A 1955 Chevrolet Bel Air
Transcription
A 1955 Chevrolet Bel Air
Cornerback Vontae Davis looks to improve on 2014 season REGGIE HAYES’ COLTS TRAINING CAMP COVERAGE, PAGE 1S Drones on the farm AUTO REVIEW Chevy Suburban What used to be on the battlefields has made its way to farmers’ fields. 1L The popular SUV is out to prove bigger is still better. BUSINESS, 1B 182nd year No. 186 Your Town. Your Voice. www.news-sentinel.com Newsstand: $1.00 W E D N E S D A Y, A U G U S T 5 , 2 0 1 5 A BIWEEKLY SERIES Fort Wayne, Indiana UNIQUE CARS, OWNERS Tom Stinnett A 1955 Chevrolet Bel Air He fully restored and named the old race car in memory of his late wife BY ELLIE BOGUE [email protected] [email protected] Lutheran Hospital is preparing for a major expansion of its campus at 7950 W. Jefferson Blvd. Although construction is not imminent, the hospital’s parent company, IOM Health System, has asked the Fort Wayne Board of Zoning Appeals for permission to erect three medical office buildings and expand two existing parking structures. BZA approval is needed in part because two of the buildings and one of the parking expansions would exceed normal height limits in the “airport overlay” planning district intended to minimize possible obstructions near Fort Wayne International Airport. According to the application to be considered at a public hearing Sept. 17, the plan calls for a new four-story office containing 125,000 square feet of space; a five-story building with 100,000 square feet; a 75,000-square-foot, three-story office; addition of two stories to an existing three-story parking structure, adding 402 spaces; and Photos by Ellie Bogue of The News-Sentinel Tom Stinnett and his 1955 Chevrolet Bel Air, “Candy’s Dream.” The name is in memory of his wife, Candy, who died in 2006. The antenna is decorated with a pink ribbon emblem, a reminder of Stinnett’s wife, who died from breast cancer and bone cancer. Stinnett and his nephew installed this engine last winter. It’s the eighth engine that’s been in the car. See STINNETT, Page 6A GOP DEBATE LINEUP: Trump and Bush in; Fiorina and Perry out Organizers challenged by 17-candidate field. BY STEVE PEOPLES of The Associated Press CLEVELAND — It’s the first really good news — and really bad news — for Republicans seeking the presidential nomination: Who’s in the first prime-time debate and who’s not. In: billionaire businessman Donald Trump, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and Ohio Gov. John Kasich. CONTACT US To offer a news tip, call 1-260-461-8354 or go to www.news-sentinel.com For home delivery, call 1-800-324-0505 More contacts, Page 2A. © 2015 > Out: former tech executive Carly Fiorina, former Texas Gov. Rick Perry, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, former New York Gov. George Pataki and former Virginia Gov. Jim Gilmore. The largest field of contenders in modern memory challenged debate organizers, who wanted to ensure that the event Thursday night in Cleveland didn’t turn into a 17-ring circus. Fox News relied on an average of five national polls to decide the lineups for the prime-time debate and the consolation See GOP, Page 3A TODAY’S PAPER Business The project is still in its early phases. BY KEVIN LEININGER T om Stinnett and his wife, Candy, bought a 1955 Chevrolet Bel Air in 1998. The idea was to restore the car, then take it to cruise-ins and car shows. The day Tom Stinnett retired from the U.S. Postal Service at 55 was the day Candy was diagnosed with breast cancer and bone cancer. In many ways, Tom Stinnett said his retirement couldn’t have come at a better time because he had the time to take care of her — driving her to her many appointments and nursing To see video her when the treat- of Stinnett’s ments made her ill. Bel Air ride, On her good days find this story at they would go to NEWS-SENTINEL.COM. cruise-ins, but they cut back on the car shows. In 2006, Cindy died. It was then that he decided to have a full restoration done on the vehicle, which was originally a race car, in Candy’s honor. So he took it to Barry’s Speed Shop in New Haven. The car is now two colors, blue on blue. He had a custom interior, which is also a twotone blue, done in Ligonier at Bohde’s Custom Interiors. Over the years, Stinnett has had eight different engines in the car. His nephew, Rick Stevens, builds the Lutheran Hospital planning to add three buildings 1B Features 2B Classifieds 4L Lotteries 2A Comics 4-5B Obituaries 2L Editorials 4A Television 3B > See LUTHERAN, Page 3A Mood relaxed as Diana Krall plays Embassy Concert stirs up nostalgia for the 1920s and vaudeville era. A COLUMN BY JAMES GRANT [email protected] Associated Press file photos Recent poll results for Republican presidential candidates Donald Trump, left, and Jeb Bush, right, earned them a place in the first primetime Republican presidential debate Thursday. THE MOOD TUESDAY night was relaxed, reflective and most definitely musical as Diana Krall and her five-piece band performed a stellar show at Embassy Theatre to an ecstatic and appreciative crowd. The audience was clearly in Krall’s corner from the moment she walked out on the stage until they gave her a standing ovation after her last encore. Throughout a 17-song set, Krall and her band — Anthony Wilson (guitar), Dennis Crouch (bass), Stuart Duncan (fiddle), Karriem Riggins (drums) and Patrick Warren See GRANT, Page 5A ONLY AT NEWS-SENTINEL.COM ‘Opening Arguments’ News-Sentinel editorial page editor Leo Morris chimes in with his thoughts on the latest news locally, statewide and around the world. Read his newest blog post at news-sentinel.com. > WEATHER 7-DAY FORECAST, 5A TONIGHT: Partly cloudy with a low of 61. Sunset at 8:53 p.m. THU: Partly sunny HIGH 79 ‖ LOW 60 FRI: Partly cloudy HIGH 81 ‖ LOW 63