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A New Year, A New You
1. By Lauren Anderson
Freeman Staff
TOWN OF MERTON — A
cheerful, 140-pound New-
foundland dog named
Zappa provided a welcome
break from studying in
Arrowhead High School’s
library on Wednesday
morning.
“He loves all the atten-
tion,” Zappa’s owner told
the crowd of students as the
dog offered one of them a
kiss on the nose.
Zappa was one of several
therapy dogs invited to the
school to help relieve anxi-
ety during what can be a
stressful week for students,
Arrowhead Director of Stu-
dent Services Mary Ann
Beckman said.
A new offering this year,
the dogs were available for
students to visit with dur-
ing study hall over the
three days of exams. The
volunteer-led service was
provided at no cost to the
school, Beckman said.
Groups streamed in and
out of the library’s rooms
to see the four dogs and
their owners, with many
students responding in
smiles and collective “aws.”
Whether consciously de-
stressing or not, students
enjoy the canine visitors,
Beckman said.
“Some students just say ‘I
love dogs,’” she said. “Oth-
ers say, ‘I just really needed
a break.’”
Seniors Kathryn
Makowski and Annie Ben-
son made the journey from
Arrowhead’s North campus
to its South one immediate-
ly after an exam to see the
dogs.
“We just took a chemistry
test — it was stressful,”
Makowski. “We knew we
would need this.”
Benson and Makowski
agreed the dogs helped
them decompress. They
suggested the school
expand the program by hav-
ing dogs at both campuses
during the next finals week.
Sophomore Sam Evert
also supported the effort.
“I just like dogs,” Evert
said while petting PJ and
Shaina, a pair of Bernese
“One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s
Nest,” 7:30 p.m. today and Friday, 2
p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Saturday and 2
p.m. Sunday, Sunset Playhouse, 800
Elm Grove Road, Elm Grove. 262-
782-4430, www.sunsetplayhouse.com
“White Rabbit Red Rabbit,” 7:30
p.m. today, Friday and Saturday and 4
p.m. Sunday, Oconomowoc Arts Cen-
ter, 641 Forest St., Oconomowoc.
OHS Fringe fundraiser. $15. 262- 560-
3172, www.oasd.k12.wi.us
“The Dastardly Ficus,” 7:30 p.m. Fri-
day and Saturday and 2 p.m. Sunday,
Lake Country Playhouse, 221 E. Capi-
tol Drive, Hartland. 262-367-4697,
http://lakecountryplayhouse.net
Clear Water Outdoor snowshoe
social hike, 10 a.m. to noon Saturday,
Lapham Peak State Park, W329-N846
Highway C, Town of Delafield. Clear
Water Outdoor Adventure Club mem-
bers $7 (snowshoes included), non-
members $10 (snowshoes included);
$5 with own snowshoes. Park fees
apply, registration required. 262-303-
4206.
Winter Tales by the Fire, 6 p.m. Sat-
urday, Sharon Lynne Wilson Center for
the Arts, 19805 W. Capitol Drive,
Brookfield. One-hour performance for
children of all ages. Florentine Opera’s
Goldie B. Locks & the Three Singing
Bears. $7. 262-781-9520, www.wilson-
center.com
Fantastic Flicks, 2 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Saturday, Waukesha Public Library,
321 Wisconsin Ave. Feature is “The
Boxtrolls.” For families with children of
all ages.
Art and Artisans Studio Creations
Clearance Sale, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Saturday, Waukesha County Expo
Center, 1000 Northview Road,
Waukesha. $5 adults, free admission
for children 12 and younger. Attend
for free with two canned goods for
Food Pantry of Waukesha County.
www.artworkswisconsin.com
Oconomowoc Indoor Winter
Farmers Market, 9:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Sunday, Oconomowoc Landscape
Supply and Garden Center, N68-
W37850 Highway K, Town of
Oconomowoc.
Winter Music Series presented by
SummerStage, 6 p.m. Sunday,
Hawks Inn visitor center, 426 Wells
St., Delafield. $10. Featuring Bill
Camplin. Purchases tickets at
Delafield Public Library, 500 Gene-
see St., SummerStage office, 605
Milwaukee St., or online at
www.summerstageofdelafield.org.
WEATHER
Tomorrow:
Partly cloudy
High 37 / Low 28
INDEX Fun Things To Do This Weekend
Volume 156,
Number 209
Business...............................5A
Classified.............................5B
Comics.................................8B
Crossword..........................8B
Dr. Komaroff.....................8B
Lottery.................................2A
Obituaries........................9A
Opinion................................8A
Sports...................................1B
Weather............................10A
See the complete forecast on back page
75¢
THURSDAY
JANUARY 22, 2015
TO SUBSCRIBE TO THE FREEMAN, CALL 542-2500
By Sarah Pryor
Freeman Staff
WAUKESHA — Darrin
Malone has been charged
with felony murder in the
Jan. 13 slaying of a Wauke-
sha Citgo clerk and his bail
has been set at $500,000, but
he remained at large as of
press time.
According to court docu-
ments, a Waukesha County
Circuit Court judge issued an
arrest warrant for 28-year-old
Malone on Wednesday. The
official charge is being a
party to felony murder, which
is punishable upon convic-
tion by up to 55 years behind
bars.
Malone’s alleged accom-
plice, 19-year-old Kenneth
Thomas of West Allis, who
allegedly shot and killed 65-
year-old Citgo clerk Saeed
Sharwani, has been charged
with seven felonies, includ-
ing homicide, and could face
life behind bars if convicted.
According to the criminal
complaint, police arrived at
the Citgo, 1445 White Rock
Ave., at 10:45 p.m. Jan. 13 to
find Sharwani prone on the
ground outside the station
with a gunshot wound to the
chest. He was unable to speak
and was only able to answer a
question about how many
people had been there by
holding up two fingers. Shar-
wani died at Waukesha
Memorial Hospital less than
an hour later.
According to the com-
plaint, Thomas told investi-
gators that Malone, a Mil-
waukee resident, put him up
to the robbery because “there
was money out in Wauke-
sha,” and Malone supplied
Halloween masks. Thomas
also told police that during
the robbery, he jumped onto
the counter and Sharwani
started “freaking out,” came
around the counter, grabbed
Thomas and “the next thing
he knew, the gun went off.”
Thomas said he didn’t
shoot on purpose and he
thought the gun’s safety was
on. He said Malone told him
to put the gun in the “baby
bag.” Police later found the
gun in a diaper box in one of
the bedrooms of Thomas’
apartment.
Alleged getaway driver Jer-
ica Cotton, 23, told police that
on Jan. 13, she agreed to give
Thomas and Malone a ride in
exchange for $50 for gas
money. She has been charged
with being a party to the
crime of felony murder and
felony armed robbery, and a
court commissioner set her
bail at $250,000. Thomas’ bail
was set at $1 million.
Third suspect
charged with
murder in
gas station
clerk slaying
$500K bail set;
Malone still at large
By Brian Huber
Freeman Staff
WAUKESHA — Jealousy
was the motivation for two
brothers and a woman who
allegedly burglarized a
Muskego home and stole a
safe containing up to $400,000
in cash Nov. 7, according to a
criminal complaint.
Tiffany Kapitanski, 23, and
Javier Rizo, 30, both of West
Allis, and Rizo’s brother
Dario Rizo, 29, of Milwaukee,
all were charged Wednesday
in Waukesha County Circuit
Court with one count each of
burglary and theft. Kapitans-
ki and Javier Rizo both were
ordered held on $20,000 cash
bonds Wednesday. Dario Rizo
has yet to appear in court.
According to the criminal
complaint, a resident of the
Muskego house returned
home Nov. 7 to find the back
door ajar and a safe contain-
ing about $400,000 missing
from his mother’s closet. The
resident had been summoned
to meet a potential client
regarding a landscaping job,
but found it suspicious when
the client did not show up
and the phone number given
could not be tracked down
later.
A person who wished to
remain anonymous called
police Jan. 7, saying he or she
knew of the burglary before
its occurrence and identified
the suspects as the Rizo
brothers, the complaint said.
The informant said the
homeowner’s husband had
died in some type of accident,
the complaint said.
A call was placed to get a
son of the resident out of the
house Nov. 7, during which
time the alleged burglary
occurred. Shortly thereafter,
the three bought cars from a
Nissan dealership in Milwau-
kee. A dealership representa-
tive recognized Javier Rizo’s
face when police showed his
picture and recalled that the
Rizo brothers and Kapitanski
bought a 2014 Nissan Altima
for $15,600, a 2013 Nissan
Rogue sport utility vehicle
worth $28,857, and a 2013 Nis-
san Pathfinder worth $39,800,
taking cash from Kapitans-
ki’s purse to pay for them, the
complaint said.
Police determined the
homeowner’s son had been
giving an ex-girlfriend
between $30,000 and $50,000;
that woman had a child with
Kapitanski’s brother and was
friends with Kapitanski, the
complaint said.
The complaint added close
to $120,000 in cash was
deposited into accounts for
the three suspects despite
their reporting a combined
$19,900 in earnings for 2014.
The informant added
Javier Rizo and Kapitanski
bought a house in West Allis
with some of the money; two
of the vehicles bought with
cash were parked outside
that home when police
checked last Friday, the com-
plaint said. They were arrest-
ed in the house. Both initially
denied knowledge of the bur-
glary but Javier Rizo later
admitted some of the money
used to buy the cars came
from the Muskego residence,
the complaint said.
Kapitanski allegedly
admitted she was upset with
her friend, the son’s ex-girl-
friend, who was frequently
flaunting new clothes, cars
and cash. She told Javier Rizo
“about how frustrated she
was with the situation that
(the woman) was getting all
this money and she didn’t
have to work or do anything
for it,” the complaint said.
Kapitanski called the son
away from the home that day,
using a prepaid cellphone.
When the son left, the broth-
ers went to the house, using a
garage door opener given to
them by the son’s ex-girl-
friend, the complaint said.
After the burglary, they went
to a hotel in Milwaukee and
opened the safe, Kapitanski
told police.
A resident of the home
could not be reached for com-
ment Wednesday.
When police contacted
Dario Rizo to turn himself in,
he hung up the phone, the
complaint said.
Email: bhuber@conleynet.com
Three charged with stealing safe containing up to $400,000
Complaint: Suspects bought cars, house with cash
Darrin Malone,suspect still at large
Fighting stress with
Canine visitors relieve exam pressure at Arrowhead
Charles Auer/Freeman Staff
Arrowhead High School freshman Travis Case pets Charlie, a beagle-dachshund mix therapy dog.
Zappa, a Newfoundland thera-
py dog, waits for students
Wednesday at Arrowhead.
Abby, a Labrador therapy dog
owned byArrowhead guidance
counselor Mike Ward, holds a
sign.Abby works with students
on a regular basis, but was not
part of the exam day program.
What do you think?
Phone: 513-2641
Email: soundoff@conleynet.com
SOUND OFF
See MALONE, PAGE 10ASee DOGS, PAGE 10A
furry friends
Coming to grips
with a health
wake-up call. 7B
What you need to know about financial aid. 7B
A NEW YEAR,
a new YOU
Tips to help you
keep your resolution
to eat healthier. 2A
Waukesha County’s Daily Newspaper
The FREEMAN
2. By Karen Pilarski
Special to The Freeman
SUMMIT — The cham-
pagne glasses have stopped
clinking and the tossed
confetti has been vacu-
umed up. Ah, another New
Year’s celebration has
come and gone. January is
the official start to the res-
olutions that were made.
Some may resolve to find a
new job, get a degree or
lose weight.
Why is weight loss a huge
resolution?
“People need a jump-
start. They think a new
year means a new begin-
ning where habits and tra-
ditions can start,” said
Amanda Motl, registered
dietitian and certified dia-
betes educator at Aurora
Medical Center in Summit.
Robyn Pearce, group
exercise director at YMCA
of Greater Waukesha
County, said: “Throughout
the year we lose focus due
to the busy-ness of every-
day life and it accelerates
toward the end of the year
and we completely lose
focus. The changing of the
calendar is always the per-
fect time to change your
behavior.”
The holiday season is full
of sugary cookies, hot ham
and creamy dips. After the
holiday eating, people are
ready to get over the excess
by having healthier begin-
nings.
Motl said people should
start small rather than set-
ting unattainable aspira-
tions and becoming dis-
couraged quickly. “The
first step is to start basic. I
see patients that try to go
full steam and make
changes that are difficult to
stick with and comply
with,” she said.
“Set a realistic goal and
then create mini steps
within that goal,” Pearce
said. “The small steps
make the goal that much
more achievable and cre-
ates opportunity for
reward, motivation and to
feel successful.”
Tips for losing weight
Diets are different from
food plans. Motl explains
that dieting means eating a
certain way for short time
then falling back on old
habits. She says, “When
dieting, someone may con-
sume cake or ice cream and
feel as though they failed.
There is no black and white
with food.”
Besides the notion of
cheating, many people are
confused about how to get
started. Pearce said they
lack a plan or education on
how to reach their goals.
The key to successful
weight loss is moderation.
Motl stresses that people
should think about how
often and how much cer-
tain foods are consumed.
A goal she gives is to
incorporate one piece of
fruit or vegetable with
every meal. This helps
form a healthy habit dur-
ing meal times.
“The biggest thing we
preach is to increase fruits
and vegetables,” she said.
“Fruits and vegetables are
low in calories and a good
source of fiber. Skins and
seeds from fruits and veg-
etables have a higher fiber
content. Eating the skins of
apples, baked potatoes,
pears, seeds, raspberries,
blackberries leaves the per-
son feeling fuller longer.”
Taming temptation
A common roadblock for
the newly health-conscious
is that they don’t want to
know what they are eating.
Motl encourages her
patients to look at the nutri-
tion label, fat content and
calories. Paying attention to
labels makes people more
aware of what they are eat-
ing. She has observed when
patients start paying atten-
tion, they put food back on
the shelves. It is all about
making healthy choices.
There may be hesitation
to fully commit to a healthi-
er lifestyle. Most people
lead busy lives. Keeping up
with a strict diet lacks vari-
ety and takes time. “Drink-
ing water, deleting empty
calories, eating clean and
getting into a regular exer-
cise schedule are very basic
lifelong changes but they
must look at their schedule
and lifestyle and figure out
a way to make it work with-
in their own schedule,
social, work and family cir-
cles,” Pearce said.
Both Motl and Pearce
agree that accountability is
the key to fitness success.
What happens is people
cave to convenience. Motl
suggested people look up
recipes to find foods that
are tasteful and healthy. By
adding recipes it prevents
the fall back of fast food.
There are many user-friend-
ly, free calorie-tracking
websites available. If the
Internet is not your cup of
tea, use a pen and paper.
“By keeping a food jour-
nal, people can look at their
meals and see calories and
where they come from,”
Motl said.
Fitness is for everyone
For older people and
those with a handicap or
illness, it may be frustrat-
ing to find a good fitness
plan. Pearce said the Y is
an inclusive organization,
with a variety of programs
for just about everyone.
“Our senior and active
older adult programs are
very extensive, we have
programs for specialty
groups and coaching and
personal training is always
available,” she said.
New fitness programs
can be intimidating.
Health enthusiasts are
wary over new equipment,
new people, and new move-
ments that may be uncom-
fortable. Motl and Pearce
suggest finding a support
system such as life coach-
es, partners, friends and
dietitians willing to work
with them. Without a men-
tor there is no one to be
accountable to. Pearce sug-
gests finding an instructor
that plays awesome music
and likes to joke a little in
class. For the shy and
timid, remember others
are not gawking at you.
They are more focused on
themselves then what is
going on around them.
“Leave your inhibitions
at the door,” Pearce said.
“Remember your goals.
Play music that motivates
you or go to a Zumba class
if you like to dance.”
Unfortunately not every-
one will share the same
healthy resolution.
Motl said it can be hard
when a loved one brings
home a fatty treat. The per-
son may take a step back in
their progress to please
others. She cheers people
on by saying, “We have to
look after ourselves. Hope-
fully by seeing others’ suc-
cessful changes, it will
lead them to making better
choices.”
Lifestyle changes must
be sustainable. Before
embarking on a fitness
plan, ask yourself if you
are willing to make these
changes for life and not
just for a month or two.
“Our bodies are units
that were designed to work
physically. We function at
a higher level in all areas
when we exercise and are
more physically active,”
Pearce says. “From a cellu-
lar level all the way
through to entire systems
we will function more effi-
ciently, we will live happi-
er, healthier, longer lives
and be better able to ward
off sickness and disease.”
PAGE 2 Today and Friday
Bubba’s, 1276 Capitol Drive,
Pewaukee
Today: Andes Mint
Chocolate
Friday: Strawberry
Shortcake
Culver’s, 1650 E.
Main St., Waukesha
Today: Butter Pecan
Friday: Turtle
Culver’s, 840 W. Sunset Drive,
Waukesha
Today: Crazy for Cookie Dough
Friday: Turtle
Culver’s, 2600 N. Grandview
Blvd., Waukesha
Today: Red Raspberry
Friday: Caramel Chocolate
Pecan
Culver’s, 14855 W. National
Ave., New Berlin
Today: Brownie Thunder
Friday: Double Marshmallow
Oreo
Culver’s, 3705 N. 124th St.,
Brookfield
Today: Chocolate Covered
Banana
Friday: Cookies & Cream
Culver’s, 21300 W. Capitol
Drive, Town of Brookfield
Today: Boston Cream
Friday: Caramel Turtle
Culver’s, 15280 W. Bluemound
Road, Elm Grove
Today: Caramel Peanut Butter-
cup
Friday: Chocolate Caramel Twist
Culver’s, 701 Industrial Ct.,
Hartland
Today: Double Strawberry
Friday: Caramel Chocolate
Pecan
Culver’s, 1090 N. Rochester St.,
Mukwonago
Today: Caramel Pecan
Friday: Really Reese’s
Culver’s, W187-S7959 Racine
Ave., Muskego
Today: Twix Mix
Friday: Butter Pecan
Culver’s, 1177 E. Summit Ave.,
Oconomowoc
Today: Double Marshmallow
Oreo
Friday: Maple Pecan
Culver’s, W249-N6620 Highway
164, Town of Lisbon
Today: Bonfire S’mores
Friday: Cookies & Cream
Culver’s, 400 E. Summit Ave.,
Wales
Today: Chocolate Heath Crunch
Friday: Turtle Dove
Sloppy Joe’s, 280 W. Broadway,
Waukesha
Today: Black Cherry
Friday: Vanilla
Kopp’s Frozen Custard, 18880
W. Bluemound Road, Town of
Brookfield
Today: Mint Chip, Chocolate
Truffel
Friday: Red Raspberry, Rocky
Road
LeDuc’s Frozen Custard Drive-
In, 240 W. Summit Ave., Wales
Today: Pistachio
Friday: French Silk
Oscar’s Frozen Custard, 21165
Highway 18, Town of Brookfield
Today: Black Forest Torte
Friday: Death by Chocolate
Flavor of the day
Wednesday, Jan. 21
WISCONSIN
5 Card Cash 3D-6D-9H-7S-8S
Pick 3 8-4-4
Pick 4 6-9-4-6
Megabucks 6-24-25-27-36-40
SuperCash 13-21-26-27-28-39
SuperCash Doubler: No
Powerball 11-12-15-28-57
Powerball 23
Power Play 4
Badger 5 12-17-20-25-31
Lottery
The FREEMAN THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 2015
262-542-2500
Hours: M-F 8 a.m.- 5 p.m.
801 N. Barstow St., P.O. Box 7,
Waukesha, WI 53187
Waukesha County’s Daily Newspaper
The FREEMAN
FREEMAN MANAGEMENT
Bill Yorth - Editor-in-Chief...................513-2671
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Arthur Thomas - Managing Editor.....513-2657
athomas@conleynet.com
Jim Baumgart - Freeman Group Ad Director 513-2621
jbaumgart@conleynet.com
Tim Haffemann - Circulation Director 513-2640
thaffemann@conleynet.com
Matt Marlett - Plant Manager..............513-2633
mmarlett@conleynet.com
Patricia Scheel - Prepress Manager...513-2690
pscheel@conleynet.com
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Local News - Arthur Thomas.............513-2657
athomas@conleynet.com
News at Night - Steve Van Dien........513-2673
svandien@conleynet.com
Sports - Daniel Mike...........................513-2667
sports@conleynet.com
Death Notices - Shana Duffy..............513-2618
obits@conleynet.com
Newsroom Fax..............................262-542-8259
CLASSIFIEDS: 800-762-6219 Ext:5005
HOURS: Monday – Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
PHOTO REPRINTS
Color reprints are $25 each. Call 542-2501
PAGE REPRINTS
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Published Tuesday-Saturday except legal
holidays.
Postmaster, send address changes to:
The Freeman, P.O. Box 7, Waukesha WI 53187-
0007
Postage paid at Waukesha 53186
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Periodicals ISSN Number 1062-9041
The Freeman is printed on recycled newsprint.
Subscription Rates
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92YEARS AGO
Jan. 22, 1923
Two boys, giving their
names as Donald Willard and
Elmer Shinn, each 12 years
of age, were arrested as
vagrants by Officer Owen
Owens, on Sunday, when
they stepped from a Soo Line
freight train on which they
had made their way from
Chicago.
The boys told Sheriff
Alvin Redford that they
“hooked” one freight for a
short ride but that they were
unable to get off until they
reached this city. Later they
admitted that they had run
away from home to see what
life outside the city of Chica-
go was like. The parents of
the boys have been notified
and will probably make
arrangements for their
return home.
They said that they had
been noticed by the brake-
man of the train, whom they
told they were on their way
to Minneapolis, where their
parents resided. Young
Willard said, upon inquiry
by Jailor Don McKay, that he
was not a relative of Jess, but
that he had been endowed
with the same fighting abili-
ty. To prove good his state-
ments he did some shadow
boxing with one of the mat-
tresses in the jail, and
McKay said that in view of
the lad’s proficiency one
might believe that Jess has
been instructing him.
The boys were arraigned
in Municipal Court this
morning together with five
others who appeared on
charges of being drunk and
disorderly.
34YEARS GO
Jan. 22, 1981
Peddlers vs. Traders
The agreement leading to
the release of the American
hostages that was worked
out in such painstaking
detail by members of the
Carter administration, the
Algerian government and
the Iranians “has the same
moral standing,” editorial-
ized the Wall Street Journal
Wednesday, “as an agree-
ment made with a kidnapper,
that is to say, none at all.”
It was announced the same
day that the new Reagan
administration just might
take that advice. It is report-
edly studying the agreement
carefully, as well it might,
but is making no commit-
ments about honoring it.
It would be a mistake, in
our view, for the new Presi-
dent to renege on the deal
struck with the Iranians —
despite the fact that the ordi-
narily such a move would
have every justification.
Agreements made under
duress, which in this case
included the threat of death,
have no legal and certainty
no moral validity whatsoev-
er.
But there are other consid-
erations. For one thing, a
broken agreement now could
seal fates of any Americans
who find themselves in a
similar situation in the
future. It makes no more
sense to cut off diplomatic
avenues than it does to rule
out military actions.
For another, a shattered
agreement would have seri-
ous diplomatic consequences
for the Algerian government,
which bargained in good
faith over the last few
months and to which we owe
a measure of gratitude.
— Local history compiled
by Patrice Shanks;
pshanks@conleynet.com
ALSO ON THIS DATE
Jan. 22, 1498 — During
his third voyage to the West-
ern Hemisphere, Christo-
pher Columbus arrived at
the present-day Caribbean
island of St. Vincent.
Jan. 22, 1917 — President
Woodrow Wilson pleaded for
an end to war in Europe, call-
ing for ‘‘peace without victo-
ry.’’ (By April, however,
America also was at war.)
Jan. 22, 1944 — During
World War II, Allied forces
began landing at Anzio, Italy.
Jan. 22, 1957 — Suspected
‘‘Mad Bomber’’ George P.
Metesky was arrested in
Waterbury, Conn. (He was
later found mentally ill and
committed until 1973; he died
in 1994.)
Jan. 22, 1968 — ‘‘Rowan &
Martin’s Laugh-In’’ pre-
miered on NBC-TV.
Jan. 22, 1973 — The U.S.
Supreme Court, in its Roe v.
Wade decision, legalized
abortions using a trimester
approach.
Former President Lyndon
B. Johnson died at his Texas
ranch at age 64.
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in Waukesha County
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3. WAUKESHA — A third
person has been charged in a
case involving the shipment
of thousands of dollars
worth of high-grade mari-
juana from California to
Waukesha.
Shannon M. Collins, 30,
was charged Wednesday in
Waukesha County Circuit
Court with several drug
charges including posses-
sion of between 2,500 and
10,000 grams of marijuana,
maintaining a drug traffick-
ing place, possession of nar-
cotics and drug parapherna-
lia and resisting an officer.
While he has been
charged, Collins is not cur-
rently in custody, according
to online court records.
Shawn P. Collins, the
brother of Shannon, and
Angelo M. Tagliavia, her
boyfriend, were similarly
charged last year.
According to the criminal
complaint against them,
Waukesha police officers
have been working on track-
ing marijuana trafficking
organizations that have sent
multiple pounds of high-
grade marijuana from Per-
ris, Calif. to the city.
The complaint states five
packages were delivered to
Tagliavia’s home, one of
which was recovered by
police and found to contain
12 identical vacuum-sealed
bags of marijuana, weighing
approximately 7.3 pounds
and worth up to $47,000 if
sold on the street.
Shawn Collins allegedly
tried to take responsibility
for the shipments, but text
messages between the two
appear to show they had
been working together, the
complaint states.
The complaint against
Shannon Collins indicates
that while police were
searching her home, they
found pill bottles that
allegedly had over 100 pills
missing two days after the
prescriptions were filled.
Police also allegedly found
“meticulous notes relating to
the distribution of the pills,”
the complaint says.
— Freeman Staff
By Lauren Anderson
Freeman Staff
DELAFIELD — A group of
high school students strug-
gled as they navigated
through a wooden structure
and tangled web of wires
while wearing firefighter
gear at the Lake Country
Fire Station early Wednes-
day morning.
Once they emerged from
the first in a series of obsta-
cles simulating a house fire,
the students looked up at
Captain Nick Heltemes for
further instructions.
“Good job,” he said. “Now
follow the hose line and go
save someone.”
That, ultimately, is what
the group was there for.
As students in Kettle
Moraine’s High School of
Health Sciences, this partic-
ular group aspires to futures
in medicine — and, huffing
through breathing masks
while crawling on all fours,
they were getting an up-close
look at one potential career
path.
Exposing students to real-
world health field experi-
ences is a central vision of
the charter school and the
inspiration behind the part-
nership with Lake Country
Fire & Rescue, school direc-
tor Steve Plum said.
The two-week course on
firefighting and emergency
medical services covers a
variety of topics, including
IV therapy, airway maneu-
vers, vehicle extrication,
patient confidentiality proce-
dures and donning and doff-
ing turnout gear. Students
took one of the days to dis-
sect a pig lung, learning how
lungs expand with the assis-
tance of a breathing tube.
By offering hands-on expe-
riences, Plum said, he hopes
the course addresses a cen-
tral question high school stu-
dents ask themselves.
“Will I fit in this career?”
Plum said. “It’s that insecu-
rity that can drive their
lives.”
Some students have taken
more of a liking to the EMS
instruction than others. But,
Plum said, it’s still a valuable
experience for those who
decide not to pursue a fire or
EMS career.
“Some people are really
into it, but some just want to
do research — and that’s
fine,” Plum said. “But even
for the people that might be
future doctors and future
nurses, to have this experi-
ence on this side of the
tragedy, on this side of the
car accident, it’s going to
give them a more well-round-
ed idea of what they’re
doing.”
As a graduate of Kettle
Moraine High School, Hel-
temes reached out to Plum
when he heard about the
health science charter and
offered to provide training
for the students.
“When I was in high
school, I wish I would have
had a program exactly like
this,” Heltemes said. “It
would have been ideal for
myself and a lot of other peo-
ple that are in the fire
department here.”
Upcoming internship
program
Beginning next fall, Hel-
temes and Plum plan to offer
an internship program and
EMT class for students to
receive their certification.
Heltemes wants to provide
students a jump-start into
their future careers.
“If you know you want to
go into the field, why not get
started as soon as you can?”
he said.
While student Sadie Wil-
son hopes to go into oncolo-
gy, she has enjoyed the EMS
course.
“I like that it’s more hands-
on than sitting in class and
learning materials —
instead you actually get to
experience it, rather than
watching videos in class,”
Wilson said.
Emma Erdman is looking
to pursue an EMS-related
career.
“I want to be a hot-zone
paramedic,” she said. “So
everything I’ve learned here
I’ve loved. There’s something
new we learn every day. I
love the physical exertion
and today we learned how
physical an actual fire would
be.”
Erdman was the last of her
classmates to attempt the
obstacle course. Visibly
exhausted as she dragged a
150-pound dummy to the fin-
ish line, Plum offered her
some encouragement.
“Life saved,” he said.
Email: landerson@conleynet.com
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The Spoon
closed until
further
notice
WAUKESHA — The
Spoon, a popular new
Waukesha restaurant, is
closed until further notice,
per a post on the restau-
rant’s Facebook page.
“We are overwhelmed
with the great reception our
restaurant had with every-
one — and so appreciate all
your great support — but
due to personal circum-
stances, need to step back
and re-evaluate,” reads the
post, which was dated
Wednesday.
Specializing in soup,
bread and pies, the restau-
rant is located at 928 N.
Hartwell Ave. It had been
open since December and
received rave reviews from
customers on its Facebook
page.
Owners John and Leslie
Bley live in Delafield, but
the former Hartwell Avenue
gyro stand stole their
hearts and made them
decide to open a carry-out
comfort food restaurant
here in Waukesha.
The building was in bad
shape after being vacant for
about seven years, but the
Bleys completely revamped
it, redecorating the interior
and fitting it with state-of-
the-art kitchen appliances.
The Bleys love cooking
locally sourced whole foods,
and planned to focus on
comfort foods like pies,
soups and freshly baked
bread, John Bley told The
Freeman last year.
In October, the Plan Com-
mission approved The
Spoon’s conditional use per-
mit, which was necessary
since it’s located in a manu-
facturing district.
“We think we will be look-
ing for younger versions of
us to manage this wonder-
ful business — so if you
know anyone, (private mes-
sage) us,” the Facebook post
read.
— Sarah Pryor, Freeman Staff
Hands-on learning
BURNING
BRIGHT
Kettle Moraine health science
charter students explore
livesaving career path
Lake Country Fire & Rescue Captain Nick Heltemes guides
Kettle Moraine High School of Health Sciences student Emma
Erdman as she climbs through an obstacle course at the fire sta-
tion Tuesday morning.
Lauren Anderson/Freeman Staff
Kettle Moraine High School of Health Sciences student Hannah Fenelon operates a fire hose with
paramedic KevinYoung’s assistance at the Lake Country Fire & Rescue stationWednesday morning.
Additional charges issued in California re.Waukesha pot case
Waukesha
man charged
with possession
of child porn
WAUKESHA — Paul R.
Ceretto, 43, was charged
Wednesday with 10 counts
of possession of child
pornography. Each charge
carries the possibility of 25
years in prison and up to
$100,000 in fines upon con-
viction.
According to the criminal
complaint against him,
police obtained a search
warrant for Ceretto’s resi-
dence after allegedly receiv-
ing images of child pornog-
raphy from his IP address
during an investigation into
the sharing of child pornog-
raphy. When they served the
warrant on Tuesday, police
allegedly found evidence of
other child pornography
items.
Ceretto, of Waukesha,
made an initial appearance
on Wednesday and a cash
bond was set for $10,000. A
preliminary hearing is
scheduled for Jan. 28.
4. By Matt Masterson
Freeman Staff
TOWN OF VERNON —
Two months after opening
his newly-branded restau-
rant, The Lakeside Supper
Club at Heaven City, owner
Troy Schoenrock said busi-
ness has exceeded his own
expectations.
“We just re-located The
Lakeside and it is like we
never missed a beat,” he said.
“It is really doing phenome-
nal.”
Schoenrock, who owned
The Lakeside in Mukwonago
for more than 16 years, moved
his operation to the site of the
old Heaven City restaurant
last fall after purchasing the
land at S91-W27850 National
Ave. in the Town of Vernon.
He said he has run into
some issues with the “Heaven
City” brand, so he is trying to
move away from that title for
the time being.
“What we basically did was
we moved The Lakeside to
the old Heaven City location
and we are in the Heaven City
complex,” he said. “I have
had some problems with peo-
ple who brought Groupons
from the old Heaven City. The
old Heaven City had some
obligations to some other
people that they took their
money and now they think I
bought their business and
they are coming after me.
These are issues I am trying
to get away from.”
Schoenrock said he’s stick-
ing with The Lakeside name
for now, but sometime down
the road he may decide to go
back to Heaven City.
The Lakeside at Heaven
City held its opening on Nov.
17 and offers many of the
same supper club favorites
that helped The Lakeside
thrive for over a decade and a
half.
“We are still specializing in
steaks, ribs, chops, seafood
and Italian specialities,”
Schoenrock said. “Then we
are starting with our all-you-
can-eat specials that we are
known for at The Lakeside.”
Those specials include all-
you-can-eat baby back ribs
and shrimp on Tuesdays,
chicken and fish fry on
Wednesdays and spaghetti,
lasagna and other Italian
courses on Thursdays.
The menu is largely the
same as it was at The Lake-
side, according to Schoen-
rock, sans a couple fan
favorites like pizzas and all-
you-can-eat crab legs which
could rejoin the main roster
sometime down the road. He
said his chef is also working
on a Valentine’s Day menu
that could feature some items
not currently on the menu.
The building was not ini-
tially ready to handle the type
of volume The Lakeside at
Heaven City is bringing in,
but Schoenrock said his staff
has slowly been progressing
towards building the supper
club atmosphere he’s sought
to create.
“Every day we are always
coming up with something
different that the customers
are looking at,” he said. “It is
working, it is just a slow pro-
cess trying to get the building
applicable for what we are
trying to do.”
Email: mmasterson@conleynet.com
4A • THE FREEMAN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 2015 WWW.GMTODAY.COMLOCAL
IN BRIEF
Swallow student to receive settlement
WAUKESHA — An 8-year-old who was
injured while going down a slide with her
teacher during a field trip could receive near-
ly $33,000 when she turns 18 as part of a set-
tlement with the Swallow School District.
The girl, who The Freeman is not naming
because she is a juvenile, broke her leg while
going down a slide on her teacher’s lap while
at the Betty Brinn Children’s Museum in
Milwaukee.
The settlement between the two parties
calls for a total amount of $50,000 with a por-
tion going towards attorney fees.
A hearing for approval of the settlement is
scheduled for Feb. 2.
Waukesha man charged with sexually
assaulting 14-year-old girl
WAUKESHA — A Waukesha man was
charged in Waukesha County Circuit Court
on Tuesday after he allegedly engaged in sex-
ual intercourse with a then-14-year-old girl
on multiple occasions last year.
Lance W. Russ, 21, is facing one count of
sexual assault of a child under 16 years of
age. If convicted on the Class C felony, he
faces up to 40 years in prison.
According to the criminal complaint
against him, a Waukesha Police Department
detective met with the victim at her high
school last September where she indicated
she’d had sex with Russ. She said the sex was
consensual, but added that she did disclose
her correct age to the defendant. He respond-
ed by telling her to be careful because he
could get into trouble for having sex with her,
the complaint states.
Russ told investigators he and the victim
had had sex on at least two or three occasions
in the basement of a home on Debbie Drive,
and he was indeed aware of her age.
Russ will make his initial appearance in
court on Feb. 2.
Pair charged with passing
off fake $100 bills
WAUKESHA — A Kenosha woman and a
Milwaukee man were charged Tuesday after
they allegedly passed off forged $100 bills at a
Target store in Menomonee Falls.
Twenty-three-year-old Aleece L. Gillespie
and Antonio L. Williams, 30, were each
charged in Waukesha County Circuit Court
on Tuesday with one count each of uttering
a forgery as a party to a crime. If convicted,
each defendant faces up to six years in
prison.
Menomonee Falls police learned of four
suspects cashing counterfeit $100 bills at the
Target on N95-W17707 Shady Lane, according
to the criminal complaint. One officer
arrived at the scene and began pursuit of a
suspicious vehicle which fled the area.
The officer pursued the vehicle, but it was
traveling over 100 mph, weaving in and out of
traffic and using the emergency lane to
evade the officer, the complaint states.
A week later, officers with the Saukville
Police Department apprehended four sus-
pects passing counterfeit bills in its jurisdic-
tion. Gillespie and Williams, who were among
the four arrested, were also identified by
surveillance footage as those who had passed
the fake bills at the Shady Lane Target
No court date was available for either
defendant through court records.
$500,000 in uncashed checks remain
from LCD antitrust case settlement
MADISON — Approximately $500,000
worth of checks remain uncashed by Wis-
consin consumers involved with an LCD
antitrust case, according to the claims
administrator for the case.
The Wisconsin Attorney General’s office is
encouraging consumers who filed valid
claims in connection with the purchase of
LCD laptops, monitors and TVs to make sure
to cash their checks.
Claimants are set to receive $43.49 for
each computer monitor or laptop claimed
and $86.98 for each LCD TV. In total, Wis-
consin consumers, businesses and public
entities will receive more than $27 million
from the settlement. The state of Wis-
consin has also received $1.5 million in
civil penalties.
Consumers who believe they should have
received checks but have not should contact
nfo@lcdclass.com or call the toll-free hotline
at 855-225-1886. Wisconsinites may also con-
tact the Attorney General’s office at 608-266-
1221.
More than 170,000 inWisconsin used
Health Insurance Marketplace for
health coverage
MADISON — More than 170,000 people in
Wisconsin selected a plan or were automati-
cally re-enrolled in the Federally Facilitated
Marketplace according to the U.S. Depart-
ment of Health & Human Services.
Open enrollment runs until Feb. 15, and
the department urges people not to waste
any time in signing up.
Nearly 7.2 million consumers nationwide
have selected a plan as of Jan. 16, including
177,157 in Wisconsin.
For more information about Health Insur-
ance Marketplaces, visit
www.healthcare.gov/marketplace. To sign
up for individual and family coverage, go to
https://www.healthcare.gov/apply-and-
enroll/.
American LungAssociation
givesWisconsin mixed grades
BROOKFIELD — The American Lung
Association gave Wisconsin mixed grades
regarding the state’s efforts to enact tobacco
control policies in 2014, according to the 13th
annual State of Tobacco Control report
released Wednesday.
Tobacco use costs Wisconsin $4.6 billion in
health care expenses and lost productivity,
according to the American Lung Associa-
tion.
State of Tobacco Control evaluates tobacco
control policies at the federal and state level
and assigns grades based on whether laws
protect citizens from the toll tobacco use
takes on lives.
Grades given to Wisconsin by the Ameri-
can Lung Association included an “F” in
tobacco prevention and control program
funding, a “B” grade in tobacco taxes, an “A”
grade in smoke-free air and an “F” in access
to cessation services.
For the full report, visit www.stateoftobac-
cocontrol.org.
Milwaukee streetcar plan moves forward, but ...
By Dave Fidlin
Special to The Freeman
MILWAUKEE — Mayor
Tom Barrett’s proposed
streetcar project moved one
step closer to reality Wednes-
day, although a final, defini-
tive vote will wait in the
wings a few weeks.
After deliberating on the
merits of Barrett’s contro-
versial plan, the Common
Council voted 10-5 to back the
$124 million project. Despite
the overwhelming approval,
seven aldermen voted for a
provision in the city’s char-
ter ordinance to delay a final
decision.
Alderman Tony Zielinski
voted to reconsider the pro-
posal until Feb. 10 so the pub-
lic can formally weigh in on
the issue.
Aldermen gave varied
viewpoints on the streetcar,
echoing previous comments
on the perceived pros and
cons behind the project.
Proponents frequently
deem the project forward-
thinking and cite the
prospect of economic
growth. But opponents have
criticized the plan because of
the cost and potential detri-
ment to other city services.
Alderman Bob Donovan,
who represents portions of
the city’s south side, has
been one of the most outspo-
ken critics of the plan.
Speaking to the issue this
week, he likened the debate
to “an almost religious fer-
vor.”
“I meet people all the time
who ask why we are pursu-
ing this,” Donovan said.
Donovan and fellow Alder-
man Joe Davis Sr. have pub-
licly backed a plan to take the
proposal to a referendum.
Explaining why he was vot-
ing against the measure this
week, Davis said he had great
concerns about it.
“(The city of Milwaukee)
has no experience in public
transportation, yet we’re still
trying to take this project
on,” Davis said. “What we do
have experience in is cost
overruns.”
Supporters speak out
But other council members
painted a far rosier picture
about bringing the streetcar
plan to fruition.
Alderman Nicholas Kovac,
whose district would be
directly impacted by the
streetcar, said he believed it
would enhance the city’s
economy and result in an
estimated 1,000 construction
jobs.
“Public transit needs to be
a priority in this city,” Kovac
said. “It needs to be in con-
cert with other decisions.”
While many of the most
ardent aldermanic support-
ers of the streetcar are in or
near the downtown area,
there are officials in outlying
areas who are also backing
the plan.
Alderman Terry Witkows-
ki represents portions of
Milwaukee’s southwest side
— a section that likely will
never have a streetcar line
running through it because
it lacks the density.
But Witkowski said the
efforts aimed at spurring
growth downtown inevitably
benefit all corners of Mil-
waukee. About 18 percent of
the city’s tax base is derived
from downtown residential,
commercial and industrial
developments.
“This is a time for the city
to have vision and look at
what can be,” Witkowski
said.
In its first phase, the street-
car, as proposed, would run
in a four-mile loop and link
downtown commuters to the
lakefront and East Side
neighborhood. About $55
million in federal funding
would be directly applied to
the $124 million cost.
In recent months, Barrett
defended allocating city dol-
lars toward the project. He
has frequently asserted the
federal dollars cannot be
applied toward other initia-
tives within the city.
Final decision slated for Feb. 10 to accommodate public input
Freeman file photo
The atrium with a large rubber tree is the center of the Heaven
City Restaurant.
Lakeside
at Heaven
City making
new name
for itself
Blair House heads
to another hearing
WAUKESHA — The historic Blair House’s
future is still uncertain as a Waukesha Coun-
ty Circuit Court judge set another summary
judgment hearing regarding the house after
hearing arguments on Wednesday.
Waukesha Masonic Lodge #37 has offered
to take $300,000 from the city to walk away
from the house, which the Masons claim is
rightfully theirs under the terms of the will
of former Mayor Henry Blair, who was mayor
of Waukesha back in the 1920s.
Blair passed away in 1957 and left the 138-
year-old Italianate-style Madison Street brick
home to the city, saying in his will that the
city couldn’t use it for commercial purposes,
storage, a tool shed or warehouse. He also
said in the will that the city could sell the
property, but it had to use the proceeds for a
“civic purpose such as playgrounds, schools,
parks or hospital work,” according to court
documents.
If the city violated the terms of the will, the
house’s title was to be turned over to Mason-
ic Lodge #37.
City Attorney Brian Running filed a
motion for summary judgment, asking the
judge to dispose of the lawsuit and treat it
as a frivolous case. The Masons’ attorney
Gene Johnson said he also discovered both
the parking lot and an addition to the city’s
Engineering Department annex on
Delafield Street are encroaching on the
Blair property.
A couple offered to purchase the historic
building and turn it into Waukesha’s only
bed and breakfast, but the purchase is on hold
until the resolution of the suit.
The next hearing will be on Feb. 4.
— Freeman Staff
Freeman file photo
The Blair House, 434 Madison St.
WAUKESHA — State lawmakers with por-
tions of their district in Waukesha County
received an average of just over $5,500 in per
diem reimbursements in 2014, according to
reports from the Senate and Assembly chief
clerks.
That number is slightly skewed by the
county having districts that included the
highest and the lowest per diem amounts in
the state.
Former state Rep. Bill Kramer tied for
the fewest number of per diem days
claimed in 2014 at 18, giving him a reim-
bursement of $1,584. The Town of Wauke-
sha Republican largely stopped legisla-
tive activity after allegations surfaced
that he had groped someone on a trip to
Washington D.C. early that year. He even-
tually pleaded guilty to two counts of
fourth-degree sexual assault, which he
committed in 2011. Kramer is currently
serving five months in jail.
Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald,
R-Juneau, meanwhile had the highest reim-
bursement amount in the state at $14,168.
His district covers the northwestern portion
of the county. Fitzgerald claimed 161 days
spent in Madison.
State law allows lawmakers to claim a per
diem allowance for food and lodging expens-
es for each day spent in Madison on legisla-
tive business. For each day, members were
reimbursed at $88.
Excluding Fitzgerald, who had 63 more
days than the next closest lawmaker, and
Kramer, the county’s lawmakers averaged
62 days in Madison and were reimbursed an
average of $5,230.
With the outliers still excluded, senators
averaged 58 days in Madison, while state
representatives averaged almost 64 days.
Rep. Joel Kleefisch, R-Town of
Oconomowoc, had the most from the Assem-
bly at 98 days, while Sen. Paul Farrow, R-
Pewaukee, was the top senator at 80 days.
The number of days decreased for most
lawmakers as 2014 was an election year com-
pared to the budget year of 2013.
— ArthurThomas, Freeman Staff
Area lawmakers on both ends
of reimbursement spectrum
Lawmakers
REPS.
Adam Neylon
David Craig
Rob Hutton
Chris Kapenga
Joel Kleefisch
Dale Kooyenga
Bill Kramer
Mike Kuglitsch
Steve Nass
Don Pridemore
Joe Sanfelippo
Dan Knodl
SENATORS
Alberta Darling
Paul Farrow
Neal Kedzie
Mary Lazich
LeahVukmir
Scott Fitzgerald
Days
79
93
37
39
98
58
18
73
96
31
46
53
49
80
66
42
53
161
Reimbursement ($)
6,952
8,184
3,256
3,432
8,624
5,104
1,584
6,424
7,200
2,728
2,024
4,240
4,312
7,040
5,808
3,696
4,664
14,168
Area lawmakers 2014
per diem reimbursements
State law allows lawmakers to receive $88 for each
day they spend in Madison on legislative business.
Source: Senate and Assembly Chief Clerks
Carroll demolition,
construction to
cause street,
sidewalk closures
WAUKESHA — As Car-
roll University continues
its demolition of Maxon
Hall, there will be period-
ic lane and sidewalk clo-
sures over the next two
weeks along College
Avenue, between Barstow
Street and the Voorhees
Hall parking lot entrance,
the university announced
Wednesday.
The closures will take
place through Friday and
again from Monday to
Jan. 30 as crews connect
water and sewer pipes.
Spokeswoman Tiffany Wynn said the closures are a necessary safety precaution during
the demolition and the university appreciates the patience and understanding of resi-
dents during the construction process.
— Freeman Staff
Charles Auer/Freeman Staff
Work continues Wednesday as crews demolish the former Maxon
Hall on the Carroll University campus to make room for a new sci-
ence building.
5. MILWAUKEE — North-
western Mutual announced
nearly five dozen companies
on Wednesday that had joined
the design and construction
team for the Northwestern
Mutual Tower and Commons,
a 32-story, 1.1 millions-square-
foot development to be built
over the next three years near
Milwaukee’s lakefront.
Sandy Botcher, head of
Northwestern Mutual’s down-
town campus development
project, stressed the inclusion
of various Milwaukee compa-
nies on the list of new hires.
“From day one, we said we
needed the community and
our fellow businesses, espe-
cially local companies, to be a
partner in this process,” said
Botcher.
Waukesha County firms
included in the released list
were:
From New Berlin: B&D
Contractors and United
States Alliance Fire Protec-
tion, Inc.;
From Waukesha: Boelter,
LLC and JWC Building Spe-
cialties, Inc.;
From Menomonee Falls:
Choice Construction, Inc.,
Con-Cor Company, Duew
Metal Products, Inc., Hurt
Electric, Inc., LaForce, Inc.
and Staff Electric Company,
Inc.;
From Sussex: E.R. Aber-
nathy Industrial, Inc. and
Tremmel Anderson Truck-
ing, LLC.;
From Pewaukee: Hetzel-
Sanfilippo, Inc. and Klein
Dickert Milwaukee, Inc.; from
Brookfield: Hiram Power
Electric, KMI Construction,
LLC and PL Freeman Compa-
ny, Inc.;
From Lannon: Rams Con-
tracting Ltd.;
And from Oconomowoc:
Valente Transport Inc. and
Vizcaino Trucking, Inc.
The new companies hired
to work on the Northwestern
Mutual Tower and Commons
will perform jobs ranging
from foundation, architecture
and building automation, to
plumbing, electrical and
mechanical work.
Construction of the North-
western Mutual Tower and
Commons is scheduled for
completion by the end of 2017.
The site is currently being
prepared for vertical con-
struction that is expected to
begin in February, when
crews undertake a 24-hour
concrete pour, the largest con-
tinuous pour conducted in
the state of Wisconsin.
Once completed, the project
is expected to preserve 1,100
downtown jobs while adding
1,900 new ones.
www.NorthwesternMutual.com/
BuildingMKE
By Matt Masterson
Freeman Staff
MADISON — Nearly three-
quarters of construction
businesses statewide
increased their employee
count last year and compa-
nies across the nation are
predicting 2015 to be one of
the biggest years for growth
in the field in nearly a decade.
The Associated General
Contractors of America
released its 2015 Construc-
tion Industry Hiring & Busi-
ness Outlook on Wednesday,
which shows most contrac-
tors are optimistic about the
year ahead and are ready to
expand, but must find quali-
fied workers to hire.
“Eighty percent of firms
report plans to expand their
payrolls in 2015 while only 7
percent expect to reduce head
counts — a net positive of 73
percent,” said Stephen Sand-
herr, CEO of Associated Gen-
eral Contractors of America,
during a conference call with
media Wednesday. “If those
predictions come true, indus-
try employment could
expand in 2015 by the most in
a decade.”
Total employment in con-
struction businesses
increased by 290,000 workers,
or nearly 5 percent, and
investments in construction
rose by nearly 6 percent in
the first 11 months of 2014
compared with the same peri-
od in 2013, according to Sand-
herr.
In Wisconsin, 91 percent of
the 22 companies in the state
that took part in the survey
said they expect an increase
of between 1 and 25 percent
in their head counts during
2015.
Suzanne Kelley, president
of the Waukesha County
Business Alliance, said those
stats are consistent with
what her organization has
been hearing locally.
“I sense a lot of optimism
for 2015,” she said. “When
you look at the survey and
some of the growth they are
projecting in manufacturing
and health care and in the
commercial arena, I think
people feel very good about
the upcoming year.”
Finding staff with
the right stuff
While a predominantly pos-
itive outlook is there, a size-
able portion of companies
believe it will be a challenge
to find the right workers.
According to the survey, 86
percent of businesses in Wis-
consin reported having a
hard time filling professional
and craft working positions.
And finding skilled and
unskilled laborers is not
expected to get any easier any
time soon. A majority of
responding companies
reported they do not foresee
much of an improvement in
hiring workers in 2015, as 90
percent said they expect it
will continue to be hard, or
become even harder, to find
and hire skilled craft work-
ers.
“Despite the overall opti-
mism, some challenges
remain for the industry,” said
Ken Simonson, the AGC’s
chief economist. “In particu-
lar, as construction firms
continue to expand, they will
continue to have a difficult
time finding enough skilled
construction workers.”
Simonsen said 87 percent of
contacted companies nation-
wide are having a tough time
filling key professional and
craft worker positions. Three
quarters of the firms that are
hiring report having trouble
finding qualified craft work-
ers, while 62 percent say the
same about professional posi-
tions such as project man-
agers, supervisors and esti-
mators.
Compensation levels, how-
ever, appear to be rising and
most businesses expect to
dole out more health care in
2015.
AGC members and officials
plan to continue pushing for
action on the measures out-
lined in their Workforce
Development Plan and look
to lobby President Barack
Obama’s administration to
rethink its current regulato-
ry approach.
“With a little luck and a lot
of effort, we will make sure
the construction industry
has the support it needs to
continue expanding in 2015
and beyond,” Sandherr said.
The Outlook was based on
survey results from over 900
construction firms from 48
states and the District of
Columbia.
www.agc.org
www.waukesha.org
Email: mmasterson@conleynet.com
Frontier to lay off 138
in Milwaukee
WAUKESHA — Frontier
Airlines will lay off 138
employees from its Milwau-
kee operations starting in
March. The company recent-
ly notified the state Depart-
ment of Workforce Develop-
ment of the decision as
required by law.
The positions are in the
company’s reservation
department and the entire
unit is expected to be elimi-
nated eventually, according
to a letter from Frontier Vice
President for Human
Resources and Labor rela-
tions Jacalyn Peter to the
DWD.
The decision will impact
reservation agents, work-
force analysts, specialty trav-
el and travel desk agents and
supervisors.
A Frontier Airlines busi-
ness partner will take over
reservations work May 31,
Peter said.
www.flyfrontier.com
www.dwd.wisconsin.com
Midwest Healthcare
companies raise
$1.8 billion in 2014
WAUKESHA — Midwest
Healthcare companies
attracted $1.8 billion in new
investments across 243 com-
panies in 2014, according to
the BioEnterprise Midwest
Healthcare Growth Capital
Report.
The totals are the highest
recorded in both dollars and
number of companies fund-
ed since BioEnterprise
began filing the report in
2005, surpassing the banner
2007 by 46 percent and 2013
by 135 percent.
The largest reported Mid-
west deal occurred in Wis-
consin, where Shine Medical
Technologies, a biotech com-
pany, raised $125 million.
To view additional data
about Midwest Healthcare
business activity, visit
http://www.bioenterprise.co
m/reports.
New RE/MAX office
opens in Muskego
MUSKEGO — RE/MAX
broker and owners Reno
Berg and John Jewell are
opening a new office at South
75 West 17237 Janesville
Road in Muskego, just three
months after converting
their real estate business to
RE/MAX Legacy.
The new franchise will
serve clients in the south-
western region of the Mil-
waukee metropolitan area.It
will specialize in residential
and commercial real estate,
new construction, land
development, investment
property and short sales.
The 1,400 square foot office
will employ a total of seven
agents and staff, with poten-
tial for new recruitments in
2015. Agents operating out of
the new office include
Catherine Kierzek, Darren
Hojnacki, Dan Warwick and
Carrie Lemke.
Berg and Jewell together
bring nearly 40 years of com-
bined realty experience to
their new office.
www.soldsignblog.com
R.A.Smith National
welcomes ecologist,
project manager
BROOKFIELD – Theran
Stautz is the newest ecologist
and project
manager at
R.A. Smith
National, a
Brookfield-
based multi-
disciplined
civil engineer-
ing and sur-
veying firm.
Stautz is one of only nine
Assured Wetland Delin-
eators with the Wisconsin
Department of Natural
Resources. He has more
than 10 years of wetland
and forest resource experi-
ence in the Great Lakes
and southeast regions of
the United States as a wet-
land ecologist.
Additionally, Stautz has
experience in vegetation sur-
veys and inventories, wet-
land mitigation monitoring,
native habitat restoration,
invasive species manage-
ment and prescribed burn
activities. He has worked
with local, state and federal
clients, including the U.S.
Forest Service and Depart-
ment of Defense.
Stautz holds a bachelor’s
degree in natural resources
in forest science and recre-
ational resources manage-
ment from the University of
Wisconsin-Madison.
www.rasmithnational.com
Stautz
BUSINESSThe FREEMAN THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 2015 • 5A
Dilbert
COMMODITIES
METALS
LIVESTOCK/FOODS
GRAINS
THE MARKET IN REVIEW
NYSE
10,720.40 +61.78
NASDAQ
4,667.42 +12.57
S&P 500
2,032.12 +9.57
Stock Footnotes: n = New in past 52 weeks. rs = Stock has
undergone a reverse stock split of at least 50 percent within the
past year.s = Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the last
year. vj = In bankruptcy or receivership.
Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.
DAILY DOW JONES
uu uu uu
STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST
YTD
Name Ex Div Yld PE Last Chg %Chg
AT&T Inc NY 1.88 5.5 10 34.00 +.05 +1.2
Actuant NY .04 .2 12 23.61 +.63 -13.3
BP PLC NY 2.40 6.2 6 38.82 +1.13 +1.8
Bemis NY 1.08 2.4 25 45.21 +.06 0.0
BrigStrat NY .50 2.7 23 18.77 +.48 -8.1
Chevron NY 4.28 4.0 10 108.16 +1.69 -3.6
Citigroup NY .04 .1 22 47.74 +.48 -11.8
CocaCola NY 1.22 2.8 23 43.36 +.20 +2.7
ColgPalm NY 1.44 2.1 30 68.35 -.25 -1.2
ConocoPhil NY 2.92 4.5 11 64.54 +1.35 -6.5
Disney NY 1.15 1.2 22 94.17 -.57 0.0
ExxonMbl NY 2.76 3.0 12 91.87 +.78 -.6
Fiserv Nasd ... ... 23 72.42 -.74 +2.0
FordM NY .60 4.0 10 14.97 -.04 -3.4
Generac NY ... ... 18 45.60 +.03 -2.5
GenElec NY .92 3.8 17 24.04 +.19 -4.9
HarleyD NY 1.10 1.7 17 64.01 +.65 -2.9
HomeDp NY 1.88 1.8 24 103.53 +.28 -1.4
IBM NY 4.40 2.9 13 152.09 -4.86 -5.2
JohnJn NY 2.80 2.7 18 101.90 +.61 -2.6
JohnsnCtl NY 1.04 2.3 25 45.85 +.61 -5.2
JoyGlbl NY .80 1.9 13 43.09 +.56 -7.4
KimbClk NY 3.36 2.9 21 117.59 +.06 +1.8
Kohls NY 1.56 2.7 15 58.66 +.30 -3.9
Koss h Nasd ... ... ... 1.95 -.18 +11.4
Magnetek Nasd ... ... 20 41.39 +.37 +1.8
ManpwrGp NY .98 1.5 13 67.42 +1.82 -1.1
Marcus NY .38 2.1 19 18.51 -.18 0.0
Microsoft Nasd 1.24 2.7 18 45.92 -.47 -1.1
Modine NY ... ... 5 12.71 -.04 -6.5
OshkoshCp NY .68 1.7 11 40.21 +.17 -17.3
RockwlAut NY 2.60 2.4 18 106.39 +.94 -4.3
RoyDShllA NY 3.76 5.7 13 65.62 +1.03 -2.0
SPX Cp NY 1.50 1.8 17 83.68 +1.95 -2.6
SmithAO NY .60 1.1 25 54.62 +.11 -3.2
SnapOn NY 2.12 1.6 20 133.80 +1.05 -2.2
Target NY 2.08 2.8 31 73.95 +.28 -2.6
3M Co NY 4.10 2.5 22 162.54 +.60 -1.1
Toyota NY ... ... ... 128.66 -.50 +2.5
WalMart NY 1.92 2.2 18 86.64 -.05 +.9
WiscEngy NY 1.69 3.0 21 56.45 +.69 +7.0
SILVER
5,000 troy oz.- cents per troy oz.
Jan 15 1826.0 1796.0 1817.9 +23.2
CATTLE
40,000 lbs.- cents per lb.
Feb 15 154.15 152.27 153.70 +.65
FEEDER CATTLE
50,000 lbs.- cents per lb.
Jan 15 216.00 213.30 215.70 +1.23
LIGHT SWEET CRUDE
1,000 bbl.- dollars per bbl.
Mar 15 48.20 46.55 47.78 +1.31
NATURAL GAS
10,000 mm btu’s, $ per mm btu
Feb 15 3.925 2.867 2.974 +.143
GOLD
100 troy oz.- dollars per troy oz.
Jan 15 1303.50 1286.70 1293.70 -.50
SOYBEAN OIL
60,000 lbs- cents per lb
Mar 15 33.15 32.33 32.41 -.43
CORN
5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel
Mar 15 392.50 386.25 388 -2.25
ROUGH RICE
2,000 CWT- dollars per CWT
Mar 15 11.390 11.290 11.370 +.105
OATS
5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel
Mar 15 291.50 289.25 290.75 +.50
SOYBEANS
5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel
Mar 15 991 977.50 983.50 +1.50
SOYBEAN MEAL
100 tons- dollars per ton
Mar 15 331.60 326.20 330.50 +4.00
WHEAT
5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel
Mar 15 544.50 535.50 536.75 -.25
High Low Close Chg.
High Low Close Chg.
FUELS
High Low Close Chg.
High Low Close Chg.
16,000
16,500
17,000
17,500
18,000
18,500
J JA S O N D
17,240
17,600
17,960 Dow Jones industrials
Close: 17,554.28
Change: 39.05 (0.2%)
10 DAYS
4,200
4,400
4,600
4,800
5,000
J JA S O N D
4,560
4,660
4,760 Nasdaq composite
Close: 4,667.42
Change: 12.57 (0.3%)
10 DAYS
STOCK EXCHANGE HIGHLIGHTS
IN BRIEF
We are located in Delafield at 355 Austin Circle, Suite 110.
To schedule a free consultation, please contact us at (262) 303-4916,
or visit our website at www.bucherlawgroup.com
Our staff is available 24/7 to provide immediate intervention with the
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Bucher Law Group, LLC, has over
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IRA ROLLOVER RULES EXPLAINED
The Internal Revenue Service does not always offer the clearest
explanations. The first set of rules about IRA rollovers were so fuzzy that
the changes were put off until this January 1.
Understand that in a true rollover, the money is transferred directly to
the owner, who then has 60 days to put it into another IRA or have to
pay taxes—and maybe a penalty—on the money. (And the IRS is sticky;
being even one day late can cost taxes and penalties.) Originally, one
could roll over each IRA once a year, no matter how many IRAs one
had. No more. Now, an IRA owner can do just one rollover in a 12-
month period, period.
What hasn’t changed, though, is the trustee-to-trustee transfer, in which
the owner never actually touches the money. There are no limits on how
many such transfers can be made. Many financial experts consider such
transfers much safer, feeling that it can be dangerous to treat IRAs as a
source of short-term loans.
Let us help you keep an eye on your money and your taxes. We offer
expert help at
With five locations in Wisconsin:
Waukesha, Mequon, Fond du Lac, Mayville and Juneau
(262) 574-0374 Waukesha | (920) 921-3356 Fond du Lac
(262) 236-9806 Mequon
www.vanderbloemengroup.com www.gibcpa.com
jeh@constcpa.com gmh@constcpa.com
Favre to star in Super Bowl ad
Wisconsin construction
eyeing big year in 2015
Survey: 91 percent of businesses
expect to increase staff size
Northwestern Mutual adds contractors
for downtown tower project
MILWAUKEE — Former Packers quar-
terback Brett Favre will be one of five
retired NFL players starring in Wix.com’s
ad during the upcoming Super Bowl on
Feb. 1.
The ad, part of Wix’s #ItsThatEasy cam-
paign, features each ex-player opening
their own unique business that has an
actual website and a comprehensive social
media presence.
Favre’s imagined small business is Favre
and Carve, a “charcuterie for Cheese-
heads.”
Favre and Carve is hosting the “Say
Charcuterie Challenge,” in which people
can video themselves pronouncing charcu-
terie, upload it to social media, and win
prizes such as an autographed Brett Favre
jersey and football. This contest ends today.
www.Wix.com
— Special to The Freeman
Submitted photo
6. All Saints
Corporation, Knights
of Columbus,
Council 4240
Drs. Mark & Cynthia
Bauer
Dan Biersack
Nancy Biersack
James Dowling
Janice Dowling
Rosemary McCarthy
Bill Hoppe
Peggy Hoppe
Michael Sweet
Gail Grenier Sweet
Patricia Payleitner
Arcario Blanco
Michael Prebilic
Dan, Diane & Max
Carstens
Thomas Bruders, Sr.
Mary Bruders
Julie Bruders
Thomas Bruders, Jr.
Elinor Bruders
Timothy Bruders
Jane Bruders
Patrice Bruders
Mary (Bruders) Baxa
Michael Baxa
Elizabeth Mezera
Larry A. Lesch
Carol G. Lesch
Jeannine Prager
Joan Reddin
Ralph E. Bitters
Dorothy M. Bitters
Irene Schey
Mary Bell Mueller
Mary Ellen Hinkens
Harold Hinkens
John & Pat Celek
Allen Nitz
Bonnie Nitz
Joe Nitz
Robert Jaworski
Julianne Jaworski
In Memory of Helen
Walczak
Patty McHugh
Carl & Karen Millard
Thomas Millard
Laura Millard
Adam J. Hartung
Frank Jelen
Nancy Jelen
Dave & Nancy
Schwanz
Caitlin Schwanz
Rachel Schwanz
Mark W. Steger
John & Mary Pires
St. James
Congregation,
Menomonee Falls
Gordon Boucher
Bernice Boucher
Dr. William Luckey
Jeanette Luckey
Florence Hahn
Robert Luckey
Jackie Vitucci
Frank Vitucci, Jr.
Mary Hanson
James Hanson
Marianne Hartounian
Aldo Bonfiglio
Angela Bonfiglio
Lucio Bonfiglio
Nancy Bonfiglio
Victoria Boucher
Marissa Boucher
Kristen Boucher
Jill Boucher
Mark Antczak
Carol Antczak
James Vitucci
Dan Abezetian
Deneen Abezetian
Mark Braaten
Kathy Braaten
Maddy Braaten
Rose Marie Brier
Don Brier
Donna Carini
Dominic Carini
Dottie Fiest
Dennis Fiest
Melody Gensler
Robert Gensler
Kim Heyen
Jack Hollenstein
Sue Hollenstein
Jennie Cagle
Pam Breden
Kean Kemnitz
Sue Kemnitz
Jeff Landis
Greta Landis
Pat Myers
Jae Myers
Kelly Marino
Chuck Olsen
Sophia Partipilo
Louise Platto
Jack Rampolla
Peter Roehl
Chuck Stanelle
Greg Stehling
Michael Schinzer
Tony Serio
Tim Townsend
Ted Torcivia
Larry Wade
Tom Becker
Hayde Becker
Kelly Becker-Van
Hoveln
Chris Becker
Erica Becker
Lisa Becker
Thomas Carpentier
Rose Carpentier
Ryan Carpentier
Melanie Manke
Tom Schoenauer
Carolyn Schoenauer
Arnold Kessler
Marilyn Kessler
Richard C. Zirbel
Judith A. Zirbel
James Rouiller
Madonna Rouiller
Edward E. Schlumpf
Mary W. Schlumpf
Thomas
Kutschenreuter
Lois Kutschenreuter
Helen N.
Barbara N.
Carol N.
Mary K.
Millie D.
From St. Luke’s
Parish:
Mary Stengel
Elizabeth McMullen
Jan & Joe
Boberschmidt
Gloria Smith
Olivia Conrad
Ken & Carole Guran
Joe McGavock
Evelyn Goretske
Thad Groszczyk
Laura Girga
Mike & Carol
Kennedy
John & Chris Kluth
Sandy Wilde
Josephine Winter
Rosemary Sottillie
Beatrice Alexander
Rose Marie Bochat
Rose & Fred
Brandenburg
Phil & Diane Beltran
Nancy A. Petersen
Janet V. Belton
Anna Mae Hurley
Connie Hurley
Pronley
Ed Hurley
Mary Ellen Eder
Dick & Kelly
Beckmann
Julie Beckmann
Ann Waddell
Sandra Nickel
Steven Nickel
Kathleen Zarling
Wilbur Hase
Wilbur Hase, Jr.
Jolene Hase
Tess Crossman
Shyann Marquardt
Carol Johns
Bill Johns
Don Wilde
George & Betsy
Lubeley
Ann Blewett
Gloria Timmer
Bela & Mary Piacsek
Bea Pronley
Doroty Goerke
Sally R. Christian
Mary Jo Kirchoff
Michael P. Johnson
Anita Weier
Gary & Maxine
Drinan
Bernice Berth
Joanne Anderson
Mary Meyer
Barbara Lucas
Arlene Wilson
James M. Garvens
Rob & Chris
Schneider Family
Washington Santos
Laura & Robert Baird
Roger Jossart
Robert Jacob
Colleen Hagen
Robin LaRose
Amy & Claude
Klemowits
Melania Klemowits
Susan Schmidt
Jim & Nancy Rusnak
From Christ Lutheran
Church:
Bonnie Frederick
Ron Frederick
Carole Hahl
Thomas Hahl
Harold Arneson
Paulette Arneson
Shirley Hilden
Marge Hoover
Ted Oertel
Deb Oertel
Debbie Krueger
Bill Krueger
Roger Seefeldt
Ken Kuchita
Kathy Gates
Larry Gates
Ramona Morehouse
Robert Tieberg
Donna L. Yaeger
Kenneth L. Yaeger
Kurt Philip Yaeger
Tricia Yaeger
Julie Yaeger
Jennifer Beranek
Tom Beranek
Judith Dorava
Diane M. Pease
Pat & Judy Hogan
Wayne Haws
Kaila Phillips
Randy Phillips
Jeff Johnson
Natalie Johnson
Bev & Ed Buerger
Alan J. Renner
James R. Burrie
Mary Ann Burrie
Dr. Walter Lehrer
Celia Lehrer
Lawrence
Bob & Rita Lorenz
Darrell & Sally Foell
Kurt & Kim Schneider
Dave & Sue Cyra
In Memory of
Dr. Thomas Smith
Karen & Gary Panka
Caroline O’Reilly
Theresa A. Singer
John T. Singer
Maria Lechner
Joan Hemauer
Charles Hemauer
Dick Hemauer
Cindy Harlfinger
Debby Peterson
Barb Mudrock
Mike Hemauer
Pat Hemauer
Lori Hemauer
Mary Jo Dampeck
Judith Hyde Krieger
Diane A. Billburg
Norbert Uecker
Dorothy Daganhardt
Joyce Volkmann
Glenn Volkmann
Gary M. Hoff
Bernice C. Maertz
Bill Panaro
Carole Panaro
Sid Earsley
Kathy Earsley
Meg Earsley
Margaret Earsley
Kris Labott
Grace Waite
Jessi Hogan
Lorraine T. Janzer
Carl Wolff
Carla Wolff
Stephanie Wolff
Dan Wolff
Debra Balistreri
Toni Memmel
Carol Kennedy
John Kennedy
Liz Kennedy
Christine Kennedy
Kortes
Kathleen Hoffman
Brett Hoffman
Colleen Kennedy
Prividera
Mark Prividera
Isabella Kennedy
Kortes
Emma Kennedy
Kortes
Justin Prividera
Joseph & Marilyn
Huber
Jean P. Zipperer
Daniel Sydlewski
Judith Sydlewski
Jay & Kiara Mack
Linda Huebner
Janice F. Gregoire
Dennis Greenwood
Diane Greenwood
Darla Enright
Don Enright
William J. Buggy
Jacqueline Buggy
Mary K. Carey
Asche Carey
Dori Vanderkelen
Karen Kabacinski
Rick Carey
From St. Joseph’s
Parish, Waukesha:
Elaine Roman
Don Roman
Steve Roman
Sue Van Abel
Jim & Beth Norgord
Cathy Muehlbauer
Dick Muehlbauer
Tony Tomaz
Jane Tomaz
Nicole Miller
Taylor Miller
Jan Stubbs
Bruno John
Sandy Lefebvre
Phil Lefebvre
David Isnard
Dianne Isnard
Don & Mary Alice
Flaten
Lorraine Storck
Mary Skoug
Frank Albano
Nimfa Albano
Joan Staub
John Kosanke
Bill & Linda Hausser
Kathy Arquette
Dennis Arquette
Carol Schueller
Thomas Schueller
Vicky Medina
Roseann Westphal
Roland & Waverly
Sterns
Barbara Walk
Vernon Pillsbury
Marianne Lenhardt
Irene Burr
Charles J. Waldvogel
Lynne Engstrom
Rick & Barb Simons
Len & Judy Dacquisto
Adeline Mlodzik
Merlin & Rosemary
Nader
Karen Larson
Rick & Chris Lufter
& Family
Diane Lufter &
Jordan Gomez
Ray & Rita Feldmeier
Jo Camacho
Jim Dessecker
Michael & Jean
Banasiak
Mr/Mrs Eugene
Ciechanowski
Richard J. Struck
Arlene Sesing
Carla Rieder
Maria Fricker
Michael Schmitz
Janice Brooks
Tom Van Handel
Don Marsicek
Marybeth Marsicek
Ken Billburg
Therese Billburg
Alyssa Kittleson
Myles Kittleson
Alex Billburg
Cassandra Billburg
Christy Billburg
Keith Billburg
Cathy Marsicek
Sue Peck
Todd Peck
Natalie Peck
Celia Peck
Steven Scheuing
Cindy Scheuing
Mae Scheuing
Ruby Beth Scheuing
Jane Eve Scheuing
Rick Marsicek
Julie Marsicek
Faith Marsicek
Amelia Marsicek
Lucy Marsicek
Dave Marsicek
Teri Marsicek
Stephen Marsicek
Mary Schweitzer
Jackie Karth
Bob Karth
Rose Maney
Don Kanter
Mary Ann Kanter
Kyle Schweitzer
Joan Kennedy
Patty Gorski
Kathy Stollenwerk
Phil Stollenwerk
Bernie Cleppe
Karen Cleppe
Pam Knackert
Milissa Lefebvre
Dan Lefebvre
Megan Lefebvre
Emily Lefebvre
Ann Strakulski
Philip Hesselbein
Barbara Hesselbein
Nina Mazza Corrao
Pat Schroeckenthaler
Bob & Nadeane
Semrow
Alice Thomas
Randy & Vicky Alf
Ann Klopp
Shawn Lang
Sandra Summerfield
Patrick Holloway
Harder Family
From Hillside
Community Church:
Chris & Carol Gedde
Therese & Dean
Carter
Michael & Judy
Bonville
Nick Syverson
Doug & Sheila
Nielson
Mike, Jill, Amanda,
Bekah, David, Kayla
& Abbie Hassi
Chris & Cindy
Wendlandt
Cherry & Patrick
Kaboskey
Kathleen Walsh
Tavulares
John & Nadine
Movrich
Sherry Drinkwine-
Letteny
Pat & Brenda Ricklefs
Aaron & Rachel
Ricklefs
William & Kim
Templeton
Molly Krejcarek
Laura & Larry Ellis
Destiny Ellis
Scott & Amber King
Greg & Lori Schlecht
Jan Kastner
Nevaeh Warren
Renee Puza
Gail Stapleton
Shae Mueller
Karen Scheel
Helen Olsen
A. Thomas
Honeyager
Carol A. Honeyager
Sarayah K.
Honeyager
Kaitlin A. Honeyager
Nathan C. Honeyager
Lauren Lopez
Mary Lopez
Anne Lopez
Kathryn A. Gotthardt
John & Mary Pandl
Charles D. Wieber
Patricia Miller
Thomas Miller
From Holy Apostles
Parish:
Barbara Cameron
Gerald Hawley
Karen Jurek
Mary Zacher
Brian Lawton
Christy Miller
Megan Miller
Amanda Miller
Karen DeQuardo
Lorraine Clarey
Randy North
Lynn North
Kyle Pionek
Laura Pionek
Ned Hovie
Mike & Mary Maney
Margaret Grandelis
Brian Jalas
Kathy Stokes
Tim Jaeger & Family
Valerie Forret
Kathleen Harris
Collee Hider
Mary Lu Weigel
James Weigel
Lynn Johnson
Ruth Rader
Sue Unruh
Joe Dorlach
Robert, Sue, Michael
Kern
Attorney Christopher
Carson
Tom Bergen
Ed Rivard
Dave & Linda
Holzinger
Jesse Mello
Dolores Slane
Paul & Molly Mikna &
Family
Cheryl Sobczak
Paul Sobczak
Mary Ann Sarsfield
Mary Jeka
Roger Uhrman
Giricz Family
Norm & Carlene
Heidemann
Chmielewski, Mike &
Mary
Craig & Mary Tobin
Bernice B.
Podlaszewski
Ralph Heun
Gloria Heun
Mary Karraker
Wallace Karraker
Rebecca Toledo
Jose Oscar Toledo
Victoria Toledo
Isabella Toledo
Kathleen Walter
Lori Murphy
Jerry Murphy
D.F. Balshunas*
Dennis K. Sage
Mary P. Sage
Joseph Sage
Miles & Kathy Vilski
Mr. & Mrs. James
Hornak
Jason & Pam Scaffidi
Joe Scaffidi
Tony Scaffidi
William Robb
Sherryl Robb
Jason Robb
Ray West
Barbara West
Luke Brayer
Andrew Brayer
Annabel Brayer
Timmy Brayer
Christian Brayer
Justin Brayer
Diane Buchholz
Fred Buchholz
Bob Nolan
Kelli Owen
Sue Firkus
Kathy & Rich
Stopczynski
Vickie Byrne
Colleen & Tom Foley
Jim & Michelle Gross
Keith R. Berndt
Christine & John
Consiglero
Donna Barnes
Andrew Brayer
John Dalton
Theresa Dalton
Tim Dalton
Judy Dalton
Kim & Mary Ireland
Gene Balcerzak
Dianna Lassa
Norman Lassa
Donna Tadych
Matt Tadych
LaVerne & Roger
Laur
Don & Marie Moran
Marie Benz
Leila Rouse
Leola Strause
Lewis Strause
Renee Gratz
Michael Gratz
Bill & Pat Sommers
Travis & Kelly Brabec
Dick & Kay Meyerring
Nancy & Richard
Rank
Doreen Reynolds
Henry Reynolds
Virginia Templin
John Templin
Robert & Rosie
Smocke
Katie Klamecki
Ann & Bernie
Klamecki
Rachel Muck
Jan Fredrickson
Dominic Sundararajan
Mark Schmalz
Susan Schmalz
Tom & Vicki
Gerstbrein
Bill & Beth Kern
Tom & Pegg Yttre
Ed & Carleen
Ericksen
James Mittelbrun
Martin Toledo
Ted & Pat Bannantine
Nancy Machnik
Dennis Machnik
Jim & Sue
Aschenbrenner
Robert Grosch
Ron Kroepfl
Gerri Kroepfl
Judy & Joe Mulqueen
Jeffrey Robb
Naomi Hawthorne
Lucy Wichtoski
Alan Wichtoski
John Shebesta
Jerry & Libby Mueller
Maryann & Bob
Hollenboch*
Susan Della
Bob & JoAnn Nadeau
Lisa Abbott
Barbara Kronenwetter
Charles Kronenwetter
Donna Rivard
David Herrmann
Steve Erdmann
Anne Rieckhoff
Scott Rieckhoff
Janet Zeier
From St. William’s
Parish:
Virginia Kulinski
Geralyn Kulinski
Tom Dougherty
Mari Dougherty
The Stockfisches
Sharon Wieser
Mary Antunes
Dawn Maddison
Liz Rambo
Craig Rambo
Debbie Rambo
PJ & Ruth Anne
White
Ann Fincutter
The Worzallas
Pat Walters
Angela Walters
Noah Walters
Caleb Walters
Eli Walters
Simon Walters
Jonah Walters
Levi Walters
Ron Walters
Marge Walters
Todd Plier
Ann Plier
Tom Shekleton
Paul Dahms
Mary Jo Dahms
John Schraufnagel
The Gabe Szecsy
Family
Carl Palzkill
Peggy McCarthy
Mike McCarthy
Vertz Family
Deacon John & Eva
Libecki
Audrey Liesenfelder
Mick McGuire
Jim & Mireya
Floryance & Family
Gene & Clarice
Gerbasi
Judy Hankel
Linda Remm
William J. Remm
Sharon Ohlis
Carol Reske
Mark Reske
Mary Reske
Steve Reske
Andrew Reske
Veronica Reske
Catherine Reske
Joellyn Marks
Josh Marks
Jim Hemmens
Henry Duss
Joyce Duss
Tom Gall
Kathy Gall
Reg & Jeanne
Nettesheim
From Blessed Terese
Parish:
Don Bethke
Rick Bethke
Terry & Marilyn
Collins
Dorothy Cull
Jo Anne Cull
Earl Cull
Dawn Cull
Sarah Cull
Clint Cull
Bridget Cull
Debra Cull
Don Cull
William Cull
Patricia Cull
Debra Czaplewski
Audrey Czaplewski
Mary Degenhardt
James Degenhardt
Gene & Judy Formolo
Louis & June
Frankulin
WWW.GMTODAY.COM6A • THE FREEMAN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 2015
UNBORN BABIES FEEL PAIN.
We, the undersigned, believe there are positive solutions to abortion.
Join us as we promote respect for all persons ... born and unborn!
When abortion
was legalized in
1973, there was
no Internet, no flat
screen TVs, digital
downloads or cell
phones.
Not much was known
about the baby in the
mother’s womb.
But now, mounting scientific
evidence shows us that unborn
babies feel pain at least five (5)
months after fertilization,
if not earlier!
7. Todd & Renee
Gehring
Diane Gilbertson
Daniel J. Hanrahan
Barbara Hasler
Ralph Hasler
Sandi Hora
Kathy Kaiser
Carol Kawleski
Tom King
Joan King
Ralph & Theresa
Kloehn
Jim Krause
Cheryl Krause
Rich & Nancy
Kreuser
Mark Leidel
Lynn Leidel
Rita Lund
Kent L. Maltby
Linda Lou Maltby
Charlotte Obermayr
Michael & Debbie
O’Driscoll
Don Orth
Sharon Orth
Cornel Rosario
Kathy Rosario
Roberta Schaefer
Matt Schaefer
Jean Schlidt
Frank Schmitz
Mary Schultz
Mike Schultz
John & Lynn Solwold
Fr. William Stanfield
Brian Stippich
Linnette Sukup
Andrew Sukup
Sharon L. Tobolski
Juiette Welch*
Vivianne Whitcomb
Steve Whitcomb
Beverly J. Kuntzsch
Dorothy Kemp &
Family
Maria Neddersen
Robert Neddersen
Susan M. Marks
Richard & Kristine
Heinrich
David & Ann Heinrich
Peter & Chelsea
Heinrich
Tom Heinrich
From Bethlehem
Lutheran Church:
Jeff Rose
Ruth Rose
Bonnie Camplin
Don Camplin
Tim Holt
Kim Holt
Darlene Stuempges
Pastor Allen Behnke
Barb Behnke
Christy Behnke
Pat Engen
Dave Engen
From Kettle Moraine
Knights of
Columbus:
Joe & Dorothy Becker
Joe Haizel
Daniel Zacharias
Karen & Dale Sitek
Kirsten & Marshall
Senfleben
Sam Vallone
Pat & Gene Gross
Lynn & Carl
Limberger
Don Schoenhaar
Jim Schoenhaar
Stan Wiliszewski
Patrick Jacunski
Sue Jacunski
AJ Jacunski
PJ Jacunski
Katherine Jacunski
Nicole Jacomet
Lucus Jacomet
Chris Williams
Linda & Bob Rohde
Mark Becker
Ronald J. Werowinski
Bob Boehler
Russ Heinritz
Gina Heinritz
Joelle Heinritz
Josie Tarantino
From St. Charles
Parish:
Ed & Kelly McAleer /
Kelly Bradford
Karen Maurer
Stephen Maurer
Jenna Maurer
Ed & Jeanine Maly
Ann Lorenz
Emma Clawson
Travis Gille
Jennifer Gille
Mary Charles*
Anthony Berndt
Kathie Henkel
Jack Henkel
Mark & Camilla Cane
Len & Sue Nowak
Nick & Terry
Manriquez
Kay Stuer
Dorothy Brauer
Jim & Shirley Klauser
Gary Fischer
Claudia Millot
Jo Millot
Ed Lump
Karen & Dale Sitek
Kris & Shelley Schultz
Mary Judge
John & Peggy
Shanabarger
Paula Post
Brian Post
Devin Post
Aaron Post
Lauren Clawson
Robb Clawson
Megan Gille
Matthew Gille
David Vogt
Gina Vogt
Margaret Andrews
Dana Andrews
Judy Klink
Meg Henke
Mark Henke
Cindy DeCleene
Patrick DeCleene
Susan & Gary
Zimmerman
Dan & Sue Van
Sistine
Bob & Margaret
Kurkiewicz
Mike & Ann Kroll
Mary Pat Meier
Curtis Blakeway
Lance Kerwin
Mary H. Brunner
Erin K. Brunner
Brian A. Brunner
Mary Hauke
Diane Gaberino
Courtney Gaberino
Mary Shanabarger
Zach Waltz
Mary Klatt
Michelle Hein
Jim Hein
Angela Hein
Diane Fleming
Mike Fleming
Mark Ubert
John Grogan
Anne Grogan
Dianne Bay
Maria Bay
William Bay
Matthew Bay
Joseph Bay
John Courchaine
Ann Courchaine
Arlene Condon
Mark Condon
Thomas Taugher &
Family
Janine Stolpa
Joy Hobert
Ann Ubert
Michael Schulze
Kimberly Schulze
Daniel Meindl
Michelle Brumm
Michaeleen Hinca
Tom Hinca
John Jensen
Kathy Jensen
Susan Switalski
Liliana Hinca
Reggie Jacobosky
Matthew Gaberino
Becky Stolpa
Colleen Pedersen
Karen Waltz
Stefanie Hett
Rose Frohna
Patricia Olson
Fred & Rosemary
Jesko
Susan M. Thiede
Ron Thiede
Shirley Lamerand
Roseann Caroll
Kathy Nawrocki
Mary Beth Trentadue
Joe Jaskolski
Julie Jaskolski
Kathy Gillstrom
Jeff Bell
Carol Bell
Christine Klingseisen
Jean Hilger
Lisa Scherrer
Joan Kobb
Rachel Shanabarger
Father Ken Omernick
Christopher Novak
Joe Braun
Sarah Olson
Margie Carmichael
E. Nancy Eberhardy
Jackie Endter
Peggy Burrus
Christine McGilvra
Maria Trentadue
Ann Kroll
Kevin & Bridget
Gaughan
Sendi Ooton
Austin Boesl
Diane Sleaper
David & Julie
Biesanski & Family
Tom & Peg Renz &
Family
Christopher Farris
Lori Farris
Ryanne Farris
Thomas P. Shannon
Karen & Mike
Borchardt
Julie Kirby
Gregory Kirby
Mary Brauer
Paul A. Akre
Cecilia A. Johnson
Pat Buzzell
Denise Fischer
Jennifer Reich
Tom Harter & Family
Lee Kempen
Merry Kempen
Julie Heyrman
Brian & Ann Kohr
Family
Tom Heyrman
Christopher
Ostromecki
Elzbieta Ostromecki
Halina Kraszewska
Maripat Dalum
Tom Dalum
Nick Hirsch
Lori Stortz
Ron Stortz
Nick Stortz
Alex Stortz
Chayse Farris
Meghan Shannon
Kerry Shannon
Judy Horwatich
Michelle Bronsted
Mary Lestina
Chris & Cliff Sprung
Tom & Helen
Kroening
Jerry & Virginia
Johnson
John & Alicia Van
Hecke & Family
Joe & Julie Malucha
& Family
Jack & Betty Sindorf
Frank & Judy Ramlow
Roy & Ruth Ann
Hackbart
Kay A. Moen
Katie Feeney
John Feeney
Ruth Chadwick
Paul Chadwick
Rich Nickel
Amy Nickel
Abby Boesl
AJ Boesl
Gabbi Gillette
Rebecca Formella
Andrew Formella
Carol Betzhold
Dale Betzhold
Dick Jacunski
Alex & Katherine
Jacunski
Sue & Pat Jacunski
Nicole Jacomet
Lucas Jacomet
Nancy Neuser
Steven Reich
Lindsay Sherman
Jeanne Sherman
Kavan Sherman
Ruth Meindl
Emil Meindl
Kristine Roznowski
Jill Boesl
Troy Boesl
Jim & Sharon Cull
Doris Senglaub
Ty Roznowski
Anna Gille
Sara Gille
Allie Farris
Karen A. Philleo
Tom O’Brien
Deborah L. Lancour
Pam & John
Charleston
Joyce Petersdorff
Rita Schroeder
Ivy Bauer
Ann Shanabarger
Marie Akre
Krista Dittrich
Ralph C. Buzzell
Patrick Burns
Gregg Brunolik
JoAnn Theeringer
Kevin Bay
Michael Bay
Mr. & Mrs. Tom Wirtz
Sara Wirtz
Susan Wirtz
Jane Wirtz
Lucy Wirtz
Max Wirtz
Janie Streff
Craig Streff
Keith & Denise
Johnson
Tom & Nancy Mroz
David & Kate Kaiser
The Davidson Family
Keith & Michele
Campbell
Arnie & Therese
Campbell
Michael S. Kaminski
Vincenca S. Kaminski
Conrad M. Kaminski
Mary E. Malloy
From Oakwood
Church:
Carol LaCasse
Terry LaCasse
Roseann Donahue
Laura Ottusch
Linda Kosek
Harry Kosek
Mel Yenter
Connie Haynes
Roger Ellis
Becci Terrill
Elizabeth Cole
Bonnie Romanowich
Nellita Lee
Peter Lee
Lee Family
Jerry & Pat Gorski
Thomas & Marlene
Freckman
From Christ the Life
Lutheran Church:
Jared Coonen
Deb Coonen
Tim Coonen
Erin Coonen
Linsey Coonen
Michael Figueira
Ellen Figueira
Jeraldine Dobbs
Rebecca Feltz
Greg Slater
Joan Slater
Nancy Schultz
Richard Schultz
Karen Worgull
Jeff Worgull
Frank Janssen
Christine Janssen
Noah Janssen
Rebekah Janssen
Samuel Janssen
Julia Janssen
Betty Palmer
Gerhard Palmer
Ted Hikade
Connie Hikade
Steven Harrison
Sarah Harrison
Ted Hikade Sr.
Stephanie Hikade
Craig Hikade
Grace Michow
Kathy Wendt
Debi Oblamski
Rick Oblamski
Rev. Timmothy Heath
Susanne Heath
Michael Feltz
Tom Crowley
Kerry Crowley
Matt Schmidt
Amber Hawkinson
Joanne Field
Joel English
Debbie English
Elaine Hills
Noel & Tim Aicher
From Queen of
Apostles Parish:
Ann & Mike
Heckenkamp
Dick & Rita Michaletz
Donna Armstrong
Greg Brostowitz
Jill Brostowitz
John Paul Brostowitz
Victoria Brostowitz
Elizabeth Brostowitz
Jessica Merkel
Clemie Merkel
Bob & Gina Schwister
Ken & Donna Mae
Zandt
Monica R. Daily
Marion Eisenman
Shirley Rogahn
Jim Rischer
Bill & MaryAnn Eder
John & Nancy
Cianciolo
Dan & Carla Zimmer
The McCourt Family
Anna Pitzo
Carol Hoch
Jim Hoch
William J. Woolley
Kathleen Laetsch
Claire & Jim Schultz
Marna & Larry
Olenchek
Tom Nettesheim
Judy Huschka
Pete, Clare & Steve
Walchli
Fran Bolan Family
Frank & Joanne
Pantus
Maureen Wurster
Paul & Julie Farrell
Henry & Kathie
Steare
Jim & Faye Sheehan
Bob & Betty Meyer
Tony & Theresa Jace
David & Becky
Niebler
Judy Nauert
Emily Toby
Bayan Toby
Evelyn Toby
Ellory Toby
Mark Toby
Michele Toby
Kevan Toby
Andrew Toby
Kristine Schroeder
Karen Schroeder
Jack & Nancy Koepp
Ray & Kay Thibault
Jeff & Melissa
Engaldo
Dylan & Lauren
Engaldo
Mrs. Nona Todd
Daniel T. O’Connor
Bernd Davidson
Bernadine Davidson
Barbara Passante
Clare Pfeifer
Jack Pfeifer
Bill & Mary Ann Eder
Maria Hughes
Al Herink
Kay Engman
Jan Verona
Todd Clarey
Jessica Merkel
John & Lyn Spitz
Adam Spitz
Katherine Spitz
Frank Soya
Francin Soya
Ed & Donna
Pulvermacher
Dave & Jean Dunker
John & Jane Losee
Mary Kestell
Anne I. Mann
Geri Toshner
Linda Kroll & Ron
Kroll
Mary Weber & Steve
Weber
Bob Eales Family
Larry Wehrheim
Family
Mary Ann Mohr
Dorothy Duchow
Kathy Evert
Barb Star
From St. Paul’s Parish
- Genesee Depot:
John & Susan
Zewiske
Beth Westlund
Ron Tryczynski
Kathy Wolf
Michael Wolf
Linda Bautz
Nicholas Bautz
Helen Hogan & Rick
Hogan
Mike Zignego
Al Schimpf
Jim Winiecki
Eleanore Gresk
Duane & Lillian Miller
Mike & Jeanne Ertl
Karen Grande
Jim Grande
Kerry Grande
Marilyn Jablonski
Dean Jablonski
Doug & Connie
Emenecker
Karen Farrell
Cathy Treutelaar &
Dave Treutelaar
Karen Shadley
Peter & Kathy Duffek
Douglas Batzler
Joan Poehnelt
Jerry Poehnelt
Nancy Marsh
Greg & Cathy Bolin
Barb & Ron Bishop
Gene & Marion
Hessen Family
Roger & Linda Varner
Jeff & Ann Krumrich
Cindy L. Frechette
Bryan & Pat Popowski
Wayne & Kathy Lois
Jim & Marcy Dunlap
Peter, Bety, Tyler &
Dustin McFadzen
Barb Krumrai
Robert & Mary Grall
Steve & Ruth Palzkill
Larry & Jennifer
Geisler
Robert & Vera
Switalski
Gary & Gail Noel
James B. Hotz
Tim Heikkinen
John P. Isely, Jr.
Mary Jo Isely
Art & Kathy Scheuber
Grant & Nancy
Bastian
Teresa Jones
Victor Jones
Faustina Jones
Ieva Neimantaite
Peggie Smith
Cindy Beauchamp
Darrell Beauchamp
Anna Beauchamp
Mary Beauchamp
John Beauchamp
Janet Shanahan
John Lammers
Mary Kay Lammers
Michelle Lammers
Breider
Mike Breider
Paul Lammers
Michelle Gottschalk
Lammers
Betty Pecha
Bob & Margaret
Schumann
Sue Rasmussen
Dave Rasmussen
Father Ralph Gross
Mary Frances Linzer
Gary & Dianne
Krueger
John & Annette
Morgen
Kathy Pierce
Mike O’Leary
J D *
Jeff Karas
Larry Geisler
Margot Schumacher
Tim & Mary Alters
Larry & JoAnn Presta
Bonnie & Bob
Schaefer
Tom & Amy McGuine
Mary Kral
Terri Trafton
Dawn Sarandos
From St. Anthony on
the Lake:
Deacon Dennis &
Mary Petrie
Fr. Paul Hartmann
Fred Weber
Matt Weber
Joy Weber
Brittany Weber
Ashley Weber
Allison Tippeny
James Coughlin
Deacon Mike & Sue
Finley
Fredette Family
Mary Estrada
Nancy & Eugene
Norby
Lyle Golemgeske
Marion Golemgeske
Rick Schueller
Helen Rehberger
Barbara Weber
Audrey Anderson
Mark & Cindy Bauer
Jennifer & Chuck
Unger
Philip Heinle
Mr. & Mrs. John
Campion
Barb Heinle
Bruce & Marianne
Miller
Nick Kroll Family
The Liska Family
Mark & Julie Goyette
Dave & Pat
Lechtenberg
Mary Cumiskey
Peter Cumiskey
Thomas Cumiskey
Shirley Cumiskey
Harold Fandel
From St. Joseph’s
Parish - Big Bend:
Tim Collins
Sandy Collins
Brian Collins
Kelly Collins
Sam Collins
Ben Collins
Brad Collins
Crystal Collins
Zach Collins
Ceclia Collins
Carol Collins
Shirley Stadler
Francis Stadler
Gerald Krenke
Lois Krenke
Lee Turay
Laina Maren
Bob Craig
Pat & Larry Wolf
Randi Bautch
Karen Hardtke
Tim Bollis
Patty Bollis
Michele Whitehouse
John Babeck Jr.
Lynn Barnickel
Karen Jeszka
Jeff Seefeld
MaryAnne Seefeld
Jennifer Frank
Delphine Wrycza
Janis Richardson
Carol Mengel
Judith Dorava
Emil Dorava
Amy Gallenberg
Charles Riley
Mary Riley
Mike Hogan
Janice Hogan
Judy Wolfe
Bill wolfe
Pat Starcevic
Jim Whitehouse*
Joan C. Bauber*
Aletha Duerst
Fr. Kevin McManaman
Rosie Neuman
Jeanne & Gene
O’Connell
Don Czajka
Donna Czajka
Sandra Wanasek
Shirley Goff
Leonard Adamski
Marie Adamski
Greg & Diane
Lemmers
Jean Welsford
Ava Maren
Mason Maren
Faye Maren
Terry Henrichs
Carol Sammer
Bernie Sammer
Paul Reitz
Kathy Reitz
Stacy Abrahan
Alexis LaBadie
Caitlyn LaBadie
Lori LaBadie
Jim LaBadie
Patricia I. Kolinski
Trinie Laplander
Robert J. Laplander
Judy Wirth
Larry Wirth
Mike & Mary Mutza
Greg & Sharon
Wuerger
Jim & Judy
Dobrzynski
Joe King
Fay King
Jeff King
Sarah King
Sean King
Ethan King
David King
Jenni King
Matthew King
Rebecca King
Angela King
Alex King
Mara King
Daniel King
Connor King
From St. Mary’s,
Waukesha:
Christopher Peychal
Beverly Peychal
Isabella Peychal
Catherine Juni
Roger Helm
Laureli Helm
Daniel Carpenter
Krista Draeger
JoAnn Weinkauf
Veronica Joan Snyder
Dave & Carol
Gramling
Kelli A. McKenzie
Ginn Family
Paul & Vina Stillwell
Phyllis Kaebisch
Behrendt Family
Marilyn Stigler
Mary Fahey
Ron & Fran Lyon
Michael Rasinole
Barb & Roger Mekka
Mary Navin
Charlie Wieber
Julianna Goldheer
Jason & Jessica
Pechloff Family
Brian Schmitz
Mike Jeske & Lee
Jeske
John & Mary Pandl
Barbara Thompson
Rev. Dennis G. Buhl
Karen & Bob Rosecky
Tom Kornowski
Sallie Saunders
Jack McCaffery
Alice McCaffery
Mary McCaffery
Pat & Joanne
McCaffery
Esther Como
Mr. & Mrs, Robert
Foreman & Family
Ann Gairy & Family
Margie Hanson
Rosie Villa
Josie Rockett
Ron & Kathy Rydberg
Terry & Mary Bourque
Joan MacGregor
Clara Winters
Bob & Cathy Day
John & Nora Eibl
Jean & Charles Kowis
Bob & Diane Jost
The Bowers Family
The Kyle Family
The Medina Family
Dr. John L. Buhl
Robert Hansen
Mary Jane Burke
Matthew & Sara
Huebisch
Joe & Abby Mazza
Betsy & Gene Mathes
Mary Beth Mathes
Cliff & Leigh Lanigan-
Stanisch
Mike Johnson
Mary Ellen Aspenson
Char Guzman
Tom & Terri Bernacchi
The Norgal Family
Chris & Wendy Brown
Family
Sr. Deb Murphy
Dan & Michelle
Morgan
Mary Miller
Bob & Ginger Biebel
Angela Leow
Margaret Weidman
The Polacheck Family
Jim & Pat Toft
Laurie & Kevin Tanel
Carol & Rick Snook
Laurie & Steve
Westor
Bud & Carol
Schneider
Ron & Elenore Piette
Elsie J. Armstrong
Ron & Michelle Grall
Joseph & Joyce Eibl
Karl H. Ricker
Chris & Stacey Smart
& Family
Grace Horan
The Rodriguez Family
James R. Schroeder
Family
Kris Riedel
Carol Seegers
Janis, Jim, Brian &
Matthew Trebby
Mike & Kelly Saveltoel
Robert & Joanne
Kraklow
Klein Family
Durward Gauthier
Andrew G. Martin
Carol Martin
Peter R. Diliberti
Betty Knoebel
Jane Plechaty
Denise Liss
Sally Magnan
Suzanne Frank
Bridget Carpenter
Ann Carpenter
Erin Carpenter
Gary & Rita Krivos
St. John Neumann
Parish
*means name spelling
was unclear
THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 2015 • THE FREEMAN • 7AWWW.GMTODAY.COM
WISCONSIN RIGHT TO LIFE
WAUKESHA COUNTY CHAPTER
Mary Carey, President
P.O. Box 12, Waukesha, WI 53187
(262) 434-0821
Please join us in this endeavor and speak for those who
cannot speak for themselves. Use membership form
below:
Name ________________________________________
Address ______________________________________
City _________________________ Zip _____________
Phone ________________________________________
Single ($10) ____________ Family ($15) ____________
Make check payable to: WRL–Waukesha Co. Chapter
and mail to the address below.