Escolar Documentos
Profissional Documentos
Cultura Documentos
100
ANNOUNCEMENTS
150 Special Notices
MONTY MONTY SA SAYS YS
Summer report
on Schiel mount-
ian...Donna went
into the pool on
a big dare.
Ended up in the
garage with Ed.
Freddie went
into the pool and
got slammed.
Over and over
again. Frank
entertained the
crowd on the
microphone...
Then went into
the pool. He got
slammed by
Andrew. The
shibu ebu dog
growled at Tom...
There goes the
neighborhood.
415 Autos-Antique
& Classic
CADILLAC `80
COUPE DEVILLE
Excellent condition,
$3,000 located in
Hazleton.
570-454-1945 or
561-573-4114
OLDSMOBILE `68
DELMONT
DRASTICALLY
REDUCED!!
This model only
produced in 1967
& 1968. All
original 45,000
miles, Color
Burgundy, cloth
& vinyl interior,
350 rocket
engine, 2nd
owner. Fender
skirts, always
garaged. Trophy
winner at shows.
Serious inquiries
only, $7,500.
570-690-0727
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
439 Motorcycles
KAWASAKI 03
KLR 650
$3,400
(570) 287-0563
KAWASAKI` 05
NINJA 500
Blue Ninja 500 with
3300 mi. Current PA
State Inspection.
Never dropped or
dumped. Must sell,
moving to Florida.
$3,000.
570-237-5947
442 RVs & Campers
TRAVEL TRAILER 33 ft
Rear queen master
bedroom, Walk
thru bathroom.
Center kitchen +
dinette bed. Front
extra large living
room + sofa bed.
Big View windows.
Air, awning, sleeps
6, very clean, will
deliver. Located in
Benton, Pa. $4,900.
215-694-7497
451 Trucks/
SUVs/Vans
MITSUBISHI `97
15 CUBE VAN
Cab over, 4 cylinder
diesel engine.
Rebuilt automatic
transmission. Very
good rubber. All
around good
condition inside
& out. Well
maintained.
Ready to work.
PRICE REDUCED!
$6,195 or
best offer
Call 570-650-3500
Ask for Carmen
509 Building/
Construction/
Skilled Trades
CONCRETE
FINISHER
10 years experience
required.
Call 570-384-0730
533 Installation/
Maintenance/
Repair
AUTO DETAIL
Busy shop and
mobile route need
two energetic and
focused individuals
with auto detail
background. Must
have valid license.
Call 570-760-9701
for an appointment.
LINE UP
A GREAT DEAL...
IN CLASSIFIED!
Looking for the right deal
on an automobile?
Turn to classified.
Its a showroom in print!
Classifieds got
the directions!
MAINTENANCE
MECHANIC
General plant main-
tenance, all phases
light industrial. Must
possess strong
mechanical abilities
as well as electrical
knowledge and abil-
ity to read electrical
prints to trou-
bleshoot equipment.
PLC knowledge
helpful. EOE.
283-WORK
(9675)
To receive text
alerts for jobs
text keyword
JOB to 292929
www.gavlick.biz
140 South Wyoming
Ave. Kingston
(next to Burger King)
548 Medical/Health
LPN AND/OR
MEDICAL ASSISTANT
Medical office.
Weekdays only.
Send resume to
c/o Times Leader
Box 2700
15 North Main St.
Wilkes-Barre, PA
18711-0250
600
FINANCIAL
610 Business
Opportunities
A
Better
Career
Starts
Here!
Your chance to build
your own business with
a JAN-PRO Cleaning
Systems franchise.
Extensive Training
Guaranteed
Customers
Guaranteed
Financing
No Selling Needed
Just $950 starts your
career, so call
570-824-5774 today!
700
MERCHANDISE
710 Appliances
STOVE: GE electric
glass top, black
good condition.
$150. GE micro-
wave oven, black,
.good condition.
$100. Take the
pair for $225.
570-696-1454
DALLAS
11 Freedman Ave
Off West Overbrook
Saturday 9a-4p
Jewelry, clocks,
accordion, violin,
jogging stroller,
lawn cart, cedar
chest, rockers, lug-
gage, microwave,
fans, two air condi-
tioners, lamps,
linens, kitchen
items, sewing
machine, depres-
sion glass, china,
flatware, clothes,
shoes, purses,
xmas, pictures, cur-
tains, bar stools,
tables, deacons
bench, vanity &
stool, vacuum,
snow blower, chain
saw & much more.
Tag Sale
DALLAS
160 Jake Moore Rd.
Follow signs from
Dallas High School
Saturday, August 13
8am - 2pm
Jewelry, Antiques,
furniture, tools,
household items,
wheelchair & more!
DALLAS
17 SPENCER ROAD
First road on right
past intersection of
Lake St. & Country
Club Rd.
Saturday, August 13
8 a.m. - 2:30 p.m.
RAIN OR SHINE
VARIETY: household
furnishings,
exercise, clothing,
books & more.
DALLAS
20 Family Sale!!!
Prince of Peace
Episcopal Church
420 Main St.
Saturday August 13
8am-2pm
Rain or Shine
Lunch & Baked
Goods. Vendor
Reservation
Required. Outdoor
& Indoor Space
$10 - $15
Call 570-675-1723
DURYEA
102 Foote Ave
Saturday, Aug 13
8am-2pm
*RAIN DATE SUN 8/14*
Something for
everyone!
EDWARDSVILLE
138 Roosevelt St
Sat, Aug. 13
8am-2pm
Electronics, weight
bench & weights,
movies, dishwasher,
easel, home decor,
bedding, clothing,
toys, vacuum, etc.
EDWARDSVILLE
189 Meyers Street
Saturday August 13
8am to 1pm
SOMETHING FOR
EVERYONE!
NANTICOKE
Flea Market &
Halushki/
Pierogi Sale!
Thursday, Friday &
Saturday
August 11, 12 & 13
8am-2pm
St. Johns Picnic
Grounds, Front St
Hanover Section
Vendors Wanted
Free Space!
EXETER
138 Mason St
Sat., 8/13 @ 8 a.m.
Boys & Girls
clothes, books,
toys, household
items & more.
EXETER
155 Penn Ave
Fri 8/12 & Sat 8/13
9am-2pm
Used furniture: two
modern bedroom
sets, hutch, rocker,
lift chair recliner -
perfect condition,
kitchen set, odd
pieces. Clothing.
Produce & hanging
plants. And more!
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
229 Boland Ave
Saturday, August 13
9am-4pm
Large collectible toy
sale, cars, trucks,
etc. 1/18, 1/24 &
1/50 scale.
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
Liberty Hills
121 Redcoat Lane
Saturday, August 13
9am - 3pm
Many household
items - old, new and
antique. Portable
Basketball set, Bar,
Piano, Pool Table,
Furniture & more!
HANOVER TWP
Annual Oaklawn Ave
Sat 8/13 8am-1pm
Household items,
tools, collectibles,
clothing, too numer-
ous to mention!
HUNLOCK CREEK
288 Sweet Valley Rd
Saturday 8/13
8am-3pm
DOWNSIZING! Fur-
niture, pool, chil-
drens 3T clothing,
toys & household.
House House
Sale! Sale!
KINGSTON
77 Eley Street
Saturday, August 13
8am - 12 noon
Estate sale. Furni-
ture, miscellaneous
household items &
much more!
Shopping for a
new apartment?
Classified lets
you compare costs -
without hassle
or worry!
Get moving
with classified!
LAKE SILKWORTH
August 13,
Saturday 9am-1pm
RAIN DATE:
August 14
all around the lake
Bargains for
everyone!
LARKSVILLE
ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST
126 Nesbitt Street
Thur 8/11 5pm-7pm
Fri 8/12 9am-12pm
& 6pm-11pm
Sat 8/13 9am-12pm
& 5pm-11pm
Sun 8/14 2pm-?
1,000s of items -
everything but the
kitchen sink!
Giant Flea
Market:
Under the Big
Tent
LUZERNE
810 Charles St.
& Bishop Lane
Saturday
August 13
& Sunday
August 14
8am - 2pm
Baby's clothes
and toys, patio
furniture,
exercise
equipment,
household
items,
electronics,
and much
more
MOCANAQUA
21-23 Railroad St
SA SATURDA TURDAY Y, , AUG 13 AUG 13
8:00-4:00 8:00-4:00
DIRECTIONS: RT 11
TO 239 SOUTH TO
FIRST RIGHT (NICELY
ST.) TO RIGHT ON
RAILROAD.
Entire contents of
both sides of a dou-
ble block and large
garage. Including
Antiques, nice
Mahogany dining
room set,
Mahogany secre-
tary desks,
Mahogany bedroom
set with poster bed,
porcelain top
kitchen table, round
Oak table, Oriental
style rugs, glass-
ware inc.
Depression glass,
kitchenware, some
vintage china sets,
vintage hats &
clothing, hand tools,
Craftsman shred-
der/bagger, push
mowers, lawn &
garden and much
more! Definitely
worth the ride!
CREDIT CARDS
ACCEPTED!
Sale by Cook &
Cook Estate
Liquidators
www.cookand
cookestate
liquidators.com
MOUNTAINTOP
1027 Woodberry Dr
(Thru Fairwood Blvd
off Nuangola Road)
Sat, 8/13; 8am-12
Playmobile toys,
Train Table, Bed
tent, Bikes, Decora-
tions, Clothing,
Misc. household &
much more!!!
MOUNTAINTOP
172 Church Road
Saturday, August 13
8am-2pm
Rain or Shine
SOMETHING FOR EVERY-
ONE! Sizes 12 & 14
missys AE & NY&
Co jeans. 2 leather
motorcycle jackets,
excellent condition.
Bug shield - still in
box. Some antiques.
Scrubs. 12pm-2pm
Bag Sale! Some
items excluded.
MOUNTAINTOP
9 Red Maple Ave
Fri 8/12 & Sat 8/13
9am-1pm
Ping Pong Table, TV
Armoire (oak) &
more. Something
for everyone!
NANTICOKE
358 East Grand St
Saturday, Aug 13
8am-1pm
Too much
to list!
PITTSTON
14 Wood St.
Saturday August 13
8:00AM - 3:00PM
baby clothes, mens
& womens, Christ-
mas, kitchen items
& more. ALL
PRICED TO SELL
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
PITTSTON
St. Johns EV Parish Community
Seton Catholic
Cafeteria
Church & Broad St
Thur 8/11, Fri 8/12 &
Sat 8/13, 5pm-10pm
Bag night Sat 7pm
Household, books,
toys, collectibles,
jewelry & new
items.
Giant Flea Giant Flea
Market!! Market!!
PLAINS
52 William St
Thur 8/11 & Fri 8/12
9:30am-2:30pm
Tools, old metal
toys, dolls, carriage,
clothes & more.
PLAINS
75 Hancock Street
Saturday, August 13
7am-2pm
Furniture, Sports
collectibles, boys
Huffy bike, many
new/unused items.
Toys, old and new,
clothes, house-
wares, bric-a-brak,
antiques, col-
lectibles, beer
items, old records,
sports equipment,
holiday decor &
more! Something for
everyone!
PLAINS
82 Abbott St
Thurs., Fri. & Sat.
Starting at 9am
Good variety of
items, good prices!
PLYMOUTH
404-420 West Main
Street
Sunday, August 14
8-2
Clothes, Toys,
DVDs, Furniture,
Household Items,
Restaurant Equip-
ment and Much,
Much More!
SHEATOWN
2 Central St
(Corner of William &
Central, off of
Robert Street)
Saturday, August 13
8am - 1pm
Clothing, household
items, Toys, Dress
codeuniforms&more!
SLOCUM
714 Lily Lake Road
Sat, 8/13 & Sun, 8/14
8am-1pm
Lots of good stuff.
Old, new and in
between - CHEAP!
SWEET VALLEY
131 Post Office Rd
Saturday, August 13
8am-3pm
Baby boy & girl
clothing, bedding,
furniture, household
items & much more!
SWOYERSVILLE
14 Grandville Drive
Saturday, August 13
8:30 to 12:30
Wicker loveseat
with cushions. Pen-
guins hockey items
including auto-
graphed Jerseys.
End tables. Design-
er purses, jewelry,
lamps &much more!
SWOYERSVILLE
704 Main Street
Saturday, Aug 13
8:30am-1:30pm
Foosball table,
baby items, books,
magazines & much
more!
TRUCKSVILLE
218 Terrace Ave
Saturday, August 13
8am - 1pm
Boys & girls cloth-
ing, jackets, stroller,
Eddie Bauer high-
chair. Pack & play.
Childs swing. Tod-
dlers Cars bed
with acc., Household
items & much more!
Looking for that
special place
called home?
Classified will address
Your needs.
Open the door
with classified!
TRUCKSVILLE
228 Clearview Ave
From Carverton Rd,
turn onto E. Hillside
St at Old Country
Deli; up 3 streets &
make Left onto
Clearview. Last
house on Left
Saturday, Aug 13
9am-3pm
Furniture, clothes,
toys & household
items. RAIN OR SHINE.
TRUCKSVILLE
328 Old Carverton
Road (2nd house in)
Saturday Aug 13
8am to 1pm
Antiques, jewelry,
furniture, rugs, col-
lectible glass, new
Entertainment Cen-
ter, collectible toys,
household items,
mirrors, shoes,
purses, designer
clothing (wide
range of sizes from
baby to 3x, a lot
brand new with
tags), brick-a-brack
& much much
more!!
OUR FAMILY
& FRIENDS
YEARLY YARD
SALE IS HERE
AGAIN
WAPWALLOPEN
444 Moyers
Grove Road
Saturday, Aug. 13
10am-3pm
Last and final
sale, 1 day only!
Everything 1/2
price, then take
an additional
$20% off! Vintage
cobalt blue glass
and some others.
Andrea Birds and
other Andrea fig-
urines. Spangled
d i n n e r w a r e .
Carved Asian
table. Prints.
Carved eagles.
Lamps. Womens
clothing & shoes,
some with tags.
Re f r i g e r a t o r .
Vintage commer-
cial hair dryer.
Tools & other
h a r d w a r e .
Christmas. Box
lots & a whole lot
more!
WEST PITTSTON
10 Washington St.
Saturday, August 13
8am-12pm
NO EARLY BIRDS!
China, books,
DVDs, Videos, col-
lectibles, & more.
WEST PITTSTON
25 PHILADELPHIA AVE
HUGE
8am-5pm on Fri.
8/12 - Sun, 8/14.
Crafter going out of
business and
inventory being
liquidated. Also,
like new appliances,
including electric
stove, microwaves,
and range hood.
Furniture, as well as
a vast inventory of
new home decor
items, including
pictures, vases, and
wall/shelf orna-
ments. Beanie
Babies! Corner or
Philadelphia Ave &
Second in West
Pittston.
WILKES-BARRE
111 Plymouth Ave.
Saturday, August 13
9am - 2pm,
Kathy Van Zeeland
purses, futon bunk
bed, 2 electronic
60-key keyboards,
2 computer desks,
electronics, clothes,
glassware, many
miscellaneous
items
NO EARLY BIRDS
WILKES-BARRE
17 Auburn St
Saturday, August 13
8am-4pm
Furniture, clothing,
household items, etc
WILKES-BARRE
266 Horton St.
Saturday, August 13
9am to 3pm
The One You
Wait All Year For!!
WILKES-BARRE
409 Plymouth Ave.
Saturday, August
13th 2011:
8am-12pm
CDs, toys, games,
collectible cards,
clothing, electron-
ics, furniture
WILKES-BARRE
419 NEW MARKET ST.
Sat. 8/13 9 til 2
Sun. 8/14 9 til 2
Find what you have
been looking for!
Tools, household
goods, collectibles,
Lenox, Waterford,
Hess trucks, and
much, much,
much more!
WILKES-BARRE
56 Hillside Street
Sat. 8/13 8am-3pm
Clothing, childrens
items, toys, books,
games, house-
wares, furniture and
much more.
WILKES-BARRE TWP.
ST. JOHNS HALL
756 E.
Northampton St.
Friday 5pm-9pm
Sat 8am-3pm
Sun 10am-3pm
* SUNDAY PRICE *
Collectible
Book Sale:
1,000s of
collectable books
& magazines
782 Tickets
PENN STATE
TICKETS
September 3, 2011
Noon Game
Indiana State
Red Zone-WH Sec-
tion. 15 yard line.
$100 each
570-675-5046
after 6 PM
900
REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE
906 Homes for Sale
SWOYERSVILLE
TOWNHOUSE
14 Grandville Drive
Nicely landscaped
on corner lot. 3 bed-
rooms, 2.5 baths.
Spacious open floor
plan. Gas Central
Air. White Vinyl pri-
vacy fencing sur-
rounding yard. Quiet
neighborhood.
(570) 288-4451
WEST WYOMING
26 Bubblo St
Cape cod. Com-
pletely renovated.
New bath & kitchen.
All stainless appli-
ances. 3 bedroom,
new high-efficiency
gas furnace with
central air. Hard-
wood laminate floor
& carpet. Washer/
dryer hookup on 1st
floor. Deck. Large
lot. Quiet neighbor-
hood. $134,900.
570-954-8825
or email
gckar1@yahoo.com
WEST WYOMING
Toy Town Section
148 Stites Street
INCREDIBLE
BUY
$71,000
On corner lot with
2 car garage.
2 bedrooms, 1 bath,
walk up attic & full
heated basement,
hardwood floors
with three season
room. Freshly paint-
ed & move in condi-
tion. 570-446-3254
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
BACK MOUNTAIN
Large 1 bedroom,
living room, kitchen
with appliances,
tiled bath, carpet-
ing, deck, parking.
No Pets. $395
570-696-1866
941 Apartments/
Unfurnished
KINGSTON
1 bedroom. Avail-
able now. $450 +
security & electric.
Call (570) 829-0847
KINGSTON
595 MARKET ST
BRAND NEW
2 bedroom
apartment. $650 +
utilities. No pets
/ No smoking. Off
street parking, air,
new appliances &
microwave, laundry.
Security, references
& Background
check required.
570-288-4508
MOOSIC
5 rooms, 2nd floor.
Appliances fur-
nished. Heat, water
& sewer furnished.
$685 + security &
references.
570-457-7854
Collect cash, not dust!
Clean out your
basement, garage
or attic and call the
Classified depart-
ment today at 570-
829-7130!
WEST PITTSTON
159 Elm St.
2 bedroom Town-
house w/full base-
ment. 1.5 baths, off
street parking.
$600/per month
+ utilities & security.
No Pets
570-283-1800 M-F
570-388-6422 all
other times
WILKES-BARRE
HEIGHTS
Townhouse type
apartments. 2
bedrooms, Stove ,
Fridge, washer/
dryer hookup. Off-
street parking. Utili-
ties by tenant. No
Pets. $450/month
570-825-8355
6 to 8 pm ONLY
953Houses for Rent
JENKINS TOWNSHIP
Executive condo,
end unit with 3 bed-
rooms, 2.5 baths,
large 1st floor Mas-
ter Suite, Living
room, Dining room,
hardwood through-
out 1st floor, kitchen
with granite coun-
ters & all stainless
steel appliances,
loft study, gas Fire-
place, alarm sys-
tem, laundry room,
large walkout base-
ment, 2 car garage,
rear deck & side
covered patio. All
season mainte-
nance provided.
Available October
2011. No pets; Ref-
erences required,
$2000 / month +
security. Call
570-313-1229
WILKES-BARRE
Clean, 5 room
2 bedroom, car-
peting, hookups,
yard, electric heat.
$495 + utilities.
No pets. 868-4444
965 Roommate
Wanted
HARVEYS LAKE
1 bedroom, fully
furnished. Includes
utilities/cable,
access to lake.
$400 month.
Call Don
570-690-1827
746 Garage Sales/
Estate Sales/
Flea Markets
746 Garage Sales/
Estate Sales/
Flea Markets
746 Garage Sales/
Estate Sales/
Flea Markets
746 Garage Sales/
Estate Sales/
Flea Markets
746 Garage Sales/
Estate Sales/
Flea Markets
746 Garage Sales/
Estate Sales/
Flea Markets
746 Garage Sales/
Estate Sales/
Flea Markets
LINEUP
ASUCCESSFULSALE
INCLASSIFIED!
Doyouneedmorespace?
A yard or garage sale
in classified
is the best way
tocleanout your closets!
Youre in bussiness
with classified!
GET THE WORD OUT
with a Classified Ad.
570-829-7130
C M Y K
PAGE 6B THURSDAY, AUGUST 11, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
S P O R T S
SOUTH BEND, Ind. Every-
where Trevor Robinson looks, he
sees familiar faces. And for the
veteran Notre Dame guard, thats
really a good thing.
For Notre Dame to get where
it wants to go this season a
BCS bowl the Irish will rely on
an offensive front that returns
four starters. On the day before
camp began last week, Coach
Brian Kelly quickly pointed to
the line as one of the teams
strengths.
There are times where its
tough for an offensive lineman to
be a team leader. Just by the na-
ture of what you do, Robinson
said. Its kind of a point we want
to get to. We knowwe can be suc-
cessful and we want to be the
group that takes the team to suc-
cess.
Robinson, who has made 27
starts as he enters his fourth sea-
son, will be joined by three other
returning starters center
Braxston Cave and tackles Zack
Martin and Taylor Dever. The
only missing piece from last sea-
son is left guard Chris Stewart,
who played a year ago while at-
tending law school and has used
up his eligibility.
The Irish have veterans ready
to step in for Stewart in fifth-year
senior Andrew Nuss, who played
in 13 games a year ago and can
also play tackle, and Chris Watt,
who can play guard or center.
This is the most continuity
weve had fromyear to year since
Ive been here, Robinson said,
crediting the system that Kelly
implemented upon his arrival in
December 2009. Everything
was different and now every-
thing is almost the same. ...
Where we are now compared to
where we were last year, its real-
ly night and day.
The Irish allowed only 20
sacks through 13 games a year
ago in a spread offense in which
the quarterback is often moving.
Robinson and his buddies will
be blocking for the likes of Cierre
Wood and Jonas Gray when the
season opens Sept. 3 against
South Florida. On Wednesday,
the Irish put on their pads and
concentrated on the running
game.
Kelly said it was obvious that
his two most experienced quar-
terbacks, Dayne Crist and Tom-
my Rees, were ahead of sopho-
more AndrewHendrix and fresh-
man Everett Golson in this seg-
ment of practice. Kelly hopes to
announce his starter after the
first 19 practices, which would
fall around the third week of Au-
gust.
Everett and Andrew would
obviously show better if we were
just playing faster, Kelly said.
And right now Dayne and Tom-
my have shown the ability to play
smarter, getting into the right
run checks, making sure that
weve got the right plays called.
... Those guys have pushed them-
selves up a little bit because of
the way we are playing right
now.
C O L L E G E F O O T B A L L
Veteran O-line looks to lead Notre Dame
The Irish return four out of
five starters up front as they
aim to return to a BCS bowl.
By RICK GANO
AP Sports Writer
Records: Tressel made $21.7 million at OSU
COLUMBUS, Ohio Jim Tressel made $21.7 million as Ohio State
football coach over his decade-long tenure before being ousted for
breaking NCAA rules, records from the publicly funded school show.
Tressel earned more than $3.5 million in 2010, the year he learned
about and covered up an improper benefits scandal that has
resulted in Ohio State meeting with the NCAAs committee on
infractions this Friday.
The figures were released Tuesday by the university as part of a
public-records request by The Associated Press. They show that part
of Tressels pay $4.6 million came from an exclusive apparel deal
with Nike under which Ohio State directed a portion of the money it
received to the coach.
Tressel also received more than $100,000 worth of regular-season
game tickets in addition to $835,000 for taking the Buckeyes to
three BCS title games.
Harveys Lake forcedthe cancella-
tion of the swimming leg of the
Wilkes-Barre Triathlon for the
first time in 1998.
An excess of duck and geese fe-
ces caused test results from the
Department of Environmental
Protection to deem the lake un-
safe for athletes.
You could tell by the smell. It
stunk. The beaches stunk, said
Kristin Stretanski, formerly of
Kingston, after the 1998 race. It
hasnt rained, and the water level
is low so naturally bacteria is go-
ing to form.
The Wilkes-Barre Triathlons
biggest obstacle came on the eve
of the 1985 race.
David Kramer, the husband of
former race director Pat Kramer,
was struck by a vehicle while
checking whether the bike
courses markers were visible. He
died several days later.
Each year, the David Kramer
Volunteer Award is given in his
honor to several of the triathlons
dedicated volunteers.
As of Wednesday, the forecast
for Sunday is cloudy with a
chance of thunderstorms and a
high of 78 degrees, according to
Accuweather. Gensel said she
will keep an eye on the radar be-
fore and during the race to see if
the triathlon needs to eliminate
the swimming portion if light-
ning is present.
As fun as we had in last years
torrential rain, she said, Imhop-
ing that the weather picks up for
us this year.
TRIATHLON
Continued from Page 1B
almost two days at a hospital be-
fore being released Tuesday, say-
ing in a statement he wanted to
shift the attention back to his
team.
The Nittany Lions apparently
didnt miss a beat at practice
without him.
For us, its business as usual,
linebacker Michael Mauti said
this week. Our assistant coach-
es have been there before. We
know where we need to go and
our goals, whether Joeis thereor
not. I think he would want us to
do the same thing ... Keep our
heads down and keep working.
Last year, the defense didnt
live up to its typical lofty stan-
dards. PennState was seventhin
the Big Ten against the run (165
yards per game) and tied for
eighth in sacks with17.
They were also porous in the
red zone, allowing opponents to
score a league-worst 91 percent
of the time (34 of 37) inside the
20.
Paterno put much of the
blame on himself.
I dont think we played very
well last year. I dont thinkI dida
very good job coaching last year,
to be frank with you, Paterno
saidlast monthat BigTenmedia
day in Chicago. Ive got to do a
better job. Everybodys got to do
a better job.
Theenergylevel has apparent-
ly been turned up in camp, ac-
cording to postings fromplayers
on Twitter. Mauti, a redshirt ju-
nior, said the first week was the
most intense so far in his career.
Its a lot of running, a little
more than were used to, he
said. Joe says this is how hard
we need to win, so we just buy
into that. ... Weve taken the atti-
tude, Whatever it takes.
At certain times last season,
the Nittany Lions had enough
trouble just keeping up with the
injury report. Ends Jack Craw-
ford (right foot) and Eric Lati-
more (left wrist) were among
those sidelined, as was starting
safety Nick Sukay, who had a
chest injury.
The linebacker positiontooka
hit, too, withGeraldHodges and
Mauti also missing some time.
Theyreall backonthepreseason
depth chart, though the Nittany
Lions are already down a key
player after end Pete Massaro
went down for the season in
spring practice with a left knee
injury.
The flip side to the injuries
was that backups and younger
players gained experience that
have helped make camp more
competitive, Mauti said.
Its a huge difference, with a
year of experience you can tell.
Youve got a lot more communi-
cation because weve all been
there before, Mauti said. The
injuries didnt help. Theyre all
factors.
PATERNO
Continued from Page 1B
80 chances this season...Yankees
batters struck out seven times on
Wednesday and are currently on
pace to smash the team-record
for punch-outs in a season. They
are now at 969 Ks this season
with the franchise record of 989
set by the RedBarons in2001and
have 26 games remaining in the
2011 season...Outfielder Dan
Brewer started the game batting
leadoff andplaying right field. He
left the game after the first inning
when he was caught stealing and
limped off the field...The time of
In the fourth when Gwinnett
opened a 2-0 lead it did so on just
one hit, but two walks.
The Braves loaded the bases
withno outs against Mitchell and
plated a run on a wild pitch. The
other run in the frame came
across on a run-scoring groun-
dout.
I was in a good rhythm early
and later but those two innings I
got out of the rhythm, Mitchell
said. I built momentum and
wanted to go as far as I could and
put up zeroes andgive our teama
chance.
Scranton/Wilkes-Barre got
one back in the bottom of the in-
ning using a similar method as
the Braves.
Mike Lamb drew a one-out
walk and after Jorge Vazquez sin-
gled, the two moved up a base on
a wild pitch. A batter later, Bran-
don Laird drove in Lamb with a
sacrifice fly to cut the lead to 2-1.
Wilkin Castillo belted a solo
home run to begin the top of the
fifth and the Braves tacked on an-
other run to go up 4-1.
SWBcut thedeficit to4-2inthe
eighth when Laird got another
runner in from third on a groun-
der. However, the Yankees left
two on base in the seventh and
eighth and one more in the ninth.
Overall, the Yankees left 10 on
base and were 0-for-8 with run-
ners in scoring position.
Early in the year we had that
same problem and then we got
better and its baseball youre go-
ing to go through spells and
youre looking for another guy to
pickyouupbut were not all click-
ing right now, Laird said. (Cor-
dier) has a goodslider andhe had
it workingtonight. He didnt real-
ly leave it over the plate where
youcouldput agoodswingonit.
Notes: SWB catcher Jesus
Montero gunned down two run-
ners trying to steal second. He
has nowthrown out 16 runners in
Wednesdays game was 2 hours,
43 minutes and the announced
attendance was 3,482.
HOWTHEY SCORED
BRAVES FOURTH: Stefan Gartrell walked and
advanced to second on a single by Mauro Gomez.
Brandon Hicks walked to load the bases. Gartrell
scored and the runners advanced on a wild pitch.
Wilkin Ramirez struck out. Diory Hernandez ground-
ed out, scoring Gomez and advancing Hicks to third.
Jeff Fiorentino flied out. BRAVES 2-0
YANKEES FOURTH: Jesus Montero grounded
out. Mike Lamb walked. Jorge Vazquez singled,
Lamb to second. The runners advanced on a wild
pitch. Brandon Laird hit a sacrifice fly to score Lamb.
Luis Nunez flied out. BRAVES 2-1
BRAVES FIFTH: Wilkin Castillo homered. Matt
Young singled and moved to second on a wild pitch.
Tyler Pastornicky grounded out, Young advanced to
third. Stefan Gartrell singled to score Young. Gartrell
was picked off. Mauro Gomez struck out. BRAVES
4-1
YANKEES EIGHTH: Jesus Montero struck out.
Mike Lamb singled. Jorge Vazquez singled, Lamb to
second. The runners moved up a base on a passed
ball. Brandon Laird safe on fielding error, Lamb
scored. Luis Nunez struck out. Greg Golson struck
out. BRAVES 4-2
DON CAREY/THE TIMES LEADER
Scranton/Wilkes-Barre pitcher D.J. Mitchell went eight innings
and struck out five while taking the loss vs. Gwinnett Wednesday.
YANKEES
Continued from Page 1B
LOOKING AHEAD
Next Game: 7:05 p.m. today vs.
Gwinnett at PNC Field
Probable Pitchers: Braves RHP
Randall Delgado (1-0, 0.00) vs.
Yankees RHP Lance Pendleton
(3-3, 3.13)
On Deck: The Yankees hit the
road this weekend for a
four-game stint in Syracuse.
They return home on Tuesday
to face Hazleton Area grad
Russ Canzler and the Durham
Bulls.
Radio: All games can be heard
on THE GAME (1280, 1340, 1400,
1440-AM) with Mike Vander
Woude
Greater Wyoming Area scored
three times in the bottom of the
sixth and Nick OBrien survived
the seventh to give his squad an
improbable spot in the Senior
League Baseball Eastern Region-
al championship round, defeat-
ing Quincy, Mass., 6-4, on
Wednesday night in West Dept-
ford, N.J.
GWA won a doubleheader for
the second time this week and
will need to sweep one more if it
is to earn a spot in the Senior
League World Series in Bangor,
Maine, this coming weekend.
Greater Wyoming Area will
face unbeaten Talbot, Md., at 10
a.m. today. If GWA wins the first
game, a second will follow 30
minutes later.
Trailing 4-3 in the sixth, Jack
Granteed singled and Eric Walk-
owiak followed with a double to
put runners at second and third.
Quincy elected to try to stay out
of the big inning and kept the in-
fieldback. JordanZezza smacked
a grounder to second, scoring
Granteed and tying the game.
Quincy pulled the infield in
with the score tied. Adam Roma-
nowski ripped a single past the
diving first baseman, scoring
Walkowiak with the go-ahead
run. Romanowski finished the
game 2-for-3 with a run scored
and two RBI.
Abases loadedwalklater inthe
inning tacked on an insurance
run for OBrien, but it wasnt an
easy seventh.
An error and a walk gave Quin-
cy two runners on and the go-
ahead run at the plate. But
OBrien, who had been pulled in
the first inning from GWAs early
game due to wildness, coaxed a
ground out to end the game
Only two teams have ever
come back from the elimination
bracket to win the regional in the
last 20 years.
YO U T H B A S E B A L L
GWA advances to Eastern Regional final round
The Times Leader staff
with his father and members of
the Valley West coaching staff.
I talked it over with my fam-
ily first, but Coach Joe was the
personI verbally committedto,
Lewis said. He was definitely
excited. He toldme they needed
skill players and that it was a
great thing I was coming. He
said it was great to have me and
he welcomed me to the family.
Next fall he will become the
first scholarship football player
at PennStatefromtheWyoming
Valley Conference since 2004
the final season for GARs Paul
Jefferson.
Verbal commitments are non-
binding. Lewis, who will gradu-
ate from Valley West next
spring, can officially join the
program in February on nation-
al signingday. He wouldthenar-
rive oncampus next summer for
the 2012 season.
A multi-sport star for the
Spartans, Lewis will play wide
receiver for the Lions. The 6-
foot-2 Lewis has played receiver
and quarterback for Valley
West, catching nine touch-
downs as a sophomore and then
topping1,000 yards rushing and
passing in his junior season.
His talent and versatility saw
him shoot up the national
recruiting rankings as a wide-
out. Major recruiting services
Scout andRivals bothlistedhim
as a four-star prospect (out of
five), with Scout rating him as
the nations No. 7 receiver
recruit in the 2012 signing class.
Rivals ranked himthe No. 23 re-
ceiver in the country, as well as
the fourth best overall recruit in
Pennsylvania.
Hes an individual that
comes around once in a life-
time, Valley West athletic di-
rector Sandy Mackay said. It
seems he has the ability to play
at the next level at the top lev-
el. And most importantly, more
than anything, hes a gentleman
and a very good student and
comes from a great family.
Lewis had scholarship offers
from Division I schools from
coast to coast, including as far
away as the University of Ore-
gon, last seasons BCS runner-
up.
But location played a big role
in his decision, as well as the op-
portunitytoplayearly. Since the
2005 season, Penn State has run
much of its offense out of three-
and four-receiver sets, allowing
true freshmen such as Derrick
Williams, Justin Brown, Curtis
Drake and Devon Smith to see
the field right away.
I lookedat every opportunity
and I looked at all the other
schools. This was definitely the
best fit, Lewis said. I also
know a lot of guys from the Val-
ley dont end up going there and
that a lot of people would be ex-
citedfor metogothere. Anddef-
initely the location was impor-
tant its really close to my fam-
ily.
I think he did a good job on
doing his homework and visited
a lot of schools in the past few
months, Valley West coach Pat
Keating said. Distance played a
role, and obviously theres the
opportunity that he could play
early.
I think that ultimately, when
it came down to it, Penn State
felt like home for him. It felt like
the best fit.
The group arrived on campus
around lunchtime on Wednes-
dayandgot towalkaroundteam
facilities as well as meet with
academic advisors. In the after-
noon, they watched the team
practice and Lewis got to speak
to Paterno.
Until that morning, Lewis
wasnt sure if hed be able to see
his future coach. Paterno had
been in the hospital until Tues-
daymorningafter sufferinginju-
ries to his right arm and hip
when a player collided with him
during practice on Sunday.
Despite sporting a sling, the
84-year-old Paterno was back
just in time to greet Lewis on
Wednesday afternoon.
The whole thing just seemed
right, Lewis said. It was a
beautiful day to (commit).
Lions land another
Penn State got some more
good news on Wednesday eve-
ning, as the Lions also received
a verbal commitment from an-
other coveted recruit in Illinois
defensive tackle Tommy Schutt.
Multiple recruiting services
reported that Schutt, rated one
of the top50recruits at any posi-
tion in the country, pledged on
the same day as Lewis.
I knew (picking Penn State)
wasnt all about me, but also
about the people aroundme and
the people who are going to be
around me, Lewis said. We
have a great class coming in
(2012) and we can have a really
great team.
The additions of Lewis and
Schutt gave PennState15verbal
commitments for the upcoming
class and pushed the teams
recruiting ranking into the top
15 nationally, according to
Scout.
LEWIS
Continued from Page 1B
Gwinnett 4, Yankees 2
Gwinnett Yankees
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Young, DH 4 1 2 0 Brewer, rf 0 0 0 0
Pastornck, ss 4 0 2 0 Parraz, rf 3 0 0 0
Gartrell, rf 2 1 2 1 Dickersn, cf 4 0 0 0
Gomez, 1b 4 1 1 0 Montero, c 4 0 0 0
Hicks, 2b 3 0 0 0 Lamb, dh 3 2 1 0
Ramirez, lf 4 0 2 0 Vazquz, 1b 3 0 2 0
Hernandz, 3b 4 0 0 1 Laird, 3b 3 0 0 2
Fiorentino, cf 4 0 0 0 Nunez, 2b 4 0 1 0
Castillo, c 3 1 2 1 Golson, lf 3 0 0 0
Bernier, ss 2 0 1 0
Totals 32 411 3 Totals 29 2 5 2
Gwinnett............................. 000 220 000 4
Yankees ............................. 000 100 010 2
2B GW: Ramirez (12); SWB: Nunez (12) HR
GW: Castillo (3)
IP H R ER BB SO
Gwinnett
Cordier (W, 4-8) ...... 6 2 1 1 4 3
Swaggerty (H, 2)..... 1.1 3 1 0 2 1
Hoover (S, 1) ........... 1.2 0 0 0 1 3
Yankees
Mitchell, (L, 9-9) ...... 8 10 4 4 3 5
Kensing.................... 1 1 0 0 0 1
LONG POND Starting with
the June10, 2012, PoconoSprint
Cup Series race, the scheduled
distance for both NASCAR
Sprint Cup Series races at the
Long Pond facility will be short-
ened to 400 miles.
The 400 mile distance will
make NASCAR racing at Poco-
no even more exciting, stated
Raceway President and CEO,
Brandon Igdalsky. Race strate-
gies will change, fuel mileage
calculations will be alteredandI
firmly believe that our fans will
be treated to outstanding racing
at the 400 mile distance.
NASCAR supports Pocono
Raceways move to two 400-
mile NASCAR Sprint Cup Se-
ries races in 2012, stated Steve
ODonnell, NASCAR Senior
Vice President, Racing Oper-
ations . We believe this will be a
good transition for the fans and
competitors. It will provide the
teams with a new type of strate-
gy and should make for even
more exciting competition at a
unique facility that has a long-
standing history in our sport.
The date for the second Poco-
no race next year is August 5,
Pennsylvania 400.
A U T O R A C I N G
Pocono races shortened
The Times Leader staff
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, AUGUST 11, 2011 PAGE 7B
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BEAKS, NAILS & WINGS
The outrageous outfits and tabloid tales guaran-
teed Dennis Rodman fame long after he finished
running with the Bulls.
He was in Mexico about five years ago on a mid-
night run for tacos the fun often started for Rod-
man around midnight when a group of girls ap-
proached and started screaming his name.
AnamusedRodmanturnedto his agent andmar-
veled, Dude, these girls never sawme play basket-
ball.
And what a player they missed.
Rodman will get recognition for his often over-
looked accomplishments on the court Friday when
he is enshrined in the Naismith Memorial Basket-
ball Hall of Fame.
Two-time Olympic gold medalist Chris Mullin is
the other headline name, becoming the 11th mem-
ber of the famed 1992 Dream Team to earn en-
shrinement as an individual. Big men Artis Gil-
more and Arvydas Sabonis; eight-time NBA cham-
pion Tom Satch Sanders of the Celtics; five-time
Olympic gold medalist Teresa Edwards; coaching
greats Tex Winter, Tara VanDerveer and Herb Ma-
gee; and the late Reece Goose Tatum of the Har-
lem Globetrotters also will be honored at Sympho-
ny Hall in Springfield, Mass.
All greats of the sport, but none as colorful or
controversial as Rodman.
Hes probably better known for wearing a wed-
ding dress than a Detroit or Chicago uniform, and
hes aware that his antics turned off plenty. But be-
neath the piercings and tattoos was someone seri-
ous about his basketball, and only a few have won
more often than he did since entering the NBA a
quarter-century ago as a second-round pick of the
Pistons.
None of my teammates had no problem with
me, Rodman said in a phone interview. And I al-
ways say to myself, if anyone has a problem with
Dennis Rodman, all youve got to do is look at the
record. Every teamI went to, I won, and I was a big,
major part of that team.
Indeed, he went 636-275, a .698 winning percent-
age that since his career started is bettered only by
San Antonios trio of Manu Ginobili, Tony Parker
and Tim Duncan, according to STATS, LLC. Rod-
man led the league in rebounding an NBA-record
seven straight seasons, won consecutive Defensive
Player of the Year awards, and won back-to-back ti-
tles with the Pistons before teaming with Michael
Jordan and Scottie Pippen for three in a row with
the Bulls.
AP FILE PHOTO
Chicago Bulls forward Dennis Rodman grabs one
of his 21 rebounds during the fourth quarter of
Game 1 of the NBA Eastern Conference Finals
against the Orlando Magic, in Chicago in May of
1996.
N B A
Rodman heading
into Hall Friday
Although his off-court antics often
overshadowed his play, Dennis Rodman
enjoyed a fine career.
By BRIAN MAHONEY
AP Basketball Writer
DENVER Top cyclists
George Hincapie, Christian
Vande Velde and Robert Gesink
are in the field for the inaugural
USA Pro Cycling Challenge
later this month.
The trio boosts an already
strong lineup for the race
through the Rocky Mountains
and the Colorado Front Range
that includes Tour de France
podium finishers Cadel Evans
and Andy and Frank Schleck.
Hincapie is on the BMC
Racing Team and Vande Velde
is on the Garmin-Cervelo team
and Gesink races for Rabobank
Cycling Team.
The provisional rosters are
subject to change.
In all, 136 riders will compete
in the weeklong race that be-
gins Aug. 22. Theyll traverse
518 miles at altitude, gaining
more than two miles in eleva-
tion before finishing in down-
town Denver on Aug. 28.
Anthony wins wild
Stage 1 at Tour of Utah
OGDEN, Utah Jesse An-
thony made up for what he
called a stupid early attack by
winning a five-way sprint to the
finish Wednesday in the first
stage of the Tour of Utah.
Prologue winner Sergio He-
nao of Colombia retained the
yellow jersey by finishing a
close second in the 113.6-mile
stage that climbed three times
over north Ogden pass in the
Wasatch Mountains.
Henaos teammate, Oscar
Sevilla of Spain, was third just
ahead of defending Tour of
Utah champion Levi Leipheim-
er and Leipheimers Radiosh-
ack teammate, Janez Brajkovic.
The six-day, 409-mile Tour of
Utah upgraded to one of the
top three sanctioned stage
races in North America now
heads south of Salt Lake City
for a 99-mile sprint between
Levi and Provo.
Cadel Evans in Australia for
victory parade
MELBOURNE, Australia
Tour de France champion Ca-
del Evans has arrived in Austra-
lia and is looking forward to his
victory parade.
First priority, though, is a
hug from his mother.
Evans, the first Australian
and only the third non-Europe-
an to win the most presti-
gious event in cycling, landed
at Melbourne Airport on Thurs-
day ahead of parade in his
honor Friday.
After working toward a Tour
de France win for the best part
of his life, he says when it all
comes together, to have been
supported all this way through
and be able to bring the yellow
jersey back to Australia, of
course Im proud to do it.
Evans and wife Chiara plan
to spend Thursday with family
and friends. Its always nice to
come home and get a hug from
your mum.
C YC L I N G
Hincapie, Vande Velde join Challenge
The Associated Press
C M Y K
T
o
d
a
y
A look at high-end consumers
Nordstroms second-quarter
earnings may have some clues
about whether wealthier consum-
ers are starting to cut back on
their spending. For many retailers
including Nordstrom, the quarter
ran until the end of July. By that
time, stocks were already falling
sharply in response to the weak-
ening global economy and the
budget debate in Washington.
Investors want to know if upscale
shoppers are as nervous as
everyone else.
Sara Lee earnings
The food company just
announced its selling its North
American refrigerated dough
business as it prepares for its
planned split into two separate
companies next year. When
Sara Lee releases its fiscal
fourth-quarter earnings, inves-
tors will want to get a better
idea of exactly when that split
will happen. Sara Lee plans to
separate into a coffee busi-
ness and a business that will
largely focus on meat.
A first look at August
employment
The governments count of
people who applied for unem-
ployment benefits last week will
show whether the weaker
economy led to a rising number
of layoffs at the start of August.
The employment report for July
released last Friday was
encouraging. But other reports,
including the Institute for Supply
Managements look at manu-
facturing, have pointed to a
slowing economy.
Price-to-earnings ratio: 14
based on past 12 months results
Dividend: $0.92 Div. Yield: 2.3%
25
35
45
$55
2Q 10
Operating
EPS
2Q 11
est.
$0.66 $0.74
JWN
$40.14
$35.13
11
Source: FactSet
Price-to-earnings ratio: 16
based on past 12 months results
Dividend: $0.46 Div. Yield: 2.7%
12
16
$20
4Q 10
Operating
EPS
4Q 11
est.
$0.19
$0.20
SLE $17.31
$14.82
11
Source: FactSet
Week
ended
July 30
Week
ended
Aug. 6
First-time applications for
unemployment benefits
Source: FactSet
(Flat)
400k 400k
est.
Job openings rose in June
Employers posted more job openings
in June and layoffs fell, a sign that
hiring could improve in the coming
months.
The number of available jobs rose to
3.1 million, up from 3 million in May,
the Labor Department said Wednesday.
It was the highest total since March.
Roughly 4.5 unemployed people, on
average, were competing for each job
in June. Thats down only slightly from
4.6 in May. In a healthy economy, the
ratio is about 2 to 1.
Even if all the positions were filled,
there would still be about 11 million
unemployed people. That compares to
the 7.7 million who were out of work
when the recession began.
Deficit again over $1 trillion
The United States budget deficit has
topped $1 trillion for a third straight
year.
The Treasury Department said
Wednesday that the deficit through
July totaled $1.1 trillion. Three years
ago, that would have been a record
high for the full year.
This years deficit is on pace to ex-
ceed last years imbalance of $1.29
trillion. But it is likely to fall short of
the record $1.41 trillion set in 2009.
For the first 10 months of the budget
year, spending has risen 2.4 percent
while revenue has climbed 8 percent.
Thats a sign more people are working
and paying taxes, although unemploy-
ment remains high at 9.1 percent.
McCarroll trunk show
Fashion designer Jay McCarroll, a
native of Lehman Township who was
the winner of the first season of the
television reality show Project Run-
way, will appear at a trunk show Fri-
day and Saturday at Outrageous, in
Midtown Village, Wilkes-Barre.
McCarroll is scheduled to be at the
South Main Street store from 5 to 9
p.m. on Friday and from11 a.m. to 5
p.m. on Saturday. Call 208-7805 for
more information.
SEC sues Stifel for fraud
The Securities and Exchange Com-
mission announced a civil fraud lawsuit
Wednesday against St. Louis-based
Stifel Nicolaus and former senior vice
president David Noack. The SEC said
they misled officials of five Wisconsin
school districts by telling them $200
million in investments made in 2006,
which ended up worthless, were safe.
The risky complex investments were
linked to default insurance protection
policies on corporate bonds.Stifel Fi-
nancial, in a statement, said the in-
vestments were suitable based on
what we knew in 2006.
Macys profit soars 64%
Department store chain Macys Inc.
reported that its second-quarter net
income climbed 64 percent to $241
million, or 55 cents per share. Revenue
rose 7.3 percent to $5.94 billion. Analy-
sts had expected earnings of 48 cents
on revenue of $5.84 billion.
Macys is reaping benefits from its
move to tailor merchandise by location
and add exclusive brands.
The retailer raised its earnings ex-
pectations to $2.60 to $2.65 per share,
up from $2.40 to $2.45.
I N B R I E F
$3.65 $2.71 $3.58
$4.06
07/17/08
BUSINESS S E C T I O N B
THE TIMES LEADER THURSDAY, AUGUST 11, 2011
timesleader.com
WALL STREET
DOW
- 519.83
10,719.94
NASDAQ
- 101.47
2,381.05
S&P
- 51.77
1,120.76
For fans of the Star
Trek series, the last
fewyears have been a
trekstravaganza
with a blockbuster
reboot of the series,
several video games
and more pop-culture interest than the
franchise has enjoyed since the1990s.
Its a good time to be a Trekkie.
Now, theres a Star Trek theme park
in the works. Its a $1.5 billion enter-
prise, which will include four hotels,
and17 entertainment developments,
along with restaurants, theaters and
shopping.
The park is being developed in con-
cert with Paramount Recreation and
CBS Consumer Products.
Dont get your phasers in a fricassee
just yet, Trek fans, theres one little
bump in the road. The newtheme park
is a little off the beaten path. By that, I
mean to say its in another country,
namely, Jordan.
You may ask yourself, Why Jordan?
It seems that His Majesty King Ab-
dullah II is quite the Star Trek fan. He
even had a cameo on Star Trek Voy-
ager, in the episode Investigations.
And like most kings worth their salt,
hes fantastically wealthy, and more to
the point, if he wants to spend the mon-
ey on a Star Trek theme park, he can.
Given the rabid nature of Star Trek
fans (to illustrate the point, Klingon, a
language that was developed for the
series, is more widely spoken than
several real languages), and since a
relatively modest 500,000 visitors a year
are required for the property to be prof-
itable, it seems like a fairly sound in-
vestment on the kings part.
The entire project, taken together, is
called the Red Sea Astrarium, and
construction is set to start in the city of
Aqaba sometime next year.
With the loss of the Star Trek: Expe-
rience, a Star Trek-themed exhibit
originally located in Las Vegas, a pil-
grimage to Aqaba could be a journey of
some significance to Star Trek fans the
world over.
If you have the means to undertake a
trek to Jordan, despite the political
instability in the region, its not a bad
place to visit. Jordan has enjoyed excel-
lent relations with the United States
and other western nations for decades,
has one of the highest standards of
living in the Arab world, and has ex-
tremely progressive social policies.
New Star Trek theme park coming; beam over to Jordan
TECH TALK
N I C K D E L O R E N Z O
Nick DeLorenzo is director of Interactive
and New Media for The Times Leader. Write
him atndelorenzo@timesleader.com.
DISCUSSING WHATS FAIR
AP PHOTO
P
rotesters rally Wednesday at a No Jobs Fair in front of the statehouse in Concord, N.H. The
state AFL-CIO and members of eight community groups were planning to discuss the impact of
the economic recession in New Hampshire. The groups also planned to highlight social services
available to the needy and unemployed.
NEW YORK The weak econo-
my is hitting Americans where they
spend a lot of their free time: at the
TV set.
Theyre canceling or forgoing ca-
ble and satellite TV subscriptions in
record numbers, according to an
analysis by The Associated Press of
the companies quarterlyearnings re-
ports.
The U.S. subscription-TV industry
first showed a small net loss of sub-
scribers a year ago. This year, that
trickle has turned into a stream. The
chief cause appears tobe persistently
high unemployment and a housing
market that has many people living
withtheir parents, reducing the need
for a separate cable bill.
But its also possible that people
are canceling cable, or never signing
up in the first place, because theyre
watching cheap internet video. If
thats the case, viewers can expect
more restrictions on online video, as
TV companies and Hollywood stu-
dios try to make sure that they get
paid for what they produce.
In a tally by the AP, eight of the
nine largest subscription-TV provid-
ers in the U.S. lost 195,700 subscrib-
ers in the April-to-June quarter.
Thats the first quarterly loss for
the group, whichserves about 70per-
cent of households. The loss
amounts to 0.2 percent of their 83.2
million video subscribers.
The group includes four of the five
biggest cable companies, which have
been losing subscribers for years.
Pay TVs
business
taking a hit,
report says
By PETER SVENSSON
AP Technology Writer
NEW YORK Wall Street
focused Wednesday on the
bleak landscape ahead for the
economy and sold off, wiping
out the big gains from a day
earlier. The selling was inten-
sified by worries about debt
problems in Europe. The Dow
Jones industrial average
closed down 519.83 points.
On Tuesday, the Federal Re-
serve said it planned to keep
interest rates ultra-lowfor two
more years. After some initial
confusion, the stock market
staged a huge comeback and
had one of its best days.
But the interest-rate news
proved to be a distraction.
The Fed made the pledge be-
cause it sees almost no chance
that the economy will im-
prove substantially by 2013,
and when investors focused
on that, they dumped stocks
again.
Nowit gets back to the fun-
damentals, said Mark Lam-
kin, founder of Lamkin
Wealth Management, which
manages $215 million.
Wednesday was another
day marked by big moves on
the stock market. The Dow
was down more than 300
points within minutes of the
opening bell. It recovered
some of that loss, then drifted
steadily lower in the last two
hours.
Gold rose above $1,800 per
ounce for the first time as
more money poured into in-
vestments considered safe at a
volatile time for the financial
markets. Gold closed up,
$41.30, to $1,784.30 per
ounce. On top of concerns
about the U.S. economy, Wall
Streets attention is still on
Europe. Investors there are
worried that Italy and Spain
may be the next countries un-
able to repay their debts.
The European financial sys-
temhas been battered by fears
about banks holdings of
bonds issued by heavily in-
debted countries such as
Greece and Portugal. This
week, there have been addi-
tional concerns about banks
exposure to other banks.
Its the same game of Old
Maid playing out in Europe
that was played out here dur-
ing the subprime mortgage
crisis, said Quincy Krosby, an
economist and market strate-
gist with Prudential Financial.
In Asia, the concern is that
higher inflation in China
could lead to slower growth.
China, Brazil and other less-
developed countries have pro-
vided the strongest economic
growth since the world began
to recover from recession in
2009.
Pessimism ignites Wall St. fire sale
Selloff sends stocks plunging 520 points
By STAN CHOE
AP Business Writer
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, AUGUST 11, 2011 PAGE 9B
T H E M A R K E T I N R E V I E W
Mattel 23.04 -1.17 -9.4
MaximIntg 21.73 -.09 -8.0
McClatchy 1.57 -.12 -66.4
McCorm 43.98 -1.30 -5.5
McDrmInt 13.01 -.41 -37.1
McDnlds 84.08 -1.88 +9.5
McGrwH 35.35 -2.21 -2.9
Mechel 17.90 -1.67 -38.8
MedcoHlth 52.02 -1.78 -15.1
Medtrnic 30.41 -1.37 -18.0
MelcoCrwn 11.82 -.39 +85.8
Merck 29.81 -1.41 -17.3
Meritage 16.38 -1.50 -26.2
Mesab 22.91 -.84 -40.5
MetLife 31.83 -3.05 -28.4
MetroPCS 9.57 +.24 -24.2
Microchp 30.71 -.80 -10.2
MicronT 5.72 -.47 -28.7
Microsoft 24.20 -1.38 -13.3
MdsxWatr 17.36 -1.11 -5.4
MobileTele 15.37 -1.17 -26.4
Molycorp 51.55 +.55 +3.3
Monsanto 65.81 -1.48 -5.5
MonstrWw 8.35 -.97 -64.7
Moodys 29.15 -2.52 +9.8
Moog A 35.35 -3.57 -11.2
Moog B 35.38 -3.26 -11.1
MorgStan 16.45 -1.76 -39.5
Mosaic 59.48 -1.45 -22.1
MotrlaSol n 39.27 -1.20 +3.2
MotrlaMo n 23.09 -.03 -20.7
Motricity 1.86 -2.69 -90.0
MuellerWat 2.10 -.04 -49.6
Mylan 17.38 -1.21 -17.7
NCR Corp 16.19 -.48 +5.3
NRG Egy 21.02 -.46 +7.6
NV Energy 12.99 -.04 -7.5
Nabors 18.26 -.95 -22.2
NalcoHld 31.32 -.33 -1.9
NatFuGas 56.38 -1.64 -14.1
NatGrid 46.04 -1.90 +3.7
NOilVarco 63.39 -3.00 -5.7
NatSemi 24.65 ... +79.1
NetApp 40.96 -.76 -25.5
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NY Times 6.94 -.72 -29.2
Newcastle 4.51 -.50 -32.7
NewellRub 11.55 -.68 -36.5
NewmtM 55.81 +.41 -9.1
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NewsCpB 14.21 -.70 -13.5
NextEraEn 50.19 -1.75 -3.5
NiSource 18.96 -.17 +7.6
NobleCorp 29.57 -.61 -17.3
NokiaCp 4.88 -.32 -52.7
Nomura 3.98 -.37 -37.6
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NorflkSo 66.71 -1.17 +6.2
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NorthropG 50.09 -3.15 -14.8
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NuanceCm 16.79 +.04 -7.6
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NvMAd 13.67 +.17 +4.5
NvPA 14.02 +.07 +5.2
Nvidia 12.34 -.59 -19.9
OcciPet 81.25 -3.16 -17.2
OfficeDpt 2.60 -.48 -51.9
OfficeMax 5.44 -.58 -69.3
OilSvHT 125.03 -4.90 -11.0
Oilsands rt .00 ... 0.0
Omnicom 39.33 -2.63 -14.1
OnSmcnd 7.18 -.16 -27.3
OplinkC 14.51 -1.01 -21.4
Oracle 26.48 -1.12 -15.4
OwensCorn25.84 -1.10 -17.0
OwensIll 17.14 -1.76 -44.2
PECO pfA 76.98 +1.28 +10.0
PG&E Cp 39.21 -.71 -18.0
PICO Hld 24.16 -1.80 -24.0
PMC Sra 5.38 -.32 -37.4
PMI Grp .36 +.03 -89.2
PPG 73.06 -4.25 -13.1
PPL Corp 25.62 -.77 -2.7
Paccar 35.90 -1.41 -37.4
Pacholder 8.30 +.06 -1.8
PaetecHld 4.85 -.01 +29.7
PallCorp 43.35 -1.97 -12.6
PatriotCoal 13.11 -.51 -32.3
PattUTI 24.56 -.45 +14.0
Paychex 25.51 -1.23 -17.5
PeabdyE 45.46 -.47 -28.9
PennVaRs 24.56 +.53 -13.3
Penney 25.29 -1.36 -21.7
PeopUtdF 10.74 -.64 -23.3
PepcoHold 17.33 -.35 -5.0
PeregrineP 1.23 -.08 -46.5
Petrohawk 38.33 -.03+110.0
PetrbrsA 24.26 -.12 -29.0
Petrobras 26.96 -.06 -28.8
PetRes 24.22 -.75 -10.4
Pfizer 17.05 -.55 -2.6
PhilipMor 64.90 -2.50 +10.9
PimcoHiI 12.10 -.13 -4.8
PimcoMuni 12.97 +.36 +2.9
PinWst 38.94 -.68 -6.1
PitnyBw 18.15 -.86 -24.9
PlumCrk 35.25 -1.18 -5.9
Polo RL 125.28 +5.43 +12.9
Polycom s 23.37 -.64 +19.9
Popular 2.05 -.19 -34.7
Potash s 51.08 -1.36 -1.0
Power-One 7.08 -.13 -30.6
PwShs QQQ50.86 -2.17 -6.6
Praxair 92.38 -2.05 -3.2
PriceTR 49.04 -2.95 -24.0
PrinFncl 22.16 -2.01 -31.9
ProLogis 26.40 -1.19 -16.7
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PrUShQQQ rs60.74+4.53 +4.4
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PPrIT 5.71 -.13 -9.1
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Qualcom 47.26 -2.63 -4.5
QuantaSvc 16.64 -.44 -16.5
QntmDSS 1.70 -.01 -54.3
QstDiag 46.21 -2.53 -14.4
Quidel 13.10 -.21 -9.3
RCM 4.52 -.28 -2.4
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RadioShk 12.23 -.42 -33.9
Raytheon 39.00 -2.17 -15.1
RegionsFn 4.23 -.55 -39.6
RepFBcp 1.81 ... -25.8
RepubSvc 25.36 -.88 -15.1
RschMotn 22.10 -1.02 -62.0
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Rowan 32.12 -1.36 -8.0
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SPX Cp 52.85 -3.34 -26.1
STMicro 6.28 -.44 -39.8
Safeway 17.61 -.69 -21.7
StJoe 16.70 -.13 -23.6
StJude 40.59 -2.27 -5.1
Saks 8.10 -.70 -24.3
SanDisk 36.51 -1.42 -26.8
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Sanofi 31.57 -2.54 -2.0
Sanofi rt .99 -.02 -57.9
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Satcon h 1.07 -.36 -76.2
SaulCntr 33.58 -2.81 -29.1
Schlmbrg 73.81 -3.82 -11.6
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Schwab 12.05 -.47 -29.6
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SeagateT 11.08 -.23 -26.3
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Siemens 99.46 -8.70 -20.0
SilvWhtn g 36.81 +1.37 -5.7
SilvrcpM g 8.79 +.41 -31.5
Sina 96.18 +3.44 +39.8
SiriusXM 1.73 -.07 +6.1
SkywksSol 20.28 -.26 -29.2
Smucker 71.86 +.69 +9.5
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SprintNex 3.16 -.12 -25.3
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SP HlthC 29.96 -1.32 -4.9
SP CnSt 28.35 -1.13 -3.3
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StanBlkDk 56.50 -3.29 -15.5
Staples 12.49 -.72 -45.1
Starbucks 34.76 -1.28 +8.2
StarwdHtl 42.10 -3.09 -30.7
StateStr 33.24 -2.42 -28.3
Statoil ASA 20.48 -1.08 -13.8
StlDynam 12.25 -.46 -33.1
StillwtrM 13.51 -.50 -36.7
Stryker 46.04 -2.97 -14.3
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Suncor gs 31.30 -.29 -18.3
Sunoco 31.06 -.05 -22.9
SunTrst 17.69 -2.29 -40.1
Supvalu 6.74 -.40 -30.0
Symantec 15.99 -.92 -4.5
Synovus 1.25 -.07 -52.7
Sysco 28.03 -.97 -4.7
TCW Strat 4.90 -.10 -6.1
TD Ameritr 13.95 -1.06 -26.5
TE Connect 28.43 -.61 -19.7
TECO 16.46 -.49 -7.5
THQ 1.80 -.21 -70.3
TaiwSemi 11.07 -.43 -11.7
TalismE g 15.87 -.32 -28.5
Target 46.70 -2.25 -22.3
TeckRes g 41.55 -.48 -32.8
Teleflex 49.85 -2.57 -7.4
TelefEsp s 18.98 -1.70 -16.8
TelMexL 16.71 -.67 +3.5
Tellabs 3.70 -.34 -45.4
TempleInld 25.97 -.79 +22.3
TmpDrgn 26.53 -.29 -13.7
TenetHlth 4.51 -.27 -32.6
Tenneco 30.14 -1.42 -26.8
Teradyn 11.27 -.54 -19.7
Terex 15.83 -.63 -49.0
Tesoro 18.66 -.80 +.6
TevaPhrm 38.25 -1.51 -26.6
TexInst 26.50 -.59 -18.5
Textron 16.24 -1.21 -31.3
ThermoFis 50.00 -2.04 -9.7
ThomCrk g 7.43 -.52 -49.5
3M Co 78.23 -4.46 -9.4
THorton g 43.47 -.73 +5.4
Timberlnd 42.67 -.21 +73.5
TimeWarn 29.07 -1.41 -9.6
TollBros 15.64 -1.08 -17.7
TorDBk g 73.61 -2.57 +.4
Total SA 44.80 -3.30 -16.2
Toyota 73.43 -3.78 -6.6
TrCda g 39.30 -.36 +3.3
Transocn 50.81 -2.17 -26.9
Travelers 49.04 -2.65 -12.0
TrimbleN 34.24 -1.43 -14.2
TriQuint 6.91 -.02 -40.9
TycoIntl 38.12 -1.88 -8.0
Tyson 16.53 -.19 -4.0
UBS AG 13.61 -1.11 -17.4
UDR 22.89 -.55 -2.7
US Airwy 5.32 -.47 -46.9
USEC 2.26 -.25 -62.5
UltraPt g 37.42 -3.30 -21.7
UniSrcEn 34.27 -.67 -4.4
UnilevNV 30.61 -1.22 -2.5
UnionPac 88.73 -3.16 -4.2
Unisys 16.88 -.88 -34.8
UtdContl 17.00 -1.46 -28.6
UtdMicro 1.91 ... -39.6
UPS B 61.99 -2.11 -14.6
US Bancrp 21.43 -1.94 -20.5
US NGs rs 10.10 -.03 -15.7
US OilFd 31.78 +.16 -18.5
USSteel 28.86 -1.39 -50.6
UtdTech 67.44 -4.13 -14.3
UtdhlthGp 41.85 -2.88 +15.9
UnumGrp 21.31 -1.14 -12.0
Vale SA 25.66 -.85 -25.8
Vale SA pf 23.62 -.66 -21.8
ValenceT h 1.02 -.07 -39.3
ValeroE 19.26 -.78 -16.7
ValpeyFsh 2.75 -.06 -18.9
ValVis A 5.10 -.23 -16.5
VangTSM 57.66 -2.56 -11.2
VangREIT 52.10 -1.23 -5.9
VangEmg 40.09 -2.18 -16.7
Ventas 44.99 -2.56 -14.3
VertxPh 41.78 -2.67 +19.3
VestinRMII 1.14 -.03 -21.4
ViacomA 52.06 -.15 +13.5
ViacomB 42.86 -1.15 +8.2
VimpelCm 10.13 -.65 -32.6
VirgnMda h 22.69 -.29 -16.7
Visa 79.28 -3.48 +12.6
VishayInt 10.36 -.49 -29.4
Vivus 6.74 -.09 -28.1
Vodafone 25.11 -1.46 -5.0
Vornado 77.51 -1.98 -7.0
VulcanM 30.18 -2.13 -32.0
WalMart 48.41 -2.04 -10.2
Walgrn 34.72 -1.57 -10.9
WalterEn 74.33 -1.60 -41.9
WarnerCh s16.78 -1.06 -25.6
WsteMInc 28.70 -.70 -22.2
WeathfIntl 16.10 -.77 -29.4
WellsFargo 22.88 -1.90 -26.2
Wendys Co 4.55 -.21 -1.5
WernerEnt 21.45 -.83 -5.1
WestellT 2.44 -.13 -25.4
WDigital 29.11 -1.21 -14.1
WstnRefin 14.62 +.10 +38.2
WstnUnion 16.41 -.35 -11.6
Weyerh 16.20 -.91 -14.4
WmsCos 26.38 -.65 +6.7
Windstrm 11.37 -.14 -18.4
WiscEn s 28.48 -.05 -3.2
Worthgtn 16.31 -1.03 -11.4
Wyndham 26.97 -.48 -10.0
XL Grp 18.78 -.97 -13.9
XcelEngy 21.82 -.48 -7.3
Xerox 7.71 -.46 -33.1
Xilinx 29.27 -.40 +1.0
Yahoo 11.77 -.32 -29.2
Yamana g 14.87 +.73 +16.2
Youku n 21.32 -.78 -39.1
YumBrnds 48.27 -2.07 -1.6
Zimmer 51.48 -2.87 -4.1
ZionBcp 16.06 -1.96 -33.7
ZollMed 40.65 -.96 +9.2
Zweig 2.83 -.01 -15.5
ZweigTl 3.05 -.03 -14.3
DOW
10,719.94
-519.83
NASDAQ
2,381.05
-101.47
S&P 500
1,120.76
-51.77
6-MO T-BILLS
.06%
+.01
10-YR T-NOTE
2.11%
-.14
CRUDE OIL
$82.89
+3.59
GOLD
$1,781.30
+41.30
q q q q p p q q p p p p q q q q
EURO
$1.4208
-.0014
1,040
1,120
1,200
1,280
1,360
1,440
F A M A M J J
1,080
1,200
1,320
S&P 500
Close: 1,120.76
Change: -51.77 (-4.4%)
10 DAYS
2,300
2,400
2,500
2,600
2,700
2,800
2,900
F A M A M J J
2,320
2,580
2,840
Nasdaq composite
Close: 2,381.05
Change: -101.47 (-4.1%)
10 DAYS
Advanced 822
Declined 2296
New Highs 3
New Lows 227
Vol. (in mil.) 7,983
Pvs. Volume 8,791
3,351
3,741
500
2124
5
237
NYSE NASD
DOW 11228.00 10686.49 10719.94 -519.83 -4.62% t t t -7.41%
DOW Trans. 4554.99 4367.10 4377.14 -183.99 -4.03% t t t -14.29%
DOW Util. 408.44 396.12 396.99 -7.50 -1.85% t t t -1.98%
NYSE Comp. 7258.04 6895.97 6938.23 -319.81 -4.41% t t t -12.88%
AMEX Index 2221.10 2148.97 2161.73 -59.37 -2.67% t t t -2.11%
NASDAQ 2461.28 2378.08 2381.05 -101.47 -4.09% t t t -10.25%
S&P 500 1171.77 1118.01 1120.76 -51.77 -4.42% t t t -10.88%
Wilshire 5000 12336.97 11791.45 11817.22 -519.75 -4.21% t t t -11.55%
Russell 2000 687.23 659.34 660.21 -35.95 -5.16% t t t -15.75%
HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. %CHG. WK MO QTR YTD
StocksRecap
Is anywhere
safe?
July
4
Aug.
10
Aug.
1
Overseas investors were selling stocks two
weeks before the U.S. market began its worst
plunge since the 2008 financial crisis. They
worried that Europe's debt crisis would spread
beyond Greece to countries like Italy.
U.S. investors largely shrugged off those
fears and focused on domestic issues like the
debate over the debt limit. U.S. stocks peaked
July 21. They began falling with stocks around
the world on worries about the global economy
and the downgrade of the U.S. credit rating.
Financial analysts say investors shouldnt
abandon global stocks. Some advice:
Invest in companies, not countries. Swiss
food maker Nestle is in a stable business. It
has a dividend yield of 2.8 percent and its
price-to-earnings ratio is only 6. The S&P 500s
yield is 2.4 percent, and its P/E is 13. You can
find many companies like Nestle, says Simon
Hallett, a fund manager at investment firm
Harding Loevner.
Look at emerging markets like Venezuela
and Indonesia. Credit Suisse predicts emerg-
ing market economies will grow 6.3 percent
in 2011. It expects 1.6 percent growth in the
U.S. and 2.3 percent in the countries that use
the euro.
Francesca Levy, Kristen Girard AP SOURCE: FactSet
The Nikkei 225 index has fallen since July 8.
The economy is still recovering from the
March 11 earthquake.
The Bovespa index has fallen since July 4.
Emerging markets are considered risky when
the global economy is weakening.
July
8
Aug.
1
Aug.
10
July
7
Aug.
10
-30
-20
-10
0%
Aug.
1
The DAX index has fallen since July 7. A
strong economy, but investors worry that
weakness in other nations will spread.
Germany Dax
-25%
-15
-10
-5
0%
Japan Nikkei
-9%
-20%
-30
-20
-10
0%
Brazil Bovespa
2011
2011
2011
Mutual Funds
Alliance Bernstein
BalShrB m 13.26 -.38 -4.0
CoreOppA m 10.72 -.49 -6.9
American Beacon
LgCpVlInv 16.07 -.81 -13.3
LgCpVlIs 16.94 -.86 -13.1
American Cent
EqIncInv 6.51 -.22 -8.8
GrowthInv 23.31 -.94 -9.8
IncGroA m 21.61 -.93 -9.5
UltraInv 21.15 -.92 -6.6
American Funds
AMCAPA m 17.04 -.71 -9.2
BalA m 16.96 -.50 -4.4
BondA m 12.61 +.07 +5.6
CapIncBuA m46.93 -1.44 -4.2
CapWldBdA m21.32 +.02 +6.2
CpWldGrIA m31.10 -1.75 -11.6
EurPacGrA m36.33 -2.07 -12.2
FnInvA m 32.40 -1.41 -11.2
GrthAmA m 27.07 -1.12 -11.1
HiIncA m 10.76 -.05 -0.3
IncAmerA m 15.60 -.38 -3.9
IntBdAmA m 13.72 +.04 +3.6
IntlGrInA m 27.74 -1.48 -9.4
InvCoAmA m 24.74 -1.12 -11.3
MutualA m 23.04 -.85 -7.9
NewEconA m 22.98 -1.01 -9.3
NewPerspA m25.43 -1.25 -11.1
NwWrldA m 48.41 -1.85 -11.3
SmCpWldA m33.62 -1.19 -13.5
TaxEBdAmA m12.30 +.01 +6.7
USGovSecA m14.58 +.11 +6.1
WAMutInvA m24.99 -1.06 -7.1
Artio Global
IntlEqI 25.90 -.93 -14.1
IntlEqIII 10.70 -.42 -14.1
Artisan
Intl d 21.21 ... -2.3
IntlVal d 25.33 ... -6.6
MdCpVal 19.43 ... -3.2
MidCap 31.78 ... -5.5
Baron
Asset b 50.70 -1.48 -8.3
Growth b 47.21 -1.38 -7.8
SmCap b 21.82 -.74 -8.2
Bernstein
DiversMui 14.69 +.05 +5.0
IntDur 14.25 +.02 +6.2
TxMIntl 13.24 -.72 -15.8
BlackRock
EqDivA m 16.07 -.63 -7.5
EqDivI 16.11 -.63 -7.3
GlobAlcA m 18.48 -.39 -4.1
GlobAlcC m 17.23 -.37 -4.6
GlobAlcI d 18.56 -.39 -4.0
CGM
Focus 26.85 -1.25 -22.8
Mutual 24.49 -.73 -16.9
Realty 24.85 -.50 -6.9
Calamos
GrowA m 47.51 -1.68 -11.0
Cohen & Steers
Realty 55.22 -1.51 -4.8
Columbia
AcornA m 25.44 -.94 -12.1
AcornIntZ 36.05 -1.03 -9.7
AcornZ 26.26 -.98 -11.9
DivBondA m 5.16 +.01 +5.1
DivrEqInA m 8.68 -.42 -13.5
StLgCpGrZ 11.84 -.40 -4.7
TaxEA m 13.40 ... +8.1
ValRestrZ 42.21 -1.87 -16.0
DFA
1YrFixInI 10.36 ... +0.7
2YrGlbFII 10.24 ... +0.9
5YrGlbFII 11.47 +.02 +5.4
EmMkCrEqI 18.73 -.72 -15.0
EmMktValI 29.40 -1.18 -18.3
IntSmCapI 14.68 -.52 -13.7
USCorEq1I 9.66 -.43 -11.7
USCorEq2I 9.49 -.44 -13.1
USLgCo 8.86 -.40 -9.8
USLgValI 17.35 -.84 -13.2
USMicroI 11.81 -.68 -14.1
USSmValI 21.11 -1.19 -17.4
USSmallI 18.35 -.96 -13.9
DWS-Scudder
EnhEMFIS d 10.37 +.02 -2.4
HlthCareS d 22.93 -1.08 -5.8
LAEqS d 41.12 -.98 -22.6
Davis
NYVentA m 30.01 -1.47 -12.6
NYVentC m 28.89 -1.42 -13.0
NYVentY 30.37 -1.49 -12.5
Delaware Invest
DiverIncA m 9.45 ... +5.4
Dimensional Investme
IntCorEqI 9.65 -.43 -12.9
IntlSCoI 15.04 -.46 -11.5
IntlValuI 15.39 -.83 -14.6
Dodge & Cox
Bal 63.16 -2.35 -9.1
Income 13.54 +.01 +4.5
IntlStk 29.97 -1.97 -16.1
Stock 92.29 -4.80 -13.7
Dreyfus
Apprecia 36.66 -1.42 -4.0
EmgLead ... ... -24.5
TechGrA f 27.91 -1.20 -14.1
Driehaus
ActiveInc 10.50 -.06 -3.6
Eaton Vance
HiIncOppA m 4.22 -.02 +0.8
HiIncOppB m 4.23 -.02 +0.4
LrgCpValA m 15.58 -.82 -14.1
NatlMuniA m 9.18 -.02 +6.7
NatlMuniB m 9.18 -.02 +6.2
PAMuniA m 8.79 -.02 +5.8
FMI
LgCap 14.19 -.65 -9.1
FPA
Cres d 25.32 -.64 -4.6
NewInc m 10.84 ... +2.0
Fairholme Funds
Fairhome d 25.72 -1.45 -27.7
Federated
KaufmanR m 4.61 -.18 -16.2
ToRetIs 11.43 +.06 +4.7
Fidelity
AstMgr20 12.79 -.04 +1.0
AstMgr50 14.73 -.25 -3.7
Bal 17.32 -.38 -4.2
BlChGrow 41.60 -1.60 -8.3
Canada d 53.06 -.15 -8.8
CapApr 22.39 -.77 -11.6
CapInc d 8.81 -.08 -3.3
Contra 62.97 -2.17 -6.9
DiscEq 19.88 -.90 -11.8
DivGrow 24.27 -1.07 -14.6
DivrIntl d 26.51 -1.11 -12.1
EmgMkt d 22.62 -.89 -14.2
EqInc 37.53 -1.95 -14.5
EqInc II 15.48 -.82 -14.5
ExpMulNat d 19.21 -.82 -11.9
FF2015 10.96 -.17 -3.0
FF2035 10.45 -.33 -8.5
FF2040 7.29 -.23 -8.6
Fidelity 29.26 -1.12 -8.8
FltRtHiIn d 9.43 -.06 -2.1
Free2010 13.15 -.19 -2.9
Free2020 13.14 -.25 -4.4
Free2025 10.78 -.25 -6.1
Free2030 12.78 -.33 -6.8
GNMA 12.02 +.11 +7.0
GovtInc 10.93 +.07 +6.2
GrowCo 77.83 -2.86 -6.4
GrowInc 16.03 -.77 -11.8
HiInc d 8.51 -.05 -1.3
Indepndnc 21.38 -.70 -12.2
IntBond 10.95 +.04 +5.7
IntMuniInc d 10.34 +.03 +5.5
IntlDisc d 28.72 -1.23 -13.1
InvGrdBd 7.75 +.06 +6.9
LatinAm d 48.83 -1.08 -17.3
LevCoSt d 23.52 -.92 -17.2
LowPriStk d 35.48 -1.16 -7.6
Magellan 61.34 -2.27 -14.3
MidCap d 24.31 -.79 -11.4
MuniInc d 12.82 +.03 +7.2
NewMktIn d 15.90 -.01 +5.1
OTC 51.18 -2.14 -6.8
Puritan 16.93 -.39 -4.6
RealInv d 24.59 -.69 -4.3
Series100Index 7.92 -.38 -9.4
ShIntMu d 10.81 +.02 +3.4
ShTmBond 8.55 +.01 +1.9
SmCapStk d 15.11 -.82 -22.9
StratInc 11.13 -.02 +3.5
StratRRet d 9.60 +.03 +1.6
TotalBd 11.13 +.06 +6.1
USBdIdxInv 11.83 +.07 +6.4
Value 58.10 -2.68 -15.4
Fidelity Advisor
NewInsA m 18.50 -.62 -7.2
NewInsI 18.70 -.62 -7.0
StratIncA m 12.44 -.02 +3.4
ValStratT m 22.02 -.96 -14.9
Fidelity Select
Gold d 49.92+1.21 -2.3
Pharm d 11.79 -.54 -2.5
Fidelity Spartan
500IdxAdvtg 39.74 -1.82 -9.8
500IdxInstl 39.75 -1.81 NA
500IdxInv 39.74 -1.82 -9.9
ExtMktIdI d 32.73 -1.34 -13.2
IntlIdxIn d 30.86 -1.58 -12.0
TotMktIdAg d 32.54 -1.46 -10.4
TotMktIdI d 32.54 -1.46 -10.4
First Eagle
GlbA m 44.38 -1.21 -4.3
OverseasA m 21.94 -.38 -3.2
FrankTemp-Franklin
CA TF A m 6.98 +.02 +7.1
Fed TF A m 11.96 +.04 +8.4
GrowB m 38.38 -1.65 -10.3
Growth A m 40.20 -1.73 -9.9
HY TF A m 10.12 +.02 +8.4
Income A m 2.00 -.03 -4.4
Income C m 2.02 -.03 -4.7
IncomeAdv 1.98 -.04 -4.8
NY TF A m 11.65 +.03 +6.7
RisDv A m 30.44 -1.25 -7.3
StrInc A m 10.32 -.03 +2.0
US Gov A m 6.96 +.06 +5.8
FrankTemp-Mutual
Beacon Z 11.01 -.45 -10.6
Discov A m 25.92 -1.05 -7.6
Discov Z 26.27 -1.06 -11.0
QuestZ 16.16 -.58 -8.6
Shares A m 18.32 -.76 -7.6
Shares Z 18.49 -.76 -11.1
FrankTemp-Templeton
Fgn A m 6.14 -.38 -12.0
GlBond A m 13.57 -.11 +2.4
GlBond C m 13.59 -.12 +2.1
GlBondAdv 13.53 -.12 +2.5
Growth A m 15.73 -.94 -11.6
World A m 13.11 -.71 -11.7
Franklin Templeton
FndAllA m 9.36 -.37 -9.2
GE
S&SProg 35.73 -1.72 -11.2
GMO
EmgMktsVI 11.79 -.55 -12.9
IntItVlIV 18.95 -1.05 -11.5
QuIII 19.33 -.77 -2.8
QuVI 19.33 -.77 -2.8
Goldman Sachs
HiYieldIs d 6.89 -.02 -0.9
MidCapVaA m30.46 -1.25 -15.2
MidCpVaIs 30.75 -1.26 -14.9
Harbor
Bond 12.40 -.01 +3.8
CapApInst 34.60 -1.38 -5.8
IntlInstl d 53.52 -3.12 -11.6
IntlInv m 52.92 -3.08 -11.8
Hartford
CapAprA m 28.32 -1.37 -18.2
CapAprI 28.37 -1.37 -18.1
CpApHLSIA 35.52 -1.66 -16.1
DvGrHLSIA 17.35 -.81 -11.0
TRBdHLSIA 11.49 +.03 +5.5
Hussman
StratGrth d 12.56 +.12 +2.2
INVESCO
CharterA m 14.88 -.59 -8.0
ComstockA m13.72 -.69 -12.2
ConstellB m 18.60 -.75 -11.1
EqIncomeA m 7.75 -.26 -9.0
GlobEqA m 9.84 -.48 -8.4
GrowIncA m 16.65 -.79 -12.9
HiYldMuA m 9.25 -.03 +7.0
PacGrowB m 19.33 -.97 -13.4
Ivy
AssetStrA m 23.16 -.95 -5.1
AssetStrC m 22.41 -.92 -5.6
JPMorgan
CoreBondA m11.87 +.01 +5.6
CoreBondSelect11.86 ... +5.8
HighYldSel d 7.76 -.03 -0.3
IntmdTFSl 11.15 +.03 +5.2
ShDurBndSel 11.04 ... +1.6
USLCpCrPS 18.06 -.89 -8.3
Janus
BalJ 23.92 -.52 -3.6
OverseasJ d 37.17 -1.77 -26.6
PerkinsMCVJ 20.40 -.66 -9.6
TwentyJ 56.78 -2.72 -13.6
John Hancock
LifAg1 b 10.82 -.46 -11.9
LifBa1 b 11.99 -.30 -6.3
LifGr1 b 11.57 -.42 -9.9
RegBankA m 11.41 -.96 -22.1
SovInvA m 14.12 -.65 -9.7
TaxFBdA m 9.91 +.01 +6.7
Lazard
EmgMkEqtI d 18.62 -.60 -14.2
EmgMktEqO m18.99 -.61 -14.4
Legg Mason/Western
CrPlBdIns 11.12 +.02 +5.4
MgdMuniA m 15.90 +.06 +8.4
Longleaf Partners
LongPart 25.62 -1.32 -9.3
Loomis Sayles
BondI 14.48 -.13 +4.6
BondR b 14.43 -.13 +4.4
Lord Abbett
AffiliatA m 9.59 -.49 -16.8
BondDebA m 7.56 -.04 +0.4
ShDurIncA m 4.57 ... +2.0
ShDurIncC m 4.60 ... +1.6
MFS
MAInvA m 17.17 -.82 -10.3
MAInvC m 16.58 -.79 -10.7
TotRetA m 13.30 -.36 -4.5
ValueA m 20.19 -1.04 -10.9
ValueI 20.28 -1.05 -10.8
Manning & Napier
WrldOppA 7.58 -.40 -12.0
Merger
Merger m 15.45 -.07 -2.1
Metropolitan West
TotRetBdI 10.55 +.02 +4.6
TotRtBd b 10.55 +.02 +4.4
Morgan Stanley Instl
MdCpGrI 35.67 -1.18 -4.5
Natixis
InvBndY 12.52 -.05 +6.3
StratIncA m 14.83 -.19 +3.4
StratIncC m 14.91 -.19 +2.9
Neuberger Berman
GenesisIs 42.96 -1.43 -6.5
GenesisTr 44.46 -1.47 -6.7
SmCpGrInv 16.29 -.71 -8.9
Northern
HYFixInc d 7.07 -.02 +1.2
MMIntlEq d 8.62 -.41 -9.2
Oakmark
EqIncI 26.07 -.75 -6.0
Intl I d 16.40 -.87 -15.5
Oakmark I d 37.31 -1.60 -9.7
Old Westbury
GlbSmMdCp 13.56 -.44 -10.7
Oppenheimer
CapApB m 34.62 -1.54 -10.1
DevMktA m 30.73 -.95 -15.7
DevMktY 30.45 -.94 -15.6
GlobA m 52.99 -3.13 -12.2
IntlBondA m 6.68 -.03 +4.2
IntlBondY 6.68 -.03 +4.4
MainStrA m 28.53 -1.18 -11.9
RocMuniA m 15.63 -.04 +6.6
RochNtlMu m 6.90 -.03 +9.0
StrIncA m 4.20 -.02 +1.6
PIMCO
AllAssetI 12.23 +.01 +3.0
AllAuthIn 10.90 +.06 +4.3
ComRlRStI 8.82 +.18 +2.7
DevLocMktI 10.73 -.13 +2.3
DivIncInst 11.38 -.01 +2.9
HiYldIs 8.91 -.02 +0.1
InvGrdIns 10.77 +.05 +6.1
LowDrA m 10.46 -.01 +1.8
LowDrIs 10.46 -.01 +2.0
RealRet 12.38 +.19 +12.1
RealRtnA m 12.38 +.19 +11.9
ShtTermIs 9.85 ... +0.6
TotRetA m 11.09 +.02 +4.0
TotRetAdm b 11.09 +.02 +4.1
TotRetC m 11.09 +.02 +3.5
TotRetIs 11.09 +.02 +4.3
TotRetrnD b 11.09 +.02 +4.1
TotlRetnP 11.09 +.02 +4.2
Permanent
Portfolio 48.75 -.15 +6.4
Pioneer
PioneerA m 35.44 -1.51 -13.1
Principal
L/T2020I 10.96 -.30 -6.0
SAMConGrB m11.93 -.41 -9.1
Prudential Investmen
2020FocA m 14.61 -.46 -8.1
BlendA m 15.30 -.63 -11.1
EqOppA m 12.30 -.51 -11.4
HiYieldA m 5.30 -.02 +0.6
IntlEqtyA m 5.51 -.31 -11.0
IntlValA m 17.91 -1.01 -13.1
JenMidCapGrA m25.09-.85 -8.4
JennGrA m 16.96 -.69 -6.0
NaturResA m 48.26 -.88 -15.5
SmallCoA m 17.82 -.77 -12.2
UtilityA m 9.64 -.20 -4.8
ValueA m 12.75 -.53 -13.4
Putnam
GrowIncA m 11.45 -.58 -10.8
GrowIncB m 11.25 -.56 -11.2
IncomeA m 6.99 +.02 +6.8
VoyagerA m 18.77 -.92 -17.0
Royce
LowStkSer m 15.97 -.47 -12.5
OpportInv d 9.51 -.58 -21.3
PAMutInv d 10.29 -.43 -11.7
PremierInv d 18.84 -.52 -7.4
TotRetInv d 11.71 -.45 -10.7
ValPlSvc m 11.53 -.47 -14.1
Schwab
1000Inv d 33.37 -1.48 -10.2
S&P500Sel d 17.65 -.80 -9.8
Scout
Interntl d 28.35 -1.22 -12.0
Selected
American D 36.34 -1.75 -12.2
Sequoia
Sequoia 127.60 -4.64 -1.3
T Rowe Price
BlChpGr 35.51 -1.51 -6.9
CapApprec 19.01 -.62 -6.4
DivGrow 20.64 -.91 -9.2
DivrSmCap d 14.22 -.60 -10.1
EmMktStk d 30.26 -1.05 -14.2
EqIndex d 30.25 -1.38 -9.9
EqtyInc 20.55 -.96 -12.5
FinSer 11.12 -.78 -21.5
GrowStk 29.36 -1.16 -8.7
HealthSci 28.74 -1.39 -5.1
HiYield d 6.45 -.03 -0.6
IntlBnd d 10.51 -.02 +7.3
IntlDisc d 39.95 -1.20 -9.0
IntlGrInc d 11.77 -.84 -11.6
IntlStk d 12.53 -.66 -11.9
IntlStkAd m 12.49 -.65 -11.9
LatinAm d 43.84 -1.11 -22.7
MediaTele 49.01 -1.70 -5.2
MidCapVa 20.73 -.76 -12.6
MidCpGr 51.81 -1.64 -11.5
NewAmGro 29.62 -1.13 -10.2
NewAsia d 17.84 -.48 -7.0
NewEra 44.22 -1.43 -15.2
NewHoriz 30.87 -1.28 -7.8
NewIncome 9.78 +.06 +5.2
OrseaStk d 7.41 -.49 -11.2
R2015 11.26 -.30 -5.3
R2025 11.11 -.39 -7.7
R2035 11.07 -.45 -9.5
Rtmt2010 14.74 -.33 -3.9
Rtmt2020 15.35 -.48 -6.6
Rtmt2030 15.77 -.60 -8.7
Rtmt2040 15.72 -.64 -9.8
ShTmBond 4.87 ... +1.8
SmCpStk 29.94 -1.43 -13.0
SmCpVal d 31.67 -1.58 -12.3
SpecInc 12.27 -.06 +1.7
TaxFHiYld 10.74 -.03 +6.6
Value 20.29 -.95 -13.1
ValueAd b 20.07 -.94 -13.2
Templeton
InFEqSeS 17.53 -1.03 -12.6
Third Avenue
Value d 44.75 -2.03 -13.5
Thornburg
IncBldC m 17.32 -.56 -6.3
IntlValA m 24.42 -1.34 -12.3
IntlValI d 24.97 -1.37 -12.1
Tweedy Browne
GlobVal d 21.48 -.48 -9.8
VALIC Co I
StockIdx 22.32 -1.03 -10.0
Vanguard
500Adml 103.46 -4.73 -9.8
500Inv 103.45 -4.73 -9.9
AssetA 21.81 -.98 -10.3
BalIdxAdm 20.39 -.47 -3.6
BalIdxIns 20.39 -.47 -3.6
CAITAdml 11.19 +.02 +7.0
CapOp d 27.94 -1.15 -15.9
CapOpAdml d64.56 -2.65 -15.9
CapVal 8.82 -.46 -20.0
Convrt d 12.06 -.18 -8.7
DevMktIdx d 8.82 -.49 -12.3
DivGr 13.30 -.57 -6.6
EmMktIAdm d33.69 -1.45 -15.5
EnergyAdm d111.49-4.08 -7.8
EnergyInv d 59.36 -2.17 -7.9
ExplAdml 59.23 -2.45 -12.7
Explr 63.59 -2.64 -12.8
ExtdIdAdm 35.86 -1.48 -13.1
ExtdIdIst 35.86 -1.48 -13.1
FAWeUSIns d81.84 -3.99 -12.8
GNMA 11.22 +.09 +6.5
GNMAAdml 11.22 +.09 +6.6
GlbEq 15.80 -.71 -11.5
GrowthEq 9.87 -.42 -8.5
GrthIdAdm 28.73 -1.19 -8.6
GrthIstId 28.73 -1.19 -8.5
HYCor d 5.55 -.01 +1.6
HYCorAdml d 5.55 -.01 +1.7
HltCrAdml d 51.11 -1.98 -0.3
HlthCare d 121.09 -4.70 -0.3
ITBondAdm 11.95 +.09 +9.6
ITGradeAd 10.27 +.05 +7.4
ITIGrade 10.27 +.05 +7.3
ITrsyAdml 12.10 +.09 +8.4
InfPrtAdm 28.49 +.54 +13.9
InfPrtI 11.60 +.22 +13.9
InflaPro 14.51 +.28 +13.9
InstIdxI 102.76 -4.70 -9.8
InstPlus 102.77 -4.70 -9.8
InstTStPl 25.38 -1.13 -10.3
IntlExpIn d 14.25 -.50 -14.5
IntlGr d 16.90 -.84 -12.6
IntlGrAdm d 53.80 -2.67 -12.5
IntlStkIdxAdm d22.98-1.06 -12.8
IntlStkIdxI d 91.96 -4.24 -12.8
IntlVal d 27.46 -1.48 -14.6
LTGradeAd 10.21 +.13 +13.1
LTInvGr 10.21 +.13 +13.1
LifeCon 15.74 -.30 -2.8
LifeGro 19.96 -.76 -8.9
LifeMod 18.34 -.51 -5.5
MidCapGr 17.16 -.62 -9.7
MidCp 17.92 -.64 -11.8
MidCpAdml 81.41 -2.89 -11.7
MidCpIst 17.98 -.64 -11.7
MidCpSgl 25.69 -.91 -11.7
Morg 16.12 -.64 -10.6
MuHYAdml 10.51 ... +7.1
MuInt 13.82 +.03 +6.5
MuIntAdml 13.82 +.03 +6.6
MuLTAdml 11.13 +.01 +7.1
MuLtdAdml 11.16 +.01 +2.9
MuShtAdml 15.95 ... +1.4
PrecMtls d 23.42 -.43 -12.3
Prmcp d 58.24 -2.79 -11.5
PrmcpAdml d 60.45 -2.91 -11.5
PrmcpCorI d 12.25 -.56 -11.0
REITIdx d 17.30 -.46 -4.4
REITIdxAd d 73.83 -1.96 -4.4
STBond 10.73 +.01 +3.0
STBondAdm 10.73 +.01 +3.0
STBondSgl 10.73 +.01 +3.0
STCor 10.78 ... +2.2
STGradeAd 10.78 ... +2.3
STsryAdml 10.87 +.02 +2.3
SelValu d 16.62 -.61 -11.4
SmCapIdx 29.94 -1.41 -13.8
SmCpIdAdm 29.99 -1.42 -13.8
SmCpIdIst 29.99 -1.42 -13.7
SmGthIdx 19.20 -.85 -12.4
SmGthIst 19.25 -.85 -12.3
SmValIdx 13.55 -.68 -15.4
Star 17.99 -.47 -4.8
StratgcEq 16.50 -.62 -9.9
TgtRe2010 22.08 -.33 -1.0
TgtRe2015 11.98 -.26 -3.5
TgtRe2020 20.97 -.56 -5.1
TgtRe2030 20.01 -.69 -7.7
TgtRe2035 11.92 -.45 -8.9
TgtRe2040 19.49 -.77 -9.3
TgtRe2045 12.25 -.47 -9.3
TgtRetInc 11.38 -.07 +2.1
Tgtet2025 11.81 -.36 -6.4
TotBdAdml 11.06 +.07 +6.5
TotBdInst 11.06 +.07 +6.5
TotBdMkInv 11.06 +.07 +6.4
TotBdMkSig 11.06 +.07 +6.5
TotIntl d 13.74 -.63 -12.8
TotStIAdm 28.06 -1.24 -10.4
TotStIIns 28.06 -1.25 -10.4
TotStISig 27.08 -1.20 -10.4
TotStIdx 28.05 -1.24 -10.4
TxMCapAdm 56.33 -2.47 -9.9
TxMIntlAdm d10.15 -.56 -12.3
TxMSCAdm 23.75 -1.23 -12.6
USValue 9.12 -.39 -9.7
ValIdxIns 18.21 -.86 -11.4
WellsI 21.83 -.22 +2.4
WellsIAdm 52.90 -.51 +2.5
Welltn 29.26 -.84 -4.6
WelltnAdm 50.54 -1.44 -4.6
WndsIIAdm 40.51 -1.85 -10.1
Wndsr 11.43 -.53 -14.8
WndsrAdml 38.58 -1.77 -14.8
WndsrII 22.83 -1.04 -10.1
Yacktman
Yacktman d 15.73 -.62 -4.9
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
52-WEEK YTD
HIGH LOW NAME TKR DIV LAST CHG %CHG
52-WEEK YTD
HIGH LOW NAME TKR DIV LAST CHG %CHG
Combined Stocks
ABB Ltd 20.59 -1.29 -8.3
AEP Ind 24.34 -.57 -6.2
AES Corp 9.68 -.22 -20.5
AFLAC 35.57 -4.04 -37.0
AGL Res 36.46 -.40 +1.7
AK Steel 8.29 -.16 -49.4
AMR 3.51 -.30 -54.9
AOL 10.22 -.97 -56.9
ASM Intl 23.16 -1.49 -33.8
ASML Hld 32.50 -1.05 -15.2
AT&T Inc 27.88 -.97 -5.1
ATP O&G 8.82 +.57 -47.3
AbtLab 46.89 -1.67 -2.1
AberFitc 65.64 -.30 +13.9
AcadiaRlt 18.81 -.54 +3.1
Accenture 51.79 -3.10 +6.8
ActionSemi 1.97 -.01 -8.4
ActivsBliz 10.43 -.53 -16.2
AdamsEx 9.29 -.40 -13.5
AdobeSy 22.80 -2.01 -25.9
AMD 5.85 -.33 -28.5
Adventrx 1.06 -1.48 -59.4
Aetna 35.07 -1.82 +14.9
Agilent 31.85 -2.36 -23.1
AkamaiT 21.24 -.65 -54.9
AlcatelLuc 3.17 -.28 +7.1
Alcoa 11.60 -.64 -24.6
AlignTech 17.54 -.74 -10.2
Allergan 70.36 -4.26 +2.5
AlliBInco 7.92 +.09 -.1
AlliantEgy 35.95 -.43 -2.2
Allstate 24.32 -1.43 -23.7
AlphaNRs 28.91 -.82 -51.8
AlteraCp lf 34.89 -.79 -1.9
Altria 24.36 -.82 -1.1
Amazon 194.13-10.96 +7.8
Ameren 26.44 -.74 -6.2
AMovilL s 22.49 -.63 -21.6
AMovilA s 22.57 -.39 -21.1
ACapAgy 28.41 -1.37 -1.1
AmCapLtd 8.04 -.28 +6.3
AEagleOut 11.32 -.18 -22.6
AEP 34.27 -.79 -4.8
AmExp 42.80 -3.30 -.3
AmIntlGrp 22.14 -1.84 -54.1
AmSupr 5.99 -.44 -79.0
AmTower 47.37 -1.83 -8.3
AmWtrWks 26.82 -.80 +6.0
Ameriprise 41.19 -3.34 -28.4
AmeriBrgn 35.24 -1.39 +3.3
Ametek s 35.42 -1.46 -9.8
Amgen 48.27 -2.28 -12.1
Anadarko 65.62 -2.64 -13.8
AnalogDev 30.67 -.33 -18.6
AnglogldA 44.33 +1.47 -10.0
ABInBev 49.72 -3.11 -12.9
Annaly 17.48 -.38 -2.5
Aon Corp 43.36 -2.08 -5.8
Apple Inc 363.69-10.32 +12.8
ApldMatl 11.25 -.19 -19.9
Arbitron 32.47 -2.81 -21.8
ArcelorMit 21.35 -2.36 -44.0
ArchCoal 18.95 -.68 -45.9
ArmHld 23.83 -.83 +14.8
AstraZen 40.95 -1.77 -11.3
Atmel 9.65 +.10 -21.7
ATMOS 29.97 -1.00 -3.9
Autodesk 28.16 -1.80 -26.3
AutoData 44.81 -1.99 -3.2
AveryD 26.02 -.97 -38.5
Avnet 25.52 +.01 -22.7
Avon 20.48 -1.15 -29.5
BB&T Cp 19.86 -2.37 -24.5
BHP BillLt 75.17 -4.08 -19.1
BHPBil plc 59.74 -4.40 -25.8
BJs Whls 49.63 -.20 +3.6
BP PLC 38.29 -1.70 -13.3
BP Pru 111.36 +2.15 -12.0
Baidu 140.79 -2.85 +45.9
BakrHu 58.59 -2.20 +2.5
BallCp s 34.00 -1.99 -.1
BallardPw 1.35 -.03 -10.0
BallyTech 32.60 -.69 -22.7
BcBilVArg 8.25 -.96 -18.9
BcoBrades 16.15 -.74 -20.4
BcoSantSA 8.31 -.87 -22.0
BcoSBrasil 8.17 -.64 -39.9
BkHawaii 39.27 -2.21 -16.8
BkAtl A h .65 -.03 -43.5
Barclay 10.61 -1.35 -35.8
Bar iPVix rs 35.17 +3.91 -6.5
BarnesNob 15.13 -.78 +6.9
BarrickG 49.66 +1.92 -6.6
Baxter 50.49 -1.82 -.3
BedBath 50.06 -2.49 +1.9
BerkHa A 102450 -6650 -14.9
BerkH B 67.60 -5.33 -15.6
BestBuy 24.08 -1.04 -29.8
BigLots 29.96 -.53 -1.6
BioRadA 94.00 -6.54 -9.5
Blackstone 12.32 -.68 -12.9
BlockHR 12.85 -.47 +7.9
Boeing 57.41 -4.51 -12.0
BostonSci 5.91 -.43 -21.9
Brandyw 9.09 -.02 -21.8
BrigExp 26.02 +.71 -4.5
BrMySq 26.46 -.64 -.1
Broadcom 32.07 -.76 -26.4
BrcdeCm 3.37 -.14 -36.3
Brookdale 13.75 -.68 -35.8
Buckeye 61.09 +.18 -8.6
CA Inc 19.27 -.89 -21.2
CB REllis 16.67 -.80 -18.6
CBS B 23.15 -1.33 +21.5
CH Engy 50.48 -1.86 +3.3
CIT Grp 33.35 -1.62 -29.2
CMS Eng 17.74 -.27 -4.6
CNO Fincl 5.39 -.54 -20.5
CSS Inds 17.72 -1.44 -14.0
CSX s 21.54 -.54 0.0
CblvsNY s 16.86 -.16 -28.8
CalaStrTR 8.00 -.21 -13.6
Cameco g 21.67 -.47 -46.3
Cameron 43.76 -1.64 -13.7
CampSp 29.77 -.94 -14.3
CdnNRs gs 35.34 -.27 -20.4
CapOne 41.05 +.28 -3.5
CapitlSrce 5.40 -.21 -23.9
CapsteadM 12.47 -.39 -1.0
CpstnTrb h 1.08 -.17 +12.5
CardnlHlth 38.47 -1.31 +.4
CarMax 26.48 -.85 -16.9
Carnival 29.42 -2.42 -36.2
Caterpillar 83.51 -3.97 -10.8
CedarF 17.92 -.33 +18.2
CelSci .39 -.01 -52.5
Celgene 51.85 -2.73 -12.3
Cemex 4.93 -.43 -52.1
CenterPnt 18.23 -.12 +16.0
CVtPS 34.70 -.21 +58.7
CntryLink 33.38 -.50 -27.7
Cephln 79.17 -.41 +28.3
Checkpnt 13.96 -.41 -32.1
Cheesecake25.38 -.56 -17.2
CheniereEn 7.18 -.02 +30.1
ChesEng 28.78 -.34 +11.1
Chevron 90.57 -2.83 -.7
Chimera 2.98 -.18 -27.5
ChinaUni 17.65 -.70 +23.9
Chubb 56.51 -3.68 -5.2
ChurchD s 39.97 +.08 +15.8
CIBER 2.87 -.26 -38.7
CienaCorp 11.45 -.64 -45.6
Cisco 13.73 -.33 -32.1
Citigrp rs 28.49 -3.33 -39.8
Citigp wtA .49 -.03 -48.4
Clearwire 1.44 +.02 -72.0
CliffsNRs 71.20 -2.51 -8.7
Clorox 65.28 -1.92 +3.2
Coach 52.63 -.46 -4.8
CocaCE 24.81 -.48 -.9
CognizTech 60.83 -4.03 -17.0
ColgPal 80.18 -3.12 -.2
Comc spcl 19.36 -.80 -6.5
Comerica 24.22 -2.58 -42.7
CmtyHlt 18.74 -.34 -49.9
CompSci 28.24 -3.73 -43.1
ConAgra 22.72 -.27 +.6
ConnWtrSv 25.32 -2.18 -9.2
ConocPhil 62.71 -1.85 -7.9
ConsolEngy38.36 -.79 -21.3
ConEd 52.07 +.17 +5.0
ConsolWtr 8.15 -.70 -11.1
ConstellA 17.63 -.54 -20.4
CooperTire 11.26 -.68 -52.2
CornPdts 43.34 -.99 -5.8
Corning 13.20 -1.14 -31.7
Covidien 44.70 -2.36 -2.1
CSVelIVSt s 9.25 -1.47 -22.6
Cree Inc 34.08 +4.59 -48.3
CrownHold 34.43 -1.88 +3.1
Cummins 86.25 -4.86 -21.6
CybrOpt 8.30 -.10 -2.8
CypSemi 17.51 -.06 -5.8
DCT Indl 4.30 -.25 -19.0
DNP Selct 9.46 -.03 +3.5
DR Horton 9.18 -.37 -23.1
DTE 45.17 -.67 -.3
DanaHldg 11.77 -.53 -31.6
Danaher 41.44 -1.54 -12.1
Darden 45.05 -1.07 -3.0
DeanFds 8.36 -.31 -5.4
Deere 67.99 -2.94 -18.1
Dell Inc 13.65 -.77 +.7
DeltaAir 6.68 -.40 -47.0
DenburyR 14.65 -.76 -23.3
Dndreon 9.91 -.91 -71.6
DeutschBk 40.36 -5.29 -22.5
DBGoldDS 4.56 -.44 -42.9
DevelDiv 11.84 -.15 -16.0
DevonE 66.28 -2.45 -15.6
Diageo 72.80 -2.16 -2.1
DiamRk 7.61 -.41 -36.6
Diebold 25.76 -.51 -19.6
DirecTV A 41.63 -1.81 +4.3
DrSCBr rs 58.48 +7.26 +24.9
DirFnBr rs 72.10+11.00 +52.6
DirLCBr rs 52.41 +6.14 +19.5
DrxFnBull 12.48 -2.64 -55.2
DirxSCBull 38.58 -6.85 -46.7
DirxLCBull 47.33 -7.34 -33.8
DirxEnBull 40.70 -4.82 -30.4
Discover 21.88 -.75 +18.1
DishNetwk 21.66 -.92 +10.2
Disney 31.54 -3.16 -15.9
DomRescs 46.36 -.41 +8.5
DonlleyRR 13.87 -.81 -20.6
Dover 51.58 -2.40 -11.8
DowChm 28.12 -1.24 -17.6
DryShips 2.47 -.06 -55.0
DuPont 44.83 -1.88 -10.1
DukeEngy 17.25 -.36 -3.1
DukeRlty 10.27 -.51 -17.6
Dycom 12.59 -1.22 -14.6
E-Trade 10.66 -1.15 -33.4
eBay 29.15 -1.01 +4.7
EMC Cp 21.59 -.97 -5.7
ENI 34.45 -3.15 -21.2
EOG Res 86.99 -3.87 -4.8
Eastgrp 36.01 -2.04 -14.9
EKodak 1.77 -.19 -67.0
Eaton s 39.01 -1.74 -23.1
Ecolab 44.75 -1.51 -11.2
ElPasoCp 17.57 -.67 +27.7
ElPasoEl 32.05 -1.23 +16.4
Elan 9.73 -.28 +69.8
EldorGld g 19.47 +.94 +4.8
ElectArts 17.62 -.98 +7.6
EmersonEl 41.89 -2.49 -26.7
EnbrEPt s 28.41 +.79 -8.9
EnCana g 24.38 -.10 -16.3
EndvSilv g 9.84 +.70 +34.1
Energen 46.88 -.75 -2.9
Energizer 71.24 -2.73 -2.3
EngyConv .73 ... -84.1
EngyTsfr 45.16 +.43 -12.9
ENSCO 43.69 -.12 -18.2
Entergy 60.21 -1.00 -15.0
EntPrPt 42.06 +1.32 +1.1
EnzoBio 2.77 -.31 -47.5
EqtyRsd 56.01 -1.26 +7.8
EricsnTel 10.64 -.48 -7.7
ExcoRes 13.61 +.61 -29.9
Exelon 40.33 -1.06 -3.1
Expedia 27.45 -.86 +9.4
ExpdIntl 41.21 -1.64 -24.5
ExpScripts 45.09 -2.50 -16.6
ExxonMbl 68.03 -3.14 -7.0
Fastenal s 29.96 -1.31 0.0
FedInvst 16.91 -1.55 -35.4
Ferro 7.18 -.90 -51.0
FidlNFin 15.11 -.54 +10.5
FifthThird 9.42 -1.13 -35.8
Finisar 13.44 -.41 -54.7
FstHorizon 6.76 -.80 -42.6
FstNiagara 10.10 -.59 -27.8
FirstEngy 39.69 -1.14 +7.2
Flextrn 5.16 -.25 -34.3
Fonar 1.77 +.08 +36.4
FootLockr 17.34 -.89 -11.6
FordM 10.41 -.50 -38.0
ForestCA 13.37 -.56 -19.9
ForestLab 33.24 -1.53 +3.9
ForestOil 18.58 -1.34 -51.1
FortuneBr 53.30 -.65 -11.5
FMCG s 43.55 -1.50 -27.5
FDelMnt 21.69 -1.24 -13.1
FrontierCm 6.68 -.19 -31.3
FuelCell 1.03 -.07 -55.4
FultonFncl 8.01 -.83 -22.5
GabDvInc 13.66 -.50 -11.1
GabelliET 4.75 -.13 -16.2
Gafisa SA 8.38 +.07 -42.3
Gannett 9.48 -.95 -37.2
Gap 15.53 -.79 -29.5
GenElec 15.09 -.87 -17.5
GenGrPr n 13.48 -.11 -12.9
GenMills 34.95 -1.06 -1.8
GenMot n 23.92 -1.62 -35.1
GenOn En 2.96 -.17 -22.3
Gentex 23.26 -.89 -21.3
Genworth 5.78 -.66 -56.0
Gerdau 7.09 -.19 -49.3
GileadSci 35.34 -2.80 -2.5
GlaxoSKln 38.84 -2.08 -1.0
GlimchRt 8.11 -.31 -3.5
GoldFLtd 16.33 +.80 -9.9
Goldcrp g 50.54 +2.41 +9.9
GoldStr g 2.40 +.20 -47.7
GoldmanS 110.34-12.39 -34.4
Goodyear 11.86 -.55 +.1
Google 549.01-24.40 -7.6
GrafTech 13.12 -.92 -33.9
Gramrcy lf 2.42 -.19 +4.8
GrtBasG g 1.92 +.02 -35.1
GtPlainEn 17.37 -.13 -10.4
Greif A 51.50 -1.05 -16.8
GpoTMM 1.75 +.25 -30.0
HCA Hld n 18.58 +.23 -40.1
HCP Inc 31.44 -.92 -14.5
HSBC 41.52 -3.40 -18.7
Hallibrtn 43.30 -1.45 +6.0
HanJS 14.40 +.20 -4.6
HarleyD 35.60 -1.72 +2.7
HarrisCorp 34.52 -2.08 -23.8
Harsco 21.17 -.51 -25.2
HartfdFn 18.15 -2.23 -31.5
HawaiiEl 21.50 -.45 -5.7
HltCrREIT 43.40 -1.50 -8.9
HltMgmt 6.98 -.24 -26.8
HeclaM 7.14 -.13 -36.6
HercOffsh 3.22 -.24 -7.5
Hertz 10.07 -.35 -30.5
Hess 54.05 -1.97 -29.4
HewlettP 29.86 -1.67 -29.1
HomeDp 28.51 -1.64 -18.7
HonwllIntl 43.22 -3.54 -18.7
Hospira 42.80 -2.53 -23.1
HostHotls 12.00 -.45 -32.8
HudsCity 6.10 -.73 -52.1
HuntBnk 4.71 -.52 -31.4
Huntsmn 12.44 -.63 -20.3
Hydrognc 4.86 +.08 +29.3
IAMGld g 20.12 +.29 +13.0
ING 8.13 -.89 -17.0
INGPrRTr 5.13 -.13 -9.8
ION Geoph 5.76 +.19 -32.1
iShGold 17.50 +.60 +25.9
iSAstla 21.43 -1.06 -15.8
iShBraz 57.84 -1.73 -25.3
iShGer 20.01 -1.53 -16.4
iSh HK 16.29 -.79 -13.9
iShJapn 9.54 -.46 -12.6
iSh Kor 51.44 -3.56 -15.9
iShMex 52.15 -2.64 -15.8
iShSing 12.32 -.67 -11.0
iSTaiwn 13.11 -.42 -16.1
iShSilver 38.44 +2.12 +27.4
iShChina25 35.12 -2.34 -18.5
iSSP500 112.60 -5.83 -10.8
iShEMkts 39.13 -2.19 -17.9
iShB20 T 109.02 +3.15 +15.8
iS Eafe 49.91 -3.17 -14.3
iSR1KG 52.35 -2.19 -8.6
iSRus1K 62.19 -2.36 -11.0
iSR2KG 75.41 -3.69 -13.7
iShR2K 66.06 -3.40 -15.6
iShREst 52.33 -1.26 -6.5
iStar 5.80 ... -25.8
ITT Corp 44.65 -2.26 -14.3
ITW 42.32 -2.06 -20.7
Immucor 26.50 -.15 +33.6
Informat 45.70 -2.71 +3.8
IngerRd 28.21 -1.87 -40.1
InglesMkts 14.20 -1.65 -26.0
Intel 19.93 -.67 -5.2
IBM 162.54 -8.07 +10.8
IntlGame 14.70 -.29 -16.9
IntPap 24.17 -.64 -11.3
Interpublic 7.89 -.26 -25.7
Intersil 11.03 -.09 -27.8
IntraLinks 6.64 -5.52 -64.5
Intuit 39.94 -2.84 -19.0
Invesco 16.62 -2.07 -30.9
ItauUnibH 16.34 -.80 -31.6
JAlexandr 5.48 +.36 +4.4
J&J Snack 44.87 -1.69 -7.0
JA Solar 3.64 +.08 -47.4
JDS Uniph 10.11 -.71 -30.2
JPMorgCh 34.37 -2.03 -19.0
Jabil 14.61 -.92 -27.3
JanusCap 6.49 -.72 -50.0
JpnSmCap 7.33 -.35 -18.3
JetBlue 3.87 -.45 -41.5
JohnJn 60.20 -2.00 -2.7
JohnsnCtl 30.31 -1.54 -20.7
JnprNtwk 20.67 -.85 -44.0
KLA Tnc 35.36 -.83 -8.5
Kaydon 30.32 -2.16 -25.5
Kellogg 51.46 -1.10 +.7
Keycorp 6.20 -.72 -29.9
KimbClk 62.57 -1.67 -.7
Kimco 15.87 -.42 -12.0
KindME 69.72 +.50 -.8
Kinross g 16.26 +.28 -14.2
KodiakO g 5.30 -.24 -19.7
Kohls 44.29 -2.27 -18.5
KrispKrm 7.33 -.36 +5.0
Kroger 21.93 -.63 -1.9
Kulicke 7.95 -.43 +10.4
LDK Solar 5.62 +.06 -44.5
LSI Corp 6.58 -.06 +9.8
LancastrC 55.99 -1.86 -2.1
LVSands 39.42 -.58 -14.2
LeggPlat 18.75 -.37 -17.6
LennarA 13.32 -1.36 -29.0
LeucNatl 26.43 -1.13 -9.4
Level3 1.80 -.05 +83.7
LibtyMIntA 13.97 -.52 -11.4
LillyEli 34.49 -1.15 -1.6
LimelghtN 2.21 +.13 -62.0
Limited 32.72 -1.12 +6.5
LincNat 20.67 -2.07 -25.7
LinearTch 26.61 -.27 -23.1
LizClaib 4.78 -.36 -33.2
LloydBkg 1.92 -.16 -53.3
LockhdM 66.87 -4.01 -4.3
Lowes 18.11 -1.06 -27.8
LyonBas A 31.13 -.71 -9.5
MBIA 6.53 -.21 -45.5
MEMC 6.04 +.11 -46.4
MF Global 5.42 -.47 -35.2
MFA Fncl 7.32 -.21 -10.3
MMT 6.35 -.05 -8.0
MGIC 2.06 -.29 -79.8
MGM Rsts 10.33 -.85 -30.4
Macys 24.52 -.92 -3.1
Manitowoc 9.58 -.13 -26.9
Manulife g 12.49 -.98 -27.3
MarathnO s 25.29 -.18 +12.5
MktVGold 59.30 +1.60 -3.5
MktVRus 29.90 -2.64 -21.1
MktVJrGld 35.39 +1.46 -11.3
MarIntA 26.82 -1.47 -35.4
MarshM 26.83 -1.51 -1.9
MarvellT 11.94 -.04 -35.6
Masco 8.11 -.23 -35.9
MassMCp s14.00 +.10 -8.4
Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD
The SEC accused the companys
brokerage, Stifel Nicolaus, of civil
fraud for risky deals sold to five Wis-
consin school districts.
The trust bank will cut 1,500 jobs, or
3 percent of its work force, because
costs have been growing faster than
revenue.
The banking giant was one of the fi-
nancial sectors biggest decliners as
investors worry about the health of
financial institutions.
Stocks plunged again Wednesday as investors
turned their attention back to the weak economy
and Europe's debt problems. The big gains that
followed a Federal Reserve pledge to extend su-
per-low interest rates vanished. The Dow fell 3.8
percent. The average plummeted more than 300
points within minutes of the opening bell and was
down 519 points by the end of the day. The S&P
500 index fell 3.4 percent. The Nasdaq composite
fell 3.1 percent.
6
8
10
$12
M A J J
Bank of America BAC
Close: $6.77 -0.83 or -10.9%
$6.31 $15.31
Vol.:
Mkt. Cap:
483.5m (2.6x avg.)
$68.61 b
52-week range
PE:
Yield:
...
0.6%
15
20
25
$30
M A J J
Bank of New York Mellon BK
Close: $19.46 -1.65 or -7.8%
$19.34 $32.50
Vol.:
Mkt. Cap:
22.9m (2.3x avg.)
$24.16 b
52-week range
PE:
Yield:
9.0
2.7%
20
30
40
$50
M A J J
Stifel Financial SF
Close: $25.88 -2.72 or -9.5%
$23.09 $49.94
Vol.:
Mkt. Cap:
4.0m (5.4x avg.)
$1.39 b
52-week range
PE:
Yield:
235.3
...
Story Stocks
Stocks of Local Interest
98.01 72.81 AirProd APD 2.32 77.82 -2.43 -14.4
30.70 21.72 AmWtrWks AWK .92 26.82 -.80 +6.0
51.50 36.76 Amerigas APU 2.96 41.60 -.47 -14.8
23.79 18.90 AquaAm WTR .62 20.21 -1.05 -10.1
38.02 26.00 ArchDan ADM .64 26.17 -1.54 -13.0
302.00 203.05 AutoZone AZO ... 274.82 -5.28 +.8
15.31 6.31 BkofAm BAC .04 6.77 -.83 -49.3
32.50 19.52 BkNYMel BK .52 19.46 -1.65 -35.6
17.49 5.59 BonTon BONT .20 6.30 -.86 -50.2
52.95 31.39 CIGNA CI .04 40.98 -2.49 +11.8
39.50 26.84 CVS Care CVS .50 32.06 -1.17 -7.8
69.82 54.92 CocaCola KO 1.88 63.96 -2.72 -2.8
27.16 16.76 Comcast CMCSA .45 19.78 -.93 -9.6
28.95 21.76 CmtyBkSy CBU .96 22.62 -1.68 -18.5
42.50 17.60 CmtyHlt CYH ... 18.74 -.34 -49.9
38.69 25.61 CoreMark CORE ... 34.36 -2.85 -3.5
13.63 4.97 Entercom ETM ... 6.35 -.66 -45.2
21.02 7.71 FairchldS FCS ... 12.85 -.16 -17.7
9.84 6.29 FrontierCm FTR .75 6.68 -.19 -31.3
18.71 13.09 Genpact G .18 15.26 -.86 +.4
13.74 7.58 HarteHnk HHS .32 7.42 -1.08 -41.9
55.00 44.62 Heinz HNZ 1.92 48.82 -1.38 -1.3
59.45 45.31 Hershey HSY 1.38 54.74 -1.50 +16.1
36.30 28.85 Kraft KFT 1.16 32.80 -1.42 +4.1
27.45 18.15 Lowes LOW .56 18.11 -1.06 -27.8
95.00 70.62 M&T Bk MTB 2.80 70.39 -5.12 -19.1
89.57 71.04 McDnlds MCD 2.44 84.08 -1.88 +9.5
24.98 18.74 NBT Bcp NBTB .80 18.83 -1.89 -22.0
10.28 3.64 NexstarB NXST ... 7.09 -.15 +18.4
65.19 45.81 PNC PNC 1.40 45.28 -4.04 -25.4
28.73 24.10 PPL Corp PPL 1.40 25.62 -.77 -2.7
17.72 11.98 PennMill PMIC ... 14.25 -.13 +7.7
17.34 9.75 PenRE PEI .60 10.07 -.82 -30.7
71.89 60.61 PepsiCo PEP 2.06 60.32 -2.77 -7.7
72.74 50.54 PhilipMor PM 2.56 64.90 -2.50 +10.9
67.72 57.56 ProctGam PG 2.10 58.51 -1.71 -9.0
67.52 47.37 Prudentl PRU 1.15 47.77 -4.81 -18.6
17.11 10.92 SLM Cp SLM .40 13.08 -.61 +3.9
60.00 32.41 SLM pfB SLMpB 4.63 46.00 -.60 +5.0
44.65 22.02 SoUnCo SUG .60 41.33 +.43 +71.7
12.45 6.60 Supvalu SVU .35 6.74 -.40 -30.0
56.78 39.56 TJX TJX .76 50.71 -2.52 +14.2
33.53 25.81 UGI Corp UGI 1.04 26.79 -.91 -15.2
38.95 29.10 VerizonCm VZ 1.95 33.66 -.63 -5.9
57.90 48.67 WalMart WMT 1.46 48.41 -2.04 -10.2
42.20 32.99 WeisMk WMK 1.16 37.20 -2.24 -7.8
34.25 22.65 WellsFargo WFC .48 22.88 -1.90 -26.2
USD per British Pound 1.6160 -.0060 -.37% 1.6092 1.5881
Canadian Dollar .9906 -.0032 -.32% .9958 1.0318
USD per Euro 1.4208 -.0014 -.10% 1.3593 1.3196
Japanese Yen 76.83 -.18 -.23% 83.32 85.27
Mexican Peso 12.3602 -.0737 -.60% 12.0790 12.6900
CURRENCY CLOSE PVS. %CH. 6MO. 1YR.
Copper 3.89 3.97 -2.05 -14.36 +19.46
Gold 1781.30 1740.00 +2.37 +30.80 +48.75
Platinum 1771.70 1756.40 +0.87 -3.23 +16.51
Silver 39.33 37.88 +3.82 +30.69 +119.82
Palladium 726.30 733.55 -0.99 -11.43 +56.29
METALS CLOSE PVS. %CH. 6MO. 1YR.
Foreign Exchange & Metals
C M Y K
PAGE 10B THURSDAY, AUGUST 11, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
W E A T H E R
Applications still being accepted for Fall 2011 admission!
Classes start August 22
nd
!
Earn a nationally recognized Penn State degree
Choose from 8 Bachelors or 4 Associate Degree programs that can be
completed right here at Penn State Wilkes-Barre.
Or, explore more than 160 degree programs where you can spend the frst
twoyears here, thencomplete your degree at another campus - including
University Park!
Check out what our students have to say about
Penn State Wilkes-Barre at
iyt.psu.edu/wilkesbarre
570-675-9238 wb.psu.edu/admissions
7
0
4
0
8
4
ALMANAC
REGIONAL FORECAST
NATIONAL FORECAST
For more weather
information go to:
www.timesleader.com
National Weather Service
607-729-1597
Forecasts, graphs
and data 2011
Weather Central, LP
Yesterday 81/64
Average 82/61
Record High 93 in 1911
Record Low 48 in 1964
Yesterday 8
Month to date 76
Year to date 603
Last year to date 694
Normal year to date 444
*Index of fuel consumption, how far the days
mean temperature was above 65 degrees.
Precipitation
Yesterday 0.00
Month to date 3.37
Normal month to date 0.98
Year to date 34.04
Normal year to date 22.89
Susquehanna Stage Chg. Fld. Stg
Wilkes-Barre 2.22 0.82 22.0
Towanda 0.91 -0.40 21.0
Lehigh
Bethlehem 2.86 0.54 16.0
Delaware
Port Jervis 4.01 -0.11 18.0
Todays high/
Tonights low
TODAYS SUMMARY
Highs: 74-79. Lows: 50-54. Mostly sunny
and pleasant. Mostly clear tonight.
The Poconos
Highs: 80-84. Lows: 59-66. Mostly sunny
and warm. Mostly clear tonight.
The Jersey Shore
Highs: 73-77. Lows: 52-64. Partly cloudy
and pleasant. Partly cloudy tonight.
The Finger Lakes
Highs: 82-83. Lows: 61-63. Mostly sunny
and warm. Mostly clear tonight.
Brandywine Valley
Highs: 82-85. Lows: 60-67. Mostly sunny
and warm. Mostly clear tonight.
Delmarva/Ocean City
Anchorage 56/47/.00 66/49/pc 66/50/c
Atlanta 94/72/.00 94/72/t 93/73/t
Baltimore 92/69/.00 84/64/s 86/66/s
Boston 78/67/.24 79/61/s 83/64/s
Buffalo 77/66/.25 76/64/pc 80/67/pc
Charlotte 93/69/.00 91/67/pc 91/71/t
Chicago 80/61/.00 83/64/s 82/69/pc
Cleveland 82/64/.00 76/62/s 82/63/s
Dallas 106/83/.00 103/82/pc 100/82/pc
Denver 93/57/.00 92/61/s 89/65/s
Detroit 83/63/.00 78/64/s 82/69/pc
Honolulu 87/76/.00 88/73/s 88/74/sh
Houston 101/81/.00 100/80/s 100/79/pc
Indianapolis 89/64/.00 81/60/s 84/67/s
Las Vegas 105/81/.00 103/79/s 103/83/s
Los Angeles 72/63/.00 68/62/s 70/62/s
Miami 93/75/.09 92/79/t 91/80/t
Milwaukee 79/60/.00 79/64/s 80/67/pc
Minneapolis 80/58/.00 81/65/pc 76/62/t
Myrtle Beach 97/75/.00 91/75/pc 90/73/t
Nashville 90/66/.00 89/70/pc 90/70/pc
New Orleans 95/80/.00 94/80/pc 94/79/pc
Norfolk 95/78/.00 85/70/pc 87/71/pc
Oklahoma City 99/70/.44 95/74/t 99/77/pc
Omaha 83/65/.00 80/64/pc 81/63/t
Orlando 88/75/.22 98/79/t 97/79/t
Phoenix 105/88/.00 103/85/pc 103/86/pc
Pittsburgh 83/63/.00 77/54/s 82/58/s
Portland, Ore. 73/58/.00 78/55/s 81/58/s
St. Louis 92/70/.04 82/63/s 84/69/pc
Salt Lake City 90/59/.00 91/65/s 92/68/s
San Antonio 101/78/.00 101/78/pc 100/78/pc
San Diego 69/63/.00 69/64/s 71/65/s
San Francisco 70/53/.00 68/54/s 67/54/s
Seattle 68/55/.00 74/55/s 76/54/s
Tampa 87/75/1.51 94/78/t 95/77/t
Tucson 98/79/.00 96/76/t 96/75/t
Washington, DC 94/75/.00 85/65/s 87/68/pc
City Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Yesterday Today Tomorrow
Amsterdam 66/55/.00 67/57/sh 68/58/sh
Baghdad 113/90/.00 114/86/s 113/84/s
Beijing 93/72/.00 89/73/t 90/72/pc
Berlin 68/55/.04 65/55/sh 68/58/sh
Buenos Aires 64/55/.00 72/55/s 69/55/sh
Dublin 64/46/.00 66/55/sh 64/55/r
Frankfurt 68/55/.00 71/56/pc 69/56/sh
Hong Kong 82/79/.00 89/81/t 90/81/t
Jerusalem 88/66/.00 88/69/s 87/68/s
London 75/52/.00 70/60/sh 70/61/sh
Mexico City 81/57/.00 78/58/t 77/56/t
Montreal 79/63/.00 68/55/sh 77/59/t
Moscow 84/59/.00 70/59/sh 70/54/pc
Paris 73/55/.00 78/59/pc 73/58/sh
Rio de Janeiro 82/70/.03 71/61/s 76/63/s
Riyadh 111/82/.00 112/83/s 114/84/s
Rome 90/72/.00 84/66/s 85/67/s
San Juan 90/78/.00 88/77/t 88/78/t
Tokyo 93/82/.00 92/79/t 91/79/t
Warsaw 72/54/.00 61/54/sh 68/55/c
City Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Yesterday Today Tomorrow
WORLD CITIES
River Levels, from 12 p.m. yesterday.
Key: s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sn-snow, sf-snowurries, i-ice.
Philadelphia
83/64
Reading
83/57
Scranton
Wilkes-Barre
78/53
78/53
Harrisburg
82/56
Atlantic City
82/61
New York City
82/64
Syracuse
77/57
Pottsville
78/53
Albany
77/55
Binghamton
Towanda
76/52
76/51
State College
77/52
Poughkeepsie
79/52
103/82
83/64
92/61
99/76
81/65
68/62
68/55
83/64
86/55
74/55
82/64
78/64
94/72
92/79
100/80
88/73
57/48
66/49
85/65
Sun and Moon
Sunrise Sunset
Today 6:09a 8:08p
Tomorrow 6:10a 8:07p
Moonrise Moonset
Today 6:44p 3:54a
Tomorrow 7:17p 4:59a
Full Last New First
Aug. 13 Aug. 21 Aug. 27 Sept. 4
Good news!
Nature's air con-
ditioner is
turned back on.
Indeed, much
drier air has
moved into town
for the next cou-
ple of days to
bring a refresh-
ing change in
the weather. In
fact, we are in
for some of the
coolest nights
since the rst of
July. There is no
chance of rain
between now
and noon
Saturday.
However, rain
will be approach-
ing this weekend
with some possi-
bly arriving late
Saturday but for
sure on Sunday
which could turn
out to be a
washout. The
annual Perseid
meteor shower
peaks tomorrow
night, but a full
moon will steal
the show and
block all but the
brightest mete-
ors.
- Tom Clark
NATIONAL FORECAST: A frontal boundary will trigger scattered showers and thunderstorms from
the Lower Mississippi Valley into portions of the Southeast today. Monsoonal ow will also produce
scattered thunderstorms from the Southwest into the southern Plains. Meanwhile, high pressure will
allow for plenty of sunshine across the Midwest.
Recorded at Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Intl Airport
Temperatures
Cooling Degree Days*
Precipitation
TODAY
Low humidity,
cooler
FRIDAY
Mostly
sunny
80
53
SUNDAY
Cloudy,
rain
73
66
MONDAY
Mostly
cloudy, a
T-storm
75
63
TUESDAY
Sunny
80
55
WEDNESDAY
Partly
sunny
80
60
SATURDAY
Partly
sunny, a
T-storm
79
60
77
55
C M Y K
LIFE S E C T I O N C
THE TIMES LEADER THURSDAY, AUGUST 11, 2011
timesleader.com
NEW YORK One mother
chose home birth because it was
cheaper than going to a hospital.
Another gave birth at home be-
cause she has multiple sclerosis
and feared unnecessary medical
intervention. And some choose
home births after Caesarean sec-
tions with their first babies.
Whatever their motivation, all
are amonga strikingtrend: Home
births increased 20 percent from
2004 to 2008, accounting for
28,357 of 4.2 million U.S. births,
accordingtoastudyfromtheCen-
ters for Disease Control and Pre-
vention released in May. White
women led the drive, with1in 98
having babies at home in 2008,
compared with 1 in 357 black
women and 1 in 500 Hispanic
women.
Sherry Hopkins, a Las Vegas
midwife, said the women whose
home births shes attended in-
cludea pediatrician, anERdoctor
and nurses. Were definitely see-
ing well-educated and well-in-
formed people who want to give
birth at home, she said.
Robbie Davis-Floyd, a medical
anthropologistattheUniversityof
Texas at Austinandresearcher on
global trends inchildbirth, obstet-
ricsandmidwifery, saidatfirst, in
the 1970s, it was largely a hippie,
countercultural thingtogivebirth
outside of the hospital. Over the
years, as the formerly lay mid-
wives have become far more so-
phisticated, sohastheirclientele.
The American College of Ob-
stetricians and Gynecologists,
which certifies OB-GYNs, warns
that homebirthscanbeunsafe, es-
pecially if the mother has high-
risk conditions, if a birth attend-
ant is inadequately trained and if
theres no nearby hospital in case
of emergency. Some doctors also
question whether a feminist ma-
choismisat play. But homebirth-
ers say they want to be free of
drugs, fetal monitors, IVs and
pressuretohurrytheirlaborat the
behest of doctors and hospitals.
Somehomebirthersciteconcerns
over Caesareansections. TheU.S.
rateof C-sections inhospitals hov-
ers around 32 percent, soaring up
to 60 percent in some areas. In
some cases, theres a too posh to
push mentality of scheduled in-
ductions for convenience sake
(Victoria Beckhamhad three).
Gina Crosley-Corcoran, a Chi-
cagoblogger andpre-lawstudent,
hadaC-sectionwithher first baby
and chronicled nightmarish pres-
sure from nurses and doctors to
abandon a vaginal birth with her
second. She followed up with a
third child born at home in April.
I do think theres a backlash
against whatshappeninginhospi-
tals, she said. Women are find-
ing that the hospital experience
wasnt a good one.
In Portland, Ore., acupunctu-
Home births have risen a dramatic 20 percent
By LEANNE ITALIE
Associated Press
AP PHOTO
Chicago blogger Gina Crosley-Corcoran holds her 2-month-old
daughter, Jolene, while her husband, John Crosley-Corcoran,
puts shoes on son Jules, 3, in Lombard, Ill.
See BIRTH, Page 2C
HACKENSACK, N.J. Fresh-
man Mark Riveras roommate ex-
perience at William Paterson Uni-
versity wasnt exactly what he had
envisioned.
After informing his roommate
before school began that he was
gay and sensing
an air of toler-
ance, the stu-
dent barely
spoke to him
during the first
daysandeventu-
ally switched
rooms. He ex-
plained to Riv-
era by text that
he was more ho-
mophobic than
he realized.
For the rest
of the semester,
I lived alone and still live alone,
said 19-year-old Rivera, of Pater-
son, N.J. Nooneshouldberobbed
of the full college experience. It
starts with a roommate.
Its a core reason why Rivera,
vicepresident of Chosen: TheGay-
Straight Alliance, said he and oth-
ers are encouraging the university
tojoina growingnumber of colleg-
es that allow students to choose
roommates of the opposite sex to
live with identified as gender-
neutral housing.
The colleges Residence Life of-
fice is researching the option and
plans to speak to campus student
groups, said Joseph Caffarelli, di-
rector of Residence Life. It nowre-
quires same-sex room assign-
ments.
It would be a university deci-
siononce we get all of the informa-
tion and look at what students
think, he said.
Six years ago, only a handful of
colleges in the country offered the
housing, said Jeffrey Chang, co-
founder of the National Student
GenderblindCampaign, anorgani-
zationthat promotesLGBT-affirm-
ative policies regarding campus
housing.
Eight schools have implement-
ed the change just since October,
hesaid. RutgersUniversitybecame
the 60th school and largest univer-
sityinthenationtohavethepolicy
when it approved the option in
March, said Chang, a Rutgers law
student.
Discussions were partially born
out of transgender students not al-
ways feeling comfortable rooming
withsomeoneof thesamesex. Asa
result, manycollegesprovidedlim-
ited options for transgender stu-
dents such as placing them in sin-
gle rooms, Chang said.
Makingthedecisionnottooffer
it tells transgender students that
they have to be in a system that
doesnt workfor them, saidJenny
Kurtz, directorof theCenterforSo-
cial Justice Education and LGBT
Communities at Rutgers.
The trendgainedadditional mo-
mentumafter last Septembers sui-
cide of Rutgers freshman Tyler
Clementi, Changsaid. Clementi, of
Ridgewood, N.J., jumped off the
George Washington Bridge after
his college roommate allegedly
streamed an intimate gay encoun-
ter to Internet viewers via a Web
camera.
Intheaftermathof theClemen-
ti tragedy, membersof theuniversi-
tys LGBTQ community told the
administrationthat gender-neutral
housing wouldhelpcreate aneven
more inclusive environment, ac-
cording to a university statement.
Since then, the university has
been exploring this in greater de-
tail.
Rutgers will offer the housing
this fall at New Gibbons on the
Douglass Campus and Demarest
Hall andsuitesinRockoff Hall both
on the College Avenue Campus in
New Brunswick, Kurtz said. Gen-
der-neutral housing will take place
in designated units on the Newark
campus as well.
Rutgersstudentshadbeenpush-
ing for the option for the past five
years, Chang said.
More colleges
green-lighting
gender-neutral
housing option
By KAREN SUDOL
The Record (Hackensack, N.J.)
See DORMS, Page 2C
Discussions
were partially
born out of
transgender
students not
always feeling
comfortable
rooming with
someone of
the same sex.
R
ALEIGH, N.C. As a restaurant hostess, Rebecca
Elcanworks a kindof runway as she leads diners to
their seats, andsolookingcutematters. Asa20-year-old
student, beingontrenddoes too.
So on a recent day, Elcan chose a romper, her first a strapless
number printedwithfanciful palmleaves, bought fromForever 21.
Myroommatehasalwayspulledthemoff reallywell, but someon
mehavebeenbaggy,shesaid. Ireallylikethembecausetheyrevery
instyle.
Indeed, rompers arebigthis season, andtheyrenot theonlyone-
piecelooksluringthestylish. Model/entrepreneurImanandsinger
Gwen Stefani have stepped out recently in sparkly vintage-style
jumpsuits, provingthe70s revival has madethat lookchic again.
On last months BET Awards, singer Mary J. Blige took a dis-
tinctlymodernapproach, openingtheshowinaskin-tight, plung-
ingV-neckjumpsuit pairedwithanasymmetrical metallic belt.
And then theres the trio of hungover Scandinavians who in-
ventedtheOnePiece, a zipperedfront jumper, nowall theragein
LondonandLos Angeles, andcovetedbythelikes of SiennaMill-
er, JustinBieber andLadyGaga.
By ADRIENNE JOHNSON MARTIN McClatchy Newspapers
MCT PHOTO
AP PHOTO
The fashion-for-
ward are reclaim-
ing the jumpsuit.
This silver-gray
Robert Rodriguez
suit, Knit Wit, is
$396.
Left: A Beveled Jumpsuit
by Chemline; Right: Macys
sells a Celebrity Pink Jeans
Romper design.
MCT PHOTO
See ROMPER, Page 2C
C M Y K
PAGE 2C THURSDAY, AUGUST 11, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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ADVERTISEMENT
John J. Cannon led a police report with The Hanover Twp.,
Police Dept. - stating that his apartment was broken into at:
100 Claymont Ave.
Apt. 401
Hanover Twp., PA
His PA Drivers License, Personal Papers, Bounty Award and
Library cards were missing.
He would like to thank PA State Rep. Gerald J. Mullery for
his assistance in re-issuing his Drivers License in such a
timely manner.
John J. Cannon
Coughlin High School
Class of 1955 will celebrate
another year since graduation
by holding a get-together
noon to 7 p.m. Aug. 20 at
Konefals Grove. Cost is low.
For more information or to
make reservations, contact
Helene at 570-693-4666.
Jenkins Township High School
Class of 1962 is planning its
50th anniversary reunion for
June 9, 2012. Classmates
interested in attending or
planning this event can call
Stan Gelaszus at 609-306-
6939 or Paul Donahue at
570-510-1399.
Kingston High School
Class of 1956 will hold its 55th
anniversary reunion 2-6 p.m.
Sept. 1 1 at Appletree Terrace,
Newberry Estates, Dallas.
Reservations are due by Sept.
4. Contact Judy Bateman
Shaffer at 675-4512. Members
of the class will meet 1 p.m.
Saturday at Grotto Pizza,
Harveys Lake, to finalize the
reunion plans. All classmates
are welcome.
Lake-Lehman High School
Class of 1976 is planning a 35th
anniversary reunion 7 p.m.
Sept. 3 at Grotto Pizza, Har-
veys Lake. Cost is $15 per
person and includes pizza,
soft drinks, tax and gratuity
with a cash bar. Make checks
payable to Sandra Barrall
Davis and mail to 93 Shak-
espeare Road, Catawissa, Pa.
17820. For classmates on
Facebook, check out our
Events page, Lake-Lehman
Class of 1976 Reunion. For
more information, call Mary
Beth Tomko at 570-831-5558,
or e-mail tomko5@com-
cast.net.
Larksville High School
Class of 1965 is planning a pizza
party at 6 p.m. Friday at Grot-
to Pizza, Harveys Lake. Class-
mates, spouses and signif-
icant others are welcome.
Contact Ron Sherin at 703-
472-5916 or ronsherin@veri-
zon.net for more information.
Newport Township High
School
Class of 1961 is planning its
50th anniversary reunion Oct.
8 at Genettis Best Western,
Hazleton. A mixer will take
place Oct. 7 at Maps, Nanti-
coke. The committee is looking
for addresses for Sandra Wasie-
lewski, Paulette Staskiel Rinaldi,
Ann Mary Butka Wintergrass and
Carey Stewart. Contact Al Yara-
savage at 570-678-3037, or
email ayarasavage@epix.net for
more information.
Class of 1966 reunion committee
reminds classmates that the
deadline to make a reservation
for the reunion was July 31.
Classmates who have not re-
sponded are urged to do so as
soon as possible. Information
may be given to the following
committee members, Robert
Deluca at 379-3572; Carol Sokol-
nicki Wilkes at 736-6018; or
Adrian Merolli at 696-1514.
Plymouth High School
Class of 1956 reunion planning
committee will meet 6 p.m. Aug.
30 at Grotto Pizza, Edwardsville.
Plans are being finalized for the
55th anniversary reunion to be
held Sept. 16 at the Checker-
board Inn. All classmates are
invited.
Class of 1959 is holding a 70th
birthday party 6:30 p.m. Aug. 27
at Grotto Pizza, Edwardsville.
This is an informal Dutch-treat
gathering. Orders will be made
from the menu with individual
checks. No invitations have been
mailed. Email notices were sent
to members who provided email
addresses. The event is being
held in conjunction with the
Plymouth Kielbasa Festival
which is taking place Aug. 26-27.
For more information, contact
Carole Mergo Samson at 570-
639-1102.
Class of 1966 will hold its 45th
anniversary reunion 5-1 1:30 p.m.
Aug. 20 at the Shawnee Room,
Main Street, Plymouth. This is
the final announcement. There
will be a cocktail and appetizer
hour followed by dinner and
dancing. Unlimited soda, coffee
and tea are included. A cash bar
will be available. Cost is $40 per
person payable to Mike Makos,
306 New Darlington Road,
Media, Pa. 19063 as soon as
REUNIONS
See REUNIONS, Page 3C
Editors Note: To have your
announcement published in this
column please submit the in-
formation to Reunions, The
Times Leader, 15 N. Main St.,
Wilkes-Barre, PA1871 1. E-mail
submissions must be sent to
people@timesleader.com. Please
type Reunion News in the
subject line. The deadline is
each Monday for all copy.
St. Marys High School Class of 1961 will meet 6 p.m. Aug. 17 at
Pattes Sports Bar, 64 W. Hollenback Avenue, Wilkes-Barre, to
continue plans for the 50th anniversary reunion. The celebration
will begin 6 p.m. Oct. 7 with an icebreaker at Pattes Sports Bar.
Class members will attend 4 p.m. Mass Oct. 8 at St. Marys Church,
followed with a formal celebration at The Caf, 1120 Highway 315,
Wilkes-Barre. All members and spouses are invited to attend the
planning session. Information is needed on the following class-
mates, Albert Gerstle, Barbara Laffey, Diane Lynch and Elizabeth
Yeraska. Anyone with information can contact Ellen Kenney Wal-
lace at 570-823-2295, or email Kathy Klein Bennett at kath-
ybg3@prodigy.net. Members of the reunion committee at a recent
meeting, from left, first row, are Jack Chamberlain, class president.
Second row: Patricia Gallagher Cole, Kathy Klein Bennett, Ellen
Kenney Wallace, Diane Cosgrove Burick, Eileen Wright Tamanini
and Sarah Burk Gibbons, chair.
St. Marys Class of 61 planning 50th reunion
rist Becca Seitz gave birth to both
her childrenat home, thefirst time
in 2007 because she and her hus-
bandwere without insurance.
It was never on my radar, until
we couldnt afford otherwise, she
said. Imgranola, but not that gra-
nola. It cost us $3,300, as opposed
toover $10,000ina hospital.
Dr. Joel Evans, the rare board-
certified OB-GYN who supports
homebirth, saidthemedical estab-
lishment has become resistant to
change, resistant to dialogue, re-
sistant toflexibility.
Women are nowlooking for al-
ternatives where theycanbe treat-
edasindividuals, asopposedtobe-
ing forced to comply with proto-
cols, whichhoweverwell meaning,
have the impact of bothmedicaliz-
ing childbirth and increasing
stress and anxiety around deliv-
ery,saidEvans, founderanddirec-
tor of the Center for Womens
Health in Stamford, Conn., and an
assistant professor at the Albert
Einstein College of Medicine in
NewYork.
By some accounts, in 1900, 95
percent of U.S. births tookplace at
home. That slippedtohalf by1938
andless than1percent by1955.
Today, most midwife-attended
births takeplaceinhospitals inthe
UnitedStates, andmanymidwives
are licensed nurses. But there are
also close to 1,700 midwives who
practice outside of hospitals, said
Davis-Floyd. In27states, so-called
lay midwives who lack nurses
training but are licensed and certi-
fied as professional midwives can
attendbirths legally.
Most studies of homebirthhave
beencriticizedastoosmall toaccu-
rately assess safety or distinguish
between planned and unplanned
deliveries, according to research-
ers KennethC. JohnsonandBetty-
Anne Daviss.
In 2005, they published a study
in the British Medical Journal
basedonnearly 5,500home births
involving certified professional
midwives inthe UnitedStates and
Canada. The study, considered
one of the largest for home births,
showed 88 percent had positive
outcomes, while 12 percent of the
women were transferred to hospi-
tals, including 9 percent for pre-
ventive reasons and 3 percent for
emergencies.
The study showed an infant
mortality rate of 2 out of every
1,000 births, about the same as in
hospitals at the time, Davis-Floyd
said.
BIRTH
Continued fromPage 1C
Students entering their sopho-
more, junior or senior years are
eligible and dont have to reveal
their sexual orientation or the
reasons for their roommate re-
quests, Kurtz said. Heterosexual
students also can apply.
A pilot program called Rain-
bow Perspectives and designed
for 40 students interested in at-
tending programs and discus-
sions on LGBT issues, also will
be unveiled at New Gibbons for
the upcoming semester.
While some colleges like Fair-
leigh Dickinson Universitys Col-
lege at Florham are informally
discussing the idea, others began
offering the option years ago.
Gender-neutral housing has
existed at Montclair State Uni-
versity at the Hawk Crossings
and The Village apartment com-
plexes since 2004, said Amie
MacMath, program assistant of
the schools LGBT Center.
But the school also launched a
housing option in 2010 within
Hawk Crossings that requires
students totakea class withinthe
LGBT minor and perform com-
munity projects related to or ad-
vocate for LGBT related issues.
Students needto feel comfort-
able and supported on campus in
order to be successful in other ar-
eas, MacMath said.
DORMS
Continued fromPage 1C
Diviningatleastpartoftheallureof
rompersisaseasyasputtingoneon.
As readily as your mama
snappedyouintothose sweet little
cotton onesies, you can slip into a
romper and be fully dressed. No
need to worry if your top matches
your bottoms.
And thats among the reasons
some find them fashionably ques-
tionable. Or worse.
I despise themif you talk to
people infashion, they will tell you
itsafashion-victimgetup, saidSa-
rah Haver, a New York stylist and
founder of focusonstyle.com.
Can anyone over 25 wear them
with confidence at all? asked Susu
Bear,ofscoopcharlotte.com.Ithink
of them as a summer fling. Theyre
cute, but not fashion-forward.
Rompers do, however, have a
longpast.
The look started out as mens un-
derwearintheearlypartofthe1900s;
by the 1920s, women athletes wore
them, and by the 30s, they became
an outerwear look for women, said
Diane Ellis, a fashion professor at
MeredithCollegeinRaleigh.
Theyre nearly always coupled
with a blouson top, and elastic at
thewaisttogiveroomtofit, tobend
over, Ellis said. Ultimately for
women, the look brought evening
attire today wear, a casual evening
wear.
Sounds comfy, no? But some
fashion observers dont think
rompers have such an accommo-
datingfit.
If youre really curvy, you cant
wear them, Bear said. The whole
point is thelongline.
Even Elcan, who is slim, had to
taketheGoldilocks approachtofind
her romper. Theyve never fit my
bodythewayI wantedthemto,she
said. This onefit perfectly.
You should be 20ish. You
shouldbeintip-topshape; nocellu-
lite, novaricoseveins, andletsadd,
for my sake, no fake orange tans,
Haversaid. Inotherwords, itmight
not be good to take a cue fromtall,
long, fit CameronDiaz, who, at 38,
was recently celebrated for her
romper choices.
The age-appropriate issue
comesupinanotherway: Rompers
cangiveoff ajuvenilevibe. Itsthat
short Daisy Duke, girly-girl thing,
Bear said. Theyre only appropri-
ate for people who fit that or want
tocommunicate that.
Still, there are romper fans in the
style community. NewYorkstyle re-
porter Donna Kim thinks folks
shouldtake it downa notchwhenit
comes to romper hate. With availa-
bilityinstoresfromKmarttoMacys,
theres acut for everyone, andromp-
ers aregoodfor all ages, shesaid.
Its just shorts attached to a
top, she said. Its not as scary as
youthink.
Perhaps, buttheresoneaspectof
theromper, andall one-piecedress-
ing, that cant beavoided: thepotty
issue.
Try to go to a public bathroom
in one, Haver said. You have to
pull the whole thing down and re-
dress yourself.
ROMPERS
Continued fromPage 1C
AP PHOTO
Mary J. Blige wore a jumpsuit to
the 2011 BET Awards in L.A.
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C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, AUGUST 11, 2011 PAGE 3C
Photographs and information
must be received two full weeks
before your childs birthday.
To ensure accurate publication,
your information must be typed
or computer-generated. Include
your childs name, age and birth-
day, parents, grandparents and
great-grandparents names and
their towns of residence, any
siblings and their ages.
Dont forget to include a day-
time contact phone number.
We cannot return photos sub-
mitted for publication in commu-
nity news, including birthday
photos, occasions photos and all
publicity photos.
Please do not submit precious
or original professional pho-
tographs that require return
because such photos can be-
come damaged, or occasionally
lost, in the production process.
Send to: Times Leader Birth-
days, 15 North Main St., Wilkes-
Barre, PA18711-0250.
GUIDELINES
Childrens birthdays (ages 1-16) will be published free of charge
C O M M U N I T Y N E W S
If your childs photo and birthday announcement is on this page, it will automatically be entered into the
Happy Birthday Shopping Spree drawing for a $50 certificate. One winner will be announced on the first
of the month on this page.
WIN A $50 GIFT CERTIFICATE
HAPPY BIRTHDAY!
Jake Asher Byron, son of Can-
dice Berretta and Mark Byron,
Harding, is celebrating his sec-
ond birthday today, Aug. 1 1. Jake
is a grandson of Mary and Frank
Stieler, Harding; Wendy and
Rodney Byron, both of Jurien
Bay, Australia; and the late David
Berretta, Exeter. He is a great-
grandson of Patrick Reedy,
Harding. Jake has two sisters,
Lily, 6, and Ella, 4.
Jake A. Byron
Isabella Rose Dudek, daughter of
Tina and Richard Dudek, Jenkins
Township, is celebrating her
second birthday today, Aug. 1 1.
Bella is a granddaughter of Ann
and Frank Spagnuolo and Enrica
and Richard Dudek, all of Hud-
son. She is a great-granddaught-
er of Frank Spagnuolo, Wilkes-
Barre; the late Edith Spagnuolo;
Irene and Robert Roberson,
Jacksonville, N.C.; and the late
Casimer Dudek.
Isabella R. Dudek
Emma L. Meese, daughter of
Laura and Wayne Meese Jr.,
Wilkes-Barre, is celebrating her
seventh birthday today, Aug. 1 1.
Emma is a granddaughter of Pat
and Frank Wolf, Albrightsville,
and Ruth and Wayne Meese Sr.,
Wilkes-Barre. She has two sis-
ters, Lillian, 8, and Olivia, 3.
Emma L. Meese
James Vincent Piccola IV, son of
Valerie Piccola, Kingston, and
James Piccola III, Tresckow, is
celebrating his 1 1th birthday
today, Aug. 1 1. James is a grand-
son of Lucy Wojcik and Michael
Kundrik Sr., Hazleton, and An-
drea and James Piccola Jr.,
Hazleton. He has a sister, Desir-
ee, 16.
James V. Piccola IV
Hunter C. Redmond, son of
David and Carrie Redmond,
Bloomsburg, celebrated his fifth
birthday Aug. 10. Hunter is a
grandson of Len and Carrie
Kaminski, Clayton, N.C., and Jan
and Mike Bondurant, Halifax, Va.
He is a great-grandson of Len
and Rose Kaminski, Wilkes-Barre;
George and Loretta Mizenko,
Harding; and Regina Albanese
and the late John Albanese,
Nanticoke. Hunter has a sister,
Kyleigh Skye, 1.
Hunter C. Redmond
Kaeden Xavier Sanchez, son of
Nicole Miscavage and Michael
Sanchez, Wilkes-Barre, cele-
brated his fourth birthday Aug.
10. Kaeden is a grandson of
Donna and Stephen Miscavage
and Mercedes and Danny San-
chez, all of Wilkes-Barre. He is a
great-grandson of Jean and Bill
Young, Shickshinny; Amy Mis-
cavage and the late Stanley
Miscavage, Thornhurst; Virginia
and Daniel Sanchez, Brooklyn,
N.Y.; and Nereida and Miguel
Rodriguez, Georgia.
Kaeden X. Sanchez
Kaylee Marie Janosov, daughter
of Bernard Lance Janosov and
Jamie Lee Quinn, both of Lu-
zerne, celebrated her first birth-
day Aug. 7. Kaylee is a grand-
daughter of Yvette Wren, Wyom-
ing; Fran Janosov, Mountain Top;
and Kim and Dave Bryk, Harding.
She is a great-granddaughter of
Robert and Dianne Wren, Dallas;
Joseph and Elizabeth Janosov,
Wapwallopen; Joe and Sue Ligi,
Olyphant; and Walter and Elea-
nor Bryk, Dupont. Kaylee is a
great-great-granddaughter of
Paul Poepperling, Kingston.
Kaylee M. Janosov
possible. A group color photo will
be taken at 6:15 p.m. Orders for
8 x 10s will be taken at $15 per
photo, payment due at time of
order.
West Hazleton High School
Wildcat Roundup XXI will be held
Aug. 27 at the Nescopeck Town-
ship Fire Hall, Route 93, Briggs-
ville. Cost is $21 per person.
Registration begins at 1 1 a.m.
and a buffet will be available
beginning at noon. Prizes,
awards and the annual crab race
will be among the festivities.
Alumni are urged to bring their
high school memorabilia. Dead-
line for reservations is Wednes-
day. Contact Chairmen Bob
Hildebrand at 788-2515 or Ken
and Marie Staber at 788-4252 to
obtain reservation forms. Reser-
vations are a must and no walk-
ins will be accepted the day of
the event. Mail reservation forms
to Wildcat Roundup, c/o Robert
Hildebrand, Box 17, Sybertsville,
Pa. 18251.
Wyoming Valley West High
School
Classes of 1985, 1986 and 1987
are planning a reunion 4-9 p.m.
Sept. 3 at Keeleys (formerly
Piledggis), 199 Division St.,
Kingston. Cost is $30 per person
and includes food, beverages
and D.J. John Taylor, classmate.
Reservations should be made by
Aug. 20. Send payment to Mi-
chelle Hogan, 115 Blueberry Hill
Road, Shavertown, Pa. 18708.
For more information, email
Wanyo3@hotmail.com or Face-
book Michelle Hogan.
REUNIONS
Continued from Page 2C
Ashlyn Smith, Mountain Top, and
Jacob Idec, Tunkhannock,
eighth-grade students from
Wyoming
Seminary
Lower School,
received
awards for
their poetry in
the junior high
division of the
Wyoming
Valley Poetry
Society Spring
Contest. Smith
received first
place for her
poem Royal
Discovery, and
Idec received
second place
for his poem
Apocalypse
Cow. The
society chose 20 winners in all
categories from 545 submis-
sions. Both students were invited
to read their poems during the
56th Annual Fine Arts Fiesta in
Wilkes-Barre.
Kimberly Rodriguez, a student at
Greater Nanti-
coke Area
Elementary
Center, recent-
ly received the
Dolores Mierz-
wa Award. The
award is given
to the most
proficient
reader in the
fifth grade. Rodriguez received a
$50 bond and her name was
engraved on a plaque that will
hang in the schools library.
Santino Gabos, Beaver Meadows,
was recognized by Wilkes Uni-
versity with the Teresa Jordan
and Frank Mehm Prize, awarded
annually to the undergraduate
who represents the ideal Wilkes
student. Gabos received the
award at the annual commence-
ment ceremony, where he gradu-
ated with a Bachelor of Science
degree in electrical engineering.
He served as
an editor of the
yearbook, an
e-mentor and a
member of the
Judicial Coun-
cil. Gabos was
also recognized
by the Center
for Global
Education and Diversity for his
outstanding work with interna-
tional students and was awarded
the Interfaith Leadership Award.
He also received the Keith Topf-
er Memorial Award for his work
in cooperative education. Gabos
is the son of Roseann and Calvin
Gabos and a graduate of Hazle-
ton Area High School.
Kathleen Mooney, New Albany,
Ohio, a rising senior at Wyoming
Seminary College Preparatory
School, was the recipient of the
22nd Annual Charlene Lisa
Chung Memorial Scholarship.
The $3,000 scholarship honors
the memory of Charlene Chung,
a 1987 graduate of Wyoming
Seminary who was a pre-med
student at the
University of
Scranton at the
time of her
untimely death
in 1989. It was
established in
1990 as a
memorial by
her parents, Dr.
Hiyoung and Helen Chung, Du-
nedin, Fla., and Wilkes-Barre, and
by friends of the Chung family. It
is granted annually to the stu-
dent who demonstrates out-
standing academic ability and
leadership in extracurricular
activities. Contributions to the
Chung memorial fund may be
sent to Wyoming Seminary, 201
N. Sprague Ave., Kingston, Pa.,
18704. For more information, call
570-270-2190.
Geralyn Cross, Plains Township,
and Jonathan Schall, Wyoming,
were recently inducted into
Alpha Epsilon Delta, the national
health preprofessional honor
society at The University of
Scranton.
NAMES AND FACES
Smith
Idec
Rodriguez
Gabos Mooney
NANTICOKE: Luzerne
County Community Col-
lege will hold registration
for fall semester classes
10 a.m. to noon Aug. 20; 9
a.m. to 7 p.m. Aug. 22-24;
and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Aug.
25-26 at the registrars
office on the colleges
campus.
Day and evening on-
and off-campus classes for
the fall semester will be-
gin on Aug. 29. For more
information, call 740-0337
or 800-377-LCCC, ext.
7337.
IN BRIEF
The Pennsylvania Association
of School Retirees (PASR) re-
cently presented its annual
scholarship to Lindsey Daven-
port, a graduate of Dallas High
School. Davenport will begin her
senior year at Wilkes University,
where she is majoring in ele-
mentary education and special
education. PASR includes all
retired employees of the public
schools of Pennsylvania. At the
scholarship presentation, from
left, are Armonde Casagrande,
president, PASR; Caroline Maurer,
chair, Wilkes Education Depart-
ment; Davenport; and Helene
Dainowski, Educational Support
Committee.
PASR gives scholarship
to Dallas graduate
Twenty-six Kings College students and three faculty members were recently inducted into the colleges
chapter of Delta Epsilon Sigma, the national honor society of colleges and universities with a Catholic
tradition. Candidates for membership must have a record of outstanding academic accomplishment and
have completed at least 50 percent of their course work for a bachelors degree with a minimum grade
point average of 3.5. Some of the new members, from left, first row, are Tamara Sager, Christine Guarino,
Christina Marvin, Megan Inama, Kasey Corbett and Sheileen Corbett, associate technical professor and
chair of the theatre department. Second row: Hannah Sharp, Exaud Hugho, Rachel Edelman, Jessica
Linskey, Victoria Weaver, Claudia Fazzino, Benjamin Foreman, Edwyn Edwards, Mary Sabulski and Antho-
ny Melf. Third row: Greg Janik, associate clinical professor of sports medicine and head trainer; Cas-
sandra Stento; Scott Pavone; James Heffers; Giancarlo Dilonardo; Michael Glenn; and Nathanial Towns-
and. Also inducted were Gareth Henderson, Matthew Kotch, Erin McDonald, Michael Deegan, Isabel Silva
and Dr. Bridget Costello, assistant professor of sociology.
Kings students, staff join Delta Epsilon Sigma
C M Y K
PAGE 4C THURSDAY, AUGUST 11, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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Submit this form with a brief paragraph about your nominees contributions and accomplishments
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