I feel a song coming on - The Paper of Montgomery County

Transcription

I feel a song coming on - The Paper of Montgomery County
guns & gear
200 W. Spring St.
Crawfordsville
Mon - Fri 9-4
Sat 8-1
765-362-0401
Anderson Receivers
Starting at $49.99
TUESDAY
Nov. 3, 2015
American Dream
Realty & Appraisals
Matt Walters
765-376-4029
Office 362-5758
The Paper
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COUNTY
OF MONTGOMERY
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I feel a song coming on
 TODAY’S VERSE
"But you will receive power when
the Holy Spirit comes on you;
and you will be my witnesses in
Jerusalem, and in all Judea and
Samaria, and to the ends of the
earth."
– Acts 1:8: (NIV)
 FACES of
MONTGOMERY
People who call our community their own.
Photo provided
“Into the Woods, Jr.” is Crawfordsville Middle School’s upcoming musical. The cast is ready, the stage is set and tickets are available
at the door. Nov. 6-7 at Crawfordsville High School, One Athenian Dr., you can enjoy the show for $5. Kids 6 and under get in free.
Seeking Ironman motorbike thieves
By Stu Clampitt
stu@thepaper24-7.com
What makes Brandon Hendricks
smile? Working at the Cracker
Barrel! He calls it a good place
to work with great people and
great guests.
 THREE THINGS
You Should Know:
1
This year’s National Eating
Healthy Day is tomorrow,
Nov. 4. You can register (so
the guilt will help keep you on
track) and you are encouraged
to share some memes to help
the American Heart Association
get the word out. More details
are on Page A4.
2
Some signal timings and
school-zone flashers did
not change over automatically with daylight saving time on
Sunday. Keep an eye out. Details
on how you can help INDOT get
everything working on time can
be found on Page A4.
3
Welcome to Movember, the
hairiest month of the year!
Moustaches and beards
are in season as a way to show
support for men’s health. This
year the Movember Foundation
is adding a physical fitness challenge. Learn more at us.movember.com/about/foundation.
 HONEST HOOSIER
Today is municipal Election Day.
Do your duty and
go vote!
 OBITUARIES
None
A total of five motorbikes
were stolen from the Ironman
race over the weekend. The
Montgomery County Sheriff and
GNCC are asking for your help
to recover them.
According to a press release
from Major Ryan Needham, “All
of the bikes were stolen sometime between late Saturday night
and early Sunday morning. “
Captain Jeremy Hughes at the
Sheriff’s office told The Paper
that all of the stolen bikes were
personal property, none of which
were there for competition. He
also said there were a total of
four victims, none of whom are
from Montgomery County. Four
of the bikes were locked with
chains, according to Hughes.
According to Lori Shaver at
Tom’s Marine, after she posted
the information on her Facebook
See BIKES Page A3
Hammer hits lesson of self-reliance
Sometimes our little newspaper that could does political
endorsements, sometimes we
don’t. The key is whether or not
we legitimately have information
to share that we believe relevant
and important. With some recent
changes in staff, we didn’t feel
like we had enough pertinent
information to share this time
around so we decided to hold off
on endorsing any candidate.
In the spirit of transparency
and sharing, I was planning on
writing a little bit about how all
this works. It starts with some
high-level meetings. Typically,
these occur on Saturdays when
the office is quiet and there are
very few interruptions. In fact,
I was preparing for just such a
meeting, tidying up the conference room (i.e., emptying the
trash) when I turned around and
ran nose-to-chest straight into
John Hammer.
“Dag! Nab! It! John!” I spit
out. Hammer may make two
of me (and unlike me, his body
fat percentage is a number well
below his age) but when he just
about spooks me into cardiac
 TODAY’S QUOTE
 TODAY’S JOKE
“If Plan A doesn’t work, no
worries. The alphabet has 25
more letters. And there are lots of
numbers, too.”
Unknown
 HEALTH TIP
See RELIANCE Page A4
Tim Timmons
Two Cents
 THE MONTGOMERY MINUTE
City offices closed today, no trash pick up
All Crawfordsville City Offices will be closed today for Election Day. There
will be no city trash or recycle pick up today, but there will be a double
pick up on Wednesday. The Yard Waste Site will also be closed today.
 INSIDE TODAY’S EDITION
Eating whole grains
instead of refined
white starches results
in less belly fat.
Today’s health tip was
brought to you by Dr. John
Roberts. Be sure to catch his
column each week in The Paper and online at
www.thepaper24-7.com.
The Paper appreciates all our customers.
Today, we’d like to personally thank
Jodie Clodfelter of Roachdale for subscribing!
The Paper
OF MONTGOMERY
Why did the cowboy get a
wiener dog?
He wanted to get a long
little doggie.
failure I tend to spout off before
thinking. “Can you just give a
cough or clear your throat or
something before I end up falling
over dead because you scared
me to death?” I yelled. “It’s
bad enough that you get up here
when the building is locked up
tight, but do you have to make
it a point to sneak up on me as
well?”
Hammer just looked at me.
Clearly, my main concern wasn’t
his.
COUNTY
American Dream... A1
American Rental... A3
Andy Biddle.......... A4
Animal Welfare..... A9
Arni’s.................... A7
Beltone................. A2
Boots Bro’s........... A4
Clos Auto.............. A1
Countryside.......... A9
C'ville Audiology... A2
Davis Material...... A2
Figues Drywall...... A9
Goings.................. A4
Gould................... A2
Haley's................. A1
Hay-Bush.............. A8
J.M. Thompson...... A7
Kirtley Taylor.......... A8
LC&G Landscape.. A5
Meadow Sales...... A7
Summers............ A10
Tri-County............. A4
VPCHC.................. A8
Wampler's............ A8
Waterford.............. A7
Serving Alamo  Browns Valley  Darlington  Crawfordsville 
Ladoga  Linden  Mace  New Market  New Richmond  New Ross 
Waveland  Waynetown  Whitesville  Wingate  Yountsville
Crawfordsville Weather
Local Weather Instantly
Forecast Radar | Storm Prediction | Travel Advisory
www.crawfordsvilleweather.com
The Paper
O F M O N T G O M E RY
101 W. Main St. Suite 300  P.O. Box 272  Crawfordsville, IN 47933
main: 765-361-0100  classifieds: 765-361-8888 fax: 765-361-5901
www.thepaper24-7.com twitter: @ThePaperNews @ThePaperSports
COUNTY
PAGE A2  Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2015
Sewer expansion makes progress
By Leeann Doerflein
leeann@thepaper24-7.com
Considerable progress
was made to the sewer
expansion project since the
Regional Sewer Board last
met in October. The board
heard progress reports and
moved to look more indepth at a path to funding
with Umbaugh and Associates this month.
The board has been
discussing plans to expand
the county sewer system
to Pilot and Banjo on
State Road 32 for several
months. The expansion is
solve the problems with
failing private sewage
mounds that both businesses are experiencing.
Tom Astbury, of Astbury Water Technology,
reported to the board
that the best solution will
be to form a regulated
utility, called Sugar Creek
Sanitation. He said the
process to get the util-
ity approved should be
around six months, but the
process should be straight
forward.
“We would be forming
an entity called Sugar
Creek Sanitation that
would be, in essence the
utility company, and it
would be contracting
directly to the Regional
Sewer District for bulk
treatment for all of their
customers,” Astbury
said. “There would be
one monthly bill to the
district and Pilot we would
be billing separately, not
under the jurisdiction of
the district.”
Amy Moore, of VS Engineering, is still working
on the design, but she said
that there might need to be
three lift stations instead
of two and more gravity
pipe might be needed.
Sanjay Patel, also of VS,
said the lift station might
be good to plan for the
future, especially if the
board wants to prepare
for possible industrial
expansion in the future.
They both said costs might
go higher than previously
expected if the board adds
the third station and because cable that is already
in the ground might cause
complications.
Sewer Board President
Phil Bane suggested that
members of the board,
Astbury, VS and the board
attorney should start talks
with Umbaugh so the
board can figure out how
to pay for the project.
“We don’t want to get
our skis too far in front of
us on this,” Bane said.
Astbury said he hopes
to have specifics on rate
design ready for the next
meeting, so the revenue
stream can be outlined for
the district. Moore and
Patel will be working on
the design of the project
as well.
In other action
• The board voted to
enact liens on the two
property owners who
have either not paid their
bill in a year or have not
paid their hook-up fee.
The board voted to inform
the property owners last
month to give them one
last chance to pay.
• Dave Saulk, Environmental Manager at Nucor,
asked the board about
adding a pump and haul
system for a new trailer
office near Ladoga Road.
Montgomery County Sanitarian Amber Reed pointed
out that an agreement with
the Indiana Department of
Health forbids new pump
and haul locations. The
board voted to try and see
if they can add another
pump and haul location or
whether Nucor will have
to hook on or look at other
avenues.
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The Paper of Montgomery County
Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2015
A3
 Births
Þ BIKES From Page A1
A son, Xavier Alexander Yassen Maston,
was born to Gabriella
Pithoud and Cody Maston
of Crawfordsville at
Franciscan St. Elizabeth
Health—East on October
31, 2015 at 5:52 p.m. At
birth, he weighed 7.15
pounds and was 20.5
inches long.
He is welcomed home
by older brothers Braxton and Zayden Pithoud.
He is also welcomed by
grandmother Chrystal
Walton.
A son, Damien
Charles Delp, was born
to Desiree Anderson and
Brandon Delp of Crawfordsville at Franciscan
St. Elizabeth Health—
East on October 31,
2015.
He is welcomed home
by an older brother,
Quatish A. Anderson.
Grandparents Lisa Delp
and Merrill Anderson
also welcome him.
CRAWFORDSVILLE: 1825 S. U.S. 231 • (765) 362-8055
Next to Superior Auto NEWLY REMODELED!
LAFAYETTE: 2224 Teal Rd., Lafayette • (765) 448-4992 • Next to
MARSH Near Lafayette Jeff.
ATTICA: 1316 E. Main St., Attica • (765) 762-2888 • Next to Pizza Hut
Photos provided
page, “The number of
shares has been ridiculous.”
She said this shows the
best side of social media
as people share the information and create a chance
that the stolen bikes could
be recovered.
Shaver said a theft at
Ironman happened a couple
of years ago and one of
Tom’s Marine’s quads
was taken from another
race last summer. “We’re
disappointed. It would be
great if it never happened,
but when you get that many
people together it’s a possibility,” Shaver said.
GNCC is also very
interested in getting the dirt
bikes back to their rightful
owners and is offering a
$500 cash reward along
with VIP passes to 2016
races.
According to Needham,
“We are currently following up leads but would like
to hear from anyone who
might know something
about any of these dirt bike
thefts.
The stolen bikes are
described as follows:
2002 Honda CR125 / red
and white in color – No
racing numbers
2013 KTM 250 XC-F /
orange and white in color –
has the number 306 on it
2013 KTM 350 XCF-W /
orange and white in color –
has the number 396 on it
2016 KTM 450 XCF /
orange and white in color –
has the number 222 on it
2014 KTM 350 XCF /
orange and white in color –
has the number 169 on it
If anyone has information
on the thefts the Montgomery County Sheriff is asking
that they contact Detective
Matt McCarty at (765) 3623740 or matt.mccarty@
montgomeryco.net.
MON & FRIDAY 9AM-7PM
TUES, THURS & SAT 9AM-6PM WED 9AM-5PM
THE PAPER
OF MONTGOMERY
COUNTY
(USPS 022-679)
November 3, 2015
Volume 11 Number 287
Published Monday through
Saturday (except for holidays)
Subscription price:
$48/6 mos.; $88/1 year.
101 W. Main St., Suite 300
Crawfordsville, IN 47933
765-361-0100
Periodicals Postage Paid at
Crawfordsville, Ind.
POSTMASTER: Send address
changes to The Paper
of Montgomery County,
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Crawfordsville, IN 47933
CALL FOR A FREE
SECURITY ASSESSMENT
Ned Swanson
765-362-0401 | 200 W. Spring St.
www.haleyslock.com| ned@haleyslock.com
Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2015
A4
 POLICE BLOTTER
Crawfordsville
Police
Incidents Friday
8:08 a.m.—Report of a
civil complaint in the 800
block of Liberty Street.
9:08 a.m.—Report of a
domestic issue in the 900
block of Whitlock Avenue.
1:39 p.m.—Report of a
motor vehicle accident in
the 1500 block of Washington Street.
6:23 p.m.—Report of a
fight in the 200 block of
Argonaut Drive.
8:36 p.m.—Report of a
motor vehicle accident at
150 South and 200 West.
10:01 p.m.—Report
of a hit and run at South
Boulevard and Washington
Street.
10:31 p.m.—Report of a
domestic issue in the 900
block of South Avenue.
Saturday
7:44 a.m.—Report of
a disturbance in the 2500
block of Lafayette Road.
7:44 a.m.—Report of an
assault in the 300 block of
Meadow Avenue.
9:31 a.m.—Report of
stalking in the 100 block
of North Street.
11:34 a.m.—Report of
a motor vehicle accident
in the 400 block of Market
Street.
11:52 a.m.—Report of
public intoxication in the
1300 block of 200 South.
2:07 p.m.—Report of
motor vehicle accident in
the 1600 block of Crawfordsville Square Drive.
4:49 p.m.—Report of
harassment in the 800
block of Center Drive.
5:11 p.m.—Report of a
motor vehicle accident in
the 1600 block of Crawfordsville Square Drive.
5:49 p.m.—Report of a
civil complaint in the 300
block of Covington Street.
6:32 p.m.—Report of a
civil complaint in the 200
block of Oak Hill Road.
7:06 p.m.—Report of
public intoxication at Blair
Street and Main Street.
8:26 p.m.—Report of
theft in the 1000 block of
Lane Avenue.
Sunday
5:11 a.m.—Report of a
domestic issue in the 1900
block of Delaware Street.
6:48 a.m.—Report of a
motor vehicle accident in
the 2500 block of Lafayette Road.
12:40 p.m.—Report of a
motor vehicle accident in
the 700 block of Washington Street.
6:06 p.m.—Report of a
domestic issue in the 1000
block of Chestnut Street.
Monday
6:48 a.m.—Report of a
motor vehicle accident in
the 2000 block of Smith
Avenue.
7:07 a.m.—Report of a
motor vehicle accident in
the 1800 block of Indianapolis Road.
7:08 a.m.—Report of
theft in the 1000 block of
Chestnut Street.
7:13 a.m.—Report of a
hit and run at State Road
47 and State Road 32.
Montgomery
County Sheriff
Incidents Friday
8:52 a.m.—Report of a
civil complaint in the 500
block of 300 South.
9:22 a.m.—Report of
breaking and entering in
the 8600 block of Academy Way in Ladoga.
9:26 a.m.—Report of
an assault in the 400 block
of Third Street in New
Market.
11:14 a.m.—Report of a
civil complaint in the 200
block of Walnut Street in
Linden.
2:55 p.m.—Report of a
civil complaint in the 200
block of Jackson Street in
Waveland.
6:01 p.m.—Report of a
motor vehicle accident on
State Road 32.
8:31 p.m.—Report of a
motor vehicle accident in
the 2200 block of Nucor
Road.
8:49 p.m.—Report of
a motor vehicle accident
at U.S. Highway 231 and
400 South.
9:01 p.m.—Report of
harassment in the 200
block of Walnut Street in
Linden.
9:48 p.m.—Report of
a motor vehicle accident
in the 5900 block of U.S.
Highway 231.
Saturday
8:04 a.m.—Report of a
motor vehicle accident at
500 North and State Road
47 in Darlington.
10:19 a.m.—Report of
a domestic incident in the
900 block of Taylor Street
in Ladoga.
6:19 p.m.—Report of
property damage in the
1300 block of 200 South.
9:18 p.m.—Report of
indecent exposure in the
1300 block of 200 South.
9:38 p.m.—Report of an
assault in the 1300 block
of 200 South.
10:17 p.m.—Report
of illegal consumption of
alcohol in the 1300 block
of 200 South.
11:00 p.m.—Report of
motor vehicle theft in the
1300 block of 200 South.
Sunday
1:10 a.m.—Report of
public intoxication in the
1300 block of 200 South.
See BLOTER Page A7
The Paper of Montgomery County
It’s not just about clocks
The Paper
The Indiana Department
of Transportation asks
Hoosier motorists to report
signal timings and schoolzone flashers that did not
change over automatically
with daylight saving time
on Sunday, Nov. 1. In
addition, motorists may
report overhead lighting
outages above interstates,
U.S. highways and state
routes to INDOT’s district
offices around the state.
Signals and
school-zone
flashers
Flashers that alert
motorists entering school
zones and traffic signals
are timed using computerized controllers. This
allows traffic signals to
use different patterns for
periods of heavy traffic,
such as the morning and
evening commutes.
INDOT is now confirming that the internal
clocks in traffic signals
and school-zone flashers
changed over automatically. INDOT technicians
may remotely access the
computerized controllers
within most traffic signals.
INDOT crews must manually patrol and confirm
timings for school-zone
flashers.
miles traveled.
Photosensors turn on
most lighting above state
and federal highways, and
are not affected by daylight
saving time. But turning
the clocks back each fall
changes daylight during
commuting times and may
make overhead-lighting
outages more noticeable.
INDOT also urges commuters to be more alert
when driving at night.
About half of the nation’s
crashes occur at night even
though nighttime driving
makes up a quarter of the
To report an overhead-lighting outage,
signal timing change or
school-zone flasher that
displays an hour early,
contact the INDOT district
office for your region. A
map of INDOT’s districts with links to contact
information is at https://
entapps.indot.in.gov/dotmaps/districtmaps.
INDOT maintains numbered state routes, U.S.
highways and interstates,
including their intersections and interchanges.
Overhead
lighting
Report timing
errors, outages
Eat healthy, at least tomorrow
The Paper
This year’s National
Eating Healthy Day is
Wednesday, Nov. 4. The
American Heart Association wants to encourage
healthy eating habits by
helping Americans take
simple steps with their
families, friends, co-workers and communities.
The following steps are
designed to make the
healthy choice the easy
choice wherever people
live, work or play:
Step 1: Register for
National Eating Healthy
Day by visiting www.
heart.org/NationalEatingHealthyDay
Step 2: Get healthy
with activities and tips for
National Eating Healthy
Day; all included in the
free AHA toolkit
Step 3: Share our
“punny” memes on your
social media channels
using #NEHD and share
your successes with us on
AHA’s Facebook, Twitter
and Instagram pages
“Most Americans know
that eating good-for-you
foods comes with a lot
of health benefits, but it
isn’t always easy to break
Get your bazaar
booth space now
The Paper
Booth space is still
available for the Extension
Homemakers Holiday
Bazaar to be held Nov.
21, from 9 a.m. to 3
p.m. The event will be
held in the Witham Health
Services Pavilion and the
new adjacent Centennial
Hall building located at
the Boone County 4-H
Fairgrounds in Lebanon,
Indiana. The show,
which is sponsored by the
Boone County Extension
Homemakers, features
hand crafted items for
gifts, home and the holidays.
A booth space of
approximately 10’x10’ is
available for $40. Over
90 vendors participated
in the past years. Admission is free and Mrs.
Claus will be on hand to
hand out candy canes to
visitors.
Lunch will be available
to purchase starting at
10:30 a.m.
For booth information
call Judy at (317) 7696298.
of American adults and
one in three children and
teens are overweight or
obese, putting them at
risk for heart disease and
stroke, as well as many
other chronic illnesses and
conditions.
A free online toolkit is
available to participate in
National Eating Healthy
Day. Resources include
easy-to-do activities, ways
to help others to join in
and delicious recipes. To
download the toolkit and
other NEHD resources,
visit www.heart.org/NationalEatingHealthyDay.
old habits,” said Annessa
Chumbley, RD, a volunteer with the American
Heart Association. “National Eating Healthy Day
offers people across the
country – at home, work
or in their community –
an opportunity to make a
healthy change together
and provides necessary resources to make the changes as easy as possible. But
eating healthy is more than
just an easy way to reduce
the risk of heart disease
and stroke; it’s also fun
and delicious.”
More than two-thirds
City Council at Large
Andy Biddle
Paid for by the Candidate
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Þ RELIANCE From Page A1
“Been thinking, Timmons,” he began. “I ran
across a quote from Roosevelt when he was talking
about the square deal. You
know what the square deal
is, don’t you, Timmons?”
“Of course I do,” I shot
back. Hammer may have
scared the bejeezus out of
me but I certainly know my
American history. “The
square deal was a foreign
program from FDR that-“
“Yeah, you’re almost
right, Timmons,” Hammer cut in. “Except it was
Teddy, not Franklin and it
was domestic, not foreign.
Other than that, you got it.”
Oh.
“Anyways,” Hammer
continued, “the old Rough
Rider said, ‘I do not like
hardness of heart, but
neither do I like softness of
head.’ Seems to me we’ve
gotten about as far away
from that as possible.”
I wasn’t going to hazard
another wrong answer so I
just nodded.
“We are becoming a
society where we don’t
depend on ourselves anymore.”
Since I sure as hell
wasn’t depending on my
own knowledge, or lack
thereof, I risked asking
what he meant.
“We can’t lose weight on
our own,” Hammer said.
“We have to take a pill.
“We can’t quit smoking
on our own. We go out and
get a patch.
“We can’t pay our bills
on our own. We have to
use credit.
“Our kids and our
grandkids can’t figure out
how to deal with bullies on
their own. They have to get
help.
“We can’t deal with
neighbors and others who
are idiots, we have to get
attorneys.
“Everywhere we turn,
we’re told that we can’t
do things on our own; that
we need this or that to get
something done. Hell,
Timmons, we already
have enough people who
think they are entitled to
things they haven’t earned
yet. Now we’re teaching
everyone that they can’t do
anything by themselves. It’s
killing us.
“Tell me this, Timmons.
When did we learn to stop
depending on ourselves?”
Hammer looked at me. I
looked back. I didn’t have
the answers he was looking
for. Truth to tell, not sure
anyone does.
“Timmons, I don’t know
much but I do know this. If
we keep going like this, if
we keep teaching kids that
they are not responsible for
themselves; if we let adults
think that the ultimate
answer and responsibility
doesn’t rest squarely on
their shoulders then we’re
going to wake up one day
and find out we really don’t
have choices anymore. I’m
not sure if we hardened our
hearts, but we surely have
let our heads get soft.”
Hammer walked away.
Once again, I fear he’s got
it right.
Two cents, which is about
how much Timmons said his
columns are worth, appears
periodically on Tuesdays in
The Paper. Timmons is the
publisher of The Paper and
can be contacted at ttimmons@
thepaper24-7.com.
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SPORTS
The Paper
OF MONT G OMERY
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CO U N T Y
A5
Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2015
Follow us on Twitter @ThePaperSports . . . Follow us on Twitter @ThePaperSports . . . Follow us on Twitter @ThePaperSports . . . Follow us on Twitter @ThePaperSports . . .
Football C’ville coach resigned
seniority
The Paper
As I
have said
all season
long, North
football is
pretty loaded
with talent
that can
score and
win games.
Friday night
was a 37-0 LORI POTEET
From Behind The Lens
beat down
of Twin
Lakes. The
Chargers looked really good as they made
Twin Lakes look really bad.
North’s long time announcer and
English teacher John Walker always has
clever things to announce. This year he
came up with the phrase for when Baylee
Adams passes a touchdown pass to Devon
Zachary: “The Chargers score from A to
Z.”
Zachary had a couple of amazing
catches several that looked like they
should be on ESPN’s highlight. DaDaDa,
DaDaDa!! So, especially after last week,
Zachary gets the nickname of “the human
highlight.”
This is a very strong senior class for the
Chargers. Vince Gwynn is the “workhorse.” He does the little things out on
the field every second that adds up to big
things.
Alex Parson’s is the one that every team
knows about and tries to stop. Most teams
just can’t find a way to stop him. He too
comes up with big plays and his determination is what makes him a better player
than most. So I will give him a nickname
of “Mr. Determination.”
Jordan Lewis is the return man. He
gains every extra yard he can so that
the offense can be in good position for a
scoring attack.
I’m giving quarterback Bayle Adams
the nickname of “Captain Crunch”. Not
only does he take control of the team but
also leads as a captain breaking several
school records this season. He also packs
a powerful hit on the defensive side that
often makes that hard hitting crunch
sound.
I think I will give Cole Clore the nickname of “The Stuntman.” He makes the
crazy spectacular dives into the danger
zone of the defense and somehow rolls out
into the end zone for a touchdown.
Jordan Banta works hard on both sides
of the ball. He pushes through the line
for and extra yard or two that helps the
Chargers get a first down. In the off
season, Banta is big into rodeo. I think
he use his rodeo skills on defense to lasso
in the ball carrier then tosses them to the
ground. If you can rope a steer and wrestle him to the ground, I guess stopping a
running back is pretty easy. Let’s face it,
throughout history, cowboys are known to
be the tough guys. So I’ll call Banta “the
cowboy”.
Then there are the seniors that make up
a big defensive line. Nate Archer shows
no mercy on his hits. He is “the hit man.”
Matthew Peach is big strong and keeps
pushing forward. Therefore, he is “the
bulldozer.” Adam Neely is “the joker”
off the field but on the field works hard
to do his part. He is “the role player” that
may never get headlines but works hard
for his team.
Gage Baer at 5’9 and 300 pounds is
“the rock”. On offense and defense, “the
rock” is pretty hard to push around.
Sam O’Brien makes his presence known
more on defense getting in on many
tackles. He is not the biggest player but
uses his speed and outsmarts his opponent
by knowing the angles to cut them off.
O’Brein, we’ll call “The Professor.”
The Chargers are in the football sectional final in large part due to the success
and determination of these 12 seniors.
The Chargers face 10-1 West Lafayette
for the sectional championship. It won’t
be easy…but the tough dozen and several
other key underclassmen will be doing all
they can to win the fourth sectional title in
school history. The last one was in 2008.
The other two championships were in ‘95
and ‘96 which also were state title years
for the Chargers.
Lori Poteet is The Paper’s ace sports photographer. You have probably seen her out
at one of the local high schools. She usually
always has her camera in hand. Lori’s column, Behind the Lens, appears on Tuesdays
in The Paper. You can also follow her on
Twitter @LoriPoteetPhoto. Lori is proudly
in her 11th year with The Paper and covering
Montgomery County Sports.
Crawfordsville head coach Mike
Hammons resigned
Friday, Oct. 30 from
coaching after finishing his third year as
Athenian head coach
and fourth year with
the program.
“We would like to
thank Coach Hammons
Hammons
for the four years that
he gave to the Crawfordsville Football program,” Crawfordsville Athletic Director Bryce
Barton said. “He cared about the
players on and off the field and expected them to represent the program,
the school, and the community in a
positive way. I had many officiating
crews and opposing coaches comment
on the positive attitudes of the players
in our program and that is a reflection
of the head coach.”
Hammons will continue to teach at
Hose Elementary as a Physical Education Instructor.
“It was a difficult decision but in
the end I decided to look to pursue
opportunities in athletic administration,” Hammons said.
He added that he was very thankful
for the opportunity to coach at the
high school.
“I was thankful to get the opportunity to get to know all the guys. They
are great young men and dedicated to
The Paper file photo by Lori Poteet
their sport.”
He continued that he decided he
wouldn’t have been able to give the
team the time they needed.
Crawfordsville went 3-7 this year
and, based on this year’s roster, will
be returning a solid group of 21 seniors next year.
“We will start the process of finding
a head coach very soon,” Barton
added. “It is my hope that the transition to the new head coach will be
seamless and that our student-athletes
will have the opportunity to continue
improving through the off-season
workouts that will be put in place.”
Mounties return veteran group
By Scott Smith
sports@thepaper24-7.com
NEW MARKET – The Lady Mounties look to improve on last year’s 4-18 mark under second-year head
coach Susan McVay. Having last season’s transition year
behind them, the Mounties are looking to improve this
season.
“We went through a lot of adversity last year, and I
thought we went through that and held together as a team
pretty well,” said McVay. “Most teams don’t do that,
so I thought that was a positive. I think we can take that
adversity and transition it into a new season and know
where we were and where we want to be.”
“We’ve kind of adopted the motto ‘make them believe,’” she continued. “We didn’t get a whole lot of
respect last year, and we need to earn that. I think that
perspective is good, but they know what they want after
having a rebuilding season last year.”
See VETERANS Page A6
The Paper file photo by Lori Poteet
Brittany Barrett is one of three seniors and returns from a 7
points per game average last year.
Chargers look to returning players
By Scott Smith
sports@thepaper24-7.com
LINDEN – Looking to improve upon last year’s 4-18
mark, the North Montgomery Lady Chargers return
a wealth of experience from last year, and return four
starters.
Gone are Conner Norman and Zoe McCormick, but
second-year coach Ryan Nuppnau is expecting good
things from his Chargers.
“We’re expecting Becca (Adams- 7.4 points per game),
Cheyenne (Warren- 6.4 points), and Carli (Cahill- 4.0
points), to pick up where they left off as far as scoring,”
he said. “We’ll look to them to be vocal, confident leaders, as well.”
“However, they won’t have to put the team on their
shoulders for scoring this season,” he continued. “We
have a good supporting cast returning that can help fill
that void.”
Lauren McClaskey, 2.3 points per game, returns for
See RETURNING Page A6
The Paper file photo by Lori Poteet
Senior Carli Cahill will return to the courts after averaging 4
points per game last year.
Athenians have lingering questions
By Scott Smith
sports@thepaper24-7.com
Graduating, or losing, 84 percent of their offense from
last season, the Crawfordsville Athenians may have the
most questions unanswered heading into the 2015-2016
campaign after a 12-11 season last year. However, head
coach Tony Thomas, and his staff, are up to the challenge.
“We may struggle early, but we feel the key is continuous improvement and staying positive,” he said. “We
will work hard every day, and we will be a better team in
February than we are in October.”
Graduated from last year’s team are Kristina Goodnight, Emily Seybold, Erika Brooks and Lacey Garrett.
Also, senior Kim Hampton decided not to return. So,
the Athenians have just one returning starter, and that’s
senior Paige Schueren, who averaged 9.4 points, 3.2
rebounds and 1.4 assists per game as a junior.
See QUESTIONS Page A6
The Paper file photo by Lori Poteet
Paige Schueren is the only returning senior and averaged
9.4 points per game last year.
A6
Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2015
VETERANS
Southmont has a good
nucleus as they return
four of their five starters
from last year, and eight
players with varsity experience
“Returning so much
experience is huge,”
added McVay. “It’s a
great place to be this early
in the season. If we can
stay healthy, and keep our
grades up, we’re looking to earn some of that
From Page A5
respect.”
The Mounties will be
led by their three seniors,
Brittany Barrett, 6.9
points per game, Kaiti
Chadd, 1.8 steals per
game, and Natalie Strauser, 2.6 points per game.
“Their leadership is
huge,” McVay said.
“They all three lead differently, and they all three
know this is their final
season. They have some
RETURNING
her senior season, and
Taylor Dyson, Katharyn
Sabens and Shelby Sims
are juniors who will look
to fill that vacuum.
“We’re expecting the
girls to come out with
more confidence this year
not only in themselves, but
also in the team,” added
Nuppnau. “Not only do
we have four starters back,
but this is their second
“Paige is a great kid,
who I’ve known since
Tuttle,” said Thomas.
“This is her third year as
a starter, so we will look
for her to be our leader
and coach both on and off
the floor.”
Paige is joined by only
three juniors, Fabiola Castro, Katie McKinsey, and
Meara McFall, so Craw-
opportunities to do things
as a team, and that’s their
goal.”
The Mounties will also
look for contributions
from juniors Kasey Burton, 4.8 points, Reagan
Case, 4.8 points, Marlowe McVay, 3.4 points,
and Peyton Endicott, 2.9
points. All four bring different skill sets that will
be vital in their success.
Burton’s athletic and
brings toughness on
defense. Case is a gritty
player who handles the
ball well. McVay has
good interior moves with
an outside touch that
could create matchup
problems and Endicott
will be an inside presence.
Sophomore, Avery
Hess, who tweaked a
knee last week, will also
look to see significant
minutes.
Gone from last year’s
squad is the inside presence of Aarika McKinsey.
However, McVay doesn’t
think that will change
their overall offensive
scope. “We’ll still get
the ball in the middle
with Marlowe (McVay)
in,” she said. “However,
when we’re small, we’re
going to look to push the
ball. We want to apply a
lot of pressure on de-
fense and have that create
offense.”
The Mounties first
game was scheduled for
Friday, however that was
moved to Thursday at
7:30 p.m. because of the
Tri-West football team
advancing in Sectional.
They will travel to TriWest Thursday, before
hosting Clinton Central
in their home opener
Saturday.
Kelsey Sabens and Joy
Shirar. “Those three have
shown quite a bit of growth
from last season,” he said.
“It’s been neat to see, not
only skill wise, but both
mentally and physically,
but I think everyone’s
shown improvement.”
“This season, I’d like
to see us take care of the
little things, as they’re so
easily overlooked,” said
Nuppnau. “We need to
focus on the things we can
control, and not so much
what we can’t. I believe
that will accumulate big
for us.”
Nuppnau believes
success is more what they
do on the court than wins
and losses. “I’d like to see
us be more confident, and
be able to react to what’s
taking place on the court,”
he said. “We need to take
care of what we need to
take care of, and everything will fall into place. If
the girls have fun, grow,
compete against each
other, and stick together,
we’ll do well.”
Their season kicks off
Saturday morning, when
they’ll travel to Turkey
Run. The game was
originally on Friday but
has been moved due to
North’s sectional final
football game against West
Lafayette.
They’ll travel to Attica
and Rockville, before they
host their first home game
on Nov. 20, when they
face Southmont in the first
game of the Sugar Creek
Classic sponsored by The
Paper of Montgomery
County.
Melia Tomlinson. All
three will look to patrol
the middle, both offensively and defensively.
The other two guards
are expected to be freshmen Addie Laskowski
and Mia Stadler. “They
are both quick and good
athletes,” said Thomas.
“They will make some
mistakes early, but we
expect that. However,
they’ll need to have an
accelerated learning curve
for us to be successful.”
“Our youthfulness will
come into play,” said
Thomas. “We played
11 games in June and it
wasn’t pretty, especially
the first weekend. So, we
had to grow up quick.”
“Instead of sulking,
the girls decided to get
better,” he continued.
“It might be baby steps,
but we will continue to
improve.”
The Athenians will look
to Schueren and Hall to
carry them offensively,
but they will need all five
on the floor to help them
win games.
“I consider success as
doing the best you can,
where you are, with what
you have to God’s glory,”
said Thomas. “If we don’t
get discouraged early, we
will get better.”
The Athenians will host
Covington for a scrimmage on Tuesday before
lacing them up for good,
when they travel to Seeger
on Friday, Nov. 6.
From Page A5
season with me.”
“Things are running
more smoothly,” he
continued. “They know
what’s expected of them,
and each other. We’re excited, and very optimistic,
about this season and what
it can bring for us.”
Nuppnau likes the
progression that he’s seen
from his three sophomores,
Caroline McClaskey,
QUESTIONS
The Paper of Montgomery County
From Page A5
fordsville will have a very
young line up this season.
Two returning players
are sophomores Jazmine
Hall, 2.1 points and
5.5 rebounds, and Zoe
Walbert, 0.7 points and
1.7 rebounds. Each saw
significant minutes for the
Athenians last year and
bring some height to the
lineup, as will classmate
BABY BLUES
MONTGOMERY MIX-UP
Below is a list of words that can be found in the puzzle below. They may
be written forward, backward, or even diagonally. The solution will be in
tomorrow’s edition of The Paper.
November
Fall
Thanksgiving
F
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A
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THATABABY
MALLARD FILLMORE
CRANKSHAFT
BARNEY GOOGLE
Saturday
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NR
G E
NB
GM
A E
A V
AO
AN
T A
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NB
T V
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KG
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Indians
Pilgrams
Turkey
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SMD
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A B R
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E H I
S T B
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Feast
Leaves
Solution to previous puzzle
ROB P POK
B L CNPNC
BCZABOA
KRO I L R L
I OOA B Z B
K A DWZWD
NOM I NN I
I Y RBAK E
MGW P A K I
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© 2015 The Paper
of Montgomery County
The Paper of Montgomery County
Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2015
A7
Redistricting reform on the way
By Leeann Doerflein
leeann@thepaper24-7.com
Gerrymandering has
been a political tool since
the days of the founding
fathers. In the spirit of
election time, The League
of Women Voters (LWV)
held a lunch talk about
the political practice on
Monday.
The talk featured
Wabash Political Science
Professor Emeritus David
Hadley, League Member
Ruth Hallett and a documentary called “Gerrymandering: A Political
Eyesore.”
The video took a nationwide view of gerrymandering, with a look
at districts around the
country. The film made
the point that politicians in
the U.S. have the power to
choose their own constituents and sometimes, give
themselves a cushy path
to reelection for the party
in power. According to
the film gerrymandering is
“one of the nation’s best
kept secrets” and “the easiest way to fix an election
without outright fraud.”
The film also told the
story of California’s
redistricting reforms that
outlined a set of considerations that the people in
charge of drawing district
lines should consider
and took the pen out of
the hands of politicians.
Hadley said Indiana is also
looking into redistricting
reform.
Hallett outlined the steps
that California chose as
considerations, which she
said is a fairly good metric. She also spoke about
her experience at a public
meeting earlier in the year
that introduced the bi-partisan study committee that
will determine what can be
Considerations for REDISTRICTING
Ruth Hallett outlined the steps that Calif. suggested
to reform redistricting. The League hopes the Indiana
General Assembly will adopt its own set of considerations
in the coming years.
• Equal population—the population should be equaled
out within 10 percent of the population over the land
area of each district.
• Race—districts should not divide up a racial group to
make the group loose power.
• Areas should be contiguous—the land of the district
should not be separated.
• Contiguous—try to make districts in regular shapes.
• Geographical boundaries—try to keep counties,
precincts together.
done to reform state laws.
“We are pleased that, in
Indiana, at least we having
a study committee—which
we have not had before,”
Hallett said. “We will
try to keep people posted when they have more
meetings.”
Hadley said redistricting has been an issue in
Retiring when you want
The Paper
The Association of
Mature American Citizens says a study among
thousands of Americans
planning for retirement
conducted by Fidelity
Investments and the Stanford Center on Longevity
shows that nearly half
of them don't care how
much money they'll need
in order to stop working.
Forty-nine percent of
12,000 people who were
polled said they would
retire at a specific time of
their choosing.
The study also found
that "despite the misconception that today's
retirees are unhappy and
forced to live a frugal lifestyle, 82 percent of recent
retirees felt they retired
at the right time, and 85
percent feel retirement is
the most rewarding time
of their lives. In addition,
79 percent indicate that it
is easier than they thought
to live comfortably in retirement - they were able
to manage their savings
and adapt their lifestyle
based on their finances, if
necessary. However, 36
percent admit they wished
they had saved more, and
33 percent wished they
had started saving earlier."
New Salem Witch trials
The Paper
Halloween has come
and gone, but the feud
between a witch and a
warlock landed in Salem,
MA District Court, appropriately enough, says
the Association of Mature American Citizens.
Lori Sforza, one of
the few witches left in
Salem where the original
witch trials were held in
the 17th Century, won a
protective order against
Christian Day, the
self-described "world's
best-known warlock."
She says he has been
harassing her with late
night phone calls for
years.
Sforza and Day own
competing occult goods
shops in Salem. They
were in business together
for a number of years before Sforza decided to go
into business for herself.
That's when the troubles
started.
Day says he will appeal
the court's decision ensuring that a new round
of Salem Witch Trials
will be held there.
Indiana since 1816, when
the state formed. In the
1800’s, Hadley said,
Indiana politics were very
competitive so redistricting
was a hard issue. He said
the legislature could not
reach a consensus some
years, so the districts
stayed the same.
“Indiana was a very
closely competitive state in
terms of politics,” Hadley
said. “With the intensity
of partisan politics that
made redistricting really
important and it was an
issue that was fought over
tooth and nail because the
stakes were very high.”
Hadley said a Supreme
Court case in 1962 forced
Indiana to redraw their
districts and move more
toward single member
districts in the spirit of
one-person, one-vote.
In 1980, Indiana finally
moved fully to the single-member district model.
The one drawback, Hadley said, is that the single-member district model
has reduced competition in
Indiana races. He believes
that one thing that is missing from the redistricting
formula, is the insurance
of competition between
parties. His belief in com-
petition can be seen at the
Crawfordsville Municipal
Election. As Montgomery
County Democratic Party
Chairman he has made an
effort to get Democrats to
contest seats on the mostly
Republican City Council.
“This is the real fly in
the ointment—we have got
to get some kind of system
for redistricting that will
maybe increase the number of districts in which
people from both parties
can feel that they have
a chance at contesting,”
Hadley said.
Even though Montgomery County is split between two Indiana House
districts, he does not
think there is a redistricting problem at the local
level. He said the Clerk’s
Office does a good job of
drawing the lines fairly for
the county and Crawfordsville.
 Letters
Walk with National Commander
Dear Editor:
The National Commander of The American
Legion, Dale Barnett, of
Georgia and formerly of
Indiana, is touring the
state from Nov. 1 – 6 with
American Legion State
Commander Larry Lowry
and his state officers,
along with the Auxiliary
State President, Ruth Rairdon and some of her state
officers, also the Sons of
the American Legion State
Commander, Chirs Carlton and state officers.
red wing
Built to Fit. Built to Last.
They will be making
a stop on Wed. Nov. 4
at the American Legion
Bryon Cox Post #73, 101
Walter Remley Dr. The
American Legion National
Commander will have
an awareness walk from
1:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m.
The walk will leave the
post and head north on
South Washington Street,
go west on West Chestnut
Street, south on South
Grant Avenue, then east
on South Boulevard Avenue, then north on South
Washington Street back
to Post #72. The public is
invited to the Awareness
Walk.
The Awareness Walk
it to let the community
know there is an American Legion post in the
community and raise
awareness to veterans.
The American Legion
National Commander
holds awareness walks in
the states and the cities he
visits.
Rodney Strong
Veedersburg
J.M. THOMPSON INSURANCE
One g
good name.
A team of good people.
Insurance, Answers & A Personal Touch 362.8858 121 S. Washington St.
Þ BLOTTER From Page A4
1:37 a.m.—Report of
illegal consumption of
alcohol in the 1300 block
of 200 South.
9:35 a.m.—Report of an
assault in the 200 block of
Jackson Street in Waveland.
12:32 p.m.—Report of a
motor vehicle accident in
the 100 block of Washington Street in Waynetown.
2:47 p.m.—Report of a
civil complaint in the 300
block of Nebraska Street
in Ladoga.
6:04 p.m.—Report of an
assault in the 300 block of
Nebraska Street in Ladoga.
6:25 p.m.—Report of
a motor vehicle accident
in the 2800 block of State
Road 47.
6:38 p.m.—Report of
breaking and entering in
the 3200 block of 775
East.
7:53 p.m.—Report of
domestic incident in the
4800 block of Wellington
Boulevard.
Monday
6:59 a.m.—Report of
a motor vehicle accident
in the 100 block of Main
Street in Ladoga.
7:54 a.m.—Report of
a motor vehicle accident
at State Road 47 and 600
South.
Crawfordsville
Fire
Incidents Friday
10:00 a.m.—Report
of a medical run in the
900 block of Washington
Street.
10:30 a.m.—Report
of a medical run in the
800 block of Englewood
Drive.
10:55 a.m.—Report of
a medical run in the 300
block of Oak Street.
2:17 p.m.—Report of
a medical run in the 1300
block of 200 South.
2:34 p.m.—Report of
a medical run in the 500
block of Wallace Avenue.
5:17 p.m.—Report of
a medical run in the 1800
block of Michigan Street.
5:51 p.m.—Report
of a medical run in the
300 block of Dry Branch
Drive.
9:23 p.m.—Report of
a medical run in the 600
block of Washington
Street.
11:44 p.m.—Report of
a medical run in the 200
block of Whitlock Avenue.
Saturday
4:09 a.m.—Report of a
medical run in the 1100
block of Pike Street.
6:11 a.m.—Report of
a medical run in the 200
block of Jefferson Street.
9:32 a.m.—Report of
a medical run in the 100
block of 150 South.
10:44 a.m.—Report of
a medical run in the 1800
block of Summer Drive.
11:03 a.m.—Report of
a medical run in the 700
block of Wayne Avenue.
1:03 p.m.—Report of
a medical run in the 1700
block of Lafayette Road.
4:40 p.m.—Report of
a medical run in the 400
block of Chestnut Street.
5:58 p.m.—Report of
a medical run in the 9500
block of 475 West in
Waveland.
6:29 p.m.—Report of
a medical run in the 300
block of Green Street.
7:22 p.m.—Report of
a medical run in the 800
block of Center Drive.
9:32 p.m.—Report of
a medical run in the 200
block of Jefferson Street.
11:56 p.m.—Report of
a medical run in the 1300
block of 200 South.
Sunday
12:04 a.m.—Report
of a medical run in the
1500 block of Washington
Street.
1:25 a.m.—Report of a
medical run in the 1800
block of Michigan Street.
8:25 a.m.—Report of
a medical run in the 200
block of Main Street in
Ladoga.
5:34 p.m.—Report of
a medical run in the 200
block of Jefferson Street.
7:25 p.m.—Report of
a medical run in the 2000
block of Parkfield Court.
Linden Police
Incidents Friday
8:15 a.m.—Report of a
civil complaint in the 200
block of Walnut Street.
Darlington Fire
Sizes 5-15 In Stock
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Off Suggested Retail
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765-597-2133
8-7 Mon-Sat; Closed Sun.
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Turkey Run State Park at 3701
E. on CR 450 N., Marshall, IN
47859. Watch for Red Wing
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Surb’s Tires
210 N. Walnut St. • 362-0279
Oil$28.95
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must present coupon
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M-F 8-5; Sat. 8-12
up to 5qts on most domestic vehicles
most domestic vehicles
ThePaper24-7.com
Incidents Friday
1:33 p.m.—Report of a
fire in the 6700 block of
Bayou Road.
Madison Fire
Incidents Sunday
10:31 a.m.—Report of
a medical run in the 5600
block of 575 East.
Star Ambulance
Incidents Sunday
10:40 a.m.—Report of a
medical run in the 11400
block of Cornstalk Creek
Road in Ladoga.
11:51 a.m.—Report of
a medical run in the 3700
block of State Road 25 in
Waynetown.
Darlington
Police
Incidents Sunday
7:41 p.m.—Report of
public intoxication in 500
block of Main Street.
Thanks for reading The Paper!
Waterford Apartments Phase 1
2001 Zelmar Dr. • Crawfordsville
765-362-6131 • TDD 1-877-895-2077
waterford.mysamteam.com
Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2015
A8
The Paper of Montgomery County
Lafayette Symphony welcomes Kentucky Opera
The Paper
The Lafayette Symphony Orchestra will be partnering with the Kentucky
Opera Company for a
concert version of The
Marriage of Figaro on
Saturday, Nov. 21 (7:30
pm) at the Long Center
for the Performing Arts.
This comedic opera favorite tells the story of a
two-timing Count and his
plans to wreak havoc on
the wedding of the wily
barber Figaro and the
lovely Susanna.
The opportunity to
see live opera in the
Lafayette area is rare
and unique. “Lafayette
doesn't currently offer
any consistent sources of
live, professional caliber
opera. We are proud
that our partnership with
Kentucky Opera Company has been able to fill
this void in our cultural
landscape,” elaborates
LSO Executive Director
Sara Mummey.
“What's really distinctive about our presentations is that, unlike
a typical opera performance where the orchestra is hidden in a pit,
you get to see the entire
LSO onstage alongside
the singers. It's a really
immersive and engaging
experience.”
Music Director & Conductor Nick Palmer is
also eager for this year’s
collaboration. “The partnership with KY Opera
began several years ago,
featuring singers who
are just about to embark on major careers.
They have extraordinary
talents as both musicians
and actors and share their
great enthusiasm for opera with the audience,”
enthuses Palmer. “Our
last two productions were
of tragic operas, so we
thought it would be fun
lighten up and do a comedy! The Marriage of
Figaro has many twists
and turns in the plot... It
really keeps the audience
guessing until last-minute. “
If you are interested
in opera, but uninitiated,
Palmer says that this is a
great introduction to the
genre. “Mozart's music
is so accessible and easy
to enjoy. The overture
is well known, and there
are several great arias
and ensembles. The
action is fast-paced and
hilarious with a thrilling
finale!”
Launched in 1951 as a
non-profit organization,
the LSO is focused on
enriching the cultural life
of the Greater Lafay-
ette community and 14
surrounding counties
through musical excellence and educational
experience. About 80
percent of its patrons are
from Lafayette, West
Lafayette and Tippecanoe County, while the
remainder are from the
surrounding counties of
Benton, Carroll, Cass,
Clinton, Fountain, Howard, Jasper, Montgomery, Newton, Pulaski,
Tipton, Warren and
White.
For tickets and information, contact the LSO
at (765) 742-6463 or
lafayettesymphony.org.
Photo provided
A concert version of The Marriage of Figaro will appear at the Lafayette Symphony.
AFRAID
YOUR FURNACE
WON’T WORK?
765-364-9227 | 2301 Indianapolis Rd.,
Heater & Furnace
Check
Music has charms
The Paper
A new study concludes
that belting out show
tunes improves brain
health, reports the Association of Mature American Citizens.
Researchers at Virginia's George Mason
University chose an
elder care facility with
a focus on patients with
moderate to severe
dementia. One group of
patients was designated
as "listeners" and another
actually got together and
performed song from
such musicals as The
Wizard of Oz, The Sound
of Music and Oklaho-
ma. Before-and-after
tests showed cognitive
improvement among
the singers. Apparently
the listeners derived no
benefits.
Neuroscientist Jane
Flinn told London's
Guardian newspaper that:
"Even when people are in
the fairly advanced stages
of dementia, when it is
so advanced they are in a
secure ward, singing sessions were still helpful.
The message is: don't
give up on these people.
You need to be doing
things that engage them,
and singing is cheap,
easy and engaging."
$65
Valley Professionals
Community Health Center
Caring Professionals in Your Community.
Crawfordsville clinic NOW OPEN!
Local physician, Dr. Hwang, and his medical
team have joined Valley Professionals Community
Health Center to open a new health center
ůŽĐĂƟŽŶ͕ůŽĐĂƚĞĚĂƚ͗
ϭϴϭϬ>ĂĨĂLJĞƩĞZŽĂĚ (765) 362-5100
www.vpchc.org
Crawfordsville, IN
Find us on Facebook or visit www.vpchc.org
Available Services:
Primary health care
Behavioral health care
/ŵŵƵŶŝnjĂƟŽŶƐ
Chronic disease care
Sliding Fee Scale
Physical exams & more
“Valley Professionals Community Health Center provides comprehensive integrated
ŚĞĂůƚŚĐĂƌĞĨŽƌĂůůŝŶĚŝǀŝĚƵĂůƐ͕ǁŚŝůĞƉƌŽŵŽƟŶŐĞĚƵĐĂƟŽŶĂůŽƉƉŽƌƚƵŶŝƟĞƐ͘͟
DARREN C. CHADD
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Disposal Service and Recycling
Over 50 years service
Criminal Defense
Estate Planning &
Administration
Family Law &
Guardianship
Personal Injury
Competent Advocacy
Excellent Client Service
Competitive Rates
105 S. Washington St. ɸ Crawfordsville
(765) 361-9680
www.kirtleytaylorlaw.com
Commitment ‡
Service
‡ Community
Accepting:
Junk autos, CDBD, aluminum,
new and used steel, zinc, die
cast, copper, brass, all scrap
metal, plastic, and paper
Also available for roll off
containers and compactors.
Monday - Friday 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Saturday 8 a.m. - 12 p.m.
1270 Washington Ave.,
Frankfort
765-659-3721
The Paper of Montgomery County
Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2015
A9
Best dressed at Russellville Halloween Social
The Paper
The annual Russellville
Halloween Social was held
on Saturday, Oct. 24 at the
Russellville Community
Center with a large crowd
attending.
Winners in the Best
Animal category were:
Jordan Melvin, first; Orion Toepp, second; Carlee
Hodgen, third; Olive Bishop, fourth; Brooklyn Day,
fifth; Kassie Johnson,
sixth; Jada Stine, seventh;
Collin Spencer, eighth;
Bethney Albright, ninth;
Bently Lott, tenth.
Miscellaneous winners
were: Sidney Hodgen,
first; Violet Smith, second;
Thomas Hunley, third;
Crystal Barnes, fourth;
Trenton Oliver, fifth;
Colson Everman, sixth;
Benjamin Sperry, seventh;
Taylor Bullerdick, eighth;
Josie Walls, ninth; Everett
Harmon, tenth.
Most original winners
were: Florizabeth Omega, first; Dorothy Senter,
second; Brendon Oliver,
third; Skyler Strickland,
fourth; Ari Osterhoudt,
fifth; Jazlyn Wethington,
sixth; Jessica Stauarz, seventh; Marilyn Anderson,
eighth; Claran Richardson,
ninth.
Best Character Winners
were: Jayden Keup, first;
Chloe Oliver, second;
Madison Albright, third;
Brooklyn Ison, fourth;
Abby White, fifth; Drew
McGill, sixth; Melody Fulwider, seventh;
Addison Everman, eighth;
Ayler Oliver, ninth; Ayden
Oliver, tenth.
Best Halloween Character: Harmony Tate, first;
Brantley Fordice, second;
Nevaeh Million, third;
Tristan Million, fourth;
Larissa Ison, fifth; Trinity
Rossok, sixth; Kinzey
Brown, seventh; Donald
Bannon, eighth; Justin
Bachman, ninth; Isaac
Clark, tenth.
Prettiest: Lexy Oliver,
first; Kierrah Thornburg,
second; Jayden Odore,
third; Lea Gregg, fourth;
Sadie Oliver, fifth; Angel
Lott, sixth; McKinley
Oliver, seventh; Kadence
Toepp, eighth; Yuna
Anderson, ninth; Alaina
Markle, tenth.
Best Couple/Group:
David & Eithan Graves,
first; The Phillips &
Wrightsmans Families,
second; Cassidy & Zoe
Bannon, third; Marleigh
& Zane Sinnett, fourth;
Lisa Albright’s team, fifth;
Rusty, Thomas & Erin
Chaplain, sixth; Lynne
Newlin & Addy, seventh;
Kevin, Kerri & Tucker
Crowe, eighth.
Ugliest: Hayden
Overfelt, first; Kevin
Kays, second; Samantha
Harmon, third; Aiden
Richardson, fourth; Kole
Martellaro, fifth; Beau
Spencer, sixth.
Dponsors for the prize
money for this year’s
masquerade were Ron &
Sue Higgins from Ron’s
Wrecker Service, Chet
and Leslie Clodfelter with
Greencastle Physical Therapy, Tri-County Bank in
Russellville, , Co-Alliance
in Russellville, Dr. Wendy
Watt with Watt Family
Medical, Jim Baird State
Representative District 44
with Indiana Home Health
Care, Curt & Cindy
Wrightsman Farm along
with North Salem State
Bank, HBG Insurance
and Bonds at Greencastle,
Dave Grime with Russellville Elevator and Jason
Hartman from the Harrison Street Tavern
A treat bag was given to
all participants in the masquerade. The bags were
provided by Darrell Wiatt,
president of the community center along with
Kroger’s of Crawfordsville and Greencastle and
Walmart of Crawfords-
366-7971
Photos provided
(Left) The grand prize was Kyla Stine, dressed as the wicked with from “The Wizard of Oz”. (Right) Reserve
grand prize was Aryanna Bailey, dressed as Mary Poppins.
ville. Laryland Pumpkins
donated many gourds and
pumpkins for decorations.
The Russellville Community Center wishes to
thank everyone that came
to their social. They appreciate those that contributed
in any way.
361-1629
•Post Frame Building
•Retrofit
•Crawl Spaces
•New Construction
•Attics
Animal Welfare League
presents
Comedy Night at the Country Club
Saturday night, November 7th
Comedy show starts at 8:00
Starring Lee Cruse and Keith McGill
Tickets are $25
Call the animal shelter for ­ckets
362-8846 or
buy them at the Country Club night of.
Buffet dinner served from
6 p.m. – 7:30 p.m. with an
addion charge of $16
Doors open at 5:30 p.m.
Proceeds from the comedy show
will benefit the AWL
Sponsors
Sponsors
Arni’s
The Paper of Montgomery County
Central Indiana Rubber
Donna Tanner/ReMax
Perry Equipment
Nucor
E’er Ford
B&L Engineering
HHSB
Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2015
A10
merchandise
OFFICE SPACE
101 W. Main St.
2014 hot tub holds 6 new with
warranty 51 jets, LED lights,
waterfall, retails $8100, now $2800
Call (317) 225-5588
Several office
spaces available
from 150sq ft
and up on the
3rd floor.
3750 sq feet
available on
4th floor.
Call
765-366-0195
RENT-TO-OWN
Large Storage Building
100 McClure St.
Wingate, IN
Building is 34' x 74'
Call (765)267-0085 or (765)3667562
ICAN
AVIATION Grads work with
JetBlue, Boeing, NASA and others
- start here with hands on training
for FAA certification. Financial aid
if qualified. Call Aviation Institute of
Maintenance. 888-242-3197
Get results fast! Sell your
unwanted items, rent your
house, find a job or post a job!
Guaranteed results!
765-361-0100 Ext. 18
2, 3 and 4 bedroom homes,
Contract Sales, Hooks, 18-8700
362-0185.
www.hookshomesindiana.com
ICAN
Dish Network - Get MORE for
LESS! Starting $19.99/month (for
12 months.) PLUS Bundle & SAVE
(Fast Internet for $15 more/month.)
CALL Now 1-800-283-0560
Driver: CDL-A. Home Daily
Working 5 on/2 off!
Earn $60k/yr + Paid Vacation
& Bonuses
Benefits after 90 days! Stock
program.
877-600-2121
Driver: CDL-A. Earn $60k/yr & Get
Home Daily! Work 5 on/2 off. Paid
Vacation & Holidays.
Great Bonuses & Benefits after 90
days! 877-600-2121
Struggling with DRUGS or
ALCOHOL? Addicted to PILLS?
Talk to someone who cares. Call
The Addiction Hope & Help Line for
a free assessment. 844-838-8002
Class A CDL Flatbed Drivers/NEW
389 Pete's/Trucks set @ 70MPH/
Starting Pay up to .41cpm/Health
Ins./401K/Per Diem Pay/Home
Weekends/800-648-9915 or www.
boydandsons.com
25 DRIVER TRAINEES NEEDED
NOW! Learn to drive for TMC
Transportation. Earn $800 per week!
Local 15 day CDL training. TMC can
cover costs. 1-877-649-9611
Truck Drivers Obtain Class A CDL
in 3 weeks. Company Sponsored
Training. Also Hiring Recent Truck
School Graduates.Experienced
Drivers Must be 21 or Older. Call:
(866) 757-8315
AVIATION Grads work with JetBlue,
Boeing, NASA and others - start
here with hands on training for
FAA certification. Financial aid if
qualified. Call Aviation Institute of
Maintenance. 888-242-3197
ADOPTION: Happily married
couple promises 1st baby a lifetime
of LOVE. Expenses paid. Kathleen
& John, 1-800-818-5250
animals
Lab Puppies AKC. Silver,
champagne, chocolate, white, fox
red, black, and charcoal. 765-7446201 or billcraptreesilverlabs.com
Lost Dog, Last seen in Ladoga ,IN
Blue/Grey color Pitbull with white
on his chest. Thicker body build,
roughly knee high. Seven
months old, not fixed. Very lovable,
will greet anyone. Comes by the
name of Bobo. Please call
(765) 267-0828 with any
information!
$3500 SIGN ON BONUS
-Class A CDL Drivers
-Dedicated Routes & OTR
Available
-Very Competitive Pay per mile
with per diem programs & Benefits!
*** CALL: 765-471-8216 ***
DRIVERS: Dedicated Home
DAILY! Dedicated Runs.
Excellent Benefits. CDL-A
6mos OTR. 2995 S. Harding,
Indianapolis, IN. MTS: 800305-7223
Drivers: $5,000 sign-on
bonus! Minimum guaranteed
weekly pay! OTR Van:
$1,050 and OTR Flatbed:
$1,200. New Pay, Benefits
package. Home Every
Weekend! www.coxtransfer.
com 1 year CDL exp. Call
Bill: 1-800-593-3590
OTR Drivers wanted to pull vans
and flats for a local family owned
company. Flatbeds run from
Chicagoland to Florida. Vans do
not go to New York State, New
England or the Northwest including California. We get you home
every week. Offering Health Ins.
and 401K. 800-348-2232
Home For Sale
New Richmond
2 Bdr 1 Bath Fenced in yard
Needs work, willing to negotiate,
Call before 1pm. 765-339-7998
Get results fast! Sell your unwanted items, rent your house, find a job
or post a job! Guaranteed results!
765-361-0100 Ext. 18
The Southmont Schools are looking for persons
interested in being a substitute teacher for the
corporation. The qualifications are listed below:
60 hours of college credit or, 21 years of age with
a high school diploma.
Pay is $70/day
If interested, please contact:
Southmont Schools
P.O. Box 8, New Market, IN 47965
Phone: 765-866-0203
NOTICE
CEL&P NEW OFFICE HOURS
EFFECTIVE NOVEMBER 1, 2015
LOBBY AND DRIVE-THRU
adoption
MON-FRI 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.
♥ADOPTION ♥College Professor
& at-home-parents, music, world
Communication Center
travel, laughter, love awaits your
For
125
years,
CEL&P
has been
baby, Expenses paid. ♥♥1-800may
be reached
24 hours
933-1975♥♥ Patti & Andrew♥♥
Crawfordsville’s source for
low-cost,
a day
CEL&P
♥ADOPTION ♥A former Pro
reliable,
hometown
electricity.
Ice Skater (Stay-Home-Mom) &
765-362-1900
Devoted Successful Dad long for
i
sv
l le
E l e c t r i c Li
gh
baby. Expenses paid. ♥♥1-800966-3065♥♥
Karen
& Steve♥♥
CEL&P is
committed
to maintainting our reliable and secure service to our customers by investing in our
for sale
FOR SALE
Approximately .5 Acre wooded
lot on 600 W. 800 N. Montgomery
County asking $5,000 call
765-366-7562 or 765-267-0085
HHSB SEEKS PART TIME TELLER- Linden Branch
Must possess positive mindset, excellent customer service, computer &
organizational skills;
be friendly, professional, coachable &community-minded. Candidate will
handle variety of customer- related tasks.
Email resume by November 10th to Jennifer at jstanfield@myHHSB.com
wer
Po
25 DRIVER TRAINEES NEEDED
NOW! Learn to drive for TMC
Transportation. Earn $800 per
week! Local 15 day CDL training.
TMC can cover costs. 1-877-6499611
Real Estate
$2500 Sign On Bonus
CDL-A Drivers needed for
Lafayette, IN Company
Stay within 500 mile radius of
Lafayette
with out and back freight
Home EVERY weekend
401k,Ins,Vac/Hol Pay
Please call 765-471-8216
t&
AIRLINE CAREERS begin here Get FAA approved Aviation Tech
training. Job placement assistance Delta, Southwest, Boeing and many
others hire AIM grads. CALL AIM.
888-242-3197
700 rock albums and album table
$2000 OBO Call 765-794-4947
Employment
drivers wanted
Crawf
or
d
For Rent
The Paper of Montgomery County
infrastructure and upgrading our system. While we are seeking approval for a rate increase through the
Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission, which will allow us to perform these infrastructure improvements,
automobile
CEL&P’s rates will remain among the lowest in the area.
Silver 1999 Dodge Magnum 2WD
Blown motor, lots of good parts.Comparison of Monthly Electric Bills
(Based on Rates Effective as of July 2015)
Selling for $500. Call (765)3769835
Kubota BX1500 620 original
hours
Consumption
With belly mower, PTO never used
NeedsResidential
radiator and
a little work
Bills
Asking $1560. Call (765)8660798
Crawfordsville
Electric
Light & Power
Nearby
Utility 1
Nearby
Utility 2
Nearby
Utility 3
kWh
kWh
kWh
kWh
$
$
$
$
57.99
100.98
143.97
186.96
$
$
$
$
67.54
114.03
155.68
197.32
$
$
$
$
80.69
132.37
184.06
235.75
$
$
$
$
83.58
137.65
191.73
245.81
Small Commercial/General Service
Single Phase
3,000 kWh
Single Phase
7,500 kWh
Three Phase
15,000 kWh
Three Phase
30,000 kWh
$
$
$
$
298.79
716.98
1,413.95
2,807.90
$
$
$
$
312.96
670.33
1,265.92
2,457.11
$
$
$
$
339.12
804.31
1,556.61
3,053.22
$
$
$
$
353.96
840.65
1,651.80
3,274.09
Large Commercial/Industrial
150 kW
300 kW
1,000 kW
5,000 kW
$
$
$
$
5,174.27
10,348.55
34,495.16
167,395.35
$
$
$
$
5,444.38
10,873.77
36,210.90
173,781.29
$
$
$
$
5,612.94
11,150.88
36,994.60
201,910.00
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
60,000
120,000
400,000
2,500,000
kWh
kWh
kWh
kWh
$
5,864.68
$ 11,644.36
$ 38,616.20
$ 206,097.50
* Source data for CEL&P and Nearby Utility Bills: Effective Retail Rate Tariffs and Riders are from each individual utility website.
Crawfordsville Electric Light and Power is a proud member of the Indiana Municipal Power Agency (IMPA), the wholesale
power provider to 60 cities and towns in Indiana and Ohio. IMPA’s member’s rates are among the lowest in the state. For
more information, visit IMPA’s website at www.impa.com.
Crawfordsville2015RateAdpaper24-7.indd 1
Employment
Moving Sale
Moving Sale Everything
Must Go
1104 S. Elm Street
Crawfordsville, IN
Couch, Whitesburg table
and 2 matching
end tables, Living room
chairs, twin box
spring and mattress, four
night stands,
metal charcoal grill, paints &
stains, and many
home decorations. Fri
9-5 & Sat 9-5
WANTED
ISO: 17” rims
for a Ford F-150
Call Ken
(765) 362-8682
ISO: Transmission for a ’96
Jeep Grand Cherokee
All Time 4WD. Call or text
Sean @ (317)294-1158
Personal Assistant to run
errands, grocery shop, rides to
appointments, pet appointments,
bills and more. Call 765-362-6393
or 366-5308
Need fast, efficient cleaning at a
Reasonable price? Call Lindzy @
(765)918-9487 so she can help
Bathroom
7/15/2015 1:17:42 PM
Track & Field Assistant Coach
Wabash College, an NCAA Division III institution and
member of the North Coast Athletic Conference, invites
applications for the position of Track & Field Assistant Coach.
The successful candidate for this part-time, six-month position
will have recruiting experience and a background in middistance events. Duties include recruiting qualified studentathletes, designing and implementing training, and meet
management and coaching.
A bachelor’s degree, strong interpersonal and
communication skills, and an understanding of NCAA
Division III athletics is required.
To learn more about this position and how to apply please
visit: www.wabash.edu/employment. Review of applications
will begin immediately.
Wabash College, a liberal arts college for men, seeks
faculty and staff committed to providing quality engagement
with students, high levels of academic challenge and support,
and meaningful diversity experiences that prepare students
for life and leadership in a multicultural global world. We
welcome application from persons of all backgrounds. EOE
Computer Service
construction
Bathrooms • R • US
Tuck Pointing
Locally Owned and Operated
Tub/Shower Conversions
Ceramic Tile/Flooring
Pedestal Sinks/Vanities
Plumbing Repairs
Complete Job
25 Years Experience
Free Estimates
Bob Berzé
765-366-6665
Construction
230-2132
970 N Englewood
Crawfordsville, IN 47933
www.phantompoint.com
Managed IT
•
Security
•
Phone Systems
•
PC Repair
• Turn Key IT Solutions
drain service
Locksmith
FREE Estimates
765-918-3001 or 765-364-9510
fencing
Johnson’s Drain Service
C & D FENCE CO.
If your drain won’t flow, just let us know!
www.johnsonsdrainservice.com
Free Estimates
Septic and Sewer
Our family serving yours since 1968
Flashing
Rain Cap Installation
All types of concrete work
Room addition/remodel
Tyler Johnson
Owner
765-794-4705
Cell: 765-376-8310
Septic and Sewer
1-800-964-7126
Cell 765-918-0158
Fax 765-339-4022
Harry Dawson
Owner
All types of fence • 20 Yrs. Experience • Insured
candfence@hotmail.com
canddfencecompany.com
tree removal
J & D TREE SURGERY
MONTGOMERY COUNTY’S OLDEST RUNNING TREE SERVICE
• Aerial Bucket Service • 24 Hour Emergency Service
• Fully Insured • Proof Of Insurance
• Free Written Estimate • Compare Ours To Others
• Owners Always On The Job
If you haven’t gotten our estimate you don’t know Jack!
Jack Steele 765-942-2634
MIKE RAISOR
2051 Sagamore Pkwy So., Lafayette, IN 47905 • 765-447-9444 • 877-484-4557 • www.Raisor.com
JC-0000246681
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