ddct_2016-10-29

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DAILY CHRONICLE SA TURDA Y & SUNDA Y, OCTOBER 29-30, 2016 • $2.00 SERVING DEKALB COUNTY SINCE 1879

Daily-Chronicle.com

SPORTS

2-1, Indians Cubs lose Game 3 to Cleveland, 1-0, at Wrigley Field / 33 LOCAL NEWS

Painted pride Cubs fans pledge their support with team tattoos / 3 LIFESTYLE

Game faces

Mock presidential masks gain popularity nationwide / INSIDE

BARBS RISING

DeKalb wins first round of the Class 6A state playoffs against Marmion AMATO FOR

STATE’S ATTORNEY

VOTE NOVEMBER 8, 2016 AmatoforStatesAttorney.com Paid for by citizens for Rick Amato.A copy of our report filed with the state Like board of elections is (or will be) available for purchase with the state board us on SM-CL0376088 of elections, Springfield, Illinois.

THE ONLY CANDIDATE ENDORSED

BY LAW ENFORCEMENT

DEKALB COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE METROPOLITAN ALLIANCE OF POLICE UNION, CHAPTER 318 SYCAMORE FRATERNAL ORDER OF POLICE HINCKLEY POLICE DEPARTMENT MALTA POLICE DEPARTMENT CORTLAND POLICE DEPARTMENT KINGSTON POLICE DEPARTMENT DON THOMAS, CHIEF OF POLICE (RETIRED), SYCAMORE

KEVIN HICKEY, CHIEF DEPUTY (RETIRED), DEKALB COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE ROBERT FRAZIER, SGT. (RETIRED), ILLINOIS CONSERVATION POLICE VICTOR SEBASTIANO, TROOPER (RETIRED), ILLINOIS STATE POLICE RUDI ZIEGLER, SGT. (RETIRED), DEKALB COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE

TODAY’S WEATHER

HIGH

/ 29

Breezy with springlike conditions. It will be cloudy, chances of rain will be low. Showers only likely overnight into Sunday.

LOW

71 50

Complete forecast on page 5


* Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Saturday, October 29, 2016

2

Principal Andria Mitchell of Tyler Elementary School in DeKalb addresses students in an assembly Friday. A student from each class was given a Student of the Month award, and students could wear their pajamas as party of the celebration. The celebration was oriented toward student achievement rather than the Halloween holiday, Mitchell said.

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Stephanie Markham – smarkham@shawmedia.com

DeKalb students wear pajamas instead of costumes to school By STEPHANIE MARKHAM smarkham@shawmedia.com

DeKALB – Tyler Reidl said he liked wearing his pajamas to school Friday, but part of him wished he could have celebrated Halloween with his classmates. “I don’t want to make a big fuss over it because they made it pretty clear that we can’t,” said Tyler, a fifth-grader at Tyler Elementary School. “I like having pajamas; I just wish we could celebrate Halloween on Monday.” This is the second year students at Tyler Elementary have not been allowed to wear Halloween costumes to school. Instead of holiday-themed parties, DeKalb schools now have quarterly celebrations recognizing students for reaching behavior goals. The districtwide change was approved as an update to the parent/student handbook at a June 7 school board meeting. “As [District 428] continues to work to create and cultivate educational environments that reflect the core tenets of social justice, we believe holiday celebrations belong to families,” the handbook policy said. Friday’s celebration at Tyler Elementary included a pajama party and a “Pajama Jammy Jam” dance. Fifth-grader T.J. Fontana, who forgot to wear his pajamas, said he was only slightly upset that he couldn’t wear a costume. “I used to love wearing Halloween costumes, and pajama day is something we kind of do every once in a while,” T.J. said. “So, I was a little mad, but now it’s fine.” Maurice McDavid, parent of a kindergartner at Tyler Elementary, said his family does not celebrate Halloween for religious reasons, and having students wear pajamas to school instead of costumes gave his son an easier time fitting in. “At this level, I think it makes sense,” McDavid said. “Most kids have a pair of pajama pants,

so there’s a little bit more equity as opposed to having to go out and buy a costume they’re only going to wear once.” McDavid also is the dean of students at DeKalb High School, and he said administrators take a different approach with older students. “As long as whatever they’re wearing fits the dress code, we don’t care,” he said. “It’s not like we’re having a costume party at the high school level.” He said high school students can wear costumes as long as they don’t cover their faces with masks or makeup, wear hats or break the dress code in any other way. “We have kids that on a regular day will wear a cape to school because they’re a [live action role player] outside of school; that’s part of what they do,” McDavid said. “So, we feel like we can’t tell them that because today is Halloween, no capes, but every other day you can wear a cape.” Tyler Elementary Principal Andria Mitchell said one reason she and her staff agreed the policy should change is the pressure some families feel to buy costumes. “Last year we had one of the highest, if not the highest, free and reduced lunch population, and several of our students’ families struggled to make ends meet,” she said. Kindergarten teacher Cate Cardella said pajama day eliminates competition among students and takes some stress away from parents. “There were tears every year,” Cardella said. “For some parents this is super easy, and for other parents it’s not. There were always kids who didn’t show up in a costume.” An online petition to bring holiday parties back to District 428 schools has more than 300 signatures, and debate has sparked from both sides on a District 428 community Facebook page. “It’s not about what I like or what I want or what feels comfortable to me or the adults in the building,” Mitchell said. “It’s about the babies, and they looked pretty happy today.”

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POLL

YESTERDAY’S RESULTS Who will be the offensive hero of this Cubs World Series home stand? Kris Bryant: 31 percent Anthony Rizzo: 29 percent Javy Baez: 20 percent Addison Russell: 8 percent Kyle Schwarber: 12 percent Total votes: 51

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ON THE COVER DeKalb Barb Zuerek Day celebrates with fellow Barb Cole Tucker as he scores a touchdown in the second half agisnt Marmion Academy. See story on page 29. Photo by Nick Brooks for Shaw Media

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SHOWING THEIR TRUE COLORS Cubs fans show loyalty with team tattoos

By STEPHANIE MARKHAM smarkham@shawmedia.com

DeKALB – No matter how the Cubs fare in their first World Series in 71 years, Matthew Walsh and José Aguilar will proudly sport red and blue ink on their skin for the rest of their lives. The two DeKalb men both got Cubsthemed tattoos Tuesday at DeKalb Tattoo Company. For Walsh, the common logo of a red C behind a blue bear cub on his upper arm is his ninth tattoo, and each one means something special to him. “I’m really hoping this brings good luck to the Cubs,” he said. Casey Banas, a tattoo artist of 17 years, did Walsh’s tattoo. Banas and other local artists said Cubs tattoos have been few so far, but they expect to do more if the team wins its first World Series in 108 years. “I think we’re anticipating quite an influx of tattoos for the Chicago Cubs all the way around,” Banas said. The next game in the series will be at 7 p.m. Saturday when the Cubs face the Cleveland Indians at Wrigley Field. The game will be televised on Fox. Walsh said he has been a fan all his life and looked up to baseball players as heroes when he was younger. “Being a Cubs fan is everything,” he said. “You win with them; you lose with them. It’s truly an honor to be a Cubs fan.” Walsh’s family also played a part in his appreciation for sports, as his grandfather was an avid softball player and coach. “I had a bat in my hand since the time I could walk,” he said. Walsh said he was sure his family members would be proud to see his new tattoo. “We’re all die-hards,” he said. “There’s no division in my family; none of us are White Sox fans.” Aguilar kept his family in mind while getting tattooed as well, sporting a bracelet of Cubs-colored rubber bands his 10-year-old daughter made for him. Aguilar said while his daughter is finding an interest in baseball, he also is connecting with his late grandfather’s passion for the sport. “I remember watching the game when they made it to go on and play the Dodgers,” he said. “I never realized why he loved watching the game so much, and at that moment I understood.” Aguilar’s tattoo was of a blue bear cub face with a Chicago flag bandanna

over its mouth. He said when artist Ray Cuevas sent him a design similar to what he had been thinking of getting, he knew it was the right time. Cuevas, a professional tattoo artist for five years, placed the tattoo on Aguilar’s calf, but it wasn’t his first time memorializing a Chicago sports team on this client. “It’s the only Chicago sports team I don’t have tattooed on me,” Aguilar said. “I have a Bulls tattoo, a Bears tattoo and a Blackhawks tattoo, and he’s done them all.” Aguilar doesn’t have a White Sox tattoo, but he said he doesn’t have any negative feelings toward the team, either. “With some Chicago fans, they pick either the White Sox or the Cubs,” he said. “Me personally, I don’t hate. I’d be happy if either one won the World Series. Of course, I do favor the Chicago Cubs.” Michael Figueroa, an artist at Spider Tattooz in Sycamore, said he hasn’t had any requests for Cubs tattoos yet, but he expects people will want them if the Cubs win the World Series. “Right now I don’t think people are wanting to jinx it,” he said. Figueroa said he was doing Black-

Photos by Matthew Apgar – mapgar@shawmedia.com

ABOVE: Tattoo artist Casey Banas (right) works on a tattoo of the Cubs logo on the arm of Matthew Walsh at the DeKalb Tattoo Company on Tuesday in DeKalb. BELOW: Jose Aguilar (left) of DeKalb checks his phone during his tattoo session at the DeKalb Tattoo Company while Banas works on a tattoo for Walsh.

hawks tattoos on a regular basis after the team won the Stanley Cup in 2015. He even tattooed the Stanley Cup on Blackhawks goalie Scott Darling, which brought more business to the shop. Cuevas said he has done two Cubs

tattoos recently, but he also believes more will come out if the Cubs win the World Series. “Either they’re die-hard fans, or they just really have love for the team,” Cuevas said.

3 Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Saturday, October 29, 2016 *

A CLOSER LOOK


Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Saturday, October 29, 2016

4

LOCAL NEWS

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Kamyah Fuller (left), 5, Dmya Sanders-Petty (right), 6, and Deonta Sanders-Petty (bottom right), 4, pose with “mermaid” Kiana Martin (center), a swim coach at the Kishwaukee Family YMCA for a photo during the Kishwaukee Family YMCA’s Annual Halloween Event on Friday at the NIU Convocation Center in DeKalb.

YMCA Halloween event raises money for cancer survivors By KEITH HERNANDEZ

news@daily-chronicle.com Cancer survivor Joe Martinez sat in a yellow volunteer shirt Friday night in the Northern Illinois University Convocation Center while hundreds of trick-or-treaters bounced to and fro at one of the Kishwaukee YMCA’s longest-running community events. The 27th Annual Halloween Event drew an estimated 3,000 people and raised thousands more in funding for a program Martinez said helped him get back on his feet after surviving colon cancer in 2012. The program, Livestrong, is a free 12-week program for cancer survivors that gives participants a chance to focus on physical and emotional rehabilitation, said Debbie Madeley, Kishwaukee YMCA development director.

“When they get through their treatments, they feel like they’re in a position to like the next chapter of their lives,” Madeley said about the 105 graduates and 14 current participants. “It’s just the most amazing program. Our alumni group continues to grow every year as we graduate a new class.” Participants come from all walks of life and have survived different kinds of cancer, but are connected by a bond only other cancer survivors would understand, Martinez said. “It gives you a chance to get things off your chest that no one really knows about unless you have had cancer,” Martinez said. “It’s an instant bond with other people that you’ve never met before, that you don’t know, but you get to know real quick. The more you do for each other, the greater the

“It gives you a chance to get things off your chest that no one really knows about unless you have had cancer.” Debbie Madeley

Kishwaukee YMCA development director program is.” Colorectal cancer, which encompasses colon and rectal cancers, is the third most common cancer among men and women in the U.S. with more than 1.1 million cases, according to the National Cancer Institute. The three most common are lung cancer, breast cancer in women and prostate cancer in men.

Livestrong alumni tend to stick together long after graduating from the program and often return to volunteer at fundraisers such as the Annual Halloween Event, said Heather Dunker, Kishwaukee YMCA marketing and communications director. “I think initially they go into thinking it’s going to be all about exercise and, you know, the physical recovery, but I think what they find and what the best part about the program is is being able to have that kind of camaraderie between other participants,” Dunker said. Activities during the Annual Halloween Event included bounce houses, which were spread across the Convocation Center’s lower floor, a show from James the Magician, a haunted house and Halloween-themed arts and crafts, among other things.


DeKalb Area Retirement Center www.oakcrestdekalb.org

SEVEN-DAY FORECAST FOR DEKALB SEVEN-DAY FORECAST FOR DeKALB COUNTY

Breezy with spring-like conditions will continue as winds remain out the west-southwest. There will be a lot of clouds but rain chances remain low. Showers are likely overnight and into Sunday. Seasonably cool weather will move back in Sunday before a quick warm up arrives Monday. A Pacific storm system will bring rain Wednesday.

TODAY

SUNDAY

71 50

57 42

Mostly cloudy, breezy and warm

Mostly cloudy and cooler

MONDAY

TUESDAY

65 58

72 57

Galena

Freeport

70/50

70/48

Belvidere

72/50

Rockford

75/52

Kewanee

AREA WATERWAYS

St. Charles

Chicago

72/49

Aurora

75/52

Orland Park 74/53 Hammond

74/54

Joliet

75/54

Michigan City

70/52

Gary

73/54 Valparaiso

75/53

Kankakee

WEATHER HISTORY

WEATHER TRIVIA™ Q: What does the term ceiling mean?

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.

A:

The height of the lowest clouds which are covering over half the sky.

Nov 21

71/52

74/52

NATIONAL WEATHER

On Oct. 29, 1991, a storm dumped a foot of snow in Utah. Another storm dropped 5 inches of rain on Little Rock, Ark. A third storm sank boats along the Massachusetts coast.

Nov 14

Evanston

Oak Park

Fld: flood stage. Prs: stage in feet at 7 a.m Friday. Chg: change in previous 24 hours. Station Fld Prs Chg

AIR QUALITY TODAY

Nov 7

73/51

77/52

+0.01 -0.02

Oct 30

Arlington Heights Elgin

77/54

4.27 4.22

Last

57 41

Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.

Ottawa

76/53

---

Full

69/46

77/54

Fox Lake Nippersink Lake

First

Waukegan

La Salle

8 am 10 am Noon 2 pm 4 pm 6 pm The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. 0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme.

New

70/49

71/50

75/52

76/51

+0.09 -0.07 +0.06 +1.01

MOON PHASES

69/48

McHenry

73/51

Sandwich

Davenport

58 40

Kenosha

Crystal Lake

71/50

Rock Falls

2.74 3.19 9.68 7.06

Sunrise today .......................... 7:24 a.m. Sunset today ........................... 5:52 p.m. Moonrise today ........................ 6:11 a.m. Moonset today ......................... 5:43 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow .................... 7:25 a.m. Sunset tomorrow ..................... 5:51 p.m. Moonrise tomorrow ................. 7:08 a.m. Moonset tomorrow .................. 6:14 p.m.

69/48

DeKalb

74/51

74/51

9 10 14 12

SUN AND MOON

Mostly sunny and cool

72/50

Belvidere DeKalb Marengo Perryville

Source: Illinois EPA

Decreasing clouds and much cooler

Hampshire

Clinton

Kishwaukee River

0-50 Good, 51-100 Moderate, 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive groups, 151-200 Unhealthy 201-300 Very Unhealthy, 301-500 Hazardous

Mostly cloudy with showers likely

71/50

Savanna

DeKalb through 4 p.m. yesterday

Harvard

74/49

Dixon

Main offender ................. particulates

FRIDAY

67/46

ALMANAC

UV INDEX

THURSDAY

Lake Geneva

73/51

TEMPERATURES High ................................................... 62° Low ................................................... 38° Normal high ....................................... 57° Normal low ........................................ 37° Record high .......................... 73° in 1989 Record low ........................... 19° in 1976 Peak wind ............................ S at 23 mph PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 4 p.m. yest. ......... 0.00” Month to date ................................. 1.45” Normal month to date ..................... 2.59” Year to date .................................. 28.14” Normal year to date ...................... 31.91”

WEDNESDAY

69 50

Mostly sunny, breezy Mostly sunny, breezy and mild and warm

5

OAK CREST

TODAY’S WEATHER BROUGHT TO YOU BY

NATIONAL CITIES City

Anchorage Atlanta Baltimore Boston Buffalo Charlotte Chicago Dallas Denver Detroit Honolulu

Today Hi Lo W

43 86 72 57 63 80 72 88 76 71 82

39 61 57 50 48 55 49 67 42 51 75

r s pc c sh s pc s s c c

Forecasts and graphics, except WFLD forecasts, provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

WORLD CITIES Sunday Hi Lo W

45 86 79 61 51 84 55 90 76 55 83

40 61 48 40 37 56 44 64 49 41 74

c s pc sh r s c s pc r pc

City

Houston Kansas City Las Vegas Los Angeles Louisville Miami Minneapolis New Orleans New York City Seattle Wash., DC

Today Hi Lo W

85 81 81 77 84 85 56 86 62 57 74

62 54 66 64 63 77 40 66 58 44 60

pc pc pc pc pc sh r s c sh pc

Sunday Hi Lo W

86 67 83 72 82 85 52 87 68 55 80

61 55 58 59 60 76 43 64 45 49 55

pc pc pc sh s c pc pc c sh pc

City

Athens Baghdad Bangkok Beijing Berlin Buenos Aires Cairo Hong Kong Istanbul Kabul London

Today Hi Lo W

65 95 91 53 51 76 85 84 58 73 62

55 64 77 34 44 58 68 71 50 41 52

c s t s c s pc t pc pc c

Sunday Hi Lo W

68 90 88 56 50 78 84 83 59 67 61

58 64 77 27 35 60 67 72 48 39 49

pc s t pc pc s s pc c pc pc

City

Madrid Manila Mexico City Moscow New Delhi Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Seoul Tokyo Toronto

Today Hi Lo W

75 92 70 32 90 60 76 68 52 68 66

44 78 48 28 64 46 68 50 35 50 48

s pc pc sn pc c pc s c pc c

Sunday Hi Lo W

74 91 69 32 90 61 75 69 55 59 48

43 78 52 26 63 45 67 51 41 52 36

s t pc sf pc s c s s r r

Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Saturday, October 29, 2016

WEATHER


Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Saturday, October 29, 2016

|DAILY CHRONICLE

6

POLICE REPORTS Note to readers: Information in Police Reports is obtained from local police departments. Individuals listed in Police Reports who have been charged with a crime have not been proved guilty in court.

Wednesday, Oct. 12, with keeping a disorderly house. • Matthew G. Moon, 18, of the 900 block of South Fifth Street, DeKalb, was charged Wednesday, Oct. 12, with criminal damage to property. DeKALB CITY • Gerry M. Gray, 18, of the 500 block of • Lashawn Jackson, 21, of the 1000 block North Annie Glidden Road, DeKalb, was of Regent Drive, DeKalb, was charged charged Wednesday, Oct. 12, with posses-

sion of drug paraphernalia. • Brendon D. Brown, 25, of the 12700 block of South Sangamon Street, Chicago, was charged Thursday, Oct. 13, with robbery and two counts of domestic battery. • Kela M. Moss, 26, of the 400 block of South First Street, DeKalb, was charged Thursday, Oct. 13, with possession of marijuana.

• Nana A. McKwartin, 20, of the 1300 block of North Annie Glidden Road, DeKalb, was charged Thursday, Oct. 13, with retail theft. • Brianna J. Morris, 20, of the 1000 block of Ridge Drive, DeKalb, was charged Thursday, Oct. 13, with retail theft and making a false report to a public safety agency.

OBITUARIES in Doc’s name may be directed to the Hamp- ties. She was a member of the Minges Brook For a full obituary, see http://www.andershire-Burlington Food Pantry. PTA, Lakeview Area Council PTA, an officer sonfuneralhomeltd.com. Information 847-683-2711. for the Lakeview Baseball Boosters and a founding member of the Lakeview Soccer Send obituary information to obits@ Boosters. She worked tirelessly on the mile- HEATHER ANNE VANDEN BERG Daily-Chronicle.com or call 815-526age proposals for Lakeview School District. 4438. Notices are accepted until 3 p.m. Born: November 12, 1969 Mary was an avid Bears, Bulls and White Sox Died: October 6, 2016 for the next day’s edition. Obituaries fan and she loved attending college football also appear online at Daily-Chronicle. games. Mary loved following the lives of com/obits where you may sign the guest Heather Anne (Benstein) her family and her friend’s families and until book, send flowers or make a memorial MARY KAY RIMKUS Vanden Berg (46) of DeKalb, she was afflicted with Parkinson’s, Mary donation. Born: October 20, 1942 Ill., passed away surrounded could give you all the details. She will also be Died: October 27, 2016 by her family on October 6, remembered for her convictions, her ability 2016, following complicato discuss issues, and when you crossed the DR. HAROLD H. BAHE Mary Kay Rimkus, 74, of tions from a long and difficult line, you better be ready for a real debate. Battle Creek died at Bronson battle with colon cancer. Friends will be received 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. Dr. Harold H. Bahe, DVM, 88, passed away at Home Hospice Residence She was born in Aurora, Ill., on November Tuesday at the Farley Estes Dowdle Funeral in his home on October 28, 2016. on Thursday, October 27, 12, 1969 to parents Mary Henderson and Home & CremationCare. Funeral services Harold, known as “Doc” to many, was 2016. Bruce (Linda) Benstein. Heather married the will be officiated by Rev. Robert G. Muirhead love of her life, Paul Vanden Berg, on June 24, born, raised and spent most of his life in Mary was born October Hampshire. After high school, he spent 20, 1942 in DeKalb, Illinois to 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, November 2, 2016. 2000, and was the mother of two wonderful Committal and interment will follow at two years in the Navy, specializing in radio Maurice Matteson and Margaret (Holliday) boys, Trevor Vanden Berg (12) and Parker Memorial Park Cemetery. communication. Baker. She grew up in DeKalb and was a Vanden Berg (11). Heather was sister to In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions in Julie (Roger) Isham, Molly Benstein and Roy He was forever grateful for the GI Bill 1960 graduate of DeKalb High School. Mary memory of Mary may be made to KCC Foun- (Mina) Gustafson and a beloved aunt. which enabled him to attend college at swept a young man, Robert Frank Rimkus, dation General Scholarship Fund, 450 North Beloit and the University of Illinois and attending Northern Illinois University off his She is preceded in death by grandparents, Avenue, Battle Creek, MI 49017. Veterinary School at the U of I. feet. Mary and Bob were married on June 17, Uarda and Bruce Henderson and George and Personal messages for the family may be In 1954 he returned to Hampshire and 1967 in DeKalb. Theresa Benstein; her aunt, Sherry Henderopened Hampshire Veterinary Clinic where Bob applied for a job at Kellogg Community placed at www.farleyestesdowdle.com. son; her father-in-law, Mark Vanden Berg; he practiced until his retirement in 1990. College in 1977 and they have made Battle and son, Connor Vanden Berg. Harold was a lifetime member of Trinity Creek their home since. Mary was a stay at Heather was a 1987 graduate of Kaneland Lutheran Church in Hampshire. home Mom until her children were in high HELEN W. SHIRLEY High School and earned a B.S. in Social Work He was an avid outdoorsman and enjoyed school. She was employed for Blue Care Net- Born: October 30, 1934 from Aurora University in 1994. She spent many hobbies including travel and gardenwork; and for Debbie & Dwight Upston at the Died: September 18, 2016 her career helping children and families as ing. The “HOME” Magazine, serving Battle Creek a case worker and later as the owner/child Whether in his workshop or the kitchen, he and Kalamazoo. Helen W. Shirley. A Celecare director of Little Friends Academy who was always tinkering with something, which Surviving are Bob, her husband of 49+ bration of Life Reception will reached out to children with special needs. In prompted Mary Lou to affectionately call years; two sons, Daniel R. Rimkus of St. be held for Helen Wenderoth her spare time, Heather enjoyed acting and him “Rube Goldberg”. Petersburg, FL, David A. (Jordan) Rimkus of Shirley (Oct. 30, 1934 - Sept. behind-the-scenes activities as she particHe is survived by Mary Lou, his wife of 64 Franklin,TN; two granddaughters, Emerson 18, 2016) on Saturday, Octo- ipated in a number of the DeKalb’s Stageyears; his son, Eric (Susan) Bahe of Hampand Blair Rimkus; two brothers, Marvin ber 29 from 1:00 to 4:00 pm, coach Players productions. She was also very shire; his daughter, Tracy (Randy) Kinsella; (Susan)Baker of Highland Park, IL, Michael with a Service at 2:00 pm, involved with Kaneland Class of 87 activities. five grandchildren and eight great-grand(Pamela) Baker of Vandalia, IL; several inin Room 315, Altgeld Hall at Northern Illinois She was recognized as a loving friend who children with number nine on the way. laws; numerous nieces, nephews, cousins University. always shared her time and advocated for He was preceded in death by his parents and their families. Light refreshments will be served immediothers. Herman and Myra (Snow) Bahe and his Mary was preceded in death by her father, ately after the Service. Maps of campus and A celebration of Heather’s life will take brother Lowell. Maurice Baker; mother and stepfather, parking are available at www.niu.edu. place at the River Heights Golf Course clubFuneral service will be held at 11:00 am Robert Moffett and Margaret (Holliday) Baker Memorials may be sent to the NIU Founhouse on Saturday, November 5, from 1:00 Wednesday, November 2 at the Trinity Moffett. dation (memo line: James R. Shirley History p.m. to 4:00 p.m. Lutheran Church in Hampshire with burial Mary lived her life for her family and loved Endowment Fund) 1425 W. Lincoln Hwy. For information, visit www.AndersonFunerfollowing in the Hampshire Center Cemefollowing and being involved in their activiDeKalb, IL 60115-2828. alHomeLtd.com or call 815-756-1022. tery. Visitation will be held from 3:00 to 7:00 View a complete list of Send flowers, pm Tuesday at the Fredrick Funeral Home, Daily Chronicle obituaries gifts and 284 Park Street, Hampshire and continues by clicking on the calendar dates charitable at the church on Wednesday from 10:00 to contributions 11:00 am. www.legacy.com/Daily-Chronicle In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions

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Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Saturday, October 29, 2016

|DAILY CHRONICLE

LAST DAYS! SAVE ON

DESIGNER BRANDS TH AT RAREL GO ON SAL Y E!

MINIMAL EXCLUSIONS! VALID NOW THROUGH WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2016

USE THIS PASS OVER AND OVER AGAIN!

extra 25%off

REGULAR AND SALE PRICE women’s, men’s & kids’ apparel categories, dresses, fine jewelry, fine watches, fashion watches, accessories, handbags, footwear, intimate apparel, maternity, ladies’ & men’s outerwear & suit separates, home store and luggage 10% OFF REGULAR AND SALE PRICE cosmetics & fragrances, salon products, toys, Tech/electronics, kitchen electrics, personal & floor care items, consumables and furniture

FRIENDS FAMILY NOW THROUGH WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2

OUR USE YPASS ON S G N SAVI

storewide savings of

up to 50% OFF 0 0 ! 1 UYS plus, an extra HOT B OVER

25 OFF 25%

when you use your Friends & Family savings pass

Including designer brands that rarely go on sale!

Excludes Bonus Buys, Incredible Values, Yellow Dot/Black Dot and selected brands. See below for details.*

10% off cosmetics & fragrance!

ONLINE PROMO CODE: OCTFF25F016

C000001AEN9

Cannot be used in conjunction with any other coupon or “use card” discount offer, including YOUR REWARDS Rewards Cards. Coupon will not be available in stores. Must be presented at time of purchase. Duplicates or reproductions will not be honored. Valid in store or online. Cannot be applied to previous purchases. Excludes Bonus Buys, Door Busters, Super Buys, Incredible Values, Yellow Dot/Black Dot merchandise, Smart Watches & Fitness Trackers, all clearance furniture and Furniture Clearance Center merchandise, Clearance Center merchandise, cause-related merchandise and other charitable items, service departments, special orders & gift cards and merchandise from Birkenstock, Coach, Columbia, Fossil Q, Kate Spade, Kors Studio handbags & wallets, Levi’s, Movado, Nike, Jordan, Official NFL licensed fine jewelry, Swarovski, TempurPedic, Ugg, Under Armour, Vera Bradley, Villeroy & Boch, Wacoal and watches from A/X Armani Exchange, Fossil and Skagen Denmark. [35155D] cut here

LIMIT ONE PER CUSTOMER

VALID NOW THROUGH WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2016

$50 off

A REGULAR & SALE PRICE LADIES’ & MEN’S OUTERWEAR PURCHASE

OF $100 OR MORE

D050001291J ONLINE PROMO CODE: ZOCFFCOAT16 Limit one per customer. One-time use only. Cannot be used in conjunction with any other coupon or “use card”discount offer, including YOUR REWARDS Rewards Cards. Coupon will not be available in stores. Must be presented and surrendered at time of purchase. Duplicates or reproductions will not be honored. Bon-Ton Stores, Inc. and its affiliates are not responsible for and will not replace lost or stolen coupons. Valid in store or online. Cannot be redeemed for cash; no change will be given. Cannot be applied to previous purchases or used towards a purchase of a gift card or as payment on a Bon-Ton Stores, Inc. credit card account. Sales tax is not included in total minimum purchase requirement calculation. If you return a portion of your purchase, a portion of the discount will be lost.The Bon-Ton Stores, Inc. associates and retirees are not eligible. Excludes Bonus Buys, Super Buys, Door Busters, IncredibleValues,Yellow Dot/Black Dot merchandise, Clearance Center merchandise, cause-related merchandise and other charitable items and special orders. Excludes merchandise from Columbia, Levi’s and Under Armour. [35155D] cut here

*Friends & Family Savings Pass excludes: Smart Watches & Fitness Trackers and merchandise from Birkenstock, Coach, Columbia, Fossil Q, Kate Spade, Kors Studio handbags & wallets, Levi’s, Movado, Nike, Jordan, Official NFL licensed fine jewelry, Swarovski,Tempur-Pedic, Ugg, Under Armour,Vera Bradley,Villeroy & Boch,Wacoal and watches from A/X Armani Exchange, Fossil and Skagen Denmark.

Merchandise availability may vary by store; for a listing, visit carsons.com/merchandisenearyou Home merchandise not available in our Detroit stores. For the store nearest you, call 1-800-233-7626 or visit us at carsons.com. Sign up for email & get a special welcome offer! Visit carsons.com/email. Hot Buys & Sale prices on select styles effective now through Wednesday, November 2, 2016, unless otherwise indicated. No price adjustments for previously purchased clearance merchandise. Entire Stock offers exclude Clearance, Incredible Value and Web-Exclusive merchandise. Regular and original prices reflect offering prices in effect during the 90 days before or after this sale, but not necessarily during the past 30 days. Savings may not be based on actual sales. Intermediate markdowns may have been taken. Merchandise, style and color availability, as well as pricing and promotional offers, may vary by store and online. [35155D]


FALL CD Special! %

APY*

11 month

39 month

1.00

25 month h

%

APY*

%

APY*

*The Annual Percentage Yield (APY) is the Credit Union's rate as of October 1, 2016. Minimum opening balance and minimum to obtain disclosed APY is $2,000. Notavailable to Public Fundsand other FinancialInstitutions. Withdrawals may reduce earnings and are subject to an early withdrawal penalty. Fees may reduce earnings. CD automatically renews at maturity at the then current rate. Offer only applies to new money to ICCU. Offer subject to change without notice. Illinois Community Credit Union membership is required. Member NCUA.

OAK CREST DeKalb Area Retirement Center www.oakcrestdekalb.org

“It’s not a pure science” Making the decision to leave your home and move to a retirement community can be a pretty daunting experience. With so many choices, a variety of options, pricing and terminology to wade through, it’s no wonder some people find the whole process overwhelming. As a scientist, I approached the retirement decision like I do many things. I collected all the data, examined the information, reviewed the financial requirements and surveyed many friends. I love to travel, and had been going on tours with people from Oak Crest for years. In all that time, I had never heard even one negative comment. I then took the first step and made an appointment to meet with the staff at Oak Crest. What I found only confirmed my earlier research and impressions. Oak Crest met all my requirements with wonderful surroundings, a solid financial background, a guarantee of life care and security and affordability. And, as I anticipated, from the minute I walked in I found a home that is warm and welcoming, supportive and caring and embraces my individuality and independence. Besides, I had many of my travel friends, nearby. When you get right down to it there’s more to retirement than facts and figures. To truly appreciate all that life at Oak Crest has to offer, you have to experience it firsthand.

Pat Vary Oak Crest Resident Since 2014

For more information call (815) 756-8461 • 2944 Greenwood Acres Dr. • DeKalb, IL SM-CL0402921

• Saturday, October 29, 2016

myICCU.org (815) 895-4541

DAILY CHRONICLE | Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com

0.70 1.20

9


Nightmare on Eddy Street – a holiday event Sandwich family’s display stirs up thrills for the community

“At first, I didn’t want to decorate, but I had a lot of support to help keep it going. My husband also told me once that if I don’t decorate, he’ll come back and haunt me. So I think that I’ll keep doing it.”

By KATRINA J.E. MILTON kmilton@shawmedia.com

SANDWICH – Laura Bacskai is a witch and was born on Halloween. Her daughter, Angel Schwab, is a headless woman. Her oldest daughter is a skeleton bride, her deceased husband was a grumpy old troll and when her grandchildren visit, they proudly tell people they live in the haunted house. Bacskai and her family aren’t really supernatural. They are superfans of Halloween. Bacskai names the more than 500 Halloween decorations in her front yard after family members and friends. “It makes it easier when decorating and taking it down,” she said. “It also makes the decorations more personal.” Bacskai and Schwab’s house at 421 N. Eddy St. in Sandwich is known as Nightmare on Eddy Street. The family

Laura Bacskai

co-creator of Nightmare on Eddy Street

Katrina J.E. Milton – kmilton@shawmedia.com

Angel Schwab (left) and her mother Laura Bacskai decorate their front yard for Halloween. Their house, 421 N. Eddy St. in Sandwich, is Nightmare on Eddy Street, a haunted exhibit for trick-or-treaters. Each year, more than 1,600 people visit. began decorating in 2003 when they moved in. That first year, they set up two dummies and six headstones as a way to decorate and celebrate Bacskai’s Halloween birthday. Through the years, they’ve added more and more, even adding live actors to the

display for a walk-through haunted exhibit. Nightmare on Eddy Street is sponsored by Rosati’s Pizza, with trick-ortreaters receiving Rosati’s coupons, as well as candy, pretzels, glow sticks and necklaces.

More than 1,600 people visit their yard each year, some people walking through or stopping by multiple times because they enjoy it so much. “Once, a family from the Sugar Grove area brought along their foreign exchange student from China,” Schwab said. “She said she never saw anything like it before. She took pictures of everything and couldn’t wait to show them to her friends and family back home.” In 2009, Bacskai’s husband passed away, and she was hesitant to

See HALLOWEEN, page 15

Let the Cabinet Man Make Your Dreams a Reality!

F I N E

C A B I NETR Y

Get your cozy slippers and moccasins, now. We also carry hats, mittens, and gloves and everything sheepskin including the latest UGG® products. Americas bestselling footwear.

815-562-6667

SM-CL0403036

Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Saturday, October 29, 2016

| LOCAL NEWS

10

almfinecabinetry.com

Butternut Bisque

Come visit us at the Pumpkins Fest We will be in the Craft Market in the Sycamore High School Field House.

Bohemian Roasted Duck Pilsner Beer

~Hillside Restaurant~ 121 N. 2nd St., DeKalb • 756-4749

SM-CL0376449

Christmas is coming, get those Christmas presents early. Visit us at: 10828 Caledonia Road Belvidere, IL 61008 815-895-9678 www.completesheepshoppe.com SM-CL0403318


11

Pumpkin Fest Visitors,

INBODEN’S

Take home a piece of DeKalb County with our line of historical, Americanmade souvenirs available at Sweet Earth located at 341 W. State St. in downtown Sycamore and online at www.sweetearthjewelry.com/

MEAT MARKET

1106 N. 1st, DeKalb

756-5852

We launched the line of DeKalb County souvenir key chains, magnets, coasters, gift cards and postcards in April and have already expanded the selection. “Sweet Earth’s souvenirs feature photos from the Joiner History Room, Sycamore Chamber of Commerce and the county’s farm bureau and community foundation. The images were designed to highlight Sycamore’s best features, including its rich farmland and annual Pumpkin Fest.

1

BEEF # Bundle

Contains:

Stop by and check out our great selection!

14 - Top Sirloin Butt Steaks, 4 - Rolled Sirloin Roasts (4 to 4 1/2 Lbs.Avg.) 10 Lbs. Ground Chuck

Rich & Roseann Para

Cut, freezer-wrapped, flash-frozen to your family’s specifications.

TOBACCO Smoke and Vape We sell Hookahs, Roll-Your-Own, Tobacco Vaporizers, E-juices, Body Cleansers (detox), Drinks, Candy and Snacks.

815-991-5782

Trimmed, Take-Home Weight

(or a combination of the two)

$349.50

BEEF # Bundle

SM-CL0403032

46 Lbs. Boneless,

14 - New York Strip Steaks, OR 14 Rib-Eye steaks

SM-CL0401644

1210 E. State Street #7 Sycamore, IL 60178

©

2

©

46 Lbs. Boneless,

Trimmed, Take-Home Weight

Contains:

Rolled Rump Roasts, Swiss Steaks, Rolled Eye of Round Roasts, Round Steaks, Chuck Eye Steaks, Rolled Boston Roasts, Stew Beef, Boneless Chuck Eye Roasts, Ground Chuck Cut, freezer-wrapped, flash-frozen to your family’s specifications.

$229.50

PORK Bundle

©

78-80 Lbs.

Trimmed, Take-Home Weight

Contains:

Pork Loin: Choice of Pork Chops, Country Ribs, Roasts or a variety of each. Smoked Ham: Choice of ham roasts, ham steaks or a combination of each. Pork Shoulder: 4 - Boneless Roasts or Pork Steaks or a combination of each. Bacon: Approximately 10 lbs., thick or thin sliced. Sausage: Mildly seasoned, approximately 10 lbs. Spare Ribs: One rack.

Cut, freezer-wrapped, flash-frozen to your family’s specifications.

$259.50

Visit Us At WWW.MEATPLACE.COM SM-CL0402879

adno=0357375

• Saturday, October 29, 2016

Each of the souvenirs is Americanmade and printed on recycled paper.

Hours: Mon–Sat 8am–7pm; Closed Sun

DAILY CHRONICLE | Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com

Welcome


Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Saturday, October 29, 2016

| DAILY CHRONICLE

12       

Exercising after breast cancer                                                    )'-%4%/-) (0! $.!.52 "-/& .1.-                                                           +-.0)2(0!(.-,/-*# 0 !/!3-/52                                                                      SM-CL0376080

                                                                                                                                                                                          

                                                                    

                                                         


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DAILY CHRONICLE | Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Saturday, October 29, 2016

SM-CL0376081


Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Saturday, October 29, 2016

| LOCAL NEWS

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Pumpkin Fest continues SHAW MEDIA The following is a list of events going on this weekend at the Sycamore Pumpkin Festival.

Saturday

• The Rotary Pancake Breakfast will be served from 7 to 11 a.m. at the Federated Church at 612 W. State St. • Pumpkin displays can be viewed on the lawn of the DeKalb County Courthouse on State Street. • The Autumn Craft & Treasures Market, hosted by Sycamore Music Boosters, will be open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Sycamore High School Field House. • A craft show will be hosted from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. by Sycamore United Methodist Church at 160 Johnson Ave. Food also will be available. • The Sycamore Golf Club Pumpkin Scramble will begin at 10 a.m. at the Sycamore Golf Club, 940 E. State St. Registration entries close the Thursday before. • The Lions Club giant pumpkin weigh-in will begin at 10 a.m. on the lawn of the DeKalb County Courthouse on State Street. • The Historic Homes Walk “The Restoration” will be from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tickets cost $25 each or $40 for two. They are available at the Sycamore History Museum, 1730 N. Main St.; the Sycamore

Antiques Vintage Collectables & Gifts, Armor Technologies, Carter’s Cottage, Common Grounds, Cracker Jax, Hillside Restaurant, Kid Stuff

Chamber of Commerce, 407 W. State St.; Sweet Earth, 341 W. State St., and at each home on the day of the walk. Visit www. sycamorehistory.org for more information. • The teen carnival will be open from noon to 10 p.m. at Sacramento and State streets. A $25 ride special is available. Check for times at the carnival. • The kiddie carnival for young children will be from noon to 10 p.m. at the parking lot at Somonauk and Elm streets. A $25 ride special is available. Check for times at the carnival. • The Marquee Saturday Event will be from 2 to 4 p.m. in the 100 block of Somonauk Street. It is sponsored by KishHealth System, Upstaging Inc. and First Midwest Bank. Pots & Pans Community Steel Band will perform at 2 p.m. and Flat 43 BMX will perform at 3 p.m. • A Pumpkin Smash will be held at 2 p.m. at the Midwest Museum of Natural History, 425 W. State St. Cost is $5 a person. For information, visit www.mmnh. org. • The Kiwanis will host a pie-eating contest at 4 p.m. on the lawn of the DeKalb County Courthouse on State Street. • Fireworks can be enjoyed at Sycamore Park off Airport Road at 7:30 p.m. The display is sponsored by the Sycamore Park District and the Sycamore Pumpkin Festival Committee.

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• HALLOWEEN

15

Continued from page 10

Now open 7 days! Katrina J.E. Milton – kmilton@shawmedia.com

Nightmare on Eddy Street, 421 N. Eddy St. in Sandwich, features live actors and more than 500 decorations. The haunted exhibit is sponsored by Rosati’s Pizza, and trick-ortreaters are given coupons, candy and other treats on Halloween. ive of their decorating, with people dropping off candy and decorations. “One year, we received a large box of brand-new decorations with the tags still on them,” she said. “Once, we came out to find a book about serial killers on our front porch. A Sandwich police officer often parks his patrol car on the corner and hands out candy. Everyone wants to help and be a part of it.”

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If young children become frightened, they can raise their hands and say, “Don’t scare me,” signaling the actors to back away. “We can be scary, but we don’t want to scare little kids and ruin the holiday for them,” Bacskai said. “I can show them what’s inside the dummies, either stuffing, noodles or pipes.” Through the years, Schwab said that the community has been support-

• Wedding cakes • Graduation Cakes • Birthday Cakes • Donuts • Pastries • Breakfast Sandwiches • Bagels • Coffee • Biscuits and Gravy

LOCAL NEWS | Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com

continue the family’s Halloween tradition. “At first, I didn’t want to decorate, but I had a lot of support to help keep it going,” she said. “My husband also told me once that if I don’t decorate, he’ll come back and haunt me. So I think that I’ll keep doing it.” The entire family helps decorate the yard, sometimes starting two months before Halloween. The family also works hard to make the yard different every year, adding items from Bacskai’s storage unit that is full of decorations. The females in the family often do the decorating and the males do the electric work, run the music and control the fog machine. All of their decorations are handmade or made from repurposed items. Their scary clown is a 1970s Santa Claus, their moving monster was a Raggedy Ann doll and they made their own plants from “Little Shop of Horrors” and characters from “The Nightmare Before Christmas.” Schwab also is making replicas of the books from “Hocus Pocus” and “Army of Darkness.” Nightmare on Eddy Street is family-friendly, with the actors not permitted to touch or grab guests.


Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Saturday, October 29, 2016

16

STATE

Kirk apologizes for mocking rival’s family By SARA BURNETT

The Associated Press

CHICAGO – Illinois Republican U.S. Sen. Mark Kirk apologized Friday for mocking his Democratic rival’s immigrant background and her claim that her family’s military service dates back to the Revolution – comments that drew wide criticism and threatened an already difficult re-election campaign. “Sincere apologies to an American hero, Tammy Duckworth, and gratitude for her family’s service,” Kirk wrote in a Twitter post. During a debate Thursday evening, U.S. Rep. Tammy Duckworth said her family has “served this nation in uniform going back to the Revolution.”

ILLINOIS ROUNDUP

News from across the state

1

Official: Plane had ‘uncontained engine failure’

CHICAGO – Pilots were forced to abort a takeoff and evacuate passengers from a burning American Airlines flight Friday on a runway at Chicago O’Hare International Airport after the airliner experienced what a federal official said was a rare and serious type of engine failure. American Airlines Flight 383 to Miami experienced an “uncontained engine failure,” in which engine parts break off and are spewed outside the engine, the official said. The official wasn’t authorized to speak publicly about the incident and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity. The danger of such a failure is that engine pieces effectively become shrapnel and can cause extensive damage to the aircraft. Flames and heavy black smoke poured from the side of the Boeing 767 jet as it sat on the runway after the aborted takeoff. Officials said the incident left 21 people injured.

Kirk responded that he had forgotten that the congresswoman’s “parents came all the way from Thailand to serve George Washington.” Duckworth, an Iraq War veteran who lost both legs when the Black Hawk she was piloting was shot down in 2004, was born in Bangkok. Her mother, who is of Chinese descent, was born in Thailand. Duckworth has said her father first went to Southeast Asia while serving with the Marines in Vietnam. Kirk’s remark was greeted mostly by silence in the auditorium of the University of Illinois in Springfield on Thursday evening. Elsewhere, there were quick calls for him to apologize. The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee immediately called the

Footage from the scene showed passengers coming down emergency slides and hurrying across grass next to the runway as emergency vehicles surrounded the plane. The right wing was drooping toward the ground and appeared to have partially melted. Passenger Sarah Ahmed told WLS-TV the plane was speeding down the runway when she heard an explosion and saw flames and black smoke. She said everyone on the right side of the aircraft jumped from their seats and moved to the left side. “People are yelling, ‘Open the door! Open the door!’ Everyone’s screaming and jumping on top of each other to open the door,” Ahmed said. “Within that time, I think it was seven seconds, there was now smoke in the plane and the fire is right up against the windows, and it’s melting the windows.” The pilots reported an engine-related mechanical issue and aborted the takeoff, American Airlines spokeswoman Leslie Scott said. The Federal Aviation Administration said in a statement that the plane made an emergency stop around 2:35 p.m. after experiencing a problem during takeoff. An earlier FAA state-

comment “offensive, wrong and racist.” Duckworth, the first Asian-American congresswoman from Illinois, later tweeted a photo of herself with her parents, including her father in uniform displaying his medals. Her tweet said: “My mom is an immigrant and my dad and his family have served this nation in uniform since the Revolution.” Kirk left the debate Thursday night without speaking to reporters. Campaign manager Kevin Artl said Thursday the senator has called Duckworth “a war hero in his commercials and he commends her family’s service.” Kirk’s campaign said the senator tried to contact Duckworth by phone to apologize Friday before posting his apology on Twitter. Duckworth’s cam-

paign confirmed he had reached out, but it was unclear whether the candidates spoke. Kirk’s comments drew heavy scorn across social media. Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton posted on Twitter that she is thankful for Duckworth’s and her family’s service, adding: “It’s really not that hard to grasp, Mark Kirk.” Donald Trump’s campaign manager also took the opportunity to jab at Kirk, who earlier this year withdrew his support for the GOP presidential nominee and has been a vocal critic. “The same Mark Kirk that unendorsed his party’s presidential nominee and called him out in paid ads? Gotcha. Good luck,” Kellyanne Conway posted on Twitter late Thursday.

for people to cast ballots ahead of time.

3

AP photo

In this photo provided by passenger Jose Castillo, fellow passengers walk away from a burning American Airlines jet that aborted takeoff and caught fire on the runway Friday at Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport. Pilots on Flight 383 bound for Miami reported an engine-related mechanical issue, according to an airline spokeswoman.

ment said the plane had blown a tire, but officials later deleted that information from the statement.

2

485K of Illinois’ 8M registered voters cast ballots early

SPRINGFIELD – Illinois State Board of Elections officials said more than 6 percent of Illinois’ record 8 million active registered voters have already cast their ballots with a little more than a week to go until Election Day. The Springfield bureau of Lee Enterprises newspapers report-

ed more than 485,400 Illinois residents had voted in the Nov. 8 election as of Thursday morning either by mail, in person or using grace period registration, which allows people to register and cast their ballots simultaneously. In 2012, the last presidential election year, nearly 16 percent of active registered voters cast their ballots before Election Day, representing 22 percent of the nearly 5.3 million votes. Elections board spokesman Jim Tenuto said early voting has become increasingly popular as Illinois has expanded opportunities

Judge gives preliminary OK to parolee settlement

CHICAGO – A federal judge has granted preliminary approval of a settlement in a lawsuit alleging Illinois violates parolees’ rights by returning them to prison for supposed violations after rushed, haphazard hearings. U.S. District Judge Amy St. Eve ruled during a status hearing Thursday in Chicago. Attorneys who filed the suit in 2013 heralded the settlement. They said it will help make the system fairer, including by ensuring parolees’ access to lawyers. MacArthur Justice Center attorney Sheila Bedi called the current parole-revocation system “byzantine.” Around 30,000 people in Illinois are on parole and Bedi said the settlement, if implemented, “should significantly reduce” the numbers of people sent back to prisoned on parole violations. Current parolees will have several months to comment on the settlement before the judge decides can give it final approval.

– Wire reports


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NATION & WORLD BRIEFS Trump short on pledge to efforts in numerous cash-hungry spend $100M on campaign states that have considered

WASHINGTON – Donald Trump has repeatedly said he will spend $100 million or more of his own money on his presidential bid. Yet even with a fresh donation, he’d be $34 million short of that promise. The Republican nominee told supporters at a New Hampshire rally Friday afternoon that he’d given another $10 million earlier in the day. That means his personal investment over the course of the primary and general elections would have grown to about $66 million. The infusion comes as Democrat Hillary Clinton holds a striking cash advantage over Trump, new Federal Election Commission reports show. As of last week, Clinton and her Democratic partners had $153 million in the bank, more than double the resources as on the Trump side.

extending sales taxes beyond goods to keep pace with the service-based economy. Concerned that states could try to tax services related to home sales, national and local organizations representing real estate agents have poured about $7 million into a campaign to pass the amendment, with hopes of a trend-setting victory.

Closing argument heard in New Jersey bridge case

NEWARK, N.J. – A former staffer and former appointee of Republican New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie were so eager to aid his rising political career in 2013 that they concocted a plan to create gridlock at the country’s busiest bridge to punish a mayor who didn’t want to go along for the ride, a federal prosecutor told jurors Friday in closing arguments at their fraud trial. Bridget Kelly and Bill Baroni, Missouri voters weigh along with a third alleged limits on sales taxes co-conspirator who has pleaded JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. – Misguilty, “shared an intense comsouri voters will be the first in the nation to decide whether to mitment to the political success of Gov. Chris Christie, and they amend their state constitution felt they could use their political to prohibit sales taxes from being expanded to services such positions to execute a malicious scheme to punish a local mayas auto repairs, haircuts, legal or,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Lee work and financial accounting. Cortes said. The proposal on the Nov. 8 – Wire reports ballot is a backlash against

17

FBI’s October surprise shocks Clinton campaign The ASSOCIATED PRESS DES MOINES, Iowa – A new shock hit Hillary Clinton’s campaign Friday in the unpredictable and often unbelievable presidential race: The FBI is looking into whether there was classified information on a device belonging to the estranged husband of one of her closest aides. Adding to the drama of the stunning revelation: The FBI uncovered the emails during a sexting investigation of Anthony Weiner, the disgraced ex-congressman who is separated from longtime Clinton aide Huma Abedin. The Democrat said late Friday she was confident whatever the FBI may find would not change its conclusion from earlier this year – that her use of a private email system as secretary of state did not merit prosecution. “We don’t know the facts, which is why we are calling on the FBI to release all the information that it has,” Clinton said. “Even [FBI] Director [James] Comey noted that this new information might not be significant, so let’s get it out.” The news arrived with Clinton holding a solid advantage in the presidential race. Early voting has been underway for weeks, and she has a steady lead in preference polls. But the development all but ensures that, even should she win the White House, the Democrat and several of her closest aides would celebrate victory under a cloud of investigation. It was a day that thrilled Republicans eager to change the trajectory of the race, none moreso than GOP nominee Donald Trump. “Hillary Clinton’s corruption is on a scale we have never seen before,” Trump said while campaigning in battleground New Hampshire. “We must not let her take

AP photo

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton speaks with senior aide Huma Abedin aboard her campaign plane Friday at Westchester County Airport in White Plains, N.Y. her criminal scheme into the Oval Office.” Democrats, still confident Clinton will prevail in 11 days, were enraged by Comey’s decision to disclose the existence of the fresh investigation in a vaguely worded letter to several congressional leaders. “The FBI has a history of extreme caution near Election Day so as not to influence the results,” California Sen. Dianne Feinstein said. She added, accusingly, “Today’s break from that tradition is appalling.” It wasn’t until hours after Comey’s letter emerged that word came that the source of the new emails was Weiner, the former congressman under investigation for sending sexually explicit text messages to a teenage girl. “We don’t know what to believe,” Clinton said, adding, “Right now, your guess is as good as mine, and I don’t think that’s good enough.” The development also reignited persistent worries among Democrats that electing the former first lady will restart a cycle of scandal and investigation that could rival the final portion of her husband’s term in office. Congressional Republicans have already promised years of investigations into

Clinton’s private email system. And that’s only one of the email-related controversies facing her. The tens of thousands of confidential emails from Clinton campaign insiders that were hacked – she and the government say by Russia – and then released by WikiLeaks have provided a steady stream of questions about her policy positions, personnel choices and ties with her husband’s sprawling charitable network and post-presidential pursuits. In his Friday letter to congressional leaders, Comey wrote only that new emails have emerged, prompting the agency to “take appropriate investigative steps” to review the information that may be pertinent to its previously closed investigation into Clinton’s private email system. The FBI ended that investigation in July without filing charges, although Comey said then that Clinton and her aides had been “extremely careless” in using the system for communications about government business. The agency, which did not respond to questions about Comey’s letter and did not lay out a timeline for the review, also is investigating the recent hacks of the emails of John Podesta, Clinton’s campaign chairman.

Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Saturday, October 29, 2016

NATION&WORLD


Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Saturday, October 29, 2016

| DAILY CHRONICLE

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By JAMES MacPHERSON and BLAKE NICHOLSON The Associated Press

AP photo

The burned hulks of heavy trucks sit on Highway 1806 near Cannon Ball, N.D., on Friday near the spot where protesters of the Dakota Access pipeline were evicted from private property a day earlier. Authorities said protesters burned several pieces of construction equipment Thursday during a chaotic confrontation with law enforcement. test for months against the four-state, thousand-mile pipeline being developed by Texas-based Energy Transfer Partners to carry North Dakota crude to a shipping point in Patoka, Illinois. The tribe argues it’s a threat to water and cultural sites, and encampments have grown to thousands at times as its cause has drawn support from Native

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Americans and others from around the country, including environmentalists and some celebrities. The protest escalated Sunday when demonstrators set up camp on private land along the pipeline’s path that had recently been acquired by Energy Transfer Partners. More than 140 people were arrested Thursday as law

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CANNON BALL, N.D. – A standoff between Dakota Access pipeline opponents and law enforcement over a highway roadblock diminished Friday without incident, a marked contrast to the forced removal a day earlier of protesters occupying private property. As many as 50 protesters gathered early in the day behind heavy plywood sheets and burned-out vehicles, facing a line of concrete barriers, military vehicles and police in riot gear. But only a handful of people, some of them observers from Amnesty International, remained on the bridge by late afternoon after protest representatives told people to return to the main encampment. Morton County Sheriff Kyle Kirchmeier described the protesters as “nonconfrontational but uncooperative” and credited Standing Rock Sioux tribal members for helping to ease tensions on the bridge. Kirchmeier said tribal representatives were allowed onto the private property to remove teepees. Officers arrested one person Friday, but no details were released. Standing Rock has waged a pro-

enforcement, bolstered by reinforcements from several states, moved in slowly to envelop the protesters. After Thursday’s eviction, some protesters worked overnight to create the two roadblocks. Jolene White Eagle, 56, a lifelong Cannon Ball resident, watched as law enforcement officers massed near Friday’s new blockade and called the police response “nonsense.” “It reminds me of something like a foreign country, what’s happened here with all the destruction,” she said. The camp cleared on Thursday was located just to the north of a more permanent, larger encampment on federally owned land that has been the main staging area for hundreds of protesters. Many returned to that site Friday to regroup and reunite with others who had been arrested the day before. There were no immediate plans to try to reoccupy the private land or to build a new camp elsewhere in the pipeline’s path, protest camp spokesman Cody Hall said. A federal judge in September denied the tribe’s request to block construction on the grounds that the Army Corps of Engineers improperly issued permits, and North Dakota officials said no culturally significant sites have been found in the area.

19

NATION | Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com

New standoff in pipeline protest ebbs without violence


Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Saturday, October 29, 2016

20

OPINIONS

Karen Pletsch Publisher

Eric Olson Editor

Brett Rowland News Editor

Inger Koch Features Editor

OUR VIEW

Thumbs-up to more voting Thumbs-up: To more people voting. The Illinois State Board of Elections reported this week that Illinois has the most registered voters than it has at any time since 1970. The state is expected to have more than 8 million registered voters by the time Election Day comes on Nov. 8. Efforts to make voting accessible through online registration, grace-period voting – in which people can register past the deadline to vote on Election Day and vote early – and other ballot accessibility measures are increasing public participation. Allowing more people to participate in the democratic process is a net positive for our society and we are pleased to see more people taking the chance to make their voice heard through voting. Thumbs-down: To the person who destroyed Donald Trump’s star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on Wednesday. Don’t like Trump or his policies? That’s fine. Want to see his name removed? Petition the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce, which bestows the stars on people and maintains the tourist attraction. But simply destroying public property doesn’t make a person a hero. It’s vandalism and it’s unwarranted. Lots of people have problems with Trump, many others with his opponent, Hillary Clinton. That doesn’t give anyone the right to vandalize public property, and it certainly doesn’t make it heroic if they do. Thumbs-up: To this year’s Athena Award winner, Susan Johnson. The award, which is given each year by the DeKalb Chamber of Commerce, recognizes an individual for business and professional accomplishments, community service and for serving as a role model to encourage women to reach their full leadership potential. Johnson is president and owner of American Title Guaranty Inc. in Sycamore and has been involved in various community initiatives as well as Stage Coach Players. “I really enjoy working with the children when they are in plays and showing them that someone that’s a grandma can be involved,” she said. “And that they can learn from their experiences there to be involved in their community also.” Good to see people leading by example and making a difference. Thumbs-up: To a long-awaited return to the IHSA football playoffs for Hiawatha. The Hawks finished this season 7-2, earning a postseason berth for the first time since 1987. The Hawks are the No. 5 seed and will face No. 12 LeRoy (6-3) in the first round the Class 1A playoffs today. Congratulations to the Hawks on snapping a nearly 30-year playoff drought. Congratulations also to Genoa-Kingston, which completed an undefeated regular season last week, as well as DeKalb and Sycamore, the area’s other two playoff football teams.

THE FIRST

AMENDMENT

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Homefield Energy to make up for mistake

To the Editor: Back in early September I discovered that Homefield Energy, DeKalb’s contracted electricity supplier, was overcharging residents in the city of DeKalb. The company failed to reduce the rate, per the negotiated contract with the city of DeKalb on behalf of its residents. The excess billing appeared on two consecutive months’ worth of bills for the billing periods of July and August 2016. As you recall, none of DeKalb’s out-of-touch officials and its elected mayor and City Council, noticed this error due to lack of oversight. The good news is, the refunds, as a result of the overbilling, are appearing in mailboxes this week for the citizens of DeKalb who utilize Homefield Energy as their electric supplier. As you recall in a letter to the editor on Sept. 14, (“City officials should be more in touch,” page 13), I requested Homefield Energy to look into a cost benefit, in addition to the promised refund, to be issued to the consumer for this error. My logic was that the company held our money hostage for several months. I had contacted Mark Fanning of Homefield, and I’m happy to report that the company, in addition to issuing the promised refund, has also agreed to send each of the affected DeKalb residents a $20 gift card for their trouble. I appreciate the fact that Homefield energy accepted blame for the overbilling, and resolved the matter properly and in a manner that I believe is fair. It is my hope that our Mayor

John Rey and our city leaders do more to mind the store as this is just as much their fault for not monitoring an agreement they negotiated on behalf of their citizens. Mark Charvat DeKalb

Amato will bring energy, ideas to state’s attorney’s office

To the Editor: Juanita and I and many others support Rick Amato for DeKalb County State’s Attorney for the following reasons: Rick is a lifetime student, attorney, owner and manager of his law office, experienced working in the State’s Attorney Office, husband, father and family man who understands the law and how the administration of the law for the people affects and benefits our community. Rick will shorten and expedite the prosecution and pleading-out of misdemeanor cases to minimize court, criminal and jail exposure for first-time offenders who plead guilty to a misdemeanor, pay the fine and end exposure to more criminals in the system who deserve to be there. Some court cases processed belong in municipal adjudication proceedings, such as exist in Sycamore, Genoa and DeKalb, freeing the state’s attorney to focus on apprehension, prosecution, and sentencing of the felonious criminals. Law enforcement endorses Rick as a law-and-order “top cop” who will go after the worst offenders and deal fairly with those who make a misdemeanor mistake, admit guilt, pay a

fine and go on their way. Rick knows less exposure to courts, jails and criminals means less chance a young person will crime as a lifestyle. Publicity around the Ridulph murder case leaves us in wonder how the current state’s attorney knows more about it than five law enforcement agencies from Sycamore to Seattle, sworn eyewitness and other testimony, jailhouse cellmate testimony, a bench conviction and sentence, and the sentence upheld by a three-judge Appellate Court panel. People question, does the county’s legal system work for the people or work for the “party.” Rick has maintained a campaign of ideas and has not demeaned his opponent. That leaves the voter with what Rick brings to the job and not recounting the opponent’s lack of experience, management, prosecution, and execution in the office. Every room Ken enters these days is full of people younger than he. The city of Sycamore is full of talented professionals who will continue the success of Team Sycamore, so no regrets about leaving the office. Rick Amato is one of those professionals who bring more energy, work ethic, professionalism, law experience, local knowledge and dedication to public service for the office he seeks. When we hire Rick Amato to improve the DeKalb County State Attorney’s Office we will not regret it. Please join us in voting for Rick Amato for DeKalb County State’s Attorney on Nov. 8. Ken and Juanita Mundy Sycamore

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.


VIEWS John Stossel events. Another reason I don’t like Trump is that he supported the Iraq war – and then lied about that. Media pooh-bahs told me Trump pushed for the war years ago on The Howard Stern Show. But then I listened to what Trump actually said. “Are you for invading Iraq?” Stern asked. Trump replied, “Yeah, I guess ... so.” Later, on Neil Cavuto’s show, Trump said, “Perhaps [Bush] shouldn’t be doing it yet, and perhaps we should be waiting for the United Nations.” I wouldn’t call that “support” – the way NBC’s debate moderator and many others have. I was stunned by how thoroughly the media have distorted Trump’s position. That’s a privilege you get when you’re part of the media elite: You get to steer the masses’ thinking. At the second debate, we all know that Trump walked over to Hillary Clinton’s podium, as if he was

“stalking Ms. Clinton like prey,” said The New York Times. CNN said, “Trump looms behind Hillary Clinton at the debate.” Afterward, Clinton went on Ellen DeGeneres’ show and said Trump would “literally stalk me around the stage, and I would just feel this presence behind me. I thought, ‘Whoa, this is really weird.’ ” But it was a lie. Watch the video. Clinton walked over to Trump’s podium. Did the mainstream media tell you that? No. The ruling class has its themes, and it sticks to them. When Clinton wore white to a debate, the Times called the color an “emblem of hope” and a Philadelphia Inquirer writer used words like “soft and strong ... a dream come true.” But when Melania Trump wore white, that same writer called it a “scary statement,” as if Melania Trump’s white symbolized white supremacy, “another reminder that in the G.O.P. white is always right.” Give me a break. The ruling class decide which ideas are acceptable, which scientific theories to believe, what speech is permitted. In the book “Primetime Propaganda,” Ben Shapiro writes that the

Hollywood ruling class calls conservatives “moral scum.” He says, “If you’re entering the industry, you have to keep [your beliefs] under wraps because nobody will hire you ... they just assume you’re a bad person.” They won’t tell you why you weren’t hired. They just tell you, “You weren’t right for the part,” explains Shapiro. “Talent is subjective, which means that it’s pretty easy to find an excuse not to call back the guy who voted for George W. Bush.” Years ago, the ruling class was the Church. Priests said the universe revolved around Earth. Galileo was arrested because he disagreed. Today, college lefties, mainstream media, Hollywood and the Washington establishment have replaced the Church, but they are closed-minded dogmatists, too. We are lucky that now we have a lot of information at our fingertips. We don’t need to rely on the ruling class telling us what to believe. We can make up our own minds.

• John Stossel is host of “Stossel” on Fox News and author of “No They Can’t! Why Government Fails – But Individuals Succeed.”

ANOTHER VIEW

The Affordable Care Act still is a work in progress The Affordable Care Act is “blowing up,” Donald Trump claimed at a rally, jumping on the government’s announcement that premiums for a popular group of ACA plans will increase by 25 percent next year. “All of my employees are having a tremendous problem with Obamacare,” he claimed. Well, no. ACA rates are going up by double digits, but that does not mean that most people’s premiums are. Most people – including, we presume, quite a few Trump employees – get their health insurance through their employers, not the ACA marketplaces for individual insurance-buyers. For that matter, most of those individual buyers also will not face a huge premium spike. The 25 percent is an average, masking regional variation, and most people buying on the ACA

marketplaces get significant government help that softens any top-line premium increase. But that doesn’t mean the ratehike news is insignificant. Rate increases of this magnitude are unsustainable. The law is facing a big test. After the rate hike, premiums will be about where the Congressional Budget Office initially projected they would be at this point. It might be that many insurers initially priced their plans too low and have been playing catch-up ever since. In addition, the increases may reflect insurers’ anticipation of the end, in 2017, of programs meant to stabilize costs in the first few years of the law’s rollout. If so, market volatility may abate in coming years.

But the increases also may reflect more fundamental problems. Enrollment still lags CBO projections. Will more people come into the system? Another big question is whether the law will unleash competitive forces, as planned. Insurers are feeling their way toward offering coverage that appeals to marketplace customers; it turns out insurers that keep costs down by offering relatively narrow networks of doctors and hospitals, a model that some bigname insurers are not accustomed to, have been doing relatively well. If that continues, more insurance companies may tweak their plans and enter or re-enter markets that have relatively little competition now, providing options to consumers and helping keep costs down. On the other hand, parts of the system may decline: Next year’s pre-

mium spikes may drive away people who make too much to qualify for government subsidies, which would worsen conditions for insurers, which might accelerate their withdrawal from more markets, leading premiums to rise even more. Either way, there are fixes they can consider. One would stiffen the penalty even more, to drive up enrollment. Another would enhance the subsidies people got to buy marketplace insurance. A third would create some form of “public option” insurance plan to fill gaps in places where markets may never work well. The ACA has reduced the rate of uninsured people in the United States. But it remains, not surprisingly, a work in progress.

The Washington Post

Haven’t Gotten Around To It?

Find someone to do it for you in the Service Directory of the classified section.

• Saturday, October 29, 2016

America is often described as a society without the Old World’s aristocracy. Yet we still have people who feel entitled to boss the rest of us around. The “elite” media, the political class, Hollywood and university professors think their opinions are obviously correct, so they must educate us peasants. OK, so they don’t call us “peasants” anymore. Now we are “deplorables” – conservatives or libertarians. Or Trump supporters. The elite have a lot of influence over how we see things. I don’t like Donald Trump. I used to. I once found him refreshing and honest. Now I think he’s a mean bully. I think that partly because he mocked a disabled person. I saw it on TV. He waved his arms around to mimic a New York Times reporter with a disability – but wait! It turns out that Trump used the same gestures and tone of speech to mock Ted Cruz and a general he didn’t like. It’s not nice, but it doesn’t appear directed at a disability. I only discovered this when researching the media elite. Even though I’m a media junkie, I hadn’t seen the other side of the story. The elite spoon-fed me their version of

OPINIONS | Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com

America actually has its own ruling class

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| DAILY CHRONICLE

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Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Saturday, October 29, 2016

$2.50 Domestic Beers $3.50 Stella Drafts • $5.00 Martinis *Prices valid only during game time in the 1879 Lounge

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Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Saturday, October 29, 2016

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DAILY CHRONICLE | Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Saturday, October 29, 2016


Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Saturday, October 29, 2016

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SPORTS

GOING DOWN SWINGING

INDIANS SHUT OUT CUBS FOR THE 2ND TIME IN SERIES TO TAKE A 2-1 LEAD / 33

Indians catcher Yan Gomes (left) celebrates after Cubs batter Javier Baez makes the final out in Game 3 of the World Series on Friday night at Wrigley Field. The Cubs lost, 1-0, falling behind in the series, 2-1. AP photo


CLASS 6A PREP FOOTBALL PLAYOFFS: (7) DeKALB 35, (10) MARMION 20

Tucker’s kickoff return highlights 28-0 3rd quarter By JESSE SEVERSON

jseverson@shawmedia.com

• Saturday, October 29, 2016

DeKALB – The DeKalb football team’s high-powered offense had 90 yards in the first half against Marmion Academy. Barbs senior star Cole Tucker matched that on his first touch of the second half. Tucker had a long touchdown return on the opening kickoff in the third quarter, and the No. 7-seeded Barbs bombarded the No. 10 Cadets with a huge third quarter with a strong wind at their backs in a 35-20 victory in the first round of the Class 6A state playoffs. “That was a game-changer in terms of momentum,” DeKalb coach Matt Weckler said of Tucker’s 90-yard return down the left sideline. “We can come out at halftime and make adjustments all you want, then you get a special teams touchdown, that changes the dimensions of your game plan.” In the second round, DeKalb will travel to undefeated No. 2 Antioch, which survived with a 29-28 win over No. 15 Wauconda. Game time is set for 1 p.m. Saturday. The Barbs (8-2) made the most of having the wind at their backs in the third quarter, outscoring the Cadets (6-4), 28-0. Along with Tucker’s kick return for a score, DeKalb senior quarterback Derek Kyler went 8 for 9 with 135 yards and two touchdowns in the quarter. He found senior Zuerek Day up the middle for a 38-yard touchdown, and connected with Tucker for a 19-yard score, to go along with a 1-yard touchdown run by Jelante Young, to turn the Barbs’ 7-6 halftime lead into 35-6 edge heading into the final quarter. “That was probably our best quarter of the year,” said Tucker, who finished with six catches and 87 yards. “What’d we outscore them, 28-0?” Kyler finished 14 for 22 with 217 yards and two touchdowns, with his main targets being Tucker, Day (three catches, 64 yards) and Devin Williams (three catches, 44 yards). The DeKalb defense clamped down in the third quarter against the Cadets, who struggled to move the ball with the wind in their faces. The

SPORTS | Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com

Huge quarter propels Barbs

29

Nick Brooks for Shaw Media

ABOVE: DeKalb’s Cole Tucker returns the opening kickoff of the second half for a touchdown against Marmion in the first round of the Class 6A playoffs Friday night in DeKalb. The Barbs won, 35-20. BELOW: DeKalb running back Elias Flowers plows his way into the end zone. With Marmion trailing, 35-6, heading into the fourth quarter, the Cadets made the most of the wind in the fourth quarter to make things interesting. Marmion junior quarterback Brandon McPherson went 7 for 8 with 180 yards and two touchdowns in the final period – including a 40yard touchdown pass to Zach Urwiler and a 66-yard score to Jett Haas on a flea-flicker on back-to-back offensive plays. “We felt like we could take the wind in the fourth quarter because we felt like we could defend them (in the third),” Marmion coach Dan Thorpe said. McPherson finished 12 for 18 with Barbs forced a turnover, three three- 221 yards and two touchdowns, and and-outs and held the Cadets to 18 running back Nick Sevenich had 11 carries for 69 yards. yards in the quarter. The Cadets had the ball inside the “We were talking to the guys in the locker room that we didn’t want this red zone with less than two minutes to be our last halftime,” said DeKalb to go, but a trick play backfired for senior linebacker Eric Letterer, who Marmion when receiver Jake Molenhad two sacks and a fumble recovery. house’s pass was intercepted by Tuck“It’s my senior year and I love these er in the end zone to seal the win. It was a wild second half compared guys, and I don’t want it to be over. We to a low-scoring first half, in which went out and got it done.”

Marmion outgained DeKalb, 189-90. The only scoring came on a 6-yard run by Urwiler and a 8-yard run by Williams in the first quarter. “We walked into halftime saying we were outplayed, but we have the lead and we can play a lot better,” Weckler said. “That made us feel good, in terms of confidence, that we had a good second half of football in us.” Marmion outgained DeKalb, 394309, but the Barbs forced four turnovers – Tucker’s interception and fumble recoveries by Letterer, Brianjay Ross and Nicholas Diaz. With the Cadets charging in the fourth quarter, senior defensive end Dwayne Lacey forced the fumble that was recovered by Diaz on the Barbs’ 24-yard line to help DeKalb kill more time. “That was a huge turnover because they were going in and if we don’t get a turnover there, they have the momentum to go in and cut it to one possession,” Weckler said. “They would have on-side kicked, I would have guessed, and then you never know what happens.”


Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Saturday, October 29, 2016

| SPORTS

30 CLASS 4A PREP FOOTBALL PLAYOFFS: (3) GENOA-KINGSTON 35, (14) COAL CITY 10

Cogs top Coalers in 1st round By EDDIE CARIFIO

ecarifio@shawmedia.com GENOA – A big run by No. 14 Coal City at the end of the first half helped tighten the game going into halftime. A big run by No. 3 Genoa-Kingston in the second half gave the Cogs enough momentum to run away with a 3510 win in the first round of the Class 4A football playoffs. The Coalers (5-5) got a 55yard run from Nick Hayden as they were trying to run out the clock in the first half, setting up a 30-yard field goal by Cal Smolik as time expired, cutting the lead for the Cogs (10-0) to 14-10. But Dan Guardi went 60 yards on the first play from scrimmage in the second half to push the Cogs’ lead to 11, their biggest to that point. They scored twice more while the defense held the Coalers to only 29 yards in the half. “It feels so crazy. I didn’t expect our team to come out this hard at the beginning of the season,” said Guardi, who ran 14 times for 130 yards and two touchdowns. “I give it up to all my teammates, giving it up all they got every play of the game.” Guardi took the ball on his run right at the Coalers’ line. Somehow he broke through, took the ball to the left and went the rest of the way. “I don’t know what happened, honestly,” Guardi said. “I felt like I wasn’t going anywhere. I was going as hard as I could. He let go and I ran as hard as I could.” Coal City coach Lenny Onsen said he thought the play was over.

Matthew Apgar – mapgar@shawmedia.com

Genoa-Kingston’s Zach Miller hauls in a pass over Coal City defender Danny Kroeger in the first quarter of Friday night’s Class 4A first-round playoff game in Genoa. The Cogs won, 35-10. “That was crushing, because we had him wrapped up,” Onsen said. “I’m looking, getting ready to call the next play. That’s what’s frustrating the last couple years because you try to tell kids to finish a play in the pile, but now you get penalties for that. The kids are concerned. But I’m not making excuses, but that’s what you have to worry about. Again, we just have to be better tacklers there, and you have to take your hat off to that ballclub. They did a lot of great things this evening.” Zach Miller – who had a 44yard touchdown catch in the fourth quarter, as well – had

a huge block to spring Guardi for the last 35 yards or so. “Miller is there, every play of the game,” Guardi said. “He’d do anything for this team. He’s a [heck] of a player.” Miller finished with four catches for 98 yards and was on the receiving end of Zach Butler’s only touchdown pass. “Zach is a [heck] of an athlete and he’s shown it all year,” coach Bill McCarty said. “He’s a great playmaker, and not only does he make nice catches, but he blocks for us, too.” The Coalers had 177 yards of offense in the first half, but finished with 206 total

– including minus-1 on the ground in the second half and 139 rushing yards in the first two quarters. Hayden had 117 yards on 12 carries. Their first touchdown came on a 23-yard pass from Christian Johnson to Blake Harseim in the second quarter, tying the score at 7. Genoa-Kingston scored first on a 16-yard run by Guardi. After Harseim’s touchdown grab to tie the score, the Cogs put together a 16-play, 80-yard drive that ate 8 minutes off the clock, capped by Aidan Simmons’ 2-yard run. After Guardi pushed the lead to 21-10, the Cogs defense forced

a three-and-out, then scored on a 7-yard run by Simmons, who finished with 80 yards on 20 carries and two scores. On the next drive, down 2810, the Coalers began driving, picking up a big third-and-9 when Johnson hit Ryan Chapman on a 25-yard pass. Guardi went for the pick on the play and missed, setting up the completion. It didn’t take long for redemption. On the thirddown play on the next series, he sacked Johnson for a 10yard loss. “I knew I had to come out cause I messed up,” Guardi said. “That was a big thirddown play for them. But I did what I needed to do.” G-K got its final touchdown on the next possession on Miller’s catch. “The second half we came out and just didn’t compete real well,” Onsen said. “That’s different when you’re a 9-0 team and a 5-4 team in the first round of the playoffs. That type of team, we knew they were going to be outstanding, and we just wanted to keep it a four-quarter game. That didn’t happen tonight.” Butler finished the game 7 of 9 for 127 yards, a touchdown and no interceptions. Johnson was 5 for 15 for 68 yards, a score and no picks. The Cogs will face No. 6 Rockford Lutheran in the second round at home. The Cogs won in Rockford this year when the Crusaders missed a last-second field goal. “It’s hard to beat a team twice, and they’ve been playing well,” McCarty said. “We’ll have our hands full again.”

IHSA FOOTBALL PLAYOFFS FIRST ROUND

Class 6A (16) Deerfield (5-4) at (1) Prairie Ridge (9-0), 1 p.m. Saturday (9) Montini 41, (8) Chicago St. Ignatius 8 (13) St. Viator (5-4) at (4) Boylan Catholic (8-1), 1 p.m. Saturday (12) Lake Forest 40, (5) Riverside-Brookfield 7 (2) Antioch 29, (15) Wauconda 28 (7) DeKalb 35, (10) Marmion Academy 20 (3) Cary-Grove 34, (14) Wheeling 8 (6) Grayslake North 42, (11) Lakes 28 (1) Lemont 35, (16) Oak Forest 13 (9) Chicago Perspectives/Leadership (7-2) at (8) Danville (7-2), 2:30 p.m. Saturday (13) Glenwood (6-3) at (4) Crete-Monee (7-2), 2 p.m. Saturday

(12) St. Laurence (6-3) at (5) Richards (7-2), 5 p.m. Saturday (2) Springfield Sacred Heart-Griffin 57, (15) Community West 20 (10) Chicago Hubbard (7-2) at (7) Galesburg (7-2), 1 p.m. Saturday (14) Shepard 41, (3) Morgan Park 7 (11) Rock Island 17, (6) Thornton Fractional South 14 Class 5A (16) Chicago Westinghouse (5-4) at (1) Sterling (9-0), 1 p.m. Saturday (9) Rich Central 28, (8) Woodstock North 0 (13) Sycamore (5-4) at (4) Chicago Solorio Academy (7-2), 2 p.m. Saturday (12) Rochelle (5-4) at (5) Ridgewood (72), 1 p.m. Saturday (15) Nazareth Academy (5-4) vs. (2) Chicago Goode (9-0), noon Saturday at Gately Stadium in Chicago

(10) Chicago Urban Prep/Bronzeville (6-3) at (7) Vernon Hills (6-3), 3 p.m. Saturday (14) Marian Central 49, (3) Chicago Payton 14 (6) Hillcrest 28, (11) Glenbard South 27 (1) Peoria 21, (16) Dunlap 9 (9) Jacksonville (6-3) at (8) Eisenhower (6-3), 1 p.m. Saturday (13) Peoria Notre Dame (6-3) at (4) Washington (7-2), 1 p.m. Saturday (12) Mahomet-Seymour (6-3) at (5) Centralia (7-2), 2 p.m. Saturday (15) Waterloo (5-4) at (2) Highland (81), 1 p.m. Saturday (10) Metamora (6-3) at (7) Kankakee (63), 2 p.m. Saturday (14) Marion (5-4) at (3) Morris (7-2), 4 p.m. Saturday (11) Triad (6-3) at (6) Geneseo (6-3), 3 p.m. Saturday

Class 4A (1) Herscher 42, (16) Illinois Valley Central 0 (9) Dixon (7-2) vs. (8) Chicago South Shore (7-2), 3:45 p.m. Saturday at Gately Stadium in Chicago (13) Kewanee (6-3) vs. (4) Chicago Phillips (8-1), 7:15 p.m. Saturday at Gately Stadium in Chicago (5) Aurora Central Catholic 20, (12) Wheaton Academy 13 (15) Marengo (5-4) at (2) Johnsburg (90), 6 p.m. Saturday (10) Manteno 28, (7) Plano 10 (3) Genoa-Kingston 35, (14) Coal City 10 (6) Rockford Lutheran 34, (11) Richmond-Burton 13 (1) Althoff Catholic 53, (16) Carterville 14 (9) Taylorville 32, (8) Alton Marquette 24

(4) Mt. Zion 41, (13) Richland County 0 (5) Rochester 52, (12) Civic Memorial 7 (15) Greenville (5-4) at (2) Columbia (90), 1 p.m. Saturday (10) Frankfort (6-3) at (7) Canton (7-2), 3 p.m. Saturday (14) Watseka (5-4) at (3) Herrin (8-1), 2 p.m. Saturday (11) Breese Mater Dei (5-4) at (6) Breese Central (7-2), 1 p.m. Saturday Class 1A (16) Milledgeville (5-4) at (1) Ottawa Marquette (9-0), 1:30 p.m. Saturday (9) Polo (6-3) at (8) Dakota (6-3), 1 p.m. Saturday (13) Oakwood (5-4) at (4) Freeport Aquin (8-1), 2 p.m. Saturday (12) LeRoy (6-3) at (5) Hiawatha (7-2), 1 p.m. Saturday (2) Forreston 67, (15) Luther North 0 (7) Stark County 35, (10) Westminster

Christian 14 (14) Salt Fork (5-4) at (3) Stockton (90), 3 p.m. Saturday (11) Bureau Valley (6-3) at (6) Lena-Winslow (7-2), 1 p.m. Saturday (16) Oblong (5-4) at (1) Tuscola (9-0), 2 p.m. Saturday (9) Carrollton (6-3) at (8) Camp Point Central (7-2), 1 p.m. Saturday (13) Red Hill (5-4) vs. (4) Decatur Lutheran (8-1) at D. Lutheran, 1 p.m. Saturday (12) Calhoun (6-3) at (5) Arcola (7-2), 2 p.m. Saturday (15) Cumberland (5-4) at (2) Decatur St. Teresa (8-1), 1:30 p.m. Saturday (10) Athens 60, (7) Pawnee 22 (14) Warrensburg-Latham (5-4) at (3) Argenta-Oreana (8-1), 1 p.m. Saturday (11) Greenfield-Northwestern Coop (63) at (6) Brown County (7-2), 1:30 p.m. Saturday


CLASS 5A PREP FOOTBALL PLAYOFFS: (13) SYCAMORE AT (4) SOLORIO ACADEMY

31

Patterson leads Sun Warriors to 46.4 points a game

Gameday

SYCAMORE – With the top-scoring offense in its conference being led by an NCAA Division I-level quarterback, Solorio Academy is averaging 46.4 points a game, including five games with more than 50 points. The Sycamore defense has been tough this year – surrendering just more than 20 points a game – but coach Joe Ryan said he expects his No. 13 Spartans, who play in the Chicago Public League’s Illini (Land of Lincoln) Conference, to have their hands full with the No. 4 Sun Warriors and 6-foot-4, 219-pound quarterback Quincy Patterson in a first-round game of the Class 5A football playoffs at 2 p.m. today in Chicago. “People just bounce off of him,” Ryan said of Patterson, who has offers from Mississippi State, Illinois, Purdue and Iowa, among others. “He runs the ball really well, and they have good schemes. We’re going to have to tackle well. You can’t leave your feet and try to tackle him because he’ll bounce right off of you. It’s got to be very disciplined and a very good technique defensively for us to be successful.” Ryan said when the Spartans face 6-4, 219-pound players, they’re not playing quarterback. “We call those guys ‘tackles’ in our programs,” Ryan said. “You don’t normally see a quarterback like that. You can’t miss him, as far as where he’s at. But you’re going to have to do you’re work if you want to get him down to the ground.” Sycamore (5-4) enters the game having won four of its past five, qualifying for the playoffs for the ninth straight year – and the second straight year after starting 1-3. The Sun Warriors (7-2) enter the game off a 40-12 win against Lane. They lost the week before to Phillips, 50-14, which is only the second time this year they scored less than 35 points – they are 0-2 in those games. Sycamore senior quarterback Ty Sulaver said after the rough start, the

team feels confident after bouncing back. “We know we can go through adversity, and that’s what we all have realized,” Sulaver said. “(Going) 1-3, that’s not how you want to start. But only a team that can handle that adversity can finish 5-4 and make the playoffs.” Sulaver has completed 48.8 percent of his passes this year for 1,233 yards, 13 touchdowns and five interceptions. Since running back Chris Pawola went down with an injury, Sulaver has picked up the rushing game, as well – including 107 against Rochelle in a 35-21 win in the finale that put the Spartans into the playoffs. Ryan said the Spartans are peaking at the right time. “You want to play your best ball at the end of the year, and we feel like we are,” Ryan said. “The kids have progressed each week, we’ve been saying that. If we can progress another week, that will be good.” The Spartans needed a win against the Hubs to get into the postseason, and got it behind an early interception return for a touchdown by Austin Perry. With a 21-14 lead late in the second, Sulaver found Peyton Wiegmann on a screen. Senior lineman Brett Swartzendruber ended up blocking two defenders at the same time as Wiegmann went 28 yards for the score, pushing the lead back to two scores. “I was just supposed to get the cornerback, but they just kinda both ran at me,” Swartzendruber said. “I got to take them both, I guess, if they’re running right at me.” Like his coach and teammates, Swartzendruber said the team is playing well heading into the playoff opener. “We had a really good ending to the year, and beating Rochelle, they’re really good,” Swartzendruber said. “It’s always good having confidence going into the playoffs, and we have some momentum, I think.”

By EDDIE CARIFIO

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No. 13 Sycamore (5-4) at No. 4 Solorio Academy (7-2) Game time: 2 p.m. today Last week: Sycamore beat Rochelle, 35-21. Solorio defeated Lane, 40-12. Next up: The winner will play either No. 5 Ridgewood or No. 12 Rochelle.

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Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Saturday, October 29, 2016

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32 CLASS 1A PREP FOOTBALL PLAYOFFS: (12) LeROY AT (5) HIAWATHA

Hawks return to playoffs By EDDIE CARIFIO

ecarifio@shawmedia.com KIRKLAND – For the first time in 29 years, the Hiawatha football program is in the playoffs. The Hawks didn’t sneak in by the skin of their teeth, either. They capped their 7-2 season by earning a No. 5 seed in Class 1A and a first-round game against No. 12 LeRoy (6-3) at 1 p.m. today in Kirkland. So despite being not only the higher seed, but playing their first playoff game in a generation, first-year coach Jason Keneway said the team isn’t really feeling the pressure. “They know the job, they hear it from the top down,” Keneway said. “We don’t blow anything up too big, we don’t minimize anything. We try to keep as much the same from week to week as we can.” LeRoy coach BJ Zeleznik said he didn’t expect a nervous Hiawatha team to come out today. “You live in the moment, and high school kids are so good at that,” Zeleznik said. “They are going to take full advantage of the opportunity they have in front of them right now. We understand what everything means and are always looking ahead, but they don’t – except for maybe seniors. I have no doubt Hiawatha will play outstanding football Saturday. It’s all about who’s hot right now, and

Gameday

No. 12 LeRoy (6-3) at No. 5 Hiawatha (7-2) Game time: 2 p.m. today Last week: LeRoy beat Fisher 43-6. Hiawatha defeated Luther North, 40-0. Next up: The winner will play either No. 4 Aquin or No. 13 Oakwood. both teams have seniors who don’t want to play their last football game.” According to IHSA archives, this will be the fourth playoff game for the Hawks, who opened with a 17-12 win against Durand in 1987 before losing to Aquin, 34-6 – they also lost to Stockton, 40-14, in the first round of the 1984 playoffs. No. 4 Aquin (8-1) or No. 13 Oakwood (54) awaits the winner in the second round. The Hawks have been winning with defense this year. In their six on-thefield wins – they also picked up a forfeit against Christian Life – they have allowed 5.5 points a game, with three shutouts. The most points they’ve given up in a win was in a 24-21 home victory against Westminster Christian, won on a field goal as time expired. Anchoring the defense has been Miguel Delvalle, a 6-foot, 185-pound linebacker who led the Northeastern Athletic Conference with 90 tackles and added five sacks.

“We’re feeling really good,” Delvalle said. “We’ve developed so much since the beginning of the season. We thought we would do well, but maybe not quite this well.” Delvalle lost almost 50 pounds from last year and was expecting another season on the line before the coaches moved him to linebacker. Keneway praised Delvalle’s ability as an athlete. “I could see that last year, but he just needed that extra attention to get him over the edge,” Keneway said. “And he worked his tail off over the offseason, one of the best offseason’s out of any of the kids. He was starting on the O-line, D-line, and we put him on scout team linebacker, and we realized he could play linebacker, he could hit.” Delvalle said Keneway helped motivate him to lose the weight and up his game. “Coach Keneway, he actually took me under his wing,” Delvalle said. “He talked with me ... and made me want to do better.” On offense, Braden Watson has rushed for 715 yards and 10 touchdowns to power the Hiawatha attack. They don’t throw much, but LeRoy throws even less. Brett Egan has attempted only 46 passes, completing 16 for 175 yards. They have five rushers with at least 250 yards – led by Trevor Bulington’s 807. He’s scored 11 times.

PREP CROSS COUNTRY SECTIONALS

H-BR’s Chada, Harrod ready to run By EDDIE CARIFIO

ecarifio@shawmedia.com BIG ROCK – Not that the Aurora Christian boys cross country team was huge, but at least it had more than one runner. Tanner Chada transferred from Aurora Christian to his hometown school of Hinckley-Big Rock for his senior year, becoming the lone runner on the boys team – and joining senior Audrey Harrod as the entirety of the Royals’ cross country program. Last week, both runners won their respective races at the Class 1A St. Bede Regional in Peru, and both are ready for today’s Oregon Sectional. “He’s just an amazing distance runner, so having him come back to Hinckley for his senior year has been great for everybody,” coach Kristy Harrod said Wednesday at a practice at Hinckley-Big Rock Middle School. “He’s had some pretty serious, pretty strange inju-

Sectional slate For list of local teams participating in sectionals today, see Page 34. ries, and he’s persevered through that.” Chada was third in 2014 in the Class A state meet, but ended up missing the 2015 season – as well as the past two track seasons – because of injuries. “I’ve been thankful, been blessed to be healthy and able to get through the season,” Chada said. “I’ve been running my best and doing everything I can.” Now he’s back, he’s eyeing a sectional title on his way to the state meet. “He came in with the expectation to win state, and that’s what he’s headed to go do,” Kristy Harrod said. Chada said it has been an adjustment to being the lone male runner at H-BR. “It’s been different,” Chada said. “It’s been a lot more mental strengthening. I’ve been able to figure out how

to show up and have to 100 percent push myself. But it’s been nice having Audrey here, and it’s been really fun to have workouts with her.” Kristy Harrod said the two have benefited from practicing with each other. “It almost held him back to have other boys to run with that were slower than he was,” Kristy Harrod said. “He and Audrey, obviously, don’t run the same pace, but they do workouts together, then there’s no one holding him back. “Audrey has loved having Tanner around,” Kristy Harrod said. “It’s lonely out here, and it’s nice just to have someone around. It’s helpful on the mental side of things.” “It’s knowing that I can do something,” Audrey Harrod said. “That mentality is really hard for runners. It’s very important, knowing you can do something, you can give 100 percent at every practice, at every race at all times. You can go forth and give your best effort and put down your best time.”

NIU VOLLEYBALL

MAC’s top teams meet up By JESSE SEVERSON

jseverson@shawmedia.com The Northern Illinois and Miami (Ohio) volleyball teams have had eerily similar seasons. With the two meeting at 7 p.m. today in Oxford, the Huskies (9-4, 11-0 Mid-American West) are riding a 14-match winning streak, while the RedHawks (19-4, 11-0 MAC East) have an 18-match winning streak. The two undefeated teams also are the top two in the conference in both hitting percentage (Miami is .300; NIU is .297) and opponent hitting percentage (Miami is .168; NIU is .177) and each team plays a two-setter system. Both teams rely on a balanced attack, with neither school having a player in the top seven in kills per set during conference play. “Defensively, we have to prepare for us, they do what we do,” NIU coach Ray Gooden said. “They’re going to have hitters all over the place.” It will be the only meeting between the teams this season, with the winner having the inside track to being the No. 1 seed in the MAC tournament – which comes along with hosting the tournament in 2017. Last season, the Huskies swept the RedHawks in DeKalb. The RedHawks are led by senior Paige Hill, who ranks seventh in the conference in hitting percentage (.333) and first in blocks per set (1.38) this season and was a first-team allMAC middle blocker in 2015. “They’re balanced and have a really good middle in Paige Hill,” Gooden said. “They’re biggest threat is their balance.” Gooden said that during the week, the Huskies’ only prepared for Western Michigan, which they beat in four sets Thursday in Kalamazoo – giving them a short window to prepare for the RedHawks. With five matches remaining until the MAC tournament, Gooden said there isn’t much difference in being the No. 1 seed and the No. 2 seed – both of which automatically advance to the semifinals. Gooden also quickly downplays any big-picture implication the game might have between two undefeated teams. “What it means is one team will have its 20th win and the other will have its first conference loss,” Gooden said.


0 Indians lead series, 2-1

Cubs’ bats silenced in Game 3 Indians shut out NL champs again, take 2-1 series lead By GORDON WITTENMYER gwittenmyer@suntimes.com

• Saturday, October 29, 2016

CHICAGO – The World Series finally returned to Wrigley Field on Friday night, about 12 hours and a few hundreds of kegs behind the daylong celebration in the streets and establishments around the ballpark. And, apparently, a little early for the Cubs’ bats. With the wind blowing hard to left field, a lineup full of right-handed hitters against a fly-ball pitcher, the Cubs mustered only two singles before the seventh inning. And even after rallying to put men at second and third in the ninth, the Cubs went down on a game-ending strikeout by Javy Baez in a 1-0 loss to the Indians, who took a 2-1 lead in the series. If the Cubs thought getting back to the World Series for the first time in 71 years was tough, beating the Indians to win it has proved to be even harder. Friday night’s slow offensive start in Game 3 came three days after the Cubs were shut out by Cleveland ace Corey Kluber, Andrew Miller and Co. in the series opener. It’s the fourth time the Cubs have been shut out during the postseason – the second time by a 1-0 score. And next up is a second date Saturday night with Kluber, the 2014 American League Cy Young winner, who starts on short rest (as the Indians look at him for a potential Game 7 start, as well). The celebration outside the ballpark that began before the workday for nonrevelers impressed even the front office imports from Boston – who headed that city’s baseball-curse-busting championship 12 years ago. “The biggest difference so far is that in Boston they had been to the World Series every 20 years or so,” Cubs president Theo Epstein said. “And when we came back from 3-0 (deficit in the AL Championship Series) against the Yankees, that seemed like the pinnacle to a lot of people.” The Red Sox wound up sweeping the Cardinals in a World Series that snapped an 86-year title drought – but

SPORTS | Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com

1

33

AP photo

The Indians’ Francisco Lindor and Rajai Davis celebrate after Game 3 of the World Series on Friday night at Wrigley Field. The Indians beat the Cubs, 1-0, to take a 2-1 lead in the series. Still, it was that World Series title that marked the end of the so-called Curse of the Bambino. Cubs vs. Indians This team’s relationship to its goat (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) involved the mere return to a World All games televised by FOX Series after 1945. “Here, just getting to the World Series has been this incredible triumph Game 1 and celebration,” said Epstein, who Indians 6, Cubs 0 found himself reminding fans and selGame 2 fie-takers of the larger goal much of the Cubs 5, Cleveland 1 early part of the day. Game 3 “Winning it is what we’re all foIndians 1, Cubs 0 cused on,” he said. Game 4: today That’s where NLCS hero Kyle HenIndians (Kluber 18-9) at Cubs (Lackey dricks was supposed to play such a 11-8), 7:08 p.m. huge role in giving the Cubs an advanGame 5: Sunday tage in this pivotal Game 3. Indians at Cubs, 7:15 p.m. And the National League ERA Game 6: Tuesday-x champ, who beat Clayton Kershaw Cubs at Indians, 7:08 p.m. with 71/3 dominant innings six days Game 7: Wednesday-x earlier to get the Cubs to this round, Cubs at Indians, 7:08 p.m. did keep the game scoreless during his start. But he lasted only one out deep into that also seemed to many in Boston “anticlimactic in some respects,” Ep- the fifth, pitched into and around trafstein said. fic throughout his start, and had the

World Series

bases loaded with one out when he handed the game over to Justin Grimm in the fifth. A single, sacrifice bunt, walk and hit batter put the dangerous Francisco Lindor at the plate as Hendricks departed. Grimm quickly jumped ahead 0-2, but then drifted to a full count before Lindor grounded sharply to second baseman Javy Baez, who started a 4-63, inning-ending double play as Grimm exulted. Rookie Carl Edwards Jr. followed Grimm with a 1-2-3 sixth. But a leadoff single in the seventh by Roberto Perez off Edwards turned into the Indians’ only run. Michael Martinez pinch ran, took second on a sacrifice and third on a ball-four/wild pitch to Rajai Davis. The Cubs challenged the safe call after catcher Willson Contreras’ throw to third, but the call was upheld. Pinch-hitter Coco Crisp then followed with a single to right, lofted just in front of Jorge Soler, for the RBI.


Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Saturday, October 29, 2016

| SPORTS

34

FIVE-DAY PLANNER TEAM

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

CLEVELAND 7 p.m. FOX AM-670, AM-1000

CLEVELAND 7 p.m. FOX AM-670, AM-1000

MONDAY

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

at Cleveland* 7 p.m. FOX AM-670, AM-1000

at Cleveland* 7 p.m. FOX AM-670, AM-1000

MINNESOTA 7:30 p.m WCIU, ESPN AM-780, 105.9-FM LOS ANGELES 6 p.m. CSN AM-720 INDIANA 7 p.m. CSN AM-890

CALGARY 7:30 p.m. CSN AM-720 at Brooklyn 6:30 p.m. CSN AM-890

at Boston 7 p.m. WGN, ESPN AM-890 *–If necessary

WHAT TO WATCH SATURDAY Pro baseball 7 p.m.: World Series, Cleveland at Cubs, Game 4, FOX Pro basketball 7 p.m.: Indiana at Bulls, CSN 7 p.m.: New Orleans at San Antonio, NBA 9:30 p.m.: Minnesota at Sacramento, NBA College football 11 a.m.: Michigan at Michigan St., ESPN 11 a.m.: Minnesota at Illinois, BTN 11 a.m.: Penn St. at Purdue, ABC 11 a.m.: Louisville at Virginia, ESPN2 11 a.m.: West Virginia at Oklahoma St., FOX 11 a.m.: Kentucky at Missouri, SEC 11 a.m.: Kent St. at Central Michigan, CBSSN 11 a.m.: Central Florida at Houston, ESPNU 11 a.m.: Connecticut at East Carolina, ESPNEWS 11 a.m.: Wagner at Massachusetts, CSN+ 2 p.m.: South Dakota St. at Illinois St., CSN 2:30 p.m.: Miami at Notre Dame, NBC 2:30 p.m.: Northwestern at Ohio St., ESPN 2:30 p.m.: Maryland at Indiana, ESPNU 2:30 p.m.: Baylor at Texas, ABC 2:30 p.m.: Florida vs. Georgia, CBS 2:30 p.m.: Miami (Ohio) at Eastern Michigan, CSN+ 2:30 p.m.: Texas Tech at TCU, ESPN2 2:30 p.m.: Samford at Mississippi St., SEC 2:30 p.m.: Cincinnati at Temple, CBSSN 2:30 p.m.: Washington at Utah, FS1 3 p.m.: SMU at Tulane, ESPNEWS 6 p.m.: Nebraska at Wisconsin, ESPN 6 p.m.: Kansas at Oklahoma, FS1 6 p.m.: Boise St. at Wyoming, CBSSN 6:15 p.m.: Tennessee at South Carolina, ESPN2 6:15 p.m.: Auburn at Mississippi, SEC 6:30 p.m.: New Mexico St. at Texas A&M, ESPNU 7 p.m.: Clemson at Florida St., ABC 7 p.m.: North Dakota St. at Northern Iowa, CSN+ (joined in progress) 7 p.m.: Tulsa at Memphis, ESPNEWS 9:30 p.m.: UNLV at San Jose St., CBSSN 9:30 p.m.: Alabama A&M at Alabama St., ESPNU (sameday tape) 9:45 p.m.: Washington St. at Oregon St., ESPN2 10 p.m.: Stanford at Arizona, FS1 Golf 5 a.m.: LPGA Tour, Sime Darby LPGA Malaysia, third round, TGC (same-day tape) 1:30 p.m.: PGA Tour, Sanderson Farms Championship, third round, TGC 4:30 p.m.: Champions Tour, PowerShares QQQ Championship, second round, TGC 10 p.m.: PGA Tour-WGC-HSBC Champions, final round, TGC Auto racing 8 a.m.: NASCAR, Sprint Cup Series, Goody’s Fast Relief 500, practice, CNBC 9 a.m.: NASCAR, Camping World Trucks Series, Texas Roadhouse 200, qualifying, FS1 11 a.m.: NASCAR, Sprint Cup Series, Goody’s Fat Relief 500, final practice, NBCSN 12:30 p.m.: NASCAR, Camping World Trucks Series,

Texas Roadhouse 200, FS1 1 p.m.: Formula One, Mexican Grand Prix, qualifying, NBCSN Soccer 6:30 a.m.: Premier League, Arsenal at Sunderland, NBCSN 8:30 a.m.: Bundesliga, Augsburg vs. Bayern Munich, FS2 9 a.m.: Premier League, Leicester City at Tottenham, CNBC 9 a.m.: Premier League, Burnley at Manchester United, NBCSN 11:20 a.m.: Bundesliga, Borussia Dortmund vs. Schalke 04, FS2 11:30 a.m.: Premier League, Liverpool at Crystal Palace, NBC Women’s volleyball 6:30 p.m.: Penn St. at Minnesota, BTN Rugby 2:30 p.m.: English Premiership, Saracens vs. Leicester, NBCSN (same-day tape) SUNDAY Pro baseball 7 p.m.: World Series, Cleveland at Cubs, Game 5, FOX Pro football 8:30 a.m.: Washington vs. Cincinnati, FOX Noon: Detroit at Houston, FOX Noon: New England at Buffalo, CBS 3:25 p.m.: Green Bay at Atlanta, FOX 7:20 p.m.: Philadelphia at Dallas, NBC Pro hockey 6 p.m.: Los Angeles at Blackhawks, CSN Pro basketball 7 p.m.: Washington at Memphis, NBA Auto racing Noon: NASCAR, Sprint Cup Series, Goody’s Fast Relief 500, NBCSN 2 p.m.: Formula One, Mexican Grand Prix, NBC Golf 5 a.m.: LPGA Tour, Sime Darby LPGA Malaysia, final round, TGC (same-day tape) 1:30 p.m.: PGA Tour, Sanderson Farms Championship, final round, TGC 4:30 p.m.: Champions Tour, PowerShares QQQ Championship, final round, TGC Drag racing 9 a.m.: NHRA, Toyota Nationals, qualifying, FS1 (tape-delayed) 3 p.m.: NHRA, Toyota Nationals, finals, FS1 College basketball 6 p.m.: Exhibition, Clarion at Kentucky, SEC Tennis 6:30 a.m.: BNP Paribas WTA Finals, championship, ESPN2 Soccer 8:30 a.m.: Premier League, West Ham at Everton, NBCSN 9:20 a.m.: Bundesliga, Hertha Berlin at Hoffenheim, FS2 11 a.m.: Premier League, Chelsea at Southampton, NBC 11:30 a.m.: Bundesliga, Hamburg at Koln, FS1 Noon: Men, Maryland at Michigan, BTN 2 p.m.: MLS playoffs, conference semifinal, Leg 1, New York Red Bulls at Montreal, ESPN 3 p.m.: Women’s Big Ten tournament, quarterfinal, Nebraska at Northwestern, BTN

See WHAT TO WATCH, page 35

NFL NATIONAL CONFERENCE

North W L T Minnesota 5 1 0 Green Bay 4 2 0 Detroit 4 3 0 Bears 1 6 0 East W L T Dallas 5 1 0 Philadelphia 4 2 0 Washington 4 3 0 N.Y. Giants 4 3 0 South W L T Atlanta 4 3 0 Tampa Bay 3 3 0 New Orleans 2 4 0 Carolina 1 5 0 West W L T Seattle 4 1 1 Arizona 3 3 1 Los Angeles 3 4 0 San Francisco 1 6 0

LOCAL SCHEDULE AMERICAN CONFERENCE

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PF 129 140 170 111

PA 84 123 170 169

Pct .833 .667 .571 .571

PF 159 156 159 133

PA 107 88 162 141

Pct .571 .500 .333 .167

PF 229 128 176 161

PA 199 159 195 176

Pct .750 .500 .429 .143

PF 111 159 120 144

PA 84 110 154 219

East W L T New England 6 1 0 Buffalo 4 3 0 Miami 3 4 0 N.Y. Jets 2 5 0 North W L T Pittsburgh 4 3 0 Baltimore 3 4 0 Cincinnati 3 4 0 Cleveland 0 7 0 South W L T Houston 4 3 0 Tennessee 4 4 0 Indianapolis 3 4 0 Jacksonville 2 5 0 West W L T Oakland 5 2 0 Denver 5 2 0 Kansas City 4 2 0 San Diego 3 4 0

Pct .857 .571 .429 .286

PF 176 187 146 119

PA 107 131 159 180

Pct .571 .429 .429 .000

PF 170 133 140 130

PA 150 139 162 207

Pct .571 .500 .429 .286

PF 117 182 194 139

PA 154 183 200 196

Pct .714 .714 .667 .429

PF 185 167 136 206

PA 179 117 123 185

WEEK 8 Thursday’s Result Tennessee 36, Jacksonville 22 Sunday’s Games Washington vs. Cincinnati, 8:30 a.m. Kansas City at Indianapolis, noon Arizona at Carolina, noon Oakland at Tampa Bay, noon Seattle at New Orleans, noon Detroit at Houston, noon New England at Buffalo, noon N.Y. Jets at Cleveland, noon San Diego at Denver, 3:05 p.m. Green Bay at Atlanta, 3:25 p.m. Philadelphia at Dallas, 7:30 p.m. Monday’s Game Minnesota at Bears, 7:30 p.m. Off: Baltimore, Los Angeles, Miami, N.Y. Giants, Pittsburgh, San Francisco

WEEK 9 Thursday’s Game Atlanta at Tampa Bay, 7:25 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 6 Dallas at Cleveland, noon N.Y. Jets at Miami, noon Philadelphia at N.Y. Giants, noon Jacksonville at Kansas City, noon Detroit at Minnesota, noon Pittsburgh at Baltimore, noon New Orleans at San Francisco, 3:05 p.m. Carolina at Los Angeles, 3:05 p.m. Tennessee at San Diego, 3:25 p.m. Indianapolis at Green Bay, 3:25 p.m. Denver at Oakland, 7:30 p.m. Monday, Nov. 7 Buffalo at Seattle, 7:30 p.m. Off: Bears, Washington, Arizona, New England, Houston, Cincinnati

NHL

NBA

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Central Division GP W L OT Pts Minnesota 8 5 2 1 11 St. Louis 8 4 2 2 10 Blackhawks 8 4 3 1 9 Winnipeg 8 4 4 0 8 Dallas 7 3 3 1 7 Colorado 6 3 3 0 6 Nashville 7 2 4 1 5 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts Edmonton 7 6 1 0 12 San Jose 8 5 3 0 10 Vancouver 7 4 2 1 9 Calgary 9 4 4 1 9 Los Angeles 7 4 3 0 8 Anaheim 8 3 3 2 8 Arizona 7 2 5 0 4

GF GA 28 19 21 21 28 27 21 23 18 22 16 17 18 24 GF GA 27 17 19 20 15 17 30 32 20 22 21 19 22 30

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Montreal 8 7 0 1 15 29 13 Detroit 8 6 2 0 12 26 18 Tampa Bay 7 5 2 0 10 25 20 Ottawa 7 4 3 0 8 23 25 Florida 7 3 3 1 7 20 18 Toronto 7 2 2 3 7 24 28 Boston 7 3 4 0 6 17 23 Buffalo 6 1 3 2 4 14 20 Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Pittsburgh 8 5 2 1 11 20 23 N.Y. Rangers 8 5 3 0 10 29 21 New Jersey 7 3 2 2 8 15 15 Washington 6 3 2 1 7 14 14 Philadelphia 8 3 4 1 7 28 30 Carolina 7 2 3 2 6 21 26 N.Y. Islanders 8 3 5 0 6 22 24 Columbus 6 2 3 1 5 14 17 Note: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Friday’s Results Blackhawks 3, New Jersey 2 (OT) Carolina 3, N.Y. Rangers 2 Calgary 5, Ottawa 2 Winnipeg 1, Colorado 0 Edmonton at Vancouver (n) Columbus at Anaheim (n) Saturday’s Games Florida at Buffalo, noon Tampa Bay at New Jersey, 6 p.m. Pittsburgh at Philadelphia, 6 p.m. Toronto at Montreal, 6 p.m. Boston at Detroit, 6 p.m. Dallas at Minnesota, 7 p.m. Los Angeles at St. Louis, 7 p.m. Colorado at Arizona, 8 p.m. Washington at Vancouver, 9 p.m. Nashville at San Jose, 9:30 p.m. Sunday’s Games Los Angeles at Blackhawks, 6 p.m. Buffalo at Winnipeg, 2 p.m. Florida at Detroit, 4 p.m. Philadelphia at Carolina, 4 p.m. Toronto at N.Y. Islanders, 5 p.m. Tampa Bay at N.Y. Rangers, 6 p.m. Ottawa at Edmonton, 8 p.m. Washington at Calgary, 8:30 p.m.

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Central Division W L Pct Cleveland 2 0 1.000 Bulls 1 0 1.000 Detroit 1 1 .500 Indiana 1 1 .500 Milwaukee 0 1 .000 Atlantic Division W L Pct Boston 1 1 .500 Toronto 1 1 .500 Brooklyn 1 1 .500 Philadelphia 0 1 .000 New York 0 1 .000 Southeast Division W L Pct Charlotte 2 0 1.000 Atlanta 1 0 1.000 Miami 1 1 .500 Washington 0 1 .000 Orlando 0 2 .000

GB — ½ 1 1 1½ GB — — — ½ ½ GB — ½ 1 1½ 2

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Southwest Division W L Pct San Antonio 2 0 1.000 Memphis 1 0 1.000 Houston 1 1 .500 New Orleans 0 1 .000 Dallas 0 2 .000 Northwest Division W L Pct Oklahoma City 2 0 1.000 Denver 1 0 1.000 Portland 1 1 .500 Utah 1 1 .500 Minnesota 0 1 .000 Pacific Division W L Pct L.A. Clippers 1 0 1.000 Sacramento 1 1 .500 L.A. Lakers 1 1 .500 Golden State 0 1 .000 Phoenix 0 2 .000

GB — ½ 1 1½ 2 GB — ½ 1 1 1½ GB — ½ ½ 1 1½

Friday’s Results Cleveland 94, Toronto 91 Brooklyn 103, Indiana 94 Detroit 108, Orlando 82 Charlotte 97, Miami 91 Oklahoma City 113, Phoenix 110 (OT) Houston 106, Dallas 98 Utah 96, L.A. Lakers 89 Golden State at New Orleans (n) Saturday’s Games Indiana at Bulls, 7 p.m. Atlanta at Philadelphia, 11:30 a.m. Boston at Charlotte, 6 p.m. Memphis at New York, 6:30 p.m. Orlando at Cleveland, 6:30 p.m. Brooklyn at Milwaukee, 7 p.m. New Orleans at San Antonio, 7 p.m. Portland at Denver, 8 p.m. Minnesota at Sacramento, 9:30 p.m. Sunday’s Games Utah at L.A. Clippers, 3:30 p.m. Golden State at Phoenix, 5 p.m. Milwaukee at Detroit, 5 p.m. San Antonio at Miami, 5 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Oklahoma City, 6 p.m. Dallas at Houston, 7 p.m. Washington at Memphis, 7 p.m.

SATURDAY Prep football: LeRoy at Hiawatha, 1 p.m.; Sycamore at Solorio, 2 p.m. Boys cross country: Sycamore, Kaneland at Belvidere Sectional, 10:40 a.m.; DeKalb at West Aurora Sectional, 11 a.m., Stuart Sports Complex, Montgomery; Genoa-Kingston, Indian Creek, Hinckley-Big Rock at Oregon Sectional, Oregon Park West, 11 a.m. Girls cross country: DeKalb at West Aurora Sectional, 10 a.m., Stuart Sports Complex, Montgomery; Sycamore, Kaneland at Belvidere Sectional, 10 a.m.; Genoa-Kingston, Indian Creek, Hinckley-Big Rock at Oregon Sectional, Oregon Park West, 10 a.m. Men’s tennis: Northern Illinois at MAC Indoor Championship, Kalamazoo, Mich. Women’s cross country: Northern Illinois at MAC Championships, Kent, Ohio Women’s volleyball: Northern Illinois at Miami (Ohio), 6 p.m.

COLLEGE FOOTBALL TOP 25 SCHEDULE Thursday No. 25 Virginia Tech 39, Pittsburgh 36 Friday South Florida 52, No. 22 Navy 45 Saturday No. 2 Michigan at Michigan St., 11 a.m. No. 3 Clemson at No. 12 Florida St., 7 p.m. No. 4 Washington at No. 17 Utah, 2:30 p.m. No. 5 Louisville at Virginia, 11 a.m. No. 6 Ohio St. vs. Northwestern, 2:30 p.m. No. 7 Nebraska at No. 11 Wisconsin, 6 p.m. No. 8 Baylor at Texas, 2:30 p.m. No. 9 Texas A&M vs. New Mexico St., 6:30 p.m. No. 10 West Virginia at Oklahoma St., 11 a.m. No. 13 Boise St. at Wyoming, 6 p.m. No. 14 Florida vs. Georgia at Jacksonville, Fla., 2:30 p.m. No. 15 Auburn at Mississippi, 6:15 p.m. No. 16 Oklahoma vs. Kansas, 6 p.m. No. 18 Tennessee at South Carolina, 6:15 p.m. No. 24 Penn St. at Purdue, 11 a.m.

NASCAR SPRINT CUP SERIES

After Friday qualifying; race Sunday at Martinsville Speedway Martinsville, Va. Lap length: 0.526 miles (Car number in parentheses) 1. (78) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 98.206 mph 2. (22) Joey Logano, Ford, 98.165 3. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 97.84 4. (47) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 97.729 5. (24) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 97.699 6. (14) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 97.684 7. (19) Carl Edwards, Toyota, 97.613 8. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 97.518 9. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 97.508 10. (88) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 97.427 11. (42) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 96.904 12. (23) David Ragan, Toyota, 96.83 13. (31) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 97.422 14. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 97.372 15. (21) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 97.292 16. (43) Aric Almirola, Ford, 97.292 17. (20) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 97.222 18. (27) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 97.172 19. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 97.073 20. (4) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 97.048 21. (7) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 97.048 22. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 97.008 23. (41) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 96.968 24. (10) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 96.914 25. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford, 97.058 26. (13) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 97.008 27. (93) Matt DiBenedetto, Toyota, 97.008 28. (15) Clint Bowyer, Chevrolet, 96.82 29. (34) Chris Buescher, Ford, 96.666 30. (95) Michael McDowell, Chevrolet, 96.657 31. (6) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 96.573 32. (3) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 96.533 33. (38) Landon Cassill, Ford, 95.694 34. (55) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet, 95.381 35. (44) Brian Scott, Ford, 95.295 36. (30) Gray Gaulding, Chevrolet, 95.146 37. (83) Dylan Lupton, Toyota, 94.794 38. (32) Jeffrey Earnhardt, Ford, 94.548 39. (17) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 92.997 40. (46) Michael Annett, Chevrolet, 0.0


NIU MEN’S BASKETBALL

By MIKE KORCEK Shaw Media

for making a throat slashing gesture after hitting a late 3-pointer in his Bulls debut Thursday night. The Northern Illinois basketball teams Wade got the ball in the corner, took a each had a player selected to the preseadribble to his left and stepped back for son all-Mid-American Conference West the 3-pointer. He made the gesture after teams, the league announced this week. the ball swished through the net, and For the men’s team, which was picked to then jumped around as the crowd roared. finish third in the MAC West behind EastWade finished with 22 points in the Bulls’ ern Michigan and Ball State, senior center 105-99 home victory over the Celtics. Marin Maric was selected to the preseason all-MAC West team after averaging 11.9 points and 8.4 rebounds last season. Anisimov lifts Blackhawks past Devils in overtime For the women, who are predicted to NEWARK, N.J. – Artem Anisimov scored take fifth place in the division, senior on a rebound at 1:15 of overtime, and the guard Ally Lehman was named to the Blackhawks rallied to beat New Jersey, preseason all-MAC West after averaging 3-2, Friday night, handing the Devils their 13.5 points, 11.0 rebounds and 4.5 assists first home loss. a game last season. Marian Hossa tied the score with a power-play goal with 2:11 left in regulaWade fined $25,000 for throat tion after the Hawks pulled goaltender slashing gesture NEW YORK – Bulls guard Dwyane Wade Corey Crawford for a sixth skater. was fined $25,000 by the NBA on Friday – From staff, wire reports

• WHAT TO WATCH

Continued from page 34 4 p.m.: MLS playoffs, conference semifinal, Leg 1, Colorado at Los Angeles, ESPN 6 p.m.: MLS playoffs, conference semifinal, Leg 1, New York City FC at Toronto FC, FS1 8:30 p.m.: MLS playoffs, conference semifinal, Leg 1,

FC Dallas at Seattle, FS1 Figure skating 4 p.m.: ISU Grand Prix Series, Skate Canada International, NBC (taped) Poker 7:30 p.m.: World Series of Poker, Main Event (final table), ESPN 10 p.m.: World Series of Poker, Main Event (final table), ESPN2

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• Saturday, October 29, 2016

DeKALB – Northern Illinois University Athletics Hall of Famer John McDougal, the winningest men’s basketball coach in school history and the revered coach who led the Huskies to their first Division I NCAA tournament appearance, died Friday morning. McDougal was 92. McDougal had been ill in recent months, and was hospitalized in Aurora after having a stroke late last week. Funeral arrangements are pending. A fixture on the high school and collegiate coaching scene for five decades, McDougal easily qualified for the Illinois elite “500 Club” and ranked among the state’s all-time winningest head coaches with 692 combined victories – 556 high school wins at Palestine, Carmi, West Aurora and Rockford Lutheran, along with 136 wins at NIU. Believed to be the only man to coach in both IHSA Class 2A and A

state tournament finals and compete as a student-athlete in the state finals, McDougal was voted to the IHSA’s centennial state tourney “100 Legends” list in 2006. Known as the “Wizard of Annie Glidden Road and Lucinda Avenue,” McDougal and his teams packed venerable Chick Evans Field House from the start in 1976-77. In his home debut, NIU dismantled Wisconsin, 81-57, before the first of several standing room only crowds of 6,000-plus in that era. McDougal’s Huskie teams were competitive, disciplined and posted five winning seasons in his 10-year tenure. In addition to capturing the Mid-American Conference Tournament title and automatic NCAA bid in 1982, the Huskies also shared the MAC regular-season championship in 1981. “Johnny Mac” was named the MAC and Illinois Division I Coach of the Year in his first Huskie season when he transformed a 5-21 team (1975-76) to a contending 13-14 club that shared the Mid-Am lead as late as Feb. 23 (1976-77).

NIU’s Maric, Lehman named to preseason all-MAC West teams

SPORTS | Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com

Former Huskies coach McDougal dies at age 92

SPORTS BRIEFS


Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Saturday, October 29, 2016

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The Movie: › “Thir(SPIKE) Crazy” (CC) Headlight” (N) Drawn No. 2” pursuit. teen Ghosts” ’ (CC) napolis. ’ (CC) ’ (CC) (N) ’ Headlight” ’ Ghostface Killer returns to claim new victims. ’ (4:45) Movie: › “I Still Know What You Did Last Movie: ›› “Prom Night” (2008) Brittany Snow. A Movie: ›› “The Skeleton Key” (2005) Kate Hudson. Premiere. A nurse (9:50) Movie: ›› “John Carpenter’s Vampires” (:40) Movie: ›› “Leprechaun” (1993, Horror) War(STZENC) wick Davis, Jennifer Aniston, Ken Olandt. (CC) Summer” (1998) Jennifer Love Hewitt. ’ (CC) madman terrorizes prom-going teenagers. ’ (CC) works in a New Orleans house with an odd history. ’ (CC) (1998) James Woods, Daniel Baldwin. ’ (CC) (4:00) Movie: › “Resident Evil: Movie: ››› “Zombieland” (2009) Woody Harrelson, Jesse Eisenberg. Movie: “The Night Before Halloween” (2016) Bailee Madison. Premiere. Movie: ››› “Zombieland” (2009) Woody Harrelson, Jesse Eisenberg. Movie: ›› “Resident Evil: Apoca(SYFY) A creature hunts down the participants in a Halloween prank. Survivors of an apocalypse join forces against zombies. (CC) lypse” (2004, Horror) (CC) Afterlife” (2010) Milla Jovovich. Survivors of an apocalypse join forces against zombies. (CC) “Thing From Movie: ›› “Earth vs. the Flying Saucers” (1956, Movie: ›› “Blood and Black Lace” (1964, Horror) Movie: ››› “Carnival of Souls” (1962, Horror) Movie: ›› “It’s Alive!” (1974) John P. Ryan. A (:45) Movie: ›› “The Baby” (1973, Horror) Anjanette (TCM) Another World” Science Fiction) Hugh Marlowe, Joan Taylor. (CC) Cameron Mitchell, Eva Bartok. Premiere. Candace Hilligoss, Frances Feist. (CC) couple’s first baby emerges with fangs. (CC) Comer, Ruth Roman, Marianna Hill. Untold Stories of the E.R. (CC) Untold Stories of the E.R. (CC) Untold Stories of the E.R. (N) ’ Untold Stories of the E.R. (CC) Untold Stories of the E.R. (CC) Untold Stories of the E.R. (CC) Untold Stories of the E.R. (CC) (TLC) A Haunting ’ (CC) (TNT) (4:00) Movie: ››› “Transformers” (2007, Action) Shia LaBeouf. Movie: ›› “Godzilla” (2014) Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Ken Watanabe. (CC) (DVS) Movie: ›› “Godzilla” (2014) Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Ken Watanabe. (CC) (DVS) Movie: ›› “Hulk” (2003) (TVL) Reba ’ (CC) Reba ’ (CC) Reba ’ (CC) Reba ’ (CC) Reba ’ (CC) Reba ’ (CC) Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Chrisley Knows Chrisley Knows Chrisley Knows Chrisley Knows Chrisley Knows Chrisley Knows Chrisley Knows Chrisley Knows Chrisley Knows Chrisley Knows Modern Family Modern Family Modern Family Modern Family NCIS: Los Angeles Finding a (USA) Best (CC) Best (CC) Best (CC) Best (CC) Best (CC) Best (CC) Best (CC) Best (CC) Best (CC) Best (CC) (CC) (DVS) (CC) (DVS) “Three Turkeys” (CC) (DVS) woman with info about Callen. ’ (VH1) (4:30) Movie: ›› “Ghostbusters II” (1989, Comedy) Bill Murray. ’ Movie: ››› “The Lost Boys” (1987, Horror) Jason Patric, Corey Haim. ’ (CC) Movie: ›› “The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift” (2006, Action) Lucas Black. ’ Movie: ›› “Step Up 3” (2010) Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Full Frontal 2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls Movie: ›› “Alice in Wonderland” (2010) (DVS) (WTBS) (4:53) Movie: ›› “Star Wars: Attack of the Clones” (2002, Science Fiction) Ewan McGregor. Premiere. PREMIUM 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 (12:15) Insecure (:45) Movie ›› (:15) Movie ›› “Seventh Son” (2014, Fantasy) Jeff Bridges. An appren- Movie ›› “Poltergeist” (2015, Horror) Sam Rockwell, (:35) Westworld The Man in Black (:35) My Fight: (:10) Movie ››› “Trainwreck” (2015) Amy Schumer, Bill Hader. A (HBO) Kovalev/Ward magazine writer’s personal life is a complete disaster. ’ ‘R’ (CC) “Racist as F...” “Poltergeist” ’ finds a clue. ’ (CC) tice prepares to fight a malevolent witch. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) Rosemarie DeWitt. Premiere. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) (:25) Movie ››› “Furious 7” (2015, Action) Vin Diesel. A dead man’s (:45) Quarry “Nuoc Chay da Mon” Mac confronts his (4:35) Movie › “Hitman: Agent (:15) Movie ›› “Entourage” (2015, Comedy) Kevin Connolly. Studio Quarry “Nuoc Chay da Mon” Mac confronts his old (MAX) 47” (2015) Rupert Friend. ‘R’ (CC) boss Ari Gold partners with movie star Vince Chase. ’ ‘R’ (CC) old demons and settles a score. ’ (CC) demons and settles a score. ’ (CC) brother seeks revenge on the Toretto gang. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) Shameless “I Am a Storm” Frank Masters of Sex “In to Me You See” (4:30) Movie ››› “Zoolander” Shameless “I Am a Storm” Frank Movie ›› “Rambo” (2008, Action) Sylvester Stallone, (:35) Movie ››› “Casino Royale” (2006, Action) Daniel Craig, Eva Green, Mads Mik(SHOW) Masters wants to groom Art. tries to save the shelter. ’ (CC) Julie Benz, Matthew Marsden. ’ ‘R’ (CC) kelsen. James Bond plays poker with a man who finances terrorists. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) (2001) Ben Stiller. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) tries to save the shelter. ’ (CC) Movie “Blood(:10) Movie ›› “The Roost” (2005, Horror) Tom (3:30) Movie ›› Movie ››› “Black Hawk Down” (2001, War) Josh Hartnett, Ewan McGregor, Tom Size- Movie ›› “The Roost” (2005, Horror) Tom Noonan, Movie “Bloodworx” (2012) Tricia Helfer. College (TMC) worx” (2012) ‘R’ students become test subjects for a new drug. ‘R’ “Chappie” Noonan, Wil Horneff, Karl Jacob. ’ ‘NR’ (CC) more. U.S. soldiers meet with disaster in 1993 Mogadishu, Somalia. ’ ‘R’ (CC) Wil Horneff, Karl Jacob. ’ ‘NR’ (CC) ^ WBBM Georgia. (N) (Live) (CC)

48 Hours (N) ’ (CC)

SATURDAY HOROSCOPE By EUGENIA LAST

Newspaper Enterprise Association TODAY – Aim to make positive changes at home. Let your imagination run wild and your ability to step up and make things happen lead the way. You stand to make gains if you don’t let anyone sabotage your plans. An aggressive, proactive approach will help you stay on top. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) – Listen carefully to what others are saying. Information will be key to navigating your way to the top. An unexpected change should not be allowed to throw you off your game. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) – A change at home will turn out better than you anticipate.

Plan to celebrate with a loved one, but don’t overspend – a nice, intimate evening should be sufficient. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) – Use your skills differently or apply them to a service that is becoming trendy. Emotional discord will erupt suddenly if someone feels left out or neglected. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) – Don’t let anger take control. A financial issue can be rectified without undue tumult. Offer a workable solution and move along. Make love, not war. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) – Moneymaking ventures look promising, but partnerships and dealing with loved ones are likely to cloud your vision. Do your due diligence before getting involved in something you’ll have little control over.

ARIES (March 21-April 19) – Multitasking will wear you down. Take time to rejuvenate. If you overdo it, you will not end up doing your best. Think matters through and discard what you no longer need. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) – If you get involved in something that will challenge you physically and mentally, you will come out looking like a genius. Step into the spotlight and make your dreams come true. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) – Explore different lifestyles and cultures. Spending valuable time with younger and older individuals will give you a new outlook regarding the possibilities open to you. Romance is in the stars. CANCER (June 21-July 22) – Socialize, make plans

to do things with the people you love or sign up for an unusual expedition that will challenge you to do more. Do something creative. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) – Don’t let criticism stop you from following your dreams. Do something creative, stimulating or physically challenging. Make a point to have some fun. Romance is featured. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) – Keep an open mind, but don’t let anyone pressure you to do something you don’t want to do. Home improvements will not go smoothly. Take time to consider your next move. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) – Get away for a couple of hours. Do something that will ease your stress and give you a better view of what’s best for you. Nothing will change if you procrastinate.


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SUNDAY HOROSCOPE By EUGENIA LAST

Newspaper Enterprise Association TODAY – Push hard and don’t stop until you reach the finish line. You will be able to handle whatever situation you face if you gather facts and use them wisely. Let willpower and determination lead you to victory. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) – Stand tall and stand out. Your intensity and desire to get what you want will make you a tough competitor. If you focus on your goal, you will gain control. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) – Getting together with someone from your past will lead to confusion or the need to question certain choices. You can’t change the past, but you can

alter the future. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) – If you consider how you earn your money and think about your goals, you’ll come up with a unique plan that will help you get your way. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) – Money matters and personal responsibilities must be put in order before you can get on with your day and have some fun. Romance, relaxation and making physical improvements are encouraged. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) – You need to take better care of your health. Don’t try to do something that you aren’t equipped to handle. Set reasonable goals, especially if they require physical endurance. ARIES (March 21-April 19) – If you look for an op-

portunity, you will find one. Online job postings and former co-workers will lead to something that interests you. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) – Trust in yourself and offer your honest opinion to someone looking for answers. A day trip, retreat or time spent with loved ones will be enlightening. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) – Learn through experience while trying something new. Volunteering for something will open your eyes to all sorts of possibilities and introduce you to someone you’ll want to get to know better. CANCER (June 21-July 22) – Engaging in some family fun or getting together with an old friend will lead to interesting events. Plan a trip to somewhere you’ve never been before and

research the perfect itinerary. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) – Take the day to pamper yourself and make improvements that will boost your morale and get you in good shape for the upcoming week. Love and romance are highlighted. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) – A day trip or a get-together with friends or relatives will open your eyes to new possibilities. If things aren’t going the way you want, you should make changes that will satisfy your needs. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) – You’ll be torn between what you want to do and what you should do. Take care of your responsibilities first in order to get greater joy and satisfaction from your day.

• Saturday, October 29, 2016

CBS 2 Sunday 60 Minutes (N) ’ (CC) NCIS: Los Angeles A maintenance Madam Secretary Elizabeth must Elementary A financial analyst’s is CBS 2 News at 10PM (N) ’ (CC) Blue Bloods Danny receives a chill- Blue Bloods “Mercy” Jamie goes News at 5:30PM man puts a teen in danger. ing message. (CC) (DVS) respond to criticism. (N) ’ (CC) murdered. (N) ’ (CC) under cover at a bar. ’ (CC) (12:05) George (:35) Open NBC5 News 5P NBC Nightly Football Night in America (N) ’ (Live) (CC) (:20) NFL Football: Philadelphia Eagles at Dallas Cowboys. From AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas. (N) ’ NBC5 News 10P Sports Sunday (:35) Open % WMAQ News - Holt (N) (CC) (Live) (CC) House ’ (CC) to the Rescue House (N) ’ (N) ’ (CC) (N) ’ (CC) Eyewitness ABC World Scandal Olivia must return to the America’s Funniest Home Videos Once Upon a Time “Dark Waters” Secrets and Lies Danny is not who Quantico Owen taps Leon for a ABC7 Eyewitness News at 10pm Inside Edition Windy City _ WLS News at 5pm News Tonight (N) ’ (CC) (N) (CC) Weekend (N) ’ Weekend White House. ’ (CC) (N) ’ (CC) he appears to be. (N) ’ special assignment. (N) ’ (CC) Chicago’s Best Friends ’ (CC) Friends ’ (CC) The Middle The Middle “The Celebrity Name WGN Sunday Evening News (N) Two and a Half Two and a Half Two and a Half Two and a Half Last Man Stand- Last Man Stand- WGN News at (:40) Instant ) WGN (Live) (CC) Nine (N) (CC) Replay ’ (CC) ’ (CC) “Hecking It Up” Concert” Game ’ (CC) Men ’ (CC) Men ’ (CC) Men ’ (CC) Men ’ (CC) ing ’ (CC) ing ’ (CC) Film School Austin City LimPBS NewsHour Keeping Up Ap- The Dark Charisma of Adolf Hitler The Durrells in Corfu on Master- Poldark on Masterpiece Ross does Indian Summers on Masterpiece Check, Please Bill Murray: The Mark Twain Prize Bill Murray + WTTW Shorts (CC) its “Iggy Pop” Elizabeth a favor. (N) (CC) Hitler tries to retain power. piece (N) ’ (CC) Weekend (N) ’ pearances Rivals vie for Sooni. (N) ’ (CC) receives Mark Twain Prize. ’ (CC) Second Opinion Healthy Minds- On Story ’ (CC) In the Loop Wild! Species hunter Marc van The Brokenwood Mysteries “Blood and Water” Prob- Roadtrip Nation POV “Hooligan Sparrow” Ye Haiyan seeks justice for schoolgirls. ’ (CC) Beyond the Beltway 4 WYCC Borenstein ing a farmer’s suspicious death. ’ (CC) Roosmalen. ’ (CC) (DVS) ’ (CC) Two and a Half Two and a Half Last Man Stand- Last Man Stand- Bones A headless corpse appears Ring of Honor Wrestling (CC) Movie: “The Last Showing” (2014, Suspense) Robert Englund, Finn Bones “The Man in the Bear” Ritual- Video Spotlight 8 WCGV Jones. Stuart traps a couple to use in his own horror film. (CC) Men ’ (CC) Men ’ (CC) ing ’ (CC) ing ’ (CC) in the woods. ’ (CC) istic cannibalism. ’ (CC) Rules of EnCheaters Secret night-life; priorities The King of The King of Mike & Molly ’ Mike & Molly ’ 2 Broke Girls ’ 2 Broke Girls ’ How I Met Your How I Met Your 2 Broke Girls ’ 2 Broke Girls Seinfeld “The Seinfeld “The Rules of En: WCIU Queens (CC) Mother (CC) Mother (CC) Queens (CC) (CC) Caroline is fired. (CC) (CC) (CC) (CC) gagement ’ gagement ’ changed. ’ (CC) Gum” ’ (CC) Rye” ’ (CC) Final Word Bears Game Inside Bears Bensinger Whacked Out Paid Program NFL Football: Packers at Falcons The OT (N) 2016 World Series: Cleveland Indians at TBA. World Series, Game 5. (If necessary). (N) ’ (Live) (CC) @ WFLD PBS NewsHour Adelante Around the Nature Relocating the world’s rarest The Secret Life of Primates Char- Globe Trekker “Antarctica” Para- POV “Thank You for Playing” Parents document their PlainSpirits ’ Out of Order Wisconsin Life Around the D WMVT (CC) lotte Uhlenbroek visits primates. “Ardent Artists” Corner-John (CC) Weekend (N) ’ Farm Table ’ giraffes. ’ (CC) (DVS) dise Harbor; Port Lockroy. ’ son’s cancer. ’ (CC) Psych Woody is taken hostage. Movie: “You Cast a Spell on Me” (2015) Nikki DeLoach. ’ Psych ’ (CC) Psych “Cog Blocked” ’ (CC) F WCPX Gran Torino ’ Movie: ››› “Gran Torino” (2008, Drama) Clint Eastwood, Christopher Carley. ’ Modern Family Modern Family Two/Half Men Two/Half Men TMZ (N) ’ (CC) The OT (N) 2016 World Series: Cleveland Indians at TBA. World Series, Game 5. (If necessary). (N) ’ (Live) (CC) G WQRF NFL Football: Packers at Falcons Family Feud ’ Family Feud ’ Modern Family Modern Family The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Modern Family Modern Family Laughs ’ (CC) Anger Manage- Anger Manage- Anger Manage- Anger Manage- Paid Program R WPWR (CC) ment (CC) ment (CC) ment (CC) ment (CC) Theory (CC) Theory (CC) Theory (CC) Theory (CC) (CC) ’ (CC) ’ (CC) “Halloween” ’ ’ (CC) CABLE 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 (A&E) Beyond Scared Straight ’ (CC) Beyond Scared Straight ’ (CC) Beyond Scared Straight ’ (CC) Beyond Scared Straight ’ (CC) Beyond Scared Straight ’ (CC) (:03) Beyond Scared Straight ’ (:03) Beyond Scared Straight ’ (12:03) Beyond Scared Straight (:45) Talking (:10) Comic (:40) The Walking Dead A new, (:05) The Walking Dead A new, (4:55) Movie ›› “Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers” (1989, (6:55) The Walking Dead Those The Walking Dead “The Well” A new, well-established (:16) Talking (AMC) Dead (N) (CC) well-established community. (CC) Book Men (N) well-established community. (CC) Dead (CC) Horror) Donald Pleasence, Danielle Harris. ‘R’ (CC) who survive will be haunted. ’ community. (N) ’ (CC) Movie: “Rats” (2016) A history of rat infestations in major cities. (:03) Movie: “Rats” (2016) A history of rat infestations in major cities. (ANPL) Lair of the Killer Crocs ’ (CC) Grizzly Uprising ’ (CC) Killer Swarms ’ (CC) (:03) Infested! ’ (CC) CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom Anthony Bourdain Parts Anthony Bourdain Parts This Is Life With Lisa Ling Anthony Bourdain Parts This Is Life With Lisa Ling This Is Life With Lisa Ling (N) (CNN) Kevin Hart (12:05) Movie: “Scary Movie” Pete Davidson: SMD (CC) (COM) (4:20) Movie: ››› “Shaun of the Dead” (2004) Movie: › “A Haunted House” (2013, Comedy) Marlon Wayans. (CC) Movie: › “A Haunted House 2” (2014) Marlon Wayans. (CC) Inside Look Blackhawks Blackhawks World Poker Tour: Season 14 SportsNet Cent SportsNet Cent Heartland Poker Tour SportsNet Cent NHL Hockey NHL Hockey: Los Angeles Kings at Chicago Blackhawks. (N Subject to Blackout) (CC) (CSN) Alaska: The Last Frontier (12:06) Alaska: The Last Frontier Alaska: The Last Frontier Exposed “The Great Kilcher Quake” (CC) (DISC) Alaska: The Last Frontier (N) ’ (:01) Edge of Alaska (N) ’ (CC) (:03) Alaska: The Last Frontier ’ (:04) Edge of Alaska ’ (CC) Movie “Mostly Ghostly 2: Have Stuck in the My Babysitter’s Austin & Ally ’ Jessie “Evil K.C. Undercover The Lodge “Op- The Lodge K.C. Undercover K.C. Undercover Liv and Maddie Bizaardvark ’ Bunk’d “Camp Liv and Maddie: Girl Meets (DISN) a Vampire (CC) (DVS) (CC) (CC) (CC) (CC) World ’ Times Two” ’ You Met My Ghoulfriend?” (2014) portunities” ’ “Double Date” Middle (CC) Kiki-slasher” ’ Cali Style ’ ’ (CC) 2016 World Series of Poker: Final Table. From Las Vegas. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) (ESPN) (4:00) MLS Soccer: Playoffs: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) E:60 Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) (CC) Arm Wrestling From Las Vegas. Arm Wrestling From Las Vegas. Arm Wrestling From Las Vegas. 2016 World Series of Poker: Final Table. From Las Vegas. (N) (Live) Nat’l Champs College Football (ESPN2) World/Poker NFL Sunday NFL Football Special Report With Bret Baier Stossel The Greg Gutfeld Show Fox News Reporting Fox Report The Greg Gutfeld Show Fox Report (N) (FNC) Halloween Wars Halloween Baking Championship Halloween Wars Worst Bakers in America Guy’s Grocery Games (N) Guy’s Grocery Games (N) Worst Bakers in America (N) (FOOD) Halloween Wars Joel Osteen David Jeremiah James Robison Paid Program (FREE) (4:20) Movie: ›› “Addams Family Values” (1993) (:25) Movie: ›› “Hocus Pocus” (1993, Comedy) Bette Midler. ’ Movie: ››› “Sleepy Hollow” (1999, Horror) Johnny Depp, Christina Ricci. ’ (4:00) “The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 1” Movie: ›› “The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2” (2012) Kristen Stewart. ’ (:02) The Strain “The Fall” (CC) (FX) The Strain “The Fall” ’ (CC) (:04) The Strain “Do or Die” ’ (12:05) The Strain “The Fall” ’ Movie: “Christmas Under Wraps” (2014, Drama) Candace Cameron Movie: “Family for Christmas” (2015) Lacey Chabert, Tyron Leitso. A Movie: “Christmas Land” (2015, Romance) Nikki Deloach, Luke Macfar- Movie: “12 Gifts of Christmas” (2015) Katrina Law, Aaron O’Connell. An (HALL) Bure. A doctor discovers an Alaskan town’s holiday secret. (CC) wish leaves a woman magically married to her college beau. (CC) lane. After inheriting a tree farm, a woman plans to sell it. (CC) executive hires an artist to do his Christmas shopping. (CC) Island Life Island Life Island Hunters Island Hunters (HGTV) House Hunters House Hunters House Hunters House Hunters Hawaii Life (N) Hawaii Life (N) Island Life (N) Island Life (N) Island Hunters Island Hunters House Hunters Hunters Int’l (:03) The Real Story of Halloween American Pickers (CC) (DVS) American Pickers “Pick or Treat” American Pickers (CC) (DVS) American Pickers (CC) (DVS) (HIST) (:03) American Pickers ’ (CC) (12:03) American Pickers ’ American Pickers ’ (CC) Little Women: LA Terra organizes Little Women: LA Tonya continues Little Women: LA Elena and Briana Little Women: LA “High Stakes Little Women: LA “Playing With (:02) Little Women: LA Tonya (:02) Little Women: LA Elena and (12:02) Little Women: LA Terra (LIFE) a belly dancing class. (CC) to doubt Briana. (CC) host a Sip and See. (CC) Friendship” Terra fights with Joe. Fire” (CC) continues to doubt Briana. (CC) Briana host a Sip and See. (CC) fights with Joe. (CC) Caught on Camera Dateline Extra Dateline Extra Dateline Extra Dateline Extra Lockup: Wabash- Extended Stay Lockup: Wabash- Extended Stay (MSNBC) Caught on Camera (MTV) MTV Special ’ Movie: ››› “Friday” (1995, Comedy) Ice Cube, Chris Tucker. ’ MTV Special ’ Movie: ›› “Malibu’s Most Wanted” (2003) Jamie Kennedy. ’ Thundermans Haunted Thundermans ’ (CC) Haunted House Game Shakers Full House ’ Full House ’ Full House ’ Full House ’ Friends (CC) Friends (CC) Friends (CC) (NICK) Nicky, Ricky (:33) Friends ’ Fresh Prince Fresh Prince Bar Rescue Pirate-themed bar in Bar Rescue Saving a bar from its Bar Rescue A cockroach infestation Bar Rescue “Chase Lounge” A Bar Rescue “Zero Dark Drunky” A Bar Rescue A bar run by two Bar Rescue Serving cheap booze at Bar Rescue “Zero Dark Drunky” A (SPIKE) Silver Spring, Md. ’ delusional owners. ’ plagues a bar. ’ stepson fails as bar manager. ’ military hero needs a rescue. ’ burned-out rockers. ’ premium prices. ’ military hero needs a rescue. ’ (3:55) Movie: Movie: ››› “The Wicker Man” (1973, Suspense) Movie: ›› “Blade II” (2002) Wesley Snipes, Kris Kristofferson. A vam- Movie: ›› “Child’s Play” (1988) Catherine Hicks. Movie: ›› “Pet Sematary” (1989) Dale Midkiff. An (12:15) Movie: ›› “Teeth” (2007) (STZENC) Woman buys killer Chucky doll for her son. (CC) ancient burial ground holds a secret for a family. “Red State” ’ Edward Woodward, Christopher Lee. Premiere. (CC) pire hunter unites with his prey against a new threat. ’ (CC) Jess Weixler. Premiere. ’ (4:00) Movie: ›› “Wrong Turn” Movie: ›› “Jeepers Creepers 2” (2003) Ray Wise, Jonathan Breck. A Movie: ›› “The Strangers” (2008, Suspense) Liv Tyler. Three masked Movie: ›› “You’re Next” (2011, Horror) Sharni Vinson, Nicholas Tucci, Movie: “Grave Halloween” (2013, (SYFY) Horror) Kaitlyn Leeb. (CC) (2003) Desmond Harrington. (CC) winged creature terrorizes stranded high schoolers. (CC) assailants terrorize a young couple in a remote cottage. (CC) Wendy Glenn. Killers in animal masks terrorize a family. (CC) Movie: ››› “The Abominable Dr. Phibes” (1971, Horror) Vincent Movie: ›››› “Young Frankenstein” (1974) Gene Wilder, Peter Boyle. Movie: ››› “Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein” (1948) Bud Ab- Movie: ›› “The Monster” (1925, Horror) Lon Chaney, Gertrude Olm(TCM) Price. Living corpse visits late wife’s surgeons with plagues. (CC) Dr. Frankenstein’s grandson returns to Transylvania. (CC) bott. Bud and Lou get mixed up with three well-known monsters. stead. Silent. Mad doctor experiments on abducted motorists. 90 Day Fiancé: More to Love (N) 90 Day Fiancé “You’re Gonna Miss Me When I’m Gone” Anfisa kicks Jorge out. (N) ’ (CC) (TLC) Toddlers & Tiaras ’ (CC) (:02) 90 Day Fiancé “You’re Gonna Miss Me When I’m Gone” Anfisa kicks Jorge out. ’ (CC) “Journey 2-Mysterious Isl.” (TNT) (4:15) Movie: ››› “Pacific Rim” (2013) Charlie Hunnam, Idris Elba. Movie: ›› “Godzilla” (2014) Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Ken Watanabe. (CC) (DVS) Movie: ›› “Jack the Giant Slayer” (2013, Fantasy) Nicholas Hoult. (CC) (DVS) (TVL) Reba ’ (CC) Reba ’ (CC) Reba ’ (CC) Reba ’ (CC) Reba ’ (CC) Reba “The Will” Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Eyewitness “Bella, Bella, Bella” (:01) Falling Water Taka investi- (:01) Law & Order: Special Victims (12:01) Eyewitness Helen seeks (USA) Agent Davis’ help. (CC) (DVS) Helen seeks Agent Davis’ help. gates the cult. (CC) (DVS) Unit “Scavenger” ’ “Missing Pieces” ’ “Glasgowman’s Wrath” ’ “Catfishing Teacher” ’ “Townhouse Incident” ’ “Fast and Furious-Drift” Love & Hip Hop (VH1) Movie: ›› “2 Fast 2 Furious” (2003, Action) Paul Walker, Tyrese, Eva Mendes. ’ Black Ink Crew: Chicago ’ Black Ink Crew: Chicago ’ Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood ’ Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood ’ People of Earth (:15) Movie: ››› “Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith” (2005) Ewan McGregor, Natalie Portman. (WTBS) (3:59) Movie: ››› “Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith” (2005) (:04) Movie: ›››› “Star Wars: A New Hope” (1977) Mark Hamill, Harrison Ford. PREMIUM 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 Westworld Dolores, Logan and Insecure “Thirsty Divorce “Media- Last Week Westworld Dolores, Logan and Wil- Divorce “Media- Insecure “Thirsty Last Week (4:25) Movie ››› “Poltergeist” (1982, Horror) Craig (:20) Movie ›› “Poltergeist” (2015, Horror) Sam (HBO) Tonight-John Tonight-John William reach Pariah. ’ (CC) as F...” liam reach Pariah. (N) (CC) tion” (N) (CC) as F...” tion” ’ (CC) T. Nelson, JoBeth Williams. ’ ‘PG’ (CC) Rockwell, Rosemarie DeWitt. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) Movie ›› “Magic Mike XXL” (2015, Comedy-Drama) Channing Tatum. Movie ›› “San Andreas” (2015, Action) Dwayne Johnson. A rescue Movie ››› “Emelie” (2015) Sarah Bolger. A boy (:25) Movie ›› “True Story” (2015) Jonah Hill. An (12:05) Movie ›› “Road House” (MAX) protects his siblings from a psychotic baby sitter. (1989) Patrick Swayze. ‘R’ Former stripper Mike Lane comes out of retirement. ’ ‘R’ (CC) pilot must save his family after an earthquake. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) accused killer assumes a journalist’s identity. ’ ‘R’ The Circus: Masters of Sex Masters and John- Shameless “Own Shameless “Own Your S...” Fiona Masters of Sex Masters and John- Shameless “Own Your S...” Fiona The Circus: Masters of Sex “In to Me You See” Shameless “I Am a Storm” Frank The Circus: (SHOW) Masters wants to groom Art. Inside Inside Inside son pose as a couple. son pose as a couple. (N) Your S...” gets financial advice. (N) ’ (CC) gets financial advice. ’ (CC) tries to save the shelter. ’ (CC) (:15) Movie ››› “Big Eyes” (2014, Drama) Amy Adams. Walter Keane Movie ››› “Paddington” (2014, Comedy) Voice of (:35) Movie ›› “The Duff” (2015, Comedy) Mae Whitman. A teen tries Movie ››› “3:10 to Yuma” (2007) Russell Crowe. A rancher escorts a (:35) “Tears of (TMC) the Sun” (2003) takes credit for his wife’s ubiquitous artwork. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) Hugh Bonneville, Sally Hawkins. ’ ‘PG’ (CC) to overthrow a judgmental classmate. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) captive outlaw to catch a train to stand trial. ’ ‘R’ (CC) ^ WBBM News (N) (CC)

TELEVISION | Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com

SUNDAY EVENING OCTOBER 30, 2016

37


Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Saturday, October 29, 2016

38

FUN&GAMES Arlo & Janis

Beetle Bailey

Big Nate

Blondie

The Born Loser

Dilbert

Frazz

Monty

Non Sequitur

Pearls Before Swine


Pickles

The Family Circus

FUN & GAMES | Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com

Rose is Rose

The Argyle Sweater

Frank & Ernest

• Saturday, October 29, 2016

Zits

Crankshaft

39


Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Saturday, October 29, 2016

| FUN & GAMES

40

Mild exercise can relieve back pain Dear Dr K: I have frequent back pain. I usually take acetaminophen (the Tylenol brand), but I hear it may not be effective for back pain. Is there anything to that? Dear Reader: If you’d asked me that question even a year ago, I would have said, “Acetaminophen works fine for most people.” Lots of people are bothered by back pain. When it strikes, all you want is relief – and fast. Many folks turn to overthe-counter pain relievers like acetaminophen and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs or NSAIDs (ibuprofen, naproxen and aspirin). Most doctors I know would have shared my impression that acetaminophen works for back pain. I respect the opinions of seasoned doctors, but I also know there is no substitute for actually studying a question. Indeed, a recent study has challenged my long-standing assumption about the value of acetaminophen for back pain. Researchers wanted to know if acetaminophen shortened the time from the start of acute back pain (back pain that comes on suddenly) to complete relief. What they found was surprising. For people who used acetaminophen only when their back pain bothered them, it took about 17 days to get complete relief. For those who took the medication three times a day, it also took about 17 days for full relief. And for those who took a placebo – a sugar pill with no medicine at all – the time to recovery was 16 days. In other words, the medication made no difference in how fast back pain went away and stayed away. In addition, all three groups had similar experiences in terms of the severity of their pain, disability and function. Does this mean you shouldn’t bother to use acetaminophen for back pain? Not necessarily. Randomized studies like this can tell you the reaction of the average

SUDOKU

ASK DOCTOR K Anthony L. Komaroff person in the study. But people are all different. It may be that some people really do get good relief from acetaminophen, even if the average person doesn’t. So if it works for you, stick with it. But acetaminophen does have its own risks and side effects. Taking too much acetaminophen seriously can damage the liver. Ideally, the average healthy adult shouldn’t take more than 3,000 milligrams a day. The safest option is to try to get through the worst of your back pain without medication: • Use cold compresses or an ice pack, not heat, immediately after an injury. About 48 hours after back pain hits, heat may be more helpful. The warmth soothes and relaxes aching muscles. • Try to keep moving. A limited amount of activity is better than lying in bed. Ask your doctor about appropriate exercises to start sooner rather than later. Exercise therapy can help heal acute back pain and help prevent a repeat episode. • Chiropractic manipulation, acupuncture, massage or yoga provides relief for some people with acute back pain. Several studies support using these alternative/ complementary therapies. Many people can relieve their back pain with these simple measures. If they don’t provide complete relief, then non-prescription NSAID medicines often will do the trick. • Write to Dr. Komaroff at www.askdoctork.com or Ask Doctor K, 10 Shattuck St., Second Floor, Boston, MA 02115.

HOW TO PLAY Each row, column and set of 3-by-3 boxes must contain the numbers 1 through 9 without repetition.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION

CROSSWORD


M A H R E

I P P E R R D I T E A F Z A I S Z I N C A L S T OM E I H D A R N R E R U R G E D M E H T A D E E M R R R S E L I N E B I T A L S E A L S

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE

O K I N G

L O S E S

JUMBLE

K J O C K N I Z I N I M A T E T W A X N A B T O L O L I D E S C R Y L A R O G N U O R S T P U S S Y E B E E N S C R E S T R

I B A G N O N O B J E C P O E T I R O C H E O T I N U T A R U S S M A S E M B O S S P L O V O I L S E R V E E N T I M E I S A N

T R A L A L A

C A N I S T E A R U T S O T T O U V N E E S

S A P

A F I O M A M O C Y O E R Z E

O M A H A N

S C U L P T O R

H O N O R E

R E T I N

S W I N G S

Was brutally honest 58 Firedog 59 Electron’s area around an atom 60 Easy shoes to put on 61 Makes secret again, as court documents 55

1 “I

R O T C T E A

S O M E H O W

M E N T O R

• Write Dear Abby at www.dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

RMA P E A N S A L A Y T I C L S H A S O D E D D E E S E D F O R Y L S T O S E M D I T O I R O N P I N S

Grandma In L.A. Dear Lonely Grandma: Learn to text!

of high lights? 8 Something a dog might fetch 15 Capital of the French department of Loiret 16 Smokeless explosive 17 Youngest-ever Nobel Prize recipient 19 Pennsylvania county named for an animal 20 Delights 21 Cab alternative 22 Cold shower? 24 Missouri and Arizona 25 Fast-food menu information: Abbr. 26 ___ dirt 28 Mich. neighbor

A L L K I D D I N G A S I D E

your event like a commanding general. Tell all your speechmakers and honorees how much time they are allotted. Insist they submit their remarks in enough time before the event that you can review the length – and keep “reminding” the speakers what time the event must end. If you bravely and diligently do this, your event will be a hit. And you will be regarded as brilliant because not many people are courageous enough to be this assertive. Dear Abby: What should a person do when their children and grandchildren don’t like to talk on the phone, and text you only? – Lonely

1 Collection

I N S T A N T

To Offend Dear Doesn’t Want To Offend: Here’s how. Run

“Love Is Strange” actress 30 In a ball 32 Frickin’ 34 Things discussed at une académie 36 Like safeties vis-à-vis field goals 37 Missed a lot 40 Got rid of 43 Hot 44 Science fiction author Stanislaw 46 Indian-born maestro 47 Spanish pronoun 48 Head of an Indian tribe 50 Hold 51 Mil. figures 52 Colloquy 54 Pennsylvania and others: Abbr. 29

S P A D E D

DOWN

wasn’t expecting it, but …” 2 Skipping sounds 3 “Seriously …” 4 New Deal power agcy. 5 Colt 45, e.g., informally 6 Writer Nin 7 Classic film whose soundtrack is famously composed entirely of strings 8 One going around the block? 9 Shakes 10 Portfolio parts, for short 11 Many an email attachment 12 Italian food named after a queen 13 Amazon, e.g. 14 Curbs 18 Clearing 23 Things corporations and fire trucks both have

1

2

3

4

5

6

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8

15

11

12

13

14

41

42

18

19

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22

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21 24

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25 28

31 34

29 32

35

38

33 36

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40 45

48

51 55

10

16

17

37

9

46 49

52

50 53

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54 57

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61

PUZZLE BY MARY LOU GUIZZO

[Emergency!] 27 Like kiwi fruits 29 Engine sound 31 Cool, in slang 33 Drain 35 Pacific Island group 37 Dishes sometimes served with Riojas 38 Blink of an eye 25

39

___-A

41

Like the Olympic flame

42

Fairy tale figures

45

“Someone who allows you to see the hope inside yourself,” per Oprah

48

Dakota dialect

49

Olympic skier Phil or Steve

52

Modern knowit-all

53

Bull Run victors

56

Double ___

57

“I already have other plans,” often

Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 7,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Read about and comment on each puzzle: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/studentcrosswords.

• Saturday, October 29, 2016

DEAR ABBY I’m a 55-year-old woman, divorced Jeanne for a year and a Phillips half. I was married twice before and have three grown children. I own my own home, have a job I enjoy and a loving family. I do what I want when I want and how I want. I control the remote, the thermostat and my money. I have no desire for male companionship or a “social life,” and honestly can say I have never felt happier or more content in my life. I wonder why society places so much emphasis on men and women forming romantic relationships. I also wonder how much angst I could’ve saved myself, my former husbands and my children by realizing years ago marriage is not for me. I don’t know why it took me so long to realize I will never meet a man whose company I enjoy more than my own. I just want to tell your readers – at least any who feel the same way I do – to be happy with themselves and stop letting friends, relatives or society dictate to them how to feel or what to do. There’s nothing wrong with an independent woman or man being, well, independent. These days I call myself ... Emancipated And Happy Dear Emancipated And Happy: If I had to guess why society places so much emphasis on marriage and romance, it would be because that’s the way society perpetuates itself. After three divorces, it is not surprising you are happier on your own. I’m sure many people wish they were as independent and resilient as you. However, most people crave some degree of closeness and intimacy – which may be why women and men search for romance. Today, more than half of adults in the United States are single. For those who are not “coupled up,” I’m sure your message will be meaningful. Dear Abby: I am the luncheon chairperson for a large fundraiser that will be held in six weeks. I know my question is one shared by many. How can a brilliant person be advised to keep his remarks short and not like he’s preaching to the choir without seeming rude? – Doesn’t Want

ACROSS

P A E L L A S

Dear Abby:

41

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD

FUN & GAMES | Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com

Three-time divorcee better off on her own


Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Saturday, October 29, 2016

| FUN & GAMES

42

THE PUZZLER ACROSS 1 6 11 16 21 22 23 24 Kramden 25 26 28 29 30 31 32 34 35 37 38 40 41 42 44 46 49 52 53 55 59 60 61 64 65 66 67 68 70 71 72 73 74 76 77 79 80 82 84 85 86 87 88 90 91 92 95 96 98 100 101 102 104 105 106

Destined One in a cast Dyeing technique Kind of bar Fiber plant Pancake Town in Maine Cooper or Excavations Built Literary category Wapiti N.Dak. neighbor Charged particle Malice Jewel Unhearing Wrath Supporting piece Chinese “way” CIA forerunner Country Merciful Buss Hit against Ice mass at sea Punch Hang around Throttle Boxing match Cried like an owl Bit of grass Paddy plant Remedy Inter That girl River in France Cuttlefish output For fear that Sharp tooth Airman “-- Miserables” Liable to sin Movie set VIP Soon Deaden a sound Eject Plant-to-be Old ointment Wings “The -- of Seville” Stew pot “-- Got a Secret” Spinner’s tool Sprint Car race Confused state Turner the singer Number prefix Mine entrance Kindled Be gloomy Enticement

107 Burn 108 Drop in on 110 Death 112 Spade or Middleton 113 -- de menthe 114 Different people 116 Spot 117 Where Cuzco is 118 Bellowed 119 Coloring matter 121 Wanted 124 Condemn 125 Rounded body 128 Fitting 130 Boca -131 Farrow the actress 132 Treaty 136 Knight’s title 137 Fixed gaze 139 Throw 140 Lake 141 Seat for a churchgoer 142 -- and well 144 Journey’s end 147 Rock 149 Magical creature 150 Consumed 151 Taut 152 Not at all wordy 153 -- Allan Poe 154 Inscribed stone 155 Stage direction 156 Filled DOWN 1 Renowned 2 Like a gymnast 3 Japanese poem 4 Holiday time 5 -- Plaines 6 Agreement 7 Hag 8 Temporary shelter 9 Harvest deity 10 One on a pension 11 Rebound 12 Curved path 13 Children 14 Bungling 15 Brown bear 16 Wise 17 Cakes and -18 Jargon 19 Measures of farmland 20 Judges 27 Gofromplacetoplace 30 Costly fur 33 Work 36 Something unexpected 38 Blemish

39 43 44 45 47 48 49 50 51 52 54 56 57 58 60 61 62 63 66 67 69 72 73 74 75 78 79 81 83

Take pleasure in Expert Fingerprint, e.g. Make lace Weep Storage structure Money substitute Old pronoun -- -- hen Army post In arrears Bird part (2 wds.) Failed Ford Della or Pee Wee Police action Attila the -Mastermind Costa -- Sol Mid Caribbean island Lettuce type Light-show device Gorge Tiny opening Oklahoma city Baby wolf Properly Church part Chubby

85 Locked securely 88 Cry of approval 89 Books exam 92 Terrible 93 Chassis 94 Discharged 97 Cover 99 Simian creature 100 Skirt for a dancer 103 Fastened 105 Bishop’s hat 106 Fat 107 Charley horse 109 Endeavor 111 1960s hipster 112 Sharp 113 Bill and -115 Chair 117 Kind of court 118 Highway 120 Suit of cards 122 Salty 123 “Go Tell -- -- the Mountain” 124 Food and drink 125 Kind of orange 126 Angered 127 Fetch 129 Handle

ANSWERS TO LAST WEEK’S PUZZLE

Look for answers to this week’s puzzle in next Saturday’s edition

131 Bullwinkle J. -133 To the left, on shipboard 134 Perfume ceremonially 135 Suit fabric 137 Prophet

138 140 143 145 146 147 148

Princely Italian family Liquid measure By way of -- Aviv Twice V Blvds. Oolong, e.g.


Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Saturday, October 29, 2016 •

CLASSIFIED 43

For Better or For Worse

Sandwich Estate Sale

Manufacturing

MOLD MAKER

Chemtech Plastics, Inc., a Thermoplastics Injection Molding Company is seeking an experienced journeyman mold maker. Applicants must be able to evaluate and troubleshoot new and existing molds, and fixtures. Roboform EDM and/or Hurco CNC experience is a plus. Duties include mold repair, insert changeovers and maintenance. We offer an excellent benefits package, including a matching 401K plan. EOE Qualified candidates should apply in person or email resume:

Chemtech Plastics, Inc.

765 Church Road, Elgin, IL 60123 jobs@chemtechplastics.com

MECHANICS

School trained Diesel Mechanics wanted.

Welding & hydraulic experience a plus. Call 630-820-1600 for application & interview appointment.

CASSENS TRANSPORT, Aurora

CLERICAL – SALES Start a new experience - clerical/sales duties within the office; Word/Excel. Learn the seed business. Martenson Turf Products, Inc. Send resume to: jmartenson@frontier.com

Education

Director of Student Support Services Responsible for the management of all aspects of the SSS Program (TRIO Grant). Must be thoroughly familiar with Department of Education regulations pertinent to the administration of the program and stay in compliance with program requirements. Required: Master's degree in counseling, higher education adm., student personnel, or related field; three years of experience in designing, administering, and managing educational opportunity programs, including staff supervision, budgeting, and record keeping. Working with low-income and academically-disadvantaged populations; strong verbal and written communication skills; proven commitment to the special needs of the target population and objectives of the program. Please apply on-line at svcc.edu/Job Opportunities/Administration or at https://jobs.svcc.edu/postings/563 Review of applications will begin immediately; however, for full consideration please submit application materials by November 20, 2016. Resume, cover letter, and unofficial transcripts are required.

Sauk Valley Community College

Attn: Human Resources 173 Illinois Route 2 Dixon, IL 61021 Email: employment@svcc.edu EOE

PlanitDeKalbCounty.com

Your online destination for all things DeKalb County

PT Live-In Caregiver Needed for Female Stroke Patient. Expericned with CNA skills. Summerset Farm, Sycamore. 815-991-9059 Guitar Lessons: Now Accepting New Students Beginner-Advanced. Experienced Instructor. Call Terry Reaves 815-758-1467

Key Fob - Infiniti Electronic Key

Found southside in DeKalb on Sat, Oct 22. 815-756-1050 - Pls Leave Message Find. Buy. Sell. All in one place... HERE! Everyday in Daily Chronicle Classified

JOBS ANNOUNCEMENTS STUFF VEHICLES REAL ESTATE SERVICES LEGALS Daily Chronicle Classified and online at: Daily-Chronicle.com

*By Heirloom*

205 N Joles Street

DeKalb Estate Sale

FRI, SAT, SUN 10-3 50% Off of Total Purchase! (Sunday Only 75% Off)

Full Length Mink, Danish Xmas Plates 75% of Plates, Waterford Chandelier, Lots of Vintage Items, Noritake Dishes, Furniture, Jewelry, Clothing + Wedding Dress & More!

Our Great Garage Sale Guarantee! If it rains on your sale, we will run your ad again the next week for FREE! Call 877-264-2527 or email: classified@shawsuburban.com Daily Chronicle Classified

Thursday 3-7 Friday & Saturday 9-3

Jazzy Electric Scooter/Wheelchair, Lots Of Kincaid, Holiday, Gardening, Home, Antiques Furniture, & MORE!!!!

DEKALB - 125 Mattek Avenue

** MOVING CROSS-COUNTRY & DOWNSIZING **

Fri-Sun (October 28/29/30), 8AM to 3PM

** EVERYTHING MUST GO ** Big Furniture, Treadmill, Snowblower, Tools, Bone China, Baby Furniture, Homebrew, and MUCH MORE!

SAT, OCT 29th 11AM-6PM 1228 E Lincoln Hwy. PLANO - Garage Sale

917 Kensey Ct.

Fri 10/28 noon-6pm Sat 10/29 8am-1pm.

Day bed, dressers, entertainment center, vanities, school desk, sleeper sofa, Coke collectibles, lunch boxes, hunting/fishing collectibles, LH bow and Nokona glove, sz 6 neo waders, subs and power booster, Legos and other toys, many Longaberger baskets. cleaning out the clutter. Something for everyone and priced to sell. Daily Chronicle – Giving you more!


44 CLASSIFIED

• Saturday, October 29, 2016 • Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com Queen Sized Sleeper Sofa – Great Cond! $150/OBO Call 815-342-1175

Sycamore

2-WEEK RUMMAGE SALE

★★★★★★★★★★★

St. John's Lutheran Church

26555 Brickville Road

★MOTORCYCLES WANTED★

Thursday, Oct. 27, 8am – 5pm Friday, Oct. 28, 8am – 5pm Sat., Oct. 29, 8am – 4pm

Before 1980. Running or not! Japanese, British, European, American

Top $Cash$ paid. Free appraisals!

Come out and do some Christmas shopping, many brand new and like new items!! New Tupperware at discounted prices. Upright piano, beds, baby items, kitchen items, knick-knacks, & many items for all holidays! Lots of Halloween costumes (NB-Adult). A lot of new and gently used winter coats and clothing (NB-Adult). Something for everyone 0-102! If you don't see something you like, monetary donations to help those affected by the hurricanes in Haiti, will be accepted. www.FoodForThePoor.org Huge, Huge, Huge Sale!!! - One sale you don't want to miss out on!!

SYCAMORE CRAFT SALE Friday 10/28 & Saturday 10/29 9-5 1666 Maness Court

CLASSICS WANTED

Restored or Unrestored Cars & Vintage Motorcycles Domestic / Import Cars: Mercedes, Porsche, Corvette, Ferrari's, Jaguars, Muscle Cars, Mustang & Mopars, $$ Top $$ all makes, Etc.

Will pay extra for Honda, Toyota & Nissan.

815-814-1964

or

815-814-1224

★★★★★★★★★★★

★★★★★★★★★★★★

CALL 315-569-8094 Email pictures or description to: Cyclerestoration@aol.com

Homemade Items: Donut Wraps, potato bags, pot holder bowls, wheel chair pockets, baby blankets, quilts, totes, bags, purses, table runners, aprons, scarves etc..

A-1 AUTO

DEKALB - 1 BR Apt for Rent. $500/mo plus electric. Available Immediately. Call Julie 815-388-4376

DeKalb - 3 Bedroom Unit, 1st Floor 630-768-5962 or 815-739-8350

DEKALB - 3BR, 2nd Flr of 2-Flat, Laundry Hook-Up, Off St. Pkg, Shower Only, Pets OK, $800/mo + Util. 1st & Sec. 630-878-4192

Call 877-264-2527

DeKalb 1 & 2BR, Clean, Quiet, 1 Bath

CAR, TRUCK, SUV

WANTED!

MOST CASH

I Buy Old Envelopes & Stamps

WILL BEAT ANY QUOTE GIVEN!!

Powered by:

815-758-4004 LOCAL NEWS WHEREVER YOU GO! Up-to-date news, weather, scores & more can be sent directly to your phone! It's quick, easy & free to register at Daily-Chronicle.com

$400 - $2000

2013 Ford Edge – SEL, AWD, Black, V6, Great Cond! 39K Miles, $18,500 815-739-5638 Daily Chronicle Classified 877-264-2527

“don't wait....call 2day”!!

815-575-5153

Daily Chronicle Classified 877-264-2527

CNA’s

DeKalb County Rehab & Nursing Center Now Hiring Night Shift CNA’s

$11.23 per hour Additional $1.00 per hour for Evening and Night Shift Additional $0.50 per hour for Weekend (Sat./Sun.) $30 for Extra shift bonus Excellent health insurance, County retirement (IMRF), 9 Paid holidays, life insurance, PHO’s, & uniform allowance.

Apply at: DeKalb County Rehab & Nursing Center Attn: Jennifer Borresen, R.N., A.D.O.N. 2600 N. Annie Glidden Road, DeKalb, IL 60115 Email: JBorresen@dekalbcounty.org Fax: 815-217-0451

Appliances incl, available now. 815-758-6580 DeKalb 1-2BR - ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED! Cats OK, A MUST SEE! No smkg, $725/mo. 815-756-1777

DeKalb 2BR, 1st Floor, Laundry, Garage, $800/mo + Reasonable utilities, No Smoking. 815-751-2937 www.HuskieWire.com

All NIU Sports... All The Time

RECEPTIONIST

DeKalb County Rehab & Nursing Center has a part time Receptionist position available. Evening Shift, every other weekend & additional miscellaneous hours as needed. Word & Excel knowledge helpful. Starting wage is $8.91 per hour.

Apply at:

DeKalb County Rehab & Nursing Center 2600 North Annie Glidden Rd. DeKalb, Illinois 60115 EOE

EOE

SM-CL1238524

1990 & Newer Will beat anyone's price by $300.

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Near Bethany & Somonauk

Advertise here for a successful garage sale!

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

I BUY CARS, TRUCKS, VANS & SUVs

SM-CL1236983


Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Saturday, October 29, 2016 • DeKalb – Hillcrest, Remodeled, 2BR, 1BA, Water & Garbage Incl. No pets, avail Nov 1, $675.

DEKALB QUIET STUDIO 1 & 2 BEDROOM

SYCAMORE - 1 BR $650 & 2 BR $750 in remodeled home available for rent NOW. Off street parking & laundry on site. 815-739-5206 SYCAMORE – 1 BR studio, new carpet, clean quiet & safe. $475 mo. 815-751-3982

DeKalb Sunny, Clean, 2nd Flr 2BR, Lrg LR/DR

SYCAMORE – 2 BR, 1 BA. Upper. new carpet, just painted. Newer appliances Off Street parking. Laundry on site. $675 mo. 815-751-3982

815-751-3806

Lease, dep, ref, no pets. 815-739-5589-815-758-6439

H/W flrs A/C, garage, free laundry, great yard on Huskie bus route, pet negotiable. $850/mo + util + 1st mo sec. Available now. Call Mary 815.991.2095

Sycamore East State St. Newly Remodeled 2 Bedroom.Call for Details! 815-236-4051 or 815-923-2521 DeKalb, 1548 Grand Drive 2BR, 2 Car Garage, 1.5B, W/D, $1000 815-501-1660

Sycamore TH Like New 2 Bedroom, 2 Bath Genoa 2BR, Close to Downtown, Remodeled Great location! Appl, skylights, W/D, C/A, 2 car gar. Country setting, 1 bath, appl. 815-901-3346 $975/mo, no pets. 815-758-0123 Malta - 2 Bedroom, Appl, A/C, Laundry Some utilities incl, no pets/smkg. 815-751-0480 Sycamore - 1631 Park Ave, 4BR, 3BA, Garage All appl, no smoking/waterbeds, $1100/mo. QUIET, REFINED ADULT BUILDING 815-895-4071 With homey environment for mature living. Sycamore 2312 Highland Dr, 3BR, 1.5BA Excellent location, 2BR with carport. Appl, 1 car gar, W/D, no pets/smoking, $1000/mo. No pets/smoking. Agent Owned 815-758-6712

Rochelle 1 & 2 Bedroom

Remodeled, 1 bath, clean & quiet. Available now. 815-758-6580 or 815-762-6650

NOW RENTING!

Quiet residential locations throughout DeKalb, Sycamore, Rochelle & Genoa

Studio, 1, 2 & 3 Bedroom Apts Call for Locations and Personal Showings 815-758-6580 Appl, A/C, will supply W/D, $660/mo, no dogs. 847-738-2334

Stone Prairie

2 Bedroom, 2 Bath Apartments Washer & dryer, central air, fireplace, exercise center. Cat friendly. Private fishing, $790/mo.

815-501-7506

SYCAMORE – 2 BR, 1 BA, full unfinished basement, 1000 sq. ft. Off street parking, $875 mo. 815-751-5228 Daily Chronicle Serving DeKalb County since 1879

Sycamore - 2 Bedroom, 2 Bath, Garage

DeKalb ~ 1300 Sq Ft Office Suite

Ideal for Real Estate, Insurance, Counseling Start-Ups. Agent owned. Call 815-756-2359 or 815-758-6712

Sycamore Front Office 412 SF $800, Util Incl. Rear Office 255 SF, $500, Util Inc. 815-895-2488 Publisher's Notice: All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation of discrimination." Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians, pregnant women and people securing custody of children under 18. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of discrimination call HUD toll-free at 1-800-669-9777. The toll-free telephone number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275 Daily Chronicle Classified It works.

West Harbor Residences At Reva Bay Now Leasing - Brand New Construction Your new home is almost complete! Units will be available in November. West Harbor Residences at Reva Bay is a brand new apartment community in beautiful Fox Lake, IL. 5 minutes from Metra station. Shopping and entertainment is just minutes away. Residence is 2 bedrooms with 2 baths in a spacious 1,250 square feet. Larger unit also has dining room and guest bath. All new stainless steel appliances with washer/dryer included. Balconies, patios, covered and open parking. Boat slips available right at your back door. Additional storage available. Monthly rent begins at $1,425.

Daily Chronicle – Giving you more!

Be sure to include a photo of your pet, home, auto or merchandise.

Call to advertise 877-264-2527 Or place your ad online Daily-Chronicle.com/placeanad

815-895-2488

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BRIDGE by Phillip Alder

DeKalb 4BR, Hrdwd Flrs, Office, BIG YARD, $1275 ALSO 3BR, new carpet, A/C, furnace, $1,025. No pets/smokers. 815-756-2755 ALSO 2 Bedroom,1Bath.

DeKalb Upper 1BR, New Appl, Private Deck

$725/mo, util incl, no pets/smkg. 815-762-1095

#1170**Leland**Large 2 br, 2 ba, country home. W/D h.u's, all appl. Heat included. Pet's @ p.m's discretion. No smoking. $1295/mo tcpm.com 815-786-2404

CLASSIFIED 45

West Harbor Residences at Reva Bay 8300 Reva Bay Lane Fox Lake, IL 60020 Phone: 630-835-4287 Email: westharborppm@gmail.com

Jean Kerr, a humorist, author and playwright, said, “I think success has no rules, but you can learn a great deal from failure.” In bridge, there are some rules that will lead to success -- or, in contrast, if they are ignored, you will learn from your failure. But the game remains popular because there are so many deals on which one can calculate that the usual rule does not work. What is the key rule for South in today’s deal? He is in three no-trump, and West leads the spade six. (As a side issue, looking at all 52 cards, how must declarer play if West leads the heart jack?) If South had bid two no-trump over his partner’s takeout double, it would have shown some 10 or 11 points. North, playing partner for six or seven points, cue-bid three spades, asking South to bid three no-trump with spades stopped. After a spade lead, declarer sees five top tricks: two spades and three diamonds. He needs to establish three tricks in clubs and one in hearts. But that means losing the lead twice, presumably once to West and once to East. With two stoppers in their suit and two high cards to dislodge, duck the first trick. South takes the second spade and plays a club. West can win, but doesn’t have another spade to lead. (Note that if declarer plays a heart at trick three, West should put up his jack. Then East should take dummy’s queen with his ace and return that suit, not a spade.) On the heart-jack lead, South must play low from the dummy to get home.


46 CLASSIFIED

• Saturday, October 29, 2016 • Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com

SYCAMORE

4 BEDROOM SPACIOUS HOME WITH GREAT FLOOR PLAN

Advanced Foundation Repair

3.81 PRIVATE ACRES Just South of DeKalb

20 Years' Experience Ray Faivre – Owner Epoxy/Poly Injection Drain Tile Systems Window Well Systems Cracked Walls Leaky Basements Guaranteed Free Estimates DeKalb & Surrounding Areas

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Free Local Delivery. Stacking Available.

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Huge Upscale Kitchen & Grand Family Room, Formal Living & Dining Room 3 Full Bathrooms + 1st Floor Bdrm. st 1 Floor Laundry Area, Full Basement with English Window Exposure

Only $278,000

CALL or TEXT NEDRA ERICSON, REALTOR or EMAIL myhomes2syc@aol.com

VIEW PROPERTY, A MUST!

CALL or Text: NEDRA ERICSON 815-739-9997

SUPER VALUE AT $169,900

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✦ 1.20 Acres, Lots of Trees ✦ 2450 Sq. Ft. Home ✦ Fireplace ✦ Full Basement ✦ Sun Porch ✦ 2 Car Garage

What More Could you Really Want? CALL or Text: NEDRA ERICSON 815-739-9997

HIRE CLOSER. HIRE HAPPIER. Why look far and wide for the best local talent? Just visit ChicagoJobs.com. Offering thousands of career candidate profiles, Chicagoland’s most comprehensive online job boards attract the most qualified local job seekers in a wide variety of industries and skill sets. Look to ChicagoJobs.com for employees who live close to the place your business calls home. Shaw Media is a partner of ChicagoJobs.com.

(Located by Sycamore Park)

5 bedroom, 3.5 bath, 2960 plus sq ft and room to grow. 1st floor master bedroom suite & 1st floor laundry room. 2.5 car attached garage & a 4 car detached garage.

Place your Classified ad online 24/7 at: www.Daily-Chronicle.com/PlaceAnAd

We are At Your Service! Daily Chronicle reaches DeKalb County 6 days a week Plus Daily-Chronicle.com is available 24/7.

Call to advertise in the At Your Service directory.

877-264-2527

classified@shawsuburban.com

815-739-9997

SYCAMORE SCHOOLS

$3,000 FOR CLOSING COSTS NEW PRICE $164,900

Ranch Home has as total of 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths, this home of course has a completely fin basement. Very nicely décorated, includes appliances, completely wood fenced yard. Huge maintenance free deck and exterior of the home.

CALL or TEXT NEDRA ERICSON, REALTOR or EMAIL myhomes2syc@aol.com

815-739-9997

DeKalb Beautiful 2BR End Unit TH, New SS Appl Fantastic Location, $109,500. 630-973-6557 DeKalb – 4 Unit Lot, Lot 60 Southpoint Greens Sub-Div, $10,000 Call 815-739-5638


Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Saturday, October 29, 2016 • Sycamore, Illinois to consider a request by Brian Grainger of Old Mill Park, LLC for a change of zoning of the property located south of Mt. Hunger Road and Route 23 (PIN numbers 0629477004, 0628426016, 0629426007 and 0628426017) constituting 8.4 acres from the current zoning of C3, Highway Business District to R3, Multi-Family Residential District. PUBLIC NOTICE Information regarding the proposed change is available for public inPUBLIC NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT spection at the City Clerk's Office, COURT FOR THE TWENTY-THIRD 308 West State Street, Sycamore, JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN DEKALB Illinois. COUNTY, ILLINOIS In the Matter of the Estate of: VIRGINIA E. GORDON, All interested parties are invited to Deceased. Case No. 16 P 93 NO- attend the public hearing or submit TICE TO CREDITORS Notice is given written comments to the City Clerk's of the death of Virginia E. Gordon, Office at 308 West State Street, who died on July 11, 2016, a resi- Sycamore, IL 60178. dent of Sycamore, Illinois. Letters of Office were issued on October 5, William Davey 2016 to Kathleen Stelford as Ex- Chairperson, Sycamore Plan Comecutrix whose attorney is Michael P. mission Coghlan of The Law Office of Michael P. Coghlan, LLC, at 444 (Published in the Daily Chronicle, E. Hillcrest Drive, Suite 330, October 29, 2016.)1238190 DeKalb, Illinois 60115, phone number (815) 787-0800. Claims against the estate may be filed within six (6) months from the first date of publication. Claims against PUBLIC NOTICE the estate may be filed with the DeKalb County Circuit Clerk located IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE at 133 W. State St., Sycamore, IL 60178, or with the representative, TWENTY THIRD JUDICIAL CIRCUIT DEKALB COUNTY, ILLINOIS or both. Any claim not filed within JUVENILE DIVISION this time period is barred. Copies of a claim filed with the Clerk's office IN THE INTEREST OF must be mailed or delivered to the representative and to the attorney DAMERE MATTHEWS A Minor within ten (10) days after it has been filed. The estate will be adNo. 16 JA 21 ministered without Court supervision, unless under section 5/28-4 NOTICE BY PUBLICATION of the Probate Act (755 ILCS 5/284) any interested person terminates NOTICE IS GIVEN TO YOU, AND independent administration at any time by mailing or delivering a peti- AND ALL PUTATIVE FATHERS, tion to terminate to the Clerk of the NAMED AND UNNAMED, of Said Minor, respondents, and to all Circuit Court. whom it may concern, that a Petition was filed under the Juvenile (Published in the Daily Chronicle, October 15, 22 & 29 2016.) Court Act by the DeKalb County State's Attorney in the Circuit Court 1234334 of DeKalb County, on 07/07/16; and that in the courtroom usually occupied by Honorable Judge Matekaitis, a status review shall be PUBLIC NOTICE held upon said Petition on November 21, 2016, at 9:00 a.m. or as Notice is hereby given that the Plan soon thereafter as this case may be Commission of the City of heard, to have the minor declared Sycamore, Illinois will hold a public to be a ward of the Court, and for hearing on Monday, November 14, other relief under the Juvenile Court 2016 at 7:00 P.M. in the City Act. The Court has authority in this Council Chambers at the Sycamore case to take from you the custody Center, 308 W. State Street, and guardianship of the above Sy Illinoi nsid

guar ip named minor and to terminate parental rights, and if the petition requests termination of parental rights the parent may lose all parental rights to the child and the parent will not be entitled to further written notices of publication notices in this case except as required by Supreme Court Rule 11. UNLESS YOU APPEAR at the above named hearing and show cause to the contrary, AN ORDER OR JUDGMENT BY DEFAULT MAY BE ENTERED AGAINST YOU FOR THE RELIEF ASKED IN THE PETITION. October 20, 2016 /s/ Maureen A. Josh CLERK OF THE COURT (Published in the Daily Chronicle, October 22, 29 & November 5, 2016.)1236063

PUBLIC NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE TWENTY-THIRD JUDICIAL CIRCUIT DEKALB COUNTY, ILLINOIS IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF JON W. CARNAHAN, Deceased. Case No. 16 P 111

be mailed or delivered to the Representative and to the attorney within 10 days after it has been filed.

The attorney for the estate and his/her address is: Brian Wright 437 W. State St. Suite 101 Sycamore, IL 60178 Claims against the estate may be filed on or before April 22, 2017. Claims against the estate may be filed with the Clerk of the Circuit Court, 133 W. State St., Sycamore, IL 60178, or with the Representative, or both. Any claim not filed within that period is barred. Copies of a claim filed with the Clerk must he Re

PUBLIC NOTICE

Village of Malta Annual Treasurer's Report Fiscal Year 2015-16 Fund Beg Bal Revenues Expenses End Bal GENERAL $797,550.01 $290,495.94 $281,059.19 $806,986.76 AUDIT $1,285.69 $12,959.45 $8,400.00 $5,845.14 INSURANCE -$3,977.01 $25,420.04 $26,054.82 -$4,611.79 FICA $22,082.33 $14,824.83 $13,221.18 $23,685.98 IMRF $24,042.03 $11,962.67 $12,141.12 $23,863.58 MFT $181,753.12 $30,031.72 $0.00 $211,784.84 TIF -$112,758.97 $382,958.97 $416,662.26 -$146,462.26 $446,040.85 $399,562.59 $293,047.90 $552,555.54 (Published in the Daily Chronicle, W/WW October 22, 29 & November 5, Totals: 1,168,216.21 1,050,586.40 1,473,647.79 1,356,018.05 2016.)1236091 Revenue Summary: Property Tax/TIF, $489.395; Road & BridgeTax, $10,986; Sales Tax, 41,572; Utility Tax,$55,221; license,$2525;Building Permits,$441; Income Tax, $124,289;Personal Property Tax, $2353; State Use Tax,$56,619; Court Fines,$10,345 Other Fines, $16; Water Sales,$119,259; Sewer Charges, $77,449; Capital Improvement/Debt Ret.,$41,807;Other Garbage $8402; Investment Income,$9244; Garbage Disposal, $91,449 Other PUBLIC NOTICE Revenues, $31,835 Total Revenues, $1,168,21 Disbursement Summary : All Around Pumping $3600, Arndt Automotive $3336, Bank of New York $5720, Bob Kyler Excavating 13,711, ComEd ASSUMED NAME $12,763, Curran Cont. $10,499, Fish Properties $ 22,175, Frontier $3,739 Blue Cross $11,465, Amazon $6,940, Arndt Drainage 11,981, Bank PUBLICATION NOTICE of New York 309,319, Clarke Environ. $4,490, DeKalb Co. Sherriff $ 9,049, Fischer Excavating $65,759, Foster Buick $ 12,583, Homefield Energy $ 36,853, Il. Municipal Ret. $ 16,507, IL Dept. Rev. $ 8036, Illinois IEPA $ 3672, IML Insurance $ 26,304, Roach $16,800, Kendal Heating $ Public Notice is hereby given that 3,017, Lang's Equip. 5,216, Metropolitan Ind. 14,660, Municipal Code Corp $2,567, NICOR on October 13, 2016 a certificate $2,782, Nutoys $ 6,016, Payroll $128,859, Petty Cash $2,924, Rood Const. $8,640, Sandberg Electric, $3,133, Town of Cortland $3,000, USwas filed in the Office of the County bank $16,187, US Treasury payroll withholding $ 38,990, Viking Chemical $5,021, Vortex Tech. $3,128, Waste Management $ 85,046, Will Clerk of DeKalb County, Illinois, Burke Kelsey $4031, Wipfli Acct. $8,400, Total $992,017 Disbursements $2500 and less $58,569 Total Disbursements $1,050,586 Payroll Sumsetting forth the names and post of- mary: Under $5,000 Kevin Battin, Christine Harbeck, Robert Iversen, Christie Manis, James Wilson, Jamie Colbert, Dennis Heins, Mary Johansen, fice address of all persons owning, Steve Meisch, Rudi Ziegler, Don Haeffner, Gerald Hunt, Mason Lang, Laurie Patterson Under $15,000 Garold Ikeler, Freddy Wilson, Floyd Grubb, conducting, and transacting the Russell Stokes, Under $25,000 David Walker Under $45,000 James Kaelin, Debbie Lang. business known as: Debbie Lang, Comptroller, Oct. 21, 2016 P1 RACING AND PERFORMANCE located at 1989 Mowers Rd., Esmond, IL 60129. PUBLIC NOTICE The estate will be administered without Court supervision unless an interested party terminated independent supervision administration by filing a petition to terminate under Section 28-4 of the Probate Act (Ill. Rev. Stat. Ch. 110 ½, Par. 28-4).

Dated October 13, 2016 /s/ Douglas J. Johnson DeKalb County Clerk & Recorder

INDEPENDENT ADMINISTRATION PUBLICATION NOTICE TO: (Published in the Daily Chronicle, Creditors and Claimants October 15, 22 & 29, 2016.) 1234235 Notice is given of the death of Jon Why not have it delivered? W. Carnahan, who died on July 6, Call 800-589-9363 2016 a resident of Sycamore, IlliDaily Chronicle nois. The Representative for the estate and his/her address is: Patricia L. Carnahan 121 West High St. Sycamore, IL 60178

CLASSIFIED 47

JOBS ANNOUNCEMENTS STUFF VEHICLES REAL ESTATE SERVICES Daily Chronicle Classified and online at: www.Daily-Chronicle.com

IMPORTANT INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR DRINKING WATER The Village of Hinckley Public Water Supply Has Levels of Combined Radium Above Drinking Water Standards Our water system has violated a drinking water standard. Although this is not an emergency, as our customers, you have a right to know what happened, what you should do, and what we are doing to correct this situation. We routinely monitor for the presence of drinking water contaminants. The average of the testing results we received over the past year show that our system exceeds the standard, or maximum contaminant level (MCL), for combined radium. The standard for combined radium is 5 pico curies per liter (pCi/L). The average level of combined radium over the last year was 6 pCi/L. The past three (3) testing results have been in compliance with the standard, but the testing result from the 4th quarter in 2015 was out of compliance and causes the average of the past four (4) results to exceed the standard.

What should I do?

o You do not need to use an alternative (e.g., bottled) water supply. However, if you have specific health concerns, consult your doctor.

What does this mean?

This is not an immediate risk. If it had been, you would have been notified immediately. However, some people who drink water containing radium226 or radium-228 in excess of the MCL over many years may have an increased risk of getting cancer.

What happened? What is being done?

Corrective action in the form of replacement of the treatment process media was accomplished in April 2016. Testing results since the corrective action was taken indicate that the media replacement has been successful to date in treating combined radium. We anticipate the 4th quarter 2016 result will also meet the standard, which will result in full compliance in accordance with regulatory standards by the end of 2016. For more information, please contact Steve Dennison or Pete Wallers at 630/466-6700 or at EEI, 52 Wheeler Road, Sugar Grove, IL 60554. Please share this information with all the other people who drink this water, especially those who may not have received this notice directly (for example, people in apartments, nursing homes, schools, and businesses). You can do this by posting this notice in a public place or distributing copies by hand or mail. Date distributed 10/26/16 This notice is being sent to you by Hinckley Water System ID# IL0370200 (Published in the Daily Chronicle, October 29, 2016.)1237711


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| DAILY CHRONICLE

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