(PDF) Section A, Page 5 Pilot News · This year, 39 Storm Radio and Storm TV student groups were announced as finalists in the high school division, rep-resenting the top 5 percent in each - DOKUMEN.TIPS (2024)

(PDF) Section A, Page 5 Pilot News· This year, 39 Storm Radio and Storm TV student groups were announced as finalists in the high school division, rep-resenting the top 5 percent in each - DOKUMEN.TIPS (1)

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Pilot NewsMarshall County, Indiana’s community news source since 1851 Volume 167 Issue No. 66 75¢

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NCAA TournamentBig Ten sending three to Sweet 16

Monday, March 20, 2017

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St. Paul’s March birthdaysSection A, Page 5

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FULTON COUNTY—Saturday, at approximately 4:48 p.m. officers from the Indiana State Police, the Futon County Sheriff’s Department, the Rochester Police Department, and the Argos Police Department responded to a two vehicle crash on U.S. 31 at State Road 110, in which an infant died.

The preliminary crash investigation by Indiana State Police Trooper Todd Trottier revealed that Brittany Gonzalez, 21 of Monterrey, was driving a 2013 Ford Taurus southbound on U.S. 31. Gonzalez attempted to make an eastbound turn onto State Road 110. She failed to yield oncoming traffic, and pulled into the path of a northbound 2011 Ford 350 pickup truck driven by Ricardo Hernandez, 24 of Goshen.

Hernandez was not injured. Gonzalez was transported by a medical helicopter, to a South Bend hospital, with non-life threatening injuries. Ivan Gonzalez, 21 also of Monterrey, a passenger in the Taurus, along with a second passenger, Isaac Davis, 2 of Monterrey, were also transport-ed, by a medical helicopter, to a South Bend hospital with non-life threatening injuries. Julian Gonzalez, 11 months of Monterrey, a third passenger in the Taurus, was transported by ambulance to a Plymouth hospital. He succumbed to injuries sustained in the crash.

The investigation is ongoing, but neither the use of alco-hol nor narcotics is suspected as having contributed to the crash according to State Police. All participants, except Ivan Gonzalez, were properly secured in a seat belt or a child safety seat.

Police were assisted at the crash scene by the Marshall County Sheriff's Department, the Rochester Fire Department, the Argos Fire Department, the Samaritan Life Line Helicopter, Lutheran EMS, and Fulton County EMS.

Infant dies in 2 carFulton County crash

PLYMOUTH—Recently in New York City, the 77th Intercollegiate National Broadcasting Awards and confer-ence was held. The annual IBS New York City Conference is focused on New Trends in School/College Radio/TV/Webcasting.

The IBS Trophy Awards honored excellence in program-ming, air personalities, public service efforts, and outstand-ing stations. The 2017 winners were announced and trophies presented to all finalists and winners. IBS presented IBS Golden Microphone Trophies to winners/finalists during the finale of the conference.

This year, 39 Storm Radio and Storm TV student groups were announced as finalists in the high school division, rep-resenting the top 5 percent in each of the high school catego-ries. LJH Digital Storm students received an impressive 10 National Winner trophies and 29 National Finalist trophies.

The conference was located at Hotel Pennsylvania, across from Madison Square Garden and PENN Station and fea-tured over 150 speakers, over 100 sessions and tours, and 1,400 attendees from all over the world! This was the largest IBS conference of the year and part of the IBS 2016-2017 coast-to-coast conference series.

The winners and the award they won:Viktoria Vancza, Kendra Howard, Harlie Mast, Cristian

Quintana, Best Community News Coverage- Radio- Blueberry Festival Director

Kaleigh Kephart, Jenna Abberger, Tallulah Gault, Best Spot News Interview- Radio- Mooney’s Ice Cream

Kaleigh Kephart, Jenna Abberger, Tallulah Gault, Best Underwriting Spot- Radio- Delta Theta Tau Sorority

Jenna Abberger, Tallulah Gault, Best Specialty Show- Radio- Halloween Show

Cristian Quintana, Best Sports Play-by-Play- Radio: Women’s Volleyball

Mason Keller and Collin Mills, Best Community Volunteer Program/Personality - Radio-WTCA Rusty Nixon

Daniel Bacon, Madison Stiles, Drew Harrell, Best TV Sports Report- Mooney’s- on location

Ana Aguilar, Emma Janda, Austin Kizer, Olivia Horvath, Hayden Hopple, Best TV Talk Program- David Harker- WNDU

LJH Digital Storm Staff- Storm Radio & Storm TV, Best Station Promotion - TV & Radio- LJH Digital Storm

Diego Martinez, Best Use of Graphics- TV

Lincoln Junior High Storm Radio and TV win awards at national conference

PHOTO PROVIDEDPictured are the Lincoln Junior High Digital Red Storm students that were named national winners in the high school divi-sion. Front row: Harlie Mast, Kendra Howard, Jenna Abberger, Madison Stiles, and Emma Janda: Second row: Viktoria Vancza, Mason Keller, Collin Mills, Kaleigh Kephart, Tallulah Gault, Drew Harrell, Ana Aguilar Back row: Diego Martinez, Cristian Quintana, Austin Kizer, Olivia Horvath, Daniel Bacon, and Hayden Hopple.

INDIANA—Average retail gasoline prices in Indiana have risen 7.4 cents per gallon in the past week, averaging $2.21/g yesterday, according to GasBuddy’s daily survey of 3,271 gas outlets in Indiana. This compares with the national average that has fallen 0.3 cents per gallon in the last week to $2.29/g, according to gasoline price website GasBuddy.com.

Including the change in gas prices in Indiana during the past week, prices yesterday were 27.4 cents per gallon higher than the same day one year ago and are 2.4 cents per gallon lower than a month ago. The national average has increased 1.2 cents per gallon during the last month and stands 30.3 cents per gallon higher than this day one year ago.

According to GasBuddy historical data, gasoline prices on March 20 in Indiana have ranged widely over the last five years:

Average pump price for gasoline in Indiana is $2.21 up slightly for the week

By CARMEN MCCOLLUMThe (NorThwesT INdIaNa) TImes

HAMMOND, Ind. (AP) — When Judy Jacobi talks about the art at Purdue University Northwest, enthusiasm and joy light up her face, just as the art around the Westville and Hammond campuses captures the imagination.

Part of the transition that combined Purdue Calumet and Purdue North Central into Purdue University Northwest is a more pronounced art presence on the Hammond campus, which includes outdoor sculptures and indoor paintings.

The new focus on art at Hammond follows the lead of the art presence that has characterized the Westville campus for years. There will be a tour on March 25 of the new works of art at the Hammond campus, and some of the artists will be there.

The person behind the art is Jacobi, who is assistant vice chancellor of the University Art Collections and Special Programs.

Nineteen years ago, the Westville campus was one of Jacobi's clients. She owned an advertising agency.

"The campus is 240-some acres of land that looks like a

Combination of Purdue campuses means more art in Hammond

See Gasoline, Page A3

See Art, Page A3

Changes, improvements on the horizon

PHOTOS BY ANNA CAMPBELLThe sign facing Lake Shore Drive is now lighted for better visibility.

New concrete pads for the portable toilets were recently installed in the town park. The two parking spots in front will be removed and lined for easier access to the toilets.

By BEth PARéCITIzeN edITor

CULVER—For a Works Progress Administration (WPA) project from the Roosevelt presidential era which opened in May of 1937, the Culver beach lodge is doing well. However, it is scheduled for some much-needed updates and improvements in the near future.

Known during its conception stage as “the new bath house” and then named the Culver Beach Lodge, the work was accompanied by improve-

ments to the adjacent park, closely resembling the plans for 2017.

Culver Park Superintendent Anna Campbell explains that the building is long overdue for work.

“This is the first time in decades that the beach lodge has undergone major renovation. From top to bottom the structure needs attention.”

Exterior concerns include cracked foundation walls on the east and west sides which can be sealed, a leaking roof, and gutters in need of replace-ment. Repairing the foundation walls should stop the water leakage into the

restroom areas.Interior work already begun includes

removal of damaged cabinets and updated plumbing for the sinks in the concession area downstairs. In the sec-ond floor meeting space, the old stucco ceiling and broken water fountain have been removed, and new light fixtures installed. New vinyl flooring is being put on the newly leveled floor, replac-ing the green carpet. Kitchen work is planned as well.

Campbell emphasizes that many of the issues already being addressed,

See Changes, Page A2

(PDF) Section A, Page 5 Pilot News· This year, 39 Storm Radio and Storm TV student groups were announced as finalists in the high school division, rep-resenting the top 5 percent in each - DOKUMEN.TIPS (2)

ObituariesLocal Pilot News • Monday, March 20, 2017Page A2

Death NoticesHelen J. Marsh

September 4, 1942 – March 17, 2017 PLYMOUTH — Helen J. Marsh, 74, and Plymouth resi-dent all her life, passed away in her home with family near her at 3:35 p.m. on Friday, March 17, 2017. Arrangements are pending with Johnson-Danielson Funeral Home, Plymouth.

Bette J. LeeJuly 1, 1918 – March 16, 2017

PLYMOUTH – Bette J. Lee, 98, of Plymouth, passed away peace-fully at 8:38 a.m. Thursday morn-ing at the Tanglewood Trace in Mishawaka where she has resided for the past year. Bette was born July 1, 1918 in Plymouth, to the late Harry Orville and Grace Alma (Stockman) Wright. She attended schools in Bremen and Valparaiso, but grad-uated from Plymouth High School in 1935. On September 14, 1939 in Plymouth, Bette married Arnold Lee; he preceded her in death on April 7, 1997. Bette was a secretary for many years; first working at a local Finance Company, then spending eighteen years with the Plymouth School system. She was a member of the Plymouth Baptist Church where she taught Sunday school and also was involved in the youth work. She traveled extensively with Arnold. After retiring, Bette took up painting and won numerous awards. Surviving are her children; Tom (Panni) Lee of South Bend, Jane (Dennis) Casey of Wilmington, NC, five grand-children and one great-grandchild. Sisters include; Kate White, Julia Hatfield, Mary Phillips, Peg (Jim) Clevenger all of Plymouth and Jean Carlisle of Atlanta. Several nieces and nephews also survive. She was preceded in death by her parents, husband, and one brother; John Wright. Visitation will be held on Wednesday, March 22, 2017 from 10 a.m. until 12 noon in the Johnson-Danielson Funeral Home, 1100 N. Michigan Street, Plymouth. Funeral services will follow visitation on Wednesday at 12 noon in the Johnson-Danielson Funeral Home, Plymouth,

Indiana 46563. Pastor Clark Harless will officiate. Burial will be in the New Oak Hill Cemetery. Memorial contributions can be made to the Plymouth Baptist Church, 11345 9A Road, Plymouth, Indiana 46563. Condolences may be sent to the family through the website: www.johnson-danielson.com

Kristol L. MillerJanuary 9, 1977 – March 17, 2017

PLYMOUTH — Kristol Lynn “Sis” Miller, 40, passed away unexpectedly in her home on Friday afternoon March 17, 2017, after struggling with diabetes since the age of 14.Sis was born on January 9, 1977 in Wichita Falls, Texas, to Allen R. and Sharon A. (Carpenter) Heist. She is survived by her husband Eric and children: Matthew R. Gaines of Plymouth, Aubrey L. Gaines of Vero Beach, Florida, Alysia J. Miller and Mariah A. Miller both at home; her parents, Allen R. and Sharon A. Heist of Argos; two sisters, Jennifer (Chris) Keim of Argos and Alicia Heist of Argos; her grandmother, Allene Ligocki of Las Vegas, Nevada and her mother-in-law Elizabeth “Liz” Ward of Plymouth. Visitation will take place on Monday, March 20, 2017

from 5-7 in the Johnson- Danielson Funeral Home, 1100 N. Michigan Street, Plymouth, IN 46563. A service will follow at 7:00 PM. In lieu of flowers, memorial con-tributions can be given to the family. Condolences may be sent to the family through the website: www.johnson-danielson.com

Jane E. BroekerMay 6, 1918 – March 18, 2017

CULVER — Jane E, Broeker, 98, of Culver, IN, passed away on March 18, 2017 in Rochester, IN. Jane was born in Chicago, IL, on May 6, 1918. She moved to State Road 8 in Culver when she was 16 and resided there ever since. She was married to Charles H. Broeker on November 26, 1939 and togeth-er they operated a roadside market for almost 60 years. Jane was a member of the RLDS – Community of Christ Church for over 50 years. There she served as church school director, women’s lead-er and primary teacher. She was a Marshall County 4-H leather craft leader for 40 years and belonged to the West Neighbors Home Ec. Club, Holly Fifteen, and the Bunco Club. Jane is survived by her sons and daughters: Chuck (Mary Ann) Broeker, Don (Jean) Broeker, Diana Harris (Jay Gray), Michelle Hanson, and Tim (Shelia) Broeker; brother Edward (Rae) Boehm; sister-in-law Mabel Kirkpatrick, 13 grandchildren, 18 great grandchildren, 3 great-great grand-children, and many nieces and nephews. Visitation will be held at the Odom Funeral Home, 104 E Lakeshore Drive, Culver, on Tuesday, March 21, 2017, from 4:00 – 7:00 p.m. Jim Hartman will officiate funeral services at Odom Funeral Home on Wednesday, March 22, 2017 at 10 a.m. Burial will follow at Burr Oak Cemetery, Culver, IN. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Visiting Nurses’ Association or to the Center for Hospice and Palliative Care. Condolences may be sent via the obituary page at www.odomfuneralhome.com. The Odom Funeral Home, Culver, is caring for the family.

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Carl R. EdingtonNovember 27, 1940 - March 11, 2017

ROCHESTER — Carl R. Edington, 76, formerly of Rochester, passed away at 10:57 a.m. Saturday, March 11, 2017 at St. Joseph Regional Medical Center, Mishawaka, Ind. He was born on Nov. 27, 1940, in Fulton County, Indiana, the son of William and Mable (Irvin) Edington. In 2016, he married Sharon Miller, and she survives.Carl retired from Burns Construction Company after more than 20 years of service as a Foreman. He enjoyed playing basketball and socializing with his friends. Survivors include his wife Sharon, children Steve and wife Barbara Edington, New Mexico; Eric Edington, Bourbon, Ind.; Shayne and wife Norma Edington, Argos, Ind.; Brandon Edington, Argos, Ind.; Chase and wife Anee Edington, Goshen, Ind.; Brian Edington, Bremen, Ind.; Penny and husband Lawrence King, California; son, Craig Shireman, Argos; numerous grandchildren; brother, Ralph Edington, Rochester, Ind.; and sisters, Louise Grube, Rochester, Ind.; Evelyn Burns, Rochester, Ind. and Ruby Armstrong, Lafayette, Ind. He was preceded in death by his parents, daughter Socha Edington, daughter-in-law Linda Edington, broth-ers Lester “Spider” Edington and George Edington, sister Margaret Carpenter, sister-in-law Jean Edington, and brother-in-law Howard Burns. Funeral service was held at 12 p.m. Saturday March 18, 2017 at Zimmerman Bros. Funeral Home, Rochester, Ind. with Pastor Gary Clingler officiating. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to the funeral home to assist the family with funeral arrange-ments. Online condolences may be expressed at www.zimmer-manbrosfh.com

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such as the interior light fixtures, have a high impact in com-parison to the cost of repairing or replacing them. She adds that park staff and utilities staff from the town have done much of the work, saving money.

In the park and beach area, several changes are planned A new lifeguard chair is on order to replace the aging one. The swings on the playground will be replaced, and some new stand-alone pieces will be installed.

Improvements already made include the new lighted sign facing Lake Shore Drive and the work on the west pavilion, which was both cosmetic and structural.

Concrete pads for the portable toilets have been installed near the electrical boxes, to offer better access to the toilets, from both the park and the parking area. The concrete will make the units more stable.

Campbell says, “We have all worked as a team to make this building more safe, more functional and more visually appealing. It is a continue work in progress but we are look-ing forward to how these small changes will have a positive impact on the community.”

Changes, cont. from front

(PDF) Section A, Page 5 Pilot News· This year, 39 Storm Radio and Storm TV student groups were announced as finalists in the high school division, rep-resenting the top 5 percent in each - DOKUMEN.TIPS (3)

Local Page A3 Pilot News • Monday, March 20, 2017

bundle of jewels and is beautifully colored with landscape and plants," she said, talking with her hands and waving them in the air to emphasize her point.

Jacobi said she talked with then-Chancellor Dale Alspaugh about bringing art to the Westville campus in a program where it would be rented or leased from artists.

Today, there are 50 or so pieces on both campuses, the majority at Westville. Purdue Northwest owns six pieces of the fine art, which is valued at about $3 million. The loaned art is not counted in that estimate.

Jacobi said with the exception of some 100 pieces of abstract sculpture and painter George Sugarman's work, which the university received as part of a massive gift about nine years ago, all the art at the Hammond campus has been newly acquired through recent gifts.

"Hammond had some art from previous gifts, but nowhere near what we have installed since June 2016," she said.

"We have some art on loan such as our seven new sculp-tures. Large sculptures are less likely to be available as gifts, because artists have invested thousands of dollars into their materials.

"We have focused our effort to transform the Hammond campus and continue to maintain the very high level of col-lections at the Westville campus. We will be moving pieces from one campus to the other for maximum exposure," she said.

Interacting with campus artJacobi can walk through the grounds and buildings of

both campuses and describe the art and artist. For example, there's John Adduci's "Odysseus," at the Westville campus, in the middle of the Bard's Pond. The aluminum sculpture represents Homer's legend, "The Odyssey," which means journey. The hero, Odysseus, navigates his raft through uncertain waters on his way home from the Trojan War.

And there is "Boundless," by Boyan Marinov, one of sev-eral sculptures on display at the Hammond campus. The sculpture depicts a man made of chains.

PNW freshman Christopher Willey, 21, said "Boundless" is one of his favorite pieces in Hammond. Willey said he's also been to the Westville campus, which he said has "beautiful

and amazing" pieces of art.Jacobi said art, unlike politics, doesn't usually raise hack-

les or make people angry."Art encourages exchange and conversation, and some-

times disagreement but all in the spirit of knowledge," she said.

"Art doesn't exist in a vacuum. Art is (a) portal or door-way to learning about everything. Art reflects and dovetails with every academic discipline I can think of. It talks about physics, socio-economic issues, politics and gender issues."

Using art with other disciplinesSome of the professors at both campuses have found a

way to incorporate art into the curriculum, and students from across Northwest Indiana have taken tours of the Westville campus.

Retired Hammond campus associate professor of English Zenobia Mistri said she often used art in her Introduction to the Liberal Arts class.

"I wanted my students to understand how impressionists used light," she said.

"I would send my students on a small exercise to go over to the White Lodging Center. I'd ask them to look at some-thing that interests them and write about it. Look at it at different times and talk about how their impression shifted and changed depending on the light."

Professor Karen Church, a limited lecturer in communica-tion and creative arts at the Westville campus, said for the first semester in Communication 114, she asks students to select one of the sculptures and research the artist and work.

"They present a speech in front of the sculpture to the entire class as we travel around the campus viewing and discussing the sculptor, and his influences on creating the sculpture and the meaning/significance of each work," she said.

Pine Elementary School art teacher Holly Beadles said Michigan City Area Schools began a partnership with

then-Purdue North Central when the elementary school became a Magnet School for the Visual and Performing Arts.

"At that time they worked with us and installed 'Festival,' by George Sugarman, in our library, which is a large sculp-ture that fills an entire wall of our library," she said.

"Since that time, the university has loaned us many works in their collection for our students to enjoy. I'll often catch conversations that students are having about the pieces of work we have on display where they are theorizing on the artists' intent or discussing the use of colors."

She said every year, the school takes the fifth-grade class to the Westville campus to look at the sculptures that are scattered throughout the campus.

"The favorite of most students is "Haints and History," by Preston Jackson. It's relevant to them, because they study the Civil War and the underground railroad in fourth grade, and for them it's like history comes alive," she said.

"Students are always surprised to find out there is a piece of the World Trade Towers in the lounge in the LSF (Library Student Faculty) building and are quite moved by seeing it, and the work of Jason Poteet that surrounds it," Beadles said.

LocalA3

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Art, cont. from front

$1.94/g in 2016, $2.36/g in 2015, $3.61/g in 2014, $3.88/g in 2013 and $3.87/g in 2012.

Areas near Indiana and their current gas price climate:Champaign- $2.36/g, up 22.4 cents per gallon from last

week’s $2.13/g.Indianapolis- $2.24/g, up 17.5 cents per gallon from last

week’s $2.06/g.Cincinnati- $2.26/g, up 15.6 cents per gallon from last

week’s $2.10/g.“As oil prices have hit a bit of a rough patch in the last two

weeks, gasoline prices have stumbled as well with a major-ity of states seeing a weekly pull back in retail prices,” said

Patrick DeHaan, senior petroleum analyst for GasBuddy.com. “While some states did see minor increases, the bulk of the country saw prices moving lower at a time of year that such a move is about as likely as a 16th seed team winning the NCAA tournament. While the drop at the pump is most welcome, we’re nearly guaranteed to see prices rebound well in time for Memorial Day and the start of the summer driving season. For now, there’s a major tug of war going on with oil prices- a move higher or lower in the week ahead could determine the direction of prices the next few weeks or longer,” DeHaan added.

Gasoline, cont. from front

Tuesday Mar. 14 at 1:43 p.m. Marshall County Probation called the Plymouth Police to advise they had a probationer who failed a drug screen. The officer arrived on scene and placed Michael Akens, 38 of Goshen, into handcuffs, and transported him to the jail without incident.

Mar. 14 at 6:01 p.m. Plymouth Officers were dispatched to the Mayflower Bar in reference to a male subject cutting a padlock off of their basem*nt access on the side of the busi-ness. When the officer arrived at the scene Adan Vargas, 43 of Plymouth, was located in the passenger seat of a vehicle parked in the front of the business. During the investigation it was discovered that not only was he on home detention through Starke County but also had an active warrant through LaPorte County. The officer transported Vargas to the Marshall County Jail where he was lodged and LaPorte County notified. He was given a court date of April 18, 2017 and $1500.00 bond for the attempted breaking and entering and hold for LaPorte County.

Tuesday, Michael A Layton, 26 of Plymouth, called 911 advising he had been battered by Jordan Kilgore, 30 of Plymouth, and had a warrant through Marshall County. Upon arrival on scene the officer met with Layton who had been visibly battered about the face. Layton was then taken into custody for the warrant shortly after and taken to the Plymouth ER for treatment. Kilgore was then contacted and taken into custody for the battery after a brief investigation.

Wednesday March 15 at 1:09 p.m. a Plymouth Police offi-cer initiated a traffic stop on a silver Neon on Markley at Shamrock due to the officer knowing the owner was driving while suspended prior. Alan Davis, 60 of N. Liberty, was taken into custody and transported to the Marshall County Jail.

Information on these arrests was provided by law enforce-ment agencies. Individuals whose names appear in these reports are presumed innocent until proven otherwise in a court of law.

Plymouth Police reports

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) — The director of an art museum at Indiana University says its lengthy, $30 million renovation will make the building a lot more engaging for visitors.

The museum is expected to close to the public for renovations May 14, according to The Herald-Times (http://bit.ly/2mBbWYh ). The target for reopening the museum is the fall semester of 2019.

Eskenazi Museum of Art director David Brenneman said the renovation is necessary because the building is old.

"Museums are basically these incred-ible preservation machines," he said

recently from his office on the third floor of the museum. "And like any machine, the parts get old, need to be replaced, need to be updated, and I'm simplifying, but that's basically why buildings need to be renovated."

But he said a renovation is also needed because it's extraordinary for a small Midwestern city to have a muse-um with such an extensive collection.

"If we were in just about any Southern major city, we would be the major city art museum. We'd be the encyclopedic collection," Brenneman said. "It's hard to understand that, to grasp that, but I'm telling you it's true."

Brenneman said many people aren't

aware of the gems hidden in the trian-gular concrete structure in the heart of Indiana University's main campus.

"I think part of our challenge is no one knows what's inside this building," Brenneman said. "In a way, we've kind of made the building the main feature of who we are."

The monumental task of moving the museum's entire collection out of the building has already begun.

The museum's building was designed by world-renowned architect I.M. Pei. Construction began in 1978, and it was completed in 1982 after opening in stages.

IU art museum prepares for renovation

(PDF) Section A, Page 5 Pilot News· This year, 39 Storm Radio and Storm TV student groups were announced as finalists in the high school division, rep-resenting the top 5 percent in each - DOKUMEN.TIPS (4)

By The AssociATed Press

Your daily look at late-breaking news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about today:

1. SENATE HEARINGS SET FOR SUPREME COURT PICK

Thirteen months after Justice Antonin Scalia’s death created a vacancy on the high court, testimony gets underway for the highly credentialed conservative judge, Neil Gorsuch.

2. RUSSIA INQUIRY GOES PUBLIC ON CAPITOL HILL

A congressional inquiry into Russian interference in the U.S. presidential election moves into the open with

a hearing featuring FBI Director James Comey.3. NEW MIDEAST BOX ON CENSUS IS SENSITIVESome are wary of singling themselves out a time

when Trump is seeking to ban travel to the U.S. from some majority-Muslim countries.

4. WHERE LIFE IS ABOUT TO CHANGEBrexit will affect Gibraltar and the 300,000 people

that live in the low-tax, business-friendly rocky out-crop on the Mediterranean.

5. WHO’S HAPPY, WHO’S NOTA new report shows Norway is the happiest country

on Earth, Americans are getting sadder, and it takes more than just money to be happy.

6. HOW MARINES ARE ADDRESSING NUDE PHOTO SCANDAL

The Corps issues a longer and more detailed social media policy that lays out professional and legal rami-fications.

7. WHAT HAS ADVOCATES FOR DISABLED CONCERNED

New York’s move to a $15 minimum wage could push low-paid health aides into less risky jobs and deepen a shortage in the field.

8. BATTER UP ... IN GAZAPalestinian women don baseball caps on top of

Islamic headscarves and field tennis balls with fabric gloves, giving a local feel to the treasured American pastime.

9. MUPPET WITH AUTISM A BREAKTHROUGHFolks on Sesame Street have a way of making every-

one feel accepted, and that goes for Julia, a Muppet youngster with blazing red hair, bright green eyes — and autism.

10. BRACKET BUSTERS LITTER NCAA TOURNAMENT

No. 7 seed South Carolina had the biggest take-down, knocking off No. 2 Duke 88-81 a day after Villanova, the defending national champion and the top overall seed, lost to Wisconsin.

Opinion Pilot News • Monday, March 20, 2017Page A4

Shoe

Views Presented By Columnists And Cartoonists On Today’s

Opinion Page Do Not Necessarily Reflect Those Of The Staff And

Management Of The Pilot News.

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(USPS 436-440)

(Terre hAuTe) TriBune-sTAr

The working poor. They are Hoosiers with jobs, sometimes more than one job, living paycheck to pay-check.

Hundreds of thousands of those folks could not afford health care before former Gov. Mike Pence agreed to use Medicaid funding — expanded under the Affordable Care Act — to broaden the Healthy Indiana Program in 2015. Pence’s action created HIP 2.0 in 2015. Obamacare provides 90 percent of HIP 2.0’s funding.

The state’s version of Obamacare remains packed with political irony. Pence ardently fought former President Obama’s health care initiatives, along with every other type of initiative, refusing to accept the ACA’s traditional Medicaid expansion. While his resis-tance withheld coverage from thousands of Hoosiers for a year, Pence managed to collaborate with the Obama administration to develop an expansion of Medicaid, with an Indiana twist. HIP 2.0 requires recipients to make monthly contributions to a health savings plan.

Pence won praise for the adaptation of Obamacare, including from Obama himself. The former governor, now Donald Trump’s vice president, does not recipro-cate that praise for the former president. Nonetheless, HIP 2.0 has improved the health circ*mstances for more than 400,000 Hoosiers.

Current Gov. Eric Holcomb wants to see those Indiana residents continue to receive health care cover-age. The future of HIP 2.0 and other states’ Medicaid expansion programs are threatened by a U.S. House Republican plan to repeal and replace the ACA with the American Health Care Act. An analysis by the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office projects that 14 million Americans would lose coverage in 2018, if the ACA is dismantled and replaced by the cleverly named AHCA. By 2026, the number would grow to 24 million, the CBO reported Monday.

Holcomb emphasized his support for corralling fed-eral spending. Yet, he is asking Congress not to strip away funding for the health care coverage that low-income residents receive under HIP 2.0.

“I want to make sure that we’re compassionate and cover the Hoosiers that we are right now,” Holcomb said Monday, according to an Associated Press report. “I completely believe we need to fix the Affordable Care Act, and [the House Republicans’] repeal was the right first step, but the devil is always in the details.”

Thirty-one states will expand Medicaid coverage under Obamacare by 2026, the CBO projected, bringing coverage to an estimated 80 percent of newly eligible residents, the Washington Post reported. If repealed and replaced by the House Republican plan, none of those 31 states would follow through with their Medicaid expansions because the states would have to pay a much larger share of the cost.

The federal deficit would shrink by $337 billion through the next decade, and wealthy taxpayers would pay less, but fewer working poor in Indiana could get health care. Plus, older Americans overall will pay “substantially more” for health care, the CBO said.

Holcomb said HIP 2.0, the plan molded from Obamacare by Vice President Pence, works as well as any in the country. It should be used as a model while the ACA is repaired, instead of becoming a shrunken casualty as the ACA is dismantled. “I do think that HIP 2.0 is part of that answer in how our nation can address the issue of health care,” the governor said.

Congress should abide by Holcomb’s call for contin-ued, proper federal funding for HIP 2.0.

Indiana’s HIP 2.0 offers better course for fixing

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10 things to know for today

(BloomingTon) herAld-Times

The confirmation of former U.S. Sen. Dan Coats as director of national intel-ligence adds at least one reason for con-fidence in the Trump Administration.

Coats will provide an experienced, thoughtful and steady voice in a high-security area of the executive branch of the federal government. He is not cut from the same mold as the president, who shoots from the hip and doesn’t hesitate to show his lack of respect for established professionalism in the intelligence community. Coats, on the other hand, will provide a serious, calm and trustworthy temperament in the job.

He’s not a pushover, but he’s shown an ability to listen and to work with people from both sides of the politi-cal aisle to get things done. That was in evidence with the 85-12 bipartisan landslide in favor of confirmation by the Senate.

Coats, who represented Indiana in both the House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate, will direct 16 federal agencies that work alone and in col-laboration to gather and analyze the intelligence used in matters of foreign policy and national security. Among the agencies he’s responsible for are the Central Intelligence Agency, Drug Enforcement Administration and National Security Agency — known

informally as the CIA, DEA and NSA.Coats has said he will act indepen-

dently in his role in the executive branch, and we trust him to do so.

If Coats was looking to ease his workload and pressure by retiring from the Senate last year, it appears he’s failed. One of his first challenges will be to support the investigation by the Senate Intelligence Committee into whether and how Russia meddled in the 2016 presidential election. That’s a tall order and important on many fronts.

Hoosiers should appreciate and take some comfort in his willingness to serve in such a vital role at such a tumultuous time.

Coats’ failure at retirement good for U.S.

(PDF) Section A, Page 5 Pilot News· This year, 39 Storm Radio and Storm TV student groups were announced as finalists in the high school division, rep-resenting the top 5 percent in each - DOKUMEN.TIPS (5)

Local Page A5 Pilot News • Monday, March 20, 2017

PHOTO PROVIDEDSt. Paul’s Lutheran School recognized students and staff with birthdays in the month of March during the weekly chapel worship service March 8. Those with March birthdays pictured are: (front l-r) Colton Napper and Abby Wildauer. (middle row l-r) Linnea Clark, Jack Wildauer, Ian Russell, and Paul Miller. (back row l-r) Pastor Neil Wonnacott, Jacob Miller, Madison Raskow, and Avery Wildauer. Missing from the picture is school secretary Deb Burcham. Happy Birthday to all those with March birthdays!

St. Paul’s March birthdays

Davis places 7th at state wrestling finals

PHOTO PROVIDEDTriton Elementary School student Wyatt Davis recently received 7th place at the ISWA Folkstyle State Finals for wrestling. Congratulations to Wyatt on his win!

MONDAY, MARCH 20• Free Child Safety Seat inspections at the

Women’s Care Center, 224 N. Michigan St., Plymouth. Call to set up an appointment in Plymouth on Thursdays 574-936-5154 or Bremen on Mondays 574-546-2904

• Job Fair from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Johns Manville, 1215 W. Dewey St., Bremen. Production & Forklift positions starting pay $16/hr.

• Free Exercise Classes at the Webster Center 6:00-6:45 p.m. Core-Motion; 6:45-7:30 p.m. Walk ‘N’ Rock; 7:30-7:50 p.m. Tabata.

• High School Equivalency Test TASC Test that replaced the GED test at the PCSC Service Center 4:00 pm to 8:00 pm. Preregistration is required. The two day test is offered today and March 22nd. Contact Plymouth Adult Education Office for more information. 574-936-7268, 574-780-6334, or [emailprotected].

• Heartland Artists Gallery will hold their Executive Committee meeting at 4:30, the Heartland Members and community are invited. The Advisory Board Meeting will take place at 6:00 for Board Members. All meetings take place at the gallery in the classroom area. And the Student Art Show with art represented from all the PCSC schools and Saint Michael’s School will be on display through March 24. Gallery hours are Tues. - Saturday 10-4.

TUESDAY, MARCH 21• St. Paul’s Lutheran School, 605 S.

Center St., Bremen, will hold Kindergarten Information Evening from 6:30 - 7:30 pm. Bring your kindergartener-to-be for a short class session while parents tour the school, ask questions and pick up information. Find out more at www.stpaulsbremen.org or call 574-546-2790.

• The Alzheimer’s Support Group for Marshall County and surrounding areas will meet at the Marshall County Council on Aging building at 1305 W. Harrison Street in Plymouth from 10:00-11:30 a.m. For more information please call Donna Sikorski at 574-780-0367 or the Alzheimer’s Services of Northern Indiana help line at 888-303-0180.

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 22• Plymouth Elks Lodge Wednesday Night

Specials include Meatloaf; Ham Dinner; Fish Basket $5.95. Serving 5-7 p.m. Carry-outs available. Call 935-5511.

• Free Exercise Classes at the Webster Center 6:00-6:45 p.m. Core-Motion; 6:45-7:30 p.m. Zumba; 7:30-7:50 p.m. Tabata.

• Senior Fit exercise classes at 11 a.m. at the Life Enrichment Program, 1305 W. Harrison St., Plymouth. Free classes are led by a fitness professional and focus on upper and lower body strength, cardiovascular endurance, flexibility and balance.

• Attorneys with the Volunteer Lawyer Network organization will be at the Life Enrichment Center, 1305 W. Harrison St., Plymouth to provide free legal advice. These clinics will be from 12:00 noon to 5:00PM. This service is BY APPOINTMENT ONLY (no walk-ins will be accepted). Please call 574-936-9904 to schedule an appoint-ment time.

• High School Equivalency Test TASC Test that replaced the GED test at the PCSC Service Center 4:00 pm to 8:00 pm. Preregistration is required. Contact Plymouth Adult Education Office for more information. 574-936-7268, 574-780-6334, or [emailprotected].

THURSDAY, MARCH 23• Riverside Intermediate School will be

hosting Title I STEM Family Night from 6:00 - 7:00. A STEM Family Night is an evening of hands-on science, math, and engineering activities for students and families to com-plete together. The event includes a range of activities covering different STEM topics and connections to exciting STEM careers. Door prizes for parents/guardians. Students who attend will be provided a book of their choice the following school day.

• Modern Western Square Dance Lessons at the Conservation Club house at 6:30 p.m. For more information, contact Ralph Hardy at 765-438- 9438.

• Free Child Safety Seat inspections at the Women’s Care Center, 224 N. Michigan St., Plymouth. Call to set up an appointment in Plymouth on Thursdays 574-936-5154 or

Bremen on Mondays 574-546-2904FRIDAY, MARCH 24

• Annual Fish Fry from 4:30-7 p.m. at Pretty Lake Trnity United Methodist Church fellowship hall, 3.5 miles west of Plymouth on SR 17. Cost is $9.50 for adults, $4 for kids 6-11 and free for kids under 6.

• Senior Fit exercise classes at 11 a.m. at the Life Enrichment Program, 1305 W. Harrison St., Plymouth. Free classes are led by a fitness professional and focus on upper and lower body strength, cardiovascular endurance, flexibility and balance.

• Wythougan Toastmasters meet from 6:45 -7:45a.m. at Christos Family Dining. It’s an opportunity to improve your commu-nication and leadership skills in a friendly environment. Guests are always welcome. For more information call 574-936-1424. Christo’s is located at 2227 N. Michigan Street in Plymouth.

SATURDAY, MARCH 25• Maxinkuckee Oddfellows Pancakes &

Sausage and Biscuits & Gravy from 6 a.m. to noon, corner of 18B and Pine Rd., South of SR 10 between Culver and Argos. $8 for adults and $6 for children. All you can eat.

• All you can eat Homemade Chicken and Noodle Supper from 4:30-7 p.m. at Union Center Church of the Brethren, corner of CR 50 and 11, east of Nappanee. Adults $7, ages 5-12 $3 and preschoolers eat free.

• Crafters/Vendors wanted: Millers Senior Living Community is having their 17th annual Spring Craft Bazaar from 9:00-1:00. Call (574) 862-1918 to get information, ask for Cindy Hill.

• Caligraphy class at Heartland Artists Gallery with Gloria Seitz from 10:30-12:00. This class is open to kids 12 years and up and all adults. All supplies are included. Call the Gallery 936-9515 to reserve your spot.

MONDAY, MARCH 27• Free Exercise Classes at the Webster

Center 6:00-6:45 p.m. Core-Motion; 6:45-7:30 p.m. Walk ‘N’ Rock; 7:30-7:50 p.m. Tabata.

• Free Child Safety Seat inspections at the Women’s Care Center, 224 N. Michigan St., Plymouth. Call to set up an appointment in Plymouth on Thursdays 574-936-5154 or Bremen on Mondays 574-546-2904

TUESDAY, MARCH 28• Bremen Seniors 1st luncheon of the year

at the Pine’s Senior Building. Cost is $5. Bring a dish to share. Lunch is at noon with Bingo to follow.

• Stained Glass Class at Heartland Artists Gallery with Mary Szymczak from 5:30 -8:00. Each adult student will take a completely finished wine bottle and glass-stained glass piece home from the two day session. All supplies included.Call the Gallery 936-9515 for more information to reserve your spot.

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 29• Not going anywhere for Spring Break?

Don’t worry...The Marshall County Museum has some fun activities planned especially for the kids today. Visit the Kids Farmer’s Market Area that offers plenty of unique opportunities for children to learn while playing with the cash regis-ter, fishing in the Yellow River, picking vegetables, collecting eggs and making a meal! Make-your-own Easter basket in the Community Room, or take a guided tour of the exhibits stationed in the 2 floors and 3 storefronts of the museum. From 11 a.m. - 1 p.m., enjoy the infamous interactive model trains, race track and all the games and give-aways in the Train Room, as well as an authentic Native American storytell-er that will captivate the kid’s imagination and teach them a lesson. Dairy Queen treat coupons will be given to all kids to keep the fun going after the museum trip! The Marshall County Museum is located at 123 N. Michigan St. in historic down-town Plymouth. For more information call 574-936-2306.

Community Calendar

Best of DTA5

(PDF) Section A, Page 5 Pilot News· This year, 39 Storm Radio and Storm TV student groups were announced as finalists in the high school division, rep-resenting the top 5 percent in each - DOKUMEN.TIPS (6)

Page A6 Page A7 Pilot News • Monday, March 20, 2017 Pilot News • Monday, March 20, 2017

Retail Consignment Store ______________________________________ Convenience Store/Gas Station ____________________________ Flooring Store __________________________________________ Florist ________________________________________________ Furniture Store _________________________________________ Garden/Nursery Store ____________________________________ Gift Store _____________________________________________ Golf Pro Shop __________________________________________ Grocery Store __________________________________________ Hardware Store _________________________________________ Hearing Aid Store _______________________________________ Home Appliance Store ___________________________________ Jewelry Store __________________________________________ Lawn Mower Store ______________________________________ Men’s Clothing Store _____________________________________ Monument Service ______________________________________ Paint Store ____________________________________________ Place To Buy A Mattress __________________________________ Place To Buy Beer, Liquor & Wine __________________________ Shoe Store ____________________________________________ Tire Store _____________________________________________ Place To Buy Music ______________________________________Dining Bar & Grill _____________________________________________ Family Dining __________________________________________ Fast Food _____________________________________________ Fine Dining ____________________________________________ Food Delivery __________________________________________ Lunch Spot ____________________________________________ Mexican Restaurant _____________________________________ Restaurant Service ______________________________________ Romantic Restaurant ____________________________________ Banquet Facility_________________________________________Entertainment Bingo Spot ____________________________________________ Golf Driving Range ______________________________________ Local Radio Station ______________________________________ Wedding Reception ______________________________________ Golf Course ____________________________________________Food BBQ Ribs _____________________________________________ Breakfast _____________________________________________ Buffet _________________________________________________ Chicken Wings _________________________________________ Coffee ________________________________________________ French Fries ___________________________________________ Hamburger ____________________________________________ Hot Dogs ______________________________________________ Ice Cream _____________________________________________ Margarita ______________________________________________ Pizza ________________________________________________ Salad Bar _____________________________________________ Seafood Dinner _________________________________________ Soup _________________________________________________ Steak Dinner ___________________________________________ Sweets/Dessert Shop ____________________________________People Barber ________________________________________________ Car Salesman _________________________________________ Hair Stylist _____________________________________________

Insurance Agent ________________________________________ Real Estate Agent _______________________________________ Auctioneer _____________________________________________ Veterinarian ____________________________________________Automotive Auto Parts Store ________________________________________ New Auto Dealer ________________________________________ Used Auto Dealer _______________________________________ Auto Repair ____________________________________________ Body Shop ____________________________________________ Car Wash _____________________________________________ Oil Change Place _______________________________________Services Accounting Firm ________________________________________ Apartment Complex _____________________________________ Auction Service _________________________________________ Bank _________________________________________________ Barber Shop ___________________________________________ Carpet/Upholstery Cleaner ________________________________ Caterer _______________________________________________ Chiropractic Office _______________________________________ Cleaning Service ________________________________________ Computer Repair Service _________________________________ Credit Union ___________________________________________ Daycare _______________________________________________ Dental Office __________________________________________ Dry Cleaners ___________________________________________ Electrician _____________________________________________ Employment Agency _____________________________________ Excavation Service ______________________________________ Funeral Home __________________________________________ Garage Door Dealer _____________________________________ Hair Salon _____________________________________________ Health Club/Gym ________________________________________ Heating & Air Co. _______________________________________ Hospital _______________________________________________ Insurance Office ________________________________________ Investment Firm ________________________________________ Lawn Care Company ____________________________________ Law Office _____________________________________________ Place To Get A Massage __________________________________ Mortgage Company______________________________________ Optometrist Office _______________________________________ Pet Grooming Salon _____________________________________ Pharmacy _____________________________________________ Physical Therapy Clinic ___________________________________ Physician’s Office _______________________________________ Plumber _______________________________________________ Photographer __________________________________________ Print Shop _____________________________________________ Real Estate Office _______________________________________ Retirement Community ___________________________________ Tanning Salon __________________________________________ Tax Service ____________________________________________ Tree Service ___________________________________________ Towing/Wrecker Service __________________________________ Storage Facility _________________________________________ Veterinarian Office _______________________________________ Water Conditioning ______________________________________ Painting Contractor ______________________________________

This is not a scientific survey, but a Readers choice award. All ballots are confidential and are

the exclusive property of the Pilot News.NAME AND ADDRESS MUST BE FILLED

OUT FOR BALLOT TO BE VALID.NAME _______________________________________ADDRESS ____________________________________CITY ____________________________ ZIP _________PHONE ______________________________________EMAIL _______________________________________

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Send or drop off your completed ballot to:PILOT NEWS

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BEST OFMarshall County

2017

14th Annual

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BallotThis is your chance to vote for your favorite local service, retail location, place/entertainment spot and restaurant/food! Look for the results in our special advertising section on Friday, April 28, 2017.

RULES:• Ballots must be received at the Pilot News by Friday, April 7, 2017.• Ballots can be picked up at our location at: 214 N. Michigan Street, Plymouth, IN 46563 from 8 a.m. - 5 p.m., Monday through Friday.• Anyone 18 or older may enter.• One ballot per person/household. Duplicates will be thrown out.• Name and address must be filled out for ballot to be valid• Ballot is also available on our website WWW.THEPILOTNEWS.COM & click Best Of tab

Pilot News

104 S. Michigan St & 103 W. Laporte St

Downtown PlymouthOPEN DAILY

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2200 N. Michigan St.Plymouth, IN 46563

(574) 286-8602

The Real Estate Corner

Jim Masterson, ABR, CRS, GRI

PLYMOUTH TIRE & SERVICE

CENTER2150 N. Oak Drive

Plymouth, IN 46563574-936-5504

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1020 High RoadBremen, IN 46506

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Brockey Insurance Agency

Larry E. Brockey II, AgentAuto • Home • Business • Life

624 E. Lake Shore Dr., Culver1300 W. Jefferson St., Plymouth, IN

www.BrockeyInsurance.comCulver Office: 574-842-2388

Plymouth Office: 574-355-3335

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574-936-8094Fax: 574-936-1558

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“The Store That Gives You More”

116 N. Michigan St.Downtown Plymouth

574-936-5666

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Computer Repair

Plymouth Office2928 Miller Drive, Plymouth • 574-935-4090

Rochester Office913 East 9th Street, Rochester, IN • 574-223-4039

10873 E. Tippecanoe Dr.Walkerton, IN 46574

(574) 250-1835

KOONTZ LAKE

RhondaHurford

Associate Broker,NCIAR, IRMLS

2233 Western AvenuePlymouth

574-936-2705877-575-3544

MASTERTECH

AUTO & TRUCK REPAIR

1505 N. Michigan St. Plymouth

935-3853Store Hours: Monday-Friday 8:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.

Sat. 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. • Sun. Closed

Vote us best oil change & car wash

Pilgrim Auto Parts

7565 N. Michigan St.Plymouth936-7000

1919 N. Michigan St.Plymouth

Delivery 935-4466

322 N. Michigan St.Suite C

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Tax Service

GaTlin PlymouTh llc

(GaTlin cPa GrouP)

574-936-5211

Lyon Wrecker ServiceJamal Detail Shop

Professional Towing & Recovery24 Hour Service

StorageLight & Heavy Duty Towing

Pee Wee Warren

14507 Lincoln Hwy. West, PlymouthPhone: 574-935-3683

Fax: 574-936-9273

Deaton-Clemens Funeral Home

115 South Main St.Bourbon, Indiana

574-342-5395www.deatonclemensfh.com

#1REAL ESTATE

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574-933-1972

CARTERDILLONUMBAUGH LLCComprehensive Financial

Consultants2901 Miller Dr., Suite B

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www.cduinfo.com

INVESTMENT

EXCAVATINGSEPTIC PUMPINGSEPTIC SYSTEMS

SEWER & DRAIN CLEANINGASPHALT PAVING

Jay Stone14501 Lincoln Hwy., Plymouth

574-935-5456www.stoneexcavating.com

2930 Miller DrivePlymouth

574-935-4327www.bergeraudiology.com

www.bergeraudiology.com/newswww.twitter/bergeraud15

www.facebook.com/berger-audiology

316 Woodies LaneBremen, IN

574-546-3494SHCofBremen.com

CHIROPRACTICMASSAGE

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MySAJA.com

2866 Miller Drive, Plymouth574-914-4866

Bremen, 1203 W. Plymouth St. Bremen, IN 574-546-2727

PLYMOUTH, 1829 W. Jefferson St., Plymouth, IN 574-935-0111

PLYMOUTH, 2303 N. Oak Rd., Plymouth, IN 574-936-5590

State Farm Insurance Darrell Rains

Rains Insurance & Financial Services Inc

572 North Oak Dr.Plymouth IN574-941-2123

225 E. Jefferson StreetPlymouth, IN 46563

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Vote us #1 Staffing Agency again!

CARTERDILLONUMBAUGH LLCComprehensive Financial

Consultants2901 Miller Dr., Suite B

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ACCOUNTING

2855 Miller DrivePlymouth IN 46563

574-936-2333www.fitnessforum.biz

Plymouth Towne Care Pharmacy Inc.

301 N. Michigan St.Plymouth IN, 46563

574-936-3167

• Med Trays • FREE Delivery (within City)• Fast & Friendly Service• Diabetic Shoe Service

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Serving Downtown Plymouth222 N. Michigan Street

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610 E. Jefferson574-935-4634

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Kelsey K. Bell, O.D.1400 N. Oak Drive, Plymouth

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(574) 935-EYES

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JIME, INC.

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116 W. LaPorte St.Plymouth

574-935-0062

2030 St. Rd. 331Bremen, IN

574-546-2861www.mishlerfuneralhomes.com

“Conscientious about the work we do for YOU”

Scott Huffman, President574-952-8601

[emailprotected]

Plymouth Tire’s Fast Lube, Etc.

Corner of Oak & Markley

574-936-5504574-936-4328

Marshall County’s Only Authorized GOODYEAR Dealer

770 N Michigan Rd.Argos

(574)-892-5790www.candsoutdoor.com

620 E. Lakeshore Dr.,Culver, Indiana

thelakehouseculver.com

Van Gilder Funeral Home300 West Madison Street

Plymouth, Indiana574-936-2534

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Russell KietzmanFinancial Advisor • 574-935-5647

John ChamberlinFinancial Advisor • 574-935-3909

Craig WilsonFinancial Advisor • 574-935-4108

Mark BishoppFinancial Advisor • 574-935-0030

Todd CladyFinancial Advisor • 574-935-4183

138 S. Michigan StreetArgos

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302 E. Center St., Bourbon, INballrealtygroup.com

574-342-8299

936-21152705 N. MichiganPlymouth, IN

www.countryautocenter.com

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StevenS, traviS & Fortin

Attorneys at Law119 West Garro St.Plymouth, IN 46563

[emailprotected]

2855 Miller DrivePlymouth IN

574-936-2333fitnessforum.biz

Marshall County’s New FM Station

“Hear the Difference”Studio Toll Free:1-844-827-2326

Business Line Toll Free: 1-855-240-4542

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(PDF) Section A, Page 5 Pilot News· This year, 39 Storm Radio and Storm TV student groups were announced as finalists in the high school division, rep-resenting the top 5 percent in each - DOKUMEN.TIPS (7)

Knights of Columbus Council #1975

LENTEN FISH FRYSaturday, April 1

4-7 p.m.Knights of Columbus

HallEast Jefferson St., Plymouth

Adults - $8.50Children (4-10) - $4.00

Dinner Includes:Breaded Alaskan Pollock,

Coleslaw, Beans, Applesauce, Bread, Drink

and Dessert

Drive-thru carryouts available without beverage

FISH PREPARED BY THE TYNER ODDFELLOWS

Knights of Columbus - Over 125 Years of Faith in Action

Fun & Advice

DEAR ABBY: I’ve had a feeling my wife is about to leave me for another man. For the last few months he has been coming to the bar where she works and saying stuff to her. I don’t know what he says, but he has also been texting her and posting things on her Facebook page.

She told me he’s only a friend, but since he has been coming around at her work, she’s been really cold to me at night. We don’t have sex like we used to, and she doesn’t let me hold her when we are in bed. Plus, she used to sleep nude, but now she wears pajamas to bed.

W h a t should I do? She told me I need to

get help because I’m jealous of him. -- JEALOUS IN OREGON

DEAR JEALOUS: I think “help” would be a good idea. Tell your wife you’re willing to get some on the condition that she come with you. It’s called marriage counseling, and clearly you both are in need of some. Your doctor can refer you to a licensed therapist. Also, if you have a religious adviser, make an appointment to talk with him or her. If your wife refuses, do both of these things without her. Please don’t wait.

****** DEAR ABBY: I’m a 15-year-old sophom*ore.

People in my class openly share their opinions and act disgusted when a slightly older man and

a younger woman are together, or vice versa. I get offended when my classmates make

these comments because my mom is 39 and my stepfather is 27. They love each other very much, and I don’t think age should interfere. Am I oversensitive because I’m offended by these comments? -- AGE IS JUST A NUMBER

DEAR AGE: Becoming offended solves noth-ing, unless the comments are made specifically about your mom and stepdad. It’s my observa-tion that people with little life experience tend to be judgmental about things they know noth-ing about, and 15-year-olds are no exception. Perhaps when your classmates are older, they’ll realize that people don’t fall in love “by the numbers” and that it’s a mistake to generalize.

****** DEAR ABBY: When I was growing up, I was

always told to remove my shoes when visiting another person’s house, especially if they have new flooring. Now that I’m an adult and build-ing a new house, I would like to ask people to remove their shoes upon entering my home.

I have young children and expect family with other small kids will visit. I’d like to keep the floors clean and maintain their good condition. Would it be tacky or rude to ask this of visitors? -- SHOELESS IN ST. LOUIS

DEAR SHOELESS: I don’t think so, but some people may. In Japan, removing one’s shoes before entering a dwelling is customary. The soles of shoes are covered with germs, and if small children crawl around on your floors, it’s not too much to ask. Be sure to warn prospective guests in advance so they can bring their own slippers, or keep a supply of them by your front door.

Husband suspects wife’s bar pal is more than a friend

Blondie

Dustin

Dear AbbyBY JEANNE PHILLIPS

Pilot News • Monday, March 20, 2017Page A8

Weighty matters Inheritances can be surpris-ing: In 1992, a 17-year-old waitress named Cara Wood, working in a diner in Chagrin Falls, Ohio, was left half a mil-lion dollars as a reward for her kindness to one customer, a childless widower! Then there was the Portuguese aristocrat who chose to divvy up his es-tate among 70 total strangers he picked out of a phone book. What you inherit from your parents can come as just as much of a surprise to your waistline. But it doesn’t have to! After analyzing data on more than 100,000 children from six countries, including

BY MICHAEL ROIZEN, M.D., AND MEHMET OZ, M.D.

the United States, scientists found that as a kid you inherit about 20 percent of your body mass index from your mom and 20 percent from your dad. However, 60 percent of your childhood and teenage weight is determined by lifestyle choices. Even though many overweight and obese adoles-cents become obese adults, genetics is not destiny when it comes to weight. Mom and Dad: Help your

children achieve a healthy weight by preparing shared family meals, introducing fresh food choices, especially vegetable dishes (even fro-zen), discouraging fast food and sweet sodas, and enjoying walks, hikes, ballgames and bike rides together. Teens: You have a lot of control over your lifestyle choices. You can decide to opt for a normal weight -- and a brighter future -- by saying no thanks to unhealthy food choices at home, school and out with friends. And join in-tramural, club or school-based sports teams for a stronger body and happier attitude.

Hints From Heloise and Sudoku every day in the Classifieds

By Chris Richcreek

Questions:1. In 2015, Josh

Donaldson became the sec-ond Toronto Blue Jay to win the A.L. MVP Award. Who was the first?

2. Who of these three major-league pitchers had the biggest positive differ-ential between wins and losses in his career: Roger Clemens, Randy Johnson or Greg Maddux?

3. Four Florida Gators football coaches have been named SEC Coach of the Year. Name three of them.

4. In 2015, Atlanta’s Kyle Korver became the fourth-oldest player (33) to make the NBA All-Star Game for the first time. Who was older?

5. How many NHL coaches reached 500 career victories before the first U.S.-born one (Columbus’ John Tortorella) accom-plished it in 2016?

6. In what sport did Fiji win its first Olympic medal in 2016?

7. Which golfer holds the PGA record for most victo-ries in his 30s?

Answers:1. George Bell, in 1987.2. Clemens was plus

170, Johnson plus 137 and Maddux plus 128.

3. Ray Graves (1960), Steve Spurrier (‘91, ‘94, ‘95, ‘96), Will Muschamp (2012) and Jim McElwain (2015).

4. Nat “Sweetwater” Clifton (34 in 1957), Anthony Mason (34 in 2001) and Sam Cassell (34 in 2004).

5. Twenty-three.6. Men’s rugby sevens,

where Fiji won the gold medal.

7. Arnold Palmer, with 44.

(c) 2016 King Features Synd., Inc.

It may be strange, but it’s trueBy Samantha Weaver

• It was the 32nd president of the United States, Franklin D. Roosevelt, who made the following sage observation: “Government by organized money is just as dangerous as government by organized mob.”

• You might be surprised to learn that Helen Keller, best known as the first blind and deaf person to earn a bachelor’s degree, loved per-forming. She spent years on vaudeville tours, and in 1919 she starred in “Deliverance,” a silent film about her life.

• In the Canadian town of Churchill, Manitoba, most

people don’t lock their car doors. The primary motiva-tion for this practice isn’t trust (although, of course, trust is required), but public safety: A pedestrian who unexpectedly encounters a polar bear will be able to find refuge in any car along the street.

• With warmer weather approaching, you might want to consider heading to Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan, to wit-ness an annual rite of spring. Students at Lake Superior State University gather on (or near) the first day of spring for the annual Snowman Burning. Started in 1971 by a campus club known as the Unicorn Hunters, the tradi-tion involves setting alight

a 12-foot-tall “snowman” -- usually built of recycled paper, wood and wire -- to celebrate the end of winter.

• If you haven’t listened to any new music in a while, chances are you’re over 33. Those who study such things say that’s the age at which Americans would rather stick to what they know than try out new tunes.

• If winter seems to be dragging on endlessly, be glad you don’t live on Uranus; there, winter lasts 21 years.

(c) 2016 King Features Synd., Inc.

Sports quiz

Chuckle of the day...I went to a restaurant last night

and had the Wookie steak. It was a little Chewy.

(PDF) Section A, Page 5 Pilot News· This year, 39 Storm Radio and Storm TV student groups were announced as finalists in the high school division, rep-resenting the top 5 percent in each - DOKUMEN.TIPS (8)

ClassifiedsPilot News • Monday, March 20, 2017 Page A9

If you would like to be a featured advertiser, please call 936-3101.

featured advertisers

Classifiedsthe pilot news group monday - friday 8:00am - 5:00pm est

PHONE - 574-936-3101 | FAX - 574-936-7491 | OFFICE - 214 N. Michigan St., Plymouth

plaCe your ad online or By phonePilot News, Advance News, Bourbon News-Mirror, Bremen Enquirer, Culver Citizen, Knox Leader, Shopper, Review

574-936-3101ad deadlines

Pilot News - 1 day prior, 12PM ESTShopper - Tuesdays, 4PM EST

Weeklies - Mondays, 12PM EST

Business & services directoryReach over 98,000 potential customers every week for as

little as $115 per month.

We accept Check, Cash, or Credit Cards

statewide advertisingHave a service or product you would like to advertise in more

than 140 newspapers with only one phone call? Starting at $340Call Stephanie for more information

Check your adPlease notify us immediately if there is an error in your ad.

Check your ad the first day it [emailprotected]

Place An Ad

24/7www.thepilotnews.com

Click Classifieds

170Help Wanted

RESIDENTIAL STAFF SUPPORT POSITIONS OPEN FOR ALL SHIFTSResponsible for assisting disabled individuals in the home with daily living skills. Plan recreational

activities. High school diploma or GED required. Experience preferred, but will train the rightindvidual. Current/valid Indiana Driver’s License. Drug/Alcohol testing.

Apply in person, no phone calls please. MSDC 1901 Pidco Dr, Plymouth, IN 46563EOE

170Help Wanted

Hoosier Racing Tire Corp., is seeking Production Employeesfor 2nd and 3rd shifts. Benefits include:

• Starting pay up to $16.55 • Shift incentives • Department incentives

• Regularly scheduled pay increases • 1-1/2 year pay up to $21.30• 40-hour work week • Overtime available • Paid lunch

• Excellent health, dental, vision, prescription, life, short-term and long-termdisability insurance • 401(k) Plan with company match, fully vested

• Paid holidays • Paid vacations • Paid time off for perfect attendance afterone month • Quality training program • Great discounts on Hoosier apparel

If you are interested in becoming part of our winning team, are motivatedand a quality minded person who has the ability to work safely in a clean,smoke and drug free manufacturing environment, we invite you to apply inperson at:

HOOSIER RACING TIRE CORP.2307 Pidco Drive, Plymouth, IN 46563

Visit www.hoosiertire.com for more company information

170Help Wanted

Deputy Town Marshal for the Town of CulverThe Culver Police Department will be accepting applications for theposition of a full-time Deputy Town Marshal for the Town of Culver,

Indiana. Applications may be picked up at the Culver Town Hall locatedat 200 E. Washington St. Culver, Indiana, between the hours of

8:00 AM and 4:00 PM Monday through Friday.

Applicants must be at least 21 years of age or older with no felonyconvictions, and a High School Diploma, or equivalent.

Salary range will be from $43,000.00 to $45,000.00, including benefits.Applications will be accepted until 4:00 PM on Friday April 7, 2017

170Help Wanted

FORKLIFT SERVICE MECHANIC Morrison Industrial Equipment Co. is a multi-line lift truck dealership and

has been in business since 1952. We offer paid training at all levels,very competitive wages and full benefits including paid time off.

Tool program if eligible. Valid drivers license required.

Physical and drug screen required.

Apply in person or send a resume to: Morrison Industrial Equipment2505 N Foundation Dr., South Bend, IN 46628 (574)287-4290

E.O.E.

170Help Wanted

• FULL-TIME COOK •

Michiana Behavioral Health is seeking a full-time Cook. This position isresponsible for the preparation and service of meals for patients, facility

staff and guests. The ideal candidate will have at least two yearsexperience in quantity cooking and a basic knowledge of modified dietsand experience in utilizing institutional kitchen equipment and utensils.

You may submit your application at:1800 N. Oak Drive, Plymouth, IN 46563, fax to 574-936-3784

or email to [emailprotected].

170Help Wanted

WILLIAMSBURG FURNITURE, INC.

NOW HIRING!!Experienced CNC Operators, Upholsterers,Experienced Drivers, Experienced Sewers,

and Material HandlersWe offer competitive wages, affordable

health, dental and vision coverage, 401(k),paid holidays and vacation.

Come Grow With Us! Apply in person at:

Williamsburg Furniture, Inc.2096 Cheyenne Street, Nappanee, IN 46550

Or online at: www.wbfusa.com/careers.html

170Help Wanted

CONSOLIDATED CONTAINER COMPANYNow hiring Production Employees for

2nd & 3rd shifts (starting wage, $10/hr.)After hire, eligible for 401K, Insurance and

Holiday BenefitsContact the office at 300 Dewey St., Argos.

(574)892-6753.EOE

116LegalsNOTICE

The following will besold for charges:14507 LINCOLN HWYPLYMOUTHAt 4/7/2017 @ 10:00AM1 9 9 7 B U I C K1G4CW52K2V4646806 $1,525.00

March 20, 2017 PN261462hspaxlp

STATE OF INDIANACOUNTY OF MAR-SHALLSS:IN THE MARSHALLCIRCUIT COURTC A S E N O .50C01-1703-MI-12IN RE THE NAMECHANGE OF:Dennis Eugene PogarPetitioner.

NOTICE OFPETITION FOR

CHANGE OF NAMEDennis Eugene Pogar,whose mailing addressis 12550 Hillside Dr.,Plymouth, IN 46563.MARSHALL County,Indiana hereby givesnotice that she/he hasfiled a petition in theMARSHALL CircuitCourt requesting thathis/her name bechanged to DennisStephen Pogar.Notice is further giventhat hearing will beheld on said Petitionon the 5 day of May,2017 at 8:30 o’clockAM.Dennis PogarPetitionerDated March 3, 2017

Deborah VanDeMarkMarshall Circuit Court

ClerkMarch 6, 13, 20, 2017 PN0977

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116Legals

STATE OF INDIANACOUNTY OF MAR-SHALLSS:IN THE MARSHALLCIRCUIT COURTC A S E N O .50C01-1703-MI-12IN RE THE NAMECHANGE OF:Dennis Eugene PogarPetitioner.

NOTICE OFPETITION FOR

CHANGE OF NAMEDennis Eugene Pogar,whose mailing addressis 12550 Hillside Dr.,Plymouth, IN 46563.MARSHALL County,Indiana hereby givesnotice that she/he hasfiled a petition in theMARSHALL CircuitCourt requesting thathis/her name bechanged to DennisStephen Pogar.Notice is further giventhat hearing will beheld on said Petitionon the 5 day of May,2017 at 8:30 o’clockAM.Dennis PogarPetitionerDated March 3, 2017

Deborah VanDeMarkMarshall Circuit Court

ClerkMarch 6, 13, 20, 2017 PN0977

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STATE OF INDIANACOUNTY OF MAR-SHALLSS:IN THE MARSHALLCIRCUIT COURTCALENDAR TERM:2017C A U S E N O .50C01-1703-EU-24

NOTICE OFADMINISTRATION

Notice is hereby giventhat on the 16th day ofMarch, 2017, Dean E.Sipes and Jeffrey G.Sipes were appointedco-personal represen-tatives of the estate ofWanda Sipes, de-ceased, who died onthe 21st of August,2016.All persons havingclaims against this es-tate, whether or notnow due, must file theclaim in the office ofthe Clerk of this Courtwithin three (3) monthsfrom the date of thefirst publication of thisnotice, or within nine(9) months after thedecedent 's death,whichever is earlier, orthe claims will be for-ever barred.Dated at Plymouth, In-diana, this 16th day ofMarch, 2017.

Deborah VanDeMarkClerk of the CircuitCourt for Marshall

County, IndianaRalph R. Huff, 7828-50JONES HUFF JONES& RICHESON, LLP550 East JeffersonStreetP. O. Box 540Plymouth, Indiana46563574-936-4031March 20, 27, 2017 PN261755

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116Legals

STATE OF INDIANACOUNTY OF MAR-SHALLSS:IN THE MARSHALLCIRCUIT COURTCALENDAR TERM:2017C A U S E N O .50C01-1703-EU-24

NOTICE OFADMINISTRATION

Notice is hereby giventhat on the 16th day ofMarch, 2017, Dean E.Sipes and Jeffrey G.Sipes were appointedco-personal represen-tatives of the estate ofWanda Sipes, de-ceased, who died onthe 21st of August,2016.All persons havingclaims against this es-tate, whether or notnow due, must file theclaim in the office ofthe Clerk of this Courtwithin three (3) monthsfrom the date of thefirst publication of thisnotice, or within nine(9) months after thedecedent 's death,whichever is earlier, orthe claims will be for-ever barred.Dated at Plymouth, In-diana, this 16th day ofMarch, 2017.

Deborah VanDeMarkClerk of the CircuitCourt for Marshall

County, IndianaRalph R. Huff, 7828-50JONES HUFF JONES& RICHESON, LLP550 East JeffersonStreetP. O. Box 540Plymouth, Indiana46563574-936-4031March 20, 27, 2017 PN261755

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NOTICE OFSHERIFF'S SALE

By virtue of a certifiedcopy of a decree to medirected from the Clerkof Marshall CircuitCourt of MarshallCounty, Indiana, inC a u s e N o .50C01-1610-MF-71wherein JPMorganChase Bank, NationalAssociation was Plain-tiff, and The UnknownHeirs and Devisees ofBarbara J. Reynolds,Deceased was a De-fendant, required me tomake the sum as pro-vided for in said De-cree with interest andcost, I will expose atpublic sale to the high-est bidder, on the 25day of April, 2017, atthe hour of 1pm, or assoon thereafter as ispossible, at 1400 Pio-neer Drive, Plymouth,IN 46563, the fee sim-ple of the whole bodyof Real Estate in Mar-shall County, Indiana.Land situated in theCounty of Marshall,State of Indiana, is de-scribed as follows: Be-ginning at the south-west corner of Section18, Township 33 North,Range 4 East, thenceEast along the southline of said Section,1002.5 feet; thenceNorth 170 feet to thePlace of Beginning;thence East parallel tosaid south Section line,150 feet; thence Northparallel to the west lineof said Section, 110feet; thence West par-allel to the south line,150 feet; thence South110 feet to the place ofbeginning, said in pre-vious deeds to contain0.38 of an acre, moreor less, and beingknown as Parcel Num-ber 1.More commonly knownas 1006 N Thayer St,B o u r b o n , I N46504-1320P a r c e l N o .50-34-18-303-044.000-002Together with rents, is-sues, income and prof-its thereof, said salewill be made withoutrelief from valuation orappraisem*nt laws.MATTHEW S. LOVE,Plaintiff Attorney Attorney # 18762-29FEIWELL & HANNOY,P.C.8415 Allison PointeBlvd., Suite 400Indianapolis, IN 46250(317) 237-2727 Matthew Hassel, Sher-iff Bourbon TownshipThe Sheriff's Depart-ment does not warrantthe accuracy of thestreet address pub-lished herein.NOTICEFEIWELL & HANNOY,P.C. IS A DEBT COL-LECTOR.

March 13, 20, 27, 2017PN261325 hspaxlp

116Legals

NOTICE OFSHERIFF'S SALE

By virtue of a certifiedcopy of a decree to medirected from the Clerkof Marshall CircuitCourt of MarshallCounty, Indiana, inC a u s e N o .50C01-1610-MF-71wherein JPMorganChase Bank, NationalAssociation was Plain-tiff, and The UnknownHeirs and Devisees ofBarbara J. Reynolds,Deceased was a De-fendant, required me tomake the sum as pro-vided for in said De-cree with interest andcost, I will expose atpublic sale to the high-est bidder, on the 25day of April, 2017, atthe hour of 1pm, or assoon thereafter as ispossible, at 1400 Pio-neer Drive, Plymouth,IN 46563, the fee sim-ple of the whole bodyof Real Estate in Mar-shall County, Indiana.Land situated in theCounty of Marshall,State of Indiana, is de-scribed as follows: Be-ginning at the south-west corner of Section18, Township 33 North,Range 4 East, thenceEast along the southline of said Section,1002.5 feet; thenceNorth 170 feet to thePlace of Beginning;thence East parallel tosaid south Section line,150 feet; thence Northparallel to the west lineof said Section, 110feet; thence West par-allel to the south line,150 feet; thence South110 feet to the place ofbeginning, said in pre-vious deeds to contain0.38 of an acre, moreor less, and beingknown as Parcel Num-ber 1.More commonly knownas 1006 N Thayer St,B o u r b o n , I N46504-1320P a r c e l N o .50-34-18-303-044.000-002Together with rents, is-sues, income and prof-its thereof, said salewill be made withoutrelief from valuation orappraisem*nt laws.MATTHEW S. LOVE,Plaintiff Attorney Attorney # 18762-29FEIWELL & HANNOY,P.C.8415 Allison PointeBlvd., Suite 400Indianapolis, IN 46250(317) 237-2727 Matthew Hassel, Sher-iff Bourbon TownshipThe Sheriff's Depart-ment does not warrantthe accuracy of thestreet address pub-lished herein.NOTICEFEIWELL & HANNOY,P.C. IS A DEBT COL-LECTOR.

March 13, 20, 27, 2017PN261325 hspaxlp

NOTICE TO BIDDERSFOR PLYMOUTH

COMMUNITYSCHOOL

CORPORATIONMARSHALL

COUNTY, INDIANANOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN, that the Boardof School Trustees ofthe Plymouth Commu-nity School Corpora-tion will receive sealedbids for asphalt re-placement at PlymouthHigh School.Bids will be acceptedat the Plymouth Com-munity School Corpo-ration, AdministrationOffice, 611 BerkleyStreet, Plymouth, Indi-ana, until 10:00 a.m.(local time), on April 6,2017. Bids will beopened and tabulatedat that time in theBoard Room. APre-Bid Meeting isscheduled for March24, 2017 at 10:00 a.m.(local time) at the Ply-mouth CommunitySchool CorporationAdministration Office.All bidding and con-struction shall be in ac-cordance with con-struction documentsprepared by PlymouthCommunity SchoolCorporation, copies ofwhich can be obtainedthrough the buildingmaintenance office,701 Berkley Street,Plymouth, Indiana. Call 574.936.3169 org o t owww.plymouth.k12.in.us under the mainte-nance link to downloadspecifications.Bidders will be re-quired to file, with theirbids, a certified checkmade payable to thePlymouth CommunitySchool Corporation ora Bid Bond for anamount not less thanfive percent (5%) oftheir maximum bid orbids. Should a suc-cessful bidder with-draw its bid, or fail toexecute a satisfactoryContract, PlymouthCommunity SchoolCorporation may thendeclare the bid depositor bid bond to be for-feited as liquidateddamages.Each successful biddershall be required to fur-nish an approved Per-formance Bond and aLabor and MaterialsPayment Bond, whichcovers faithful perform-ance of the contractand the payment of allobligations arisingthereunder. The Plymouth Commu-nity School Corpora-tion Board of Trusteesreserves the right towaive formalities inbidding, to reject anyor all bids, and to letseparate contracts oras a whole, without as-signing any reason forits action in the prem-ises, using its discre-tion to determine whataction will be in thebest interest of the Ply-mouth CommunitySchool Corporation.The bid wil l be

awarded to the lowestresponsive and re-sponsible bidder basedupon cost, serviceabil-ity, availability of mate-rials and specifications.Bids not reaching saidoffice by 10:00 a.m.,on April 6, 2017 will notbe opened and will bereturned unopened tothe original bidder.BOARD OF SCHOOLTRUSTEESPLYMOUTH COMMU-NITY SCHOOL COR-PORATIONMarch 13, 20, 2017 PN261230

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116Legals

NOTICE TO BIDDERSFOR PLYMOUTH

COMMUNITYSCHOOL

CORPORATIONMARSHALL

COUNTY, INDIANANOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN, that the Boardof School Trustees ofthe Plymouth Commu-nity School Corpora-tion will receive sealedbids for asphalt re-placement at PlymouthHigh School.Bids will be acceptedat the Plymouth Com-munity School Corpo-ration, AdministrationOffice, 611 BerkleyStreet, Plymouth, Indi-ana, until 10:00 a.m.(local time), on April 6,2017. Bids will beopened and tabulatedat that time in theBoard Room. APre-Bid Meeting isscheduled for March24, 2017 at 10:00 a.m.(local time) at the Ply-mouth CommunitySchool CorporationAdministration Office.All bidding and con-struction shall be in ac-cordance with con-struction documentsprepared by PlymouthCommunity SchoolCorporation, copies ofwhich can be obtainedthrough the buildingmaintenance office,701 Berkley Street,Plymouth, Indiana. Call 574.936.3169 org o t owww.plymouth.k12.in.us under the mainte-nance link to downloadspecifications.Bidders will be re-quired to file, with theirbids, a certified checkmade payable to thePlymouth CommunitySchool Corporation ora Bid Bond for anamount not less thanfive percent (5%) oftheir maximum bid orbids. Should a suc-cessful bidder with-draw its bid, or fail toexecute a satisfactoryContract, PlymouthCommunity SchoolCorporation may thendeclare the bid depositor bid bond to be for-feited as liquidateddamages.Each successful biddershall be required to fur-nish an approved Per-formance Bond and aLabor and MaterialsPayment Bond, whichcovers faithful perform-ance of the contractand the payment of allobligations arisingthereunder. The Plymouth Commu-nity School Corpora-tion Board of Trusteesreserves the right towaive formalities inbidding, to reject anyor all bids, and to letseparate contracts oras a whole, without as-signing any reason forits action in the prem-ises, using its discre-tion to determine whataction will be in thebest interest of the Ply-mouth CommunitySchool Corporation.The bid wil l be

awarded to the lowestresponsive and re-sponsible bidder basedupon cost, serviceabil-ity, availability of mate-rials and specifications.Bids not reaching saidoffice by 10:00 a.m.,on April 6, 2017 will notbe opened and will bereturned unopened tothe original bidder.BOARD OF SCHOOLTRUSTEESPLYMOUTH COMMU-NITY SCHOOL COR-PORATIONMarch 13, 20, 2017 PN261230

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116Legals

NOTICE TO BIDDERSFOR PLYMOUTH

COMMUNITYSCHOOL

CORPORATIONMARSHALL

COUNTY, INDIANANOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN, that the Boardof School Trustees ofthe Plymouth Commu-nity School Corpora-tion will receive sealedbids for asphalt re-placement at PlymouthHigh School.Bids will be acceptedat the Plymouth Com-munity School Corpo-ration, AdministrationOffice, 611 BerkleyStreet, Plymouth, Indi-ana, until 10:00 a.m.(local time), on April 6,2017. Bids will beopened and tabulatedat that time in theBoard Room. APre-Bid Meeting isscheduled for March24, 2017 at 10:00 a.m.(local time) at the Ply-mouth CommunitySchool CorporationAdministration Office.All bidding and con-struction shall be in ac-cordance with con-struction documentsprepared by PlymouthCommunity SchoolCorporation, copies ofwhich can be obtainedthrough the buildingmaintenance office,701 Berkley Street,Plymouth, Indiana. Call 574.936.3169 org o t owww.plymouth.k12.in.us under the mainte-nance link to downloadspecifications.Bidders will be re-quired to file, with theirbids, a certified checkmade payable to thePlymouth CommunitySchool Corporation ora Bid Bond for anamount not less thanfive percent (5%) oftheir maximum bid orbids. Should a suc-cessful bidder with-draw its bid, or fail toexecute a satisfactoryContract, PlymouthCommunity SchoolCorporation may thendeclare the bid depositor bid bond to be for-feited as liquidateddamages.Each successful biddershall be required to fur-nish an approved Per-formance Bond and aLabor and MaterialsPayment Bond, whichcovers faithful perform-ance of the contractand the payment of allobligations arisingthereunder. The Plymouth Commu-nity School Corpora-tion Board of Trusteesreserves the right towaive formalities inbidding, to reject anyor all bids, and to letseparate contracts oras a whole, without as-signing any reason forits action in the prem-ises, using its discre-tion to determine whataction will be in thebest interest of the Ply-mouth CommunitySchool Corporation.The bid wil l be

awarded to the lowestresponsive and re-sponsible bidder basedupon cost, serviceabil-ity, availability of mate-rials and specifications.Bids not reaching saidoffice by 10:00 a.m.,on April 6, 2017 will notbe opened and will bereturned unopened tothe original bidder.BOARD OF SCHOOLTRUSTEESPLYMOUTH COMMU-NITY SCHOOL COR-PORATIONMarch 13, 20, 2017 PN261230

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140Personals

PHYSIC-READINGSBY Tina can help youon all manners of life.(219)308-1375

170Help Wanted

AG BUSINESS hasopening for general la-borer. Must have CDL.Seasonal, 40+hrs.Must be 18. Apply inperson. Farm Fertilizer& Seeds, Inc., 564614th Rd., Bourbon, IN(574) 342-4435

FURNITURE DELIV-ERY (heavy lifting): Ex-perience/leaderships k i l l s n e e d e d ,full/part-time, BanfichInteriors, Plymouth.C a l l A l a n219-670-0549

GENERAL LABOR-ERS & Machine Op-erators wanted. Com-petitive pay. Apply inperson: North CentralPallets, Inc. 13990State Route 10, Argos.www.ncpallets.com orcall Cliff (574)892-5171

IMMEDIATE OPEN-INGS for all shifts.May apply on line at:www.oasisbath.com orin person.

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SUDOKU

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 numbers 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!

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Dear Heloise: My SOUND OFF: Store em-ployees so engrossed in conversations with each other and/or on cellphones that they seemingly don’t have time to wait on me! I understand that employees are friends, and a parent may have kids calling after school and such, but employees should focus on the customer. I’m standing there waiting to pay at a counter, or need help with a question. Thanks for your time. -- Jim Y. in St. Louis Jim, that’s an often-voiced com-plaint. An emergency is one thing, but chitchat on a cellphone in FRONT of a customer is just plain bad business. Readers? Business owners? What do you have to say? Keeping customers is a main goal of business. -- He-loise

FAST FACTS Dear Readers: Other uses for lemons: * Run lemon peels through the garbage disposal to freshen it. * Spray lemon juice to kill weeds in the garden. * Use dried lemon peel to spice up tea. * Rub on hands to eliminate onion odors. -- Heloise

PAINT PROJECT Dear Heloise: I want to paint my guest bedroom, but determining the actual color to use is difficult. The light varies throughout the day, and this affects how the color “reads” on the wall. I painted a white board the color I want to use, put it on the wall and checked it throughout the day. Still can’t decide, but I have narrowed it down to two colors. -- J.S. in San Diego

PLAY CLAY Dear Heloise: Help! My young nieces are

coming to visit. You had a recipe for mod-eling clay that we can make at home -- please repeat it! -- Sonya in Alabama Sonya, happy to, and it’s soooo easy! Here is the recipe: 2 cups baking soda

1 cup cornstarch 1 1/4 cups water Mix the cornstarch and baking soda in a saucepan, then add the water. Cook over MEDIUM heat, stirring constantly, until blended. Empty onto

a plate and cover with a damp cloth un-til cool. Knead until smooth, then break into sections. You can add a drop or two of food coloring for fun. Store unused clay in a sealed container in the refrigera-tor. Baking soda is a must-have around the house. I’ve compiled a collection of my favorite hints and uses for baking soda in a handy pamphlet. To receive one, visit my website, www.Heloise.com, to order, or send a long, stamped (70 cents), business-size envelope, along with $5, to: Heloise/ Baking Soda, P.O. Box 795001, San Antonio, TX 78279-5001. Before putting new cat litter down, sprinkle a little baking soda in the pan to help keep it fresh. Cats don’t like change, so if Kitty stops using the box, dump the soda! -- Heloise

SAFETY HINT Dear Heloise: When my young grandchildren come to visit, I take a bath towel and put it over the top of each door in the house. The door won’t close all the way. They can’t get stuck in a room, and no smashed fingers by mistake. -- Helen B., Jackson, Miss.

(c)2017 by King Features Syndicate Inc.

ClassifiedsPage A10 Pilot News • Monday, March 20, 2017

Customer calls out employees ^HINTS FROM HELOISE]

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Contact us: e-mail [emailprotected] or call 936-3104

SportsMonday, March 20, 2017 • Page A11

This down year for Big Ten basketball just might end on an up note in the NCAA Tournament.

Eighth-seeded Wisconsin took out No. 1 overall seed and defending national champion Villanova in a sec-ond-round game Saturday, and No. 7 Michigan ousted No. 2 Louisville on Sunday. In between, No. 4 Purdue defeated No. 5 Iowa State.

None of the Big Ten’s seven tournament teams were seeded higher than a No. 4. Now it has three teams in regional semifi-nals, matching last year’s total, and would have had a fourth if No. 9 Michigan State had been able to upset No. 1 Kansas.

The Pac-12, Southeastern Conference and Big 12 also had three teams in the Sweet 16.

The Big Ten went into the tournament No. 4 in confer-ence RPI behind the ACC, Big 12 and Big East.

“You guys seem to get a theme, whether it’s good or bad. Tell them to go play Michigan,” Purdue coach Matt Painter told report-ers in Milwaukee after his team’s win over the Cyclones . “People that don’t think our league is any good, tell them to go play Wisconsin. They’re not an eighth seed. I don’t understand that. You don’t understand basketball if you put Wisconsin as the eighth seed. Wisconsin is one of the toughest teams in the country, period.”

Michigan’s 73-69 upset of Louisville exemplifies the role reversals between the Atlantic Coast Conference and Big Ten this postseason.

The ACC led all confer-ences with nine bids and was billed as the clear-cut pick as the top league in the nation. But only one team, conference heavyweight North Carolina, made the Sweet 16. Duke lost to South Carolina on Sunday night, several hours after Louisville was bounced by Michigan.

The ACC had four region-al finalists last season, including Final Four partic-ipants North Carolina and

Syracuse. The ACC also sent three teams to the regional finals in 2015, with Duke winning the national title.

The Big Ten had rosters filled with youth and no dominant team. The con-ference owned two of the worst nonconference losses in the country — Indiana losing at home to IPFW and Ohio State losing at home to Florida Atlantic.

Purdue has been consis-tent, other than a bad loss at Nebraska in January. Wisconsin lost five of its last seven in the regular season and was beaten handily by Michigan in the conference tournament championship game. Michigan lost six of 10

in Big Ten play before rolling off wins in 12 of its last 14.

All that played a part in the lower seedings for the NCAA Tournament.

“We’re all going to be judged a lot on what happens in November, December,” Michigan coach John Beilein said in Indianapolis after his team’s win over Louisville . “We had a tremendous league last year with a lot of turnover. Guys going pro, great seniors in the league. We had some injuries to some players as well. So you get judged by that. I thought we had a pretty good record, actually, as a league, but it didn’t measure up.”

Wisconsin’s Nigel Hayes,

who scored the go-ahead basket with 11 seconds left against Villanova, dismissed ranking systems and analyt-ics. He said he and his fellow seniors learned from players who came before them, guys who made it to Final Fours in 2014 and ‘15.

“The thing is with all those algorithms, they can’t calculate heart, will to win, toughness, desire,” Hayes said. “They can’t put that into a formula to come out with a percentage chance to win, and that’s the things that we have. The things that we’ve grown with. We’ve seen the older guys, they’ve had that.”

Big Ten rides NCAA Tournament surge with 3 teams in Sweet 16

MCT PHOTOMichigan Wolverines guard Derrick Walton Jr. scores against Louisville forward Deng Adel during second half action on Sunday at Bankers Life Fieldhouse in Indianapolis.

MIDWEST REGIONMICHIGAN 73, LOUISVILLE 69

INDIANAPOLIS — Moe Wagner scored a career-high 26 points and spurred a furious second-half rally to send Michigan past second-seeded Louisville 73-69 on Sunday and into the Sweet 16.

The seventh-seeded Wolverines (26-11) have won seven straight — six since a frightening plane accident before the Big Ten Tournament. They also earned a ticket to the Midwest Regional in Kansas City, Missouri, their first since 2014.

Donovan Mitchell scored 19 points and Deng Adel had 16 points to lead Louisville (25-9), which had made the Sweet 16 in its last four NCAA Tournament appearances.

But Wagner bailed out the Wolverines from a poor game.Trailing 45-36 with 16:09 to play, the German native scored

on a layup to start a 17-6 run that gave Michigan its first lead since the opening minutes. And after Wagner’s 3-pointer broke a 55-55 tie with 6:39 to go, the Wolverines led the rest of the way.OREGON 75, RHODE ISLAND 72

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Tyler Dorsey hit a contested go-ahead 3-pointer from the top of the arc with 38.4 seconds to play, E.C. Matthews airballed a long 3 in the waning moments trying to force overtime, and third-seeded Oregon rallied in the second half to beat upstart No. 11 Rhode Island 75-72 on Sunday and reach the Midwest Regional.

Dorsey also tied the game with a 3 with 1:45 remaining on the way to 27 points before teammate Dillon Brooks took a charge on the other end for Oregon (31-5).

With Oregon’s season on the brink of an early NCAA Tournament exit, Brooks found his shooting stroke as he typ-ically does and scored 19 points despite a 7-for-20 shooting day. Dorsey made 9 of 10 shots with four 3-pointers.

Rhode Island nearly scrapped and hustled its way into the next round, with Stanford Robinson matching his career high of 21 points as the Rams (25-10) had their nine-game winning streak snapped to end the season.KANSAS 90, MICHIGAN STATE 70

TULSA, Okla. — Josh Jackson scored 14 of his 23 points in the second half to help Kansas pull away late and reach the Sweet 16 for a second straight year with a 90-70 victory over Michigan State on Sunday.

Frank Mason III added 20 points for the top-seeded Jayhawks (30-4), who have advanced to the second week-end of the NCAA Tournament in nine of coach Bill Self’s 14 seasons.

Devonte’ Graham added 18 points and Landen Lucas had 10 for the Jayhawks, who shot 53.1 percent (34 of 64) in the win.

Miles Bridges scored 22 points to lead Michigan State (20-15) despite leaving briefly in the first half with an injury. Nick Ward also finished in double figures with 13 points and

MCT PHOTOMichigan State Spartans forward Nick Ward (44) swats the ball as Kansas Jayhawks forward Carlton Bragg Jr. (15) tries to shoot in the first half during a second round NCAA men’s basketball tournament game on Sunday at the BOK Center in Tulsa, Okla.

Wolverines advance; Spartans bow out; UK closes Wichita State on Sunday

See Advance, Page A12

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Pilot News • Monday, March 20, 2017Page A12 Sports

Joshua Langford had 10 for the Spartans.

EAST REGIONSOUTH CAROLINA 88, DUKE 81

GREENVILLE, S.C. — Sindarius Thornwell had 24 points, Chris Silva scored 13 of his 17 points in the second half and seventh-seeded South Carolina stunned No. 2 seed Duke 88-81 on Sunday night to advance to its first Sweet 16 in the NCAA Tournament’s expanded bracket.

The Gameco*cks (24-10) trailed by 10 points early in the second half after one of its coldest shooting stretches of the season to start. But behind Thornwell’s outside shooting and Silva’s dominance underneath, South Carolina rallied to win two NCAA games for the first time in 44 years.

The Gameco*cks rushed to their fans when things were over, celebrating one of the biggest wins in program history.

Next up is the East Regional at Madison Square Garden where the Gameco*cks will face third-seeded Baylor, an 82-78 winner over Southern Cal earlier Sunday.

Duke (28-9) was attempting to reach the round of 16 for the sixth time in eight seasons. The Blue Devils, though, could not surmount South Carolina’s stifling defense. Leading scorer Luke Kennard had his second straight subpar shooting game, finishing 1 of 6 for 11 points before fouling out.

SOUTH REGIONNORTH CAROLINA 72, ARKANSAS 65

GREENVILLE, S.C. — Kennedy Meeks had 16 points and a huge tip-in with 44.2 seconds left to help North Carolina barely avoid a huge upset by rallying to beat Arkansas 72-65 in Sunday’s second round of the NCAA Tournament.

Justin Jackson added 15 points for the Tar Heels (29-7), including the dunk that capped a game-closing 12-0 run by the South Region’s No. 1 seed to help it survive a wild game.

North Carolina led by 17 points after a dominating start, blew that lead and trailed 65-60 with about 3 1/2 minutes left then came up with a response befitting its veteran experience.

Isaiah Hicks came up big late, too, with a dunk and four free throws in the final 2 minutes to help UNC survive.

Daryl Macon scored 19 points to lead the eighth-seeded Razorbacks (26-10), who did everything right in the second

half except close out the Tar Heels.KENTUCKY 65, WICHITA STATE 62

INDIANAPOLIS — Bam Adebayo had a double-double and swatted away the final shot on Sunday as Kentucky sent Wichita State to yet another second-round heartbreak, 65-62 in the South region.

The youngest team in the NCAA Tournament grew up in the closing minutes.

Adebayo had 13 points and 10 rebounds. De’Aaron Fox had 14 points, including a late steal and dunk. Malik Monk blocked a shot and made a pair of free throws in the final 13 seconds. Adebayo clinched it by blocking Landry Shamet’s 3-pointer shot at the buzzer.

Yes, Kentucky’s freshman trio did it all.Wham, Bam, move on ‘Cats (31-5), right into the Sweet 16

for the seventh time in nine years.And wipe tears away again, Shockers (31-5).

Advance, cont. from Page A11

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John Glenn’s Elizabeth Sarber cruised to the win in the 440 at Tuesday’s Culver Academies six-way meet with a 1:05.2 stop.

Elizabeth SarberAaron Brooke

Culver Military Academy junior Aaron Brooke cleared 12’6” to easily beat out the competition at a Culver Academies indoor meet last Tuesday.

(PDF) Section A, Page 5 Pilot News · This year, 39 Storm Radio and Storm TV student groups were announced as finalists in the high school division, rep-resenting the top 5 percent in each - DOKUMEN.TIPS (2024)

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