3 arrested in Ironwood meth busts

Transcription

3 arrested in Ironwood meth busts
Sunny
High: 56 | Low: 36 | Details, page 2
yourdailyglobe.com
DAILY GLOBE
Friday, May 10, 2013
75 cents
3 arrested
in Ironwood
meth busts
Cortney Ofstad/Daily Globe
A FIREFIGHTER works on a vehicle that started on fire on Tuesday near the intersection of Lake and Ayer streets in Ironwood. The incident was reported at around 10 a.m., and firefighters responded from the Ironwood Public Safety Department and the Ironwood City
Volunteer Fire Department. No injuries were reported during the incident.
Iron County Jail to buy new security equipment
By CORTNEY OFSTAD
cofstad@yourdailyglobe.com
HURLEY — The Iron County Finance
Committee approved the purchase of new
security equipment for the Iron County
Jail during a meeting on Thursday at the
Iron County Courthouse.
Sheriff Tony Furyk presented two bids
he received for the project. The committee approved a motion to accept a bid
from Security and Access Control Specialists Inc., of Verona, Wis.
The bid package included installing or
updating cameras, which featured
‘unlimited expandability,’ cameras that
State commission
approves wolf
hunt in Michigan
DETROIT (AP) — Michigan
now has a wolf hunting season
after a board voted Thursday to
allow hunters and trappers to
kill up to 43 of the animals in
selected parts of the state’s
Upper Peninsula.
The 6-week season will open
Nov. 15 and end Dec. 31.
The seven-member Natural
Resources commission voted 6-1
in favor of the plan during its
weekly meeting in Roscommon.
The plan was recommended by
state wildlife regulators.
Michigan becomes the sixth
state to authorize hunting
wolves since federal regulations
were lifted over the past two
years in the western Great
Lakes and the Northern Rockies.
About 1,100 wolves have been
killed by hunters and trappers in
Minnesota, Wisconsin, Montana,
Idaho and Wyoming. About 658
of the animals are believed to be
roaming remote areas in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula.
WOLF
—
page 5
are IP-based for better definition and the
ability to read all of the current cameras
on one monitor.
The cost for the project is $53,763.
According to clerk Mike Saari, the sheriff’s department has more than $25,000
in their budget for the project, with the
additional funds coming from next year’s
budget.
Saari said that the project would be
paid in full this year, but the amount
that the sheriff’s department is short on
will come out of next year’s budget.
“We’ll put in it next year’s budget, and
we won’t spend it, so it will be a wash,”
page 5
—
page 5
Students hold potluck meal for final exam
By KATIE PERTTUNEN
kperttunen@yourdailyglobe.com
IRONWOOD TOWNSHIP — Students from Daniel Obradovich’s
Native American History course at
Gogebic Community College had a
fun twist on their final on Wednesday. They were tasked with bringing
in Native American foods for a
“Native Food Final Exam.”
Obradovich brought dilly beans
and squash soup, which none of the
students seemed eager to try, he said.
Scott Sturkol and Joe Weickert made
elk stew and Jackie Leannah and
Avery Jackson provided Indian venison tacos. Lily Mattson came with fry
bread and Aaron Tilton prepared
venison-pork jalapeno brats, a Wisconsin twist on Native American cuisine, Obradovich said. Derrick
FOOD
—
page 5
Ironwood show
choir takes the stage
n Performances set
today, Saturday at
Theatre North
By ALYSSA SCHWAB
Daily Globe Intern
IRONWOOD — The Luther
L. Wright High School show
choir Accent! will perform
today and Saturday with
shows at 6 and 8 p.m. both
nights at Theatre North in
Ironwood. Accent’s theme for
this year’s show is “Accent!
Road Trip.”
“There’s a lot of fun music
covering a wide variety of
eras,” director Denise Woodward said, “such as ‘Eye of the
Tiger,’ ‘September’ and several
medleys bringing a large variety of music.”
Some of the students have
helped with choreography for
the show, including Jourdyn
McGrath, Alyssa Schwab, Victoria Agee and Aleah Maki.
Daily Globe Inc.
118 E. McLeod Ave.
PO Box 548
Ironwood, MI 49938
A
AR
RE
E
Woodward also credited
Ironwood resident Claudia
Panosso with helping with the
dance steps.
“This show pulls together
many community talents
including student vocalists,
artists and choreographers,
adult musicians and actors,
and a sound, light and tech
crew,” said Woodward. “It’s
truly a collaborative effort the
community will enjoy.”
Local musicians joining the
group
include
Annette
Burchell, Keith Cannon, John
Grew and Matt Clausen and
sound director is Donny Osier.
Accent! also participated in
the State Solo and Ensemble
contest this past weekend.
They received a score of 2 on a
1–5 scale with 1 being the
best.
Members include: seniors,
Patrick
Heffner,
Alyssa
ACCENT!
—
page 5
Larry Holcombe/Daily Globe
MEMBERS OF Luther L. Wright High School’s show choir Accent! pose for a picture at their rehearsal Wednesday night in Ironwood. Students include, from left, first row: Emily Ruotsala, Vanessa Clausen and Lea Benyo;
second row: Caitlyn Agee, Jourdyn McGrath, Victoria Agee, Alyssa Schwab, Pam Romans, Aleah Maki, Anna
Zacharkiw, Emma Tervonen and Brittany Stella; third row: Jacob Cadeau, Logan Jacisin, Noah Terzano,
Patrick Heffner, Dylan Neill, Robert Burchell, Noel Chiapuzio and Cara Thomas. The group will preform
shows at Theatre North tonight and Saturday at 6 and 8 p.m. both nights.
W E AT H E R
TODAY
Sunny
—Details, page 2
yourdailyglobe.com
906-932-2211
W
WE
E
—
METH
AC C E N T ! S P R I N G C O N C E RT
C O N TA C T U S
Vol. 94, Ed. 110
Karin Eckdahl, a representative from
FINANCE
for assistance with clean-up.
Tina Marie Rappley, 53, of Ayer
Street, was charged with 11 felony
counts including seven counts of
operating or maintaining a meth lab,
one count of delivery/manufacture of
methamphetamine or ecstasy, one
count of operating or maintaining a
laboratory in the presence of a minor,
one count of operating or maintaining a laboratory near specified
places, all 20-year felonies, and one
count of possession of methamphetamine or ecstasy, a 10-year
felony.
Gerald John Abramson, 52, of
Mansfield Street, was charged with
six felony counts including: operating
Food for thought
Saari said.
The installation of the security features could expand into the courthouse
and court room in the future, according
to Furyk. The county could add features
when needed, allowing financial flexibility.
“You can add what you need when you
can afford it,” Furyk said.
Discount medication card
IRONWOOD — Two search warrants conducted by the Gogebic Iron
Area Narcotics Team at 228 West
Ayer St., Apartment 1, Ironwood,
and 229 S. Mansfield St., Ironwood,
yielded 24 felony charges for three
Ironwood residents, according to a
press release.
The first warrant was executed at
8:30 a.m. Wednesday at the Ayer
Street apartment and an active
methamphetamine lab was found.
GIANT was assisted by the Upper
Peninsula Substance Enforcement
Team, according to the press release.
The second warrant was executed
at 2:30 a.m. at the South Mansfield
Street residence. GIANT officers
found evidence of prior methamphetamine cooks. UPSET was called
Thursday
High
47
Low
38
Year ago today
High
60
Low
35
Today’s records
High
86 (1922)
Low
16 (1981)
B
BU
UY
YI
IN
NG
G!
!!
!
INSIDE
Precipitation
To 7 a.m.
Thursday
.1 in.
Snowfall
To 7 a.m.
Thursday
none
Snow on ground none
Season total 223.7 in.
Last season 120.9 in.
G
GO
OL
LD
D
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COUNTRY CHARM
Business . . . . . . . . . . .7
Classifieds . . . . . .14-15
Comics . . . . . . . . . . .13
Community . . . . . . . . .3
Obituaries . . . . . . . . . .6
Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . .4
Sports . . . . . . . . . .9-11
Wraparound porch gives
charming country home
beautiful outdoor seating
—Home & Garden,
page 16
S
SI
IL
LV
VE
ER
R
INDEX
&
&
M
MO
OR
RE
E
5.50 x Face Value!
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Mon.-Wed.-Thurs.-Fri. 9:30-4:30pm, Sat. 10-3pm (call first)
AREA / STATE
2 l FRIDAY, MAY 10, 2013
Solid Waste Committee OKs
new landfill in Ontonagon
FIVE-DAY FORECAST FOR IRONWOOD
TODAY
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
MONDAY
TUESDAY
By JAN TUCKER
Sunny
Rain/Snow
30º
43º
36º
56º
Winds: 5-10 mph N
Sunny
46º
Winds: 15-20 mph NW
Mostly Sunny
32º
59º
Winds: 15-20 mph NW
Winds: 5-10 mph W
Bergland
58/36
Ironwood
56/36
45
Wakefield
60/36
Temperature
High . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .47
Low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .38
Precipitation
Yesterday . . . . . . . . . . . . none
MOON PHASES
First
Full
Last
5/17
5/24
5/31
New
52º
70º
Winds: 5-10 mph SW
SUN AND MOON
NATIONAL WEATHER
REGIONAL WEATHER
Today
52/33 s
51/34 s
64/42 s
57/37 mc
60/42 sh
51/39 pc
60/42 cl
43/36 s
61/35 s
65/42 s
63/38 pc
Ashland
Duluth
Eau Claire
Escanaba
Grand Rapids
Green Bay
Madison
Marquette
Rhinelander
St. Paul
Wausau
Sat.
45/31
43/32
51/29
53/33
62/38
56/34
57/35
46/33
48/27
51/35
53/29
sh
s
s
sh
mc
sh
pc
sh
sh
s
s
Chicago
Dallas
Kansas City
Los Angeles
New York
Orlando
Phoenix
Seattle
Today
55/45 sh
81/61 mc
65/50 sh
73/60 mc
76/62 s
90/69 s
91/68 s
76/52 s
Sat.
62/42
79/60
67/43
81/61
76/54
90/69
94/71
77/53
Weather (Wx): cl/cloudy; fl/flurries; pc/partly cloudy;
ra/rain; rs/rain & snow; s/sunny; sh/showers;
sn/snow; t/thunderstorms; w/windy
s
s
s
s
t
s
s
pc
?
WEATHER TRIVIA
Are there any continents that do
not have hurricanes?
Answer: Yes. Only Antarctica is immune to
hurricanes.
The Corner Store
6/8
ONTONAGON — The Ontonagon County Solid Waste Committee Thursday approved an
amendment to the county waste
plan to permit the Evergreen
Landfill and Recycling Center to
receive waste from the five western counties in the Upper Peninsula. The landfill is on the site of
the former landfill operated by
Smurfit Stone Corporation off M28 in Ontonagon Township. The
present license permits waste
from other states but not elsewhere in Michigan. The approval
followed a public hearing
A large crowd attended the
hearing with 18 speaking. Fifteen of the comments were in
favor of the amendment, while
three opposed passage.
The session was chaired by
Kim Stoker, of the Western U.P.
Planning and Development
Region, which is the designated
planning agency for Ontonagon
County.
Bob Botkins, who lives 1 mile
from the existing landfill, noted
that he had opposed the landfill
when it was planned and opened
by Smurfit. He said he has a new
flowing well which cost $22,000
and he was concerned with possible pollution of water from the
landfill. He said that Smurfit
had strong requirements for testing and monitoring but was concerned about accountability. He
added he had no problems with
contaminated water, but did not
know when the water is tested or
received results.
Dale Venema said he had not
seen the waste plan or the
amendment, but noted the U.P.
is just a strip of land between
fresh water and putting a dump
on that strip of land is “absurd.”
He wanted to know who would
monitor the landfill.
The third person objecting to
the amendment was Norm Pestka. He said he ran the landfill for
35 years and had agreed to work
with the Evergreen Landfill
Sunrise . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5:31 a.m.
Sunset . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8:22 p.m.
Moonrise . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5:57 a.m.
Moonset . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9:13 p.m.
Minocqua
65/35
ALMANAC
Partly Cloudy
Today we will see sunny skies with a high
temperature of 56º, humidity of 29%. North wind
5 to 10 mph. The record high temperature for
today is 86º set in 1922. Expect partly cloudy
skies tonight with a 50% chance of showers.
Marenisco
60/36
Watersmeet
2
62/35
Bessemer
Hurley 57/36
55/35
51
Mercer
59/35
Manitowish
62/35
Upson
56/35
jantuck@jamadots.com
OUTLOOK
Ontonagon
54/36
Saxon
54/37
50º
C A R WA S H
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owner Pat Tucker but was
turned down. Pestka said that an
article in the paper said that
Tucker wanted to run a site for
construction and demolition
refuse, but he does not have a
permit for that yet. He said he
thought the landfill might take
waste from the mill and “that
stuff’s terrible.”
Tucker said there is not a
question of a license. “We already
have a license, the question is if
we can bring waste from other
counties in the Upper Peninsula.” He continued that he has a
contract to bring in ash from the
Warden Power Plant in L’Anse
and would be applying to the
DNR for a permit to take construction and demolition material and recycle. He added there
has never been a leaking issue.
He said the DNR has asked him
to install additional wells “ which
we are doing for each type of
waste regulation.”
Steve Walsh of Traxys White
Pine Refinery, White Pine Electric and L’Anse Warden said the
issue is competition. He said the
L”Anse plant ash is presently
being shipped to Delta County.
He said the Evergreen Landfill is
a smart idea and recommended
the approval.
Fred Sliger of the Ontonagon
EDC and others testified that the
landfill would create jobs. Sliger
said he is an industrial engineer
and there is a need for a constriction and demolition landfill.
Meredith Strong, who was the
environmental engineer for
Smurfit, said Michigan rules are
stricter than those in California
and the site would be monitored.
She said the landfill would be an
asset to the community. Later
when the board met, she denied
assertions from Waste Management representatives and said
that the Smurfit landfill does
have a liner.
Wayne Bouchey, a former
Smurfit employee, said the landfill was managed to the letter of
the law and in 10 years there
were no DEQ or EPA violations.
Several others testified as to the
need for jobs, and the fact that
Tucker is a local man and cares
about the area. Steve Moreau of
Northland Electric said that the
area “needs competition. I am
tired of being ripped off,” he said.
He then added that he never
heard of any contamination by
either Waste Management or the
Smurfit landfill.
Following the hearing the
Solid Waste Management Board
met and discussed the amendment. Two representatives of
Waste Management oppose the
amendment. Bob Pliska, engineer for Waste Management
drew attention to a letter that
lawyers from a group to which
Waste management is a member,
objected to the landfill amendment. They claimed the liner is
not one of present technology.
Strong answered that it is in
compliance with current Michigan law.
Village Manager Joe Erickson
said he had worked with the
Solid Waste board in Marquette
and, “Every county in the state
should have a construction and
demolition landfill.” He claimed
it will “actually prolong the
capacity of the Waste Management facility.”
Prior to the vote, Tucker said
that the only issue in the amendment is “can I accommodate
waste from the five-county area.”
He praised the work of Waste
Management, but said, “Waste
Management should not be
allowed to maintain a monopoly.”
The
amendment
was
approved 10-2, with both Waste
Management members voting no
and Ontonagon County Supervisor Steve Store abstaining.
Stoker reported that the
amendment now moves to the
Ontonagon County Board for
approval and, if approved, must
be sent to every township board
for approval. It would require 67
percent of the township boards to
approve.
House GOP backs expanded
Medicaid, with conditions Wisconsin state committee approves
LANSING (AP) — House
Republicans on Thursday proposed an expansion of Medicaid
eligibility to more low-income
Michigan residents, but only if
major changes are made to the
government health insurance
program such as limiting ablebodied adults to four years of coverage.
The time limit — touted by
lawmakers as the first such proposal in the country — would
need the unlikely blessing of the
Obama administration and ran
into immediate opposition from
Republican Gov. Rick Snyder
and Democrats.
Snyder and others pushing for
Medicaid expansion under the
federal health care law, though,
credited GOP lawmakers for
putting forth a House bill for discussion. Senate Republicans met
behind closed doors to talk about
the plan and reached no consensus. It was crafted by a GOP
workgroup of two representatives and two senators.
“Government assistance is not
an entitlement. Government
assistance should not be a
lifestyle. Government assistance
should be a temporary hand up,”
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House Speaker Jase Bolger told
reporters at the Capitol.
So far Republicans have
resisted a push by Snyder, hospitals, insurers and advocates for
the poor to make 320,000 more
residents eligible for Medicaid
health insurance in 2014. The
legislation unveiled Thursday
would:
—ask low-income recipients to
pay up to 5 percent of their
income on health care — with a
sliding scale — and require them
to start paying monthly premiums.
—create
health
savings
accounts for recipients and let
them choose whether to be under
the traditional Medicaid system
or buy their own coverage on a
marketplace known as an
exchange.
—lower premiums and copays if recipients quit smoking or
lose weight, for instance, and follow their doctor’s orders.
Bolger, R-Marshall, stressed
that the 48-month cap on benefits is for able-bodied adults and
would not apply to children,
seniors or the disabled.
“We’re not aware of that being
introduced anywhere in the
country,” he said, contending the
goal is to make people healthier
and save taxpayers money.
“What we’ve sought to do is take
the best of Indiana, add the best
of Arkansas and add Michigan
criteria to that.”
new 15-mile residency rule
MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Public safety workers in Wisconsin
couldn’t be required to live any
closer than within 15 miles of
the city or county where they
serve under a provision added to
the state budget by the Legislature’s Joint Finance Committee
on Thursday.
The committee rejected a
bipartisan attempt to keep current law in place, which allows
units of local government to
establish even more restrictive
residency requirements for all
public workers. Gov. Scott Walker proposed doing away with any
residency
requirements
statewide.
While more than 100 cities
have residency requirements,
the change would most dramatically affect Milwaukee. All Milwaukee city and school district
employees must live in the city.
Under the change, those city
and school employees could
move anywhere they wanted.
Police, fire and emergency workers would have to live within 15
miles of the city.
Opponents said the change
could devastate Milwaukee as
middle-class residents leave for
the suburbs.
“I am very afraid the actions
we take today are going to be
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harmful to some of the nicest
neighborhoods left in the city of
Milwaukee,” said Sen. Glenn
Grothman, R-West Bend. “If this
doesn’t work out right, we’re not
going to be able to take it back.”
Democratic Sen. Bob Wirch,
of Racine, joined with three
other Democrats in opposing
removing the residency requirements.
“I’m worried that if we get rid
of residency we’re going to take a
large step toward Milwaukee
getting to be like Detroit, and I
don’t want to see that,” Wirch
said.
Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett and other mayors strongly
opposed removing the residency
requirement. The change was
endorsed by Milwaukee police
and firefighter unions that
backed Walker in his gubernatorial campaigns in which he
defeated Barrett.
Walker supports the move as
a way to give public workers
more freedom on where they
live. Opponents, including mayors and other local leaders, said
doing away with it would have a
devastating effect on the safety
and economic health of their
communities.
Supporters of the residency
requirement generally argue
that there is a benefit to having
public workers live in the communities they serve. They say it
increases response time and
ensures the workers have a vested interest in the area.
Opponents say employees
shouldn’t be denied the right to
live where they like. And they
say a residency requirement
could limit applicants and
inhibits promotions.
“This is the United States of
America and people should have
the freedom to live, work and
recreate wherever they want,”
said committee member Rep. Pat
Strachota, R-West Bend.
A vote to remove Walker’s
proposal in the budget failed on
an 8-8 vote. Four Republicans
joined with Democrats to remove
it, but it fell one vote short of
succeeding.
Committee co-chair Rep. John
Nygren floated the possibility of
a compromise on Wednesday
that would involve the radius
restriction but also include a
penalty for employees who don’t
live in the city.
Nygren said Thursday he
couldn’t get enough support for
that approach. Instead, he introduced the 15-mile radius idea
without any penalty for those
who live outside city boundaries.
Snyder signs bills to keep 0.08 pct. for drivers
LANSING (AP) — Republican Gov. Rick Snyder has signed legislation to prevent a scheduled rise in Michigan’s blood-alcohol content
limit for drivers.
The legislation signed Thursday will keep the legal limit for
drivers’
5 blood-alcohol content at 0.08 percent. The limit was set to
revert back to 0.10 percent in October because of a sunset provision
in current state law.
Snyder says in a statement that it sends the message that “Michigan is serious about stopping drinking and driving” and helping law
enforcement protect public safety.
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THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM
FRIDAY, MAY 10, 2013
Ontonagon St. Vincent Society assists many
By JAN TUCKER
jantuck@jamadots.com
ONTONAGON — The lengthy winter
and the economic conditions locally have
impacted the needs of the area, Ontonagon
St. Vincent de Paul Society President
Nancy Block reported to the members and
volunteers this week.
The profits from the St. Vincent de Paul
Store supports the charity of the Society
although the store and Society are separate
entities with separate boards and supervisors. The two entities work under the same
umbrella.
The food pantry is also a separate entity
and operates in the same building as the
store.
All three are part of the St. Vincent
Umbrella and can help those in need coordinate with other organizations.
Block said in the past fiscal year, the
Society in Ontonagon assisted 435 people
with utility bills, rent, medicine and travel.
The bottom line was $32,042. The long winter made a difference with the needs, especially utility bills, Block said.
The Society could not exist, Block said,
without the volunteers. In the fiscal year
2,473 volunteer hours were logged in the
county.
The Holy Family Conference of St. Vincent de Paul, along with the Bessemer and
Ironwood Conferences from Gogebic County, make up the membership of the Ironwood District of St. Vincent de Paul.
There are six districts and 33 conferences
in the U.P. The next district-wide meeting
will be hosted at Holy Family Catholic
Church in Ontonagon May 18.
WUPTA plans
youth ORV
safety course
Submitted photo
UPPER PENINSULA Girl Scout adult volunteers display recognition certificates at a luncheon April 27 in Marquette. Gina DeCarlo, of Ironwood, and Lisa Spencer, of Wakefield, were among those honored for service in
their communities and their outstanding volunteerism within the organization, a news release said. Pictured
are, from left: Karen Jarvis, Hancock, Heather Modell, Marquette, Abigail Stewart, Escanaba, Christina Martinson, Kingsfod, Karen Allor, Manistique, Laurie Britton, Powers, Janet Holz, Newberry, DeCarlo, Spencer
and Heather Fitzgerald, Chassell. Eleven other volunteers from across the U.P. and northeast Wisconsin were
also honored at the event.
IRONWOOD TOWNSHIP —
The Western U.P. Trail Association will hold an off-road vehicle
youth safety course Saturday,
May 18, from 8:30 a.m. to 2:30
p.m at Gogebic Community College.
The classroom instructiononly course meets in Room B22
in the Jacob Solin Center.
Seating is limited and
advance registration is required.
Attendees should bring a bag
lunch.
For more information, or to
register, call instructors Ross or
Kim Kolesar at 906-932-4519.
3
MI-TRALE attends
meeting on right-of-ways
n Michigan state
departments hear
comments from
many ORV groups
ESCANABA — MI-TRALE
was among 21 Upper Peninsula
ORV groups that attended a
right-of-way workshop and
meeting May 2 at Bay College
in Escanaba.
The meeting was sponsored
by the Michigan Department of
Natural Resources and Michigan Department of Transportation. “The purpose of the meeting was to identify and collect
proposed geographic locations
and justifications for the club’s
ORV route connections within
MDOT highway right-of-way
that link essential services to
official MDNR ORV trails and
local user group ORV trails,”
said Donna Wolf, communications coordinator for MITRALE.
Attendees offered proposed
locations mapped out with corresponding justification writeups for each. An MDOT staff
member collected the data to
pinpoint exact locations through
Geographic Information Systems.
MI-TRALE representatives
included Don Helsel, president,
Tom Chase, vice president,
Linda Schulz, secretary, Kim
Sims, director, Mike Schulz,
trail manager, and member Ken
Berry.
Local clubs presented maps
of proposed right-of-ways, or
ROW, in small groups for each
of four counties. “MDOT will be
composing a map showing all
the ROW requests and will
bring that to a second meeting
to be held later this month with
the MDNR,” Wolf said.
“I believe this meeting has
set the tone of cooperation as to
how local clubs can work together with MDOT and the MDNR
to jointly establish safe trail and
route connectors requiring
ROW along our state highways,” Helsel said.
Other MI-TRALE attendees
described the meeting as “positive” and said cooperation
between MDOT, MDNR and the
ORV groups worked well.
“MI-TRALE acknowledges
that safety is the No. 1 priority
that we have for our guests,”
Wolf said. The group plans to
continue working with private
landowners to find ways to connect trails without using highway ROWs.
Community calendar
Across the Range
Legal planning
presentation
MERCER, Wis. — Mercer
Health and Wellness will sponsor a legal planning presentation, “Seven Simple Steps to
Legal Peace of Mind,” Tuesday,
May 14, from 1 to 3 p.m. at the
Mercer Community Center.
Central Wisconsin elder law
attorney Janet M. Lattyak will
discuss simple steps people can
take to protect their resources
and rights in aging.
“From powers of attorney to
wills, we’ll highlight the legal
documents that speak for you
when you cannot, and we’ll
overview important benefits for
Veterans Administration veterans and their surviving spouses,” said Geri Reynolds, Mercer
Health
and
Wellness
spokesperson.
The free program is a general session, not legal advice for
specific individual situations.
For more information, or to
register, call Reynolds at 715476-3720.
Class of 1963
IRONWOOD — The Luther
L. Wright high school class of
1963 will hold a reunion meeting on Tuesday, May 14 at
Larry’s Luck Strikes.
Classmates will meet at noon
for lunch and meeting to follow
at 1 p.m.
All classmates are encouraged to attend.
Story hour
WAKEFIELD — Tiny Tot
Story Hour will be held at the
Wakefield Public Library Tuesday at 10 a.m.
Activities include chicken
stories and a craft. A snack will
also be provided.
For more information, call
906–229–5236 or email dengel@uproc.lib.mi.us
Spring concert
WATERSMEET
—
The
Watersmeet Township School
District will hold its annual
spring concert Tuesday at 6
p.m. in the high school gym.
Performers include each of
the elementary grades and K4
singing patriotic and pop songs;
the fifth and sixth grade band
performing some of their
favorites; and the high school
band playing selections including “The Best of Green Day”
and “Highlights from Phantom
of the Opera.”
“The concert will be sure to
delight and entertain, and is
free to the public,” Watersmeet
music director Dan Mykkanen
said.
Email calendar items and community news to news@yourdailyglobe.com. For more information,
call Community Editor Michelle
Thomasini at 906-932-2211.
Today
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.
Friends of the Ironwood
Carnegie Library Used Book Sale
Members-Only Preview, 2-6 p.m.,
Ironwood
Memorial
Building.
Friends membership required; dues
may be payed at sale.
Fish Fry, 3:30-8 p.m., Bessemer
VFW; eat in or carry-out. 906-6670812.
Fish Fry, 4-8:30 p.m., Ironwood
American Legion Post 5; eat in or
takeout. Wheelchair accessible;
906-932-3612.
Accent! Spring Concert, 6 and
8 p.m., Theatre North, Ironwood.
Gogebic Community College
Spring Commencement, 6:30
p.m., Lindquist Student Center,
GCC, Ironwood Township.
The Backroom Boys in Concert, 7 p.m. EDT, Ontonagon Theater of Performing Arts.
Alcoholics Anonymous, 7:30
p.m., Our Lady of Peace Catholic
Church, Ironwood. area74.org.
Saturday, May 11
Friends of the Ironwood
Carnegie Library Used Book Sale,
7:30 a.m.-2 p.m., Ironwood Memorial Building.
Mercer-Manitowish
Waters
American Legion Auxiliary Annual French Toast Breakfast, 8-11
a.m., Mercer (Wis.) School. 715476-7655.
Bessemer Township-Ramsay
Heritage Committee Rummage
and Bake Sale, 8 a.m.-4 p.m.,
Bessemer Township Hall, Ramsay.
Brian Nasi Heart Memorial
Run/Walk, 9 a.m., Hurley K-12
School.
Bessemer Citywide Garage
Sale, 9 a.m. start, Bessemer and
Ramsay area.
Treasure Room, 9 a.m.-noon, at
Iron County Food Pantry, 72 Michigan Ave., Montreal, Wis. 715-5614450.
Kimball Homemakers Annual
Pie Social and Rummage Sale, 9
a.m.-3 p.m., Kimball (Wis.) Community Center.
Beaks and Binoculars Hike, 10
a.m. EDT, meet at visitor center,
Porcupine Mountains Wilderness
State Park, near Silver City. 906885-5206.
Mother’s Day Story Time, 10:30
a.m., for kids up to third grade,
Bessemer Public Library. Register at
906-667-0404.
Alcoholics Anonymous, 11
a.m., Salem Lutheran Church, Ironwood. area74.org.
Alcoholics
Anonymous
Women’s Group, 5 p.m., Salem
Lutheran, Ironwood. area74.org.
Accent! Spring Concert, 6 and
8 p.m., Theatre North, Ironwood.
Sunday, May 12
Mother’s Day Breakfast Buffet,
7 a.m.-1 p.m., Wakefield VFW.
Mother’s Day Brunch, 9 a.m.-1
p.m., Ironwood Township building.
Proceeds benefit Ironwood Township Fire Department.
Alcoholics Anonymous, 1 p.m.,
closed meeting, Salem Lutheran
Church, Ironwood.
National
Finnish-American
Chorus Mother’s Day Concert, 2
p.m., Zion Lutheran Church, Ironwood.
Alcoholics Anonymous, 7:30
p.m., Sharon Lutheran Church,
Bessemer. area74.org.
Monday, May 13
Gogebic-Ontonagon Community Action Agency food commodity distribution, seniors, mothers,
infants, and children, 9 a.m.-noon,
100 Mill St., Bessemer. 906-6670283.
Iron County Food Pantry and
Treasure Room, 9 a.m.-4 p.m., 72
Michigan Ave., Montreal, Wis. 715561-4450.
National Finnish American
Festival Inc. Board of Directors,
10 a.m., Little Finland, Kimball, Wis.
906-932-1608.
Alcoholics Anonymous, noon,
Salem Lutheran Church, Ironwood.
area74.org.
After School Story Time, 4
p.m., “Wild About You!” by Judy
Sierra, Ironwood Carnegie Library.
Chess Club, 4 p.m., for grades
5-10, Ironwood Carnegie Library.
Finnish Language Classes,
4:15 p.m. beginners, 5 p.m.
advanced, with Seija Jarvenpaa, Little Finland, Kimball, Wis. 906-9321608.
“How to Sign Up for a Free
Email Account” Class, 5 p.m.,
Wakefield Public Library. Advance
registration required to 906-2295236.
Creative Writing for Adults,
5:30 p.m., Ironwood Carnegie
Library. 906-932-0203.
Bingo, card sale, 5:30 p.m.,
game starts, 6:30 p.m., Bessemer
Veterans of Foreign Wars hall.
Alcoholics Anonymous, 6 p.m.,
Our Lady of Peace Catholic Church,
Ironwood. area74.org.
Alcoholics
Anonymous/AlAnon, 7 p.m., Salem Lutheran
Church, Ironwood. area74.org.
Government
Gogebic-Iron County Airport
Board, 4:30 p.m., at the airport.
Gogebic County Road Commission, 4:30 p.m., road commission office, county courthouse,
Bessemer.
Ironwood City Commission,
4:30 p.m., work session to identify
project priorities for budget, Ironwood Memorial Building.
Bessemer Township Board, 5
p.m., Bessemer Township Hall,
Ramsay.
Hurley School Board of Education, 5:30 p.m., high school library.
Ironwood Township Board,
5:30 p.m., Ironwood Township
offices.
Wakefield City Council, 5:30
p.m., Wakefield City Hall.
Ironwood City Commission,
5:30 p.m., Ironwood Memorial Building.
Town of Carey, 6 p.m., Carey
(Wis.) Town Hall.
Town of Oma, 6 p.m., Oma
(Wis.) Town Hall.
Tuesday, May 14
Weight Watchers, Knights of
Columbus, Ironwood; 6:30 a.m.
weigh-in, 7 a.m. meeting; 5 p.m.
weigh-in, 5:30 p.m. meeting.
Free GED Tutoring, 9 a.m.-noon
and 6-10 p.m., Gogebic County
Community Schools, 304 E. Iron St.,
Bessemer. 906-663-4888.
Gogebic County Veterans Service Officer, 9:30-11:30 a.m., Ironwood Memorial Building. 906-6671110.
Tiny Tot Story Hour, 10 a.m.,
Wakefield Public Library. 906-2295236.
Friends of the Mercer Public
Library, 10 a.m., library, Mercer,
Wis.
Alcoholics Anonymous, noon,
Salem Lutheran Church, Ironwood.
area74.org.
Luther L. Wright High School
Clas of 1963 reunion planning, 1
p.m., noon lunch, Larry’s Lucky
Strikes, Ironwood.
Gogebic-Ontonagon Community Action Agency food commodity distribution, seniors, mothers,
infants, children, 1-3 p.m., 100 Mill
St., Bessemer. 906-667-0283.
Legal Planning Presentation,
“Seven Simple Steps to Legal
Peace of Mind,” 1-3 p.m., Mercer
(Wis.) Community Center. 715-4763720 to register.
Adult Education Class, 4-7
p.m., high school library, Hurley K12 School. 715-561-3306 or 715561-4900, ext 258.
American Legion Post 27, 5
p.m., regular monthly meeting, at
the Legion, Bessemer.
Norrie Elementary Choir Concert, 6 p.m., high school gym,
Luther L. Wright School, Ironwood.
Wakefield VFW Post 9084,
Ladies Auxiliary, VFW Post, 6 p.m.;
lunch, 5:30 p.m.
Watersmeet Township School
District Annual Spring Concert, 6
p.m., high school gym.
Regional Advocacy Group for
Individuals with Developmental
Disabilities, 6 p.m. organizational
meeting, Tacconelli’s, downtown
Ironwood.
Fat Tire Bicycle Group Ride, 6
p.m., departs from parking lot
behind Iron Nugget, Hurley.
Christian Men of the Northland, 6:30 p.m. dinner, 7:30 p.m.
meeting, Tacconelli’s, Ironwood.
Al-Anon, 7 p.m., Salem Lutheran
Church, Ironwood.
Alcoholics Anonymous, 7 p.m.,
Episcopal Church of the Transfiguration, Ironwood. area74.org.
Government
Iron County Forestry and
Parks Committee, 2:30 p.m.,
forestry conference room, 607 Third
Ave. N., Hurley.
Montreal City Council, 4:30
p.m., city hall, Montreal, Wis.
Bessemer Township Planning
Commission, 5 p.m., Bessemer
Township Hall, Ramsay.
Town of Pence, 6 p.m., Pence
(Wis.) Town Hall.
Hurley City Council, 6:30 p.m.,
city hall, Hurley.
Kimball Town Board, 6:30 p.m.,
Kimball (Wis.) Community Center.
Wednesday, May 15
Christian Men of the Northland, 6:30 a.m., Uptown Cafe, Ironwood.
Gogebic-Ontonagon Community Action Agency food commodity distribution, 9-10 a.m., Pioneer
Park Apartments, Ironwood. 906932-4200.
Treasure Room, 9 a.m.-noon, at
Iron County Food Pantry, 72 Michigan Ave., Montreal, Wis.
Gogebic Chapter of Michigan
Association of Retired School
Personnel, 11 a.m., annual spring
meeting, Tacconelli’s, downtown
Ironwood. Reservations required to
906-932-5830 by May 11.
Alcoholics Anonymous, open
meeting, noon, Salem Lutheran
Church, Ironwood. area74.org.
Hurley Education Foundation
Inc., noon, luncheon meeting, conference room, Hurley K-12 School.
I am the Alpha and Omega,
the beginning and the end,
the first and the last.
– Revelation 22:13
SERVICES 9 A.M. SUNDAY
YOU’RE ALWAYS WELCOME AT SALEM
10 A.M. COFFEE FELLOWSHIP
SALEM LU THERAN
CHURCH
E.L.C.A.
333 E. AURORA
IRONWOOD
932-1510
Given in Honor of our Pastors,
Pastor Mary Beth Kovanen
and Pastor Kurt Kovanen,
by Steve and Betsy Wesselhoft
DOVE Support Group, noon-2
p.m. 906-932-4990.
Ironwood Community Blood
Drive, noon-6 p.m., Ironwood
Memorial Building. 906-932-5478
for appointments.
Iron County Veterans Service
Officer, 1-3 p.m., Mercer (Wis.)
Town Hall. 715-561-2190.
Bessemer Woman’s Club
Senior Tea, 3 p.m., for A.D. Johnston High School and Gogebic
County Community Schools seniors
and parents, Bessemer City Hall
auditorium.
Veterans Health Care Town
Hall Meeting, 4:30 p.m., with representatives from Oscar Johnson VA
Medical Center, Bessemer VFW.
“Teens and Technology,” 5
p.m., for parents and guardians,
Mercer (Wis.) Public Library.
Awana Clubs Ministry, 6:208:05 p.m., Bible study, games and
more for kids age 3 through sixth
grade, Range Community Bible
Church, Hurley.
American Legion Post 58, Hurley, 7 p.m. at the post.
Luther L. Wright Middle and
High School Band Concert, 6:30
and 7:30 p.m., Historic Ironwood
Theatre.
Alcoholics Anonymous, 7:30
p.m., Sharon Lutheran Church,
Bessemer. area74.org.
Government
Powderhorn Area Utility District Board of Trustees, 4:30 p.m.,
Ironwood Township Hall.
5
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“The New”
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Pastor Mike
Loneliness or Solitude?
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feels loneliness when they desire intimacy, yet
are all alone. Relationships are the answer; with
God and with each other. Loneliness is a cage
of bondage; relationships are God’s path to
freedom. Let’s be friends eh!!!
Join us this Sunday at 10am
N10234 Curry Road
Ironwood, MI 49938
(906) 932-1102
www.woodlandchurchironwood.com
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135 E. AURORA ST.
IRONWOOD, MI
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OPINION
4 l FRIDAY, MAY 10, 2013
THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM
DAILY GLOBE Perils of self-publishing
Sue Mizell, Publisher
Larry Holcombe, Managing Editor
In Their Opinion
Wisconsin proposed
budget full of policy
A ban on wolf hunting at night.
A favor for rent-to-own businesses.
An end to residency requirements for thousands of
school and municipal workers in Milwaukee.
All of these items — and dozens more — are buried in
the state budget even though they have nothing to do
with state finances.
It’s a common yet sneaky trick governors and top lawmakers have been pulling for three budgets now, first
when Democrats had a lock on power, and now with
Republicans in charge.
Prior to that, split power at the state Capitol led to both
sides of the partisan divide responsibly pulling non-fiscal
policy items from the state’s two-year spending plan.
So much for that. And so much for Gov. Scott Walker’s
campaign promise to keep pure policy out of his budgets.
The nonpartisan Legislative Fiscal Bureau identified
58 policy items “not closely related to the state’s fiscal
program” in the governor’s budget request. The Legislature’s budget committee subsequently removed only a
dozen of them.
That leaves 46 items that still need to come out. The
full Legislature should nix all of them before sending the
budget to the governor’s desk to sign. And if lawmakers
fail to do that, Walker should restore his credibility on the
issue by vetoing them.
“The governor campaigned on not having policy in the
budget,” said Sen. Rob Cowles, R-Green Bay, according to
the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. “What happened to that
promise?”
“They pile things into the budget so they can hide
them,” Cowles said, “and they don’t have to take responsibility for their action.”
Cowles is right, and he deserves a lot of credit for calling out fellow Republicans for this sneaky tactic. Cowles’
opposition means a lot more than Democratic complaints,
given that the minority party allowed nearly as much policy into its budget the last time Democrats were in control.
These items should stand or fall on their own merits as
individual bills. In fact, the State Journal editorial board
supports some of the measures.
But none deserves a free pass.
That includes an item allowing police to collect DNA
from suspects arrested for, but not convicted of, a felony.
That includes policy changes affecting special needs
students who seek private school vouchers.
The state budget is a spending document. It shouldn’t
be camouflage for policy unrelated to spending.
Take all the non-fiscal stuff out.
—Wisconsin State Journal
Legislators
Michigan
Gov. Rick Snyder, P.O. Box
30013, Lansing MI 48909, phone
517-373-3400, fax 517-335-6863.
Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., SR269 Russell Office Building, U.S.
Senate, Washington DC 20510,
phone 202-224-6221.
Sen. Debbie Stabenow, DMich., 133 Hart Senate Office Building, U.S. Senate, Washington DC
20510, phone 202-224-4822.
U.S. Rep. Dan Benishek, RCrystal Falls, 514 Cannon House
Office Building, Washington DC
20515, phone 202-225-4735.
State Sen. Tom Casperson, REscanaba, 705 Farnum Building,
P.O. Box 30036, Lansing MI 489097536, phone 517-373-7840.
State Rep. Scott Dianda, DCalumet, S-1489 House Office
Building, P.O. Box 30014, Lansing
MI 48909, phone 517-373-0850.
Wisconsin
Gov. Scott Walker, Office of the
Governor, 115 East Capitol, Madison
WI 53702, phone 608-266-1212.
Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., 386
Russell Senate Office Building,
Washington DC 20510, phone 202224-5323.
Sen. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wis., 1
Russell Courtyard, Washington D.C.
20510, phone 202-224-5653; Madison office, 14 W. Mifflin St., Suite
207, Madison WI 53703, phone 608264-5338.
U.S. Rep. Sean Duffy, R-Ashland, 1208 Longworth House Office
Building, Washington DC 20515,
phone 202-225-3365.
State Sen. Robert Jauch, DPoplar, 415 South, State Capitol,
P.O. Box 7882, Madison WI 537077882, phone 608-266-3510.
State Rep. Janet Bewley, DAshland, Room 420 North, State
Capitol, P.O. Box 8953, Madison WI
53708, phone 608-266-7690.
“Nobody should self-publish,” says Philip
Corbett, the standards editor of the New
York Times. “Everything should go through
an editor. Ideally, it should go through two
editors.”
Corbett was speaking in January 2011,
after the Times mistakenly reported that
Rep. Gabrielle Giffords had been killed by a
gunman in her Arizona district. We thought
of Corbett’s admonition after widely respected media critic Howard Kurtz made, in his
own words, a “big mistake” in covering the
story of Jason Collins, the pro basketball
player who wrote an article in Sports Illustrated coming out as gay.
In his commentary on the Daily Beast
website, Kurtz accused Collins of covering up
the fact that he had once been engaged to a
woman. But Collins had made that very point
in his article. “I read it too fast and carelessly missed” Collins’ admission, Kurtz said on
his CNN show “Reliable Sources” (where
Steve is an occasional guest).
Give Kurtz credit for confessing his sin on
national TV. But the incident exposes serious
flaws — and some significant advantages —
in a digital universe where writers “self-publish” all the time and lack the safeguards
built into old-line media outlets like the
Washington Post, where Kurtz worked for
years.
The first lesson is the obvious one: Speed
can be the enemy of accuracy. Kurtz read the
Collins piece “too fast” because he wanted to
be first, to be out there, to make a splash. As
traditional sources of revenue dry up, every
media platform is under enormous pressure
these days to break news, attract attention
and generate the click-throughs that appeal
to advertisers.
The pressures are even greater for online
upstarts like the Daily Beast that are still
yourdailyglobe.com
Published daily Monday - Saturday
(except Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day,
Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year’s Day)
struggling to establish a brand identity. And
when consumers increasingly get their news
through mobile devices that seem permanently attached to their palms, speed has a
real virtue. It also leads to the carelessness
Kurtz describes, but that wasn’t his only
error.
He totally ignored Corbett’s adage. No one
saw his column before it was posted. As
Kurtz said on CNN: “Sometimes there is a
tendency, when you do something quick,
when you just hit the button, you don’t check
as carefully.”
Kurtz then taped a video segment for the
Daily Download, a website where he is a frequent contributor, during which he made an
offensive comment about Collins playing
“both sides of the court.” Lauren Ashburn,
who runs the site, said later, “I knew Kurtz
was going to make this point about Collins
before we taped, and I didn’t double-check to
make sure it was accurate.”
By this time, speed was no excuse for sloppiness. Again, Kurtz wanted to get noticed,
and again, he failed to consult an editor — or
at least one who thought double-checking
was part of her job.
Every journalist in the world has made
mistakes, including us. Many of them. It goes
Today in history
The Associated Press
Today’s Highlight in History
On May 10, 1863, during the
Civil War, Confederate Lt. Gen.
Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson died
of pneumonia, a complication
resulting from being hit by friendly
fire eight days earlier during the
Battle of Chancellorsville in Virginia.
On this Date
In 1774, Louis XVI acceded to
the throne of France.
In 1775, Ethan Allen and his
Green Mountain Boys, along with
Col. Benedict Arnold, captured the
British-held fortress at Ticonderoga,
N.Y.
In 1865, Union forces captured
Confederate President Jefferson
Davis in Irwinville, Ga.
In 1869, a golden spike was driven in Promontory, Utah, marking the
completion of the first transcontinental railroad in the United States.
In 1913, the U.S. House of Representatives passed a resolution
calling upon all federal officials,
from the president on down, to wear
a white carnation the following day
in observance of Mother’s Day.
In 1924, J. Edgar Hoover was
given the job of FBI director.
In 1933, the Nazis staged massive public book burnings in Germany.
In 1941, Adolf Hitler’s deputy,
Rudolf Hess, parachuted into Scotland on what he claimed was a
peace mission. (Hess ended up
serving a life sentence at Spandau
prison until 1987, when he apparently committed suicide.)
In 1963, the Rolling Stones
recorded their first single for Decca
Records in London, covering Chuck
Berry’s “Come On” (which ended up
being redone) and “I Want to Be
Loved” by Willie Dixon.
In 1973, the New York Knicks
won the NBA Finals, defeating the
Los Angeles Lakers in Game 5,
102-93.
In 1984, the International Court
of Justice said the United States
should halt any actions to blockade
Nicaragua’s ports (the U.S. had
already said it would not recognize
World Court jurisdiction on this
issue).
In 1993, members of the Senate
Armed Services Committee visited
the Norfolk Naval Base in Virginia
for a hearing on the issue of homosexuals in the military; most of the
sailors who spoke said they favored
keeping the ban on gays. At least
188 workers were killed in a doll factory fire in Bangkok, Thailand.
Ten years ago: The leader of
Iraq’s largest Shiite Muslim group,
Ayatollah Mohammad Baqir alHakim, returned triumphantly to his
U.S.-occupied homeland after two
decades in Iranian exile.
Five years ago: Barack Obama
erased Hillary Rodham Clinton’s
once-imposing lead among Democratic superdelegates as he added
endorsements from Utah, Ohio and
the Virgin Islands.
One year ago: Republican pres-
idential candidate Mitt Romney
apologized for “stupid” high school
pranks that might have gone too far
and moved quickly to stamp out any
notion that he’d bullied schoolmates
because they were gay.
Today’s Birthdays: Author Bel
Kaufman (“Up the Down Staircase”)
is 102. Author Barbara Taylor Bradford is 80. Rhythm-and-blues singer
Henry Fambrough (The Spinners) is
75. TV-radio personality Gary
Owens is 74. Actor David Clennon
is 70. Writer-producer-director Jim
Abrahams is 69. Singer Donovan is
67. Singer Dave Mason is 67. Actor
Bruce Penhall is 56. Former Sen.
Rick Santorum, R-Pa., is 55.
Actress Victoria Rowell is 54. Rock
singer Bono (U2) is 53. Rock musician Danny Carey (Tool) is 52. Actor
Darryl M. Bell is 50. Playwright
Suzan-Lori Parks is 50. Model
Linda Evangelista is 48. Rapper
Young MC is 46. Actor Erik Palladino is 45. Rock singer Richard
Patrick (Filter) is 45. Actor Lenny
Venito is 44. Actor-singer Todd
Lowe is 41. Country musician David
Wallace (Cole Deggs and the Lonesome) is 41. Actress Andrea Anders
is 38. Race car driver Helio Castroneves is 38. Rock musician
Jesse Vest is 36. Actor Kenan
Thompson is 35. Rhythm-and-blues
singer Jason Dalyrimple (Soul For
Real) is 33. Rock musician Joey
Zehr (The Click Five) is 30. Singer
Ashley Poole (Dream) is 28. Actress
Odette Annable is 28. Actress Lauren Potter is 23. Olympic gold
medal swimmer Missy Franklin is
18.
Thought for Today: “The art of
being wise is the art of knowing
what to overlook.” — William
James, American psychologist and
philosopher (1842-1910).
MALLARD FILLMORE
DOONESBURY
DAILY GLOBE
Cokie and
Steve Roberts
with the territory. But we still have an obligation to minimize those mistakes, to aim
toward accuracy, to follow strict standards of
professionalism.
As a married couple we have an advantage, since we each have an in-house editor.
But we never “hit the button” on this column
until both of us have read it very carefully.
We’re petrified of self-publishing because we
know how easy it is to miss a point or mangle
a meaning. And when we do omit something,
the editors at Universal Uclick provide
another line of defense.
In the online world, many writers are like
Kurtz. There’s no filter, no checkpoint
between them and the public. But this new
universe does have one huge advantage:
interactivity. Thousands of editors are out
there in cyberspace, primed to correct and
criticize the slightest misstep.
This month marks the 10th anniversary of
the scandal spawned by Jayson Blair, the
young New York Times reporter who “lied
and faked and cheated his way through story
after story — scores of them, for years,” in
the words of Times ombudsman Margaret
Sullivan.
The Blair affair is a reminder that even
the most diligent news outlet can be victimized by a determined fraud. It also suggests
how much the world has changed in 10 years.
Sullivan says that Blair’s sins “would come to
the surface much more quickly in the age of
blogging and Twitter,” and she’s right. As
Times managing editor Dean Baquet puts it,
“The world is better at checking us and challenging us.”
True enough. But that’s no substitute for
checking and challenging ourselves. We still
should do that before hitting the button.
Steve and Cokie Roberts can be contacted by email at stevecokie@gmail.com.
Award Winning Newspaper
POSTMASTER – Send changes of addresses to:
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MANAGING EDITOR
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THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM
AREA / STATE
FRIDAY, MAY 10, 2013
l
5
Gogebic Taconite applies for mining permit
MADISON, Wis. (AP) — A mining company has applied for an exploratory license to
begin the process of opening an iron ore mine
in northern Wisconsin near Lake Superior.
The Wisconsin Department of Natural
Resources says Gogebic Taconite submitted
the application on Thursday.
DNR Waste and Materials Management
Program director Ann Coakley says a decision on granting the application will be
made within 10 business days as required
by the new law passed by the Legislature in
March.
If Gogebic obtains a state permit it still
must receive federal approval for the mine
since it would affect federal wetlands. The
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers says that
permit process could take up to four years.
Supporters of the mine say it will create
jobs while opponents say it will harm the
environment.
Wolf
From page 1
Three harvest zones were chosen in the UP because of conflicts
between wolves and humans.
State officials say they’ve
received a high number of complaints in those areas where
wolves have preyed on livestock.
“We anticipate that this limited public harvest could both
change wolf behavior over time
— making them more wary of
people, residential areas and
farms — and reduce the abundance of wolves in these management areas that have experienced chronic problems,” said
Russ Mason, DNR Wildlife Division chief. “We’re aiming to
decrease the number of conflicts
and complaints while maintaining the long-term viability of the
wolf population.”
Commission chair J. R.
Richardson called the commission’s vote “a thoughtful, sciencebased decision.”
It “ensures the long-term presence of wolves while providing a
valuable tool for managing conflicts between wolves and human
populations,” he said.
A target of 16 wolves can be
taken from Gogebic County; 19
from a region that includes portions of Baraga, Houghton,
Ontonagon and Gogebic counties;
and eight from portions of Luce
and Mackinac counties.
Wolf management units will
be created for each region. Once
the target harvest is reached in
each unit, hunting is closed in
that region for the season.
Hunters and trappers are
allowed only one wolf each.
Firearms, crossbows and bow
and arrows can be used. Hunting
and trapping is allowed on public
and private land.
Starting Aug. 3, 1,200 wolf
hunting licenses will be available. The cost is $100 for Michigan residents and $500 for nonresidents.
Meth
Larry Holcombe/Daily Globe
LUTHER L. Wright High School junior Jourdyn McGrath sings during the
Accent! show choir’s rehearsal Wednesday night in Ironwood. Accent!
will perform concerts today and Saturday at Theatre North at 6 and 8
p.m. both nights.
Accent!
From page 1
Schwab, Victoria Agee, Aleah
Maki, Pam Romans and Noel
Chiapuzio;
juniors,
Logan
Jacisin, Dylan Neill, Jourdyn
McGrath and Anna Zacharkiw;
sophomores, Robert Burchell,
Noah Terzano, Jake Cadeau,
Caitlyn Agee and Emma Tervonen; and freshmen, Vanessa
Clausen, Brittany Stella, Cara
Thomas, Emily Ruotsala and
Lea Benyo.
Finance
From page 1
Pro Act Pharmacy Services, also
addressed the committee. Pro
Act is a nationwide company
that
produces
“innovative,
affordable and flexible prescription drug benefit solutions,”
according to its website.
Eckdahl discussed supplying
medication discount cards to
Iron County residents to help
people who pay out-of-pocket for
medications.
“We want to help those that
are falling between the cracks,”
Eckdahl said. “We are also here
to help keep business local and in
the county.”
The program allows for every
county resident to receive a discount card that is accepted at
participating pharmacies. The
card allows discounts on medications that aren’t accepted
through insurance or that are
paid for out-of-pocket. Residents
will not receive discounts on copays, however.
While Eckdahl doesn’t need
county permission to send out
the cards, she said that the company likes to work with the county to help the program be successful.
“We want to make sure that
the county supports it as well,”
Eckdahl said.
Committee member Tom
Innes, of Gurney, Wis., asked if
the cards would come at a cost to
either the county or residents,
and Eckdahl said no.
“The card is completely free,”
Eckdahl said.
Eckdahl also mentioned that
other counties throughout Wisconsin are already participating,
or will be starting soon.
Each card provides between
20-50 percent savings on generic
medications, and up to 20 percent on name brand medications.
Card recipients can also receive
discounts on pet medications, if
they are purchased at participating pharmacies.
The committee agreed to have
Saari look over a contract that
Eckdahl brought to the meeting,
and the item was tabled until the
next meeting.
From page 1
or maintaining a meth lab, a 20-year felony;
operating or maintaining a laboratory
involving a firearm/other harmful device, a
25-year felony; two counts of operating or
maintaining a laboratory near specified
places, operating or maintaining a laborato-
ry in the presence of a minor, possession of
methamphetamine or ecstasy and delivery/manufacture of marijuana, a 4-year
felony.
Michelle Lee Kitto, 43, of Mansfield
Street, has been charged with six felony
counts including five counts of operating or
maintaining a meth lab, and operating or
maintaining a laboratory in the presence of a
minor.
All three were arraigned in Gogebic County Court on Thursday afternoon. Bond is set
at $200,000 cash.
The matter is still under investigation
and additional arrests are probable, according the the press release.
Bill helps Michigan schools with too many snow days
LANSING (AP) — Students in
many school districts across
Michigan who rejoiced at the
news of repeated snow days now
must sweat out an extended stay
in the classroom.
A bill approved 34-1 Thursday
by the state Senate would let
schools lengthen their days for
the rest of the school year instead
of having to make them up. The
minimum requirement of 170
school days would be waived, but
schools still would have to have at
least 1,098 hours of instruction
this academic year.
The House passed an earlier
version of the legislation, meaning it could reach Gov. Rick Snyder as early as next week.
It represents a potential
reprieve for some districts, particularly schools in northern and
western Michigan, that may have
to extend classes later into June
as winter weather led to more
cancellations than usual — some
as late as April. State law only
allows six days to be canceled or
else schools lose state funding,
but some have gone over the
limit.
For officials with the Morley
Stanwood Community Schools,
about 40 miles northeast of
Grand Rapids, the legislation
comes too late to offer much relief.
Superintendent Roger Cole
said the district missed 15 days
“between snow and ice and power
outages,” and he’s left with at
least six days to make up even if
the three the district had to cancel after April 1 are waived.
“An hour ago, I sent out a mass
email to all of our parents,” Cole
said Thursday afternoon. “I’ve
made the decision we’re going to
be here through June 10 — even
if the bill passes, because we need
to make a decision to move forward.”
Record
COURT DISPOSITIONS
Gogebic County
98th District Court
Jan. 7-May 7
Amy Marie Kessler, 37, of Ironwood, operating while visibly
impaired, $570.
Nathan James LaChapelle, 24,
of Bessemer, no valid license in
possession, $215.
Joseph Arthur LaPlant, 22, of
Hurley, operating while visibly
impaired, $630, three months probation and three days of community service.
Jon Thomas Lonsway, 26, of
Ironwood, operating while license
suspended, $410.
Timothy Michael Lotzer, 20, of
Hurley, minor in possession (first
offense)/illegal possession, $380
and 10 days of community service.
Trevor James McPherson, 21,
of Watersmeet, disorderly drunk
person, $370.
Tracy S. Maskewit, of Ironwood, operating while visibly
impaired, $570.
Kaitlyn Ann Mitchell, 17, of Ironwood,
alcohol-purchase/consume/possess, $460 and six days
community service.
Cody R. Page, of Newald, Wis.,
operating while intoxicated, $830.
Dylan Michael Noble, 20, of
Ironwood, alcohol-purchase/consume/possess, $635 and four
months probation and 30 days of
community service.
Courtney Peterson, 34, of
Eagle River, Wis., operating while
visibly impaired, $610.
Elizabeth Nancy Regnier, 25, of
Orono, Minn., operating while
intoxicated, $830.
Jeffrey Dean Rehling, 54, of
Ironwood, controlled substance
use of marijuana, $285; disorderly
person drunk, $405.
Thomas John Saari, 69, of
Wakefield, operating while visibly
impaired, $570.
Kevin Russell Schuelke, 40, of
Ironwood, drove while license
suspended, $460.
Thomas Patrick Sholar, 67, of
Ironwood, tampering with utility,
$1,950.
Chase Michael Sizemore, 21,
of Ironwood, open alcohol in
motor vehicle, $360.
Robert Joseph Smith, 47, of
Calumet, operating while intoxicated, $880; drove while license
suspended, $385.
Gregory Lewis Strehlow, 59, of
Shoreview, Minn., operating while
visibly impaired, $640.
Sarah Marie Timmons, 29, of
Ironwood, drove while license
suspended, $370.
Amber
Lynn
Voght,
of
Houghton, operating while visibly
impaired, $620.
Donna Ann Vuorenmaa, 49, of
Ironwood, reckless driving, $820
and 12 months probation.
Nydia Marie Watts, 40, of Ironwood, operating while intoxicated,
$760 and five days of community
service; operating while licenses
suspended, $285.
Keira Lynn Way, 22, of Ironwood, operating while visibly
impaired, $570.
Brett Daniel Wilkie, 27 of
Watersmeet, operating while visibly impaired, $570.
Nicole
Williams,
35,
of
Watersmeet, operating while visibly impaired, $570.
SUNDAY LAKE SUPERMARKET
U.S.D.A. Choice, Boneless
CHUCK TENDERLOIN ROAST
$ 29
lb.
U.S.D.A. Choice, Boneless
Katie Perttunen/Daily Globe
GOGEBIC COMMUNITY College students, from left, Joe Weickert, Scott Sturkol, Brittany Penegor, instructor
Daniel Obradovich, Aaron Tilton, Lily Mattson, Jackie Leannah, Avery Jackson, Eric Lewis and Derrick Ervans
display their offerings before enjoying a feast of Native American foods as part of their final exam for Native
American History Wednesday at GCC.
From page 1
Ervans provided corn on the cob,
Brittany Penegor cooked rice
pudding and Eric Lewis made
Indian beef and fry bread.
Lottery
5
Midday Daily 4: 5-34-5
Daily 3: 3-7-1
Daily 4: 7-3-8-8
Fantasy 5: 13-2131-34-36
Keno: 03-04-07-0810-15-17-19-25-29-
New York Strip Steak ........lb.
U.S.D.A. Choice, Boneless
Round Steak ..................................lb.
Farmland, Assorted
Pork Chop Pack ..........................lb.
Hormel Little Sizzlers
Food
Thursday
Michigan
Midday Daily 3: 9-5-
3
30-36-56-60-62-6566-67-74-75-77-79
Wisconsin
SuperCash: 03-0914-22-23-24, Doubler:
N
Badger 5: 01-03-2126-31
Daily Pick 3: 1-8-1
Daily Pick 4: 3-3-6-5
Obradovich said he was
inspired to assign this unique
assignment by a cookbook of
Native American foods that a
student brought in. The concept
of using natural and earth oriented indigenous products such
as honey and maple syrup and
honey intrigued him, Obradovich
said.
Ironwood Hours
7:30-5
M-F
8-3
Sat.
8-Noon
Sun.
(906)932-2311
www.forslund.com
Ironwood • Land O’Lakes • Caspian
$ 99
8
$ 99
2
$ 69
1
1
$ 99
1
2 $ 88
/3
Pork Sausage
$
Links .............................................12 oz. Pkg.
Sugardale Center Cut
Ham Steaks
49
.......................... lb.
Creamette, Selected Varieties
Pasta ..............................32 oz. Boxes
Fresh Express
88¢
$ 79
1
Garden
Salad Mix ..................................12 oz. Bag
Florida Gold, Selected Varieties
Orange Juice ..................64 oz. Ctn.
Morning Glory & Dean’s Strawberry &
Kemps, Selected Varieties
Ice Cream
......................56 oz. Square
Knorr, Selected Varieties
$ 25
3
109
Rice or
$
Pasta Sides .............. 4 to 5.7 oz. Pkg.
Frito-Lay Selected Varieties
Lay’s
Potato Chips
Wildwood
....8 to 10.5 oz. Bags
2/$ 98
5
Soda ................2 Ltr. Btls. plus deposit or tax
Brawny, Big Roll Print
Paper Towels ......................3 Roll Pkg.
Ziploc, Selected Sizes
3
4/$
429
$
5
Storage and
2/$
Freezer Bags ......12 to 25 Ct. Boxes
Dole, Idaho Grown
Potatoes ....................................5 lb. Bag
Red Ripe
128
$
1
On-the-Vine
$ 48
Tru-Moo
$ 79 Tomatoes ............................................lb.
Chocolate Milk ..............64 oz. Jug
1110 U.S. Hwy. 2, Wakefield, MI 49968 • Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8-7, Sat. 8-6, Sun. 8-4
1
AREA / NATION
6 l FRIDAY, MAY 10, 2013
THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM
Ontonagon foundation awards scholarships
In Tribute
Lynn A. ‘Buck’ Starkey Sr.
WAUSAU, Wis — Lynn A. “Buck” Starkey Sr., 79, a former
Ironwood, Mich. resident, died Wednesday, May 8, 2013, at
Wausau Manor in Wausau.
Arrangements are pending and will be announced at a later
date by McKevitt-Patrick Funeral Home and Cremation Services of Ironwood.
Briefly
Name of motorcycle crash
driver released
IRONWOOD — The Ironwood
Public Safety Department has
released the name of the man
involved in a motorcycle crash
Tuesday on Aurora Street in
Ironwood.
Warren L. Watkins, 49, of
Hurley, crashed his motorcycle
near the St. Vincent de Paul
store Tuesday, a news release
said.
He was transported to Aspirus
Grand View Hospital after the
crash, later being transferred to
St. Mary’s Hospital in Duluth,
Minn., by Life Flight. Watkins
remains hospitalized and his
condition has not been released,
the release said.
The accident remains under
investigation.
Iron County to lift seasonal
weight limits
HURLEY — The Iron County
Highway
Department
will
remove the seasonal weight limit
restrictions on the Iron County
Trunk Highway System on Monday, according to a press release.
The change will be in effect
after 7 a.m.
For more information, call the
highway department at 715-5614965.
Name of Chippewa
Township crash victim
released
CHIPPEWA TOWNSHIP —
Troopers from the Michigan
State Police in Sault Ste. Marie
Post have announced the name
of the person involved in the
fatal crash in Chippewa Town-
ship on Tuesday.
According to a press release,
Cindy Sawyer-Bonenfant, 44, of
Sault Ste. Marie, was pronounced deceased at the scene.
The single-vehicle accident
took place on M-28 near Dick
Road on Tuesday evening.
Troopers were assisted by
Hulbert Fire, Hulbert EMS and
the Chippewa County Sheriff’s
Department.
The crash currently remains
under investigation.
Well repair results in
accidental death
WAUCEDAH TOWNSHIP —
A 77-year-old man, of Orland
Park, Ill., has been pronounced
dead after being trapped in a 12foot well at a camp in Waucedah
Township, Wednesday.
James Ennis, was pronounced
dead after attempting repairs on
a well using dry ice.
According to a press release,
the dry ice reacted and removed
the oxygen from the bottom of
the well, causing Ennis to lose
consciousness when attempting
to climb out.
A friend who was nearby at
the time, called 911, and rescue
personnel arrived on scene and
removed Ennis.
CPR was performed, but the
victim was pronounced dead at
the scene.
The Michigan State Police
Iron Mountain Post was assisted
at the scene by the Dickinson
County Sheriff’s Department,
Beacon Ambulance, Nordic
Ambulance, Tri City Rescue,
Felch Township Fire Department and North Breltung Fire
Department.
Critter cams provide peek
into the lives of bears
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP)
— Biologists at the Alaska
Department of Fish and Game
are getting a peek into what city
bears do all day.
Six bears were equipped with
rugged video cameras attached
to collars around their necks,
which are allowing biologists to
get a good idea of how the four
black and two brown bears
spent their time last summer.
The biologists collected 60
hours of video, according to the
Anchorage Daily News. It shows
the bears sleeping, eating gull
eggs, walking greenbelts, and
licking grease cans and gum
stuck on the ground.
Bears are seen salivating
over garbage pizza and discarded birdseed, scooping up
bivalves from Cook Inlet mudflats and scarfing horsetail and
dandelions.
“You’re riding around under
their chin, seeing what they do,”
said Fish and Game research
biologist Sean Farley, who
designed the project. “Now we
can say, a bear was here and
this is what it was doing.”
Not all the collars attached
last summer survived. Farley
said the brown bears destroyed
their collars.
“Critter cams,” as Farley calls
the small, durable cameras
attached to wildlife, are not
new. But video cameras tough
enough to withstand riding
around on a bear only recently
hit the market.
The cameras cost $5,000
each. Biologists programmed
them to record 10 seconds of
video every 20 minutes, 24
hours a day, for about a month.
The collars are engineered to
drop off at a designated time.
Radio signals are used to locate
them.
By JAN TUCKER
jantuck@jamadots.com
ONTONAGON — Twenty-two seniors of
the Ontonagon Area High School will
receive $1,000 each in scholarship funds
from the Ontonagon Area Scholarship Foundation.
The Scholarship Foundation Board met
Wednesday to authorize the funds for students with at least a 2.0 grade point average
and plan to attend college or trade school.
They collect the funds when they successfully complete their first year in advanced education.
The Foundation was formed 30 years ago
and with the help of donations and named
scholarships has a bottom line of nearly $1
million. Co-treasurers Sue Preiss and Will
Dupont reported the fund has $947,029.69.
President Meredith Strong announced
that another named scholarship has been
funded in the memory of Martin and Aune
(Aho) Kaurala. The Kauralas were born in
Mass City, the son and daughter of Finnish
immigrants, Isaac and Olga Kaurala and
Herman and Evi Aho.
Martin’s parents established a farm in
Wainola, and Aune’s parents purchased an
existing farm in East Branch. According to
officials, both families valued education and
sacrificed so that their children could attend
high school at a time when not all children
did. Martin graduated from the Greenland
Township High School in 1929, and Aune
graduated in 1934.
Both Martin and Aune took additional
courses in accounting and were employed as
bookkeepers. They lived in the Mass City
area for most of their lives. Foundation officials noted that “Martin and Aune valued
education, formal and informal. Their
daughter, Helen, is a graduate of the Ontonagon Area High School.”
The board also heard that a one time
memorial scholarship has been given in the
memory of Bill and Nora T. Niemi.
The Foundation has more than 35 named
scholarships funded with a $10,000 gift.
The Foundation Board of Directors
named three people to its 16-person board.
J.R. Richardson, Tammy Lancioni and
Megan Tucker were selected.
The board also reelected its present slate
of officers: Meredith Strong, president; Lou
Gregory, vice president; co-secretaries Marilyn Anderson and Linda Karttunen; and cotreasurers Sue Preiss and Will Dupont.
Police: Ohio captive suffered 5 miscarriages
CLEVELAND (AP) — Prosecutors said Thursday they may
seek the death penalty against
Ariel Castro, the man accused of
imprisoning three women at his
home for a decade, as police
charged that he impregnated
one of his captives at least five
times and made her miscarry by
starving her and punching her
in the belly.
The horrific allegations were
contained in a police report that
also said another one of the
women, Amanda Berry, was
forced to give birth in a plastic
kiddie pool.
Cuyahoga County prosecutor
Timothy McGinty said his office
will decide whether to bring
aggravated murder charges
punishable by death in connection with the pregnancies that
were terminated by force.
“Capital punishment must be
reserved for those crimes that
are truly the worst examples of
human conduct,” he said. “The
reality is we still have brutal
criminals in our midst who have
no respect for the rule of law or
human life.”
Castro, a 52-year-old former
school bus driver, is being held
on $8 million bail under a suicide watch in jail, where he is
charged with rape and kidnapping.
McGinty said Castro will be
charged for every act of sexual
violence, assault and other
crimes committed against the
women, suggesting the counts
could number in the hundreds,
if not thousands.
Among the chilling details in
the police report, obtained
Thursday by news organizations:
— Berry, now 27, told officers
that she was forced to give birth
in a plastic pool in the house so
it would be easier to clean up.
Berry said she, her baby, now 6,
and the two other rescued
women had never been to a doctor during their captivity.
— Michelle Knight, now 32,
said her five pregnancies ended
after Castro starved her for at
least two weeks and “repeatedly
punched her in the stomach
until she miscarried.”
She also said Castro forced
her to deliver Berry’s baby
under threat of death if the
infant died. Knight said that
when the newborn stopped
breathing, she revived the child
through mouth-to-mouth resuscitation.
Associated Press
LAW ENFORCEMENT officials gather evidence at the crime scene where three women were held captive in
Cleveland, Ohio, Thursday, May 9, 2013. Ariel Castro, a 52-year-old former school bus driver, is being held on
$8 million bail under a suicide watch in jail, where he is charged with rape and kidnapping for allegedly
abducting three women and holding them captive in his home for a decade.
— All three women said Castro chained them up in the basement but eventually let them
live upstairs on the second floor.
Each woman told a similar story
about being abducted after
accepting a ride from Castro.
During his brief arraignment
Thursday, Castro tried to hide
his face, tucking his chin inside
his collar. He appeared to close
his eyes during the hearing and
awkwardly signed documents
while handcuffed. He did not
speak or enter a plea.
In court, prosecutor Brian
Murphy said Castro used the
women “in whatever self-gratifying, self-serving way he saw
fit.”
Kathleen DeMetz, a public
defender assigned to represent
him at the hearing, didn’t comment on his guilt or innocence
or object when prosecutors recommended bail be set at $5 million. The judge, instead, ordered
Castro held on $8 million.
Castro has been under arrest
since Monday, when Berry
broke out of his run-down house
and called 911 while he was
away. Police found the two other
women inside. The women had
vanished separately between
2002 and 2004 when they 14, 16
and 20.
Berry and former captive
Gina DeJesus, 22, went home
with relatives on Wednesday.
Knight was reported in good
condition at a Cleveland hospital.
The police report gave a
detailed account of their escape,
beginning with Berry’s discovery that a door was unlocked,
leaving only a bolted outer door
between her and freedom.
Berry feared it was a test:
She said Castro occasionally left
a door unlocked to test them.
But she called to neighbors on a
porch for help and was able to
get out.
Police then entered the house
and found the other women,
who threw themselves into the
officers’ arms.
Castro’s two brothers, who
were arrested with him but
later cleared of involvement in
the kidnapping case, appeared
in court on unrelated charges
Thursday and were released.
Ariel Castro’s former daughter-in-law, Monica Stephens,
told The Associated Press that
Kennecott offers mine
workers early retirement
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — A Utah
mining company is offering a $20,000
early retirement bonus to reduce the
number of layoffs it says it has to
make following a landslide inside the
ore pit west of Salt Lake City.
Kennecott Utah Copper Corp. is
giving 270 qualified workers until
June 1 to accept or reject the incen-
her former husband said Castro
had an extremely violent
nature.
“He was always described to
me as a violent, just a scary violent person,” Stephens said.
“He talked about how his
father had beaten him and his
mother severely. They were like
hostages in their own house.
They were locked in,” said the
woman, who now lives in Florida.
A musician who often practiced at Castro’s house said he
was there last week and heard
noises, “like banging on the
wall.” Ricky Sanchez said he
asked Castro about it, and he
blamed it on the dogs. He also
said Castro — a bass guitarist
in merengue and salsa bands —
liked to play his music loud.
On his most recent visit,
Sanchez said, a little girl came
out from the kitchen and stared
at him but didn’t say anything.
He said he also noticed there
were four or five locks on the
outside door.
“When I was about to leave, I
tried to open the door. I couldn’t
even, because there were so
many locks in there,” he said.
tive.
The company hasn’t put a number
on the layoffs it says will follow that
date.
Kennecott has halved its copper
production goal for 2013. It’s able to
resume production only because it
staged some haul trucks inside the
pit before a predicted landslide tore
loose April 10. The trucks are
marooned inside the pit, feeding a
conveyer belt with ore.
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THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM
BUSINESS
7
Stocks pull back from
record levels on Wall Street
FRIDAY, MAY 10, 2013
Submitted photo
THE IRONWOOD Area Chamber of Commerce helped Steep Creek Cafe & Outfitters celebrate the opening
Thursday of its conference room and expansion of its retail shop in the suite adjacent to the cafe at 930 East
U.S. 2 in Ironwood. From left are: Peter Grewe, chamber president; Gary Kusz, board member; Steep Creek
staff Stephen Maxinoski, LeaAnn Schroeter, Sarah Deppa, Steven Barnabo, Neal Shroeter, Becky Castle and
Danette Terzano; Joe Terzano, board member; Jon Parker, vice president; and Tim Erickson, director.
YouTube’s new pay channels
go from campy to kids
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Roger
Corman’s campy B movies, children’s shows like “Sesame
Street” and “Inspector Gadget,”
and inspirational monologues by
celebrities — these are among
the offerings on 30 channels that
will soon require a paid monthly
subscription on YouTube.
Although the world’s largest
video site has rented and sold
movies and TV shows from major
studios since late 2008, most people watch videos on YouTube for
free.
It’s the first time YouTube is
introducing all-you-can-watch
channels that require a monthly
fee. The least expensive of the
channels will cost 99 cents a
month but the average price is
around $2.99.
In the field of paid video content online, YouTube is playing
catch up to services like Netflix,
Hulu and Amazon, all of which
have millions of paying customers.
But with a billion monthly visitors from around the globe, the
Google-owned video service
hopes to quickly add subscribers
and add to the money it already
makes from online advertising.
“This is just the beginning,”
said Malik Ducard, YouTube’s
director of content partnerships.
The site plans to roll out a way
for a broad number of partners to
also launch pay channels on
their own soon.
Corman, a producer and director whose influential cult classics
like “Deathrace 2000” and
“Piranha” earned him an honorary Oscar in 2009, said he’s
kept his 400-film library off of
video streaming sites until now.
In an interview with The
Associated Press, he said he
turned down an offer from Hulu
for about $5,000 to $6,000 per
film several years ago, but sees
promise in the YouTube offering.
His channel, “Corman’s Drivein,” will cost subscribers $3.99
per month for a rotating selection of 30 movies, refreshed with
new interviews and clips from
films that are in production. It is
set to launch in June.
“I believed for many years
that the future of motion picture
distribution, particularly for the
independents, is on the Internet,” the 87-year-old said. “I
think the time is now.”
YouTube will keep slightly
less than half of the revenue generated by the subscriptions.
Corman’s wife and producing
partner Julie Corman said they
were taken aback at YouTube’s
potential after a clip of their
2010 movie “Sharktopus” went
viral with 11 million views.
If even 1 percent of those
viewers signed up for a subscription, it would amount to a
healthy revenue stream, she
said.
“The numbers are astonishing. We’re waiting for the fireworks display,” she said.
DHX Media Ltd., a Canadian
company that owns the rights to
8,500 episodes of children’s TV
shows, is launching three paid
YouTube channels, two for different age categories and one called
“DHX Retro” that replays old
programs such as “Inspector
Gadget” and “Archie’s Weird
Mysteries.”
It plans to launch in 10 countries and seven languages —
something that is much easier
online than over traditional cable
or satellite networks, according
to DHX executive chairman
Michael Hirsh.
“Clearing a channel across 10
countries would have taken a
long time,” Hirsh said. Doing it
with YouTube takes just a
“metaphorical flip of a switch.”
As is the case with free videos
on YouTube, the pay channels
will be available for viewing on
computers, mobile devices and
Internet-connected TVs.
People who are accustomed to
watching videos for free on
YouTube are in for a slightly new
experience. When viewers stumble upon a video requiring payment, they’ll get a free preview
up to 2 minutes long before being
asked to subscribe.
NEW YORK (AP) — The stock
market pulled back from record
levels Thursday as investors
became harder to please.
Even a decline in the number
of Americans applying for unemployment benefits failed to give
stock prices a boost. Markets
drifted lower in early trading,
moved between gains and losses
in the afternoon, then ended
slightly lower. The Standard &
Poor’s 500 index had its first loss
since May 1.
Unemployment
claims
dropped to a five-year low last
week, the Labor department
reported early Thursday. That
signals fewer layoffs and possibly more hiring.
While the report failed to
boost stocks, it did give the dollar a lift. The U.S. currency
climbed against most major currencies and traded above 100
yen for the first time in more
than four years. The Japanese
currency has weakened dramatically this year due to the Bank of
Japan’s massive monetary stimulus.
An improvement in hiring at
U.S. employers has been one of
the key factors that pushed
stocks up to record levels. The
Dow Jones industrial average
climbed above 15,000 for the
first time Tuesday and is on
track to notch six straight
months of gains. The S&P 500
index also closed at a record high
Wednesday.
The bar for economic news
and corporate earnings has risen
as stock prices have marched
higher, said JJ Kinahan, chief
derivative strategist at TD
Ameritrade. “You have to beat
by a lot to really move the market higher,” Kinahan said.
Rising corporate earnings,
another key support for the
stock market, were also in focus
on Thursday.
—Tesla
Motors
soared
$13.61, or 24 percent, to $69.40,
after the electric car maker
posted its first quarterly net
profit since it was founded a
decade ago.
—Green Mountain Coffee
Roasters surged $16.56, or 27.8
percent, to $76.04 after the company reported late Wednesday
that its net income rose 42 percent. It also raised its earnings
l
forecast for the full year.
—Monster Beverage, the
maker of energy drinks, fell
$2.96, or 5 percent, to $54.01,
after it reported net income that
fell short of analysts’ estimates.
The company’s profits fell 17
percent, despite stronger sales,
because of unfavorable currency
rates, legal expenses and costs
tied to distribution agreements.
Almost 90 percent of the companies in the S&P 500 index
have reported earnings for the
first quarter. Earnings are projected to rise 5 percent for the
period and continue climbing
throughout the year, according
to S&P Capital IQ.
The Dow fell 22.5 points, or
0.2 percent, to 15,082.62. The
S&P 500 index dropped 6.02
points, or 0.4 percent, to
1,626.67.
So far, markets have defied
expectations for a slowdown
heading into the summer.
The S&P 500 index has started the second quarter well, gaining 1.8 percent so far in the period. The index has declined in
the second quarter in each of the
past three years.
TA
T
ABLE GAMES
Dollar rises above 100 yen
for first time in 4 years
TOKYO (AP) — The dollar
rose above 100 yen for the first
time in more than four years
Friday as currency traders persist in selling the Japanese currency in reaction to Tokyo’s
aggressive credit-easing moves.
The dollar rose as high as
101.18 yen early Friday in
Tokyo. It was the first time
since April 2009 that the greenback has traded above 100 yen.
The yen’s protracted rise has
riled some of Japan’s trading
partners but generally won support from leaders of other big
economies eager to see the
world’s second-biggest economy
recover from two decades of
stagnation. Prime Minister
Shinzo Abe has pushed both fiscal and monetary stimulus
strategies to help Japan end a
long bout of deflation and support domestic demand.
Japan’s monetary easing, and
expectations it will help promote inflation, have helped
drive the value of the yen down
by more than 20 percent against
the dollar since October, when it
was trading at around 78 yen.
The central bank, under its
new governor Haruhiko Kuroda,
has vowed to double the monetary base through purchases of
government bonds to meet a 2
percent inflation target within
the next two years or so.
By joining the U.S. Federal
Reserve and other major central banks in flooding the economy with cash, the Bank of
Japan hopes to get corporations
and consumers to begin spending more and end a long
malaise.
A weaker yen helps Japan’s
key exporters by boosting foreign earned income when it is
repatriated. However, it raises
costs in yen terms of the imported crude oil and natural gas
resource-scarce Japan must rely
on to keep its industries humming and power its cities.
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NATION
8 l FRIDAY, MAY 10, 2013
THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM
Prince Harry opens weeklong U.S. visit
WASHINGTON (AP) — A buttoneddown Prince Harry joined Michelle
Obama in honoring military families
Thursday and toured an exhibition in
Congress about land-mines, opening a
weeklong U.S. visit devoted to the
wounded victims of war. Shrieking
onlookers gave him the pop-star treatment, but he was all royal business.
The British soldier-prince had one of
America’s most storied wounded warriors, the wisecracking Sen. John
McCain, at his side as he viewed a display of land-mine photos, maps and
mine-detection equipment, staged by a
charity held dear by his late mother,
Princess Diana.
As the prince entered the rotunda of
the Russell Senate Office Building near
the Capitol, he was greeted by a roar
and shouts of “Harry!” from a crowd of
about 500 people, nearly all of them
women. They crowded a roped-off hallway and stairway with a view of the
exhibit, hoisting their cellphones and
tablets to get a picture. Harry didn’t
visibly react except to give a polite
wave.
McCain, with a laugh, said he told
Harry “I’ve never seen, in all the years
I’ve been here, such an unbalanced gender crowd.”
From there it was on to the White
House for a previously unannounced
visit with the first lady, Vice President
Joe Biden’s wife, Jill, and military
mothers and children at an afternoon
tea. Harry joined with the children in
helping the kids make Mother’s Day
gifts from tulip and rose bouquets, vegetable chips and edible dough jewelry
gathered in the State Dining Room.
For the prince, the Washington settings were a world away from the
Afghanistan war zone where he recently served for 20 weeks as a co-pilot gunner in an Apache attack helicopter. It
was just as far removed from his
hijinks in a Las Vegas hotel room last
summer, when fuzzy photos got out of a
naked Harry playing strip billiards.
McCain, R-Ariz., who was shot down
over North Vietnam and tortured as a
captive, said he told the prince that “he
was probably a much better pilot than I
was.”
As for the prince’s reputation for cutting loose on occasion, McCain joked
that the British diplomatic reception
and dinner later in the evening was
sure to be a “wild and raucous affair.”
On Friday, the prince visits Arlington National Cemetery and Walter
Reed National Military Medical Center
before flying to Colorado for the 2013
Warrior Games in Colorado Springs.
More than 200 wounded servicemen
and women from the U.S. and Britain
will participate.
Harry will also visit parts of New
Jersey afflicted by Superstorm Sandy
and stop for events in New York City
before capping his visit by playing in
the Sentebale Polo Cup match in
Greenwich, Conn., on Wednesday.
Diana highlighted the work of the
mine-clearing charity HALO Trust
when she was pictured wearing a face
mask and protective clothing during a
visit to a minefield being cleared by the
trust in Angola in 1997. Fiona
Willoughby, marketing manager of the
trust, said the prince’s tour of the
trust’s exhibit raises the profile of the
issue once again.
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sports051013_Layout 1 5/9/13 11:48 PM Page 1
THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM
SPORTS
FRIDAY, MAY 10, 2013
Ducks captain outplaying Wings captain
DETROIT (AP) — Ryan Getzlaf has been dominant when the
Anaheim Ducks have needed
their captain most, scoring
clutch goals in two of their three
wins.
“Isn’t that what he’s supposed
to do?” coach Bruce Boudreau
asked after his team arrived
Thursday night in Detroit. “Your
best player is supposed to be
your best player.”
It hasn’t worked out that way
so far for the Detroit Red Wings
and their captain, putting them
on the brink of elimination at
home in Game 6 of their firstround series against Anaheim.
Zetterberg hasn’t scored in
the playoffs in nearly 13 months.
He has gone a career-high seven
postseason games without a goal
dating to last year’s first-round
setback against Nashville.
“You want to be on the scoresheet,” Zetterberg said. “All you
can do is continue to work hard,
keep putting pucks on the net,
and hopefully one or two will
sneak by the goalie.”
Two of Getzlaf’s three goals —
a total that puts him among
NHL leaders — helped lift the
Ducks to leads in the series.
He had a short-handed goal
midway through the third period
of Game 3 to give Anaheim a
two-goal lead in a game it won 40 to go ahead 2-1 in the series.
He pulled the Ducks into a 2-2
tie with 31 seconds left in Game
5, helping them extend a game
they took 3-2 in overtime to go
ahead 3-2 in the best-of-seven
matchup.
Getzlaf said the Ducks plan to
match the desperation Detroit
will have, hoping to avoid playing an up-for-grabs Game 7 back
in Anaheim.
“We’ve worked really hard
throughout the year to know
Aspinwall, Gering, Subert
winners at Ashland
ASHLAND, Wis. — On a 37degree day in Ashland, Hurley
and Ironwood competed in the
Welker Invitational track-andfield meet.
The Hurley boys were third
with 62 points and the girls
were fourth at 81.5. The Ironwood girls took fifth and the
boys were sixth. Of the four
Indianhead Conference teams
competing — Hurley, Ironwood,
South Shore and Drummond —
the Hurley boys were tops and
the South Shore girls were on
top. The Hurley boys edged
South Shore 62-61.
The Ashland boys and
Chequamegon girls won.
“Good to get another meet in
and to see some local competition,” Hurley girls coach Melissa Oja said. “It was cold and wet
but happy to get it in and focus
on the conference meet.”
The Indianhead Conference
meet is set for Tuesday at Hurley.
Mariah Aspinwall was a double winner for the Midgettes
Thursday, taking the shot put
and discus. Teammate Kayla
Subert took the 100 hurdles.
Ironwood’s Jessica Gering
won the 800 run.
Ashland’s Bryce Miller won
the 1,600 run in a meet record
4:27.20. The old record was held
by Hurley’s Kyle Elsemore.
Hurley’s Jordan Moore was
second in the shot put, Mark
Saari was runner up in the 110
hurdles and Geno Vokolek was
second in the 300 hurdles.
Ironwood’s 400 relay team
took second.
results
Top 6 places receive team points in each event
Girls
Team: 1. Chequamegon 137.5, 2. Ashland 111, 3.
South Shore 107, 4. Hurley 81.5, 5. Ironwood 52, 6.
Drummond 50.
100 hurdles: 1. Kayla Subert, Hurley, 18.60, 5. (tie)
Teressa Subert 19.52.
100 dash: 1. Alexis Stueber, Chequamegon, 13.99,
4. Rachel Hudacek, Ironwood, 14.55.
1,600 run: 1. Harley Kinney, Ashland, 5:40.13, 2.
Jessica Gering, Ironwood, 5:48.72.
800 relay: 1. Drummond 2:00.92, 5. Ironwood
(Christy Moore, Emily DiGiorgio, Rachel Hudacek,
Alyssa Schwab) 2:12.08.
400 relay: 1. Chequamegon and Ashland 58.15, 4.
Hurley (Anna Olson, Beka Harrington, Makayla Wolfe,
Angela Aimone) 1:03.84.
300 hurdles: 1. Miranda Wickman, Drummond,
51.45, 2. Teressa Subert, Hurley, 54.71, 4. Kayla
Subert, Hurley, 56.45.
800 run: 1. Jessica Gering, Ironwood, 2:41.66, 5.
Hannah Palmeter, Ironwood, 2:52.34.
200 dash: 1. Alexis Stueber, Chequamegon, 29.12,
2. Rebecca Kapelka, Ironwood, 29.88.
3,200 run: 1. Harley Kinney, Ashland, 12:20.27, 3.
Neva Bentley, Ironwood, 14:43.59.
1,600 relay: 1. South Shore 4:45.14, 4. Ironwood
(Hannah Palmeter, Sarah Johnson, Christy Moore,
Emily DiGiorgio) 5:12.60.
Discus: 1. Mariah Aspinwall, Hurley, 91-10.5, 3.
Jackie Hissa, Hurley, 83-7.5.
High jump: 1. Miranda Wickman, Drummond, 4-8, 2.
Rachel Hudacek, Ironwood, 4-8.
Long jump: 1. Alexis Stueber, Chequamegon, 14-6.5,
4. Kayla Subert, Hurley, 13-2.5.
Pole vault: 1. Cassie Riddiford, Chequamegon, 7-6,
2. Dani Irons, Hurley, 6-6, 3. Rachel Fedora, Hurley, 62.
Shot put: 1. Mariah Aspinwall, Hurley, 31-6.5, 2.
Jackie Hissa, Hurley, 29-4.
Triple jump: 1. Michelle Hecimovich, Chequamegon,
28-10, 5 Sam Lardinois, Hurley, 23-11.
Boys
Team: 1. Ashland 189, 2. Chequamegon 156, 3. Hurley 62, 4. South Shore 61, 5. Drummond 47, 6. Ironwood 39.
3,200 relay: 1. Chequamegon 9:03.11, 4. Hurley
(Ryan Curty, James Sukanen, Dakota Rice, Daulton
Bressette) 10:30.09, 5. Ironwood (Jared Joki, Dan
Freeman, Ryan Sobolewski, Daulton Bressette)
10:32.52.
110 hurdles: 1. Anthony Litersky, Ashland, 15.49, 2.
Mark Saari, Hurley, 18.52, 4. Geno Vokolek, Hurley,
19.28, 5. Riley Jarocki, Ironwood, 20.68.
1,600 run: 1. Bryce Miller, Ashland, 4:27.20, 4. Jared
Joki, Ironwood, 4:58.43.
800 relay: 1. Drummond 1:41.26, 4. Hurley (Adam
Hendricks, Jacob Saari, Larry Stenroos, L.J. Kutz)
1:53.61.
400 relay: 1. Chequamegon 48.11, 2. Ironwood (Cole
Stevens, Brad Torni, James Giannunzio, Riley Jarocki)
50.08, 6. Hurley (Jake Zeller, Jordan Moore, Matt
Christoferson, Chris Edyvean) 56.94.
300 hurdles: 1. Anthony Litersky, Ashland, 43.56, 2.
Geno Vokolek, Hurley, 44.00, 3. Mark Saari, Hurley,
46.00.
800 run: 1. Bryce Miller, Ashland, 2:04.65, 4. Daulton
Bressette, Ironwood, 2:24.20.
3,200 relay: 1. Bryce Miller, Ashland, 10:01.91, 3.
Jared Joki, Ironwood, 10:38.22.
1,600 relay: 1. Drummond 3:53.98, 5. Ironwood
(Tyler Saari, Dylan Neill, Jordan Luoma, Daulton Bresette) 4:29.79.
Discus: 1. Cole Sanda, Drummond, 116-7.5, 3. Chris
Edyvean, Hurley, 105-1.
High jump: 1. Eric Sauer, South Shore, 5-8, 3. Ronnie Nickels, Hurley, 5-6.
Shot put: 1. Joe Myers, Chequamegon, 42-9.5, 2.
Jordan Moore, Hurley, 39-8, 3. Matt Christoferson, Hurley, 38-0.
Red Devils lose soccer opener
THREE LAKES, Wis. — Ironwood started the soccer season
with a 4-0 loss to Three Lakes in
Northern Lakes Conference action
Thursday.
“Oh God, was it terrible, cold
and rainy,” Ironwood coach Don
Cvengros said. “It was just miserable. At least we played anyway.
Their field wasn’t too bad.”
The young Devils have 14 players and they have been practicing
hard, he said. The conference
hopes to get the second half of the
schedule completed.
Three Lakes scored two goals
in the first half and two more in
the second half.
“We need to keep working on
our passing,” Cvengros said. “I
guess the big thing is practicing in
the gym so long, stuck in that
small confined space. That’s how
they’re playing on the field.
They’re all bunched together,
they’re not creating space to pass
through.”
Ironwood hosts Washburn
Tuesday.
Hurley golf starts with pair
of second-place finishes
PRENTICE, Wis. — Hurley
went south to Prentice to start
the golf season and came in second on Monday and Thursday.
In the 18-hole Northern Wisconsin Golf Conference meet
Thursday, Hurley finished 20
strokes behind Chequamegon,
348-368.
Chequamegon’s Dominick
Koller was medalist with a 78.
Jake Tenlen led Hurley with
an 83. Noah Huotari carded a
92, Dominic Pozzani a 93, A.J.
Fischer 100 and Logan Olkonen
113.
“By the time we were done, it
was 41 degrees and solid rain,
wind,” Hurley coach Jeff
Tenlen said. “Today was just
miserable for the kids. For the
conditions, the scores were
amazing.”
In the invitational on Monday at Prentice, Hurley scored
a 202 behind Chequamegon’s
182.
Koller was medalist that day
also with a 38.
Huotari paced Hurley with a
41. Tenlen had a 49, Olkonen
and Fischer 57, Adam Hendricks 58, Cole Koski 70 and
Jeff Franzoi 71.
Hurley
goes
to
the
Chequamegon Invitational at
4:30 p.m. Monday with the conference meet Thursday.
what to do in these situations,”
he said. “We’re excited about trying to get that win here in
Detroit.”
The Red Wings, of course,
have other plans and can point
to Zetterberg’s past production
in the playoffs as a source of
optimism.
Zetterberg and Philadelphia’s
Danny Briere lead the league
with 48 postseason goals since
2006, according to STATS, and
only Pittsburgh’s Sidney Crosby
and Evgeni Malkin have produced more points in the playoffs
than Zetterberg (80) since 2008.
The Swede isn’t sweating his
scoring slump, or the situation
the seventh-seeded Red Wings
are in against a bigger and perhaps better team.
“We’ve been through this
before,” Zetterberg said. “It’s
first to four, not first to three.”
Zetterberg, though, wasn’t in
the NHL the last time the Red
Wings advanced after trailing a
series 3-2.
Detroit, in its 22nd straight
postseason, hasn’t won Games 6
and 7 in a series since coming
back in the Western Conference
finals to beat Colorado in 2002
— the season before Zetterberg’s
rookie year. They went on to
hoist the Stanley Cup that season.
As good as Getzlaf is, the
Ducks are in the playoffs for just
the second time in four years and
have made it out of the first
round only once — in 2009 —
since he led them to a title in
2007.
He bounced back this year
with a team-high 49 points in 44
games during the lockout-shortened season after slipping to
third on the team in scoring last
season. Getzlaf has followed his
strong play with more of the
same in the playoffs.
“It’s not going to hurt his reputation at all, but things change
on a dime,” Boudreau said. “People only remember the end
result, quite frankly. If we were
to go out and play two duds in a
row, then that’s all they’re going
to remember is that we lost.”
The Ducks might also lament
that Detroit forward Justin
Abdelkader
knocked
out
defenseman Toni Lydman with a
blow to the head that led to a
suspension for the Red Wing and
likely a series-ending injury for
Lydman.
Abdelkader landed his left
shoulder on the side of Lydman’s
head in Game 3 and was suspended for the next two games.
While the Red Wings are looking forward to getting Abdelkader back on Zetterberg’s line,
Anaheim is left to wish Lydman
was on their blue line.
l
9
aNaheim 3, Detroit 2
all games on FoX sports
Detroit (Charter channel 36)
Tuesday, April 30: Anaheim 3,
Detroit 1
Thursday, May 2: Detroit 5,
Anaheim 4, OT
Saturday, May 4: Anaheim 4,
Detroit 0
Monday, May 6: Detroit 3, Anaheim 2, OT
Wednesday, May 8: Anaheim 3,
Detroit 2, OT
Friday, May 10: Anaheim at
Detroit, 7 p.m. CDT
x-Sunday, May 12: Detroit at
Anaheim, TBD
“Whether it be (Game 6) or
Sunday, I got to believe it would
be hard for him to get back in the
lineup,” Boudreau said.
Nationals
sweep
Tigers
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
Detroit Tigers hit the ball hard
for two days against the Washington Nationals with not much
to show for it.
Thursday’s final out was no
different as Prince Fielder flied
to the warning track in center
with the tying run on base to end
the Tigers’ 5-4 loss to the Nationals.
Ryan Mattheus, Drew Storen
and Rafael Soriano combined for
shutout relief after Dan Haren
nearly squandered a four-run
lead to complete a two-game
sweep of the AL champions.
“Unfortunately in baseball
there’s no way you can guarantee
a hit,” Fielder said. “All you can
do is control your swings and
control what pitches you swing
at. I think we did that well today,
just didn’t get the results we
wanted.”
Fielder very nearly gave himself, and the Tigers, a huge present on his 29th birthday. After
Miguel Cabrera singled with two
outs off Washington closer Rafael
Soriano, Fielder sent a 1-0 pitch
to deep center, but Denard Span
made the catch on the warning
track.
“When he first hit it I thought
‘maybe,’ but I could tell the way
Span was going after it that it
was going to stay in the park,”
Tiger manager Jim Leyland said.
“Prince (1 for 5) hit the ball good
all day long, didn’t get much to
show for it.”
Fielder said, “I put a good
swing on it, just got under it a little bit.”
Detroit had entered the series
with nine wins in 10 games only
to get swept for the first time
since losing three games at the
Los Angeles Angels from April
19-21.
Omar Infante had three hits
for the Tigers, who outhit Washington 12-9. Ten of them were
singles however, and Detroit left
nine runners on base.
“We got ourselves in a hole
early on,” Tiger manager Jim
Leyland said. “We had quite a
ways to come back. We almost
Associated Press
DETROIT TIGERS’ Matt Tuiasosopo reacts in the dugout after hitting a three-run home run against the Washington Nationals during the sixth inning Thursday in Washington.
did it.
“I thought we actually hit the
ball pretty decent both games.
We couldn’t get that one tweener
with a couple of guys on.”
Tiger starter Doug Fister (4-1)
gave up five runs, eight hits and
four walks in three innings, in
his first loss since Game 2 of the
World Series at San Francisco
last October.
“It was just lack of executing,”
Fister said. “I didn’t keep the ball
down. I got a lot of the plate a lot
of the time and they made me
pay for it.”
He was removed for a pinch
hitter in the fourth. It was Fister’s shortest career start other
than an outing at Cleveland in
August 2011 when he was taken
out after two innings because of a
lengthy rain delay.
“He wasn’t sharp. You could
see that,” Leyland said. “He wasn’t brutal by any means, but he
just wasn’t sharp. His curveball
wasn’t good like it normally is.”
Ryan Zimmerman, in a 2-for14 slide coming in, had three hits
for Washington and Adam
LaRoche added a pair.
Bryce Harper hit an RBI
groundout in the first following
Denard Span’s leadoff double,
and Harper came home from sec-
ond when LaRoche singled and
centerfielder Austin Jackson let
the ball get past him for an error.
Ian Desmond followed with a
run-scoring single for a 3-1
Washington lead.
Fister (4-1) had an RBI single
in the second off Haren (4-3), but
the Nationals made it 5-1 in the
bottom half on consecutive runscoring singles by Zimmerman
and LaRoche.
Haren (3-3) allowed four runs
and nine hits in six innings.
After falling behind 5-1 after
two innings, the Tigers pulled to
within 5-4 on Matt Tuiasosopo’s
pinch-hit three-run homer in the
sixth. Leyland sent Tuiasosopo, a
right-hander, up to pinch-hit
against the right-handed Haren.
“Right-handers have a little
have better numbers off Haren
over his career and we were looking for a quick strike and we got
it,” Leyland said.
Washington’s three relievers
had identical lines, each giving
up a hit and striking out a batter
in an inning. Soriano converted
his 12th save in 13 chances.
NOTES: Tuiasosopo’s home run was the first by a
Tiger pinch hitter since Ryan Rayburn at the Chicago
White Sox on Sept. 14, 2011. . Fister’s RBI was the first
by a Tigers pitcher since Rick Porcello had two on June
12, 2009.The game was a makeup of Tuesday night’s
rainout. Rain fell during the second and third innings
Thursday but play was not halted. ... Leyland has man-
Detroit
NatioNals 5, tigers 4
Washington
h bi
ab r h bi
AJcksn cf
1 0 Span cf
3 2 1 0
TrHntr rf
0 0 Berndn lf
2 1 1 0
MiCarr 3b
2 0 TMoore ph-lf 1 0 0 0
Fielder 1b
1 0 Harper rf
4 1 0 1
Dirks lf
0 0 Zmrmn 3b 4 1 3 1
JhPerlt ss
2 0 LaRoch 1b 4 0 2 1
Avila c
1 0 Dsmnd ss
4 0 1 1
Infante 2b
3 0 Espinos 2b 4 0 0 0
Fister p
1 1 WRams c
3 0 0 0
VMrtnz ph
0 0 Haren p
2 0 1 0
DDwns p
0 0 Lmrdzz ph 0 0 0 0
Tuiassp ph
1 3 Matths p
0 0 0 0
Putknn p
0 0 Storen p
0 0 0 0
Smyly p
0 0 Tracy ph
1 0 0 0
D.Kelly ph
0 0 RSorin p
0 0 0 0
Valvrd p
0 0
Totals
12 4 Totals
32 5 9 4
Detroit
010
003
000 — 4
Washington
320
000
00x — 5
E_A.Jackson (1). LOB_Detroit 9, Washington 7.
2B_A.Jackson (7), Span (5). HR_Tuiasosopo (2).
S_Lombardozzi.
IP
H
R ER BB SO
Detroit
Fister L,4-1
3
8
5
4
1
4
D.Downs
2
0
0
0
0
3
Putkonen
1/3
0
0
0
1
0
Smyly
1 2/3
1
0
0
0
2
Valverde
1
0
0
0
0
0
Washington
Haren W,4-3
6
9
4
4
1
3
Mattheus H,3
1
1
0
0
0
1
Storen H,6
1
1
0
0
0
1
R.Soriano S,12-13 1
1
0
0
0
1
HBP_by Fister (Span).
Umpires_Home, Jerry Layne; First, Alan Porter; Second, Greg Gibson; Third, Hunter Wendelstedt.
T_2:51. A_28,742 (41,418).
ab
5
5
5
5
4
3
4
4
1
1
0
1
0
0
1
0
39
r
0
0
0
0
0
2
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
4
aged at every current big league ballpark other than Marlins Park, which opened in 2012. ... Ross Detwiler (1-3,
2.50) will face Cubs RHP Jeff Samardzija (1-4, 3.09) on
Friday night in Washington. ... Max Scherzer (4-0, 3.43)
starts at home Friday, opposed by RHP Cleveland’s
Corey Kluber (2-1, 3.06).
MLB says umpires made ‘improper call’ against A’s
CLEVELAND (AP) — Major League Baseball said the umpires were wrong.
The Athletics knew that all along.
“We saw what we saw last night,” Oakland
manager Bob Melvin said.
One day after umpire Angel Hernandez and
his crew failed to reverse an obvious gametying home run by A’s infielder Adam Rosales
in the ninth inning following a video review,
MLB executive vice president Joe Torre said
an “improper call” was made in Wednesday’s
game between the Indians and Athletics.
However, despite pointing out the critical
error, Torre said the “judgment” call will stand.
The Indians won 4-3, and went on to sweep the
four-game series with a 9-2 victory over the A’s
on Thursday.
Melvin, who had been in contact with MLB
officials since shortly after Wednesday’s game,
said he never thought the ruling would be
overturned.
“No, I didn’t think there was any chance at
that,” he said, “because there’d been calls
before that have been missed and nothing’s
happened because of it.”
Few, though, seemed as egregious as this
error.
The A’s were already down by six runs in
the series finale when Torre’s statement was
released. In it, the former Yankees manager
made it clear the umpires had blown the call.
“By rule, the decision to reverse a call by use
of instant replay is at the sole discretion of the
crew chief,” Torre said. “In the opinion of Angel
Hernandez, who was last night’s crew chief,
there was not clear and convincing evidence to
overturn the decision on the field. It was a
judgment call, and as such, it stands as final.
“Home and away broadcast feeds are available for all uses of instant replay, and they
were available to the crew last night. Given
what we saw, we recognize that an improper
call was made. Perfection is an impossible
standard in any endeavor, but our goal is
always to get the calls right. Earlier this morning, we began the process of speaking with the
crew to thoroughly review all the circumstances surrounding last night’s decision.”
Before MLB’s ruling, Melvin said he still
believed he witnessed a home run and nothing
will ever change his mind.
The stunning decision not to reverse the call
was the talk of the sports world with everyone
seeming to agree the A’s had been wronged.
Retired Atlanta third baseman Chipper Jones
didn’t mince words with his take on the
umpires’ blown call.
“What good is instant replay if u don’t have
umpires who interpret it correctly?” Jones
wrote on Twitter. “Some course of action has to
be taken w/ umps. Even worse than that, there
were 2 other umpires looking at it with him.
What the hell were they lookin at?? Musta
been “get away day”!
In New York, Mets manager Terry Collins
said that human error is part of the game.
“Once in a while we’re going to make a mistake. I will always defend that,” he said. “Pretty soon this game is going to be played by
robots and we’ll all be watching it.”
With two outs, Rosales sent a drive to left
that appeared to easily clear the 19-foot-high
outfield wall and strike a metal railing. Melvin
asked Hernandez and his crew to review the
hit, and three umpires left the field to view
replays in a designated area near their dressing room.
After a lengthy delay, the umpires returned
and instructed Rosales, who was set to sprint
home, to stay at second, a decision that
shocked him the A’s, the Indians, 14,000 fans
in attendance at Progressive Field and people
watching on television.
Following Thursday’s game, Rosales
shrugged when he was told about Torre’s ruling.
sports051013_Layout 1 5/9/13 11:38 PM Page 2
10 l FRIDAY, MAY 10, 2013
DAILY GLOBE SCOREBOARD
Basketball
NBA PLAYOFFS
All Times EDT
(x-if necessary)
(Best-of-7)
CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Chicago 1, Miami 1
Monday, May 6: Chicago 93, Miami 86
Wednesday, May 8: Miami 115, Chicago 78
Friday, May 10: Miami at Chicago, 8
p.m.
Monday, May 13: Miami at Chicago, 7
p.m.
Wednesday, May 15: Chicago at
Miami, 7 p.m.
x-Friday, May 17: Miami at Chicago,
TBA
x-Sunday, May 19: Chicago at Miami,
TBA
Indiana 1, New York 1
Sunday, May 5: Indiana 102, New York
95
Tuesday, May 7: New York 105, Indiana 79
Saturday, May 11: New York at Indiana, 8 p.m.
Tuesday, May 14: New York at Indiana,
7 p.m.
Thursday, May 16: Indiana at New
York, 8 p.m.
x-Saturday, May 18: New York at Indiana, TBA
x-Monday, May 20: Indiana at New
York, 8 p.m.
WESTERN CONFERENCE
San Antonio 1, Golden State 1
Monday, May 6: San Antonio 129,
Golden State 127, 2OT
Wednesday, May 8: Golden St. 100,
San Antonio 91
Friday, May 10: San Antonio at Golden
State, 10:30 p.m.
Sunday, May 12: San Antonio at Golden State, 3:30 p.m.
Tuesday, May 14: Golden State at San
Antonio, 9:30 p.m.
x-Thursday, May 16: San Antonio at
Golden State, TBA
x-Sunday, May 19: Golden State at San
Antonio, TBA
Oklahoma City 1, Memphis 1
Sunday, May 5: Oklahoma City 93,
Memphis 91
Tuesday, May 7: Memphis 99, Oklahoma City 93
Saturday, May 11: Oklahoma City at
Memphis, 5 p.m.
Monday, May 13: Oklahoma City at
Memphis, 9:30 p.m.
Wednesday, May 15: Memphis at Oklahoma City, 9:30 p.m.
x-Friday, May 17: Oklahoma City at
Memphis, TBA
x-Sunday, May 19: Memphis at Oklahoma City, TBA
Hockey
NHL PLAYOFFS
All Times EDT
FIRST ROUND
(Best-of-7)
(x-if necessary)
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Pittsburgh 3, N.Y. Islanders 2
Wednesday, May 1: Pittsburgh 5, N.Y.
Islanders 0
Friday, May 3: N.Y. Islanders 4, Pittsburgh 3
Sunday, May 5: Pittsburgh 5, N.Y.
Islanders 4, OT
Tuesday, May 7: N.Y. Islanders 6, Pittsburgh 4
Thursday, May 9: Pittsburgh 4, N.Y.
Islanders 0
Saturday, May 11: Pittsburgh at N.Y.
Islanders, 7 p.m.
x-Sunday, May 12: N.Y. Islanders at
Pittsburgh, TBA
Ottawa 4, Montreal 1
Thursday, May 2: Ottawa 4, Montreal 2
Friday, May 3: Montreal 3, Ottawa 1
Sunday, May 5: Ottawa 6, Montreal 1
Tuesday, May 7: Ottawa 3, Montreal 2,
OT
Thursday, May 9: Ottawa 6, Montreal 1
Washington 2, N.Y. Rangers 2
Thursday, May 2: Washington 3, N.Y.
Rangers 1
Saturday, May 4: Washington 1, N.Y.
Rangers 0, OT
Monday, May 6: N.Y. Rangers 4, Washington 3
Wednesday, May 8: N.Y. Rangers 4,
Washington 3
Friday, May 10: N.Y. Rangers at Washington, 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, May 12: Washington at N.Y.
Rangers, TBA
x-Monday, May 13: N.Y. Rangers at
Washington, TBA
Boston 3, Toronto 1
Wednesday, May 1: Boston 4, Toronto
1
Saturday, May 4: Toronto 4, Boston 2
Monday, May 6: Boston 5, Toronto 2
Wednesday, May 8: Boston 4, Toronto
3, OT
Friday, May 10: Toronto at Boston, 7
p.m.
x-Sunday, May 12: Boston at Toronto,
TBA
x-Monday, May 13: Toronto at Boston,
TBA
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Chicago 3, Minnesota 1
Tuesday, April 30: Chicago 2, Minnesota 1, OT
Friday, May 3: Chicago 5, Minnesota 2
Sunday, May 5: Minnesota 3, Chicago
2, OT
Tuesday, May 7 Chicago 3, Minnesota
BASEBALL STANDINGS
0
Thursday, May 9: Minnesota at Chicago, 9:30 p.m.
x-Saturday, May 11: Chicago at Minnesota, 9:30 p.m.
x-Sunday, May 12: Minnesota at Chicago, TBA
Anaheim 3, Detroit 2
Tuesday, April 30: Anaheim 3, Detroit 1
Thursday, May 2: Detroit 5, Anaheim 4,
OT
Saturday, May 4: Anaheim 4, Detroit 0
Monday, May 6: Detroit 3, Anaheim 2,
OT
Wednesday, May 8: Anaheim 3, Detroit
2, OT
Friday, May 10: Anaheim at Detroit, 8
p.m.
x-Sunday, May 12: Detroit at Anaheim,
TBA
San Jose 4, Vancouver 0
Wednesday, May 1: San Jose 3, Vancouver 1
Friday, May 3: San Jose 3, Vancouver
2, OT
Sunday, May 5: San Jose 5, Vancouver
2
Tuesday, May 7: San Jose 4, Vancouver 3, OT
Los Angeles 3, St. Louis 2
Tuesday, April 30: St. Louis 2, Los
Angeles 1, OT
Thursday, May 2: St. Louis 2, Los
Angeles 1
Saturday, May 4: Los Angeles 1, St.
Louis 0
Monday, May 6: Los Angeles 4, St.
Louis 3
Wednesday, May 8: Los Angeles 3, St.
Louis 2, OT
Friday, May 10: St. Louis at Los Angeles, 10 p.m.
x-Monday, May 13: Los Angeles at St.
Louis, TBA
Transactions
BASEBALL
Major League Baseball
OFFICE OF THE COMMISSIONER OF
BASEBALL_Suspended Cincinnati RHP
Daniel Tuttle (Dayton-MWL) 100 games
after a third violation for a drug of abuse
under the Minor League Drug Prevention
and Treatment Program..
American League
BALTIMORE ORIOLES_Recalled RHP
Alex Burnett from Norfolk (IL). Placed
RHP Miguel Gonzalez on the 15-day DL,
retroactive to May 4.
BOSTON RED SOX_Optioned RHP
Allen Webster to Pawtucket (IL). Selected
the contract of RHP Jose De La Torre
from Pawtucket (IL). Transferred RHP
Joel Hanrahan to the 60-day DL.
CLEVELAND INDIANS_Activated CF
Michael Bourn from the 15-day DL.
Optioned LHP Scott Barnes to Columbus
(IL).
HOUSTON ASTROS_Sent RHP Josh
Fields to Cedar Rapids (MWL) for an
injury rehabilitation assignment.
KANSAS CITY ROYALS_Traded 3B
Brandon Wood to Baltimore for future
considerations.
NEW YORK YANKEES_Sent OF Curtis Granderson to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre
(IL) for an injury rehabilitation assignment.
TEXAS RANGERS_Placed C A.J.
Pierzynski on the 15-day DL, retroactive
to May 6. Sent RHP Colby Lewis to
Round Rock (PCL) for an injury rehabilitation assignment.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS_Optioned LHP
Ricky Romero to Buffalo (IL). Designated
RHP Edgar Gonzalez for assignment.
Selected the contracts of RHP Ramon
Ortiz and RHP Mickey Storey from Buffalo.
National League
ATLANTA BRAVES_Sent OF Jason
Heyward to Gwinnett (IL) for an injury
rehabilitation assignment.
CINCINNATI REDS_Sent RHP Johnny
Cueto to Dayton (MWL) for an injury rehabilitation assignment.
PITTSBURGH PIRATES_Sent 2B Neil
Walker to Altoona (EL) for an injury rehabilitation assignment.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
ATLANTA FALCONS_Waived K Casey
Barth and CB Momo Thomas.
BALTIMORE RAVENS_Acquired C
A.Q. Shipley from Indianapolis for a conditional 2014 draft pick.
BUFFALO BILLS_Signed TE Chris
Gragg.
CHICAGO BEARS_Agreed to terms
with LB Jon Bostic on a four-year contract.
DALLAS COWBOYS_Signed DB Gerald Sensabaugh a one-day contract, who
announced his retirement.
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS_Signed OL
Hugh Thornton, OL Khaled Holmes, DT
Montori Hughes, S John Boyett, RB Kerwynn Williams, TE Justice Cunningham
and OL Rick Schmeig.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS_Signed
WR Lavelle Hawkins.
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS_Signed S
Kenny Vaccaro, DE Terron Armstead,
WR Kenny Stills and DE Rufus Johnson.
NEW YORK JETS_Agreed to terms
with OL Brian Winters and FB Tommy
Bohanon on four-year contracts.
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES_Signed TE
Zach Ertz, S Earl Wolff, DE Joe Kruger,
CB Jordan Poyerand and DE David King.
TENNESSEE TITANS agreed to terms
with C Eloy Atkinson, CB George Baker,
K Maikon Bonani, DT Stefan Charles, TE
John Doyle, WR Travis Harvey, RB Stefphon Jefferson, G Oscar Johnson, DE
Nigel Nicholas, CB Matthew Pierce, WR
Rashad Ross, OT Matt Sewell, WR Dontel Watkins, LB Jonathan Willard and LB
Tom Wort.
Petitioners ask marathon
to let them finish in ‘14
BOSTON (AP) — Runners who
couldn’t complete this year’s Boston
Marathon because of the bombs at
the finish line have created an online
petition asking organizers to let them
into next year’s race.
The petition at change.org had
more than 20,000 signatures on
Thursday afternoon.
About 5,700 people were stopped
on the course because of the explosions that killed three people and
wounded hundreds more on Boylston Street on April 15. Ryan Polly,
of Vermont, who was approaching
the 35K checkpoint when the bombs
went off, started the petition asking
for runners like him to be allowed to
register in the 2014 race.
Boston Athletic Association officials say they’ve heard from thousands of runners since this year’s
race — on Facebook, by email and
over the phone — including many
who were stopped on the course.
B.A.A. executive director Tom Grilk
said “the common thread is one of
persistence.”
“We have listened and read every
e-mail and voicemail, and we have
been touched,” he said. “Planning a
marathon takes a lot of teamwork,
SPORTS
New York
Baltimore
Boston
Tampa Bay
Toronto
Detroit
Kansas City
Cleveland
Minnesota
Chicago
W
20
21
21
16
13
W
19
18
18
16
14
L
13
14
14
18
23
L
13
13
14
15
18
Texas
Oakland
Seattle
Los Angeles
Houston
W
21
18
16
11
10
Atlanta
Washington
Philadelphia
New York
Miami
W
20
19
16
14
10
L
13
15
19
17
25
W
20
19
19
16
13
L
14
15
15
18
20
St. Louis
Cincinnati
Pittsburgh
Milwaukee
Chicago
San Francisco
Arizona
Colorado
San Diego
Los Angeles
W
21
19
18
15
13
L
13
18
19
22
24
L
12
16
16
17
21
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
Pct GB WCGB L10
.606 —
—
6-4
.600 —
—
6-4
.600 —
—
3-7
.471 4½
4½
5-5
.361 8½
8½
4-6
Central Division
Pct GB WCGB L10
.594 —
—
7-3
.581
½
1
5-5
.563
1
1½
9-1
.516 2½
3
5-5
.438
5
5½
4-6
West Division
Pct GB WCGB L10
.618 —
—
5-5
.500
4
3½
4-6
.457 5½
5
7-3
.333 9½
9
2-8
.294 11
10½
3-7
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
Pct GB WCGB L10
.606 —
—
5-5
.559 1½
—
6-4
.457
5
3½
5-5
.452
5
3½
4-6
.286 11
9½
4-6
Central Division
Pct GB WCGB L10
.636 —
—
7-3
.543
3
½
6-4
.529 3½
1
4-6
.469 5½
3
3-7
.382 8½
6
4-6
West Division
Pct GB WCGB L10
.588 —
—
7-3
.559
1
—
5-5
.559
1
—
4-6
.471
4
3
7-3
.394 6½
5½
2-8
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Wednesday’s Games
Str Home
W-2
12-7
L-1
9-6
L-3
12-8
W-2
10-6
L-2
7-12
Str Home
L-2
10-4
W-1
10-5
W-4
10-7
W-3
7-6
W-1
7-7
Str Home
W-1
11-4
L-4
9-8
W-1
9-8
L-4
7-9
W-2
6-12
Away
8-6
12-8
9-6
6-12
6-11
Away
9-9
8-8
8-7
9-9
7-11
Away
10-9
9-10
7-11
4-13
4-12
Str Home
W-1
9-5
W-4
11-7
L-1
8-10
W-1
9-9
L-3
5-11
Away
11-8
8-8
8-9
5-8
5-14
Str Home
W-1
12-6
W-3
8-8
L-2
11-7
W-4
10-8
L-7
7-11
Away
8-8
11-7
8-8
6-10
6-9
Str Home
W-1
7-5
L-1
13-6
L-2
10-7
L-1 10-11
L-1
7-11
Away
14-7
6-10
8-9
5-6
6-10
Seattle 2, Pittsburgh 1
Washington 3, Detroit 1
Baltimore 5, Kansas City 3
Cleveland 4, Oakland 3
Chicago White Sox 6, N.Y. Mets 3
Minnesota 15, Boston 8
Tampa Bay 10, Toronto 4
Houston 3, L.A. Angels 1
Texas 4, Milwaukee 1
N.Y. Yankees 3, Colorado 2
Thursday’s Games
Cleveland 9, Oakland 2
N.Y. Yankees 3, Colorado 1
Washington 5, Detroit 4
Kansas City 6, Baltimore 2
Minnesota 5, Boston 3
Tampa Bay 5, Toronto 4, 10 innings
L.A. Angels at Houston
Friday’s Games
Cleveland (Kluber 2-1) at Detroit (Scherzer 4-0), 7:08 p.m.
San Diego (Volquez 3-3) at Tampa Bay (Cobb 4-2), 7:10 p.m.
Toronto (R.Ortiz 0-0) at Boston (Lester 4-0), 7:10 p.m.
Baltimore (Hammel 5-1) at Minnesota (Pelfrey 3-3), 8:10 p.m.
L.A. Angels (Hanson 2-1) at Chicago White Sox (Axelrod 0-2), 8:10 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (P.Hughes 1-2) at Kansas City (W.Davis 2-2), 8:10 p.m.
Texas (Ogando 3-2) at Houston (Keuchel 0-1), 8:10 p.m.
Oakland (Straily 1-0) at Seattle (Iwakuma 3-1), 10:10 p.m.
Saturday’s Games
Toronto at Boston, 1:35 p.m.
San Diego at Tampa Bay, 6:10 p.m.
Cleveland at Detroit, 7:08 p.m.
Baltimore at Minnesota, 7:10 p.m.
L.A. Angels at Chicago White Sox, 7:10 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at Kansas City, 7:10 p.m.
Texas at Houston, 7:10 p.m.
Oakland at Seattle, 9:10 p.m.
Sunday’s Games
Cleveland at Detroit, 1:08 p.m.
Toronto at Boston, 1:35 p.m.
Baltimore at Minnesota, 2:10 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at Kansas City, 2:10 p.m.
Texas at Houston, 2:10 p.m.
Oakland at Seattle, 4:10 p.m.
San Diego at Tampa Bay, 7:10 p.m.
L.A. Angels at Chicago White Sox, 8:05 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Wednesday’s Games
Atlanta 7, Cincinnati 2
Seattle 2, Pittsburgh 1
St. Louis 5, Chicago Cubs 4
San Diego 1, Miami 0
San Francisco 4, Philadelphia 3, 10 innings
Washington 3, Detroit 1
Chicago White Sox 6, N.Y. Mets 3
Texas 4, Milwaukee 1
N.Y. Yankees 3, Colorado 2
Arizona 3, L.A. Dodgers 2
Thursday’s Games
N.Y. Yankees 3, Colorado 1
Washington 5, Detroit 4
N.Y. Mets 3, Pittsburgh 2
Philadelphia at Arizona
Atlanta at San Francisco
Friday’s Games
Chicago Cubs (Samardzija 1-4) at Washington (Detwiler 1-3), 7:05 p.m.
Milwaukee (Gallardo 3-1) at Cincinnati (Cingrani 2-0), 7:10 p.m.
Pittsburgh (W.Rodriguez 2-2) at N.Y. Mets (Marcum 0-2), 7:10 p.m.
San Diego (Volquez 3-3) at Tampa Bay (Cobb 4-2), 7:10 p.m.
Colorado (Garland 3-2) at St. Louis (S.Miller 4-2), 8:15 p.m.
Philadelphia (Cloyd 0-0) at Arizona (Kennedy 1-3), 9:40 p.m.
Miami (Fernandez 1-2) at L.A. Dodgers (Magill 0-0), 10:10 p.m.
Atlanta (Hudson 4-1) at San Francisco (M.Cain 1-2), 10:15 p.m.
Saturday’s Games
Pittsburgh at N.Y. Mets, 1:10 p.m.
Colorado at St. Louis, 2:15 p.m.
Atlanta at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m.
Chicago Cubs at Washington, 4:05 p.m.
Milwaukee at Cincinnati, 4:10 p.m.
San Diego at Tampa Bay, 6:10 p.m.
Philadelphia at Arizona, 8:10 p.m.
Miami at L.A. Dodgers, 9:10 p.m.
Sunday’s Games
Milwaukee at Cincinnati, 1:10 p.m.
Pittsburgh at N.Y. Mets, 1:10 p.m.
Chicago Cubs at Washington, 1:35 p.m.
Colorado at St. Louis, 2:15 p.m.
Atlanta at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m.
Miami at L.A. Dodgers, 4:10 p.m.
Philadelphia at Arizona, 4:10 p.m.
San Diego at Tampa Bay, 7:10 p.m.
and planning a marathon in the wake
of the events of April 15 takes even
more teamwork, communication,
and planning. ... As we work on our
plan, and options for that group of
runners which did have the opportunity to cross the finish line of the
race, we ask those runners for continued patience.”
Hossa scores twice as
Blackhawks eliminate Wild
CHICAGO (AP) — Marian Hossa
scored twice to back a strong effort
by goalie Corey Crawford, and the
Chicago Blackhawks beat the Minnesota Wild 5-1 Thursday night to
win their first-round playoff series 41.
Chicago is moving on in the postseason for the first time since the
championship run in 2010, and will
face either San Jose or Detroit if the
Red Wings get past Anaheim.
The way the Blackhawks have
dominated, anything less than a trip
to the Stanley Cup finals would be a
disappointment for them.
They got off to a record start and
captured the Presidents’ Trophy for
finishing with more points than any
other team.
Now, they’re eyeing the biggest
prize of all. And after bowing out in
the first round the past two years,
they sure are looking good.
Penguins drop Islanders
4-0 to regain series lead
PITTSBURGH (AP) — Tomas
Vokoun had forgotten what it was
like to start in the playoffs. Tyler
Kennedy wondered if he’d ever get
the chance again.
That’s never an issue for Sidney
Crosby, who followed the lead of his
decidedly less-heralded teammates
to establish a bit of order to the Pittsburgh Penguins’ first-round series
with the New York Islanders.
Vokoun stopped 31 shots in his
first postseason appearance in six
years, Kennedy broke a scoreless
tie with a sizzling breakaway and
Crosby delivered another magical
goal in a career stuffed with them.
The Penguins beat the Islanders 4-0
in Game 5 to take a 3-2 lead in the
best-of-seven series.
Kris Letang and Doug Murray
also scored for Pittsburgh, which
finally looked like the team that rolled
to the best record in the Eastern
Conference during the regular season.
Game 6 is Saturday in New York.
Another 60 minutes like the Penguins put together on Thursday and
a Game 7 won’t be required.
THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM
Great debut for Castro;
Woods solid at Players
PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla.
(AP) — Tiger Woods was nine
shots out of the lead, not the best
position at The Players Championship, especially since he had
not even started his round. Perhaps the bigger surprise was the
guy who posted the record-tying
round Thursday.
Roberto Castro had only
played the TPC Sawgrass in a
practice round. He made a debut
he won’t soon forget.
There was the 9-iron to a foot
on the island-green 17th and a 4iron to about the same tap-in
range on the 18th, the hardest
hole on the course. He hit a 3iron to 3 feet for eagle, and twice
hit wedge so close he didn’t even
have to read the putt.
When his memorable day was
over, Castro had a 9-under 63
and his name in the record book
twice. He tied the course record
held by Fred Couples and Greg
Norman, and his three-shot lead
was the largest margin after the
opening round at The Players in
21 years.
Welcome to Sawgrass.
“I hit it close a lot,” said Castro, making it sound as easy as it
looked.
He led over Rory McIlroy, who
broke par for the first time in his
fourth appearance with five
birdies after the turn and conservative play off the tee on the
front nine for a bogey-free 66.
Zach Johnson also had a 66 while
playing in the pristine morning
conditions.
Woods had to work a little
harder in the afternoon. Not only
did he spot Castro nine shots,
Woods had never broken 70 in
the opening round in his 15 previous tries.
“It was a day that I felt I had
to shoot something in the 60s,”
Woods said.
He ran off four straight
birdies around the turn. He was
on the cup of his first bogey-free
round at The Players until his 8iron from 200 yards went just
over the green and he flubbed his
chip. The bogey gave him a 67, a
strong effort considering he knew
he had a lot of ground to make up
before hitting his first shot.
“I’ve seen that a lot, but not at
this golf course,” he said.
Vijay Singh, playing one day
after he sued the PGA Tour for
its handling of his doping case,
was largely ignored while playing in the group behind Woods.
One fan wore felt deer antlers in
the bleachers behind the first tee
— Singh’s case involved taking
deer antler spray — but only a
dozen or so people followed the
50-year-old Fijian on the back
nine and it was a quiet day.
At one point, Singh let out a
hearty laugh walking off the tee
with Robert Garrigus and J.J.
Henry. His golf wasn’t the subject of the laughter. Singh hit
into the water on the last hole
and made bogey for a 74, leaving
him in danger of missing the cut.
So ended a first round filled
with plenty of action — a recordtying score by a player hardly
anyone knows, McIlroy breaking
par for the first time at Sawgrass, 17 balls in the water
around the island-green 17th
and 33 rounds in the 60s.
Padraig Harrington followed an
eagle with a double bogey.
Michael Thompson made a holein-one.
But it all started with Castro,
a 27-year-old who felt like he
couldn’t miss.
“I don’t think anyone has figured out what the secret is to
this place,” Castro said.
Woods, Webb Simpson and
Ryan Palmer each had a 67, the
lowest score from the afternoon.
McIlroy also played in the
morning, in the same group as
Masters champion Adam Scott
(69) and Steve Stricker (67). The
24-year-old from Northern Ireland had never made the cut or
even broken par at The Players,
but McIlroy figured it out on a
gorgeous morning by dialing it
back off the tee and letting his
iron play take over. McIlroy
never came seriously close to a
bogey, and he didn’t hit driver
once on the front nine.
“When you hit the shots, it
seems very simple,” McIlroy said.
“I had a lot of good shots out
there, lot of iron shots that were
12, 15 feet away from the pin and
I got myself a lot of looks for
birdies. I adopted maybe more of
a conservative strategy off the
tee this year. But once you put
your ball in the fairway that
means you can be more aggressive into the greens. So it sort of
balances itself out.”
The Stadium Course has
rarely looked so vulnerable with
barely a trace of wind and some
pins in bowls that allowed for
good looks at birdie. Half the 72
players in the morning broke
par.
But the punishment is never
far away, as Scott Stallings discovered. He opened with five
straight birdies to get everyone’s
attention, but after going out in
31, Stallings gave most of it back
with a bogey, double bogey and a
triple bogey on the 16th when he
hit two balls into the water. He
shot 40 on the back for a 71.
“It just goes to show about the
golf course and really how
volatile it is,” Stallings said.
Castro hasn’t discovered that
yet. This was a day when everything went right.
He made three birdies early in
his round on the back until making his tap-in birdies on the 17th
and 18th. Then, he hit 3-iron into
3 feet on the par-5 second hole for
an eagle and was 7-under
through 11 holes. On the fourth,
he hit his approach inside 2 feet
for another birdie, and then he
hit wedge to 18 inches on the
sixth.
Castro had a birdie putt just
outside 12 feet to break the
course record, but missed it.
After his eagle on the second
hole — his 11th of the round —
Castro was reminded of a game
he plays to try to birdie every
other hole.
“When I eagled, I was like,
‘Oh, now I’m 7 (under) through
11, so that’s keeping ahead of
that 50 percent mark.’ But this is
a different golf course,” he said.
“The golf course is much harder
than most of the other times I’ve
kind of taken that attitude.”
Couples shot his 63 in 1992 in
the third round. Norman opened
with a 63 in 1994 when he went
on to shatter the tournament
record at 24-under 264. Along
with joining them in the record
PGA TOUR-THE PLAYERS CHAMPIONSHIP PAR SCORES
Thursday
At TPC Sawgrass
Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla.
Purse: $9.5 million
Yardage: 7,215; Par: 72 (36-36)
First Round
Roberto Castro
32-31—63
Zach Johnson
33-33—66
Rory McIlroy
35-31—66
Casey Wittenberg
33-34—67
Hunter Mahan
34-33—67
Steve Stricker
36-31—67
Ryan Palmer
35-32—67
Webb Simpson
32-35—67
Tiger Woods
34-33—67
Jason Bohn
31-37—68
Henrik Stenson
33-35—68
David Lingmerth
35-33—68
Greg Chalmers
33-35—68
Padraig Harrington
35-33—68
Sergio Garcia
34-34—68
Sang-Moon Bae
34-34—68
Jason Kokrak
34-35—69
Jason Day
34-35—69
Ben Crane
35-34—69
Kevin Streelman
37-32—69
Louis Oosthuizen
35-34—69
Russell Henley
33-36—69
Adam Scott
35-34—69
Bo Van Pelt
33-36—69
Andres Romero
33-36—69
Nicholas Thompson
33-36—69
Kevin Chappell
36-33—69
Daniel Summerhays
34-35—69
Jonas Blixt
34-35—69
Ben Curtis
34-35—69
Lee Westwood
36-33—69
K.J. Choi
34-35—69
Michael Thompson
35-34—69
Jeff Maggert
35-35—70
William McGirt
37-33—70
Cameron Tringale
36-34—70
Peter Hanson
32-38—70
Justin Leonard
37-33—70
George McNeill
34-36—70
Graeme McDowell
35-35—70
Keegan Bradley
37-33—70
Sean O’Hair
35-35—70
John Huh
34-36—70
Matt Jones
35-35—70
Matt Every
36-34—70
Charley Hoffman
37-33—70
Seung-Yul Noh
35-35—70
Davis Love III
34-36—70
Carl Pettersson
35-35—70
Chris Kirk
35-35—70
Scott Piercy
34-36—70
James Hahn
37-33—70
Harris English
35-35—70
Ken Duke
35-36—71
Chad Campbell
34-37—71
Jerry Kelly
35-36—71
Scott Stallings
31-40—71
Ricky Barnes
35-36—71
Boo Weekley
35-36—71
Charles Howell III
37-34—71
Jason Dufner
39-32—71
Matt Kuchar
35-36—71
Brandt Snedeker
36-35—71
Martin Laird
35-36—71
Tim Herron
34-37—71
Graham DeLaet
36-35—71
Jeff Overton
37-34—71
Josh Teater
36-36—72
Brian Harman
36-36—72
Jimmy Walker
35-37—72
D.A. Points
35-37—72
Tim Clark
37-35—72
Jim Furyk
37-35—72
Brian Gay
36-36—72
Charlie Beljan
36-36—72
Marc Leishman
35-37—72
Freddie Jacobson
35-37—72
Phil Mickelson
35-37—72
Justin Rose
34-38—72
Luke Donald
35-37—72
Charl Schwartzel
35-37—72
Robert Garrigus
36-36—72
David Hearn
34-38—72
David Lynn
37-35—72
Brendon de Jonge
38-34—72
-9
-6
-6
-5
-5
-5
-5
-5
-5
-4
-4
-4
-4
-4
-4
-4
-3
-3
-3
-3
-3
-3
-3
-3
-3
-3
-3
-3
-3
-3
-3
-3
-3
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-2
-1
-1
-1
-1
-1
-1
-1
-1
-1
-1
-1
-1
-1
-1
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
book, Castro matched the record
set by Billy Ray Brown in 1992
with his three-shot lead after one
round.
Castro is not well known even
in golf circles. His mother grew
up in Peru and moved to America as a teenager along with her
sister, Jenny Lidback, who
played the LPGA Tour. He toiled
in the minor leagues for five
years after getting his industrial
engineering degree at Georgia
Tech.
Woods wasn’t pleased with
how he struck the ball, only with
where he missed it. Despite missing six greens, he was left with
straightforward shots to save
par. The only blemish came at
the end, when his 56-degree
wedge came up heavy into the
grain and failed to reach the
putting surface.
Vikings shore up agreement to play at TCF Stadium
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — The Minnesota Vikings
and University of Minnesota have spent an entire
year putting together an agreement that will allow
the NFL team to play on the college campus while its
shiny, new home is built.
After navigating myriad obstacles, working with
sponsors to resolve potential conflicts and putting a
price tag on the cost of their temporary stay, the two
sides finally got a chance to celebrate its conclusion
Thursday.
The Vikings and the university announced the
details of the agreement that will allow the NFL
team to play all of its home games at the Golden
Gophers’ stadium in 2014 and 2015. The contract
calls for the Vikings to pay the university $250,000
for every game and an additional $50,000 in concession and advertising revenue. That could add up to as
much as $3 million per season above all expenses.
“I think we’ve reached a very fair agreement for
both sides,” Minnesota President Eric Kaler said.
“It’s the classic example of a win-win.”
The university will also keep all parking revenue
and the Vikings will be responsible for paying for
upgrades to TCF Bank Stadium that are required,
including heating the artificial turf field, winterizing
the stadium so that it can be fully operational in
November, December and January, and adding seats
to increase capacity. The agreement was unanimously approved by a committee at the board of regents
meeting Thursday and is expected to gain full
approval Friday.
“This shows the collaborative nature between the
Minnesota Vikings and the University of Minnesota,” Vikings vice president of legal affairs and chief
administrative officer Kevin Warren said. “Hopefully
we can win two Super Bowls while we’re playing here
and leave a lasting legacy.”
The Vikings are planning 2013 to be their last in
the Metrodome. They won a decade-long fight for a
new stadium last year when state lawmakers
approved public funding to help build a brand new
facility in downtown Minneapolis, where the Dome
currently sits.
The Vikings’ agreement with the Gophers
includes two additional years if necessary, an important designation given that the state’s side of the
funding — initially planned to be paid for by electronic gambling machines — has been slow to get
started. But the Vikings made clear that they only
plan to be playing at TCF for two seasons.
The Vikings will be limited to one weekday night
game each season, which can only take place late in
the year when school is not in session and when the
weather is likely to be the coldest. They will most
likely take a pretty big hit in ticket revenue in the
smaller stadium.
The Metrodome’s capacity is over 64,000 fans.
TCF Bank Stadium holds under 51,000, but the
Vikings could add bleacher seating in one end zone
that could bump the capacity by 2,000-3,000 seats.
“TCF Bank Stadium is a tremendous college football stadium. It’s outstanding,” Vikings vice president of stadium development Lester Bagley said.
“But it’s not an NFL stadium, and that is a challenge.
There will be limitations, there will be challenges
ongoing for our fans, for the Vikings, for the university. But the relationship that’s been built and the
partnership going forward is comforting.”
SPORTS
11
Parity abounds so far in NBA conference semifinals
sports051013_Layout 1 5/9/13 11:39 PM Page 3
THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM
By TIM REYNOLDS
AP Basketball Writer
Parity has struck the NBA playoffs,
where the conference semifinals are all fit
to be tied.
The four current series are all knotted
at one game apiece — the first time that’s
happened in the second round of the NBA
playoffs since the league went to its current format more than a quarter-century
ago. For favorites like Miami, New York,
San Antonio and Oklahoma City, homecourt advantage has disappeared, and
now it’s the underdogs who can control
their own fates simply by taking care of
business on their home floors.
A wild weekend is ahead, without question.
The Heat, Knicks, Spurs and Thunder
are four of the league’s top five winningest
road teams this season. That probably
isn’t being received as great news for
Chicago, Indiana, Golden State and Memphis, the lower-seeded clubs who will be
hosting pivotal Game 3’s when NBA playoff action resumes on Friday and Saturday.
“Pretty cool. The NBA’s loving it,” Heat
forward LeBron James said. “When it
comes to the playoffs, I always continue to
say no matter how many games you win or
lose in the regular season, once you get to
the playoffs everybody’s record is 0-0. So I
think it’s great. I think it’s great for our
fans, I think it’s great for the competition
that every series is tied 1-1.”
After a first round with only two
FRIDAY, MAY 10, 2013
sweeps — by Miami and San Antonio, the
top seeds in the Eastern and Western Conferences — the tone for the second round
was set pretty quickly around the league.
Miami lost Game 1 at home to a wounded
and weary team from Chicago. San Antonio needed a huge comeback to beat Golden State in Game 1 of their series, then
saw the Warriors simply come back and
take Game 2.
The Knicks lost Game 1 to Indiana
before evening up their matchup, and the
Thunder are likely feeling lucky that
they’re not in an 0-2 hole after Memphis
had plenty of chances to take the opening
game of their series.
“When you get this deep into the playoffs, they’re all good teams, they’re all very
good teams more than capable of winning
at home or on the road,” Golden State
coach Mark Jackson said. “So I’m not surprised at all. Good coaching, good playing,
you make adjustments and win games.
They’ve all been great games.”
Big fourth-quarter comebacks, first by
Oklahoma City and then by Memphis,
decided the outcomes of the first two
games of that series, where the cumulative score right now is Grizzlies 190, Thunder 186. The first two Spurs-Warriors
games were pure theater, with San Antonio winning a double-overtime thriller in
Game 1 after rallying from 16 points down
late in regulation.
Road teams took Game 1’s in the East
semifinals, with Indiana and Chicago both
winning by seven. And the home teams
imposed their wills in Game 2 of both
matchups, New York using a huge late
run to beat the Pacers by 26, and the Heat
outscoring the Bulls by an unbelievable
62-20 margin over a 19-minute stretch on
the way to evening that matchup with a
115-78 romp.
“Anybody can beat you on a given night
and playoff basketball is no different,”
Knicks coach Mike Woodson said. “I mean,
everybody at this particular time is hungry even more. Nobody wants to go home
so it becomes crazy basketball. Everybody
is pumped up and ready to play.”
Then again, if you checked out how
these teams fared against each other in
the regular season, maybe you could have
seen something as uncanny as this coming.
There wasn’t any real separation
between the clubs then, either.
The Bulls and Heat split four games
against one another, as did the Knicks and
Pacers, and Spurs and Warriors. The only
exception was Memphis beating Oklahoma City in two of the three games they
played this year — and if they met four
times, there would figure to be a chance
that it could have been a 2-2 split as well.
“Each team is working hard, trying to
get wins,” said Memphis guard Tony
Allen, who was part of Boston’s title-winning team in 2008. “They got the trophy on
their mind so I believe that each series is
probably going to go all the way to the end.
You look at the eight teams that are left,
all the teams have a shot.”
l
Associated Press
MIAMI HEAT’S LeBron James, front, is fouled by Chicago Bulls’ Daequan Cook, center,
during Game 2 Wednesday in Miami. At right is Chicago’s Marquis Teague (25).
The Heat entered the playoffs as the
overwhelming favorites to win their second straight title, and they remain that
way in the eyes of oddsmakers even
though they’ll need to win one game in
Chicago to reclaim the home-court advantage.
Heat coach Erik Spoelstra’s eyes
widened a bit Thursday when told that no
second round in the NBA playoffs had ever
8th Annual
opened quite this way.
“Is that right? First time ever? Really?
Wow,” Spoelstra said. “Makes for great
theater. I know I’m enjoying the other
games, probably like other fans are enjoying ours. It shows how much parity there
is and how little margin for error with the
teams that are left. ... We had always felt
there was up to six or seven legitimate,
title-contending teams.”
Brian Nasi Memorial
Heart Run/Walk
Saturday, May 11th ~ 9:00 a.m.
The 8th Annual Brian Nasi Memorial Heart Run/Walk will be held on Saturday, ment for the 2nd grade class at Hurley K-12 School. Possible future plans include
May ll, 2013 starting @ 9:00 a.m from the Hurley K-12 School. Registration the expansion of the cross country ski trail behind the Hurley K-12 School.
forms are available online @ www.EroNasi.com & www.AspirusGrandview.org This trail can be used by all students and also the people of our community.
The long term goal will be the formation of a Nordic ski team and Hurley K-12
The race includes a 5-K Run, a 5-K Walk, a 1-mile run and a 1-mile walk. School.
There is also a children’s 12/under division group for the 1 mile run and the 1
mile walk. All children will be presented a red ribbon and a free show pass Other projects funded were a Hurley Walking trail through the City of Hurley,
courtesy of Cloverland Cinemas. We also will have Cheryl Cunico donating heart monitors placed in the physical education classes and Hurley K-12 School
her time & talents with face painting for the children.
and a monetary contribution to the cardiac unit at Aspirus Grand View Hospital.
The purpose of this yearly event is to encourage people of all ages to come
out and enjoy the day while helping to support the fight against heart disease,
Proceeds from the race will be used to fund health focused initiatives. If any
the #1 killer of people in America today.
school group or organization needs funding and/or more information please
call 715-561-2486.
Proceeds from the race are put directly back into the schools and community
supporting many heart healthy events and activities. This past year a major
Awards and prizes will be scheduled for 10:30 a.m. in the Commons Area at
monetary contribution was made for the purchase of cross country ski equip- the Hurley K-12 School. Top male and female from each age group will be
awarded. We also will award plaques for the largest family group and also the
largest school or other group project.
RAY’S
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Red Heart Ballons will be sold before the race for $1.00 each in honor/memory
of loved ones lost or are currently fighting heart disease. These are released at
the start of the race. There is also a 50/50 Raffle.
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ENTERTAINMENT
‘Young and Restless’ star Jeanne Cooper dies at 84
12 l FRIDAY, MAY 10, 2013
LOS ANGELES (AP) —
Jeanne Cooper, the enduring
soap opera star who played
grande dame Katherine Chancellor for nearly four decades on
“The Young and the Restless,”
has died. She was 84.
Cooper died Wednesday morning in her sleep, her son the actor
Corbin Bernsen wrote on Facebook. The family confirmed the
death to CBS, according to a network spokeswoman.
She was in a Los Angeles-area
hospital, according to Bernsen’s
spokesman, Charles Sherman,
who said the cause of death was
not immediately available.
“One of the last great broads
in our business — Jeanne Cooper, Mom — is now stirring up
trouble in great beyond,” her
family said in a statement.
Cooper will be remembered
“as a daytime television legend
and as a friend who will truly be
missed by all of us here at the
network,” said Nina Tassler,
president of CBS Entertainment,
adding that the actress brought
“indelible charm, class and talent
to every episode.”
“Heaven just gained one feisty
angel,” cast member Melissa
Claire Egan posted on her Twitter account.
“A very sad day for all of us.
You will be deeply missed,”
tweeted Jessica Collins, also on
the serial.
THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM
Cooper joined the daytime
serial six months after its March
1973 debut, staking claim to the
title of longest-tenured cast
member. The role earned her 11
Daytime Emmy nominations and
a trophy for best actress in a
drama series in 2008.
“God knows it’s claimed a big
part of my life,” she told The
Associated Press in March as
CBS’ “The Young and the Restless” celebrated its milestone
40th anniversary.
As the years passed, Cooper
brushed aside thoughts of saying
goodbye to the show and its fictional Wisconsin town of Genoa
City.
“What would I do? I’m no good
at crocheting. My fingers would
bleed,” she told the AP as she
turned 83 in October.
But on April 12 Bernsen
tweeted that his mother faced an
“uphill battle” for an undisclosed
illness. In subsequent days he
wrote of her gradual improvement and said that she’d been
taken off breathing equipment.
In a Facebook posting April
17, Bernsen said his mother
cursed several times, “showing
me that she’s becoming her old
self, not thrilled about the situation, and ready to get out of the
hospital and shake up the world.”
On Wednesday he wrote that
she remained a fighter until the
end: “She has been a blaze her
Briefly
Neil Patrick Harris to return as Tony Awards host
NEW YORK (AP) — Neil Patrick Harris will be back for his fourth
turn as host of the Tony Awards.
The Broadway League and the American Theatre Wing, joint producers of the show that honors the best of Broadway, said Thursday
the 67th annual awards will be broadcast live by CBS from Radio
City Music Hall on June 9.
In a statement, Harris said he was excited to be back hosting the
Tonys, adding: “The show will rock!”
Harris previously hosted the Tonys last year and in 2011 and
2009.
Last year’s telecast at the intimate Beacon Theatre was seen by 6
million viewers, down significantly from 2011’s 6.9 million. It was
also the second-lowest ratings for the Tony Awards since 1988,
though it was up against the season finale of AMC’s “Mad Men.”
The 39-year-old Harris has starred in three Broadway productions, including “Assassins,” ‘’Proof,” opposite Anne Heche, and as the
exuberant master of ceremonies in “Cabaret.” He currently stars as
dapper ladies’ man Barney Stinson on CBS’ sitcom hit “How I Met
Your Mother.”
Usher to curate music for July 4 fireworks show
NEW YORK (AP) — Usher will be the spark for Macy’s Fourth of
July fireworks show.
The Grammy-winning singer will collaborate with Macy’s to
curate the concept, music and design for the fireworks, which will be
launched from barges off Manhattan.
It’s the first time the company has worked with an artist on the
concept for its annual show, Macy’s said Thursday.
Usher will score the music for “It Begins With a Spark,” which will
feature his songs, as well as songs and hits from Rihanna, Swedish
House Mafia, Jimi Hendrix and Frank Sinatra.
He will also provide visual design cues and direction for the
pyrotechnics that are choreographed to the musical score.
The 37th annual Macy’s Fourth of July Fireworks display will air
after the annual concert on NBC. Performers haven’t been
announced.
Bertolucci to head Venice Film Festival jury
MILAN (AP) — The Venice Film Festival has announced that
Oscar-winning director Bernardo Bertolucci will chair the jury for
the 70th Venice Film Festival.
Bertolucci, 73, headed the jury previously in 1983, when the Golden Lion went to Jean-Luc Godard’s “First Name: Carmen,” and he
has premiered numerous films at the festival, starting with “The
Grim Reaper” in 1962 and more recently “The Dreamers,” in 2003.
Bertolucci’s 1987 film “The Last Emperor” won nine Oscars. The
festival says it was the first and only Italian film to win the Academy Award for best director.
Bertolucci said in a statement Thursday that the festival will give
him the opportunity to discover “the most mysterious niches of filmmaking in the most mysterious countries of the world.”
The festival will be held Aug. 28-Sept. 7.
Social media eyed ‘Day of the Dead’ trademark fail
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — When Lalo Alcaraz saw a tweet
this week that Disney was seeking to trademark “Dia de los Muertos,” the name of the traditional “Day of the Dead” celebrated by millions in Mexico and the U.S., the Los Angeles-based cartoonist immediately pressed “retweet.”
The humorist then sent out a series of satirical social media posts
warning that Disney was out to trademark dead Latino relatives. He
also created a cartoon, which quickly went viral, of a skeletal Godzilla-sized Mickey Mouse destroying a city. The words on top of the
monster read: “It’s coming to trademark your cultura (culture).”
Those tweets, along with tens of thousands of other similar social
media posts, sparked Disney Enterprises Inc. into announcing that
the company was withdrawing a “Dia de los Muertos” trademark
request it made on May 1 to the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.
Disney had hoped to secure name rights for merchandise such as
snack foods and Christmas ornaments as it partners with Pixar Animation Studios Inc. to create an animated movie inspired by the holiday.
“Disney’s trademark filing was intended to protect any potential
title for our film and related activities,” a company statement said.
“It has since been determined that the title of the film will change
and therefore we are withdrawing our trademark filing.”
But the anger and ridicule expressed on social media largely by
Latinos are being credited with the company’s retreat by Tuesday as
word began to spread on Twitter and Facebook. Within hours, online
petitions were created and the organizers started openly discussing
plans to boycott whatever movie or products would be linked to the
trademark request.
Critics charged that Disney, or any other corporation, for that
matter, had no right to trademark a cultural holiday like November’s
Day of the Dead. Not only was the move insensitive, critics said that
trademarking the popular holiday put thousands of businesses that
made products linked to the day at risk.
entire life, that beacon, that
boxer I spoke of earlier. She went
the full twelve rounds and by
unanimous decision... won!”
Cooper, born in the California
town of Taft in 1928, attended
the College of the Pacific and performed in local theater productions before her professional
career began with the 1953 film
“The Redhead from Wyoming”
starring Maureen O’Hara. Other
film credits include 1968’s “The
Boston Strangler” with Tony
Curtis and 1967’s “Tony Rome”
with Frank Sinatra.
She had a parallel career in
TV, with shows including “The
Adventures of Kit Carson” in
1953 and “The Pepsi-Cola Playhouse” in 1954 and “Bracken’s
World” in 1969-70.
In a recurring role on “L.A.
Law,” she played the mother to
Bernsen’s character, Arnie, and
received a 1987 Emmy nomination for best guest actress in a
drama. Bernsen later joined his
mother on her series, making
several appearances as a priest,
Father Todd.
But it was her role on “The
Young and the Restless” that
made her a TV star intimately
familiar to viewers.
In 1984, Cooper’s real-life
facelift was televised on the show
as her character underwent the
surgery at the same time, and
had no regrets about it.
Associated Press
IN THIS June 8, 2008, file photo, Jeanne Cooper poses with her award for outstanding lead actress in a drama
series for her work on “The Young and the Restless” at the 35th annual Daytime Emmy Awards in Los Angeles. CBS says soap opera star Cooper has died. She was 84. Cooper played grande dame Katherine Chancellor on CBS’ “The Young and the Restless” for nearly four decades.
“It opened up reconstructive
surgery for so many people,
youngsters getting things done,”
she said. “To this day, people will
come up to me and say, ‘Thank
you so much for doing that. My
mom or I had something done,
and not just cosmetic surgery.’
That was an incredible experience in my life.”
“The Young and the Restless”
has topped the daytime serial ratings for more than 24 years, in
part because of the continuity provided by Cooper and its other longtime stars including Eric Braeden.
It held its ground as the genre
diminished in popularity and the
majority of soaps vanished.
Cooper’s 30-year marriage to
Harry Bernsen ended in divorce.
The couple have three children,
Corbin, Caren and Collin, and
eight grandchildren.
Hawn, Hudson talk mother-daughter beauty
By ALICIA RANCILIO
The Associated Press
NEW YORK (AP) — When
Kate Hudson first burst onto the
scene with the movie “Almost
Famous,” her uncanny resemblance to her mother Goldie
Hawn had everybody talking.
Hudson didn’t see it. But now
that she’s a mother herself — of
two sons, Rider and Bingham —
the 34-year-old actress says she
treasures the comparison.
The mother-daughter pair —
Hawn an Oscar winner for “Cactus Flower” and Hudson a nominee for “Almost Famous” — has
never acted together, but they
teamed up for an Almay ad for
Mother’s Day. In a discussion of
motherhood and beauty, both
said their glow comes from the
inside. Hawn also said daily
meditation allows her to “connect to spirit.”
“Growing up with my mom
there was always a sense of fun
and it comes down to optimism
as well,” Hudson said in an
interview with The Associated
Press. “When you learn how to
be optimistic and wake up in the
morning and appreciate things
and create that in your brain, I
think you start to have an enjoyment of life and it shows.”
AP: Now that Kate is an adult
and a mom herself, has your
relationship gone from parent
and child to friends?
Hawn: The truth is that no
matter how old we are, as long
as our mothers are alive, we
want our mother. And it’s a very
powerful relationship if it’s
healthy. I miss my mother today.
I think the transition does happen but I don’t think we ever
lose our positioning because we
don’t want to lose our mother.
It’s a very, very interesting walk.
Hudson: I think when I had
Rider I think that’s when you
really start to see your parents
and connect with them in a different way and you start to see
yourself differently as to what
you put your parents through,
you sort of empathize.
AP: Everyone talks about
how you two look alike. Do you
Associated Press
THIS DEC. 15, 2009, file photo shows actress Goldie Hawn, left, and her daughter Kate Hudson at the premiere of “Nine” at the Ziegfeld Theatre in New York. When Kate Hudson first burst onto the scene with the
movie “Almost Famous,” her uncanny resemblance to her mother Goldie Hawn had everybody talking. Hudson didn’t see it. But now that she’s a mother herself, the 34-year-old actress says she treasures the comparison. The mother-daughter pair has never acted together, but they teamed up for an Almay ad for Mother’s
Day.
see the resemblance?
Hawn: I do.
Hudson: I used to say, ‘Why
do people say that? I look nothing like my mom.’ But I sometimes walk across a mirror and
just get a glance and I see it.
Hawn: We don’t really look
alike. You take all of our features and they’re not alike.
What we do have is a way of
being that is both very similar.
Katie’s eyes are different. She
looks more like my mother. It’s
interesting how you can feel it’s
in the DNA. Katie said it perfectly. She said, ‘Why does
everybody always talk about
this and that and us’ and she
said, ‘What do you expect? I’m
my mother’s daughter!’
Hudson: And you know
what, I am damn proud of it! It’s
a very repetitive question that I
get a lot in my life and it’s something that I feel the rarity of
being in that position is I really
look at that as a real blessing
because
the
relationship
between mother and daughter is
very complex and to be able to
talk about the importance of the
relationship is something that I
look forward to. It really
informed such a huge part of
who I am and the confidence
that I have as a woman. It really does come from the closeness
that I have with mommy. Now
as I get questions about mom it’s
so much deeper and so much
more complex that I look forward to sharing that more and
more with people.
AP: What’s the best beauty
advice you ever received from
your mother?
Hudson: Beauty is an insideout job and I think when you are
connected to the things that you
love, whether it be your children
or your creativity, that they
bring out a level of joy and circulate all the endorphins in your
brain and then you have that,
that’s when beauty starts to
reveal itself.
JFK retrospective, Latino history on PBS schedule
LOS ANGELES (AP) — PBS’
fall schedule will examine President John F. Kennedy’s life and
his death 50 years ago through a
modern lens, part of the network’s increased emphasis on
relevance, its programming chief
said.
A variety of programs about
Kennedy will air in the weeks
leading up to the milestone
anniversary of his Nov. 22, 1963,
slaying in Dallas, including
“JFK,” a four-hour “American
Experience” portrait of Kennedy,
what he accomplished and what
was left undone, PBS announced
Thursday.
The science show “Nova” will
look at how the forensics investigation into his death would have
been handled today and “lay bare
some of the problems with forensics at the time,” said Beth
Hoppe, PBS’ new chief programming executive.
The history-oriented “Secrets
of the Dead,” with a narrative
account of the president’s shooting, and a look at Kennedy collectibles also will be part of the
coverage, along with other specials being planned, PBS said.
Also set for public TV’s lineup
are specials on American heritage, including a family roots
series, “Genealogy Roadshow,”
and two documentary programs
with sweeping views of Hispanic
and black history, “Latino Americans” and “The African Americans: Many Rivers to Cross.”
In 2007, Hispanic organizations criticized PBS and film-
maker Ken Burns for inadequately representing the contributions of Latinos in his 15-hour
documentary on World War II.
PBS also will keep an eye on
current events, Hoppe said.
“The idea of being able to act
fast and be responsive and relevant is really important,” said
Hoppe, noting that PBS aired
timely specials after the Newtown, Mass., school shooting,
Superstorm Sandy and the Russian meteor strike.
PBS, which has enjoyed a ratings surge due in part to its
“Downton Abbey” drama series,
is aligning its programming in a
“viewer friendly way” aimed at
expanding its reach, Hoppe said.
Friday, for example, will be
home to PBS’ fall arts festival for
a second year, with programs
including a “Great Performances” miniseries, “The Hollow
Crown,” that combines four
Shakespearean plays — “Richard
II,” ‘’Henry IV,” parts one and
two, and “Henry V” — into a
chronological narrative.
Another Friday series, “Great
Performances,” will celebrate its
40th anniversary with past
guests including Julie Andrews,
Audra McDonald and Josh
Groban, while “Nashville 2.0”
will pay tribute to legendary
country music stars.
PBS, which has more than 350
member stations, has said it gets
15 percent of its money from the
federally funded Corporation for
Public Broadcasting, with the rest
largely contributed by viewers.
THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM
DEFLOCKED
MOTHER GOOSE & GRIMM
COMICS
Dear Annie: I’m concerned
about my sister’s parenting
style. “Sara” just went through a
nasty divorce, so we let her move
into a house we own next door,
thinking it would help to have
family close by.
Sara’s kids spend a great deal
of time with us. What worries
me is my 7-year-old niece,
“Andrea.”
Andrea
appears
underweight for her age and
height. When she has dinner
here, she eats like she’s starving.
Several weeks ago, Sara joined
us for dinner, and I watched her
dole out food for the kids. She
gave her 5-year-old son a much
bigger portion than she gave
HOROSCOPE
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL
Your Birthday
Friday, May 10, 2013
ALLEY OOP
FOR BETTER OR WORSE
FRANK & ERNEST
GET FUZZY
BEETLE BAILEY
ZITS
THE GRIZZWELLS
l
13
Woman worried about niece’s health
YOUR
BORN LOSER
FRIDAY, MAY 10, 2013
Financial trends will be developing in your favor in the year ahead.
Take advantage of all that comes
your way and make the most of
every opportunity.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) –
The way to acquire something
you’ve been wanting will become
apparent. It’s up to you, however, to
focus your efforts on making it happen.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) –
Mask your assertiveness with
unselfish actions and lots of charm.
If you make sure that others will also
benefit from your aims, you’ll meet
with success.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) – If
you don’t give up on your dreams
and keep a realistic viewpoint, you
make success much more probable.
Keep pushing forward.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) – You will
be presented with some intriguing
opportunities via your social contacts. It pays to be the nice guy,
sometimes.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) –
There’s no need to try to duck
tedious assignments, because the
things that appear to be the most
troublesome could, surprisingly, be
the easiest to handle.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) –
Closely observe the people you
admire, because there’s a strong
possibility that you could profit from
mimicking their behavior. You’ll
wisely use what you learn.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) –
Something advantageous can come
from an arrangement that is initiated
by a close friend or family member.
There’s room in the endeavor for
your skill set.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) – Your pleasant and cheerful
demeanor today could serve as a
magnet attracting all kinds of companions of similar dispositions.
Something that is both fun and interesting will come of it.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
– You have a special knack for handling jobs that require creativity. Use
your artistic touch to transform what
you consider to be unsightly.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) –
There’s no need to be surprised if an
appealing someone evinces an
interest in you. This person has
been waiting for the right time to
make his or her feelings known.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) –
Make the concerns of a close someone your top priority. He or she
needs help that only you can provide.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) – As
long as there is justification for it, be
lavish in your praise. Expressing
sincere approval will go far in securing the loyalty of those who work at
your side.
HERMAN
Annie’s
Mailbox
Andrea. When I mentioned it,
Sara said the pediatrician
warned her that Andrea is obese.
I do not believe this for one second.
Andrea is sick all the time.
Last week, when I was preparing the kids an after-school
snack, Andrea started crying.
She said she was really hungry,
but if she ate anything, it would
make her mother angry because
she is “so fat.” I have never been
so furious with my sister.
I spoke to the school social
worker and was told there is little they can do. I also spoke to
Sara about getting help, but she
became hysterical and slapped
Andrea for “telling tales.”
I’ve never seen Sara like this
before. I called CPS, but I worry
that Sara will take off with the
kids before help can be provided.
What else can I do? – Big Sis
Dear Sis: Sara should not be
slapping her daughter. You need
to befriend your sister so that
she trusts you and her children
can turn to you for help.
It’s difficult to ascertain
whether Sara is still stressed
from the divorce, simply needs
better parenting skills or there is
something else going on. You
may be interpreting the food
issues through your own subjective filter.
Leave a message with the
pediatrician’s office with your
concerns. But please do not criticize and alienate Sara right now.
Those kids need you. Be a safe
haven for all of them.
Dear Annie: I am a married
woman in my 50s, and I hate to
be hugged. I’m sure it stems
from my childhood, when my
mother, who was not affection-
ate, forced me to hug relatives.
I have a friend in his mid-70s
who’s a great guy, but he’s a hugger. “Henry” insists on grabbing
everyone and giving them a bear
hug. I have told him repeatedly
that I don’t like this, but he doesn’t listen. He also hugs my husband, who has a bad back, and
those bear hugs really hurt.
I’ve been avoiding Henry lately, but I miss him. Perhaps if he
sees this in print, he might finally get it. – Hate Being Hugged
in Kansas
Dear Kansas: You will have
to remind Henry each time he
comes near you that you don’t
want a hug. He has difficulty
controlling his effusiveness, and
until he can associate his hugging with negative consequences, he won’t stop.
Gently put out your arm to
distance him. Tell him he is
hurting you. Cry out in pain if
need be. Do whatever will make
it extremely clear that you don’t
like this and he must stop.
Dear Annie: Some responses
to “Your Husband” indicated
that he needed to try harder to
be intimate with his wife. Maybe
he did.
I tried talking to my wife. I
shared and cleaned, went grocery shopping, did laundry and
dishes. I took care of the kids
while she went out shopping.
Giving her flowers didn’t work,
small gestures didn’t work, and
talking about her day didn’t
work. Seeing a therapist didn’t
work. I didn’t cheat, because I
didn’t want to lose my kids. Well,
that didn’t work, either. She left
with no explanation. It takes two
to make a marriage work. –
Mark from N.C.
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
LOBE CLASSIFIED
AILY SGOURCE
RDANGE
14 l FRIDAY, MAY 10, 2013
THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM
THE
The Daily Globe • The Range Source • www.yourdailyglobe.com
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MattsonÕs
TV & Appliance
Since 1962
ÒBox Store
Prices,
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John Jennings, Proprietor
E4717 Airport Road
Leviticus 19:36
Ironwood, MI 49938
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The GRTA Board would
like to thank the
Businesses
Members
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DAILY GLOBE
16 l FRIDAY, MAY 10, 2013
Electrical fires at
home can be deadly
Electrical fires remain one of
the top causes of home structure
fires, according to a new report
by the National Fire Protection
Association.
The report estimates an electrical failure or malfunction factored in 45,000 to 55,000 home
structure fires reported to the
U.S. fire departments every year
since 2000.
These fires, which account for
13 percent of total home structure fires, resulted in annual
losses of 455 civilian deaths,
1,500 civilian injuries and $1.5
billion in direct property damage
during 2007-2011.
Any type of equipment that
uses electrical power can have an
electrical failure or malfunction.
Electrical distribution or
lighting equipment accounted for
48 percent of home electrical
fires in 2007-2011. Arcing
appears to account for most
home electrical fires, outnumbering overheating by at least twoto-one and as much as seven-toone.
NFPA is marking National
Electrical Safety Month in May
by reminding the public to be
aware of the risks associated
with the use of electricity, and
providing safety tips and information to assist individuals in
taking steps to reduce the risk of
home electrical fires.
Other key findings in the
report have to do specifically
with home structure fires involving electrical distribution or
lighting equipment, including:
— 63 percent involved wiring
and related equipment.
— 74 percent cited some type
of electrical failure or malfunction.
— Nearly half (44 percent) of
civilian deaths were caused by
fires that began in the bedroom,
living room, family room or den.
Wire or cable insulation was
the item first ignited in 32 percent of electrical distribution or
lighting equipment home structure fires.
NFPA offers the following
electrical safety tips:
— Replace damaged or loose
electrical cords.
— Avoid running extension
cords across doorways or under
carpets.
— In homes with small children, make sure your home has
tamper-resistant receptacles.
— Consider having additional
circuits or outlets added by a
qualified electrician so you do
not have to use extension cords.
— Follow the manufacturer’s
instructions for plugging an
appliance into a receptacle outlet.
— Avoid overloading outlets.
Plug only one high-wattage
appliance into each receptacle
outlet at a time.
— If outlets or switches feel
warm, or for frequent problems
with blowing fuses or tripping
circuits, or flickering or dimming
lights, call a qualified electrician.
— Place lamps on level surfaces, away from things that can
burn and use bulbs that match
the
lamp’s
recommended
wattage.
— Make sure your home has
ground fault circuit interrupters
in the kitchen, bathroom(s),
laundry, basement and outdoor
areas.
— Arc-fault circuit interrupters should be installed in
your home to protect electrical
outlets.
When you are buying, selling,
or remodeling a home, have it
inspected by a qualified electrician.
HOME & GARDEN
THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM
HOUSE OF THE WEEK
Country club appeal
ePlans.com images
A WRAPAROUND porch gives this charming country home a beautiful place to enjoy sitting outside. See interior images online at
ePlans.com/HouseOfTheWeek.
A wraparound porch gives
this charming country home a
beautiful place to enjoy sitting
outside.
The kitchen opens to virtually
all of the common areas: the
breakfast area, family room, and
cozy keeping room.
Inside, you’ll find a spacious,
open floor plan that is perfect for
entertaining.
Fireplaces in the family room
and keeping room combine to
warm the adjoining kitchen and
breakfast area. Upstairs, the
master suite boasts a dual-sink
vanity, a garden tub, a separate
shower, a water closet, and an
enormous walk-in closet, with
the option for a second.
Three additional family bedrooms, sharing a full bath, complete the second floor.
To build this home, you can
order a complete set of construction documents by calling tollfree 866-772-1013 or visiting
ePlans.com/HouseOfTheWeek.
Enter the design number to
locate the plan and view more
images and details.
At ePlans.com/HouseOfTheWeek, you can view previously
featured plans, browse other specialty collections, or use our
search filters to help you find
exactly what you want from over
28,000 home designs. Most plans
can be customized to suit your
lifestyle.
Design number HOTW130006
MAIN LEVEL
Bedrooms: 3
Baths: 2 1/2
Framing: 2x4
SECOND LEVEL
Main level: 1,214 sq. ft.
Second level: 1,229 sq. ft
Garage: 463 sq. ft.
Dimensions: 52-3 x 55-10
Foundation options: Unfinished walkout basement