14
INDEX Classifieds . . . . . .12-13 Comics . . . . . . . . . . .11 Community . . . . . . . . .3 Education . . . . . . . . . .6 Obituaries . . . . . . . . . .7 Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . .4 Sports . . . . . . .8-10, 14 INSIDE LION KING Calvin Johnson goes for 329 yards on 14 catches to lead Lions over Cowboys —Sports page 8 WEATHER Sunday High 50 Low 32 Year ago today High 50 Low 32 Today’s records High 56 (1932) Low 2 (1934) Precipitation 48 hours to 7 a.m. Sunday .26 in. Snowfall 48 hours to 7 a.m. Sunday .4 in. Snow on ground 2 in. Season total 5.4 in. TODAY Partly cloudy —Details, page 2 Partly cloudy High: 33 | Low: 30 | Details, page 2 CONTACT US Daily Globe Inc. 118 E. McLeod Ave. PO Box 548 Ironwood, MI 49938 yourdailyglobe.com 906-932-2211 Vol. 94, Ed. 253 5 Miles West Of Ashland on Hwy. 2 Sales Hours: 8-7 Mon.-Thur.; 8-6 Fri.; 8-5 Sat. 1-715-682-8400 • 800-296-3819 www.ashlandfordchrysler.com • 5stardealers.com/ashland FIVE STAR DAILY GLOBE Monday, October 28, 2013 75 cents JEWELERS PHONE 906-932-5679 135 E. AURORA ST. IRONWOOD, MI 20% OFF This Tuesday October 29th yourdailyglobe.com HALLOWEEN TIME Katie Perttunen/Daily Globe MERCER LION Glenn Doxsee and Lioness Joan Wainio look to recruit new members at Saturday’s Mercer Community Center's Volunteer Fair. By KATIE PERTTUNEN [email protected] MERCER, Wis. — Local orga- nizations gathered at the Mercer Community Center Saturday to seek volunteers for both the long term and for specific projects. The American Legion Post 424, serving Mercer and Mani- towish Waters, is seeking volun- teers to speak at Mercer School's Veteran's Day program. They are judging essays submitted by 14 students, "a daunting task, considering that this year's batch were all wonderful," said member Tom Leidenheimer. The legion is also seeking vol- unteers for its Memorial Day program, to speak, sing or put flags on grave sites. A lot of help is needed with the July 4 Run for a Veteran event, especially with trail clean- ing, signing up runners, and assisting on race day. Volunteers are also needed at the VA Clinic and at the Camp American Legion. Funeral assis- tance is needed for deceased vet- erans. For more information, contact Leidenheimer at 715- 476-2759. Neal Klemme, of Iron Coun- ty's University of Wisconsin- Extension office, is seeking vol- unteers to assist in bringing a 4- Commission to tackle blight again IRONWOOD — The Ironwood City Commission will continue its blight fight with four public hearings before today's 5:30 p.m. regular meeting. The hearings begin at 5:10 p.m. on blight violations at 148 W. Pewabic St., 226 W. Arch St., 1216 Celia St. and 507 Lake St. The hearings are planned for five minutes apiece. During its regular meeting, the commission will consider action on those parcels and also one at 319 Albany St. That par- cel was reviewed a previous city commission meeting. Commissioners will also con- sider approving a resolution authorizing the use of snowmo- biles on designated streets and alleyways. The snowmobile map approved by commissioners is nearly identical to a year ago. Ironwood Public Safety Department Director Andrew DiGiorgio told commissioners at the last meeting that the biggest change in the new map is open- ing the trail from Lake Street to the Holiday Station, where the machine owners buy fuel. Another change is access on Lawrence Street will be closed, but trail access is available on routes near there. —Ralph Ansami Gasoline prices continue to fall across Gogebic Range, nation By RALPH ANSAMI [email protected] Gas prices have continued to plunge on the Gogebic Range, with the lowest price locally for a gallon $3.25 on Saturday in Hur- ley. That was quite a drop from summer prices around $4 a gallon. The Hurley gas price was below the nationwide average of $3.30.5, according to gasbuddy.com. The cheapest U.S. gas on Saturday was $2.96.8 for a gallon in Missouri, while the most expensive was $4.08.5 in Hawaii. In Michigan, the lowest cost for a gallon was $3.02 in Lambertville, while the highest was $3.79 in Romulus. For Wisconsin, the statewide average was $3.26.5, compared to $3.44.3 a year ago. Mercer stood at $3.39 a gallon Saturday. What's ahead? If last winter is any indication, prices could fall more. For example, last January, the Wisconsin average for a gallon of gas had fallen to $3.15.2. With the recent winter-like weather across the Gogebic Range, one way motorists can save on gas mileage is to keep tires prop- erly inflated. It's not unusual for tire pressure to drop by 3 or 4 pounds per square inch in cold weather. Gasbuddy.com notes a tire under- inflated by 2 PSI increases fuel consumption by 1 percent. Also, not braking hard, nor accelerating rapidly can increase fuel economy by as much as 20 percent. Using cruise control over long trips is another way to improve mileage and shut- ting off the car, rather than having it idle for long periods during winter months, also saves on trips to the pump. LCO tribe members plan winter camping at mine site UPSON, Wis. — Lac Courte Oreille Band of Lake Superior Ojibwe members plan to occupy five acres of forested land near the proposed Gogebic-Taconite mine through the winter. The LCO has made the decision to contin- ue the camp, called the LCO Harvest Educa- tional Learning Project, despite no agree- ment having been reached with Iron County, according to Wisconsin Public Radio. Tribal member Paul DeMain said camp members are winterizing by double-walling and insulating wigwams. DeMain said it's important to stay there because he believes G-Tac might conduct rock-sampling this winter and a geoscientist found asbestos-like fibers there. Tribal members were at the camp site all summer, although county forestry rules only allow two weeks of camping there. LCO (Hayward area) Tribal Chairman Mic Isham said the tribal members are researching maple syrup harvesting and plants and resources. He said it's a research project and not a camping expedition. Isham said he hopes to come to an agree- ment with Iron County. —Ralph Ansami Wanted: Community volunteers Larry Holcombe/Daily Globe A HALLOWEEN display includes lights, pumpkins, gourds and a masked bear on Lake Avenue in Ironwood early Sun- day evening. Relay for Life to rally members Nov. 7 By CORTNEY OFSTAD [email protected] BESSEMER — The Gogebic County Relay for Life will conduct a planning meeting Nov. 7 at 6 p.m. at the Bessemer VFW for the 2014 event. According to relay member Car- ole Lillar, the group is looking or teams, volunteers and committee members. "We're looking for everybody," Lillar said, "anyone is who willing to participate." According to Lillar, many past members and volunteers have enjoyed the experience. "You come to the event once, and you're hooked," Lillar said. "That was my story. I went to relay one time, and then I was on a team, VOLUNTEERS page 5 RELAY page 5

Partly cloudy High: 33 | Low: 30 | Details, page 2 DAILY GLOBE...Partly cloudy —Details, page 2 Partly cloudy High: 33| Low: 30| Details, page 2 CONTACT US Daily Globe Inc. 118 E

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I N D E XClassifieds . . . . . .12-13Comics . . . . . . . . . . .11Community . . . . . . . . .3Education . . . . . . . . . .6Obituaries . . . . . . . . . .7Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . .4Sports . . . . . . .8-10, 14

I N S I D ELION KINGCalvin Johnson goes for 329yards on 14 catches to leadLions over Cowboys

—Sportspage 8

W E AT H E RSunday

High 50Low 32

Year ago todayHigh 50Low 32

Today’s recordsHigh 56 (1932)Low 2 (1934)

Precipitation48 hours to 7 a.m. Sunday .26 in.

Snowfall48 hours to 7 a.m.Sunday .4 in.Snow on ground 2 in.Season total 5.4 in.

TODAYPartly cloudy

—Details, page 2

Partly cloudyHigh: 33 | Low: 30 | Details, page 2

C O N TAC T U SDaily Globe Inc.118 E. McLeod Ave.PO Box 548Ironwood, MI 49938

yourdailyglobe.com906-932-2211

Vol. 94, Ed. 253

5 Miles West Of Ashland on Hwy. 2Sales Hours: 8-7 Mon.-Thur.; 8-6 Fri.; 8-5 Sat.

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JEWELERS PHONE906-932-5679135 E. AURORA ST.

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H A L L OW E E N T I M E

Katie Perttunen/Daily Globe

MERCER LION Glenn Doxsee and Lioness Joan Wainio look to recruit new members at Saturday’s Mercer Community Center's Volunteer Fair.

By KATIE [email protected]

MERCER, Wis. — Local orga-nizations gathered at the MercerCommunity Center Saturday toseek volunteers for both the longterm and for specific projects. The American Legion Post

424, serving Mercer and Mani-towish Waters, is seeking volun-teers to speak at Mercer School'sVeteran's Day program. Theyare judging essays submitted by14 students, "a daunting task,considering that this year'sbatch were all wonderful," saidmember Tom Leidenheimer.The legion is also seeking vol-

unteers for its Memorial Dayprogram, to speak, sing or putflags on grave sites.A lot of help is needed with

the July 4 Run for a Veteranevent, especially with trail clean-ing, signing up runners, andassisting on race day. Volunteers are also needed at

the VA Clinic and at the CampAmerican Legion. Funeral assis-tance is needed for deceased vet-erans. For more information,contact Leidenheimer at 715-476-2759.Neal Klemme, of Iron Coun-

ty's University of Wisconsin-Extension office, is seeking vol-unteers to assist in bringing a 4-

Commissionto tackle

blight againIRONWOOD — The Ironwood

City Commission will continueits blight fight with four publichearings before today's 5:30 p.m.regular meeting.The hearings begin at 5:10

p.m. on blight violations at 148W. Pewabic St., 226 W. Arch St.,1216 Celia St. and 507 Lake St.The hearings are planned for

five minutes apiece.During its regular meeting,

the commission will consideraction on those parcels and alsoone at 319 Albany St. That par-cel was reviewed a previous citycommission meeting.Commissioners will also con-

sider approving a resolutionauthorizing the use of snowmo-biles on designated streets andalleyways. The snowmobile mapapproved by commissioners isnearly identical to a year ago. Ironwood Public Safety

Department Director AndrewDiGiorgio told commissioners atthe last meeting that the biggestchange in the new map is open-ing the trail from Lake Street tothe Holiday Station, where themachine owners buy fuel. Another change is access on

Lawrence Street will be closed,but trail access is available onroutes near there.

—Ralph Ansami

Gasoline prices continue to fallacross Gogebic Range, nation

By RALPH [email protected]

Gas prices have continued to plunge onthe Gogebic Range, with the lowest pricelocally for a gallon $3.25 on Saturday in Hur-ley.That was quite a drop from summer prices

around $4 a gallon.The Hurley gas price was below the

nationwide average of $3.30.5, according togasbuddy.com.The cheapest U.S. gas on Saturday was

$2.96.8 for a gallon in Missouri, while themost expensive was $4.08.5 in Hawaii.In Michigan, the lowest cost for a gallon

was $3.02 in Lambertville, while the highestwas $3.79 in Romulus.For Wisconsin, the statewide average was

$3.26.5, compared to $3.44.3 a year ago. Mercer stood at $3.39 a gallon Saturday. What's ahead?

If last winter is any indication, pricescould fall more. For example, last January,the Wisconsin average for a gallon of gas hadfallen to $3.15.2.With the recent winter-like weather

across the Gogebic Range, one way motoristscan save on gas mileage is to keep tires prop-erly inflated.It's not unusual for tire pressure to drop

by 3 or 4 pounds per square inch in coldweather. Gasbuddy.com notes a tire under-inflated by 2 PSI increases fuel consumptionby 1 percent.Also, not braking hard, nor accelerating

rapidly can increase fuel economy by as muchas 20 percent. Using cruise control over long trips is

another way to improve mileage and shut-ting off the car, rather than having it idle forlong periods during winter months, alsosaves on trips to the pump.

LCO tribe members plan winter camping at mine siteUPSON, Wis. — Lac Courte Oreille Band

of Lake Superior Ojibwe members plan tooccupy five acres of forested land near theproposed Gogebic-Taconite mine through thewinter.The LCO has made the decision to contin-

ue the camp, called the LCO Harvest Educa-tional Learning Project, despite no agree-ment having been reached with Iron County,according to Wisconsin Public Radio.Tribal member Paul DeMain said camp

members are winterizing by double-wallingand insulating wigwams. DeMain said it's important to stay there

because he believes G-Tac might conductrock-sampling this winter and a geoscientistfound asbestos-like fibers there.Tribal members were at the camp site all

summer, although county forestry rules onlyallow two weeks of camping there.LCO (Hayward area) Tribal Chairman

Mic Isham said the tribal members areresearching maple syrup harvesting andplants and resources. He said it's a researchproject and not a camping expedition.Isham said he hopes to come to an agree-

ment with Iron County.—Ralph Ansami

Wanted: Community volunteers

Larry Holcombe/Daily Globe

A HALLOWEEN display includes lights, pumpkins, gourds and a masked bear on Lake Avenue in Ironwood early Sun-day evening.

Relay for Life to rally members Nov. 7By CORTNEY [email protected]

BESSEMER — The GogebicCounty Relay for Life will conduct aplanning meeting Nov. 7 at 6 p.m.at the Bessemer VFW for the 2014event.According to relay member Car-

ole Lillar, the group is looking orteams, volunteers and committeemembers."We're looking for everybody,"

Lillar said, "anyone is who willingto participate."According to Lillar, many past

members and volunteers have

enjoyed the experience."You come to the event once, and

you're hooked," Lillar said. "Thatwas my story. I went to relay onetime, and then I was on a team,

VOLUNTEERS — page 5

RELAY — page 5

Page 2: Partly cloudy High: 33 | Low: 30 | Details, page 2 DAILY GLOBE...Partly cloudy —Details, page 2 Partly cloudy High: 33| Low: 30| Details, page 2 CONTACT US Daily Globe Inc. 118 E

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) —Authorities investigating aNorth Carolina State Fair ridethat injured five people haveconcluded that someone tam-pered with it, and the ride’soperator was being held Sundayon criminal charges.On the fair’s final day, state

officials said attendance wasdown compared to the finalweekend of last year’s fair andattributed the dip partly to theinjuries. They declined to elabo-rate on how the ride had beentampered with.Three people remained in a

Raleigh hospital on Sunday,

three days after the “Vortex”ride suddenly jolted into gear aspeople were exiting, droppingsome riders from heights thateyewitnesses estimated to be 20or 30 feet.Investigators determined the

Vortex, known for thrilling rid-ers with its wild twirls andflips, had been tampered withand critical safety devices werecompromised, Wake CountySheriff Donnie Harrison saidSaturday. Harrison’s office didnot return messages and offi-cials with the state LaborDepartment declined to offerfurther explanation of the tam-pering and the overall investi-gation.Ride operator Timothy

Dwayne Tutterrow, 46, of Quit-man, Ga., faces three criminalcounts of assault with a deadly

weapon in the mishap. Tutter-row was being held in jail Sun-day on $225,000 bond and wasdue in court Monday for a firstappearance, said attorneyRoger W. Smith Jr.“Mr. Tutterrow is absolutely

devastated by what happened,”Smith said in a phone interviewSunday.Fair attendance on Friday

and Saturday was down morethan 11 percent compared to thecorresponding days last year.While that may have been part-ly due to colder nighttime tem-peratures, the injuries probablyfactored into the decline, saidspokesman Brian Long of thestate agriculture department,which runs the fair.“I do understand that this

incident may have given somepeople pause,” he said.

NATION THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM2 l MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2013

FIVE-DAY FORECAST FOR IRONWOODTODAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY

Partly Cloudy Partly Cloudy Partly Cloudy Mostly Cloudy Cloudy

33º 20º 36º 27º 45º 42º 49º 37º 43º 33ºWinds: 5-10 mph N Winds: Light winds Winds: Light winds Winds: 5-15 mph N Winds: 5-10 mph NW

OUTLOOKToday we will see partly cloudy skies with aslight chance of snow, high temperature of33º, humidity of 64%. North wind 5 to 10mph. The record high temperature for todayis 71º set in 1948.

SUN AND MOON

Sunrise . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7:38 a.m.Sunset . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5:50 p.m.Moonrise . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1:10 a.m.Moonset . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2:52 p.m.

NATIONAL WEATHER

REGIONAL WEATHERToday Tue.

Ashland 37/26 mc 40/27 pcDuluth 38/26 s 38/28 pcEau Claire 43/28 s 41/35 rsEscanaba 40/21 pc 41/30 sGrand Rapids 50/32 mc 50/38 pcGreen Bay 44/31 pc 46/35 shMadison 47/34 mc 50/40 shMarquette 37/30 mc 39/32 sRhinelander 37/19 pc 39/28 shSt. Paul 45/30 s 41/35 rsWausau 41/26 pc 41/31 sh

Today Tue.Chicago 54/45 s 54/48 raDallas 81/66 mc 78/70 mcKansas City 68/54 s 65/56 tLos Angeles 65/54 sh 64/55 shNew York 60/44 s 53/43 sOrlando 83/63 s 85/66 sPhoenix 84/58 s 75/51 mcSeattle 56/41 s 55/44 s

Weather (Wx): cl/cloudy; fl/flurries; pc/partly cloudy; ra/rain; rs/rain & snow; s/sunny; sh/showers;

sn/snow; t/thunderstorms; w/windy

MOON PHASES

11/3 11/10 11/17 11/25

New First Full Last

ALMANACTemperatureHigh . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .50Low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32Yesterday . . . . . . . . . . . .

WEATHER TRIVIA

Where are the three world weathercenters located?

Answer: In Melbourne, Moscow and Washington, D.C.

?

51

2

45

Marenisco35/18

Bergland34/19

Ontonagon34/21

Wakefield34/18

Bessemer33/19

Ironwood33/20

Minocqua38/19

Manitowish36/20

Mercer36/20

Upson35/20

Saxon36/24

Hurley35/20

Watersmeet35/19

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Go To TrueValue.comFREE SHIPPING TO OUR STORE ON YOUR TRUEVALUE.COM ORDERS

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Precipitation .26 inch

Veterans Questionnaire for the Daily Globe

Your Name______________________________________________________________________________________

Address_________________________________________________________________________________________

City____________________________________________State___________________Zip Code_________________

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Branch of Service_________________________________________________________________________________

Rank_______________________________________Years Served_________________________________________

Where Served____________________________________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________________________________________________

Please include a current or service photo; include a SASE if you would like the photo returned.DEADLINE: Friday, November 1, 2013 ~ To be published Friday, November 8, 2013.

PLEASE DROP OFF AT THE DAILY GLOBE, OR MAIL TO: Daily Globe c/o Honoring Veterans, 118 E. McLeod Ave., Ironwood, Michigan 49938

SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT!

The Daily Globe is proud to honor all of our military Veterans who have served our country. As a tribute to our Veterans,

the Daily Globe will publish a special pictorial tribute on Friday, Nov. 8, 2013. If you have served in the military or you want to honor someone who

has, please fill out the questionnaire below and return to the Daily Globe. Please include a

photograph and a return envelope if you would like the photo returned. You may also submit the questionaire and photo online. Go to yourdailyglobe.com and click on the “Honoring Our Veterans, Our Heroes” link.

Deadline for submission is Friday, Nov. 1, 2013.

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TRENTON, N.J. (AP) — Gov.Chris Christie says he under-stands victims’ frustrations ayear after Superstorm Sandybut maintains that his adminis-tration isn’t to blame for delaysin aid reaching victims.In an interview with The

Associated Press as the anniver-sary of the Oct. 29 megastormapproached, Christie blamedCongress, which took threemonths to approve a $50.7 bil-lion relief package for theregion, and a thicket of red tapeput in place to prevent the typeof fraud that occurred after Hur-ricane Katrina.“We’ve done everything we

possibly can, and I think in theimmediate aftermath did a verygood job,” Christie told the AP.“Since then, we’ve kind of beenhostage to two situations, thedelay in the aid itself and thenwhat I call the ‘Katrina factor,’which is the much more detailedand difficult rules surroundingthe distribution of the aid.”Christie, widely believed to

be positioning himself for a 2016Republican presidential run,saw his popularity skyrocketafter Sandy as he donned a bluefleece pullover and doggedly ledthe state through its worst nat-ural disaster, a freakish stormthat plunged 5.5 million stateresidents into darkness, dam-aged 360,000 homes and busi-nesses, and disrupted gasolinesupplies for days.Christie was in many ways

the face of the storm, whetherhe was embracing PresidentBarack Obama during a visit tothe battered coast or consoling atearful 9-year-old girl who hadlost her house and told the gov-ernor she was scared.Lately, though, some of his

admirers have become detrac-tors.Frustrations boiled over at a

hearing last week on the pace ofthe recovery in Toms River, oneof the hardest-hit communities.Storm victims there complainedof insurance companies trying tolowball them on payouts, andstringent aid rules delayingthem from rebuilding.“These programs are intend-

ed to help; they’re not. They’rejust putting more obstacles onyou,” said Vincent Giglio, a doc-tor from the Ortley Beach sec-tion of Toms River, which wasdevastated by the storm andremains sparsely populated ayear later. He said gettinginsurance payouts and govern-ment aid has been daunting.

“When I needed my govern-ment — the people I voted for —they failed me,” said DanielleVaz, of Toms River, who broughther 4-year-old autistic son alongto show how months of beingdisplaced has severely affectedthem both.Christie refused to send an

administration representativeto any of four post-Sandy hear-ings because, he said, the ses-sions were led by Democrats outto score political points. He didassign staff to monitor the hear-ings and follow-up with anyonewho complained.“I get the that fact that until

any one particular person youspeak to is back in their homesand their lives are back to nor-mal, they are going to be incred-ibly frustrated and upset and, insome cases, distraught,” he said.“I think most people, if you talkto them, would say we’ve done agood job. Not a perfect job, but agood job.”Since the first $1.8 billion in

federal recovery aid wasapproved, New Jersey has setup 17 separate programs forhomeowners, renters, smallbusinesses, local governments,nonprofits and developers.Counselors and administrativestaff who were rude or unhelpfulhave been fired, he said.The largest homeowner aid

program, which provides asmuch as $150,000 for recon-struction, repairs, to elevate ahouse or protect against futureflooding, has been criticized for

not making any payouts from a$600 million allocation. Onehundred grant applicationstotaling $7.8 million in assis-tance were signed last week,and the administration expects200 more to be finished withindays. About 4,000 homeownersare expected to benefit eventual-ly.Asked about the delay,

Christie said cumbersome feder-al requirements are responsible.After Katrina, homeowners

proved their losses and got theirmoney, he said. Under the newrules, checks go directly tobuilders, so the jobs are beingawarded through public bid-ding, slowing the process. Also,environmental and historicalreviews are required for post-Sandy rebuilding of homes andbusinesses. Those reviewsweren’t required after Katrina.Though he said he under-

stands the insistence onincreased oversight, Christie, aformer federal prosecutor, saidhe would have done some thingsdifferently. For example, hewould have cut checks to home-owners instead of builders in theremediation program butrequired residents to keep livingin their homes for a certain timeas a condition of receiving thegrant.“To the victims, I’d say you’re

right, it is too slow, and I wishthat the federal governmentwould allow us the flexibility toget you aid more quickly,”Christie said.

Associated Press

In this Oct. 31, 2012, file photo, President Barack Obama is greeted byNew Jersey Gov. Chris Christie upon his arrival at Atlantic City Interna-tional Airport, in Atlantic City, N.J. Obama traveled to region to take anaerial tour of the Atlantic Coast in New Jersey in areas damaged bysuperstorm Sandy.

NJ Governor Christieblames aid delay on DC

Phoenix shooting leaves family, dogs, gunman deadPHOENIX (AP) — Authorities

released details Sunday from aweekend shooting attack thatleft four family members and twodogs dead at a central Phoenixtownhouse before the gunmanturned the weapon on himself.Michael Guzzo, 56, killed his

next door neighbors in a deadlyconfrontation Saturday that mayhave been touched off by loudbarking, police said.Phoenix police Sgt. Tommy

Thompson said there is “someindication that perhaps that wasa problem.” But he added a

motive may never be known.The victims have been identi-

fied as Bruce Moore, 66; hisdaughter, Renee Moore, 36; herhusband, who took his wife’sname, Michael Moore, 42; andRenee’s son, Shannon Moore,17.

Ride operator charged over 5 hurt at NC State Fair

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Community CalendarEmail calendar items and com-

munity news to [email protected]. For more information,call Community Editor MichelleThomasini at 906-932-2211.

Monday, Oct. 28Iron County Food Pantry and

Treasure Room, 9 a.m.-4 p.m., 72Michigan Ave., Montreal, Wis. 715-561-4450.

Finnish Woman’s Auxiliary, 10a.m. Little Finland, Kimball, Wis.

Alcoholics Anonymous, noon,Salem Lutheran Church, Ironwood.area74.org.

Iron County Historical Muse-um, 2 p.m., Hurley.

Chess Club, 4-5 p.m., for stu-dents grades 6-12, IronwoodCarnegie Library. 906-932-0203.

Alcoholics Anonymous, 6 p.m.,Our Lady of Peace Catholic Church,Ironwood. area74.org.

Alcoholics Anonymous, 7 p.m.,Salem Lutheran Church, Ironwood.area74.org.

GovernmentGogebic County Road Com-

mission, 4:30 p.m., road commis-sion office, courthouse, Bessemer.

Bessemer Township Board, 5p.m., Bessemer Township Hall,Ramsay.

Wakefield-Marenisco SchoolBoard, 5 p.m., Marenisco TownshipHall.

Hurley School District annualmeeting and budget hearing, 5:30p.m. followed by monthly boardmeeting, high school library.

Ironwood Township Board,5:30 p.m., Ironwood Townshipoffices.

Wakefield City Council, 5:30p.m., Wakefield City Hall.

Ironwood City Commission,5:30 p.m., Ironwood Memorial Build-ing.

Bessemer Area School DistrictBoard of Education, 6 p.m., A.D.Johnston High School library.

Mercer School Board, 6 p.m.,Mercer K-12 School commons, Mer-cer, Wis.

Ironwood Area School DistrictBoard of Education, 6 p.m., LutherL. Wright School board room.

Western U.P. Board of Health, 6p.m., Tony’s Steakhouse, U.S. 41,L’Anse.

Tuesday, Oct. 29Free GED Tutoring, 9 a.m.-noon

and 6-10 p.m., Gogebic CountyCommunity Schools, 304 E. Iron St.,Bessemer. 906-663-4888.

Gogebic County Veterans Ser-vice Officer, 9:30-11:30 a.m., Iron-wood Memorial Building. 906-667-1110.

Alcoholics Anonymous, noon,Salem Lutheran Church, Ironwood.area74.org.

Drama Club, 3:30 p.m., gradessix-12, Ironwood Carnegie Library.906-932-0203.

Writer and Illustrator Club, 3:30p.m., for third through fifth grades,Ironwood Carnegie Library. 906-932-0203 to register.

Al-Anon, 7 p.m., Salem LutheranChurch, Ironwood.

Alcoholics Anonymous, 7 p.m.,Episcopal Church of the Transfigura-tion, Ironwood. area74.org.

GovernmentGogebic County Retirement

Commission, 4 p.m., courthouse,Bessemer.

Gogebic Community CollegeBoard, 4:30 p.m., room B-22 of theJacob Solin Business Center, GCC.

Iron County Board of Supervi-sors, 6 p.m., courthouse, Hurley.

Wednesday, Oct. 30Christian Men of the Northland,

6:30 a.m., Uptown Cafe, Ironwood.Treasure Room, 9 a.m.-noon, at

Iron County Food Pantry, 72 Michi-gan Ave., Montreal, Wis. 715-561-4450.

Alcoholics Anonymous, openmeeting, noon, Salem LutheranChurch, Ironwood. area74.org.

DOVE Support Group, noon-2p.m. 906-932-4990.

Iron County Veterans ServiceOfficer, 1-3 p.m., Mercer (Wis.)Town Hall. 715-561-2190.

Christian Kidz Club, 3:15-5p.m., Salem Lutheran Church, Iron-wood. 906-932-1510.

Christian Kids Club, 3:30-5p.m., all elementary children wel-come, Wesley United MethodistChurch, Ironwood. 906-932-3900.

Adult Education Class, 4-7p.m., high school library, Hurley K-12School. 715-561-4900, ext 258.

“Rethinking Guardianship:Facilitating Lifelong Self Determi-nation,” 5-8 p.m., Gogebic Commu-nity College, Ironwood. RSVP byOct. 23 to 906-483-0442 or michi-ganallianceforfamilies.org/rsvp.

Bessemer VFW CribbageLeague, 6 p.m., at the VFW.

Alcoholics Anonymous, 7:30p.m., Sharon Lutheran Church,Bessemer. area74.org.

GovernmentCity of Ironwood Public Infor-

mation Meeting, 5 p.m., on streetmillage vote, auditorium, IronwoodMemorial Building.

Thursday, Oct. 31Treasure Room, 9 a.m.-noon, at

Iron County Food Pantry, 72 Michi-gan Ave., Montreal, Wis. 715-561-4450.

Gogebic County Veterans Ser-vice Officer, 10:30-11:30 a.m.,Wakefield City Hall; 1-2 p.m.,Watersmeet Township; 2:45-3:15p.m., Marenisco Township. 906-667-1110.

Alcoholics Anonymous, noon,Salem Lutheran Church, Ironwood.area74.org.

Grief Support Group, 2 p.m.,The Inn Bed and Breakfast, Montre-al, Wis. 906-663-0308.

Kids’ Club, 6-7 p.m., for childrenin kindergarten-sixth grade, Haven-wood Baptist Church, 501 CopperSt., Hurley. 906-364-7420.

Alcoholics Anonymous, 6:30p.m., First Presbyterian Church,Hurley. area74.org.

iHeart Youth Ministries, 7 p.m.,teens to mid-20s; Lighthouse FaithCenter, Ironwood.

GovernmentThe Gogebic-Ontonagon

County Remonumentation PeerReview, 9 a.m., Gogebic CountyForestry Parks Commission, NaturalResources Center, Bessemer.

Submitted photo

WAKEFIELD-MARENISCOHigh School celebrated its 2013 Homecoming recently. Homecoming court is, from left: Paxton Wanink, Summer Curtis,Brianna Greenough, Lizzy Noble, Princess Hannah Cormier, King Austin Calderon, Queen Miranda Sibley, Prince Kevin Lane, Jacob Cox, DenverPikka, Nick Orlich and Sam Dean. Crown bearers are Mara Jacobson and Chase Lane.

Submitted photo

LAUREN BALLONE, left, and Kristin Pipho completed the Twin CitiesMarathon in Minneapolis Oct. 6 to raise money for Special OlympicsArea 39 in Wakefield. They ran in honor of their father and grandfather,John W. Ballone, who died earlier this year.

Could duck be the new chicken?By ELIZABETH KARMELFor The Associated Press

I recently spent two gloriousbarbecue-filled weeks in Austin,where I happily cooked for 1,200hungry folks at a food festival.While these events tends to be

crazy busy, they also involve afair amount of down time. In thiscase, that down time was while Ipatiently waited for 50 brisketsto slowly smoke to tender perfec-tion. To fill the time, I decided toexperiment with smoked duck.I’d had an idea to try some-

thing new that would make theducks cook faster with less tend-ing, and deliver a crispier skin. Iwas eager to try this. I alsodecided to up the flavor ante andcelebrate one of the classic tastesof summer by bathing the ducksin a spicy watermelon glaze.This is a technique and glaze

I frequently use with chicken. Ibutterfly the chicken so it openswide and flat. This helps it cookfast and produces a wonderfullycrispy skin. I wanted to know if Icould do the same with duck.Using poultry scissors, I

removed the backbone of theduck and flattened it like a book,twisting the wings behind thebreast (this is called “wings akimbo” and makes the duck layflat). I coated the duck with athin layer of olive oil and sprin-kled both sides with a classicTexas barbecue rub of salt,butcher-grind black pepper andenough cayenne to turn the ruba light pink color.Then I put the duck on the pit

and patiently waited to see whatwould happen. After a couplehours, the butterflied duck wasbeautifully caramelized, andalmost done, ready to beslathered with the spicy water-melon glaze. A few juicy passeswith my mop and another few

minutes in the pit, and the glazeset.I took the duck out, and let it

rest for about 10 minutes tomake sure it would be juicy.It was, no doubt, the best

duck I’d ever made or tasted. Itamazes me that a small changein the technique could make thatmuch of a difference, and I won-der why I never thought of doingit before. It also makes grillingduck so much more accessible foreveryone. It’s as easy as cookingchicken, yet far more impressive(and tasty!).Now, I’ll never cook duck

another way. It cooks faster,more evenly and renders the fatfrom the skin, leaving crispyduck skin and moist succulentmeat.This summer, duck will be my

new chicken!

———SPICY WATERMELON GLAZE

Start to finish: 10 minutesMakes about 1 cup1 cup seedless watermelon flesh1/2 cup apple jellyZest and juice of 1/2 lime1 teaspoon red pepper flakes1/2 teaspoon jalapeno hot saucePinch of saltIn a blender, puree the watermel-

on flesh until smooth. Set aside.In a small, heavy-bottomed

saucepan over medium, heat theapple jelly, stirring constantly, until itis melted. Add the watermelon juiceand stir to combine. Stir in the limezest and juice, red pepper flakes,jalapeno hot sauce and salt. Mixand taste, adjusting the seasoning ifdesired.

The glaze can be used warm orcooled. It can be refrigerated in atightly sealed jar for up to 2 days.

———GRILLED BUTTERFLIED

DUCK WITH SPICY WATERMELON GLAZE

Start to finish: 2 1/2 hoursServings: 46-pound duck1 teaspoon kosher salt1/2 teaspoon coarsely ground

black pepperPinch of cayenne pepperOlive oilSpicy watermelon glaze (recipe

above)Heat one side of a grill to medium

and the other side to low. Duringcooking, if you get flaring from theduck fat, you may need to turn offthe low side completely.

Use paper towels to pat dry theduck. Using poultry or kitchenshears, cut along each side of theduck’s backbone and remove it.Turn the duck breast-side up. Openthe 2 sides of the duck as if youwere opening a book, and lay it flat.Break the breast bone by firmlyapplying pressure and pressingdown. Tuck the wing tips under theupper wing and place on a sheetpan. Set aside.

In a small bowl, mix together thesalt, pepper and cayenne. Brush theduck all over with olive oil. Seasonlightly on both sides with the spicerub. Place the duck skin-side updirectly on the grill grates on thecooler side of the grill. Grill for about2 hours.

After 2 hours, brush the glaze onthe duck. Continue grilling for anoth-er 20 to 30 minutes, brushing withthe glaze 2 more times during thefinal grilling time. Grill until the juicesrun clear and the thigh registers 190F.

Remove the duck from the grilland brush with glaze one last time.Let the duck rest for 10 minutes. Cutthe duck into halves or quarters andserve.

Nutrition information per serv-ing (values are rounded to the near-est whole number): 1,050 calories;710 calories from fat (68 percent oftotal calories); 79 g fat (27 g saturat-ed; 0 g trans fats); 230 mg choles-terol; 30 g carbohydrate; 52 g pro-tein; 0 g fiber; 640 mg sodium.

Associated Press

Elizabeth Karmel’s grilled butterflied duck with spicy watermelonglaze can be served right from the grill.

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Mar-cia Wallace, who was the voiceof scoffing schoolteacher EdnaKrabappel on “The Simpsons”and played wisecracking recep-tionist Carol on “The BobNewhart Show” in the 1970s,has died. She was 70.“Simpsons” executive produc-

er Al Jean said in a statementSaturday that her “irreplaceable

character” — who contendedwith Bart Simpson’s constantantics — would be retired.Jean said he was “tremen-

dously saddened” when he foundout about “the passing of thebrilliant and gracious MarciaWallace. She was beloved by allat The Simpsons.”Jean went on to say that her

death was “a terrible loss for all

who had the pleasure of know-ing her.”The statement did not pro-

vide a date for her death, or acause.The longtime TV actress’

credits also included appear-ances on Candice Bergen’s“Murphy Brown” and roles on“Full House,” ‘’7th Heaven” and“The Young and the Restless.”

Marcia Wallace dies, voice of ‘ Simpsons’ Krabappel

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Sue Mizell, PublisherLarry Holcombe, Managing Editor

In Their Opinion

In the age of 30-second attack ads that sell candidatesno differently that laundry soap and cheeseburgers, mostlegislators surely felt they had no choice but to support a$100 million property tax cut approved last week.Anyone who balked surely knew what awaited them at

re-election time: “Call Senator Schmedley and ask himwhy he voted against cutting your property taxes!” Overand over and over.Bob Jauch of Poplar and Tim Cullen of Janesville, two

of the five Democratic state senators who voted againstthe tax cut, are retiring from the Senate next year. Twoothers, Fred Risser and Mark Miller, represent the safelyDemocratic city of Madison. The other, John Lehman ofRacine, doesn’t face re-election until 2016, but surely hewill be lambasted if he runs again in a previously swingdistrict redrawn in 2010 more favorable to Republicans.Lehman won last year in a re-count.People will argue that cutting taxes is what the people

want. No kidding. They’ll also argue that our propertytaxes are too high compared with other states. When alltaxes and fees are totaled, however, we move much closerto the national median in state and local spending.But if you don’t like high property taxes and “excessive

spending,” you won’t like this either: In the current 2013-15 state budget, we are borrowing about $2.05 billion.Servicing the state’s debt will consume about 5 percent ofstate revenues, above the historical target of 4 percent,according to the nonpartisan Wisconsin TaxpayersAlliance.As we all know, money we borrow from somebody else

has to be repaid with interest. The problem is putting allthat in a 30-second ad just doesn’t play as well asharanguing Sen. Schmedley for being against lower taxes.That $100 million tax cut pales in comparison to the

borrowing. Of that $2.05 billion we’ll borrow between nowand mid-2015, $1.64 billion will be repaid through gener-al fund dollars. So while we will enjoy a $100 millionproperty tax cut that could be described as modest at best($33 for the typical homeowner), we’ll be spending 16times as much paying principal and interest on previousstate spending, essentially out of the same pot of money.The majority could argue with some conviction that the

tax cut is a thank-you to taxpayers after the state fin-ished the last fiscal year with a surplus of $759 million inthe state’s main account, up from an earlier estimated$670 million balance used to plan the current 2013-15budget, according to state figures.Tax cut proponents might also sniff that those who

don’t want the $33 can donate it back to their school dis-trict or favorite charity.But lowering our borrowing saves us money now and in

the future. We all feel the pinch in our own budgets whentoo much goes out of our paycheck to cover the mortgage,car payment, etc. Collectively, borrowing more to buildand fix roads while pocketing $33 per homeowner issmart politics but short-sighted budgeting.But come next year, the message will be clear and

incessant: “Vote for me ... I cut your property taxes.” Peo-ple like hearing that.They don’t like, “I voted to borrow more that you’ll have

to pay back.” Besides, that doesn’t roll off the tonguenearly as well, and most voters wouldn’t understand any-way.Go nuts with the $33 ... renters don’t qualify.

—Leader-Telegram, Eau Claire, Wis.

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PUBLISHER EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT/ACCOUNTINGSue Mizell Jenna MartillaMANAGING EDITOR CLASSIFIED/LEGAL ADVERTISINGLarry Holcombe Trisha KotconADVERTISING DIRECTOR LEAD PRESSGary Pennington Bill WestermanCIRCULATIONMarissa Casari

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Award Winning Newspaper

PUBLISHER EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT/ACCOUNTINGSue Mizell Jenna MartillaMANAGING EDITOR CLASSIFIED/LEGAL ADVERTISINGLarry Holcombe Trisha KotconADVERTISING DIRECTOR LEAD PRESSGary Pennington Bill WestermanCIRCULATIONMarissa Casari

906-932-2211 • 800-236-2887 • Fax 906-932-5358

DAILY GLOBEyourdailyglobe.com

State borrowing risesas tax cut lauded in

Wisconsin

OPINION THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM4 l MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2013

DAILY GLOBEAnother Halloween is now upon us, with

thoughts of treats, costumes and scary mon-sters going through our minds.This time of year is always really fun. It’s

nice to see people be creative with their cos-tumes and see all the kids in your neighbor-hood walking around town asking for candy.As with many holidays, I have wonderful

memories of trick-or-treating with family,visiting relatives and friends to receivetreats and parading around school in my cos-tume.As I’ve gotten older, I don’t dress up any-

more, hardly ever carve a pumpkin and Imost definitely do not go trick-or-treating. IfI went to my neighbors’ doors at age 24, I’msure they would be more likely to call thecops then give me chocolate.One of the best parts of Halloween was

the rare trick-or-treating without snow onthe ground. Every year it was a challenge tofind a costume that was not only warm, butcould also be accessorized with a snowsuit or

boots. It isn’t easy finding a “lady-like” way to

climb over a massive snowbank whiledressed as a princess.Each year when it snows, I always feel

bad for the kids and parents who put a lot oftime and energy in their costumes, only tohave them covered up by 17 layers to wardoff frost bite.And with the falling flakes, many of our

minds skip right over Halloween and

Thanksgiving and go straight to Christmas.I myself am guilty of this, and I’ve alreadypurchased gifts for people because the snowgot me thinking about wrapping paper, treesand holiday cheer.The best way to handle the oncoming

depression from earlier snow is to beat it atits own game. Can’t find a store-bought cos-tume to help keep away the cold? Try beingcreative and use the snow to your advantage.Dress up as the abominable snowman,

skier or snowmobile driver for Halloween ifthe snow isn’t cooperating. And if worse comes to worst, rock your

costume underneath with the nine sweatersyour mom made you put on. Who cares if noone can see it. Either way, you’re getting freecandy, so enjoy it while you can, with snowor not. Because by the time your my age, get-ting free candy doesn’t happen, and if youask for it, it’s just plain creepy.So be safe, don’t gorge yourself on sweet

treats and have a happy Halloween!

Happy Halloween, so or not

The Associated PressHighlights in history on this date1492 - Christopher Columbus

discovers Cuba on his first voyageto New World.1636 - Harvard College is found-

ed in Massachusetts.1708 - Sweden’s King Charles

XII takes Mohilev, Russia, andinvades Ukraine.1793 - U.S. inventor Eli Whitney

applies for a patent for the cottongin, used to separate green seedsfrom staple-cotton.1836 - Federation of Peru and

Bolivia is proclaimed.1886 - The Statue of Liberty, a

gift from the people of France, isdedicated in New York Harbor byU.S. President Grover Cleveland.1890 - The German East Africa

Company cedes its territorial rightsto Germany.1916 - Australian voters reject

conscription for World War I by nar-row margin.1919 - Congress enacts the Vol-

stead Act, which provides forenforcement of Prohibition, the banon alcoholic beverages, over U.S.President Woodrow Wilson’s veto.1922 - Fascism comes to Italy as

Benito Mussolini takes control ofthe government.1940 - Italy invades Greece dur-

ing World War II.1956 - Israeli troops invade Sinai

Peninsula, later to be joined byBritish and French forces, followingEgypt’s seizure of the Suez Canalfrom European control.1958 - The Roman Catholic

patriarch of Venice, AngeloGiuseppe Roncalli, is elected pope,taking the name John XXIII.1962 - Soviet Premier Nikita

Khrushchev announces he hasordered the withdrawal of Sovietmissiles from Cuba.1965 - Pope Paul VI issues a

decree absolving Jews of collectiveguilt for the crucifixion of JesusChrist.

1971 - House of Commons votesin favor of Britain’s entry into Euro-pean Common Market.1974 - Arab heads of state,

including Jordan’s King Hussein,issue declaration calling for creationof independent Palestinian state.1977 - U.N. General Assembly

censures Israel for establishing set-tlements in occupied Arab territo-ries, calling action illegal and dam-aging to peace efforts.1983 - The U.N. General Assem-

bly approves a resolution calling onVietnam to withdraw its occupationforces from Cambodia.1989 - More than 10,000 rally in

protest of the government on the71st anniversary of Czechoslo-vakia’s independence; scores arebeaten or detained.1998 - Hurricane Mitch pauses

over Honduras with 205 kph (120mph) winds, sweeping awaybridges, flooding neighborhoods

and killing hundreds of people.2001 - U.S. President George W.

Bush announces creation of a For-eign Terrorist Tracking Task Forceto find and deport foreigners whoare in the United States illegally.2007 - First lady Cristina Fernan-

dez claims victory in Argentina’spresidential election to become thefirst woman elected to the post.2011 - The Commonwealth

countries agree to change cen-turies-old rules of succession thatput sons on the British throneahead of any older sisters. So anyhypothetical daughter of PrinceWilliam and Kate Middleton — nowknown as Catherine, Duchess ofCambridge — would have a primeplace in history: the first princess tobeat out any younger brothers andaccede to the throne.2012 - Syria’s air force fires mis-

siles and drops barrel bombs onrebel strongholds while opposition

fighters attack regime positions,flouting a U.N.-backed cease-firethat was supposed to quiet fightingover a long holiday weekend butnever took hold.

Today’s BirthdaysEvelyn Waugh, British novelist

(1903-1966); Ivan Turgenev, Rus-sian writer (1818-1883); AugusteEscoffier, chef par excellence(1846-1935); Francis Bacon, Britishpainter (1909-1992); Dr. JonasSalk, U.S. doctor, developer of firstpolio vaccine (1914-1995); BillGates, U.S. chairman of Microsoft(1955--); Julia Roberts, U.S.actress (1967--); Ben Harper, rocksinger (1969--).

Thought for TodayLife is easier to take than you’d

think; all that is necessary is toaccept the impossible, do withoutthe indispensable and bear theintolerable — Kathleen Norris,American author (1880-1960).

CortneyOfstad

The Daily Globe welcomes letters from readers. Letters should dealwith matters of current, public interest. We will publish as many as possi-ble; however, we reserve the right to reject any letter and to edit those thatare to be published. Please avoid name-calling or personal attacks. Letters should be no longer than 400 words. They must be signed by

the author, and an address and phone number must be included for veri-fication purposes. Letters may be mailed to Letters to the Editor, Daily Globe, 118 E.

McLeod Ave., Ironwood MI 49938; emailed to:[email protected];or faxed to 906-932-5358.

Briefly

Questionable wolfhunt continuesTo the Editor:There is no scientific, biologi-

cal, ethical or economic reason tohunt wolves in Michigan. Hunt-ing will not instill fear in wolvesor increase social tolerance.Hunting wolves destroys packstructure and may even causewolf conflicts to increase. Follow-ing the inaugural wolf hunt inWisconsin, there have been 27wolf attacks so far this yearagainst hunting dogs, a nearrecord high.Contrary to a press release by

state Sen. Tom Casperson, D-Escanaba, (Daily Globe, Oct. 24),

wolves are already managedthrough a wolf management planwhich includes both non-lethaland lethal measures and com-pensation for producers who loselivestock to wolves. Caspersoncites three recent livestockattacks near Engadine, but failsto mention that permits havebeen issued to kill any wolves onthese properties.Casperson cites a poll that

showed support for a wolf hunt.However, the question asked wasprefaced with misleading infor-mation, stating in part, “Thenumber of wolves has gottenlarge enough that claims arebeing made that the wolves areattacking other animals and posea threat to people in small ruralareas and should be reduced innumber … .” This tactic, known

as a push poll, is a form of tele-marketing-based propagandaand rumor mongering, mas-querading as a poll as false ormisleading information is provid-ed to influence the response.Between January-August

2012, there were 31 verified wolf-livestock depredation events inMichigan; however for the sameperiod this year there wereseven. The evidence is clear;when conflicts occur they mustbe addressed by promptly target-ing the offending animals whichis being done.This last spring 250,000 sig-

natures of registered Michiganvoters, including those fromevery U.P. county were certified,allowing voters to decide in theNovember 2014 election, if thewolf should be designated as a

game animal. However, Casper-son circumvented the public byintroducing a second bill, whichbecame law (PA 21) and set thestage for a wolf hunt to begin thisyear. PA 21 takes away the rightof citizens to challenge wildlifelaws by allowing the NaturalResource Commission, a politi-cally appointed body, to desig-nate species as game.Although we cannot stop this

year’s wolf hunt from proceeding,a second ballot initiative to over-turn PA 21 has begun. If youwould like to sign a petition orhelp in any way, contact me at906-988-2892 or visit keep-wolvesprotected.com.Fear, hatred and politics are

not valid reasons to hunt wolves.Nancy Warren

Ewen

Letter

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MADISON, Wis. (AP) — MaryBurke's campaign to be the firstwoman elected Wisconsin gover-nor comes as Republican incum-bent Scott Walker deals with lag-ging poll numbers among womenand a continued attack fromDemocrats that the GOP doesn'tcare about female voters.It is not clear yet how much

Burke is willing to capitalize onthat potential weakness. She hasdownplayed gender in commentsmade in the opening weeks of hercampaign, while another poten-tial female Democratic candi-date, state Sen. Kathleen Vine-hout, sees it as a key issue."I believe this campaign is

about who the people of Wiscon-sin believe will provide the bestleadership to lead Wisconsin for-ward," said Burke, a former TrekBicycle Corp. executive and stateCommerce Department secre-tary. "I don't think this is goingto be an issue based on gender,one way or the other, but ofcourse I would be very proud toblaze that trail."In contrast, Vinehout said

health care and education will bekey issues in the race, andfemale candidates are betterpositioned than men to attackWalker on those topics."The tone of the state would

change if we had a woman gover-

nor," Vinehoutsaid.W a l k e r ' s

c a m p a i g nspokesman saidthe governor'srecord appealsto all voters."Wisconsin

has turned thecorner throughGovernor Walk-er's leadershipwith lower

taxes, more jobs, and realreform," spokesman JonathanWetzel said. "We're confidentthat all voters want to continuemoving Wisconsin forward, andhave no desire to return to thefailed policies of the past."A Marquette University Law

School poll released in Julyshowed a significant gender gapin Walker's support. Fifty-fourpercent of men, compared to 43percent of women, approved ofthe governor's job performance.More women than men — 52 per-cent to 39 percent — disap-proved.With Walker likely to face a

woman in the general election,the question now is, what does hedo to win more women to hisside, pollster Charles Franklinsaid."The obvious assumption is

that a female candidate bringswomen even more strongly tothem," Franklin said. "There issome truth to that, but it'salways important to realize thatwomen as a group are not homo-geneous. We do have morewomen who lean Democraticrather than Republican, overall.That's one of the foundations ofthe gender gap."Deciding on which candidate

to support in any election basedon gender is disingenuous, saidPam Stevens, of Kenosha, vicepresident of the Women Republi-cans of South East Wisconsin."To me voting for somebody

because of their gender is thesame as voting for somebodybecause of their race," Stevenssaid. "I don't believe in that. Ibelieve in voting for the personbecause of where they stand."Stevens, who supports Walk-

er, said Burke will have a hardtime convincing people that hehasn't done a good job as gover-nor and should be replaced."I think the people of Wiscon-

sin will be smart enough to seewe are moving ahead as a state,"she said.Walker signed legislation in

July that requires women seek-ing abortions to have ultra-sounds first. The law alsorequires doctors who perform

abortions to have admitting priv-ileges at nearby hospitals.Planned Parenthood of Wiscon-sin has challenged the restric-tions in court.That law and others, includ-

ing one repealing equal pay pro-tections for women and anothercutting money for women'shealth services, led Democrats toargue that Republicans werewaging a "war on women."EMILY's List, a well-funded,

pro-Democratic group that backscandidates who support abortionrights, endorsed Burke thisweek. The group spent nearly $5million on Democrat TammyBaldwin's race for the U.S. Sen-ate last year.Burke told news organizations

this month that "women shouldhave the freedom to make theirown health choices," but wascareful to avoid getting intodetails about her views on abor-tion restrictions. Vinehout is forabortion rights, and says abor-tion should be "legal, safe andrare."No woman from a mainstream

political party has made it past agubernatorial primary in Wis-consin, but Burke's candidacycomes a year after Baldwinbecame the first woman electedto the U.S. Senate from Wiscon-sin. Baldwin said Burke's history

as a job creator will be a moresignificant factor in her race thanthe fact that she's a woman."I'm very pleased that the

Democrats have a very strongcandidate in Mary Burke whobrings real life experience in jobcreation and running a businessto her candidacy and somebodywho will stand in stark contrastto Scott Walker and his record onjob creation," Baldwin said.

AREA / STATETHE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2013 l 5

H club to Mercer, either as aleader with a commitment of upto 20 days per year, or volunteersas project leaders with an area ofexpertise to share with youth, beit carpentry or ice fishing. Klemme said he only needs

four interested youth to start aclub. With this year as the 100thanniversary of the 4-H in Wiscos-nin, Klemme is seeking to enroll100 youth in Iron County, upfrom 60 last year. “It's a lot more than cows and

plows,” Klemme said. Past pro-jects have included robotics, andcan include any hobbies or inter-ests that youth may have. Road to Recovery is seeking

volunteer drivers for cancerpatients, for more information,contact Carol Decker at 715-561-2342.Mercer Lions and Lioness are

seeking volunteers, with severalevents slated to provide localassistance, from their afterschool reading buddies programto an Easter Egg Hunt for chil-dren, as well as their camp forchildren. For more information,contact president Sulo Wainio at715-543-2110.Iron and Gogebic County Sal-

vation Army is seeking bellringers for the upcoming holidayseason. To volunteer in GogebicCounty, contact Virginia LaFaveat 715-476-3572, and for theMercer area contact Norb Bros-mer at 715-476-2168. Mercer Public Library and

Friends of the Library are seek-ing volunteers for fundraisers aswell as working in the library.Friends were able to raise$60,000 toward the recent expan-sion, said library director TeresaSchmidt. For more information,call her at 715-476-2366.Mercer Health and Wellness

program is seeking volunteers,especially for their HeartHealthy Brunch in February,

when it will need help setting upfor the event, cooking and takingdown after the event.The program is doubling the

size of their community gardennext year — adding 17 more beds— if funding can be secured. Thegroup needs donations of topsoil,as well as help putting up fencingand other gardening work, com-mittee member Gerri Reynoldssaid. The wellness programs offered

include the new pickleball ses-sions at the community center,as well as strength training. Formore information, call Reynoldsat 715-493-7706. The Church of Nazarene is

seeking volunteers to paint thechurch next summer, Rev. KittySchwanke said, because of thechurch being “the first thing peo-ple see when they come to Mer-cer, and the last thing they seewhen they leave,” due to it's loca-tion on U.S. 51. Schwanke is also seeking vol-

unteers and members to assist incleaning the attic of the church.Contact Schwanke at 715-476-3766. Mercer Area Historical Soci-

ety is seeking assistance withnewsletters, cataloging items,and manning the society's officein the summer to keep it open forvisitors. For more information,contact board member ClemettaEvenson at 715-476-3462. Lupine Junefest Committee,

Mercer Downtown and Commu-nity Development Committee,and Mercer Regional Bike/HikeCommittee are seeking volun-teers and committee members. “We work together for com-

mon goals,” Toni Sendra said.Next summer's Junefest will bethe eighth annual. For moreinformation, contact Sendra at715-904-8899. The Woods and Blooms Gar-

den club is seeking assistance incleaning up County J, as well as

maintaining the Pocket Park,and cleaning up gardens, GinnyKemplin said. “Think spring.”For more information, contactthe club at P.O. Box 345, Mercer.Mercer's American Legion

Auxiliary is seeking members,although members must have ahusband or parent that has

served in the military, saidKathy Hannemann. “We supportpatriotism by teaching thirdgraders about flags, sponsoringGirl's State, which teaches themhow government works.” Otheractivities include fundraising forveterans associations with pro-jects like an art festival. Hanne-

man said there is a new recogni-tion that art is very helpful forthose suffering with post trau-matic stress disorder. The auxiliary also oversees

the disposition of old flags. Formore information, contact BettySnyder at P.O. Box 374, Mercer,or at [email protected].

VolunteersFrom page 1

then on the committee. It's beenclose to 20 years."Relay for Life raises money

for the American Cancer Soci-ety's research to cure cancer."Cancer is so prevalent in my

family, as in many others," Lillarsaid. "This gives us a way tohelp. Instead of that feeling ofhelplessness, this is somethingpeople can do."The meeting is open to the

public, and Lillar said peoplewho would like to participate inthe Relay can start raisingmoney at any time."You can start now if you

want to," Lillar said. "It goes tosuch a great cause."For more information about

Relay for Life, the planningmeeting or joining a team, callLillar at 906-229-5263.

RelayFrom page 1

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Thank You To Our Current Sponsors ofNewspaper In Education (NIE)

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Katie Perttunen/Daily Globe

NEAL KLEMME, Iron County UW-Extension youth development agent, recruits volunteers to help start a Mer-cer 4-H program on Saturday at a volunteer fair at Mercer's Community Center.

Burke downplays gender gap in Wisconsin governor’s race

MaryBurke

Police search landfill forclues on missing woman MILWAUKEE (AP) — Police

are hoping to find evidence in aMenomonee Falls landfill aboutthe disappearance of a Milwau-kee woman who has been miss-ing for over two weeks.Because the investigation is

ongoing, the Milwaukee PoliceDepartment is releasing fewdetails. Police found nothing inthe landfill on Saturday, but Lt.Mark Stanmeyer says the searchresumed Sunday.Twenty-seven-year-old Kelly

Dwyer's mother reported hermissing Oct. 12 after she failedto show up for work.

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EDUCATION THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM6 l MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2013

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Robyn Reports: The Nutty Neighborhood Block PartyChapter 7: A Spitting Dispute

Editor’s note: This weekly install-ment of a serial story for young people isprovided in part by the Newspaper Asso-ciation of America Foundation. This ischapter 7 of 10.

By STACY TORNIOThe story so far: During the block

party’s seed-spitting contest, Henry hasjust accused Sarah of cheating.

The crowd starts buzzing with whis-pers. “Sarah the seed-spitting champion

is a cheater?” “I always thought she looked suspi-

cious.”“So that’s how she did it all those

years!” Mrs. Rogers walks up to Henry.

Everyone is watching. “What are you talking about?” she

asks him. “This!” Henry says. He picks up Sarah’s glass of water.

Each spitter is allowed to drink waterbetween spits. “You’d better tell me what’s going

on, Henry,” Mrs. Rogers says. “This isn’t water,” Henry says. “This

is soda. Sarah’s been drinking soda tobuild up more saliva. She’s a cheater!” The crowd starts buzzing again.

Sarah is a tough competitor, but I don’tbelieve she’s a cheater. “Wait a minute,” I say. “There’s one

way to find out.” “How?” Mrs. Rogers asks. “Taste it,” I say. “Yeah,” Sarah says. “Taste it.” Mrs. Rogers takes a drink. Then she

looks at Henry.

“No,” shesays. “Sarah isnot a cheater.This is water.” “But … I

thought … I…” Henrystammers. He knows

he’s lost thebattle. The second

round begins.Sarah spitseven farther.So does Henry.They are clearly the top two spitters inthe neighborhood. They flip a coin at the beginning of

the third round. Sarah loses the toss.She has to spit first. I look around theback yard. The crowd is really big now. Mrs. Rogers gives Sarah her first

seed. Sarah swishes it around in hermouth. After one minute, she spits itthrough the air. It lands on the faredge of the blue tarp. The crowdcheers. “We’d better get another tarp,” Mrs.

Rogers says. “Someone might set a newrecord.”They mark Sarah’s seed and add

another tarp. When Henry gets hisseed, he rolls it around in his mouth. Ican see him biting it with his teeth. Helooks mad. “SPIT,” Mrs. Rogers says. Henry’s seed soars across the back

yard. It lands just outside of Sarah’s.The crowd cheers again. When Sarahspits her second seed, it barely goes 5feet, far short of the first seed.

“Awww,” the crowd says in unison. Henry laughs. “Ha!” he says. Sarah looks worried. Henry spit his

second seed even farther than the first. “How do you like that?” he asks. Sarah looks out at the crowd. Then

she looks over at her sister. “You’ve got this, Sarah,” Madison

says. “Just pretend we’re practicing athome.” Sarah puts the seed in her mouth.

She closes her eyes. “That’s right, Sarah,” her sister says

under her breath. After a minute, Sarah opens her

eyes. “SPIT!” Mrs. Rogers says. Sarah doesn’t even hesitate. She

grabs onto the deck railing and lungesforward. The seed flies past Henry’sfirst two seeds. The crowd goes wild. Henry takes his third seed and

grinds it with his teeth. When it’s time,he throws his head sideways and theseed takes off. It lands inches behind Sarah’s. Or

was that inches in front of Sarah’s?Which seed belongs to which spitter?The crowd doesn’t know how to react.No one is sure. “I WIN, I WIN, I WIN!” Henry

shouts. “Wait a minute,” Mrs. Rogers says.

“We’re going to have to take a closerlook at this.” She walks up to the seeds. She turns

back to Mr. Allen. He is the officialjudge. “Who won?” she asks him. He shrugs

his shoulders. Mrs. Rogers looks backat Sarah and Henry. “Maybe we should do one more

round,” Sarah says. “No way,” Henry says, grinding his

teeth. “I’m the winner. That’s myseed,” he insists, pointing to the far-thest seed.“Wait a minute,” I say to Mrs.

Rogers. “I don’t think we need to doanother round.”

“You don’t know anything,” Henrysays to me. Now I don’t feel bad that Sarah is

my favorite spitter. I walk up to thetwo seeds and examine them. Yep, justwhat I thought. “I know exactly who the winner is,”

I announce.

Illustrated by Roel Wielinga

Katie Perttunen/Daily Globe

WASHINGTON ELEMENTARY awarded “Student of the Month” certificates and prizes to students on Oct. 18.Students qualified by “being caught being good,” head teacher Diana Hansen said, and exhibiting: “Besse-mer’s Best qualities: Be responsible, be respectful, and be safe.” Honorees include, from left, first row: Ary-onna Ozzello, Emma Choronzy, Katie Talaska, Dawson Sackmann and Noah Busch; and second row: LabaTalo, Eliza Stone, Isaak Fyle, Cameron Sanquist and Blue Leatham. Corah Stimac is missing from the photo.

Submitted photo

THE ONTONAGONArea Schools Junior High recently elected its student council. Members include, from left,first row: Noah Kaarto, Holly Wardynski and Henry Menigoz; and second row: Jaden Weisinger, Alora Marks,Taylor Goard, Kinsey Weisinger, Daniel Jenkins and Tyler Dean.The student council’s first task was to planand run the school’s 34th annual Halloween Carnival on Oct. 31.

Free career seminars offered by WITCASHLAND, Wis. — Wisconsin Indianhead Technical College is offering a

free Career Seminar on Tuesday, Nov. 5 at 4 p.m. at WITC-Ashland. WITC Career Seminars are designed to assist individuals in selecting the

most appropriate career and or educational options available. WITC CareerSpecialist Dan Miller will facilitate this fun and informational seminar.

The career seminar is for those who are graduating from high school,considering choices for a first career, thinking about changing careers orwant to get ahead in a present career. Career seminars are held the firstTuesday of each month at WITC-Ashland.

To register for the free career seminar, call WITC-Ashland at 715-682-4591.

Career Day offered for high school studentsASHLAND, Wis. — Wisconsin Indianhead Technical College is hosting

the ninth annual career day on its Ashland Campus. “Experience 4 Success”is Wednesday, Nov. 6, at 9:20-11:30 a.m. or 10:45 a.m.-1:10 p.m. 

The event brings area high school students to WITC-Ashland to explorecareer programs through hands-on demonstrations and discussions withinstructors and current WITC students. Career Specialist Dan Miller will bevisiting area schools to help students register for the event. 

High school-aged home-schooled or private school students are also wel-come to attend the event.

For more information, please contact WITC Student Services at 715-682-4591 or visit witc.edu/ashland.

ASHLAND, Wis. — The Sig-urd Olson Environmental Insti-tute at Northland College isundergoing a renaissance, ofsorts.Under the leadership of Exec-

utive Director Mark Peterson, inthe last year alone, the SOEI hashired three new staff membersand implemented dynamic pro-jects for watershed protectionand restoration, lake manage-ment and environmental analy-sis.In May, SOEI and Northland

College opened the AppliedResearch and EnvironmentalLaboratory, a commercial lab toserve the region in water analy-sis. This summer alone, SOEIemployed 10 students andtrained them in the field and inthe laboratory. To enhance these programs

and expand hands-on environ-mental education experiences,Xcel Energy recently awardedthe SOEI $11,500. The Xcelgrant will also support the XcelEnergy Scholarship and theApostle Island School project.“These funds are especially

helpful to SOEI and NorthlandCollege now as we are buildingout new programs for the Insti-tute in northern waters, wildlifeand wilderness,” Peterson said. Peterson has also bolstered

staple SOEI programs like theLake Superior BinationalForum, the Chequamegon BayArea Partnership, LoonWatchand the Sigurd Olson NatureWriting Awards, as well as reen-ergizing SOEI’s commitment tobringing speakers on a range oftopics this fall from mercury towolves to pygmy chimpanzees.The common thread running

through Institute programs isthe desire to protect and sustainthe natural resources and sensi-tive ecology of the Great Lakesbasin, Peterson said.

Sigurd OlsonInstituteawarded

funds

ONTONAGON — Ontonagonstudent radio station WOAS-FMpersonnel recently received theirstation T-shirts.“It has become a tradition to

award senior radio station per-sonnel their “colors” early in theyear so they can display their sta-tion affiliation proudly while theyare still around,” said instructorKen Raisanen.The shirts read “#LBH” on the

back for the Lets Be Honest show

that airs on WOAS-FM 88.5 dailyfrom 10-11 a.m.The program was conceived

last year by former DJ TomCroteau who has since graduatedand moved on to Northern Michi-gan University. The remainingcrew jumped on the chance to con-tinue the program as part of theirsenior project school/communityservice project. The show offersinsights into a variety of school,community and world topics.

Submitted photo

Luke Pattison, from left, Jeremy MacRae, Tony Roberts, Logan Graffand Brady Guilbault display their Ontonagon student radio stationWOAS-FM senior shirts. The shirts read “#LBH” on the back for the LetsBe Honest show that airs on WOAS-FM 88.5 daily from 10-11 a.m.

Ontonagon student radio offers insights

Briefly

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LANSING (AP) — Green is agreat school. Red is bad one.Lime, yellow and orange are in-between.Michigan's new color-coded

school accountability systemalready could be up for an over-haul just two months after itsdebut. Some lawmakers sayschools should get A-F gradesjust like students do, so parentsand others can easily understandperformance."It's not clear, it's not concise

and it's not transparent. Nobodyknows what a lime green means,but everybody knows what an Ameans," said House EducationCommittee Chairwoman LisaPosthumus Lyons, an AltoRepublican who is expected tostart hearings this week on hersoon-to-be introduced legislationto switch to letter grades.Letter grades — implemented

in roughly 15 states — seemintuitive on their face since

schools are used to evaluatingstudents with letter grades oftheir own. The tricky part isdetermining how the rankingsare calculated and making surethey are credible.Indeed, Lyons' bills would do

more than change the perfor-mance scorecard from colors toletters. She said she wants tochange the formula so thatgrades "accurately reflect"schools' quality.In the 2012-13 scores released

in August, some schools wererated red despite being seen astraditionally high-performing,while other schools got greenscores despite having no perfor-mance data because they werenew, according to critics.Another complaint is that

Michigan's separate top-to-bot-tom percentile ranking ofschools, which is part of itsaccountability system under awaiver from federal no Child Left

Behind requirements, closelycorrelates with student povertyrates. And others complain thatthe top-to-bottom list and sepa-rate color grades are not aligned,confusing educators and the pub-lic.One goal of the House bills is

to eliminate the top-to-bottomranking and replace it with A-Fgrades so there is a single sys-tem. That does not mean thatdesignations such as "reward,"''priority" and "focus" schoolswould necessarily go awaybecause they are in the state'swaiver to the U.S. government.But priority schools in the bot-tom 5 percent and subject tostate intervention could be "F''schools. Reward schools in thetop 5 percent could be "A''schools.

AREA / STATETHE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2013 l 7

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In Memory of Herbert E.Swanbeck

who passed away 4 years agoon October 28th

There’s a lot of comfortin the thought

That sorrow, grief and woeAre sent into our lives

sometimesTo help our souls to grow.Another hill and sometimes

a mountainBut just when you reach

the peakYour weariness is lifted and

You find the peace you seek.

Sadly missed by his family

In TributeBernard D. EppoliteTUCSON, Ariz. — Bernard D. Eppolite, 97, of Tucson, for-

merly of Bessemer, Mich., died Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2013, in Tuc-son. He was born May 30, 1916, in Bessemer, son of the lateArnold and Mary (Masnaghetti) Eppolite.On March 14, 1938, he was united in marriage with Eileen

Provencher at St. Ambrose Catholic Church in Ironwood,Mich. They resided in Bessemer until 1973, and then moved toTucson. For 40 years he lived in the same home in Tucson, inthe Far Horizons Mobile Home Park. Eileen preceded him indeath on June 4, 1991.Bernard was a member of St. Sebastian Catholic Church in

Bessemer, where he was also an usher. In Tucson, he was amember of St. Francis de Sales Catholic Church.Bernard had been employed in iron mining for twenty years.

He also worked for the Bessemer Creamery.Bernard loved fishing, traveling, and gardening. He loved

sports, but after all the major league strikes he quit watchingprofessional sports and turned to college games. His favoriteteam was the University of Arizona. He was kind and alwayswilling to help out his neighbors. Whether it was a trip to thedoctors or to the grocery store, Bernie was there.He was a life member of the Knights of Columbus.He is survived by two daughters, Karen (Larry) Thomas of

Colorado Springs, Colo., and Denise (Bud) Korich of Leomin-ster, Mass.; nine grandchildren; 17 great-grandchildren, andnine great-great-grandchildren.In addition to his wife and parents, Bernard was preceded

in death by a son, David; a daughter, Janice; and five brothers,Hugo, Charles, Vincent, Frankie and Louis.Mass of Christian Burial will be held on Wednesday, Oct.

30, 2013, at 1 p.m. at St. Sebastian Catholic Church in Besse-mer. Father Ben Hasse will be the celebrant. Visitation will beheld Tuesday evening from 5-7 p.m. at the Frick-ZielinskiFuneral Home in Bessemer, with a prayer service at 5:30, andfrom noon until the time of the service at the church. Burial will be in the Hillcrest Cemetery in Bessemer. Pall-

bearers will be David, Michael and Gary Thomas; Bruce Eppo-lite; Todd Korich; and Nicholas Thomas.Arrangements are by Range Funeral Service and Cremato-

ry, Frick-Zielinski Funeral Home in Bessemer.

Shirley SextonCRYSTAL FALLS, Mich. — Shirley Sexton, 82, of Bruce

Crossing, passed away Saturday, Oct. 26, 2013, at the IronCounty Medical Care Facility in Crystal Falls.Arrangements are pending with the Cane Funeral Home,

Bruce Crossing Chapel.

Charles J. 'Chuck' CarpenedoWAKEFIELD, Mich. — Charles J. “Chuck” Carpenedo, 86,

of Bessemer, died Wednesday, Oct. 23, 2013, in Wakefield. Hewas born March 14, 1927, in Bessemer, son of the late Peterand Ann (Montesi) Carpenedo.He grew up in Bessemer and attended

Bessemer schools, graduating from the A.D.Johnston High School with the class of 1944.He was drafted into the U.S. Navy. Followinghis discharge, he returned to Bessemer.On July 8, 1950, he was united in marriage

with Betty A. Certano at St. SebastianCatholic Church in Bessemer by Father Har-ris. Chuck and Betty then moved to southernCalifornia, where Chuck drove truck and usedhis GI Bill to attend aircraft mechanics'school. He worked for North American Rockwell

and Rockadyne Corporation. He eventuallybecame crew leader. He worked on the Apollorockets, which took the U.S. astronauts to the moon.In 1965, the family moved back to Bessemer, where Chuck

and Betty joined C & M Oil Company to take over his father’sshare of the partnership. In 1980, the Carpenedos took oversole ownership of C & M, and their children Jim and Deejoined the company. Chuck was part of the family businessuntil his retirement in 1989.Chuck enjoyed music, and he played his trumpet in several

dance bands and in Marty’s Goldenaires. He and Betty lovedto dance whenever they could. They also traveled with seniortour groups to many parts of the country. They were active members of the Paisano Club, and Chuck

was an officer in the club. A gracious host, Chuck enjoyed family celebrations and was

concerned that everyone was comfortable and well fed. He is survived by his wife, Betty, of Bessemer; his son Jim

(Shirley) of Bessemer; his daughter, Dee, of Bessemer; twogranddaughters, Susan of San Francisco, Calif., and Karen ofMauston, Wisc.; a brother, John (Lee) of San Jose, Calif.; a sis-ter, Nancy (Carlton) Gotta-Rudolph of Ironwood; and a nieceand three nephews.In addition to his parents, Chuck was preceded in death by

a brother, Julius.Cremation has taken place at the Range Crematory in Hur-

ley. Mass of Christian Burial will be held on Thursday, Oct. 31,

2013, at 11 a.m. at St. Sebastian Catholic Church in Bessemer.Father Ben Hasse will be the celebrant. A luncheon will followin the church hall. The family will receive friends on Thursdayfrom 10 a.m. until the time of the Mass. In lieu of flowers, memorials in Chuck's memory are pre-

ferred to the Mayo Clinic Alzheimer's Disease Research Cen-ter, 200 First St. SW, FF2-700, Rochester, MN 55905.Arrangements are by Range Funeral Service and Cremato-

ry, Ketola-Burla Funeral Home.

Charles J.“Chuck”

Carpenedo1927 — 2013

For reprints or lamination services, contact the Daily Globe at 906-932-2211

Michigan considers grading schools from A to F

Sand mining bill sponsorsays it needs changes

MILWAUKEE (AP) — Thechief Senate sponsor of a bill thatwould weaken local control overWisconsin's booming sand min-ing industry says his legislationneeds work and he doesn't expectthe Senate will take it up beforenext year.The bill is supported by com-

panies that mine and process sil-ica sand that's used by the oiland gas drilling industry forhydraulic fracturing.But Sen. Tom Tiffany, R-

Hazelhurst, told the MilwaukeeJournal Sentinel that local gov-ernment officials have raisedvalid objections that need to beaddressed."Realistically, we are not

going to see the Senate vote onthis, this year," Tiffany said. Hedeclined to say whether the Sen-ate mining committee, which hechairs, will vote before year'send.The bill was the subject of a

contentious, overflow hearing

before the committee Thursday.Tiffany said the measure wouldshift regulatory authority to thestate and eliminate an emergingpatchwork of restrictive localordinances. But opponents saidthe proposal amounts to anunwarranted attack on smallgovernment and could put peoplewho live around the mining oper-ations at risk.The bill's prospects are also

uncertain in the Assembly,where Speaker Robin Vos, R-Rochester, has said his chamberwon't hold a vote until nextspring at the earliest.Wisconsin's silica sand mining

industry has grown from fivemines in 2010 to 105 as of April,according to the Legislative Fis-cal Bureau. With the increasehave come concerns about poten-tial health hazards from silicadust and damage to roads, lead-ing local governments to passtheir own ordinances governingmines in their areas.

Mesich to publishbook on paranormal

By KATIE [email protected]

IRONWOOD TOWNSHIP —Andrea Mesich, a paranormalinvestigator since 2004 fromIronwood Township, is publish-ing a book about her experienceswith paranormal activity in theUpper Peninsula called “Ghostin the Coal Cellar” throughLlewellyn Worldwide on Aug. 8. Most of the stories in the first

book of a series are based in theU.P., Mesich said, includinglocations at the Paulding Light,Mission Point Resort Theater onMackinac Island, as well as aprivate investigation of an Iron-wood family's home. Anotherinvestigation in the bookinvolves a Wisconsin Rapidsschoolhouse where “a lot ofweird things happened,” Mesichsaid. “So many people have had

issues with paranormal activity,but don't ask for help for fear ofbeing ridiculed,” Mesich said.She provides her services forfree locally, and also travels. “Ido it more for the research,” shesaid.She is soon traveling to St.

Paul to investigate the HistoricMounds Theater, where per-formers experience seeing fullbody apparitions and feelingtouches from former performers,one of whom died there. The first thing Mesich does in

an investigation is rule out anatural explanation, she said.Sometimes wiring issues cancause problems in a home orbuilding's electromagnetic

fields, whichcan cause para-noia or feelingsthat there issomething inthe house. The next

step is to hold aK2 session, shesaid, where sheuses a meter todetect the pres-ence of ghostsby communi-

cating with them. Mesich uses two electronic

recorders, because spirits com-municate on a different wave-length than people do, she said,no different from digitalrecorders, cassette recorders, orvideo recorders. “I have highsuccess with that,” she said. Mesich provides her services

confidentially, because manypeople don't want other people toknow about their paranormalissues. “I didn't believe in ghostsuntil I experienced one myself,”Mesich said. She has spoken to many reli-

gious leaders about the issue ofsouls waiting to get into Heavenand their spiritual presence inthe world. “I tried to talk to people from

the Native American tribes nearthe Paulding Light, but no onewanted to talk about it,” Mesichsaid. Mesich is planning to host a

local symposium. For more information, visit

her website at paranormal-ronin.blogspot.com.

APPLETON, Wis. (AP) — Aformer Princeton University offi-cial has been named the 16thpresident of Lawrence Universi-ty in Appleton.Mark Burstein was formally

inaugurated Saturday. The 52-year-old spent nine years atPrinceton, where he was anexecutive vice president.He now takes over at

Lawrence, a liberal-arts schoolwith 1,500 students.In his inaugural address,

Burstein recalled how Lawrencewas founded in 1847 with a$10,000 commitment from aBoston businessman. He notedthat the Fox Cities area has alarger population now than theentire state of Wisconsin didback then.Burstein says the school must

sustain its sense of creativityand continue to embrace theunknown.Appleton Mayor Tim Hanna

presented Burstein with a GreenBay Packers jersey with thenumber 16, reflecting Burstein'sstatus as the school's 16th presi-dent.

Lawrenceinaugurates

new president

AndreaMesich

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LIONS — page 14

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — AaronRodgers has the Green Bay Packersrolling, even without three of his bestreceivers.There's a powerful running game on

his side now, as if Rodgers needed anymore help.Ignoring the injuries around him,

Rodgers picked apart what's left of Min-nesota's depleted defense by throwingtwo first-half touchdown passes to JordyNelson and guiding the Packers to a 44-31 victory Sunday night."I think this is really shaping up to be

one of Aaron's best years," Packerscoach Mike McCarthy said. "Aaron's hada lot of challenges Monday through Sat-urday that don't show up on the statsheet, just trying to get on the samepage with younger players and trustingthe game plan."Missing Randall Cobb, James Jones

and Jermichael Finley, Rodgers finished24 for 29 for 285 yards to help the Pack-ers (5-2) stay in first place in the NFCNorth."We expect greatness out of our

guys," Rodgers said.Christian Ponder's encore went poor-

ly for the Vikings (1-6), who sent out adifferent starting quarterback for thethird straight week. Adrian Petersongained a quiet 60 yards on 13 carries,Greg Jennings had just one catchagainst his old team and the Vikingsoffense counted only three plays in thethird quarter as the Packers pulledaway in their final game at theMetrodome, now known as Mall ofAmerica Field.Ponder didn't turn the ball over, but

he was again out of sorts under pressurein the pocket all night. He finished 14for 21 for 145 yards against a defensemissing three starting linebackers toinjury and added a late touchdown run.Coach Leslie Frazier said he wasn't sureyet whether Ponder would keep the jobfor another game.The Vikings beat the Packers 37-34

last December to make the playoffs. Butthey needed 199 yards rushing fromPeterson and the best game of Ponder'scareer to do it, because Rodgers hasrarely found resistance from thisdefense in purple. In his last eightgames against the Vikings, he has 22touchdowns and only three interceptionswhile completing roughly three-quartersof his passes. The Packers have wonseven of those."I wasn't going to let this team beat

us," Rodgers said, adding: "A lot was onmy shoulders."Micah Hyde had a punt return for a

touchdown for the Packers, who neverpunted and held the ball for more thantwo-thirds of the game to counteractCordarrelle Patterson's opening 109-yard kickoff return for a touchdown. ThePackers have won 15 of their last 16games against NFC North teams."We've got a great team, very well-

coached," Rodgers said. "Guys are readyto play. It was loud in here. It was a

tough environment, but guys steppedup."The Packers scored on their first two

possessions, running a total of 31 playsfor 160 yards that drained 15 minutesand 48 seconds off the clock. Eddie Lacyfinished with 94 yards and a touchdownand James Starks ran for 57 yards and ascore."Everybody wants a 1,500-yard rush-

er. I've always wanted an 1,100-yardrusher, because I plan on being in theplayoffs, so I want him running thesame way in January and February ashe is in September and October,"McCarthy said.The way Lacy has been pounding the

ball, as the leading NFL rookie rusher,Rodgers hasn't had to come up with asmany clutch throws with his top targetsmissing. Lacy and Starks took turnstrampling an exhausted Vikingsdefense, with each guy contributing atouchdown on the ground and the Pack-ers reaching a season-high 182 yardsrushing."When the heck is the last time the

Green Bay Packers rushed for 200 yardson somebody?" defensive end Jared

Allen said, slightly exaggerating thetotal. "If that's not a punch in the gutand a wake-up to people, somethingneeds to be."The Packers converted 13 third

downs and two fourth downs. The onlytime they had the ball and didn't scorewas the kneel-down at the end of thegame."These are the guys we have," Frazier

said. "So we've got to figure out schemat-ically what we can do with the guys thatwe have to be better."

Green Bay 7 17 7 13 — 44Minnesota 7 10 0 14 — 31

First QuarterMin—Patterson 109 kickoff return (Walsh kick), 14:47. Minnesota 7,

Green Bay 0.GB—Nelson 11 pass from Rodgers (Crosby kick), 7:23. Drive: 14

plays, 90 yards, 7:24. Key Plays: Rodgers 11 pass to Boykin on 3rd-and-6; Rhodes 16-yard defensive pass interference penalty; Rodgers18 pass to Boykin; Lacy 2 run on 3rd-and-1; Rodgers 12 run on 3rd-and-6. Green Bay 7, Minnesota 7.

Second QuarterGB—FG Crosby 30, 10:29. Drive: 17 plays, 70 yards, 8:24. Key

Plays: Rodgers 7 pass to Nelson on 3rd-and-3; Rodgers 5 pass toQuarless on 3rd-and-3; Williams 5-yard offside penalty on 3rd-and-3;Rodgers 7 pass to Kuhn on 4th-and-1; Lacy 17 run. Green Bay 10,Minnesota 7.Min—FG Walsh 36, 5:09. Drive: 11 plays, 62 yards, 5:20. Key

Plays: Peterson 17 run; D.Jones 15-yard unnecessary roughnesspenalty on 3rd-and-6; Ponder 17 pass to Rudolph on 3rd-and-10.Green Bay 10, Minnesota 10.

GB—Nelson 76 pass from Rodgers (Crosby kick), 3:38. Drive: 3plays, 80 yards, 1:31. Green Bay 17, Minnesota 10.GB—Hyde 93 punt return (Crosby kick), 1:30. Green Bay 24, Min-

nesota 10.Min—Peterson 8 run (Walsh kick), :04. Drive: 8 plays, 77 yards,

1:26. Key Plays: Ponder 13 pass to Peterson; Ponder 4 pass to Peter-son on 3rd-and-3; Ponder 17 pass to Patterson; Williams 26-yarddefensive pass interference penalty on 3rd-and-1. Green Bay 24, Min-nesota 17.

Third QuarterGB—Lacy 1 run (Crosby kick), 6:50. Drive: 15 plays, 80 yards, 8:10.

Key Plays: Rodgers 11 pass to Nelson on 3rd-and-1; Lacy 11 run;Rodgers 8 pass to Nelson on 4th-and-3; Rodgers 14 run on 3rd-and-2; Rodgers 3 run on 3rd-and-2. Green Bay 31, Minnesota 17.

Fourth QuarterGB—Starks 25 run (Crosby kick), 14:16. Drive: 9 plays, 74 yards,

5:32. Key Plays: Rodgers 17 pass to Boykin on 3rd-and-16; Starks 11run; Starks 11 run; Rodgers 15 pass to White. Green Bay 38, Min-nesota 17.GB—FG Crosby 20, 6:10. Drive: 10 plays, 53 yards, 6:36. Key

Plays: Rodgers 27 pass to Boykin on 3rd-and-1; Lacy 6 run on 3rd-and-1. Green Bay 41, Minnesota 17.Min—Gerhart 13 run (Walsh kick), 4:42. Drive: 5 plays, 58 yards,

1:28. Key Plays: Patterson 51 kickoff return to Minnesota 42; Ponder18 pass to Simpson; Ponder 13 pass to Gerhart; Ponder 14 pass toRudolph. Green Bay 41, Minnesota 24.GB—FG Crosby 45, 2:53. Drive: 6 plays, 16 yards, 1:49. Key Play:

Rodgers 16 pass to Boykin. Green Bay 44, Minnesota 24.Min—Ponder 19 run (Walsh kick), 1:24. Drive: 5 plays, 73 yards,

1:29. Key Play: Williams 44-yard defensive pass interference penaltyon 4th-and-5. Green Bay 44, Minnesota 31.A—64,134.

GB MinFIRST DOWNS 26 15Rushing 11 5Passing 13 7Penalty 2 3THIRD DOWN EFF 13-18 2-8FOURTH DOWN EFF 2-2 0-0TOTAL NET YARDS 464 243

Total Plays 73 43Avg Gain 6.4 5.7NET YARDS RUSHING 182 111Rushes 42 19Avg per rush 4.3 5.8NET YARDS PASSING 282 132Sacked-Yds lost 2-3 3-13Gross-Yds passing 285 145Completed-Att. 24-29 14-21Had Intercepted 0 0Yards-Pass Play 9.1 5.5KICKOFFS-EndZone-TB 9-8-3 6-4-2PUNTS-Avg. 0-0.0 4-46.5Punts blocked 0 0FGs-PATs blocked 0-0 0-0TOTAL RETURN YARDAGE 127 247Punt Returns 2-93 0-0Kickoff Returns 2-34 6-247Interceptions 0-0 0-0PENALTIES-Yds 6-120 7-46FUMBLES-Lost 0-0 0-0TIME OF POSSESSION 40:54 19:06

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHING—Green Bay, Lacy 29-94, Starks 7-57, Rodgers 6-31.

Minnesota, Peterson 13-60, Ponder 5-38, Gerhart 1-13.PASSING—Green Bay, Rodgers 24-29-0-285. Minnesota, Ponder

14-21-0-145.RECEIVING—Green Bay, Nelson 7-123, Boykin 5-89, White 5-35,

Lacy 4-18, Quarless 2-13, Kuhn 1-7. Minnesota, Rudolph 4-51, Peter-son 3-23, Patterson 2-26, Gerhart 2-15, Simpson 1-18, Jennings 1-9,Carlson 1-3.PUNT RETURNS—Green Bay, Hyde 2-93. Minnesota, None.KICKOFF RETURNS—Green Bay, Franklin 2-34. Minnesota, Pat-

terson 5-228, Gerhart 1-19.INTERCEPTIONS—None.MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.

NFCNORTH THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM8 l MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2013

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460 W. Cloverland DriveIronwood, MI 49938Bus.: 906-932-1252Fax: 906-932-4523Cell: 906-285-4832

NFC NORTH STANDINGS

Overall Stk.

1. Green Bay 5-2 W4

2. Detroit 5-3 W1

3. Chicago 4-3 L1

4. Minnesota 1-6 L2

Associated Press

(At left) DETROIT LIONS wide receiver Calvin Johnson (81) pulls in areception against the Dallas Cowboys in the second quarter in Detroiton Sunday.

Johnson-ledLions rally tobeat CowboysDETROIT (AP) — Calvin

Johnson thought MatthewStafford was going to spike theball for at least another snap.The Dallas Cowboys did, too.Stafford's 1-yard lunge over a

pile of linemen with 12 secondsleft and Johnson's 329 yardsreceiving lifted the Detroit Lionsto a 31-30 win over Dallas onSunday."I was yelling that I was going

to spike the ball," Staffordrecalled. "But their linebackerswere just standing there."The Cowboys weren't just

standing around letting Johnsonmake catch after catch, but hemade them look helpless.Johnson almost broke an

NFL record, and could celebratethe feat because of a comebackfrom a 10-point, fourth-quarterdeficit that some people whoentered Ford Field didn't seebecause they had left."Even our fans didn't think

we could pull this one out," hesaid. "They were leaving, but weknew we could do it."Johnson's total trails only the

336 yards receiving FlipperAnderson had for the Los Ange-les Rams against New Orleanson Nov. 26, 1989 in a game thatwent into overtime. Andersonhad 296 yards receiving in regu-lation.The Cowboys dared Detroit to

throw to Johnson with a lot ofone-on-one coverage. They usu-ally asked cornerback BrandonCarr to do the improbable by

Rodgers, Packers cruise past Vikings

Associated Press

GREEN BAY Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers (12) runs toward the end zone in the second half against the Minnesota Vikings on Sunday in Minneapolis.

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Pat Krause/Daily Globe

THE GOGEBIC Miner football team gathered in coach Mark Mazzon's room at A.D. Johnston High School to watch the MHSAA Selection Sunday show in which all the high school play-off teams were announced. The Miners finished with a 6-3 record and qualified for the playoffs in Division 8 Region 1. Gogebic will play undefeated Crystal Falls Forest Park in CrystalFalls. L'Anse and Lake Linden play in the other half of Region 1, District 1. Most of the playoff games will be on Friday, but the official time and date will be announced today. Teammembers watching the show included from left: Collin Gagnon, Tom Jackson, Lance Berwald, Ben Zielinski and Jess Mazzon.

M H S A A F O O T B A L L P L AY O F F P A I R I N G S A N N O U N C E DThe MHSAA Football playoff

pairings were announced Sun-day eveningfor all eight 11-play-er divisions and the 8-playerdivison.Qualifying teams for the play-

offs were divided into eight divi-sions of 32 schools each. Withineach division are four regions ofeight teams each; and withinthose regions are two districts offour teams each. Pre-Districtpairings are based on regular-season computer rankings, withthe first-place team in each Dis-trict hosting the fourth-placeteam; and the second-place teamhosting the third-ranked team.Most playoffs games will be

held this Friday evening, butofficial dates and times will beannounced later today.

8-PLAYER PLAYOFF PAIRINGS

Region 1Posen (4-5) 29.110 at Rapid River (9-0) 63.330Engadine (5-4) 36.330 at Cedarville (8-1) 49.110

Region 2Bellaire (5-4) 29.440 at Kinde-North Huron (6-3)

43.220Akron-Fairgrove (7-2) 39.397 at Owendale-Gagetown

(8-1) 42.952Region 3

Deckerville (5-4) 36.403 at Peck (9-0) 61.556Carsonville-Port Sanilac (6-3) 44.181 at Portland St.

Patrick (7-2) 47.667Region 4

Waldron (5-4) 30.556 at Battle Creek St. Philip (9-0)63.110Burr Oak (5-4) 31.667 at Lawrence (6-2) 39.330

11-PLAYER PLAYOFF PAIRINGS

DIVISION 1REGION 1

DISTRICT 1Traverse City West (5-4) 61.972 at Rockford (8-1)

99.444East Kentwood (5-4) 62.000 at Hudsonville (6-3)

78.333DISTRICT 2

Holt (5-4) 61.889 at Flint Carman-Ainsworth (8-1)93.333Brighton (5-4) 64.000 at Grand Blanc (7-2) 87.778

REGION 2DISTRICT 1

Oxford (5-4) 61.333 at Clarkston (8-1) 101.889Romeo (5-4) 62.444 at Lake Orion (7-2) 84.889

DISTRICT 2

PLAYOFFS — page 10

Williams runs for 230 as Pathers maul CougarsBy John Vrancic

Escanaba Daily Press

EBEN — Junior quarterback KayneWilliams carried a big load for theEwen-Trout Creek Panthers Saturdayas they handed the Superior CentralCougars a 42-18 eight-man football loss.Williams ran 41 times for 230 yards

and four touchdowns and completed hislone pass for a 40-yard TD to seniorZach Leskala on the final play of the

first half.The victory, E-TC’s first over the

Cougars, enabled the Panthers to finishwith a two-game winning streak. Theyended 3-6 overall and 1-6 in the BridgeAlliance Conference.“This is a nice win for our program,”

said E-TC coach Larry Maki. “We wereled by sophomores all season. I think wehave a lot to look forward to. We’ve gotto take this as a big step forward.”

The Panthers grabbed the lead on thefirst play from scrimmage whenWilliams dashed 52 yards on a keeper.He scored again on a keeper, this

time for 16 yards and a 14-0 lead mid-way through the opening frame on thischilly, windy and blustery afternoon inwestern Alger County.The Cougars (2-6 overall, 1-6 league)

got on the board with 2:25 left in thefirst quarter on sophomore Phil Pasa-

nen’s 12-yard run through the middle,set up on a blocked punt by senior Tuck-er Spranger on the previous play.E-TC, however, had a response early

in the second stanza with Williams scor-ing up the middle from six yards and a22-6 cushion.Junior QB Dayne Nelson trimmed

the Cougars’ deficit to 22-12 on a 21-yard keeper to the right midwaythrough the second.

Just 19 seconds later, however,sophomore Cyle Wascher broke left on a60-yard dash and a 28-12 Panther lead.E-TC then scored twice in the final

16.2 seconds before halftime, withWilliams breaking through the middleon a 23-yard run and tossing his scoringpass to Leskala and a 42-12 advantage.The latter TD in that sequence was set

PANTHERS — page 10

Associated Press

BOSTON RED Sox's Jonny Gomes celebrates his three-run home run off St. Louis Cardinals relief pitcher Seth Maness, left, during the sixth inning of Game 4 of the World Series Sun-day in St. Louis.

MOONSHOT:Red Sox knot WorldSeries with Gomes’ blast

ST. LOUIS (AP) — There's notelling how these wacky WorldSeries games will end.One night after a rare

obstruction call, Jonny Gomeshit a decisive homer when hewasn't even in the original line-up and Koji Uehara picked off arookie at first base for the finalout.An entertaining, even goofy

World Series is tied at twogames apiece following Boston's4-2 victory Sunday night, whichensured the title will be decidedback at Boston's Fenway Park."Emotional roller-coaster

here, obviously," Gomes said.Inserted into the lineup about

75 minutes before gametime,Gomes hit a tiebreaking, three-run shot off reliever SethManess in the sixth inning.Felix Doubront and surprise

reliever John Lackey, bothstarters during the regular sea-son, picked up for a gritty ClayBuchholz to help the Red Soxhang on.And of course, another

bizarre ending: Uehara pickedoff pinch-runner Kolten Wong —with postseason star Carlos Bel-tran standing at the plate.It was the first postseason

game in history to end on a pick-off, according to STATS.Game 5 is Monday night at

Busch Stadium, with Bostonleft-hander Jon Lester facingCardinals ace Adam Wainwrightin a rematch of the opener won8-1 by the Red Sox.Gomes helped get Boston

started in the fifth when he fol-lowed David Ortiz's leadoff dou-ble with a 10-pitch walk thattired starter Lance Lynn, whohad faced the minimum 12 bat-ters through the first fourinnings.Stephen Drew's sacrifice fly

tied the score 1-all, erasing adeficit created when center field-er Jacoby Ellsbury's third-inning error advanced Matt Car-penter into scoring position forBeltran's RBI single.Ortiz, who homered in the

first two games of the Series,had three of Boston's six hits

WORLD SERIES — page 14

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SPORTS THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM10 l MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2013

DAILY GLOBE SCOREBOARDNASCAR SPRINT CUPGoody's Headache Relief Shot 500

Results Sunday

At Martinsville SpeedwayRidgeway, Va.

Lap length: .526 miles(Start position in parentheses)

1. (9) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 500 laps,127 rating, 47 points.2. (4) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 500, 134.6,

44.3. (5) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 500, 122, 42.4. (11) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 500,

102.1, 40.5. (2) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 500,

126.4, 40.6. (10) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 500,

98.5, 38.7. (1) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 500, 108.2,

38.8. (12) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet,

500, 101.5, 36.9. (33) Greg Biffle, Ford, 500, 79.1, 35.10. (7) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 500,

85.8, 34.11. (22) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 500,

90.4, 34.12. (14) Carl Edwards, Ford, 500, 78.5,

32.13. (13) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet,

500, 98, 31.14. (6) Joey Logano, Ford, 500, 90, 30.15. (3) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 500, 103.4,

30.Race Statistics

Average Speed of Race Winner: 70.337mph.Time of Race: 3 hours, 44 minutes, 21

seconds.Margin of Victory: 0.605 seconds.Caution Flags: 17 for 111 laps.Lead Changes: 15 among 8 drivers.Top 12 in Points: 1. M.Kenseth, 2,294; 2.

J.Johnson, 2,294; 3. J.Gordon, 2,267; 4.K.Harvick, 2,266; 5. Ky.Busch, 2,258; 6.C.Bowyer, 2,239; 7. D.Earnhardt Jr., 2,238;8. G.Biffle, 2,236; 9. Ku.Busch, 2,219; 10.C.Edwards, 2,218; 11. J.Logano, 2,209; 12.R.Newman, 2,188.

MLB WORLD SERIES(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)All games televised by Fox

St. Louis 2, Boston 2Wednesday, Oct. 23: Boston 8, St. Louis

1Thursday, Oct. 24: St. Louis 4, Boston 2Saturday, Oct. 26: St. Louis 5, Boston 4Sunday, Oct. 27: Boston 4, St. Louis 2Monday, Oct. 28: Boston (Lester 15-8) at

St. Louis (Wainwright 19-9), 8:07 p.m.x-Wednesday, Oct. 30: St. Louis at

Boston, 8:07 p.m.x-Thursday, Oct. 31: St. Louis at Boston,

8:07 p.m.

NCAAUSA Today Top 25 Poll

Record Pts Pvs1. Alabama (56) 8-0 1,542 12. Oregon (6) 8-0 1,483 23. Florida State 7-0 1,419 34. Ohio State 8-0 1,375 45. Baylor 7-0 1,293 56. Miami (Fla.) 7-0 1,190 67. Stanford 7-1 1,182 88. Clemson 7-1 1,064 109. Oklahoma 7-1 933 1210. Missouri 7-1 834 711. Auburn 7-1 804 1712. Oklahoma State 6-1 803 t1313. LSU 7-2 802 t1314. Texas A&M 6-2 758 1515. Texas Tech 7-1 673 916. South Carolina 6-2 627 2017. Louisville 7-1 579 1618. Fresno State 7-0 542 1819. UCLA 5-2 432 1120. Northern Illinois 8-0 373 2221. Michigan 6-1 309 2322. Central Florida 6-1 300 2523. Wisconsin 5-2 253 2424. Michigan State 7-1 237 NR25. Notre Dame 6-2 83 NR

Associated Press Top 25Record Pts Pv

1. Alabama (55) 8-0 1,495 12. Oregon (3) 8-0 1,432 23. Florida St. (2) 7-0 1,390 34. Ohio St. 8-0 1,317 45. Baylor 7-0 1,223 66. Stanford 7-1 1,189 87. Miami 7-0 1,149 78. Auburn 7-1 1,022 119. Clemson 7-1 1,007 910. Missouri 7-1 873 511. LSU 7-2 818 1312. Texas A&M 6-2 811 1413. Oklahoma 7-1 791 1714. South Carolina 6-2 701 2015. Texas Tech 7-1 579 1016. Fresno St. 7-0 510 1517. UCLA 5-2 489 1218. Oklahoma St. 6-1 483 1919. UCF 6-1 464 2120. Louisville 7-1 417 1821. N. Illinois 8-0 290 2322. Wisconsin 5-2 262 2223. Michigan 6-1 199 2424. Michigan St. 7-1 166 NR25. Arizona St. 5-2 133 NR

How the top 25 faredNo. 1 Alabama (8-0) beat Tennessee 45-

10. Next: vs. No. 13 LSU, Saturday, Nov. 9.No. 2 Oregon (8-0) beat No. 12 UCLA

42-14. Next: at No. 8 Stanford, Thursday,Nov. 7.No. 3 Florida State (7-0) beat N.C. State

49-17. Next: vs. No. 7 Miami, Saturday.No. 4 Ohio State (8-0) beat Penn State

63-14. Next: at Purdue, Saturday.No. 5 Missouri (7-1) lost to No. 20 South

Carolina 27-24, 2OT. Next: vs. Tennessee,Saturday.No. 6 Baylor (7-0) beat Kansas 59-14.

Next: vs. No. 17 Oklahoma, Thursday, Nov.7.No. 7 Miami (7-0) beat Wake Forest 24-

21. Next: at No. 3 Florida State, Saturday.No. 8 Stanford (7-1) beat Oregon State

20-12. Next: vs. No. 2 Oregon, Thursday,Nov. 7.No. 9 Clemson (7-1) beat Maryland 40-

27. Next: at Virginia, Saturday.No. 10 Texas Tech (7-1) lost to No. 17

Oklahoma 38-30. Next: vs. No. 19 Okla-homa State, Saturday.No. 11 Auburn (7-1) beat FAU 45-10.

Next: at Arkansas, Saturday.No. 12 UCLA (5-2) lost to No. 2 Oregon

42-14. Next: vs. Colorado, Saturday.No. 13 LSU (7-2) beat Furman 48-16.

Next: at No. 1 Alabama, Saturday, Nov. 9.No. 14 Texas A&M (6-2) beat Vanderbilt

56-24. Next: vs. UTEP, Saturday.No. 15 Fresno State (7-0) beat San

Diego State 35-28, OT. Next: vs. Nevada,Saturday.No. 16 Virginia Tech (6-2) lost to Duke

13-10. Next: at Boston College, Saturday.No. 17 Oklahoma (7-1) beat No. 10

Texas Tech 38-30. Next: at No. 6 Baylor,Thursday, Nov. 7.No. 18 Louisville (7-1) beat South Florida

34-3. Next: at UConn, Friday, Nov. 8.No. 19 Oklahoma State (6-1) beat Iowa

State 58-27. Next: at No. 10 Texas Tech,Saturday.No. 20 South Carolina (6-2) beat No. 5

Missouri 27-24, 2OT. Next: vs. MVSU, Sat-urday.No. 21 UCF (6-1) beat UConn 62-17.

Next: vs. Houston, Saturday, Nov. 9.No. 22 Wisconsin (5-2) did not play.

Next: at Iowa, Saturday.No. 23 Northern Illinois (8-0) beat East-

ern Michigan 59-20. Next: at UMass, Satur-day.No. 24 Michigan (6-1) did not play. Next:

at Michigan State, Saturday.No. 25 Nebraska (5-2) lost to Minnesota

34-23. Next: vs. Northwestern, Saturday.Big Ten Conference Standings

LegendsConference All Gms.

W L PF PA W LMichigan St. 4 0 124 45 7 1Michigan 2 1 145 103 6 1Nebraska 2 1 106 60 5 2Minnesota 2 2 74 105 6 2Iowa 2 2 78 77 5 3Northwestern 0 4 63 112 4 4

LeadersOhio St. 4 0 168 92 8 0Wisconsin 3 1 156 79 5 2Penn St. 1 2 81 147 4 3Indiana 1 2 119 129 3 4Illinois 0 3 54 137 3 4Purdue 0 3 17 99 1 6

NFLAll Times EDT

AMERICAN CONFERENCEEast

W L T Pct PF PANew England 6 2 0 .750 179 144N.Y. Jets 4 4 0 .500 143 211Miami 3 4 0 .429 152 167Buffalo 3 5 0 .375 176 213

SouthW L T Pct PF PA

Indianapolis 5 2 0 .714 187 131Tennessee 3 4 0 .429 145 146Houston 2 5 0 .286 122 194Jacksonville 0 8 0 .000 86 264

NorthW L T Pct PF PA

Cincinnati 6 2 0 .750 197 144Baltimore 3 4 0 .429 150 148Cleveland 3 5 0 .375 148 179Pittsburgh 2 5 0 .286 125 153

WestW L T Pct PF PA

Kansas City 8 0 0 1.000 192 98Denver 7 1 0 .875 343 218San Diego 4 3 0 .571 168 144Oakland 3 4 0 .429 126 150

NATIONAL CONFERENCEEast

W L T Pct PF PADallas 4 4 0 .500 230 186Philadelphia 3 5 0 .375 176 211Washington 2 5 0 .286 173 229N.Y. Giants 2 6 0 .250 141 223

SouthW L T Pct PF PA

New Orleans 6 1 0 .857 196 120Carolina 4 3 0 .571 170 96Atlanta 2 5 0 .286 166 184Tampa Bay 0 7 0 .000 100 163

NorthW L T Pct PF PA

Green Bay 5 2 0 .714 212 158Detroit 5 3 0 .625 217 197Chicago 4 3 0 .571 213 206Minnesota 1 6 0 .143 163 225

WestW L T Pct PF PA

Seattle 6 1 0 .857 191 116San Francisco6 2 0 .750 218 145Arizona 4 4 0 .500 160 174St. Louis 3 4 0 .429 156 184

Thursday's GameCarolina 31, Tampa Bay 13

Sunday's GamesKansas City 23, Cleveland 17New Orleans 35, Buffalo 17New England 27, Miami 17Detroit 31, Dallas 30N.Y. Giants 15, Philadelphia 7San Francisco 42, Jacksonville 10Oakland 21, Pittsburgh 18Cincinnati 49, N.Y. Jets 9Arizona 27, Atlanta 13Denver 45, Washington 21Green Bay 44, Minnesota 31Open: Baltimore, Chicago, Houston, Indi-anapolis, San Diego, Tennessee

Monday's GameSeattle at St. Louis, 8:40 p.m.

Thursday, Oct. 31

Cincinnati at Miami, 8:25 p.m.Sunday, Nov. 3

Minnesota at Dallas, 1 p.m.Tennessee at St. Louis, 1 p.m.Atlanta at Carolina, 1 p.m.New Orleans at N.Y. Jets, 1 p.m.Kansas City at Buffalo, 1 p.m.San Diego at Washington, 1 p.m.Philadelphia at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.Tampa Bay at Seattle, 4:05 p.m.Baltimore at Cleveland, 4:25 p.m.Pittsburgh at New England, 4:25 p.m.Indianapolis at Houston, 8:30 p.m.Open: Arizona, Denver, Detroit, Jack-sonville, N.Y. Giants, San FranciscoMonday, Nov. 4Chicago at Green Bay, 8:40 p.m.

NCAAWCHA Glance All Times EDTW L T Pts GF GA

Bemidji State 2 0 0 4 7 1Mich. Tech 1 1 0 2 4 3N. Michigan 1 1 0 2 3 4Alaska Anch. 0 0 0 0 0 0Alaska 0 0 0 0 0 0Bowling Green0 0 0 0 0 0Ferris State 0 0 0 0 0 0Lake Sup. St. 0 0 0 0 0 0Minn. St. 0 0 0 0 0 0Ala.-Huntsville0 2 0 0 1 7OVERALL RECORDS: Alabama-Huntsville 0-4-0, Alaska Anchorage 3-1-0,Alaska 3-1-2, Bemidji State 2-3-1, BowlingGreen 2-1-2, Ferris State 3-2-0, LakeSuperior State 4-0-0, Michigan Tech 1-4-1,Minnesota State Mankato 2-2-0, NorthernMichigan 2-4-0.

Sunday, Oct. 20Notre Dame 7, Michigan Tech 3

Friday, Oct. 25N. Michigan 2, Michigan Tech 0Bemidji St. 6, Ala.-Huntsville 1Alaska 5, Mercyhurst 4

Saturday, Oct. 26N. Michigan 4, Michigan Tech 1Bemidji St. 1, Ala.-Huntsville 0Mercyhurst 3, Alaska 3, OT

Tuesday, Oct. 29Bowling Green at Ohio St. 7:05 p.m.Laurentian at Lake Superior St., 7:37 p.m.(exhibition)

Friday, Nov. 1Alaska-Anchorage at Bowling Green, 7:07p.m.Michigan Tech at Michigan, 7:30 p.m.Lake Superior St. at Wisconsin, 8 p.m.Ferris St. at Ala.-Huntsville, 8:07 p.m.Minn. State (Mankato) at Bemidji St., 8:37p.m.N. Michigan at Alaska, 11:07 p.m.

NHLAll Times EDT

EASTERN CONFERENCEGP W LOT Pts GF GA

Tampa Bay 11 8 3 0 16 39 31Toronto 12 8 4 0 16 40 30Boston 10 7 3 0 14 30 17Pittsburgh 11 7 4 0 14 35 28Carolina 11 4 4 3 11 25 33N.Y. Islanders11 4 4 3 11 35 36Detroit 12 6 4 2 14 27 33Montreal 11 6 5 0 12 33 22Columbus 11 5 6 0 10 31 29Ottawa 11 4 5 2 10 30 32Washington 11 5 6 0 10 32 35New Jersey 11 2 5 4 8 24 36Florida 12 3 7 2 8 26 42N.Y. Rangers 9 3 6 0 6 15 33Philadelphia 10 3 7 0 6 18 27Buffalo 13 2 10 1 5 20 37

WESTERN CONFERENCEGP W LOT Pts GF GA

San Jose 12 10 1 1 21 48 20Colorado 11 10 1 0 20 35 16Anaheim 12 9 3 0 18 39 31Vancouver 13 8 4 1 17 38 37Chicago 11 6 2 3 15 34 32Minnesota 12 6 3 3 15 29 26Phoenix 12 7 3 2 16 40 39St. Louis 9 6 1 2 14 35 23Los Angeles 11 7 4 0 14 33 29Nashville 12 6 5 1 13 23 32Calgary 11 5 4 2 12 34 39Winnipeg 13 5 6 2 12 32 37Dallas 10 4 5 1 9 26 31Edmonton 12 3 8 1 7 35 48NOTE: Two points for a win, one point forovertime loss.

Saturday's GamesWinnipeg 2, Dallas 1, SOPhoenix 5, Edmonton 4New Jersey 4, Boston 3Toronto 4, Pittsburgh 1San Jose 2, Montreal 0N.Y. Rangers 3, Detroit 2, OTTampa Bay 3, Buffalo 2Philadelphia 5, N.Y. Islanders 2Minnesota 5, Chicago 3St. Louis 6, Nashville 1Calgary 5, Washington 2

Sunday's GamesTampa Bay 4, Florida 3, SOSan Jose 5, Ottawa 2Anaheim 4, Columbus 3Colorado 3, Winnipeg 2Edmonton at Los Angeles, late

Monday's GamesDallas at Buffalo, 7 p.m.Pittsburgh at Carolina, 7 p.m.Montreal at N.Y. Rangers, 7:30 p.m.Chicago at Minnesota, 8 p.m.Washington at Vancouver, 10 p.m.

NBARegular Season StartsTuesday's Games

Orlando at Indiana, 7 p.m.Chicago at Miami, 8 p.m.L.A. Clippers at L.A. Lakers, 10:30 p.m.

Racing

Baseball

Football

Associated Press

NEW YORK Rangers center Derick Brassard (16) scores the winning goal on Detroit Red Wings goalie Jimmy Howard during thefirst overtime period on Saturday in Detroit. The Rangers won 3-2.

Waterford Kettering (6-3) 72.222 at Walled LakeNorthern (7-2) 88.222Rochester Hills Stoney Creek (6-3) 73.111 at

Rochester Adams (6-3) 75.667REGION 3DISTRICT 1

Detroit Catholic Central (7-2) 91.000 at Northville(8-1) 106.111Canton (8-1) 98.556 at Walled Lake Western (8-

1) 101.222DISTRICT 2

Westland John Glenn (6-3) 66.333 at Temper-ance Bedford (9-0) 111.111Belleville (6-3) 69.333 at Saline (8-1) 97.333

REGION 4DISTRICT 1

Warren DeLaSalle (6-3) 79.016 at MacombDakota (9-0) 109.333Macomb L'Anse Creuse North (8-1) 93.889 at

Clinton Township Chippewa Valley (8-1) 102.222DISTRICT 2

Grosse Pointe South (6-3) 69.222 at DetroitCass Tech (9-0) 114.556Dearborn Fordson (6-3) 78.222 at Warren Mott

(9-0) 102.222

DIVISION 2REGION 1DISTRICT 1

Marquette (5-3) 68.111 at Midland (8-1) 97.667Midland Dow (7-2) 78.222 at Fenton (8-1) 94.111

DISTRICT 2Muskegon Mona Shores (7-2) 83.222 at Lowell

(9-0) 119.111Muskegon Reeths-Puffer (7-2) 84.889 at

Muskegon (8-1) 106.667REGION 2DISTRICT 1

Lansing Everett (6-3) 64.778 at Portage Central(9-0) 106.667Portage Northern (7-2) 79.000 at Battle Creek

Lakeview (9-0) 94.222DISTRICT 2

North Farmington (5-3) 56.667 at FarmingtonHills Harrison (8-1) 102.000Pinckney (6-3) 69.222 at South Lyon (6-3)

76.667REGION 3DISTRICT 1

Birmingham Groves (7-2) 79.889 at BirminghamBrother Rice (9-0) 117.333Southfield (7-2) 90.556 at Birmingham Seaholm

(8-1) 94.333DISTRICT 2

Warren Woods Tower (6-3) 58.000 at Detroit U-D Jesuit (5-4) 67.444Detroit Renaissance (6-3) 58.333 at Oak Park

(5-4) 62.111REGION 4DISTRICT 1

Detroit Cody (6-3) 60.111 at Detroit MartinLuther King (7-1) 95.444Detroit East English (6-3) 62.194 at Grosse

Pointe North (6-3) 73.556DISTRICT 2Ypsilanti Lincoln (7-2) 79.111 at Wyandotte Roo-

sevelt (9-0) 110.222Taylor Truman (7-2) 81.556 at Allen Park (7-2)

83.333

DIVISION 3REGION 1DISTRICT 1

Sparta (5-4) 54.194 at Mt. Pleasant (8-1) 99.556Ionia (7-2) 64.667 at Sault Ste. Marie (6-3)

65.103DISTRICT 2Zeeland East (5-4) 62.778 at Zeeland West (8-1)

91.111

Grand Rapids Forest Hills Northern (7-2) 76.889at Grand Rapids Christian (7-2) 90.556

REGION 2DISTRICT 1

Wayland Union (5-4) 58.778 at Plainwell (8-1)81.667Byron Center (6-3) 63.778 at Battle Creek Harp-

er Creek (7-2) 77.222DISTRICT 2Sturgis (5-4) 53.556 at St. Joseph (8-1) 95.111Coldwater (5-4) 54.556 at Stevensville

Lakeshore (6-3) 64.556REGION 3DISTRICT 1

Haslett (6-3) 63.944 at DeWitt (9-0) 112.016Linden (6-3) 68.556 at Lapeer West (8-1)

100.778DISTRICT 2

Eaton Rapids (5-4) 52.778 at Charlotte (7-2)80.444Tecumseh (7-2) 72.889 at Mason (7-2) 75.333

REGION 4DISTRICT 1

Detroit Old Redford (6-2) 60.556 at St. Clair (8-1)90.333Detroit Denby (7-2) 68.861 at Detroit Mumford

(7-2) 75.417DISTRICT 2

Redford Thurston (6-3) 68.222 at Milan (9-0)104.889Riverview (7-2) 71.000 at Melvindale (7-2)

83.333

DIVISION 4REGION 1DISTRICT 1

Remus Chippewa Hills (6-3) 51.222 at Cadillac(9-0) 98.889Ogemaw Heights (6-3) 65.889 at Cheboygan (7-

2) 74.833DISTRICT 2

Fremont (6-3) 55.889 at Comstock Park (9-0)105.000Belding (6-3) 56.528 at Spring Lake (8-1) 82.444

REGION 2DISTRICT 1

Otsego (6-3) 59.333 at Grand Rapids SouthChristian (8-1) 89.556Grand Rapids Catholic Central (6-3) 65.556 at

Allendale (7-1) 86.667DISTRICT 2

Dowagiac (6-3) 59.111 at Edwardsburg (9-0)96.000Battle Creek Pennfield (8-1) 74.556 at Paw Paw

(8-1) 80.889REGION 3DISTRICT 1

Yale (6-3) 61.333 at Saginaw Swan Valley (9-0)91.889North Branch (6-3) 61.556 at Essexville Garber

(7-2) 68.000DISTRICT 2Corunna (6-3) 57.694 at Lansing Sexton (9-0)

105.778Williamston (5-3) 59.194 at Lake Fenton (7-2)

66.444REGION 4DISTRICT 1

Dearborn Heights Robichaud (6-3) 62.778 atPontiac Notre Dame Prep (7-2) 79.778Clawson (7-2) 64.778 at Detroit Country Day (6-

3) 72.333DISTRICT 2Marysville (5-4) 55.000 at Marine City (8-1)

95.000Harper Woods Chandler Park (7-2) 70.444 at

Richmond (8-1) 84.333

DIVISION 5REGION 1DISTRICT 1

Houghton (6-3) 43.000 at Menominee (9-0)

98.667Kingsford (7-2) 63.611 at Grayling (8-1) 76.000DISTRICT 2Kingsley (6-3) 49.000 at Standish-Sterling (7-1)

76.778Kalkaska (6-3) 51.778 at Gladwin (7-2) 61.861

REGION 2DISTRICT 1Clare (7-2) 67.222 at Reed City (9-0) 87.111Newaygo (8-1) 73.778 at Muskegon Oakridge

(8-1) 75.444DISTRICT 2

Freeland (6-3) 60.222 at Frankenmuth (8-1)88.111Millington (7-2) 74.333 at Almont (8-1) 76.333

REGION 3DISTRICT 1

Grand Rapids West Catholic (5-4) 60.889 atPortland (7-1) 84.333Lansing Catholic (5-4) 60.972 at Ovid-Elsie (7-2)

67.528DISTRICT 2

Parchment (6-3) 49.444 at Jackson LumenChristi (9-0) 105.778Olivet (8-1) 72.778 at Hopkins (7-2) 75.083

REGION 4DISTRICT 1

Warren Michigan Collegiate (6-3) 57.667 at Livo-nia Clarenceville (9-0) 90.667Detroit University Prep (7-2) 59.958 at Clinton

Township Clintondale (9-0) 88.000DISTRICT 2

River Rouge (8-1) 63.778 at Monroe St. MaryCatholic Central (8-1) 83.556Ida (7-2) 67.556 at Ann Arbor Gabriel Richard (7-

2) 75.556

DIVISION 6REGION 1DISTRICT 1

Indian River Inland Lakes (6-3) 42.111 atNegaunee (8-1) 66.333Elk Rapids (6-3) 61.444 at Boyne City (7-2)

65.556DISTRICT 2Sanford Meridian (7-2) 60.000 at Ithaca (9-0)

84.111Lakeview (7-2) 63.000 at Maple City Glen Lake

(8-1) 73.333REGION 2DISTRICT 1

Reese (8-1) 69.333 at Montrose Hill-McCloy (9-0) 90.667Marlette (8-1) 71.000 at Saginaw Nouvel (8-1)

81.587DISTRICT 2Burton Bendle (6-3) 53.333 at Madison Heights

Madison (9-0) 85.333Byron (7-2) 56.667 at Flint Beecher (7-2) 64.667

REGION 3DISTRICT 1

Montague (6-3) 54.556 at Shelby (8-1) 77.222Grandville Calvin Christian (6-3) 58.444 at Grand

Rapids NorthPointe Christian (8-1) 77.111DISTRICT 2Hartford (6-3) 45.222 at Watervliet (9-0) 76.444Schoolcraft (8-1) 74.556 at Niles Brandywine (8-

1) 75.111REGION 4DISTRICT 1

Constantine (5-4) 40.222 at Michigan Center (8-1) 72.778Hillsdale (6-3) 58.000 at Jonesville (7-2) 60.222DISTRICT 2Whitmore Lake (5-4) 46.000 at Clinton (9-0)

81.778Manchester (7-2) 65.667 at Grass Lake (8-1)

78.000

DIVISION 7REGION 1

DISTRICT 1Traverse City St. Francis (5-4) 56.333 at Iron

River West Iron County (9-0) 81.778Mancelona (7-2) 57.222 at Ishpeming (9-0)

75.556DISTRICT 2McBain (5-4) 40.222 at Lincoln Alcona (9-0)

69.333Whittemore-Prescott (6-3) 50.417 at Lake City

(8-1) 66.667REGION 2DISTRICT 1

Evart (7-2) 57.667 at Carson City-Crystal (9-0)77.333Saugatuck (8-1) 60.111 at Pewamo-Westphalia

(8-1) 72.000DISTRICT 2Auburn Hills Oakland Christian (5-4) 39.556 at

Harbor Beach (8-1) 73.778Bath (5-4) 42.333 at Elkton-Pigeon-Bay Port

Laker (7-2) 56.667REGION 3DISTRICT 1

St. Joseph Lake Michigan Catholic (6-2) 47.889at Cassopolis (6-3) 55.810Bridgman (6-3) 48.403 at Decatur (6-3) 49.333

DISTRICT 2Reading (6-3) 42.889 at Homer (8-1) 70.111Springport (6-3) 48.333 at Lawton (8-1) 62.222

REGION 4DISTRICT 1

Grosse Pointe Woods University Liggett (5-4)41.111 at Southfield Christian (8-1) 64.778Royal Oak Shrine Catholic (6-3) 57.778 at Madi-

son Heights Bishop Foley (6-3) 59.000DISTRICT 2

Melvindale Academy for Business & Tech (5-4)40.111 at Detroit Loyola (9-0) 106.667Britton Deerfield (6-3) 52.000 at Hudson (8-1)

69.111

DIVISION 8REGION 1DISTRICT 1

Gogebic (6-3) 40.206 at Crystal Falls ForestPark (9-0) 71.778Lake Linden-Hubbell (5-4) 40.889 at L'Anse (7-2)

56.556DISTRICT 2

Pickford (6-3) 39.333 at Felch North Dickinson(6-2) 49.889Munising (6-3) 44.847 at Powers North Central

(7-2) 46.847REGION 2DISTRICT 1

Hillman (5-4) 31.444 at St. Ignace (7-2) 64.778Atlanta (5-4) 34.556 at Johannesburg-Lewiston

(7-2) 49.111DISTRICT 2

Mio (7-2) 49.444 at Beal City (9-0) 82.667Mt. Pleasant Sacred Heart (6-3) 52.444 at Cole-

man (7-2) 55.111REGION 3DISTRICT 1

Fulton (5-4) 44.000 at Muskegon Catholic Cen-tral (7-2) 61.667Baldwin (7-2) 46.222 at Fowler (7-2) 58.556

DISTRICT 2Eau Claire (4-4) 27.403 at Mendon (9-0) 78.841Bellevue (6-3) 42.667 at Climax-Scotts (8-1)

59.111REGION 4DISTRICT 1

Saginaw Michigan Lutheran Seminary (7-2)57.778 at New Lothrop (9-0) 82.667Clarkston Everest Collegiate (7-2) 63.889 at

Waterford Our Lady (7-2) 74.222DISTRICT 2

Sterling Heights Parkway Christian (5-4) 39.778at Ottawa Lake Whiteford (7-2) 55.556Adrian Lenawee Christian (7-2) 50.000 at Detroit

Allen (6-2) 51.778

From page 9

Playoffs

Panthersup on a fumble recovery by senior MikeBoro.“Kayne had a big day,” said Maki.

“He was running hard. Our linemenwere blocking and our offense was mov-ing the ball. It’s always nice when youhave ball control. We played well in thefirst half today.”The Cougars finished the scoring

nearly halfway through the fourth whenjunior lineman Tristen Thorson blockeda punt and Nelson scooped up the balland scrambled four yards into the end-zone.“We seemed to be a second-half team

all year and again today we played bet-ter in the second half,” said Cougars’

coach Chris Messano. “Ewen-TroutCreek played hard. They were able toscore off our turnovers and we didn’tscore off theirs. We made some adjust-ments at halftime and were more stingyon defense in the second half.”E-TC finished with 384 yards in total

offense.The Cougars had 213, including 138

on the ground. Pasanen rushed 18 timesfor 61 yards. Nelson had 20 carries for56 and completed 6-of-17 passes for 75.“We’re losing six more kids through

graduation,” said Messano. “We need toget more kids interested in playing foot-ball. When you don’t have depth, it’seasier for opposing teams to find mis-matches. One good thing is we kepteveryone healthy. We have some good,

young talent coming back.”

Ewen-Trout Creek 14 28 0 0 — 42Superior Central 6 6 0 6 — 18

First quarterE-TC — Williams, 52-yard run (Williams run), 11:45E-TC — Williams, 16-yard run (run failed), 5:56SC — Pasanen, 12-yard run (run failed), 2:25

Second quarterE-TC — Williams, six-yard run (Wascher run), 10:11SC — Nelson, 21-yard run (run failed), 5:55E-TC — Wascher, 60-yard run (run failed), 5:36E-TC — Willilams, 23-yard run (run failed), 0:16.2E-TC — Williams, 40-yard pass to Leskala (Williams run), 0:00

Fourth quarterSC — Nelson, 4-yard run off blocked punt (run failed), 7:26

StatisticsTotal offense — Ewen-Trout Creek, 384 yards (344 rushing, 40

passing); Superior Central, 213 yards (138 rushing, 75 passing).Rushing — Ewen-Trout Creek, 344 yards (Willliams 41-230,

Wascher 7-57, Leskala 10-57); Superior Central, 213 yards (Pasanen18-61, Nelson 20-56, Herndon 4-16, B. Maki 1-5).Passing — Ewen-Trout Creek, 40 yards (Williams 1-1, TD); Superi-

or Central, 75 yards (Nelson 6-17).Receiving — Ewen-Trout Creek (Leskala 1-40); Superior Central

(Pasanen 1-44, Hill 3-16, Herndon 1-11, N. Maki 1-4).

From page 9

DEVILS LAKE, N.D. — The seasonof the Gogebic Community CollegeLady Samsons came to a close on Sun-day afternoon after a 3-0 defeatagainst the North Dakota State Col-lege of Science in the Region 13 Tour-nament in Devils Lake, N.D. Gogebic fell 25-10, 25-13, 25-5. It was the second time the Lady

Samsons had been swept on the week-end by the Wildcats in the double elim-ination tournament. The first was the tournament open-

er on Saturday as Gogebic fell 3-0. The second match on Saturday was

a win against Dakota County Techni-cal College, 3-1, 25-11, 25-22, 23-25,26-24. The even record out Gogebicthrough to the semifinals on Sunday. North Dakota State College of Sci-

ence defeated Dakota College - Bot-tineau to win the regional tournament. "It as a mirror image of our season,

up and down throughout the entire

weekend," said Gogebic coach AaronBender. "It came down to our achillesheel, passing. When we pass well, wescore a lot of points. That's what hap-pened today, we just did not pass wellat all."Brittni Kisul was selected to the all

region team, finishing with 28 killsand seven aces on the weekend. Kisul,Krista Svaboda and Korrie Trier werelikely to make the all-tournamentteam. Svaboda finsihed with 62 assistsand Trier with 11 kills and two aces. Gogebic finished the season with a

8-17 record and will lost just onestarter, Jess Fink. "It will be tough to replace her

speed in the back row as a defensivespecialist," Bender said. "If these girlsmake a decision to continue on at GCC,they give themselves an opportunityas five returning starters. I think theycould really have a successful yearnext year."

Basketball

Hockey

Lady Samsons close season at Region 13 tourney

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COMICSTHE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2013 l 11DEFLOCKED

BORN LOSER

MOTHER GOOSE & GRIMM

ALLEY OOP

FOR BETTER OR WORSE

GET FUZZY

BEETLE BAILEY

ZITS

THE GRIZZWELLS

FRANK & ERNEST

SPEED BUMPHERMAN

Dear Annie: I am gettingmarried next year. One of themost stressful things for me ispicking the attendants. I havemy best man and two grooms-men. My fiancee, "Sara," sug-gested I add another friend,which I was happy to do.

Then, a good friend found outand was a little upset that I did-n't choose him, as well. He triedto joke about not being in the

wedding, but I knew he was a lit-tle hurt, so I asked him to be agroomsman. He has been themost excited about everythingsince then. So Sara and I nowhave four attendants each.

The problem is, I have oneadditional friend, "Mark," who Iknow will be upset if he is theonly one of my close friends leftout of the wedding party. I'd liketo include Mark, but Sara doesn'thave many friends and wouldhave trouble finding a matchingpartner as an attendant.

How should I go about this? Ifeel weird even talking about mywedding with Mark because heisn't included. — West CoastDilemmaDear Dilemma: First of all,

while it's nice for attendants to"match up," it is not a require-ment. One groomsman can escorttwo bridesmaids. Attendantsalso can walk separately, or twogroomsmen (or bridesmaids) canwalk together. Discuss this withSara, in case she has someoneelse she'd like to ask. Anotheroption is to include Mark by giv-ing him a different honor: Hecould be an usher, directingguests to their seats and handingout programs if you have them.You also could ask him to readsomething during the ceremonyor help in other ways. He wouldbe treated the same as a grooms-man and included in all plannedevents.Dear Annie:My husband and

I occasionally socialize withanother couple our age. Theproblem is, at restaurants, thehusband is condescending to thewait staff, repeatedly asks forsubstitutions and always sendssome of his food back with a com-

plaint. In addition, he is a stingytipper.

His wife says nothing whenthese things happen. But we areembarrassed by his behavior. Wedon't want to humiliate them orcause a scene by being critical.What do you suggest? — AFriend of Waiters Dear Friend: You can tell a

lot about a person's character bythe way he treats the wait staffat a restaurant. If you insist onsocializing with this boorishman, we suggest you avoid placeswhere he will cause embarrass-ment and ill will. Go to a movieor a play, and stop briefly for adrink after. Meet for coffee.Invite them to your home if youprefer to share a meal. We thinkhis wife will know why you nolonger eat out with them, andshe will inform her husband.How they choose to deal withthat is up to them.Dear Annie: I cried when I

read the letter from "Hurt andAlone," whose husband goes outdrinking with his cheatingfriends and leaves her at home.

I, too, have been hurt andalone for years. My husband'salcohol intake, work scheduleand need to be the social centerof attention have taken priorityin our marriage for 20 years. Myhusband is the kind of guy whotreats everyone to everything, sopeople think he's the greatest.He's not a raging, belligerent orviolent alcoholic. He's a success-ful functioning alcoholic who isan expert at excuses and turningthe tables.

Tell "Hurt and Alone" that sheis not the only one who has spentmany a night waiting for herhusband to come home. I wasonce a self-assured, confidentwoman, but I've lost myself cop-ing with endless lies and loneli-ness while trying to raise threechildren. — Lonely in California Annie's Mailbox is written

by Kathy Mitchell and MarcySugar, longtime editors of theAnn Landers column. Pleaseemail your questions to [email protected].

Take on a project or search for aplace to visit in the months ahead.Getting into the swing of things andbroadening your horizons will turnthis into a spectacular year. Don't beafraid to make the first move, and doeverything with confidence andgusto.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) —Let emotional mishaps pass you bywithout causing upset. Mistakeshappen, and you have too muchgoing for you to let the little annoy-ances bother you. Think big and fol-low through.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.21) — Make sure you have a ser-viceable Plan B ready to go. Makinga snap decision or changing coursemidstream could confuse others, butit will bring you closer to your desti-nation.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)— Take on additional responsibilitytoday. The more control you have,the less time you'll spend explainingwhat you want or fixing what youdon't like.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) —Don't leave anything to chance.Take a close look around you andfigure out what everyone else isdoing. Emotions are likely to sur-face, and sudden, unexpectedchange will be necessary.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) —Appreciate life and the people youlove. If you devote energy to pro-jects and plans that entice you,you'll find a way to make extramoney while having fun.

ARIES (March 21-April 19) —You would be wise to avoid makinglast-minute decisions. Mild unpre-dictability will help you avoid inter-ference in your affairs. Romance willimprove your life. Get active to feelbetter.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) —Put one foot in front of the other.Taking the proper precautions willensure success. Refuse to let any-one stand in your way. Be preparedto pay for what you want — no debt,no worry.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) —Put love first and nurture the rela-tionships that are most important toyou. Fixing up your place to ensurecomfort and entertainment will leadto compliments from influential folks.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) —Sharing with people who think likeyou will help you flush out anyaspect of an endeavor that has thepotential to go wrong. Being a teamplayer will promote friendship.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) — Makea decision based on your needs.You may not win, but you will findout where you stand, giving youadded impetus and needed help tomove on and do your own thing.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) —Greater participation will lead toallies and strong friendships. Takepride in what you do and deliver onany promises you make. Someonefrom your past will offer you some-thing special.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) —Don't get sidetracked, no matterwhat comes at you. Finish what'sexpected of you before someonecomplains. Leave plenty of time fora special get-together or to takecare of personal needs.

YOURHOROSCOPE

Problems picking wedding party members

Annie’sMailbox

BERNICEBEDE OSOL

Your BirthdayMonday, Oct. 28, 2013

DAILY GLOBE CROSSWORD

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CLASSIFIEDS THE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM12 l MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2013

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KKiinnnnuunneenn’’ss GGaarraaggeeGeneral Auto & Truck Repair

John Jennings, ProprietorE4717 Airport RoadIronwood, MI 49938

Check Engine Light On? Have your car checked today!

ABS Service • Air Bags Computer Scanning

Leviticus 19:36

906-364-9332

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SNOW PLOWINGAre you paying too much?For a pay only when it snows rate inthe Ironwood, Bessemer, Hurley areas

Phone: R.A. Miller1-906-364-0767

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No Job Too Big or Too Small!

Saari Snowplowing

55 TTRRUUCCKKSS && 11 FFRROONNTT--EENNDD LLOOAADDEERR

Banks Pushed Back Driveways Widened

Snowplowing

Great Gift for Parents & Grandparents!

Commercial & Residential32 YEARS EXPERIENCE • FREE ESTIMATES

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SNOW RUN TRUCKING, LLC

SSNNOOWW RRUUNN TTRRUUCCKKIINNGG,, LLLLCC is now taking applications for a full time

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“GUARANTEED TO BE HOME ON WEEKENDS”

We offer the following benefits to our full time employees:• Medical/Dental Insurance• Paid Vacations/Holidays• Life/Disability Insurance

OTR TRUCK DRIVER

Applications may be picked up at the following address between 7:30a.m.–4:00p.m.

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CLASSIFIEDSTHE DAILY GLOBE • YOURDAILYGLOBE.COM MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2013 l 13� � � � ��

By Anthony L. Komaroff, M.D.DEAR DOCTOR K: I'm the primary care-giver for my ill, elderly father. I'm ex-hausted and upset all the time. What canI do to lighten my load without costing usmuch? Neither of us is well off.DEAR READER: You're not alone. Ap-proximately one in five American adultshelps an elderly or disabled family mem-ber with the daily tasks of life. This care-giving runs the gamut from groceryshopping, cooking and cleaning house, tohelping with baths and personal hygieneor providing hands-on medical care.That's often in addition to caring for otherfamily members and holding down a paidjob.Caregiving may be one of the most worth-

while jobs you'll ever undertake, but it canbe exhausting. It can cause immensestrain, which may lead to depression andhealth problems.Here are some budget-conscious tips tohelp you take care of yourself:-- Always accept help when it's offered.Create a list of very specific things thatyou would love to have help with, so youcan request something specific whenhelp is offered.-- Tap into religious communities. A reli-gious or spiritual community can be astrong source of assistance if you or theperson you are caring for belongs to one.-- Support groups are a good place toshare ideas and experiences with othercaregivers. There are quite a number ofsupport groups for caregivers on the In-ternet. Just type "caregiving supportgroups" into a search engine.-- Look for government-supported serv-ices. You might be surprised by howmany services your father may be eligiblefor. These are services provided by localor state governments, or by the federalgovernment. Ask your doctor for thename of a social worker who can workwith the two of you. Particularly if your fa-ther is on Medicare, he may be eligible forhelp in cleaning the home, personal hy-giene, and even "Meals on Wheels" de-livered to the home.-- Stay connected. Catch up with friends

regularly. Establish a weekly walk with afriend or an occasional lunch or movie.-- Clear your schedule. Set aside a regu-lar time to spend with your partner or fam-ily, away from home.-- Stay active. Try to get 30 minutes ofmoderate exercise a day, most days ofthe week.-- Enjoy yourself. Listen to music, enjoy aluxurious bath, take a yoga class or do ajigsaw puzzle. Regular time off can renewyour spirit and energy. If you don't takecare of yourself, you won't be in verygood shape to take care of your father.-- Ease stress. Learn meditation or otherrelaxation techniques.I have never had to be a caregiver for amember of my family, but many of my pa-tients have been in that position. Theirpersonal sacrifice and dedication inspireme. But sometimes they need help tolighten their load. Often that help is avail-able, but they have to be proactive to findit.Dr. Komaroff is a physician and professorat Harvard Medical School. To send ques-tions, go to AskDoctorK.com, or write: AskDoctor K, 10 Shattuck St., Second Floor,Boston, MA 02115.) COPYRIGHT 2013THE PRESIDENT AND FELLOWS OFHARVARD COLLEGE DISTRIBUTED BYUNIVERSAL UCLICK FOR UFS 1130Walnut, Kansas City, MO 64106; 816-581-7500

HELP IS AVAILABLE FOR OVERTAXED CAREGIVERS

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North 10-28-13 A J 6 A 4 8 6 5 3 2 A 7 4West East

8 7 3 4 Q 9 8 2 K J 10 7 5 K 4 J 10 9 7 K Q J 9 10 6 3

South K Q 10 9 5 2 6 3 A Q 8 5 2

Dealer: SouthVulnerable: Both

South West North East1 Pass 2 Pass2 Pass 4 All pass

Opening lead: K

With one fewer card, it would be easierBy Phillip Alder

Bridge can be a strange game at times. Usually, you are happy to have lots of honors, but occasionally you would find a contract much easier if it weren’t for an unnecessary high card. Do not resist the idea that an honor may be extraneous.

In this deal, South is in four spades. West leads the club king. How should South plan the play?

South starts with four potential losers: one heart, one diamond and two clubs. He has nine winners; six spades, one heart, one diamond and one club. So it seems as if the dia-mond finesse had better be winning. In theory, this is a 50-50 shot, but surely you know that finesses never work on Mondays! And if the dia-mond finesse is failing, is there any other way to make the contract?

How about trying to establish dum-my’s diamond suit? As long as the suit is splitting 3-3 or 4-2 (or 5-1 with a singleton king) and trumps are not 4-0, an extra diamond winner can be established.

South should take the first or sec-ond club, play a trump to his king, cash the diamond ace, and continue with the diamond queen.

Suppose West takes that trick, cashes two club winners and shifts to a heart.

Declarer wins on the board, ruffs a diamond high in his hand, leads a trump to dummy’s jack, ruffs anoth-er diamond high, returns to dummy with a spade and cashes the diamond eight — bingo.

The probability for this line is ap-proximately 78 percent — much bet-ter than a finesse. And without the superfluous diamond queen in his hand, South would have seen this line immediately.

© 2013 UFS, Dist. by Universal Uclick for UFS

BRIDGE PHILLIP ALDER

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Associated Press

DETROIT LIONS quarterback Matthew Stafford (9) celebrates scoring on a 1-yard touchdown run against the Dallas Cowboys in the fourth quar-ter in Detroit on Sunday.

Lionsdefending him by himself, andsometimes attempted to slowhim down with a zone."He had his way," Carr said.

"And, we couldn't find a way tokeep him from rolling."Johnson noticed."It was crazy," he said. "We

had a lot of one-on-one coveragetoday, and we were able to takeadvantage and hit some deepballs. Matt made some greatthrows to me."The Lions (5-3) overcame four

turnovers without forcing aturnover, becoming the firstteam to do that and win sinceNew England did against Miamiin 2007, according to STATS.On their last drive, Stafford

threw a 22-yard pass to Johnsonto set up the winning score. Thequarterback caught at leastsome Cowboys by surprise,including linebacker Sean Lee,who appeared to expect him tospike the ball to stop the clock."He kind of caught us off-

guard," defensive tackle JasonHatcher acknowledged.Dallas (4-4) seemed to set

itself up to win three straight forthe first time this year to build abigger lead atop the NFC Eastwhen Tony Romo threw his sec-ond touchdown — and third ofthe game — to Dez Bryant with6:45 left to take 27-17 lead.The Cowboys, though, allowed

Reggie Bush to cap an 80-yarddrive with a 1-yard TD with 3:33left. They also had to settle for

Dan Bailey's third field goal with1:02 left after Tyron Smith wasflagged for holding on thirddown, a mistake that stopped theclock even though Detroitdeclined the penalty."If we don't get called for a

penalty, I think they probablyhad 20 seconds or so left," Romosaid.With no timeouts, the Lions

went from their 20 to the Cow-boys end zone thanks in largepart to a 17-yard pass to John-son, a 40-yard connection withKris Durham and Johnson's 14threception that gave them the ballat the Dallas 1.Instead of spiking the ball,

Stafford took the snap andleaped with his arms extended tobeat the team he rooted for grow-ing up in Highland Park, Texas."I was just as fooled as the

defense was," Lions offensiveguard Larry Warford said.Stafford was 33 of 48 for 488

yards —his second-highest total— with a 2-yard TD pass toJohnson in the first quarter andtwo interceptions. Reggie Bushhad 92 yards rushing and ascore.Romo was 14 of 30, failing to

complete half his passes for thefirst time since 2009, for 206yards without a turnover.

From page 8

Associated Press

BOSTON RED Sox first baseman Mike Napoli celebrates after tagging out St. Louis Cardinals' Kolten Wong on a pick-off attempt to end Game 4the World Series Sunday in St. Louis. The Red Sox won 4-2 to ties the series at 2-2.

World Seriesand was the club's leader, smack-ing his hands together andscreaming at teammates to getgoing when he pulled into secondbase on his double. Then, afterthe fifth inning, he huddled theRed Sox for a pep talk in thedugout.Not long after, Gomes' drive

put Boston ahead 4-1 in thesixth.With adrenaline taking over,

Gomes spiked an arm throughthe air as he rounded first base,yelled and banged his chest witha fist twice. Teammates tuggedon Gomes' beard for good luckwhen he got back to the dugout,including a two-handed pull byMike Napoli.While talk of umpires' calls

dominated discussion followingtwo of the opening three games,

this one turned on a manager'spregame decision.John Farrell's original Red

Sox lineup didn't include Gomes,but Victorino's back had beenbothering him since Saturday, soDaniel Nava was moved from leftfield to right and from fifth tosecond in the batting order.Gomes was inserted into the No.5 hole behind Ortiz."Since I signed up for this

game, all I wanted was theopportunity," Gomes said. "I justwanted to be in the box."Gomes had been 0 for 9 in the

Series before the home run, andRed Sox outfielders had been 4for 40 with no RBIs. FollowingDustin Pedroia's two-out singleand a four-pitch walk to Ortiz byLynn, Maness threw five straightsliders to Gomes, who sent thelast one into the Red Sox bullpenin left as Matt Holliday kept run-

ning back only to run out ofroom."I take a lot of pride in the at-

bat in front of me and behindme," Gomes said. "Obviously, BigPapi is pretty much an intention-al walk. I did what I could to givehim a little protection."Carpenter singled in a run in

the seventh off Craig Breslow inthe seventh after pinch-hitterShane Robinson doubled withtwo outs against Doubront on aball that skidded away fromGomes. Junichi Tazawa came inand got Holliday to hit an inning-ending grounder to second, anight after allowing a tiebreak-ing, two-run double to Holliday.Doubront got the win with 2 2-

3 innings of one-hit relief. Lack-ey, the Game 2 loser andBoston's probable Game 6starter, pitched the eighth for hisfirst relief appearance in nine

years, overcoming a two-basethrowing error by third basemanXander Bogaerts — Boston's sev-enth error of the Series — and awild pitch.With a runner on third, Lack-

ey got Jon Jay to pop up andDavid Freese to ground out.Uehara, Boston's sixth pitch-

er, got three outs for his sixthsave this postseason, completinga six-hitter.Lynn was the hard-luck loser,

leaving with the score tied andtwo on for Maness, who allowedGomes' homer on his fifth pitch.A night after one of the crazi-

est endings in Series history —an obstruction call on Red Soxthird baseman Will Middle-brooks — Boston ensured theSeries will return to FenwayPark for Game 6 on Wednesdaynight."We stayed away from throw-

ing the ball down the third baseline tonight," Gomes said.It was a special anniversary

for both teams. Exactly nineyears earlier, the Red Sox com-pleted a four-game sweep of theCardinals across the street at oldBusch Stadium for their firstchampionship since 1918. Andtwo years earlier, Freese hit atying, two-run, two-out triple inthe ninth against Texas and awinning homer in the 11th toforce a Game 7, which St. Louiswon the following night.Buchholz, in his first appear-

ance since the AL championshipseries finale on Oct. 19, foughtthrough shoulder issues and hisvelocity topped out at 90 mph. Helasted a season-low four inningsand 66 pitches before he was lift-ed for a pinch-hitter, but heallowed just an unearned runand three hits."We have guys with heart.

Clay, he brought everything he'sgot," Ortiz said. "I have neverseen Clay throwing an 88 mphfastball."Fielding for the Red Sox

became trouble again in the thirdwhen Carpenter singled to centerwith one out, and the ballappeared to take a high hop androll away from Ellsbury. Carpen-

ter sprinted to second on the sec-ond error of the Series by Ells-bury — who had just three dur-ing the regular season.Beltran singled into center

field two pitches later, makinghim 8 for 10 with 12 RBIs withrunners in scoring position dur-ing the postseason.There almost was another

miscue in the fourth following aone-out walk to Jay. Freesebounced to Drew, and the short-stop grabbed the grounder on therun and flipped the ball with hisglove high to Pedroia at second.He jumped and just got his leftfoot down in time to force Jay,who slid into him hard.After Ortiz's double to the

right-center field wall in thefifth, Gomes fell behind 0-2 in thecount and then worked out hiswalk. Lynn appeared to be toofine with his pitches as hewalked rookie Bogaerts, loadingthe bases, and Drew lofted a flyto medium left near the foul line.Holliday's one-hop throw

home hit the sliding Ortiz in theback and bounced away. Lynnrecovered to strike out DavidRoss and induce an inning-end-ing groundout from pinch-hitterMike Carp.

From page 8

Obstruction call becomestalk of baseball worldST. LOUIS (AP) — By Sunday

morning, most everyone hadbecome an expert on the obstructionrule."How can u make a call like that

in the World Series," rapper LilWayne tweeted."Worst ending to a World Series

game ever!" PGA golfer HunterMahan posted."Obstruction of justice," Arizona

Cardinals kicker Jay Feely wrote.No matter that the Official Base-

ball Rules have a slightly differenttake on what happened when St.Louis runner Allen Craig tripped overBoston third baseman Will Middle-brooks in Game 3 late Saturdaynight.But anytime someone scores the

winning run with two outs in the bot-

tom of the ninth inning without eventouching home plate — called safeon an extremely rare ruling by anumpire — it's bound to cause a littleruckus.All sides seemed to agree on this

point: Allen Craig tripping overBoston third baseman Will Middle-brooks likely made for the mostcrazy, chaotic October finish of all-time.And it gave St. Louis a 5-4 win at

Busch Stadium and a 2-1 edge."As a baseball fan, you hate to

see a game end like that," pitcherAdam Wainwright said Sundaybefore Game 4. "Obviously I'm onthe Cardinals, so I'm fortunate therule is the way it is. And you hate tosay it, but he impeded the process ofrunning home."Said Red Sox manager John Far-

rell: "It wasn't a normal night ofsleep, I know that."