World’s Funniest Ross Mathews; signature burger. (DVS) Natasha Leggero. (N) (9:07) Crime Watch Daily (N) 18 The Big Bang Theory The Big Bang Theory MasterChef Junior cooks prepare a World’s Funniest Ross Mathews; signature burger. (DVS) Natasha Leggero. (N) FOX 18 Nine O’Clock News 26 Family Guy (HDTV) The Simpsons Reign “The Price” Mary receives word from her mother. (N) CBS NBC 6 KWQC 10 WGEM News 10 Entertain10 WGEM at 6 (N) ment Tonight (N) Iowa Press Hawaii Five-0 “Na Kama Hele” (HDTV) McGarrett and Lynn’s date turns deadly. (N) America’s Next Top Model (HDTV) Two and a Half (N) Men TMZ (HDTV) (N) Entertainment Tonight (N) Modern Family (HDTV) 2 Broke Girls (HDTV) Two and a Half Men American Dad “CIAPOW” American Dad (HDTV) news CNBC CNN CNN2 CSPAN CSPAN2 FOXN MSNBC American Greed American Greed American Greed Erin Burnett OutFront (N) Anderson Cooper 360 (N) CNN Tonight With Don Lemon (N) Erin Burnett OutFront (N) Anderson Cooper 360 (N) CNN Tonight With Don Lemon (N) (4) Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. (2) U.S. Senate (N) (Live) Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. On Record, Greta Van Susteren The O’Reilly Factor (N) The Kelly File (N) Hardball With Chris Matthews (N) First in the South Democratic Candidates Forum (N) (Live) BIGTEN ESPN ESPN2 FOXS Women’s College Soccer SportsCenter (N) NBA Countdown College Football Countdown (N) UEFA Magazine Pacers Live American Greed (N) American Greed Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown This Is Life With Lisa Ling Forensic Files Forensic Files Forensic Files Forensic Files Hannity (N) The O’Reilly Factor First in the South Democratic Candidates Forum American Greed Special Report Special Report Capitol Hill Capitol Hill The Kelly File Candidates sports Women’s College Volleyball Michigan State at Minnesota. (N) (Live) BTN Live B1G Football & Beyond Field Hockey NBA Basketball Miami Heat at Indiana Pacers. (N) (Live) NBA Basketball Houston Rockets at Sacramento Kings. (N) (Live) College Football Temple at Southern Methodist. From Gerald J. Ford Stadium in Dallas. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) NBA Basketball Miami Heat at Indiana Pacers. (N) (Live) Pacers Live NBA Basketball Miami Heat at Indiana Pacers. family (5) Nanny McPhee ›› (2005, Com- (7:15) Nanny McPhee Returns ›› (2010, Comedy) Emma Thompson, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Rhys Ifans. A nanny The 700 Club (HDTV) uses magic to teach mischievous children a lesson. (PG) ABCFAM edy) Emma Thompson. (PG) A Boy Named Charlie Brown DISN (5) The Game Plan ›› (2007, Com- Bunk’d (N) edy), Madison Pettis (PG) (DVS) Girl Meets World Liv and Maddie (N) Best Friends Whenever Star Wars Rebels The Rebel crew returns to Lothal. Bunk’d Girl Meets World Liv and Maddie NICK The Thundermans SpongeBob SquarePants Harvey Beaks (N) Pig Goat Banana Full House Cricket (N) Full House Full House Full House Friends Friends TOON We Bare Bears (N) World of Gumball Adventure Time Regular Show “Football” (N) The Cleveland Show Family Guy Family Guy Black Jesus (N) Tim & Eric’s Your Pretty Face Bedtime Stories Is Going to Hell King of the Hill Friends cable variety A&E My Haunted House A couple is plagued by visions. My Haunted House A man’s childhood fears come to life. ANIM BET CMT (2) To Be Announced (6:06) Being Mary Jane Last-Standing Last-Standing Tanked: Unfiltered “SHAQ-SIZED” (8:01) Restoration Wild (N) (9:02) Tanked “NBA Wizardry” (10:05) Restoration Wild (7:04) Martin (7:33) Martin (8:02) Martin (8:31) Martin Martin Martin Martin Martin I Love Kellie I Love Kellie Sleepless in Seattle ››› (1993, Romance-Comedy) Tom Hanks, Meg Ryan. (PG) Last-Standing COM (5:56) Jackass 3D ›› (2010, Comedy) Johnny Knoxville, Bam Margera, Ryan Dunn. More outrageous pranks and stunts. (R) DSC E! FOOD FX Gold Rush E! News (N) Diners, Drive Diners, Drive (5) R.I.P.D. › (2013, Action) Gold Rush - The Dirt (N) (8:01) Gold Rush (N) (9:04) Pacific Warriors (N) Botched “Breast Greedy” Botched The Soup The Soup Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive BBQ Blitz (N) Men in Black 3 ›› (2012, Action) Will Smith, Tommy Lee Jones, Josh Brolin. (PG-13) (5) A Princess for Christmas ›› ’Tis the Season for Love (2015, Romance) Sarah Lancaster, Brendan Penny. An out-of-work actress finds romance during Christmastime. A Cookie Cutter Christmas (2014, Drama) Erin Krakow, David HaydnJones. Two rival teachers make a grab for a single father’s heart. (NR) Annie Claus Is Coming to Town Tiny House House Hunters Tiny House HALLMK (2011, Comedy), Roger Moore HGTV House Hunters House Hunters HIST ION INSP LIFE MTV OXYG SCIENCE SPIKE Tiny House My Haunted House A woman sees (9:01) My Haunted House “The Inn- (10:02) My Haunted House “Art Loft (11:01) My visions in her sleep. keeper & Quarantine” & Drowned” Haunted House Futurama Tiny House Futurama “Deci- South Park sion 3012” Tiny House South Park Hunters Int’l Archer “Coyote Lovely” Archer Tanked Wendy Williams Last-Standing Triptank (N) (10:05) Gold Rush Pacific Warriors E! News (N) Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Men in Black 3 ›› (2012, Action) Will Smith. House Hunters Hunters Int’l Ancient Aliens “Secrets of the Mummies” Ancient Aliens “Aliens B.C.” Ancient Aliens Using technology to Ancient Aliens Photographs of Mars (10:03) Ancient Aliens “The Da Vin- (11:01) Ancient detect pyramids. reveal mysteries. ci Conspiracy” Aliens Criminal Minds (DVS) Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman Step It Up Ridiculousness Ridiculousness (4:35) Stepmom (1998) How It’s Made How It’s Made Cops Cops Criminal Minds (DVS) Criminal Minds (DVS) Criminal Minds (DVS) Saving Hope (HDTV) Saving Hope The Waltons “The Long Night” JAG “Adrift” (Part 2 of 2) Walker, Texas Ranger Matlock “The Therapist” Dr. Quinn Step It Up (N) Step It Up (N) The Jacksons: Next Generation The Jacksons: Next Generation Step It Up Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness 8 Mile ››› (2002, Drama) Eminem, Kim Basinger, Brittany Murphy. (R) (7:15) Stepmom ›› (1998, Drama) Julia Roberts, Susan Sarandon, Ed Harris. (PG-13) (9:50) He’s Just Not That Into You (2009) How It’s Made How It’s Made All-American Makers All-American Makers How It’s Made How It’s Made All-American Cops Cops Bellator MMA Live Patricio Pitbull puts his title on the line in a rubber match against Daniel Straus. (N) (11:15) Cops Casino Royale ››› (2006, Action) Daniel Craig, Eva Green, Mads Mikkelsen. James Bond plays poker with a man who finances terrorists. (PG-13) Z Nation “Rozwell” The team search- Haven “Perditus” Nathan tracks es an Air Force base. down a killer. Z Nation “Rozwell” Seinfeld Seinfeld 2 Broke Girls (DVS) 2 Broke Girls (DVS) The Big Bang Theory The Big Bang Theory Happy Gilmore ›› (1996, Comedy) Adam Sandler, Christopher McDonald, Julie Bowen. (PG-13) Cougar Town “Pilot” TLC Say Yes to the Dress Say Yes to the Dress Say Yes to the Dress Say Yes to the Dress Say Yes to the Dress Say Yes to the Dress 90 Day Fiancé (N) Say Yes to the Dress TNT (5) Rush Hour 3 › (2007, Action) Jackie Chan. (DVS) SYFY TBS TRAV Mysteries at the Museum Top Funniest TRUTV Top Funniest Facts of Life TVLND Facts of Life USA Say Yes to the Dress Say Yes to the Dress 1 MasterChef 7 p.m. on 15 18 Youngsters are in the kitchen again as the fourth season of the show’s “Junior Edition” begins with “New Kids on the Chopping Block.” As the hour starts, 24 chefs tackle a mystery box challenge, the result being a hamburger and a side dish unique to each preparer. Host Gordon Ramsay joins Graham Elliot and Christina Tosi on the judging panel. 2 Truth Be Told 3 Hawaii Five-0 4 Grimm 7:30 p.m. on 6 10 As a mixed-faith couple, Mitch and Tracy (Mark-Paul Gosselaar, Vanessa Lachey) debate what to tell Sadie (guest star Sophie Mackenzie Nack) after her favorite chicken at school dies in the new episode “Psychic Chicken.” Things get nutty when Mitch’s sister (guest star Ashley Tisdale) brings her psychic boyfriend (Ryan Cartwright) to a family dinner. 8 p.m. on 4 7 Going on a date with McGarrett (Alex O’Loughlin) might not be the typical social engagement, as Lynn (guest star Sarah Carter) discovers in the new episode “Na Kama Hele” (Hawaiian for “Day Trippers”). He takes her to a deserted island, which might seem romantic, but it also turns out to be the hiding place of a Mob kingpin determined to keep his whereabouts secret. A high-school athlete’s father becomes a gambler’s target. 8 p.m. on 6 10 Parenthood proves to have more than the usual concerns for Nick (David Giuntoli) in the new episode “Clear and Wesen Danger.” Otherworldly enemies make him even more fearful for the safety of Adalind (Claire Coffee) and their child. Monroe and Rosalee (Silas Weir Mitchell, Bree Turner) try to help. The Longest Yard ›› (2005, Comedy) Adam Sandler, Chris Rock, Burt Reynolds. Prisoners The Replacements ›› (2000, Comedy) Keanu Reeves, Gene Hackman, train for a football game against the guards. (PG-13) (DVS) Orlando Jones. (PG-13) (DVS) Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum Top Funniest Top Funniest Top Funniest Top Funniest My Cousin Vinny ››› (1992, Comedy) Joe Pesci, Marisa Tomei. (R) Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at Top Funniest Top Funniest Top Funniest Top Funniest Top Funniest King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Satisfaction “...Through Bondage” “Fight” “Chicago Crossover” “Spousal Privilege” Grace learns about BDSM. VH1 (5) The Dilemma ›› (2011) WGN-A Person of Interest (HDTV) Say Yes to the Dress FRIDAY The Middle “The Sink Hole” TMZ (HDTV) (N) Modern Family “The Cold” Family Guy (HDTV) Top Picks (10:01) Law & Order: Special Victims Unit “Responsible” Law & Order: SVU Back to the Future ››› (1985, Comedy) Michael J. Fox, Christopher Lloyd. (PG) Back to the Future Part II ››› (1989, Comedy) Michael J. Fox. Person of Interest (HDTV) Person of Interest (HDTV) Person of Interest (HDTV) How I Met How I Met How I Met movies AMC (4:30) Under Siege ››› (1992, Action) Steven Seagal. ENCO (4:40) Terminator 2: Judgment Day The Butterfly Effect ›› (2004, Suspense) Ashton Kutcher, Amy Smart, (1991, Science Fiction) Eric Stoltz. iTV. (R) The Guardian ›› (2006, Drama) Kevin Costner, Ashton Kutcher, Sela Ward. iTV. A Coast Guard trainer makes a swimming champ his protege. (PG-13) HBO (4:45) Dawn of the Planet of the Apes ››› (2014) Real Time With Bill Maher (N) (Live) HBO2 Dumb and Dumber To ›› (2014, Comedy) Jim Carrey, Jeff Daniels, Kathleen Turner. (PG-13) MAX (5) Queen of the (6:45) Blackhat ›› (2015, Suspense) Chris Hemsworth, Tang Wei, Viola Davis. Premiere. A The Knick Edwards comes clean to The Knick Edwards comes clean Damned furloughed convict and his partners hunt cybercriminals. (R) Opal. (N) to Opal. SHOW Hard to Kill ›› (1990, Action) Steven Seagal, Kelly LeBrock. Years after Out for Justice ›› (1991, Action) Steven Seagal, William Forsythe. A nearly dying, a policeman seeks revenge. (R) New York cop relentlessly pursues a comrade’s murderer. (R) The Leftovers “Orange Sticker” An old enemy returns. The Leftovers Matt takes his wife outside Miracle. The Maze Runner ›› (2014, Science Fiction) Dylan O’Brien, Kaya Scodelario, Aml Ameen. (PG-13) The Affair Cole rejects Scotty’s plan. The Death of “Superman Lives”: What Happened? (2015, Documentary) (NR) Horrible Bosses 2 (2014) (R) The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies ›› (2014, Fantasy) Ian McKellen. (PG-13) The Knick Boxing ShoBox: The New Generation. (N) (Live) (6:10) Invincible ›› (2006, Biography) Mark Wahlberg, Greg Kinnear. iTV. Cut Bank (2014, Suspense) Liam Hemsworth, Teresa Palmer. iTV Premiere. (R) STARZ The story of football’s Vince Papale. (PG) Real Time With Bill Maher The Walking Dead (9:40) Ash vs Evil Dead “El Jefe” (iTV) (10:25) 22 Jump Street ››› (2014, Comedy) Jonah Hill. TCM (5:15) Vacation From Marriage ››› (1945, Comedy-Drama) Charade ››› (1963, Suspense) Cary Grant, Audrey Hepburn. A woman is targeted in a search for her dead husband’s loot. (NR) And Then There Were None ››› (1945, Mystery) Barry Fitzgerald, Wal- It Terror From ter Huston. Unknown host brings 10 sinners to island. (NR) Beyond Space TMC (4:50) World Trade Center ››› (2006, Drama) (PG-13) Runaway Bride ›› (1999, Romance-Comedy) Julia Roberts, Richard Gere, Joan Cusack. Premiere. (PG) GBF ››› (2013, Comedy) Michael J. Willett, Paul Iacono, Sasha Pieterse. Premiere. (R) (10:35) I Am Divine (2012, Documentary) Michael Musto. 5 Z Nation 9 p.m. on SYFY Things take a decidedly weird turn — even for this series — as the heroes drive through New Mexico, where they witness bright lights in the sky and encounter a beautiful but distracted woman named Bernadette, who leads them on an adventure through an abandoned Air Force base. As they search for zombie aliens, the team discovers what looks like alien technology, in the new episode “Rozwell.” William Sadler stars. www.thehawkeye.com THE HAWK EYE !" BURLINGTON, IOWA Friday • November 6, 2015 9C FUN & ADVICE Family has little sympathy for death of online boyfriend DEAR ABBY: I am a 20-year-old woman. A few Dear Abby months ago, my boyfriend (my very first boyfriend) committed suicide. I absolutely feel destroyed. The problem is, my family doesn’t regard my feelings of grief seriously because our relationship was started and maintained online. We lived several states apart, and while we never met in person, By JEANNE PHILLIPS we talked every night and Universal Press video-chatted many, many Syndicate times. My feelings for him were real. I broke down when I heard the news, and I still hurt, but my family thinks I’m overreacting. They can’t understand how a relationship with someone online can be serious. How can I make them recognize how much pain I’m in? The fact they refuse to recognize this loss hurts me so much more. What do I do? — ALL ALONE IN LOUISIANA DEAR ALL ALONE: Please accept my sympathy for the loss of someone you cared about so deeply. That your parents would minimize your feelings is sad, but it says more about them and their level of sensitivity than about the depth of your relationship with him. Many serious relationships have started online, and marriages as well, and I understand you are left mourning all the things that might have been. At 20, you are no longer a child. You can find emotional support elsewhere. Talk to your clergyman or clergywoman, if you have one, or look online for a grief support group you can join. There you will be able to vent your feelings safely with others who understand what you are experiencing right now. DEAR ABBY: My parents divorced four years ago. Mom lives with my husband and me. We have a great relationship with her, and she never speaks ill of my father. She has moved on, found a new direction in life and a new boyfriend we all like very much. Dad moved in with the woman he cheated on Mom with, but their relationship fell apart. He has never stopped speaking ill of Mom. When things aren’t going well for him, he causes trouble by showing up at Mom’s workplace and making a scene. He’ll also come over to our house unannounced to talk badly about her. He was a great father until a few years ago when all this trouble started. I feel torn between trying to continue a relationship with him or cutting him out of my life like a bad daughter. What should I do? — CAUGHT IN THE MIDDLE IN CALIFORNIA DEAR CAUGHT: Your father’s behavior is sick. Depending upon how disruptive he is when he shows up at your mother’s workplace, suggest she consider getting a restraining order preventing him from acting out that way. She must have a very understanding employer to have tolerated it, because that kind of disruption has been known to cost people their jobs. And when your dad shows up at your home unannounced, speak up. Tell him you and your husband don’t like it. Make clear his nasty comments about your mother aren’t welcome, and neither will he be unless he calls first to see if a visit is all right with everyone. His misbehavior continues because you have allowed it. ARIES (March 21-April 19) ####" Pace yourself, Horoscopes and handle as much as you can. Take a walk in order to clear your head. Tonight: Don’t push yourself too hard. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) #####" A friend is likely to need your time. It could be as simple as listening to his or her problem. Tonight: Let your imagination rock and roll. GEMINI (May 21-June By JACQUELINE 20) ###" Share your feelBIGAR ings with a trusted friend. King Features You might be surprised by Stars Show the Kind the reaction and suggestion. The of Day You’ll Have: Tonight: At home. #####"- Dynamic CANCER (June 21-July ####"- Positive ###"- Average 22) ####" You might be ##"- So-so having a difficult time read- #"- Difficult ing someone else. Let this go for now, and don’t worry so much. Tonight: Catch up on a loved one’s news. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ###" Use caution with money matters. You are best off postponing conversations for a few days. Tonight: Treat a pal to TGIF. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) #####" Step into your new, more confident image. You won’t allow a bad situation to get the best of you. Tonight: Invite a special person to a favorite haunt. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ###"Step back graciously. This position of lesser importance will give you more freedom to do what you want. Tonight: Out and about. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) #####" Zero in on your priorities, even if you’re surrounded by several people. You seem to get exactly what you want. Tonight: With friends. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ####" A request might stop you in your tracks. Use your instincts when dealing with this person. Tonight: Count on being available and needed. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ####" Keep your eyes open, and look for the most universal interpretations of what is going on around you.Tonight: Your call, but opt for something different. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) #####"A partner or associate will make a request. Indulge this person. Tonight: With a favorite person. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) ####"What you feel you’d like to do might be very different from what is happening. Try to detach in order to complete your plans. Use caution with finances, as you could make a simple mistake, like miscounting your change. Tonight: Make it memorable. People Dilbert Roker set for a 50-state marathon Non Sequitur Associated Press For Better or for Worse The Lockhorns Garfield The Family Circus Al Roker is testing his endurance again, and this time, he’s picking up frequent flier miles. The “Today” show personality, a year after completing a marathon 34-hour weather forecast, plans to give reports from all 50 states within a Roker week, starting today. If successful, he’ll try to have it certified as a Guinness World Record — not that anyone has done it before him. Last year’s stunt raised $70,000 for the USO. This year, Roker’s trip is benefiting Feeding America. “If we can shine a light on something that’s a problem, I’m willing to do anything,” he said. Roker takes care of the longest travel issue first, starting today in Honolulu before flying to Anchorage, Alaska, Saturday. Then the real fun begins. Starting in Spokane, Wash., Sunday, Roker travels through the Northwest that day. He cheats a little Monday, visiting the Four Corners, enabling him to cross off Arizona, Utah, New Mexico and Colorado at one stop, and then gradually makes his way East. He’ll be delivering forecasts throughout his travels, either on “Today,” local NBC affiliates, cable networks like CNBC, MSNBC or the Weather Channel and online. Planes, trains and automobiles will shuttle him across the country, and Roker is packing a few books and a supply of movies on his tablet. Johnny Cash’s travelogue song “I’ve Been Everywhere” has been referenced. Roker promises not to sing it. The NBC veteran will be dependent on the weather to keep to his timetable. A bad storm or two might force some rescheduling. “Don’t think it’s not lost on me,” he said. Roker hopes to begin next Friday in Stamford, Conn., before making the 45-minute commute to Manhattan and the finish line at the “Today” show studio. Bridge Blondie Forgive and remember By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency Zits Beetle Bailey Baby Blues “Women say they can forgive and forget,” Cy the Cynic grumbled to me. “The problem is that they don’t forget what they forgive.” “Wendy is still on your case?” I asked. Cy, a chauvinist, and Wendy, my club’s feminist, always are at odds. “We were partners in this deal,” Cy said, “and I led a heart against 2NT. Wendy took the king and returned a heart, and I ran the hearts. Dummy pitched a diamond and a spade, and Wendy threw three diamonds. She couldn’t afford a spade or a club.” “When I led the king of diamonds next, Wendy grimaced and threw a spade. South won and ran the spades to make his contract, and Wendy savaged me. She said I’d done the same thing three years ago, she’d forgiven me and now I’d done it to her again.” Cy arranged for Wendy to be squeezed. At trick three, Cy should lead the king of diamonds. If South takes the ace, he can cash only six more tricks, and the defense has the rest. If instead South ducks, Cy runs the hearts for down one. North dealer Both sides vulnerable 10C www.thehawkeye.com Friday • November 6, 2015 NEW 2015 RAM 1500 SLT CREW CAB M S RP $32,060 M SRP $46,985 Shott Price $43,831 Reb ate -$7,000 SA LE 36 ,8 31 $ * OR *M ustfina nc e w ith CCAP 25,934 4,000Re b a te + 0% -75m o s . $ M SRP $31,125 Shott Price $29,900 Reb ate -$3,000 SA LE $26,900* p er OR mo. 1,000Re b a te + 0% -75m o s . $ p er OR mo. *M ustfina nc e w ith CCAP $ p er OR mo. 6 AT THIS P R IC E 1,500Re b a te + 0% -75m o s . $ C51 1 02 S AL E PRICE 0% for 66 m o. plus 1ST TW O P AY M ENTS * OV ER 4,000 $ OFF M S RP $35,040 30,000 $ S HO TTE N K IRK PRICE N EW 201 5 CH EV R O LET M ALIBU FR EE OR 1 9,732 $ ** 1 8,392 $ S HO TTE N K IRK PRICE SO N IC K1 6096 #G 15764 M S RP $23,61 5 N EW 201 6 CH EV R O LET N EW 201 6 KIA FO R TE NEW 2015 CHEVRO LET SO NIC LT A shen G ray, M yLink, Backup C am era, A lloy W heels LT C5201 8 M SRP $18,470 SA LE 15,700 0 229 A $ d o wn $ 0 for 66 m o. plus % 1ST TW O P AY M ENTS p er mo. FR EE OR 1 6,268 $ ** 1 5,679 $ S HO TTE N K IRK PRICE TR AV ER SE K1 6078 Blue, Rem ote Start, O nstar, 1 Year C ustom er C are M S RP $1 9,01 5 N EW 201 6 CH EV R O LET N EW 201 6 KIA SO R EN TO NEW 2015 CHEVRO LET CRUZE LT #G 16107 AW D 2LT M SRP $21,700 Shott Price $21,548 Reb ate -$3,775 SA LE T4 2033 17,773 249 249 $ IM P ALA C51 1 06 *M ustfina nc e w ith CCAP $ N EW 201 5 CH EV R O LET LS M SRP $26,840 Shott Price $26,046 Reb ate -$4,000 SA LE $22,046* d o wn 26,591 $ S HO TTE N K IRK PRICE 2LT R oof,Lea ther,Sa fety P kg . K1 5972 Velvet Red, 8.4 Uconnect, Rem ote Start, Backup C am era 0 349 OFF N EW 201 5 KIA O P TIM A #C 115144 $ OV ER 9 ,000 $ N EW 201 5 JEEP CH ER O KEE LATITU D E NEW 2015 CHRYSLER 200 LIM ITED $ * 22,974 2,500Re b a te + 0% -75m o s . $ EQ U IN O X M S RP $29,545 J1 581 7 and N O PA Y M EN TS FO R 90 DA Y S. M S RP $27,1 35 M SRP $23,085 Shott Price $22,839 Reb ate -$4,000 SA LE $18,839* d o wn up to 4,000 $ Silver, Sirius/X M Radio, V6 3.6L, A m erican Value Package 0 29 2 36,960 RE BA TE S N EW 201 6 CH EV R O LET T4 204 3 $ PL US 37,51 5 $ FW D LT S AL E PRICE 75 m os . #D 115132 $ OFF S HO TTE N K IRK PRICE M S RP $46,31 0 A llnew C hryslers com e w ith 0% for NEW 2015 DO DG E G RAND CARAVAN SE $ OV ER 6,000 $ C 1 51 007 Black, 3.2L V6, Trailer Tow G roup, Rem ote Start & H eated Seats 0 38 9 * M S RP $47,350 N EW 201 5 R AM 1 500 SLT CR EW CAB 4X 4 #J115262 $ T4 1 4 35 S AL E PRICE $ NEW 2015 JEEP CHERO KEE LATITUDE 4X4 d o wn SILV ER AD O CR EW CAB 1 LT 5.3 4X 4 C 1 51 68 Bighorn, Blue Streak, Uconnect 8.4, Rem ote Start, H eated Seats $ N EW 201 5 CH EV R O LET N EW 201 5 CH R YSLER TO W N & CO U N TR Y #D 115190 B* $ d o wn $ *LEV $13,237 NEW 2015 CHEVRO LET SILVERADO 1500 CREW CAB LT 4X4 Z71 #G 115253 p er mo. 0% for 66 m o. plus 1ST TW O P AY M ENTS K1 61 84 FR EE OR 24,973 $ ** CR U ZE LT B a cku p Ca m era C50000 39 ,725 $ 36,1 84 $ S HO TTE N K IRK PRICE N EW 201 6 CH EV R O LET N EW 201 6 KIA SO U L W hite, Boards 6”, Bedliner, Rem ote Start M SRP $49,430 Shott Price $46,225 Reb ate -$6,500 SA LE M S RP $41 ,750 * *M ustfina nc e w ith W ells or GM F 0 for 66 m o. plus % 1ST TW O P AY M ENTS FR EE OR 1 5,940 $ ** M S RP $21 ,620 S HO TTE N K IRK PRICE 1 8,573 $ N EW 201 5 G M C NEW 2015 G M C TERRAIN SLE SIER R A #G 15856 Iridium , O nstar, Backup C am era, G reat M PG CR EW CAB SLT 4X 4 G4 1 4 1 6 M SRP $27,685 SA LE 23,532 $ Friends & N eighbors Pricing on ALL NEW FO R D S! M S RP $49,880 S HO TTE N K IRK PRICE 40,000 $ 1- 8 66- 324- 9137 w w w .s hotte n k irk s u p e rs tore .c om 309 S . Gea r Aven u e • W es t Bu rlin gto n TO L L - FR EE 1-8 66-330 -138 8 L O C A L C A L L S 319-372-6880 O N TH E W ES T EN D O F FO R T M AD IS O N (A) 0 d o w n , 3.5% fo r 84 m o s . (B) $249 d o w n , 27 m o s . *M u s tfin a n ce w ith Chrys ler, s a le p rice in clu d es reb a te. **$2,500 reb a te p lu s 1.9% APR 66 m o . M u s tfin a n ce w ith K IA. w w w .shottenkirkgm giant.com In clu d es a ll GM reb a tes . 427851