The ADvisor 09/04/19

Page 1

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2 • Advisor • Wednesday, September 4, 2019

“Results You Expect...Service You Deserve”

Why the love for the ’90s will not die By Sadie Dingfelder The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — When you think of D.C.’s major cultural exports, punk and go-go come to mind. But over the past decade, a new contender has emerged: ’90s nostalgia. The No Scrubs: ’90s Dance Party, which launched in D.C. in 2003, has gone on to pack venues in Atlanta; Birmingham, Alabama; Charlottesville, Virginia; and Baltimore, according to co-founder and DJ Will Eastman. D.C.-based ’90s cover band White Ford Bronco has risen to monster success since forming in 2008, recently playing to a crowd of 1,200 in New York. Peach Pit, a ’90s dance night at DC9, is taking the party to Minneapolis for the event’s 10th anniversary. And a new R&Bfocused event, Nostalgia: The 90s Experience, may soon pop up in Los Angeles after its inaugural edition here, according to organizer Fred Baum, 50. “The interest in the ’90s is going strong everywhere, but it’s really strong in the DMV,” Baum says of the D.C.-Maryland-Virginia area. One likely reason D.C. is a ’90s nostalgia hotbed is the region’s great concentration of millennials, who are getting misty-eyed for their youth as they take on grown-up responsibilities. But ’90s love is turning out to be a bigger phenomenon than the usual, 10-year nostalgia cycle. Starting just a few years after the turn of the 21st century, it’s since become a major force in fashion (scrunchies!), music (MC Hammer’s on tour) and screens both large (“The Lion King”) and small (“BH90210”). Another factor that may be driving ’90s madness is our current dumpster fire of a century, which ignited on Sept. 11, 2001, blazed on with the Great Recession and continues to cough up fresh nightmares on an almost daily basis, says Jacob Juhl, a nostalgia researcher at the University of South-

ampton in England. “People become nostalgic in response to adversity or psychologically negative states,” Juhl says. “Nostalgia helps restore people to a psychological equilibrium.” Scientists have induced nostalgia in the lab by prompting people to contemplate the vast and random universe as well as by simply pumping up the air conditioning and making people feel uncomfortably cold, Juhl says. Researchers have also found that nostalgia comforts us by making us feel connected to one another and to a shared past, he adds. Since the ’90s were the last moment before the internet splintered mass culture, the decade is particularly good nostalgia fodder, says Peach Pit DJ and founder Matt Bailer, 42. “In the ’90s, everyone listened to the same one or two radio stations in their city that played all the Top 40 hits, spanning all kinds of genres,” he says. “After that, people started having their own ways of accessing and acquiring and

Rat.” Another factor driving ’90s nostalgia is how the internet has made the past more accessible than ever before, says White Ford Bronco singer-guitarist Diego Valencia, 37. In the ’90s, you had to wait for your favorite song to play on the radio or buy a CD, so music felt more precious back then. Now you can watch or listen to anything you want, from any era, on demand — and that seems to have made people more interested in rehashing and remixing the past rather than creating new, original things. “If you listen to contemporary music now, a lot of songs sound like something that we’ve already heard before. If you look at, say, ‘Uptown Funk’ or ‘Blurred Lines,’ they sound so much like other songs,” Valencia says. “Or there’s DJ Khaled, who has made a career out of taking other people’s ideas and adding his name to it.” While Valencia suspects our extended ’90s obsession marks the end of reminiscing as we know it, East-

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man, 50, sees a future in nostalgia. In fact, he’s banked on it with two more parties, Hot in Herre: 2000s Dance Party and Can’t Feel My Face: 2010s Dance Party. “I personally love the Hot in Herre party the most, because those are the songs I played when I first got into DJing,” he says. But while Eastman’s

’00s party is gaining momentum, it seems unlikely that aughts nostalgia will burn as brightly or for as long as ’90s nostalgia has. “Most parties are done in a couple years,” he says. “It’s a real exception to have an event that lasts a decade — and at this point, No Scrubs the party has lasted longer than the ’90s itself.”

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listening to the music they chose to listen to, so there wasn’t such a general pool of commonality.” Without those shared cultural touchstones, the current decade may prove difficult to reminisce about down the road, says David Newman, a nostalgia researcher at the University of Southern California. “Since everything seems to be more individualistic now and people are all having different experiences, we might have fewer of these collectivistic nostalgic experiences overall,” Newman says. Mass culture in the 21st century feels more like a grab bag of random events than a coherent narrative, notes Nick Gatewood, 40, an Ohio-based rapper who goes by the name Vice Souletric and tours the country with his nostalgia event, the Nu 90s Experience. “Everything moves too fast now. By the time you’ve heard about something, there’s already a backlash,” he says. “No one is going to have a deep, personal connection to Pizza

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Wednesday, September 4, 2019 • Advisor • 3

“Results You Expect...Service You Deserve”

Save big during back-to-school mania this year By Laura Daily The Washington Post Think enduring the chaos that is the toy department on Black Friday to find great deals is tough? Try the back-to-school section in August. Parents must navigate crowded aisles, dig through overflowing bins and employ every negotiating skill to avoid meltdowns when that sought-after Spider Man lunchbox is nowhere to be found. According to the National Retail Federation, families with children in kindergarten through 12th grade plan to spend an average $697 this year. Clothing and accessories take the biggest cut, closely followed by electronics. Basic supplies such as notebooks, pencils, backpacks and lunchboxes will run — ouch! — about $117. Carolyn Erickson tracks and reports the best back-to-school sales at local stores on her website, Wichita on the Cheap, weekly. “It’s my favorite time of the year because you

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can find good-quality, name-brand supplies for cheap,” says Erickson, who spent 13 years buying school supplies for her daughter, a recent high school graduate. “But I also see how widely prices can vary.” When it comes to shopping for school supplies, there are two schools of thought. One is to choose a store you think has the lowest prices and buy everything there in a single swoop. This approach saves time, gas and, for some, sanity. (Savvy shoppers might even increase their savings by using their smartphone to comparison-shop other stores, then ask the checkout clerk to match the prices.) The other approach is to watch ads for grocery, drug, big-box and office-supply stores in the weeks leading up to the start of school and pick up the best deals at each. This technique works best when you live within a five- to 10-mile radius of those stores.

I favor the latter route, especially if you want to maximize your savings. Here are more tips to help you earn an A-plus on back-toschool shopping. ► Read your supply list carefully. This will help you strategize and set a budget for the essentials. Lists can differ depending on what grade your child is in. “Usually elementary school supply lists are planned by a team of teachers,” says Cecily White-Cooper, a Montgomery County middle school teacher and mother to 7-yearold twins. “Middle and high school students are given a list of basics, then, when school starts, [they] receive supplemental lists along with their syllabus, specific to the classes in which they enroll.” ► Shop your house first. Inventory what your kids have left over from last year. “You may find folders, binders, boxes of crayons that you bought last year, but didn’t get used,” says Michael Foguth,

a financial planner in Brighton, Mich. With five daughters under the age of 10, four of whom are in elementary school, Foguth and his wife, Brooke, often “recycle” school uniforms from one daughter to her younger sister. ► Know what the price should be. To find the average cost of supplies, do an online search for “school supply price list + [your city].” This way, when you spot an apparent sale, you’ll know whether it’s a real deal. ► Cast a wide net. Back-to-school season is one time when even higher-price chains offer deep discounts. A store you perceive as pricey may have an item you need on sale. Glue may be more expensive at the office-supply store, but spiral notebooks may be cheaper there than at other outlets. Saving 25 cents on every notebook can add up for a large family. ► Jump on loss leaders. Read weekly store circulars. Although

most sales start Sunday morning, many stores post online previews by late Friday. Review sale fliers and note the items at a deep discount. Head out as early as possible on Sunday. “Buy the loss leader only, then leave the store so you aren’t tempted to buy more expensive items,” Erickson advises. ► Take note of season-long pricing. Many stores are setting their lowest price for the entire back-to-school period — through early September. Keep those places in the back of your — mind. That way, right before school starts, you can shop for any items you still need at the stores with the cheapest prices. ► Use manufacturer’s coupons. There aren’t a ton of coupons for office supplies, but the ones that are issued can save you big when combined with sales. Also, many school supply lists request items such as hand sanitizer, paper towels, plastic bags and disinfectant wipes. Companies often issue

high-value coupons for these products during back-to-school season. ► Stock up. When you see a great deal, buy extra. You won’t pay full retail later in the year if you need more, and at worst, you’ll be ahead of the game next year (if you remember to shop your house first). ► Be smart about backpacks. Backpacks can be a budget buster. Durable backpacks can cost $50 to $80, whereas the super cheapies may not make it through the first quarter of school. Look for name-brand backpacks at off-price retailers such as Marshalls, T.J, Maxx or Ross. Erickson found one for about $25, 50 percent less than other stores, and her daughter used it for several years. ► Check consignment stores. Both Erickson and White-Cooper look to kids’ consignment stores for clothes, shoes and backpacks. It’s hit or miss, but sometimes you’ll find new items with the tags still on and pay a fraction of the retail price.

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4 • Advisor • Wednesday, September 4, 2019

Tools and rules for cellphone use By Elizabeth Leamy The Washington Post Here are some tools, high- and low-tech alike, to help everyone in the family manage their cellphone habits. It really helps if kids see that you are working to do better, too.

Tools for cellphone use

Google’s Family Link: Free Android app for restricting time, time spent on particular apps and more. Parental control apps: Some apps even allow you to monitor your kids’ cellphone activity keystroke by keystroke. Worley likes the Circle parental control dashboard. PCMag gives its highest overall ratings to Qustodio and Kaspersky Safe Kids. Family media plan: The American Academy of Pediatrics has created this thought-provoking online form to fill out with your kids, to set goals and limits around technology use. Smart WiFi Routers: Some routers, like Aero and Google Home, have their own parental controls. Or you can just turn your existing WiFi off at night. System preferences: Turn off audible chimes and beeps that alert you and your kids to text messages and social media posts to stop the constant stimuli. You can do the same for push messages. Charging station: Buy a cute multi-device charging station, set it up far from your bedrooms, and announce that everybody —

including parents — will be docking their devices at night from now on. Alarm clocks: Oldfashioned, battery-powered ones sell for as little as $8. Go retro! There is no reason to have a smartphone next to your bed. Shoe box: A place for all family members to deposit their (silenced!) cellphones before meals. Wrap it in cute paper if it makes you feel better.

Rules for cellphone use

Here are some basic rules that have worked for other families in limiting technology. I think the first two should be mandatory. Pick and choose from the rest to fit your parenting style or your child’s life stage. No cellphones at meals: Study after study says family mealtime is important. Parents should put their own phones away during meals, too. No cellphones upstairs — or wherever the bedrooms are — at night: Start this “device curfew” an hour or more before bedtime. No phones in the bedroom: Remember the old advice that computers should be in common areas of the house? Cellphones are little computers. No phones in the bathroom: Yuck! This is unhygienic — and a huge time waster. No phones until homework is done: Kids can turn phones in when they arrive home. If your child needs to text a friend about an assignment, they can do that, then stow it again.

No phones in the car: Ever notice how some of the most important conversations happen while you’re playing chauffeur to your kids? No social media before your child is of age: Platforms such as Instagram say kids under 13 are not allowed. Use this to your advantage, or wait even longer, like until eighth or ninth grade. No digital negativity: Teach your kids that anger and criticism should be expressed in person — or at least in a voice conversation. Private accounts only: Private accounts, which are visible only to people your child (or you) approve, are a good transition for kids new to social media. Don’t take the phone away: Worley makes the counterintuitive suggestion not to take tech away as a punishment because it just signals that it’s incredibly valuable. Use other consequences for correcting undesirable behavior, instead. Shared passcode or monitoring: Some parents require their child to tell them their passcode, or agree to monitoring, and allow them to spot check their phone if they want the privilege of having one. If you do this, consider lightening up over time to give responsible older teens some privacy. Pay for overages: If your child goes over your data limits, they must pay the overage fee. Pay for the plan: Older teens with jobs can pay their own cell phone bills.

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“Results You Expect...Service You Deserve”

New homes need maintenance, too maintenance budget which will save you both time and money.” Monthly maintenance tasks: Smoke and carbon monoxide detectors: Check their operation by pushing the test button. Check and replace the battery as needed. Clean or replace a dirty filter in oven range hood: Your range hood pulls smoke, steam and odors through the filter and vent to help clear the air. Without a clean filter and effective range hood, your smoke alarm could go off frequently because of a buildup of smoke while you cook or food smells may permeate your home and nearby walls. Check the Temperature Pressure Release (TPR) valve on the water heater: The water heater should be drained periodically. In areas with hard water, be sure to drain at least five gallons of water every six months to prevent sed-

By Michele Lerner The Washington Post A big advantage for buyers of newly built homes is the opportunity to own something no one else has lived in — a brand-new property. You’re the first person to use the oven or take a shower in the property. You’re also free from worrying about repair bills and home improvement projects.But just because a home is new doesn’t mean homeowners don’t need to care for their property. We asked Kim Ambrose, vice president of marketing at Miller & Smith, which builds homes in the Washington region, for advice for owners of newly built homes. “Even though your house is brand new, home maintenance includes regular, seasonal and one-time tasks,” Ambrose wrote in an email. “Establishing a maintenance schedule is the best way to manage a home

iment buildup. Quarterly maintenance task: Furnace filter: A good rule of thumb is to change one- or two-inch furnace filters every three months, four-inch filters every six months and five-inch filters every 12 months. If you have pets, filters should be checked and/or replaced every two months. Ambrose suggested the following twice-ayear maintenance tasks: Roof: Inspect for broken or missing shingles and identify anything that may cause leaks. This is most important with unpredictable weather. Be sure to also inspect and clean gutters and downspouts. Heating and air conditioning: Complete seasonal maintenance on heating and air conditioning should be handled by a licensed HVAC contractor. Check heating system in the fall and the air conditioning in the spring.

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Wednesday, September 4, 2019 • Advisor • 5

“Results You Expect...Service You Deserve”

‘Tesla killers’ are not succeeding By Colin Beresford Bloomberg It’s a trope that’s been around roughly as long as Elon Musk has been in the car business: When a new electric vehicle is unveiled, it’s dubbed a potential “Tesla killer.” But from the flaming-out of Fisker to present day, Tesla has largely dominated the American electric-vehicle market. Musk has even managed to expand the company’s preeminence over the still small segment despite two new battery-powered luxury SUVs arriving in U.S. showrooms the last 10 months: Jaguar’s I-Pace and Audi’s e-tron. Their starts are the latest indications that legacy automakers aren’t assured instant success when they roll out new plug-in

models. Tesla’s Model S and X have largely held its own against the two crossovers that offer shorter range and less plentiful public charging infrastructure. Jaguar and Audi also lack the cool factor Musk has cultivated for the Tesla brand by taking an aggressive approach to autonomy and using over-the-air software updates to add games and entertainment features. “If a customer is choosing the I-Pace over the comparable Tesla, they are making the conscious decision: I don’t want the Tesla,” said Ed Kim, an analyst at the car-market research and consulting firm AutoPacific. “You really have to be someone who doesn’t like Tesla, who doesn’t want the Tesla product, in order to go for this.” Tesla’s Model X and

Model S each boast more than 300 miles of range, and the cheaper Model 3 travels 240 miles between charges. Jaguar’s $69,500 I-Pace is rated at 234 miles, and Audi’s $74,800 e-tron registers 204 miles. Jaguar’s marketing team spent years laying the groundwork to introduce the I-Pace. In 2016, the brand joined Formula E, an openwheeled, electric-powered race circuit similar to Formula One. “We had an electric car in our development plan — the I-Pace — at the time,” said James Barclay, Jaguar’s racing director. “We had to create an awareness about the fact that we had an electric car coming to market, firstly, and to showcase why you’d buy a Jaguar electric vehicle over something else.” Porsche and Mer-

cedes-Benz are also joining Formula E for the 2019-2020 season to help generate buzz for the new all-electric models they have coming out. The circuit makes stops in cities including New York, Hong Kong and London, which the brands are banking on as major markets for plug-in cars. “City centers are where there’s going to be a really good application for electric vehicles,” said Kim McCullough, Jaguar Land Rover’s vice president of marketing for North America. “So having them be able to see something firsthand — it starts the education process.” But while Formula E is drawing crowds of urban dwellers and a substantial audience on social media, all that buzz may not necessar-

ily translate into showroom traffic. “Auto racing really comes as one of the last influencers, in terms of influencing people to buy whatever car they’re looking at,” according to AutoPacific’s Kim. If Jaguar is doing well in Formula E, it couldn’t hurt the I-Pace, he said. “But I don’t think it would have a huge positive impact on awareness of the vehicle.” Jaguar has sold an average of about 190 I-Pace crossovers a month since U.S. sales began. Tesla, by comparison, was delivering Model Xs at a clip of about 550 a month in its first year on the market, beginning in 2015, according to InsideEVs. com estimates. The Audi e-tron has been on the market in the U.S. for only four months, but during that time, it has averaged sales of about 745 units, InsideEVs estimates. In July, 3.5 percent of Audi’s U.S. sales were all-electric, and the

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company expects that number to climb to 30 percent by 2025. “We are confident that we are and will continue to deliver an offering that customers will want to be part of,” Cian O’Brien, the interim president and chief operating officer of Audi of America, said in an email. After initial efforts to nab electric-car buyers proved challenging, Jaguar has decided to attack Tesla head-on. The brand is offering Tesla owners a $3,000 discount on the I-Pace for the next month and a half. “This is all about capturing share of voice,” Stuart Schorr, a Jaguar Land Rover spokesman, said in an email. “The EV market is just at its infancy.” Jaguar is confident that I-Pace sales will improve. “Consumers, as a result of seeing our race program, do consider us to be a car brand they would consider for their electric car purchase,” said Barclay, the racing director. “Rome wasn’t built in a day, and for a premium automotive manufacturer with their first electric vehicle, it takes time in the market.”

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6 • Advisor • Wednesday, September 4, 2019

“Results You Expect...Service You Deserve”

Robotic tail to help balance developed By Peter Holley The Washington Post

The year is 2030. You’ve arrived at your elderly mother’s home to pay her a visit with your chubby toddler in tow. After several minutes of watching the giggling tot crawl across the carpet, your mom decides she can’t wait any longer — she needs to feel the squishy ball of human jello in her arms. As she bends over at the waist, her arms outstretched, you panic, suddenly remembering that she has a bad back. Just then, as her body appears ready to topple forward, a mechanical appendage uncoils from beneath her dress and stiffens behind her like a wooden plank, steadying her from a fall. You quickly relax, wondering how you could’ve been so forgetful. Your mother has a tail. Though the scenario outlined above is hypothetical, it’s not exactly far-fetched. Japanese researchers at Keio University have unveiled a robotic tail that has been designed to be worn by elderly people who struggle to maintain their balance, according to Reuters. Researchers told the wire service that the thick, one-meter device, which is worn using a harness, functions the same way a money or a cheetah’s tail does, by providing its owner with

a counterbalance during demanding movements. Animals also use tails to signal danger (deer), move in the water (fish), communicate aggression (beaver) or function as a poison-filled weapon (scorpion), but the current iteration of the Japanese tail appears to be devoid of deadly serums. “The tail keeps balance like a pendulum,” Junichi Nabeshima, a graduate student and researcher at the university’s Embodied Media Project, told Reuters. “When a human tilts their body one way, the tail moves in the opposite direction,” he added. It should come as no surprise that a robotic tail geared toward the elderly originated in Japan. In addition to embracing robotics, the nation’s population is rapidly aging, according to the Los Angeles Times, which notes that about 25 percent of Japanese people are at least 65 years old (in the U.S., that number is about 16 percent). An aging populace, combined with a worker shortage, has led to a flurry of robotic designs aimed at assisting older people. Design that imitates natural biological design is known as “biomimicry.” Other examples include this backpack inspired by an armadillo’s shell and a synthetic adhesive that was inspired by geckos and is strong enough to allow people

to scale glass walls. CNN reported that the mechanical tail project — called Arque — is about a year old. Initial designs mimicked feline tails, but proved to be too light to support the user’s weight, the outlet reported. Video reveals that the latest version, which is more robust and was inspired by seahorse tails, sits near the wearer’s lower back and adjusts seconds after the individual leans forward or bends to the side. When the wearer bends to the left the tail curls to the right and when the wearer shifts their weight to the left the tail moves right. When the wearer bends forward, the tail balances from behind. Researchers told CNN that the device needs to be at least five percent of the wearer’s body weight to be effective. Using four artificial muscles and compressed air, the tail is capable of moving in eight directions, Reuters reported. Though the experimental device is still being refined, researchers said they don’t envision it being limited to the elderly. Other applications could include helping warehouse workers carry heavy objects or adding a sense of realism to virtual reality. “I think it would be nice to incorporate this further developed prosthetic tail into daily life, when one seeks a little more help balancing,” Nabeshima told Reuters.

Turtles assist in scientific study By Lela Nargi The Washington Post Hop in a canoe and paddle the 23 miles of the Bronx River. You’ll snake and snarl through New York City’s northernmost borough. You’ll pass houses and parks and roads, then busier roads and taller apartment houses and grimy industrial buildings. Little herrings called alewives swim through the brownish water. Big white egrets swoop to catch those fish in their beaks. Snapping turtles sun themselves on the shore near the Bronx Zoo. You might think these animals are a sign that the river is healthy. But researchers at the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), which oversees the zoo, weren’t so sure. That’s because the Bronx River has a history of pollution. “It takes a long time to clean up those messes,” John Sykes, one of the researchers, says. “Looking at it with just your eyes might not tell you enough about its real status.” So Sykes and Paul Calle of the Bronx Zoo and other colleagues took blood and other samples from 41 of those sun-loving snapping turtles. These turtles are native

to New York and can live almost 50 years. The researchers also sampled 28 red-eared sliders. These turtles are nonnative invaders from the South and live half as long as snapping turtles. Testing the health of turtles is a great way to determine the health of a river, too. That’s because turtles live a long time. And they generally stay put, instead of migrating. This gives toxins in a river plenty of time to build up in the turtles’ bodies, Sykes explains. The Bronx River was once a pristine waterway fished by the Mahicans, Native Americans who lived near its banks. But by the mid-19th century, it was being pumped full of garbage, sewage and other waste. It became full of chemicals called PCBs, which were once found in paint, inks and caulk. Factories dumped lead and mercury into the river. These heavy metals can cause illness and deformities in people and animals. In the 1970s, PCBs were banned in the United States. The ban helped make the Bronx and other rivers a little bit cleaner. In the 1960s and 1970s, the government started to restrict the use of mer-

cury and lead in paint and other products. This was good for rivers, too. How good? When Sykes got the turtles’ tests back from the lab, he didn’t see any signs of mercury. “That was a surprise,” he says. He did see lead and PCBs, though. He thinks the turtles may still be absorbing these toxins from the river. That’s because there’s a “similar pattern in both the longer-lived snapping turtles and in the shorter-lived sliders [that] suggests that the toxin exposure is more recent,” Sykes says. That means the Bronx River still needs more cleaning up. But there is good news. The turtles are thriving in parts of the river. “We even found a nest with recently hatched snapping turtles in it,” Sykes says. Which tells him that even though there are still toxins in the ecosystem, “they do not seem to be preventing the turtles from living there and reproducing” Sykes says he hopes the next time researchers study these turtles, they’ll find even fewer toxins in their blood. That will be better news for the turtles — and the river.

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Wednesday, September 4, 2019 • Advisor • 7

“Results You Expect...Service You Deserve”

‘Internet language;’ community and division By Sonny Bunch Washington Post (opinion) If I started a sentence with”Ermahgerd,” misspelled “the” as “teh” or dropped a “1” in a string of exclamation points, and that sentence made sense to you — or even made you smile a bit — congratulations: You’re an Internet Person. And if you grimaced or winced, thinking those references dated or tragically unhip, you, too, are an Internet Person. Indeed, you are among the most Internet People: those who use the web to build the same divisions we see in society. Linguist Gretchen McCulloch’s new book, “Because Internet: Understanding the New Rules of Language,” is at its best when the author

is considering the myriad ways subgroups interact with each other on the internet and how internet migrants have acclimated to the digital steppes. She divides them into Old Internet People (BBSers, etc.); Full Internet People (those who grew up with the Internet in the late 1990s and early 2000s); Semi Internet People (people who got online around the same time as Full Internet People but used the web solely for work or other functional tasks); Pre Internet People (those who got online even more reluctantly than Semi Internet People, after giving up hope that this fad would pass); and Post Internet People (the wee ones who will

never know an internet that doesn’t encompass an increasingly meaningful amount of their personal and professional lives). Generational conflict exists online as it does in meatspace, McCulloch writes. “The first generation of internet users had brought with them a certain smugness, a feeling of internet exceptionalism, the conviction that Internet People were better than regular people, and that it was just as well if the internet was a place where the previous norms of social interactions need not apply,” she writes. “If the language was a bit rough around the edges, prone to misinterpretations, so much the bet-

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ter for keeping out those who didn’t get it.” Exclusion — or, at the least, a sense of in-groups and out-groups — was thus baked into the Internet. This is the original sin of cyberspace. And it has stuck with us as more people arrived online, since the Internet is simply a reflection of us. You see it in the dismissal of people who spend their time on Facebook or use memes with the traditional “Impact” font as “Boomers,” orthe fact that Boomers dismiss any lazy teen as a “millennial” despite the fact that old millennials are nearing 40. Anyone who has spent much time on social media sites such as Twitter or Facebook will understand the ritualized way people interact with one another — the ways subgroups form and fall apart. There are superusers, whose follower counts and real-world clout render them nigh-on untouchable, and there are lesser users, whose efforts to become part of the in-group mark them as try-hards and targets of mockery. And a large part of that signaling involves language. McCulloch’s mastery of Internet-ese among Post Internet People was wholly linguistic. Take, for exam-

ing concern at the heated rhetoric on all sides of the political divide: the increasing desire to “own the libs,” or the tendency of people to denounce those they disagree with as essentially Nazi collaborators. This has filtered down to other subcommunities; even knitting isn’t safe from our online civil war. This is why we have such nasty fights over detention centers being described as “concentration camps,” why people on the right highlight the violence of “anti-fascists” and why people on the left are roused to anger if the New York Times doesn’t precisely reflect their worldview. Language matters because language defines how the world is perceived. And many of us no longer wish to associate with people who perceive the world in a different way. “When we think of language like a network, we can see order as a thing that emerges out of the natural tendencies of the individuals the way that a forest keeps itself in order even though it doesn’t get pruned and weeded,” McCulloch writes. But the forest is a savage place filled with carnivores of all stripes. And when you don’t prune or weed it, it tends to burn.

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ple, an anecdote from McCulloch’s book in which someone almost sent McCulloch her own writing as an example of linguistic memes, prompting her to reply, “my Brand is Strong.” In doing so, she demonstrated an irony-tinged brand of self-abasing humor that nevertheless drove home the fact that she is Kind Of A Big Deal. “But at a deeper level, what I was taking seriously was aligning myself with the internet fluent, demonstrating such fluency myself, and signaling that I understood how vital it is to be able to convey a typographical tone of voice,” she writes. She used language to prove her bona fides, to make her seem part of the in-group rather than the outgroup; McCulloch’s book is, in large part, an examination of how such communities form. While it’s interesting to think of the ways in which the internet has helped foster a new society, it’s equally worth ruminating upon the ways in which the internet has been used to divide and diminish. It is in the world of politics, of course, where we see this division most clearly. One doesn’t have to be a kumbaya, can’twe-all-just-get-along type to look with grow-

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8 • Advisor • Wednesday, September 4, 2019

“Results You Expect...Service You Deserve”

Climate change is coming for your travel plans. Here’s how to cope. By Amy Ettinger The Washington Post Hurricane Sandy hit New York City five days into our family vacation. My husband and I were stranded in an Airbnb on the Upper West Side — along with our 4-year-old daughter and my 73-yearold mother — as winds felled trees and the storm surge flooded streets and subway tunnels. My mom, an anxious traveler, panicked while my husband and I ran around town after the storm getting food and water. Because airlines were grounded, we couldn’t get back to our home in Northern California for four days. Fortunately, we were able to stay in the apartment we’d rented until we could score a return flight. But the delay put tremendous strain on my mom, who fretted about being stranded and was so distraught over the delays and the news reports about flooding and destruction that she almost wound up in the emergency room. If we’d been paying closer attention to the predictions that Sandy would hit New York and New Jersey, we could have cut our trip short or canceled it altogether. For any traveler concerned about timing, safety or cost, the days of being able to simply make reservations and hope for sunny weather are over. Climate change is increasing the frequency and intensity of certain extreme weather events, said

Stephen Vavrus, a weather researcher at the University of Wisconsin. With the warming climate, we’re likely to see more heavy rainfall, storms and extreme heat, all of which affect travel, said Vavrus. You can still be a globe-trotter, but these are some tips that can help minimize your travel risk. ► Before you book. Check your credit cards for travelrelated benefits that will cover weatherrelated events, and use the one that has the best protection to book your trip, said Sara Rathner, credit card expert at NerdWallet. Several credit cards, including Chase Sapphire Preferred and Chase Sapphire Reserve, offer insurance for trips canceled or affected by severe weather. You can also receive reimbursement for costs associated with a trip delayed by weather, such as hotel stays. Otherwise, you’ll pay out of pocket, with no chance at reimbursement. “If an airline cancels due to weather, the hotel cost is on you,” Rathner said. NerdWallet has a comparison of travel cards and coverage at nerdwallet.com/travel-miles-credit-cards. You can also find comparisons at InsureMyTrip, QuoteWright and SquareMouth. If you don’t have a credit card that offers good travel protection, consider purchasing travel insurance. “More and more people are purchasing travel insurance due

to weather extremes,” said Christine Buggy, vice president of marketing for Travelex Insurance Services. Typical premiums for comprehensive coverage average about 7% of trip cost, Buggy said. But it’s important to read the fine print before you buy. Some travel insurance plans do not cover major weather events such as hurricanes. Keep in mind that you usually can’t cancel a trip just because you see massive clouds on the horizon. “We don’t insure the fear of travel,” Buggy said. To be able to cancel for a full refund, the storm must have already hit your destination and done severe damage, rendering it “uninhabitable.” However, an insurance plan can cover prepaid trip costs if weather interrupts your travels or causes delays, baggage loss or missed connections. Finally, purchase insurance in advance, especially during hurricane season. Once a storm has a name and a path, you can no longer buy travel insurance for your trip. ► Do your research. Planning is key, says Steve Sintra, regional director of Kayak North America, especially in the case of locales where you are not familiar with weather patterns. “If you’re looking forward to going to Southeast Asia, you may want to avoid the rainy season in May to October,” Sintra said. “Hurricane season hits the Caribbean in late

a flight in the morning, Francis suggested. Thunderstorms are much more common in the afternoon. ► If you get caught in a storm. Make sure you download your airline’s travel app before you go, and sign up for cellphone notifications. But you don’t have to wait for news. Be proactive: If you see a big storm on the forecast, contact the airline immediately to see whether your flight is canceled, and get rescheduled on the next available flight. Do not cancel a flight before your airline does; you will be responsible for whatever fees are associated with changing your ticket. If it looks as though you’ll be stranded, secure your accommodations (hopefully with a credit card that has great travel coverage). You don’t want to be stuck couch surfing at an airport, especially if you have kids or elderly relatives in tow. If the hotels are booked, look on Airbnb, VRBO and other options. Or reach out on your social media channels to people you know in the area. Once you’ve got a place to stay, review your itinerary and make changes to rest of the trip — such as hotel, car rental, restaurant, and tour or activity reservations — to avoid cancellation charges. When it comes to travel, Rathner said, “you should always be prepared for things to go wrong, and hope everything goes right.”

“You can’t predict where a tornado is going to happen, but you can predict where they’re likely to form,” Francis said. For example, when the jet stream takes a big dip in the middle of the country in the spring, the risk for violent thunderstorms that can unleash damaging winds and hail and delay travel increases. Temperatures are heating up globally, said Francis, and heat waves are lasting longer. Record heat spread throughout Europe in June, even as wildfires blazed in Catalonia. These are the kinds of extreme-weather scenarios we’re likely to see more of in the future, Francis said. “It doesn’t mean you shouldn’t go, you just need to pay attention and be ready for your travel to be disrupted because extreme weather is increasing,” she said. ► Prepare for delays and turbulence. Research suggests that flight turbulence will increase because of climate change, Francis said. A study from 2017 predicted that climate change could lead to a 149% increase in severe turbulence. Sometimes these in-flight bumps can be hazardous; in late May, 30 people were injured on a flight from Istanbul to New York. These days, it’s especially important to pay attention to the seat belt signs during flights to avoid injury. And if you want to minimize summer weather delays and turbulence, take

August through September.” Fire season in the western United States runs from summer to fall, tornado season in the Midwest hits late spring to early summer, hurricanes can pummel the East Coast in the fall, and winter travel in the Great Lakes and East can be delayed by intense snow. Familiarizing yourself with the seasonal weather, both nationally and globally, can help you avoid travel headaches. Kayak has a guide that allows you to check the precipitation and temperature patterns at top destinations: kayak.com/travelhacker. However, if you’re cash-strapped and not risk-averse, you can consider buying tickets for the offseason. “Weather can create some opportunities to save some money. Take advantage of the deals with that,” Sintra said. ► A week before you go. “Travelers really need to be more diligent about getting ahold of good weather forecasts and taking them more seriously,” said Jennifer Francis, a senior scientist at Woods Hole Research Center. Weather predictions have become much more accurate, but they can tell you only so much. The forecasts are particularly good at showing when a big hurricane or snowstorm will hit, but other extreme weather events, such as tornadoes, can be more challenging for forecasters and travelers to anticipate.

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Wednesday, September 4, 2019 • Advisor • 9

“Results You Expect...Service You Deserve”

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PERSONALS CHRISTIAN MOTORCYCLIST ASSOCIATION meets at Marlins Roadhouse Second Saturday of each month. For more information about Bible Study call Tim 933-0828 or AmySue 630-0353

Your advertisement will appear in 150 South Dakota daily and community newspapers across the state that are read by more than 814,000 people based on an average of 2.2 newspaFREE per readers per Bible household and a Correspondence total circulation Course base of more than 1603 East 2nd, 370,000. Mitchell For more information, call FREE FREE FREE! The Daily Republic Are you interested Classifieds Christian eviat 605-996-5515 in dences? Creation and Evolution? Contact us for a Free 10 lesson Christian Evidences Correspondence Course Write to: Christian Evidence Correspondence ATTENTION Course CATHOLIC’S That are home- 1508 Wisconsin Ave SW Huron SD 57350 bound and the elderly. DISH or DIRECT TV channel FREE WGN has a very nice 1/2 hour 5:30 Nondenominational Bible am Sunday Mass Video Studies with a choir. You 996-1964 watch, you decide. for appointment

PERSONALS

HELP WANTED HELP WANTED CONSTRUCTION CONSTRUCTION *CERTIFIED WELDERS *EXPERIENCED CONCRETE FORM SETTERS & FINISHERS

Puetz Corporation is looking for Certified welders & Experienced concrete form setters and finishers. Must be 18 yrs. of age. Pay DOE. Stop at Puetz Corporation’s office, 800 N. Kimball for application.

HELP WANTED HELP WANTED EDUCATION EDUCATION Mitchell Technical Institute Academic & Finance Specialist MTI is seeking a front line person to staff a busy office working with academic records, student financial accounts and financial record keeping for the MTI Foundation. This full-time, 12-month position would be responsible for working with transcripts, enrollment verifications, updating student information, processing letters and mailings from the Academic Affairs office; managing student payments and payment plans; coordinating financial aid refunds; making journal entries for transactions; and assisting with gift recording and acknowledgement, accounts receivable and payable and maintaining Foundation donor database. Associate degree and/or two years’ experience in a related field required. Accounting or bookkeeping background preferred. Candidates must be able to pass a state and federal criminal background check. Position open until filled. Applicants must complete the online application for employment and upload their resume and cover letter to the application. Apply at:

https://www.mitchelltech.edu/aboutmti/careers-at-mti For information, contact Liz Kitchens, HR Manager, at 605.995.7136 or email liz.kitchens@mitchelltech.edu. MTI is an equal opportunity institution and does not discriminate in its employment of policies and practices, or in its educational programs.

PERSONALS Meet singles right now! No paid operators, just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call now: 855-651-0114. (MCN)

HELP WANTED HELP WANTED BUSINESS GENERAL OPPORTUNITIES GENERAL BECOME A PUBLISHED AUTHOR! We edit, print and distribute your work internationally. We do the work… You reap the Rewards! Call for a FREE Author’s Submission Kit: 855-623-8796 (MCN)

HELP WANTED HELP WANTED FINANCIAL SERVICES FINANCIAL SERVICES & BANKING & BANKING

SOUTH DAKOTA DEPARTMENT O 2.0x2.000 J680 001902417r2.PDF6228513

Server-1850705 Fry Cook-1850708 Guest Services Representative-1851689 Delivery Driver-1845147 Teaching Counselor-1844305

ACCOUNTS PAYABLE SPECIALIST Dakota Wesleyan University is seeking to fill the position of Accounts Payable Specialist. This individual will be responsible for the accurate payment of accounts payable invoices, order processing, bank statement reconciliation, and other general ledger accounting activities. This is a full-time position working 40 hours per week with occasional weekend assignments. Qualifications: Bachelor’s degree in accounting, preferred, or equivalent accounting experience. Successful candidates will have strong communication and organizational skills, attention to detail, and have a demonstrated commitment to the mission of DWU and our values of learning, leadership, faith, and service. Review of applicants will begin immediately and continue until position is filled. Applicants should submit a resume, cover letter, and a list of three references to: hr@dwu.edu Dakota Wesleyan University 1200 W. University Avenue Mitchell, SD 57301 Dakota Wesleyan University is an equal opportunity employer and provider

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10 • Advisor • Wednesday, September 4, 2019

HELP WANTED UNFURNISHED BUSINESS APARTMENTS OPPORTUNITIES GENERAL Become a Published Author. We want to Read Your Book! Dorrance Publishing-Trusted by Authors Since 1920 Book manuscript submissions currently being reviewed. Comprehensive Services: Consultation, Production, Promotion and Distribution Call for Your Free Author`s Guide 1-855-520-9045 or visit http://dorranceinfo.com/Midwest (MCN)

HELP WANTED GENERAL Help Wanted to scare away blackbirds from sunflower fields. Part time now until end of Oct. Drivers license and ATV experience necessary. Weekend & evening hours. Great for retired persons & others. Hunting exp. a plus. Call Chet 605-770-5133

1 & 2 Bedroom www.jobshq.com Apartments, Autumn Crest, 400 W. 19th, For elderly or persons with disabilities. Rent based on income. Equal Housing OpporCLASS A CDL tunity. 770-5832 or Company Driver. Good home Skogen time. Stay in the 605-263-3941 Midwest. Great pay and benefits. Matching 401k. Bonus’s and tax free money. Experience 1 BEDROOM in needed. Call Scott 5-plex, $400 rent, 507-437-9905. Ap- utilities included exply on-line. cept electric. Call WWW.MCFGTL.CO 605-770-5336 M (MCN)

HELP WANTED TRANSPORTATION & LOGISTICS

TRUCK DRIVER

Full-time with Class B CDL. Clean driving record. Pre-employment, drug & alcohol testing. Contact

Schoenfelder Construction

3131 W. Havens, Mitchell

605-996-3254

HOUSES FOR RENT 2 BEDROOM, 25 min. from Mitchell. 1 month free (wac), $450 month. Call 605-760-7564

HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HEALTHCARE HEALTHCARE ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF NURSING Progressive 71 bed skilled long-term care facility looking for dynamic nurse to join in leading a large nursing department in providing quality care for the residents and families who call our facility home. Our team is looking for someone who is willing to lead through technology changes and innovations in care. This position requires excellent oral and written communication skills and the ability to handle multiple tasks simultaneously, organization, and the desire to learn. Registered Nurse license required. Knowledge of MDS, Medicare, QAPI and Staff Development preferred.

Competitive salary & benefits package.

To join our team, please contact:

Bonnie Vavruska, DNS Good Samaritan Society-Tyndall 2304 Laurel St - Tyndall, SD 57066 605-589-3350 or Apply online at www.good-sam.com/careers

3 BEDROOM Townhouse. 500 W. 19th. Rent based on income. Equal Housing Opportunity. 605-770-5832 or Skogen Company 605-263-3941

HELP WANTED MANUFACTURING & PRODUCTION

“Results You Expect...Service You Deserve”

UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS

MONEY TO LEND

PUBLIC/ MISCELLANEOUS MISCELLANEOUS MISCELLANEOUS GARAGE SALES FOR SALE FOR SALE FOR SALE

Lombardi Court Apts-Large 2 & 3 bedroom apts. Rent based on income. Playground. Full basements. Call Mandy 770-7324 or email mandy@apcmanagement.com Equal Housing Opportunity.

Attention all homeowners in jeopardy of Foreclosure? We can help stop your home from foreclosure. The Foreclosure Defense helpline can help save your home. The Call is absolutely free. 1-866-850-1384 (MCN)

Rummage & Bake Sale Mitchell, 500 E. 5th First Presbyterian Church, Sept. 6, 8-4 & Sept. 7, 8-12. Rolls & Coffee, Sloppy Joes, cards, napkins, household items, Christmas items & more.

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY/LAND-SALE

Lifetime Gun & Coin Collection Auction - 10 am, Saturday, Sept. 7, 2019. Guns, sporting goods, gold coins and much more. Old 20 Auctions, 1949 210th St., Manchester, IA, Struggling With 563-927-2900. Your Private Stu- w w w . o l d 2 0 a u c COMMERCIAL dent Loan Pay- tions.com (MCN) BUILDING/ PROPERTY ment? New relief for sale Chamber- programs can relain SD. $269,000 duce your pay605-520 3203 ments. Learn your options. Good credit not necessary. Call the HelAKC Golden pline 855-238-4594 Retriever Pups (Mon-Fri 9am-5pm wormed, shots, Eastern) (MCN) dew claws done 605-505-0007 Blonde color $750

HELP WANTED MANUFACTURING & PRODUCTION

OES Industries, LLC is looking for a shipping/receiving specialist. Basic duties include preparing & completing customer orders for delivery, receiving & processing warehouse stock products, forklift operation and maintaining production paperwork and documentation. Basic computer skills a must. Competitive pay starting at $16+/hr. DOE. Benefits include Health, Dental and Paid Time Off.

Email resume to: dwipf@oesindustries.com or call 1-605-239-4884

HELP WANTED SKILLED & TRADES

Parts/Material Handler

OES Industries, LLC is looking for a parts/material handler. Basic duties include sorting parts per customer orders, forklift operation and maintaining production paperwork. Basic computer skills a must. Competitive pay starting at $15+/hr. DOE. Benefits include Health, Dental and PTO.

Please send cover letter and resume to dwipf@oesindustries.com or call 1-605-239-4884

REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE MISCELLANEOUS MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE BY OWNER: 32’x48’x14’’ Pole Shed $54,000 OBO.

All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, disability or protected veteran status.

BATHROOM RENOVATIONS. EASY, ONE DAY updates! We specialize in safe bathing. Grab bars, no slip flooring & seated showers. Call for a free in-home consultation: 855-836-2250 (MCN)

Book Your Flight Today on United, Delta, American, Air France, Air Canada. We have the best rates. Call today to learn more 1-855-725-6305 (MCN)

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AUCTION ADS

ANIMALS/PETS FOR SALE

Shipping/Receiving Specialist

HELP WANTED SKILLED & TRADES

Over $10K in debt? Be debt free in 24-48 months. Pay a fraction of what you owe. A+ BBB rated. Call National Debt Relief 855-995-1557 (MCN)

AUCTION ADS

AUTO INSURANCE STARTING AT $49/ MONTH! Call for your fee rate comparison to see how much you can save! Call: 855-648-7642. (MCN)

Located at 5808 Sam Street, off Maui Drive, just North of Lake Mitchell. Built in 2008, Concrete floor and electricity. Gravel driveway. Lyle L. Rumbolz Estate. Please contact Barbara A. Braley, Attorney for Estate. (605) 928-7958 Serious inquiries only.

MANUFACTURED HOMES

GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES, AKC, 4 weeks, vet checked, home BRAND NEW 2020 ready end of Sept. - 3 Br., 2 Bath, $700. 605-371-2552 M A N U FAC T U R E D HOME. Thermal Windows, Electric Range, 18’ Refrigerator, Caramel Cabinets, Vinyl/Shingle, FACUSED FURNITURE TORY DIRECT Large Selection SALES, $29,999. Delivered E. Of Montgomery Furniture Alexandria 605-239-4311 I-35/Iowa, 1-319-239-1920. (MCN)

HOUSEHOLD MISC.

FARM EQUIPMENT FOR SALE: Feed bulk bins, outdoor round hog feeders, 84” and 42” farmweld ss hog feeders, lots of used hog equip. Call 605-251-1133 Save this Ad!!

MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE

2 END TABLES and coffee table, $50. 605-770-0515 2 SINGLE roll away with dustcover’s like new, $30 e a c h . 605-990-6956 or 605-999-6956

A PLACE FOR MOM has helped over a million families find senior living. Our trusted, local advisors help RELATED EQUIPMENT find solutions to your unique needs MUSICK LIVESTOCK at no cost to you. Buying horses daiCall ly. 605-999-8086 1-888-894-7038 (MCN)

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PUBLIC/ GARAGE SALES MITCHELL, 1424 S Duff Wed & Thur 10-6. Fri 9-4. Youth Adult namebrand clothes, bedding, comforter, sheers, books, twin bed, vertical blinds, lamps, pillows, tons of decor. DON”T MISS!

ATTENTION: OXYGEN USERS! The NEW Inogen One G5. 1-6 flow settings. Designed for 24 hour oxygen use. Compact and Lightweight. Get a Free Info kit today: 844-852-7448 (MCN) TAN LEATHER sofa in good condition, $100. 605-996-6226

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4 10:00 A.M. 1,129.46 Acres Hyde County Land Auction of Productive Cropland and Excellent Summer Grassland. Located from Holabird, S.D. 5 miles south on the Holabird Grade Road. Sale Site Location: Ramkota Hotel, Pierre, S.D. Owners: Shirley “Pruess” Helgesen and Alice “Pruess” Englund Estate and Misterek Living Trust. Auctioneers: Mark Joens Fischer, Rounds & Assoc., Chuck Sutton, Jared Sutton, Terry Haiar. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 7 10:00 A.M. Antiques, Collectibles & Guns at Auction Location: Main Street - Alexandria SD (12 miles E. of Mitchell or 55 miles W. of Sioux Falls on I-90) Owners: Tom & Deb Bell Auctioneers: Mitchell Realty and Olsen Auction Service, Bob Jarding, Clyde Olsen & Allen Ymker MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 8 9:00 A.M. State of South Dakota - Dept. of Property Management Surplus Vehicles - Equipment Auctions. Located: Aberdeen SD - DOT Shop, 2529 W. Hwy 12. Auctioneers: Bradeen Real Estate & Auctions TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10 9:00 A.M. State of South Dakota - Dept. of Property Management Surplus Vehicles - Equipment Auctions. Located: Mitchell, SD - I-90 exit 330, 1300 S. Ohlman St. Auctioneers: Bradeen Real Estate & Auctions 5:30 P.M. City of Mitchell Surplus 2019 Auction Located: City of Mitchell North Facility, 5951 Airport Road (Impound Lot) Owner: City of Mitchell WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11 9:00 A.M. State of South Dakota - Dept. of Property Management Surplus Vehicles - Equipment Auctions. Located: Ft. Pierre, SD - Stanley Co. Fair Grounds. Auctioneers: Bradeen Real Estate & Auctions THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12 12:00 NOON Affordable Acreage at Auction. Located at 44656 - 259th Street or from the Northeast Corner of Canistota, So. Dak. Go just 2 miles North on 446th Avenue then a half mile East on 259th Street. Owner: Edward Schmit Living Trust. Auctioneers: Hansen Land & Auction Company, Bob Hansen, Forrest Miller FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 13 9:00 A.M. State of South Dakota - Dept. of Property Management Surplus Vehicles - Equipment Auctions. Located: Sturgis, SD - South I-90 Exit 32, 11 Otter Rd. Auctioneers: Bradeen Real Estate & Auctions 1:00 P.M. Hanson County Land Auction, +/- 160 acres located on the NE corner of Hwy 17 (247th St) and 477th Ave. Located at farm site 41732 247th St, Fulton SD 57340. Owners: Bunny Olson and Janice Schunk Auctioneers: Total Auctions & Real Estate, Andy Harr, Jason Bormann, Brad Swenson 6:00 P.M. Wicks Consignment Auction Located: 5 miles South of Cavour (21316 409th Ave), Cavour SD SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 10:00 A.M. Real Estate Auction consists of 2 lots & Church building as the closing of the First United Methodist Church will offer at Public Auction. Located: 212 West 2nd Ave in Mt. Vernon, SD. Owners: First United Methodist Church Real Estate Auctioneers: Clyde Olsen & Allen Ymker 10:30 A.M. Personal Property of the entire contents of First United Methodist Church, Brick Sign, Piano, Organ, Desk, Office Chair, File Cabinet’s, Office Shelves, Round Table & Chairs, 14 Pews, Chair Lift, Stove, Refrigerator, Dishes, Silverware, & many more misc items. Located: 212 West 2nd Ave in Mt. Vernon, SD Owners: First United Methodist Church Auctioneers: Olsen Auction Service, Clyde Olsen, Rodney Olivier & Allen Ymker FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27 6:00 P.M. Wicks Consignment Auction Located: 5 miles South of Cavour (21316 409th Ave), Cavour SD

Wherever you are, we are too! Local news - any time, any place!

514 N. Main St. Mitchell www.mitchellrepublic.com

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2 1:00 P.M. MT 2089 Acres * Scenic Ranch & Farm Land offered in 3 tracts & as an entire unit, Absolute Land Auction Located only 12 miles north of Rapid City (off Haines Ave.) Owner: Larry Henderson Auctioneers: Piroutek & Arneson Auction Services WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9 10:00 A.M. 4,203.12 acres Hyde/Hughes County Grassland. Located from Pierre, S.D. 27 miles east on Hiway 34 or from Stephan, S.D. 10 miles west on Hiway 34. Auction Site: CaseyTibbs Rodeo Center, Ft. Pierre, S.D. Owner: Chaney Rush Grazing Association. Auctioneers: Mark Joens - Fischer, Rounds & Assoc., Chuck Sutton, Jared Sutton, Terry Haiar. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10 10:00 A.M. Davison County Land Auction on site 505.15 Acres +/- Located at the Cornery of Highway 42 & 409th or 1 mile W. of Mike’s Corner & Hwy 37 or 2 miles W. of Ethan. Owners: Luverne and Lois Thuringer Estate - Chuck and Daryl Thuringer are Personal Representatives. Auctioneers: Mitchell Realty LLC, Bob Jarding, Ralph E. Kiner, Duane DeBoer SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26 10:30 A.M. Aurora Co. Land Auction consists of 99+/- acres of crop land. N.E. 1/4 25-103-64 in Plankinton, Twp. This land is located west of Hwy 281, north of interstate I-90 north of Coffee Cup at Plankinton, SD. Auction will be held at Commerce Street Grille & Bar, 1205 S. Main St, Plankinton, SD. Owner: Ronald K. Miller. Auctioneers: Olsen Auction Service, Plankinton, SD. Real Estate Auctioneers Clyde Olsen & Allen Ymker


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