Local man charged for adult film
Transcription
Local man charged for adult film
Local Sports Ready for spring? ISMS wins Page A2 L K who’s on the front page . . . Brought to you by . . . City Vision Center Dr. Hogue OD 260.244.7542 Page A10 With our new technologically advanced contact lenses, you can see your phone better. Post&Mail The 513 N. Line St., Columbia City columbiacityeye.com Wednesday Weather Outlook High 30, Low 16 Thursday Friday High 31, Low 20 High 33, Low 17 Whitley County’s Most Complete News Source Tuesday, March 1, 2016 •Elizabeth Mattern• Volume 115 Issue No. 50 50¢ Local man charged for adult film By NICK RUPERT The Post & Mail SOUTH WHITLEY — A 46 year-old South Whitley man was arrested last week after playing an adult film in the presence of two young girls. South Whitley Police contacted the Whitley County Sheriff’s Department Jan. 14 to report that Andrew Spriggs had engaged in inappropriate be- Kosciusko sheriff indicted on bribery, intimidation charges PLYMOUTH, Ind. (AP) — A northern Indiana sheriff was indicted Monday on 10 felony counts, including bribery and official misconduct, alleging he accepted $40,000 to allow special privileges for a jail inmate and a visitor. Kosciusko County Sheriff Aaron Rovenstine is accused of allowing unrecorded and unsupervised visitations and phone calls between the inmate and the visitor. Rovenstine did so “with the intent to hinder the punishment” of the inmate, the indictment stated. The indictment also stated that Rovenstine threatened a law enforcement officer. Rovenstine did not respond to an email and two phone messages from The Associated Press requesting comment Monday. Court records do not indicate whether he has hired an attorney. Rovenstine, 56, is charged with three counts of bribery, one count of intimidation, one count of assisting a criminal and five counts of official misconduct. An Elkhart County Jail spokeswoman said Rovenstine was taken into custody shortly before noon Monday and released on $10,000 surety bond. The indictment alleges the misconduct started in March 2011 and continued into August 2015. The indictment alleges Rovenstine took the bribes from Kevin Bronson while he was an inmate at the Kosciusko County Jail. Bronson is charged with three felony charges of corrupt business influence and seven felony charges of intimidation. Rovenstine, Page A5 Man allegedly viewed adult video in front of child havior in the presence of a young girl, according to a case report by the Whitley County Sheriff’s Department. A forensic interview was conducted involving the victim, the Whitley County Department of Child Services and the Whitley County Sheriff’s Department on Jan. 19. The victim disclosed that she was spending the night with her 12-year-old friend when the incident occurred. Spriggs allegedly turned on a movie titled “Evil Sex” while the victim was in the room with him. The report says the victim asked Spriggs several times over a 10-minute pe- riod to stop the film before he turned it off and told her not to tell her parents. The victim did tell her parents about the incident, which led to an investigation and, ultimately, Spriggs’ arrest last Thursday. The event allegedly occurred between the dates of Dec. 20 and Dec. 23, 2015. Spriggs made bail later the day of his arrest and appeared in Whitley County Superior Court Monday afternoon for an initial hearing. His bail was a $10,000, 10-percent bond. Spriggs is charged with dissemination of matter harmful to minors, a level 6 felony. Andrew Spriggs CCPD officers graduate from ILEA By NICOLE MINIER The Post & Mail Photo contributed Columbia City Police Officers Nick Metzger and Alan Meeks graduated from the Indiana Law Enforcement Academy on Friday. Joining them for the ceremony were Chief Tony Hively and Captain Gary Parrett. From left: Hively, Metzger, Meeks and Parrett. COLUMBIA CITY — Two of Columbia City’s new police officers graduated from the Indiana Law Enforcement Academy last week. Nick Metzger and Alan Meeks spent the past 15 weeks traveling to Plainfield to learn the ins and outs of police work. Each week of the 15-week academy had a different area of focus, from traffic stops to criminal law and other various scenarios. “We are very proud of them,” said Columbia City Police Captain Gary Parrett. “They are doing a really good job.” Metzger and Meeks were hired in July 2015 with little law enforcement background. The pair completed inhouse training before going to the Law Enforcement Academy, which began in November. Parrett said they will have more training before they are on their own as patrolmen. During the past 15 weeks, the officers were only allowed to come home on weekends, putting their personal lives on hold. “They are very dedicated,” Parrett said. Columbia City’s Police Department has selected two more policemen to replace retired officers. Local history buffs advancing to state Columbia City earns many awards at National History Day SOUTH BEND — Several Columbia City students won awards at the National History Day competition at Saint Mary’s College last weekend. Approximately 270 students from nine schools competed for a chance to advance to the state contest on Saturday, April 23 at Ivy Tech’s campus in downtown Indianapolis. National History Day in Indiana is a year-long program dedicated to enhancing history education in elementary and secondary schools. Students in grades four through 12 explore a historical subject and then use their research to create imaginative exhibits, original performances, media documentaries, websites and papers. The 2016 theme is “Exploration, Encounter, Exchange in History.” One elementary school student, Isaac Rentschler, of Little Turtle, won first place with his individual exhibit. His brother, Ian Rentschler, of Indian Springs Middle School, earned first place in the Junior Individual Documentary division. All other local winners attend Columbia City High School, and are taught by the Rentschler boys’ “Like” us on Facebook, follow us on Twitter @ThePostandMail or visit www.thepostandmail.com Contact us for subscriptions, advertising or news: 260-244-5153 or 260-625-3879 mother, Kristin, in AP World History. Those winners include: •Amber Deno, Jaelyn Himes and Molly Luther, first place, senior group exhibits. •Tyler Hollis, Robert Sheets and Nicolas Decker, second place, senior group exhibits. History, Page A2 Scan and visit A2 News Tuesday, March 1, 2016 House committee advances contentious teacher salary bill INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — A measure to curtail the bargaining abilities of teachers’ unions by granting Indiana school districts the authority to negotiate higher pay with individual teachers was advanced Monday by a House committee. The contentious teacher pay bill moved forward despite GOP Senate leader David Long declaring the issue dead last week. The House Education Committee voted 7-4 to advance the bill, which is opposed by teachers’ unions and some school administrators who say such benefits should be negotiated through collective bargaining. They say many districts have a limited pool of money, which means those who are paid more could take away from resources available for all teachers. “This bill ... is less about giving a few teachers more money,” said Gail Zeheralis, a lobbyist for the Indiana State Teachers Association. She added that it’s “more about devaluing the rest of them.” The debate comes as state officials and local school leaders have considered steps to address teacher shortages as the number of first-time teaching licenses issued by the state Department of Education has declined by 33 percent over the past five years. Some districts have negotiated agreements allowing them to pay individual teachers more. But those abilities are on hold pending the outcome of a case currently before the Indiana Supreme Court. Supporters of the idea say it would give school districts flexibility to fill their classroom vacancies. They say some school districts are at a competitive disadvantage because other districts with more money can recruit their best teachers by offering them more pay. But critics say the bill lacks transparency because it would allow salary agreements to be reached by local school boards during closed-door meetings. While Long declared the issue dead last week, House Education Committee Chairman Bob Behning, R-Indianapolis, says he wants to advance the measure despite intense efforts by teachers’ unions to scuttle the bill. Teachers’ unions targeted individual lawmakers on social media over the weekend, urging them to vote against the bill. The measure that House GOP leaders are now advancing was previously approved by the Senate before Long had a change of heart. The Senate last week killed a similar bill that the House had previously approved. Long called for the bill to be scrapped because it is “misperceived by some as something that would be harmful to teachers.” He said lawmakers should work with teachers and come back with a more collaborative bill next year. History, Post & Mail • www.thepostandmail.com The Judge blocks Indiana’s Syrian refugee order INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — A federal judge in Indianapolis on Monday blocked Republican Gov. Mike Pence’s order that barred state agencies from helping Syrian refugees resettle in Indiana, saying the governor’s directive “clearly discriminates” against refugees from the war-torn country. The ruling grants a request for a preliminary injunction from Exodus Refugee Immigration, which helps resettle refugees in Indiana. The group sued shortly after Pence issued his order in November, saying the change would hurt aid groups by withholding reim- bursements for housing and medical care to assist Syrian refugees. Exodus and other organizations have continued to resettle Syrian refugees, though the state has sought to withhold funds earmarked for resettlements. Four Syrian refugees were settled in January, with Exodus planning to settle nearly 200 more this year, Monday’s opinion said. More than two dozen states, most with Republican governors, have taken similar action to suspend Syrian resettlement programs. Pence released a statement saying he stood by his decision and would quickly appeal. The governor has repeatedly cited the November attacks in Paris as justification, noting that a passport found near one of the suicide bombers had been registered along the route asylum seekers from Syria were taking through Europe. In her 36-page opinion, U.S. District Judge Tanya Walton Pratt said the state had a compelling concern to protect its residents, but that withholding federal grant money from the aid group “in no way furthers the state’s asserted interest in the safety of Indiana residents.” Signs of spring Post & Mail photo / Linda Hoskins Due to another warm day on Sunday, hostas plants are beginning to emerge. Hostas are exceedingly popular perennials that grow well in moist, shady areas. from A1 •Abigail Schrader, Breanna Larh, Lauren Keller and Whitney Shelton, runner up, senior group exhibits. •Mollie Baar and Haylee Coyle, runner-up, senior group exhibits. •Allison Conrad, Blake Deno and Braden Whitacre, first place, senior group websites. •Sarah Peterson, second place, senior papers. •Sydney Korte, first place, senior individual exhibits. •Bryce Banks, second place, senior individual exhibits. •Kylee Longenbaugh, runner up, senior individual exhibits. •Lenah Beck, first place, senior individual websites. Eric Burkholder and Eric Yager, first place, senior group documentaries. All first, second, third and runners up will advance to the state competition. T o a d v e r T i s e o n T h i s f e aT u r e pa g e , c o n Ta c T y o u r p o s T & M a i l a d r e p T o d ay Business Visit these area businesses for great deals! 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Fisher Chili Cheese Hot Dogs..................... $4.29/16 oz. pkg. Check Post & Mail Website or Like Krider’s on Facebook. Valued subscriber of the day: Erich Zummack, of South Whitley Facebook friend of the day: Diana Lesley Obituaries Theodore ‘Teddy’ Minnick, 68 Nov. 27, 1947 — Feb. 28, 2016 Theodore “Teddy” Minnick, 68, of Columbia City, passed away at 9:23 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 28, 2016 at Parkview Regional Medical Center, Fort Wayne. Born Nov. 27, 1947 in Fort Wayne, he was the son of Theodore J., Jr. and Magdalena A. (Vorich) Minnick. He graduated from Central Catholic High School with the Class of 1966. He served in the U.S. Army before becoming a truck driver. He drove for more than 36 years, retiring from USF Holland in 2008. During this time Minnick he achieved the Million Safe Miles award. On March 12, 1981, he married Mary A. Carpenter in Columbia City. Teddy enjoyed spending time with his family and was a big supporter of his daughter and grandchildren in any activity they participated in. After retirement, he was a security officer at Chain O’Lakes where he and his family loved to camp. Survivors include his loving wife of 34 years, Mary Minnick; daughter, Lori Leeanne Straub, of Columbia City; sister, Sharon (Ron) Walden, of West Palm Beach, Fla.; brothers, Richard Minnick, of Gas City and Robert (Georgeann) Minnick, of Fort Wayne; grandchild, Maddie and Mason Straub; son-in-law, Adam Straub, of Columbia City; six nieces; and four nephews. He was preceded in death by his parents and sister, Rosemarie Recht. Visitation will be from 2 to 8 p.m. Thursday, March 3 at DeMoney-Grimes, a Life Story Funeral Home, 600 Countryside Dr., Columbia City. Memorial donations may be made in his memory to Lung Cancer Alliance. To read Teddy’s life story or to send his family online condolences, visit www.demoneygrimes.com. News Tuesday, March 1, 2016 A3 CCPD Chief Hively speaks to Columbia City Rotarians COLUMBIA CITY — Columbia City’s new police chief was the speaker at last week’s Columbia City Rotay Club meeting. CCPD Chief Tony Hively was introduced by Whitley County Prosecutor Matt Rentschler. The two criminal justice leaders first met when they were freshmen at Columbia City High School. Hively joined the U.S. Army immediately after high school in 1988. His deployment has varied from Desert Storm in Iraq to spending two years as a drill sergeant. He has also been stationed in Germany and Guantanomo Bay in Cuba. Hively has achieved the highest enlisted rank in the Army — Sergeant Major. The new police chief said policies started by his predecessor, former chief Tim Longenbaugh, match with his opinions as well. “We both agreed on the direction the department is headed,” Hively told Rotarians. Currently, the department has 18 full-time officers with another to be added soon. The department has one reserve officer. “It’s really hard to keep reserve of- ficers active because the state mandates 24 hours of continuing education every year, along with firearms training,” Hively said. “When you also work full-time at another job, it can become almost impossible to continue.” In Longenbaugh’s tenure, he had to hire many new officers after veteran policemen retired. Hively said he expects more of the same in the next four years, with potentially 4-5 more ready to retire. He noted there are 24 police vehicles in the department, and the department has used body cameras since 2012 — a hot topic in national news in recent months. “Our top priority coming up is to upgrade our communication equipment — especially the computers,” Hively said. Hively also mentioned a mentoring program, where the CCPD can use Fort Wayne departments for training its personnel. The CCPD also has a new Facebook page, where the department will inform the public about tax scams, con artists and various alerts. Hively said he hopes to reinstate the K-9 program, and hopes to start a “Talk-to-a-cop” over a cup of cof- Chief Tony Hively fee, which appears to be popular with adults. “A similar approach for children would be with an ice cream cone,” Hively said. Hively said he also hopes to improve the Blue River Trail so an ATV can patrol the length of the trail. A Rotarian questioned combining the city and county communications departments, to which Hively responded, “we do have a committee looking into that as well.” More than one may have been GOP badly split as involved in Ft. Wayne shootings Trump, Clinton seek FORT WAYNE, Ind. (AP) — Police said Monday that multiple people may have been involved in the fatal shooting last week of two men and a teenager in a Fort Wayne house. Officer Michael Joyner said the manner in which the victims were killed "would make one believe that more than one individual was involved." He declined to offer details, referring questions about the victims' injuries to the local coroner. Joyner also declined to say whether police have identified any possible suspects in the Wednesday killings. But he said the investigation was "very active" and urged anyone with information to come for- ward. He noted the house was known to police, saying one person associated with the home who wasn't present during the shootings is "known to have gang involvement." Allen County Coroner's Office investigator Rebecca Stuttle said information about the victims' injuries wasn't being disclosed because it was part of the ongoing investigation. The victims have been identified as 23-year-old Mohamedtaha Omar, 20-year-old Adam Mekki and 17-year-old Muhannad Adam Tairab. A remembrance service was held Saturday for Omar and Tairab, who were both Muslim. Darfur Super Tuesday wins People's Association founder and vice president Motasim Adam, who visited with the families Saturday, said all three were originally from Sudan. He said people from Darfur living in the United States showed up for the remembrance on Saturday to "show solidarity and to send their condolences." A funeral service for Mekki, who was Christian, is scheduled for Tuesday at the Carmichael Funeral Service in Fort Wayne. Joyner dismissed speculation the victims' were targeted because of their race or religion, noting that two victims were Muslim and one was Christian. He said police "know definitively this was not a hate crime." VALDOSTA, Ga. (AP) — On the eve of Super Tuesday’s crucial primaries, a sharp new divide erupted between Republicans who pledge to fall in line behind Donald Trump if he wins their party’s nomination and others who insist they can never back the bombastic billionaire. The fissure could have major implications beyond the primaries, exposing the looming challenges in uniting the party after the election, no matter who wins. Nebraska’s Ben Sasse, a rising star among conservatives, became the first current senator to publicly raise the prospect of backing a third-party option if Trump clinches the nomination. In a letter posted on Facebook late Sunday, Sasse urged Republicans to consider whether a party led by Trump would still represent their interests. “If our party is no longer working for the things we believe in — like defending the sanctity of life, stopping Obamacare, protecting the Second Amendment, etc. — then people of good Tuesday, Page A6 House panel passes medical open to the public LEGION malpractice cap increase INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Medical malpractice victims would be able to receive more compensation under a measure an Indiana House committee approved Monday that would update the payment cap for the first time in nearly 18 years. The bill, which passed the Judiciary Committee 11-1, would increase the limit on the amount victims can receive by $400,000 to $1.65 million. It would then gradually increase every four years until 2031 to keep up with inflation, with a final cap of $2.25 million. The bill now heads to the full House for consideration. "My goal is that we address those in a periodic increase because we the Legislature don't do a very good job with keeping pace with the cost of living," Bedford Republican Sen. Brent Steele said. "I think it's extremely important that we put periodic increases in it so the act jeeps its stability and doesn't run into what it's run into now." Steele also said the proposal would protect the cap from constitutional challenges that may arise since the cap does not keep pace with inflation. But the measure was originally the basis of a Senate bill, authored by Steele, which previously died in the Senate. Steele has said he aimed to find a compromise between physicians who are worried about ballooning malpractice insurance costs and lawyers who represent patients injured or killed because of medical mistakes. The House committee revived the measure Monday after stripping an unrelated bill in a last-ditch effort to shove the proposal forward. The move came amid objections from medical associations that opposed the cap increase saying doctors would not be able to absorb the costs as their malpractice insurance premiums would also rise. Though most opponents supported the initial $400,000 increase, they largely opposed the continuing increase. Mary Abernathy, executive director of Medical Education at St. Vincent Indianapolis Hospital, said increased liability costs could also deter students from wanting to become physicians in Indiana. Islamic Society chief says Muslims refuse to be victims PLAINFIELD, Ind. (AP) — American Muslims refuse to be victims in their own country, the secretary general of the Islamic Society of North America said Monday after vulgar, antiMuslim graffiti was spray-painted on an exterior wall of the group's headquarters in suburban Indianapolis. "Muslims will not abandon our faith simply because of some spray paint or even worse," Hazem Bata said at a news conference at which he was joined by hundreds of members of other faiths and interfaith groups to condemn the vandalism, lend their support to the Muslim community and call on lawmakers to approve an Indiana hate-crimes law. The graffiti applied Sunday morning while Muslims were praying inside the headquarters' mosque included profanity, racial epithets and references to suicide bombings and the Islamic State The spray paint has been washed away, but ISNA's interfaith partners "are still here," Bata said. "I want to thank the vandals for highlighting the fact that the bonds between Muslims and their fellow Americans and the bonds between Muslims and their brothers and sisters in other faiths is stronger than the bond between spray paint and brick," Bata said. He also suggested anybody thinking of doing something similar to simply knock on the door of the headquarters located about 15 miles west of Indianapolis. "If you're going to bother to drive all the way to a mosque, walk up to the front door. Instead of spray painting the wall around the front door, just try knocking instead. We will gladly open our doors to you. We will invite you in. We will answer any questions you have. More than likely, we're going to feed you some really good kebabs and biryani. We're going to break bread together. And you'll walk away with a full stomach, as well as having learned something about your fellow Americans," Bata said. 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Green Sense Farms in Portage, Ind., which operates the country's largest vertical farm, detailed its proposal at a panel discussion last October at Ivy Tech. The plan is to build a $3 million, 20,000-square-foot vertical farm in South Bend. Green Sense will oversee the farm, but Ivy Tech students will work there in an "earn to learn" setup, said Robert Colangelo, Green Sense "founding farmer" and CEO. Students will earn credit toward related degrees from the college. "The idea here is we will create a hands-on working farm," Colangelo said of the learning environment. Green Sense is finalizing the last contract agreements, he said, and expects to break ground by June with a goal of finishing construction by December. The building will be located at 250 E. Sample St., in South Bend. It will be have a "stretch fabric" roof, which will optimize the use of space, Colangelo said. At Green Sense Farms' facility located in an industrial park in Portage, he said they have to work around large support beams, which take up space. This stretch fabric building will have an arching steel skeleton and won't require vertical support State plan allowing replacement of jailed councilman proceeds INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — An Indiana House committee has moved forward legislation that would allow East Chicago officials to replace a jailed councilman without having to remove him from office. The House Judiciary Committee voted Monday to revise a Senate bill to include a proposal allowing a city council to declare a member “disabled” due to incarceration lasting 90 days or more. The (Munster) Times reports the proposal was expanded to also include disability due to physical or mental incapacitation. East Chicago City Council member Robert Battle has been held without bond in jail since November after pleading not guilty to federal drug and homicide charges in connection with the killing of Reimundo Camarillo Jr. Under the proposal, a council’s disability finding would lead to a replacement member until a council majority agrees the original member is capable of returning. Join the conversation! Facebook: The Post & Mail Twitter: @thepostandmail Instagram: @thepostmail beams. In addition to the vertical farm being a learning environment for students, it will also be one for the public. Only those working the farm will be allowed in normally, but the project will include a viewing area. Green Sense doesn't offer tours at its Portage facility so it can avoid outside contaminants like bugs. Colangelo said they are also talking with a South Bend company that can install solar panels on the building, increasing its mark as a sustainable operation. Everything in the vertical farm grow rooms is controlled. The temperature, humidity, water, air, nutrients, etc. The plants also grow under red and blue LED lights that create a pinkish glow in the room. Green Sense Farms focuses on lettuce, herbs and other leafy greens, which are pesticidefree and not genetically modified. The company's operation in Portage produces about 3 million plants per year for Whole Foods and other supermarket chains, as well as farm-to-fork type restaurants. And Ivy Tech is excited to expand into an ever-changing agriculture industry, Janet Evelyn, the Ivy Tech South Bend campus president, said in a statement to The Tribune. The college is excited for the opportunity to develop courses and training in new areas that will lead to new HSPA photo Founding farmer and CEO of Green Sense Farms, Robert Colangelo, holds one of the basil plants inside the vertical farm grow room on Friday in Portage, Ind. The company plans to break ground on June on a $3 million vertical farm in South Bend. jobs, and in some cases, reengineering current skills to meet the demands for the field, she said. “Ivy Tech is excited about the opportunity to pursue this unique partnership in what is still an emerging field of farming," Evelyn said in the statement. Indiana’s teacher background checks system lacks safeguards, some say MERRIVILLE (HSPA) — Six dead pit bulls in plastic bags. Bloody collars. Photographs of dogs strapped down and being forced to breed. Sixteen neglected dogs that were still alive. This was just some of the evidence that Lake County Police investigators found when they went to the Calumet Township home of Carlton Davis Jr. in May 2006. “It’s just inconceivable that someone could be so inhumane,” said then-Lake County Sheriff Roy Dominguez. But just four years later, Davis applied for — and was granted — a substitute teacher’s license in 2013 by the Indiana Department of Education, after having been convicted on dog-fighting charges and serving two years in prison. In 2014, he was charged in federal court for attending a dog fight in Akron, Ohio, but that didn’t seem to raise any red flags, either. He had been serving as a regular substitute at Dunbar-Pulaski Middle School in Gary for two years when he was accused of grabbing a 13-year-old boy, who was a special-education student, around the neck and pushing him down the stairs, then hitting a 15-year-old boy who was a witness to the incident on May 29, 2015. Brett Zagorac, a Munster resident, is currently facing aggravated criminal sexual abuse charges in Willmette, Ill., for a 2014 incident involving a 9-year-old who he was tutoring at the child’s home. But his record reveals multiple incidents while he was teaching at schools in Indiana and Illinois before his license was revoked. Zagorac served time for inappropriately touching two Schererville students in 2002. He pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor battery charge involving children in nine 2005 incidents involving students at schools in DuPage County, Ill., and he pleaded guilty to misdemeanor battery for inappropriately touching a 5-yearold child who he was tutoring in Portage in 2009. Zagorac was known for using aliases such as “B.J. the Educator,” B.J. Zagor, B.J. Welhelm, B.J. Zagorac and B.J. Zagr, according to authorities. These situations raise questions about how effective Indiana’s background check and licensure system is at weeding out teachers with questionable backgrounds — particularly those who’ve been charged or convicted of crimes against children. A recent USA Today investigation gave Indiana an “F” for delegating its background checks of prospective teachers to local school districts, providing little information online about teacher disciplinary actions, having weak mandatory reporting laws on teacher misconduct, and how teacher misconduct was not shared with other states in several cases. NASDTEC is a national clearinghouse of teacher discipline cases, but only states have direct access to the information on the database. The situation is complicated by the fact that there are no federal rules mandating reporting to NASDTEC, and spotty reporting by states to NASDTEC creates holes in the system, according to Terri Miller, president of Stop Educator Sexual Abuse Misconduct and Exploitation. Today in history Today is Tuesday, March 1, the 61st day of 2016. There are 305 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On March 1, 1966, the Soviet space probe Venera 3 impacted the surface of Venus, becoming the first spacecraft to reach another planet; however, Venera was unable to transmit any data, its communications system having failed. On this date: In 1565, the city of Rio de Janeiro was founded by Portuguese knight Estacio de Sa. In 1790, President George Washington signed a measure authorizing the first U.S. Census. In 1815, Napoleon, hav- ing escaped exile in Elba, arrived in Cannes, France, and headed for Paris to begin his “Hundred Days” rule. In 1867, Nebraska became the 37th state. In 1890, J.P. Lippincott published the first U.S. edition of the Sherlock Holmes mystery “A Study in Scarlet” by Arthur Conan Doyle. In 1932, Charles A. Lindbergh Jr., the 20-month-old son of Charles and Anne Lindbergh, was kidnapped from the family home near Hopewell, New Jersey. (Remains identified as those of the child were found the following May.) In 1940, “Native Son” by Richard Wright was first published by Harper & Brothers. In 1954, four Puerto Rican nationalists opened fire from the spectators’ gallery of the U.S. House of Representatives, wounding five members of Congress. The United States detonated a dry-fuel hydrogen bomb, codenamed Castle Bravo, at Bikini Atoll in the Marshall Islands. In 1961, President John F. Kennedy signed an executive order establishing the Peace Corps. In 1971, a bomb went off inside a men’s room at the U.S. Capitol; the radical group Weather Underground claimed responsibility for the pre-dawn blast. In 1981, Irish Republican Army member Bobby Sands began a hunger strike at the Maze Prison in Northern Ireland; he died 65 days later. In 1996, President Bill Clinton slapped economic sanctions on Colombia, concluding that Colombian authorities had not fully cooperated with the U.S. war on drugs. The Food and Drug Administration approved a powerful new AIDS drug, saying ritonavir could prolong slightly the lives of severely ill patients. Today’s Birthdays: Actor Robert Clary is 90. Singer Harry Belafonte is 89. Actor Robert Conrad is 81. Rock singer Mike D’Abo (Manfred Mann) is 72. Former Sen. John Breaux, D-La., is 72. Rock singer Roger Daltrey is 72. Actor Dirk Benedict is 71. 927 W. Connexion Way, Columbia City, Indiana 46725 (260)244-5153 or (260)625-3879 • Fax: (260)244-7598 Publisher Rick Kreps [email protected] Managing Editor Nicole Minier [email protected] Newsroom contacts Nicole Minier ext. 202 [email protected] Mark Parker ext. 209 [email protected] Nick Rupert [email protected] Tyler Wertman [email protected] Sports [email protected] Obituaries [email protected] Community/Announcements [email protected] Letters to the Editor [email protected] Subscription /Delivery Sally Ballard ext. 207 [email protected] Advertising [email protected] Classifieds [email protected] The Post & Mail (ISSN: 0746-9550) published daily except Sunday, and New Years, Memorial Day, Labor Day and Christmas, by Horizon Indiana Publications Inc., 927 W. Connexion Way, Columbia City, IN 46725. Telephone: (260) 244-5153 or (260) 625-3879 * Fax: (260) 244-7598. Periodicals postage paid in Columbia City, Indiana. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Post & Mail, 927 W. Connexion Way, Columbia City, IN 46725. NEWSPAPER DELIVERY GUARANTEE: If your Post & Mail carrier has not delivered your newspaper and you call the newspaper office before 5:30 p.m. (9:30 a.m. on Saturdays, leave a message), that day’s newspaper will be delivered to you that day (guaranteed in most areas). PUBLISHER’S RIGHTS: Publisher reserves the right to reject, edit or cancel any advertising at any time without liability. Publisher’s liability for error is limited to the amount paid for advertising. Regis Hanna eMMie Hanna If you’ve been waiting for a handsome companion to share your life, your wait is over! I am REGIS, and I need a good home, somewhere I can settle down and stay forever. I was a stray living outside in midJanuary when a kind stranger brought me here. Life is much easier now, I have lots of food and a good bed. Everyone here shows me love and I return it too. They guess I am 2 years old. My coat is gray and white, thick from living outside. Now I’m ready for an easier life, maybe with you? (NEUTERED) My name is EMMIE and coming into the shelter has been a little scary for me. My first owner decided to move and could not take me along so what I thought would be my home forever didn’t last. I’m settling in to life here slowly and the volunteers are very good to me. They are sure the right person will recognize my sweet nature and take me home. I hope so. I have an orange and white coat with a white line on my forehead. My eyes are gold. If you need a loyal friend and can love me forever, please come and see me here. (sPaYeD) Bella Find Your Next Pet At the humAne society of Whitley County BElla is my new name and I am happy to be here but ready to find my forever home. I am a 9 month old staffie mix with a pretty black and white coat and perky ears. I am a lot of fun to be around and I know we could be great friends. I like to play ball and squeaky toys are fun too. I also love to cuddle and I like to nuzzle my head in your lap to let you know I love you. I think I am a lap dog and I hope you will give me your lap to sit on in my new forever home! Sponsored In Part By: T&L Construction New Construction & Remodeling Service, For All Your Improvement Needs: Siding • Windows • Roofing • Decks • Concrete Larry Trumbull, Jr. 1824 E. Poplar Rd. Columbia City, IN 46725 Phone & Fax (260) 691-2853 WISH LIST PAPER TOWELS CAT LITTER BLEACH 951 S. Line Street Tues. Wed. & Fri: Noon-5p.m. 13 Gallon Trash Bags Columbia City, IN 46725 Letter Size File Folders Thurs: Noon-7p.m visit these and other available pets at the shelter Disinfectant Wipes Sat: 11 a.m. - 4 p.m. or online at www.hswc.org • Free iPhone & Android Ap Sun. & Monday: Closed HE Laundry Soap 260-244-6664 Postage Stamps Nylabone Dog Bones 6’ Dog Leashes Toilet Paper Window Cleaner Hand Sanitizer Hand Soap Refill A5 Local NE Indiana employers seek applicants with soft skills Tuesday, March 1, 2016 www.thepostandmail.com • ThePost & Mail FORT WAYNE (HSPA) — Employers of the two largest sectors in northeast Indiana are looking for a particular set of skills in their job applicants. According to an analysis of online job ads posted by the region’s manufacturing and health care/social assistance sectors in 2015 conducted by the Indiana Department of Workforce Development, oral and written communication skills, also known as soft skills, were far and away the priority of employers of both sectors. According to a February Labor Market Report by Northeast Indiana Works, both sectors are expected to continue growing. Manufacturing is expected to grow 5 percent and the health care/social assistance sector is expected to grow by 23 percent. Rick Farrant, director of com- munications for Northeast Indiana Works, said employers are specifically looking for skills including problem solving, troubleshooting and attention to detail, but some employers are looking for skills as simple as showing up to work on time. “We interact with around 1,300 employers per year and what’s surprising is how entrenched the trend is that employers are seeking oral and written communication skills,” Farrant said. “The presumption is that something is missing in these applicants’ skill sets and that’s what we want to get to the bottom of.” Tim Eckerle, executive director of the Grant County Economic Growth Council, said a business climate survey he conducts every year has indicated employers of all sectors believe their job applicants lack soft skills, specifically oral and written communication. “It’s always been an issue across all boards and this isn’t specific to northeast Indiana,” Eckerle said. “The ability to think logically, read and comprehend tasks has always been important to employers of all sectors.” Kylie Jackson, President/CEO of Marion-Grant County Chamber of Commerce, said many employers she interacts with regularly indicate soft skills in their job applications are lacking. “It’s something we hear about from our membership businesses,” Jackson said. “In discussions I have had with Marion schools they have said they are really trying to renew the effort to make teaching those skills a priority again.” Jackson said the ages of applicants who lack oral and written communication skills are across the board for different reasons. “Some employers see the younger generations who grew up with technology lacking interpersonal skills and the older generations may be lacking when it comes to the online job application process,” she said. “Employers are seeing a little bit of both.” According to Farrant, the greatest number of job gains in northeast Indiana over the next decade is expected to be among team assemblers in manufacturing (1,158 jobs) and health care is expected to grow by 23.6 percent. As of February, manufacturing accounted for about 82,000 jobs in northeast Indiana and health care and social assistance accounted for about 48,000 jobs. Joe Frank, spokesperson for the Indiana Department of Workforce Development, said the data in the analysis indicates a need for more soft skill training. “We are unfortunately seeing across the board that we need to be doing more soft skill training, not just in the adult workforce, but also at earlier ages,” Frank said. “We provide schools and institutions with this data so they can shape their curriculum around it.” Gary Gatman, executive vice president of strategic initiatives for Northeast Indiana Works, said the emphasis on oral and written communication highlights the need for such skill development to be integrated with all learning disciplines. “Oral and written communication needs may vary from occupation to occupation,” Gatman said, “But what is clear is that attention to developing effective communication should be embraced by all education and training providers.” Turning off lights pays off for Franklin schools, more than $400,000 in four years FRANKLIN (HSPA) — During the past four years, the Franklin school district has saved more than $400,000 per year by turning off lights, computers and air conditioning systems when they’re not in use. Since 2012, Franklin director of operations Bill Doty has tracked the energy used in the school buildings, including the school district’s electric, natural gas, sewer and water systems. In an effort to save money, the school district hired two energy auditors with a yearly stipend of $5,000 who regularly walk through the school buildings and turn off lights or computers when not in use, Doty said. If a teacher or administrator forgets to turn off their classroom or office lights, an “oops” sticker is left behind to remind them to keep energy savings in mind, Doty said. Since Doty has began tracking the energy use, the school district saved more than $336,000 per year compared to what Franklin schools were spending in 2012, Doty said. Due to the mild weather last year, the total savings that Franklin schools recorded was $413,000, he said. But if the weather conditions were the same as in 2012, the school district saved $336,074 last year, Doty said. Call 244-5153 for a Photo contributed / The Pilot News (Plymouth) Marshall County Prosecutor Nelson Chipman and Indiana State Police Public Information Officer Ron Galaviz (right) held a press conference in Plymouth Monday afternoon following the arrest of Kosciusko County Sheriff Aaron Rovenstine. Rovenstine was booked in the Elkhart County Jail and released an hour later. Rovenstine, from A1 Also charged is Mark Soto, a professor at Grace College in Winona Lake, who faces three felony charges of corrupt business influence and three felony charges of intimidation. The Warsaw Times-Union reported Soto served as a spiritual mentor and counselor to Bronson. Soto and Bronson are accused of intimidating multiple men, including threats to beat or kill the victims and their families. Marshall County Prosecutor E. Nelson Chipman Jr., who has been appointed as special prosecutor in the case, said at a news conference Monday that Soto has been arrested and that Bronson remains in custody after being arrested 14 months ago for possession of cocaine with intent to deal and criminal gang activity. One victim was allegedly told Bronson would break his legs unless he gave Bronson money, and another man was forced to provide free medical services to Bronson under threat of a beating, the indictment states. Bronson and Soto are also accused of threatening to beat or kill another man and his family unless the man provided legal services without payment to help them secure a movie or book contract, the indictment states. THE Post & Mail subscription today! Wanatah, IN 10525 US Hwy 30 (West before Hwy 30) 219-733-1442 Y-Corner MAkE LEARN REjoiCE Easter Egg Extravaganza Hop on by for an EGG-splosion of Easter crafts, drawing contest, and the Easter story. FREE for Members. Saturday, March 19th 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. www.FWYMCA.org Sponsored By: For Youth Development For healthY living For Social reSponSibilitY BLOOM GATES & WHITELEATHER, LLP ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW • John Whiteleather • Timothy J. Bloom • Matthew R. Shipman • Lindsey A. Grossnickle • Elizabeth A. Deckard 119 South Main Street, Columbia City, Indiana (260) 248-8900 DREAM CoLoR PoWERLiFTiNG CoMPETiTioN CELEBRATE Sunday, March 13, 2016 Weigh-in begins at 12pm 2nd Annual Whitley County Family YMCA Tell us what Easter means to you and enter a drawing contest. We will select a winner March 28th from the categories of preschool, elementary, middle school and high school. The winner from each category will win a one month family membership. Submissions are due by 6:00pm March 26th on a blank piece of paper. Lifters Meeting at 1:00pm Competition begins at 1:15pm Events: Bench Press (Max) Deadlift (Max) Location: Whitley County Family YMCA Entry Fees: FREE to Members $30 YMCA Members and Community $40 Non Members 950 E. Van Buren St . Columbia City, IN Register: Register at the Whitley County YMCA or online at fwymca.org 260-244-YMCA A6 News Purdue Extension – Whitley County offers free classes for National Nutrition Month Tuesday, March 1, 2016 Post & Mail • www.thepostandmail.com The Photo contributed Three of the four candidates for Whitley County Soil and Water Conservation District’s board posed for a photo. From left: Seth Ruckman, Brent Cormany and Cory Studebaker. Brent Emerick, the fourth candidate, is not pictured. Whitley County Soil and Water Conservation District to hold annual meeting mid-March COLUMBIA CITY — Whitley County Soil and Water Conservation District’s annual meeting will be Wednesday, March 16 beginning at 6:30 p.m. at Grace Lutheran Church, 204 N. Main St., Columbia City, in the fellowship hall. The agenda for the evening is a meal followed by the election of a new supervisor, report of activities, accomplishments and finances for 2015. Plus, the group will be recognizing two River Friend Farmers for 2015 which are Anderson Partnership and Drew Farms. The Whitley County Soil and Water Conservation District’s Board has an opening on the Board. Four gentlemen are running for the open position. The candidates are Brent Emerick, a grain farmer with a herd of beef cows and calves from Jefferson township, Brent Cormany, a grain farmer that also raises hogs and beef from Etna Troy and Richland townships, Seth Ruckman, a grain farmer and raises beef from Union township, and Cory Studebaker, a grain farmer and is part of a dairy operation from Cleveland and Richland townships. All four of the candidates have been serving as associate supervisors on the District Board. Nominations will also be accepted from the floor that evening. To be eligible to vote at the SWCD annual meeting each individ- ual has to be of voting age or a representative of a firm, company, or corporation that owns or rents land/property located within the district/county may vote. Eligible individuals also include the owner and tenant of the same land/property as well as any owner’s or tenant’s spouse. Individuals must attend the meeting to be able to vote in the election. The speaker for the evening is Jamie Bultemeier with A & L Great Lakes Laboratories, Inc. Bultemeier is an agronomist/ technical service provider, a certified professional agronomist (CPAg) and certified crop advisor (CCA). He will be discussing soil fertility trends, some basics of soil fertility and will shed some light on better phosphorus management for crop production. The dinner will begin at 6:30 p.m. and the cost of the meal is $5 per person. Reservation should be made by Wednesday, March 9 by visiting or calling the office at 244-6266 ext. 101 or email [email protected]. net. Tickets can also be purchased from the Board of Supervisors, Michael Hinen, Gary Hoffman, Scott Anderson, Dennis Hinen and Chris Frazier; or Associate Supervisors, Phil Walker, Tom Zumbrun, Brian Johnson, Brent Cormany, Dennis Easterday, William Klenke, Cory Studebaker, Gary Lamle, Brent Emerick and Seth Ruckman. COLUMBIA CITY — Like the idea of saving time and money while preparing healthy meals? Want to trim the fat and salt from meals? Need help selecting nutritious foods within a budget? The local Purdue Extension office is celebrating National Nutrition Month by offering free classes that include hands-on demonstrations, free recipes and food samples. In addition, at each class participants may earn items like kitchen gadgets and cookbooks. Classes last approximately 90 minutes, there is no homework and participants can take as many or as few as they like. Classes are held at the Purdue Extension – Whitley Tuesday, County office located at 115 S. Line Street in Columbia City. Due to seating, class size is limited and reservations are required. To sign up or for more information, contact the Purdue Extension at 244-7615 or 625-3313 or via email at [email protected]. Classes will include: •Meatless Mondays Firday, March 4 - noon Eating meatless once a week may reduce the risk of chronic conditions like cancer, heart disease and obesity? It will save money. Enjoy a healthy meatless lunch and take home free recipes. •Facts on FATS - Friday, March 11 - noon Good fats and bad fats … Learn the difference and how to select the fat that is the healthy option for cooking. Heathy snack provided. •SALT! You are eating more than you know! Tuesday, March 15 - noon Learn about the salt in some favorite foods and how to read a label to determine how much is being consumed. Healthy snack provided. •Save time, save money - one-pot meals - Tuesday, March 22 - noon Skip the fast food and expensive mixes and learn to use a skillet and what’s in the pantry to make fast, easy and healthy meals. During class participants will prepare a one-pot meal. Food samples and recipes provided. from A3 conscience should stop supporting that party until it is reformed,” he wrote. The Associated Press asked Republican senators and governors across the country if they would support Trump if he secured the nomination. Just under half of those who responded would not commit to backing him, foreshadowing a potentially extraordinary break this fall. “I am increasingly concerned by Donald Trump’s statements and behavior, and I have serious concerns about his ability to win the general election and provide presidential leadership,” Indiana Sen. Dan Coats said in a statement to the AP. The concern among Republican leaders appeared to grow in light of Trump’s refusal to immediately disavow former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke’s support. Mitt Romney, the party’s 2012 nominee, called that “disqualifying.” And South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, campaigning in Atlanta alongside Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, said she would “not stop fighting a man who refuses to disavow the KKK.” Trump said he had not understood the interviewer who first raised the question about Duke, and he did later repudiate him. “How many times do I have to continue to disavow people?” he said. Several high-profile Republicans and conservative writers have embraced an anti-Trump social media campaign, using the Twitter hashtag “NeverTrump.” Trump has won three of four early primary contests, roiling a party that had assumed his populist appeal with voters would fizzle. Instead, he’s only grown stronger and appears to be in commanding position heading into Super Tuesday, the biggest single-day delegate haul of the year. Tensions boiled over during Trump’s rally Monday in Radford, Virginia, where he was repeatedly disrupted by demonstrators, including 20 or more chanting “Black lives matter.” At another point, he asked a protester, “Are you from Mexico?” after he was interrupted during remarks about immigration. He ordered several people to be removed, then cast himself as a unifying political force. Russian warplanes sit idle on Syria base HEMEIMEEM AIR BASE, Syria (AP) — Dozens of Russian warplanes sat idle Tuesday on the tarmac at this Russian air base in Syria on the fourth day of a cease-fire brokered by Moscow and Washington. The apparent lull in action witnessed by the AP on a trip to the base, which was organized by the Russian defense and foreign ministries, contrasts with the hectic operation AP reporters saw here on a previous visit in January. The cease-fire that began at midnight Friday has brought a notable reduction in hostilities for the first time in the five-year war that has killed more than 250,000 people, displaced half of Syria’s population and flooded Europe with refugees. But the truce has remained highly fragile with violations reported in many areas with the opposition and the Syrian government blaming each other. The Islamic State group and al-Qaida’s branch in Syria, Jabhat al-Nusra, are excluded from the truce. The Russian military said Monday that its warplanes struck al-Nusra targets north of Aleppo. It said that groups that have declared their adherence to the cease-fire are not being targeted. During the five-month Russian air blitz that began on Sept.30, each jet flew several combat sorties on an average day, amounting to an impressive total of more than 6,000 missions The Russian Defense Ministry said late Monday that the cease-fire was largely holding despite sporadic violations. Lt. Gen. Sergei Kuralenko, who heads the cease-fire coordination center at the Russian base in Syria, voiced satisfaction with what he described as a good level of coordination with his U.S. counterparts in Amman, Jordan. Russia and the U.S. have agreed to exchange information about opposition groups abiding by the truce and jointly tackle any pos- sible violations. For President Vladimir Putin, the cease-fire deal offers a chance to capitalize on a successful air campaign that has helped Syrian President Bashar Assad’s military reverse the tide of war and make significant gains near Aleppo and in several other areas. The U.S.-Russian-brokered truce agreement achieves Putin’s key strategic goal of having Moscow appear as an equal partner of Washington in tackling the Syrian crisis. The deal raises Russia’s global clout, allows Putin to appear as a peacemaker and marks the first time Russia has engaged the U.S. in a military-to-military dialogue since the start of the Ukrainian crisis two years ago. By exchanging target information with the U.S., Moscow also hopes to deflect Washington’s criticism that it was striking moderate opposition groups instead of its declared target, the Islamic State. The truce comes at a time when Assad’s military has cut most supply routes to Aleppo, Syria’s largest city and its commercial capi- tal before the war. that has been split into governmentand opposition-controlled parts since 2012. The Syrian army’s successes around Aleppo and in other areas have strengthened Assad’s hand ahead of planned peace talks in Geneva tentatively set for next week. The negotiations broke down a few weeks ago before starting in earnest with the opposition demanding an end to the Russian airstrikes as a key condition to proceed. SALT SALE Salt for all types of water softeners. MARCH 4 & 5 SAle PriceS 40# 40# 40# 50# Solar Pellet Red Out Cube Salt $5.25 $5.99 $6.99 $8.29 Pick-Up Only – No limit – No rainchecks Next Salt Sale April 1 & 2 Hours: Mon - Fri • 7:30-5:00pm • Sat. • 8:00-12:00pm 675 e. Business 30, columbia city 260-244-5850 • www.culligancolumbiacity.com Dealer participation may vary. *Offer valid these dates only. Fun & Advice Hi & Lois “For my part I know nothing with any certainty, but the sight of the stars makes me dream.” ~ Vincent van Gogh Grandmother wants to be in grandchild’s life Dear Annie: the boy against I have eight more serious disg r a n d c h i l d re n eases. She also and I love them lets him climb all. I make sure out of his car seat to spend equal because he fusses amounts of time in it, which exposand care with es him to the risk each one of them. Annie’s of death from a The probMailbag minor car accilem is my son’s dent. 3-year-old child. When I send My son and his wife live Christmas presents, she with his mother-in-law opens them early and in another state. I have hands them to the child, been unable to see this never saying they are grandson, because the from me. I have sent him wife and her mother are clothes, but have never so afraid of colds that seen a picture of him in they will leave the gro- anything but a T-shirt cery if someone so much and diaper. At the age of as sneezes. 3, he is still drinking forWhen I first flew mula from a bottle and down to meet the new eating very little real baby, my son called me food. in the rental car to say I am worried about that I was not allowed the mental and physito come because I had a cal health of this child, cold three weeks earlier. not to mention my I was able to negotiate own sadness that we meeting them at a near- can’t have a relationby restaurant, but I was ship. Is there anything not allowed to hold the I can do? — Perplexed baby. The mother-in-law Grandmother came and took the child Dear Perplexed: Is home before the meal your son not involved was served. in these decisions? It Yet, my daughter-in- doesn’t bother him that law refuses to vaccinate his son isn’t belted into Puzzler A7 Cleaning car at fuel pump is a distraction Beetle Bailey Quote of the Day... Tuesday, March 1, 2016 a car seat? Or that he is still getting most of his nutrition from infant formula? And we won’t get into the anti-vaxx movement, which, although well-intentioned, we disagree with. Please gently suggest to your son that he speak about these things with the child’s pediatrician, to be certain he is caring for his son in the best possible way. If he disagrees with his wife’s child-rearing methods, he should not be a coward about it. Even so, there are limits to what you can do about your relationship with your grandson other than continue to keep in touch, visit whenever possible and maintain the most compassionate communication you can with the boy’s mother. Dear Annie: “Out of the Loop” says her grown daughters send wish lists for holidays and birthdays that include e-books. If she wants to send something they can open on the actual day, she ought to look into gift cards. Plenty of places offer them for e-books. These days, gift cards for many businesses, online and not, are available at grocery stores, drug stores, bigbox stores, etc. It’s onestop shopping for you and the kids can buy whatever they want. — Roanoke, Virginia Dear Virginia: Thank you for mentioning a gift card for an e-book, or more generally, for an online store that carries e-books. Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to [email protected], or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254. You can also find Annie on Facebook at Facebook.com/AskAnnies. To find out more about Annie’s Mailbox and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com. ©2016 CREATORS.COM Dear Readers: It’s time to talk about the GAS PUMP again! So many of you commented about the refueling and cleaning out the car hint. Even the reader, Katrina, whose hint started all the discussion wrote me again! Here are some Ask more “fumes in the air” Heloise and words on this “fueling” subject: Katrina S. in Dana Point, Calif., said: “Apparently I stirred up a bit of static when I wrote about tidying my car while refueling. Of course I don’t enter the car. I never leave the area, so I can see if the pump doesn’t shut off automatically. I had to laugh a bit.” (Heloise here: Katrina, I knew what you meant, but my readers sometimes take the written word literally, or read the sentence the way it means to them.) Donna B., via email, said: “To those who want to clean out trash while pumping gas, a simple solution: I keep a bag in my car and place all trash in it. When I want to empty it, I check the car (while still inside) and things I missed.” Betty B. in Bentonville, Ark., said: “May I add an additional warning? I saw a report on television about a rash of purse snatchings at these locations. While the customer’s back is turned, thieves open the passenger door and snatch purses from the front seats.” Great reminder, Betty. Many readers (me included) turn off the auto, take the keys out and lock the door for safety, especially at a busy location. — Heloise STICKY FINGERS Dear Heloise: I took my granddaughter out for a nice lunch, and her hands got a little sticky while eating, which bothered her. Rather than pack everything up to go wash her hands midmeal, I had her run her fingers over the condensation on my water glass. She dried her hands with the napkin. It worked until we finished and could wash up in the bathroom. — Grandma in Indiana ADDED LABEL Dear Heloise: For so many reasons and occasions, it would be helpful if every sender of a card would also stick an address label inside the card itself. — Linda W., Roland, Ark. Yes, it’s a very nice thought, especially for wedding, anniversary and condolence cards. Many times, a gift card is signed with first names only, such as “Bob and Jan,” “Jan and Joan” or simply “Dan.” If the recipient does not know you well, they might not have your address. — Heloise LARGER PUZZLES Dear Heloise: I am a senior whose hobby is puzzle games. Because most puzzles are too small, with insufficient writing space, I use my computer and printer to “blow them up.” Simply copy the puzzle into a picture-editor program, enlarge it to full page and print. I use an erasable red pen until I get stumped. — Theresa in Alabama GUEST WELCOME Dear Heloise: When we have guests for several nights, I empty a drawer or two into an empty suitcase so they have a place for their things. — Evelyn B., via email Send a money-saving or timesaving hint to Heloise, P.O. Box 795000, San Antonio, TX 78279-5000, or you can fax it to 1-210-HELOISE or email it to Heloise@ Heloise.com. I can’t answer your letter personally but will use the best hints received in my column. ©2016 by King Features Syndicate Inc. Horoscopes & more entertainment at www.thepostandmail.com SUDOKU Fun By The Numbers Like puzzles? Then you’ll love sudoku. This mind-bending puzzle will have you hooked from the moment you square off, so sharpen your pencil and put you sudoku savvy to the test! Here’s How It Works: Sudoku puzzles are formatted as a 9x9 grid, broken down into nine 3x3 boxes. To solve a sudoku, the numbers 1 through 9 must fill each row, column and box. Each number can appear only once in each row, column and box. You can figure out the order in which the number will appear by using the numeric clues already provided in the boxes. The more numbers you name, the easier it gets to solve the puzzle! ANSWER: www.thepostandmail.com • ThePost & Mail Recipe of the Day Buffalo-Ranch Slow-Cooker Chicken Ingredients 1 pkg (28 oz) boneless skinless chicken thighs 1 pkg (1 oz) ranch dressing and seasoning mix 1 bottle (12 oz) Buffalo wing sauce Directions In large bowl, toss chicken and seasoning mix to coat evenly. The Family Circus Place in 4- to 5-quart slow cooker; top with Buffalo sauce. Cover; cook on Low heat setting 4 to 5 hours or until chicken is tender. Remove chicken from slow cooker to bowl. Shred chicken with 2 forks. Return shredded chicken to slow cooker; stir to evenly coat with sauce. Serve warm. Cryptoquip The Cryptoquip is a substitution cipher in which one letter stands for another. If you think that X equals O, it will equal O throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words and words using an apostrophe give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is by trial and error. © 2010 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. A8 Post & Mail www.thepostandmail.com The Tuesday, March 1, 2016 Miscellaneous Rental Property Help Wanted Tuesday, March 1, 2016 Help Wanted RIVER BLUFF APARTMENTS 2 bedroom available. Call for more information 260-2676088 or 260-705-1362 GET NOTICED!! DO YOU know how many options you have for Classified Advertising? Borders Bold Centering Italic Underline CAPS Ad Toppers ADD A PHOTO & EVEN ADD YOUR LOGO!! You can also change your font size! Help Wanted HELP WANTED Administrative Assistant Needed for local company. Must be able to multi-task and learn quickly. Quickboooks knowledge required. Mail resume to: VAN CONTRACTING, INC. P.O. Box 1001 Columbia City, IN 46725 Add any of these for $6 or less a month!!! COMFORT KEEPERS NOW ADDING to our TEAM of Life-Changing Stop in or Call us Caregivers- great hourly Today! rate plus travel bonus, The Post & Mail flexible hours, all shifts, 927 W Connexion Way C o l u m b i a C i t y , F t . Columbia City, IN Wayne area. Call Jes260-244-5153 or send sica 260-484-5858 for email to details and rememberpostandmailclassifieds *To the world, you may @earthlink.net be ONE person…but to ONE person, you may IF YOU HAD HIP OR be the World. KNEE REPLACEMENT SURGERY A N D NOW HIRING BUS SUFFERED AN INFEC- DRIVERS March TrainTION between 2010 and ing @ CN Central Noble the present time, you Schools Call 260-636may be entitled to com- 2175 pensation. Call Attorney Charles H. Johnson 1- C O L U M B I A C I T Y 800-535-5727 PART-TIME Cleaning Jobs. Immediate Openings morning and evenFree ings. Call 260-484-6365 for Interviews FREE WOOD PALLETS/SKIDS available for PICK UP FIRST COME FIRST SERVE BEHIND THE POST & MAIL NEWSPAPER. 927 W. Connexion Way Columbia City. no phone calls please 15 DRIVER TRAINEES NEEDED NOW! Learn to drive for US Xpress! NEW Drivers earn $800/week & Benefits! NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED! CDL & Job Ready in 3 weeks! 1-800-882-7364 Lost/Found KEYS FOUND WITH A BLUE TAG in The Post & Mail's Front Office parking lot. Contact 260-244-5153 Rental Property The Post & Mail newspaper has an By Frank Longo WHITLEY MANUFACTURING ANAWARD Winning manufacturer of modular buildings has Year-roundConstruction Opportunities for experienced help in the following areas: General-Carpentry, Plumbing/Electrical, W e l d i n g , T r i m - W o r k, General-Labor. $12$15/hour, Medical, PaidLife-Insurance, Paid-Holidays, Personal-day + 3 sick-days per year. Apply in person: 201 W. First Street South Whitley, IN OR Online whitleyman.com HAIR STYLISTS & BARBERS SHAKE IT OFF IN BLUFFTON!! Are you tired of struggling to build your clientele & scraping to pay your bills? Need a new outlook & room to grow? Join us at Great Clips! We have a steady client base & plenty of perks to enjoy. • Base Hourly-Wage • NO Booth Rent Fees • Commissions & Bonuses • Ongoing Training & Development • Opportunities for Management • Insurance Benefits • FT & PT Shifts Available Contact Beth 260-4142580 OR Apply @www.greatclips.com THE POST & MAIL NEWSPAPER has OPENINGS for Foot Route in Abbr. starting a memo Author Fleming Painter Nolde In times past Keystone __ (comic lawman) Title for Robt. E. Lee Inventor Franklin The “O” of WHO: Abbr. Yesterdayʼs Solution: M A N H O U R S A S T N E S A R E U R T O S E S T O R A C I A N A E R A B O T T O National Classifieds Network Apply in Person or email resumes to [email protected] AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE SAVING! 1-866-725-5135 DONATE A CAR Humane Society of the United States FREE Next-DAY TOWING! Running or Not. Tax Deductible. Call Before Tax Year Ends! 1-800-418-1562 EMPLOYMENT The Post & Mail newspaper is seeking applicants! 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I Pay Top Dollar Since 2005! 1-Day Fast Payment Guaranteed Up To $60 Per Box! FREE Shipping www.CashNowOffer. com 1-888-210-5233 Get Extra $10 Use Offer Code: CashNOW! Mail, Fax Or Bring This Form In . . . Placing your ad is easy! We’ll even help you write it! Call us: 260-244-5153 or 625-3879 • Fax us: 260-244-7598 Email us: [email protected] Send something to us by mail or come and see us: The Post & Mail, 927 W. Connexion Way, Columbia City, IN 46725 Deadlines to Place, Correct or Cancel Ads. . . Publish Date Thursday Friday Saturday Excellent Frankensteinʼs helper ERNST PAINTING INTERIOR EXTERIOR power washing metal roofs and more. quality painting since 1963 they do it fast, we do it, best. David & Cindy 260-248-2091 APPLY NOW! Deadline 1 pm Friday 10 am Monday 11 am Tuesday Billiards variation “Orinoco SelfFlow” centered New Ager Mexican friend 260-244-2816 Publish Date Monday Tuesday Wednesday Nissanʼs luxury brand Reddishbrown pigment Serpent SimonSon EStatES HELP WANTED Luau guitar Mexican moola Make safe, as a bomb Part-Time Servers Casual Activity Assistants Part-Time Bus Driver Whitley County Head cook “Rob Roy” star Liam Now Hiring applications may be completed at: 927 W Connexion Way Columbia City, IN 46725 Apply in person The Post & Mail Newspaper “Now it makes sense!” Bonfire remnant Services Affordable Lawn Care Spring Clean Up Pressure Washing EARLY MORNING Gutter Clean Up JOURNAL GAZETTE Lawn Mowing Trimming newspaper routes availFree Quotes able in rural Columbia Senior Discounts! City, up to $1,000/mo, Insured. 260-248-0088 and Churubusco/Blue Lake area, up to $900/mo. 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Hop into Candidate must be able to work flexible hours including weekends, weekdays and holidays. 2 Bedroom Units • NOw AvAilABle Most shifts are between FRee HeAt & HOt wAteR two and four hours and Office Hours: Mon. - Fri. 8-5 • Sat. 10-2 two to five days a week. Prior animal experience www.simonsonestatesapts.com a plus. 100 Raleigh Ct. • Columbia City Please reply by email to (North of US 30 on SR 9) [email protected]. pets Welcome! www.animalinninc.com Buttery, fried poultry dish Deadline 11 am Wednesday 11 am Thursday 11 am Friday Write out your ad using this form. One word per line - punctuation is FREE! 1. 8. 15. 2. 9. 16. 3. 10. 17. 4. 11. 18. 5. 12. 19. 6. 13. 20. 7. 14. 16 words .............................................$42.65/week 20 words ..................................... $62.10/month (Private Individuals Only) Call for pricing on additional wording. Ad costs vary for certain ad types. (Ex: Garage Sales, Help Wanted) Name Address Home Phone Amount Enclosed $ Card Number City Or ❑ Visa State ❑ Master Card Zip ❑ Discover ❑ American Express Expiration Date Mail this form in time to meet the daily deadlines or you may fax or bring the form to our office. Reach 4.5 Do you have a business, service or product you would like to advertise in 4.5 million households with only one phone call? Million The American Community Classified Advertising Network Households 1-888-593-6357 • 1-888-376-9231 A9 Post & Mail www.thepostandmail.com The Services MEYERS REMODELING BATHROOMS & KITCHENS, All Interiors, Tile, Wood Floors, Property Clean Up. Free Estimates. Insured. 260248-2939 or 260-5030404 DO YOU HAVE SERVICES to offer or have a Small Business? You can place an ad for $62.10/month 20 words and under for 26 days. Stop in or Call us Today! The Post & Mail 927 W. Connexion Way Columbia City, IN 260-244-5153 BKP HANDYMAN SERVICE. INDOOR & Outdoor, Light Hauling, Driveway Repair. Tilling, Tractor Work, In-home Remodeling. Brian Paseka 260-248-4809 or 213-1529. A+ HOOSIER PAINTING ALL Exteriors/Interiors 1000's of Local References. Fully Insured. Bret Baily 260-6092664 Now Scheduling Spring and Summer! WE BUILD POLE BARNS AND Garages. We also re-roof and reside old barns, garages and houses. Call 260632-5983 or 260-2557463. What’s Coming & Announcements PANCAKE/SAUSAGE BREAKFAST ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT! Carry-outs-Available March 5th 7:00am-11:00am West Point Trinity UMC 4980 N Etna Road Free-Will-Donations! JEFFERSON TOWNSHIP FIRE DEPT 22nd Annual Breakfast March 13th 7am-1pm Cross Roads Inn 5975 S State Road 9 Adults-$8 Children-$4.50 Tuesday, March 1, 2016 What’s Coming & Announcements Subscribe TODAY! 125/Year +1 Month FREE $ ROCKABILLY SQUARES COME & CHECK OUT Today's SQUARE DANCING! March 15, 2016 7:00pm-9:00pm 4-H Building (top of the hill) 860 W. Squawbuck Rd Whitley County 4-H Fairgrounds Columbia City, Indiana $6.00 person Couples, Families (age 10 & over) & Singles welcome. No experience needed Questions call 260-327-3112 Email rockabillysquares @gmail.com Caller Jimmy Robison 68/6 Months +2 Weeks FREE $ Read all about what’s happening in town and around the region from local voices who live and work here like you do. Join the Conversation! Want to Downsize Your Gas Guzzler? Find a new car here, in The Post & Mail classifieds! We’re Talking We’re Talking Local Jobs Local Dining We’re Talking Local Schools In Print, Online & Social 260.244.5153 We’re Talking Local Entertainment We’re Talking Local We’re Talking Local Shopping Perspectives 927 W. Connexion Way Columbia City, IN 46725 www.thepostandmail.com AUTOMOTIVE 34 MPG, 06 CIVIC. Runs great. 555-3210. 30k miles. Call Jim BusinesServicesDirectory Connecting you with local businesses in Whitley County. enjoy the Benefits of PET FRIEND LY! Ask About Move-In Specials 2 or 3 Bedroom ApArtment! Lots of storage Take a Tour! full size Appliances Central Air Washer & dryers 718 N. SR 9 • Columbia City 244-3666 Deckard Carpentry Residential • New/Remodel • Additions Custom Trim Work Cabinet Installation • Decks Siding • Windows • Doors Licensed/Insured Dave Deckard 27 Years Experience 260-248-4142 Columbia City, IN 46725 [email protected] H onCrete enterprises Ward C Stamped • Colored Concrete Driveways • Sidewalks • Patios Remove & Replace Old Concrete All Types of Flatwork Bobcat & Excavator Work 260.610.7006 Realtor • Auctioneer Call or Text 260-341-4801 [email protected] rayshockome.com Rainelle Metzger Shockome Hilty R Roofing Specializing in Metal roofs and Lifetime guaranteed Asphalt Shingles. ars 10 Ye nce rie Expe Larry Hilty Phone: (260) 701-3490 [email protected] Everyone checks out the classifieds! Prime ad space for as little as $6500 per month! Call for details. (260) 244-5153 Sports Post &Mail The Tuesday, March 1, 2016 • Page A10 Contact us: [email protected] Oregon breaks into AP Poll Top 10 EUGENE, Ore. (AP) — The Oregon Ducks broke into the top 10 in the AP poll on Monday for their highest ranking since 2007. Oregon jumped four spots in the rankings to No. 9 after defeating Washington State 76-62 last Wednesday and rival Washington 86-73 on Sunday night. The Ducks haven’t been ranked this high before in head coach Dana Altman’s tenure. With the victories, Oregon finished a perfect 18-0 at home this season. “Amazing,” said senior guard Dwayne Benjamin of his final game Hoosiers rise to no. 12 after three straight wins at Matthew Knight Arena. “Just like the first one when I first played, I was so excited and the fans were great. This was a perfect way to go out for me.” It was the fifth time the Ducks have gone undefeated at home, and the first time since the 2001-02 season. Oregon extended its home winning streak, dating back to last season, to a school-record 25 games. The Ducks (23-6, 12-4 Pac-12) will wrap up the regular season this week with in Los Angeles with a Wednesday night game against UCLA before the finale Saturday at USC. With a victory in one of the final two games, Oregon will clinch at least a share of the Pac-12 regular season title. It’s been 14 years since the last one. Oregon sits atop the Pac-12 standings, with Utah (23-7, 12-5) a halfgame back, followed by California (21-8, 11-5), which has won six straight. Arizona (22-7, 12-6) is two games behind the Ducks. Indiana rebounded from a demoralizing loss at Michigan State to beat Nebraska, then No. 17 Purdue and Illinois. As a result, the Hoosiers jumped from No. 18 to No. 12 on the AP poll. With a win tonight at Iowa, Indiana will win the outright Big Ten regular season championship. Heading into the 9 p.m. matchup with the Hawkeys, the Hoosiers are still led in scoring by senior point guard Yogi Ferrell, who is averaging 17 points per game. Ferrell also leads the team in assists per with 5.5. Troy Williams has provided a spark when the Hoosiers have needed it most, grabbing six rebounds per game to lead Indiana. Still atop the Big Ten standings at 13-3 in conference play, the Hoosiers lead Michigan State, Maryland, Iowa and Wisconsin, which are all tied for second at 11-5. Hoops tourney begins tonight By MARK PARKER The Post & Mail WHITLEY COUNTY — Two of Whitley County’s high school boys basketball teams begin their quest for IHSAA sectional titles this evening. Both Whitko and Churubusco play in the opening games of their respective sectionals. Whitko (13-9) will square off against Bremen (4-18) at 7 p.m. in the opening game of the Westview sectional. The winner will advance to Friday evening’s semifinal contest against host Westview (11-11) at 7 p.m. Churubusco (6-17) will open the IHSAA Bluffton sectional with a rematch against its final regularseason opponent, Eastside (15-7). The Eagles, who fell to the Blazers 52-35 in Butler, will face Eastside for the second time in five days, with tip-off set for 6 p.m. at Bluffton. The winner will move on to face defending sectional champion Canterbury (1210) in Friday’s first semifinal contest at 6 p.m. Columbia City, Whitley County’s third high school team, begins sectional play at home on Friday at 6 p.m. against the winner of Tuesday evening’s contest between Bishop Luers (12-9) and Norwell (9-15). Columbia City is the boys sectional host for the second year in a row, and is favored to win the title. Photo contributed Indian Springs Middle School wrestlers celebrate after winning the Crestview Wrestling Tournament Saturday in Huntington. Indian Springs wrestlers claim team title at Crestview tourney HUNTINGTON — Indian Springs Middle School’s wrestling team downed host Crestview Middle School in the finals to win the team championship at the Cougar Invitational Saturday. The Eagle wrestlers defeated Woodside 63-21 to pick up their first win of the day. In the second round, Indian Springs defeated Adams Central by a 54-24 margin. The Eagles then powered past Southwood by a 33-9 score. The championship came down to a match between Indian Springs and host Crestview. At the end of regulation, the Eagles and Cougars were tied 42-42. After several tie breaker criteria, ISMS took the title by way of having the most individual victories in the match. Indian Springs grabbed eight victories to Crestview’s seven. Picking up wins for ISMS were Justin Miller, Austin Dunnuck, Jarrett Forrester and Ryan Sheets. Also winning for the Eagles were Isaiah Litherland, Seth Schaper, Austin Uher, Kory Lude and Riley Hare. Jackson Pettigrew, Carter Wire- man, Cole Mosier, Tanner Martz and Ryan Elston, along with JT Levensky, Alton Mullinax, Josh Potts, Devin Wirick and Ivan Smith won matches for Indian Springs. ISMS wrestlers going undefeated for the day were Justin Miller, Jarrett Forrester, Ryan Sheets, Riley Hare, Carter Wireman, Jackson Pettigrew and Isaiah Litherland. Countdown to the 100th Tom Brady, Patriots agree to 2-year contract extension running of the Indy 500 FOXBOROUGH, Mass. (AP) — Tom Brady reportedly has agreed to a two-year contract extension with the New England Patriots. The deal will significantly lessen Brady's salary cap hit for 2016, which would have been about $15 million. He was due to make $9 million next season, plus a $6 million bonus, and $10 million in salary in 2017. Brady, 38, has often redone his contract to help the Patriots' cap situation. The four-time Super Bowl champion has said he plans to play well into his 40s. The extension would allow him to do so in New England. The agreement was first reported by ESPN. Brady also renegotiated his contract in 2013 to help reduce cap hits. New England was $13.6 million under the 2016 cap of $155.27 million before extending Brady. Brady, of course, is an alltime great who could wind up the NFL's leader in many career passing categories. He's been to six Super Bowls and 10 AFC title games, including the last five. Some would say he is underpaid for the position given the championship pedigree and his two league MVP awards to go with three Super Bowl MVPs. In 2015, his cap hit of $14 million ranked 14th in the league, behind the likes of Colin Kaepernick and Jay Cutler. He might not rank even that high in 2016. Race 11 INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — On May 29 the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, the city of Indianapolis, Indiana and the racing world celebrate the 100th running of “the greatest spectacle in racing,” the Indianapolis 500. This series will highlight the winners and other notable moments in the history of arguably the most famous racing event in the world. Race: 11th Indianapolis 500 Date: May 30, 1923 Winner: Tommy Milton, HCS Motor Company Average speed: 90.545 mph What happened: Tommy Milton wins for “Exercise your right to choose your physical therapy needs!” Visit us directly! No referral needed by your doctor. Some of the services we offer include: Orthopedic Injuries • Orthopedic Post-Operative Rehab • Manual Therapy Custom Orthotic Fabrication • Personal Training • Athlete Performance Programs the second time in three years, getting help from 1919 winner Howdy Wilcox driving a long stretch in relief. Well-known driver Tom Alley crashed early in the race, his car going through the backstretch wall and killing a spectator. Alley and two other fans were injured in the wreck. Notable: The first repeat winner of the Indy 500, Milton accomplished the feat despite only having vision in his left eye. He would spend most of his life in motor sports, and worked with the manufacturer Packard on several projects. He died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in 1962. Dr. Sean White, PT, DPT, OCS, CMDT Most Insurances Accepted Peak Performance is the only locally owned, private physical therapy practice in Whitley County. 169 N. 200 E. Columbia City, IN 46725 • 260-244-5133 | 2304 Dubois Dr., Warsaw, IN 46580 • 574-267-3500 For more information, visit: www.peakperformancetherapy.com
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