8
Saturday, March 4, 2017 Sheridan, Noblesville, Cicero, Arcadia, Atlanta, Carmel, Fishers, Westfield Vol. 4, No. 42 Sheridan’s ny new library The REPORTER The Sheridan Main Street Committee, in cooperation with the Noblesville Branch of the American Association of University Women (AAUW), has located and opened a “Little Free Library” on Main Street in uptown Sheridan. The library is located in the pocket park at the front of the JBS United Feeds parking lot just on the north edge of their office building. Sheridan Main Street is responsible, of course, for several pocket parks on Main Street but this location seemed to be just perfect for a project like this. Little Free Libraries is an idea that began in Wisconsin in 2009 and features a small, dollhouse-sized structure with a large front panel that opens like a door. Most of the libraries are fashioned after one-room school houses. They are filled with books which people can trade for free. The idea is that for every book you borrow, you will leave one in return for someone else to borrow. Once you have read the book you can trade it in for anoth- er. There are no due dates or overdue fines involved; it is based entirely on the integri- ty of the individual to bring borrowed ma- terials back. And now that warmer weather is returning, this little pocket park location on Main Street makes an excellent loca- tion for people to sit, relax and read their books. Since 2009 and the advent of Little Free Libraries, there are literally thou- sands of them spread all across the world. According to Elaine Petro, president of the Noblesville Branch of the AAUW, this is their first time to sponsor one of these little libraries and they are very pleased with the enthusiastic welcome they have received here in Sheridan. And the members of the Sheridan Main Street Committee, most notably Linda Williams, Michelle Junkins and Anita Childers, are just as pleased to have this unique gift to our community lo- cated in one of their pocket parks. The next time you drive up or down Sheridan’s Main Street be sure to take a look at our new library located in the 300 block. And if you feel so inclined, please stop and pick up a book or two to take home to read; or better yet, just take a seat in the park and have a good read. Photo provided Sheridan Main Street Committee members, members of the Noblesville branch of the American Association of University Women and other Sheridan community members dedicate the new Little Library located in the pocket park located on the west side of Main Street in uptown Sheridan. The REPORTER Registration is now open for the Boys & Girls Club of Noblesville spring break programs. The Club offers two unique programs for youth to participate in during the break. The attendees must be a member of the Club to take part in either program and both begin March 27 and run through April 7. Camp Crosser is a fun and adven- turous program full of high energy, fun and educational experiences. Youth will participate in age appropriate activities including fishing, archery, arts & crafts, nature and environmental education, hiking, camp fire cooking, and so much more! Two separate week-long sessions are available which take place Monday through Friday from 8:30 a.m.-4 p.m. Registration forms can be found at www. BGCNI.org and turned in at the Club. Available spots are limited and will fill up quickly. Club Daybreak programming, which is located at 1448 Conner Street, provides themed weeks which will con- sist of special events, contest, guest speakers, activities and much more relat- ing to that theme. Participants will have access to our computer lab, library, gym, games room, art room and snack bar. Hours of operation for spring break are Monday through Friday, 7:30 a.m.-6:00 p.m. The hours of 11 a.m.-3 p.m. are free with a Club membership, and there is a $9 charge for the morning session (7:30- 11 a.m.) and a $9 charge for the after- noon session (3-6 p.m.). Club Daybreak registration forms are available online at www.BGCNI.org. The Community Center will have multiple activities taking place during break. Open gym will be open to Club Boys & Girls Club of Noblesville ready for spring break March brings never-ending opportunies By MARY SUE ROWLAND March brings a never-ending supply of downed tree limbs, winter collections of leaves in the yard and general yard waste. Unusually warm weather in February, was an opportunity to get some fresh air and work in the yard. But what to do with the organic left overs of mother nature? The city of Noblesville has the answer. Beginning in just a few days, the street department will be coming to your door to remove the gathered yard waste from your property. The Street Department does not rake your yard but they do pick up the result of your work. Here is how it must be done and when: Give a lile me, raise a lile money By JACK RUSSELL Westfield Chamber of Commerce President Have you ever heard the saying, “Time is money?” Such an interesting expression, but it can mean different things to different people. I wanted to look at those words individ- ually. Time is an interesting word because it can mean different things depending on how you say it. You can use it as a noun which means a point of time as measured in hours and minutes. You can also use it as a verb in which case the meaning is plan, schedule, or arrange when (some- thing) should happen or be done. See Time . . . Page 2 See Opportunity . . . Page 4 See Spring . . . Page 2 Today: Early morning snow shower chances. Then decreasing cloudiness. Tonight: Mostly clear. TODAY’S WEATHER HIGH: 52 LOW: 34

Sheridan’s tiny new library - Constant Contactfiles.constantcontact.com/57b55f5d301/83642a19... · Sheridan’s tiny new library The REPORTER The Sheridan Main Street Committee,

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    11

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Saturday March 4 2017Sheridan Noblesville Cicero Arcadia Atlanta Carmel Fishers Westfield Vol 4 No 42

Sheridanrsquos tiny new libraryThe REPORTER

The Sheridan Main Street Committee in cooperation with the Noblesville Branch of the American Association of University Women (AAUW) has located and opened a ldquoLittle Free Libraryrdquo on Main Street in uptown Sheridan The library is located in the pocket park at the front of the JBS United Feeds parking lot just on the north edge of their office building Sheridan Main Street is responsible of course for several pocket parks on Main Street but this location seemed to be just perfect for a project like this

Little Free Libraries is an idea that began in Wisconsin in 2009 and features a small dollhouse-sized structure with a large front panel that opens like a door

Most of the libraries are fashioned after one-room school houses They are filled with books which people can trade for free The idea is that for every book you borrow you will leave one in return for someone else to borrow Once you have read the book you can trade it in for anoth-er There are no due dates or overdue fines involved it is based entirely on the integri-ty of the individual to bring borrowed ma-terials back And now that warmer weather is returning this little pocket park location on Main Street makes an excellent loca-tion for people to sit relax and read their books

Since 2009 and the advent of Little Free Libraries there are literally thou-sands of them spread all across the world

According to Elaine Petro president of the Noblesville Branch of the AAUW this is their first time to sponsor one of these little libraries and they are very pleased with the enthusiastic welcome they have received here in Sheridan And the members of the Sheridan Main Street Committee most notably Linda Williams Michelle Junkins and Anita Childers are just as pleased to have this unique gift to our community lo-cated in one of their pocket parks

The next time you drive up or down Sheridanrsquos Main Street be sure to take a look at our new library located in the 300 block And if you feel so inclined please stop and pick up a book or two to take home to read or better yet just take a seat in the park and have a good read

Photo providedSheridan Main Street Committee members members of the Noblesville branch of the American Association of University Women and other Sheridan community members dedicate the new Little Library located in the pocket park located on the west side of Main Street in uptown Sheridan

The REPORTERRegistration is now open for the

Boys amp Girls Club of Noblesville spring break programs The Club offers two unique programs for youth to participate in during the break The attendees must be a member of the Club to take part in either program and both begin March 27 and run through April 7

Camp Crosser is a fun and adven-turous program full of high energy fun and educational experiences Youth will participate in age appropriate activities including fishing archery arts amp crafts nature and environmental education

hiking camp fire cooking and so much more Two separate week-long sessions are available which take place Monday through Friday from 830 am-4 pm Registration forms can be found at wwwBGCNIorg and turned in at the Club Available spots are limited and will fill up quickly

Club Daybreak programming which is located at 1448 Conner Street provides themed weeks which will con-sist of special events contest guest speakers activities and much more relat-ing to that theme Participants will have access to our computer lab library gym

games room art room and snack bar Hours of operation for spring break are Monday through Friday 730 am-600 pm The hours of 11 am-3 pm are free with a Club membership and there is a $9 charge for the morning session (730-11 am) and a $9 charge for the after-noon session (3-6 pm) Club Daybreak registration forms are available online at wwwBGCNIorg

The Community Center will have multiple activities taking place during break Open gym will be open to Club

Boys amp Girls Club of Noblesville ready for spring break

March bringsnever-ending opportunitiesBy MARY SUE ROWLAND

March brings a never-ending supply of downed tree limbs winter collections of leaves in the yard and general yard waste Unusually warm weather in February was an opportunity to get some fresh air

and work in the yard But what to do with the organic left overs of mother nature The city of Noblesville has the answer Beginning in just a few days the street department will be coming to your door to remove the gathered yard waste from your property The Street Department does not rake your yard but they do pick up the result of your work

Here is how it must be done and when

Give a little time raise a little moneyBy JACK RUSSELLWestfield Chamber of Commerce President

Have you ever heard the saying ldquoTime is moneyrdquo Such an interesting expression but it can mean different things to different people I wanted to look at those words individ-ually

Time is an interesting word because it can mean different things depending on how you say it You can use it as a noun which means a point of time as measured in hours and minutes You can also use it as a verb in which case the meaning is plan schedule or arrange when (some-thing) should happen or be done

See Time Page 2

See Opportunity Page 4See Spring Page 2

Today Early morning snow shower chances Then decreasing cloudiness Tonight Mostly clear

TODAYrsquoS WEATHER

HIGH 52 LOW 34

2 News

TheHAMILTON COUNTYREPORTER

Hamilton Countyrsquos

Hometown Newspaper

ReadTheReportercom

All aboard Amtrakrsquos Hoosier State service The REPORTER

The Indiana Department of Transpor-tation community partners and Amtrak announce passenger amenities on board the Hoosier State service now that it has tran-sitioned to modern Amtrak railcars and lo-comotives March 1 The train operates four days a week between Indianapolis and Chi-cago with intermediate stops in Crawfords-ville Lafayette Rensselaer and Dyer

Amtrak will provide Horizon-series coach cars each seating 68 passengers and including accommodations for passengers with disabilities A cafeacute car with an atten-

dant will have table seating on one end of the car and private seating at the opposite end for 14 Business class passengers Food and beverages ndash including alcoholic drinks ndash will be available for purchase in the cafeacute and can be enjoyed at the tables or at each passengerrsquos seat

All the railcars have power outlets reading lights and tray tables at each seat with free cellular-based AmtrakConnectreg Wi-Fi that combines mobile data from mul-tiple carriers along the tracks Overhead space is provided for baggage and each of the railcars also has a rack to stow larger

luggage at one end Amtrak continues to have the friend-

liest carry-on baggage policy in the travel industry allowing up to four bags and 150 pounds per passenger Also coach passen-gers can bring along a dog or cat weighing 20 pounds or less housed in a soft-sided carrier for a fee of $25 each way

One-way adult ticket prices for coach service to and from Chicago range from $25 to $48 from Indianapolis $25 to $47 from Crawfordsville $23 to $45 from Lafayette $17 to $30 from Rensselaer and $12 to $22 from Dyer Children 2-12 years old are half-fare and discounts are also available for stu-dents seniors military and others

Business class is in a curtained area with abundant space arranged with two seats on one side of the aisle and one seat on the oth-er side with leather seating surfaces foot-rests and leg-rests Included is a 25-percent points bonus for Amtrak Guest Rewards members as well as complimentary cof-fee tea and use of the Amtrak Metropolitan Lounge in Chicago which offers priority boarding The additional charge each way for business class is $21 from Indianapolis and Crawfordsville $20 from Lafayette and $14 from Rensselaer and Dyer

ldquoBOGOrdquo fares other promotions and a special railcar for March

To mark the transition Amtrak and IN-DOT are offering a ldquobuy-one get-onerdquo fare for the month of March so two adult pas-sengers can ride for the price of one See the Deals tab on Amtrakcom for applicable re-quirements for fare code V216 for purchase starting Tuesday Feb 28

While Amtrak passengers in business class always have access to the Metropoli-tan Lounge at Chicago Union Station coach customers normally pay for an upgrade for the Legacy Club a separate waiting area at the station that has complementary snacks and beverages charging stations and board-ing ahead of other coach passengers For

SPRINGfrom Page 1

TIMEfrom Page 1

Members from 1200pm-300pm Mon-day through Friday for both weeks of Spring Break Boys and Girls ages 7-16 are invited to participate in the Indiana Pacers ldquoUpgrade Your Gamerdquo Basket-ball Clinic on April 3rd and 4th Indiana Pacers Basketball Clinics are an excel-lent way for boys and girls of all ages to upgrade their skills and have a blast at the same time The clinic cost of $80 includes a t-shirt and a ticket to a future Pacers home game

The Boys amp Girls Club of Noblesville pro-vides high-quality low-cost programs for youth members with the help of donors and sponsors Between the Club the Community Center and Camp Crosser we provide opportunities for members to enjoy activities and experiences that help shape character and offer new per-spectives We are dedicated to inspiring and enabling all young people to reach their full po-tential as productive caring responsible citi-zens by promoting leadership character health and physical development

Another part of the sentence I want-ed to look at is the word money One of the definitions of money is the assets property and resources owned by some-one or something

No matter how you define time or money one thing I learned over the last couple weeks is our local nonprofits here in Hamilton County work hard every day to support individuals in our community through time and money

The Westfield Chamber of Com-merce had the Share the Love Luncheon connecting the business community with local nonprofits in the area It was amazing to me to hear the responses af-terwards Most of the people who came up to me said I had no idea about these issues and needs The businesses and people attending also could not believe how much each nonprofit relied on one another Every person after the event re-sponded withhellip How do I get involved

My answer was ldquoTime is moneyrdquoAgain each of us have a different

definition of that saying My definition is simple if people have time in their busy lives find a way to give back We learned at that luncheon that volunteers were needed in most organizations Each of us treat time like money It is valuable and it is an important part of how we take care of our family It is an asset and re-source that we own

I challenge everyone to use their most valuable asset and give back That being time If you already do so share it Share it on social media and let oth-ers know how they can join you We are blessed to live in a place like Hamilton County and together we can give a voice to those who may not have one

If the perception of Hamilton County is that the streets are paved in gold than letrsquos find a way to make that true in the lives of each person in Hamilton County

I would be crazy not to say thank you to those who work for nonprofits each and every day Passion is a conta-gious thing I encourage everyone to go meet with a local nonprofit and talk to a board member or their executive direc-tor I would bet after that conversation that you would be ready to help that day because of the passion they bring

If you can remember one thing re-member this Time is money

See Aboard Page 3

Ronald E Campbell August 24 1940 - March 1 2017

Ronald E Campbell 76 of Noblesville passed away on Wednesday March 1 2017 at St Vincent Hospice in Indianapolis He was born on August 24 1940 to Eu-gene and Doris (Finnegan) Campbell in Guthrie Center Iowa

Ronald worked in security system sales and was a model railroader and avid reader He enjoyed camping and watching NASCAR

Ronald is survived by his wife Kathy mother Doris daughters Niki Joey Leah and Rachel son Chris brother Allen and grandchildren Marcus Hardt and Raquel

In addition to his father Eugene he was preceded in death by his brother Robert and niece Wendy

Services will be held at 10 am on Satur-day March 4 2017 at Randall amp Roberts Fu-neral Center 1685 Westfield Road in Nobles-ville with Rev Allen Campbell officiating

Condolences wwwrandallrobertscom

Donna L Clark November 7 1946 - March 2 2017

Donna L Clark 70 of Noblesville passed away peacefully at her home sur-rounded by loved ones on Thursday March 2 2017 She was born on November 7 1946 to James and Pearl (Herron) Trexler in Painesville Ohio Donna was a self-employed house cleaner

She is survived by her daughter Angela McGraw grandsons Lee McFarland Joseph Privett Jr Kevin McGraw and Kameron McGraw brothers Robert (Nancy) Trexler and Joe (Pam) Trex-ler sisters Joyce (Keith) Benefiel Alice (Ron) Beamon Sally Harmon Robin (Jeff) Souder and Linda (Scott) Weems and friends James McMichael and Robert Pollard

In addition to her parents Donna was preceded in death by her husband James Clark sister Barbara Lott and brother-in-law Mike Harmon

Services will be held at 1 pm on Monday March 6 2017 at Randall amp Rob-erts Funeral Center 1685 Westfield Road in Noblesville with visitation from 11 am to the time of service Rev Stanley R Sutton will of-ficiate Burial will be at Summit Lawn Ceme-tery in Westfield

Condolences wwwrandallrobertscom

Obituaries 3

Hamilton County

RepoRteR

Contact InformationPhone

317-408-5548

EmailHamiltonCoNorthReporterhotmailcom

Publisher Jeff JellisonHamiltonCoNorthReporterhotmailcom

317-408-5548

Editor Don JellisonHoosiermabaaolcom

317-773-2769

Sports Editor Richie HallRhall1977gmailcomTwitter Richie_Hall

Public NoticesPublicNoticesReadTheReportercom

765-365-2316

Web AddresswwwReadTheReportercom

Mailing AddressPO Box 190

Westfield IN 46074

ArrangementsCalling 11 am ndash 1 pm March 6Service 1 pm March 6Location Randall amp Roberts Funeral CenterCondolences wwwrandallrobertscom

ArrangementsService 10 am March 4Location Randall amp Roberts Funeral CenterCondolences wwwrandallrobertscom

the month of March Amtrak Hoosier State coach customers will enjoy complementary Legacy Club access a $20 value

Also for the month of March the Hoosier State train will include the only dome car in Amtrak service a Great Dome Built in 1955 by the Budd Company for the Great Northern Railway it carries the name ldquoOcean Viewrdquo Repainted in honor of Amtrakrsquos 40th anniversary it wears stripes comprised of equal width red white and

blue symbolic of Amtrak being Americarsquos Railroadreg It features an upper level with windows on all sides to provide passengers with panoramic views of spring in India-napolis and Chicago as well as the Hoosier scenery in between There is no extra cost as seats in the car are unreserved and avail-able on a first-come first-served basis Pas-sengers are encouraged to rotate in and out of the Great Dome to allow all to enjoy this unique experience

ABOARDfrom Page 2

4 News

The REPORTERMilestone Contractors plans to shift

traffic lanes on southbound Interstate 69 between 116th Street (Exit 205) and 106th Street (Exit 204) starting on Sat-urday night March 4 as part of the I-69 Major Moves 2020 construction project

Up to three lanes of southbound I-69 may be closed after 7 pm as crews paint

new lane markings and shift all lanes to the left to accommodate construction of an additional lane along the right shoul-der between the 116th Street entrance ramp to southbound I-69 and the new 106th Street exit ramp All lanes are expected to be open in the temporarily shifted configuration before 9 am on Sunday March 5

Southbound I-69 lanes shift starting tonight Beginning March 13 2017 and

continuing through Oct 13 2017 brush will be picked up on the same day as trash collection not the same time as trash collection but the same day Pick up is made on the street side only NO alleys Do NOT put brush in the street but place it in the space be-tween the street and the sidewalk All brush must be stacked in small piles no more than 4 feet in length and 18 inch-es in diameter Limb size should be no more than 4 inches in diameter

So you have a bigger pile of brush Solution Just call the Noblesville Street Department 317-776-6348 to schedule a special large brush pick up Now how is that for service No rea-son to not beautify your property with a spring cleanup and set the brush be-tween the curb and sidewalk for pick up on the same day as trash pickup DO NOT PUT THE BRUSH IN THE AL-LEY WAY BRUSH IS PICKED UP AT THE STREET SIDE only

What about the small stuff like leaves left over from fall

In the spring NO loose leaves will be picked up All leaves must be bagged in green biodegradable bags set next to the brush pick up site or placed in front of the house between the curb and side-walk Keep all yard waste away from storm drain sites to keep the drains open and flowing If the storm drains become blocked flooding can occur If you have a storm drain near your home ldquoadopt the drainrdquo and take care of it by raking leaves and trash away from the storm drain site It will mean positive water flow for your property and your neighbors

So get your supplies ready now

Pick up the free green biodegradable bags from City Hall front desk or Plan-ning Department Street Department just 3 blocks west of the Post Office on Pleasant Street Parks Department in Forest Park Inn Hamilton Co Hazard-ous Waste Station on Pleasant Street or the Fire Station in your area There is no charge and now you are ready to do your yard cleanup You have all the information to be a good citizen and follow the helpful suggestions for city pick up of yard materials That service is free alsohellipwell maybe not free but a service supported by your tax dol-lars Get your tax dollarsrsquo worth and take advantage of this great service It also makes the community look clean and healthy and ready for those warm breezes to follow

Note Fall leaf pick up begins Sept 18 and continues through Dec 15 Use those left-over spring green biodegradable bags in the fall Pick up is at the same location and day as in the spring No limit to the number of bagged leaves Loose leaves are messy and pick up does not begin until Oct 9 2017 It would be good to pick up a nice supply of green bags and bag it in the spring and the fall

Add a few nice flowers and enjoy The city is your partner is making your home an even more special place and you can be the great example for the neighborhood

Questions Call the Street Department 317-776-6348 Mayorrsquos Office 317-776-6324 Police Department (non-emergency) 317-776-6340 Hamilton Co Household Hazardous Waste Center 317-776-4005 Green Cycle 317-773-3350 Creative Com-post 317-776-2909 See you in the yard

OPPORTUNITYfrom Page 1

Tips to simplify spring cleaning(StatePoint) Itrsquos

the time of year to roll up your sleeves and do some spring cleaning Experts point out that itrsquos helpful to stream-line the tools you use to do the job and the tasks you seek to ac-complish

ldquoAn all-purpose cleaner and a tough degreasing agent can be used in so many ar-eas of the homerdquo says Jeff Devlin a licensed contractor whorsquos ap-peared on several home improvement television shows Devlinrsquos first tip look to reduce the number of products in your cleaning arsenal ldquoAlong with high-quality sprays and cloths I use one all-purpose cleaner that also con-tains degreasing ingredientsrdquo

Devlin along with Mean Green and its line of heavy-duty all-purpose cleaners offer these different strategies for critical areas of your home

bull Stove and range hoods While you should be cleaning these areas regular-ly after food preparation take this op-portunity to conduct a more thorough cleaning Spray cleaner directly on the mess for up to two minutes Wipe clean with a sponge or cloth Then rinse thor-oughly with clean water

bull Sinks and countertops Sinks and countertops can be a trap for food grease grime and soap scum Gener-ously spray non-porous surfaces with your cleaner then rinse with clean wa-ter

bull Stove exhaust filter The grease buildup that collects on the stoversquos ex-haust filter can be a tough nut to crack In a sink basin mix 8 ounces of a con-centrated multi-surface cleaner and 1 gallon of hot water and submerge the filter Place the filter in a sink or dish-pan and pour in concentrated cleaner to cover Allow the filter to soak for 30 minutes Drain the dishpan and rinse thoroughly with hot water

bull Floors Give your floors a mop-ping Mix 4 ounces of cleaning solution with 1 gallon of warm water Apply with mop or sponge

bull Garbage cans and diaper pails

Bags often leak nastiness into the bot-tom of the garbage can which can eas-ily be missed when quickly replacing the bag Turn your cleanserrsquos nozzle to spray and generously cover the can Wipe or brush any areas that have any residue Rinse thoroughly with clean water

bull Showers tubs and tile Use your cleaning agent at full strength and gen-erously spray surfaces directly Allow it to penetrate the soap scum for up to two minutes Do not allow to dry Wipe away with a coarse sponge or cloth Rinse thoroughly with clean water

bull Toilets Letrsquos face it This isnrsquot anyonersquos favorite job but it has to be done Turn that nozzle to spray and generously spray the outside of the toi-let Wipe clean with a paper towel then give a quick rinse

bull Patio For patios outdoor furni-ture concrete vinyl fences and siding use the same cleaner outdoors simply spray then wipe clean with a cloth or sponge and rinse surfaces with clean water While yoursquore at it consider re-moving grease and grime from tools engine parts tires sports gear and lawn equipment

For efficiency consider cleaning solutions that donrsquot require pre-clean-ing such as Mean Green Super Strength Cleaner amp Degreaser the strongest all-purpose cleaner available More tips for getting your spring to-dos complet-ed can be found at meangreendegreasercom

ldquoMake spring cleaning simple and effective by using smart strategies on every surface of your homerdquo said Devlin

Photo provided by west_photo - Fotoliacom

By RICHIE HALLReporter Sports EditorHamilton Southeastern and Carmel

advanced to the championship game ofSectional 8 Friday night after semi-finalwins at the Eric Clark Activity Center

In the first game the Royals took careof Anderson 68-47 The Greyhounds werenext taking on their old rival Noblesvilleand winning 62-44 Tonights championshipwill tip off at 7 pm

The Indians stayed with HSE for mostof the first quarter which ended with theRoyals ahead 14-13 Jack Davidson scoredeight points for Southeastern including two3-pointers and Chaz Birchfield added six

Anderson then took a 16-14 lead earlyin the second period but the Royals blastedoff after that outscoring the Indians 23-6 tocruise into halftime with a 37-22 advantageSix different HSE players scored in thesecond quarter with Aaron Etheringtongetting six points

Defensively I thought we were solidthe entire game said Royals coach BrianSatterfield I know once they got that lead16-14 we ran a play got the ball inside goto the foul line and from that point ondefensively we were solid

And then I thought our defense didsome things to create some offense for usand then the other aspect is we moved thebasketball when we did get to the offensiveend and had some good looks

Southeasterns lead gradually grew in thesecond half and the Royals never allowedAnderson to score more than fiveconsecutive points in the half HSEs largestrun of the second half came in the fourthquarter when it scored seven unansweredpoints (five points from Aaron Shank andtwo more from Etherington) and that rungave the Royals their largest lead of thegame at 62-38

Davidson scored 17 points forSoutheastern (21-5) with Birchfield adding13 and Etherington scoring 10 BirchfieldEtherington and Zach Mutchner all had fourrebounds Zach Gunn the Royals leadingscorer didnt play Satterfield that was aprecautionary measure

The first quarter of the Carmel-Noblesville game was a roller coaster TheHounds scored the first five points withLuke Heady hitting a 3-pointer and PJ Baronscoring off a rebound

The Millers answered that with eightstraight points of their own Rico Duncangot Noblesvilles first basket on a floaterNolan Ginther tied the game with a three-point play then Duncan drained a 3-pointerto put Noblesville up 8-5

Carmel came back finishing the periodon a 10-2 run to lead 15-10 Baron scoredeight points including two three-point playsand Heady scored off a steal

The Greyhounds started to take controlof the game in the second quarter slowly

making their way to a 28-18 lead byhalftime Baron scored five more points hefinished the first half a perfect 6-of-6 fromthe field

I thought we were patient offensivelyand really got good shots said Carmelcoach Scott Heady We got some greatlooks and we got a lot of shots around thebasket

Both teams scored 10 points in the thirdperiod The Millers cut Carmels lead to38-30 late in the quarter thanks toconsecutive baskets by Grant Gremel andMax Flinchum Baron ended the period witha layin to push the Greyhounds ahead 40-30

They hung around said Heady Theykind of kept it around eight nine and theydid enough to where it was a game We had

to make plays so give them credit they keptcoming back and made it a game

Heady and Jalen Whack both had a3-pointer in the third quarter and they eachmade another long-range shot in the fourthquarter with Whacks basket putting Carmelup 46-34 A late 3-pointer from Duncan keptNoblesville within 53-42 with 226 left butthe Greyhounds ended the game on a 9-2run Carmel is now 20-4 for the year

Baron finished the game with 20 pointson 7-of-9 shooting and also had sixrebounds Heady drained three 3-pointersfor 13 points John Michael Mulloy was allover the place with seven rebounds fiveassists and four blocked shots to go alongwith his seven points

He was good said Heady of Baron Ithought John Michael was good defensively

Luke gave us some scoring punch againtonight which is what we need withoutSterling

Duncan led the Millers with 10 pointsNoblesville had very balanced scoring withMcGwire Plumer adding nine Flinchum andGremel each scoring eight Nolan Gintheradded seven points and pulled fourrebounds

The Millers finished their season 12-13and graduate five seniors - Duncan PlumerFlinchum Ginther and Nick MillsNoblesville coach Brian McCauley spokewith pride about his senior class after thegame

Theyve done a lot for the program withCoach McCullough throughout their

Carmel HSE head to championship

Reporter photo by Kent Graham

Carmelrsquos Jalen Whack guards Noblesvillersquos McGwire Plumer during the Greyhounds-Millers sectional semi-final game Fridaynight at the Eric Clark Activity Center Turn to Page 7 to see more pictures

Sports 5

Sheridan was overwhelmed by Lapel79-29 in the first semi-final at Sectional 40Friday night at theBulldogs gym

Lapel thedefending Class 2Astate champion led17-4 after the firstquarter and 35-11 athalftime

Aidan Roatenscored seven points tolead the Blackhawkswith Jack Waitt

scoring six Roaten and Nick Burnell bothpulled three rebounds

Sheridan finished its season with a 9-15record

Lapel 79Sheridan 29

Sheridan FG FT TP PFCaleb Duke 0-1 0-0 0 0Jack Waitt 2-5 2-2 6 0Brody Perry 0-2 0-0 0 0Drake Delph 0-4 1-2 1 4Tommy Glidden 1-4 3-4 5 1Cam Weitzel 2-5 0-1 5 4Aidan Roaten 2-6 2-4 7 4Nicholas Burnell 0-1 0-0 0 1Kenny Burnell 0-1 0-0 0 1Tanner Swindle 1-3 3-7 5 1Totals 8-32 11-20 29 16Score by QuartersLapel 17 18 25 19 - 79Sheridan 4 7 10 8 - 29Sheridan 3-point shooting (2-18) Weitzel 1-4Roaten 1-2 Waitt 0-3 Perry 0-2 Glidden 0-2Swindle 0-2 Duke 0-1 Delph 0-1 K Burnell 0-1Sheridan rebounds (15) Roaten 3 N Burnell 3Waitt 2 Delph 2 Glidden 2 Swindle 2 Perry 1

Waitt

Hamilton Heights advanced to the championship at theClass 3A Marion sectional takingcare of Delta 51-33 in the secondFriday night semi-final

The Huskies got off to a fantasticstart leading the Eagles 15-1 after thefirst quarter Heights kept Delta atarms length for the remainder of thegame as it led 19-7 at halftime TheEagles cut the Huskies lead to 29-23by the end of the third period butHeights outscored Delta 22-10 in thefourth to easily win the game

Defensively thats the best weveplayed said Huskies coach Chad

Ballenger In fact those 33 points are the least Heights hasgiven up so far this season - its previous season-low wasthe 34 points it allowed Blackford in Tuesdays sectionalfirst round so the Huskies defense is playing well at the

right timeMax Wahl scored 15 points for Heights including three

3-pointers while Sterling Weatherford reached double-double territory with 11 points and 11 rebounds

Hes really stepped it up since hes been back and hesbeen healthy said Ballenger Im just happy that hes beinga leader on the court verbally and getting guys in the rightspots

As for Wahl Ballenger said he was huge on Fridayshooting the ball well I was pleased with Max tonight andthe show that he ran said the coach

The Huskies play Tipton at 730 pm tonight for thesectional championship The two teams played each otheron Jan 27 with the Blue Devils winning 56-41

Its a huge backyard rivalry probably what everybodywanted said Ballenger Itll be great from the fan perspec-tive Theyre on a nice run

Tipton has won eight of its last nine games while theHuskies now 11-12 are on a five-game winning streak

Heights 51 Delta 33Heights FG FT TP PFSterling Weatherford 4-12 3-6 11 2Max Wahl 5-9 2-2 15 3Caymn Lutz 3-4 1-2 7 2Tyler Wiltermood 3-3 1-1 7 4Austin Sauerteig 2-2 0-0 5 0Max Beale 0-2 0-0 0 1Drayden Thomas 0-2 0-0 0 1Noah Wallace 0-0 0-0 0 0Dawson Phifer 1-1 4-6 6 1Caleb Bean 0-0 0-0 0 0Michael Cross 0-0 0-0 0 0Owen Powell 0-0 0-0 0 0Totals 18-35 11-17 51 14Score by QuartersHeights 15 4 10 22 - 51Delta 1 6 16 10 - 33Heights 3-point shooting (4-6) Wahl 3-4 Sauerteig 1-1 Beale 0-1Heights rebounds (25) Weatherford 11 Thomas 3 Wahl 2 Lutz2 Wiltermood 2 Sauerteig 2 Phifer 1 Beale 1 Bean 1

Wahl

Huskies beat Delta will play Tipton for title

lsquoHawks fall to Lapelyounger years and then with me the pastthree years said McCauley Im proud ofthose guys They did something that wehadnt done as a program since CoachMcCulloughs 2010 team and thats advanceto the sectional semi-finals They took astep Im proud of them for that

FIRST SEMI-FINALSoutheastern 68

Anderson 47Southeastern FG FT TP PFJack Davidson 6-9 2-2 17 2Chaz Birchfield 4-7 5-7 13 1Aaron Etherington 3-12 4-4 10 3Connor Rotterman 1-2 0-0 2 2Noah Smith 1-1 3-4 5 1Aaron Shank 1-3 4-5 6 1Austin Holzum 1-5 0-0 3 2Nick Bowman 2-2 2-2 6 0Zach Mutchner 0-1 0-0 0 1Jack Habegger 1-1 2-2 4 0Mabor Majak 1-2 0-0 2 1Totals 21-45 22-26 68 14Score by QuartersAnderson 13 9 9 16 - 47Southeastern 14 23 12 19 - 68Southeastern 3-point shooting (4-16) Davidson3-6 Holzum 1-5 Etherington 0-3 Shank 0-1Majak 0-1Southeastern rebounds (25) Birchfield 4Etherington 4 Mutchner 4 Bowman 3 Davidson2 Shank 2 Holzum 1 Majak 1 team 4

SECOND SEMI-FINALCarmel 62

Noblesville 44Carmel FG FT TP PFCole Jenkins 3-6 0-0 7 1Luke Heady 4-6 2-3 13 1Jalen Whack 3-5 1-2 9 3PJ Baron 7-9 6-7 20 2John Michael Mulloy 2-2 3-6 7 2Britt Beery 0-0 0-0 0 0Eddie Gill 1-2 0-0 3 1Mike Pitz 0-0 1-2 1 0Alex Jackson 0-0 2-2 2 0Totals 20-30 15-22 62 10Carmel 3-point shooting (7-13) Heady 3-5Whack 2-3 Jenkins 1-3 Gill 1-1 Falender 0-1Carmel rebounds (23) Mulloy 7 Baron 6Jenkins 3 Pitz 3 Heady 2 Gill 1 Whack 1Noblesville FG FT TP PFRico Duncan 4-6 0-0 10 5Max Flinchum 3-7 2-2 8 0McGwire Plumer 4-6 1-2 9 3Nolan Ginther 3-10 1-1 7 3Grant Gremel 4-5 0-0 8 4Ryan Barnes 0-0 2-2 2 1Xavier Hines 0-1 0-0 0 2Nick Mills 0-1 0-0 0 2Totals 18-36 6-7 44 20Noblesville 3-point shooting (2-7) Duncan 2-2Flinchum 0-2 Plumer 0-2 Hines 0-1Noblesville rebounds (10) Ginther 4 Duncan 1Flinchum 1 Gremel 1 Hunes 1 Mills 1 team 1Score by QuartersCarmel 15 13 10 24 - 62Noblesville 10 8 10 16 - 44

CARMEL From Page 5

Courtesy John Harrellrsquos websitewwwjohnharrellnet

CLASS 4AEast Chicago CentralEast Chicago Central 74Hammond Morton 69Lake Central 53 Munster 40Michigan CityMerrillville 57 Michigan City 48Crown Point 78 Chesterton 66South Bend WashingtonPlymouth 40 Mishawaka 37 OTSouth Bend Adams 66 LaPorte

63 2OTElkhart CentralGoshen 65 Elkhart Memorial 56Warsaw 71 Elkhart Central 36Carroll (Fort Wayne)Fort Wayne North 67 Fort WayneNorthrop 47Fort Wayne Snider 50 Carroll(Fort Wayne) 41Fort Wayne WayneMuncie Central 44 HuntingtonNorth 36Homestead 60 Fort WayneWayne 54Lafayette JeffZionsville 66 Logansport 57McCutcheon 78 Kokomo 56CarmelHamilton Southeastern 68 Ander-son 47Carmel 62 Noblesville 44New CastleConnersville 65 Richmond 47New Castle 57 Greenfield-Central32North Central (Indianapolis)Lawrence North 70 IndianapolisTech 57North Central (Indianapolis) 81Indianapolis Cathedral 58Decatur CentralBen Davis 67 Decatur Central 60Indianapolis Roncalli 62 South-port 42PlainfieldBrownsburg 64 Plainfield 54Terre Haute South 69 Mooresville61Franklin CentralFranklin Central 57 Franklin 45Center Grove 56 Whiteland 39Bloomington NorthShelbyville 53 East Central 38Bloomington South 75 Blooming-ton North 60SeymourFloyd Central 44 Seymour 26New Albany 89 Bedford NorthLawrence 52Evansville NorthEvansville Reitz 71 EvansvilleHarrison 67Castle 89 Evansville North 53

Friday night sectional scores

Sports6

Sports 7

HamiltonSoutheasternrsquos ZachMutchner (right) hadfour rebounds for theRoyals during theirsectional win over

Anderson on FridayAt left is Austin

Holzum (13) while inthe background isMabor Majak (50)

Reporter photos by Kent Graham

LEFT Cole Jenkins takes a 3-point shot for CarmelABOVE Noblesvillersquos Rico Duncan is guarded by Carmelrsquos LukeHeady

Nick Bowman scored six points for Hamilton Southeastern in its Friday night win

Do You Have ACommunity

AnnouncementWedding BirthAnnouncement

AnniversaryShare It With The

CommunityContact the

Hamilton CountyReporter

Hamiltonconorthreporter

hotmailcom

or call317-408-5548

Hamilton CountyReporter

Hamilton CountyrsquosHometownNewspaper

Eastern ConferenceAtlantic W L PCT GBBoston 40 22 645 -Toronto 37 25 597 30New York 25 37 403 150Philadelphia 23 38 377 165Brooklyn 10 50 167 290Southeast W L PCT GBWashington 36 24 600 -Atlanta 34 27 557 25Miami 28 34 452 90Charlotte 26 35 426 105Orlando 23 39 371 140Central W L PCT GBCleveland 42 18 700 -Chicago 31 30 508 115Indiana 31 30 508 115Detroit 29 32 475 135Milwaukee 27 33 450 150

Western ConferenceNorthwest W L PCT GBUtah 38 24 613 -Oklahoma City 35 27 565 30Denver 28 33 459 95Portland 25 35 417 120Minnesota 25 36 410 125Southwest W L PCT GBSan Antonio 47 13 783 -Houston 43 19 694 50Memphis 36 26 581 120Dallas 25 36 410 225New Orleans 24 38 387 240Pacific W L PCT GBGolden State 50 11 820 -LA Clippers 36 25 590 140Sacramento 25 36 410 250Phoenix 20 42 323 305 LA Lakers 19 43 306 315

NBA standingsFridayrsquos games

Philadelphia 105 New York 102Toronto 114 Washington 106

Orlando 110 Miami 99Cleveland 135 Atlanta 130

Milwaukee 112 LA Clippers 101

Dallas 104 Memphis 100Utah 112 Brooklyn 97

Phoenix 118 Oklahoma City 111San Antonio 101 New Orleans 98 OT

Boston 115 LA Lakers 95

CLASS 3AHammond CivicLighthouse CPA 90 Kankakee Valley 62Griffith 69 Hammond Gavit 38Rensselaer CentralRensselaer Central 61 Wheeler 40Twin Lakes 60 Hanover Central 43JimtownSouth Bend St Joseph 42 Mishawaka Marian40Culver Academy 59 Jimtown 28MaconaquahWest Lafayette 55 Maconaquah 49Western 63 Peru 50

WawaseeWest Noble 42 Wawasee 38Fairfield 59 NorthWood 51GarrettNew Haven 67 Fort Wayne Dwenger 51Angola 46 Garrett 31BellmontFort Wayne Luers 71 Mississinewa 50Columbia City 59 Norwell 50MarionTipton 42 Yorktown 17Hamilton Heights 51 Delta 33GreencastleTri-West 66 Crawfordsville 53Lebanon 55 Western Boone 35EdgewoodEdgewood 46 Sullivan 42Northview 63 Owen Valley 43Brebeuf JesuitIndianapolis Chatard 51 New Palestine 48Indianapolis Attucks 65 Indianapolis Manual53DanvilleDanville 88 Indianapolis Northwest 72Beech Grove 79 Indianapolis Ritter 60GreensburgGreensburg 63 Madison 60 OTLawrenceburg 52 Rushville 42WashingtonPike Central 57 Jasper 43Vincennes Lincoln 59 Princeton 49BoonvilleMount Vernon (Posey) 62 Heritage Hills 59Evansville Bosse 82 Evansville Memorial 76

CLASS 2AGary RooseveltGary Roosevelt 36 Hammond Noll 34

River Forest 57 Lake Station 49WinamacDelphi 50 North Judson 31Marquette Catholic 76 Knox 52WestviewLaVille 57 Bremen 38Central Noble 46 Westview 42WoodlanChurubusco 75 Woodlan 60Eastside 58 Fort Wayne Canterbury 56 3OTOak HillManchester 59 Rochester 36Southwood 60 Oak Hill 52Fountain CentralCovington 68 Rossville 62Fountain Central 56 Carroll (Flora) 35TaylorMadison-Grant 49 Taylor 46Eastern (Greentown) 47 Eastbrook 38LapelLapel 79 Sheridan 29Frankton 77 Monroe Central 53HagerstownUnion County 57 Cambridge City Lincoln 41Northeastern 59 Hagerstown 55 OTTriton CentralShenandoah 66 Irvington Prep Academy 38Indianapolis Howe 101 Knightstown 47SpeedwaySpeedway 65 Indianapolis Broad Ripple 62Heritage Christian 49 Indianapolis Scecina46South PutnamMonrovia 45 South Putnam 40Cloverdale 61 North Putnam 51South RipleySouth Ripley 40 Southwestern (Hanover) 39Milan 47 North Decatur 45Crawford CountyProvidence 65 Paoli 46Crawford County 41 Clarksville 38Eastern GreeneBarr-Reeve 62 Mitchell 43South Knox 50 North Knox 38SouthridgeEvansville Mater Dei 64 South Spencer 58Forest Park 31 Tell City 27

CLASS 1AKoutsGary 21st Century 82 Washington Twp 53Westville 68 LaCrosse 56

CastonTri-County 66 Covenant Christian (DeMotte)46South Newton 45 Pioneer 39TritonTriton 58 Culver 40Oregon-Davis 63 Argos 55Bethany ChristianFort Wayne Blackhawk 87 Lakeland Christian51Lakewood Park 64 Hamilton 34North VermillionNorth Vermillion 47 Attica 43Riverton Parke 58 Rockville 56Tri-CentralLafayette Central Catholic 83 Clinton Central43Clinton Prairie 60 Faith Christian 52Wes-DelWes-Del 54 Daleville 44Liberty Christian 63 Cowan 46Blue RiverUnion (Modoc) 59 Union City 57Seton Catholic 71 Blue River 61White River ValleyEminence 62 White River Valley 38Shakamak 65 Bloomfield 62UniversityBethesda Christian 52 Indiana Deaf 46Indianapolis Tindley 80 Indiana Math ampScience 58EdinburghMorristown 59 Greenwood Christian 50Indianapolis Lutheran 63 Central Christian 59South DecaturHauser 75 Waldron 48Oldenburg Academy 67 South Decatur 31BordenBorden 61 Crothersville 44West Washington 51 Trinity Lutheran 40New WashingtonNew Washington 50 Lanesville 43Christian Academy 53 South Central(Elizabeth) 46North DaviessShoals 44 Washington Catholic 18Loogootee 44 North Daviess 43Wood MemorialWood Memorial 76 Evansville Day 43Northeast Dubois 55 Tecumseh 47NACA TournamentColumbus Christian 57 Louisiana Christian41

SCORES From Page 6

Sports8

2 News

TheHAMILTON COUNTYREPORTER

Hamilton Countyrsquos

Hometown Newspaper

ReadTheReportercom

All aboard Amtrakrsquos Hoosier State service The REPORTER

The Indiana Department of Transpor-tation community partners and Amtrak announce passenger amenities on board the Hoosier State service now that it has tran-sitioned to modern Amtrak railcars and lo-comotives March 1 The train operates four days a week between Indianapolis and Chi-cago with intermediate stops in Crawfords-ville Lafayette Rensselaer and Dyer

Amtrak will provide Horizon-series coach cars each seating 68 passengers and including accommodations for passengers with disabilities A cafeacute car with an atten-

dant will have table seating on one end of the car and private seating at the opposite end for 14 Business class passengers Food and beverages ndash including alcoholic drinks ndash will be available for purchase in the cafeacute and can be enjoyed at the tables or at each passengerrsquos seat

All the railcars have power outlets reading lights and tray tables at each seat with free cellular-based AmtrakConnectreg Wi-Fi that combines mobile data from mul-tiple carriers along the tracks Overhead space is provided for baggage and each of the railcars also has a rack to stow larger

luggage at one end Amtrak continues to have the friend-

liest carry-on baggage policy in the travel industry allowing up to four bags and 150 pounds per passenger Also coach passen-gers can bring along a dog or cat weighing 20 pounds or less housed in a soft-sided carrier for a fee of $25 each way

One-way adult ticket prices for coach service to and from Chicago range from $25 to $48 from Indianapolis $25 to $47 from Crawfordsville $23 to $45 from Lafayette $17 to $30 from Rensselaer and $12 to $22 from Dyer Children 2-12 years old are half-fare and discounts are also available for stu-dents seniors military and others

Business class is in a curtained area with abundant space arranged with two seats on one side of the aisle and one seat on the oth-er side with leather seating surfaces foot-rests and leg-rests Included is a 25-percent points bonus for Amtrak Guest Rewards members as well as complimentary cof-fee tea and use of the Amtrak Metropolitan Lounge in Chicago which offers priority boarding The additional charge each way for business class is $21 from Indianapolis and Crawfordsville $20 from Lafayette and $14 from Rensselaer and Dyer

ldquoBOGOrdquo fares other promotions and a special railcar for March

To mark the transition Amtrak and IN-DOT are offering a ldquobuy-one get-onerdquo fare for the month of March so two adult pas-sengers can ride for the price of one See the Deals tab on Amtrakcom for applicable re-quirements for fare code V216 for purchase starting Tuesday Feb 28

While Amtrak passengers in business class always have access to the Metropoli-tan Lounge at Chicago Union Station coach customers normally pay for an upgrade for the Legacy Club a separate waiting area at the station that has complementary snacks and beverages charging stations and board-ing ahead of other coach passengers For

SPRINGfrom Page 1

TIMEfrom Page 1

Members from 1200pm-300pm Mon-day through Friday for both weeks of Spring Break Boys and Girls ages 7-16 are invited to participate in the Indiana Pacers ldquoUpgrade Your Gamerdquo Basket-ball Clinic on April 3rd and 4th Indiana Pacers Basketball Clinics are an excel-lent way for boys and girls of all ages to upgrade their skills and have a blast at the same time The clinic cost of $80 includes a t-shirt and a ticket to a future Pacers home game

The Boys amp Girls Club of Noblesville pro-vides high-quality low-cost programs for youth members with the help of donors and sponsors Between the Club the Community Center and Camp Crosser we provide opportunities for members to enjoy activities and experiences that help shape character and offer new per-spectives We are dedicated to inspiring and enabling all young people to reach their full po-tential as productive caring responsible citi-zens by promoting leadership character health and physical development

Another part of the sentence I want-ed to look at is the word money One of the definitions of money is the assets property and resources owned by some-one or something

No matter how you define time or money one thing I learned over the last couple weeks is our local nonprofits here in Hamilton County work hard every day to support individuals in our community through time and money

The Westfield Chamber of Com-merce had the Share the Love Luncheon connecting the business community with local nonprofits in the area It was amazing to me to hear the responses af-terwards Most of the people who came up to me said I had no idea about these issues and needs The businesses and people attending also could not believe how much each nonprofit relied on one another Every person after the event re-sponded withhellip How do I get involved

My answer was ldquoTime is moneyrdquoAgain each of us have a different

definition of that saying My definition is simple if people have time in their busy lives find a way to give back We learned at that luncheon that volunteers were needed in most organizations Each of us treat time like money It is valuable and it is an important part of how we take care of our family It is an asset and re-source that we own

I challenge everyone to use their most valuable asset and give back That being time If you already do so share it Share it on social media and let oth-ers know how they can join you We are blessed to live in a place like Hamilton County and together we can give a voice to those who may not have one

If the perception of Hamilton County is that the streets are paved in gold than letrsquos find a way to make that true in the lives of each person in Hamilton County

I would be crazy not to say thank you to those who work for nonprofits each and every day Passion is a conta-gious thing I encourage everyone to go meet with a local nonprofit and talk to a board member or their executive direc-tor I would bet after that conversation that you would be ready to help that day because of the passion they bring

If you can remember one thing re-member this Time is money

See Aboard Page 3

Ronald E Campbell August 24 1940 - March 1 2017

Ronald E Campbell 76 of Noblesville passed away on Wednesday March 1 2017 at St Vincent Hospice in Indianapolis He was born on August 24 1940 to Eu-gene and Doris (Finnegan) Campbell in Guthrie Center Iowa

Ronald worked in security system sales and was a model railroader and avid reader He enjoyed camping and watching NASCAR

Ronald is survived by his wife Kathy mother Doris daughters Niki Joey Leah and Rachel son Chris brother Allen and grandchildren Marcus Hardt and Raquel

In addition to his father Eugene he was preceded in death by his brother Robert and niece Wendy

Services will be held at 10 am on Satur-day March 4 2017 at Randall amp Roberts Fu-neral Center 1685 Westfield Road in Nobles-ville with Rev Allen Campbell officiating

Condolences wwwrandallrobertscom

Donna L Clark November 7 1946 - March 2 2017

Donna L Clark 70 of Noblesville passed away peacefully at her home sur-rounded by loved ones on Thursday March 2 2017 She was born on November 7 1946 to James and Pearl (Herron) Trexler in Painesville Ohio Donna was a self-employed house cleaner

She is survived by her daughter Angela McGraw grandsons Lee McFarland Joseph Privett Jr Kevin McGraw and Kameron McGraw brothers Robert (Nancy) Trexler and Joe (Pam) Trex-ler sisters Joyce (Keith) Benefiel Alice (Ron) Beamon Sally Harmon Robin (Jeff) Souder and Linda (Scott) Weems and friends James McMichael and Robert Pollard

In addition to her parents Donna was preceded in death by her husband James Clark sister Barbara Lott and brother-in-law Mike Harmon

Services will be held at 1 pm on Monday March 6 2017 at Randall amp Rob-erts Funeral Center 1685 Westfield Road in Noblesville with visitation from 11 am to the time of service Rev Stanley R Sutton will of-ficiate Burial will be at Summit Lawn Ceme-tery in Westfield

Condolences wwwrandallrobertscom

Obituaries 3

Hamilton County

RepoRteR

Contact InformationPhone

317-408-5548

EmailHamiltonCoNorthReporterhotmailcom

Publisher Jeff JellisonHamiltonCoNorthReporterhotmailcom

317-408-5548

Editor Don JellisonHoosiermabaaolcom

317-773-2769

Sports Editor Richie HallRhall1977gmailcomTwitter Richie_Hall

Public NoticesPublicNoticesReadTheReportercom

765-365-2316

Web AddresswwwReadTheReportercom

Mailing AddressPO Box 190

Westfield IN 46074

ArrangementsCalling 11 am ndash 1 pm March 6Service 1 pm March 6Location Randall amp Roberts Funeral CenterCondolences wwwrandallrobertscom

ArrangementsService 10 am March 4Location Randall amp Roberts Funeral CenterCondolences wwwrandallrobertscom

the month of March Amtrak Hoosier State coach customers will enjoy complementary Legacy Club access a $20 value

Also for the month of March the Hoosier State train will include the only dome car in Amtrak service a Great Dome Built in 1955 by the Budd Company for the Great Northern Railway it carries the name ldquoOcean Viewrdquo Repainted in honor of Amtrakrsquos 40th anniversary it wears stripes comprised of equal width red white and

blue symbolic of Amtrak being Americarsquos Railroadreg It features an upper level with windows on all sides to provide passengers with panoramic views of spring in India-napolis and Chicago as well as the Hoosier scenery in between There is no extra cost as seats in the car are unreserved and avail-able on a first-come first-served basis Pas-sengers are encouraged to rotate in and out of the Great Dome to allow all to enjoy this unique experience

ABOARDfrom Page 2

4 News

The REPORTERMilestone Contractors plans to shift

traffic lanes on southbound Interstate 69 between 116th Street (Exit 205) and 106th Street (Exit 204) starting on Sat-urday night March 4 as part of the I-69 Major Moves 2020 construction project

Up to three lanes of southbound I-69 may be closed after 7 pm as crews paint

new lane markings and shift all lanes to the left to accommodate construction of an additional lane along the right shoul-der between the 116th Street entrance ramp to southbound I-69 and the new 106th Street exit ramp All lanes are expected to be open in the temporarily shifted configuration before 9 am on Sunday March 5

Southbound I-69 lanes shift starting tonight Beginning March 13 2017 and

continuing through Oct 13 2017 brush will be picked up on the same day as trash collection not the same time as trash collection but the same day Pick up is made on the street side only NO alleys Do NOT put brush in the street but place it in the space be-tween the street and the sidewalk All brush must be stacked in small piles no more than 4 feet in length and 18 inch-es in diameter Limb size should be no more than 4 inches in diameter

So you have a bigger pile of brush Solution Just call the Noblesville Street Department 317-776-6348 to schedule a special large brush pick up Now how is that for service No rea-son to not beautify your property with a spring cleanup and set the brush be-tween the curb and sidewalk for pick up on the same day as trash pickup DO NOT PUT THE BRUSH IN THE AL-LEY WAY BRUSH IS PICKED UP AT THE STREET SIDE only

What about the small stuff like leaves left over from fall

In the spring NO loose leaves will be picked up All leaves must be bagged in green biodegradable bags set next to the brush pick up site or placed in front of the house between the curb and side-walk Keep all yard waste away from storm drain sites to keep the drains open and flowing If the storm drains become blocked flooding can occur If you have a storm drain near your home ldquoadopt the drainrdquo and take care of it by raking leaves and trash away from the storm drain site It will mean positive water flow for your property and your neighbors

So get your supplies ready now

Pick up the free green biodegradable bags from City Hall front desk or Plan-ning Department Street Department just 3 blocks west of the Post Office on Pleasant Street Parks Department in Forest Park Inn Hamilton Co Hazard-ous Waste Station on Pleasant Street or the Fire Station in your area There is no charge and now you are ready to do your yard cleanup You have all the information to be a good citizen and follow the helpful suggestions for city pick up of yard materials That service is free alsohellipwell maybe not free but a service supported by your tax dol-lars Get your tax dollarsrsquo worth and take advantage of this great service It also makes the community look clean and healthy and ready for those warm breezes to follow

Note Fall leaf pick up begins Sept 18 and continues through Dec 15 Use those left-over spring green biodegradable bags in the fall Pick up is at the same location and day as in the spring No limit to the number of bagged leaves Loose leaves are messy and pick up does not begin until Oct 9 2017 It would be good to pick up a nice supply of green bags and bag it in the spring and the fall

Add a few nice flowers and enjoy The city is your partner is making your home an even more special place and you can be the great example for the neighborhood

Questions Call the Street Department 317-776-6348 Mayorrsquos Office 317-776-6324 Police Department (non-emergency) 317-776-6340 Hamilton Co Household Hazardous Waste Center 317-776-4005 Green Cycle 317-773-3350 Creative Com-post 317-776-2909 See you in the yard

OPPORTUNITYfrom Page 1

Tips to simplify spring cleaning(StatePoint) Itrsquos

the time of year to roll up your sleeves and do some spring cleaning Experts point out that itrsquos helpful to stream-line the tools you use to do the job and the tasks you seek to ac-complish

ldquoAn all-purpose cleaner and a tough degreasing agent can be used in so many ar-eas of the homerdquo says Jeff Devlin a licensed contractor whorsquos ap-peared on several home improvement television shows Devlinrsquos first tip look to reduce the number of products in your cleaning arsenal ldquoAlong with high-quality sprays and cloths I use one all-purpose cleaner that also con-tains degreasing ingredientsrdquo

Devlin along with Mean Green and its line of heavy-duty all-purpose cleaners offer these different strategies for critical areas of your home

bull Stove and range hoods While you should be cleaning these areas regular-ly after food preparation take this op-portunity to conduct a more thorough cleaning Spray cleaner directly on the mess for up to two minutes Wipe clean with a sponge or cloth Then rinse thor-oughly with clean water

bull Sinks and countertops Sinks and countertops can be a trap for food grease grime and soap scum Gener-ously spray non-porous surfaces with your cleaner then rinse with clean wa-ter

bull Stove exhaust filter The grease buildup that collects on the stoversquos ex-haust filter can be a tough nut to crack In a sink basin mix 8 ounces of a con-centrated multi-surface cleaner and 1 gallon of hot water and submerge the filter Place the filter in a sink or dish-pan and pour in concentrated cleaner to cover Allow the filter to soak for 30 minutes Drain the dishpan and rinse thoroughly with hot water

bull Floors Give your floors a mop-ping Mix 4 ounces of cleaning solution with 1 gallon of warm water Apply with mop or sponge

bull Garbage cans and diaper pails

Bags often leak nastiness into the bot-tom of the garbage can which can eas-ily be missed when quickly replacing the bag Turn your cleanserrsquos nozzle to spray and generously cover the can Wipe or brush any areas that have any residue Rinse thoroughly with clean water

bull Showers tubs and tile Use your cleaning agent at full strength and gen-erously spray surfaces directly Allow it to penetrate the soap scum for up to two minutes Do not allow to dry Wipe away with a coarse sponge or cloth Rinse thoroughly with clean water

bull Toilets Letrsquos face it This isnrsquot anyonersquos favorite job but it has to be done Turn that nozzle to spray and generously spray the outside of the toi-let Wipe clean with a paper towel then give a quick rinse

bull Patio For patios outdoor furni-ture concrete vinyl fences and siding use the same cleaner outdoors simply spray then wipe clean with a cloth or sponge and rinse surfaces with clean water While yoursquore at it consider re-moving grease and grime from tools engine parts tires sports gear and lawn equipment

For efficiency consider cleaning solutions that donrsquot require pre-clean-ing such as Mean Green Super Strength Cleaner amp Degreaser the strongest all-purpose cleaner available More tips for getting your spring to-dos complet-ed can be found at meangreendegreasercom

ldquoMake spring cleaning simple and effective by using smart strategies on every surface of your homerdquo said Devlin

Photo provided by west_photo - Fotoliacom

By RICHIE HALLReporter Sports EditorHamilton Southeastern and Carmel

advanced to the championship game ofSectional 8 Friday night after semi-finalwins at the Eric Clark Activity Center

In the first game the Royals took careof Anderson 68-47 The Greyhounds werenext taking on their old rival Noblesvilleand winning 62-44 Tonights championshipwill tip off at 7 pm

The Indians stayed with HSE for mostof the first quarter which ended with theRoyals ahead 14-13 Jack Davidson scoredeight points for Southeastern including two3-pointers and Chaz Birchfield added six

Anderson then took a 16-14 lead earlyin the second period but the Royals blastedoff after that outscoring the Indians 23-6 tocruise into halftime with a 37-22 advantageSix different HSE players scored in thesecond quarter with Aaron Etheringtongetting six points

Defensively I thought we were solidthe entire game said Royals coach BrianSatterfield I know once they got that lead16-14 we ran a play got the ball inside goto the foul line and from that point ondefensively we were solid

And then I thought our defense didsome things to create some offense for usand then the other aspect is we moved thebasketball when we did get to the offensiveend and had some good looks

Southeasterns lead gradually grew in thesecond half and the Royals never allowedAnderson to score more than fiveconsecutive points in the half HSEs largestrun of the second half came in the fourthquarter when it scored seven unansweredpoints (five points from Aaron Shank andtwo more from Etherington) and that rungave the Royals their largest lead of thegame at 62-38

Davidson scored 17 points forSoutheastern (21-5) with Birchfield adding13 and Etherington scoring 10 BirchfieldEtherington and Zach Mutchner all had fourrebounds Zach Gunn the Royals leadingscorer didnt play Satterfield that was aprecautionary measure

The first quarter of the Carmel-Noblesville game was a roller coaster TheHounds scored the first five points withLuke Heady hitting a 3-pointer and PJ Baronscoring off a rebound

The Millers answered that with eightstraight points of their own Rico Duncangot Noblesvilles first basket on a floaterNolan Ginther tied the game with a three-point play then Duncan drained a 3-pointerto put Noblesville up 8-5

Carmel came back finishing the periodon a 10-2 run to lead 15-10 Baron scoredeight points including two three-point playsand Heady scored off a steal

The Greyhounds started to take controlof the game in the second quarter slowly

making their way to a 28-18 lead byhalftime Baron scored five more points hefinished the first half a perfect 6-of-6 fromthe field

I thought we were patient offensivelyand really got good shots said Carmelcoach Scott Heady We got some greatlooks and we got a lot of shots around thebasket

Both teams scored 10 points in the thirdperiod The Millers cut Carmels lead to38-30 late in the quarter thanks toconsecutive baskets by Grant Gremel andMax Flinchum Baron ended the period witha layin to push the Greyhounds ahead 40-30

They hung around said Heady Theykind of kept it around eight nine and theydid enough to where it was a game We had

to make plays so give them credit they keptcoming back and made it a game

Heady and Jalen Whack both had a3-pointer in the third quarter and they eachmade another long-range shot in the fourthquarter with Whacks basket putting Carmelup 46-34 A late 3-pointer from Duncan keptNoblesville within 53-42 with 226 left butthe Greyhounds ended the game on a 9-2run Carmel is now 20-4 for the year

Baron finished the game with 20 pointson 7-of-9 shooting and also had sixrebounds Heady drained three 3-pointersfor 13 points John Michael Mulloy was allover the place with seven rebounds fiveassists and four blocked shots to go alongwith his seven points

He was good said Heady of Baron Ithought John Michael was good defensively

Luke gave us some scoring punch againtonight which is what we need withoutSterling

Duncan led the Millers with 10 pointsNoblesville had very balanced scoring withMcGwire Plumer adding nine Flinchum andGremel each scoring eight Nolan Gintheradded seven points and pulled fourrebounds

The Millers finished their season 12-13and graduate five seniors - Duncan PlumerFlinchum Ginther and Nick MillsNoblesville coach Brian McCauley spokewith pride about his senior class after thegame

Theyve done a lot for the program withCoach McCullough throughout their

Carmel HSE head to championship

Reporter photo by Kent Graham

Carmelrsquos Jalen Whack guards Noblesvillersquos McGwire Plumer during the Greyhounds-Millers sectional semi-final game Fridaynight at the Eric Clark Activity Center Turn to Page 7 to see more pictures

Sports 5

Sheridan was overwhelmed by Lapel79-29 in the first semi-final at Sectional 40Friday night at theBulldogs gym

Lapel thedefending Class 2Astate champion led17-4 after the firstquarter and 35-11 athalftime

Aidan Roatenscored seven points tolead the Blackhawkswith Jack Waitt

scoring six Roaten and Nick Burnell bothpulled three rebounds

Sheridan finished its season with a 9-15record

Lapel 79Sheridan 29

Sheridan FG FT TP PFCaleb Duke 0-1 0-0 0 0Jack Waitt 2-5 2-2 6 0Brody Perry 0-2 0-0 0 0Drake Delph 0-4 1-2 1 4Tommy Glidden 1-4 3-4 5 1Cam Weitzel 2-5 0-1 5 4Aidan Roaten 2-6 2-4 7 4Nicholas Burnell 0-1 0-0 0 1Kenny Burnell 0-1 0-0 0 1Tanner Swindle 1-3 3-7 5 1Totals 8-32 11-20 29 16Score by QuartersLapel 17 18 25 19 - 79Sheridan 4 7 10 8 - 29Sheridan 3-point shooting (2-18) Weitzel 1-4Roaten 1-2 Waitt 0-3 Perry 0-2 Glidden 0-2Swindle 0-2 Duke 0-1 Delph 0-1 K Burnell 0-1Sheridan rebounds (15) Roaten 3 N Burnell 3Waitt 2 Delph 2 Glidden 2 Swindle 2 Perry 1

Waitt

Hamilton Heights advanced to the championship at theClass 3A Marion sectional takingcare of Delta 51-33 in the secondFriday night semi-final

The Huskies got off to a fantasticstart leading the Eagles 15-1 after thefirst quarter Heights kept Delta atarms length for the remainder of thegame as it led 19-7 at halftime TheEagles cut the Huskies lead to 29-23by the end of the third period butHeights outscored Delta 22-10 in thefourth to easily win the game

Defensively thats the best weveplayed said Huskies coach Chad

Ballenger In fact those 33 points are the least Heights hasgiven up so far this season - its previous season-low wasthe 34 points it allowed Blackford in Tuesdays sectionalfirst round so the Huskies defense is playing well at the

right timeMax Wahl scored 15 points for Heights including three

3-pointers while Sterling Weatherford reached double-double territory with 11 points and 11 rebounds

Hes really stepped it up since hes been back and hesbeen healthy said Ballenger Im just happy that hes beinga leader on the court verbally and getting guys in the rightspots

As for Wahl Ballenger said he was huge on Fridayshooting the ball well I was pleased with Max tonight andthe show that he ran said the coach

The Huskies play Tipton at 730 pm tonight for thesectional championship The two teams played each otheron Jan 27 with the Blue Devils winning 56-41

Its a huge backyard rivalry probably what everybodywanted said Ballenger Itll be great from the fan perspec-tive Theyre on a nice run

Tipton has won eight of its last nine games while theHuskies now 11-12 are on a five-game winning streak

Heights 51 Delta 33Heights FG FT TP PFSterling Weatherford 4-12 3-6 11 2Max Wahl 5-9 2-2 15 3Caymn Lutz 3-4 1-2 7 2Tyler Wiltermood 3-3 1-1 7 4Austin Sauerteig 2-2 0-0 5 0Max Beale 0-2 0-0 0 1Drayden Thomas 0-2 0-0 0 1Noah Wallace 0-0 0-0 0 0Dawson Phifer 1-1 4-6 6 1Caleb Bean 0-0 0-0 0 0Michael Cross 0-0 0-0 0 0Owen Powell 0-0 0-0 0 0Totals 18-35 11-17 51 14Score by QuartersHeights 15 4 10 22 - 51Delta 1 6 16 10 - 33Heights 3-point shooting (4-6) Wahl 3-4 Sauerteig 1-1 Beale 0-1Heights rebounds (25) Weatherford 11 Thomas 3 Wahl 2 Lutz2 Wiltermood 2 Sauerteig 2 Phifer 1 Beale 1 Bean 1

Wahl

Huskies beat Delta will play Tipton for title

lsquoHawks fall to Lapelyounger years and then with me the pastthree years said McCauley Im proud ofthose guys They did something that wehadnt done as a program since CoachMcCulloughs 2010 team and thats advanceto the sectional semi-finals They took astep Im proud of them for that

FIRST SEMI-FINALSoutheastern 68

Anderson 47Southeastern FG FT TP PFJack Davidson 6-9 2-2 17 2Chaz Birchfield 4-7 5-7 13 1Aaron Etherington 3-12 4-4 10 3Connor Rotterman 1-2 0-0 2 2Noah Smith 1-1 3-4 5 1Aaron Shank 1-3 4-5 6 1Austin Holzum 1-5 0-0 3 2Nick Bowman 2-2 2-2 6 0Zach Mutchner 0-1 0-0 0 1Jack Habegger 1-1 2-2 4 0Mabor Majak 1-2 0-0 2 1Totals 21-45 22-26 68 14Score by QuartersAnderson 13 9 9 16 - 47Southeastern 14 23 12 19 - 68Southeastern 3-point shooting (4-16) Davidson3-6 Holzum 1-5 Etherington 0-3 Shank 0-1Majak 0-1Southeastern rebounds (25) Birchfield 4Etherington 4 Mutchner 4 Bowman 3 Davidson2 Shank 2 Holzum 1 Majak 1 team 4

SECOND SEMI-FINALCarmel 62

Noblesville 44Carmel FG FT TP PFCole Jenkins 3-6 0-0 7 1Luke Heady 4-6 2-3 13 1Jalen Whack 3-5 1-2 9 3PJ Baron 7-9 6-7 20 2John Michael Mulloy 2-2 3-6 7 2Britt Beery 0-0 0-0 0 0Eddie Gill 1-2 0-0 3 1Mike Pitz 0-0 1-2 1 0Alex Jackson 0-0 2-2 2 0Totals 20-30 15-22 62 10Carmel 3-point shooting (7-13) Heady 3-5Whack 2-3 Jenkins 1-3 Gill 1-1 Falender 0-1Carmel rebounds (23) Mulloy 7 Baron 6Jenkins 3 Pitz 3 Heady 2 Gill 1 Whack 1Noblesville FG FT TP PFRico Duncan 4-6 0-0 10 5Max Flinchum 3-7 2-2 8 0McGwire Plumer 4-6 1-2 9 3Nolan Ginther 3-10 1-1 7 3Grant Gremel 4-5 0-0 8 4Ryan Barnes 0-0 2-2 2 1Xavier Hines 0-1 0-0 0 2Nick Mills 0-1 0-0 0 2Totals 18-36 6-7 44 20Noblesville 3-point shooting (2-7) Duncan 2-2Flinchum 0-2 Plumer 0-2 Hines 0-1Noblesville rebounds (10) Ginther 4 Duncan 1Flinchum 1 Gremel 1 Hunes 1 Mills 1 team 1Score by QuartersCarmel 15 13 10 24 - 62Noblesville 10 8 10 16 - 44

CARMEL From Page 5

Courtesy John Harrellrsquos websitewwwjohnharrellnet

CLASS 4AEast Chicago CentralEast Chicago Central 74Hammond Morton 69Lake Central 53 Munster 40Michigan CityMerrillville 57 Michigan City 48Crown Point 78 Chesterton 66South Bend WashingtonPlymouth 40 Mishawaka 37 OTSouth Bend Adams 66 LaPorte

63 2OTElkhart CentralGoshen 65 Elkhart Memorial 56Warsaw 71 Elkhart Central 36Carroll (Fort Wayne)Fort Wayne North 67 Fort WayneNorthrop 47Fort Wayne Snider 50 Carroll(Fort Wayne) 41Fort Wayne WayneMuncie Central 44 HuntingtonNorth 36Homestead 60 Fort WayneWayne 54Lafayette JeffZionsville 66 Logansport 57McCutcheon 78 Kokomo 56CarmelHamilton Southeastern 68 Ander-son 47Carmel 62 Noblesville 44New CastleConnersville 65 Richmond 47New Castle 57 Greenfield-Central32North Central (Indianapolis)Lawrence North 70 IndianapolisTech 57North Central (Indianapolis) 81Indianapolis Cathedral 58Decatur CentralBen Davis 67 Decatur Central 60Indianapolis Roncalli 62 South-port 42PlainfieldBrownsburg 64 Plainfield 54Terre Haute South 69 Mooresville61Franklin CentralFranklin Central 57 Franklin 45Center Grove 56 Whiteland 39Bloomington NorthShelbyville 53 East Central 38Bloomington South 75 Blooming-ton North 60SeymourFloyd Central 44 Seymour 26New Albany 89 Bedford NorthLawrence 52Evansville NorthEvansville Reitz 71 EvansvilleHarrison 67Castle 89 Evansville North 53

Friday night sectional scores

Sports6

Sports 7

HamiltonSoutheasternrsquos ZachMutchner (right) hadfour rebounds for theRoyals during theirsectional win over

Anderson on FridayAt left is Austin

Holzum (13) while inthe background isMabor Majak (50)

Reporter photos by Kent Graham

LEFT Cole Jenkins takes a 3-point shot for CarmelABOVE Noblesvillersquos Rico Duncan is guarded by Carmelrsquos LukeHeady

Nick Bowman scored six points for Hamilton Southeastern in its Friday night win

Do You Have ACommunity

AnnouncementWedding BirthAnnouncement

AnniversaryShare It With The

CommunityContact the

Hamilton CountyReporter

Hamiltonconorthreporter

hotmailcom

or call317-408-5548

Hamilton CountyReporter

Hamilton CountyrsquosHometownNewspaper

Eastern ConferenceAtlantic W L PCT GBBoston 40 22 645 -Toronto 37 25 597 30New York 25 37 403 150Philadelphia 23 38 377 165Brooklyn 10 50 167 290Southeast W L PCT GBWashington 36 24 600 -Atlanta 34 27 557 25Miami 28 34 452 90Charlotte 26 35 426 105Orlando 23 39 371 140Central W L PCT GBCleveland 42 18 700 -Chicago 31 30 508 115Indiana 31 30 508 115Detroit 29 32 475 135Milwaukee 27 33 450 150

Western ConferenceNorthwest W L PCT GBUtah 38 24 613 -Oklahoma City 35 27 565 30Denver 28 33 459 95Portland 25 35 417 120Minnesota 25 36 410 125Southwest W L PCT GBSan Antonio 47 13 783 -Houston 43 19 694 50Memphis 36 26 581 120Dallas 25 36 410 225New Orleans 24 38 387 240Pacific W L PCT GBGolden State 50 11 820 -LA Clippers 36 25 590 140Sacramento 25 36 410 250Phoenix 20 42 323 305 LA Lakers 19 43 306 315

NBA standingsFridayrsquos games

Philadelphia 105 New York 102Toronto 114 Washington 106

Orlando 110 Miami 99Cleveland 135 Atlanta 130

Milwaukee 112 LA Clippers 101

Dallas 104 Memphis 100Utah 112 Brooklyn 97

Phoenix 118 Oklahoma City 111San Antonio 101 New Orleans 98 OT

Boston 115 LA Lakers 95

CLASS 3AHammond CivicLighthouse CPA 90 Kankakee Valley 62Griffith 69 Hammond Gavit 38Rensselaer CentralRensselaer Central 61 Wheeler 40Twin Lakes 60 Hanover Central 43JimtownSouth Bend St Joseph 42 Mishawaka Marian40Culver Academy 59 Jimtown 28MaconaquahWest Lafayette 55 Maconaquah 49Western 63 Peru 50

WawaseeWest Noble 42 Wawasee 38Fairfield 59 NorthWood 51GarrettNew Haven 67 Fort Wayne Dwenger 51Angola 46 Garrett 31BellmontFort Wayne Luers 71 Mississinewa 50Columbia City 59 Norwell 50MarionTipton 42 Yorktown 17Hamilton Heights 51 Delta 33GreencastleTri-West 66 Crawfordsville 53Lebanon 55 Western Boone 35EdgewoodEdgewood 46 Sullivan 42Northview 63 Owen Valley 43Brebeuf JesuitIndianapolis Chatard 51 New Palestine 48Indianapolis Attucks 65 Indianapolis Manual53DanvilleDanville 88 Indianapolis Northwest 72Beech Grove 79 Indianapolis Ritter 60GreensburgGreensburg 63 Madison 60 OTLawrenceburg 52 Rushville 42WashingtonPike Central 57 Jasper 43Vincennes Lincoln 59 Princeton 49BoonvilleMount Vernon (Posey) 62 Heritage Hills 59Evansville Bosse 82 Evansville Memorial 76

CLASS 2AGary RooseveltGary Roosevelt 36 Hammond Noll 34

River Forest 57 Lake Station 49WinamacDelphi 50 North Judson 31Marquette Catholic 76 Knox 52WestviewLaVille 57 Bremen 38Central Noble 46 Westview 42WoodlanChurubusco 75 Woodlan 60Eastside 58 Fort Wayne Canterbury 56 3OTOak HillManchester 59 Rochester 36Southwood 60 Oak Hill 52Fountain CentralCovington 68 Rossville 62Fountain Central 56 Carroll (Flora) 35TaylorMadison-Grant 49 Taylor 46Eastern (Greentown) 47 Eastbrook 38LapelLapel 79 Sheridan 29Frankton 77 Monroe Central 53HagerstownUnion County 57 Cambridge City Lincoln 41Northeastern 59 Hagerstown 55 OTTriton CentralShenandoah 66 Irvington Prep Academy 38Indianapolis Howe 101 Knightstown 47SpeedwaySpeedway 65 Indianapolis Broad Ripple 62Heritage Christian 49 Indianapolis Scecina46South PutnamMonrovia 45 South Putnam 40Cloverdale 61 North Putnam 51South RipleySouth Ripley 40 Southwestern (Hanover) 39Milan 47 North Decatur 45Crawford CountyProvidence 65 Paoli 46Crawford County 41 Clarksville 38Eastern GreeneBarr-Reeve 62 Mitchell 43South Knox 50 North Knox 38SouthridgeEvansville Mater Dei 64 South Spencer 58Forest Park 31 Tell City 27

CLASS 1AKoutsGary 21st Century 82 Washington Twp 53Westville 68 LaCrosse 56

CastonTri-County 66 Covenant Christian (DeMotte)46South Newton 45 Pioneer 39TritonTriton 58 Culver 40Oregon-Davis 63 Argos 55Bethany ChristianFort Wayne Blackhawk 87 Lakeland Christian51Lakewood Park 64 Hamilton 34North VermillionNorth Vermillion 47 Attica 43Riverton Parke 58 Rockville 56Tri-CentralLafayette Central Catholic 83 Clinton Central43Clinton Prairie 60 Faith Christian 52Wes-DelWes-Del 54 Daleville 44Liberty Christian 63 Cowan 46Blue RiverUnion (Modoc) 59 Union City 57Seton Catholic 71 Blue River 61White River ValleyEminence 62 White River Valley 38Shakamak 65 Bloomfield 62UniversityBethesda Christian 52 Indiana Deaf 46Indianapolis Tindley 80 Indiana Math ampScience 58EdinburghMorristown 59 Greenwood Christian 50Indianapolis Lutheran 63 Central Christian 59South DecaturHauser 75 Waldron 48Oldenburg Academy 67 South Decatur 31BordenBorden 61 Crothersville 44West Washington 51 Trinity Lutheran 40New WashingtonNew Washington 50 Lanesville 43Christian Academy 53 South Central(Elizabeth) 46North DaviessShoals 44 Washington Catholic 18Loogootee 44 North Daviess 43Wood MemorialWood Memorial 76 Evansville Day 43Northeast Dubois 55 Tecumseh 47NACA TournamentColumbus Christian 57 Louisiana Christian41

SCORES From Page 6

Sports8

Ronald E Campbell August 24 1940 - March 1 2017

Ronald E Campbell 76 of Noblesville passed away on Wednesday March 1 2017 at St Vincent Hospice in Indianapolis He was born on August 24 1940 to Eu-gene and Doris (Finnegan) Campbell in Guthrie Center Iowa

Ronald worked in security system sales and was a model railroader and avid reader He enjoyed camping and watching NASCAR

Ronald is survived by his wife Kathy mother Doris daughters Niki Joey Leah and Rachel son Chris brother Allen and grandchildren Marcus Hardt and Raquel

In addition to his father Eugene he was preceded in death by his brother Robert and niece Wendy

Services will be held at 10 am on Satur-day March 4 2017 at Randall amp Roberts Fu-neral Center 1685 Westfield Road in Nobles-ville with Rev Allen Campbell officiating

Condolences wwwrandallrobertscom

Donna L Clark November 7 1946 - March 2 2017

Donna L Clark 70 of Noblesville passed away peacefully at her home sur-rounded by loved ones on Thursday March 2 2017 She was born on November 7 1946 to James and Pearl (Herron) Trexler in Painesville Ohio Donna was a self-employed house cleaner

She is survived by her daughter Angela McGraw grandsons Lee McFarland Joseph Privett Jr Kevin McGraw and Kameron McGraw brothers Robert (Nancy) Trexler and Joe (Pam) Trex-ler sisters Joyce (Keith) Benefiel Alice (Ron) Beamon Sally Harmon Robin (Jeff) Souder and Linda (Scott) Weems and friends James McMichael and Robert Pollard

In addition to her parents Donna was preceded in death by her husband James Clark sister Barbara Lott and brother-in-law Mike Harmon

Services will be held at 1 pm on Monday March 6 2017 at Randall amp Rob-erts Funeral Center 1685 Westfield Road in Noblesville with visitation from 11 am to the time of service Rev Stanley R Sutton will of-ficiate Burial will be at Summit Lawn Ceme-tery in Westfield

Condolences wwwrandallrobertscom

Obituaries 3

Hamilton County

RepoRteR

Contact InformationPhone

317-408-5548

EmailHamiltonCoNorthReporterhotmailcom

Publisher Jeff JellisonHamiltonCoNorthReporterhotmailcom

317-408-5548

Editor Don JellisonHoosiermabaaolcom

317-773-2769

Sports Editor Richie HallRhall1977gmailcomTwitter Richie_Hall

Public NoticesPublicNoticesReadTheReportercom

765-365-2316

Web AddresswwwReadTheReportercom

Mailing AddressPO Box 190

Westfield IN 46074

ArrangementsCalling 11 am ndash 1 pm March 6Service 1 pm March 6Location Randall amp Roberts Funeral CenterCondolences wwwrandallrobertscom

ArrangementsService 10 am March 4Location Randall amp Roberts Funeral CenterCondolences wwwrandallrobertscom

the month of March Amtrak Hoosier State coach customers will enjoy complementary Legacy Club access a $20 value

Also for the month of March the Hoosier State train will include the only dome car in Amtrak service a Great Dome Built in 1955 by the Budd Company for the Great Northern Railway it carries the name ldquoOcean Viewrdquo Repainted in honor of Amtrakrsquos 40th anniversary it wears stripes comprised of equal width red white and

blue symbolic of Amtrak being Americarsquos Railroadreg It features an upper level with windows on all sides to provide passengers with panoramic views of spring in India-napolis and Chicago as well as the Hoosier scenery in between There is no extra cost as seats in the car are unreserved and avail-able on a first-come first-served basis Pas-sengers are encouraged to rotate in and out of the Great Dome to allow all to enjoy this unique experience

ABOARDfrom Page 2

4 News

The REPORTERMilestone Contractors plans to shift

traffic lanes on southbound Interstate 69 between 116th Street (Exit 205) and 106th Street (Exit 204) starting on Sat-urday night March 4 as part of the I-69 Major Moves 2020 construction project

Up to three lanes of southbound I-69 may be closed after 7 pm as crews paint

new lane markings and shift all lanes to the left to accommodate construction of an additional lane along the right shoul-der between the 116th Street entrance ramp to southbound I-69 and the new 106th Street exit ramp All lanes are expected to be open in the temporarily shifted configuration before 9 am on Sunday March 5

Southbound I-69 lanes shift starting tonight Beginning March 13 2017 and

continuing through Oct 13 2017 brush will be picked up on the same day as trash collection not the same time as trash collection but the same day Pick up is made on the street side only NO alleys Do NOT put brush in the street but place it in the space be-tween the street and the sidewalk All brush must be stacked in small piles no more than 4 feet in length and 18 inch-es in diameter Limb size should be no more than 4 inches in diameter

So you have a bigger pile of brush Solution Just call the Noblesville Street Department 317-776-6348 to schedule a special large brush pick up Now how is that for service No rea-son to not beautify your property with a spring cleanup and set the brush be-tween the curb and sidewalk for pick up on the same day as trash pickup DO NOT PUT THE BRUSH IN THE AL-LEY WAY BRUSH IS PICKED UP AT THE STREET SIDE only

What about the small stuff like leaves left over from fall

In the spring NO loose leaves will be picked up All leaves must be bagged in green biodegradable bags set next to the brush pick up site or placed in front of the house between the curb and side-walk Keep all yard waste away from storm drain sites to keep the drains open and flowing If the storm drains become blocked flooding can occur If you have a storm drain near your home ldquoadopt the drainrdquo and take care of it by raking leaves and trash away from the storm drain site It will mean positive water flow for your property and your neighbors

So get your supplies ready now

Pick up the free green biodegradable bags from City Hall front desk or Plan-ning Department Street Department just 3 blocks west of the Post Office on Pleasant Street Parks Department in Forest Park Inn Hamilton Co Hazard-ous Waste Station on Pleasant Street or the Fire Station in your area There is no charge and now you are ready to do your yard cleanup You have all the information to be a good citizen and follow the helpful suggestions for city pick up of yard materials That service is free alsohellipwell maybe not free but a service supported by your tax dol-lars Get your tax dollarsrsquo worth and take advantage of this great service It also makes the community look clean and healthy and ready for those warm breezes to follow

Note Fall leaf pick up begins Sept 18 and continues through Dec 15 Use those left-over spring green biodegradable bags in the fall Pick up is at the same location and day as in the spring No limit to the number of bagged leaves Loose leaves are messy and pick up does not begin until Oct 9 2017 It would be good to pick up a nice supply of green bags and bag it in the spring and the fall

Add a few nice flowers and enjoy The city is your partner is making your home an even more special place and you can be the great example for the neighborhood

Questions Call the Street Department 317-776-6348 Mayorrsquos Office 317-776-6324 Police Department (non-emergency) 317-776-6340 Hamilton Co Household Hazardous Waste Center 317-776-4005 Green Cycle 317-773-3350 Creative Com-post 317-776-2909 See you in the yard

OPPORTUNITYfrom Page 1

Tips to simplify spring cleaning(StatePoint) Itrsquos

the time of year to roll up your sleeves and do some spring cleaning Experts point out that itrsquos helpful to stream-line the tools you use to do the job and the tasks you seek to ac-complish

ldquoAn all-purpose cleaner and a tough degreasing agent can be used in so many ar-eas of the homerdquo says Jeff Devlin a licensed contractor whorsquos ap-peared on several home improvement television shows Devlinrsquos first tip look to reduce the number of products in your cleaning arsenal ldquoAlong with high-quality sprays and cloths I use one all-purpose cleaner that also con-tains degreasing ingredientsrdquo

Devlin along with Mean Green and its line of heavy-duty all-purpose cleaners offer these different strategies for critical areas of your home

bull Stove and range hoods While you should be cleaning these areas regular-ly after food preparation take this op-portunity to conduct a more thorough cleaning Spray cleaner directly on the mess for up to two minutes Wipe clean with a sponge or cloth Then rinse thor-oughly with clean water

bull Sinks and countertops Sinks and countertops can be a trap for food grease grime and soap scum Gener-ously spray non-porous surfaces with your cleaner then rinse with clean wa-ter

bull Stove exhaust filter The grease buildup that collects on the stoversquos ex-haust filter can be a tough nut to crack In a sink basin mix 8 ounces of a con-centrated multi-surface cleaner and 1 gallon of hot water and submerge the filter Place the filter in a sink or dish-pan and pour in concentrated cleaner to cover Allow the filter to soak for 30 minutes Drain the dishpan and rinse thoroughly with hot water

bull Floors Give your floors a mop-ping Mix 4 ounces of cleaning solution with 1 gallon of warm water Apply with mop or sponge

bull Garbage cans and diaper pails

Bags often leak nastiness into the bot-tom of the garbage can which can eas-ily be missed when quickly replacing the bag Turn your cleanserrsquos nozzle to spray and generously cover the can Wipe or brush any areas that have any residue Rinse thoroughly with clean water

bull Showers tubs and tile Use your cleaning agent at full strength and gen-erously spray surfaces directly Allow it to penetrate the soap scum for up to two minutes Do not allow to dry Wipe away with a coarse sponge or cloth Rinse thoroughly with clean water

bull Toilets Letrsquos face it This isnrsquot anyonersquos favorite job but it has to be done Turn that nozzle to spray and generously spray the outside of the toi-let Wipe clean with a paper towel then give a quick rinse

bull Patio For patios outdoor furni-ture concrete vinyl fences and siding use the same cleaner outdoors simply spray then wipe clean with a cloth or sponge and rinse surfaces with clean water While yoursquore at it consider re-moving grease and grime from tools engine parts tires sports gear and lawn equipment

For efficiency consider cleaning solutions that donrsquot require pre-clean-ing such as Mean Green Super Strength Cleaner amp Degreaser the strongest all-purpose cleaner available More tips for getting your spring to-dos complet-ed can be found at meangreendegreasercom

ldquoMake spring cleaning simple and effective by using smart strategies on every surface of your homerdquo said Devlin

Photo provided by west_photo - Fotoliacom

By RICHIE HALLReporter Sports EditorHamilton Southeastern and Carmel

advanced to the championship game ofSectional 8 Friday night after semi-finalwins at the Eric Clark Activity Center

In the first game the Royals took careof Anderson 68-47 The Greyhounds werenext taking on their old rival Noblesvilleand winning 62-44 Tonights championshipwill tip off at 7 pm

The Indians stayed with HSE for mostof the first quarter which ended with theRoyals ahead 14-13 Jack Davidson scoredeight points for Southeastern including two3-pointers and Chaz Birchfield added six

Anderson then took a 16-14 lead earlyin the second period but the Royals blastedoff after that outscoring the Indians 23-6 tocruise into halftime with a 37-22 advantageSix different HSE players scored in thesecond quarter with Aaron Etheringtongetting six points

Defensively I thought we were solidthe entire game said Royals coach BrianSatterfield I know once they got that lead16-14 we ran a play got the ball inside goto the foul line and from that point ondefensively we were solid

And then I thought our defense didsome things to create some offense for usand then the other aspect is we moved thebasketball when we did get to the offensiveend and had some good looks

Southeasterns lead gradually grew in thesecond half and the Royals never allowedAnderson to score more than fiveconsecutive points in the half HSEs largestrun of the second half came in the fourthquarter when it scored seven unansweredpoints (five points from Aaron Shank andtwo more from Etherington) and that rungave the Royals their largest lead of thegame at 62-38

Davidson scored 17 points forSoutheastern (21-5) with Birchfield adding13 and Etherington scoring 10 BirchfieldEtherington and Zach Mutchner all had fourrebounds Zach Gunn the Royals leadingscorer didnt play Satterfield that was aprecautionary measure

The first quarter of the Carmel-Noblesville game was a roller coaster TheHounds scored the first five points withLuke Heady hitting a 3-pointer and PJ Baronscoring off a rebound

The Millers answered that with eightstraight points of their own Rico Duncangot Noblesvilles first basket on a floaterNolan Ginther tied the game with a three-point play then Duncan drained a 3-pointerto put Noblesville up 8-5

Carmel came back finishing the periodon a 10-2 run to lead 15-10 Baron scoredeight points including two three-point playsand Heady scored off a steal

The Greyhounds started to take controlof the game in the second quarter slowly

making their way to a 28-18 lead byhalftime Baron scored five more points hefinished the first half a perfect 6-of-6 fromthe field

I thought we were patient offensivelyand really got good shots said Carmelcoach Scott Heady We got some greatlooks and we got a lot of shots around thebasket

Both teams scored 10 points in the thirdperiod The Millers cut Carmels lead to38-30 late in the quarter thanks toconsecutive baskets by Grant Gremel andMax Flinchum Baron ended the period witha layin to push the Greyhounds ahead 40-30

They hung around said Heady Theykind of kept it around eight nine and theydid enough to where it was a game We had

to make plays so give them credit they keptcoming back and made it a game

Heady and Jalen Whack both had a3-pointer in the third quarter and they eachmade another long-range shot in the fourthquarter with Whacks basket putting Carmelup 46-34 A late 3-pointer from Duncan keptNoblesville within 53-42 with 226 left butthe Greyhounds ended the game on a 9-2run Carmel is now 20-4 for the year

Baron finished the game with 20 pointson 7-of-9 shooting and also had sixrebounds Heady drained three 3-pointersfor 13 points John Michael Mulloy was allover the place with seven rebounds fiveassists and four blocked shots to go alongwith his seven points

He was good said Heady of Baron Ithought John Michael was good defensively

Luke gave us some scoring punch againtonight which is what we need withoutSterling

Duncan led the Millers with 10 pointsNoblesville had very balanced scoring withMcGwire Plumer adding nine Flinchum andGremel each scoring eight Nolan Gintheradded seven points and pulled fourrebounds

The Millers finished their season 12-13and graduate five seniors - Duncan PlumerFlinchum Ginther and Nick MillsNoblesville coach Brian McCauley spokewith pride about his senior class after thegame

Theyve done a lot for the program withCoach McCullough throughout their

Carmel HSE head to championship

Reporter photo by Kent Graham

Carmelrsquos Jalen Whack guards Noblesvillersquos McGwire Plumer during the Greyhounds-Millers sectional semi-final game Fridaynight at the Eric Clark Activity Center Turn to Page 7 to see more pictures

Sports 5

Sheridan was overwhelmed by Lapel79-29 in the first semi-final at Sectional 40Friday night at theBulldogs gym

Lapel thedefending Class 2Astate champion led17-4 after the firstquarter and 35-11 athalftime

Aidan Roatenscored seven points tolead the Blackhawkswith Jack Waitt

scoring six Roaten and Nick Burnell bothpulled three rebounds

Sheridan finished its season with a 9-15record

Lapel 79Sheridan 29

Sheridan FG FT TP PFCaleb Duke 0-1 0-0 0 0Jack Waitt 2-5 2-2 6 0Brody Perry 0-2 0-0 0 0Drake Delph 0-4 1-2 1 4Tommy Glidden 1-4 3-4 5 1Cam Weitzel 2-5 0-1 5 4Aidan Roaten 2-6 2-4 7 4Nicholas Burnell 0-1 0-0 0 1Kenny Burnell 0-1 0-0 0 1Tanner Swindle 1-3 3-7 5 1Totals 8-32 11-20 29 16Score by QuartersLapel 17 18 25 19 - 79Sheridan 4 7 10 8 - 29Sheridan 3-point shooting (2-18) Weitzel 1-4Roaten 1-2 Waitt 0-3 Perry 0-2 Glidden 0-2Swindle 0-2 Duke 0-1 Delph 0-1 K Burnell 0-1Sheridan rebounds (15) Roaten 3 N Burnell 3Waitt 2 Delph 2 Glidden 2 Swindle 2 Perry 1

Waitt

Hamilton Heights advanced to the championship at theClass 3A Marion sectional takingcare of Delta 51-33 in the secondFriday night semi-final

The Huskies got off to a fantasticstart leading the Eagles 15-1 after thefirst quarter Heights kept Delta atarms length for the remainder of thegame as it led 19-7 at halftime TheEagles cut the Huskies lead to 29-23by the end of the third period butHeights outscored Delta 22-10 in thefourth to easily win the game

Defensively thats the best weveplayed said Huskies coach Chad

Ballenger In fact those 33 points are the least Heights hasgiven up so far this season - its previous season-low wasthe 34 points it allowed Blackford in Tuesdays sectionalfirst round so the Huskies defense is playing well at the

right timeMax Wahl scored 15 points for Heights including three

3-pointers while Sterling Weatherford reached double-double territory with 11 points and 11 rebounds

Hes really stepped it up since hes been back and hesbeen healthy said Ballenger Im just happy that hes beinga leader on the court verbally and getting guys in the rightspots

As for Wahl Ballenger said he was huge on Fridayshooting the ball well I was pleased with Max tonight andthe show that he ran said the coach

The Huskies play Tipton at 730 pm tonight for thesectional championship The two teams played each otheron Jan 27 with the Blue Devils winning 56-41

Its a huge backyard rivalry probably what everybodywanted said Ballenger Itll be great from the fan perspec-tive Theyre on a nice run

Tipton has won eight of its last nine games while theHuskies now 11-12 are on a five-game winning streak

Heights 51 Delta 33Heights FG FT TP PFSterling Weatherford 4-12 3-6 11 2Max Wahl 5-9 2-2 15 3Caymn Lutz 3-4 1-2 7 2Tyler Wiltermood 3-3 1-1 7 4Austin Sauerteig 2-2 0-0 5 0Max Beale 0-2 0-0 0 1Drayden Thomas 0-2 0-0 0 1Noah Wallace 0-0 0-0 0 0Dawson Phifer 1-1 4-6 6 1Caleb Bean 0-0 0-0 0 0Michael Cross 0-0 0-0 0 0Owen Powell 0-0 0-0 0 0Totals 18-35 11-17 51 14Score by QuartersHeights 15 4 10 22 - 51Delta 1 6 16 10 - 33Heights 3-point shooting (4-6) Wahl 3-4 Sauerteig 1-1 Beale 0-1Heights rebounds (25) Weatherford 11 Thomas 3 Wahl 2 Lutz2 Wiltermood 2 Sauerteig 2 Phifer 1 Beale 1 Bean 1

Wahl

Huskies beat Delta will play Tipton for title

lsquoHawks fall to Lapelyounger years and then with me the pastthree years said McCauley Im proud ofthose guys They did something that wehadnt done as a program since CoachMcCulloughs 2010 team and thats advanceto the sectional semi-finals They took astep Im proud of them for that

FIRST SEMI-FINALSoutheastern 68

Anderson 47Southeastern FG FT TP PFJack Davidson 6-9 2-2 17 2Chaz Birchfield 4-7 5-7 13 1Aaron Etherington 3-12 4-4 10 3Connor Rotterman 1-2 0-0 2 2Noah Smith 1-1 3-4 5 1Aaron Shank 1-3 4-5 6 1Austin Holzum 1-5 0-0 3 2Nick Bowman 2-2 2-2 6 0Zach Mutchner 0-1 0-0 0 1Jack Habegger 1-1 2-2 4 0Mabor Majak 1-2 0-0 2 1Totals 21-45 22-26 68 14Score by QuartersAnderson 13 9 9 16 - 47Southeastern 14 23 12 19 - 68Southeastern 3-point shooting (4-16) Davidson3-6 Holzum 1-5 Etherington 0-3 Shank 0-1Majak 0-1Southeastern rebounds (25) Birchfield 4Etherington 4 Mutchner 4 Bowman 3 Davidson2 Shank 2 Holzum 1 Majak 1 team 4

SECOND SEMI-FINALCarmel 62

Noblesville 44Carmel FG FT TP PFCole Jenkins 3-6 0-0 7 1Luke Heady 4-6 2-3 13 1Jalen Whack 3-5 1-2 9 3PJ Baron 7-9 6-7 20 2John Michael Mulloy 2-2 3-6 7 2Britt Beery 0-0 0-0 0 0Eddie Gill 1-2 0-0 3 1Mike Pitz 0-0 1-2 1 0Alex Jackson 0-0 2-2 2 0Totals 20-30 15-22 62 10Carmel 3-point shooting (7-13) Heady 3-5Whack 2-3 Jenkins 1-3 Gill 1-1 Falender 0-1Carmel rebounds (23) Mulloy 7 Baron 6Jenkins 3 Pitz 3 Heady 2 Gill 1 Whack 1Noblesville FG FT TP PFRico Duncan 4-6 0-0 10 5Max Flinchum 3-7 2-2 8 0McGwire Plumer 4-6 1-2 9 3Nolan Ginther 3-10 1-1 7 3Grant Gremel 4-5 0-0 8 4Ryan Barnes 0-0 2-2 2 1Xavier Hines 0-1 0-0 0 2Nick Mills 0-1 0-0 0 2Totals 18-36 6-7 44 20Noblesville 3-point shooting (2-7) Duncan 2-2Flinchum 0-2 Plumer 0-2 Hines 0-1Noblesville rebounds (10) Ginther 4 Duncan 1Flinchum 1 Gremel 1 Hunes 1 Mills 1 team 1Score by QuartersCarmel 15 13 10 24 - 62Noblesville 10 8 10 16 - 44

CARMEL From Page 5

Courtesy John Harrellrsquos websitewwwjohnharrellnet

CLASS 4AEast Chicago CentralEast Chicago Central 74Hammond Morton 69Lake Central 53 Munster 40Michigan CityMerrillville 57 Michigan City 48Crown Point 78 Chesterton 66South Bend WashingtonPlymouth 40 Mishawaka 37 OTSouth Bend Adams 66 LaPorte

63 2OTElkhart CentralGoshen 65 Elkhart Memorial 56Warsaw 71 Elkhart Central 36Carroll (Fort Wayne)Fort Wayne North 67 Fort WayneNorthrop 47Fort Wayne Snider 50 Carroll(Fort Wayne) 41Fort Wayne WayneMuncie Central 44 HuntingtonNorth 36Homestead 60 Fort WayneWayne 54Lafayette JeffZionsville 66 Logansport 57McCutcheon 78 Kokomo 56CarmelHamilton Southeastern 68 Ander-son 47Carmel 62 Noblesville 44New CastleConnersville 65 Richmond 47New Castle 57 Greenfield-Central32North Central (Indianapolis)Lawrence North 70 IndianapolisTech 57North Central (Indianapolis) 81Indianapolis Cathedral 58Decatur CentralBen Davis 67 Decatur Central 60Indianapolis Roncalli 62 South-port 42PlainfieldBrownsburg 64 Plainfield 54Terre Haute South 69 Mooresville61Franklin CentralFranklin Central 57 Franklin 45Center Grove 56 Whiteland 39Bloomington NorthShelbyville 53 East Central 38Bloomington South 75 Blooming-ton North 60SeymourFloyd Central 44 Seymour 26New Albany 89 Bedford NorthLawrence 52Evansville NorthEvansville Reitz 71 EvansvilleHarrison 67Castle 89 Evansville North 53

Friday night sectional scores

Sports6

Sports 7

HamiltonSoutheasternrsquos ZachMutchner (right) hadfour rebounds for theRoyals during theirsectional win over

Anderson on FridayAt left is Austin

Holzum (13) while inthe background isMabor Majak (50)

Reporter photos by Kent Graham

LEFT Cole Jenkins takes a 3-point shot for CarmelABOVE Noblesvillersquos Rico Duncan is guarded by Carmelrsquos LukeHeady

Nick Bowman scored six points for Hamilton Southeastern in its Friday night win

Do You Have ACommunity

AnnouncementWedding BirthAnnouncement

AnniversaryShare It With The

CommunityContact the

Hamilton CountyReporter

Hamiltonconorthreporter

hotmailcom

or call317-408-5548

Hamilton CountyReporter

Hamilton CountyrsquosHometownNewspaper

Eastern ConferenceAtlantic W L PCT GBBoston 40 22 645 -Toronto 37 25 597 30New York 25 37 403 150Philadelphia 23 38 377 165Brooklyn 10 50 167 290Southeast W L PCT GBWashington 36 24 600 -Atlanta 34 27 557 25Miami 28 34 452 90Charlotte 26 35 426 105Orlando 23 39 371 140Central W L PCT GBCleveland 42 18 700 -Chicago 31 30 508 115Indiana 31 30 508 115Detroit 29 32 475 135Milwaukee 27 33 450 150

Western ConferenceNorthwest W L PCT GBUtah 38 24 613 -Oklahoma City 35 27 565 30Denver 28 33 459 95Portland 25 35 417 120Minnesota 25 36 410 125Southwest W L PCT GBSan Antonio 47 13 783 -Houston 43 19 694 50Memphis 36 26 581 120Dallas 25 36 410 225New Orleans 24 38 387 240Pacific W L PCT GBGolden State 50 11 820 -LA Clippers 36 25 590 140Sacramento 25 36 410 250Phoenix 20 42 323 305 LA Lakers 19 43 306 315

NBA standingsFridayrsquos games

Philadelphia 105 New York 102Toronto 114 Washington 106

Orlando 110 Miami 99Cleveland 135 Atlanta 130

Milwaukee 112 LA Clippers 101

Dallas 104 Memphis 100Utah 112 Brooklyn 97

Phoenix 118 Oklahoma City 111San Antonio 101 New Orleans 98 OT

Boston 115 LA Lakers 95

CLASS 3AHammond CivicLighthouse CPA 90 Kankakee Valley 62Griffith 69 Hammond Gavit 38Rensselaer CentralRensselaer Central 61 Wheeler 40Twin Lakes 60 Hanover Central 43JimtownSouth Bend St Joseph 42 Mishawaka Marian40Culver Academy 59 Jimtown 28MaconaquahWest Lafayette 55 Maconaquah 49Western 63 Peru 50

WawaseeWest Noble 42 Wawasee 38Fairfield 59 NorthWood 51GarrettNew Haven 67 Fort Wayne Dwenger 51Angola 46 Garrett 31BellmontFort Wayne Luers 71 Mississinewa 50Columbia City 59 Norwell 50MarionTipton 42 Yorktown 17Hamilton Heights 51 Delta 33GreencastleTri-West 66 Crawfordsville 53Lebanon 55 Western Boone 35EdgewoodEdgewood 46 Sullivan 42Northview 63 Owen Valley 43Brebeuf JesuitIndianapolis Chatard 51 New Palestine 48Indianapolis Attucks 65 Indianapolis Manual53DanvilleDanville 88 Indianapolis Northwest 72Beech Grove 79 Indianapolis Ritter 60GreensburgGreensburg 63 Madison 60 OTLawrenceburg 52 Rushville 42WashingtonPike Central 57 Jasper 43Vincennes Lincoln 59 Princeton 49BoonvilleMount Vernon (Posey) 62 Heritage Hills 59Evansville Bosse 82 Evansville Memorial 76

CLASS 2AGary RooseveltGary Roosevelt 36 Hammond Noll 34

River Forest 57 Lake Station 49WinamacDelphi 50 North Judson 31Marquette Catholic 76 Knox 52WestviewLaVille 57 Bremen 38Central Noble 46 Westview 42WoodlanChurubusco 75 Woodlan 60Eastside 58 Fort Wayne Canterbury 56 3OTOak HillManchester 59 Rochester 36Southwood 60 Oak Hill 52Fountain CentralCovington 68 Rossville 62Fountain Central 56 Carroll (Flora) 35TaylorMadison-Grant 49 Taylor 46Eastern (Greentown) 47 Eastbrook 38LapelLapel 79 Sheridan 29Frankton 77 Monroe Central 53HagerstownUnion County 57 Cambridge City Lincoln 41Northeastern 59 Hagerstown 55 OTTriton CentralShenandoah 66 Irvington Prep Academy 38Indianapolis Howe 101 Knightstown 47SpeedwaySpeedway 65 Indianapolis Broad Ripple 62Heritage Christian 49 Indianapolis Scecina46South PutnamMonrovia 45 South Putnam 40Cloverdale 61 North Putnam 51South RipleySouth Ripley 40 Southwestern (Hanover) 39Milan 47 North Decatur 45Crawford CountyProvidence 65 Paoli 46Crawford County 41 Clarksville 38Eastern GreeneBarr-Reeve 62 Mitchell 43South Knox 50 North Knox 38SouthridgeEvansville Mater Dei 64 South Spencer 58Forest Park 31 Tell City 27

CLASS 1AKoutsGary 21st Century 82 Washington Twp 53Westville 68 LaCrosse 56

CastonTri-County 66 Covenant Christian (DeMotte)46South Newton 45 Pioneer 39TritonTriton 58 Culver 40Oregon-Davis 63 Argos 55Bethany ChristianFort Wayne Blackhawk 87 Lakeland Christian51Lakewood Park 64 Hamilton 34North VermillionNorth Vermillion 47 Attica 43Riverton Parke 58 Rockville 56Tri-CentralLafayette Central Catholic 83 Clinton Central43Clinton Prairie 60 Faith Christian 52Wes-DelWes-Del 54 Daleville 44Liberty Christian 63 Cowan 46Blue RiverUnion (Modoc) 59 Union City 57Seton Catholic 71 Blue River 61White River ValleyEminence 62 White River Valley 38Shakamak 65 Bloomfield 62UniversityBethesda Christian 52 Indiana Deaf 46Indianapolis Tindley 80 Indiana Math ampScience 58EdinburghMorristown 59 Greenwood Christian 50Indianapolis Lutheran 63 Central Christian 59South DecaturHauser 75 Waldron 48Oldenburg Academy 67 South Decatur 31BordenBorden 61 Crothersville 44West Washington 51 Trinity Lutheran 40New WashingtonNew Washington 50 Lanesville 43Christian Academy 53 South Central(Elizabeth) 46North DaviessShoals 44 Washington Catholic 18Loogootee 44 North Daviess 43Wood MemorialWood Memorial 76 Evansville Day 43Northeast Dubois 55 Tecumseh 47NACA TournamentColumbus Christian 57 Louisiana Christian41

SCORES From Page 6

Sports8

4 News

The REPORTERMilestone Contractors plans to shift

traffic lanes on southbound Interstate 69 between 116th Street (Exit 205) and 106th Street (Exit 204) starting on Sat-urday night March 4 as part of the I-69 Major Moves 2020 construction project

Up to three lanes of southbound I-69 may be closed after 7 pm as crews paint

new lane markings and shift all lanes to the left to accommodate construction of an additional lane along the right shoul-der between the 116th Street entrance ramp to southbound I-69 and the new 106th Street exit ramp All lanes are expected to be open in the temporarily shifted configuration before 9 am on Sunday March 5

Southbound I-69 lanes shift starting tonight Beginning March 13 2017 and

continuing through Oct 13 2017 brush will be picked up on the same day as trash collection not the same time as trash collection but the same day Pick up is made on the street side only NO alleys Do NOT put brush in the street but place it in the space be-tween the street and the sidewalk All brush must be stacked in small piles no more than 4 feet in length and 18 inch-es in diameter Limb size should be no more than 4 inches in diameter

So you have a bigger pile of brush Solution Just call the Noblesville Street Department 317-776-6348 to schedule a special large brush pick up Now how is that for service No rea-son to not beautify your property with a spring cleanup and set the brush be-tween the curb and sidewalk for pick up on the same day as trash pickup DO NOT PUT THE BRUSH IN THE AL-LEY WAY BRUSH IS PICKED UP AT THE STREET SIDE only

What about the small stuff like leaves left over from fall

In the spring NO loose leaves will be picked up All leaves must be bagged in green biodegradable bags set next to the brush pick up site or placed in front of the house between the curb and side-walk Keep all yard waste away from storm drain sites to keep the drains open and flowing If the storm drains become blocked flooding can occur If you have a storm drain near your home ldquoadopt the drainrdquo and take care of it by raking leaves and trash away from the storm drain site It will mean positive water flow for your property and your neighbors

So get your supplies ready now

Pick up the free green biodegradable bags from City Hall front desk or Plan-ning Department Street Department just 3 blocks west of the Post Office on Pleasant Street Parks Department in Forest Park Inn Hamilton Co Hazard-ous Waste Station on Pleasant Street or the Fire Station in your area There is no charge and now you are ready to do your yard cleanup You have all the information to be a good citizen and follow the helpful suggestions for city pick up of yard materials That service is free alsohellipwell maybe not free but a service supported by your tax dol-lars Get your tax dollarsrsquo worth and take advantage of this great service It also makes the community look clean and healthy and ready for those warm breezes to follow

Note Fall leaf pick up begins Sept 18 and continues through Dec 15 Use those left-over spring green biodegradable bags in the fall Pick up is at the same location and day as in the spring No limit to the number of bagged leaves Loose leaves are messy and pick up does not begin until Oct 9 2017 It would be good to pick up a nice supply of green bags and bag it in the spring and the fall

Add a few nice flowers and enjoy The city is your partner is making your home an even more special place and you can be the great example for the neighborhood

Questions Call the Street Department 317-776-6348 Mayorrsquos Office 317-776-6324 Police Department (non-emergency) 317-776-6340 Hamilton Co Household Hazardous Waste Center 317-776-4005 Green Cycle 317-773-3350 Creative Com-post 317-776-2909 See you in the yard

OPPORTUNITYfrom Page 1

Tips to simplify spring cleaning(StatePoint) Itrsquos

the time of year to roll up your sleeves and do some spring cleaning Experts point out that itrsquos helpful to stream-line the tools you use to do the job and the tasks you seek to ac-complish

ldquoAn all-purpose cleaner and a tough degreasing agent can be used in so many ar-eas of the homerdquo says Jeff Devlin a licensed contractor whorsquos ap-peared on several home improvement television shows Devlinrsquos first tip look to reduce the number of products in your cleaning arsenal ldquoAlong with high-quality sprays and cloths I use one all-purpose cleaner that also con-tains degreasing ingredientsrdquo

Devlin along with Mean Green and its line of heavy-duty all-purpose cleaners offer these different strategies for critical areas of your home

bull Stove and range hoods While you should be cleaning these areas regular-ly after food preparation take this op-portunity to conduct a more thorough cleaning Spray cleaner directly on the mess for up to two minutes Wipe clean with a sponge or cloth Then rinse thor-oughly with clean water

bull Sinks and countertops Sinks and countertops can be a trap for food grease grime and soap scum Gener-ously spray non-porous surfaces with your cleaner then rinse with clean wa-ter

bull Stove exhaust filter The grease buildup that collects on the stoversquos ex-haust filter can be a tough nut to crack In a sink basin mix 8 ounces of a con-centrated multi-surface cleaner and 1 gallon of hot water and submerge the filter Place the filter in a sink or dish-pan and pour in concentrated cleaner to cover Allow the filter to soak for 30 minutes Drain the dishpan and rinse thoroughly with hot water

bull Floors Give your floors a mop-ping Mix 4 ounces of cleaning solution with 1 gallon of warm water Apply with mop or sponge

bull Garbage cans and diaper pails

Bags often leak nastiness into the bot-tom of the garbage can which can eas-ily be missed when quickly replacing the bag Turn your cleanserrsquos nozzle to spray and generously cover the can Wipe or brush any areas that have any residue Rinse thoroughly with clean water

bull Showers tubs and tile Use your cleaning agent at full strength and gen-erously spray surfaces directly Allow it to penetrate the soap scum for up to two minutes Do not allow to dry Wipe away with a coarse sponge or cloth Rinse thoroughly with clean water

bull Toilets Letrsquos face it This isnrsquot anyonersquos favorite job but it has to be done Turn that nozzle to spray and generously spray the outside of the toi-let Wipe clean with a paper towel then give a quick rinse

bull Patio For patios outdoor furni-ture concrete vinyl fences and siding use the same cleaner outdoors simply spray then wipe clean with a cloth or sponge and rinse surfaces with clean water While yoursquore at it consider re-moving grease and grime from tools engine parts tires sports gear and lawn equipment

For efficiency consider cleaning solutions that donrsquot require pre-clean-ing such as Mean Green Super Strength Cleaner amp Degreaser the strongest all-purpose cleaner available More tips for getting your spring to-dos complet-ed can be found at meangreendegreasercom

ldquoMake spring cleaning simple and effective by using smart strategies on every surface of your homerdquo said Devlin

Photo provided by west_photo - Fotoliacom

By RICHIE HALLReporter Sports EditorHamilton Southeastern and Carmel

advanced to the championship game ofSectional 8 Friday night after semi-finalwins at the Eric Clark Activity Center

In the first game the Royals took careof Anderson 68-47 The Greyhounds werenext taking on their old rival Noblesvilleand winning 62-44 Tonights championshipwill tip off at 7 pm

The Indians stayed with HSE for mostof the first quarter which ended with theRoyals ahead 14-13 Jack Davidson scoredeight points for Southeastern including two3-pointers and Chaz Birchfield added six

Anderson then took a 16-14 lead earlyin the second period but the Royals blastedoff after that outscoring the Indians 23-6 tocruise into halftime with a 37-22 advantageSix different HSE players scored in thesecond quarter with Aaron Etheringtongetting six points

Defensively I thought we were solidthe entire game said Royals coach BrianSatterfield I know once they got that lead16-14 we ran a play got the ball inside goto the foul line and from that point ondefensively we were solid

And then I thought our defense didsome things to create some offense for usand then the other aspect is we moved thebasketball when we did get to the offensiveend and had some good looks

Southeasterns lead gradually grew in thesecond half and the Royals never allowedAnderson to score more than fiveconsecutive points in the half HSEs largestrun of the second half came in the fourthquarter when it scored seven unansweredpoints (five points from Aaron Shank andtwo more from Etherington) and that rungave the Royals their largest lead of thegame at 62-38

Davidson scored 17 points forSoutheastern (21-5) with Birchfield adding13 and Etherington scoring 10 BirchfieldEtherington and Zach Mutchner all had fourrebounds Zach Gunn the Royals leadingscorer didnt play Satterfield that was aprecautionary measure

The first quarter of the Carmel-Noblesville game was a roller coaster TheHounds scored the first five points withLuke Heady hitting a 3-pointer and PJ Baronscoring off a rebound

The Millers answered that with eightstraight points of their own Rico Duncangot Noblesvilles first basket on a floaterNolan Ginther tied the game with a three-point play then Duncan drained a 3-pointerto put Noblesville up 8-5

Carmel came back finishing the periodon a 10-2 run to lead 15-10 Baron scoredeight points including two three-point playsand Heady scored off a steal

The Greyhounds started to take controlof the game in the second quarter slowly

making their way to a 28-18 lead byhalftime Baron scored five more points hefinished the first half a perfect 6-of-6 fromthe field

I thought we were patient offensivelyand really got good shots said Carmelcoach Scott Heady We got some greatlooks and we got a lot of shots around thebasket

Both teams scored 10 points in the thirdperiod The Millers cut Carmels lead to38-30 late in the quarter thanks toconsecutive baskets by Grant Gremel andMax Flinchum Baron ended the period witha layin to push the Greyhounds ahead 40-30

They hung around said Heady Theykind of kept it around eight nine and theydid enough to where it was a game We had

to make plays so give them credit they keptcoming back and made it a game

Heady and Jalen Whack both had a3-pointer in the third quarter and they eachmade another long-range shot in the fourthquarter with Whacks basket putting Carmelup 46-34 A late 3-pointer from Duncan keptNoblesville within 53-42 with 226 left butthe Greyhounds ended the game on a 9-2run Carmel is now 20-4 for the year

Baron finished the game with 20 pointson 7-of-9 shooting and also had sixrebounds Heady drained three 3-pointersfor 13 points John Michael Mulloy was allover the place with seven rebounds fiveassists and four blocked shots to go alongwith his seven points

He was good said Heady of Baron Ithought John Michael was good defensively

Luke gave us some scoring punch againtonight which is what we need withoutSterling

Duncan led the Millers with 10 pointsNoblesville had very balanced scoring withMcGwire Plumer adding nine Flinchum andGremel each scoring eight Nolan Gintheradded seven points and pulled fourrebounds

The Millers finished their season 12-13and graduate five seniors - Duncan PlumerFlinchum Ginther and Nick MillsNoblesville coach Brian McCauley spokewith pride about his senior class after thegame

Theyve done a lot for the program withCoach McCullough throughout their

Carmel HSE head to championship

Reporter photo by Kent Graham

Carmelrsquos Jalen Whack guards Noblesvillersquos McGwire Plumer during the Greyhounds-Millers sectional semi-final game Fridaynight at the Eric Clark Activity Center Turn to Page 7 to see more pictures

Sports 5

Sheridan was overwhelmed by Lapel79-29 in the first semi-final at Sectional 40Friday night at theBulldogs gym

Lapel thedefending Class 2Astate champion led17-4 after the firstquarter and 35-11 athalftime

Aidan Roatenscored seven points tolead the Blackhawkswith Jack Waitt

scoring six Roaten and Nick Burnell bothpulled three rebounds

Sheridan finished its season with a 9-15record

Lapel 79Sheridan 29

Sheridan FG FT TP PFCaleb Duke 0-1 0-0 0 0Jack Waitt 2-5 2-2 6 0Brody Perry 0-2 0-0 0 0Drake Delph 0-4 1-2 1 4Tommy Glidden 1-4 3-4 5 1Cam Weitzel 2-5 0-1 5 4Aidan Roaten 2-6 2-4 7 4Nicholas Burnell 0-1 0-0 0 1Kenny Burnell 0-1 0-0 0 1Tanner Swindle 1-3 3-7 5 1Totals 8-32 11-20 29 16Score by QuartersLapel 17 18 25 19 - 79Sheridan 4 7 10 8 - 29Sheridan 3-point shooting (2-18) Weitzel 1-4Roaten 1-2 Waitt 0-3 Perry 0-2 Glidden 0-2Swindle 0-2 Duke 0-1 Delph 0-1 K Burnell 0-1Sheridan rebounds (15) Roaten 3 N Burnell 3Waitt 2 Delph 2 Glidden 2 Swindle 2 Perry 1

Waitt

Hamilton Heights advanced to the championship at theClass 3A Marion sectional takingcare of Delta 51-33 in the secondFriday night semi-final

The Huskies got off to a fantasticstart leading the Eagles 15-1 after thefirst quarter Heights kept Delta atarms length for the remainder of thegame as it led 19-7 at halftime TheEagles cut the Huskies lead to 29-23by the end of the third period butHeights outscored Delta 22-10 in thefourth to easily win the game

Defensively thats the best weveplayed said Huskies coach Chad

Ballenger In fact those 33 points are the least Heights hasgiven up so far this season - its previous season-low wasthe 34 points it allowed Blackford in Tuesdays sectionalfirst round so the Huskies defense is playing well at the

right timeMax Wahl scored 15 points for Heights including three

3-pointers while Sterling Weatherford reached double-double territory with 11 points and 11 rebounds

Hes really stepped it up since hes been back and hesbeen healthy said Ballenger Im just happy that hes beinga leader on the court verbally and getting guys in the rightspots

As for Wahl Ballenger said he was huge on Fridayshooting the ball well I was pleased with Max tonight andthe show that he ran said the coach

The Huskies play Tipton at 730 pm tonight for thesectional championship The two teams played each otheron Jan 27 with the Blue Devils winning 56-41

Its a huge backyard rivalry probably what everybodywanted said Ballenger Itll be great from the fan perspec-tive Theyre on a nice run

Tipton has won eight of its last nine games while theHuskies now 11-12 are on a five-game winning streak

Heights 51 Delta 33Heights FG FT TP PFSterling Weatherford 4-12 3-6 11 2Max Wahl 5-9 2-2 15 3Caymn Lutz 3-4 1-2 7 2Tyler Wiltermood 3-3 1-1 7 4Austin Sauerteig 2-2 0-0 5 0Max Beale 0-2 0-0 0 1Drayden Thomas 0-2 0-0 0 1Noah Wallace 0-0 0-0 0 0Dawson Phifer 1-1 4-6 6 1Caleb Bean 0-0 0-0 0 0Michael Cross 0-0 0-0 0 0Owen Powell 0-0 0-0 0 0Totals 18-35 11-17 51 14Score by QuartersHeights 15 4 10 22 - 51Delta 1 6 16 10 - 33Heights 3-point shooting (4-6) Wahl 3-4 Sauerteig 1-1 Beale 0-1Heights rebounds (25) Weatherford 11 Thomas 3 Wahl 2 Lutz2 Wiltermood 2 Sauerteig 2 Phifer 1 Beale 1 Bean 1

Wahl

Huskies beat Delta will play Tipton for title

lsquoHawks fall to Lapelyounger years and then with me the pastthree years said McCauley Im proud ofthose guys They did something that wehadnt done as a program since CoachMcCulloughs 2010 team and thats advanceto the sectional semi-finals They took astep Im proud of them for that

FIRST SEMI-FINALSoutheastern 68

Anderson 47Southeastern FG FT TP PFJack Davidson 6-9 2-2 17 2Chaz Birchfield 4-7 5-7 13 1Aaron Etherington 3-12 4-4 10 3Connor Rotterman 1-2 0-0 2 2Noah Smith 1-1 3-4 5 1Aaron Shank 1-3 4-5 6 1Austin Holzum 1-5 0-0 3 2Nick Bowman 2-2 2-2 6 0Zach Mutchner 0-1 0-0 0 1Jack Habegger 1-1 2-2 4 0Mabor Majak 1-2 0-0 2 1Totals 21-45 22-26 68 14Score by QuartersAnderson 13 9 9 16 - 47Southeastern 14 23 12 19 - 68Southeastern 3-point shooting (4-16) Davidson3-6 Holzum 1-5 Etherington 0-3 Shank 0-1Majak 0-1Southeastern rebounds (25) Birchfield 4Etherington 4 Mutchner 4 Bowman 3 Davidson2 Shank 2 Holzum 1 Majak 1 team 4

SECOND SEMI-FINALCarmel 62

Noblesville 44Carmel FG FT TP PFCole Jenkins 3-6 0-0 7 1Luke Heady 4-6 2-3 13 1Jalen Whack 3-5 1-2 9 3PJ Baron 7-9 6-7 20 2John Michael Mulloy 2-2 3-6 7 2Britt Beery 0-0 0-0 0 0Eddie Gill 1-2 0-0 3 1Mike Pitz 0-0 1-2 1 0Alex Jackson 0-0 2-2 2 0Totals 20-30 15-22 62 10Carmel 3-point shooting (7-13) Heady 3-5Whack 2-3 Jenkins 1-3 Gill 1-1 Falender 0-1Carmel rebounds (23) Mulloy 7 Baron 6Jenkins 3 Pitz 3 Heady 2 Gill 1 Whack 1Noblesville FG FT TP PFRico Duncan 4-6 0-0 10 5Max Flinchum 3-7 2-2 8 0McGwire Plumer 4-6 1-2 9 3Nolan Ginther 3-10 1-1 7 3Grant Gremel 4-5 0-0 8 4Ryan Barnes 0-0 2-2 2 1Xavier Hines 0-1 0-0 0 2Nick Mills 0-1 0-0 0 2Totals 18-36 6-7 44 20Noblesville 3-point shooting (2-7) Duncan 2-2Flinchum 0-2 Plumer 0-2 Hines 0-1Noblesville rebounds (10) Ginther 4 Duncan 1Flinchum 1 Gremel 1 Hunes 1 Mills 1 team 1Score by QuartersCarmel 15 13 10 24 - 62Noblesville 10 8 10 16 - 44

CARMEL From Page 5

Courtesy John Harrellrsquos websitewwwjohnharrellnet

CLASS 4AEast Chicago CentralEast Chicago Central 74Hammond Morton 69Lake Central 53 Munster 40Michigan CityMerrillville 57 Michigan City 48Crown Point 78 Chesterton 66South Bend WashingtonPlymouth 40 Mishawaka 37 OTSouth Bend Adams 66 LaPorte

63 2OTElkhart CentralGoshen 65 Elkhart Memorial 56Warsaw 71 Elkhart Central 36Carroll (Fort Wayne)Fort Wayne North 67 Fort WayneNorthrop 47Fort Wayne Snider 50 Carroll(Fort Wayne) 41Fort Wayne WayneMuncie Central 44 HuntingtonNorth 36Homestead 60 Fort WayneWayne 54Lafayette JeffZionsville 66 Logansport 57McCutcheon 78 Kokomo 56CarmelHamilton Southeastern 68 Ander-son 47Carmel 62 Noblesville 44New CastleConnersville 65 Richmond 47New Castle 57 Greenfield-Central32North Central (Indianapolis)Lawrence North 70 IndianapolisTech 57North Central (Indianapolis) 81Indianapolis Cathedral 58Decatur CentralBen Davis 67 Decatur Central 60Indianapolis Roncalli 62 South-port 42PlainfieldBrownsburg 64 Plainfield 54Terre Haute South 69 Mooresville61Franklin CentralFranklin Central 57 Franklin 45Center Grove 56 Whiteland 39Bloomington NorthShelbyville 53 East Central 38Bloomington South 75 Blooming-ton North 60SeymourFloyd Central 44 Seymour 26New Albany 89 Bedford NorthLawrence 52Evansville NorthEvansville Reitz 71 EvansvilleHarrison 67Castle 89 Evansville North 53

Friday night sectional scores

Sports6

Sports 7

HamiltonSoutheasternrsquos ZachMutchner (right) hadfour rebounds for theRoyals during theirsectional win over

Anderson on FridayAt left is Austin

Holzum (13) while inthe background isMabor Majak (50)

Reporter photos by Kent Graham

LEFT Cole Jenkins takes a 3-point shot for CarmelABOVE Noblesvillersquos Rico Duncan is guarded by Carmelrsquos LukeHeady

Nick Bowman scored six points for Hamilton Southeastern in its Friday night win

Do You Have ACommunity

AnnouncementWedding BirthAnnouncement

AnniversaryShare It With The

CommunityContact the

Hamilton CountyReporter

Hamiltonconorthreporter

hotmailcom

or call317-408-5548

Hamilton CountyReporter

Hamilton CountyrsquosHometownNewspaper

Eastern ConferenceAtlantic W L PCT GBBoston 40 22 645 -Toronto 37 25 597 30New York 25 37 403 150Philadelphia 23 38 377 165Brooklyn 10 50 167 290Southeast W L PCT GBWashington 36 24 600 -Atlanta 34 27 557 25Miami 28 34 452 90Charlotte 26 35 426 105Orlando 23 39 371 140Central W L PCT GBCleveland 42 18 700 -Chicago 31 30 508 115Indiana 31 30 508 115Detroit 29 32 475 135Milwaukee 27 33 450 150

Western ConferenceNorthwest W L PCT GBUtah 38 24 613 -Oklahoma City 35 27 565 30Denver 28 33 459 95Portland 25 35 417 120Minnesota 25 36 410 125Southwest W L PCT GBSan Antonio 47 13 783 -Houston 43 19 694 50Memphis 36 26 581 120Dallas 25 36 410 225New Orleans 24 38 387 240Pacific W L PCT GBGolden State 50 11 820 -LA Clippers 36 25 590 140Sacramento 25 36 410 250Phoenix 20 42 323 305 LA Lakers 19 43 306 315

NBA standingsFridayrsquos games

Philadelphia 105 New York 102Toronto 114 Washington 106

Orlando 110 Miami 99Cleveland 135 Atlanta 130

Milwaukee 112 LA Clippers 101

Dallas 104 Memphis 100Utah 112 Brooklyn 97

Phoenix 118 Oklahoma City 111San Antonio 101 New Orleans 98 OT

Boston 115 LA Lakers 95

CLASS 3AHammond CivicLighthouse CPA 90 Kankakee Valley 62Griffith 69 Hammond Gavit 38Rensselaer CentralRensselaer Central 61 Wheeler 40Twin Lakes 60 Hanover Central 43JimtownSouth Bend St Joseph 42 Mishawaka Marian40Culver Academy 59 Jimtown 28MaconaquahWest Lafayette 55 Maconaquah 49Western 63 Peru 50

WawaseeWest Noble 42 Wawasee 38Fairfield 59 NorthWood 51GarrettNew Haven 67 Fort Wayne Dwenger 51Angola 46 Garrett 31BellmontFort Wayne Luers 71 Mississinewa 50Columbia City 59 Norwell 50MarionTipton 42 Yorktown 17Hamilton Heights 51 Delta 33GreencastleTri-West 66 Crawfordsville 53Lebanon 55 Western Boone 35EdgewoodEdgewood 46 Sullivan 42Northview 63 Owen Valley 43Brebeuf JesuitIndianapolis Chatard 51 New Palestine 48Indianapolis Attucks 65 Indianapolis Manual53DanvilleDanville 88 Indianapolis Northwest 72Beech Grove 79 Indianapolis Ritter 60GreensburgGreensburg 63 Madison 60 OTLawrenceburg 52 Rushville 42WashingtonPike Central 57 Jasper 43Vincennes Lincoln 59 Princeton 49BoonvilleMount Vernon (Posey) 62 Heritage Hills 59Evansville Bosse 82 Evansville Memorial 76

CLASS 2AGary RooseveltGary Roosevelt 36 Hammond Noll 34

River Forest 57 Lake Station 49WinamacDelphi 50 North Judson 31Marquette Catholic 76 Knox 52WestviewLaVille 57 Bremen 38Central Noble 46 Westview 42WoodlanChurubusco 75 Woodlan 60Eastside 58 Fort Wayne Canterbury 56 3OTOak HillManchester 59 Rochester 36Southwood 60 Oak Hill 52Fountain CentralCovington 68 Rossville 62Fountain Central 56 Carroll (Flora) 35TaylorMadison-Grant 49 Taylor 46Eastern (Greentown) 47 Eastbrook 38LapelLapel 79 Sheridan 29Frankton 77 Monroe Central 53HagerstownUnion County 57 Cambridge City Lincoln 41Northeastern 59 Hagerstown 55 OTTriton CentralShenandoah 66 Irvington Prep Academy 38Indianapolis Howe 101 Knightstown 47SpeedwaySpeedway 65 Indianapolis Broad Ripple 62Heritage Christian 49 Indianapolis Scecina46South PutnamMonrovia 45 South Putnam 40Cloverdale 61 North Putnam 51South RipleySouth Ripley 40 Southwestern (Hanover) 39Milan 47 North Decatur 45Crawford CountyProvidence 65 Paoli 46Crawford County 41 Clarksville 38Eastern GreeneBarr-Reeve 62 Mitchell 43South Knox 50 North Knox 38SouthridgeEvansville Mater Dei 64 South Spencer 58Forest Park 31 Tell City 27

CLASS 1AKoutsGary 21st Century 82 Washington Twp 53Westville 68 LaCrosse 56

CastonTri-County 66 Covenant Christian (DeMotte)46South Newton 45 Pioneer 39TritonTriton 58 Culver 40Oregon-Davis 63 Argos 55Bethany ChristianFort Wayne Blackhawk 87 Lakeland Christian51Lakewood Park 64 Hamilton 34North VermillionNorth Vermillion 47 Attica 43Riverton Parke 58 Rockville 56Tri-CentralLafayette Central Catholic 83 Clinton Central43Clinton Prairie 60 Faith Christian 52Wes-DelWes-Del 54 Daleville 44Liberty Christian 63 Cowan 46Blue RiverUnion (Modoc) 59 Union City 57Seton Catholic 71 Blue River 61White River ValleyEminence 62 White River Valley 38Shakamak 65 Bloomfield 62UniversityBethesda Christian 52 Indiana Deaf 46Indianapolis Tindley 80 Indiana Math ampScience 58EdinburghMorristown 59 Greenwood Christian 50Indianapolis Lutheran 63 Central Christian 59South DecaturHauser 75 Waldron 48Oldenburg Academy 67 South Decatur 31BordenBorden 61 Crothersville 44West Washington 51 Trinity Lutheran 40New WashingtonNew Washington 50 Lanesville 43Christian Academy 53 South Central(Elizabeth) 46North DaviessShoals 44 Washington Catholic 18Loogootee 44 North Daviess 43Wood MemorialWood Memorial 76 Evansville Day 43Northeast Dubois 55 Tecumseh 47NACA TournamentColumbus Christian 57 Louisiana Christian41

SCORES From Page 6

Sports8

By RICHIE HALLReporter Sports EditorHamilton Southeastern and Carmel

advanced to the championship game ofSectional 8 Friday night after semi-finalwins at the Eric Clark Activity Center

In the first game the Royals took careof Anderson 68-47 The Greyhounds werenext taking on their old rival Noblesvilleand winning 62-44 Tonights championshipwill tip off at 7 pm

The Indians stayed with HSE for mostof the first quarter which ended with theRoyals ahead 14-13 Jack Davidson scoredeight points for Southeastern including two3-pointers and Chaz Birchfield added six

Anderson then took a 16-14 lead earlyin the second period but the Royals blastedoff after that outscoring the Indians 23-6 tocruise into halftime with a 37-22 advantageSix different HSE players scored in thesecond quarter with Aaron Etheringtongetting six points

Defensively I thought we were solidthe entire game said Royals coach BrianSatterfield I know once they got that lead16-14 we ran a play got the ball inside goto the foul line and from that point ondefensively we were solid

And then I thought our defense didsome things to create some offense for usand then the other aspect is we moved thebasketball when we did get to the offensiveend and had some good looks

Southeasterns lead gradually grew in thesecond half and the Royals never allowedAnderson to score more than fiveconsecutive points in the half HSEs largestrun of the second half came in the fourthquarter when it scored seven unansweredpoints (five points from Aaron Shank andtwo more from Etherington) and that rungave the Royals their largest lead of thegame at 62-38

Davidson scored 17 points forSoutheastern (21-5) with Birchfield adding13 and Etherington scoring 10 BirchfieldEtherington and Zach Mutchner all had fourrebounds Zach Gunn the Royals leadingscorer didnt play Satterfield that was aprecautionary measure

The first quarter of the Carmel-Noblesville game was a roller coaster TheHounds scored the first five points withLuke Heady hitting a 3-pointer and PJ Baronscoring off a rebound

The Millers answered that with eightstraight points of their own Rico Duncangot Noblesvilles first basket on a floaterNolan Ginther tied the game with a three-point play then Duncan drained a 3-pointerto put Noblesville up 8-5

Carmel came back finishing the periodon a 10-2 run to lead 15-10 Baron scoredeight points including two three-point playsand Heady scored off a steal

The Greyhounds started to take controlof the game in the second quarter slowly

making their way to a 28-18 lead byhalftime Baron scored five more points hefinished the first half a perfect 6-of-6 fromthe field

I thought we were patient offensivelyand really got good shots said Carmelcoach Scott Heady We got some greatlooks and we got a lot of shots around thebasket

Both teams scored 10 points in the thirdperiod The Millers cut Carmels lead to38-30 late in the quarter thanks toconsecutive baskets by Grant Gremel andMax Flinchum Baron ended the period witha layin to push the Greyhounds ahead 40-30

They hung around said Heady Theykind of kept it around eight nine and theydid enough to where it was a game We had

to make plays so give them credit they keptcoming back and made it a game

Heady and Jalen Whack both had a3-pointer in the third quarter and they eachmade another long-range shot in the fourthquarter with Whacks basket putting Carmelup 46-34 A late 3-pointer from Duncan keptNoblesville within 53-42 with 226 left butthe Greyhounds ended the game on a 9-2run Carmel is now 20-4 for the year

Baron finished the game with 20 pointson 7-of-9 shooting and also had sixrebounds Heady drained three 3-pointersfor 13 points John Michael Mulloy was allover the place with seven rebounds fiveassists and four blocked shots to go alongwith his seven points

He was good said Heady of Baron Ithought John Michael was good defensively

Luke gave us some scoring punch againtonight which is what we need withoutSterling

Duncan led the Millers with 10 pointsNoblesville had very balanced scoring withMcGwire Plumer adding nine Flinchum andGremel each scoring eight Nolan Gintheradded seven points and pulled fourrebounds

The Millers finished their season 12-13and graduate five seniors - Duncan PlumerFlinchum Ginther and Nick MillsNoblesville coach Brian McCauley spokewith pride about his senior class after thegame

Theyve done a lot for the program withCoach McCullough throughout their

Carmel HSE head to championship

Reporter photo by Kent Graham

Carmelrsquos Jalen Whack guards Noblesvillersquos McGwire Plumer during the Greyhounds-Millers sectional semi-final game Fridaynight at the Eric Clark Activity Center Turn to Page 7 to see more pictures

Sports 5

Sheridan was overwhelmed by Lapel79-29 in the first semi-final at Sectional 40Friday night at theBulldogs gym

Lapel thedefending Class 2Astate champion led17-4 after the firstquarter and 35-11 athalftime

Aidan Roatenscored seven points tolead the Blackhawkswith Jack Waitt

scoring six Roaten and Nick Burnell bothpulled three rebounds

Sheridan finished its season with a 9-15record

Lapel 79Sheridan 29

Sheridan FG FT TP PFCaleb Duke 0-1 0-0 0 0Jack Waitt 2-5 2-2 6 0Brody Perry 0-2 0-0 0 0Drake Delph 0-4 1-2 1 4Tommy Glidden 1-4 3-4 5 1Cam Weitzel 2-5 0-1 5 4Aidan Roaten 2-6 2-4 7 4Nicholas Burnell 0-1 0-0 0 1Kenny Burnell 0-1 0-0 0 1Tanner Swindle 1-3 3-7 5 1Totals 8-32 11-20 29 16Score by QuartersLapel 17 18 25 19 - 79Sheridan 4 7 10 8 - 29Sheridan 3-point shooting (2-18) Weitzel 1-4Roaten 1-2 Waitt 0-3 Perry 0-2 Glidden 0-2Swindle 0-2 Duke 0-1 Delph 0-1 K Burnell 0-1Sheridan rebounds (15) Roaten 3 N Burnell 3Waitt 2 Delph 2 Glidden 2 Swindle 2 Perry 1

Waitt

Hamilton Heights advanced to the championship at theClass 3A Marion sectional takingcare of Delta 51-33 in the secondFriday night semi-final

The Huskies got off to a fantasticstart leading the Eagles 15-1 after thefirst quarter Heights kept Delta atarms length for the remainder of thegame as it led 19-7 at halftime TheEagles cut the Huskies lead to 29-23by the end of the third period butHeights outscored Delta 22-10 in thefourth to easily win the game

Defensively thats the best weveplayed said Huskies coach Chad

Ballenger In fact those 33 points are the least Heights hasgiven up so far this season - its previous season-low wasthe 34 points it allowed Blackford in Tuesdays sectionalfirst round so the Huskies defense is playing well at the

right timeMax Wahl scored 15 points for Heights including three

3-pointers while Sterling Weatherford reached double-double territory with 11 points and 11 rebounds

Hes really stepped it up since hes been back and hesbeen healthy said Ballenger Im just happy that hes beinga leader on the court verbally and getting guys in the rightspots

As for Wahl Ballenger said he was huge on Fridayshooting the ball well I was pleased with Max tonight andthe show that he ran said the coach

The Huskies play Tipton at 730 pm tonight for thesectional championship The two teams played each otheron Jan 27 with the Blue Devils winning 56-41

Its a huge backyard rivalry probably what everybodywanted said Ballenger Itll be great from the fan perspec-tive Theyre on a nice run

Tipton has won eight of its last nine games while theHuskies now 11-12 are on a five-game winning streak

Heights 51 Delta 33Heights FG FT TP PFSterling Weatherford 4-12 3-6 11 2Max Wahl 5-9 2-2 15 3Caymn Lutz 3-4 1-2 7 2Tyler Wiltermood 3-3 1-1 7 4Austin Sauerteig 2-2 0-0 5 0Max Beale 0-2 0-0 0 1Drayden Thomas 0-2 0-0 0 1Noah Wallace 0-0 0-0 0 0Dawson Phifer 1-1 4-6 6 1Caleb Bean 0-0 0-0 0 0Michael Cross 0-0 0-0 0 0Owen Powell 0-0 0-0 0 0Totals 18-35 11-17 51 14Score by QuartersHeights 15 4 10 22 - 51Delta 1 6 16 10 - 33Heights 3-point shooting (4-6) Wahl 3-4 Sauerteig 1-1 Beale 0-1Heights rebounds (25) Weatherford 11 Thomas 3 Wahl 2 Lutz2 Wiltermood 2 Sauerteig 2 Phifer 1 Beale 1 Bean 1

Wahl

Huskies beat Delta will play Tipton for title

lsquoHawks fall to Lapelyounger years and then with me the pastthree years said McCauley Im proud ofthose guys They did something that wehadnt done as a program since CoachMcCulloughs 2010 team and thats advanceto the sectional semi-finals They took astep Im proud of them for that

FIRST SEMI-FINALSoutheastern 68

Anderson 47Southeastern FG FT TP PFJack Davidson 6-9 2-2 17 2Chaz Birchfield 4-7 5-7 13 1Aaron Etherington 3-12 4-4 10 3Connor Rotterman 1-2 0-0 2 2Noah Smith 1-1 3-4 5 1Aaron Shank 1-3 4-5 6 1Austin Holzum 1-5 0-0 3 2Nick Bowman 2-2 2-2 6 0Zach Mutchner 0-1 0-0 0 1Jack Habegger 1-1 2-2 4 0Mabor Majak 1-2 0-0 2 1Totals 21-45 22-26 68 14Score by QuartersAnderson 13 9 9 16 - 47Southeastern 14 23 12 19 - 68Southeastern 3-point shooting (4-16) Davidson3-6 Holzum 1-5 Etherington 0-3 Shank 0-1Majak 0-1Southeastern rebounds (25) Birchfield 4Etherington 4 Mutchner 4 Bowman 3 Davidson2 Shank 2 Holzum 1 Majak 1 team 4

SECOND SEMI-FINALCarmel 62

Noblesville 44Carmel FG FT TP PFCole Jenkins 3-6 0-0 7 1Luke Heady 4-6 2-3 13 1Jalen Whack 3-5 1-2 9 3PJ Baron 7-9 6-7 20 2John Michael Mulloy 2-2 3-6 7 2Britt Beery 0-0 0-0 0 0Eddie Gill 1-2 0-0 3 1Mike Pitz 0-0 1-2 1 0Alex Jackson 0-0 2-2 2 0Totals 20-30 15-22 62 10Carmel 3-point shooting (7-13) Heady 3-5Whack 2-3 Jenkins 1-3 Gill 1-1 Falender 0-1Carmel rebounds (23) Mulloy 7 Baron 6Jenkins 3 Pitz 3 Heady 2 Gill 1 Whack 1Noblesville FG FT TP PFRico Duncan 4-6 0-0 10 5Max Flinchum 3-7 2-2 8 0McGwire Plumer 4-6 1-2 9 3Nolan Ginther 3-10 1-1 7 3Grant Gremel 4-5 0-0 8 4Ryan Barnes 0-0 2-2 2 1Xavier Hines 0-1 0-0 0 2Nick Mills 0-1 0-0 0 2Totals 18-36 6-7 44 20Noblesville 3-point shooting (2-7) Duncan 2-2Flinchum 0-2 Plumer 0-2 Hines 0-1Noblesville rebounds (10) Ginther 4 Duncan 1Flinchum 1 Gremel 1 Hunes 1 Mills 1 team 1Score by QuartersCarmel 15 13 10 24 - 62Noblesville 10 8 10 16 - 44

CARMEL From Page 5

Courtesy John Harrellrsquos websitewwwjohnharrellnet

CLASS 4AEast Chicago CentralEast Chicago Central 74Hammond Morton 69Lake Central 53 Munster 40Michigan CityMerrillville 57 Michigan City 48Crown Point 78 Chesterton 66South Bend WashingtonPlymouth 40 Mishawaka 37 OTSouth Bend Adams 66 LaPorte

63 2OTElkhart CentralGoshen 65 Elkhart Memorial 56Warsaw 71 Elkhart Central 36Carroll (Fort Wayne)Fort Wayne North 67 Fort WayneNorthrop 47Fort Wayne Snider 50 Carroll(Fort Wayne) 41Fort Wayne WayneMuncie Central 44 HuntingtonNorth 36Homestead 60 Fort WayneWayne 54Lafayette JeffZionsville 66 Logansport 57McCutcheon 78 Kokomo 56CarmelHamilton Southeastern 68 Ander-son 47Carmel 62 Noblesville 44New CastleConnersville 65 Richmond 47New Castle 57 Greenfield-Central32North Central (Indianapolis)Lawrence North 70 IndianapolisTech 57North Central (Indianapolis) 81Indianapolis Cathedral 58Decatur CentralBen Davis 67 Decatur Central 60Indianapolis Roncalli 62 South-port 42PlainfieldBrownsburg 64 Plainfield 54Terre Haute South 69 Mooresville61Franklin CentralFranklin Central 57 Franklin 45Center Grove 56 Whiteland 39Bloomington NorthShelbyville 53 East Central 38Bloomington South 75 Blooming-ton North 60SeymourFloyd Central 44 Seymour 26New Albany 89 Bedford NorthLawrence 52Evansville NorthEvansville Reitz 71 EvansvilleHarrison 67Castle 89 Evansville North 53

Friday night sectional scores

Sports6

Sports 7

HamiltonSoutheasternrsquos ZachMutchner (right) hadfour rebounds for theRoyals during theirsectional win over

Anderson on FridayAt left is Austin

Holzum (13) while inthe background isMabor Majak (50)

Reporter photos by Kent Graham

LEFT Cole Jenkins takes a 3-point shot for CarmelABOVE Noblesvillersquos Rico Duncan is guarded by Carmelrsquos LukeHeady

Nick Bowman scored six points for Hamilton Southeastern in its Friday night win

Do You Have ACommunity

AnnouncementWedding BirthAnnouncement

AnniversaryShare It With The

CommunityContact the

Hamilton CountyReporter

Hamiltonconorthreporter

hotmailcom

or call317-408-5548

Hamilton CountyReporter

Hamilton CountyrsquosHometownNewspaper

Eastern ConferenceAtlantic W L PCT GBBoston 40 22 645 -Toronto 37 25 597 30New York 25 37 403 150Philadelphia 23 38 377 165Brooklyn 10 50 167 290Southeast W L PCT GBWashington 36 24 600 -Atlanta 34 27 557 25Miami 28 34 452 90Charlotte 26 35 426 105Orlando 23 39 371 140Central W L PCT GBCleveland 42 18 700 -Chicago 31 30 508 115Indiana 31 30 508 115Detroit 29 32 475 135Milwaukee 27 33 450 150

Western ConferenceNorthwest W L PCT GBUtah 38 24 613 -Oklahoma City 35 27 565 30Denver 28 33 459 95Portland 25 35 417 120Minnesota 25 36 410 125Southwest W L PCT GBSan Antonio 47 13 783 -Houston 43 19 694 50Memphis 36 26 581 120Dallas 25 36 410 225New Orleans 24 38 387 240Pacific W L PCT GBGolden State 50 11 820 -LA Clippers 36 25 590 140Sacramento 25 36 410 250Phoenix 20 42 323 305 LA Lakers 19 43 306 315

NBA standingsFridayrsquos games

Philadelphia 105 New York 102Toronto 114 Washington 106

Orlando 110 Miami 99Cleveland 135 Atlanta 130

Milwaukee 112 LA Clippers 101

Dallas 104 Memphis 100Utah 112 Brooklyn 97

Phoenix 118 Oklahoma City 111San Antonio 101 New Orleans 98 OT

Boston 115 LA Lakers 95

CLASS 3AHammond CivicLighthouse CPA 90 Kankakee Valley 62Griffith 69 Hammond Gavit 38Rensselaer CentralRensselaer Central 61 Wheeler 40Twin Lakes 60 Hanover Central 43JimtownSouth Bend St Joseph 42 Mishawaka Marian40Culver Academy 59 Jimtown 28MaconaquahWest Lafayette 55 Maconaquah 49Western 63 Peru 50

WawaseeWest Noble 42 Wawasee 38Fairfield 59 NorthWood 51GarrettNew Haven 67 Fort Wayne Dwenger 51Angola 46 Garrett 31BellmontFort Wayne Luers 71 Mississinewa 50Columbia City 59 Norwell 50MarionTipton 42 Yorktown 17Hamilton Heights 51 Delta 33GreencastleTri-West 66 Crawfordsville 53Lebanon 55 Western Boone 35EdgewoodEdgewood 46 Sullivan 42Northview 63 Owen Valley 43Brebeuf JesuitIndianapolis Chatard 51 New Palestine 48Indianapolis Attucks 65 Indianapolis Manual53DanvilleDanville 88 Indianapolis Northwest 72Beech Grove 79 Indianapolis Ritter 60GreensburgGreensburg 63 Madison 60 OTLawrenceburg 52 Rushville 42WashingtonPike Central 57 Jasper 43Vincennes Lincoln 59 Princeton 49BoonvilleMount Vernon (Posey) 62 Heritage Hills 59Evansville Bosse 82 Evansville Memorial 76

CLASS 2AGary RooseveltGary Roosevelt 36 Hammond Noll 34

River Forest 57 Lake Station 49WinamacDelphi 50 North Judson 31Marquette Catholic 76 Knox 52WestviewLaVille 57 Bremen 38Central Noble 46 Westview 42WoodlanChurubusco 75 Woodlan 60Eastside 58 Fort Wayne Canterbury 56 3OTOak HillManchester 59 Rochester 36Southwood 60 Oak Hill 52Fountain CentralCovington 68 Rossville 62Fountain Central 56 Carroll (Flora) 35TaylorMadison-Grant 49 Taylor 46Eastern (Greentown) 47 Eastbrook 38LapelLapel 79 Sheridan 29Frankton 77 Monroe Central 53HagerstownUnion County 57 Cambridge City Lincoln 41Northeastern 59 Hagerstown 55 OTTriton CentralShenandoah 66 Irvington Prep Academy 38Indianapolis Howe 101 Knightstown 47SpeedwaySpeedway 65 Indianapolis Broad Ripple 62Heritage Christian 49 Indianapolis Scecina46South PutnamMonrovia 45 South Putnam 40Cloverdale 61 North Putnam 51South RipleySouth Ripley 40 Southwestern (Hanover) 39Milan 47 North Decatur 45Crawford CountyProvidence 65 Paoli 46Crawford County 41 Clarksville 38Eastern GreeneBarr-Reeve 62 Mitchell 43South Knox 50 North Knox 38SouthridgeEvansville Mater Dei 64 South Spencer 58Forest Park 31 Tell City 27

CLASS 1AKoutsGary 21st Century 82 Washington Twp 53Westville 68 LaCrosse 56

CastonTri-County 66 Covenant Christian (DeMotte)46South Newton 45 Pioneer 39TritonTriton 58 Culver 40Oregon-Davis 63 Argos 55Bethany ChristianFort Wayne Blackhawk 87 Lakeland Christian51Lakewood Park 64 Hamilton 34North VermillionNorth Vermillion 47 Attica 43Riverton Parke 58 Rockville 56Tri-CentralLafayette Central Catholic 83 Clinton Central43Clinton Prairie 60 Faith Christian 52Wes-DelWes-Del 54 Daleville 44Liberty Christian 63 Cowan 46Blue RiverUnion (Modoc) 59 Union City 57Seton Catholic 71 Blue River 61White River ValleyEminence 62 White River Valley 38Shakamak 65 Bloomfield 62UniversityBethesda Christian 52 Indiana Deaf 46Indianapolis Tindley 80 Indiana Math ampScience 58EdinburghMorristown 59 Greenwood Christian 50Indianapolis Lutheran 63 Central Christian 59South DecaturHauser 75 Waldron 48Oldenburg Academy 67 South Decatur 31BordenBorden 61 Crothersville 44West Washington 51 Trinity Lutheran 40New WashingtonNew Washington 50 Lanesville 43Christian Academy 53 South Central(Elizabeth) 46North DaviessShoals 44 Washington Catholic 18Loogootee 44 North Daviess 43Wood MemorialWood Memorial 76 Evansville Day 43Northeast Dubois 55 Tecumseh 47NACA TournamentColumbus Christian 57 Louisiana Christian41

SCORES From Page 6

Sports8

Sheridan was overwhelmed by Lapel79-29 in the first semi-final at Sectional 40Friday night at theBulldogs gym

Lapel thedefending Class 2Astate champion led17-4 after the firstquarter and 35-11 athalftime

Aidan Roatenscored seven points tolead the Blackhawkswith Jack Waitt

scoring six Roaten and Nick Burnell bothpulled three rebounds

Sheridan finished its season with a 9-15record

Lapel 79Sheridan 29

Sheridan FG FT TP PFCaleb Duke 0-1 0-0 0 0Jack Waitt 2-5 2-2 6 0Brody Perry 0-2 0-0 0 0Drake Delph 0-4 1-2 1 4Tommy Glidden 1-4 3-4 5 1Cam Weitzel 2-5 0-1 5 4Aidan Roaten 2-6 2-4 7 4Nicholas Burnell 0-1 0-0 0 1Kenny Burnell 0-1 0-0 0 1Tanner Swindle 1-3 3-7 5 1Totals 8-32 11-20 29 16Score by QuartersLapel 17 18 25 19 - 79Sheridan 4 7 10 8 - 29Sheridan 3-point shooting (2-18) Weitzel 1-4Roaten 1-2 Waitt 0-3 Perry 0-2 Glidden 0-2Swindle 0-2 Duke 0-1 Delph 0-1 K Burnell 0-1Sheridan rebounds (15) Roaten 3 N Burnell 3Waitt 2 Delph 2 Glidden 2 Swindle 2 Perry 1

Waitt

Hamilton Heights advanced to the championship at theClass 3A Marion sectional takingcare of Delta 51-33 in the secondFriday night semi-final

The Huskies got off to a fantasticstart leading the Eagles 15-1 after thefirst quarter Heights kept Delta atarms length for the remainder of thegame as it led 19-7 at halftime TheEagles cut the Huskies lead to 29-23by the end of the third period butHeights outscored Delta 22-10 in thefourth to easily win the game

Defensively thats the best weveplayed said Huskies coach Chad

Ballenger In fact those 33 points are the least Heights hasgiven up so far this season - its previous season-low wasthe 34 points it allowed Blackford in Tuesdays sectionalfirst round so the Huskies defense is playing well at the

right timeMax Wahl scored 15 points for Heights including three

3-pointers while Sterling Weatherford reached double-double territory with 11 points and 11 rebounds

Hes really stepped it up since hes been back and hesbeen healthy said Ballenger Im just happy that hes beinga leader on the court verbally and getting guys in the rightspots

As for Wahl Ballenger said he was huge on Fridayshooting the ball well I was pleased with Max tonight andthe show that he ran said the coach

The Huskies play Tipton at 730 pm tonight for thesectional championship The two teams played each otheron Jan 27 with the Blue Devils winning 56-41

Its a huge backyard rivalry probably what everybodywanted said Ballenger Itll be great from the fan perspec-tive Theyre on a nice run

Tipton has won eight of its last nine games while theHuskies now 11-12 are on a five-game winning streak

Heights 51 Delta 33Heights FG FT TP PFSterling Weatherford 4-12 3-6 11 2Max Wahl 5-9 2-2 15 3Caymn Lutz 3-4 1-2 7 2Tyler Wiltermood 3-3 1-1 7 4Austin Sauerteig 2-2 0-0 5 0Max Beale 0-2 0-0 0 1Drayden Thomas 0-2 0-0 0 1Noah Wallace 0-0 0-0 0 0Dawson Phifer 1-1 4-6 6 1Caleb Bean 0-0 0-0 0 0Michael Cross 0-0 0-0 0 0Owen Powell 0-0 0-0 0 0Totals 18-35 11-17 51 14Score by QuartersHeights 15 4 10 22 - 51Delta 1 6 16 10 - 33Heights 3-point shooting (4-6) Wahl 3-4 Sauerteig 1-1 Beale 0-1Heights rebounds (25) Weatherford 11 Thomas 3 Wahl 2 Lutz2 Wiltermood 2 Sauerteig 2 Phifer 1 Beale 1 Bean 1

Wahl

Huskies beat Delta will play Tipton for title

lsquoHawks fall to Lapelyounger years and then with me the pastthree years said McCauley Im proud ofthose guys They did something that wehadnt done as a program since CoachMcCulloughs 2010 team and thats advanceto the sectional semi-finals They took astep Im proud of them for that

FIRST SEMI-FINALSoutheastern 68

Anderson 47Southeastern FG FT TP PFJack Davidson 6-9 2-2 17 2Chaz Birchfield 4-7 5-7 13 1Aaron Etherington 3-12 4-4 10 3Connor Rotterman 1-2 0-0 2 2Noah Smith 1-1 3-4 5 1Aaron Shank 1-3 4-5 6 1Austin Holzum 1-5 0-0 3 2Nick Bowman 2-2 2-2 6 0Zach Mutchner 0-1 0-0 0 1Jack Habegger 1-1 2-2 4 0Mabor Majak 1-2 0-0 2 1Totals 21-45 22-26 68 14Score by QuartersAnderson 13 9 9 16 - 47Southeastern 14 23 12 19 - 68Southeastern 3-point shooting (4-16) Davidson3-6 Holzum 1-5 Etherington 0-3 Shank 0-1Majak 0-1Southeastern rebounds (25) Birchfield 4Etherington 4 Mutchner 4 Bowman 3 Davidson2 Shank 2 Holzum 1 Majak 1 team 4

SECOND SEMI-FINALCarmel 62

Noblesville 44Carmel FG FT TP PFCole Jenkins 3-6 0-0 7 1Luke Heady 4-6 2-3 13 1Jalen Whack 3-5 1-2 9 3PJ Baron 7-9 6-7 20 2John Michael Mulloy 2-2 3-6 7 2Britt Beery 0-0 0-0 0 0Eddie Gill 1-2 0-0 3 1Mike Pitz 0-0 1-2 1 0Alex Jackson 0-0 2-2 2 0Totals 20-30 15-22 62 10Carmel 3-point shooting (7-13) Heady 3-5Whack 2-3 Jenkins 1-3 Gill 1-1 Falender 0-1Carmel rebounds (23) Mulloy 7 Baron 6Jenkins 3 Pitz 3 Heady 2 Gill 1 Whack 1Noblesville FG FT TP PFRico Duncan 4-6 0-0 10 5Max Flinchum 3-7 2-2 8 0McGwire Plumer 4-6 1-2 9 3Nolan Ginther 3-10 1-1 7 3Grant Gremel 4-5 0-0 8 4Ryan Barnes 0-0 2-2 2 1Xavier Hines 0-1 0-0 0 2Nick Mills 0-1 0-0 0 2Totals 18-36 6-7 44 20Noblesville 3-point shooting (2-7) Duncan 2-2Flinchum 0-2 Plumer 0-2 Hines 0-1Noblesville rebounds (10) Ginther 4 Duncan 1Flinchum 1 Gremel 1 Hunes 1 Mills 1 team 1Score by QuartersCarmel 15 13 10 24 - 62Noblesville 10 8 10 16 - 44

CARMEL From Page 5

Courtesy John Harrellrsquos websitewwwjohnharrellnet

CLASS 4AEast Chicago CentralEast Chicago Central 74Hammond Morton 69Lake Central 53 Munster 40Michigan CityMerrillville 57 Michigan City 48Crown Point 78 Chesterton 66South Bend WashingtonPlymouth 40 Mishawaka 37 OTSouth Bend Adams 66 LaPorte

63 2OTElkhart CentralGoshen 65 Elkhart Memorial 56Warsaw 71 Elkhart Central 36Carroll (Fort Wayne)Fort Wayne North 67 Fort WayneNorthrop 47Fort Wayne Snider 50 Carroll(Fort Wayne) 41Fort Wayne WayneMuncie Central 44 HuntingtonNorth 36Homestead 60 Fort WayneWayne 54Lafayette JeffZionsville 66 Logansport 57McCutcheon 78 Kokomo 56CarmelHamilton Southeastern 68 Ander-son 47Carmel 62 Noblesville 44New CastleConnersville 65 Richmond 47New Castle 57 Greenfield-Central32North Central (Indianapolis)Lawrence North 70 IndianapolisTech 57North Central (Indianapolis) 81Indianapolis Cathedral 58Decatur CentralBen Davis 67 Decatur Central 60Indianapolis Roncalli 62 South-port 42PlainfieldBrownsburg 64 Plainfield 54Terre Haute South 69 Mooresville61Franklin CentralFranklin Central 57 Franklin 45Center Grove 56 Whiteland 39Bloomington NorthShelbyville 53 East Central 38Bloomington South 75 Blooming-ton North 60SeymourFloyd Central 44 Seymour 26New Albany 89 Bedford NorthLawrence 52Evansville NorthEvansville Reitz 71 EvansvilleHarrison 67Castle 89 Evansville North 53

Friday night sectional scores

Sports6

Sports 7

HamiltonSoutheasternrsquos ZachMutchner (right) hadfour rebounds for theRoyals during theirsectional win over

Anderson on FridayAt left is Austin

Holzum (13) while inthe background isMabor Majak (50)

Reporter photos by Kent Graham

LEFT Cole Jenkins takes a 3-point shot for CarmelABOVE Noblesvillersquos Rico Duncan is guarded by Carmelrsquos LukeHeady

Nick Bowman scored six points for Hamilton Southeastern in its Friday night win

Do You Have ACommunity

AnnouncementWedding BirthAnnouncement

AnniversaryShare It With The

CommunityContact the

Hamilton CountyReporter

Hamiltonconorthreporter

hotmailcom

or call317-408-5548

Hamilton CountyReporter

Hamilton CountyrsquosHometownNewspaper

Eastern ConferenceAtlantic W L PCT GBBoston 40 22 645 -Toronto 37 25 597 30New York 25 37 403 150Philadelphia 23 38 377 165Brooklyn 10 50 167 290Southeast W L PCT GBWashington 36 24 600 -Atlanta 34 27 557 25Miami 28 34 452 90Charlotte 26 35 426 105Orlando 23 39 371 140Central W L PCT GBCleveland 42 18 700 -Chicago 31 30 508 115Indiana 31 30 508 115Detroit 29 32 475 135Milwaukee 27 33 450 150

Western ConferenceNorthwest W L PCT GBUtah 38 24 613 -Oklahoma City 35 27 565 30Denver 28 33 459 95Portland 25 35 417 120Minnesota 25 36 410 125Southwest W L PCT GBSan Antonio 47 13 783 -Houston 43 19 694 50Memphis 36 26 581 120Dallas 25 36 410 225New Orleans 24 38 387 240Pacific W L PCT GBGolden State 50 11 820 -LA Clippers 36 25 590 140Sacramento 25 36 410 250Phoenix 20 42 323 305 LA Lakers 19 43 306 315

NBA standingsFridayrsquos games

Philadelphia 105 New York 102Toronto 114 Washington 106

Orlando 110 Miami 99Cleveland 135 Atlanta 130

Milwaukee 112 LA Clippers 101

Dallas 104 Memphis 100Utah 112 Brooklyn 97

Phoenix 118 Oklahoma City 111San Antonio 101 New Orleans 98 OT

Boston 115 LA Lakers 95

CLASS 3AHammond CivicLighthouse CPA 90 Kankakee Valley 62Griffith 69 Hammond Gavit 38Rensselaer CentralRensselaer Central 61 Wheeler 40Twin Lakes 60 Hanover Central 43JimtownSouth Bend St Joseph 42 Mishawaka Marian40Culver Academy 59 Jimtown 28MaconaquahWest Lafayette 55 Maconaquah 49Western 63 Peru 50

WawaseeWest Noble 42 Wawasee 38Fairfield 59 NorthWood 51GarrettNew Haven 67 Fort Wayne Dwenger 51Angola 46 Garrett 31BellmontFort Wayne Luers 71 Mississinewa 50Columbia City 59 Norwell 50MarionTipton 42 Yorktown 17Hamilton Heights 51 Delta 33GreencastleTri-West 66 Crawfordsville 53Lebanon 55 Western Boone 35EdgewoodEdgewood 46 Sullivan 42Northview 63 Owen Valley 43Brebeuf JesuitIndianapolis Chatard 51 New Palestine 48Indianapolis Attucks 65 Indianapolis Manual53DanvilleDanville 88 Indianapolis Northwest 72Beech Grove 79 Indianapolis Ritter 60GreensburgGreensburg 63 Madison 60 OTLawrenceburg 52 Rushville 42WashingtonPike Central 57 Jasper 43Vincennes Lincoln 59 Princeton 49BoonvilleMount Vernon (Posey) 62 Heritage Hills 59Evansville Bosse 82 Evansville Memorial 76

CLASS 2AGary RooseveltGary Roosevelt 36 Hammond Noll 34

River Forest 57 Lake Station 49WinamacDelphi 50 North Judson 31Marquette Catholic 76 Knox 52WestviewLaVille 57 Bremen 38Central Noble 46 Westview 42WoodlanChurubusco 75 Woodlan 60Eastside 58 Fort Wayne Canterbury 56 3OTOak HillManchester 59 Rochester 36Southwood 60 Oak Hill 52Fountain CentralCovington 68 Rossville 62Fountain Central 56 Carroll (Flora) 35TaylorMadison-Grant 49 Taylor 46Eastern (Greentown) 47 Eastbrook 38LapelLapel 79 Sheridan 29Frankton 77 Monroe Central 53HagerstownUnion County 57 Cambridge City Lincoln 41Northeastern 59 Hagerstown 55 OTTriton CentralShenandoah 66 Irvington Prep Academy 38Indianapolis Howe 101 Knightstown 47SpeedwaySpeedway 65 Indianapolis Broad Ripple 62Heritage Christian 49 Indianapolis Scecina46South PutnamMonrovia 45 South Putnam 40Cloverdale 61 North Putnam 51South RipleySouth Ripley 40 Southwestern (Hanover) 39Milan 47 North Decatur 45Crawford CountyProvidence 65 Paoli 46Crawford County 41 Clarksville 38Eastern GreeneBarr-Reeve 62 Mitchell 43South Knox 50 North Knox 38SouthridgeEvansville Mater Dei 64 South Spencer 58Forest Park 31 Tell City 27

CLASS 1AKoutsGary 21st Century 82 Washington Twp 53Westville 68 LaCrosse 56

CastonTri-County 66 Covenant Christian (DeMotte)46South Newton 45 Pioneer 39TritonTriton 58 Culver 40Oregon-Davis 63 Argos 55Bethany ChristianFort Wayne Blackhawk 87 Lakeland Christian51Lakewood Park 64 Hamilton 34North VermillionNorth Vermillion 47 Attica 43Riverton Parke 58 Rockville 56Tri-CentralLafayette Central Catholic 83 Clinton Central43Clinton Prairie 60 Faith Christian 52Wes-DelWes-Del 54 Daleville 44Liberty Christian 63 Cowan 46Blue RiverUnion (Modoc) 59 Union City 57Seton Catholic 71 Blue River 61White River ValleyEminence 62 White River Valley 38Shakamak 65 Bloomfield 62UniversityBethesda Christian 52 Indiana Deaf 46Indianapolis Tindley 80 Indiana Math ampScience 58EdinburghMorristown 59 Greenwood Christian 50Indianapolis Lutheran 63 Central Christian 59South DecaturHauser 75 Waldron 48Oldenburg Academy 67 South Decatur 31BordenBorden 61 Crothersville 44West Washington 51 Trinity Lutheran 40New WashingtonNew Washington 50 Lanesville 43Christian Academy 53 South Central(Elizabeth) 46North DaviessShoals 44 Washington Catholic 18Loogootee 44 North Daviess 43Wood MemorialWood Memorial 76 Evansville Day 43Northeast Dubois 55 Tecumseh 47NACA TournamentColumbus Christian 57 Louisiana Christian41

SCORES From Page 6

Sports8

Sports 7

HamiltonSoutheasternrsquos ZachMutchner (right) hadfour rebounds for theRoyals during theirsectional win over

Anderson on FridayAt left is Austin

Holzum (13) while inthe background isMabor Majak (50)

Reporter photos by Kent Graham

LEFT Cole Jenkins takes a 3-point shot for CarmelABOVE Noblesvillersquos Rico Duncan is guarded by Carmelrsquos LukeHeady

Nick Bowman scored six points for Hamilton Southeastern in its Friday night win

Do You Have ACommunity

AnnouncementWedding BirthAnnouncement

AnniversaryShare It With The

CommunityContact the

Hamilton CountyReporter

Hamiltonconorthreporter

hotmailcom

or call317-408-5548

Hamilton CountyReporter

Hamilton CountyrsquosHometownNewspaper

Eastern ConferenceAtlantic W L PCT GBBoston 40 22 645 -Toronto 37 25 597 30New York 25 37 403 150Philadelphia 23 38 377 165Brooklyn 10 50 167 290Southeast W L PCT GBWashington 36 24 600 -Atlanta 34 27 557 25Miami 28 34 452 90Charlotte 26 35 426 105Orlando 23 39 371 140Central W L PCT GBCleveland 42 18 700 -Chicago 31 30 508 115Indiana 31 30 508 115Detroit 29 32 475 135Milwaukee 27 33 450 150

Western ConferenceNorthwest W L PCT GBUtah 38 24 613 -Oklahoma City 35 27 565 30Denver 28 33 459 95Portland 25 35 417 120Minnesota 25 36 410 125Southwest W L PCT GBSan Antonio 47 13 783 -Houston 43 19 694 50Memphis 36 26 581 120Dallas 25 36 410 225New Orleans 24 38 387 240Pacific W L PCT GBGolden State 50 11 820 -LA Clippers 36 25 590 140Sacramento 25 36 410 250Phoenix 20 42 323 305 LA Lakers 19 43 306 315

NBA standingsFridayrsquos games

Philadelphia 105 New York 102Toronto 114 Washington 106

Orlando 110 Miami 99Cleveland 135 Atlanta 130

Milwaukee 112 LA Clippers 101

Dallas 104 Memphis 100Utah 112 Brooklyn 97

Phoenix 118 Oklahoma City 111San Antonio 101 New Orleans 98 OT

Boston 115 LA Lakers 95

CLASS 3AHammond CivicLighthouse CPA 90 Kankakee Valley 62Griffith 69 Hammond Gavit 38Rensselaer CentralRensselaer Central 61 Wheeler 40Twin Lakes 60 Hanover Central 43JimtownSouth Bend St Joseph 42 Mishawaka Marian40Culver Academy 59 Jimtown 28MaconaquahWest Lafayette 55 Maconaquah 49Western 63 Peru 50

WawaseeWest Noble 42 Wawasee 38Fairfield 59 NorthWood 51GarrettNew Haven 67 Fort Wayne Dwenger 51Angola 46 Garrett 31BellmontFort Wayne Luers 71 Mississinewa 50Columbia City 59 Norwell 50MarionTipton 42 Yorktown 17Hamilton Heights 51 Delta 33GreencastleTri-West 66 Crawfordsville 53Lebanon 55 Western Boone 35EdgewoodEdgewood 46 Sullivan 42Northview 63 Owen Valley 43Brebeuf JesuitIndianapolis Chatard 51 New Palestine 48Indianapolis Attucks 65 Indianapolis Manual53DanvilleDanville 88 Indianapolis Northwest 72Beech Grove 79 Indianapolis Ritter 60GreensburgGreensburg 63 Madison 60 OTLawrenceburg 52 Rushville 42WashingtonPike Central 57 Jasper 43Vincennes Lincoln 59 Princeton 49BoonvilleMount Vernon (Posey) 62 Heritage Hills 59Evansville Bosse 82 Evansville Memorial 76

CLASS 2AGary RooseveltGary Roosevelt 36 Hammond Noll 34

River Forest 57 Lake Station 49WinamacDelphi 50 North Judson 31Marquette Catholic 76 Knox 52WestviewLaVille 57 Bremen 38Central Noble 46 Westview 42WoodlanChurubusco 75 Woodlan 60Eastside 58 Fort Wayne Canterbury 56 3OTOak HillManchester 59 Rochester 36Southwood 60 Oak Hill 52Fountain CentralCovington 68 Rossville 62Fountain Central 56 Carroll (Flora) 35TaylorMadison-Grant 49 Taylor 46Eastern (Greentown) 47 Eastbrook 38LapelLapel 79 Sheridan 29Frankton 77 Monroe Central 53HagerstownUnion County 57 Cambridge City Lincoln 41Northeastern 59 Hagerstown 55 OTTriton CentralShenandoah 66 Irvington Prep Academy 38Indianapolis Howe 101 Knightstown 47SpeedwaySpeedway 65 Indianapolis Broad Ripple 62Heritage Christian 49 Indianapolis Scecina46South PutnamMonrovia 45 South Putnam 40Cloverdale 61 North Putnam 51South RipleySouth Ripley 40 Southwestern (Hanover) 39Milan 47 North Decatur 45Crawford CountyProvidence 65 Paoli 46Crawford County 41 Clarksville 38Eastern GreeneBarr-Reeve 62 Mitchell 43South Knox 50 North Knox 38SouthridgeEvansville Mater Dei 64 South Spencer 58Forest Park 31 Tell City 27

CLASS 1AKoutsGary 21st Century 82 Washington Twp 53Westville 68 LaCrosse 56

CastonTri-County 66 Covenant Christian (DeMotte)46South Newton 45 Pioneer 39TritonTriton 58 Culver 40Oregon-Davis 63 Argos 55Bethany ChristianFort Wayne Blackhawk 87 Lakeland Christian51Lakewood Park 64 Hamilton 34North VermillionNorth Vermillion 47 Attica 43Riverton Parke 58 Rockville 56Tri-CentralLafayette Central Catholic 83 Clinton Central43Clinton Prairie 60 Faith Christian 52Wes-DelWes-Del 54 Daleville 44Liberty Christian 63 Cowan 46Blue RiverUnion (Modoc) 59 Union City 57Seton Catholic 71 Blue River 61White River ValleyEminence 62 White River Valley 38Shakamak 65 Bloomfield 62UniversityBethesda Christian 52 Indiana Deaf 46Indianapolis Tindley 80 Indiana Math ampScience 58EdinburghMorristown 59 Greenwood Christian 50Indianapolis Lutheran 63 Central Christian 59South DecaturHauser 75 Waldron 48Oldenburg Academy 67 South Decatur 31BordenBorden 61 Crothersville 44West Washington 51 Trinity Lutheran 40New WashingtonNew Washington 50 Lanesville 43Christian Academy 53 South Central(Elizabeth) 46North DaviessShoals 44 Washington Catholic 18Loogootee 44 North Daviess 43Wood MemorialWood Memorial 76 Evansville Day 43Northeast Dubois 55 Tecumseh 47NACA TournamentColumbus Christian 57 Louisiana Christian41

SCORES From Page 6

Sports8

Eastern ConferenceAtlantic W L PCT GBBoston 40 22 645 -Toronto 37 25 597 30New York 25 37 403 150Philadelphia 23 38 377 165Brooklyn 10 50 167 290Southeast W L PCT GBWashington 36 24 600 -Atlanta 34 27 557 25Miami 28 34 452 90Charlotte 26 35 426 105Orlando 23 39 371 140Central W L PCT GBCleveland 42 18 700 -Chicago 31 30 508 115Indiana 31 30 508 115Detroit 29 32 475 135Milwaukee 27 33 450 150

Western ConferenceNorthwest W L PCT GBUtah 38 24 613 -Oklahoma City 35 27 565 30Denver 28 33 459 95Portland 25 35 417 120Minnesota 25 36 410 125Southwest W L PCT GBSan Antonio 47 13 783 -Houston 43 19 694 50Memphis 36 26 581 120Dallas 25 36 410 225New Orleans 24 38 387 240Pacific W L PCT GBGolden State 50 11 820 -LA Clippers 36 25 590 140Sacramento 25 36 410 250Phoenix 20 42 323 305 LA Lakers 19 43 306 315

NBA standingsFridayrsquos games

Philadelphia 105 New York 102Toronto 114 Washington 106

Orlando 110 Miami 99Cleveland 135 Atlanta 130

Milwaukee 112 LA Clippers 101

Dallas 104 Memphis 100Utah 112 Brooklyn 97

Phoenix 118 Oklahoma City 111San Antonio 101 New Orleans 98 OT

Boston 115 LA Lakers 95

CLASS 3AHammond CivicLighthouse CPA 90 Kankakee Valley 62Griffith 69 Hammond Gavit 38Rensselaer CentralRensselaer Central 61 Wheeler 40Twin Lakes 60 Hanover Central 43JimtownSouth Bend St Joseph 42 Mishawaka Marian40Culver Academy 59 Jimtown 28MaconaquahWest Lafayette 55 Maconaquah 49Western 63 Peru 50

WawaseeWest Noble 42 Wawasee 38Fairfield 59 NorthWood 51GarrettNew Haven 67 Fort Wayne Dwenger 51Angola 46 Garrett 31BellmontFort Wayne Luers 71 Mississinewa 50Columbia City 59 Norwell 50MarionTipton 42 Yorktown 17Hamilton Heights 51 Delta 33GreencastleTri-West 66 Crawfordsville 53Lebanon 55 Western Boone 35EdgewoodEdgewood 46 Sullivan 42Northview 63 Owen Valley 43Brebeuf JesuitIndianapolis Chatard 51 New Palestine 48Indianapolis Attucks 65 Indianapolis Manual53DanvilleDanville 88 Indianapolis Northwest 72Beech Grove 79 Indianapolis Ritter 60GreensburgGreensburg 63 Madison 60 OTLawrenceburg 52 Rushville 42WashingtonPike Central 57 Jasper 43Vincennes Lincoln 59 Princeton 49BoonvilleMount Vernon (Posey) 62 Heritage Hills 59Evansville Bosse 82 Evansville Memorial 76

CLASS 2AGary RooseveltGary Roosevelt 36 Hammond Noll 34

River Forest 57 Lake Station 49WinamacDelphi 50 North Judson 31Marquette Catholic 76 Knox 52WestviewLaVille 57 Bremen 38Central Noble 46 Westview 42WoodlanChurubusco 75 Woodlan 60Eastside 58 Fort Wayne Canterbury 56 3OTOak HillManchester 59 Rochester 36Southwood 60 Oak Hill 52Fountain CentralCovington 68 Rossville 62Fountain Central 56 Carroll (Flora) 35TaylorMadison-Grant 49 Taylor 46Eastern (Greentown) 47 Eastbrook 38LapelLapel 79 Sheridan 29Frankton 77 Monroe Central 53HagerstownUnion County 57 Cambridge City Lincoln 41Northeastern 59 Hagerstown 55 OTTriton CentralShenandoah 66 Irvington Prep Academy 38Indianapolis Howe 101 Knightstown 47SpeedwaySpeedway 65 Indianapolis Broad Ripple 62Heritage Christian 49 Indianapolis Scecina46South PutnamMonrovia 45 South Putnam 40Cloverdale 61 North Putnam 51South RipleySouth Ripley 40 Southwestern (Hanover) 39Milan 47 North Decatur 45Crawford CountyProvidence 65 Paoli 46Crawford County 41 Clarksville 38Eastern GreeneBarr-Reeve 62 Mitchell 43South Knox 50 North Knox 38SouthridgeEvansville Mater Dei 64 South Spencer 58Forest Park 31 Tell City 27

CLASS 1AKoutsGary 21st Century 82 Washington Twp 53Westville 68 LaCrosse 56

CastonTri-County 66 Covenant Christian (DeMotte)46South Newton 45 Pioneer 39TritonTriton 58 Culver 40Oregon-Davis 63 Argos 55Bethany ChristianFort Wayne Blackhawk 87 Lakeland Christian51Lakewood Park 64 Hamilton 34North VermillionNorth Vermillion 47 Attica 43Riverton Parke 58 Rockville 56Tri-CentralLafayette Central Catholic 83 Clinton Central43Clinton Prairie 60 Faith Christian 52Wes-DelWes-Del 54 Daleville 44Liberty Christian 63 Cowan 46Blue RiverUnion (Modoc) 59 Union City 57Seton Catholic 71 Blue River 61White River ValleyEminence 62 White River Valley 38Shakamak 65 Bloomfield 62UniversityBethesda Christian 52 Indiana Deaf 46Indianapolis Tindley 80 Indiana Math ampScience 58EdinburghMorristown 59 Greenwood Christian 50Indianapolis Lutheran 63 Central Christian 59South DecaturHauser 75 Waldron 48Oldenburg Academy 67 South Decatur 31BordenBorden 61 Crothersville 44West Washington 51 Trinity Lutheran 40New WashingtonNew Washington 50 Lanesville 43Christian Academy 53 South Central(Elizabeth) 46North DaviessShoals 44 Washington Catholic 18Loogootee 44 North Daviess 43Wood MemorialWood Memorial 76 Evansville Day 43Northeast Dubois 55 Tecumseh 47NACA TournamentColumbus Christian 57 Louisiana Christian41

SCORES From Page 6

Sports8