The Indiana Gazette, Nov. 8, 2015

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www.indianagazette.com Vol. 112 — No. 78

68 pages — 7 sections

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Job listings There are 20 help wanted ads listed in the Classified section today./Pages B-7 and B-8

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Turkey time Find tips for cooking the perfect Thankgiving dinner. Page E-1

Harbinger?

Staying in

Federal Reserve Chairwoman Janet Yellen has been hinting that interest rates may soon rise, and the latest jobs report would seem to increase that likelihood. Page D-1

Even the presidential candidates who are struggling in the polls are finding reasons to stay in the race. Page B-4

Optimism returns to budget talks

DISTRICT CHAMPS

Who’s in the news There is good news today in The Indiana Gazette about these area people: Olin Bartlebaugh, Becky Lewis, Dave Miloser, Jessica Wagner, Colin Fox, Rachel Johns.

Saturday scores Farrell 44 United 20

By MARC LEVY

Gannon 14 IUP 26

Associated Press

Northwestern 23 Penn State 21 Notre Dame 42 Pitt 30 Coverage begins on Page C-1. KEVIN STIFFLER/Gazette

Inside HONOR ROLL: Marion Center Area High School./Page A-5 WEIGHTY ISSUE: Nearly half of U.S. mothers gain too much weight during pregnancy, a new study says./Page B-1 GETTING HELP: In a growing number of places, heroin addicts who land in hospitals after being revived from an overdose are being guided toward long-term treatment./Page B-2

Weather Today

Tonight

51°

32°

Mostly sunny today. Clear tonight. See Page 2.

Deaths Obituaries on Page 4 BRACKEN, Murdick “Turk,� 98, Armagh KOMLOSKY, Roseann, 65, Waterman PENTRACK, Rita, 87, Rockledge, Fla., formerly of Blairsville SHIELDS, James, 93, Blairsville

THE PURCHASE LINE High School girls’ volleyball team crowded around Carly Mumau as it celebrated a victory Saturday over Bishop Carroll to win the school’s first district championship in the sport. The Red Dragons move on to the state playoffs on Tuesday. Story on Page C-1.

Noise heard in last second of recording on Russian plane By MARAM MAZEN and NOUR YOUSSEF Associated Press

CAIRO — A noise was heard in the last second of the cockpit voice recording from the Russian plane that crashed last week in Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula, the head of the joint investigation team said Saturday, bolstering U.S. and British suspicions that the

plane was brought down by a bomb. However, Ayman el-Muqadem warned it was too early to say what caused the plane to apparently break up in mid-flight. Analysis of the noise was underway. “All scenarios are being considered ... it could be lithium batteries in the luggage of one of the passengers, it could be an explo-

Families share house, hardships

RUN SUPPORT NORM, IUP’s mascot, gave a high five to Marlie Mangold, 6, as she neared the finish line of the 2K Fun Run on Saturday for students at Homer-Center and all four Indiana elementary schools. She is the daughter of Jessica and Jason Mangold, of White Township.

• EDITOR’S NOTE: Names of Angels’ Wings applicants have been changed to protect their identities.

Index Business..............D-1-D-5 Classifieds............B-6-B-8 Dear Abby...................D-8 Family .........................D-6 Food ............................D-7 Leisure..................E-1-E-8 Lottery.........................A-2 Op/Ed..........................A-7 Sports...................C-1-C-8 Today in History ........D-8 Viewpoint....................A-6

sion in the fuel tank, it could be fatigue in the body of the aircraft, it could be the explosion of something,� said El-Muqadem, who is Egyptian and leading the investigation committee that includes experts from Russia, France, Germany and Ireland, where the plane was registered. El-Muqadem appeared alone at the news conference in Cairo. Continued on Page A-8

HARRISBURG — With Pennsylvania’s budget stalemate in its fifth month, Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf and leaders of the Legislature’s huge Republican majorities say the momentum of closed-door talks has picked up and there is cause for optimism. One key development is the identification of a source of money to help prop up the budget: diverting slot-machine gam- “WE’RE NOT bling revenue into the state there yet, but treasury. However, numerous dif- for the first ferences remain between time in a Wolf and Republican lawmakers, and Republicans while, we may have to confront their seem to have own internal differences to pave the way to a broader a direction agreement. that we’re Wolf’s press secretary, Jeff Sheridan, said Saturday that heading in there are serious negotia- together.� tions and a light at the end of the tunnel. That followed an Jake Corman, upbeat note Friday by House Senate majority Majority Leader Dave Reed, leader R-Indiana, to rank-and-file Republicans saying progress in talks could lead to the passage of a budget by Thanksgiving. “We’re not there yet, but for the first time in a while, we seem to have a direction that we’re heading in together,� Senate Majority Leader Jake Corman, R-Centre, said Friday. Wolf has sought a multibillion-dollar tax increase to correct a long-term deficit and narrow a funding disparity between rich and poor school districts that’s considered among the Continued on Page A-8

KAYLA GRUBE/Gazette

By SEAN YODER

syoder@indianagazette.net

Obama to lay out Gitmo plan By LOLITA C. BALDOR and KATHLEEN HENNESSEY Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The Pentagon’s plan outlining the long-stalled effort to close the Guantanamo Bay detention center, expected in the coming week, includes details suggesting that the Centennial Correctional Facility in Colorado is one suitable site to send detainees whom officials believe should

never be released, administration officials said. The plan represents a last-gasp effort by the Obama administration to convince staunch opponents in Congress that dangerous detainees who can’t be transferred safely to other countries should be housed in a U.S.-based prison. According to administration officials, the Continued on Page A-8

Thirteen years ago, Tara had her first tumor removed. She had her second removed in 2008. She cannot be alone due to seizures. She and her husband live with her sister, Janet, and Janet’s husband. Between them they have five children in the house, ranging from 4 to 17. Janet said Saturday that her sister endured hard radiation and chemo. And because of the seizures and other issues,

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Tara and Janet merged their families. “She’s my sister and I would take care of her until the day I die,� Janet said. Their income all goes toward the sometimes monthly trips to Pittsburgh for medical visits and the medical bills themselves. Janet was in a car crash in September, she said, so Tara and her husband have the only vehicle. And Janet is not without health problems of her own. They have lived in the county all of their lives and Continued on Page A-8



State

The Indiana Gazette

Sunday, November 8, 2015 — A-3

The role of school police officer keeps evolving By NATALIE REID MILLER

(Washington) Observer-Reporter

WASHINGTON, Pa. — Taking a short break from his many duties, Richard Horner recalled his days as a patrolman, when police officers were sometimes stationed at school entrances to sign in visitors. Now a school officer, Horner rarely sits on the job. Instead, he is all over Trinity Area’s six schools. He has even gone to homes for wellness checks and to help parents get their kids out of bed and off to school. As law enforcer, protector and instructor, Horner’s job encompasses not only maintaining a safe environment but also education and outreach. “In my job, I do a little bit of everything,� said Horner, who retired from North Franklin Township Police Department in 2013 and became the district’s officer in February 2014. Police departments have long had a presence in schools. In the wake of the Columbine High School shootings in 1999, that presence expanded. With the help of federal and state grants, districts began placing full-time officers in schools. Safety continues to be the top priority, but the role of school officers has expanded to include education, conflict resolution, investigations and community outreach. Grants continue to diminish, but many districts are opting to foot the bill for their police officers.

JIM McNUTT/Associated Press

TODD FOREMAN, Washington School District’s school resource officer, started at the district in 2004. “We call on him to do a variety of things,� said Trinity Superintendent Dr. Michael Lucas. “We value this position.� The National Association of School Resource Officers, the most widely recognized certifying organization, divides the function into three duties: teacher, counselor and law enforcement officer. Assistant Superintendent Donald Snoke said “Chief,� as Horner is affectionately called, fills all those roles. “He develops relationships with the kids. Our kids are extremely receptive to that. He has a tremendous calming effect on everybody,�

Snoke said. “The great thing about his position is that he’s proactive instead of just reactive.� “I try to talk to someone before they get in trouble,� Horner said. “I like to put fires out before they start.� Washington School District’s school resource officer, Todd Foreman, a city patrolman and detective who started at the district in 2004, agreed that forging relationships with students helps avoid or de-escalate potential problems. “Through the years, the number of arrests at school have dropped dramatically. There’s more of an understanding of what’s expected

from students,� Foreman said. “Getting to relate to the kids, showing empathy to students — I think that’s helped.� In a county that’s mostly rural, being an officer in a city school is unique. “There’s a greater risk for certain things, like violence. We have a large population on probation. Those types of things make it more difficult. Sometimes you arrest someone’s family and now there’s resentment. A lot of our kids here have been through things a lot of adults haven’t been through. It’s rough,� he said. “A lot of students see a person in uniform and show respect. There’s a small group that lacks respect for a police officer, but that’s very little.� Foreman said being familiar to the students has helped with encounters outside of school. Students will talk to him when they won’t talk to anyone else about a problem. “They understand we’re not here to get you in trouble, we’re here to help,� Foreman said. Central Greene School District recently hired Officer Thomas Ankrom, who provides protection for the 1,900 students of the district. Spread out over three buildings, the district had not had a full-time police officer before this school year. “In my career, I’ve had the opportunity to work with other (school resource officers). A lot of times, students will speak with the officer before me, the principal or another

WINTER WIN WI W INT NT TER TE ER

Supreme Court likely to see changes By MARK SCOLFORO Associated Press

HARRISBURG — The results from Tuesday’s state Supreme Court elections were barely in when triumphant Democrats began talking about what the court’s new 5-2 majority will mean for them, including a possible edge in the process of redrawing legislative district lines after the 2020 census. There’s no doubt the sweep of three open seats on the high court was a major win for the party and will bring changes after several years of turmoil, including the resignation of two justices and an ongoing investigation into a third. The court, which currently has a 3-2 Republican majority and two vacancies, appears likely to remain dominated by Democrats for the foreseeable future. In the near term, one effect of the election is that the one outgoing justice is working to wrap up his role in the court before returning as a senior judge to Superior Court. Justice Corry Stevens was appointed by Gov. Tom Cor-

VIEWING HARRISBURG bett in 2013 to fill the vacancy created by the arrest and prosecution of Justice Joan Orie Melvin. Melvin was convicted of using her staff to work on political campaigns. Another justice, Seamus McCaffery, abruptly retired last year after being linked to a pornographic email ring. Justice Michael Eakin is currently under investigation for his email practices as well. Stevens, a Republican who has also served as a district attorney and state lawmaker from Democratic-leaning Luzerne County, said public perceptions of party bias in the high court can be overblown. “I haven’t seen it,� Stevens said. “I haven’t seen anything that anybody’s approached as a Republican or Democrat.� But there are reasons why partisan groups poured millions into the race, and in recent years the high court has taken up a number of politically charged cases, includ-

ing public corruption criminal cases, natural gas drilling rules and voter ID. The last redistricting process ended up in court and it was a Republican justice, Ronald Castille, who cast a swing vote to send the Legislative Reapportionment Commission back to work. In that case, the majority said the maps had split too many municipalities and was not being sufficiently compact, noting Senate districts that looked like a wishbone, a crooked finger and an iron cross. The five-member commission consists of floor leaders of both parties in the House and Senate and a fifth member they choose. If they can’t decide — and usually, they can’t — the Supreme Court picks the fifth member. The Republicanmajority court picked a Republican judge. That’s not to say this week’s vote means Democrats will have a free hand in the next process, or that it will produce a partisan result.

“The redistricting commission is made up of Republicans and Democrats, and if you looked at the votes, they were bipartisan votes,� said House Republican spokesman Steve Miskin. “Democrats voted for our maps as well. It wasn’t a Republican map.� That process is six years away, and in the meantime new justices Christine Donohue, David Wecht and Kevin Dougherty will have ample time to live up to campaign promises to improve the court’s integrity and restore public confidence in the tarnished institution. “I think there’s a real opportunity for the Supreme Court to move into its next chapter, with three new justices out of seven,� said Lynn Marks with Pennsylvanians for Modern Courts. Stevens, who worked with Donohue and Wecht on Superior Court and knows Dougherty, is optimistic about that next chapter. “I think people can be very comfortable with the new justices-elect,� Stevens said. “They’re good, solid jurists, all three of them — I’m confident of that.�

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2 jailed, 1 dead after shooting at motel TREVOSE (AP) — Authorities say one person is dead and two others have been taken into custody after gunfire at a suburban Philadelphia motel. Police in Bucks County said shots were reported at the Knights Inn in Trevose at about 3 p.m. Saturday after officers tried to serve a warrant. The officers weren’t hit. Police said a woman later surrendered. A man remained in the room holding police off for more than two hours before he was taken into custody. Police said the other man was found dead in the room; it isn’t clear how he died. Bensalem public safety director Fred Harran said Virginia was looking for the dead man and the woman in connection with a homicide. Police are checking out the surviving man’s story that he was just a hitchhiker.

teacher. They feel more comfortable speaking with someone in uniform,� said Superintendent Brian Uplinger. Ankrom uses an “unpredictable schedule� to monitor the schools. David Buchowski, Fort Cherry School District police chief, also walks the halls of his rural district, making his presence known to outsiders and students. “I get to know the kids,� said the retired state police officer. “When you get a rapport started young, they know they can trust me.� While he also acts as an educator, Buchowski said his primary role is keeping everyone on campus safe. The district, one of the first in the county to employ a full-time officer, enhanced its security last year, increasing the number of cameras and alarms and providing access cards to staff. From his office, Buchowski can monitor the campus and lock and unlock doors. Another way officers ensure safety is by reducing bullying and cyberbullying. The popularity of social media creates new challenges. Snoke, who was a high school principal for 17 years, said that technology has reduced face-toface quarrels and replaced them with anonymous insults. “If used for positive things, (technology) is wonderful,� Snoke said. “But with texting and Facebook, anybody can put anything they want. Any tool can be used for inappropriate activities.�

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The Indiana Gazette

A-4 — Sunday, November 8, 2015

OBITUARIES Murdick Bracken Murdick “Turk” Bracken, 98, of Armagh, passed away Friday, Nov. 6, 2015 at his home. Born June 7, 1917, in Wehrum, he was the son of the late Elmer and Rhea (Beard) Bracken. Turk was a member of Bethel United Presbyterian Church, ACACIA Lodge #355 F&AM, Blairsville, Operating Engineer’s Local 66, Dilltown Sportsman Club, Clyde Saddle Club, and he was a lifetime member of Clyde Volunteer Fire Company. Turk was well know for riding his horse in numerous parades. He had a part in building much of the infrastructure in the area during his working career and was well-known in the community. He is survived by a daughter, Donna Semetkoskey, and husband Frank, Indiana; grandchildren, Charles Semetkoskey, New Florence; Toni Eaton, Ernest; Frank “Ted” Semetkoskey Jr. and wife Brenda, Apollo; Tamara Ohler and husband Charles, Davidsville; Lori Pease and husband Robert, Home;

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Joseph Semetkoskey and wife Karen, Indiana; greatgrandchildren Melody Semetkoskey; Tarah, Katie and Jacob Eaton; Tyson Semetkoskey, Josie Ohler, Bobbi Pease, Joey and Allison Semetkoskey; sisters-in-law Grace Gavin, Davidsville; Kathryn Stewart, Dilltown; special nephew Gene “Sonny” Stewart, Calif. He was preceded in death by his wife of 71 years, Helen (Stewart) Bracken; brothers Ira, Wayne and Harry Bracken. Friends will be received from 6 to 8 p.m. Monday and 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesday at Richard C. Stuart Funeral Home, 392 East Philadelphia St., Armagh, where a service will be held at 11 a.m. Wednesday with Pastor James Sunseri Officiating. Interment will be at Armagh Cemetery. There will be a Masonic service at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. Memorial donations may be made to VNA/Hospice, 850 Hospital Road, Suite #3000, Indiana, PA 15701. Online condolences may be left at www.thestuart funeralhomes.com.

Roseann Komlosky Roseann Komlosky, 65, of Waterman, died Saturday, Nov. 7, 2015, at her late residence. She was the daughter of the late Earl and Louise (Kopchak) Henry and was born March 27, 1956, in Indiana. Roseann is survived by her husband, Paul E. Komlosky; two daughters, Regina Komlosky, Blackjack and Pauline Hilty, Homer City. She is also survived by three grandchildren, Kathy, Bretton and Se-

rina and a great granddaughter, Emily. Friends will be received from 10 a.m. Monday until time of the service at noon at the C. Frederick Bowser Funeral Home, Homer City. Interment to follow in the Greenwood Cemetery, Indiana.

Agnes Mester Agnes (Cush) Mester, 89, of Homer City, died Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2015, at her residence. The daughter of the late John and Anna (Misik) Cush, she was born May 25, 1926, in Lucernemines. Agnes was a member of Our Lady of the Assumption Parish. She is survived by three children: Bernadette and her husband, Michael, of Arlington, Va.; Joseph Mester Jr. and his wife, Marion, of Bowie, Md.; and Daniel Mester and his wife, Sandra, of Virginia Beach, Va.; six grandchildren; and eight great-grandchildren. Agnes is also survived by three sisters: Marie Exon, of Mundelein, Ill.; Irene Leysock, of Lucernemines;

and Delores Cush, of Indiana. She was preceded in death by her husband, Joseph Mester; and sisters, Dorothy Novak and Helen Brew. A funeral Mass was held at noon Saturday at Our Lady of the Assumption Parish, Lucernemines site, with the Rev. Father Ron Cyktor the celebrant. Interment will follow in the St. Bernard Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the VNA Hospice, 850 Hospital Road, Suite 3000, Indiana, PA 15701.

Rita Pentrack Rita Anne Pentrack departed this life for her eternal rest on Monday, Oct. 26, 2015, at Palm Cottages Assisted Living Facility in Rockledge, Fla. Rita was born in Johnstown on March 30, 1928, to her loving parents, George and Elizabeth Robak. While living in Johnstown, Rita graduated from Bishop McCort Catholic High School, started a career in the banking industry and married the love of her life, Don. Later Rita and Don moved to Blairsville, where they raised three sons and Rita continued working and volunteering. After retiring, Rita and Don wanted to be able to further pursue their passion for golf and thus moved for Florida, where they could golf and enjoy the sunshine daily. The family would like to thank the staff of Palm Cottages for all the love and care that was given to Rita during her time with them. Rita will be mourned by her

Hess wins seat as commissioner WEEKLY DIGEST

Here is a look at the top stories of local interest published in The Indiana Gazette during the week of Nov. 1-7:

SUNDAY, NOV. 1 The team restoring actor Jimmy Stewart’s private airplane for future display at the airport named after him is looking for a little detective help. The Cessna C-310 twin-engine plane Stewart owned from 1961 to 1966 had languished unused and was eventually abandoned years ago at the Dallas Executive Airport, in Texas. What was left of the plane was acquired and disassembled and in April was trucked to the Indiana County/Jimmy Stewart Airport by volunteers of the Experimental Aircraft Association Chapter 993 at the airport. Harold Wood, secretary of the EAA chapter, said members since the spring have reassembled the plane, added missing parts and stripped off the old paint. EAA volunteers hope someone may have taken some color photos of the movie star and his plane. Anyone who has photos of the old Cessna is asked to contact Wood at (724) 388-2912.

MONDAY, NOV. 2 sons Mark and Todd (Kim); daughter-in-law, Monica; and four grandchildren: Michael, Kyle, Lauren and Meghan. She was preceded in death by her husband of 54 years, Don, and son Tom. Rita was a member of Divine Mercy Catholic Church, Merritt Island, where her memorial service will be held at 5 p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 24. The Wylie-Baxley Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

James Shields James Arthur Shields, 93, of Blairsville, passed away on Thursday, Nov. 5, 2015, at St. Andrew’s Village, White Township. The son of James M. and Anna (Fairly) Shields, he was born Aug. 30, 1922, in Conemaugh Township. Mr. Shields graduated from Blairsville High School in 1940 and was a self-employed farmer in Conemaugh Township for many years. He was a member of the Ebenezer Presbyterian Church for 84 years, having joined at age 9 and had served on the cemetery board of the church. He enjoyed hunting. Surviving are his wife of 58 years, Elma M. (Klingensmith) Shields, who he married on June 1, 1957; a daughter, Bonnie M. McConnell (Dennis), of Blairsville, and a son, James W. Shields (Shirley), of Clarksburg; and three grandchildren, Teresa

Submitted photo

THIS OLD PHOTO shows the color guard of the Pennsylvania National Guard Company L, 110th Infantry Regiment, 28th Infantry Division, which participated in the 1958 Veterans Day parade in Blairsville. It was submitted by Russ Quick, of Blairsville, and is from the guard’s archives.

Shields, Patrick McConnell and Sarah McConnell. He was preceded in death by his parents; an infant daughter and twin boys. The family will receive friends from 10 to 11 a.m. Tuesday at the Ebenezer Presbyterian Church, Lewisville. A funeral service will be held at 11 a.m. at the church with The Rev. Elizabeth A. Arter officiating. Interment will be in Ebenezer Cemetery, Lewisville. Memorial contributions may be made to the Ebenezer Presbyterian Church, c/o Dorinda Hutchison, 5684 New Port Road, Clarksburg, PA 15725, or to St. Andrew’s Village, 1155 Indian Springs Road, Indiana, PA 15701, in memory of Mr. Shields. To view the online obituary, sign the guest registry or send condolences, visit www.shoemakerfh-monuments.com.

Authorities reported that a motorist suffered a fatal heart attack before his pickup truck hit a structure along Route 286 outside Commodore in Green Township. Todd Deitman, 54, of Barr Slope Road, Clymer, was pronounced dead at 12:40 a.m. Nov. 1 at Indiana Regional Medical Center, according to Indiana County Coroner Jerry Overman Jr. Emergency responders were sent at 11:56 p.m. Oct. 31 when Deitman’s vehicle hit a house owned by Shirley Wissinger at 13781 Route 286, near the intersection with Route 240 and Lighthouse Road, officials said. The truck hit a man door entrance to the basement and damaged the wall, according to a fire official. Fire Police Captain James Hopkins III of the Commodore fire department said a tire of the truck continued to spin after the impact and started a fire that scorched the wall and filled the house with smoke. Deitman, the owner of

TOMORROW’S FUNERALS KOMLOSKY, Roseann, noon, C. Frederick Bowser Funeral Home, Homer City ZIMMERMAN, Gloria (Beltz) Bugal, 11 a.m., Bowser-Ondr iezek Funeral Home, Nanty Glo

You may have missed these and other stories. To subscribe, call (724) 465-5555. Last Chance Saloon in Commodore, had driven away from the tavern moments earlier, Overman reported in a news release.

TUESDAY, NOV. 3 A road rage incident in downtown Indiana last year that escalated into a shooting resulted in a prison sentence Monday for a White Township man. Indiana County Common Pleas Court Judge Thomas Bianco sentenced Eagan Minich, 30, of Old Route 56, to serve two to five years in a state correctional institution and to pay more than $18,000 in court costs, a fine and restitution. Minich in August pleaded guilty to a single count of aggravated assault, a first-degree felony. A second count of aggravated assault and a charge of making terroristic threats were dismissed in a plea agreement arranged earlier. With the plea, Minich admitted that he beat Hayden Warmke, an Indiana University of Pennsylvania criminology student from Hollidaysburg, and shot him in the leg shortly after 2 a.m. on Jan. 30, 2014, in a parking lot at the Maple Town Houses at 565 Maple St., White Township.

WEDNESDAY, NOV. 4 Republican Indiana County commissioners Mike Baker and Rodney Ruddock won re-election Tuesday and will be joined in the commissioners’ office in January by Democrat Sherene Hess. Baker, appointed as a commissioner in January 2014 to fill a vacancy, led all six candidates on the ballot and received 8,914 votes, or 26.5 percent of the total. Ruddock, now completing his 12th year as a commissioner, finished second with 5,802 votes, or 17.2 percent. Hess had 5,561 votes, or 16.5 percent. Independent candidate Bob Colgan made a strong showing and finished in a close fourth place with 5,251 votes, or 15.6 percent. Colgan’s running mate, independent Tony Moretti, received 3,812 votes, or 11.3 percent. And Democratic candidate Tammie Shetler finished with 3,550 votes, or 10.5 percent. Two other Republicans, the Rev. Dr. Allan Campbell and Ed Chapman, ran as write-in candidates, and 686 write-in votes were cast. The

names of the candidates who received those writeins were not available Tuesday night. ❏❏❏ Indiana Area School District directors Douglas Steve and Walter Schroth to serve four-year terms on the board, and elected newcomers Tamara Leeper and Robert Edwards as board members. Of the three incumbents nominated in the primary, only one, John Barbor, was returned to the board for a four-year term. Directors Brian Petersen and Hilliary Creely trailed in the voting Tuesday. All those elected will take their seats in the first week of December during the annual reorganization session. Complete election results are available online at www.indianagazette.com.

THURSDAY, NOV. 5 Two children of an Armstrong County woman who police said was killed by an escaped inmate have filed a wrongful death lawsuit. According to a published report, they filed the suit Wednesday alleging Armstrong County and the jail’s outgoing warden laid the groundwork for their mother’s death. Todd and Tara Long accused the county and warden of running a lax facility with security flaws that allowed Robert Crissman to flee. The suit claims the jail wrongly allowed Crissman, 38, to be given special freedoms. State police reported Crissman left the lockup about 6:30 a.m. July 30 while he helped to deliver inmate meals from a truck parked outside the jail. Crissman fled to the residence of two acquaintances, Tammy Long and Jerry Slagle, who live about 500 yards away from the jail along Rayburn Road. Investigators charged that Crissman beat and strangled Long, 55, after Slagle left for work, then fled in a stolen truck that belonged to Slagle.

FRIDAY, NOV. 6 Academic performance scores increased in the 2014-15 school year for five of the 15 high schools serving students in Indiana County and selected bordering areas, according to figures released this week by the Pennsylvania Depart-

ment of Education. The department’s School Performance Profile scoring system takes into account student scores on standardized tests, competency-assessment based on industry standards and third-grade literacy rates. Other factors include college aptitude test results, attendance and graduation rates, and year-to-year progress toward bringing students to prescribed levels of proficiency, particularly students with a tendency to underperform. The scores have been issued this year only for secondary schools, where student performance on the Keystone exams stand as the equivalent of final exams for courses taken by 11th-grade students. The scores are calculated on a scale of zero to 100 points. Scores for elementary and middle schools reflect performance on Pennsylvania System of School Assessment (PSSA) tests administered to thirdand eighth-grade students. The most recent elementary school performance scores were given for 2013-14. Including schools in bordering areas associated with Indiana County through athletic and academic programs, the scores ranged from 63.8 at Northern Cambria High School to 90.1 at United High School.

SATURDAY, NOV. 7 Indiana County Child Daycare Program Inc., styled as “Indi Kids,” faces the prospect of suspending two of its pre-kindergarten centers later this month as the state’s budget deadlock creeps along. They, and other institutions in Indiana County, have been waiting for months on the release of state funds and movement in the bureaucratic pipeline of state grants that have been frozen since June 30. Headquartered at Davis Hall on Indiana University of Pennsylvania’s campus, Indi Kids provides an array of child care and education programs for infants through 13-year-olds at four different locations. Now, two of the prekindergarten classes, one at Davis and the other at Homer-Center Elementary School, face a suspension as they await the release of state funds. The Davis prekindergarten would have to close on Nov. 24 and HomerCenter on Nov. 25. This would affect 30 children, 15 in each pre-kindergarten program.

Jesse Helms’ widow dies at age 96 RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Dorothy Coble Helms, wife of the late U.S. Sen. Jesse Helms, has died. She was 96. Spokesman Mark Blake of Brown-Wynne Funeral Home said Mrs. Helms died Friday in her hometown of Raleigh. Dorothy Helms was among the first women to graduate from the school of journalism at the University of North Carolina. She went to work as the society editor at The News & Observer of Raleigh, where she

met Jesse Helms. They were married on Oct. 31, 1942. Her husband, a staunch Republican conservative, was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1972. She was a regular speaker for Republican women’s groups and other gatherings. Jesse Helms died in July 2008. Blake says funeral services for Dorothy Helms are scheduled for Tuesday in Raleigh.


Region

The Indiana Gazette

Shelter opens its doors There was quite a large gathering Thursday evening as the Indiana County Humane Society took the opportunity to show off their new home along Airport Road. It was a Business After Hours event sponsored by the Indiana County Chamber of Commerce. Humane society board members were on hand to assist as tour guides and answer questions about the new facility. There is no comparison with the former shelter along Rose Street. A walkthrough takes you down a welllighted hallway where the cats are displayed in steel cages with glass doors and they Carl Kologie is look at a retired man- the visiaging editor at tors as if the Gazette. to say, His column “take me, appears on take me.” Sunday. Write Natuhim at kologie rally, the @indiana board gazette.net. members are very proud of their building which can house up to 35 dogs and 150 cats, or any other animals that may have been abandoned. It is triple the size of the old facility. But the bad news is that the new quarters are costly to maintain, and the utilities, the medical expenses and veterinary costs have also increased. Fundraisers are held throughout the year, but a financial need still exists. Anyone wishing to donate can simply call up the human society’s website at incohumane society.com and follow the instructions. ❏❏❏ The United Way of Indiana County is just about on track to its 2015 goal and will hold a fundraiser on Dec. 11 that they have labeled “The 12 Days of Christmas Scavenger Hunt.” In this unique event, teams or one to 10 members will be tested on their knowledge of Indiana as they explore the nooks and crannies of downtown Indiana in a search for clues based on Indiana’s present and past. Check-in is at 5 p.m. at The Coney and the entry donation is $20 per team member. All participants receive a T-shirt and snacks will be available throughout the hunt. Registration forms may be obtained by calling the United Way office at (724) 463-0277. Any company, firm or individual has the opportunity to be a scavenger hunt sponsor. The deadline for sponsorship is Dec. 1 and can be obtained by calling the United Way office. ❏❏❏ “You better watch out, you better not cry, you better not pout, I’m telling you why: B.E. Taylor is coming to town.” If this concert doesn’t get you in the holiday mood, nothing will. I can promise you that. For the fourth year the B.E. Taylor Christmas concert will be held at the Kovalchick Convention and Athletic Center on Dec. 19 at 7:30 p.m. Taylor is truly entertaining and those who attended previous shows are witness to that. In fact, many return each year. As an added bonus, the “Voices of Christmas,” an all-star high school student choir made up of Indiana County students, will perform at 6:45 p.m. So get there early. Tickets are now on sale at the box office at the Kovalchick complex or by calling (800) 298-4200. This concert benefits Renda Broadcasting’s 36th annual Teddy Bear Fund Drive and the IRMC Pediatrics Department.

CARL KOLOGIE

Sunday, November 8, 2015 — A-5

HONOR ROLL

Marion Center Area High School MARION CENTER — The following students have been named to the honor roll for the first quarter at Marion Center Area High School. GRADE 12 Primary honors Maranda Anderson, Aaron Ankney, Michael Bacha, Tessa Bailey, Hanna Beer, Colton Bennett, Kristie Coffman, Mallory Dixon, Zachery Edwards, Sierra Filipovich, Madeline Geesey, Morgan Glasser, Mitchell Gordish, Jed Goss, Madison Griffith, Lindsay Herring, Erik Hicks, Craig Irvin, Rachel Johns, Courtney Johnston. Larry Jones, Carissa Kessler, Kyle Kinter, Laken Lambing, Madison Lazeration, Taylor Lecce, Trina Lingenfelter, Cassidy Lydick, Erika Mack, Kacey Misko, Alexis Mouser, Josie Ohler, Christopher Olp, Vanessa Pappal. Zachary Patterson, Carley Peterson, Hannah Peterson, Benjamin Rudd, Chaise Stiteler, Deven Ward, Lindsey Weaver, David Wiles, Jordan Williams, Levi Yeomans and Tyler Zapach. Secondary honors Richard Ankney, Roland Braun, Morgan Bresnock, Kevin Condrick, Madison Doolin, Haley Frazee, Samantha Fulmer, Emilee Howells, Patience Huey, Shaylynn Lane, Bradley Leasure, Kylie Lingenfelter, Kaitlin Miller, Katelin Olson, Chanler Polisky, Kyla Rito, Nicole Sarnovsky, Jordan Stear and Morgan Wells. GRADE 11 Primary honors Brianna Adams, Brianna Adkins, Rafael Arenas Sola, Arista Barnoff, Madison Betts, Zachary Collazzo, Laura Crego Robles, Bailey Cribbs, Mackenzie Crooks, Braxton Dameron, Lindsey Fenton. Alex Fiechuk, Allison Fleming, Rachel Fleming,

Deal gives horse racing more time

Austin Gearhart, Brooke Heberling, Shawn Isenberg, Zachary King, Kara Kutsch, Michaela Lydic, April Murdick, Rachael Myers, Brandon Parsell, Brent Penrose, Sara Piersigilli, Zachery Pounds, Aubrie Putt, Olivia Riley. Laken Ryen, Robin Schultz, Jacob Sellers, Taylor Shearer, Sari Shultz, Mariah Sinan, Bradley Smith, Cole Stewart, Courtney Suppes, Megan Taylor, Kyle Uptegraph, Taya Whitfield, Allan Wright, Joseph Zele and Zack Zambotti. Secondary honors Tyler Banks, Caitlynn Blazavich, Sloan Brocious, Samuel Cramer, Angel Cronan, Marina Fulmer, Jessica Gess, Jordan Gromley, Mia Heilbrun, Brandon King, Noah MacBlane, Jared Marshall, Madison McGinnis, Kole Miller, Bryant Miloser, Ian Orr, Mia Oterson, Shelly Reefer, Savannah Santiago, Steven Shirley, Eric Stitt, Jessica Wagner and Dakota Weston. GRADE 10 Primary honors Trinity Ashbaugh, Matthew Badzik, Charlie Beatty, Kaiana Bell, Taylor Blanzy, Isabella Bosar, Jared Burkhardt, Sydney Edwards, Matthew Gaston, Katelyn Geesey, Carmen Gett, Dylan Goss, Jane Herring, Kyle Hill, Madison Hubbert, Nicole Kessler, Lauren Krecota, McKenzie Lucas, Laci McClure, Paul McClure, Tanner Morrison, Page Musser, Alexis Neese, Brandon O’Hara, Rex Olp, Maleah Orr, Tristan Pfeiffer, Makaela Rising, Emily Risinger, Alicia Ruddock, Samantha Schurr, Logan Short, Jenna Strittmatter, Leah Strong, Mariah Syktich, Michael Turner, Madison Vincent, Logan Wells and Reegan Yaworski. Secondary honors Zackary Betts, Michael Blystone, Madison Cattau,

Tyler Cover, Logan Crooks, Evan Dalessio, Elizabeth Elkin, Kristopher Fairman, Cortney Ferringer, Tyler Gelles, Gavin Gibbons, Cody Gyms, Danielle Hayes, Desirae Henry. Emily Henry, Benjamin Johns, Kaitlynn Kirkland, Morgan Knox, Scott McCoy, Taylor McCunn, Brandon Orr, Derek Patterson, Alesia Quagliato, Emily Reed, Paige Repine, Garrick Shellhammer, Megan Wannett and Luke Wray GRADE 9 Primary honors MaLeah Adamson, Ian Bertuzzi, Emma Bland, Ethan Brewer, Tarrina Christy, Emily Dailey, Makenzie Doolin, MacKenzie Gapshes, Maleigha Gardner, Ryan Gemmell, Bryce Gromley, Claire Henderson, Matthew Himes, Taylor Lingenfelter. Quatrina Long-Tate, Brandon Lucik, Shyra Lute, Brant Lydic, Connor McGrady, Eric McKee, Allix Monoskey, Emily Murphy, Makayla Musser, Zakkary Painter, Madison Penrose, Katelin Poproch, Hannah Rising, Rylie Schoch, Shylynn Smicklo, Grace Snyder, Morgan Straw, Megan Uptegraph, Dominic Urbani, Elizabeth Vaglia, Odessa Vallies, Mackenzie Walker, Hunter Waltermire and Seth White. Secondary honors Jacob Adamson, Leslie Blystone, Curtis DeHaven, Jacalyn Fetsko, Tessa Freeman, Sarah Fulton, Katlynn Gromley, Gavin Heilbrun, Zachary Hicks, Tyler Howells, Brendan Mondi, Orion Neal, Annissa Orr, Travis Parsell, Bobbi Pease, Koral Smith, Megan Trunzo and Sierra Wilson. GRADE 8 Primary honors Torri Ashbaugh, Emily Busija, Clayton Coble, Rhys Davies, AnnaPearl Diamond, Kaleb Farmery, Tris-

VETERANS DAY 2015 + + +

tan Filler, Adam Fulmer, Bridget Gardner, Camille Gibbons, Taylor Harper, Riley Hays, Alaina Kutsch, Alaina Leasure, Christina Lyttle, Hailey McCunn, Cleo McMahan, Hunter Peterson, Isaac Ryer, Tyler Sacco, Cherise Schultz, Chloe Scott, Joseph Semetkoskey, Melanie Sinan, Carrington Steele, Joshua Tozer, Jonah Vaglia, Garet Wells and Bethany Zapach. Secondary honors Hunter Armstrong, Alyxandra Cornetto, Karina Fisher, Colin Fox, Jessica Girolami, Madison Krugh, Peyton Lightcap, Hunter Lydic, Gabriel McClellan, Ian McDaniel, Lauren Miller, Lyza Miller, Alexander Nanni, Erika Niel, Brooke Powell, Kassandra Roush and Jocilyn Thompson. GRADE 7 Primary honors Marcus Badzik, Marvin Beatty, Callie Bland, Morgan Blystone, Justine Brocious, Aidan Cattau, Adam Caylor, Ashlynne Coble, Jerzey

Coble, Evan Crooks, Robin DeHaven, Mychaela Doolin, Alexis Evans, Hallie Filler, Morris Fleming, Joshua Ford, Preston Fox, Eric Gaston, Abbrealla Griffith, Breanna Hanayik, Andrew Helman, Jacob Hubbert, Hayden Johnston, Areil Jordan, Alyson Krecota, Carter Lydic, Tanner MacBlane, Bradley McCunn, Alexa Meyer, Sarah Miller, Alexis Morgan, Fawntanna Plyler, Jadyn Schoch, Anthony Scott, Jack Shearer, Benjamin Shoop, Zachary Short, Brianna Sirochman, Elizabeth Smith, Kayli Smith, Julia Spence, Mia Urbani and Levi Waltermire. Secondary honors Alexa Ackerman, Austin Bailey, James Clark, Conner Fairman, Waylon Ferringer, Clairissa Gallo, Michaela Gett, Jasmine Hill, Justin Peterson, Michael Reinard, Kristin Richards, Dylan Roach, Krista Saxfield, Sunnie Shelstad, Lauren Shirley, Vaz Smay, Ellivia Solien, Kole Uptegraph, Hannah Venesky and Riley Weaver.

THANK YOU O to those se who h supported me and came out to vot o e! – Tony Moretti

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By The Associated Press HARRISBURG — Gov. Tom Wolf’s administration says it’s giving another week to allow horse and harness racing in Pennsylvania now that it’s reached a preliminary agreement to underwrite the industry’s regulatory functions. The state Department of Agriculture said Friday night that, after two weeks of negotiations, it had secured concessions from horsemen, breeder organizations and race track operators to fix a long-term deficit in the State Racing Fund. Details had yet to be finalized. The Wolf administration warned two weeks ago that the state would shut down racing because the fund was out of money and the budget stalemate prevented it from transferring money into it. Six Pennsylvania tracks offer Thoroughbred or harness racing. The fund is subsidized by a tax on wagers, which have steadily declined for years.

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A-6

Indiana Gazette

Sunday, November 8, 2015

The

Established in 1890

Published by The Indiana Printing & Publishing Company MICHAEL J. DONNELLY President and Publisher

STACIE D. GOTTFREDSON

HASTIE D. KINTER

Treasurer and Assistant Secretary

Secretary and Assistant Treasurer

JOSEPH L. GEARY

Vice President and General Manager

R. Hastie Ray Publisher, 1913-70

Lucy R. Donnelly Publisher, 1970-93

Joe Donnelly

Publisher, 1970-2000

“The Gazette wants to be the friend of every man, the

promulgator of all that’s right, a welcome guest in the home. We want to build up, not tear down, to help, not to hinder; and to assist every worthy person in the community without reference to race, religion or politics. Our cause will be the broadening and bettering of the county’s interests.”

W

Austerity’s grim legacy

hen economic crisis short run also inflict lasting struck in 2008, policy- damage is generally referred makers by and large to as “hysteresis.” It’s an idea did the right thing. The Fed- with an impressive pedigree: eral Reserve and other cen- The case for hysteresis was tral banks realized that sup- made in a well-known 1986 porting the financial system paper by Olivier Blanchard, took priority over conven- who later became the chief tional notions of monetary economist at the Internaprudence. The Obama ad- tional Monetary Fund, and ministration and its counter- Lawrence Summers, who parts realized that in a served as a top official in slumping economy budget both the Clinton and the deficits were helpful, not Obama administrations. But harmful. And the money- I think everyone was hesitant printing and borrowing to apply the idea to the Great worked: A repeat of the Great Recession, for fear of seemDepression, which seemed ing excessively alarmist. all too possible at the time, At this point, however, the was avoided. evidence practically screams Then it all went hysteresis. Even wrong. And the countries that seem consequences of to have largely rethe wrong turn we covered from the took look worse crisis, like the Unitnow than the ed States, are far harshest critics of poorer than precriconventional wissis projections sugdom ever imaggested they would ined. be at this point. And For those who a new paper by don’t remember Summers and Anto(it’s hard to benio Fatás, in addilieve how long tion to supporting this has gone on): other economists’ In 2010, more or conclusion that the less suddenly, the crisis seems to have policy elite on done enormous Paul Krugman both sides of the long-run damage, writes a Atlantic decided shows that the column for The to stop worrying downgrading of naabout unemploy- New York Times. tions’ long-run ment and start prospects is strongworrying about budget ly correlated with the deficits instead. amount of austerity they imThis shift wasn’t driven by posed. evidence or careful analysis. What this suggests is that In fact, it was very much at the turn to austerity had truly odds with basic economics. catastrophic effects, going Yet ominous talk about the far beyond the jobs and indangers of deficits became come lost in the first few something everyone said be- years. In fact, the long-run cause everyone else was say- damage suggested by the ing it, and dissenters were no Fatás-Summers estimates is longer considered re- easily big enough to make spectable — which is why I austerity a self-defeating polbegan describing those par- icy even in purely fiscal roting the orthodoxy of the terms: Governments that moment as Very Serious Peo- slashed spending in the face ple. of depression hurt their Some of us tried in vain to economies, and hence their point out that deficit future tax receipts, so much fetishism was both wrong- that even their debt will end headed and destructive, that up higher than it would have there was no good evidence been without the cuts. that government debt was a And the bitter irony of the problem for major story is that this catastrophic economies, while there was policy was undertaken in the plenty of evidence that cut- name of long-run responsiting spending in a depressed bility, that those who protesteconomy would deepen the ed against the wrong turn depression. were dismissed as feckless. And we were vindicated by There are a few obvious lesevents. More than 4½ years sons from this debacle. “All have passed since Alan the important people say so” Simpson and Erskine Bowles is not, it turns out, a good warned of a fiscal crisis with- way to decide on policy; in two years; U.S. borrowing groupthink is no substitute costs remain at historic lows. for clear analysis. Also, callMeanwhile, the austerity ing for sacrifice (by other policies that were put into people, of course) doesn’t place in 2010 and after had mean you’re tough-minded. exactly the depressing effects But will these lessons sink textbook economics predict- in? Past economic troubles, ed; the confidence fairy like the stagflation of the never did put in an appear- 1970s, led to widespread reance. consideration of economic Yet there’s growing evi- orthodoxy. But one striking dence that we critics actually aspect of the past few years underestimated just how de- has been how few people are structive the turn to austerity willing to admit having been would be. Specifically, it now wrong about anything. It looks as if austerity policies seems all too possible that didn’t just impose short-term the Very Serious People who losses of jobs and output, but cheered on disastrous polithey also crippled long-run cies will learn nothing from growth. the experience. And that is, The idea that policies that in its own way, as scary as the depress the economy in the economic outlook.

PAUL KRUGMAN

Rubio’s immigration problem

M

arco Rubio has a dubious distinction among the top-tier Republican presidential candidates: He’s the only one who crafted and passed through the Senate a socalled comprehensive immigration reform that is anathema to the right. As Rubio has demonstrated considerable political strength, the spotlight has turned to him. Inevitably, his role as frontman for the “Gang of Eight” bill will get extensively relitigated — and it should. It was a colossal political and policy misjudgment. Among the flaws of the bill was the elemental one that put an amnesty before enforcement. In large part due to Rubio’s exertions, the bill passed with 68 votes in the Senate — enough, it was thought at the time, to bulldoze the opposition in the House. Instead, House conservatives dug in, and eventually Rubio declared his own handiwork a mistake. It’s a hell of a mulligan, and there is, understandably, lingering distrust. House Speaker Paul Ryan is a Kempian true believer in a latitudinarian immigration policy. If you couple him with a President Rubio, they could be the Dynamic Duo of everything grass-roots conservatives oppose on immigration.

The reassurances from the have some unmistakable two aren’t always very reascontent. It should require suring. Sometimes, Ryan, that an E-Verify system is who has pledged not to fully functioning. move a comprehensive bill It should require that an during the Obama adminisentry-exit system is up and tration, sounds as if he is running and tracking 100 implicitly saying: percent of people It’s a real shame coming here by that Barack sea or air. It Obama is presishould require a dent since we can’t working system of pass a sprawling, cooperation bedeceptive, impostween the federal sible-to-adminisgovernment and ter 1,000-page imlocal police. Finalmigration bill. But ly, all this should don’t worry. Once show results in there’s a Republiyear-over-year decan president, clines in the illewe’ll really get gal-immigrant after it! population. Rubio often Rubio says his sounds more catsecond step on egorical when ex- Rich Lowry’s immigration plaining that imwould be to modcolumn is migration reform ernize the legal distributed by has to be incresystem to emphamental, not com- King Features size skills. prehensive, but he Syndicate. This shouldn’t should be more be controversial, explicit. but he said the same thing What does it mean that during the Gang of Eight deenforcement will come first, bate, even though the bill as Rubio says? would have welcomed more If it is only a promise to unskilled immigrants and pass enforcement legisla- increased overall levels of tion before moving with dis- legal immigration considerpatch to pass the other con- ably. stituent parts of so-called Rubio should promise that comprehensive immigra- any change in the criteria for tion reform, it is a meaning- legal immigration come in less commitment to a par- the context of an appreciaticular parliamentary path ble drop in overall immigrato the same end. tion levels. “Enforcement first” must Not only has legal immi-

RICH LOWRY

gration been running at historic highs for decades now, Republicans strongly back reducing it, according to a recent Pew survey. It found that 67 percent want to reduce immigration and only 7 percent want to increase it. If Rubio’s increased highskilled immigration is merely layered on top of current levels, it will represent a continuation of the Beltway’s default toward more immigration no matter what. And it will continue to orphan all those Republicans who feel as though no one represents their views, except perhaps Donald Trump. Conservatives will want to hear more from Rubio — on Obama’s executive amnesty, on guest workers, on the pathway to citizenship — but making these two assurances wouldn’t contradict anything Rubio has said during the past year, and it would at least alleviate concern that his new approach is “boob bait for Bubba” in the GOP primaries. But the doubts will never go away, nor should they. On immigration, the lesson from decades of cant and false promises by both parties is clear. With apologies to Ronald Reagan, it is simply “Don’t trust.” comments.lowry @nationalreview.com

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Agenda 21: fact or fiction? For the last year our thoughts in Indiana County have been on the reassessment of private and business property. Landowners owning 10 acres or more have been introduced to “Clean and Green” as a way of reducing their taxes. It is a confusing and critically important time in our county’s history and future. If you haven’t read the book “Agenda 21” by Glenn Beck and Harriet Parke, you need to. Although a fictional book written by a conserva-

tive and a liberal, the book is based on a real action taken by 178 world leaders, including U.S. President George Herbert Walker Bush, at the Earth Summit in 1992. The Agenda 21 plan of action includes not only talk of sustainable development and property rights, but of training of government workers, education in our schools and population growth. The Indiana Armstrong Patriots invite you to a free

showing of the movie “Agenda 21 … How will it affect you?” on Tuesday from 6 to 9 p.m. at the Rustic Lodge, 2199 Oakland Ave., White Township. From 6 to 6:30 p.m. there will be a pre-showing discussion with the movie to begin at 6:30 p.m. If you are unable to attend the pre-discussion time, please know that you are welcome to come at 6:30 p.m. as there will be a postmovie discussion. The movie is produced by

Say thanks to veterans With Veterans Day quickly approaching, it is time to thank all veterans who have served our great country. Thank you! One veterans organization in Indiana participates in Veterans Day activities, organizing and helping with the parade, breakfast/lunch for veterans and free flu shots. This is Indiana American Legion Post 141, Philadelphia Street, Indiana. This is greatly appreciated. Thank you! There is one problem with the post home: There is no handicap access. A wheelchair-bound veteran cannot even get in the building. Once inside, there are no handicap-accessible rest-

rooms. Men must go 17 steps down and 17 back up to use the restroom. Women must go to the second floor. These conditions have existed for the 55 years I’ve been going on this property. I realize the post has recently had some financial problems, but it is time for the officers and trustees to step back and take a good hard look at the problems and take some action. I hope this letter will encourage some action by the post officials and get some improvements before next year’s Veterans Day. Thank you. Samuel W. Martin Indiana

the John Birch Society. Since most of us equate private property with freedom, we feel that the more educated we become on Agenda 21, the more we citizens can have a more positive role in the future of our family and community. Before you come to the movie showing on Tuesday, you may want to Google United Nations.com/Agenda 21 to gain more insight into the topic. Jim Ray Penn Run

Independents commended I’d like to commend the efforts of the independents, Bob Colgan and Tony Moretti, who ran for the commissioner seats in the recent election. They weren’t elected but fought the good fight and largely set the dialogue in the campaign. People who voted a straight party ticket and particularly the large expenditures focused on retaining Rod Ruddock were too much to overcome. Nevertheless, we’re all better off for their efforts and hope that they retain their concern for the residents of Indiana County in the future. Timothy L. Wilson Indiana

Guidelines for letter writers The Indiana Gazette welcomes letters to the editor and will endeavor to print readers’ letters in a timely manner. Letters should be signed and include the writer’s full address and telephone number so the authenticity of the letter can be confirmed. No letters will be published anonymously.

Letters must be factual and discuss issues rather than personalities. Writers should avoid name-calling. Form letters and automated “canned” email will not be accepted. Generally, letters should be limited to 350 words. All letters are subject to editing. Letter

writers are limited to one submission every 30 days. Send letters to Mike Petersen, editorial page editor, The Indiana Gazette, 899 Water St., Indiana, PA 15701. Letters may also be emailed to mepetersen@indianagazette.net. Be sure to include a phone number.


Op-Ed

The Indiana Gazette

Sunday, November 8, 2015 — A-7

Editorials elsewhere The Associated Press

Petulance won’t improve debates

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By The Sacramento (Calif.) Bee

hey want a pledge that the temperature will be kept below 67 degrees. That no one will require them to raise their hands to answer a question, or pose a yes or no question without providing enough time for a “substantive answer.” Also, no “lightning rounds.” Those are definitely off-limits, just like audience “reaction shots.” And, please, no footage of their empty podiums after a commercial break. These are just a few of the demands that Republican presidential candidates have for TV networks before they agree to take part in another primary debate. With such a list, you’d think the candidates were pampered rock stars on tour, not supposedly serious politicians running for the nation’s highest office. (In our dressing room this evening, we’d like five bottles of San Pellegrino chilled to 33 degrees, one large bowl of peanut M&Ms, all green ones removed.) The list, which no campaign has endorsed yet, was nonetheless drawn up in a clandestine meeting Sunday night attended by the leaders of more than a dozen GOP campaigns. It represents an attempt to alter a debate process that the candidates loathe, culminating with last week’s debate hosted by CNBC. Wanting debates with more substance, as several candidates have said they want, is a noble goal. The faceoffs are an important way for voters to vet candidates aspiring to be president, and yet, at times this year, the debates have resembled more of an ego-fueled WWF match than a sobering war of words. The debates should be better. But petulantly issuing demands to TV networks -— and threatening to go around them and stream debates online if they don’t comply — isn’t the best way to go about that.

Safety on gridiron

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By The Chicago Sun-Times

t its best, football is a beautiful sport. From the Olympic speed of NFL running backs to the masterful skills of quarterbacks, the game can take your breath away. But the sport has a monumental problem. It is a game of tackling and hitting, essential to its entertainment value. Some of those hits become blows to the brain. Catastrophic injuries, such as the fatal head trauma suffered in a game last week by Andre Smith, a player for Bogan Computer Technical High School, are rare, but concussions are prevalent and dangerous. For too long, the NFL dismissed the hazards of head injuries. Its executives and medical staff denied that playing football could lead to permanent brain damage, defying common sense and the findings of specialists. Now league officials and teams want to show they are making the game safer. Their target audience? Moms and dads, of course. Keeping kids involved — playing the game and loving it — is crucial to the NFL’s future bottom line. The NFL, we have no doubt, also hopes to get out in front of the potential fallout from a soon-to-be-released movie, “Concussion,” starring Will Smith, about a neuropathologist credited with finding chronic traumatic encephalopathy in deceased football players. The stakes for the league are huge. Football has good reason to fear going the way of boxing, a once beloved sport that lost its mainstream popularity. Bears Chairman George H. McCaskey, as well as an NFL senior vice president and an independent neuropsychologist, shared with us Wednesday important changes to the game in recent years that have brought a drop in concussions. Medical timeouts are called at the discretion of a medical trainer monitoring games from a stadium box; the kickoff line was moved to the 35-yard line from the 30 to make returns safer, and rules to protect “defenseless” players were expanded. Every fan should welcome the changes, but the NFL would be smart to do more. We see no reason, for example, why the league cannot take a firm stand on the appropriate age for a child to begin playing tackle football.

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What voters need to know

ov. Chris Christie got the debates exactly right. “If you can’t take it on the stage, no matter whether it’s fair or unfair ... then how are you going to take running against Hillary Clinton?” he told NBC. “How are you going to take negotiating for America around the world?” Being president is a pretty big job. Voters deserve to know how candidates react to adversity, perform under pressure, handle criticism and deal with crisis. And the debate stage is one of the few places in politics where those qualities are teased out and tested. That’s why the Republican candidates who keep whining about the unfairness of the last debate on CNBC badly misconstrue the role of an independent press. Yes, some of the questions were too argumentative or disrespectful. Donald Trump might well be a “comic-book version” of a candidate, but those derogatory words went too far. Many other questions were quite useful, however. Dr. Ben Carson will not tell you how much his tax-cutting plan will really cost the Treasury. It took a moderator to add up the numbers and point out that he would expand the federal deficit by $1.1 trillion. Sen. Ted Cruz later said it was unfair to ask Carson, “Can you do math?” But isn’t it rather important to know what a candidate’s tax proposal will actually mean, especially if that candi-

COKIE ROBERTS STEVEN ROBERTS

Cokie and Steven V. Roberts write a column distributed by the Newspaper Enterprise Association. date is now the front-runner? (Carson outpaces Trump in the latest Wall Street Journal/NBC poll, 29 percent to 23 percent.) These candidates have countless opportunities every day to promote their policies and credentials, unchecked by media scrutiny. They have millions of dollars to buy TV and online ads that are carefully crafted to convey their precise messages. They speak at rallies, issue statements, release videos. And they post comments on Twitter and Facebook that go directly to their supporters’ tablets and smartphones, without any journalists getting in the way. That’s why debates are more important than ever. Sure, many of the answers are scripted, but still, the candidates are live on

stage. Spontaneity happens. Some candidates seize the moment, like Marco Rubio; some get stung by it. Ask Jeb Bush. There’s a larger point here. Debates are a central part of the “media primary,” the ongoing effort to investigate and interrogate the people running for the world’s most powerful office. And while it’s Republican orthodoxy to say the mainstream press favors Democrats, the facts tell a different story. The Wall Street Journal, for example, counted up the cost of all the promises made by Sen. Bernie Sanders. The total came to $18 trillion, a fact all Democratic voters need to know before they cast a primary ballot. Then there’s the myth that journalists are soft on Hillary Clinton. In fact, Team Clinton constantly complains about its treatment by the mainstream media, especially The New York Times, which has doggedly pursued stories like the ones about the Clinton Foundation’s finances. Writing in Media Matters, a pro-Clinton website, Eric Boehlert charges that “the daily has been carrying around an unmistakable Clinton grudge for nearly 20 years.” By the way, remember who asked the toughest question of Trump in the first GOP debate: Megyn Kelly of Fox News. Hardly a Democratic partisan. To her credit, she was only doing what professional journalists are supposed to do: hold the powerful to account, in both parties.

That’s the role that the Republican candidates refuse to recognize. Carson, for example, said on ABC’s “This Week” that each candidate should be allowed “a substantial opening statement” — in other words, a campaign commercial they don’t have to pay for. Asked what kind of moderators he would prefer, Carson replied, “moderators who are interested in disseminating the information about the candidates as opposed to, you know, ‘gotcha,’ ‘you did this’ and ‘defend yourself on that.’” But journalists are not there to spread the candidates’ messages; candidates can do that for themselves. Their role is precisely what Carson denies and derides: to make politicians defend themselves and account for their past actions and positions. Cruz was even blunter, saying any moderator of a GOP debate should be a Republican sympathizer. “How about instead of a bunch of attack journalists, we actually have real journalists,” he suggested, like Sean Hannity and Rush Limbaugh. Calling Hannity and Limbaugh “real journalists” is like calling Batman and Robin real people. But Cruz’s ridiculous proposal demonstrates how right Christie is. To paraphrase an old line often attributed to Harry Truman, “If you can’t stand the heat, get off the stage.” stevecokie@gmail.com

Sex, violence and gender parity on college campus

ere’s a question for your next cocktail party: Do women civilize men? To your average feminist, that’s an arcane and sexist notion — maybe even a ploy to bridle women into unfulfilling monogamous relationships. But it’s a question worth asking, especially when considering the findings of Jon Birger, a Fortune magazine writer, who dug into the data about gender imbalances on college campuses and emerged with some interesting findings about their impact on social and sexual behavior. Birger has just published a book, “Date-onomics: How Dating Became a Lopsided Numbers Game,” in which he explains how oversupply of women can and often does lead to their devaluation by males. And there is nowhere better to study the impact of the female surplus on society than on college campuses, where women increasingly dominate the population. A few decades ago, women fought for equal representation at institutions of higher learning. Today, women are more likely to hold a college degree than their

male counterparts. but brutally promiscuous when it In 1994, male and female high comes to encounters with coeds. school graduates enrolled in college An interview with a male student at roughly the same rate. at Sarah Lawrence UniIn 2013, the gender versity, where women ratio among college gradoutnumber men 4:1, peruates was 57:43, meaning fectly captured this phethat for every four nomenon. The student women who received a copped to sleeping with diploma, only three men more than 20 of his fejoined them. That ratio is male peers. expected to increase to “Sometimes it feels like 3:2 within a decade. you can have anyone you This disparity has a want,” he said. plethora of socioecoThere’s a toll on women, nomic implications that too. Aside from the damwarrant further exploage to self-esteem that the ration, but for our purlack of consistent male atposes we’ll focus on one tention can cause, element of the research. women are more likely to Birger posits that this feel pressure to engage in gender imbalance con- Cynthia M. Allen sexual behavior that they tributes significantly to is a columnist for may come to regret. the hook-up culture that the Fort Worth Skeptics might argue permeates campus life, Star-Telegram. that campus hook-up culwhich makes complete Her column is ture is a universal feature sense. distributed by the of modern college life, Comfortable in the mi- Tribune News that men and women are nority, many young men Service. acting as they would in find themselves with any similar environment. seemingly limitless dating opportuNot so, says Birger, who also nities. And as the “in-demand” gen- looked at schools with more balder, men can be not only choosy, anced gender ratios and those with

CYNTHIA ALLEN

disproportionately higher numbers of men. At those universities, he found a propensity for traditional dating and monogamy, especially after freshman year. What’s even more interesting, and somewhat troubling, about Birger’s research is what appears to be a correlation between gender imbalance on campus and sexual violence. The narrative that universities foster a culture of rape has exploded. And while there are numerous good reasons and plenty of credible research to counter the questionable underlying data, there isn’t an abundance of data or analysis on the potential causes of this alleged phenomenon. Birger’s research offers one. When women are in abundant supply, there is reason to believe they are more likely to become victims of sexual assault. The notion defies logic. Statistically, men, not women, are more likely to commit assault, and with fewer of them present, sexual violence should theoretically decrease. Similarly, women tend to find safety in numbers.

Unless labeled as a Gazette editorial, all opinions on the Viewpoint page are those of the authors.

But a bounty of research shows that sexual assaults are more prevalent in communities where females outnumber the males. Birger points to research by a Columbia University scholar who found that in China, where the opposite is true — men outnumber women by 20 percent — crime rates have risen with the tide of the male population, but rapes have declined dramatically. The idea being that when women are scarce they are better treated and men are more protective of them. Another comprehensive look at the data by the Anthropology Department at the University of California at Davis also found an oversupply of males is associated with lower rates of rape, although some research suggests an uptick in intimate partner violence. It may not be true that women civilize men, but the available supply of women certainly affects male behavior toward them, for better and for worse. The evidence suggests that women can help themselves by becoming less available to their counterparts. cmallen@star-telegram.com


The Indiana Gazette

A-8 — Sunday, November 8, 2015

Optimism returns to budget talks

FIRE CALL

JACQUELINE DORMER/The Republican-Herald

PRESCHOOL STUDENTS from Seedlings at the Schuylkill County Council for the Arts in Pottsville watched as firefighters turned on the sirens and retracted the ladder of a truck at the end of an annual fire prevention program last week.

Noise heard in last second of recording on Russian plane Continued from Page A-1 U.S. and British officials have cited intelligence reports as indicating that the Oct. 31 flight from the Sinai resort town of Sharm el-Sheikh to St. Petersburg was brought down by a bomb on board. All 224 people onboard, most of them Russian tourists, were killed. Islamic State extremists claimed they brought down the Metrojet flight, without offering proof, saying it was in retaliation for Moscow’s airstrikes that began a month earlier against fighters in Syria. El-Muqadem said debris was found scattered across a 8-mile stretch of desert, indicating the Airbus A321-200 broke up midair, but initial observations don’t shed light on what caused it. Some pieces of wreckage were still missing, while the recovered pieces will be taken to Cairo for analysis, he said. Egyptian airport and security officials told The Associated Press on Saturday that authorities were questioning airport staff and ground crew who worked on the plane and had placed some employees under surveillance. The officials all spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media. Also Saturday, Egypt’s foreign minister complained that Western governments had not sufficiently helped Egypt in its war on terrorism. Egypt’s past calls for assistance and coordination on terrorism issues from “the countries that are now facing the danger” had not been dealt with seriously, Sameh Shoukry told a news conference. “European countries did not give us the cooperation we are hoping for,” he said. Egyptian authorities have been trying to whip up support for a war on terror after the military overthrow of Islamist President Mohammed Morsi in 2013. A crackdown on Islamists and

a series of militant attacks on security buildings and checkpoints, mainly in the Sinai Peninsula, have followed Morsi’s ouster — with a Sinai-based affiliate of the Islamic State group claiming responsibility for some of the most devastating attacks. Shoukry also said countries that have suspended flights to Sharm el-Sheikh — which include the U.K. and Russia, though the foreign minister did not specifically name them — did not share the intelligence that drove their decisions with Cairo. Egypt “expected that the information available would be communicated to us instead of being broadcast” in the media, he said. Russia announced Friday it was suspending flights to all of Egypt, joining the UK and Ireland, which had stopped flights to Sharm el-Sheikh. At least a half-dozen Western European governments told their citizens not to travel there. Empty charter planes have been flying to Sharm el-Sheikh to bring home stranded Russian and British tourists. Passengers were banned from checking in luggage — reflecting an apparent concern about security and luggage-screening procedures at the airport. The crash one week ago dealt a huge blow to Egypt’s battered tourism sector, which is yet to fully recover from years of political turmoil. Russians comprise nearly a third of all tourists who visited Egypt in the past year. There are currently 80,000 Russians in Egypt — 79,000 of them in the resort areas of Hurgada and Sharm el-Sheikh, Russian tourism chief Oleg Safonov was cited as saying by Russian news agencies. Maya Lomidze, acting director of the Russian Association of Tour Operators, said authorities were sending 93 empty planes to Egypt on Saturday and Sunday to bring tourists home. The Russian Emergencies Ministry also said it would send

planes to transport the checked baggage of Russian tourists who were forced to leave their suitcases behind. Thousands of tourists waited in slow-moving security lines at the Sharm el-Sheikh airport on Saturday as they tried to board charter flights home. Many complained about a lack of information from travel agents and airlines, but seemed to accept tight security measures. Designer Georgy Kononov and his family hoped to catch a flight to Moscow after a seven-hour delay. He said he agreed with Russia’s decision to suspend flights to Egypt. “When we’re talking about the safety and security of people, it’s more important than the business,” he said, though he added that there should have been better planning for such a complicated situation. Meanwhile, Britain’s Guardian newspaper reported that investigators had determined that a missile that came within 1,000 feet of a plane carrying British tourists to Sharm el-Sheikh on Aug. 23 was “probably a flare.” The Thomson jet was carrying 189 passengers. Tui Group, which owns Thomson, said an investigation by Britain’s Department for Transport had concluded that the incident was not a “targeted attack” and likely connected to routine Egyptian military exercises in the area at the time. Thomson said there was “no cause for concern” for further flights. The spokesman for Egypt’s Ministry for Foreign Affairs, Ahmed Abu Zeid, tweeted Saturday that the incident involved a “ground-to-ground fire exercise” at an Egyptian military base a few miles from the Sharm elSheikh airport. The spokesman said airliners had previously been informed of the military exercise and that the Egyptian and British governments were “fully aware that plane was in no danger.”

Continued from Page A-1 nation’s widest. Meanwhile, House Republican negotiators want Wolf to agree to privatize the state-controlled wine and liquor system and Senate Republicans want Wolf to agree to replace the traditional pension benefit for future school and state employees with a 401(k)-style plan. Republicans have thus far united against a tax increase to support state government operations or public schools. As of Friday, there was no agreement on how to meet Wolf’s funding demands, Wolf administration officials said, and Republicans have not agreed to one of Wolf’s priorities: increasing taxes on Marcellus Shale natural gas production. House Speaker Mike Turzai, R-Allegheny, has maintained his opposition to it, although Corman and Reed had not ruled it out as a concession to Wolf. One new idea under discussion could provide a cornerstone of the cash Wolf is seeking: diverting the roughly $600 million in slot-machine gambling receipts that school districts currently pass along to homeowners as property tax reductions. That stream of money would shift to the state treasury, while negotiators are discussing an increase in the state sales tax to offset reductions in local school property taxes, another concept that is important to Wolf to improve equity in school funding. The new money from a higher state sales tax would replace the diverted slot-machine dollars to schools — and then some. But many disagreements remain

between Wolf and Republican lawmakers. For one, negotiators report differences over how much of an increase in aid the state should sent to public schools. Wolf will not sign onto a budget agreement without a historic increase, Sheridan said Saturday. Wolf administration officials also say there is disagreement with at least some Republican negotiators over two issues that are “critically important” to the governor: which school districts would benefit the most from the new flow of sales tax revenue and which school districts would benefit the most from an increase in state aid. Another disagreement is over wine and liquor sales. Wolf has stuck by his September counteroffer to hire a private manager to run the system, administration officials said. That clashes with Turzai’s stance that the state must sell its wholesale and retail wine and liquor operations to private licensees. Turzai’s spokesman Jay Ostrich acknowledged the differences raised by Wolf administration officials, as well as differences over the overall amount of aid for public schools. “We are making progress, but we are not close to a deal yet,” he said. In the meantime, the notion of raising state taxes to cut school property taxes divides Republicans. Some Senate Republicans worry that school boards will simply keep boosting taxes, and they prefer the complete elimination of school property taxes — even if it takes a state tax increase of around $14 billion.

Families share hardships Continued from Page A-1 still have other family in the area. Their father passed away unexpectedly in 2000. Janet said it is tough with nine people in the house, but they make it work. Anyone wishing to adopt Tara or Janet’s families through the Angels’ Wings program may do so by contacting Karen Swisher at (724) 5410008. Angels’ Wings is the Gazette’s annual Christmas gift program that seeks to put gifts under the tree for underprivileged local families, with the help of the community. Families adopted through Angels’ Wings are given a Christmas gift and meal to each member of the family. Those wishing to enroll their families in Angels’ Wings can still do so. To register by phone, call ICCAP from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tuesday

and Thursday and on Nov. 17, 19 and 24. However, those who register by phone must also sign an application in person at ICCAP by 4:30 p.m. on Nov. 24. To register in person, visit the ICCAP offices between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Monday, Tuesday and Thursday. There will also be evening hours from 6 to 8 p.m. Wednesday. Registration is open to those with income at 200 percent or less of the federal poverty guidelines. Veterans are also encouraged to apply. For more information about the program call the Gazette at (724) 465-5555 or send an email to angels wings@indianagazette.net or check out the Angels’ Wings Facebook page. For questions about volunteering for the program or about adopting a family, contact Swisher.

Police: Mom kills son, self MESA, Ariz. (AP) — A mother of a patient at a suburban Phoenix children’s hospital took her son’s life before taking her own, police said Saturday. Mesa police spokesman Steve Berry said nurses at Cardon Children’s Medical Center in Mesa found the woman and her 5-year-old child dead inside the child’s room while conducting a 2 a.m. bed check. “Every two hours they do a check,” Berry said. “They were seen alive and fine at midnight and then found at 2 a.m.” The mother had a fatal gunshot wound, Berry said. He could not describe how the child died.

Upon finding the pair, the nurses immediately called for trauma units as well as security. An off-duty police officer was already working at the hospital, according to authorities. Nobody at the hospital recalls hearing any gunshots or suspicious activity, Berry said. The boy was in a private room. Berry said the woman was Tammy Griffith, 27, and the 5-year-old’s name was Helious. Police have completed their investigation of the scene and the room has been turned back over to the hospital. No one else in the hospital was threatened or harmed.

Obama to lay out plan on closing Gitmo prison Continued from Page A-1 plan makes no recommendations on which of seven U.S. sites is preferred and provides no rankings. But it lists the prison sites in Colorado, South Carolina and Kansas that a Pentagon assessment team reviewed in recent months and mentions advantages and disadvantages for the facilities. Those elements can include the facilities’ locations, costs for renovations and construction, the ability to house troops and hold military commission hearings, and health care facilities. The Centennial facility has advantages that could outweigh the disadvantages there, according to officials, but no details were available and no conclusions have been reached. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to discuss the matter publicly. Any decision to select a U.S. facility would require congressional approval — something U.S. lawmakers say is unlikely. At the same

time, dangerous prisoners are not new to Colorado. The Supermax in Florence, Colo., which has been dubbed “Alcatraz of the Rockies,” already holds convicted terrorists, including Unabomber Ted Kaczynski and Zacarias Moussaoui, one of the conspirators of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. The Pentagon plan also lays out the broader effort to reduce the detainee population at Guantanamo, through transfers to other countries. The center now holds 112 detainees, and 53 are eligible for transfer. The rest are either facing trial by military commission or the government has determined that they are too dangerous to release but are not facing charges. In order to approve a transfer, Defense Secretary Ash Carter must conclude that the detainees will not return to terrorism or the battlefield upon release and that there is a host country willing to take them and guarantee they will secure them. As President Barack Obama

PRESIDENT OBAMA heads into his final year in office, the effort is part of a push to keep his election promise to close the detention center at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. But he is facing an uphill battle with Congress. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., has asked for an administration plan for the shutdown of Guantanamo. The Pentagon’s assessment team visits over the last few months were part of the effort to provide options for the relocation of Guantanamo detainees. “I’ve asked for six and a half years for this administration to come forward with a plan a plan that we could imple-

ment in order to close Guantanamo. They have never come forward with one and it would have to be approved by Congress,” McCain said this week. The facilities reviewed by the assessment team were the U.S. Disciplinary Barracks and Midwest Joint Regional Corrections Facility at Leavenworth, Kansas; the Consolidated Naval Brig, Charleston, South Carolina; the Federal Correctional Complex, which includes the medium, maximum and supermax facilities in Florence, Colorado; and the Colorado State Penitentiary II in Canon City, Colorado, also known as the Centennial Correctional Facility. A Colorado senator made it clear this week that he opposes any move to relocate detainees to his state. “I will not sit idly by while the president uses political promises to imperil the people of Colorado by moving enemy combatants from Cuba, Guantanamo Bay, to my state of Colorado,” Republican Sen. Cory Gardner

told a Capitol Hill news conference. Later, Gardner told The Associated Press that “the pressure that this would put on our judicial system in Colorado is real. The challenges that could be brought through the legal system we’re not prepared for. I think that’s another question on our federal judiciary in Denver. This is a rural area of Colorado. Would they be transported to downtown Denver to the federal courthouse for a hearing?” Even as the White House pitches this latest plan to skeptical lawmakers, officials have not ruled out the possibility that Obama will try to close the prison and move the remaining prisoners to the U.S. without congressional approval. “I would not take anything off the table in terms of the president doing everything that he can to achieve this critically important national security objective,” White House spokesman Josh Earnest said this week, when asked whether Obama

would act unilaterally. “And this is a pretty transparent case of the United States Congress putting narrow political interests ahead of national security.” The threat echoes Obama’s moves on immigration and gun control — both cases where he urged Congress to pass legislation and then used his executive authority when the bills failed. McCain and others have said that an executive order to shutter Guantanamo would face fierce opposition, including efforts to reverse the decision through funding mechanisms. The prison at Guantanamo presents a particularly confrontational replay of that strategy. Obama would likely have to argue that the restrictions imposed by Congress are unconstitutional, although he has abided by them for years. The dispute could set off a late-term legal battle with Republicans in Congress over executive power, potentially in the height of a presidential campaign.


Elsewhere

Gazette Classifieds Inside

News from the nation, world

Sunday, November 8, 2015 — B-1

BRIEFS

Study: Moms gain too much

LAWN (CHAIR) CARE

Gazette wire services

IS group releases 37 Syrian captives DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) — Islamic State militants on Saturday released 37 Syrian Christians, mostly women, who were among more than 200 people from the Assyrian minority group abducted in February, activists said. Also Saturday, the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the death toll from an airstrike on an IScontrolled eastern city near the border with Iraq rose to 71. The group initially reported that the Thursday attack killed 25. The Observatory, which relies on a network of activists on the ground to monitor the war in Syria, said at least six children were among the dead. Other activist groups, as well as the Islamic State, said the attack was carried out by Russian jets, targeting a school and a popular market in Boukamal. In videos and pictures posted online purportedly showing the aftermath of the airstrike, people are seen digging for survivors in the rubble and holding children soaked in blood.

Dozens protest ‘SNL’ appearance NEW YORK (AP) — Dozens of demonstrators in New York City are protesting NBC’s decision to allow Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump to host “Saturday Night Live.” The group held signs and chanted Saturday night while marching from Trump Tower to the network’s studios in Rockefeller Plaza. They say his statements on immigration are racist and offensive. Protester Mike Bento says NBC is giving Trump a platform for “vitriolic, racist rhetoric.” NBC has faced pressure from groups calling for Trump to be dropped from SNL over his comments last summer describing some Mexicans in the U.S. illegally as criminals and rapists.

Prosecutor: Seal health records OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — A prosecutor wants a judge to seal the mental health records of a woman charged with driving a car into the Oklahoma State University homecoming parade, killing four people and injuring dozens. The motion, filed Friday by Payne County District Attorney Laura Austin Thomas in Stillwater, says Adacia Chambers’ attorney appears to be trying to influence potential jurors by publicly discussing her mental health. Thomas said that information is “privileged and confidential” under state law.

Angler catches digital camera GRAND HAVEN, Mich. (AP) — Andre Monterio has a fishing story about one that got away and eventually was caught. But what he pulled from Lake Michigan near Grand Haven in September had no scales or gills. It was a small digital camera knocked overboard two years ago from another boat. WZZM-TV reported that Monterio put the camera’s memory card in his computer and saw “Mike’s Family Pharmacy” in one photo. He contacted pharmacist Mike Cook at the shop in Montague, northwest of Grand Rapids. Cook was on the boat when the camera was lost. He relayed the story to Deb Hays of Whitehall. The camera belonged to her husband. Hays told the television station that “when something falls in a great lake, your chance of getting it back is slim to none.”

B

By MIKE STOBBE AP Medical Writer

GREG LEHMAN/Associated Press

ADMITTING THAT keeping her yard leaf-free is difficult, Judy Sine made it look easy as she sat in a camp chair and blows the leaves in front of her house last week in Walla Walla, Wash.

Carson’s front-runner status brings increased scrutiny By BILL BARROW Associated Press

PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. — Ben Carson rose to top the Republican ranks of White House hopefuls as the wise outsider — a candidate without any experience in office, but one who offers a compelling personal narrative, speaks openly of his deep Christian faith and issues calm-but-tough indictments of the nation’s leaders. Now, just as he finishes a triumphant, monthlong book tour, Carson finds that persona threatened by a series of inquiries that cast doubt on the veracity of his biography. While Carson may be an unorthodox candidate running an unorthodox campaign, scrutiny of his past is par for the course for wouldbe presidents. But in a race in which an angry electorate has scrambled the established order in the Republican Party, the retired neurosurgeon predicts what he calls a “witch hunt” will only help him with voters. “There’s got to be a scandal. There’s got (to be) some nurse he’s had an affair with,” a defiant Carson said Friday night of the hopes of those looking into his past. “They are getting desperate. Next week, it will be my kindergarten teacher who said I peed in my pants. It’s ridiculous.” Carson has every reason to expect that what for almost

BEN CARSON ... Republican presidential candidate any other candidate would be considered negative attention will help him. While he’s long used extreme examples to make his case, including repeated references to such third-rails as Nazi Germany and slavery, he’s emerged as one of the GOP field’s best fundraisers and sits atop numerous preference polls. “We’ve obviously had a variety of controversial statements,” admitted Doug Watts, Carson’s campaign spokesman. “Sometimes you just flip a coin as to how people will react to them.” That is the obvious question to the latest development in Carson’s rise — a whirlwind week in which one new question about Carson’s background was followed by another. CNN reported it could not find friends or confidants to corroborate his story, told as part of his widely read autobiography, “Gifted Hands,” of unsuccessfully stabbing a close friend when he was a teenager. A story published

by Politico examined his claim of having received a scholarship offer to attend the U.S. Military Academy. The Wall Street Journal said it could not confirm Carson anecdotes from his high school and college years. There are others. Last month, police in Baltimore said they didn’t have enough information to verify Carson’s account of being held at gunpoint at a fast-food restaurant in the city. In the third GOP debate, Carson said it was “absolutely absurd” to say he had a formal relationship with the company Mannatech. He is featured in the company’s videos, including one from last year in which he credits the firm’s supplements with helping people restore a healthy diet. Carson and his campaign forcefully reject any suggestion he has been less than truthful. Indeed, Friday’s news conference may have been the first instance of the 2016 campaign in which the notably even-tempered Carson showed open signs of anger. During a combative 20 minutes, Carson said the media hadn’t subjected President Obama to the same level of scrutiny he now faces and demanded the reporters present explain why. He said he would think about revealing the name of the person he has said he tried to stab, but only if reporters would sign an affidavit promising to

“sing my praises” for doing so. His advisers say they are determined to keep their attention focused on the campaign as he shifts from his recent book tour — an ostensibly noncampaign exercise paid for mostly by his publisher — to more traditional voter outreach in Iowa and other early voting states. The campaign has attracted more than 4.5 million followers on Facebook, with separate social media efforts by volunteers bringing together smaller groups of supporters for everything from canvassing to prayer groups. The campaign has paid staff in six states, with 32 total workers in the field. Watts said the campaign is on track to qualify for the ballot in all 50 states and six other jurisdictions with delegates. As for what’s next, Watts said Carson plans in the coming weeks to roll out comprehensive policy proposals on health care, education, fiscal policy, energy and foreign affairs. “We came into the campaign consciously looking for a different way to run out of necessity, and because we had a candidate who did not want to run as a politician,” Watts said. “We have a lot of the normal and customary components where we think they are important, and that’s what we’re going to keep doing.”

Sanders, Clinton jockey for key voters By BILL BARROW Associated Press

COLUMBIA, S.C. — Presidential candidates Bernie Sanders and Hillary Rodham Clinton jockeyed Saturday for the support of key South Carolina Democratic voting blocs that anchored President Barack Obama’s twice-victorious national coalition. Sanders framed his message of economic and social inclusion for the state’s Democratic Women’s Council by highlighting his support for gender pay equity, paid family leave and access to abortion and birth control. “Make no mistake about it, the right wing in this country is continuing its war on women,” the Vermont senator said Saturday morning before he and Clinton spent the day vying for backing from the state’s Democratic women, African-Americans and gay rights activists. Clinton vowed at a town hall in heavily AfricanAmerican Orangeburg to tackle problems important to black voters, from im-

CHUCK BURTON/Associated Press

DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL candidates Hillary Rodham Clinton; former Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley, center; and Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt, posed Friday in Rock Hill, S.C. proving historically black colleges and universities to curing sickle cell anemia, an inherited blood disease that disproportionately affects African-Americans. The two candidates touted competing endorsements. Former North Carolina Sen. Kay Hagan declared her support for Clinton following Sanders’ speech at the Women’s Council. Sanders meanwhile came to the capital city of Columbia to accept plaudits from black

community leaders, including some state lawmakers. Addressing the women’s group, Sanders didn’t direct his arguments on women against Clinton, but focused instead on Republicans, decrying the GOP’s “horrific attacks” on Planned Parenthood. “Women have been front and center in every one of our progressive victories,” he said, adding they are critical to withstand the GOP’s “counter-revolution.”

Meanwhile, at Orangeburg, Clinton continued her focus on minority voters. Calls to combat gun violence, enact immigration legislation and reform criminal justice laws have emerged as central themes of her campaign. Polls here suggest Clinton enjoys a strong advantage among women and black voters, crucial players in the nominating contest given that white men across the Deep South have largely abandoned Democrats. South Carolina hosts the South’s first primary on Feb. 27, weeks after Iowa and New Hampshire begin the 2016 presidential voting. In presidential elections, demographic shifts have led the party to concentrate on women, nonwhites and younger voters, even as they pitch their policy positions as favoring opportunity for all. Yet across the South, and the many other states lying between the Democratic strongholds of the Northeast and West Coast, that effort hasn’t translated to victories in congressional or state elections.

NEW YORK — Nearly half of U.S. moms gain too much weight during pregnancy, according to a government study released Thursday. Putting on too many extra pounds during pregnancy can harm the mom, and may cause a range of problems for the child, experts say. The study found only about a third of women gain the recommended amount of weight, and about a fifth gained too little. Overweight and obese women most commonly exceeded the guidelines. Women need to eat extra calories during pregnancy, although not that much — only about 350 to 450 extra calories during the second and third trimester, said Andrea Sharma, one of the study’s authors from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, “It’s not about eating twice as much. It’s eating twice as healthy,” she said. How much moms should gain depends on their weight when they become pregnant. Experts say women of normal weight should add 25 to 35 pounds. Overweight women should gain 15 to 25, and obese women should only add 10 to 20. For unusually thin women, weight gain should be about 30 to 40 pounds. Gaining too little weight increases the risk that the baby will be born very small. Too much weight can lead to obesity and other health problems for the mom. It can lead to dangerous complications during labor and delivery. And it raises the risk the baby will become obese, diabetic, and have other problems later in life. The study involved more than 3 million U.S. pregnant women during 2012 and 2013. In most of the 46 states included, birth certificates now also record pre-pregnancy weights.

Consumer credit up $28.9B By MARTIN CRUTSINGER AP Economics Writer

WASHINGTON — U.S. consumer borrowing jumped by a record amount in September, driven higher by big gains in borrowing for auto and student loans. The Federal Reserve said Friday that consumer borrowing increased $28.9 billion, the largest one-month increase on record going back to 1941. It followed a gain of $16 billion in August and pushed total consumer borrowing to an all-time high of $3.5 trillion. The big September gain reflected a $22.2 billion increase in the category that covers auto loans and student loans and a $6.7 billion increase in credit card borrowing. It was the biggest increase in auto and student loans since July 2011. Economists believe consumer spending, which accounts for 70 percent of economic activity, will remain strong in coming months. A healthy labor market is helping give consumers confidence to spend and finance part of their purchases by taking on more debt. The Labor Department reported earlier Friday that the economy created 271,000 jobs in September, the most this year, pushing the unemployment rate down to a seven-year low of 5 percent. Economists are looking for a strong consumer sector to help offset soft spots in other parts of the economy.


Nation

B-2 — Sunday, November 8, 2015

The Indiana Gazette

Opiods still haunt addicts after naloxone intervention By GEOFF MULVIHILL and MICHAEL R. SISAK Associated Press

CAMDEN, N.J. — It’s a truth addicts and health providers know well: Naloxone can reverse heroin overdoses, but it can’t cure the addictions that cause them. In a small but growing number of places, people who land in hospitals after being revived by the drug are being guided toward longterm treatment. That’s largely because decision makers have heard so many stories about people being brought back from the brink — sometimes repeatedly — and then turned loose to use again. The drug, pronounced nuh-LOX-ohn but often known by the brand name Narcan, is administered via shot or nasal spray and can almost immediately revive a victim of an overdose on heroin and its painkiller relatives, known as opioids. It’s widely distributed to anyone likely to encounter an overdose victim, including police, paramedics and users’ families. Billie Fisher, 33, recalled a painful withdrawal a few years back in a Camden emergency room after being given naloxone. She just wanted to get high again, she said, and it seemed the hospital staff just wanted her out. Before she left, no one even talked to her about getting treatment for her addiction, she said. “It was like they didn’t really care,â€? said Fisher. She acknowledged she is still using heroin and cocaine, but hasn’t overdosed since the one time she was given naloxone. In the past year in Upper Darby, a Philadelphia suburb of 82,000, police administered Narcan 111 times, including a handful of repeat uses on the same people. “We bring them back, but that day or the next day, they’re shooting up again,â€? Police Chief Michael Chitwood said. “It’s almost like a revolving door.â€? People trained to administer naloxone — including police, medics and addicts themselves — are told to get patients to emergency rooms quickly. But that often doesn’t happen. In Vermont, among the states hardest hit by heroin, only about 30 percent of overdose victims given naloxone by people who aren’t first responders — in many cases, fellow drug users — are taken to emergency rooms, said Michael Leyden, state deputy director of emergency management. When police, paramedics and the like give the antidote, he said, patients are much more likely to get medical help afterward. In Vermont and elsewhere, particularly the Northeast where naloxone-distribution programs are well-established, that’s when treatment often kicks in: • A pilot program announced in October in Camden County will provide money for 50 people to go through detox and win spots

MEL EVANS/Associated Press

A JUG of used needles as shown on Oct. 29 when it is about to be exchanged for new needles in Camden, N.J.

in a methadone clinic. The hope is that they can get placed in inpatient rehab while getting the shorterterm intervention. • In Rhode Island, recovering addicts trained as counselors work in emergency rooms to help guide overdose patients into treatment. In its first full year after starting in June 2014, AnchorED worked with 230 people. Only 12 have been back with overdoses, and most have gotten treatment, according to program officials. The program has expanded to a 24/7 operation serving nine of Rhode Island’s 11 hospitals. • Next year, Baltimore plans to open a “stabilization centerâ€? to divert people from

emergency rooms when they seek attention for overdoses. The center is to have addiction specialists and social workers on staff. Naloxone works most of the time, but national statistics aren’t kept on what happens to people who are revived. Some overdose again soon afterward. Some get treatment and get clean, but limited insurance, high costs and a shortage of spots at treatment centers can be hurdles. Officials at Boston Medical Center give Narcan kits to patients at high risk of overdoses, including those previously revived by the drug. About 30 percent of the 395 patients who got kits in 2013

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MEL EVANS/Associated Press

BILLIE FISHER stood on Oct. 29 in an industrial area of Camden, N.J., as she discussed her naloxone treatment that prevented her overdose but left her in withdrawal.

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and 2014 have had multiple overdoses, officials say. Advocates for addicts see the war on heroin as complicated and naloxone as an essential tool. After all, it saves lives — if only for a while, when further recovery lies in the patient’s hands. “What’s the alternative? Not to revive someone with naloxone?� said Daniel Raymond, policy director for the Harm Reduction Coalition. At a regular emergency room, a patient might have to wait several hours for such a specialist, said Leana Wen, the Baltimore health commissioner, who has also worked as an emergency room doctor.

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World

The Indiana Gazette

Sunday, November 8, 2015 — B-3

Death toll rises to 39 in nightclub fire By ALISON MUTLER Associated Press

PEOPLE STOOD in their damaged home Saturday in Barra Longa after a dam burst on Thursday in Minas Gerais state, Brazil.

Rescuers search for 19 missing after dams burst By CRISTIANA MESQUITA Associated Press

MARIANA, Brazil — Searchers used small airplanes and a drone Saturday to look for 19 people confirmed as missing following the burst of two dams inside an iron ore mine, while authorities lowered the official death count to one. The Fire Department said officials were now not sure that a second body, which was found 62 miles from the site of the accident, was a victim. It said those missing included 13 mine workers and six residents of a nearby village that was overrun with mud and water. Earlier Saturday, 23 people had been listed as missing. Bras Azevedo, secretary of social defense in the nearby city of Mariana, told The Associated Press that authorities had to be cautious in sorting out exactly how many people were missing or dead. “There are still people in isolated areas; they could be the ones we are looking for,� he said. The flood of mud came without warning Thursday afternoon when two dams breached for reasons that investigators had not yet determined. People in the small village of Bento Rodrigues downhill from the dams said a deafening clap was the only hint they got that a sea of viscous, clay-red mud was about to hit. The sound of the two dams bursting at the Samarco iron ore mine in Brazil’s central Minas Gerais state sent the approximately 600 residents running for higher ground. “When I went outside there were already people running uphill saying the dam burst,� Joaquim Dutra

said. “All I did was close my house and run to the top.� Dirce da Silva Mendes, a mother of two, told a story heard repeatedly from survivors. “We lost a lot of things,� she said Saturday. “At the moment we removed the last household appliance, the mud had taken over the whole house. It also destroyed our orange trees, our fig trees. It is all gone. It was so quick.� The accident sent some 62 million cubic meters of water and iron ore leftovers flooding into the village, which is some 4 miles downhill from the mine, officials said Friday. Since Friday, hundreds of people have taken shelter in a gym in Mariana as donations of food, clothing and mattresses pour in. Many of the survivors have injuries to their feet, from fleeing their houses barefoot and trekking through the devastated terrain and then onto scorching asphalt. The public prosecutor’s office has said it may file criminal charges against Samarco, which is jointly owned by the Brazilian mining company Vale and Australia’s BHP Billiton, over the facility’s lack of an emergency siren. But Samarco CEO Ricardo Vescovi said that as far as he knows Brazilian law doesn’t require an emergency alarm for dam failures and that authorities had approved the company’s emergency response plan. He also worked to dispel fears that the mud contained toxins that could contaminate the land and area rivers. The mayor’s office in Mariana said Samarco officials assured them the mining company would pay for the damages, but did not provide details.

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Interim Prime Minister Sorin Campeanu said a patient at the Floreasca emergency hospital in Bucharest also succumbed to his injuries. Campeanu said earlier that 109 other people still remain hospitalized, 48 of them in serious or critical condition, from the Oct. 30 blaze that erupted at the Colectiv basement nightclub during a heavy metal concert. Panicked people fled for the sole exit in a stampede, leaving 180 injured. Late Friday, several thousand protesters gathered in

Bucharest for the fourth consecutive evening, waving Romanian flags and calling for better governance and an end to corruption. Protesters came with their children and dogs. Some played drums and sang in memory of the rock band Goodbye to Gravity, which was playing at Colectiv when a spark from a pyrotechnic show ignited foam decor, setting off an inferno. “We want a decent standard of life, not a criminal state!� read one banner. Another banner carried the hashtag “#corruptionkills.�

Sierra Leone declared free of Ebola transmissions By CLARENCE ROY-MACAULAY Associated Press

FREETOWN, Sierra Leone — The World Health Organization declared Sierra Leone free from Ebola transmissions on Saturday, as West Africa battles to stamp out the deadly virus that is holding on in neighboring Guinea. Nearly 4,000 people have died in Sierra Leone of Ebola since the outbreak began in late 2013. The organization said 42 days have passed since the last confirmed Ebola patient was discharged on Sept. 25 after two consecutive negative test results. Hundreds of people cheered in the capital Saturday as Dr. Anders Nordstrom, Sierra Leone representative for the World Health Organi-

zation, declared the end of the Ebola outbreak in Sierra Leone. “WHO commends the government and people of Sierra Leone for the significant achievement of ending this Ebola outbreak,� he said. A country must go 42 days — equal to two incubation periods of 21 days — without an Ebola case in order for WHO to declare it free of Ebola transmission. It’s a benchmark that neighboring Liberia reached in May only to then experience a brief reappearance of cases before it was declared free from transmissions again in September. Sierra Leone had at one point begun the 42 day countdown only to discover a new Ebola case. Guinea, where the epidemic began, now remains the only coun-

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BUCHAREST, Romania — Seven more people succumbed to burn-related injuries on Saturday, just over a week after a fire broke out in a Bucharest nightclub, authorities said, bringing the death toll in the tragedy to 39. Many in Romania have blamed lax government safety standards for the deadly blaze. Prime Minister Victor Ponta and his Cabinet resigned Wednesday after mass protests.

Adrian Stanculea, spokesman for the state burns hospital, said three men died at that facility on Saturday, while the manager at University Hospital, Catalin Cirstoiu, said a man there died of his injuries. Raed Arafat, an emergency situations official, said two patients who had been sent to the Netherlands for specialized burns treatment had died, including a 20year-old Italian woman. Eight patients were transported by military plane to the Netherlands for treatment, he said.

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“This new phase is crucial as our goal is to ensure a resilient zero and that we can detect and respond to any potential flare-ups,� said Nordstrom, adding that WHO will maintain staff in Sierra Leone.

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Politics

B-4 — Sunday, November 8, 2015

The Indiana Gazette

Struggling Republicans see reasons to stay in race By JULIE PACE

they can use television appearances as a way to get free publicity. Running for president can be a stepping stone to high-profile television jobs and other lucrative opportunities. And given that the field remains unsettled, there’s always the possibility that an unlikely candidate can make a late surge in one of the early voting states. Huckabee pulled off a surprise victory in the 2008 Iowa caucuses, and former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum did the same four years later, though neither ultimately secured his party’s nomination. “Candidates never really run out of reasons to run,� said Kevin Madden, a Republican strategist who advised 2012 GOP nominee Mitt Romney. “Many are staying in because the lesson learned from past campaigns is that it’s possible to go from 1 percent to winning the caucuses, or at least beat expectations.� Yet some Republicans are concerned, believing that one of the reasons the race remains unsettled is because there are still so many candidates. Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker openly worried about that when he abruptly ended his campaign in late September amid a cash shortage. He encouraged other candidates to follow his lead “so voters can focus on a limited number of candidates who can offer a positive conservative alternative to the current frontrunner.� The front-runner Walker was referring to was Donald Trump. The billionaire real estate mogul is still atop the GOP field, causing heartburn for establishment Republicans who fear he couldn’t win in the general election — or that his controversial statements on immigration and minorities could hurt the party even if he’s not the nominee. In his typical no-holdsbarred style, Trump has been calling out rivals who are

AP White House Correspondent

WASHINGTON — For months, Republican presidential candidates with dwindling bank accounts and negligible support in polls have been finding reasons to stay in the 2016 race. Now, a few must weigh whether they can keep competing after being downgraded or excluded from Tuesday’s fourth GOP debate. New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and former CHRIS Arkansas CHRISTIE Gov. Mike Huckabee have been bumped to the undercard debate because of low poll numbers, while South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham and former New York Gov. George Pataki didn’t qualify for either event. Each of the candidates has so far vowed to stay in the race, keeping the Republican contest crowded with just under three months until the Iowa caucuses kick off the nominating process. Fifteen Republicans are still running for president, while three Democrats are vying for their party’s nomination. “I’ll go there, debate, and as soon as I MIKE leave the deHUCKABEE bate I’ll go to Iowa and get back to work,� Christie said Friday as he filed his paperwork to run in the New Hampshire primary. Struggling candidates can see multiple reasons to keep their White House hopes alive. It’s relatively inexpensive to campaign in Iowa and

struggling and pointing them toward the exits. “There are too many people,� Trump said this week. “If a person has been campaigning for four or five months and they’re at zero or 1 or 2 percent, they should get out.� Other candidates have avoided assessing when their rivals should end their campaigns, a process that is often emotional and deeply personal. But for weeks, Jeb Bush supporters have said the crowded field is contributing to the former Florida gover-

nor’s struggle to gain traction. “For Jeb, the field’s got to get narrowed down a lot to shine,� said Philip Taub, a supporter from New Hampshire. Iowa State Rep. Ron Jorgenson said Bush is “suffering just from a lot of fragmentation with so many people in the race.� The New York Times, in a biting editorial, has called for Christie to end his campaign and refocus on his duties as governor. “You are accountable for what happens in New Jersey,� the paper wrote last week.

And in Louisiana, Gov. Bobby Jindal’s pursuit of the presidency has led both Democrats and Republicans in the state to criticize him for being an absentee state executive. Jindal, whose term as governor ends in January, has spent most of the last several months campaigning across Iowa. “I think spending time here, working here is paying off,� the low-polling Jindal said. He is facing a major cash crunch, ending the last fundraising quarter with $261,000 on hand.

But his financial disclosure forms show he’s finding ways to campaign cheaply, bunking at affordable hotel chains. Santorum, who is also low on cash, appears to be looking around for deals on online travel sites, with multiple payments to Expedia and Hotels.com. Of course, for most candidates, there eventually comes a time where a lack of money and lack of votes becomes too great to overcome. “They need to recognize that moment and make a move,� Madden said.

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Nation

The Indiana Gazette

Sunday, November 8, 2015 — B-5

Doggie day care a new trend for busy pet parents By JERRILYN ZAVADA The (Ottawa) Times

OTTAWA, Ill. — Day care: It’s not just for children anymore. As people are busy working all day and children are at school and extracurricular activities, family pets, which would otherwise be left home alone, are now enjoying the benefits of doggie day care in Starved Rock Country. Four Leaf K9 Training and Daycare and Starved Rock Pet Resort are in Streator, while Play and Stay Dog Lounge is in Ottawa, for examples. “Day care is a fairly new concept in Ottawa,� said Linda Marini, who co-owns Play and Stay with her daughter Shea Fargher. “When people learned that there is a safe, fun, clean place for their dog to socialize and play with other dogs off leash, word of mouth and social media brought lots of clients to us to find out more about what we do and how we do it.� The owners all have extensive training and experience in dog care and agree that a bored dog home alone can be a destructive dog, or develop other behavior issues. “Today we have ‘modern dogs.’ They play a big part of our families lives and we as dog owners expect more out of our pet,� said Erin Marconi, owner of Four Leaf K9. “Some people want a family dog but are too busy with every day life and the dog sits at home by themselves or in a kennel all day, bored. This is when bad behavior can start. Separation anxiety, destructive behavior, excitable energy, aggression with people and other animals and so on. Pretty much all the dogs in day care I have trained with their owners.� Susan Crawford owns Starved Rock Pet Resort in Streator and the Fetching Frieda Dog and Cat Emporium in LaSalle. “I believe many dogs are in shelters because of destructive behaviors that make it hard for families to accommodate them,� Crawford said. “I believe proper training and exercising for the nations dogs could alleviate much of the shelter over population of dogs that we now have. This is part of the reason that I decided to go into the day care business.� Marini added there are numerous factors that play a role in a dog’s overall wellbeing.

DOUG LARSON/Associated Press

LINDA MARINI, co-owner of Play and Stay Dog Lounge, played with dogs in October on the playground equipment at her business in Ottawa, Ill. “Dogs need both mental and physical stimulation. Some need less, some need more,� Marini said. “Each dog is individual but every dog can benefit from the right mix of good diet, fun exercise, and brain stimulating activities. A happy dog is one that has these needs met on a regular basis. Dog day care provides two of the three essentials to a happy pet.� With the help of staff, Marconi works to make sure each of the dogs’ needs are met in a safe environment. “The goal of day care is you have to know and understand dogs and their body language to be in charge of a pack of dogs,� she said. “You have to know every dog to a ‘T,’... Not every dog is suitable for day care but I usually get them playing with new dogs and bring them out of their shell with some training. Being in charge of group play is not just for anyone. Some people even think or say how fun and easy my day must be ‘playing with cute dogs all day.’ I always laugh when I hear that because there is a lot of work involved and you always have to be on your toes.� “Every dog that comes to day care is assessed prior to playing to ensure that no dog is put in an uncomfortable or scary position with other dogs,� Marini said. “Our goal is for every dog that visits to have a fun, safe time and be excited to return.� Marconi said the more frequently a dog attends day care, the better their behavior. “You can tell what dogs come three or five days a week. They have the system down,� she said. “Some can

ride shot gun and most importantly they are a well-balanced and happy dog. The ones that come here and there are more work because they are so excited to be here,

have a lot more energy to burn, and have a harder time focusing on directions.� Play and Stay offers webcams throughout the facility for families can log on to their website and monitor their dogs while they are away, and Starved Rock Pet Resort uses computers to monitor dogs as well. “We are computer organized, so we always know were each dog is and what they are doing,� said Crawford. Four Leaf’s bus delivery and pick-up service is offered five days a week for Streator clients and Monday, Wednesday and Friday for Ottawa, Grand Ridge and Naplate clients. Customers can also drop their dogs off at Four Leaf, west of Streator. “Safety is very important. You can’t have dogs loose in a vehicle for many reasons,� Marconi said. “People love our vehicles even if they don’t even have a dog. “The dogs especially enjoy the outing and are always

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waiting or watching out the window for their ride to school.� Play and Stay offers pick up service with a van that is open in the back with fake grass on the floor. “We have soft beds and blankets back there but also have hooks where a dog can be harnessed for safety or cages that a dog can be transported in, whichever the client prefers,� Marini said. “We are always happy to transport for people who cannot get their dog to Play and Stay for day care and need our help.� Crawford said Starved Rock Pet Resort offers pickup and delivery depending on needs and location. “We have two pet taxis which utilize crates for the

safety and security of our guests,� she said. As for the benefits of day care for dogs and their people, Marconi says they are “endless.� “Dogs are just more balanced and manageable for owners,� she said. “They are obviously dog friendly and learn to play properly, more social in life, and the biggest advantage to owners is their dogs come home exhausted. The biggest reward is to see all the happy smiling dogs and watching the progress dogs make over time by coming here.� “They become more social and less anxious as they continue to come and they look forward to the many play activities they get to participate in,� Marini said.

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Classified

B- 6 — Sunday, November 8, 2015

The Indiana Gazette

PLACING A CLASSIFIED AD? IT’S AS SIMPLE AS...1-2-3 1. Phone 724-349-4949 2. Drop It Off...899 Water St., Indiana Mon.-Fri. 8am-5pm; Closed Saturday

3. Email ... classified@indianagazette.net 001

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Public Notices

015

Memoriams

1st SHOWING – NEW PA MODULAR! 1,650 sq ft, luxurious Roman Master Bath Suite. New “Peppercorn” Cabinets. New Carlota Floor Tile. Specially designed & Decorated for RHI. 60-Day Price Lock $101.500. Riverview Homes – Rte 422 Prospect (724) 865-9930

NOTICE The 2016 Budget for West Mahoning Township has been prepared and is now available for public inspection. The budget will be presented for adoption on December 2, 2015, at 7:00 p.m. at the residence of township supervisor, Kenneth Lightner. Those who wish to view the budget may do so by contacting the secretary at 814-257-8654 or 814-375-1095. WEST MAHONING TOWNSHIP Nancy Holmes, Secretary 11/8

NOTICE The Montgomery Township Board of Supervisors has tentatively adopted the 2016 Proposed Budget at their Meeting held on November 04, 2015. The Proposed Budget will be available for public inspection by appointment until the final adoption which will take place on December 02, 2015 at the Meeting which will be held at 7:00 p.m. at the Township Building located at 1220 Cush Creek Road, Cherry Tree, PA 15724. To make an appointment contact Paula Burba, Secretary/ Treasurer at 814-845-2240. 11/8

In Loving Memory of Thomas R. Stiffler 5/7/67 - 11/8/86 Loving memories never die, as years roll on and days pass by. Deep in our hearts a memory is kept of one we loved and will never forget. Love always, Dad, family and friends.

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Houses For Sale

Sunshine Notices

NOTICE

The Curriculum Committee of the Board of Directors of the Blairsville-Saltsburg School District will meet on Thursday, November 12, 2015, beginning at 5:30 pm in the Conference Room at the Saltsburg Elementary School to discuss comprehensive planning, State testing and any other business that comes before the committee. Leigh A. Free, Board Secretary

006

Lost & Found

019

Houses For Sale

3 BEDROOM, 2 Bath home with finished basement & 1 car garage. 385 6th Street, Clymer, PA 15728. Call 724-464-7621

4 BEDROOM HOME DISCOUNTED! Save $9,600 on display model 28x76 Commodore Double Wide. 4 Beds, 2 Baths, Master Retreat. Now only $71,800 for lot model! Riverview Homes, Rte 22 New Alexandria, (724) 668-2297

BLAIRSVILLE CHESTNUT RIDGE

Indiana: 24 Dogwood Rd. 4 bdr, 2 ba, 4.8 acres, appliances included, close to shopping/ schools, asking $150,000 Call (724) 357-0365

PUBLISHERS NOTICE: All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination.” We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.

Sunday 11/8, 12-4pm 2591 Melloney Lane, Reduced. Buy: Loan from $614. Rent To Own: rent $995. (412) 596-4144 UPDATED Duplex, furnished upstair/downstair, Great income 49K. Call or txt (724) 840-5717 or (724) 464-7816

016

Condominiums For Sale

Sterling Hills, 2 bdr, asking $163,000 for details call (724) 762-5668

$200 REWARD

LOST Gray Tabby cat w/ black stripes. Name Jack. Very friendly. Ann Circle/ Lucerne Rd area. (724) 388-8730 or 599-5566. LOST CAT: Grandview & 6th St. black & white, male, yellow collar, answers to Harry. Call (410) 253-9130

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Unfurnished Apartments

STERLING HILLS Development, Indiana - Lots starting at $25,000 with Public Utilities. Call (724) 349-4914.

1 BDRM 7 min. south of Indiana, newly remodeled $400 + util. No pets! Non smoking! 724-422-2819

021

1 bdrm w/central air, dishwasher, stove & frig. Spacious w/extra storage! No pets, ns. $560 + Elec. 724-349-2638.

Business Property For Sale

PRICE REDUCED!

Retail Furniture Store or Commercial Building For Sale. 6th Street, Clymer. 724-254-5678

029

Roommate Needed

FEMALE Roommate wanted, share 3 bedroom, 1.5 bath w/laundry area & off street parking. $450/mo. includes all utilities & wireless internet. References. Call Bonnie at (724) 549-1607 ROOMMATE to share 3 bdr in fully furnished mobile home, all utilities included. $500/mo. Indiana Area. Call or Text (570) 316-1165

030

Furnished Apartments

1 ROOM Efficiencies, East Pike. $490/mo. ALL UTIL. INCL., TV & Internet also. Call (724) 549-2059 HOMER CITY: 2bdr, w/d, handicapped accessible $550/mo. Call or text. (724) 840-5717 or (724) 464-7816 INDIANA: 1 mile N, 2 Bdrm, 1 bath, 1st floor. No pets! $500/mo. + util. (724) 465-8253 INDIANA: 1bdr, upper level, 2nd flr, quiet, $425 + gas, elec, cable, clean, ready to move in, no pets Old Rte 119 N. past Bilo, N.4th St 724-465-8521 INDIANA: 2 bdr, garage apt, $550/mo + sec., no pets, n/s. (814) 743-5080 INDIANA: near IUP starting at $450/mo. 1 bedroom, furnished, all utilities plus Dish TV & high speed internet included. For Information or to schedule an appointment Phone (724) 471-2140 PLUMVILLE: 1 bdr, $525/mo. includes utilities except electric, n/s & no pets. (724) 388-6969

2 BDR 1st floor, $600/ mo. 2 BDR, 2nd floor, $500/mo. Sewage & garbage incl. (724) 463-6157 AFFORDABLE - 2 bdrms with A/C, laundry room & off-street parking. $595/ mo. incl. water, sewage & trash. 50% discount on 1st month rent, Call (724) 910-0921 ATTRACTIVE, 1 bdrm unit, carpeting, appliances, air, on-site laundry, off st. parking. Rent incl water, garbage, sewage. No Pets. 10mo lease $475/mo (724) 463-1645 CLYMER, 2nd flr, 1 bdr, $490/mo, incl heat, water, sewage, trash, non smoking/no pets 724-840-2315

031

AIRLINE CAREERS begin here - Get hands on training as FAA certified Aviation Technician. Financial Aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance. 1-888-834-9715

031

Unfurnished Apartments

IN TOWN 2nd FL, 2 bdrm unit. Rent incl. gas heat, a/c, water, hot water, garbage, sewage & off street parking. $700 month, 6 mo. lease, no pets. Call (724) 349-5880 IN TOWN: 2 bdr, all appliances, w/d, pets negotiable $650/mo. Call (724) 388-3512 INDIANA Boro. 2 bd. 1200 Sq ft. garage. $600 + gas, elec., H20. No dogs. Yr lease. (724) 349-8077 from 7am-9pm. www.pelesholdings.net INDIANA: 1 bdr garage apt. incl all appliances, no pets. $450/mo + dep. & utilities. (724) 422-9324 INDIANA: 1 bdrm, $475 mo + ele, Ref, No smokers or pets, available now (724) 349-9270, M-F, 9-5 INDIANA: 2 bdr, 286 W, $475/mo incl. water, sew, garbage, non smoking, no pets. 724-388-2023

033

Unfurnished Apartments

INDIANA: 2 story 3 bdr townhs + full bsmt, appl. incl, $600/mo. N/S, No pets. (724) 465-8280 NEW 1 bdr, Indiana, $540/mo. incl sewage, garbage & water. No Pets. Call (412) 289-0382

Office Space For Rent

PRIME OFFICE SPACEDowntown Blairsville: 4000+ sq. ft., 1st floor, can be easily divided. Off-street parking. Call Peggy Kinter, 724459-0200. Howard Hanna Chestnut Ridge Realty.

035

Houses For Rent

Rochester Mills: $375 month incl all util + direct tv, 1 bdr, 1ba, kit/lr, storage, Call (724) 286-9301

3 BDR, near Indiana Airport, $650/mo + util. Call (724) 459-7494

SPACIOUS One bdrm, Indiana. $490 month incl. sewage, garbage & water. (412) 289-0382

3 BDR: Young Twp, A.R School District, $625/mo. incl. heat & water. (717) 979-5245 for more info. 3 BDRM, Brush Valley Area, $675/mo. plus utilities, No pets. Non Smoking. Ph. 724-801-0375

Two, Three, & Four Bedroom Houses 1 & 2 Bedroom Apartments OakGroveRealty.net

032

3 BEDROOM in Indiana, $675/mo plus security. Non smoking. No pets. (814) 743-5080

Business Property For Rent

285 Phil St: 1,000 sq ft, 1st fl, pkg, 2 baths, red light, $800 mo + el, negot. (724) 349-9270, M-F, 9-5

AVAILABLE NOW Cute 3 bdr, $750/mo. + utilities. Eisenhower School Dist. Call 724-349-0581

Clymer: 2 bedroom, $475 - some utilities included + sec deposit. Full attic storage. No Pets. Non smoking. (814) 948-4268 COLONIAL MANOR 1 bdr furnished. & unfurnished. 2 bdr unfurnished. Call for info. (724) 463-9290. 9-4pm. colonialmanorindianapa .com CREEKSIDE: 10 minutes from Indiana, 1 Bdrm, W/D, fridge, stove, new carpet. $595/mo util. incl., No pets. (724) 354-3722 Homer City: Large 2bdr, finished basement, washer/dryer hookups, no pets, $600 mo. + sec. dep. Call (724) 479-3742 or (724)479-2840

Classified Information

HOMER CITY: Two bedrooms, no pets, Royal Oaks Apts. Phone (724) 464-9708

Whether searching for a home, an apartment, a job, a vehicle or gently used merchandise, consumers search the classifieds first.

SALTSBURG

A Divorce $219 Total. Uncontested. No Fault. Davis Divorce Law, Pgh. No Travel. Free Info. 1-800-486-4070, 24/7

YOUR AD IS

031

3516 FAIRWAY COURT TOMS RUN & CHESNUT RIDGE GOLF COURSE Live where you play...Great space with numerous updates $249,900 Cynthia Perry 412.848.6381 BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY HOME SERVICES 724.327.0444 X 229 OPEN SUNDAY NOV. 15th, 11am-2pm

Special Notices

One item per ad priced under $200

Lots & Acreage For Sale

AND

508 INDIANA AVENUE ADORABLE & TOTALLY CHARMING. 2 Bedroom Ranch, Oversized Garage COMPLETELY UPDATED Covered Front Porch. Home Warranty. Cindee Perry 412.848.6381 BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY HOME SERVICES 724.327..0444 X 229

One item per ad priced under $500

One item per ad priced under $1000

Newspaper classifieds ... when buyers & sellers need to connect.

724.465.5555 One item per ad priced under $2000

One item per ad priced under $3000

One item per ad priced under $4000

One item per ad priced under $5000

One item per ad priced over $5000

YOUR AD IS ONLY YOUR AD IS ONLY YOUR AD IS ONLY YOUR AD IS ONLY YOUR AD IS ONLY YOUR AD IS ONLY YOUR AD IS ONLY

Place your ad in The Gazette Classifieds to

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You can place your ads by ... EMAIL: classifieds@indianagazette.net ... PHONE: 724-349-4949 ... FAX: 724-349-4550 MAIL: The Indiana Gazette Classifieds, PO Box 10, Indiana, PA 15701 ... or by dropping them off at The Indiana Gazette, located at 899 Water St. in Indiana • All ads are up to 6 lines and run for 7 days • Free ads can run for 7 days. Second week is $5, or you can wait 30 days to rerun for another 7 days free. Additional renewals are $5 each. • Rates apply to private-party ads only • Must list price of item/s in ad • No cancellation refunds • Add an Attention-Getter for only $5 (optional) • Pets, Real Estate, Rentals, Auctions, Financial, Services/Repairs, Garage Sales, Bulk (firewood, hay, etc.) not eligible. • No other discounts or coupons apply.


Classified

The Indiana Gazette

039

061

Mobile Homes For Rent

COUNTRY Setting, Double wide, 3 bedroom, 2 baths, electric & heat incl. Non smoking. No Pets. For Info 724-349-3904 HOMER Center S.D, 2&3 bdr 2ba, some util. incl, for more details call (724) 541-3265 NICE: 2 Bdrm near Yellow Creek Park, large yard, nice front porch, rear deck, lawn care & snow removal incl. $520/ mo + util. 724-422-0717

050

Mobile Homes For Sale

RENT to Own: 2 bdr, 2009 Champion, Blairsville Schools, new hardwood floors, c/a, $590+ utilities. (814) 243-2504 TYSON FARMS: 2 bdr, 2 bath, 1987, in good condition. $6,000. Call (724) 549-2563

11-08-15

061

Help Wanted

061

Help Wanted

CARPENTERS Wanted in Latrobe, PA Mihalko’s General Contracting. Must have interior and or exterior remodeling experience. 401K, Health Insurance, Competitive Salary Pay. + Bonus. Please Call: (814) 535-2700 to schedule interview or hello@ mihalkoscontracting. com

CDL School Bus/Van Drivers Needed:

Hiring for the current school year. Drivers are needed to transport children to and from schools in Indiana / Armstrong counties. Contact Barker Inc. at (724) 548-8536 ext 111 or 127 for more info.

CHILDCARE TEACHERS

A.C. Miller Concrete Products is now accepting applications for various positions in our Traffic Department. Do you have experience or credentials in:

Dispatching (experience

035

035

Houses For Rent

COAL RUN: 2 bdr, 1 bath, Call for details. (724) 464-7154 or (724) 388-6351. Ava. Dec. 1st IN BORO: 1 bdr, $600 plus utilities, off street parking, quiet neighborhood. (724) 465-8923

w/ obtaining permits preferred)

Houses For Rent

036

Equipment operators

Mail resume to Colonial Auto Body 97 N. 2nd St., Indiana, PA 15701 Email to Shop Manager: Mark Hamilton mehamilton@live.com

Auto Body

Convenience Store Manager

Immediate Opening, must be available for all shifts, weekends & holidays. Must be 18years old. Serious inquiries only. Saltsburg Area. Send resume to: Box 2916 c/o The Indiana Gazette P.O. Box 10, Indiana, PA 15701. MAKE your classified ad get noticed! Ask us about using Attention Grabbers. Call (724) 349-4949 today.

Duplex For Rent

DIESEL TECH For heavy duty truck shop. Must have experience in troubleshooting, repairing, and overhauling mechanical and electronic diesel truck engines, transmissions, rearends, and clutches. Send resume or pick up application at: Penn View Equipment Co., Inc. 592 Penn View Road Blairsville, PA 15717. (724) 459-6057

OUTSIDE SALES PROFESSIONAL

Needed for a growing Westmoreland County Factory Authorized Dealer for Sharp Electronics Corp. With customers in Westmoreland, Indiana, Fayette & Somerset Counties, the successful candidate will be responsible for initiating customer contact and growing revenue with new and existing customers in the Sale of Office Machines, Supplies & Furniture. We offer salary, commission, 401k & benefits. Please mail resume to Total Service, Inc. 1117 Ligonier St, Latrobe, PA 15650 Fax: 724-537-0699 Email: total@ totalserviceinc.com

ASSISTANT VICE PRESIDENT OF HUMAN RESOURCES

(i.e. large capacity lift trucks for loading/unloading product) Send resumes to: P.O. Box 93 Blairsville, PA 15717 or email to candreassi@acmiller.com

Drivers, Cooks, And Servers

Needed. Part time, full time, daylight or evening work. Apply at Wayne Ave. Pizza Hut/ KFC in Indiana.

Direct Care

INDIANA: Lovely 2 story + bsmt, 3 bdr, 2ba, fireplace, large yard, $650/ mo. N/S. (724) 465-8280

• Estimator • Detailer • Parts Manager • Experienced Auto Body & Paint Technicians

hydraulic

boom trucks and articulating cranes

We are hiring compassionate, caring people who enjoy helping others. Full-time overnights in the Indiana and Homer City areas. Assist adults with intellectual disabilities w/social activities, housekeeping, doctor’s appts. & personal care. Valid driver’s license, ability to obtain ACT 33/34 & 151 clearances & lift up to 200 lbs. with assistance required. 100% employer paid medical, dental & vision for full-time staff. No experience necessary. Call 724-496-1960 for more information or apply online.

INDIANA: Beautifully furnished 2 bdrm & office, AC, W/D, $900/mo. + util. Avail 11/15. 724-541-1486

Colonial Auto Body & Collision Center, Indiana, PA is expanding & hiring all positions:

061

Help Wanted

061

Help Wanted

Head Cheerleading Coach

Event Staff

Landmark Event Staffing will be conducting interviews for part time event staff on Thursday November 12th from Noon to 5 pm at IUP Kovalchick center. Qualified applicants can work variety of events At KCAC and the Hub along with Steelers, Pitt and PSU Football games and concerts through out the year. Contact Landmark at 412-321-2707 Mon-Fri. 9am-5pm.

Indiana Area School District is accepting applications for a Head Cheerleading Coach. Complete application instructions can be found at www.iasd.cc/jobs. EOE. NOW Hiring Servers and Bartenders. Apply within. Bruno’s Restaurant

Operations Manager.

EXPERIENCED Snow Plow Drivers Needed. Must have clean driving record. Call (724) 854-9200

CHILDCARE TEACHERS

Help Wanted

Needed for Great Expectations Childcare at Blairsville and Latrobe locations. Star 4 center, seeking FT-PT professionals dedicated to high quality. E.C.E. or related fields (724) 459-6800 or Ispitzer@ greatexpectations childcare.com

Universal Well Services, Inc. has an opening at the Punxsutawney, PA District for Operations Manager. This position will be responsible for managing all of the day to day operations of the district. Must have thorough and extensive knowledge of pressure pumping operations and equipment. All candidates will be required to pass a drug screen and physical. Competitive wages & benefit package including medical, dental, vision, 401k, paid holidays and annual paid vacation. Apply at www.patenergy.com under the Pressure Pumping Careers Section, vacancy# IRC6928.

w/ oversize preferred)

Operating

GIRTY: 3 bdrm, util. & cable incl. $1000. Shelocta: 1 bdrm furnish apt. $650 util. incl. (724) 354-4631

Indiana: 24 Dogwood Rd. 4 bdr, 2 ba, 4.8 acres, appliances included, $900/mo plus utilities, monthly lease, no pets, no smoking, Call (724) 357-0365

061

Help Wanted

CDL Class A (experience

INDIANA: nice 2 bdr, a/c, 2 car garage, big yard. $795/mo. (724) 840-2399

2 BDRM Creekside area. $500/month plus utilities. (724) 388-9011

INDIANA Boro: 3 bedroom, $650 plus utilities. No pets. (724) 422-3464

Needed for Great Expectations Childcare at Blairsville and Latrobe locations. Star 4 center, seeking FT-PT professionals dedicated to high quality. E.C.E. or related fields (724) 459-6800 or lspitzer@greatexpectationschildcare. com

Sunday, November 8, 2015 — B -7

Helping Individuals and Families with Life’s Changing Needs

Pennsylvania Highlands Community College is seeking an Assistant Vice President of Human Resources. This is a key management position with responsibilities for the development, execution and evaluation of College wide policies and procedures for personnel administration. The successful candidate will provide strategic vision, leadership and management of the Human Resources function. Areas of responsibility include compensation, benefits, recruitment, training, employee/labor relations and collective bargaining. Minimum qualifications: Master’s degree in human resources, public administration, business administration or related field; plus four years of increasingly responsible experience in HR administration; experience in HRIS systems and strong computer literacy; knowledge of and ability to apply HR best practices. Competitive salary and comprehensive benefits package. View a complete job description and apply online at www.pennhighlands.edu/about/hr/employment/ EOE/AA

www.lifesteps.net

EOE/ADA

NEW 2015 FORD F-150 SUPERCAB XL

DRUG & ALCOHOL COUNSELORS NEEDED Firetree, Ltd., a leading provider of drug & alcohol treatment programs, is searching for Drug & Alcohol Counselors for their Conewago Indiana facility located in Indiana, PA. The counselor will be responsible for providing treatment services to the residents of the program. Minimum qualifications for the position of Counselor are: Bachelors Degree in Behavioral Science or related Human Service field. Previous drug & alcohol experience a must. Must pass criminal background check & attend Department of Corrections two week training in Elizabethtown, PA. Firetree, Ltd. offers competitive wages, paid time off, company matched 401(K) & employee tuition reimbursement. Resumes along with a letter of interest will be accepted until suitable candidates are found. Firetree, Ltd. Attn: Joseph Duffey, Director 2275 Warren Road, Indiana, PA 15701 or Fax: 724-471-7105 e-mail: jduffey@firetree.com Firetree, Ltd. is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer

Real Prices FRIENDS & FAMILY Re Testimonials! PRICING EVENT! Real HOT DEALS

2013 FORD FIESTA

G Glenn Bush Ford Service Loaner Since New.

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Classified

B- 8 — Sunday, November 8, 2015

061

061

Help Wanted

RN & LPN

Care Unlimited, Inc. is seeking FT/PT RN & LPN’s, Call 814-503-8081 to schedule orientation on Thursday November 12 at 10am at the Clarion Library TO start a subscription to the Indiana Gazette, phone (724) 465-5555 and ask for the circulation department.

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090

101

Antiques

Mahoganey Secretary, Oak d/r set, Victorian love seat & chair, sm. accent tables and more, agway Call (724) 465-8253

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CARTER: winter coat with snow pants, size 3t, excellent condition. $20.00. (724) 541-8524

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People are driving more and more every day. Outdoor advertising is the ultimate way to reach them outside their home & office - and it gives you constant exposure, 24/7. Three fourths of Americans rely on billboards to locate places while they are traveling. We already help you reach your customers at home, in the office, and on the go with The Indiana Gazette, indianagazette.com and the Shopper’s Guide.

105

Fuel & Firewood

PELLET Stove England’s Stove Works, 2 years old, new paid $1,500 sell for $1,100. obo. Call (724) 397-2592 SEASONED Hardwoods: sold by the cord. Will Deliver. (724) 479-0251 Seasoned Split Firewood $160 cord. Delivered & dumped. (724) 479-0845

098

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Genie Garage Door Opener, w/ hardware, older model, asking $25, Call (724) 459-9648 Machinery & Tools

CRAFTSMAN pull behind 42” high performance lawn sweeper, like new. Asking 150.00. Call (724) 463-0726 EFCO 940 12” blade chain saw. 2 new chains, 2 sharped chains. $90.00 Call (724) 465-7300

Household Goods

48” Oak Cabinet with fiberglass top & faucet, asking $75, Call (724) 357-9918 CHAISE Lounge, Conover from Country Manor, quilted navy floral fabric, asking $100, Call (724) 463-6282 LARGE Overstuffed Couch, brown tweed color, excellent condition, pd $850 asking $400 firm, Call (724) 471-2070 LEATHER recliners: (2) new. Best Offer. Call (724) 541-1988

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LOVE seat in good condition, hide away bed inside. $175.00 firm. (814) 246-4502

why digital?

QUEEN camo comforter & sheet set. $55. & Queen pink camo comforter & sheet set $55. brand new. Call (724) 463-3289 SOFA & Matching chair, navy blue, hunter green in burgundy block plaid, very good cond., recently moved & have too much, $600. 814-599-9927

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100

Every day, 15,500 vehicles drive by our digital billboard at 1967 Oakland Ave. in Indiana.

WILLIAMS Appliance, 30 years. Selling quality new & used. (724) 397-2761.

BABY SWING With lights & music, excellent condition, $35. (724) 599-7629

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102

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099

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The Indiana Gazette

Appliances For Sale

Pets & Supplies For Sale

ATTENTION... ADS FOR FREE PETS

Your beloved pet deserves a loving, caring home. The ad for your free pet may draw response from individuals who may sell your pet for research or breeding purposes. Please screen respondents very carefully when giving away your pet. Your pet will thank you! This message compliments of

The Indiana Gazette

Large Dog Crate, 19”w x 21”h & 24”d, good condition, asking $30, Call 724-464-8571

107

Sports Equipment For Sale

20’ LADDER Tree stand, 1 year old, brand new, $50. (724) 464-8195 Exercise Chair, as seen on TV item, never used, asking $125, Call (724) 254-3003 REDUCED Triple 7 powder pellets; 2 new boxes only $30 for all Call (724) 762-7710 SEARS electric elliptical, upright & recumbent. I joined the “Y”. $200.00 obo. Call (724) 549-6312 Taurus 38 special revolver handgun, 2” barrel, holster, 6 rounds, blue metal, wooden grip , model 85 asking $375, Call(724) 349-9016

108

2 TON hydraulic jack, scissors jack & spinner wrench, $10.00 for all. Call (724) 465-8252 ATTENTION Pitt fans, Black Ceramic Panther in hunting pose, wired for display accent, good condition. 10”x14”x8” $50. (814) 257-8515 CHILDREN’S books: $10.00 for a box of 30. Call (724) 254-0325 CHRISTMAS Tree, 12’ Prelit Northern Pine, brand new, $75. (724) 459-5803 DISHES: 16 place settings with lots of extra serving pieces. Still in boxes. $100. Call (724) 397-8124 MIRROR: Large 3’x4’. $50. Good condition. (724) 349-3557 or (724) 422-1324 OLD Office Safe: 29” wide, 38” high, 26” deep, inside 16”x18”. Dial lock works great, $200. (724) 465-4918 PROPANE heater in good condition. $50.00. Call (724) 349-7224 RADIANT 10: Kerosun Heater, never used. $40.00 (724) 465-8684 Rail King Electric Train, like new, in original box, ask $175, Call (814) 948-7529 Schaefer Submersible Pump, 1 hp, 2-wire, new only used 2 weeks, 260’ wire and 1” water pipe, complete, includes warrenty. asking $475. Call (724) 422-9344 SUNQUEST Tanning Bed: 24 body lamps, built in security timer, cooling system, key lock. $1,500. Call (724) 397-2288 TIMBER Line Fire Place Insert. $200.00 Call (412) 289-5838

SALES

092

Garage Sales

Indiana: Moving sale , 144 Jackson St. in Montecello, Monday 11/9 9am-2pm, house appliances, misc.

LAWN FARM

GARDEN CENTER 116

Farm Products For Sale

EAR CORN for wildlife or livestock. 724-479-9178

117

Lawn & Garden Tools For Sale

CRAFTSMAN riding lawn mower, blown motor, needs tires, new belt, rebuilt carburetor. $30.00 obo. Call (724) 726-5550

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131

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1987 BRONCO with snow plow. Please call on Mon, Fri, or Sat for more details. (724) 349-0152 2010 Chevy Aveo , 57k, good shape, green in color, great gas mileage, $5900 obo. Call (724) 388-0598

134

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136

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139

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GARAGE

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The

Sports

Sunday, November 8, 2015 — C-1

Hardy should be gone already Who needed pictures? Now that Deadspin has released pictures of Greg Hardy’s former girlfriend/ victim, there is a movement among fans and media to have him thrown out of the NFL. Jerry Jones, who signed Hardy to play for the Cowboys, has said that he didn’t see the pictures before signing him and that he has no intention of cutting him. If Hardy JOHN were a STEIGERWALD backup special teams gunner, he would have been cut immediately, but he’s a really good pass rusher and will soon be getting a contract John extension. Steigerwald is If there a former had been Pittsburgh sports reporter. video of Hardy, as His column there was appears each of Ray Rice, weekend. who still can’t get anybody to give him a job, Jones wouldn’t have signed him. Not because he would have been appalled by it, but because he would have known that you would have been appalled by it. Jones called Harvey a good team player the other day, not long after he fought with teammate Dez Bryant and an assistant coach on the sideline. NFL teams have no shame. If the videotape in a Georgia bar hadn’t been recorded over a few years ago, would Ben Roethlisberger still be quarterbacking the Steelers? A good case could have been made for the Steelers cutting Roethlisberger without seeing the videotape. I suggested it at the time. The Steelers obviously had no problem with keeping him on as the face of the franchise. If he had been the backup quarterback, he would have been cut before he got home that night. Meanwhile, as you’re reading this, there’s a good chance that, somewhere in Texas, some men and women are slipping on their Greg Hardy jerseys. Keep Hardy and the Cowboys in mind the next time you see the NFL’s heartfelt anti-domestic violence message. • The Penguins, going into their game with Calgary on Saturday night, were the toughest team to score on in the NHL and had won six in a row and eight out of nine. Part of that success can be attributed to having Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin playing a 200-foot game, by playing defense behind their goal line. Winning is nice, but, if Mario Lemieux had sacrificed half his points per year to play defense in the 1990s and that had meant an extra Stanley Cup for the Penguins, hockey would be about half as popular as it is around here right now. • Pitt hung with Notre Dame for a while on Saturday in a 42-30 loss and the program seems to be Continued on Page C-7

Indiana Gazette

C

COLLEGE FOOTBALL: IUP 26, Gannon 14

Crimson Hawks claim share of division title By MATTHEW BURGLUND

mburglund@indianagazette.net

JAMES J. NESTOR/Gazette

IUP’S SWAHNEEK BROWN tried to get around Gannon’s Foster Reznor during Saturday afternoon’s game.

Years from now, the record book will show the IUP football team won a share of the PSAC West title on Saturday. It won’t say that it was an ugly win, or a win the Crimson Hawks nearly gave away. Nope, it will say IUP beat Gannon, 26-14, to finish 6-1 in the division and split the championship with rival Slippery Rock. Ask the Crimson Hawks, and they’ll tell you that’s all that really matters today. “We just take them one at a time,” linebacker Dorian Lane, one of nine seniors who likely played their final game at Miller Stadium, said. “We’ve got a share of the PSAC West, and that’s a great feeling.”

Up next for the Crimson Hawks is winless Cheyney (0-10). IUP was originally scheduled to play West Chester, but since the Rams won the PSAC East on Saturday, they will play against Slippery Rock in the conference championship game, and the Crimson Hawks get the hapless Wolves, who have not won more than one game in a season since 2003. The only question is where that game will be played. Cheyney was scheduled to play host to Slippery Rock, but the Wolves agreed earlier this season to travel to Slippery Rock. But now it’s up to IUP to hammer out a deal to bring the Wolves to Indiana, or hit the road to the Philadelphia suburbs next week for the regular-season finale. Continued on Page C-4

NOTRE DAME 42 PITTSBURGH 30

DISTRICT 6 CLASS A CHAMPIONSHIP

Over the Top

Big plays hurt Pitt in defeat By WILL GRAVES AP Sports Writer

KEVIN STIFFLER/Gazette

PURCHASE LINE’S Jaycelyn Fleming spiked the ball over the net Saturday against Bishop Carroll in the District 6 Class A championship match.

Dragons win first district crown By DUSTIN FILLOY

dfilloy@indianagazette.net

ALTOONA — Purchase Line didn’t believe that winning Saturday’s District 6 Class A girls’ volleyball championship simply translated to bragging rights and a higher seed in the PIAA tournament. For the senior-laden Red Dragons, winning their first district title marked the culmination of years of hard work and dedication, tangible evidence that buy-

ing into coach Greg Pack’s system ultimately paid major dividends. In its first district title match, second-seeded Purchase Line answered nearly everything Bishop Carroll dished out and continued its magical season by sweeping the No. 4 Huskies, 25-21, 25-19, 25-16, at Altoona Field House. Purchase Line (18-1) hasn’t lost a game in the playoffs and has won 18 matches in a row, last tasting defeat against Indiana, a WPIAL Class AA playoff team, in its season opener.

The Heritage Conference champion Dragons face District 9 runner-up Allegheny-Clarion Valley in the opening round of the state tournament Tuesday at a site to be announced. Bishop Carroll (15-6), which upset defending district champion and top-seeded West Branch in the semifinals on Thursday, takes on District 5 champion North Star in the opening round. “It’s a great feeling. I’m superexcited for my girls,” Pack said. Continued on Page C-7

PITTSBURGH — The attitude adjustment Pat Narduzzi brought to Pittsburgh is in full swing. The Panthers play with an aggressive fearlessness the program has lacked for years. The talent adjustment to hang with the elite, however, will take more time. Sluggish early and sloppy late, Pitt fell to No. 8 Notre Dame 42-30 on Saturday in a game that showcased how much work remains in front of the relentlessly energetic JORDAN Narduzzi and his s t i l l - m a t u r i n g WHITEHEAD team. “We had too many opportunities we missed,” Narduzzi said. “Whether it’s falling on a fumbled ball in the first half or recovering a surprise onside kick, there were opportunities for us.” They are ones the Panthers need to take advantage of when playing a faster, more tested opponent. The Irish (8-1) scored on the game’s third play and rolled up 435 yards. A pair of late Pitt touchdowns tightened things up in the final minutes, but the Panthers were never within one score over the final three quarters. Nate Peterman passed for 223 yards with a touchdown and an interception for Pitt (6-3), which has lost two straight. Jordan Whitehead ran for two scores for the Panthers. Tyler Boyd caught three passes for 84 yards to set a school record for career yards receiving, but the Panthers didn’t come close to ruining Notre Dame’s spot in the College Continued on Page C-7

Lenze, Whitfield earn medals at state meet By The Indiana Gazette

SAM LENZE

HERSHEY — Indiana’s Sam Lenze and Marion Center’s Taya Whitfield earned medals to lead a local contingent of 18 runners at the PIAA Cross Country Championships on Saturday. Lenze, a junior and threetime state qualifier, placed 21st in the Class AA boys’ race with

a time of 16 minutes, 52 seconds. The Indiana County and Crimson Hawk Invitational champion qualified for the state meet by placing fourth in the WPIAL Championships. Whitfield, a junior, finished 17th in the Class A girls’ race with a time of 20:07. The Indiana County and two-time Heritage Conference champion qualified for the state meet by

finishing fifth in the District 6 Championships. There were 225 runners in the Class AA boys’ race and 226 in the Class A girls’ race. Dominic Hockenberry, a senior from Lake-Lehman, won the boy’s title in 15:49, and Marianne Abdalah, a junior from Vincentian Academy, won the girls’ race in 18:50. Homer-Center’s Sam Cunkel-

man came up four places shy of earning a state medal. He placed 29th in the Class A boys’ race with a time of 17:17. The District 6 champion also won the Heritage Conference title and finished second to Lenze in the county meet. Griffin Mackey, a junior from Sewickley Academy, won the race in 16:05. Continued on Page C-8

INSIDE TODAY’S SECTION MAKING STRIDES Even though it lost, the United High School football team ended its season on a high note Saturday with a solid performace against state-ranked Farrell. Page C-8

PAIRING UP

LOSING LIONS

TEXAS TIME

Three Heritage conference teams will play in the District 6 football playoffs starting Friday. Pairings for Class A and Class AA on Page C-8

Penn State rallied against Northwestern, but still came up short against the Wildcats during Saturday’s game. Page C-4

Jeff Gordon knows that drivers will feel the desparation set in when things heat up at today’s Sprint Cup race at Texas Motor Speedway. Page C-7


NFL

C-2 — Sunday, November 8, 2015

The Indiana Gazette

STEELERS GAMEDAY Game 9: vs. Raiders • 1 p.m. today • Heinz Field • TV: CBS

STAFF PREDICTIONS

SCHEDULE SEPT. 10 at Patriots L, 28-21

SEPT. 20 vs. 49ers W, 43-18

SEPT. 27 at Rams W, 12-6

OCT. 1 vs. Ravens

L, 23-20

BEN MARGOT/Associated Press

OCT. 12

at Chargers W, 24-20

OCT. 18

vs. Cardinals W, 25-13

RUNNING BACK Latavius Murray is playing the role of bellcow in his third season with the Raiders. Murray is ninth in the league with 534 rushing yards.

A Daunting Task

Revamped Raiders present tough challenge By WILL GRAVES

OCT. 25 at Chiefs L, 23-13

NOV. 1 vs. Bengals L, 16-10

TODAY

vs. Raiders 1 p.m.

NOV. 15 vs. Browns 1 p.m.

NOV. 22 Bye Week

NOV. 29

at Seahawks 4:25 p.m.

AP Sports Writer

PITTSBURGH — Oakland gave the Pittsburgh Steelers fits during the Raiders’ decade-plus run as a comically hot mess. Imagine the issues that might crop up now that Oakland might be ... good? A victory on the road today would give the Raiders (4-3) their best record at the midway point since 2001 and serve notice that first-year head coach Jack Del Rio’s rebuilding program is well ahead of schedule. “This is a different team,” Oakland running back Latavius Murray said. “I won’t say completely different, but there are new faces and the atmosphere has changed around here. It’s great what we have going on now, but we want to continue doing what we’re doing.” Namely, playing with a swagger not seen since Jon Gruden was scowling on the sideline instead of analyzing in the TV booth. Quarterback Derek Carr is taking care of the ball, Murray is ripping through holes and ageless Charles Woodson is picking off passes as if it was still the late ’90s. “We can’t think of it as just a bigger moment or smaller moment,” Carr said. “For us it’s just we have the Pittsburgh Steelers at their place and that’s never easy for anybody.” Well, maybe anybody but the Raiders. Oakland is 4-1 against Pittsburgh since 2006 and 43-103 against the rest of the league. Del Rio and Carr expect a playoff-type atmosphere, and

in some ways it could be an elimination game for the Steelers (4-4). Injuries have decimated Pittsburgh since training camp with running back Le’Veon Bell the latest to head to injured reserve after tearing the MCL in his right knee last week against Cincinnati. DeAngelo Williams filled in capably in September while Bell sat out two games for violating the league’s substance abuse policy and his 4.9 yards per carry rank in the top 10 in the league. Coach Mike Tomlin has preached faith in Williams, and it will be tested as the 32-year-old returns to a feature role at an age when most backs are slowing down. That’s not an option if Pittsburgh wants to reach the postseason. “Listen, he’s not Le’Veon and he’s not going to try to be Le’Veon,” Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger said. “But he’s DeAngelo and he’s done it in this league for a while now and he’s done it at a high level.” Other things to look for as the Raiders try for consecutive wins in the Eastern time zone for the first time since 2002: BULLISH BEN: Roethlisberger wasn’t exactly sharp in his first game back after missing a month with a sprained knee. He threw three picks against the Bengals, including one that set up Cincinnati’s game-winning drive. Still, he’s hardly backing off the idea set forth by offensive coordinator Todd Haley in the preseason that Pittsburgh can average 30 points a game. “I don’t see why anything has

changed, and it shouldn’t,” Roethlisberger said. RUN STUFFERS: The Raiders have gone 11 straight games without allowing a 100-yard rusher and have been one of the toughest teams in the league to run against. Oakland is second in the NFL, allowing 82.9 yards per game, and ranks third at 3.7 yards per carry. The Raiders completely shut down Chris Ivory last week. Ivory, who came into the game averaging more than 100 yards per game, was held to 17 yards on 15 carries and was hit for a loss on six runs. CAREFUL, CAREFUL: While the injuries are an easy scapegoat, Tomlin has a more blunt assessment of why his team has lost consecutive games for the first time since 2013. The Steelers have turned it over six times the past two weeks and were flagged 10 times against the Bengals. That’s not exactly winning football no matter who is or who isn’t in uniform. “We can’t be highly penalized,” Tomlin said. “We have to win the turnover battle and we have to take better care of the football than we have in the last two weeks.” FAST STARTERS: The Raiders have jumped on teams early the past two weeks. They scored on their first seven drives against San Diego two weeks ago and followed that with scores on six of the first seven drives last week against the Jets. Only a missed field goal by Sebastian Janikowski marred the first three quarters against New York.

INSIDE THE GAME

OAKLAND (4-3) at PITTSBURGH (4-4) DEC. 6

vs. Colts 8:30 p.m.

DEC. 13

at Bengals 1 p.m.

DEC. 20

OPENING LINE — Steelers by 6 RECORD VS. SPREAD — Raiders 4-3, Steelers 4-2-2 SERIES RECORD — Raiders lead 15-12 LAST MEETING — Raiders beat Steelers 21-18, Oct. 27, 2013 LAST WEEK — Raiders beat Jets 34-20; Steelers lost to Bengals 16-10 AP PRO32 RANKING — Raiders No. 11, Steelers No. 14 RAIDERS OFFENSE — Overall (9), rush (20), pass (10). RAIDERS DEFENSE — Overall (26), rush (2), pass (31).

STEELERS OFFENSE — Overall (20), rush (9), pass (21). STEELERS DEFENSE — Overall (2), rush (8), pass (26). STREAKS, STATS AND NOTES — Raiders have won four of last five meetings since 2006. ... Oakland is looking to be over .500 at season’s midway point for first time since 2001. ... Raiders haven’t won consecutive road games since 2011 and haven’t won consecutive games in Eastern time zone since 2002 (beat Cleveland in Week 3 this season) ... Raiders S Charles Woodson grabbed his 65th career

interception last week, tying him with Ken Riley for fifth on NFL’s all-time list. ... Oakland is third in league in yards allowed per rush (3.7). ... Steelers WR Antonio Brown needs 23 yards receiving to become fifth player in franchise history with 6,000 in career. ... Pittsburgh LB Bud Dupree’s four sacks are tied for most in league by rookie. ... Steelers QB Ben Roethlisberger has career quarterback rating of 88.0 in November, lowest of any month. ... Roethlisberger is just 9-10 against AFC West, only division he has losing record against.

Joe Baccamazzi (5-3): What for so long was the perfect remedy for a struggling team — a home game against the Raiders — is no longer a certainty. Breakout sophomore Derek Carr will torch the Steelers’ secondary, and future All-Pro Khalil Mack will terrorize Big Ben, but Oakland will come up just short. Steelers, 23-17 Tony Coccagna (5-3): Ben Roethlisberger will be much better than last week, a fresh DeAngelo Williams will carry the load, and the Steelers will do enough to win. Steelers, 33-32 Dustin Filloy (5-3): Historically, Ben Roethlisberger doesn’t play very well in his second games back from injuries (he’s 1-5 in his career). However, Big Ben rarely plays poorly in two straight home games, and considering how badly the Steelers need a win, it’d be a big surprise if he lays another egg. Steelers, 28-21 Justin Gerwick (5-3): The Steelers usually play poorly against bad Raiders teams. I don’t see why things would be any different against a half-decent Raiders squad. Derek Carr put up 333 yards and four touchdowns against a good Jets secondary, just imagine what he’ll do to William Gay, Antwon Blake and two backup safeties. Raiders, 30-20 Carly Krouse (3-5): Big Ben is a competitor, and he will play much better this week. If he does, the Steelers can win. The Raiders are second-to-worst in the NFL in pass defense, allowing 300-plus yards per game. I think that’ll be the deciding factor. Steelers, 27-17

INJURY REPORT RAIDERS: No Data Reported STEELERS: DNP: WR Martavis Bryant (illness), LB Terence Garvin (knee), CB William Gay (not injury related), LB James Harrison (not injury related), TE Heath Miller (not injury related), TE Matt Spaeth (knee), WR Markus Wheaton (ankle). LIMITED: S Will Allen (ankle), DE Stephon Tuitt (knee). FULL: S Mike Mitchell (concussion), QB Mike Vick (hamstring).

vs. Broncos 4:25 p.m.

DEC. 27 at Ravens 8:30 p.m.

JAN. 3 at Browns 1 p.m.

ON THIS DATE IN STEELERS HISTORY 1942 The Steelers held the winless Lions to just 189 yards and earned a 35-7 victory at Briggs Stadium. The Steelers’ defense forced four fumbles, and nose guard Joe Lamas returned one 29 yards for a touchdown.

1987 The Steelers edged the Kansas City Chiefs, 17-16, on Gary Anderson’s 44-yard field goal in the fourth quarter. Running back Earnest Jackson led the Steelers with 125 rushing yards.

2010

RASHARD MENDENHALL

Running back Rashard Mendenhall rushed for 99 yards and a touchdown, and the Steelers held off a late comeback attempt by the Cincinnati Bengals to score a 27-21 win at Paul Brown Stadium.

STAT OF THE WEEK Pittsburgh’s 22 sacks through eight games are the team’s most through the midway point of the season since totaling 24 in 2010.


NFL

The Indiana Gazette

Sunday, November 8, 2015 — C-3

STANDINGS AMERICAN CONFERENCE East L T 0 0 3 0 4 0 4 0 South W L T Indianapolis 3 5 0 Houston 3 5 0 Jacksonville 2 5 0 Tennessee 1 6 0 W New England 7 N.Y. Jets 4 Buffalo 3 Miami 3

Pct 1.000 .571 .429 .429

PF PA 249 133 172 139 176 173 154 173

Pct .375 .375 .286 .143

PF PA 173 203 174 205 147 207 125 159

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

North L T Cincinnati 0 0 Pittsburgh 4 0 Baltimore 6 0 Cleveland 7 0 West W L T Denver 7 0 0 Oakland 4 3 0 Kansas City 3 5 0 San Diego 2 6 0 W 8 4 2 2

Pct 1.000 .500 .250 .222

PF PA 229 142 168 147 190 214 177 247

Pct 1.000 .571 .375 .250

PF PA 168 112 178 173 195 182 191 227

East L T 4 0 4 0 4 0 5 0 South W L T Carolina 7 0 0 Atlanta 6 2 0 New Orleans 4 4 0 Tampa Bay 3 4 0 W N.Y. Giants 4 Washington 3 Philadelphia 3 Dallas 2

Pct .500 .429 .429 .286

PF PA 215 208 148 168 160 137 133 171

Pct 1.000 .750 .500 .429

PF PA 191 136 213 173 213 234 163 199

North L T Green Bay 1 0 Minnesota 2 0 Chicago 5 0 Detroit 7 0 West W L T Arizona 6 2 0 St. Louis 4 3 0 Seattle 4 4 0 San Francisco 2 6 0 W 6 5 2 1

Pct .857 .714 .286 .125

PF PA 174 130 147 122 140 202 149 245

Pct .750 .571 .500 .250

PF PA 263 153 135 125 167 140 109 207

Games on TV RAIDERS at STEELERS Today 1 p.m., CBS

THIS WEEK IN THE NFL GIANTS at BUCCANEERS Today 4 p.m., Fox

BRONCOS at COLTS Today 4:25 p.m., CBS

EAGLES at COWBOYS Today 8:20 p.m., NBC BOB LEVERONE/Associated Press

PANTHERS QUARTERBACK Cam Newton (1) celebrated a touchown against the Colts during a Nov. 2 game in Charlotte, N.C. Newton leads all quarterbacks with four rushing scores this season.

Pushing Forward

BEARS at CHARGERS Monday 8:15 p.m., ESPN

Newton leads unpredictable Panthers offense atop NFC

UPCOMING SCHEDULE

By BARRY WILNER

AP Pro Football Writer

Peyton returns to Indy. The Raiders and Steelers renew their long-standing and often nasty rivalry. Intriguing matchups both. Yet the spotlight this weekend shines on Charlotte, where the unbeaten Panthers host the 6-1 Packers, with the winner getting the inside track for the top rung in the NFC. Green Bay comes off, by far, its worst performance of the season, a 29-10 drubbing at Denver in which even Aaron Rodgers looked pedestrian. The Panthers weren’t exactly lights-out on Monday night in their rain-soaked 29-26 victory over Indianapolis that required overtime after Carolina blew a big lead. Considering the strengths of their coaching staffs and rosters, expect both sides to be far more efficient for 60 minutes today. “We have stressed to young guys that if you play this game long enough, regardless of how good you are or how well you prepare, bad things are going to happen if you play,” said Greg Olsen, the Panthers’ outstanding tight end. “Things are not going to always go your way. But the guys who have the ability to continue to fight, or not let it take them over mentally, are the ones who make it here.” After this, the Panthers (7-0) don’t face an opponent that currently has a winning record until Atlanta on Dec. 13. Green Bay (6-1) heads into the meat of its NFC North schedule with four in a row, two with the lowly Lions. So look at this as a valid test for both Carolina and Green Bay. “It’s a good thing that we have a quality opponent this week that’s undefeated,” Packers safety Micah Hyde said. “We can go in there and have a big opportunity to make a splash win.” The week’s action began Thursday night with Cincinnati’s 31-10 home victory over Cleveland. Andy Dalton threw three touchdown passes to Tyler Eifert and played lead blocker on Mohamed Sanu’s reverse to help the Bengals improve to 8-0 for the first time in franchise history. Coming off an emotional 16-10 victory in Pittsburgh that gave them control of the AFC North, the Bengals dominated the Browns (2-7) and Johnny Manziel in the second half. A six-pack is off this week: Arizona (6-2), Seattle (4-4), Kansas City (3-5), Houston (3-5), Baltimore (2-6) and Detroit (1-7). DOLPHINS AT BILLS: Of the teams that have changed coaches so far, the Dolphins found instant success with two wins after Dan Campbell replaced Joe Philbin. Then they went up to New England and got smoked. No coaching changes are imminent in western New York, though Rex Ryan has quieted down while trying to fix a sick offense and a disappointing defense. Buffalo comes off a bye after a damaging loss in London to the Jaguars, and should have starting quarterback Tyrod Taylor back after missing two games. But Ryan needs to get that defense revived, especially in light of professed communication issues between players and coaches. “It’s the execution of the calls, and I think that’s the thing that we’re trying to make sure that we’re dialed in,” Ryan says.

BRONCOS AT COLTS: Peyton Manning has been gone from Naptown for 3½ seasons, in which time the Colts have been a playoff regular, as have the Broncos. Denver clearly is on a path toward another postseason berth, using a powerful defense more than Manning’s arm. But he comes off his best performance of the season in the Broncos’ romp past perhaps the NFC’s best team, Green Bay. If the Broncos win, Manning will break Brett Favre’s record for regular-season wins by a quarterback (186). Manning also needs 284 yards passing to pass Favre (71,838) and become the NFL’s career leader. Manning dislikes remembrance tours. “We’ve got a lot on our plate each week trying to kind of figure out what we’re doing and trying to get everybody on the same page and that’s plenty to focus on,” Manning said. “Between that and getting ready to play a team in a loud environment, it’s kind of easy just to focus on that.” Folks in Indy are focused on that losing record, even though the Colts are tied for the AFC South lead with Houston. Offensive coordinator Pep Hamilton was fired this week and Andrew Luck has thrown a league-high 12 interceptions despite missing two games. REDSKINS AT PATRIOTS: No place is tougher for a visitor than Foxborough, and the Redskins are 1-10 on the road under coach Jay Gruden. They head into this game off a bye and a stirring comeback victory over the Bucs the previous week, but are banged-up on defense — no way to face Tom Brady. Brady leads the NFL in fourth-quarter passer rating at 143.5, with seven TDs, zero interceptions, and a 76.7 completion rate. Overall, Brady’s 115.8 passer rating is best in the league, too; he has thrown for 20 TDs and one pick. EAGLES AT COWBOYS: A rare intriguing night affair between teams with losing records. Why? Well, the Cowboys believe if they could only find a way to win a game or two before quarterback Tony Romo returns, they could steal the NFC East. Of course, that assumes Dallas is spotless once Romo is back in the lineup — a huge if. The Cowboys do come close most weeks, though, as their defense has performed well. So has Philadelphia’s, relatively speaking, allowing less than 20 points a game. But the Eagles need an outbreak offensively from DeMarco Murray and where better to do it than at his former stomping grounds? RAMS AT VIKINGS: The winner here will be in good position for a wild card halfway through the schedule. Both teams are on the upswing, with the Vikings taking three in a row and the Rams three of four. The Rams have visited Minnesota just twice in 23 seasons. Their coach, Jeff Fisher, is 1-6 against the Vikings. For St. Louis to prosper, it will need to keep firing up that league-leading pass rush, but also run Todd Gurley. Gurley is the first rookie in NFL history with four straight games of 125-plus yards rushing. He leads the league with 115 yards per game rushing, and Minnesota star Adrian Peterson is next at 90.4.

TITANS AT SAINTS: Mike Mularkey steps into a difficult situation in the Big Easy. The Saints have turned it around as Drew Brees tears apart defenses with some new playmakers (Brandin Cooks, Willie Snead). Meanwhile, the Titans are in disarray with six straight defeats, and No. 2 overall draft pick Marcus Mariota missed the past two losses with a knee injury. Brees is on one of those hot streaks that have marked his superb career. He tied the NFL record for single-game TD passes with seven last week and passed for 505 yards, 5 yards short of career high, in a 52-49 shootout with the Giants, but he also threw two interceptions. FALCONS AT 49ERS: Desperation has hit the Niners’ offense, with QB Blaine Gabbert taking over for Colin Kaepernick. The 49ers have no touchdowns in their past two games and three in five, and they will be without top running back Carlos Hyde (foot). After a 5-0 start, the Falcons have struggled. Atlanta has six turnovers and 17 penalties over the past two games, and could be thin in the secondary. Safety William Moore (groin) could miss his second straight game and two more starters, cornerbacks Robert Alford (groin) and Desmond Trufant (lower back) also have missed practice time or have been limited by injuries. JAGUARS AT JETS: Jacksonville could do some more damage to AFC East wild-card contenders with a win at the Meadowlands, and like two weeks ago at Wembley, the Jags will face a team with uncertainty behind center. Both Ryan Fitzpatrick (left thumb) and Geno Smith (shoulder) were dinged in the Jets’ worst showing of the season, a 34-20 loss at Oakland, although Fitz will start. Look for New York’s defense to be far stingier this week, and also keep an eye out for Jaguars WRs Allen Robinson and Allen Hurns, who have combined for 11 TD catches, most of any wideout duo this season. Hurns, who has 513 yards, has a TD catch in five consecutive games, the longest streak in team history. GIANTS AT BUCCANEERS: The prospect of the return of Jason Pierre-Paul, the Giants’ stud defensive end who blew off his finger in a fireworks accident July 4, makes this game stand out a bit. New York desperately needs to find a pass rush, and that’s JPP’s specialty. The Bucs are more than capable of making the Giants pay for poor defending as Jameis Winston improves on his reads and decisions. In Mike Evans and Vincent Jackson, he has the targets to hurt a weakened D. BEARS AT CHARGERS: Not exactly a prime-time must-see, especially with Bears star RB Matt Forte (knee) out and Chargers standout WR Keenan Allen (lacerated kidney) done for the year. Philip Rivers has had brilliant numbers this season even as the Bolts blunder. Rivers has set a franchise record with five straight 300-yard games. He has thrown for 18 TDs and has a 102.1 passer rating. Could be plenty of transplanted Midwesterners at this one as San Diegans wonder where the Chargers will call home after this season.

Thursday, Nov. 12 Buffalo at N.Y. Jets, 8:25 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 15 Jacksonville at Baltimore, 1 p.m. Detroit at Green Bay, 1 p.m. Miami at Philadelphia, 1 p.m. Cleveland at Pittsburgh, 1 p.m. Chicago at St. Louis, 1 p.m. Dallas at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m. Carolina at Tennessee, 1 p.m. New Orleans at Washington, 1 p.m. Minnesota at Oakland, 4:05 p.m. Kansas City at Denver, 4:25 p.m. New England at N.Y. Giants, 4:25 p.m. Arizona at Seattle, 8:30 p.m. Monday, Nov. 16 Houston at Cincinnati, 8:30 p.m. (Byes: Atlanta, Indianapolis, San Diego, San Francisco) Thursday, Nov. 19 Tennessee at Jacksonville, 8:25 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 22 Indianapolis at Atlanta, 1 p.m. St. Louis at Baltimore, 1 p.m. Washington at Carolina, 1 p.m. Denver at Chicago, 1 p.m. Oakland at Detroit, 1 p.m. N.Y. Jets at Houston, 1 p.m. Dallas at Miami, 1 p.m. Green Bay at Minnesota, 1 p.m. Tampa Bay at Philadelphia, 1 p.m. Cincinnati at Arizona, 4:05 p.m. San Francisco at Seattle, 4:25 p.m. Kansas City at San Diego, 8:30 p.m. Monday, Nov. 23 Buffalo at New England, 8:30 p.m. (Byes: Cleveland, New Orleans, N.Y. Giants, Pittsburgh)

BY THE NUMBERS

136 Career sacks by the Panthers’ Jared Allen, most among active players and ninth all-time.

892 Receiving yards by the Falcons’ Julio Jones, most in the league.

109 Total points scored by the 49ers this season, least in the league. The Cardinals lead the NFL with 263.

48 Receiving yards needed by the Colts’ Andre Johnson (13,885) to pass Cris Carter (13,899) and injured Raven Steve Smith (13,932) for 10th most all-time.


College Football

C-4 — Sunday, November 8, 2015

SATURDAY SCOREBOARD SCORES EAST Akron 17, UMass 13 Albany (N.Y.) 17, Delaware 6 Alfred St. 34, Maranatha Baptist 17 American International 15, Pace 10 Amherst 16, Trinity (Conn.) 7 Assumption 28, Stonehill 14 Bates 31, Bowdoin 0 Becker 35, Castleton 21 Bentley 30, LIU Post 28 Brockport 49, Morrisville St. 42 Bryant 40, Wagner 10 Buffalo St. 7, Ithaca 3 Carnegie-Mellon 52, Chicago 7 Charleston (WV) 56, Alderson-Broaddus 21 Chowan 49, Lincoln (Pa.) 3 Colgate 28, Lafayette 19 College of NJ 23, S. Virginia 12 Concord 52, W. Virginia St. 7 Duquesne 41, Sacred Heart 14 Endicott 27, Curry 21, 2OT Fitchburg St. 33, Mass.-Dartmouth 14 Fordham 24, Bucknell 16 Framingham St. 27, Bridgewater (Mass.) 17 Gettysburg 20, Dickinson 17 Harvard 24, Columbia 16 Hobart 19, St. Lawrence 17 Kean 20, Rowan 17, OT King’s (Pa.) 10, Lebanon Valley 6 Lehigh 51, Holy Cross 38 Lycoming 43, Delaware Valley 42 MIT 21, Nichols 11 Marist 49, Stetson 14 Mass. Maritime 48, Plymouth St. 27 Merchant Marine 24, Union (NY) 14 Merrimack 21, S. Connecticut 14 Middlebury 21, Hamilton 16 Misericordia 31, Wilkes 24 Moravian 42, Juniata 10 Muhlenberg 10, Ursinus 9 NC State 24, Boston College 8 NY Maritime 42, Mount Ida 16 New Hampshire 30, Richmond 25 New Haven 44, St. Anselm 21 Norwich 20, Husson 17 Notre Dame 42, Pittsburgh 30 Penn 26, Princeton 23, OT RPI 17, Springfield 14 Robert Morris 21, ETSU 9 Salve Regina 49, Maine Maritime 14 Seton Hill 44, Edinboro 23 St. Francis (Pa.) 22, CCSU 13 St. John Fisher 41, Hartwick 34 St. Vincent 34, Geneva 27 Stony Brook 14, Howard 9 Susquehanna 44, McDaniel 15 Towson 10, Maine 7 Tufts 28, Colby 10 Utica 20, Alfred 16 Villanova 24, Rhode Island 3 W. New England 51, Coast Guard 0 WPI 35, Rochester 34 WV Wesleyan 47, Virginia-Wise 21 Washington & Jefferson 65, Thiel 28 Wesleyan (Conn.) 27, Williams 7 West Virginia 31, Texas Tech 26 Westminster (Pa.) 45, Grove City 7 Widener 50, FDU-Florham 20 Worcester St. 53, Westfield St. 27 Yale 41, Brown 14 SOUTH Alabama 30, LSU 16 Alabama St. 17, Jackson St. 12 Albany St. (Ga.) 21, Fort Valley St. 17 Albright 30, Stevenson 26 Anna Maria 24, Gallaudet 20 Arkansas 53, Mississippi 52, OT Averett 31, Ferrum 28, OT Bethune-Cookman 38, Morgan St. 14 Birmingham-Southern 14, Berry 7 Bowie St. 63, Elizabeth City St. 42 Campbellsville 70, Reinhardt 56 Carson-Newman 48, North Greenville 45 Catawba 24, Tusculum 6 Central St. (Ohio) 50, Concordia (Ala.) 31 Centre 41, Rhodes 14 Charleston Southern 28, Kennesaw St. 14 Christopher Newport 42, Wm. Paterson 30 Clemson 23, Florida St. 13 Coastal Carolina 46, Gardner-Webb 0 Dayton 20, Morehead St. 15 Edward Waters 18, Warner 13 Emory & Henry 54, Shenandoah 21 FIU 48, Charlotte 31 Faulkner 33, Cumberland (Tenn.) 14 Florida 9, Vanderbilt 7 Florida Tech 28, West Georgia 26 Georgetown (Ky.) 30, Cumberlands 13 Georgia 27, Kentucky 3 Grambling St. 41, Texas Southern 15 Greensboro 26, Methodist 22 Guilford 33, Hampden-Sydney 20 Hampton 33, Florida A&M 0 Huntingdon 38, Maryville (Tenn.) 14 Incarnate Word 16, SE Louisiana 2 Jacksonville 42, Davidson 12 Johns Hopkins 45, Franklin & Marshall 24 Kentucky St. 34, Stillman 7 Kentucky Wesleyan 39, UNC-Pembroke 31 Lenoir-Rhyne 27, Brevard 0 Liberty 21, Presbyterian 13 Lindsey Wilson 30, Bethel (Tenn.) 22 Livingstone 35, Johnson C. Smith 12 Louisiana College 28, McMurry 15 Louisiana Tech 56, North Texas 13 Louisiana-Lafayette 23, Georgia St. 21 Louisville 41, Syracuse 17 MVSU 27, Alabama A&M 24, OT Mars Hill 42, Wingate 24 McNeese St. 27, Sam Houston St. 10 Mercer 17, Chattanooga 14 Miami 27, Virginia 21 Middle Tennessee 27, Marshall 24, 3OT Miles 26, Tuskegee 23 Millsaps 42, Sewanee 12 Montclair St. 33, Frostburg St. 27 Morehouse 28, Lane 24 Murray St. 46, Tennessee St. 43, OT NC A&T 9, SC State 6 NC Central 43, Delaware St. 10 NC Wesleyan 48, LaGrange 31 Navy 45, Memphis 20 Newberry 41, Limestone 7 Norfolk St. 20, Savannah St. 17, OT North Alabama 28, Shorter 7 North Carolina 66, Duke 31 Northwestern St. 39, Abilene Christian 22 Pikeville 40, Kentucky Christian 11 Prairie View 40, Alcorn St. 34 Randolph-Macon 35, Bridgewater (Va.) 14 SE Missouri 44, Austin Peay 15 Salisbury 38, Wesley 35 Samford 43, Clark Atlanta 0 Shaw 31, St. Augustine’s 24 South Alabama 52, Idaho 45 South Florida 22, East Carolina 17 Southeastern (Fla.) 35, Benedict 20 Tennessee 27, South Carolina 24 The Citadel 35, VMI 14 Troy 51, Louisiana-Monroe 14 UConn 7, Tulane 3 UT Martin 42, E. Kentucky 35 Union (Ky.) 35, Bluefield South 18 Valdosta St. 40, Delta St. 34, OT Virginia Union 28, Virginia St. 27 W. Carolina 48, Furman 10 W. Kentucky 35, FAU 19 Washington & Lee 52, Catholic 33 Webber 36, Apprentice 3 West Alabama 14, Mississippi College 13 William & Mary 34, Elon 13 Winston-Salem 24, Fayetteville St. 22 Wisconsin 31, Maryland 24 MIDWEST Albion 66, Alma 28 Ashland 40, Michigan Tech 14 Augustana (SD) 35, Winona St. 34 Benedictine (Ill.) 32, Aurora 24 Butler 42, Valparaiso 21 Carroll (Wis.) 48, Beloit 24 Cent. Missouri 34, Pittsburg St. 6 Concordia (Mich.) 24, Missouri Baptist 7 Cornell (Iowa) 64, Illinois College 62 Dakota Wesleyan 17, Concordia (Neb.) 10 DePauw 53, Oberlin 0

Ferris St. 49, N. Michigan 39 Findlay 49, Malone 17 Fort Hays St. 42, Missouri Southern 31 Franklin 35, Defiance 7 Grand Valley St. 49, Tiffin 42 Grand View 10, Benedictine (Kan.) 0 Hillsdale 28, Northwood (Mich.) 14 Hiram 40, Wooster 36 Illinois 48, Purdue 14 Iowa 35, Indiana 27 Jacksonville St. 24, E. Illinois 3 John Carroll 42, Otterbein 13 Lake Forest 54, Grinnell 10 Marian (Ind.) 28, St. Francis (Ill.) 0 Marietta 49, Muskingum 28 McKendree 56, Quincy 30 Miami (Ohio) 28, E. Michigan 13 Michigan 49, Rutgers 16 Mid-Am Nazarene 52, Cent. Methodist 20 Minn. Duluth 14, Bemidji St. 9 Minn. St.-Mankato 44, Sioux Falls 3 Minn. St.-Moorhead 37, Mary 0 Minn.-Crookston 45, Minot St. 14 Missouri Western 34, Nebraska-Kearney 17 Monmouth (Ill.) 49, Knox 7 Morningside 80, Midland 10 Mount St. Joseph 27, Rose-Hulman 26, OT Mount Union 42, Baldwin-Wallace 0 North Dakota St. 59, W. Illinois 7 Northern Iowa 59, Indiana St. 13 NW Missouri St. 44, Emporia St. 10 Neb. Wesleyan 44, Northwestern (Iowa) 38 Nebraska 39, Michigan St. 38 North Central (Ill.) 27, Augustana (Ill.) 10 Northern St. (SD) 31, St. Cloud St. 24 Northwestern 23, Penn St. 21 Northwestern (Minn.) 31, Eureka 20 Notre Dame College 47, Urbana 30 Ohio Dominican 24, Saginaw Valley St. 17 Ohio Northern 55, Wilmington (Ohio) 21 Ohio St. 28, Minnesota 14 Ohio Wesleyan 39, Allegheny 9 Olivet 56, Concordia (Wis.) 42 Peru St. 65, Culver-Stockton 21 Ripon 43, Lawrence 15 Robert Morris-Chicago 28, St. Xavier 14 S. Dakota St. 25, Illinois St. 20 SW Minnesota St. 48, Concordia (St.P.) 24 Siena Heights 44, Trinity (Ill.) 20 South Dakota 34, S. Illinois 31 Southwestern (Kan.) 31, St. Mary (Kan.) 7 St. Francis (Ind.) 61, College of Faith 0 St. John’s (Minn.) 21, Bethel (Minn.) 0 St. Norbert 25, Macalester 16 St. Scholastica 40, Greenville 19 St. Thomas (Minn.) 80, Carleton 3 Thomas More 36, Case Reserve 32 Truman St. 10, St. Joseph’s (Ind.) 3 Upper Iowa 34, Wayne (Neb.) 31, OT Wabash 38, Denison 7 Wartburg 51, Simpson (Iowa) 45 Wayne (Mich.) 56, Lake Erie 54 Westminster (Mo.) 37, Minn.-Morris 20 Wheaton (Ill.) 40, Illinois Wesleyan 27 William Penn 31, Graceland (Iowa) 17 Wis. Lutheran 35, Concordia (Ill.) 13 Wis.-Oshkosh 31, Wis.-LaCrosse 13 Wis.-Platteville 50, Wis.-Eau Claire 26 Wis.-Stout 34, Wis.-Stevens Pt. 31 Wis.-Whitewater 42, Wis.-River Falls 6 Wittenberg 45, Kenyon 21 Youngstown St. 47, Missouri St. 7 SOUTHWEST Arizona Christian 27, Bacone 12 Auburn 26, Texas A&M 10 Cent. Arkansas 36, Stephen F. Austin 24 Cent. Oklahoma 37, Lindenwood (Mo.) 20 E. Texas Baptist 27, Hardin-Simmons 21 Harding 42, NW Oklahoma St. 30 Henderson St. 22, Oklahoma Baptist 14 Hendrix 54, Washington (Mo.) 51 Houston 33, Cincinnati 30 Mary Hardin-Baylor 67, Howard Payne 14 Midwestern St. 26, E. New Mexico 21 New Mexico St. 31, Texas St. 21 Nicholls St. 30, Lamar 28 Oklahoma 52, Iowa St. 16 Oklahoma St. 49, TCU 29 Old Dominion 36, UTSA 31 S. Arkansas 35, East Central 26 SE Oklahoma 37, Ark.-Monticello 0 SW Oklahoma 28, Arkansas Tech 14 Southern U. 57, Ark.-Pine Bluff 24 Texas 59, Kansas 20 Texas A&M Commerce 36, Angelo St. 35 Texas College 21, Lyon 14 Texas Lutheran 41, Austin 7 Tulsa 45, UCF 30 W. Texas A&M 28, Okla. Panhandle St. 21 Washburn 35, Northeastern St. 21 FAR WEST Air Force 20, Army 3 CSU-Pueblo 51, Colorado Mesa 30 Chadron St. 31, W. New Mexico 13 Colorado St. 26, Wyoming 7 E. Oregon 21, Coll. of Idaho 10 Fort Lewis 51, Adams St. 10 Humboldt St. 57, Dixie St. 14 Linfield 72, Puget Sound 3 Montana 33, Idaho St. 27, OT Montana St.-Northern 52, W. Montana 6 Montana Tech 21, S. Oregon 17 N. Arizona 52, E. Washington 30 N. Colorado 35, Portland St. 32 NM Highlands 40, Black Hills St. 19 New Mexico 14, Utah St. 13 Pacific (Ore.) 34, George Fox 20 Pacific Lutheran 26, Lewis & Clark 7 Rocky Mountain 21, Carroll (Mont.) 13 S. Utah 34, Montana St. 23 San Diego 31, Campbell 27 Stanford 42, Colorado 10 UCLA 41, Oregon St. 0 UNLV 41, Hawaii 21 Utah 34, Washington 23 W. Oregon 33, S. Dakota Tech 15 Washington St. 38, Arizona St. 24 Weber St. 23, UC Davis 3 Western St. (Col.) 45, Colorado Mines 42 Whitworth 20, Willamette 16

PITT SUMMARY NO. 8 NOTRE DAME 42, PITT 30

Notre Dame Pitt

7 14 7 14 — 42 3 0 14 13 — 30 First Quarter ND—Fuller 47 pass from Kizer (Yoon kick), 13:49. Pitt—FG Blewitt 22, 2:48. Second Quarter ND—Hunter Jr. 12 pass from Kizer (Yoon kick), 12:48. ND—Fuller 46 pass from Kizer (Yoon kick), 1:35. Third Quarter Pitt—Whitehead 10 run (Blewitt kick), 11:19. ND—Fuller 14 pass from Kizer (Yoon kick), 7:53. Pitt—Whitehead 3 run (Blewitt kick), 2:06. Fourth Quarter ND—Adams 5 pass from Kizer (Yoon kick), 12:30. ND—Kizer 2 run (Yoon kick), 5:47. Pitt—Boyd 51 pass from Peterman (Blewitt kick), 4:44. Pitt—Price 32 fumble return (pass failed), 1:44. A—68,400. ND Pitt First downs 22 18 Rushes-yards 42-175 31-175 Passing 262 223 Comp-Att-Int 19-26-0 12-32-1 Return Yards 18 28 Punts-Avg. 4-51.8 6-42.7 Fumbles-Lost 3-1 0-0 Penalties-Yards 2-20 3-25 Time of Possession 33:39 26:21 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Notre Dame, Adams 20147, Prosise 5-28, D.Williams 3-6, Wimbush 3-4, Kizer 11-(minus 10). Pitt, Peterman 8-60, Boyd 3-42, Ollison 12-32, Whitehead 4-27, James 2-10, Hall 2-4.

The Indiana Gazette

NORTHWESTERN 23, PENN STATE 21

PASSING—Notre Dame, Kizer 19-26-0262. Pitt, Peterman 12-31-1-223, Boyd 01-0-0. RECEIVING—Notre Dame, Fuller 7152, Carlisle 4-30, Hunter Jr. 3-37, Prosise 2-29, Robinson 1-12, Adams 1-5, Brown 1-(minus 3). Pitt, Boyd 3-84, Holtz 3-58, Ford 2-58, Challingsworth 1-8, Orndoff 1-6, James 1-5, Ollison 1-4.

PENN STATE SUMMARY NORTHWESTERN 23, PENN STATE 21

Penn State 0 7 7 7 — 21 Northwestern 0 20 0 3 — 23 Second Quarter NU—C.Jones 14 pass from Oliver (Mitchell kick), 12:56. NU—Oliver 1 run (kick failed), 6:00. PSU—Barkley 7 run (T.Davis kick), 2:18. NU—Vault 96 kickoff return (Mitchell kick), 2:04. Third Quarter PSU—Hamilton 32 pass from Lewis (T.Davis kick), 5:04. Fourth Quarter PSU—Barkley 13 run (T.Davis kick), 12:22. NU—FG Mitchell 25, :09. A—34,116. PSU NU First downs 17 22 Rushes-yards 30-125 47-227 Passing 237 169 Comp-Att-Int 22-41-1 16-32-1 Return Yards 9 12 Punts-Avg. 11-39.8 8-36.8 Fumbles-Lost 1-1 4-0 Penalties-Yards 9-70 7-80 Time of Possession 30:41 29:19 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Penn St., Barkley 25-120, Hackenberg 5-5. Northwestern, Jackson 28-186, Long 4-39, Thorson 4-15, Vault 2-7, Je.Roberts 1-2, Team 2-(minus 2), Oliver 6-(minus 20). PASSING—Penn St., Hackenberg 2140-1-205, Lewis 1-1-0-32. Northwestern, Oliver 11-24-1-111, Thorson 5-8-0-58. RECEIVING—Penn St., Godwin 8-104, Barkley 6-50, Hamilton 3-56, Lewis 2-15, Lynch 1-6, Gesicki 1-5, Ky.Carter 1-1. Northwestern, D.Vitale 4-40, Je.Roberts 3-14, G.Dickerson 2-34, C.Jones 2-27, Carr 1-23, McHugh 1-14, C.Dickerson 1-9, Jackson 1-9, Shuler 1-(minus 1).

IUP SUMMARY Gannon IUP

IUP 26, GANNON 14

0 7 7 0 — 14 17 3 0 6 — 26 First Quarter IUP (8:56) — Chris Temple, 1 run (Ryan Stewart kick). Drive: 10 plays, 62 yards, 4:34. IUP (6:41) — Walt Pegues, 54 pass from Lenny Williams (Stewart kick). Drive: 1-54-0:08. IUP (0:00) — FG Stewart 30. Drive: 4-41:36. Second Quarter IUP (9:26) — FG Stewart 35. Drive: 935-3:36 G (7:30) — Brock Jones, 3 run (Karch Holland kick). Drive: 6-52-1:48 Third Quarter G (1:39) — Brendan Klemensic, 48 pass from Zach Phillips (Holland kick). Drive: 349-1:45. Fourth Quarter IUP (4:35) — Williams, 64 run (pass failed). Drive: 3-72-1:28. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Offense Rushing Gannon: Zach Phillips 19-58, Brock Jones 12-43, Tyler Johnson 6-39. IUP: Chris Temple 32-142, Lenny Williams 15140, Team 4-(minus-21). Passing Gannon: Zach Phillips 9-21-2-85. IUP: Lenny Williams 9-18-0-124. Receiving Gannon: Brock Jones 3-20, Jesstin Hamm 2-10, Brandon Mansell 2-1, Brendan Klemensic 1-48, Eli Quinter 1-6. IUP: Swahneek Brown 4-55, Walt Pegues 3-55, Sean McVay 2-14. Defense Tackles Gannon: Joshua Wiechelt 13, Nico Mendieta 11, Mike Zanders 10, Matt Astorino 7, Justin Brown 5, Rico Wright 5, Geremy Paige 5. IUP: Eric Williams 9, Steve Franco 8, Ackeno Robertson 6, Kevin Clarke 6, Myles Catlin 5. Interceptions-yards Gannon: None. IUP: Jay Watkins 1-0, Takhi Turner 1-0. Sacks-yards lost Gannon: Geremy Paige 1-8. IUP: Eric Williams 1-8, Dorian Lane 1-7, Jemal Averette 1-2, Deandre Easterling 0.5-3, Justin Weldon 0.5-3. TEAM STATISTICS G IUP Total first downs 13 18 First downs rushing 6 13 First downs passing 5 5 First downs penalty 2 0 Total yards 225 385 Yards rushing 140 261 Rushes 37 51 Yards passing 85 124 Passes attempted 21 18 Passes completed 9 9 Interceptions thrown 2 0 Fumbles-lost 1-1 2-1 Penalties-yards 5-22 5-48 Punts-average 6-32.8 3-39.7 Third downs 5 of 15 4 of 14 Fourth downs 1 of 3 1 of 2 Time of possession 27:50 32:10

PSAC STANDINGS WEST DIVISION Slippery Rock IUP California Clarion Gannon Mercyhurst Seton Hill Edinboro

Conf. 6-1 6-1 5-2 4-3 3-4 2-5 2-5 0-7

EAST DIVISION

Overall 9-1 7-2 7-3 7-3 6-4 5-5 3-7 0-10

Conf. Overall West Chester 6-1 7-3 Shippensburg 5-2 7-3 Bloomsburg 5-2 6-4 Kutztown 5-2 6-4 East Stroudsburg 4-3 5-5 Lock Haven 2-5 2-8 Millersville 1-6 1-9 Cheyney 0-7 0-10 Saturday’s Games IUP 26, Gannon 14 Seton Hill 44, Edinboro 23 Slippery Rock 65, Clarion 13 California 31, Mercyhurst 21 West Chester 41, East Stroudsburg 27 Millersville 26, Cheyney 6 Kutztown 51, Shippensburg 27 Bloomsburg 31, Lock Haven 28, OT Saturday, Nov. 14 IUP at Cheyney Seton Hill at Bloomsburg Gannon at East Stroudsburg Edinboro at Millersville Mercyhurst at Shippensburg California at Lock Haven Clarion at Kutztown State Game Slippery Rock at West Chester

MATT MARTON/Associated Press

NORTHWESTERN CORNERBACK Matthew Harris (27) and linebacker Anthony Walker (18) watched as Penn State receiver DaeSean Hamilton tried to grab a pass during Saturday’s game.

Nittany Lions rally, but still lose to ’Cats By BRIAN SANDALOW Associated Press

EVANSTON, Ill. — The Penn State Nittany Lions began the difficult finishing stretch of their season. They came nine seconds from a victory and couldn’t hold on without one of their stars. Jack Mitchell’s 35-yard field goal with nine seconds left gave the Wildcats a 23-21 win Saturday over the Nittany Lions. Saquon Barkley ran for 120 yards and had two scores, and the second with 12:22 left gave the Nittany Lions a 21-20 lead after they trailed 20-7 at halftime. They had a chance to take more time off the clock, but Barkley was stopped short on a third-and-1 at his own 15 with 2:25 to go, giving Northwestern the ball back on a punt. Christian Hackenberg and the Nittany Lions offense struggled, which led to the end of their two-game winning streak. Hackenberg was under pressure for much of the day and went 21 of 40 for 205 yards with an interception. “We were able to fight back, but at the end of the day they were better than us today,” Hackenberg said. “You’ve got to give them a lot of credit.” Carl Nassib’s sack of Zack Oliver with 14:50 left in the game gave him 15½ this season to set a single-season school record. But that moment might have been costly for Penn State because Nassib wasn’t on the field for the Wildcats’ final drive because of an injury.

“Obviously the guy’s leading the country in sacks,” Penn State coach James Franklin said. “All-time sack leader in school history. Not having him out there is significant.” Saturday began a tough stretch for Penn State (7-3, 4-2). After playing Northwestern, the Nittany Lions have a bye and then play host to Michigan before visiting Michigan State in their regular-season finale. They didn’t start that stretch successfully. “We weren’t able to play winning football at the end of the game,” Franklin said. Northwestern did, and it got a key contribution from somebody who had struggled earlier. Even though he had missed two field goals and an extra point, kicker Jack Mitchell still had the confidence of coach Pat Fitzgerald. And Mitchell justified that faith when it mattered the most. “I’ve got great confidence in Jack,” Fitzgerald said. “I had full confidence he was going to make that kick. He’s pretty good.” Northwestern (7-2, 3-2) had to win with Oliver, who had only appeared in three games this year before Saturday. He passed for 111 yards and threw an interception but led Northwestern’s key final drive. Penn State pulled to within 20-14 with 5:04 left in the third when receiver Geno Lewis hit DaeSean Hamilton for a 32-yard score. The drive was aided by a pair of 15-yard penalties, including a roughing-the-punter call against Warren Long that returned the ball to Penn State.

IUP claims share of title

Continued from Page C-1 “They’re the next team we have to play,” IUP coach Curt Cignetti said, shrugging off the change in schedule. Against Gannon, the Crimson Hawks led 14-0 just eight minutes into the game, but it never turned into a blowout. In fact, the Golden Knights, the preseason favorites to win the division, outscored IUP 14-9 the rest of the way, and the win wasn’t secured until IUP quarterback Lenny Williams put some insurance on the board with a 64-yard touchdown with less than five minutes left to play. “It’s good to come out with the win,” Williams said, “but it was ugly.” It sure was. The Crimson Hawks looked like worldbeaters the first few minutes of the game. But the rest of the way, they seemed to let Gannon off the ropes every time they were ready to levy the knockout blow. “We didn’t execute,” Cignetti said. “I mean, at the end of the day, it comes down to execution. It’s nice to win when you don’t necessarily play your best.” After Chris Temple’s 1-yard touchdown run and Williams’ 54-yard scoring pass to Walt Pegues two minutes later, the IUP offense fizzled out. Temple, who had two 200yard games this season, found running lanes clogged, Williams couldn’t escape the pocket to scramble, and Pegues was blanketed every time Williams looked his way. And from the time they took a 14-0 lead to Williams’ clinching run, the only thing the Crimson Hawks had to show was two Ryan Stewart field goals. In that span, Stewart missed two other field goal attempts, Temple fumbled away the ball as he was about to cross the goal line, a high snap sailed over Williams’ head to stunt another red zone opportunity, and the Gannon offense suddenly found its rhythm despite playing a freshman quarterback making his first career start. “I’m happy that we came out with the win,” Lane said. “It was an ugly win. We felt like we should have put up more points and we should have stopped them. But I’m glad we came out with the win.” IUP led 20-0 midway through the second quarter before the Golden Knights cut the deficit to 13 on Brock Jones’ 3-yard touchdown run. IUP’s next possession ended with a missed field goal, and Gannon entered halftime with some momentum. Late in the third quarter, the Golden Knights made things rather uncomfortable for the IUP fans when receiver Brendan Klemensic got behind freshman cornerback Mikale Makle and caught a 48-yard touchdown pass from Zach Phillips. All the while, IUP kept making mistake after mistake to keep Gannon in the game. After recovering a Gannon fumble, IUP drove to the 3-yard line before Temple inexplicably had the ball stripped just before he could get to the end zone. The Golden Knights punted soon after, and IUP failed to take advantage of the good field position when Stewart missed a 36-yard field goal with 9:17 remaining. On the play before the kick, center Ed Bier’s shotgun snap went over Williams’ head, and the 18-yard loss made Stewart’s kick

JAMES J. NESTOR/Gazette

IUP QUARTERBACK Lenny Williams rushed for 140 yards in Saturday’s win over Gannon. more difficult. “We just had so many missed opportunities on offense, Jiminy Christmas,” Cignetti said. “I mean, it was unbelievable.” Had the IUP defense not been holding strong at that point, Gannon might have been able to rally, but the Golden Knights couldn’t sustain a drive against one of the PSAC’s top defenses. “If we’re not doing good in one area, we expect another area to do good,” IUP senior defensive end Karon Gibson said. “Every time we go out there, it’s just like, next play, next drive, next series. The past doesn’t matter. We’re on to the future.” And just when the uneasy feeling on the IUP sideline seemed the worst, Williams made the key play to seal the win. He took the snap and read the defense, which was overpursuing to his left. So he went right, cut upfield and was gone. His 64-yard touchdown run put the game away and effectively preserved the Crimson Hawks’ share of the PSAC West crown. “In my mind, I know, it’s starting to get to be crunch time and a play has to be made,” Williams, who finished the day with 140 yards on 15 carries, said. “I just took it up the field and tried to outrun them, and that’s what happened.” The win puts the Crimson Hawks in good position for the NCAA Division II playoffs, which begin Nov. 21. The top seven teams in Super Region One earn playoff berths at the end of the regular season, and IUP is ranked No. 6 in the latest poll. The top nine teams all won Saturday, with the only loss coming by No. 10 Clarion to No. 4 Slippery Rock. If IUP wins next weekend, the Crimson Hawks are expected to earn a postseason spot for the first time since 2012. “Next week we play Cheyney, and that’s another notch we have to get over so we can get to the playoffs,” Lane said. “It’s a great feeling to have the opportunity to play for that.” The Crimson Hawks have that opportunity, along with a share of the division title, because they won Saturday, albeit in ugly fashion — not that Cignetti minds. “In the record book, it’s gonna say ‘tied for first,’” Cignetti said. “That’s what it’s gonna say. So we get a share.”


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College Football

Sunday, November 8, 2015 — C-5

SATURDAY’S HIGHLIGHTS By The Associated Press

STARS • Brandon Allen, Arkansas, threw for 442 yards, ran for a 2-point conversion in overtime after his sixth TD pass to lead the Razorbacks to an improbable 53-52 overtime win over No. 19 Mississippi. • Mason Rudolph, Oklahoma State, passed for 352 yards and five TDs, leading the No. 12 Cowboys to a 49-29 upset against No. 5 TCU. • Luke Falk, Washington State, threw for 497 yards and five TDs to help the Cougars beat Arizona State 38-24 and become bowl-eligible for the second time in coach Mike Leach’s four years with the program. • Marquise Williams, North Carolina, threw for 404 of his school-record 494 yards by halftime and accounted for five touchdowns to lead the No. 21 Tar Heels to a 66-31 rout over rival Duke. • DeShone Kizer, Notre Dame, threw for 262 yards and five TDs in leading the No. 8 Irish to a 42-30 win over Pitt. • Gunner Kiel, Cincinnati, threw for 523 yards and four TDs in a 33-30 loss to No. 18 Houston. • Troy Mitchell, Western Carolina, acocunted for 360 yards and five TDs in a 48-10 win over Furman. • Michael White, Marist, threw for three TDs and rushed for two more in a 49-14 win over Stetson. • Kyle Bolin, Louisville, threw for a season-high 362 yards and three TDs in a 41-17 rout over Syracuse. • Brandon Doughty, Western Kentucky, threw four TD passes and added a scoring reception in a 35-19 victory over Florida Atlantic. • Donald Liotine, Stony Brook, ran for 204 yards two TDs in a 14-9 win over Howard.

NUMBERS 12: Sacks by Stony Brook against Howard, most in the FBS this season. 21: Touchdown passes by Florida International’s Alex McGough, a school record. 32: Career victories by Stanford’s Kevin Hogan to break Andrew Luck’s school record.

FSU ALL BUT OUT OF CFP A 23-13 loss to Clemson all but eliminates Florida State from the college football playoffs. It also ends the Seminoles’ run as three-time ACC champions, a stretch that included the 2013 national title. Notre Dame transfer Everett Golson missed a second straight contest after suffering a concussion, although Fisher said Golson could’ve played if needed. The last time the Tigers were 9-0 was 1981 when they won their lone national championship.

MARSHALL LOSES IN 3 OTS Brent Stockstill threw for 353 yards with three touchdown passes to lead Middle Tennessee to a 27-24 triple-overtime upset victory against Marshall on Saturday night. Jeremy Cutrer blocked Amoreto Curraj’s 39-yard field goal attempt in the third overtime to seal it for Middle Tennessee (4-5, 3-2 Conference USA). Marshall (8-2, 5-1) place kickers Nick Smith and Curraj were a combined 1-for-6. Chase Litton was 34 of 56 for 346 yards passing with three touchdowns and an interception. Both teams went scoreless in the second overtime before Cody Clark kicked the game winner.

AIR FORCE WINS 11TH STRAIGHT AT HOME Karson Roberts threw two TD passes to tight end Garrett Griffin, Air Force’s defense turned in a dominating performance and the Falcons won their school-record 11th straight home game by beating Army 20-3 on Saturday. The victory makes Air Force (6-3) bowl-eligible. Even more, the Falcons remain in the running for the Commander-in-Chief’s Trophy, which is presented annually to the winning academy in the round-robin competition. Air Force lost to Navy earlier this season and needs the Black Knights (2-7) to beat the Midshipmen next month to retain the trophy.

REGION ROUNDUP

RMU rallies late for win vs. ETSU By The Associated Press Mathew Barr threw an 84-yard touchdown pass to Kyle Buss with 3:18 left in the game and Cole Blake added a 12-yard scoring run just under two minutes later to help Robert Morris overcome a late 9-7 deficit and beat East Tennessee State 21-9. Barr finished with 225 yards passing and two touchdowns for the Colonials (3-6). Buss added 138 yards receiving on nine receptions with a touchdown, and Blake had 83 yards rushing with a TD. East Tennessee State (1-8) entered the fourth quarter leading 9-7 on the strength of three JJ Jerman field goals. After the Barr-to-Buss touchdown strike gave Robert Morris the advantage, the Buccaneers had an opportunity to retake the lead but turned the ball over on downs after gaining just 3 yards on eight plays. Falon Lee had 73 yards rushing for East Tennessee State. Jajuan Stinson added 71. SAINT FRANCIS 22, CENTRAL CONNECTICUT 13: Lance Geesey kicked a career-best five field goals, Khairi Dickson ran for 105 yards and a score and Saint Francis beat Central Connecticut. The Red Flash career field goal leader, Geesey kicked two 46-yarders, a 30-yarder and two 21-yarders for Saint Francis (5-3, 3-1 Northeast Conference), bringing his career total to 45 field goals. Dickson had 24 carries and scored on a 2-yard run in the fourth quarter after the Red Flash recovered a fumbled punt. Najae Brown returned a Geesey kickoff 95 yards for a third-quarter score for the Blue Devils (4-6, 3-2). Zack Drayer was 21 of 34 for 220 yards passing for the Red Flash, which outgained the Blue Devils 324 total yards to 214. DUQUESNE 41, SACRED HEART 14: Dillon Buechel threw two first-quarter touchdown passes and Duquesne cruised to a victory over Sacred Heart. Buechel was 22 of 37 for 320 yards. Chris King had nine catches for 111 yards with a touchdown. Reggie McKnight had a touchdown catch and Rafiq Douglas ran for a 13-yard touchdown for Duquesne (7-3, 4-1 Northeast Conference), which snapped a two-game losing skid against Sacred Heart (4-5, 1-3). Buechel threw a 35-yard touchdown pass to McKnight and an 18-yard scoring strike to King on the first two offensive series. Austin Crimmins made two field goals, and Christian Kuntz had an interception return for a touchdown late for the Dukes.

SUE OGROCKI/Associated Press

TCU SAFETY Nick Orr (18) broke up a pass intended for Oklahoma State receiver Marcell Ateman during the second half of Saturday’s game in Stillwater, Okla.

’Bama rocks Fournette, LSU

Derrick Henry ran for 210 yards and three touchdowns and No. 7 Alabama’s defense smothered Leonard Fournette in a 30-16 victory over No. 4 LSU on Saturday night. The Crimson Tide (8-1, 5-1 Southeastern Conference) physically dismantled the previously unbeaten Tigers (7-1, 4-1) in the second half. It was a physical, nofrills performance days after some questioned the team’s No. 4 College Football Playoff ranking. LSU came in at No. 2 in the CFP ranking. Henry led the way with 38 punishing carries in a game in which he took second billing. The nation’s leading rusher, Fournette gained only 31 yards on 19 carries. His previous season low was 154 yards against Western Kentucky. Alabama’s SEC title chances got a boost even before kickoff when Arkansas beat No. 19 Mississippi 53-52 in overtime. The Rebels are the only team to have beaten the Tide. NO. 12 OKLAHOMA STATE 49, NO. 5 TCU 29: Mason Rudolph threw for 352 yards and a career-high five touchdowns, and unbeaten Oklahoma State beat previously undefeated TCU. James Washington caught five passes for 184 yards and three touchdowns for the Cowboys (9-0, 6-0 Big 12, No. 14 CFP), who have won their first nine games for only the third time in school history. TCU’s Trevone Boykin passed for 445 yards and ran for 73 yards and two touchdowns. But he also threw a careerhigh four interceptions. TCU (8-1, 5-1, No. 8 CFP) gained 663 yards but was held scoreless in the red zone twice. NO. 3 CLEMSON 23, NO. 17 FLORIDA STATE 13: Deshaun Watson threw a go-ahead touchdown pass to Deon Cain, Wayne Gallman came through with a gamesealing score and Clemson held off Florida State and Dalvin Cook to wrap up the Atlantic Coast Conference’s Atlantic Division. The win came after the Tigers (9-0, 6-0) were No. 1 in the first College Football Playoff ranking. Watson led three long scoring drives in the second half for the Tigers’ first win over the Seminoles (7-2, 5-2, No. 16 CFP) since 2011. Cook had 194 yards rushing, but only 37 came in the second half. NEBRASKA 39, NO. 6 MICHIGAN STATE 38: Tommy Armstrong drove Nebraska 91 yards in 38 seconds, hitting Brandon Reilly with a 30-yard touchdown pass that survived a video review with 17 seconds left to hand Michigan State a loss that likely will ruin the Spartans’ playoff hopes. Armstrong rallied the Cornhuskers from 12 points down in the last 4½ minutes. He scored on a short touchdown run with 1:47 left to make it 38-33. After Michigan State (8-1, 4-1 Big Ten, No. 7 CFP) went three-and-out, he led the winning drive. Starting at the Nebraska 9, Armstrong hit Jordan Westerkamp for passes of 28 and 33 yards. Two plays later, Armstrong found Reilly for the winning score. NO. 1 OHIO STATE 28, MINNESOTA 14: Ezekiel Elliott ran 15 yards for a touchdown on Ohio State’s only lengthy drive, and the Buckeyes weathered Minnesota’s two fourth-quarter touchdowns. The Buckeyes (9-0, 5-0 Big Ten) struggled with Cardele Jones back at quarterback, but got a solid performance by their defense and just enough from everyone else to win their 22nd in a row. Minnesota (4-5, 1-4) managed only 110 yards through three quarters before getting Mitch Leidner’s two touchdown passes, the last with 2:10 to go. The onside kick went out of bounds, and Jones ran 38 yards untouched for a touchdown off a fake handoff to clinch it. NO. 9 STANFORD 42, COLORADO 10: Kevin Hogan threw two touchdown passes and had a scoring run in Stanford’s victory over Colorado. With his 32nd win, Hogan surpassed Andrew Luck as the school’s winningest quarterback. Christian McCaffrey, who grew up in

TOP25

The Associated Press

nearby Denver, where his father, Ed, starred for the Broncos in the 1990s, had 220 all-purpose yards and threw a 28yard touchdown pass to tight end Austin Hooper. The Cardinal (8-1, 7-0 Pac-12, No. 11 CFP) bounced back from a scare at Washington in which they escaped with a two-point win on a shanked field goal as time expired. Colorado (4-6, 1-5) has lost 21 consecutive games to ranked teams. NO. 10 IOWA 35, INDIANA 27: LeShun Daniels Jr. ran for two scores, and injured quarterback C.J. Beathard threw the clinching touchdown midway through the fourth quarter to help keep Iowa unbeaten. The Hawkeyes (9-0, 5-0 Big Ten, No. 9 CFP) have matched the best start in school history. The last time it happened was 2009. It was another frustrating finish for Indiana (4-5, 0-5), which got to 21-20 after a 28-yard field goal early in the fourth quarter. NO. 11 FLORIDA 9, VANDERBILT 7: Austin Hardin made a 43-yard field goal with 2:22 left and Florida beat Vanderbilt to wrap up a spot in the Southeastern Conference championship game. The Gators (8-1, 6-1) won the Eastern Division for the first time since 2009 under first-year coach Jim McElwain. Vanderbilt (3-6, 1-4) held Florida to 258 yards, including 57 in the second half. NO. 13 UTAH 34, WASHINGTON 23: Gionni Paul returned a fumble 54 yards for a touchdown, set up another score with an interception and Utah held off Washington to remain in control of the Pac-12 South Division race. Utah (8-1, 5-1, No. 12 CFP) leaned on big plays from its defense to overcome an inconsistent night offensively against the Huskies (4-5, 2-4). After going two weeks without forcing a turnover, the Utes forced three in the first half and made that stand up against Washington’s second-half rally. Paul jumped on Dwayne Washington’s fumble midway through Utah’s 24-point second quarter and went untouched to give the Utes a 21-6 lead. Quarterback Travis Wilson ran 3 yards for a touchdown with 3:27 left in the fourth quarter after the Utes had gone scoreless in the second half. NO. 14 OKLAHOMA 52, IOWA STATE 16: Baker Mayfield completed 23 of 31 passes for 342 yards and three touchdowns and ran for a score to help Oklahoma beat Iowa State. Samaje Perine ran for 95 yards and a touchdown on 13 rushes, and Joe Mixon rushed for 88 yards and a touchdown on eight carries for Oklahoma (8-1, 5-1 Big 12, No. 15 CFP). The Sooners have won four straight, outscoring their opponents 232-50. Joel Lanning completed 26 of 51 passes for 260 yards and a touchdown for Iowa State (3-6, 2-4). NAVY 45, NO. 15 MEMPHIS 20: Chris Swain ran for 108 yards and three touchdowns and Navy upset Memphis, ending the Tigers’ winning streak at 15 games. The Midshipmen (7-1, 5-0 American Athletic) remained tied with Houston atop the West Division. Memphis (8-1, 41) was 13th this week in the first College Football Playoff poll. DeBrandon Sanders ran for 82 yards and Navy’s triple-option rushing attack had 374 yards against a Memphis defense that had only allowed 118.8 yards a game. But it was a 75-yard scoring pass from Keenan Reynolds to DeBrandon Sanders

with 6:43 left in the third quarter that gave the Midshipmen the lead for good at 24-17. NO. 16 MICHIGAN 49, RUTGERS 16: Jake Rudock threw for two touchdowns and a career-high 337 yards and ran for a score and a two-point conversion to lead Michigan past Rutgers. The Wolverines (7-2, 4-1 Big Ten, No. 17 CFP) were able to coast to an easy victory after wild finishes in their last two games. They beat Minnesota last week on a goal-line stand and botched a punt to lose to Michigan State on the final play the week before. The Scarlet Knights (3-6, 1-5) have lost three straight. NO. 18 HOUSTON 33, CINCINNATI 30: Houston overcame Gunner Kiel’s 523 yards passing, forcing four straight incompletions on the final drive to preserve a victory and remain unbeaten. Greg Ward Jr. led scoring drives after two of three Cincinnati (5-4, 2-3) turnovers, finishing 16 of 24 for 161 yards with two touchdowns and two interceptions. He also ran for 119 yards on 16 carries to help Houston improve to 9-0 (5-0 American Athletic Conference). ARKANSAS 53, NO. 19 MISSISSIPPI 52, OT: Brandon Allen threw his sixth touchdown pass and then ran for a two-point conversion to lead Arkansas to an improbable overtime win over Mississippi. Arkansas (5-4, 3-2 Southeastern Conference) won thanks to two wild plays in overtime. The Razorbacks kept the game alive on fourth-and-25 when Allen completed a pass to Hunter Henry, who flung the ball backward and Alex Collins picked it up on the bounce and ran it for a 31-yard gain. After Arkansas scored its overtime touchdown, its first attempt at the twopoint conversion failed but Ole Miss’ Marquis Haynes was called for a facemask penalty that gave the Razorbacks another chance. Allen threw for a career-high 442 yards. Chad Kelly threw three touchdown passes and ran for two scores for Ole Miss (7-3, 4-2). NO. 21 NORTH CAROLINA 66, DUKE 31: Marquise Williams threw for 404 of his school-record 494 yards by halftime and North Carolina routed rival Duke. Williams threw for four touchdowns and ran for another, breaking the school passing mark in the opening minutes of the second half. The senior’s performance was the biggest highlight on an afternoon full of them for the Tar Heels (81, 5-0 ACC), who haven’t lost since the opener and firmed up their hold on the Coastal Division race by blowing out the Blue Devils (6-3, 3-2). Seven players scored for UNC, with Elijah Hood leading the way with three touchdowns. NO. 22 UCLA 41, OREGON STATE 0: Josh Rosen threw two touchdown passes to Thomas Duarte and UCLA beat Oregon State in cold, rainy conditions to keep alive its Pac-12 title hopes. Rosen was 22-for-33 for 333 yards, with the freshman sitting out the fourth quarter. The Bruins (7-2, 4-2) had 676 yards against the Beavers (2-7, 0-6). UCLA limited Oregon State to 246 yards and forced four turnovers. AUBURN 26, NO. 25 TEXAS A&M 10: Jovon Robinson ran for 159 yards and a touchdown and Auburn intercepted three passes in a victory over Texas A&M. Jeremy Johnson wasn’t flashy but was effective in his first start since Auburn’s third game with Sean White out with an injured left knee. He finished with 132 yards and a touchdown. Auburn (5-4, 2-4 Southeastern Conference) built a 14-3 lead by halftime, with its second touchdown coming on the drive after the first of Aggies quarterback Kyler Murray’s three interceptions. The Tigers didn’t score a touchdown in the second half but got four field goals by Daniel Carlson to snap a two-game skid. Murray threw for 105 yards for for Texas A&M (6-3, 3-3) before leaving after a hit to the head late in the third quarter.



Sports FLAMES 5, PENGUINS 2

The Indiana Gazette

NASCAR

Sunday, November 8, 2015 — C-7

Notre Dame bests Pitt

Emotions run high in Texas By STEPHEN HAWKINS AP Sports Writer

FORT WORTH, Texas — Jeff Gordon knows there could be some desperate drivers in Texas today trying to get what he already has — one of the four spots to race for the NASCAR Sprint Cup championship in the season finale. With Matt Kenseth starting a two-race suspension after intentionally wrecking Chase contender Joey Logano last weekend at Martinsville, the big question with only two races and three championship spots left before Homestead is if drivers will change their approach if racing for a win in the late laps. “Nobody should have to tell you what happened at Martinsville was wrong,� said Brad Keselowski, who has the pole at Texas. “And if somebody has to tell you, then you should have never made it this far in the sport.� Kenseth’s car was damaged in a wreck with Keselowski. Kenseth later returned to the track and was nine laps down when he drove race-leading Logano into the wall as retaliation for a crash between the two drivers three races earlier. “Racing is racing. Guys have wrecked each other since racing started, OK? That’s not going to change,� said Martin Truex Jr., who is third in Chase points behind Gordon and Kyle Busch. “Guys get mad all the time. I think that people will go about it differently now because of what happened this week, for sure. How far that goes, I’m not real sure. We’ll have to wait and see.� Kurt Busch told NBC Sports on Saturday that Keselowski had intentionally wrecked Kenseth. Last November at Texas, Keselowski was unapologetic after bumping past a leading Gordon on a restart at Lap 335, one more than the race’s scheduled length. Keselowski pushed through a gap when the No. 24 car drifted up a bit on the outside and made contact with Gordon, who wound up 29th instead of getting a big playoff victory.

By winning at Martinsville, Gordon got to Texas already assured of racing at HomesteadMiami Speedway on Nov. 22 for his fifth season championship before retiring at the end of this season. While at Homestead and going for a championship will be a different scenario, Gordon said the goal at Texas is having a solid performance. But he’d go for a win if he had a chance against another Chase contender to do it in a clean way — with one exception. “If it is the No. 2 car (Keselowski), then that is going to be different,� Gordon said.“To just go do that to whoever I’m racing in the Chase when I feel like a little more desperate or because they were blocking me, and I didn’t like that, I don’t know if that is worth that,� he said. “Because, in my opinion, that is going to come back to you in the next couple of weeks, possibly at Homestead. I don’t know if that risk is worth taking at this point of the game.� Gordon starts 18th at Texas, where the top four qualifiers were Chase contenders Keselowski, Kevin Harvick, Kyle Bush and Logano, who slipped to last among the remaining eight contenders after Martinsville. There was no practice Saturday when efforts to dry the track after overnight rains were unsuccessful. Carl Edwards, a threetime Texas winner and Chase contender who starts 13th, isn’t sure he understands where the line is and what kind of repercussions there could be for on-track incidents after the penalty against his Joe Gibbs Racing teammate. “I guess I don’t know. It was a shock, the penalty to me,� Edwards said. “I think everyone will be on pretty decent behavior because of that. If that’s how it’s going to be, we definitely have to be careful.� Edwards is a spot ahead of Keselowski, who has described himself as being in a “must-win situation.� Then that would also have to apply to Logano, his fellow Team Penske driver.

Keselowski wins title for Penske By STEPHEN HAWKINS AP Sports Writer

FORT WORTH, Texas — Brad Keselowski won the NASCAR Xfinity race at Texas, leading a race-high 62 of 200 laps and wrapping up a third consecutive owners’ championship for Roger Penske. While Penske got a title, the Xfinity drivers’ championship is still undecided with two races left. Points leader Chris Buescher finished 11th and has a 24-lead over defend-

ing champion Chase Elliott, who finished eighth. Regan Smith was 31 points behind after finishing ninth. Keselowski has two series victories this year and 34 overall. He had an average speed of 139.607 mph to finish ahead of Kevin Harvick, Austin Dillon and Erik Jones. Jones won the Camping World Truck race Friday night and is driving in place of suspended Matt Kenseth today in the Sprint Cup race at the high-banked track.

Cowboys’ Hardy should’ve been cut Continued from Page C-1 headed in the right direction under Pat Narduzzi, but something’s not right when Temple, which gave Notre Dame a much tougher game, is ranked in the top 25 and Pitt is not. • And it’s not a good time for local major college football when Penn State and West Virginia are also ranked behind Temple. WVU looks like it’s over its head in the Big 12. Penn State, which lost to Northwestern on Saturday, in the post-Paterno era has turned into Indiana. • When the schedule came out in April, the Raiders at home on Nov. 8 looked like a pretty sure “Wâ€? for the Steelers. Not now. It’s become a mustwin and not an easy one. • It might have been a good idea for the Steelers to

give Ray Rice a tryout. Unlike Hardy, he has shown what appears to be genuine remorse. And, as horrific as his offense was, Rice was known as a pretty solid citizen prior to the elevator episode. Some guys do deserve a second chance. Rice does. Hardy doesn’t. Rice is only 28 and had a below-average year in 2013, but he played hurt. The Patriots are having a lot of success with former Pitt running back Dion Lewis, who sat out last year with an injury. • There is a major goal shortage in the NHL right now. What the league doesn’t need is for a goal to be wiped out after a video shown at 1/1000th speed shows a skate 1/16 of an inch offside.

JEFF McINTOSH/Canadian Press

PENGUINS GOALIE Marc-Andre Fleury dived for the puck as the Flames’ Johnny Gaudreau chased it Saturday. No further information about the game was available at press time.

PL wins district title

Continued from Page C-1 “I’m very proud of them because they’ve just mentally gotten tougher and tougher every year and every match. This is a huge accomplishment for them.� Carly Mumau, one of the Dragons’ 10 seniors, talked about how badly the team yearned to hoist its first district championship trophy. “We wanted it bad,� she said. “We were just saying the whole way down, ‘C’mon guys, we’ve got to get this. It’s our last year, but we’ve got to play like it’s our last match, even though we know we’re going to states.’ It was in our brains the whole time that we wanted it.� The Dragons grabbed an early lead in the opening set and maintained at least a threepoint advantage until Hannah Cotchen notched four straight service points to pull the Huskies within one point of the lead, 21-20. Pack wisely called a timeout following that spurt and gave the Dragons a pep talk that enabled them to turn the tables. Mumau blocked an Ava Myers’ kill attempt into the Huskies’ front row on the following point to make the score, 22-20. Allison Goodlin then tallied two straight service points to bring up game point at 24-20. Two points later, a Bishop Carroll player bumped a second volley out of play to seal the Dragons’ 25-21 win. “He always gives us really good pep talks and good inspirational speeches,� Purchase Line’s Jaycelyn Fleming said. “He’s just so influential on us, and that’s why we respond to him the way we did there,� The Huskies held a comfortable lead before the 18th point of the second game, when Purchase Line’s Allison Goodlin rotated to the service line. Goodlin baffled the Huskies with her quirky jump serve, amassing eight straight service points, three of which were aces, to give Purchase Line a 15-10 lead. The Dragons held at least a five-point lead the rest of the way, and on game point, they forced the Huskies to make another passing error to end the game, 25-19. Fleming racked up eight kills in the game, Mumau had three kills and a block, and Jordan Barr added three kills and three service points. “We knew the team with the most unforced errors wasn’t coming out of here on top, and that was obviously us,� Bishop Carroll coach Joseph Skura said. Mumau said the Dragons could sense they had the Huskies on the ropes following their late run in the second game. “We had tons of intensity and they just seemed like they were down a little, especially

after that second game. It’s hard to keep going after you’re down 2-0,� she said. Sensing vulnerability and looking to stick a dagger the Huskies, Purchase Line used three early aces, two of which came from Kelsee Lazor, to jump out to an 8-2 lead in the third game. Cotchen drilled a kill that capped a 6-2 run and pulled Bishop Carroll within two points of tying the game, 10-8. But the two-point deficit was the closest the Huskies would get. Kelly Pierce recorded three kills and an ace, four other Dragons added kills, and Purchase Line mounted a 14-7 spurt to force game point at 24-15. Ashley Goodlin fittingly offered a perfect set to Fleming, who walloped a kill in the middle of the court two points later to finish off a 2516 win and the sweep. Barr piled up four kills and an ace in the final game. Ashley Goodlin added three kills, Lazor had two aces, and Mumau tacked on two kills and a block. “We practiced really hard for this so we had to buckle down, and after we shut down (Ellie Yahner) they just couldn’t do anything,� Fleming said. “When we get it rolling we get in their heads, and we feed off that. We feed off their anger and their fear and their sadness. We just get in their heads.� Skura certainly didn’t diminish the accomplishments of the Dragons. However, he said the Huskies’ lack of fire was a result of the emotional high from Thursday’s win over West Branch. “Honestly, Thursday night felt more exciting for our program and our team and our fans, and that’s why it was hard to come in here with energy,� he said. “We gave it all on Thursday, because we knew if we didn’t get that one we were done. From the beginning today when we came into the gym I was saying, ‘We’re in the final. Are you guys nervous?’ But it just seemed like they were too even keel and we didn’t have the momentum we had on Thursday night.� Ashley Goodlin led the Dragons with 30 assists, six kills, five service points and four digs. Fleming had 14 kills and three blocks, Allison Goodlin added 12 service points, six digs and three aces, Barr tacked on nine kills, five service points, five digs and two blocks, and Pierce chipped in nine service points, three kills, three aces and three digs. Lazor had four service points, three aces and a dig, Mikhala Stover added four service points and four digs, Mumau tallied seven kills and three blocks, and Sarah Smith tallied four kills and two blocks.

West Shamokin falls short in WPIAL championship By The Indiana Gazette BALDWIN — Freeport topped West Shamokin in four games to win the WPIAL Class AA girls’ volleyball championship for the second time in the past three years Saturday at Baldwin High School. Freeport (20-1), the Section 4-AA champion, handed West Shamokin (13-1), the Section 3-AA champion, its first loss of the season, 25-18, 25-20, 23-25, 25-16. Freeport entered as the top seed, and West Shamokin was

the

FIND A

the No. 2 seed. The Yellowjackets also won the title in 2010 and 2013, giving them six title in the past six years. Freeport jumped out to a 12-4 lead in the first game and grabbed an early lead in the second game while rolling to a 2-0 advantage. West Shamokin used an 11-0 run to fuel its lone victory before Freeport closed out the match. Both teams advanced to the PIAA tournament, which begins Tuesday.

Continued from Page C-1 Football Playoff race. “We missed on a few by inches, just a few plays, so maybe we weren’t in a good rhythm,� Peterman said. “We were stressing to come out fast, but we’ve just got to go out there and not let the nerves get to us and play fast.� Peterman hit just 3 of 18 passes during a forgettable first half, including an interception deep in Notre Dame territory in the second quarter. While he improved in front of the second-largest crowd to watch a home game in school history, by then the Panthers were down by double digits and scrambling. There were bright spots. Boyd’s 51-yard catch-andrun in the fourth quarter broke Antonio Bryant’s school record for career yards receiving, and Whitehead provided a glimpse of the future with touchdown runs of 10 and 3 yards. That’s not bad for a true freshman making his first appearance on offense after spending the first eight games exclusively at safety. “I really didn’t get touched on either score,� Whitehead said. “I think the coaches know that my speed would help on the outside runs, so that’s probably why they used it.� DeShone Kizer completed 19 of 26 passes for 262 yards and five touchdowns with no turnovers as the Irish won their fourth straight. Will Fuller caught seven passes for 157 yards and three scores and Josh Adams ran for 147 yards and hauled in Kizer’s final touchdown pass. The Irish stressed they weren’t going to get caught up in their lofty spot in the CFP, pointing out that being fifth in the first week of November wouldn’t mean a thing if they looked too far down the road. That typically isn’t an issue when Notre Dame plays the Panthers, who seem to play the Irish tight regardless of the circumstances. Not this time. Kizer hit Fuller for a 47yard touchdown on the game’s third play and Pitt’s methodical attack lacked the firepower to match. Kizer drilled a 12yard strike between two Pitt defenders to Torii Hunter Jr. later in the first half and found Fuller deep for a 46-yard catchand-run that put the Irish up 21-3 at the break. The Panthers finally generated some momentum in the second half, with Whitehead showing off the speed that made him the most coveted recruit in Pennsylvania last season. Yet each time Pitt appeared ready to make a run, Notre Dame responded. www.indianagazette.com

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Local Sports

C-8 — Sunday, November 8, 2015

The Indiana Gazette

Pairings set for district playoffs By The Indiana Gazette Three Heritage Conference teams will kick off the District 6 football playoffs on Friday and Saturday. Unbeaten Penns Manor (10-0), the Heritage Conference champion and No. 3 seed, will play host to sixthseeded Westmont Hilltop (73), at 7 p.m. Saturday in the first round of the Class A playoffs. In the three other Class A games, Northern Cambria (64), the seventh seed, plays at second-seeded Moshannon Valley (10-0) at 7 p.m. Friday; Cambria Heights (5-5), the eighth seed, visits top-seeded Bishop Guilfoyle (10-0) at 7 p.m. Friday; and BellwoodAntis (7-3), the fifth seed, plays at fourth-seeded Portage (8-2) at 7 p.m. Saturday. The winner between Penns Manor and Westmont advances to face the winner between Northern Cambria and Moshannon Valley, and the winner between Bellwood and Portage advanced to face

the Bishop Guilfoyle-Cambria Heights winner. Those semifinals will be played Nov. 20 and 21 at the home of the highest seed. In Class AA, Ligonier Valley (8-2), the fourth seed, plays host to Mount Union, the fifth seed, at 7 p.m. Saturday. In the three other Class AA games, Forest Hills (6-4), the eighth seed, plays at topseeded Central (9-1) at 7 p.m. Friday; Huntingdon (6-4), the seventh seed, plays at second-seeded Tyrone (8-2) at 7 p.m. Friday; and Southern Huntingdon (7-3), the sixth seed, plays at third-seeded Juniata (8-2) at 7 p.m. Saturday. The Ligonier Valley-Mount Union winner advances to play the Forest Hills-Central winner, and the Southern Huntingdon-Juniata winner advances to face the Huntingdon-Tyrone winner. Those semifinals will be played Nov. 20 and 21 at the home of the highest seed. The district championship games are set for Nov. 27 and 28 at Mansion Park in Altoona.

LOCAL SCOREBOARD HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL

SATURDAY’S SCORES

KAYLA GRUBE/Gazette

UNITED’S BRENT MACK (26) tried to break away from Farrell’s Malachi Newell (5) during Saturday afternoon’s game at Thomas J. Madill Field.

Lions cap turnaround year with solid effort Hampel will run IUP ROUNDUP

at national meet By The Indiana Gazette

In the women’s race, IUP’s Rachel Magliane, a senior, IUP’s Alex Hampel earned missed a national berth by a berth to the NCAA Division three spots, finishing 28th in II Cross Country Champi- 22:11.9 on a 6K course. IUP onships, but the placed 10th in the Crimson Hawks team standings. missed out on qualiAlso competing for fying as a team by IUP were Jenna one spot in the AtLezanic, a junior and lantic Region ChamMarion Center gradupionships on Saturate (43rd, 22:32.7); day. Riva Walker (48th, Hampel, a senior, 22:44.9); Makena placed 19th in 31 Felts (72nd, 23:23.0); minutes, 46 seconds Becky Wilson, an Inon a 10K course at diana High graduate ALEX Lock Haven. IUP (86th, 23:45.5); MarHAMPEL placed fourth in the garet McChesney team standings. (98th, 24:0.6) and Three other IUP Nicole Best (103rd, runners joined Ham24:09.6). pel by earning All-AtCalifornia won the lantic Region honors, regional title, Edinwhich went to the top boro was second, and 25 runners in the Shippensburg finfield. Ray Ofman, a ished third. senior and United High School graduVOLLEYBALL: IUP ate, placed 20th in lost to Seton Hill, 25RACHEL 31:52.3; Hutson Bau23, 33-31, 25-23, in a MAGLIANE Pennsylvania State mann, a redshirt freshman, finished Athletic Conference 22nd in 31:56.4; and Greg women’s volleyball match Beaudette, a junior, placed Saturday at the Kovalchick 23rd in 31:56.5. Convention and Athletic IUP finished with 114 Complex. points, five behind thirdIUP lost its third in a row to place Edinboro. Shippens- fall to 16-14 overall and 8-12 burg won the team title, and in the conference. Seton Hill Lock Haven was second. improved to 21-12 and 12-8. Also competing for IUP Meghan Schneider and were Andrew Morgan (30th, Alexis Anderson each had a 32:25.5); Caleb Cordell (43rd, team-high nine kills for IUP. 32:55.8); and Austin Cooper Natalie Cignetti and Sami (53rd, 33:23.7). Brown each had seven kills, The national meet is Lindsay Moeller finished scheduled for Nov. 21 in with 25 assists. Jess Marut Joplin, Mo. had 25 digs.

Lenze, Whitfield win state medals

Continued from Page C-1 Four other local runners competed in the Class AA boys’ race. They were Derry senior Micky Phillippi (47th, 17:17) West Shamokin senior Logan Stancombe (98th, 17:53), Indiana sophomore Rocco Fanella (102nd, 17:55) and Derry junior Brian Harr (166th, 18:32). Six other runners joined Cunkelman in the Class A boys’ race, which consisted of 226 competitors. They were Marion Center senior David Wiles (43rd, 17:44), Purchase Line sophomore Micah Kurka (78th, 18:06), Purchase Line junior Nathan Moore (80th, 18:06), United sophomore Alex Ringler (82nd, 18:07), Marion Center senior Joseph Brendle (112th, 18:27) and Marion Center senior Nathan Alabran (160th, 19:03). Joining Whitfield in the Class A girls’ field were United junior Ryleigh Ludwig (62nd, 21:22), Blairsville senior Allyson Smathers (84th, 21:44) and Blairsville freshman Jillian Barger (85th,

21:45). Two Indiana runners competed in the Class AA girls’ field, which consisted on 213 competitors. Melanie Zolocsik, a junior, placed 79th at 20:53, and Isabelle McCabe, a freshman, placed 156th in 22:06. Erin Feeney, a senior from Scranton Prep, won the race in 18:49.

By JUSTIN GERWICK

jgerwick@indianagazette.net

FARRELL 44, UNITED 20

ARMAGH — United coach Kevin Marabito faced a tall task in turning around a football program that had mustered just one win over the past three seasons, but the Lions went above and beyond what was asked of them by their first-year but veteran head coach. The hard work the players and coaches put into transforming the program showed on Saturday when United took on Farrell in a non-conference game at Thomas J. Madill Field. The Lions (4-6) jumped on the ninth-ranked team in the state and perennial power early, taking a two-score lead early in the second quarter, and kept the game close until the fourth quarter. The Steelers (9-1) came away with a 44-20 win, but the Lions came away with hope for a brighter future. “It’s a great thing to take the No. 9 team in the state as far as we did,” Marabito said. “It’s a great moment. Hopefully, United football is coming back.” United jumped out to a 140 lead in the first 12 minutes of the game, but the Steelers ripped off 30 unanswered points after that and put the game out of reach with another 14-point run in the fourth quarter. Farrell running back Davaughn Green gave the Lions fits all day, rushing for 250 yards and scoring on runs of 11, 2, 39, 69 and 15 yards. Quarterback Alex Myers piled up 116 yards from scrimmage and scored a touchdown. But for the Lions, they were content with just competing with a high-level team. “We went in like we had no fear,” Marabito said. “We always say, ‘Respect everyone, but fear no one.’ We just came out relaxed and wanted to see what we could go out and do. The kids came out focused and drove the ball down and made a couple statements. Farrell’s athleticism caught up to us at the end, but I can’t be any prouder of what our kids did.” The Lions dropped four of their first five games this season, and at that point things were looking much the same as they had the past few years. But the United team that played on Saturday was

Key stats — Farrell’s Davaughn Green rushed for 250 yards and five touchdowns. United’s Brent Mack ran for 181 yards, scored two touchdowns and set a single-season school record for rushing yards. Team records — Farrell 9-1, United 4-6. much different than the one that dropped 31 straight Heritage Conference games prior to a Week 6 win over Saltsburg. “Our mindset has changed,” Marabito said. “At one time, nobody believed they could ever win. We’ve started to win, and that mindset now is that we don’t want to lose. We are focused all the time. We had one setback a few weeks back, and we had a couple back-toback wins and kids didn’t know how to take care of it. We addressed that right away that Monday coming back, and they are learning now that you have to have that mindset to practice hard. You play the way you practice, and our practice picked up after that week. That’s what it’s all about. The kids have to believe in what you are doing here.” After a 1-4 start, United won three of its last five games to finish at 4-6 — matching the most wins the program has had since 2011. In addition to Saltsburg, the Lions scored wins over Heritage Conference opponents Blairsville and Homer-Center and beat St. Joseph’s in a non-conference game. “We were 1-4 after the first five games, and we decided to make the second five games a new season,” Marabito said. “The kids bought into that. There was never a time that they threw in the towel. They’ve battled all the time, and it’s a tribute to all the kids. This community really rallied around the team. They deserve a lot of credit, because we had people supporting us all the time. And that’s what it takes. The players, the community and the administration backed us, and that’s what you need to turn a program around.” Brent Mack and the Lions’ offensive line fueled the turnaround. A 5-foot-10, 170-pound senior, Mack rushed for 181 yards and scored two touchdowns on Saturday.

Mack finished the season with 1,501 rushing yards, establishing a single-season school record. The previous mark of 1,366 yards was set by Kody Oliver in 2009. “Brent is just a hard runner,” Marabito said. “He gives it everything he’s got. The way you see him run in the games is the same way he runs in practice. He sets the example. He’s not a vocal leader, but he goes out and goes after it every day.” “I’ll think back on (the record),” Mack said, “and I’ll think of every single one of my teammates.” With only five departing seniors, the Lions have a golden opportunity to build on this season. “The kids played hard, and I can’t be any prouder,” Marabito said. “It’s a shame it has to end. We’re only losing five seniors, but those are five quality seniors. We’re losing some good people, and we just have to build on for next year.” Mack is one of those seniors. “It’s big shoes to fill, but we’ve got some quality kids coming,” Marabito said. “It’s a long way to next year, but we’ll have kids that can step in. It’s going to take some time, and it’s big shoes, but I feel certain we’ll get a kid to replace him.”

Abington Heights 31, Scranton 19 Acad. of the New Church 28, Pennington 6 Allentown Dieruff 34, Allentown Allen 6 Bethlehem Catholic 34, Allentown C.C. 21 Beth. Freedom 37, Bethlehem Liberty 21 Blue Mountain 38, Schuylkill Haven 0 Brashear 21, Allderdice 6 Bristol 50, Lower Moreland 13 Carlisle 63, Harrisburg 25 Council Rock No. 35, Council Rock So. 14 Delco Christian 41, New Hope-Solebury 17 Eisenhower 66, Sheffield 22 Episcopal Academy 17, Chestnut Hill 12 Erie McDowell 38, Erie Central 16 Farrell 44, United 20 Harry S. Truman 28, Norristown 25 Haverford 42, Germantown Acad. 14 Iroquois 35, Mercyhurst Prep 7 Lackawanna Trail 42, Scran. Holy Cross 14 Lawrenceville, N.J. 28, The Hill School 26 Malvern Prep 37, Penn Charter 7 Methacton 21, Pope John Paul II 14 Penn Wood 34, Chester 14 Westmont Hilltop 27, Central Cambria 14 Wilkes-Barre Coughlin 42, Tunkhannock 0 York Catholic 56, York County Tech 8 Class A District Playoffs District 12 Final Bishop McDevitt 50, KIPP DuBois 12 Class AA District Playoffs District 12 Quarterfinal Lansdale Catholic 35, Conwell Egan 12 Philadelphia West Catholic 46, NeumannGoretti 0 Class AAAA District Playoffs Phila. Central 13, Benjamin Franklin 12

SATURDAY’S SUMMARY FARRELL 44, UNITED 20

Farrell 0 16 14 14 — 44 United 0 14 0 6 — 20 U — Matt Dill, 1 run (Adam Donelson kick) U — Brent Mack, 37 run (Donelson kick) F — Davaughn Green, 11 run (Alex Myers run) F — Green, 2 run (Deante Phillips pass from Myers) F — Myers, 1 run (pass failed) F — Green, 39 run (Myers run) U — Mack, 1 fumble recovery (run failed) F — Green, 69 run (pass failed) F — Green, 15 run (James Jackson run) INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Rushing Farrell: Davaughn Green 18-250, Malachi Newell 7-39, Alex Myers 8-33, Kyi Wright 4-27, Christian Lewis 2-6. United: Brent Mack 36-181, Dom Eritano 11-37, Devin Mack 1-3, Matt Dill 3-(-11), Team 1(-14). Passing Farrell: Myers 6-14-1-83. United: Dill 48-0-72. Receiving Farrell: Newell 2-41, Wright 2-24, Phillips 1-23, Green 1-(-5). United: D.Mack 3-63, Eritano 1-9. TEAM STATISTICS F U First downs rushing 17 10 First downs passing 4 5 First downs by penalty 2 3 Total first downs 23 18 Total yards 438 268 Yards rushing 355 196 Yards passing 83 72 Passes attempted 14 8 Passes completed 6 4 Interceptions thrown 1 0 Fumbles-lost 1-0 1-1 Penalties-yards 8-80 2-20 Punts-average 1-21.0 3-25.0

Sports Staff Directory (724) 465-5555 sports@indianagazette.net Tony Coccagna, Editor Phone: Ext. 266 Email: tonyc Carly Krouse Phone: Ext. 257 Email: ckrouse Twitter: @CarlyKrouse Dustin Filloy Phone: Ext. 266 Email: dfilloy Justin Gerwick Phone: Ext. 266 Email: jgerwick Twitter: @lewgerger

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The

Business

Sunday, November 8, 2015 — D-1

Leadership crash course On May 25 of 2015, I totaled my motorcycle. The impact drove my beautiful, shiny cruiser off the road and into mud so thick I could hardly move. It took four strong men and a length of rope to free the heap of twisted metal. A muddy landing — and protective gear — helped me survive much better than my motorcycle, though. I walked away with a broken wrist, contusions in both shoulders and some lasting damage to the ring finger of my right hand. When I finally got home, I explained to my doting wife what had happened. We promptly headed to the emergency room. I wish I could tell you that a joyful evening of fun and frolicking ensued. Perhaps it’s enough to say that drugs were involved. Unfortunately they were injected into the only part of my body that hadn’t been in pain until then: my tushie. Along with my pride, I had broken one of the cardinal dictums of motorcyJeffrey Tobin cling: “Your is an bike will alinternational ways go where speaker and you look.â€? business Don’t ask me coach. He is how it works, also the owner but it does. of Henry Hall If you look at Office that rabbit Products in carcass on the Indiana. View road, you will his blog at hit it. If you www.Jeffrey stare at that Tobin.com. good-sized pothole, it will magically appear directly ahead of your front tire. If you look at the gravel along the side of a tight bend, you would be me. I should have been looking where I wanted the bike to go. Instead, I stared myself directly into an accident. Had I remembered the rule and looked further ahead on the highway, my bike and I would likely have made the corner. And I’d have written an entirely different article for you today. At the office, I often find myself being distracted by other sorts of carcasses and potholes. They demand my attention and I succumb to giving them more attention than they deserve. For some leaders, these distractions may manifest themselves in the form of employees who enjoy not getting along. Perhaps there’s a logistical problem that defies any proposed solution. It might even be the lure of Facebook or meaningless banter with someone that whiles away precious time. If this is you, wear a helmet, my friend, because you are going down. You are the leader. Your job is to set the course. It is imperative that you — yes you — fix your eyes upon the place you want to be, not where you are. Yes, it’s true, you do need to be aware of any hazards near at hand. But if you don’t keep your eyes further down the road, you will end up as damaged goods. It will take a great deal of effort to get you moving once again. Hey, I’ve been there and I have the scars to prove it. Businesses go where the leader is looking. Get out of the mire of day-to-day distractions. Lead with a more distant vision. In no time you will be where you are looking. And those carcasses ‌ they’ll be left far behind.

Indiana Gazette

D

Rate hike even more likely By CHRISTOPHER S. RUGABER AP Economics Writer

WASHINGTON — U.S. hiring swelled in October by the largest amount all year, and unemployment dropped another notch to 5 percent, increasing the likelihood that the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates next month for the first time in a decade.

With Americans spending more on everything from restaurant meals and clothing to new cars, employers added an impressive 271,000 jobs last month. That was a strong rebound from August and September, when turmoil in China and other economies overseas proved a drag on the U.S. job market. Unemployment declined from

5.1 percent in September and is now at its lowest point since April 2008, just a few months after the Great Recession began. Even before Friday’s report, expectations for a Fed rate increase in December were building. Fed chief Janet Yellen and other top officials said this week that the economy is generally healthy and a move at next month’s meeting is a

“live possibility.� “This data tips the scales toward a rate hike in December, but more importantly is a sign that our economy may have more punch than we thought,� said Tara Sinclair, chief economist for job site Indeed.com. The Fed cut the short-term rate it controls to a record low of nearly Continued on Page D-5

BRIEFS Bank manager named among those making a difference

JEFFREY TOBIN

CARLOS OSORIO/Associated Press

LINE WORKER Michelle Albritton loaded stamped wheel housings recently at the General Motors Pontiac Metal Center in Pontiac, Mich.

UAW reaches tentative deal with Ford, General Motors By TOM KRISHER and DEE-ANN DURBIN AP Auto Writers

DETROIT — The United Auto Workers union reached a tentative contract agreement with Ford on Friday, the same day that General Motors workers voted in favor of a similar four-year deal. But official ratification of the GM pact was delayed because although it was approved overall, skilled trades workers

such as electricians and pipe fitters rejected the deal. The UAW said it reached an agreement with Ford on Friday morning. The contract covers 53,000 workers at 22 U.S. plants. No details were released, but Ford’s agreement is expected to be similar to the contract with GM. The union said Friday night that 55.4 percent of GM workers overall voted in favor of the deal, including 58 percent of

production workers. But almost 60 percent of skilled trades workers voted no. Union leaders must now hold meetings with trades workers over the next several days to find out why they rejected the deal. The union Executive Board will meet to determine the next step, the UAW said in a statement. The rejection by skilled trades workers could lead to changes in provisions specifiContinued on Page D-5

NEW ADDITION

Denise Clawson, who is vice president of Marion Center Bank and manages the Indian Springs office in White Township, has been named to the list of Women Making a Difference by PA Business Central magazine. Clawson began her career in banking in 1973 and retired from PNC Bank in 2011. In addition to her banking career, she has been a Mary Kay beauty consultant for the past 20 years. She participates in public relation programs and community involvement. She serves on the board of the United Way of Indiana DENISE County as past president, is a founding member and CLAWSON the current president of Indiana County Commission for Women, advisory board member for the Center for Family Business at IUP Eberly College of Business, board member of Indiana County Small Business Incubator, treasurer of Leader’s Circle of Indiana County and treasurer for the Indiana Networking Group. On a state level, Clawson is the membership chairwoman of the PA Federation of Business & Professional Women Inc. and board member of Business and Professional Women Foundation. She resides in Indiana with her husband, Bob. They have three sons and one grandson.

Co-op hires assistant director of program services, events The Student Cooperative Association has announced the appointment of Bob Smith as assistant director of program services and events. In this role, Smith will assist the Indiana University of Pennsylvania community with facility reservations, event setup, logistics and staffing in the Hadley Union Building complex. Smith joins the Student Cooperative Association from the Kovalchick Convention and Athletic Complex, where he served as the event manager since 2012 and oversaw all events and staffing. A native of Johnstown, Smith earned his undergraduate degree in sports management from Slippery Rock University in 2009. He continued his education at IUP, where he obtained his master’s degree in sports management in 2011. While at IUP, Smith also served as a graduate assistant in the sports information department.

Buffett’s firm doubles 3Q profit

JAMIE EMPFIELD/Gazette

THE PHOENIX Spa and Salon, adjacent to JC Penney in the Indiana Mall, recently had a grand opening for its bath and body products store. Pictured, from left, are employees Macy Koren and Leslie McCormick; Kris Mellinger, store manager; Beth Gregg, owner; Dana Starry, Phoenix general manager; Jim Struzzi, president of the Indiana County Chamber of Commerce; and Sherry Renosky, mall manager. The store will be open through Christmas.

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OMAHA, Neb. — Berkshire Hathaway Inc.’s third-quarter profit more than doubled as the completion of the Kraft-Heinz merger boosted the paper value of its stake in the food giant. The conglomerate Warren Buffett leads said Friday it earned $9.4 billion, or $5,737 per Class A share. That’s up from $4.6 billion, or $2,811 per share, in last year’s third quarter. Berkshire’s revenue grew 15 percent to nearly $59 billion. Several of its non-insurance businesses, such as BNSF railroad, performed well, but the results across its nearly 90 companies were mixed. Berkshire holds about 27 percent of the stock in the Kraft Heinz Food Co., and it recorded a $4.4 billion after-tax gain as the result of the merger that was completed over the summer. Buffett has said operating earnings offer a better view of quarterly performance because they exclude investments and derivatives, which can vary widely. Berkshire’s operating earnings per Class A share were $2,769 this year, down slightly from $2,876 last year.

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Money & Markets

D-2 — Sunday, November 8, 2015

The Indiana Gazette

MarketPulse GENDER GAP IN RETIREMENT SAVINGS Men have much larger retirement savings accounts than women, and it’s because they’re paid more. That’s according to a study by the investment management company Vanguard. The study looked at men and women with identical job tenure. It says women at all income levels save at greater rates than men do. Vanguard analyst Jean Young also said men and women have similar portfolios, and they take similar amounts of risk with their investments. Still, the median account balance for women was 34 percent less: about $24,400 for women and almost $37,000 for men. “The difference is not due to savings behavior but the higher wages of men,” Young said.

Women vs. men: Vanguard defined-contribution participants Median retirement account balance in 2014

Median income in 2014 Women

25% $56,264 less

Women

Men

74,590

Men

SEND A LETTER, MAKE A DEPOSIT Wednesday marked the trading debut of a company that might seem unusual to Americans: Japan Post Bank, a bank that’s part of Japan’s post office. The post offices in countries including Germany, China, and Brazil also have banks, and the U.S. had a postal savings system until the 1960s. Some have argued the U.S. should bring back postal banking to give people with low incomes access to financial services. Together, the initial public offerings of Japan Post, Japan Post Bank and Japan Post Insurance raised almost $12 billion in the world’s biggest initial public offering this year.

CORPORATE CASH DEALS Publicly traded U.S. companies announced $457.8 billion in takeovers over the six months that ended in October, according to research firm TrimTabs. The tech sector was particularly busy. Companies are striking more deals because it’s hard for them to generate revenue growth with the global economy in a shaky state, and they’ve also cut back on capital spending over the years. Meanwhile, companies have easy access to credit because of low interest rates. TrimTabs says the previous six-month record was set over the period that ended in July 2007, when $406.5 billion worth of deals was announced. That was right before the credit crisis hit.

34% $24,446 less 36,875 Source: Vanguard

AP

StocksRecap 2,200

24.69

5.74

-7.48

-2.38

-0.73

MON

TUES

WED

THUR

FRI

5,400

73.40

17.98

-2.65

-14.74

19.38

MON

TUES

WED

THUR

FRI

Refined Profits

5,200

2,100

5,000 2,000 4,800 1,900 4,600

S&P 500

1,800 1,700

M

J

J

A

S

W E E K L Y

52-WEEK HIGH LOW

INDEX

657.17 11254.87

O

HIGH

7452.70 Dow Jones transportation 539.96 Dow Jones Utilities 9509.59 NYSE Comp.

4,200

Nasdaq composite Close: 5,147.12 1-week change: 93.37 (1.8%) M

J

J

A

S

O

P E R F O R M A N C E

18351.36 15370.33 Dow Jones industrial average 9310.22

4,400

Close: 2,099.20 1-week change: 19.84 (1.0%)

LOW

CLOSE

YTD CHG %CHG MO QTR %CHG

1YR %CHG

+246.79

+1.4

s s

+0.5 ((!7| 65 +1.9

8270.09

8131.97

8241.43

+113.36

+1.4

t t

-9.8 ^$#@!98752| -7.9

584.68

551.81

556.46

-24.04

-4.1

t t -10.0 ^%$@98732| -7.7

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+52.40

+0.5

s t

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Cheaper crude is dragging down earnings at Exxon Mobil and Chevron, but lower oil prices are not hurting everybody in the business. Falling oil prices are a boon to refiners, who are paying less for their chief raw material while seeing solid demand for gasoline and other finished products. The benefits show in third-quarter earnings. Valero Energy earned $1.4 billion, an increase of 30 percent, even though revenue fell 34 percent. Tesoro’s profit soared 92 percent to $759 million, and Marathon Petroleum boosted income by 41 percent to $948 million – despite lower revenue at both refiners. With cash flow up, Valero increased its dividend 25 percent. On the exploration-andproduction side of the business, Marathon Oil cut its dividend 76 percent.

Net income change in 3Q

5139.29

5002.44

5034.34

-24.66

-0.5

t t

4737.12

3787.23 Nasdaq 100

4737.12

4652.45

4707.23

+58.40

+1.3

| 993 +13.1 s s +11.1 ((!9

5231.94

4292.14 Nasdaq Comp.

5163.47

5061.47

5147.12

+93.37

+1.9

s s

| 98432 +11.1 +8.7 ((!9

3

2134.72

1867.01 S&P 500

2116.48

2080.76

2099.20

+19.84

+1.0

s s

+2.0 ((!8| 72 +3.3

2

1551.28

1344.80 S&P MidCapS&P MidCap

1473.14

1445.87

1463.32

+18.55

+1.3

s t

+0.8 ((!8| 321 +2.3

1

1296.00 415.16 7122.74

1078.63 Russell 2000 319.01 Dow Jones Stoxx 600 5768.22 FTSE 100

21648.51 21865.12

+216.61

+1.0

s s

+0.9 ((!8| 321 +2.3 -0.4 ((!8| 321 +2.3

3Q 2014 3Q 2015 5.6

$5 billion

4619.24 NYSE International

22032.71

8.1

Cheap oil boosts refiners

5757.23

22537.15 19619.26 Wilshire 5000

Stocks of oil refiners have boomed. Through Oct. 30, shares of Phillips 66 and Valero were up at least 30 percent this year and Tesoro was up 17 percent. Exxon, Chevron, ConocoPhillips and Marathon Oil were all down in the same time frame. There is cause for concern: Analysts say high inventories of gasoline and other products could pinch margins. But they say the long-term outlook is bright because of strong demand for fuels. Barclays analyst Paul Cheng says Valero, Tesoro, Phillips 66 and Marathon Petroleum will benefit from continuing low crude prices, and U.S. refiners will grab more of the export market.

4

0

1199.95

1161.95

1199.74

+37.88

+3.3

s t

382.53

372.89

379.95

+4.48

+1.2

| 995 +13.3 s t +11.4 ((!9

6459.46

6317.29

6353.83

-7.26

-0.1

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TSO

0.9

MPC

2.0

1.6 1.2

0.4

PSX

XOM

CVX

274%

MRO

-0.7

Exploration-and-production

Refiners Source: FactSet

David Koenig; Jenni Sohn • AP

-3.2 (^%$#@872| -3.3

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+.27 -9.5 -.51 -1.6 +.30 +20.2 +1.15 -5.6 -.75 -25.9 +.57 +5.3 unc +7.1 -.12 -53.4 -9.62 -28.7 +2.42 +19.7 +2.01 +55.0 -.35 -1.3 +.54 +77.1 +.06 -42.0 -4.12 -0.8 +.47 -17.8 +.83 +1.4 +4.58 -2.0 +2.28 -23.8 +1.43 -21.0 +7.43 +113.1 +12.28 +20.4 +1.93 +15.7 -1.20 +18.7 +.37 -6.4 +.66 -31.6 +2.23 -18.0 +.24 +73.7 +1.92 -9.3 +2.03 +24.7 +.03 -19.5 +.05 -5.5 +2.54 +70.2 +1.15 +0.8 +.17 -15.7 +1.02 +9.5 +.17 -66.1 +.01 -90.5 -7.23 +21.1 +.10 +17.4 +.38 -6.6 -3.16 +1.0 +3.81 +2.3 +1.23 +1.8 -.36 -3.9 -1.83 -2.5 +1.56 -0.9 +3.21 -17.3 -.46 -52.6 +1.83 +30.7 -2.84 -15.7 +.04 +14.6 +.19 -42.4 -3.20 +12.9 -3.85 -7.0 -.22 -19.6 +.07 +22.9 -.41 -58.9 -.90 +15.9 -6.90 +17.2 +.20 -3.6 -.70 -17.4 +.85 +16.8 +2.19 -8.8 +.18 -14.9 +15.58 +4.7 +.62 +37.1 +22.95 +39.4 +24.21 +43.5 -.10 -23.0 +.20 +42.3 -3.38 +15.9 +.14 +108.2 +33.47 +112.5 +4.87 +7.1 +.11 -19.3 -.01 -68.4 -1.13 -7.8 -.90 -23.8 -.78 -15.5 +.24 -0.8 -.86 -4.0 -.05 -18.6 +1.27 -3.8 +1.10 +18.0 -2.13 -11.1 +1.04 -20.1 -.18 -4.2 -1.13 +10.6 -1.27 -12.9 -4.20 -0.8 -1.58 +4.0 +3.92 -9.8 +1.10 +8.3 +1.39 +6.8 +2.28 +0.7 +3.17 +28.2 +.45 -6.1 +.95 +2.5 +13.44 +52.6 -6.41 +228.7 +1.72 -16.8 +1.58 +11.1 -2.38 +978.9 -.15 +21.7 -1.38 -18.9 +1.40 +5.9 -.44 -12.0 +.05 -44.4 +.46 -40.8 -5.17 +6.6 -.10 -11.0 +.26 -1.3 +.54 -23.9 -2.10 -0.2 +.54 -77.1 +.21 -21.6 +.55 -20.6 +.63 +13.1 +2.08 +9.7 +.73 +44.3 +.28 -31.6 +.72 +10.4 -2.99 +57.1 +.27 -58.8 -.31 +6.0

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Wk YTD PE Last Chg %Chg 27 30.50 +.15 -2.1 dd 5.43 -.18 -50.8 dd 1.66 +.16 -90.7 15 42.13 -3.53 -19.0 36 11.87 -.77 -39.8 ... 12.99 -1.05 +8.5 dd 2.08 +.19 -40.1 10 15.72 +.49 +0.7 dd 6.97 +.13 +1.5 38 70.46 +5.95 +16.0 ... 48.25 +.82 +4.2 72 5.03 -.09 +6.3 17 28.80 +.54 -4.6 10 59.98 +4.99 +3.6 dd 5.35 +.20 -27.5 dd 12.95 -.37 +3.1 dd .13 -.02 -87.8 2 6.73 -.15 -31.2 29 42.50 +1.11 +21.4 17 20.61 +1.27 +10.6 3 29.47 +2.03 +13.4 24 16.34 +.38 +22.3 22 32.09 +.20 -8.8 15 2.74 -.01 -73.9 ... 7.89 +.29 -6.0 19 59.81 -3.19 +7.3 2 17.39 +.84 -38.2 16 64.00 +.81 +5.9 dd 63.88 +8.69 +6.4 ... 32.06 -4.08 -11.8 28 87.63 +.64 +5.1 54 129.67 +6.54 +28.9 21 65.09 +.12 +25.5 14 45.17 -4.77 -31.9 11 46.95 +1.52 +9.1 dd 3.19 -.84 -66.0 cc 28.65 +1.02 +10.1 22 2.45 -.35 -4.3 dd 21.90 +1.65 -48.4

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dd 14 ... 30 24 ... ... dd ... cc 33 dd 20 dd ... ... ... ... 13 16 9 cc dd q ... q 20 dd ... 12 dd 45 12 5 19 60 15 dd dd dd 19 dd 23 dd ... dd 13 20 16 ... dd 17 19 18 dd ... 20 15 18 31 dd cc cc cc ... ... 15 64 cc 46 23 24 14 dd 11 54 21 dd cc 18 31

B 1.04 39.04 42.71 47.29 9.00 30.75 29.67 35.13 14.84 29.12 200.30 52.08 67.78 1.58 8.56 5.83 5.66 3.91 17.95 44.19 46.38 14.47 .18 8.41 14.07 18.04 7.05 4.34 35.11 37.97 4.37 152.50 61.25 1.77 136.33 32.85 35.41 6.35 6.04 .37 295.35 114.92 23.28 2.75 30.34 8.02 32.88 37.21 16.54 18.46 73.64 13.31 147.94 101.98 9.02 1.90 28.91 41.69 12.33 124.19 18.78 9.12 21.12 13.15 11.84 2.42 45.86 65.45 30.73 24.95 53.79 57.17 10.86 23.22 34.44 20.97 54.96 5.57 15.25 72.97 46.53

-.03 -35.8 +1.89 +0.4 -.50 -6.9 +.34 -18.5 +.35 -1.6 -2.14 -35.0 -2.58 -31.0 -.57 -7.8 -.49 -35.9 +.82 +34.9 +12.83 -12.1 -.60 -7.1 -.72 -0.6 +.07 -20.2 -.06 -8.8 +.40 -47.7 +.12 -32.1 +.34 -22.1 +1.17 +0.3 +2.54 +8.9 -.60 -17.9 +2.60 +16.4 -.02 +31.6 -.18 -32.9 -.10 -6.3 -.79 -42.7 -.64 -34.4 +.63 -38.1 +.65 +4.8 +.58 -3.5 +.30 -73.7 +9.98 +9.6 +1.62 -19.6 +.13 -51.4 +.31 -9.2 -.65 +4.1 +.38 -9.2 +1.48 -44.2 +.66 -49.8 +.01 -72.2 +4.84 -13.0 -2.12 +27.1 -.13 +8.1 +.78 -60.7 -1.56 -56.9 +.73 -27.0 -.18 -2.8 -.05 +10.5 -.43 -33.2 +.52 -32.1 -3.49 -19.7 +.49 -25.1 +.78 +13.8 +21.97 +31.1 +3.33 -62.4 +.77 +38.7 -.42 +9.0 -1.13 -24.1 +.96 -8.5 -1.66 -3.5 +.50 +41.7 +.26 -17.5 +1.13 +65.3 -.35 -16.9 +.69 -8.3 +.17 -65.4 +.35 -21.9 -.50 +10.9 -4.00 -53.3 -.67 +1.4 +2.39 +24.1 -2.41 +23.8 +.44 -8.3 +2.31 -36.7 -.53 +3.1 +2.60 +6.9 +1.15 +7.2 -.84 -41.7 +3.43 +122.0 +.01 -19.7 -1.55 -1.5

5.21 27.40 13.95

+.22 -60.6 -.31 -10.0 -.63 -28.2

C C&J Engy CA Inc CBL Asc

... 1.00 1.06

dd 16 15

Name Div CBRE Grp ... CBS B .60 CDW Corp .42f CF Inds s 1.20 CH Robins 1.52 CIT Grp .60 CME Grp 2.00a CMS Eng 1.16 CNH Indl ... CNO Fincl .28 CST Brnds .25 CSX .72 CTI BioPh ... CVR Rfng 3.12e CVS Health 1.40 CYS Invest1.04m Cabelas ... CblvsnNY .60 Cabot .88 CabotO&G .08 Cadence ... CaesarStne .57e CalAtlantic ... CalifRes n .04 Callidus ... CallonPet ... Calpine ... Cameco g .40 Cameron ... CampSp 1.25 CampusCC ... CdnNR gs 1.25 CdnNRs gs .92 CP Rwy g 1.40 CdnSolar ... CapOne 1.60 CapsteadM1.04m CpstnTur h ... CardnlHlth 1.55 CarMax ... Carnival 1.20 Carrizo ... CastlightH ... Caterpillar 3.08 Cel-Sci ... Celanese 1.20 Celgene ... CelldexTh ... Cellectis n ... Cemex .40t Cemig pf .56e Cempra ... CenovusE .64 Centene s ... CenterPnt .99 CentAl ... CntryLink 2.16 Cerner ... CerusCp ... ChambStPr .51 CharterCm ... ChkPoint ... CheetahM ... Chegg ... Chemours n.12m CheniereEn ... ChesEng ... Chevron 4.28 ChicB&I .28 Chicos .31 Chimera rs 1.92 ChiMYWnd ... ChinaMble 1.87e Chipotle ... Chubb 2.28 ChurchDwt 1.34 CienaCorp ... Cigna .04 Cimarex .64 CinciBell ... Cinemark 1.00 Cirrus ... Cisco .84 Citigroup .20 CitizFincl .40 CitrixSys ... Civeo ... CleanEngy ... CleanHarb ... CliffsNRs ... Clorox 3.08 CloudPeak ... ClovisOnc ... Coach 1.35 CobaltIEn ... CocaCola 1.32 CocaCE 1.12 Coeur ... Cognex .28 CognizTch ... Colfax ... ColgPalm 1.52 ColonyCap 1.60f ColuPpln n .50 Comcast 1.00 Comc spcl 1.00 Comerica .84 CommScpe ... CmclMtls .48 CommSal n 2.40 CmtyHlt ... CBD-Pao .38e CompSci .92 ComstkRs ... ConAgra 1.00 ConchoRes ... Conns ... ConocoPhil 2.96 ConsolEngy .04 ConEd 2.60 ConstantC ... ConstellA 1.24 Constellm ... ContlBldg ... ContlRescs ... CorOnDem ... .48 Corning

PE 20 15 20 12 20 7 26 18 23 15 10 13 dd 18 22 15 16 44 dd 66 29 ... ... dd dd dd 11 ... 18 22 dd ... ... ... 5 11 9 dd 21 19 30 dd dd 15 dd 18 44 dd ... ... ... dd dd 22 15 5 21 40 dd 60 dd 24 cc dd ... dd dd 20 7 28 ... 3 ... 37 15 27 dd 17 dd 5 21 19 16 13 17 47 ... dd 36 dd 24 dd dd 22 dd 27 22 dd 16 27 18 24 22 ... 19 19 16 27 12 ... 11 ... 19 dd 26 39 20 62 dd 16 56 27 ... 44 26 dd 13

Last 36.16 48.64 43.62 46.52 68.72 43.28 96.79 34.24 6.99 19.90 37.23 27.07 1.33 21.20 98.70 7.53 43.30 31.35 41.32 22.30 22.71 40.21 38.80 4.63 19.94 8.83 14.61 12.77 68.62 48.77 6.69 59.12 25.30 134.31 23.57 81.42 9.64 .20 88.50 57.30 53.36 39.19 3.86 73.84 .52 71.47 116.74 13.77 42.14 6.22 2.00 27.69 15.92 61.75 17.46 4.49 28.57 60.17 5.38 7.16 190.26 83.67 19.20 7.72 6.73 46.40 7.34 94.03 44.20 13.61 13.98 2.19 59.61 612.40 129.25 81.89 24.90 132.81 117.76 3.80 36.97 32.17 28.45 55.87 25.73 82.02 2.15 5.22 43.53 3.15 122.28 3.71 99.22 32.06 8.89 41.96 50.55 2.54 35.49 69.05 29.07 65.82 21.59 20.62 61.61 61.89 46.80 32.31 14.85 20.42 31.64 14.03 67.75 2.70 40.69 111.43 23.88 55.77 8.21 61.95 31.82 132.11 8.19 16.98 36.24 35.46 18.92

Wk Chg -1.12 +2.12 -1.07 -4.25 -.66 +.28 +2.32 -1.54 +.20 +.69 +1.30 +.08 unc +.25 -.08 -.19 +4.13 -1.24 +5.38 +.61 +.49 +4.70 +.71 +.59 +2.57 +.15 -.90 -1.40 +.61 -2.02 +.06 -1.97 +2.08 -6.19 +1.74 +2.92 -.01 -.01 +6.30 -1.71 -.72 +1.56 -1.20 +.85 -.01 +.42 -5.97 +1.71 +15.69 -.09 +.05 +5.49 +1.01 +2.27 -1.09 +.87 +.36 -6.12 +.61 +.08 -.68 -1.27 -.75 +.82 -.20 -3.12 +.21 +3.15 -.67 -.21 -.10 -.03 -.70 -27.83 -.10 -3.86 +.76 -1.23 -.30 +.03 +1.53 +1.34 -.40 +2.70 +1.53 -.08 +.29 -.43 -2.96 +.39 +.34 +.74 -.69 +.86 +1.22 -.39 -.79 -.16 -2.11 +.94 +2.11 -.53 +1.25 -.15 -1.01 -.82 +3.40 -.12 +.60 +.33 +3.60 +.90 +1.16 +.40 +.14 -4.48 +4.91 +2.42 +1.55 -3.80 +5.72 -2.38 +4.42 -.59 +2.33 +3.96 +.32

YTD %Chg +5.6 -12.1 +24.0 -14.7 -8.2 -9.5 +9.2 -1.5 -13.3 +15.6 -14.6 -25.3 -43.6 +26.2 +2.5 -13.6 -17.9 +51.9 -5.8 -24.7 +19.7 -32.8 +6.4 -16.0 +22.1 +62.0 -34.0 -22.2 +37.4 +10.8 -8.5 -14.2 -18.1 -30.3 -2.6 -1.4 -21.5 -72.9 +9.6 -13.9 +17.7 -5.8 -67.0 -19.3 -10.5 +19.2 +4.4 -24.5 +7.2 -36.5 -59.8 +17.8 -22.8 +18.9 -25.5 -81.6 -27.8 -6.9 -13.8 -11.2 +14.2 +6.5 +27.0 +11.7 -67.7 -34.1 -62.5 -16.2 +5.3 -16.0 -12.1 unc +1.3 -10.5 +24.9 +3.9 +28.3 +29.1 +11.1 +19.1 +3.9 +36.5 +3.0 +3.3 +3.5 +28.6 -47.7 +4.5 -9.4 -55.9 +17.3 -59.6 +77.2 -14.6 unc -0.6 +14.3 -50.3 -14.1 +31.1 -43.6 -4.9 -9.4 -34.6 +6.2 +7.5 -0.1 +41.5 -8.8 -32.0 -41.3 -61.9 +7.5 -60.4 +12.2 +11.7 +27.8 -19.2 -75.7 -6.2 -13.3 +34.6 -50.2 -4.2 -5.5 +0.7 -17.5

Last 27.86 3.68 157.55 9.79 28.50 9.99 16.10 3.81 9.18 11.67 104.73 32.28 5.72 24.54 24.76 13.85 2.67 36.80 9.97 16.63 84.72 103.39 27.17 106.48 .29 47.23 10.64 10.82 .35

Wk YTD Chg %Chg -.64 -23.3 +.18 -52.5 -.57 +11.1 -.66 +42.3 -.45 +37.9 -.05 -12.5 -.66 -26.9 +.08 -80.9 -1.31 -81.2 -.54 +45.1 +9.83 -10.6 +1.19 +3.7 -.51 -79.3 -.46 -2.2 -.43 -23.2 +.22 -40.2 -.08 -67.0 -1.26 -9.0 -.83 -20.2 +3.13 +33.3 -.74 +7.6 +10.42 +127.2 -.65 +23.1 +2.97 -26.1 -.17 -93.1 -2.41 +19.1 +.10 -25.5 +2.21 +35.1 -.01 -28.2

Name Div CorrectnCp 2.16 Cosan Ltd .26e Costco 1.60 Cott Cp .24 Coty .25f CousPrp .32 CovantaH 1.00 CSVLgNG rs ... CSVLgCrd rs ... CSVInvNG ... CSVInvCrd ... CSVelIVST ... CSVixSh rs ... CredSuiss .72e Cree Inc ... CrescPtE g 1.20 CrestwdEq .55 Criteo SA ... Crocs ... CrssCtryHl ... CrwnCstle 3.54f Ctrip.com ... CubeSmart .64 Cummins 3.90 CumMed ... CyberArk ... CypSemi .44 Cytokinetic ... CytoriTh h ...

PE 16 ... 29 23 43 23 cc q q q q q q ... dd 58 dd ... dd dd 19 cc cc 11 10 ... ... dd dd

DDR Corp .69 DHT Hldgs .72f DR Horton .25 DSW Inc .80 DTE 2.92f DanaHldg .24 Danaher .54 Darden 2.20 DarlingIng ... DaVitaHlt ... DeanFoods .28 DeckrsOut ... Deere 2.40 Delek .60a DelphiAuto 1.00 DeltaAir .54 Demandw ... DenburyR ... Dennys ... Dentsply .29 Depomed ... DeutschBk .83e DBXEafeEq1.78e DBXEurHgd2.10e DBXHvChiA ... DevonE .96 DexCom ... DiamOffsh .50 DiamRk .50 DiambkEn ... DicksSptg .55 DigitalRlt 3.40 DigitalGlb ... DiploPhm ... DxRsaBll rs ... DirSPBear ... DxEnBear ... DxSCBear rs ... DxFnBr rs ... DxGMBr rs ... DrGMBll rs ... DxGBull rs ... DrxEMBull ... DxFnBull s ... DxBiotBear ... DxBiotBull ... DirDGldBr ... DirxChiBull .07e DrxSCBull .48e DrxSPBull ... DirxEnBull ... Discover 1.12 DiscCmA ... DiscCmC ... DishNetw h ... Disney 1.32f DollarGen .88 DollarTree ... DomRescs 2.59 DonlleyRR 1.04 DEmmett .84 Dover 1.68 DowChm 1.84f DrPepSnap 1.92 DrmWksA ... DryShips h ... DuPont 1.52 DuPFabros 1.68 DukeEngy 3.30f DukeRlty .72f Dunkin 1.06 DyaxCp ... Dycom ... Dynegy ...

dd 16.45 -.35 -10.4 11 7.65 -.21 +4.7 16 29.40 -.04 +16.3 13 23.53 -1.41 -36.9 15 79.39 -2.20 -8.1 8 16.45 -.35 -24.3 20 95.83 +2.52 +11.8 25 61.71 -.18 +5.3 20 10.40 +.28 -42.7 35 77.27 -.24 +2.0 dd 17.94 -.17 -7.4 13 55.19 -.47 -39.4 12 77.51 -.49 -12.4 15 27.14 -.06 -0.1 16 83.30 +.11 +14.5 11 51.20 +.50 +4.1 dd 51.84 -4.86 -9.9 3 4.24 +.70 -47.8 25 10.55 -.41 +2.3 32 61.65 +.80 +15.7 28 19.87 +2.37 +23.3 ... 27.69 -.26 -7.8 q 28.35 +.47 +5.0 q 27.10 +.44 +4.0 q 38.01 +2.49 +2.1 dd 46.87 +4.94 -23.4 dd 84.72 +1.40 +53.9 45 23.18 +3.30 -36.9 16 11.61 -.07 -21.9 dd 77.79 +3.95 +30.1 15 44.13 -.42 -11.1 48 72.18 -1.78 +8.9 63 17.09 +2.16 -44.8 cc 34.98 +6.87 +27.8 q 16.39 +.56 -0.9 q 16.16 -.54 -21.6 q 20.97 -1.92 -0.1 q 39.56 -4.25 -17.6 q 38.92 -2.97 -23.2 q 36.26 +7.20 -42.3 q 31.19 -8.64 -74.4 q 24.99 -9.70 -77.6 q 14.82 +.47 -35.4 q 32.27 +2.01 +1.5 q 33.57 -7.62 -17.4 q 22.53 +3.28 -42.5 q 21.28 +5.39 -13.7 q 22.89 +1.18 -36.0 q 75.68 +6.92 -6.5 q 90.23 +2.61 +2.9 q 37.02 +2.50 -38.8 12 57.61 +1.67 -12.0 18 29.01 -.43 -15.8 ... 27.53 +.01 -18.4 24 63.74 +.77 -12.6 22 115.67 +1.93 +22.8 18 67.82 +.05 -4.1 45 67.97 +2.48 -3.4 19 67.85 -3.58 -11.8 16 17.22 +.35 +2.5 85 30.74 +.19 +8.2 14 64.49 +.06 -10.1 14 51.84 +.17 +13.7 22 86.26 -3.11 +20.3 dd 23.18 +2.94 +3.8 dd .20 +.00 -81.1 20 66.11 +2.71 -6.0 29 32.64 +.55 -1.8 17 67.76 -3.71 -18.9 42 20.31 -.39 +0.5 23 41.58 +.17 -2.5 dd 34.52 +6.99 +145.5 34 82.32 +6.23 +134.6 cc 18.10 -1.33 -40.4

E-TrAlerInf 1.93e E-Trade ... eBay s ... EMC Cp .46 EOG Rescs .67 EP Energy ... EQT Corp .12 EV Engy 2.00 EagleMat .40 EarthLink .20 EstWstBcp .80 EastChem 1.60 Eaton 2.20 EVTxMGlo .98 EclipseRs ... Ecolab 1.32 Ecopetrol 1.03e EdisonInt 1.67 EducRlt rs 1.48 EldorGld g .02e

q 28.79 35 30.42 17 29.40 22 25.95 21 85.27 42 6.32 29 67.24 1 5.46 24 70.59 dd 9.55 16 43.49 14 71.10 13 57.22 q 9.20 dd 2.38 28 117.40 ... 9.73 13 59.06 62 35.36 dd 3.24

D

E -.17 -29.1 +1.91 +25.4 +1.50 +26.1 -.27 -12.7 -.58 -7.4 +.81 -39.5 +1.17 -11.2 +.34 -71.7 +4.56 -7.2 +1.00 +117.5 +3.10 +12.3 -1.07 -6.3 +1.86 -15.8 +.06 -3.1 +.23 -66.1 -2.95 +12.3 +.41 -43.2 -1.46 -9.8 -.55 -3.4 -.26 -46.7

Name Div ElectArts ... EliLilly 2.00 EllieMae ... Embraer .37e EmergeES2.68m EmersonEl 1.90f EmpStRTr .34 EnbrdgEPt 2.33 Enbridge 1.86 EnCana g .28 EncoreCap ... Endo Intl ... Endologix ... EndurIntl ... EnerNOC ... Energen .08 EngyFocus ... EnrgyRec ... EgyTrEq s 1.14f EngyTsfr 4.22f EngyXXI ... Enerpls g .60 Enersis .71e Enphase ... ENSCO .60 Entergy 3.40f EnteroM h ... EntProdPt 1.54f EnvisnHlth ... EquityCmw ... EqtyRsd 2.21 Ericsson .39e Eros Intl ... Esperion ... EsteeLdr 1.20f Etsy n ... Euronav n .87e EverBank .24 Evercore 1.24f EveriHldgs ... EversrceE 1.67 ExactSci h ... ExamWks ... ExcoRes ... Exelixis ... Exelon 1.24 Expedia .96 ExpdIntl .72 Express ... ExpScripts ... Exterran n ... ExtraSpce 2.36 ExtrmNet ... ExxonMbl 2.92

Wk YTD PE Last Chg %Chg 29 72.38 +.31 +54.0 34 80.46 -1.11 +16.6 59 68.81 -4.17 +70.7 ... 29.92 +.55 -18.8 3 6.79 +2.50 -87.4 12 49.23 +2.00 -20.2 66 17.91 +.09 +1.9 66 26.51 -1.43 -33.6 ... 38.90 -3.79 -24.3 34 8.05 +.42 -42.0 9 38.50 -2.20 -13.3 dd 55.30 -4.69 -23.3 dd 9.73 +1.19 -36.4 dd 13.46 +.13 -27.0 dd 4.70 -3.14 -69.6 43 57.15 -1.00 -10.4 25 16.29 +.09 +230.4 dd 8.62 +1.45 +63.6 25 20.11 -1.15 -29.9 64 42.01 -1.09 -35.4 dd 1.96 +.23 -39.9 5 5.40 +.69 -43.8 ... 12.75 -.50 -20.5 dd 2.19 -1.41 -84.7 dd 18.06 +1.43 -39.7 13 65.65 -2.51 -25.0 dd .18 -.08 -87.1 21 26.79 -.84 -25.8 53 30.24 +2.04 -12.8 dd 27.40 -1.31 +6.7 32 76.90 -.42 +7.0 ... 9.83 +.09 -18.8 43 13.00 +1.83 -38.6 dd 27.77 +3.77 -31.3 28 85.67 +5.21 +12.4 ... 9.21 -1.69 -69.3 ... 13.98 -.98 +15.3 20 17.94 +.74 -5.9 38 59.04 +5.04 +12.7 dd 4.45 -.23 -37.8 17 49.02 -1.92 -8.4 dd 9.65 +1.33 -64.8 cc 24.92 -3.32 -40.1 dd 1.02 -.10 -53.0 dd 6.23 +.21 +332.3 12 28.09 +.17 -24.2 21 133.32 -2.98 +56.2 22 49.49 -.30 +10.9 18 19.00 -.30 +29.3 28 89.14 +2.76 +5.3 ... 14.71 -3.29 -18.3 41 77.51 -1.73 +32.2 dd 3.91 +.32 +10.8 18 84.47 +1.73 -8.6

F5 Netwks ... FLIR Sys .44 FMC Corp .66 FMC Tech ... FNBCp PA .48 Facebook ... FairchldS ... FairmSant ... FaroTech ... Fastenal 1.12 FedExCp 1.00 FedInvst 1.00 FelCor .16 Ferrari n ... Ferro ... FiatChrys ... FibriaCelu .09e FidlNatFn 1.04f FidNatInfo 1.04 FifthStFin .72 FifthThird .52 58.com ... Finisar ... FireEye ... FstData n ... FstHorizon .24 FMajSilv g ... FstNiagara .32 FstSolar ... FT DWF5 .18e FTDJInet ... FT Fincl .61e FT RNG .24e FirstEngy 1.44 FstMerit .68f Fiserv ... Fitbit n ... Fleetcor ... Flextrn ... Flotek ... FlowrsFds .58 Flowserve .72 Fluidigm ... Fluor .84 FootLockr 1.00 FordM .60 ForestCA ... Fortinet ... Fortress .32a FBHmSec .56 ForumEn ... Fossil Grp ... FrancoN g .84 FrankRes .60a FranksIntl .60 FreeSea hrs ... FrptMcM .20a Freescale ... FrontierCm .42 Frontline ... FuelCellE h ... FultonFncl .36 Furmanite ...

22 16 28 15 17 cc dd 4 32 23 48 21 dd ... 41 ... ... 20 27 8 12 dd cc dd ... 17 dd 18 11 q q q q 11 14 33 ... 35 13 cc 28 17 dd 11 17 12 18 ... 19 27 15 8 38 12 ... ... dd 28 dd dd dd 17 33

GNC .72 GalenaBio ... Gallaghr 1.48 GameStop 1.44 Gannett n .64 Gap .92

11 dd 22 13 21 11

F 109.67 27.58 41.01 35.11 14.48 107.10 18.26 3.29 28.26 41.08 162.38 31.95 8.28 52.43 11.87 14.42 13.87 35.41 67.19 6.18 20.49 52.84 12.29 23.83 17.08 15.20 2.97 10.98 59.67 23.52 76.68 24.09 6.46 29.29 20.34 95.90 37.92 156.40 11.73 18.10 26.68 47.42 10.29 49.14 66.98 14.52 22.23 34.05 5.95 51.97 14.76 55.12 46.33 40.86 17.07 .05 10.75 34.32 4.65 3.25 .94 14.32 8.13

-.53 +.91 +.30 +1.28 +1.01 +5.13 +1.58 +.62 -5.53 +1.92 +6.33 +1.47 +.23 +2.00 -.62 -.22 +.35 +.13 -5.73 +.45 +1.44 +.35 +.92 -2.32 +1.24 +1.02 -.34 +.71 +2.60 +.43 +2.28 +.32 +.36 -1.55 +1.55 -.61 -2.62 +11.54 +.34 unc -.32 +1.06 -.52 +1.33 -.77 -.29 +.13 -.31 +.42 -.36 +1.51 +.71 -4.36 +.10 -.09 -.01 -1.02 +.83 -.49 +.09 +.06 +.90 +1.18

-15.9 -14.6 -28.1 -25.0 +8.7 +37.3 +8.2 -52.5 -54.9 -13.6 -6.5 -3.0 -23.5 -4.7 -8.4 +24.5 +14.3 +2.8 +8.0 -22.8 +0.6 +27.2 -36.7 -24.5 +8.4 +11.9 -40.8 +30.2 +33.8 +6.8 +25.0 +3.5 -42.4 -24.9 +7.7 +35.1 +27.8 +5.2 +4.9 -3.4 +39.0 -20.7 -69.5 -19.0 +19.2 -6.3 +4.4 +11.1 -25.8 +14.8 -28.8 -50.2 -5.8 -26.2 +2.6 -99.8 -54.0 +36.0 -30.3 +29.5 -39.0 +15.9 +4.0

G 32.61 +2.86 -30.6 1.73 +.05 +14.6 44.06 +.33 -6.4 46.82 +.75 +38.5 16.95 +1.13 +18.9 28.49 +1.27 -32.3

Name Div Garmin 2.04 GasLog .56 GenDynam 2.76 GenElec .92 GenGrPrp .76f GenMills 1.76 GenMotors 1.44 GeneticT rs ... Gentex s .34 GenuPrt 2.46 Genworth ... Gerdau .07e GeronCp ... GileadSci 1.72 GlaxoSKln 2.46e GlobPay s .04 Globalstar ... GlobusMed ... GluMobile ... GoDaddy n ... Gogo ... GolLinhas ... GolLNGLtd 1.80 GoldFLtd .02e Goldcrp g .24 GoldStr g ... GoldmanS 2.60 GoodrPet ... Goodyear .28f GoPro ... GovPrpIT 1.72 GrmrcyP rs .88 GraphPkg .20 GrayTelev ... GtBasSci f ... GtPlainEn 1.05f GreenDot ... GreenPlns .48f GreenbCos .80f GrifolsSA .65e Groupon ... GrubHub ... GpFnSnMx .19e GpTelevisa ... GugSPEW 1.31e GulfportE ...

Wk YTD PE Last Chg %Chg 27 37.44 +1.97 -29.1 ... 12.75 +1.18 -37.3 17 145.92 -2.66 +6.0 dd 29.92 +1.00 +18.4 18 27.50 -1.45 -2.2 27 56.58 -1.53 +6.1 13 35.75 +.84 +2.4 ... 3.01 +1.16 +56.4 16 16.48 +.09 -8.8 19 89.52 -1.24 -16.0 dd 4.73 +.05 -44.4 ... 1.47 +.08 -58.6 dd 3.90 +.43 +20.0 10 108.34 +.21 +14.9 ... 41.92 -1.14 -1.9 32 69.94 +1.74 +73.3 9 2.10 +.30 -23.6 25 26.67 +4.32 +12.2 46 3.22 -.90 -17.4 ... 30.54 +3.06 +16.8 dd 17.80 +3.67 +7.7 ... .87 -.02 -84.9 dd 29.08 +.07 -20.3 ... 2.42 -.11 -46.6 dd 11.55 -1.27 -37.6 dd .20 -.02 -3.8 13 199.17 +11.67 +2.8 dd .67 +.07 -84.9 3 32.98 +.14 +15.4 19 25.13 +.13 -60.2 dd 16.11 -.17 -30.0 dd 22.87 +.19 -17.1 19 14.04 -.12 +3.1 17 17.00 +1.11 +51.8 ... .06 -.00 -97.4 19 25.74 -1.76 -9.4 13 17.42 -1.12 -15.0 16 21.93 +1.42 -11.5 6 36.87 -.97 -31.4 ... 35.02 +.21 +3.0 25 2.73 -.98 -66.9 57 25.19 +1.21 -30.6 ... 9.29 +.14 -10.3 ... 29.07 -.07 -14.7 q 79.33 +.63 -0.9 dd 30.33 -.14 -27.3

HCA Hldg ... HCP Inc 2.26 HD Supply ... HMS Hldgs ... HP Inc ... HSBC 2.50e HSN Inc 1.40a HainCeles s ... HalconRes ... Hallibrtn .72 Halozyme ... Hanesbds s .40 HarleyD 1.24 HarmonyG ... HarrisCorp 2.00 HartfdFn .84f Hasbro 1.84 HatterasF 1.80m HawHold ... Headwatrs ... HlthcrRlty 1.20 HlthcreT rs 1.18f HlthSouth .92f HeclaM .01e HelixEn ... HelmPayne 2.75 Herbalife ... Hershey 2.33 Hertz ... Hess 1.00 HP Ent n ... Hi-Crush ... Hilton .28 HimaxTch .30e HollyFront 1.32 Hologic ... HomeDp 2.36 HomeAway ... HonwllIntl 2.38f HorizPhm ... Hormel 1.00 Hornbeck ... HorsehdH ... Hortonwk n ... HospPT 2.00 HostHotls .80a HoughMH ... HovnanE ... Humana 1.16 HuntJB .84 HuntBncsh .28f Huntsmn .50 HutchT ...

13 69.97 +1.18 -4.7 67 33.97 -2.66 -22.8 ... 30.54 +.75 +3.6 75 11.32 +.79 -46.5 ... 14.01 +1.77 -23.1 ... 39.86 +.79 -15.6 16 54.16 -7.69 -18.3 27 45.90 -3.95 -21.3 dd .77 +.06 -57.0 49 39.35 +.97 +0.1 dd 18.59 +2.94 +92.6 33 32.80 +.86 +17.5 13 49.16 -.29 -25.4 ... .67 -.01 -64.6 23 79.58 +.45 +10.8 12 47.60 +1.34 +14.2 22 78.24 +1.41 +42.3 dd 14.12 -.19 -23.4 15 38.07 +3.37 +46.1 dd 18.75 -1.80 +25.1 43 25.59 -.77 -6.3 72 24.61 -1.70 -8.6 20 35.54 +.71 -7.6 64 1.91 -.16 -31.5 20 6.48 +.70 -70.1 10 58.95 +2.68 -12.6 17 55.06 -.98 +46.0 22 86.16 -2.53 -17.1 dd 18.81 -.69 -24.6 dd 62.76 +6.55 -15.0 ... 14.40 -.32 -13.0 7 8.37 +2.59 -73.0 37 25.64 +.65 -1.7 22 6.25 +.33 -22.5 10 50.54 +1.57 +34.8 88 40.26 +1.40 +50.6 25 125.98 +2.34 +20.0 cc 37.30 +5.74 +25.3 18 104.00 +.72 +4.1 cc 21.00 +5.28 +62.9 28 66.63 -.92 +27.9 6 14.13 +.62 -43.4 dd 2.86 +.02 -81.9 dd 18.15 -1.31 -32.8 15 27.06 +.22 -12.7 21 17.48 +.15 -26.5 dd 18.15 -1.44 -12.4 1 1.91 -.15 -53.8 26 177.24 -1.39 +23.4 21 76.58 +.42 -9.1 14 11.65 +.68 +10.7 30 13.41 +.24 -41.1 dd 3.67 +1.92 +4.9

IAC Inter 1.36 IAMGld g ... ICICI Bk s .16e IMS Hlth ... ING .14e ION Geoph ... iShGold ... iSAstla 1.23e iShBrazil 1.03e iShCanada .60e iShEMU .95e iShGerm .51e iSh HK .49e iShItaly .37e iShJapan .13e iSh SKor .66e iSMalasia .44e iShMexico .93e iShSing .43e iShSpain 1.62e iSTaiwn .29e iShSilver ...

27 dd ... 20 ... dd q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q

H

I 66.40 -.61 +9.2 1.47 -.33 -45.6 8.19 -.43 -29.1 27.72 +.50 +8.1 14.80 +.33 +14.1 .37 -.00 -86.7 10.50 -.52 -8.2 18.64 -.28 -15.9 24.10 +1.23 -34.1 23.52 -.28 -18.5 36.83 -.02 +1.4 26.92 -.19 -1.8 20.63 +.12 +0.4 14.60 -.21 +7.4 12.40 +.08 +10.3 54.19 -.19 -2.0 10.42 +.13 -22.7 54.53 -.19 -8.2 11.07 -.05 -15.4 31.30 -.15 -9.6 14.21 +.31 -6.0 14.08 -.72 -6.5 Continued on next page


Money & Markets

The Indiana Gazette

Sunday, November 8, 2015 — D-3

Weekly Stock Winners and Losers

COMPANY

TICKER

Qorvo Inc

QRVO

Ralph Lauren Corp

RL

Alnylam Pharmaceutic ALNY

FRIDAY CLOSE

$CHG 1WK

15 BEST SMALL-CAP STOCKS

15 BEST MID-CAP STOCKS

15 BEST LARGE-CAP STOCKS %CHG 1WK

%CHG 1MO

%RTN 1YR COMPANY

TICKER

FRIDAY CLOSE

$CHG 1WK

%CHG 1WK

%CHG 1MO

%RTN 1YR COMPANY

55.55

+11.62

+26.5

+21.7

...

Weight Watchers

WTW

22.89

+7.51

+48.8

+231.7

-33.0

137.24

+26.47

+23.9

+13.9

-19.6

NantKwest Inc

NK

17.19

+5.29

+44.5

+31.3

...

101.53

+15.58

+18.1

+22.1

+12.2

Amicus Therapeutics

FOLD

10.67

+3.17

+42.3

+40.8

+76.0

TICKER

FRIDAY CLOSE

$CHG 1WK

%CHG 1WK

%CHG 1MO

%RTN 1YR -68.1

Constellium NV

CSTM

8.19

+4.42 +117.2

+29.0

Hutchinson Tech

HTCH

3.67

+1.92 +109.7

+86.3

+3.7

9.02

+3.33

+13.2

-82.7

Bonanza Creek Energy BCEI

+58.5

Autodesk Inc

ADSK

63.88

+8.69

+15.7

+23.9

+8.9

Stamps.com Inc

STMP

104.93

+29.32

+38.8

+42.1 +104.6

Emerge Energy Svcs

EMES

6.79

+2.50

+58.3

-22.2

-87.5

HP Inc

HPQ

14.01

+1.77

+14.5

+5.3

-10.4

Lexicon Pharma

LXRX

13.04

+3.53

+37.1

+12.5

+3.8

ChannelAdvisor Corp

ECOM

13.18

+4.46

+51.1

+32.7

-25.2

KKR & Co L.P.

KKR

18.99

+1.84

+10.7

+1.7

-3.8

ZS Pharma Inc

ZSPH

89.04

+24.03

+37.0

+33.1

+77.0

Lantheus Holdings

LNTH

4.45

+1.45

+48.3

+22.6

...

Michael Kors Hldgs

KORS

43.48

+4.84

+12.5

+2.1

-39.9

Horizon Pharma plc

HZNP

21.00

+5.28

+33.6

+7.6

+39.6

Hi-Crush Ptrs LP

HCLP

8.37

+2.59

+44.8

-7.2

-74.1

Tesla Motors Inc

TSLA

232.36

+25.43

+12.3

+5.3

+0.3

Axovant Sciences

AXON

16.03

+3.84

+31.5

+17.8

...

Regulus Therapeutics

RGLS

9.61

+2.96

+44.5

+40.1

-53.4

Devon Energy

DVN

46.87

+4.94

+11.8

+3.6

-21.3

MedAssets Inc

MDAS

30.92

+7.24

+30.6

+39.0

+47.1

Fibrocell Science

FCSC

5.50

+1.68

+44.0

+31.6

+77.2

+35.6

+45.7

Immune Design Corp

IMDZ

18.44

+5.44

+41.8

+50.7

-47.4

BioScrip Inc

BIOS

2.75

+0.78

+39.6

+50.3

-56.7

TrueCar Inc

TRUE

8.43

+2.29

+37.3

+31.7

-63.1

Hess Corp

HES

62.76

+6.55

+11.7

+1.4

-24.0

Paylocity Hldg

PCTY

43.37

+9.80

+29.2

Skyworks Solution

SWKS

85.99

+8.75

+11.3

+8.2

+32.9

Builders FirstSource

BLDR

15.25

+3.43

+29.0

Nvidia Corporation

NVDA

31.55

+3.18

+11.2

+21.0

+39.5

Achillion Pharm

ACHN

10.05

+2.23

+28.5

+32.8

-11.4

Synchrony Financial

SYF

33.98

+3.22

+10.5

+4.9

+18.7

BofI Holding Inc

BOFI

101.98

+21.97

+27.5

-27.7

+26.9

Five9 Inc

FIVN

5.92

+1.59

+36.7

+46.9

+38.6

Monster Beverage

MNST

150.24

+13.92

+10.2

+9.3

+33.3

WPX Energy Inc

WPX

8.69

+1.83

+26.7

-2.2

-52.0

Unit Corp

UNT

17.11

+4.50

+35.7

-4.3

-63.6

Schwab Corp

SCHW

33.51

+2.99

+9.8

+18.7

+10.5

Acceleron Pharma

XLRN

39.49

+8.28

+26.5

+64.0

+13.6

Genocea Bioscience

GNCA

6.46

+1.67

+34.9

+7.8

-33.2

-29.1

+6.5 +107.8

10 WORST MID-CAP STOCKS

10 WORST LARGE-CAP STOCKS

10 WORST SMALL-CAP STOCKS

Incyte Corp

INCY

100.21

-17.32

-14.7

-4.6

+72.4

Mens Wearhouse

MW

22.70

-17.28

-43.2

-48.0

-9.7

Straight Path Comm

STRP

12.79

-18.21

-58.7

-67.9

Valeant Pharma

VRX

81.77

-12.00

-12.8

-53.5

-40.3

Marcus & Millichap

MMI

30.73

-12.84

-29.5

-36.5

+27.1

Iconix Brand Group

ICON

6.90

-8.42

-55.0

-55.9

-59.4

Plains All Am Pipe

PAA

28.44

-3.28

-10.3

-15.3

-42.4

Groupon Inc

GRPN

2.73

-0.98

-26.4

-29.4

-61.8

LSB Industries

LXU

9.08

-6.57

-42.0

-49.7

-54.9

35.51

-12.33

-25.8

-29.6

-29.5

EnerNOC Inc

ENOC

4.70

-3.14

-40.1

-51.3

-66.5

3.19

-0.84

-20.8

-22.9

-67.0

Wi-LAN Inc

WILN

1.17

-0.69

-37.1

-41.2

-58.4

Qualcomm Inc

QCOM

53.42

-6.00

-10.1

-7.5

-31.5

Royal Gold

RGLD

Newmont Mining

NEM

17.54

-1.92

-9.9

-7.3

-1.3

Avon Products

AVP

Goldcorp Inc

GG

11.55

-1.27

-9.9

-20.2

-28.9

PRA Group Inc

PRAA

45.00

-9.80

-17.9

-17.8

-19.5

Enova Intl Inc

ENVA

9.04

-3.96

-30.5

-26.0

-70.4

Cerner Corp

CERN

60.17

-6.12

-9.2

-6.1

-3.0

Plains GP Hldgs LP

PAGP

12.82

-2.73

-17.6

-32.6

-50.8

Aspen Aerogels Inc

ASPN

6.09

-2.28

-27.2

-26.6

-19.8

SBA Communications

SBAC

108.45

-10.57

-8.9

-1.6

-0.6

Papa Johns

PZZA

57.64

-12.53

-17.9

-15.6

+21.9

Navios Maritime

NMM

5.53

-1.91

-25.7

-36.8

-52.4

Enbridge Inc

ENB

38.90

-3.79

-8.9

-8.9

-9.1

AVG Technologies

AVG

19.58

-4.12

-17.4

-16.9

+13.8

Core Molding Tech

CMT

15.00

-5.04

-25.1

-25.9

+15.5

Freeport McMoRan

FCX

10.75

-1.02

-8.7

-20.3

-55.6

Yamana Gold Inc

AUY

1.82

-0.37

-16.9

-26.9

-42.1

Titan Intl

TWI

5.33

-1.77

-24.9

-30.9

-32.7

Note: Stocks classified by market capitalization, the product of the current stock price and total shares outstanding. Ranges are $100 million to $1 billion (small); $1 billion to $8 billion (mid); greater than $8 billion (large).

Local Stocks Stock indexes were mixed Friday after a strong October jobs report. Employers added 271,000 jobs, the most in 10 months and far more than expected. The gain could encourage the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates in Weight Watchers WTW BHP Billiton Close: $22.89 5.96 or 35.2% The weight-loss program operator reported better-than-expected third-quarter profit and revenue and boosted its revenue outlook. $30 20

Close: $30.75 -1.69 or -5.2% The mining operator shares slid as more details emerged about a deadly disaster at a mine co-owned by the company in Brazil. $40 35

10 0

December after nearly seven years of near-zero rates. Bank rose stocks on the prospect that they’ll be able to charge more for lending, and dividend-paying stocks like utilities sank. Bond prices fell, sending yields higher. BHP DreamWorks SKG DWA

A

$3.67

S O N 52-week range $29.70

Vol.: 21.7m (5.0x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $1.31 b

PE: 28.6 Yield: ...

TripAdvisor

TRIP

Close: $77.42 -5.69 or -6.8% The travel website operator reported worse-than-expected third-quarter profit and revenue along with higher costs and expenses. $90

30

Close: $23.18 2.97 or 14.7% The animation studio reported third-quarter results and revenue that beat Wall Street’s expectations.

A

$30.15

S O N 52-week range $60.33

15

Vol.: 3.2m (4.1x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $1.81 b

Kraft Heinz

Nvidia

KHC

Close: $72.01 -3.41 or -4.5% The maker of Oscar Mayer meats, Jell-O pudding and Velveeta Cheese reported worse-than-expected third-quarter earnings. $90 70

25

60

Last

Wk YTD Chg %Chg

Continued from previous page iShSelDiv 2.52e q 76.44 iShAsiaexJ .99e q 57.18 iShChinaLC .76e q 38.95 iSCorSP5004.38e q 211.24 iShUSAgBd2.71e q 108.25 iShEMkts .84e q 35.30 iShACWX 1.15e q 41.55 iShiBoxIG 3.97 q 114.75 iSh ACWI 1.21e q 58.38 iSEafeSC 1.24e q 49.98 iShEMBd 5.31e q 108.19 iShIndones .38e q 21.13 iSSP500Gr1.97e q 118.95 iSh20 yrT 3.19 q 119.00 iSh7-10yTB 1.96 q 105.37 iSh1-3yTB .49 q 84.56 iS Eafe 1.70e q 60.94 iShIntlRE 1.09e q 28.50 iSCorSPMid1.88e q 146.20 iShiBxHYB 4.73 q 84.54 iShMtgRE 1.57e q 9.91 iShNsdqBio .06e q 330.24 iShIndia bt .24e q 28.09 iSR1KVal 2.35e q 101.58 iSR1KGr 1.35e q 101.97 iSRus1K 2.14e q 116.89 iSR2KVal 1.99e q 97.98 iSh1-3CrBd 1.30 q 104.97 iShR2K 1.68e q 119.22 iSh3-7yTrB 1.76 q 122.63 iShUSPfd 2.35e q 38.99 iSUSAMinV .82e q 41.79 iShREst 2.61e q 73.98 iShHmCnst .09e q 27.19 iShCrSPSm1.59e q 116.35 iShCorEafe1.55e q 56.03 iStar ... dd 12.52 ITC Holdg .75f 16 31.28 IconixBr ... 3 6.90 IderaPhm ... dd 3.36 ITW 2.20 18 92.62 Illumina ... 45 155.84 Imax Corp ... 52 39.17 ImunoGn ... dd 12.75 Imunmd ... dd 3.01 ImpaxLabs ... cc 35.84 Incyte ... dd 100.21 Infinera ... 61 20.88 InfinityPh ... dd 8.95 InfoSonic h ... 57 1.70 Infosys s .62e 12 17.90 IngerRd 1.16 24 60.05 IngrmM .40 26 30.90 InovioPhm ... dd 6.73 Insulet ... dd 36.09 InsysTher s ... 42 27.39 IntgDv ... 29 26.39 Intel .96 14 33.84 InterXion ... ... 30.42 IBM 5.20 9 138.25 IntPap 1.76f 17 42.55 Interpublic .48 18 22.82 IntersENT ... dd 17.07 Intersil .48 cc 14.19 IntPotash ... 97 3.86 Intrexon ... dd 39.00 Intuit 1.20f 41 98.28 InvenSense ... cc 12.53 Invesco 1.08 14 34.10 InvMtgCap1.60m 19 12.51 InvestBncp .20 25 12.86 IridiumCm ... 7 8.11 IronMtn 1.94f 30 30.29 IronwdPh ... dd 11.48 iSh UK .70e q 17.17 iShCorEM 1.09e q 42.84 iShCHEmu .69e q 27.62 iShCHGer 1.29e q 25.61 iSCHeafe .70e q 26.75 Isis ... cc 55.87 ItauUnibH .40e ... 7.49 Ixia ... ... 13.95

-.43 -3.7 +.69 -6.2 +.68 -6.4 +2.19 +2.1 -1.20 -1.7 +.43 -10.2 -.06 -3.4 -1.67 -3.9 +.31 -0.2 -.14 +7.0 -.31 -1.4 +.98 -23.0 +.96 +6.6 -3.78 -5.5 -1.65 -0.6 -.27 +0.1 -.17 +0.2 -.85 -5.1 +1.99 +1.0 -1.03 -5.6 -.02 -15.4 +4.78 +8.9 -.39 -6.2 +1.29 -2.7 +.88 +6.7 +1.16 +2.0 +2.91 -3.6 -.29 -0.2 +3.88 -0.3 -1.28 +0.3 -.27 -1.1 -.17 +3.2 -1.38 -3.7 unc +5.1 +3.30 +2.0 -.15 +1.3 -.42 -8.3 -1.44 -22.6 -8.42 -79.6 +.60 -23.8 +.68 -2.2 +12.56 -15.6 +.78 +26.8 +1.05 +109.0 +.02 -37.3 +1.21 +13.1 -17.32 +37.1 +1.12 +41.8 -1.40 -47.0 +.55 +56.0 -.26 -43.1 +.79 -5.3 +1.22 +11.8 +.40 -26.7 +6.19 -21.6 +1.63 +29.9 +.89 +34.6 +.22 -6.8 +1.04 +11.3 -.53 -13.8 -.14 -20.6 -.11 +9.9 -2.09 -8.0 +.64 -1.9 unc -72.2 +5.40 +46.9 +.85 +6.6 +.61 -22.9 +.93 -13.7 +.46 -19.1 +.40 +14.6 -.10 -16.8 -.35 -21.7 +.12 -25.1 -.30 -4.8 +.50 -8.9 +.60 +12.2 +.43 +8.8 +.47 +6.3 +7.72 -9.5 +.65 -36.6 -.46 +24.0

Name

Div

PE

J JD.com JPMorgCh JPMAlerian Jabil JanusCap Jarden s JetBlue JohnJn JohnsnCtl JoyGlbl Jumei Intl JnprNtwk JunoTher n

... 1.76 2.29 .32 .36 ... ... 3.00 1.04 .80 ... .40 ...

dd 29.70 12 68.46 q 32.87 17 24.24 17 16.01 43 48.30 16 26.09 18 101.92 19 45.24 7 17.73 25 10.20 dd 31.71 ... 49.69

KAR Auct KB Home KBR Inc

1.08 .10 .32

23 15 dd

+2.08 +4.21 -.33 +1.26 +.57 +3.50 +1.25 +.89 +.06 +.55 +.20 +.32 -2.07

+28.3 +10.1 -28.5 +11.0 -0.7 +0.9 +64.5 -2.5 -6.4 -61.9 -25.1 +42.1 -4.8

K 37.02 13.27 18.96

-1.38 +6.8 +.20 -19.8 +.52 +11.9

J

A S 52-week range

$61.42

O $81.20

Vol.: 8.8m (2.3x avg.) PE: 36.9 Mkt. Cap: $87.34 b Yield: 3.1%

Name Div KKR 1.58e KLA Tnc 2.08 KandiTech ... KC Southn 1.32 KapStoneP .40 KateSpade ... Kellogg 2.00 Kennamtl .80 KeryxBio ... KeurigGM 1.15 KeyEngy ... Keycorp .30 KimbClk 3.52 Kimco 1.02f KindMorg 2.04f KindrM wt ... KindredHlt .48 KingDEnt 1.40e Kinross g ... KitePharm ... KnightTr .24 Knowles ... Kohls 1.80 KosmosEn ... KraftHnz n 2.30f KratosDef ... Kroger s .42f

Wk YTD PE Last Chg %Chg 19 18.99 +2.19 -18.2 26 66.85 -.27 -4.9 17 10.79 +1.38 -23.0 20 87.65 +4.89 -28.2 15 22.81 +1.06 -22.2 32 21.04 +3.07 -34.3 66 67.93 -2.59 +3.8 dd 28.82 +.90 -19.5 dd 5.22 +.74 -63.1 15 52.68 +1.93 -60.2 dd .56 +.04 -66.5 13 13.39 +.97 -3.7 63 118.58 -1.13 +2.6 21 26.15 -.62 +4.0 49 26.06 -1.29 -38.4 ... .45 -.16 -89.5 dd 13.05 -.35 -28.2 10 17.81 +2.85 +16.0 dd 1.77 -.24 -37.2 dd 73.77 +5.72 +27.9 18 27.54 +2.12 -18.2 dd 17.84 +1.18 -24.2 11 46.57 +.45 -23.7 dd 7.66 +.84 -8.7 ... 72.01 -5.96 -1.3 14 4.88 -.11 -2.8 19 37.57 -.23 +17.0

L Brands 2.00a L-3 Com 2.60 LKQ Corp ... LPL Fincl 1.00 LSB Inds ... LaQuinta ... LabCp ... LamResrch 1.20 LamarAdv 2.76 Lannett ... LaredoPet ... LVSands 2.60 LaSalleH 1.80 Lattice ... Lazard 1.40 LearCorp 1.00 LeggMason .80 LeggPlat 1.28 LendingC n ... LennarA .16 LeucNatl .25 Level3 ... LexiPhm rs ... LexRltyTr .68 LibtyGlobA ... LibtyGlobC ... LibtMda A ... LibtyMdaC ... LibQVC A ... LifeLock ... LincEdSv .08 LincNat 1.00f LinearTch 1.20 LinkedIn ... LinnEngy ... LinnCo ... LionsGt g .36f LiveNatn ... LloydBkg ... LockhdM 6.60f Loews .25 LaPac ... Lowes 1.12 lululemn gs ... LumberLiq ... LyonBas A 3.12

27 17 22 23 57 54 18 16 14 9 dd 18 27 dd 10 13 16 25 cc 15 30 ... dd 28 dd ... cc ... 20 dd dd 11 22 dd dd dd 33 dd ... 19 20 dd 25 27 dd 10

M&T Bk 2.80 MBIA ... MDU Res .73 MEI Phrm ... MFA Fncl .80 MGIC Inv ... MGM Rsts ... MRC Glbl ... MSCI Inc .88f MSG Netw ... Macerich 2.72a MackCali .60 Macys 1.44 MadCatz g ... MagellMid 3.05f Magna g s .88 MagHRes ... Mallinckdt ... Manitowoc .08 MannKd ... Manulife g .68 MarathnO .20m MarathPt s 1.28 MVJrGold ... MktVGold .12e MV OilSvc .86e MV Semi .63e

17 123.66 +3.81 -1.6 14 8.28 +.77 -13.2 dd 18.48 -.38 -21.4 dd 1.79 unc -58.1 9 6.81 -.11 -14.8 11 9.61 +.21 +3.1 dd 23.84 +.65 +11.5 18 14.60 +2.70 -3.6 36 67.79 +.79 +42.9 ... 20.92 +.40 -8.1 8 84.09 -.65 +0.8 13 21.97 +.21 +16.2 12 48.90 -2.08 -25.6 9 .45 -.22 +5.9 19 67.09 +3.28 -18.8 10 48.25 -4.48 -11.2 dd .28 +.02 -91.0 ... 69.89 +4.22 -29.4 56 16.16 +.86 -26.9 dd 2.87 -.44 -45.0 ... 16.81 +.22 -11.9 cc 18.29 -.09 -35.3 9 55.97 +4.17 +24.0 q 18.90 -1.56 -21.0 q 13.46 -1.50 -26.8 q 31.55 +.98 -12.2 q 55.19 +.98 +1.0

L 96.88 122.09 30.08 44.72 9.08 15.03 121.76 76.90 58.11 37.77 12.05 49.78 30.08 4.98 47.94 123.46 45.46 46.26 14.70 48.52 19.47 50.86 13.04 8.82 46.13 44.20 40.49 39.10 26.75 14.43 1.32 56.95 44.98 250.64 2.55 2.46 39.37 26.47 4.49 216.63 37.80 17.51 73.14 51.06 16.71 96.18

+.90 +11.9 -4.31 -3.3 +.47 +7.0 +2.12 +0.4 -6.57 -71.1 -.12 -31.9 -.98 +12.8 +.31 -3.1 +1.68 +8.3 -7.00 -11.9 +.57 +16.4 +.27 -14.4 +.67 -25.7 +.40 -27.7 +1.62 -4.2 -1.60 +25.9 +.71 -14.8 +1.23 +8.6 +.52 -41.9 -1.55 +8.3 -.54 -13.2 -.09 +3.0 +3.53 +104.7 -.02 -19.7 +1.61 -8.1 +1.56 -8.5 -.27 +14.8 -.05 +11.6 -.62 -9.1 +.42 -22.0 +.38 -52.9 +3.44 -1.2 +.56 -1.4 +9.77 +9.1 +.01 -74.8 +.14 -76.3 +.40 +23.0 -.81 +1.4 -.09 -3.2 -3.20 +12.5 +1.34 -10.0 -.15 +5.7 -.69 +6.3 +1.89 -8.5 +2.89 -74.8 +3.27 +21.1

M

PE: ... Yield: ... NVDA

Close: $31.55 3.84 or 13.9% The maker of graphic chips and processors for phones and tablets reported better-than-expected third-quarter profit and revenue. $35

60

PE: 53.6 Yield: ...

S O N 52-week range $29.75

Vol.: 8.2m (2.5x avg.) PE: 9.6 Mkt. Cap: $81.81 b Yield: 8.1%

70

Vol.: 8.4m (3.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $10.16 b SOURCE: Sungard

A

$17.02

30

$62.24

Black Box

BBOX 11.67 1 24.91

Bon Ton Store

BONT

Buckeye Part

%RTN RANK %RTN 1YR 1YR 5YRS* PE Yld +15.73 1 10.8 16 1.5

12.41

0.20

1.6 t

t -48.1

—45.12

5 -16.9

...

3.5

9.23

3.13

-0.02

-0.6 t

t -57.8

—60.45

5 -20.7

...

6.4

BPL

52.91 5 85.14

66.00

-0.65

-1.0 t

t -12.8

—7.35

3

6.2

21

7.1

Calgon

CCC

14.70 2 23.20

15.94

-1.26

-7.3 t

s -23.3

—25.09

4

1.0

16

1.3

Fst Comwlth

FCF

9.93

9.77

0.65

7.1 s

s

6.0

+6.57

2

11.4

18

2.9

MSA Safety Inc

MSA

38.32 4 58.99

44.70

1.22

2.8 s

t -15.8

—19.57

4

11.4

20

2.9

Marathon Oil

MRO

14.03 2 35.78

18.29

-0.09

-0.5 t

t -35.3

—44.29

5

1.5 \>99

1.1

NiSource Inc

NI

14.87 9 19.85

18.96

-0.20

-1.0 t

s

16.7

+19.14

1

27.8

16

3.3

PNC Financial

PNC

81.84 8 100.52

95.20

4.94

5.5 s

t

4.4

+9.99

2

12.1

13

2.1

PPG Inds

PPG

82.93 6 118.95 103.00

-0.90

-0.9 s

t -10.9

+1.33

3

22.4

20

1.4

PulteGroup Inc

PHM

17.52 1 23.36

17.91

-0.42

-2.3 t

t -16.5

—6.99

3

18.7

14

1.8

Rex Amer Resources REX

43.50 5 76.29

58.99

4.08

7.4 s

s

-4.8

—19.03

4

28.0

7

...

S&T Bancorp

STBA 25.68 0 33.55

33.94

2.25

7.1 s

s

13.9

+26.77

1

11.9

17

2.2

US Steel Corp

X

9.66 1 39.83

10.91

-0.77

-6.6 t

t -59.2

—69.22

5 -24.5

...

1.8

Verizon Comm

VZ

38.06 6 51.73

45.78

-1.10

-2.3 s

t

3

18

4.9

2.89 1

7.76 0

20

80

S O N 52-week range $94.00

TICKER BK

$25

80

A

COMPANY Bk of NY Mellon

52-WK RANGE FRIDAY $CH %CHG %CHG LOW HIGH CLOSE 1WK 1WK 1MO 1QTR YTD 35.63 9 45.45 44.19 2.54 6.1 s t 8.9

20 $18.94

A

S O N 52-week range $31.94

Vol.: 29.3m (3.2x avg.) PE: 33.6 Mkt. Cap: $17.01 b Yield: 1.2% AP

Last 16.89 43.77 76.68 56.11 154.98 8.90 28.60 .42 17.79 101.50 26.07 24.62 40.56 17.36 5.39 113.31 98.67 183.75 .82 82.96 30.92 15.43 11.13 39.53 39.53 73.71 76.06 2.62 18.95 4.84 16.99 22.70 27.90 118.69 54.61 10.90 9.97 41.97 51.69 43.48 23.52 47.85 16.45 38.66 54.92 7.84 26.64 3.95 8.80 6.52 6.89 46.75 187.14 66.14 87.57 17.76 14.19 44.88 9.76 93.49 150.24 6.57 102.55 35.41 32.50 68.01 8.95 30.82 44.96 44.08

Wk YTD Chg %Chg +.18 +15.4 +1.02 -34.9 -.10 -1.7 +.37 -2.0 -.17 +40.5 +.69 -38.6 -.40 +28.5 -.02 -24.6 +1.02 -21.3 +2.51 +17.8 +.36 +28.9 +.04 -20.4 -.42 +27.3 +4.36 +134.3 +.78 +85.2 +1.06 +20.9 +6.03 +10.9 +4.95 -11.5 -.08 -26.1 +.96 -17.5 +7.24 +56.5 +.57 -7.8 -.17 -19.2 +5.29 +42.9 -2.53 -20.6 +3.24 +11.5 +2.14 +5.3 +.05 +71.2 +.22 -25.4 -.44 -66.8 -.70 -5.8 -17.28 -48.6 +.70 +27.3 +20.32 -7.0 -.05 -3.8 +.03 -28.1 +.63 -11.8 +2.04 -8.4 +1.69 -4.4 +4.84 -42.1 +.14 -4.9 -.44 +6.1 -.11 -53.0 +2.65 +36.2 +2.28 +18.2 +.56 -32.0 +2.66 +0.9 +.68 +19.3 +.97 -17.7 +.05 +17.9 -.14 -4.0 +1.23 +15.3 -8.36 +20.5 +4.14 +23.6 -.53 +17.5 +1.35 +47.5 +.76 +18.3 -1.28 +23.6 -.10 +5.4 +.27 -21.7 +13.92 +38.7 +.30 +42.2 +6.39 +7.0 +2.44 -8.7 -1.29 -28.8 -1.96 +1.4 +.17 -12.6 +2.39 -39.0 +.87 -20.2 +3.71 +29.4

Name Div MktVRus .64e MarkWest 3.72f MarIntA 1.00 MarshM 1.24 MartMM 1.60 MarvellT lf .24 Masco .38 MastThera ... Mastec ... MasterCrd .64 MatadorRs ... Mattel 1.52 MaximIntg 1.20 MaxLinear ... McDrmInt ... McDnlds 3.40 McGrwH 1.32 McKesson 1.12 McEwenM .01 MeadJohn 1.65 MedAssets ... MediaGen ... MedProp .88 MediCo ... Medivat s ... Mednax ... Medtrnic 1.52 MeetMe ... MelcoCrwn .10e MemorialP 1.20f MemResDv ... MensW .72 MentorGr .22 MercadoL .41 Merck 1.80 Meritor ... MerrimkP ... Methanx 1.10 MetLife 1.50 MKors ... Michaels ... Microchp 1.43f MicronT ... MicroSemi ... Microsoft 1.44f MiMedx ... MindrayM .40e MitekSys ... MitelNet g ... MitsuUFJ ... MobileTele .88e Mobileye ... Mohawk ... MolinaHlth ... MolsCoorB 1.64 Momenta ... Momo n ... Mondelez .68f MonogRs n .30 Monsanto 2.16f MonstrBev ... MonstrWw ... Moodys 1.36 MorgStan .60 Mosaic 1.10 MotrlaSolu 1.36 MuellerWat .08 MurphO 1.40 Mylan NV ... MyriadG ...

PE q dd 25 20 39 11 26 dd 81 30 20 28 cc dd dd 24 cc 24 dd 24 37 25 21 dd 27 21 32 15 34 dd dd 17 21 59 15 13 dd 16 12 10 21 24 7 29 37 44 18 ... 37 ... ... cc 24 24 36 dd ... 35 ... 20 53 dd 22 12 9 25 26 35 26 36

NCR Corp ... NQ Mobile ... NRG Egy .58 NRG Yld C .86f NXP Semi ... Nabors .24 NantKwst n ... Nasdaq 1.00 NBGreece ... NOilVarco 1.84 NatRetPrp 1.74 Nationstar ... Navient .64 Navios .24 NaviosMar .85m Navistar ... NektarTh ... NeoGenom ... NeoPhoton ... NetApp .72 NetEase 1.58e Netflix s ... Neurcrine ... NeuStar ... NwGold g ... NewLink ... NewOriEd .40e NewResid 1.84f NwSenInv n 1.04 NY CmtyB 1.00 NYMtgTr .96m NY REIT .46

cc 27.31 +.71 -6.3 dd 4.08 +.22 +4.3 dd 13.51 +.62 -49.9 91 16.46 +2.02 -32.8 ... 80.89 +2.54 +5.9 dd 10.36 +.32 -20.2 ... 17.19 +5.29 -50.4 27 58.24 +.35 +21.4 ... .66 -.12 -63.4 11 39.79 +2.15 -39.3 28 36.46 -1.54 -7.4 22 14.58 +1.31 -48.3 5 13.26 +.07 -38.6 dd 1.81 -.30 -56.0 10 5.53 -1.91 -45.6 dd 14.12 +1.82 -57.8 dd 12.88 +1.01 -16.9 dd 8.15 +1.10 +95.4 74 9.58 +1.31 +183.4 25 34.40 +.40 -17.0 23 146.82 +2.29 +48.1 cc 114.06 +5.68 +133.7 dd 53.49 +4.40 +139.4 8 25.47 -1.72 -8.4 dd 2.33 -.12 -45.8 10 33.92 -4.35 -14.7 24 28.76 +1.25 +40.9 10 12.85 +.72 +0.6 dd 9.55 -.47 -41.9 15 16.16 -.11 +1.0 5 5.59 -.09 -27.5 ... 11.60 +.24 +9.5

N

-2.1

—4.54

10.9

Notes on data: Total returns, shown for periods 1-year or greater, include dividend income and change in market price. Three-year and fiveyear returns annualized. Ellipses indicate data not available. Price-earnings ratio unavailable for closed-end funds and companies with net losses over prior four quarters. Rank classifies a stockʼs performance relative to all U.S.-listed shares, from top 20 percent (far-left box) to bottom 20 percent (far-right box).

Name Div NY Times .16 NewellRub .76 NewfldExp ... NewmtM .10 NewpkRes ... NewsCpA .20 NewsCpB .20 NextEraEn 3.08 NiSource s .62 Nielsen plc 1.12 NikeB 1.12 NimbleStg ... NobilisH n ... NobleCorp .60m NobleEngy .72 NokiaCp .16e NordicAm 1.38e Nordstrm 1.48a NorflkSo 2.36 NoAtlDrill ... NthStarAst .40 NthnO&G ... NthnTEn 3.80e NorTrst 1.44 NorthropG 3.20 NStREur n ... NStRFn rs 3.00 NorwCruis ... NovaGld g ... Novartis 2.82e Novavax ... NovoNord .76e NOW Inc ... NuSkin 1.40 NuanceCm ... Nucor 1.49 Nvidia .46f NxStageMd ...

Wk YTD PE Last Chg %Chg 45 13.63 +.35 +3.1 31 44.25 +1.82 +16.2 dd 39.37 -.82 +45.2 23 17.54 -1.92 -7.2 39 6.22 +.56 -34.8 dd 14.88 -.52 -5.2 17 15.14 -.34 +0.4 15 98.84 -3.82 -7.0 16 18.96 -.20 +16.7 37 48.05 +.54 +7.4 33 131.78 +.75 +37.1 dd 23.31 +.71 -15.2 ... 3.76 +.94 -51.7 dd 13.54 +.07 -18.3 cc 36.79 +.95 -22.4 ... 7.51 +.09 -4.5 32 15.14 -.14 +50.3 18 65.80 +.59 -17.1 14 79.87 +.43 -27.1 ... .78 -.04 -52.0 26 15.22 +.59 -32.6 2 5.55 +.51 -1.8 7 28.90 +2.06 +30.5 19 74.97 +4.58 +11.2 18 184.01 -3.74 +24.8 ... 11.97 +.02 -13.3 dd 20.85 +.81 -99.9 30 60.56 -3.06 +29.5 dd 3.27 -.35 +10.8 22 89.63 -.80 -3.3 dd 8.00 +1.25 +34.9 ... 54.92 +1.74 +29.8 dd 18.04 +1.53 -29.9 15 34.96 -3.25 -20.0 dd 17.70 +.73 +24.0 22 42.10 -.20 -14.2 25 31.55 +3.18 +57.4 dd 19.91 +3.20 +11.0

OGE Engy 1.10f OasisPet ... OcciPet 3.00 OceanRig ... Oceaneerg 1.08 Och-Ziff .87e Oclaro ... OcwenFn ... OfficeDpt ... Oi SA s ... OilStates ... OldRepub .74 Olin .80 OmegaHlt 2.24f Omnicom 2.00 OnSmcnd ... ONEOK 2.46f OneokPtrs 3.16 OpkoHlth ... Oracle .60 Orexigen ... OshkoshCp .76f OwensCorn .68 OwensIll ...

14 7 33 ... 14 10 dd dd dd ... 19 15 21 23 17 31 21 18 dd 19 dd 15 19 61

PBF Engy 1.20 PDC Engy ... PDL Bio .60 PG&E Cp 1.82 PGT Inc ... PHH Corp ... PMC Sra ... PNC 2.04 PPG s 1.44 PPL Corp 1.51f PRA Grp ... PTC Inc ... PTC Thera ... PVH Corp .15 Paccar .96 PacBiosci ... PacEthanol ... PaciraPhm ... PackAmer 2.20 PaloAltNet ... PanASlv .20m Pandora ... PapaJohns .70 ParagOffsh .50 ParkerHan 2.52 ParsleyEn ... PatternEn 1.49f PattUTI .40 Paychex 1.68 PaycomSft ... PayPal n ... PeabdyE rs ... Pearson .80e Pebblebrk 1.24 PengthE g .04m PennVa ... PennWst g ... Penney ...

6 35.51 +1.81 +33.3 31 57.78 -2.56 +40.0 2 4.08 -.50 -47.1 23 51.93 -1.47 -2.5 24 10.66 -1.40 +10.7 dd 17.55 +2.85 -26.8 cc 11.86 -.06 +29.5 13 95.20 +4.94 +4.4 20 103.00 -.90 -10.9 11 33.08 -1.32 -1.9 13 45.00 -9.80 -22.3 35 36.40 +.96 -0.7 dd 28.09 +3.22 -45.7 16 94.24 +3.29 -26.5 12 53.95 +1.30 -20.7 dd 7.35 +.25 -6.3 dd 5.26 -.75 -49.1 ... 56.88 +6.93 -35.8 12 67.02 -1.43 -14.1 dd 161.82 +.82 +32.0 dd 6.91 -.66 -24.9 dd 12.70 +1.19 -28.8 32 57.64 -12.35 +3.3 ... .23 -.01 -91.7 16 104.87 +.80 -18.7 dd 18.13 +.40 +13.6 dd 22.09 -1.30 -10.4 dd 16.17 +1.28 -2.5 27 52.80 +1.22 +14.4 cc 44.88 +6.87 +70.5 ... 36.24 +.23 -1.3 dd 14.59 +1.80 -87.4 ... 12.38 -.94 -32.9 42 35.46 +1.28 -22.3 dd .96 -.03 -69.1 dd .74 +.12 -88.9 ... 1.25 +.08 -39.9 dd 8.74 -.43 +34.9

O 26.07 12.99 75.10 2.09 44.28 6.80 3.35 7.27 7.73 .58 31.54 18.41 20.36 32.52 73.50 11.60 31.60 31.77 9.96 40.62 2.68 42.28 45.59 21.26

-2.44 +1.36 +.56 -.05 +2.26 -.20 +.42 +.28 +.11 -.01 +1.53 +.37 +1.38 -2.00 -1.42 +.60 -2.32 -.06 +.51 +1.78 -.36 +1.19 +.06 -.29

-26.5 -21.5 -6.8 -77.5 -24.7 -41.8 +88.2 -51.9 -9.9 -81.8 -35.5 +25.8 -10.6 -16.8 -5.1 +14.5 -36.5 -19.8 -0.3 -9.7 -55.8 -13.1 +27.3 -21.2

P

Last 15.37 57.26 16.79 15.01 26.54 99.72 1.12 162.25 4.12 5.06 33.93 86.37 27.19 92.75 8.19 20.21 41.83 61.54 2.90 144.10 21.27 28.44 12.82 11.89 2.76 40.29 13.85 30.19 20.44 14.92 25.83 22.95 38.26 14.80 27.94 114.79 113.58 230.65 4.14 76.93 2.02 51.95 41.87 22.17 20.48 82.59 66.64 16.92 68.72 124.27 68.30 25.77 21.47 12.00 63.19 26.25 75.57 7.80 32.01 19.25 28.80 46.08 35.87 17.95 30.20 31.13 7.47 87.69 38.66 17.91 17.62

Wk Chg +.75 +1.34 +.84 -.03 -.09 -2.47 unc +4.51 +.13 +.18 +.39 -2.03 +.25 +3.70 +.77 +1.22 -2.25 -1.97 +.59 +6.96 +.62 -3.28 -2.73 +1.45 +.35 -.45 +.07 +.62 +.21 -.28 +.58 -.05 -.10 -.01 -.09 +1.46 +2.49 -.16 +.24 +1.31 -.27 +1.79 -.86 -.34 -.22 +2.05 +1.34 -.77 +1.69 +4.62 +2.04 -2.44 -1.52 -.53 +2.34 +1.16 -.81 +.46 -1.12 -.42 -.77 +2.51 -2.52 -.70 -.99 -1.09 +.14 +5.19 -2.63 -.42 -.01

YTD %Chg -27.1 -13.8 +10.6 +52.9 -1.4 +5.5 -19.4 -2.9 -45.6 -30.7 +8.9 +6.0 -6.2 +29.4 -46.8 -27.0 +18.5 -9.9 -47.7 -3.2 -12.7 -44.6 -50.1 -48.8 -8.0 -5.8 +2.6 -11.3 -42.1 -19.1 +7.8 -4.5 +0.8 +0.7 -0.8 +11.2 -12.3 -4.2 -31.7 -10.4 -47.4 unc -2.7 -4.8 -6.0 +20.8 +3.9 -17.7 +9.5 +27.5 +3.0 -79.5 -58.6 -42.8 +3.3 +21.5 -17.0 +3.2 +18.6 -12.7 -27.1 -0.7 -9.4 -39.8 -20.6 -32.3 -9.6 -3.1 -6.6 -16.5 +10.1

Name Div PennyMac1.88m Pentair 1.28 PeopUtdF .67 PepBoy ... PepcoHold 1.08 PepsiCo 2.81 PeregrinP ... Perrigo .50 PetrbrsA ... Petrobras ... Pfizer 1.12 PhilipMor 4.08f PhilipsNV .91e Phillips66 2.24 Pier 1 .28 PilgrimsP 5.77e PinnaclFds 1.02f PinWst 2.50f PionEnSvc ... PioNtrl .08 PitnyBw .75 PlainsAAP 2.80f PlainsGP .92f PlatfmSpc ... PlugPowr h ... PlumCrk 1.76 Polycom ... Popular .60 Potash 1.52 PwshDB ... PS USDBull ... PS SrLoan .96 PS SP LwV .85 PwShPfd .84 PShEMSov 1.56 PwShs QQQ1.52e Praxair 2.86 PrecCastpt .12 PrecDrill .28 PriceTR 2.08a Primero g ... PrinFncl 1.52 ProLogis 1.60f ProShtDow ... ProShtS&P ... PrUltQQQ s .15e ProUltSP s .32e ProUShD30 ... PrUltBio s ... PrUltPQQQ .03e PUltSP500 s.15e PUVixST rs ... PrUCrude rs ... ProVixSTF ... ProShtVix ... ProUShEuro ... ProctGam 2.65 PrognicsPh ... ProgsvCp .69e ProUShSP ... PUShtQQQ ... ProUShL20 ... PUShtR2K ... PShtQQQ ... PUShtSPX ... ProUShBio ... ProspctCap 1.00 Prudentl 2.32 PSEG 1.56 PulteGrp .32 PureStrg n ...

PE 12 49 20 dd 30 30 dd 82 ... ... 26 17 ... 11 12 7 28 17 dd 28 11 17 11 dd dd 30 26 4 11 q q ... q q ... q 21 20 26 17 cc 13 19 q q q q q q q q q q q q q 27 cc 14 q q q q q q q 16 8 12 14 ...

QEP Res QIAGEN Qihoo360 QlikTech Qorvo n Qualcom QuantaSvc QntmDSS QstDiag Questar QuintTrn Qunar RLJ LodgT RPC RSP Perm Rackspace RadianGrp RadiusHlth RLauren Rambus Randgold RangeRs RaptorPhm Rayonier Raytheon Realogy RealPage RltyInco RedHat RegalEnt Regenrn

dd 15.89 +.43 -21.4 ... 25.11 +.94 +7.0 53 61.48 +4.39 +7.4 dd 32.94 +1.57 +6.6 11 55.55 +11.62 -21.1 17 53.42 -6.00 -28.1 11 20.85 +.74 -26.6 ... 1.04 +.20 -40.9 14 68.20 +.25 +1.7 15 19.04 -1.61 -24.7 22 66.09 +2.44 +12.3 ... 40.81 -7.73 +43.5 19 25.71 +.62 -23.3 17 12.46 +1.43 -4.4 66 26.96 -.46 +7.2 34 28.28 +2.43 -39.6 5 14.60 +.13 -12.7 dd 70.81 +6.58 +82.0 19 137.24 +26.47 -25.9 6 11.11 +.79 +0.2 27 59.74 -7.13 -11.4 21 34.41 +3.97 -35.6 dd 6.93 +1.48 -34.1 65 24.15 +1.50 -13.6 18 117.57 +.17 +8.7 33 42.18 +3.08 -5.2 60 20.34 +3.44 -7.4 43 47.47 -1.99 -0.5 76 81.02 +1.91 +17.2 21 19.90 +.52 -6.8 cc 562.00 +4.61 +37.0

Q-R .08 ... ... ... ... 1.92 ... ... 1.52 .84 ... ... 1.32 ... ... ... .01 ... 2.00 ... .60f .16 ... 1.00 2.68 ... ... 2.29 ... .88a ...

Name Div RegionsFn .24 RegulusTh ... Relypsa ... RentACt .96 Replgn ... ReprosTh ... RepubAir ... RepubSvc 1.20f RestBrds n .52f RetailProp .66 RetailMNot ... Retrophin ... RevanceTh ... RexEnergy ... RexahnPh ... Rexnord ... ReynAm s 1.44f RiceEngy ... RingCentrl ... RioTinto 2.27e RitchieBr .64f RiteAid ... RobtHalf .80 RockwlAut 2.60 RossStrs s .47 Rovi Corp ... Rowan .40 RoyalBk g 3.16f RylCarb 1.50f RoyDShllB 3.76 RoyDShllA 3.76 RoyGld .88 Rubicon g ... RuckusW ...

Wk YTD PE Last Chg %Chg 15 10.13 +.78 -4.1 dd 9.61 +2.96 -40.1 dd 18.87 +2.88 -38.7 14 18.31 -.08 -49.6 99 26.81 -6.43 +35.4 dd 1.78 +.07 -82.1 10 4.98 -.78 -65.9 26 44.07 +.33 +9.5 dd 36.09 -4.07 -7.6 25 14.66 -.31 -12.2 35 10.89 +2.10 -25.5 9 19.02 -.11 +55.4 dd 36.94 -2.23 +118.1 dd 2.46 +.20 -51.8 dd .45 +.00 -36.4 27 20.29 +1.81 -28.1 17 44.63 -3.69 +38.9 dd 16.04 +.78 -23.5 dd 20.46 +1.96 +37.1 ... 34.72 -1.79 -24.6 25 27.04 +1.07 +0.6 30 7.84 -.04 +4.3 20 52.80 +.14 -9.6 17 109.00 -.16 -2.0 21 50.40 -.18 +6.9 dd 10.09 +.94 -55.3 dd 20.29 +.61 -13.0 ... 57.61 +.78 -16.6 39 99.41 +1.06 +20.6 12 52.18 -.51 -25.0 12 52.13 -.33 -22.1 dd 35.51 -12.33 -43.4 ... .13 -.32 -86.8 cc 11.40 +.12 -5.2

SAP SE 1.19e SBA Com ... SCANA 2.18 SLM Cp ... SM Energy .10 SpdrDJIA 3.77e SpdrGold ... SpdrEuro501.18e SP Mid 3.01e S&P500ETF4.13e SpdrBiot s .44e SpdrHome .15e SpdrS&PBk .53e SpdrBarcCv3.48e SpdrShTHiY1.41 SpdrLehHY 2.12 SpdrLe1-3bll ... SpdrS&P RB.74e SpdrRetl s .49e SpdrOGEx .73e SpdrMetM .49e SPX Cp ... SS&C Tech .50 SABESP .11e SabraHltc 1.64f SabreCorp .36 StJude 1.16 Salesforce ... SallyBty ... SanchezEn ... SanDisk ... SandRdge ... SandstG g ... SangBio ... Sanmina ... Sanofi 1.62e SantCUSA ... SareptaTh ... Schlmbrg 2.00 SchwUSMkt .96e SchwIntEq .84e Schwab .24 SciGames ... ScorpioBlk ... ScorpioTk .50 ScrippsNet .92 SeadrillLtd ... SeagateT 2.52f SealAir .52 SeattGen ... SeaWorld .84 SelCmfrt ... SelMedHld ... SemGroup 1.80f SempraEn 2.80 SenHous 1.56 SensataT ... Sequenom ... ServiceCp .48f ServiceMst ... ServcNow ... SevSevEn ... ShakeShk n ... Sherwin 2.68 Shire .70e ShoreTel ...

... dd 11 14 dd q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q dd 90 ... 17 18 18 ... 15 dd 31 dd dd dd 5 ... 6 dd 27 q q 34 dd ... ... 14 3 7 43 dd 67 14 13 30 20 20 36 19 24 28 dd dd ... 26 ... dd

S 78.79 108.45 57.20 7.12 36.60 179.14 104.10 36.54 266.39 210.04 70.70 35.93 36.59 46.72 27.06 36.12 45.68 45.93 46.27 38.94 17.04 11.44 71.72 4.83 20.33 29.40 64.82 79.41 22.97 6.24 77.07 .41 2.67 7.95 24.69 46.60 18.46 24.88 79.06 50.66 29.03 33.51 11.99 1.30 9.06 59.04 6.84 38.81 47.82 43.02 18.14 24.67 12.57 39.49 100.92 14.52 48.31 1.74 27.07 34.48 85.24 1.39 49.99 267.23 216.03 9.89

+.08 -10.57 -2.02 +.06 +3.25 +2.65 -5.20 -.08 +3.68 +2.11 +4.07 +.19 +2.10 +.16 -.24 -.35 unc +3.10 +.38 +1.86 -.18 -.81 -2.43 +.44 -2.35 +.08 +1.01 +1.70 -.54 +.29 +.07 +.04 +.02 +.90 +4.02 -3.74 +.45 +.82 +.90 +.60 -.14 +3.07 +.90 -.10 -.06 -1.04 +.37 +1.38 -1.30 +1.53 -1.79 +3.47 +1.27 -6.06 -1.49 -.67 +.22 -.01 -1.19 -1.17 +3.59 +.25 +4.42 +.40 -11.02 +.45

+13.1 -2.1 -5.3 -30.1 -5.1 +0.7 -8.3 -0.9 +0.9 +2.2 +13.8 +5.3 +9.1 -0.4 -6.4 -6.4 -0.1 +12.9 -3.6 -18.6 -44.8 -47.1 +22.6 -23.2 -33.1 +45.0 -0.3 +33.9 -25.3 -32.8 -21.3 -77.3 -21.5 -47.7 +4.9 +2.2 -5.9 +71.9 -7.4 +1.7 +0.4 +11.0 -5.8 -34.0 +4.3 -21.6 -42.7 -41.6 +12.7 +33.9 +1.3 -8.7 -12.7 -42.3 -9.4 -34.3 -7.8 -53.0 +19.3 +28.8 +25.6 -74.3 +8.9 +1.6 +1.6 +34.6

Continued on next page


Money & Markets

D-4 — Sunday, November 8, 2015

The U.S. real estate market appears to have reached a stable plateau in recent months, aided by mortgage rates near historic lows and steady job gains that have reduced the unemployment rate to a healthy 5 percent. Yet first-time buyers remain scarce and relatively few properties are being listed for sale. Just 4.8 months’ supply of homes is available for would-be buyers, substantially below the 6 months’ supply associated with a truly healthy market. Meanwhile, rising home prices are pushing homes out of reach for some, particularly those in the 18-to-35 age group known as Millennials, who represent the next big segment of potential homebuyers. Gino Blefari, CEO of Irvine, California-based HSF Affiliates, which operates the real estate brokerage franchise

InsiderQ&A

Real estate’s challenges

Gino Blefari, CEO, HFS Affiliates Real esate brokerage networks

networks Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices, Prudential Real Estate and Real Living Real Estate, weighs in on how these and other trends affect real estate agents, buyers and sellers:

The Indiana Gazette

But then you have other markets where there’s not that same sense of urgency.

represented by a Realtor and it was exactly the same in 2014 as it was just before the Internet came in.

What’s the biggest challenge that your agents face in this market? In almost every single one of our markets, inventory, lack of homes to sell, is a huge, huge challenge. It’s just a market thing right now, there are just fewer homes for sale.

Are you doing anything specific to cater to Millennials? We have a briefing council that's made up of Millennials, and we meet with them on a regular basis. One of the things we're doing, and everybody is doing, is just educating Millennials where potentially it can be less expensive in certain areas to own than it is to rent.

What other housing trends are you seeing? Every market is somewhat unique. The Silicon Valley (California) market is still very hot, because it has record-low inventory. That’s the same with most of the coastal markets and most of the desirable areas.

How have things changed for real estate agents now that that most homebuyers begin their search online and use real estate sites to research the market? It hasn't really shifted much. If you go back to right before the Internet, 81 percent of homes that were sold or bought were

Do you anticipate more push-back on real estate agent commissions given how some real estate companies have been successful in wooing clients by offering lower fees? My whole career, the last 30 years, we’ve had the discounters there, and they’ll come and they’ll go and at certain times it’s more popular than when it isn’t. It’s just like anything else. We choose to be Nordstrom or Bloomingdale’s, as opposed to Wal-Mart. Both of them work, both of them have their niche. Interviewed by Alex Veiga. Answers edited for clarity and length. AP

TopWeeklyExchangeTradedFunds

Mutual Fund Categories “This is a fantastic jobs number at this point in the recovery, and we’re also finally seeing strong wage gains.” — Tara Sinclair, chief economist for job site Indeed as U.S. hiring roared back in October after two weak months

Interest Rates MIN INVEST

Money market mutual funds YIELD

PHONE

SMALL-CAP MID-CAP

LARGE-CAP

VALUE YTD 1YR 3YR 5YR YTD 1YR 3YR 5YR YTD 1YR 3YR 5YR

1.5 3.2 14.6 12.0 -0.4 1.3 14.3 11.4 -0.8 0.7 12.7 10.1

PRIME FED Taxable—national avg RATE FUNDS Meeder MMF/Retail FRIDAY 3.25 6 MOS AGO 3.25 1 YR AGO 3.25

0.01 0.08 $ 2,500 min (800) 325-3539 SPECIALTY FUNDS Conservative Allocation (CA) Moderate Allocation (MA) Tax-exempt—national avg 0.01 BlackRock Liquidity:MuniFund PrCl 0.02 $ 1 min (800) 821-7432 Health (SH) Natural Resources (SN) Real Estate (SR) Technology (ST) FRIDAY -------------- CHANGE -------------52-WEEK

.13 .13 .13

U.S. BOND INDEXES

YIELD

Broad market Lehman Triple-A corporate Moodyʼs Corp. Inv. Grade Lehman Municipal Bond Buyer U.S. high yield Barclays Treasury Barclays

2.47 4.05 3.49 7.41 4.38 1.66

1WK 0.08 0.01 0.06 -0.05 0.04 0.21

FRIDAY -------------YIELD 1WK

U.S. TREASURYS

1MO 3MO s s s t r s

s t s s s t

1YR 0.19 0.15 0.42 1.56 -0.01 -0.30

CHANGE -------------1MO 3MO 1YR

HIGH

LOW

2.48 4.33 3.55 8.20 4.49 2.13

1.92 3.29 2.78 5.82 4.09 1.24

52-WEEK HIGH LOW

3-month T-Bill

0.08

0.01

s

s

0.07

0.11

6-month T-Bill

0.30

0.07

s

s

0.24

0.30

0.03

52-week T-Bill

0.43

0.10

s

s

0.34

0.46

0.09

2-year T-Note

0.87

0.14

s

s

0.32

0.87

0.43

5-year T-Note

1.73

0.21

s

s

0.05

1.79

1.18

10-year T-Note

2.33

0.18

s

s

-0.06

2.48

1.64

30-year T-Bond

3.09

0.17

s

s

-0.01

3.24

2.22

Money fund data provided by iMoneyNet Inc.

Last

Wk YTD Chg %Chg

Continued from previous page Shutterstk ... 42 35.71 SibanyeG .40e ... 5.41 SiderurNac .14e ... 1.31 SierraWr ... 56 19.20 SilvStd g ... dd 5.66 SilvWhtn g .20e 24 12.53 SimonProp 6.40f 36 194.90 Sina ... 20 51.59 Sinclair .66 16 33.51 SiriusXM ... 41 4.10 Skechers s ... 18 29.27 SkywksSol 1.04 21 85.99 SolarCity ... dd 29.05 SolarEdg n ... ... 20.52 SolarWinds ... 49 58.17 SonicCorp .44f 24 28.56 Sonus rs ... dd 7.09 Sothebys .40 19 34.09 SouFun .20e 19 7.36 SouthnCo 2.17 16 43.59 SthnCopper .34e 21 26.95 SwstAirl .30 16 46.85 SwstnEngy ... dd 11.91 SpectraEn 1.48 21 27.96 SpectPh ... dd 5.25 SpiritAero ... 10 54.87 SpiritAir ... 9 36.56 SpiritRltC .68 33 9.76 Splunk ... dd 60.17 Sprint ... dd 4.53 Sprouts ... 31 24.04 SP Matls .96e q 45.33 SP HlthC .97e q 71.75 SP CnSt 1.26e q 49.18 SP Consum1.09e q 81.42 SP Engy 1.98e q 69.80 SPDR Fncl .44e q 24.73 SP Inds 1.12e q 54.86 SP Tech .78e q 44.34 SP Util 1.55e q 42.25 StanBlkDk 2.20 23 107.50 Staples .48 cc 13.20 Starbucks s .80f 34 61.97 StarwdHtl 1.50 23 77.75 StarwdPT 1.92 9 20.61 Starz A ... 13 34.80 StateStr 1.36 18 73.62 Statoil ASA .88e ... 16.23 StlDynam .55 41 18.35 StemCells h ... dd .45 Stericycle ... 42 125.88 Steris plc 1.00 27 75.46 SterlingBc .28 29 16.61 SMadden ... 19 33.73 StillwtrM ... dd 9.07 StoneEngy ... dd 7.24 StrPathCm ... ... 12.79 Stratasys ... dd 27.59 StratHotels ... 94 14.11 Stryker 1.38 32 97.60 SucampoPh ... 24 17.44 SumitMitsu ... ... 8.14 SumtMtls n ... ... 24.58 SunCmts 2.60 cc 63.75 SunCokeE .60 dd 4.88 Suncor g 1.16f ... 29.69 SunEdison ... dd 7.58 SunocoLog 1.83f cc 29.88 SunOpta ... 28 5.98 SunPower ... 74 28.74 SunstnHtl .20a 37 14.62 SunTrst .96 13 44.03 SupEnrgy .32 dd 15.70 Supernus ... 86 18.11 Supvalu ... 9 6.80 SwERCmTR ... ... 5.12 SwiftTrans ... 14 17.52 Symantec .60 21 20.57 Synchrony ... 13 33.98 SynchFn wi ... ... 33.29 SynrgyPh ... dd 6.25 SynergyRs ... 48 11.46 SynovusFn .40 21 33.39 SyntaPhm ... dd .65 SynthBiol ... dd 2.45 Sysco 1.20 25 40.93

+7.23 -48.3 -1.12 -28.5 +.08 -37.0 -5.72 -59.5 -1.24 +13.1 -1.06 -38.4 -6.56 +7.0 +3.95 +37.9 +3.50 +22.5 +.02 +17.1 -1.93 +58.9 +8.75 +18.3 -.60 -45.7 +2.03 -0.9 +.14 +16.7 +.13 +4.9 +.48 -64.3 -.56 -21.1 +.29 -0.4 -1.51 -11.2 -.77 -4.4 +.56 +10.7 +.87 -56.4 -.61 -23.0 +.04 -24.2 +2.13 +27.5 -.56 -51.6 -.42 -17.9 +4.01 +2.1 -.20 +9.2 +3.66 -29.3 +.05 -6.7 +.41 +4.9 -.70 +1.4 +.45 +12.8 +1.77 -11.8 +.65 unc +.59 -3.0 +.69 +7.2 -1.50 -10.5 +1.52 +11.9 +.21 -27.2 -.60 +51.1 -2.12 -4.1 +.52 -11.3 +1.29 +17.2 +4.62 -6.2 +.07 -7.8 -.12 -7.0 +.05 -52.6 +4.51 -4.0 +.51 +16.4 +1.29 +15.5 -1.12 +6.0 -.27 -38.5 +1.65 -57.1 -18.21 -32.5 +2.09 -66.8 +.01 +6.7 +1.98 +3.5 -1.92 +22.1 +.16 +11.8 +3.52 +17.2 -3.27 +5.4 -.08 -74.8 -.04 -6.6 +.28 -61.1 +1.30 -28.5 +.60 -49.5 +1.90 +11.3 +.16 -11.4 +2.51 +5.1 +1.54 -22.1 +1.61 +118.2 +.23 -29.9 -.11 -18.9 +1.89 -38.8 -.03 -19.8 +3.22 +14.2 unc +8.1 -.16 +104.9 +.27 -8.6 +1.76 +23.3 -.02 -75.5 +.16 +67.8 -.32 +3.1

Name

Div

PE

T T-MobileUS ... TAL Educ ... TCF Fncl .30f TD Ameritr .68f TE Connect 1.32 TECO .90 TIM Part .25e TJX .84 TableauA ... TahoeRes .24 TaiwSemi .73e TakeTwo ... TalenEn n ... TangerFac 1.14 Tangoe ... TargaRes 3.64f TargaRsLP 3.30f Target 2.24f TASER ... TataMotors ... TeamHlth ... TeckRes g .30m Teekay 2.20 TeekayTnk .12

65 39.11 +1.22 +45.2 44 38.03 -.42 +35.4 17 15.34 -.05 -3.5 25 37.26 +2.96 +4.1 13 66.55 +2.11 +5.2 45 26.96 -.04 +31.6 ... 11.31 +.20 -49.1 22 72.93 -.26 +6.3 dd 102.44 +18.48 +20.9 20 7.52 -.83 -45.8 ... 22.82 +.86 +2.0 dd 34.20 +1.00 +22.0 ... 8.78 +.10 -57.7 27 34.07 -.88 -7.8 dd 7.04 -1.24 -46.0 41 48.37 -8.78 -54.4 35 29.10 -.90 -39.2 dd 77.22 +.04 +1.7 56 20.19 -3.22 -23.8 ... 30.00 +.43 -29.0 35 59.00 -.67 +2.6 ... 5.39 -.48 -60.5 48 29.52 -2.61 -42.0 ... 7.15 -.49 +41.3

BALANCED Target-Date 2011-2015 (TD) Target-Date 2016-2020 (TE) Target-Date 2021-2025 (TG)

BLEND LV

MV

SV

GROWTH

1.5 3.2 14.6 12.0

LB

-0.8 0.8 13.6 11.0

MV

0.2 2.0 13.3 10.8

6.1 7.6 16.6 12.9 2.4 4.0 14.6 11.4

SB

2.1 4.9 14.5 11.8

PERCENT RETURN 1YR 3YR*

YTD

LG

MG

SG

5YR*

-0.53 0.45 6.93 -13.79 -0.31 7.47

-0.73 1.13 10.98 -18.91 3.19 10.36

4.10 8.51 26.65 -5.66 9.94 18.88

4.67 7.53 21.79 -3.04 9.96 11.82

0.27 0.12 0.73

0.27 0.32 0.96

5.25 5.73 7.80

5.27 5.60 7.05

-8.32 3.74 2.96 0.79 2.80 5.84 -0.29 -1.93 1.06

-11.78 3.31 2.30 -0.65 1.89 5.25 -2.39 -2.71 1.10

-2.35 8.66 8.30 6.13 7.24 9.38 5.75 4.57 10.27

-3.63 5.00 4.69 2.95 4.15 6.70 2.59 4.21 7.36

-0.01 0.37 2.23 -0.18 1.16 1.40 0.47

0.55 0.96 3.72 -2.28 1.86 2.59 0.39

1.39 0.72 3.17 3.25 1.96 2.53 0.60

2.93 1.87 5.16 4.94 3.43 4.37 1.37

INTERNATIONAL Divers. Emerging Mkt. (EM) Europe Stock (ES) Foreign Small/Mid Val (FA) Foreign Large Blend (FB) Foreign Large Growth (FG) Foreign Small/Mid Gr. (FR) Foreign Large Value (FV) World Allocation (IH) World Stock (WS) BOND FUNDS Interm-Term Bond (CI) Interm. Government (GI) High Yield Muni (HM) High Yield Bond (HY) Muni National Interm (MI) Muni National Long (ML) Muni Short (MS) *– Annualized

Last 27.04 10.57 13.01 25.27 35.34 28.83 19.99 21.74 18.57 232.36 113.69 7.95 11.05 60.19 57.63 33.78 15.25 41.98 6.82 9.11 134.30 40.14 10.18 159.26 4.30 11.37 81.91 17.41 188.09 68.86 .16 5.33 34.87 41.10 50.01 52.66 93.38 32.56 15.07 113.10 14.40 85.73 13.29 1.31 22.71 10.52 19.97 27.44 77.42 5.62 8.43 6.44 17.11 2.87 29.83 30.08 28.28 8.27 21.92 37.02 45.50

Wk Chg unc +.22 -.16 unc +3.97 +.72 +.47 +1.74 +.32 +25.43 +6.76 +1.21 +2.02 +1.00 +.91 -.57 -4.31 -.19 +.95 +.33 +3.52 -.88 +.12 +2.05 +.49 -.98 -.53 -1.17 -1.31 -6.48 -.05 -1.77 -1.10 +.08 +1.78 +.21 +.99 -1.03 -.76 +.21 +.85 +.09 +.31 +.11 -.04 +.33 +.99 +.37 -6.36 -.59 +2.29 +.21 +1.08 +.15 -.86 -.80 -.18 -.19 +.94 +.58 +1.14

YTD %Chg +5.9 -39.7 -8.4 -16.4 -30.3 -34.0 +1.0 -22.0 -39.9 +4.5 +52.9 +19.0 -72.2 +4.7 +7.8 +0.1 -55.6 -0.3 +53.3 -35.6 +7.2 -0.5 -69.0 -3.1 +35.2 -64.9 -23.3 -29.3 +23.7 -19.4 -83.4 -49.9 +1.8 -13.2 -2.3 +55.1 +18.5 -33.7 -17.8 +6.8 -20.0 +0.2 -12.9 -72.6 -14.4 +13.6 -36.2 -2.0 +3.7 -76.5 -63.2 -11.3 -27.9 -7.4 -22.3 -18.5 -21.2 -17.5 +11.5 -15.6 +13.5

Name Div Tegna .56 TelefBrasil 1.56e TelefEsp 1.03e Tenaris .75e TenetHlth ... Teradata ... Teradyn .24 Terex .24 TerraFmP 1.34f TeslaMot ... Tesoro 2.00f TetraTech ... Tetraphase ... TevaPhrm 1.36e TexInst 1.52 TexRdhse .68 Textainer .96m Textron .08 TherapMD ... Theravnce 1.00 ThermoFis .60 ThomsonR 1.34 3D Sys ... 3M Co 4.10 ThrshdPhm ... Tidwtr 1.00 Tiffany 1.60 Time Inc .76 TW Cable 3.00 TimeWarn 1.40 Timmins g ... Titan Intl .02 TollBros ... TorDBk gs 2.04 Total SA 2.81e TotalSys .40 TractSupp .80 TrCda g 2.08 Transocn .60 Travelers 2.44 Travelport .30 TreeHseF ... TriPointe ... TriangPet ... TrimbleN ... TrinaSolar ... TriNetGrp ... Trinity .44 TripAdvis ... Tronox 1.00 TrueCar ... TrstNY .26 TumiHldgs ... TurqHillRs ... 21stCFoxA .30 21stCFoxB .30 Twitter ... TwoHrbInv 1.04 2U ... TycoIntl .82 Tyson .40

PE 6 ... ... ... cc dd 57 11 dd dd 8 88 dd 20 21 26 5 17 dd dd 27 15 dd 21 dd dd 51 ... 28 16 dd dd 19 9 ... 27 31 13 dd 10 ... 33 15 dd 39 12 59 7 49 ... dd 15 19 29 8 8 dd 8 dd 39 14

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... 19.74 -.29 +15.8 30 34.08 -.38 +10.6 11 20.20 +2.14 -21.4 29 24.62 +1.05 -12.0 dd 7.09 -.04 -41.3 21 33.99 +4.81 +14.7 4 5.31 -.17 -59.7 18 17.85 +1.15 +4.9 99 96.01 +.93 +41.4 dd .98 -.08 -82.9 ... 44.44 -.54 +13.8 ... 43.38 -1.07 +7.2 dd .94 +.19 -72.0 15 85.98 -3.37 -27.8 dd 17.11 +4.50 -49.8 4 61.49 +1.18 -8.1 ... 1.95 +.10 -14.1 18 49.03 -1.42 -36.6 24 104.99 +1.97 -5.6 13 79.84 +4.98 -21.7 14 43.72 +1.54 -2.7 q 9.89 +.08 -33.0 q 14.23 -.58 -30.1 dd 10.91 -.77 -59.2 15 100.80 +2.39 -12.3 18 114.81 -2.97 +13.6 cc 40.55 +6.24 +46.1 25 36.09 +1.44 +3.5 17 29.39 +.79 -16.3

VF Corp 1.48 Vale SA .29e Vale SA pf .29e ValeantPh ... ValeroE 2.00f VlyNBcp .44 VandaPhm ... VangSTBd 1.07e VangTotBd 2.06e VangTSM 2.17e VangValu 2.05e VangSP5003.81e VangREIT 3.09e VangAllW 1.34e VangEmg 1.10e VangEur 1.71e VangNatR 1.41 VanSTCpB 1.69e VangFTSE 1.10e VanTIntBd .97

29 69.00 +1.48 -7.9 ... 4.14 -.22 -49.4 ... 3.49 -.11 -51.9 46 81.77 -12.00 -42.9 8 71.95 +6.03 +45.4 21 11.11 +.61 +14.4 8 9.77 -.97 -31.8 q 79.78 -.46 -0.2 q 80.90 -.89 -1.8 q 107.84 +1.31 +1.7 q 83.55 +.93 -1.1 q 192.56 +2.00 +2.2 q 78.22 -1.67 -3.4 q 45.38 -.10 -3.2 q 35.39 +.55 -11.6 q 51.72 -.36 -1.3 dd 7.65 -.24 -49.2 q 79.28 -.27 -0.4 q 37.93 -.11 +0.1 q 52.66 -.44 -0.8

U

V

Name Div Vantiv ... VarianMed ... VectorGp 1.60b VeevaSys ... Ventas 3.10r Verastem ... Vereit .55 VeriFone ... Verisign ... Verisk ... VerizonCm 2.26f VertxPh ... ViacomB 1.60 Viavi ... VimpelCm .04 ViolinMem ... Vipshop ... VirginAm n ... VirtualScp ... Visa s .56f VishayInt .24 Vivus ... VMware ... Vodafone 1.74e Vonage ... Vornado 2.52 VoyaFincl .04 VulcanM .40

Wk YTD PE Last Chg %Chg 52 51.44 +1.29 +51.7 20 80.88 +2.35 -6.5 43 23.74 -.51 +17.0 80 27.12 +1.75 +2.7 39 50.82 -2.90 -19.1 dd 2.13 +.29 -76.7 ... 8.25 -.01 -8.8 50 31.03 +.89 -16.6 32 82.51 +1.91 +44.8 23 70.12 -1.49 +9.5 18 45.78 -1.10 -2.1 dd 117.96 -6.78 -0.7 11 47.71 -1.60 -36.6 dd 6.53 +.58 -16.3 dd 3.52 -.26 -15.7 dd 1.60 -.01 -66.6 56 21.29 +.77 +9.0 11 38.36 +2.75 -11.3 dd 3.85 -.65 +21.4 31 78.75 +1.17 +20.1 16 11.89 +1.29 -16.0 dd 1.58 +.32 -45.1 27 59.49 -.66 -27.9 ... 32.66 -.31 -4.4 52 6.80 +.73 +78.5 19 96.48 -3.44 -18.0 13 41.91 +1.34 -1.1 77 102.15 +5.57 +55.4

W&T Off .40 WEC Engy 1.83 WP Glimch 1.00 WPX Engy ... Wabash ... Wabtec .32 WaferGen ... WalMart 1.96 WalgBoots 1.44 WsteMInc 1.54 Wayfair ... WeathfIntl ... WtWatch ... WeinRlt 1.38 Wellcare ... WellsFargo 1.50 Welltower 3.30 Wendys Co .24f WestarEn 1.44 WstAstMtg 2.61e WDigital 2.00 WstnRefin 1.52f WstnUnion .62 WestlkChm .73f WestRock n 1.50 Weyerhsr 1.24 Whrlpl 3.60 WhiteWave ... WhitingPet ... WholeFood .54f WmsCos 2.56f WillmsPtrs 3.40 WillisGp 1.24 Windstm rs .60 WT EurHdg3.51e WisdomTr .32a WTJpHedg5.54e WT India .22e WolvWW .24 Workday ... WrightMed ... Wyndham 1.68 Wynn 2.00

dd 3.71 +.45 -49.5 19 49.51 -2.05 -6.1 62 11.87 +.25 -31.1 dd 8.69 +1.83 -25.3 10 12.95 +.98 +4.8 19 77.60 -5.27 -10.7 dd .93 +.03 -69.0 12 58.78 +1.54 -31.6 26 84.67 -.01 +11.1 23 54.43 +.67 +6.1 ... 44.12 +1.85 +122.3 dd 11.15 +.91 -2.6 46 22.89 +7.51 -7.9 34 34.24 -1.52 -1.9 33 83.34 -5.26 +1.6 13 55.85 +2.07 +1.9 24 61.02 -3.02 -19.4 30 9.56 +.40 +5.9 18 38.88 -.82 -5.7 6 10.94 -.48 -25.6 12 67.89 +1.07 -38.7 8 46.71 +5.09 +23.6 12 19.86 +.61 +10.9 12 61.23 +.96 +0.2 ... 53.66 -.10 -15.3 29 30.40 +1.07 -15.3 18 156.45 -3.69 -19.2 46 41.47 +.49 +18.5 dd 18.95 +1.72 -42.6 21 31.11 +1.15 -38.3 69 37.98 -1.46 -15.5 72 34.50 +1.55 -32.4 23 44.14 -.47 -1.5 dd 6.36 -.15 -50.6 q 62.27 +1.49 +12.0 37 20.89 +1.99 +33.3 q 54.91 +1.62 +11.5 q 19.91 -.19 -9.7 14 19.23 +.66 -34.7 dd 82.18 +3.21 +0.7 dd 22.58 +3.25 -11.5 17 81.59 +.24 -4.9 39 73.99 +4.04 -50.3

W

X-Y-Z XL Grp .80 XOMA ... XPO Logis ... XcelEngy 1.28 XenoPort ... Xerox .28 Xilinx 1.24 Xylem .56 YPF Soc .14e YRC Wwde ... Yahoo ... Yamana g .06 Yandex ... Yelp ... YoukuTud ... YumBrnds 1.84f ZS Pharm ... Zendesk ... ZillowA s ... ZillowC n ... ZimmerBio .88 ZionsBcp .24 Ziopharm ... Zoetis .33 Zynga ...

9 37.60 -.48 +9.4 dd 1.23 +.01 -65.7 dd 33.50 +5.74 -18.1 18 34.86 -.77 -3.0 dd 6.54 +.43 -25.4 34 9.75 +.36 -29.7 22 47.63 +.32 +10.0 21 36.92 +.65 -3.0 ... 21.08 -.28 -20.4 20 17.55 -.71 -22.0 cc 34.20 -1.42 -32.3 dd 1.82 -.37 -54.7 ... 15.83 -.27 -11.9 59 25.50 +3.25 -53.4 dd 26.14 +1.80 +46.8 31 71.24 +.33 -2.2 dd 89.04 +24.03 +114.2 ... 22.96 +2.84 -5.8 dd 27.92 -2.89 -15.4 ... 25.48 -2.21 -8.1 95 107.28 +2.71 -5.4 27 30.69 +1.92 +7.6 dd 13.70 +2.31 +170.2 46 45.97 +3.04 +6.8 ... 2.57 +.20 -3.4

Stock Footnotes: cld - Issue has been called for redemption by company. d - New 52-week low. ec - Company formerly listed on the American Exchange's Emerging Company Marketplace. g - Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h - Does not meet continued-listing standards. lf - Late filing with SEC. n - Stock was a new issue in the last year. The 52-week high and low figures date only from the beginning of trading. pf - Preferred stock issue. pr - Preferences. pp - Holder owes installments of purchase price. rt - Right to buy security at a specified price. rs - Stock has undergone a reverse stock split of at least 50% within the past year. s - Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the last year. wi - Trades will be settled when the stock is issued. wd - When distributed. wt - Warrant, allowing a purchase of a stock. u - New 52-week high. un - Unit,, including more than one security. vj - Company in bankruptcy or receivership, or being reorganized under the bankruptcy law. Appears in front of the name. Dividend Footnotes: a - Extra dividends were paid, but are not included. b - Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e - Amount declared or paid in last 12 months. f Current annual rate, which was increased by most recent dividend announcement. i - Sum of dividends paid after stock split, no regular rate. j - Sum of dividends paid this year. Most recent dividend was omitted or deferred. k - Declared or paid this year, a cumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r Declared or paid in preceding 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distribution date. PE Footnotes: q - Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc - P/E exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last 12 months. Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.

FUNDS

TICKER

Dir Dly Gold Bear3x Direxion GoldMinBear Prsh Ulshrt Gold Min Direx Reg Banks Bull Dirx Dly NG Bull3x Direx Biotech Bull Prosh Ultshrt Jr Min Direx DlyBrazilBull CS Velocity3xInvSilv Direx S&P O&G Bull CS Velocity 3xInvGld Direx 300 China A ProShs UltRegBk Direx CuuHgdJpnBull ProShs Ult Brazil Barc iPath10yrTrBear CS VelSh 3xInvCrude ProShs UltSht Silver ETF BioSh Clinical Pro UltPro Russ2000 Direxion SCapBull 3x ProShs Ultra O&G Exp ProShs UltraSht Gold DB Gold DoubleShort MktV China AMC Barclays Invrs US Tr Direx 30YTr Bear 3x Barc iPathUSTrLgBear ProShs UltSht Cmdty FstTr Brazil Deutsche CSI 300 Ch DB 3x Sht UST ETN Alps Med Breakthroug PowShs China A-Share PwSh Crude DblSht PowSh KBW Reg Bank Mkt Vectors ChinaAMC ETF Loncar Cancer

DUST JDST GDXS DPST GASL LABU GDJS BRZU DSLV GUSH DGLD CHAU KRU HEGJ UBR DTYS DWTI ZSL BBC URTY TNA UOP GLL DZZ CNXT TAPR TMV DLBS CMD FBZ ASHX SBND SBIO CHNA DTO KBWR PEK CNCR

FRI 21.28 36.26 31.22 42.63 22.70 22.53 23.81 19.07 61.64 15.52 89.34 24.85 115.00 35.12 11.50 20.96 104.73 115.23 30.20 88.22 75.68 12.17 111.15 8.47 43.22 34.82 30.02 22.83 122.16 10.20 26.75 5.10 32.07 39.35 107.64 45.40 48.18 29.68

$CHG 1WK

1WK

+5.39 +7.20 +5.64 +7.23 +3.30 +3.28 +3.36 +2.65 +8.54 +2.08 +11.68 +3.22 +13.30 +3.79 +1.11 +2.01 +9.83 +10.84 +2.81 +8.26 +6.92 +1.11 +9.93 +0.73 +3.49 +2.82 +2.39 +1.83 +9.39 +0.78 +1.98 +0.38 +2.34 +2.82 +7.59 +3.16 +3.35 +2.03

+33.9 +24.8 +22.0 +20.4 +17.0 +17.0 +16.4 +16.1 +16.1 +15.5 +15.0 +14.9 +13.1 +12.1 +10.7 +10.6 +10.4 +10.4 +10.3 +10.3 +10.1 +10.0 +9.8 +9.4 +8.8 +8.8 +8.7 +8.7 +8.3 +8.3 +8.0 +8.0 +7.9 +7.7 +7.6 +7.5 +7.5 +7.3

PCT RETURN 1MO 1YR +56.4 -62.5 +40.9 -70.1 +37.4 ... +25.2 ... -34.4 -95.9 +25.1 ... +24.4 ... -15.6 -85.6 +20.4 -35.6 -10.2 ... +19.1 -3.7 +27.3 ... +18.2 +21.0 +10.9 ... -9.2 -68.9 +16.3 -17.4 +30.4 +123.6 +14.1 -14.7 +10.0 ... +8.4 +0.5 +8.3 ... -6.3 ... +12.5 -0.9 +12.8 +2.0 +18.4 +44.2 +10.5 -17.8 +6.6 -25.6 +10.1 -11.3 +14.5 +61.0 +6.1 -38.6 +5.0 ... +8.2 -18.0 +10.4 ... +12.8 +55.6 +28.9 +129.8 +9.0 +14.7 +14.4 +40.7 +18.3 ...

Mutual Funds Biggest funds by asset rank Fund

NAV

Wk Chg

%Rtn/Rank 12-Mo 3-Yr

AMG YacktmanSvc d 24.24 -.01 -.7/E +11.5/E YkmFcsSvc d 25.15 -.22 -.3/E +11.3/E AQR MaFtStrI 10.78 -.08 +10.8/ +8.4/ Advisorsʼ Inner Crcl EGrthIns 22.93 +.26 +12.5/A +21.5/A Alger Group CapApInsI 28.83 +.35 +9.7/B +18.4/B AllianzGI NFJAllCpValIns 16.15 +.24 -3.7/E +10.8/E American Beacon LgCpVlInv 27.16 +.46 +.1/D +13.9/B LgCpVlIs 28.88 +.50 +.5/D +14.3/B SmCapInst 25.43 +.74 +3.4/B +15.4/A American Century EqIncInv 8.75 +.06 +3.2/A +11.0/E HeritInv 24.62 +.04 +6.6/B +14.1/C InvGrInv 30.76 +.19 +9.4/B +15.7/D MdCpValInv 16.73 +.23 +5.3/A +16.4/A UltraInv 38.15 +.34 +10.7/B +18.4/B American Funds AMCAPA m 28.11 +.40 +4.1/D +17.4/B AmBalA m 25.07 +.10 +4.3/A +11.2/A BondA m 12.65 -.09 +1.1/B +1.4/C CapIncBuA m 57.43 -.53 -1.1/C +7.0/A CapWldBdA m 18.96 -.33 -4.5/C -1.7/C CpWldGrIA m 45.82 +.12 -.1/D +10.5/C EurPacGrA m 48.35 +.30 +1.2/C +7.9/B FnInvA m 53.86 +.55 +6.9/A +15.4/C GlbBalA m 29.48 -.18 -2.4/D +6.7/B GrthAmA m 45.81 +.63 +8.2/C +17.0/C HiIncA m 9.93 -.05 -4.8/E +2.0/E IncAmerA m 21.03 -.01 /D +8.9/C IntBdAmA m 13.48 -.08 +.9/A +.6/C IntlGrInA m 29.52 -.11 -7.1/E +4.6/D InvCoAmA m 36.97 +.16 +1.4/D +14.9/C MutualA m 36.41 +.23 +1.0/C +12.8/D NewEconA m 39.12 +.91 +6.9/C +17.8/B NewPerspA m 39.02 +.41 +8.5/A +13.5/A NwWrldA m 51.79 +.42 -6.5/A +2.2/A STBdFdA m 9.97 -.02 +.5/C +.2/D SmCpWldA m 47.28 +.69 +6.3/A +12.3/B TaxEBdAmA m 12.97 -.05 +2.7/A +2.9/A WAMutInvA m 41.09 +.33 +2.9/B +14.3/B Angel Oak MulStrIncInstl 11.76 +.02 +3.2/A +4.5/A Artisan Intl d 29.35 +.21 -2.3/E +8.3/B IntlI d 29.59 +.21 -2.1/E +8.5/B IntlVal d 34.58 -.33 +1.6/B +11.1/A MdCpVal 23.60 +.26 -4.1/E +10.3/E MidCap 47.49 +.74 +5.3/B +16.2/B MidCapI 50.18 +.79 +5.6/B +16.5/B BBH CoreSelN d 22.96 +.17 +3.1/C +11.5/E Baird AggrInst 10.65 -.09 +1.4/A +2.2/A CrPlBInst 10.95 -.08 +1.3/A +2.0/A ShTmBdIns 9.64 -.02 +.9/A +1.3/A Baron GrInstl 73.06 +.84 +2.3/D +13.6/D Growth b 71.95 +.83 +2.0/D +13.3/D Bernstein DiversMui 14.45 -.05 +1.7/A +1.3/A IntDur 13.26 -.14 +.9/B +1.5/C TxMIntl 15.66 -.09 +1.6/B +7.1/B BlackRock EqDivA m 24.96 +.30 +2.8/B +11.3/D EqDivI 25.01 +.29 +3.0/A +11.5/D EquitDivC m 24.34 +.28 +2.0/B +10.5/E GlLSCrI 10.43 +.03 /B +2.1/A GlobAlcA m 19.77 ... +.2/B +5.9/C GlobAlcC m 18.11 -.01 -.6/B +5.1/C GlobAlcI 19.88 -.01 +.4/A +6.2/B HiYldBdIs 7.56 -.02 -1.4/C +5.1/A HiYldBlRk 7.56 -.03 -1.4/C +5.1/A HiYldInvA m 7.56 -.02 -1.7/C +4.7/A HthScOpA m 53.59 +.47 +11.4/C +26.9/C LowDurIs 9.64 -.03 +.8/B +1.4/A StIncInvA m 9.97 ... +.5/B +2.6/A StrIncIns 9.97 ... +.8/A +2.9/A Causeway IntlVlIns d 14.64 -.17 -2.8/D +6.6/C Cohen & Steers Realty 70.78 -1.74 +5.5/A +11.5/A Columbia AcornIntZ 41.50 +.16 -.7/E +6.5/E AcornZ 31.35 +.75 +3.7/C +11.9/E DivIncZ 18.96 +.09 +3.6/A +13.7/C DivOppA m 9.17 -.03 -.5/D +11.3/D LgCrQuantA m 10.00 +.08 +5.5/B +16.5/A StLgCpGrZ 18.42 +.52 +8.1/C +20.9/A TaxExmptA m 13.85 -.05 +3.2/A +3.1/B Constellation SndsSelGrI 19.12 +.35 +4.3/D +17.5/B Credit Suisse ComStrInstl 4.89 -.13 -27.1/C -15.9/C DFA 1YrFixInI 10.31 -.01 +.3/B +.3/C 2YrGlbFII 9.94 -.02 +.5/A +.4/B 5YrGlbFII 11.01 -.07 +1.8/A +1.4/A EmMkCrEqI 16.95 +.14 -11.9/C -2.4/C EmMktValI 22.30 +.08 -16.2/E -5.1/E EmMtSmCpI 18.69 +.18 -7.4/A +.7/A EmgMktI 22.35 +.18 -12.5/C -3.2/C GlAl6040I 15.60 +.03 +.4/D +7.1/D GlEqInst 18.34 +.17 +1.2/C +12.0/B GlblRlEstSecsI 10.36 -.23 +2.3/A +8.3/A InfPrtScI 11.42 -.12 -1.8/A -2.3/B IntCorEqI 11.63 -.06 /B +7.6/B IntGovFII 12.54 -.13 +2.4/A +1.1/B IntRlEstI 5.14 -.13 -.2/D +4.8/D IntSmCapI 19.26 -.18 +4.7/C +12.0/A IntlSCoI 17.67 -.11 +4.5/C +9.7/C IntlValuI 16.86 -.06 -4.1/D +5.8/C LgCapIntI 20.24 -.12 -2.2/D +6.3/C RelEstScI 32.35 -.69 +3.7/C +10.7/B STEtdQltI 10.78 -.04 +1.3/A +1.1/B TAUSCrE2I 14.32 +.23 +3.2/B +15.8/A

Fund

NAV

TMIntlVal 13.82 TMMkWVal 25.91 TMUSTarVal 33.22 USCorEq1I 18.15 USCorEq2I 17.54 USLgCo 16.59 USLgVal3 24.25 USLgValI 33.75 USMicroI 19.61 USSmValI 34.21 USSmallI 31.73 USTgtValInst 22.22 USVecEqI 16.61 Davis NYVentA m 35.24 NYVentC m 32.98 NYVentY 35.83 Delaware Invest USGrowIs 28.52 ValueI 18.24 Diamond Hill LngShortI 24.53 Dodge & Cox Bal 100.70 GlbStock 11.48 Income 13.48 IntlStk 39.76 Stock 177.95 DoubleLine CrFxdIncI 10.78 TotRetBdN b 10.82 Dreyfus AppreciaInv 52.47 MidCapIdx 38.19 Driehaus ActiveInc 10.24 Eaton Vance ACSmCpI 27.74 FltgRtI 8.66 GlbMacroI 9.21 IncBosI 5.63 FMI LgCap 21.50 FPA Cres d 33.63 NewInc d 10.02 Fairholme Funds Fairhome d 35.68 Federated InstHiYIn d 9.56 KaufmanR m 6.21 StrValI 5.92 ToRetIs 10.77 Fidelity AstMgr20 x 13.13 AstMgr50 17.03 Bal 21.75 Bal K 21.75 BlChGrow 70.13 BlChGrowK 70.22 CapApr 37.46 CapInc d 9.52 Contra 105.66 ContraK 105.66 DivGrow 31.40 DivrIntl d 36.01 DivrIntlK d 35.98 EqInc 55.52 EqInc II 26.33 FF2015 12.55 FF2035 13.27 FF2040 9.34 Fidelity 43.10 FltRtHiIn d 9.40 FourInOne 37.86 Fr2045 10.52 FrdmK2010 13.06 FrdmK2015 13.53 FrdmK2020 14.23 FrdmK2025 14.86 FrdmK2030 15.19 FrdmK2035 15.65 FrdmK2040 15.69 FrdmK2045 16.12 FrdmK2050 16.23 Free2010 15.30 Free2020 15.31 Free2025 13.12 Free2030 16.11 GNMA 11.53 GexUSIdx 11.10 GovtInc 10.34 GrowCo 144.19 GrowInc 30.15 GrthCmpK 144.12 HiInc d 8.42 Indepndnc 39.34 IntBond 10.81 IntMuniInc d 10.43 IntlDisc d 39.89 InvGrdBd 7.69 LargeCap 27.99 LevCoSt d 43.52 LowPrStkK d 49.72 LowPriStk d 49.75 Magellan 95.35 MdCpVal d 24.15 MeCpSto 16.44 MidCap d 36.20 MuniInc d 13.36 NewMille 39.43 NewMktIn d 14.99 OTC 83.34 OTCK 84.20 Overseas d 41.30 Puritan 20.70 PuritanK 20.69 RealInv d 39.83 SASEqF 14.20 SCOppF 12.90 SEMF 15.51

Wk Chg

%Rtn/Rank 12-Mo 3-Yr

-.05 +.31 +.88 +.25 +.28 +.17 +.34 +.48 +.61 +1.13 +.89 +.66 +.39

-4.3/D +5.4/D +3.3/A +16.9/A +4.5/A +17.1/A +4.1/C +16.1/B +2.9/B +15.7/B +5.4/B +16.1/B +2.2/B +16.6/A +2.1/B +16.5/A +4.3/B +16.3/A +.2/D +14.7/B +5.0/B +16.2/A +1.7/C +15.4/A +1.8/C +15.4/B

+.64 +.60 +.65

+8.3/A +15.5/C +7.4/A +14.6/D +8.5/A +15.7/B

-.05 +.11

+7.1/C +16.5/C +2.8/B +15.9/A

+.31

+2.7/B +10.4/A

+1.05 +.07 -.05 -.13 +2.91

+2.0/B +12.5/A -2.9/E +12.5/B +.3/D +2.1/A -7.3/E +8.2/A +2.2/B +16.5/A

-.07 -.06

+1.8/ +2.4/ +2.6/A +2.9/A

+.40 +.49

+.8/D +9.5/E +3.5/B +14.6/C

+.04

+.5/B +1.6/B

+.16 +11.0/A +16.4/B -.02 /C +2.3/C +.07 +2.1/A +1.8/B -.03 -.4/B +4.5/A +.21

+3.7/C +14.4/D

+.25 -.01

+1.6/C +9.8/B +.4/B +.9/C

+.36

+2.7/B +10.0/E

-.05 +.1/A +4.6/A +.18 +10.1/A +19.4/A -.17 +1.8/C +11.5/D -.07 +.8/C +1.7/B -.04 +.05 +.17 +.17 +1.18 +1.19 +.43 +.02 +1.61 +1.60 +.31 -.06 -.06 +.60 +.25 +.05 +.13 +.10 +.64 ... +.16 +.10 +.04 +.05 +.07 +.09 +.13 +.15 +.15 +.16 +.16 +.04 +.08 +.09 +.14 -.04 -.05 -.08 +3.57 +.50 +3.57 -.04 +.69 -.07 -.04 -.25 -.06 +.53 +.86 +.51 +.50 +1.66 +.16 +.23 +.39 -.06 +.60 +.02 +2.29 +2.32 -.25 +.22 +.22 -.78 +.20 +.43 +.14

+1.0/B +3.4/D +1.7/C +7.1/D +3.2/A +10.9/A +3.3/A +11.1/A +10.2/B +20.6/A +10.4/B +20.7/A +4.7/D +16.9/C +1.4/A +6.9/A +10.3/B +17.4/B +10.4/B +17.5/B +3.2/C +15.0/C +3.9/B +9.7/A +4.0/B +9.9/A -.7/D +11.2/D +1.8/C +12.9/C +1.9/A +6.4/B +2.9/A +9.9/C +2.9/A +10.0/C +7.0/C +15.3/D -.3/C +2.0/D +3.1/A +11.5/A +2.8/A +10.2/C +1.8/A +6.1/A +2.0/A +6.5/B +2.2/A +7.1/B +2.5/A +8.4/B +2.8/A +9.0/B +2.9/A +10.0/C +2.9/A +10.1/B +2.9/A +10.3/C +3.0/A +10.4/C +1.6/A +6.0/A +2.1/A +7.0/B +2.4/A +8.3/C +2.7/A +8.9/C +1.6/B +1.6/A -4.3/E +4.1/E +1.3/B +1.1/B +12.5/A +20.3/A +2.1/D +14.6/C +12.6/A +20.5/A -2.9/D +3.0/D +3.2/E +17.8/B +1.1/B +1.3/C +1.8/C +2.1/C +3.9/B +9.2/A +.2/D +1.2/C +1.3/D +16.2/B +1.3/C +14.2/C +5.1/A +15.2/B +5.0/A +15.1/B +8.3/C +18.2/B +1.7/C +17.6/A +3.1/C +15.1/C +3.3/D +15.3/B +3.0/B +3.1/B +1.7/E +14.6/D -.7/A +.8/A +12.7/A +24.7/A +12.8/A +24.8/A +8.5/A +11.6/A +4.4/A +11.4/A +4.5/A +11.6/A +5.3/A +11.3/A +4.2/D +16.1/C +6.6/A +13.8/C -10.0/B -.8/B

Fund

NAV

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Continued on next page


Money & Markets

The Indiana Gazette

Sunday, November 8, 2015 — D-5

Interest rate increase now even more likely Continued from Page D-1 zero in December 2008 to try to stimulate growth during the recession. An increase would eventually raise borrowing costs for mortgages, auto loans and business loans. The prospect of higher interest rates initially drove down financial markets Thursday, though stock indexes finished mixed. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note surged to 2.33 percent from 2.23 percent, suggesting that investors see a greater likelihood of a rate increase. After a prolonged period of relatively stagnant pay for many Americans, hourly wages climbed a solid 9 cents in October to $25.20. Average pay is up 2.5 percent in the past year, the largest annual gain since 2009. Strong hiring and pay raises, if they continue, could make it harder for Republicans to mount effective attacks on the Obama administration’s economic record and could bolster Democratic prospects in the 2016 elections. The pay gains should fuel more

faltering growth in China, Europe and Japan have cut into exports of factory goods. Oil and gas drillers also shed workers as oil prices stayed low. But retailers added nearly 44,000 jobs last month, a sign that they expect a good holiday shopping season. Hotels and restaurants added 41,000, while health care providers hired nearly 57,000. Higher-paying sectors also gained, notably professional and business services, which include architects, engineers and many IT workers. That sector added 78,000 positions, the most in nearly a year. Matt Friedman, chief executive of the Wing Zone restaurant chain, said he thinks lower gas prices are encouraging more people to eat out and boosting sales at his company’s 93 U.S. sites. Company sales have grown 6 percent this year from 2014. Wing Zone expects to open 15 stores this year and 19 next year. “People are spending more money,� Friedman said. “Fuel

ANDREW HARNIK/Associated Press

FEDERAL RESERVE Chairwoman Janet Yellen prepared to testify Wednesday on Capitol Hill in Washington. consumer spending in coming months, which, in turn, could support further hiring. “These are very strong numbers and likely to continue,� said Carl Tannenbaum, chief economist at

Northern Trust. “The two summer months that were low now look like the aberration.� Manufacturing employment was flat in October, after two months of job cuts. The strong dollar and

prices have a big impact.� The company receives plenty of applications for its hourly jobs and hasn’t had to increase pay for those positions to attract applicants, Friedman said. But it has had to raise pay to fill professional jobs in marketing, training and operations, he said. Pay for those positions has increased about 10 percent in the past two years. Eric Renninger, vice president of Honest-1 Auto Care, said his 54shop chain is seeing evidence that cheaper gas is encouraging more travel. “You are seeing people bringing in vehicles in preparation for road trips,� he said. The company expects to open five more locations this year. The economy grew at just a 1.5 percent annual rate in the JulySeptember quarter. Still, Americans boosted their spending at a healthy 3.2 percent annual pace. Economists expect growth to rebound to 2.5 percent or more in the final three months of the year.

UAW reaches tentative deal with Ford, General Motors Continued from Page D-1 cally aimed at those workers. But it cannot change parts of the agreement that are “common to all members,� the union statement said. Like a previous contract ratified by Fiat Chrysler workers, GM’s agreement would eliminate a two-tier wage system over eight years. The agreement also promises bonuses, profitsharing payments and the first raises for top-tier workers in a decade. Ford plant leaders will meet Monday in Detroit to discuss the agreement. If they approve it, details will be released to members, who would then vote on it. “The agreement, if ratified, will help lead the Ford Motor Company, our employees and our communities into the future,� Ford’s global labor chief, John Fleming, said in a

Fund

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statement. Fiat Chrysler workers rejected their first contract agreement in early October, but ratified a sweetened deal late last month with a vote of 77 percent in favor. GM and the UAW reached their own agreement just before a strike deadline on Oct. 25. At GM, voting was fairly close early this week, but workers at two large factories approved it Friday. The pact would cover 52,600 GM workers at 63 U.S. facilities. UAW President Dennis Williams had promised — and won — richer benefits from GM, which is a bigger and wealthier company than Fiat Chrysler. GM reported last month that it earned $1.36 billion in the third quarter. The union was also seeking a richer contract from Ford, which earned $1.9 bil-

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lion in the third quarter, including a record $2.7 billion pretax profit in North America. GM currently pays recent hires around $15.78 per hour. Under the new agreement, workers with four or more years of experience

Commodities The price of crude oil dropped for the third straight day, capping a 5 percent loss for the week. Prices of both gold and silver skidded lower, and copper also fell.

will make the top $29 hourly wage within four years; workers with less experience would make between $22.50 and $28 in four years and top wages in eight years. Williams said lower-tier workers — who make up 20

FUELS CLOSE Crude Oil (bbl) 44.29 Ethanol (gal) 1.52 Heating Oil (gal) 1.49 Natural Gas (mm btu) 2.37 Unleaded Gas (gal) 1.37 METALS Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (lb) Palladium (oz)

1087.60 1104.40 14.70 14.99 940.00 953.10 2.24 2.25 612.75 606.10

AGRICULTURE Cattle (lb) 1.35 Coffee (lb) 1.18 Corn (bu) 3.73 Cotton (lb) 0.62 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 247.90 Orange Juice (lb) 1.38 Soybeans (bu) 8.71 Wheat (bu) 5.23

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percent of GM’s hourly workforce — will now be eligible for traditional health care benefits. Both tiers of workers would get an $8,000 signing bonus if they ratify the contract, higher than the $3,000 and $4,000 bonuses offered at Fiat

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Design ~ Print ~ Bind ~ Mail One Stop. One Shop. For all your printing needs.

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3K ‡ )[ ZZZ JD]HWWHSULQWHUV FRP ‡ JD]SULQW#JD]HWWHSULQWHUV FRP ,QGLDQ 6SULQJV 5G ,QGLDQD 3$ Web Offset Printing Sheetfed Offset Printing Digital Printing Full Design & Typesetting Mailing Services IncomeA m 12.21 +.01 IncomeC m 12.21 +.01 IncomeD b 12.21 +.01 IncomeInl 12.21 +.01 InvGrdIns 10.34 -.04 LgDrTRtnI 11.32 -.10 LgTmCrdIn 12.05 -.08 LowDrIs 9.90 -.01 RealRet 10.63 -.07 ShtTermIs 9.77 ... TotRetA m 10.46 -.06 TotRetAdm b 10.46 -.06 TotRetC m 10.46 -.06 TotRetIs 10.46 -.06 TotRetrnD b 10.46 -.06 TotlRetnP 10.46 -.06 UnconstrBdIns 10.74 +.07 PRIMECAP Odyssey AggGr 34.61 +1.34 Growth 27.72 +.63 Stock 24.68 +.23 Parametric TxMgEMInstl d 41.38 +.19 Parnassus CoreEqInv 41.17 +.22 Permanent Portfolio 38.10 -.53

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SpecGrow SpecInc SumMuInt TaxFHiYld d TrRt2020Ad b TrRt2030Ad b Value TCW TotRetBdI TIAA-CREF BdIdxInst EqIx Gr&IncIn IntlE LCVal LgCVIdx MidValIn Templeton InFEqSeS Third Avenue RealEsVal d Thornburg IncBldA m IncBldC m IntlI LtdTMul

Chrysler. And the profitsharing formula in GM’s proposed agreement promises $1,000 per $1 billion of GM’s North American profits. Fiat Chrysler is giving workers $800 based on percentage gains in its North American margins.

24.21 12.24 11.89 11.84 20.87 23.31 34.53

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10.21

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20.14

-.16

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31.29

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+.03 +.04 -.11 -.05

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31.31 65.63 64.58 86.73 93.19 66.73 66.73 164.67 89.29 10.66 10.66 24.70 70.49 43.17 56.76 56.77 56.76 5.78 5.78 95.42 226.13 11.32 9.69 11.33 25.42 10.36 12.94

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LB LB LB LB LB LG LG FB MA IH MA CI CI FB LB

+1.0 +1.2 +1.0 +1.2 +1.0 +1.5 +1.4 -0.2 0.0 -0.9 +0.4 -0.5 -0.8 -0.3 +0.4

+6.2 +5.9 +6.2 +5.9 +6.2 +6.5 +6.7 +1.7 +3.1 +1.4 +3.5 -0.6 -1.0 +2.3 +5.3

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5YRS*

2 +13.7 2 +13.6 2 +13.7 2 +13.4 2 +13.7 2 +13.5 3 +13.0 4 +1.8 4 +8.7 3 +6.7 2 +9.7 2 +3.0 2 +2.7 5 +3.9 4 +11.8 * – annualized.

Fund

NAV

Wk Chg

%Rtn/Rank 12-Mo 3-Yr

InstIdxI 192.14 +1.94 +5.5/B +16.1/B InstPlus 192.15 +1.94 +5.5/B +16.1/B InstTStPl 47.48 +.56 +5.1/B +16.1/B IntlExpIn 17.73 -.03 +7.7/B +12.3/A IntlGr 22.06 +.23 +.4/D +7.6/C IntlGrAdm 70.20 +.72 +.6/D +7.8/B IntlStkIdxAdm 25.23 -.04 -3.1/D +4.7/D IntlStkIdxI 100.88 -.19 -3.2/D +4.7/D IntlStkIdxIPls 100.90 -.18 -3.1/D +4.7/D IntlVal 33.32 +.10 -5.6/D +6.0/C LTGradeAd 9.96 -.21 +.5/B +2.5/A LTInvGr 9.96 -.21 +.4/B +2.4/A LgCpIdxAdm 48.63 +.49 +5.3/B +16.1/B LifeCon 18.32 -.04 +1.9/A +5.9/B LifeGro 28.84 +.10 +1.9/B +10.1/B LifeInc 14.78 -.08 +1.7/A +3.7/D LifeMod 24.09 +.01 +1.9/B +8.0/D MdCpGrIdxAdm 44.55 +.32 +4.2/C +16.2/B MdCpValIdxAdm 46.07 +.22 +3.7/B +17.2/A MidCapGr 25.25 +.37 +7.0/B +16.1/B MidCapIdxIP 167.84 +1.01 +4.1/A +16.8/A MidCp 33.96 +.20 +3.9/B +16.6/A MidCpAdml 154.05 +.92 +4.0/A +16.8/A MidCpIst 34.03 +.20 +4.0/A +16.8/A Morg 27.76 +.34 +11.3/A +18.3/B MorgAdml 86.07 +1.05 +11.4/A +18.5/A MuHYAdml 11.16 -.04 +3.5/A +3.6/A MuInt 14.13 -.06 +2.4/B +2.4/B MuIntAdml 14.13 -.06 +2.5/A +2.5/B MuLTAdml 11.59 -.05 +3.3/A +3.3/A MuLtdAdml 11.01 -.03 +1.1/A +1.1/A MuShtAdml 15.81 -.02 +.5/C +.6/C NYLTAdml 11.74 -.05 +3.5/A +3.2/A PALTAdml 11.58 -.05 +3.4/A +3.4/A Prmcp 106.99 +1.43 +5.9/D +20.6/A PrmcpAdml 110.90 +1.49 +5.9/D +20.7/A PrmcpCorI 22.31 +.25 +5.5/D +19.4/A REITIdxAd 110.90 -2.32 +3.1/C +10.7/B REITIdxInst 17.16 -.36 +3.0/D +10.7/B S/TBdIdxInstl 10.46 -.05 +1.0/A +.9/B S/TBdIdxInstlPl 10.46 -.05 +1.0/A +.9/B STBondAdm 10.46 -.05 +1.0/A +.9/B STCor 10.60 -.04 +1.1/A +1.4/A STFedAdml 10.75 -.04 +.9/A +.7/A STGradeAd 10.60 -.04 +1.2/A +1.5/A STIGradeI 10.60 -.04 +1.2/A +1.5/A STsryAdml 10.68 -.05 +.6/B +.5/A SelValu 28.44 +.29 +1.5/C +14.9/C ShTmInfPtScIxIn 24.20 -.08 -1.5/A -.8/A ShTmInfPtScIxIv 24.15 -.08 -1.6/A -.9/A SmCapIdx 55.84 +1.17 +2.9/C +15.2/B SmCapIdxIP 161.23 +3.38 +3.1/C +15.4/B SmCpGrIdxAdm 44.43 +1.08 +2.9/D +14.4/C SmCpIdAdm 55.86 +1.17 +3.1/C +15.4/B SmCpIdIst 55.86 +1.18 +3.1/C +15.4/B SmCpValIdxAdm 45.20 +.82 +3.1/B +16.0/A SmGthIst 35.58 +.86 +2.9/D +14.4/C Star 24.85 +.09 +2.5/B +9.3/B StratgcEq 33.12 +.59 +5.3/A +19.3/A TgtRe2010 26.49 -.07 +1.3/A +5.5/B TgtRe2015 15.42 -.01 +1.6/A +7.1/A TgtRe2020 28.72 +.01 +1.8/A +8.3/A TgtRe2025 16.70 +.03 +1.9/A +9.1/B TgtRe2030 29.34 +.08 +1.8/B +9.9/A TgtRe2035 18.02 +.06 +1.8/C +10.6/B TgtRe2040 30.05 +.15 +1.7/C +11.1/A TgtRe2045 18.84 +.10 +1.7/C +11.1/B TgtRe2050 29.91 +.15 +1.7/C +11.1/A TgtRetInc 12.83 -.04 +1.1/A +4.2/B TlIntlBdIdxAdm 21.06 -.15 +2.3/A NA/ TlIntlBdIdxInst 31.61 -.22 +2.4/A NA/ TlIntlBdIdxInv 10.53 -.08 +2.3/A NA/ TotBdAdml 10.67 -.09 +1.2/B +1.3/C TotBdInst 10.67 -.09 +1.3/B +1.4/C TotBdMkInv 10.67 -.09 +1.1/B +1.2/C TotIntl 15.08 -.03 -3.2/D +4.6/D TotStIAdm 52.47 +.62 +5.0/B +16.0/B TotStIIns 52.48 +.62 +5.0/B +16.0/B TotStIdx 52.45 +.62 +4.9/B +15.9/B TxMCapAdm 106.87 +1.12 +5.8/A +16.3/A TxMSCAdm 46.84 +1.23 +6.1/A +16.6/A USGro 32.54 +.22 +11.0/A +19.3/A ValIdxAdm 32.58 +.34 +2.5/B +15.0/A ValIdxIns 32.58 +.34 +2.5/B +15.0/A VdHiDivIx 27.06 +.17 +2.6/B +14.1/B WellsI 25.44 -.11 +2.7/A +6.4/A WellsIAdm 61.62 -.28 +2.7/A +6.4/A Welltn 39.10 +.13 +2.9/B +10.3/A WelltnAdm 67.54 +.24 +3.0/B +10.4/A WndsIIAdm 65.88 +.69 +2.0/B +13.6/C Wndsr 21.39 +.33 +2.6/B +16.0/A WndsrAdml 72.17 +1.13 +2.7/B +16.1/A WndsrII 37.12 +.39 +1.9/B +13.5/C Victory MudrMdCpCoGrY42.53 +.43 +1.8/D +14.2/C Virtus EmgMktsIs 9.36 -.09 -8.6/B -.9/B Waddell & Reed Adv CoreInv A m 7.13 +.03 +2.3/E +14.3/E SciTechA m 15.13 +.41 +2.1/E +18.6/C Wells Fargo GrI 53.09 +1.00 +6.4/D +13.7/E UlSTMInI 9.62 -.01 +.4/C +.5/D World Funds EpGloEqShYI 18.48 -.32 -2.3/D +9.2/D

Mutual fund footnotes: b - Fee covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption fee. f - front load (sales charges). m - Multiple fees are charged, usually a marketing fee and either a sales or redemption fee. NA - not available. p - previous day´s net asset value. s - fund split shares during the week. x - fund paid a distribution during the week. Rank: Fundʟs letter grade compared with others in the same group; an A indicates fund performed in the top 20 percent; an E, in the bottom 20 percent. 3-year percent return is annualized. Source: Morningstar and the Associated Press.


Family

D-6— Sunday, November 8, 2015

SENIOR CENTER ACTIVITIES The schedules at the Aging Services Inc. social centers for the coming week: Armagh — Armagh Fire Hall, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Tuesdays only. Activities: Exercise, speakers. (800) 442-8016. Chestnut Hills — 26 Heybert Drive, Blairsville, 8:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday and 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Tuesday through Friday. Activities: Exercise, cards, computer lab, painting class, billiards, Wii. (724) 4595251. Homer-Center — Holy Protection of Mary Byzantine Catholic Church, 279 Yellow Creek St., Homer City, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Thursdays only. Activities: Speakers, cards, socialization, computer lab. (800) 442-8016. Indiana — 1001 Oak St., 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Monday to Friday. Activities: Crafts, billiards, movies, music, Wii, checkers and computer lab. (724) 465-2697. Mahoning Hills — Route 119, south of Punxsutawney, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through Thursday and 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Friday. Activities: Bingo, crafts, cards, computer lab and Wii. (724) 286-3099. Aultman — Aultman Fire Hall, Aultman, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Wednesdays only. Activities: Bingo, speakers. (800) 442-8016. Saltsburg — 212 Point St., Saltsburg, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday and 1 p.m. to 7 p.m. Wednesday. Activities: Crafts, cards and computer lab. (724) 639-9055. Two Lick Valley — 450 Franklin St., Clymer, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Activities: Games, cards, puzzles, exercise, shopping, Wii and computer lab. (724) 254-9820. Call (724) 349-4500 or (800) 442-8016 by noon the day before to reserve a meal.

MONDAY Chicken and gravy with peas over biscuits, Italian vegetable medley, warm applesauce, sugar cookies Chestnut Hills: (Day) 11 a.m., dime bingo; Wii; billiards; socialization Chestnut Hills: Evening center closed Indiana: 10 to 11 a.m., crochet club; 10:30 to 11 a.m., balance club; 11:30 a.m., APPRISE; 1 to 3 p.m., dominos club; self-directed exercise and computer usage; socialization Saltsburg: 10 a.m., cards; 11 a.m., craft club with Debbie; decorate for Thanksgiving; 1 p.m., bingo; socialization Two Lick: Thank a veteran week; 10:30 a.m., crochet club; bake sale club: pumpkin rolls; 11 a.m., fitness and chair yoga with Carole; 12:30 p.m., Woods Spa therapy; socialization Mahoning Hills: Good humor day; 9:30 to 10 a.m., chocolate chip pancake breakfast; Wii; annual ICCAP food drive; puzzles; selfdirected computer usage; Wii; socialization

TUESDAY Swiss steak and gravy, oven-browned potatoes, mixed vegetable medley, vanilla pudding, bread Armagh: 10 to 11 a.m., blood pressure by IRMC; fitness club with Carole; 11 a.m., word search drawing; 12:45 to 1:45 p.m., bingo; socialization Chestnut Hills: 9 a.m., veterans’ breakfast (vets eat for free); Wii; puzzles; billiards; selfdirected exercise and computer usage; socialization Indiana: Noon to 2 p.m., seniors give back to the community fundraiser; spaghetti dinner to benefit Team Red, White and Blue Saltsburg: 9 to 10 a.m., community veterans’ breakfast open to the public (all vets eat for free); 11:30 a.m., honoring our veterans; cards; Wii; puzzles; 1 p.m., bingo; socialization Two Lick: Thank a veteran week; 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., indoor flea market; 10 a.m., plastic canvas club; 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., quilters and card club; self-directed exercise and computer usage; socialization Mahoning Hills: Annual ICCAP food drive; 10:45 a.m., morning bingo with Senior Life; puzzles; cards; Wii; self-directed computer usage; 1 p.m., grocery bingo; socialization

WEDNESDAY Centers closed for Veterans Day

THURSDAY Meat and cheese lasagna, mixed greens with carrots, tomatoes, cucumbers and cabbage, mixed fruit salad, garlic bread sticks Homer Center: 10 to 11 a.m., fitness club; 11 a.m., word search drawing; noon, blood pressure by IRMC; 1 p.m., bingo; socialization Chestnut Hills: 10 a.m., baking planning meeting (volunteers needed); Wii; puzzles; billiards; self-directed computer usage; socialization Indiana: 10 to 11 a.m., games; 10 a.m., mahjong club; 1 p.m., afternoon bingo with Hillsdale Nursing and Rehabilitation; socialization Saltsburg: 11 a.m., self-defense with Margaret; 11:30 a.m., get fit with Margaret; socialization Two Lick: 10 a.m. to noon, open jam session with Fun Band; self-directed exercise and computer usage; 1 p.m., Wii; socialization Mahoning Hills: Annual ICCAP food drive; 11:15 a.m., IndiGO transportation by an IndiGO representative; puzzles; cards; afternoon shopping; Wii; self-directed computer usage; socialization

FRIDAY All centers closed ❏❏❏ FAMILY CAREGIVER SUPPORT GROUP: Meets from 2 to 3 p.m. the last Wednesday of each month at Aging Services Inc., 1055 Oak St., Indiana. For more information, call (724) 349-4500. APPRISE VOLUNTEERS NEEDED: Free training is available. For more information, call Lisa at (724) 349-4500 or (800) 442-8016. VOLUNTEER OMBUDSMAN PROGRAM: Sign up and volunteer today to make a difference in someone’s life. For more information, call (724) 349-4500 or (800) 442-8016.

The Indiana Gazette

A HOLIDAY TRADITION

If you see these people today, be sure to wish them a happy birthday:

JAMIE EMPFIELD/Gazette

AN EVERGREEN Christmas will be the theme for the Evergreen Garden Club’s annual Tinsel Time to be held from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Dec. 3 at the Rustic Lodge, White Township. The event includes boutique shopping, a luncheon, holiday designs, entertainment by Lynn Jones and Chuck Potthast, a raffle, door prizes and more. Tickets are $25 per person and only 300 will be sold. Purchase tickets by calling (724) 726-5708 or visit the Indiana County Historical Society, the Book Nook, the Indiana County Tourist Bureau, Indiana Mall or Flo’s Floral in Homer City. Pictured, from left, are club member Jo Anne McQuilken with Jones and Potthast.

• Olin Bartlebaugh, Punxsutawney • Sally Brown, Clymer • Connie Cribbs, Home • Brandon Andrew Higgins, Homer City • Jenny Klimkowski, Indiana • Becky Lewis, Punxsutawney • Joshua McKendrick, Northern Cambria • Dave Miloser, Home • Micha Misko, Home • Ruth Pence, Indiana • The Rev. Dennis Roser Jr., Wisconsin • Rebecca Singer, White Township

HUMAN SERVICES CALENDAR ANNOUNCEMENTS • November is Family Caregiver Month. Indiana Regional Medical Center will honor those who selflessly care for a loved one and honor an individual with the annual Spirit of Caring award on Thursday at the Rustic Lodge, White Township. For more information, call (724) 357-7188. • ANEW Home Health is offering flu shots from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through Friday at its office, 1380 Route 286, Building 2, Suite 223, White Township. ANEW can bill insurers, or private pay is $20. Private payers may bring a flu shot advertisement from The Indiana Gazette to receive a 10 percent discount. For more information, call (724) 465-9224. • The Salvation Army will be accepting Treasures for Children sign-ups from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Wednesday and Thursday and Nov. 27 and 28; and from 4 to 8 p.m. Nov. 23. Those applying to the program for gifts for their children should bring proof of all household income and monthly bills, Social Security cards for all family members, a valid photo ID for the primary applicant, and sizes and wishes for their children. Applications will not be accepted without this required information. • Indiana Regional Medical Center presents “Empower Yourself and Your Health,” a free monthly wellness workshop, the third Wednesday of each month from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. in IRMC’s private dining room. For more information and to register, call (724) 427-2763. • The PA Department of Health is offering vaccines/immunizations by appointment only from 9 to 11:30 a.m. and 1:30 to 2:30 p.m. Monday, Nov. 23, at the Indiana County State Health Center, 75 N. Second St., Indiana. Vaccinations/immunizations are free or $5 per visit, depending on eligibility. For more information and to schedule an appointment, call (724) 357-2995. • The Indiana County Reality Tour of the Indiana County Jail will be held at 5:45 p.m. Wednesday. This free tour is for youths 10 to 18, parents and community members. For more information and to register, call (724) 354-2746, ext. 309, or email Jennifer McCroskey at jmccros key@aidac.org. • The Southwestern PA Food Security Partnership (SNAP) works to provide people and families with the resources necessary to buy food with food stamps. For more information, contact Amber, Indiana County SNAP outreach coordinator, at (724) 219-9618. • The Salvation Army Food Pantry is open to the public. Photo ID is required and appointments are encouraged but not mandatory. • The Indiana County Department of Human Services and the United Way of Indiana County have partnered with PA 2-1-1 Southwest to bring a free Human Services Helpline to Indiana County. County residents are able to dial 2-1-1 and be connected with a live operator 24 hours per day, seven days a week, who can connect them with human services help. Please share this number with family and friends who may not be sure where to turn for help with such things as emergency shelter, food banks, crisis intervention, child care, and other health and human service resources. Go to www.pa211sw.org; www. uwindianacounty.org or www. humanservices-countyofindi ana.org for more information.

• The Attire to Aspire/PA Workwear Program is in need of gently used, up-to-date fall clothing for women and men (in their 20s). The women’s sizes needed are 0 to 26 (especially sizes 16 through 26 and size large to 3X blouses). Women’s items needed are business casual slacks for women in black, khaki, navy, and brown, and business casual tops and blouses. Men’s sizes and items needed are 32W to 36W business casual slacks (Dockers) in black and khaki. To donate, bring items to the Department of Human Services, 300 Indian Springs Road, Suite 203, White Township. • Aging Services Inc.’s Apprise Program is a free health insurance counseling program designed to help all Pennsylvanians with Medicare. Counselors are trained staff and volunteers who can answer questions and provide objective, easy-to-understand information about Medicare. For more information, call (724) 349-4500. • Aging Services Inc. runs a thrift shop from 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. and 1 to 2 p.m. weekdays at the Indiana Social Center, 1001 Oak St., Indiana. Donations of gently used clothing are accepted. Call (724) 349-4500 for more information. • Creekside Area Food Pantry, for residents of Creekside, Ernest and Washington Township, will be open from 10 a.m. to noon the second Thursday of the month at the Creekside United Methodist Church. Appointment times are also available. For more information, call (724) 463-6004. • Community Kitchen is looking for volunteers to help prepare and serve meals. The kitchen is open from 4 to 6 p.m. the first Thursday of the month at Dixonville Wesleyan Church Social Hall, the second Thursday of the month at Church of the Resurrection, Clymer, and the third Thursday of the month at Penn Run Christian Outreach Center. For more information, call Cindy Briggs at (724) 397-9498 or visit sites.google.com/site/ dwccommunitykitchen. • Katie’s Closet provides a wide variety of free clothing for adults and children from 9 to 11 a.m. and 5 to 7 p.m. every Monday at Zion Lutheran Church (upstairs) on the corner of Church and Sixth streets in Indiana. • Christos Clothes Closet is open from 10 a.m. to noon the third Saturday of every other month at the Homer City United Presbyterian Church, 40 E. Elm St., Homer City. The next date is Nov. 21. For more information and to confirm date, call (724) 479-2695. • Calvary United Methodist Church’s Clothes of Many Colors free clothing closet in Brush Valley will be open from 1 to 3 p.m. the first Wednesday of every month, weather permitting. For more information, call (724) 479-8290. • First United Methodist Church of Marion Center’s Clothing Closet provides free clothing from 9 a.m. to noon every Tuesday in Marion Center. For more information, call (724)-397-5517. • Free clothing will be available the last Saturday of the month at Jacksonville Presbyterian Church’s clothing closet in Kent. For more information and time, call (724) 726-8895 or (724) 479-8237.

CLASSES • AARP Driver Safety Program provides adults age 50 and older with a driving refresher class.

Dates and times vary. For more information, call Excela Health at (877) 771-1234. • A Baby-sitting Class, held at the American Red Cross, Indiana County headquarters, 610 Kolter Drive, White Township, will provide youths who are planning to baby-sit with the knowledge and skills necessary to safely and responsibly give care for children and infants, including learning to develop a baby-sitting business, keeping themselves and others safe and helping children behave. The recommended age for this course is 11 to 15. Call (800) 7332767 or go to www.redcross.org for dates and time or to register. • Childbirth Preparation is a four-part series is designed to prepare women at 32-36 weeks for giving birth. The class is offered from 6 to 9 p.m. four consecutive Tuesday evenings each month at Indiana Regional Medical Center’s Urgi Care Center, second floor, classrooms A and B. For information, call (724) 357-7075. • Six classes to teach volunteers how to help in time of disaster are offered by the Indiana headquarters of the American Red, Cross: Disaster Services: An Overview teaches how the Red Cross fits in when there is a disaster and how you can help your community. Disaster Health Services Orientation teaches participants to organize and administer a disaster at the local level and to initiate a larger operation. Disaster Mental Health Services: An Overview helps participants learn how DMHS supports disaster relief workers and people affected by disasters. Logistics – Disaster Preparedness Training is a study providing the support services for a disaster relief operation, including transportation, facilities and supplies. Shelter Operations teaches the process of opening and properly managing a shelter through the American Red Cross. Survey/Damage Assessment teaches how to make assessment of damage to homes and areas affected by disaster through American Red Cross. Disaster Services. For more information on any of these programs, call (724) 465-5678. • “I Can Cope,” sponsored by the American Cancer Society and the Herbert L. Hanna Center for Oncology Care, is an educational series for cancer patients and their caregivers. Contact Kristen at (412) 919-1078 or email Kristen.Hillebrand @cancer.org. • “Your Changing Body for Girls” addresses the emotional and physical changes of puberty for girls ages 9 to 12 and their parents. The class is held monthly at Excela Health Westmoreland Hospital. For more information, call (877) 771-1234. • “Smoke Free For Life” classes are offered at Indiana Regional Medical Center. Call for next session dates. Key topics covered are understanding the habit, developing a plan to quit and maintenance strategies. The classes are free courtesy of the Armstrong-Indiana-Clarion Drug and Alcohol Commission. For more information or to register, please contact Betsee Beunier at bbeunier@aidac.org or (724) 354-2746, ext. 318. • Medical Fitness is a supervised, structured exercise program for inactive adults or those at risk for health problems. Any adult who wishes to improve their fitness level or health is invited to attend. For more infor-

mation, call Indiana Regional Medical Center at (724) 3578088.

FAMILY SUPPORT • Adult Socialization Group is for adults with epilepsy through the Epilepsy Foundation of Western/Central Pennsylvania. For more information, call the Pittsburgh office at (800) 3615885. • Arthritis Aquatics Program is held at the YMCA of Indiana County, White Township and at Laurel Highlands Health Center. For dates, times, cost or other information, call the Arthritis Foundation at (800) 522-9900. • A Breast Cancer Support Group for individuals who have had breast cancer meets at 6 p.m. the second Thursday of the month at Indiana Regional Medical Center at Chestnut Ridge conference room, Blairsville, and at 6 p.m. the last Thursday of the month at the Women’s Imaging Center Library, IRMC. Call (724) 357-8081 for location. • “Celebrate Recovery,” a recovery ministry based on biblical principles with a goal to let God work through individuals in providing his healing power through a Christ-centered 12step program, is held at the following times and locations: 6:15 to 9:30 p.m. every Thursday at Homer City United Methodist Church, (724) 479-8682; meetings based on need at Blairsville Free United Methodist Church, (724) 459-8181; and at 6:15 Fridays at Grace United Methodist Church, Indiana, (724) 5414875. Celebrate Recovery provides a safe place for individuals to start dealing with their life’s hurts, hang-ups and habits, including codependency, chemical addiction, sexual addiction, eating disorders, anger issues, depression and/or loss. • Diabetes Support Group provides a dietitian and clinical nurse specialists to help people with diabetes develop and practice self-management. Call Indiana Regional Medical Center at (724) 357-7164. • A Gluten-free Support Group at Indiana Regional Medical Center teaches participants how to manage diet, and provides recipes and resources that may be useful to those on a gluten-free diet. For more information, call (724)357-8088. • HIV/AIDS Support is offered two times monthly at UPMC Lee Regional Community Care Management for those living with HIV/AIDS. All support group meetings are facilitated by a social worker. For more information, call (814) 524-3032 or (866) 429-1583. • Men’s Anger Group, Catholic Charities, meets from 7 to 8:30 p.m. in Greensburg. A registration screening is required. For more information, call (724) 463-8806 or (866) 409-6455. • Narcotics Anonymous offers referrals to meetings, services, agencies, etc. For meeting information, call (888) 251-2426. • “One Stitch at a Time,” a knitting and sharing hour, is offered at 10 a.m. the first and third Tuesday of the month at Indiana Regional Medical Center’s Women’s Imaging Center library. This hour is for women in cancer treatment or those who are moving beyond cancer. Call (724) 357-8081. • Pediatric Diabetes Support Group meets twice a year at Indiana Regional Medical Center. For more information, call (724) 357-7164. • Weight Watchers provides information on weight loss for a fee. For more information, call (800) 651-6000 or visit www. weightwatchers.com.


Food

The Indiana Gazette

Sunday, November 8, 2015 — D-7

Six ways to jazz up mashed potatoes By ALISON LADMAN

BROWN BUTTER ROSEMARY In a small saucepan over medium-low, cook ½ cup (1 stick) unsalted butter until the milk solids on the bottom of the pan turn light brown and smell fragrant, 5 to 6 minutes. They will continue to cook a little longer, so be careful not to burn them. Stir into the potatoes in place of the room temperature butter and add 2 tablespoons finely minced fresh rosemary.

Associated Press

Are you the sort of person who insists that Thanksgiving mashed potatoes can only be served straight up buttery, or are you willing to allow room for a little creative adulteration in the name of bigger, bolder flavor? Either way, we’ve got you covered. We started by creating a master recipe for basic, buttery-creamy mashed potatoes that are delicious just as they are. Stick with this version if you think mashed potatoes with anything beyond the basics (and a few lumps) is just a distraction. But in case you’re the type who gives thanks for the wild side of things, we also offer you six ways to jazz up our basic recipe. But before we tackle any of that, you first have to consider your potato varieties. Which variety you use depends on the type of mashed potatoes you want. If you prefer super fluffy, pure white mashed potatoes, russets are a good choice. If you’re going for ultra-buttery, use Yukon Golds. And if you like to leave the skin on all or some of the potatoes, red bliss are a good choice because their thinner skin mixes into the mash (Yukon Golds are a good middle ground, but russets are too thick). How you mash the potatoes also changes the consistency of the dish. For ultimate fluffiness, squeeze the potatoes through a ricer. Food mills also make very smooth potatoes. If you’re going for chunky (or left the skins on), you’ll want to use a hand-held potato masher.

BLUE WALNUT Stir in ½ cup crumbled blue cheese, ¾ cup chopped toasted walnuts and the zest of ½ lemon. DEVILED Stir in ½ teaspoon cayenne pepper, 2 tablespoons Dijon or spicy mustard, ¼ cup prepared horseradish and ¼ cup chopped fresh chives.

STICK WITH this recipe for Perfect Mashed Potatoes or, for bolder flavor, add a few new ingredients. Then there’s the mixer. Some people use it, but it’s not a great choice. It can easily overwork the potatoes, breaking down the starches and producing the dreaded gluey potato syndrome. If you insist, go easy. PERFECT MASHED POTATOES Start to finish: 30 minutes Servings: 10 5 pounds potatoes, peeled or not, cut into 1-inch chunks Kosher salt ¼ cup (½ stick) unsalted

butter, room temperature 1 to 1½ cups half-and-half, warmed Ground white pepper Place the cut potatoes in a large pot, then add enough cool water to cover by at least 1 inch. Stir in 1 tablespoon of salt. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat to maintain a simmer. Cover and cook until the potatoes are very tender and a fork penetrates them easily. Timing will vary by potato variety, but should take between 10 and 15 minutes. Be careful not to let the potatoes cook beyond this point; you

want them tender, not totally broken down. Drain well in a colander, then return the potatoes to the pot. Set the pot over medium heat and cook for 1 to 2 minutes, shaking the pan now and again, to cook off excess moisture. Remove from the heat and mash. Once the potatoes are mashed to your liking, stir in the butter and 1 cup of the warmed half-and-half. If you like a wetter mashed potato, add the additional half-andhalf. Season with salt and white pepper. Serve or use a

Associated Press photos

variation below. Nutrition information per serving: 260 calories; 70 calories from fat (27 percent of total calories); 8 g fat (4.5 g saturated; 0 g trans fats); 20 mg cholesterol; 410 mg sodium; 44 g carbohydrate; 4 g fiber; 3 g sugar; 4 g protein. SOUR CREAM AND ONION Use sour cream in place of the half-and-half and mix in 1 bunch of chopped scallions. Add a splash of milk to adjust the consistency, if needed.

HUNTERS Stir in ½ cup crumbled cooked bacon, 1 cup crumbled cooked sausage and ½ cup finely chopped salami. DIRTY Slice the top off 2 heads of garlic, just so the tips of the cloves show under the papery skins. Drizzle with olive oil and wrap loosely in foil. Roast in the oven at 350 F for 45 minutes, or until very tender. Meanwhile, thinly slice and sauté 2 large yellow onions in a little butter over medium heat until well browned, about 20 minutes. Squeeze the garlic cloves out of the skins and mash with a fork. Stir into the potatoes, along with the caramelized onions, and a hefty dose of ground black pepper.

DIY cranberry sauce makes great pancakes By MELISSA D’ARABIAN Associated Press

SPOONBREAD CORN PUDDING tastes good on Thanksgiving and the next day, paired with a green salad tossed with vinaigrette.

Choosing sides: Corn pudding or spoonbread? By KATIE WORKMAN Associated Press

During fall — and particularly at Thanksgiving — we often find ourselves searching for just the perfect side dish. We want recipes that will be at home next to a roasted chicken or turkey, or maybe a beef roast or ham. We want recipes that are crowd-pleasers, recipes that shimmer with the glow of comfort food. We want side dishes that people inch toward while contemplating second helpings. This is the side dish you are looking for. I knew I wanted something corn-based, and then got a bit torn between spoonbread and corn pudding. Both dishes are popular in the South and appear regularly on holiday dinner tables. Basically, spoonbread is cornbread that is soft enough to eat with a spoon and is made from a cornmeal base. Corn pudding is more of an eggand dairy-based pudding with corn kernels studded throughout. I couldn’t decide. So I combined both thoughts into one dish. Let’s just say the “Should I have seconds?” question was answered with a definitive “Yes!” Purists from the South might cock an eyebrow at me. But I invite them to give it a shot (and acknowledge cheerfully that strict culinary authenticity is not my strongest suit).

Whipping the egg whites is an extra step, but one that ensures the resulting dish will be light and fluffy. You do want to serve this dish warm from the oven so that it holds its slightly soufflé-like texture. Having said that, a scoop or two reheated in the microwave the next day — and paired with a green salad tossed with vinaigrette — is a fine lunch. SPOONBREAD CORN PUDDING Start to finish: 55 minutes (20 minutes active) Servings: 8 4 tablespoons (½ stick) unsalted butter, plus extra 3¼ cups whole milk, divided 2 teaspoons sugar 1 teaspoon kosher salt 1 cup cornmeal 2 cups corn kernels (from 3 to 4 ears of corn or frozen kernels) Large pinch cayenne pepper 4 large eggs, separated and at room temperature ¼ teaspoon cream of tartar Heat oven to 400 F. Butter a shallow 1½- or 2-quart baking dish. In a medium saucepan over medium-high heat, combine the butter, 3 cups of the milk, the sugar and salt. Bring to a simmer. When the butter has melted, reduce the heat to medium-low. Whisking constantly, add the cornmeal in a slow, steady drizzle. Whisk in the corn kernels

and cayenne and continue whisking for another 4 or 5 minutes, or until the mixture is thick. Remove from the heat and transfer the mixture to a large bowl. Set aside. In a small bowl, whisk together the egg yolks and remaining ¼ cup of milk. Set aside. In a medium bowl, use an electric mixer to beat the egg whites and cream of tartar until stiff peaks form. Add about ½ cup of the cornmeal mixture to the bowl with the egg yolks and stir quickly to combine. Turn the yolk mixture into the bowl with the rest of the cornmeal mixture and whisk to combine. Fold about 1/3 of the egg white mixture into the cornmeal mixture, which will lighten the batter, then gently fold in the rest of the egg whites so that they are almost incorporated. You will see a white streak or two, which is fine. Transfer the batter to the prepared baking dish and bake for 30 to 35 minutes, or until the top is browned and puffy. When you shake the pan the spoonbread should jiggle slightly, though not so much that it looks liquidy in the middle. Remove and cool slightly on a wire rack. Serve warm. Nutrition information per serving: 230 calories; 110 calories from fat (48 percent of total calories); 12 g fat (6 g saturated; 0 g trans fats); 135 mg cholesterol; 320 mg sodium; 24 g carbohydrate; 2 g fiber; 7 g sugar; 8 g protein.

In their natural form, cranberries are quite healthy, full of vitamin C and fiber and packing just 4 grams of sugar per cup. In fact, they only become nutritionally worrying when they get doused with sugar around the holidays. My answer, of course, is to make your own cranberry sauce this holiday. It’s incredibly easy and it allows you to cut the sugar content in half without anyone missing it. So instead of heading down the canned food aisle, pop over to the produce section (you’re going there to buy potatoes and green beans, anyway, right?) and pick up a bag of fresh cranberries. Follow the recipe on the bag (usually something along the lines of boiling the berries with water and sugar), but cut the suggested amount of sugar in half (or by a quarter if you can’t come to terms with half). For extra flavor and natural sweetness, I sometimes add orange zest or segments to my cranberry sauce, as well as a vanilla bean. But frankly, it almost doesn’t matter what I do to the cranberry sauce, as its presence on the table is merely symbolic to my family. My French husband didn’t grow up eating cranberry sauce, so he never developed a taste for it. And my kids aren’t fans, either. The result? I always have leftover cranberry sauce. Forever a budget cook, I feel compelled to give those leftovers new life. I’ll add it to my favorite apple crumble or muffin recipe, spoon it over yogurt or into oatmeal for breakfast, or use it as a base for a spicy-sweet salsa or chutney. Perhaps my kids’ favorite way to rework cranberry sauce is in pancakes. I mix cranberry sauce with oats and flax seeds to make a tasty treat that my family loves on winter weekend mornings, when I let a little extra sugar slide. I use my leftover homemade cranberry sauce in this recipe, but it works just fine with the canned stuff, even the jellied variety (complete

LEFTOVER CRANBERRY sauce can also top oatmeal. with can-shaped grooves on the sides). CRANBERRY SAUCE, OAT AND FLAX PANCAKES This recipe is easily made gluten-free by substituting a gluten-free flour mix for the all-purpose flour called for. Start to finish: 20 minutes Makes 10 pancakes ½ cup oat flour (or ¾ cup oats, pulsed in food processor until finely ground) ¼ cup almond flour (also called almond meal) 1/3 cup all-purpose flour 1½ teaspoons baking powder ¼ teaspoon baking soda ¼ teaspoon kosher salt 3 tablespoons flax meal (ground flaxseed) 1/8 teaspoon cinnamon ¼ cup plain low-fat Greek yogurt 2/3 cup prepared cranberry sauce (whole berry or jellied) 1 teaspoon orange zest 1 egg 2/3 cup low-fat milk (dairy or non-dairy) 1 teaspoon vanilla extract Heat a nonstick griddle over medium while preparing the batter. Heat the oven to 200 F. In a medium bowl, whisk together the oat flour, almond flour, all-purpose flour, baking powder, bak-

ing soda, salt, flax meal and cinnamon. In a second medium bowl, briskly whisk together the yogurt and cranberry sauce to break up the cranberry sauce. Add the orange zest, egg, milk and vanilla and whisk until smooth (not counting chunks from any whole cranberries). Pour the wet ingredients into the dry mixture and gently stir with a whisk, incorporating all the ingredients, being careful not to overmix. Lightly mist the hot griddle with cooking spray. Using a ¼-cup measuring cup, scoop batter onto the prepared griddle, being careful not to crowd the griddle. Cook until the pancake batter is nearly dry, 2 to 3 minutes, then flip and cook for another 1 to 2 minutes. Transfer to a heat-safe plate and set in the oven to keep warm. Repeat with remaining batter. Serve with desired toppings. Nutrition information per pancake: 130 calories; 30 calories from fat (23 percent of total calories); 3 g fat (0.5 g saturated; 0 g trans fats); 25 mg cholesterol; 190 mg sodium; 18 g carbohydrate; 2 g fiber; 8 g sugar; 4 g protein.


Et Cetera

D-8 — Sunday, November 8, 2015

‘Warcraft’ trailer debuts ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) — The director and cast of “Warcraft” are hammering down on BlizzCon. A trailer for the film adaptation of the long-running interactive fantasy series debuted to thunderous applause Friday at the fan convention. The footage teased the tusk-filled, armor-laden conflict between orcs and humans that has been depicted in the 11-year-old online role-playing game “World of Warcraft” and the original “Warcraft” games from the 1990s. “Warcraft” filmmaker Duncan Jones introduced the preview on stage at the Anaheim Convention Center with cast members Clancy Brown, Dominic Cooper, Ben Foster, Toby Kebbell, Paula Patton and Daniel Wu. “That was incredible,” said Jones backstage after the unveiling. “I’ve been working on this movie for three years and coming to BlizzCon for the past five years. I know this crowd from both sides, so it was fantastic to be able to finally show them in person and release the trailer online for everyone who couldn’t be here.” Jones, the filmmaker behind the critical sci-fi successes “Moon” and “Source Code,” said he understands winning over the BlizzCon crowd is only half the battle. “We have to convince people who aren’t fans of ‘Warcraft’ that this is a movie that they’re going to understand, enjoy and

love,” said Jones. “I keep telling everyone here that this is an opportunity for those who love ‘Warcraft’ to communicate to everyone else exactly what it is they love about ‘Warcraft.’” Despite the game series’ 20-year-old history and die-hard fanbase, Foster said he was undaunted when tackling the role of the magical Medivh. He didn’t care that “Warcraft” was a game before a film. Patton, who plays the half-orc, halfhuman Garona, acknowledged one of the biggest challenges of her part was attempting to act while wearing pointy ears and tusks. She would take them home to practice. “My son loved it,” said Patton. “He would call me orc mommy. I would tape my pointy ears on him and rehearse my lines with the tusks on while cleaning the house or whatever.” Ahead of the “Warcraft” trailer debut, Activision Blizzard Inc. announced plans during an investor meeting at BlizzCon to create and release its own film and TV series based on the “Call of Duty” military shooter franchise and the “Skylanders” toy-game series. Activision Blizzard partnered with Legendary Pictures to produce “Warcraft,” which is set for release June 10 and will be distributed by Universal Pictures. Online: http://www.warcraftmovie.com

TODAY IN HISTORY By The Associated Press

Today is Sunday, Nov. 8, the 312th day of 2015. There are 53 days left in the year. Today’s Highlights in History: On Nov. 8, 1965, newspaper columnist Dorothy Kilgallen was found dead in her Manhattan home the morning after appearing as a regular panelist on the CBS game show “What’s My Line?” The TV soap opera “Days of Our Lives” premiered on NBC. On this date: In 1793, the Louvre began admitting the public, even though the French museum had been officially open since August. Madame Roland, 39, an influential figure of the French Revolution, was convicted of treason during the Reign of Terror and sent to the guillotine. In 1864, President Abraham Lincoln won re-election as he defeated Democratic challenger George B. McClellan. In 1889, Montana became the 41st state. In 1923, Adolf Hitler launched his first attempt at seizing power in Germany with a failed coup in Munich that came to be known as the “Beer-Hall Putsch.” In 1932, New York Democratic Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt defeated incumbent Republican Herbert Hoover for the presidency. In 1935, the movies “Mutiny on the Bounty,” starring Clark Gable and Charles Laughton, and “A Night at the Opera,” starring the Marx Brothers, premiered in New York. In 1942, Operation Torch, resulting in an Allied victory, began during World War II as U.S. and British forces landed in French North Africa. In 1950, during the Korean War, the first jet-plane battle took place as U.S. Air Force Lt. Russell J. Brown shot down a North Korean MiG-15. In 1960, Massachusetts Sen. John F. Kennedy defeated Vice President Richard M. Nixon for the presidency. In 1974, a federal judge in Cleveland dismissed charges against eight Ohio National Guardsmen accused of violating the civil rights of students who were killed or wounded in the 1970 Kent State shootings. In 1988, Vice President George H.W. Bush won the presidential election, defeating the Democratic nominee, Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis. In 1994, midterm elections resulted in Republicans winning a majority in the Senate while at the same time gaining control of the House for the first time in 40 years. Ten years ago: French President Jacques Chirac declared a 12-day state of emergency to halt France’s worst civil unrest in nearly four decades. Gunmen assassinated a second lawyer in the Saddam Hussein trial in Baghdad. At Campbell County Comprehensive High School in Tennessee, Assistant Principal Kent Bruce was shot and killed and two other administrators seriously wounded. (Student Kenneth Bartley later pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and attempted murder and was sentenced to 45 years in

prison, with a chance for parole in 25.) Bartolo Colon won the American League Cy Young Award. Today’s Birthdays: Actor Norman Lloyd is 101. CBS newsman Morley Safer is 84. Actress Stephane Audran is 83. Actor Alain Delon is 80. Singer-actress Bonnie Bramlett is 71. Singer Bonnie Raitt is 66. TV personality Mary Hart is 65. Former Playboy Enterprises chairman and chief executive Christie Hefner is 63. Actress Alfre Woodard is 63. Singersongwriter Rickie Lee Jones is 61. Author Kazuo Ishiguro is 61. Rock musician Porl Thompson (The Cure) is 58. Singer-actor Leif Garrett is 54. Chef and TV personality Gordon Ramsay is 49. Ac-

tress Courtney ThorneSmith is 48. Actress Parker Posey is 47. Rock musician Jimmy Chaney is 46. Actress Roxana Zal is 46. Singer Diana King is 45. Actor Gonzalo Menendez is 44. Rock musician Scott Devendorf (The National) is 43. Actress Gretchen Mol is 42. ABC News anchor David Muir is 42. Actor Matthew Rhys is 41. Actress Tara Reid is 40. Country singer Bucky Covington is 38. Actress Dania Ramirez is 36. Actress Azura Skye is 34. Actor Chris Rankin is 32. TV personality Jack Osbourne is 30. Actress Jessica Lowndes is 27. Singer-actor Riker Lynch (TV: “Glee” “Dancing With the Stars”) is 24. Country singer Lauren Alaina is 21.

The Indiana Gazette

Mom faces tough choice if daughter decides to move DEAR ABBY: I am a 68year-old woman. For the past seven years, I have lived with my daughter, my only child. We have always had a great relationship, and now as adults, we have a great friendship. She and her husband Dear Abby is recently written by separated, Abigail Van and she Buren, also now has a known as boyfriend. Jeanne She has an Phillips, and excellent was founded by her mother, job and has been talkPauline ing lately Phillips. about asking for a transfer to Florida, 900 miles away. I don’t want to move anywhere. I have a part-time job I love and I don’t want to give it up. All my family and friends live here. My ex-sonin-law has offered for me to come live with him. We have always had a good relationship.

DEAR ABBY

So: Do I give up the rest of my life without seeing my only child every day and move in with her ex? Or do I move with her to Florida? In either case, I’ll have to give up my very specialized job that is not transferable. Help! — DECISIONS TO MAKE IN MARYLAND DEAR DECISIONS: You and your daughter are not joined at the hip. While you won’t be able to be with her every day, there is no reason you can’t talk together on the phone or Skype. She should move alone to Florida and see how her relationship with her boyfriend works out, because there are no guarantees. Since you and your former son-in-law are comfortable with the arrangement, give living with him a try. It says a lot about both of you that your relationship is such a warm one. If anything changes, re-evaluate your options then. But for now, some separation between you and your daughter might be good for both of you. DEAR ABBY: My spouse and I are Buddhists, and we do not intend to raise our 2year-old daughter as a Christian. We plan to teach her about various religions, but we want the opportunity to

do so to be ours as parents. I have discussed this at length with my parents. Nevertheless, they insist on teaching her Christian songs even though I have asked them to stop. I feel their refusal to follow my wishes on this matter is disrespectful. They had their opportunity to raise me the way they chose. Now it’s my turn to raise my child as I choose. How do I get them to take me seriously, short of telling them they can no longer see her? (I’d rather it not come to that.) — CHANTING FOR PATIENCE IN AUSTIN, TEXAS DEAR CHANTING: When are your parents teaching your child these songs? If they are doing it when she is with them without your supervision, limit their alone time with her. That should work in the short term. But realize that you can’t shelter your daughter from Christianity and other religions forever, particularly as she grows older and the Christian holidays roll around with all the attendant marketing that surrounds them. Having awareness of and respect for other religions is important today, because not all people believe alike.

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is pleased to welcome Joy Boone, M.D. to our practice. Dr. Boone brings a great deal of expertise and experience to Indiana County. She is board certified in Family Medicine and has been involved with the development of the Medical Home concept in Pennsylvania. Most recently she has been on the faculty at the UPMC Family Practice Residency Program in McKeesport. Her residents gave her the Faculty Teaching Award for 2015. We’re glad she has decided to return to private practice. Dr. Boone is accepting new patients in Clymer. Read more about her at clymerfamilymedicine.com. 724-254-4314 349 Franklin Street Clymer, PA. 15728


EISUR L E

E

FAMILY The Indiana Gazette

Sunday, November 8, 2015

SORGHUM PECAN PRALINE CHEESECAKE

It’s turkey time A complete Thanksgiving dinner made easy Food. Friends. Family. Football. Thanksgiving would be incomplete without any of them, but the most important is the holiday feast your family and friends have gathered to enjoy while the game plays in the background. Serving up a full holiday spread — from turkey to dessert — that is sure to bring everyone back for years to come is easy with these tips for every stage of the meal. Pair this perfectly pumpkin dessert with a glass of milk for a tasty twist on a holiday favorite. From fourth-generation dairy farmers — Ryan and Susan Anglin and their sons, Cody and Casey, of Triple A Farms in Bentonville, Ark. — this savory dessert, featured in “The Dairy Good Cookbook,” is sure to become a tradition in your family, just as it is in the Anglin family. For more recipes, visit Midwest Dairy.com.

PUMPKIN PIE SQUARES WITH CINNAMON SUGAR YOGURT TOPPING Total time: 1 hour, 20 minutes Servings: 16 Crust 1 cup graham cracker crumbs ½ cup old-fashioned oats ¼ cup brown sugar ¼ cup butter, melted 2 tablespoons low-fat milk Cooking spray Filling 2 cups canned pumpkin 2 eggs ¾ cup sugar ¾ cup low-fat vanilla yogurt ½ cup low-fat milk 1 teaspoon cinnamon 1 teaspoon pumpkin spice ¼ teaspoon salt ½ cup pecans, chopped Topping 2 tablespoons sugar 1 teaspoon cinnamon 1 cup plain nonfat yogurt Heat oven to 350 F. In large bowl, mix together graham cracker crumbs, oats, brown sugar, butter and milk. Press into thin layer in a 9-by-13-inch pan greased with cooking spray. Bake for 10 minutes. While crust is baking, in another bowl, beat together pumpkin through salt. Pour over crust and bake for 40 minutes or until set. Sprinkle pecans over filling and bake another 10-15 minutes or until center is set. Cool slightly in pan. Mix together sugar and cinnamon. Mix in yogurt. Top each square with 1 tablespoon yogurt topping. Leave your taste buds dancing for joy. With rich, creamy, delicious flavors in every bite, this Sorghum Pecan Praline Cheesecake will leave everyone at your table satisfied. Luscious sorghum syrup, which is naturally high in fiber, iron and protein, surrounds, captures and com-

plements the decadent cheesecake and praline pecan topping. Find more satisfying recipes using sorghum that will keep your taste buds tingling all season long, visit sorghumcheckoff.com.

SORGHUM PECAN PRALINE CHEESECAKE Recipe developed by Brenda Watts, Gaffney, S.C. Cheesecake 6 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted 1 1/8 cups sorghum syrup, divided 1¾ cups graham cracker crumbs 4 packages (8 ounces each) cream cheese, softened ½ cup sour cream 1/3 cup packed light brown sugar 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour 1 cup sorghum syrup 1½ teaspoons vanilla extract 4 large eggs Topping 1 package (6 ounces) pecan halves 2 tablespoons packed light brown sugar 4 tablespoons sorghum syrup, divided 6 tablespoons unsalted butter ½ cup packed light brown sugar 3 tablespoons heavy cream 1 teaspoon vanilla extract 1/8 teaspoon kosher salt Heat oven to 325 F. Lightly spray bottom and sides of 9-inch nonstick springform pan with removable rim. Place pan over center of 3 18-inch sheets heavy-duty foil and securely wrap foil around outside bottom and sides of pan. For cheesecake, in small bowl, combine butter and 2 tablespoons sorghum syrup. In medium bowl, toss graham cracker crumbs and sorghum butter mixture together until crumbs are moistened. Press crumb mixture evenly into bottom of prepared pan. Bake 8 minutes to form crust; remove from oven and cool 10 minutes over wire rack. In large bowl use electric mixer on medium speed to beat cream cheese, sour cream, brown sugar and flour, 3 minutes, or until well blended and smooth. Gradually add 1 cup sorghum syrup, vanilla and eggs (one egg at a time) and continue beating 3 minutes longer from low speed increasing to medium speed, or until mixture is well blended and creamy. Pour filling evenly over crust in pan. Place pan in center of large baking pan (e.g., roasting pan) and pour 1-inch of hot water in large baking pan, around filled prepared pan. Bake 1 hour and 15 minutes or until center is almost set but slightly jiggles. Remove from oven, remove cheesecake from baking pan and gently remove wrapped foil from cheesecake. Place cheesecake onto wire rack to cool 15 minutes. Run thin, sharp knife around edge of pan to loosen edges; cool in pan

2-3 hours in refrigerator. Meanwhile, prepare pecans. Increase oven temperature to 350 F. Line baking sheet with large sheet of parchment paper. In bowl, sprinkle brown sugar and drizzle 1 tablespoon sorghum syrup over pecans. Using large spoon, toss to evenly coat and spread pecans flat over parchment paper-lined pan. Bake pecans 8 minutes or until lightly browned and glazed. Place pan over wire cooling rack, use large spoon to separate and evenly coat pecans; let cool 10 minutes. In heavy duty 1-quart nonstick saucepan, melt butter over medium heat. Add brown sugar and 3 tablespoons sorghum syrup into melted butter and cook 2 to 3 minutes or until blended and heated through, stirring constantly. Stir heavy cream, vanilla and salt into mixture; continue stirring constantly until praline mixture comes to a boil. Simmer until slightly thickened, about 3 minutes. Stir occasionally. Remove from heat and let cool. To serve, remove rim of pan from cheesecake. Place cheesecake on large round serving plate. Place glazed pecans flat on top of cheesecake, starting at outer edges and ending in center. Spoon or pour praline topping evenly over top of cheesecake.

TURKEY DAY TIPS The sight of a beautifully cooked, golden brown bird being brought to the table is one of the most memorable moments of any Thanksgiving gathering. Follow these tips to prepare the perfect centerpiece for your holiday meal: Thawing Your Turkey • For every 5 pounds in weight, thaw in original wrapper for 24 hours in the refrigerator. Thaw faster by covering with cold water in the sink and soaking approximately 30 minutes per pound. • Refrigerate as soon as thawed or cook immediately. For best quality, do not refreeze uncooked turkey. Roasting the Bird • Baste with extra virgin olive oil. • Place breast-side-up on rack in shallow roasting pan. Cook in 325 F oven. • For an unstuffed turkey, place a stalk or two of celery, seasonings, a cut-up onion and a handful of parsley in the cavity to keep it moist. • Lay “tent” of foil loosely over turkey to prevent over-browning. • Turkey is done when meat thermometer is 180 F or when the red stem on the pop-up thermometer rises. • For easier carving, let turkey stand at room temperature for at least 20 minutes. More Ways to Make the Perfect Centerpiece • Grilled: Grill 15-18 minutes per pound. Air in grill must be between 225-300 F. • Deep Fat Fried: Cook 3-5 minutes per pound in 350 F oil. • Smoked: Cook 20-30 minutes per pound. Air in smoker must be

SORGHUM PECAN PRALINE CHEESECAKE

How to cook up a visual #Thanksgiving feast on Instagram By KATIE HUMPHREY (Minneapolis) Star Tribune

Food is a certainty at Thanksgiving — and on Instagram. The photo social network is a prime place to share foodie snapshots any day of the week. And it’s guaranteed we’ll get an extra helping of dinner table pictures on Thursday, #HappyThanksgiving. Why not show off the table you decorated with care, that first turkey or Grandma’s homemade pumpkin pie? But there are pitfalls to #foodporn photography. Just ask Martha Stewart. Even the super hostess has made delicious look disgusting on social media. For a little help, we turned to Melissa Oholendt, a Minneapolis lifestyle and wedding photographer whose work is often featured on Wit & Delight. Here are her tips for snapping delightful photos of food and decor. QUESTION: What makes a good picture of food or a table setting? ANSWER: Natural light! I know with the sun setting by 5 p.m. that can be tough, but natural light is the best possible ingredient for a stunning Instagram photo. Set the table early and snag a photo before your guests arrive. Call it a practice round for the real thing. Q: The best Thanksgiving Instagrams show ... A: A beautiful table setting. A top-down view of the table and

between 225-300 F. • Microwaved: Cook 9-10 minutes per pound on medium power. Rotate during cooking.

HAVE YOUR SIDES AND EAT THEM TOO While the turkey takes center stage on Thanksgiving, surrounding the centerpiece with a variety of delicious side dishes can take your turkey day to the next level. Here are a few popular sides to round out your table: POTATOES: While mashed potatoes and gravy are always a holiday hit, other serving options, such as roasted potatoes, scalloped potatoes or sweet potatoes, can add va-

food. A perfectly crafted cocktail. Q: The worst food pictures ... A:... are of food only. Q: Help! So much of this Thanksgiving food is white, brown and yellow. Not very colorful. A: So true. Try bringing in a floral arrangement or even just a few sprigs of herbs into the frame to add a little visual interest. And if all else fails, omit the food and just focus on the beautiful table. Q: Are there particular clichés to avoid? A: It’s the holidays. The more cliché the better. Show me your football in the park and your turkey cooked to perfection; I want to see it. Q: How about other do’s and don’ts? A: If you miss your window of natural light, do light some candles and give into the warm candlelit glow. Don’t make your guests wait to sit and eat while you take photos. Do try different angles — get low, get high, get to the side, etc. Don’t Instagram your half-eaten food. That’s gross. Q: Any final holiday Instagram thoughts? A: I love a great Instagram as much as the next person (in fact, maybe more), but if your only photo from Thanksgiving is a grainy photo of the people you love around a table filled with delicious but not particularly Instagrammable food? It’s a job well done. Cheers to you.

riety to a favorite traditional dish. FRUITS AND VEGETABLES: From green bean casserole and cranberry sauce to roasted vegetables, corn pudding, candied yams and butternut squash, no table is full without a variety of fruits and veggies to choose from. NOODLES: Outside of a traditional potato side, many turkey day tables offer pasta-based sides, such as homemade turkey noodles, macaroni and cheese or pasta salad. BREAD: No Thanksgiving meal can be complete without cornbread, rolls or biscuits — which can also be used to make miniature turkey sandwiches after the meal is over — and a holiday classic, stuffing.


Leisure

E-2— Sunday, November 8, 2015

The Indiana Gazette

Paint a creative fix for worn floors By MELISSA RAYWORTH Associated Press

Worn and faded hardwood floors can drag down the look of a room. But having scuffed floors sanded down and restained can be expensive and messy. One alternative that’s gaining popularity: painting older hardwood floors. You can add solid color, stripes, or any imaginable stenciled or hand-drawn patterns to a floor. There’s actually a long tradition of painted wooden floors in American homes, says Tom Silva, general contractor on the long-running PBS television series “This Old House.” One hundred years ago, paint was considered a practical way to protect floors and add some beauty in the process. In a survey done last month of more than 1,200 users on the home-improvement website Houzz.com, 15 percent said they’re ready to make the leap to painting while 85 percent were still more comfortable with stained wood floors. But Houzz editor Sheila Schmitz says some of the site’s members who have embraced painted floors have done so with real creativity. “We’ve seen homeowners reinvent their floors with glossy white paint, oversize stripes, checkerboards with alternating natural and painted finishes, and even more fanciful shapes,” Schmitz says. It’s a DIY project that requires effort but little experience. So how do you do it, and what are some of the boldest, most interesting approaches you can take?

BOLD FLOOR, NEUTRAL WALLS Interior designer Camila Pavone was ahead of the trend in painting her kitchen floor in 2010. The room previously had green walls and a stained wood floor. Pavone switched the walls to a creamy white (she used Martha Stewart’s “Glass of Milk”) and covered the wood floor with jade green paint. She considered using marine paint but chose a formula called Break-Through!, which dries quickly and creates a harder surface than many other types of paint. Five years later, Pavone is still thrilled with the result. The floors “always get a ‘Wow’ when new people come to my house,” she says. “The only thing I didn’t take into account was the wear and tear of two dogs and now two kids. The claws on the dogs do scratch the floors up a bit. But I try to pretend that if I saw that in a store display in Anthropologie, I would think it was fabulous. So I don’t stress.” Because the kitchen is a high-traffic area, Pavone has repainted the floors

Does all-wheel drive protect from icy roads? Consumer Reports editor

PREP SMART Fans of painted floors point out that the process is less labor-intensive than staining because you don’t have to sand away every old scratch or stain. But that doesn’t mean you can skip the step of prepping your floors. Clean the floor well, says Silva, then scuff it with sandpaper just enough to create a slightly rough surface. That prep work is the key to making sure the first layer of paint or primer will adhere. Primer isn’t required if the floor already has some finish on it. But putting down a few thin, clear coats of primer can make it easier if you decide years from now to remove the paint. If you do prime the floor, use sandpaper to lightly scuff that clear coat after it dries to help subsequent painted coats adhere well.

CONSUMER REPORTS

Associated Press

A WHITE and gray checkerboard pattern was painted on this floor to add a touch of elegance to the otherwise casual space. once every two years to keep them looking shiny and scratch-free. But that work is relatively easy. “It’s a really fast project and normally only takes around two hours,” she says. “I would totally do it again!”

PICK ANY PATTERN Paint can also be perfect for entryways. Thick stripes, diamond or chevron patterns can make a small foyer seem bigger, drawing attention to an otherwise ignored space. Once the floor is cleaned and prepared, simply lay out your design with painters’ tape. Be careful to measure the width of stripes or the angles of diamonds or chevrons to make sure you’ve laid the tape in the proper places. Consider using large stencils to add a pattern to the floor of a larger space, like an enclosed porch. Or paint a brightly colored “rug” in the center of a room by first painting a solid rectangle, then adding a pattern once that solid coat is completely dry. Another option: Coat the floor with a semi-transparent stain or paint that allows the grain of the wood to show through. Once it’s dry, use painters’ tape to create a border around the room that you’ll fill with a contrasting or complementary color or pattern.

TAKE TIME FOR TOPCOATS Once you’ve finished your painted masterpiece, add one or several clear coats on top for protection. Patience

HOUSE OF THE WEEK Home features interesting touches The Mirabel’s front facade is a graceful blend of arched openings, interesting roof lines and intriguing window treatments. This four-bedroom home also boasts a large bonus room over the garage. Family living spaces fill the rear, an open, expansive area brightened by a wealth of windows. This generously sized room is both dramatic and relaxed. Shelves or cabinets (your choice) that flank the fireplace in the sunken family room are ideal for housing a home entertainment center. Two steps up and you’re in a dining area that’s totally open to the modern kitchen. French doors swing inward to welcome summer breezes and provide access to a large patio. A central work island adds to the already generous counter and cupboard space that wraps around three sides of the C-shaped kitchen. Two or more cooks can combine their culinary efforts here without bumping elbows or bickering over space. Space is ample in the utility room as well, where counters rim two walls. The end counter is a natural location for a sewing machine. If desired, a laundry chute could easily be installed in an upstairs linen closet. Just off the foyer is a room that could be furnished as a formal living room. Some families might prefer enclosing it more completely and outfitting it as a library or home office. An elegant tub gives a feeling of luxury to the owners’ suite. Other amenities include a large walk-in closet, twin lavs, and an enclosed shower and toilet. Left unfinished, the Mirabel’s bonus room is great for storage. Finished, it could be another bedroom, crafts room, rehearsal studio, or you name it. Associated Designs is the original source for the Mirabel 30-201. For more information or to view other designs, visit www.AssociatedDesigns.com or call (800) 634-0123.

THE FLOOR of this kitchen was painted a soft shade of green. between layers is the key: You may be tempted to paint again as soon as one thin coat feels dry to the touch, but you’ll get a much stronger and more attractive result if you leave extra time. Silva points out that oil-based topcoats “may add a little bit of a goldish color to it, because of the oil. Waterbased will give you the true color of the paint.” And, obvious as it may sound, remember: “Know where to start and where to end,” says Schmitz, “so you don’t literally paint yourself into a corner.”

Forty-one percent of all weather-related car crashes on U.S. roads are due to conditions involving snow, sleet, ice and slush, according to Consumer Reports. That’s pretty sobering when you consider that those conditions usually exist during just a few months of the year. Accidents caused by winter weather result in 150,000 injuries and 2,000 deaths each year, on average, according to a study by the Federal Highway Administration. Little wonder, then, that car manufacturers trumpet all-wheel drive as a safety shield against inclement conditions. Consumers are inundated with that marketing message, and all-wheel drive is perceived as a musthave for many car buyers. It’s a key reason SUVs are now the top-selling segment of the auto market. But can all-wheel drive really save you when the weather turns ugly? It provides some benefit, but it may be insufficient to get you through a grueling storm. All-wheel drive is about getting your car moving from a dead stop — not about braking or steering — and you should be aware of its limitations. Through weeks of driving in snowy, unplowed conditions at Consumer Reports’ 327-acre test center in Connecticut, testers found that all-wheel drive didn’t aid in braking or in certain cornering situations. Their evaluations conclusively showed that using winter tires matters more than having allwheel drive in many situations, and that the difference on snow and ice can be significant. Swapping and storing tires twice per year is a nuisance. And in places where street plowing is thorough, you can probably get by with all-season tires that are in good condition. All-wheel drive is far better than two-wheel drive when it comes to driving on slick surfaces where you need serious traction to get going, such as a snowy uphill driveway. But Consumer Reports’ tests found that all-wheel drive by itself won’t help if you’re heading too fast toward a sudden sharp curve on a snowy night.

That’s an important point for people who overestimate the capability of their allwheel-drive vehicle. Don’t be one of those guys — unless you want to risk a crash or find yourself stranded far from civilization. Consumer Reports’ testtrack observations lead it to advise that using snow tires provides the best grip and assurance for going, stopping and cornering, no matter what you drive: all-wheel drive, front-drive or reardrive. And buying winter tires for a front-drive car will cost far less than the several-thousand-dollar premium you’ll pay for all-wheel drive. Enhancements like electronic stability control — standard on every new car since 2012 — also help twowheel-drive vehicles maintain control, at least up to a point. What did the tests show? Braking tests were conducted in an all-wheel-drive 2015 Honda CR-V, the best-selling compact crossover, with its original all-season tires, then with winter tires. The differences in stopping distances were considerable. On a different day under different snow conditions, testers did braking tests pitting the CR-V against a Toyota Camry, both rolling on new winter tires. The frontdrive Camry did just as well as the AWD Honda, both stopping from 60 mph in about 300 feet. As for handling, testers found that some of the allwheel-drive vehicles in the fleet struggled to stay on course when equipped with all-season tires — even in the hands of professional drivers. A couple of the vehicles even plowed straight through corners and off the track. If you live in a place that gets frequent snow storms, an all-wheel-drive vehicle with winter tires will be very capable. But most AWD drivers don’t think of adding winter tires. According to a survey of 54,295 Consumer Reports subscribers who drove AWD or 4WD vehicles in the snow for more than six days last winter, less than 15 percent equipped their vehicles with winter tires. Consumer Reports strongly recommends buying four winter tires for whatever vehicle you drive.

SMART MONEY

Dispute with hotel may play out in court DEAR BRUCE: I stayed tell Discover that you at a Los Angeles hotel BRUCE intend to pay only the July 10 to July 13. I WILLIAMS $84 until such time as booked the room for this is settled. $84 per night. When I DEAR BRUCE: I just noticed the hotel exercised my 500 charged me $140 per stock option shares night, I told them I with my current emwould pay only $84 ployer. I was granted and to present me them five years ago with a bill for that and had three to five rate. They refused, years to exercise and I refused to sign them. the charge receipt and When I exercised left the hotel. the options, they Someone at the asked if it is my intent Send your hotel signed an illegito remain with the questions to ble name to the recompany for a year. If Smart ceipt and sent it to I were to leave the Money, P.O. Discover for the $140 company during the Box 503, rate. The receipt that next 12 months, can Elfers, FL went to Discover was they really do any34680 dated July 6. I reportthing? If so, what can ed this as fraud to the they do? My intent, police department indeed, is to stay with and to Discover. Disthe company for a cover says I must pay year. — P.O. them and take the DEAR P.O.: You can hotel to small claims court. I certainly inquire to the comsay it is illegal, under FTC pany about what would haprules, for Discover to make pen should you leave in less me pay a fraudulent bill. than a year, just for informaWould you pay a fraudulent tion alone. bill? — Reader And you should tell the DEAR READER: I don’t under- company you have every instand on what basis the hotel tention of staying, whether suddenly charged you $140 that turns out to be the case for a room you had booked at or not. What, if anything, it $84 a night. I would have can do since you have alpaid only the $84 when the ready exercised your options bill was presented and put is another question. the rest into dispute. Send questions to Your position is clear. If you bruce@brucewilliams.com. can demonstrate that you Questions of general interest had booked the room with a will be answered in future reservation for $84 a night, columns. Owing to the volthen the hotel has no ability ume of mail, personal replies to raise it to $140. On the cannot be provided. The other hand, if you’ve nothing Bruce Williams Radio Show to prove the reservation (a can now be heard 24/7 via quote or guarantee), you iTunes and at www.taeramay have a problem. dio.com. It is also available at In the meantime, I would www.brucewilliams.com.


Leisure

The Indiana Gazette

Sunday, November 8, 2015 — E-3

TOP iTUNES SONGS

Top hits

TOP iTUNES ALBUMS

1. “Hello,” Adele 2. “Sorry,” Justin Bieber 3. “Hotline Bling,” Drake 4. “Stitches,” Shawn Mendes 5. “Ex’s & Oh’s,” Elle King 6. “What Do You Mean?,” Justin Bieber 7. “Wildest Dreams,” Taylor Swift 8. “The Hills,” The Weeknd 9. “Downtown” (feat. Eric Nally, Melle Mel, Kool Moe Dee & Grandmaster Caz), Macklemore & Ryan Lewis 10. “Like I’m Gonna Lose You,” (featuring John Legend), Meghan Trainor

Copyright 2015, Apple Inc.

“THE HUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY — PART 2” ... Nov. 20

1. “25,” Adele 2. “Storyteller,” Carrie Underwood 3. “Sounds Good Feels Good,” 5 Seconds of Summer 4. “Purpose (Deluxe),” Justin Bieber 5. “21,” Adele 6. “Death Of A Bachelor,” Panic! At the Disco 7. “Between the Pines,” Sam Hunt 8. “Reloaded: 20 #1 Hits,” Blake Shelton 9. “Beauty Behind the Madness,” The Weeknd 10. “1989,” Taylor Swift

“STAR WARS: THE FORCE AWAKENS” ... Dec. 18

“BY THE SEA” ... Friday

The ‘Force’ is strong this holiday film season By RICK BENTLEY The (Calif.) Fresno Bee

The upcoming holiday film season is one of the lightest in recent years. Make no mistake: There are a few big movies opening, but the long list of openings around Christmas is not as lengthy as in previous years. That’s because of the 800-pound gorilla that will be taking over theater complexes come Dec. 18. “Star Wars: Episode VII: The Force Awakens” is not just an 800-pound gorilla, it is a gorilla armed with lightsabers. “The Force Awakens” is expected to shatter global box office records. First up is expected to be global opening weekend, with a current record of more than $511 million, set by “Jurassic World.” Other films will not only lose business to the film directed by J.J. Abrams, but because it will play on the largest number of screens, there won’t be a lot of empty theaters for other movies. Most major movies open on about 4,000 screens globally; “Force” likely will surpass that. There are still five opening weekends before “The Force Awakens” hits theaters. Here are some of the movies that will be vying for second place among this year’s holiday releases:

NOW SHOWING “SPECTRE” Director: Sam Mendes Starring: Daniel Craig, Christoph Waltz, Ben Whishaw, Lea Seydoux Plot: James Bond goes on a mission to uncover an evil organization. At the same time, M fights to keep the British secret service from folding. What to expect: As always, Bond movies have a license to kill. “THE PEANUTS MOVIE” Director: Steve Martino Cast: Noah Schnapp, Bill Melendez, Hadley Belle Miller, Alexander Garfin Plot: Charlie Brown goes on a

quest while Snoopy battles the Red Baron. What to expect: It’s great to see a new product featuring the Peanuts gang.

FRIDAY, NOV. 13 “THE 33” Director: Patricia Riggen Starring: Antonio Bandaras, James Brolin, Rodrigo Santoro, Juliette Binoche Plot: The world watches efforts to save 33 miners trapped underground after a mine collapses in Chile. What to expect: Hard to build drama when the results are so wellknown. “BY THE SEA” Director: Angelina Jolie Cast: Angelina Jolie, Brad Pitt, Neils Arestrup, Melanie Laurent Plot: An American writer and his wife are having trouble in their marriage. What to expect: Most heat in a movie since Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton shared the big screen. “LOVE THE COOPERS” Director: Jessie Nelson Cast: Diane Keaton, Ed Helms, John Goodman, Alan Arkin Plot: Four generations of a family come together for their annual Christmas Eve celebration. “MY ALL AMERICAN” Director: Angelo Pizzo Cast: Aaron Eckhart, Sarah Bolger, Finn Wittrock, Robin Tunney Plot: A young man who has been told he is too small to play college football is trained by his father.

FRIDAY, NOV. 20 “THE HUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY — PART 2” Director: Francis Lawrence Starring: Jennifer Lawrence, Julianne Moore, Josh Hutcherson, Liam Hemsworth Plot: Katniss Everdeen and District 13 take on the Capitol in a fullscale revolution. What to expect: The fact that this wraps up the series should draw big crowds.

“SPOTLIGHT” Director: Tom McCarthy Cast: Rachel McAdams, Mark Ruffalo, Liev Schreiber Plot: True story of how the Boston Globe uncovered scandal involving the Catholic Church. What to expect: A story that will be hard to forget. “THE NIGHT BEFORE” Director: Jonathan Levine Cast: Lizzy Caplan, Miley Cyrus, Joseph Gordon-Levitt Plot: Three friends go looking for the ultimate Christmas party. What to expect: Look for some very dark comedy.

WEDNESDAY, NOV. 25 “CREED” Director: Ryan Coogler Cast: Michael B. Jordan, Sylvester Stallone, Tessa Thompson, Phylicia Rashad Plot: The son of Apollo Creed turns to Rocky Balboa for training help in his pursuit of a boxing career. What to expect: The “Rocky” films lost their punch years ago. “THE GOOD DINOSAUR” Director: Peter Sohn Cast: Raymond Ochoa, Jeffrey Wright, Steve Zahn, Sam Elliott Plot: A dinosaur makes friends with a young human boy. What to expect: Will be difficult to live up to comparisons to “Inside Out.” “VICTOR FRANKENSTEIN” Director: Paul McGuigan Starring: James McAvoy, Daniel Radcliffe, Jessica Brown Findlay Plot: Victor Frankenstein and Igor believe they have a way to help humanity. Their studies into immortality are more dangerous than they imagine. What to expect: It might be time to give Frankenstein’s monster a rest.

FRIDAY, DEC. 4 “KRAMPUS” Director: Michael Dougherty Starring: Adam Scott, Toni Collette, David Koechner, Conchata Ferrell

Plot: When a young man turns his back on Christmas, he unleases an evil force. What to expect: Do we need a movie about family fights during the holidays?

FRIDAY, DEC. 11 “IN THE HEART OF THE SEA” Director: Ron Howard Cast: Cillian Murphy, Chris Hemsworth, Ben Whishaw, Tom Holland Plot: The story of a mammoth whale attacking a ship in 1820 that served as the inspiration for “Moby Dick.” What to expect: Could be the sleeper hit of the holidays. “LEGEND” Director: Brian Helgeland Cast: Tom Hardy, Chazz Palminteri, Emily Browning, David Thewlis Plot: Reggie and Ronnie Kray become the most notorious gangsters in London. What to expect: Oscar buzz for Hardy, who is playing both brothers.

FRIDAY, DEC. 18 “SISTERS” Director: Jason Moore Cast: Tina Fey, Amy Poehler, Maya Rudolph, Dianne Wiest Plot: Two disconnected sisters must return home to clean out their childhood bedroom before the family house is sold. What to expect: It’s opening against the new “Star Wars” movie. Enough said. “STAR WARS: THE FORCE AWAKENS” Director: J.J. Abrams Cast: Oscar Isaac, Adam Driver, John Boyega, Daisy Ridley, Harrison Ford Plot: Little has been released except something happens to new and old characters in a galaxy, far, far away. What to expect: It will be a mammoth hit.

WEDNESDAY, DEC. 23 “ALVIN & THE CHIPMUNKS:

THE ROAD CHIP” Director: Walter Becker Cast: Jason Lee, Tony Hale, Jesse McCartney, Justin Long Plot: Alvin, Simon and Theodore must get to Miami in three days to stop Dave from proposing. What to expect: Will survive on very young moviegoers.

FRIDAY, DEC. 25 “CONCUSSION” Director: Peter Landesman Cast: Will Smith, Alex Baldwin, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Stephen Moyer Plot: Film based on the true story of Dr. Bennet Omalu’s discovery of CTE. What to expect: Heavy way to spend Christmas. “DADDY’S HOME” Director: Justin Price Cast: Will Ferrell, Mark Wahlberg, Thomas Haden Church, Linda Cardellini Plot: Guy gets back into the life of the woman he divorced when she marries a very uptight man. What to expect: Never bet against Will Ferrell. “JOY” Director: David O. Russell Cast: Jennifer Lawrence, Robert De Niro, Diane Ladd Plot: A woman rises to become founder and matriarch of a family business. What to expect: Has a good pedigree as it’s from the people behind “Silver Linings Playbook.” “POINT BREAK” Director: Ericson Core Cast: Teresa Palmer, Edgar Ramirez, Luke Bracey, Delroy Lindo Plot: Young FBI agent infiltrates a team of thrill seekers on the wrong side of the law. What to expect: Will be difficult to top the original Patrick Swayze movie. “THE REVENANT” Director: Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu Cast: Leonardo Dicaprio, Tom Hardy, Luke Haas, Will Poulter Plot: One man goes to extremes to fight for his survival. What to expect: Could produce

IT’S HAPPENING HERE This information is provided by the Indiana County Tourist Bureau. Times and dates are subject to change. All events are held in Indiana, unless otherwise noted.

TODAY • The Lively Arts will present “She Kills Monsters” at 2 p.m. on the Waller Hall Mainstage at IUP. For more information, visit www.iup. edu/livelyarts. • The Indiana Players will present “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” at 2:30 p.m. in the downtown theater, 725 Philadelphia St. For more information, visit www.indianaplayers.com. • Visit your favorite shops for the holiday season at the Smicksburg Old-Fashioned County Christmas open house from noon to 5 p.m. in Smicksburg. For more information, visit www.smicksburg.net. • A Veterans Marathon to benefit the Indiana County Veterans Assistance Fund will begin at 9 a.m. at Saylor Park near Route 119 in Black Lick. There will be a marathon, halfmarathon and marathon relay on the Ghost Town Trail. The event is sponsored by Indiana First Bank and the Indiana Road Runners Club.

NOV. 9 In observance of Veterans Day, the Six O’clock Series will honor those who have served and are currently serving our nation from 6 to 7:30 p.m. in the HUB Ohio Room,

off Pratt Drive, IUP. For more information, call (724) 357-2598 or visit www.iup.edu/sixoclockseries.

NOV. 10 A Percussion Ensemble Concert will begin at 8 p.m. in Gorell Recital Hall on the second floor of Sutton Hall, IUP. For more information, visit www.iup.edu.

NOV. 11-14 The Lively Arts will present “She Kills Monsters” at 8 p.m. on the Waller Hall Mainstage at IUP. For more information, visit www.iup. edu/livelyarts.

NOV. 13 • “Musical Mysteries and More” will be presented at 6:30 p.m. at Chestnut Ridge Golf Resort and Conference Center, 132 Pine Ridge Road, Burrell Township. Tickets are $39.99 and include show and dinner. For more information, call (724) 459-7191, ext. 111. • The IUP Jazz Ensemble will present its fall concert under the direction of Kevin Eisensmith at 8 p.m. in Fisher Auditorium, IUP. For more information, visit www.iup. edu/livelyarts.

NOV. 14 • The Indiana Ballroom Dance Club will continue its workshop series for beginning and intermediate dancers with professional instructor Trevor Runco from 5 to 6:30 p.m. at Sharon’s School of Dance, 496

Ben Franklin Road, White Township. This workshop will focus on the rumba and is $35 per couple. For more information, call (724) 463-3753 or visit www.IndDance Club.wordpress.com. • Visit shops, sample delicious treats and leave with a copy of the recipe at the Smicksburg Cookie Tour from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. in Smicksburg. For more information, visit www.smicksburg.net. • The Evergreen Conservancy will present a program on Pennsylvania Elk at 6:30 p.m. in Blue Spruce Park Lodge, 1128 Blue Spruce Road, near Ernest, by Pennsylvania Game Commission environmental education specialist Mandy Marconi. For more information, email lankard@ comcast.net. • The Junior High Band Invitational Concert will be held at 8 p.m. in Fisher Auditorium on the IUP campus. For more information, visit www.iup.edu/livelyarts.

NOV. 14-15 Shop for unique gifts and holiday treasures at a Christmas Open House from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and noon to 5 p.m. Sunday at the Dillweed Bed and Breakfast, 7453 Route 403, Dilltown. Tour the inn decorated with Christmas angels, enjoy light refreshments and product samplings and register to win an overnight stay in the bed and breakfast. Admission is free. For more information, call (814) 446-6465 or visit

www.dilweedinc.com.

NOV. 20

NOV. 15

• Trace Adkins will perform at 7 p.m. at the Kovalchick Convention and Athletic Complex, 711 Pratt Drive, White Township. For tickets and more information, visit www.kovalchickcomplex.com. • The “It’s a Wonderful Life” Holiday Festival and Parade will begin at 7 p.m. in downtown Indiana. A tree lighting will immediately follow the parade. For more information, visit www.downtownindiana. org.

The IUP Symphony Band and Concert Band will perform at 3 p.m. in Fisher Auditorium on the IUP campus. For more information, visit www.iup.edu/livelyarts.

NOV. 16 The Six O’Clock Series will continue from 6 to 7:30 p.m. in the HUB Ohio Room, Pratt Drive, IUP. Learn how Chicano political activism, together with developments in the mass media, transportation, immigration, consumer culture and other facets of our globalizing world, transformed and spread Day of the Dead rituals that were once limited to specific Latin American indigenous populations. For more information, call (724) 357-2598.

NOV. 18 Indiana County businesses will display their products and advertise their services at an Indiana County Business Showcase at the Indiana Mall, 2334 Oakland Ave., White Township, from 5 to 8 p.m. For more information, call (724) 463-7505.

NOV. 19 Ovations will present “Ragtime: The Musical” at 8 p.m. in Fisher Auditorium on the IUP campus. For more information, visit www.iup. edu/livelyarts.

NOV. 21 • A Holiday Craft and Vendor Show will be held from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at 313 Salt St., Saltsburg. Holiday gifts, an auction, lunch and homemade soups — stuffed pepper, chicken and noodle, and creamy potato at $7 a quart — will be featured. To order soup, call (412) 855-4061. Pickup is between 11 a.m. and 2 p.m.

NOV. 22 The Clymer Volunteer Fire Company will hold a Sunday Breakfast Buffet from 8 a.m. to noon at the station along Sherman Street in Clymer. The menu includes scrambled eggs, hash browns, bacon, sausage gravy and biscuits, toast, coffee, juice and milk. The cost is $8 for adults and $5 for ages 6 to 12. For more information, call (724) 599-6954.


Leisure

E-4— Sunday, November 8, 2015

The Indiana Gazette

BEST-SELLING BOOKS This list is compiled by the Wall Street Journal:

By The Associated Press

FICTION

Associated Press

A NEW BOOK explains how to build items like a bench and a dog bed using reclaimed wood.

Discarded wooden pallets are DIY gold By JENNIFER FORKER Associated Press

Here’s a little secret about building furniture out of pallets, those simple wooden structures used to schlep goods: Not all pallet wood is cheap, rough-cut pine. Sharp-eyed scroungers can find oak, hickory or even cherry pallets, since hardwoods are needed to transport heavy goods. Finding one of those is hitting the jackpot for do-it-yourself pallet-furniture aficionados. “The first time I found a hardwood, it was hickory, and I was giddy,” says Becky Lamb, of Bozeman, Mont. “And I made a bench out of that one.” Wooden pallets in the U.S. often measure 40-by-48 inches. An online slideshow by Country Living magazine features 17 pallet projects, including a headboard, garden frame, daybed, wine rack and artworks. More projects — including guitars — and how-to tutorials can be found on the website 1001 Pallets. “I’ve seen people do some amazing things reclaiming the wood,” including paneling a wall or ceiling, says Jamie Supsic, style director at Country Living. She says there are two ways to approach DIY pallet furniture: Use the pallet intact, as the foundation for a coffee table or sofa, or take it apart and

use the slats. One of the most stunning creations she has seen, she says, was a chandelier hanging from ropes in a party tent: It was made from a pallet hung with battery-operated tea lights in mason jars. Beginners might want to start with a daybed or console, for which the pallet could be kept mostly intact, or a simple art project such as a front-door wreath, she says. “Start with something small and you only have to use one small nail on your wall to install it,” Supsic says. You can find wood pallets behind businesses such as flooring and plumbing-supply stores, or the local newspaper, says Lamb in her new book, “Crafting with Wood Pallets” (Ulysses Press). Ask if they’re free for the taking. Or find free pallets on Craigslist.com. Not all pallets will make good furniture. Each needs to be inspected. Steer clear of those that appear to have a chemical or oil residue, says Lamb. Choose pallets that have mostly usable boards, without cracks or splits. Look for an IPPC (International Plant Protection Convention) label or the HT (heat-treated) stamp on the pallet. The IPPC label verifies that the pallet manufacturer followed standards for treating the pallets, while the HT stamp assures that the wood was heat-treated,

not chemically treated. Pallets used just in the U.S. might not have the IPPC label, says Lamb, but play it safe and use pallets that have it. Always look for the HT stamp; besides being safer for human use, the sterilization of heat-treating ensures that the wood won’t harbor insects. Lamb hasn’t found an unstamped pallet, but “if I see one without a stamp, I won’t take it.” As for tools, Lamb suggests starting with a hammer, saw, drill and sander. A reciprocating saw helps disassemble pallets faster. She can take apart five pallets in 30 or 40 minutes with her Sawzall, she says, and explains how in her book. You can tear pallets apart with only a hammer and crow bar, but it takes a lot longer: “You don’t need the gym if you’re going to do that,” Lamb warns. Dimitri Boulze of Toulouse, France, who launched 1001 Pallets two years ago with a friend, thinks pallet furniture has become popular because it combines recycling and creativity. And it’s cheap. “On one side, people are realizing that resources are finite and that recycling can help with saving things and money,” says Boulze. “And then it gives them a goal to create something, and it’s something very positive.

1. “Rogue Lawyer” by John Grisham (Doubleday) 2. “See Me” by Nicholas Sparks (Grand Central Publishing) 3. “Dork Diaries 10” by Renee Rachel Russell (Aladdin) 4. “The Sword of Summer” by Rick Riordan (Disney-Hyperion) 5. “Career of Evil” by Robert Galbraith (Little, Brown) 6. “Twilight 10th Anniversary Ed.” by Stephenie Meyer (Little, Brown) 7. “The Survivor” by Vince Flynn (Atria Books) 8. “Welcome to Night Vale” by Joseph Fink and Jeffrey Cranor (HarperPerennial) 9. “The Murder House” by James Patterson and David Ellis (Little, Brown) 10. “Harry Potter/Sorcerer’s Stone” by J.K. Rowling (Arthur A. Levine Books)

NONFICTION 1. “The Pioneer Woman Cooks: Dinnertime” by Ree Drummond (Morrow Cookbooks) 2. “Killing Reagan” by Bill O’Reilly and Martin Dugard (Henry Holt and Co.) 3. “A More Perfect Union” by Ben Carson (Sentinel) 4. “Binge” by Tyler Oakley (Gallery Books) 5. “The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up” by Marie Kondo (Ten Speed) 6. “The Amazing Book Is Not on Fire” by Dan Howell and Phil Lester (Random House Books for Young Readers) 7. “The Power of I Am” by Joel Osteen (Faithwords) 8. “Strengths Finder 2.0” by Tom Rath (Gallup Press) 9. “A Common Struggle” by Patrick J. Kennedy and Stephen Fried (Blue Rider Press) 10. “Extreme Ownership” by Willink/Babin (St. Martin’s)

FICTION E-BOOKS 1. “Rogue Lawyer” by John Grisham (Doubleday) 2. “Career of Evil” by Robert Galbraith (Little,

Brown) 3. “See Me” by Nicholas Sparks (Grand Central Publishing) 4. “The Martian” by Andy Weir (Broadway) 5. “Kian” by Tijan (Tijan) 6. “The Survivor” by Vince Flynn (Atria/Emily Bestler Books) 7. “The Lake House” by Kate Morton (Atria Books) 8. “The Murder House” by James Patterson and David Ellis (Little, Brown) 9. “Wrong” by Jana Aston (Jana Aston) 10. ‘Pirate Latitudes” by Michael Crichton (HarperCollins)

NONFICTION E-BOOKS 1. “Killing Reagan” by Bill O’Reilly and Martin Dugard (Henry Holt and Co.) 2. “10% Happier” by Dan Harris (Harper Collins) 3. “Think Like a Freak” by Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner (HarperCollins) 4. “The Astors” by Virginia Cowles (Random House) 5. “Extreme Ownership” by Willink/Babin (St. Martin’s)’ 6. “Medium Raw” by Anthony Bourdain (HarperCollins) 7. “The James Beard Cookbook” by James Beard (Open Road Media) 8. “The Case for Faith” by Lee Strobel (Zondervan) 9. “The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up” by Marie Kondo (Ten Speed Press) 10. “Religion and the Decline of Magic” by Keith Thomas (Penguin UK) Nielsen BookScan gathers point-of-sale book data from about 16,000 locations across the U.S., representing about 85 percent of the nation’s book sales. Print-book data providers include all major booksellers and Web retailers, and food stores. E-book data providers include all major ebook retailers. Free e-books and those sold for less than 99 cents are excluded. The fiction and nonfiction lists in all formats include both adult and juvenile titles. The combined lists track sales by title across all print and e-book formats; audio books are excluded. Refer questions to Michael.Boone@ wsj.com.

LOS ANGELES TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE 101 Most sylvan “SHORT CHANGES” By JIM 103 Swap headgear with HOLLAND the priest? 109 Loan letters ACROSS 1 Perennial ’90s- 111 Colorful marble ’00s presidential 112 Controversial war zone, candidate briefly 6 Artist van __ 113 Entrepreneur10 Pear type helping gp. 14 Fairylike 19 How two hearts 114 DI doubled 115 Succumb to may beat flattery 20 Fencing tool 116 Word in many 21 Choral part music genres 22 Transitional 118 More than point concerns 23 Trio in a leather 123 Open, in a way factory? 125 Moderate 26 Start of a building historic B-29 expansion? name 128 Engraved pillar 27 Car user, 129 Joyce’s home perhaps 28 Techie on “24” 130 Election lead-in 131 Coal __ 29 “You said it!” 132 Made less 31 Witticism harsh 32 Pub. VIPs 34 Tout’s territory, 133 Deli call 134 Barrie’s bosun initially 135 Homebound 35 Mixes student, 36 Farm sound perhaps 37 Riffraff lacking direction? 44 Take advantage of, in a way 45 Org. with an online Patriot Index 46 Deli pockets 49 Nitwit 50 Place to raise simians? 56 Aria, for one 57 Religious faction 59 Coll. prep test 60 Song of praise 62 “ ... o’er the dew of __ high eastward hill”: Shak. 63 Common batteries 65 SEC overseer 68 Bend at a barre 69 Game-winning combination 70 “Leave tiny bugs alone!”? 77 “Gotcha!” 78 ’90s Saturn maker 79 Put-ons 80 Biblical verb ending 81 Slight amount 82 Counts’ equals 84 Former “formerly” 87 Appear to be 90 Silver sources 92 Encouragement for a sailing maneuver? 96 Fires 98 Gobs 100 Expressions of pleasure 11/8/15

DOWN 1 N.L. part: Abbr. 2 Court icon Arthur 3 Bucks’ partners 4 “The Lord of the Rings” race 5 Cobbles, in a way 6 Whiz start 7 Cartel acronym 8 Really start selling 9 __ insurance 10 Undoing 11 Corrida cheer 12 Layers 13 Kind of ray or dust 14 Ties, as a score 15 Author Deighton 16 Beatles’ title lyric that follows “With love” 17 Northern abode 18 “Cool!” 24 Exchange for cash 25 Nary a soul 30 Big band, for one 33 Descend suddenly

35 One may be over your shoulder 37 Kid 38 Wally of cookie fame 39 Org. with antlers on its logo 40 Maneuverable tractor brand 41 Lodging locales 42 Syr. and Eg., once 43 Family nickname 47 Above it all 48 Ibn, in Arabic names 51 “Critique of Pure Reason” author 52 Sketch opening 53 California tourist area near Santa Rosa 54 Block component 55 Ethiopia’s Selassie 58 Calais cup 61 Fits one inside the other

64 Word before pants, shirts or socks 66 Former nuclear agcy. 67 __ in the right direction 70 Extinct birds 71 Catherine of “Best in Show” 72 Awards since 1901 73 Indian shrine site 74 Powder source 75 New car letters 76 Up in __: uncertain 83 Glide along 85 Planted 86 NFL analyst Aikman et al. 88 Corp. VIP 89 Colorado’s __Verde National Park 91 Actor Erwin 93 Sound of silence? 94 Web discussion venue 95 “Sorry that didn’t work out”

97 Auto performance brand 99 Ended for good, with “out” 102 Believer in a pair of opposed eternal principles 104 Mature 105 Cast out of heaven 106 Getup 107 Some critics 108 Introduction to a madam? 109 Entertain 110 1492 vessel 116 Hotel pillow topper 117 Make more potent, in a way 119 Westernmost Aleutian island 120 Million laughs 121 Game play 122 Bygone blade 124 __-de-France 126 Cookbook direction 127 Sandra who played Gidget

ASTROGRAPH MONDAY, NOV. 9, 2015 Don’t wait for others to make the first move. It’s vital that you act with your ultimate goals in mind. Use your resources in order to advance. Balance, diplomacy and a firm knowledge of your capabilities will help you excel. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) — Consider whether you still enjoy your job. Attend a seminar, trade show or networking function that will allow you to check out other possibilities. Romance is in the stars. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) — Not all roads lead to victory. You will have opportunities, but will also face opposition. Don’t believe everything you hear. Be cautious while traveling and careful when sharing information. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Don’t let unpredictable people cause you to be uncertain. Do your own thing and be ready to take on more if that’s what’s required to get things done. Choose what works best for you. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) — Resolve any personal problems you are facing with friends, family or loved ones. Ask questions before making assumptions. Do your best to make a solid financial change. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) — Something will surprise you. A chance to collaborate

ANSWERS FOR 11/1/15

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with someone you respect or to forge a partnership that allows you to use your talents and skills more diversely looks promising. ARIES (March 21-April 19) — If something needs to be done, hop to it and make it happen. Procrastinating is not your style, so stop floundering and do whatever is necessary to take care of unfinished business. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) — Let your voice be heard. Don’t play second fiddle to someone who is trying to outshine you. Socializing and networking will lead to prospects. Self-improvement will boost your confidence. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) — Stay focused and avoid letting anyone distract you from taking care of your responsibilities. Be aware of anyone who is being overly nice or complimentary, and don’t share personal information. CANCER (June 21-July 22) — Make plans to do things you enjoy or to look into new interests that have the potential to raise your income. A day trip will lead to greater emotional awareness and satisfaction. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) — You can initiate change, but make sure you get the approval of those your plans will affect before you begin. A competitive situation will be enhanced by worthy opponents. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Consider your options and pick a direction that will lead to greater freedom. You can focus your energy on a goal that has eluded you in the past. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) — Volunteer your services in order to encounter people with something to offer in return. If you gather information, you will formulate a solution that will be well received.

The Indiana Gazette: In print daily, online always. www.indianagazette.com


The Indiana Gazette

Leisure

e v a C n a M e Th

Sunday, November 8, 2015 — E-5

Cook up the ultimate tailgate fare for game night By GRETCHEN McKAY

board; halve lengthwise. Return halves to skillet and cook over moderately high heat, turning occasionally, until no trace of pink remains within, about 5 minutes. Transfer to a plate. Halve each roll (keep it hinged). Pull out some of the bread within. Toast the rolls. Drizzle cut sides of the rolls with olive oil and set 2 sausage halves on each roll. Top with sautéed onions and peppers. Close sandwiches and serve immediately. Serves 4. — Adapted from Food & Wine

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

So, are you ready to party? If you’re a football fan, the answer is a resounding “heck, yes!” this time of year. For some die-hard fans, tailgating comes close to an obsession, if not an out-and-out religion, what with the elaborate gourmet spreads that defy their humble set-up out of the back of a vehicle on an asphalt parking lot. We’ve seen everything from seafood etouffee to deep-fried duck to prosciutto-wrapped asparagus, along with full bars featuring homemade mixers. For others, it’s much more casual, with simple-but-satisfying finger foods such as dips, pierogies, wings and cookies filling hungry bellies before everyone heads to the gate or turns their attention to the TV screen. We totally buy into the concept that you can’t be into football without also being at least a little obsessed with what to eat and drink before and during the game. But we’re realists, too. We’re also juggling jobs, family and other activities, and recognize that not everyone has the time or desire to spend hours in the kitchen preparing a smorgasbord of delectable munchies. The menu here reflects that realization. While the recipes all offer amazing flavors, none is too labor intensive. And they’re all easy to transport, whether you’re just walking from your kitchen to your living room, or are tasked with wrapping everything in foil or plastic and schlepping it via car to the stadium. To help you ease into a long season of tailgating, we’ve gone with a classic menu for the kickoff: Buffalo chicken dip, nachos, wings, sausage and peppers, and chocolate chip cookies. Regardless of how your team does on the field, at least you know your stomach will be satisfied.

BUFFALO CHICKEN DIP PG tested Some recipes call for canned chicken, but I can’t imagine using anything but grilled or broiled chicken breasts. I use blue cheese dressing but you could substitute ranch. Depending on how saucy you like your dip, add more or less Frank’s Red Hot. 2 roasted or poached boneless chicken breasts, shredded (about 3 cups) 6 ounces (¾ package) cream cheese, softened 8 ounces cheddar cheese, shredded ¼ cup blue cheese crumbles, plus more for garnish ⅓ cup Homemade Blue Cheese Dressing (recipe follows), plus more for drizzling ⅓ cup of Frank’s Red Hot Sauce, or more to taste Chopped cilantro, pickled jalapeños or sliced green onion for garnish Preheat oven to 350 degrees. In a large bowl, mix together shredded chicken, cream cheese, cheddar and blue cheeses, blue cheese dressing and Frank’s Red Hot. If it’s not saucy (or spicy) enough, add a little more Red Hot. Spoon into a casserole and bake until cheeses are hot and bubbly, and chicken is heated through, about 15 to 20 minutes. Garnish with chopped cilantro, pickled jalapeños and/or sliced green onion. Serve with crackers, pita chips or corn tortillas. Serves 8 to 10. — Gretchen McKay

HOMEMADE BLUE CHEESE DRESSING ¾ cup sour cream ⅓ cup crumbled blue cheese

BLACK ‘N GOLD BEST CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIES

BUFFALO CHICKEN DIP ⅓ cup whole milk ⅓ cup mayonnaise 1 teaspoon salt or more to taste Fresh ground black pepper 1 tablespoon red wine vinegar Place sour cream, blue cheese, milk, mayonnaise, salt, pepper and vinegar in a medium bowl. Whisk thoroughly, until completely combined. Taste and adjust the seasoning, if desired.

NACHOS DE PUERCO PG tested Your kitchen will smell so good when you’re making this dish. In addition to a topping for these stellar nachos, the shredded pork can be used in burritos or sandwiches. ½ cup sour cream 1 lime 1-pound bag crispy corn tortilla chips 2 ounces Monterey Jack cheese, shredded 6 ounces Slow-Cooked Pork Barbacoa, shredded (recipe follows) 2 avocados, pits removed and diced 2 cups Cantina Salsa (recipe follows) Heat oven to 350 degrees. In small bowl, whisk sour cream with juice of lime. Spread ⅓ of the chips in a single layer on baking sheet lined with nonstick foil or parchment paper. Sprinkle ⅓ of the cheese and pork, add another layer of chips, cheese and pork, and then build a final layer of chips and cheese. Reserve remaining ⅓ of pork. Bake for 5 minutes, or until cheese melts. (I added half the salsa at this point.) Remove from oven and sprinkle with remaining pork. Spoon salsa and avocado over the top; drizzle with lime. Serve immediately. Serves 8 to 10. — “Pure Pork Awesomeness” by Kevin Gillespie (Andrews McMeel, 2015, $29.95)

SLOW-COOKED BARBACOA 2 tablespoons kosher salt 1 tablespoon ancho chili powder ½ teaspoon ground cinnamon ¼ teaspoon ground cloves 5 pounds bone-in pork shoulder 1 onion, quartered 10 cloves garlic, peeled 3 dried bay leaves Adjust rack in oven to lower level so roast will easily slide in. Heat oven to 350 degrees. In small bowl, combine salt, chili powder, cinnamon and cloves. Pat pork dry and generously season all over with salt mixture. Cut large piece of heavy-duty foil and place in roasting pan. Add pork, onions, garlic and bay leaves and wrap everything up tightly in the foil. Roast for 3½ hours.

NACHOS DE PUERCO

GRILLED CHICKEN WINGS WITH 9-SPICE DRY RUB Remove pork from oven and let rest, still wrapped in foil, for 30 minutes. Foil will keep all the moisture and flavors in the packet and the shoulder will braise as it cools, creating very tender and juicy meat. Discard the onion, garlic and bay leaves before shredding meat.

CANTINA SALSA 1 sweet onion 6 cloves garlic, root ends trimmed 1 small jalapeño pepper 1 teaspoon oil 3 tomatoes, cored and quartered 1 lime 1 teaspoon kosher salt ½ teaspoon ancho chili powder ½ cup fresh cilantro leaves Peel onion, discarding root and stem ends, cut in half then slice into ½-inch rings. Heat large cast-iron skillet until smoking hot; add onions, garlic and jalapeño to skillet and quickly char them, turning once and then drizzling with oil. Add veggies; let char. Then transfer them to a blender, leaving the jalapeño in the pan until it chars on all sides, about 5 minutes. Add tomato to blender, along with lime juice, salt and chili powder. Pulse to combine. Add cilantro and blend on low speed, until blended but still coarse, about 30 seconds. Store covered and refrigerated for up to 4 days.

GRILLED CHICKEN WINGS WITH 9-SPICE DRY RUB PG tested Brining wings before you grill them makes the meat more tender and juicy, and also intensifies the flavor. Intensely spiced, these wings are best with a crisp, pale ale such as East End Big Hop. And don’t forget the napkins — the wings are messy. For wings ½ cup kosher salt 3 tablespoons light brown sugar 2 garlic cloves 1 teaspoon whole black peppercorns 1 bay leaf 3 pounds chicken wings, tips discarded and wings split For rub ¼ cup dark brown sugar ¼ cup granulated sugar ¼ cup sweet paprika 1 tablespoon granulated garlic 1 tablespoon salt 1 tablespoon granulated onion ¾ tablespoon black pepper ½ tablespoon dry sage ½ tablespoon dry mustard ½ tablespoon ground ginger ½ tablespoon cayenne Canola oil for brushing

Lime wedges for serving In large saucepan, combine salt, sugar, garlic, peppercorns and bay leaf with 2 quarts water and bring to boil. Cook over moderate heat, stirring, until sugar and salt dissolve, about 3 minutes. Let cool to room temperature. In large bowl, pour brine over chicken wings. Cover and refrigerate 3 hours. Meanwhile, make the rub. In bowl, mix all of the ingredients except oil and lime. (Rub can be made ahead, and refrigerated for up to 1 month.) Light grill and oil the grate. Drain wings and pat dry with paper towels. In large bowl, toss wings with ⅓ cup of the rub. Grill over moderate heat, turning, until nicely charred and cooked through, about 15 minutes. Serve hot with lime wedges. — Food and Wine

SAUSAGE & PEPPERS PG tested The better the meat, the better the sandwich. For this traditional tailgate sammy, Labriola’s awardwinning sausage is a sure bet, and Parma Sausage in the Strip District also offers a variety of housemade hot, sweet and Sicilian links. Seal the Pittsburgh deal with sausage rolls from Mancini’s, Cellone’s or my personal fave, BreadWorks. Smoked paprika adds to the sweet and smoky taste. ¼ cup plus 1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil, plus more for drizzling 2 large onions, thinly sliced 1 teaspoon smoked paprika ½ teaspoon sugar 2 large bell peppers (1 red and 1 green), cut into thin strips ¼ cup water 1½ teaspoons dried oregano, crumbled Kosher salt and freshly ground pepper 4 sweet or hot Italian sausages 4 hoagie or small submarine sandwich rolls In a large skillet, heat ¼ cup of the olive oil. Add onions and cook over high heat, stirring frequently, until golden, 10 minutes. Stir in paprika, sugar, and red and green bell peppers. Reduce heat to moderate; stir occasionally, until peppers are softened, about 12 minutes. Add water and oregano. Season with salt and pepper; cover and keep warm. Heat remaining 1 tablespoon of olive oil in a medium skillet. Prick sausages all over; add them to skillet and cook over moderately high heat, turning frequently, until browned all over, about 5 minutes. Transfer sausages to a cutting

PG tested In developing the recipe for this “best” chocolate chip cookie, The Food Lab’s J. Kenji Lopez-Alt aimed for a cookie that’s “barely crisp around the edges with a buttery, toffee-like crunch that transitions into a chewy, moist center that bends like caramel.” Kenji lets his batter rest in the fridge overnight, but I’m too impatient and baked it right away. I don’t think the end result suffered. Why melt the butter before combining it with sugar and eggs? It makes for a denser cookies. If you’re not a fan of butterscotch (the “gold”), simply omit it. 8 ounces (2 sticks) unsalted butter 1 standard ice cube (about 2 tablespoons frozen water) 10 ounces (about 2 cups) all-purpose flour ¾ teaspoon baking soda 2 teaspoons Diamond Crystal kosher salt or 1 teaspoon table salt 5 ounces (about ¾ cup) granulated sugar 2 large eggs 2 teaspoons vanilla extract 5 ounces (about ½ tightly packed cup plus 2 tablespoons) dark brown sugar 8 ounces semisweet chocolate, roughly chopped with a knife into ½- to ¼-inch chunks 8 ounces butterscotch morsels Coarse sea salt for garnish Melt butter in a medium saucepan over medium-high heat. Cook, gently swirling pan constantly, until particles begin to turn golden brown and butter smells nutty, about 5 minutes. Remove from heat and continue swirling the pan until the butter is a rich brown, about 15 seconds longer. Transfer to a medium bowl, whisk in ice cube, transfer to refrigerator, and allow to cool completely, about 20 minutes, whisking occasionally. (Alternatively, whisk over an ice bath to hasten process). Meanwhile, whisk together flour, baking soda and salt in a large bowl. Place sugar, eggs and vanilla extract in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the whisk attachment. Whisk on medium-high speed until mixture is pale brownish-yellow and falls off the whisk in thick ribbons when lifted, about 5 minutes. Fit paddle attachment onto mixer. When brown butter mixture has cooled (it should be just starting to turn opaque again and firm around the edges), Add brown sugar and cooled brown butter to egg mixture in stand mixer. Mix on medium speed to combine, about 15 seconds. Add flour mixture and mix on low speed until just barely combined but some dry flour still remains, about 15 seconds. Add chocolate and mix on low until dough comes together, about 15 seconds longer. Transfer to an airtight container and refrigerate dough at least overnight and up to three days. (I couldn’t wait and used the batter in about 15 minutes.) When ready to bake, adjust oven racks to upper and lower middle positions and preheat oven to 325 degrees. Using a 1-ounce ice cream scoop or a spoon, place scoops of cookie dough onto a nonstick or parchment-lined baking sheet. Each ball should measure approximately 3 tablespoons in volume and you should be able to fit 6 to 8 balls on each sheet. Transfer to oven and bake until golden brown around edges but still soft, 13 to 16 minutes, rotating pans back to front and top and bottom halfway through baking. Remove baking sheets from oven. While cookies are still hot, sprinkle very lightly with coarse salt and gently press it down to embed. Let cool for 2 minutes, then transfer cookies to a wire rack to cool completely. Allow cookies to cool completely before storing in an airtight container, plastic bag or cookie jar at room temperature for up to 5 days. Makes about 28 cookies. — Adapted from Serious Eats


Leisure

E-6— Sunday, November 8, 2015

The Indiana Gazette

Wildlife safari

JASON WILLIAMS/Jackson Hole Wildlife Safaris

THERE IS NO better time to explore Grand Teton National Park than in 2016, when the National Park Service marks its 100th anniversary.

Get in touch with nature in Jackson Hole By KATHY WITT KathyWitt.com

Jackson Hole, Wyo., in winter is like a magical scene inside a snow globe – snow-covered mountains sparkle in the sun; in the valley, lights wink from shop windows in a postcard-pretty Western ski town; elk and other wildlife gather on the range outside town. Winter is an exhilarating season for a wildlife safari. The area, tucked between the Teton Mountain Range and the Snake River along the border of Wyoming and Idaho, is home to more than 60 species of mammals and 100 species of birds, plus a half dozen game fish. Bison, big horn sheep, moose, coyotes, fox, bald eagles, wolves and trumpeter swans are all here, having migrated in search of food, but crowds have thinned dramatically. As a bonus, the National Elk Refuge — home to some 8,000 wintering elk — is located here, just outside the town of Jackson.

WHERE THE BISON ROAM With the National Park Service marking its 100th anniversary in 2016, there is no better time to follow the animal tracks and their scat while exploring the geologic marvels of Grand Teton National Park and Yellowstone National Park — and no better outfit to tour with than Jackson Hole Wildlife Safaris. The company was founded in 2007 by Jason Williams, a professional wildlife photographer, Wilderness First Responder and Leave No Trace Master Educator. All Jackson Hole Wildlife Safaris’ guides are avid and accomplished outdoorsmen and -women with keen interest in outdoor sports, photography, archaeology and wildlife conservation. Knowing they’re in such capable hands, visitors can relax and turn themselves fully over to the adventure of tracking and photographing bison, elk and other wildlife. “I love showing this to people,” said guide Kyle Williams, indicating the snow-covered landscape. “I get a kick out of being next to a bison, seeing a carcass. And yes, I will take

Grand Tetons and waffles and wine at Corbet’s Cabin. Served in a warm foil packet, the waffles are gooeydelicious with toppings including lemon curd, brown sugar butter — even peanut butter and bacon. • Explore the National Museum of Wildlife Art, home of one of the world’s premier collections of wildlife art, including one spanning three centuries and capturing the American West in all its former glory.

a stick and poke scat. You can tell the type of animal by scat droppings.” Williams’ enthusiasm is contagious, and visitors touring with him have been known to grab their own stick and do likewise. Whether trekking across a frozen lake to capture a scene of two foxes flirting with each other or racing to a wolf kill site, Williams brings an edge-ofthe-seat breathlessness to his tours. It feels like a scavenger hunt for wildlife — where some of the wildlife are scavengers. “We are a great PBS special that can turn into National Geographic real fast,” he said.

ADVENTURE GEAR TO TAKE ALONG The Qlipter ($19.95, www.Qlipter. com), a new gadget invented by Seattle entrepreneur Mina Yoo for her company, Lulabop, is a carabiner hook with a rotating clip. For winter trips and outdoor adventures like skiing, where you’re packing more luggage and equipment, this versatile device can bundle luggage or sporting equipment together. Qlipter swivels 360 degrees to open and folds open and closed. Its surface-protecting rubber end helps with gripping. In your hotel room, you can use Qlipter to hang your cosmetic kit from the back door of your bathroom; at a restaurant, Qlipter makes a handy purse hook to keep your bag off the floor.

WESTERN SKI TOWN Base yourself at Snow King Resort, the largest full-service yearround resort in Jackson Hole, just six blocks from town. Recently renovated to the tune of $16 million, it sits at the base of Snow King Mountain, which opened in 1939 as Wyoming’s first ski resort, and is mere minutes from Grand Teton National Park. Dining at the second-floor Hayden’s Post Restaurant, which overlooks skiers schussing and tubing, is casual with a warm and bracing Wyoming-focused menu — bison chili, elk sausage, house-made jerky — and lots of Western-style hospitality. A favorite on the bar menu is Chile Verde poutine, a piquant melange of braised pork, green chile, cheese curds, onions and cilantro. A year-round activity center offers ski, snowboard, mountain bike and other rentals, plus information on nearby trails and all the outdoor activities found in Jackson Hole. The resort also has a fitness center, day spa and a pool with lots of comfy seating warmed by fire pits. In town, browse the shops clustered round Jackson Town Square. You can outfit yourself with a pair of custom-made boots and a cowboy hat; pick up woodcarvings, antiques, leather goods, artisan-made jewelry; and find a book to take back to the hotel for reading by the lobby’s double-sided fireplace. Plan to have dinner at the architecturally beautiful kitchen, with

BISON AND elk are among the wildlife in Wyoming.

INFORMATION

JACKSON HOLE is home to more than 60 species of mammals. bamboo bar and tables, softly illuminating light and a comfortably elegant ambience. Food focus is on natural ingredients and sleek presentation. The Lotus Cafe is another comehither culinary gem with its organic, vegetarian and vegan dishes and delectables. Nightlife includes the Silver Dollar Bar with live music and the iconic Million Dollar Cowboy Bar, known for its authentic western memorabilia, live entertainment and string of country music greats

that have performed here, including Waylon Jennings, Hank Williams Jr. and Willie Nelson.

ADVENTURE GUIDE TO DON’T-MISS MOMENTS • Bring camera, phone and selfie stick for a narrated horse-drawn sleigh ride through the National Elk Refuge, the largest established elk preserve in North America, where you’ll be surrounded by thousands of wintering wild elk. • Tram to the top of Rendezvous Mountain for sweeping views of the

Snow King Resort, www.Snow KingResort.com, (800) 522-5464, offers a winter ski package from $169/two people. Room rates are from $99 at the resort hotel, $199 at the adjacent Snow King Condominiums and Grand View Resort Lodges. Jackson Hole Wildlife Safaris, www.JacksonHoleWildlifeSafaris.co m, (307) 690-6402. Half-day wildlife safari tours and custom photography workshops are offered Nov. 1April 30. Full-day Best of Jackson Hole Wildlife Safaris are offered Dec. 15-April 1. New are Winter Wolf and Wildlife Safaris that start from both Jackson and Bozeman, Mont., and spend time in Yellowstone’s Lamar Valley and Jackson Hole. Pickup offered at Snow King Resort. Check website for details and updates.


The Indiana Gazette

Sunday, November 8, 2015 — 3

Captain comics ‘Arrow’ show has quiver of similarities to comic By ANDREW A. SMITH Tribune News Service

In 1941, Green Arrow and Speedy debuted as the protectors of Star City. After more than three seasons, the TV show “Arrow” has finally caught up with the comics — in more ways than one. Astute viewers of “Arrow” have probably already figured out what’s been common knowledge among comics fans for more than 70 years, that originally the Emerald Archer was a knockoff of a more famous superhero. In the official history “DC Comics: Sixty Years of the World’s Favorite Comic Book Heroes,” author Les Daniels wrote that Green Arrow “was based on the blueprint of Batman,” who had debuted at DC Comics two years earlier. And in those early issues, the “inspiration” was hard to deny. Oliver Queen, like Bruce Wayne, was a bored playboy who fought crime in a secret identity. Queen’s ward Roy “Speedy” Harper, like Wayne’s ward Dick “Robin” Grayson, accompanied his mentor as a sidekick. Batman and Robin fought crime with gimmicks in their utility belts, while Green Arrow and Speedy kept similar gimmicks in quivers. The similarities only grew from there. The Battling Bowman was summoned by the police with a flaming arrow in the sky, much like the Bat-Signal. Further aping the Gotham Guardian, the Amazing Archer had an Arrowcave and an Arrowcar. All that was missing was a butler — and a more compelling reason to fight crime. Batman had that whole deadparents thing going, while Green Arrow just swiped his origin story from Robinson Crusoe. But while the comics Green Arrow started moving away

from the Bat-blueprint in the 1960s to become a unique character in his own right, the TV version has been eagerly filling the Bat-niche in the superhero food chain. That’s because the TV rights to Batman are tied up elsewhere, so in “Arrow,” as in the unrelated “Smallville,” Green Arrow has been more Dark Knight than Robin Hood. “We played him as a guy who was returning home from war with PTSD for the first three years,” executive producer Marc Guggenheim told Entertainment Weekly Sept. 10. And initially the character wasn’t even called Green Arrow — he has been “The Vigilante,” “The Hood” or “The Arrow” to the police and media for three seasons. That wasn’t the only difference between the comics and TV. The on-screen bowman lives in the inventedfor-the-show Starling City. His first partner was invented-for-the-show John Diggle, and he has a sister, inventedfor-the-show Thea “Speedy” Queen. The show lifted Felicity Smoak from “Firestorm” comics to join the rapidly growing Team Arrow, and swiped “Teen Titans” archenemy Slade “Deathstroke” Wilson as a villain closely tied to Ollie’s origin. “Arrow” gave us Roy Harper as a sidekick, but he isn’t Ollie’s ward and he has never been called “Speedy.” Even more confusing for comics fans is what the show has done with Black Canary. That heroine was introduced in 1947 as Dinah Drake, who appeared to play both sides of the law to Johnny Thunder, a character whose strip she took over. Canary eventually married a private investigator named Larry Lance, becoming Dinah Drake Lance. DC revived the character in the 1960s, and faced with the realities of a character tied to

the 1940s, eventually decided to make the new Black Canary the daughter of the original, dubbing her Dinah Laurel Lance. That character became the love of Green Arrow’s life, their off-and-on romance mirrored by the Canary’s off-and-on status as co-star in various Green Arrow titles. But since the latest revamp of DC’s superhero line, Green Arrow and Black Canary have yet to meet, much less date (although one suspects that will eventually happen). That’s pretty complicated, but the TV show decided it wasn’t complicated enough, splitting Black Canary into two characters, sisters named Lance who have both dated — and broken up with — Oliver Queen. On TV, Sara Lance was the original Black Canary, who kicked the bucket at the beginning of Season Three. Her sister Laurel is the current Black Canary, but is no longer tied romantically to Oliver, who is shipping with Felicity. Got all that? Well, it doesn’t matter, because a lot of it is changing. Because with Season Four, the grim “Bat-Arrow” era is over. TV’s Oliver Queen is getting a much cheerier attitude and a brighter green costume without sleeves (much like in the comics). And, finally, he’s renamed himself Green Arrow. But that’s not all. Starling City has been renamed Star City, and Roy Harper has left — to be replaced by Olliver’s sister Speedy, who’s learned combat skills from an assassin cult. So, at last, Green Arrow and Speedy are the protectors of Star City. And it only took three years! But those aren’t the only from-the-comics shenanigans going in “Arrow.” As of the third episode of Season Four:

• Serious Ink: In the 1960s, Green Lantern used to fight a criminal named Tattooed Man, whose tattoos were made from super-scientific chemicals and could come alive. Yes, that is a stupid super-power. There have been several Tattooed Men since, all of them with some variation of this power, although now it seems mystical instead of chemical. In the “Arrow” episode “Restoration,” a character named Double Down can bring playing cards tattooed on his skin to life, and throw them like knives. That’s not quite the Tattooed Man, but it’s pretty close (although the concept also seems to borrow more than a little from Daredevil villain Bullseye). • Getting Bee-zy : The Hierarchy of International Vengeance and Extermination (H.I.V.E.) has been doing evil things in DC Comics since it was introduced in 1980. H.I.V.E. has been mentioned several times on “Arrow” and is allied with this season’s big bad, Damien Darhk. • Darhk Times: Speaking of which, yes, “Damien Darhk” is a stupid name. But he isn’t a stupid character, being a mystical threat in some incarnations of “Teen Titans” and a big player in the (current) origin of John Constantine, DC’s mystical anti-hero. If TV’s Damien

Tribune News Service

THE TELEVISION version of “Arrow” draws from the comics. Darhk looks familiar, it’s because he’s played with evil gusto by Neil McDonagh, who played Dum Dum Dugan in “Captain America: The First Avenger” and on TV’s “Agent Carter.” • Abracadabra: Speaking of Constantine, Matt Ryan will reprise his role from NBC’s short-lived “Constantine” in this season’s episode five, “Haunted.” That’s a character jumping networks intact, which is a pretty rare — almost magical — event. • Mr. T, Too: DC revamped a 1940s character named Mr. Terrific — yes, that’s another stupid name — in the 1990s, as an African-American ge-

nius named Michael Holt, whose signature T-mask and T-spheres (round computers/weapons roughly the shape and size of tennis balls that fly around in his wake) have already appeared on “Arrow.” The T-mask appears on John Diggles’ helmet, but that appears to be a red herring. Because an AfricanAmerican genius named Curtis Holt has been introduced at Palmer Industries, inventing something that looks very much like a TSphere. And if that isn’t enough to make “Green Arrow” required reading, it’s enough to make a TV show pretty entertaining.

Got game?

Associated Press

WHETHER PLAYING as Master Chief or Locke, players now lead a four-person squad in “Halo 5.”

‘Halo 5’ delivers thin story, promising multiplayer By LOU KESTEN Associated Press

Near the end of “Halo 5: Guardians” (Microsoft, for the Xbox One, $59.95), an artificial intelligence bemoans humanity’s propensity toward solving every problem with violence. Which makes one wonder: Have you been paying attention? The entire “Halo” series is about flying to distant planets and then shooting everything that moves. That formula has served Microsoft well since the first “Halo: Combat Evolved” in 2001, selling millions of Xboxes and inspiring legions of imitators. But it’s getting stale, with even trigger-happy

games like “Destiny” (by “Halo” creator Bungie) offering players a little more to chew on. “Halo” is now in the hands of Microsoft’s in-house studio 343 Industries, which has streamlined the storytelling while acknowledging the convoluted mythology that has built up over the last 15 years. In essence: Our recurring hero, the faceless Master Chief, appears to have gone rogue, and it’s up to a new commando named Locke to hunt him down. And assorted aliens are getting in everyone’s way. The missions in the eight-hour solo campaign fall into an uninspired pattern. You go to another planet, which conveniently has

an assortment of guns lying around. You plow your way through increasingly aggressive waves of alien monsters. There are occasional respites where you get to drive a Warthog attack vehicle or fly a zippy anti-gravity Ghost, but for the most part you’re on foot. The major change is that whether you’re playing as Master Chief or Locke you’re now leading a four-person squad. This opens up some limited tactical possibilities — primarily, ordering your team to gang up on particular enemies — as well as the ability to tackle each mission with three online friends. As with any online relationship,

you and your friends will eventually want to stop playing nice and start attacking each other. And here, 343 Industries has built a beefy collection of multiplayer battlefields. They’re divided into two sections, Arena and Warzone. Arena is the traditional four-versus-four competition familiar to “Halo” fans, with the usual variants like deathmatch and capture-theflag. Warzone is more ambitious. It’s a 12-versus-12 affair, with computer-controlled aliens added to make the mayhem even more intense. The sprawling Warzone maps accommodate a variety of gameplay objectives. At the start of a

match, you need to clear all the AI monsters out of your base. Then you can focus on taking over various control points on the map, earning “req points” you can spend on more effective weapons, armor and vehicles. If you build up enough power, the enemy’s base becomes vulnerable and it’s game over. It remains to be seen how well this works once millions of “Halo” fans are trying to compete — last year’s “Halo: The Master Chief Collection” anthology was dogged by online issues. But Warzone holds much promise, and could make up for the pedestrian story in the “Guardians” solo campaign. Two stars out of four.


SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2015





6— Sunday, November 8, 2015

The Indiana Gazette


TVWeek

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TNT debuts the James Bond-esque ‘Agent X’ By Jacqueline Spendlove TV Media

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he name’s Case. John Case. OK, the title character in “Agent X� isn’t quite 007, but he’s certainly drawing comparisons to the smooth-talking, tuxedo-swaddled Brit. TNT’s action-packed new series sees big-screen icon Sharon Stone (“Casino,� 1995) making a rare departure from film to star in a television show. She portrays the newly elected vice president of the United States, Natalie Maccabee, who is landed with a very particular set of responsibilities — and more importantly, one exceptional employee — that only a handful of people know about. “Agent X� premieres Sunday, Nov. 8, on TNT. At last month’s New York Comic Con, series creator William Blake Herron explained his inspiration for the concept of “Agent X.� In a sentiment echoed in the first episode by Malcolm Millar (Gerald McRaney, “House of Cards�), the vice president’s chief steward, Herron was intrigued by the fact that the second most important executive position in the American government doesn’t appear to have any set duties. From that came the speculation that perhaps those duties are just unseen and kept from the public. After she’s sworn into office, Maccabee returns to her new digs only to discover a secret passage behind the fireplace, which she follows to the end

and promptly has her mind blown when she’s filled in on one of the nation’s biggest secrets. As Millar explains, Maccabee is about to be heavily involved in a program she never knew existed. An extra section in Article Two of the Constitution — the original document is housed in the hidden chamber in which she’s now standing — states that “an agent of unknown identity is hereby authorized to serve at the discretion of the vice president for the purpose of aiding the republic in times of dire peril.� And so she’s introduced to John Case, also known as Agent X. Jeff Hephner (“Chicago Fire�), who plays Agent X, described the character in an interview for Blastr as a “tallerthan-average, really handsome bad-ass� who’s deployed on missions that the government needs to accomplish on the down-low. “He’s an American James Bond,� added Herron, “so he goes on missions like any super spy would do.� Indeed, the extended preview has no shortage of butt-kicking, gun-toting, glass-breaking and other fancy maneuvers; Agent X pulls it all off while looking terribly dapper, with never a hair out of place. The character is, in essence, a weapon himself. Case is Special Ops-trained, CIA-tested, cunning, tough and quick as a whip. He’s also fiercely patriotic with a strong moral compass

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— qualities that all come together to make him the ideal man to be protecting his country when no one else can. His charm and good looks don’t hurt, either. The series obviously has some recognizable faces attached to it, but scoring Stone as the leading lady was a real windfall. The award-winning actress, producer and former fashion model has dozens of roles under her belt and, while she’s done some TV work (mostly in guest appearances), it’s on the big screen that she’s made a name for herself. Stone spoke with “Extra� about the timing of finally taking a major television role: “I waited for the good thing. I knew that I wanted to do something that had a woman in a sort of political situation, in a way that talked about politics but also in a way that was fun.� The current political situation in the U.S. also played a role in Stone, a supporter of Hillary Clinton, taking the part. “For me, to play vice president during this prescient moment when women are in so many powerful positions politically, and when we’re very apt to have a woman as president, it’s a very exciting time in the world to be playing something that is really in

that moment, in that historical moment,� she added. Maccabee is certainly an admirable character. She went from law professor to senator to the country’s first female vice president, and bore the tragic death of her husband with a strength that showed her to be capable in times of crisis, and a qualified commander of a top secret program requiring clarity and careful discretion. Of course, she’ll still have guidance in her new position, and not only from the dry-witted Millar, who will become her right-hand man and trusted adviser. Chief Justice Caleb Thorne is played by another Hollywood heavyweight, threetime Emmy winner James Earl Jones (“Field of Dreams,� 1989), and is one of the few people who is in on the Agent X program. The iconic actor can do no wrong in roles requiring a voice of guidance and reason, and Thorne will prove invaluable to Maccabee as she dives head first into crisis management. James Earl Jones as seen in “Agent X�

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By Adam Thomlison TV Media Q: I haven’t seen Meg Ryan in any productions for a long while. What’s going on with her? A: Meg Ryan has been on a sort of extended break for the past few years, living a quiet life in New York and picturesque Massachusetts while she raises her 9-year-old daughter, Daisy. Ryan’s profile has been so low that she made headlines this past summer just by showing up at a red carpet event — what fashion-andgossip site TooFab called “a rare public appearance� at Paris Fashion Week. It’s not that she hasn’t been working at all, though. In fact, she’s about to draw attention again in exactly the way fans want her to — by reuniting with Tom Hanks. Her directorial debut, “Ithaca,� just premiered at the Middleburg Film Festival in Virginia, ahead of a wider release. She also acts in the Second World War-era drama as the mother of the protagonist, a young bike messenger bringing news of the war to the residents of Ithaca, New York. Her husband will be played by Hanks. We all know Hanks is a sucker for period dramas, but more importantly, this is his fourth film as Ryan’s romantic partner. The popularity of those previous films — particularly “Sleepless in Seattle� (1993) and “You’ve Got Mail� (1998) — have made the two actors into one of the great romantic couples in Hollywood. In keeping with Ryan’s current family focus, “Ithaca� also stars her son, Jack Quaid (who plays another of her sons in the film). Prior to this, it seemed as if Ryan hadn’t been working much partly because her projects haven’t quite panned out. She would’ve been a lot busier if “How I Met Your Dad� had been picked up to series. The series, a spinoff of

the hugely popular sitcom “How I Met Your Mother,� would have essentially told the same long story of a couple’s coming together, but from the mother’s perspective, and would have been narrated by Ryan. Though a pilot was made in 2014, CBS ultimately turned it down. Ryan also appeared in the teen comedy “Fan Girl,� which premiered at the prestigious Los Angeles Film Festival this past summer, but failed to earn a theatrical release. Instead, it aired last month on ABC Family. Q: Is it true they’re making a new Miss Marple TV series? Who’s going to play her? A: CBS has signed a deal to develop a new series featuring Agatha Christie’s famous amateur sleuth/busybody, but while no one’s been cast yet, you’d be surprised at who they’re looking for. According to Variety magazine, the show is planning to cast a “much younger� actress for the character. Miss Marple will now be a young woman who inherits her grandmother’s bookshop and, therefore, for some reason starts solving mysteries in her small California town. This involves cutting at least a couple of decades off the character’s age. Indeed, Christie has said that she based Miss Marple on her own grandmother. Of course, CBS has had some luck radically changing British characters to suit American TV. “Elementary� has yielded three hit seasons for the network so far by transforming Sherlock Holmes from a pipe-smoking London gentleman to a tattooed and angry young man in New York City — not to mention transforming Dr. Watson into a woman.

Have a question? Email us at questions@tvtabloid.com. Please include your name and town. Personal replies will not be provided. November 8 - 14, 2015


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Cooking highlights

‘The Great British Baking Show’ makes PBS its second home By Andrew Warren TV Media

A

nyone who feels at home in the kitchen knows that, while cooking is an art, baking is a science. Of course, only cooks who don’t love to dabble in the sweet side of things would ever think that the science of baking doesn’t also have its own artistic beauty. Here in the United States, Fox’s “MasterChef” has been a boon for amateur home cooks looking to break into the big leagues, but there just hasn’t been a show focused on baking that’s taken off in the same way — and not for lack of trying. Across the Atlantic, though, the cards have played out differently and, as is so often the case with some of the fantastic shows coming out of the U.K., PBS has been quick and eager to bring them to our shores. Season 2 of “The Great

British Baking Show” has been airing on PBS for the past few weeks, and its winner will finally be crowned in the grand finale airing Sunday, Nov. 8, on PBS. Late to the sweet, sweet party? Not to worry, the entire season’s available to watch on the PBS website — along with the entire first season, too. So what sets the awardwinning competition apart from the rest? It’s hard to pin down, but it’s not just the accents. Perhaps it’s the way the challenges are laid out. Each week, the remaining home bakers are challenged to show off a different baking skill, but, as the competition goes on, the skills required become more and more difficult. This season started out with easy stuff like cakes and bread, but since then, the bakers have been faced with flaky pastries, technically

challenging sweet dough and more. The hosts definitely add to the fun nature of the contest: broadcaster Sue Perkins and comedian Mel Giedroyc are a pair of performers with quick wits and sharp tongues, and they spice up every episode. Then there are the judges, Mary Berry and Paul Hollywood, a pair of heavyweights who know their stuff — and who don’t pull their punches. Berry is an icon in the U.K. She’s published more than 75 cookbooks and hosted a number of her own cooking shows; she sits beside Hollywood at the judges table, a man who is one of the best known and most respected artisanal bakers in the country. Whatever the reasons for its success, “The Great British Baking Show” is a hit in the U.K., and PBS is making sure that American audiences don’t miss out.

SUNDAY 5:00 p.m. FOOD Chopped ‘Chopped: Impossible, Part 3’ Chef Robert Irvine serves as a judge. (1h) TVG TRAV Food Paradise ‘Pizza Paradise’ Pizza it’s the treat you just bake and eat. (1h) TVPG 6:00 p.m. FOOD Holiday Baking Championship ‘We’re Nuts for the Holidays’ The first challenge the bakers take on a nutty dessert. (1h) TVG TRAV Food Paradise ‘Deep Fried Paradise’ Load up on finger licking, crunchy and deep fried food. (1h) TVPG 7:00 p.m. WPSU (3) The Great British Baking Show ‘The Final’ Which of the finalists will emerge as Britain’s best. (1h) TVPG FOOD Guy’s Grocery Games ‘Blue Plate Blues’ Guy’s dice decide the details of the chefs blue plate. (1h) TVG 8:00 p.m. FOOD Guy’s Grocery Games ‘Grandma’s Grocery Games’ Four spunky grandmothers show Guy how it’s done. (1h) TVG

MONDAY 5:00 p.m.

FOOD The Pioneer Woman ‘Dorm

Room Dining’ Ree shares ideas for simple dorm room food. (30m) TVG TRAV Food Paradise ‘Meatball Paradise’ (1h) TVPG 5:30 p.m. FOOD Farmhouse Rules ‘All Aboard the Farmhouse Express!’ Fried chicken, cobb salad with buttermilk dressing. (30m) TVG 6:00 p.m. FOOD Guy’s Grocery Games ‘Fan-

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Tastic Food’ Chefs make a five-star dinner with five ingredients. (1h) TVG TRAV Bizarre Foods ‘China Guangzhou’ Guangzhou is the bizarre food capital of China. (1h) TV14 7:00 p.m. FOOD Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives ‘Dynamite Duos’ Guy pickles, smokes and cures. (30m) TVG TRAV Bizarre Foods America ‘Seattle’ Andrew checks out Seattle’s food scene. (1h) TVG 7:30 p.m. FOOD Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives ‘East Coast Comfort’ Guy looks for home cooking on the east coast. (30m) TVG 8:00 p.m. FOOD Chopped ‘Thanksgiving Soup-Er Stars’ (1h) TVG TRAV Bizarre Foods America ‘Atlanta: Monkfish Liver and Goat Heart’ Andrew feasts on calf brains in Atlanta, Georgia. (1h) TVG

TUESDAY 5:00 p.m.

FOOD The Pioneer Woman

‘Essential Cooking Tools’ Ree gathers kitchen tools that she will give as a gift. (30m) TVG TRAV Food Paradise ‘Deli Paradise’ Today we are serving up dish after dish of deli food. (1h) TVG 5:30 p.m. FOOD Trisha’s Southern Kitchen ‘Class Reunion’ Trisha cooks with her college roommates Beth and Donna. (30m) TVG 6:00 p.m. FOOD Chopped ‘One in a Hundred’ The chefs tell the judges why they want to win. (1h) TVG TRAV Bizarre Foods ‘Brooklyn: Schmaltz and Sea Robins’ Andrew tries kombucha bacteria pancakes and more. (1h) TVPG 7:00 p.m. FOOD Chopped ‘No Kidding!’ Teenage cooks compete. (1h) TVG TRAV Bizarre Foods America ‘Cleveland, Pighead and Perch’ People and food in Cleveland are full of surprises. (1h) TVG 7:30 p.m. WQED (13) The Mind of a Chef ‘Garbage’ Chef Hamilton explores what is garbage in the kitchen. (30m) TVG 8:00 p.m. FOOD Chopped Junior ‘Shake It Up’ A giant milkshake has the kids all amped up. (1h) TVG ESQTV Top Chef Canada ‘Food From Around the World’ The chefs must create their own unique salad. (1h) TVPG TRAV Bizarre Foods America ‘Family Business’ Andrew learns that hard work runs in the family. (1h) TVG

WEDNESDAY 5:00 p.m.

FOOD Chopped ‘Military Vets’ (1h)

TVG

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takes a Wild West tour of the Lone Star State. (1h) TVPG

THURSDAY 5:00 p.m.

FOOD The Pioneer Woman

‘Investment Reunion Dinner’ Mexican-inspired menu for an investment club reunion. (30m) TVG 5:30 p.m. FOOD Valerie’s Home Cooking ‘Poker Night’ Valerie prepares a menu with Southwestern eggrolls. (30m) TVPG 6:00 p.m. FOOD Chopped ‘Every ‘wich Way’ Four chefs get creative with appetizer sandwiches. (1h) TVG 7:00 p.m. FOOD Chopped ‘Tailgate Fate’ The chefs prepare chicken wing appetizers. (1h) TVG 8:00 p.m. FOOD Chopped ‘Chopped: Impossible, Grand Finale’ (1h) TVG

FRIDAY 5:00 p.m.

FOOD Holiday Baking

Championship ‘Gingerbread Worlds’ Bakers use their holiday memories as inspiration. (1h) TVG 6:00 p.m. FOOD Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives ‘Grabbin’ a Sandwich’ Guy heads to Salt Lake City and samples meatball subs. (30m) TVG 6:30 p.m. FOOD Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives ‘A Burger, a Bowl and a Slice’ In this episode, burgers are done every which way. (30m) TVG 7:00 p.m. FOOD Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives ‘Fresh, Filled and Fried’ Guy looks for the best scratch cooking in America. (30m) TVG 7:30 p.m. FOOD Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives ‘Sandwiches Plus’ Guy travels to find a homemade meatloaf sandwich. (30m) TVG 8:00 p.m. FOOD Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives ‘Gettin’ Fresh’ Guy makes unique pizzas in Boulder, Colorado. (30m) TVG

SATURDAY 7:00 p.m.

FOOD Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives

‘Piggin’ Out’ This trip, Guy’s going big on the pig. (30m) TVG 7:30 p.m. FOOD BBQ Blitz ‘Miami Meltdown’ Miami’s exploding culinary scene is well represented. (30m) TVPG 8:00 p.m. FOOD Unwrapped 2.0 ‘Nostalgic Eats’ (30m) Indiana Gazette: Food Nov 8, 2015 to Nov 14, 2015

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1380 Route 286 Hwy E Building uilding 2, Indiana, PA 724.465.9224

vin eco ms Flower Boutique

2 x 1.5�

Indiana Floral 721 Philadelphia St, Indiana 724-465-2608

Flower Boutique 1690 Warren Rd, Indiana 724-465-4440

Trainwreck

Fill in the grid so that every row, every column and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 through 9. November 8 - 14, 2015

the

Amy (Schumer) has gone her whole life believing that monogamy is unrealistic, a lesson that her father taught her years ago. A writer for a men’s magazine by trade, she’s a harddrinking party animal who never stays with one guy for long. So when her boss (Swinton) assigns her an article about prominent sports doctor Aaron (Hader), the last thing on her mind is falling in love. The more she spends time with him, though, the closer they grow and the more she begins to suspect that her dad’s “life lesson� may not have been entirely accurate. Director: Judd Apatow. Stars: Amy Schumer, Bill Hader, Tilda Swinton, LeBron James, 2015. 125 min. Romantic comedy.

Arnold Schwarzenegger in a scene from “Terminator Genisys� 7


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Support our volunteers. Volunteer Firefighter Discount (VFD) Partners offer a 10% or more EXCLUSIVE discount to our local volunteer firefighters when they present their VFD Cards. As a VFD Partner you receive: r B XJOEPX DMJOH TIPXJOH ZPV TVQQPSU WPMVOUFFS ĂąSFĂąHIUFST r BO *OEJBOB$PVOUZ7'% DPN MJTUJOH MJOLJOH UP ZPVS XFCTJUF r JODMVTJPO JO BET QVCMJTIFE JO The Indiana Gazette r ZPVS BE JO SPUBUJPO PO UIJT The Indiana Gazette QBHF JO To participate: Call Debbie Palmer at 724.465.5555 or email dpalmer@indianagazette.net

$150 $1 50 Off Vehicle V eehicle Purchase Pu 2600 W. Pik Indiana, .VTU CF B MPDBM WPMVOUFFS ĂąSFĂąHIUFS QSFTFOU 7'% $BSE

724.

349-9100

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7'% $BSE

8PQTILMTXPQI ;\ZMM\ Π8PQTILMTXPQI ;\\ZZMM\ Π! ! Must be a local volunteer firefighter & present VFD Card to receive

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631 Phila.St. 724.801.8783

Our thanks to these businesses who participate in the VFD Program BLAIRSVILLE r #MBJSTWJMMF 'MPPS $PWFSJOH r 'BOUBTUJD 4BN T r .BSLFU 4USFFU 3FTBMF BRUSH VALLEY A r #SVTI 7BMMFZ "VUP 4BMFT 4FSWJDF CLLYMER r "JLFOT 1PXFSTQPSUT r $MZNFS 'VSOJUVSF r $MZNFS )BSEXBSF r 3BJSJHI #FODF 'VOFSBM )PNF DIXONVILLE r % $ 4BMFT 4FSWJDF r 'JTIFS 'VSOJUVSF HOMER CITY r %JTPCFEJFOU 4QJSJUT r (SBIBN "DDPVOUJOH r .D"EBNT $POTUSVDUJPO INDIANA r "EWBODFE "VUP 1BSUT r "VEJPQIPOJDT r #FODF T 'VOFSBM )PNF r #JH -FBHVF )BJSDVUT r 5IF #PPL /PPL r #PZFS 'BNJMZ $IJSPQSBDUJD r #SPXO 'BNJMZ $IJSPQSBDUJD r #VEBTI 8FMDI r $BĂ­F "NBEFVT r $$ *OUJNBUFT r $PMPOJBM .PUPS .BSU r $PMPOJBM 5PZPUB r $PPL $IJSPQSBDUJD r 5IF $PTUVNF 4IPQ r $SPPLFE $SFFL $SFBUJPOT r %VOLJO %POVUT r &BHMFTDSJQUT r &WJEFODF #BTFE $IJSPQSBDUJD r &WPMVUJPOT 4BMPO r 'BTU5JNFT r 'MFNJOH T $ISJTUNBT 5SFF 'BSNT r 5IF 'MPXFS (BMMFSZ r 5IF 'SBNJOH )VU (BMMFSZ r (BNF 0O 7JEFP r (BUUJ 1IBSNBDZ r (JOHFSCSFBE .BO 3VOOJOH $P r %ST )JMMJBSE 5BSOPĂ­ r * N UIF (VZ r *OEJBOB "VUP (MBTT r *OEJBOB &ZF$BSF r *OEJBOB 'MPSBM r *OEJBOB 1MBZFST r *SPOXPPE (SJMM r +% T 4QFFEZ -VCF r +FĂ­ )BNJMUPO 5SFF 4FSWJDF

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Audiophonics 10%OFF (724)

Must be a local volunteer firefighter & present VFD Card

465.9996 0BLMBOE "WF *OEJBOB 1"

Rix Limousine 10% 1 0% OFF . VTU CF B MPDBM WPMVOUFFS ĂąSFĂąHIUFS .VTU CF B MPDBM WPMVOUFFS ĂąSFĂąHIUFS QSFTFOU 7'% $BSE QSFTFOU 7'% $BSE

724.463.3992

1 10% 0% Of Offf

. .VTU CF B MPDBM WPMVOUFFS ĂąSFĂąHIUFS QSFTFOU 7'% $BSE VTU CF B MPDBM WPMVOUFFS ĂąSFĂąHIUFS QSFTFOU 7'% $BSE

724.349.5050 The

INDIANA PLAYERS The Philadelphia Street Playhouse 725 Philadelphia Street 724-464-0725 indianaplayers.com

20% 20% OOFF FF T Ticket icket P Price rice

THANKS TO OUR NEWEST VFD PATR T ONS! $BNQVT $PSOFS .JDIBFM # 4IPFT

. .VTU CF B MPDBM WPMVOUFFS ĂąSFĂąHIUFS VTU CF B MPDBM WPMVOUFFS ĂąSFĂąHIUFS QSFTFOU 7'% $BSE QSFTFOU 7'% $BSE

10% OFF .VTU CF B MPDBM WPMVOUFFS ĂąSFĂąHIUFS QSFTFOU 7'% $BSE

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Sponsored by S.A.FF..E.R. Recruitment & Retention

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