Gogebic County Board hears promising report on mining
Transcription
Gogebic County Board hears promising report on mining
Slight chance of snow High: 28 | Low: 10 | Details, page 2 Passion for excellence. Compassion GV-013a for people. aspirusgrandview.org yourdailyglobe.com DAILY GLOBE Thursday, January 15, 2015 75 cents Gogebic County Board hears promising report on mining By RALPH ANSAMI ransami@yourdailyglobe.com BESSEMER — The Gogebic County Board of Commissioners heard an encouraging report Wednesday about the possibility of mining returning to the western Upper Peninsula. Dave Anderson, of Highland Copper Company, talked about the future of the Copperwood site, near Wakefield, and a possible return to mining at White Pine. Highland, a Canadian firm, acquired the Copperwood mining project from Orvana Minerals Corp. and has committed more than $20 million to the two projects. Anderson said Copperwood remains “constructionready” and mining there would Dave Anderson likely begin before it could at White Pine. Various state mining permits are in place for Copperwood, but the White Pine project would require new permits, he said. He said there are now 25 fulltime employees at the White Pine refinery office and 50 people are involved in drilling operations, as Highland continues to tap into Michigan Technological University for employees. “We have a good group of people,” he said. He noted the Copperwood project would involve mining for about 13 years, while mining north of the previously mined area in White Pine would last from 40 to 50 years. There will be no smelter at White Pine, he said, mentioning Utah, Quebec or perhaps Michigan as possible refinery sites. Anderson said Highland officials have been invited to Gov. Rick Snyder’s state-of-state address next week and the company has received good cooperation from lawmakers “from both sides of the aisle,” including U.S. Sen. Debbie Stabenow. County board members had questions about transporting the ore from the Wakefield Township site. Anderson said a rail line from Thomaston to White Pine looks By CORTNEY OFSTAD WAKEFIELD — The Michigan State Police Wakefield Post has a new Community Service Trooper, a liaison between the post and the community. Trooper Jerry Mazurek, a 15year veteran of the Wakefield post, will provide a number of services in the community, including at local schools. The CST was created in 2010 after the MSP received a Department of Justice Community Oriented Policing Grant. At that time, 21 CSTs were installed in posts across the state. Because of the success of the program, MSP decided to expand it, requiring there be at least one CST in each of the 29 posts across Michigan. Currently, there are 34 CSTs around the state. The goal of the position is to focus on community outreach and to help strengthen communi- ties. Locally, Mazurek will perform a variety of functions, including mentoring youth, working with senior citizens, educating Trp. Jerry citizens on Mazurek emerging crime trends, providing information on a variety of topics and focusing on community service and training. Mazurek has an advantage when it comes to his role as CST. He was born and raised in Ontonagon and has lived in the area for the last 15 years. “It feels like a natural fit,” he said. “It makes it a lot easier, because being here the last 15 years, I have made lots of conTROOPER — page 5 Submitted Photo ENBRIDGE ENERGY has donated a pickup truck to the Gogebic County Sheriff’s Department through its “Community Investment Safe Communities Initiative.” Gogebic County Sheriff Pete Matonich and Ron Peterson, of Enbridge, stand next to the truck. Matonich thanked Enbridge, which maintains a pipeline through the county, for its “generous donation and continued commitment in support of our local communities.” MDNR creel clerks to visit Lake Gogebic BESSEMER SCHOOL Bessemer school board members sworn in LAKE GOGEBIC — Michigan Department of Natural Resources officials said Lake Gogebic is included in state waters that will be visited by winter creel clerks. MDNR personnel will interview anglers about their fishing trips. “The DNR appreciates anglers’ cooperation in obtaining critical data for fisheries management,” said Ed Golder, of the DNR. The DNR creel clerks will briefly interview anglers to ask about how long they fished, what species they were targeting, what they caught and where By ALISSA PIETILA apietila@yourdailyglobe.com BESSEMER — Two new board members and two incumbents were sworn in at a special school board meeting on Wednesday. Bob Berg and Annette Lillie along with newcomers Beth Steiger and Mary Beth Trudgeon were administered the oath of office by Superintendent Dave Radovich. Berg was elected as the temporary chairman and Lillie proposed the officers remain the same as well. Personnel decisions The board accepted a letter of resignation from para-professional Barb Adams. The position she left is four and a half hours per day. “Three hours is food service,” said business manager Chris Berquist. The last hour and a half is spent working in “a program that the ISD is actually paying the aid for. It’s a speech therapist, online thing,” she said. Alissa Pietila/Daily Globe NEW BESSEMER school board members Beth Steiger, right, and Mary Beth Trudgeon, and incumbents Annette Lillie and Bob Berg take the oath of office at Wednesday’s special meeting. Also pictured is Superintendent Dave Radovich. It will keep the case load of the current speech therapist down, Berquist said. The school received six applications, none internally, for the position, but Radovich said Patty VanderVelden was the only applicant with extensive food service experience. The board approved hiring VanderVelden to fill the position. At the recommendation of A.D. Johnston principal Dan VanderVelden, the board also Vol. 96, Ed. 12 Daily Globe Inc. 118 E. McLeod Ave. P.O. Box 548 Ironwood, MI 49938 yourdailyglobe.com 906-932-2211 approved the termination of junior high school English teacher Katherine Adams, with abstention from Steiger. “What are we doing to replace the old English teacher?” Steiger questioned. “We are filling internally,” Radovich said. “Our counselor is going to teach two hours a day and then we’re dropping one class that had a limited amount of students and that teacher will pick up the third class.” “How long was this teacher Wednesday High 17 Slight chance of snow 14 —Details, page 2 Low Year ago today High 19 Low 7 Today’s records High 41 (1933) Low -37 (1965) TODAY MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Several members of Congress are preparing to introduce legislation soon to take wolves in Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan and Wyoming off the endangered list. It’s an effort to undo recent court decisions that have blocked the four states from allowing hunting and trapping of wolves for sport and predator control. U.S. Rep. Reid Ribble, of Wisconsin, is leading the effort. Cosponsors include U.S. Rep. Collin In other business, the board: —approved the school to post for a Title position opening at BESSEMER— page 5 Precipitation To 7 a.m. Wednesday .01 Snowfall To 7 a.m. Wednesday .4 Snow depth 15 Season total 132.3 Last year 71.6 INSIDE in. in. in. in. in. they live. In a few instances, the clerks will ask to measure or weigh fish and to take scale samples to gather key biological information on anglers’ catches. The efforts are part of a statewide program designed to track recreational fisheries across Michigan waters of the Great Lakes and selected inland waters. Creel clerks will also interview anglers at Munising, Au Train, Marquette, Keweenaw Bay and Little Bay de Noc, among other bodies of water. —Ralph Ansami Lawmakers eye wolf legislation aware that her position was in jeopardy?” Trudgeon asked. “Three months. Her response to (a) plan of improvement was inadequate,” said Dan VanderVelden. Radovich said Adams was also assigned mentors. W E AT H E R C O N TA C T U S Bonovetz said the rail commission members were informed that Canadian National realizes mining potential in Gogebic and Ontonagon counties and wouldn’t abandon the line. After Anderson’s presentation, the county board agreed to advertise for a mine inspector. The position is now vacant. It requires 10 years of mining experience. The mine inspector is paid a $100 annual salary and $40 per each visit he or she makes to abandoned mineshafts. T R U C K D O N AT I O N Trooper Mazurek named new Community Service Trooper cofstad@yourdailyglobe.com most feasible, but trucking might be be used while that rail line was being revitalized. He said shipping by rail is the “most socially accepted” method. He also mentioned the possibility of a “utility corridor” using a conveyor line to cover the distance. County board chairman Joe Bonovetz, of Bessemer, and commissioner Ton Laabs, of Ironwood, sit on a special regional rail committee and they stressed the importance of keeping that Thomaston to White Pine line available. DETROIT AUTO SHOW New Chevy Bolt page 9 Peterson, of Minnesota. Ribble spokeswoman Katherine Mize said they’re circulating a draft as they seek sponsors from both parties. The bill uses a strategy that succeeded in taking wolves in Idaho and Montana off the endangered list after court challenges by environmentalists blocked those efforts. Congress took matters into its own hands in 2011 and lifted the federal protections in those two states. INDEX Business . . . . . . . . . .14 Classifieds . . . . . .12-13 Comics . . . . . . . . . . .11 Community . . . . . . . . .3 Obituaries . . . . . . . . . .7 Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . .3 Sports . . . . . . . . . .9-10 2 l THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 2015 FIVE-DAY FORECAST FOR IRONWOOD NATION TODAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY Mostly Cloudy Mostly Cloudy Snow Possible Mostly Cloudy Mostly Cloudy Winds: 15 mph SW Winds: 5-10 mph N Winds: Light winds Winds: 5-7 mph SW Winds: 5-10 mph W 19º 23º 10º 28º 16º 33º 23º Wakefield 28/10 Ironwood 28/10 Saxon 30/10 Bessemer Hurley 28/10 28/9 51 Mercer 28/8 Manitowish 28/6 Upson 29/8 ALMANAC Temperature High . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17 Low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14 Precipitation Yesterday . . . . . . . . . . . . .01 in. Snowfall .4 in. MOON PHASES New First Full Last 1/20 1/26 2/3 2/11 45 Marenisco 28/10 Watersmeet 2 28/8 VIDEO DUPLICATION We copy these media formats to DVD or VHS tape: VHS-C – 8mm – Hi8 - Digital 8 – Mini DV-DVD Super 8 – Reg 8 – 16mm and Beta Reel to Reel / Cassette 45-78-LP Ronnie’ s Camera & Sound 906-932-3901 SUN AND MOON Sunrise . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7:39 a.m. Sunset . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4:41 p.m. Moonrise . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2:27 a.m. Moonset . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12:38 p.m. NATIONAL WEATHER REGIONAL WEATHER Today 32/9 mc 32/6 mc 31/9 pc 29/10 mc 29/20 mc 29/11 pc 30/15 pc 30/12 mc 27/5 mc 33/13 s 29/8 mc 16º Today we will see mostly cloudy skies with a slight chance of snow, high temperature of 28º, humidity of 49%. Southwest wind 15 mph. The record high temperature for today is 69º set in 1910. Minocqua 29/6 Ashland Duluth Eau Claire Escanaba Grand Rapids Green Bay Madison Marquette Rhinelander St. Paul Wausau 22º OUTLOOK Ontonagon 30/12 Bergland 28/11 11º Fri. 27/23 25/23 27/23 22/17 27/22 22/20 27/21 22/18 18/15 30/25 21/18 mc mc pc mc pc pc pc cl mc pc pc Today 30/20 pc 52/34 mc 43/26 s 75/49 s 35/27 s 67/50 sh 70/47 s 51/46 ra Chicago Dallas Kansas City Los Angeles New York Orlando Phoenix Seattle Fri. 33/25 61/41 50/34 74/50 36/20 64/48 73/46 50/42 s s s s s s s sh WEATHER TRIVIA Does lightning strike from the sky to the ground or vice versa? Answer: Lightning strikes from sky to ground and also from ground to sky. CLOSING OUT ALL CD’s in stock $5.00 Ronnie’ s Camera & Sound 906-932-3901 QUALITY Every Day 2 For 1 Film Developing Ronnie’ s Camera & Sound 906-932-3901 ment,” as NASA called it, occurred around 4 a.m. EST, well into the station crew’s workday. As alarms blared, the astronauts followed emergency procedures in slapping on oxygen masks, taking cover in the Russian quarters, then sealing the hatches between the U.S. and Russian sides. At the same time, flight controllers at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston turned off non-essential equipment. Within minutes, Mission Control gave an all-clear, but sent the astronauts scurrying back over to the Russian side again when there was more evidence of a possible leak of the coolant. The highly toxic liquid ammonia, flowing outside the space station, is used to cool electronics. Flight controllers originally feared it had gotten into the water system running inside. Now, it’s believed that a failed card in a computer-relay box was the culprit. The crew — three Russians, two Americans and the Italian Cristoforetti — stayed in the three, relatively small Russian compartments while Mission Control analyzed data. Engineers wanted to understand the computer failure and confirm “that the system is tight like we believe it to be,” space station program manager Mike Suffredini said on NASA TV. About 11 hours after the ammonia system-alarm sounded, the hatch to the U.S. segment was reopened. Cristoforetti and U.S. astronaut Terry Virts ran tests and no ammonia was detected. Fire forces 200 inmates from century-old Pennsylvania prison SUNBURY, Pa. (AP) — A large fire tore through a nearly 140-year-old prison on Wednes- Look for These Inserts in Tomorrow’s Daily Globe TV Time Gogebic County Tax DAILY GLOBE www.yourdailyglobe.com day, forcing the evacuation of more than 200 inmates. There were no reported inmate or staff injuries, but the Northumberland County Prison appeared to have been destroyed, county officials said. The cause of the fire was not immediately known. The blaze was reported Wednesday afternoon at the prison in Sunbury, a city of 10,000 residents about 40 miles north of Harrisburg, the state capital. Flames and thick smoke shot through the roof. The prison, a stone building 2013 FORD EDGE LIMITED AWD Leather, dual moon roofs, navigation, loaded, only 23,000 miles, black, SHARP! $ SAVE! 29,999 Associated Press OFFICIALS INVESTIGATE the scene of a prison transport bus crash, Wednesday, in Penwell, Texas. Law enforcement officials said the bus carrying prisoners and corrections officers fell from an overpass in West Texas and crashed onto train tracks below, killing at least 10 people. 10 killed, 5 injured when prison bus strikes train in Texas ? Weather (Wx): cl/cloudy; fl/flurries; pc/partly cloudy; ra/rain; rs/rain & snow; s/sunny; sh/showers; sn/snow; t/thunderstorms; w/windy Astronauts flee US side of space station; No sign of leak CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — In a rare scare, astronauts fled the American side of the International Space Station on Wednesday after an alarm indicated a possible toxic leak. NASA later said there was no leak of ammonia coolant and a computer problem likely set off the false alarm. By Wednesday afternoon, the astronauts were back in the U.S. part of the orbiting outpost. Earlier, the six crew members had huddled safely on the Russian side — once when the alarm sounded and again following an initial all-clear. “Hey everybody, thanks for your concern,” Italian astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti said via Twitter. “We’re all safe & doing well in the Russian segment.” The “unscheduled excite- THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM with castle-like parapets, was built in the late-1800s and sits a few blocks off the banks of the Susquehanna River. All 208 inmates were initially taken under heavy guard to a nearby church. County officials said the male and female inmates were being moved to separate state prisons nearby. All inmates were accounted for, Commissioner Stephen Bridy said. County Commissioner Chairman Vinny Clausi said the building appeared to be a “total loss.” 2013 FORD EDGE SEL AWD Leather, dual moon roofs, navigation, loaded, only 5,000 miles, silver, SHARP! $ SAVE! 30,999 Cloverland Motors 300 E. Cloverland Dr., (U.S. 2) • Ironwood, MI 49938 1-800-932-1202 • Phone: 906-932-1202 • Fax: 906-932-3295 ODESSA, Texas (AP) — Eight inmates and two corrections officers died Wednesday when a prison bus skidded off an icy West Texas highway, slid down an embankment and collided with a passing freight train, authorities said. The overpass on Interstate 20 was slick with ice Wednesday morning when the Texas Department of Criminal Justice bus left the roadway in Penwell, just west of Odessa, according to Ector County Sheriff Mark Donaldson. An earlier accident on the I-20 overpass may have contributed to the prison bus losing control, Donaldson said. The Texas Department of Criminal Justice confirmed the 10 deaths in a statement, adding that four prisoners and one corrections officer were injured. “It’s as bad as you can imagine,” Odessa Fire and Rescue Battalion Chief Kavin Tinney told the Odessa American newspaper. “In 32 years it’s as bad as anything I’ve seen.” Tiffany Harston, spokeswoman for Medical Center Hospital in Odessa, said four of the injured are in critical condition and one is in serious condition. “It’s with a heavy heart that we mourn the loss of those killed and injured this morning in a tragic accident,” said Brad Livingston, executive director of the Department of Criminal Justice. “Their loved ones will be in our thoughts and prayers.” Jason Clark, a spokesman for the Department of Criminal Justice, said the bus was taking the inmates from the Middleton prison in Abilene to the Sanchez prison in El Paso. The prisoners were handcuffed together in pairs. After the accident around 7:30 a.m., the white bus came to rest on its side, next to the railroad tracks, crumpled with heavy damage to its front and undercarriage. The top of the bus was caved inward. The Union Pacific freight train with four locomotives and 58 cars came to a stop soon after. None of the cars derailed, but two containers at the rear of the train were damaged, said Mark Davis, a railroad spokesman. The containers were carrying hundreds of parcels and packages, many of which were strewn along the tracks. No Union Pacific employees were injured. The train, which was traveling from the Los Angeles area to Marion, Ark., remained stopped at the accident site several hours after the accident, Davis said. “We’ll send crews to inspect the train, inspect the track,” he said. The National Transportation Safety Board said it’s sending its own team of inspectors to the scene. State Rep. Tan Parker notified the Texas House of the accident and led a moment of silence. Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick issued a statement offering condolences to the families of those killed in the wreck. “I also pray for a speedy recovery of a third correctional staff member and four offenders who were transported with injuries,” he said. In June, an inmate was killed and several other people were injured when a Department of Criminal Justice van collided with a car in Central Texas. 2 men reach top of Yosemite’s El Capitan in historic climb YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK, Calif. (AP) — A pair of Americans on Wednesday completed what had long been considered the world’s most difficult rock climb, using only their hands and feet to ascend a 3,000foot vertical wall on El Capitan, the forbidding granite pedestal in Yosemite National Park that has beckoned adventurers for more than half a century. Tommy Caldwell and Kevin Jorgeson became the first to freeclimb the rock formation’s Dawn Wall, a feat that many had considered impossible. They used ropes and safety harnesses to catch them in case of a fall, but relied entirely on their own strength and dexterity to ascend by grasping cracks as thin as razor blades and as small as dimes. The effort took 19 days, as the two dealt with constant falls and injuries. But their success completes a yearslong dream that bordered on obsession for the men. Caldwell finished the climb first Wednesday afternoon. Jorgeson caught up minutes later. The two embraced before Jorgeson pumped his arms in the air and clapped his hands above his head. They then sat down for a few minutes, gathered their gear, changed their clothes and hiked to the summit. The trek up the world’s largest granite monolith began Dec. 27. Caldwell and Jorgeson lived on the wall itself. They ate and slept in tents fastened to the rock thousands of feet above the ground and battled painful cuts to their fingertips much of the way. Free-climbers do not pull themselves up with cables or use Associated Press PEOPLE WATCH as two climbers vying to become the first in the world to use only their hands and feet to scale a sheer slab of granite and make their way to the summit of El Capitan Wednesday, in Yosemite National Park, Calif. The pair, 30-year-old Kevin Jorgeson of California and 36-year-old Tommy Caldwell of Colorado, completed their climb early Wednesday afternoon, a spokeswoman said. chisels to carve out handholds. Instead, they climb inch by inch, wedging their fingertips and feet into tiny crevices or gripping sharp, thin projections of rock. In photographs, the two appeared at times like SpiderMan, with arms and legs splayed across the pale rock that has been described as smooth as a bedroom wall. Both men needed to take rest days to wait for their skin to heal. They used tape and even superglue to help with the process. At one point, Caldwell set an alarm to wake him every few hours to apply a special lotion to his throbbing hands. They also took physical punishment when their grip would slip, pitching them into long, swinging falls that left them bouncing off the rock face. The tumbles, which they called “taking a whipper,” ended in startling jolts from their safety ropes. Caldwell and Jorgeson had help from a team of supporters who brought food and supplies and shot video of the adventure. The 36-year-old Caldwell and 30-year-old Jorgeson ate canned peaches and occasionally sipped whiskey. THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM Community calendar Email calendar items and community news to news@yourdailyglobe.com. For more information, call 906-932-2211. Thursday, Jan. 15 Gogebic-Ontonagon Community Action Agency food commodity distribution, seniors, mothers, infants, children, 9:45-10 a.m. EST, Lake Gogebic Senior Center, Bergland; 10:20-10:35 a.m. EST, Porcupine Mountain Senior Center, White Pine; 11-11:45 a.m. EST, Holy Family Catholic Church parking lot, Ontonagon; 1:15-1:45 p.m. EST, Resource Center, Mass City; 2:152:45 p.m. EST, Stannard Township Ballpark, Bruce Crossing; 2:30-2:45 p.m., Watersmeet Town Hall parking lot, Watersmeet. 906-884-2106. Commander’s Winter U.P. VA hospital tour, 10 a.m., 906-7743300 ext. 3278, Hermansville. Gogebic County Veterans Service Officer, 10:30-11:30 a.m., Wakefield City Hall; 1-2 p.m., Watersmeet Township; 2:45-3:15 p.m., Marenisco Township. 906-6671110. Alcoholics Anonymous, noon, Salem Lutheran Church, Ironwood. area74.org. Commander’s Winter U.P. Tour Lunch, 1 p.m., 906-438-2236, Hermansville. Bessemer Area Historical Society, 2 p.m., 403 Sophie St., Bessemer. Grief Support Group, 2 p.m., all welcome, The Inn Bed and Breakfast, Montreal, Wis. 906-6630308. Mended Hearts and Diabetes Support Group, 2 p.m., Aspirus Grand View Hospital conference area, Ironwood. 906-932-2443. Western U.P. Enviromental Health Board of Appeals, 2 p.m., health department office, Hancock. Chess Club, 4 p.m., Ironwood Carnegie Library, Ironwood. Gogebic Range Solid Waste Management Authority, 4 p.m., Transfer Station, Ironwood. Free community dinner, 5-6:30 p.m., Wakefield United Methodist Church, Wakefield. ReGeneration Youth, 5:30-6:45 p.m., ages 10-11; Relentless Youth, 7-9 p.m., ages 12-18; Lighthouse Faith Center, Ironwood. Commander’s Winter U.P. Tour dinner, 6 p.m., 906-923-4397, Stephenson. Alcoholics Anonymous, 6:30 p.m., First Presbyterian Church, Hurley. area74.org. Gogebic County Council of Veteran Affairs, 6:30 p.m., Bessemer VFW. Knights of Columbus Council 1396, 6:30 p.m. social meeting, KC Hall, Ironwood. Sisu all volunteer meeting, 6:30 p.m., Memorial Building, Ironwood. Government Aging Unit of Iron County Board of Directors, 9 a.m., Hurley Senior Center, Hurley. Gogebic County Foresty and Parks Commission, 4:30 p.m., Resource Center, Bessemer. Friday, Jan. 16 Morning Brew, 8-9 a.m., Buon Appetito, Ironwood. Gogebic Conservation District, 10 a.m., Natural Resource Center, Bessemer. Double Trouble, 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m., Serenity Center, Ironwood. Commander’s Winter U.P. Tour Lunch, 11:30 a.m. CST, 906-8633562, Menominee. Mercer Food Pantry, noon-1 p.m., Railroad Street, Mercer, Wis. Emergencies: 715-476-7655. Alcoholics Anonymous/AlAnon, noon, Salem Lutheran Church, Ironwood. area74.org. Scrabble at the Mercer Library, 2:30-4:30 p.m., Mercer (Wis.) Public Library. 715-476-2366. Harbortown AA, 7:30 p.m. EST, Ontonagon Village Housing, 100 Cane Court, Ontonagon. area74.org. Alcoholics Anonymous, 7:30 p.m., Our Lady of Peace Catholic Church, Ironwood. area74.org. Saturday, Jan. 17 Children’s Story Hour, 10 a.m., Marenisco Public Library. Children’s story time, 10:45 a.m., Ironwood Carnegie Library, Ironwood. Alcoholics Anonymous, 11 a.m., Salem Lutheran Church, Ironwood. area74.org. Alcoholics Anonymous Women’s Group, noon, Salem Lutheran, Ironwood. area74.org. Chess Nuts Chess Club, 4 p.m., Maplewood Steakhouse, Ironwood. Jack Frost Wrap Up, 5 p.m., Rigoni’s Inn, Ironwood. 906-9321122. Sunday, Jan. 18 Alcoholics Anonymous, 1 p.m., closed meeting, Salem Lutheran Church, Ironwood. DJ Dance, 2-5 p.m., Little Finland, Kimball. Gogebic Range Trail Authority, 6 p.m., Pit Stop, Bessemer. Alcoholics Anonymous, 7:30 p.m., Sharon Lutheran Church, Bessemer. area74.org. Monday, Jan. 19 Iron County Food Pantry, 9 a.m.-4 p.m., 72 Michigan Ave., Montreal, Wis. 715-561-4450. Alcoholics Anonymous, noon, Salem Lutheran Church, Ironwood. area74.org. Pre-school story time, 1:45 p.m., Ironwood Carnegie Library, Ironwood. Iron County Historical Society, 2 p.m., Iron County Historical Society Museum, 303 Iron St., Hurley. Adult poetry group, 5:30 p.m., Ironwood Carnegie Library, Ironwood. Alcoholics Anonymous, 6 p.m., Our Lady of Peace Catholic Church, Ironwood. area74.org. Harbortown AA, 7:30 p.m. EST, Ontonagon Village Housing, 100 Cane Court, Ontonagon. area74.org. Methamphetamine ETC, 8 p.m., support group, Woodland Church, Ironwood. 906-285-2813 or methetc.web.com. Government Bessemer Housing Commission, 8:30 a.m., executive director’s office, 709 W. Iron St., Bessemer. Wakefield-Marenisco School Board, 5 p.m., school administrative board room, Wakefield. Hurley School Board, 5:30 p.m., Hurley High School library. Ironwood Area School District Board of Education, 6 p.m., Luther L. Wright School board room. Watersmeet Township School Board, 6:30 p.m., media center, Watersmeet School. Tuesday, Jan. 20 Iron-Gogebic Integrated Family Services, 9-10:30 a.m., Iron County Courthouse, Hurley. 906-663-4045 or 715-561-2191. Wisconsin Veterans Employment Services Representative, 911:30 a.m., veterans service office, Hurley. 715-392-7808. Gogebic County Veterans Ser- COMMUNITY 4 5 F E E T TA L L Thursday, Jan. 22 Gogebic County Veterans Service Officer, 10:30-11:30 a.m., Wakefield City Hall; 1-2 p.m., Watersmeet Township; 2:45-3:15 p.m., Marenisco Township. 906-6671110. Alcoholics Anonymous, noon, Salem Lutheran Church, Ironwood. area74.org. Pre-school story time, 1:45 p.m., Ironwood Carnegie Library, Ironwood. Grief Support Group, 2 p.m., all welcome, The Inn Bed and Breakfast, Montreal, Wis. 906-663-0308. Chess Club, 4 p.m., Ironwood Carnegie Library, Ironwood. ReGeneration Youth, 5:30-6:45 p.m., ages 10-11; Relentless Youth, 7-9 p.m., ages 12-18; Lighthouse Faith Center, Ironwood. Alcoholics Anonymous, 6:30 p.m., First Presbyterian Church, Hurley. area74.org. Government Downtown Ironwood Development Authority, 8 a.m., Memorial Building, Ironwood. but it’s a step that we can take.” Bryant said the group’s board of directors voted in November to impose the ban, after some children didn’t heed past warnings not to “fire” toy weapons at past festivals. “Kids want to demonstrate them, and boys will be boys,” Bryant said. But some say the ban is too much, including Mike Reinert, of Patton Township, whose son has built ping pong ball catapults that have drawn large crowds in recent years. “I understand they want to be careful and not encourage weapons and violence, so I can try to appreciate their position,” Reinert said. “On the other hand, we have a military that uses them and is violent just so we can have this conversation.” And some of the “boys who will be boys” are girls, who are disappointed, too. PUBLIC NOTICE CITY OF BESSEMER In observance of the Martin Luther King, Jr. holiday, the City of Bessemer Offices will be closed on Monday, January 20, 2015. Garbage normally picked up on Monday, January 20th will be picked up on Tuesday, January 21st. The Council meeting originally scheduled for Monday, January 20th, has been rescheduled to Tuesday, January 21st, 2015 at 5:00 p.m. Alex Straka, of State College, said she’s “heartbroken” she won’t be able to sell bows and arrows she’s made. “It has taught me to apply what I’ve learned in science and it has also helped me to continue Across the Range Briefly Philadelphia cabbie gets tip of lifetime: almost $1,000 PHILADELPHIA (AP) — An anonymous passenger brightened a Philadelphia cab driver’s night with the tip of a lifetime: nearly $1,000 on a $4.31 fare. Oumar Maiga’s bosses revealed the hefty, holiday-season gratuity Wednesday after waiting to make sure the credit card cleared and it wasn’t an error. The West African immigrant received the $989.98 tip Dec. 13. Maiga’s bosses tell Philly.com the cabbie and passenger chatted briefly during the mile-long trip from the city’s Old City section to Columbus Boulevard. Maiga said his shift had been a little hectic. The passenger said he’d make it a great night and punched in the tip. Maiga asked if he’d made a mistake. The passenger replied, “I know what I did.” Maiga’s bosses said the card company wouldn’t give up the mystery tipper’s name. Men accused of taking lamb chops in Washington burglary Associated Press This photo shows a 45-foot-tall icicle created after Garrick Moreland, a tree trimmer, climbed into a tree with a hose and turned on the water when temperatures dropped a few weeks ago at his mother Katherine Ragel’s home near St. Elmo, Ill. lllinois family creates 45-foot icicle in yard ST. ELMO, Ill. (AP) — An Illinois family has created a 45-foottall icicle in their front yard. Katherine Ragel of St. Elmo in in south-central Illinois’ Fayette County says she’s worried there might be an accident because passing traffic sometimes will “stop in the middle of the road.” Ragel’s son, Garrick Moreland, made the icicle. The tree trimmer climbed into one of Ragel’s trees with a hose and turned on the water when temperatures dropped a few weeks ago. The icicle kept growing. The Effingham Daily News reports the idea originally came from Ragel’s late husband, Alan Ragel, who liked to build smaller icicles along the driveway. St. Elmo is about 20 miles southwest of Effingham on Interstate 70. SPOKANE VALLEY, Wash. (AP) — A deputy questioned two men carrying large black garbage bags over their shoulders Sunday morning in Spokane Valley and found they were carrying frozen lamb chops. The men said a woman gave them the food because she was moving, the Spokane Valley Sheriff’s Office said. The deputy contacted the woman, who denied the story, the sheriff’s office said. Deputies followed footprints in the snow to another home that had been broken into. That resident said the lamb chops had been taken from her freezer. For reprints or lamination services, contact the Daily Globe at 906-932-2211 PUBLIC NOTICE The Gogebic County Land Bank Authority is seeking two individuals to serve a three year term on its board. One member must reside in a city located in Gogebic County. Another member must reside in a township located in Gogebic County. If interested please send a letter of interest to Gerry Pelissero, Gogebic County Clerk by 4pm on January 23, 2015. to improve my marketing skills that I’ve learned from selling cookies through the Girl Scouts,” Straka said, adding kids can have “a safe and fun time” with toy weapons provided they’re properly instructed and supervised. Charter Township of Ironwood 2015 Board Meetings (906)932-5800 Meetings are at 5:30 p.m. CST., 2nd and 4th Monday of every month at the Charter Township of Ironwood Board Room N10892 Lake Road January 12 February 9 March 9 April 13 May 11 June 8 July 13 August 10 September 14 October 12 November 9 December 14 3 IRONWOOD — January is National Blood Donor Month. To help with the increased need for blood in our area two blood drives will be held Jan. 21 from noon to 6 p.m. at the Ironwood Memorial Building, and Jan. 22 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Bessemer High School. Schedule an appointment by calling Betsy at 906-932-5478. Wednesday, Jan. 21 Christian Men of the Northland, 6:30 a.m., Uptown Cafe, Ironwood. Mercer Area Play Group, 9:3011 a.m., all welcome, Mercer (Wis.) Public Library. 715-476-2366. Alcoholics Anonymous, open meeting, noon, Salem Lutheran Church, Ironwood. area74.org. DOVE Support Group, noon-2 p.m. 906-932-4990. Hurley Education Foundation luncheon meeting, noon, Hurley School, Hurley. Iron County Veterans Service Officer, 1-3 p.m., Mercer (Wis.) Town Hall. 715-561-2190. Powderhorn Area Utility District Board, 4:30 p.m., Ironwood Township Hall. Ironwood American Legion Auxiliary Unit 5, 6 p.m., at the post, Ironwood Memorial Building. Survivors of Suicide, 6 p.m., Zion Lutheran Church, Ironwood. 906-932-5718. Gogebic Range Carvers, 6:30 p.m., shop room, A.D. Johnston High School, Bessemer. Superior Snowshoe Walk, 6:30 p.m., Gogebic County Club, Ironwood. American Legion Post 58, 7 p.m., at the post, Hurley. Alcoholics Anonymous, 7:30 p.m., Sharon Lutheran Church, Bessemer. area74.org. Government Iron County Recycling Committee, 4 p.m., Courthouse, Hurley. l Blood drives scheduled for second half of January vice Officer, 9:30-11:30 a.m., Ironwood Memorial Building. 906-6671110. Blood Pressure Screening, 11 a.m.-1 p.m., with Regional Hospice nurses, Mill Street Garden, Bessemer. 906-663-0308. Alcoholics Anonymous, noon, Salem Lutheran Church, Ironwood. area74.org. Adult Book Club, 4 p.m., Ironwood Carnegie Library, Ironwood. North Country Trail, 6 p.m., Regal Country Inn, Wakefield. 906229-5122. Hurley VFW Post 1580, 6 p.m., VFW post home. Bessemer Veterans of Foreign Wars, 7 p.m., VFW hall, Bessemer. Alcoholics Anonymous, 7 p.m., Episcopal Church of the Transfiguration, Ironwood. area74.org. Narcotics Anonymous, 7 p.m., open meeting, Wesley United Methodist Church, Ironwood. Government Bessemer City Council, 5 p.m., city hall, Bessemer. Toy weapons banned from Pennsylvania arts festival STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) — Toy weapons have been banned from a Pennsylvania arts festival where kids sell handmade arts and crafts because organizers believe it’s a step needed to combat the “especially violent times” in which we live. This summer’s Central Pennsylvania Festival of the Arts will include a Youth Day on July 8, when kids 8 to 18 are invited to sell their wares on the sidewalks of downtown State College. Top weapons — including rubber band guns, light sabers and anything that launches a projectile — will not be permitted, the Centre Daily Times reported Wednesday. “We live in especially violent times,” executive director Rick Bryant said in a statement. “Banning the sale of weapons at the Children and Youth Sidewalk Sale might not be a giant step in making our society less violent, THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 2015 January 26 February 23 March 23 April 27 May 26 (Tuesday) June 22 July 27 August 24 September 28 October 26 November 23 December 28 This notice is posted in compliance with Public Act 267 of 1976, as amended. The Open Meetings Act, MCL 41.72a (2)(3) and the American Disabilities Act (ADA). Individuals with disabilities requiring auxiliary aids or services should contact the Township Clerk at (906)932-5800, or N10892 Lake Rd., Ironwood, MI 49938 five days prior to the meeting. There is a possibility that a quorum or the Charter Township of Ironwood Board may be present at meetings of various boards and commissions or units of government within Gogebic County. This is not to be construed as an official meeting of the Charter Township of Ironwood Board, under the Open Meetings Act, unless it has been advertised as a regular or special meeting of the Charter Township of Ironwood. However, if it is known in advance that a quorum will be present at a meeting efforts to post the meeting will be made. STATEMENT OF NONDISCRIMINATION This institution is an equal opportunity provider and employer. If you wish to file a Civil Rights program complaint of discrimination, complete the USDA Program Discrimination Complaint Form, found online at http://www.ascr.usda.gov/complaintfilingcust.html, or at any USDA office, or call (866) 6329992 to request the form. You may also write a letter containing all of the information requested in the form. Send your completed complaint form or letter to us by mail at U.S. Department of Agriculture, Director, Office of Adjudication, 1400 Independence Avenue, S.W., Washington, D.C. 20250-9410, by fax (202) 690-7442 or email at program.intake@usda.gov. 4 l THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 2015 DAILY GLOBE Sue Mizell, Publisher Larry Holcombe, Managing Editor In Their Opinion Blood alcohol change for boaters, sledders good idea The Mining Journal supports legislation that Gov. Rick Snyder signed into law early last week, toughening the legal threshold for intoxication for snowmobilers and boaters. The bill, which enjoyed bi-partisan support in both houses of the Michigan Legislature, changed from .10 to .08 the amount of alcohol permissible in the system of a boater or snowmobiler. “It is vital to keep our waterways and other recreational areas safe for all Michiganders,” Snyder said in a statement included in Associated Press coverage of the issue. We couldn’t agree more. AP reported that the House in 2003 and 2005 voted overwhelmingly to make the limit 0.08 for all vehicle users, but the legislation died in the Senate, apparently in part because critics felt the only reason the blood alcohol limit for drunken driving had been lowered was because the state faced the loss of federal funding. Rep. Matt Lori, a Constantine Republican who sponsored two of the four bills, said he was “elated” that the package got to Snyder’s desk, stated AP. There was never a good reason, politics aside, that this action wasn’t taken before. We were glad to see the governor and Legislature rectify this. —The Mining Journal (Marquette) Thought for Today “I refuse to accept the idea that the ‘is-ness’ of man’s present nature makes him morally incapable of reaching up for the ‘ought-ness’ that forever confronts him.” — Martin Luther King, Jr. (1929-1968). Letters to the Editor Time is now to support Relay for Life To the Editor, What started as one man walking around a track in Tacoma, Wash., 30 years ago this spring has grown into the world’s largest movement to fight back against cancer. Today, more than four million people participate in American Cancer Society Relay For Life events in 6,000 communities worldwide. The Gogebic County Relay For Life is one of them, and I want to encourage people from every part of our community to get involved. Plans are underway for the American Cancer Society event, set for Aug. 2015. And don’t worry, there is no running involved! We have made tremendous progress in recent years. The five-year survival rate for all cancers has climbed to 68 percent. The Relay For Life event celebrates this. We also know there is more work to do to finish the fight once and for all. Community volunteers are the backbone of this movement, and we need more to join our team. Together, our efforts will help save lives by funding groundbreaking research and increasing our understanding of prevention and early detection. The Relay For Life program also helps to fund important support for families facing cancer and ensures cancer patients’ voices are heard on important public policy issues. This year it’s especially important that we get people to volunteer for the event, as we’re saying goodbye to Carole Lillar, who has acted as the lead of our event planning team for the last 3 years. Carole has put her heart and soul in to leading this event and on behalf of the American Cancer Society and all of our volunteers we want to thank her for her commitment to the fight against cancer. She looks forward to enjoying the event as a team captain for her Bessemer-Wakefield VFW relay team. Now is the time for individuals, families, clubs, faith-based groups and businesses in Gogebic County to step up and help finish the fight against cancer by participating in the Relay For Life. Several critical positions on our leadership team are still unfilled. Celebrate survivors. Remember loved ones no longer here. Pledge to fight back against this disease. I invite everyone to form a team and volunteer for the American Cancer Society and the Relay For Life event today. Visit relayforlife.org or call 1800-227- 2345 for more information about local opportunities. Sincerely, Stephanie Swartzendruber Specialist, Relay For Life American Cancer Society Hancock OPINION Students: How they learn, how they don’t At Pittsfield Middle High School in southeastern New Hampshire, the students are individually and actively involved in their own learning. This enlivening approach to education, which I’ve been advocating for years, is beginning in an evolving number of schools around the country. Here, Emily Richmond of the Hechinger Report, an education news site, writes, “student-led discussions, small-group work and individual projects dominate” (“Putting students in charge to close the achievement gap,” Emily Richmond, The Hechinger Report, Oct. 24, 2014). As Noah Manteau, a senior at Pittsfield, tells Richmond: “There used to be a lot more of teachers talking at you — it didn’t matter if you were ready to move on. When the teacher was done with the topic that was it. This is so much better.” Richmond adds: “Educators, researchers and policymakers at the state and national level are keeping close tabs on Pittsfield, which has become an incubator for a critical experiment in school reform. The goal: a stronger connection between academic learning and the kind of real-world experience that advocates say can translate into postsecondary success.” This kind of goal could turn future generations of Americans into more knowledgeable participants of what our nation began as: a self-governing republic whose Bill of Rights guaranteed each American individual constitutional liberties. For years, educational reformers have too often just glibly emphasized “critical thinking” as a key goal of education. But students who are mainly talked at by teachers and then graded by collective standardized tests don’t get to do much critical thinking in school. By contrast, here is some of Richmond’s report of a class she observed: “In an 11th-grade English class ... Jenny Wellington’s students were gathered in a circle debating Henry David Thoreau’s positions on personal responsibility.” One student asked: “Do you think Thoreau really was about ‘every man for himself’?” To this, another student responded: “He lived alone in the woods and didn’t want to pay taxes. So yeah!” “Sitting off to the side,” writes Richmond, “Wellington took rapid notes. When she noticed the conversation being dominated by a couple of voices, she politely suggested someone else chime in. Otherwise, she stayed out of the way and let the discussion take yourdailyglobe.com USPS 269-980 Published daily Monday - Saturday (except Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year’s Day) Periodicals postage paid at Ironwood, MI 49938 POSTMASTER – Send changes of addresses to: The Daily Globe, P.O. Box 548, 118 E. McLeod Ave., Ironwood, MI 49938 Nat Hentoff Sweet Land of Liberty shape.” So how, at Pittsfield, are these individual learners being graded? Richmond answers: “The traditional grading system has been replaced with a matrix of ‘competencies,’ detailing the skills and knowledge students are expected to master in each class. “Students are graded on a scale of 1 to 4 — with 2.5 considered ‘proficient’ — and those numbers are converted into letter grades for their transcripts.” In addition, “teachers meet at regular intervals to review how closely their instruction is aligning with the competencies; they use an online database to continually track individual student growth. “Additional online classes allow students to further challenge themselves and earn college credit ...” And dig this: “The Extended Learning Opportunities (ELO) program allows students to earn credit for workplace experiences that reinforce their academic studies, such as interning at a dentist’s office or the local radio station.” Accordingly, “all of this means students are shouldering more responsibility for their own learning. “And they are expected to develop the kind of critical thinking skills — not just rote knowledge — required for ‘real world’ success.” (Emphasis added.) So how is all this working out? “Pittsfield’s superintendent, John Freeman, is among the first to acknowledge that adopting student-centered learning was a bold move. Student performance on statewide assessments has long been uneven, and teachers and administrators know there is still significant work to be done. “But test scores are just one indicator, and based on multiple other measures, including higher graduation and college-going rates, Freeman feels confident that student-cen- tered learning is moving Pittsfield in the right direction.” Also worth noting is the composition of the town’s students: “Pittsfield, a former mill town, has about 4,500 predominantly white students, and the Middle High School serves about 260 residents. Fifty-six percent of them qualify for free or reduced-price meals.” Although these kids are predominantly white, I haven’t the slightest doubt that encouraging active individual involvement would be of exceptional, sustained value to predominantly black or Hispanic schools and those other schools with underserved students. In Pittsfield, Richmond assures us, “student-centered learning is fully in place in the high school, and elements of it are being phased in at the middle-school level. The long-term plan is to eventually add it to the nearby elementary school.” From time to time, I will keep you up to date on those results. Superintendent Freeman tells Richmond: “People in our community wanted schools to be places where students’ passions and interests were recognized, and their deficits and weaknesses addressed.” He adds: “We’re thinking not just about what happens within these walls, but preparing them for success at least seven years beyond high school graduation.” And conceivably, I believe, for the rest of their lives. Laureen Avery of UCLA Center X, an education program that focuses on public schools, tells Richmond: “I’ve never seen any school — big or little — pay such close attention to student data.” Not just “data,” but continuing real-life evidence of how students learn. Among voters in 2016, I challenge students, parents, teachers, school board members, state legislators and those in Congress to compare their school systems to what is happening in Pittsfield. What achievements are their school systems making to deepen and individualize students’ futures? I don’t know whom I’ll vote for president in 2016. But if any candidate convinces me that he or she has believable plans for increasing students’ love of learning, I — despite arthritis — will be at the polls early. Nat Hentoff is a nationally renowned authority on the First Amendment and the Bill of Rights. He is a member of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, and the Cato Institute, where he is a senior fellow. Today in history The Associated Press Today’s Highlight in History On Jan. 15, 1865, during the closing months of the Civil War, the Second Battle of Fort Fisher near Wilmington, N.C., ended as Union forces captured the “Gibraltar of the South,” depriving the Confederates of their last major seaport. On this date In 1559, England’s Queen Elizabeth I was crowned in Westminster Abbey. In 1777, the people of New Connecticut declared their independence. (The republic later became the state of Vermont.) In 1862, the U.S. Senate confirmed President Abraham Lincoln’s choice of Edwin M. Stanton to be the new Secretary of War, replacing Simon Cameron. In 1919, in Boston, a tank containing an estimated 2.3 million gallons of molasses burst, sending the dark syrup coursing through the city’s North End, killing 21 people. In 1929, civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. was born in Atlanta. In 1943, work was completed on the Pentagon, headquarters of the U.S. Department of War (now Defense). In 1947, the mutilated remains of 22-year-old Elizabeth Short, who came to be known as the “Black Dahlia,” were found in a vacant Los Angeles lot; her slaying remains unsolved. In 1967, the Green Bay Packers of the National Football League defeated the Kansas City Chiefs of the American Football League 35-10 in the first AFL-NFL World Championship Game, known retroactively as Super Bowl I. In 1973, President Richard Nixon announced the suspension of all U.S. offensive action in North Vietnam, citing progress in peace negotiations. In 1989, NATO, the Warsaw Pact and 12 other European countries adopted a human rights and security agreement in Vienna, Austria. In 1993, a historic disarmament ceremony ended in Paris with the last of 125 countries signing a treaty banning chemical weapons. In 2009, US Airways Capt. Chesley “Sully” Sullenberger ditched his Airbus 320 in the Hudson River after a flock of birds disabled both engines; all 155 people aboard survived. Ten years ago: Wilbert Rideau, an award-winning black journalist who’d spent nearly 44 years in Louisiana prisons for the 1961 death of a white bank teller, Julia Ferguson, was found guilty of manslaughter in a fourth trial by a racially-mixed jury and set free, his original sentence for murder reduced to time already served. Mahmoud Abbas was sworn in as Palestinian president. Michelle Kwan won her ninth title at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Portland, Ore. MALLARD FILLMORE DOONESBURY CLASSIC DAILY GLOBE THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM Award Winning Newspaper PUBLISHER Sue Mizell EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT/ACCOUNTING Jenna Martilla ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Gary Pennington LEAD PRESS Bill Westerman MANAGING EDITOR Larry Holcombe CIRCULATION Marissa Casari 906-932-2211 • 800-236-2887 • Fax 906-932-5358 THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM Trooper From page 1 nections.” In addition to his role as CST, Mazurek will have a busy schedule, also being the background investigator, local assistant for recruiting, crime scene technician and field training officer at the post. Bessemer From page 1 Washington Elementary. —scheduled the regular board meeting dates and times. —authorized the appropriate people for signing checks, contact/agreements, purchase Over his career, he has also been a representative for troopers in the Upper Peninsula on an executive board, as well as chairman of a statewide safety committee for nine years. “I think it’s a really good thing,” Mazurek said. “We have heard some really positive responses from the public about this and it’s a very important aspect to strengthen the ties between the post and community. I’m looking forward to this.” By VIKKI JAMES ONTONAGON — Ontonagon County Planning Commission members this week heard from Don Helsel of MI-TRALE about recreational possibilities coming to the county. Helsel presented a short video of what is happening in Wisconsin with the various trail organizations and how those groups are impacting recreational trail activity throughout the state. Helsel also showed a presentation on what will be known as the Himanka Hill Recreational Area, comprised of more than 800 acres in the Himanka Hill and Holombo road areas in Haight Township. The plan is to log the area beginning this year through 2018 and then gradually turn the area into a family recreational area for both off-road vehicle and non-motorized leisure pursuits. When the area is completed, a trail will run to Bond Falls, and will connect to trails in Wisconsin. Part of the trail, Forst Road 5320 or the CC road, should be open next year. William Fischer, president of the Ontonagon County Economic Partnership, gave a presentation about the necessity for providing top quality technical training to students and others in light of the proposed new mine at White Pine. Fischer offered an overview of what the training might look like, and Jim Bobula, principal/superintendent of the Ontonagon Area Schools, described what is already in place at the high school that could be used for training. Bobula said he is in meetings with the intermediate school district and will be meeting with Highland Copper management to see how the school district could provide training for individuals who could be future employees. Sue Preiss, treasurer of the OCEP, spoke about how funding could be obtained for the training. Fischer asked the planning commission for a resolution to support the efforts of the OCEP as it moves forward with this project. The formal resolution read, “The Ontonagon County Planning Commission fully supports and endorses the Ontonagon County Technical Skills Education Initiative as led by OCEP and other leadership entities.” It was approved on a unanimous vote. The planning commission asked Fischer to bring his presentation to the next county commissioners’ meeting. Village of Ontonagon authorizes some “let-run” for residents ONTONAGON — Village of Ontonagon manager Joe Erickson reported Monday that while the lame-duck legislature passed a transportation funding bill, it must be approved on a voters’ ballot proposal in May before it becomes effective. It would increase the state sales tax from 6 percent to 7 percent and remove the motor fuel tax. The 2015-16 draft budget will be ready for the first meeting in February. The village is authorizing some “let-run water” accounts, unlike last year, when it was a community-wide situation. There was a major watermain break on Michigan Avenue and getting through three feet of frost was a special challenge that required heavy equipment from Pestka Construction. Erickson will propose an alternative means to break through the heavy frost. There have been numerous calls from village residents asking about whether or not to open their faucets to prevent winter freeze-ups. The policy usually involves 50 or more customers. Erickson was concerned that some homeowners are running more than a “pencil stream” of water, consuming 50,000 gallons of water or more. Freeze-ups inside a house on the inner meter side are the responsibility of the homeowner. Erickson suggested looking at each individual case to determine if the freeze-up situation is correctable. He asked to meet with the water committee to consider standards, such as what constitutes a “pencil stream” of water. A credit card payment feature is being used for payment of water bills, including some delinquent accounts. Artificial ice in the recreation building, instead of operating the expensive compressors, was discussed. The general feeling of council was if the village can cut costs at the recreation building, dollars spent by the hockey association will go a lot further. The meeting concluded with discussion of various pieces of equipment the village may consider purchasing and modification to lighting in village buildings to be become more efficient. RNC panel censures Michigan member over gay, Muslim remarks CORONADO, Calif. (AP) — The Republican National Committee’s executive committee voted to censure Michigan Republican David Agema for what it calls “harmful rhetoric” about gays and Muslims. At the outset of the RNC’s winter meeting near San Diego, the panel said Michigan Republican National Committeeman Dave Agema’s history of “harmful and offensive rhetoric” has no place in the party. THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 2015 G R E AT L A K E S Last March, Agema posted on Facebook an unsubstantiated claim that gays account for half the murders in large cities. Last month, he told a Michigan county GOP committee that gay Americans tried to obtain health insurance because they risk contracting AIDS. Agema also came under fire from the Council on AmericanIslamic Relations for a Facebook posting this month questioning Muslims’ commitment to charity. Associated Press IN THIS May 1, 2011, file photo, a cargo ship moves through a lock at St. Catharines, Ontario, that is part of the Welland Canal linking Lakes Erie and Ontario. Scientists say there are serious flaws with tests of equipment designed to kill invasive species in ballast water, which cargo ships use for stability but which is believed to have brought invasive species to U.S. waters. Report: Tests of ballast water treatment systems are flawed TRAVERSE CITY (AP) — Government-sanctioned tests of equipment designed to cleanse ship ballast water of invasive species are seriously flawed because they don’t determine whether the systems will remove microbes that cause gastrointestinal illnesses, scientists said Wednesday. Ballast water provides stability for cargo ships in rough seas. But it’s believed to have introduced numerous invaders to U.S. coastal waters and the Great Lakes, including zebra mussels, spotted jellyfish and Japanese shore crabs, along with bacteria and viruses. The Environmental Protection Agency and the Coast Guard have set limits on the number of live organisms ballast water can contain, based on standards proposed by an international agency in 2004. To comply, ship companies must install technology that kills enough creatures to meet the limits. Laboratory testing of treat- ment systems has been conducted for 10 years. But a newly published paper in the Marine Pollution Bulletin contends the evaluations have a crucial defect: They don’t adequately measure the systems’ effectiveness against three disease-carrying microbes that the regulations target. One of them, E. coli, can indicate the presence of fecal sewage. “This is a real problem,” said Andrew Cohen of the Center for Research on Aquatic Bioinvasions in Richmond, Calif., who wrote the paper with Fred Dobbs of Old Dominion University in Virginia. “We know there are serious pathogens in ballast water. There’s good evidence that ballast water has moved them around the world and into U.S. waters.” The Coast Guard declined to comment and theEPA had no immediate reaction to the report. Some experts believe ballast water from Asia caused a 1991 cholera outbreak in South America that killed 10,000 people, Cohen said. According to the paper, at least 38 species of disease-causing bacteria have been detected in ballast tanks. Companies are developing onboard cleansing systems using tools such as filters, chemicals, ozone and ultraviolet light. University and private laboratories are testing how well they work. Fifty-three systems have won approval from at least one country with membership in the International Maritime Organization. The U.S. Coast Guard and EPA have yet to certify any system but have allowed the temporary use of 45 endorsed by other nations. Cohen and Dobbs said they obtained data from 390 tests conducted on 38 treatment systems between 2004 and 2013. They said in 95 percent of the tests, the water samples contained so few of the targeted microbes from the start that they met the standards even before the treatments began. Coalition works to improve cancer vaccinations in teens WASHBURN, Wis. — The Superior Immunization Coalition is joining a national effort to improve rates of vaccinating teens against a virus that causes cancer. Figures from 2013, the latest available, show about 19 percent of northern Wisconsin teens aged 13 to 17 had received the three vaccinations necessary to prevent human papillomavirus infection, which can cause cervical, anal and oral cancers. “We know that our region can do better, and our New Year’s resolution for 2015 is to improve our vaccination rates,” said Terri Kramolis, of the Bayfield County Health Department. The coalition includes Ashland, Bayfield, Price, Sawyer and Iron counties. It was one of 16 local coalitions to receive a grant from the Wisconsin Immunization Program and the Wisconsin Comprehensive Cancer Control Program to promote and support HPV vaccine-related activities within the communities. The Superior coalition will work with local schools and clinical providers to increase knowledge of the HPV vaccine safety and promote vaccinating teens. Dr. Noelle LoConte, associate professor of medicine at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, said because the HPV virus is known to cause cancer, getting the vaccine is one of the surest ways to prevent it. “One of the goals is to reduce the risk of people in our state getting cancer,” said LoConte, an oncologist. “By increasing the use of the HPV vaccine statewide, we are closing the door to cancer for our children’s generation,” she said. LoConte is a member of the UW Carbone Cancer Center, one of 18 National Cancer Institute centers that received grants to improve HPV vaccine rates. The NCI centers are meeting this week about improving HPV vaccination rates nationwide. Mercer youth sentenced for possessing pot By RALPH ANSAMI ransami@yourdailyglobe.com HURLEY — A Mercer youth was sentenced Monday for possession of THC, the active ingredient in marijuana. Anthony Thompson, 20, entered a no contest plea to the charge and was placed on probation for a year. If he doesn’t get into any legal trouble in the next 12 months, the misdemeanor charge will be expunged, Madden ruled. A charge of possessing drug paraphernalia was dismissed. Thompson was also ordered to pay court costs and assessments for a total of $443. Thompson’s attorney, public defender Aaron Marcoux, said his client was charged after he had received a ride from a deputy, who later found a pipe with marijuana residue in Thompson’s possession. Iron County Sheriff’s Department deputy Larry Koivisto was the arresting officer in August. Madden said having a clean record is especially important when a young person applies for a job or seeks higher education. He said while many states have decriminalized marijuana, Wisconsin isn’t one of them. “If marijuana is that important to you, move to Colorado,” the judge advised. “You’ve been tapped, don’t get whacked,” he added. Case dismissed In an unrelated case on Monday, domestic battery and disorderly conduct charges and a bail jumping allegation were dismissed without prejudice against Dawn Laguna, 44, of Hurley. The matter had been set for a scheduling conference and Laguna had requested a speedy trial, l 5 Record orders and electronic transfers. —set their legal counsel with Thrun Law and depositories for school funds at First National Bank, Gogebic Range Bank and Michigan Liquid Asset Fund Plus. —designated the Ironwood Daily Globe and Wakefield News/Bessemer Pick and Axe as the official newspapers for the district. Ontonagon County Planning Commission hears proposals news@yourdailyglobe.com AREA / STATE but she still has about six or seven months remaining in a Department of Human Services treatment program. The dismissal of the case without prejudice by Madden means Iron County District Attorney Marty Lipske may refile charges in the future, if he chooses. The charges were filed in August. POLICE REPORTS City of Ironwood The Ironwood Public Safety Department received a Wednesday complaint that a bong was found in a parking lot near the Handsome Prints store in downtown Ironwood. It was discovered the marijuanasmoking device had been reported stolen on Monday. The owner of the bong was to be notified to come and pick it up. Gogebic County Deputies were called about a vehicle being parked in a driveway on W. Lead Street in Bessemer at 7:22 a.m. on Tuesday that did not belong there. According to the Gogebic County Sheriff’s Department report, the vehicle was towed at the homeowners request. ACCIDENTS City of Ironwood A two-vehicle accident was reported Tuesday on Vaughn Street, near the Suffolk Street intersection. A vehicle owned by Steven Korpela, 28, of 205 E. Vaughn St., was legally parked along the street. Brittany Massoglia, 25. of 117 W. Norrie St., was approaching a stop sign and because of sun glare, she said she didn’t see the parked vehicle and her vehicle rear-ended it. There was heavy damage to the passenger side front end and hood of the Massoglia vehicle, but the Korpela vehicle had only minor bumper damage, according to the IPSD accident report. No injuries were reported. Gogebic County Police responded to a possible vehicle’s hit and run in the parking lot of the Mill Trace Apartments in Ironwood at 9:50 a.m. on Wednesday. There was minor damage to the left side, back bumper and a paint transfer, the GCSD report said. ——— A deputy from the sheriff’s department was stopped at the light at the intersection of U.S. 2 and Country Club Road in Ironwood at 8:20 p.m. on Monday when he noticed a car quickly moving toward him from behind. The deputy pulled into the turning lane to avoid a rear-end collision. The car behind him, driven by Amada Grace Zakula, 37, of Wakefield, lost control, slid sideways and spun to face the opposite direction. She was traveling with her three children, but no injuries were reported. There was some damage to the vehicle’s front bumper. According to the GCSD report, Zakula was cited for speeding. ——— Genevieve Weaver, 18, of Ontonagon, was traveling west on U.S. 2 near Jackson Road in Ironwood at 8:25 a.m. on Monday when she hit a patch of ice. Weaver’s vehicle slid into a vehicle driven by William Dean Jacobson, 61, of Ironwood. Jacobson’s vehicle had moderate damage to the driver’s side front fender and door. Weaver’s vehicle had minor damage to the driver’s side door and fender, according to a GCSD report. ——— Police were called to a one-car rollover accident on U.S. 2 near Sunday Lake Supermarket in Wakefield at 9:25 a.m. on Monday. The red Toyota rolled and overturned on the driver’s side, on snowcovered, slippery roads, the GCSD report said. ANIMAL COMPLAINTS Gogebic County The GCSD received received a report of a dog being left outside without blankets or hay to keep warm on Verona Road in Wakefield at 10:47 a.m. on Jan. 6. Deputies continued to check the situation, making sure the dog could get to the doghouse. The dog’s owners kept putting blankets in for the dog, but whatever they put in, the dog kept dragging Lottery Wednesday Michigan Classic Lotto 47: 09-14-20-24-30-43 Poker Lotto: QC-KC-JS-4C-5D Midday Daily 3: 1-2-3 Midday Daily 4: 2-4-1-4 Daily 3: 3-6-6 Daily 4: 5-1-8-3 Fantasy 5: 07-19-29-30-39 Keno: 04-06-11-12-13-19-20-24-25-26-27-30-37-3846-47-48-55-67-68-79-80 Wisconsin 5 Card Cash: QD-KD-JH-QH-8D Megabucks: 02-11-19-36-40-43 SuperCash: 03-06-11-20-29-39, Doubler: N Badger 5: 01-09-14-26-29 Daily Pick 3: 5-9-5 Daily Pick 4: 2-9-8-6 Multi-state Powerball: 02-04-10-41-53, Powerball: 22 Thank You Thank you to all our special friends who sent cards, made personal visits, and called us to express their sympathy at the loss of Fran’s brother, William Strelcheck and also for the loss of my two sisters, Carol Vanderschaegen and Christine Hotchkiss. A special thank you to Our Redeemer Lutheran Church for pastor’s calls. Your friendship and caring thoughts will always be remembered. FRANCIS AND GLORIA (SCHILLING) STRELCHECK CELEBRATIONS 6 l THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 2015 New Arrivals Sara Esther Bilc IRONWOOD, Mich. — Andrei and Esther Bilc are parents of a daughter, Sara Esther, born Jan. 4, 2015, at home with Midwife Sandy Pera attending in Ironwood. Sara weighed 6 pounds 3 ounces and was 19 inches long at birth. Grandparents are Tim and Terri Bale, of Ironwood, and Mihai and Lucia Bilc of Romania. Great-grandparents are Jim and Joan Bale, of Ironwood, and Eileen Wright, of Santa Barbara, Calif., and Elena Buctos, of Romania. Briefly Flower girl, ring bearer wed nearly 20 years later ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — When a flower girl and ring bearer from Minnesota walked down the aisle at their relatives’ wedding in 1995, little did they know they would do it again nearly 20 years later. A chance encounter in a college classroom brought Brittney Husbyn and Briggs Fussy together again. Fussy says Husbyn turned around in class one day and said she thought she might have a photo of him as a ring bearer on her wall. KMSP-TV says one date became two and five years after meeting in class, the couple is right back where they started. They walked down the aisle at their own wedding Saturday. 2 NDSU players propose to girlfriends on field after big win FARGO, N.D. (AP) — Two women have rings of their own following North Dakota State’s win in the Football Championship Subdivision title game — not championship rings but engagement rings. WDAY-TV reports that two NDSU offensive linemen proposed to their girlfriends while fans were storming the field in Frisco, Texas, following NDSU’s 29-27 win over Illinois State. It was the fourth consecutive national title for the Bison. Zac Johnson proposed to Trisha Goerts while Jesse Hinz popped the question to Gretchen Folkerts. Both women said yes. Hinz and Folkerts likely will wed this summer, while Johnson and Goerts are eyeing a summer 2015 wedding. Police officer weds couple after weather closes courthouse KALAMAZOO (AP) — A Michigan couple will never forget the guy who married them: He was carrying a gun. Dean Lauer and Carrie Stull were married Friday at the Kalamazoo Department of Public Safety after the county courthouse was closed due to extreme weather. Kalamazoo Officer Joe Paul is certified to perform marriages in Michigan. So he married the couple in the chief’s conference room before the start of his afternoon shift. Baby Asian elephant at Oklahoma City Zoo is named OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — An Asian elephant born last month at the Oklahoma City Zoo finally has a name. Zoo officials say the elephant will be called Achara (A-ka-ra) after the name received about 13,000 votes on the zoo’s website. The name is of Thai origin and means “pretty angel.” Other names considered were Biju, an Indian word that means awesome. Associated Press IN THIS photo Alexis Donahoe and J.D. Rappold, a pair of ice skating partners from Charleston, W.Va., who fell in love, walk down the aisle after being married, in front of more than 100 friends and family members who were sitting atop the ice at the South Charleston Memorial Ice Arena in South Charleston, W.Va. West Virginia couple’s wedding held at ice rink SOUTH CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — Alexis Donahoe had cold feet as she walked down the aisle and approached her soon-to-be husband, James “J.D.” Rappold, at their wedding on New Year’s Eve. Although they had no second thoughts, the couples’ toes were chilly as they gathered with a hundred of their closest friends and family members at the South Charleston Memorial Ice Arena to join in holy matrimony. It was an end-of-the-year celebration unlike any other. “We originally thought about getting married in a church and doing a reception in Huntington,” said Donahoe, 20. But those plans changed after Rappold, 26, jokingly suggested they get married on ice. Donahoe originally laughed at the idea, Rappold said prior to the ceremony, as he overlooked the rink that had been converted into a provisional wedding hall. When guests arrived at the * * * * * VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (AP) — Listen up, married fellas. Norman Hammond has a story for you. Hammond was a newlywed in the early 1950s when he learned a lesson about marriage and forgiveness and, well, knowing a thing or two about your wife. The 90-year-old and his wife, Doris, 86, can laugh about it now; the mistake made when he commissioned a portrait of her during a Navy deployment to the Mediterranean about 64 years ago. On the 13-by-17-inch canvas, she is smiling with red lips, rosy cheeks and dark, shoulderlength hair. But it was more than 40 years before it ever hung on a wall. The couple, who attended rival Garfield and Wiley high schools in Terre Haute, Ind., had never met until they took up dancing in the late 1940s. “If you wanted to get a girl, you had to know how to dance,” Norman said recently. They waltzed right into a romance at a dancing school where Norman said Doris “was the prettiest girl in the whole place.” They married a short while GIOVANONI True Value Wedding Gifts Baby Gifts Bridal Shower Gifts Bridal Registry Much, Much More byterian Church in Huntington to officiate the ceremony. A relative of Donahoe, who served as their wedding planner, was tasked with figuring out the logistics of using half an ice rink as both the wedding site and reception hall. Rappold asked a college friend to sit in the announcer’s booth — in between penalty boxes — and DJ the evening. The couple first met four years ago when Rappold’s mother, Heidi, suggested they become skating partners. Heidi Rappold had been Donahoe’s figure skating coach since she was very young. Although he was fearful of what his hockey friends might say, Rappold gave it a try. What began as a pair skating partnership blossomed into a relationship that was centered around their love for the ice. Since then, the skating pair has gone to nationals twice, finishing in the top 10 for the novice level. Book lover gets marriage proposal at St. Albans Library CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — Kristin Earley cracked open the door of a room on the second floor of the St. Albans Library on Dec. 13. Glimpsing a crowd, she thought she’d wandered into someone else’s event. Her friend, Danielle Moles, who — like Earley — is a Marshall University student, had said to meet her at the library because she needed help with a finals report. Kristin’s boyfriend, David Griffith, had come with Moles to the library along with Josh Goble, Griffith’s best friend. Goble and Moles were there for the show. “We had roses sitting there as soon as you walked in the room on the left,” Griffith said. He grabbed the dozen pink roses and handed them to Earley as she walked in the door. “I don’t know if she knew what was going on at the time because she was still like, ‘What’s going on?’ She had that look in her eye,” Griffith recalled. “We had this little hollowedout book type of thing, and we put the ring in that. So, after I gave her the roses, I grabbed the book and opened it and got down on my knee.” Then, he asked her that eternal question: “Will you marry me?” The people waiting in the room — Griffith’s parents, his sister, both sets of his grandparents, as well as Earley’s parents, her brother and one grandma — all got to see her answer in the affirmative. “She was kind of shocked.” Griffith said. “She cried a little bit, then she laughed and smiled. It was a good time.” The couple had been together for three years and, while marriage was in the cards, she expected that a proposal might take some more time, since Griffith, 24, had recently landed a job as a St. Albans Police Department patrolman. “I was shocked,” Earley said. “I had no idea at all. And it was going to be hard to shock me, after three years.” Griffith and his mother had also done some homework. Earley, 21, is a senior majoring in English education at Marshall. Her dream job is to teach English at her alma mater, St. Albans High School. “So, she really loves books,” said Griffith. “Me and my mom sat down and were brainstorming some ideas. She’s really big into literature and all that. So, we came up with the idea to do something in the library.” They created poster boards, cracked open like books and set on tables, featuring photos of the couple’s “love story,” as Griffith put it. He also chose a numerologically significant date for the proposal: 12-13-14, since the couple’s first date was Sept. 10, 2011: or 9-10-11. The couple toured the room after the proposal. “It was really cool,” said Earley. “He and his mom made these, like, book posters. It started out with one of our very first dates. It was like, ‘Once upon a time.’ It went through the last three years. Then there were some love poems: ‘How do I love thee, let me count the ways .” And there were books, she said. “Books are my favorite things. So everything was bookthemed. He did a good job there.” Griffith, who ended his training period as an officer on New Year’s Day, had been nervous about whether he could successfully pull off the wedding proposal or not. “It’s kind of hard to surprise her,” he said. “She’s been asking about an engagement because we’ve been together for three years. I kept telling her it would probably be sometime in 2015. It really caught her off guard. Which is what I wanted, because I wanted her to be surprised.” And those roses? They’ll have another use once the couple decides on a date in 2015 for their ceremony. “We’re going let them dry and use them for the rose petals in our wedding,” Griffith said. Man’s portrait mistake provides lesson about marriage Nifty Gift Shop At arena, they discovered half of the ice covered with mats that weren’t quite thick enough to fend off the chill from the frozen surface below their feet, dressed up aluminum chairs and music playing on a system normally used for calling out hockey players’ names. As Rappold suited up — into a tuxedo — inside the men’s locker room, the smell of hockey, his favorite sport, was undeniable. He told a groomsman how cool the scene was. “The dream,” a friend responded. Rappold, who set aside his hockey pads to become a figure skater with Donahoe a few years ago, was well aware of the strangeness of the scene. “It’s not a normal sport, so why have a normal wedding?” “We thought it would be very fitting,” Donahoe said. And with that, the two set out to make their dream a reality. They brought in the Rev. Chris Perkins from Enslow Park Pres- THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM GIFTS FOR ALL OCCASIONS • Appliances • Hunting & Fishing Supplies • Plumbing Parts • Kitchen Appliances • Snowblowers • Lawnmowers • Tools • Tool Rental OPEN: 7 DAYS A WEEK 303 Silver St., Hurley, WI Phone 561-4141 later. About 13 months after that, Norman was called from the Naval Reserve to active duty because of the war in Korea. The first port of call aboard the attack transport Chilton was Gibraltar, where merchants and artists were allowed to board ships and sell their wares. For $20, an artist would look at your photograph and turn it into an oil painting. “Since the snapshot was in black and white, he needed to write down the colors to use; brown hair, brown blouse, white collar with white checks, brown eyes and eyebrows,” Norman wrote in a self-published memoir. Four months later, when the ship returned, the artist located Norman and gave him the finished work. The portrait looked like the photo, but Norman knew something about it wasn’t quite right. He paid the fee, tucked the canvas in a tube and packed it away in his things. When he got leave to go home and meet his first newborn son, he unpacked the painting and handed it to his wife. At first, silence. “My eyes are blue, not brown!” Doris said. She said nothing else, except “OK,” when Norman offered to have the eyes retouched in blue. She later added blue to the eyes herself and packed the picture back into its tube. The portrait was moved from drawers to closets to chests through the years and to various new houses. Norman retired as a lieutenant commander from the Naval Reserve. The couple moved to Florida after he retired from a chemical company in 1989. It was then that Doris took the portrait out of the tube, had it framed and chose a spot for it on the bedroom wall directly in Norman’s line of sight. It was the first thing he saw in the morning and the last before going to sleep. He figured it may have been a twice-daily reminder of his blunder years earlier. He preferred, though, to believe it was a sign of forgiveness. The portrait moved one more time earlier this year when the Hammonds moved into Atlantic Shores Retirement Community off Dam Neck Road in Virginia Beach. This year, they celebrated 65 years together and their four children, nine grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. The painting is back on the wall in Norman’s line of sight. “It was worth twenty bucks,” he says with a chuckle. Associated Press A PORTRAIT of Doris Hammond that her husband Norman Hammond commissioned when he deployed with the Navy and was in port in Gibraltar in 1951 hangs on the wall of their home, Wednesday, Nov. 19, 2014 in Virginia Beach, Va. Seized boa constrictor gets new home on Big Island KAILUA-KONA, Hawaii (AP) — A boa constrictor seized on Oahu in 2011 is getting a warm welcome in its new home on Hawaii Island. The nearly 8-foot snake, which had been kept in a 100-gallon aquarium at the Honolulu office of the state Department of Agriculture Plant Quarantine Branch, was moved Friday to new digs at the Panaewa Rainforest Zoo & Gardens. Children pressed up against the glass of the boa constrictor’s enclosure for a view of it flicking its black tongue and its tan and black body stretched to full length, West Hawaii Today reported. Ken Smith, general manager of the Petco store in Kailua-Kona, gave tips on how to handle the snake. Hawaii County Councilman Dennis “Fresh” Onishi, who helped secure it, tentatively touched its sides and then lifted a few loops of reptile. “It’s very smooth,” Onishi said, “but I could feel his muscles underneath.” The Hawaii County Council on Wednesday approved a resolution authorizing the mayor to enter into an agreement with the state to provide a holding facility at the zoo for prohibited animals. The new 8-by-3-foot exhibit was built to specifications by county Parks and Recreation Department staff. The snake is a temporary resident but zoo director Pam Mizuno hopes it stays a long time. The zoo plans to use the snake to teach people about rain forest animals and the damage they could cause if they are loosed on the almost snake-free Hawaiian Islands. The Department of Agriculture has an amnesty program that allows people turning in the reptile pets or other alien species to avoid prosecution. For reprints or lamination services, contact the Daily Globe at 906-932-2211 THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM Obituaries AREA / NATION THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 2015 l 7 Betty Meyer-Lundberg Betty Meyer-Lundberg, 85, died Dec. 17, 2014. Betty was born Elizabeth Jean Kellett on Feb. 24, 1929, with her twin brother, William Gene “Bill,” in Ironwood, Mich. Bill succumbed to cancer in 1973. She married John H. Meyer on June 19, 1948, and together they owned and managed the Walter Meyer Sausage Co. in Ironwood for 40 years. They had ten good years of retirement splitting their time between their condo in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., and their cottage in Pine Lake, Wis. John died of cancer in 1998. Betty and Edgar Lundberg, of Chicago, were married in Florida in 1999, and they enjoyed their church and traveling for another ten years. Ed passed away in 2008. In 2010 she moved to Appleton, Wis., to be Betty MeyerLundberg close to her grandchildren, Spencer (now 13) and Heather (now 10) children of her son, 1929 — 2014 John, and his wife Maythee. One more move would happen in 2011 when she made her final destination Alexandria, Va., to live with her daughter Diane and her husband, Dave. A memorial service was held for her on Jan. 10, 2015, at St. John’s Lutheran in Alexandria, Va. She will be laid to rest at Riverside Cemetery following a service there on Saturday, July 11, 2015, at 11 a.m. Jane Cvengros DULUTH, Minn. — Jane Cvengros, 83, of Wakefield, formerly of Ironwood, died Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2015, at St. Mary’s Medical Center in Duluth. Arrangements are pending with Range Funeral Service and Crematory, Ketola-Burla Funeral Home of Ironwood. Paulwarns about people getting undeserved disability payments MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP) — Republican Sen. Rand Paul said Wednesday that some people “game the system” to receive disability payments they don’t deserve and later criticized the federal government for not doing an adequate job policing a system he says needs reform. During a meeting with Republican state lawmakers, Paul said fraud is a widespread problem in disability programs that help people who are injured at work. He joked that “half the people on disability are either anxious or their back hurts.” “Join the club,” Paul said. “Everybody over 40 has a back pain.” The Kentucky Republican added: “We all know people who are horrifically disabled and can’t work, but if you have ablebodied people taking the money, there’s not going to be anything left for people who are truly disabled.” The Democratic National Committee seized on the comments, calling them offensive. Alex Lawson, the executive director of the advocacy group Social Security Works, said the U.S. has among the strictest standards for assessing disability claims in the work and accused Paul of trying to creating a “false crisis.” “One in 5 men and nearly 1 in 6 women die within five years of being approved for benefits,” Lawson said in a statement. “Sen. Paul should be ashamed of himself for attacking Americans living with disabilities, many of whom are veterans.” In an interview with The Associated Press, Paul dismissed the criticism. “They’re arguing for fraud,” he said. “I’m arguing for eliminating fraud.” Paul’s initial comments followed a question from a state lawmaker about how states could wrest control of government from Washington. The senator said states are better prepared to administer a number of federal programs, including Medicaid, and then turned to disability programs. It wasn’t clear what disability program Paul was referring to. About 11 million people in the U.S. receive disability benefits via Social Security, including 9 million disabled workers and nearly 2 million children of disabled workers. Monthly benefits for disabled workers average $1,146. Paul’s trip to New Hampshire, home of the first presidential primary, came as he continues to take steps toward a White House campaign. While he often takes unscripted questions from his audiences, Paul said the intense scrutiny on his comments won’t change how he interacts with voters. “I didn’t think what I said was controversial, that we should eliminate fraud from a disability program,” he said. “Overall that’s a judgment voters make. Do they want someone who is frank and genuine, or someone who is guarded?” Winfield, long-serving Marlboro Man, dies in Wyoming at 85 RIVERTON, Wyo. (AP) — One of the last of the Marlboro Men has died in Wyoming. Darrell Hugh Winfield was 85. He died Monday at his home in Riverton, Davis Funeral Home said. The Marlboro Man was a macho cowboy whose image in advertising from the 1950s to the late 1990s made filtered cigarettes more appealing to men. Previously Marlboros were marketed to women. Winfield’s rugged good looks made him the face of Marlboro cigarettes in magazine and television ads from the late 1960s to the late 1980s. The Leo Burnett ad agency discovered Winfield in 1968 while he was working on the Quarter Circle 5 Ranch in western Wyoming. Winfield was born on July 30, 1929, in Little Kansas, Okla., He is survived by his wife, son, five daughters and several grandchildren. Bartender charged with threatening to kill Speaker Boehner CINCINNATI (AP) — House Speaker John Boehner returned to the Capitol on Wednesday without commenting to reporters after disclosures that a bartender at a country club near his Ohio home is charged with threatening to kill him, either with a gun or by poisoning his drink. A grand jury indictment filed in U.S. District Court in Ohio on Jan. 7 identified the accused man as Cincinnati-area resident Michael R. Hoyt, who has a history of psychiatric illness. He was indicted on a charge of threatening to murder Boehner, according to court documents. A spokesman for Boehner, Michael Steel, has said the speaker is aware of the situation and grateful to authorities. A separate criminal complaint filed in November said Hoyt came to authorities’ attention when he called 911 on Oct. 29. Hoyt told the operator: “This is Mike. I messed up.” He then asked the operator to call his father and let him know he was OK and was sorry he had made mistakes. When the operator asked for his location and how to reach his father, Hoyt provided his home address in Deer Park, but said his father is “everywhere.” Associated Press IN THIS Jan. 12, file photo, the Chevrolet Bolt EV electric concept vehicle is driven onto the stage at a presentation during the North American International Auto Show, in Detroit. The Bolt concept, an electric car with a 200-mile range, could go on sale by 2017. Innovation, optimism on display at Detroit auto show DETROIT (AP) — The mood is exuberant at this year’s North American International Auto Show. Automakers are flush with profits and the show gleams with performance cars, beefy trucks and exciting experiments, from plug-in hybrids to cars carved by a 3-D printer. Here are some key takeaways from the show, which opens to the public Saturday. OPTIMISM The U.S. economy is rejuvenated. Interest rates are low and auto financing is readily available. Carmakers have lots of new offerings with cool features. And gas prices are at a five-year low. “I’m always looking for the black swan, to be prepared. And I’m looking at 2015 and saying, ‘I can’t even find a baby black swan,’” said Mike Jackson, CEO of the AutoNation dealership chain. “I have never seen better conditions for the auto industry and the U.S. market.” Conditions are good for buyers as well. U.S. sales could start to plateau this year as they approach the record of 17.3 million. That could prompt automakers to offer deals, particularly on small and midsize cars. Even record recalls that involved 60 million cars and trucks in the U.S. last year seem to have faded in consumers’ minds. General Motors, which accounted for half the total, saw U.S. sales climb 5 percent in 2014. HALO CARS The health of the car industry can be measured by the number of growling, preening performance cars on the show floor. Ford revealed its 600-horsepower GT while Acura showed off its NSX hybrid supercar. Cadillac, BMW, Mercedes, Lexus and Porsche introduced new performance vehicles. Automakers kept these cars under wraps until the economy improved and buyers had more disposable income. The NSX, due in showrooms this summer, is expected to cost around $150,000. “You didn’t see these kinds of cars produced during the recession,” said Karl Brauer, a senior analyst with Kelley Blue Book. “They’re not about being conservative or subtle.” Even with small sales, halo cars cast a glow of technical and design know-how over an entire brand. Ford’s GT, for example, is powered by one of the company’s EcoBoost V6 engines, not a bigger V8. Ford hopes that shows buyers that an EcoBoost engine has enough power for their own pickup or SUV. GAS Gasoline is averaging $2.10 per gallon, $1.20 below a year ago. Cheaper gas gives con- sumers more money to spend on other things — like cars. And it has helped fuel a truck and SUV boom that benefits Detroit automakers the most. According to the car-shopping site Edmunds.com, SUVs and pickups outsold cars in 2014 for the first time in a decade. The Jeep brand, which sells only SUVs, saw a 41 percent U.S. sales jump last year. “I think we all notice it’s a lot less money to fill up your vehicle. That helps with a better sentiment and outlook,” Jeep CEO Mike Manley said. It’s tougher to sell green vehicles. If efficiency doesn’t sell, the auto industry could have trouble meeting government gas mileage requirements that reach a fleet average of 54.5 miles per gallon in 2025. Several executives said the government may have to ease off on the requirements. But the incoming head of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, which administers the requirements, said that’s unlikely. ALTERNATIVE FUELS Despite the tough sales environment for green cars, automakers are pressing ahead. Chevrolet surprised with the Bolt concept, an electric car with a 200-mile range that could go on sale by 2017. It’s also showing an updated Volt plug-in hybrid. Hyundai introduced hybrid and plug-in hybrid versions of the Sonata sedan. Audi revealed a diesel-fueled, plug-in hybrid version of its Q7 SUV. Honda has a hydrogen fuel cell concept that’s expected to go on sale in the U.S. in 2016. Fiat Chrysler Automobiles CEO Sergio Marchionne says automakers have to assume that stricter fuel economy standards — both here and abroad — will go into effect even if gas prices stay low for a prolonged period. INNOVATION The recession damped experimentation, but it’s back. Hyundai’s Santa Cruz concept is a five-seat crossover with a small pickup bed in the back. If people like it, Hyundai could put it on the road in three years. Honda demonstrated its Uni-Cub, a Segway-like vehicle that lets the user sit down. China’s Guangzhou Automobile Group is showing the WitStar, a hybrid, semi-autonomous SUV with a bubbling fish tank in the rear armrest. Phoenix-based Local Motors has a big 3-D printer on the show floor that’s cutting out the Strati, a two-seater with a body made from carbon fiberinfused plastic. It’s not the stuff of fantasy, said Jim O’Sullivan, Mazda’s North American CEO. “There’s a lot more substance out there,” he said. “A lot of stuff years ago was very cosmetic.” New Jersey’s Christie courts potential White House supporters in South Carolina COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — A day after delivering a State of the State address widely seen as an informal kick-off to a potential campaign for president, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie traveled to South Carolina on Wednesday to court potential donors in the early-voting state. His message? Stay tuned. Christie spent the morning at the swearing-in of incumbent Gov. Nikki Haley, part of an ongoing cross-country victory tour of GOP governors taking office, capping off his role as chairman of the Republican Governors Association. Christie was the only potential 2016 candidate in attendance at the chilly ceremony on the statehouse steps and a private luncheon at the governor’s mansion. Later, Christie headlined a meet-and-greet event, spending two hours mingling with a crowd that included pastors of evangelical churches, legislators, fundraisers and business leaders. “I think it’s pretty clear that Gov. Christie has plans over the next year to-year-and-a-half. That was the sense among everyone in the room,” said Matt Moore, the chairman of the South Carolina Republican Party. “He said he’s got eight more days of his official RGA activities, but stay tuned.” Christie’s team is in the early stages of putting together a political Gov. Chris action commitChristie tee to begin raising and spending money, according to several Republican donors who are being aggressively courted. The PAC is expected to be announced as early as the end of the month Phil Cox, the former executive director of the Republican Governors Association who grew close with Christie and his team during the governor’s tenure as chair of the organization, is helping lay the groundwork for a campaignin-waiting at the political action committee, several donors said. All spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss Christie’s internal moves by name. The political committee will raise cash to cover Christie’s trips to early nominating states in Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina, as well as be home to the data Christie’s team will start collecting about potential supporters. Should Christie enter the presidential race as expected, the committee could easily be transformed into a campaign. Cox’s involvement suggests a serious campaign is coming together. He is one of the most sought-after operatives after his stint at the RGA and the victories the committee logged on behalf of GOP governors. Christie and his aides maintain his timeline hasn’t been affected by moves from former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush or 2012 GOP nominee Mitt Romney. Christie suggested that he would move forward not long after Jan. 21, when he travels to Maryland to celebrate Gov.-elect Larry Hogan’s inauguration, several people attending the South Carolina event said. Leighton Lord, a lawyer from South Carolina who went to college with Christie and co-hosted the event at his law firm, said that Christie’s remarks to the group of more than 75 people focused on his governing philosophy. He said Christie steered clear of social issues, and instead stressed the need for candidates to provide a vision for the future if they want to get elected. Christie, Lord said, spoke of the need to be inclusive and to work with people, even if they disagree, driving home the message that “you’ve just got to talk to people” to get things done. In loving memory of DONALD SAMARZIYA who passed away 2 years ago on January 13, 2013 The moment you left me, my heart was split in two; One side was filled with memories, the other side died with you. I often lay awake at night, when the world is fast asleep; And take a walk down memory lane, with tears upon my cheek. Remembering you is easy, I do it every day; But missing you is a heartache, that never goes away. I hold you tightly within my heart, and there you will remain; You see life has gone on without you, but will never be the same. Sadly missed by wife Sharon, sons Jesse & Cole & Families & mother-in-law Lois Passint WORLD 8 l THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 2015 Detained Washington Post journalist indicted in Iran TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — A Washington Post journalist detained in Iran for months has been indicted and will stand trial, Iran’s state news agency reported Wednesday, without elaborating on what charges he faced. The report by the official IRNA news agency came the same day as U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry met with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammed Javad Zarif before talks with world powers resume over the Islamic Republic’s contested nuclear program. It wasn’t immediately clear if the two events were connected, though Zarif earlier said he hoped the case against reporter Jason Rezaian could be “resolved.” “We will have to wait for the judiciary to move forward, but we will try to provide all the humanitarian assistance that we could,” Zarif told journalists in Geneva. “We hope that this issue could be resolved but unfortunately there are judicial issues involved which the judiciary has to deal with.” IRNA quoted Tehran prosecutor Abbas Jafari Dowlatabadi saying Rezaian, the newspaper’s bureau chief in Tehran since 2012, had been indicted. He was previously charged last month, but the bill of i n d i c t m e n t Jason clears the way Rezaian for his trial. The IRNA report did not disclose what charges Rezaian, an IranianAmerican who holds dual citizenship, faces, nor when his trial would begin. However, the report says he will stand trial in Iran’s Revolutionary Court, which mostly hears cases involving security offenses. The newspaper and Rezaian’s mother have repeatedly called for his release. “We still do not know what charges the Iranian authorities have brought against our correspondent Jason Rezaian, but we hope the referral of his case to a Revolutionary Court represents a step forward toward Jason’s prompt release,” said a statement from Martin Baron, execu- tive editor of The Washington Post. “This step gives Iran’s judiciary an opportunity to demonstrate its fairness and independence by determining that the charges are baseless. We call on Iran to make these charges public, to allow Jason access to a lawyer and to bring a swift and just resolution of a six-monthlong nightmare that has been extremely difficult for Jason and his family.” IRNA quoted the prosecutor as saying Rezaian’s mother met twice with him on her recent visit to Iran. Rezaian, his wife, Yeganeh Salehi, and two photojournalists initially were detained July 22 in Iran’s capital, Tehran. All later were released except Rezaian. The U.S. State Department repeatedly has raised the subject of Rezaian and other Americans jailed in Iran during talks with the government about a deal to curb Iran’s nuclear capacity and ease international sanctions. State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf said Wednesday that the U.S. was aware of the Iranian press reports and was seeking further information. Austria ponders taking over Hitler’s childhood home VIENNA, Austria (AP) — The Austrian government is looking at options that would allow it to take possession of the house where Adolf Hitler spent his early childhood as it seeks to end a dispute with the owner over its use, officials said Wednesday. The move is the latest in efforts by the government to ensure that the house is not turned to a use that makes it even more of a shrine for Hitler’s admirers. Municipal officials in Braunau, where the house stands, already complain that it draws neo-Nazi visitors to the town on the border with Germany. Reacting to reports in local media, Interior Ministry spokesman Karl-Heinz Grundboeck said his ministry expects expert opinions by the end of the month on expropriation — taking the property for public use — if the owner turns down a government offer to buy it. Authorities refuse to identify the owner. The Interior Ministry has rented the house for years to prevent its misuse, subletting it to various charitable organizations. The building has stood empty since a workshop for the mentally disabled moved out more than three years ago. Local officials say the woman vetoed plans to move in a new charity and a school late last year because she was opposed to renovations that would be required. “We’ve tried very hard to find a solution,” alderman Harry Buchmayer told Wednesday’s Kurier newspaper. “But she does not seem ready to cooperate.” Grundboeck described expropriation as the “last option,” saying the government hoped the owner would agree to sell. She reportedly has turned down past offers. Among prospective buyers over the past few years was a Russian parliamentarian who threatened to raze it — a plan doomed to fail as the Renaissance-era building is under historical protection. THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM Associated Press PEOPLE QUEUE up to buy the new issue of Charlie Hebdo newspaper at a newsstand in Paris Wednesday. Charlie Hebdo’s defiant new issue sold out before dawn around Paris on Wednesday, with scuffles at kiosks over dwindling copies of the paper fronting the Prophet Muhammad. In the city still shaken by the deaths of 17 people at the hands of Islamic extremists, a controversial comic who appeared to be praising the men was taken into custody. New issue of Charlie Hebdo sells out quickly PARIS (AP) — Parisians lined up Wednesday to empty the newsstands of the first issue of Charlie Hebdo, a week after Islamic extremists attacked the satirical newspaper’s office, and French justice officials began cracking down by arresting dozens of people who glorified terrorism or made racist or antiSemitic remarks. The editors of the publication again put a caricature of the Prophet Muhammad on the cover, and it quickly sold out by early morning around the capital and elsewhere, with long lines and scuffles at kiosks. Disappointed buyers were told to come back Thursday when more of the increased print run of 5 million copies will be available. A leader of Yemen’s al-Qaida branch officially claimed responsibility for the attacks by two gunmen that left 12 dead at the weekly publication, saying in a video posted online that the slayings came in “vengeance for the prophet.” The newspaper had received repeated threats for lampooning Muhammad. A third attacker killed five other people, bringing the total number of dead in the Jan. 7-9 spasm of violence to 17 before all the gunmen died in police raids. On alert for new attacks, France deployed thousands of police and soldiers around the country, and they moved to quash any racist remarks or praise for terrorists. The scale of security measures is raising questions in some quarters about whether some freedoms will be impinged upon. At least 54 people were arrested for hate speech or other acts insulting religious faiths, or for cheering the men who carried out the attacks The new issue of Charlie Hebdo features the prophet, a tear rolling down his cheek, holding a placard that says “Je Suis Charlie.” The saying has swept France and the world, with the irreverent newspaper being embraced as a symbol of freedom of speech. Prime Minister Manuel Valls held up his copy after the weekly Cabinet meeting — but strategically placed his hand over the prophet’s face. Muslims believe their faith forbids depictions of the prophet, and some reacted with dismay — and occasional anger — to the new cover. Some who had supported Charlie Hebdo after the attacks felt betrayed and others feared the cartoon would trigger yet more violence. Defending his caricature of the prophet on the latest cover, cartoonist Renald Luzier argued that there should be no exceptions to freedom of expression. He said when the weekly was threatened before, the reaction was often: “Yes, but you shouldn’t do that (publish cartoons of Muhammad). Yes, but you deserved that.” “There should be no more ‘Yes, but,” he insisted. Rigoni’s Inn TAVERN & RESTAURANT ~ Serving you for 80 years! ~ THURSDAY’S MEXICAN NITE WEDNESDAYS Pizza & Pasta Buffet All homemade Mexican dinners 4-8 p.m. 5-9 p.m. FRIDAY’S FISH FRY noon-10pm Open 7 Days A Week 925 E. 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Serving Hot & Ready Pasties ON SATURDAYS Liberty Bell Chalet Restaurant: Mon.-Thurs. 11-2; 7 Days a Week at 4 p.m. Italian Market: Mon.-Sat. 10-7; Closed Sunday SPORTS THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 2015 Jason Juno/Daily Globe Ofstad’s 3 sinks Finlandia By JASON JUNO IRONWOOD — Gogebic vs. Finlandia. Sam Ofstad vs. Marissa Burke. Neither matchup could have been more even. Gogebic Community College’s Sam Ofstad nailed a 3pointer on top with two seconds left to give the Lady Samsons a 69-66 victory over Finlandia Wednesday night. The triple gave Ofstad a game-high 30 points, three more than the 27 scored by Burke of Watersmeet. “I didn’t know how many seconds were left, so when I got the ball, I shot it right away,” Ofstad said. “Luckily it went in. This was a very good win for us. It was a very good team we played against and it’s going to help us get better.” Finlandia never led until midway through the second half. Seven more lead changes — and a thrilling finish — followed. Gogebic’s Darian Vinkemeier made two free throws to tie the game 66-66 with 42 seconds left. Finlandia’s Brierra Ruska-Pasanen missed a triple try and GCC called timeout with 24.5 seconds left. The Lady Lions defended Gogebic’s planned play well, but the Lady Samsons improvised just fine as Ofstad’s shot fell and time expired. “It wasn’t the original play, but with the night that she had and the season that she’s had, I guess when all else fails, plan B is just get it in her hands,” Gogebic coach Mark Movrich said. “I’d say 80 percent of the time she’s going to make something good happen.” Plan A involved Ofstad also. “It was to come off of a screen-and-roll with her and if they didn’t hedge it hard, we were going to try to get it to Brittni (Kisul) on the roll,” Movrich said. “But they defended it well. Luckily our girls kept their composure and we made a play.” Finlandia coach Terry Klemett, who played for the Samsons in the mid-90s, was happy with his team’s defense on the initial play. “She just made a hell of a shot,” he said. “She’s a good player. There’s nothing you can really do about it. She had a great game. She was feeling it. I just think there were plays before that play that allowed that possession to happen. That’s what we didn’t capitalize on. Sam single-handily won that game.” Vinkemeier’s free throws may be forgotten in the excitement of Ofstad’s game-winner, but the Lady Samsons would have faced a much tougher scenario had she missed even one. “Those are huge free throws because if she misses just one of them, now we’re in a situation where we probably have to foul,” Movrich said. “How does that play out? They make free throws and now we’re down three? It’s like you’re extending the game, but are you ever catching up?” And Ofstad’s 3 is probably coming a lot sooner than with two seconds left. “Now we’re probably forcing a 3,” Movrich said. “There’s nothing wrong with it going to overtime. We weren’t losing it in regulation. We were I think a little more relaxed, even before the shot took place, nobody panicked with the ball. Where if we’re down three, somebody’s probably panicking with the ball or forcing a shot.” Just like the plan wasn’t for Ofstad to shoot a 3 at the end, the play Vinekmeier was fouled on wasn’t drawn up for her. “There actually was supposed to be a down screen for Sam,” Movrich said. “Sarah (Trudgeon), I don’t know just caught up in the moment and swung it. Darian took it upon herself to get by her girl, which she did. She got to the foul line and sank both of them.” Klemett said the Lady Lions defended that possession very well before the foul was called with five seconds on the shot clock. “That was the game changer,” he said. The Lady Samsons are in the midst of a great season LADY SAMSONS Samsons fall to Finlandia on shot with 2.6 seconds left By JASON JUNO sports@yourdailyglobe.com IRONWOOD — Gogebic’s shot to tie bounced around multiple times before falling. Finlandia’s shot to win was far more improbable. Finlandia’s Tyler Koski got to the basket and made the gamewinner with 2.6 seconds left to give the Lions an 81-79 victory Wednesday in a fantastic game between U.P. college teams. “Tough to lose that way, but at the same time, good effort by the guys,” Gogebic Community College coach Dennis Mackey said. “They never quit.” There were often three All-U.P. Dream Team players on the floor together —GCC’s Adam Mackey (Ironwood) and Finlandia’s Brandon Robinette (Escanaba) and Jordan LaPlant (Ewen-Trout Creek). Mackey led all scorers with 26 points, Robinette had 18 and LaPlant, an All-Region selection at GCC the past two years, scored 14. Mackey made some big plays down the stretch but none bigger than his 3 that tied the game at 79-79 with about 10 seconds left. It bounced around seemingly forever before falling through the hoop and bringing the good-sized crowd at the Lindquist Center alive. “It got the shooter’s roll I guess,” coach Mackey said. “It has a lot to do with the situation, where he’s shooting from. It was front iron, off the glass, and bouncing and bouncing and bouncing and it fell in. It was big for us.” Finlandia crossed halfcourt and called timeout with 7.5 seconds left, setting up Koski’s gamewinner. Gogebic called timeout, but Miller’s desperation 3 was wide left. Finlandia coach Mike O’Donnell said the Lions just wanted to get something going to the basket. “We knew we were in the double bonus, so maybe get a foul,” he said. “Tyler just made a great play to get the shot on the rim and it rolled in for him.” It went in. Somehow. “I’m not sure how the ball went in. Koski made a good play,” coach Mackey said. “I think he was under the basket. He hit the bottom of the basket and it spun around; it must have had some spin on it. I was shocked it went in. “It’s one of those things, guy made a great play, give him credit. He spun it up there, got the rotation on the ball and spun it in the basket. One of those things, we couldn’t let him get that deep. That was our Achilles’ in the second half.” The Samsons 39-35 led at halftime before Finlandia took over, building the lead as big as 67-56 with under seven minutes left. “I thought we started moving the ball better and getting higher quality shots,” O’Donnell said. “I thought we settled sometimes early. Once we started attacking the basket, we were able to draw some fouls, get to the free throw line and things just seemed to open up for us more when we started attacking the basket.” Finlandia shot 17 of 24 from the free throw line, including 13 of 17 in the second half. GCC only got to the line five times, making one. The Samsons had a surge of their own, almost completing the comeback. After trailing 71-63 with 4:34 left, Gogebic pulled within 77-76 on a Michael Harris fadeaway with 48.6 seconds left. Gogebic’s Collin Miller picked up a steal as Finlandia went downcourt, but Bryant Rowe’s 3 rimmed out. Koski made a pair of free throws to put Finlandia up 79-76 with 22.3 seconds left. That’s when Mackey followed with the tying triple before Koski made the game-winner. “Finlandia plays a four-year schedule,” coach Mackey said. “Maybe their record isn’t what 9 Davis has doubledouble as Pelicans beat Pistons GOGEBIC COMMUNITY College’s Sam Ofstad shoots the game-winning 3-pointer, above, and jumps into Sarah Trudgeon’s arms, at right, to celebrate it Wednesday at the Lindquist Center. GCC beat Finlandia 6966. sports@yourdailyglobe.com l they’d like it to be, but they’re playing four-year schools every night and they’re seasoned in these types of games. Hopefully we can learn from this and learn to finish the game and make one more play. Although I can’t be disappointed the way we came back at the end, stayed with it, lost our point guard and came in with a makeshift lineup. I thought Harris, Adam and Collin all did a great job, they took turns handling the ball down the stretch. They all made plays.” LaDell Hickman scored 16 points for Gogebic before fouling out with more than four minutes left. Miller had 15 and Harris scored 11. With all the Dream Teamers on the court, Mackey shined. He was 4 of 4 from behind the arc in the first half and got on a roll again down the stretch. “He’s a competitor and he’s going to give it his all. He was fired up to play tonight. He was fired up to play Finlandia,” his SAMSONS — page 10 Jason Juno/Daily Globe GOGEBIC COMMUNITY College’s Adam Mackey takes a shot Wednesday at the Lindquist Center in Ironwood. — page 10 AUBURN HILLS (AP) — The New Orleans Pelicans brought the hot Detroit Pistons back to earth. The Pistons came in having won of nine of 10, but were never competitive with New Orleans. Anthony Davis had 27 points and 10 rebounds as the Pelicans beat the Pistons 105-94 on Wednesday night. “That was a bad performance, and we have to make sure it stops tonight,” said Pistons coach Stan Van Gundy. “We didn’t do anything. We didn’t rebound and we didn’t protect the paint, which were two big areas of emphasis. We brought absolutely no energy whatsoever to the game.” The Pelicans (19-19) were missing Jrue Holliday (ankle), but easily picked up their second win in five games. Tyreke Evans added 18 points, nine assists and eight rebounds for the Pelicans, while Ryan Anderson came off the bench to score 17. Brandon Jennings had 19 for the Pistons (14-25), while Greg Monroe had 16 points and eight rebounds and was the only other starter to reach double figures. The Pistons only managed three offensive rebounds in the game, usually a strength. “That was unacceptable,” said Monroe, who led the team in both rebounds and assists (five). “We just gave them an easy win. We have to be a lot better than that.” The Pelicans dominated the first half, with the exception of Detroit’s 6-0 run to end the first quarter. New Orleans led 58-36 at the intermission, helped in great part by a 36-point second period that saw them outrebound Detroit 14-2. “We played the right way,” said New Orleans coach Monty Williams. “That’s the only way I can sum it up. We shared the ball; we defended the ball; we played in transition.” The Pistons only managed 10 rebounds in the first half to 24 for New Orleans, and had just one second-chance opportunity despite missing 13 of their 15 jumpers in the opening two quarters. Andre Drummond struggled for Detroit, scoring only two points in 17 minutes and saw his team outscored by 21 points while he was on the floor. He didn’t get better in the second half, and spent most of it on the bench. “This is four games in a row where he hasn’t had any energy,” Van Gundy said. “Tonight, he didn’t even rebound. That’s why I didn’t bring him back in the second half. He wasn’t bringing us anything tonight.” New Orleans stayed in control in the third quarter, and even when the Pelicans made mistakes, the Pistons couldn’t capitalize. After one turnover, Kyle Singler led a Detroit fast break, only to pass the ball directly to New Orleans forward Dante Cunningham. Singler didn’t hustle back on defense, leading to an open 3pointer for the Pelicans. A furious Van Gundy yanked him from the game. SPORTS 10 l THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 2015 DAILY GLOBE SCOREBOARD Local Schedule Thursday, Jan. 15 Boys basketball Bayfield at Bessemer, 7:15 Solon Springs at Ironwood, 7:15 Mellen at Hurley, 7:15 South Shore at Mercer, 7:15 Washburn at Wakefield-Marenisco, 7:15 Chassell at Ontonagon, 7:20 EST Watersmeet at Dollar Bay, 6:20 Girls basketball Dollar Bay at Watersmeet Friday, Jan. 16 Girls basketball Drummond at Bessemer, 7:15 Mellen at Ironwood, 7:15 Solon Springs at Hurley, 7:15 South Shore at Wakefield-Marenisco, 7:15 Ontonagon at Ewen-Trout Creek, 7:20 EST Boys basketball Ewen-Trout Creek at Watersmeet, 6:20 College basketball GCC at UW-Marshfield Classic, men Saturday, Jan. 17 College basketball GCC at UW-Marshfield Classic, men Sunday, Jan. 18 College basketball GCC at UW-Stevens Point JV, women Football NFL PLAYOFFS All Times EST Wild-card Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 3 Carolina 27, Arizona 16 Baltimore 30, Pittsburgh 17 Sunday, Jan. 4 Indianapolis 26, Cincinnati 10 Dallas 24, Detroit 20 Divisional Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 10 New England 35, Baltimore 31 Seattle 31, Carolina 17 Sunday, Jan. 11 Green Bay 26, Dallas 21 Indianapolis 24, Denver 13 Conference Championships Sunday, Jan. 18 Green Bay at Seattle, 3:05 p.m. (FOX) Indianapolis at New England, 6:40 p.m. (CBS) Pro Bowl Sunday, Jan. 25 At Glendale, Ariz. Team Irvin vs. Team Carter, 8 p.m. (ESPN) Super Bowl Sunday, Feb. 1 At Glendale, Ariz. AFC champion vs. NFC champion, 6:30 p.m. (NBC) Dartball GOGEBIC RANGE DARTBALL Week 9 Chub & Sandy’s 5, Munch 0 Rigoni’s 4, Pit Stop (Bessemer) 1 Uncle Sam’s 4, Aurora Club 1 Silver Street Pit Stop 5, Studio of the Stars 0 Keystone 5, Hautala’s 0 Standings W L Chub & Sandy’s 41 4 Rigoni’s 35 10 Uncle Sam’s 30 15 Aurora Club 28 17 Silver Street Pit Stop 27 18 Keystone 22 23 Pit Stop (Bessemer) 19 26 Munch 10 35 Hautala’s 9 36 Studio of the Stars 4 41 Pool IRON COUNTY MEN’S THURSDAY NIGHT POOL LEAGUE Jan. 8 Studio of the Stars I 13, Studio of the Stars II 3 Spiders 11, North Pole 5 Loggers Lounge 11, Full Throttle 5 Beer Barrel 12, Full Moon 4 The Munch 12, Bank Club 4 Krash Inn 12, Silver Street Pit Stop 4 Saxon Pub 12, Downtown Lounge 4 DIVISION I Beer Barrel – 100, Spider’s – 92, Studio of the Stars I – 83, Loggers Lounge – 81, The Munch – 76, Saxon Pub – 74, Silver Street Pit Stop – 36. DIVISION II Aurora Club – 93, Krash Inn – 82, Bank Club – 76, Downtown Lounge – 75, North Pole – 73, Full Throttle – 71, Studio of the Stars II – 54, Full Moon – 54. Basketball U.P. BOYS Wednesday Negaunee 32, Ishpeming 26 Westwood 49, Gwinn 36 Wednesday St. Ignace 55, Cedarville 40 Watersmeet Wakefield-Marenisco Bessemer Ewen-Trout Creek Conf 0-0 1-1 1-1 1-1 Overall 5-1 4-2 2-3 2-5 Republic-Michigamme Lake Linden-Hubbell Baraga Dollar Bay Chassell Jeffers Ontonagon Conf 4-0 3-0 2-1 1-1 1-3 0-3 0-3 Overall 6-0 5-0 3-3 1-3 2-4 1-3 1-5 Ironwood Wakefield-Marenisco Bessemer Hurley Mercer Butternut Conf 5-0 3-2 2-2 2-2 1-3 0-4 Overall 8-0 4-2 2-3 3-6 4-5 1-8 Washburn Conf 5-0 Overall 8-2 CCC INDIANHEAD EAST WEST 4-1 3-2 1-3 1-4 0-4 6-2 6-4 5-4 3-4 1-5 Houghton L’Anse Calumet Hancock West Iron County Conf 4-0 2-2 1-1 0-2 0-2 Overall 5-2 3-4 3-2 1-6 0-6 Wakefield-Marenisco Watersmeet Bessemer Ewen-Trout Creek Conf 3-0 1-1 1-2 0-2 Overall 8-0 4-3 5-3 0-7 Baraga Lake Linden-Hubbell Dollar Bay Ontonagon Jeffers Chassell Republic-Michigamme Conf 3-0 2-1 2-1 2-2 1-1 1-3 0-3 Overall 5-1 3-4 3-2 2-4 2-5 2-4 1-4 Wakefield-Marenisco Hurley Bessemer Mercer Ironwood Butternut Conf 6-0 5-1 4-2 2-2 1-5 0-5 Overall 8-0 8-2 5-3 5-5 2-5 1-8 South Shore Bayfield Solon Springs Drummond Washburn Mellen Conf 5-0 5-2 3-3 2-3 1-5 0-6 Overall 8-1 6-5 3-6 2-8 1-10 0-10 Conf 3-0 2-0 2-1 0-3 0-3 Overall 8-0 6-2 4-3 4-4 1-7 WEST-PAC GIRLS PMC CCC U.P. GIRLS STANDINGS BOYS PMC South Shore Solon Springs Mellen Bayfield Drummond INDIANHEAD EAST WEST WEST-PAC Calumet Houghton Hancock L’Anse West Iron County Rodgers limited in practice GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) — While he appreciates suggestions from Packers fans of remedies for his sore left calf, Aaron Rodgers is not necessarily going to listen to the advice. Whatever Rodgers is doing appears to be working. The quarterback took limited snaps on Wednesday, the first day of practice for Green Bay ahead of Sunday’s NFC title game against the Seattle Seahawks. It is an improvement from last week, when Rodgers missed the first day of practice preparing for the Dallas Cowboys. “I mean, he’s doing everything he can. I do know that,” coach Mike McCarthy said. “We did a little bit more today than we did this time last week. I don’t really know if that’s an indicator. We’re dealing with it.” Rodgers is sticking to the team’s prescribed rehab plan, along with an occasional dose of acupuncture, and that’s it. “I know people have the best intentions when they’re sending stuff in,” Rodgers said. “You know they want me to get back on the field. This time of the year when there’s an injury, there (are) a lot of experts out there.” Rodgers doesn’t have the full mobility that allows him to extend plays outside the pocket, one of his trademark strengths. The right arm is just fine though. The 13-yard touchdown pass thrown like a fastball to Richard Rodgers in last week’s 26-21 win over Dallas is proof. “I don’t think so,” Rodgers said when asked if he had to overcompensate with accuracy to make up for his limited mobility. THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM Heisman winner Marcus Mariota says he’s going to the NFL Heisman Trophy winner Marcus Mariota, whose bold moves and leadership on the field brought the Ducks to the brink of a national championship before falling short, is leaving Oregon early for the NFL. Mariota announced his long-awaited decision to forgo his senior season on Oregon’s website. The team said he filed paperwork on Wednesday, a day before the NFL deadline. “I will miss being with my teammates,” he said in a statement. “Being a part of this team was something special that I will always treasure.” Mariota has been the humble leader of Oregon’s highflying offense for three seasons. This season, the Ducks (13-2) defeated Florida State at the Rose Bowl in college football’s first playoffs, but fell 42-20 to Ohio State in Monday night’s national championship game. The 6-foot-4 dual threat from Hawaii won every major award he qualified for, starting with the Heisman, as well as AP Player of the Year, the Maxwell and Walter Camp awards and Pac-12 Offensive Player of the Year. He set a conference record for most touchdowns in a single season with 58; 42 via pass, 15 on the run and a touchdown catch. His passing touchdowns set a Pac-12 single-season record. He also set the conference’s career mark for career touchdowns with 136. He threw at least one touchdown pass in all 41 college games he played in at Oregon, starting in every one of his appearances. And he’s one of just four quarterbacks in FBS history to pass for more than 10,000 yards and run for more than 2,000 in his career. “It’s been an honor to watch Marcus develop over the last four years, and I’m excited to see what his future holds,” Oregon coach Mark Helfrich said in a statement. “He’s given this program everything we could have asked, and he’ll be the standard by which others are judged. Mahalo.” Meet the Samsons and Lady Samsons ALE KOHEGYI FRESHMAN Hometown: Mercer, Wis. What is the best thing about playing basketball? At GCC? The results we get from the hard work we put in Best quality a basketball player can have? A teammate? A coach? Teamwork, always making your teammates better, a good work ethic, leadership and being coachable-we have an awesome coach. Favorite food (s): Jimmy Johns, Sam Ofstad’s cooking and the Nugget’s house salad Person I respect the most: My father-he’s the most hard-working, selfless, amazing person I know and I can’t thank him enough Name a person (living or deceased) that you would like to meet & spend time with: I’ve already met Kohegyi him; I’d give anything for some time with my Grandfather who has passed Best advice I was ever given: There are so many critics with no credentials, keep your head up and work hard, play for yourself and good things will happen on and off the floor Favorite college or professional team: Men’s Wisconsin Badgers, women’s North Carolina Favorite high school, college or pro player: Carter John Hall (the future), Sam of Stad, Timothy Joustra (AKA CHUB!) Team goals/personal goals in basketball: We have to compete to the best of our abilities every day, win the regionals and work hard to improve daily Something people would be surprised to know about me: I love kids, my grandma is my best friend and I actually enjoy school Dream job/career: Coaching women’s college basketball after I’m done playing Parents/step parents names: Gordy and Carrie Kohegyi Second mother: Bonita Joustra Proud Supporter of Gogebic Community College Student-Athletes The #1 Hot Spot on Copper Street - Hurley, WI Finlandia’s Jordan LaPlant (12) goes up for a shot as Gogebic Community College’s Brandon Cooper defends at the Lindquist Center in Ironwood Wednesday. LaPlant played for Ewen-Trout Creek and GCC previously. Jason Juno/Daily Globe Lady Samsons with their record improving to 17-4. But games competitive for all 40 minutes have been tough to come by. It was also a big game for the local girls who have played against Finlandia’s local girls. This is probably GCC’s signature win. “We needed a game like this,” Movrich said. “We’ve had a lot of close games against close teams; we’ve had a bunch of moral victories against tough teams. We needed an actual victory against a good team.” Ofstad was simply amazing. “I tell you what, I just can’t say enough good things about Sam Ofstad, the complete game she had tonight,” Movrich said. Burke, a preseason All-American, was pretty good also. Burke also was a Dream Team player as a senior in 2011 at Watersmeet. “I think she’s become a much more complete player with pretty much unlimited range. She hit some deep, deep 3s,” Movrich said. “But what I really, really saw from her tonight was the way she was coaching her teammates on the floor. It was like having another coach on the floor. It was all positive things and what they should be doing.” Gogebic started fast, scoring the first nine points. But things stalled after that. Already shorthanded, Brittni Kisul and Ale Kohegyi picked up their third fouls, depleting them of inside players. But a couple of others were versatile enough to defend inside. “Finlandia mostly had perimeter players on the floor, too, so we were able to get away with it,” Movrich said. “Where we really missed it was Brittni’s presence inside.” Finlandia (7-10) then wore Gogebic down in the second half to nearly take the win. “For our girls to stay in the game and battle back after being up the whole game, I couldn’t be prouder of them right now,” Movrich said. “We came out flat for the first 12 minutes of the game,” Klemett said. “I told them before we came in, ‘You can’t go into a game and have that kind of flatness for that long. We’re a good team. We bounced back because we have a longer bench.” Finlandia --- Valerie Rajala 2, Brierra Ruska-Pasanen 11, Paige Yoho 6, Kelsie Richards 2, Mikayla Hakala 2, Brooke Turin 6, Brooke Pasanen 8, Marissa Burke 27, Adrianna Osuna 2. FTs: 9-14. Fouls: 14. Fouled out: None. 3-pointers: Burke 6, RuskaPasanen 1, Yoho 1, Pasanen 1. Gogebic --- Darian Vinkemeier 8, Ale Kohegyi 4, Korrie Trier 4, Sam Ofstad 30, Sarah Trudgeon 6, Brittni Kisul 10, Samantha Norback 7. FTs: 11-15. Fouls: 16. Fouled out: None. 3-pointers: Ofstad 3, Vinkemeier 2, Norback 1. Half: GCC 34-27. Hometown: Milwaukee, Wis. What is the best thing about playing basketball? At GCC? Getting to learning more about basketball Favorite food (s): Pizza Favorite type of music Rhythm and Blues, rap Person I respect the most: My grandmother Name a person (living or deceased) that you would like to meet & spend time with: My dad, Jhoung Miller Best advice I was ever given: Never give up Favorite college or professional team: Duke Favorite high Miller school, college or pro player: LeBron James Team goals/personal goals in basketball: Win Region 13 and go to Nationals Best sports memory: Getting my first dunk of the season last year Dream job/career: Police Officer Hardest thing to do on a basketball court: Rebound Parents/step parents names: Sandra Lark Chub & Sandy’s FINLANDIA’S MARISSA Burke of Watersmeet passes Wednesday at the Lindquist Center. From page 9 COLLIN MILLER SOPHOMORE Jason Juno/Daily Globe Samsons From page 9 coach and father said. LaPlant also led Finlandia with nine rebounds. “It was fun to see a former player play against us, a little frustrating when he gets the win,” Mackey said. “Jordan’s a good player and he did a great job tonight.” GCC (10-9) plays UW-Fox Valley at the Marshfield Classic Friday at 6 p.m. Finlandia — Sean Appling-Daniels 2, Tyler Koski 15, Brandon Robinson 2, Andrew Johnson 6, Jordan LaPlant 14, Marcus Geralds 10, Schwartzen Jarmond 12, Brandon Robinette 18. FTs: 17-24. Fouls: 13. Fouled out: None. 3-pointers: Jarmond 4, Robinette 2, Koski 1, LaPlant 1. Gogebic — LaDell Hickman 16, Michael Harris 11, Adam Mackey 26, Collin Miller 15, Bryant Rowe 2, Tarius Hagood 2, Brandon Cooper 7. FTs: 1-5. Fouls: 18. Fouled out: Hickman. 3-pointers: Mackey 6, Hickman 4, Harris 1, Miller 1. Half: GCC 39-35. THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM DEFLOCKED MOTHER GOOSE & GRIMM COMICS Trust intuition when it comes to boyfriend Dear Annie: My boyfriend and I are in our 60s and have known each other since high school. We reconnected five years ago, and for the past 18 months, we’ve been living together. At first, my boyfriend was loving and sweet and promised all sorts of dreams for our future. But after several months, he changed. He became distant, sometimes even cruel in his actions. I begged him to tell me if there was another woman, but he always denied it, in spite of rumors and the fact that things just seemed off. The problem is, even after all this time, I still have moments YOUR BORN LOSER HOROSCOPE EUGENIA LAST Your Birthday Thursday, January 15, 2015 ALLEY OOP FOR BETTER OR WORSE FRANK & ERNEST GET FUZZY BEETLE BAILEY ZITS THE GRIZZWELLS THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 2015 l 11 Don’t hold back; demonstrate all of your dazzling traits. Your wit, wisdom and charisma will have others competing for your attention. You will discover that your actions and words can create interest and influence people in positive ways. Strive for perfection, precision and popularity. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Community services or events will provide great opportunities for leadership and charitable acts. Your involvement will benefit your neighborhood, give you a sense of pride and lead to new friendships. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) — Practice patience and do your best to avoid impulsive moves or hasty actions if you want to avoid error or injury. Take your time and do things right the first time. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) — Your energy will wane. To remain motivated, plan a small reward or incentive to get your juices flowing so you feel able to take care of your responsibilities. ARIES (March 21-April 19) — You will shine at social activities. Schedule an event or gathering that will allow you to display your attributes and stand out in the crowd. Lady Luck is on your side today. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) — Lasting memories will be made if you take a short trip with family or friends. This is a good time to look into investment opportunities and increase your assets. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) — Your home provides the backdrop for your daily life. Avoid frustration by keeping on top of small repairs and necessary improvements. You will perk up if you feel comfortable in your surroundings. CANCER (June 21-July 22) — An unforeseen opportunity to use your teaching skills will impress those around you. Your talent for sharing your ideas and insightful problemsolving tactics will be admired and rewarded. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) — An illconsidered idea will leave you in a quandary. Get all the facts before you make an irreversible decision. Time is on your side, so do the appropriate research. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Holding a grudge will cause unhappiness and lead to unhappy events. Someone may disappoint you, but that doesn’t mean you have to treat them poorly. Let bygones be bygones and move on. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) — Springing your ideas on unsuspecting family members will invite discord. You can eliminate problems by letting everyone know your intentions in advance and by asking for support and approval. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) — Stay in touch with elderly or distant relatives and friends. Time tends to fly by, making it easy to neglect someone or something that needs your attention. Be thoughtful and avoid regret. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) — A mental or physical challenge will energize you. Plan an activity that includes stimulating conversation and recreation with friends. The more you do, the better you will feel. HERMAN Annie’s Mailbox when I’m convinced he had a fling with a certain woman, and I can’t get over it. He still denies it, and I am confused and hurt. But when I ask, he will respond by withdrawing from me for months. I believe he did have an affair and never got over her and that’s why we have so little intimacy now. I have been praying and am seeing a counselor, but I can’t seem to let it go completely. Is there something wrong with me? Or is my intuition telling me that he deceived me and is continuing to lie about it? All my friends say either to let it go or to end it, but I don’t want to leave him, and I have no control over my thoughts and feelings. Please help. — Louise in Louisville Dear Louise: Actually, you do have some control over those thoughts and feelings, but it takes effort and willingness. Your intuition is telling you that your boyfriend is not being completely honest, and you have become fixated on knowing something that he probably will never tell you. And it could be that there is nothing to tell. Because you wish to stay with him, please talk to your counselor about how to forgive him, and then do the necessary work to get there. Dear Annie: I would like to write a note to all smokers: News flash. You smell like a dirty ashtray. Always. You try to be nice and go outside to have your cigarette, but when you come back in, you still smell like an ashtray. You smoke in your car so you can have your cigarette before you arrive at your destination, but when you walk into the room, you still smell. Your clothes reek of smoke — always. No amount of perfume covers it up. Just thought you’d like to know. I know I’m tired of smelling you. — A Nonsmoker Dear Nonsmoker: Although what you say is true, it is not so simple. Most smokers are well aware of the lingering odor, not to mention the yellowing teeth and nails, frequent cough, and looming lung cancer. The downside has been well-documented and publicized. But smoking is highly addictive. For some, giving it up is nearly impossible, no matter how much effort they put into trying. Though smoking in the car or outside the office is not ideal, it is better than nothing. Dear Annie: I’d like to offer a more positive response to all those mothers who complain about their daughters-in-law. My son is married to a wonderful woman. She is a great mother to their two children and stepmother to his daughter. I love this woman with all of my heart. I am always welcome in their home as they are in mine. I can have the grandchildren whenever I want. When their daughter was born, my daughter-in-law gave me the most wonderful gift: She allowed me to be in the delivery room for the birth. What a precious woman my son married. I called her “daughter,” because to me, that is what she is. My own mother-in-law was not very kind to me, and I vowed I would be different. Sometimes it takes a little work, and sometimes your son marries an angel. — Mother-in-Law of an Angel Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254. DAILY GLOBE CROSSWORD SPEED BUMP CLASSIFIEDS 12 l THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 2015 9=> 9?8. /6: (+8>/. #&*+ 0A :4HB F8C7 1;D4 1403B #>BC >= *0CDA30H 3>F=C>F= A>= F>>3 0;; '# * " />DA 03 >= C74 58ABC AD= 30H F8;; =>C 14 A4B?>=B81;4 5>A <8BC0:4B 05C4A C74 58ABC 30H F8;; =>C 14 A4B?>=B81;4 5>A ;>BC ?7>C>B ?;0243 8= 03E4AC8B8=6 3</A99. 8A4F>>3 5>A B0;4 1H C74 ;>664AB 2>A3 0;; 7:69C7/8> $3>?+>398 (+8>/. *=>F A4<>E0; A>>5B 3A8E4F0HB 0=3 ?0C7B *=>F1;>F4A F8;; CA0E4; )40B>=01;4 0;; >= >A "! "* ! 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"! ! & . %+ ) % &% ::63+8-/= Two 4-H Program Coordinator Positions Available MSU Extension is hiring a 50% time 4-H Program Coordinator for Iron County and a full-time 4-H Program Coordinator for Gogebic County. These positions are responsible expanding the reach and effectiveness of local 4-H Youth Development Program in Iron and Gogebic Counties. For more information and to apply for these positions, go to www.jobs.msu.edu and select posting number 0575 for Ion County and 0663 for Gogebic County. Application deadline is January 27, 2015. MSU is an affirmative-action, equal-opportunity employer. (+8>/. >9 ?C . / 3B AD= 5A44 5>A C7A44 30HB F>A3 ;8<8C +74 03B <DBC 14 <08;43 >A 3A>??43 >55 0C +74 08;H ;>14 $2#4>3 E4 A>=F>>3 $ $ ! 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FH $ 4A6;0=3 8B ;>>:8=6 C> 58;; 2>>: ?> B8C8>=B ';40B4 0??;H 0C C74 A4B C0DA0=C ($" & ' ##"$&'! & % " ) D;; C8<4 >55824 74;? $DBC 14 01;4 C> F>A: 8= 50BC ?0243 4=E8A>=<4=C 0=3 <D;C8 C0B: *4=3 A4BD<4 C> >G 08;H ;>14 $2#4>3 E4 A>=F>>3 $ Aspirus Grand View has opportunities available for Medical Assistants. Responsibilities include providing clinical care to patients in the clinic setting under the direction of the nurse manager and provider. Completion of CMA program or CMA, EMT or LPN Certification or Licensure and BLS certification required. 1-2 years of previous work experience as a clinical assistant preferred. For more information and to apply, please visit www.aspirus.org. /6: (+8>/. )86>=8 B == 8B ;>>:8=6 5>A 0 1DBB4A 5>A A830H 4E4=8=6B ??;H F8C78= %> ?7>=4 20;;B ?;40B4 /6: (+8>/. 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( #% " " $ '+ * ( ) , " " * (* $ * #% )! %+* %+( $* ( & ") "" ** 7EE7?7D 476DAA? 3B3DF?7@F ?A@F: !@5>G67E :73F I3F7D 93D4397 7>75FD;5 3>> !,(1 89(9, (25,78 !%8 CLASSIFIEDS THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 2015 Sales • Rentals Management • Appraisals 906-932-5406 Highway US-2 • Ironwood upnorthproperty.com AI@FAI@ !DA@IAA6 788;5;7@5K >73@ ?A67D@ E75GD7 I;F: >3G@ 6DK &A B7FE 13 &, **,59 :948 "$%8 North 01-15-15 w A732 v 9643 u K t A843 West East w 10 9 6 4 w K5 v K Q 10 5 vJ72 u 10 7 2 u J654 tJ9 tK752 South w QJ8 v A8 u AQ983 t Q 10 6 !" $ ), )& )+ ,;F3@;G? F: /:77> E>;67E CG77@ 476 >3D97 E:AI7D 7>75FD;5 8;D7B>357 B3F;A DAA? 3;D D;67 $;=7 @7I >75FD;5 >7H7>;@9 <35=E 8DA@F 3@6 D73D $;9:FI7;9:F 3>G?;@G? 5A@EFDG5F;A@ &7I (D;57 AD 47EF A887D AD l &;EE3@ >F;?3 ?;>7E 'D79A@ +F3F7 H7 :;5>7 &7I AAB7D I;@F7D F;D7E &A E3>F &A DGEF J57>>7@F DG@@7D +;>H7D F3@ 5A>AD >35= 5>AF: ;@F7D;AD ' ' & "&(!$ ( !& !$ $$!*&'&, ( %$ $)&, ( (-' ' %+& ( # +!( &' &' $ '$( (% %&( (& &%$+%% Dealer: South Vulnerable: Neither South West 1u Pass 1NT* Pass * 15-17 points #7:*08 ,(;> 6:/52,39 North 1v 3NT East Pass All Pass Opening lead: w 4 :7HK %3>;4G $, 5K>;@67D FGD4A ?;>7E 3GFA EF3DF >G7FAAF: 3;D F;>F 5DG;E7 BAI7D I;@6AIE >A5=E 3>G?;@G? 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"G>K +G??7D>3@6 8F '@7 E>;67 AGF 3I@;@9 CG77@ 476 EFAH7 AH7@ ?;5DAI3H7 8D;697 E:AI7D @7I G@67D53DD;397 $3DDK A697 3D3H3@ D7>;34>7 DG@@7D @7I7D F;D7E E73FE >;FF>7 DGEF &776E F:7D?AEF3F 3@6 8DA@F 4D3=7 B36E 3E: A@>K 38F7D B? * ,4+ 743<44+ ;, <<< >4:7+(/1>.14), *42 $ ! $# $!# ' %" $ #' ! "# "" ! " # :7HDA>7F D7I 34 E=;@9 3>> Ralph Richardson, one of the best thespians ever, said, “Actors are the jockeys of literature. Others supply the horses, the plays, and we simply make them run.” When a cast takes its bow, I always think that the playwright ought to be there, too. But if the actors are bad, the play will not work. However, the key word in Richardson’s observation for today’s deal is “others.” Bridge is full of “normal” plays, which work most of the time. But when an “other” play is needed, that sorts out the experts from the less capable. This deal occurred in a private game. North-South were using the weak no-trump, in which an opening bid of one no-trump shows 12-14 points. So South’s rebid indicated a strong no-trump, 15-17 points. This had an effect on the opening lead of West, who preferred the spade four, an unbid suit, to a heart, dummy’s bid suit. (Note that if South had opened one strong no-trump, North would have used Stayman, South would have denied a four-card major and North would have jumped to three no-trump. Then West surely would have led a heart.) East took the first trick with his spade king and stuck to the standard script when he returned his second spade. But South won in his hand, played a diamond to dummy’s king, returned to his hand with a spade and played three more rounds of diamonds. He had nine tricks: three spades, one heart, four diamonds and one club. Could East have found the fatal heart shift at trick two? It was tough. 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BAD3DK AD B7D?3@7@F >AEE A8 KAGD D;9:FE FA F:7 5:;>6 D7@ !$-* ,' (( * ?3K EG4 <75F KAG FA F:7 B7@3>FK 8AD 5A@ F7?BF A8 5AGDF 3@6 3 47@5: I3D D3@F ?3K 47 ;EEG76 8AD KAGD 3DD7EF 3F7 "G697 "A7> $ %3EE;7 3D &A KG@63; 0 $ 6AAD E763@ $ . >A3676 I;F: 7JFD3E ;@5>G6;@9 :73F76 E73FE ?;>7E ,7J3E 53D BGD5:3E76 @7I 97@F>K 6D;H7@ 93D3976 3@6 53D76 8AD 4K 3 9D73F 9D3@6?AF:7D DAILY GLOBE * ,4+ ;,3:, 743<44+ <<< >4:7+(/1>.14), *42 © 2015 UFS, Dist. by Universal Uclick for UFS BRIDGE PHILLIP ALDER Ask Doctor K ASTHMA ACTION PLAN WILL HELP DURING AN EMERGENCY DEAR DOCTOR K: My son was recently diagnosed with asthma. His doctor wants to put together an asthma "action plan." What is that? DEAR READER: Asthma is a complicated and serious disease. It can behave differently from hour to hour and from day to day. A person with asthma needs a plan for what to do at each stage of the disease. I'll describe the elements of the plan in a minute, but first a little background on asthma itself. Asthma assaults the lung's airways. The airways are the tubes through which the air you breathe enters and leaves your lungs. During an asthma attack, the airways get narrower as the muscles surrounding them constrict. The airways also become inflamed, and mucus fills the narrowed passageways. As a result, the flow of air is partially or completely blocked. A mild asthma attack may cause wheezing, difficulty breathing or a persistent cough. Symptoms of a more severe attack can include extreme shortness of breath, chest tightness, flared nostrils and pursed lips. Two types of medications are used to treat asthma: controllers and relievers. Controllers -- usually inhaled corticosteroids -- are medicines taken regularly By Anthony L. Komaroff, M.D. to reduce the likelihood of asthma attacks. They reduce inflammation, which decreases mucus production and reduces tightening of airway muscles. Relievers, or "rescue" medications, are used just during asthma attacks. They stop or reduce the severity of the attack by relaxing the muscles around the airways to improve airflow. Bronchodilators are often used as rescue medications. (I've put an illustration showing how medications treat asthma on my website, AskDoctorK.com.) Everyone with asthma should have an asthma action plan. This is a written plan that details what you need to do to control your asthma. It also explains what to do when you experience asthma symptoms or in case of an emergency. You may feel that you already know this information, but when you or a loved one is struggling to breathe, it helps to have a set of written instructions to refer to. Asthma action plans are often divided into "zones." You should be able to tell what zone your son is in from his symptoms. The action plan will tell you what you need to do in each zone. For example: Take prescribed long-term controller medicine. -- YELLOW ZONE: Getting worse. Coughing, wheezing, chest tightness or shortness of breath; waking at night; can do some, but not all, usual activities. Add quick-relief medicine. -- RED ZONE: Medical alert! Very short of breath; quick-relief medicines don't help; cannot do usual activities; symptoms no better after 24 hours in yellow zone. Get medical help now. People live with asthma for many years and come to know a lot about it. So a written asthma action plan may seem unnecessary. But in my experience, people who suddenly get sick sometimes forget to take the steps they know they should. A written asthma action plan can be a valuable reminder at a moment of trouble. (Dr. Komaroff is a physician & professor at Harvard Medical School. To send questions, go to AskDoctorK.com, or write: Ask Doctor K, 10 Shattuck St., Second Floor, Boston, MA 02115.) COPYRIGHT 2014 THE PRESIDENT AND FELLOWS OF HARVARD COLLEGE DISTRIBUTED BY UNIVERSAL UCLICK FOR UFS 1130 Walnut, Kansas City, MO 64106; 816-581-7500 -- GREEN ZONE: Doing well. No coughing, wheezing, chest tightness or shortness of breath; can do all usual activities. SUDOKU DAILY GLOBE 4 6 7 4 9 6 2 5 8 4 3 9 1 Difficulty Level By Dave Green 3 2 8 1 4 6 1 9 8 5 7 2015 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc. &'*, !*'&/'' 476DAA? GBEF3;DE 3B3DF?7@F I;F: 675= 476DAA? 43F: I;F: >A8F GBEF3;DE 3B3BDF?7@F !*'&/'' 476DAA? >AI7D 6GB>7J I;F: BD;H3F7 675= 3>> 8AD 67F3;>E 3@6 3 E:AI;@9 AD By Phillip Alder DAILY GLOBE !*'&/'' 476DAA? 3B3DF ?7@F I;F: 93D397 3@6 3BB>;3@57E B>GE GF;>;F;7E 476DAA? :AGE7 One looks good, but consider others 9 3 1/15 Sudoku is a number-placing puzzle based on a 9x9 gr id with several given numbers. The object is to place the numbers 1 to 9 in the empty squares so that each row, each column and each 3x3 box contains the same number only once. The difficulty level of the Conceptis Sudoku increases from Monday to Saturday. Answer to previous puzzle 8 5 6 9 3 7 1 2 4 7 2 1 4 5 8 9 6 3 Difficulty Level 9 4 3 1 2 6 5 8 7 6 3 2 8 4 5 7 1 9 1 8 9 2 7 3 6 4 5 5 7 4 6 1 9 8 3 2 4 1 8 7 9 2 3 5 6 2 9 5 3 6 1 4 7 8 3 6 7 5 8 4 2 9 1 2015 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc. GD>7K '@7 476DAA? 73F I3 F7D 7>75FD;5 ;@5>G676 &73F 5>73@ 3@6 CG;7F &A E?A=;@9 AD B7FE 1/14 BUSINESS 14 l THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 2015 THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM Dismal report on US retail spending hits the stock market NEW YORK (AP) — A dismal report on retail spending in the U.S. and signs of slowing global growth drove stocks lower and sent yields on government bonds plunging as investors sought safety. U.S. stocks fell from the start of trading on a report that consumers pulled back on spending last month and on a slump in European markets. At one point, the Dow Jones industrial average shed nearly 350 points. Investors dumped some key commodities on fears global growth is stalling, pushing the price of copper to a five-year low, and they piled into German, British and U.S. government bonds. The yield on the 30-year U.S. Treasury fell to its lowest on record. “We haven’t seen volatility like this for years,” said John Canally, investment strategist for LPL Financial. “People are more worried.” The Commerce Department reported that retail sales fell 0.9 percent in December, the biggest decline since January last year. The drop was a surprise to many investors because it showed consumers are still reluctant to spend despite lower gas prices and a pickup in hiring. “There was a perception that the economy was improving, but that has gotten called into question,” said Peter Tuz, a portfolio manager at Chase Investment Counsel, which manages $400 million in assets. “The savings from lower gas prices hasn’t translated into higher consumer spending yet.” A report from the World Bank late Tuesday also weighed on markets. The bank lowered its forecast for global growth this year to 3 percent from 3.4 percent. It blamed sluggish economies in Europe and Japan and a slowdown in China. The price of copper, a metal used in construction and manufacturing, fell 14 cents, or 5.2 percent, to close at $2.51 a pound following the World Bank’s downgrade. Investors buying up 10-year Treasury notes sent its yield, a benchmark for home loans and corporate borrowing, to 1.85 percent, its lowest since May 2013. The yield on the 30-year bond dropped below 2.4 percent for the first time. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index fell 11.76 points, 0.6 percent, to 2,011.27 The S&P 500 is heading for its third straight week of losses. The Nasdaq composite fell 22.18 points, or 0.5 percent, to 4,639.32 And the Dow Jones industrial average dropped 186.59 points, or 1.1 percent, to 17,427.09. Stocks are swinging more this year as investors become anxious. The Dow index was down as much as 348.78 points in the early afternoon, before gaining back much of its losses. On Tuesday, the difference between the Dow’s high and low was more than 400 points. Investors will turn their attention next to more corporate earnings reports. A handful of big companies are expected to report Thursday, including giant money manager BlackRock, energy company Schlumberger and Intel Corp., the world’s largest chip maker. Overall, companies in the S&P 500 are expected to report a modest 4.5 percent increase in Paul MlasekAgoent Independent fourth-quarter earnings per share compared with a year ago, according to S&P Capital IQ. Among stocks making big moves: — The drop in commodities pushed mining giant FreeportMcMoRan down $2.30, or 11 percent, to $18.74. — JPMorgan Chase fell $2.03, or 3.5 percent, to $56.81 after reporting a 7 percent drop in fourth-quarter earnings. The bank was hit by more legal costs and a decline in trading revenue. — GameStop jumped nearly 11 percent, the biggest gain in the S&P 500, after its CEO reported strong sales in gaming software sales during the holiday shopping season. The stock rose $3.44 to $36.21. The price of oil surged, despite a large increase in U.S. oil stockpiles, on a weaker dollar and traders’ expectations that oil had fallen too far recently. Benchmark U.S. crude rose $2.59 to close at $48.48 a barrel in New York. Brent crude, a benchmark for international oils used by many U.S. refineries, rose $2.10 to close at $48.69 in London. A DAY ON WALL STREET Jan. 14, 2015 18,000 Dow Jones industrials 17,000 -186.59 16,000 17,427.09 J A S Pct. change from previous: -1.06% O N D J High 17,609.06 Low 17,264.90 Jan. 14, 2015 4,800 Nasdaq composite 4,600 4,400 -22.18 4,200 4,639.32 J A S O N D J Jan. 14, 2015 2,100 Standard & Poor’s 500 2,000 -11.76 1,800 2,011.27 1,900 J A S Pct. change from previous: -0.58% O N High 2,018.40 D J AP escription e Plans e Health Car pplements • Pr e Plans • Hom • Medicare Su ar a Care) C m ba rm (O Te Long Care Reform lth ea • Annuities • H ans e Pl t nc ealth Insura l Confinemen • Under 65 H nce • Hospita ra su In on isi s • Dental & V surance Plan -7654 • Disability In ce : (906)364 Offi -2232 #2 Cell : (586)707 s Blvd, Suite 201 N. Dougla arter.net I 49938 .insurance@ch Ironwood, M Email : mlasko $% * "#$ * %%#$ !'# # $ #! (!! Check Engine Light On? 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