DDC-12-29-2015

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TUESDAY

D e cember 29, 2015 • $1 .0 0

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DAILY CHRONICLE Former Browns’ building seen as key for Sycamore’s east side / A3

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Winter storm slows travel

Power outages, accidents and closures reported in DeKalb County By BRITTANY KEEPERMAN bkeeperman@shawmedia.com DeKALB – Right on the heels of a winter storm that covered much of DeKalb County with ice Monday, residents are bracing for a cold snap with temperatures in the teens and possibly more snow later this week. That storm caused vehicle accidents, power outages and closures. Monday’s weather also caused social service agencies to cut services and businesses to close early. About 1,500 ComEd customers in DeKalb County lost power Monday, according to the ComEd Voice your power outage map. The city of DeKalb esopinion tablished two warming shelters. How were you County officials affected by Monday’s estimated that about winter storm? Vote 60 to 65 vehicles endonline at ed up in ditches while Daily-Chronicle. navigating the icy com. roadways. About four accidents also took place Monday, with two of those involving injuries, Sheriff Roger Scott said. A car slid off the road at Five Points and Base Line roads near Kingston because of icy conditions about 8 a.m. Monday. The driver wasn’t injured, but the vehicle struck a utility pole which caused power outage for about 40 ComEd customers. Power was restored about 10 a.m. Throughout the day, ComEd reported more outages in the area, including loss of power for more than 250 customers in Waterman as well as sporadic disconnections throughout DeKalb and Sycamore, according to the utility’s outage map. More rural areas also had outages. Parts of Waterman were without power for hours. “It’s a pretty big outage for us,” Waterman Police Chief Chuck Breese said. “It was mostly on the north side of town.” Freezing temperatures are forecast for the rest of the week after Monday’s wintry mix. The new year will kickoff with a high of 21 degrees New Years Day. On New Year’s Eve, the nighttime low will be 12 degrees. The city of DeKalb has two designated warming centers, one at the DeKalb Senior Center, 330 Grove St., open 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and Haish Gymnasium, 303 S. Ninth St., open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Hope Haven, at 1145 Rushmore Drive, is a no turn away

See WEATHER page A5

Photos by Danielle Guerra – dguerra@shawmedia.com

A tow truck operator from Accurate Towing in Sycamore puts the tow cable back in his truck Monday after realizing the cable would not reach a Chrysler in the cornfield after its driver veered off Peace Road before the bridge over the Kishwaukee River between Freed Road and Route 64 in Sycamore. DeKalb County Sheriff’s Chief Deputy Andy Sullivan was out directing traffic while the tow truck returned with a longer cable and commented that the driver was forced onto the shoulder by an oncoming car in its lane.

Warming centers

Snowplows from the city of Sycamore pass each other on Route 64 in front of the Sycamore Golf Course during the ice storm Monday in Sycamore. Power was out in parts of Sycamore as emergency crews were responding to downed powerlines along Airport Road.

DeKalb Senior Center, 330 Grove St., DeKalb 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday. Haish Gymnasium, 303 S. Ninth St., DeKalb 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday Hope Haven, 1145 Rushmore Drive, DeKalb, 815758-3166 Warming Center Information: 815748-8400

Advocates: Chicago police crisis training weak By SARA BURNETT The Associated Press CHICAGO – In the wake of another police shooting, Mayor Rahm Emanuel called for an immediate review of how the Chicago Police Department trains officers to respond to calls involving people in crisis or with mental health problems. But advocates for what’s known as crisis intervention team training say Chicago’s program has been “starved” of resources, with only about 15 percent of officers completing the 40-hour course. Advocates say they tried to get Ashlee Rezin/Chicago Sun-Times via AP meetings with Emanuel earLatonya Jones, 19, holds a photo of her mother, Bettie Jones, during a ly in his first term to stress vigil Sunday in Chicago. Jones and Quintonio LeGrier, 19, were killed the importance of the trainearly Saturday by police responding to a domestic disturbance on the ing and ask the city to invest city’s West Side, police said. more in it, but were ignored.

Inside Court records show Quintonio LeGrier had behavioral problems, see page A3 Illinois’ budget crisis also created a lapse, not just in Chicago but elsewhere. The issue resurfaced last weekend, after officers responding to a domestic disturbance shot and killed a 19-year-old man and a 55-yearold woman. The deaths of Bettie Jones – who police say was accidentally hit by gunfire – and Quintonio LeGrier occurred just weeks after the Department of Justice opened a civil-rights investigation into Chicago police practices. Here’s a look at Chicago’s

training program and what excessive force. its supporters describe as the Family members of anothcity’s “shameful” response to er man, Philip Coleman, had a growing crisis: similar questions after officers arrested the 38-year-old THE CASES in 2012. LeGrier’s father said the He later died in police cusNorthern Illinois University tody. student appeared to be a “litColeman’s family said tle agitated” and later tried to they told officers that he was bust open his door, prompting mentally ill and experiencAntonio LeGrier to call po- ing some type of breakdown. lice. He said Jones, who lived A video released this month downstairs, told him Quin- shows officers later entertonio LeGrier had a baseball ing Coleman’s jail cell, using bat. a stun gun on him and then Relatives of both shoot- dragging him away. ing victims have questioned He later died after bewhy police opened fire and ing given an anti-psychotic if the situation could have drug. Emanuel has said an been handled another way. investigation into how police On Monday, Antonio LeGri- handled the case is being reer filed a lawsuit against the opened. city, saying his son was never See CHICAGO, page A5 a threat and that officers used

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DeKalb boys hoops reaches Dayton semifinals / B1

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DeKalb bicycle shop gets new owners, services / A6

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DAILY PLANNER CORTLAND

Tuesday Evening Story Time Time: 7 p.m. today Place: Cortland Community Library, 63 S. Somonauk Road Information: 815-756-7274 or www.cortlandlibrary.com

DeKALB

Kishwaukee Sunrise Rotary Time: 7 a.m. today Place: Kishwaukee Hospital, 1 Kish Hospital Drive Information: 815-901-5326 Job Club Time: 9 to 11 a.m. today Place: Illinois WorkNet Center, 650B N. Peace Road Information: 815-901-0177, ext. 250, or billi. tierney@kishwaukeecollege.edu Salvation Army Food Pantry Time: 9 a.m. to noon today Place: 830 Grove St. Call 815-756-4308 to volunteer. Those needing food pantry assistance should be prepared to show a state-issued photo ID and proof of DeKalb County residency. Easy Does It AA (C) Time: 9:30 a.m. today Place: 312 E. Taylor St. Information: 800-452-7990 or www. dekalbalanoclub.com Living with Cancer: Chair Yoga Time: 9:30 a.m. today Place: KishHealth System Cancer Center Information: 815-748-2958 St. Vincent de Paul Food Pantry Time: 3 to 6 p.m. today Place: St. Mary Ministry Center, the corner of Fourth St. and Fisk Ave. Information: 815-758-5432 Beginning and Intermediate ESL Classes Time: 5:30 to 8:10 p.m. today Place: Conexion Comunidad, 637 N. 11th St., use front or side entrance Information: 815-825-2086, ext. 3180 Free English as a Second Language class taught by qualified instructors. Childcare is available for children from birth to age 10. Good Vibes Al-Anon Time: 7 p.m. today Place: First Lutheran Church, 324 N. Third St. Information: 815-895-8119 Sexaholics Anonymous Time: 7 p.m. today Place: 512 Normal Road, in the brick building behind the church Information: 815-508-0280 Jazz Jam Time: 7:30 p.m. today Place: The House Cafe, 263 E. Lincoln Highway Information: 815-275-4884 Sign up begins at 7:30 p.m. and performances begin at 8 p.m. Musicians are welcome to bring their instruments and join the jam.

GENOA

Moms in the Park Time: 10 a.m. today Place: Chamberlain Park, 400 E. Second St. Information: 815-751-5526 or sheerlady@ hotmail.com. Moms meet and socialize while kids play. Take Off Pounds Sensibly (TOPS) Time: 6 p.m. today Place: CrossWind Community Church, 13100 Cherry Road Information: 815-784-3480 Bingo Time: 7 p.m. today Place: Genoa Veterans Home, 311 S. Washington St. Information: 815-785-5967 Smoky Mirror AA (C) Time: 7:30 p.m. today Place: Trinity Lutheran Church, 33930 N. State Road Information: 800-452-7990 or www. dekalbalanoclub.com

SANDWICH

Preschool Story Time Time: 10:30 a.m. today Place: Sandwich Public Library, 925 Main St. Information: 815-785-8308 Preschoolers can read, dance, sing, play and learn at this story time geared towards children age 2-and-a-half years old to 5 years old. Registration is required. Creative Yarns Time: 6 p.m. today Place: Sandwich Public Library, 925 Main St. Information: 815-785-8308 Bring your hooks and needles for a fun evening of knit and crochet. Learn the techniques you need to create projects. All skill levels are welcome; bring your own materials.

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Yesterday’s Reader Poll results

Today’s Reader Poll question

Which historic document do you consider most important?

How were you affected by Monday’s winter storm?

Declaration of Independence: 15 percent U.S. Constitution: 57 percent Bill of Rights: 28 percent

• It made for a difficult commute • Lost power • Had to scrape ice of my vehicle • I wasn’t affected • Other

Total votes: 116

Vote online at Daily-Chronicle.com

TODAY’S TALKER

Texas cleans up after twisters By DAVID WARREN GARLAND, Texas – Jacqui Gordon spent Monday sifting through the debris that had been her home, searching for old family photographs – especially of her father, who died two years ago. She and nine others were enjoying a holiday gathering when winds began to rattle her home in suburban Dallas. They all dashed into closets and suffered only bumps and bruises, but Gordon’s roof was torn away and her house destroyed. “I just got divorced, and this is all I had,” she said. With rain all day Sunday keeping people away, residents worked on a dreary and frigid Monday to salvage what they could, with the American Red Cross distributing items like tarps, rakes and work gloves to help them. At least 11 people died and dozens were injured in the tornadoes that swept through the Dallas area Saturday. Snow from New Mexico through the Midwest, plus flooding in Arkansas, Missouri and Illinois, added to the succession of severe weather events across the country in the last week that led to about four dozen deaths. The storm system brought heavy snow, ice and blustery winds to several states in the nation’s midsection, as well as heavy rain in already-waterlogged areas. More than 2,100 flights across the U.S. were canceled Monday – more than half of them at Chicago’s two main airports – and 3,700 were delayed, according to flight-tracking service FlightAware. A typical day sees about 150 cancellations and 4,000 delays. Highways turned icy and treacherous in New Mexico, while Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin declared a state of emergency after blizzard conditions affected parts of the state and heavy rains fell. The Oklahoma Highway Patrol said the body of a 22-year-old man was recovered,

The Associated Press CLEVELAND – A grand jury Monday declined to indict a white rookie police officer in the killing of 12-year-old Tamir Rice, a black youngster who was shot while playing with what turned out to be a pellet gun. In explaining the decision, Cuyahoga County prosecutor Tim McGinty said it was “indisputable” that the boy was drawing the pistol from his waistband when he was gunned down. McGinty said Tamir was trying to either hand the weapon over to police or show them it wasn’t real, but the officer and his partner had no way of knowing that. “Simply put, given this perfect storm of human error,

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G.J. McCarthy/The Dallas Morning News via AP

This aerial photo taken Monday shows damage after a tornado ripped through the area Saturday in Glenn Heights, Texas. Residents surveyed the destruction from deadly tornadoes in North Texas as the same storm system brought winter woes to the Midwest on Monday, amplifying flooding that’s blamed for more than a dozen deaths and prompting hundreds of flight cancellations. At least 11 people died and dozens were injured in the tornadoes that swept through the Dallas area Saturday and caused substantial damage. but a second man, the lead singer of the country-rock band Backroad Anthem, was still missing after the two went duck hunting and their boat capsized. Officials in Arkansas said a 31-year-old man died in a storm-related drowning. Several inches of rain caused flooding in Illinois and Missouri, where Gov. Jay Nixon also declared a state of emergency. Nixon says the state’s death toll from days of pounding rainfall has risen to 10, and he expects that number to grow. The Mississippi River neared a potential record crest, after an unusual amount of late-fall rain had the river already high before torrential downpours that began Saturday. Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant said Monday the state is seeking a federal disaster

declaration for some or all of the seven counties hit by a tornado last week. Authorities in Georgia said they recovered the body of a man whose car was swept away when floodwaters overtook it. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott made disaster declarations Sunday for four counties – Dallas, Collin, Rockwall and Ellis. Officials estimated as many as 1,450 homes in North Texas were damaged or destroyed by at least nine tornadoes. The National Weather Service has said an EF4 tornado, which is the second-most powerful with winds up to more than 200 mph, hit Garland. Eight people died there, 15 were injured and more than 600 structures, mostly single-family homes, were damaged.

No charges for cop in killing of Cleveland boy By MARK GILLISPIE

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mistakes and miscommunications by all involved that day, the evidence did not indicate criminal conduct by police,” McGinty said. He said patrolman Timothy Loehmann was justified in opening fire: “He had reason to fear for his life.” Tamir’s family condemned the decision but echoed the prosecutor in urging those disappointed to express themselves “peacefully and democratically.” Barricades were set up outside a Cleveland courthouse in case of protests, and about two dozen people gathered in the cold rain at the recreation center where Tamir was shot, some holding signs with photos of the boy and others killed by police in the U.S. A grainy surveillance-camera video of the boy’s November 2014 shooting provoked

outrage nationally, and together with other killings of black people by police in places such as Ferguson, Missouri, and New York City, it helped fuel the Black Lives Matter movement. There was no immediate comment from Loehmann or his partner, who was not charged either. Tamir was gunned down by Loehmann within two seconds of the officer’s police cruiser skidding to a stop near the boy. Loehmann and his white training partner, Frank Garmback, were responding to a 911 call about a “guy” waving a gun and pointing it at people. Tamir was carrying a borrowed airsoft gun that looks like an actual firearm but shoots nonlethal plastic pellets. It was missing the orange tip

that is supposed to show that it is not a real weapon. The grand jury had been hearing evidence and testimony since mid-October. In detailing the decision not to bring charges, McGinty said police radio personnel contributed to the tragedy by failing to pass along the “all-important fact” that the 911 caller said the gunman was probably a youngster and the gun probably wasn’t real. Assistant Prosecutor Matthew Meyer said it was “extremely difficult” to tell the difference between the pellet gun and a real one. And he said Tamir was big for his age – 5-foot-7 and 175 pounds, with a men’s XL jacket and size-36 pants – and could have easily passed for someone much older.

News Editor Brett Rowland Ext. 2221 browland@shawmedia.com

Daily Chronicle and Daily-Chronicle.com are a division of Shaw Media. All rights reserved. Copyright 2015

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Pink Sisters mark 100 years of nonstop prayer, seek 100 more By NATALIE POMPILIO The Associated Press

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December 29, 2015 Daily Chronicle Section A • Page 2

AP photo

Roman Catholic Holy Spirit Adoration sisters pray Dec. 22 at the Chapel of Divine Love in Philadelphia. For 100 years now, 24-hours a day, one of the cloistered nuns in a pink habit pray before the altar at the chapel.

PHILADELPHIA – For more than 100 years, the cloistered nuns known as the Pink Sisters have worked in shifts to ensure nonstop prayer in Philadelphia’s Chapel of Divine Love. Now, to address their shrinking numbers and ensure their prayers continue for another century, the Roman Catholic Holy Spirit Adoration sisters have begun quietly reaching out, seeking to grow their order while carefully maintaining their secluded life. In the last year, they hung a banner outside their chapel and convent as a way to let other people know about their daily public Masses. They’ve grant-

ed more interviews with news reporters. And they have begun inviting Catholic women’s organizations and schools to speak to the sisters – with all conversations taking place through the grille in the convent visiting room, of course. There’s even a subtle recruitment flier hanging just inside the front door of the chapel. It encourages visitors to ask themselves three questions: Do you love Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament? Do you realize the power of prayer before the Blessed Sacrament? Is Jesus calling you to say ‘yes’ to a life of prayer before the Blessed Sacrament? “We rarely reached out for vocation promotion before the centennial. But now we want

young ladies to see how beautiful the life is and how truer the joy when it is without the trappings of material things,” said Sister Maria Clarissa, 55. “We do our part in addressing these challenges, but at the same time, we leave it to the Lord. He’s the one who calls.” There were once as many as 40 nuns living in the Philadelphia convent. Now, there are 20: The youngest is 52, and the oldest is 90. The order was founded in Holland in 1896 with a focus on the perpetual adoration of the Blessed Sacrament, the consecrated bread they uphold as the body and blood of Christ. The rose-hued habits are meant to symbolize the joy the sisters feel honoring the Holy Spirit.


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December 29, 2015 Daily Chronicle Section A • Page 3

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Records: NIU student shot by police had behavioral issues By RHONDA GILLESPIE rgillespie@shawmedia.com

Danielle Guerra – dguerra@shawmedia.com

Jose Meza of Weaver Construction uses a concrete saw on the newly poured drive leading into the back of the new location of Resource Bank on Dec. 22 in Sycamore. The bank, which is currently located in the strip mall on Sycamore’s east side, will move to the old Willow’s Hometown Cafe at 351 N. Main St., Sycamore.

Former Browns’ building seen as key for Sycamore’s east side By KATIE SMITH ksmith@shawmedia.com SYCAMORE – As businesses continue to close or move away from Sycamore’s east side, city officials are turning to the lot formerly occupied by Browns’ County Market to restore the area. Browns’ County Market closed in 2013 after the owner transferred the property at 403 E. State St. to NB&T Bank and proceeded with Chapter 7 bankruptcy. The market had anchored a shopping plaza that used to include the Wendy’s restaurant that was destroyed in a January fire and demolished in July. Transaction delays from last summer’s auction of the former Browns’ County Market building kept the deal from closing, and the space has remained vacant. Most recently, owners of

the State Street coffee and donut shop, Mudslingers, announced earlier this month that they plan on ending their three-year run a couple of blocks away on East State and would close. Plans to renovate Willow’s Hometown Cafe building at 351 N. Main St. are underway so the building can be used as a new location for a Resource Bank branch. The Sycamore City Council approved rezoning the corner property in August to allow crews to install banking drive-up lanes on the property. However, it’s repurposing the former Browns’ space that likely will be the first step to drawing more interest to east State, City Manager Brian Gregory said. “It seems as though the economy is, generally speaking, picking up,” Gregory said. “... Redeveloping the Browns’

site will [be] an anchor that will help all the different sites on the east end start to redevelop and fill up.” The hypothetical new business doesn’t need to boast a popular name brand so long as it provides a service Sycamore residents are sure to use, Gregory said. “Browns’ is the first cog in the wheel,” he said. But developing business in that area could continue to present challenges, First Ward Alderman Alan Bauer said. No one currently is contracted to fill the vacant space. “It’s a residential area, so what you’re looking at is neighborhood commercial space available there, and those are sometimes kind of hard spots to fill,” Bauer said. “Economic development is sometimes pretty challenging, but those are residential neighborhoods.”

DeKALB – The 19-year-old man shot and killed by a Chicago police officer Saturday, remained a Northern Illinois University student despite an arrest for punching a residence hall worker and other arrests, including assault and disorderly conduct. Quintonio LeGrier, a sophomore engineering major at NIU, was shot seven times, according to the Cook County medical examiner, by police who responded to a call about a domestic disturbance at the residence he shared with his father. Officers “were confronted by a combative subject resulting in the discharging of the officer’s weapon,” Chicago Police Department officials said in written statement after the incident. After hearing about LeGrier’s DeKalb legal troubles, the Rev. Jesse Jackson said they, along with the domestic issues that prompted Saturday’s call by LeGrier’s father for police help, show a young man beset with mental challenges. “It just means he was going through something,” Jackson told the Daily Chronicle. Calls to the student’s father indicated his voicemail was full. However, LeGrier’s family has said publicly that LeGrier had at one point been in foster care. They also said he was an honor student at NIU. His troubles began here in January when, according

to police records, he was arrested by city of DeKalb police for stealing a speaker, deodorant and body wash from Wal-Mart on Sycamore Road, according to court records. The merchandise was valued at less than $150 – making it a misdemeanor – but the fines and fees he amassed in the case topped $1,000. Two weeks later, on March 1, LeGrier had his first encounter for the year with NIU police. He was charged that day with resisting a campus police officer after police accused him of trying to leave the scene of a battery they were investigating, court records show. One month later, on May 6, he was charged with felony aggravated battery. That day NIU police were called to a dining hall in the Neptune dormitory in response to reports of a disturbance. According to a NIU police report, witnesses said LeGrier was in a buffet line “yelling and swearing” when a residence hall worker came over to try and calm him. The report states that LeGrier shouted an expletive to the female worker and punched her in the chest. “He had the same rebelliousness towards his father,” Jackson said. “That’s what mentally ill people do.” LeGrier’s father, Antonio, posted the $500 bail his son needed to get out of DeKalb County Jail after the felony arrest. And the student still was living in the Neptune residence hall as of this past

semester, an NIU spokesman confirmed. “His being out on bail had nothing to do with the way he was executed,” Jackson said. The civil rights leader has been consulting with the family since the shooting and was part of a Sunday vigil held near where it happened. According to the university’s student conduct code, LeGrier should have been subject to sanctions for his arrests and behavior. However, it is unclear if the university disciplined him. “Student Affairs has a strict policy of not speaking about sanctions against any individual student,” NIU spokesman Joe King said. LeGrier’s death was the third one associated with NIU this semester. In September, a student fell from the top floor of a residence hall after police and the coroner said he used LSD. Earlier this month 19-year-old Joseph Graves was killed in Chicago. Some media outlets erroneously reported that he was an NIU student, although NIU officials said he previously attended the university. “It does seem that we have dealt with more than our share of sorrows this semester,” King said. “Hopefully there are better times ahead in 2016.” LeGrier was due back in court Jan. 25. Now, however, his family will have to come to the campus to clear the belongings left in his dorm room.

DEKALB COUNTY ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION 2015 FUNDRAISING CAMPAIGN **=Monetary plus In-Kind Contribution *#=Special Partner-Reciprocal and/or In-Kind Contribution

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4 NEWS • Tuesday, December 29, 2015 • Section A • Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com POLICE REPORTS

STATE BRIEFS

Note to readers: Information in Police Reports is obtained from the DeKalb County Sheriff’s Office and city police departments. Individuals listed in Police Reports who have been charged with a crime have not been proven guilty in court.

Much of State Museum management leaves

Northern Illinois University Quentin D. Bond, 23, of the 17900 block of Royale Lane, Hazel Cresh, was charged Wednesday, Dec. 23, with possession of marijuana. Zachary J. Willard, 22, of the 400 block of Mary Ann Circle, Sycamore, was charged Thursday, Dec. 24, with driving under the influence. Dionte A. Crawford, 20, of the 1900 block of North Lewis Avenue, Waukegan, was charged Sunday, Dec. 27, with possession of marijuana. Steven E. Tomanek, 34, of the 200 block of Presidential Boulevard, Oswego, was charged Sunday, Dec. 27, with possession of marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia and driving under the influence. Zachary J. Barcott, 21, of the 1300 block of North Green Meadows Boulevard, Streamwood, was charged Sunday, Dec. 27, with possession of marijuana.

agencies. “Curation work needs to be done every day, and without SPRINGFIELD– Most of the the public being there, it has management team at the Illinois State Museum has re- allowed more time for some tired or taken other jobs amid of these things,” Suggs said. A bill designed to keep the museum’s closure due to the museum open has been a lack of a state budget. passed by the state House Gov. Bruce Rauner’s and Senate, and Suggs said administration closed the the bill was delivered to Raunmuseum to the public Oct. 1 and has laid off about a dozen er on Dec. 9. But Suggs said it’s unlikely members of the museum’s the museum would reopen management team, the Springfield State Journal-Reg- without a new budget. Rauner spokeswoman Cathister reported. erine Kelly told The AssociatMuseum board chairman Guerry Suggs said only three ed Press in an email that the bill is under review. or four members of the management team would be available to return should the Suburban funeral home museum reopen. He said the to serve drinks WHEELING – A suburban others have retired or gotten Chicago funeral home has new jobs. obtained a liquor permit that Union employees working will allow mourners to toast for the museum have spent departed loved ones with their time doing curation alcoholic drinks. work and other duties since Kolssak Funeral Home in the museum was closed. Wheeling recently received a A lawsuit filed by the liquor license from the village American Federation of of Wheeling. State, County and Municipal Owner Jon Kolssak told the Employees temporarily halted layoffs of about 150 people at Chicago Tribune he believes the museum and other state his funeral home is the first in

Illinois to obtain a special use permit allowing it to serve alcohol. He said families were asking if they could have alcohol at memorial events. The Wisconsin-based National Funeral Directors Association said Kolssak’s move to offer special packages include liquor and catered food is part of a broader trend in which funeral homes are taking steps to accommodate receptions held in conjunction with a wake, funeral or memorial service.

Metra: 2 dead, 4 others hurt in train-car crash CHICAGO – A spokesman for Chicago’s commuter train service said two people were killed and four others injured when a Metra train struck a car on Chicago’s southwest side. Metra spokesman Michael Gillis said Monday night that an 18-year-old woman and a 20-year-old woman died from their injuries. Gillis said the injured included a 3-year-old male, a 17-year-old male and a

17-year-old female. Their injuries weren’t considered life-threatening. He said a 20-year-old male was in serious condition. The spokesman said that the 17-year-old male was driving. Gillis said the cause of the crash is still under investigation. Officials said no passengers on the train were injured.

under investigation. The newspaper reported that firefighters who responded found flames and smoke pouring from the structure. Harrisburg is about 60 miles west of Evansville, Indiana.

Kankakee girl, 7, dies in house fire

KANKAKEE – Authorities in Kankakee say a 7-year-old girl Coroner plans autopsy in has died in a house fire. fatal mobile home fire Kankakee County Coroner HARRISBURG – Authorities Bob Gessner identified the girl in southern Illinois say an autopsy is scheduled to find as T’Niyah Hale. Authorities out the identity of a woman told WVLI radio that the fire pulled from a burning mobile destroyed a two-story home home in Harrisburg. Saturday morning, injuring The Evansville Courier and four people and killing the Press reported that the Saline girl. Officials say the fire was County coroner plans the so intense that it delayed autopsy Monday evening. firefighters from entering the Saline County Coroner Jerry home. Watson said the woman was Gessner said fire officials the only person in the mobile say they believe the cause home when it caught fire of the blaze was a hair dryer. early Saturday. Gessner says the hair dryer Watson said the victim’s identity and an official cause caught bedding on fire as it was being used for warmth. of death should be released after the autopsy. The cause of the blaze is – Wire reports

OBITUARIES supervisor of the bakery for more than 30 years. Chuck was a loving husband, Send obituary information to father and grandfather. He was an obits@Daily-Chronicle.com or avid sports fan and enjoyed followcall 815-526-4438. Notices are ing the Bears, White Sox and Husaccepted until 3p.m. for the Helen Louise Ruud, 89, of Sycakies, and especially loved following next day’s more died Friday, Dec. 25, 2015, at edition. his grandson Joey’s participation Oakcrest Retirement Home. Obituaries also appear in sports from elementary school She was born on March 7, 1926, to online at Daily-Chronicle.com/ through college. the late Gail and Laurel(Townsend) obits where you may sign the The family thanks the doctors and Moyers in Sycamore, IL. Helen CHARLES D. SAARELA guest book, send flowers or staff at Pine Acres and Passages graduated in the class of 1943 from Born: July 6, 1918; in DeKalb, Ill. make a memorial donation. Hospice for all their care and Sycamore High School. She attendDied: Dec. 25, 2015; in DeKalb, Ill. compassion of Charles during his ed The University of Illinois and last days. earned a degree in Dietetics. She Charles David Saarela, 97, of and chicken dinners. She enjoyed He is survived by his daughter, was a member of Beta Sigma Phi supporting many groups, gardening, DeKalb, Illinois, passed away Friday, Sorority. Helen utilized her dietetics and spending time with her grand- Dec. 25, 2015, at Pine Acres Rehab Linda Kaisher of Rochelle; grandson, Joey, of Rochelle; step-grandchildegree in many careers before & Living Center, DeKalb. children, family and friends. retiring. Helen married the late Born July 6, 1918, dren, Ray (Chris) Kaisher of MissouHelen is survived by her only son, ri and Josie Nash of Sugar Grove; Donald E. Ruud in 1964 and moved in DeKalb, he was David (Kathy) Ruud of Sycamore; brother-in-law, Joseph Jiminaro of to Melrose Park, IL. She returned to grandchildren. D. Erik, Victoria, and the son of Kalle Red Bank, New Jersey; sister-in-law, Sycamore in 1983 were she owned Preston Ruud; sister, Norma Andres, Charles and Rose and oversaw the operations of her (Erickson) Saarela. Lee De Sarno of Neptune, New Jerniece Paula (Beatty) McCaleb, Russ sey; several step-great-grandchilhog and grain farm. Charles married (Judy) Andres, Steve Andres; and dren; several nieces and nephew; Helen was a member of the Antoinette Joan several nieces and nephews. and special friends, Greg Obourn DeKalb County Farm Bureau, Dolly Jiminaro on Helen is predeceased by her and John Coffey. Daughters of the American Revolu- parents, Gail and Laurel Moyers; Sept. 15, 1945, He was preceded in death by his tion John Starks chapter, volunteer and sister, Nancy Valle. in Long Branch, wife, Antoinette Dolly, in 2011; sonat Oakcrest and The Salvation Army New Jersey. They The visitation will take place on in-law, Joe Kaisher; parents; sister food pantry. She was a nominee for Wednesday, Dec. 30, 2015, from 5 enjoyed 65 happy and brother-in-law, Helen and Elton the Athena Award for her excelyears together. p.m. to 8 p.m. at Olson Funeral & Singleton of Sycamore; sisters-inlence in service to the community. Cremation Services, Ltd., Quiram Chuck was a 1937 graduate of Mayfield Church was dear to HelDeKalb High School and after gradu- law, Frances Marcotte and Connie Chapel in Sycamore. Funeral Jiminaro; and brother-in-law, en’s heart, she served selflessly as a services will be at Mayfield Church ation, worked several years in his Anthony De Sarno. member of the church in any aspect in Sycamore on Thursday, Dec. 31, family’s bakery in DeKalb. The funeral service will be held that was needed. She was a long He was a U.S. Army veteran of 2015, at 11:00 a.m. Burial will be at at 11 a.m. Wednesday, Dec. 30, at serving member on the Women’s Mayfield Cemetery. A luncheon will World War II and spent more than Anderson Funeral Home, DeKalb, Fellowship Committee. She faithtwo years in Panama guarding be served immediately after the with the Rev. Robert Vaughn of fully baked delicious baked goods the Canal Zone. He was employed graveside service. for Mayfield’s pancake breakfasts The family wishes to thank Oakat Northern Illinois University as Malta Congregational Church offiBorn: March 7, 1926, in Sycamore, Ill. Died: Dec. 25, 2015; in DeKalb, Ill.

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Kentucky, Mary (Kevin) Williams of DeKalb and Carol (Gordon) Richardson of Woodstock; grandchildren, Andrew and Kevin Cherry, and Jaclyn Spraetz; several nieces and nephews; and sister-in-law, Donna Remsey of Necedah, Wisconsin. She was preceded in death by her husband, Robert; son, Kurt; and parents. The funeral service will be held at 1 p.m. Thursday, December 31, at Anderson Funeral Home, DeKalb, with the Rev. Ray Krueger of Immanuel Lutheran Church, DeKalb, officiating. Burial will follow at Fairview Park Cemetery, DeKalb. Visitation will be from noon to 1 JANICE CLAIRE SPRAETZ p.m. Thursday at Anderson Funeral Home. Janice Claire Spraetz, 78, of In lieu of flowers, memorials can DeKalb, Illinois, passed away Friday, be made to the Janice C. Spraetz December 25, 2015, at Rochelle Memorial Fund, sent to the Spraetz Rehab and Healthcare Center in Family in care of Anderson Funeral Rochelle. Home, P.O. Box 605, 2011 South Born July 18, 1937, in DeKalb, the Fourth Street, DeKalb, IL 60115. daughter of John W. and Mary Ellen For information, visit www. (McIntosh) Remsey, Janice married AndersonFuneralHomeLtd.com or Robert A. Spraetz on February 23, call 815-756-1022. 1960, in DeKalb. How to Submit A 1955 graduate of DeKalb High Send obituary information to School, Janice attended Northern obits@Daily-Chronicle.com or call Illinois University and later was 815-526-4438. Notices are acceptemployed at Northern Illinois University Employees Credit Union. ed until 3p.m. for the next day’s edition. Obituaries also appear During 10 years of her retirement, Janice was a crossing guard at 4th online at Daily-Chronicle.com/obits where you may sign the guest book, Street and East Sunset Place. send flowers or make a memorial She is survived by her children, Erich (Sue) Spraetz of Henderson, donation.

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ciating. Cremation will follow, with interment of cremated remains on a later date at Fairview Park Cemetery, DeKalb, with full military rites. Visitation will be from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. Wednesday at Anderson Funeral Home. In lieu of flowers, memorials can be made to the Charles D. Saarela Memorial Fund, sent to the Saarela Family in care of Anderson Funeral Home, P.O. Box 605, 2011 South Fourth Street, DeKalb, IL 60115. For information, visit www. AndersonFuneralHomeLtd.com or call 815-756-102.2

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Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Section A • Tuesday, December 29, 2015 •

NEWS 5

About 15 percent of Chicago police force has had CIT training Continued from page A1 WHAT IS CRISIS INTERVENTION TEAM TRAINING? In CIT training, officers learn to identify a person who is in crisis and to de-escalate situations in which someone is agitated or exhibiting other signs of mental trouble. That may mean taking more time for the person to calm down, talking with the person about what’s happening or finding other resources such as a case manager or mental health clinic rather than making an arrest. There are more than 2,700 CIT programs across the U.S. Amy Watson, an associate

professor of social work at the University of Illinois at Chicago, has been involved with the Chicago Police Department’s program since it formed in 2005 and has conducted two studies on its effectiveness. Her research and other studies have found that officers trained in CIT methods use less force, are better equipped to defuse crises and reduce the risk of injury. Alexa James, executive director of the National Alliance on Mental Illness of Chicago, called the program “fabulous.” Any deficiencies, Watson and James agree, are in how it’s been implemented in the Chicago Police Department.

Colder weather on way • WEATHER

Continued from page A1 shelter. Residents can call 815-748-8400 for more information. The DeKalb County Highway Department snow removal crews were out on the roads by 6 a.m. Monday, said Nathan Schwartz, county engineer. “We have a dozen routes,” he said. “They have been out there all day, spreading salt, pushing and plowing the snow and slush off the roads and applying more salt.” The County Highway Department is responsible for clearing county highways. The Illinois Department of Transportation is in charge of its state roads, such as Routes 23, 64 and 38. Municipalities and townships clear the roads within town boundaries that the highway department and state don’t own. Service agencies had to cut services because of the weather Monday as well. The Family Service Agency

NATION BRIEF Motorhead frontman ‘Lemmy’ Kilmister dies LOS ANGELES – Ian “Lemmy” Kilmister, the Motorhead frontman whose outsized persona made him a hero for generations of hard-rockers and metal-heads, has died. Agent Andrew Goodfriend tells The Associated Press that Kilmister died on Monday in Los Angeles after a brief battle with aggressive cancer. Known simply as “Lemmy” to most, he was as famous for his mustache, mutton chops and the mole on his face as his music. But he was deeply respected and revered as a rock master and innovator, from his time with the seminal psychedelic band Hawkwind in the early 1970s to his four decades in Motorhead, best known for their 1980 anthem “Ace of Spades.”

closed. Sycamore Library closed early and busing services throughout the county were halted. The Voluntary Action Center stopped Blue and Green Line services at 6 p.m. instead of running through its usual 9 p.m. The agency also canceled Meals on Wheels deliveries to the rural areas of the county and Sandwich as well as busing services. Busing services to rural areas were cut in the morning, but by 12:30 p.m., busing services were stopped all together because of road conditions. A TransVAC bus was involved in an accident Monday morning on Annie Glidden Road. No one was injured and the bus wasn’t carrying passengers at the time of the incident, said interim associate director Paul LaLonde. “That helped guide us toward the closure,” he said. “It’s just hard to control conditions out there. A car slid right into [the bus.]”

About 1,860 officers, or approximately 15 percent of the police force, have received the training, Chicago police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said Monday. Watson and James say the percentage should be closer to 25 or 35 percent – enough so that there’s a CIT-trained officer on every shift in every police district who can respond to calls as needed. Right now, that kind of coverage is “spotty,” Watson said. It’s particularly difficult to find a trained officer on the overnight shift. “Every officer is trained in how to use a firearm, but not every officer will use their

weapon,” James said. She said the likelihood of an officer encountering a person in crisis is far greater. Training also has been inconsistent at the city’s 911 center, where dispatchers should ask questions to determine if a situation involves someone with a mental health issue, then dispatch a CIT-trained officer if one is needed. That training hasn’t been happening often enough, they said.

“We couldn’t even get a call back,” she said. Around that same time, the city closed several mental health centers because of budget problems. And this year, with state lawmakers and Gov. Bruce Rauner unable to agree on a budget, there was no money to conduct the training in the first half of the fiscal year. That means about 200 Chicago officers missed out on the class, James said. LACK OF RESOURCES The department plans to Watson said she and oth- hold 26 CIT training sessions er academics, as well as ad- in 2016, providing the course vocacy groups, attempted to to an additional 910 officers, speak with Emanuel after he Guglielmi said. was elected about committing Emanuel spokesman Adam more resources to CIT. Collins said Monday that the

mayor directed the interim police superintendent and a police oversight agency to conduct a thorough review, determine what gaps exist in training and to act on them immediately. “It is clear from recent incidents that substantive changes are needed in our police department, particularly around use of force and de-escalating conflicts, including interactions with individuals in crisis,” Collins said. Emanuel’s office said he was returning early from a family vacation to Cuba to address the latest crisis, and would be back in Chicago on Tuesday.

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December 29, 2015 Daily Chronicle Section A • Page 6

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DeKalb bicycle shop gets new owners, services Know more

By KATIE SMITH ksmith@shawmedia.com DeKALB – North Central Cyclery will cater to more than just its bicycle-riding clientele under the store’s new management. Hobbyist triathletes Mike and Justeen Paul took ownership of the shop, at 534 E. Lincoln Highway, with Mike Paul’s parents, Lyle and Marty Paul, in late October. “For our family it’s kind of a perfect fit,” Mike Paul said. The store now offers a lifetime of free adjustments for any bike purchased at North Central Cyclery and will continue to add merchandise suited for runners as well as cyclists, he said. “We brought in just a lot of different accessories they didn’t have in the store: Garmin cycling computers, watches, hydration systems for the bike and runners,” Mike Paul said. Future plans include building a computerized indoor training studio for cyclists, and introducing bicycle-fitting equipment so customers can be sure their bike is safe and comfortable to ride before leaving the store, he said. “We’re really doing a lot different,” Mike Paul said. “We’re trying to maintain the culture that the store had to some extent in working with [bikes] but then we’re adding to it.”

WHAT: North Central Cyclery WHERE: 534 E. Lincoln Highway, DeKalb HOURS: 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. weekdays, 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. Saturdays, noon to 4 p.m. Sundays PHONE: 815-758-2403 WEBSITE: northcentralcyclery.com

A former chiropractor, Mike Paul moved from Libertyville back to DeKalb, where he was raised, about a year ago. The shop was listed for sale shortly after his return, and he felt like it was a good fit for the whole family, he said. During the rare times Mike and Justeen Paul aren’t managing the shop, the recently married couple works hard to be sure they can endure the physical stresses of their next triathlon. “I think that I’ve got a pretty long background of bicycling – whether it was racing, BMX bikes, or riding road bikes – and it kind of developed into triathlons,” Mike Paul said. “Bikes have always kind been a part of my life.” The store has adopted new hours and will operate from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. weekdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturdays, and noon to 4 p.m. Sundays. Danielle Guerra - dguerra@shawmedia.com “The cycling industry, basically all parts of it, is something we’re passion- Justeen Paul and her husband, Michael Paul, bought North Central Cyclery in DeKalb in October along with Michael’s parents, Lyle ate about,” Mike Paul said. and Marty Paul (not pictured). The pair, seen here in their shop at 534 E. Lincoln Highway, are avid triathletes.

Vanatta celebrates 5 years at Northern Rehab DAILY CHRONICLE Physical therapist Todd Vanatta is celebrating his five-year anniversary at Northern Rehab Physical Therapy Specialists. Vanatta joined Northern Rehab in 2010 as a physical therapist working in the DeKalb Resource Parkway and Genoa clinics. He also worked at Northern Rehab from 2001 to 2004 as a physical therapy technician while attending North-

ern Illinois University in the physical therapy program. He earned his Master of Physical Therapy degree in 2005 from Todd Vanetta NIU. In 2012, he received credentialing as a certified functional manual therapist (CFMT) and is a lab assistant in courses offered through The Institute of Physical Art

NAPA donates to Opportunity House

throughout the country. Vanatta treats all diagnoses and areas of the body including spinal dysfunction, headache, TMJ, visceral dysfunction, and chronic pain. Born and raised in Sycamore, he enjoys providing physical therapy services in the community where he grew up. For information about Northern Rehab, visit www. northernrehabpt.com or call 815-784-6417.

Chamber celebrates ForthRight Financial Planning

Participating NAPA Auto Care companies raised $743 for Opportunity House in September through the NAPA Auto Care Center Oil Change Charity. Executive Director Bob Shipman accepts the big check from Tim King, owner of the NAPA Auto Parts store, and John Volkert, owner of Barb City Auto. Photo provided

Edward Jones welcomed in Sycamore

Photo provided Photo provided

The DeKalb Chamber of Commerce ambassadors, board members and staff hosted a ribbon-cutting celebrating the name change of Upstream Investments to ForthRight Financial Planning at 352½ W. State St. in Sycamore. ForthRight offers financial products and services to individuals and business owners. For information, visit www. henrypwm.com.

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The Sycamore Chamber Ambassadors attend an open house and ribbon-cutting to help celebrate the opening of a new office on behalf of Edward Jones – Heather Hilleshiem, Financial Adviser. The office is located at 1680 Mediterranean Drive, Suite 105, in Sycamore. Edward Jones offers a number of investments and services to help customers reach their financial goals, including preparing and living in retirement, saving for an education, preparing for the unexpected, and saving on taxes.

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Jill Hansen has been with Kishwaukee College as an Accountant for three and a half years. She has worked in accounting and finance since graduating from Northern Illinois University in 1989 with a Bachelor of Science in Accountancy. She spent eleven years at Motorola in accounting and finance before “retiring” to stay home with her young children. She was the Business Manager, Secretary and Bookkeeper at various Genoa businesses while her children were young, and then decided to delve back into her career in 2012. She joined Kishwaukee College in the Spring of 2012. Jill grew up in Genoa and came back in 1998 with her husband Jayson to raise their family. They have two children, Lindsay and Connor. She is currently a member of the Genoa Area Chamber Board of Directors. Jill From sports statsastoa Girl business you previously was active Scout news, leader we andkeep on the Finance and Stewardship Committees at St. Catherine of Genoa Church. in the local loop. Subscribe today! 800-589-9363

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Daily Chronicle Editorial Board Karen Pletsch, Inger Koch, Eric Olson, Brett Rowland

OPINIONS TUESDAY

daily-chronicle.com

SKETCH VIEW

Facebook.com/dailychronicle

@dailychronicle

Winning war on poverty demands centrism

Unknowns in GOP race ahead Some observations on the 2016 presidential race as we wind down the dark period, i.e., the two weeks of Christmas and New Year’s holidays in which no one has ever dared, at least in the past, to conduct any polls. Those of us who pick over poll results will have to fly blind until Monday. Which leaves us with two weeks to ponder, without much in the way of further evidence, the known unknowns of the 2016 Republican campaign cycle. They include: 1. How many of Donald Trump’s supporters will actually vote in caucuses and primaries? Poll analysts have noted that Trump is much stronger among noncollege-educated than college-educated voters, that he tends to be stronger among those who haven’t voted in caucuses and primaries in the past than among those who have, and that he runs consistently better in robo-call and Internet polls than he does in live-interview polls. Under traditional rules of thumb, one would expect that many Trump fans won’t actually vote, and that his percentages will be well under the 33percent he’s getting in national polls and the 25 percent and 29 percent he’s polling in Iowa and New Hampshire. That in turn suggests he’ll have a low ceiling of support in later contests, since many, perhaps most, of non-Trump respondents have unfavorable feelings about him. In which case a candidate who emerges asTrump’s chief rival, or one of two candidates who rise to the top, will be nominated, much as candidates have been in the past. But maybe Trump supporters will actually turn out in large numbers, even those who haven’t been engaged in the past. Evidence for that includes the large crowds he’s been attracting and the huge viewership numbers

VIEWS Michael Barone for the Republican debates: 13 million to 24 million, far above the previous record of 8 million. 2. Will the Republican race boil down to a contest between Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio? If Trump’s numbers fall or collapse, the focus will be on these two candidates, whose poll numbers have risen to double digits nationally and in the two leadoff states. Cruz seems to have benefited in Iowa from the collapse in support for Ben Carson among religious conservatives. They have been a majority of past caucus-goers – a larger Republican constituency than in any other non-Southern state. But that won’t help him much in New Hampshire, where religious conservatives are scarce on the ground. Rubio is threatened there by the rising support for Chris Christie, who has been conducting dozens of town hall meetings and who had a strong debate performance last week. That’s in contrast to Jeb Bush, who has made no headway despite his super PAC’s $17 million in TV ads there. It looks like either Rubio or Christie will emerge as a strong contender from New Hampshire – but probably not both. 3. How will Rubio withstand the attacks coming his way? Although he isn’t leading the polls in any state, Rubio is the odds-makers’ favorite to win the Republican nomination. He’s widely acceptable to Republican primary voters and is a smooth and articulate debate performer. His opponents

evidently share the odds-makers’ view: He was the target of more attacks in the Las Vegas debate than any other candidate, even Trump. There Rubio and Cruz engaged in furious argument over foreign policy and immigration, both making intellectually serious points but both also taking tacks that, as my Washington Examiner colleague Byron York has documented, can’t really be sustained. So far Rubio impressively has been unflappable and even in the heat of argument has maintained a likeability edge over Cruz. But it’s not clear who will come out ahead. 4. Besides the known unknowns, what unknown unknowns lie ahead? The Las Vegas debate centered on terrorism, which probably would not have been the case but for the San Bernardino attack 13 days earlier. That probably helped some candidates, notably Christie, more than others. That was not the first time that this contest was affected by what the British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan told a junior colleague determines history: “Events, dear boy, events.” And it probably won’t be the last. None of the Republican or Democratic candidates in 2008 expected that financial markets would collapse that fall, and they might have campaigned differently had they known. We can see the calendar ahead, but not everything that will appear on the pages.

analyst at the Washington Examiner, is a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a Fox News Channel contributor and a co-author of The Almanac of American Politics.

A quick review of Bernienomics 101 lower interest rates than unsecured loans, like credit card balances and student loans. The day after Christmas, Bernie SandStudent loans are two-for-one in terms ers asked a question on Twitter: “You have of risk: They frequently are made to people families out there paying 6, 8, 10 percent with no income, no credit history, and someon student debt but you can refinance your what imperfect prospects; and they carry homes at 3 percent. What sense is that?” no guarantee of payment other than the Finance types may snicker. But I’ve seen borrower’s signature. If someone fails to pay this question asked fairly often, and it seems their auto loan, you can take their car away. worth answering, respectfully, for people This ensures repayment in two ways: first, whose expertise and interest lie outside the you can auction the car and recover some of realm of economics. the money that you lent out; and second, peoThe short answer is: “Loans are not ple need their car, and will scrimp on other priced in real life the way they are in Sunday things in order to keep it from losing it. The School stories.” In a Sunday School story, the immediate personal costs of failing to pay cheapest loans would go to the nicest people your student loans, on the other hand, are with the noblest use for the money: single pretty minimal, and people are going to take mothers who need money to buy their kids a that into account when they decide whether Christmas present, say. to pay you or the auto finance company. That’s splendid for the recipient. But That’s why the government has to guarantee what about the lender? Let’s say you had $150 these loans; the low-fixed-rate, take-anythat you really needed to have at the end of course-of-study-you-want-at-any-accreditedthe month, say, to pay your rent. Would you institution, interest-deferred-in-school is want to lend it to the single mother whose probably not a financial product that would income is stretched so tight that she needs exist in the wild. to borrow money for Christmas presents, or Secured loans have thus always carried would you want to lend it to some heartless lower interest rates than unsecured loans, leech of a securities litigator with an 800 cred- and will do so until the heat death of the uniit rating who happens to have left his wallet verse renders moot such questions. at home? C’mon. You know the answer; you Now, Sanders actually may be asking a just don’t want to say it. If you really need deeper question: How can society make it the money – if you cannot afford to turn your easier to get a home than to get the priceless loan into a gift – then you lend it to the better boon of an education? credit risk with the higher income, not the If that is the answer that the cold math person who may find themselves too short to of the market gives us, then maybe we need pay you when the loan comes due. some alternative to the market, such as, I In aggregate, most of the money in your dunno, socialism? Or at least endorsing Elizsavings account is loaned out using this cold abeth Warren’s scheme to lower the subsicalculus, and unless you could afford to have dized rates on loans? that contents of that account suddenly vanFair question, to which we may pose ish, you want it to be. That’s why poor peoseveral fair answers. ple, on top of all the other unfairness heaped The first is that government-subsidized upon them, pay higher interest rates. And student loans seem like a fairly stupid idea that is why secured loans, like mortgages, get that may well have done students no good

By MEGAN MCARDLE

The main casualty of Washington’s endless partisan squabbling is a pragmatic approach to policy – meaning one that prefers results to noise. Ideological warriors of left and right say centrism of this kind is mere cover for cynical deal-making, splitting the difference and substituting platitudes for principles. They’re wrong, and proof is at hand. A working group convened by the (conservative) American Enterprise Institute and the (liberal) Brookings Institution has just produced an excellent report on poverty. Its recommendations don’t take a weak-willed average. They combine the strongest parts of what Democrats and Republicans in Congress think on this issue. Crucially, the group began by accepting three general truths that often derail debate before it begins: Able-bodied adults should work, two committed parents are better than one, and schools must do more to prepare students for careers. In each of those areas, the group managed to reach consensus on policy. To encourage work, the group endorses some traditionally liberal ideas: modestly raising the minimum wage, increasing state payroll taxes to fund paid medical and family leave, offering child-support debt forgiveness for fathers who work, “banning the box” that is used to screen out job applicants with criminal records and subsidizing wages for low-income workers and the hard-to-employ. Traditional conservative ideas also won support: creating stronger incentives for workers not to claim disability benefits, tying housing benefits and food stamps to work and expanding “workfare” programs for those unable to find jobs. On education, the group’s approach was no less catholic: It called for increasing and improving pre-K and early learning opportunities, as liberals want, and expanding school choice and teacher evaluations, as conservatives want. The group wants more focus on “social-emotional learning” – standards of behavior that are essential to workplace success. It calls for expanding career and technical-education opportunities by encouraging community colleges to offer more employment-oriented classes and businesses to offer more apprenticeships. Taken in isolation, each of these and other policies are likely to arouse opposition from one party or the other. Bundled together, they form a package both sides can support. This new report, excellent in its own right, makes an even larger point. The most effective way to make policy is not from the left or the right, but from the radical center. Bloomberg View

• Michael Barone, senior political

VIEWS

AMENDMENT

Daily Chronicle Section A • Page 7

ANOTHER VIEW

VIEWS

THE FIRST

December 29, 2015

at all, driving up tuition and thereby paying for the swelling level of college amenities, the swelling ranks of for-profit colleges of dubious value, and the swelling number of administrators at our nation’s institutions of higher learning. That’s not a sterling argument for further well-meaning government intervention in the sector. The second is to point out that while it is cheaper to pay a mortgage, it is not easier to get one. They’re very sticky about ensuring that you repay them. Most college students could not make it through the amount of underwriting that goes into writing a typical mortgage these days. And the third is that unless we are going to go pretty far in the socialist direction, we’re stuck with prices as the main way to allocate economic activity. As long as we have prices, the government will have a budget. And reducing the interest rate on loans with a high delinquency rate compared to other loans means that we will have less money to do something else. Giving people free tuition will also mean that the government will have less money to do something else – a lot less money. Sanders tries to deal with this problem by conjuring hundreds of billions worth of imaginary tax revenue out of thin air, but alas, the actual president will have to find real money, taken from some other use. Is subsidizing the folks who are going to end up as the best-off members of society really what we would choose to use that money for? More people require shelter than college diplomas. More Americans own homes than a sheepskin on the wall. If we’re going to be subsidizing anything, why choose the needs of the few over the many? • Megan McArdle is a Bloomberg View columnist who writes on economics, business and public policy. She is the author of “The Up Side of Down.”

ANOTHER VIEW

Illinois economy underperforms Which way does the arrow point? Regardless of which direction the national economy takes in 2016, Illinois continues to take the path of underperformance. It does not feel like the best of times. It certainly is not the worst of times. If Charles Dickens were to rely on today’s economy for inspiration, he would never have left the newspaper business. With a new year approaching, the U.S. economy is not sending any clear signals on which way it is headed. Up, down, sideways? Some economists see accelerating growth in 2016, the most robust growth since the end of the Great Recession in mid-2009. Those experts point to more jobs being created, a historically low unemployment rate of 5 percent, remarkably low prices for gasoline, and greater spending on housing and autos. Other economists, however, are less optimistic and have their own statistics to back up their case. While the U.S. is growing, it is not putting any upward pressure on wages. Therefore, inflation remains low – too low for these experts and for the Federal Reserve, which would like to see prices rising at an annual rate of 2 percent. The global economy, they say, is keeping a lid on the American business environment. U.S. companies can and do move overseas for lower-cost labor – one reason for stagnant wages here. America’s trading partners, especially China, play a key role in how well the U.S. economy performs. If Chinese growth is slowing, the rest of the world tends to do the same. Finally, the naysayers point to low unemployment, low interest rates and low gas prices and ask: With such strengths, where’s the boom? Indeed, there has been no great expansion so far to wipe away the last recession’s damage. Here in Illinois, we are all too familiar with the economic no-man’s land. Last month, Illinois’ 5.7 percent unemployment rate stayed stubbornly higher than the national rate. Either this state finds its way back to the path of growth, or it will be setting up its residents for the worst of times.

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The (Champaign) News-Gazett


WEATHER TUESDAY 7-DAY FORECAST

Cloudy and breezy conditions will remain in place throughout the day as our storm system that moved through yesterday is slow to exit east. This will keep a slight chance of a passing snow shower. A clipper system will swing through Wednesday bringing a snow shower across the area. Some cold air arrives Thursday and continues into the weekend, but dry air will prevail.

ALMANAC

December 29, 2015 Daily Chronicle Section A • Page 8

TODAY

TOMORROW

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

MONDAY

Mostly cloudy with a snow shower

Cloudy and cooler with a snow shower

Mostly cloudy and cold

Partly sunny, breezy and very cold

Mix of sun and clouds; continued cold

Mostly sunny and a little warmer

Partly sunny and more seasonal

34

30

24

22

27

29

31

24

20

10

9

13

19

20

Winds: W 10-20 mph

Winds: W/SW 5-10 mph

UV INDEX

Winds: W 5-15 mph

Winds: W/SW 10-20 mph

Winds: W 10-15 mph

Winds: N/NW 5-10 mph

REGIONAL CITIES

REGIONAL WEATHER

DeKalb through 4 p.m. yesterday

Temperature High ............................................................. 33° Low .............................................................. 31° Normal high ............................................. 29° Normal low ............................................... 14° Record high .............................. 64° in 1984 Record low ................................. -3° in 2000

Precipitation 24 hours through 4 p.m. yest. ......... 0.76” Month to date ....................................... 3.89” Normal month to date ....................... 1.99” Year to date ......................................... 34.48” Normal year to date ......................... 36.82”

Jan 9

Jan 16

AIR QUALITY TODAY

Full

Jan 23

Lake Geneva 32/20

Rockford 34/22

Source: Environmental Protection Agency

Arlington Heights 35/24

DeKalb 34/24

Main offender ................................................... N.A.

Dixon 32/22

If a cold front reverses its direction, what would it then be called?

WEATHER HISTORY

La Salle 34/24

An Union assault on the wellfortified town of Vicksburg, Miss., was interrupted by flooding on Dec. 29, 1862. The heavy rain helped Confederates thwart the invasion.

Joliet 36/26 Streator 35/25

Peoria 34/24

Waukegan 36/22 Evanston 37/27

Hammond 38/28 Gary 38/28 Kankakee 34/25

City Aurora Belleville Beloit Belvidere Champaign Elgin Joliet Kankakee Mendota Michigan City Moline Morris Naperville Ottawa Princeton Quincy Racine Rochelle Rockford Springfield Sterling Wheaton Waukegan Woodstock Yorkville

Hi 34 38 33 34 34 35 36 34 33 39 30 35 35 35 33 30 36 32 34 35 32 35 36 33 35

Today Lo W 25 c 26 c 22 sf 23 sf 26 c 24 c 26 c 25 c 24 c 30 c 19 c 26 c 26 c 25 c 23 c 23 c 24 sf 22 c 22 sf 25 c 22 c 25 c 22 sf 21 sf 25 c

Tomorrow Hi Lo W 30 22 sf 38 23 c 29 17 sf 29 18 sf 34 24 c 29 21 sf 31 23 sf 31 24 sf 29 20 sf 34 27 sf 29 17 sf 31 23 sf 30 22 sf 31 23 sf 29 21 sf 29 20 c 31 21 sf 27 18 sf 28 18 sf 33 23 c 28 18 sf 30 22 sf 30 20 sf 28 18 sf 30 22 sf

RIVER LEVELS

Pontiac 35/26

NATIONAL WEATHER

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

Chicago 35/24

Aurora 34/25

WEATHER TRIVIA™

Q:

A warm front.

Jan 1

First

Kenosha 36/21

A:

Sunrise today ................................ 7:22 a.m. Sunset tonight ............................. 4:31 p.m. Moonrise today ........................... 9:14 p.m. Moonset today ............................. 9:58 a.m. Sunrise tomorrow ........................ 7:22 a.m. Sunset tomorrow ........................ 4:32 p.m. Moonrise tomorrow ................ 10:12 p.m. Moonset tomorrow ................. 10:30 a.m.

New

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

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

SUN and MOON

Last

Janesville 34/21 8 a.m. 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 6 p.m.

Winds: N/NE 5-10 mph

Watseka 36/28

Location

7 a.m. yest.

Kishwaukee Belvidere Perryville DeKalb

3.57 8.62 4.33

Flood stage

9.0 12.0 10.0

24-hr chg

-0.56 -0.62 -0.12

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

-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s

Cold Front

Warm Front

Stationary Front

T-storms Rain Showers Snow Flurries

City Atlanta Atlantic City Baltimore Boston Buffalo Charleston, SC Charlotte Chicago

Hi 67 64 64 42 46 81 72 35

Today Lo W 59 pc 49 r 44 r 34 sn 36 r 66 c 59 sh 24 c

Tomorrow Hi Lo W 66 49 r 56 48 r 56 46 r 44 38 c 41 31 r 79 64 c 67 57 r 30 21 sf

Ice

City Cincinnati Dallas Denver Houston Indianapolis Kansas City Las Vegas Los Angeles

Hi 47 48 23 57 40 26 48 61

Today Lo W 35 c 33 s 8 c 46 s 29 c 12 pc 30 s 40 s

Tomorrow Hi Lo W 45 28 r 51 33 s 25 4 pc 63 45 pc 38 25 c 27 9 pc 49 31 s 63 44 s

City Louisville Miami Minneapolis New Orleans New York City Philadelphia Seattle Wash., DC

Hi 51 84 26 64 54 64 39 64

Today Lo W 39 c 75 pc 16 sn 58 pc 44 r 45 r 28 pc 46 r

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

FIND US ON:

Tomorrow Hi Lo W 50 32 r 84 75 pc 22 14 sf 62 54 t 52 44 r 55 44 r 38 27 pc 57 44 r

Becky, wintery mix Jefferson Elementary School Mail your weather drawings to: The Daily Chronicle, 1586 Barber Greene Road, DeKalb, IL 60115

Forecasts and graphics, except WFLD forecasts, provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

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SPORTS TUESDAY

Line change Coach looks to spark struggle offense for Blackhawks; Shaw to start / B2

CONTACT: Eddie Carifio • ecarifio@shawmedia.com

December 28, 2015 Daily Chronicle

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BULLS 104, RAPTORS 97

MORNING KICKOFF

Snell, Gasol spark Bulls By JOE COWLEY jcowley@suntimes.com

AP photo

Globetrotters legend Meadowlark Lemon dies

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. – Meadowlark Lemon, the “clown prince” of basketball’s barnstorming Harlem Globetrotters, whose blend of hook shots and humor brought joy to millions of fans around the world, has died. He was 83. Lemon’s wife and daughter confirmed to the team that he died Sunday in Scottsdale, Arizona, Globetrotters spokesman Brett Meister said Monday. Meister did not know the cause of death. Though skilled enough to play professionally, Lemon instead wanted to entertain, his dream of playing for the Globetrotters hatched after watching a newsreel of the all-black team at a cinema house when he was 11. Lemon ended up becoming arguably the team’s most popular player, a showman known as much for his confetti-in-the-water-bucket routine and slapstick comedy as his half-court hook shots and no-look, behind-the-back passes. A sign of his crossover appeal, Lemon was inducted into both the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame and the International Clown Hall of Fame. “My destiny was to make people happy,” Lemon said as he was inducted into the basketball hall as a contributor to the game in 2003. Lemon played for the Globetrotters during the team’s heyday from the mid-1950s to the late-1970s, delighting fans with his skills with a ball and a joke. Traveling by car, bus, train or plane nearly every night, Lemon covered nearly 4 million miles to play in over 100 countries and in front of popes and presidents, kings and queens. Known as the “Clown Prince of Basketball,” he averaged 325 games per year during his prime, that luminous smile never dimming. “Meadowlark was the most sensational, awesome, incredible basketball player I’ve ever seen,” NBA great and former Globetrotter Wilt Chamberlain said shortly before his death in 1999. “People would say it would be Dr. J or even (Michael) Jordan. For me it would be Meadowlark Lemon.” Lemon spent 24 years with the Globetrotters, doing tours through the racially torn South in the 1950s until he left in 1979 to start his own team. He was one of the most popular athletes in the world during the prime of his career, thanks to a unique blend of athleticism and showmanship.

– The Associated Press

KEEP UP ONLINE Follow us on Facebook and Twitter Want the latest from the area’s prep sports scene? Follow our coverage on Facebook by searching for DC Preps or on Twitter at twitter.com/dc_preps. Follow our NIU athletics coverage on Facebook by searching for Huskie Wire or on Twitter at twitter.com/HuskieWire.

Calls are being made. But as Fred Hoiberg pointed out, calls are always being made. Hoiberg would know. Before deciding to make a living as a head coach, he spent almost five seasons in the front office for the Minnesota Timberwolves. “Teams are always talking,’’ Hoiberg said Monday, when asked about the trade rumors hovering over the Bulls. “That’s always go-

Next

day night at the United Center, not only have the names of Pau Gasol and Taj Gibson been Bulls vs. Indiana, 7 p.m. Wed., floating around, but according to one NBA source, Joakim WGN, AM-1000 Noah’s name was picking up steam despite the big man on the shelf with a sprained left ing to happen. Ninety-nine shoulder. percent of them go nowhere. Noah was seen putting up They’re not serious. It’s just shots after the team’s mornpeople throwing things against ing shootaround, and the the wall.’’ source indicated that the Bulls That wall is getting a lot of were hoping that next week’s work as far as the Bulls (17-12) re-evaluation will bring good were concerned lately. AP photo news. Not only because Noah Even with another impres- was actually starting to play Toronto Raptors guard Kyle Lowry, right, drives to the basket on a pick sive win in beating the 19-13 set by Bismack Biyombo on Bulls guard Derrick Rose during the first Toronto Raptors, 104-97, MonSee BULLS, page B2 half Monday.

PREP ROUNDUP: DEKALB 61, BELVIDERE 46

Back in the semis again Barbs win away from berth in Dayton championship

a good job of shutting them down. Then our offense was crisp – we shot 62 percent in Hot shooting and a tough the first half, 56 percent from defense in the first half pro- 3.” pelled the DeKalb boys basketKaneland falls to Newark: ball team to a 61-46 win against Dylan Vaca scored 23 but the Belvidere in the quarterfinals Knights lost 66-62 after being of the 88th annual Chuck Day- outscored by nine in the final ton Invitational on Monday. quarter. The No. 3 Barbs advance Ryan David added 11 to the semifinals of their own points and seven rebounds tournament with the win, fac- for Kaneland, which will face ing West Chicago at 6:45 p.m. Genoa-Kingston at 3:30 p.m. tonight. The No. 2 Wildcats got today. a forfeit victory over WinnebaIn other results from Plano, go. the Cogs forfeited their game “They are very aggressive against No. 1 LaSalle-Peru. and well coached,” DeKalb Hinckley-Big Rock had its coach Al Biancalana said of game delayed until this mornthe Wildcats. “They have ex- ing, and Indian Creek’s battle cellent guard play. We are go- against Plano didn’t start until ing to be tested out on the pe- after 10 p.m. on Monday night. rimeter. GIRLS BASKETBALL Michael Pollack went 6 DeKalb loses two: The Barbs for 11 from 3-point range and fell 72-30 to Edwardsville in scored 21, while Cole Tucker the opener of a tournament in had 12 points, four blocks and Edwardsville, then lost 56-51 to three assists. Luke Davis had Jacksonville in the nightcap. 11 points and a team-high sevNo stats were available en rebounds. from the game. The Barbs re“We were up by one the end sume play at 10 a.m. today. of the first quarter than outLisle tops H-BR: The Royals scored them 15-7 in the second lost 44-30. – it was a nice job defensiveNo further information was ly,” Biancalana said. “We did available from the game.

By DAILY CHRONICLE

sports@daily-chronicle.com

Danielle Guerra - dguerra@shawmedia.com

DeKalb’s Cole Tucker holds the ball before crossing over for the lay up against Belvidere’s Eric Munoz during Danielle Guerra - dguerra@shawmedia.com a second round game of the 88th annual Chuck Dayton Holiday Tournament at DeKalb High School on MonDeKalb’s Robert Mitchell guards Belvidere’s Joey Hernandez. day. DeKalb beat Belvidere, 61-46.

BEARS

Don’t take away too much from win over Bucs It would be a real mistake to try to take too much from the Bears’ 26-21 victory over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Sunday. It was big because it snapped a three-game skid in which the Bears had gotten progressively worse each week, and even bigger because it gave last year’s 5-11 team its sixth win this year with an allnew coaching staff and front office. When you’re climbing from the bottom up, progress is huge, and Sunday was a big AP photo step. But if you start assuming Chicago Bears quarterback Jay Cutler (6) throws a pass against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers Sunday. the Bears solved all kinds of

BEARS INSIDER Hub Arkush

More online Visit ChicagoFootball.com for more Bears and NFL coverage. personnel questions with nice performances from so many youngsters, you can delude yourself into a real fool’s paradise. The Bucs are also a 6-9 team that has lost three straight and

four of its past five, all to losing teams. The Bears won in large part because the Bucs gave them three really bad turnovers. The Bears also caught a break when, trailing 7-0 less than two minutes into the second quarter, Jay Cutler had a pass tipped by Gerald McCoy and intercepted by William Gholston at the Bears’ 39 and returned to the 15, but it was overturned by a Bucs facemask penalty, allowing the Bears to drive 68 yards to a game-tying score. That said, there was much

See BEARS, page B2


2 SPORTS • Tuesday, December 29, 2015 • Section B • Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com LOCAL SCHEDULE TODAY Men’s college basketball Northern Illinois at UIC, 7 p.m. Prep boys basketball DeKalb hosts Chuck Dayton Invite, TBA Plano tournament – Kaneland, Indian Creek, Genoa-Kingston, Hinckley-Big Rock TBD Prep girls basketball DeKalb at Edwardsville Holiday Classic, 10 a.m. Indian Creek at Amboy tournament, TBA Hinckley-Big Rock at Lisle tourney, TBA Prep wrestling DeKalb hosts Flavin invite Sycamore at Mid-States Wrestling Classic, Wisconson-Whitewater Kaneland at Palatine tourney Prep swimming DeKalb-Sycamore at Boylan invite, 10 a.m. College wrestling Northern Illinois at Midland Championships, Evanston

WHAT TO WATCH TODAY Pro hockey Blackhawks at Arizona, 8 p.m., CSN Nashville at St. Louis, 7 p.m., NBCSN Colelge football Armed Force Bowl: Air Force vs. California, 1 p.m., ESPN Russell Athletic Bowl: North Carolina vs. Baylor, 4:30 p.m., ESPN Texas Bowl: Texas Tech vs. LSU, 8 p.m., ESPN College basketball Tulane at Memphis, noon, ESPNU Tennessee State at Tennessee, noon, SEC Temple at Cincinnati, 2 p.m., ESPN2 Texas Southern at Baylor, 2 p.m., ESPNU SMU at Tulsa, 4 p.m., ESPN2 Liberty at Notre Dame, 4 p.m., ESPNU Richmond at Texas Tech, 4 p.m., FSN Purdue at Wisconsin, 6 p.m., BTN Florida State at Florida, 6 p.m., ESPN2 Wake Forest at LSU, 6 p.m., ESPNU Robert Morris at Georgia, 6 p.m., SEC Michigan State at Iowa, 8 p.m., BTN UConn at Texas, 8 p.m., ESPN2 UC Irvine at Kansas, 8 p.m., ESPNU Pro basketball Milwaukee at Oklahoma City, 7 p.m., NBA

SPORTS BRIEFS Yankees get Aroldis Chapman from Reds NEW YORK — The New York Yankees bolstered an already dominant bullpen Monday, acquiring hard-throwing AllStar closer Aroldis Chapman from the Cincinnati Reds for four minor leaguers. Chapman became available after the Reds’ deal with the Los Angeles Dodgers fell through during baseball’s winter meetings three weeks ago when it was learned Florida police investigated an accusation of domestic violence involving the Cuban left-hander.

Ware lifts Broncos past Bengals in overtime DENVER — DeMarcus Ware beat AJ McCarron to a fumbled snap in overtime, sending the Denver Broncos into the playoffs with a 20-17 win over the Cincinnati Bengals on Monday night. Ware’s recovery followed a 37-yard field goal by Brandon McManus, whose shanked 45-yarder at the end of regulation made necessary the extra drama. The Broncos (11-4) overcame a 14-0 first-half deficit in clinching their fifth consecutive playoff berth and denying the Bengals (11-4) their first road win on a Monday night since 1990. Cincinnati also blew a chance to earn a bye in the playoffs. – Wire reports

BOWL ROUNDUP

Minnesota edges CMU By ASSOCIATED PRESS DETROIT — Cooper Rush was being taken down from behind, so to avoid a sack, he tossed the ball toward a receiver. “Looking back, probably should have just ate it,” the Central Michigan quarterback said. Rush’s risky pass was intercepted, and the Chippewas fell 21-14 to Minnesota on Monday night in the Quick Lane Bowl. It was a tough ending to a terrific season for Rush, who set CMU’s single-season record for yards passing. Central Michigan (7-6) took a 14-13 lead with 11:08 remaining on a 13-yard touchdown run by Romello Ross. Minnesota responded by driving 74 yards in 13 plays, and quarterback Mitch Leidner ran 13 yards for the go-ahead touchdown with 4:26 to play. Leidner then threw to KJ Maye for a 2-point conversion. CMU drove back into Min-

Hoiberg ignoring rumors

nesota territory, but Rush’s ill-advised pass was picked off by Briean Boddy-Calhoun with 2:10 to play. “We felt like we were right there,” CMU coach John Bonamego said. “Just not enough at the end, a few too many mistakes, but Minnesota had a good plan, they executed it. They definitely deserved the win.” Minnesota (6-7) ended a trying season on a positive note. Coach Jerry Kill retired in late October because of continued difficulty managing his epilepsy and his job. The Gophers were 5-7 after the regular season but were able to play on because not enough teams reached six wins to fill all the bowls. “We played by the rules,” said Tracy Claeys, who took over as coach after Kill’s retirement. “If they don’t want 5-7 teams in the bowl, then change the rule, but right now that’s the rule.” All three teams that went

to bowls at 5-7 — Minnesota, Nebraska and San Jose State — ended up winning.

Navy 44, Pittsburgh 28

How appropriate that Keenan Reynolds’ final touchdown at Navy thrust him into the NCAA record book and secured a milestone victory for the Midshipmen. Reynolds wrapped up his record-setting college career in spectacular fashion, running for three scores and throwing for another Monday to lead Navy past Pittsburgh 44-28 in the Military Bowl. After the Midshipmen let a 24-point cushion dwindle to 38-28, Reynolds capped a nineplay drive with a 9-yard touchdown run with 4:19 remaining. It was his 88th career TD, breaking a tie with Kenneth Dixon of Louisiana Tech for most in Football Bowl Subdivision history. It was classic Reynolds, given that he broke a slew of records and won a whole lot of games.

MEN’S BASKETBALL PREVIEW: NORTHERN ILLINOIS AT UIC Tipoff: 7 p.m. today, UIC Pavilion, Chicago Media: 1360-AM, 98.9-FM, ESPN3 Records: Huskies 9-2, Flames 2-8 Last game: The Huskies beat NAIA Roosevelt 85-52 on Tuesday; The Flames also last played on Tuesday, a 91-74 win against Purdue Calumet. Who to watch: Travon Baker had seven assists against Roosevelt to move into ninth place all time in school history with 285 for his career. ... Dikembe Dixson leads UIC with 12.9 points and 7.4 rebounds per game. The lowdown: The Huskies haven’t won at UIC since 1993, a 6664 win. They’ve lost 10 straight game at UIC since. The teams last played in 2012 in DeKalb, a 58-46 win for the Flames. ... UIC leads the all-time series 23-15. ... The Huskies are giving up 62.8 points per game, 27th in the country. ... The Flames are 0-5 on the road and 2-3 at home this year. ... UIC is averaging 42.8 rebounds per game, 16th in the country.

BLACKHAWKS

to feel good about. General manager Ryan Pace and coach John Fox were here almost two full months before they confirmed whether Cutler would even be a Bear this year. The Bucs game was Cutler’s fifth of the season with a passer rating of better than 100 and the sixth in which he didn’t throw an interception. He now appears to be a lock as the quarterback of the present and future. Both Jeremy Langford and Matt Forte played really well in Tampa behind an excellent run-blocking effort from the offensive line. But the perception that Ka’Deem Carey’s recent success in the red zone and short-yardage situations has made Forte

W 10 10 6 6

y-Washington Philadelphia N.Y. Giants Dallas

W 8 6 6 4

y-Carolina Atlanta Tampa Bay New Orleans

W 14 8 6 6

y-Arizona x-Seattle St. Louis San Francisco

W 13 9 7 4

North L T Pct PF 5 0 .667 355 5 0 .667 345 9 0 .400 334 9 0 .400 315 East L T Pct PF 7 0 .533 354 9 0 .400342 9 0 .400390 11 0 .267 252 South L T Pct PF 1 0 .933 462 7 0 .533 322 9 0 .400 332 9 0 .400388 West L T Pct PF 2 0 .867 483 6 0 .600 387 8 0 .467 264 11 0 .267 219

PA 303 289 380 373 PA 356 400 407 340 PA 298 325 379 459 PA 277 271 311 371

AMERICAN CONFERENCE y-New England N.Y. Jets Buffalo Miami

W 12 10 7 5

Houston Indianapolis Jacksonville Tennessee

W 8 7 5 3

y-Cincinnati Pittsburgh Baltimore Cleveland

W 11 9 5 3

x-Denver x-Kansas City Oakland San Diego

W 11 10 7 4

East L T Pct PF 3 0 .800455 5 0 .667 370 8 0 .467 357 10 0 .333 290 South L T Pct PF 7 0 .533 309 8 0 .467 303 10 0 .333 370 12 0 .200 275 North L T Pct PF 4 0 .733 395 6 0 .600 395 10 0 .333 312 12 0 .200266 West L T Pct PF 4 0 .733 328 5 0 .667 382 8 0 .467 342 11 0 .267 300

PA 295 292 342 379 PA 307 384 418 393 PA 263 307 377 404 PA 276 270 376 371

x-clinched playoff spot y-clinched division Monday’s Result Cincinnati at Denver, 7:30 p.m. Sunday’s Games Jacksonville at Houston, 1 p.m. Washington at Dallas, 1 p.m. Detroit at Chicago, 1 p.m. N.Y. Jets at Buffalo, 1 p.m. New England at Miami, 1 p.m. New Orleans at Atlanta, 1 p.m. Baltimore at Cincinnati, 1 p.m. Pittsburgh at Cleveland, 1 p.m. Tennessee at Indianapolis, 1 p.m. Philadelphia at N.Y. Giants, 1 p.m. St. Louis at San Francisco, 4:25 p.m. San Diego at Denver, 4:25 p.m. Seattle at Arizona, 4:25 p.m. Oakland at Kansas City, 4:25 p.m. Tampa Bay at Carolina, 4:25 p.m. Minnesota at Green Bay, 8:30 p.m.

Dallas St. Louis Minnesota Blackhawks Nashville Colorado Winnipeg Los Angeles Arizona Vancouver San Jose Calgary Edmonton Anaheim

Central Division GP W L OT Pts 37 27 7 3 57 38 22 12 4 48 35 19 10 6 44 37 20 13 4 44 36 18 12 6 42 36 17 17 2 36 35 16 17 2 34 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts 34 21 11 2 44 35 17 15 3 37 37 14 14 9 37 34 17 15 2 36 35 17 16 2 36 37 15 19 3 33 34 13 15 6 32

GF 129 95 95 97 97 100 93

GA 91 90 84 89 92 99 104

GF 88 95 93 93 96 95 66

GA 79 109 104 94 116 113 87

EASTERN CONFERENCE

AP photo

Chicago Blackhawks left wing Dennis Rasmussen, left, celebrates his first NHL goal with teammates Andrew Shaw (65) and Trevor van Riemsdyk (57) earlier this month.

Shaw added to first line By MARK LAZERUS mlazerus@suntimes.com For about three weeks, the Blackhawks were slowly starting to resemble the Blackhawks again. They were getting scoring from their bottom-six forwards. They were scoring three or four goals a night. They had a real fourth line again, balancing out the minutes. They were camping out in the offensive zone for entire shifts at a time. And they were winning, too – seven out of nine, to be exact. Well, two bad games and Joel Quenneville’s already back to the drawing board. After the Hawks avoided being shut out for the second straight game by a mere three seconds Sunday night against the mediocre Carolina Hurricanes, Quenneville did what he always does when he’s unhappy with the offense: He tinkered. So Andrew Shaw, one of the few players who brought his best against Dallas and

Next Hawks at Arizona, 8 p.m. today, CSN, AM-720 Carolina, is back on the top line, and Teuvo Teravainen, who barely a week ago looked like the long-term solution on the top line at left wing, is on the third line at right wing. “It could be permanent, or it could be short term,” Quenneville said. “We’ll see. But [it’s] more like a reward. Shaw deserves a chance to get up there.” On top of that, the Hawks finally seem to have given up on defenseman David Rundblad, who has watched 28 of 37 games this season in a suit – healthy, available and eager to play, but essentially unwanted by Quenneville. He was put on waivers Monday, with promising rookie Erik Gustafsson called up. If Rundblad clears, he will be sent to Rockford. He also can be claimed by another

team, as Viktor Tikhonov was earlier in the season. General manager Stan Bowman gave up a second-round pick to get Rundblad at the trade deadline in 2014, then resigned him to a two-year contract worth an average of $1.05 million a season this past summer. But the offensive-minded defenseman never won over Quenneville. Gustafsson, who was impressive during an earlier sixgame stint, will get a chance to be an everyday player, which will allow Quenneville to rotate veterans Michal Rozsival and Rob Scuderi to keep them fresh. Gustafsson will even start out on the second power-play unit. “I try to play the game as Chicago wants to play,” Gustafson said. “They like to move the puck, and I tried to show them that I can move the puck.” The way the Hawks really want to play is high-flying, showtime hockey.

Carey’s hot streak may not be enough to replace Forte Continued from page B1

x-Green Bay x-Minnesota Detroit Chicago

NHL

Continued from page B1

• BEARS

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

WESTERN CONFERENCE

• BULLS

well before the injury, but also so that prospective teams could see that Noah was alive and well moving forward. The concern the Bulls have with the injury was a small tear in the shoulder will heal without surgery, but could also leads to a more serious tear. Then there’s the Bobby Portis factor in all of this, as the emergence of the rookie would make life without Noah – who will be a free agent after this season – a bit easier to handle. “Ever since I was a kid I was always the guy that always went out there and worked as hard as I can, always played as hard as I can to provide my team with positive energy,’’ Portis, who scored 12 points and grabbed nine rebounds in the win over Toronto, said. “That’s what I’ve been trying to do ever since Joakim got hurt. I’m not trying to replace him, I’m just trying to fill in the lost void.’’ While Hoiberg has been very outspoken about his dislike for social media and all of the rumors that seem to branch out from it, his way of dealing with the trade talk and how it relates to his players was to simply ignore it. “I don’t talk about them,’’ Hoiberg said. “These guys, what they’ve done is shown up every day and been ready to go to work. That’s what great teams do. That’s what professional teams do. We’ve got a lot of pros on this team.”

NFL

expendable when his contract expires at the end of the season is a dangerous conclusion. Carey touched the ball once in the first three quarters – his 1-yard touchdown run – and then again for his touchdown reception on the first play of the fourth quarter. Carey’s remaining six carries for 15 yards came only after Forte was out with a back problem and Langford was gassed during the final 6:28 of the game. Carey is still a long way from a comfortable enough insurance policy to send Forte packing. As good as the line was on the run – particularly Vladimir Ducasse and Kyle Long – they were mediocre in pass protection, and Ducasse is a real liability in that facet of the game. Matt Slauson continued to

impress, moving seamlessly from guard to center and back. Wide receiver play was again below average at best, and it’s time they all started begging offensive coordinator Adam Gase to mothball the bubble screen before somebody gets killed. The front seven on defense was solid with John Timu and Jonathan Anderson in particular raising some cautious optimism at inside linebacker. Both were aggressive and explosive, which has been lacking at that position all season, enough so they demand another look against the Lions. Adrian Amos struggled a bit for the third week in a row, and Kyle Fuller and Tracy Porter were average-to-mediocre, but Harold Jones-Quartey was active, exciting and, like the rookie linebackers, demands anoth-

er look this Sunday. For 60 minutes in Tampa, Jones-Quartey was more effective than Antrel Rolle was at any point this season before his knee injury. Robbie Gould had a big bounce-back game, perfect on four field goal attempts and allowing only one kickoff return, but Pat O’Donnell suffered a punter’s worst nightmare, a punt blocked, which led to a touchdown, because of a huge breakdown in his protection. When the special teams are directly accountable for points allowed, their day is a failure. Fortunately for them, this was a day for the defense to keep taking the ball away, which can cover a lot of ills.

• Chicago Football editor Hub Arkush can be reache at harkush@chicagofootball.com or on Twitter @Hub_Arkush.

Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA 38 21 14 3 45 110 95 36 20 12 4 44 98 83 36 18 11 7 43 93 94 35 19 12 4 42 108 94 36 18 12 6 42 108 105 37 18 15 4 40 95 88 36 15 17 4 34 85 94 34 13 14 7 33 89 94 Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Washington 35 27 6 2 56 110 72 N.Y. Rangers 37 20 13 4 44 107 98 N.Y. Islanders 36 19 12 5 43 97 85 New Jersey 36 17 14 5 39 84 90 Pittsburgh 35 17 15 3 37 79 86 Philadelphia 35 15 13 7 37 76 96 Carolina 36 15 16 5 35 85 103 Columbus 38 13 22 3 29 92 120 Two points for a win, one point for OT loss Montreal Florida Detroit Boston Ottawa Tampa Bay Buffalo Toronto

Today’s Results Montreal 4, Tampa Bay 3, SO Washington 2, Buffalo 0 Nashville 5, N.Y. Rangers 3 Minnesota 3, Detroit 1 Los Angeles at Vancouver(n) Colorado at San Jose (n) Tuesday’s Games Ottawa at Boston, 6 p.m. N.Y. Islanders at Toronto, 6 p.m. Carolina at New Jersey, 6 p.m. Dallas at Columbus, 6 p.m. Montreal at Florida, 6:30 p.m. Nashville at St. Louis, 7 p.m. Detroit at Winnipeg, 7 p.m. Anaheim at Calgary, 8 p.m. Los Angeles at Edmonton, 8 p.m. Blackhawks at Arizona, 8 p.m.

NBA EASTERN CONFERENCE

Central Division W L Pct 20 9 .690 18 12 .600 17 12 .586 17 14 .548 12 20 .375 Atlantic Division W L Pct Toronto 19 13 .594 Boston 18 13 .581 New York 14 18 .438 Brooklyn 9 22 .290 Philadelphia 2 31 .061 Southeast Division W L Pct Atlanta 20 13 .606 Miami 18 12 .600 Orlando 18 13 .581 Charlotte 17 13 .567 Washington 14 15 .483 Cleveland Indiana Bulls Detroit Milwaukee

GB — 2½ 3 4 9½ GB — ½ 5 9½ 17½ GB — ½ 1 1½ 4

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Southwest Division W L Pct San Antonio 27 6 .818 Dallas 18 13 .581 Memphis 17 16 .515 Houston 16 16 .500 New Orleans 10 21 .323 Northwest Division W L Pct Oklahoma City 21 10 .677 Utah 13 16 .448 Portland 13 20 .394 Denver 12 19 .387 Minnesota 11 20 .355 Pacific Division W L Pct Golden State 28 1 .966 L.A. Clippers 19 13 .594 Sacramento 12 18 .400 Phoenix 12 21 .364 L.A. Lakers 5 27 .156

Monday’s Results Indiana 93, Atlanta 87 Orlando 104, New Orleans 89 L.A. Clippers 108, Washington 91 Charlotte 108, L.A. Lakers 98 Brooklyn 111, Miami 105 Bulls 104, Toronto 97 San Antonio 101, Minnesota 95 Dallas 103, Milwaukee 93 Utah 95, Philadelphia 91 Cleveland 101, Phoenix 97 Sacramento at Golden State (n) Tuesday’s Games Detroit at New York, 6:30 p.m. Miami at Memphis, 7 p.m. Atlanta at Houston, 7 p.m. Milwaukee at Oklahoma City, 7 p.m. Cleveland at Denver, 8 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Brooklyn at Orlando, 6 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Charlotte, 6 p.m. Washington at Toronto, 6:30 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Boston, 6:30 p.m. Indiana at Chicago, 7 p.m. Utah at Minnesota, 7 p.m. Phoenix at San Antonio, 7:30 p.m. Golden State at Dallas, 7:30 p.m. Philadelphia at Sacramento, 9 p.m. Denver at Portland, 9 p.m.

GB — 8 10 10½ 16 GB — 7 9 9 10 GB — 10½ 16½ 18 24½


Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Section B • Tuesday, December 29, 2015 •

Mother wants her children to value character over beauty Dear Abby : All children are beautiful to their parents. My three children are of mixed race and get a lot of attention because of it. The boys are aloof about random compliments they receive from strangers. However, I’m worried about the pressure it may put on my daughter to be “pretty.” I care more about my daughter’s character than her looks, but I’m concerned if I say that to these people, it will come off as rude. Also, I don’t want her to think I don’t think she’s pretty. How can I respond in a way that isn’t rude to well-intentioned strangers, but at the same time allows me to make a statement

DEAR ABBY Jeanne Phillips about the importance of character over beauty? –

Mom Of Beauties Dear Mom : When some-

one exclaims your child is beautiful, accept the compliment and say something like this: “Yes, my child is beautiful, but more important, she is beautiful on the inside.” It will reinforce the message to your daughter character is equally, if not more important, than physical beauty. Dear Abby : Isn’t the rule of etiquette when a gift is given, it belongs to the

recipient? My mother sends gifts to our infant daughter. She is the first grandbaby, and my mother is a doting grandparent. My question is what should happen when my child outgrows the items – clothing, shoes, toys, etc. My mother expects me to put them all in a storage bin and return them to her. There have been times when I have packed up things to give to friends who have younger daughters than ours, or taken them to a resale shop. My mother then becomes upset I’m not returning the items to her. She is saving them for my sister, who isn’t even

pregnant yet. While I have no issue with saving some things for a potential niece, my friends need these things now, and I feel strange essentially being obligated to return them. Is my mom out of line? It’s off-putting to receive a gift that comes with a return clause. – Confused In

er might be, she is out of line to demand everything she has given be returned to her. (What will she do if your sister has only boys?) Dear Abby : When I’m dining out, sometimes the flatware is wrapped and banded in a large paper napkin. Do I use this napkin for cleaning myself, or do I ask for more napkins? –

your mother not only is a doting grandma, but also someone who is determined to get a double bang for her buck. Once given, a gift does belong to the recipient. Otherwise, it’s not a gift but a loan. And yes, however well-intentioned your moth-

napkin in your lap, and if you would like to have more, do not hesitate to ask your server. It is not a breach of etiquette to do so.

Central Texas Dear Confused : It appears

Dear Dr. K: I know my child is supposed to get a flu shot each year. But how much good does it really do, and is it safe? Dear Reader: Every fall and winter, parents face the question: Should my child get an influenza (flu) shot? There are several important reasons why children older than 6 months should get a flu shot every year: • Influenza can be dangerous, even for healthy children. Flu can be dangerous for children, particularly those with asthma, diabetes or other chronic health problems. But

ASK DR. K Anthony L. Komaroff even healthy children can get very sick – and possibly die – from influenza. The H1N1 “swine flu” virus that has been circulating since the epidemic of 2009-10 is particularly dangerous for children. • You can’t catch the flu from a flu shot. The flu shot, given by needle, contains virus that has been killed. Despite misconceptions some parents have, the flu shot cannot infect your child and cause the flu. There now is a nasal spray flu vaccine made with weakened (but still alive) flu virus,

for children who hate shots. While nasal congestion and a low-grade fever can occur (in about one in 20 children), the illness is milder and briefer than the flu. If your child is between 6 months and 2 years or has a weakened immune system, however, he or she should get the flu shot, not the nasal spray vaccine. Some children (and adults) who get the flu shot also get a mild fever, an aching muscle where the flu shot was given and feel tired for a day or so. That’s not because the shot gave them the flu; it’s a sign their immune system is responding vigorously to the shot. That’s good news, because that’s what we want the immune system to do.

• The flu shot is safe. Years of experience have shown the flu vaccine is very safe. There is no evidence thimerosal, a common vaccine preservative, is dangerous for children. But preservative-free preparations are available. A particular flu vaccine used in 1976 did seem to cause a few cases of the neurological condition called Guillain-Barre syndrome. But this same condition can follow getting the flu itself. Indeed, it happens more often after the flu than after getting a flu shot. Since the flu shot protects against the flu, your child is less likely to get this rare condition if they get the flu vaccine. • The flu shot protects more

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

than your child. Children are germ-producing machines. Your child may weather the flu fine – but what about others who could catch the flu from your child? Although there are a few unusual circumstances in which your pediatrician might recommend against a flu shot, the flu shot almost always is a safe treatment. It is not too late to get the shot: Flu season will continue for another three months. And the shot can make all the difference in your child’s health. • Write to Dr. Komaroff at www.askdoctork.com or Ask Doctor K, 10 Shattuck St., Second Floor, Boston, MA 02115.

‘Wild’ teen must seek honest communication with mother Dr. Wallace: My problem is my mom is trying to totally run my life. Her reason probably is my older sister was no angel. She was into everything from staying out late at wild parties, to sex, booze and smoking pot. So now my mom is really trying to prevent me from having any fun at all, and I’m tired of being a goody-goody. I do have a couple of friends who are thought of as a bit wild, but we all are popular and have fun. Sometimes we go to parties (my mom thinks I’m just over at a friend’s house) and once in a while I drink a little, but I know when to stop and pop a couple of peppermints.

How can I get my mother to just leave me alone to have a little fun? – Nameless, St.

’TWEEN 12 & 20 Robert Wallace

Louis Nameless: Your mother

I’m only 15, and my mother is all hyped up because she saw me kissing this guy who is 16, but looks a bit older. Now I’m grounded for two weeks, and she wants me to promise I won’t see this guy again. I really like this guy and even though I promised, I will see him again because he throws great parties. My mom also doesn’t like me to hang around the teen hangout (no drinks are allowed there) because there are too many boys there. Of course there are, that’s why my girlfriends and I go there.

HOROSCOPE

loves you and wants only what is best for you, and would prefer you were not a “wild child” like your older sister. I can see extracting promises from you would have no effect because you would have no intention of keeping them. Nor would grounding work for you. This only will cause your relationship with your mother to deteriorate further. If your mother had written for advice regarding your behavior, I would have recommended she do everything in her power to

SUDOKU By EUGENIA LAST Newspaper Enterprise Association

TODAY – Broaden your horizons and explore new territory. If you focus on diversity, you will utilize your skills to the fullest. This is a year of opportunity, but it’s up to you to take advantage of what comes your way. Now is the time to make personal improvements and gains. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) – Don’t waste time arguing when you should be expanding your interests and looking for investments and projects that are exciting, challenging and beneficial to your career. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) – Partnerships should be questioned if you feel apprehensive. Make a point to go over your options and not only look at the facts, but follow your heart as well. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) – Keep an open mind, but don’t let anyone talk you into something that doesn’t feel right. Offer suggestions, but refrain from making cash donations or lending money or possessions. ARIES (March 21-April 19) – Listen carefully before you offer your opinion. You’ll end up in an argument if you are too quick to judge. Put more effort into personal gains than into helping someone else advance. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) – Business meetings, interviews or updating your resume will pay off. A short trip will result in knowledge that will help you advance. Romance is in the stars. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) – Someone’s motives will be questionable. Don’t do something just because someone else does. Pick and choose what you want to do based on your skills. Practicality and reason will help you avoid loss. CANCER (June 21-July 22) – Partnerships, your personal environment and the initiation of unusual but beneficial changes are highlighted. A discussion with someone you love will lead to solid plans. Romance will spice up your life. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) – Don’t be afraid to ask for help. A new acquaintance will make a difference to the way you approach someone or something that can alter your personal or professional future. Embrace change. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) – Socializing, networking or checking out an interesting project will help you come to an important decision. Positive changes at home can be expected if you are up front about what you want. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) – If you volunteer to help a cause you believe in, the people you encounter will brighten your day and encourage you to make the changes that you’ve been putting off making. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) – An emotional situation will be a telltale sign regarding the way someone feels about you. Listen, but don’t respond until you have a solid suggestion or compromise. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) – Stick close to home and work toward making your surroundings more convenient and comfortable. Avoid taking on responsibilities that don’t belong to you. React from the heart.

improve communication with you, including seeing a family counselor or therapist with you. This person could help her set reasonable limits for you that you will honor and respect. However, since you’re the one who wrote the letter, I only can ask you to take the initiative to improve your relationship with your mom. She is right (and deep in your heart, you know it) to want to rein you in and control your “little wildness,” which is a bit much for a 15-year-old. You did not mention how your older sister’s life has turned out, but it probably is not as successful and happy as it should have been. My hope for you and your mother is an honest “moth-

BRIDGE Phillip Alder

Unsure In Connecticut Dear Unsure : Place the

Children older than 6 months should get a flu shot annually • Note to readers: This column is an update of one that originally appeared in October 2012.

ADVICE & PUZZLES 3

er-daughter communication” can be established. This is the foundation of a successful family. You should not make any promise you do not intend to keep. Instead, have an honest discussion in order to reach a reasonable compromise with Mom: Some partying is OK, but sex, drinking and drugs are off limits. And homework should be completed on a regular basis. You are heading for a life full of trouble and misery if you do not have limits on your behavior. I feel if you didn’t understand this instinctively, you wouldn’t have contacted me. • Write to Dr. Wallace at rwallace@galesburg.net.

CROSSWORD

Do you go this way or turn that way? As Yogi Berra nearly said, when you come to a fork in the road, turn left or right. When defending at the bridge table, you often will be wondering whether you should turn left or right. How do you decide? First, work out what holdings partner needs to make each choice the winner, and consider whether either is consistent with the auction and play so far. In this deal, for example, East has to choose a play at trick four. South is in four hearts. West leads the diamond king, under which East encourages with his 10. West continues with the diamond jack and diamond queen. East overtakes the queen with his ace and, when declarer follows throughout, what should East do next? North used Stayman. He planned, if South had rebid two diamonds, to jump to three hearts, employing the Smolen convention, to show five spades, four hearts and game-forcing values. But when South indicated four hearts, North jumped to game in that suit. East could shift to his singleton spade, hoping partner could win with the ace and give him a ruff for down two. Or East could lead his last diamond, hoping to generate a trump trick. As always, check the points. The dummy holds 11, East has five, and West has already produced six. That leaves 18 unaccounted for, but South showed 15-17 with his opening bid. So, West has only 1-3 more points. As he cannot have the spade ace, East should lead his fourth diamond. When West ruffs with his heart king, and dummy overruffs with the ace, East takes a trump trick.


COMICS • Tuesday, December 29, 2015 • Section B • Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com 4 0AGE 88 s $AY $ATE COMICS 0ICKLES

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COMMUNITY

“I have your back ” Photo by: K. Wilber

877-264-CLAS

CLASSIFIED

(2527)

classified@shawsuburban.com Daily-Chronicle.com/classified Upload your photos at

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29, 2015 • SECTION B

Daily-Chronicle.com/myphotos

Rochelle 1 & 2 Bedroom

Wedding Ring Quilt, New - $50, Nancy 815-895-4659

Remodeled, 1 bath, clean & quiet. Available now. 815-758-6580 or 815-739-5806

Sycamore – 1BR, off street parking close to downtown, no pet/smkg, utilities & security dep. $490/mo. 815-762-7200 lv. msg

Sycamore TH Like New 2BR

Great location! 2BA, 2 car garage, skylights, appl, W/D, C/A, $950. No pets. 815-758-0123

SYCAMORE CLEAN 2BR, 1BA

Powered by:

2008 Dodge Grand Caravan SXT 121k miles, new tires, no rust/dents. All service records available. $6500 OBO. 815-751-6363

BOOKKEEPER

DeKalb company has an opening for a part-time entry level Bookkeeper. Flexible hours. Duties include, but are not limited to, being responsible for computerized financial operations, ie: accounts receivables, payables, payroll and various spreadsheets. Must have experience with Microsoft Office and Quick Books. Send confidential cover letter and resume to:

HHHHHHHH

CLASSICS WANTED

Restored or Unrestored

Cars

Vintage Motorcycles 121 Industrial Dr DeKalb, IL 60115 Attn: Mary or email: mary@castleprint.com No phone calls, please.

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

Domestic/ Import Cars: Mercedes, Porsche, Corvette, Ferrari's, Jaguars, Muscle Cars, Mustang, Mopars

W/D, D/W, next to park and schools. $725/mo, tenant pay utilities, NO DOGS. 815-970-4640 BIG APARTMENTS, LESS MONEY! Rochelle: 15 minutes from DeKalb Studios, 1 BR & 2BR Starting at $415 Recently updated! Affordable heat. Walk to shops! (815) 562-6425 www.whiteoakapartments.net Now accepting Visa, M/C, Discover

DEKALB - 1215 State St. 4br 2ba, W/D, DW, $995/mo, avail 1/1 847-845-4021

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DeKalb Spacious 1-2BR New stove, carpet, full bath.

$720, all utilities incl. No pets/smoking. 815-756-1777

Sycamore E. State St. AVAILABLE NOW!

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DeKalb, Efficiency Apt, So. 3 . St off st. parking, nice neighborhood $500/mo, utilities included. No pets. Paul 815-748-4228 DEKALB: Sunny, Clean 3 Floor 1BR, Like Living in a Tree House! Laundry, garage, yard, pets neg. Husky bus route, no smoking. $600/mo + util, 1st mo & sec dep. Avail 1/16. Mary 815-991-2095

877-264-2527

#582-1**Paw Paw** 4 br, 1.5ba farmhouse, W/D h,u's, c/a, Est. 1600 sq. ft., Tenant pays electric, Pets @ p.m.'s discretion $1195/mo Heat Included tcpm.com 815-786-2404

DeKalb Quiet Studio 1 & 2BR Lease, deposit, ref, no pets.

rd

Daily Chronicle Classified

CORTLAND 2BR, 1½ BA Central A/C, nice yard, garage. Washer/dryer hook-up, $900/mo. 815-761-5944

www.HuskieWire.com All NIU Sports... All The Time

Stone Prairie 2BR, 2BA APT.

Washer & dryer, central air, fireplace, exercise center. Cat friendly. Private fishing. $770/mo.

Laing Mgmt.

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Newly remodeled 2 Bedroom CALL FOR DETAILS 815-236-4051 ~ 815-923-2521 Sycamore Quiet Upper & Lower 2BR, 1BA, W/D, no pets/smoking. $700/mo + 1st, last security. 815-501-1378

DeKalb Pets OK, Main Flr 1-2BR, With basement, W/D, 2 car garage. No smoking, some util incl, $695. Please text. 630-880-1666

DeKalb, contractor office / storage space for rent, great space for small contractor. $300/mo. 815-751-5224

1.5 bath, appl, W/D, 2 car garage. No smoking, $1100/mo + sec. 815-970-0110

DeKalb, 1888 State St Professional Office Space Available, different sizes, furniture included; 815-756-1198

PUBLIC NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE TWENTY-THIRD JUDICIAL CIRCUIT DEKALB COUNTY, ILLINOIS

HHHHHHHH

Will BUY UR USED RING

Ladies, yellow gold red garnet ring. Looks like a flower, lost in DeKalb area. 815-756-7135

REWARD!

NEW PRICE $169,000

Solid Solid Stone Ranch Home Over 2400 sq. ft. Full basement, 2 car garage. One of a Kind in DeKalb.

CALL NEDRA ERICSON, REALTOR 815-739-9997

ONE OF A KIND BUILT WITH QUALITY ON A LAKE HOME, SYCAMORE

DAILY CHRONICLE CLASSIFIED www.Daily-Chronicle.com

/s/ Maureen A. Josh Clerk Attorneys for Plaintiffs KLEIN, STODDARD, BUCK LEWIS, LLC 2045 Aberdeen Court, Suite A Sycamore, IL 60178 (815) 748-0380 (815) 748-4030 fax jbuck@kleinstoddard.com

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE TWENTY-THIRD JUDICIAL CIRCUIT DEKALB COUNTY, ILLINOIS LEGAL NOTICE FOR A NAME CHANGE (ADULT)

v. GRANT RICHARD BLOCK-WISHON, a minor, JESSICA ANN WISHON, UNKNOWN FATHER and ALL WHOM IT MAY CONCERN, Defendants.

ADOPTION PUBLICATION NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given that on January 29, 2016 at 9:00 a.m., at the DeKalb County Courthouse, 133 West State Street, Sycamore, Illinois, 60178 in the courtroom occupied by the presiding judge, Audrey Alexandra Wickersham will file his/her petition requesting that his/her name be changed from AUDREY ALEXANDRA WICKERSHAM to ALEXANDRA ZIVA PARKER pursuant to the statute in such case made and provided. Any person interested in said request for change of name may appear at said time and place, if they so desire. Audrey Alexandra Wickersham 1307 W. Lincoln Hwy Apt. 7102 DeKalb, IL 60115

(Published in the Daily Chronicle, December 15, 22 & 29, 2015.)

Cortland Township Meeting Dates 2016 Cortland Township Building Cortland, Illinois 60112

A Super Down to Earth Solid Home. 4 Bedrms, 1-1/2 bathrm, full basement. Big rooms and lots of storage, huge 3.5 car garage with wood burning heater. A man cave.

CALL NEDRA ERICSON, REALTOR 815-739-9997

3/5 Bedrms, 3.5 bathrms, Finished Look out Basement, 4 car garage, tech savvy home, Grand floor plan, Appliances, TV's, Etc. included

CALL NEDRA ERICSON, REALTOR 815-739-9997

January 13, 2016 Wednesday 6:30 pm February 10, 2016 Wednesday 6:30 pm March 9, 2016 Wednesday 6:30 pm April 12, 2016 Tuesday Annual Meeting 6:30 pm April 13, 2016 6:15 Wednesday Budget Meeting 6:30 pm Board Meeting May 11, 2016 Wednesday 6:30 pm June 8, 2016 Wednesday 6:30 pm July 13, 2016 Wednesday 6:30 pm August 10, 2016 Wednesday 6:30 pm September 14, 2016 Wednesday 6:30 pm October 12, 2016 Wednesday 6:30 pm November 9, 2016 Wednesday 6:30 pm December 14, 2016 Wednesday 6:30 pm (Published in the Daily Chronicle, December 29, 2016.)

Brass Shop Keeper's Bells hangs on door to alert incoming customer, lovely sound, three bells $20. Call Don 815-895-4659

OOGA Auto Horn – Nickel or Brass circa 1909, lovely attentive sound $25. Don 815-895-4659

Bathroom Fixtures - New Orleans décor, 5 styles, towel holder, dual towel holder, towel w/ring, 3-tier, shelf & towel bar, $30 each, Nancy 815-895-4659 HUTCH-SOLID MAPLE 51” wide. 3 drawers, 2 Doors, with 2 shelf plate rack. $200. 815-756-6253 Milk Can Lamp and Shade, for country decor, conversation piece, New - $50. Call Nancy 815-895-4659 Pink Dressing Table with skirt, $45, and pink book shelf, $45 new, 815-895-4659 Nancy

New " Mother " throw, Warm, $25. Nancy 815-895-4659 New Grandmother Throw, warms the body & the heart w/verse - $25 Call Nancy 815-895-4659 Warm " Father " throw, blanket, afghan, new, never used, $25, Nancy 815-895-4659

Woodworking Shop Tools, 779-212-2188 Old wood frame windows Nine 28 x 29 2 pane and one 28 x 14 3 pane $15 each or 2 for $25. 815-748-7693 Old wood window fram windows 9ea. 28X29, 2 pane 1ea. 28 x 14, 3 pane $15/each or 2 for $25 815-748-7693

Send your Help Wanted Advertising 24/7 to: Email: helpwanted@shawsuburban.com Fax: 815-477-8898

&

(Published in the Daily Chronicle, December 15, 22 & 29, 2015.)

PUBLIC NOTICE

MOST CASH WILL BEAT ANY QUOTE GIVEN!! $400 - $2000 “don't wait.... call 2day”!!

SHANE H. WAGNAAR and DONNA M. WAGNAAR, Plaintiffs,

Case No. 15 AD 16

CAR, TRUCK, SUV,

815-575-5153

Advertise here for a successful garage sale! Call 815-455-4800

PLANT YOUR ROOTS IN SYCAMORE

Dated at Sycamore, Illinois, this 9th day of December, 2015.

FOR CHANGE OF NAME

all makes, Etc.

CALL NEDRA ERICSON, REALTOR 815-739-9997

NOW, THEREFORE, unless you, Unknown Father and All Whom It May Concern, file your answer to the Petition in said suit, or otherwise file your appearance therein, in the said Circuit Court of DeKalb County, in the City of Sycamore, Illinois, on or before the 22nd day of January, 2016, a default may be entered against you at any time after that day, and a Judgment entered in accordance with the prayer of said Petition.

IN THE MATTER OF THE PETITION OF: Audrey Alexandra Wickersham

1 PLUS ACRE IN THE HEART OF DEKALB

$$ Top $$

A-1 AUTO

TAKE NOTICE that a Petition was filed in the Circuit Court of DeKalb County, Illinois, for the adoption of a child named Grant Richard Block-Wishon.

PUBLIC NOTICE DEKALB 2 BEDROOM TH

SYCAMORE 5+ BEDROOM HOME

3300+ sq. ft. with a Great Floor Plan. Outstanding Features, 2 Fireplaces, 3+ garage, Grand outside Patio.

TO: ALL WHOM IT MAY CONCERN

(Published in the Daily Chronicle, December 29, 2015.)


6 CLASSIFIED

• Tuesday, December 29, 2015 • Section B • Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com

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Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com • Section B • Tuesday, December 29, 2015 •

AT YOUR SERVICE

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Register FREE today at Daily-Chronicle.com www.HuskieWire.com

PUBLIC NOTICE

/s/ Douglas J. Johnson DeKalb County Clerk & Recorder

ASSUMED NAME PUBLICATION NOTICE

(Published in the Daily Chronicle, December 15, 22 & 29, 2015)

Public Notice is hereby given that on December 14, 2015 a certificate was filed in the Office of the County Clerk of DeKalb County, Illinois, setting forth the names and post office address of all of the persons owning, conducting, and transacting the business known as: SMOKING GRILL & PIZZERIA located at 528 E. Main St., Genoa, IL 60135.

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JOBS ANNOUNCEMENTS STUFF VEHICLES REAL ESTATE SERVICES

Find. Buy. Sell. All in one place... HERE! Everyday in Daily Chronicle Classified

Daily Chronicle Classified and online at: www.Daily-Chronicle.com

Dated December 14, 2015

TUESDAY EVENING DECEMBER 29, 2015 ^ WBBM % WMAQ _

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+ WTTW 4 WYCC 8 WCGV :

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CABLE (A&E) (AMC) (ANPL) (CNN) (COM) (CSN) (DISC) (DISN) (ENC) (ESPN) (ESPN2) (FAM) (FNC) (FOOD) (FX) (HALL) (HGTV) (HIST) (LIFE) (MSNBC) (MTV) (NICK) (SPIKE) (SYFY) (TCM) (TLC) (TNT) (TVL) (USA) (VH1) (WTBS)

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Comics UnThe 38th Annual Kennedy Center Honors King, Lucas, Moreno, Ozawa CBS 2 News at (:35) The Late Show With Stephen (:37) The Late Late Show With 10PM (N) (CC) Colbert ’ leashed James Corden ’ (CC) and Tyson. (N) ’ (CC) Chicago Med “iNO” Treating a teen Chicago Fire Severide deals with a NBC5 News 10P (:34) The Tonight Show Starring (:37) Late Night With Seth Meyers Last Call With (N) (CC) Carson Daly ’ Jimmy Fallon ’ (CC) ’ (CC) who’s just given birth. ’ difficult day. ’ (CC) (DVS) ABC7 Eyewit- (:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live John (:37) Nightline (12:07) Windy City Live David Muir; Beyond the Tank Robert Herjavec Beyond the Tank ’ (CC) ness News (N) Krasinski; Chris Fowler. ’ (CC) (N) (CC) checks on Chord Buddy. (CC) Lisa Ling; Elizabeth Dole. ’ Everybody The Middle “The iZombie “Abra Cadaver” An illusion- WGN News at Nine (N) ’ (Live) WGN News at Friends ’ (CC) Friends ’ (CC) Everybody Ten (N) (CC) Loves Raymond Loves Raymond Hose” ’ (CC) ist is murdered. ’ (CC) Nightly BusiProhibition Support for Prohibition diminishes. ’ (Part 3 of 3) (CC) (DVS) Frontline Women who were once BBC World Chicago Tonight ’ ness Report (N) News ’ (CC) held as sex slaves. ’ (PA) (CC) DW News Antiques Roadshow Tin toys; Marx Poirot A prince desires to marry an A Very British Murder The golden Democracy Now! Current Events & Charlie Rose ’ (CC) Tavis Smiley ’ Charlie Rose (N) ’ (CC) car and dump truck. (CC) actress. (CC) News in the World. (CC) age of detective fiction. ’ (CC) The Simpsons College Football: Nova Home Loans Arizona Bowl -- Nevada vs. Colorado State. Nevada and Colorado State, a pair of Mountain The Walking Dead Rick leads the The Walking Dead Rick discovers a Cheaters ’ (CC) Raising Hope West teams, collide in the first-ever Arizona Bowl. (N) (Live) ’ (CC) group out of Atlanta. ’ possible safe haven. ’ “Bee Story” ’ The King of The King of Seinfeld “The Mike & Molly Family Guy ’ Rules of EnFamily Guy ’ 2 Broke Girls ’ 2 Broke Girls ’ Seinfeld “The Mike & Molly ’ ABC7 Eyewitness News on WCIU, Rules of EnQueens (CC) Queens (CC) The U (N) Baby Shower” Watch” (CC) “School Recital” (CC) (CC) (CC) (CC) (CC) gagement ’ gagement ’ Big Bang Modern Family New Girl ’ Grandfathered New Girl ’ Derm Exclusive! The Grinder ’ Fox Chicago News at Nine (N) ’ Modern Family TMZ ’ (CC) Dish Nation ’ TMZ Live ’ (CC) Adelante BBC World Nightly BusiDoc Martin Martin is worried about BBC World PBS NewsHour (N) ’ (CC) Nostra Aetate Concert ’ (CC) PBS NewsHour (N) ’ (CC) Charlie Rose (N) ’ (CC) News America ness Report (N) News ’ (CC) the nanny. ’ (CC) Paid Program Paid Program Saving Hope “A New Beginning” Saving Hope ’ (CC) Criminal Minds “Retaliation” ’ Criminal Minds “The Hunt” ’ Criminal Minds “Burn” ’ Criminal Minds ’ (CC) (DVS) Big Bang Modern Family New Girl ’ Grandfathered New Girl ’ Modern Family Big Bang The Simpsons TMZ (N) (CC) How I Met How I Met The Grinder ’ Eyewitness News at Nine (N) Family Feud ’ Family Feud ’ The Walking Dead Rick leads the The Walking Dead Rick discovers a The Big Bang How I Met Your The Simpsons How I Met Your Anger Manage- Anger Manage- Tosh.0 ’ (CC) Paid Program Mother (CC) ment (CC) ment (CC) Theory (CC) Mother (CC) “Bull-E” (CC) (CC) (CC) group out of Atlanta. ’ possible safe haven. ’ CBS 2 News at Entertainment 6PM (N) (CC) Tonight (N) ’ NBC5 News 6P Access Hollywood (N) (CC) (N) (CC) ABC7 Eyewit- Wheel of Forness News (N) tune (N) (CC) Two and a Half Two and a Half Men ’ (CC) Men ’ (CC) PBS NewsHour (N) ’ (CC)

NCIS “Stop the Bleeding” Gibbs fights for his life. (CC) (DVS) Hollywood Game Night John Legend; Chrissy Teigen. ’ (CC) Fresh Off the The Muppets ’ (CC) Boat ’ (CC) The Flash Patty and Barry become closer. ’ (CC) Chicago Tonight (N) ’

Married at First Sight (N) (CC) (:01) Married at First Sight (CC) (12:01) Married at First Sight ’ Married at First Sight ’ (CC) Married at First Sight ’ (CC) Married at First Sight ’ (CC) (:01) Born This Way (N) ’ (CC) (:02) Born This Way ’ (CC) (4:30) The Walk- The Walking Dead Hershel disThe Walking Dead “Secrets” Glenn The Walking Dead Secrets are told The Walking Dead Rick and Glenn The Walking Dead Rick, Hershel The Walking Dead Rick and Shane The Walking Dead Rick and Shane The Walking Dead (CC) ing Dead (CC) agrees with the group’s plan. thinks he knows too much. and revealed. (CC) follow Hershel into town. and Glenn try to survive. (CC) are in conflict. (CC) share sides. (CC) River Monsters “Silent Assassin” Mermaids: The Body Found A team claims to have found a mermaid. The Cannibal in the Jungle ’ (CC) (:01) Mermaids: The Body Found ’ (CC) (12:01) River Monsters ’ (CC) All the Best, All the Worst 2015 CNN Tonight With Don Lemon (N) Anderson Cooper 360 (CC) All the Best, All the Worst 2015 CNN Newsroom Live (N) The Situation Room (N) Erin Burnett OutFront (N) Anderson Cooper 360 (N) (CC) (4:56) Futurama (:28) Futurama Tosh.0 (CC) (:31) Tosh.0 (12:01) Tosh.0 (:33) Tosh.0 Tosh.0 (CC) Tosh.0 (CC) Tosh.0 (CC) Tosh.0 (CC) Tosh.0 (CC) Tosh.0 (CC) Tosh.0 (CC) The Comedy Central Roast “James Franco” (CC) Inside Look SportsNet Cent Blackhawks All Blackhawks Blackhawks SportsNet Cent Fantasy Ftb SportsNet Cent NHL Hockey NHL Hockey: Chicago Blackhawks at Arizona Coyotes. (N) (Live) SportsTalk Live (N) ’ (Live) (:02) Moonshiners: Outlaw Cuts (12:02) Moonshiners “Still Life” Moonshiners “Still Life” ’ (CC) Moonshiners “Rain or Shine” ’ Moonshiners: Outlaw Cuts (N) ’ Moonshiners (N) ’ (CC) (:01) The Ballad of Jim Tom ’ (:01) Moonshiners ’ (CC) Liv and Maddie Girl Meets World Austin & Ally ’ Jessie ’ (CC) Jessie “Panic Girl Meets World Girl Meets World K.C. Undercover Bunk’d ’ (CC) Movie “Invisible Sister” (2015) Rowan Blanchard. Girl Meets World Best Friends Austin & Ally ’ Hannah MonAttack Room” (CC) (CC) tana ’ (CC) Whenever ’ ’ (CC) ’ (CC) ’ (CC) ’ (CC) ’ (CC) Cleo accidentally makes her sister invisible. ’ ‘NR’ ’ (CC) Movie: › “The Fan” (1996) Robert De Niro, Wesley Snipes. iTV. A Movie: ›› “Eraser” (1996) Arnold Schwarzenegger, James Caan. iTV. A Movie: ›››› “Terminator 2: Judgment Day” (1991) Arnold Schwarzenegger, Linda (:20) Movie: ›› “Fire Down Below” (1997, Action) slumping baseball star is stalked by a psychotic admirer. ’ (CC) government agent protects a witness from gunrunners. ’ (CC) Hamilton. iTV. Cyborgs battle over a youth who holds the key to the future. ’ (CC) Steven Seagal, Marg Helgenberger. iTV. ’ (CC) (4:30) College Football: Russell Athletic Bowl -- North Carolina vs. Baylor. (N) (Live) (CC) College Football: AdvoCare V100 Texas Bowl -- LSU vs. Texas Tech. (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) College Basketball SportsCenter NBA Tonight (N) College Football College Basketball: Florida State at Florida. (N) (Live) College Basketball: Connecticut at Texas. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) Movie: “Another Cinderella Story” (2008) Selena Gomez. (4:00) Movie: ›› “Twilight” (2008, Romance) Kristen Stewart. (:15) Movie: ››› “Pitch Perfect” (2012, Musical Comedy) Anna Kendrick, Skylar Astin, Rebel Wilson. The 700 Club ’ (CC) Special Report With Bret Baier On Record, Greta Van Susteren The O’Reilly Factor (N) (CC) The Kelly File The Kelly File (N) Hannity Guest host Mark Steyn. The O’Reilly Factor (CC) Hannity Guest host Mark Steyn. Chopped “Take Heart” Chopped “Sports Stars” Chopped Junior (N) Chopped “Tendon Intentions” Chopped “Wild Ride” Chopped “T.G.I. Fry-Day” Chopped “Tendon Intentions” Chopped “Wild Ride” Movie: ›› “Taken 2” (2012, Action) Liam Neeson, Maggie Grace. Movie: › “R.I.P.D.” (2013, Action) Jeff Bridges, Ryan Reynolds. Movie: › “R.I.P.D.” (2013, Action) Jeff Bridges, Ryan Reynolds. Movie: ›› “Taken 2” (2012, Action) Liam Neeson, Maggie Grace. Movie: “On the Twelfth Day of Movie: “A Christmas Detour” (2015, Romance) Candace Cameron Movie: “Crown for Christmas” (2015) Danica McKellar, Rupert Penry The Middle ’ The Middle “The Movie: “Christmas Under Wraps” (2014, Drama) Candace Cameron Christmas” (2015) Robin Dunne. Bure. A doctor discovers an Alaskan town’s holiday secret. (CC) Bure, Paul Greene. Two travelers become stranded in Buffalo. (CC) Jones. Sparks fly between a European king and a governess. (CC) (CC) Trip” ’ House Hunters Hunters Int’l House Hunters Hunters Int’l Fixer Upper (CC) Fixer Upper (CC) Fixer Upper An old Victorian. Fixer Upper (CC) Fixer Upper (CC) Fixer Upper (CC) Oak Island: Digging Deeper Oak Island: Digging Deeper (12:01) The Curse of Oak Island The Curse of Oak Island (CC) Hunting Hitler ’ (CC) The Curse of Oak Island (N) ’ Hunting Hitler “Hitler’s Plane” ’ (:03) Hunting Hitler ’ (CC) Movie: › “I Don’t Know How She Does It” (2011, Comedy) Sarah Jes- Movie: ›› “Ghosts of Girlfriends Past” (2009) Matthew McConaughey. (:02) Movie: › “The Ugly Truth” (2009) Katherine Heigl, Gerard Butler. (:02) Movie: ›› “Ghosts of Girlfriends Past” (2009) Matthew McCosica Parker, Pierce Brosnan, Greg Kinnear. (CC) Spirits of ex-lovers show a cad his failed relationships. (CC) A romantically challenged woman faces outrageous tests. (CC) naughey. Spirits of ex-lovers show a cad his failed relationships. The Last Word Clash at the Border Caught on Camera Caught on Camera MSNBC Live (N) Hardball With Chris Matthews (N) All In With Chris Hayes (N) The Rachel Maddow Show (N) (4:00) Movie: ›› “Little Man” Movie: ›› “Project X” (2012) Thomas Mann, Oliver Cooper. ’ Movie: ›› “I Am Number Four” (2011) Alex Pettyfer, Timothy Olyphant. Premiere. ’ Movie: ››› “8 Mile” (2002, Drama) Eminem, Kim Basinger. ’ (CC) Alvinnn!!! and Alvinnn!!! and Alvinnn!!! and SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Fresh Prince Friends (CC) Friends (CC) Full House ’ Full House ’ Full House ’ Full House ’ Friends (CC) (:33) Friends ’ Fresh Prince (4:30) Movie: ››› “Back to the Future” (1985, Comedy) Michael J. Fox, Christopher Movie: ››› “Back to the Future Part II” (1989, Comedy) Michael J. Fox, Christopher Movie: ››› “Back to the Future Part III” (1990, Comedy) Michael J. Fox, Christopher Lloyd, Mary SteenburLloyd, Crispin Glover. A boy travels through time to his parents’ teenage years. ’ Lloyd. Marty’s time traveling is threatened by a dangerous rival. ’ gen. Marty McFly visits the Old West to save the imperiled Doc. ’ (4:00) Movie: ››› “The Conjuring” (2013, Horror) Movie: ››› “The Bourne Ultimatum” (2007, Action) Matt Damon, Julia Stiles, Joan Allen. The Expanse “CQB” Holden and The Expanse Holden and crew and The Expanse “CQB” Holden and Movie: ›› “Aliens vs. Predator: crew are in a crossfire. (N) (CC) taken prisoner. (CC) crew are in a crossfire. (CC) Requiem” (2007) John Ortiz (CC) Vera Farmiga, Patrick Wilson. (CC) Jason Bourne continues to look for clues to unravel his true identity. (CC) (:15) Movie: ››› “Jason and the Argonauts” (1963) Todd Armstrong. Movie: ›››› “Gigi” (1958) Leslie Caron. A Gay ’90s Parisian finds he (:15) Movie: ›› “Too Late for Tears” (1949, Crime Drama) Lizabeth Movie: ››› “The Defiant Ones” (1958) Tony Curtis, Sidney Poitier. The mythic hero and his crew search for the Golden Fleece. wants to marry his would-be mistress. (CC) (DVS) Scott. A woman’s greed surfaces when stolen cash lands in her car. Shackled convicts must put aside racial hatred to escape. (CC) Jill & Jessa: Recount Jill & Jessa: Recount Kate Plus 8 “Florida Fun” (CC) Kate Plus 8 “What’s Old Is New” Kate Plus 8 (N) ’ (CC) 7 Little Johnstons ’ (CC) Kate Plus 8 ’ (CC) 7 Little Johnstons ’ (CC) Legends (CC) Legends (CC) (4:30) Movie: ›› “Now You See Me” (2013) Jesse Eisenberg. Movie: ›› “Olympus Has Fallen” (2013) Gerard Butler. (CC) (DVS) Movie: ›› “Limitless” (2011) Bradley Cooper. (CC) (DVS) Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Facts of Life Facts of Life Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens Old Christine Old Christine (:12) The Facts of Life ’ (CC) CSI: Crime Scene Investigation Modern Family Modern Family Modern Family Modern Family Modern Family Modern Family Modern Family Modern Family Mr. Robot “eps1.0hellofriend.mov” (:05) Mr. Robot “eps1.0hellofriend.mov” Elliot meets (:42) Mr. Robot (CC) (DVS) “Fight or Flight” (CC) (DVS) “Spring Break” (CC) (DVS) “Patriot Games” (CC) (DVS) Elliot meets Mr. Robot. Mr. Robot. (CC) (DVS) Elliot is torn. Two murder investigations. ’ “Integrity” ’ Black Ink Crew: Chicago ’ Black Ink Crew: Chicago ’ Love & Hip Hop ’ Love & Hip Hop ’ Movie: ››› “Boyz N the Hood” (1991, Drama) Larry Fishburne, Ice Cube. ’ Movie: “Nas: Time Is Illmatic” (2014) ’ Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang 2 Broke Girls Cougar Town Seinfeld (CC) Seinfeld (CC) Seinfeld (CC) Seinfeld (CC) Big Bang Conan (CC) Conan (CC) Boxing’s Best of (:45) Boxing’s Best of 2015 (N) REAL Sports With Bryant Gumbel Movie ›› “Dumb and Dumber To” (2014) Jim Carrey. Lloyd and Harry Movie ›› “The Water Diviner” (2014) Russell Crowe. An Australian (:35) Movie ›› “A Little Chaos” (2014, Historical 2015 (N) ’ ’ (CC) ’ (CC) Drama) Kate Winslet, Alan Rickman. ’ ‘R’ (CC) set out to find the child Harry never knew. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) looks for his missing sons after World War I. ’ ‘R’ (CC) (3:30) Movie (:25) Movie ››› “Neighbors” (2014, Comedy) Seth (:05) Movie ››› “Edge of Tomorrow” (2014) Tom Cruise. A soldier in Movie ››› “Transformers” (2007, Action) Shia LaBeouf, Tyrese Gibson, Josh Duhamel. (:25) Life on Top Feature 1: Innocence A compilation “Black Sea” ‘R’ Rogen, Zac Efron, Rose Byrne. ’ ‘R’ (CC) of episodes. ’ (CC) an alien war gets caught in a time loop. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) Two races of robots wage war on Earth. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) (4:00) “Proph- (:45) Movie ››› “Good Will Hunting” (1997, Drama) Matt Damon, Robin Williams, Ben Inside the NFL Highlights and Play It Forward ’ (CC) Movie ›››› “The Silence of the Lambs” (1991) Jodie Foster. A mad Inside the NFL Highlights and et’s Prey” ‘NR’ Affleck. A young Boston man must deal with his genius and emotions. ’ ‘R’ (CC) analysis from week sixteen. (CC) analysis from week sixteen. (N) genius helps an FBI trainee pursue a serial killer. ’ ‘R’ (CC) (4:00) Movie ››› “Rampart” Movie ›› “Ping Pong Summer” (2014, Comedy) (:35) Movie ›› “Get Over It” (2001, Romance-Come- (:05) Movie › “Vampire Academy” (2014) Zoey Deutch. A half-human Movie ›› “The Riot Club” (2014, Drama) Sam Claflin, Max Irons. Two (2011) Woody Harrelson. ‘R’ (CC) Marcello Conte, Judah Friedlander. ’ ‘NR’ (CC) dy) Kirsten Dunst. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) teen trains to be guardian for a vampire royal. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) first-year students at Oxford join a secret society. ’ ‘R’ (CC)


8 SPORTS • Tuesday, December 29, 2015 • Section B • Daily Chronicle / Daily-Chronicle.com

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