Legal Advertisement TO THE OWNERS OF THE WITHIN DESCRIBED REAL ESTATE AND ALL INTERESTED PARTIES NOTICE OF SHERIFF’S SALE By virtue of a certified copy of a decree to me, directed from the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Bartholomew County, Indiana, in Cause No. 03C01-2510-MF-006261wherein PNC Bank, National Association was Plaintiff, and Kimberly Mills, The United States of America, Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, Shadow Creek Homeowners Association, Inc., Forum Credit Union, Amsterdam Capital Solutions LLC, State of Indiana, Department of Revenue and The United States of America, Department of Treasury, Internal Revenue Service were Defendants, requiring me to make the sum as provided for in said Decree, with interest and cost, I will expose at public online sale to the highest bidder on the 5th day of May, 2026, at the hour of 10 a.m., with a closing time of 11 a.m., or as soon thereafter as is possible, at www. zeusauction.com, the fee simple of the whole body of Real Estate in Bartholomew County, Indiana. Lot Numbered 128 in Shadow Creek Farms, Section Two, as recorded March 19, 2002 as Instrument No. 2002-4937 in Plat Book “Q”, page 316C, in the Office of the Recorder of Bartholomew County, Indiana. More commonly known as: 3285 Lakestream Drive, Columbus, IN 47201 Parcel No. 03-85- 02-230-000.104-005 Together with rents, issues, income, and profits thereof, said sale will be made without relief from valuation or appraisement laws. “Subject to all liens, encumbrances and easements of record not otherwise extinguished in the proceedings known as Cause 03C01-2510-MF-006261 in the Circuit Court of the County of Bartholomew, Indiana.” Attorney for Plaintiff: Stephanie A. Reinhart ATTORNEY NO. 25071-06 MDK Legal P.O. Box 165028 Columbus OH 43216-5028 Chris Lane Sheriff of Bartholomew County Columbus Township 3285 Lakestream Drive Street Address The Sheriff’s Department does not warrant the accuracy of the street address published herein. 60158568 (R) 03-25 – 04-01-08-2026
2026-04-01 The Republic 60159016
Legal Advertisement NOTICE OF PETITION FOR NAME CHANGE NOTICE BY PUBLICATION STATE OF INDIANA IN THE BARTHOLOMEW SUPERIOR COURT 2 CAUSE NO. 03D02-1901-JP-000612 PARKER H. MOSS, Petitioner, vs. TAYLOR N. BLANKENHORN, Respondent. Respondent filed a Verified Petition for Name Change on March 26, 2026 on behalf of the minor child, Ella Jane Blankenhorn. The Petition requests a name change to Ella Jane Meyer. Any person has the right to appear at the hearing regarding this Petition and to file objections to this name change. 60159016 R: 4/1, 4/8, 4/15/2026
2026-04-01 The Republic 60158731
Legal Advertisement STATE OF INDIANA COUNTY OF BARTHOLOMEW IN THE BARTHOLOMEW COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT 1 CAUSE NUNBER 03D01-2603-MI-001670 IN RE THE NAME CHANGE OF EVELYN GRACE LEFFLER Petitioner NOTICE OF PUBLICATION Be it hereby known that Evelyn Grace Leffler has petitioned the Bartholomew Courts to formally change her name from Evelyn Grace Leffler to Evelyn Grace Baker said Petition for name change having been filed on the 20th day of March, 2026. Any person has the right to file objections to the name change. Shari J. Lentz Clerk of Bartholomew County 60158731 R: 3/25, 4/1, 4/8/2026
2026-04-01 The Republic 60158715
Legal Advertisement CAUSE NO. 03C01-2603-EU-001520 NOTICE OF UNSUPERVISED ADMINISTRATION In the Bartholomew Circuit Court, Indiana. Notice is hereby given that Philip A. Harlow, Jr. was on March 17, 2026, appointed personal representative of the estate of Philip A. Harlow Sr., deceased, who died on January 27, 2026. All persons who have claims against this estate, whether or not now due, must file the claim in the Office of the Clerk of this Court within three (3) months from the date of the first publication of this notice, or within nine (9) months after the decedent’s death, whichever is earlier, or the claims will be forever barred. Dated at Columbus, Indiana: March 19, 2026. Shari J. Lentz Clerk of the Bartholomew Circuit Court Blake C. Reed (#28026-49) Attorney at Law VOELZ, REED, &MOUNT, LLC 2751 Brentwood Drive Columbus, IN 47203 Telephone: (812) 372-1303 60158715 R 03-25—04-01-2026
2026-04-01 The Republic 60158719
Legal Advertisement CAUSE NO. 03D01-2603-EU-001521 NOTICE OF UNSUPERVISED ADMINISTRATION In the Bartholomew Superior Court 1, Indiana. Notice is hereby given that Randall L. Settle was on March 15, 2026, appointed personal representative of the estate of Robert L. Settle, deceased, who died on February 3, 2026. All persons who have claims against this estate, whether or not now due, must file the claim in the Office of the Clerk of this Court within three (3) months from the date of the first publication of this notice, or within nine (9) months after the decedent’s death, whichever is earlier, or the claims will be forever barred. Dated at Columbus, Indiana: March 19, 2026 Shari J. Lentz Clerk of the Bartholomew Superior Court 1 Blake C. Reed (#28026-49) Attorney at Law VOELZ, REED, &MOUNT, LLC 2751 Brentwood Drive Columbus, IN 47203 Telephone: (812) 372-1303 60158719 R 03-25—04-01-2026
Chang Ung, North Korean ex-IOC member who brokered Olympic joint marches with South, dies
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — Chang Ung, a former North Korean member of the International Olympic Committee who once led sports exchanges with rival South Korea including joint marches of their athletes at the Olympics, has died, the IOC announced Wednesday. He was 87.
The IOC said on its website that it had learned with “extreme sadness” of Chang’s death on Sunday. It said the Olympic flag will be flown at half-mast for three days at Olympic House in Lausanne, Switzerland in a show of respect.
The IOC statement didn’t describe the cause of Chang’s death. North Korea’s state media has not reported on his death.
Born in 1938, Chang was originally a basketball player who captained the North Korean national team. After retiring from the sport, he became an athletics administrator, serving as a vice sports minister, a vice chairman of North Korea’s national Olympic Committee and a vice president of the Olympic Council of Asia.
In 1996, Chang was elected to the IOC. As North Korea’s only-ever IOC member, he represented his country on international sports fields and headed numerous — if often rocky — talks with South Korea to promote sports exchange and cooperation programs between the rivals.
The most notable results of this diplomacy came at the 2000 Sydney Olympics, when athletes of the two Koreas marched together under a “unification flag” depicting their peninsula during the opening and closing ceremonies, the first joint parade since their division in 1945.
Athletes of the Koreas walked together at following Olympic Games and major international sports events, including the 2018 Pyeongchang Olympics in South Korea. After watching a joint march in Pyeongchang’s opening ceremony, Chang told reporters that he was “deeply moved.”
Chang played a key role in earlier talks with South Korea, which led to the two countries sending their first unified male and female teams to the 1991 world table tennis championships in Chiba, Japan. In Pyeongchang, the two Koreas fielded their first combined Olympic team for women’s ice hockey.
But sports ties between North and South Korea have suffered as political relations frayed.
There have been no sports and any other exchanges programs between the countries for years. North Korea has shunned talks with South Korea and the U.S. since its leader Kim Jong Un’s broader nuclear diplomacy with U.S. President Donald Trump collapsed in 2019. He’s also branded South Korea a permanent enemy and rejected the idea of future unification.
The IOC said Chang’s contributions helped advance sports participation, cultural exchanges and the role of sport in society.
“His efforts to promote cooperation on the Korean Peninsula demonstrated the power of sport to build bridges and inspire hope,” IOC President Kirsty Coventry said.
The IOC said Chang served on several commissions including Sport for All and International Olympic Truce Foundation.
North Korea’s official news agency, KCNA, last mentioned Chang in 2023, when he was awarded the Olympic Order, an award given to those who have made extraordinary contributions to the Olympics, during an IOC session in Mumbai, India. Chang, then an honorary IOC member, joined the ceremony by video.
Umpire loses track of count, leading to walk instead of strikeout for Astros’ Cam Smith vs. Red Sox
HOUSTON (AP) — Plate umpire Mark Wegner acknowledged he lost track of the count during Cam Smith’s nine-pitch walk Tuesday night in the fifth inning of the Houston Astros’ 9-2 win over the Boston Red Sox.
In fact, Smith should have been out on strikes after the third pitch.
Smith swung and missed at two cutters from Red Sox starter Brayan Bello to begin the plate appearance. After the second pitch, Joey Loperfido stole second base and Christian Walker scored on the play thanks to a throwing error by catcher Connor Wong. After about 40 seconds, Smith swung and missed at a sweeper.
That should have been strike three but Wegner, a crew chief working his 29th major league season, flashed 1-2 for the count. Six pitches later, Smith worked a walk.
“I just watched the video. I didn’t know what happened until I came in here and apparently, I somehow didn’t count the second swinging one because I said the count was 1-2. It was actually strike three,” Wegner told a pool reporter after the game. “Had anybody caught it, we can always go and call replay and check the count. I’ve never done that before. I’m not happy about it. Just made a mistake.”
Wegner said no one on the field raised an issue in the moment.
Bello said Wegner gave the count as 1-1 after his second pitch, and he didn’t question it at the time.
“I thought the first pitch was a strike and I thought that he swung at the second pitch,” Bello said in Spanish through a translator. “None of that took me out of my focus in that inning. I tried to get out of that inning, and it didn’t happen.”
Smith was the last batter Bello faced in his season debut. He allowed six runs, five earned, on eight hits and three walks over 4 2/3 innings.
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AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb
Board condemns 13th Street house
City code enforcement asked the Columbus Board of Public Works and Safety to approve an order to vacate and condemn a house due to unsafe conditions.
Code Enforcement Officer Fred Barnett said he has been working with the 2909 13th St. property since the first of the year with issues regarding garbage, trash and unlicensed inoperable vehicles which he said the property owner did handle.
Barnett said that after the outside of the home was fixed up, his team inspected the inside of the building. He told the board that inside the building were issues such as holes in the roof and electrical issues from open-panels and spigot leaks next to electrical panels.
Due to these issues, he asked that the house be vacated, condemned and that legal action be taken if needed. Barnett also added a building permit requirement for any action taken on fixing the house.
Board member John Pickett asked if there is anything the board or the Columbus City Council could do to prevent houses from getting bad enough to the point of condemnation.
“It would be nice if we could be more proactive, because we have some crap housing stock,” Pickett said.
The board voted unanimously to approve the order to condemn, vacate and take legal action on the 13th Street home.



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