Garden City Telegram June 8, 2013

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BIG RIDE: Minnesota rider takes lead in bulls. PAGE D1

rodeo: Volunteers make PRCA event happen. PAGE B1

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SATURDAY, June 8, 2013

$1.25

Volume 84, No. 133

4 sections

24 pages

Go to GCTelegram.com for photo galleries from Friday’s Beef Empire Days tennis and rodeo events.

Surveillance program denials require decoding

First look at flight

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Google CEO Larry Page and Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg are denying reports that depict two of the Internet’s most influential companies as willing participants in a secret government program that gives the National Security Agency unfettered access to email and other personal information transmitted on various online services. The rebuttals issued Friday in blog posts expand upon earlier statements that the See Surveillance, Page A5

G.C. man arrested on allegations of attempted murder By The Telegram A Garden City man has been arrested on allegations that include attempted first-degree murder, aggravated arson, aggravated battery, and robbery. Garden City police arrested Heriberto Ramirez, 27, 950 Jennie Barker Road, at 7:49 a.m. Wednesday and lodged him in the Finney County Jail. According to Sheriff Kevin Bascue, Ramirez was arrested on three separate warrants and a probable-cause arrest warrant. The first warrant included three allegations of attempted first-degree murder and aggravated arson; the second included a sole allegation of aggravated battery; the third warrant included allegations of aggravated robbery; two allegations of aggravated battery; and one of aggravated burglary, in addition to allegations of riot, criminal damage to property and two battery allegations. The probable cause arrest warrant included allegations of defacing identification marks on a firearm, possession of narcotics and possession of drug paraphernalia. Total bond for Ramirez is $870,000, Bascue said. Garden City Police Department Capt. Michael Reagle declined to give details on the case on Friday and said police would release more information on Monday. Bascue said the police department would be holding a press conference on the matter at 2 p.m. Monday in the training room of the police department.

Rodeo royalty on call

Becky Malewitz/Telegram

Baylyn Mantzke 11, and Max Neeley, 9, get ready to take a ride in an airplane as part of the Spencer Flight & Education Center’s aviation youth day camp Friday.

Aviation camp gets youths in the cockpit By SCOTT AUST

saust@gctelegram.com

Caleb Carter drew praise from his teacher while taking a turn practicing a landing on Scott City’s state-of-the-art flight simulator Friday during an aviation day camp for youth. “Not too bad. Not too bad, Caleb,” Brian Vulgamore, chairman of Spencer Flight and Education Center, said. After exiting the Redbird FMX, a full motion, FAA-certified flight simulator, a wide grin spread across Carter’s face. “It was fun,” Carter, 12, said. “I just worried I was going to crash.” Several dozen youths ages 10 and 18 took part in the aviation camp on Friday at Scott City’s Spencer Flight and Education Center. The kids broke into several small groups and visited different stations that included two ground schools, pre-flight inspection, airplane tours, Young Eagles rides, visiting with U.S. Air Force members, and turns on the Redbird FMX flight simulator. Carter, who will be a seventh-grader this fall, said he’s been flying a few times with his grandfather, John Buehler, and said he might like to become a pilot someday. See Aviation, Page A5

Becky Malewitz/Telegram

Spencer Flight & Education Center Chairman Brian Vulgamore and Joe Evans, 12, Scott City, take part in a landing simulation during the center’s aviation youth day camp Friday afternoon.

Report: Economy adds 175,000 jobs in May Brad Nading/Telegram

Becky Malewitz/Telegram

TOP: Bethany Harter, Moundridge, is congratulated after being named the 2013 Beef Empire Days Queen Friday during the PRCA Rodeo. Abbie Schweb, Goddard, was named this year’s princess. BOTTOM: Waylon Wittliff, 9, gets help during the rodeo clown contest from Miss Rodeo Kansas Kara Hackney and volunteers during the Finney County Public Library’s rodeo story time Friday morning.

What’s inside

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Annie’s Advice . . Classified . . . . . . . Comics . . . . . . . . . Police Blotter . . .

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Unemployment rate climbs to 7.6 percent. WASHINGTON (AP) — More Americans hunted for jobs in May, and more companies filled them — signs of confidence and resilience for the slowhealing U.S. economy. The 175,000 jobs employers added last month were the latest evidence that the economy could be poised for stronger growth in coming months despite tax increases and government spending cuts. The unemployment rate rose to 7.6 percent from 7.5 percent in April, the Labor Department said Friday. But that increase was only because more people began looking for work, a healthy sign. About threequarters of them found jobs. Investors seemed pleased that the report hit a sweet spot: The job growth showed the U.S. economy’s sturdiness. Yet the gain was modest enough that many analysts think the Federal Reserve will continue making bond purchases intend-

Obituaries . . . . . . Opinion . . . . . . . . State . . . . . . . . . . . TV Listings . . . . . . Weather . . . . . . . .

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ed to stimulate growth for at least several more months. The purchases have eased long-term loan rates and lifted stock prices. The Dow Jones industrial average surged more than 200 points. “Job growth is still a bit weaker than desired,” said Russell Price, an economist at Ameriprise Financial. But the steadiness of the job gains “is a testament to the economy’s much improved underlying fundamentals.” The housing market is strengthening, auto sales are up and consumer confidence has reached a five-year peak. Stock prices are near record highs, and the budget deficit has shrunk. The American economy’s relative strength contrasts with Europe, which is gripped by recession, and Asia, where once-explosive economies are now struggling. U.S. employers have added an average of 155,000 jobs in the past three months. But the May gain almost exactly matched the average increase of the previous 12 months: 172,000.

Market Prices Grain prices at the Garden City Co-op Wheat...........7.10 Corn..............7.26

Milo..............6.66 Soybeans....14.66

Schwieterman Inc. reported Chicago Live Cattle Futures: June Aug. Oct. High........... 120.65......120.05.....123.25 Low............ 119.95......119.28.....122.50 Stand......... 120.03......119.28.....122.68

Reflecting a recent trend, many of the jobs added in May were lower-paying ones, which aren’t likely to fuel as much consumer spending and economic growth as higher-paying jobs that have disappeared. Yet many Americans appear more optimistic about their job prospects: 420,000 people started looking for work in May. As a result, the percentage of Americans 16 and older either working or looking for work rose to 63.4 percent from a 34-year low of 63.3 percent in April. This is called the labor force participation rate. Higher participation can raise the unemployment rate. That’s because once people without a job start looking for one, they’re counted as unemployed. Labor force participation has been falling since peaking at 67.3 percent in 2000. That’s partly the result of baby boomers retiring and dropping out of the workforce. Joseph LaVorgna, chief U.S. economist at Deutsche Bank Securities, thinks See Jobs report, Page A5

Weather Forecast Today, strong p.m. T-storm, high 89, low 64. Sunday, mostly sunny, high 90, low 65. Details on page A8.


For The Record

SATURDAY, June 8, 2013

Obituaries

Who’s Responsible ➤ Overall company operations and editorial page

Dena Sattler, editor and publisher (620) 275-8500 ext. 201 denas@gctelegram.com

Newsroom ➤ Department e-mail, fax

newsroom@gctelegram.com Fax: (866) 450-5936

➤ News operations, corrections

Brett Riggs, managing editor (620) 275-8500 ext. 234 riggs@gctelegram.com

➤ Business news

Ruth Campbell, news editor (620) 275-8500 ext. 231 dthompson@gctelegram.com

➤ Web Content

Kamil Zawadzki, web editor (620) 275-8500 ext. 230 kzawadzki@gctelegram.com

➤ SW Life, entertainment

(620) 275-8500 ext. 234 newsroom@gctelegram.com

➤ Education, youth

Brett Riggs, managing editor (620) 275-8500 ext. 234 riggs@gctelegram.com

Scott Aust (620) 275-8500 ext. 232 saust@gctelegram.com

Government

➤ Law enforcement, courts

Angie Haflich, reporter (620) 275-8500 ext. 238 ahaflich@gctelegram.com

Dr. Marion Spikes

Emmett Reardon

Imogene French

D r . M a r i o n E. Spikes, 86, of Scottsdale, Ariz., died Friday, May 31, 2013, after a brief illness. Dr. Spikes was a physician in G a r d e n City from 1963 until his retirement. He had served in the military during World War II. Surviving is his wife of 67 years, Charlotte; a brother, Warren of Hugoton; a sister, Wilma Rider of Tucson, Ariz.; a son, Larry of Wichita; two daughters, Janice of Pine, Colo., and Susan Peterson of Wichita; 10 grandchildren; and 10 great-grandchildren. He was preceded in death by a son, Trent; and a grandson. A memorial service took place at 10 a.m. Wednesday at Valley Presbyterian Church in Paradise Valley, Ariz. In lieu of flowers, memorials are suggested to Hospice of the Valley, 16117 N. 76th St., Scottsdale, AZ 85260.

HUGOTON — Emmett A. Reardon, 104, died Friday, June 7, 2013, at Pioneer Manor in Hugoton. He was born Dec. 19, 1908, in Texas County, Okla., to George E. and Clara Lauterbach Reardon. He graduated from Moscow High School in Moscow. On Dec. 10, 1942, he married Harriet McAtee in Riverside, Calif. Mr. Reardon was employed at Citizens State Bank in Hugoton, retiring in 1974 as vice president and cashier. He served in the 20th Army Air Force during World War II. Survivors include a son, Harold Reardon of Tyrone, Okla.; two daughters, Charlotte Thomas and Kathleen Furr, both of Hugoton; seven grandchildren; numerous greatgrandchildren; two greatgreat-grandchildren; and a sister, Clara Highland of Wichita. He was preceded in death by his parents, a brother and four sisters. Funeral will begin at 10 a.m. Monday at the United Methodist Church, Hugoton. Burial will be at Hugoton Cemetery. Memorials are suggested to Cal Farley’s Boys Ranch, in care of Paul’s Funeral Home, Box 236, Hugoton, KS 67951.

DIGHTON — Imogene Davis French, 93, died Wednesday, June 5, 2013, at Lane County Long Term Care Unit in Dighton. She was born Oct. 16, 1919, in Hempstead County, Ark., to Hinton Charles and Mary Owen Davis. On June 20, 1954, she married Robert Earl French in Dallas. They farmed and ranched in Oklahoma until moving to Dighton in 1997. He died Dec. 27, 2003. She also was preceded in death by her parents; two brothers, Marshall and Wallace; and a sister, Mildred. Survivors include two children, Marilyn Chinburg of Dighton, and Robert Alan French of Lafayette, Ind.; and three sisters, Wilma Lee of San Diego, Joyce Davis of Albertville, Ala., and Frances Patterson of Hope, Ark. Graveside service will begin at 11 a.m. Monday at Sunset Memorial Gardens in Stillwater, Okla. Visitation hours are noon to 8 p.m. today at Boomhower Funeral Home in Dighton. Condolences may be sent at garnandfh@ sbcglobal.net. Memorials are suggested to the Lane County Long Term Care Unit, in care of the funeral home, 145 N. Wichita, Dighton, KS 67839.

Josephine Carson

➤ Sports

ELKHART — Josephine “Jo” Carson, 90, died Tuesday, June 4, 2013, in Lawrence. She was born Jan. 12, ➤ Bridal, obituaries 1923, in Harrisburg, Ill., to Debbie Schiffelbein, clerk Martin and Kristina Lydak (620) 275-8500 ext. 242 Klondike. She graduated debbie@gctelegram.com from Harrisburg Township High School. In February 1955, she married Roland Carson. Advertising/Marketing A registered nurse since ➤ Department e-mail, fax 1946, Mrs. Carson pur advertising@gctelegram.com sued her nursing career Fax: (866) 757-6842 in many locations, including Wyoming, Illinois, New ➤ Advertising/Marketing Robin Phelan, advertising Mexico, Texas and Kansas. director A former Lakin resident, (620) 275-8500 ext. 225 she moved to Elkhart in rphelan@gctelegram.com 1959. ➤ Web Advertising She worked at the county Robin Phelan, content marketing hospital and for many years director was clinic nurse for Dr. E.J. (620) 275-8500 ext. 225 McCreight. In 1975, she rphelan@gctelegram.com become Morton County’s ➤ Classified advertising: first county health nurse (620) 275-8500 ext. 501 and established the origi classifieds@gctelegram.com nal Morton County Health ➤ Retail advertising: Department. She retired in (620) 275-8500 ext. 203 1988. Her husband died in Circulation 1988. She also was preceded in death by her parents; ➤ Department e-mail, fax a, sister, Rosa Preradovic; circulation@gctelegram.com and two brothers, Karl and Fax: (866) 379-2675 Frank Klondike. ➤ Subscriptions and Sales Survivors include three Jeremy Banwell, circulation daughters, Mary Carson and operations manager (620) 275-8500 ext. 214 Cari “Tina” Carson, both jbanwell@gctelegram.com of Lawrence, and Monica Carson of New York City; ➤ Missing your paper? If you do not receive your daily and two grandchildren. delivered copy of The Garden City Telegram in Mass of Christian the mail, please call our office. Burial will begin at 2 p.m. ➤ Garden City June 15 at St. Joan of Arc (620) 275-8500 Catholic Church in Elkhart. ➤ Outside of Garden City Inurnment will follow at 1-800-475-8600 Elkhart Cemetery. The family will receive Want to subscribe? visitors at Garnand Funeral Home in Elkhart from 6 ➤ Finney Co. Mail Delivery to 7:30 p.m. Friday. In lieu $13 a month, plus tax of flowers, memorials are ➤ Rural Mail Delivery suggested to the Humane $13.87 a month, plus tax Society of the United States, ➤ Outside Area Delivery $14.30 a month, plus tax in Kansas. the World Wildlife Fund or the Nature Conservancy of $15.17 a month, plus tax outside New Mexico, all in care of Kansas the funeral home, Box 854, Elkhart, KS 67950.

Sports Dept. Fax: (866) 410-1749 Brett Marshall, sports editor (620) 275-8500 ext. 227 bmarshall@gctelegram.com

Telesforo Dorado Telesforo Dorado, 60, died Thursday, June 6, 2013, at his home in Garden City. He was born Jan. 5, 1953, in Zacatecas, Mexico, to Vicente and Juaquina Guiterrez Dorado. A Garden City resident since 1993, Mr. Dorado worked at the Tyson Packing Plant in Holcomb. He married Laura Valles. She survives. Other survivors include a son, Ricardo Dorado of Houston; three daughters, Yadhira Ruiz of Holcomb, and Dayana Dorado and Alejandra Dorado, both of Garden City; three sisters, Antonia Dorado, Eva Dorado and Zimona Dorado, all of Mexico; and five grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his parents. Visitation and funeral will be from 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. today at Price & Sons Funeral Home in Garden City, with burial following at Valley View Cemetery in Garden City. Memorials to the Telesforo Dorado Memorial Fund may be sent in care of the funeral home, 620 N. Main St., Garden City, KS 67846.

Lela Urban Lela Mae Urban, 77, died Friday, June 7, 2013, at Homestead Health & Rehabilitation Center in Garden City. Price & Sons Funeral Home of Garden City will announce arrangements.

Obituary policy Obituaries must be submitted by 9 p.m. Sunday through Friday for inclusion in the next day’s editions.

Kansas Lottery TOPEKA (AP) — These Kansas lotteries were drawn Friday: Daily Pick 3: 9-3-0 2 By 2: Red Balls: 4-17, White Balls: 2-25 Mega Millions: 1-10-3748-55, Mega Ball: 21 Megaplier: 4

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Jerry Naab, pressroom manager (620) 275-8500 ext. 244 pressroom@gctelegram.com

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Aaron Sauseda, mailroom manager (620) 275-8500 ext. 245 mailroom@gctelegram.com

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Joseph Burns IT / web developer (620) 275-8500 ext. 236 webmaster@gctelegram.com

Tuesday, June 11th through Thursday, July 11th Tuesdays (Ages 3-5 years)

10:30 am and 2:30 pm

Tuesdays (Ages 5-10 years) Thursdays at Holcomb (Holcomb City Office)

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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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Join us during Summer Reading Need more information? Contact Judy Cole at 272-3680 x 281.

➤ On the World Wide Web

Derrick Martinez In loving memory of my youngest son Genaro Ladislao Hernandez, also known as Derrick Martinez. You are always in my heart. I will always love you. Juan V. Hernandez, father, deceased. Love, Nancy Espinoza(Mom) 224220

Historic Homes & Buildings

Tour

Five Stops! $15 per person

PUBLIC

LIBRARY

Tickets available at all five sites.

• Salyer House 1012 N. Main

• Z.T. Nelson Building

414 N. Main & adjacent Regan Building apartment

• Community Church

710 N. Third

• W.D. Fulton House

Located in Finnup Park

1:30-4 p.m

Sunday, June 9 South Courtyard, Finney County Museum

Production

June 5 Kathlena Fink, 36, Elkhart, was cited and released at 1:14 p.m. June 5 on an allegation of theft and released. Loss was $345. Dalton Pister, 20, 306 W. Bellevue Ave., Apt. C, was arrested at 4:54 p.m. in the 300 block of West Bellevue on a municipal warrant for driving while suspended and on allegations of interference with law enforcement and battery on a law enforcement officer. Bianca Gomez, 16, 4101 E. U.S. Highway 50, Lot 6, was arrested at 4:12 p.m. in the 4100 block of E. U.S. Highway 50, Lot 6, on a warrant for probation violation from a prior possession of drug paraphernalia allegation. Manuel Melendez, 20, 4180 Finney County Feeders Road, was arrested at 9:49 a.m. in the 400 block of East Spruce Street, on a warrant for probation violation from a prior aggravated battery allegation. Fidel Lozano, 18, 4101 E. U.S. Highway 50, Lot 268, was cited and released at 8:53 p.m. on an allegation of driving while suspended. June 6 Romaldo Shumate, 19, 311 N. 11th St., was arrested at 5:05 a.m. in the 3100 block of Campus Drive, on an allegation of criminal damage to property. May 26 Patrick Harkness, 30, Manhattan, was cited and released at 8:13 p.m. in the

Concluding Reception

➤ Office hours

The Telegram office is open weekdays from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. After hours calls will be handled by an automated phone attendant, which will direct calls to specific departments.

Garden City Police Department Arrests/ Citations

1700 block of East Kansas Avenue on an allegation of no proof of insurance. Javier Saravia, 30, 606 Long Blvd., No. E2, was cited and released at 11:54 p.m. in the 1600 block of Conard Avenue on allegations of no valid driver’s license and exhibition of speed. Hugo Sarabria Blanco, 2512 Lee Ave., was arrested at 12:13 a.m. on allegations of theft, criminal use of a financial card, identity theft, forgery, computer unlawful acts and theft. Yulder Valencia-Diaz, 18, 1805 Kello St., was arrested at 4:29 p.m. on an allegation of interference with a law enforcement officer. May 25 Adrian Martin, 20, 1211 Parkwood Lane, was cited and released at 4:45 a.m. in the 3500 block of Campus Drive on an allegation of consumption of alcohol by a minor. Levi Beaman, 25, 2409 Lincoln Road, was arrested at 4 p.m. at Sears, 2310 E. Kansas Ave., on an allegation of felony theft. Joseph Christoper Avitua, 16, 2113 C St., was cited and released at 3:45 p.m. in the 900 block of Campus Drive on an allegation of driving while suspended. Alberto Ledesma, 49, 207 S. Cooper St., Johnson, was cited and released at 5:14 p.m. in the 1700 block of East Kansas Avenue on an allegation of transporting an open container. Roy W. Geddes, 58, 402 N. State, Meade, was arrested at 6:51 p.m. in the 2400 block of East Kansas Avenue on allegations of driving under the influence of drugs, possession of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia.

508 N. Sixth

Under New Ownership Locally Owned

➤ Department e-mail, fax

The following reports were taken from local law enforcement logs:

• Ciddie Stevens House

Business Office

Police Beat

Get ink on your fingers.

(USPS213-600) Published daily mornings except New Year’s Day, Martin Luther King Jr. Birthday, President’s Day, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Columbus Day, Veterans Day, Thanksgiving and Christmas, by The Telegram Publishing Co. Inc. at 310 N.7th Street, Garden City, KS 67846.

THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM

• Baker Boot • Regan Jewelers • Wharton’s • Wheatfields on Main • Finney County Museum

Hosted by:

• Finney County Women’s Chamber • Refreshments • Finney County • Music by Al Miller Historical Society • Historic Homes Art Exhibit

Who has the craziest hair? Friday, June 14, 2013 6:00-7:30 PM (Ages 10-17) Come with your hair done for the contest or do it here. (Some hair product will be available.)

Sponsors: Coldwell Banker

The Real Estate Shoppe, Inc.

Golden Plains

(Parents must sign release before participation.)

Finney County Public Library 605 E. Walnut Garden City, KS 67846 (620) 272-3680 Fax: (620) 272-3682 www.finneylibrary.org

Advance Tickets:

Credit Union 224173

Upcoming Events!

Kindle Raffle

In Progress Drawing July 1 25 cents per ticket 5 tickets for $1.00

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Finney County Historical Museum 403 S. Fourth at Finnup Park • 620-272-3664 www.finneycounty.org

Finney County Museum


Region & State

Roundup Briefs County commission to meet Monday The Finney County commission will meet at 8:30 a.m. Monday at the Finney County Administrative Center, 311 N. Ninth St. Items on the agenda include 2014 budget requests from the Register of Deeds, Sheriff’s Department, Juvenile Detention Center, County Clerk, Treasurer, County Attorney and County Administrator/Human Resources.

Garden City Arts sets fundraiser at Freddy’s Freddy’s Frozen Custard and Steakburgers in Garden City is having a fundraiser from 5 to 7 p.m. Monday for Garden City Arts. Garden City Arts has initiated two new children’s programs this summer: “Garden on the Gogh� and “Walls & Halls� in addition to “Artful Afternoons� and “N.E.W. (Never-Ending Workshop).� Funds will go toward providing program scholarships for youth age 3 to 15. A portion of all meals sold in-store and at the drive-through will be donated.

THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM

TOPEKA (AP) — Gov. Sam Brownback said Friday that he’s reviewing “all options� for lessening cuts in higher education spending approved by Kansas legislators, but his choices appear to be limited. Brownback acknowledged that he is not sure that he can use the governor’s power to veto individual line-items in budget legislation to eliminate just the reductions in state funding from lawmakers for public universities, community colleges and technical colleges. Brownback had wanted to maintain current funding for each of the next two fiscal years, starting in July. A bill containing a budget of

more than $14 billion for each of the next two fiscal years was delivered to the governor Thursday by legislators, and Brownback has until June 16 to decide whether to sign it, veto the entire measure or veto individual items. “We’re going to be looking at what all options are (available),� Brownback said. “That’s what we’re analyzing, what’s available for line item vetoes and what impact that has, if there is a line item veto.� Legislators approved a 1.5 percent cut in state operating funds for the universities for each of the next two fiscal years, as well as a 1.5 percent reduction in

funding for community and technical colleges for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2014. But state Board of Regents members have said the cuts are deeper than they appear because lawmakers also reduced the state funds available for salaries. They said the higher education system is losing a total of nearly $33 million in state funds over the next two fiscal years. But the Legislature’s non-partisan research staff said Friday that the budget is written so that the reductions aren’t separated from other spending for each university or for the Board of Regents. That means if Brownback

Jones earns post at Annapolis. By The Telegram

KDOT highway bids The Kansas Department of Transportation has announced May approved bids for state highway construction and maintenance projects in Kansas. The letting took place May 22 in Topeka. In District Six – Southwest: Hodgeman – Kansas Highway 156 from the Finney/Hodgeman county line east to a half-mile east of U.S. 283. Conventional seal, 19.5 miles, Heft and Sons LLC, Greensburg. $514,505.

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wants to eliminate the cuts, he’ll have to veto an institution’s full state funding — forcing legislators to pass additional budget legislation when their only remaining business scheduled is a brief, formal adjournment ceremony June 20. Another option would be to ask lawmakers next year to pass a supplemental funding bill, though they’ve not done that for several years. Brownback said he and his staff haven’t yet had a chance to fully review the 553-page budget measure. “We’re really looking at it on a line-by-line basis,� he said. “We’re going to do everything we can, looking at the budget.�

G.C. native gets Naval command

The Exploration Place Science and Discovery Center is heading to Emporia to bring an exclusive event to Girl Scouts. Two options will be available: Gross Day Camp, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. June 25, for second- through fifth-graders at a cost of $150; and Gross Camp Overnight, 7 p.m. June 27 to noon June 28 for kindergarten to 12th-grade youth, at a cost of $40. The camps are open to all girls. Financial assistance is available for girls who otherwise would not be able to attend camp. Space is limited. Sign up online at www.kansasgirlscouts.org or by contacting the Garden City Girl Scout Center, 114 Grant Ave., 276-7061 or (888) 900-7061 or emailing clay@ kansasgirlscouts.org.

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Brownback mulls higher education cuts

Girl Scout camp sign up is under way

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SATURDAY, June 8, 2013

Just a little lower

Becky Malewitz/Telegram

Construction workers use a crane to place a structure on top of what will be the Sleep Inn just off Kansas Avenue and Campus Drive.

Governor’s spokeswoman takes new job TOPEKA (AP) — The most visible member of Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback’s staff is leaving next month to become the state Lottery’s deputy director. Brownback said Friday that Communications Director Sherriene Jones-Sontag will join the lottery July 8. She has overseen the administration’s communications operations and served as Brownback’s press secretary and chief spokeswoman

since he took office in January 2011 and had the same role in his successful campaign for governor in 2009 and 2010. The governor praised JonesSontag in a statement, calling her a “trusted adviser.� His office said he would name a new communications direction within a few weeks, and he told reporters, “I’m sorry to lose her.� Jones-Sontag is a former broadcast journalist who also

operated her own communications company. She was communications director to then-House Speaker Melvin Neufeld in 2007 and 2008. Both Brownback and Neufeld are Republicans. On Brownback’s staff, JonesSontag’s salary was $72,000, while the deputy lottery director’s job pays a little more than $84,000 a year, according to a state payroll database available online.

GRAB LIFE

Garden City native Capt. Logan Jones was named commanding officer of Naval Support Activity Annapolis during a change of command and retirement ceremony on May 30, according to information provided by Naval Academy Public Affairs. Jones, the son of Dave and Diana Jones, both of Garden City, graduated from the Naval Academy in 1987 with a degree in Jones oceanography. Following commissioning, Jones completed the naval nuclear power training program before reporting to his initial assignment on board the USS Yorktown. He subsequently served on board the USS Theodore Roosevelt, USS Enterprise, USS Barry and USS Cole. Jones commanded the USS Reuben James from 2004 to 2006 and then returned to the USS Enterprise as the reactor officer. He also served on the commander’s staffs at Naval Air Forces East and U.S. Joint Forces Command. Prior to taking command of Naval Support Activity Annapolis, he commanded the USS Vicksburg. Jones holds a master of science in joint command, control and communications from the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, Calif., and a master of arts in national security and strategic studies from the Naval War College. NSA Annapolis is home to more than 600 military and civilian employees and numerous facilities, including military housing, the award-winning bachelor enlisted quarters, and the Fleet and Family Support Center. The base maintains the yard patrol craft used for the Naval Academy seamanship training program for midshipmen and provides support services to the Chesapeake Bay Detachment at Randle Cliff, Md., and the Navy Operational Support Center in Baltimore.

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SCHEDULE OF EVENTS

Thursday, 8:30 a.m. First Slack Run - FREE Admission June 6: 7:05 p.m. Family Night

Family of 4 get in for $10. Crazy House giving away bandanas and candy to the

first 350 kids! Muttin’ Bustin’ and Boot Scramble for the kids during the rodeo! WE ’ LL U O Friday, 7:05 p.m. Breast Cancer Awareness Night SEE Y June 7: Are You Tough Enough To Wear Pink? Come enjoy the night’s festivities and E H T AT support your local Relay for Life. Presented by Cox Communications. Muttin’ O! Bustin’ and Boot Scramble for the kids during the rodeo! RODE

Saturday, 7:05 p.m. Military Appreciation Night June 8: Show your Military ID and get in for FREE. Presented by Boot Hill Casino. Muttin’ Bustin’ and Boot Scramble for the kids during the rodeo! Specialty Act: Funnyman Mark Swingler here to entertain you!

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A4

Opinion

SATURDAY, June 8, 2013

THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM

COMMENTARY Dena Sattler, Editor/publisher

Bob Franken King Features Syndicate

denas@gctelegram.com

Our View

Sex and the pithy

Stalled growth Budget plan undermines assistance for children.

O

O

f problems with a new budget plan approved by Kansas lawmakers — and there are many — moves to target the vulnerable in Kansas hurt the most. And that would include programs to help children. As part of attempts to offset a Should the state take funds intended to benefit severe budchildren’s programs and get shortfall use them in other ways in brought about the face of a severe budby incomeget shortfall? Add your tax breaks comments at the end of for wealthy the online version of this Kansans, editorial at GCTelegram. lawmakers com/opinion. approved a budget plan that included a $9.5 million sweep from the Kansas Endowment for Youth (KEY) into the state’s general fund. The KEY fund and Children’s Initiatives Fund (CIF) were created as a result of nationwide tobacco litigation in the late 1990s. Legislation called for tobacco dollars received by Kansas to go directly to the KEY fund, an endowment established for the long-term benefit of funding children’s programs through the CIF — and a sensible investment in the state’s future. The funds have supported many good early-childhood programs in Kansas, such as Head Start, Parents as Teachers and newborn health screening. Unfortunately, significant endowment funding was raided by lawmakers over the years, jeopardizing future programs for children. The assault continued in the last session, even as Republican Gov. Sam Brownback and his ultraconservative allies claimed their financial strategies represent an engine for growth. Targeting aid for children is no way to encourage economic prosperity. But as much was to be expected in a budget plan that also subjects higher education — a known driver of economic development — to deep cuts. A plan to generate economic growth has to acknowledge the potential that exists in all young Kansans. Education and health care are vital, starting with prenatal care and throughout a child’s developmental years. Credit Rep. Don Hineman, R-Dighton, for acknowledging as much in expressing concern over the financial raid on the KEY fund. Hineman knows the importance of early-childhood education thanks in part to his wife’s experience operating a preschool. He and others who support adequate funding for children’s programs know a smart economic development strategy ensures that every child receives a solid start in life. Children are the key to our future. Those who would undermine programs in place to give Kansas children a foundation for success apparently believe otherwise.

Today’s quotes “Just tell them NO!” — Online remark selected by the editorial staff from comments at GCTelegram. com in response to a story on a request from a group of local hoteliers for the city to change its anti-smoking ordinance to allow some rooms for smoking.

“There are certain things that we do in the Air Force that helps us train better. Be prepared. Be flexible. Know your limitations.” — U.S. Air Force Academy instructor and A-10 pilot Maj. Matt Basler, from a story in today’s edition on an aviation day camp for youth in Scott City.

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

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

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

Write to:

Attn. Editor 310 N. Seventh St. Garden City, KS 67846

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Free pass for wealthy Americans A

ll of a sudden, almost everybody — in Congress at least — seems to want to talk about the IRS. Fine. We need a good debate about taxes. But let’s have a debate that zooms in on the core issues. Like who’s paying taxes in America today and who isn’t. Interested in a debate along these lines? A good place to start just might be a new report from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office on “tax expenditures.” Policy wonks have come up with the label “tax expenditures” to cover the special tax breaks that hand most of us, at one time or another, discounts at tax time. These tax breaks can come in handy. If you buy a home, you typically get to deduct the mortgage interest you pay. If you’re raising a family, you get to claim tax credits for your children. If you retire, you can exclude Social Security income from taxes. And if you make a killing on the stock market, you only have to pay taxes on your windfall at half the normal tax rate. How much do all these “tax expenditures” actually cost the federal treasury? Representative Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) asked the Congressional Budget Office to calculate the answer, and the CBO has just reported back. The top 10 special tax breaks in the federal tax code, CBO researchers found, will cost the federal government $900 billion in 2013 and $12 trillion over the next decade. A huge chunk of these trillions, the CBO also found, is cascading down to America’s most comfortable. Over the next 10 years, under current law, tax expenditures will pour $3.6 trillion into the pockets of America’s

COMMENTARY Sam Pizzigati otherwords.org

top 5 percent of earners — and $1.9 trillion into the pockets of America’s top 1 percent. Our top 1 percent — households that amass over $450,000 in yearly income — are now raking in 17 percent of tax expenditure benefits. But these numbers only hint at how light a tax burden rests on our rich, suggests another new study from researchers at the Boston Consulting Group. Just under 5 percent of America’s households, says this research, now hold at least $1 million each in financial wealth, assets like stocks, dollars in bank accounts. In 2012, the total net worth of these top 5 percent of households pumped up America’s total financial wealth to an amazing $39 trillion. America’s wealthiest households pay no annual federal taxes on any of these trillions. Why? The United States has no annual federal tax on financial wealth. We do, on the other hand, have a tax on property wealth. This state and local government levy essentially amounts to a tax on America’s middle class. That’s because residential property makes up the bulk of American middle class wealth — 66 percent, on average, the latest Federal Reserve figures show. For America’s richest 1 percent, by contrast, home sweet home accounts for only 9.4 percent of household net worth. In other words, in America today, we tax the wealth of the

middle class every year. We essentially give the wealth of the wealthy a free pass. Other nations do tax the wealth of the rich. French households with more than $21.5 million in wealth are now paying a wealth tax at nearly a 2 percent annual rate. How much money would a 2 percent wealth tax raise for the country if we levied it on America’s millionaires? The Deloitte Center for Financial Services can help us here. Deloitte researchers have calculated that American millionaire households in 2011 held $38.6 trillion in total, not just financial, net worth. In 2020, Deloitte estimates, U.S. households worth at least $1 million will hold a total of $87.1 trillion in wealth. A 2 percent annual tax on this $87.1 trillion would raise over $1.7 trillion. Some perspective: In 2020, the Congressional Budget Office estimates, the personal income tax bill for all Americans will total $2.16 trillion. The new CBO numbers on tax expenditures, says Representative Van Hollen, show clearly that current federal income tax deductions, credits, exclusions, and preferences skew “disproportionately to the highest 1 percent of income earners.” America’s absence of any national annual tax on the wealth of our wealthy skews this top-tilting tax picture even more. OtherWords columnist Sam Pizzigati is an Institute for Policy Studies associate fellow. His latest book is “The Rich Don’t Always Win: The Forgotten Triumph over Plutocracy that Created the American Middle Class.” Distributed by www.otherwords. org.

Not afraid to challenge Obama By DOUG PATTON

F

ew members of the United States Congress are willing to risk their careers to state the truth to the American people. Michele Bachmann of Minnesota is one, but unfortunately she has announced she is calling it quits after four terms in the House. In the 10 years I’ve known him, Iowa’s Steve King has never shied away from the truth for the sake of political correctness. Texas Congressman Joe Barton had the courage to call Barack Obama’s extortion of $20 billion from oil giant BP after the Gulf oil spill exactly what it was — a shakedown. Sadly, the GOP “leadership” slapped him down for it, threatening to strip him of his committee position if he didn’t apologize. Rep. Joe Wilson told the world the truth, albeit somewhat crassly, when he called out “You lie!” to Obama during the State of the Union speech. South Carolina Congressman Trey Gowdy (who should give serious consideration to challenging RINO Lindsay Graham for his senate seat) lit up the Twitter universe after telling IRS official Lois Lerner that she had waived her right to plead the Fifth Amendment by making an opening statement before the House Judiciary Committee. This is just one of many bold acts that have made Gowdy a hero to freedom-loving Americans. But few congressional statesmen in our time have emerged to so utterly speak truth to power — the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth — as did U.S. Rep. Jim Brindenstine,

a courageous Republican from Oklahoma who, in a little more than a minute on the floor of the House, summed up the corruption and lawlessness of the President of the United States. Here is the text of Rep. Brindenstine’s remarks: “The president’s Justice Department sold weapons to narco-terrorists south of our border, who killed one of our finest. The president’s State Department lied about Benghazi with false information provided by the White House. The president’s attorney general authorized spying on a Fox News reporter and his family for reporting on a North Korean nuclear test. The president’s Justice Department confiscated phone records of the Associated Press because they reported on a thwarted terrorist attack. The president’s Treasury Department uses the IRS to target political opposition. The president’s Health and Human Services secretary pressures insurance companies she is supposed to regulate to promote ‘Obamacare,’ which is the same law she uses to force citizens to pay for abortion-inducing drugs against their religious liberties. The president’s dishonesty, incompetence, vengefulness and lack of moral compass lead many to suggest that he is not fit to lead. The only problem is that his vice president is equally unfit and even more embarrassing.” Of course, since Brindenstine calmly delivered these blistering words on the House floor, more

scandals have emerged from the most scandal-ridden administration in history. For example, we are learning that communications giant Verizon handed over to Obama’s NSA the phone records on as many as 100 million Americans, allegedly to fight terrorism. We learned during House Judiciary Committee hearings that the IRS deliberately leaked the names and addresses of the donors to a pro-marriage group in order to help the fanatical leftist bullies in the gay mafia (otherwise known as the Human Rights Campaign) harass their political enemies. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist (even Bill O’Reilly figured it out) to deduce that the Obama administration now has the goods on every member of Congress (or anyone else they would like to blackmail) who uses Verizon cell phone service. Do you believe they would hesitate to use such information? Meanwhile, Attorney General Eric Holder defiantly announced that he has no intention of resigning. And why should he? He and his boss, Barack Obama, have spent the last four and a half years making the Congress of the United States largely irrelevant. And other than the handful of House members already mentioned — and perhaps a few senators like Ted Cruz — it is hard to imagine anyone in the congressional leadership who is willing to take the steps necessary to reclaim the constitutional authority they have allowed Obama to steal from them. Email Doug Patton at dpatton@cagle. com. Distributed by Cagle Cartoons Inc.

nce again, we should congratulate the winner of the coveted Sound Bite of the Week award. Put your hands together for New York Democratic Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand. She sent TV people covering the military sexual-assault hearing into sheer ecstasy when she scornfully told the generals assembled before her, “Not every commander can distinguish between a slap on the ass and rape.” With that, she took the sound-bite honors (dare I say it) hands down. Besides, she was making a strong point, which is that the cluelessness of the uniformed hierarchy is a significant contributor to the loathsome spread of rape, similar attacks and harassment in the armed services. Army Chief of Staff Ray Odierno admitted they’re “like a cancer.” Did you see the wide-angle shots of the witness table? There were more stars on the panelists’ shoulders than you’ll see in many galaxies, but their testimony revealed that their grasp of the problem has disappeared into a black hole. It’s tragic that after all the years of caterwauling over openly homosexual troops, the real threat to decency and order comes from heterosexuals whose assaults in the military have spread like an epidemic while the leadership, until now, has given the outrage short shrift. In spite of the fact that about 14.5 percent of the active-duty ranks are female — more than 200,000 women — just 69 are generals or admirals. The top of the heap is still overwhelmingly male, lords presiding over their fiefdoms with their “good ol’ boy” mindset. They have allowed the numbers of sexual assaults to swell — 26,000 in the most recent year counted, and that doesn’t include the huge numbers of those that go unreported because of intimidation or fear of reprisal. It has fed a growing feeling that the main problem is the traditionally inflexible structure, which includes ultimate authority over criminal enforcement and prosecution. There have been some recent infamous cases where court-martial convictions for sexual offenses have been overturned by top brass and where those in command of efforts to bring this contemptible conduct under control have been arrested for the same crimes. So 18 senators, Republicans as well as Democrats, have sponsored legislation that would take away supervision of sex-crime allegations. No more ability for the top dogs to countermand decisions made by investigators or counsel, or the court-martial results. Well, here’s a surprise: The generals hate that idea. It would undercut their authority and would “adversely affect the ability of the commander to enforce professional standards and ultimately to accomplish the mission.” Those were the words of the Joint Chiefs chairman, Gen. Martin Dempsey. Of course, it begs the question of how much impact the growing scourge of sexual violence has on morale, which is essential to sustain a military force. Even the usually gung-ho Sen. John McCain was aghast. “Just last night,” he snapped, “a woman came to me and said her daughter wanted to join the military and could I give my unqualified support for her doing so. I could not.” In spite of such withering criticism and in spite of the stark evidence that the problem is running rampant through the forces they lead, the generals, pardon the expression, stuck to their guns. But when Odierno insisted, “The military cannot simply prosecute our way out of this problem,” Missouri Democrat Claire McCaskill shot back, “We can prosecute our way out of ... the problem of sexual predators.” Yes, the verbal shots were flying back and forth like missiles, but the runner-up in the weekly sound-bite contest probably was Georgia Republican Sen. Saxby Chambliss, who expressed the opinion that the very presence of females is a contributing factor. “Gee whiz,” he uttered, “The hormone level created by nature sets in place the possibility for these types of things to occur.” Nobody said that these verbal snippets must be enlightened. Emmy Award-winning reporter Bob Franken served as CNN’s Capitol Hill correspondent and as a Supreme Court and White House reporter. Distributed by King Features Syndicate Inc.


THE Garden City Telegram

SATURDAY, June 8, 2013

A5

Aviation: Youths get behind flight controls in Scott City Continued from Page A1

“I’ve been up with my grandpa before, but he knows what he’s doing,” Carter said. Carter said he was very excited about Friday’s day camp. “I’m excited just to learn how to fly a plane, first of all,” he said. “It’s been in my family for awhile. My grandpa Norman, he’s passed away now, but he made like four or five planes. I think that would be scary. You have to have lots of confidence that it’s going to work right.” The day camp also featured the appearance of two Air Force personnel, U.S. Air Force Academy instructor and A-10 pilot Maj. Matt Basler and his wife, KC-135 pilot Maj. Shelby Basler, who flew into Scott City to answer questions about flying and what it takes to become a military pilot.

“Flying is freedom. You get to go up there above the clouds. It’s awesome,” Matt Basler said. But to be able to fly requires focus, training and hard work, he said, while urging kids to get good grades and stay out of trouble. Basler said no one needs to be a “rock star” to join the Air Force Academy, the Air Force or just become a pilot. He noted that he earned a college degree in history from Kansas State University before joining the Air Force out of a desire to serve his country and an interest in flying. “I grew up in a small Kansas town, and Shelby is the first generation of her family to go to college or be a pilot. You just need to work hard,” Matt Basler said. Shelby Basler, a native of Los Angeles, said she is in the

reserves now, which allows her to be the kind of mom she wants to be to their two sons, ages 4 and 7, and still be an aviator. “It’s not something I really knew about in high school, but it’s a great fit for me now to balance family and work,” she said. Some of the questions young people asked included how fast Basler has flown in his A-10 (upwards of 450 knots), and his favorite flying maneuver (the Split S). Basler said the Split S involves rolling over upside down, pulling back on the stick until the plane turns itself back upright and coming in for a landing, something pilots tended to do frequently when approaching runways in Iraq to make them less of a target to bad guys with rockets. “It was so much fun. I

couldn’t believe they paid me for it,” he said. Later in the afternoon, the SFEC sponsored a fly-in, free barbecue and a presentation by the Baslers titled, “Training Like You Fight: The Benefits of Training in Combat Aviation,” which shared stories and firsthand video footage of their experiences as pilots and instructors at the U.S. Air Force Academy. Matt Basler said there is a saying, “train like you fight,” which essentially means to train hard every day, not just running through the motions. “There are certain things that we do in the Air Force that help us train better. Be prepared. Be flexible. Know your limitations,” he said. “The things we want to pass along to these guys are to know your business. Flying is great, it’s fantastic, but it’s inherently a dangerous job. It’s

not something you need to be afraid of, but you need to take it seriously.” The SFEC’s mission is to actively promote the safety and success of western Kansas pilots and passengers by providing a local venue for high-quality flight instruction in addition to various educational programs and resources for individuals of all ages. A 501(c)3 public charity, it houses the only full-motion flight simulator between Denver and Salina — a Redbird FMX — and hosts aviation related courses and programs for adults and youngsters. The center was established in memory of Dylan, Amy, Chase and Ansley Spencer of Scott City, who were killed in a small plane crash near Topeka over Easter weekend 2011. More information can be found at www.spencerflightcenter.com.

Jobs report: Economy adds 175,000 jobs; jobless rate at 7.6 percent Continued from Page A1

an improving job market will lead more Americans to seek jobs. He predicts that the participation rate will level off around 63.5 percent. The unemployment rate is derived from a survey of households, which found that more people started looking for work in May. Because some didn’t find jobs right away, the number of unemployed rose 101,000 to 11.7 million. The job gain for the month is calculated from a separate survey of employers. Some signs in the report

suggested that the federal government’s deep spending cuts in domestic and defense programs and scant growth in much of the rest of the world are weighing on the U.S. job market. Weakness overseas has slowed demand for U.S. exports. Manufacturers cut 8,000 jobs. The federal government shed 14,000. Both were the third straight month of cuts for those industries. Over the past three months, the federal government has cut 45,000 jobs. The number of temporary jobs rose by about 26,000. The economy has added temporary jobs for eight straight months, sug-

gesting that employers are responding to more demand but aren’t confident enough to hire permanent workers. Industries that rely directly on consumer spending hired at a healthy pace — a sign of confidence that consumers will keep spending. Retailers added 28,000 jobs. Restaurants added 38,000. Those categories include many lower-paying occupations. By contrast, the recession sharply cut jobs in higher-paying industries such as manufacturing, construction and finance, which have yet to recover. Mark Vitner, an economist at Wells Fargo, calcu-

lated that about 60 percent of the jobs created in May were in lower-paying fields. Even in a professional field such as health care, one of the biggest job creators was home health care services, where care providers earn about $10 an hour, according to government data, he said. “It’s hard to get meaningful income growth with these types of jobs,” Vitner said. Rob McGahen, 29, has felt the trend personally. After receiving his master’s in business administration in 2007, McGahen worked for Boeing in St. Louis, buying parts for military planes.

Last year, after moving with his wife to Pensacola, Fla., McGahen sought work for about nine months. He settled for a part-time job in the produce section of Publix, a supermarket chain. “It’s certainly not a longterm plan,” McGahen said. “But it keeps me busy. It keeps my skills from atrophying.” Stock markets have gyrated in the past two weeks on speculation that the Fed would soon start to taper its $85 billion-a-month in bond buying — a step that could raise rates and cause stock prices to fall. “I think the Fed will stay

Surveillance: Companies deny participation in NSA program Continued from Page A1

companies issued in an attempt to distance themselves from a government surveillance program that is raising questions. At issue is whether the NSA has constructed a direct pipeline into the computers that run some of the world’s most widely used online services. Each of the statements issued by Google Inc., Facebook Inc. and the five other companies linked to the program has been carefully worded in ways that doesn’t rule out the possibility that the NSA has been gathering online communications as part of its efforts to uncover terrorist plots and other threats to U.S. national security. “I think a lot of people are spending a lot of time right now trying to parse those denials,” says Lee Tien, a senior staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a digital rights group. “The top level point is simply: it’s pretty hard to know what those denials mean.” Google and Facebook were tied to a clandestine snooping program codenamed PRISM in reports published late Thursday by The Washington Post and The Guardian, a British newspaper. James Clapper, the director of national intelligence for the Obama administration, subsequently confirmed PRISM had been approved by a judge and is being conducted in accordance with U.S. law. But Clapper didn’t identify what companies fall under PRISM’s broad authority, leaving the reports by the Post and

Guardian as the only windows into the spying program. The newspapers based their reports on confidential slides and other documents about PRISM. Besides Google and Facebook, those documents cited Microsoft Corp., Apple Inc., Yahoo Inc., AOL Inc. and Paltalk as the other companies immersed in PRISM. The NSA program also is getting data from Google’s YouTube video service and Microsoft’s Skype chat service, according to the PRISM documents posted on the Post’s website. All of the companies have issued statements making it clear that they aren’t voluntarily handing over user data. They also are emphatically rejecting newspaper reports indicating that PRISM has opened a door for the NSA to tap directly on the companies’ data centers whenever the government pleases. “Press reports that suggest that Google is providing open-ended access to our users’ data are false, period,” Page asserts in a blog post co-written with Google’s top lawyer, David Drummond. In his post, Zuckerberg lambasts the media accounts as “outrageous.” All the companies but Microsoft and Yahoo said they had never heard of PRISM before the name was revealed Thursday. All of the statements could be technically true. At the same time, they could mean the companies have been turning over user data when served a legally binding order issued under a program that they didn’t know had a code name until they read about it like the rest of the world.

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on hold,” said Nariman Behravesh, chief economist at IHS Global Insight. “They want to see numbers above 200,000 on payroll jobs on a consistent basis before they start to taper off.” Behravesh said he thinks the Fed will maintain its pace of bond buying through this year before scaling it back in 2014. “Today’s report is perhaps the perfect number for nervous investors,” said James Marple, Senior Economist at TD Economics. “It is strong enough to point to continued economic recovery but not so strong as to bring forward expectations of Fed tapering.”


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THE Garden City Telegram

SATURDAY, June 8, 2013

A7

Health care coverage a thorny issue in immigration debate WASHINGTON (AP) — Health care coverage for newly legalized immigrants is emerging as a thorny issue in Congress’ drive to remake the nation’s immigration system, posing hard-to-solve problems for Senate negotiators and threatening a bill-writing effort in the House. The question is how much access to taxpayer-subsidized care should be granted to immigrants who were here illegally and are embarking on a path to citizenship. Answering it has pulled the noxious politics around President

Barack Obama’s signature health care law into the immigration debate. That’s threatening fragile alliances between Republicans and Democrats, already causing one key House member, GOP Rep. Raul Labrador of Idaho, to ditch a bipartisan group in the House that has been struggling to finalize a comprehensive immigration bill. “What may be the story at the end of this session is that Obamacare killed immigration reform,” Labrador said before a

What’s up

Listing of southwest Kansas events published each Saturday. Calendar listings are published free of charge. Submit information 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.

Special Events TODAY, JUNE 8 Garden City Farmer’s Market: Featuring a variety of baked goods, homegrown produce, homecrafted items, jewelry and more, 7 a.m. to noon each Saturday in the parking lot of Westlake Hardware, 1210 Fleming St. Giraffe feedings: Guests of Lee Richardson Zoo will be able to purchase “keeper approved” food and experience a close encounter with a giraffe, 1:30 to 2:30 p.m. on Saturdays and Sundays throughout the summer at the zoo. Book Sale: The Friends of the Library’s annual sale will feature books and assorted items, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 1 to 6 p.m. Sunday through Sunday at the Finney County Public Library, 605 E. Walnut St. “Run with the Champs” Longhorn Stampede: Featuring a 5K, a 10K and a Kids “Buddy” Race beginning and ending at Holcomb Recreation Commission, 106 Wiley St. in Holcomb. Race times are 7:15 a.m. (10K), 7:45 a.m. (5K) and 8:30 a.m. (Kids “Buddy” Race; paired with area cross-country runners). Same-day sign-ups will be accepted beginning at 6:15 a.m. For more information and registration details, call Dan Knight at 277-2152 or (620) 521-2643 or email hrcwellnessdir@wbsnet.org. Beef Empire Days: Featuring numerous events throughout Garden City through Sunday, with today’s events including the Commerce Bank Chuckwagon Breakfast from 6:30 to 9:30 a.m. at Stevens Park, the American State Bank Beef Empire Days Parade at 10:30 a.m. on Main Street, and Chuckwagons in the Park community feed at 11:30 a.m. in Stevens Park. For more information, visit www.beefempiredays. com. Windsor Hotel tours: Multi-level guided historical tours from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. for a $5 donation (12 and younger free). Oral histories are being sought and orders for Windsor benches will be taken. Tickets for the Sept. 21 benefit concert will be on sale. For more information, call 275-4340. Vaccination clinic: The Finney County Humane

Society’s event offering free parvo/distemper vaccinations for dogs, 2 to 4 p.m. at the Garden City/ Finney County Animal Shelter, 124 N. Fleming St. SUNDAY, JUNE 9 High Plains Archery Club 3-D Tournament: 10 a.m. at the outdoor range located on East Mansfield Road. Prizes, a raffle and dinner are included with the registration fee. For details, call Rick Carroll at 275-7329. American Legion Riders Community Breakfast: 8 to 11 a.m. at 405 S. Main St., featuring biscuits, gravy, bacon, sausage, scrambled eggs, potatoes, French toast, coffee and orange juice at a cost of $8 for the all-you-can-eat meal (family members of deployed service men and women eat for free). Finney County Historic Homes and Buildings Tour: 1:30 to 4 p.m., featuring tours of the Ciddie Stevens house at 508 N. Sixth St.; Salyer House at 1012 N. Main St.; Z.T. Nelson Building at 414 N. Main St.; Community Church at 710 N. Third St.; and W.D. Fulton House in Finnup Park. Admission is $15, with tickets available at all five sites. For more information, call 272-3664. Musical program: High Plains Country Music Fiddlers, Pickers and Singers monthly program at the Memorial Building on Main Street in Lakin. Sign-up will begin at 1 p.m., with the program starting at 2 p.m. All area musicians are welcome to come and join in and help provide the program for the afternoon. There will be a short break for snacks. Feel free to bring a snack to share. For more information, call Curtis Young at (620) 3556410, Fred Hendrickson in Syracuse at (620) 640-0482 or Katie Day in Garden City at 276-7316.

last-gasp effort failed this week to resolve the health care dispute in a way he could accept. Now the seven other members of the House group are moving forward without Labrador, who said their proposal doesn’t go far enough to ensure that immigrants must pay for all their own health care costs without leaving taxpayers on the hook for any of it. Health care and immigrants was a hot-button issue even before Republican Rep. Joe Wilson of South Carolina yelled “You lie!” at Obama four years ago as the

president told Congress that immigrants in the country illegally wouldn’t be covered under his health plan. For Republicans, allowing immigrants here illegally to get coverage under Obamacare remains a nonstarter, even once they’ve taken the first steps toward legalizing their status. “We cannot be providing Obamacare subsidies to people who have been violating our immigration laws,” said Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., an author of a bipartisan immigration bill that the full Senate began debat-

Area public meetings These meetings are open to the public under Kansas law. Portions of the meetings may be closed to the public, but only under specific exemptions cited in Kansas law. MONDAY, JUNE 10 DIGHTON — Dighton City Council: 5:30 p.m. in the council meeting room at Dighton City Hall, 147 E. Long St. SYRACUSE — Syracuse City Council: 5 p.m. MST in the council meeting room at Syracuse City Hall, 109 N. Main St. GARDEN CITY — Golf Advisory Board: 7 p.m. at the Buffalo Dunes Clubhouse, 5685 S. U.S. Highway 83. HASKELL COUNTY — Haskell County Commission: 9 a.m. in the commission meeting room at the county courthouse, 300 S. Inman St., Sublette. KEARNY COUNTY — Kearny County Commission: 8 a.m. in the county courthouse, 304 N. Main St., Lakin. TUESDAY, JUNE 11 HAMILTON COUNTY — Hamilton County Commission: 8:30 a.m. MST in the commission meeting room at the county courthouse, 219 Main St., Syracuse. GARDEN CITY — Board of Zoning: 9 a.m. in the commission chamber on the second floor of the City Administrative Center, 301 N. Eighth St., as needed. City. Open to the public.

Senior Center

SUNDAY, JUNE 16 Singles dance: Featuring “The Blue Notes” 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 public. People attending must be age 21 or older.

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

Health Department and WIC 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 department at 272-3600 or WIC (Women, Infant and Children) at 2723615.

ing Friday. The Senate bill bars immigrants in a new provisional legal status, the first step toward a green card and citizenship, from getting taxpayer-subsidized care. That includes Medicaid and tax subsidies to buy coverage in the new state purchasing exchanges being set up by Obamacare. The immigrants would be in provisional status for 10 years, and only once they get a permanent resident green card would they be able to access Obamacare subsidies.

HOLCOMB — Board of Zoning: 5:30 p.m. in the council chamber at the Holcomb city offices, 200 N. Lynch St., as needed. GARDEN CITY — Drainage District No. 2: 8 a.m. in the first-floor meeting room at the Finney County Administrative Center, 311 N. Ninth St. GARDEN CITY — Drainage District No. 1: 9:30 a.m. in the first-floor meeting room at the Finney County Administrative Center, 311 N. Ninth St. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12 MOSCOW — Moscow City Council: 7 p.m. in the council meeting room at Moscow City Hall, 107 Main St. GARDEN CITY — Local Housing Authority: 5:30 p.m. at Pershing Manor, 606 Pershing Ave. 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. THURSDAY, JUNE 13 GARDEN CITY — Cultural Relations Board: 5:15 p.m. in the commission chamber on the second floor of the City Administrative Center, 301 N. Eighth St. GARDEN CITY — Airport Advisory Board: 5:30 p.m. at the Garden City Regional Aiport, 2225 S. Air Service Road, Ste. 112. FRIDAY, JUNE 14 GRAY COUNTY — Gray County Commission: 9 a.m. in the county courthouse, 300 S. Main St., Cimarron. Duplicate bridge: 7 p.m. Monday. Gentle exercise: 11 a.m. Tuesday. Pitch: 12:30 p.m. Tuesday. Bridge: 1:15 p.m. Tuesday. Line dancing: 8:30 a.m. Wednesday. Pinochle: 12:40 p.m. Wednesday. Completely Unraveled: 1 p.m. Wednesday. Dance: 7:30 p.m. Wednesday featuring Craig Stevens. TOPS: 9 a.m. Thursday. Art class: 10 a.m. Thursday. Gentle exercise: 11 a.m. Thursday. Ambassador Singers

God sends the storm to show that he is the only shelter

practice: 1 p.m. Thursday. Skip-Bo: 1 p.m. Thursday. Yoga: 6:30 p.m. Thursday. Line dancing: 8:30 a.m. Friday. Craft Shop check-in/ out: 10 a.m. to noon Friday. Bridge: 12:45 p.m. Friday. Dad’s root beer floats: 2 p.m. Friday. Meals on Wheels is available by calling 2723620; Mini-bus, 272-3626; Senior Center, 272-3620. What’s Up is published each Saturday. Submit calendar items for upcoming events by 5 p.m. Wednesday by calling 2766862 Extension 242 or (800) 475-8600.

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

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TUESDAY, JUNE 11 Musical variety program: Featuring Billy and Loretta Whitfield of Syracuse, 7 p.m. at Garden Valley Retirement Village, 1505 E. Spruce St. The public is encouraged to attend at no charge. For more information, call 275-5036. FRIDAY, JUNE 14 Dance: Featuring “The Blue Notes,” 7:30 p.m. at the Senior Center in Scott 223936

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SATURDAY, June 8, 2013

the Garden City Telegram

Flea market planned for July 6 O

ur nation’s 237th birthday is arriving in less than a month, and for most people across southwest Kansas, that ignites thoughts of fireworks, barbecues and outdoor fun with friends and family — not to mention the heritage of liberty that we can trace back to the American Revolution. However, for people planning family or individual activities to celebrate Independence Day weekend, there’s also another opportunity that has drawn a lot of local interest since it was inaugurated four years ago. That is the annual Finney County Historical Society Flea Market, a bazaar-style gathering of merchants, crafts people and artisans on the lawn just south of the Finney County Museum in Finnup Park. The fourth annual market this year is scheduled for 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. July 6, the Saturday that follows the Fourth of July. Last year’s flea market included nearly two-dozen booths, where shoppers could stroll by and visit with vendors offering the crowd everything from candles, antiques, collectibles, tools and food to baked goods, artwork, primitives, toys, unique apparel, handbags, purses and other handcrafts. In addition, our organization’s members and volunteers stocked the museum courtyard with donated goods for sale, such as furniture, housewares, electronics, toys, bicycles, games, holiday decorations, home decor items, exercise equipment, cookware, and yard and garden objects.

Future, Present, Past Steve Quakenbush

Executive Director of the Finney County Historical Society

to reserve a space, if you’re interested in a booth of your own; and bring us your gently used items, if you would like to donate them to help support the museum’s courtyard sale at the flea market. Various groups and individuals participated during the three previous flea markets, and those who already have made reservations to return, or get involved for the first time, include people offering origami, Scentsy products, plants, yard art, antiques, Tupperware, craft goods and CDs, as well as lots and lots of additional items. While they’re taking in the array of goods, marketgoers can purchase meals prepared on-site by Finney County pork producers Larry and Barbara Goss. If you’re among those interested in supporting the museum and our historical society programs by donating items to sell, you can reach us 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays at 272-3664,

or stop by at 403 S. Fourth St., during those hours. We’ll also be glad to come and pick up anything you might want to provide. It’s important, by the way, to note that our fourth annual flea market is Garden City’s original craft, art, collectible and bargain festival in Finnup Park, and that it isn’t connected with a different event scheduled nearby in June.

Don’t forget historic tour this weekend It’s also important to note that there’s another opportunity coming up even sooner — this weekend, in fact. The 2013 Garden City Historic Homes Tour is taking place 1:30 to 4 p.m. Sunday, offering the chance to visit inside five homes and buildings with significant links to the community’s past. Tickets for the Sunday afternoon homes tour are $15 each, and available at any of the stops, including the Ciddie Stevens Queen Anne Victorian house, 508 N. Sixth; the original Salyer home, 1012 N. Main; the Community

Congregational Church, Third and Walnut streets; and the Z.T. Nelson Building, home of Illusions Hair Salon at 414 N. Main St., as well as the adjacent Regan Building apartment of Christopher Cruz. We’re hoping you’ll make the historic William Fulton House in Finnup Park your final stop, and then take time to step over to the nearby outdoor courtyard of the museum for a reception, with refreshments, music by Al Miller and a display of 12 paintings and drawings depicting homes, hotels and other structures that comprise part of the community’s history. The tour is hosted by the Finney County Women’s Chamber and the FCHS, and sponsored by Golden Plains Credit Union and Coldwell Banker, the Real Estate Shoppe. Whether you want to visit this weekend at some of the places whose owners and occupants have shaped Garden City’s growth and development, take advantage of a onceper-year outdoor shopping festival in July, or do both. We hope to see you soon at the Finney County Historical Society.

Why

Shop, sell or donate We hope you’ll put the flea market on your Independence Day weekend schedule, and in addition to sharing in the experience, you’re also welcome

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RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — The first named storm of the Atlantic hurricane season brought heavy rains but no major damage to the Southeastern U.S. on Friday, as it moved swiftly up the East Coast with flooding threats for as far north as New England. After bringing rain, strong winds and even tornadoes to Florida on Thursday, Andrea was losing its tropical characteristics on Friday even as it still packed maximum sustained winds of 45 mph. Tropical storm warnings remained in effect for North Carolina and southern Virginia, the National Hurricane Center in Miami said at 5 p.m. EDT Friday. The storm’s low-level center was losing definition but remained a threat to the East Coast while “evolving into a low-pressure center,� said Darin Figurskey, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Raleigh. The storm was centered in eastern North Carolina about 55 miles (88 kilometer) northeast of Raleigh and moving toward the Northeast at nearly 30 mph. Forecasters say Andrea could bring high winds, heavy rainfall, and localized coastal flooding through today across the mid-Atlantic states and New England. Rainfall accumulations of 2 to 4 inches were possible along the Eastern Seaboard into coastal Maine, the hurricane center said.

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Red Rocks State Park at Denver. Photo contributed by Paul Karkiainen, Denver.

Southwest Life THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM

You Docs: Healthy diet, healty brain. Page B3

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

SATURDAY, June 8, 2013

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King Features Syndicate

Mike Ketterling, Beef Empire Days Rodeo Committee president, and 18-year veteran rodeo volunteer Will Johnson take a short break from setting up pens that will hold this year’s rodeo livestock.

Rodeo family Volunteers work hard together to make PRCA event possible.

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t’s late Tuesday afternoon. Beef Empire Days volunteers have just finished taking gates down from the Live Show earlier that day. Now, it’s time for rodeo volunteers to get to work building pens Story and behind the arena that photos by will hold BECKY the PRCA Rodeo’s live MALEWITZ stock arriving from South Dakota in the early hours Wednesday morning. That’s just one of the many things on the volunteers’ checklist for the next few days. Walking up to a group of rodeo volunteers is like entering a family reunion. There are stories, jokes and smiles all around.

Returning volunteer Lucky Luckett uses wire to reinforce livestock pens. Luckett takes a week of vacation from his job every year to help with the BED PRCA Rodeo. “Everyone on this committee, if something would happen they would have so many people trying

to help out. It’s unbelievable,” said See Rodeo, Page B4

Mike Ketterling, Beef Empire Days Rodeo Committee president, helps set up livestock pens behind the Finney County Fairgrounds Arena on Tuesday night.

Reminiscing with friends brings back memories of younger days I

went back in time for a couple hours last week. Two college friends stopped by to reminisce about our days at Wayne State College and to get caught up. One friend still lives in Nebraska, and another calls Arizona home. The transplanted Arizonan was back visiting family in Colorado and Iowa and made a stop in Nebraska. I cannot remember the last time I had seen him. Thanks to our smartphones, we keep in touch by texting and even go old-school by talking on the phone on rare occasions. My Nebraska friend and I had shared lunch a few times and commiserated when we were out of work at the same time.

Once we got back together, it was like old times again. We laughed about our college days, and tried to put faces to names and names to faces of some of the people we remembered from those days that happened about 28 years ago. Twenty-eight years, wow. Two years after graduation, I would be married, and four years after that my daughter would be born, and about two years later our family was complete when my son was born. In between college graduation and last week, the three of us went through a few jobs, a few moves and the start of two families. Besides my family, my Arizona buddy got married and had two children — a girl and a boy — and now finds himself in

the newspaper business, selling ads. He made it a point to tell me about the spring training games he went to in March, knowing I was the one friend he had who would be very jealous. The third of the trio has remained single and stayed close to home. None of us had any idea where life would take us when we left college. Not many do at that point.

When you graduate college, you just want to get a job. Where doesn’t matter too much. Even the money doesn’t matter all that much. You are happy someone wants to hire you and pay you. Then you get to work and start living on your own, and you come to a startling realization. All those years people were telling you there’s a big difference between the real world and college, well, it’s even bigger. The insulation of college is gone. After all, college is still school, and kids have been in school for years. The biggest thing about college is that Mom and Dad are no longer checking up on you. Sure you grow up, have to do

more for yourself, and take on more responsibilities. Teachers don’t care if you show up for class or not. They get paid whether there are 200 in class, 20 or two. The college doesn’t care because they already have collected your money. It’s up to you to care. But if you’re paying attention, you learn to care, and everything else falls into place. College is a great experience. It may not teach you all you need to know about living on your own and starting your first job, but it’s where you meet friends that last a lifetime, and that’s just as important.

Patrick Murphy, of Humphrey, Neb., is a former assistant managing editor of The Telegram.


SATURDAY, June 8, 2013

the Garden City Telegram

Engagement Announcements

Anniversary Announcements Fairbairn

MessengerBakken Tony and Jackie Messenger of Garden City announce the engagement of their daughter, Jessica Lynn Messenger, to Michael Lynn Bakken. He is the son of Mike and Carla Bakken of Garden City. The bride-to-be graduated from Garden City High School and from Wichita State University with a bachelor’s degree in chemistry and earned her surgical technology certification in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. She is a surgical technologist at Via Christi Regional

Jessica Lynn Messenger Michael Lynn Bakken Medical Center in Wichita. Her fiancĂŠ graduated from Garden City High School. He is a welder at Boardman LLC, Wichita. They plan to marry Sept. 1, 2013, at Homewood Suites by Hilton, Wichita.

Schmitt-Bailey Tom Schmitt of Kinsley and Bill and Alicia Heydman of Holcomb announce the engagement of their daughter, Trista Schmitt, to Nate Bailey, the son of Clint and Dawn Bailey of Osawatomie. Trista graduated from Holcomb High School in 2006, from Garden City Community College in 2008 with an associate of science degree and from Kansas State University in 2011 with a bachelor of science degree in secondary education. She teaches high school English at Clearwater High School and is the head volleyball coach and assistant softball coach. Nate graduated from Holcomb High School in 2006 and from Pittsburg State University in 2012

Nate Bailey Trista Schmitt with an associate of science degree in secondary education. He teaches high school biology at Haven High School and is an assistant football and assistant girls basketball coach. They plan to marry Aug. 3, 2013, in a 4 p.m. ceremony at the First United Methodist Church in Garden City.

Lauren Deaver Adam Lauridsen Her fiancĂŠ graduated from Free State High School in Lawrence in 2005 and from the University of Kansas in 2012 with a bachelor of arts degree in French. He is a program director at Boys & Girls Club of Lawrence. They plan to marry Nov. 2, 2013, at Grace Evangelical Presbyterian Church in Lawrence.

Sean Pate Nakeisha Kinney deployed to both Iraq and Afghanistan and served for seven years. He attends Austin Community College, majoring in kinesiology, and plans to transfer to a university to major in history education. The wedding is planned for June 22, 2013, at the First United Methodist Church in Garden City. The couple resides in Buda, Texas, 20 minutes outside of Austin.

Who’s New Brooklyn Ann Bailey is the daughter of Derrick and Jennifer Bailey of Wabaunsee. Born May 9, 2013, she has two brothers, Patrick, 3 1/2, and Greyson, 2. Grandparents are Doug and Theresa Heatwole of Garden City; and Paul and

and

Marilyn

They have nine grandchildren and three greatgrandchildren. The Fairbairns have been residents of Garden City for 56 years.

Dr. and Mrs. Asel W. Harder of Garden City will celebrate their 60th wedding anniversary June 13, 2013. The Harders were married at First Baptist Church in Greensburg, Pa. A family celebration at Camp Lakeside later in the month will be hosted by their children: Douglas Harder and Barbara Harder of Garden City; Melinda Garvert of Colorado Springs, Colo.; and Marcia Maurer of Topeka. Prior to their retirement, Dr. Harder was the dean of instruction at Garden City Community

Dr. and Mrs. Asel Harder College and Mrs. Harder was the director of Community Day Care Center. They have nine grandchildren.

Wedding Announcement Goldsby-Heatwole

Kinney-Pate Nakeisha Kinney and Sean Pate announce their upcoming wedding. Nakeisha is the daughter of Charles and Tina Kinney of Garden City. She is a 2004 graduate of Garden City High School. She earned a bachelor’s degree in English and secondary education in 2010 from Fort Hays State University. She plans to complete her master’s of science degree in adaptive special education and be fully endorsed in gifted education in December. She is a behavior support teacher assistant at Eanes Elementary School in Austin, Texas. Sean is the son of Gentry and Debbie Pate of Pflugerville, Texas. He graduated from Round Rock High School in 2006 and joined the U.S. Army in June 2006. He was

Leighton Fairbairn

Harder

Deaver-Lauridsen Michael and Carol Deaver of Garden City announce the engagement of their daughter, Lauren Grace Deaver, to Adam Oliver Keith Lauridsen. He is the son of Lee and Cathy Lauridsen of Lawrence. The bride-to-be is the granddaughter of Ruth Richards and the late Harvey Richards of Garden City; and Leroy and Dorothy Deaver of Clay Center. Her fiancĂŠ is the grandson of Eva Cramer and the late Clyde Cramer of Lawrence; and Louise and the late Lamonte Lauridsen of Baldwin. The bride-to-be graduated from Garden City High School in 2009 and from the University of Kansas in 2012 with a bachelor of arts degree in psychology. She is an executive assistant at The Professional Renewal Center in Lawrence.

Leighton and Marilyn Fairbairn of Garden City will celebrate their 60th wedding anniversary June 14, 2013. Leighton Fairbairn and Marilyn Blankenship were married June 14, 1953, at First Christian Church in Great Bend. Their children are Scott Fairbairn and his wife Sheri of Oklahoma City; Jan Scott and her husband Jim of Dodge City; Brad Fairbairn and his wife Kathy of Cornelia, Ga.; and Lance Fairbairn and his wife Janice of Wichita. Their oldest son, Kyle, is deceased.

Marilyn Bailey of Colby. Great-grandparents are Loretta Seibel of Eads, Colo.; Franklyn and Esther Heatwole of LaJunta, Colo.; Charlie and Pauline Berend of Colby; and Eleanor Rogers of Selden.

Rachelle Goldsby of Hillsboro and Michael Heatwole of Topeka were married April 6, 2013, at Hillsboro United Methodist Church in Hillsboro. The 4 p.m., double-ring ceremony was officiated by the Rev. Morita Truman. The bride is the daughter of Alan and Michelle Goldsby of Hillsboro. Her grandparents are Marion and Jennie Goldsby of Lenora; Lyman David of Lenora; and Raymond and Ardith Scheetz of Clayton. The groom is the son of Doug and Theresa Heatwole of Garden City. His grandparents are Loretta Seibel of Eads, Colo.; and Franklyn and Esther Heatwole of LaJunta, Colo. Maid of honor was Heather Goldsby, the bride’s sister from Olathe. Bridesmaids were Suzy Lindsay of Hillsboro; Shelby Heatwole, the groom’s sister from Garden City; Shelbie Smith of Manhattan; and Niki Caro of Hollywood, Calif. Junior bride was Hailee Scheetz of New Amelo. Best man was Mitch Watson of Lawton, Okla. Groomsmen were Mark Prieb of Wichita; Travis Stoneburgh of Manhattan; Alan Schwengler of Colorado Springs, Colo.; and Charlie Wilson of Garden City. Candlelighters were Kayla Scheetz of North Platte, Neb.; and Kaylee Thibault of Lawrence. Flower girls were Mackenzie Goldsby of Salina; and Sophia Goldsby of Olathe. Ringbearers were Patrick Bailey and Greyson Bailey, both of Wabaunsee; and Kaden Goldsby of

Rachelle Goldsby and Michael Heatwole Salina. Serving as ushers were Matt Legg of Dodge City; Jake Bontrager of Plano, Texas; Alex Jost of Ellis; and Steven Carpio of Yuma, Colo. Organist was Andrea Springer of Gretna, Neb. Soloist was Maria Loewen of Andover. Music selections included “I Will Be Here,� “Parents Prayer� and “Household of Faith.� A reception, given by the bride’s parents, took place at Meridian Center in Newton. Assistants were Samantha Raymer and Meghan Cummings, both of Wichita. The bride graduated from Kansas State University in 2012 with a degree in hotel and restaurant management. The groom graduated from Kansas State University in 2012 with a degree in industrial engineering. He is employed by MARS Incorporated, Topeka. After a wedding trip to St. Lucia, the newlyweds are at home in Topeka.

Go for happiness; don’t waste a day By MALINDA DUNLAP FILLINGIM If you don’t think every day is a good day, just try missing one. — Cavett Robert ••• A hospice chaplain shares a story about one of his patients. ••• My profession as a hospice chaplain is usually a conversation stopper, especially at parties. After all, who wants to talk about death and dying when deciding which dessert to eat? Nope, hospice talk just doesn’t seem to go hand in hand with happiness and party talk. But, in fact, some of the happiest folks I have ever known are those I serve as a hospice chaplain. But they are dying, you say, how can they be happy? Death — or, rather, the knowledge that your death is imminent — does many things to folks. It causes great denial, grief, agony, heartbreak and reflection. And rightly so. But after a while, it can provide great motivation to enjoy the last days of your life to the fullest. You don’t have a day to waste, a day to complain, a day to hate, a day to not be happy. You eat the best foods, visit your favorite places and receive calls and visits from your favorite people. You stop worrying about hair and make-up. Your grudges and resentments are abandoned. There’s no more keeping up with the Joneses. Letting the “child withinâ€? come out to play becomes a priority. You laugh as you recall old stories. You let go of the bad and embrace the good when you know life is indeed very, very short. Often my patients tell me how happy they are relinquishing their worries, their prejudices, their anger, their fears and really enjoying today, one minute at a time, with its

NEW YORK (AP) — Jon Stewart is starting a summer-long break from anchoring “The Daily Show,� but it will be no holiday. He’ll be in the Middle East making his first movie. While he’s away, Stewart says he’ll miss hosting the Comedy Central fake newscast. As he explains, “People

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Divorce turns messy over money issues Dear Annie: My wife and I are going through a divorce after 23 years of marriage. We just grew apart. We have four children, ages 12 to 21. The problem is, my wife feels I do not deserve any of the marital assets because she was the primary breadwinner. She made a nice income, but it also meant she spent a considerable amount of time away from home. She left the responsibility of raising our kids to me. I never had the time to devote to a career, because I wanted to be with my children. They were active in youth sports, and I never missed a game and even coached the teams. I also made sure homework was done and dinner was on the table every night. I was awarded half of all marital assets, and it is causing bitterness. My ex is upset because it means

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SATURDAY, June 8, 2013

ANNIE’S MAILBOX KATHY MITCHELL MARCY SUGAR

she will have to take out a substantial portion of her 401(k) and a home equity loan. Now she has shared this information with our children and flies into a fit of rage from time to time. My kids don’t care, but my ex told her family and friends that I am taking “her” money, and now they won’t speak to me. Also, my older children have asked to live with me, and this doesn’t make my ex any happier. My ex is a good person, and we don’t fight over visitation. She gives me full and complete access to the kids. But how do I get her to feel less angry about the division of

assets? She barely speaks to me. The only time she is nice is when we are at the children’s events. Should I accept a lesser percentage so she will be kind to me again? — Soon-To-Be ExHusband Dear Ex: It is not uncommon for the higherearning spouse to resent giving equal assets to the one who earned less, even though the lesser-earning spouse is generally the one who cares for the house and the children. Society still doesn’t give sufficient value to those contributions. You are under no obligation to take less than the court awarded you, and there is no guarantee that doing so would solve the problem. (Also, alienating friends and family members is a form of manipulation.) But if you feel strongly about it, ask the court to assign a mediator.

Dear Annie: My husband’s behavior has been different lately. It’s as if his personality has changed. He throws tantrums and displays road rage. He throws things. He hasn’t hit me, but I am afraid he will. Even the dog hides behind the furniture. I have talked to his doctor, to no avail. He does have medical issues, but I do, too. What else can I do? — Frustrated Wife Dear Frustrated: Sudden personality changes can be an indication of a neurological problem or a severe reaction to medication. Your husband may even have had a small stroke or other trauma. Return with him to his doctor and insist on more tests. If his doctor is unwilling to consider other possibilities, it’s time to find a physician who will take your complaints seriously. Please don’t wait.

and he climbs the stairs and watches us until we put him on his raft. He loves to float that way but hates to swim.” To see Rascal on his bright-colored float, visit my website, www. Heloise.com and click on “Pets.” — Heloise

at the same time. — Dawn in Nebraska You should call first to make sure the agency accepts them. And remember, most dry cleaners will take them back. — Heloise

Becker’s Bridge

Experimenting with multipurpose cleaner includes a lot of common stains that every household has to deal with on a daily basis. To receive a copy, just send $5 and a long, self-addressed, stamped (66 cents) envelope to: Heloise, P.O. Box 795001, San Antonio, TX 78279-5001. Never put an item in the dryer until you make sure the stain is gone. If it goes in the dryer, the stain will be very hard to remove. — Heloise

Pet pal Dear Readers: Cathy Wilson of Lancaster, Calif., sent in a photo of her black dachshund/ Chihuahua mix, Rascal, floating on his favorite pool float. Cathy says, “Rascal loves to join us in our pool,

Wire hanger donation H e l l o , Heloise: I just read your column in the Omaha (Neb.) WorldHerald, and one of the topics was how to recycle wire hangers. I found that they can be taken to local domesticabuse organizations. They have asked specifically for hangers as well as other items. This is a great way to help the organization and to recycle the hangers

Reach the soap Dear Heloise: I had back surgery and cannot bend down easily. I dropped the soap a couple of times in the shower and had difficulty getting it. I took an old pair of pantyhose and cut off one leg. I put the soap in and tied it to the soap holder (or wherever you can, like the faucet, etc.). Now I can still reach the pantyhose and pull it back up. — Simon, via email Good for anyone and all ages. Also, tie one on the outside faucet, or put by a work sink. — Heloise

Healthy diet can help with a healthy brain T

he age-old question: Which came first? The fried chicken or the ... ADHD? It’s not easy to answer. We know that obese moms are more likely to give birth to kids with ADHD (attention deficit hyperactivity disorder); people with ADHD (kids or adults) are more likely to be overweight (impulsecontrol issues?); and refined grains, sweet sodas, red meats and whole dairy increase a child’s risk for ADHD. Now it seems that kids who eat diets high in saturated and trans fats (fried foods and red or processed meats) have a great-

er chance of developing several childhood disabilities, including impulsivity disorders, depression, anxiety and ADHD. Five to eight times as many kids are depressed today as there were 50 years ago (less play, more pressure, more obesity), and anxiety is increasingly diagnosed. ADHD affects millions of U.S. children, some as young as 2 years old. Diagnosis is up 66 percent, especially among boys. And these issues often lead to problems as teens and major depression in adulthood. So for your kids — and

you, too — adopt an eating plan packed with fruit, vegetables, 100 percent whole grains, healthy fats (olive oil, omega-3 rich salmon and ocean trout, and ALA in walnuts, avocados, and canola and walnut oils). Go for portion control: Keep servings of animal protein about the size of your palm; fill two-thirds of your plate with veggies and whole grains! And get moving! That means 30 minutes of aerobics (minimum) daily for you and your kids and strength training with weights or stretch bands for you two to three times a week.

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Dear Heloise: While pretreating a piece of laundry for stains, I mistakenly grabbed a spray bottle of multipurpose cleaner, instead of my normal spotremover product. Happily, the cleaner removed the spot without damaging the fabric! I now often use it as a spot remover on light-colored laundry, although I haven’t tested it on darker-colored fabrics. I like the fact that this one product does double duty as both a general cleaning agent and a laundry spot remover! — Debbie R. in Texas Glad this worked for you! Readers, if you use this hint, test on a small area first to be sure it doesn’t fade or change the color, and wash the item as soon as possible. Do you have other stains that you are unable to remove? All you need to do is send for Heloise’s Handy Stain Guide for Clothing. It

6/08

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.

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

King Features Syndicate

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.

Ways to reduce accidents in the bathroom

300 Oak, Holcomb • $134,900

Single letters, short words and words using any apostrophe give you clues to locating vowels.

Nonslip Mats: Most injuries occur while getting in & out of the shower/bathtub. Having a nonslip mat in the shower/tub and a plush mat on the outside can help decrease slipping while getting in/out.

224059

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

SATURDAY EVENING 6:00

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JUNE 8, 2013 7:00

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The First Family The First Family Mr. Box Office (s) Mr. Box Office (s) The Closer “Next of Kin” (cc) Leverage “The Snow Job” (cc) Leverage “The Mile High Job” (cc) 3 KMTW-MNT Seinfeld (s) (cc) Love-Raymond Kansas News Big Bang Theory Hell’s Kitchen “7 Chefs Compete” Goodwin Game Ring of Honor Wr. 4 KSAS-FOX MLB Baseball: Regional Coverage. (N) (Live) (s) (cc) Whacked Out M*A*S*H (cc) M*A*S*H (cc) M*A*S*H (cc) M*A*S*H (cc) Eyewitness Red & Gold The Collector “The Cowboy” (cc) TMZ (N) (s) (cc) 5 KSCW-CW Tummy Tuck CSI: Crime Scene Investigation (s) 48 Hours (s) (cc) 48 Hours (s) (cc) Eyewitness News Crew M*A*S*H (cc) M*A*S*H (cc) 6 KBSD-CBS Eyewitness News Paid Program Jimmy Dee and the Fabulous Destinations in Concert Bee Gees: One Night Only (s) (cc) Red Green Show Front Row Center “Cheap Trick” (s) 7 KDCK-PBS Jimmy Dee-Fab. Destinations Wheel of Fortune NHL Hockey: Los Angeles Kings at Chicago Blackhawks. (N) (Live) (s) (cc) KSN News at 10p Saturday Night Live (s) (cc) 11 KSNG-NBC News (N) Last-Standing IndyCar Racing: Firestone 550. (N) (Live) News Burn Notice “Friends Like These” Law & Order (s) 13 KUPK-ABC KAKE News at Six Kake News CABLE CHANNELS America’s Funniest Home Videos (s) America’s Funniest Home Videos (s) America’s Funniest Home Videos (s) WGN News at Nine (s) (cc) Bones (s) (cc) Bones (s) (cc) 9 WGN-A (5:00) Los 5 Magnificos El Chavo La Rosa de Guadalupe (SS) ¡Es De Noche!-Franco Está Cañon con Yordi Rosado 10 GALA La Familia P. Luche (N) (SS) Sábado Gigante (N) (SS) Comediant. 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(N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (cc) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (cc) 32 ESPN College Baseball: NCAA Super Regional: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) (cc) College Baseball: NCAA Super Regional: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) (cc) 33 ESPN2 Courtside Jones Boys in the Hall 2013 U.S. Chess Championships Car Warriors (s) (cc) Bull Riding: Championship. Game Time Destination Pol. World Poker Tour: Season 11 34 FSN New Jack City (s) I’m Married to A... Stevie TV (s) Hit the Floor “Game On” (s) Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta (s) Movie: ›››‡ Boyz N the Hood (1991, Drama) (Larry Fishburne, Ice Cube) (s) 35 VH1 La Voz Kids (s) (SS) Titulares Tele. Operación Repo 12 Corazones (s) (SS) Pelicula: ›› Tooth Fairy (2010) (Dwayne Johnson, Ashley Judd) (s) (SS) 37 TELE (5:00) Movie: A Sister’s Revenge (cc) Movie: The Good Mother (2013, Suspense) (Helen Slater) (Premiere) (cc) Movie: Adopting Terror (2012) (Sean Astin, Samaire Armstrong) (cc) Movie: The Good Mother (2013) (cc) 38 LIFE House Hunters Hunters Int’l Love It or List It “The Yee Family” Love It or List It “Matthews-Rooney” House Hunters Hunters Int’l House Hunters Hunters Int’l Love It or List It “Matthews-Rooney” 39 HGTV Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Iron Chef America Diners, Drive Diners, Drive 40 FOOD Storage-Texas Storage-Texas Storage-Texas Storage-Texas Storage-Texas Storage-Texas Shipping Wars Shipping Wars Shipping Wars Shipping Wars Storage-Texas Storage-Texas 41 A&E Buying Alaska (s) Buying Alaska (s) Buying Alaska (s) Buying Alaska (s) Buying Alaska (s) Buying Alaska (s) Buying Alaska (s) Buying Alaska (s) Buying Alaska (s) Buying Alaska (s) Buying Alaska (s) Buying Alaska (s) 42 DISC Breaking Amish: Brave New World Breaking Amish: Brave New World Breaking Amish: Brave New World Breaking Amish: Brave New World Breaking Amish: Brave New World Breaking Amish: Brave New World 43 TLC Movie: ››› Batman Begins (2005, Action) (Christian Bale, Michael Caine) Bruce Wayne becomes Gotham City’s Dark Knight. (s) Lara Croft-Life (5:05) Movie: ››› Kick-Ass (2010, Action) (Aaron Johnson) (s) 44 SPIKE Good Luck Charlie Good Luck Charlie Dog With a Blog Austin & Ally (N) A.N.T. Farm (s) Jessie (s) (cc) Jessie (s) (cc) Jessie (s) (cc) A.N.T. Farm (cc) A.N.T. Farm (cc) A.N.T. Farm (cc) Jessie (s) (cc) 45 DISN SpongeBob SpongeBob Sam & Cat “Pilot” Marvin Marvin (s) Big Time Rush (s) Wendell & Vinnie The Nanny (cc) The Nanny (cc) Friends (s) (cc) Friends (s) (cc) Friends (s) (cc) Friends (s) (cc) 46 NICK Movie: ›››‡ Monsters, Inc. (2001, Comedy) (Voices of John Goodman) Movie: ›››‡ The Blind Side (2009) (Sandra Bullock, Tim McGraw) (5:55) Movie: ›››‡ Monsters, Inc. (2001) (Voices of John Goodman) 47 FAM Hot in Cleveland Hot in Cleveland Hot in Cleveland Hot in Cleveland Hot in Cleveland Hot in Cleveland Hot in Cleveland Hot in Cleveland Hot in Cleveland Hot in Cleveland King of Queens King of Queens 48 TVLD Mountain Men “Miles From Home” Mountain Men “Surviving Winter” Mountain Men “Show Me the Money” Mountain Men “The Final Stand” Mountain Men “This Is the End” Mountain Men “Surviving Winter” 49 HIST Sinbad “Pilot” (N) (cc) Primeval: New World (N) (cc) Movie: Rise of the Dinosaurs (2013) (Gary Stretch, Corin Nemec) (cc) Movie: ›‡ Land of the Lost (2009, Comedy) (Will Ferrell, Anna Friel) 50 SYFY Movie: ›››‡ Breathless (1959) (Jean-Paul Belmondo) Movie: ››‡ The Thief of Paris (1967) (Jean-Paul Belmondo, Geneviève Bujold) Movie: ›››‡ Two Women (1961) (5:15) Movie: ››‡ Springfield Rifle 54 TCM (4:00) Movie: Kingdom of Heaven (R) Movie: ›››‡ King Kong (2005) (Naomi Watts, Jack Black) Premiere. A beauty tames a savage beast. (PG-13) (Adult situations, violence) (cc) The Killing (s) (cc) 55 AMC My Cat From Hell “Bea Hates CeCe” My Cat From Hell: Scratch Tracks (s) Too Cute! “Fluff and Feathers” (s) My Cat From Hell “Bea Hates CeCe” My Cat From Hell: Scratch Tracks (N) My Cat From Hell “Chubs” (s) 56 ANPL Movie: ›› White Chicks (2004, Comedy) (Shawn Wayans, Marlon Wayans) (Premiere) (cc) Movie: ›› Rebound (2005) (Martin Lawrence) (cc) (5:30) Movie: ›‡ Big Momma’s House 2 (2006) (Martin Lawrence) (cc) 57 BET Movie: ››‡ The Ringer (2005) (Johnny Knoxville) (Premiere) (cc) Movie: Zack and Miri Make a Porno (4:25) Waiting... Movie: ››‡ Dumb & Dumber (1994, Comedy) (Jim Carrey, Jeff Daniels) (cc) 58 COM The Wanted Life Fashion Police The Soup Keeping Up With the Kardashians Movie: ›› The Dilemma (2011, Comedy) (Vince Vaughn, Kevin James) 59 E! 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SATURDAY, June 8, 2013

the Garden City Telegram

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 2752018.

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) 6607500.

Domestic violence Support Group. For survivors 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/

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 2725623). 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 children. Contact: (620) 899-5420. Al-Anon Family Groups. For friends and families of alcoholics/addicts. Time/Location: 7 p.m. each Thursday at 116 1/2 E. Chestnut St.

Health Alzheimer’s Support Group. The support group welcomes any family members or friends caring for someone with Alzheimer’s Disease and other dementias. Time/Location: 2:30 p.m. the third Monday of each month in the South Conference Room of Garden Valley Retirement Village, 1505 E. Spruce St. Contact: Shirley at 275-9651. 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, family 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, 2722526. Garden City “Wolf Pack” Consumer Run Organization (C.R.O.) Inc. A non-profit organization that serves persons with self-

identified mental illness. It is a member run organization that is centered on peer support. The CRO focuses on leadership, education and community involvement. 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 6 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) 9328677 or email Bednasek@ networksplus.net.

Other Celebrate Recovery. A faith-based, Christ-centered, 12-Step recovery program for people struggling 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-recovery. Divorce Care. Weekly seminar and support group for people who are separated 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-centered, 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 additional information.

Get Prints of Photos from The Telegram.

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B4

Rodeo: Volunteers work hard to make event possible Continued from Page B1

Mike Ketterling, Rodeo Committee President. “When one person goes down, there’s several other people that will be there to help pick them up.” It’s that atmosphere that has volunteers like Diane Overland and her husband, Keith, coming back every year to make sure that one of Garden City’s few professional sporting event goes off without a hitch. In fact, Diane has celebrated her past 20 birthdays volunteering for the Beef Empire Days PRCA Rodeo. Thursday marked this year’s opening night and Diane’s 61st birthday. What keeps her coming back each year? “Stupidity,” she joked, making everyone around her laugh the way one does with close friends and family. She then added, “We’ve been in it so long, and we enjoy it. You meet a lot of really good people from all walks of life, and not just the people here but the people associated with other rodeos. You make lifelong friends.” There’s a general consensus among volunteers that even though the hours are long and the work is hard, it is worth it to bring the professional rodeo to Garden City’s residents every year. “The group we have now is an exceptional group,” Ketterling said. “Everybody kind of knows what’s going on. That’s why everybody works together so well to get the things done that need to be done.“ The rodeo gets 25 to 30 volunteers each year, but there is always room for more. “We’re always looking for new blood because

some of us are getting old.” Overland said. Volunteering for the rodeo doesn’t start or end when the cowboys and cowgirls come to town. Volunteers on the rodeo committee meet monthly throughout the year to discuss fundraising options to ensure the capital to bring the PRCA to Beef Empire Days. For those not as familiar with livestock, there are plenty of jobs to keep people busy. “It’s more work than most people realize, and it’s a lot more money than most people realize,” Tim Joyce, rodeo committee vice president said. “You know, everybody thinks this comes together in two weeks. We basically work at this year round.” Like any family with ups and downs, the members of the BED rodeo volunteer family have seen it all. “We’ve been through births, deaths, divorce, marriages, near death experiences,” Overland said. “There are very few things we haven’t been through, and your rodeo family’s always there to help you out. That is a wonderful, wonderful experience to have.” Fifteen-year volunteering veteran Lucky Luckett takes a week of vacation from work each year to help his rodeo family. “We argue, we fuss, but we get what we need to done,” he said. The long hours and hard work can cause some tension, but through it all, the camaraderie is present. “Nobody likes each other during rodeo, but after the rodeo, we all love each other again,” Overland said. “So that’s OK.”

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Flea Market Fix-Ups

I have always been a flea market junkie. The sidewalk sales, the old curio shops and the demolition sites pull me in wherever I am, at home or on my travels. In her new book, “Paris Flea Market Style,” Claudia Strasser has a beautiful way of getting to the core of why the old and the discarded hold such an important place in our hearts: “We relish finding things of beauty, whether in artwork, lace or an industrial remnant. And we want to have those things close to us in our homes. On tattered tables are memories and precious reminders of what we were and what we are, what we value and what we have lost.” Strasser takes us on a fascinating tour of her favorite flea market haunts in Paris, where she spends days seeking out treasures for her business and herself. From Clignancourt (a maze of 14 different markets that spread out along alleyways) to Vanves (the quintessential French flea market, with loads of eye candy that will fit in your suitcase); from Marche D’Aligre in the heart of Paris (which is set up and broken down each day) to Georges Brassens’ Old Book Market (a covered arcade that overflows with precious leather-bound volumes, mostly in French), there is nothing you can’t find if you take the time to search and discover. This book is for lovers of French decor, whether you have a passion for Napoleon III, Louis XV, Art Deco, Art Nouveau or Moderne and would love to have even a single piece that would re-create the spirit of that time in your home. However, while guiding us through these sites with their jumble of treasures, Strasser inspires us with the multitude of ways that old pieces from any era and any country can be reinvented and refreshed for new life in a new place. Old chairs may have been stripped of their wornout stuffing and fabric, but if you like the design of the frame, it is easy to re-stain or paint and reupholster with new fabric that fits the age and style. A great way to add French flair to your home is to look for mantel mirrors, once mounted over Paris apartment fireplaces, found in every style, from Louis XVI to Belle Epoque. The carved details on mirrors and other old frames large and small make these pieces special and worthy of giving new life. Doors can be decorated with panache to revive a style with push plates, decorative handles, keyholes and hinges that have been artfully constructed and are ready to be cleaned up and re-used. On a larger scale, old wardrobes may not be in demand as they once were, with present-day built-in storage, but the magnificent carved doors can be used in inventive ways as wall panels, headboards, tabletops or even on a garden gate. Columns and fragments from old building sites are precious relics that add charm to modern-day entranceways, gardens or interiors. A detailed mantel will transform any room and can surround updated fireplaces with ancient style. Lighting just keeps getting better, but the old-fashioned chandeliers and sconces hold a special place in today’s decor. If you are lucky enough to unearth pendants or chandeliers, sconces or candlesticks, don’t worry about their slightly tattered appearance. These relics can be restrung, cleaned up and rewired, saving the original finery while updating for another life in today’s home. Lampshades are true jewels, but often the fabric has decayed. Use photos of old designs to re-create the look with fabric, beading and fringes.

THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM

SATURDAY, June 8, 2013

C1

SANDY KELLER

620.272.1969 sandykeller@gcnet.com

2008 Antler Ridge $449,000

813 Pats Drive $165,000

3360 E. Rodkey Rd. $195,000

108 Golf Acres $140,000

JUDY GARNER

620.521.1515 jgarner@gcnet.com

218 E. Bellevue Ave. $137,000

7690 Lindsay Cir $134,000

201 W. Olive $127,900

BETH BRUNO

620.271.1128 bclabough@gcnet.com

VICKI DOWNEY

620.521.0160 yourrealtor@gcnet.com

SUSAN CARMICHAEL 620.260.7369 scarmichael@gcnet.com

TERRIA JUDGE

620.271.2129 terria@terriajudge.com

3614 Cheyenne $118,900

610 W. Maple $120,000

MISSY BAIER

620.287.5000 missy.baier@gcnet.com

JOEY KELCH

620.640.5732 joeykelch@gmail.com

1204 Robroyce $102,000

515 N. 10th $99,900

509 David $90,000

SKIP GARNER

620.521.8181 jgarner@gcnet.com

CARMEN GUZMAN 620.290.8669 carmenguzmant@ hotmail.com

Take a trip to Paris or a bike ride along a nearby country road, and discover some history to add ageless style to your home.

MARIO REYES

Jump to Real Estate

620.640.5222 mreyes11_16@yahoo.com

Open Houses C4

1050 Jennie Barker Rd $85,000

310 Washington $75,000

303 Davis $75,000

1902 Chesterfield $59,900 223246

GARDEN CITY

LOOKING FOR A NEW HOME? GO TO www.gardencitymls.com

OPEN HOUSES

Sunday, June 9, 2013

2 1. 1604 W. Kansas. .................... 2:00-3:00 ............. Tom Chappel

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SAGEBRUSH ESTATES

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5. 1605 York Ave ....................... 1:30-2:30 ....... Viviana Longoria 6. 1705 Belmont....................... 2:00-3:00 ..... Stephanie Bogner 7. 1708 Hattie. ......................... 3:00-4:00 ....... Viviana Longoria

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4.1610 Conard. ......................... 3:00-4:00 ........Carmen Guzman

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8. 607 N. 1st ............................. 1:00-2:00 ..................Pat Smith 9. 2005 Sioux ........................... 1:00-2:00 .............. Peggy Glunt 10. 800 Sage Hill Trail ............... 3:00-4:00 ..................Pat Smith

11. 312 13th Street. .................. 1:00-2:30 ............ Vicky Buckley 12. 1804 Sloan ........................... 1:00-2:30 ........... Marian Mason 13. 324 Colony ........................... 1:00-2:30 ..............Laya Martial


SATURDAY, June 8, 2013 C2 PEANUTS

THE Garden City Telegram

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

ZITS DILBERT

HI & LOIS FOR BETTER OR WORSE

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

BEETLE BAILEY

BABY BLUES

BLONDIE

GARFIELD PICKLES

BC

Help Us Cover Your Town. Call Your News Tips

In At: (620)275-8500 1-800-475-8600

Saturday June 8, 2013 HAPPY BIRTHDAY 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) HHHH A new beginning involving a close associate could become possible, which will affect the way you communicate with this person. You might feel as if you have everything under control, until an event or misunderstanding points out that you don’t! Stay calm. Tonight: Hang out. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHH Be aware of what is going on with your finances. You might want to adjust your budget or vary some of your ground rules about funds. Focus on the positive instead of the negative regarding this situation. Remember, you only need to answer to yourself. Tonight: Your treat. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH Your innate magnetism attracts many different types of people. Hopefully your plans don’t come across as too exclusive, as you will want to ask one or two more people to join you. A misunderstanding could be quite surprising and also very upsetting. Tonight: Where the action is. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHH You could choose not to discuss so much with others. Honor a change that is happening within you. You might not be as sure of a situation as you would like to be. You will know when the time is right for a conversation. Tonight: Head to bed early, and get a good night’s sleep. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHH You will become full of energy when you think about your friends and your desire to join them. When making plans, make sure that you know where, how and when. You won’t want to have everyone feeling scattered. Tonight: You are the ringmaster of your personal life. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHH While others joyfully seem to go off and enjoy themselves, you feel saddled with responsibilities. You are the grease that makes everything work, and you need to recognize your importance. Know that others will catch on

DAY IN THE STARS

BIZARRO

Jacquelline Bigar King Features

eventually. Tonight: Out and about. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH You’ll be more in tune with a situation than you might want to be. Sometimes when you empathize you become too involved. Know that just because you understand a person, it doesn’t mean that he or she is morally correct. Tonight: Opt for a different type of experience. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH You have the unique ability to relate to others on a one-on-one level. Though you always appreciate a nice and easy pace, you also enjoy the excitement of some chaos. As the afternoon becomes the evening, it is unlikely that you will be bored. Tonight: Get physical. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHH Defer to others, and know full well what direction you need to head. Maintain a sense of humor, as others seem to have very different ideas from you. You might want to be open to trying a new hobby. Let go of prejudgments. Tonight: At least you have great company! CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH You could be overtired and withdrawn. You also might not understand why you need to proceed in the same direction you have been. Fatigue plays a strong role in your decisionmaking process; perhaps you’ll want to incorporate a nap at some point. Tonight: At a favorite spot. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH Once you start to let go, you could have difficulty reeling yourself back in. Use care if plans change or if you experience an upset, as suddenly you could go way overboard and spend too much. Recognize that you need to deal with this issue. Tonight: Put on your dancing shoes. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHH You could be taken aback by a problem. You’ll see a matter very differently because of new information that comes in. Your reaction might be over the top. Take a deep breath, and realize that you will be able to sort through this issue. Tonight: Entertain loved ones at home.

THE LOCKHORNS

CROSSWORD


CLASSIFIEDS

SATURDAY, June 8, 2013

C3

THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM

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Special Notices

See More Real Estate Listings C10

OPEN SUNDAY

SUNDAY

OPEN HOUSES

Special Notices

Did you know that post- Spl it out; get btr reslts. ing signs on utility poles Did you get that? and street signs, in What we!re saying is... street right-of-ways, or other public property is Spell it out! And get prohibited in Garden better results with your City. All such signs will ad! Ads with fewer abbe removed without nobreviations are easier tice! Your cooperation is greatly appreciated. to read. The City of Garden City CALL TODAY Ordinance No. 1858 Sold tomorrow! Shop The Classifieds! (620) 275-8500

423 N. Main, Garden City • 276-3525

www.ReganAndCo.com

OPEN HOUSES SUNDAY, June 9, 2013

1804 Sloan

$169,900 1:00-2:30 Marian Mason - 521-3833

1940 Kensington 2:00pm-3:00pm Amazing view of the 3rd Tee, gourmet kitchen with top of the line appliances, gorgeous custom cabinetry and countertops, two wet bars, big open spaces, double huge walk-in closets, best laundry room in GC, triple garage and also a golf cart garage that drives out onto the course, close to club house pool, climate controlled wine vault. Everything you could want. Take a look!

312 13th Street

$85,000 1:00-2:30 Vicki Bulkley - 272-4032

324 Colony

Needed: Real Estate Sales Associates, Bi-lingual preferred

Linda Adams, Broker 620-521-0566

224241

$154,900 ~ VERY NICE BRICK HOME! NE culde-sac. 5 bdrms., 3 baths. New windows & doors. Updated mechanics. Large combo kitchen/dining. Very Welcoming! Peggy Glunt (620) 272-6494

gccoldwellbanker.com

SMILE!

www.facebook.com/therealestateshoppeinc se habla espanol

Maintenance Technician

OPEN HOUSE Sunday, June 9, 2013

800 Sage Hill Tr. • 3:00-4:00 p.m.

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SAGEBRUSH ESTATES ~ PRICE REDUCED TO $285,000 ~ Quiet, peaceful living with expansive view of the City & country side on 3.5 acres. Quality built, full brick w/3+2 bdrms. & multi-purpose room, 2 1/2 + 3/4 baths. Pat Smith (620) 271-2279

www.mba-realestate.com

OPEN HOUSES SUNDAY, June 9, 2013

VACATION EVERY DAY! Your OWN 4XJNNJOH 1PPM 3 or 4 Bdrms main lvl/3 Bths. BEAUTIFUL corner lot. Flowing family space main lvl & Fnshd familyrm dn. DIVE INTO your own 41"3,-*/( 100- --- A-h-h-h the cool! '"/5"45*$ '".*-: '6/ JO (3&"5 LOCATION!! $219,500. JUDY NUSSER, $3# $34 "#3 (3* &95

1605 York Ave • 1:30 - 2:30

$125,900 - Viviana Longoria, 290-6263

224299

Each office is independently owned and operated.

R P $$ ED R $ U ICE C ED

SUNDAY, June 9, 2013

FEED MILL

1708 Hattie • 3:00 - 4:00

4620 Commerce Drive, Garden City This is a great opportunity to purchase a well-established feed mill. This property is being sold as a turn-key operation with all inventory, equipment and real estate being sold as one unit. Asking Price $250,000

$108,000 - Viviana Longoria, 290-6263

www.mba-realestate.com

MBA REAL ESTATE

275-7440 224285 Special Notices

Special Notices

Difficulty Level

7 8 5 3 1 9 2 4 6

8 5 9 1 6 7 4 2 3

1 6 3 5 2 4 7 9 8

2 7 4 9 3 8 5 6 1

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9 4 8 7 5 1 6 3 2

5 2 6 4 8 3 9 1 7

6/07

1610 Conard • 3:00 - 4:00 Carmen Guzman 620-290-8669

• Capable of working any shift with a possibility of rotating. • Must be able to work in a team-based environment. • Experience with specific plant motors. • Trouble shoot mechanical, electrical, hydraulic, and pneumatic equipment. • Must be able to work independently; will be responsible for specific or cross-functional tasks, based on equipment. • Must be willing to participate in continuous improvement projects throughout the facility. • Must participate in all department/plant safety programs. • Must promote safety rules and regulations.

Palmer MFG & Tank, Inc. Division of Worthington Industries offers an excellent benefits package that includes health insurance, life & disability insurance, paid vacation and holiday time, along with a matching 401K plan.

HOME TOWN REAL ESTATE, P.A.

271-9500

www.hometownrealestategc.com Se Habla EspaĂąol 224276

603 Labrador #5, Garden City, KS 67846 chappeltom@yahoo.com

Please send your resumes to Human Resources mailto:khernandez@pmtank.com or come by the office to complete an application 2814 W. Jones Ave M-F 8am to 5pm. This company is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

OPEN HOUSE

(Published in the Garden City Telegram Saturday, June 8 and 15, 2013.)

Sunday, June 9

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF FINNEY COUNTY, KANSAS In the Interest/Matter of Gerardo Tamayo-Guardiola Case No. 2013-JC-000072-JS NOTICE OF HEARING

ANIMAL KEEPER II Lee Richardson Zoo

2013 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

6 3 2 8 4 5 1 7 9

HUTCHESON Real Estate & Auction Co Lakin, KS (620) 355-7991 www.hutchreal.com

224277

IF YOU USED THE MIRENA IUD between 2001-present and suffered perforation or embedment in the uterus requiring surgical removal, or had a child born with birth defects you may be entitled to compensation. Call Johnson Law and speak with female staff members 1-800-535-5727

GARDEN CITY STORAGE RENTALS will dispose of property GARDEN CITY STORstored by CHARLES AGE RENTALS will disof property DANIELS if no contact pose is made by June 30, stored by FRANK WENDLER if no con2013. tact is made by June 30, 2013. Classifieds do the work!

4 9 1 6 7 2 3 8 5

General Responsibilities:

• Capable of reading and writing relay/ladder logic. • Have advanced knowledge of AC/DC motor drives, PLC and SLC controllers, and motor control circuits. • Advanced knowledge of hydraulic, pneumatic, electrical, and plumbing code books. • Capable of reading and writing mechanical, electrical, hydraulic, and pneumatic prints. • Must be willing to develop skill set further with company provided paid training. • Possess good problem solving skills, computer skills, and safety practices.

Stephanie Bogner, 272-3209

Help Wanted

Palmer MFG & Tank, Inc. is seeking a qualified maintenance technician with strong electrical and mechanical skills.

Skills:

1705 Belmont • 2:00 - 3:00

POSITION AVAILABLE in swine finishing facility in Scott County. Good schedule and benefits. Call (620) 874-1017

224298

224303

We’re open 24/7 at

TODAY’S NEW ADS

Garden City Community College Human Resources $BNQVT %SJWF t (BSEFO $JUZ ,4 t IS!HDDDLT FEV 224218

224278

Vicki Bulkley..................272-4032 Laya Martial...................260-6994 Marian Mason................521-3833 Lanelle Messenger.........275-4874

REQUIREMENTS Requires high school diploma or GED, or completion of relevant trade school course of study; two to five years of successful work experience in relevant trades or skills; related experience.

See www.gcccks.edu for full requirements and application procedures. Apply by June 24. Start ASAP after selection. Position open until filled. EOE.

2005 Sioux • 1:00-2:00 p.m.

The Real Estate Shoppe, Inc.

& -BVSFM (BSEFO $JUZ ,4 t :P 4J )BCMP &TQBĂ—PM t XXX )FSJUBHF3FBMUZ CJ[

Work full-time, year-round as part of GCCC Physical Plant staff, maintaining campus buildings and equipment through the use of one or more advanced skills, including electrical, HVAC or plumbing skills; performing a variety of tasks in the repair of college facilities and equipment, involving interior and exterior lighting; diagnosis and repair of various electrical/ mechanical equipment; plumbing work, including faucet and toilet repair, plus cleaning of sewer and drain lines; installation of computer network, TV and camera cabling, as well as telephone lines; maintenance of electrical and mechanical apparatus, including the routine service and cleaning of equipment, emergency and exit lighting, lamps and electrical fixtures; related responsibilities.

COMPENSATION Salary based on qualifications and experience. Extensive benefits.

501 N. Main. • Garden City, KS

Coldwell Banker

S LD

PRICE REDUCED TO $225,000 ~ FULL BRICK HOME LOVINGLY MAINTAINED!! 3 bdrms., 1 3/4 baths. Spacious rooms! Main level laundry. Main level family room with wet bar & beautiful stone fireplace. Lovely fenced yard w/wood deck & sprinkler system. Established SE neighborhood. Pat Smith (620) 271-2279

620-275-8955

$194,900 1:00-2:30 Laya Martial - 260-6994

Our homes are... with a

607 N. 1st • 1:00-2:00 p.m.

4,*--&% ."*/5&/"/$& 803,&3

Lee Richardson Zoo has an opening for an Animal Keeper II (front line supervisor). Job involves supervising keeper I staff and providing animal care and facility upkeep. Experience in the zookeeping profession required; 4 year or two year degree in a biology related field preferred. Previous supervisory experience desired. For full job requirements see City of Garden City website. Starting salary is $15.31 per hour with generous health benefits package and retirement plan. Send resume, cover letter and application to City of Garden City, Human Resources Dept: by email: human.resources@gardencityks.us; or by mail: PO Box 998, Garden City, KS 67846; or online at: https://ks-gardencity.civicplus.com/ jobs.aspx. Applications will be accepted until June 17, 2013. EOE 224189

1604 W. KANSAS 2:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m.

Tom Chappel, Supervising Broker

620.271.4938

WAREHOUSE ASSOCIATE

224234

223842

HD Supply Power Solutions is hiring for the position of warehouse associate/CDL-A driver at our Ulysses, KS warehouse. Must be 21 years of age or older. Must pass drug test and background check. High School diploma or GED required. Forklift experience preferred. Class A CDL license is required. Qualified applicants please apply online at www.hdsupply.com - Job Req#75524. For additional information please call 620-356-3373. HD Supply is an equal opportunity employer.

TO: Javier Calderon, father of the above named child; Gloria Tamayo, maternal grandparent of the above named child; and any unknown maternal and paternal relatives of the above named child and all other persons who are or may be concerned: A Petition has been filed in this Court requesting that the Court find the above named child to be a Child In Need of Care. You are required to appear before this Court for a First Appearance, Adjudication, and Disposition at 11:00 AM on the 1st day of July, 2013, at the Finney County Courthouse, Hutchison Courtroom, Garden City, Kansas, or prior to that time file your written response to the pleading with the Clerk of this Court. If, after a child has been adjudged to be a child in need of care and the Court finds a parent or parents to be unfit, the Court may make an order permanently terminating the parental rights. Lara K Blake Bors, an attorney, has been appointed as Guardian Ad Litem for the Child/Children. Each parent or other legal custodian of the Child/Children has the right to appear and be heard personally either with or without an attorney. The Court will appoint an attorney for a parent who is financially unable to hire one. Christine Blake Clerk of the District Court 224306


SATURDAY, June 8, 2013

Special Notices (Published in The Garden City Telegram June 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, & 11, 2013.) NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: A & A Drywall #125 Items: Sheetrock Mud Mix. Items will be sold or otherwise disposed of at this site on Saturday, June 15, 2013 at 11:00 am at the address listed below, in order to satisfy lien for rent due, in accordance with State statutes. Terms of sale are cash only, no checks. All goods are sold in as is condition. Seller reserves the right to outbid. All items may be available on date of sale. AAA Secured Storage 3105 E Mary Garden City, KS 67846 224232 (Published in The Garden City Telegram June 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, & 11, 2013.) NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: Harold Kenningston #27 Items: Dryer & 25cu ft freezer. Items will be sold or otherwise disposed of at this site on Saturday, June 15, 2013 at 11:00 am at the address listed below, in order to satisfy lien for rent due, in accordance with State statutes. Terms of sale are cash only, no checks. All goods are sold in as is condition. Seller reserves the right to outbid. All items may be available on date of sale. AAA Secured Storage 3105 E Mary Garden City, KS 67846 224231 (Published in The Garden City Telegram June 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, & 11, 2013.) NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: Kathi Osborn #5. Items: Numerous boxes & bags. Items will be sold or otherwise disposed of at this site on Saturday, June 15, 2013 at 10:30 am at the address listed below, in order to satisfy lien for rent due, in accordance with State statutes. Terms of sale are cash only, no checks. All goods are sold in as is condition. Seller reserves the right to outbid. All items may be available on date of sale. AAA Secured Storage 3810 Schulman Garden City, KS 67846 224230

the Garden City Telegram

Help Wanted WESTLAKE ACE HARDWARE GENERAL MANAGER Reports to: District Manager The General Manager is responsible for ensuring superior customer service in their store. They must develop associates at all levels, drive sales and profitability, and maintain effective expense and payroll budget management. They ensure compliance with effective inventory management and merchandising practices and all Westlake policies and procedures. Summary of Job Duties and Responsibilities:Customer Service, Store Operations, Leadership, Hire/Train Associates. Education/ Training: High school or GED equivalent. Experience: Previous retail management experience preferred. Hardware experience preferred. If interested, please submit resume and salary requirements to resumes@westlakehardware.com or fax to 866490-0460.

Help Wanted MICRO, A division of MWI Veterinary Supply Co, has an opening for a Field Support Computer Consultant working remotely from the Garden City or Scott City, KS area. Involves computer installations, wiring, maintenance, wireless networking and troubleshooting Intel based computer systems at feedlots. Requires an AS degree in computer related field or equivalent. Needs basic electrical/electronic knowledge. Unix, Linux and Windows exp. desired. Heavy day travel some overnights required. Apply at www.mwivet.com. Career Tab Link. EEO/AA

HELP WANTED at Fitz LLC, Mike!s Locker. 3547 Hwy 40, Oakely, KS 67748. Butcher, wrapper, & processing. (785) 672-9003

BARTENDER, EXPERIENCED COOK, & WAIT STAFF needed. Must be 18 years old or older. Apply in person at TIME OUT SPORTS CLUB

DELIVERY • Self Motivated • Friendly Attitude • Valid Driver’s License • 18 Yrs. or Older APPLY IN PERSON BETWEEN 9AM-11AM NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE

705 W. Kansas • Garden City, KS

DRIVERS: TRAINING, Class A-CDL. Train and work for us! Professional and focused training for your Class A-CDL. You choose between Company Driver, Owner Operator, Lease Operator or Lease Trainer. (877) 369-7885 www.centraltruckingdrivingjobs.com

EARLY MORNING front counter help needed. You will rotate between 4:30 am to 11 am and 6:30 am to 12:30 pm. Must have cash register experience and must speak English. Great job opportunity for someone who likes to work mornings and have afterLost noons free. Looking for LARGE GOLD someone who is women!s ring. Lost outfriendly, energetic, honside JCPenney!s on est, and dependable. May 27th. Sentimental We are closed on Sunvalue. (620) 275-4874 day!s and all major holidays. Apply at Daylight LOST!! 2 year old red & white Donut before noon. female Austrailian EXP. FLATBED DrivShepherd named Tess. ers:! Regional opportuLost from 6310 Old nities now open with Post Rd, Garden City plenty of freight & great on March 14th. Wear- pay! 800-277-0212 or ing a brown collar, re- primeinc.com cently shaved. $500 reward offered if found. G & S Transport, INC. Call Lonnie or Justin at is looking for Drivers w/ CDL. Home nightly (620) 260-7042. (620) 290-5532.

Help Wanted

CLASS A CDL Driver wanted. 2 years experience. Clean Record. Please Contact 620-287-3505

Help Wanted General Pest Control has an opening for a full time Service Technician no experience necessary, will train the right person. Sales/ Service experience beneficial EOE pre-employment & random drug screening required. Excellent benefits included. 15609 S Hwy. 23, Cimarron, Ks (620)855-7768 or 1-800-362-0124 HEAVY EQUIPMENT Operator Career! 3 Week Hands On Training School. Bulldozers, Backhoes, Excavators. National Certifications. Lifetime Job Placement Assistance. VA Benefits Eligible! 1-866-362-6497

212877

C4

An addition to the family on the way? Check out our van and SUV classifieds.

HELP WANTED “Partners In Excellence� OTR Drivers APU Equipped Pre-Pass EZ-pass passenger policy. 2012 & Newer equipment. 100% NO touch. Butler Transport 1-800-528-7825 HELP WANTED Waitresses nights and weekends. Apply atHannah!s Corner Taylor Ave & Mary St. Garden City Maintenance Technician! The Trails of Garden City has an immediate opening for an experienced Maintenance technician to join our property management team. Candidates must have a working knowledge of electrical, plumbing, carpentry, painting and dry wall repair. Must have reliable transportation. Bi-lingual English/Spanish helpful. Applicant must pass a background check, drug screen and have a valid driver!s license and auto insurance. Please apply in person between the hours of 10:00am and 2:00pm at 3501 N. Campus Drive, Garden City, KS. Equal opportunity employer.

POSITION AVAILABLE in swine finishing facility in Scott County. Good schedule and benefits. Call (620) 874-1017

Help Wanted Drivers TRUCK DRIVER. End Dump experience a plus, loader experience a must. CDL required. Local hauls, home everynight. Call 620272-4725.

Child Care EXPERIENCED, LICENSED daycare has 2 infant spaces plus pre-school openings. Call (620) 640-5873

Miscellaneous for Sale HOPPER?? GENIE?? We have BOTH!! Call us for monthly prices and comparisons. Information, Upgrades, Full service, all from!your LOCAL Retailer! Jay D's Satellite 800-952-9634 www.jaydsatellite.com

MEAT CUTTER position. Looking for an individual with meat cutting experience to work full-time in the meat department of a small grocery store. Please contact Greg or Justin at (620)872-3355 or pick up an application at Heartland Foods, 212 E 5th, Scott City, KS 67871 OFFICE HELP needed. Must have good computer, communication and organizational skills. Part-time or full-time. Send resume to P.O. Box 554, Garden City, KS. 67846.

REQUIREMENTS Requires Kansas RN license and 1,750 hours of experience and/or additional training in long-term care; Kansas Department of Health and Environment approval prior to starting work; related requirements. Preference for experience teaching adults, supervising nurse aides or completion of course on instructing adult learners; experience in team teaching environment. COMPENSATION Salary based on qualifications and experience. Extensive benefits. See www.gcccks.edu for full requirements and application procedures. Apply by June 21. Start ASAP after selection. Position open until filled. EOE. Garden City Community College Human Resources $BNQVT %SJWF t (BSEFO $JUZ ,4 t IS!HDDDLT FEV 224217

224239

To apply for this outstanding opportunity apply in person or send your letter of interest to Royal Beef, ATTN: Alberto Morales, 11060 N Falcon Rd, Scott City, KS 67871. Irsik & Doll is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

www.irsikanddoll.com

Special Accounts Representative

Golden Plain Credit Union is currently seeking a qualified individual to fill a full time position as a Special Accounts Representative. Responsibilities include: Controlling delinquent loan accounts, collecting delinquent loan payments and recovering collateral. Qualified candidates will be detail-oriented and have strong communication skills. Send cover letter and resume to — Vice President, HR Services Golden Plains Credit Union PO Box 459, Garden City, KS 67846 EOE

224177

223408

Human Resources

Post Office Box M • 311 North Ninth Street Garden City, KS 67846

(620) 272-3542

humres@finneycounty.org

CURRENT JOB OPENINGS

Assistant County Attorney I

This position acts as a Prosecuting Attorney responsible for legal matters related to criminal offenses, traffic offenses, juvenile offenders care and treatment proceedings, and appeals. The Assistant County Attorney II works with defendants, victims, witnesses and Defense Attorneys pursuant to Kansas law. This position is under the general direction of the County Attorney. Applicants must be licensed to practice in the State of Kansas. Salary is dependent on experience. Position includes health and retirement benefits. Background check will be required.

EMS - MICT

This is an emergency response position with the general responsibility to provide emergency care in pre-hospital settings, provide care and transport for sick and injured patients, and promote education and awareness of emergency care procedures. The Mobile Intensive Care Technician is under the supervision of the shift supervisor and the EMS Administrative team.

Public Works - Equipment Operator Trainee

This position is responsible for setting up equipment, stalls, lighting, microphones, concessions, furnishings, and related equipment and activities that are involved in the smooth running of a county fairground. Experience: Minimum of one year experience in building and grounds maintenance. Education: High School diploma or equivalent. Must possess and maintain a valid Kansas driver’s license.

Production Tech JOB ID: 1300829

Competitive wages are offered with a full benefits package including, 401(k) with company match, profit sharing plan, 100% paid medical and dental insurance for employee, 100% paid short/long term disability insurance, life insurance, paid vacation, sick leave, and career advancement opportunities.

Business going so well that your assistant needs an assistant? Place your ad with us and find one! Call Classifieds, 276-6862 x 202.

Fairgrounds - Event Worker

224213

Our next team member must be energetic, goal-oriented, and have a desire to grow and take on more responsibility.

www.gctbargains.com

Sporting Equipment

Bargain Blowout BEAUTIFUL CHERRY ENTERTAINMENT CENTER, LAMPS, BAR STOOL, ANTIQUE ROCKING CHAIR AND MORE! Bargains Plus Consignment, 308 N. 7th, Garden City. Tuesday- Saturday 10am-4pm. www.gctbargains.com

This is a general road construction position, which operates trucks, road construction and maintenance equipment. The position works on road construction and or maintenance projects and assists in processing and delivery of road materials. The 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.

Please apply in person at 802 Campus Drive, Garden City, KS 67846.

NIGHT WATCH, MAINTENANCE CREW AND A FEED MILL OPERATOR.

Bargains Plus Consignment 308 N. 7th, Garden City Tue-Sat 10am-4pm.

Tools & Equipment DC WELDER on a trailer. Oxygen hoses, regulators, & torch included. (620) 276-7849

ALLIED HEALTH INSTRUCTOR Faculty contracted position in GCCC Nursing and Allied Health Program, which provides courses for certified nurse aides and related professions in health care, primarily teaching CNA and CMA courses, using lecture, lab, hands-on demonstration, cooperative learning and other methods; providing individual and small group learning; assessing and guiding students; working cooperatively with others in department; related responsibilities. Optional adjunct contract for teaching summer classes.

The position will require close work with patients gathering health and personal information, performing multiple testing, scheduling appointments and answering phones. Good people skills and work ethics are necessary. Bilingual is helpful, but not required. Pay commensurate to experience. Benefits include health insurance, life insurance, vacation and sick leave pay, 401K, and eye care benefits.

Irsik & Doll

We currently have a wedding dress, 2 purple prom dresses, vintage gold prom dress andcute flower girl dress in the shop! We are now accepting formal gowns & dresses for consignment. Items must be freshly clean and in “ready-to-wear� condition.

PSI TRANSPORT is always looking for Good Company Livestock Haulers.! Competitive Pay, Life/Health/Dental Benefits paid in Full for Employees, Discounted for Family, 401K and Bonus Program Available.!Contact (785) Want to Buy 675-3477 for more in- LOOKING TO BUY formation. nice mobile home. PT BOOKKEEPER (620) 424-2174. needed for local truck- Household Items ing company. Call DebKENMORE SIDE-BY bie at (620) 271-3593 -SIDE refrigerator & between 2-5pm only. electric stove. $375 toTHE SUPERSTORE is gether. (620) 640-7326 now hiring for a FT WASHER & Electric sales position. Hourly Dryer by Whirlpool wage, plus commission. 220v $325.00. Please Benefit package. call (620) 521-0302 bePlease apply in person tween 8 am - 4:30 pm. at The Superstore, 1213 Fleming, between Are you reading this? 9 am and 11 am. So is your future emTRUCK DRIVING ployee! Call us today positions available. and we!ll help you find Class A CDL required. qualified candidates 2 years experience. 276-6862 ext 501. Call (620) 275-5499.

Optometric Technician/ Receptionist.

Come and grow with us and be part of an innovative team. We are looking for a

Wedding Gowns, Prom Dresses & QuinceaĂąera Dresses!

HPR IN Satanta, KS has over 50 black guns in stock from entry level to bench guns. We are class 3 for your NFA items such as suppressors and short barreled RECONDITIONED rifles. We take care of USED bicycles of vari- ATF paperwork. Give ous sizes. Fixed with a us a call for all your firewebliner in tires and arm needs. Shawn new thorn resistant (620) 629-7080 or Shop tubes. See at 1307 (620) 649-2670. Glenn St in Scott City, JR. GOLF Clubs (5) KS. 620-872-5591 w/bag & practice net. STURDIBILT STOR- $40.00. (620) 275-0613 AGE SHEDS, all sizes. BIG L SALES, 1102 East Fulton, Garden City.

The optometry office of Drs. Hopkins & Hopkins & Ackerman has an opening for an

224295

Wearing Apparel

Praxair is a Fortune 250 company with products and technology that serve more than 20 different industries. We’re one of the world’s largest industrial gases businesses and you see our work every day, often without realizing it. Praxair United States Industrial Gases is currently seeking a Production Tech in Ulysses, KS. Responsibilities: • Variety of complex operations and duties in the production of helium. • Adjustments to process variables, startup and shutdown of process equipment. • Preparing equipment for maintenance work including lock-out tag-out. • Correctly and safely permitting maintenance work, and monitoring equipment performance. •12 hour shift rotation, on-call periods, and scheduled overtime. Qualifications: • High School Diploma or GED • 2 + years production operations experience is preferred Apply online at www.praxair.com Click on Careers, United States and Search for Admin/Tech/Other Career Opportunities. Search by job number 1300829. Praxair is committed to Equal Employment Opportunity (U.S.) M/F/D/V, and a barrier-free employment process. Individuals who need an accommodation in order to apply for a position should contact Praxair at 1-866-844-0635.

Youth Services - JJA Transport/Surveillance Officer

(2-Part-Time Openings) This position is responsible for the monitoring of clients assigned to the program during non-traditional office hours. The successful applicant will be responsible for the transportation of juveniles placed in the Juvenile Justice Authority custody. This will include transporting juveniles to placement through the state of Kansas. Experience: A minimum of one year of experience in law enforcement or related educational training is preferred. Education: Associate Degree from an accredited two-year college with a major in criminal justice, psychology or related field is preferred. Must be at least 21 years of age. Must have a valid Kansas driver license.

Adult Corrections - Intensive Supervision Officer

The Intensive Supervision Officer I (ISOI) is responsible for the supervision of adult offenders placed in the 25th Judicial District Community Intensive Supervision Program (ISP). The ISO I identifies and utilizes community resources for referrals of adult offenders to needed services. Experience: Minimum one-year of experience in case management or related field. Education: Bachelor’s degree in social sciences or related field preferred. A high school diploma with five years experience working in the criminal justice field or with offender populations may be substituted for Associates degree requirement.

To apply for the listed position, paper applications can be obtained at County facilities or for your convenience, you can apply online at humres@finneycounty.org. 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 An Equal Opportunity Employer AA/VPE

224270


Garden City Telegram

GARAGE SALES

Autos

11

3

12 To 2116 West Mary

4 6

2 To 2118 W. Jones

9

13

5

1505 E Johnson, Garden City - Multi-family sale. FRIDAY 5:00 PM - 8:00 PM. Bunkbeds, infant swing, carseat, bouncer, toys. Household items. Infant boy's clothing and women's apparel.

2 2118 W. Jones Bookcases, antique glassware, Pyrex/Corningware bowl sets, cake pans, collectables, toys, dressers, Disney VCR movies, lots of misc. Sat 8-12

3 902 LABRADOR Lots of clothing, furniture and household goods. Sat 7:30-Noon

MONSTER SALE Civic Center 1000 W Patterson Ulysses, KS Sat. June 22 For Booth Space Call (620) 937-0349

6 1506 FAIR. Sat 8-12. Mens, womens, boys (2T-4T), & girls (up to 9 mos) clothes, Maytag gla s s t o p r a n g e , wooden bunkbed.

7 501 N. 9th St. Baby items, furniture, household and clothing. Sat 8-noon

Farmers Services DEERFIELD FEEDYARD is now accepting contracts for high moisture corn. Please call (620) 426-8611 and ask for Cary from 8 am-4:30 pm.

Business Opportunities

4 MULTI-FAMILY SALE! 2111 Commanche Fri 4-8 Sat 7-1

Bargain Blowout FREE! YOU HAUL! WOOD PALLETS Pick up in the alley behind The Telegram 310 N. 7th Street Garden City

Motorcycles & ATVs

Motorcycles & ATVs

2010 CHEVY Tahoe LT. 4X4. Leather, 69k miles $27,800 OBO. 620-353-4223

2005 DYNA Wide Glide Harley Davidson. Black Cherry. 88 cubic in. For more info call (620) 640-2805.

FOR SALE: 2009 Honda Shadow Spirit. Black, windshield, only 2200 miles. Call 620-290-7080 or 620-335-5515

Motorcycles & ATVs 02 HARLEY Wide Side, purple. 22k miles. Priced under book $7,500. 01 Harley Sportser, Candy Red. 12k miles. Lowered for lady rider. $4,500 OBO. 620-304-5377

CRAFT BUSINESS FOR SALE! 10 boxes & equip. Show list/Tent included. Call Louise Nichols at 276-6822.

Autos

This new full time 8-5, M-F, position will provide administrative support to the Clinic Chief Officer and oversee the clinic reception desk. No weekends or holidays are required. Management experience in the healthcare office setting is desired. Experience in successfully supervising multiple staff is required. This individual must have excellent customer service and communication skills, and must be proficient in Microsoft Word and Excel. Business degree helpful but not required. We offer competitive wages and excellent benefits. Pre-employment physical, drug/alcohol screen, TB skin test and physical assessment required. Scott County Hospital is a tobacco free facility. Applications available through Human Resources, Scott County Hospital, 201 Albert Avenue, Scott City, KS 67871. 620-872-7772, or on our website at www.scotthospital.net. Return completed applications to Human Resources. 224023

SECRETARY

Continuing Education Department Work full-time, year-round providing administrative and clerical support to the GCCC director of continuing education. Must have excellent written and verbal communication skills, experienced in operating a variety of office equipment, strong organizational skills and the ability to perform and manage multiple tasks. Must be committed to providing outstanding customer service and quality educational programs. REQUIREMENTS Requires associate degree or completion of appropriate course of study at business or trade school; six months to two years of experience working with Microsoft Word and Excel; ability to effectively perform multiple tasks and manage multiple projects; commitment to outstanding customer service and quality educational programming; ability to work occasional evenings and Saturdays; related responsibilities. COMPENSATION Salary based on qualifications and experience. Extensive benefits.

SOUTHWIND MOVING SALE!! 106 Cambridge Ct. Lawn equip/supplies, beds, ping-pong table, W/D, bedroom set, various furniture & much more! Fri. & Sat. Open at 8 am!

9 147 SHAMROCK Yard Sale. Baby-adult clothing, appliances and so much more! Sat 8am-?

3310 YELLOWSTAR Friday & Saturday 8am-???. Household furniture, kids clothing, pop machine, shelving units, treadmill, home decor, appliances, toys, misc.

12 MULTI-FAMILY GARAGE SALE. 2116 W Mary. Office furniture, motorcycle, golf clubs & LOTS MORE. Fri 12-6 Sat 8:30-1

School Nurse Mathematics (7-12) Chemistry School Psychologist Special Education (K-8) Physical Therapist Occupational Therapist Art (K-4/7-8) School Counselor Elementary (PreK-6)

The City of Garden City, Kansas is currently accepting applications for a Water Systems Resource Manager. The successful candidate will be responsible for efficient and effective water resource planning, water quality monitoring, water conservation and education programs and regulatory reporting. Must have experience operating a public water system, including the management of personnel, the assessment of capital and equipment needs, major project management, budget preparation, rate analysis, proven conflict resolution skills and the ability to interact and be productive in a cross disciplinary team environment. Please submit Letter of application including salary history, resume, and three work-related references in confidence to Human Resource Director, PO Box 998, Garden City, KS 67846; 620-276-1175 (phone); 620-276-1169 (fax); michelle.stegman@gardencityks.us (e-mail). For more information view recruitment profile at www.garden-city.org.

To apply online check our website at www.gckschools.com or call 620-805-7024 or 1-800-276-5121.

Applications will be accepted until June 21, 2013. EOE

224075

224301

405 N 4TH. Paintings, 108 Apache, Satanta. antiques, collectibles, In alley. Saturday furniture, art supplies. 8am-noon. Colectibles, Fri, Sat & Sun 9 - dark. Antiques, & Misc.

FULL TIME

224280

HOME HEALTH RN KEARNY COUNTY HOSPITAL LAKIN, KANSAS

This full time position requires flexible hours and offers competitive wages, excellent benefits including group health insurance; vacation, sick and holiday pay; pension plan and an organization that takes pride in providing excellent patient care. Home Health experience is preferred. Applications may be picked up at the KCH business office or downloaded at www.kearnycountyhospital.com Kansas license required. Contact: Donna Winright, 620-355-1520 or Debbie Tuttle, 620-355-1365 Kearny County Hospital 500 Thorpe St., Lakin, KS 67860

Water Systems Resource Manager

Garden City Public Schools is an Equal Employment/ Educational Opportunity Agency.

13

10

Shift Differential Competitive Wages Excellent Benefits

224192

LPN FULL TIME Summitt ResCare is seeking a qualified individual to fill the full time position of LPN at our Garden City office. This position is responsible to provide nursing care to individuals as prescribed by the physician and in accordance with standards of nursing practices and regulations, and may be directed by Nursing Department Managers. Must have completed post secondary education coursework to facilitate licensure as a Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN). Must have a current license in good standing. Must have a valid drivers license, ability to read, write, and follow oral and written directions at a level necessary to accomplish the job. must be able to relate positively and favorably to individual / consumer and families and work cooperatively with other associates. Must be knowledgeable of individual service plans including understanding of clients rights, health needs and program implementation activities. Must be able to bend, stoop, push, pull, sit and walk for periods of time. Must be able to utilize, proper body mechanics while lifting up to 75 pounds. If interested, apply only at www.rescare.com then select careers. Summitt ResCare is an EOE employer.

STUDENT ACTIVITIES COORDINATOR Work full-time year round developing, coordinating and implementing comprehensive activities program based at Beth Tedrow Student Center for all GCCC students; assisting with student orientation, recruitment and retention; providing experiences that add enjoyment, personal growth and social development for students; assisting with sponsorship and advisement of student government; related responsibilities. REQUIREMENTS Requires associate degree; ability to work evenings, weekends and flexible hours as necessary; related requirements. Bachelor’s degree and/or previous experience in student activity coordination, student supervision and training preferred; other preferences. COMPENSATION Salary based on qualifications and experience. Extensive benefits. See www.gcccks.edu for full requirements and application procedures. Apply by June 24. Start ASAP after selection. Position open until filled. EOE. Garden City Community College Human Resources $BNQVT %SJWF t (BSEFO $JUZ ,4 t IS!HDDDLT FEV

224297

Group Health Insurance

EOE. Physical exam and drug testing required.

N ESTATE AUCTION IO T C 3216 SQ.FT. 2 STORY HISTORIC BLDG 3 BDRM RESIDENCE + REMODEL PROJECT UP 201 S. MAIN ST., HOLCOMB, KS

Marketplace!

MON., JUNE 17TH,1:00PM CT.

AUCTION LOCATION - 201 S. MAIN, HOLCOMB (HISTORIC TURN OF CENTURY HOLCOMB BANK BLDG) SEE COMPLETE LIST W/PICTURES AT “www.scottauction.com� LEGAL: Lots 1-4, Blk 44, New Town Plat of Holcomb, Finney County, KS. - - BUILDING: Built in 1912 the original Holcomb Bank, 2 story brick w/650 sq.ft. Unfinished partial basement. Walls are 16� thick, Remodeled into residence, Central air & heat - - GROUND FLOOR - residence is 1617 sq.ft., clean and ready for living in.- Living room – Kitchen, small dining area, lots of counters & cabinets, sink, disposal, range hood - Large bay window - Utility area w/rear entrance - Utility storage closet is one of the original vaults w/20� thick walls - Bathroom total renovation 2012 - Bedroom/Office w/gas log fireplace - Master Bedroom w/walk-in “original bank vault� closet 10’x6’ w/20� thick walls - Bedroom doorway to 2nd floor, large closet. - - SECOND STORY - 1600 sq.ft area wide stairway w/private exterior entrance & entrance from second bedroom. unfinished remodel project w/Landing area, 2 bedrooms, Living room/Dining room, Kitchen, Great room Utility/storage area, Bathroom. - - BASEMENT (650 sq.ft.), unfinished, outside & interior stairways, 2 rooms, unfinished - GARAGE/ AMENITIES – 14’x23’ detached garage w/overhead door & walk door - 5’10�x23’ enclosed storage area between garage & building . Private well w/working windmill for watering. - steel dry van storage unit - nice trees & shrubs. Off street parking. TERMS: 20% earnest money deposit day of sale. Balance due upon closing and delivery of deed. Closing to be on or before July 17th, 2013. Possession upon closing. Prospective buyers must have financing prior to bidding. Buyer pays one-half (1/2) the cost of title insurance. SELLING: subject to seller’s confirmation TAXES: 2012 taxes = $1916.82. 2012 paid, 2013 Taxes to be prorated as of closing - - ZONING: R3 – Limited multi family - LOT SIZE: 100’ front x 140’ deep. - TITLE: by Warranty Deed w/Title Insurance. Buyer pays 1/2 of title insurance. - - SHOWING: contact J. Kent Scott, broker, Scott Auction - 620-276-8282. Scott Auction is the agent of the seller and does not represent the bidders or purchaser in any manner. - INSPECTIONS: All 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: Heirs of WALLACE (WALLY) BOHLING Estate

See www.gcccks.edu for full requirements and application procedures. Apply by June 24. Start ASAP after selection. Position open until filled. EOE.

Another

SCOTT AUCTION

There is a reason

223976

Garden City Community College Human Resources $BNQVT %SJWF t (BSEFO $JUZ ,4 t IS!HDDDLT FEV 224219

is accepting applications for the following certified positions for the 2013-14 school year.

11

AU Clinic Office Manager

Garden City Public Schools

8

2000 FORD Windstar.. Call after 6pm. (620) 275-4245.

2006 HONDA Accord LX - V6, 4 Door, 76K Great Car in!Great Condition.!White w/Tan Cloth Interior.!Asking Pets $9,995. Please call FREE KITTENS to a (620) 277-8070. Don"t good home. Calico, miss this deal! black & white, or champagne colored. Call FOR SALE: 2004 (620) 276-3386 for Freightliner Columbia. 645K miles. $18k. 2010 more information. Tempte grain hopper. HELP US HELP YOU! $25k. 620-338-7547 Advertise in the classifieds.

5

To 147 Shamrock

2008 HONDA Goldwing GL. Over $2k in Auto Parts & Services add-ons. 27,500 miles. ANTIQUE VISIBLE gas Excellent condition. pump. Nice condition. $16,900. Call (620) $2500. (620) 271-4148. 640-8319 for more inClassifieds Work! formation.

2001 APRILIA FALCO 1000, $4000. (620) 295-0723

10 Take 83 to get to Ulysses and Satanta

1

Selling your vehicle? Did you know parking your vehicle on city streets, right-of-ways and other public property is prohibited in Garden City? The City of Garden City ordinance No 86-2 (88) states in part “No person shall park a vehicle upon any roadway for the principal purpose of: (a) Displaying such vehicle for sale (b) 8 Washing, greasing or T repairing such vehicle except repairs necessieC g id tated by an emerbr m gency�. Violations of Ca 6 this ordinance May re0 1 sult in a $40 fine and To court costs.

SUVs & Vans

2001 HARLEY Davidson Fatboy. 88 cubic in. 10,800 actual miles. Includes helmet, cover, luggage, and battery BIG HEADLINES charger. Dealer servGET THE JOB DONE! iced. (620) 275-5903. Advertise the right way in the classifieds. www.gctelegram.com

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C5

SATURDAY, June 8, 2013

3280 W. Jones PO Box 398 Garden City, Kansas 67846 Phone 620-276-8282 www.scottauction.com

Brought to you by The Garden City Telegram OPEN HOUSE

Sun. 2:30 -3:30pm

2611 N. Coachman

Lakin

Well maintained home in nice NE neighborhood. 5 bdrm, 3 bath. 3,057 sq. ft. Large kitchen, bedrooms, and family room. $203,000. Call 620-640-0455. See www.forsalebyowner.com for more info

NICE 2800 sq.ft. home in the country on 66 acres near river. 4 bedroom, 3 bath, with D/ A garage. 40x60 shop, underground spring fed pond. Call (620) 355-7653 or (620) 271-3685

660 S. Randy Lane,

2303 Lee

Garden City

Garden City

Garden City

1729 sq ft, 4 bed, 2 bath geodestic home in horse friendly neighborhood. Lots of upgrades throughout the house. All kitchen appliances included! $128,000 Call Clint at (620) 290-5008 for info.

3 bedroom, S/A garage, fenced yard, almost finshed basement. $115,000. (620) 276-6299

Call Sharynn or Erin to list your home in the Homeowner’s Marketplace.

Call 276-6862 ext. 501 or 1-800-475-8600.


SATURDAY, June 8, 2013

the Garden City Telegram

Auto Parts & Services

Commercial Real Estate

Cargo cover and sliding cargo divider. Fits Nissan Xterra. Great for traveling. Excellent condition. See at Bargains Plus Consignment, 308 N. 7th, Garden City. TuesdaySaturday 10am-4pm. www.gctbargains.com

MOBILE HOME park for sale in Garden City. Serious inquiries only. (620) 277-0131 or (620) 640-0857.

Trailers

Residential Rentals 4 BED, 3 bath home. NE location. Fenced yard. References checked. $1500/month. (620) 272-4542 Luxury newly remodeled 2 bedroom apartment. No pets. $900 / $900. (620) 510-2477.

Commercial Rentals FOR RENT: 40! x 123! x 14! Warehouse/Shop Building with offices, bathrooms, and 20! x 13! D.S. door. 150 N Industrial Drive. (620) 275-6142 or (620) 640-4149

Commercial Real Estate 4355 CHAMBER Drive, Garden City. 6 acres, parcels & prices negotiable. (620) 276-3087, (620) 765-0239.

Real Estate

Shop The Classifieds

1999 TIMPTE Super Hopper trailer. Call after 4pm for information. (620) 260-7286 24 FT Aluminum car hauling trailer. Lightly hauled. $8k with generator. $7k without generator. 620-272-3120

Real Estate

LAKIN — NICE 2800 sq.ft. home in the country on 66 acres near river. 4 bedroom, 3 bath, with D/ A garage. 40x60 shop, underReal Estate ground spring fed pond. 2922 CLIFF PL. 5 Price reduced. Will conbdrm./3 baths, great NE sider all offers. Call cul-de-sac. Updated (620) 355-7653 or (620) throughout. $196,900. 271-3685. 913-302-6041

2611 N. Coachman Well maintained home in nice NE neighborhood. 5 bdrm, 3 bath. 3,057 sq. ft. Large kitchen, bedrooms, and family room. $203,000. Call 620-640-0455. See www.forsalebyowner. com for more info.

HOUSE FOR SALE! 3 bd, 2.25 bath.Nice, quiet neighborhood. 2 car garage. 271-2225. 660 S. RANDY LANE 1729 sq ft, 4 bed, 2 bath geodestic home in horse friendly neighbor hood. Lots of upgrades throughout the house. All kitchen appliances included! $128,000 Call Clint at (620) 290-5008 for info.

The Classifieds: Get it here

Hamilton County Hospital is seeking a

Maintenance Manager Hamilton County Hospital is seeking a motivated and innovative individual to manage the Maintenance Department. If you have knowledge and skills in electrical, plumbing, and carpentry, then this is an exciting opportunity for you to be a part of a progressive management team.

Volunteer Coordinator for a Child-Advocacy Program Qualified applicants will have excellent people skills, enjoy public speaking, computer skills, the ability to supervise volunteer advocates, and enjoy working with children. Knowledge of the child-welfare system and court system is helpful. A degree or 3 years experience in the social service field is preferred. This is a full-time position. Benefits include sick and vacation days, retirement plan, and $200 a month towards health insurance. Spirit of the Plains, CASA P.O. Box 656 Garden City, KS 67846 Deadline is June 13, 2013. 224188

KanEquip, one of the largest Agricultural Dealerships in Kansas, is looking for an

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www.gctbargains.com 224077

for the Garden City, KS Dealership. The position offers a rewarding career path, with competitive wages and an excellent benefit package.

Please contact the: Human Resources Manager for more information on this position. Hamilton County Hospital, Box 948, Ave. G & Huser, Syracuse, KS 67878, 620-384-7461. Drug screening required. EOE

Summit ResCare is seeking a qualified individuals to fill the position of direct support staff. This position will provide services for assigned consumers in Garden City. High school diploma or GED and a valid driver’s license are required. If interested, apply only at www.rescare.com then select careers, External Applicants, enter 67846 and then choose Garden City Summit ResCare. Summitt ResCare is an EOE employer.

ON

AU

For more information about this Service Technician Position Contact Chris at 785-456-2083 Ext 192.

Western State Bank is seeking an individual with a strong work ethic and attention to detail to fill a critical position in our Internal Audit Department. Duties will include, but are not limited to, examination of accounting, financial and other operations to ensure adherence to industry appropriate internal controls. Successful candidates will possess strong analytical skills, above average computer skills, use of a 10-key calculator, and demonstrate the ability to learn and understand functional areas of the bank and work as part of a team. The Internal Auditor is required to present reports to Senior Management and the Board of Directors so above average communications skills are required. Skills testing and background investigation are required.

We offer excellent pay and a professional working environment! Candidates should submit their resume and completed application to the Western State Bank Human Resource Department at 1500 E Kansas Ave, Garden City, KS 67846. Applications will be accepted until the position is filled. Western State Bank is an Equal Opportunity Employer

224240

223395

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AUCTION Saturday, June 15, 2013 • 9 a.m.

Location: 4-H Building in Garden City, KS Located on the Finney County Fairgrounds (Viewing Friday - June 14 from 9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.)

Furniture & Appliances - Queen, Full, Twin Beds - Couch & Living Rm. Chairs - Wood Dining Table & Chairs - Hidea-bed - Sm. Swivel Rocker - Chest of Drawers - Dresser’s - Wood Corner Knick Knack Stand - White Metal & Wood Cabinets - Wood Desk - Night Stand - End Tables - Book Cases - Cedar Chest - Sewing Table - Refrigerator - Dryer (gas) - Washer & Dryer - Antique & Collectible - Settee Free Standing Radio - Carnival Glass- Fenton Glass - Blue Willow Dishes - Red Hobnail Glass - Frankoma Dishes - Antique Dishes - Oil Lamps - Thomas Kinkaid items Porcelain wash basins - Wash Board - Owl Collection - Cast Iron Skillets - Coal Shovel - Iron Pots - Costume Jewelry - Old Hats - Ceramic Angels - Breyer Horse Collection Miscellaneous - Card Table & Chairs - Vacuum - Golf Clubs - Cuckoo Clock - Fishing Tackle & Supplies - Yard Equipment - Shop Tools - Floor Lamp - Microwave - Computer - Small Kitchen Appliances - Pots & Pans Glassware - Cookie Jars - Silver plated Flatware w/ wood box - Linens - Bedding - Doilies (crochet & embroidery) - Dishes & Silverware - 35 mm camera w/ tripod (new) DVD Player - Records - 8 Track Player & Tapes - Books - Pictures & Paintings - Knack Knacks - Lots Framed Art - Home Decorating Items - Christmas Decorations - Quilt Scraps & frame - Quilts & Blankets - Lots Miscellaneous Not Listed (This is a partial list)

OWNER: Hazel F. Whitaker Estate Visit us on the Web: www.larryjohnstonauction.com

202246

Direct Support Professional

I CT

Join the Blue Sky Satellite team! Blue Sky Satellite installs exclusively for DISH Network with 12 locations in the Midwest. Our Technicians receive Top Hourly Rates, 4 Day Work Week, Monthly Bonus Program, Extensive Benefits Package with 401(k) and Paid Vacation. If you would like to find out more about an exciting career in our telecommunication installation field, apply online at careers.blueskydish.com or call Ray Ziegler at (316) 619-2552. 224078

Collector Car, Trucks, Tractor Shop Equipment Antique and Collectable

224193

To learn more about this great opportunity and to apply on line go to kanequip.com/employment.

FULL-TIME Internal Audit Position

Check us out at

www.stappsautosales.com 214157

Spirit of the Plains, CASA is seeking a

214995

STAPP’S AUTO SALES

2303 Lee 3 bedroom, S/A garage, fenced yard, almost finshed basement. $115,000. (620) 276-6299

3332 JANTZ Circle 4 bdrm., 3 baths. Recently finished basement. Beautiful family home. Great quiet kid-friendly neighborhood! $189,000 (620) 805-1650

203 E. Laurel, Garden City, 275-0284 www.HeritageRealty.biz Yo Si Hablo EspaĂąol

Autos

Real Estate

ABSOLUTE AUCTION 314 ACRES SCOTT CO. KS 2 IRRIGATED CIRCLES 50 % of MINERALS

WED., JULY 3RD,1:00PM CT.

LOCATION - EXHIBIT BUILDING, SCOTT CO. FAIR GROUNDS 600 Fairground Road, Scott City, KS (NE edge of town) SEE COMPLETE LIST W/PICTURES AT “www.scottauction.com� LEGAL: W/2 Sec.11, T 20 S, R 33 W of 6th P.M., less 6 acre farmstead tract, Scott Co., KS. -- LOCATION: From Scott City: K96 & US83, 11 mi S. on US83, 2 mi W. on W Road 40 to SW corner - From Garden City: N. on US83 to Scott/Finney Co. line, 4 mi N., 2 mi W. on W Road 40 to SW corner. - - MINERAL STATUS: Intact & Selling 50% undivided interest. NW/4 2600’ gas well to be closed & plugged soon. Lower depth open for lease. SW/4 open for lease all depths. - - CROPS: NW/4 120 acres wheat, corners are dry land corn. SW/4 100 acres corn, corners are summer fallow. - - IRRIGATION: 4 wells – approx 180’ deep w/elec. submerg. pumps, tied to both pivots & produce approx. 200 gal. per min. combined, watering both circles by alternating sprinklers. Sprinklers owned by Tenant. - - TAXES: 2012 Real Estate taxes = $1881.50 – 2012 & prior years paid, 2013 to be prorated at closing. - - TENANT: Greg Wasinger, Scott City, Ks. Cash lease ending 02/28/2014. Tenant has been notified of non-renewal of Lease & is interested in lease w/buyer. - - MANNER OF SELLING: offering the surface & minerals separate & together selling in the manner brings the highest bid. Selling absolute, with no minimum & no reservation. - - TITLE: Title Insurance & Warranty Deed. Mineral Title Search & Special Certificates & mineral deeds on the severed minerals. - - POSSESSION: Cash tenant retains 2013 crops. Immediate possession of open ground at closing & possession of balance after fall harvest. - - TERMS: 20% earnest deposit day of sale. Balance upon closing. Closing by August 2, 2013. Bidders must have financing arranged prior to bidding. - - 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 ways & or any other information. Only good title is warranted. Announcements day of sale take precedence. See web site for USDA FSA & Mineral tax info. & complete details.

AUCTION Saturday, June 15, 2013 • 10:00 AM

Location: 1 block north of Highway 4 and Main St., Utica, Ks.

Utica Implement closed its doors in 1972 and left everything inside the shed intact, so we are sure to find some real treasures. Don was a MM equipment dealer and a Nash Rambler dealer. *COLLECTOR CAR, TRUCK & TRACTOR* 1929 Essex Super Six car, touring sedan, needs restored-but in WFSZ HPPE DPOEJUJPO PSJHJOBM UJSFT TIFEEFE t MM GB tractor, in pieces-need put back together, QBSUT BSF XJUI JU TIFEEFE t 'PSE USVDL DZM TQE USBOT GU CFE GPS SFTUPSBUJPO t *)$ USVDL DZM TQE GU CFE GPS SFTUPSBUJPO t T Westcraft boat and trailer, built in Bazine, Ks. *CAR AND PICKUP* 0METNPCJMF %FMUB DBS EPPS NJMFT DMFBO JO HPPE TIBQF t 'PSE ' QJDLVQ BVUP NJMFT X UPQQFS nice shape *DEALERSHIP ITEMS* Lots of old MM, 3BNCMFS PUIFS NBLFT PG QBSUT TPNF OFX t -PUT PG .. BOE 3BNCMFS TBMFT MJUFSBUVSF TFSWJDF NBOVBMT t 4IPQ NBOVBMT GPS %FTPUP 1 1MZNPVUI DBST t .. QFOT QFODJMT t .. VOJGPSN QBUDIFT t .. ÜMF CPY t 4IFMWJOH DBCJOFUT **SHOP TOOLS** )PCBSU BNQ XFMEFS t FODI HSJOEFS t 8FMEJOH UBCMF X WJTF t 4IPQ CVJMU NFUBM CBOE TBX t $BSCJEF XFMEFS t "WFSZ JNQMFNFOU KBDL t )BOE UPPMT t 4PVUI #FOE TNBMM NFUBM MBUIF X FYUSB UPPMT t .JDJOH UPPMT t 8BMLFS øPPS KBDL t +FU ESJMM QSFTT t 0ME BJS DPNQSFTTPS t $SFFQFS t )FBWZ EVUZ TIPQ CVJMU BJS CVNQFS KBDL t #FODI NPEFM CBOE TBX t (FBS QVMMFST t 0JM CBSSFM EPMMJFT t -PH DIBJOT CPPNFST t $IBJO IPJTU t 0WFSIFBE " GSBNF t 4DSBQ JSPO t 'MPPS KBDL t 4BDL EPMMZ t 4OBQQFS SJEJOH NPXFS t IQ SPUP UJMMFS t :BSE HBSEFO UPPMT t 0UIFS TIPQ items *ANTIQUE AND COLLECTABLES* 0ME IVC DBQT t -JDFOTF UBHT CBDL UP t 0ME HBT PJM DBOT t 7BSJPVT TPEB QPQ CPUUMFT KBST NFEJDJOF CPUUMFT t $SFBN DBOT t *SPO XIFFMT t 4NBMM UPZ TUFBN NPUPST t 0ME UBCMF UPQ SBEJPT t 'MPPS NPEFM SBEJPT ;FOJUI FDU t 0BL TUSBJHIU DIBJST t 5SFBEMF TFXJOH NBDIJOF t #SBTT CMPX UPSDI t 0ME XPPEFO JODVCBUPS t 0BL ESFTTFS t ,JUDIFO DBCJOFU t $PNNFSDJBM QPQDPSO NBDIJOF t 0BL SPDLFS t 8BMM NPVOU DJHBSFUUF NBDIJOF t 1PQ DSBUFT t $PDB $PMB QPQ NBDIJOF DIFTU UZQF X SPVOE UPQ EJTQFOTFS t 1FQTJ NFUBM SPBE TJHO t .FUBM MBXO DIBJST t 'MBU UPQ USVOLT t "UXBUFS ,FOU SBEJP t 0ME DBTI SFHJTUFS t Y DPVOUFS UPQ EJTQMBZ DBCJOFUT t *SPO CFE TUFFET t .BQMF TFXJOH NBDIJOF DBCJOFU t $SBOL UFMFQIPOF t T 'PSNJDB UPQ EJOJOH UBCMF NBUDIJOH DIBJST t 0ME QJDUVSFT t 8PPEFO BEWFSUJTJOH CPYFT t 0BL CBSCFS T DIBJS OFBU t -BOUFSOT t (FSNBO $PP $PP DMPDL t 4BE JSPOT t $BTU JSPO CVMM EPH EPPS TUPQ t 0ME 4QBSLT TMPU NBDIJOF t 0ME TMBUF UPQ TOPPLFS UBCMF MFBUIFS QPDLFUT t #VSSPVHIT (MBTT BEEJOH NBDIJOF t ,FSPTFOF TUPWF t )PSOFS TUVEFOU BDDPSEJPO t .BOZ PUIFS BOUJRVF JUFNT *GUNS* 4QSJOHÜFME "SNT .PEFM SJøF t 4QSJOHÜFME "SNT .PEFM SJøF t +BQBOFTF 88** SJøF t +BQBOFTF NN SJøF t Belgium US arms double barrel 12 gauge shot gun, side hammers. Lunch served. Terms: %SJWFST -JDFOTF SFRVJSFE UP SFHJTUFS $BTI PS approved check day of sale. Everything sold as is. No warranties expressed or implied. Not responsible for UIFGU PS BDDJEFOU "OOPVODFNFOUT EBZ PG BVDUJPO take precedence. Check us out: on facebook & www.berningauction.com

Utica Implement OWNERS: The Late Don Babcock

SELLERS: ALFRED & NICIE WASINGER

www.berningauction.com

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Irsik & Doll

"VDUJPOFFS -JTUJOH "HFOU

Berning Auction, Inc.

SCOTT AUCTION

“Don’t Trust Your Auction To Just Anyone!�

There is a reason

Beefland Feed Yard is now taking applications for Pen Riders. Applicants should be reliable, hard working, and self motivated. Individual must have previous experience and knowledge. Competitive wages are offered with a full benefits package including: 401(k) with company match, profit sharing plan, 100% paid medical and dental insurance for employee, paid short/long term disability insurance, life insurance, paid vacation, sick leave, and career advancement opportunities. To apply for this outstanding opportunity, apply in person at Beefland, 12500 S Beefland Road, Garden City, KS, or call 620-275-2030 to schedule an appointment. Irsik & Doll is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

Phone: 620-276-6397

224304

224186

PEN RIDERS

See www.gcccks.edu for full requirements and application procedures. Apply by June 24. Start ASAP after selection. Position open until filled. EOE. Garden City Community College Human Resources $BNQVT %SJWF t (BSEFO $JUZ ,4 t IS!HDDDLT FEV

224296

224209

1508 N. 8th St., $81,000

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1711 E. Fair St., $189,500

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REQUIREMENTS Requires bachelor’s degree; excellent written and spoken communication skills; computer skills and knowledge; ability to travel extensively as integral part of job; related responsibilities. Preference for experience in college admissions and/or financial aid. COMPENSATION Salary based on qualifications and experience. Extensive benefits.

Russell Berning Ed Simon Sage Davis -FPUJ ,4 .BSJFOUIBM ,4 4DPUU $JUZ ,4

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Work full-time year-round building and maintaining relationships with prospective students; providing college information on academic and technical programs; traveling on recruitment visits to high schools and college planning conferences, as well as additional recruitment activities and events, on and off campus, in Nebraska, New Mexico and Oklahoma to Kansas and Colorado; entering recruitment data and producing recruitment letters; related responsibilities.

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French: Nadal outlasts Djokovic in epic semifinal. PAGE D3

Sports

Belmont: Race could be wet, wide-open. PAGE D3

THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM

SATURDAY, June 8, 2013

GCTelegram.com/Sports

SWKPrepZone.com

D

Duncan appreciating success

Brad Nading/Telegram

Austin Eller, Glendo, Wyo., works on turning a steer to the ground Friday on a run in the steer wrestling competition during the night performance of the Beef Empire Days PRCA Rodeo at the Finney County Farigrounds Arena. Eller scored a time of 8.7 seconds on the run.

Second-chance ride Pojanowski rides Magnum Force to bull riding lead. By BRETT MARSHALL

bmarshall@gctelegram.com

Brad Nading/Telegram

Taylor Price, Huntsville, Texas, works on staying on for a full ride Friday night in the bareback riding competition durng the Beef Empire Days PRCA Rodeo at the Finney County Fairgrounds Arena. Price scored 69 points for the full ride.

There is an adage that says, “Good things come to those who wait.” It was never more appropriate late Friday night on the last bull ride of the night at the Beef Empire Days PRCA Rodeo at the Finney County Fairgrounds Arena. Matt Pojanowski, a selfdescribed rider for life, capitalized on getting a second opportunity after his first bull, Little Rascal, didn’t meet the judging standards for a certified ride. Pojanowski, of Woodbury, Minn., took advantage of that second chance to score an 87point ride atop Magnum Force to move into the lead of the bull riding after two nights of competition. It was good enough to take a three-point lead over Trey Benton III, of Rock Island, Texas, who had scored an 84 earlier Friday on Lucifer’s Leap. Rorey Maier of Timber Lake, S.D., and Sage Steele Kimzey of Strong City, Okla., the day one leaders, dropped into a tie for third at 83 points. For Pojanowski, Friday’s ride culminated the end to one of his best weeks after tying for first at an Extreme Bull competition on Wednesday in Gladewater, Texas. “I can’t complain,” Pojanowski said after finish-

ing his ride. “One of the bullfighters told me that the re-ride bull was a good one and that I should give him a go, and if I had a good ride, I’d have a chance to get a good score. It sure worked out.” Pojanowski said he had never seen the bull, which is out of the Anchor K Ranch of Korkow Rodeos of Pierre, S.D. “He just said take it (re-ride) and you can win,” Pojanowski said. “I’m glad I listened.” The appearance in Garden City was the first for Pojanowski since he was riding in the junior college ranks in the late 1990s for Fort Scott Community College. “It’s a good arena,” Pojanowski said. “That bull was big, and he blew out hard. He hit to the left, and I thought I was gonna lose him. I thought he had me beat. I just kept working hard to stay in the middle and stick to the basics. Bull ridin’ ain’t easy, but it’s simple and that’s what you have to do. Don’t overthink what you’re doing.” Up until that final ride, Benton had taken the lead from the two Thursday night riders. Benton, the PRCA Rookie of the Year in 2012 at age 20, is one of the top young bull riders in America despite the fact that he’s competing with a torn ACL, MCL and miniscus in his right knee, an injury he sustained in a nasty fall last August in Fort Madison, Iowa. “The bull threw me about 12 feet, and I ended up landing in a hole,” Benton said. “I knew immediately I was hurt.

See Rodeo, Page D3

MIAMI (AP) — For all the playoff slugfests he has endured over the years, for all the elbows to the ribs he’s taken in the post, for all the postseason runs between this NBA Finals and his last one, precious little has changed for Tim Duncan. His expressive face looks remarkably similar in 2013 to the one that helped the San Antonio Spurs to their first championship in 1999. His game is still built on fundamentals and smarts more than athleticism a n d speed. And he still plays for the same coach, in the same system and with the same two stars by his side that brought three titles to the River Walk in five years. You see Duncan in Game 1 against Miami on Thursday night, controlling the paint, finding the open man and cleaning up the boards like he’s always done. And then you realize he’s 37 years old, and his last trip to the NBA Finals was six years ago. That may not seem so far back to most players. To Duncan, it felt like an eternity. And now that he’s finally here, with a chance for title No. 5, he’s playing with the urgency of a man that doesn’t know how many more chances he’s going to get. “It felt like a long time,” Duncan said on Friday, one day after posting 20 points, 14 rebounds, four blocks and three assists in San Antonio’s 92-88 win over Miami in Game 1. “I definitely appreciate being back out here, to see the finals banners all around and to see the patch on the jersey and all those little things, the last couple of days it’s really been sinking in. “I think I really do appreciate it more now, having been gone so long.” That Duncan, the most understated of stars, is focusing on those little details that he never did before should come as no surprise. He’s never been one for the pyrotechnic pre-game introductions; never craved the spotlight that comes with playing for the championship. What he has stood for more than anything over the years is dependability. Everyone knows what he brings to the table, and the fact that he keeps bringing it year-in and year-out has earned him an unparalleled level of respect and admiration within the league — if not among the casual fan who craves soaring dunks and wicked crossovers. “The way he’s played his whole career, he’s continued to play that way,” Heat guard Ray Allen said. “In this world we live in, consistency is all we ask. You get paid a lot of money and you get respect by doing it.”

Richard, Curtis win men’s, women’s G.C. Open tennis titles By The Telegram Tyler Richard of Overland Park and Deiah Curtis of Great Bend captured the men’s and women’s open singles championships on Friday in the Garden City Open. The tournament, conducted at the new Garden City High School courts, also saw champions crowned in A and B divisions. Patrick Weaver of Hugoton won the men’s A division while Tania Pastrana of Garden City took the women’s A division crown. In the B division, it was Sean Kneeland of Garden City winning the men’s division while Courtney Goble of Garden City earned the top spot in the women’s division. Richard, a former Garden City High School tennis standout, defeated recent GCHS graduate Brian Clarke of in the title match, 6-1, 6-2. Richard had defeated Denton Keller of Garden City in the semifinals, 103, while Clarke advanced with a 10-9 (12-10) win over Evan Riggs of Garden City in his semifinal match. In the women’s competition, Curtis rolled to a 10-1 win over Marcy Lynn of Meade after winning her semifinal match

over Kelly Brauer of Dodge City, 10-1. Lynne won by default over Heather Kneeland of Garden City when the score was tied at 8. Jannett Martinez finished third in the open women’s singles with a 10-7 victory over Shai Cartmill of Garden City. Denton Keller’s 10-9 (7-4) win over Scott Glass provided him the third-place finish. In the men’s A division, Weaver breezed to a 10-5 win over Dylan Victor of Garden City while Robert Askew of Dodge City defeated Austin Greathouse of Garden City, 10-4, for third place. Amber Miller claimed third over Loan Trinh of Garden City. For the Men’s B division, Kneeland went into a tiebreaker before defeating Vinh Nguyen of Garden City, 10-9 (7-5) in the title match. Michael Berry garnered the thirdplace match with a 10-5 win over Jonathan Robinson of Garden City. In the Women’s B division, Goble defeated Bre Small of Scott City, 10-8, in the championship match. Rhyan Elliott of Meade was third with a win over Megan Bordewick of Garden City. The tournament was to continue today with the men’s and women’s doubles competitions and conclude on Sunday with mixed doubles.

Shai Cartmill of Garden City hits a backhand shot Friday during a singles match in the Beef Empire Days GCTA Open tennis tournament at Garden City High School. Cartmill finished fourth in the women’s open singles division.

Brad Nading/Telegram


D2

Scoreboard

SATURDAY, June 8, 2013

BASEBALL American League By The Associated Press East Division W L Pct GB Boston 37 24 .607 — New York 35 25 .583 1.5 Baltimore 34 27 .557 3 Tampa Bay 33 27 .550 3.5 Toronto 26 34 .433 10.5 Central Division W L Pct GB Detroit 33 26 .559 — Cleveland 30 30 .500 3.5 Minnesota 26 31 .456 6 Kansas City 26 32 .448 6.5 Chicago 25 34 .424 8 West Division W L Pct GB Oakland 38 25 .603 — Texas 36 24 .600 .5 Los Angeles 26 34 .433 10.5 Seattle 26 35 .426 11 Houston 22 40 .355 15.5 ——— Thursday’s Games Detroit 5, Tampa Bay 2 Baltimore 3, Houston 1 Boston 6, Texas 3 Kansas City 7, Minnesota 3 Oakland 5, Chicago White Sox 4, 10 innings N.Y. Yankees 6, Seattle 1 Friday’s Games Minnesota at Washington, ppd., rain Toronto 6, Texas 1 Detroit 7, Cleveland 5 Tampa Bay 2, Baltimore 1 L.A. Angels at Boston, ppd., rain Kansas City 4, Houston 2 Oakland 4, Chicago White Sox 3 N.Y. Yankees at Seattle, night Today’s Games L.A. Angels (Hanson 2-2) at Boston (Doubront 4-2), 12:05 p.m., 1st game Texas (Darvish 7-2) at Toronto (Buehrle 2-4), 12:07 p.m. Minnesota (Correia 5-4) at Washington (G.Gonzalez 3-3), 3:05 p.m. Cleveland (Masterson 8-4) at Detroit (Porcello 2-3), 3:08 p.m. Baltimore (Gausman 0-2) at Tampa Bay (Hellickson 3-2), 3:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Pettitte 4-3) at Seattle (J.Saunders 4-5), 3:10 p.m. Oakland (Milone 6-5) at Chicago White Sox (Joh.Danks 0-2), 3:10 p.m. Houston (Bedard 1-2) at Kansas City (E.Santana 3-5), 6:15 p.m. L.A. Angels (C.Wilson 4-4) at Boston (Buchholz 8-0), 6:15 p.m., 2nd game Sunday’s Games Texas at Toronto, 12:07 p.m. Cleveland at Detroit, 12:08 p.m. L.A. Angels at Boston, 12:35 p.m. Minnesota at Washington, 12:35 p.m., 1st game Baltimore at Tampa Bay, 12:40 p.m. Houston at Kansas City, 1:10 p.m. Oakland at Chicago White Sox, 1:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Seattle, 3:10 p.m. Minnesota at Washington, 6:05 p.m., 2nd game Monday’s Games L.A. Angels at Baltimore, 6:05 p.m. Boston at Tampa Bay, 6:10 p.m. Cleveland at Texas, 7:05 p.m. Detroit at Kansas City, 7:10 p.m. Toronto at Chicago White Sox, 7:10 p.m. Houston at Seattle, 9:10 p.m. National League By The Associated Press East Division W L Pct GB Atlanta 37 23 .617 — Philadelphia 31 31 .500 7 Washington 29 30 .492 7.5 New York 23 33 .411 12 Miami 16 44 .267 21 Central Division W L Pct GB St. Louis 40 21 .656 — Cincinnati 36 25 .590 4 Pittsburgh 36 25 .590 4 Chicago 24 34 .414 14.5 Milwaukee 23 37 .383 16.5 West Division W L Pct GB Arizona 34 26 .567 — Colorado 33 29 .532 2 San Francisco 31 28 .525 2.5 San Diego 28 33 .459 6.5 Los Angeles 26 33 .441 7.5 ——— Thursday’s Games N.Y. Mets at Washington, ppd., rain St. Louis 12, Arizona 8 Philadelphia 5, Milwaukee 1 San Diego 6, Colorado 5, 12 innings L.A. Dodgers 5, Atlanta 0 Friday’s Games Pittsburgh 2, Chicago Cubs 0 Minnesota at Washington, ppd., rain St. Louis 9, Cincinnati 2 Miami at New York, ppd., rain Milwaukee 5, Philadelphia 4 Colorado 10, San Diego 9 San Francisco at Arizona, night Atlanta at L.A. Dodgers, night Today’s Games Miami (Fernandez 3-3) at N.Y. Mets (Harvey 5-0), 12:10 p.m. Minnesota (Correia 5-4) at Washington (G.Gonzalez 3-3), 3:05 p.m. Pittsburgh (A.J.Burnett 3-6) at Chicago Cubs (Samardzija 3-6), 3:05 p.m. Philadelphia (K.Kendrick 6-3) at Milwaukee (Gorzelanny 1-0), 6:15 p.m. San Diego (Stults 4-5) at Colorado (Chatwood 3-1), 6:15 p.m. St. Louis (Lyons 2-1) at Cincinnati (Latos 5-0), 6:15 p.m. Atlanta (Medlen 2-6) at L.A. Dodgers (Fife 1-0), 9:10 p.m. San Francisco (Bumgarner 4-4) at Arizona (Cahill 3-6), 9:10 p.m. Sunday’s Games

Television Today

On Tap Mercury at Indiana Fever.

Auto Racing — 7 p.m., ESPN, NASCAR Nationwide Series, Dupont Pioneer 250, from Newton, Iowa; 7:30 p.m., ABC, IndyCar Firestone 550, from Fort Worth, Texas. College Baseball — 11 a.m., ESPN, NCAA Super Regional, teams TBA; Noon, ESPN2, NCAA Super Regional, teams TBA; 2 p.m., ESPN, NCAA Super Regional, teams TBA; 3 p.m., ESPN2, NCAA Super Regional, teams TBA; 6 p.m., ESPN2, NCAA Super Regional, teams TBA; 9 p.m., ESPN2, NCAA Super Regional, teams TBA. Horse Racing — 4 p.m., NBC, 145th Belmont Stakes, from Elmont, N.Y. Pro Baseball — 3 p.m., WGN, Oakland Athletics at Chicago White Sox; 6 p.m., FOX, Houston Astros at Kansas City Royals. Pro Golf — 2 p.m., CBS, PGA Tour, FedEx St. Jude Classic, third round, from Memphis, Tenn. Pro Hockey — 7 p.m., NBC, Los Angeles Kings at Chicago Blackhawks (if necessary). Pro Tennis — 8 a.m., NBC, French Open, Women’s Final, Serena Williams vs. Maria Sharapova, from Paris. Women’s Pro Basketball — 2:30 p.m., ABC, Phoenix

Miami at N.Y. Mets, 12:10 p.m. Minnesota at Washington, 12:35 p.m., 1st game Philadelphia at Milwaukee, 1:10 p.m. Pittsburgh at Chicago Cubs, 1:20 p.m. Atlanta at L.A. Dodgers, 3:10 p.m. San Diego at Colorado, 3:10 p.m. San Francisco at Arizona, 3:10 p.m. Minnesota at Washington, 6:05 p.m., 2nd game St. Louis at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m. Monday’s Games Milwaukee at Miami, 6:10 p.m. Cincinnati at Chicago Cubs, 7:05 p.m. Arizona at L.A. Dodgers, 9:10 p.m. Atlanta at San Diego, 9:10 p.m. ——— NCAA Division I Super Regionals By The Associated Press Best 2-of-3 x-if necessary Host school is Game 1 home team; visiting school is Game 2 home team; coin flip determines Game 3 home team At Boshamer Stadium Chapel Hill, N.C. Friday, June 7: South Carolina (42-18) vs. North Carolina (55-9), ppd., rain Saturday, June 8: South Carolina vs. North Carolina, 11 a.m. Sunday, June 9: South Carolina vs. North Carolina, Noon Monday, June 10: x-South Carolina vs. North Carolina, TBA At Doak Field Raleigh, N.C. Friday, June 7: Rice (44-18) vs. N.C. State (47-14), ppd., rain Saturday, June 8: Rice vs. N.C. State, 3 p.m. Sunday, June 9: x-Rice vs. N.C. State, 3 p.m. Monday, June 10: Rice vs. N.C. State (47-14), TBA At Alex Box Stadium Baton Rouge, La. Friday, June 7: Oklahoma (43-19) vs. LSU (55-9), 6 p.m. Saturday, June 8: Oklahoma vs. LSU, 6 p.m. Sunday, June 9: x-Oklahoma vs. LSU, 6 p.m. At Goodwin Field Fullerton, Calif. Friday, June 7: UCLA (42-17) vs. Cal State-Fullerton (51-8), 6 p.m. Saturday, June 8: UCLA vs. Cal StateFullerton, 9 p.m. Sunday, June 9: x-UCLA vs. Cal StateFullerton, 9 p.m. At Dick Howser Stadium Tallahassee, Fla. Saturday, June 8: Indiana (46-14) vs. Florida State (47-15), 11 a.m. Sunday, June 9: Indiana vs. Florida State, Noon Monday, June 10: x-Indiana vs. Florida State, Noon At Davenport Field Charlottesville, Va. Saturday, June 8: Mississippi State (4618) vs. Virginia (47-10), Noon Sunday, June 9: Mississippi State vs. Virginia, 6 p.m. Monday, June 10: x-Mississippi State vs. Virginia, 3 p.m. At Hawkins Field Nashville, Tenn. Saturday, June 8: Louisville (49-12) vs. Vanderbilt (54-10), 2 p.m. Sunday, June 9: Louisville vs. Vanderbilt, 3 p.m. Monday, June 10: x-Louisville vs. Vanderbilt, 6 p.m. At Goss Stadium Corvallis, Ore. Saturday, June 8: Kansas State (44-17) vs. Oregon State (48-10), 6 p.m. Sunday, June 9: Kansas State vs. Oregon State, 9 p.m. Monday, June 10: x-Kansas State vs. Oregon State, 6 p.m.

BASKETBALL NBA Playoff Glance By The Associated Press CONFERENCE FINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) NBA FINALS San Antonio 1, Miami 0 Thursday, June 6: San Antonio 92, Miami 88. Sunday, June 9: San Antonio at Miami, 7 p.m. Tuesday, June 11: Miami at San Antonio 8 p.m. Thursday, June 13: Miami at San Antonio, 8 p.m. x-Sunday, June 16: Miami at San Antonio, 7 p.m.

Sunday

Auto Racing — Noon, TNT, NASCAR Sprint Cup, Party in the Poconos 400, from Long Pond, Pa.; 1 p.m., NBC, Formula One, Canadian Grand Prix, from Montreal. College Baseball — Noon, ESPN, NCAA Super Regional, teams TBA (if necessary); 3 p.m., ESPN, NCAA Super Regional, teams TBA (if necessary); 6 p.m., ESPN2, NCAA Super Regional, teams TBA (if necessary); 9 p.m., ESPN2, NCAA Super Regional, teams TBA (if necessary). Pro Baseball — 12:30 p.m., TBS, Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim at Boston Red Sox; 1 p.m., FSN, Houston Astros at Kansas City Royals; 1:10 p.m., WGN, Pittsburgh Pirates at Chicago Cubs (joined in progress); 7 p.m., ESPN, St. Louis Cardinals at Cincinnati Reds. Pro Basketball — 7 p.m., ABC, NBA Finals, Game 2, San Antonio Spurs at Miami Heat. Pro Golf — 2 p.m., CBS, PGA Tour, FedEx St. Jude Classic, final round, from Memphis, Tenn. Pro Tennis — 8 a.m., NBC, French Open, Men’s Final, Rafael Nadal vs. David Ferrer, from Paris.

x-Tuesday, June 18: San Antonio at Miami, 8 p.m. x-Thursday, June 20: San Antonio at Miami, 8 p.m.

BEEF EMPIRE DAYS Beef Empire Days PRCA Rodeo Friday at Finney County Fairgrounds Arena Bareback Riding T1. Ty Breuer, Mandan, N.D., 83; T1. Casey Breuer, Mandan, N.D., 83; 3. Joe Gunderson, Agar, S.D., 82; 4. Will Lowe, Canyon, Texas, 79; 5. Taner Aus, Granite Falls, Minn., 78; 6. Chris Harris, Itasca, Texas, 75; 7. Ethan McNeill, Grantsville, Utah, 74; T8. Taylor Price, Huntsville, Texas, 69; T8. Frank Morton, Wright, 69. Saddle Bronc Riding 1. Louie Brunson, Interior, S.D., 85; T2. Cole Elshere, Faith, S.D., 83; T2. Wade Sundell, Boxholm, Iowa, 83; T4. Ryan Bestol, Hyannis, Neb., 82; T4. Jordan Furnish, Guymon, Okla., 82; 6. Isaac Diaz, Desdemona, Texas, 81; T7. Chuck Schmidt, Keldron, S.D., 80; T7. Cody Taton, Corona, N.M., 80. Bull Riding 1. Matt Pojanowski, Woodbury, Minn., 86; 2. Trey Benton III, Rock Island, Texas, 84; T3. Rorey Maier, Timber Lake, S.D., 83; T3. Sage Steele Kimzey, Strong City, Okla., 83; 5. Patrick Geipel, Elbert, Colo., 79; 6. Lane Wilhelm, Elk City, Okla., 77; 7. Austin Meier, Kinta, Okla., 74; 8. Skeeter Kingsolver, McLouth, 73. Barrel Racing 1. Taylor Jacob, Carmine, Texas, 17.26; 2. Lizzy Ehr, Abilene, Texas, 17.52; 3. Brittany Pozzi, Victoria, Texas, 17.58; 4. Delores Toole, Manter, 17.60; 5. Annesa Self, Sanger, Texas, 17.62; 6. Sherri Odell, Liberal, 17.66; 7. Toni Hardin, Wetmore, Colo., 17.68; 8. Angie Meadors, Blanchard, Okla., 17.72; 9. Kasey Etbauer, Goodwell, Okla., 17.74; 10. Tana Poppino, Big Cabin, Okla., 17.75; 11. Carley Richardson, Pampa, Texas, 17.76; 12. Kaley Bass, Kissimmee, Fla., 17.76. Ladies Breakaway Roping 1. Jessica Miller, Madison, 2.7; 2. Kashlee Schweer, Garden City, 2.9; 3. Heidi Hazen, Ashland, 3.0; 4. Shelly Meier, Garden City, 3.2; 5. Teddi Winslow, Plains, 4.1; 6. Mandi Michaelis, Lakin, 4.2. Steer Wrestling T1. Justin Smith, Castle, Okla., 4.2; T1. Seth Brockman, Wheatland, Wyo., 4.2; 3. Kyle Broce, La Junta, Colo., 5.0; 4. Kyle Irwin, Robertsdale, Ala., 5.2; 5. Ryan Swayze, Freedom, Okla., 5.4; 6. Trevor Haake, Grand Island, Neb., 5.7; T7. Del Ray Kraupie, Bridgeport, Neb., 5.8; T7. Brady Hageman, McCook, Neb., 5.8. Tie Down Roping 1. Cody McCartney, Ottawa Lake, Mich., 9.8; 2. Charley Russell, Shamrock, Texas, 9.9; T3. Reese Riemer, Stinnett, Texas, 10.1; T3. Clark Adcock, Smithville, Tenn., 10.1; 5. Chase Williams, Stephenville, Texas, 10.2; 6. Trenton Johnson, Mound City, 10.3; 7. Jesse Clark, Portales, N.M., 10.4; 8. Trevor Thiel, Greeley, Colo., 10.5. Team Roping 1. Chase Wiley, Charlotte, Texas/Ace Pearce, Washington, Texas, 4.9; 2. Bubba Buckaloo, Kingston, Okla./Cole Davison, Madisonville, Texas, 5.0; 3. Travis Tryan, Billings, Mont./Jake Long, Coffeyville, 5.1; T4. Jake Orman, Huntsville, Texas/ Corey Hendrick, Huntsville, Texas, 5.2; T4. Colby Siddoway, Hooper, Utah/ Shay Carroll, La Junta, Colo., 5.2; 6. Trey Harmon, Pocasset, Okla./Jace Crabb, Mangum, Okla., 5.5; 7. Parker Warner, Vinita, Okla./Dustin Searcy, Mooreland, Okla., 5.7; 8. Adam Rose, Willard, Mo./ Billie Saebens, Nowata, Okla., 5.9; 9. Josh Morris, Clay’s Corner, Texas/Austin Rogers, Crescent, Okla., 6.1; T10. Trevor Brazile, Decatur, Texas/Patrick Smith, Lipan, Texas, 6.2; T10. Cole Dorenkamp, Lamar, Colo./Ryon Tittel, Pueblo, Colo., 6.2.

HOCKEY NHL Playoff Glance By The Associated Press CONFERENCE FINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) EASTERN CONFERENCE

Boston 3, Pittsburgh 0 Saturday, June 1: Boston 3, Pittsburgh 0 Monday, June 3: Boston 6, Pittsburgh 1 Wednesday, June 5: Boston 2, Pittsburgh 1, 2OT Friday, June 7: Pittsburgh at Boston, 7 p.m. x-Sunday, June 9: Boston at Pittsburgh, 7 p.m. x-Tuesday, June 11: Pittsburgh at Boston, TBD x-Wednesday, June 12: Boston at Pittsburgh, TBD WESTERN CONFERENCE Chicago 3, Los Angeles 1 Saturday, June 1: Chicago 2, Los Angeles 1 Sunday, June 2: Chicago 4, Los Angeles 2 Tuesday, June 4: Los Angeles 3, Chicago 1 Thursday, June 6: Chicago 3, Los Angeles 2 Saturday, June 8: Los Angeles at Chicago, 7 p.m. x-Monday, June 10: Chicago at Los Angeles, 8 p.m. x-Wednesday, June 12: Los Angeles at Chicago, TBD

GCRC Adult Softball Men’s Competitive Watering Hole 18, G.O. Trucking 3 First United Methodist 18, G.O. Trucking 8 First United Methodist 21, 3rd & KS/ CityKutz 4 3rd & KS/CityKutz 16, Nuzum Handyman Service 6 Men’s Intermediate O.D.B. 14, Niemans Siding 10 Niemans Siding 14, Windriver 13 Tyson Hides 7, Windriver 4 Sonic Soldiers 13, Tyson Hides 5 Women’s Lower INA Income Tax Dinero 19, Tequilas 3 GPCU Pitch Slappers 17, True Value 7 Lee Outlaws 18, Pink Sox 3 Joe Amos 10, Four Sons Automotive 6 Youth Major Boys Pete’s Tires 7, Commerce Bank 6 C&M Amusements 9, Farm Credit of Southwest Kansas 6 MBA Real Estate 4, Urrutia Trucking 2 Minor Boys United Wireless 11, Farmer’s Insurance 6 UR Audio 11, Fresh Bites 5 First National 16, Garden Bowl 13 Midwest Well & Pump 8, Fresh Bites 4 United Wireless 14, Garden Bowl 13 JR Audio 7, Farmers Insurance 3 United Wireless 12, James B. Etling 6 Douglas Roofing 11, Fresh Bites 5 Midget Girls Commerce Bank 5, Mongeau Land & Cattle 3 Pete’s Tires 8, High Maintenance 0 Mighty Molars tied with Lakin, 2-2 Prairie Girls The Good Sports 12, Midwest Body Shop 10 Encino’s Auto Center 11, Western Irrigation 2 Rainbow Girls GC Coop 12, Cornerstone Professional 2 The Pitches 5, GC Breakers 2

TENNIS Garden City Tennis Open Friday at Garden City High School Men’s Open Singles Championship First Round Brian Clarke, Garden City, bye; Evan Riggs, Garden City def. Brennan Keller, Garden City, 10-4; Denton Keller, Garden City def. Scott Glass, Garden City, 10-5; Tyler Richard, Overland Park, bye. Championship Semifinals Brian Clarke, Garden City, def. Evan Riggs, Garden City, 10-9 (12-10); Tyler Richard, Overland Park, def. Denton Keller, Garden City, 10-3. Consolation Semifinals Scott Glass, Garden City def. Evan Riggs, Garden City, default; Denton Keller, Garden City, def. Brennan Keller, Garden City, 10-4. Consolation Final Denton Keller, Garden City, def. Scott Glass, Garden City, 10-9 (7-4).

Royals hold off Astros, win third straight KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Eric Hosmer wasn’t sure whether he could score from first when Billy Butler roped a pitch down the third-base line, so he put his head down and sprinted as fast as he could. He slid home just ahead of the tag for the go-ahead run in the eighth inning Friday night. And after the Kansas City Royals held on for a 42 victory over the Houston Astros for their first threegame winning streak in a month, Hosmer flashed a little quickness once again. He deftly dodged a bath of ice water from some teammates.

“It’s a lot of fun, man. It was a big win for us,” Hosmer said with a smile. “We’re starting to turn things around, we’re starting a little winning streak and we want to keep it going.” Kelvin Herrera (3-4) worked a perfect eighth inning in relief of James Shields, and Greg Holland pitched the ninth for his 11th save and second during the Royals’ modest winning streak. Shields engaged in quite the pitchers’ duel with the Astros’ Jordan Lyles, but the game came down to the bullpens. Houston brought in Wesley Wright (0-2) in the eighth and Hosmer greeted him with a single,

THE Garden City Telegram

and then Butler doubled off Josh Fields for the goahead run. David Lough’s RBI double moments later created a cushion for the Royals, who also got a two-run homer from Salvador Perez earlier in the game to help them win three straight for the first time since May 1-5 — a stretch interrupted twice by weather postponements. “I feel like the offense is starting to come around a bit,” said Royals manager Ned Yost, who praised Hall of Famer George Brett for his work since taking over as interim hitting coach. “George has done a good job of loosening them up and putting them in a good

position to hit,” Yost said, “and I think you’re starting to see the fruits of his labor here a little bit.” Trevor Crowe and Jason Castro drove in the only runs for Houston, which had won six straight on the road, its best run since July 18-22, 2005. “That was real tough to drop a game like that, especially coming in close,” Fields said. “It’s my job to hold the game right there and I wasn’t quite as fine as I needed to be.” Shields allowed the leadoff hitter to reach base in each of the first four innings, and again in the seventh, but for the most part the Royals’ ace kept limiting the damage.

Saturday Baseball — TBD, Finney County Blues at Ulysses Tournament; Finney County Bandits at Ulysses Tournament. Pro Rodeo — 7 p.m., Final night performance. Amateur Tennis — 8 a.m., Garden City Open, Doubles, GCHS Courts. Sunday Baseball — TBD, Finney County Blues at Ulysses Tournament; Finney County Bandits at Ulysses Tournament. Amateur Tennis — 8 a.m., Garden City Open, Mixed Doubles, GCHS Courts. Tuesday Baseball — 6p.m., Finney Co. Blues at Hooker, Okla.; Lamar, Colo. at Finney Co. Bandits. Friday

Championship Final Tyler Richard, Overland Park, def. Brian Clarke, Garden City, 6-1, 6-2. A Singles Championship First Round Patrick Weaver, Hugoton, bye; Robert Askew, Dodge City def. Seth Dinkel, Garden City, 10-4; Austin Greathouse, Garden City def. Tyler Herrada, Garden City, 10-1; Dylan Victor, Garden City, bye. Championship Semifinals Patrick Weaver, Hugoton def. Robert Askew, Dodge City, 10-4; Dylan Victor, Garden City def. Austin Greathouse, Garden City, 10-2. Consolation Semifinals Robert Askew, Dodge City def. Tyler Herrada, Garden City, 10-3; Austin Greathouse, Garden City def. Seth Dinkel, Garden City, 10-2. Consolation Final Robert Askew, Dodge City def. Austin Greathouse, Garden City, 10-2. Championship Final Patrick Weaver, Hugoton def. Dylan Victor, Garden City, 10-5. B Singles Championship First Round Michael Berry, Garden City, bye; Sean Kneeland, Garden City def. Jonathan Robinson, Garden City, 10-1; Vinh Nguyen, Garden City def. Jay Edwards, Garden City, 10-0; Josiah Thomas, Garden City, bye. Championship Seimfinals Sean Kneeland, Garden City def. Michael Berry, Garden City, 10-7; Vinh Nguyen, Garden City def. Josiah Thomas, Garden City, 10-3. Consolation Semifinals Michael Berry, Garden City def. Jay Edwards, Garden City, 10-3; Jonathan Robinson, Garden City def. Josiah Thomas, Garden City, 10-9 (7-5). Consolation Final Michael Berry, Garden City def. Jonathan Robinson, Garden City, 10-5. Championship Final Sean Kneeland, Garden City def. Vinh Nguyen, Garden City, 10-9 (7-5). Women’s Open Singles Championship First Round Kelly Brauer, Dodge City, bye; Deiah Curtis, Great Bend def. Jannette Martinez, Garden City, 10-6; Marcy Lynn, Meade def. Shai Cartmill, Garden City, 10-9 (7-3); Heather Kneeland, Garden City, bye. Championship Semifinals Deiah Curtis, Great Bend def. Kelly Brauer, Dodge City, 10-1; Marcy Lynn, Meade def. Heather Kneeland, Garden City, 8-8 (default). Consolation Semifinals Shai Cartmill, Garden City def. Kelly Brauer, Dodge City, 4-2 (default); Jannette Martinez, Garden City def. Heather Kneeland, Garden City, default. Consolation Final Jannette Martinez, Garden City def. Shai Cartmill, Garden City, 10-7. Championship Final Deiah Curtis, Great Bend def. Marcy Lynn, Meade, 10-1. A Singles Championship Semifinals Kaylee Keller, Garden City def. Loan Trinh, Garden City, default; Tania Pastrana, Garden City def. Amber Miller, Garden City, 1-01. Consolation Final Amber Miller, Garden City def. Loan Trinh, Garden City, default. Championship Final Tania Pastrana, Garden City def. Kaylee Keller, Garden City, 10-4. B Singles Championship First Round Megan Bordewick, Garden City, bye; Bre Small, Scott City def. Emma Gregg, Dodge City, 10-2; Courtney Goble, Garden City def. Jordan Hagan, Garden City, default; Rhyan Elliot, Meade, bye. Championship Semifinals Bre Small, Scott City def. Megan Bordewick, Garden City, 10-6; Courtney Goble, Garden City def. Rhyan Elliot, Meade, 10-8. Consolation Semifinals Megan Bordewick, Garden City def. Jordan Hagan, Garden City, default; Rhyan Elliot, Meade def. Emma Gregg, Dodge City, 10-2. Consolation Final Rhyan Elliot, Meade def. Megan

Baseball — TBD, Finney Co. Blues at Blue Springs, Mo. Tournament; Finney Co. Bandits at Great Bend Tournament. Saturday, June 15 Baseball — TBD, Finney Co. Blues at Blue Springs, Mo. Tournament; Finney Co. Bandits at Great Bend Tournament. Amateur Golf — TBD, Garden City Men’s Championship, Buffalo Dunes Golf Course, First round. Sunday, June 16 Baseball — TBD, Finney Co. Blues at Blue Springs, Mo. Tournament; Finney Co. Bandits at Great Bend Tournament. Amateur Golf — TBD, Garden City Men’s Championship, The Golf Club at Southwind, Final round.

Bordewick, Garden City. Championship Final Courtney Goble, Garden City def. Bre Small, Scott City, 10-8. French Open Results By The Associated Press Friday At Stade Roland Garros Paris Purse: $28.4 million (Grand Slam) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Men Semifinals Rafael Nadal (3), Spain, def. Novak Djokovic (1), Serbia, 6-4, 3-6, 6-1, 6-7 (3), 9-7. David Ferrer (4), Spain, def. Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (6), France, 6-1, 7-6 (3), 6-2. Doubles Women Semifinals Ekaterina Makarova and Elena Vesnina (4), Russia, def. Andrea Hlavackova and Lucie Hradecka (2), Czech Republic, 64, 7-5. Sara Errani and Roberta Vinci (1), Italy, def. Nadia Petrova, Russia, and Katarina Srebotnik (3), Slovenia, 6-3, 5-7, 6-3. Legends Doubles Round Robin Men Over 45 Mansour Bahrami, France, and Pat Cash, Australia, def. Mikael Pernfors and Mats Wilander, Sweden, 4-6, 6-4, 10-7. Andres Gomez, Ecuador, and Mark Woodforde, Australia, def. Peter McNamara, Australia, and Michael Stich, Germany, 6-3, 6-3. Women Lindsay Davenport, United States, and Martina Hingis, Switzerland, def. Nathalie Tauziat and Sandrine Testud, France, 6-2, 6-2. Iva Majoli, Croatia, and Conchita Martinez, Spain, def. Mary Joe Fernandez, United States, and Arantxa Sanchez, Spain, walkover. Junior Singles Boys Semifinals Christian Garin, Chile, def. Borna Coric (8), Croatia, 7-5, 6-2. Alexander Zverev (4), Germany, def. Nikola Milojevic (2), Serbia, 7-5, 6-1. Girls Semifinals Belinda Bencic (2), Switzerland, def. Louisa Chirico, United States, 7-5, 3-6, 6-3. Antonia Lottner (5), Germany, def. Ana Konjuh (1), Croatia, 6-0, 6-1. Junior Doubles Boys Semifinals Kyle Edmund, Britain, and Frederico Ferreira Silva (3), Portugal, def. Benjamin Bonzi and Quentin Halys, France, 6-3, 6-7 (5), 10-3. Christian Garin and Nicolas Jarry (5), Chile, def. Maximilian Marterer, Germany, and Lucas Miedler, Austria, 6-1, 2-6, 10-5. Girls Semifinals Domenica Gonzalez, Ecuador, and Beatriz Haddad Maia, Brazil, def. Alice Matteucci, Italy, and Nina Stojanovic (8), Serbia, 7-5, 6-7 (6), 10-7. Barbora Krejcikova and Katerina Siniakova (2), Czech Republic, def. Ana Konjuh, Croatia, and Carol Zhao (3), Canada, 6-2, 6-4. Wheelchair Singles Men Championship Stephane Houdet (2), France, def. Shingo Kunieda (1), Japan, 7-5, 5-7, 7-6 (5). Women Championship Sabine Ellerbrock, Germany, def. Jiske Griffioen (2), Netherlands, 6-3, 3-6, 6-1. Wheelchair Doubles Men Championship Stephane Houdet, France, and Shingo Kunieda (1), Japan, def. Gordon Reid, Britain, and Ronald Vink (2), Netherlands, 3-6, 6-4, 10-6. Women Championship Jiske Griffioen and Aniek Van Koot (1), Netherlands, def. Sabine Ellerbrock, Germany, and Sharon Walraven, Netherlands, 6-2, 6-3.


THE Garden City Telegram

SATURDAY, June 8, 2013

D3

Nadal outlasts Djokovic in French Open epic Defending champ to play fellow Spaniard Ferrer for the title.

Associated Press

Spain’s Rafael Nadal celebrates winning against Serbia’s Novak Djokovic in their semifinal match Friday at the French Open in Paris. Nadal won in five sets 6-4, 3-6, 6-1, 6-7 (3), 9-7.

PARIS (AP) — Rafael Nadal won an epic semifinal against Novak Djokovic at the French Open to remain the King of Clay — for another couple of days, at least. The seven-time champion twice let a lead slip away in the fourth set Friday, then came from behind in the fifth to beat the No. 1-ranked Djokovic 6-4, 3-6, 6-1, 6-7 (3), 9-7. Djokovic blew an easy overhead on the opening point in the final game and went on to lose serve at love, sending his final forehand long. “I was ready for the fight,� Nadal said. “I really fought a lot.� He improved to 58-1 at Roland Garros, including five wins over Djokovic. The French Open remains the only major title Djokovic has yet to win. “It has been an unbelievable match to be part of, but all I can feel now is disappointment,� Djokovic said. “I wanted this title so much.� Instead, Nadal needs one more win to become the first man to win eight titles at the same Grand Slam event. On Sunday, he’ll play fellow Spaniard David Ferrer, who advanced to his first Grand Slam final by beating Frenchman JoWilfried Tsonga 6-1, 7-6 (3), 6-2. The No. 4-seeded Ferrer had

been 0-5 in major semifinals. He has played in more major tournaments — 42 — to reach his first final than any other man in the Open era. Ferrer has swept all 18 of his sets in the tournament. “I am not tired,� he said. “This is very important playing against Rafa, because I need to be 100 percent to do well against him.� In the women’s final today, No. 1-ranked Serena Williams seeks her first French Open title since 2002 when she faces defending champion Maria Sharapova, who is 2-13 against her nemesis. They’ll be hard-pressed to generate the sort of seesaw drama created by Nadal and Djokovic. In the fourth set Nadal twice was a break up, and twice found himself two points from victory before Djokovic summoned his best tennis of the day. “Djokovic,� Nadal said, “always come back.� The Serb had said the French Open was his most important tournament this year, and he wanted to win it for his childhood coach, who died in Belgrade last week. On the verge of defeat, he dug in and won 10 of the final 13 points in the fourth set to even the match. A rattled Nadal double-faulted in the first game of the final set, and Djokovic broke to take the lead. But there were more plot twists to come. Serving at 4-3 in the fifth set, Djokovic came forward and successfully hit a smash volley, but his

momentum carried him into the net and the chair umpire awarded the point to Nadal. “I should have won that point in 99.9 percent of cases,� Djokovic said. “It was a bit unfortunate.� Three points later he drove a forehand into the net to lose the game and even the score once again. The weather, warm and sunny, Djokovic began complaining during changeovers that the clay had become too dry. He wanted the court watered, and summoned the tournament referee to argue his case, but officials declined his request. “It got very dry and it was very slippery,� Djokovic said. “I think that it’s wrong what they did.� The conditions didn’t hamper the quality of play. As the tension built, Nadal pulled off the shot of the day — and perhaps the tournament — in the 14th game of the set. Retreating for a lob, he flicked the ball on the run between his legs with his back to the net. That left Djokovic with an easy overhead, but he dumped it in the net, and the crowd roared at the improbable sequence. The mistake didn’t cost Djokovic, who won the game on the next point for 7-all. But the next blown overhead did, and it appeared to shake him as he lost the next three points and the match. “A real emotional match,� Nadal said. “These kind of matches make the sport big.�

Rodeo: Pojanowski Belmont Stakes could be wet, wide-open race rides Magnum Force to bull riding lead Continued from Page D1

But I didn’t want to do surgery because of the NFR (National Finals Rodeo, in December, in Las Vegas). No sense in doing the surgery. I just get it wrapped up and go ride.� In a sport where rides and good scores can be rare, Benton had nearly a 40 percent success rate in 2012. But the injury has not slowed him in 2013. He had won a CBR event in Del Rio, Texas, at the end of April and then won at Cloverdale, Canada, in midMay. “You just want to stay consistent on the ball and make sure you stay on,� Benton said. “I had no idea what he (Lucifer’s Leap) looked like. You just get yourself on the bull, and hope for the best. I spurred him a bit at the end and tried to stay in the middle.� Benton is on his way to the National College Finals Rodeo in Casper, Wyo., which gets under way on Sunday. Taylor Jacob, a Texas A&M team member, continues to lead the women’s barrel racing with a time of 17.26 seconds while Lizzy Ehr of Abilene, Texas, had Friday’s top time of 17.52, moving her into second place ahead of Brittany Pozzi of Victoria, Texas. For Holcomb’s Dalton Davis, a sophomore at Garden City Community College, Friday’s saddle bronc event provided the Broncbuster team member with a good warm-up before he, too, headed off to Wyoming for the CNFR. He scored a 78 on Wasabi, but was just out of the top, which was at 80 points. “I like riding here because it’s a really good rodeo,� Davis said. “They’ve got good stock. It was a decent ride, but he (Wasabi) was a little slow at the start and wasn’t jumping.�

But Davis is looking forward to his CNFR competition this coming week. “I’m really excited,� Davis said. “Jim Boy (GCCC coach Jim Boy Hash) has done a ton for me, so this is really a nice opportunity for me to give something back to him.� Ty and Casey Breuer of Mandan, N.D., remained on top of the bareback riding with 83 points. Ethan McNeill of Gransville, Utah, cracked the top 10 with a score of 74 points to move into seventh while Taylor Price of Huntsville, Texas, shared eighth place with Frank Morton of Wright at 69 points. Louie Brunson of Interior, S.D., is still in first in the saddle bronc riding with 85 points. Jessica Miller of Madison clocked 2.7 s to take the lead in the ladies breakaway roping competition while Garden City’s Kashlee Schweer was second at 2.9 seconds. Another Garden Citian, Shelly Meier, was fourth at 3.2 seconds, and Mandy Michaelis of Lakin was sixth at 4.2 seconds. Justin Smith of Castle, Okla., and Seth Brockman of Wheatland, Wyo., share first in the steer wrestling with times of 4.2 seconds. Cody McCartney of Ottawa Lake, Mich., and Charley Russell of Shamrock, Texas, are first and second in tie down roping with times of 9.8 and 9.9 seconds. In the team roping, Chase Wiley of Charlotte, Texas, and Ace Pearce of Washington, Texas, still lead at 4.9 seconds, while Bubba Buckaloo of Kingston, Okla., and Cole Davison of Madisonville, Texas, moved into second with a time of 5.0 seconds. The PRCA Rodeo concludes at 7 tonight, and the rodeo will honor local veterans and military organizations.

NEW YORK (AP) — Orb and Oxbow. Oxbow and Orb. Anyway you draw it up, there will not be a Triple Crown on the line in the $1 million Belmont Stakes on Saturday. Even without a Triple try, the Belmont is still an intriguing race. It matches Kentucky Derby winner Orb against Preakness winner Oxbow, Todd Pletcher sending out a record five horses and one of the largest fields in the 145-year history of a race also known as the “Test of the Champion.� There are many story lines that will unfold when the 14-horse field begins its 1 1/2 -mile run around Belmont Park on what could be a wet track following 24 hours of rain. Orb is looking to bounce back after his fourth-place finish in the Preakness, following his 2 1/2 -length win in the Derby. Oxbow is out to show his wire-to-wire Preakness win was not a fluke. Todd Pletcher’s quintet includes the filly Unlimited Budget, with Rosie Napravnik looking to become the second female jockey to win a Triple Crown race. Up-and-coming Freedom Child joins the Triple Crown fray for the first time off his 13 1/4

-length romp in the Peter Pan Stakes four weeks ago over a sloppy track at Belmont Park. And Kenny McPeek, who won the 2002 Belmont with Sarava at record odds of 70-1, is back again with 30-1 shot Frac Daddy. “There’s probably a few in there that don’t figure, but they’ve got just as much license to run as Orb or Oxbow or anybody else,� said Hall of Fame trainer Shug McGaughey, whose Derby winner is the 3-1 morning-line favorite. “I’m not going to worry about because it makes this a good, solid field.� Revolutionary is the second choice at 9-2, with Oxbow third at 5-1 and Unlimited Budget and Freedom Child each at 8-1 in the field of 14 — the largest since 1996 and one shy of the record set in 1983. Weather could be a factor. A steady rain began early Friday and was expected to continue through Saturday morning, with as much as 3 inches predicted by the National Weather Service. The track was rolled and sealed after Thursday’s

Garden City Community College is accepting bid proposals for:

12-15 Passenger Vans

Bids are being sought for one or two new 12-15 passenger vans.

Deadline:

Written bids should be received by mail, fax or e-mail no later than 2 p.m. Wednesday, June 12, 2013. Proposals should be clearly marked “Passenger Vans� and submitted to the office of: Dee Wigner, Executive Vice President Garden City Community College 801 Campus Drive Garden City, KS 67846 620-276-9577 (Phone) 620-276-0464 (Fax) dee.wigner@gcccks.edu For complete details and specifications, please contact Wigner.

PETS OF THE WEEK

Charge. The big colt may not have the nifty moves of some of his rivals, but Lukas says once he builds up a head of steam “he’s dangerous.� Palace Malice is among Pletcher’s squad — the others are the filly, Revolutionary, Overanalyze and Midnight Taboo. Despite only one win in seven starts, Palace Malice, the son of two-time Horse of the Year Curlin, looks to have the potential to win at the top level. “He’s always impressed us in his training, and he’s shown hints of that in some of his races although he hasn’t completely followed through and won a big race that we feel like he’s capable of doing,� said Pletcher. “We think he’s well meant for this race.� The Belmont is known as a rider’s race because it takes a savvy jockey familiar with the lay of the land to navigate the nation’s only 1 1/2 -mile oval. Belmont Park is like the Grand Canyon of racetracks, a much wider track than Churchill Downs or Pimlico, with long, sweeping turns.

REQUEST FOR BIDS

Garden City Community College is accepting bid proposals for:

REQUEST FOR BIDS

GCCC reserves the right to reject any or all bids.

races to compress the dirt so water doesn’t seep into the racing surface. If the track comes up wet, Orb, Golden Soul and Revolutionary — the first three finishers in the Derby run over a sloppy track at Churchill Downs — should be able to deal with it. So, too, should Freedom Child. “I like what I’m seeing,� said Freedom Child’s trainer Tom Albertrani. “I’m getting all the good signs. He couldn’t be doing any better.� The last Belmont run over the slop was two years ago when 24-1 long shot Ruler On Ice won. It also was the most recent Derby winner vs. Preakness winner matchup, with Preakness winner Shackleford fifth and Derby winner Animal Kingdom sixth. In addition to Frac Daddy, there are few other long shots worth a look in 20-1 Will Take Charge and 15-1 Palace Malice. D. Wayne Lukas will be out to win his 15th Triple Crown race with Oxbow, and he also trains Will Take

224294

Cable or Satellite television system and service Bids are being sought for a cable or satellite television system installation to include 215 wiring drops, head-end distribution system and monthly service for approximately 215 outlets.

Deadline:

Written bids should be received by mail, fax or e-mail no later than 2 p.m. Wednesday, June 12, 2013. Proposals should be clearly marked “Cable Television� and submitted to the office of: Dee Wigner, Executive Vice President Garden City Community College 801 Campus Drive Garden City, KS 67846 620-276-9577 (Phone) 620-276-0464 (Fax) dee.wigner@gcccks.edu For complete details and specifications, please contact Wigner. GCCC reserves the right to reject any or all bids. 224293

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

Adopt a pet today! 620-276-1152

Check out the FCHS website at finneycohs.org

PROUD SPONSOR of the Humane Society

Vicki Bulkley

Owner/Broker 272-4032

Cesar

Dozier

Goetz

Reggie

Willow

German Shepherd Mix -BSHF r "EVMU r .BMF

Doberman Mix

Miniature Pinscher Mix

Boxer Mix

German Shepherd Mix

-BSHF r "EVMU r .BMF

4NBMM r "EVMU r .BMF

.FEJVN r "EVMU r .BMF

-BSHF r "EVMU r 'FNBMF

Many other animals are available for adoption at the

Animal Shelter at 124 Fleming • Tues.-Sat. 12-6pm

with a SMILE S LD XXX )FSJUBHF3FBMUZ CJ[ t


SATURDAY, June 8, 2013

the Garden City Telegram

Business Briefs

Service Directory

K-State extension awarded grant

Mid-Kansas holds annual meeting HAYS — Mid-Kansas Electric Company LLC held its sixth annual meeting May 18 in Ulysses. The board of directors received the annual report of the company, which is available on the Mid-Kansas website, and elected officers for the upcoming year. Stuart Lowry, MidKansas’ president and chief executive officer, discussed the company’s current projects and future plans, including regulatory challenges, transmission policy and the transition to the Southwest Power Pool Integrated Marketplace in March 2014. Following the board meeting, an organizational meeting was conducted by the board of directors to elect leadership for the coming year. Steve Epperson, a representative of Southern Pioneer Electric Company, was elected chairman of the board of directors. Bruce Mueller, a representative of Wheatland Electric

DAZZLIN’ DOGS PET GROOMING We make dogs look dazzlin’ !

Julia A. Goetz Certified Groomer (620) 277-2130 (620) 640-1370

GARDEN CITY HANDYMAN SERVICES (620) 640-2010

Call Tim at (620) 521-2181

NEED ELDERCARE? I am a mature woman with a flexible schedule that is available to work in your home 7 days a week. Garden City area. 720-666-1378.

Licensed & Insured

J&H Upholstery

Courtesy Photo

Pictured from left to right are Maria Gutierrez, KSU Extension Agent Bertha Mendoza, Yazmin Ruvalcaba, Camila Soltero, Yadira Soltero and KSU Extension Agent Debra Bolton. Holding the check are Wheatland Electric representative Shawn Powelson, left, and Mendoza. Cooperative Inc., was elected vice chairman. “In a relatively short period of time, Mid-Kansas has made great strides in bolstering its generation and transmission assets to better serve our members,� Lowry said. “These projects would not have been possible without the expertise and visionary approach of the Mid-Kansas board, who base each decision they make on what is in the best interest of the members they serve.� Mid-Kansas Electric Company LLC is a coalition of five rural electric cooperatives and one wholly owned subsidiary that serve approximately 200,000 Kansans throughout 33 counties. Mid-Kansas’ members include Lane-Scott Electric Cooperative Inc., Dighton; Prairie Land Electric Cooperative Inc., Norton; Southern Pioneer Electric Company, Ulysses; The Victory Electric Cooperative Association Inc., Dodge City; Western Cooperative Electric Association Inc., WaKeeney; and Wheatland Electric Cooperative Inc., Scott City, Kansas. For more information, visit the Mid-Kansas website at www.midkansas. net.

New Boston earns award MANHATTAN — New Boston Creative Group was honored for its work with Great Bend Regional Hospital by the 2013 Aster Awards for medical marketing. The Manhattan-based marketing company garnered a gold for the hospital’s patient handbook. The company was also awarded for its efforts with Meadowlark Hills Retirement Community in Manhattan, earning a gold for its 30-second television commercial, and a silver for the complete “Live Your Way, Every Day� campaign. Kristin Brighton, New Boston principal, teamed up with Great Bend Regional Hospital on its patient handbook. “We so enjoyed working with Great Bend Regional Hospital and taking photos of every aspect of their business,� Brighton said. “The patient guidebook hopefully provides patients and their families with a resource to easily find all the information they need to guide their stay, and the original photog-

REQUEST FOR BIDS

Garden City Community College is accepting bid proposals for:

Mezzanine Repairs

Bids are being sought for repairs to the east dormitory mezzanine walkway.

Deadline:

MJT CONSTRUCTION

Roofing, Siding, Remodeling, Windows, doors & concrete. Free estimates.

Written bids should be received by mail, fax or e-mail no later than 2 p.m. Wednesday, June 12, 2013. Proposals should be clearly marked “Mezzanine Repairs� and submitted to the office of: Dee Wigner, Executive Vice President Garden City Community College 801 Campus Drive Garden City, KS 67846 620-276-9577 (Phone) 620-276-0464 (Fax) dee.wigner@gcccks.edu For complete details and specifications, please contact Wigner. GCCC reserves the right to reject any or all bids. 224291

raphy really makes it enjoyable to use. It was just a stellar project, and it looks like the Aster judges agreed.� The Aster Awards program is a nationwide competition judged by an expert panel, and winners are published in Marketing Healthcare Today magazine. More information on the awards is available at www. asterawards.com. New Boston Creative Group is a full-service marketing and communications agency that produces logos, websites, advertisements and commercials, brochures, publications, training materials and full-scale promotional campaigns. In addition to writing, editing and graphic design services. Local clients include Western Kansas Community Foundation, Garnand Funeral Home, the Lee Richardson Zoo, Keller Leopold Insurance, Western State Bank and the Finney County Convention and Visitors Bureau. The company also provides communications consulting, brand development, and strategic planning services to businesses, communities and nonprofit

organizations.

G.C. Homestead Assisted Living earns award Garden City Homestead Assisted Living has been recognized as a 2013 recipient of the Bronze– Commitment to Quality award for its dedication to improving the lives of residents through improved quality care. The award is one of three distinctions possible through the National Quality Award program, presented by the American Health Care Association and National Center for Assisted Living. Implemented by AHCA/ NCAL in 1996, the National Quality Award Program is centered on the core values and criteria of the Baldrige Performance Excellence Program. The program assists providers of longterm and post-acute care services in achieving their performance excellence goals. The award will be presented during AHCA/NCAL’s 64th Annual Convention and Exposition set for Oct. 6-9 in Phoenix, Ariz.

REQUEST FOR BIDS

Garden City Community College is accepting bid proposals for:

Scoring/press table with LED display

Bids are being sought for a bleacher model scoring/press table with LED display.

Deadline:

Written bids should be received by mail, fax or e-mail no later than 2 p.m. Wednesday, June 12, 2013. Proposals should be clearly marked “Scoring Table� and submitted to the office of: Dee Wigner, Executive Vice President Garden City Community College 801 Campus Drive Garden City, KS 67846 620-276-9577 (Phone) 620-276-0464 (Fax) dee.wigner@gcccks.edu For complete details and specifications, please contact Wigner. GCCC reserves the right to reject any or all bids. 224292

Dining Room Chairs Tractor Seats, Motorcycle Seats & More! 3410 N. 8th, GC (620) 521-7073

NEXSTEP LAWN CARE

LAWN MOWING & TRIMMING Good Rates (620) 272-2839 LAWN RANGER Landscaping, Stone Edging, Planting, Mulch & Rock Laying, Shrub Trimming, Mowing & Fertilizing. Insured. Free Estimates. Call Alonzo 290-9406.

Full Service Mowing & Trimming Yard Clean-Up Vi / MC Accepted (620) 276-6699

51546

SCOTT CITY — Wheatland Electric Inc. announced that its Sharing Success Fund, managed by the Scott Community Foundation, has awarded a $1,000 grant to K-State Research and ExtensionSouthwest Area Office in Garden City. KSRE submitted its grant request to help to fund its Woman to Women leadership program. The program is designed to empower women who live in poverty to see themselves as leaders and equip them for selfimprovement. Participants in the program meet weekly to work on skills, such as computer word processing, resume building, exercise, parenting, self-expression, chronic disease prevention/ management skills, volunteer opportunities, financial resource management and more. The grant will be used to provide educational materials, funding for field trips and to bring in specialized speakers and facilitators to the community. KSRE contributes to fighting poverty in Southwest Kansas by empowering low-income individuals and families and providing them with valuable information to help them improve their quality of life. KSRE provides information and hands-on activities to help people become self-sufficient and furthermore, to become community leaders. In addition to these efforts, KSRE provides a number of other services to the community and agricultural sector. The extension office serves as a source of information for a wide variety of topics including; lawn and gardens, 4-H and youth development, crops and livestock and health/nutrition just to name a few. The Scott Community Foundation began formally accepting applications for grants from the Wheatland Electric Sharing Success Fund from non-profit organizations on Dec. 1, 2012. The program will run until the funds are exhausted. Non-profit groups interested in receiving funding from the Wheatland Electric Sharing Success Fund should contact the Scott Community Foundation at (620) 872-3790 for further details.

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

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Stocks

THE GARDEN C TY TELEGRAM

Market Summary

New York Stock Exchange Name Last Chg Wkly A-B-C ABB Ltd 21.85 +.06 +5.1 ACE Ltd 89.88 +.20 +12.6 ADT Cp n 40.21 -.38 -13.5 AES Corp 12.51 +.31 +16.9 AFLAC u57.03 +1.34 +7.4 AK Steel 3.34 -.13 -27.4 AT&T Inc 35.45 +.46 +5.2 AbtLab s 37.51 +.84 +19.7 AbbVie n 44.00 +1.31 +28.8 Accenture 80.90 -1.21 +21.7 AMD 3.91 -.09 +62.9 Aetna 60.27 -.11 +30.1 Agilent 45.15 -.30 +10.3 Agnico g 31.07 -.94 -40.8 AlcatelLuc u1.84 +.16 +32.4 Alcoa 8.33 -.17 -4.0 Allergan 99.75 +.26 +8.7 Allstate 47.46 -.78 +18.1 AlphaNRs 6.39 -.29 -34.4 AlpAlerMLP 17.59 +.20 +10.3 Altria 36.15 +.05 +15.0 AmBev 37.01 -1.06 -11.9 Ameren 34.91 +.87 +13.6 AMovilL 20.19 +.28 -12.7 AEagleOut 19.90 +.11 -3.0 AEP 46.15 +.33 +8.1 AmExp u78.04 +2.33 +36.2 AmIntlGrp 45.28 +.82 +28.3 AmTower 78.77 +.93 +1.9 AmeriBrgn 52.94 -1.14 +22.6 Anadarko 87.98 +.51 +18.4 AnglogldA 16.81 -1.33 -46.4 Annaly 13.49 -.09 -3.9 Apache 84.73 +2.60 +7.9 ArcelorMit 12.56 -.10 -28.1 ArchCoal 4.91 -.25 -32.9 ArchDan 32.91 +.68 +20.2 ArmourRsd 4.95 -.21 -23.5 AssuredG 22.97 +.35 +61.4 AuRico g 5.11 +.01 -37.5 Avon 23.70 +.13 +65.0 BB&T Cp 33.23 +.31 +14.9 BHP BillLt 64.21 -1.11 -18.1 BP PLC 42.95 +.04 +3.1 BakrHu 46.49 +1.01 +13.8 BcoBrad pf 15.03 -1.09 -4.8 BcoSantSA 7.22 +.02 -11.6 BcoSBrasil 6.94 -.19 -4.7 BkofAm 13.38 -.27 +15.2 BkNYMel 29.85 -.21 +16.1 Barclay 19.18 -.01 +10.7 BariPVix rs 19.04 -.10 -40.1 BarrickG 20.25 -.87 -42.2 Baxter 69.97 +.13 +5.0 BerkH B u115.31 +1.24 +28.6 BestBuy u27.36 -.02 +130.9 Blackstone 21.67 -.22 +39.0 BlockHR 29.84 +.57 +60.7 Boeing u102.49 +3.47 +36.0 BostonSci 9.30 +.06 +62.3 BrMySq u47.50 +1.49 +47.3 CBL Asc 22.99 ... +8.4 CBRE Grp 23.44 +.26 +17.8 CBS B 48.03 -1.35 +26.2 CMS Eng 27.04 +.09 +10.9 CNO Fincl u12.67 +.36 +35.8 CST Brds n 32.79 +2.40 +15.1 CSX 25.02 -.19 +26.8 CVS Care 58.49 +.91 +21.0 CYS Invest d10.44 +.16 -11.6 CblvsnNY 14.65 -.47 -1.9 Calpine 20.84 +.53 +14.9 Cameron 62.55 +1.68 +10.8 CampSp 44.67 +1.86 +28.0 CdnNRs gs 29.16 -.61 +1.0 CapOne 62.33 +1.40 +7.6 CardnlHlth 46.90 -.06 +13.9 CareFusion u38.17 +1.42 +33.6 Carnival 32.71 -.39 -11.0 Caterpillar 84.65 -1.15 -5.5 Cemex 10.95 -.55 +15.4 Cemig pf 9.80 -.62 -9.8 CenterPnt 23.39 +.21 +21.5 CntryLink 35.43 +1.28 -9.4 ChesEng 22.00 +.16 +32.4 Chevron 121.70 -1.05 +12.5 Chicos 17.93 -.13 -2.9 Chimera 3.10 +.05 +18.8 CinciBell 3.29 -.15 -40.0 Citigroup 51.60 -.39 +30.4 CliffsNRs 17.94 -.10 -53.5 Coach 58.75 +.83 +5.8 CobaltIEn 26.35 +.41 +7.3 CocaCola s 41.41 +1.42 +14.2 CocaCE 37.04 +.08 +16.7 ColgPalm s 59.10 +1.26 +13.1 ColonPT 23.43 +1.32 +9.6 Comerica 38.86 -.63 +28.1 CompSci 46.74 +2.13 +16.7 ConAgra 33.75 +.06 +14.4 ConocoPhil 62.32 +.98 +7.5 ConEd 57.43 +.36 +3.4 ConstellA 53.34 +.33 +50.7 Corning 15.38 +.01 +21.9 Covidien 64.76 +1.16 +12.2 CSVelIVSt 22.48 +.05 +35.5 CSVS2xVx rs 2.75 -.04 -70.6 CrwnCstle 70.28 -.97 -2.6 D-E-F DCT Indl 7.60 +.22 +17.1 DDR Corp 17.51 +.05 +11.8 DR Horton 23.56 -.80 +19.1 Danaher 62.10 +.28 +11.1 DeanFds 10.25 -.24 +31.6 Deere 86.81 -.30 +.5 DelphiAuto u50.40 +1.59 +31.8 DeltaAir 18.38 +.37 +54.8 DenburyR 18.79 +.44 +16.0 DevonE 56.85 ... +9.2 DigitalRlt d60.40 -.51 -11.0 DxFinBr rs 32.39 -.56 -46.4 DxSCBr rs 31.33 -.43 -42.0 DxGldBll rs 10.53 -.63 -80.8 DxFnBull s 67.80 +.66 +69.6 DirSPBear 10.32 -.28 -39.0 DxSCBull s 49.05 +.38 +53.4 DxSPBull s 44.64 +.89 +52.8 Discover 48.66 +1.25 +26.2 Disney 64.85 +1.77 +30.2 DollarGen 51.09 -1.71 +15.9 DomRescs 55.64 -.35 +7.4 DowChm 34.35 -.11 +6.3 DuPont 55.44 -.35 +23.3 DukeEn rs 67.69 +.76 +6.1

DukeRlty 16.17 -.40 +16.6 E-CDang u7.34 +.92 +76.9 EMC Cp 24.74 -.02 -2.2 Eaton 65.62 -.44 +21.1 EdisonInt 47.61 +1.67 +5.4 Elan 13.44 +.78 +31.6 EldorGld g 7.85 -.12 -39.1 EmersonEl 57.63 +.17 +8.8 EnCana g 18.51 -.52 -6.3 EqtyRsd 56.69 +.14 ... ExactTgt u33.62 +10.61 +68.1 ExcoRes 8.29 +.16 +22.5 Exelon 31.36 +.02 +5.4 ExxonMbl 91.45 +.98 +5.7 FedExCp 99.78 +3.44 +8.8 FidlNFin 25.76 -.55 +9.4 FstHorizon 11.33 -.15 +14.3 FirstEngy 38.94 -.07 -6.8 FootLockr 34.93 +.61 +8.7 FordM u15.73 +.05 +21.5 ForestOil 4.51 -.04 -32.6 FBHmSec 40.06 -2.22 +37.1 FMCG 30.92 -.13 -9.6 Fusion-io 14.01 -.46 -38.9 G-H-I Gafisa SA 3.38 -.12 -27.3 GameStop 36.75 +3.59 +46.5 Gannett 20.79 -.51 +15.4 Gap u42.09 +1.54 +35.6 GenElec 23.86 +.54 +13.7 GenGrPrp 20.78 +.25 +4.7 GenMills 48.08 +1.00 +19.0 GenMotors u35.03 +1.14 +21.5 Genworth 10.92 +.11 +45.4 Gerdau d6.06 -.05 -32.6 GiantInter u7.33 -1.13 +35.5 GlaxoSKln 51.71 -.06 +19.0 GolLinhas 3.95 -.51 -39.8 GoldFLtd 6.07 ... -43.5 Goldcrp g 28.55 -.56 -22.2 GoldmanS u166.01 +3.93 +30.1 GraphPkg 7.50 -.19 +16.1 GpFSnMx n 15.45 -.37 -4.5 HCA Hldg 39.60 +.54 +31.3 HCP Inc 47.56 +.18 +5.3 HalconRes d5.33 +.05 -23.0 Hallibrtn 43.16 +1.44 +24.4 HarmonyG 4.08 -.10 -54.5 HartfdFn 30.50 -.13 +35.9 HltCrREIT 68.29 +.26 +11.4 HltMgmt u14.01 +.22 +50.3 HeclaM 3.55 -.28 -39.1 Heinz 72.49 +.13 +25.7 Hersha 5.61 -.11 +12.2 Hertz 25.58 -.25 +57.2 Hess 69.18 +1.77 +30.6 HewlettP 24.81 +.39 +74.1 HollyFront 47.26 -2.24 +1.5 HomeDp 78.74 +.47 +27.3 HonwllIntl 79.08 +.62 +24.6 HostHotls 17.42 -.37 +11.2 HovnanE 6.14 ... -12.3 Huntsmn 18.48 -.97 +16.2 IAMGld g 5.29 +.01 -53.9 ING 9.17 -.13 -3.4 iShGold 13.40 -.06 -17.7 iSAstla 23.88 -.53 -5.0 iShBraz 49.73 -1.16 -11.1 iSCan 27.66 -.07 -2.6 iShEMU 35.19 +.21 +5.2 iShGer 26.48 +.33 +7.2 iSh HK 19.20 -.50 -1.1 iShJapn 11.00 +.16 +12.8 iSh SKor 56.51 -1.13 -10.8 iSMalas 16.20 +.20 +7.1 iShMexico 66.29 -2.05 -6.0 iShSing 13.38 -.15 -2.3 iSPacxJpn 45.39 -.96 -3.7 iSTaiwn 13.69 +.05 +.5 iSh UK 18.82 +.05 +4.9 iShSilver 20.86 -.58 -29.0 iShBTips d115.44 -1.00 -4.9 iShChina25 35.67 -.34 -11.8 iSCorSP500 165.62 +1.32 +15.7 iShEMkts 40.69 -.51 -8.3 iShiBxB 116.59 -.90 -3.6 iShB20 T d113.16 -1.01 -6.6 iS Eafe 60.30 +.23 +6.0 iShiBxHYB 92.34 -.10 -1.1 iShMtg 13.73 ... +.4 iSR1KV 85.21 +.62 +17.0 iShR2K 98.20 +.40 +16.5 iShBar3-7 d122.08 -.25 -.9 iShUSPfd 39.82 -.35 +.5 iShREst 68.55 -.14 +6.0 iShDJHm 23.82 -.51 +12.6 ITW 70.70 +.57 +16.3 IngerRd 58.04 +.51 +21.0 IBM 206.35 -1.67 +7.7 IntlGame 17.45 -.43 +23.1 IntPap 45.62 -.53 +14.5 Interpublic 14.66 +.52 +33.0 InvenSense 13.30 +.42 +19.7 Invesco 34.44 +.70 +32.0 InvMtgCap 18.75 +.10 -4.9 IronMtn 28.95 -6.89 -6.8 ItauUnibH 14.73 -.30 -1.5 J-K-L JPMorgCh 54.27 -.32 +24.3 Jabil 19.44 -.62 +.8 JanusCap 8.76 -.01 +2.8 JohnJn 84.91 +.73 +21.1 JohnsnCtl 37.62 +.45 +22.7 JoyGlbl 53.67 -.41 -15.9 JnprNtwk 19.06 +1.33 -3.1 KAR Auct 22.57 -.88 +11.5 KB Home 21.36 -.80 +35.2 KBR Inc 34.53 -1.57 +15.4 KKR 19.56 +.08 +28.4 Kellogg 63.39 +1.34 +13.5 KeyEngy 6.38 -.10 -8.2 Keycorp 10.86 +.08 +29.0 KimbClk 97.12 +1.10 +15.0 Kimco 22.13 -.02 +14.5 KindMorg 39.54 +1.56 +11.9 KindrM wt u5.88 +.25 +55.6 Kinross g 6.27 -.14 -35.5 KodiakO g 8.84 +.06 -.1 Kohls 51.96 +.55 +20.9 KrispKrm u18.04 +.72 +92.3 Kroger 34.56 +.89 +32.8 L Brands 50.88 +1.17 +8.1 LVSands 57.27 -.63 +24.1 LeggMason 34.06 -.85 +32.4 LennarA 38.60 -.72 -.2

LexRltyTr 12.23 -.36 +17.0 LightBox n ud12.53 ... +7.9 LillyEli 52.49 -.67 +6.4 LincNat 35.89 +.23 +38.6 LinkedIn 170.70 +3.17 +48.7 LloydBkg u3.89 +.16 +21.6 Lorillard s 43.61 +1.17 +12.1 LaPac 16.73 -.84 -13.4 Lowes 41.60 -.51 +17.1 LyonBas A u64.87 -1.78 +13.6 M-N-0 MBIA 14.00 -.25 +78.3 MFA Fncl 8.83 +.05 +8.9 MGIC 6.12 -.06 +130.1 MGM Rsts 14.95 -.22 +28.4 Macys 48.61 +.27 +24.6 MagHRes 4.05 +.62 +1.5 Manitowoc 19.70 -1.31 +25.6 Manulife g 16.00 +.20 +17.7 MarathnO 34.73 +.34 +13.3 MarathPet 83.63 +1.13 +32.7 MktVGold 28.99 -.51 -37.5 MV OilSvc 43.86 +.63 +13.5 MV Semi u38.31 +.02 +18.5 MktVRus 25.38 +.08 -15.1 MktVJrGld 11.78 -.24 -40.5 MarIntA 41.66 -.35 +11.8 MarshM 40.45 +.43 +17.3 Masco 20.21 -.81 +21.9 McDrmInt 9.26 -.29 -16.0 McDnlds 98.28 +1.71 +11.4 McEwenM 2.44 -.11 -36.3 Mechel d2.91 -.09 -58.0 Medtrnic 52.08 +1.07 +27.0 Merck u48.19 +1.49 +17.7 MetLife 45.06 +.85 +36.8 MKors 62.69 -.13 +22.8 MitsuUFJ 6.01 +.07 +10.9 MobileTele 19.00 -.27 +1.9 Molycorp 5.92 -.65 -37.3 Monsanto 101.65 +1.01 +7.8 MorgStan u27.00 +1.10 +41.2 MotrlaSolu 56.94 -1.02 +2.3 NRG Egy 27.10 +1.58 +17.9 NV Energy 23.60 +.16 +30.1 Nabors 16.69 +.72 +15.5 NBGrce rs d5.50 -1.72 -69.3 NOilVarco 70.20 -.10 +2.7 NewResd n 6.55 -.29 -3.1 NY CmtyB 13.22 +.14 +.9 Newcastle 5.56 +.50 +36.6 NewellRub 27.28 +.24 +22.5 NewfldExp 23.54 -.25 -12.1 NewmtM 34.11 -.17 -26.6 NextEraEn 78.80 +3.18 +13.9 NikeB s 62.75 +1.09 +21.6 NobleCorp 39.23 +.48 +12.7 NokiaCp 3.54 +.10 -10.4 Nomura 7.57 -.17 +29.0 NorflkSo 77.41 +.82 +25.2 NStarRlt 8.94 +.51 +27.0 OcciPet 93.12 +1.69 +21.6 OcwenFn 43.92 +1.14 +27.0 OfficeDpt 4.35 -.06 +32.6 Oi SA s d2.26 +.39 -43.6 Omnicom 63.93 +1.80 +28.0 OpkoHlth 6.50 -.11 +35.1 P-Q-R PBF Egy n 27.04 -2.13 -6.9 PG&E Cp 45.30 +.39 +12.7 PNC 71.10 -.54 +21.9 PPL Corp 29.29 -.04 +2.3 Pandora 15.12 -1.90 +64.7 PeabdyE 18.74 -.93 -29.6 Pengrth g 5.18 +.10 +4.2 PennWst g 10.20 +.01 -6.1 Penney 18.73 +1.15 -5.0 PepcoHold 20.62 +.12 +5.2 PepsiCo 82.51 +2.31 +20.6 PetrbrsA 17.66 -.98 -8.5 Petrobras 16.65 -1.12 -14.5 Pfizer 28.26 +1.03 +12.7 PhilipMor 92.09 +1.18 +10.1 Phillips66 65.87 -.70 +24.0 Pier 1 24.13 +.94 +20.6 PitnyBw 14.64 -.04 +37.6 Potash 41.68 -.34 +2.4 PwshDB 26.32 +.46 -5.3 PS SrLoan 24.96 -.12 -.1 PS SP LwV 31.24 +.29 +12.9 PwShPfd 14.53 -.16 -1.0 PrecMxNik 16.28 +.23 +12.7 ProLogis 39.03 -.99 +7.0 ProShtS&P 29.00 -.27 -14.8 ProUltQQQ 69.04 +.22 +26.0 PrUShQQQ 22.60 -.15 -23.8 ProUltSP 80.42 +1.17 +33.3 Pro7-10yrT 54.62 -.34 -3.8 ProUltR2K 61.42 +.50 +34.9 PrUVxST rs 6.25 -.09 -70.1 PrUltCrude 30.21 +2.58 +3.0 ProVixSTF 10.26 -.07 -39.7 ProUltSilv d20.87 -1.23 -52.7 ProctGam 77.75 +.99 +14.5 ProgsvCp 24.79 -.70 +17.5 PrUShSP rs 39.34 -.70 -27.3 PrUShL20 rs 69.15 +1.03 +9.0 ProUSR2K 17.79 -.21 -29.8 PUSSP500 23.22 -.61 -38.5 Prudentl u71.72 +2.75 +34.5 PSEG 32.68 ... +6.8 PulteGrp 21.06 -.53 +16.0 QuantaSvc 27.66 -.71 +1.4 QksilvRes 2.22 ... -22.4 Quiksilvr 6.83 -1.04 +60.7 Rackspace d35.52 -2.01 -52.2 RadianGrp 12.66 -.21 +107.2 RadioShk 3.60 -.10 +69.8 Realogy n 49.41 -2.23 +17.8 RltyInco 44.83 -.62 +11.5 RedHat d46.24 -1.99 -12.7 RegionsFn 9.21 +.08 +29.2 Renren 3.32 +.16 -3.8 RepubSvc 33.92 -.18 +15.6 ReynAmer 47.82 +.34 +15.4 RioTinto 43.35 +.63 -25.4 RiteAid u3.03 +.09 +122.8 RylCarb 33.99 -1.02 ... RoyDShllA 65.21 -1.16 -5.4 Ryland 42.32 -2.96 +15.9 RymanHP 34.27 -3.99 -10.9 S-T-U SAIC 14.94 +.44 +32.0 SpdrDJIA 152.32 +1.22 +16.6 SpdrGold 133.28 -.64 -17.7

SATURDAY June 8 2013

SP Mid 215.28 -.52 +15.9 S&P500ETF 164.80 +1.36 +15.7 SpdrHome 30.51 -.39 +14.7 SpdrS&PBk 28.29 -.05 +18.7 SpdrLehHY 40.24 -.14 -1.2 SpdrS&P RB 32.82 ... +17.3 SpdrRetl 78.32 +.72 +25.6 SpdrOGEx 61.42 +1.03 +13.6 SpdrMetM 36.77 -.88 -18.5 STMicro 9.58 +.28 +32.3 SABESP s 12.24 -.48 -12.1 Safeway 22.71 -.30 +25.5 StJude 43.99 +.76 +21.7 Salesforc s 39.61 -2.72 -5.7 SandRdge 5.05 -.12 -20.5 Schlmbrg 73.93 +1.21 +6.7 Schwab 20.12 +.26 +40.1 SeadrillLtd 40.01 +.36 +8.7 SealAir 24.41 +.52 +39.4 SenHous 26.50 +.65 +12.1 SiderurNac d2.94 -.21 -50.2 SilvWhtn g 23.51 -.21 -34.8 SmithfF 32.82 -.12 +52.2 SonyCp 19.56 -.59 +74.6 SouthnCo 44.44 +.54 +3.8 SwstAirl 13.88 -.25 +35.5 SwstnEngy 38.29 +.60 +14.6 SpectraEn 30.59 +.02 +11.7 SprintNex 7.24 -.06 +27.7 SP Matls 40.18 -.12 +7.0 SP HlthC 48.50 +.39 +21.6 SP CnSt 40.68 +.63 +16.6 SP Consum 56.84 +.72 +19.8 SP Engy 81.31 +.81 +13.8 SPDR Fncl 19.97 +.13 +21.8 SP Inds 43.79 +.26 +15.5 SP Tech 31.73 +.07 +10.0 SP Util 37.97 +.29 +8.7 StdPac 8.71 -.14 +18.5 StarwdHtl 69.17 +.87 +20.6 StateStr 67.44 +1.26 +43.5 StratHotels 8.24 +.20 +28.8 SumitMitsu 8.56 +.49 +16.6 Suncor gs 31.04 +.73 -5.9 SunEdison 8.07 ... +151.4 Suntech .90 -.14 -41.0 SunTrst 32.25 +.16 +13.8 Supvalu 6.33 -.13 +156.3 Synovus 2.73 -.01 +11.4 Sysco 33.76 -.04 +7.6 T-MoblUS n u21.31 -.12 +29.0 TD Ameritr 24.01 +.57 +42.8 TECO 17.50 -.11 +4.4 TJX 50.45 -.16 +18.8 TaiwSemi 18.69 +.03 +8.9 TalismE g 11.61 -.07 +2.5 Target u70.36 +.86 +18.9 TeckRes g 25.17 -1.52 -30.8 Teradyn u17.86 -.08 +5.7 Terex 33.15 -2.72 +17.9 Tesoro 58.68 -2.97 +33.2 TevaPhrm 39.49 +1.29 +5.8 Textron 26.92 -.04 +8.6 ThermoFis 84.58 -3.72 +32.6 3D Sys s 45.23 -3.29 +27.2 3M Co 111.11 +.84 +19.7 TimeWarn 58.77 +.40 +22.9 TollBros 33.57 -.60 +3.8 Transocn 50.68 +.45 +13.5 Travelers 83.44 +.22 +16.2 TrinaSolar 5.70 -.14 +31.3 TwoHrbInv 10.98 -.05 +15.0 TycoIntl s u34.28 +.47 +17.2 Tyson 25.05 +.05 +29.1 UBS AG 18.16 +.63 +15.4 UDR 24.49 +.12 +3.0 US Airwy 17.02 -.55 +26.1 US Silica 21.54 -.55 +28.8 USG 24.95 -2.38 -11.1 UltraPt g 22.27 -.51 +22.8 UndArmr s 59.82 -2.18 +23.3 UnionPac 158.13 +3.51 +25.8 UtdContl 32.94 +.48 +40.9 UPS B 86.37 +.47 +17.1 UtdRentals 51.85 -4.99 +13.9 US Bancrp 35.87 +.81 +12.3 US NGas 20.43 -.88 +8.1 US OilFd 34.16 +1.55 +2.4 USSteel 17.35 -.34 -27.3 UtdTech 94.50 -.40 +15.2 UtdhlthGp 62.57 -.06 +15.4 UnumGrp 28.75 +.27 +38.1 V-W-X-Y-Z Vale SA 14.51 +.11 -30.8 Vale SA pf 13.60 +.12 -33.0 ValeroE 39.57 -1.06 +16.0 VangTSM 84.83 +.56 +15.8 VanS&P500 75.47 +.63 +15.8 VangREIT 70.74 -.04 +7.5 VangDivAp 68.13 +.56 +14.4 VangEmg 41.11 -.43 -7.7 VangEur 51.68 +.32 +5.8 VangFTSE 37.32 +.13 +5.9 VeriFone d17.09 -6.24 -42.4 VerizonCm 50.24 +1.76 +16.1 Visa 179.94 +1.80 +18.7 VMware d71.27 +.15 -24.3 WPX Engy 19.30 +.04 +29.7 WalMart 76.33 +1.49 +11.9 Walgrn 49.42 +1.66 +33.5 WalterEn d15.22 -1.84 -57.6 WsteMInc 40.47 -1.09 +19.9 WeathfIntl 14.12 +.63 +26.2 WellsFargo 41.25 +.70 +20.7 WstnUnion 16.65 +.27 +22.3 Weyerhsr 29.03 -.79 +4.3 WhiteWv n 17.54 +.10 +12.9 WhiteWB n d16.62 +.08 ... WmsCos 35.23 +.40 +7.6 WTJpHedg 44.86 -1.42 +21.6 WT India 17.44 -.21 -10.0 XL Grp 31.31 -.12 +24.9 XcelEngy 29.15 +.43 +9.1 Xerox 9.17 +.38 +34.5 Yamana g 11.49 -.05 -33.2 YingliGrn 2.83 -.02 +20.4 YumBrnds 73.52 +5.77 +10.7 Zoetis n 31.50 -.50 +1.6

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A-B-C ASML Hld 80.59 -.68 +25.2 AcaciaTc 24.95 -.05 -2.8 AcadiaPh u17.01 +2.94 +265.8 Accuray 5.72 +.34 -11.0 Achillion 8.27 -.07 +3.2 ActivsBliz 14.73 +.30 +38.7 AdobeSy 44.12 +1.21 +17.1 Adtran 24.06 +.94 +23.1 AkamaiT 45.26 -.86 +10.6 AlaskCom 1.76 +.12 -9.3 Alexion 94.38 -3.20 +.7 AlignTech 35.45 -.30 +27.7 Alkermes 31.05 -.20 +67.7 AllscriptH 13.71 -.15 +45.5 AlteraCp lf 32.61 -.61 -5.2 Amarin 7.07 +.08 -12.6 Amazon 276.87 +7.67 +10.4 AmbacFn n 25.75 +.55 +28.8 Ambrlla n 16.53 +.36 +48.3 ACapAgy 25.56 -.24 -11.6 AmCapLtd 13.33 ... +10.9 ACapMtg 20.91 -.16 -11.3 ARltCapPr 15.01 -.14 +13.4 Amgen 98.81 -1.72 +14.6 AmkorTch 4.42 -.12 +4.2 Anadigc 2.08 +.02 -17.5 AnalogDev 46.21 +.28 +9.9 AntheraP h .56 -.03 -9.7 ApolloGrp 21.30 +1.31 +1.8 ApolloInv 8.07 -.22 -3.5 Apple Inc 441.81 -7.92 -17.0 ApldMatl u15.49 +.29 +35.4 ArenaPhm 8.69 -.15 -3.7 AresCap 16.92 -.23 -3.3 AriadP 18.89 +.55 -1.5 ArmHld 40.17 -3.71 +6.2 ArrayBio 5.01 -.83 +34.7 Arris 14.73 -.40 -1.4 ArubaNet 14.48 -.45 -30.2 AscenaRtl 18.02 -2.31 -2.4 AsscdBanc 15.33 -.08 +16.8 AstexPhm 4.57 -.28 +57.0 Atmel u8.00 +.13 +22.1 Autodesk 36.65 -1.08 +3.7 AutoData 68.91 +.19 +21.0 Auxilium 15.97 +1.06 -13.9 AvagoTch 37.29 -.44 +17.8 AvanirPhm 3.77 +.45 +44.1 AVEO Ph 2.34 -.22 -70.9 AvisBudg u33.58 +.42 +69.4 Axcelis u1.79 +.19 +29.7 BGC Ptrs 5.85 +.34 +69.1 BMC Sft 45.35 +.05 +14.5 Baidu 102.67 +6.03 +2.4 BallardPw 1.89 +.18 +209.3 Bazaarvce 9.51 +2.02 +1.7 BebeStrs 5.85 +.42 +46.3 BedBath 69.36 +1.11 +24.1 BiogenIdc 225.02 -12.47 +53.7 BioMarin 58.93 -3.77 +19.8 BloominB n u23.59 +.33 +50.8 Broadcom 35.39 -.52 +6.6 BrcdeCm 5.62 +.19 +5.4 BrukerCp 16.40 -.13 +7.6 CA Inc u29.14 +1.82 +32.6 CBOE u41.20 +1.06 +39.9 CH Robins 57.16 +.81 -9.6 CME Grp s u72.00 +4.52 +42.1 CadencePh u7.43 +.78 +55.1 Cadence 15.17 +.04 +12.3 CalaStrTR 10.45 -.20 +6.5 CdnSolar 8.80 +.29 +158.8 CpstnTrb h u1.30 +.14 +46.1 CarlyleGp 26.74 -2.42 +2.7 Catamarn s 50.29 +1.07 +6.8 Cavium 33.11 +.35 +6.1 Celgene 120.41 -3.24 +53.4 CelldexTh u14.57 +1.79 +117.1 CentAl 10.03 +.12 +14.5 Cepheid 34.47 -.29 +1.8 Cerner u99.35 +1.19 +28.2 CharterCm 113.91 +1.91 +49.4 ChkPoint 50.91 +.83 +6.9 CienaCorp u19.75 +3.01 +25.8 CinnFin 46.46 -.88 +18.6 Cirrus 18.10 -.15 -37.5 Cisco u24.49 +.38 +24.6 CitrixSys 63.61 -.77 -3.1 CleanEngy 13.29 +.02 +6.7 Clearwire 4.40 -.08 +52.2 ClovisOnc u71.83 +35.25 +349.0 CognizTech 66.58 +1.93 -9.9 Comcast 41.18 +1.02 +10.2 Comc spcl 39.60 +.77 +10.2 Compuwre 11.09 -.01 +2.0 Conns u53.33 +4.10 +73.9 Copart 32.28 -2.11 +9.4 CorinthC 2.64 +.05 +7.8 Costco 110.58 +.95 +12.0 Cree Inc 62.84 +.49 +84.9 Crocs 17.12 -.52 +19.0 Ctrip.com u33.87 +2.72 +49.5

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51.38 -3.67 +22.2 10.85 -.40 +.1 D-E-F 13.49 +.14 +33.0 3.90 -.09 -26.3 41.41 -.35 +4.5 62.20 +1.01 +24.0 76.39 -2.48 +20.3 39.14 +.60 +7.5 49.69 +1.65 +22.5 u12.49 -.78 +38.9 1.81 -.04 +13.1 41.42 +1.82 +24.8 11.76 +.14 +31.4 51.45 -2.65 +.9 5.97 +.09 -7.6 26.16 -.19 +21.7 u23.61 +.62 +62.6 u38.24 +1.94 +45.8 12.86 -.58 -9.7 25.47 -.06 -20.8 u10.06 -.36 +9.6 4.45 +.17 -15.9 192.57 -10.07 -6.6 11.81 +.14 +16.9 45.80 -3.82 +72.7 4.79 -.05 +4.8 d.20 -.25 -94.1 55.84 -1.67 -9.1 38.62 -.41 -2.4 62.50 +.38 +15.7 78.07 -5.14 -19.6 24.40 +.04 +9.3 23.29 -1.06 -12.5 1.66 +.32 -28.8 48.41 -3.77 +3.8 10.51 +.01 +.9 18.42 +.22 +21.2 14.11 +1.01 -13.4 9.76 -.01 +23.1 53.09 -1.30 +72.1 u18.92 +.05 +33.3 86.52 -.64 +9.5 u7.89 +.43 +27.1 6.35 +.46 +39.3 18.65 -.61 -11.3 105.81 -.39 +13.6 23.74 +.72 -2.4 27.59 -.96 +6.4 4.16 +.12 -2.8 1.48 +.21 +61.4 11.31 -.18 +17.7 G-H-I 4.26 -.19 +40.6 u48.78 +6.67 +42.5 34.84 -.09 -14.5 23.26 +.39 +23.4 1.11 +.02 -21.3 52.89 -1.59 +44.0 2.51 -.20 +10.1 14.82 -.32 +7.3 879.73 +8.51 +24.4 76.09 +2.96 +84.1 6.94 -.75 +42.8 49.66 +1.97 +29.9 6.56 -.50 -2.2 28.08 -.23 -11.5 1.61 +.01 +59.4 45.00 +.52 +25.3 5.98 +.02 -9.0 7.00 +.10 +13.5 6.82 -.38 +184.2 21.63 +.88 +8.1 23.91 +1.07 +26.5 29.65 -.93 +34.8 8.41 -.09 +3.4 73.36 -.30 +22.9 7.68 -.07 +20.2 49.94 +1.46 +5.7 64.40 +5.10 -3.4 52.10 +.11 +8.4 179.19 -.31 +30.6 5.25 +.51 +8.2 69.99 -.33 +25.9 16.58 -1.79 +30.0 18.90 -.07 -7.8 21.40 -.77 +28.8 u11.16 +.63 +92.1 18.13 -8.82 -48.2 36.50 +.14 +20.4 u8.38 -.14 +14.8 24.59 +.31 +19.3 9.92 +.04 +2.4 8.08 -.12 -2.5 59.46 +1.02 ... 13.38 +.03 +20.8 22.76 +1.07 +118.0 J-K-L 6.82 -.52 +59.7 14.65 +1.03 +8.5 2.54 -.05 -20.9 u68.57 +.60 +28.8 6.43 +.22 +12.4

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17.40 +.50 +19.8 56.77 +.48 +18.9 u5.69 +1.94 +42.6 54.37 -.76 +19.6 24.67 +.19 +16.9 37.13 +.05 +31.9 7.36 -.05 +4.1 u48.40 +1.62 +34.0 43.62 -3.11 +12.6 5.20 +.02 +30.3 5.56 -.08 -16.4 2.35 -.03 +6.3 76.24 +2.54 +21.1 71.51 +2.82 +21.7 127.68 +2.82 +16.3 22.85 +.40 +16.1 74.10 ... +51.1 37.09 -.44 +8.1 33.96 +1.06 -3.6 u81.43 +3.62 +6.8 M-N-0 MAKO Srg 12.11 -.25 -5.8 MannKd u7.46 +.80 +222.9 MarvellT 11.24 +.40 +54.8 Mattel 45.18 +.43 +23.4 MattsonT u2.38 +.41 +183.3 MaximIntg 28.48 -1.01 -3.1 Maxygen 2.49 +.13 +1.2 MediCo 33.79 +1.58 +41.0 Medivatn s 52.05 +3.49 +1.7 MelcoCrwn 24.33 +.55 +44.5 MentorGr u19.80 +.86 +16.3 Microchp u36.70 +.22 +12.6 MicronT u12.65 +.97 +99.5 MicrosSys 43.57 +1.37 +2.7 Microsoft u35.67 +.77 +33.5 Mondelez 29.86 +.39 +17.3 MonstrBev 61.62 +7.03 +16.6 MorgHtl u7.78 +1.07 +40.4 Mylan 30.58 +.10 +11.4 MyriadG 32.92 +.82 +20.8 NII Hldg 7.55 -.15 +5.9 NPS Phm u15.87 +.12 +74.4 NXP Semi 30.59 -.26 +16.2 NasdOMX 32.88 +1.42 +31.6 NatPenn 9.96 +.08 +6.9 NektarTh 9.30 -.17 +25.5 NetApp 37.97 +.44 +13.2 Netflix 220.22 -6.03 +137.8 Netlist h 1.08 +.47 +45.9 Neurcrine 12.87 -.06 +72.1 NwLead hlf d.17 -.02 -58.3 NewsCpA 32.17 +.06 +26.1 NewsCpB 32.29 +.05 +23.1 NorTrst 58.23 +.39 +16.1 Novavax 1.88 -.03 -.5 NuanceCm 19.04 +.04 -14.7 Nvidia 14.45 -.03 +17.8 Oclaro 1.18 +.14 -24.8 OmniVisn u18.93 +.46 +34.4 OnSmcnd u8.20 -.36 +16.3 Oncothyr d1.86 +.01 -3.1 OnyxPh 92.30 -3.15 +22.2 OptimerPh 14.88 ... +64.4 Oracle 33.82 +.04 +1.5 Orexigen 6.14 -.18 +17.0 P-Q-R PDL Bio 7.95 -.15 +12.9 PMC Sra 6.24 +.24 +19.8 PTC Inc 25.24 +.13 +12.1 Paccar 54.35 +.75 +20.2 PacSunwr u3.47 +.18 +118.2 PanASlv 12.26 +.05 -34.5 PattUTI 21.09 +.08 +13.2 Paychex 37.15 -.08 +19.5 Pendrell u2.64 +.17 +107.9 PeopUtdF 13.92 +.14 +15.1 PerfectWld u16.40 +.97 +53.6 PetSmart 68.93 +1.43 +.9 PilgrimsP u14.13 +2.17 +95.2 Pixelwrks u3.36 +.35 +50.0 Polycom 11.35 +.02 +8.5 Power-One 6.32 -.01 +53.8 PwShs QQQ 73.39 +.14 +12.7 PriceTR 75.68 -.23 +16.2 ProUPQQQ 72.51 +.34 +40.1 PrUPShQQQ 26.82 -.30 -33.9 ProspctCap 10.26 -.13 -5.6 QIAGEN 18.75 +.07 +3.3 QlikTech 29.72 -1.04 +36.8 Qlogic 10.09 +.35 +3.7 Qualcom 62.10 -1.03 +.4 Questcor 36.29 +2.12 +35.8 RF MicD 5.09 -.43 +13.6 Rambus u8.07 +.19 +65.7 Regenrn 257.50 +15.62 +50.5 RschMotn 13.86 -.10 +16.8 Responsys 11.51 +1.73 +93.1 RigelPh d3.56 -1.06 -45.2 RiverbedT 16.01 +.55 -18.8 RockwllM 4.10 -.02 -49.1 RosettaR 46.72 -.14 +3.1 RossStrs 64.87 +.72 +19.9 Rovi Corp u26.51 +.71 +71.8

S-T-U SBA Com 76.18 +.91 +7.3 SEI Inv 30.13 -.48 +29.1 SLM Cp 23.56 -.03 +37.5 SanDisk 58.31 -.71 +34.0 Santarus 21.24 -1.03 +93.4 Sapient u13.00 +.11 +23.1 Sarepta rs 37.84 +2.49 +46.7 SavientP h .70 +.15 -33.1 SeagateT u44.01 +.93 +44.7 SearsHldgs 47.56 -1.27 +15.0 SeattGen 34.49 +.17 +48.9 SelCmfrt 22.20 +.01 -15.2 Semtech u35.78 -.73 +23.6 Sequenom 4.10 -.04 -13.0 ShandaGm 3.94 -.18 +29.6 Shutterfly u52.19 +3.45 +74.7 Slcnware 5.82 +.07 +9.0 SilvStd g 7.38 -.48 -50.4 Sina 60.03 +2.33 +19.5 Sinclair 25.39 -1.64 +101.2 SiriusXM 3.46 -.03 +19.7 SkywksSol 22.40 -1.46 +10.3 SmithWes 9.21 +.10 +9.1 SodaStrm u72.52 +8.72 +61.6 Sohu.cm 66.00 +1.82 +39.4 SolarCity n 35.97 -9.28 +201.5 SonicCorp u13.79 +.67 +32.5 Sonus u3.50 +.29 +105.9 SpectPh 8.11 -.10 -27.5 SpiritAir 31.07 +.64 +75.2 Splunk 43.42 -3.34 +49.6 Spreadtrm 19.24 -.22 +9.2 Staples 15.48 +.48 +35.8 StarScient 1.51 +.02 -43.7 Starbucks u65.04 +1.90 +21.3 Starz A 22.87 -.21 +72.2 StlDynam 14.83 -.52 +8.0 StewEnt 13.05 +.05 +70.8 Stratasys 78.48 -5.57 -2.1 SunPwr h 19.64 +.33 +249.5 SusqBnc 11.99 -.02 +14.4 Swishr hlf d.93 -.11 -46.9 Symantec 22.19 -.20 +17.9 Synaptics 40.49 -.77 +35.1 SyntaPhm d4.55 -2.83 -49.6 tw telecom 28.74 +.21 +12.8 TakeTwo 16.98 +.34 +54.2 Tellabs 2.13 +.06 -6.6 Tesaro n u39.81 +5.60 +134.9 TeslaMot 102.04 +4.28 +201.3 TexInst 36.18 +.27 +17.1 TexRdhse 24.33 +.68 +44.8 Theravnce 35.51 +.47 +59.7 TibcoSft 21.17 -.16 -3.7 TileShop u28.78 +3.18 +71.0 TiVo Inc u11.10 -1.84 -9.8 TrimbleN s 27.00 -.90 -9.7 TripAdvis 64.05 -.44 +52.8 TriQuint u7.01 -.02 +45.1 TriusTher 8.32 +.65 +74.1 UTiWrldwd 15.41 -.43 +15.0 Ubiquiti 16.02 -2.89 +32.0 UltaSalon 85.65 -5.11 -12.8 Umpqua u14.23 +.71 +20.7 Unilife 3.43 +.12 +51.1 UtdOnln u6.78 -.03 +21.3 UnivDisp 27.89 -1.90 +8.8 UrbanOut 42.58 +.65 +8.2 V-W-X-Y-Z VCA Ant u26.46 +.90 +25.7 ValueClick 25.20 -1.16 +29.8 VandaPhm u9.91 +.78 +167.8 Velti 1.73 -.03 -61.6 VBradley 20.29 -3.21 -19.2 Verisign 46.20 -.84 +19.0 VertxPh 82.81 +2.48 +97.6 ViacomB 67.81 +1.92 +28.6 Vical 3.19 -.32 +9.6 VirgnMda h 51.00 +1.34 +38.8 Vivus 14.26 -.44 +6.3 Vodafone 29.66 +.70 +17.7 Volcano 18.61 -.48 -21.2 WarnerCh 19.52 +.32 +62.1 Wendys Co 5.87 -.08 +24.9 WDigital u64.15 +.83 +51.0 WetSeal u4.98 +.02 +80.4 WholeFd s 51.51 -.35 +13.0 Windstrm d7.89 -.14 -4.7 WisdomTr 12.26 -.18 +100.3 Wynn 137.50 +1.61 +22.2 Xilinx 40.60 -.05 +13.2 YY Inc n 28.78 +.12 +101.8 Yahoo 27.04 +.74 +35.9 Yandex 27.08 -.08 +25.7 ZionBcp 27.37 -.70 +27.9 Zynga 2.84 -.56 +20.3

American Stock Exchange Name

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AbdAsPac d6.66 -.04 -14.0 ElephTalk d.69 -.05 -31.0 Metalico AdvPhot .57 +.13 +21.3 EmrldO rs 6.43 +.32 +22.7 MdwGold g AlexcoR g 1.54 -.06 -56.9 FrkStPrp 13.78 +.16 +11.9 NTS Inc AlldNevG 7.84 +.12 -74.0 GamGldNR 11.25 ... -12.1 NavideaBio AmApparel 2.05 +.10 +103.0 Gastar grs 2.58 +.10 +113.2 NeoStem AvalnRare d.75 -.14 -44.9 GenMoly 2.03 -.12 -49.4 NBRESec Banro g 1.16 -.04 -58.6 GigOptics 1.26 -.52 -34.4 Neuralstem BarcUBS36 38.63 +.32 -6.6 GoldResrc 9.56 -.01 -38.0 Nevsun g BarcGSOil 22.36 +1.09 +2.6 GoldenMin 1.61 -.14 -64.9 NwGold g BioTime 4.15 -.60 +32.2 GoldStr g .65 -.06 -64.8 NA Pall g BlkMunvst d10.45 +.25 -5.3 GldFld 2.48 -.13 +31.9 NthnO&G BrigusG g .65 -.01 -30.9 GranTrra g 6.40 +.12 +16.2 NovaGld g CardiumTh d.08 -.01 -60.0 GtPanSilv g .90 -.07 -41.0 NuvDiv2 CelSci .24 -.01 -10.7 Hemisphrx .24 +.01 -6.4 NuvDiv3 CFCda g 15.78 -.18 -25.0 HstnAEn .31 -.10 +38.6 NNYAmtF CheniereEn 28.35 -1.00 +51.0 iShIndia bt 24.79 -.30 -5.5 NuvAmtFr CheniereE 28.72 -2.27 +35.1 ImmunoCll 2.68 +.24 +39.6 NMuHiOp ClaudeR g .29 +.02 -48.5 ImpOil gs 38.98 +.04 -9.3 ParaG&S ComstkMn 1.96 -.10 -14.0 InovioPhm .67 -.01 +34.2 PhrmAth CornstProg 5.97 +.03 +19.2 IntTower g .87 -.04 -59.9 PlatGpMet CornerstStr 7.48 +.13 +24.7 InvAdvMu2 d12.38 +.18 -5.9 PolyMet g CrSuiHiY 3.23 -.01 +.9 LadThalFn 1.62 +.04 +15.7 ProlorBio DejourE g .21 +.01 -3.7 LkShrGld g .33 -.03 -55.8 Protalix DenisnM g 1.30 +.03 +4.0 MadCatz g .46 -.01 -8.2 ReavesUtl EV LtdDur d16.18 -.53 -2.9 MastThera .67 -.04 +17.2 Rentech EVMuniBd d12.73 -.10 -9.0 MeetMe d1.57 +.07 -55.0 RexahnPh

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Mutual Funds m AQR Funds: DivArb I n 11.19 MgdFutSt I n 10.12 Aberdeen Funds: GlbHiIncI r 10.11 TotRet I 13.39 Alger Funds A: SpectraN 15.48 Alger Funds I: CapApprI 25.18 AllianceBern A: GloblBdA r 8.51 HighIncoA p 9.58 AllianceBern Adv: HiIncm Adv 9.60 Allianz Fds Instl: NFJDivVal 14.63 SmCpVl n 34.41 Allianz Funds A: NFJDivVal t 14.56 SmCpV A 32.62 AmanaGrth n 29.12 Amer Beacon Insti: LgCapInst 25.83 SmCapInst 25.07 Amer Beacon Inv: LgCap Inv 24.48 Ameri Century 1st: Growth 30.50 Amer Century Adv: EqtyIncA p 8.77 Amer Century Inst: EqInc 8.78 Amer Century Inv: DivBond n 10.89 DivBond 10.89 EqGroInv n 28.46 EqInco 8.78 GrowthI 30.17 HeritageI 25.05 InfAdjBond 12.55 IntTF 11.57 IntTF n 11.58 MdCapVal 15.14 NT DivrBd n 10.82 SelectI 48.33 Ultra n 29.31 ValueInv 7.50 American Funds A: AmcapFA p 25.17 AmMutlA p 32.26 BalA p 22.67 BondFdA p 12.67 CapInBldA p 56.09 CapWGrA p 40.88 CapWldA p 20.53 EupacA p 43.39 FundInvA p 46.87 GlblBalA 28.58 GovtA p 13.95 GwthFdA p 39.25 HI TrstA p 11.38 HiIncMuniA 15.38 IncoFdA p 19.55 IntBdA p 13.57 IntlGrIncA p 33.16 InvCoAA p 34.55 LtdTEBdA p 16.23 NwEconA p 33.35 NewPerA p 34.71 NewWorldA 55.61 STBFA p 10.01 SmCpWA p 45.45 TaxExA p 12.99 WshMutA p 36.27 Arbitrage Funds: Arbitrage I n 12.75 Ariel Investments: Apprec 49.80 Ariel n 60.32 Artisan Funds: Intl 26.94 IntlInstl 27.11 IntlValu r 33.65 IntlValInstl 33.73 MidCap 42.94 MidCapInstl 44.72 MidCapVal 24.80 SmCapVal 17.26 Aston Funds: FairMidCpN 41.01 FairptMidC I 41.60 M&CGroN 27.12 BBH Funds: CoreSelN 19.87 LtdDurN 10.38

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BNY Mellon Funds: EmgMkts 9.67 NatlIntMuni 13.74 Baird Funds: AggBdInst 10.69 CoreBdInst 11.05 Baron Fds Instl: Growth 62.78 SmallCap 30.58 Baron Funds: Asset n 56.73 Growth 62.24 SmallCap 30.26 Bernstein Fds: IntDur 13.75 DivMun 14.63 TxMgdIntl 14.90 IntlPort 14.80 Berwyn Funds: Income 13.93 BlackRock A: BasValA p 30.39 CapAppr p 26.16 EqtyDivid 22.24 GlbAlA r 20.95 HiYdInvA 8.17 InflProBdA 11.36 NatMuniA 10.92 BlackRock B&C: EquityDivC 21.74 GlobAlC t 19.45 BlackRock Instl: InflProtBd 11.51 BasValI 30.62 EquityDiv 22.30 GlbAlloc r 21.07 HiYldBond 8.17 NatlMuni 10.91 Brown Advisory Fds: GroEqInv 16.42 BrownSmCoIns 57.78 Buffalo Funds: SmallCap 33.15 CGM Funds: FocusFd n 35.36 CRM Funds: MidCapValI 35.59 Calamos Funds: Grth&IncA p 33.54 GrowthA p 50.70 Calvert Invest: SocEqA p 42.97 Causeway Intl: Institutnl nr 14.03 ClearBridge: AggGr A 154.90 AllCapVal A 16.35 Apprec A 18.01 CBAAggGrI I 166.72 EqInco A 16.77 Cohen & Steers: InsltRlty n 45.16 PfdSec&IncI 13.46 RltyShrs n 69.25 Columbia Class A: Acorn tx 32.56 CapAlloMAg r 12.54 DivEqInc A 12.36 DiviIncoA 17.22 DivOpptyA 9.90 IncOppty p 10.02 IntBd t 9.28 LgCoreQ A p 7.51 TxExA p 14.06 SelComm A 45.14 Columbia Class Z: Acorn Z x 33.83 AcornIntl Z x 43.58 DiviIncomeZ 17.23 IntmBdZ n 9.28 IntmTEBd n 10.82 LgCapIdxZ 31.93 MidCpIdxZ 13.74 MdCpVal p 17.31 SelLgCapGr 15.68 STIncoZ 9.98 STMunZ 10.52 ValRestr n 51.89 CG Cap Mkt Fds: LgGrw 18.85 Credit Suisse Comm: CommRet t 7.56 Cullen Funds: HiDivEqI nr 15.64 DFA Funds: Glb6040Ins 14.48

-.16 -.04 -.04 -.05 +.03 +.07 +.12 +.02 +.07 -.07 -.03 +.05 +.05 -.01 +.37 +.08 +.22 -.04 -.07 -.06 -.06 +.22 -.03 -.06 +.37 +.22 -.04 -.07 -.07 +.06 -.02 +.03 -.02 +.21 -.11 +.02 +.37 +.04 -.34 +.09 +.14 -.36 +.13 -.03 -.19 -.07 -.45 -.01 +.07 +.17 +.07 -.09 -.04 +.06 -.07 +.11 -.45 -.72 +.16 -.05 -.04 +.26 -.03 +.07 -.01 -.01 ... +.38 +.06 +.03 +.12 +.01

IntlCoreEq n 11.29 ... USCoreEq1 n 14.47 +.09 USCoreEq2 n 14.34 +.09 DWS Invest A: MgdMuni p 9.34 -.06 DWS Invest S: CoreEqtyS 21.32 -.05 GNMA S 14.85 ... MgdMuni S 9.35 -.06 Davis Funds A: NYVen A 40.97 +.27 Davis Funds C: NYVen C 39.35 +.24 Davis Funds Y: NYVenY 41.45 +.27 Delaware Invest A: Diver Inc p 9.10 -.07 Diamond Hill Fds: LongShortI n 20.86 +.13 Dimensional Fds: EmMkCrEq n 19.55 -.33 EmgMktVal 28.45 -.50 GlbRESec n 9.47 -.03 IntSmVa n 17.27 -.11 LargeCo 13.01 +.11 STExtQual n 10.86 -.02 STMuniBd n 10.24 ... TAUSCorEq2 11.73 +.07 TM USSm 30.32 +.14 USVectrEq n 14.16 +.07 USLgVa n 27.48 +.23 USLgVa3 n 21.04 +.18 US Micro n 17.19 +.12 US TgdVal 20.21 +.07 US Small n 26.69 +.10 US SmVal 31.19 +.12 IntlSmCo n 16.91 -.08 GlbEqInst 15.89 +.04 EmgMktSCp n 21.33 -.45 EmgMkt n 25.92 -.41 Fixd n 10.32 ... ST Govt n 10.72 -.01 IntGvFxIn n 12.80 -.03 IntlREst 5.22 -.04 IntVa n 17.55 +.07 InflProSecs 12.20 -.10 Glb5FxInc 11.12 -.03 LrgCapInt n 20.33 +.04 TM USTgtV 27.83 +.08 TM IntlValue 14.41 +.06 TMMktwdeV 20.45 +.18 TMUSEq 17.83 +.14 2YGlFxd n 10.06 ... DFARlEst n 28.36 -.03 Dodge&Cox: Balanced n 88.32 +.59 GblStock 10.24 +.02 IncomeFd 13.76 -.05 Intl Stk 37.60 -.14 Stock 144.14 +1.54 DoubleLine Funds: CoreFxdInc I 11.16 -.05 TRBd I 11.28 +.01 TRBd N p 11.27 +.01 Dreyfus: Aprec 48.30 +.34 BasicS&P 33.75 +.27 DreyMid r 33.60 -.08 Drey500In t 44.60 +.36 IntlStkI 14.78 +.01 MunBd r 11.75 -.06 DreihsAcInc 10.82 -.05 Eaton Vance A: FltgRtAdv p 11.18 -.05 FloatRate 9.49 -.02 IncBosA 6.02 -.06 LgCpVal 22.58 +.20 NatlMunInc 9.99 -.12 Eaton Vance Fds: PTxMEm Inst 48.07 -.40 Eaton Vance I: AtlCapSMID 21.17 +.09 FltgRt 9.18 -.02 GblMacAbR 9.76 -.05 IncBost 6.02 -.06 LgCapVal 22.64 +.20 ParEmgMkt 14.69 -.12 EdgwdGInst n 15.80 +.17 FMI Funds: LargeCap p 20.14 +.12 FPA Funds: NewInco n 10.56 -.01 FPACres n 31.52 +.18 Fairholme 37.51 -.32 Federated A: KaufmA p 5.80 -.02 MuniUltshA 10.05 -.01 StrValDiv p 5.53 +.05

Federated Instl: HighYldBd r 10.22 KaufmanR 5.81 MunULA p 10.06 TotRetBond 11.17 StaValDivIS 5.55 Fidelity Advisor A: FF2030A p 13.23 NwInsghts p 25.84 StrInA 12.47 Fidelity Advisor C: NwInsghts tn 24.34 StratIncC nt 12.44 Fidelity Advisor I: FltRateI n 9.95 NewInsightI 26.19 StrInI 12.63 Fidelity Advisor T: NwInsghts p 25.47 Fidelity Freedom: FF2010 n 14.76 FF2010K 13.23 FF2015 n 12.30 FF2015K 13.35 FF2020 n 15.01 FF2020A 12.92 FF2020K 13.87 FF2025 n 12.62 FF2025A 12.52 FF2025K 14.23 FF2030 n 15.26 FF2030K 14.43 FF2035 n 12.56 FF2035K 14.75 FF2040 n 8.83 FF2040K 14.81 FF2045 n 10.22 FF2045K 15.07 FF2050 n 10.27 FF2050K 15.13 FreeIncK x 11.76 IncomeFd nx 11.71 Fidelity Invest: AllSectEq 13.44 AMgr50 n 17.36 AMgr70 nr 18.78 AMgr20 nrx 13.34 Balanc 21.90 BalancedK 21.90 BlueChipGr 56.97 BluChpGrF n 57.10 BluChpGrK 57.05 CA Mun n 12.78 Canada n 53.74 CapApp n 33.77 CapApprK 33.83 CapDevelO 13.34 CapInco nr 9.67 Contra n 87.35 ContraK 87.32 CnvSec 29.11 DiverIntl n 32.28 DiversIntK r 32.25 DivStkO n 20.14 DivGrowK 34.19 DivGth n 34.19 EmrgMkt n 23.22 EqutInc n 54.32 EQII n 22.51 EqIncK 54.31 Export n 24.58 FidelFd 40.77 FltRateHi r 9.96 FourInOne n 32.45 GNMA n 11.48 GovtInc n 10.39 GroCo n 107.90 GroInc 25.02 GrowCoF 107.84 GrowthCoK 107.83 HighInc rn 9.37 Indepndnce n 30.15 InProBnd 12.74 IntBd n 11.00 IntmMuni n 10.52 IntlDisc n 35.78 InvGrBd n 11.36 InvGB n 7.84 LargeCap nx 23.71 LgCapVal n 12.27 LatAm n 41.32 LevCoStock 37.90 LowPr rn 45.89 LowPriStkK r 45.87 Magellan n 83.69 MagellanK 83.61 MA Muni n 12.37 MegaCpStk n 13.94 MidCap ne 34.09 MidCapK re 34.08 MuniInc n 13.33

-.10 -.01 ... -.06 +.05 +.02 +.07 -.06 +.06 -.06 -.04 +.08 -.06 +.07 ... ... ... ... ... +.01 +.01 +.01 +.02 +.01 +.02 +.02 +.03 +.03 +.02 +.04 +.02 +.03 +.02 +.04 -.02 -.02 +.10 +.01 +.02 -.03 +.07 +.07 +.20 +.19 +.20 -.06 -.25 -.02 -.01 +.01 -.11 +.21 +.20 -.06 +.13 +.14 +.16 +.15 +.14 -.46 +.44 +.20 +.44 +.06 +.14 -.04 +.12 -.04 -.03 +.48 +.24 +.48 +.48 -.09 +.04 -.10 -.03 -.03 -.03 -.05 -.04 -.42 +.15 -.81 +.11 +.27 +.27 +.44 +.44 -.05 +.13 -.32 -.32 -.06

NewMkt nr 16.55 -.26 NewMill n 35.45 +.19 NY Mun n 13.42 -.06 OTC 71.57 +.95 OTC K 72.11 +.95 100Index 10.90 +.11 Ovrsea n 35.13 +.16 Puritan 20.99 +.05 PuritanK 20.99 +.05 RealEInc rx 11.84 -.16 RealEst nx 34.43 -.18 SrAllSecEqF 13.44 +.10 SCmdtyStrt n 8.29 +.05 SCmdtyStrF n 8.33 +.06 SrsEmrgMkt 16.51 -.26 SrEmgMktF 16.55 -.26 SrsIntGrw 12.68 +.02 SerIntlGrF 12.71 +.02 SrsIntVal 10.06 +.05 SerIntlValF 10.08 +.04 SrsInvGrdF 11.36 -.05 ShtIntMu n 10.79 -.01 STBondF 8.58 -.01 STBF n 8.58 -.01 SmCapDisc nx 27.64 -.83 SmCapOpp 12.69 +.01 SmallCap nrx 18.96 -1.25 SmCapValu r 19.14 +.09 StkSlcACap n 32.57 +.18 StratDivInc 13.68 +.02 StratInc n 11.17 -.06 TaxFreeB r 11.51 -.05 TotalBond n 10.75 -.06 USBdIdxF 11.63 -.04 USBI n 11.63 -.04 Value n 90.65 +.45 Fidelity Selects: Biotech n 145.87 -.44 ConStaple 89.39 +1.12 Energy n 57.50 +.89 Health n 160.67 -.42 Softwr n 97.65 +1.71 Tech n 109.91 +.54 Fidelity Spartan: 500IdxInv n 58.43 +.48 500Idx I 58.44 +.48 IntlIndxInv 36.52 +.02 TotMkIdxF r 47.88 +.33 USBond I 11.63 -.04 Fidelity Spart Adv: ExtMktAdv r 46.40 +.05 500IdxAdv 58.44 +.48 500Index I 58.44 +.48 IntlAdv r 36.54 +.02 TotlMktAdv r 47.87 +.33 USBond I 11.63 -.04 First Eagle: GlobalA 51.57 -.09 OverseasA 22.72 -.19 Forum Funds: AbsolStratI r 11.31 +.02 Frank/Temp Frnk A: CalInsA p 12.74 -.07 CalTFrA px 7.40 -.06 FedInterm p 12.36 -.04 FedTxFrA px 12.47 -.10 FlexCapGrA 52.88 -.09 FoundFAl p 12.38 ... GrowthA p 56.77 +.28 HY TFA p 10.74 -.07 HiIncoA x 2.09 -.03 IncoSerA px 2.32 -.02 InsTFA p 12.37 -.06 NY TFA px 11.90 -.08 RisDivA p 43.60 +.32 SMCpGrA 39.51 +.13 StratInc p 10.63 -.06 TotlRtnA p 10.12 -.06 USGovA p 6.60 -.01 UtilitiesA px 14.79 ... Frank/Tmp Frnk Adv: FdTF Adv x 12.48 -.10 GlbBdAdv n 13.21 -.06 GrAdv t 56.89 +.28 HY TF Adv 10.78 -.06 IncomeAdv x 2.31 -.02 TGlbTRAdv 13.57 -.11 TtlRtAdv 10.14 -.06 USGovAdv p 6.62 -.01 Frank/Temp Frnk C: FdTxFC tx 12.47 -.09 FoundFAl p 12.18 ... IncomeC tx 2.35 -.02 RisDvC t 42.89 +.31 StratIncC p 10.63 -.06 USGovC t 6.56 -.01 Frank/Temp Mtl A&B: SharesA 25.56 +.12 Frank/Temp Temp A: DevMktA p 22.77 -.44

ForeignA p 7.46 -.04 GlBondA p 13.25 -.07 GrowthA p 21.92 -.01 WorldA p 17.80 -.02 Frank/Temp Tmp Adv: FrgnAv 7.38 -.03 GrthAv 21.93 -.01 Frank/Temp Tmp B&C: GlBdC p 13.28 -.06 Franklin Templ: TgtModA p 15.34 -.04 GE Elfun S&S: S&S Income n 11.53 -.04 TaxEx 12.02 -.06 Trusts n 50.79 +.42 US Eqty n 52.46 +.47 GE Instl Funds: IntlEq n 11.80 +.08 GE Investments: TRFd3 p 18.43 +.02 GMO Trust: USTreas x 25.01 ... GMO Trust II: EmergMkt r 10.86 -.08 GMO Trust III: CHIE 25.37 -.43 Quality 25.81 +.29 GMO Trust IV: EmgCnDt 10.14 -.15 IntlGrEq 26.44 +.12 IntlIntrVal 22.19 +.03 Quality 25.83 +.29 GMO Trust VI: EmgMkts r 10.81 -.08 Quality 25.82 +.28 StrFixInco 16.58 -.06 Gabelli Funds: Asset 59.88 +.23 EqInc p 26.40 +.15 SmCapG n 42.44 ... Gateway Funds: GatewayA 28.34 +.13 Goldman Sachs A: MidCapVA p 45.68 +.21 Goldman Sachs Inst: GrthOppt 27.87 +.03 HiYield 7.35 -.08 HYMuni n 9.51 -.06 MidCapVal 46.07 +.22 ShrtDurTF n 10.65 -.01 SmCapVal 51.99 +.26 Harbor Funds: Bond 12.32 -.06 CpAppInv p 46.87 +.19 CapAppInst n 47.57 +.19 HiYBdInst r 11.18 -.08 IntlInv t 64.88 +.27 IntlAdmin p 65.09 +.26 Intl nr 65.59 +.27 Harding Loevner: EmgMkts r 47.61 -.55 IntlEqty 16.40 -.13 Hartford Fds A: BalIncoA p 12.83 ... CapAppA p 41.59 +.25 DivGthA p 24.04 +.24 EqtyInc t 16.98 +.11 FltRateA px 9.00 -.04 MidCapA p 23.34 +.05 Hartford Fds C: CapAppC t 36.76 +.22 FltRateC tx 8.99 -.04 Hartford Fds Y: CapAppI n 41.61 +.25 DivGrowthY n 24.42 +.26 FltRateI x 9.01 -.04 Hartford HLS IA : CapApp 51.82 +.35 Div&Grwth 25.21 +.26 Balanced 23.50 +.08 Stock 52.44 +.46 MidCap 33.64 +.08 TotalRetBd 11.86 -.08 Heartland Fds: ValPlusInv p 33.46 +.09 Hotchkis & Wiley: MidCpVal 35.24 +.40 Hussman Funds: StrGrowth 10.30 -.05 ING Funds Cl A: GlbR E p 18.44 +.02 IVA Funds: Intl I r 16.55 ... WorldwideA t 17.17 +.05 Worldwide I r 17.18 +.04

Invesco Fds Invest: DivrsDiv p 15.55 Invesco Funds A: BalRiskA 12.51 Chart p 20.64 CmstkA 21.18 Constl p 26.75 DivrsDiv p 15.56 EqtyIncA 10.46 GrIncA p 24.87 HYMuA 10.00 IntlGrow 30.21 MidCGth p 32.27 MuniInA 13.68 SmCpValA t 19.74 Invesco Funds C: BalRiskC 12.21 Invesco Funds P: SummitP p 14.72 Invesco Funds R: IntlGrowR5 30.65 Invesco Funds Y: BalRiskY 12.61 Ivy Funds: AssetSC t 27.04 AssetStrA p 27.81 AssetStrI r 28.04 HiIncC t 8.68 HighIncoA p 8.68 HiIncI r 8.68 JPMorgan A Class: Core Bond A 11.85 Inv Bal p 13.90 InvCon p 12.22 InvGr&InA p 15.13 LgCpGrA p 26.67 MdCpVal p 31.96 JPMorgan C Class: CoreBond pn 11.90 JP Morgan Instl: MidCapVal n 32.54 JPMorgan R Cl: CoreBond n 11.86 HighYld r 8.21 MtgBacked 11.47 ShtDurBond 10.94 JPMorgan Select: MdCpValu 32.23 USEquity n 13.13 JPMorgan Sel Cls: CoreBond n 11.84 CorePlusBd n 8.40 EmMkEqSl 22.53 EqtyInc 11.97 HighYld 8.21 IntmdTFBd n 11.14 LgCapGr 26.65 MtgBckdSl n 11.46 ShtDurBdSel 10.93 TxAwRRet n 10.24 USLCCrPls n 26.19 James Adv Fds: BalGldnRbw 23.12 Janus S Shrs: Forty 41.67 Janus T Shrs: BalancedT n 28.56 Janus T 35.39 OverseasT r 34.63 PerkMCVal T 24.28 ShTmBdT 3.07 Twenty T 68.34 Jensen Funds: QualGrowth I 34.37 QualityGrthJ 34.35 John Hancock A: IncomeA p 6.70 John Hancock Cl 1: LSAggress 14.29 LSBalance 14.46 LS Conserv 13.68 LSGrowth 14.76 LS Moder 13.91 John Hancock Instl: DispValMCI 15.67 Keeley Funds: SmCpValA p 33.29 Laudus Funds: USLgCapGr r 16.18 Lazard Instl: EmgMktEq 18.70 Lazard Open: EmgMktEq O 19.14 Legg Mason A: WAIntTmMu 6.74

+.09 -.13 +.12 +.17 +.03 +.09 +.05 +.20 -.08 +.06 -.07 -.08 +.03 -.13 +.09 +.06 -.12 ... ... +.01 -.06 -.06 -.06 -.03 +.02 +.01 +.04 -.03 +.11 -.03 +.12 -.02 -.06 -.02 ... +.11 +.10 -.03 -.02 -.46 +.15 -.06 -.03 -.03 -.02 -.01 ... +.25 -.07 -.19 +.03 +.05 -.31 +.05 -.01 +.25 +.37 +.37 -.08 +.03 -.01 -.04 +.01 -.02 +.10 -.01 ... -.29 -.30 -.02

WAMgMuA p 16.96 -.10 Legg Mason C: CMValTr p 50.38 +.17 Longleaf Partners: Partners 30.16 +.16 Intl n 15.35 -.12 SmCap 33.79 -.33 Loomis Sayles: LSBondI 15.36 -.04 LSGlblBdI 16.80 +.09 StrInc C 16.23 -.04 LSBondR 15.29 -.04 StrIncA 16.13 -.04 ValueY n 24.81 +.27 Loomis Sayles Inv: InvGrBdA px 12.50 -.07 InvGrBdC px 12.40 -.06 InvGrBdY x 12.51 -.07 Lord Abbett A: FloatRt p 9.51 -.03 IntrTaxFr 10.89 -.05 ShDurTxFr 15.89 -.01 AffiliatdA p 14.10 +.13 FundlEq 15.67 +.08 BondDebA p 8.25 -.06 ShDurIncoA p 4.61 -.01 TaxFrA p 11.45 -.07 Lord Abbett C: BdDbC p 8.27 -.06 ShDurIncoC t 4.64 -.01 Lord Abbett F: FloatRt p 9.50 -.03 ShtDurInco 4.60 -.02 Lord Abbett I: ShtDurInc p 4.60 -.02 SmCapVal 39.50 +.01 MFS Funds A: IntlDiverA 15.05 ... MITA 24.65 +.16 MIGA 20.19 +.09 BondA 14.00 -.09 EmGrA 55.26 +.22 GrAllA 16.48 +.05 IntlValA 30.22 +.08 ModAllA 15.43 +.03 MuHiA t 8.20 -.05 RschA 33.11 +.27 TotRA 16.62 +.09 UtilA 20.37 +.17 ValueA 30.06 +.34 MFS Funds I: MassITI 24.14 +.16 ReInT 16.70 +.07 ValueI 30.21 +.35 MFS Funds Instl: IntlEqty n 20.28 +.11 MainStay Funds A: HiYldBdA 6.11 -.04 LgCpGrA p 8.77 ... MainStay Funds I: EpochGlb r 18.00 +.15 ICAP SelEq 44.13 +.54 Mairs & Power: Growth n 97.82 +.50 Managers Funds: Yacktman np 22.51 +.25 YacktFocus n 24.15 +.29 YactFocInst n 24.16 +.29 Bond n 27.81 -.15 Manning&Napier Fds: WorldOppA n 8.34 +.05 Matthews Asian: AsiaDivInv r 15.70 -.15 AsianG&IInv 19.23 -.27 PacTigerInv 25.00 -.56 MergerFd n 15.94 +.01 Meridian Funds: Growth 44.49 +.12 Metro West Fds: TotRetBd 10.79 -.06 TotalRetBondI 10.79 -.05 MontagGr I 27.27 +.23 MorganStanley Inst: IntlEqI n 15.46 +.09 MCapGrI n 40.16 ... MCapGrP p 38.58 ... Munder Funds Y: MdCpCGrY n 38.12 +.04 Mutual Series: BeaconZ 15.39 +.07 GblDiscovA 31.91 -.04 GlbDiscC 31.57 -.04 GlbDiscZ 32.38 -.04 QuestZ 18.78 +.04 SharesZ 25.79 +.13 Nationwide Instl:

S&P500Instl n 13.62 +.11 Neuberger&Berm Fds: EqIncInst 12.36 +.03 Genesis n 38.72 +.11 GenesInstl 55.50 +.16 HiIncBdInst 9.52 -.10 Neuberger&Berm Tr: Genesis n 57.66 +.16 Nicholas Group: Nicholas nx 55.83 -1.03 Northern Funds: BondIdx 10.73 ... EmgMEqIdx 11.13 -.17 FixIn n 10.39 -.04 HiYFxInc n 7.62 -.09 IntTaxEx n 10.57 -.03 IntlEqIdx r 10.93 -.06 MMEmMkt r 18.28 -.28 MMIntlEq r 9.90 -.07 SmlCapVal n 18.91 -.04 StockIdx n 20.21 -.10 Nuveen Cl A: HYldMuBd p 17.01 -.16 Nuveen Cl C: HYMunBd t 16.99 -.16 Nuveen Cl R: IntmDurMuBd 9.24 -.03 HYMuniBd 17.01 -.16 LtdTermR 11.11 -.01 Nuveen Cl Y: RealEst 22.68 -.02 Oakmark Funds I: EqtyInc r 31.16 +.24 GlobalI r 27.29 -.09 Intl I r 23.69 -.11 IntlSmCp r 15.20 -.11 Oakmark 57.31 +.57 Select 35.80 +.32 Old Westbury Fds: GlobOpp 7.93 -.06 GlbSMdCap 16.14 +.01 LgCapStrat 10.92 -.04 RealReturn 8.34 -.05 Oppenheimer A: AMTFrMuA 7.24 -.06 CapAppA p 54.04 +.22 DevMktA p 35.20 -.38 EqIncA p 30.14 +.14 GlobalA p 71.59 +.41 GlblOppA 32.86 -.10 GblStrIncoA 4.25 -.05 IntlBdA p 6.30 -.07 IntGrow p 33.70 +.38 LtdTrmMu 14.98 -.05 MnStFdA 42.14 +.06 MnStSCpA p 26.47 +.08 RisingDivA 19.74 +.16 RochLtNYMu 3.35 -.01 SenFltRtA 8.38 -.03 Oppenheimer C&M: DevMktC t 33.65 -.37 GblStrIncoC 4.24 -.05 LtdTmMuC t 14.91 -.05 SenFltRtC 8.39 -.03 Oppenheimer Roch: LtdNYC t 3.33 -.02 RoNtMuC t 7.56 -.09 RoMu A p 16.95 -.14 RcNtlMuA 7.58 -.09 Oppenheimer Y: DevMktY 34.84 -.37 IntlBdY 6.29 -.08 IntlGrowY 33.56 +.37 RisingDivY 20.19 +.16 Osterweis Funds: StratIncome 11.95 -.04 PIMCO Admin PIMS: RelRetAd p 11.65 -.11 ShtTmAd p 9.87 -.02 TotRetAd n 11.00 -.07 PIMCO Instl PIMS: AllAssetAut r 10.64 -.11 AllAsset 12.43 -.10 CommodRR 6.07 -.01 DiverInco 11.89 -.15 EmgMktCur 10.34 ... EmMktsBd 11.69 -.20 FltgInc r 8.85 -.09 FrgnBdUnd r 10.18 +.19 FrgnBd n 10.68 -.05 HiYld n 9.61 -.09 InvGradeCp 10.91 -.10 LowDur n 10.37 -.03 LTUSG n 10.36 -.10 ModDur n 10.74 -.04 RealRetInstl 11.65 -.11 ShortT 9.87 -.02 TotRet n 11.00 -.07

TR II n 10.45 TRIII n 9.68 PIMCO Funds A: AllAstAuth t 10.64 All Asset p 12.43 CommodRR p 5.98 LowDurA 10.37 RealRetA p 11.65 TotRtA 11.00 PIMCO Funds C: AllAstAut t 10.62 AllAssetC t 12.38 RealRetC p 11.65 TotRtC t 11.00 PIMCO Funds D: LowDurat p 10.37 RealRtn p 11.65 TotlRtn p 11.00 PIMCO Funds P: AllAsset 12.45 AstAllAuthP 10.65 CommdtyRR 6.06 IncomeP 12.56 LowDurP 10.37 RealRtnP 11.65 TotRtnP 11.00 Parnassus Funds: EqtyInco n 33.68 Pax World: Balanced 25.44 Perm Port Funds: Permanent 47.00 Pioneer Funds A: PionFdA p 37.74 StratIncA p 11.22 Pioneer Fds Y: StratIncY p 11.23 Price Funds Adv: BlChipGr n 51.92 EqtyInc n 30.56 Growth n 42.19 R2020A n 19.13 R2030Adv n 20.57 R2040A n 20.94 Price Funds R Cl: Ret2020R p 18.97 Ret2030R n 20.43 Price Funds: Balance n 22.20 BlueChipG n 52.10 CapApr n 24.74 DivGro n 30.16 EmMktB n 13.31 EmMktS n 32.35 EqInc n 30.64 EqIdx n 44.43 GNM n 9.73 Growth n 42.67 HlthSci n 50.22 HiYld n 7.10 InstlCpGr n 21.63 InstHiYld n 9.89 InstlFltRt n 10.25 MCEqGr n 35.68 IntlBd n 9.63 IntlDis n 49.65 IntlGr&Inc n 13.91 IntStk n 14.95 MdTxFr n 10.91 MediaTl n 60.10 MidCap n 65.64 MCapVal n 27.73 NewAm n 39.93 N Asia n 16.42 NewEra n 44.44 NwHrzn n 39.74 NewInco n 9.62 OverSea SF n 9.03 PSBal n 22.26 RealAssets n 10.64 RealEst n 22.34 R2010 n 17.35 R2015 13.73 Retire2020 n 19.26 R2025 14.26 R2030 n 20.73 R2035 n 14.74 R2040 n 21.10 R2045 n 14.05 Ret Income n 14.45 SciTch n 31.39 ST Bd n 4.81 SmCapStk n 39.49 SmCapVal n 44.42 SpecGr 21.60 SpecIn n 13.01 SumMuInt n 11.83 TxFree n 10.37 TxFrHY n 11.82

-.06 -.06 -.10 -.11 -.01 -.03 -.11 -.07 -.11 -.11 -.11 -.07 -.03 -.11 -.07 -.10 -.10 -.01 -.11 -.03 -.11 -.07 -.06 +.06 -.06 +.27 -.09 -.08 +.12 +.22 +.09 +.01 +.03 +.04 +.01 +.03 +.04 +.13 +.10 +.13 -.23 -.61 +.23 +.36 -.03 +.08 -.16 -.09 +.05 -.13 -.04 +.09 +.12 -.25 +.02 ... -.05 +.56 +.16 +.11 -.07 -.25 +.23 +.12 -.06 +.03 +.01 -.02 -.03 ... ... +.02 +.02 +.04 +.03 +.04 +.03 -.01 +.21 -.01 +.03 +.08 +.05 -.05 -.03 -.06 -.07

TxFrSI n 5.68 R2050 n 11.78 Value n 31.62 Primecap Odyssey : AggGrwth r 24.54 Growth r 21.08 Stock r 18.90 Principal Inv: BdMtgInstl 10.88 DivIntlInst 10.75 HighYldA p 7.90 LgLGI In 11.23 LgCV1 In 13.56 LgGrIn 10.37 LgCpIndxI 11.59 LgCValIn 12.57 LfTm2020In 13.49 LT2030In 13.52 LT2040In 13.91 MidCap A 17.97 PreSecs In 10.58 SGI In 12.80 SAMBalA 14.86 Prudential Fds A: MidCpGrA 34.56 NatResA 45.72 STCorpBdA 11.42 UtilityA 13.35 Prudential Fds Z&I: MidCapGrZ 35.93 SmallCoZ 26.96 TotRetBdZ 14.33 Putnam Funds A: CATxA p 8.28 DvrInA p 7.88 EqInA p 19.85 GrInA p 17.56 MultiCpGr 63.44 VoyA p 25.58 RS Funds: RSNatRes np 38.04 RidgeWorth Funds: GScUltShBdI 10.14 HighYldI 10.20 MdCValEqI 13.56 Royce Funds: PennMuI rn 13.09 PremierI nr 21.11 SpeclEqInv r 23.97 TotRetI rx 15.52 Russell Funds S: GlobEq 10.34 IntlDevMkt 32.73 StratBd x 11.16 SEI Portfolios: CoreFxInA n 11.43 HiYld n 7.80 IntlEqA n 9.03 S&P500E n 45.38 TaxMgdLC n 16.05 Schwab Funds: CoreEqty 21.75 DivEqtySel 17.21 FunUSLInst r 12.71 IntlSS r 17.88 1000Inv r 44.68 S&P Sel n 25.80 SmCapSel 24.66 TSM Sel r 29.98 Scout Funds: Intl 34.60 MidCap r 16.09 Selected Funds: AmerShsD 48.59 AmShsS p 48.55 Sequoia n 195.11 Sound Shore: SoundShore n 42.21 St FarmAssoc: Gwth n 63.03 TCW Funds: EmMktInc 8.88 TotlRetBdI 10.20 TCW Funds N: TotRtBdN p 10.53 TFS Funds: MktNeutral r 15.50 TIAA-CREF Funds: BdIdxInst 10.77 BondInst 10.48 EqIdxInst 12.56 Gr&IncInst 11.58 HighYldInst 10.42 IntlEqIInst 17.31 IntlEqInst 10.28 LgCVl Inst 16.81 MidCValInst 21.57

-.01 +.03 +.29 +.28 -.04 +.11 -.06 -.01 -.07 +.04 +.12 -.01 +.10 +.08 +.01 +.02 +.03 +.02 -.10 +.08 +.02 -.06 +.34 -.03 +.11 -.06 +.22 -.09 -.04 -.04 +.15 +.16 +.20 -.10 +.01 -.01 -.09 ... +.04 +.12 +.13 -.03 +.04 +.04 -.05 -.05 -.06 +.03 +.36 +.08 +.14 +.18 +.09 +.06 +.32 +.21 +.09 +.21 -.11 +.10 +.30 +.30 -1.66 +.43 +.53 -.16 -.04 -.04 +.09 -.03 -.05 +.08 +.07 -.11 +.06 +.05 +.14 +.12

Templeton Class A: TGlbTRA 13.55 -.12 Templeton Instit: ForEqS 20.71 -.12 Third Avenue Fds: REValInst r 27.02 -.11 ValueInst 54.27 -.31 Thompson IM Fds: Bond n 11.95 -.04 Thornburg Fds: IntlValA p 28.50 -.40 IncBuildA t 20.10 -.13 IncBuildC p 20.10 -.12 IntlValue I 29.12 -.42 LtdMunA p 14.57 -.03 LtTMuniI 14.58 -.02 Thrivent Fds A: MuniBd 11.65 -.06 Tocqueville Fds: Delafield 33.96 -.25 Touchstone Family: SandsCpGY n 14.10 -.08 SandsCapGrI 18.91 -.10 SelGrowth 13.81 -.07 Tweedy Browne: GblValue 25.33 -.28 USAA Group: CornstStr n 24.14 -.03 Income n 13.37 -.04 IntTerBd n 10.98 -.05 Intl n 27.44 +.16 S&P Idx n 23.22 -.10 ShtTBnd n 9.25 -.01 TxEIT n 13.62 -.04 TxELT n 13.75 -.09 TxESh n 10.80 -.01 VALIC : MidCapIdx 24.38 -.06 StockIndex 30.31 +.24 Vanguard Admiral: BalAdml n 25.82 +.08 CAITAdm n 11.58 -.04 CALTAdm 11.78 -.07 CpOpAdl n 95.35 -.25 DevMktsAd 29.92 +.07 EM Adm nr 34.38 -.53 Energy n 119.30 +.54 EqIncAdml 58.75 +.54 EuropAdml 64.56 +.40 ExplAdml 87.86 +.05 ExntdAdm n 53.61 +.04 FTAllWxUS 28.89 -.05 500Adml n 152.08 +1.25 GNMA Adm n 10.62 ... GroIncAdm 57.59 +.43 GrwthAdml n 41.41 +.18 HlthCare n 71.26 +.71 HiYldCp n 6.05 -.07 InflProAd n 27.13 -.22 ITBondAdml 11.61 -.07 ITsryAdml n 11.49 -.03 IntlGrAdml 64.74 -.04 ITAdml n 14.16 -.05 ITCoAdmrl 10.01 -.06 LtdTrmAdm 11.10 -.01 LTGrAdml 10.25 -.15 LTsryAdml 12.19 -.10 LT Adml n 11.58 -.06 MCpAdml n 119.61 +.41 MorgAdm 70.80 +.33 MuHYAdml n 11.13 -.06 NJLTAd n 12.09 -.07 NYLTAd m 11.56 -.06 PrmCap r 86.45 +.21 PacifAdml 69.63 -.31 PALTAdm n 11.51 -.06 REITAdml r 100.21 -.13 STsryAdml 10.70 -.01 STBdAdml n 10.55 -.02 ShtTrmAdm 15.89 ... STFedAdm 10.74 -.01 STIGrAdm 10.75 -.02 SmlCapAdml n 45.40 +.01 SmCapGrth 36.57 +.06 SmCapVal 36.39 -.03 TxMCap r 82.72 +.61 TxMGrInc r 73.95 +.61 TtlBdAdml n 10.83 -.04 TotStkAdm n 41.29 +.28 ValueAdml n 27.07 +.28 WellslAdm n 60.98 ... WelltnAdm n 64.37 +.33 WindsorAdm n 60.76 +.42 WdsrIIAdm 61.14 +.57 TaxMngdIntl rn 11.98 +.03 TaxMgdSC r 36.38 +.16 Vanguard Fds: CapOpp n 41.28 -.11 Convt n 13.85 -.06

DivAppInv n 27.26 +.25 DividendGro 19.45 +.17 Energy 63.54 +.28 EqInc n 28.03 +.26 Explorer n 94.40 +.04 GNMA n 10.62 ... GlobEq n 20.88 +.03 GroInc n 35.26 +.26 HYCorp n 6.05 -.07 HiDvdYld n 22.83 +.29 HlthCare n 168.89 +1.67 InflaPro n 13.81 -.11 IntlExplr n 16.16 -.01 IntlGr 20.35 -.01 IntlVal n 33.03 +.11 ITI Grade 10.01 -.06 ITTsry n 11.49 -.03 LIFECon n 17.58 -.01 LIFEGro n 25.50 +.07 LIFEInc n 14.35 -.02 LIFEMod n 21.94 +.03 LTInGrade n 10.25 -.15 MidCapGro 23.51 -.01 Morgan n 22.83 +.10 MuHY n 11.13 -.06 MuInt n 14.16 -.05 MuLtd n 11.10 -.01 MuShrt n 15.89 ... PrecMtlsMin r 11.96 -.02 PrmCpCore rn 17.76 +.06 Prmcp r 83.32 +.20 SelValu r 24.87 +.19 STAR n 22.42 +.02 STIGrade 10.75 -.02 STFed n 10.74 -.01 StratEq n 25.51 +.02 TgtRetInc 12.43 ... TgtRet2010 25.08 ... TgtRet2015 14.16 +.01 TgtRet2020 25.53 +.03 TgtRet2025 14.70 +.03 TgRet2030 25.53 +.06 TgtRet2035 15.53 +.05 TgtRe2040 25.69 +.09 TgtRet2050 n 25.58 +.08 TgtRe2045 n 16.12 +.05 USGro n 24.04 +.11 Wellsly n 25.17 ... Welltn n 37.27 +.20 Wndsr n 18.00 +.12 WndsII n 34.44 +.32 Vanguard Idx Fds: DevMkInPl nr 107.48 +.23 EmMkInPl nr 86.99 -1.33 ExtMkt I n 132.31 +.11 FTAllWIPl nr 96.98 -.16 MidCpIstPl n 130.31 +.44 SmCapInPl n 131.06 +.04 TotIntAdm nr 25.78 -.07 TotIntlInst nr 103.11 -.25 TotIntlIP nr 103.13 -.25 TotIntSig nr 30.93 -.07 500 n 152.05 +1.25 Balanced n 25.81 +.07 DevMkt n 10.40 +.03 EMkt n 26.17 -.40 Extend n 53.58 +.05 Growth n 41.41 +.19 ITBond n 11.61 -.07 LTBond n 13.37 -.18 MidCap 26.35 +.09 REIT r 23.48 -.03 SmCap n 45.36 +.02 SmlCpGrow 29.23 +.06 SmlCapVal 20.29 -.01 STBond n 10.55 -.02 TotBond n 10.83 -.04 TotlIntl n 15.41 -.04 TotStk n 41.27 +.28 Value n 27.07 +.29 Vanguard Instl Fds: BalInst n 25.82 +.08 DevMktInst n 10.32 +.03 EmMktInst n 26.15 -.40 ExtIn n 53.61 +.04 FTAllWldI r 91.58 -.15 GrowthInstl 41.41 +.18 InfProtInst n 11.05 -.09 InstIdx n 151.11 +1.24 InsPl n 151.12 +1.24 InstTStIdx n 37.41 +.25 InstTStPlus 37.42 +.26 LTBdInst n 13.37 -.18 MidCapInstl n 26.42 +.09 REITInst r 15.51 -.02 STBondIdx n 10.55 -.02 STIGrInst 10.75 -.02 SmCpIn n 45.40 +.01 SmlCapGrI n 29.29 +.06 TBIst n 10.83 -.04 TSInst n 41.30 +.29 ValueInstl n 27.07 +.28

Vanguard Signal: BalancSgl n 25.54 +.07 ExtMktSgl n 46.06 +.03 500Sgl n 125.62 +1.03 GroSig n 38.35 +.17 ITBdSig n 11.61 -.07 MidCapIdx n 37.74 +.13 REITSig r 26.75 -.04 STBdIdx n 10.55 -.02 SmCapSig n 40.91 +.02 TotalBdSgl n 10.83 -.04 TotStkSgnl n 39.85 +.27 ValueSig n 28.17 +.30 Virtus Funds A: MulSStA p 4.90 -.02 Virtus Funds C: MulSStC p 4.96 -.02 Virtus Funds I: EmgMktI 10.23 -.22 WM Blair Fds Inst: IntlGrwth 15.63 -.19 WM Blair Mtl Fds: IntlGrowthI r 24.07 -.30 Waddell & Reed Adv: AssetS p 10.60 ... Bond 6.49 -.04 CoreInvA 7.18 +.03 HighInc 7.71 -.06 ScTechA 13.42 +.11 Wasatch: SmCapGrth 46.96 +.26 Wells Fargo Adv A: AstAllA p 13.41 -.07 Wells Fargo Adv C: AstAllC t 12.92 -.06 Wells Fargo Adv : GrowthInv n 44.00 +.14 STMunInv n 10.01 -.01 Wells Fargo Ad Ins: CoreBond 12.65 -.05 Growth 47.76 +.15 UlStMuInc 4.82 ... Wells Fargo Admin: Growth 46.39 +.15 Wells Fargo Instl: UltSTMuA 4.83 ... Western Asset: CrPlusBdF1 p 11.45 -.07 CorePlsBd IS 11.45 -.06 CorePlus I 11.45 -.07 ShtMuni C 5.17 -.01


Business

SATURDAY, June 8, 2013

Menards plans special events for grand opening By The Telegram Menards has announced a grand opening celebration for its new Garden City store featuring nine days of special events, including appearances by a University of Kansas basketball star and Kansas City Chiefs running back. The store is located at 1110 Lareu Road, on the corner of East Schulman Avenue and Lareu Road. Menards has built its reputation by recognizing that people expect high quality guest service, competitive pricing and shopping convenience. It has full-service lumberyards, garden centers, landscape blocks, lighting options, tools, hardware supplies, doors, windows, flooring, plumbing supplies, cabinets, appliances, patio furniture, home dĂŠcor items and much more. “This is our sixth Kansas store and we’re excited to bring our diverse product mix to Garden City,â€? Menards Spokesperson, Jeff Abbott said in a press release. “Whether you’re a casual shopper, beginning do-ityourselfer or more experienced contractor, we can help with all of your home improvement needs.â€? A family-owned and run business since 1958, Menards has steadily grown throughout the years. With 280 stores in 14 states, the chain has relied on being the low-price leader while “winning people over by treating them like family in a hometown hardware store atmosphere,â€? the release said. The store, which opened in late May, employs 200 people. “The town has been very welcoming and we’re pleased that we were able to hire many people from the Garden City area,â€? Garden City Menards General Manager Lars Paulsen said. “We have some really hard working employees who are very excited for the upcoming grand opening. We invite everyone to stop by and experience the Menards way every day.â€? The grand opening celebration starts today and

runs through June 16. Store hours are Monday through Saturday from 6:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. and 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday. Appearances include: • Chainsaw artist John Gage, who will create wood carvings from logs. Representing Remington Chainsaws, Gage is wellknown throughout the Midwest as a personable and talented artist. Gage’s carvings will be available for public sale. • Tyshawn Taylor, former Kansas Jayhawks guard, 6 to 8 p.m. Monday (two free autographs). A four-year starter for the University of Kansas, Taylor helped the Jayhawks to a 127-21 record with four Big 12 regular-season titles, two Big 12 tourney championships, two NCAA Elite Eights and one Final Four. As a senior, Taylor averaged 16.5 points and 4.9 assists per game, was named to the 2012 first team All-Big 12 team and led the Jayhawks to the national championship game. Taylor was selected by the Portland Trailblazers as the 41st pick in the 2012 NBA Draft before being traded and signing a contract with the Brooklyn Nets. • Dexter McCluster, Kansas City Chiefs running back, will be on hand from 6 to 8 p.m. Wednesday (two free autographs). After earning Florida’s high school player of the year honors, McCluster had a record-setting career at University of Mississippi. He had a breakout season as a senior in 2009, becoming the only player in SEC history to rush for more than 1,000 yards while gaining over 500 yards receiving in a single season. A second-round draft choice in the 2010 NFL Draft by Kansas City, McCluster has proven to be a versatile performer as a running back, receiver and kick returner while becoming a fan favorite among faithful Chiefs fans, the release said. • Jason Elam, former Denver Broncos kicker, will sign autographs from 6 to 8 p.m. Thursday (two free autographs).

Patent issued for beneficial animal ‘candy’

MANHATTAN — A U.S. patent has been granted to a Kansas State Universitydeveloped “candy� that stimulates the growth, health and reproductive functions of cattle, bulls and other livestock. Jim Drouillard, professor of animal sciences and industry, discovered a specific combination of molasses, oilseeds and oilseed extracts that when heated and evaporated, formed a substance that improves absorption of specific omega-3 fatty acids. “It’s a free-choice type of supplement in a block form — sort of like a big, 250-pound piece of fancy for livestock,� Drouillard said. “It’s put in the pasture and the animals consume it whenever they want. The product’s physical characteristics restrict the animals to consuming less than a pound each day, making it a convenient and cost effective way to deliver essential nutrients.�

Commercial Real Estate Need Help?

221720

By K-State University

The substance contains desirable fats that elevate levels of specific omega-3 fatty acids in the bloodstream. The increases in omega3 fatty acids can stimulate growth, improve immunity and enhance reproduction function and overall fertility in livestock that consume the supplement. New Generation Feeds, a South Dakota-based company, has retained exclusive rights to the patented technology for use in its SmartLic brand of livestock supplements. The process is used in making the company’s HorsLic supplement for equines and FlaxLic supplement for beef and dairy cattle. The patent, “Product and process for elevating lipid blood levels in livestock,� is issued to the Kansas State University Research Foundation, a nonprofit corporation responsible for managing technology transfer activities at the university. Drouillard is continuing research on the combination by working to improve the fats’ resistance to bacteria in the digestive system.

221312

Effective way to deliver nutrients.

Selected by the Denver Broncos out of the University of Hawaii in the 1993 NFL Draft, Elam had a record-setting 17-year career as a placekicker. Elam owns the NFL record of 371 consecutive extra points and is tied for the longest field goal in league history of 63 yards. One of the most accurate field goal kickers in NFL history, Elam won two Super Bowl titles during his 15 seasons in Denver, retiring as a Bronco on March 30, 2010. • Racing appearance: Paul Menard’s 2011 Indy Brickyard winning No. 27 car and Matt Crafton’s No. 88 truck will be on display from noon to 8 p.m. Monday and Tuesday. Racing apparel and die-cast cars also will be on sale.

THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM

GCCC offering short-term Quickbooks Pro classes Business owners, managers, bookkeepers and others who want to learn QuickBooks Pro may sign up for a pair of short-term, non-credit courses coming up soon from the Garden City Community College Continuing Education Department. The courses include QuickBooks Pro 2011 Fundamentals and QuickBooks Pro 2011 Advanced. The fundamental level course will be offered from 1:30 to 5:30 p.m. June 18 and June 20, with a fee of $149 per person. The course will show people in medium-size

and small businesses how to keep their financial books easily and accurately, as well as ways to use the popular program to manage customer or vendor records, and handle banking transactions. The advanced course will be offered 1:30 to 5:30 p.m. July 9 and July 11 for $149 per person. Participants will be able to build on knowledge from the fundamental course by learning how to manage physical inventory, sales tax and payroll, as well as handle asset, liability and equity accounts. Information and registration are available at 276-9647, BIZ@gcccks.edu or on the second floor of the GCCC Student and Community Services Center. Information is also available at www.gcccks.edu.

SCHOOL VACATION Bible

Trinity Lutheran Church 1010 Fleming • 620-276-3110

Come for a week full of Bible Based Fun!

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June 10 - 14th 9am - 12pm Age 3 through 6th Grade We welcome 7th grade students through adults to be helpers.

Register online at: http://bit.ly/12gDbYk or email: dcecynthia@tlcgck.ks.coxmail.com

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*See verizonwireless.com for Google Play promotional details. Activation/upgrade fee/line: Up to $35. IMPORTANT CONSUMER INFORMATION: Subject to Cust. Agmt, Calling Plan, rebate form & credit approval. Up to $350 early termination fee/line. Offers & coverage, varying by svc, not available everywhere; see vzw.com. While supplies last. Limited-time offers. Restocking fee may apply. Rebate debit card takes up to 6 wks & expires in 12 months. LTE is a trademark of ETSI. 4G LTE is available in more than 490 markets in the U.S. DROID is a trademark of Lucasfilm Ltd. and its related companies. Used under license. Android and Google Play are trademarks of Google Inc. iPhone is a trademark of Apple Inc., registered in the U.S. and other countries. TM and Š 2013 Apple Inc. All rights reserved. In those areas in which Verizon Wireless is eligible to receive support from the universal service fund, Verizon Wireless must meet all reasonable requests for service. Unresolved questions concerning service availability can be directed to the Kansas Corporation Commission Office of Public Affairs and Consumer Protection at 800-662-0027. Š 2013 Verizon Wireless. KFDRH


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