garden city telegram october 20, 2012

30
By RACHAEL GRAY [email protected] Students, community mem- bers, faculty and staff Friday morning gathered on the quad at Garden City Community College to celebrate the beginning of a new era. After more than two decades, the college has a new logo. The simple, bold yellow and brown “G” has “Garden City Community College” underneath written in modern type face. It’s a switch from the old logo, the four-letter cube logo, which has now been retired. Students showed their pride for the new logo on Friday, wear- ing T-shirts, temporary tattoos and holding balloons with the logo. Wendy Thiel, 19, a sophomore in elementary education, and Whitney Parks, 19, a sophomore in early childhood education, approved of the new logo. “I think it’s cool. It’s a nice change with the new president,” Thiel said. Parks said it was more mod- ern and more of the type of logo found at a university. “I think it’s cool for a new change and new start for the school,” she said. Friday morning’s celebration opened with words from GCCC President Herbert Swender. “This is a true moment in his- tory, because right here, right now, you are among the first people anywhere to see the new logo for Garden City Community College,” he said. Employees and visitors were offered a free lunch after the ceremony. Music played, and members of the GC3 Media staff began offering opportunities for groups, couples and individuals to get their pictures taken next to a large copy of the collegiate trademark. The official unveiling was the first of two introduc- tory events. Plans also called for the logo to be announced and shown during halftime at tonight’s GCCC football game against Dodge City in Memorial Stadium. Since the game also serves as alumni night, organiz- ers also planned a post-game party for alumni and friends at Samy’s Spirits and Steakhouse, featuring additional logo give- aways. Steve Quakenbush, GCCC executive director of public rela- tions, said the logo better defines and represents what the college means and offers to the public. He said it is “the primary visual element in an overall branding effort for the college, so that we can better commu- nicate the quality and success that people should expect from GCCC,” he said. Quakenbush said the college is following suit with other edu- cational institutions that have changed logos recently. “We believe that’s important in today’s competitive collegiate environment, and it’s something that we’ve seen other learning institutions address, as well. Editor’s note: This is the 14th in a series of stories featuring the 21 agen- cies that will receive funding from the Finney County United Way in 2013. By KAMIL ZAWADZKI [email protected] The Russell Child Development Center’s tiny-k program is crucial to helping families ensure their chil- dren develop at a healthy rate and are primed to lead successful lives. For tiny-k Early Intervention Coordinator Jill Reagle, that’s a main goal and part of the essence of RCDC she hopes people are aware of and take advantage of when they need to. “We’re able to help parents help their child,” she said. “And to be able to encourage parents and empower par- ents to be advocates for their child.” This year, RCDC has received $35,000 from Finney County United Way, the same amount as was allocated last year but an increase from $30,000 for 2011. The United Way money mainly will be used to pay for the salaries of RCDC’s early interventionists. These interventionists fan out across 12 counties in southwest Kansas to help families with children ranging in age from birth to 36 months old, providing services that Reagle notes are not just required by some of the federal grants the organization gets but are crucial for any community. These services include physical, occupational and speech-language ther- apy, early childhood education, feed- ing and nutrition, hearing and vision, social work and assistive technology. “There’s not a one-size-fits-all. Every child is different,” Reagle said. “And our staff really does a fabulous job of identifying the needs, identifying the priorities of the family and working with that.” She admits the organization is underfunded, but is satisfied with the quality of service provided to its cli- ents, something she and her staff want to continue. With less funding, she said, they likely would have to reduce staff or staff hours, which would mean there would be less time each child would get with their interventionist. As a result, the quality of the program and its positive effect on children and their families would be reduced, as well. “They wouldn’t get the assistance 72472 00075 6 0 What’s Inside Annie’s Advice B5 Classified C3 Comics B6 Lottery A2 Obituaries A2 Opinion A4 State A3 TV Listings B4 Weather A8 Go to www.GCTelegram.com/Multimedia for a video of the GCCC logo unveiling ceremony. GROWING GRAPES: Farmer sets aside land for vineyard. PAGE B1 SATURDAY, October 20, 2012 $125 Volume 83, No 245 4 sections 30 pages Weather Forecast Today, mostly sunny, high 80, low 44 Saturday, partly sunny, high 80, low 41 Details on page A8 Market Prices Wheat. .......... 8.48 Corn.............. 7.85 Milo.............. 7.20 Soybeans....14.59 Grain prices at the Garden City Co-op Schwieterman Inc. reported Chicago Live Cattle Futures: Oct. Dec. Feb. High. .......... 126.50..... 128.27. .... 131.75 Low ........... 125.82..... 126.95. .... 130.62 Stand......... 126.17..... 127.25. .... 130.92 GCHS: Hutchinson blows past Buffs, 56-14. PAGE D1 Courtesy photo In this undated photo, Russell Child Development Center tiny-k Physical Therapist Brenda Drees, right, provides early intervention services to Jude Hanny, as his mom, Beth Hanny, helps. Photos by Becky Malewitz/Telegram Garden City Community College freshman Veronica Dooley gets a temporary tattoo of GCCC’s new logo on her face after the unveiling ceremony Friday. Garden City Community College President Herbert Swender addresses the crowd after unveiling the new GCCC logo on the banner behind him. Launching a new look By ANGIE HAFLICH [email protected] A series of investigations involving members of three law enforcement agencies has led to the arrest of a Garden City man on more than 40 sex crime allega- tions. Brian Ray Banister, 43, 633 N. Main St., was arrested Oct. 11 at the Law Enforcement Center on 30 counts of sexual exploitation of a child. After taking Banister into custody, investigators uncov- ered more information that led them to add one count of rape and 11 counts of indecent liber- ties with a child to the list of allegations. “(Sexual exploitation), in this particular case, was the viewing Tiny-k program helps kids develop from the start Community college unveils new logo G.C. man arrested on sex crime allegations WASHINGTON (AP) Sensing a moment of political vulnerability on national secu- rity, Republicans pounced Friday on disclosures that President Barack Obama’s administration could have known early on that militants, not angry protesters, launched the attack on U.S. diplo- mats in Libya. Within 24 hours of the deadly attack, the CIA station chief in Libya reported to Washington that there were eyewitness reports that the attack was car- ried out by militants, officials told The Associated Press. But for days, the Obama adminis- tration blamed it on an out-of- control demonstration over an American-made video ridiculing Islam’s Prophet Muhammad. Paul Ryan, the Republican vice presidential nominee, led Friday’s charge. GOP pounces after news of CIA cable on Libya raid See Branding, Page A5 See Libya, Page A5 MENINGITIS: Medicare questions arise. PAGE A8 See Investigations, Page A5 See United Way, Page A5

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Garden City Telegram October 20, 2012 entry for News & Writing Excellence, KPA 2013.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Garden City Telegram October 20, 2012

By RACHAEL [email protected]

Students, community mem-bers, faculty and staff Friday morning gathered on the quad at Garden City Community College to celebrate the beginning of a new era.

After more than two decades, the college has a new logo.

The simple, bold yellow and brown “G” has “Garden City Community College” underneath written in modern type face.

It’s a switch from the old logo, the four-letter cube logo, which has now been retired.

Students showed their pride for the new logo on Friday, wear-ing T-shirts, temporary tattoos and holding balloons with the logo.

Wendy Thiel, 19, a sophomore in elementary education, and Whitney Parks, 19, a sophomore in early childhood education, approved of the new logo.

“I think it’s cool. It’s a nice change with the new president,” Thiel said.

Parks said it was more mod-ern and more of the type of logo found at a university.

“I think it’s cool for a new change and new start for the school,” she said.

Friday morning’s celebration opened with words from GCCC President Herbert Swender.

“This is a true moment in his-tory, because right here, right now, you are among the first people anywhere to see the new logo for Garden City Community College,” he said.

Employees and visitors were offered a free lunch after the ceremony. Music played, and members of the GC3 Media staff began offering opportunities for groups, couples and individuals to get their pictures taken next to a large copy of the collegiate trademark.

The official unveiling was the first of two introduc-tory events. Plans also called

for the logo to be announced and shown during halftime at tonight’s GCCC football game against Dodge City in Memorial Stadium. Since the game also serves as alumni night, organiz-ers also planned a post-game party for alumni and friends at Samy’s Spirits and Steakhouse, featuring additional logo give-aways.

Steve Quakenbush, GCCC executive director of public rela-tions, said the logo better defines and represents what the college means and offers to the public.

He said it is “the primary visual element in an overall branding effort for the college, so that we can better commu-nicate the quality and success that people should expect from GCCC,” he said.

Quakenbush said the college is following suit with other edu-cational institutions that have changed logos recently.

“We believe that’s important in today’s competitive collegiate environment, and it’s something that we’ve seen other learning institutions address, as well.

Editor’s note: This is the 14th in a series of stories featuring the 21 agen-cies that will receive funding from the Finney County United Way in 2013.

By KAMIL [email protected]

The Russell Child Development Center’s tiny-k program is crucial to helping families ensure their chil-dren develop at a healthy rate and are primed to lead successful lives.

For tiny-k Early Intervention Coordinator Jill Reagle, that’s a main goal and part of the essence of RCDC she hopes people are aware of and take advantage of when they need to.

“We’re able to help parents help their child,” she said. “And to be able to encourage parents and empower par-ents to be advocates for their child.”

This year, RCDC has received $35,000 from Finney County United Way, the

same amount as was allocated last year but an increase from $30,000 for 2011. The United Way money mainly will be used to pay for the salaries of RCDC’s early interventionists.

These interventionists fan out across 12 counties in southwest Kansas to help families with children ranging in age from birth to 36 months old, providing services that Reagle notes are not just required by some of the federal grants the organization gets but are crucial for any community.

These services include physical, occupational and speech-language ther-apy, early childhood education, feed-

ing and nutrition, hearing and vision, social work and assistive technology.

“There’s not a one-size-fits-all. Every child is different,” Reagle said. “And our staff really does a fabulous job of identifying the needs, identifying the priorities of the family and working with that.”

She admits the organization is underfunded, but is satisfied with the quality of service provided to its cli-ents, something she and her staff want to continue.

With less funding, she said, they likely would have to reduce staff or staff hours, which would mean there would be less time each child would get with their interventionist. As a result, the quality of the program and its positive effect on children and their families would be reduced, as well.

“They wouldn’t get the assistance

72472 000756 0

What’s InsideAnnie’s Advice . . .B5Classified . . . . . . . .C3Comics . . . . . . . . . .B6Lottery . . . . . . . . . .A2

Obituaries . . . . . . .A2Opinion . . . . . . . . .A4State . . . . . . . . . . . .A3TV Listings . . . . . .B4Weather . . . . . . . . .A8

Go to www.GCTelegram.com/Multimedia for a video of the GCCC logo unveiling ceremony.

GROWING GRAPES: Farmer sets aside land for vineyard. PAGE B1

SATURDAY, October 20, 2012 $1 .25 Volume 83, No . 245 4 sections 30 pages

Weather ForecastToday, mostly sunny, high 80, low 44 . Saturday, partly sunny, high 80, low 41 . Details on page A8 .

Market Prices

Wheat...........8.48Corn..............7.85

Milo..............7.20Soybeans....14.59

Grain prices at the Garden City Co-op

Schwieterman Inc. reported Chicago Live Cattle Futures:

Oct. Dec. Feb.High........... 126.50...... 128.27..... 131.75Low............ 125.82...... 126.95..... 130.62Stand......... 126.17...... 127.25..... 130.92

GChS: Hutchinson blows past Buffs, 56-14. PAGE D1

Courtesy photo

In this undated photo, Russell Child Development Center tiny-k Physical Therapist Brenda Drees, right, provides early intervention services to Jude Hanny, as his mom, Beth Hanny, helps.

Photos by Becky Malewitz/Telegram

Garden City Community College freshman Veronica Dooley gets a temporary tattoo of GCCC’s new logo on her face after the unveiling ceremony Friday.

Garden City Community College President Herbert Swender addresses the crowd after unveiling the new GCCC logo on the banner behind him.

Launching a new look

By ANGIE [email protected]

A series of investigations involving members of three law enforcement agencies has led to the arrest of a Garden City man on more than 40 sex crime allega-tions.

Brian Ray Banister, 43, 633 N. Main St., was arrested Oct. 11 at the Law Enforcement Center on 30 counts of sexual exploitation of a child. After taking Banister into custody, investigators uncov-ered more information that led them to add one count of rape and 11 counts of indecent liber-ties with a child to the list of allegations.

“(Sexual exploitation), in this particular case, was the viewing

Tiny-k program helps kids develop from the start

Community college unveils new logo

G.C. man arrested on sex crime allegations

WASHINGTON (AP) — Sensing a moment of political vulnerability on national secu-rity, Republicans pounced Friday on disclosures that President Barack Obama’s administration could have known early on that militants, not angry protesters, launched the attack on U.S. diplo-mats in Libya.

Within 24 hours of the deadly attack, the CIA station chief in Libya reported to Washington that there were eyewitness reports that the attack was car-ried out by militants, officials told The Associated Press. But for days, the Obama adminis-tration blamed it on an out-of-control demonstration over an American-made video ridiculing Islam’s Prophet Muhammad.

Paul Ryan, the Republican vice presidential nominee, led Friday’s charge.

GOP pounces after news of CIA cable on Libya raid

See Branding, Page A5 See Libya, Page A5

MENINGITIS: Medicare questions arise. PAGE A8

See Investigations, Page A5

See United Way, Page A5

A1

Page 2: Garden City Telegram October 20, 2012

For The RecordA2 SATURDAY, October 20, 2012 THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM

Obituaries

Kansas Lottery

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submitted by 9 p.m. Sunday through Friday for inclusion in the next day’s editions.

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Overall company operations and editorial page DenaSattler,editorandpublisher (620)275-8500ext.201 [email protected]

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On the World Wide Web www.gctelegram.com

Postmaster: Address changes should be sent to The Garden City Telegram, P.O. Box 958, Garden City, Kansas 67846-0958. Periodicals postage paid at Garden City, Kansas.

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TOPEKA (AP) — These Kansas lotteries were drawn Friday:

Daily Pick 3: 5-0-72 By 2: Red Balls: 1-24,

White Balls: 2-5Mega Millions: 14-24-36-

48-53, Mega Ball: 42Megaplier: 3

Custom obituary

Jonnie Samples

LINDALE, TEXAS — Memorial services will be held for Mrs. Jonnie Justine Juanita Samples, age 94, of Hideaway, Texas, on Monday, Oct. 22, 2012, under the direction of Caudle-Rutledge Funeral Home in Lindale.

Jonnie was born on March 2, 1918, in Tyrone, Okla., to the late Eramus a n d N o r a (Brock) Garnett. J o n n i e graduat-ed from h i g h school in Liberal, K a n . , a n d a t t e n d -ed school in Garden City, Kan. She married Robert T. Samples, V.P. of Western Union, in 1939 until his death in 1969. Jonnie enjoyed living in many locations, including San Francisco, Calif.; Seattle, Wash.; Garden City, Liberal and Kansas City, Kan.; and Dallas and Lubbock, Texas, before moving to Hideaway, Texas, in 1975.

Jonnie was active in many hobbies and clubs, a Bridge Master, poker player/teacher, Mahjong Club, Gin Rummy Group, garden hobbyist, Tennis Club, Fishing Club, 9-Hole Golf Group, Tuesday/Thursday Exercise Group for 30-plus years, Swim Club, Variety Club, Book Club, Dance Club, Square Dance Club, Line Dance Club, Park Party Group and a lifetime member of the Salvation Army, where she volunteered for many years.

Jonnie was preceded in death by her two sisters and three brothers. She is survived by her children, Susan Leedy Stewart of Sun Lakes, Ariz., and Janet L. Gary of Dallas, Texas; and her grandsons, Lance Leedy, Derek Leedy, John Gary and Mike Gary.

W.J. ‘Bill’ Light

R O L L A — W.J. “Bill” Light, 89, died T h u r s d a y,

Oct. 18, 2012, at Pioneer Manor in Hugoton.

He was born Sept. 25, 1923, on the farm in Morton County, to William Clarence and Zula Tarter Light. He graduated from Rolla High S c h o o l in 1942 a n d s e r v e d in the Marines d u r i n g W o r l d War II.

A lifetime r e s i -dent of Morton County, Mr. Light was a farmer, a real estate broker and appraiser. He served two terms as State Representative in the mid-1960s.

On Aug. 18, 1946, he married Mardelle Cullison in Coffeyville. She died Feb. 28, 1988. He also was preceded in death by his parents; three broth-ers, Gale, Wayne and Paul Light; three sisters, Dorothy Cullison, Edna Gilbert and Helen Girling; and a grandson.

Survivors include two sons, Bill and David Light, both of Rolla; four daughters, Nancy Light-Olson of Houston, Peggy Light-Carswell of Oberlin, Linda Light-Bushart of Glenwood Springs, Colo., and Ellen Light-Hall of Rolla; a brother, James Light of Rolla; two sisters, Elsie Holcomb of Albuquerque, N.M., and Lesta Lou Muse of Oklahoma City; 20 grand-children; and 22 great-grandchildren.

Funeral will begin at 10 a.m. Monday at the United Methodist Church in Rolla. Burial will follow at Rolla Cemetery.

Visitation hours are 2 to 8 p.m. Sunday at Garnand Funeral Home in Hugoton. Memorials are suggest-ed to Rolla Pentecostal Church Food Outreach, in care of the funeral home, 423 S. Main St., Hugoton, KS 67951.

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — TransCanada Corp. has temporarily shut down its existing 2,100-mile Keystone pipeline after tests showed possible safe-ty issues, a federal agency said Thursday.

Jeannie Layson, spokes-woman for the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration, which oversees pipelines in the U.S., said no leaks were detected on the line, which moves on average about 500,000 barrels of crude a day from Alberta, Canada, down through several states to facilities Illinois and Oklahoma.

“TransCanada report-ed to the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration that they have shut down their existing Keystone system pipeline to make repairs in areas where required integrity tests identified possible safety issues,” Layson said in an email.

She said the possible problems were located on the stretch of pipeline that extends between Missouri and Illinois.

A federal inspector was deployed to review test results, observe repairs and monitor any addition-al necessary safety issues, Layson said. PHMSA did not have additional details on what the possible safety issues were.

Grady Semmens, spokesman for Calgary-based TransCanada, said the pipeline was shut down

Wednesday evening as a precaution and was expect-ed to restart Saturday.

“We found a small anomaly on the outside of the pipe after analyzing the data from an in-line inspec-tion tool,” Semmens said in an email. “As a precau-tion, we’ve shut down the line so we can go in and take a closer look.”

Once the pipeline is restarted the company expects “normal opera-tions and flows” for the rest of October, but TransCanada may have to “make up some volumes in November,” Semmens said.

Heavy storms that have hit the area recently “are not helping” the operation, he said.

“But we have crews on site and will be doing exca-vation work to expose the pipeline so we can inves-tigate the feature that was identified by the in-line inspection,” Semmens said.

The Keystone pipeline has been moving crude to facilities in Wood River and Patoka, Ill., since 2010 and to sites in Cushing, Okla., since February 2011, according to the company’s website.

One oil analyst said the Keystone suspension should not have any impact on U.S. gasoline prices. But “it may put pipeline safety and the environmental haz-ards that come with trans-porting petroleum back on the map for a while, Tom Kloza, chief oil analyst at

the Oil Price Information Service, said in an email.

The shutdown comes amid delays over TransCanada’s plans to build another $7 billion section of pipeline called the Keystone XL that would transport heavy tar-sands crude oil from Canada to Texas’ Gulf Coast refiner-ies.

Pipeline opponents argue the project is unsafe because it would be carry-ing heavy, acidic crude oil that could more easily cor-rode a metal pipe, which would lead to a spill. They also say refining the oil would further contaminate the air in a region that has long struggled with pollu-tion.

TransCanada says its pipeline would be the saf-est ever built, and that the crude is no dirtier than oil currently arriving from Venezuela or parts of California.

President Barack Obama rejected TransCanada’s original application for a federal permit to build the pipeline in January by after congressional Republicans imposed a deadline for approval that didn’t allow enough time to address questions about the route through Nebraska.

S i n c e t h e n , TransCanada has split the project into two pieces. The company has started construction on the south-ern section of the pipeline between Oklahoma and the Gulf Coast.

TransCanada temporarily shuts Keystone pipeline

WASHINGTON (AP) — A new White House executive order would direct U.S. spy agencies to share the latest intelligence about cyber-threats with companies oper-ating electric grids, water plants, railroads and other vital industries to help pro-tect them from electronic attacks, according to a copy obtained by The Associated Press.

The seven-page draft order, which is being final-ized, takes shape as the Obama administration expresses growing concern that Iran could be the first country to use cyberter-rorism against the United States. The military is ready to retaliate if the U.S. is hit by cyberweapons, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said. But the U.S. also is poorly prepared to prevent such an attack, which could damage or knock out critical services that are part of everyday life.

The White House declined to say when the president will sign the order.

The draft order would put the Department of Homeland Security in charge of orga-nizing an information-shar-ing network that rapidly distributes sanitized sum-maries of top-secret intelli-gence reports about known cyberthreats that identify a specific target. With these warnings, known as tear lines, the owners and opera-tors of essential U.S. busi-nesses would be better able to block potential attackers from gaining access to their computer systems.

An organized, broad-based approach for sharing cyberthreat information gathered by the government is widely viewed as essential for any plan to protect U.S. computer networks from foreign nations, terrorist groups and hackers. Existing efforts to exchange informa-tion are narrowly focused on specific industries, such as the finance sector, and have had varying degrees of suc-cess.

Yet the order has gener-ated stiff opposition from Republicans on Capitol Hill who view it as a unilateral move that bypasses the leg-

islative authority held by Congress.

Administration officials said the order became neces-sary after Congress failed this summer to pass cybersecu-rity legislation, leaving criti-cal infrastructure companies vulnerable to a serious and growing threat. Conflicting bills passed separately by the House and Senate included information-sharing pro-visions. But efforts to get a final measure through both chambers collapsed over the GOP’s concerns that the Senate bill would expand the federal government’s regu-latory power and increase costs for businesses.

The White House has acknowledged that an order from the president, while legally binding, is not enough. Legislation is need-ed to make other changes to improve the country’s digital defenses. An executive order, for example, cannot offer a company protection from liabilities that might result from a cyberattack on its sys-tems.

The addition of the infor-mation-sharing provisions is the most significant change to an earlier draft of the order completed in late August. The new draft, which is not dated, retains a section that requires Homeland Security to identify the vital systems that, if hit by cyberattack, could “reasonably result in a debilitating impact” on national and economic secu-rity. Other sections establish a program to encourage companies to adopt volun-tary security standards and direct federal agencies to determine whether existing cyber security regulations

are adequate.The draft order directs

the department to work with the Pentagon, the National Security Agency, the director of national intelligence and the Justice Department to quickly establish the infor-mation-sharing mechanism. Selected employees at criti-cal infrastructure compa-nies would receive security clearances allowing them to receive the information, according to the document. Federal agencies would be required to assess whether the order raises any privacy or civil liberties risks.

To foster a two-way exchange of information, the government would ask businesses to tell the govern-ment about cyberthreats or cyberattacks. There would be no requirement to do so.

The NSA has been shar-ing cyberthreat informa-tion on a limited basis with companies that conduct business with the Defense Department. These com-panies work with sensitive data about weapon systems and technologies and are fre-quently the targets of cyber-spying.

But the loss of valu-able information has been eclipsed by fears that an enemy with the proper know-how could cause havoc by sending the computers controlling critical infra-structure systems incorrect commands or infecting them with malicious software. Potential nightmare scenari-os include high-speed trains being put on collision cours-es, blackouts that last days or perhaps even weeks or chem-ical plants that inadvertently release deadly gases.

Draft order would give companies cyberthreat info

A2A2A2A2A2A2A2A2A2A2A2A2

FAMILY MINISTRIES, INC.Licensed, Bonded, and Insured

606 N. Main, G.C., KS275-7364

All staff screened through Child and Adult Protective Services and KBI218316

Community Service Provider

Elder Services

Other Services

• Wellness Monitoring• Day & Residential Services• In-home Supports• Case Management for: MR/DD, PD, TBI Waivers• Personal Attendant for: PD, TBI, TA Waivers

• Yard Work• Minor Maintenance• Free Shredding• Furniture & Appliance Moving/Installation

• Licensed Home Health Agency• Homemaker, Bath Aides • Adult Day Care• Home Health Aides• RN’s, LPN’s, CNA’s• Private Duty Nursing

• Painting• Trash Haul• Clean-Up

Call: Tricia Hodge 272-6186

First Christian CHURCH

Sunday Worship 10 a.m.306 N. Seventh St., Garden City, KS

218613

Let’s grow in Christ together! 620-275-5411www.fccgcks.org

“Everyday is campaign dayfor the devil”

Damien’s Memorial

B WL-A-RAMACome join us for a good cause in memory of Damien Huelskamp!

All proceeds to benefit St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital &

Children’s Miracle Network.

Saturday,OCTOBER 27

1:00 p.m.@ HARD ROCK LANES1612 E. Laurel, Garden City

$15 / 3 GAMES(Shoes included)

& RAFFLES218705

September 29 - October 28Sat. & Sun. ONLY 2 - 7 p.m.OPEN

PUMPKIN PARADISE, llc

217872

Guess the weight & win the GIANT SASQUA!SH

Haskell County Rd. 100 Between Rr & Ss

Steve Weidner 620-668-5680www.pumpkinparadisellc.com • Like us on

Page 3: Garden City Telegram October 20, 2012

ABC Pregnancy Center fundraiser continues

The “Little Angels Consignment Sale,” a fundrais-er for ABC Pregnancy Center, continues today.

A variety of items, includ-ing infant clothes, toys, furni-ture, plus children’s clothes, maternity clothes, strollers and more, will be available for purchase.

Hours are 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. today at First Southern Baptist Church, 2708 N. Third St. Items will be offered at half price from 2 to 4 p.m.

Roundup Briefs Region & StateA3THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM SATURDAY, October 20, 2012

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KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A northeast Kansas lawsuit chal-lenging the state’s cap on how much money residents in a school district can raise through taxes has gotten new life after a federal appeals court reversed a lower court’s dismissal of the case.

The 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver ruled Thursday that the plaintiffs, who are all parents in the Shawnee Mission School District, have legal stand-ing to pursue the lawsuit.

The lawsuit was dismissed last year by District Judge John W. Lungstrum, who said the local option budget cap — which lim-its the amount of money school districts can raise beyond what

the state provides — is not sever-able from the rest of the funding formula.

The parents appealed, saying the cap violated their constitu-tional rights of equal protection and due process because they aren’t allowed to decide for them-selves how much money to spend on education.

“We’re anxious for Judge Lungstrum to have an opportuni-ty to rule on the constitutionality of the cap,” said Tristan Duncan, an attorney who represents the Shawnee Mission parents.

The Kansas Legislature rewrote its funding formula in 1992 and heavily revised it in 2005 and 2006, mostly to increase

funding in response to a lawsuit filed by dozens of school districts claiming the state wasn’t meet-ing its constitutional obligation to adequately fund public schools.

As part of the formula, the local option tax was capped so wealthy districts wouldn’t have an unfair advantage over poorer ones. But the Shawnee Mission district — one of the wealthiest in Kansas — has reached the maxi-mum amount allowed.

Lawmakers wrote into the law that the cap on local property taxes could not be broken away from the rest of the formula. While the 10th Circuit acknowl-edged that severing the cap could bring the whole funding system

down, the judges said the cap’s constitutionality was a matter for the lower court to decide.

In their lawsuit, the parents argued that not only are they lim-ited in how much they can raise, their schools are receiving less state aid than most other districts. Neighboring districts such as Kansas City, Kan., are getting as much as $1,000 more per student in state assistance, Duncan said.

“Our citizenry is willing to tax ourselves more to achieve equal-ity with KCK, but they say you can’t do that, we want you to stay poorer than us,” Duncan said. “We the people should be able to decide how much education we can afford, not the state.”

Appeals Court revives Kansas school funding case

On the agendaSchool board to report on iPad programBy The Telegram

Technology instructors are scheduled to give an update Monday on the 1-to-1 iPad implementation at Garden City High School to the USD 457 Board of Education.

The meeting is sched-uled to begin at 6 p.m. in the Educational Support Center, 1205 Fleming St.

According to the meet-ing agenda, James Mireles, GCHS principal, Renee Scott, associate principal in the Academy of Trade and Health Science, Casey Wise, instruc-tional technologist, and Layne Schiffelbein, instructional tech-nology coordinator, will give an update on iPad implementation and logistics.

The board approved the 1-to-1 iPad initiative in April by a 5-2 vote.

City CommissionBy The Telegram

At Tuesday’s city commis-sion meeting the commission-ers:

• Accepted an offer for the purchase of the lot at Mary and Fleming streets, from Marshall Woodberry for $70,000.

• Passed a resolution to remove motor vehicle nuisances from 2315 Tonio Ave.

• Passed an ordinance from a request from Cecil O’Brate to rezone 2815 Jennie Barker Road from residential rural to single-family residential district.

• Approved an ordinance to rezone 1107 W. Olive St. from general commercial to single-housing residential district.

• Approved an ordinance to approve rezoning for 1008 N. Main St. from central business to single-family residential.

• Considered a recom-mendation and selection for new entrance signage using the new “burst” logo with the Convention and Visitors Bureau.

• Approved a memorandum of understanding from Siemens Industry to develop and obtain a preliminary analysis of poten-tial energy and operation sav-ings of city facilities.

• Approved a $10,000 pay-ment to Southwest Kansas Coalition and proposal from Pinegar, Smith & Associates.

• Approved making pavement markings to visually narrow Spruce Street at its intersection with Fleming Street, as per the recommendation of the Traffic Advisory Board.

By ANGIE [email protected]

The Neighborhood Improvement Project, in which high school students aid in clean-ing up and beautifying areas in Garden City, is set to begin its next project on Oct. 27, and it will be one of the larger undertakings yet, according to Garden City Police Detective Clint Brock, who over-sees the program.

“It was so hot this summer that we didn’t get to do a lot of things that we wanted to do, so we wanted to have this one pretty big project put together,” Brock said.

The latest project is a commu-nity garden, located behind the East Garden Village mobile home park, 4101 E. U.S. Highway 50.

“We think (the area) is rough-ly the size of two football fields. What we’re going to be doing is, Burlington Northern Railroad — they’re replacing a lot of their railroad ties — so they’re giving us their old railroad ties and we’re going to use the railroad ties to make the garden boxes,” Brock said.

He said that these boxes will be approximately 6 by 12 feet.

“The way we have it figured right now is we should be able do right around 200 or so of the boxes, and then the Salvation Army, they wanted to do a project where they could have their volunteers come out and grow food and then give it to underprivileged people in Garden City, so they’re going to have a plot and that will give them something for their kids to work and learn about,” Brock said.

The first row of the garden will be Americans with Disabilities compliant, allowing people with limited access or mobility to uti-lize the garden.

Brock said that the land was made available by Robert Martin, owner of East Garden Village, and that the boxes will allow residents of the mobile home park to tend to their own small gardens, in which they can plant anything they wish.

“Rob Martin, he figures he’s got close to 3,000 residents, so what he’s going to do is, each one of these will be numbered and they’ll

keep track of them and then any-one who comes in to rent a lot space, they will be asked if they would like to have a garden spot or not and if they do, they’ll be assigned that one for as long as they either live in the residence or want to continue to garden. So their office will keep track of that,” Brock said.

The dirt that will be used in each of the garden boxes is being donated by Jake Foltz, owner of Excavated Unlimited.

As the kids build the boxes, dirt will be dumped into each one and then another group of kids will flatten it out.

Brock said that the city will install an irrigation system either some time this fall or in the early spring.

“And they’re not going to charge the residents for this. The city will take care of (the water),” he said.

He said that other area busi-nesses have also contributed sup-

plies to the project.Students who live in the area

came up with the idea, Brock said.

As part of the community gar-den, the plan is to also plant more trees surrounding it.

“There are some trees here and I’m assuming that it’s going to take more than one weekend to do this,” Brock said.

Better known as NIP, the com-munity-wide cleanup project began in late 2009 with a trash pick-up project. Since then, the NIP has participated in several cleanups. For the community garden project, Brock said he is expecting about 300 kids to participate.

“We’ve got the wrestling team; I’ve asked the high school foot-ball team to see if they’re going to come, the JROTC, the AVID (Advancement Via Individual Determination class) kids, Green Club — those are usual staples,” Brock said. “Plus, then Horace Good Middle School has issued a

challenge to Kenneth Henderson to see how many (students) they can get out there, so their junior leadership class will be out there, and we should have a lot of kids working on this,” Brock said.

He said that for this project, they are competing in the National Make a Difference Day, in which prizes in increments of $10,000 are awarded to organizations deemed to be making the most difference in their communities.

Brock said that adults are encouraged to participate in the projects, and that he finds the interaction between students and their parents at these projects helps open the lines of communi-cation.

Students will begin arriving at the East Garden Village offices at 9 a.m. on Oct. 27 to begin work on the garden.

For more information, call Senior Resources Officer Emma Banuelos at the Garden City High School.

NIP set to begin new community garden

Courtesy graphic

An overhead view of the community garden site that Garden City Police Detective Clint Brock with the help of nearly 300 middle school and high school students, will begin working on as part of the Neighborhood Improvement Project. When the finished, garden will be roughly the size of two football fields and residents of East Garden Village will be given the option of gardening in one of the estimated 6 by 12 foot squares.

Becky Malewitz/Telegram

Car show enthusiasts mill around in the Exhibition Building at the fairgrounds during the 10th annual Emmaus House Car Show Friday evening. Approximately 75 cars filled with exhibition hall with an expected 25 to 50 more vehicles today. The car show continues from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. t0day with a brisket dinner open to the public from 7 to 9 p.m. Tickets are $10 for adults and $5 for children under 11. Sunday, church services will be held at 10 a.m. and doors for the show open from 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Car showcase

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1805 E. Mary St.620-275-7440mba-realestate.com

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Page 4: Garden City Telegram October 20, 2012

Our View

Today’s Quotes“ ... Whatever happened to

taking notes in class by hand? It made you think about it as you took the notes, made for better retention of the mate-rial. ...”

— Online remark selected by the editorial staff from comments at GCTelegram.com in response to a story on Garden City High School teachers and students using iPads in the class-room.

“Daddy wanted an orchard, so we’re starting with the vineyard and working toward the orchard.”

— Darrell Strawn of Cimarron, from a feature story in today’s edition on Strawn’s vineyard.

OpinionTHE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAMSATURDAY, October 20, 2012A4

Letters PolicyThe Telegram welcomes letters to the editor. Letters must be signed and include the writer’s address and phone number. All let-ters will be confirmed before publication.

Letters are subject to editing for libel and length, and must be 500 words or less.

Thank-you letters should be general in nature. Form letters, poems, consumer complaints or business testimonials will not be printed.

[email protected]

Fax(866) 379-2675 Attn. Editor

Phone(620) 276-6862 Ext. 201

Onlinewww.gctelegram.com

Write to: Attn. Editor310 N. Seventh St.Garden City, KS 67846

Dena Sattler, Editor/publisher [email protected]

A4

Many questions left to answer

Regarding the presidential campaign:

During the big Oct. 3, 2012, presidential debate, Romney said, “We are all God’s children.” I am hearing many people of faith declar-ing Obama to not be worthy of praise because, “he is a Muslim.“ (This is hearsay to me).

I find these remarks to be in conflict and very con-fusing. However, I do see President Obama as what he presents himself to be as our USA president. Many people appear to let derogatory mes-sages become their belief because their perspectives are clouded by refusing to see and hear the entire plan that is intended to be implemented. Very often segments are iso-lated and used out of context. This adds to confusion. These complex plans are implement-ed with an expected positive outcome and impact to our total existence that is depen-dent on government deci-sions, policy and procedure. My understanding is that more than one person decides these plans of action.

For those Americans with an open mind and honest values it must be obvious that any one man, of any race, religion or political party, would have been challenged to move this country, the USA, out of the depressed and economically challenged state of being that it was in when Obama became presi-dent.

In all fairness, it appears to me that what resulted from many years would require many years to restabilize.

Can anyone, honestly, say one man in one term as presi-dent of our USA, has been totally responsible for our country’s disarray and irre-sponsible conduct of many of its worthy citizens.

I say, “not“ ... we citizens have a responsibility to do our best to be patriotic citi-zens. We have an obligation to act upon what we believe. Actions do speak louder than words. I feel that many of us need to wake up, pay attention and accept our per-

sonal responsibility to be self-accountable. We must learn to be patriotic by accepting positive leadership roles ... our actions need to replace words.

I do have many concerns and many considerations that need to be clarified. There appear to be many unan-swered and avoided issues in this 2012 presidential cam-paign. It is a challenge ... may the best leader win.

I am retired from more than 50 years of gain-ful employment and I am a 45-year member of the American Legion Auxiliary.

My views and opinions are inspired (not endorsed) by the worthwhile mission of the American Legion Auxiliary.

CAROLYN HERRELL,Cañon City, Colo.

Herrell is a former Garden City resident.

Domestic violence affects everyone

It could be your mother, aunt, grandmother or little

sister. It could even be your neighbor or co-worker. It is even possible it could be a man in your family. You think it doesn’t affect you, but it does. It affects everyone whether they realize it or not.

Domestic violence isn’t a personal issue — it’s a community issue. It’s a com-munity issue because commu-nities also pay the price for violence. It is estimated that one in four women, and one in eight men, will experience domestic violence in their lifetime. Without interven-tion and education, victims are more likely to form future relationships with other batterers. Of children exposed to domestic violence, 50 percent are more likely to use violence against their partners later in life.

It becomes a cycle, being repeated generation after generation. And it doesn’t just happen in the home, it happens in the workplace as well. No one can really be sure when they go to work or out to run errands that they won’t be a fatality of someone’s irate partner. You think it won’t happen, but so did others when they went

to a salon for a haircut, or the post office to mail a let-ter, or the courthouse to take care of a legal matter. But what should really speak to individuals is the economic impact. The cost of keeping communities safe through law enforcement, prosecu-tors, court personnel and parole officers; the cost of counseling victims and reha-bilitating perpetrators; the cost of providing for women and children who can’t provide for themselves as a result of domestic violence. No, it doesn’t affect you at all. It only affects all of us.

October is Domestic Violence Awareness Month. To help, educate, advocate and donate. For more infor-mation, call Family Crisis Services at 275-5911.

ROBIN SHELDEN,Garden City

Shelden is executive direc-tor of Family Crisis Services Inc.

Welcome runby Sherwood

Analogies of our national pastime and “mulligans”

in golf aside, I’m concerned about the county attorney’s position. The use of a “write-in” campaign is not new. In fact, every primary and general election I’ve voted in since 1960 have had a blank space for a “write-in” candi-date.

Brian Sherwood brings nearly 22 years experience as a prosecutor for Finney County. This experience includes more than 45 jury trials with 80 percent convic-tion success. Some of the cases have been first-degree murder, rape, gang violence, etc. His business administra-tion experience gives him insight into such areas as budgetary matters. In these tight budget times he has said he would continue to prosecute cases when his department would have fewer lawyers. Last but not least, he has a rapport with law enforcement.

Brian Sherwood, write-in, right on.

DON JERNBERG,Garden City

Your Views

Everybody talks about the middle class being hurt in

the Obama economy, but it’s really the working poor who are getting crushed.

The president boasts that he and four more years of his trickle-down government poli-cies are going to save the mid-dle class’ bacon, eggs and jobs.

And at the Tuesday night cockfight on Long Island, our presumptive ex-commander in chief accused Mitt Romney of being hypocrite and a liar who wants to help the rich at the expense of the middle class.

The middle class has become an important political football this fall, but no one knows what the middle class actually is.

There’s no official definition based on household income. It ranges between $42,000 and $60,000 a year and it’s different by state.

Earn $45k in Utah or Mississippi and you’re sol-idly middle class. Earn that much in Manhattan or the Great Train Wreck State of California, where Obama Gas can cost $5 a gallon, and you’re really hurting.

It’s certainly true the middle class has been hurt by the Great Recession. But the biggest losers are the working poor.

When the economy goes south, they are the first to lose their jobs or see their pay-checks shrink.

The president doesn’t talk about helping them. But the working poor are people like my daughter, a schoolteacher in Southern California. And Victor, my barber. And Jenny, who does my nails. And the waiter at the local restaurant.

When the middle class feels the pinch, what’s the first thing they do to make ends meet? They drop their hair colorists and gardeners, who often end up becoming part of the 23 million Americans looking for jobs.

President Obama wants to encourage high-skilled immi-grants to stay in America. That’s fine. But it’s the low-skilled immigrants and the working poor who I’m worried about.

They’re the ones who do America’s hardest, dirtiest jobs, and it’s their kids who are hop-ing to join the middle class of tomorrow.

The American people have two clear choices three Tuesdays from now. They can choose between a successful businessman and a failed presi-dent.

Obama wants to take wealth from the rich and give it to the poor so everyone in America can live on an equal scale.

But Americans have never been economically equal and don’t want to be. The president wants to create something that’s never existed in the histo-ry of the world; the economies that tried are on “the ash heap of history.”

Obama’s been a total disas-ter. The economy is tanking, 23 million are out of work, 47 million are getting food stamps, and he has no clue what to do for the next four years.

And since he can’t defend his own record, all Obama’s been doing is attacking Mitt Romney for his wealth and suc-cess.

Mitt has nothing to be ashamed of. In fact, he needs to stop being so shy about his record of success. He needs to do a little bragging to the American people — especially to the poor and working classes.

He needs to say, “When I ran Bain Capital I was asked to come in, save a lot of jobs, and make other people rich. I did a great job at that.

“I was brought in to save the Winter Olympics when it was being destroyed by corruption and financial problems. I suc-ceeded at that.

“Now my job is to bring the American economy back to health and create jobs. I’ll be successful at that, too. And I’ll make it possible for the work-ing poor, the middle class — all of us — to live better.”

Come on, all you undecid-eds, step up. It’s time to vote for Mitt and put America’s work-ers back to work.

Michael Reagan is the founder and chairman of The Reagan

Group and president of The Reagan Legacy Foundation.

Email him at [email protected]. Distributed by Cagle

Cartoons Inc.

By ARNOLD OLIVER

If you were born before 1950, you probably remember what

happened in October 1962. If you were born after that fateful month, you’re lucky.

Exactly half a century ago, the United States and the Soviet Union reached the brink of a deadly nuclear showdown during the Cuban Missile Crisis.

Appropriately, Barack Obama and Mitt Romney’s foreign policy debate will take place Oct. 22 — exactly 50 years after President John F. Kennedy’s most dramatic tele-vision address to the nation. That frank talk ushered in a week of heightened anxiety, to put it mildly, around the world. With the question of Iran’s nuclear ambitions now on our minds, I hope Obama and Romney will take this opportu-nity to weigh in on the lessons we’ve learned since 1962.

In the aftermath of Cuba’s 1959 revolution, the Kennedy administration was trying hard to topple Fidel Castro’s govern-ment. Washington imposed trade sanctions, experimented with sabotage, staged assas-sinations, and finally backed an ill-fated and poorly equipped guerrilla invasion in Cuba’s Bay of Pigs. Instead of bring-ing Havana back into the U.S. sphere of influence, Cuba turned to the USSR for support.

Premier Nikita Khrushchev, acutely aware of the U.S. nuclear missiles based close

to Soviet territory in Turkey, approved sending military aid, troops and nucle-ar weapons to Cuba.

Khrushchev sought to protect his new Caribbean ally and achieve nuclear deterrence on the cheap. Moscow had few long-range nuclear missiles at that time.

The crisis rapidly escalated after a U.S. spy plane discov-ered missile sites under con-struction on Oct. 14, 1962. When Kennedy addressed the nation eight days later, he demanded that Moscow remove the mis-siles. Then he imposed a naval blockade.

We know now that the cri-sis was a classic example of misperception and misunder-standing: the fog of war.

The Kennedy administra-tion didn’t realize that Moscow had already stationed 162 nucle-ar warheads in Cuba as well as nuclear-armed torpedoes on its submarines. Russian leaders incorrectly thought that Washington would accept missiles in Cuba since Uncle Sam had missiles in Turkey, on the USSR’s doorstep. Both sides thought they understood the situation and the other side’s motives. They were wrong.

In retrospect, it’s clear that JFK’s top military advisers did

him a disservice. What’s perhaps most alarm-

ing about the crisis is that both U.S. and Soviet leaders behaved as if the addition of nuclear weapons to the mix had little impact on how they handled the crisis. That’s why they allowed a dispute over a transient tactical advantage to endanger the entire planet, including generations yet unborn.

If that sounds insane, it should. It’s what Albert Einstein warned about in 1946, when he declared, “The unleashed power of the atom has changed everything save our modes of thinking, and we thus drift toward unparalleled catastrophe.”

Do you think either Romney or Obama would have done bet-ter than JFK during the crisis? Do you trust either one of them to be stewards of weapons quite capable of extinguishing life on the planet?

I sure don’t. So on this 50th anniversary of being more lucky than brilliant, let’s make a commitment to rid the Earth of nuclear weapons.

Arnold Oliver is an emeritus professor of political science at Heidelberg University in Tiffin,

Ohio. He is now in Eureka, Calif., helping the organization

Veterans for Peace restore the Golden Rule, the first anti-nuclear

sailing vessel. Email him at [email protected]. Distributed

by www.otherwords.org.

Being more lucky than brilliant

Time to side with success

State should keep promise on aid for problem gamblers.

As new casinos pop up in Kansas, access to gambling has become more conve-

nient.Yet efforts to help problem gamblers

have been stymied.According to some state lawmakers,

the state has improperly spent casino and lottery revenues earmarked for pro-grams to help Kansans with gambling and other addictions.

State law requires 2 percent of the state’s gambling revenues to be put into a prob-lem gam-bling fund. Instead, most of the dollars have gone to general government services.

Those who’d defend such a move claim the effort to assist people with gambling problems in Kansas has been slow to materialize because the state hasn’t identified communities with gam-bling problems, or identified specifics on how many people have problems, and what those problems may be.

Perhaps they should start with a hard look at cities with casinos.

The first state-owned casino opened in December 2009 in Dodge City. There’s no question the venture — and others to follow in Kansas — were safe bets to put significant funding in state coffers, to the tune of hundreds of millions of dol-lars a year.

At the same time, there also was no denying gambling would come at a pain-ful cost to many.

State lawmakers knew that while Kansas was poised to collect big bucks in gaming tax revenue, the business also would exact a costly social toll in personal financial crises that can lead to crime, bankruptcies and broken fami-lies.

The deal was to use just a small por-tion of gambling income for outreach, counseling and help lines for such addic-tion-related problems.

By now, the programs to aid Kansans addicted to gambling should at least be close to meeting existing needs.

Yet only about 100 people used prob-lem gambling services available in the first year. Statistics show thousands more in trouble.

It’s inexcusable to lean on gamblers for significant state funding, then snatch away any meager funding set aside to address problems.

More casinos means more gamblers. And, as a result, more people getting in trouble.

The state should follow through on its part of the deal, and spend gambling income as required by law.

Should the state of Kansas continue to open new casinos? Add your comments at the end of the online version of this editorial at GCTelegram.com/opinion.

Poor bet

Page 5: Garden City Telegram October 20, 2012

A5SATURDAY, October 20, 2012THE GARDEn CiTY TElEGRAm

“Look around the world, turn on your TV,” Ryan said in an interview with WTAQ radio in the elec-tion battleground state of Wisconsin. “And what we see in front of us is the absolute unraveling of the Obama administration’s foreign policy.”

As a security matter, how the Obama admin-istration immediately described the attack has little effect on broader counterterrorism strat-egies or on the hunt for those responsible for the incident, in which the U.S. ambassador and three other Americans were killed. And Republicans have offered no explana-tion for why the president would want to conceal the nature of the attack.

But the issue has given Republican presidential

nominee Mitt Romney an opportunity to question Obama on foreign policy and national security, two areas that have received little attention in an elec-tion dominated by the U.S. economy. Obama’s sig-nature national security accomplishment is the mil-itary’s killing of terrorist leader Osama bin Laden.

Ryan was teeing up the issue for Monday’s presi-dential debate on foreign policy.

“I’m excited we’re going to have a chance to talk about that on Monday,” Ryan said.

Obama, speaking Thursday on Comedy Central’s “The Daily Show,” insisted that infor-mation was shared with the American people as it came in. The attack is under investigation, Obama said, and “the pic-ture eventually gets filled

in.”“What happens, during

the course of a presidency, is that the government is a big operation and any given time something screws up,” Obama said. ‘’And you make sure that you find out what’s broken and you fix it.”

The report from the station chief was written late Sept. 12, and reached intelligence agencies in Washington the next day, intelligence officials said. It is not clear how widely the information from the CIA station chief was cir-culated.

U.S. intelligence offi-cials have said the infor-mation was just one of many widely conflicting accounts, which became clearer by the following week.

Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Mich., who chairs the House Intelligence

Committee, said on CNN that the administration didn’t understand the gravity of the situation in Benghazi and as a result bad decisions were made to promote the video as the root of the violence.

“By continuing to pro-mote the video, by escalat-ing the value and credibil-ity of that video to a presi-dential level, by buying ads in Pakistan that actually fueled protests all across Pakistan — and so, this is what’s so disturbing to me: Were those decisions based on intelligence? I think it’s hard to say yes. So why did they do it? That’s the question we need to get answered. “

Democrats have spent the past week explaining the administration’s han-dling of the attack. On Monday, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said a period of uncer-

tainty typically follows attacks.

“In the wake of an attack like this, in the fog of war, there’s always going to be confusion,” Clinton said. “And I think it is absolute-ly fair to say that everyone had the same intelligence. Everyone who spoke tried to give the information that they had.”

On Tuesday, Obama and Romney argued over when the president first called it a terrorist attack. In his Rose Garden address the morning after the killings, Obama said, “No acts of terror will ever shake the resolve of this great nation, alter that charac-ter or eclipse the light of the values that we stand for.”

But Republicans said he was speaking generally and didn’t specifically call the Benghazi event a terror attack until weeks later.

Until then, key members of the administration were blaming an anti-Muslim movie circulating on the Internet as a precipitating event.

This Wednesday, the chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., put the blame on the direc-tor of national intelligence, James Clapper.

“I think what happened was the director of intel-ligence, who is a very good individual, put out some speaking points on the initial intelligence assess-ment,” Feinstein said in an interview with news chan-nel CBS 5 in California. “I think that was possibly a mistake.”

Congress is asking the administration for docu-ments about the attack, in hopes of building a time-line of what the govern-ment knew and when.

that they need,” Reagle said. “They wouldn’t get the start that they deserve.”

Dr. Michael Shull, a pedi-atrician at St. Catherine Hospital’s Siena Medical Clinic, who refers families to RCDC, spoke highly of the tiny-k program.

“I think people don’t realize what a real jewel we have in the community with this center here,” he said. “Russell gets families the treatment their chil-dren need.”

He added that some of his referrals are from fami-lies who are simply con-cerned and want to make sure that their children are

on track with other kids their age.

“Sometimes it’s a child that is developing nor-mally, and they can take their child to Russell for free screenings during the school year if the family’s worried,” he said. “If they are in fact behind in one area, Russell will put them in touch with the right peo-ple to help their child.”

And if the child is devel-oping at a normal rate, Shull said, a family can be put at ease and made aware of some simple exercises to ensure continued develop-ment of walking, speaking and other skills.

“It really gives the chil-dren a chance to grow up to have a healthy lifestyle,”

Shull said.Reagle said that inter-

ventions and therapies before children enter school prepare them for success in classroom situ-ations, academically and socially.

“Children learn best in their natural environ-ment,” she said, adding that is why tiny-k inter-ventionists head to the children’s homes or play-grounds, where they feel most at ease, until “school eventually becomes the natural environment.”

Reagle cites research showing that not only does learning begin at birth but as much as 85 percent of brain growth happens in the first three years of life.

And it also helps the fami-lies.

“Families report that early intervention services have helped them to know their rights, effectively com-municate their children’s needs and help their chil-dren develop and learn,” she wrote in a follow-up email. “Therefore, the tiny-k Early Intervention pro-gram and staff values and considers the role of the family as key to the success of early intervention.”

And parents can offer input, as well, through an inter-agency coordinating council, while some past participants currently sit on the organization’s board, which Reagle said shows the positive impres-

sions the program leaves on families involved.

Shull said it’s unique for a rural, vast region like southwest Kansas to have a program like RCDC’s tiny-k Early Intervention.

“People in this region are very blessed to have services like this avail-able,” he said.

The local United Way’s annual campaign goal is $550,000 for 2013, the same as it has been for the last few years.

The 21 partner agencies for the 2013 campaign are also the same as this year.

They include: Miles of Smiles; Russell Child Development Center; Finney County RSVP; Kansas Children’s Service

League; Catholic Social Service; Southeast Asian Mutual Assistance Program; Smart Start; Playground Program; Family Crisis Services; Spirit of the Plains, CASA; The Salvation Army; Meals on Wheels; Habitat for Humanity; Garden City Family YMCA; Garden City Chapter of the Red Cross; Santa Fe Trail Council of the Boy Scouts of America; Community Day Care Center; United Methodist Mexican-American Ministries; United Cerebral Palsy of Kansas; Big Brothers Big Sisters of Finney and Kearny Counties; and Girl Scouts of Kansas Heartland.

and sharing of child por-nography on the Internet,” said Finney County Sheriff Kevin Bascue.

Finney County Sheriff’s investigators were noti-fied by investigators of the Kirksville Regional Computer Crimes Unit in Kirksville, Mo., that an IP address belonging to some-one in Garden City was linked to the viewing and sharing of child pornog-raphy on Sept. 27, Bascue said. “So they contacted us. What they weren’t able to provide at that time was the exact location.

All that we could tell was that it was in Garden City, Kansas, so sheriff’s office investigators got ahold of an investigator at Ford County Sheriff’s Office who is very familiar with these type of investiga-tions. ... They have some software, programming where they were able to pull that up and look at what the person was look-ing at and confirm that it was child pornogra-phy,” Bascue said, refer-ring to the assistance of Ford County investigator George Brown.

After confirming the IP address, authorities

obtained a warrant to seek the exact location from the Internet service provider connected to the computer.

After determining the location was Banister’s place of employement, Midwest Hearing Aids, 301 E. Pine St., a second search warrant was executed, allowing investigators to search the computer at the business.

“When we went there (the business), we still did not know who our sus-pect was. We just knew that now we have a loca-tion and a computer where it’s being viewed. So then when they executed the

(second) search warrant and went (to the business) and came in contact with Mr. Banister, and after tak-ing the computer and ques-tioning him, he was then arrested on the child por-nography charges,” said Bascue, adding that inves-tigators first ruled out the possibility of passersby using the Internet connec-tion wirelessly and also ruled out other employees of the business.

It was after the ini-tial arrest that authori-ties made a connection between Banister and a separate case involving a 14-year-old Garden City

girl, Bascue said.“We became aware of

the presence of a 14-year-old female victim through the course of that inves-tigation, in which some red flags came up that investigators thought they needed to pursue further,” Bascue said.

After interviewing the girl, authorities added 11 counts of aggravated inde-cent liberties and one count of rape in connection with crimes Banister allegedly committed between March 2011 and May 2012.

At this point, Bascue said, there is no reason to believe there are any other

victims or suspects in the case.

“If we get additional information, then we’d fol-low up. But at this time, we’re not aware that there are any more victims, so we’re not doing any more investigations,” he said.

Bascue said that the 30 counts of sexual exploita-tion of a child mean that Banister allegedly viewed 30 different photos or vid-eos of child pornography.

Banister is currently in custody on a $500,000 bond for the sexual exploitation allegations and an addi-tional $500,000 bond for the rape allegation.

Both Kansas State University and the University of Kansas, for example, have estab-lished new brandmarks in recent years, and so have some of our com-petitors among the ranks of Kansas community colleges,” he said.

Quakenbush said the present cube-letter logo has been in use for more than 20 years.

“... And that’s well past

the average shelf life for a corporate emblem or a collegiate logo to go with-out at least some updat-ing,” he said.

Quakenbush said the branding effort par-ticularly took off when Swender became presi-dent.

“When Dr. Swender took charge as president in 2011, one of the objec-tives he identified early on was the development of an updated logo,” he said.

Tiffany Heit, who manages the GCCC print-ing and graphic design services, created the logo under the direc-tion of Cathy McKinley, GCCC’s executive direc-tor of marketing. Final selection was made by the GCCC President’s Cabinet.

“When it was time to start looking, we went out and researched ... all of the colleges we thought had a good repu-tation and following and

then studied the type of logo that they had used,” Heit said.

She said they liked the KU and Oklahoma State University logos.

Heit said the commit-tee thought simple was better.

“... Because it repre-sents so many facets of the college and of the peo-ple, so we just felt simple was better. We thought it was a very strong, power-ful representation of our college,” she said.

Branding: College unveils new ‘G’ logo

United Way: Tiny-k program helps kids develop from the start

Investigations: G.C. man arrested on sex crime allegations

Libya: GOP pounces after news of CIA cable on raidContinued from Page A1

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Page 6: Garden City Telegram October 20, 2012

A6 SATURDAY, October 20, 2012 The GARDen CiTY TeleGRAm

WASHINGTON (AP) — Tennessee lawyer Brian Manookian says he never considered himself a gun enthusiast. He owns just one handgun and was raised in a gun-free home. But the firearms industry has proven so successful in recent years that he decid-ed to give up practicing law and make guns his liveli-hood.

It’s a decision that’s put Manookian on track to earn four times what he made as a corporate health care attorney, a job that earned him six figures right out of law school, he said.

And he’s far from alone. An analysis by The Associated Press of data tracking the health of the gun industry shows that President Barack Obama has presided over a heyday for guns.

Sales are on the rise, so much that some manu-facturers cannot make enough fast enough. Major gun company stock prices are up. The number of fed-erally licensed, retail gun dealers is increasing for the first time in nearly 20 years. The U.S. gun lobby is bursting with cash and political clout. Washington has expressed little inter-est in passing new gun laws, despite renewed calls to do so after recent deadly shootings in Colorado and Wisconsin.

Four years ago the gun lobby predicted Obama would be the “most anti-gun president in American his-tory.” Yet it is hard to find a single aspect of the gun world that isn’t thriving.

“The driver is President Obama. He is the best thing that ever happened

to the firearm industry,” said Jim Barrett, an indus-try analyst at C.L. King & Associates Inc. in New York.

Obama has made no pledges to push for new gun control legislation and does not have the

support in Congress or among voters even if he did. During this week’s presidential debate, he did suggest renewing a U.S. ban on assault weapons and coming up with an overall strategy to reduce violence. But both Obama

and Republican presiden-tial nominee Mitt Romney said the real need is for the government to enforce gun laws already on the books.

Meanwhile, sales are brisk.

Since opening a $5 mil-

lion armory in Nashville last month, Manookian and his business partner have outdone their own expectations, selling inven-tory three to four times faster than they expected. The facility has high ceil-ings and granite fixtures in

the bathroom and provides instructional courses and a shooting range in addition to firearms for sale.

“It is a very strong investment,” Manookian said.

Others agree.For the first time since

1993, the number of federal-ly licensed retail gun deal-ers in the U.S. increased slightly in 2010 and 2011. The country added 1,167 licensed retail gun deal-ers, according to Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives records. After the assault weapons ban of 1994 — now expired — the number of gun deal-erships dropped annually until 2010. As of October 2012, there were 50,812 retail gun dealers — 3,303 more than in 2009.

“Business has been very good,” said Frederick Prehn, who a year ago opened a small gun store above his dentistry prac-tice in Wausau, Wis. In the past year, Prehn has relo-cated twice to larger spaces and gone from one employ-ee to eight.

Some gun store owners can’t keep shelves stocked, said Brian Jones, owner of Bullseye Shooter’s sup-ply in Painted Post, N.Y. Jones said he opened his gun store in November 2010. In his first year, he said he sold between 600 and 700 guns. A little more than halfway through his second year, he’s already sold 700.

“Wouldn’t you want to be in a business where customers are just beg-ging to hand you money?” said Bill Bernstein, owner of East Side Gun Shop in Nashville.

U.S. gun industry is thriving during Obama’s term

Associated Press

This Aug. 22 photo shows Central Wisconsin Firearms owner Frederick Prehn in his store in Wausau, Wis. He says he’s had to expand his business to the new location last summer because of increased gun sales. He attributes the spike to Wisconsin’s new concealed carry law as well as the uncertainty about the upcoming election. President Barack Obama is presiding over a heyday for the gun industry despite predictions he would be the most anti-gun president in history. An Associated Press analysis finds gun sales are on the rise and stocks of major gun companies are up. The number of federally licensed gun dealers is increasing for the first time in nearly 20 years.

CLEVELAND (AP) — Unemployment rates fell last month in nearly all of the battleground states that will determine the presiden-tial winner, giving President Barack Obama fresh fodder to argue that voters should stick with him in an elec-tion focused squarely on the economy.

The declines, however, were modest. It’s unknown whether they will do much to sway undecided vot-ers who are considering whether to back Republican Mitt Romney or give the Democratic president four more years.

The statewide data released by the Labor Department on Friday pro-vide one of the last compre-hensive looks at the health of the U.S. economy ahead of Election Day, now a little more than two weeks away. Voters will get one more update on the national unem-ployment rate just days before the election. But the state reports matter greatly to the Obama and Romney campaigns, which believe the public’s impressions of the economy are shaped mostly by local conditions rather than national ones.

In Ohio, perhaps the most crucial battleground state for both Obama and Romney, the unemployment rate ticked down last month to 7 percent from 7.2 percent, below the national average of 7.8 per-cent.

“I knew a lot of people who were laid off and now they’re working,” said firefighter Matt Sparling, an Obama sup-porter from Parma Heights, Ohio. “So something good is happening here.”

Obama’s team is banking

on the president getting cred-it for improvements in Ohio’s economy, particularly for the bailout of the auto indus-try, which has deep roots in the Midwestern swing state. But Romney has opportuni-ties to run on the economy in Ohio, too. The state actu-ally lost nearly 13,000 jobs in September and the drop in the unemployment rate was probably due in part to peo-ple dropping out of the job market.

Obama’s campaign released a new ad in Ohio on Friday, touting the president’s rescue of General Motors and Chrysler. Without the auto bailout, one man in the ad says, “Ohio would have col-lapsed.” Another man says, “Mitt Romney would have just let us go under — just let

them go bankrupt.” The ad’s tagline shows the map of Ohio with the words: “Mitt Romney. Not one of us.”

The president didn’t mention the state jobless numbers during a campaign stop Friday in Virginia, one of two battleground states where the rate didn’t drop. It held steady at the relatively low level of 5.9 percent.

Spirited on other topics, Obama quipped in a rau-cous rally at George Mason University that a case of “Romnesia” was preventing his opponent from remem-bering his own stances on health care, energy and a slate of policies.

“He’s forgetting what his own positions are — and he’s betting that you will, too,” Obama said. “We’ve got to

name this condition that he’s going through. I think it’s called Romnesia.”

Romney was headlining a rally in Florida Friday eve-ning after spending much of the day in New York meeting

with advisers.The candidates were step-

ping off the campaign trail this weekend for debate prep-arations ahead of Monday’s third and final face-off in Boca Raton, Fla. Romney

was staying in South Florida to practice, while Obama and top aides headed to Camp David, the presidential retreat in Maryland, to pre-pare for the foreign policy-focused debate.

Most battleground states see unemployment rates fall

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A7SATURDAY, October 20, 2012THE GARDEn CiTY TElEGRAm

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A8 SATURDAY, October 20, 2012 The GARDen CiTY TeleGRAm

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Medicare is coming under scrutiny in the meningitis outbreak that has rekindled doubts about the safety of the nation’s drug supply.

The giant health insur-ance program for seniors long ago flagged com-pounded drugs produced for the mass market with-out oversight from the Food and Drug Administration as safety risks. In 2007, Medicare revoked cover-age of compounded inhaler drugs for lung disease.

But Medicare doesn’t seem to have consistently used its own legal power to deny payment, and crit-ics say that has enabled the compounding business to flourish.

Now program officials are scrambling to find out how many Medicare benefi-ciaries are among the more than 270 people sickened in 16 states in a still-growing outbreak that has claimed 21 lives.

The illnesses have been linked to an injectable ste-roid used to treat back pain, made by the New England Compounding Center, a Massachusetts specialty pharmacy. The medication was contaminated with a fungus.

A senior lawmaker and consumer advocates are raising questions about Medicare’s role, including an apparent lack of coordi-nation between Medicare and the FDA, the two most powerful agencies within the federal Health and Human Services Department.

In response, a department spokesman says Congress needs to provide the FDA with stronger powers.

The meningitis outbreak has called attention to the role of compounding phar-macies in supplying medica-tions routinely used by hos-pitals and doctors to treat patients. Regulated primar-ily by states, the pharmacies specialize in customizing doses for individual patients who have allergies to ingre-dients in an FDA-approved drug, or who might need a smaller dosage than what’s available commercially.

But some pharmacies have pushed into full-scale manu-facturing.

Medicare has long been aware of the risks.

“By compounding drugs on a large scale, a company may be operating as a drug manufacturer within the meaning of (federal law), without complying with requirements of that law,” Medicare’s coverage manu-al, a reference for contrac-tors that handle payments, says in a section dealing with compounded drugs.

That situation, adds the manual, fails Medicare’s basic standard, that treat-ments must be “reasonable and necessary” in order to be covered. “This means, in the case of drugs, the FDA must approve them for mar-keting,” says the manual.

It goes on to say that billing contractors should wait for instructions from Medicare before cutting off payment in specific cases

where the FDA has deter-mined that a company is pro-ducing compounded drugs in violation of the law.

“Medicare indicates in its own policy documents that it can cut off payments for compounded drugs pro-duced under manufactur-ing-like conditions,” said Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, who over the years has pushed for stronger government oversight of the pharmaceutical industry.

“Medicare should explain whether it uses this step, and if not, why not. Every avenue for explaining how this health crisis occurred and preventing others like it needs exploration,” he added.

Joyce Lovelace of Albany, Ky., says she doesn’t under-stand how the outbreak could have happened. Eddie Lovelace, her husband of 55 years, died of a stroke after receiving injections of the steroid implicated in the

outbreak as a treatment for pain from an auto accident.

“I’m 100 percent behind not paying ... whether it’s Medicare, Blue Cross, or whatever,” she said. “Somebody dropped the ball and as a result my husband is gone.” Eddie Lovelace, 78, a long-serving judge, was still working at the time of his death and Medicare was not his primary insurance.

Medicare officials are looking into whether the program paid for drugs that have sickened patients.

“If the FDA determines a company is producing com-pounded drugs in violation of (federal law), Medicare will not reimburse for drugs produced in that facility,” said HHS spokesman Tait Sye. “The FDA’s regulatory authority over compounding pharmacies is more limited by statute than it is for typi-cal drug manufacturers. We urge Congress to strengthen the FDA’s authority.”

Medicare questions arise in meningitis outbreak

Associated Press

This Oct. 9 photo, provided by the Minnesota Department of Health, shows vials of the injectable steroid product made by New England Compounding Center implicated in a fungal meningitis outbreak that were being shipped to the CDC from Minneapolis. On Thursday, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration said the fungus was in one lot of vials made in August 2012 by the New England Compounding Center of Framingham, Mass. The specialty pharmacy has been at the center of a national investigation into more than 250 fungal meningitis cases, including at least 20 deaths.

CHICAGO (AP) — When it comes to the birds and the bees, some parents may want to have that talk with their boys a little sooner than they expected.

Researchers have found signs of puberty in American boys up to two years earlier than previous-ly reported — age 9 on aver-age for blacks, 10 for whites and Hispanics. Other stud-ies have suggested that girls, too, are entering puberty younger.

Why is this happening? Theories range from higher levels of obesity and inactiv-ity to chemicals in food and water, all of which might interfere with normal hor-mone production. But those are just theories, and they remain unproven.

Doctors say earlier puberty is not necessarily cause for concern. And some experts question whether the trend is even real.

Dr. William Adelman, an adolescent medicine special-ist in the Baltimore area, says the new research is the first to find early, strong physical evidence that boys are maturing earlier. But he added that the study still isn’t proof and said it raises a lot of questions.

Earlier research based on 20-year-old national data also suggested a trend toward early puberty in boys, but it was based on less rigorous information. The new study involved testes measure-ments in more than 4,000 boys. Enlargement of testes is generally the earliest sign of puberty in boys.

The study was pub-lished online Saturday in Pediatrics to coincide with the American Academy of Pediatrics’ national confer-ence in New Orleans.

Dr. Neerav Desai, an ado-lescent medicine specialist at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, said he’s seen a subtle trend toward slightly earlier puberty in boys. He said it’s important for par-ents and doctors to be aware so they can help children emotionally prepare for the changes that come with puberty.

Earlier puberty seen in boys, just like in girls

Page 9: Garden City Telegram October 20, 2012

One of the best parts of moving is it forces you to

look through your junk.Inevitably, you look at stuff

and wonder why in the heck you kept it, or even what in the heck is this?

But there also are times you rediscover things you forgot you had; things that mean a lot to you.

My wife had me sort through a box of items I packed up when we moved from Kansas to Nebraska.

These were things I had at the newspaper I worked at, either work related or just stuff I kept at my desk that meant something to me.

I had a picture of David Letterman sent to the news-

paper when he switched from NBC to CBS. For some reason, I ended up with it, so I kept it.

I had several old notebooks filled with notes from inter-views. I have no idea why I kept them.

There also were things that I always cherished.

I had two key chains my chil-dren made for me out of beads. I remember I had them hanging up in my cubicle.

I also had a hot pad my daughter made that was the perfect size for a coaster, which I used for years at work.

Someday, when I get more time to get organized, some of these things and others will find their way to work here. Nothing like a touch of home to

remind you that no matter how long of a day you have at work, you can always go home.

I also ran across a letter my late mother had written me.

I don’t know when it was written — some time during the seven years we lived in Kansas — but she wrote about looking forward to seeing me, so we must have been making plans to visit.

Doesn’t matter how old you

are or how long they’ve been gone, but when you lose some-one, you miss them forever, and reminders can be both happy and sad.

The letter choked me up, but also brought back a lot of good memories.

More memories washed over me as I packed away a doll house and Tonka toys in stor-age until we move to Humphrey, Neb.

I remember watching Claire play with her doll house and the roads Alek built in his mom’s flower bed.

The time has gone by quick-ly, but we packed a lot of memo-ries in that time.

When I look at what my children have made, it reminds

me how great it is to reflect and think back to those times when Claire and Alek were little. I got to see life through their eyes, when everything seemed new and each day brought its own excitement.

They are off in college now, and I enjoy them as young adults.

There may not be anymore key chains coming my way or hot pads that work as coast-ers, but the Claire and Alek of those years should be proud of the young people they’ve grown into.

I am.

Patrick Murphy, of Columbus, Neb., is a former assistant managing

editor of The Telegram.

Southwest Life

B SATURDAY, October 20, 2012THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM

Picture This ResTauRanTs: Cell phone distractions

still irritate. Page B2

The fall Aspen colors in the Colorado mountains. Photo contributed by Paul Karkiainen, Denver.

A bunch of grapes grow on a vine Tuesday at Darrell Strawn’s homestead south of Cimarron. Strawn is working to create a vineyard in southwest Kansas, and hopes to have plants producing grapes for wine by this time next year.

ABOVE: A bottle label for Darrell Strawn’s future Tierra del Sol Vineyard has been designed by Strawn’s son, Brandon.

RIGHT: Darrell Strawn works a grape vine around a wire Tuesday south of Cimarron as he trains it to grow along the wire. Training

the vines to grow along the wire enables the weight of the grapes to be handled by the wire instead of the vine.

Packing up a home makes memories come rushing back

Gray County farmer sets aside portion of land to grow grapes.

CIMARRON — Darrell Strawn must feel a little like Ray Kinsella.

No, the Cimarron farmer isn’t level-ing a portion of his crop to make way for a baseball field like Kinsella did in the fictional story “Field of Dreams.” But like the Iowa corn farmer in the movie, he has succumbed to an urge to create something somewhat unique on his Gray County farm, and it’s catching the attention of both locals and passersby.

He began planting grapevines on his farm five miles south of Cimarron in the spring of 2011, in part because of an unfulfilled dream of his father’s, but also because of Strawn’s own interest in vineyards.

“This is a family house we built in 1970, and

my dad always wanted to have an orchard. But it’s like how farming goes, every spring when

you should be planting an orchard, it’s like, ‘Well, maybe not. Maybe next year,’” Strawn said.

His father, Ira Strawn, died in March 2010 before they ever got around to putting an orchard in. But it was this, along with his late mother Marjorie’s unfulfilled desire to improve their home’s inte-rior, that spurred Strawn into action.

“What I’m trying to do is catch up on all the things that they didn’t get quite finished up with. Daddy wanted an orchard, so we’re start-

The fruits of his laborStory by angIe HaFLICHPhotos by BRaD naDIng

See Grapes, Page B7

Page 10: Garden City Telegram October 20, 2012

Weber-Villarreal

Erica Weber and Johnny Villarreal, both of Garden City, were married Aug. 4, 2012, at Stevens Park in Garden City. The 5 p.m., double-ring ceremony was officiated by the Rev. Randy Caddell.

The bride’s parents are Mark and Stacey Tweedy of Garden City; and Mark and Aida Weber of Corpus Christi, Texas. Her grand-parents are Tawana Earnest of Garden City; LeRoy and Betty Weber of Mesa, Ariz.; and Daryl and Rae Tweedy of Dodge City.

The groom’s parents are Fred and Pearl Villarreal of Holcomb. He is the grand-son of Olga Boyd and Vicky Villarreal of Mission, Texas.

Maid of honor was Whitney Weber of Garden City. Bridesmaids were Cheyenne Sauvain of Norton; Erin Fitzpatrick, Lauren Mesa and Sabrina Cipriano, all of Garden City; Trista Schmitt of Wichita; and Chelsea Mader and Keyanna Sauvain, both of Holcomb.

Best man was Adrian Banda of Holcomb. Groomsmen were Jarek Mader and Myke Rousell, both of Holcomb; Nate Schmitt of Leoti; Scott Hornbaker of Overland Park; Erik Base of Garden City; Josh Wilcox of Manhattan; and Brian Trevino of Wichita.

Flower girls were Zoe Miller and Mia Villarreal,

the couple’s daughters from Garden City. Ringbearer was Aiden Samad of Garden City.

Serving as ushers were Randy Perales of Norton; Eric Mangles and Ed Ruiz, both of Manhattan; and Pedro Rivas of Garden City.

Jason Crockett of Garden City sang “You” and played guitar.

The ceremony was fol-lowed by a reception at Fiesta Courtyard in Garden City.

The bride graduated from Deerfield High School and from Kansas State University with a degree in business administration. She is a student at Friends University, pursuing a master’s degree in business administration, and works as a supply chain assistant at Sunflower Electric Power Corp.

The groom graduated from Holcomb High School. He is a dock leadman at TCCS.

After a wedding trip to Las Vegas, the newlyweds are at home in Garden City.

B2 SATURDAY, October 20, 2012 The GARDen CiTY TeleGRAm

Wedding Announcements

Johnny and Erica Villarreal

Lucas-Simmons

Hope Lucas and Damon Simmons, both of Lawrence, were married June 9, 2012, in a double-ring ceremony at the historic Taylor Barn in Lawrence.

The bride is the daughter of R.W. and Cathy Lucas of Sublette. Her grandparents are Ron and Shirley Lucas of Satanta; and Larry and Bette Haverfield of Russell Springs.

The groom is the son of Chris and Denise Russom of Sublette; and James and Bonnie Simmons of Dodge City. His grandparents are Clayton and Lenora Buller of Sublette; Jim and Clara Russom of Sublette; and Glen and Vera Simmons of Tonkawa, Okla.

Maid of honor was Misha Rhone of El Dorado. Bridesmaid was Teri Ross of Perry.

Best man was Marine Corp. Jeremy Keeney of Cherry Point, N.C. Groomsmen was Colby Bucl of Manhattan.

The flower girl was Destiny Russom, the groom’s sister.

Ushers were Spencer Lucas, the bride’s brother; and Brett Holloway.

Music selections includ-ed “The Wedding March,” which the groom’s brother, Dante Simmons, played on the guitar. Prairie Acre Band from Lawrence per-formed “My Heart’s Own Love.” After the ceremony, the band played old-time music during an outdoor brunch.

The bride is a senior at the University of Kansas, majoring in art history and speech, language and hear-ing.

The groom is a senior at the University of Kansas, majoring in anthropology.

Following a honey-moon in Sedona, Ariz., the newlyweds are at home in Lawrence.

Hope and Damon Simmons

Jonagan-Spangler

Cinda Jonagan and Allen Spangler were mar-ried Sept. 29, 2012, at Prairie Fire Resort in Maple Hills.

Lawrence Dale and Martha Jonagan of Ingalls, along with Jerry and Rosemary Spangler of Topeka, are hosting a come-and-go reception for the new-lyweds beginning at 5 p.m. Oct. 27, 2012, at Cimarron Church of the Nazarene, 406 N. First St., in Cimarron.

Cinda and Allen Spangler

Schlicht-Wehkamp

Diana Rose of Lindsborg announces the engagement of her daughter, Alisha Paige Schlicht, to Lee Andrew Wehkamp. He is the son of David Wehkamp of Ingalls; and Paula Wilson of Jetmore.

The bride-to-be gradu-ated from Garden City Community College with an associates degree in accounting. She is employed at Financial Management in Cimarron.

Her fiancé gradu-ated from Garden City Community College with an associates degree in

criminal justice. He is a farmer.

They plan to marry Nov. 24, 2012, at St. Dominic Catholic Church in Garden City.

Miller-Bose

Kirk and Lois Miller of LaCrosse announce the engagement of their daughter, Sarah Elizabeth Miller, to Eric Wendell Bose, the son of David and Linda Bose of Deerfield.

Grandparents of the bride-to-be are Arlene Miller of Ness City; the late Frank Miller; and the late Reuben and Rose Gumescheimer.

Her fiancé is the grand-son of Wendell Bose of Dumas, Texas; the late Lois Bose; and Roland and Mae Morse of Canyon, Texas.

The bride-to-be is a graduate of Hays Hair Academy. She is employed by J.C. Penney’s Hair Salon and Dillon’s of Hays.

Her fiancé is a gradu-

ate of Northwest Kansas Technical College, Goodland. He is employed as a respiratory therapist at Hays Medical Center.

A Nov. 17, 2012, wed-ding is planned at the United Methodist Church, Hays.

Engagement Announcements

Sarah MillerEric Bose

Alisha SchlichtLee Wehkamp

For a support group to be included, call The Telegram at 276-6862 Ext. 242 or (800) 475-8600. For information about other support groups in the state, call the Center for Community Support & Research at (316) 978-3843 or (800) 445-0116, or visit www.ccsr.wichita.edu. In case of emergency, call the 24-hour crisis hotline at (316) 660-7500.

Domestic violence

Support Group. For sur-vivors of domestic violence and sexual assault. Time/Location: 6:30 p.m. on the first and third Tuesdays of each month at Family Crisis Services Inc., 106 W. Fulton St. (child care provided). Contact: 275-2018 or 275-5911.

Teen-Talk Support Group. For victims of domestic violence, dating violence and sexual assault. Time/Location: 5 p.m. on the first and third Mondays of each month at Family Crisis Services Inc., 106 W. Fulton St. Contact: Susan at 275-2018.

Substance abuse

Alcoholics Anonymous Hotline. Information for AA groups in the Garden City area. Contact: Hotline, 272-5623.

12 Step Group of Alcoholics Anonymous. Time/Location: Daily at 116 1/2 E. Chestnut St. (for meeting times, call 272-5623).

Narcotics Anonymous. Time/Location: 7 p.m. Mondays and Saturdays, 8 p.m. Wednesdays and book study at 6 p.m. Saturdays in Classroom 1 at St. Catherine Hospital, 401 E. Spruce St. Children are welcome; parents are responsible for their chil-dren. Contact: (620) 899-5420.

Health

Garden City Area Alzheimer’s and Other Dementias Support Group. The support group wel-comes any family mem-bers or friends caring for someone with Alzheimer’s Disease and other demen-tias. Time/Location: 2 to 4 p.m. the third Monday of each month in the main parlor of First United Methodist Church, Main Street and Kansas Avenue (use entrance off Main Street). Contact: Mary Seibert, 276-8933, or Barbara McKenna, (620) 937-1766.

TBI (Traumatic Brain Injury). To aid and support people with brain injuries and their families. For information, contact Logie Asebedo, (620) 384-5048.

Builders of Hope Cancer Support Group. Open to all patients, fam-ily and/or friends touched by this disease. Time/

Location: 2 p.m. on the first Sunday of each month at Downtown Vision, 413 N. Main St. Contacts: Chaplain Remy Ekweariri, 272-2513; Kris Hughes, 272-2526.

Garden City “Wolf Pack” Consumer Run Organization (C.R.O.) Inc. A non-profit organiza-tion that serves persons with self-identified mental illness. It is a member run organization that is centered on peer sup-port. The CRO focuses on leadership, education and community involve-ment. Time/Location: 3 to 6 p.m. Wednesday through Friday at 409 N. Eighth St. Contact: Alexis Fluellen (620) 260-9970.

Weight loss

TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly). An affordable group for those wanting to lose weight. Time/Location: Weigh-in is from 8:15 to 9 a.m., with the meeting starting at 9 a.m. each Thursday in the Blue Room at the Senior Center of Finney County, 907 N. 10th St. Contact: Kathy Howard at 276-7919 or Patti Barton at (620) 521-1672.

Garden City Weight Watchers. Time/Location: 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m. Tuesday at the First United Methodist Church, 1106 N. Main St. (use the east entrance on Seventh Street). Contact: Norma Nolte, 276-2520.

TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly). Nonprofit organi-zation providing weight-loss support since 1948. Contact/more information: (800) 932-8677 or email [email protected].

OtherCelebrate Recovery. A

faith-based, Christ-cen-tered, 12-Step recovery program for people strug-gling with all kinds of issues and is not just for those struggling with chemical and alcohol addiction. Time/Location: Meal at 6 p.m. Mondays, followed by large group meetings at 7 p.m. and splitting off into small groups at 8 p.m. at Area 96, 308 W. Fifth St., Scott City. Contact (620) 872-2339 for additional information or visit www.fbcscott.com/#/ministries/celebrate-recov-ery.

Divorce Care. Weekly seminar and support group for people who are sepa-rated or divorced. Time/Location: 7 to 9 p.m. each Tuesday at Garden City Church of the Nazarene, 2720 N. Campus Drive. Contact: (620) 430-7653.

Celebrate Recovery. A faith-based, Christ-cen-tered, recovery program for people struggling with all kinds of issues and not just for those struggling with chemical and alcohol addiction. Time/Location: 12-Step Program at 7 p.m. Mondays and the Open Share Group at 6:15 p.m. Fridays, both at Bible Christian Church, 1501 E. Mary St., Garden City. Contact 276-8356 for addi-tional information.

By BETSY S. FRANZ

Birds sing after a storm; why shouldn’t people feel as free to delight in whatever remains to them?

— Rose F. Kennedy•••

Although many people envy the residents of

sunny Florida, with our almost-constant summer-time weather, the fall of 2004 brought nothing but sym-pathy from our northern friends and relatives.

During a period of two months, the east coast of Florida was hit by three major hurricanes!

But in the midst of boarding and un-boarding windows and living without electricity and hot water for weeks at a time, a tiny miracle arrived in our yard that seemed to make every-thing else bearable. When we woke up on the morning of Sept. 5, after Hurricane Frances had hit our coast with winds of up to 75 miles per hour, my husband and I stood on the porch on the sheltered side of our home and watched the still-power-ful winds topple and break huge, ancient, mighty oaks.

Suddenly, in the midst of these destructive winds, we spotted a flash of color in our garden. No more than 10 feet from where we stood, a ruby-throated hummingbird emerged and hovered in front of our native firebush plant, jockeying back and forth with the gusts of wind to get nectar from the sway-ing plant. Unbelievably, this bird came back time and again to drink from this plant. After years of trying to lure them, this was the first time we had ever seen a hummingbird in our yard — or in Florida!

Because of their scarcity, the sight of a hummingbird in Brevard County is almost a miracle in itself. But to see the determination of this tiny three-inch bird, which weighs about a tenth of an ounce, in the face of a storm that put fear into the hearts of millions of Florida resi-dents, was truly remarkable.

The next morning, most of the firebush plant was gone, victim of the winds that continued to batter our state for hours. But much to our pleasure and surprise, our new hummingbird visi-tor was still there, dining on the plants that remained.

Although we didn’t have power and the boarded win-dows blocked out the light, my first action of the day was to dig out an old, previ-ously unvisited humming-bird feeder, and boil up some hummingbird nectar on our propane stove.

The next day, when the stores opened again and most practical people were standing in line buying bat-teries and bottled water, I was at a local department store with an armload of new hummingbird feeders, which I quickly filled and hung outside. That was enough to get the humming-birds to move right in!

I had lived in Florida for 37 years and had never seen a hummingbird, one of my favorite forms of wildlife. Although I had been trying to plant all the right plants to attract them, it took a hur-ricane for me to finally lure them to my yard.

Almost every day since the hurricanes, I have had the joy of observing the visiting hummingbirds. With a feeder right outside my office window, I get a daily bird’s eye view. I have watched as they chase each other through the yard, and I have had them fly right between my arms as I refilled their feeders. And I have become very famil-iar with their buzzing and chittering sounds that let me know they are always around, even when I can’t see them.

They remained through the next, more powerful hur-ricane (Hurricane Jeanne), and have stayed ever since.

The hurricane season of 2004 affected everyone in Florida, some more than others. They affected me in a very positive way.

Every time I see the hum-mingbirds, I am reminded of the many blessings that nature holds for us: mes-sages of beauty, strength and determination. But perhaps the greatest message is that wonders are out there wait-ing to pay us a visit. We just need to keep planting seeds of beauty and faith, and we need to keep an eye out for the miracles!

Finding the goodin a natural disaster

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ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — The digital divide is wider than ever between diners who talk, tweet and snap pictures mid-meal and those who wish they’d just shut up, shut down and be present.

Caught at the center of the discord are restau-rant owners and chefs, who must walk the care-ful line of good customer service for both those who dine under the influence of smart phones, and those who won’t. But as the devic-es have morphed into an unrelenting appendage for texting, photography and games, more restaurateurs are challenged to keep the peace.

Owners who once relied mostly on “no cell phones, please” signs, increasingly are experimenting with everything from penalties for using phones, discounts for not and outright bans on photography.

“There’s no place to get away from the chatter,” said

Julie Liberty of Miami, who started the Facebook page “Ban Cell Phones From Restaurants” ear-lier this year. “Everything has a soundtrack, includ-ing when you go into the ladies room. That’s just not right.”

It’s a touchy issue. Consider the crush of news coverage Eva Restaurant in Los Angeles generated when it began offering patrons a 5 percent discount if they leave their phone at the door. Online comments ranged from cheers of “YES!” to others who said their phones would have to be pried from their cold, dead hands.

The policy is working, though. Eva’s Rom Toulon said about 40 percent of our customers will leave their cell phones at the door.

“After a few cocktails and glasses of wine, it can be challenging to remem-ber that you left the phone behind,” he said.

Restaurant cell phone distractions still irritate

Page 11: Garden City Telegram October 20, 2012

By KAMIL [email protected]

When Garden City’s Builders of Hope cancer

support group meets each month, there is more to it than the disease or their numbers.

It’s about being able to come together with other people who know what it means to be diag-nosed with, live with, and sur-vive after cancer.

“We may be few, but we enjoy each other’s company,” said Denice Good, a seven-year survi-vor of breast cancer.

The group is casual, and they don’t meet with any certain agenda. They talk about any-thing from politics to business to just their everyday lives.

Talk about cancer, including treatment and awareness, can weave its way into the discus-sion, particularly when new members come to check out what the group is all about.

“The group can meet you where you’re at,” Good said, adding that people can use it to find out where they can look for reliable sources and responsible information about it.

But there’s also humor, and the participants join in joking about aspects of living with, and after, cancer.

“Any disease, you come up with ways to deal with it,” Good said. “Joining other survivors, you share it.”

And humor is just one coping mechanism that helps lighten the daunting burden of cancer.

That doesn’t mean that they don’t take cancer, whatever its form, seriously. But through their experiences with it, each participant can find solace in knowing that they’ve been able to make it this far, and they can pass that encouragement on to others who may join the group.

The point of it all, they say, is to help people overcome the disease, if not physically, then mentally and spiritually.

This group is a reincarnation of the original cancer support group that served the commu-nity but eventually fell by the wayside.

When he arrived in Garden City as a chaplain at St. Catherine Hospital in 2002, Remigius Ekweariri saw that there was a need for such a gath-ering to be resumed.

“Out here in this community, there is a hunger for something to get people together,” he said. “And that’s how we started it.”

The group was much larger then, Ekweariri said. Some members simply moved away to other communities; others passed away, and not necessarily from the cancer.

But even as their numbers have dwindled steadily, the Builders of Hope believe it is important to keep their group going and open.

“The number is impor-tant, but it is not the essence,”

Ekweariri said. “The essence is what you get out of this group.”

Camaraderie, knowing there is a forum they can turn to where people know what they’re going through is important for cancer patients and their care-givers.

Ekweariri said that it might not necessarily be therapeutic, but it can help people with what they need to go through during their treatment.

“I’m just a normal, average person,” Good said. “If I made it, I need to be that beacon for others.”

The group has multiple goals and functions, and members attend events such as Relay for Life to help raise awareness. And they want people to be sure to get regular check-ups and screenings. The more common

type of screenings for females might be mammograms, and for males, prostate exams.

The Builders of Hope also engages in fundraising efforts and gives part of its funds to the Cancer Center at St. Catherine Hospital each year to help the facility pay for screenings. And this year, as the Cancer Center didn’t have as much of a need for such financial assistance, the funding will benefit United Methodist Mexican-American Ministries for labs and tests on cancer diagnoses.

And while October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month, the Builders of Hope include people who’ve faced various forms of cancer.

“It’s not only about breast cancer,” said John Ryder, a 12-year survivor of esophegeal cancer.

He attributes his survival to early detection, treatment and surgery.

He said fewer people know about this particular type of cancer, and symptoms like con-stant heartburn often can be overlooked.

“When somebody tells me they’ve got gas, right away I say ‘go to the doctor,’” he said. “Don’t fool around with it.”

The survival rate for esophe-geal cancer is 5 percent. And Ryder recalled mentoring sev-eral people diagnosed in later stages who did not survive because the disease already had taken its toll.

This was in stark contrast with Ryder, who was diagnosed early enough and who under-went a regimen of various treat-ments including chemotherapy, as well as surgery that required some rearrangement of his organs, such as his stomach.

“That’s the biggest thing with esophegeal cancer, people don’t go to the doctor. They take TUMS,” Ryder said.

And, he said, the high fatality rate makes esophegeal cancer “one of those where it’s ‘pack your bags, you’re going home.’”

“We know it is a battle of win and loss, just like every disease,” Ekweariri said. “... It’s some-thing to look forward to to have a group to come out here, if someone is thinking about ‘what if (it happens) to me?’”

In addition to survivors or those diagnosed with a cancer, the Builders of Hope group counts among its members some caregivers, including William Widows, the husband of colon cancer survivor Kelly Widows.

Family support is a crucial component of fighting cancer, the group members agreed. And a diagnosis and treatment also can take their toll on the care-givers who have to watch their loved ones struggle with the disease.

“It can definitely be hard on us, too, because we can only help them so much,” William said.

Kelly was diagnosed in 2009 but feels she was fortunate, because her cancer did not prog-ress much and was treated fairly quickly compared to others who have to go through multiple rounds of chemotherapy just to keep it in check, much less eradicate it completely.

The couple said that the news that the cancer was gone, and was unlikely to come back, was the best they could get.

“It meant more to me than winning the lottery,” Kelly said. “To hear news like that, and I’ve met some real good people that had to go through some tough times... It makes me feel very, very blessed.”

She said what got her through the experience was the support of her husband and family, in addition to the doctors and others she’s met throughout her journey.

They come to the Builders of Hope to pay it forward and offer that support to help others face their fears, cope with diagnosis and treatment and fight the disease.

The Builders of Hope want to remind people that they are there not only for survivors but for caregivers, family and friends. And they stressed the need for that group support and camaraderie that people touched by the disease can find, not only among their own families, but groups such as the Builders of Hope.

“I remember one woman who came here that was a caregiver, and she came because this was her respite,” Good said.

Others agreed that coming to the group can help a person come to terms with everything that’s going on, and that it’s OK to embrace it rather than give up.

“You can’t get depressed about it,” Ryder said. “Life dealt me a bad hand, but that doesn’t mean I have to accept it.”

“It’s a battle,” Good said. “But you can’t surrender.”

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Think PinkEach Saturday in October, The Garden City Telegram will be publishing a special “pink page” that will feature local stories about the fight against cancer.THIS WEEK: Cancer support groups.NEXT WEEK: Breast cancer survivors.

Brad Nading/Telegram

Cancer survivors and their families make their way around the track lined with luminaries in August during the survivors’ lap to kick off this year’s Relay for Life at Memorial Stadium.

Courtesy photo

Remigius Ekweariri, chaplain for St. Catherine Hospital and the Builders of Hope group, prepares to speak during the 2011 Survivors Brunch, which is a part of Relay for Life. The Builders of Hope participate in the Relay as a team each year to benefit the American Cancer Society.

The power of hope

Builders of Hope• The Builders of Hope sup-port group meets the first Sunday of each month at 2 p.m. at the Downtown Vision office, 413 N. Main St.St. Catherine Hospital Chaplain Remigius Ekweariri, who helps conduct the meetings, can be reached at 272-2513.

Support NetworkTHE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM SATURDAY, October 20, 2012 B3

Page 12: Garden City Telegram October 20, 2012

B4 SATURDAY, October 20, 2012 The GARDen CiTY TeleGRAm

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B4 Entertainment

Page 13: Garden City Telegram October 20, 2012

B5SATURDAY, October 20, 2012THE GARDEn CiTY TElEGRAm

Solution in next edition

Sudoku is a number-placing puzzle based on a 9x9 grid with several given number.The objext is to place the numbers 1to 9 in the empty squates so that each rowm each columb and each 3x3 box contains the same number only once. The difficulty level of the Conceptis Sudoku increase from Monday to Saturday.

Becker’s Bridge

The Cryptoquip is a substitution cipher in which one letter stands for another. If you think that X equals O, it will be O throughout the puzzle.

Single letters, short words and words using any apos-trophe give you clues to locating vowels.

Solution is by trial and error. 2011 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.C

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Farm (cc) Gravity Falls (s) Gravity Falls (s) Gravity Falls (s) Gravity Falls (s) Make Your Mark: Shake It Up Result Show (N) (s) (cc) My Babysitter Jessie (s) (cc) Jessie (s) (cc)46 NICK Victorious (cc) Victorious (cc) iCarly (N) (cc) Victorious (N) (s) Big Time Rush (N) How to Rock (N) The Nanny (cc) The Nanny (cc) Friends (s) (cc) Friends (s) (cc) Friends (s) (cc) Friends (s) (cc)47 FAM (5:00) Movie: Addams Family Values Movie: ››‡ Hocus Pocus (1993) (Bette Midler, Sarah Jessica Parker) Movie: ››‡ Hocus Pocus (1993) (Bette Midler, Sarah Jessica Parker) Movie: ››‡ Alice in Wonderland48 TVLD The Cosby Show The Cosby Show The Cosby Show The Cosby Show Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens49 HIST Cajun Pawn Stars Cajun Pawn Stars Pawn Stars (cc) Pawn Stars (cc) The Men Who Built America “A New War Begins” (cc) Pawn Stars (cc) Pawn Stars (cc) Pawn Stars (cc) Pawn Stars (cc)50 SYFY Movie: ››‡ Daybreakers (2009) (Ethan Hawke, Willem Dafoe) (cc) Movie: ›› Underworld: Rise of the Lycans (2009) (Michael Sheen) (cc) Movie: ››› Stake Land (2010, Horror) (Nick Damici, Connor Paolo) (cc)54 TCM (5:15) Movie: The Prisoner of Zenda Movie: ›››‡ Camille (1936) (Greta Garbo, Robert Taylor) (cc) (DVS) Movie: ›››› Gigi (1958) (Leslie Caron, Maurice Chevalier) (cc) (DVS) Movie: ›› Madame Du Barry (1934)55 AMC Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday Movie: › Jason X (2002) (Lexa Doig, Lisa Ryder) Premiere. (R) (cc) Movie: ››‡ Eight Legged Freaks (2002) (David Arquette) Premiere. (PG-13) (cc) Friday 13-New56 ANPL My Cat From Hell (s) (cc) Too Cute! (N) (s) Too Cute! (s) (cc) Pit Bulls and Parolees (N) (s) Addicts and Animals (N) (s) Pit Bulls and Parolees (s)57 BET Movie: ››› The Best Man (1999) (Taye Diggs, Nia Long) (cc) Movie: ››› Barbershop 2: Back in Business (2004, Comedy) (Ice Cube, Cedric the Entertainer) (cc) Movie: I Will Follow (2010) (cc)58 COM (5:30) Movie: › Joe Dirt (2001) (David Spade) (cc) Jeff Dunham: Minding the Monsters Key & Peele (cc) Jeff Dunham: Minding the Monsters Brickleberry (cc) Movie: ››‡ Offi ce Space (1999) (Ron Livingston) (cc)59 E! Fashion Police Movie: ››› Pride & Prejudice (2005, Drama) (Keira Knightley, Matthew MacFadyen) The Soup Keeping Up With the Kardashians Chelsea Lately Chelsea Lately61 BRAVO Million Dollar Listing: Los Angeles Million Dollar Listing: Los Angeles Million Dollar Listing: Los Angeles Million Dollar Listing: Los Angeles Million Dollar Listing: Los Angeles Million Dollar Listing: Los Angeles63 TOON Movie: ››‡ Hoodwinked! (2005) (Voices of Anne Hathaway, Glenn Close) The Venture Bros. Family Guy (cc) Family Guy (cc) Cleveland Show Black Dynamite The Boondocks Bleach (N) Samurai 7217 HALL Movie: A Crush on You (2011) (Brigid Brannagh, Sean Patrick Flanery) (cc) Movie: I Married Who? (2012) (Kellie Martin, Ethan Erickson) (Premiere) (cc) Movie: I Married Who? (2012) (Kellie Martin, Ethan Erickson) (cc)PREMIUM CHANNELS

HBO Movie: ›› Life as We Know It (2010) (Katherine Heigl) (s) (PG-13) (cc) Movie: The Girl (2012) (Sienna Miller) Premiere. (s) (cc) Boardwalk Empire (s) (cc) Movie: The Girl (2012) (Sienna Miller) (s) (cc) MAX Movie: ››‡ The Running Man (1987) (Arnold Schwarzenegger) (R) (cc) Hunted “Mort” (s) (cc) Movie: ›› Contraband (2012) (Mark Wahlberg) (s) (R) (cc) Hunted “Mort” (s) (cc) SHOW Jay Mohr: Funny for a Girl (s) (cc) Boxing: Danny Garcia vs. Erik Morales. (N) (Live) Homeland (cc)

2187152717 Campus • $217,500

When Selling, Use Your NoseEliminate pet odors, shampoo carpets, & empty trash cans.

Introduce pleasing smells with fresh flowers or potpourri.

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Dear annie: “Looking for a Relationship, Too” asked where to meet men. You suggested book-stores, grocery stores, hardware stores, laundro-mats and sporting events, and while taking college courses, playing golf, soft-ball and basketball, doing volunteer work and travel-ing. Then you asked your readers for their ideas.

People often overlook dance classes as an excel-lent way for men and women to meet each other. Many of these people are single and available. There is a vast array of dance styles for every possible interest: Latin, swing, ball-room, square dancing, country-western, jazz, bal-let, from the elegant and slow to the wild and sexy. By its very nature, dance brings men and women together in close physical contact.

Those who dance tend to have positive outlooks, enjoy fun times and are socially outgoing. I often find dates as a direct result of being in the dance world. — Dancing in California

Dear California: Thanks for your upbeat

suggestion. Many read-ers told us that the best place to meet men was in church. Here’s more:

from el Paso, Texas: Take up shooting! Men are at the gun show, and guys like a gal with good aim. To win a man and keep a man, a woman needs to engage in activi-ties that men like, too.

iowa: i live in a small rural community and have found that going to estate auctions and flea markets (even farm sales) can be quite “helpful” in meeting single men. I also recommend going car shopping.

California: i am a 53-year-old guy, so I will come at it from a different angle. Want a relationship? Reverse the situation. Why should a guy pick you? Do you have great hair, a nice smile or a good career? Don’t be shy about using what you have. No one will do it for you. Let him know why he should date you instead of the woman across the room.

Ask friends for some brutal honesty. If you find a common criticism, take it to heart. Do you love bright

blue eye shadow? Most guys don’t. Ditto for women who wear dresses that look like tents or women who smell like goats. Finally, be realistic. If you keep going after those hunky young surfer types, and you don’t look like a model, you will spend a lot of nights alone.

norTh Carolina: afTer my divorce, I dated a few men and found the good ones are hard to come by. Then I “friended” an old high school boyfriend on Facebook. Back then, he was the first guy my par-ents allowed me to date. He was gorgeous and liked me a lot. After all these years, we started talking again, got together and began a wonderful relationship. He is the love of my life, and we will be married soon.

ChiCago: Try The lake or a billiards hall. Guys love to play pool and go fishing. Also try the library or dog park.

(Borrow a dog from a friend if you don’t have one.) And remember, a mug shot is not a dating photo.

California: i woulD say to first look for a relationship with yourself. If you want to take a class, play golf or do volunteer work, do those things for yourself, not because you might meet someone. Otherwise, if you don’t meet anyone, you’ll be disappointed. I can’t tell you how many times I have gotten involved in some-thing hoping to meet a man, and then, rather than simply enjoying the event, I could only focus on the fact that meeting someone wasn’t happening. I would also say there is richness in groups of women, such as a church group. Those friendships are precious. — Been There, Done That

Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to [email protected], or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.

ByMICHAEL ROIZEN, M.D., AND MEHMET OZ, M.D.

“Scotty, we need more power!”

“I’m giving her all we’ve got, Captain. No, wait! We’ll use transcranial magnetic stimulation!”

Transcranial magnetic stimulation is a potential treatment for tinnitus (it’s approved for treat-ing depression, but not yet for chronic ringing in the ears), and though it may sound like a device to make space travel more efficient — a la “Star Trek” — it’s actually a noninvasive way to ease the chronic ringing and whooshing sounds that can fill one or both ears.

Anything that provides some quiet is a big relief. Tinnitus can range from bothersome to debilitating — just ask the 50 million people in the U.S. who have it! (These days, half of all soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan have tinnitus because of blasts from explosive devices.)

Treatments lasting 35-40 minutes are delivered via a magnetic coil placed next to the left side of the head. It sends short pulses of magnetic energy to the brain. There are no known negative side effects.

TMS has been studied for almost three decades. It offers about three months’ worth of significant improvement for more

than a third of people with newly diagnosed, severe tinnitus. Now Loyola University researchers are looking to see if TMS “treatments” offer double relief for the 12 percent of people with tinnitus who also have depression. (Stay tuned for that news!)

For more information about tinnitus and TMS, contact the American Tinnitus Association. Tell them Captain Kirk sent you; William Shatner is their national spokesman — really!

Mehmet Oz, M.D. is host of “The Dr. Oz Show,” and Mike Roizen, M.D. is Chief Medical Officer at the Cleveland Clinic Wellness Institute. For more infor-mation go to www.RealAge.com.

Dear reaDers: In response to a reader who said that her towels were coming out of the washer and dryer with “mystery” bleach spots, I asked readers for input if they had this issue. Wow! Lots of replies came in, and here are just a few of them:

• Carol in Texas says the spots on her towels were caused by a cleaner (that included bleach) that wasn’t being complete-ly rinsed off the shower walls. When her fam-ily would wipe the walls after showering, the cleaner would get on the towels. Once she started rinsing the walls thoroughly, the problem went away.

• Bill G. in Boca Raton, Fla., says that an acne medication caused the bleached-out spots on the towels.

• Mia C. in Freehold, N.J., says that the bleach dispenser on her wash-ing machine was the culprit. She spoke to a washing-machine ser-viceman, who said that those dispensers don’t always release all the bleach that’s in them.

Sometimes they release the rest of it into the next load. Once she stopped using the dispenser, there were no more problems.

• Linda P. in South Dakota says she believes it is not how the towels are used, but the poor-quality coloring at the factory.

• J. in Kansas says that if you are adding the towels to the washer before the detergent is diluted, this could cause the problem with bleach-stained wash. Make sure the detergent is totally diluted in your washer before adding any towels.

Thanks to all who took the time to drop us a line and share their experi-ences. — Heloise

Powdered-drink mix containers

Dear heloise: The big containers that pow-dered drink mix comes in make great containers to take along on a trip for your pets. You can put water or food in them, and you will always have the lid to use as a bowl! — Linda C., via email

Transcranial magneticstimulation for tinnitus

King Features Syndicate

Michael Roizen, M.D. and Mehmet Oz, M.D.

In search of the best places to hook upANNIE’SMAILBOX

KATHY MITCHELLMARCY SUGAR

Solutions forbleach mystery

Page 14: Garden City Telegram October 20, 2012

The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult

ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHH You could be overserious and unpredictable. You might even stir the pot with a boss or someone in charge. Try to avoid a power play, at all costs. A take-charge attitude seems reasonable and could be most effective. Someone is changing before your very eyes. Tonight: In the limelight.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHHH Keep reaching out for more information, especially if you are not satisfied with what is coming up for you. You could be surprised by what comes in from out of left field. You might realize that you have had this information all along, but it takes an event like this to recall the memory. Tonight: Be entertained. Try a movie.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHHH Deal with one other person directly, and you could be surprised by how you get exactly what you most want. Surprises tend to follow your path wherever you go. Friends seem to be an endless source of the unexpect-ed. Do not get into a control game with a partner. Tonight: Make nice.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH Defer to others, and know full well what will happen. You could feel blocked in some sense. A key associate really does not want any input from you. Someone you look up to might be cantankerous and unpredictable. Tonight: Follow a friend’s lead.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH Clear out errands in order to free up your day. Afterward, play it low-key or get together with friends. At last, you will have the opportu-nity to choose what you want. The unexpected occurs when making plans to travel in the near future. Tonight: Once in a while, staying home feels right.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHHH You come up with one idea after another today, which creates a problem, as you simply cannot squeeze everything in. A heavy discussion or an intense interaction is unavoidable. No matter what, you cannot turn the other way. A special friend comes to the rescue. Tonight: You know how to have fun.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH Stay anchored and direct. You might not have all the answers, but you do need to find them. There is a financial decision looming over you that has several potential outcomes. Do not question your self-discipline. You know how to tell someone that you have had enough. This person could become very stubborn as a result. Tonight: Entertain at home.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH You will go out of your way to make an impression on a person or sit-uation. You actually are more appeal-ing than you might realize; you do not need to try so hard. Just be yourself, and allow an important discussion to take place. Tonight: At a favorite spot.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH Be sensitive to your own issues, as well as to a partner’s. You can become quite insecure at times. How this behavior manifests could differ from person to person. Try not to get involved in a financial deal or agree-ment. Stay away from spending in gen-eral right now. Tonight: Your treat.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH The Moon highlights you and what you want. You could have a strong reaction to a child or loved one who demands a lot at this moment. You probably will go along with this person’s request. A situation takes an interesting twist. Tonight: Let the good times happen.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHH Be as discreet as possible when dealing with a relative or neighbor. You’ll need to stay mum about what you know, whether it is the informa-tion this person wants or what he or she reveals. Rethink a judgment. Much that you hear or see tells you that you might need to readjust your thinking. Tonight: Not to be found.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHHH Zero in on what you want, and others will seem delighted to play along. You could be taken aback by a friend’s unusually good mood. Enjoy the moment. This person could flip at any given moment, as he or she typi-cally is difficult to deal with. Tonight: Where your pals are.

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B6 SATURDAY, October 20, 2012 The GARDen CiTY TeleGRAm

Page 15: Garden City Telegram October 20, 2012

B7SATURDAY, October 20, 2012THE GARDEn CiTY TElEGRAm

ing with the vineyard and working toward the orchard,” he said.

Strawn began by planting a small vineyard located in a half-acre patch of land that runs in front of his home, right along Highway 23.

“This was kind of an experimental type of deal. Well, first of all, it was up close to the house, so I could watch it every day, and this was just kind of a vacant field and always had been — just some grass and stuff that was left over. I think I got one bale of hay off of it, one time in 10 years, so I thought, ‘This isn’t very pro-ductive,’” he said.

He began with 300 grape plants.

“The first half of these, when you get to this type here that have more foliage, these are your wine type and these are more for table grapes,” Strawn said, com-paring the different types of grapes. “With grapes, you’ll get a good crop the fourth year, and so next year, I should have my first full crop.”

The vineyard contains Niagara and Catabra, which are table grapes, Cambourcin grapes, which are used for red wine, and Marquis grapes, which are used for white wine.

Although the drought has had a negative impact on his other crops, such as corn, he has discovered that grapes are a much tougher crop.

“Grapes are hardy. I mean, they are tough,” Strawn said.

He chose varieties of grapes that can withstand not only freezes of up to 20 degrees below zero, but that also can withstand extreme heat.

“The main thing is, I didn’t want to put all of the effort and the money involved with it, if they’d just freeze out in the winter time, so that’s why I picked varieties that were adaptable to here,” he said. “Grapes need two things. They need well-drained soils — well,

this sandy soil is real well drained — and they need lots of sunshine. So it’s perfect, absolutely perfect.”

Last spring, Strawn added an additional 1,200 plants in a two-acre area of land southwest of his home. There are eight varieties of wine grapes in that sec-tion, Chardonel, Marechal Foch, Seyval Blanc, Vincent, Steuben, Traminette, Vignoles and Vidal Blanc.

Ultimately, he hopes to have five acres of grapes, from which to produce his own wine label.

“We’ll probably do two whites, two reds and a rose,” he said.

He said that in discover-ing that certain grapes grow

best in low humidity and a lot of sunshine, he also stum-bled upon the perfect name for his label: Tierra del Sol.

“It means the land of sun,” he said and laughed. “It kind of just came to me when it was about 117 degrees one day.”

He said that his son, Brandon Strawn, Culver City, Calif., came up with the label’s design, which is a picture of an orange Kansas sunset, overlooking a field.

The next step, Strawn said, is to build a winery, where he will not only produce the wine, but also provide wine tastings. He said that his first vineyard already has evoked curiosity in passersby.

“I’ve had people from Texas stop in. People drive by, and they’ll turn around,” Strawn said.

In the meantime, Strawn is in the middle of harvest-ing milo, a crop he said is much improved from last year. He also still farms wheat, but decided to forego corn because of the water required. Because grapes require water, as well, anoth-er aspect of Strawn’s plan is to dig a well that will reach depths of about 500 feet, which he said will provide

a long-term supply of water for all of his crops.

When asked if he and his fellow farmers and buddies give him a hard time, Strawn laughed and said, “Oh yeah, oh yeah. That’s why I started wearing sandals — just to spite them.”

Strawn said that it’s all in fun and that, to him, the lighthearted ribbing is worth it because he’s now getting something out of a piece of land that once produced nothing.

“I say it’s creative imagi-nation,” he said and laughed, adding that he also plans to one day put his own golf-put-ting green on the property.

It’s still too early to pre-dict, but maybe Strawn’s vineyard will draw visitors the same way Kinsella’s base-ball field did in the movie.

“This is the funnest thing I’ve ever done ... besides sky-diving,” Strawn said and laughed.

Special Events

TODAY, OCT. 20Boo! At The Zoo:

Featuring a trick-or-treat trail with more than 25 treat stops, creepy crea-ture encounters with zoo docents and a journey through a ghoulish grave-yard at Lee Richardson Zoo. The advanced gate will open at 4 p.m.; the general admission gate will be open from 5 to 8:30 p.m. Gate passes are $5 per person. Members-only skeleton key passes also are available (family/grandparent membership and above) and includes the Sleepy Hollow Wagon Tour. Skeleton key passes are sold exclusively through the Friends of Lee Richardson Zoo office. Advance tickets are available for $4 per person at El Remedio, the FOLRZ office, Safari Shoppe and Ward’s Garden Center through noon today. Frankenweenies (hot dogs), monster barbe-cue beef sandwiches, pumpkin pie and apple cider will be available for purchase. Attendees can

bring an old cell phone to recycle and receive a spe-cial treat. The rain date is Oct. 27.

“The King Stag”: A comic fairy tale pre-sented by the Garden City Community College Drama Department, 7:30 p.m. in the auditorium of the Pauline Joyce Fine Arts Building on campus, 801 Campus Drive. Admission is $8 for adults, $5 for seniors age 65 and older and chil-dren age 17 and younger. Ticket sales available 7 to 11 a.m. and noon to 3:30 p.m. weekdays in the fine arts office, plus one hour before each show at the box office. Subsequent performances scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Oct. 26 and 27, plus 2:30 p.m. Oct. 21.

Musical program: Featuring artist and song-writer Brandon Heath, with special guest Matt Maher, singer, songwriter and worship leader, 6 p.m. in Clifford Hope Auditorium at Horace J. Good Middle School, 1412 N. Main St. Tickets are $25 for VIP and $20 for general admission. For

information, call (620) 873-2991 or visit www.kjil.com.

46th annual Bazaar and Quilt Show: Featuring unique hand-crafted items for sale from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Senior Center of Finney County, 907 N. 10th St. Lunch will be avail-able beginning at 11 a.m., with a variety of soups, sandwiches, cakes and pies on the menu.

SUNDAY, OCT. 21Singles dance:

Featuring “Moonshiners” from 7 to 10:30 p.m. at the Eagles Lodge, U.S. Highway 83 and Mary Street. Sponsored by

Garden City Singles, the dance is open to the pub-lic. People attending must be age 21 or older.

“Obama’s America”: Free showing beginning at 6 p.m. in the sanctu-ary at Church of the Nazarene, 2720 N. Campus Drive.

TUESDAY, OCT. 23Musical variety

program: Featuring the music group “Kearny County Road Runners” from Lakin, directed by Curtis Young, 7 p.m. at Garden Valley Retirement Village, 1505 E. Spruce St. The public is encouraged to attend at no charge.

Organizations

TODAY, OCT. 20Finney County

Genealogical Society: 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in the Hutchinson Room at the Finney County Public Library, 605 E. Walnut St. Visitors welcome.

Health Department

Hours at the Finney County Health Department, 919 Zerr Road, are 8 a.m. to noon and 1 to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday. Friday hours are 8 a.m. to noon.

For more information, call the health depart-ment at 272-3600.

Senior Center

The following events are scheduled at the Senior Center of Finney County, 907 N. 10th St., unless otherwise noted. Anyone 55 years of age or older is welcome to participate.

46th Annual Senior Citizen Association Bazaar: 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. today.

Open pool: 1 to 4 p.m. today.

Duplicate bridge: 2 p.m. Sunday.

Dominoes and open pool: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.

Lunch: Served at noon Monday through Friday.

Walking Club: 8:30 a.m. Monday.

Humdinger Band prac-tice: 12:30 p.m. Monday.

Double pinochle: 12:30 p.m. Monday.

Duplicate bridge: 7 p.m. Monday.

Gentle exercise: 11 a.m. Tuesday.

Elder abuse program: 11:45 a.m. Tuesday.

Pitch: 12:30 p.m. Tuesday.

Bridge: 1:15 p.m. Tuesday.

Bingo: 1:30 p.m. Tuesday.

Line dancing: 8:30 a.m. Wednesday.

Library check-in/out: 11 a.m. Wednesday.

Completely Unraveled: 1 p.m. Wednesday.

Dance: 7:30 p.m. Wednesday featuring “The Blue Notes.”

TOPS: 9 a.m. Thursday.Art class: 10 a.m.

Thursday.Gentle exercise: 11 a.m.

Thursday.Ambassador Singers

practice: 1 p.m. Thursday.Snooker Tournament:

1 p.m. Thursday.Yoga: 6:30 p.m.

Thursday.Line dancing: 8:30 a.m.

Friday.Bridge: 12:45 p.m.

Friday.Fiddlers, Pickers and

Singers: 5 to 9 p.m. Oct. 27.Meals on Wheels is

available by calling 272-3620; Mini-bus, 272-3626; Senior Center, 272-3620.

What’s Up is published each Saturday. Submit calendar items for upcom-ing events by 5 p.m. Wednesday by calling 276-6862 Extension 242 or (800) 475-8600.

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PETS OF THE WEEK Space and Time Are Running Out!These animals – and the shelter – need your help.

Adopt a pet today! 620-276-1152

Listen to Bobby Wild show on Q97 FM each Thursday morning at 8:40am for the Pet of the Week

Check out the FCHS website at finneycohs.org

Many other animals are available for adoption at theAnimal Shelter at 124 Fleming • Mon.-Sat. 12-6pm

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Area public meetings

These meetings are open to the public under Kansas law. Portions of the meet-ings may be closed to the public, but only under specific exemp-tions cited in Kansas law.

MONDAY, OCT. 22GARDEN CITY

— USD 457 Board of Education: 6 p.m. in the board meeting room of the Educational Support Center, 1205 Fleming St.

WEDNESDAY, OCT. 24 HOLCOMB — Holcomb City Council: 7 p.m. in the council meeting room at

Holcomb City Hall, 200 N. Lynch St.

ULYSSES — Ulysses City Council: 5 p.m. in the council meeting room at Ulysses City Hall, 115 W. Grant Ave.

GARDEN CITY — Finney County Economic Development Corp.: 7:30 a.m. at the city com-mission chamber on the second floor of the City Administrative Center, 301 N. Eighth St.

GARDEN CITY — Garden City Community College Board of Trustees: 7 p.m. in the Endowment Room of the Beth Tedrow Student Center on the GCCC campus, 801 Campus Drive.

What’s upListing of southwest Kansas events published each Saturday. Calendar listings are published free of charge. Submit informa-tion by 5 p.m. Wednesday to: Garden City Telegram, 310 N. Seventh St., Garden City, KS 67846, or call 276-6862, ext. 242, or toll-free at (800) 475-8600. Include a brief description of the event, a contact person and a phone number.

A plot of grapevines are fenced off on a portion of land at Darrell Strawn’s home south of Cimarron.

Continued from Page B1

Grapes: Farmer finds new crop for unproductive land

GCTe

legra

mPho

tos.co

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Get Prints of Photos from The Telegram.

Page 16: Garden City Telegram October 20, 2012

B8 SATURDAY, October 20, 2012 The GARDen CiTY TeleGRAm

Our 2012

Ewe Specialties, LLC & Perfect Occasions

EEW

Garden City’s Only 2012 Bridal Show FeaturedOVER $1,000 IN PRIZES INCLUDING OUR

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much more enticed the attending crowds!

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We are proud to announce the date of our2nd Annual Bridal Show!

FEBRUARY, 24, 2013Sunday,

More information coming soon!

Interested in becoming a vendor?Contact Robin Phelan - email [email protected] or call

620-276-6862, ext. 225.

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B4 Entertainment

Page 17: Garden City Telegram October 20, 2012

HOMESHOMES

Jump to Real EstateOpen Houses C3

Classifieds begin on page C3

THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM C1

SMALL UPGRADES LEAD TO DREAM KITCHEN

SATURDAY, October 20, 2012

Christina BeckerBroker/Owner271-4079

Cheryl WattRealtor

640-2485

Viviana LongoriaRealtor/Office Manager

Agente Biligue290-6263

Stephanie BognerAssoc. Broker/Owner

272-3209

Robin HawkinsRealtor

271-3809

203 Grandview Circle $390,000

1940 Kensington$425,000

1500 Grandview Dr. East$369,000

2506 Carriage Lane $173,900

507 W. Zuni Ave., Satanta $249,900

2109 Grandview Drive$365,000

911 N. 5th Street $156,900

7690 Lindsay Cir., Holcomb$136,000

618 N. 10th Street$135,000

2914 El Dorado$74,500

505 S. Main, Cimarron$53,000

Moving Buyers Ahead www.mba-realestate.com

620-275-74401805 E. Mary

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Sunday, October 21, 2012GARDEN CITY

1. 2602 Schulman .................1:00-2:00 ..........Patty Tarpley2. 205 E. Pawnee, Satanta ....1:00-2:00 ........... Nicole Lucas

3. 1940 Kensington, Southwind. .1:30-2:30 .......Robin Hawkins4. 1500 Grandview Dr. East, Southwind .1:30-3:00 .... Christina Becker5. 618 N. 10th St ....................2:00-3:00 ... Viviana Longoria

6. 2405 Yosemite...................2:00-3:00 .............Jeff Dunlap

7. 2042 Kensington, Southwind...1:00-2:30 ....Carmen Guzman8. 2922 Belmont....................1:30-2:30 ......... Vicki Downey9. 2010 Chmelka Rd...............2:00-3:00 .............Missy Baier

10. 1809 Van Dittie. ..............2:00-3:00 ...... Kathie Maestas

2

SOUTHWIND 6

10

873

4

9 To Chmelka Rd.

1

5

Renovating a kitchen is the most disruptive and costly home project there is, other than major add-ons. And yet, for a busy family, this is the space where everyone meets and eats, at all hours of the day and night. You may have a dream kitch-en in mind; however, how and when to accomplish the turnover is sim-ply too daunting a task. If you are frustrated by working in a poorly planned, out-of-date kitchen, there are ways to improve it one or two changes at a time. Your reno budget will be divided up over a few years rather than months, and time out of the kitchen while repairs are taking place will not be as onerous. Begin with a list of fix-ups placed in order of urgency. If the fridge or stove doesn’t work, appli-ances will be at the top; if the floor is grungy or the countertops are stained, chipped or damaged, then those will be the first to go. This list will become your long-range plan. Here’s one way to order a long-term reno that offers tangible improve-ments you will enjoy every step of the way. Lighting is usually the last item we think about, but it’s so important and beneficial that it’s worth moving to the top of the list. New wiring will be required; install ceiling pot lights with a dimmer for overall brightness, task lights under the counter and a stylish pen-dant light or two if you have a table or island. This is a good time to investigate rope lighting or energy-saving LED lighting, now available in undercounter strips. A fresh coat of paint on the ceiling and walls is a powerful deco-rating tool. Be sure to de-grease sur-faces before you paint. Add to this a new backsplash, and the character of the kitchen will soar. The back-splash design can be as simple and as modern as subway tiles laid end to end horizontally or vertically, or set at angles to produce a diamond pattern. Highlight plain white tiles by inserting a few glass or metallic tiles as trim or in a set pattern. Take your time and investigate all the tile options. You can produce your very own work of art for this prominent area. When it’s time for the new countertop, it makes sense to re-place the kitchen sink and faucets as well, as the new dimensions and hole locations are required for cut-ting and fitting the counter. Solid-surface materials are a good coun-tertop choice. The cost is midrange, between laminates and stone. Colors and patterns permeate the thickness of the counter, they are non-porous, and seams are bonded to eliminate cracks. Choose from sink styles that sit flush or under the counter and a modern do-it-all kitchen faucet. Good-quality cabinetry can be refaced and redecorated with new handles to achieve a fresh, up-to-date look. If old cabinets are in poor repair, then replace the lot. There’s a good range of cabinets in different price points. The door styles and finishes provide a wide scope of de-sign possibilities. The inviting fam-ily kitchen shown here, designed by Kitchen Craft, features all the ele-ments I’ve discussed and could have been pulled together over time as budget and circumstances dictated. Well-made, high-quality features never go out of style. ** * Debbie Travis’ House to Home column is produced by Debbie Trav-is and Barbara Dingle. Please email your questions to [email protected]. You can follow Debbie on Twitter at www.twitter.com/debbie_travis, and visit Deb-bie’s new website, www.debbietra-vis.com. (c)2012 Debbie Travis

BY DEBBIE TRAVIS

FROM HOUSE

HOMETo

Page 18: Garden City Telegram October 20, 2012

C2 SATURDAY, October 20, 2012 The GARDen CiTY TeleGRAm

By ELLEN GIBSONFor The Associated Press

Car seat, diapers, chang-ing table, crib, stroller, blan-kets, onesies: A new baby is a bundle of joy that also costs a bundle of cash.

Nursery decor is one area where new parents can save some money by creat-ing their own design ele-ments.

Opting for DIY doesn’t mean missing out on the fun of browsing stores and cata-logs: Often a splurge item — such as a $400 Jonathan Adler giraffe lamp — can serve as inspiration for a cheaper, handmade version, says Pam Ginocchio, co-founder of baby design site Project Nursery.

Handmade decorations also lend the baby’s room a unique personality, she says, and give parents a project to work on together before baby arrives.

Here, Ginocchio, her business partner, Melisa Fluhr, and a few other DIY design bloggers share their favorite projects for baby’s room. Whether you’re creat-ing a cozy nest at home or seeking ideas for a shower gift, these crafts can add warmth and style to a little one’s space.

Decoupage tree(from Pam Ginocchio

and Melisa Fluhr, ProjectNursery.com)

Wall trees have become a popular trend in nursery dicor; try this project in lieu of a pricey vinyl decal.

Materials:scrapbook paper (any

size), about 20 sheets for a 6-foot tree

Mod Podge matte finish scissors2-inch-wide paintbrush

or foam craft brushpaper bowl or plateladder or step stoolStep 1: Take fabric

swatches from your baby’s bedding to a crafts or paper store, and grab a mix of printed, solid and glittered papers in the same color family.

Step 2: Start building the tree at the part of the trunk where the limbs begin to branch off. Cut or tear the paper (imperfect edges give a vintage feel), making each branch the thickness and length you want. Apply the

Mod Podge to the back of each piece with the paint-brush or craft brush, and press the scrap against the wall. With this glue, the piece will be moveable at first if you don’t like your initial placement.

Step 3: Let it grow! As the limbs reach out and up, tear the paper thinner, just like on a real tree. Create the tree trunk with various-size scraps of paper using a col-lage technique. For a cute addition, hang the baby’s name off a low branch that reaches out across the crib.

Step 4: Stack some of the leftover paper and cut out simple leaves. Cluster them along the branches. You can adorn the tree with birds, butterflies or even rhine-stones.

http://projectnursery.com/2012/06/diy-how-to-make-a-decoupage-tree/

No-sew bunting flags

(From Ginocchio and Fluhr, ProjectNursery.com)

Materials:printed papers or fabricsrulercolorful ribbon or pom-

pom fabric trimhot glue gunscissorsStep 1: At a crafts or

scrapbooking store, pick out a variety of printed papers

or fabric remnants. Step 2: Using a ruler,

draw an 8-inch line on the back of a piece of paper or fabric. This will be the dis-tance from the point of your triangle to the base. Turn the ruler perpendicular to one end of the line and make a “T” by drawing a line 6 inches long. Use the ruler to connect the top edges of the “T” to the point, making a triangle. Cut out this first pennant and use it as a tem-plate for the rest.

Step 3: Line up your dif-ferent-patterned flags in the order you want. Lay them side by side so they are pointing down and almost touching. Apply hot glue in a line across the top edge of each triangle and affix the ribbon or trim overtop. (Optional: Add iron-on let-ters to the flags to spell out baby’s name.) Once the glue dries, hang the bunting flags like a banner or in a zigzag pattern.

http://projectnursery.com/2012/05/diy-no-sew-bunting-flags/

Clean, colorful dresser drawers

(From Sherry and John Petersik, YoungHouseLove.com)

You can get a similar effect from contact paper, which comes in a wide vari-

ety of colors and patterns. But you can make your own if you’re looking for a dif-ferent look.

Materials:Foam craft brushesMod Podge matte finishSix sheets of patterned,

heavy-duty wrapping paper (or swatches of colorful wallpaper or fabric)

Step 1: Wipe the insides of the drawers with a moist rag. If they’re musty, wipe them with mineral spirits or Murphy’s Oil Soap and let them air dry in the sun.

Step 2: After selecting six sheets of wrapping paper (or however many drawers

you have), cut the sheets down to the size of the drawers. If all the drawers are the same size, use the first rectangle as a template.

Step 3: Apply a thin, even coat of Mod Podge adhe-sive to the bottom of the first drawer. Mod Podge is 100 percent water-based, so it won’t stink up baby’s clothes.

Step 4: Glue the cut-to-size paper rectangle to the bottom of the drawer by pressing it along the center and out towards the cor-ners to eliminate bubbles or wrinkling. Repeat steps 3 and 4 for all drawers.

Step 5: Give the draw-ers four hours to dry, then apply a thin top coat of Mod Podge over the paper to pro-tect against wear and tear. Let everything dry over-night and you’re left with fresh, durably lined draw-ers that provide a little dose of happy every time they’re opened.

h t t p : / / w w w. yo u n g -houselove.com/2010/03/nursery-progress-lining-our-dresser-drawers/

Pretty as a picture frame mobile

(From McBride, ApartmentTherapy.com)

Materials:8 mini frames (available

at craft stores; check the bridal section)

one larger frame about 3 yards of ribbon,

divided into four uneven sections

decorative paper

photos or art reduced to fit small frames

4 screw eyesfishing line or thin wireglue stickpaintpolyurethaneStep 1: Paint the frames

to make them colorful. Some may need a light sanding first. Add a coat of polyure-thane after the paint is dry.

Step 2: If any of your frames has a support arm on the back to prop it up, pull it off. You want the back of the mini frame to be completely smooth.

Step 3: Put your photos or artwork in the small frames. (You could use abstract art, photos of vintage trucks or pictures of baby’s cousins, for instance.)

Step 4: To connect two small frames vertically, run the ribbon behind the art-work but inside the frame back. Cut a piece of decora-tive paper the same size as each frame back and, with a glue stick, paste it on.

Step 5: Remove the glass and backing from the large frame. Hang the four pairs of small frames from the large frame by twisting four screw eyes into the back of the large frame and then tying a ribbon to each screw eye.

Step 6: Tie a length of fishing line or thin wire to each screw eye, then tie all four pieces together so the mobile hangs evenly. Knot the end for attaching to a ceiling hook.

http://www.apartment-therapy.com/pretty-as-a-pic-ture-frame-mobi-144393

B2B2B2B2B2B2B2B2B2B2B2B2B2C1C2C2C2C2C2NewsC2C2C1C2News

HOMESMortgage Rates

LENDER NOTE INTEREST TYPE RATE %

American State Bank620-271-0123Loans Serviced Locally Under Some ProgramsFHA/VA, First Time Home Buyers ProgramsFinancing Based on 90% of $100,000 Loans

Bank of the West620-276-7000With no points or origination fees (for both)Financing Based on 95% of $100,000 Loans

First National Bank of Holcomb620-277-0077No Origination or Application Fees RequiredFinancing Based on 90% of $100,000 Loans

Garden City State Bank620-271-9700First Time Home Buyer Programs AvailableConventional 97% FHA Bond 97%Financing Based on 100% of $100,000 Loans

Golden Plains Credit Union620-276-8175No Origination or Application FeesFirst Time Home Buyer & USDA Guaranteed Rural Housing LoanPrograms. Loans Serviced LocallyFinancing Based on 95% of $100,000 Loans

Landmark National Bank620-275-2166Fixed ARMSFHA/VA First Time Home Buyer Programs AvailableLoans Services Locally Under ProgramNew Improved Rates! Rates Subject to ChangeFinancing Based on 90% of $100,000 Loans

First National Bank of Garden City620-276-6971Special financing programs available.Some loans serviced locally.Conv/FHA/VA & First time Home Buyer Programs AvailableFixed/Adjustable rates available. Rates subject to change.Financing Based on 80% of $125,000 Sales Price

State Farm Bank877-734-2265Affordable Housing Programs AvailableFinancing Based on 90% of $100,000 Loans

Wells Fargo Home Mortgage620-408-5287Evening and Weekend Appointments AvailableNo fee mortgage - Financing Based on 80% of $100,000 Loans

Western State Bank620-275-2292Conventional loans serviced locally FHA/VA/RDFinancing Based on 100% of $100,000 Loans

NANA

2.8753.6252.000

2.7503.3752.9273.479

2.503.25

2.6253.3752.7223.474

2.6253.375

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NANA

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15 yr. fixed30 yr. fixed

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5/1 ARM

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15 yr. fixed APR30 yr. fixed APR

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15 yr. fixed APR30 yr. fixed APR

15 yr. fixed30 yr. fixed

15 yr. fixed30 yr. fixed

15 yr. fixed APR30 yr. fixed APR

30 yr. FHA30 yr. FHA APR

15 yr. fixed30 yr. fixed

15 yr. fixed30 yr. fixed

15 yr. fixed30 yr. fixed

Rates effective as of 10-18-12 • All rates subject to change 218617

1901 E. MaryGarden City, KS 67846

(620) 271-0123

OSJ: 725 McKinley St., Great Bend KS 67530 (620) 793-4279

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271-0478 • (cell) 640-1605Troy Hawker, Owner Operator

Free EstimatesLicensed & Insured

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Call Eugene Saloga(c)

Email: [email protected] Dig-Safe 1-800-344-7233

Landscape with TreesTree Spade, Inc.

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Licensed & Insured

Specialized Ser-

RE-FACING

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ParamountCarpentryCarpentry

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ERIC RAY’SHANDYMAN SERVICE

Interior & ExteriorRepairs

Call (620) 805-2893 or(620) 640-9125

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HOUSECLEANING OROffice Cleaning.Serv-ices Available. Call(620) 260-0294

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modeling, Windows,doors & concrete.

Free estimates. Call Tim at

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Commercial • Residential Call Thomas @(620) 640-0734

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At your service!

The Garden City Telegram

Call today to add your services to the

directory! (620) 276-6862 ext. 501

Call the Classifi ed Department to Advertise.620-276-6862 ext. 501

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DIY nursery chic: 4 drool-worthy projects

Associated Press

This undated publicity photo provided by Apartment Therapy shows a Do-It-Yourself Picture Frame Mobile from ApartmentTherapy.com.

By JENNIFER FORKERAssociated Press

Think you know the latest tricks for carving a creepy pumpkin? The pros continue to push the bar-riers.

A handful of people become professional pumpkin carvers each fall, specializing in fantasti-cal designs. Among them are Alex Wer, self-styled “Pumpkin Geek,” who lives near Sacramento, Calif.; Scott Cummins, a Perryton, Texas, middle-school art teacher; and Marc Evan and Chris Soria, the Maniac Pumpkin Carvers of New York City.

Wer does his carving between insurance sales and an evening package-delivery route. He works with the fake, foam pump-kins sold at craft stores, so his intricate work has longevity. Evan and Soria drop their jobs as illustra-tors for a few months to carve pumpkins for festi-vals, parties and individu-al clients. The long hours leave the two childhood friends battling sore wrists and aching backs by late November.

“It’s a labor of love,” says Evan, who also carves pumpkins on the Food Network’s “Halloween Wars” this season. “Pumpkin carving is defi-nitely not the easiest way to make money. It’s not a ‘get rich quick’ scheme.”

For inspiration, scroll through these carvers’ websites — The Pumpkin Geek, Pumpkin Gutter, Maniac Pumpkin Carvers. Or check out the creepy, three-dimensional por-traits at Villafane Studios.

Pumpkin tips from the pros

Page 19: Garden City Telegram October 20, 2012

CLASSIFIEDSC3 THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM SATURDAY, October 20, 2012

(Published in the Garden City Telegram Satuday, Oc-tober 20, 2012

ORDINANCE NO. 2570-2012AN ORDINANCE APPROVING THE REZONING OFLAND FROM “C-2” GENERAL COMMERCIAL DIS-TRICT TO “R-2” SINGLE FAMILY RESIDENTIALDISTRICT; AMENDING THE COMPREHENSIVEPLAN OF THE CITY, AND THE DISTRICT ZONINGMAP OF THE CITY; AND REPEALING THE CUR-RENT COMPREHENSIVE PLAN, AND DISTRICTZONING MAP; ALL TO THE CODE OF ORDI-NANCES OF THE CITY OF GARDEN CITY, KAN-SAS.

BE IT ORDAINED by the Governing Body of theCity of Garden City, Kansas:

SECTION 1. The Zoning Ordinance of the City ofGarden City, Kansas, adopted by Ordinance No.2528-2011 with all amendments thereto, is herebyamended and shall read as follows:

The boundary of the “R-2” Single Family Residen-tial District is hereby amended to include the follow-ing described real property:

A Tract of land in Lots One (1) and Two (2) ofPlaza East Replat of the South 494 feet of Block One(1), Schreiber Addition, Garden City, Kansas, de-scribed as follows:

Commencing at the Southeast Corner of saidLots One (1), thence North along the East line of saidlots One (1) and Two (2), a distance of 235 feet,thence West along a line parallel with the South lineof said block a distance of 163.82 feet, more or less,to a point which is 130 feet East of the West line ofsaid Lot Two (2), thence South along a line parallelwith the East line of said Lot Two (2) a distance of 35feet, thence East along a line parallel with the Southlie of said block a distance of Fifty (50) feet, thenceSouth along a line parallel with the Ease line of saidLots One (1) and Two (2), a distance of 200 feet tothe South line of said block and thence East alongthe South line of said block a distance of One Hun-dred Fourteen (114) feet to the place of beginning.

AndA tract of land in Lots One (1) and Two (2) in

Plaza East Replat of the South 494 feet of Block (1),Schreiber Addition, Garden City, Finney County,Kansas, described as follows:Beginning at the Southeast corner of said Lot 1,thence West along the South line of said Lot 1 a dis-tance of 114 feet for the place of beginning; thenceNorth along a line parallel with the East line of saidLots 1 and 2, a distance of 200 feet; thence Westparallel to the North line of said Lot 1 a distance of 50feet; thence South along a line parallel to the Westline of Lots 1 and 2 a distance of 200 feet; thenceEast on the South line of Lot 1 a distance of 50 feetto the place of beginning.

Except:A tract of land in Lots One (1) and Two (2) in

Plaza East Replat of the South 494 feet of Block One(1), Schreiber Addition to Garden City, FinneyCounty, Kansas, described as follows:Commencing at the Southeast Corner of Lot 1;thence North along the East line of Lot 1 a distanceof 155 feet to the point of beginning; thence North adistance of 80 feet, thence West a distance of 163.82feet, more or less, along a line parallel to the Southline of said block; thence South a distance of 80 feetalong a line parallel with the East line of said Lot 1;thence East 163.82 feet, to the point of beginning.

SECTION 2. The “Future Land Use Map” of theCity of Garden City, Kansas, adopted by OrdinanceNo. 2469-2010 with all amendments thereto, ishereby amended as follows:

The boundary of the Single Family Residential Po-tential overlay is hereby amended to include the fol-lowing described real property:

A Tract of land in Lots One (1) and Two (2) ofPlaza East Replat of the South 494 feet of Block One(1), Schreiber Addition, Garden City, Kansas, de-scribed as follows:

Commencing at the Southeast Corner of saidLots One (1), thence North along the East line of saidlots One (1) and Two (2), a distance of 235 feet,thence West along a line parallel with the South lineof said block a distance of 163.82 feet, more or less,to a point which is 130 feet East of the West line ofsaid Lot Two (2), thence South along a line parallelwith the East line of said Lot Two (2) a distance of 35feet, thence East along a line parallel with the Southlie of said block a distance of Fifty (50) feet, thenceSouth along a line parallel with the Ease line of saidLots One (1) and Two (2), a distance of 200 feet tothe South line of said block and thence East alongthe South line of said block a distance of One Hun-dred Fourteen (114) feet to the place of beginning.

AndA tract of land in Lots One (1) and Two (2) in

Plaza East Replat of the South 494 feet of Block (1),Schreiber Addition, Garden City, Finney County,Kansas, described as follows:Beginning at the Southeast corner of said Lot 1,thence West along the South line of said Lot 1 a dis-tance of 114 feet for the place of beginning; thenceNorth along a line parallel with the East line of saidLots 1 and 2, a distance of 200 feet; thence Westparallel to the North line of said Lot 1 a distance of 50feet; thence South along a line parallel to the Westline of Lots 1 and 2 a distance of 200 feet; thenceEast on the South line of Lot 1 a distance of 50 feetto the place of beginning.

Except:A tract of land in Lots One (1) and Two (2) in

Plaza East Replat of the South 494 feet of Block One(1), Schreiber Addition to Garden City, FinneyCounty, Kansas, described as follows:Commencing at the Southeast Corner of Lot 1;thence North along the East line of Lot 1 a distanceof 155 feet to the point of beginning; thence North adistance of 80 feet, thence West a distance of 163.82feet, more or less, along a line parallel to the Southline of said block; thence South a distance of 80 feetalong a line parallel with the East line of said Lot 1;thence East 163.82 feet, to the point of beginning.

SECTION 3. The “Future Land Use Map”adopted by Ordinance No. 2469-2010, as previouslyexisting and amended, be and the same is herebyamended, to be replaced and continue hereafter asamended in this ordinance.

SECTION 4. The District Zoning Map referred toin the Zoning Regulations Article 3, Section 3, of theGarden City, Kansas, adopted by Ordinance No.2528-2011, as previously existing and amended, beand the same is hereby amended, to be consistentwith the amendments set forth herein.

SECTION 5. The current Zoning Ordinance andDistrict Zoning Map of the City of Garden City, Kan-sas, as previously existing and amended, be and thesame hereby are repealed, to be replaced as speci-fied in this ordinance.

SECTION 6. That this ordinance shall be in fullforce and effect from and after its publication in theGarden City Telegram, the official city newspaper.

APPROVED AND PASSED by the GoverningBody of the City of Garden City, Kansas, this 16thday of October, 2012.

DAVID D. CRASE, MayorCelyn N. Hurtado, City Clerk

APPROVED AS TO FORM:RANDALL D. GRISELL, City Counselor

218835

(Published in the Garden City Telegram Saturday,October 20, 2012)

RESOLUTION NO. 2506-2012

A RESOLUTION MAKING CERTAIN FINDINGSAND DETERMINATIONS AS TO THE NEED FORHOUSING WITHIN THE CITY OF GARDEN CITY,KANSAS AND SETTING FORTH THE LEGAL DE-SCRIPTION OF REAL PROPERTY PROPOSED TOBE DESIGNATED AS A RURAL HOUSING INCEN-TIVE DISTRICTS WITHIN THE CITY.

WHEREAS, K.S.A. 12-5241 et seq. (the “Act”)authorizes any city incorporated in accordance withthe laws of the State of Kansas (the “State”) with apopulation of less than 40,000 located in a countywith a population of less than 60,000, to designaterural housing incentive districts within such city; and

WHEREAS, prior to such designation the govern-ing body of such city shall conduct a housing needsanalysis to determine what, if any, housing needs ex-ist within its community; and

WHEREAS, after conducting such analysis, thegoverning body of such city may adopt a resolutionmaking certain findings regarding the establishmentof a rural housing incentive district and providing thelegal description of property to be contained therein;and

WHEREAS, after publishing such resolution, thegoverning body of such city shall send a copy thereofto the Secretary of Commerce of the State (the “Sec-retary”) requesting that the Secretary agree with thefinding contained in such resolution; and

WHEREAS, if the Secretary agrees with suchfindings, such city may proceed with the establish-ment of a rural housing incentive district within suchcity and adopt a plan for the development or redevel-opment of housing and public facilities in the pro-posed district; and

WHEREAS, the City of Garden City , Kansas (the “City”) has an estimated population of 30,685, islocated in Finney County, Kansas which has a popu-lation of 43,008 and therefore constitutes a city assaid term is defined in this act; and

WHEREAS, the Governing Body of the City hasperformed a Community Housing Assessment TeamReport dated December 15, 2008 (CHAT), a copy ofwhich is on file in the office of the City Clerk; and

WHEREAS, based on the CHAT, the GoverningBody of the City proposes to commence proceedingsnecessary to create a Rural Housing Incentive Dis-trict, in accordance with the provisions of the Act.

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED by the Govern-ing Body of the City of Garden City, Kansas, as fol-lows:

Section 1. The Governing Body has previouslyadopted and incorporated reference as part of thisResolution the CHAT, a copy of which is on file in theoffice of the City Clerk, and based on a review of saidCHAT makes the following findings and determina-tions.

Section 2. The Governing Body hereby findsand determines that there is a shortage of qualityhousing of various price ranges in the City despitethe best efforts of public and private housing devel-opers.

Section 3. The Governing Body hereby finds anddetermines that the shortage of quality housing canbe expected to persist and that additional financial in-centives are necessary in order to encourage the pri-vate sector to construct or renovate housing in theCity.

Section 4. The Governing Body hereby findsand determines that the shortage of quality housingis a substantial deterrent to future economic growthand development in the City.

Section 5. The Governing Body hereby finds anddetermines that the future economic wellbeing of theCity depends on the Governing Body providing addi-tional incentives for the construction or renovation ofquality housing in the City.

Section 6. Based on the findings and determina-tions contained in Sections 2 through 5 of this Reso-lution, the Governing Body proposes to establish Ru-ral Housing Incentive Districts pursuant to the Act,within boundaries of the real estate legally describedand depicted in maps in Exhibits “A-1”, “A-2”, “B-1”,“B-2”, “C-1”, “C-2”,”D-1”, “D-2”, “E-1”, “E-2”, “F-1”,“F-2”, “G-1”, and “G-2” attached hereto.

Section 7. This Resolution shall take effect afterits adoption and publication once in the Garden CityTelegram, the official City newspaper.

APPROVED AND PASSED by the GoverningBody of the City of Garden City, Kansas, this 16thday of October, 2012.

DAVID D. CRASE, MayorCELYN N. HURTADO, City Clerk

APPROVED AS TO FORM:RANDALL D. GRISELL, City Counselor

218833

(Published in the Garden City Telegram Satuday, Oc-tober 20, 2012)

ORDINANCE NO.2569-2012AN ORDINANCE APPROVING THE REZONING

OF LAND FROM “R-R” RURAL RESIDENTIAL DIS-TRICT TO “R-1” SINGLE FAMILY RESIDENTIALDISTRICT; AMENDING THE ZONING ORDINANCE,THE COMPREHENSIVE PLAN OF THE CITY, ANDTHE DISTRICT ZONING MAP OF THE CITY; ANDREPEALING THE CURRENT ZONING ORDI-NANCE, COMPREHENSIVE PLAN, AND DISTRICTZONING MAP; ALL TO THE CODE OF ORDI-NANCES OF THE CITY OF GARDEN CITY, KAN-SAS.

BE IT ORDAINED by the Governing Body of theCity of Garden City, Kansas:

SECTION 1. The Zoning Ordinance of the City ofGarden City, Kansas, adopted by Ordinance No.2528-2011 with all amendments thereto, is herebyamended and shall read as follows:

The boundary of the “R-1” Single Family Residen-tial District is hereby amended to include the follow-ing described real property:

Phase 1, Block 1, Lot 1 of the HamptonsAddition to Finney County, KS.

SECTION 2. The “Future Land Use Map” of theCity of Garden City, Kansas, adopted by OrdinanceNo. 2469-2010 with all amendments thereto, ishereby amended as follows:

The boundary of the Single Family Residential Po-tential overlay is hereby amended to include the fol-lowing described real property:

Phase 1, Block 1, Lot 1 of the HamptonsAddition to Finney County, KS.

SECTION 3. The “Future Land Use Map”adopted by Ordinance No. 2469-2010, as previouslyexisting and amended, be and the same is herebyamended, to be replaced and continue hereafter asamended in this ordinance.

SECTION 4. The District Zoning Map referred toin the Zoning Regulations Article 3, Section 3, of theGarden City, Kansas, adopted by Ordinance No.2528-2011, as previously existing and amended, beand the same is hereby amended, to be consistentwith the amendments set forth herein.

SECTION 5. The current Zoning Ordinance andDistrict Zoning Map of the City of Garden City, Kan-sas, as previously existing and amended, be and thesame hereby are repealed, to be replaced as speci-fied in this ordinance.

SECTION 6. That this ordinance shall be in fullforce and effect from and after its publication in theGarden City Telegram, the official city newspaper.

APPROVED AND PASSED by the GoverningBody of the City of Garden City, Kansas, this 16thday of October, 2012.

David D. Crase, MayorCelyn N. Hurtado, City Clerk

APPROVED AS TO FORM:RANDALL D. GRISELL, City Counselor

218834

(Published in The Garden City Telegram on October20, 27 and November 3, 2012)

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF FINNEY COUNTY,

KANSAS

In the Matter of the Estate ofKAROLYN J. KELLS, Deceased

Case No. 11 PR 23(Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 59)

NOTICE OF HEARING

THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS CON-CERNED:

You are notified a Petition for Final Settle-ment has been filed in this Court by Kristi R. Cole, dulyappointed, qualified and acting executor of the Estateof Karolyn J. Kells, deceased, requesting that Petition-er!s acts be approved; account be settled and allowed;the heirs be determined; the will be construed and theestate be assigned to the persons entitled thereto; thecourt find the allowances requested for executor!s andattorneys' fees and expenses are reasonable andshould be allowed; the administration of the estate beclosed; upon the filing of receipts the petitioner be fi-nally discharged as the executor of the estate of Karo-lyn J. Kells, deceased, and the petitioner be releasedfrom further liability.

You are required to file your written de-fenses thereto on or before the 15th day of November,2012, at 8:30 a.m. in room 304 in the District Court, inGarden City, Finney County, Kansas, at which time andplace the cause will be heard. Should you fail therein,judgment and decree will be entered in due courseupon the petition.

Kristi R. Cole, Executor

Michael K. Ramsey, SC#10764HOPE, MILLS, BOLIN, COLLINS & RAMSEY607 N. Seventh Street, P.O. Box 439Garden City, Kansas 67846(620) 276-3203Attorneys for Executor 218830

(PUBLISHED IN the Garden City Telegram on Satur-day, October 13 & 20, 2012)

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF FINNEY COUNTY,

KANSASIn the Interest / Matter ofCase No. 2012-JC-000109-JSManuel Vazquez

NOTICE OF HEARING

TO: Manuel Vazquez, father of the above named childand all other persons who are or may be concerned:

A Petition has been filed in this Court re-questing that the Court find the above named child tobe a Child In Need of Care.

You are required to appear before thisCourt for a First Appearance, Adjudication, and Dispo-sition at 03:00 PM on the 9th day of November, 2012,at the Finney County Courthouse, Hutchison Court-room, Garden City, Kansas, or prior to that time fileyour written response to the pleading with the Clerk ofthis Court. If, after a child has been adjudged to be achild in need of care and the Court finds a parent orparents to be unfit, the Court may make an order per-manently terminating the parental rights.

Douglas M Crotty, an attorney, has been ap-pointed as Guardian Ad Litem for the Child/Children.Each parent or other legal custodian of the Child/Chil-dren has the right to appear and be heard personallyeither with or without an attorney. The Court will ap-point an attorney for a parent who is financially unableto hire one.

Christine BlakeClerk of the District Court

218703

(Published in The Garden City Telegram Saturday, Oc-tober 20, 27 and November 3, 2012)

IN THE DISTRICTCOURT OF FINNEY COUNTY, KANSAS

In the Matter of the Estate ofWILLIAM W. GERE, Deceased

Case No. 11 PR 9NOTICE OF HEARING

THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS CON-CERNED:

You are notified a Petition for Final Settlement hasbeen filed in this Court by Ora Leigh Swords and HiWayne Gere, duly appointed, qualified and acting ex-ecutors of the Estate of William W. Gere, deceased, re-questing that Petitioners! acts be approved; account besettled and allowed; the heirs be determined; the willbe construed and the estate be assigned to the per-sons entitled thereto; the court find the allowances re-quested for executor!s and attorneys' fees and ex-penses are reasonable and should be allowed; the ad-ministration of the estate be closed; upon the filing ofreceipts the petitioner be finally discharged as the ex-ecutor of the estate of William W. Gere, deceased, andthe petitioners be released from further liability. Youare required to file your written defenses thereto on orbefore the 15th day of November, 2012, at 8:30 a.m. inRoom 304 in the District Court, in Garden City, FinneyCounty, Kansas, at which time and place the cause willbe heard. Should you fail therein, judgment and de-cree will be entered in due course upon the petition.

Ora Leigh Swords andHi Wayne Gere, Executors

HOPE, MILLS, BOLIN, COLLINS & RAMSEYMichael K. Ramsey607 N. Seventh Street, P.O. Box 439Garden City, Kansas 67846(620) 276-3203Attorneys for Executors

218756

Coldwell BankerThe Real Estate Shoppe, Inc.www.gccoldwellbanker.com

OPEN HOUSESSunday, October 21, 2012

se habla espanol

218806

PRICE REDUCED!!! 4 bed/3 bath home located in great family community! windows, paint, carpet to name a few! Walk-out basement,

with lift & air compressor.

All with on the

main level. A woodburning for your cold days & a for your warm days. This property is being sold as is.

Each office is independently owned and operated.

SUNDAY, October 21, 2012

1500 Grandview Dr. E. • 1:30 - 3:00$369,000 - Christina Becker, 271-4079

1940 Kensington • 1:30 - 2:30$425,000 - Robin Hawkins, 271-3809

MBA REAL ESTATE

OPEN HOUSES

275-7440 218814

We’re open 24/7 atwww.mba-realestate.com

– Motivated Seller –

618 N 10th Street • 2:00 - 3:00$135,000 - Viviana Longoria, 290-6263

2042 Kensignton • 1:00 - 2:30Carmen Guzman 620-290-8669

HOME TOWNREAL ESTATE, P.A.

271-9500www.hometownrealestategc.com

Se Habla Español

SUNDAY, October 21, 2012

2010 Chmelka • 2:00 - 3:00Missy Baier 620-287-5000

218823

2922 Belmont • 1:30 - 2:30Vicki Downey 620-521-0160

OPEN HOUSESUNDAY, October 21, 2012

423 N. Main, Garden City • 276-3525www.reganandco.com

218822

1809 Van Dittie • 2:00-3:00 p.m.

$492,000 ~ QUALITY CUSTOM BUILT 2 STORY HOME IN EXECUTIVE CUL-DE-SAC! Open floor plan & spacious rooms. Granite, hardwoods, custom wall treatments, marble, large sun room, private yard, 4 car attached garage & so very much more.Kathie Maestas (620) 271-4777

501 N. Main. • Garden City, KS

Linda Adams, Broker 620-521-0566 Jeff Dunlap, Agent 620-290-1559

620-275-8955

Needed: Real Estate Sales Associates, Bi-lingual preferred

OPEN SUNDAY

2405 Yosemite • 2:00 - 3:00

$149,000

218816

See More Real Estate Listings C10

End your search today!Shop the classifieds

Garden City Telegram

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Difficulty Level 10/19 Classified: A Bargain Hunters Paradise

Page 20: Garden City Telegram October 20, 2012

An Equal Opportunity Employer AA/VPE

To apply for the listed position, paper applications can be obtained at County facilities or for your convenience, you can apply online at [email protected]. Resumes are also accepted at 311 N. 9th St, Human Resource Office (2nd Floor)Finney County offers a competitive wage and benefits. Applications will be accepted until positions are filled. For more information about Finney County visit www.finneycounty.org

Human Resources Post Office Box M • 311 North Ninth Street

Garden City, KS 67846(620) 272-3542

[email protected]

CURRENT JOB OPENINGS

218798

Equipment Operator Trainee - Public WorksThe position requires the operation of trucks and various types of light to medium duty construction equipment and is under the supervision of the Road Superintendent, Assistant Road Superintendent, or EO Specialist as directed by the Road Superintendent. High School diploma or equivalent required. Must have a valid Kansas driver’s license.

Garden City Public Schools is accepting applications for the following positions for the 2012-2013 school year

Substitute Bus Drivers – work on an as needed basis. Drivers must be able to get a

Class B CDL and have a clean driving recordSubstitute Teachers – work on an as needed basis at all levels must have

60 semester hours of college to be eligibleApplications will only be accepted on-line

at www.gckschools.com.Any questions please contact the

Personnel Office at 620-805-7020.USD# 457 is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

218265

Substitute Teachers / Bus DriversNew Accounts RepresentativeWestern State Bank is seeking a motivated, self-starter as a New Accounts Representative in our

Scott City Banking Center. Employees in the position possess computer skills in word and excel, and demonstrate the ability to

learn and adapt to changing technology. New Account representatives must also display a

strong ability to work with the public and Western State Bank Customers.

Applicants must have a High School diploma and the ability to pass a criminal background investigation.

Please apply in person at Western State Bank

1425 S Main Street, Scott City, Kansas between 8:00 am and 5:00 pm.

Applications will be accepted until the position is filled. Western State Bank is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

218744

2840 Schulman Ave Ste A

2188

01

Irsik & Dollwww.irsikanddoll.com

Come and grow with us and be part of an innovative team. We are looking for experienced PEN RIDERS & CATTLE DOCTORS. Our next team member must be energetic, goal-oriented, and have a desire to grow and take on more responsibility.

We offer competitive wages and full benefits package including 401(k) with company match, profit sharing plan, company paid medical and dental insurance, short/long term disability insurance, life insurance, paid vacation, sick leave, and career advancement opportunities.

To apply for this outstanding opportunity apply in person or send your letter of interest to Ingalls Feed Yard, ATTN Chuck Freeman, 10505 U.S. Hwy 50, Ingalls, KS 67853. Irsik & Doll is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

620-855-3111

218745

Full-Time With Full Benefites:Health, Dental, 401K, Vacation, Sick,

Mileage Reimbursement.

Interested applicants may send their resume to:The Garden City Telegram

c/o Robin Phelan, Advertising DirectorP.O. Box 958

Garden City, KS 67846No phone calls please.

SALES EXECUTIVE

213638

Do you enjoy working with people? Are you interested in an exciting career field that will

reward your hard work?

And, do you want a career that doesn’t take away your nights and weekends?

If so, The Garden City Telegram has an opportunity for you!

We are seeking enthusiastic candidates to join our Advertising sales team. Prior sales

experiences helps, but is not required. We will train the right candidates.

Be a part of a fast-changing, exciting sales environment that includes print, online, social networking, promotional and other forms of

advertising.

218787

United Methodist Mexican American Ministries is seeking applications for

Full-time Front DeskClerk in the UMMAM Garden City Dental Clinic.

Requirements include high school diploma or GED and bilingual Spanish/English. Must

have good organizational skills, be an excellent communicator, possess a positive attitude and be a team player. Duties include greeting and

dismissing patients, answering phones, scheduling patients, verifying insurance and collecting

payments. Previous dental office experience with practice management software is preferred.

Benefits include a four day work week, competitive salary, health/life insurance, holidays and

weekends off.

To apply for this position, please send resume to: UMMAM, attn: Personnel, PO Box 766, Garden City,

KS 67846 or apply in person at United Methodist Mexican American Ministries Dental Clinic at 310 E. Walnut, Suite LL5. You can also email resume to

[email protected].

Assistant Farm ForemanLocated near Garden City, Kansas,

Irsik Farms is seeking a highly motivated individual with strong leadership & or-ganizational skills. Prior experience with agronomy, chemical application, and truck driving is desired. Responsibilities include all facets of irrigated and dryland crop production. Benefits include salary, home,

401k, insurance, bonuses, and vacation.To join a great team on a progressive

operation in SW Kansas, call 620-335-5454 or email Kyle at [email protected]

218631

Custom ApplicatorHelena Chemical Company, a national agricultural-chemical company, has an immediate opening for a custom applicator at Cimarron or Garden City, KS location. This is a full time position; responsibili-ties include operating and maintenance on custom application equipment and various other duties assigned by management. Position requires high school diploma or equivalent, ability to obtain a CDL with HAZMAT endorsement, and the ability to operate machinery. We offer an excellent working environment and outstanding compensation and benefits package. For consideration, please send

your resume to:Helena Chemical

PO Box 7941004 N Anderson RoadGarden City, KS 67846

620-275-1988Pre-employment drug screen required. EOE M/F/V/H

215535

Information TechnologySpecialist

Keller & Miller, CPAs LLP is accepting ap-plications for a information technologyspecialist. The applicant would be responsi-ble for management of the computer / dataentry department. A strong applicantwould have the ability to manage multiplepriorities, have software installation exper-tise and general computer troubleshootingskills. Applicants will be responsible forgeneral accounting procedures such as ac-counts receivable, accounts payable, billprocessing and payroll. Applicable data en-try and experience with Word, Excel, Pow-erPoint and QuickBooks a re a plus. Willprovide training for specific accountingsoftware. This individual must be hardworking, dependable and organized withattention to details.

Send resume to:Attention: Personnel

Keller & Miller, CPAs LLP401 Campus Drive, Garden City, KS 67846

All inquiries will be kept confidential.218500

The Finney County Sheriff’s Office is accepting applications for a Part-Time Food Service Assistant.Qualifications: Must be at least 18 years of age, no felony criminal convictions.

Primary Responsibilities: food preparation, cooking meals, complete kitchen clean up, washing dishes, and assisting the Food Service Director. Part-time position working Friday, Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, approx. 32-35 hours per week.

Salary: $7.40 - $12.73 depending on qualifications and experience.

Benefits: Part-Time benefits available.

Contact Gaye at 620-272-3700 for further information.

Apply in person or e-mail at:Finney County Sheriff’s Office

304 N. 9th, Garden City, KS 67846620-272-3700 FAX: 620-272-3778

[email protected] Opportunity Employer

Part-Time Food Service Assistant

218645

Head Start TeacherGarden City, KS - Full Time

Kansas Children’s Service League Head Start is currently accepting applications for the following positions:

To be considered for these positions and to view the full job-description go to the careers section at www.KCSL.org and submit an online application. Kansas Children’s Service League is an equal opportunity employer. 218717

Head Start TeacherLiberal, KS - Full Time

Head Start ParaprofessionalUlysses, KS - Full Time

Classified: A Bargain Hunters Paradise

C4 SATURDAY, October 20, 2012 The GARDen CiTY TeleGRAm

109 CAMBRIDGE

Southwind Friday 3 -7Sat 9 -12 QualityClothes, Scrubs, XmasDishes , P ic tu res ,Loveseat Lots of Misc

1211 BELMONT

Fri 6-? & Sat 8 -?

1711 A St (in Alley)Sat 10-3 & Sun 11-?Household items, Furni-ture, Hydraulic ExamChair, Retro Art, Pic-ture Frames, MetalDesk, Tomcat Lighten-ing Trusses & Lots ofMisc. More items addedSunday

2621 CARRIAGE Ln.Friday 3pm-7pm

Saturday 9am-1pm

309 OLDWEILER

Holcomb Fri 4- 6 &

Sat 8 -11 Furniture,

Electronics & Misc

MOVING SALE , EVE-RYTHING MUST GO,2008 Nth 9th , Saturday8am-2pm , Furniture ,clothes, and lots ofmisc.

YARD SALE 921 Main ,Deerfeild , Saturday9am-1.

Southwind218 GRANDVIEW DR

Saturday 8am-???.

DeerFeild

1 4 8

2

3

5

6

7

GARAGE SALES

Southwind

Holcomb

2

3

64

15 8

8 to Deerfield

Getting rid of your old stuff? Call today and add your garage sale to the list!

620-276-6862

Food/ BeveragePART TIME Server.Apply in person atGolden Dragon Restau-rant, 1106 Campus Dr,Garden City.

TODAY’S NEW ADS

Special Notices

B A R R ' S B E S TSTORAGE (1607 W.Mary) will sell by auc-tion the abandonedproperty in the stor-age units of RobertPyle & HendersonBanks, ArmandoRoman, and JamesGreenwood !if not re-deemed before theauction scheduled for11:00am SaturdayOct. 27, 2012.218788

FoundFOUND HUSKY

Puppy, Female. Wouldlike to get her home!

Please Call(620)275-5499 or(620)271-3593

FOUND! LITTLE whiteFluffy dog. Possibly aBischon, male, 15 lbs.Very Sweet. Foundaround Fair & Flemingneighborhood. Call(620) 805-6784

FOUND! YORKIE.black & brown, youngfemale. 3i Building/ CityBrush Pile area. (620)521-3833, 640-3888.

LOST! BLACK & WhiteHouse CAT, answers toDAX. Rainbow collar,needs seizure medica-tion! Corner of 1st &Spruce neighborhood.Call (620) 260-6771.

Help WantedCDL DRIVER

needed with tanker andhopper experience. Re-

sponsible, customerdriven, individuals need

only apply.Call 620-272-6649

DRILLING RIG Opera-tor, Truck Driver andHelper wanted. Willtrain the right person.Possible supervisoryposition available withoperator post. CDL &clean record required.Tyler Water Well Serv-ice. (620) 275-5254

HELP US HELP YOU!

Advertise in the classifieds.

Help WantedDRIVERS

Heat Waves Hot OilService is currently ac-cepting applications fordrivers.! Must haveCDL wi th tanker&!clean MVR. Pick upapplications at 655 Air-links Drive between8am-1pm.

EXPERIENCEDFULL TIME

Company pumperneeded

SUBLETTE AREADrug screen,

Competitive wages & benefits

Call 316-772-8650.EXPERIENCED FULLTIME OR PART TIMECOOK, BARTENDER &WAITRESS. Must be atleast 18 years of age.Apply in person at TimeOut.

EXPERIENCED TRUCK

DRIVERS NEEDED

Must have CDL classA license, goodMVR, 2 years experi-ence, and pass drugtest. Local hauling,home every night.

Call 275-7601218574

Are you Experienced?

Find Your Perfect Job

in The Telegram Classi-

fieds.

Help WantedFEEDLOT PEN Riderneeded.! Experiencepreferred.! Good wages& benefits.! ContactBrian at Ft Kearny Con-solidated Feedlot.! Min-den, NE 308-832-1360.

TREATMENT COUNSELORLicensed treatment fa-cility seeks treatmentcounselor – LAC orLCAC. Preferencegiven for SB123 train-ing. Bilingual a plus.Generous benefits pro-gram. Send resumeand salary require-ments to EMPLOY-MENT, PO Box 43,Dodge City, KS 67801.

Help Wanted

SELL YOUR

CAR, BOAT or

CYCLE

Place an ad!

276-6862 x 1

Help WantedINDIVIDUAL NEEDEDin farrowing/breedingdivision. Candidate willbe caring for the needsof newborn piglets andtheir mothers. We willtrain a person with asincere desire to learn.The position has oppor-tunities for advance-ment for a careerminded individual.Send resume to: PokyFeeders Inc. 600 ERoad 30, Scott City, KS67871, apply at the of-fice or call Connor @(620)872-7046

Local well-establishedcompany looking forsales representative.We will offer the suc-cessful candidate anestablished account listearning over 30K, a fulltime Monday - Fridayschedule, and goodbenef i ts inc ludinghealth, dental insur-ance, 401k, vacationand sick time. We arelooking for an outgoing,organized person whocan acheive objectives.Please mail your re-sume to box 376, in c/oGarden City Telegram,P.O. Box 958, GardenCity KS 67846

ADVERTISE HERE

Call (620) 275-8500

to place your Classi-

fied ad in the

Garden City Tele-

gram.

Page 21: Garden City Telegram October 20, 2012

218811

FAMILY SUPPORT WORKERProvide direct in-home services including, but not limited to, parenting skills, life skills, child development and behavior management, to assist children & families in reaching permanency. Requires HS Diploma/GED, at least 21 years of age, exp working with children & families & dependable transportation.

Bilingual English/Spanish preferred.

DRIVER – PART TIMESafely transporting children/families to appointments in various locations statewide during varied hours/days of the week. Must have valid driver’s license, clear MVR/KBI/

CANIS & at least 21 yrs of age.

SFCS offers an excellent benefit package and competitive wages.

Send Resume to [email protected] or Apply online at www.st-francis.org. EOE

Concrete IndustriesREDI-MIX DRIVERSConcrete Industries, a division of Dodge City Concrete Inc. is

looking for experienced redi-mix drivers. Must have Class B CDL with clean driving record. We

offer competitive starting wages with growth opportunity and a

complete benefits package.Apply in person at:

Equal Opportunity Employer - Drug-Free Workplace217880

Marketplace!Marketplace!

1513 N. 8thNew 2 bedroom,

2 bath, S/A garage,full basement. 10 year

property tax rebate.(620) 290-0652

1615 Bancroft2 +2 Bdrms, office or 5th bedroom

downstairs, large family room downstairs. Stove, Refrigerator,

washer & dryer. Mature landscaping.Carport, patio. $108,900.

620-277-6932

Brought to you by The Garden City Telegram

711 W. Campbell2 bedroom, 1 bath, S/A, updated and

move in ready w/large family room in finished basement, all appliances stay, LARGE backyard, close to schools, shopping and the Talley Trail is right out your backdoor. Call 277-2035.

Call Sharynn or Stacey to list your home in the Homeowner’s Marketplace. We have a special “Priced to sell” package for you!

Call 276-6862 ext. 501or 1-800-475-8600.

218496

OPEN HOUSESunday 2-3 p.m.

PRICEREDUCED!610 Wheatridge

3 bedrooms + fourth room 8’ X 11’6”, 2 Baths. Fireplace, Over-sized Double Garage, Custom

Cabinets, Rolox Windows, Steel Siding, Hot Tub, Privacy Fence,

Fire Pit, Jennie Wilson Elementary, $199,900. (620) 290-6161

Visit us on the Web: www.larryjohnstonauction.com

Wed, November 14, 2012 @ 11 a.m.Location: 4-H Building in Dighton, Ks.

located on the Lane Co. Fairgrounds.

640 Acres Lane Co, KS with 1/2 Minerals 136.5 Acres CRP &

503.5 Acres Grass w/ Water

Land Location: 5 1/2 miles East of Dighton, Ks to Quantum Rd. & 1 1/2 miles SouthLegal’s: N/2 Section 31, Township 18 Range 27 & S/2 Section 30, Township 18, Range 27 all in Lane Co., Ks.

Phone: 620-276-6397 218743

OWNERS: Belva Rosenau, William E. Knight Jr. & Tamra J. Maynard

www.larryjohnstonauction.com

REAL ESTATE AUCTION

MDS Coordinator

Applications may be picked up at the Kearny County Hospital Business Office at

www.kearnycountyhospital.com or submit a resume. Kansas license required.

Contact:Donna Winright, Human Resource

DirectorKearny County Hospital

500 Thorpe St., Lakin, KS 67860620-355-1520

Competitive Wages

Excellent Benefits

Group Health Insurance

Pension Plan 2186

44

is looking for a RN or LPN who is motivated, organized, flexible and able to work with accuracy and attention to detail. Duties

include but not limited to: MDS assessment, Care Plans and Care Plan Meetings.

Excellent computer skills a must. RAC-CT certification is a plus.

High Plains Retirement VillageKEARNY COUNTY HOSPITAL

LAKIN, KANSAS

EOE. Physical exam and drug testing required.

Established company is expanding.We are seeking qualified applicants

for the following positions:

Welders & Drilling and PumpCrew Positions

(Must Have CDL License)For water well drilling industry

- Competitive benefits & wages-  Overtime Available     

Submit resume to:Hydro Resources / Mid Continent

3795 West Jones, PO Box 639Garden City, KS 67846

Or fax resume to (620) 277-0224217057

End your search today

Browse the classifieds

The Garden City

Telegram

C5SATURDAY, October 20, 2012GARDen CiTY TeleGRAm

Help WantedMaintenance

Technician!

The Trails of GardenCity has an immediateopening for an experi-enced Maintenancetechnician to join ourproperty managementteam. Candidates musthave a working knowl-edge of electrical, plum-ing, carpentry, paintingand dry wall repair.Must have reliabletransportation. Bi-lin-gual English/Spanishhelpful. Applicant mustpass a backgroundcheck, drug screen andhave a valid driver!s li-cense and auto insur-ance. Please apply inperson between thehours of 10:00am and2:00pm at 3501 N.Campus Drive, GardenCity, KS. Equal oppor-tunity employer.

PART TIME Reception-ist/Data Entry Clerk.Approx. 5 hours, can beflexible, but must in-clude 12:00 -2:00. Willinclude some full timebenefits. Must be ableto lift 50 lbs. Send re-sume or fill out applica-tion @ Scheopner!sWater Conditioning2203 E Fulton Plaza

POLICE OFFICER

The City of Ulysses isseeking conscientious,motivated applicants forthe position of PoliceOfficer. Position re-qu i rements : H ighSchool diploma, ValidKansas Drivers Li-cense, No felony or se-rious misdemeanorconvictions, Residencywithin the City of Ulys-ses within 30 day sofemployment, KansasLaw EnforcementTraining Certificate pre-ferred but not required.The Ulysses Police De-partment is a modern,well equipped agencythat services a popula-tion of approx. 6000.Entry level income inapprox. $34,000 peryear with paid insur-ance, paid holidays aswell as other benefits.Women and minoritiesare encouraged to ap-ply. Applications can bepicked up at City Hall oronline atwww.cityofulysses.com.Applications will betaken until FRIDAY,November 2, 2012 @5pm. The City of Ulys-ses is an equal oppor-tunity employer.

An Opportunity is a

Terrible Thing to

Waste.

www.gctelegram.com

Finney County!s

#1 Job Source.

Help WantedTRUCK DRIVERS

wanted to haul boxedmeat and general com-modities in the Midwest

region. Wages plusnon-taxable per diemaverage $40-55K/yr.Home 2-3 times perweek. Contact Larry

at 800-835-0193for details.

KINDSVATER TRUCK-ING

DODGE CITY, KS

UNIFIRST CORPORA-TION has an opening inthe Maintenance de-partment.

Bas ic mechanica lknowledge is required,industrial maintenanceexperience is a plus.Applicant must scorebetter than 75% on abasic maintenanceskills test to be consid-ered. Candidate musthave a valid DL and beable to speak, write andread English. Success-ful candidate must beable to pass a drugtest, physical and back-ground check.

Please apply in personat 903 W Prospect Ave,on October 22nd, 23rdand 24th only, between8 am and 5 pm.

UniFirst is an Equal Op-portunity Employer.

WEATHERCRAFTROOFING has anopenings for general la-borers & roofing in-stallers. All applicantsmust apply in person at807 E FULTON, Gar-den City. All applicantsare required to pass apre-employment drugscreen. Benefits avail-able

AgricultureH E L P W A N T E D :!Farm/ feedyard nearGC seeking full timehelp, must have validdriver's license. !Fax re-sume to: 620-272-0682,email [email protected], or call620-271-8464.

Did you know that post-ing signs on utility polesand street signs, instreet right-of-ways, orother public property isprohibited in GardenCity. All such signs willbe removed without no-tice! Your cooperationis greatly appreciated.The City of Garden City

Ordinance No. 1858

Let this space work for

you! Place and employ-

ment ad to find the right

person.

Help WantedConstruction

ELECTRICIAN

Full time position for ex-perienced industrialelectrician. 3-5 yearsminimum experiencerequired. Proficiencywith motor controls pre-ferred. Excellent oppor-tunity for motivated indi-vidual with Wichitabased company operat-ing in Dodge City forover 15 years. Pleasecall 1-800-229-7230 forapplication and inter-view or e-mail resumeto: [email protected].

Drivers

ATTENTION!

DRIVERSBusy oilfield

service company needsadditional drivers!Home every night!

Benefits: Uniform,simple IRA & health

insurance

Brady Fluid

Service620-275-5827

214221

Food/ BeverageALL POSITIONS

Apply in person atHanna!s Corner,Taylor & Mary ST.

PART TIME Server.Apply in person atGolden Dragon Restau-rant, 1106 Campus Dr,Garden City.

Healthcare

COURIER/ ACCES-

SIONER Preparation of

specimens for testing

through the following:

sorting, coding, in-

putting, labeling, swap-

ping, receiving, CVISing,

manifesting, and filing.

Pick up/delivery service

for specimens, supplies

and reports.HS diploma,

good driving record. To

apply, please visit

www.paml.com "Ca-

reers"

PHLEBOTOMIST - Per-form a variety of speci-men collection tech-niques from patients.HS diploma To apply,p l e a s e v i s i twww.paml.com "Ca-reers"

Are you reading this?

So is your future em-

ployee! Call us today

and we!ll help you find

qualified candidates

276-6862 ext 501.

Employment WantedBABYSITTER WITHteaching degree lookingfor 1-4 children towatch in your home.Flexible rates. Willingto do pick up and tutor-ing. Tammy @937-3306.

Miscellaneous for SaleCHAIRS, SOFAS,LAMPS & MORE! Bar-gains Plus Consign-ment, 308 N. 7th, Gar-den City. Tuesday- Sat-urday 10am-4pm.www.gctbargains.com

FIREWOODProCut Tree Service

Pickup Load/Free Del$125 Mixed HdWd.

$100 Elm.Call (620) 640-1605

FIREWOOD FOR

SALE . Various kinds.

Call 620-275-1659.

FOR SALE

TNT Firewood Busi-

ness Call for Details.(620) 275-5376 or271-3999

LIGHTLY USED &

New Womens Name

Brand Clothes SizesXS & Small in Tops.Size 2 & 4s in Pantsand Shoe Size 71/2 &8s. Also a Miche Pursenever been used.Call 620-640-4682

Pallets of Firewood

for Sale in Syracuse,KS. Oak & MesquitePallets $150. Call620-384-5313

SIDE BY Side Refrig-erator, Beige Asking$300 or OBO Call forDetails #314-458-4707

TABLES & CHAIRS,Office desks, chairs,small office goods. Bar-gains Plus Consign-ment, 308 N. 7th, Gar-den City. Tuesday- Sat-urday 10am-4pm.www.gctbargains.com

Sporting EquipmentEXERCISE EQUIP-MENT! Get fit for less!Bargains Plus Consign-ment, 308 N. 7th, Gar-den City. Tuesday- Sat-urday 10am-4pm.www.gctbargains.com

Bargain BlowoutGIVE AWAY - Woodpallets. Pick up on theeast side of The Tele-gram, 310 N. 7th, Gar-den City.

PetsFOR SALE Pure Breed

Registered EnglishMastiff Puppies,10 wks

old, First & Secondshots, 2 Males $600Call 620-277-0889

HAND FED & tamedbaby Love Birds. Readynow! (620) 805-6363

PetsLAB PUPPIES!

3 Chocolate, 5 Black.Call (620) 287-0030.

PUREBRED GRAY &White Chihuahua Pup-p ies. Cal l (620)805-5237

Farmers WantsWANTED: 8 inch irriga-tion pipe, 30” gates.(620) 276-6361.

Farm BuildingsSTEEL BUILDINGS

Complete for AssemblyEx. 24x24 Reg $6,678

Disc. $5,640 (Quantity 1)

48x96 Reg $32,470Disc. $27,057 (Quantity 2)

Call for OthersSource#18X800-964-8335

Business OpportunitiesATTN: BABY BoomersAre you nearing retire-ment or do you haveextra time on yourhands? Primrose Oilcompany is looking foryou! Primrose Oil is a96 year old Custom Lu-bricant manufacturerlooking for independentcontractors to representour line of oils, greases,and fuel additives. Lu-crative markets includeagriculture, oil field,construction and manyothers. Primrose pro-vides both product andfield training. ContactHoward Carrithers at(214) 707-4661 formore information.

BIG HEADLINESGET THE JOB DONE!Advertise the right wayin the classifieds.

Autos1988 FORD RangerRuns Good, AC, PowerWindows, 4WD, 5Speed, 156K Asking$2500 or OBO Call620-271-7343

1996 BMW

Convertible

Blue, Loaded,

Call 620-275-8607 or

272-6469

1997 FORD F150 Ex-tended Cab, Long Box,4 WD, 130K AboveAverage $5000 Call620-649-2427

1997 MERCURY GrandMarquis 106K, VeryGood Condition $2900Call 620-275-2824 or276-9890

1999 FORD Escort ZX2“Builder” Needs Head-work New Radiator &Alternator Asking $650Call 620-937-0139

2000 CHEVY AstroUtility Van

Complete Shelving inthe Back. Drop DownLadder Rack. NewTires, Runs Great.Asking $4000.00 orOBO Call 620805-1608

2000 GMC Yukon XL

Grey, 180K, 4WD,$5000 or BO.

Excellent ConditionCall 620-271-2221

2001 OLDSMOBILE

Silhouette Van 165K

Great Condition $5500

Call 620-290-1004

2004 FORD Expedition4WD, 210K, RunsGreat, $4500. Call620-290-1421

Autos2004 NISSAN Maxima

3.5 SL Black, VeryClean, Very Good Con-dition Asking $11,000Call 620-451-0813 formore information

2005 HONDA AccordLX, Silver, tinted win-dows, 100k miles,aluminum wheels,good tires, excellentcondit ion, $9,750O B O P H .620-846-0627Q49387

2007 BUICK LaCross44,573 Actual MilesExcellent Condition$15,000 Call 275-4775

2007 PT Cruiser 66KVery Good ConditionCall 620-271-4701

2010 LINCOLN MKZ

5K, Fully Loaded Immaculate Condition

Asking $27,500Call 620-271-4929

Shop The Classifieds!

AutosGONE TO Air Force!

Much Sell!

2001 Blue Ford EscortAsking $1500

Call (620) 290-1972or (620) 290-1664

Selling your vehicle?Did you know parkingyour vehicle on citystreets, right-of-waysand other public prop-erty is prohibited inGarden City? The Cityof Garden City ordi-nance No 86-2 (88)states in part “No per-son shall park a vehicleupon any roadway forthe principal purposeof: (a) Displaying suchvehicle for sale (b)Washing, greasing orrepairing such vehicleexcept repairs necessi-tated by an emer-gency”. Violations ofthis ordinance May re-sult in a $40 fine andcourt costs.

www.gctelegram.com

Page 22: Garden City Telegram October 20, 2012

OFFICE ACCOUNTANTOutstanding career opportunity with a progressive Southwest Kansas feed yard for an experienced accountant. The ideal candidate will have a strong accounting background and experience in the feed yard industry would be helpful. Excel-lent computer and communication skills will be required and a college degree is a plus. This position offers a competitive

salary and benefits package.

Please send your resume to:Lewis, Hooper & Dick, LLC,

Attention: Personnel.,PO Box 699,

Garden City, KS 67846.218457

Farm Equipment

AUCTIONLocation: From Lakin, KS on Hwy 25 ,20 miles

north to road 360, 4.5 miles west. From Leoti, KS on Hwy 25, 20 miles south to road 360, 4.5 miles west.

Saturday, October 27, 2012 • 10:00 AM

*TRACTORS AND COMBINE* 1995 Ford New Holland 9680 tractor, 4 wheel drive, duels, 12 spd.

2388 combine, 3,540 engine hours, 30 ft. platform, *TRUCKS

AND PICKUP* 1996 Freightliner semi truck, day cab,

conversion van, automatic *TRAILERS* 2008 North

*FARM EQUIPMENT* Sunflower Flex King 9 x 6 sweep

Brandt 500 bushel grain cart *SHOP EQUIPMENT*

*OTHER FARM ITEMS*

*MOWERS & ATV*

*ANTIQUE ITEMS* Brass blow

*HOUSEHOLD ITEMS*

other items Auctioneer’s note:on this auction but has been well cared for and has had regular maintenance. Terms:

to be removed within 3 weeks. No warranties expressed or implied. Not responsible for theft or

of sale take precedence. Find us on Facebook or visit www.berningauction.com

Auctioneer/Listing Agent:

Berning Auction, Inc.

“Don’t Trust Your Auction To Just Anyone!”

2185

10

“Don’t Trust Your Auction To Just Anyone!”

www.berningauction.comOWNER: Max Jay Estate

Syracuse USD 494BID ANNOUNCEMENTSyracuse School District USD 494 is accepting

sealed bids for the following building and land located at 707 West Warner, Syracuse, Kansas:

Appx. 2.1 Acres with Attached Metal Building to wit

5000 sq. ft. metal frame, metal exterior and roof. Three walk-in doors, 1 insulated overhead

door. West 20’ consists of offices; next 40’ consists of 4 restrooms, large open space and kitchen. The remaining 40’ consists of storage

area that at one time was used as a large meeting room and dance area The front 60’ has CHAC tile and carpet floor covering. The storage area has concrete floor and interior finish. There is a fenced area on the exterior

north side containing playground equipment. There is a paved road on the north side and a

dirt road on the east side.

The commercial appraisal report dated 8/20/2012 by Leighty Ag. Appraisal set the

present market value at $110,000.00.

For more details or to inspect the property, please contact the USD 494 District Office at

620-384-7872.

Please place bids in a sealed envelope along with all appropriate contact information

and mail to:

Syracuse School District USD 494c/o CLC Bldg. Bid

P.O. Box 1187Syracuse, Kansas 67878

ORBring sealed bids to the District Office

located at 103 Ave. F, Syracuse, KS

Bids must be received on or before Friday, November 9, 2012 at 4:00 p.m. Bids will be opened at the regular Board of Education meeting on Monday, November 12, 2012.

Successful bidder will be contacted on November 13, 2012.

*USD 494 retains the right to accept or refuse any or all bids.

218784

218643

LLCGarden Valley Retirement Village is accepting

applications for the following positions:

Certified Medication Aides & Certified Nurse Aides –

Revised wage scale.Apply today and be a part of

Garden Valley’s journey to success.Contact HR at 620-275-9651 or email your

resume to: [email protected] Valley Retirement Village

1505 E. Spruce, Garden City, KS

DriverHampel Oil is a stable, growing, and fast-pacedorganization looking to fill a delivery driver posi-tion. Candidates must have strong work ethic; be adetail - oriented multi - tasker, self motivated andable to work with limited supervision.

• CDL license with Hazmat/tank (X) Preferred• Good communication and people skills• Excellent Customer Service skillsAn equal opportunity employer offering goodbenefits and wages based on experience and apti-tude.Send Resume to:Hampel Oil

2121 W Mary

Garden City, KS 67846

Or [email protected]

Do you want to start a sales career?$36,000 $60,000 guaranteed income!

Farmers Insurance seekingSales/Marketing Representative

in your area! We train and offer base pay + commission!

To schedule an interview call Karina:316-927-2753

Ulysses Feedyard

PEN RIDERSResponsibilities include riding pens, and shipping cattle.

We offer a very competitive wage based on experience, retirement program, affordable health coverage which includes health, dental & vision.

Please call for more information620-356-1750 or Travis 620-575-4142

218640

(PUBLISHED IN The Garden City Telegram Saturday,October 13, 20, 27, 2012)

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF FINNEY COUNTY,

KANSASCIVIL DEPARTMENT

Bank of America, N.A., successor by merger to BACHome Loans Servicing, L.P.Plaintiff,

vs.Glenn E. Webb and Theresa M. Ortiz-Webb and Un-known Spouse, if any, of Glenn E. Webb and UnknownSpouse, if any, of Teresa M. Ortiz-Webb, et al.Defen-dants.

Case No. 11CV217Court Number:Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 60

Notice Of Sale

Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale is-sued to me by the Clerk of the District Court of FinneyCounty, Kansas, the undersigned Sheriff of FinneyCounty, Kansas, will offer for sale at public auction andsell to the highest bidder for cash in hand, at the FrontDoor of the Courthouse at Garden City, Finney County,Kansas, on November 6, 2012, at 10:00 AM, the follow-ing real estate:

A tract of land located in the Northwest ? ofSection 17, Township 24 South, Range 32 West of theSixth P.M., in Garden City, Finney County, Kansas,said tract also being located in Lots 5 and 6 in the A.H.Smith Addition. Commencing at the Southeast cornerof the Northwest ? of said Section 17, thence Westalong the South line of said Northwest ? of Section 17for a distance of 655.70 feet; thence North 00 degrees00' East (an assumed bearing) along the centerline ofCenter Street for a distance of 963.99 feet to the inter-section of Center Street and Gillespie Drive; thenceNorth 89 degrees 44' 40” West along the centerline ofGillespie Drive for a distance of 152.89 feet to the pointof beginning; thence continuing North 89 degrees 44'40” West along said centerline for a distance of 121.34feet; thence North 00 degrees 14' 25” East for a dis-tance of 329.31 feet to the South right of way line ofHackberry Street; thence South 89 degrees 21' 51”East along the South right of way line of HackberryStreet for a distance of 124.44 feet; thence South 00degrees 43' 53” West a distance of 128.72 feet; thenceNorth 89 degrees 49' 35” West for a distance of 2.50feet; thence South 00 degrees 05' 37” West a distanceof 199.77 feet to the centerline of Gillespie Drive andthere terminating., commonly known as 1117 Gillespie Place, GardenCity, KS 67846 (the “Property”)to satisfy the judgment in the above-entitled case. Thesale is to be made without appraisement and subject tothe redemption period as provided by law, and furthersubject to the approval of the Court. For more informa-tion, visit www.Southlaw.com

Kevin Bascue, Sheriff Finney County, Kansas

Prepared By:South & Associates, P.C.Megan Cello (KS # 24167)6363 College Blvd., Suite 100Overland Park, KS 66211(913)663-7600(913)663-7899 (Fax)Attorneys For Plaintiff (129324)

218557

(Published in the Garden City Telegram Saturday, Oc-tober 20, 2012)

ORDINANCE NO. 2571-2012AN ORDINANCE APPROVING THE REZONING

OF LAND FROM “C-2” CENTRAL BUSINESS DIS-TRICT TO “R-3” SINGLE FAMILY RESIDENTIAL DIS-TRICT; AMENDING THE COMPREHENSIVE PLANOF THE CITY, AND THE DISTRICT ZONING MAP OFTHE CITY; AND REPEALING THE CURRENT COM-PREHENSIVE PLAN, AND DISTRICT ZONING MAP;ALL TO THE CODE OF ORDINANCES OF THE CITYOF GARDEN CITY, KANSAS.

BE IT ORDAINED by the Governing Body of theCity of Garden City, Kansas:

SECTION 1. The Zoning Ordinance of the City ofGarden City, Kansas, adopted by Ordinance No.2528-2011 with all amendments thereto, is herebyamended and shall read as follows:

The boundary of the “R-3” Single Family Residen-tial District is hereby amended to include the followingdescribed real property:

The North 50 feet of the South 200 feet of theWest half of Block Three (3) of Steven Addition of theCity of Garden City, Finney County, KS.

SECTION 2. The “Future Land Use Map” of theCity of Garden City, Kansas, adopted by Ordinance No.2469-2010 with all amendments thereto, is herebyamended as follows:

The boundary of the Single Family Residential Po-tential overlay is hereby amended to include the follow-ing described real property:

The North 50 feet of the South 200 feet of theWest half of Block Three (3) of Steven Addition of theCity of Garden City, Finney County, KS.

SECTION 3. The “Future Land Use Map” adoptedby Ordinance No. 2469-2010, as previously existingand amended, be and the same is hereby amended, tobe replaced and continue hereafter as amended in thisordinance.

SECTION 4. The District Zoning Map referred to inthe Zoning Regulations Article 3, Section 3, of the Gar-den City, Kansas, adopted by Ordinance No.2528-2011, as previously existing and amended, beand the same is hereby amended, to be consistent withthe amendments set forth herein.

SECTION 5. The current Zoning Ordinance andDistrict Zoning Map of the City of Garden City, Kansas,as previously existing and amended, be and the samehereby are repealed, to be replaced as specified in thisordinance.

SECTION 6. That this ordinance shall be in fullforce and effect from and after its publication in theGarden City Telegram, the official city newspaper.

APPROVED AND PASSED by the GoverningBody of the City of Garden City, Kansas, this 16th dayof October, 2012.

DAVID D. CRASE, MayorCelyn N. Hurtado, City Clerk

APPROVED AS TO FORM:RANDALL D. GRISELL, City Counselor

218832

(Published in The Garden City Telegram Saturday, Oc-tober 20, 27 and November 3, 2012)

IN THE DISTRICTCOURT OF FINNEY COUNTY, KANSAS

In the Matter of the Estate ofCARSON M. HOBBS, Deceased

Case No. 11 PR 51NOTICE OF HEARING

THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS CON-CERNED:

You are notified a Petition for Final Settlement hasbeen filed in this Court by Clydeen E. Hobbs, duly ap-pointed, qualified and acting Administrator of the Estateof Carson M. Hobbs, deceased, requesting that Peti-tioner's acts be approved; account be settled and al-lowed; the heirs be determined; the Estate be assignedto the persons entitled to it pursuant to the laws of in-testate succession; fees and expenses be allowed;costs be determined and ordered paid; the administra-tion of the Estate be closed; the Administrator be dis-charged and Petitioner and the surety on Administra-tor's bond be released from further liability. You are re-quired to file your written defenses to the Petition on orbefore November 15, 2012, at 8:30 a.m. in Room 304of the District Court, Garden City, Finney County, Kan-sas, at which time and place the cause will be heard.Should you fail to file your written defenses, judgmentand decree will be entered in due course upon the Peti-tion.

Clydeen E. Hobbs, AdministratorHOPE, MILLS, BOLIN, COLLINS & RAMSEYMichael K. Ramsey607 N. Seventh Street, P.O. Box 439Garden City, Kansas 67846(620) 276-3203Attorneys for Administrator

218755

(PUBLISHED IN The Garden City Telegram Satur-day, October 20 and 27, 2012)

RESOLUTION NO. 2504-2012A RESOLUTION AUTHORIZING THE RE-

MOVAL OF MOTOR VEHICLE NUISANCES FROMCERTAIN PROPERTIES IN THE CITY OF GARDENCITY, KANSAS, PURSUANT TO SECTION 38-63OF THE CODE OF ORDINANCES OF THE CITY OFGARDEN CITY, KANSAS.

WHEREAS, the Governing Body of the City ofGarden City has declared it unlawful for any personto maintain a motor vehicle nuisance on private prop-erty within the City of Garden City, and

WHEREAS, the resident and/or owners of the pri-vate property at the addresses listed herein havebeen notified pursuant to Section 38-63 of the Codeof Ordinances and have neither abated the nuisanceconditions nor requested a hearing before the Gov-erning Body.

NOW THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED by theGoverning Body of the City of Garden City, Kansas:SECTION 1. Ten (10) days after passage of thisResolution the Public Officer is hereby authorized toabate the following motor vehicle nuisance condi-tions:

2315 Tonio-inoperable and unregistered vehi-cle on property. White GMC suburban tag# 142-CQR

SECTION 2. The abatement costs incurred bythe City shall be charged against the lots or parcelsof ground on which the motor vehicle nuisance is lo-cated.

PASSED AND APPROVED by the GoverningBody of the City of Garden City, Kansas, on this 16thday of October 2012.

David D. Crase, MAYORCelyn N. Hurtado, CITY CLERK

218837

(Published in The Garden City Telegram Saturday,October 20, 2012)

RESOLUTION NO. 2505-2012A RESOLUTION AUTHORIZING THE RE-

MOVAL OF NUISANCE CONDITIONS FROM THEPROPERTY LISTED BELOW IN THE CITY OFGARDEN CITY, KANSAS, PURSUANT TO SEC-TION 38-139 OF THE CODE OF ORDINANCES OFTHE CITY OF GARDEN CITY, KANSAS.

WHEREAS, the Governing Body of the City ofGarden City has declared it unlawful for any personto maintain nuisance conditions on private propertywithin the City of Garden City, and

WHEREAS, the resident and/or owners of the pri-vate property at the address listed herein have beennotified pursuant to Section 38-137 of the Environ-mental Code of Ordinances and have neither abatedthe nuisance conditions nor requested a hearing be-fore the Governing Body.

NOW THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED by theGoverning Body of the City of Garden City, Kansas:

SECTION 1. Ten (10) days after passage of thisResolution, and after notification of person in viola-tion by one of the methods prescribed in Section38-139, the Public Officer is hereby authorized toabate the following nuisance conditions:

2203 N. 8th-tires, scrap metal, misc equipment,misc junk, scrap lumber, trash, litter, & debris onproperty

SECTION 2. The abatement costs incurred bythe City shall be charged against the lot or parcel ofground on which the nuisance is located.

PASSED AND APPROVED by the GoverningBody of the City of Garden City, Kansas, on this 16thday of October, 2012.

David D. Crase, MAYORCelyn N. Hurtado, CITY CLERK

218836

C6 SATURDAY, October 20, 2012 The GARDen CiTY TeleGRAm

Armstrong Custom Cattle Service LLCare filling Leadership & Training

Positions and are interviewing for cattle handlers, processors and computer

sorting technicians in the Garden City / Ulysses area. Part time, 3/4

time and seasonal full time opportunities are available. Ladies encouraged to apply.

Early morning start time.Call 620-355-1483. EOE218610

Another

SCOTT AUCTION There is a reason

3280 W. Jones PO Box 398Garden City, Kansas 67846 Phone 620-276-8282

218782

AUCTION 9845 SQ. FT. BLDG.1.5 ACRES –

REAL ESTATE: 98’x100’ commercial/industrial building Jones Ave. frontage, 1.5 Acre fenced lot. - Legal Description: East 140’ of that part of SE 1/4 of the NW 1/4 of the SW 1/4 of Section 12, Township 24 South, Range 33 West of the 6th PM lying south of Jones Avenue, formerly known as Hwy 50, in Finney County, Kansas. - Building: Mostly block construction w/several different roof lines & types. Central heat & baseboard heat & window AC in office areas. Overhead heaters & wood stove heat in mfg. area. 1exterior overhead door on West & 1 interior overhead door between partition walls. 2 oversize swing doors into storage area & mfg. area. 2 - ½ bath restrooms. Builiding has been used for heavy manufacturing and has 220/440 wiring. 2 large manufacturing bays, 5 offices, conference room, reception area, locker room, and 2 big parts room/storage areas. Private water well and septic system. - TERMS: 20% deposit day of sale. Balance due at closing. Closing by Dec. 5. 2012. Possession upon closing. Prospective buyers must have financing prior to bidding. - TAXES: 2011 taxes = $3236.19. 2011 & prior years taxes paid, 2012 Taxes to be prorated at closing. - TITLE: by Warranty Deed, Title Insurance Policy. Buyer pays 1/2 title insurance. - SELLING: Absolute w/No Minimum – No Reservation - SHOWING: contact J. Kent Scott, Broker, Scott Auction - 620-276-8282. Scott Auction is the agent of the seller only. - INSPECTIONS must be done prior to the auction at the prospective purchaser’s expense. - All information is believed to be correct, however, no warranty is given by the Auction firm or Sellers. Each prospective Purchaser is advised to satisfy themselves as to acreage’s, boundaries, allotment, easements, fences right-of way and or any other information. Only good title is warranted. Announcements day of sale take precedence.Selling for: FIRST NATIONAL BANK of SPEARVILLE

COMMERCIAL/INDUSTRIAL2202 W. JONES AVE.

GARDEN CITY, KANSASMON., NOV. 5, 2012 – 2:00 PM CT.

AUCTION LOCATION: 2202 W. JONES AVE., GARDEN CITY, KS

See pictures & complete terms & Info. @ www.scottauction.com

3-DAY FALLFARM, SHOP & INDUSTRIAL CONSIGNMENT

AUCTIONSAT., SUN., & MON., OCT. 27, 28 & 29

@ 9:00 a.m. Each DayLOCATION: LARNED, KS—CARR AUCTION GALLERY, 909 AUCTION AVE., W. HWY 156

218809

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Page 23: Garden City Telegram October 20, 2012

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Barry Zito pitched the San Francisco Giants back into the NL champion-ship series, dominating into the eighth inning of a 5-0 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals on Friday night that narrowed their deficit to 3-2.

The defending champion Cardinals might have thrown away a chance to clinch a sec-ond straight World Series trip. Pitcher Lance Lynn’s toss on a possible forceout deflected off the second-base bag, paving the way for the Giants’ four-run fourth.

Pablo Sandoval homered for the second straight night and Zito made an extremely rare offensive contribution with a perfectly executed bunt for an RBI single.

The Giants’ win in Game 5 sent the series back to San Francisco. Game 6 will begin Sunday in the twilight at AT&T Park, with Ryan Vogelsong pitch-ing against the Cardinals’ Chris Carpenter.

Once again this postseason, the Giants benefited from a big error.

Needing three straight wins at Cincinnati to avoid elimina-tion in the division series, San Francisco began its comeback on a bobble by third baseman Scott Rolen in the 10th inning that gave the Giants the go-ahead run in Game 3.

The Giants improved to 4-2 on the road this postseason and

have won Zito’s last 13 starts, with the last setback on Aug. 2. They’re averaging more than six runs a game during the streak, although the lefty didn’t need much help in this one.

Zito looked like the same guy who won the 2002 AL Cy Young award. He retired 11 batters in a row in one stretch while scatter-ing six hits with six strikeouts in 7 2/3 innings.

Giants catcher Buster Posey twice tapped Zito on the chest when he was pulled in the eighth

inning. It was Zito’s first postsea-son win since 2006, shortly before he left the A’s and signed a $126 million, seven-year contract with San Francisco.

Zito was left off the postsea-son roster when the Giants won the 2010 World Series because he had pitched so ineffectively. He started Game 4 of the division series against the Reds earlier in this year’s playoffs and lasted only 2 2/3 innings.

By BRETT [email protected]

HUTCHINSON — They came. They saw. They played.

Taking on Hutchinson’s No. 1-ranked Salthawks, the Garden City High School Buffaloes sim-ply were overmatched by a team that has produced seven state championships in Class 5A and 6A over the past eight years, with the final score 56-14 on Friday night at Gowans Stadium.

Yep, it was one of those games where you might simply put the tape of the game in the drawer and never look at it.

And while it was to be a long trip home for the Buffs, they will now re-focus on The Hatchet Game at Dodge City next Friday to conclude the regular season. A win will assure the Buffs of a runner-up district finish and their third straight playoff appearance under coach Brian Hill.

“Going forward, I told the kids this is the kind of program we want to have,” Hill said after-ward. “That’s the focus to our younger players. I wanted them to understand how Hutchinson conducts itself, how they pre-pare, how they play each and every down. “

If ever so briefly, the Buffs held a lead on the state’s No. 1-ranked team after the Salthawks coughed up the ball on an errant pitch from quarterback Trevor Turner to Jamison Likes on their first possession of the game.

It did take the Buffs five plays to cover the 18 yards, but Brady Bean’s 3-yard run capped it off with 8:04 to play in the first.

After that early Garden City lead, Hutchinson did what it does best — run, run, run — and then

strike with big-play passes. The Salthawks had five pos-

sessions after that and put it into the end zone each time.

It took the Salthawks three minutes to tie the game at 7 when they marched 59 yards in

seven plays, with Turner sneak-ing in from 1-yard out. Kassidy Lemons’ point-after was perfect.

Following a short drive that ended with a 41-yard Mitchell Hernandez punt, the Salthawks went right back to work. This

time it was Colby Turner’s 1-yard run that capped off a seven-play, 50-yard drive at the 1:28 mark to make it 14-7 at the end of the first.

SportsTHE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM

SATURDAY, October 20, 2012 GCTelegram.com/Sports SWKPrepZone.com

CFB: Kansas State to be tested by Mountaineers’ Geno Smith.PAGE D5

BOUnTiES: Tagliabue to hear player appeals.PAGE D4

D

Brad Nading/Telegram

Holcomb’s Blake Richmeier, right, breaks in to the Lakin second-ary for a 20-yard gain off a block by Clay Gilbert, center, Friday at Holcomb.

Buffs simply overmatchedHutchinson rolls its way to 56-14 win over Garden City.

Travis Morrise/Hutchinson News

Garden City’s Brady Bean, left, scores a touchdown as he gets past Hutchinson’s Turner Wintz in the first quarter Friday at Gowans Stadium in Hutchinson.

Associated Press

San Francisco Giants starting pitcher Barry Zito threw 7 2/3 shutout innings in the Giants’ 5-0 win over the St. Louis Cardinals in Game 5 of the NLCS .

Zito keeps Giants alive in NLCS

By KEVIN [email protected]

HOLCOMB — After losing the opening round of district play last week, Lakin was in a fight to stay alive for postseason play.

But it also put more pressure on the Broncs in their rivalry with Holcomb on the Longhorns’ field.

Live to fight another day, or lose and stay home.

The host Longhorns had their own plans, however, as they picked up district win number two with a 34-17 win over the Broncs on Friday.

Despite playing without injured junior Heath Tucker (nine touchdowns scored this season), the Longhorns (now 7-1, 2-0) unloaded an arsenal of other weapons in the win and securing

a spot in the postseason.Chief among those was quar-

terback Tyler LaSalle, who rushed 20 times for 239 yards in the first three quarters.

Aaron Hernandez, who scored three times, carried the ball 2 yards for Holcomb’s first score, just over two minutes in.

Six minutes later, after Lakin’s Pedro Chavez connected for a 35-yard field goal, LaSalle outran the defense up the Lakin sideline for a 63-yard score.

He then gave Holcomb a boost with a short run with just under four minutes to play to put the Longhorns up 21-3 at the half.

By halftime Holcomb had out-gained Lakin 277 yards to 148, including 167 alone by LaSalle, while the defense held the daunt-ing running game of the Broncs to just 77 first-half yards.

Holcomb finished the game with 456 total yards, with just four gained in the final quarter,which the Broncs controlled.

Hernandez scored two more times from two yards out in the third period that gave Holcomb a 34-10 lead.

Lakin controlled the final peri-od, running 27 plays, but scoring just once on a Gage McAtee 2-yard run.

McAtee and Ty Adams, both averaging over 100 yards on the ground, were held to 115 com-bined for the game, but Lakin was held to just 167 rushing yards, or 120 under its season average.

Holcomb coach Jerry Johnson was happy with the win — and the Longhorns’ offense specifi-cally — but he knows they have

LaSalle guides Longhorns to win over Lakin, 34-17

See NLCS, Page D4

See LaSalle, Page D3

See Overmatched, Page D3

By The Telegram

Scott City 58, TMP-Marian 0

At Scott City, the Beavers had little trouble against the visiting Monarchs, as Scott City led 46-0 at the half on its way to a 58-0 district win over TMP-Marian on Friday.

Dalton Buehler led a bal-anced Scott City offense on the ground with three touchdown runs, including an 80-yard run for the first score of the game.

Brett O’Neil, Tyler Hess, Tius Price, Alex Kough, and Paco Banda each had a rushing touchdown, while O’Neil also added a second-quarter field goal.

Now at 8-0 overall (2-0 in dis-trict play), Scott City, the No.-2 team in Class 3A, looks to com-plete an undefeated regular sea-son next week at Russell.

———TMP-Marian 0 0 0 0— 0ScottCity 28 18 6 6— 58Scoring SummaryFirst QuarterSC—Buehler 80 run (kick good), 11:47SC—O’Neil 39 run (kick good), 9:24SC—Hess 18 run (kick good), 3:40SC—Buehler 13 run (kick good), 0:37Second QuarterSC—Buehler 30 run (kick good), 9:38SC—O’Neil 27 FG, 2:57SC—Price 10 rin (conv. good), 0:09Third Quarter

SC—Kough 15 run (PAT failed), 4:50 Fourth QuarterSC—Banda 4 run (PAT failed)

Ulysses 36, Pratt 14

At Pratt, the visiting Ulysses Tigers had a blazing first half and held off Pratt for a 36-14 dis-trict win over the Greenbacks on Friday.

Ian Rudzik did most of the damage for Ulysses as he had all four of the Tigers’ touchdowns in the second quarter, his lon-gest from 41 yards out.

Alec Meierhoff had the other touchdown for Ulysses in the first quarter to open the scoring

Skylar Dean had two late touchdown runs in the fourth quarter for Pratt.

The Tigers, now 2-0 in dis-trict play and 5-3 overall, will host Hugoton next week to determine the district title and playoff seeding for both teams.

———Ulysses 7 29 0 0— 36Pratt 0 0 0 14— 14Scoring SummaryFirst QuarterU—Meierhoff 5 run (Mendez kick), 1:09Second QuarterU—Rudzik 41 run (Haney pass from Garnette), 8:41U—Rudzik 4 run (Mendez kick), 6:38U—Rudzik 14 run (Mendez kick), 2:48U—Rudzik 11 run (Mendez kick), 0:37

Scott City cruises past TMP; Ulysses beats Pratt

See GWAC, Page D3

Page 24: Garden City Telegram October 20, 2012

By The Telegram

Minneola 62, Satanta 12

At Satanta, the Indians struggled against visiting Minneola, falling 62-12 to the Wildcats in a game called at halftime.

Satanta’s Kyle Abernathy passed for 60 yards, two interceptions and a first-quarter touch-down to Jesus Garcia.

Matt Leggett had the other touchdown for Satanta on a 2-yard run in the second quarter.

Satanta drops to 2-6 on the season.

———Minneola 50 12 x x— 62Satanta 6 6 x x— 12

Rolla 46, Bucklin 0

At Bucklin, the visiting Pirates had little trouble scoring points, as Rolla shut out Bucklin 46-0 on Friday in a game called in the third quarter.

Kyler Telford led Rolla as he ran for three touch-downs and returned a punt for another.

Jaron Rusch passed for one touchdown and ran

for another. Obie Telford also had a touchdown on a 45-yard interception return in the first quarter.

Rolla’s improves to 3-1 in district play and 6-2 overall. The Pirates will host Moscow next week to determine the Santa Fe Trail League title and a second-place district fin-ish to qualify for the state playoffs.

Bucklin travels to Ingalls next week and has now lost its 38th game in a row, with its last win com-ing on September 26, 2008 against Greensburg.

———Rolla 26 12 8 x— 46Bucklin 0 0 0 x— 0Scoring SummaryFirst QuarterR—Rusch 10 run (Telford run), 9:21R—K. Telford 63 punt return (run failed), 7:30R—O. Telford 45 INT return (run failed), 6:24R—K. Telford 10 run (run failed), 5:25Second QuarterR—K. Telford 8 run (pass failed), 9:14 R—K. Telford 12 run (run failed), 1:08Third QuarterR—K. Telford, O. Telford pass from Rusch, 5:28

Fowler 57, Moscow 12

At Moscow, despite the

Wildcats taking a five-point lead at the end of the first quarter, Fowler dominated the rest of the game for a 57-12 blowout win on Friday.

Fowler’s Taylin Bird led the air attack with five touchdown passes, four to Ty Clark and one to Tem Shetley. Shetley also led the ground attack for the Goldbugs as he ran in three more touchdowns.

Lane Miller and Rigo Bustillos connected for both touchdowns in the first quarter with passes of 68 and 13 yards.

Moscow drops to 2-2 in district play and 5-3 over-all. Their game next week at Rolla will determine the Santa Fe Trail League title and a second-place district finish to qualify for the state playoffs.

———Fowler 7 21 21 8— 57Moscow 12 0 0 0— 12Scoring SummaryFirst QuarterM—Bustillos 68 pass from Miller (PAT failed), 9:19M—Bustillos 13 pass from Miller (PAT failed), 3:28F—Clark 21 pass from Bird (Shetley kick), 1:45Second QuarterF—Clark 10 pass from Bird (Shetley

kick), 10:18F—Shetley 4 run (Shetley kick), 3:48F—Shetley 3 run (Shetley kick), 0:52Third QuarterF—Clark 22 pass from Bird (Shetley kick), 11:31F—Clark 16 pass from Bird (kick blocked), 3:31F—Shetley 28 pass from Bird (Huelskamp run), 1:06Fourth QuarterF—Shetley 2 run (Reese pass from Bird), 8:26

Spearville 28, South Gray 20

At Spearville, the South Gray Rebels came a touch-down short, as Spearville escaped with a 28-20 win on Friday.

Brandon Davis led Spearville with two touch-down runs and added a 70-yard kickoff return to begin the third quar-ter. Nathan Stein had a touchdown pass to Hunter Stephenson in the sec-ond quarter for the other score.

Colton Dirks scored all of South Gray’s three touchdowns, a long run in the second quarter, a pass to Gabriel Loya in the third quarter, and a short run in the fourth quarter.

South Gray is now 2-2 in district play and 4-4

overall. The Rebels, who host

Hodgeman County next week, must win that game to have any shot of return-ing to the playoffs this sea-son.

———SouthGray 0 8 6 6— 20Spearville 6 8 14 0— 28Scoring SummaryFirst Quarter

SPE—Davis 13 run (conv. failed), 1:51Second QuarterSPE—Stephenseon 18 pass from Stein (Stein run), 10:22SG—Dirks 27 run (Dirks run), 6:25Third QuarterSPE—Davis 70 kickoff return (Stein run), 11:50SPE—Davis 76 run (PAT failed), 5:18SG—Loya 12 pass from Dirks (PAT failed), 1:23Fourth QuarterSG—Dirks 2 run (PAT failed), 5:47

ScoreboardD2 SATURDAY, October 20, 2012 THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM

BASEBALLPostseason Baseball GlanceBy The Associated PressLEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)American LeagueDetroit 4, New York 0Saturday, Oct. 13: Detroit 6, New York 4, 12 inningsSunday, Oct. 14: Detroit 3, New York 0Tuesday, Oct. 16: Detroit 2, New York 1Wednesday, Oct. 17: New York at Detroit, ppd., rainThursday, Oct. 18: Detroit 8, New York 1National LeagueAll games televised by FoxSt. Louis 3, San Francisco 2Sunday, Oct. 14: St. Louis 6, San Francisco 4Monday, Oct. 15: San Francisco 7, St. Louis 1Wednesday, Oct. 17: St. Louis 3, San Francisco 1Thursday, Oct. 18: St. Louis 8, San Francisco 3Friday, Oct. 19: San Francisco 5, St. Louis 0Sunday, Oct. 21: St. Louis (Carpenter 0-2) at San Francisco (Vogelsong 14-9), 7:45 p.m.x-Monday, Oct. 22: St. Louis at San Francisco, 8:07 p.m.

———Giants 5, Cardinals 0San Francisco St. Louis ab r h bi ab r h biPagan cf 5 0 0 0 Jay cf 4 0 1 0Scutaro 2b 4 1 1 0 Beltran rf 4 0 1 0Sandovl 3b 4 2 2 1 Hollidy lf 4 0 0 0Arias 3b 0 0 0 0 Craig 1b 4 0 1 0Posey c 4 0 1 0 YMolin c 4 0 2 0Pence rf 4 1 0 0 Freese 3b 4 0 1 0Belt 1b 3 0 0 0 Descals 2b 4 0 1 0GBlanc lf 2 1 0 0 Kozma ss 2 0 0 0BCrwfr ss 4 0 1 2 Lynn p 1 0 0 0Zito p 2 0 1 1 J.Kelly p 0 0 0 0SCasill p 0 0 0 0 SRonsn ph 1 0 0 0A.Huff ph 1 0 0 0 Rosnthl p 0 0 0 0Romo p 0 0 0 0 Boggs p 0 0 0 0 Schmkr ph 1 0 0 0 Mujica p 0 0 0 0Totals 33 5 6 4 Totals 33 0 7 0SanFrancisco 000 400 010 — 5St.Louis 000 000 000 — 0E—Lynn (1). DP—San Francisco 1. LOB—San Francisco 5, St. Louis 7. 2B—Craig (1), Freese (2). HR—Sandoval (2). SB—Belt (1), Beltran (1). S—Zito. IP H R ERBBSOSan FranciscoZito W,1-0 7 2/3 6 0 0 1 6S.Casilla 1/3 0 0 0 0 1Romo 1 1 0 0 0 1St. LouisLynn L,0-1 3 2/3 4 4 0 2 6J.Kelly 1 1/3 1 0 0 0 1Rosenthal 2 0 0 0 0 4Boggs 1 1 1 1 1 1Mujica 1 0 0 0 0 0Umpires—Home, Ted Barrett; First, Jerry Layne; Second, Gary Darling; Third, Chris Guccione; Right, Greg Gibson; Left, Bill Miller.T—3:03. A—47,075 (43,975).

———WORLD SERIES(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)All games televised by FoxWednesday, Oct. 24: Detroit at National League (n)Thursday, Oct. 25: Detroit at National League (n)Saturday, Oct. 27: National League at Detroit (n)Sunday, Oct. 28: National League at Detroit (n)x-Monday, Oct. 29: National League at Detroit (n)x-Wednesday, Oct. 31: Detroit at National League (n)x-Thursday, Nov. 1: Detroit at National League (n)

BASKETBALLNational Basketball AssociationPreseason GlanceBy The Associated PressEASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division W L Pct GBNew York 2 0 1.000 —Brooklyn 3 1 .750 —Philadelphia 3 1 .750 —Toronto 2 1 .667 .5Boston 1 3 .250 2Southeast Division W L Pct GBMiami 2 2 .500 —Atlanta 2 3 .400 .5Charlotte 1 3 .250 1Washington 1 4 .200 1.5Orlando 0 4 .000 2Central Division W L Pct GBIndiana 2 1 .667 —Chicago 2 2 .500 .5Milwaukee 2 2 .500 .5Cleveland 2 3 .400 1Detroit 2 3 .400 1WESTERN CONFERENCESouthwest Division W L Pct GBSan Antonio 2 1 .667 —Houston 3 2 .600 —New Orleans 3 2 .600 —Memphis 2 2 .500 .5Dallas 1 1 .500 .5Northwest Division W L Pct GBDenver 3 1 .750 —

Minnesota 2 1 .667 .5Utah 3 2 .600 .5Portland 2 2 .500 1Oklahoma City 1 2 .333 1.5Pacific Division W L Pct GBGolden State 3 1 .750 —Phoenix 2 1 .667 .5Sacramento 2 1 .667 .5L.A. Clippers 2 2 .500 1L.A. Lakers 0 4 .000 3

———Wednesday’s GamesToronto 104, Washington 101Philadelphia 113, Cleveland 99Houston 109, Memphis 102Phoenix 100, Dallas 94Golden State 98, Sacramento 88Portland 97, Denver 80L.A. Clippers 96, Utah 94Thursday’s GamesAtlanta 97, New Orleans 68Miami 105, Detroit 78Memphis 97, Milwaukee 94Boston 115, Brooklyn 85Today’s GamesNew York vs. Toronto at Montreal, Quebec, 6 p.m.Indiana at Orlando, 6 p.m.Philadelphia at Brooklyn, 6:30 p.m.Minnesota at Chicago, 7 p.m.Phoenix vs. Oklahoma City at Tulsa, OK, 7 p.m.Sacramento vs. L.A. Lakers at Las Vegas, NV, 9 p.m.Golden State at Portland, 9 p.m.Saturday’s GamesSan Antonio at Miami, 2:30 p.m.Dallas at Atlanta, 6 p.m.Memphis at Indiana, 6 p.m.New York vs. Boston at Albany, NY, 6:30 p.m.Charlotte at Detroit, 6:30 p.m.Washington at Milwaukee, 7:30 p.m.L.A. Clippers at Utah, 8 p.m.

———WNBA Playoff GlanceBy The Associated Press(x-if necessary)FINALS(Best-of-5)Indiana 1, Minnesota 1Sunday, Oct. 14: Indiana 76, Minnesota 70Wednesday, Oct. 17: Minnesota 83, Indiana 71.Friday, Oct. 19: Indiana 76, Minnesota 59Sunday, Oct. 21: Minnesota at Indiana, 7 p.m.x-Wednesday, Oct. 24: Indiana at Minnesota, 7 p.m.

FOOTBALLNational Football LeagueBy The Associated PressAMERICAN CONFERENCEEast W L TN.Y. Jets 3 3 0New England 3 3 0Miami 3 3 0Buffalo 3 3 0South W L THouston 5 1 0Indianapolis 2 3 0Tennessee 2 4 0Jacksonville 1 4 0North W L TBaltimore 5 1 0Cincinnati 3 3 0Pittsburgh 2 3 0Cleveland 1 5 0West W L TSan Diego 3 3 0 Denver 3 3 0Oakland 1 4 0Kansas City 1 5 0NATIONAL CONFERENCEEast W L TN.Y. Giants 4 2 0Philadelphia 3 3 0

Washington 3 3 0Dallas 2 3 0South W L TAtlanta 6 0 0Tampa Bay 2 3 0Carolina 1 4 0New Orleans 1 4 0North W L TChicago 4 1 0Minnesota 4 2 0Green Bay 3 3 0Detroit 2 3 0West W L TSan Francisco 5 2 0Arizona 4 2 0Seattle 4 3 0St. Louis 3 3 0

———Thursday’s GameSan Francisco 13, Seattle 6Sunday’s GamesArizona at Minnesota, noonGreen Bay at St. Louis, noonBaltimore at Houston, noonWashington at N.Y. Giants, noonDallas at Carolina, noonNew Orleans at Tampa Bay, noonCleveland at Indianapolis, noonTennessee at Buffalo, noonJacksonville at Oakland, 3:25 p.m.N.Y. Jets at New England, 3:25 p.m.Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, 7:20 p.m.Open: Atlanta, Denver, Kansas City, Miami, Philadelphia, San DiegoMonday’s GameDetroit at Chicago, 7:30 p.m.

———COLLEGEBig 12 Conference Big12 All Kansas State 3-0 6-0TCU 2-1 5-1Texas Tech 2-1 5-1West Virginia 2-1 5-1Oklahoma 2-1 4-1Oklahoma State 1-1 3-2Iowa State 1-2 4-2Texas 1-2 4-2Baylor 0-2 3-2Kansas 0-3 1-5

———Today’s GamesIowa State at Oklahoma State, 11 a.m.Texas Tech at TCU, 2:30 p.m.Kansas at Oklahoma, 6 p.m.Kansas State at West Virginia, 6 p.m.Baylor at Texas, 7 p.m.

———Top 25 GamesNo. 1 Alabama at Tennessee, 6 p.m.No. 3 Florida vs. No. 9 South Carolina, 2:30 p.m.No. 5 Notre Dame vs. BYU, 2:30 p.m.No. 6 LSU at No. 20 Texas A&M, 11 a.m.No. 7 Ohio State vs. Purdue, 11 a.m.No. 8 Oregon State vs. Utah, 9:30 p.m.No. 11 Southern Cal vs. Colorado, 5 p.m.No. 12 Florida State at Miami, 7 p.m.No. 13 Georgia at Kentucky, 6 p.m.No. 14 Clemson vs. Virginia Tech, 11 a.m.No. 15 Mississippi State vs. Middle Tennessee, 6 p.m.No. 16 Louisville vs. USF, 2:30 p.m.No. 18 Texas Tech at TCU, 2:30 p.m.No. 19 Rutgers at Temple, 11 a.m.No. 21 Cincinnati at Toledo, 6 p.m.No. 22 Stanford at California, 2 p.m.No. 23 Michigan vs. Michigan State, 2:30 p.m.No. 24 Boise State vs. UNLV, 2:30 p.m.

———JUNIOR COLLEGEKANSAS JAYHAWK CONFERENCE Standings Conf. Overall Butler 5-0 7-0Hutchinson 5-0 6-1Coffeyville 4-1 5-2 Garden City 3-2 5-2Fort Scott 3-3 3-4Highland 1-5 1-6 Indepen. 1-5 3-5 Dodge City 0-6 0-7

———

Today’s GamesHutchinson at Fort Scott, 1 p.m.Dodge City at Garden City, 7 p.m.Coffeyville at Butler, 7 p.m.Independence, byeMonday’s GameBenedictine JV at Highland, 4 p.m.

PREPSCROSS COUNTRYRegionals TodayClass 6A—Garden City at Wichita Cessna Activity Center.Class 4A—Hugoton, Ulysses at Buhler Prairie Ridge XC Course.Class 3A—Cimarron, Holcomb, Lakin, Scott City at Cimarron Golf Course.Class 2A—Stanton County, Meade, South Gray, Sublette, Syracuse at Meade Golf Course; Wichita County at Hill City Prairie Trails Golf Course.Class 1A—Deerfield, Dighton, Ingalls, Moscow, Greeley County at Meade Golf Course.State Championships (Oct. 27)Class 3A-5A-6A—at Rim Rock Farm, Lawrence.Class 1A-2A-4A—at Wamego Country Club.

FOOTBALLFriday’s Area ScheduleClass 6AHutchinson 56, Garden City 14Class 4AUlysses 36 Pratt 14Hugoton 52, Larned 6Class 3AHolcomb 34, Lakin 17Scott City 58, TMP-Marian 0Cimarron 56, SW Heights 145Class 2AStanton County 52, Syracuse 0Medicine Lodge 22, Sublette 8Meade 77, Elkhart 0St. Francis 52, Wichita County 328-Man Division IHodgeman County 58, Deerfield 0Spearville 28, South Gray 20Minneola 62, Satanta 128-Man Division IIFowler 57, Moscow 12Cheylin 40, Greeley County 18Ingalls at AshlandRolla 46, Bucklin 0Sylvan-Lucas 50, Dighton 44Other Kansas ScoresBy The Associated PressAltoona-Midway 56, Elk Valley 24Andale 72, Nickerson 22Andover Central 39, Wichita West 16Atchison 39, KC Bishop Ward 14Axtell 44, Blue Valley 26Baileyville-B&B 52, Hanover 46, 2OTBaldwin 41, Santa Fe Trail 0Basehor-Linwood 23, Perry-Lecompton 14Belle Plaine 19, Douglass 14Beloit 56, Norton 9Bishop Miege 68, KC Harmon 6Blue Valley Stilwell 55, Pittsburg 0Buhler 21, Cheney 0Burlington 60, Eureka 30Butler, Mo. 41, Maranatha Academy 6BV West 29, Blue Valley Southwest 28Caldwell 46, Argonia 0Caney Valley 26, Neodesha 6Central Heights 12, West Franklin 0Central Plains 56, Solomon 52Centralia 55, Doniphan West 6Centre 44, Flinthills 40Chanute 70, Anderson County 12Chase 62, St. John’s Military 14Cherryvale 35, Erie 6Clay Center 25, Colby 10Clearwater 27, Winfield 13Clifton-Clyde 60, Linn 12Coffeyville 68, Columbus 26Concordia 34, Goodland 24Conway Springs 84, Chaparral 56Crest 58, Southern Coffey 12Derby 48, Wichita East 6El Dorado 35, Circle 34Ell-Saline 40, Washington County 0Ellis 14, Oberlin-Decatur 7Emporia 27, Andover 10

Eudora 50, Ottawa 6Flint Hills Christian 44, Cair Paravel 38Fort Scott 34, Iola 7Frankfort 58, Independence 0Frontenac 52, Independence 16Galena 23, South East 6Garden Plain 33, Hutchinson Trinity 7Gardner-Edgerton 59, Olathe North 28Girard 68, Parsons 13Goessel 44, White City 28Halstead 48, Moundridge 21Haven 34, Kingman 27Hiawatha 40, Riverside 20Hillsboro 40, Marion 21Hoisington 42, Russell 12Holton 27, Topeka Hayden 0Hope 56, Tescott 12Hoxie 54, Quinter 8Humboldt 44, Fredonia 14Hutchinson Central Christian def. Word of Life, forfeitJackson Heights 26, Valley Heights 21Jefferson North 47, Oskaloosa 12Johnson-Stanton County 52, Syracuse 0Kapaun Mount Carmel 31, Arkansas City 12Kiowa County 60, Attica 0Labette County 34, Baxter Springs 0LaCrosse 54, Ellinwood 6Lansing 27, KC Schlagle 26Lawrence 57, KC Wyandotte 16Lawrence Free State 47, Leavenworth 14Lebo 58, Burlingame 8Liberal 56, Goddard-Eisenhower 35Life Christian, Okla. 26, Wichita Warriors 18Louisburg 60, Osawatomie 12Lyndon 70, Northeast-Arma 8Lyons 13, Southeast Saline 0Macksville 66, Pratt Skyline 20Madison 68, Peabody-Burns 20Maize 54, Dodge City 51Maize South 42, Hesston 15Manhattan 21, Washburn Rural 0Marais des Cygnes Valley 52, St. Paul 40Marmaton Valley 52, Yates Center 0McLouth 36, Valley Falls 6McPherson 47, Abilene 14Mill Valley 63, KC Washington 40Mulvane 33, Wellington 7Natoma 47, Logan 34Nemaha Valley 7, Rock Creek 6Ness City 48, Rawlins County 0Newton 23, Valley Center 12Northern Heights 59, Herington 20Olathe South 34, Olathe Northwest 31Olpe 53, Chase County 7Onaga 42, Wabaunsee 0Oswego 40, Jayhawk Linn 20Otis-Bison 60, Wilson 14Oxford 63, Cedar Vale/Dexter 18Paola 49, Prairie View 8Phillipsburg 56, Minneapolis 7Pike Valley 50, Osborne 40Plainville 69, Republic County 14Pleasant Ridge 46, Maur Hill - Mount Academy 38Pretty Prairie 68, Lincoln 18Riley County 49, Marysville 23Riverton 21, Pittsburg Colgan 20Rock Hills 54, Wakefield 6

Rose Hill 20, Wichita Collegiate 1Rossville 56, Council Grove 0Royal Valley 26, Wamego 18Sabetha 35, Horton 0Salina Central 20, Great Bend 13Salina Sacred Heart 49, Ellsworth 0Salina South 35, Hays 6Sedgwick 51, Bluestem 7Shawnee Heights 34, Topeka West 0Silver Lake 47, Atchison County 7SM Northwest 42, SM North 14SM West 31, SM East 14Smith Center 22, Bennington 16Smoky Valley 21, Chapman 14South Barber 64, Norwich 12South Haven 46, Sedan 0Southern Cloud 75, Burrton 30Spring Hill 17, DeSoto 13St. Francis 52, Wichita County 32St. James Academy 17, Bonner Springs 16St. John 54, Fairfield 36St. John’s Beloit-Tipton 26, Lakeside 6St. Mary’s 59, Mission Valley 6St. Thomas Aquinas 28, KC Turner 6Stafford 58, Cunningham 8Sterling 40, Inman 0Stockton 62, Palco 16Thunder Ridge 60, Northern Valley 14Tonganoxie 9, Jefferson West 7Topeka 39, Junction City 25Topeka Seaman 34, Highland Park 6Trego 66, Hill City 14Troy 44, Immaculata 20Udall 24, Central Burden 20Uniontown 56, Pleasanton 6Victoria 56, Western Plains 6Wallace County 56, Weskan 0Waverly 54, Chetopa 6Wellsville 52, Osage City 6Wheatland-Grinnell 38, Golden Plains 18Wichita Bishop Carroll 70, Goddard 13Wichita Campus 27, Wichita South 16Wichita Heights 42, Wichita Southeast 18Wichita Independent 47, Remington 12Wichita Northwest 70, Wichita North 7Wichita Trinity 42, Augusta 21

TRANSACTIONSFriday’s Sports TransactionsBy The Associated PressBASEBALLAmerican LeagueTEXAS RANGERS—Named Dave Magadan hitting coach.National LeagueHOUSTON ASTROS—Named John Mallee hitting coach and Dave Trembley coach. Announced pitching coach Doug Brocail and coach Dave Clark will also return for 2013.BASKETBALLNational Basketball AssociationBROOKLYN NETS—Exercised the third-year contract option on G MarShon Brooks.CLEVELAND CAVALIERS—Exercised the third-year contract options on G Kyrie Irving and F Tristan Thompson.

Television/Internet On TapTodayAuto Racing — 10 a.m., ESPN2, NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Hollywood Casino 400, Practice, from Kansas City, Kan.; 2:30 p.m., ESPN, NASCAR, Nationwide Series, Kansas Lottery 300, from Kansas City, Kan.Pro Baseball — 7 p.m., TBS, MLB, American League Championship Series, Game 6 (if necessary), Detroit Tigers at New York Yankees.College Football — 11 a.m., CW, Auburn at Vanderbilt; ABC, Purdue at Ohio State or Virginia Tech at Clemson; FX, Teams TBA; ESPN, LSU at Texas A&M; ESPN2, Teams TBA; 2 p.m., FOX, Stanford at California; 2:30 p.m., CBS, Teams TBA; NBC, BYU at Notre Dame; ABC, Texas Tech at Texas Chrisitian or Nebraska at Northwestern; ESPN2, Teams TBA; FSN, Rice at Tulsa; 6 p.m., FOX, Kansas State at West Virginia; ESPN, Alabama at Tennessee; FSN, Kansas at Oklahoma; 6:45 p.m., ESPN2, Middle Tennessee at Mississippi State; 7 p.m., ABC, Baylor at Texas; 9:30 p.m., ESPN, Utah at Oregon State.Pro Soccer — 6:30 a.m., ESPN2, English Premier League, Tottenham Hotspur FC vs. Chelsea FC, from London; 6 p.m., MNT, MLS, Sporting Kansas City at New York Red Bulls, from Harrison, N.J.

College Women’s Volleyball —11 a.m., FSN, Missouri at Mississippi.

SundayPro Football — Noon, Fox, Dallas Cowboys at Carolina Panthers; CBS, Baltimore Ravens at Houston Texans; 3 p.m., CBS, New York Jets at New England Patriots; 7:20 p.m., NBC, Pittsburgh Steelers at Cincinnati Bengals.Pro Baseball — 3:30 p.m., Fox, National League Championship Series, Game 6, St. Louis Cardinals at San Francisco Giants.Auto Racing — 1 p.m., ESPN, Sprint Cup: Hollywood Casino 400, from Kansas Speedway in Kansas City.Women’s College Soccer — 1 p.m., FSN, Tennessee at Mississippi.Women’s College Volleyball — 2 p.m., ESPN2, Nebraska at Illinois.Women’s Pro Basketball — 7 p.m., ESPN2, WNBA Finals Game 4, Minnesota Lynx at Indiana Fever.Pro Soccer — 8 p.m., ESPN, MLS, FC Dallas at Seattle Sounders FC.

TodayCollege Football — 7 p.m., Dodge City C.C. at Garden City C.C.Prep Cross Country — 11 a.m./11:30 a.m., Class 4A regional at Prairie Ridge Course (Buhler, Hugoton, Ulysses); 1 p.m./1:30 p.m., Class 6A regional at Wichita Cessna Activity Center (Garden City); Class 3A regional at Cimarron Golf Club (Cimarron, Holcomb, Lakin, Scott City); 2 p.m./3 p.m., Class 1A region-al at Meade Golf Course (Dighton, Deerfield, Ingalls, Moscow, Greeley County); 2:30 p.m./3:30 p.m., Class 2A regional at Meade Golf Course (Stanton County, Meade, South Gray, Sublette, Syracuse); 3 p.m./3:30 p.m., Class 2A regional at Prairie Trails Golf Course, Hill City (Wichita County).Prep Volleyball — Sub-states: 1 p.m., Class 2A at Meade (Elkhart, Stanton County, South Gray, Sublette, Syracuse); Class 2A at Oberlin (Wichita County); Class 1A-I at Bucklin (Deerfield, Satanta); Class 1A-II at Dighton (Dighton, Healy, Greeley County); Class 1A-II at Rolla (Ingalls, Moscow, Rolla); 2 p.m., Class 6A at Garden City; Class 4A at Ulysses (Ulysses, Hugoton); Class 3A at Hoisington (Cimarron, Holcomb, SW Heights, Lakin, Scott City).

MondayCollege Men’s Golf — TBA, Garden City C.C. at NJCAA National Preview, Lubbock, Texas.

TuesdayCollege Men’s Golf — TBA, Garden City C.C. at NJCAA National Preview, Lubbock, Texas.College Volleyball — 6:30 p.m., Garden City C.C. at Dodge City.

WednesdayCollege Basketball — 6:30 p.m. Buster Tip-Off party, at the Perryman Athletic Complex.

ThursdayCollege Volleyball — 6:30 p.m., Pratt C.C. at Garden City C.C.Prep Football — 3:30 p.m., Greeley County at Weskan; 7 p.m., Bucklin at Ingalls; Cimarron at Holcomb; Dighton at Western Plains/Healy; Hodgeman County at South Gray; Hugoton at Ulysses; Moscow at Rolla; Satanta at Deerfield; Scott City at Russell; SW Heights at Lakin; Stanton County vs. Sterling at Dodge City.

FridayPrep Football — 7 p.m., Garden City at Dodge City; Meade at Sublette; Syracuse at Elkhart; Wichita County at Oberlin.Prep Volleyball — State Tournaments: TBA, Class 6A-5A at Topeka Kansas Expocentre; Class 4A-3A at Salina Bicentennial Center; Class 2A at Emporia White Auditorium; Class 1A-Div. I and II at Gross Memorial Coliseum, Fort Hays State University, Hays.

Saturday, Oct. 27College Football — 7 p.m., Coffeyville at Garden City C.C.Prep Cross Country — at Wamego Country Club, 10 a.m., Class 2A boys; 10:30 a.m., Class 1A girls; 11 a.m., Class 4A boys; 11:30 a.m., Class 2A girls; Noon, Class 1A boys; 12:30 p.m., Class 4A girls; at Rim Rock Farm, Lawrence, 10 a.m., Class 5A boys; 10:30 a.m., Class 3A girls; 11 a.m., Class 6A boys; 11:30 a.m., Class 5A girls; Noon, Class 3A boys; 12:30 p.m., Class 6A girls.Prep Volleyball — State Tournaments: TBA, Class 6A-5A at Topeka Kansas Expocentre; Class 4A-3A at Salina Bicentennial Center; Class 2A at Emporia White Auditorium; Class 1A-Div. I and II at Gross Memorial Coliseum, Fort Hays State University, Hays.

Minneola, Rolla, Fowler cruise to wins; South Gray falls

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some issues to sort out before hosting Cimarron on Thursday for the dis-trict title.

“Our offense did well. I thought we played what we wanted to do,” he said. “We executed really well.”

But the word after the game was “sloppy,” something to work on, he said.

“Especially after we don’t score we get sloppy,” Johnson said. “I don’t know if it’s a lack of focus or what, but we’ve got to figure it out before we go much further.”

A district title means a home game to start the playoffs, and that’s a big deal, Johnson said.

For the most part, he said, his defense played well, stopping Lakin a number of times and keeping them out of the end zone.

But the Longhorn pass defense got exposed a bit, especially in the

final period when Caleb Seeger hit 10-of-12 passes before throwing an end zone interception.

“We knew it would be tough. I was proud of the defense stopping the run, but the passing ‘D’ is something we’ve got to work on,” Johnson said.

The touchdown right before the half was huge, psychologically, he said.

“Lakin’s a good team. I told our kids being up 21-3 on a good team, that was a good position to be in,” Johnson said.

For Lakin coach Jeff Fuss, preparing the Broncs to stop LaSalle was hard.

“Not only do they have a couple of kids who can break it for 50, but they can spread the field. And we had kids in proper places tonight to make a play, but LaSalle just makes some moves, we stand there, and he’s gone,” he said. “We had a difficult time on that kid.”

Compound that with the Lakin players deal-

ing with the unexpected death of former basket-ball coach Greg Reed ear-lier in the week and the Friday morning funeral. Both proved emotional-ly taxing, but Fuss was proud of how his team responded.

“We talked about try-ing to start fast, but after the week we’ve had--I’m not a moral victory guy, and I’m not happy we got beat, but I’m proud of the way our kids played,” he said. “It would have been easy to fold up after that first quarter.”

Holcomb hosts Cimarron (7-1, 2-0) Thursday for the District 16 title, and the right to host the first-round of playoffs.

The Broncs (4-4, 0-2) hosts the Southwestern Heights Mustangs Thursday in the “Battle for the Golden Saddle.”

———Lakin 3 0 7 7— 17Holcomb 14 7 13 0— 3Scoring SummaryFirst QuarterH—Hernandez 2 run (Guerrero kick) 9:28

L—Chavez 35 FG 3:50H—LaSalle 63 run (Guerrero kick) 3:30Second QuarterH—LaSalle 3 run (Guerrero kick) 3:36Third QuarterH—Hernandez 2 run (Guerrero kick) 4:35L—Adams 4 run (Chavez kick) 1:34H—Hernandez 2 run (kick failed) :00Fourth Quarter

L—McAtee 3 run (Chavez kick) 6:55Team Statistics H LFirst downs 15 17 Rushing yds 342 167 Passing yds 114 206 Total yds 456 373 Comp-Att 8-17 17-30 Punts 2 3 Fumbles-lost 1-0 0-0

Penalties-yds 6-40 6-45 Individual StatisticsRUSHING — Lakin: McAtee 16-58, Adams 14-57, Seeger 4-20; Holcomb: LaSalle 25-244, Hernandez 8-64, Richmeier 2-31.PASSING — Lakin: Seeger 17-30-3-206; Holcomb: LaSalle 8-17-1-114.RECEIVING — Lakin: Shalberg 8-83, Adams 2-39; Holcomb: Cox 3-41.

After that, it was like watching a runaway freight train that could suddenly convert itself into a speed-ing jet.

Colby Turner’s 4-yard score midway through the second made it 21-7 with 6:55 to play. Hutchinson, which had entered the game averaging only 78 yards passing, hit the air-waves, as Joe Dower took a 21-yard pass from Trevor Turner, and Emilio Tafolla hauling in a 25-yard half-back pass from Tanner Higgins with just under a minute left before inter-mission.

Mercifully, after a quick three-and-out for the Buffs, the half ended with Trevor Turner taking a knee.

There wasn’t anything in the second half that went any better for the Buffs.

The Salthawks scored two touchdowns in the first 1:51 without having run a play from scrimmage.

First, Higgins returned the opening third-quarter kickoff 90 yards, and then when the Buffs got the ball back, Greyson Tempel was intercepted by Colby Turner, who returned it 41 yards untouched. Before one could comfortable in a seat, it was Hutchinson, 49-7, and 10:09 to play in the third.

Garden got a consola-tion TD at the 5:22 mark of the third quarter when Taylor Foley, the hero of the 31-26 victory the week before over Maize, made a

diving catch of Tempel’s throw.

Hutch would close out the scoring with its back-ups playing, as Braydon Wells scampered 21 yards with 5:53 remaining in the game.

“That’s a good football team we beat tonight,” Hutchinson coach Randy Dreiling said. “We just happened to hit on all cylinders. They’re a bet-ter team than people give them credit because of the score.”

Hill said that the plan was to try and stop the run and force Hutch to beat them through the air,

something they had not shown an ability to do all season. But Friday night was not one of those.

“We were going to dare them to throw the ball, and we got caught looking into their backfield,” Hill said. “They were able to get behind us. Credit to them, they performed just like you’d expect from a team that is used to playing in big games. They didn’t make any mistakes, except the one early fumble and the other one late.”

By halftime, and even-tually for the game, Hutch had completed 6-of-7 passes for 184 yards and a pair

of TDs and they finished the game with 271 rushing yards on 42 attempts, well below their season average of 397.

For Bean and Tempel, two of the springboards of this 2012 season, it was a tough pill to swallow. But both of them vowed the Buffs would be ready for the grudge game with Dodge City.

“You look at it (the score) and it feels like a blowout, but I feel like we played them tough a good part of the game,” Bean said. “They just come out and play every snap, they execute perfectly and we

didn’t. We made mistakes that cost you big against a team like Hutch. For the future, that’s the team that we want to be.”

Tempel, harassed all night by the Salthawk defense, finished with just 49 yards rushing on 12 car-ries and was 12-of-23 for 78 yards and two intercep-tions.

“We just didn’t execute on some of the plays and we’ve just gotta get better,” Tempel said. “We’re disap-pointed in the outcome, but we’ll get back after it this week and we just need to have a good week of practice.”

The Buffs got a few play-ers banged up and their status will be unclear for the Dodge game. Bryce Bickett and Ivan Vivanco both left the game with undetermined injuries. Logan Dechant never suit-ed up because of an inju-ry sustained in the Maize win, forcing Hill to utilize sophomore Zac Finch and freshman Jared Koster at running back.

“Considering what we were up against, I thought they did a very good job,” Hill said of his two young backs. Koster was the lead-ing rusher for the Buffs, getting 61 yards on 14 car-ries, while Finch, playing just in the second half, had 19 yards on 5 carries.

The Buffs are now 5-3 overall and 1-1 in District 8. Hutchinson improved to 6-2 overall and 2-0 in the district, and will be on the road at Maize. Maize won a wild and wooly shootout

with the Red Demons, 54-51. Maize is 1-1 in the dis-trict and Dodge is 0-2.

———TheYardstick

GardenCity 7 0 7 0— 14Hutchinson 14 21 14 7— 56Scoring SummaryFirst QuarterGC—Brady Bean 3 run (Rudy Chavez kick), 8:04. 5 plays, 18 yards, 2:13.HUT—Trevor Turner 1 run (Kassidy Lemons kick), 5:04. 7 plays, 59 yards, 3:00.HUT—Colby Turner 1 run (Lemons kick), 0:30.8. 4 plays, 85 yards, 1:28.Second QuarterHUT—Colby Turner 4 run (Lemons kick), 6:55. 8 plays, 87 yards, 2:42.HUT—Joe Dower 21 pass from Trevor Turner (Lemons kick), 2:27. 5 plays, 79 yards, 1:25.HUT—Emilio Tafolla 25 pass from Tanner Higgins (Lemons kick), 0:55. 5 plays, 58 yards, 1:03.Third QuarterHUT—Tanner Higgins 90 kickoff return (Lemons kick), 11:47. HUT—Colby Turner 41 pass intercep-tion return (Lemons kick), 10:09.GC—Taylor Foley 5 pass from Greyson Tempel (Rudy Chavez kick), 5:22. 8 plays, 25 yards, 4:43.Fourth QuarterHUT—Braydon Wells 21 run (Lemons kick), 5:53. 8 plays, 54 yards, 4:23.Team Statistics GC HUTFirst downs 12 16Rushes-yards 40-163 42-271Passing yards 78 184Com-Att-Int 12-23-2 6-7-0Fumbles-lost 1-1 2-2Penalties-yards 6-50 4-21Punts-avg. 6-38.5 1-29.0Individual StatisticsRUSHING: Garden City—G. Tempel 12-49, Koster 14-61, Bean 9-34, Finch 5-19. Hutchinson—T. Turner 6-82, Higgins 2-6, Smith 4-47, C. Turner 6-17, Brower 3-8, Likes 2-9, Hardenburger 6-40, Wintz 5-23, Wells 3-25, Cushinberry 2-6, Garcia 3-8.PASSING: Garden City—G. Tempel 12-23-2—78. Hutchinson—T. Turner 5-6-0—159; Higgins 1-1-0—25.RECEIVING: Garden City—Banner 4-48, D. Tempel 1-0, Foley 2-13, Bean 2-7, Finch 1-(-1), Smith 1-11. Hutchinson—Brower 1-80, Tafolla 2-60, Dower 1-21, Gaines-Grissom 1-4, Likes 1-19.

D3SATURDAY, October 20, 2012THE GARDEn CITY TELEGRAM

Overmatched: Buffs run over by Salthawks in 56-14 loss

LaSalle: Holcomb quarterback leads Longhorns to win over Lakin

GWAC: Hugoton beats Larned, 52-6Fourth QuarterP—Dean 10 run (run failed), 5:30P—Dean 5 run (Dean run), 3:27

Hugoton 52, Larned 6

At Hugoton, the Eagles scored in each quarter and held the visiting Indians to a single touchdown, to qualify for the playoffs with a big 52-6 win over Larned on Friday.

Yates Sutton and Garrett Walker led the charge for Hugoton. Sutton scored five touchdowns with two passing scores to Michael Baeza, and three rushing. Walker had the other three touchdowns to round up the Eagles’ scoring.

Sutton and Walker rushed for 123 and 248 yards, respectively.

Easton Palmer had the

lone touchdown for Larned on a short run in the sec-ond quarter.

Hugoton (4-4) will travel to Ulysses (5-3) next week with each boasting a 2-0 district record, to deter-mine the district champion and playoff destinations for both squads.

———Larned 0 6 0 0— 6Hugoton 6 13 19 14— 52Scoring SummaryFirst QuarterH—Sutton 8 run (kick failed), 5:25Second QuarterH—Baeza 44 pass from Sutton (run failed), 9:38L—Palmer 4 run (kick failed), 6:20H—Walker 24 run (Rodriguez kick), 1:11Third QuarterH—Sutton 4 run (kick failed), 9:33H—Sutton 3 run (Rodriguez kick), 7:09H—Walker 5 run (kick failed), 3:34Fourth QuarterH—Baeza 24 pass from Sutton (Suton run), 10:15H—Walker 28 run (pass failed), 7:29

Brad Nading/Telegram

Lakin’s Kevin Dasenbrock, right, tries to pick up a first down as Holcomb’s Aaron Hernandez comes in to make a tackle Friday at Holcomb.

Travis Morrise/Hutchinson News

Garden City’s Hunter Delgado, left, tackles Hutchinson quarter back Trevor Turner (1) after a short gain by Turner in the first quarter Friday at Gowans Stadium in Hutchinson.

Continued from Page D1

Continued from Page D1

Continued from Page D1By The Telegram

Stanton County 52, Syracuse 0

At Syracuse, visiting Stanton County jumped ahead early for an easy 52-0 win over the Bulldogs on Friday.

Angel Molina led a balanced Trojan ground game with three touchdown runs. Marques Logan and Johnny Pantoja each ran in two touchdowns.

Logan led the team with four car-ries for 149 yards. An Eddie Camacho intercep-tion return to start the sec-ond quarter helped put the game away.

Stanton County moves to 7-1 overall and completes a 3-1 district record.

———StantonCounty 20 18 8 6— 52Syracuse 0 0 0 0— 0Scoring SummaryFirst QuarterSC—Molina 5 run (run failed), 8:02SC—Logan 75 run (B. Gum pass from Kendrick), 2:55SC—Molina 17 run (kick failed), 0:47

Second QuarterSC—Camacho 15 InT return

(kick failed), 11:50SC—Molina 13 run (kick failed), 9:35SC—J. Pantoja 15 run (kick failed), 6:31Third QuarterSC—Logan 42 run (Logan run), 10:51

Fourth QuarterSC—J. Pantoja 16 run (run

failed), 2:41

Meade 77, Elkhart 0

At Meade, the Buffaloes let their offense roam over the visiting Wildcats for an easy 77-0 win over Elkhart Friday night.

Chris Hardaway led

Meade with three passing touchdowns and two more rushing scores. Trevin Wiens had three rushing touchdowns, while Ben Thompson added anoth-er. Morgan Davis had an interception return to cap off the Buffaloes’ blowout win.

Elkhart’s Alex Gomez and AJ McKinley passed for 59 and 66 yards, respec-tively, with Gomez also throwing five intercep-tions.

Meade is now 3-0 in dis-trict play and 7-1 overall.

———Meade 19 35 17 6— 77Elkhart 0 0 0 0— 0

St. Francis 52, Wichita County 32

At Leoti, visiting St. Francis used a big first half and powerful fourth-quarter offense to hold off

Wichita County 52-32 on Friday.

St. Francis got the bulk of its scoring from Michael Leibbrandt, who scored all of its touch-downs in the first half and another in the fourth quarter, all on big runs. Cade Bracelin and Thomas Douthit each scored a touchdown in the fourth quarter to pull away from Wichita County.

The Indians’ Jantz Budde passed for three touchdowns on the night, two to Bryce Nickelson and one to Matt Huber. He also ran in a touchdown in the fourth quarter.

Nickelson also had a kickoff return for a score.

Wichita County falls to 1-7 on the season.

———St.Francis 14 16 0 22— 52WichitaCounty 6 0 6 20— 32

Stanton County thumps Syracuse, 52-0; Meade beats Elkhart 77-0

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Minnesota coach Cheryl Reeve drew national atten-tion with her screaming, jacket-tossing meltdown in Game 2 of the WNBA Finals.

The Indiana Fever silenced her in Game 3. Shavonte Zellous scored a career-high 30 points to help the Fever beat the Lynx 76-59 on Friday night.

“You know, I was fired

up for this game,” Zellous said. “That Game 2 left a bad taste in our mouth. You know, we could have done a better job in a lot of different things, and I think today, we made a con-scious effort to do things better.”

Tamika Catchings added 17 points and Erlana Larkins had 10 points and 15 rebounds for the Fever, who took a 2-1 lead in the

series and can win their first title at home Sunday night against the defend-ing champs.

It had been a tense series. Reeve was fined after her actions in Game 2, which Fever coach Lin Dunn called “disrespect-ful.”

Indiana’s play did the talking on Friday. The Fever’s lead of 70-33 with 1:58 left in the third quar-

ter was the largest lead by any team in WNBA Finals history. The extent of the blowout left Reeve seated with her hand on her chin for much of the second half.

Rebekkah Brunson, who scored 12 points, was the only Minnesota player to reach double figures.

“I think Indiana played the way Indiana always plays,” Reeve said. “They

defend. You defend, you have a chance to win a championship. That’s it.”

When asked what the Lynx need to do differently in Game 4, Reeve simply said, “Score more points than them.”

Minnesota’s previ-ous playoff scoring low this season was 70 points against the Fever in Game 1 of the Finals. Maya Moore was held to

eight points in Game 3 and Seimone Augustus, who scored 27 points in Game 2, had six on 3-for-9 shooting on Friday night. Minnesota finished with just six assists.

Indiana did it all without No. 2 scorer Katie Douglas. She is still sidelined with a severely sprained left ankle. Reserve guard Jeanette Pohlen is out with a left knee injury.

Indiana Fever rout Minnesota Lynx in Game 3 of WNBA Finals

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D4 SATURDAY, October 20, 2012 The GARDen CiTY TeleGRAm

Lynn, an 18-game win-ner his first year in the rotation, failed to make it out of the fourth for the second time in the series.

The Cardinals are seeking consecutive pen-nants for the first time since 1967-68, and try-ing to advance for the second year in a row as a wild-card entry. One more win would set up a rematch of the 2006 World Series against the Tigers, which the Cardinals took in five games.

Lynn struck out five of the first 10 batters, sailing through the first three innings with no balls hit out of the infield. His undoing was a wild throw off the sec-ond-base bag attempt-ing to get a forceout on a comebacker that paved the way for San Francisco’s four-run fourth.

The Giants had run-ners on first and sec-ond with one out when Lynn gloved a tapper by Hunter Pence, wheeled and waited a bit while rookie shortstop Pete Kozma hustled to sec-ond. But Lynn threw a low dart off the bag with the ball bounding into

shallow right field and Marco Scutaro scoring without a play from sec-ond.

Eighth-place hitter Brandon Crawford sin-gled up the middle with the bases loaded on a

full count with two outs as Lynn just missed with a kick save for two more runs. Zito, who has just 30 career hits in 310 at-bats in the regular sea-son with no extra-base hits and nine RBIs, laid

down a perfect bunt for a fourth run.

Lynn has allowed four runs both of his NLCS starts, although all four were unearned in Game 5.

Zito’s only trouble

came in the second when Yadier Molina and David Freese, both swinging on the first pitch, opened the inning with a sin-gle and double. Lynn, a career .056 hitter includ-ing the postseason,

hit into a bases-loaded double play to end the threat.

Lynn was 3 for 50 with 1 RBI, 10 sacrifices and 36 strikeouts during the regular season, going hitless his last 42 at-bats.

NEW YORK (AP) — NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell appointed prede-cessor Paul Tagliabue to hear the appeals of four players suspended in the Saints’ bounty scandal.

Goodell said Friday he notified Jonathan Vilma, Will Smith, Scott Fujita and Anthony Hargrove, as well as the players’ union, that Tagliabue would be the hearing officer to “decide the appeals and bring the matter to a prompt and fair conclusion.”

The union and the four players had asked Goodell to recuse himself, contend-ing he could not fairly rule. Their second set of appeals will be heard Oct. 30.

“Any time we move towards a fair evaluation of the evidence it is a posi-tive development,” said Peter Ginsberg, Vilma’s attorney. “Commissioner Goodell’s belated recogni-tion that he cannot possi-bly serve as an impartial and unbiased arbitrator is certainly a positive devel-opment. And we have enormous respect for Paul Tagliabue.

“Having said that, we

now need to learn whether Commissioner Tagliabue plans to provide to us the fundamental rights that Commissioner Goodell ignored, including the right to examine the accus-ers and to see the evidence, and also we need to con-sider that Commissioner

Tagliabue is counsel to the law firm representing Commissioner Goodell in Jonathan’s defamation law-suit, as well as represent-ing the NFL in Jonathan’s challenge to the entire pro-cess in this matter.”

Vilma was suspended for the 2012 season and

Smith was banned four games for his role in the bounties program. Fujita, now with the Browns, was barred three games, since reduced to one. Hargrove is a free agent whose sus-pension was reduced from eight games to seven.

“I have held two hear-ings to date and have modified the discipline in several respects based on my recent meetings with the players,” Goodell said. “I will have no role in the upcoming hearings or in Mr. Tagliabue’s decisions.”

“Paul Tagliabue is a genuine football authority whose tenure as commis-sioner was marked by his thorough and judicious approach to all matters,” he added. “He has many years of experience in NFL collective bargaining matters and an impeccable reputation for integrity.”

Tagliabue was NFL com-missioner from 1989-2006 and is a lawyer. For part of that time, Goodell was the league’s general counsel.

Goodell said he con-sulted with NFL Players Association executive director DeMaurice Smith

before asking Tagliabue to hear these appeals. The collective bargaining agreement with the union that was reached to end the lockout in August 2011 gave Goodell exclusive author-ity to hear appeals of dis-cipline for conduct detri-mental or to appoint some-one to hear and decide an appeal.

Goodell periodically has appointed others to hear appeals for club fines, per-sonal conduct suspensions and for matters concerning drug and steroid policy.

“To be clear, I have not consulted with Paul Tagliabue at any point about the Saints’ matter, nor has he been any part of the process,” Goodell said. “Furthermore, under our process the hearing officer has full author-ity and complete indepen-dence to decide the appeal and determine any proce-dural issues regarding the hearings.”

Goodell handed down the suspension in May and they took effect in July after initial appeals were rejected by Goodell. Those suspensions lasted through

training camp before being vacated by a three-member appeals panel that instruct-ed Goodell to start the dis-ciplinary process again and clarify his reasons for suspending the players.

The suspensions were reissued by the NFL last week and promptly appealed by all four play-ers. None of the suspen-sions is currently in effect because they were appealed within the frame-work of the NFL’s labor agreement.

But all four players have asked U.S. District Judge Ginger Berrigan to throw out Goodell’s disciplinary rulings on the grounds he has demonstrated bias against the players in his handling the bounty inves-tigation. The players say Goodell violated due pro-cess rights.

In a recent court fil-ing, the union said: “It is only a neutral (arbitrator) of unquestioned integrity who can restore public confidence in this process and mitigate the damage which the NFL’s handling of ‘bounty-gate’ has inflict-ed upon the game.”

HOUSTON (AP) — State your name and school.

That’s the only guid-ance NFL players get before taping introductions for Sunday night games.

Most simply list their college, but some players get creative.

Last week, three play-ers on the Houston Texans’ offensive line gave their elementary schools and one his middle school. The announcers joked that pre-schools were sure to come next week. (They were actu-ally behind on that: A for-mer Seahawks player once said his daycare group.)

The Houston linemen decided to use their elemen-tary schools last season for their first appearance in a playoff game. When Houston was to be on NBC again Sunday night, they planned to recite their mid-dle schools.

What they didn’t realize is that players must specifi-cally ask to make a change or the network uses what already has been shot. So new addition Derek Newton said his middle school according to plan, only to be the odd man out when three of the four other line-men were left with their ele-mentary schools from last year’s footage.

“We were kind of bummed out about it because we all wanted to be the same,” Houston left tackle Duane Brown said.

A fifth lineman, Antoine Caldwell, also didn’t follow suit because he was a back-up last year and not privy to the plan. The former Alabama player still stood

out, though. He passed on saying Alabama for “Roll Tide Roll.”

Brown got a great response from the introduc-tions and said they have another surprise planned for Houston’s next night game on Nov. 11.

“We try to get away from the norm,” he said. “We wanted to take it all the way back to our early beginnings. We had a good time with it. It was pretty fun. I heard from my for-mer teachers, and the prin-cipal contacted one of my cousins who goes there now to tell me how proud they were that I said the school. It was a huge hit.”

Fred Gaudelli, the pro-ducer of the Sunday night games, said players love the introductions.

“Especially guys that don’t handle the ball, offen-sive linemen or defensive players, it’s their chance to introduce themselves to the country and show who they are,” Gaudelli said.

Then there are those who make up schools or use the introductions to joke or give a shout-out to family members.

“We let them do what they want,” Gaudelli said. “It’s their moment to per-sonalize themselves.”

Former NBC producer Don Ohlmeyer started the practice of players intro-ducing themselves in 2000 when they were still doing “Monday Night Football.” They’ve continued to do that since moving the show to Sunday night. He got the idea from college broad-casts in the late 1960s and

early 1970s when players would introduce themselves and state their heights and weights in pregame shows.

Ravens linebacker Terrell Suggs is a player who’s always taken advan-tage of his moment in the introductions.

In one of his early ones, he said Duke and Donna University. Of course there is no such school. Suggs revealed to a producer that Duke and Donna are the first names of his parents.

“You’ve got to have fun,” he said, adding that he doesn’t plan them in advance. “I used to go straight with it, but they started messing my name up, and where I went to school and who I was, so I started to say things that have to deal with me.”

He’s also used “Sizzle Sun Devil” as a nod to Arizona State’s mascot and even incorporated lyrics from a Jay Z song in his introduc-tion last year (Sizzle Ball So Hard University.)

“He’s always been a cre-ative one,” Gaudelli said. “I love Terrell Suggs for that.”

Another player who’s used the platform to have some fun is Minnesota defensive end Jared Allen. He attended Idaho State, but over the years has said everything from The Culinary Academy to home school. Once he simply said: “Thanks Mom.”

San Francisco 49ers receiver Randy Moss gave some publicity to his home-town in West Virginia when he went with the fictitious Rand University while play-ing for the Vikings.

Green Bay cornerback Charles Woodson, who won the Heisman Trophy at Michigan, had a little fun with his intro several years ago when he played for the Raiders. He said: “Mr. Woodson to you all. You know the school.”

Cowboys cornerback Brandon Carr, who went to Grand Valley State, has never used anything other than his name and college.

But while talking about it this week, the player from Flint, Mich., thought of one he’ll use next time.

“I would say, Brandon Carr, Flintstone,” he said in a nod to his hometown.

Ohio State players frequently put the over-enunciating THE in front of their school name, and other schools like Texas have copied that style. Last Sunday, Packers linebacker

D.J. Smith, who went to Appalachian State, added the hard THE in front of his school in the introduc-tions.

And everyone’s heard Miami players simply say-ing The U instead of the school’s full name.

“It’s just something we called Miami when we were at school,” Houston’s Andre Johnson said. “The U is on our helmets so it was just something that we always said. It was just something that always stuck with us.”

Sometimes players who try to be cute run into trou-ble with their schools.

“Some guys do their junior college and then their real college calls them and gets mad at them and they ask if they can do their real college,” Gaudelli said. “So I always let guys redo them.”

He often gets emails from fans about the intro-ductions, and the response has been overwhelmingly positive.

“There’s hardly ever any-thing in entertainment that is universally liked, that you don’t get complaints about even if you think it’s great,” he said. “This is the one thing we never receive complaints about and we always get praise for.”

He does, however, get the same question repeatedly.

“I’ve gotten emails from the fans before asking me if I make the NFL wait for the lineups to end to snap the ball,” he said. “I’ve got that email quite a bit, and I laugh. I wish. No, I’m just trying to get it in there in between plays.”

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Houston Texans’ Duane Brown poses in an NFL football jersey in Houston. Last week during player introduc-tions, three players on the Texans’ offensive line, includ-ing Brown, gave their elementary schools and one his middle school.

Associated Press

NFL commissioner Roger Goodell, left, has appoint-ed his predecessor, Paul Tagliabue, right, to hear the appeals of four players suspended in the New Orleans Saints bounties scandal.

NFL players play the name game for introductions

Goodell appoints Tagliabue to hear player appeals in bounty case

NLCS: Giants still alive, thanks to Zito’s pitching against CardinalsContinued from Page D1

Page 27: Garden City Telegram October 20, 2012

NORMAN, Okla. (AP) — At Oklahoma, there’s no feeling quite like plopping the Golden Hat trophy on your head and walking off the Cotton Bowl field with a victory against rival Texas in hand.

Even so, the 10th-ranked Sooners (4-1, 2-1 Big 12) know it can get much bet-ter than that. When Bob Stoops has his teams play-ing at their best, a Red River Rivalry win often means there’s a championship in store when the end of the season comes.

It didn’t happen that way after last year’s Red River Rivalry blowout, with the Sooners scuffling through a win at Kansas that fore-shadowed three losses in the second half of the season. They want to reverse that trend when the last-place Jayhawks (1-5, 0-3) visit Norman on Saturday night after this year’s Red River rout.

“This year, we’re not just peaking. We’re going to continue to work,” safety Javon Harris said. “We’re not going to stop doing what we’ve been doing.

“I don’t think that we’re done. We’re really just get-ting started.”

Under Stoops, the Sooners have never suffered enough of a letdown after the emo-tional Texas game to lose

their next time out. They’re a perfect 13-0, including five wins against Kansas. But last season, the 55-17 blow-out of the Longhorns ended up being the high point of the season. Losses to Texas Tech, Baylor and Oklahoma State spoiled a promising start and Oklahoma settled for a trip to the Insight Bowl after holding the preseason No. 1 ranking.

“You can look back on that and just learn from your mistakes and learn that one game doesn’t deter-mine your season,” quar-terback Landry Jones said. “Each game will determine where you want to go at the end of the year.”

The Sooners provided a

strong response after losing to Kansas State last month, bouncing back with consecu-tive wins against Texas Tech and Texas. Now, they’re deal-ing with the return of high expectations and even talk that the national champion-ship could be a possibility if a handful of teams lose.

But will that atmosphere have an adverse effect?

“I don’t know,” Stoops said. “I guess it all depends on the team or the person. In the end, it shouldn’t. Hopefully when you have a mature team, they under-stand what they’re doing correct, they understand what they’re not doing as well as they should, regard-less of what anyone else

says about them. “Hopefully our guys will

do that, continue to improve in the areas we feel we can and keep pushing for more. The mature teams do that.”

Part of that maturity will be require keeping the same standard of preparation for Kansas, which has lost 15 straight conference games and 26 of its last 27, even with No. 5 Notre Dame next on the schedule.

The Jayhawks have been pulling out all the stops to

stay competitive in games, faking punts and field goals and last week replacing starting quarterback Dayne Crist with redshirt fresh-man Michael Cummings. With Cummings taking the snaps, Kansas scored 14 straight points and had the ball with the chance to take the lead late in a 20-14 loss to Oklahoma State.

First-year coach Charlie Weis wouldn’t say who would start against Oklahoma.

“Dayne’s a competitor,” quarterbacks coach Ron Powlus said. “He wants to play. He doesn’t want to come off the field. If he’s not on the field, he’ll be sup-portive, he’ll be engaged - which he was on Saturday - and anything other than that, I would be disappoint-ed if that was the case.”

“There is a drastic dif-ference between Dayne and Michael, there’s no doubt about it, but Michael has come a long way.”

D5SATURDAY, October 20, 2012THE GARDEn CiTY TElEGRAm

By ARNE GREENSpecial to The Telegram

Tempting as it might be to check out Texas Tech’s victory over West Virginia last week, scribble down some notes and call it good, Bill Snyder isn’t tak-ing the bait.

Tech may have offered Kansas State a few tips on how to take down the high-octane Mountaineers, but the Wildcats have their own template for success.

“We don’t attempt to go out and take things from one game to the next,” said Snyder, whose No. 4-ranked Wildcats go on the road to Morgantown, W.Va., to face No. 17 West Virginia at 6:05 tonight at Milan Puskar Stadium. “We have to view all the ballgames that they’ve played and find what it is in our system that would fit in our preparation for West Virginia or any other opponent that we play.”

In other words, the Wildcats aren’t likely to challenge West Virginia and quarterback Geno Smith to a shootout, despite the Mountaineers’ No. 114 national ranking in total defense. While they’d love to duplicate Tech’s defensive performance in the 49-14 rout at Lubbock, they’re more inclined to do it with ball control and time of possession.

“It’s not a matter of taking things,” Snyder

said. “Now there might be philosophical thoughts in regards to how you defend Geno Smith or how you function in special teams or offense that you might tend to say with our schemes we can philosoph-ically do something simi-lar to what may have been done.”

While Texas Tech threw for over 500 yards against a West Virginia offense that allows 364 yards a game through the air, K-State ranks 108th nationally and last in the Big 12 in pass-ing with a 179-yard aver-age. But the Wildcats are 11th nationally in rushing at 248.5 yards and could help their defense signifi-cantly by controlling the ball.

“We are going to have to control the clock (and) play defense with a good offense, which is kind of our game,” fullback Braden Wilson said of the offense, which features two of the league’s top rushers in John Hubert and quar-terback Collin Klein. “We just have to make sure to go out and do what we do best.”

Snyder isn’t convinced that running the ball will be enough against a West Virginia unit that allows 131.3 yards a game on the ground but clearly is vulnerable defending the pass.

“What’s important to us is for that to happen

we have to be a well-bal-anced offense,” Snyder said. “If we become one-sided in our approach then it makes it that much more complex for us and that

much easier for the oppo-nent.”

Even if they take time off the clock, they must either finish their drives or at least create a field

position advantage, some-thing they did successfully in last week’s 27-21 victory at Iowa State.

The other part of the equation, and easily the trickiest, is keeping West Virginia off the board. The Mountaineers are sixth nationally in total offense with 543.7 yards a game and third in passing at 384.8.

Smith, the early-season Heisman Trophy favorite has completed 75 percent of his passes for 2,271 yards and 25 touchdowns with-out an interception. Tavon Austin and Stedman Bailey also rank atop the league receiving charges with 67 and 55 catches respectively, both with over 125 yards a game and 22 touchdown grabs between them.

“Geno Smith is one of the best quarterbacks in the NCAA and does a lot of great things,” said K-State strong safety Jarard Milo. “They have a great receiv-ing corps and (Smith) is like the next RG3 (Robert Griffin III) of college foot-ball.

“It will be a great chal-lenge for us to go down to Morgantown and be able to play against him and his team.”

The Wildcats have been solid defensively all sea-son, ranking 31st nation-ally overall and allowing 339.7 yards per game. But if they have a vulnerabil-ity it is against the pass,

where they are No. 74.Still the defense has

been able to mask its defi-ciencies with a bend-don’t-break philosophy that has yielded just 12 plays of 20-plus yards and three of 40 or more. The Wildcats also rank seventh nationally in turnover margin at plus-10.

“We’re fine with it, because in reality it’s going to take a lot of really short passes to beat you,” senior corner-back Nigel Malone said of the approach, which has helped the Wildcats rank 19th nationally in scoring defense (16.5 points). “So if we can just keep them out of the end zone and no points or at least a field goal, we’re comfortable that our offense will go out there and score points.”

The Wildcats have not been as dominant in time of possession this sea-son, in part because the offense has been more effi-cient. But Snyder would still like to see them con-trol the clock against West Virginia – with one caveat.

“If you keep them out of the end zone and off the field, that’s a real positive thing,” he said. “If they’re scoring a mile a minute, then …

“It’s good in either account, I guess. I don’t want them scoring at seven points a minute either, and they are very capable of doing it.”

K-State cautious heading into game with Mountaineers

Associated Press

It will be a battle of Heisman Trophy-contending quarterbacks in Morgantown, W. Va., today when the Mountaineers’ Geno Smith, above, takes on Collin Klein and the Wildcats.

No. 10 Oklahoma aims for more vs. Kansas, after Texas blowout

Associated Press

After being pulled last week, KU quarterback Dayne Crist (10) might not start vs. Oklahoma.

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Page 28: Garden City Telegram October 20, 2012

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ADT Cp n 38.80 +2.32 +1.7AES Corp 11.04 +.43 -6.8AFLAC u49.69 +1.55 +14.9AK Steel 5.51 +.31 -33.3AOL u36.27 -.50 +140.2AT&T Inc 35.32 -.31 +16.8AbtLab u66.15 -3.13 +17.6AberFitc 32.01 -.95 -34.5Accenture 67.75 -1.67 +27.3AMD d2.18 -.56 -59.6Aeropostl 13.19 +.27 -13.5Aetna 43.54 +.29 +3.2Agilent 35.75 -1.47 +2.3AirProd 79.99 -2.01 -6.1AlcatelLuc 1.12 +.12 -28.2Alcoa 9.01 +.32 +4.2Allergan 92.21 -.05 +5.1Allstate u42.01 +1.40 +53.3AlphaNRs 8.97 +1.09 -56.1AlpAlerMLP 16.64 -.03 +.1Altria 32.63 -.49 +10.1AmBev 41.34 +1.62 +14.5AMovilL 26.28 +.46 +16.3AEagleOut 22.54 +1.00 +47.4AEP u44.98 +.86 +8.9AmExp 56.86 -1.03 +20.5AmIntlGrp u35.70 +.24 +53.9AmTower u73.84 +1.67 +23.0AmeriBrgn 40.28 +.78 +8.3Anadarko 70.34 +1.16 -7.8AnglogldA 33.21 -1.07 -21.8Annaly d15.98 -.06 +.1Anworth 6.20 ... -1.3Apache 86.87 +1.71 -4.1ArcelorMit 16.28 +1.46 -10.5ArchCoal 7.91 +.29 -45.5ArchDan 28.52 +.47 -.3ArmourRsd 7.04 -.16 -.1AuRico g 8.06 +.88 +.6Avon 16.48 -.63 -5.7BB&T Cp 29.78 -2.56 +18.3BHP BillLt 71.14 +2.80 +.7BP PLC 43.10 +1.26 +.8BRFBrasil 18.19 +.06 -7.0BakrHu 44.75 -.02 -8.0BcoBrad pf 15.87 +.51 -4.8BcoSantSA 7.64 +.40 +1.6BcoSBrasil 7.18 -.14 -11.8BkofAm 9.44 +.32 +69.8BkNYMel u24.68 +1.84 +24.0Bankrate d10.97 -3.70 -49.0Barclay 14.91 +.13 +35.7BariPVix rs d34.99 -.39 -75.4BarrickG 38.78 -.24 -14.3Baxter u61.92 +1.23 +25.1BeazerH rs 18.41 +1.51 +48.5BerkH B u89.26 +1.01 +17.0BestBuy 17.25 -.41 -26.2BioMedR 19.38 +.30 +7.2Blackstone 15.67 +.73 +11.8BlockHR 17.11 +.19 +4.8Boeing 74.01 +2.16 +.9BostonSci 5.22 -.35 -2.2BrMySq 33.81 +.72 -4.1BrkfldOfPr 16.07 +.07 +2.7BrwnBrn 25.24 -1.01 +11.5CBRE Grp 19.11 +.29 +25.6CBS B 33.74 -.03 +24.3CSX 21.10 -.21 +.2CVS Care 46.20 -.72 +13.3CYS Invest 13.26 -.01 +.9CblvsnNY u18.39 +1.48 +29.3CabotOG s 44.48 +.62 +17.2Calpine 18.40 +.92 +12.7Cameron 55.21 +1.99 +12.2CdnNRs gs 31.25 +.42 -16.4CapOne u60.75 +2.54 +43.7CapitlSrce u7.78 +.05 +16.1CapsteadM 12.60 +.17 +1.3CardnlHlth 41.26 +.37 +1.6CarMax 33.30 +.75 +9.3Carnival u38.19 +1.43 +17.0Caterpillar 83.86 +1.56 -7.4Cemex 8.97 +.14 +73.1Cemig pf s 12.43 +.20 -12.7CenterPnt u21.41 +.28 +6.6CntryLink 38.96 -.10 +4.7ChesEng 20.81 +.63 -6.6Chevron 113.38 +1.31 +6.6Chicos u18.91 +.78 +69.7Chimera 2.67 +.09 +6.4Chipotle d243.00 -47.47 -28.1Cigna u49.66 -.05 +18.2CinciBell 5.57 +.11 +83.8Citigroup u37.16 +2.41 +41.2CliffsNRs 44.45 +3.95 -28.7Coach 56.00 +2.29 -8.3CocaCola s 37.40 -.83 +6.9CocaCE u31.20 -.29 +21.0ColgPal u107.74 +.47 +16.6Comerica 29.43 -1.46 +14.1ConAgra u28.26 +.32 +7.0ConocPhil s 57.45 +1.28 +3.4ConsolEngy 35.21 +.07 -4.1ConstellA u35.65 +.65 +72.5Corning 13.52 +.54 +4.2Cosan Ltd 15.85 -.33 +44.6Costamre 13.56 -1.38 -4.2Covidien 56.40 -1.34 +25.3CSVS2xVxS d1.40 -.06 -95.6CSVelIVSt u17.27 +.10 +165.3CredSuiss 23.49 +1.06 ...Cummins 91.93 +4.44 +4.4

D-E-FDCT Indl 6.56 +.12 +28.1DDR Corp u15.68 +.09 +28.8DR Horton 21.48 +1.52 +70.3Danaher 53.34 -2.59 +13.4DeVry 21.55 -2.17 -44.0DeanFds u18.30 +3.34 +63.4Deere 84.99 +2.55 +9.9DeltaAir 10.00 -.02 +23.6DenburyR 16.21 +.02 +7.4DeutschBk 44.48 +2.53 +17.5DevonE 62.00 +.64 ...DiaOffs 70.52 +3.94 +27.6DiamRk 8.87 -.19 -8.0DxFnBull rs 113.82 +5.32 +75.5DirSCBear 15.62 +.04 -41.0DirFnBear d16.64 -.92 -55.4DirSPBear 17.31 -.22 -41.4DirDGldBll 15.63 -.03 -20.1DrxEnBear 7.44 -.44 -34.2DirEMBear 11.52 -.20 -41.5

SpdrDJIA 133.11 +.17 +9.2SpdrGold 166.97 -3.09 +9.9SP Mid 179.59 +1.93 +12.6S&P500ETF 143.39 +.50 +14.3SpdrHome u26.11 +1.49 +52.7SpdrS&PBk 23.70 +.05 +19.5SpdrLehHY 40.42 +.17 +5.1SpdrS&P RB 27.95 -.21 +14.5SpdrRetl 62.21 -.02 +18.4SpdrOGEx 56.14 +.57 +6.5SpdrMetM 45.66 +1.52 -6.8Safeway 16.35 +.78 -22.3StJude 39.50 -3.09 +15.2SallyBty 23.52 -1.15 +11.3SandRdge 7.06 -.18 -13.5Sanofi u44.55 +1.44 +21.9Schlmbrg 74.00 +1.81 +8.3Schwab 13.32 +.37 +18.3SeadrillLtd 41.43 +1.88 +24.9SealAir 15.95 +.60 -7.3ShawGrp u43.69 -.21 +62.4SiderurNac 5.57 +.16 -31.9SilvWhtn g 39.29 +.42 +35.7SouthnCo 46.64 +1.03 +.8SthnCopper u36.97 +1.96 +23.8SwstAirl 8.88 +.04 +3.7SwstnEngy 35.25 -.86 +10.4SpectraEn 29.62 +.59 -3.7SprintNex 5.65 -.08 +141.5SP Matls 37.09 +.72 +10.7SP HlthC u40.60 +.29 +17.0SP CnSt 35.71 -.14 +9.9SP Consum 46.58 +.33 +19.4SP Engy 73.83 +1.27 +6.8SPDR Fncl 16.11 +.30 +23.9SP Inds 36.79 +.34 +9.0SP Tech 29.29 -.63 +15.1SP Util 37.11 +.61 +3.1StdPac 7.70 +.73 +142.1StanBlkDk 70.27 +.21 +3.9StateStr 44.66 +3.28 +10.8StillwtrM 10.27 +.05 -1.8Stryker 52.64 +.34 +5.9Suncor gs 33.99 +1.01 +17.9SunTrst 28.63 -.54 +61.8SupEnrgy 20.84 +.89 -26.7Supvalu 2.19 +.33 -73.0Synovus 2.35 -.02 +66.7Sysco 30.92 -.33 +5.4TCF Fncl 11.01 -.12 +6.7TD Ameritr 15.76 +.20 +.7TE Connect 32.94 +.19 +6.9TIM Part 17.93 +.53 -30.5TJX s 42.55 -.28 +31.8TaiwSemi 15.22 +.10 +17.9TalismE g 13.12 +.10 +2.9Target 62.23 +.71 +21.5TeckRes g 31.67 +1.17 -10.0TelefBrasil 21.83 +.02 -20.1TelefEsp 13.65 +.56 -20.6TenetHlt rs 23.51 -.16 +14.6Teradyn 14.12 +.50 +3.6Terex 23.60 +1.17 +74.7Tesoro 38.16 -.13 +63.4TevaPhrm 40.49 +1.05 +.3Textron 25.51 +.02 +38.0ThermoFis 58.04 -.80 +29.1ThomCrk g 2.77 +.07 -60.23M Co 92.94 +.19 +13.7TimeWarn 44.93 -.13 +24.3TollBros 35.10 +2.39 +71.9Total SA 51.39 +1.77 +.5Transocn 48.52 +3.03 +26.4Travelers u73.51 +4.79 +24.2TurqHillRs 7.88 -.84 -55.5TwoHrbInv 11.91 +.25 +28.9TycoIntl s 27.58 +.50 +20.4Tyson 16.44 +.42 -20.3UBS AG 13.05 +.44 +10.3UDR 24.71 +.70 -1.6US Airwy 11.47 +.11 +126.2USG u24.48 +3.42 +140.9UltraPt g 23.86 +.64 -19.5UnilevNV u36.64 +.44 +6.6UnionPac 123.77 +2.72 +16.8UtdContl 20.13 +.13 +6.7UtdMicro d1.93 -.09 -9.8UPS B 72.30 +.19 -1.2UtdRentals 38.58 +6.50 +30.6US Bancrp 34.23 +.51 +26.5US NGs rs 23.09 -.07 -10.6US OilFd 33.34 -.66 -12.5USSteel 22.15 +.96 -16.3UtdTech 77.99 +2.03 +6.7UtdhlthGp 55.66 -1.41 +9.8UnumGrp 20.48 +.73 -2.8

V-W-X-Y-ZVale SA 18.11 +.50 -15.6Vale SA pf 17.45 +.50 -15.3ValeroE 29.53 +.52 +40.3VangTotBd 84.68 -.32 +1.4VangREIT 65.54 +.77 +13.0VangEmg 41.81 +.21 +9.4VangEAFE 33.58 +.60 +9.6VeriFone 31.68 +.62 -10.8VerizonCm 45.16 +.54 +12.6VimpelCm 11.09 -.30 +17.1Visa u139.97 +.85 +37.9VMware 83.65 -3.65 +.6WPX En n 17.69 -.17 -2.6WalMart u75.62 -.19 +26.5Walgrn 35.79 -.15 +8.3WalterEn 38.27 +2.73 -36.8WsteMInc 32.53 +.44 -.6WeathfIntl 12.20 +.03 -16.7WellPoint 61.82 -.01 -6.7WellsFargo 34.34 +.09 +24.6Wesco Intl 63.50 +7.39 +19.8WstnRefin 25.53 +1.19 +92.1WstnUnion 17.93 +.05 -1.8Weyerhsr u28.01 +1.75 +50.0WmsCos 34.97 -.17 +29.7WT India 18.40 -.43 +17.9XL Grp u25.43 +.45 +28.6Xerox 6.98 -.10 -12.3Yamana g u19.33 +.64 +31.6YumBrnds 70.09 +.64 +18.8Zimmer 62.69 +.43 +17.4

LVSands 45.28 +1.32 +6.0LeggPlat u25.86 +1.15 +12.2LennarA u38.73 +2.97 +97.1LillyEli u52.86 +2.41 +27.2Limited 48.60 +.34 +20.4LincNat 25.33 +1.57 +30.4LinkedIn 106.72 -3.69 +69.4LloydBkg u2.56 +.05 +63.1LaPac u15.66 +1.66 +94.1Lowes u32.64 +1.46 +28.6LyonBas A u54.33 +3.47 +67.2

M-N-0MBIA 10.29 -.26 -11.2MEMC 2.45 +.06 -37.8MFA Fncl 8.16 ... +21.4MGIC 2.02 +.36 -45.8MGM Rsts 11.06 +.81 +6.0MSCI Inc 27.02 +1.09 -17.9Macys 39.99 +.58 +24.3MagHRes 4.35 +.02 -19.3Manitowoc 15.26 +1.96 +66.1Manulife g 12.44 +.36 +17.1MarathnO 30.59 +1.21 +4.5MarathPet 54.94 +.64 +65.0MktVGold 51.73 +.07 +.6MV OilSv s 40.79 +1.21 +6.5MV Semi n 30.49 -.01 +.2MktVRus 28.91 +.20 +8.5MktVJrGld 23.64 -.37 -4.3MarIntA 37.53 -.63 +28.7MarshM u34.35 +.01 +8.6Masco 15.04 +.74 +43.5McDrmInt 10.98 -.34 -4.6McDnlds 88.72 -3.79 -11.6McGrwH u56.09 +.73 +24.7McMoRn 11.76 -.10 -19.2McEwenM 4.61 +.09 +37.2Mechel 6.98 +.17 -17.9Medtrnic 42.00 -1.05 +9.8Merck u47.03 +1.41 +24.7MetLife 35.93 +.93 +15.2MetroPCS 10.97 -.91 +26.4MKors n u55.05 +2.07 +102.0MobileTele 17.37 +.24 +18.3Molycorp 11.05 +.33 -53.9Monsanto 88.69 +.12 +26.6MonstrWw 7.12 -.44 -10.2MorgStan 17.53 +.22 +15.9Mosaic 53.97 -.18 +7.0MurphO 62.20 +3.50 +11.6NCR Corp 22.18 +.12 +34.8NRG Egy 23.28 +.26 +28.5NYSE Eur 24.41 +.61 -6.5Nabors 14.89 +.36 -14.1NOilVarco 80.70 +2.48 +18.7Navistar d19.04 -3.25 -49.7NewOriEd 17.37 +.23 -27.8NY CmtyB 14.53 +.08 +17.5Newcastle 7.89 +.23 +69.7NewellRub u20.60 +.85 +27.6NewfldExp 34.14 +1.01 -9.5NewmtM 54.90 -.04 -8.5Nexen g 25.40 -.43 +59.6NextEraEn 71.72 +2.35 +17.8NielsenH u31.45 +.68 +5.9NikeB 96.45 +2.03 +.1NobleCorp 39.81 +3.81 +31.7NokiaCp 2.74 +.18 -43.2Nordstrm 56.43 +1.50 +13.5NorflkSo 65.64 -1.64 -9.9Nucor 40.53 +1.95 +2.4OcciPet 84.35 +2.42 -10.0OfficeDpt 2.41 +.07 +12.1Oi SA s 4.03 -.08 -23.6OldRepub 10.63 +.85 +14.7Omnicom 48.91 -2.82 +9.7OrientEH u11.79 +3.16 +57.8OvShip d3.25 -1.83 -70.3

P-Q-RPG&E Cp 42.78 +.28 +3.8PNC 59.42 -3.31 +3.0PPL Corp 29.78 +.34 +1.2Pandora 9.10 -.30 -9.1ParkerHan 78.50 -.90 +3.0PeabdyE 25.89 +.18 -21.8PennVa 4.94 +.05 -6.6Penney 26.01 -.02 -26.0Pentair 42.58 -1.05 +27.9PepcoHold 20.06 +.72 -1.2PepsiCo 69.88 -.17 +5.3PetrbrsA 21.97 +.04 -6.5Petrobras 22.80 +.09 -8.2Pfizer u25.76 +.64 +19.0PhilipMor 88.12 -3.58 +12.3Phillips66 n 44.64 +.72 +31.3Pier 1 u20.34 +1.55 +46.0PitnyBw 14.27 +.91 -23.0PlainsEx 38.00 +1.59 +3.5Potash 40.58 -1.01 -1.7PrecDrill 8.15 +.07 -20.6PrinFncl 28.16 +1.24 +14.5ProLogis 35.57 +.73 +24.4ProShtS&P 34.19 -.14 -15.4PrUltQQQ s 55.67 -1.73 +36.7PrUShQQQ 29.95 +.81 -33.6ProUltSP 60.63 +.35 +30.7PrUltSP500 88.87 +.73 +47.7PrUVxST rs d28.96 -.83 -96.0PrUltCrude 29.70 -1.17 -27.5ProctGam 68.57 +1.19 +2.8ProgsvCp 22.92 +.72 +17.5PrUShSP rs 54.84 -.52 -28.9PrUShL20 rs 64.36 +2.24 -11.0ProUSR2K 27.80 +.08 -28.0PUSSP500 rs 38.73 -.49 -41.0Prudentl 58.04 +1.99 +15.8PSEG 32.71 +.22 -.9PulteGrp u17.89 +2.28 +183.5QuantaSvc 23.55 -.75 +9.3QstDiag 59.17 -4.22 +1.9Questar 20.35 +.15 +2.5QksilvRes 4.59 -.25 -31.6RadianGrp u4.66 +.31 +99.1RadioShk 2.44 +.18 -74.9Realogy n u36.90 +3.30 +7.9RedHat 50.73 -2.96 +22.9RegionsFn 7.13 -.15 +65.8ReynAmer 41.95 -.03 +1.3RioTinto 51.00 +2.31 +4.3RiteAid 1.15 -.01 -8.7RobtHalf 27.24 +2.00 -4.3RylCarb u32.01 +1.45 +29.2RoyDShllA 68.74 -.23 -6.0

S-T-USAIC 10.89 ... -11.4

A-B-CAMC Net 45.53 +4.07 +21.1ASML Hld 52.18 -.81 +24.9AcaciaTc 24.51 -1.29 -32.9AcadiaPh 2.40 ... +122.2Achillion 10.25 -.54 +34.5AcmePkt 16.23 +.15 -47.5ActivsBliz 11.18 +.02 -9.3AdobeSy 33.24 +1.30 +17.6Adtran 15.83 +.18 -47.5Aegerion u19.65 +3.69 +17.4AEtern grs 2.28 -.15 -75.3Affymax u24.47 -2.28 +270.2Affymetrix 3.55 +.13 -13.3AkamaiT 36.37 -1.21 +12.7Akorn 12.51 -.60 +12.5Alexion 107.62 -3.57 +50.5AlignTech 27.68 -8.88 +16.7Alkermes 18.76 -.46 +8.1AllscriptH 13.58 -.16 -28.3AlteraCp lf 32.51 +.18 -12.4Amarin 11.26 +.38 +50.3Amazon 240.00 -2.36 +38.6ACapAgy 33.04 +.45 +17.7AmCapLtd u11.89 +.30 +76.7ACapMtg 24.82 +.36 +31.9ARltyCT n 11.76 -.11 +12.1Amgen u87.16 +3.16 +35.7AnacorPh 6.01 -.38 -3.1AnalogDev 38.45 +.34 +7.5AntheraPh .95 -.07 -84.6vjA123 d.12 -.11 -92.3ApolloGrp d20.39 -8.25 -62.1ApolloInv 7.94 +.10 +23.3Apple Inc 609.84 -19.87 +50.6ApldMatl 10.84 -.06 +1.2ArQule 2.69 +.18 -52.3ArenaPhm 9.19 +.06 +391.4AresCap 17.28 +.34 +11.8AriadP u23.14 -1.08 +88.9ArmHld 28.10 +.15 +1.6ArrayBio 4.49 -.59 +107.9ArubaNet 18.99 -.44 +2.5AscenaRt s 20.97 +.98 +41.1AscentSolr .97 -.04 +149.5AsscdBanc 12.90 +.11 +15.5AstexPhm 2.65 -.25 +40.2athenahlth 73.31 -8.76 +49.2Atmel d4.62 -.11 -43.0Autodesk 30.47 -.73 +.5AutoData 58.42 +.10 +8.2AvagoTch 33.19 +.21 +15.0AvanirPhm 3.18 +.10 +55.1AvisBudg 17.03 +.05 +58.8B/E Aero 43.41 -.55 +12.1BGC Ptrs 4.66 -.10 -21.5BMC Sft 40.34 -2.21 +23.1Baidu 112.38 +1.16 -3.5BeacnRfg u30.19 +2.49 +49.2BedBath 60.24 -1.21 +3.9BiogenIdc 145.65 -1.55 +32.3BioMarin 42.29 +.72 +23.0Broadcom 33.33 +.43 +13.5BrcdeCm 5.46 -.33 +5.1BrukerCp 11.77 -.48 -5.2BldrFstSrc 4.87 +.34 +138.7CA Inc 24.51 -.35 +21.2CH Robins 60.73 +.79 -13.0CME Grp s 56.50 +.13 +15.9CVB Fncl 11.19 -.56 +11.6Cadence 12.61 +.10 +21.3CapFedFn 11.60 -.08 +.5CpstnTrb h .97 -.03 -16.1CareerEd 3.60 -.30 -54.8CaribouC 11.94 -.71 -14.4Carrizo 26.49 +1.47 +.5Catamarn s 48.42 -1.76 +71.5CathayGen u18.11 +1.11 +21.3Cavium 31.68 +.62 +11.4Celgene 75.16 -3.26 +11.2CentAl 7.60 +.51 -10.7Cepheid 30.59 -3.31 -11.1Cerner 70.43 -1.99 +15.0ChkPoint d41.72 -4.33 -20.6Cheesecake 33.73 -.73 +14.9CienaCorp 12.43 -.32 +2.7CinnFin 39.53 +1.13 +29.8Cintas 41.88 +.02 +20.3Cirrus 38.22 +1.02 +141.1Cisco 18.04 -.37 +.1CitrixSys 64.16 -3.54 +5.7CleanEngy 13.11 +.04 +5.2Clearwire u1.85 -.47 -4.6CognizTech 68.77 -.77 +6.9Coinstar 43.83 -.52 -4.0Comcast u36.95 +1.17 +55.8Comc spcl u36.03 +1.10 +52.9CmcBMO 37.68 -1.45 -1.2Compuwre 9.57 +.05 +15.0Comverse 6.43 +.04 -6.3CopanoEn 31.75 -1.52 -7.2CorinthC 2.51 -.12 +15.7Costco 94.78 -2.77 +13.8

Rovi Corp 13.60 -.60 -44.7RoyGld 86.58 -2.02 +28.4

S-T-USBA Com u66.10 +.88 +53.9SEI Inv 21.19 +.02 +22.1SLM Cp 16.61 -.40 +23.9SanDisk 44.02 +1.74 -10.5Santarus u9.52 +.41 +187.6Sapient 10.26 -.31 -18.6Sarepta rs 24.41 -2.70 +446.1SavientPh 2.13 -.13 -4.5SciClone 5.90 +.18 +37.5SeagateT 27.90 -.17 +70.1SearsHldgs 58.72 -1.20 +84.8SeattGen 26.04 +1.04 +55.8SelCmfrt 30.73 -1.11 +41.7Sequenom 3.50 +.06 -21.3Shutterfly 29.84 +1.42 +31.1SifyTech 2.51 +.34 -37.6SigmaAld 72.67 +.77 +16.3SilicnImg 4.34 ... -7.7Slcnware 5.13 -.14 +17.7SilvStd g 15.12 +.61 +9.4Sina 56.14 -4.50 +8.0SiriusXM u2.92 +.14 +60.4SkywksSol 22.14 -.03 +36.5SmithWes 9.76 -.41 +123.9SodaStrm 37.04 +1.15 +13.3Solazyme 9.86 -.25 -17.1SonicCorp 9.88 +.19 +46.8Sonus 1.79 +.01 -25.2Sourcefire 42.81 -3.35 +32.2SpectPh 11.51 -.26 -21.3Splunk n 31.51 +.20 -11.2Spreadtrm 20.88 +.40 ...Staples 11.23 +.13 -19.2StarScient 3.20 +.07 +46.8Starbucks 45.69 -1.50 -.7StlDynam 12.56 +.46 -4.5SunPwr h 4.35 -.34 -30.2SusqBnc 10.08 -.12 +20.3SycamNet 5.76 +.56 +1.1Symantec 17.43 -.45 +11.4Synacor n 6.12 -.65 +16.6Synopsys 32.00 -.10 +17.6tw telecom 26.15 -.60 +34.9TakeTwo 10.98 -.20 -19.0Tellabs 3.24 -.07 -19.8TeslaMot 27.74 +.10 -2.9TexInst 27.81 +.53 -4.5TexRdhse 16.78 -.31 +12.6TibcoSft 26.47 -.80 +10.7TitanMach 22.42 +2.00 +3.2TiVo Inc 9.94 ... +10.8TractSupp 93.97 -3.21 +34.0TripAdv n 29.93 -1.29 +18.7TriQuint 4.87 +.01 ...UTiWrldwd 14.40 +.53 +8.4UltaSalon 94.78 -.44 +46.0Umpqua 11.98 -.24 -3.3UrbanOut 37.09 +.48 +34.6

V-W-X-Y-ZVanLTCpB 93.53 -1.38 +7.9VeecoInst 29.49 +.74 +41.8Velti 7.52 -.16 +10.6VBradley 29.74 +2.25 -7.8Verisign 47.37 -.66 +32.6Verisk 46.50 -.53 +15.9VertxPh 50.24 -3.29 +51.3ViacomB 54.67 +.34 +20.4Vical 3.64 -.25 -17.5VirgnMda h u32.80 +2.09 +53.4ViroPhrm 27.96 -.81 +2.1Vivus 20.60 -2.26 +111.3Vodafone 28.38 +.24 +1.2Volterra d17.82 -1.57 -30.4WarnerCh 12.37 -.63 +7.1WashFed 17.02 +.40 +21.7Wendys Co 4.19 -.02 -21.8WernerEnt 22.06 -.50 -8.5WDigital 34.88 -1.14 +12.7WstptInn g 29.35 -1.10 -11.7WetSeal 2.96 -.10 -9.2WholeFd 96.65 +.25 +38.9Windstrm 9.91 -.06 -15.6Wynn 115.62 +1.81 +4.6Xilinx 33.06 +.38 +3.1Xyratex 7.54 +.41 -43.4Yahoo 15.84 -.04 -1.8Yandex 22.24 -1.04 +12.9Yongye 5.51 +.72 +56.5Zagg 7.90 -.12 +11.8Zalicus .65 +.05 -46.3Zillow 36.61 +.07 +62.8ZionBcp 21.45 -.53 +31.8Zogenix 2.60 -.25 +17.1Zynga n 2.40 -.03 -74.5

K Swiss d2.50 -.39 -14.4KLA Tnc 45.58 +.43 -5.5KraftFGp n 46.03 -1.07 +2.1Kulicke 9.45 -.20 +2.2LKQ Cp s u20.43 +.80 +35.9LamResrch 35.37 +2.91 -4.5LamarAdv u39.05 +1.35 +42.0Lattice 3.69 +.13 -37.9LeapWirlss 5.98 -.38 -35.6LexiPhrm 2.23 -.46 +72.9LibGlobA u62.10 +1.24 +51.4LibCapA u112.64 +4.24 +44.3LibtyIntA u20.03 +.55 +39.3LifeTech 47.36 -1.06 +21.7LinearTch 31.20 -.31 +3.9LinnEngy 41.33 +.78 +9.0LinnCo n u38.41 +.15 +.4LodgeNet h d.35 -.25 -85.4Logitech 8.62 +.02 +10.8lululemn gs 69.03 -4.40 +47.9

M-N-0MIPS Tech 6.99 +.01 +56.7MagicJck s 23.03 +2.92 +68.6MAKO Srg 15.05 +.10 -40.3MannKd 1.98 -.37 -20.8MarvellT d7.57 -1.18 -45.4Mattel u37.50 +1.49 +35.1MaximIntg 26.64 -.09 +2.3MediCo 24.58 +.63 +31.9Medivatn s 52.95 -.71 +129.7MelcoCrwn 13.93 +.33 +44.8Mellanox 77.01 -26.37 +137.0MercadoL 85.23 +.41 +7.2Microchp 31.35 -.36 -14.4MicronT 5.45 -.22 -13.4Microsoft 28.64 -.56 +10.3MidConE n 21.62 -1.22 +17.8Molex 26.57 +.88 +11.4Mondelez 27.01 -.21 +10.5MonstrBv s 53.32 -3.76 +15.7Mylan 23.65 -.13 +10.2NII Hldg 7.55 -.36 -64.6NPS Phm 9.31 -1.55 +41.3NXP Semi 22.21 +.25 +44.5Nanosphere 3.02 -.19 +105.4NasdOMX 24.27 +1.01 -1.0NatPenn 8.63 -.26 +2.3NektarTh 9.79 -.85 +75.0NetApp 29.95 +1.02 -17.4Netflix 64.98 +.65 -6.2NtScout 25.17 +1.10 +43.0NewFrnt u1.99 +.66 +93.2NewsCpA u24.91 +.80 +39.6NewsCpB u25.36 +.78 +39.5NorTrst 47.10 +.81 +18.8Novavax 2.21 +.01 +75.4NuVasive 13.36 -.72 +6.1NuanceCm 22.34 -.98 -11.2Nvidia 12.11 -.53 -12.7OReillyAu 80.58 -2.72 +.8OmniVisn 13.92 +.12 +13.8OnSmcnd 6.03 +.17 -21.9OnyxPh u85.19 -3.88 +93.8Oracle 30.48 -.53 +18.8Orexigen 6.15 +.16 +282.0

P-Q-RPDL Bio u8.25 +.11 +33.1PLX Tch 4.34 -1.02 +51.2PMC Sra d4.87 -.15 -11.6PSS Wrld 21.85 -.53 -9.7Paccar 40.41 +.26 +7.8PanASlv 21.17 -.02 -2.9ParamTch 20.22 -1.50 +10.7Patterson 33.49 -.86 +13.4PattUTI 17.31 +.34 -13.4Paychex 32.55 -.08 +8.1PnnNGm 41.98 +1.16 +10.3PeopUtdF 12.29 +.25 -4.4PetSmart 68.61 -.74 +33.8Polycom 9.47 -.67 -41.9Popular rs 18.98 +.71 +36.5Power-One 4.41 -.35 +12.8PwShs QQQ 65.68 -1.00 +17.6PriceTR u65.35 +1.75 +14.7priceline 560.50 -32.65 +19.8PrivateB 16.63 -.27 +51.5PrUPQQQ s 52.91 -2.74 +55.6ProgrsSoft 18.66 +.10 -3.6PUShQQQ rs 41.48 +1.58 -47.3ProspctCap 11.84 +.37 +27.4QIAGEN 17.24 -.71 +24.8QlikTech 20.55 -.82 -15.1Qlogic d9.44 -.45 -37.1Qualcom 58.75 -.14 +7.4QualityS s 18.15 +.33 -50.9Questcor 24.99 +2.98 -39.9RF MicD 3.65 +.09 -32.4Rambus 4.79 -.17 -36.6Randgold 120.55 -.67 +18.1Regenrn u158.24 +7.51 +185.5RschMotn 7.76 -.04 -46.5RiverbedT 23.06 +1.09 -1.9RosettaR 47.37 +1.78 +8.9RossStrs s 61.88 +.15 +30.2

AbdAsPac 7.96 +.05 +8.6Adventrx .72 +.00 +22.2AlexcoR g 3.85 -.20 -43.5AlldNevG u39.45 +.57 +30.3AmApparel 1.06 -.28 +47.2Aurizon g 4.69 -.06 -4.9AvalnRare 1.75 -.01 -26.2Bacterin 1.27 -.10 -55.6Banro g 4.60 -.05 +24.3BarcUBS36 43.47 -.26 +2.9BarcGSOil 21.80 -.45 -13.2BrigusG g 1.02 -.02 +5.7BritATob 101.91 -1.25 +7.4Cardero g d.60 -.05 -41.2CardiumTh .21 ... -29.2CelSci .37 +.01 +27.6CFCda g 22.23 -.87 +13.4CheniereEn 15.70 -.03 +80.7CheniereE 22.04 -.26 +22.3ChinaShen d.27 -.01 -78.6ClaudeR g .75 -.01 -43.2ComstkMn 2.70 -.02 +46.7CornstProg 5.63 -.04 -6.9CornerstStr 7.31 -.39 +10.8CrSuiHiY 3.24 -.08 +12.5Crosshr g d.14 -.01 -59.1

InovioPhm .69 -.02 +61.2IntTower g 2.66 +.07 -39.0KeeganR g 4.02 +.30 +5.0LadThalFn 1.30 +.07 -47.6LkShrGld g .81 -.06 -35.7LongweiPI u2.14 +.38 +64.6LucasEngy 1.80 -.08 -22.1MeetMe 4.05 +.80 +22.0MdwGold g 1.68 +.06 -20.4NavideaBio 2.69 +.09 +2.7NeoStem .72 +.01 +41.0NBRESec 4.75 +.07 +26.7Neuralstem 1.12 +.02 +16.1Nevsun g 4.68 +.05 -15.4NwGold g 11.85 +.05 +17.6NA Pall g 1.65 -.19 -35.3NDynMn g 3.69 -.27 -38.9NthnO&G 16.21 -.97 -32.4NovaCpp n 2.55 +.70 -39.3NovaGld g 5.00 -.01 -34.7ParaG&S 2.48 -.03 +15.9PhrmAth d1.05 -.02 -17.3PlatGpMet 1.03 ... +18.4PolyMet g 1.09 -.06 +4.8Protalix 5.02 -.12 +1.8Quaterra g .46 +.06 -14.8

Name Last Chg Wkly

AQR Funds:DivArb I n 11.14 -.03 MgdFutSt I n 9.40 -.02

Alger Funds I:CapApprI 23.17 +.01

AllianceBern A:GloblBdA r 8.64 -.01 HighIncoA p 9.43 +.06

Allianz Fds Instl:NFJDivVal 12.91 +.14 SmCpVl n 31.33 +.26

Allianz Funds A:NFJDivVal t 12.81 +.14 SmCpV A 29.77 +.24

Alpine Funds:TaxOptInco 10.05 ...AmanaGrth n 26.51 -.16

Amer Beacon Insti:LgCapInst 21.91 +.28 SmCapInst 21.13 +.17

Amer Beacon Inv:LgCap Inv 20.75 +.27

Ameri Century 1st:Growth 28.21 -.16

Amer Century Adv:EqtyIncA p 8.00 +.08

Amer Century Inv:DivBond n 11.28 -.02 DivBond 11.28 -.02 EqGroInv n 24.47 +.04 EqInco 8.00 +.08 GNMAI 11.20 -.02 GrowthI 27.93 -.16 HeritageI 22.73 +.05 InfAdjBond 13.41 -.06 IntTF 11.75 -.01 IntTF n 11.75 -.02 MdCapVal 13.05 +.10 SelectI 44.21 -.42 Ultra n 25.99 -.32 ValueInv 6.37 +.06

American Funds A:AmcapFA p 21.20 +.01 AmMutlA p 28.53 +.27 BalA p 20.31 +.12 BondFdA p 12.96 -.02 CapInBldA p 53.05 +.15 CapWGrA p 36.35 +.26 CapWldA p 21.59 -.01 EupacA p 40.05 +.46 FundInvA p 40.23 +.34 GlblBalA 26.57 +.15 GovtA p 14.57 -.03 GwthFdA p 33.69 +.10 HI TrstA p 11.30 +.04 HiIncMuniA 15.28 +.01 IncoFdA p 18.15 +.17 IntBdA p 13.77 -.03 IntlGrIncA p 30.20 +.37 InvCoAA p 30.68 +.14 LtdTEBdA p 16.39 -.03 NwEconA p 28.23 -.06 NewPerA p 30.54 +.28 NewWorldA 52.80 +.37 STBFA p 10.09 ... SmCpWA p 39.23 +.05 TaxExA p 13.15 ... WshMutA p 31.53 +.31

American Funds B:CapInBldB p 53.10 +.15 CapWGrB t 36.17 +.27 GrowthB t 32.51 +.09

Arbitrage Funds:Arbitrage I n 12.88 -.20

Ariel Investments:Ariel n 49.64 +.32

Artio Global Funds:GlbHiIncI r 9.93 +.06 IntlEqI r 24.72 +.42 TotRet I 14.04 -.02

Artisan Funds:Intl 23.68 +.13 IntlInstl 23.85 +.14 IntlValu r 29.01 +.22 IntlValInstl 29.10 +.23 MidCap 37.59 -.19 MidCapInstl 39.01 -.20 MidCapVal 21.39 +.30 SmCapVal 14.89 +.06

Aston Funds:FairMidCpN 33.29 +.03 M&CGroN 25.72 -.23

BBH Funds:BdMktN 10.45 +.01 CoreSelN 17.66 +.14

BNY Mellon Funds:

Virtus Funds A:MulSStA p 4.95 +.01

Virtus Funds I:EmgMktI 9.94 +.02

WM Blair Fds Inst:IntlGrwth 14.62 +.22

WM Blair Mtl Fds:IntlGrowthI r 22.51 +.34

Waddell & Reed Adv:AssetS p 9.53 +.03 Bond 6.66 -.01 CoreInvA 6.71 +.04 HighInc 7.48 +.03 ScTechA 10.84 -.07

Wasatch:Long/Short 13.82 +.14 SmCapGrth 42.61 -.66

Weitz Funds:ShtIntmIco I 12.60 +.01

Wells Fargo Adv A:AstAllA p 13.01 +.14

Wells Fargo Adv Ad:AssetAll 13.12 +.15

Wells Fargo Adv C:AstAllC t 12.50 +.14

Wells Fargo Adv :GrowthInv n 39.36 -.59 STMunInv n 10.04 ...

Wells Fargo Ad Ins:TRBdS 13.43 -.03 DJTar2020I 14.63 +.02 DJTar2030I 15.03 +.07 Growth 42.59 -.63 UlStMuInc 4.82 -.01

Wells Fargo Admin:Growth 41.43 -.61

Wells Fargo Instl:UltSTMuA 4.83 ...

Westcore:PlusBd 11.30 -.02

Western Asset:CrPlusBdF1 p 11.68 -.02 CorePlus I 11.68 -.02

LIFEGro n 23.55 +.11 LIFEInc n 14.73 -.01 LIFEMod n 20.96 +.07 LTInGrade n 11.09 -.02 LTTsry n 13.25 -.23 MidCapGro 21.10 +.02 Morgan n 19.85 -.14 MuHY n 11.27 ... MuInt n 14.40 -.02 MuLtd n 11.19 -.01 MuShrt n 15.93 -.01 PrecMtlsMin r 17.60 +.11 PrmCpCore rn 15.12 +.12 Prmcp r 69.62 +.43 SelValu r 21.14 +.27 STAR n 20.73 +.09 STIGrade 10.88 ... STFed n 10.87 -.02 STTsry n 10.78 -.01 StratEq n 21.04 +.27 TgtRetInc 12.22 ... TgtRet2010 24.44 +.03 TgtRet2015 13.53 +.03 TgtRet2020 24.04 +.09 TgtRet2025 13.70 +.06 TgRet2030 23.51 +.11 TgtRet2035 14.16 +.08 TgtRe2040 23.26 +.13 TgtRet2050 n 23.16 +.13 TgtRe2045 n 14.61 +.09 USGro n 20.95 -.05 Wellsly n 24.59 +.09 Welltn n 34.48 +.23 Wndsr n 14.82 +.15 WndsII n 29.61 +.19

Vanguard Idx Fds:DevMkInPl nr 99.08 +1.89 EmMkInPl nr 87.95 +.48 ExtMkt I n 110.82 +.55 MidCpIstPl n 109.55 +.77 SmCapInPl n 109.63 +.35 TotIntAdm nr 24.12 +.35 TotIntlInst nr 96.45 +1.37 TotIntlIP nr 96.47 +1.37 TotIntSig nr 28.93 +.41 500 n 132.28 +.45 Balanced n 23.79 +.03 DevMkt n 9.58 +.18 EMkt n 26.45 +.15 Extend n 44.84 +.22 Growth n 36.59 -.24 ITBond n 12.16 -.05 LTBond n 14.60 -.10 MidCap 22.13 +.15 REIT r 21.78 +.28 SmCap n 37.91 +.12 SmlCpGrow 24.28 -.01 SmlCapVal 17.17 +.11 STBond n 10.66 -.01 TotBond n 11.17 -.03 TotlIntl n 14.41 +.20 TotStk n 35.67 +.13 Value n 23.16 +.31

Vanguard Instl Fds:BalInst n 23.79 +.03 DevMktInst n 9.51 +.18 EmMktInst n 26.44 +.15 ExtIn n 44.90 +.23 FTAllWldI r 85.80 +1.27 GrowthInstl 36.59 -.24 InfProtInst n 11.88 -.05 InstIdx n 131.41 +.45 InsPl n 131.42 +.45 InstTStIdx n 32.29 +.11 InstTStPlus 32.30 +.12 LTBdInst n 14.60 -.10 MidCapInstl n 22.21 +.16 REITInst r 14.38 +.18 STBondIdx n 10.66 -.01 STIGrInst 10.88 ... SmCpIn n 37.97 +.12 SmlCapGrI n 24.35 -.01 TBIst n 11.17 -.03 TSInst n 35.68 +.12 ValueInstl n 23.16 +.32

Vanguard Signal:ExtMktSgl n 38.58 +.20 500Sgl n 109.27 +.37 GroSig n 33.88 -.22 ITBdSig n 12.16 -.05 MidCapIdx n 31.73 +.23 REITSig r 24.81 +.32 STBdIdx n 10.66 -.01 SmCapSig n 34.21 +.11 TotalBdSgl n 11.17 -.03 TotStkSgnl n 34.44 +.13 ValueSig n 24.10 +.33

Vantagepoint Fds:EqtyInc n 9.45 +.12 Growth n 9.50 -.06 MPLgTmGr n 22.61 +.12 MPTradGrth n 23.65 +.09

Tocqueville Fds:Gold t 72.62 -.13

Touchstone Family:SandsCapGrI 17.27 -.21 SelGrowth 12.18 -.15

Transamerica C:AsAlModGr t 12.38 +.03

Tweedy Browne:GblValue 25.10 +.24

USAA Group:CornstStr n 23.21 +.08 HYldInco n 8.77 +.07 IncStk n 13.73 +.03 Income n 13.55 ... IntTerBd n 11.00 +.02 Intl n 24.87 +.33 PrecMM 30.94 +.02 S&P Idx n 21.84 +.44 ShtTBnd n 9.28 ... TxEIT n 13.72 -.02 TxELT n 13.94 ... TxESh n 10.85 ...

VALIC :MidCapIdx 21.16 +.25 StockIndex 26.98 +.09

Vanguard Admiral:BalAdml n 23.79 +.03 CAITAdm n 11.75 -.01 CALTAdm 11.99 -.02 CpOpAdl n 77.07 +.54 DevMktsAd 27.58 +.53 EM Adm nr 34.76 +.20 Energy n 116.75 +2.02 EqIncAdml 51.28 +.55 EuropAdml 58.29 +1.10 ExplAdml 73.19 +.14 ExntdAdm n 44.90 +.23 500Adml n 132.29 +.45 GNMA Adm n 11.02 -.03 GroIncAdm 49.98 +.17 GrwthAdml n 36.59 -.24 HlthCare n 62.91 +.03 HiYldCp n 6.08 +.03 InflProAd n 29.16 -.13 ITBondAdml 12.16 -.05 ITsryAdml n 11.75 -.06 IntlGrAdml 59.38 +.71 ITAdml n 14.40 -.02 ITCoAdmrl 10.49 -.01 LtdTrmAdm 11.19 -.01 LTGrAdml 11.09 -.02 LTsryAdml 13.25 -.23 LT Adml n 11.80 -.01 MCpAdml n 100.54 +.71 MorgAdm 61.61 -.42 MuHYAdml n 11.27 ... NJLTAd n 12.38 -.02 NYLTAd m 11.83 -.02 PrmCap r 72.28 +.46 PacifAdml 62.74 +1.25 PALTAdm n 11.74 -.02 REITAdml r 92.92 +1.17 STsryAdml 10.78 -.01 STBdAdml n 10.66 -.01 ShtTrmAdm 15.93 -.01 STFedAdm 10.87 -.02 STIGrAdm 10.88 ... SmlCapAdml n 37.97 +.12 SmCapGrth 30.41 -.01 SmCapVal 30.81 +.20 TxMCap r 72.20 +.31 TxMGrInc r 64.33 +.22 TtlBdAdml n 11.17 -.03 TotStkAdm n 35.68 +.13 ValueAdml n 23.16 +.32 WellslAdm n 59.59 +.24 WelltnAdm n 59.56 +.41 WindsorAdm n 50.01 +.51 WdsrIIAdm 52.56 +.35 TaxMgdSC r 30.39 +.05

Vanguard Fds:CapOpp n 33.35 +.23 Convt n 12.90 ... DivAppInv n 23.80 +.07 DividendGro 17.02 +.12 Energy 62.17 +1.08 EqInc n 24.46 +.26 Explorer n 78.58 +.15 GNMA n 11.02 -.03 GlobEq n 18.37 +.13 GroInc n 30.60 +.10 HYCorp n 6.08 +.03 HiDvdYld n 20.03 +.16 HlthCare n 149.07 +.08 InflaPro n 14.85 -.06 IntlExplr n 14.51 +.14 IntlGr 18.65 +.22 IntlVal n 30.07 +.58 ITI Grade 10.49 -.01 ITTsry n 11.75 -.06 LIFECon n 17.26 +.02

LT2030In 12.55 +.07 LT2040In 12.73 +.09 MidCV1 In 14.31 +.19 PreSecs In 10.57 +.06 SAMBalA 13.79 +.06

Prudential Fds A:MidCpGrA 31.63 +.01 NatResA 46.39 +.79 STCorpBdA 11.61 ... UtilityA 12.11 +.16

Prudential Fds Z&I:MidCapGrZ 32.86 +.01

Putnam Funds A:CATxA p 8.35 -.01 DvrInA px 7.67 +.03 EqInA p 17.34 +.26 GrInA p 14.77 +.26 MultiCpGr 54.71 +.14 VoyA p 22.07 +.07

RS Funds:RSNatRes np 37.77 +.23

RidgeWorth Funds:GScUltShBdI 10.19 -.01 HighYldI 10.03 +.04 LgCpValEqI 14.04 +.20 MdCValEqI 11.23 +.10

Royce Funds:LowPrSkSvc r 14.70 +.07 PennMuI rn 11.69 +.09 PremierI nr 19.70 +.29 SpeclEqInv r 21.72 -.01 TotRetI r 13.91 +.10

Russell Funds S:GlobEq 8.90 +.08 IntlDevMkt 29.98 +.46 StratBd 11.50 -.01

SEI Portfolios:CoreFxInA n 11.64 -.02 HiYld n 7.66 +.03 IntlEqA n 8.31 +.12 S&P500E n 39.46 +.13 TaxMgdLC n 13.82 +.07

Schwab Funds:CoreEqty 19.06 +.08 DivEqtySel 14.76 +.13 FunUSLInst r 10.91 +.12 IntlSS r 16.48 +.31 1000Inv r 40.81 +.16 S&P Sel n 22.68 +.07 SmCapSel 21.31 -.05 TSM Sel r 26.14 +.10

Scout Funds:Intl 31.95 +.45

Selected Funds:AmerShsD 44.14 +.24 AmShsS p 44.05 +.23Sequoia n 162.74 -.26

Sit Funds:US Gov n 11.36 -.01

Sound Shore:SoundShore n 34.14 +.35

St FarmAssoc:Gwth n 56.90 +.52

Sun Capital Adv:IbbotsBalSv p 12.06 +.04

TCW Funds:EmMktInc 9.40 +.09 TotlRetBdI 10.27 -.01

TCW Funds N:TotRtBdN p 10.61 -.01

TFS Funds:MktNeutral r 15.28 -.08

TIAA-CREF Funds:BdIdxInst 11.02 -.02 BondInst 10.99 ... EqIdxInst 10.98 +.04 Gr&IncInst 10.58 +.04 IntlEqIInst 15.88 +.30 IntlEqInst 9.10 +.21 LgCVl Inst 14.39 +.25

Templeton Instit:ForEqS 19.26 +.45

Third Avenue Fds:REValInst r 26.60 +.25 ValueInst 48.80 +.56

Thornburg Fds:IntlValA p 26.61 +.46 IncBuildA t 19.02 +.19 IncBuildC p 19.02 +.19 IntlValue I 27.21 +.48 LtdMunA p 14.69 -.02 LtTMuniI 14.69 -.02

Thrivent Fds A:LgCapStock 23.98 +.21 MuniBd 11.92 -.02

PIMCO Funds P:AstAllAuthP 11.28 +.06 CommdtyRR 7.01 -.06 RealRtnP 12.57 -.05 TotRtnP 11.57 -.02

Parnassus Funds:EqtyInco n 29.68 +.01

Pax World:Balanced 23.49 +.09

Perm Port Funds:Permanent 49.19 -.07

Pioneer Funds A:PionFdA p 41.94 +.21 StratIncA p 11.28 +.02

Pioneer Funds C:PioneerFdY 42.10 +.22

Pioneer Fds Y:StratIncY p 11.28 +.02

Price Funds Adv:BlChipGr n 44.92 -.34 EqtyInc n 26.43 +.35 Growth pn 36.79 -.40 HiYld n 6.91 +.02 R2020A p 17.86 +.06 R2030Adv np 18.77 +.06 R2040A pn 18.89 +.06

Price Funds R Cl:Ret2020R p 17.69 +.05 Ret2030R n 18.64 +.06

Price Funds:Balance n 20.93 +.08 BlueChipG n 45.09 -.34 CapApr n 23.23 ... DivGro n 26.41 +.13 EmMktB n 14.23 +.09 EmMktS n 32.34 +.03 EqInc n 26.48 +.35 EqIdx n 38.65 +.13 GNM n 10.06 -.02 Growth n 37.22 -.41 HlthSci n 43.11 -.46 HiYld n 6.93 +.02 InstlCpGr n 18.51 -.18 InstHiYld n 9.76 +.03 InstlFltRt n 10.20 +.01 MCEqGr n 29.65 -.15 IntlBd n 10.18 -.03 IntlDis n 45.17 +.17 IntlGr&Inc n 12.71 +.17 IntStk n 13.95 +.10 LatAm n 41.00 +.37 MdTxFr n 11.13 -.01 MediaTl n 58.13 -.09 MidCap n 57.96 -.30 MCapVal n 25.32 +.22 NewAm n 35.25 -.15 N Asia n 16.19 -.05 NewEra n 44.48 +.60 NwHrzn n 35.14 -.42 NewInco n 9.96 -.02 OverSea SF n 8.31 +.12 PSBal n 20.77 +.08 RealAssets r 11.33 +.15 RealEst n 21.02 +.28 R2010 n 16.69 +.05 R2015 12.98 +.03 Retire2020 n 17.99 +.06 R2025 13.18 +.04 R2030 n 18.93 +.07 R2035 n 13.38 +.04 R2040 n 19.04 +.06 R2045 n 12.68 +.05 Ret Income n 13.95 +.03 SciTch n 25.95 -.31 ST Bd n 4.86 ... SmCapStk n 35.56 ... SmCapVal n 38.77 +.26 SpecGr 19.44 +.07 SpecIn n 13.04 +.02 SumMuInt n 12.00 -.02 TxFree n 10.59 ... TxFrHY n 11.86 +.01 TxFrSI n 5.72 ... R2050 n 10.63 +.04 Value n 26.63 +.35

Primecap Odyssey :AggGrwth r 19.25 +.02 Growth r 17.20 +.13 Stock r 15.98 +.19

Principal Inv:BdMtgInstl 11.08 -.01 DivIntlInst 9.95 +.11 HighYldA p 7.89 +.04 LgLGI In 10.20 -.05 LgCV1 In 11.96 +.15 LgGrIn 9.09 ... LgCpIndxI 10.17 +.03 LgCValIn 11.12 +.18 LfTm2020In 12.71 +.07

SmlCapVal n 16.68 +.27 StockIdx n 18.10 +.36

Nuveen Cl A:HYldMuBd p 17.00 -.01

Nuveen Cl C:HYMunBd t 16.99 ...

Nuveen Cl R:IntmDurMuBd 9.38 -.02 HYMuniBd 17.00 -.01

Nuveen Cl Y:RealEst 21.66 +.29

Oakmark Funds I:EqtyInc r 29.18 +.06 GlobalI r 22.20 +.49 Intl I r 19.52 +.54 IntlSmCp r 13.51 +.33 Oakmark 49.52 +.44 Select 33.24 +.38

Old Westbury Fds:GlobOpp 7.54 +.04 GlbSMdCap 14.67 +.09 LgCapStrat 9.83 +.12 RealReturn 9.64 +.05

Oppenheimer A:AMTFrMuA 7.29 +.03 CapAppA p 48.40 -.09 CapIncA p 9.25 +.02 DevMktA p 34.33 +.19 EqIncA p 26.05 +.31 GlobalA p 61.88 +.98 GlblOppA 29.28 -.34 GblStrIncoA 4.33 +.01 Gold p 35.70 -.20 IntlBdA p 6.59 +.03 IntGrow p 29.77 +.34 LtdTrmMu 15.12 -.01 MnStFdA 37.50 +.03 MnStSCpA p 22.30 +.12 RisingDivA 17.44 +.14 SenFltRtA 8.31 ...

Oppenheimer C&M:DevMktC t 32.84 +.18 GblStrIncoC 4.32 +.01 IntlBondC 6.56 +.02 LtdTmMuC t 15.05 -.01 SenFltRtC 8.32 ...

Oppenheimer Roch:LtdNYA p 3.40 ... LtdNYC t 3.38 -.01 RoNtMuC t 7.55 +.02 RoMu A p 16.95 -.01 RcNtlMuA 7.57 +.01

Oppenheimer Y:DevMktY 34.02 +.19 IntlBdY 6.59 +.03 IntlGrowY 29.67 +.34 ValueY 23.69 +.30

Osterweis Funds:StratIncome 11.67 +.03

PIMCO Admin PIMS:RelRetAd p 12.57 -.05 ShtTmAd p 9.88 -.01 TotRetAd n 11.57 -.02

PIMCO Instl PIMS:AllAssetAut r 11.29 +.06 AllAsset 12.76 +.06 CommodRR 7.02 -.06 DiverInco 12.28 +.04 EmgMktCur 10.54 +.02 EmMktsBd 12.45 +.06 FltgInc r 8.94 +.06 FrgnBdUnd r 11.55 -.10 FrgnBd n 11.29 -.04 HiYld n 9.60 +.05 InvGradeCp 11.34 ... LowDur n 10.64 -.01 ModDur n 11.16 -.01 RealRetInstl 12.57 -.05 ShortT 9.88 -.01 TotRet n 11.57 -.02 TR II n 11.12 -.02 TRIII n 10.18 -.02

PIMCO Funds A:AllAstAuth t 11.22 +.06 All Asset p 12.66 +.06 CommodRR p 6.89 -.06 LowDurA 10.64 -.01 RealRetA p 12.57 -.05 TotRtA 11.57 -.02

PIMCO Funds C:AllAstAut t 11.11 +.06 AllAssetC t 12.52 +.06 RealRetC p 12.57 -.05 TotRtC t 11.57 -.02

PIMCO Funds D:LowDurat p 10.64 -.01 RealRtn p 12.57 -.05 TotlRtn p 11.57 -.02

Loomis Sayles Inv:InvGrBdA p 12.82 +.04 InvGrBdC p 12.71 +.03 InvGrBdY 12.83 +.04

Lord Abbett A:IntrTaxFr 11.01 -.01 ShDurTxFr 15.97 ... AffiliatdA p 12.05 +.16 FundlEq 13.28 +.12 BondDebA p 8.11 +.03 ShDurIncoA p 4.65 ... TaxFrA p 11.55 ...

Lord Abbett C:BdDbC p 8.13 +.03 ShDurIncoC t 4.68 ...

Lord Abbett F:ShtDurInco 4.65 +.01

Lord Abbett I:ShtDurInc p 4.65 +.01 SmCapVal 34.10 +.33

MFS Funds A:IntlDiverA 13.81 +.12 MITA 21.84 +.05 MIGA 17.38 -.14 BondA 14.33 +.02 EmGrA 47.67 -.42 GrAllA 15.08 +.06 IntlValA 26.93 +.14 ModAllA 14.45 +.04 MuHiA t 8.26 ... RschA 28.54 +.04 TotRA 15.25 +.05 UtilA 18.91 +.30 ValueA 25.63 +.15

MFS Funds I:ValueI 25.75 +.16

MFS Funds Instl:IntlEqty n 18.38 +.25

MainStay Funds A:HiYldBdA 6.12 +.02 LgCpGrA p 7.67 -.06

MainStay Funds I:ICAP SelEq 38.33 +.44

Mairs & Power:Growth n 83.01 +.73

Managers Funds:PimcoBond n 11.12 -.01 Yacktman p 19.18 +.07 YacktFocus 20.59 +.08 Bond n 27.93 +.11

Manning&Napier Fds:WorldOppA n 7.56 +.12

Matthews Asian:AsiaDivInv r 14.25 +.09 AsianG&IInv 18.01 +.08 China Inv 22.37 ... PacTigerInv 23.36 -.22MergerFd n 15.88 -.08

Meridian Funds:Growth 45.27 -.04

Metro West Fds:TotRetBd 11.05 -.01 TotalRetBondI 11.05 ...MontagGr I 25.87 -.23

MorganStanley Inst:IntlEqI n 14.06 +.22 MCapGrI n 34.74 -.02 MCapGrP p 33.44 -.02

Munder Funds Y:MdCpCGrY n 31.94 +.30

Mutual Series:BeaconZ 13.37 +.09 GblDiscovA 30.04 +.22 GlbDiscC 29.66 +.22 GlbDiscZ 30.49 +.24 QuestZ 17.90 +.15 SharesZ 22.73 +.17

Nationwide Instl:S&P500Instl n 11.96 +.04

Neuberger&Berm Fds:Genesis n 35.44 +.18 GenesInstl 49.82 +.24 HiIncBdInst 9.54 +.05

Neuberger&Berm Tr:Genesis n 51.61 +.25

Nicholas Group:Nicholas n 48.48 +.22

Northern Funds:BondIdx 11.06 -.06 EmgMEqIdx 11.55 +.22 FixIn n 10.84 -.03 HiYFxInc n 7.51 +.04 IntTaxEx n 10.97 -.03 IntlEqIdx r 10.19 +.32 MMEmMkt r 18.45 +.37 MMIntlEq r 9.38 +.26

EqtyIncA 9.29 +.05 GrIncA p 21.27 +.19 HYMuA 10.10 +.01 IntlGrow 28.16 +.19 MidCpCEq p 22.55 +.21 MidCGth p 27.40 +.15 MuniInA 13.95 -.02 RealEst p 26.32 +.39

Invesco Funds C:BalRiskC 12.62 -.08

Invesco Funds P:SummitP p 12.94 -.01

Invesco Funds Y:BalRiskY 13.00 -.07

Ivy Funds:AssetSC t 24.31 +.07 AssetStrA p 25.17 +.08 AssetStrI r 25.43 +.08 GlNatRsA p 17.09 +.45 HighIncoA p 8.57 +.03 HiIncI r 8.57 +.03

JPMorgan A Class:Core Bond A 12.12 -.02 Inv Bal p 13.02 +.05 InvCon p 11.79 +.02 InvGr&InA p 13.80 +.06 LgCpGrA p 23.97 -.25 MdCpVal p 27.71 +.42

JPMorgan C Class:CoreBond pn 12.17 -.03

JP Morgan Instl:MidCapVal n 28.23 +.43

JPMorgan R Cl:CoreBond n 12.12 -.03 HighYld r 8.18 +.06 MtgBacked 11.65 -.02 ShtDurBond 11.02 ...

JPMorgan Select:MdCpValu 27.96 +.43 USEquity n 11.44 +.07

JPMorgan Sel Cls:CoreBond n 12.11 -.02 CorePlusBd n 8.53 ... EqtyInc 10.53 +.13 HighYld 8.18 +.05 IntmdTFBd n 11.41 -.01 IntlValSel 12.44 +.26 LgCapGr 23.95 -.26 MtgBckdSl n 11.65 -.01 ShtDurBdSel 11.02 ... TxAwRRet n 10.53 -.01 USLCCrPls n 23.15 +.17

Janus S Shrs:Forty 37.53 +.02

Janus T Shrs:BalancedT n 27.11 +.14 Janus T 31.49 -.03 OverseasT r 33.06 +.42 PerkMCVal T 22.07 +.16 ShTmBdT 3.11 ... Twenty T 61.67 -.17

Jensen Funds:QualGrowth I 29.04 -.05 QualityGrthJ 29.03 -.05

John Hancock A:IncomeA p 6.74 +.03

John Hancock Cl 1:LSAggress 12.76 +.06 LSBalance 13.53 +.05 LS Conserv 13.50 +.02 LSGrowth 13.47 +.06 LS Moder 13.36 +.04

Keeley Funds:SmCpValA p 27.16 +.26

Lazard Instl:EmgMktI 19.39 +.06

Lazard Open:EmgMktOp p 19.80 +.06

Legg Mason A:CBEqBldrA 14.89 +.17 CBAggGr p 129.51 +1.16 CBAppr p 16.12 +.10 WAIntTmMu 6.82 ... WAMgMuA p 17.23 -.01

Legg Mason C:CMValTr p 41.92 +.05

Longleaf Partners:Partners 31.25 +.57 Intl n 13.68 +.30 SmCap 30.28 +.29

Loomis Sayles:LSBondI 15.12 +.06 LSGlblBdI 17.41 -.04 StrInc C 15.54 +.13 LSBondR 15.06 +.07 StrIncA 15.46 +.13

GrthAv 19.12 +.39Frank/Temp Tmp B&C:

GlBdC px 13.53 +.06Franklin Templ:

TgtModA p 14.61 +.06GE Elfun S&S:

S&S Income n 12.09 -.02 TaxEx 12.36 -.02 Trusts n 49.34 +.47 US Eqty n 45.23 +.31

GE Instl Funds:IntlEq n 10.80 +.13

GE Investments:TRFd3 p 17.32 +.07

GMO Trust:USTreas x 25.00 ...

GMO Trust II:EmergMkt r 11.37 +.06

GMO Trust III:CHIE 22.91 +.42 IntlIntrVal 20.50 +.44 Quality 23.53 -.18

GMO Trust IV:EmgCnDt 10.50 +.07 EmerMkt 11.32 +.06 IntlGrEq 23.71 +.29 IntlIntrVal 20.48 +.43 Quality 23.55 -.18

GMO Trust VI:EmgMkts r 11.33 +.06 IntlCoreEq 27.77 +.51 Quality 23.54 -.18 StrFixInco 16.78 +.01

Gabelli Funds:Asset 53.82 +.62 EqInc p 22.68 +.19 SmCapG n 35.68 +.18

Gateway Funds:GatewayA 27.57 +.05

Goldman Sachs A:MidCapVA p 38.35 +.56

Goldman Sachs Inst:GrthOppt 25.40 -.04 HiYield 7.39 +.04 HYMuni n 9.34 ... MidCapVal 38.72 +.56 ShrtDurTF n 10.67 -.01 SmCapVal 45.58 +.12

Harbor Funds:Bond 13.00 -.02 CpAppInv p 41.49 -.42 CapAppInst n 42.15 -.42 HiYBdInst r 11.20 +.05 IntlInv t 59.06 +.89 IntlAdmin p 59.27 +.90 Intl nr 59.76 +.91

Harding Loevner:EmgMkts r 50.09 +1.02 IntlEqty 15.44 +.36

Hartford Fds A:CapAppA p 33.01 +.27 DivGthA p 21.15 +.24 FltRateA px 8.95 +.01 MidCapA p 20.70 +.30

Hartford Fds C:CapAppC t 29.12 +.23 FltRateC tx 8.94 +.01

Hartford Fds Y:CapAppI n 33.08 +.28 DivGrowthY n 21.45 +.24 FltRateI x 8.96 +.01

Hartford HLS IA :CapApp 42.43 +.31 Div&Grwth 22.00 +.25 Balanced 21.42 +.06 Stock 46.19 +.30 TotalRetBd 11.88 -.02

Heartland Fds:ValPlusInv p 29.81 -.16

Hussman Funds:StrTotRet r 12.47 -.02 StrGrowth 10.96 -.02

IVA Funds:Intl I r 16.06 +.11 WorldwideA t 16.15 +.03 WorldwideC t 15.97 +.03 Worldwide I r 16.18 +.04

Invesco Fds Invest:DivrsDiv p 13.63 +.18

Invesco Funds A:BalRiskA 12.91 -.07 Chart p 18.02 +.17 CmstkA 17.81 +.31 Constl p 23.66 -.13 DivrsDiv p 13.64 +.18

RealEst n 31.93 +.42 SrAllSecEqF 13.04 +.08 SCmdtyStrt n 9.27 -.04 SCmdtyStrF n 9.30 -.04 SrsEmrgMkt 16.36 +.10 SrEmgMktF 16.41 +.09 SrsIntGrw 11.71 +.14 SerIntlGrF 11.75 +.14 SrsIntVal 9.23 +.16 SerIntlValF 9.25 +.16 SrsInvGrdF 11.68 -.03 ShtIntMu n 10.88 -.01 STBF n 8.59 -.01 SmCapDisc n 23.28 +.46 SmallCapS nr 17.73 +.04 SmCapValu r 15.61 +.34 StkSlcACap n 28.34 +.10 StratDivInc 12.43 +.13 StratInc n 11.45 +.01 TaxFreeB r 11.69 -.02 TotalBond n 11.02 -.02 USBdIdxF 11.93 -.03 USBI n 11.93 -.03 Value n 74.70 +.99

Fidelity Selects:Biotech n 112.56 -1.28 Energy n 52.97 +1.12 Gold rn 41.48 -.24 Health n 146.32 -.40 Softwr n 85.22 -2.54 Tech n 99.17 -1.97

Fidelity Spartan:ExtMktIndInv 39.99 +.20 500IdxInv n 50.82 +.17 500Idx I 50.82 +.17 IntlIndxInv 33.53 +.66 TotMkIdxF r 41.64 +.15 TotMktIndInv 41.62 +.15 USBond I 11.93 -.03

Fidelity Spart Adv:ExtMktAdv r 40.00 +.20 500IdxAdv 50.82 +.17 500Index I 50.82 +.17 IntlAdv r 33.55 +.66 TotlMktAdv r 41.63 +.15 USBond I 11.93 -.03

First Eagle:GlobalA 49.58 +.37 OverseasA 22.40 +.20 SoGenGold p 29.65 -.19 US ValuA t 18.38 +.09

Forum Funds:AbsolStratI r 11.25 ...

Frank/Temp Frnk A:CalInsA p 12.98 -.02 CalTFrA p 7.53 ... FedInterm p 12.58 -.03 FedTxFrA p 12.74 -.01 FlexCapGrA 48.37 -.23 FoundFAl p 11.18 +.15 GoldPrM A 35.30 -.01 GrowthA p 49.61 -.10 HY TFA p 10.93 -.01 HiIncoA 2.07 +.01 IncoSerA p 2.26 +.03 InsTFA p 12.61 -.02 NY TFA p 12.16 ... OhioITFA p 13.12 -.02 RisDivA p 37.57 +.09 SMCpGrA 36.62 -.16 StratInc p 10.74 +.05 TotlRtnA p 10.52 -.01 USGovA p 6.84 -.02 UtilitiesA p 14.29 +.23

Frank/Tmp Frnk Adv:FdTF Adv 12.75 -.01 GlbBdAdv nx 13.45 +.05 GrAdv t 49.72 -.10 HY TF Adv 10.97 -.01 IncomeAdv 2.24 +.03 TGlbTRAdv x 13.66 +.06 TtlRtAdv 10.54 -.01 USGovAdv p 6.86 -.02

Frank/Temp Frnk C:FdTxFC t 12.73 -.01 FoundFAl p 11.01 +.15 IncomeC t 2.28 +.03 RisDvC t 36.89 +.08 StratIncC p 10.73 +.04 USGovC t 6.80 -.01

Frank/Temp Mtl A&B:SharesA 22.51 +.17

Frank/Temp Temp A:DevMktA p 23.15 +.25 ForeignA p 6.67 +.18 GlBondA px 13.50 +.06 GrowthA p 19.09 +.38 WorldA p 15.87 +.29

Frank/Temp Tmp Adv:FrgnAv 6.60 +.18

NwInsghts tn 21.41 -.18 StratIncC nt 12.75 +.01

Fidelity Advisor I:FltRateI n 9.95 +.01 NewInsightI 23.04 -.18 StrInI 12.94 +.01

Fidelity Advisor T:NwInsghts p 22.38 -.17 StrInT 12.78 +.01

Fidelity Freedom:FF2010 n 14.33 +.03 FF2010K 13.13 +.03 FF2015 n 11.98 +.02 FF2015K 13.20 +.03 FF2020 n 14.51 +.03 FF2020A 12.67 +.04 FF2020K 13.63 +.03 FF2025 n 12.10 +.04 FF2025A 12.22 +.05 FF2025K 13.79 +.04 FF2030 n 14.41 +.05 FF2030K 13.94 +.04 FF2035 n 11.94 +.05 FF2035K 14.04 +.06 FF2040 n 8.33 +.03 FF2040K 14.08 +.06 FF2045 n 9.86 +.04 FF2045K 14.23 +.06 FF2050 n 9.71 +.04 FF2050K 14.25 +.06 FreeIncK 11.82 +.01 IncomeFd n 11.80 ...

Fidelity Invest:AllSectEq 13.02 +.08 AMgr50 n 16.35 +.03 AMgr70 nr 17.38 +.06 AMgr20 nr 13.37 ... Balanc 20.18 +.09 BalancedK 20.17 +.08 BlueChipGr 49.23 -.31 BluChpGrF n 49.33 -.30 BluChpGrK 49.28 -.30 CA Mun n 12.93 -.02 Canada n 54.24 +.24 CapApp n 29.77 +.23 CapApprK 29.83 +.23 CapDevelO 11.91 ... CapInco nr 9.44 +.04 Contra n 77.94 -.65 ContraK 77.96 -.64 CnvSec 24.82 +.11 DisEq n 24.57 +.11 DiscEqF 24.57 +.11 DiverIntl n 29.26 +.35 DiversIntK r 29.25 +.35 DivStkO n 17.51 +.04 DivGth n 30.08 +.18 EmrgMkt n 22.15 ... EqutInc n 47.53 +.53 EQII n 19.84 +.22 EqIncK 47.52 +.53 Export n 22.82 -.01 FidelFd 36.02 +.10 FltRateHi r 9.96 +.01 FourInOne n 29.36 +.20 GNMA n 11.81 -.03 GovtInc n 10.61 -.03 GroCo n 95.55 -1.15 GroInc 21.29 +.15 GrowCoF 95.58 -1.15 GrowthCoK 95.56 -1.15 GrStrat nr 20.29 +.10 HighInc rn 9.34 +.04 Indepndnce n 25.52 +.27 InProBnd 13.49 -.06 IntBd n 11.14 -.02 IntmMuni n 10.66 -.02 IntlDisc n 32.11 +.42 InvGrBd n 11.67 -.03 InvGB n 8.00 -.01 LgCapVal n 11.55 +.14 LatAm n 50.10 +.94 LevCoStock 30.73 +.47 LowPr rn 39.09 +.25 LowPriStkK r 39.07 +.25 Magellan n 73.94 -.06 MagellanK 73.91 -.05 MA Muni n 12.75 -.01 MegaCpStk n 11.97 +.06 MidCap n 29.63 -.09 MidCapK r 29.63 -.09 MuniInc n 13.54 -.03 NewMkt nr 17.85 +.08 NewMill n 33.23 -.18 NY Mun n 13.72 -.01 OTC 59.21 -1.07 OTC K 59.64 -1.08 100Index 10.32 ... Ovrsea n 31.59 +.39 Puritan 19.54 +.03 PuritanK 19.53 +.02 RealEInc r 11.49 +.07

Davis Funds A:NYVen A 36.35 +.19

Davis Funds C:NYVen C 34.88 +.18

Davis Funds Y:NYVenY 36.80 +.20

Delaware Invest A:Diver Inc p 9.46 -.01

Diamond Hill Fds:LongShortI n 18.52 +.17

Dimensional Fds:EmMkCrEq n 19.12 +.08 EmgMktVal 28.65 +.20 IntSmVa n 15.24 +.31 LargeCo 11.32 +.04 STExtQual n 10.97 -.01 STMuniBd n 10.29 ... TAUSCorEq2 9.86 +.09 USVectrEq n 11.71 +.11 USLgVa n 22.72 +.35 USLgVa3 n 17.39 +.26 US Micro n 14.81 -.12 US TgdVal 17.38 +.12 US Small n 23.10 +.01 US SmVal 26.75 +.09 IntlSmCo n 15.33 +.22 GlbEqInst 13.80 +.14 EmgMktSCp n 20.44 +.03 EmgMkt n 26.17 +.13 Fixd n 10.35 ... ST Govt n 10.86 -.02 IntGvFxIn n 13.08 -.07 IntlREst 5.60 +.07 IntVa n 15.90 +.34 InflProSecs 12.90 -.06 Glb5FxInc 11.26 -.02 LrgCapInt n 18.50 +.33 TM USTgtV 22.98 +.16 TM IntlValue 13.08 +.29 TMMktwdeV 16.97 +.22 TMUSEq 15.37 +.06 2YGlFxd n 10.13 ... DFARlEst n 26.27 +.33

Dodge&Cox:Balanced n 77.47 +.91 GblStock 9.05 +.14 IncomeFd 13.93 +.04 Intl Stk 33.39 +.72 Stock 120.65 +1.86

DoubleLine Funds:CoreFxdInc I 11.43 ... TRBd I 11.40 -.01 TRBd N p 11.39 -.01

Dreyfus:Aprec 44.90 -.02 DreyMid r 29.30 +.35 Drey500In t 39.71 +.13 IntlStkI 14.09 +.24 MunBd r 11.93 -.02 NY Tax nr 15.60 -.02DreihsAcInc 10.58 +.03EVPTxMEmI 47.10 +.20

Eaton Vance A:GblMacAbR p 9.98 -.01 FloatRate 9.41 +.01 IncBosA 5.95 +.03 LgCpVal 19.72 +.20 NatlMunInc 10.24 +.03 Strat Income Cl A 8.19 +.01

Eaton Vance I:AtlCapSMID 17.67 +.07 FltgRt 9.10 ... GblMacAbR 9.97 -.01 IncBost 5.95 +.03 LgCapVal 19.78 +.21 ParStEmMkt 14.45 +.06EdgwdGInst n 13.50 -.16

FMI Funds:LargeCap p 17.40 +.05

FPA Funds:NewInco n 10.61 -.02 FPACres n 28.70 ...Fairholme 31.56 +.20

Federated A:KaufmA p 5.32 -.01 MuniUltshA 10.05 ... StrValDiv p 5.15 +.06

Federated Instl:HighYldBd r 10.19 +.02 KaufmanR 5.32 -.01 MunULA p 10.05 ... TotRetBond 11.63 -.02 StaValDivIS 5.17 +.06

Fidelity Advisor A:FF2030A p 12.81 +.06 NwInsghts p 22.72 -.18 StrInA 12.78 +.01

Fidelity Advisor C:

Cree Inc 28.88 +3.77 +31.0Crocs 16.38 +.69 +10.9Ctrip.com 19.34 +.89 -17.4CubistPh 45.66 -1.34 +15.2Cyclacel rs u5.22 -.25 +26.4Cymer u75.75 +28.93 +52.2CypSemi d9.67 -.21 -42.4

D-E-FDeckrsOut 37.08 +.64 -50.9Dell Inc 9.55 -.14 -34.7Dndreon 4.33 +.15 -43.0Dentsply 36.91 -.10 +5.5Diodes d15.00 -.73 -29.6DirecTV 51.35 +1.51 +20.1DiscCmA h u60.44 -.30 +47.5DishNetwk u35.47 +2.08 +24.5DollarTr s 39.15 -1.96 -5.8DonlleyRR 10.49 -.17 -27.3DrmWksA u20.78 +1.22 +25.2DryShips 2.38 +.11 +18.8Dunkin 32.33 +.73 +29.4DyaxCp u2.97 +.59 +118.4E-Trade 8.57 -.43 +7.7eBay u49.97 +2.12 +64.8EstWstBcp 21.61 +1.22 +9.4ElectArts 13.08 -.33 -36.5EndoPhrm 30.32 -.16 -12.2EngyXXI 34.19 +.29 +7.2Entegris 7.89 +.23 -9.6EntropCom 5.52 +.08 +8.0Equinix 182.84 -7.35 +80.3Ericsson 9.05 +.29 -10.7Exelixis 4.72 -.03 -.3Expedia s 52.10 -2.15 +79.5ExpdIntl 35.32 +.54 -13.8ExpScripts 62.56 -1.00 +40.0Ezcorp 19.21 +.27 -27.2F5 Netwks 95.84 -1.43 -9.7FLIR Sys 19.37 -.21 -22.7Facebook n 19.00 -.52 -50.3Fastenal 43.76 -1.56 +.3FifthStFin 10.70 ... +11.8FifthThird 15.02 -.25 +18.1Finisar 11.65 -.39 -30.4FinLine 20.85 -.06 +8.1FstNiagara 8.24 +.23 -4.5FstSolar 23.54 +1.43 -30.3FstMerit 14.12 -.09 -6.7Fiserv u75.31 +1.55 +28.2Flextrn 5.96 +.02 +5.3FocusMda 23.99 -.01 +23.1Fortinet 19.72 -4.54 -9.6Fossil Inc 89.35 +6.62 +12.6FosterWhl 22.97 -.16 +20.0Francesca 29.38 +.14 +69.8FrontierCm 4.76 -.06 -7.7FuelCell .93 -.03 +7.1FultonFncl 9.79 -.61 -.2

G-H-IGT AdvTc 4.77 +.11 -34.1Garmin 38.93 -1.24 -2.2Gentex 16.96 +.19 -42.7GeronCp 1.44 +.07 -3.0GileadSci 66.59 -1.35 +62.7GluMobile 3.28 -.09 +4.5Google 681.79 -62.96 +5.6GreenMtC 23.93 +1.93 -46.6Groupon n 4.69 -.60 -77.3GulfportE 32.32 +.15 +9.7HMS Hldgs 27.06 -.56 -15.4HainCel 59.72 +.80 +62.9Halozyme 5.79 -.36 -39.1Hasbro 39.05 -.25 +22.5HercOffsh 5.03 -.18 +13.3Hologic 20.46 -1.14 +16.8HmLnSvc n u19.35 +2.15 +42.7HorizPhm d3.12 -.15 -22.0HudsCity u8.64 +.64 +38.2HuntJB 57.33 -1.04 +27.2HuntBncsh 6.45 -.48 +17.5IAC Inter u52.69 -.86 +23.7iSh ACWI 47.02 +.39 +11.5iShNsdqBio 139.40 -2.24 +33.6IdenixPh 4.15 +.07 -44.3Identive 1.10 +.05 -50.7Illumina 46.68 -4.48 +53.1Incyte 17.22 +.47 +14.7Infinera d4.83 -.37 -23.1Informat 29.22 +1.73 -20.9Infosys 43.69 -.85 -15.0IntgDv 5.78 +.19 +5.9Intel d21.27 -.22 -12.3InterMune 9.25 +1.32 -26.6Intersil 6.94 +.05 -33.5Intuit 59.82 -.07 +13.7IntSurg 538.35 +43.77 +16.3Isis 9.35 -3.29 +29.7

J-K-LJA Solar h d.62 -.17 -53.4JDS Uniph 10.17 -.13 -2.6JamesRiv 5.00 +1.12 -27.7JetBlue 5.20 +.11 ...JiveSoft n d11.52 -1.65 -28.0

DejourE g .23 +.00 -55.4DenisnM g 1.34 -.04 +7.2DocuSec 2.85 -.79 +11.8EV LtdDur u17.01 +.09 +11.7EVMuniBd 14.49 +.20 +14.3EmeraldOil d.76 -.02 -70.4EntreeGold d.43 -.09 -64.2ExeterR gs 1.40 +.03 -46.4FAB Univ 3.74 -.50 +141.6FrkStPrp 11.31 +.27 +13.7GamGldNR 14.23 -.16 +.9GascoEngy .14 -.01 -38.7Gastar grs d1.09 -.16 -65.7GenMoly u3.58 +.31 +15.9GeoGloblR .11 -.01 -49.8Geokinetics .29 -.07 -86.5GoldResrc 17.58 -2.55 -17.3GoldenMin 4.42 +.01 -23.9GoldStr g 2.01 -.03 +21.8GranTrra g 5.35 +.18 +11.5GtPanSilv g 1.91 -.08 -2.1Hemisphrx .69 -.00 +255.4HstnAEn d.40 -.05 -96.8ImmunoCll 1.99 -.51 +46.3ImpacMtg 10.70 +.70 +432.3ImpOil gs 45.55 ... +2.4

EmgMkts 9.69 ... NatlIntMuni 14.02 -.02

Baird Funds:AggBdInst 11.09 ...

Baron Fds Instl:Growth 57.94 +.45

Baron Funds:Asset n 51.54 +.05 Growth 57.43 +.44 SmallCap 25.83 +.06

Bernstein Fds:IntDur 14.25 -.01 DivMun 14.90 -.02 NYMun 14.63 -.03 TxMgdIntl 13.63 +.26 IntlPort 13.54 +.27

Berwyn Funds:Income 13.43 +.03

BlackRock A:BasValA p 27.97 +.59 CapAppr p 23.53 -.10 EqtyDivid x 20.14 +.12 GlbAlA r 19.59 +.09 HiYdInvA 8.03 +.04 InflProBdA 12.10 -.04 NatMuniA 11.13 -.01

BlackRock B&C:EquityDivC x 19.71 +.15 GlobAlC t 18.21 +.08

BlackRock Instl:InflProtBd 12.25 -.03 BasValI 28.20 +.60 CoreBond 9.78 -.03 EquityDiv x 20.18 +.11 GlbAlloc r 19.69 +.09 CapAppr p 24.46 -.11 HiYldBond 8.03 +.04 NatlMuni 11.13 -.01

Buffalo Funds:SmallCap 28.28 -.42

CGM Funds:FocusFd n 28.91 +1.11 Realty n 29.02 +.24

CRM Funds:MidCapValI 30.00 +.18

Calamos Funds:Grth&IncA p 32.96 +.10 GrowthA p 50.64 -.48 Growth I 55.62 -.53

Calvert Invest:SocEqA p 37.91 -.16

Cohen & Steers:InsltRlty n 44.34 +.72 RltyShrs n 68.49 +1.10

Columbia Class A:Acorn t 29.63 +.05 DivEqInc A 10.62 +.11 DivrBd 5.28 +.01 DiviIncoA 15.03 +.08 DivOpptyA 8.82 +.08 LgCorQA p 6.62 +.03 StrtIncA 6.44 +.02 TxExA p 14.30 -.01 SelComm A 42.02 -.47

Columbia Class Z:Acorn Z 30.75 +.06 AcornIntl Z 40.02 +.15 AcornUSA 30.27 -.10 DiviIncomeZ 15.04 +.08 IntmBdZ n 9.65 +.01 IntmTEBd n 11.03 -.02 LgCapGr 13.50 -.16 LgCapIdxZ 28.01 +.10 MarsGrPrZ 22.71 -.10 MidCpIdxZ 11.87 +.14 MdCpVal p 14.39 +.16 STIncoZ 10.01 +.01 STMunZ 10.55 -.01 ValRestr n 49.77 +.27

CG Cap Mkt Fds:LgGrw 16.54 -.09

Credit Suisse Comm:CommRet t 8.42 -.04

Cullen Funds:HiDivEqI nr 14.14 +.14

DFA Funds:IntlCoreEq n 10.17 +.18 USCoreEq1 n 12.26 +.07 USCoreEq2 n 12.12 +.10

DWS Invest A:MgdMuni p 9.55 -.01 StrGovSecA 8.88 -.01

DWS Invest S:CoreEqtyS 18.14 +.20 GNMA S 15.51 -.02 MgdMuni S 9.56 -.01

DirxSCBull 57.87 -.59 +29.1Discover u39.62 +.83 +65.1Disney 51.90 +1.31 +38.4DollarGen 47.17 -2.08 +14.7DollarTh 84.75 -2.20 +20.6Dominos 40.17 +2.47 +18.3Dover 58.08 +2.75 +.1DowChm 29.86 +1.78 +3.8DuPont 49.34 +.65 +7.8DukeEn rs 65.51 +1.35 ...DukeRlty 15.07 +.42 +25.1EMC Cp 24.58 -1.06 +14.1Eaton 45.81 +.84 +5.2Ecolab u69.07 +2.83 +19.5Elan 10.91 -.21 -20.6EldorGld g 14.34 +.34 +4.6EmersonEl 48.25 -.10 +3.6EnCana g u23.91 +1.59 +29.0EngyTsfr 42.25 -.36 -7.9ENSCO 59.02 +3.95 +25.8ExcoRes 8.80 +.08 -15.8Exelon 37.01 +.90 -14.7Express 11.34 +.05 -43.1ExxonMbl u92.15 +1.12 +8.7FairchldS 11.78 -.10 -2.2FamilyDlr 65.10 -1.30 +12.9FedExCp 92.11 +1.71 +10.3FidlNFin u22.61 +.09 +41.9Fifth&Pac 10.64 +.38 +23.3FstHorizon 9.33 -.19 +16.6FirstEngy 45.98 +1.07 +3.8FordM 10.18 +.06 -5.4ForestLab 34.90 -1.38 +15.3ForestOil 8.69 -.13 -35.9FMCG 41.18 +1.04 +11.9Fusion-io 27.55 -2.34 +13.8

G-H-IGafisa SA 4.23 +.05 -8.0GameStop 23.12 +.35 -4.2Gannett 18.24 +.34 +36.4Gap 36.37 +.27 +96.1GenElec 22.03 -.45 +23.0GenGrPrp 19.47 +.15 +33.4GenMills 39.99 +.80 -1.0GenMotors 24.59 +.15 +21.3GenOn En 2.78 +.01 +6.5Genworth 5.63 +.16 -14.0Gerdau 8.96 -.34 +14.7GlaxoSKln 45.33 -.50 -.7GoldFLtd 12.06 -.09 -20.9Goldcrp g 43.29 -.18 -2.2GoldmanS 123.62 +3.42 +36.7Goodyear 12.39 +.11 -12.6GovPrpIT 22.35 -1.62 -.9GpFSnMx n 14.07 -.48 +9.0GpTelevisa 23.53 -.34 +11.7HCA Hldg 30.05 -.87 +36.4HCP Inc 45.08 -.10 +8.8HalconR rs 7.07 +.08 -24.7Hallibrtn 34.98 +1.18 +1.4HarleyD 43.88 +2.46 +12.9HarmonyG 8.14 +.09 -30.1HartfdFn 22.08 +.75 +35.9HltMgmt 7.38 -.26 +.1Heckmann 4.21 +.11 -36.7HeclaM 6.51 +.07 +24.5HelmPayne 50.17 +.57 -14.0Hertz 14.34 -.49 +22.4Hess 54.28 +1.00 -4.4HewlettP 14.48 +.07 -43.8HollyFront 38.18 +.81 +63.2HomeDp 61.89 +2.33 +47.2HonwllIntl u62.49 +2.29 +15.0HostHotls 15.55 -.14 +5.3HovnanE u4.38 +.81 +202.1Huntsmn 15.61 +.47 +56.1IAMGld g 15.53 -.11 -2.0ING 8.95 +.48 +24.8iShGold 16.77 -.31 +10.1iSAstla 24.56 +.49 +14.6iShBraz 54.39 +.39 -5.2iSCan 28.57 +.21 +7.4iShEMU 31.31 +.84 +12.2iShGer 23.22 +.44 +20.8iSh HK u18.23 +.15 +17.8iShJapn 9.14 +.18 +.3iSh Kor 57.43 +.19 +9.9iShMex u67.95 +1.21 +26.4iShSing 13.36 +.07 +23.4iSTaiwn 12.83 -.12 +9.6iShSilver 31.09 -1.36 +15.4iShChina25 37.13 +.75 +6.5iSCorSP500 143.86 +.45 +14.2iShEMkts 41.50 +.23 +9.4iShiBxB u122.80 +.05 +7.9iShUSTrs 25.16 -.15 +1.4iShB20 T 121.74 -2.23 +.4iS Eafe 54.14 +.97 +9.3iShiBxHYB 92.96 +.45 +3.9iShMtg 14.62 +.14 +15.5iShR2K 81.85 -.25 +11.0iShUSPfd u40.11 +.07 +12.6iShREst 64.78 +.83 +14.0iShDJHm u20.87 +1.52 +75.7ITW 60.79 +2.24 +30.1IngerRd 46.35 +2.04 +52.1IBM 193.36 -14.44 +5.2IntlGame 13.00 +.24 -24.4IntPap u37.42 +.62 +26.4Interpublic 10.90 -.36 +12.0Invesco 24.63 -.08 +22.6InvMtgCap 20.87 +.14 +48.5IronMtn u34.08 +2.91 +24.0ItauUnibH 14.53 -.01 -21.7

J-K-LJPMorgCh 42.32 +.70 +27.3Jabil d17.19 +.16 -12.6JanusCap 8.56 -.32 +35.7Jefferies 14.40 +.03 +4.7JohnJn u71.86 +3.89 +9.6JohnsnCtl 26.19 +.32 -16.2JoyGlbl 62.21 +3.77 -17.0JnprNtwk 17.79 +1.44 -12.8KB Home u16.90 +2.30 +151.5KeyEngy 7.23 +.35 -53.3Keycorp 8.74 +.41 +13.7Kimco 20.58 +.31 +26.7KindMorg 34.97 +.47 +8.7KindrM wt u3.85 +.42 +109.2Kinross g 10.10 -.08 -11.4KnghtCap 2.50 ... -78.8KodiakO g 9.82 +.35 +3.4Kohls 52.93 +1.51 +7.3Kroger u25.13 +1.82 +3.8LSI Corp 6.46 +.01 +8.6

13,661.72 11,231.56 Dow Jones Industrials 13,343.51 +14.66 +.11 +9.22 +13.00 5,390.11 4,531.79 Dow Jones Transportation 5,082.16 +37.53 +.74 +1.24 +5.57 499.82 422.90 Dow Jones Utilities 483.76 +8.28 +1.74 +4.11 +6.87 8,515.60 6,898.12 NYSE Composite 8,324.14 +97.06 +1.18 +11.33 +12.02 2,509.57 2,102.29 AMEX Index 2,408.53 -17.43 -.72 +5.71 +8.53 3,196.93 2,441.48 Nasdaq Composite 3,005.62 -38.49 -1.26 +15.37 +13.96 1,474.51 1,158.66 S&P 500 1,433.19 +4.60 +.32 +13.96 +15.74 15,432.54 12,158.90 Wilshire 5000 14,959.87 +41.93 +.28 +13.42 +15.28 868.50 666.16 Russell 2000 821.00 -2.09 -.25 +10.81 +15.24

52-Week Daily Wkly Wkly YTDHigh Low Name Last Net Chg Net Chg %Chg %Chg

Name Last Chg Wkly

Name Last Chg Wkly

D6 THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAMSATURDAY, October 20, 2012

New York Stock Exchange

Mutual Funds

NASDAQ National Market

American Stock Exchange

Gainers ($2 or more)Name Last Wkly %Wkly

OrientEH 11.79 +3.16 +36.6EthanAl 29.42 +7.18 +32.3HovnanE 4.38 +.81 +22.7DeanFds 18.30 +3.34 +22.3MGIC 2.02 +.36 +21.7

Losers ($2 or more)

OvShip 3.25 -1.83 -36.0Bankrate 10.97 -3.70 -25.2AMD 2.18 -.56 -20.4MdbkIns 6.18 -1.46 -19.1Kngswy rs 3.58 -.72 -16.7

DiaryAdvanced 1,889Declined 1,254New Highs 461New Lows 64Total issues 3,199Unchanged 56

DiaryAdvanced 240Declined 240New Highs 25New Lows 16Total issues 499Unchanged 19

DiaryAdvanced 1,070Declined 1,543New Highs 212New Lows 126Total issues 2,676Unchanged 63

Gainers ($2 or more)

NovaCpp n 2.55 +.70 +37.8MeetMe 4.05 +.80 +24.6LongweiPI 2.14 +.38 +21.6SDgo pfC 23.31 +2.87 +14.0VirnetX 27.79 +2.77 +11.1

Losers ($2 or more)

DocuSec 2.85 -.79 -21.7IncOpR 3.10 -.78 -20.1Vringo wt 2.18 -.50 -18.7Medgen wt 3.20 -.71 -18.2Vringo 3.93 -.85 -17.8

Gainers ($2 or more)

CybexIntl 2.45 +1.13 +86.2Cymer 75.75 +28.93 +61.8IntrntGold 4.67 +1.65 +54.8B Comm 6.93 +2.13 +44.3TSR Inc 5.07 +1.31 +34.7

Losers ($2 or more)

MeadeInst 2.37 -.99 -29.4ApolloGrp 20.39 -8.25 -28.8ClearSign n 5.70 -2.23 -28.1CytRx rs 2.52 -.92 -26.7Isis 9.35 -3.29 -26.0

Name Last Wkly %Wkly Name Last Wkly %Wkly

Name Last Wkly %Wkly Name Last Wkly %Wkly Name Last Wkly %Wkly

most active ($1 or more)Name Vol (00) Last Wkly

BkofAm 8395557 9.44 +.32SprintNex 7158496 5.65 -.08S&P500ETF 5766596 143.39 +.50Citigroup 3393209 37.16 +2.41SPDR Fncl 2964967 16.11 +.30

Vringo 310535 3.93 -.85CheniereEn 164197 15.70 -.03NovaGld g 112538 5.00 -.01NA Pall g 111716 1.65 -.19GoldStr g 110217 2.01 -.03

SiriusXM 5134095 2.92 +.14Clearwire 3549415 1.85 -.47Intel 3127450 21.27 -.22Microsoft 2702188 28.64 -.56PwShs QQQ 2058728 65.68 -1.00

most active ($1 or more) most active ($1 or more)Name Vol (00) Last Wkly Name Vol (00) Last Wkly

nyse

Wkly YTDName Div PE Last Chg %ChgAT&T Inc 1.76 47 35.32 -.31 +16.8AlcatelLuc ... ... 1.12 +.12 -28.2BP PLC 1.92 6 43.10 +1.26 +.8Baxter 1.80 15 61.92 +1.23 +25.1BlkHillsCp 1.48 29 35.66 +.54 +6.2Boeing 1.76 13 74.01 +2.16 +.9Cimarex .48 13 62.44 +1.52 +.9Citigroup .04 12 37.16 +2.41 +41.2CocaCola s 1.02 20 37.40 -.83 +6.9CmcBMO .92 12 37.68 -1.45 -1.2ConAgra 1.00 19 28.26 +.32 +7.0ConocPhil s 2.64 7 57.45 +1.28 +3.4DukeEn rs 3.06 17 65.51 +1.35 ...ExxonMbl 2.28 12 92.15 +1.12 +8.7FordM .20 8 10.18 +.06 -5.4HarleyD .62 14 43.88 +2.46 +12.9

HelmPayne .28 10 50.17 +.57 -14.0IBM 3.40 13 193.36 -14.44 +5.2Kroger .60 23 25.13 +1.82 +3.8McDnlds 3.08 17 88.72 -3.79 -11.6NCR Corp ... 24 22.18 +.12 +34.8OcciPet 2.16 11 84.35 +2.42 -10.0PepsiCo 2.15 19 69.88 -.17 +5.3Schlmbrg 1.10 18 74.00 +1.81 +8.3SouthnCo 1.96 19 46.64 +1.03 +.8TorDBk g 3.08 ... 83.37 +.81 +12.5Tyson .16 12 16.44 +.42 -20.3ValeroE .70 7 29.53 +.52 +40.3WalMart 1.59 16 75.62 -.19 +26.5Wendys Co .08 ... 4.19 -.02 -21.8WestarEn 1.32 15 30.07 +.76 +4.5

Wkly YTDName Div PE Last Chg %Chg

Indexes

Market Summary

17,889,958,546

Name Sell Wkly

amex nasDaq

346,292,096 9,208,353,293Volume VolumeVolume

Mick HunterFinancial Consultant

1807 E. Mary St. Ste. #2Garden City, KS 67846

620-271-0008218271

Mick’s Message Of The Month:

Securities and financial planning offered through LPL Financial. Member FINRA/ SIPC

*Limitations and restrictions apply to IRAs

RetirementAre you retired or planning to retire? Have you recently changed jobs and left your retirement

plan with your previous employer? Could your portfolio be sitting dead in an account that no one is monitoring? Are you getting

several different statements from several different programs? Let me help you consolidate, simplify, and monitor your portfolio which will assist

in maximizing your returns.

Page 29: Garden City Telegram October 20, 2012

D7SATURDAY, October 20, 2012THE GARDEn CiTY TElEGRAm

AT&T invests in Kansas

In the first half of 2012, AT&T invested nearly $75 million in its Kansas wire-less and wired networks, according to a release from the company. Network upgrades include activa-tion of new cell sites or towers to improve network coverage, deploying faster connections to enable 4G speeds, and adding spec-trum capacity to support additional traffic.

First-half upgrade highlights include:

• The launch of 4G LTE service in Wichita, which allows customers to stream, download, upload and game faster than ever before.

• The launch of AT&T U-verse Services in Ottawa, which expanded our footprint of available cutting-edge TV, Internet and voices services to more than 540,000 house-holds in and around Kansas City, Wichita and Topeka.

• The enhancement of numerous wireless Internet cell sites and addition of network capac-ity in various locations across the state, which is like adding lanes to a high-way, to lessen congestion and maintain the flow of data.

AT&T network upgrades in Kansas also include deployment of new Wi-Fi hot spots and backbone network connec-tions.

“When companies like AT&T invest in their network infrastructure, Kansas wins,” Sen. Mike Petersen, vice chairman of the Kansas Senate Utilities Committee, said. “AT&T’s ongoing com-mitment to our state will help keep Kansas and its businesses connected — and competitive — in an increasingly fast-paced global economy.”

Energy conference coming up

State leaders and indus-try representatives will gather in Hutchinson on Nov. 27 to discuss how Kansas small businesses can benefit from the oil and gas activity under way in the Mississippian Lime Play in Kansas.

The Oil and Gas Small

Business Opportunities Conference: Your Guide to Working in the MLP will feature three events:

• A roundtable discus-sion with state leaders and industry executives on the current status of the MLP and what the future holds, as well as to educate small and rural businesses on potential business opportu-nities available as activity within the MLP continues.

• A business-to-business networking session, where Kansas small business owners can interact with key oil and gas companies – and their vendors and suppliers – to see what products and services they can provide.

• The Kansas Oil and Gas Career Fair will help interested Kansans find career opportunities among the various com-panies active in the MLP. Participants also can learn about opportunities to get additional training for careers in the MLP.

Several officials are expected to be on hand at the conference, includ-ing Kansas Commerce Secretary Pat George, Kansas Corporation Commission Executive Director Patti Petersen-Klein and Kansas Geological Survey Director Rex Buchanan. Industry representa-tives include Tom Ward, CEO, SandRidge Energy; Robert Murdock, CEO, Osage Resources; Michael Radler, CEO Tug Hill Operating; David Todd, vice president of produc-tion, Shell Exploration and Production Co.; and Wayne Woolsey, CEO, Woolsey Operating.

The conference will take place from 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Nov. 27 in the Encampment Building, Kansas State Fairgrounds, 2000 N. Poplar St. in Hutchinson. The round-table is set for 8:30 a.m. to noon, the business-to-busi-ness networking session will take place from 1 to 3 p.m., and the career fair will take place from 3 to 6 p.m.

Registration and hotel information can be found at KansasCommerce.com/MLPConference. Deadline to register is Nov. 14.

Women in Ag conference nears

“Advocating for

Agriculture, How Do You Defend Your Livelihood?” is the speaker’s topic for the Women in Ag Conference, Nov. 8 in Salina. The conference will be at 6:30 p.m. at the Redeemer Lutheran Church at 743 Magnolia in Salina.

Debbie Lyons-Blythe, America’s Farmers 2012 Farm Mom of the Year, will be the speaker. She will share her advocacy philosophy to make a dif-ference with the consum-ing public.

Lyons-Blythe is the day-to-day manager of the family’s ranch and uses Twitter, Facebook, and blogs throughout the day to communicate with consumers about agricul-ture. Lyons-Blythe works to connect with women — specifically moms — to give them a look into how their food is raised. At the same time, she shares sto-ries about her family, their ranch, and even tried-and-true recipes. She blogs at http://kansascattleranch.blogspot.com.

The conference is sponsored by K-State Research & Extension-Central Kansas District, Saline County Farm Bureau, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Farm Service Agency, American Ag Credit, and conservation districts.

This Women in Ag conference is designed for any woman who has an interest in farming such as a landowner, farmer/rancher, or farmer’s/rancher’s wife or daughter or daughter-in-law. Men are welcome also.

There is no fee for the conference, but partici-pants are asked to pre-reg-ister by Nov. 1. To register, call the Extension office in Salina at (785) 309-5850.

Chamber breakfast nears

The Garden City Area Chamber of Commerce November breakfast is scheduled for Nov. 14.

Due to the Thanksgiving holiday, the November breakfast will be held one week earlier than normal.

The breakfast is held at 7:30 a.m. at the Wheat Lands Convention and Conference Center, 1404 E. Fulton St.

City’s Jucan earns recognition

In recognition of her contributions promoting professionalism, pride and high ideals among those working in the wastewater analysis field, Garden City Laboratory Chemist Anca Jucan recently was induct-ed into the Kansas Water Environment Association’s Crystal Crucible Society.

Heath Horyna, envi-ronmental scientist with the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, presented Jucan with the recognition during the Oct. 2 Garden City Commission meeting.

“This is a very special award because the per-son who nominated your employee was from the state of Kansas; it was a state agency nomination,” Horyna told the commis-sioners.

Jucan, a native of Romania, graduated with a master’s degree in pharmacy in Bucharest, Romania. For 10 years, she was employed in the areas of retail and hospital phar-macy before moving to the United States.

In 1991, Jucan settled in Sublette, with her husband, Florentin, a self-employed businessman, and her two children, Ruxandra and Dan. Jucan began her first job in the United States in 1994 with Iowa Beef Processors, Inc., working in the laboratory. In 1997, she was hired by the City of Garden City to work in the laboratory at the Wastewater Treatment Facility, where she acquired and maintains certification as a Class III Wastewater Analyst.

“We are all extremely proud of Anca and very fortunate to have her in our organization,” Public Utilities Director Mike Muirhead said.

In addition to her duties in the wastewater lab, Jucan also conducts drink-ing water tests for the City’s water division and for other private property owners within the community.

“Thank you very much, I am so flattered,” Jucan said. “I am going to try to keep up the good work. I know what I do; I’m proud of what I do. The analyses do come out just right. I pass my tests, and I am going to keep it up.”

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FSheila really enjoys dancing, singing and listening to mu-sic. Sheila does well in school, her favorite class is reading. She has been working on becoming more outgoing, out-spoken and independent. She will need a forever fami-ly that will love her unconditionally and be there for her throughout life’s ups and downs. Sheila would like a loving family that will allow her to maintain contact with her sib-lings. She would enjoy a family that has pets and likes spen-ding time outside. To learn more about adoption visit www.adoptkskids.org or call 877-457-5430.Sheila’s case number is CH-5241.

Courtesy photo

Heath Horyna, environmental scientist with the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, presented Garden City Laboratory Chemist Anca Jucan, center, with a certificate recognizing her induction into the Kansas Water Environment Association’s Crystal Crucible Society. Also pictured is Mike Muirhead, Garden City director of public utilities.

Business Briefs

By ROBERTA NAMEEBetter Business Bureau of Kansas

O ctober, as everyone must surely know by now, is

Breast Cancer Awareness Month. Store shelves have blossomed with pink as product after product prom-ises to help the cause if you will only give them your shopping dollars.

The popularity of pink products is not lim-ited to October, of course. Throughout the year we are seeing more and more of the trend toward using pink as a marketing tool to lure customers.

The Better Business Bureau advises consumers that some of those products that adorn themselves with pink may be only providing very limited help to the fight against breast cancer. Some of them promise significant donations to breast cancer charities and some of them do not.

What does the ribbon mean?

If you are interested in being sure that your money

will go to this very worthy cause, the BBB urges you to become acquainted with which products are more likely to be donating to that cause, and which are just using the pink-ribbon craze to increase their sales. Products as diverse as duct tape, fried chicken buckets, airplanes and handguns have trumpeted their pink appeal to consumers. Some of these products clearly state the amount they are contributing to charities on their packaging. The BBB endorses this method to properly inform consumers who are interested in sup-porting the cause.

Other products, however, make very vague claims. Some even require the con-sumer to mail in proof of purchase before they will donate to breast cancer charities. Consumers should remember that the pink rib-bon symbol is not regulated by any agency and does not necessarily mean that prod-uct combats breast cancer. Some products simply use the pink ribbon to indicate that they are “healthy” and that they aren’t associated with breast cancer as a

contributing cause. Some natural health and beauty products fall within this category.

Still other companies might put the pink ribbon on their product to signify that that company supports the breast cancer cause, even if their contribu-tion is not tied to the sales of the item bearing the pink ribbon emblem. One example of that was back in 2010 when a shoe com-pany sold pink ribbon clogs. While customers may have thought their purchase was furthering the cause, the company had made a set donation of $25,000 to Susan G. Komen for the Cure. The purchase of the shoes did not increase the size of the donation.

Some companies put an arbitrary cap on their dona-tion to the breast cancer cause. Though proceeds from the sales of the item may go to that cause, once the cap is reached the dona-tion stops. There is no mech-anism for informing the con-sumer that their purchase happened after that fact. The consumer’s purchase does not go toward the company’s

donation. A major athletic shoe company in 2010 set a limit on their donations to the Avon Breast Cancer Crusade of $750,000, and didn’t let their customers know. Customers were led to believe that a portion of that shoe’s sales helped the cause. The truth is, after the limit was reached, sales did not contribute to the fund.

Here are the Better Business Bureau’s tips for responsible pink-ribbon shopping:

• Inspect the product for information to see if the label tells how much of sales to the charity, or specifically where it does go.

• Check their website. The product packaging usually gives the website address and the information about charitable giving may be there.

• Call the company and ask for the information.

• Contact the charity and ask if they are receiving money from that company.

• Check out the char-ity on the Better Business Bureau’s website.

Contact the BBB by call-ing (800) 856-2417 or visit www.kansasplains.bbb.org.

How to stay smart when thinking pinkW A S H I N G T O N

(AP) — The maker of Banana Boat sunscreen is recalling some half-million bottles of spray-on lotion after reports that a handful of people have caught on fire after applying the product and coming in contact with an open flame.

Energizer Holdings said Friday that it is pulling 23 varieties of UltraMist sunscreen off store shelves due to the risk of the lotion ignit-ing when exposed to fire.

The recall includes aerosol products like UltraMist Sport, UltraMist Ultra Defense and UltraMist Kids.

A company spokes-man said there have been five reports of peo-ple suffering burns after using the sunscreen in the last year. Four burn cases were reported in the U.S. and one in Canada.

More than 20 mil-lion units have been sold since UltraMist

launched in 2010, the spokesman said.

The problem appears to be caused by UltraMist’s spray valve, which is over applying the product, Energizer said in a statement. As a result the lotion is tak-ing longer to dry, which raises the flammability risk.

“If a consumer comes into contact with a flame or spark prior to com-plete drying of the prod-uct on the skin, there is a potential for the prod-uct to ignite,” the com-pany said.

UltraMist’s label warns users: “Keep away from sources of ignition — no smoking.”

But dermatologists say most people don’t read such labels.

“So many people put this on outside, while they’re on their way to activities, so I just don’t think people are aware of that,” said Dr. Michele Green, a dermatologist at New York’s Lenox Hill Hospital.

Banana Boat recalls lotion due to fire risk

Page 30: Garden City Telegram October 20, 2012

By DEREK [email protected]

A prominent retail store in Scott City soon will be operating under a different banner.

Starting Sunday, the 4-year-old Pamida store will begin the transition into a Shopko Hometown store. Today is Pamida’s last day of operations. The store will be closed until Oct. 28, when it reopens under the new company. A grand opening ceremo-ny is scheduled for Nov. 29.

Shopko Hometown will offer shoppers a greater breadth and depth of product selection than was previously carried by Pamida, Shopko spokes-woman Tara Powers said.

“There will be much more to choose from in both the apparel and home departments. There will also be more nation-al brands available than before, including brands like Gloria Vanderbilt, Sony, Nike, Graco, Rachael Ray, Paula Deen, T-Fal, etc. In addition, there will be more high quality pri-

vate label brands. So the product categories will be the same, but there will be more selection,” Powers said.

As a community that “does not have a pleth-ora of soft goods avail-able,” the store will be a

welcomed addition, Scott City Area Chamber of Commerce Director Katie Eisenhour said.

“The neat thing for us is that Shopko Hometown might more resemble a Target, to give just a bit of familiarity to what

folks might experience. It will not be a low-end discount store. It will be more like a department store of sorts,” Eisenhour said.

Eisenhour said there is a buzz around the com-munity in anticipation of

the new store.“We’re very excited,

and I think the region, you know our neighbor-ing communities, are, too, because while it’s wonderful everything that Garden City has to offer, we think it’s nice that maybe we’ll be able to give our local people a choice,” Eisenhour said.

Eisenhour gave the example that sometimes it can be hard for women in Scott City to find a pair of pantyhose, and if they do, there’s not much room to be picky. Shopko Hometown will help alle-viate that kind of strug-gle, she said.

“I know that it’s a good thing for our communi-ty. We love to be able to offer people choices here, and in this town of 4,000, we kind of are demand-ing that way. We have a Dollar General, we have Alco and we had Pamida. We don’t want less than that, so I’m grateful that they’re staying. It’s going to be exciting,” Eisenhour said.

The merger between Pamida and Shopko was

finalized earlier this year. According to a release from Shopko, the joint effort creates “one of the largest U.S. retailers focused on serving small-er, rural communities.”

There will not be any structural changes to the building, located at 1702 Main St. on the southern edge of Scott City, accord-ing to Powers.

The Shopko Hometown retail format, developed over the past three years to augment Shopko’s larg-er store model, offers a differentiated and finan-cially successful mer-chandising strategy, the release said. More than 120 Pamida stores in the Midwest have been con-verted to the Shopko Hometown concept, Powers said, adding that the response from shop-pers has been positive.

“They appreciate the expanded product selec-tion, the new brands, the fresh, updated look and feel of the store, all com-bined with the same great value and service they received from Pamida,” Powers said.

BusinessTHE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAMD8 SATURDAY, October 20, 2012

Becky Malewitz/Telegram

The Pamida store located at 1702 Main St. Scott City, seen here, will soon reopen as a Shopko Hometown store.

Scott City Pamida to reopen as Shopko Hometown

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First National Bank of Holcomb is changing hands following its pur-chase by American State Bancshares, Inc., of Great Bend.

“There was a short list of prospects that we con-tacted to see if they had an interest in purchasing our bank,” Paul Pfeifer, Holcomb bank president, said in a release. “Our ownership group isn’t get-ting any younger, and we felt it was time to let the next generation take over. This decision will be good for our customers and employees.”

The transaction is pend-ing regulatory approval, but is expected to take place before the end of the

year.American State Bank

currently has a bank in Garden City, located at 1901 E. Mary St.

“This acquisition will increase our presence in the Garden City mar-ket and fits well with our strategic direction,” Don LacKamp, American State president and CEO, said.

LacKamp said the acquisition will provide additional penetration into the market share, and also provide diversity in the customer base.

American State is a Kansas banking company that has three other bank charters and 14 locations in central and western Kansas. Assets total more than $650 million, and loca-tions include Belleville,

Concordia, Clyde, Great Bend, Larned, St. John, Macksville, Garden City, Rose Hill, Augusta and Wichita.

The acquisition will mean expanded financial services for customers of the 401 North Henderson St. bank in Holcomb, LacKamp said.

“They should see an improvement in the finan-cial services because with the size and scale of our company, we can afford to provide services that typi-cally many smaller banks can’t,” the Great Bend banker said.

Those services will include higher lending limits, remote deposit capture and additional treasury management ser-vices.

American State Bank of Great Bend to buy Holcomb bank

NEW YORK (AP) — The release of Microsoft’s Windows 8 operating sys-tem is a week away, and consumers are in for a shock. Windows, used in one form or another for a generation, is getting a completely different look that will force users to learn new ways to get things done.

Microsoft is making a radical break with the

past to stay relevant in a world where smartphones and tablets have eroded the three-decade dominance of the personal computer. Windows 8 is supposed to tie together Microsoft’s PC, tablet and phone software with one look. But judging by the reactions of some people who have tried the PC version, it’s a move that risks confusing and alien-ating customers.

Tony Roos, an American missionary in Paris, installed a free preview version of Windows 8 on his aging laptop to see if Microsoft’s new operating system would make the PC faster and more responsive. It didn’t, he said, and he quickly learned that work-ing with the new software requires tossing out a lot of what he knows about Windows.

Early look at Windows 8 baffles consumers