thursday - Hastings Tribune Archive Page

Transcription

thursday - Hastings Tribune Archive Page
Thriller: Titans rally to down Sandy Creek. — Page B1
Edgar project
Community center moving
forward.
Page A5
SERVING THE COMMUNITY FOR MORE THAN 100 YEARS
16 pages
Wednesday, Sept. 12, 2012
http://www.hastingstribune.com
Home delivered 33 cents Newsstands 75 cents
Common type of rail car has dangerous design flaw
JASON KEYSER
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — For two
decades, one of the most commonly used type of rail tanker
has been allowed to haul hazardous liquids from coast to
coast even though transportation officials were aware of a
dangerous design flaw that
almost guarantees the car will
tear open in an accident,
potentially spilling cargo that
could catch fire, explode or
contaminate the environment.
The rail and chemical industries have committed to a safer
design for new tankers but are
pressing regulators not to require
modifications to tens of thousands of existing cars, despite a
spike in the number of accidents
as more tankers are put into
service to accommodate soaring
demand for ethanol, the highly
flammable corn-based fuel usually transported by rail.
Derailments have triggered
chemical spills and massive
blasts like one in July in
Columbus, Ohio, that blew up
with such intensity that one witness said it “looked like the sun
exploded.” Some communities
with busy railways are beginning to regard the tankers as a
serious threat to public safety.
“There’s a law of averages
that gives me great concern,”
said Jim Arie, fire chief in
Barrington, a wealthy Chicago
suburb where ethanol tankers
snake through a bustling
downtown. “Sometimes I don’t
sleep well at night.”
He’s not the only one. The
town’s mayor is trying to build
a national coalition to push for
safety reforms.
The tanker, known as the
DOT-111, is a workhorse of the
American rail fleet, with a sodacan shape that makes it one of
the most easily recognizable
cars on freight routes.
The tanker itself is not suspected of causing derailments,
but its steel shell is too thin to
resist puncture in accidents. The
ends are especially vulnerable to
tears from couplers that can rip
off between cars. Unloading
valves and other exposed fittings on the tops of tankers can
also break during rollovers.
Please see RAIL/page A3
‘Miss
Caroline’
loved
dance,
fashion
Film
sparks
deadly
attack
HUNDREDS CELEBRATE
10-YEAR-OLD’S LIFE
U.S. AMBASSADOR
KILLED IN LIBYA
ESAM MOHAMED
AND MAGGIE MICHAEL
TONY HERRMAN
[email protected]
The Associated Press
B
LUE HILL — When
it came to fashion,
Caroline Thallman
was 10 going on 18.
That was the recollection of her aunt Janae Bauer of
Adams, one of
several speakers during
Caroline’s
funeral
Tuesday
morning at
the United
Methodist
Church here, Thallman
where her family attends
church. The 10-year-old girl
was one of four people killed
when a school bus and semitrailer truck collided a week ago
northeast of Cowles.
Five people, including
Caroline’s younger sister, Allie,
were injured in the crash.
Allie has since been released
from Mary Lanning Healthcare
in Hastings where she was
treated for injuries. She walked
between her parents, Mark and
Cheryl Thallman, as the family
entered the church sanctuary
for Tuesday’s service.
Hundreds of mourners filled
the sanctuary.
Please see CAROLINE/page A3
AMY ROH/Tribune
Mourners gather outside Blue Hill United Methodist Church after the funeral for Caroline Thallman Tuesday.
Thallman was one of the four victims of a bus-semi collision last week in Webster County.
TRIPOLI, Libya — The
American ambassador to
Libya and three other
Americans were killed when a
mob of protesters and gunmen overwhelmed the U.S.
Consulate in Benghazi, setting fire to it in outrage over
a film that ridicules Islam’s
Prophet Muhammad. Libya’s
new president apologized
Wednesday for the attack,
which underlined the lawlessness plaguing a region trying
to recover from months of
upheaval.
Ambassador Chris Stevens,
52, died as he and a group of
embassy employees went to
the consulate to try to evacuate
staff as a crowd of hundreds
attacked the consulate Tuesday
evening, many of them firing
machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades.
By the end of the assault,
much of the building was
burned out and trashed.
Stevens was the first U.S.
ambassador to be killed in the
line of duty since 1979.
A Libyan doctor who treated
Stevens said he died of severe
asphyxiation, apparently from
smoke.
Please see ATTACK/page A3
Paris native still painting at 84
KENSINGTON
RESIDENT’S WORK PART
OF ‘ART OF THE AGES’
EXHIBIT THURSDAY
JOCELYN MCMURTRY
[email protected]
LAURA BEAHM/Tribune
A framed watercolor painting
decorates Edith Brookhart’s
apartment at the Kensington.
Edith Brookhart was only 16
when World War II was shaking Paris and she was finishing
school as an art student.
She remembers how ruthless
the German soldiers were to
the French; how the war
brought American soldiers into
her beautiful city.
Brookhart found beauty
Lo:
50
Hi:
73
Please see PARIS/page A3
Nation
STATUE OF LIBERTY
INTERIOR TO RE-OPEN
NEXT MONTH
Art by Hope Kohmetscher,
11, Hawthorne Elementary
Tribune
Edith
Brookhart
shows off a
watercolor
painting of
a World
War II B-17
bomber
Tuesday
afternoon
at The
Kensington.
Brookhart’s
paintings
will be on
display
Thursday
during a
resident
show.
among the pain and destruction by painting flowers on
scarves for Parisian clothing
stores.
Brookhart, now 84 and living at The Kensington in
Hastings, has been painting
ever since.
Her work can be seen at a
resident art showing at The
Kensington Thursday to celebrate National Assisted Living
Week, which runs Sept. 9-15.
The Kensington is commemorating the week with the theme
“Art of the Ages,” and showcasing residents’ work.
Weather
Widespread
showers
tonight.
Partly
cloudy
Thursday.
LAURA
BEAHM/
NEW YORK — Visitors to the
Statue of Liberty will once again
be able to go inside the monu-
ment, starting next month.
David Luchsinger, superintendent of the Statue of Liberty
National Monument and Ellis
Island, made the announcement Tuesday.
He said the interior of the
statue would be open to the
Inside
public again starting October
28. That’s the Statue of Liberty’s
126th birthday.
The interior had been closed
off to visitors since October
2011 as part of a renovation
project.
The Associated Press
Agri/Business
Classified
Comics
Entertainment
A7
B6
B4
B5
Obituaries
Opinion
Outdoors
Public Notices
A2
A4
B8
B6
VOL. 107, NO. 294 ©2012,
THE SEATON PUBLISHING CO., INC. HASTINGS, NEBRASKA
Page Two
A2
Yesterday and Today
Obituaries
BLANCH M. GROSSMAN ERICKSON
Blanch M. (Brennforder)
Grossman Erickson, 88, died
Monday, Sept. 10, 2012, at
Edgar
Rosebrook
Care Center
in Edgar.
Services are
11 a.m. Friday
at St. James
Lutheran
Church in
Edgar with Pastor Stuart Sell
officiating. Burial is at Edgar
Cemetery in Edgar. Visitation
is 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday
at Williams Funeral Home in
Edgar.
Condolences may be sent to
wmsfh.com
***
Blanch was born on June
15, 1924, to Herman and
Bertha (Smith) Brennforder in
Nelson, Neb. She was one of
three childern. She grew up in
Nelson and attended the
Nelson School while working
various jobs.
Blanch was married to
Wallace Grossman from 19431953. To them was born a son,
Jerald (Jerry) Grossman.
Blanch was united in marriage to Ivan (Spec) Martin
Erickson on Jan. 5, 1955. To
them four children were born,
Janell (Sue), Ronald (Ron), Jane
and Jodi. They enjoyed 35
years of marriage. Blanch was a
member of the Edgar
Community for 60 years.
Blanch was a member of the
St. James Lutheran Church.
She was a Girl Scout leader,
homemaker, mother, grand-
mother and great-grandmother.
She loved birds and flowers,
but her greatest enjoyment was
spending time with and doing
things for her family. She
loved creating many memories
with her grandchildren and
great-grandchildren. In her leisure time, she enjoyed playing
cards, bingo, crossword and
jigsaw puzzles. Later in life, she
became an avid Nebraska
Cornhuskers and Chicago Cubs
fan.
Blanch is survived by children, Jerry (Jill) Grossman of
Gladstone, Mo., Janell Sue
(Jim) Randall of Edgar, Neb.,
Ronald Erickson of Hastings,
Neb., Jane Woods of Lincoln,
Neb., Jodi Taylor of Edgar,
Neb.; grandchildren, Brian, Jay,
Jason G., Jeanne, Jeremy, Jaime,
Jason E., Angie, Jon, Josh, Jeff
and Jerry; great-grandchildren,
Jessica H., Jake, Alex, Jacobi,
Patricia, Jasmine, Joey, Austin,
Shayne, Elizabeth, Caden,
Rylee, Morgan, Lilly, Caleb,
Carter and Baby Erickson due
in December 2012. She is also
survived by brother, Frank
(Jean) Brennforder of Lincoln,
Neb.; sister-in-law, Virgina
Erickson of Sitka, Alaska; brother-in-law, Mervin Erickson of
Hastings, Neb.; along with
nieces, nephews and other relatives.
Blanch was preceded in
death by her parents; her husbands; sister and brother-inlaw, Harley and Anna Brennfoder; brother-in-law, Charles
Erickson; and two great-grandchildren.
ROTHA A. KEUTEN
Rural Trumbull resident
Rotha A. Keuten, 84, died
Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012, at
Mary Lanning
Healthcare in
Hastings.
Services are
10:30 a.m.
Friday at
Grace United
Methodist
Church in
Hastings with the Rev. Dr. Lee
Wigert officiating. Burial is at
Parkview Cemetery in Hastings.
Visitation is 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Thursday with family present
from 6-8 p.m. at Brand-Wilson
Funeral Home in Hastings, and
one hour prior to service time
at the church on Friday.
Memorials may be given to
Grace United Methodist
Church in Hastings.
Condolences may be sent to
www.brandwilson.com
***
Rotha was born Feb. 24,
1928, to Orville and Jennie
Pearl (Cockrill) Alderman in
Table Rock, Neb. She was the
eldest daughter. On July 14,
1949, she married Joel
Raymond Keuten in Crete,
Neb.; he passed away March
16, 2003.
She loved outdoor activities
and the farm life. She restored
antique buggies and wagons
and used her carpentry skills
building the house she lived in
and for others through the
Habitat for Humanity program. For 20 years, she entered
cornhusking events and has
numerous trophies and awards
for her skill.
She is survived by two
daughters, Joleen Ekstein of
Bennet, Neb., and Joyce
Brannan of Hastings, Neb; one
son, Dean Keuten of Golden,
Colo.; two sisters, Joan Hyde of
Cheyenne, Wyo., and Carleen
Roebke of Pawnee City, Neb.;
five grandchildren; six greatgrandchildren; and many nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death
by her parents; her husband,
Joel; and one sister, Norma Gail
Heath.
ALICE L.M. DEISLEY
Alice Lydia Marie (Schmidt)
Deisley, 91, died Tuesday,
Sept. 11, 2012, at the Golden
Living Center
in Franklin.
A celebration of life is
10 a.m. Friday
at Hutchins
Funeral Home
in Franklin.
Burial is
at Maple Grove Cemetery in
Bloomington. Visitation is 9
a.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday with
family greeting friends from 57 p.m. at the funeral home.
Memorials may be directed
to the Franklin Fire
Department and EMTs.
Condolences may be sent to
www.hutchinsfh.com
***
Alice was born Sept. 20,
1920, to William Fredrick and
Anna Lydia (Goebel) Schmidt
on a farm south of Riverton.
She had nine brothers and one
sister. Alice was baptized and
confirmed at the Grace
Lutheran Church in Franklin.
She lived her childhood on a
farm south of Riverton. Alice
went to Rock Creek School
through the eighth grade.
Alice met her husband, Louis
Samuel Deisley at Riverton.
They were married on Oct. 22,
1949, at the Lutheran Church
in Red Cloud. They lived north
of Riverton a short while before buying a farm south of
Bloomington, where they
made their home for 26 years.
She was preceded in death
by her parents; husband, Louis;
and son-in-law, Jason; brothers, Harry, Willie, Orley, Guy,
Ben, Wayne, Gene (Bud) and
Melvin.
Alice is survived by her two
daughters, Doris Ann and husband Jerry Dierking of
Bloomington, and Patty Clancy
of Lincoln; five grandchildren,
Troy and his wife Renay
(Boyce) Stover of Grand Island,
Mindy and her husband Jon
Hackel of Ord, Neilie Hoskins
and her fiancé Steve Verville of
Nevada, Iowa, Ashley and his
wife Tena (Rhamy) Dierking of
Phillipsburg, Kan., and Jillian
and her husband Jay Morrill
of Hay Springs; 10 great-grandchildren, Andrew and Rachael
Stover, Brook , A.J. and Chloe
Morrill, Loren and Ella
Hoskins, Korbyn Fleming,
Payton Hackel, Austin and
Trevor Dierking; sister, Delores
and Robert Christy of
Washington; brother, Gerry
Schmidt of Phillips; also many
nieces, nephews, her good
friend Virdeena, her little boy
Ryan; and many close and dear
friends.
DONIS E. MOSS
Hastings resident Donis E.
Moss, 66, died Tuesday, Sept.
11, 2012, at her home.
Services are pending with
DeWitt Funeral Home and
Cremation Service in Hastings.
HASTINGS TRIBUNE
Wednesday, Sept. 12, 2012
IRENE H. FRERICHS
Hildreth resident Irene
Hermina Frerichs, 89, died
Monday, Sept. 10, 2012, at
Bethany Home in Minden.
Services are 2 p.m. Friday at
Trinity Lutheran Church in
Hildreth with Pastors Steve
and Patti Byrnes officiating.
Burial will be at Hildreth
Cemetery prior to the memorial service. Visitation is 3-5 p.m.
and 7-8 p.m. Thursday at
Jelden-Craig Funeral Home.
***
Irene was born Nov. 21,
1922, at the farm home north
of Bloomington, Neb., and was
confirmed in 1937 by Pastor
Schultz at the Redeemer
Lutheran Church in the
Ashgrove community. She
attended country grade school
District #50 northwest of
Blooimington in Franklin
County, and graduated from
Bloomington High School with
the class of 1940.
In 1941, she married John
W. Frerichs. After John
returned from World War II
service, they lived on a farm
southwest of Hildreth and were
members of the Country
Redeemer Lutheran Church
until moving to the village of
Hildreth in 1961. They then
became members of the St.
Paul Lutheran Church in
Hildreth. After the merger of
the three Lutheran churches,
Irene became a member of
Trinity Lutheran Church. She
was also a member of the
O.E.C. Auxiliary VFW 6016 of
Hildreth.
After moving to the village
of Hildreth, Irene was
employed at the school’s lunch
program and the postal service
before retirement. John died in
1991.
Survivors include her son,
Dale and his wife Elvera of rural Hildreth; four grandchildren, Rich Frerichs, Lori
Frerichs, Karen Frerichs and
Tarcia Frerichs; five great-grandchildren, Derek and Alex
Frerichs, Shiane Frerichs, Devin
Frerichs, and Reanna Crites;
and extended loving family
and friends.
In addition to her husband,
John, she was preceded in
death by her parents; sister,
Lavina Blank and husband
George; and brother, Elmer
Bienhoff and wife Adeline.
ELLA M. MEYER
Harvard resident Ella Marie
(Warneking) Meyer, 87, died
Monday, Sept. 10, 2012, at
Harvard Rest Haven in Harvard.
Services are 10 a.m. Saturday
at Salem Lutheran Church near
Nelson with Pastor Joel
Remmers officiating. Burial will
be held at Salem Lutheran
Cemetery. Williams Funeral
Home in Superior is in charge
of arrangements.
DONNA J. STUEHRENBERG
Donna J. Stuehrenberg, 86, of
Hastings died Wednesday, Sept.
12, 2012, at Mary Lanning
Healthcare in Hastings.
Services are pending with
Livingston-Butler-Volland
Funeral Home & Cremation
Center in Hastings.
BERNADINE E. TIMMERMANS
Hebron resident Bernadine E.
Timmermans, 89, died Tuesday,
Sept. 11, 2012, in Hebron.
Rosary is 7 p.m. Friday at
Price Funeral Home chapel in
Hebron. Services are 10 a.m.
Saturday at Sacred Heart
Catholic Church in Hebron.
Visitation is 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Thursday and Friday at the
funeral home.
Memorials to family’s choice.
Zamparelli, Howard
Hughes’ chief designer, dies
JOHN ROGERS
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Mario
Armond Zamparelli, an internationally renowned artist who
for nearly 20 years created the
distinctive, often colorful logos,
images and posters for reclusive
billionaire Howard Hughes’
many companies, has died at
age 91.
Zamparelli, who had homes
in the Los Angeles suburbs of
La Canada-Flintridge and San
Marino, died Saturday of heart
failure, his family said.
The artist, who worked in
numerous styles and forms,
was an illustrator for major
magazines and movie posters
in the early 1950s when
Hughes came looking for someone to design posters for his
RKO Pictures’ movies. He told
his aides to find posters done
by people they believed were
the best in the business.
“He pointed straight at my
dad’s poster and said, ‘Get me
that one,”’ the artist’s daughter
Gina Zamparelli said Monday.
What followed was an association between the artist and
the increasingly reclusive billionaire that continued until
Hughes’ death in 1976.
During that time, and for a
few years afterward, Zamparelli
created numerous logos, images
and designs for such companies
as TWA, Hughes Helicopters,
Hughes Aircraft, the Summa
Corporation and the Howard
Hughes Medical Institute.
Among the most instantly
recognizable were the bright
yellow, mini-skirted uniforms
he designed for the female
flight attendants Hughes
Airwest employed in the 1970s.
He also created that airline’s
signature nameplate, which
featured bright blue lettering
placed against a bright yellow
background on every plane.
As a painter, Zamparelli created the only portrait of Hughes
that the billionaire is believed
to have sat for. Gina Zamparelli
said Hughes gave her father just
two days to get it done, telling
him he would never sit still for
a portrait again.
“We still have some of the
sketches,” she said, adding they
contain the words “OK” and
“not OK” next to various parts
that Hughes did and didn’t like.
Although Hughes grew
increasingly reclusive over the
years, Zamparelli never spoke
ill of the billionaire.
“He was a gentleman, a real
professional, and he had a marvelous sense of humor,”
Zamparelli told the Los Angeles
Times in a 1981 interview.
Lotteries
WINNING NUMBERS
Tuesday
Kansas Pick 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6-2-0
Nebraska Pick 3 . . . . . . . . . . . .5-6-4
MyDaY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10-31-88
Nebraska Pick 5 . . . . . .2-26-32-36-38
Jackpot: $122,000
MegaMillions . . . .5-11-20-33-36-Y-11
Megaplier: 3
2by2 . . . . . . . . .Red 5-17, White 4-10
Calendar
HASTINGS
u Al-Anon, noon Thursday, The
Kensington, 233 N. Hastings Ave.
u Alcoholics Anonymous, noon,
5:15, and 8 p.m., 521 S. St. Joseph
Ave.; 7 p.m. (Women’s group), 907
S. Kansas Ave.; and 8 p.m., Faith
Lutheran Church, 837 Chestnut
Ave. Thursday.
u Red Cross Bloodmobile, noon to
5:15 p.m. Thursday, First
Congregational United Church of
Christ. Make appointment at 1-800GIVE-LIFE.
u GriefShare, 7 p.m. Thursday,
First St. Paul’s Youth and Family
Center, Fourth Street and Lexington
Ave. For more information, call 402463-1329 or visit
www.griefshare.org.
u Narcotics Anonymous, 6:30 p.m.
Thursday, 422 N. Burlington Ave.,
rear entrance.
JUNIATA
u Alcoholics Anonymous, 8 p.m.
Thursday, United Methodist Church
basement, 610 N. Adams Ave.
Today is Wednesday, Sept.
12, the 256th day of 2012.
There are 110 days left in the
year.
MEMORY LANE
TRIBLAND
Sixty years ago: Hastings
Tribune carriers appealed to their
customers to help the Hastings
Federation of Labor raise money
for the Iron Lung fund.
Fifty years ago: Councilmen
L.C. Schuster and Floyd C.
Sneller announced for the
office of mayor when current
mayor Hans F. Thorne said he
would not be a candidate for
re-election.
Forty years ago: Nebraska
was clinging to the paper ballot
for elections as only five counties were using other methods.
Thirty years ago: The
Hastings Airport Authority
approved a second fixed base
operator. Pro Flight would offer
flight instruction, fuel and air
taxi service. Hastings Flyways
already offered similar services.
Twenty years ago: John
Hoeger, founder of the
Evangelical Lutheran Good
Samaritan Society and a former
administrator at the Hastings
village, spoke at an Autumnfest
celebrating the 35th anniversary of the village’s founding.
Ten years ago: Harvey Perlman,
chancellor at the University of
Nebraska-Lincoln, proposed the
closure of the South Central
Research & Extension Center in
western Clay County.
One year ago: The 29th
annual Old Trusty Antique and
Collectors Show was under way
at the Clay County Fairgrounds
in Clay Center.
HIGHLIGHT IN HISTORY
On Sept. 12, 1942, during
World War II, a German U-boat
off West Africa torpedoed the
RMS Laconia, which was carrying Italian prisoners of war,
British soldiers and civilians.
The German crew, joined by
other U-boats, began rescue
operations. (On Sept. 16, the
rescue effort came to an abrupt
halt when the Germans were
attacked by a U.S. Army
bomber; some 1,600 people
died while more than 1,100
survived. As a result, U-boat
commanders were ordered to
no longer rescue civilian survivors of submarine attacks.)
TODAY IN NEBRASKA
Base Hospital No. 49, operated largely by University of
Nebraska College of Medicine
faculty and alumni, opened in
Allereye, France, in the waning
days of World War I.
ON THIS DATE
Five years ago: Oil prices
briefly topped a record $80 a
barrel. Russian President
Vladimir Putin replaced longserving Prime Minister Mikhail
Fradkov with an obscure
Cabinet official, Viktor Zubkov.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo
Abe announced his resignation.
One year ago: Texas Gov. Rick
Perry, the perceived front-runner in the Republican presidential contest, endured an
onslaught from seven rivals during a fractious two-hour debate
in Tampa, Fla. In Logan, Utah,
about a dozen bystanders rescued motorcyclist Brandon
Wright, who’d become pinned
under a burning car after a collision. A leaking gasoline pipeline
in Kenya’s capital exploded,
turning part of a Nairobi slum
into an inferno, killing 119 people, according to the Kenya Red
Cross. Novak Djokovic beat
defending champion Rafael
Nadal 6-2, 6-4, 6-7 (3), 6-1 to
win his first U.S. Open championship. Kurt Ziebart, a certified
master auto mechanic in his
native Germany who invented
the Ziebart rust-proofing
process, died in Williamsburg,
Mich., at age 91.
TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS
Actor Dickie Moore (“Our
Gang”) is 87. Actor Freddie
Jones is 85. Country singer
George Jones is 81. Actor Ian
Holm is 81. Actress Linda Gray
is 72. Singer Maria Muldaur is
70. Actor Joe Pantoliano is 61.
Singer-musician Gerry Beckley
(America) is 60. Rock musician
Neil Peart (Rush) is 60. Actor
Peter Scolari is 57. Kansas Gov.
Sam Brownback is 56. Actress
Rachel Ward is 55. Actress Amy
Yasbeck is 50. Rock musician
Norwood Fisher (Fishbone) is
47. Actor Darren E. Burrows is
46. Rock singer-musician Ben
Folds (Ben Folds Five) is 46.
Actor-comedian Louis C.K. is
45. Rock musician Larry
LaLonde (Primus) is 44. Actor
Josh Hopkins is 42. Actor Paul
Walker is 39. Country singer
Jennifer Nettles (Sugarland) is
38. Actor Ben McKenzie is 34.
Singer Ruben Studdard is 34.
Basketball player Yao Ming is
32. Singer-actress Jennifer
Hudson is 31. Actress Emmy
Rossum is 26.
QUOTE OF THE DAY
“Conscience without judgment is superstition.”
— Benjamin Whichcote,
English theologian and
philosopher (1609-1683)
FACT OF THE DAY
Dr. Mae Jemison, the science
mission specialist on the
Endeavour in 1992, was the
first African-American woman
in space.
NUMBER OF THE DAY
45 — minutes it took track
legend Jesse Owens to break
three world records, and tie a
fourth, at a college track meet
in 1935.
Sources: The Associated Press,
Newspaper Enterprise Assn. and
World Almanac Education Group
Tribland
Matthew J. Hilburn of 424 N.
Minnesota Ave. reported
Sunday that his digital media
player was taken at his residence.
Concealed carry class Sunday, September 30. Call Clark
at 402-984-5305. -Adv.
Timothy R. Maas of Potter
reported Sunday that his vehicle window was damaged at
600 N. Sixth Ave.
Nurse needed for busy medical office. Must have outstanding communication skills, be
computer literate, work well
with colleagues. Send resume
to Box A, Hastings Tribune,
P.O. Box 788, Hastings 68902.
-Adv.
It was reported Sunday that a
vehicle owned by Brandi
Boden of 322 S. Boston Ave.
was egged at her residence.
Deland R. Boutin of 830 S.
Hastings Ave. reported Sunday
that his bag with checkbook,
checks and cash were taken
from his vehicle at his residence.
DAV, Thursday, pizza night.
302 South Elm. All welcome. Adv.
Public notices
See today’s notices on Page B6
u Notice of trustee's sale, Leduc's
Addition
u Notice of meeting, Hastings
Board of Education
u Notice of organization,
Producers Grain Storage 3
u Notice of organization, BB & P
Hospitality
u Notice of special meeting,
Educational Service Unit #9
It was reported Monday that
a yellow blinking light owned
by Hastings Utilities was shot
out at 12th Street and Adams
Central Avenue.
80th birthday open house
for Rev. Elton Temme Sunday.
Details Saturday’s Social page. Adv.
Vehicles reportedly driven by
James D. Richter of Kearney
and Cynthia L. Beck of Juniata
collided Thursday at Marian
Road near Second Street.
Eagles bingo Thursday, 7:00;
pig and bonanza. -Adv.
Leslee L. Wischmeier of 405
N. Sunset Drive reported
Monday that two bicycles were
taken at her residence.
For your convenience, the
Hastings Tribune has a driveup payment box in our north
parking lot. This may be used
for subscription and advertising payments. -Adv.
Area funerals
Thursday
uDorothy Kent, 87, of Omaha, 11
a.m. at First St. Paul’s Lutheran
Church in Hastings.
Friday
u Alice Deisley, 91, of Franklin, 10
a.m. at Hutchins Funeral Home in
Franklin.
u Blanch Erickson, 88, 11 a.m. at
St. James Lutheran Church in
Edgar.
u Irene Frerichs, 89, of Hildreth, 2
p.m. at Trinity Lutheran Church in
Hildreth.
u Rotha Keuten, 84, of Trumbull,
10:30 a.m. at Grace United
Methodist Church in Hastings.
HASTINGS TRIBUNE
Wednesday, Sept. 12, 2012
A3
Caroline: 10-year-old
loved dance, fashion
MOHAMMED ABU ZAID/AP
Protesters destroy an American flag pulled down from the U.S. embassy in Cairo, Egypt,
Tuesday. Egyptian protesters, largely ultra conservative Islamists, climbed the walls of the
U.S. embassy in Cairo, went into the courtyard and brought down the flag, replacing it with a
black flag with Islamic inscription, in protest of a film deemed offensive of Islam.
Attack: U.S. ambassador killed
Continued from page A1
In a sign of the chaos of during
the attack, Stevens was brought
alone by Libyans to the
Benghazi Medical Center with
no other Americans, and no
one at the facility knew who
he was, the doctor, Ziad Abu
Zeid, told The Associated Press.
Stevens was practically dead
when he arrived close to 1 a.m.
on Wednesday, but “we tried to
revive him for an hour and a
half but with no success,” Abu
Zeid said. The ambassador had
bleeding in his stomach
because of the asphyxiation
but no other injuries, he said.
President Barack Obama
ordered increased security to
protect American diplomatic
personnel around world. Hours
before the Benghazi attack,
Egyptians angry over the film
protested at the U.S. Embassy
in Cairo, climbing its walls and
tearing down an American flag,
which they replaced briefly
with a black, Islamist flag.
“I strongly condemn the outrageous attack on our diplomatic facility in Benghazi,”
Obama said, adding the four
Americans “exemplified
America’s commitment to freedom, justice, and partnership
with nations and people
around the globe.”
Libya’s interim president,
Mohammed el-Megarif, apologized to the United States for
the attack, which he described
as “cowardly.” Speaking to
reporters, he offered his condolences on the death of the four
Americans and vowed to bring
the culprits to justice and
maintain his country’s close
relations with the United
States.
The three Americans killed
with Stevens were security
guards, he said.
“We extend our apology to
America, the American people
and the whole world,” elMegarif said.
Rail: Tanker has dangerous flaw
Continued from page A1
The flaws were noted as far
back as a 1991 safety study.
An Associated Press analysis
of 20 years’ worth of federal
rail accident data found that
ethanol tankers have been
breached in at least 40 serious
accidents since 2000. In the
previous decade, there were
just two breaches.
The number of severe crashes
is small considering the total
mileage covered by the many
tankers in service. But the accident reports show at least two
people have been killed by
balls of flame, with dozens
more hurt. And the risk of
greater losses looms large.
The rail and chemical industries and tanker manufacturers
have acknowledged the design
flaws and voluntarily committed to safety changes for cars
built after October 2011 to
transport ethanol and crude
oil. The improvements include
thicker tank shells and shields
on the ends of tanks to prevent
punctures.
But under their proposal to
regulators, the 30,000 to
45,000 existing ethanol tankers
would remain unchanged,
including many cars that have
only recently begun their
decades-long service lives.
The National Transportation
Safety Board asked in March for
the higher standards to be
applied to all tankers, meaning
existing cars would have to be
retrofitted or phased out.
The industry’s proposal
“ignores the safety risks posed
by the current fleet,” the NTSB
said, adding that those cars
“can almost always be expected
to breach in derailments that
involve pileups or multiple car-
Ethanol tankers’ safety is questioned
For decades, the DOT-111 tanker has hauled hazardous
liquids across the U.S. despite flaws that almost guarantee it
will tear open in an accident. Though incidents have been
rare, The Associated Press notes a spike in accidents as
more tankers are put into service to accommodate soaring
ethanol demands.
Ends suspectible
to tears from
coupler damage
Exposed fittings can
break on impact
Continued from page A1
So many people were there that about 10 rows
of folding chairs were added for the service
behind the pews and still dozens of people stood
in back.
“Miss Caroline,” as she was known in school,
had a fondness for zebra print anything and
everything. Her first 4-H project was a zebra
print skirt she entered at the Webster County
Fair when she was 8.
“Her job was to accessorize it, and accessorize
it she did,” Bauer remembered.
The judges told Caroline the skirt was overly
accessorized, to which she disagreed, of course,
Bauer said.
To memorialize Caroline, her fellow Blue Hill
students wore zebra-print clothing to school last
week following the Wednesday collision.
The Rev. Steve Marsh, pastor of the Blue Hill
United Methodist Church, who conducted the
service, said Caroline’s family wanted the service
to be a celebration of her life.
So, rather than black, he wore a gray suit and
brightly colored shirt and tie.
“She would say, ‘I hope you’re styling for my
service, Rev. Marsh,’ ” he said.
Caroline relished public speaking opportunities and had in fact been scheduled to give a
Bible reading during the church’s service last
Sunday.
Of the four members of her family, Caroline
was the most boisterous, especially at home,
Marsh said. Mark and Cheryl told him they worried the family’s home would now be too quiet
and they along with Allie would greatly miss
that joyful, playful presence.
Addressing Allie, Marsh told her the entire
community is glad she wasn’t injured any worse.
He also told her God will give her the courage
and playfulness to be a little louder, a little more
outgoing. If her father tells her to quiet down
when she is being a little too noisy, that is a sign
of Caroline’s spiritual presence still with her.
Caroline excelled in school. Marsh heard she
was about three grades ahead in math and close
to that level in English.
“She always followed the rules at school, if not
always at home,” he said.
She was elected to the Blue Hill Elementary
School’s Character Council last year as a fourthgrader. As part of the council, Caroline helped
with service projects and focused on eradicating
Paris: Artist still painting at 84
Continued from page A1
The art showing is open to
the public and pieces of art are
available for purchase.
While in Paris, Brookhart
lived in a scenic neighborhood
across from what is now the
famous Stock Exchange, located near the
Eiffel Tower
and the Arc de
Triomphe.
The public is
The young
woman found invited to an art
show displaying
love with
Kensington resiHastings residents’ work all
dent Darrell
day Thursday in
Brookhart,
the ballroom of
who was staThe Kensington,
tioned in Paris 233 N. Hastings
Ave. The event
toward the
end of the war. is part of
National
The couple Assisted Living
met at a
Week.
dance.
“I saw my husband standing
there, smiling, and he asked
me to dance,” Brookhart
Inside
Steel shell vulnerable to puncture
AP Photo/Nati Harnik
U.S. fuel ethanol production
Accidents involving a breach in
tankers containing ethyl alcohol
15 billion gallons
25 incidents
12
20
9
15
6
10
3
5
0
’90
’95
’00
’05
’10
’90
’95
’00
’05
SOURCES: Renewable Fuels Association; Dept. of Transportation
to-car impacts.”
The federal Pipeline and
Hazardous Materials Safety
Administration, part of the U.S.
Department of Transportation,
is considering both arguments,
but the regulatory process is
slow and could take several
years, experts said.
Industry representatives say a
Old Fashioned Republican Picnic
Sunday, September 16 • 1:00-3:30 p.m.
Lincoln Park, Hastings, NE
United States Senate
Candidate Deb Fischer
and Speeches from other
Candidates for Office
recalled.
After the war ended and several letters were exchanged
between the two, Darrell convinced the Parisian painter to
marry him in Hastings.
“I found the people here to
be very nice and friendly,”
Edith said.
The flowers on the walls in
her Kensington room are painted from memory. Other paintings, like that of a B-17 Flying
Fortress, are painted from models or pictures.
She painted the B-17 because
it helped end the war by
enabling the Allies to heavily
bomb Germany.
“It destroyed the enemy,”
she said.
Brookhart still remembers
the day when the streets of
Paris filled to celebrate the end
of the war.
“People were celebrating,”
Brookhart said. “Oh, you better
believe it!”
While she began painting at
the age of 16 and attended art
school in Paris, her move
across the Atlantic didn’t stop
her from pursuing her art.
It has always been a big part
of her life. She has kept her
skills sharp over the years, even
selling some paintings.
She went back to Paris once
in the 1970s and said she misses her native city because it is
so beautiful. She has remained
active in art clubs in Hastings
and Grand Island.
Some of her impressionisticesque paintings will be available for purchase at Thursday’s
art show.
Everything from paintings to
painted china and quilts will
be shown in the ballroom at
The Kensington throughout
the day Thursday.
“If they’re artistic, we’re
going to show them off,” said
Wendy Buhr, The Kensington’s
resident services coordinator.
’Teacher of the year’ denies sex charge
The Associated Press
0
bullying at the school.
Caroline liked to make good impressions,
Marsh said, from her hair to her outfits to her perfumes. She loved to shop, and she loved to plan.
She planned the family trip to New York City
in early August, during which she talked her
father into buying her a reddish-orange top in a
Juicy Couture store.
“Caroline always tried to be on the cutting edge
of the latest trends and fashions,” Marsh said.
Appearing on television was a goal for her. In
fact, she had a sign planned out for Times
Square where the family could hopefully appear
during a broadcast of “Good Morning America,”
but that didn’t work in the family’s schedule.
Besides fashion, Caroline liked dancing.
Her aunt said she liked the “Just Dance” Wii
video game.
Dance permeated her funeral service. Before
the service began, amid family photos of
Caroline playing with friends and helping in the
kitchen, was a video from one of Caroline’s
dance recitals of a performance called “Sweet
Dream.”
Among the songs the hundreds of mourners
who filled the sanctuary sang or heard Tuesday
were “Lord of the Dance” and “I Hope You Dance.”
On the front page of one of the two funeral
programs, below a photo of Caroline, was a
quote: “Dance like no one is watching; sing like
no one is listening; live each day as if it were
your last.”
She had just recently signed up for her second
year of dance classes at T’Dance School of
Performing Arts in Hastings, where she took a
hip hop class last year.
In a Monday afternoon interview with the
Tribune, T’Dance owner Teresa Miller said
Caroline was always happy, attentive and eager
to learn more in her hip hop class with instructor Cassie McLeod. Miller talked with Caroline
about the family’s trip to New York City recently
when she signed up for classes this fall.
Allie had signed up for classes for the first time
this fall, also.
The girls were to begin their classes on the day
of the crash.
“Although she was a quiet girl, she had a lot of
spunk to her and could be sassy in her dancing,”
Miller said. “When they do that, you just know
they love what they’re doing. You could tell by
the look on her face that she loved to dance.”
’10
AP
retrofit isn’t feasible because of
engineering challenges and
costs. They insist the threat of
serious accidents is overstated.
NEWARK, N.J. — An attorney for a county teacher of the
year says she will plead not
guilty to charges she had a sexual relationship with a 15-yearold honors student.
Erica DePalo faces aggravated
sexual assault, sexual assault
and child endangerment
charges.
She faced a court hearing
Wednesday in Newark. Before
the hearing, her lawyer said she
maintains her innocence.
Prosecutors say the 33-yearold Montclair resident had a
relationship with a boy in her
honors English class. They say
the affair started in June and
ended recently.
DePalo has been indefinitely
suspended from her job teaching English at West Orange
High School. She was the 2011
teacher of the year in Essex
County.
Join us for an Open House
Thursday, September 13th
4-7 p.m.
at the Villa Assisted Living, 931 East F St. at
Good Samaritan Society - Hastings Village
Refreshments & Entertainment by the
Richards Family at 7:00
(standing on the soap box •
bring lawn chairs or blankets)
Free Food - Free Drink - Free Entertainment
Games for the Kids
Good Old Fashioned Fun!!
Highway 6 and East D Street
All faiths or beliefs are welcome, age 55 and older
Opinion
A4
Nebraska
tourism
takes a hit
with fires
HASTINGS TRIBUNE
Wednesday, Sept. 12, 2012
First Amendment
“
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right
of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress
of grievances.
”
Scottsbluff Star Herald
Travelers who visit the northern Panhandle to
experience the beauty of the Pine Ridge will find
abundant evidence of three recent fires and temporary limitations on where they can go.
Areas of the Nebraska National Forests and
Grasslands that were scorched by wildfire over the
past week have been closed by the U.S. Forest
Service. Chadron State Park has reopened, but also
was scorched by backfires set deliberately to protect its $7.5 million in buildings and recreational
facilities. The Hudson-Meng Bison Kill Research
and Visitor Center also has reopened.
The forest closures, which will allow assessment
of damages and protect the public’s natural
resources, will be lifted in stages. For more information, contact the Pine Ridge Ranger District of
the Nebraska National Forests and Grasslands at
308-432-0300.
Dave Kinnamon, Chadron State Park superintendent, said the backfire strategy spared
Nebraska’s oldest state park. Many of the trees
were damaged, and air quality could be a problem
if winds kick up ash. Workers are cleaning the cabins, which should be ready for rent next week.
Kirk Nelson, west regional parks manager for
Nebraska Game and Parks Commission, told the
Omaha World-Herald that the wildfire itself
reached the park’s western edge, “roaring alongside” but not damaging the swimming pool, stables and a shelter.
“It was like the fire drew a line,” Nelson said.
“The smoke and flames were so close, it just scared
the bejesus out of everybody. We feel very fortunate. From what we can gather, we couldn’t have
stopped the wildfire from ruining the park.”
The wildfire was much hotter and more erratic
than the controlled burn, he said, and would have
caused far more damage. The backfire effort helped
to remove fuels in the path of the West Ash Creek
fire, which was blazing a two-mile-wide path
toward Chadron, about nine miles north of the
park.
Like ranches and forests in the area, the park
faces a long recovery period. The entire park —
particularly the grass and other ground vegetation
— was blackened by the controlled burn. Trees,
already stressed by drought, suffered further stress
from the fire. Rain and snow will be crucial to
stemming the loss of the park’s majestic ponderosa
pines, Nelson said.
The Nebraska Emergency Management Agency
has warned that hazards remain in the area from
downed power lines and fire-weakened trees.
Rainfall would be welcome, and would decrease
the risk of more wildfires caused by dry lightning.
But the next round of heavy rains will bring new
concerns about unchecked runoff. The lack of vegetation to soak up moisture means roads, bridges
and structures within the floodplain could be
damaged.
In addition to property loss and destruction of
valuable hay and pastureland, the fires dealt a
blow to the Pine Ridge tourism industry — another costly effect of the nation’s extended drought,
and the world’s changing climate.
When does ‘happily ever after’ really begin?
H
ave you ever looked at your life
and thought, “This is not how I
imagined it would be”?
I found myself thinking that this
weekend. Actually, I often find
myself thinking that, but this time it was a
revelation.
Saturday morning, I bent over a mat in my
sister-in-law’s living room and tried, I swear,
not to snicker watching my husband and my
brother-in-law force their bodies into a pose
aptly called “downward dog.”
Picture the Blues Brothers, minus overcoats,
doing yoga.
For the record, I wasn’t so good at it myself.
I’ve done a little yoga in the past, but not in
this millennium. Limbs once limber as
saplings threatened to snap like rubber bands.
Lynne, God bless her. My sister-in-law is the
best person in the world. Seriously. You might
know some good people (I hope you do), but
they don’t have a prayer of being half as good
as Lynne, especially when it comes to good
intentions.
I do wonder on occasion exactly what she
was thinking. But I never doubt that her heart
is in the right place — an odd place, maybe,
but definitely good.
The yoga class was her idea, a surprise for
when my husband and I stayed at her house
over the weekend. She meant to tell us, but
forgot until the yoga instructor rang the doorbell.
That’s OK. I forget things,
too. Like: Why exactly were
we there? Wait, I remember.
Birthdays.
A day earlier, on Friday,
my husband and I met my
daughter and her husband
and their 1-year-old, Henry,
at the San Francisco Zoo to
Sharon
celebrate Henry’s birthday.
Randall
We saw lions and tigers and
gorillas and an ark load of
other wonders. We even stared down the
throat of a hippopotamus that opened its
mouth like an airplane hangar to catch buckets of vegetables.
Henry’s favorite thing? A rubber snake from
the gift shop. My favorite thing? Henry, of
course. And seeing his family — those of us
who could be there — take such delight in him.
On Saturday, after yoga with the Blues
Brothers, my husband and I drove to Sonoma
to attend a birthday party for Charlotte, his
granddaughter, who is one day older than
Henry.
Charlotte wore a tutu. There were cupcakes
and presents and a room knee deep with balloons. Her mom made the cupcakes. Her dad
blew up the balloons.
Charlotte’s favorite thing? A tent with a
tunnel. My favorite thing? Charlotte, of
course. And seeing her family — those of us
who could be there — take such delight in
her.
Sunday, we flew home to Las Vegas, tired,
but happy, and unbelievably sore (a little yoga
goes a long way).
Driving out of the airport, I started thinking
about my life, how different it is from what I
once thought it would be.
In my 20s, I got married, had three babies,
bought a house near the ocean and thought:
“This is it — my ‘happily ever after.’ “
I didn’t plan to be a widow. To start my life
over. To open my arms and my eyes, my
heart, mind and soul to a new way of thinking and loving and being.
But sometimes life has a different plan from
the plans we make for ourselves.
The older I get, the less I know, but of this
much I am sure: We are here to love while we
can; let go when we must; and be willing to
love again.
It might not be the life we planned. But it
could be the life we were meant to live.
Who knows? Maybe, if we’re lucky, we’ll
get little boys who like snakes and little girls
who wear tutus and the world’s best person
for a sister-in-law.
I think happiness is where you find it.
Don’t look for it in the past. It isn’t there.
Don’t wait for it in the future. It won’t come.
It can only be found in this moment, what
you make of it. “Happily ever after” starts
now.
Sharon Randall is an award-winning columnist.
Her email is [email protected].
Campaign 2012 is rare referendum on challenger
C
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ampaign 2012 has become a rare
contest — a referendum on the
challenger. Our smart screens are
beaming loads of dumb stuff at us
these days, as pols, pollsters and
pundits micro-think the meaning of those
essentially meaningless initial post-convention public opinion surveys.
Never mind that we all know the bounces
and blips in those initial numbers usually last
about as long as an out-of-shape pundit can
pedal a news cycle.
Missed in all of this is the real significance
of this post-convention period: 2012 has morphed into a most unconventional election. It
will require a rethinking of the conventional
wisdom that says U.S. presidential elections
are mainly a referendum on the incumbent’s
performance as a leader.
The 2012 presidential race has become a
flip-side presidential campaign — a referendum not so much on the incumbent but on
the challenger.
Voters from the political left, center and
right have basically concluded that President
Barack Obama has not been as bold and
strong a leader as they expected him to be —
especially when it came to leading the nation
to recover from the catastrophic Great
Recession that began in the last year of
George W. Bush’s presidency.
Indeed, even Obama himself has said in
recent interviews that he came into office not
realizing how much there was to the job —
that he thought it was mainly about just getting the policies right. Obama has said he fell
short by failing to realize he needed to educate Americans as to what needed to be done
and why.
So it is that independent voters have been
trying to take the measure of
former Massachusetts Gov.
Mitt Romney. But in the
Republican primaries and
ever since, Romney too
often presented himself as a
candidate who will say
whatever is needed — on
domestic, global and social
Martin
policies — to appeal to any
constituency du jour. So far,
Schram
he has failed to demonstrate
he can be bold enough and
strong enough to be a better president than
Obama.
That’s where the Democratic and
Republican candidates were going into their
conventions. And that is where they still are
today. Romney and Obama did well at their
conventions, but failed to do all they needed
to do and could have done to help themselves.
Romney’s convention speech seemed to
have been teed up by keynoter Chris Christie,
as the New Jersey governor extolled at length
that Republicans would be the party that tells
voters the tough truths. But then Romney
told no tough truths at all. No patriotic calls
for us to share the burden to make America
economically strong again. Nor did Romney
even mention the war in Afghanistan or the
sacrifices of our troops — omissions that
would have been unthinkable for a generation of Republicans, even in America’s most
war-weary times.
Obama’s convention speech similarly
seemed to have been teed up by former
President Bill Clinton’s magnificent defense of
what Obama accomplished in halting and
reversing the massive monthly job losses he
inherited — resulting in 30 consecutive
months of private-sector job gains. Also, companies have rebounded strongly under
Obama, having earned huge profits.
Yet companies are banking their profits, not
investing them back into the economy by
purchasing capital goods or hiring more
employees. Industry executives lack confidence the government will make tough choices to halt the spiraling national debt.
Obama could have seized the moment by
unveiling a bold new path forward, in the tradition of Franklin D. Roosevelt’s “New Deal”
and John F. Kennedy’s “New Frontier.”
Perhaps a call for a “New Democracy” — with
the president urging Americans to lead their
leaders by demanding that Congress finally
make the tough compromises to enact real
reforms. Instead, Obama was typically inspirational but not bold.
Because this election has become a referendum on challenger Romney — more specifically, a referendum on a potential for leadership Romney hasn’t yet demonstrated —
Obama may narrowly win re-election.
But it is instructive to recall the events of
1980, a time of economic strife when many
disillusioned Americans were also very unsure
about the challenger, former California Gov.
Ronald Reagan. At their convention, even
Reagan’s top strategists were so concerned
Americans lacked confidence in their nominee that they brokered a bizarre power-sharing deal to convince former President Gerald
Ford to run as Reagan’s vice president. It
almost happened, then fell apart. But then
Reagan performed well enough in the debates
— and defeated President Jimmy Carter in a
landslide.
Martin Schram writes political analysis for
Scripps Howard News Service.
Hastings/Region
HASTINGS TRIBUNE
Wednesday, Sept. 12, 2012
Tribland five-day forecast
Art by Hope Kohmetscher, 11, Hawthorne Elementary
CLOUDY TODAY
High: 68
Low: 49
Wind: North 25
Scattered storms likely
overnight.
PARTLY CLOUDY
THURSDAY
High: 73
Low: 42
Wind: North 5-10
SUNNY FRIDAY
High: 73
Low: 48
SUNNY SATURDAY
High: 76
Low: 53
A5
Driver in crash didn’t hear warnings
CB RADIO IN SEMI
NOT WORKING
The Associated Press
SIDNEY — A truck driver
charged with manslaughter in a
chain-reaction accident that killed
five people in western Nebraska
told investigators he never heard
the warnings about stopped traffic
because his CB radio wasn’t on,
court documents say.
Witnesses told investigators
Josef Slezak’s semitrailer didn’t
appear to slow down before it collided with a Ford Mustang that
had stopped because of an earlier
wreck on Interstate 80 about 40
miles from the Wyoming border.
Both accidents happened between
4 a.m. and 5 a.m. Sunday. One
person died in the first accident,
and four people died in the second accident.
The first crash caused traffic to
back up on the interstate, and
other truck drivers told investigators there was constant chatter
about the accident on the citizens band radio as drivers
warned each other to slow down.
According to court documents,
Slezak told investigators that he
never listens to the CB and that
he didn’t see anything before
hearing a crash.
Investigators needed an inter-
preter to interview Slezak in detail
because he said he was from “the
former Czechoslovakia Republic,”
according to court documents.
Slezak declined to answer many
questions after an interpreter was
found.
Slezak, 36, of River Grove, Ill.,
was charged Monday with four
counts of manslaughter and four
counts of motor vehicle homicide.
He remained jailed Tuesday in lieu
of $1 million bond.
Slezak’s attorney, who has asked
a judge to consider lowering the
bond, did not immediately
respond to a message Tuesday.
Authorities closed I-80 for more
than 14 hours after the crashes.
More
interlock
devices
used in
DUI cases
SUNNY SUNDAY
High: 79
Low: 56
Becoming partly cloudy.
Today’s weather records
High: 103 in 1931
Low: 28 in 1902
Local weather
u From 7 a.m. Sept. 11
to 7 a.m. Sept. 12
The Associated Press
High Tuesday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .94
High in 2011 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .83
Overnight low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .62
Overnight low in 2011 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .52
Precipitation last 24 hours . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .00
September precipitation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . trace
Sept. 2011 precipitation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .47
Year-to-date precipitation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16.07
Jan. to August ’11 precipitation . . . . . . . . . . . . .24.14
Local
MAN DENIES SEX ASSAULT
A 23-year-old Hastings man Monday denied
an accusation of sexually assaulting a 13-yearold girl on July 30.
Cory Allsman of 608 S. Colorado Ave. pleaded
not guilty in Adams County
District Court to one charge of
first-degree sexual assault of a
child, a Class 2 felony punishable by up to 50 years in prison.
Adams County District
Judge Terri Harder scheduled a
pre-trial hearing in the case
for Oct. 22 at 9:30 a.m.
During the preliminary
Allsman
hearing on Aug. 20, Adams
County Sheriff’s deputy Mike
Poplau testified that the alleged victim said she
had sex with Allsman in the back of a van at
the 3000 block of Southern Hills Drive.
Poplau testified he asked Allsman about the
sexual assault charge and Allsman admitted to
having sex with the girl, but said he didn’t
know her age at the time.
In Nebraska, anyone under the age of 16
cannot legally consent to sex.
DRUG CHARGE DENIED
A 19-year-old Hastings man Monday claimed
to be innocent of selling cocaine on two occasions in January.
Aaron M. Sullivan of 1139 W. Sixth St. pleaded not guilty to two counts of distributing
cocaine in Adams County
District Court.
Adams County District
Judge Terri Harder scheduled a
pre-trial hearing in the case
for Oct. 22 at 9:30 a.m.
According to court records,
Sullivan sold cocaine to a confidential informant on Jan. 11
and Jan. 13. Both transactions
were monitored by law
Sullivan
enforcement.
Distribution of a controlled substance
(cocaine) is a Class 2 felony punishable by up
to 50 years in prison.
State
WOMAN FOUND INCOMPETENT
SIDNEY — A 41-year-old woman charged
with assaulting a Sidney police officer in western Nebraska has been found incompetent to
stand trial.
A Cheyenne County judge on Tuesday
adopted the conclusion of a state psychologist
that Tammy Stansbury is incompetent to stand
trial. However, the judge noted that Stansbury
could become competent to stand trial soon. A
review hearing is scheduled for Dec. 11.
Stansbury was arrested in May after two
Sidney officers were dispatched to the U.S.
Recycling plant to deal with a woman who had
been asked to leave.
The officers say that during their attempts to
talk to and then arrest Stansbury, she kicked
one officer in the midsection, spit on him and
bit him and threatened his family.
SHOOTING VICTIM FOUND
OMAHA — Police say Omaha’s latest shooting victim was found by officers in a church
parking lot.
Officers were called to the north Omaha area
around 3:15 a.m. Wednesday on a report of
shots being fired.
There, police found a 17-year-old victim with
several gunshot wounds lying in a church parking lot. The teen, whose name has not been
released, was taken to the Nebraska Medical
Center in critical condition.
The Associated Press
In the first crash, 27-year-old
Keith Johnson, of Big Lake, Minn.,
died after his semi hit a stalled
truck.
Prosecutors say the force of
Slezak’s truck hitting the stopped
Mustang pushed it into a Toyota
Corolla. The Toyota was shoved
under a semi that was ahead of it.
The Ford’s driver and an adult
and two juveniles in the Corolla
all died. Authorities haven’t identified those victims, but court documents say both those cars were
owned by the same couple.
An accident reconstructionist
who examined the scene concluded Slezak failed to slow down and
exercise caution on the road.
AMY ROH/Tribune
Julia Kaup dances with the Hastings College Crimson Spirit dance team during the Hastings College
Melody Round-Up Parade Oct. 9, 2010, in downtown Hastings.
Parade strikes chord with community
MELODY ROUND-UP
COINCIDES WITH 130TH
ANNIVERSARY OF HC
JOHN HUTHMACHER
[email protected]
H
undreds of Hastings
College alumni will
join thousands of
spectators expected to
line the streets of
Hastings for the 61st Annual
Melody Round-Up Parade at 10
a.m. Saturday in Hastings.
Hastings High School and
Hastings St. Cecilia are among the
12 bands slated to participate in the
musical parade, which begins at
the corner of Fourth Street and
Colorado Avenue, proceeds west to
Hastings Avenue, turns onto Second
Street, and concludes at the intersection of Second and Colorado.
Other participating Tribland
high school bands are Blue Hill,
Deshler, Doniphan-Trumbull, Red
Cloud and Sandy Creek. Hastings
College will be performing as well.
This year’s parade was pushed
up a few weeks to coincide with
Thursday’s celebration of HC’s
130th anniversary and the inauguration of its 15th president,
Dennis Trotter, which will take
place Friday.
An estimated 3,500 people
turned out for last year’s parade,
with at least as many expected this
time around.
“I think this has become something the community always looks
forward to,” said Robin Koozer,
chair of HC’s music department.
“It’s a way for the Hastings College
community to engage the community and show we’re good citizens
and members of the community
as well.”
Sharing the spotlight in this
year’s parade are the HC
Homecoming king, queen and
runners-up, along with numerous
antique vehicles, local Cub Scout
and Girl Scout troops, and local
dignitaries. Following the parade,
spectators can enjoy free root beer
floats served at the “Floats after
the Floats” booth while supplies
last in front of the Dutton-Lainson
Plaza at the corner of Second
Street and St. Joseph Avenue.
Winners of the parade’s
Outstanding Band (by division,
based on school enrollment),
Outstanding Auxiliary, and
Outstanding Drum Major will be
awarded at 11:30 a.m. by representatives from HC’s Department of
Music in the plaza.
Originally a city/college cooperative event, Melody Round-Up is
still supported by the city through
its Business Improvement District
and corporate sponsors. Koozer
said the parade is one of the more
anticipated events on HC’s calendar each year.
“It is one of the events I would
say is rich in tradition because it is
associated with Homecoming,” he
said. “All of our alums have memories from the days when they
were involved with the parade.”
LINCOLN — Nebraska is
on pace for a 20 percent
increase in the number of
ignition interlock devices
issued in DUI cases, thanks to
a new state law that requires
the sensors for most people
convicted of drunken driving.
The law also has reduced
the number of so-called
administrative license revocation hearings by 90 percent.
Supporters of the law say
those hearings dragged out
cases for a year or more.
“It is just really incredible,”
said Beverly Neth, head of the
Nebraska Department of
Motor Vehicles.
The new law was spearheaded by legislative Speaker Mike
Flood, of Norfolk. It forces
most people convicted of firstand second-offense DUIs to
have interlock devices
installed. Drivers must exhale
into the devices before the
vehicles can be started. If a preset level of alcohol is detected,
the vehicle will not start.
The cost varies, but one
Lincoln company says it
charges $49 to install a
device, $69.95 a month to use
— the first month is free —
and $75 to uninstall.
“I am cautiously optimistic
that we can see an even
greater percentage of ignition
interlock usage,” Neth said.
“We are closely monitoring
this program to ensure compliance and to identify areas
that might be improved to
increase usage.”
Please see INTERLOCK/page A6
Edgar community center project moving forward
TONY HERRMAN
[email protected]
EDGAR — Two weeks after splitting with the local American
Legion post on a proposed community center project, city officials like
the proposed smaller building.
Members of the Edgar City
Council discussed the community
center during their regular meeting
Tuesday. Mayor Brad Brennfoerder
said this morning the council’s discussion Tuesday went “really
good,” and the project design is
just a couple small details away
from completion.
Those details include increasing
the size of the kitchen and adding
a smaller meeting room from what
architect Bruce Bailey of Lincoln
architecture firm Design Associates
presented Tuesday.
A bond issue to pay for a community center passed during the
May 15 primary election, 115-49 —
70.1 to 29.9 percent.
Edgar voters rejected a similar
proposal in November 2010 by a
margin of 91-85, or 51.7 percent to
48.3 percent, even though the debt
payments would be covered not by
tax dollars, but by interest from the
Mike Sugden endowment bequest.
Sugden left $1 million to the city
upon his death more than two
decades ago. The money was
invested early on, and the interest
it generates has been used to
finance various community
improvements in the intervening
years.
Unlike the 2010 project, which
was more of a recreation center, the
building now will have a full
kitchen, instead of a partial
kitchen, and also would include
the Edgar city office.
Because of the increased facilities
in the proposed project, the cost
cap has increased, as well, from
$400,000 in 2010 to $700,000 now.
The project still will include
amenities proposed with the 2010
project: Basketball court with
bleacher seating for 216 people,
plus a concessions area, rest rooms
and storage.
The estimate for the project proposed Tuesday, Brennfoerder said,
is around $600,000.
The Edgar American Legion had
been working with the city on the
project and pledged $80,000
toward construction costs. In late
August, members of the local post
decided it would be in the best
interest of both parties to each pursue their own new buildings.
At $600,000, the design proposed
Tuesday is close to the needed cost
estimate.
Even though the city has up to
$700,000 to complete the project,
Brennfoerder previously said the
building estimate must be less than
that amount to allow for work on
the property surrounding the community center.
The current design is around
10,000 square feet, Brennfoerder
Courtesy
This artist rendering shows Lincoln architecture firm Design
Associates’ proposed plans for the Edgar City Hall and Community
Center.
said, which is down from around
13,000 square feet when the
American Legion was involved.
The building will include a full
junior high court. Brennfoerder
said when bidding begins the city
will receive cost estimates for a
wooden floor as well as a concrete
floor for the basketball court.
A wooden floor would cost
$15,000-$20,000 more than a concrete floor.
The next step, he said, will be to
get the design changes finalized,
hopefully within the next month,
so council members can approve it
by their Oct. 9 meeting and begin
the bidding process.
He said the hope is still to break
ground on the project in 2012.
Brennfoerder is encouraged by
what he’s seen so far.
“It was a nice-looking building
last night that he proposed, a very
user-friendly building,” he said.
Todd Wilson, commander of
Edgar’s Sons of the American
Legion Squadron No. 248, said
Legion members had a subcommittee meeting Tuesday night to finalize their building design. The
organization will send that design
to manufacturers today for project
quotes, and members will reconvene in October to review those
quotes and select a manufacturer.
The current American Legion
building is more than 60 years old
and needs to be replaced, he said.
All of the members present
Tuesday were supportive of the
decision not to go in with the city,
he said.
Please see PROJECT/page A6
Region/State
A6
Local
‘Evening on the Prairie’ to serve spirits and live music
BPW TO MEET
The Hastings Board of
Public Works will continue
discussion on the electric
vehicle lease with Kerr
Chevrolet on Thursday.
At its Aug. 30 meeting, the
board approved the expense
of $8,320 to lease a Chevy
Volt for two years for
Hastings Utilities employees.
It was expressed at the city
council meeting on Tuesday
that leasing the vehicle was a
good compromise from buying the vehicle right away.
If the board decides to purchase the vehicle after two
years, it will cost an additional $34,716 dollars. Adding
charging stations in the community for people with electric cars also has been a point
of discussion.
The board meets 9 a.m. at
HU, 1228 N. Denver Ave. In
other business Thursday, the
board will:
HASTINGS TRIBUNE
Wednesday, Sept. 12, 2012
CRANE TRUST EVENT
WILL INCLUDE GALLERY
DISPLAY OF NEBRASKA
ARTISTS AND MUSIC
JOHN HUTHMACHER
[email protected]
JUNIATA — Gallery art,
spirits and live music frame
“An Evening on the Prairie,”
hosted by Crane Trust Nature
& Visitor Center from 7-10
p.m. Friday at 9325 S. Alda
Road, just off Exit 305 of
Interstate 80 near here.
Nebraska alcohol makers
Thunderhead Brewery and
Cedar Hills Winery will offer a
wide variety of beer and wine
samples for tastings, with wine
available for purchase by the
glass or bottle and beer in cans.
Acoustic pop artists the Evan
Scott Duo of Omaha will perform a concert under the stars
during the tasting, with art
from mostly Nebraska artists
on display in the Nature
Center gallery.
“It’s just pretty much a walk
around, relax and kind of do
your own thing event,” said
Jenny Reisdorph, newly hired
business development manager
at Crane Meadows. “Our mainly busy time of the year is during crane season, of course, so
we need to promote the center
at other times throughout the
year to get people to understand and acknowledge what
we do here.”
Artists with works on display
at Crane Meadows include:
Cynthia Duff of Grand
Junction, Colo.; and Nebraska
artists Tina Simeon of Ogallala;
J.I. McElroy, Gurley; Ryan
McGinnis, Kearney; Richard
Teller, Scottsbluff; and Karen
Krull Robart, Shelton.
Those attending the event
are encouraged to bring blankets and/or chairs for the concert and beverage samplings.
Picnics and snacks are also
encouraged. Proceeds from beer
and wine sales will benefit the
Crane Trust, a non-profit
UNMC officials
to brief Regents
on health care law
The Associated Press
u Hear an update on the North
Denver Station parking lot.
u Hear a presentation on the
June 2012 monthly report.
u Discuss the Hastings Utilities
Grievance Policy and a possible
Whistleblower Policy.
u Have an annual performance
review of the manager of
Hastings Utilities.
Region
FCH AUCTION
During their regular meeting Tuesday, members of the
Fillmore County Board of
Supervisors scheduled the
auction of the former
Fillmore County Hospital for
1 p.m. Oct. 17.
The old hospital building at
1325 H St., constructed in
1961, is around 38,000 square
feet. It was replaced by a
47,000-square-foot new hospital at 1900 F St., which
opened March 1.
The auction date previously
had been scheduled for today
and then for Sept. 26. County
Clerk Amy Nelson said
Monday the auction needed
to be rescheduled to allow for
sufficient time to advertise it.
TONY GRAY/Fremont Tribune
Dondi Eckert positions a Little Free Library in front of Pinnacle Bank in downtown Fremont Sept. 4.
Fremont joins Little Free Library effort
Project:
Building
moving
forward
Continued from page A5
“So they were supportive of
that decision and hopeful the
city would be successful in
their endeavor and we’re just
looking forward to doing our
own thing and getting a good
building,” he said.
Wilson said it was too early
to establish a date to break
ground, but the hope is to
complete the project by June
2, 2013.
The new building will use
the same foundation as the
existing building on Fourth
Street on the block between C
and D Streets.
“There will be some slight
changes we’ll have to do with
the foundation that’s there,
but nothing dramatic,” he
said.
organization dedicated to the
protection and maintenance of
critical habitat for whooping
cranes, sandhill cranes and
other migratory birds along the
Platte River through science,
habitat management, community outreach and education.
The Trust recently assumed
management of the Nature
Center, which provides an
important gateway to this
extraordinary ecosystem.
For information, call 308382-1820.
KRISTIN BAUER
Fremont Tribune
FREMONT — They look like
something out of Sesame Street
or Mister Roger’s Neighborhood,
but these tiny buildings aren’t
for Muppets or puppets, they’re
for people.
It’s a movement that’s sweeping the world, making even the
biggest, burliest men stop and
say, “Awww . how cute!” They’re
called Little Free Libraries, and
Fremont is soon to have one of
its own.
“It’s a pay it forward program
so you can take a book and read
it. If you like it, you can keep it
and bring back a different book,”
Julie Eckert, vice president of
Fremont Altrusa said.
Fremont Altrusa is a local nonprofit organization with a mission to support and encourage
women, youth and children,
promote literacy and embrace
community service.
The organization will be funding the Little Free Library, and
placing it in front of Pinnacle
Bank at 99 West Sixth Street at
10 a.m. Saturday. The organization will hold a short installation
ceremony with refreshments
available. Community members
are encouraged to attend.
Eckert got the idea after seeing
a news story on television.
She also saw it as a great
opportunity to use memorial
funds donated to Altrusa in
honor of her mother, who died
last year.
“When I saw that story, I
thought ‘That’s it. That’s what I
should do with the money,”’ she
said. “My mom loved to read.
She read the dictionary as a kid
for fun!
There are almost 3,000 Little
Free Libraries in more than 10
countries around the world —
including Pakistan, Italy,
Saskatchewan and Ghana.
LINCOLN — Top administrators from the
University of Nebraska Medical Center are expected to brief the university’s Board of Regents this
week about the impact that the federal health care
law would have on their facilities.
Bradley Britigan, the dean of the College of
Medicine, and other administrators will focus
Friday on the proposed Medicaid expansion and
how it would affect the medical center, which is
the state’s largest health care facility.
“Obviously, Medicaid patients come through the
hospital,” and the number would likely increase if
the program were expanded, said medical center
spokesman Tom O’Connor.
A university report released in August concluded
that the law would attract $2.9 billion to $3.5 billion in revenue from the federal government by
2020, and reduce so-called charity care at Nebraska
hospitals by $650 million over a five-year period.
Uncompensated costs without the expansion are
expected to top $1 billion.
The report is based on a study conducted by Jim
Stimpson, director of the Center for Health Policy
and an associate professor in the College of Public
Health.
Stimpson, who will also speak to the regents, has
said the decision about whether to expand
Medicaid will have a “huge impact” on Nebraska.
States that choose to expand their Medicaid programs would see 100 percent of their new costs
covered by the federal government between 2014
and 2016. The amount would decrease to 90 percent by 2020.
The analysis follows an earlier report by the university’s Center for Health Policy, which found that
the number of uninsured Nebraska residents
topped 271,100 in 2010 — a 67 percent increase
since 2000. Rates of uninsured were particularly
high in the so-called “rural-frontier counties” of
western and central Nebraska, regions with larger
immigrant populations and fewer companies that
can afford to subsidize employee health insurance.
The health care law has drawn strong opposition
from Republicans. The U.S. Supreme Court upheld
the law in June, but ruled that federal government
cannot penalize states that choose not to expand
Medicaid coverage.
Expanding Medicaid coverage in Nebraska would
attract between 90,021 and 108,025 new enrollees
through 2020, according to the report. Between
2014 and 2020, the expansion would cost
Nebraska taxpayers between $140 million and
$168 million.
Republican Gov. Dave Heineman has said he
opposes any move to expand Medicaid in the state.
Interlock: Nebraska ups use of devices in DUI cases
Continued from page A5
Flood said the new law
means roads are safer.
He originally called for scrapping the administrative license
revocation system, which
Nebraska has used since 1992.
Under it, police confiscate the
driver’s license of anyone
arrested for DUI and issue a 30day temporary license to be
used until a license revocation
hearing can be held.
People who think they’ve
been wrongly accused can ask
for a hearing, at which arresting officers testify and hearing
officers evaluate evidence and
recommend whether revocations should go into effect or
be dismissed. Most of the hearings result in 90-day license
suspensions.
But Flood and others say that
after an administrative license
revocation hearing is held,
pending court cases often go
on for a year or longer, or are
plea-bargained.
Flood said interlock devices
are better than the old system,
which essentially forced a lot of
people to drive on suspended
NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING AND BUDGET SUMMARY
HASTINGS PUBLIC SCHOOLS (01-0018) IN ADAMS COUNTY, NEBRASKA
PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given, in compliance with the provisions of State Statute Sections 13-501 to
13-513, that the governing body will meet on the 17th day of September, 2012 at 7:00 o’clock, p.m. at City
Hall, 220 North Hastings, Hastings, NE, for the purpose of hearing support, opposition, criticism, suggestions or observations of taxpayers relating to the following proposed budget and to consider amendments relative thereto. The budget detail is available at the office of the Clerk/Secretary during regular business hours.
Jeff Schneider Clerk/Secretary
Actual
Actual/Estimated
Budgeted
Disbursements Disbursements Disbursements
& Transfers
& Transfers
& Transfers
FUNDS
General
Depreciation
Employee Benefit
Activities
School Lunch
Bond
Special Building
Qualified Capital Purpose Undertaking
Cooperative
Student Fee
TOTALS
2010-2011
2011-2012
2012-2013
(1)
(2)
(3)
35,770,237.21 36,029,236.00 38,802,014.00
103,331.24
267,800.00 1,020,200.00
13,722.75
22,397.00
529,753.00
673,676.20
700,000.00
921,830.00
1,774,181.82 1,907,848.00 2,026,000.00
1,206,033.75 1,075,020.00 1,247,384.00
-03,007.00
2,580.00
576,385.97 2,656,913.00 5,637,766.00
868,508.69
825,590.00 2,130,231.00
63,467.18
75,000.00
80,000.00
41,049,544.81 43,562,811.00 52,397,758.00
Necessary
Cash
Reserve
(4)
2,000,000.00
-0-0-01,251,137.00
250,000.00
-0-03,501,137.00
Total
Available
Resources
Before
Property
Taxes
(5)
30,220,964.00
1,020,200.00
529,753.00
921,830.00
2,026,000.00
1,210,386.00
2,580.00
5,409,318.00
2,130,231.00
80,000.00
43,551,262.00
Total Personal
Fee and
and Real
Delinquent
Property Tax
Tax Allowance Requirement
(6)
(7)
105,811.00 10,686,861.00
12,881.00 1,301,016.00
-0-04,784.00
483,232.00
Total Personal
and Real
Property Tax
Requirement
for Bonds
1,301,016.00
Total Personal
and Real
Property Tax
Requirement
for
ALL Other
11,170,093.00
123,476.00 12,471,109.00
licenses because much of the
state is not served by mass
transit.
The number of administrative license revocation hearings
is down because people who
are arrested now can be convicted and then use the interlock device and continue to
drive.
Neth said the state held
5,150 revocation hearings last
year. So far this year, there have
been fewer than 500. In addition, she said, 471 hearing
decisions were appealed to district courts last year. This year,
eight have been appealed.
NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING
AND BUDGET SUMMARY
Hanover Township
IN
Adams County, Nebraska
PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given, in compliance with
the provisions of State Statute Sections 13-501 to 13513, that the governing body will meet on the 18th day
of September 2012, at 7:30 o’clock, p.m., at Hall for the
purpose of hearing support, opposition, criticism,
suggestions or observations of taxpayers relating to
the following proposed budget. The budget detail is
available at the office of the Clerk during regular
business hours.
Rick Meyer, Clerk/Secretary
2010-2011 Actual Disbursements & Transfers
2011-2012 Actual/Estimated
Disbursements & Transfers
2012-2013 Proposed Budget of Disbursements &
Transfers
2012-2013 Necessary Cash Reserve
2012-2013 Total Resources Available
Total 2012-2013 Personal & Real
Property Tax Requirement
Unused Budget Authority Created for Next Year
Breakdown of Property Tax:
Personal and Real Property Tax
Required for Bonds
Personal and Real Property Tax
Required for All Other Purposes
$
15,070.10
$
16,868.50
$
$
$
17,000.00
3,253.82
20,253.82
$
$
18,360.00
1,791.63
$
$
18,360.00
Agri/Business
HASTINGS TRIBUNE
Wednesday, Sept. 12, 2012
A7
Moody’s set
to downgrade
U.S. debt rating
LACK OF BUDGET
DEAL, APPROACH
OF ‘FISCAL CLIFF’
PROMPT THREAT
The Associated Press
STEPHAN SAVOIA/AP
A container ship from China is offloaded July 13 at Massport’s Conley Terminal in the port of Boston.
Trade deficit widens a bit
U.S. OIL IMPORTS
DROP, BUT SO DO
EXPORTS TO SEVERAL
KEY NATIONS
MARTIN CRUTSINGER
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The U.S.
trade deficit grew to $42 billion
in July, widened by fewer
exports to Europe, India and
Brazil that offset a steep decline in oil imports.
The Commerce Department
said Tuesday that the trade
deficit increased 0.2 percent
from June’s deficit of $41.9 billion.
U.S. exports fell 1 percent
to $183.3 billion. Sales of
autos, telecommunications
equipment and heavy
machinery all declined.
Imports dropped 0.8 percent
to $225.3 billion.
Economists note that the
deficit would have grown
much faster had it not been for
a 6.5 percent drop in oil
imports, largely reflecting
cheaper global prices. Prices
have increased since then,
while demand for exports has
dampened.
“It won’t be long before the
deficit widens more significantly as the global slowdown takes
a greater toll on U.S. exports,”
said Paul Dales, senior U.S.
economist at Capital
Economics. Dales said trade
will likely weigh on growth in
the second half of the year.
A wider trade deficit acts as
a drag on growth because the
U.S. is typically spending more
on imports while taking in less
from the sales of Americanmade goods. U.S. growth
slowed to a 1.7 percent annual
rate in the April-June quarter,
well below what is needed to
accelerate a slackening job
market.
Growth has also weakened
around the globe, which has
hurt sales of U.S. goods overseas.
Exports to Europe fell 11.7
percent in July from June.
Many European countries are
recession, which has cut
demand for American-made
goods. The region accounts
for about one-fifth of U.S.
exports.
Exports also fell in other big
emerging economies. U.S. sales
of goods to Brazil declined 4.4
percent. Exports to India
dropped 1.2 percent.
The U.S. exported 0.4 percent more goods to China, the
world’s second largest economy. But the deficit with China
grew 7.2 percent in July to a
record $29.4 billion. U.S.
imports from China jumped
5.6 percent.
China’s economy has weakened this year and may be
worsening. On Monday, China
reported that its imports from
the rest of the world shrank in
August.
In July, exports of American
farm goods rose to all-time
high. There were also gains in
exports of commercial aircraft
and electric generators. The
gains were offset by declines in
overseas sales of autos and auto
parts and heavy machinery.
Further declines in exports
could weigh on manufacturing
and slow the ailing job market.
American employers added
just 96,000 jobs last month,
down from an increase of
141,000 jobs in July and well
below the average 226,000 jobs
a month created from January
through March.
Manufacturing, which has
been one of the few bright
spots in this recovery, lost
15,000 jobs in August.
While the overall unemployment rate fell to 8.1 percent from 8.3 percent in
July, the improvement came
only because many people
gave up looking for work
and therefore were not
counted in the government’s
calculations.
The weak unemployment
report has lifted expectations
that the Federal Reserve will
approve more help for the U.S.
economy at their meeting this
week.
Senate ag leader urges House Farm Bill action
STABENOW: LAW
COULD BE FINALIZED
IN
NOVEMBER
JIM ABRAMS
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Senate
Agriculture Committee chair-
Markets
Wednesday’s 11 a.m.
local markets
Corn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7.47
Soybeans . . . . . . . . . .16.87
Milo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7.06
Wheat . . . . . . . . . . . . .8.28
Stocks of local interest
The following stocks of local interest were
traded today:
Last
Chg.
Berkshire Hathaway A
130,223
+53
Berkshire Hathaway B
86.80
+.04
ConAgra
25.62
-.07
Eaton Corp.
47.43
-.19
Ingersoll Rand
46.12
+.14
Level 3
23.38
+.92
McDonald’s
91.02
-.18
PepsiCo
70.44
-1.14
Tricon Global Restaurants 66.00
-.85
Union Pacific
124.58
+.39
Wells Fargo
34.33
+.17
Williams Cos.
33.81
+.07
Wal-Mart
74.24
+.18
Nation
AIG SHARE SALES
WASHINGTON — The
Treasury Department says it has
received an additional $2.7 billion from the sale of American
International Group stock. The
sale comes one day after the
government reported a profit
on its four-year investment in
the bailed-out financial firm.
Treasury says the banks
underwriting the sale have exercised their option to buy 83.1
million additional AIG shares at
$32.50. Together with Monday’s
$18 billion in stock sales,
Treasury says the government
has recovered a total $197.4 billion from the company. That’s
all of its original investment of
$182.3 billion plus a return of
$15.1 billion to taxpayers.
The Associated Press
man Debbie Stabenow is
opposing House proposals to
extend the current farm policy
act and urging House
Republican leaders to take up
legislation to enact a new bill.
The Michigan Democrat said
a House-Senate compromise on
a new five-year farm bill is with-
in reach if only the House acts
on legislation approved by the
House Agriculture Committee.
She said the two sides could
settle differences in October
and pass a bill in November.
The current farm bill expires
at the end of September but
many of its programs, includ-
ing the food stamp program
which helps feed some 46 million Americans, would continue after that date.
House Republicans, concerned about a tough fight over
food stamp spending, have
proposed extending the existing bill for a year.
Nation
BRIBERY PLEA
IOWA CITY, Iowa — A
federal prosecutor says a manager at the Iowa egg farms
linked to a 2010 nationwide
salmonella outbreak will
plead guilty to trying to bribe
an inspector.
Tony Wasmund is charged
with conspiring to bribe a
public official. U.S. Attorney
Stephanie Rose says
Wasmund has agreed to
plead guilty Wednesday at
federal court in Cedar Rapids.
A charging document says
Wasmund authorized an
employee to offer a $300
bribe to a U.S. Department of
Agriculture inspector to
approve eggs for sale that did
not meet federal standards.
The Associated Press
NOTICE OF SPECIAL HEARING TO SET FINAL TAX REQUEST
Hastings Public Schools (01-0018) in Adams County, Nebraska
PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given, in compliance with the provisions of State
Statute Section 77-1601.02, that the governing body will meet on the 17th day of
September 2012 at 7:00 o’clock p.m. at City Hall, 220 North Hastings, Hastings,
NE 68901 for the purpose of hearing support, opposition, criticism, suggestions
or observations of taxpayers relating to setting the final tax request at a
different amount than the prior year tax request.
2011/12 Budget Information
2012/13 Budget Information
FUND
General Fund
Bond Fund (s) K-12
Qualified Capital Purpose
Undertaking Fund K-12
2011-2012
Property
Tax Request
2011
Tax
Rate
Property Tax Rate
(2011-2012
Request
Divided by
2012 Valuation)
2012-2013
Proposed
Property Tax
Request
Proposed
2012
Tax
Rate
$10,586,979.00
1.149999
1.139252
10,686,861.00
1.150000
$1,288,851.00
0.140000
0.138691
1,301,016.00
0.140000
$478,716.00
0.052000
0.051514
483,232.00
0.052000
NEW YORK — The U.S.
government’s debt rating
could be heading for the “fiscal cliff” along with the federal budget.
Moody’s Investors Service
on Tuesday said it would likely cut its “Aaa” rating on U.S.
government debt, probably
by one notch, if budget negotiations fail.
If Congress and the White
House don’t reach a budget
deal, about $1.2 trillion in
spending cuts and tax increases will automatically kick in
starting Jan. 2, a scenario
that’s been dubbed the “fiscal
cliff,” because it is likely to
send the economy back into
recession and drive up unemployment.
A year ago, Moody’s cut its
outlook on U.S. debt to “negative,” which acts as a warning that it might downgrade
the rating, after partisan
wrangling over raising the
U.S. debt limit led the nation
to the brink of default.
Rival agency Standard &
Poor’s took the drastic step of
stripping the government of
its “AAA” rating on its bonds
on Aug. 5, 2011. Fitch Ratings
issued a warning of a potential downgrade.
In its report Tuesday,
Moody’s said it is difficult to
predict when Congress will
reach a deal on the budget,
and it will likely keep its current rating and “negative”
outlook until the outcome of
the talks is clear.
In Washington, Moody’s
action didn’t spur the politicians responsible for making a
deal to sit down at the table.
House Speaker John
Boehner, an Ohio
Republican, said he’s not confident that Congress can
reach a deal and avoid a
downgrade. No serious negotiations are expected until
after the November elections.
Boehner’s Democratic
counterpart in the Senate,
Majority Leader Harry Reid,
was far more hopeful that
“some kind of agreement”
would be reached after the
elections. Reid suggested that
the results of the election will
weaken the GOP’s resolve to
block tax increases on wealthier earners and that
Republicans will be more willing to compromise.
Moody’s also noted that
the government will likely
again reach the debt limit by
the end of the year, which
means another round of
negotiations in Congress on
raising the limit if the U.S. is
to keep paying its bills.
“Under these circumstances, the government’s
rating would likely be
placed under review after
the debt limit is reached,
but several weeks before the
exhaustion of the Treasury’s
resources,” Moody’s analyst
Steven A. Hess said in his
report.
Despite the rating cut last
year from S&P and the
warnings from Moody’s and
Fitch, the U.S. has been able
to continue borrowing at
very low rates. That’s
because investors are still
buying U.S. government
bonds, as economic turmoil
in Europe and uncertainty
in other parts of the globe
have left U.S. debt and U.S.
dollars looking like safe bets.
In contrast, bond investors
demand high rates from
troubled countries like Spain
and Italy.
The stock markets plunged
when the downgrade
occurred in August 2011. The
Dow Jones industrial average
lost 634 points on the first
trading day after S&P’s
announcement. But Moody’s
warning on Tuesday did little
to ruffle traders. The Dow
average rose 69 points to
close at 13,323.
Rep. Barney Frank of
Massachusetts, the top
Democrat on the House
Financial Services Committee,
called the Moody’s action
“nonsense.”
There’s no risk of the U.S.
defaulting on its debt obligations, Frank said in a telephone interview. He noted
that S&P’s downgrade last
year didn’t result in higher
interest rates for the government.
CENTRAL COMMUNITY COLLEGE
NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING
AND BUDGET SUMMARY
PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given that the governing body of Central
Community College Area will meet on the 18th day of September, 2012, at
1:00 p.m., in Board Room, at 3134 West Highway 34, Grand Island NE
68802, to hold public hearings for the purpose of hearing support,
opposition, criticism, suggestions or observations of taxpayers relating to
the following:
1. PROPOSED BUDGET. In compliance with Sections 13-501 et seq. of the
Nebraska Statutes, as amended, a public hearing will be held on the date
and at the time and place stated above to consider the proposed budget
statement, a summary of which is printed below (and the details of which
are available for inspection at the principal office of the clerk/secretary), and
to consider any proposed amendments thereto;
2. HANDICAPPED BARRIER AND ENVIRONMENTAL HAZARD
ELIMINATION. The proposed budget calls for receipts from property taxes in
an amount sufficient to pay for funding accessibility barrier elimination
project costs and abatement of environmental hazards, and, in compliance
with Section 85-1517 of the Nebraska Statutes, as amended, a public
hearing will be held, on the date and at the place stated above, prior to, in
conjunction with or after the public hearing on the proposed budget.
The budget detail is available at the office of the Secretary during regular
business hours.
Larry C. Glazier, COLLEGE BUSINESS OFFICER
2010-2011 Actual Disbursements & Transfers
2011-2012 Actual Disbursements & Transfers
2012-2013 Proposed Budget of
Disbursements & Transfers
2012-2013 Necessary Cash Reserve
2012-2013 Total Resources Available
Total 2012-2013 Personal & Real
Property Tax Requirement
Unused Budget Authority Created For Next Year
Breakdown of Property Tax:
Personal and Real Property Tax Required for Bonds
Personal and Real Property Tax
Required for All Other Purposes
$
$
94,221,081
100,004,658
$
$
$
114,071,949
21,880,683
135,808,632
$
$
39,377,481
10,569,213
$
-0-
$
39,377,481
NOTICE OF SPECIAL HEARING
TO SET FINAL TAX REQUEST
PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given, in compliance with the provisions of
State Statute Section 77-1601.02, that the governing body will meet on
the 18th day of September, 2012 at 1:00 o’clock P.M., in Board Room,
at 3134 West Hwy. 34, Grand Island NE for the purpose of hearing
support, opposition, criticism, suggestions or observations of taxpayers
relating to setting the final tax request at a different amount than the
prior year tax request.
2011-2012 Property Tax Request
2011 Tax Rate
Property Tax Rate (2011-2012 Request/2012 Valuation)
2012-2013 Proposed Property Tax Request
Proposed 2012 Tax Rate
$36,251,272
$0.116248/$100
$0.112023/$100
$39,377,481
$0.116883/$100
The budget detail is available at the office of the Secretary during
regular business hours.
Larry C. Glazier, COLLEGE BUSINESS OFFICER
A8
HASTINGS TRIBUNE
Wednesday, S ept.12,2012
Sports
HASTINGS TRIBUNE
Wednesday, Sept. 12, 2012
B1
St. Cecilia sweeps Bobcats
NICK BLASNITZ
miscommunication, Blue Hill coach Kristi
Allen said her team made mistakes she
had never seen before, even in practice.
But with the week the community has
had, with four people dying in a school
bus-semitrailer crash last week about 10
miles southeast of Blue Hill, she said it’s
understandable.
“I think it’s just a combination of (a big
game) and the week they have been
through. I think it’s been hard for them to
come to grips with everything they are
dealing with in life and then to come and
play an awesome team like St. Cecilia,”
Allen said. “We said, it’s just one game. It’s
not our season. What they have been
through, we know there are a lot bigger
things than a volleyball match. We just
have to hit it hard and we have two big
games on Saturday to get ready for.”
The first set was back-and-forth through
much of the action. With St. Cecilia leading 15-13, Hamburger set up junior
Morgan Nikkila — a common sight on
Tuesday — for the kill. The point started a
10-3 run that led to the Hawkettes taking
the set. During the run, STC took advantage of four errors on the Bobcats. Senior
Arika Kitten had one kill and two ace
[email protected]
BLUE HILL — If there was one thing
to take away from Class C-2 No. 3 St.
Cecilia’s performance at Blue Hill, it’s this:
When the Hawkettes are connected on all
cylinders, it’s nearly impossible to defend
them.
St. Cecilia defeated Blue Hill in straight
sets Tuesday, winning 25-16, 25-15, 25-20.
Sophomore Clare Hamburger finished
the match with 34 assists. Hamburger
seemed to have a number of hard hitter to
set to at any given moment. If the Bobcats
(4-3) dug the ball, the Hawkettes came
right back at them with another hard hit.
St. Cecilia (5-2) showed its depth by having three players who finished with more
than seven kills.
“We have a lot of weapons, and I
thought we dug the ball well,” St. Cecilia
coach Alan VanCura Blue Hill said. “They
played really well against us. They dug a
lot of balls and we had to work hard out
there. It was a good matchup for us
because they made us work hard.”
The Hawkettes took advantage of several Blue Hill mistakes in cruising to the
sweep. Whether it was a hitting error or
LAURA
BEAHM/
Tribune
Blue Hill’s
Mackenzie
Willicott
(5) blocks
a hit by
St.
Cecilia’s
Clare
Hamburger
Tuesday
night in
Blue Hill.
blocks during the stretch.
Set No. 2 was all St. Cecilia. The
Hawkettes seemed to score in bunches,
with Hamburger recording a match-high
13 assists in the set. Nikkila led with six
kills and Kitten tallied five.
The third set had a similar start as the
second did. St. Cecilia jumped out to a 179 lead and all seemed to be in control.
With the score 23-12, some of the
Hawkettes came out of the game. But Blue
Hill was determined to make STC earn the
final set. The Bobcats scored eight of the
next nine points, making it 24-20. With
the most of the momentum now with
Blue Hill, VanCura subbed Hamburger
back into the match. And that was all it
took for St. Cecilia to end the rally.
Hamburger said the main focus of the
STC defense was on Maci Coffey. The Blue
Hill junior finished with 12 kills on the
night. VanCura said his team knew Blue
Hill would look to her, and the fact that
she still got that many kills on a defense
that had her spotlighted only testifies to
the kind of player she is. But as VanCura
told his team, it’s going to take more than
one opponent to beat his Hawkettes.
Please see STC/page B3
Broncos win
10th straight
GAGE AXFORD
[email protected]
AMY ROH/Tribune
Thayer Central players celebrate their win over Sandy Creek in five sets Tuesday at Sandy Creek.
Titans rally to win in five sets
MIKE ZIMMERMAN
[email protected]
F
AIRFIELD — No quit.
That’s what the players on the
Thayer Central volleyball team
showed Tuesday night at Sandy
Creek.
The Class C-1 No. 10 Cougars (6-2)
scored in crunch time to nab the first two
sets, and the Class C-2 No. 5 Titans just
looked like they were having an off night.
Instead, Thayer Central (4-0) charged
back, turning up the emotion and making
a few key adjustments to come back and
win 21-25, 22-25, 25-20, 25-23, 15-12.
“We were really down. It was our intensity that won it,” Titan junior Allison
Tietjen said. “We were just not getting
excited, so Coach took us out there and
told us we better do something. And I
think we responded to it.”
Added Thayer Central head coach Kurk
Wiedel: “For us, the key is to just play
every point. Don’t worry about the point
before, and we did that early in the match.
But late, I think we just let things go. We
let the flow go.
“We lacked a lot of emotion. Just the
intensity, just being intense when you’re
at the net without the ball. I thought we
lacked the intensity, but we brought it up.”
Sandy Creek had all the momentum on
its side after the first two sets.
Both teams were close in those sets, but
the Cougars found a way to pull away when
it mattered most. Tied 13-all in the first,
Sandy Creek went on a tear to score nine
out of the next 12 points to take a 22-16
lead. The Titans put themselves back into
the set with a four-point run of their own to
get back within two. But then the Cougars
scored the final points to take the set.
The second was very similar. Both teams
battled back and forth, forcing a 21-all tie.
But like the first, it was the Cougars that
would get the points at the end to win the
second 25-22.
In those first two sets, Sandy Creek
relied heavily on senior Mikaela Shaw —
and it worked. With help from sophomore
setter Rylee Morris, Shaw tallied 15 kills.
However, Shaw was limited to only nine
more kills in the final three sets. Keeping
track of her was one of a few things Thayer
Central adjusted during its comeback.
Please see TITANS/page B3
AMY ROH/Tribune
Sandy Creek’s Morgan Dickson spikes the ball in
the first set against Thayer Central’s Lauren
Edgecomb Tuesday at Sandy Creek.
After jumping into the NAIA poll at No. 9
earlier Tuesday, the Hastings College volleyball team didn’t have a letdown in its first
match as a top-25 team since the 2008 season.
The Broncos swept Nebraska Wesleyan
25-16, 25-16, 25-14 at Lynn Farrell Arena to
run their winning streak to 10 matches.
“Anytime you get a conference win over a
good team in Wesleyan, who has good athletes and is well coached ... we’re happy to
have a good performance and to come out
with the win,” first-year HC coach Matt
Buttermore said.
Against the Prairie Wolves (3-2, 0-1
GPAC), the Broncos (12-2, 2-0) produced
one of their most balanced offensive performances of the season.
Senior outside hitter Kendra Schwein,
who was named the NAIA player of the
week earlier Tuesday, and sophomore middle Jessica Osterhaus tallied nine kills each,
while junior middle Shayna Schacher contributed eight kills.
“That’s what we wanted to focus on after
a week where we were pretty one-sided,”
Buttermore said. “We wanted to come out
and develop the rest of our offense a little
bit more. We have good middles and we
want to get them the ball, so I thought we
did a good job of that. The numbers are
much more balanced in this match than
they have been in the last few weeks.”
The Broncos finished with a .232 hitting
percentage while totaling 35 kills, with six
players finishing with at least three kills.
Hastings also had 12 team blocks while
holding Wesleyan to a .038 hitting percentage.
Nebraska Wesleyan sophomore outside
hitter Katelyn Walsh finished with a matchhigh 13 kills, accounting for nearly half of
the Prairie Wolves’ kills.
“She has a lot of range, she has power and
she’s a good outside presence, so she’s
always going to cause matchup problems,”
Buttermore said of Walsh. “We wanted to
make sure we had a good blocker in front of
her as well as get set up on the defense.
Luckily we were able to kind of get them
out of system more and were able to line up
a little better on her.”
The HC attack — led by Osterhaus and
Schwein — proved to be too much for
Nebraska Wesleyan to handle.
Osterhaus, a Sutton graduate, had her
hand in 10 total blocks. Along with her
nine kills, Schwein had two ace serves and
six digs.
Please see HC/page B2
Big Ten football coaches: Don’t write off league just yet
ANDREW SELIGMAN
The Associated Press
Big Ten coaches had just one
request for the critics ripping the conference after a rough weekend.
Wait.
Nebraska coach Bo Pelini cautioned
against making “snap judgments” so
early in the season during Tuesday’s
conference call, no matter how rough
things looked.
“I don’t make much of it,” he said.
“It’s early in the year. I think there’s a
lot of football left to be played.”
A 6-6 showing that left the Big Ten
with just three ranked teams was bad
enough. But last week’s split decision
included a 1-6 mark against oppo-
nents from major conferences and
Notre Dame, plus Michigan’s narrow
win over Air Force.
So is the conference headed toward
a dull season? At the moment, No. 10
Michigan State appears to be the only
team with a realistic shot at the
national championship, and the
Spartans are facing a tough matchup
this week at home against No. 20
Notre Dame.
A year ago, the Spartans’ 31-13 loss
in South Bend cast doubt on their season, but they rebounded to finish
with 11 wins and the 11th spot in the
final AP poll. That’s something coach
Mark Dantonio was quick to point
out.
“I think we played two games,” he
said. “We’re very, very early in the season. I think last year, as I remember,
the third game we didn’t play well at
Notre Dame and people sort of wrote
us off. I think we ended up No. 9 or
something like that in the nation.
People will respond. That’s the nature
of football, the competitive nature of
things. People are going to respond,
and they’re going ... to reset their
compass and re-evaluate and move
forward. It’s very, very competitive in
the country right now in terms of
winning and losing football games.”
Michigan State was one of the
bright spots for the Big Ten, pounding
Central Michigan as expected, but No.
17 Michigan struggled to get past Air
Force despite Denard Robinson’s 426
yards of offense.
Against BCS opponents? The results
weren’t good.
Northwestern beat Vanderbilt, but
that was it for the Big Ten.
Nebraska’s defense gave up 653
yards in a 36-30 loss to UCLA that
dropped the Cornhuskers out of the
Top 25. Purdue lost by three to Notre
Dame on a late field goal, and
Boilermakers quarterback Robert
Marve injured his left knee.
Illinois got shredded by Arizona
State. Iowa managed just two field
goals in a 9-6 loss to Iowa State and
has just one touchdown after two
games. Wisconsin’s offense managed
just 35 yards rushing and 207 overall
in a 10-7 loss at Oregon State. Star
running back Montee Ball had just 61
yards on the ground, and offensive
line coach Mike Markuson was let go.
“Overall, I just wasn’t seeing the
results,” coach Bret Bielema said. “This
wasn’t something that was decided
overnight. I’ve had discussions with
Mike going back into last spring, kind
of getting to where we needed to be. I
just felt for us to move forward one of
the things as a head coach that I
decided early on in my career was if I
didn’t like the direction somewhere
was going and thought we had a
Please see BIG TEN/page B3
Scoreboard
B2
Baseball
AL Standings
East Division
W L Pct
GB
Baltimore
79 62 .560
—
New York
79 62 .560
—
Tampa Bay
77 64 .546
2
Toronto
64 76 .457 14 1/2
Boston
64 78 .451 15 1/2
Central Division
W L Pct
GB
Chicago
76 65 .539
—
Detroit
74 67 .525
2
Kansas City
64 77 .454
12
Cleveland
59 83 .415 17 1/2
Minnesota
59 83 .415 17 1/2
West Division
W L Pct
GB
Texas
84 57 .596
—
Oakland
81 60 .574
3
Los Angeles
77 65 .542 7 1/2
Seattle
68 74 .479 16 1/2
Tuesday’s Games
Baltimore 9, Tampa Bay 2
Seattle 4, Toronto 3
Boston 4, N.Y. Yankees 3
Texas 6, Cleveland 4
Detroit 5, Chicago White Sox 3
Kansas City 9, Minnesota 1
Oakland 6, L.A. Angels 5
Wednesday’s Games
Tampa Bay (Cobb 9-8) at Baltimore (Mig.Gonzalez
6-4), 6:05 p.m.
Seattle (Millwood 5-12) at Toronto (R.Romero 813), 6:07 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (D.Phelps 3-4) at Boston (A.Cook 39), 6:10 p.m.
Cleveland (J.Gomez 5-7) at Texas (Dempster 5-1),
7:05 p.m.
Detroit (Scherzer 15-6) at Chicago White Sox
(Floyd 9-9), 7:10 p.m.
Kansas City (Hochevar 7-13) at Minnesota
(Walters 2-3), 7:10 p.m.
Oakland (Griffin 5-0) at L.A. Angels (E.Santana 811), 9:05 p.m.
Thursday’s Games
Tampa Bay (Hellickson 8-10) at Baltimore
(W.Chen 12-9), 11:35 a.m.
Oakland (Bre.Anderson 4-0) at L.A. Angels
(Weaver 16-4), 2:35 p.m.
Seattle (F.Hernandez 13-7) at Toronto (H.Alvarez
8-12), 6:07 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (P.Hughes 14-12) at Boston
(Doubront 10-8), 6:10 p.m.
Cleveland (McAllister 5-7) at Texas (D.Holland 106), 7:05 p.m.
Detroit (Verlander 13-8) at Chicago White Sox
(Sale 16-6), 7:10 p.m.
Kansas City (Mendoza 7-9) at Minnesota
(Hendriks 0-7), 7:10 p.m.
NL Standings
East Division
W L Pct
GB
Washington
88 54 .620
—
Atlanta
81 62 .566 7 1/2
Philadelphia
71 71 .500
17
New York
65 77 .458
23
Miami
63 80 .441 25 1/2
Central Division
W L Pct
GB
Cincinnati
86 57 .601
—
St. Louis
75 67 .528 10 1/2
Pittsburgh
72 69 .511
13
Milwaukee
71 71 .500 14 1/2
Chicago
55 87 .387 30 1/2
Houston
45 97 .317 40 1/2
West Division
W L Pct
GB
San Francisco
80 62 .563
—
Los Angeles
74 68 .521
6
Arizona
70 72 .493
10
San Diego
68 75 .476 12 1/2
Colorado
57 84 .404 22 1/2
Tuesday’s Games
Philadelphia 9, Miami 7
Cincinnati 5, Pittsburgh 3
Washington 5, N.Y. Mets 3
Houston 1, Chicago Cubs 0
Milwaukee 5, Atlanta 0
San Francisco 9, Colorado 8
Arizona 1, L.A. Dodgers 0
San Diego 6, St. Louis 4
Wednesday’s Games
Miami (Jo.Johnson 8-11) at Philadelphia (Cl.Lee
4-7), 3:05 p.m.
St. Louis (Lohse 14-2) at San Diego (Richard 1212), 5:35 p.m.
Pittsburgh (A.J.Burnett 15-6) at Cincinnati
(H.Bailey 10-9), 6:10 p.m.
Washington (Lannan 2-0) at N.Y. Mets (Harvey 3-
4), 6:10 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (T.Wood 5-11) at Houston (Abad 03), 7:05 p.m.
Atlanta (Maholm 12-9) at Milwaukee (Gallardo
14-8), 7:10 p.m.
San Francisco (Lincecum 8-14) at Colorado
(Francis 5-4), 7:40 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers (Harang 9-8) at Arizona (Cahill 1011), 8:40 p.m.
Thursday’s Games
Philadelphia (Cloyd 1-1) at Houston (Harrell 10-9),
7:05 p.m.
St. Louis (Lynn 14-7) at L.A. Dodgers (Beckett 12), 9:10 p.m.
Football
NFL Standings
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct PF
N.Y. Jets
1 0 0 1.000 48
New England
1 0 0 1.000 34
Miami
0 1 0 .000 10
Buffalo
0 1 0 .000 28
South
W L T Pct PF
Houston
1 0 0 1.000 30
Jacksonville
0 1 0 .000 23
Indianapolis
0 1 0 .000 21
Tennessee
0 1 0 .000 13
North
W L T Pct PF
Baltimore
1 0 0 1.000 44
Cleveland
0 1 0 .000 16
Pittsburgh
0 1 0 .000 19
Cincinnati
0 1 0 .000 13
West
W L T Pct PF
San Diego
1 0 0 1.000 22
Denver
1 0 0 1.000 31
Kansas City
0 1 0 .000 24
Oakland
0 1 0 .000 14
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct PF
Dallas
1 0 0 1.000 24
Washington
1 0 0 1.000 40
Philadelphia
1 0 0 1.000 17
N.Y. Giants
0 1 0 .000 17
South
W L T Pct PF
Tampa Bay
1 0 0 1.000 16
Atlanta
1 0 0 1.000 40
New Orleans
0 1 0 .000 32
Carolina
0 1 0 .000 10
North
W L T Pct PF
Detroit
1 0 0 1.000 27
Chicago
1 0 0 1.000 41
Minnesota
1 0 0 1.000 26
Green Bay
0 1 0 .000 22
West
W L T Pct PF
Arizona
1 0 0 1.000 20
San Francisco 1 0 0 1.000 30
St. Louis
0 1 0 .000 23
Seattle
0 1 0 .000 16
Thursday, Sep. 13
Chicago at Green Bay, 7:20 p.m.
Sunday, Sep. 16
Tampa Bay at N.Y. Giants, Noon
New Orleans at Carolina, Noon
Arizona at New England, Noon
Minnesota at Indianapolis, Noon
Baltimore at Philadelphia, Noon
Kansas City at Buffalo, Noon
Cleveland at Cincinnati, Noon
Houston at Jacksonville, Noon
Oakland at Miami, Noon
Dallas at Seattle, 3:05 p.m.
Washington at St. Louis, 3:05 p.m.
Tennessee at San Diego, 3:25 p.m.
N.Y. Jets at Pittsburgh, 3:25 p.m.
Detroit at San Francisco, 7:20 p.m.
Monday, Sep. 17
Denver at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m.
PA
28
13
30
48
PA
10
26
41
34
PA
13
17
31
44
PA
14
19
40
22
PA
17
32
16
24
PA
10
24
40
16
PA
23
21
23
30
PA
16
22
27
20
Prep Results
Tuesday’s volleyball results
Ashland-Greenwood def. Concordia, 18-25, 2025, 25-22, 25-23, 15-8
Boone Central/Newman Grove def. Crofton, 2025, 25-21, 25-12, 15-25, 15-13
Chase County def. Holyoke, Colo., 25-22, 25-15,
26-24
Clearwater/Orchard def. Creighton, 25-27, 25-18,
25-15, 25-21
Columbus Lakeview def. Fairbury, 25-14, 25-14,
25-15
Columbus Scotus def. Aquinas, 25-11, 25-13, 2514
Crete def. Schuyler, 25-14, 25-21, 25-22
Elgin Public/Pope John def. Stanton, 25-21, 19-25,
20-25, 25-15, 15-9
Elkhorn South def. Bennington, 25-21, 25-18, 2519
Elkhorn Valley def. Plainview, 25-27, 25-18, 19-25,
25-18, 15-9
Elm Creek def. Maxwell, 25-10, 25-18, 25-16
Elwood def. Cambridge, 20-25, 25-20, 25-19, 2624
Fillmore Central def. Heartland, 25-22, 25-18, 2516
Grand Island def. Lincoln East, 25-21, 25-19, 1425, 25-16
Grand Island Northwest def. Kearney, 25-15, 2514, 25-10
Gretna def. Blair, 25-12, 25-18, 25-11
Guardian Angels def. Wayne, 25-21, 25-17, 25-19
Hampton def. Shelby/Rising City, 25-20, 18-25,
25-21, 25-15
Hartington def. Wynot, 12-25, 25-23, 25-18, 2325, 15-8
Hastings St. Cecilia def. Blue Hill, 25-16, 25-15,
25-20
Hitchcock County def. Maywood, 25-12, 25-8,
25-13
Humphrey St. Francis def. Fullerton, 25-19, 17-25,
26-24, 25-23
Leyton def. Paxton, 13-25, 25-23, 25-17, 25-18
Lincoln Christian def. Bishop Neumann, 25-11,
25-19, 25-14
Lincoln Lutheran def. Auburn, 25-12, 25-15, 25-5
Lincoln Pius X def. Omaha Skutt Catholic, 25-15,
25-20, 26-24
Lincoln Southeast def. Lincoln Northeast, 25-17,
25-20, 25-19
Malcolm def. Wilber-Clatonia, 25-7, 25-12, 25-17
Mead def. College View Academy, 25-11, 25-9,
25-15
Millard North def. Bellevue West, 25-14, 25-16,
18-25, 26-24
Millard South def. Omaha South, 25-8, 25-7, 2511
Mitchell def. Bayard, 25-18, 25-14, 25-18
Neligh-Oakdale def. Randolph, 24-26, 25-23, 2519, 25-21
Norfolk Catholic def. Hartington Cedar Catholic,
22-25, 26-24, 25-19, 22-25, 15-11
Norris def. Waverly, 25-19, 25-23, 20-25, 10-25,
15-7
North Bend Central def. Wisner-Pilger, 25-20, 1725, 25-19, 25-16
North Platte St. Patrick’s def. Gothenburg, 26-24,
21-25, 25-20, 25-16
Ogallala def. North Platte, 25-22, 25-15, 25-19
Omaha Bryan def. Omaha North, 25-20, 25-14,
25-27, 18-25, 15-5
Omaha Central def. Omaha Mercy, 25-20, 25-14,
23-25, 25-27, 15-12
Omaha Duchesne Academy def. St. Albert,
Council Bluffs, Iowa, 15-25, 25-13, 25-18, 25-16
Omaha Gross Catholic def. Bellevue East, 27-29,
25-16, 25-15, 25-15
Omaha Roncalli def. Omaha Northwest, 25-14,
25-19, 25-15
Papillion-LaVista def. Omaha Burke, 25-27, 25-18,
22-25, 25-23, 15-10
Papillion-LaVista South def. Omaha Westside, 2516, 25-14, 25-16
Pender def. Logan View, 25-19, 26-24, 22-25, 1925, 15-11
Pierce def. Battle Creek, 25-20, 25-17, 25-19
Savannah, Mo. def. Falls City, 25-6, 25-16, 25-19
Scottsbluff def. Gering, 20-25, 23-25, 25-23, 2517, 15-9
Scribner-Snyder def. Clarkson/Leigh, 25-14, 2225, 25-21, 25-21
Seward def. Ralston, 25-20, 25-11, 25-13
Sioux County def. Minatare, 25-7, 25-12, 25-23
South Platte def. Banner County, 25-9, 25-15, 2519
Southwest def. Wauneta-Palisade, 25-16, 25-11,
25-15
St. Paul def. Centura, 29-27, 21-25, 25-17, 25-14
Stuart def. CWC, 25-19, 23-25, 25-19, 26-24
Sutton def. Superior, 23-25, 25-22, 25-22, 29-27
Tekamah-Herman def. West Point-Beemer, 25-15,
25-21, 23-25, 25-18
Thayer Central def. Sandy Creek, 21-25, 22-25,
25-20, 25-23, 15-12
Weeping Water def. Omaha Brownell-Talbot, 2527, 25-14, 22-25, 25-13, 15-12
Wood River def. Ravenna, 25-10, 25-13, 25-18
York def. Holdrege, 25-19, 11-25, 25-20, 19-25,
15-13
Ansley-Litchfield Triangular
Ansley-Litchfield def. Elba/North Loup-Scotia, 2515, 25-23
Ansley-Litchfield def. Arcadia-Loup City, 25-14,
25-20
Arthur County Triangular
Garden County def. Arthur County, 22-25, 25-21,
25-16
Mullen def. Arthur County, 25-9, 25-21
Bridgeport Triangular
Chadron def. Bridgeport, 25-11, 25-13
Chadron def. Sidney, 25-16, 23-25, 25-16
Sidney def. Bridgeport, 25-18, 25-21
Conestoga Triangular
Elmwood-Murdock def. Louisville, 25-17, 17-25,
25-21
Elmwood-Murdock def. Conestoga, 25-14, 25-18
Louisville def. Conestoga, 25-17, 25-16
Cozad Triangular
Alma def. Cozad, 25-11, 25-13
Alma def. Arapahoe, 25-20, 25-22
Arapahoe def. Cozad, 25-14, 23-25, 25-15
Eustis-Farnam Triangular
Amherst def. Sumner-Eddyville-Miller, 12-25, 2520, 25-18
Eustis-Farnam def. Amherst, 25-17, 25-23
Eustis-Farnam def. Sumner-Eddyville-Miller, 2523, 25-18
Gibbon Triangular
Central City def. Gibbon, 25-14, 25-14
Central City def. Doniphan-Trumbull, 25-15, 25-9
Doniphan-Trumbull def. Gibbon, 25-18, 23-25, 2523
Harvard Triangular
Kenesaw def. Harvard, 25-21, 25-20
Lawrence-Nelson def. Kenesaw, 25-21, 25-15
Lawrence-Nelson def. Harvard, 25-10, 25-13
Hayes Center Triangular
Dundy County-Stratton def. Hayes Center, 25-22,
25-11
Dundy County-Stratton def. Wallace, 25-22, 25-13
Wallace def. Hayes Center, 25-15, 25-12
Hemingford Triangular
Gordon/Rushville def. Hemingford, 23-25, 25-22,
25-15
Kimball def. Hemingford, 25-13, 25-21
Kimball def. Gordon/Rushville, 25-21, 25-10
High Plains Community Triangular
Cedar Valley def. High Plains Community, 25-22,
25-17
Palmer def. High Plains Community, 25-15, 25-22
Palmer def. Cedar Valley, 19-25, 25-23, 25-21
Lincoln Southwest Triangular
Lincoln Southwest def. Fremont, 25-17, 25-21
Lincoln Southwest def. Norfolk, 25-17, 25-12
Lyons-Decatur Northeast Triangular
Humphrey def. Lyons-Decatur Northeast, 25-15,
26-24
Humphrey def. Oakland-Craig, 25-16, 25-15
Oakland-Craig def. Lyons-Decatur Northeast, 2520, 25-17
McCool Junction Triangular
Cross County def. McCool Junction, 25-1, 25-18
Heartland Lutheran def. McCool Junction, 25-11,
25-10
Heartland Lutheran def. Cross County, 21-25, 2521, 25-16
MUDECAS Tournament
Class B
Semifinal
Falls City Sacred Heart def. Johnson County
Central, 25-15, 25-16
Consolation Semifinal
Lewiston def. Meridian, 23-25, 25-23, 25-23
Southern def. Parkview Christian, 25-16, 25-13
Class A
Semifinal
Bruning-Davenport/Shickley def. Palmyra, 25-13,
25-19
Freeman def. Exeter/Milligan, 25-8, 18-25, 27-25
Nebraska City Triangular
Nebraska City def. Plattsmouth, 25-13, 25-17
Syracuse def. Nebraska City, 25-18, 25-18
Syracuse def. Plattsmouth, 25-13, 25-7
Raymond Central Triangular
East Butler def. Raymond Central, 25-20, 25-16
Yutan def. Raymond Central, 25-20, 25-16
Yutan def. East Butler, 25-20, 25-20
Santee Triangular
Niobrara/Verdigre def. Santee, 25-14, 25-7
St. Mary’s def. Niobrara/Verdigre, 25-12, 25-20
St. Mary’s def. Santee, 25-2, 25-7
Shelton Triangular
Axtell def. Shelton, 25-10, 25-9
Axtell def. Wilcox-Hildreth, 25-11, 25-18
Wilcox-Hildreth def. Shelton, 25-22, 18-25, 25-13
SMC Triangular
Hyannis def. SMC, 25-10, 25-15
Sandhills/Thedford def. SMC, 25-17, 25-13
Sandhills/Thedford def. Hyannis, 25-21, 25-23
Stockton, Kan. Triangular
Hoxie, Kan. def. Franklin, 25-4, 25-8
Stockton, Kan. def. Franklin, 25-10, 25-4
Twin Loup Triangular
Pleasanton def. North Central, 25-19, 20-25, 2520
Twin Loup def. Pleasanton, 25-11, 25-6
Twin Loup def. North Central, 25-20, 25-7
Wakefield Triangular
Howells/Dodge def. Bancroft-Rosalie, 25-17, 25-6
Howells/Dodge def. Wakefield, 25-15, 25-20
Wakefield def. Bancroft-Rosalie, 28-26, 25-19
West Boyd Triangular
HASTINGS TRIBUNE
Wednesday, Sept. 12, 2012
Ewing def. Lynch, 25-14, 25-16
Ewing def. West Boyd, 25-14, 25-19
West Boyd def. Lynch, 25-10, 25-20
Winnebago Triangular
Allen def. Ponca, 25-8, 25-15
Allen def. Winnebago, 25-9, 25-14
Ponca def. Winnebago, 25-12, 25-16
Winside Triangular
Osmond def. Homer, 25-7, 25-12
Winside def. Homer, 25-11, 25-22
Winside def. Osmond, 25-16, 25-22
Transactions
Baseball
American League
BALTIMORE ORIOLES—Selected the contracts of
OF Endy Chavez and OF L.J. Hoes from Norfolk (IL).
Designated RHP Kevin Gregg and INF Ryan Adams
for assignment.
National League
HOUSTON ASTROS—Announced they have
extended its player development contract with
Oklahoma City (PCL) through the 2014 season.
LOS ANGELES DODGERS—Reinstated SS Dee
Gordon from the 60-day DL. Recalled RHP Stephen
Fife and INF-OF Elian Herrera from Albuquerque
(PCL). Placed INF Adam Kennedy on the 60-day DL.
MILWAUKEE BREWERS—Announced they have
extended its player development contract with
Nashville (PCL) through the 2014 season.
ST. LOUIS CARINALS—Announced they have
extended their player development contract with the
Memphis (PCL) through the 2014 season.
Basketball
National Basketball Association
GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS—Named Bob Beyer
assistant coach. Promoted Darren Erman to assistant coach.
MIAMI HEAT—Re-signed G Terrel Harris.
NEW YORK KNICKS—Signed G Oscar Bellfield, C
Henry Sims, F John Shurna and F Mychel Thompson
to contracts.
CLASS A
1. Millard North (3-0), 2, def. Creighton
Preparatory School 17-7, Kearney.
2. Millard South (2-1), 4, def. Lincoln Southeast
28-20, Millard West.
3. Lincoln Southeast (2-1), 1, lost to Millard
South 28-20, Creighton Preparatory School.
4. Papillion-La Vista (3-0), 3, def. Omaha South
56-0, at Omaha Benson.
5. Omaha North (3-0), 6, def. Omaha Bryan 647, at Lincoln Southwest.
6. Kearney (3-0), 9, def. Lincoln Southwest 196, at Millard North.
7. Lincoln Southwest (2-1), 5, def. Kearney 196, Omaha North.
8. Creighton Preparatory School (2-0), 7, lost to
Millard North 17-7, at Lincoln Southeast.
9. Omaha Westside (2-1), NR, def. Grand
Island 42-7, Fremont.
10. Millard West (1-2), 10, def. Omaha Burke
15-7, at Millard South.
Others receiving votes: Lincoln North Star.
CLASS B
1. Beatrice (3-0), 1, def. York 38-24, Blair.
2. Aurora (3-0), 2, def. Seward 42-14, at
Sidney.
3. Scottsbluff (3-0), 3, def. Holdrege 44-6, at
Hastings.
4. Omaha Skutt (3-0), 4, def. Elkhorn 23-0,
Mount Michael Benedictine.
5. Ralston (3-0), 5, def. Blair 14-10, Nebraska
City.
6. Elkhorn South (2-1), 7, def. Waverly 23-8, at
Omaha Roncalli Catholic.
7. Crete (2-1), 9, def. Columbus 35-15, at
Omaha Gross Catholic.
8. Gretna (2-1), NR, def. Norris 20-9, at South
Sioux City.
9. McCook (1-2), NR, def. Northwest 26-13, at
Gering.
10. Norris (2-1), 6, lost to Gretna 20-9,
Columbus.
Others receiving votes: South Sioux City,
Gering, Elkhorn, Waverly.
CLASS C-1
1. Norfolk Catholic (3-0), 1, def. Boone
Central/Newman Grove 35-31, Madison.
2. Wahoo (3-0), 2, def. Fort Calhoun 42-20,
bye.
3. Adams Central (2-0), 3, def. WilberClatonia 21-7, at Fairbury.
4. Boone Central/Newman Grove (2-1), 5, lost
to Norfolk Catholic 35-31, bye.
5. Columbus Lakeview (2-1), 4, def. Sandy
Creek 33-19, Wayne.
6. Pierce (2-1), 6, def. Boys Town 42-7, Logan
View.
7. Kearney Catholic (2-0), 8, def. St. Paul 49-14,
Ogallala.
8. Broken Bow (2-0), NR, def. Gothenburg 1514, Cozad.
9. Valentine (2-0), NR, def. Gordon-Rushville
52-0, Winner, S.D.
10. Grand Island Central Catholic (2-0), 10, def.
Columbus Scotus 21-7, at Milford.
Others receiving votes: O’Neill.
CLASS C-2
1. Aquinas Catholic (2-0), 1, def. Archbishop
Bergan 19-7, at Elmwood-Murdock.
2. Hastings St. Cecilia (2-0), 2, def. Ravenna
7-6, Blue Hill.
3. Crofton (2-0), 3, def. Ponca 38-12, Stanton.
4. Lutheran High Northeast (2-0), 4, def.
Wisner-Pilger 49-14, at Laurel-Concord.
5. North Platte St. Patrick’s (3-0), 5, def.
Bayard 67-12, at Ravenna.
6. Hartington Cedar Catholic (2-0), 6, def.
Laurel-Concord 27-12, Ponca.
7. Battle Creek (2-0), 7, bye, at Oakland-Craig.
8. Elmwood-Murdock (2-0), 10, bye, Aquinas
Catholic.
9. Oakland-Craig (1-1), 8, def. Homer 58-12,
Battle Creek.
10. West Holt (2-0), 9, def. Twin River 40-12,
at Wakefield.
Others receiving votes: Sutton, Cambridge,
Perkins County.
CLASS D-1
1. Howells-Dodge (2-0), 1, def. Randolph 4612, High Plains Community.
2. Guardian Angels Central Catholic (2-0), 2,
def. Neligh-Oakdale 76-19, Cross County.
3. Elgin High/Pope John (2-0), 3, def.
Chambers/Wheeler Central 36-0, at Nebraska
and she doesn’t care who you are,
she wants to beat you. That’s great
to have on the court. She has some
physical talent, too.”
Senior setter Haley Beardsley tallied 27 assists and three kills.
“She’s doing a nice job of distributing the ball,” said Buttermore,
whose Broncos have a week off
before returning to action Sept. 19
at NCAA Division II No. 1
University of Nebraska at Kearney.
“We’ve asked her to kind of step
out of her comfort zone this week
from what we’ve been doing the
last couple of weeks and she did
that.”
Nebraska Wesleyan (3-2, 0-1).... 16 16 14
Hastings (12-2, 2-0)..................... 25 25 25
Nebraska Wesleyan (kills-aces-blocks)
Cody Long 2-1-0.5, Hannah Softley 2-0-0, Alex
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Notre
Dame is leaving the Big East for the
Atlantic Coast Conference in all
sports but football.
The ACC and Notre Dame said
Wednesday that the school will
play five football games annually
against the league’s programs, while
Notre Dame athletic director Jack
Swarbrick said in a statement that
the Irish will also have access to the
ACC’s non-BCS bowl tie-ins.
The move allows the Irish to
maintain football independence,
while the ACC is making an excep-
tion to its all-or-nothing requirement for schools to be full members.
ACC Commissioner John Swofford
said in a statement the move was “a
terrific milestone in the evolution of
the ACC and showcases tremendous
solidarity and vision by our Council
of Presidents.”
Along with inviting Notre Dame,
the ACC also says it has increased
its exit fees for the conference’s
schools to three times the league’s
annual operation budget — which
would currently come to more than
$50 million.
It was not clear when the realign-
ment will take effect. The ACC
scheduled a news conference for
Wednesday afternoon in Chapel
Hill, N.C.
Notre Dame has played basketball in the Big East for years, but
Syracuse and Pitt are leaving the
league along with West Virginia —
and now Notre Dame. In the ACC,
the Irish will face traditional powers
like Duke, North Carolina and the
league also fits the sports Notre
Dame is competitive in, including:
lacrosse and soccer.
The ACC in turn gets one of the
nation’s premier football programs,
TV/Radio broadcasts
Wednesday’s television
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
6 p.m.
ESPN — N.Y. Yankees at Boston
9 p.m.
ESPN — Teams TBA
WNBA
6 p.m.
ESPN2 — Seattle at Indiana
Thursday’s television
BOXING
9 p.m.
ESPN2 — Welterweights, Jessie
Vargas (19-0-0) vs. Aaron Martinez (18-11), at Las Vegas
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
6:30 p.m.
ESPN — Rutgers at South Florida
GOLF
7:30 a.m.
TGC — European PGA Tour, Italian
Hockey
National Hockey League
BOSTON BRUINS—Agreed to terms with F Tyler
Seguin on a six-year contract extension.
CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS—Agreed to terms with
D Michal Rozsival on a one-year contract.
WINNIPEG JETS—Agreed to terms with F
Spencer Machacek.
Olympic Sports
United States Anti-Doping Agency
USADA—Announced sprinter Debbie Dunn
accepted a two-year suspension after testing positive for a prohibited substance.
College
PAC-12 CONFERENCE—Suspended Washington
State S Deone Bucannon for a half game for a hit to
the head of an Eastern Washington player during a
game on Sept. 8.
SOUTHEASTERN CONFERENCE—Suspended
Mississippi DB Trae Elston one game for a “flagrant
and dangerous act” during a Sept. 8 game against
UTEP.
ARMSTRONG ATLANTIC STATE—Named Iuliia
Sherrod men’s and women’s assistant tennis coach.
GEORGIA SOUTHERN—Named Chris Moore
assistant baseball coach.
HOFSTRA—Named Alison Adamski director of
tennis.
MASSACHUSETTS—Named May Kotsopoulos
director of women’s basketball operations.
Christian.
4. High Plains (3-0), 4, def. Friend 65-6, at
Howells-Dodge.
5. Creighton (2-0), 5, def. Emerson-Hubbard 386, Pender.
6. Burwell (3-0), 6, def. Loup City 55-18, bye.
7. Exeter-Milligan (2-0), 7, def. Cross County
46-0, Shelby-Rising City.
8. Overton (3-0), 8, def. South Loup 28-14, bye.
9. Hartington (3-0), NR, def. Wynot 20-0, at
Allen.
10. Bruning-Davenport/Shickley (2-1), 10,
def. Pawnee City 48-16, bye.
Others receiving votes: Freeman, McCool
Junction, Arapahoe.
CLASS D-2
1. Giltner (2-0), 1, def. Hampton 70-14,
Kenesaw.
2. Kenesaw (2-0), 2, bye, at Giltner.
3. Humphrey St. Francis (2-0), 3, def.
Spalding/Spalding Academy 42-3, at Cedar
Valley.
4. Falls City Sacred Heart (2-0), 4, def. St.
Joseph Christian, Mo. 69-12, Axtell, Kan.
5. Shelton (2-0), 5, def. Harvard 62-8, Fullerton.
6. Medicine Valley (2-0), 7, def. Eustis-Farnam
55-12, at Axtell.
7. Garden County (2-0), 9, def. Potter-Dix 6214, Crawford.
8. Lawrence-Nelson (3-0), 10, def. Heartland
Lutheran 48-20, at Kenesaw.
9. Lindsay Holy Family (3-0), NR, def.
Newcastle 67-6, bye.
10. Wausa (2-0), NR, def. Bancroft-Rosalie 5622, Boyd County.
Others receiving votes: Amherst, Bertrand.
Springman 2-0-0.5, Katelyn Walsh 13-0-0.5,
Cicely Batie 2-0-2.5, Karny Kuehl 5-0-0,
Mackenzie Hite 0-0-0, Makayla Westphal 2-0-1,
Hanna Morrison 0-0-0, Mackenzie Ashton 0-0-0,
Michelle Pettit 0-0-0. Totals: 28-1-5.
Assists — Softley 1, Springman 26, Ashton 2.
Hastings (kills-aces-blocks)
Taylor Jordan 0-0-0, Kirsten Nickel 3-1-1, Haley
Beardsley 3-0-0.5, Kendra Schwein 9-2-1.5,
Jessica Osterhaus 9-0-6, Shayna Schacher 8-0-1,
Lindy Matthews 0-2-0, Kyla Havranek 0-0-0,
Carissa Kinne 0-0-0, Katie Zoucha 3-0-2. Totals:
35-5-12.
Assists — Nickel 1, Beardsley 27, Kinne 4.
Notre Dame to ACC in all sports but football
The Associated Press
THURSDAY
College men’s golf: Hastings College at Northwestern College......................................Noon
Prep volleyball: Doniphan-Trumbull at Adams Central ...................................................7 p.m.
Prep volleyball: Hastings High at Holdrege ....................................................................7 p.m.
Prep volleyball: Aquinas at St. Cecilia............................................................................7 p.m.
Prep cross country: AC, D-T, Kenesaw at Ravenna Invitational...............................4:15 p.m.
Prep cross country: Hastings High at Lincoln High .......................................................4 p.m.
Prep cross country: STC, BH, Desh, S. Central, Sup., TC at Fillmore Central invite.....5 p.m.
Prep softball: Hastings High at Adams Central.........................................................6:30 p.m.
Prep boys tennis: Holdrege at Hastings High.................................................................4 p.m.
Prep girls golf: Adams Central at Hastings High Invitational.......................................10 a.m.
Area Schedules
Minden at Thayer Central
Prep volleyball
Tri County at Superior
Bruning-Davenport/Shickley vs.
Sutton at Centennial
Freeman at MUDECAS Tournament
Wilcox-Hildreth, Overton at Elm Creek
Deshler, Franklin at Kenesaw
Prep softball
Wilber-Clatonia at Fillmore Central
Blue Hill at Minden
Palmer at Giltner
GICC/Doniphan-Trumbull at Twin River
McCool Junction at Harvard
Prep cross country
Lawrence-Nelson at Shelton
Smith Center Invitational
Football
HC: No. 9 Broncos win 10th straight
Continued from page B1
Schwein has been a major offensive force for the Broncos throughout the season, especially last week
in the Broncos’ five-set victory over
then-No. 11 Doane when she
recorded 21 kills and six blocks.
“Kendra was kind of a warrior all
week,” Buttermore said. “She’s a
competitor. She wants to come out
WEDNESDAY
College men’s soccer: Hastings College at Kansas Wesleyan ................................8:30 p.m.
National Football League
BUFFALO BILLS—Signed RB Johnny White.
Placed WR David Nelson on injured reserve.
CLEVELAND BROWNS—Signed OL D.J. Young to
the practice squad. Released OL Jeff Shugarts from
the practice squad. Announced the NFL lifted the
exemption for LB Scott Fujita.
DALLAS COWBOYS—Released TE Colin Cochart.
DENVER BRONCOS—Signed C Dan Koppen.
Waived C C.J. Davis, Re-signed QB Caleb Hanie.
Placed DT Ty Warren on injured reserve.
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS—Signed OT Bradley
Sowell from the Tampa Bay practice squad.
Released OT Kashif Moore from the practice squad.
Signed C A.Q. Shipley to the practice squad.
OAKLAND RAIDERS—Signed FB Marcel Reece to
a contract extension.
WASHINGTON REDSKINS—Signed LS Justin
Snow. Placed LS Nick Sundberg on injured reserve
and designated him for return. Signed FB Eric
Kettani and RB Javarris Williams to the practice
squad. Released RB Antwon Bailey, FB Robert
Hughes and DL Jason Shirley from the practice
squad.
Associated Press high school football rankings
Here are the Associated Press Nebraska high
school football rankings in Classes A through D2.
Listings include name of school, season record,
previous week’s result and next opponent. The
rankings are based on a formula that includes
ratings from the Omaha World-Herald and Lincoln
Journal Star plus experts for each class. Class A:
Dale Miller, Grand Island Independent. Class B:
Jeff Fielder, Scottsbluff Star-Herald. Class C1:
Tom Behmer, Norfolk Daily News. Class C2:
Brent Wasinius, Fremont Tribune. Class D1: Mark
Obermeier, North Platte Telegraph. Class D2: Nick
Blasnitz, Hastings Tribune.
Tribland
raising its profile alongside the likes
of Florida State, Miami, Virginia
Tech and Clemson.
“The ACC is composed of some
of the most highly respected universities in the country, and we at
Notre Dame look forward to joining them,” said Notre Dame
President, Rev. John Jenkins. “With
a mix of institutions — many of
which are also private, similar to
Notre Dame in size, and committed
to excellence in research and undergraduate education — the ACC is
an exceptionally good fit for us academically, as well as athletically.”
Open, first round, at Turin, Italy
8 a.m.
ESPN2 — Women’s British Open, first
round, at Hoylake, England
4 p.m.
TGC — Web.com Tour, Boise Open,
first round, at Boise, Idaho
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
6 p.m.
MLB — Regional coverage, N.Y.
Yankees at Boston or Detroit at Chicago
White Sox (8 p.m. start)
NFL FOOTBALL
7 p.m.
NFL — Chicago at Green Bay
Thursday’s radio
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
7 p.m.
KLIQ 94.5 — Kansas City at Minnesota
NFL FOOTBALL
7:30 p.m.
KXPN 1460, KICS 1550 — Chicago at
Green Bay
Parks and Rec. Softball
Monday’s results
Slow Pitch
Coed 1/2
Master Batters 17, D5 Design
Photography 5
Studs & Cougars 25, Premier Rental 5
Adams Land Title 18, Kitty’s Roadhouse
14
Tuesday’s results
Slow Pitch
Men 1/2
Carmichael Constructions/Rivals 24,
Dream Team 11
Haggie/Glass Bar 24, Shaka Brah 9
Haggie/Glass Bar 27, Kitty’s Roadhouse
6
Bravos 22, DJ’s Pet
Groomin/tt3Computers 9
Applause Video 8, Arby’s Travelers II 4
Sons of Pitches 16, Somethings Fierce
8
Balls Deep 11, Lifehouse 10
Local
NAIA VOLLEYBALL POLL
On the heels of nine straight wins, including
two in the last week over teams ranked in the
top 12, the Hastings College volleyball team
jumped into the top 10 at No. 9 in the NAIA
poll released Tuesday afternoon before the
Broncos’ match with Nebraska Wesleyan.
Hastings was receiving votes in the previous poll.
Also in the top 25 from the GPAC are No. 14
Doane and No. 20 Midland. It’s the first time
Hastings has been in the top 25 since the 2008
season.
HC VOLLEYBALL EARNS HONORS
A pair of Hastings College volleyball players
earned conference honors Tuesday, and one of
them received top NAIA honors. Senior outside
hitter Kendra Schwein was named both the
GPAC player of the week NAIA national player
of the week, while senior setter Haley Beardsley
was named the GPAC setter of the week. The
two helped lead the Broncos to a 5-0 record last
week. Schwein averaged 4.6 kills per set while
hitting .247. Beardsley averaged 9.6 assists per
set, totaling 43 assists and five ace serves in a
five-set win over Doane. Northwestern libero
Alexis Bart was named the GPAC defensive player of the week.
HC MEN’S SOCCER EARNS HONOR
Hastings College senior forward Jordan Green
was named the GPAC men’s soccer offensive
player of the week Tuesday. Green led the
Broncos to a 2-0 record with wins over then-No.
20 Grand View (Iowa) and Bethel (Ind.), which
was receiving votes. Green on the week scored
two goals against Bethel and assisted the gamewinning goal against Grand View. Green now
has four goals and two assists in four games.
NAIA SOCCER POLLS
The Hastings College men’s soccer team
moved one spot up to No. 13 in the NAIA poll
released Tuesday, while the HC women’s soccer
team dropped out of the top 25. The HC men
are 2-2, while the HC women are 0-4.
PREP CROSS COUNTRY RANKINGS
The following are rankings by the Nebraska
Cross Country Coaches Association released this
week:
Class A boys — 1, Kearney; 2, Fremont; 3, Lincoln
Southwest; 4, Millard West; 5, Millard South; 6,
Creighton Prep; 7, Papillion-La Vista; 8, Papillion-La Vista
South; 9, Lincoln Pius X; 10, Bellevue West
Class A girls — 1, Kearney; 2, Lincoln Southeast; 3,
Lincoln East; 4, Lincoln Pius X; 5, Millard West; 6,
Lincoln Southwest; 7, Omaha Marian; 8, Papillion-La
Vista South; 9, Fremont; 10, Omaha Burke
Class B boys — 1, Scottsbluff; 2, Mount Michael; 3,
Seward; 4T, Lexington; 4T, Elkhorn South; 6, Hastings
High; 7, Blair; 8, Plattsmouth; 9, York; 10T, Omaha
Skutt; 10T, Gering
Class B girls — 1, Seward; 2, York; 3, Omaha Mercy;
4, Lexington; 5, Plattsmouth; 6, Omaha Duchesne; 7,
Elkhorn South; 8, Gering; 9, Sidney; 10T, McCook; 10T,
Omaha Skutt
Class C boys — 1, Milford; 2, Ogallala; 3, Columbus
Scotus; 4, Minden; 5, Cozad; 6, Pierce; 7, Arlington; 8,
Raymond Central; 9, Gothenburg; 10, Mitchell
Class C girls — 1T, Fort Calhoun; 1T, Columbus
Scotus; 3, Cozad; 4, Ogallala; 5, West Point-Beemer; 6,
Norfolk Catholic; 7, Auburn; 8T, Arlington; 8T,
Gothenburg; 8T, Minden
Sports department contacts
General public: To contact the Tribune sports department regarding story ideas, for upcoming events, for
corrections or for any other information, please contact:
Hastings Tribune media manager Vince Kuppig: 402461-1257 or [email protected]
Sports writer Nick Blasnitz: 402-461-1270 or [email protected]
Sports writer Mike Zimmerman: 402-461-1271 or
[email protected]
Sports
HASTINGS TRIBUNE
Wednesday, Sept. 12, 2012
B3
Titans: Thayer Central rallies
Continued from page B1
The offense also changed it
up. The Titans showed they have
four, sometimes five, girls who
can score points when needed.
The go-to player is senior
Bridgette Baden, and the game
plan was for her to get chances.
But Sandy Creek keyed on her,
and it was evident in the third
set when she was blocked twice
in a row. Wiedel said it became
clear that the other hitters needed to be given a chance.
“As soon as we started to distribute the ball evenly, the kids
started to get some confidence,”
the coach said. “We’ve just got to
do that. I think you go to your
stud. But sometimes you’ve just
got to distribute in order to make
it work.”
After taking the third set 2520, Thayer Central became a different team. In the fourth, when
it came down to crunch time
again, it was the Titans who
showed the poise to get the final
points. A big kill from Tietjen to
send it into the fifth set may
have been the point when all
the momentum went to the
Titans.
Sandy Creek battled, though,
and erased a 10-6 deficit in the
fifth set to take a 11-10 lead. But
then four Cougar errors gave free
points to Thayer Central, and
Baden finished it with an
emphatic block that made the
Titans players fall to their knees
in excitement.
“We just have to be able to
keep our composure when it’s
tight,” Sandy Creek head coach
Angie Morris said. “For this
team, that really hasn’t been the
case up to this game.”
The Cougars finished with 53
unforced errors — including 31
in the final three sets.
Wiedel pointed out that his
team didn’t have a clean match,
either.
“A lot of errors. Sometimes it’s
survival at this time of the season,” he said.
Shaw had a stellar performance, finishing with 24 kills, an
LAURA BEAHM/Tribune
Blue Hill’s Mackenzie Willicott hits past St. Cecilia’s Arika Kitten (8) and Shanelle Farmer (12)
Tuesday night in Blue Hill.
STC: Hawkettes sweep Blue Hill
AMY ROH/Tribune
Thayer Central’s Bridgette Baden blocks against Sandy
Creek’s Mikaela Shaw Tuesday at Sandy Creek.
ace and four blocks for the
Cougars. Rylee Morris had 27
assists, as the two connected for
16 Sandy Creek points.
Sophomore Taylor Hinrichs had
eight kills, while junior Morgan
Dickson tallied six. Freshman
Chainey Tompkin had three
blocks.
Allison Tietjen finished with
11 kills, two aces and three
blocks for Thayer Central. Tarryn
Tietjen led with 25 assists. Baden
tallied 10 kills, an ace and five
blocks on the night.
“Give (Thayer Central) credit,
they played good defense,”
Angie Morris said. “We didn’t
always get our passes where we
needed it to be.
“We really hurt ourselves
tonight. We had so many service
errors and just little mistakes that
gave them easy points.”
For Wiedel, the credit to the
night goes to his leaders on the
floor.
“Our seniors have stepped up.
A year ago, we were kind of complacent,” he said. “Our seniors,
they understand what leadership
is. And I give Tarryn, Bridgette ...
all those kids a ton of credit.”
Thayer Central (4-0) . . . . . . . . . 21 22 25 25 15
Sandy Creek (6-2) . . . . . . . . . . . 25 25 20 23 12
Thayer Central (kills-aces-blocks)
Lauren Edgecomb 5-0-1, Tarryn Tietjen 1-0-0, Allison
Tietjen 11-2-3, Kelsey Long 5-0-0, Bridgette Baden 10-1-5,
Tashia Mumm 1-1-0, Megan Bulin 5-0-0. Totals: 33-4-9.
Assists — Edgecomb 2, T. Tietjen 25, Mumm 9, Bulin 1.
Sandy Creek (kills-aces-blocks)
Amanda Skalka 0-0-0, Chainey Tompkin 1-0-3, Sadie
Svoboda 0-0-1, Mikaela Shaw 24-1-4, Taylor Hinrichs 8-0-0,
Rylee Morris 2-1-0, Morgan Dickson 6-1-2, Tiffany Schweer
0-2-0, Hope Svoboda 0-1-0. Totals: 41-6-10.
Assists — Skalka 1, Shaw 5, Hinrichs 5, Morris 27.
Continued from page B1
Both Hamburger and VanCura
said St. Cecilia is improving with
each match. But according to
VanCura, this week will be an
important one for the
Hawkettes. St. Cecilia hosts
Aquinas on Thursday and plays
at the Fillmore Central tournament Saturday.
“Our schedule doesn’t get any
easier. We told the kids this is a
rough week against us,” VanCura
said. “With five matches against
some good ball clubs ... it’s very
tough week, and on top of that
you throw on homecoming and
all of those activities. We’re just
hoping that our kids stay focused
and take it one game at a time
and play as well as we can.”
Allen felt her team was just
half a step behind throughout
the match. And with a young
team, it’s going to be important
to stick together through the
remainder of the season. Allen
said volleyball has been a way to
take their minds off the recent
events the community has been
through.
“Tomorrow, we have to come
back after a funeral and practice
hard. We’ve talked about when
we get on that court, that’s a
release for us. We can get our
minds off of what we’ve been
through and just start focusing
on volleyball again,” Allen said.
“This is their time to have fun.
They’re young. They’re kids and
they need to have fun, too.
Hopefully we can do a couple
fun things during practices and
get their mindset back. A little
more positveness, a little more
enthusiasm and intensity — it
was lacking tonight, which was
understandable.”
St. Cecilia (5-2). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 25 25
Blue Hill (4-3) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 15 20
St. Cecilia (kills-aces-blocks)
Josie Jackson 0-1-0, Clare Hamburger 1-1-0, Arika Kitten
12-0-3, Josie Prevette 3-0-2, Shanelle Farmer 1-1-0, Morgan
Nikkila 14-2-0, Olivia Thomas 8-1-2, Meghan O’Callaghan 0-10. Totals: 39-7-7.
LAURA BEAHM/Tribune
St. Cecilia’s Josie Jackson
passes the ball Tuesday
night in Blue Hill.
Assists — Hamburger 34, Thomas 1.
Blue Hill (kills-aces-blocks)
Maci Coffey 12-0-1, Amber Kohmetscher 0-0-0, Hannah
Okckinga 3-0-1, Kortney Allen 1-1-0, Mackenzie Willicott 4-00, Rachel Reiman 1-0-1. Totals: 21-1-3
Assists — Allen 17, Coffey 1.
Tribland roundups
COLLEGE
PREP CROSS COUNTRY
HC women’s golf
Hastings High, Minden
ORANGE CITY, Iowa — The Hastings
College women’s golf team finished seventh
in the first GPAC qualifier with a score of
392 Tuesday. Dakota Wesleyan had the top
score after shooting 352.
Michaela Worley led the Broncos with a
95, which was good enough to tie in 19th
place overall. Rachel Cavalier shot a 98, and
Riley Johnson finished with a 99. Betsy
Rodgers shot a 100 and was followed by
Kelsey Mayfield (102).
MINDEN — The Minden girls and boys
cross country team received a perfect score of
10 to win a dual with Hastings High Tuesday.
The HHS girls scored 26 points. The HHS boys
had 34 points as a team.
For Minden, Sydney Phillips placed first in
12:53. Emma Jons placed second in 13:24.
Jessica Dolan placed third in 13:45. Teammate
Smantha Hoskins placed fourth in 13:46. Chris
Shelton (13:41) led the Whippet boys with a
first-place finish. Trevor Jacobsen placed second in 14:52. Leobardo Iniguez placed third in
15:15. Nicolas Brandt (15:19) placed fourth.
PREP GIRLS GOLF
AC, STC
GRAND ISLAND — Adams Central came
in second at the GICC triangular with 205
strokes. GICC (172) placed first. St. Cecilia
placed third with 261 strokes.
Mari Sayer led AC with a 48. Courtney
Barbee added shot a 51. Teammates Bailey
Hoins and McKenna Reed each shot a 53.
For STC, Emalee Napier led with a 54.
Madison Hucke shot a 55.
Girls Team Results
1, GICC 172; 2, Adams Central 205; 3, St. Cecilia 261
Adams Central results
Bailey Hoins 53; Courtney Barbee 51; McKenna Reed 53; Kristin Beck
60; Mari Sayer 48
Adams Central junior varsity results
Lacey Johnson 57; Breanna Jacobitz 58; Chandler Yurk 59; Alexis
Allerhelligen 59; Alyssa Spartz 66; Breann Norton 65
St. Cecilia results
Madison Hucke 55; Emalee Napier 54; Danielle Rynearson 70;
Brittany Trausch 82
Doniphan-Trumbull
Boys Team Results
1, Minden 10; 2, Hastings High 34
Boys Individual Results (4k)
1, Chris Shelton, Minden, 13:31; 2, Trevor Jacobsen, Minden, 14:52; 3,
Leobardo Iniguez, Minden, 15:15; 4, Nicolas Brandt, Minden, 15:19; 5, Drew
Cavanaugh, Minden, 15:30; 6, Nic Werner, Minden, 15:30; 7, Zack Rehus,
Minden, 15:52; 8, Carlos Roca, Hastings, 16:16; 9, Francisco Jauregui,
Minden, 16:34; 10, Alex Raun, Minden, 16:52; 11, Carlos Baustia, Hastings,
17:24; 12, Daulten Sadd, Hastings, 17:32; 13, Max McKelvey, Hastings,
17:35; 14, Alex Kleinjan, Hastings, 17:38; 15, Nick Hein, 18:05
HHS Boys
Carlso Roca 16:16; Carlos Baustia 17:24; Daulten Sadd 17:32; Max
McKelvey 17:35; Alex Kleinjan 17:38; Nick Hein 18:05; Ben Panwitz 18:29;
Collin Spilinek 18:30; Kyle Bishop 19:37; Nick Christen 19:43; Bryan Pedroza
19:54; Aiden Schneider 20:28; Sam Fincher 21:12; Heitor Pereira 22:16;
Dakota Boydston 23:44
Girls Team Results
1, Minden 10; 2, Hastings High 26
Girls Individual Results
1, Sydney Phillips, Minden, 12:53; 2, Emma Jons, Minden, 13:24; 3,
Jessica Dolan, 13:45; 4, Samantha Hoskins, Minden, 13:46; 5, Lindsey
Labrie, Hastings, 15:39; 6, Megean Bartos, Hastings, 16:28; 7, Bethany
Lehrling, Hastings, 16:28; 8, Madisson Fincher, 17:07; 9, Paige Lehrling,
Hastings, 18:07
HHS Girls
Lindsey Labrie 15:39; Megean Bartos 15:48; Bethany Lehrling 16:28;
Madisson Fincher 17:07; Paige Lehrling 18:07
PREP VOLLEYBALL
MUDECAS tournament
TAYLOR — Doniphan-Trumbull placed second at the Arcadia/Loup City invitational with
a 426 Tuesday. Centura placed first with 411
strokes.
Olivia Rash led D-T by placing first with a
95 stokes. Teammate Brandi Lemek (96)
came in fourth.
Girls Team Results
1, Centura 411; 2, Doniphan Trumbull 426; 3, Kearney Catholic 475; 4,
Gibbon 492; 5, Arcadia/Loup City 493.
Girls Individual Results
1, Olivia Rash, D-T, 95; 2, Micah Stall, Gib, 96; 3, Nikki Thienel, WR,
96; 4, Brandi Lemek, D-T, 96, 5, Haley Luhn, Cent, 98; 6, Brookely Nitch,
Cent, 98; 7, Ellie Johnson, Gib, 102; 8, Jenna Hargens, Cent, 103; 9,
Devyn Rother, STP, 107; 10, Baylee Groskreutb, KC, 112; 11, Ashlee
Brandt, Cent, 112; 12, Hannah Jakundowski, A/LC, 113; 13, Brooke
Meusch, KC, 115; 14, Khaila Roth, KC, 115; 15, Ashlyn Roth, Cent, 115.
BEATRICE — Bruning-Davenport/Shickley
defeated Palmyra at the MUDECAS tournament 25-13, 25-19 in a semifinal match to
improve to 7-0 Tuesday. Exeter-Milligan fell in
its semifinal match against Freeman 25-8, 1825, 27-25.
Makaleigh Yantzie led BDS with 10 kills and
11 digs. Christy Swartzendruber had nine kills,
13 digs and four aces. Matyson Kleinschmidt
added 16 assists and two blocks for the win.
Jackie Luzum led the Timberwolves with
eight kills, while Jennifer Pribyl added six.
Taylor Erdkamp finished with 19 assists.
Rock Hills
MANKATO, Kan. — Rock Hills went 0-2 at
the Rock Hills triangular, falling to Southern
Cloud 25-5, 25-15 and Wilson 25-9, 25-12
Tuesday.
No other information was available.
Wilcox-Hildreth
SHELTON — Wilcox-Hildreth (2-4) went 1-1
at the Shelton triangular Tuesday, defeating
Shelton 25-22, 18-25, 25-13 and falling to Axtell
25-11, 25-18.
Against Shelton, Jessica Harms had 10 kills
and four blocks. Shaylee Fouts had five aces.
Teammate Riley Jenkins tallied 17 assists.
Harms had two aces and one assist against
Axtell. McKenzie Aspegren had five kills.
Jenkins had eight assists.
Silver Lake
BLADEN — Silver Lake defeated Red Cloud
17-25, 25-18, 25-21, 25-12 Tuesday.
Mackenzie Skupa had 18 kills and four aces.
Megan Rockefeller had 12 kills. Teammate Kila
Timm had 15 assists, while Sydney Parr added
nine assists and two ace serves.
No Red Cloud information was available.
Sutton
SUTTON — Sutton defeated Superior 25-23,
22-25, 25-22, 27-29 Tuesday.
Maryah Calkins led Sutton with 15 kills.
Maria Van Kirk added 11 kills and four aces.
Delaney Lemkau recorded 34 assists, and
Steph Osterhaus had 19 digs.
No Superior information was available.
Fillmore Central
HENDERSON — Fillmore Central defeated
Heartland 25-22, 25-18, 25-16 Tuesday.
Audrey Malone led Fillmore Central with 11
kills. Lindsey Maloley tallied nine kills, while
teammate Christa Scott had five ace serves.
Fillmore Central advances to 5-1 on the year.
Harvard triangular
HARVARD — Lawrence/Nelson (4-3) went 20 at the Harvard triangular, defeating Kenesaw
25-21, 25-15 and Harvard 25-10, 25-13.
Harvard defeated Kenesaw 25-21, 25-20.
Against Kenesaw, Kelsey Menke led L/N
with 10 kills. McKayla Ward had 20 assists.
Rachel Kuthman, Cherokee Thayer, and Carlie
Mazour each had an ace serve.
Thayer had seven ace serves against
Harvard. Ward added 16 assists. Mazour had
eight kills, while Harlie Himmelberg had five
digs.
Katie Bell led Harvard against L-N with two
kills. Shelby Smith added six digs. Bell also led
with three kills in the win against Kenesaw.
Tiana Barnes tallied two aces.
Bridget Gallagher and Kelli Mack led Kenesa
with four kills against Harvard. Brenna
Schneider added eight assists. Against
Lawrence-Nelson, Schneider had seven
assists and Rachelle Steiner recorded five kills.
Kohmetscher was hit with the loss for DT/GICC. Alex Kentner also hit a home run.
Kohmetscher was also stuck with the loss
to Firend. D-T/GICC gave up all eight runs in
the final three innings and managed only five
hits.
PREP BOYS TENNIS
Adams Central
Doniphan-Trumbull
GIBBON — Doniphan-Trumbull went 1-1 at
the Gibbon triangular, deafeating Gibbon 2518, 23-25, 25-23 and falling to Central City 2515, 25-9.
In the victory against Gibbon, Kenzie Kloke,
Laren Hinrichs and Jordyn Brummund all had
six kills each. Brummund also had 15 assists.
Against Central City, Hinrichs led the team
with seven kills. Brummund had 12 assists.
PREP SOFTBALL
Adams Central
ST. PAUL — The Adams Central softball
team defeated St. Paul 10-2 in five innings on
Tuesday. Josie Bumgardner was the winning
pitcher. Jorji Johnson was 3-for-4 with a home
run and scored twice. Brianna Schuck went 2for-4 with a triple. Alyssa Ehlers also had a
triple. Syd Bernasek, Josie Bumgardner and
Alexis Grimmett each added a hit.
Hastings High
McCOOK — Hastings High went 1-1 against
McCook, winning 4-0 and losing 8-9.
In game No. 1, Cassandra Chandler threw all
seven innings to earn the shut out. She gave
up only four hits and struck out three. Alex
Schmidt led the offense with two hits and a
RBI. Libby Knapple and Paige Kennedy also
drove in one run each.
In the loss in game No. 2, Knapple hit a
grand slam for her only hit of the game.
Chanler had two hits and drove in one run.
Sophia Pankratz had two hits and a RBI, while
Melody Gnagy had one hit and also drove in a
run. Kennedy added a triple.
Blue Hill, GICC/D-T
FRIEND — Blue Hill went 1-1 at the Friend
triangular defeating Doniphan-Trumbull/Grand
Island Central Catholic 6-2 and falling to Friend
14-5 Tuesday. D-T/GICC also fell to Friend 8-0.
Blue Hill’s Katie Schaefer was the winning
pitcher against D-T/GICC. Lexie Himmelberg
hit a home run for the Bobcats. Alyssa
HOLDREGE — The Adams Central tennis
team defeated Holdrege 6-3 on Tuesday.
Jordan Nash cruised to an 8-2 victory at No. 1
singles. Nash and Schyler Bohlen were locked
in a battle at No. 1 doubles, but won the
match 9-7.
Adams Central 6, Holdrege 3
Singles
No. 1 — Jordan Nash, AC, def. Jared karlson, Hol; 8-2
No. 2 — Schyler Bohlen, AC, def. Walker Hohensee, Hol; 8-5
No. 3 — Levi Cermak, AC, def. Justin Ropers, Hol; 8-5
No. 4 — Zane Nelson, AC, def. Joseph Anderson, Hol; 8-6
No. 5 — Daniel Olson, Hol, def. Grant Ostrander, AC; 5-8
No. 6 — Michael Sanderson, AC, def. Joseph Marvin, Hol; 8-5
Doubles
No. 1 — Nash/Bohlen, AC, def. Karlson/Hohensee, Hol; 9-7
No. 2 — Anderson/Ropers, Hol, def. Nelson/Cermak, AC; 8-1
No. 3 — Olson/Marvin, Hol, def. Ostrander/Sittner, AC; 8-2
Hastings High
GRAND ISLAND — Hastings High fell 7-2 to
Grand Island on Tuesday. Matt Karnes and
Josh Hinrichs won their No. 1 doubles match
8-6. Sam Johnson and Ryan Kern went into a
tiebreaker to win their doubles match 9-8.
Grand Island 7, Hastings High 2
Singles
No. 1 — Joe Huston, GI, def. Matt Karnes, HHS; 8-1
No. 2 — Chance Keopanya, GI, def. Josh Hinrichs, HHS; 8-3
No. 3 — Braedon Root, GI, def. Sam Johnson, HHS; 8-2
No. 4 — Austen Lamborn, GI, def. Ryan Kern, HHS; 8-2
No. 5 — Brennon Root, GI, def. Nick Hamburger, HHS; 8-5
No. 6 — Austin Ryan, GI, def. John Funkey, HHS; 8-4
Doubles
No. 1 — Karnes/Hinrichs, HHS, def. Lamborn/Bra. Root, GI; 8-6
No. 2 — Johnson/Kern, HHS, def. Ryan/Bre. Root, GI; 9-8 (7-2)
No. 3 — Keopanya/Huston, GI, def. Funkey/Hamburger, HHS; 8-4
Adams Central JV
HOLDREGE — The Adams Central junior
varsity tennis team finished in a 6-6 tie with
Holdrege on Tuesday.
Singles
No. 1 — Isaac Hohman, Hol, def. Cody Lavene, AC; 6-4
No. 2 — Zeke Gollner, AC, def. Logan Piening, Hol; 6-0
No. 3 — Tevin Anderson, AC, def. Austin Swanson, Hol; 6-1
No. 4 — Preston Rath, Hol, def. Dylan Bunde, AC; 6-3
No. 5 — Connor Nelson, AC, def. Garrett Stice, Hol; 6-1
No. 6 — Nathan McNiel, Hol, def. Brady Conant, AC; 6-4
No. 7 — Landon Reed, Hol, def. Remmington Brandenburger, AC; 6-1
No. 8 — Harley Scott, Hol, def. Collin Schnase, AC; 6-0
Doubles
No. 1 — Lavene/Gollner, AC, def. Hohman/Piening, Hol; 6-4
No. 2 — Anderson/Bunde, AC, def. Swanson/Rath, Hol; 6-3
No. 3 — Conant/Nelson, AC, def. Burgeson/Jones, Hol; 6-3
No. 4 — Jacobson/Geiger, Hol, def. Brandenburger/Schnase, AC; 6-1
Big Ten: Coaches say not to write off league just yet
Continued from page B1
chance to have a good football
team, I wasn’t going to wait
until the end just because that’s
how it’s normally done. This
one was on me as a head coach.
I righted a situation I felt I needed to do. Hopefully, we can
move forward with progress.”
The Badgers still seem to have
a clear path to the Big Ten title
game in the Leaders division.
After all, No. 12 Ohio State
and Penn State are banned from
playing in the Big Ten title game
or a bowl as part of NCAA sanctions. Indiana’s two wins are
over weak competition (Indiana
State and Massachusetts), and
Illinois and Purdue have done
nothing to indicate they’re
about to make a jump.
Then again, the conference’s
coaches think it’s too early to
rule anything out.
“One game doesn’t define a
season,” Bielema said. “The Big
Ten went, what, 6-6 overall?
Obviously, it’s not winning, it’s
not losing, but it’s right in the
middle. That’s not where the Big
Ten wants to be. We played
some pretty formidable teams.”
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Rubes
HASTINGS TRIBUNE
Wednesday, Sept. 12, 2012
By Leigh Rubin
The Family Circus
By Bil Keane
THURSDAY, SEPT. 13
I
A good conversationalist
lets others have their say
D
EAR ABBY: I’m really
bad when it comes to
speaking. It’s hard for
me to squeak out the few
words I can. I
am shy and
not very sociable, so when
I’m with people, even my
two friends, I
feel like I
come across as
rude. I never
have the right
Dear Abby
things to say.
When I’m with my family, I
don’t usually have this problem.
In public, it seems like everyone else is so much more interesting than I am. Making conversation is a lot of trouble. I
know this sounds silly, but do
you know if there is anything
that can be done about it? I
heard you had a booklet about
being more social. Is it still
published? If so, how can I get
one? — VICTORIA IN SOUTH
CAROLINA
DEAR VICTORIA: Making
conversation may seem like “a
lot of trouble” to you because
making conversation is a SKILL
that you haven’t yet mastered.
A surefire way to contribute in
social situations is to become
informed about what is going
on in the world by reading
books, magazines, the Dear
Abby column (of course) and
going on the Internet. The
more informed you are about
the world, the better you will
be.
You don’t have to be an
“authority” on everything. A
good conversationalist is interested in what other people
have to say instead of feeling
pressured to fill the air with the
sound of his or her own voice.
My booklet “How to Be
Popular” is filled with suggestions about how to polish one’s
social skills. It isn’t meant to be
read just once and then put
aside. Read it often because it
covers a variety of social situations. It can be ordered by
sending your name and
address, plus check or money
order for $7 (U.S. funds) to
Dear Abby Popularity Booklet,
P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, IL
61054-0447. Shipping and handling are included in the price.
There are tips not only for
what to say, but also what NOT
to say, which is one of the keys
for becoming the kind of person other people find interesting, attractive and want to
know better. If parents, teachers and clergy know people
who need help in this regard, it
might make an inexpensive gift
that could help change the
course of their lives.
Most people can concentrate
on only one thing at a time.
One of the best cures for shyness is to forget about yourself
and concentrate on the OTHER
person by asking about what
he or she is interested in. Try it,
and you’ll find it works.
*
*
*
DEAR ABBY: I have this little
boy I tutor. He is 7 and says he
loves me. I’m 18. I try to tell
him I’m way too old and he
isn’t my type, but all he says is,
“Age ain’t nothing but a number.” Help! I need to know
what to do. — ALEX IN NEW
JERSEY
DEAR ALEX: Start by telling
him that the word “ain’t” isn’t
appropriate — that what he
should be saying is, “Age isn’t
anything but a number.” Then
tell him that while you are
complimented, he is there to
study — so you’ll revisit the
subject when HE is 18.
Pauline Phillips, a.k.a. Abigail
Van Buren, and Jeanne Phillips
are columnists for Universal
Press Syndicate©. Write Dear
Abby at P.O. Box 69440, Los
Angeles, CA 90069.
n coming months, be
alert for an unusual venture in which you will be
able to transform something that is outmoded
into a profitable endeavor.
It shouldn’t be too hard,
because it’ll be in your area
of expertise.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.
22) — It’s admirable of you
to be compassionate and
charitable to persons who
are less fortunate than you.
However, be practical when
it comes to the extent to
which you help them.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
— Don’t be surprised if a
couple of friends turn to
you for help when it comes
to a problem that they
can’t unravel. Fortunately,
you’ll know how to resolve
their issues.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) — It is quite likely that
you’ll have a slight edge
over your adversaries in a
competitive development.
However, your margin of
error is rather thin, so
don’t push your luck.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) — It might prove
to be beneficial to try to
communicate with an old
friend who is presently
residing at a new, distant
location, if you’ve got
something he or she might
be interested in.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) — The chances of
achieving an important
objective are likely to be
better today than they will
be tomorrow. Don’t put
anything off if it can easily
be taken care of right now.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) — Pay heed to your
mate’s suggestions if a decision regarding a matter of
mutual concern has to be
made sooner rather than
later. The added perspective
could prove to be just what
the doctor ordered.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) — A project that you’re
undertaking with another
has plenty of promising
potential. However, both
parties must be patient,
because the rewards will be
slow in coming.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) — Don’t think less of
opportunities that presently offer only small rewards
because with time, some of
them could turn out quite
well. Make sure you have
an eye on long-term potential.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) — The main reason
that most conditions
appear to be so promising
is because of your ability to
overcome difficulties.
You’re able to accomplish
what you envision, and
that counts for a lot.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20) — Don’t let a Johnnycome-lately associate try to
assume control of an
arrangement that you’re
better equipped to handle.
Stand up for what you
know is not only fair but
also best.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) — Trust your innate
business acumen because
it’s the asset that will put
you in the black. You’re
especially adroit at handling both your pennies
and dollars.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) —
Others are likely to find the
example you’re setting to
be an excellent one, mostly
because they’ll see you taking your responsibilities
seriously.
Baby Blues
Grizzwells
Shoe
By Rick Kirkman and Jerry Scott
By Bill Schorr
By Chris Cassatt and Gary Brookins
Frank and Ernest
By Bob Thaves
Pickles
By Brian Crane
Alley Oop
The Born Loser
By Dave Graue and Jack Bender
By Art and Chip Sansom
©2012 by NEA, Inc.
Frugal Living — Organize school lunch supplies
BY SARA NOEL
United Media
Packing school lunches can be
stressful for those who aren’t
“morning people.” Organization is
key to making it much easier.
The first reader tip can make the
morning run more smoothly:
Lunch organization: I put all of
the lunch foods that I can (refrigerated and pantry items) into plastic
bins on Sunday. Throughout the
week, I just pull from the bins.
Making multiple lunches is quick
and painless. — Olivia, Ohio
Note from Sara: Look at my mixand-match lunch idea list, too: frugalvillage.com/forums/foodkids/134225-mix-match-lunchboxideas.html.
Dress up a paper plate: I bake a
lot of cookies to give as gifts. Tins
make nice containers for them,
and I like to stack the cookies in
glass jars, too. Sometimes I punch
holes into a paper plate and thread
ribbon through the holes and tie a
bow. It’s a frugal way to gift cookies, and it’s a nicer presentation
than on a plain paper plate.
Different ribbons and colored
plates make this a great gift for any
time of year. You can run paper
lunch sacks through your printer,
too. Think: Gift bags and goodie
bags with cute images or messages.
— Kelly, Texas
Uses for pillowcases: I use our
old pillowcases to store things like
the food processor or large pans
that aren’t used often. The pillowcase keeps the dust and bugs/spiders off. — Zakity, Oregon
Bacon end pieces: I buy the end
pieces and grind them up into
“bacon hamburger.” I then fry it
up into bacon bits. We store them
in old 64-ounce yogurt containers
in the freezer. When we need
some, we pry some off with a fork.
The bottom layer ends up being a
mix of bacon bits and bacon
grease, so we make bacon gravy
out of it. Oh my, that stuff is heavenly! Also, when we cook up the
bits, we drain them using a mesh
colander. I then save the bacon
grease in an old 32-ounce yogurt
container. We use that to season
our cast iron. Occasionally, we will
cook with it. Homemade tortillas
with bacon grease instead of shortening is to die for. — Zakity,
Oregon
Freeze rice: I find freezing rice to
be very helpful. You can freeze it in
whatever containers you want (I
use one-pint jars, which are the
perfect size for the two of us). Both
brown rice and white rice freeze
well. I find it especially helpful to
freeze wild rice, since it has a
longer cooking time. A one-pound
can is almost $4 here. I would
never pay that, but a lot of times
I’ve been tempted to have one on
the shelf, since I don’t always have
time to cook wild rice. Having it
frozen is a big help. And adding
rice is a great way to stretch hamburger. — S.D., Minnesota
Uses for toothpaste: I could
hardly see through my car’s headlights, so I hooked up the buffer
(the kind used to buff the car
when waxing), placed some toothpaste on it, added a small amount
of water and went to town. The
headlights were clear again, and I
saved a lot of money! I also clean
my wedding band with toothpaste.
It’s silver, not gold, and cleaning
with bleach would cause it to turn
dark. Now I use toothpaste to buff
it, and it shines good as new! —
Rose F., North Carolina
Garfield
Zits
By Jim Davis
By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
B5
Arts & Entertainment
Quickly or slowly,
which is better?
HASTINGS TRIBUNE
Wednesday, Sept. 12, 2012
A
TYLER GOLDEN, NBC/AP
This June photo released by NBC shows mentors (from left) Blake Shelton, Christina Aguilera, Cee Lo Green and Adam
Levine on the set of “The Voice” in Los Angeles.
‘X Factor,’ Voice’ clash
LYNN ELBER
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — The stakes are high,
the tactics are fierce and the rhetoric is
heating up.
Obama versus Romney? Nope. It’s the
contest between “The Voice” and “The X
Factor,” which escalated after NBC
abruptly moved to pit its “Voice” against
Wednesday’s second-season debut of Fox’s
“X Factor.”
The two singing contests already faced
a tussle over audience votes when NBC
scheduled a fall cycle of “The Voice” after
it proved itself as a solid spring performer.
Then, in a post-Labor Day surprise, an
apparently mischievous NBC said it was
expanding the show’s first week from
Monday and Tuesday to include a third
episode, which happens to air opposite
the first hour of the “X Factor” bow at 7
p.m.-9 p.m. Wednesday. Fox’s show also
airs Thursday.
Suddenly, the battle of the talent shows
is much more interesting.
Or make that infuriating, if you’re “X
Factor” creator, executive producer and
judge Simon Cowell. Known for his creative critiques as an “American Idol” panelist (”You sound like a cat jumping off
the Empire State Building”), he was simply blunt about NBC’s move.
Cowell took off the gloves when he
told a teleconference last week that he
was angry “because I think there’s a kind
of gentleman’s agreement.”
The implication: Networks can slap
each other around by putting dramas and
comedies head-to-head, but a talent show
is in a class of its own, like PBS’
“Downton Abbey” but with a record contract and hot modern blondes named
Christina, Britney and Demi.
“I think it’s mean-spirited and I hope
and I pray that it backfires on them,
because it’s one of the best shows we’ve
ever made,” Cowell said, adding that
three consecutive nights of “Voice” is
“too much” and viewers will choose “X
Factor.”
“But I’ve learned, don’t make any predictions,” he said, tempering bravado
with caution.
Season two represents a sophomore
reboot for “X Factor,” which did well last
season but failed to pull the 20 million
viewers he’d grandly predicted. Instead, it
averaged about 12.6 million for its performance and results episodes, which
Cowell saw as a “wake-up call” for how to
handle the U.S. version of his British hit.
(”The Voice” averaged 15.9 million last
season, with results shows coming in at
11.3 million.)
The Associated Press
North
´AQ2
™J985
©7
®AQ764
West
East
´J874
´ 10 9 5
™A3
™K762
© A Q 10 6 5
©J43
® K 10
®J93
South
´K63
™ Q 10 4
©K982
®852
Dealer: West
Vulnerable: East-West
South West North East
1©
Dbl.
Pass
1 NT Pass Pass
Pass
Opening lead: © 6
trick and returns a diamond.
Then the defenders can collect
one club, four diamonds and
two hearts for down one.
Is there a better way to get
the two extra tricks?
Yes, if South is willing to go
slowly by attacking hearts. He
loses two tricks in the suit, but
he also establishes two winners. The defense is held to two
hearts and four diamonds,
while declarer takes three
spades, two hearts, one diamond and one club.
Losing tricks early to establish winners is a common notrump strategy.
Phillip Alder is a columnist for
Newspaper Enterprise Association.
HarperCollins agrees
to lower e-book prices
HILLEL ITALIE
The Associated Press
RAY MICKSHAW, Fox/AP
This June photo released by Fox shows judges (from left) L.A. Reid, Demi Lovato,
Britney Spears and Simon Cowell on the set of “The X Factor.”
“I was a bit cocky,” he said in a recent
interview. “I was feeling bullish coming
off the U.K. show. And I don’t think I
really read the (American) market that
well” and how a strong show could let
“massive social network power” make it a
hit.
So is “X Factor” sharper now that firstyear judges Nicole Scherzinger and Paula
Abdul are out and Britney Spears and
Demi Lovato are in? Also gone is host
Steve Jones, to be replaced before live
episodes begin in November by a likely
male-female duo yet to be chosen (Kevin
McHale of “Glee,” Kelly Osbourne and
Khloe Kardashian are among the rumored
candidates).
Yes, said Cowell, with the new judges
and new producers making a difference.
“The show looks better and feels better
than what we did a year ago. I can see an
improvement. I’m happy with it,” he said.
Spears and Lovato are “doing great,”
according to Cowell. “With Britney,
everybody expects there’s going to be
some kind of car crash with her. But it’s
not. She’s very switched on, very focused.
... She has good taste and from working
with her you can understand why she’s
lasted so long in the industry.
“She totally understands the music
business and understands the difference
between a good singer and a potential
star.”
As for Lovato, she’s a “revelation,” he
said. “She’s very smart, she’s a brat and
that’s probably why I like her.”
Lovato, 20, also is “a very hot recording
artist,” Cowell said, and one who’s closer
to the age of the audience that Fox wants
to attract, the young adults for whom
sponsors pay higher ad rates.
All that optimism, and then came the
decision by NBC that Cowell labels a
“spoiling tactic.”
NBC declined to comment. “Voice”
executive producer Mark Burnett, who
told TMZ last week that he was unaware
of his show’s added night and that it
never occurred to him the two shows
would compete, didn’t respond to a
request for comment.
He’s not afraid of a little verbal hardball, however. Recently, Burnett pointedly
noted that there are format changes for
“The Voice,” but he’s sticking with original mentors Christina Aguilera, Cee Lo
Green, Blake Shelton and Adam Levine as
long as they’re available — in obvious
contrast to Cowell’s musical chairs.
“Truly we’ve gotten so close with all
these guys, and it really has become like a
family,” Burnett said, explaining why he
opened his Malibu home for a “Voice”
news conference.
“The X Factor” should be more concerned with postseason Major League
Baseball pre-emptions as Fox airs the playoffs, said analyst Brad Adgate of mediabuyer Horizon Media.
For “The Voice,” there’s competition to
come from ABC’s popular “Dancing With
the Stars” and the potential of overkill
with two runs in a year, he said, while
“American Idol” is still on and strong in
part because Fox airs it once annually.
“Fox kind of protected it, and I don’t
think NBC is doing that with ‘The Voice,’ ”
he said. “I was kind of surprised they took
one of the few bona fide hits on the network and are running the risk of viewer
fatigue.”
Nielsen shows how people use TV differently
NEW YORK — The number
of U.S. homes that don’t get traditional television service continues to increase, but that doesn’t mean they don’t have TVs.
The Nielsen company said
in a report issued on Tuesday
that three-quarters of the esti-
rthur Ashe said, “A
wise person decides
slowly but abides
by these decisions.”
That is interesting
from someone who had to
make split-second decisions
on a tennis
court.
However, in
each deal,
declarer and
the defenders
must decide
whether to
Phillip
strive quickly to
Alder
take the number of tricks
needed to make or break the
contract, or to act more leisurely, slowly developing the necessary winners.
Which applies in today’s
deal? South is in one no-trump.
West leads his fourth-highest
diamond, East puts up the jack,
and South wins with his king.
These days, many Easts
would have responded one
heart over North’s takeout double. But it consumes no space
and cannot even be considered
a useful lead-director.
South starts with five top
tricks: three spades, one diamond (trick one) and one club.
It looks tempting to play on
clubs, where surely West has the
king. But note what happens. If
declarer plays a club to the
queen, cashes the club ace, and
plays a third club, East takes the
mated 5 million homes that
don’t get TV signals over the
airways or through cable,
satellite or telecommunications companies have televisions anyway.
Many of these homes are satisfied to use their TVs for games
or get programming through
DVDs or services like Netflix or
Apple TV, said Dounia Turrill,
senior vice president for client
insights at Nielsen.
The company’s report shows
how the nature of TV service
is slowly changing. Before the
percentage started declining
about three years ago, more
than 99 percent of TV homes
received the traditional TV signals. Now that has dipped just
below 96 percent.
Part of the decline is also
economic — service deemed
expendable by people struggling to make ends meet,
Nielsen said.
WILD WEDNESDAY
One Medium 12” Pizza w/Cheese & 1 Topping
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HASTINGS
314 N. Burlington Ave.
(next to Applause Video)
462-5220
NEW YORK — A new and
uncertain era of e-book prices
has begun.
HarperCollins Publishers
announced Tuesday that it has
reached new price agreements
with sellers that conform to a
settlement with the Justice
Department over allegations that
five publishers and Apple colluded to set prices for e-books. Such
new works as Michael Chabon’s
“Telegraph Avenue” now can be
purchased on Amazon.com for
$9.99, a price publishers and
rival booksellers fear will give
Amazon dominant control of
the e-market.
Simon & Schuster and
Hachette Book Group also settled, but as of Tuesday afternoon e-prices for such fall
books from those publishers as
Bob Woodward’s “The Price of
Politics” and Tom Wolfe’s
“Back to Blood” were selling
for $14.99. A spokesman for
Simon & Schuster declined
comment, while Hachette
issued a statement saying it was
“engaged in productive discussions with e-book distribution
agents.”
Apple and two other publishers, Penguin Group (USA) and
Macmillan, declined to settle
and a trial is expected next June.
The settlement was
announced in April, when the
Justice Department filed suit,
and was approved last week by a
federal judge in New York. The
legal action stems from agreements reached between major
publishers and Apple in 2010
that allowed publishers to set
their own prices for e-books, an
effort to counter Amazon’s deep
discounts of best sellers. Over
the past two years, Amazon’s eshare is widely believed to have
dropped from around 90 percent to around 60 percent, with
Barnes & Noble.com’s rising to
25 percent.
E-books are believed to comprise around 25-30 percent of
total sales, exponentially higher than four to five years ago.
But growth has slowed over the
past year, and reasons cited
vary from the higher prices
charged under the Apple agreements to a general maturation
of the e-market, with the most
avid e-book readers already
accounted for.
With no definitive resolution
expected soon, publishers and
booksellers face a complicated
time of possible price wars or
periods when books may
become unavailable during the
busy fall season, depending
how quickly new agreements
are signed. Barnes & Noble.com
and other online retailers may
feel pressure to cut their prices
as deeply as Amazon.com. And
Random House Inc., which
agreed to a similar sales model
as HarperCollins and others but
is not involved in the legal
action, may find itself charging
several dollars more for popular
e-books than its competitors
charge
Prices for new HarperCollins
books differed from seller to
seller as of Tuesday afternoon.
Chabon’s “Telegraph Avenue”
cost $12.59 on Barnes &
Noble’s Nook and $9.99 on
Apple’s iBookstore. Molly
Ringwald’s “When It Happens
to You” was $9.74 on Amazon,
$12.99 on Barnes & Noble and
$9.99 on Apple.
WOMEN
AT WORK
A special supplement
of the Hastings
Tribune to celebrate
women in the
workforce.
Publishes
Monday,
October 1, 2012
To be included in
this section call
402-462-2131
by September 17.
Nation/World
B6
HASTINGS TRIBUNE
Wednesday, Sept. 12, 2012
Romney criticizes Obama in wake of embassy attacks
BEN FELLER AND
NEDRA PICKLER
attacks as “disgraceful” in a statement the former Massachusetts
governor released before confirmation that the American
ambassador had been killed.
Obama spokesman Ben
LaBolt said the campaign was
“shocked that, at a time when
the United States of America is
confronting the tragic death of
one of our diplomatic officers
in Libya, Gov. Romney would
choose to launch a political
The Associated Press
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. —
Republican Mitt Romney
slammed the Obama administration’s handling of foreign affairs
after attacks on U.S. diplomatic
missions in Egypt and Libya as
foreign policy pushed to the front
of the presidential campaign.
Romney branded the administration’s early response to the
attack.” The president planned
to make a statement
Wednesday morning in a
White House Rose Garden
appearance with Secretary of
State Hillary Rodham Clinton.
U.S. ambassador to Libya Chris
Stevens and three American
members of his staff were killed
in an attack on the U.S. consulate
in the eastern city of Benghazi.
Libyan officials said the attack
was carried out by protesters
angry over a film that ridiculed
Islam’s Prophet Muhammed.
Romney pounced on news of
the attacks, trying to seize an
opportunity to criticize
President Barack Obama on an
area where voters see him as a
stronger leader. Polling shows
Americans trust Obama more
on foreign policy and national
security — areas where
Republicans traditionally have
an edge in public opinion.
Deaths in factory fires up to 314
ADIL JAWAD
pulling bodies out from the site
in Karachi.
Most of the deaths were
caused by suffocation as people
caught in the basement were
unable to escape when it filled
with smoke, said the top firefighter in Karachi, Ehtishamud-Din.
The building only had one
accessible exit, and all the
The Associated Press
KARACHI, Pakistan —
The death toll from a pair of
devastating factory fires that
broke out in Pakistan’s two
biggest cities rose on
Wednesday to 314 people,
many of whom perished
because they were unable to
escape buildings that lacked
emergency exits and basic safety equipment such as alarms
and sprinklers.
The horrific toll highlights
the atrocious state of industrial
safety in Pakistan, where many
factories are set up illegally in
the country’s densely populated cities, and owners often pay
officials bribes to ignore safety
violations.
The more deadly of the two
blazes, which both erupted on
Tuesday night, was at a garment factory in the southern
city of Karachi, the country’s
economic heart.
The death toll there rose to
289 people Wednesday, as firefighters battled the flames for
hours, said senior government
official Roshan Ali Sheikh. It
was one of the worst industrial
accidents in Pakistan’s 65-year
history, and Sheikh said the
death toll could rise because
rescue workers were still
other doors were locked, said
Sheikh.
“It is a criminal act to lock
the emergency exit doors, and
we are trying to know who did
it, and why?” Sheikh said.
Relatives of the victims said
the factory owner locked the
exit doors in response to a
recent theft, thereby endangering the workers inside.
NOTICE OF ORGANIZATION
OF A LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY
TAKE NOTICE that BB & P HOSPITALITY, LLC has
been organized under the laws of the State of Nebraska.
The address of the designated office is 201 East J
Street, Hastings, Nebraska 68901. The company is organized to engage in and do any lawful act concerning
any and all lawful business for which a limited liability
company may be organized under the laws of the State
of Nebraska. The company commenced on September
7, 2012, and its existence is perpetual. The company will
be managed by its members.
Daniel C. Pauley, #24582
DUNMIRE, FISHER & HASTINGS
P.O. Box 1044
Hastings, Nebraska 68902-1044
(402) 463-1383
September 12, 19, 26, 2012
Notice of Meeting
Notice of Meeting
The Board of Education
Educational Service
of the Hastings Public
Unit No. 9
Schools, School District
The Budget Committee
No. 18, Adams County, of the Board of EducationNebraska, will hold a regu- al Service Unit No. 9 will
lar Board meeting on Mon- hold a meeting on Monday, September 17, 2012, day, September 17, 2012,
7:00 p.m., City Council at 5:00 p.m. at the office at
Chambers, 220 North 1117 East South Street,
Hastings Avenue, Hast- Hastings, Nebraska. The
ings, Nebraska. A current purpose of the meeting is
agenda for the meeting will to review the 2012-13 ESU
be available for public in- No 9 budget.
spection during regular
Sue Brown
business hours at the SuBoard Secretary
perintendent's Office, 1924 September 12, 2012
West A Street, Hastings,
HAVE LIVESTOCK, farm
Nebraska.
Jeff Schneider, equipment, or farm land for
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE`S SALE
Secretary sale? Call 402-462-2131 to
The following described property will be sold at pubBoard of Education advertise your specialty.
lic auction to the highest bidder on October 1, 2012, at
10:00 a.m. at the main entrance of the Webster County September 12, 2012
Courthouse, 621 North Cedar, Red Cloud, Nebraska
NOTICE OF ORGANIZATION
68970:
OF
THE EAST 42 FEET OF LOTS 19 AND 20, ALL OF
PRODUCERS GRAIN STORAGE 3, LLC
LOTS 21, 22, 23 AND 24, IN BLOCK 1, LEDUCʼS
Notice is hereby given that PRODUCERS GRAIN
ADDITION TO RED CLOUD, WEBSTER COUNTY,
STORAGE 3, LLC has been organized as a limited liabilNEBRASKA
All subject to any and all: (1) real estate taxes, (2) ity company under the laws of the State of Nebraska.
special assessments, (3) easements, covenants, restric- The address of the Companyʼs principal office is 265
tions, ordinances, and resolutions of record which affect North Showboat Boulevard, P.O. Box 1008, Hastings,
the property, and (4) unpaid water bills, (5) prior mort- Nebraska 68902-1008. The general nature of the Comgages and trust deed of record and (6) ground leases of panyʼs business to engage in all lawful business activirecord. The purchaser is responsible for all fees or tax- ties, for which limited liability companies may be formed
es. This sale is made without any warranties as to title or under the laws of the State of Nebraska. The existence
of the Company commenced on August 20. 2012. The
condition of the property.
By: Eric Lemp, Trustee, NSBA# 24096 affairs of the Company are to be conducted by a Board
Kozeny & McCubbin, LC of Managers appointed by its members.
Dated: August 24, 2012.
12400 Olive Boulevard, Suite 555
PRODUCERS GRAIN STORAGE 3, LLC
St. Louis, Missouri 63141
BY: William R. Kutilek
(314) 991-0255
Its Attorney
Published in the Hastings Tribune
CROSBY GUENZEL, LLP
K&M Filename: SOUJENO3
Attorneys at Law
THIS FIRM IS A DEBT COLLECTOR AND ANY IN134 South 13th Street, Suite 400
FORMATION WE OBTAIN FROM YOU WILL BE USED
Lincoln, Nebraska 68508
FOR THAT PURPOSE.
August 29, September 5, 12, 2012
August 22, 29, September 5, 12, 19, 2012
Open 8:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. Monday through Friday
8:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon Saturday
DE A E L E CTRO N ICS
House Calls/Free pickup and delivery 9 a.m .-9 p.m .daily
402-984-8001 or tollfree 1-800-383-8141
Visa & M astercard accepted.
Con tra c tors
1
Card of Thanks
Thank you Jesus, Mary,
Joseph, and St. Jude.
CP
What fun it is turning middle age. Thank you so
much to all my friends,
relative, and former customers for the many cards,
phone calls, emails, and
flowers. It was overwhelming. Special thanks to Nola
Glover and Bev Ochsner!
Lavera Hoggatt
3
A BC S E A M L E S S S IDIN G , W IN DO W S &
G U TTE RS
In Memory
Jim Harrell
01/14/38 – 09/12/2000
Hastings,w w w .abcseam less.com ...402-463-7580
10 %
10 %
We reserve the right to reject, edit or reclassify any advertisement accepted by us for publication.
We accept cash, check or money order VISA, MASTERCARD, DISCOVER or
AMERICAN EXPRESS.
Fax: 402-462-2156
YELLOW
PAGES
Com pute r Re pa ir
20
Automobiles
2006 BUICK LaCrosse
CXL: Fully equipped,
leather seats, 3800 V-6.
Hi-Line Motors, Kenesaw
402-752-3498
www.hilinemotors.com
ʻ97 Astro Van: Green, 4.3,
62,xxx miles, clean. Books
$6,975...........Cash $5,975
220 West South Street
402-461-3161
List your ad. 402-462-2131.
Brambleʼs Auto Sales
Check our new website
bramblesauto.com
Phone (308)381-8220 • w w w.them obilityexpert.com
Ray’s Cafe
N e w s pa pe rs
2604 West 2nd Street
Serving Breakfast at 6 a.m.
7 days a week
10 %
Coupon can also be used for
Papa Ray’s Pizza
Expires 9-18-12
10 %
H A S TIN G S TRIBU N E
w w w .hastingstribune.com
908 W .2nd S t.Hastings..................402-462-2131
P e ts & A n im a l Con trol
H E A RTL A N D P E T CO N N E CTIO N
1807 W .J Hastings
w w w .petfinder.com ............402-462-P E TS (7387)
Coun s e lors -H um a n Re la tion s
G E N E RA L CO U N S E L IN G L L C
Cyndee Fintel,LIM HP,Jessica Hunt,M S,PLM HP
w w w .generalcounseling.com ...........402-463-6811
H om e A pplia n c e s & E le c tron ic s
RO G E R’S IN C.
1035 S.Burlington Hastings............402-463-1345
L a w n S prin kle r S ys te m s
RA N DY’S S P RIN K L E R S YS TE M S
Free Estim ates • R esidential• C om m ercial• D esign S ervice
S erving the area for over 20 years........308-384-4036
M e d ic a l E quipm e n t
G O O D A IR H O M E M E DICA L E Q U P IM E N T
Tim Garniss
710 W est16th S t.Hastings.............402-463-1100
Your house is too important
to trust just anyone.
S teel & Vinyl
Replacem entD oors
S unroom s
S offit& Fascia
Replacem entW indow s
Lifetim e W arranty
M aintenance Free
Financing A vailable
Trustw orthy S ervice
Q uality W orkm anship
These and other
pets
are ready for
adoption.
Heartland Pet
CHE DDA R & CHE E S E Connection,
FIZZL E
D o m es tic s ho rtha ir,
Sc hna u zer/Terrier
1807 W estJ,
o ra nge & w hite m ix ,
M
ix , M ed iu m
462-PETS
la rge a d u ltm a les , m ic ro
Ad u ltFem a le,
pet
f
i
nder
.
com
c hipped , neu tered ,
M ic ro Chipped ,
s ho ts , ho u s e tra ined .
Buy O ne -G etO ne!
Spa yed , Sho ts
S ee us fora com plete line
ofpetsupply needs.
SUPERSTO RE 1115
W es t2 nd Street
P iz z a
L ITTL E CA E S A R’S
TRUST A PRO.
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
ADOPT A PET
TH E“Y OU G ET M ORE”
COUNTRY CRAFTS and
Friends Fall Event. Thursday, September 13, 6-9
p.m., Friday, September
14, 6-9 p.m., Saturday,
September 15, 10 a.m. to
5 p.m., Sunday, September 16, 1-5 p.m. All handmade crafts. Hot food
served Thursday-Saturday. Go 7 miles east of
Hwy. 281 and Doniphan
corner, turn right at C Rd.,
go 1 mile on gravel, turn
left. From Giltner: Go 5
miles west on 6 Rd., turn
left on C Rd., go 1 mile on
gravel, turn left.
HAVE A Service to offer?
Do you lay carpet, cater
banquets, give music lessons? Call 402-462-2131
to advertise your specialty.
P A P A RA Y’S P IZZA
727 W. E: Friday, 2-7.
Ipod, PS2 games, kidsʼ
clothes.
T.R.L . TRE E S E RV ICE L .L .C.
Tree Trim m ing & Rem oval
Ted S m ith........................................402-469-8427
U phols te ry
TH E CO V E R U P U P H O L S TE RY
204 N.Clay,Box 387,Harvard.........402-772-4031
To Pu rc ha s e Ad vertis ing O n This Pa ge Co nta c t4 6 2 -2 13 1
20
Garage Sales
Southeast
Automobiles
2007 DODGE Durango:
3rd seat, 1 owner....$8,000
2003 PONTIAC Bonneville: 4-door.............$4,200
Great Plains Chrysler Dodge
402-463-3104•N. Hwy 281
www.greatplainsdodge.com
Hajnyʼs
AUTO SALES
2006 CHEVY TrailBlazer:
4x4, 4-door, new tires,
nice. $7,450.
2005 DODGE Neon: 4door, SXT, 4-cylinder, automatic, full power, 62,000
miles, nice. $4,250.
402-463-2636
PAUL SPADY
MOTORS
www.spadyautos.com
See our selection of
FUEL ECONOMY cars at
jacksonscarcorner.com
22
2-wheel Drive
Pickups
BROKEN ARM? We have
used upper and lower control arms. McMurray Motors, 402-462-6879.
Deveny Motors
1013 S. Burlington
402-462-2719
LOOKING FOR a job?
Check classified every day.
4-wheel Drive
Pickups
1990 DODGE: 4-wheel
drive,
extended
cab.
$3,195. 308-737-7652
25
Vans
2010 DODGE Grand Caravan: Stow N Go, 1 owner.
Special price.........$12,900
THE CAR LOT
East Highway 6
36 Travel Trailers &
Motor Homes
2004 WILDWOOD 22ʼ
travel trailer, bunkhouse
model. Super nice.
TRANSPORTATION
EQUIPMENT CO.
100 N. Laird, Hastings, NE
Year end RV sale
Going on now!
50
Announcements
14
Tre e S e rvic e
FR EE ESTIM ATES!
4
23
53
Health Care
KEARNEY
COUNTY
Health Services currently
has these exceptional
healthcare opportunities
available:
Long Term Care
CNA and or MA - part-time
and full time
RN – full or part-time, or
just weekends
Environmental Services
Housekeeper- Full or parttime. Monday-Friday; Every other Saturday; Possible occasional evening
hours.
Dietary Services
Kitchen Helper-6:30 a.m. –
3 p.m. and 4 p.m. – 8 p.m.
Every other weekend
Cook- Full or part -time
Kearney County Hospital
RN- Full or part-time
Radiology Tech -Part-time
Competitive wages, flexible scheduling. If interested:
No farewell words
were spoken,
No time to say goodbye.
You were gone before
we knew it,
And only God knows why.
Love never ends ––
until weʼre together again.
Love, Me
Carry Outand D elivery
314 N.Burlington Ave.Hastings......402-462-5220
2604 W .2nd S treet,Hastings..........402-463-1626
H ASTIN G S
4 0 2 -4 6 3 -75 8 0
STATEW ID E
1-8 0 0 -8 2 5 -3 3 6 0
could create a campaign issue for
Obama, but instead the attacks
sparked by the obscure film has
brought an unexpected crisis.
Romney jumped on the development to argue Obama isn’t leading on foreign policy. It’s unclear
whether the ambassador’s death
will catch the attention of voters
rather than the war in
Afghanistan or Obama’s leadership in the death of al-Qaida
leader Osama bin Laden.
Public Notices
Classified Ads
402-462-2131
But voters — and Romney’s
campaign — have been more
focused on the economy than
security in this election. And
Romney gave Obama an opening for criticism when he didn’t offer a salute to the troops
or reference the war in
Afghanistan during his speech
to the Republican National
Convention two weeks ago.
The question has been
whether a crisis in Iran or Syria
Employment
Agencies
Immediate Work
Available
• General Laborers
• Grain Handler
• Harvest Laborers
• Machine Operator
• Temporary Workers
• ....and more!
Pay up to $15/hour!
Associated Staffing
1023 W. 2nd St.
Hastings, NE
www.associated-staffing.com
402-462-5116
NOW HIRING
ESSENTIAL PERSONNEL
402-462-4400
51
Professional
PHARMACY
TECHNICIAN: Allenʼs Pharmacy
has an immediate opening
for one full-time or two
part-time Pharmacy Technicians. Experience preferred. Competitive starting
salary, excellent working
conditions. Benefits include paid vacation, holidays (including birthday),
BCBS Insurance, and Cafeteria Plan, plus valuable
employee discount. Apply
at Allenʼs main office or
email resume to [email protected]
1115 West 2nd Street
Hastings, NE 68901
See our truck selection at
jacksonscarcorner.com
List your ad. 402-462-2131.
TRIBUNE CLASSIFIED It
works to sell used items
every day. 402-462-2131
•Mail or pick up application at: HR Department,
727 East First Street,
Minden Ne. 68959
•Email: [email protected]
•Call 308.832.3400 ext
2630 for application
and/or more information
Applications can be found
online at www.kchs.org
under Careers.
MED AIDE: Night shift, every Friday and Saturday,
11 p.m.-7 a.m. Call Champion Homes. 402-9029694.
List your ad. 402-462-2131.
54
Office/Clerical
PART-TIME
MEDICAL
receptionist needed for
flexible evenings and
weekends. Medical experience needed. Send resumes to Box D, c/o Hastings Tribune, P.O. Box
788, Hastings, NE 68902.
Cruise
with the
Classifieds
Looking for a change of
pace? A new car could be
just what you need for
some extra fun. And
thereʼs no better way to
buy a pre-owned car than
through the Classifieds.
Every week, youʼll find new
listings for automobiles in
a wide range of styles and
price ranges. Start looking
today and get a head start
with a great deal on a car
in the Classifieds.
HASTINGS TRIBUNE
Wednesday, Sept. 12, 2012
55
Sales
58
CELLS-U-MORE
is searching the area for
dynamic Sales Leaders to
fill the following positions:
Full-time Sales Manager
All candidates will have
high school diploma, be
flexible to work some
evenings, weekends, and
holidays, and deliver an
exceptional customer
experience. All managers
and associates earn an
above-minimum wage
base pay plus have the
chance to grow that salary
through
Please apply online or
Hastings store at
828 W. 2nd St.
Hastings, NE 68901
GRAND OPENING! Fulltime positions. Guaranteed
pay. Training provided.
308-850-9562.
56
Restaurant
PAPA RAYʼS Pizza is
looking for a delivery driver
and weekend dishwasher.
Apply in person.
PART-TIME FOOD Service positions available on
week nights and weekends. Apply at 9th and
Elm, Hazelrigg Student
Union, Monday thru Friday, 8:30-4:30. Sodexo.
RESTAURANT MANAGER: Pioneer Village has an
opening for a full service
restaurant and lounge
manager in Minden, NE.
We have a seating capacity of 200 and a significant
catering operation. This
full-time position offers
competitive wage and benefits. 5 years restaurant
and catering experience
required. Send resume to
Harold Warp Pioneer Village, 138 East Hwy 6,
Minden, NE. 68959
57
B7
Technical &
Trade
1ST and 2ND shift welders and assemblers needed. Minden Machine is a
fast-growing equipment
manufacturer. Drug testing
required. 1302 K Road,
Minden. 308-832-0220.
Ag Related
DO YOU Like to Farm?
FULL-TIME POSITION
on progressive row-crop
corn and soybean farm,
modern equipment and
non-smoking
environment. Experience and
references
required.
CDL, mechanical, pivot irrigation, welding, and
precision farming/GPS
guidance
experience
helpful. Top wages based
on relevant experience.
Come join our team!
Send resume and cover
letter
to
[email protected]
Gothenburg
HARVEST HELP needed.
Grain cart operator. Bladen area. Work available
immediately.
402-7057062.
HARVEST HELP wanted
for local corn and soybean
harvest. 402-469-2057.
HARVEST HELP, general
labor. Call 402-627-2425.
SEMI-TRUCK driver for
harvest help. May have
some manual labor required. CDL required. Call
308-383-2679.
59
Trucking
CLASS A CDL drivers
wanted for construction.
Central Nebraska. Drug
testing, EOE. 402-8909000 or 402-890-8888.
IMMEDIATE OPENING.
Side dump truck driver.
Local driving. Lots of work,
great pay and benefits.
402-649-4887
LARRY KLIMEK Trucking
looking for experienced
OTR driver. Class A CDL.
Home weekly, insurance,
paid vacations, competitive wages. 308-384-3313
60
General
$2400 PER MONTH
Guaranteed
Safety Advisor/
Management
No Experience Necessary
Full and Part-time
Positions Available.
Call 402-834-0511
Monday-Friday
10 a.m.- 5 p.m. ONLY
for Interview Appointment
HELP WANTED: 2 Journeymen electricians needed. Call Sutton Electric,
402-762-5119
PRODUCTION SUPERVISOR: Triad Fastener, an
established and expanding
custom injection molder in
Central Nebraska, is seeking a night shift Production
Supervisor to join our
management team. Knowledge of injection molding
processes is a plus. Looking for an ambitious person with minimum 3 years
experience. This is an immediate opportunity offering competitive salary and
benefits. Send resume and
salary history in strictest
confidence to: Mark Hartford, c/o Human Resources, P.O. Box 188, Alda,
NE 68810
Email: [email protected]
STYLIST or NAIL TECH:
Established salon. Call
402-984-7543.
58
Ag Related
Agricultural Research
Technician I
The U.S. Meat Animal Research Center, near Clay
Center, NE has an opening for full-time Agricultural
Research Technician I position; primary emphasis
working with cattle in the
Feedlot. Livestock experience required, $11.25 per
hour, overtime after 40
hours, excellent benefits.
To view entire job description and/or apply for this
position, visit https://em
poyment.unl.edu (search
for Requisition Number
120761). UNL is committed to a pluralistic campus
community through affirmative action, equal opportunity, work-life balance, and dual careers.
Questions regarding this
position can be addressed
to: [email protected]
60
General
CLEANING: Residential/
Commercial.
Part-time
days. Background checks.
Call Sandra 402-519-6279
DRIVERS NEEDED: Must
be 25 or older. Call 308390-6337. Action Cab
FULL and PART-TIME positions open in our assembly department. Starting
pay $12/hour. Prior assembly experience helpful.
Send resume to Box R, c/o
Hastings Tribune, P.O.
Box 788, Hastings, NE
68902
GARRETT TIRES and
Treads is looking for a tire
tech. Experience is a plus
but will train. Must have a
valid driverʼs license. Competitive pay and benefits
package available. Apply
at 1007 E. South St. or call
402-463-6222
LIBERTY
CLEANERS
looking to fill Customer
Service position. 30+
hours/week. Some Saturdays. Apply in person. 314
N. Burlington. EOE
LOOKING FOR full-time
employees for an irrigation
and grain storage construction company located
in Juniata, NE. Valid driverʼs license preferred. Also
looking for crew leaders
with experience managing
job sites and employees.
Competitive wages for the
qualified applicants. Contact Abby at 402-834-0580
Looking for some extra
income to supplement an
upcoming trip, the
upcoming holidays, etc.?
We may have an
opportunity that will fit
your needs.
We are looking for:
1st shift corn sorters –
weekends only
2nd shift corn sorters –
full-time hours
Overnight cleaners –
full-time hours
APPLY TODAY!
www.asinc.net/apply
Select Hastings from
the locations menu
CLINICAL DATA ABSTRACTOR:
Part-time
position working days.
This position will perform
data abstraction from medical records as required by
Joint Commission, Center
for Medicare Services and
other regulatory agencies.
Candidates must have
working knowledge of data
variables, collection processes and standards. Associates degree in nursing
or coding program preferred, also prefer Certification as Medical Coder or
Health Information experience.
For more information on
this position and to apply
please go to our website at
www.marylanning.org
EOE
TRIBUNE CLASSIFIED It
works to sell used items
every day. 402-462-2131
COMMUNITY
APARTMENT Manager-Full-Time,
Hastings. Previous sales
and office experience required. Qualified applicants should possess
good communication skills
and enjoy working with the
public.
Salary
plus
health/dental, vacation and
401K. Send resume to
[email protected]
Cutting Back?
402-463-6685
213 S. Burlington
Hastings, NE 68901
facebook.com/
AdvanceServices
Mary Lanning Healthcare
is hiring for a full-time
Food Service Worker III to
work varied shifts. Do you
have what it takes to join
our team? Our ideal candidate is highly motivated
and dependable. To succeed in this position, the
ideal candidate will be focused, disciplined yet flexible, able to meet and exceed departmental goals
in an ever-changing, fastpaced setting.
Excellent benefits include
health, dental and vision
care, life insurance, shortand long-term disability,
401K, flexible spending
account, paid time off, and
employee discounts in the
pharmacy, snack bar, cafeteria and gift shop.
Please go to our web site
at www.marylanning.org to
apply. To be considered
for position, application
must be complete and online Gallup Interview must
be taken. EOE
Look for the latest coupon
values in the Hastings
Tribune and save money
without skimping on the
important stuff. Youʼll find
big values on everyday
essentials, from haircuts
to hardware, groceries to
eyeglasses, detergent to
dry cleaning and so much
more! Call 402-462-2131
to subscribe.
Sudoku
60
General
MUSEUM REGISTRAR
City of Hastings seeks an
energetic and qualified
professional to work in all
aspects of collections and
exhibitions, care and management. Bachelorʼs degree in History, Archeology or Museum Studies or
equivalent training and experience required. 40
hours per week, $12.167$16.892/hr, full benefits.
Job description, benefit information and City of Hastings Application available
at www.cityofhastings.org/
employment/job_openings.
htm or in person or 402461-2313. Submit application, cover letter and
resume to the City of
Hastings Personnel Office,
220 N. Hastings Ave,
Hastings, NE 68901 or
email kstill@cityofhastings
.org. Position open until
filled; 1st review date 9-2112. EOE
61
Part Time
CENTRAL
NATIONAL
Bank, Superior, NE, is now
accepting applications for
a part-time janitor for approximately 20 hours per
week. Scheduling and
wages will be determined
based on experience.
Please contact 402-8797708 or in writing to Central National Bank, P.O.
Box 268, 411 N. National,
Superior, NE 68978.
EXPERIENCED COOK for
Champion Homes Assisted Living. Monday-Friday,
4-6 p.m. 402-463-6021
Hastings Tribune has
opening for carrier in Hastings. Call Circulation. 402461-1221 or 1-800-7426397.
Hastings Tribune has
opening for a carrier in
BLUE HILL. Call Circulation. 402-461-1221 or 1800-742-6397.
NOW HIRING: Part-time
bartender. Please apply at
Miscues.
PART-TIME
MAINTENANCE p o s i t i o n ,
a p p r o x i mately 30 hours/week with
insurance benefits. Press
experience and carpentry
skills necessary. Please
send resume to Box S, c/o
Hastings Tribune, P.O.
Box 788, Hastings, NE
68902
62
Child Care
DAYCARE: OPENINGS
all three shifts and weekends. Do take state pay.
984-9663 Becky.
70
Pets
86 Sporting Goods
UPCOMING EVENTS
for Four Rivers
Sportsman Club
•Wednesday, 9/12, Open
Trap or Skeet, 6 p.m.
•Friday, 9/14, Practical
Pistol, 7:30 p.m.
•Saturday, 9/15, Service
Rifle, 9 a.m.
•Saturday, 9/15, Bowling
Pin, 2 p.m.
•Sunday, 9/16, Open
Trap or Skeet 1 p.m.
94 Miscellaneous
ʻ94 FORD dually; 4 push
mowers, JD, Craftsman
and Snapper, 402-4691309
96
Want To Buy
NEWER washers, dryers,
stoves and refrigerators.
Working or not. 462-6330.
100 Unfurnished
Apartments
1-BEDROOM: $350, partial utilities, air, east side,
402-469-2924.
1-BEDROOM: 105 E. 14th
Most utilities paid. References. $425. 460-9626
3-BEDROOM: 105 E. 14th
2-bath. Most utilities paid.
$595. 460-9626
DOWNTOWN LOCATION:
Remodeled 2-bedroom.
$450. Diane, 469-4777.
Equal
Housing
Opportunity
All real estate advertising
in the Fair Housing Act
makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation or discrimination
based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or an intention, to
make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.” Familial status includes children under the
age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians;
pregnant women and people securing custody of
children under 18.
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept any advertising for real estate
which is in violation of the
law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this
newspaper are available
on an equal opportunity
basis. To complain of discrimination, call HUD tollfree at 1 (800) 669-9777.
The toll-free telephone
number for the hearing impaired is 1 (800) 9279275.
DO YOU Want to earn
cash for your Handyman
services? Advertise in “A t
Your Service”. Call the
Tribune for details. (402)
462-2131.
AKC VIZSLA puppies.
Ready 9/12/12. $450, 4
males remaining from litter
of 11, family raised, parents proven hunters.
[email protected] for
information/pictures. 402984-1218
Your WHIRLPOOL and
TOSHIBA Dealer
ROGERʼS, INC.
1035 S. Burlington
402-463-1345
Automotive
PENROSE REPAIR LLC.
Automotive repair service.
ACE certified master mechanic. Call for your appointment today, 402-4630127.
AT YOUR SERVICE Ads
can help you advertise
your business without a
large investment. 16
words or less, everyday
for one full month is only
$49.00.
Cleaning Services
SANDRAʼS
CLEANING
SERVICES. Residential,
commercial. Insured. References. Thorough, reliable. 402-519-6279
Clock Repair
VILLAGE TIME. Clocks
and watches cleaned, repaired. Authorized service
center. Will pick up and
deliver. 308-832-0671.
Computer Repair
WILL DO general computer maintenance in my
home. Prompt service.
402-705-3726.
LOOKING FOR a job?
Check classified every day.
Concrete
Construction
MASTERCRAFT BUILDERS. Houses, garages,
decks, metal buildings,
siding, windows, tile and
wood flooring. Guaranteed, insured quality work.
Contact James Edwardson, 402-460-7080.
Gutters
BRYCOR INC. We clean
gutters. Average home
$30. Fully insured. 402261-8557.
Handyman
CONCRETE,
SIDING,
windows, doors, roofing,
trim trees, mow yards. 10
years experience. Low prices. 402-705-4320, 402469-3263
HANDYMAN:
Roofing,
concrete, painting, home
repairs, lawn care. Fully insured. 15 years experience. Reasonable. 4622660, 460-6756.
DO YOU Want to earn
cash for your Handyman
services? Advertise in “A t
Your Service”. Call the
Tribune for details. (402)
462-2131.
1-BEDROOM unit for
RENT. 6-month lease is
required. Rent is $300
per month (plus electric).
Deposit is $300. Call 402463-1958 to schedule
showing.
2 BEDROOM on 4 lots located in Harvard. $40,000.
402-469-7483
840 N MINNESOTA AVE.:
1,540 sq. ft. plus full basement, 3-bedroom, 2-bath,
attached garage, underground sprinklers. Photos/
info: cicadadwellings.com
$147,500. 402-460-7047.
906 RONAN DR.: 2-car
garage. Joyce Schlachter,
Broker, 402-462-5794.
CHATEAU
IMPERIAL
Townhomes/Apartments
Call 402-463-4111
LARGE
2-BEDROOM
penthouse at Depot Plaza.
Mexican tile, fireplace. No
pets. 469-4777.
NICE, CLEAN 2- and 3bedroom units await you at
the Townhouses of Hastings. We offer rent and
utility assistance. Come to
945 W. H St. to pick up an
application or call Dawn at
402-463-5953 for further
information.
2- AND 3-BEDROOM: Regency Heights, Hastings.
Large apartments with
controlled entry, complete
kitchens, ample parking,
on-site laundry and you
pay ONLY electricity! Pet
friendly (some restrictions). Call today! Our new
manager is waiting to give
you a tour! 402-469-0830.
www.perryreid.com/regen
cyheights
EHO
TWO 1-BEDROOM apartments and 2 efficiency
apartments. All utilities
paid. $385-$500. Ready
September 7. Call Rick at
402-461-1907.
VERY NICE unfurnished
1-bedroom
apartment.
References required. No
pets/smoking. 970-5901611
101
Furnished
Apartments
$149.95/WEEK
RAINBOW MOTEL
463-2989; 402-926-6252
Breakfast, internet, HBO.
Maid. Clean. Coin laundry.
No credit/deposit. Near
McDonaldʼs, 1000 W. “J”.
102
Duplexes
For Rent
1-BEDROOM: All utilities
paid. No pets/smoking.
402-902-9551.
104
1-, 2-, 3-, 4-BEDROOM:
Rent to own. Air, garage.
$400-$850. 402-469-6635
3 BEDROOM, 2 bath,
$600/month. References.
Located in Blue Hill. 402705-0157
3-BEDROOM: 3-car garage, new construction.
$1,500/month. 461-1785
4-BEDROOM, remodeled
farmhouse with 2-car garage. 402-469-3420.
Farmer's
Corner
Farm
Equipment
Services
To place ad for the
Farmer's Corner call
402-462-2131
Up to 16 Words
for 1 month
ONLY
49.00
$
includes online
Call
402-462-2131
for details
Home Improvement
Lawn/Garden Care
NEW IMAGE
CONSTRUCTION
Warranted work. Home,
commercial, tile flooring,
kitchen, bath, additions,
garages, siding, windows,
doors, decks, fencing. Insured, references. 402705-8369.
T&D MOWING. 10+ years
experience. Commercial/
residential. Mowing, landscaping, trimming, edging,
fertilizing. Insured. Call
402-463-0152
House Plans
SPELLMAN DRAFTING.
614 Phelps Dr., Shelton,
NE. If you need house
plans, 308-647-5693 or
[email protected]
Junk Removal
JUNK HUNK. Junk removal service. Call Scott at
402-705-6263, or visit us
at www.junk-hunk.com
Lawn/Garden Care
12 YEARS experience.
NEEMOW LAWN CARE.
Commercial/residential
mowing, trimming. Insured. Where Qualityʼs Expected. Ken Neemeyer,
402-463-5720.
15+ YEARS experience.
JEFFʼS LAWN SERVICE.
Mowing, aerating, powerraking, tilling, edging,
tree/bush pruning. Insured.
402-469-4121.
LANDSCAPE THERAPY,
LLC. Mowing, trimming,
fertilizing, build and maintain flower beds. Reliable,
insured. 402-460-0923
List your ad. 402-462-2131.
108 Office Space
AVAILABLE NOW: Office
suite at Depot Plaza, store
front. Reasonable rates.
Call Diane, 402-469-4777.
BURLINGTON VILLAGE
208 S. Burlington Ave.
Large and small suites
available for lease. Rental
incentive. Call 402-4624032 for information.
NICE, SMALL office with
bathroom. 645 S. Burlington. $325 plus electric. Alton Jackson 402-463-0688
OFFICE SPACE
Single office, double office,
up to 4 office suites available. Very nice. Conference
and meeting room available. 402-461-4100.
Landmark Center
OFFICE SPACE: $250$600 month. Utilities included. 402-461-1785.
109
Business
Property
714 EAST SIDE BLVD.
Approximately 1770 sq. ft.,
open space plus waiting
room and 3 private rooms.
Updated,
tile
floors
throughout, currently a hair
salon. $995/month. Licensee owned. 402-984-2198
COMMERCIAL SPACE
for rent. 1,386 sq. ft. Call
Diane. 402-469-4777
FOR LEASE: 6,000 sq. ft.
commercial building with
office and ample parking.
1933 W. 2nd. Licenseeowned. 402-469-4724.
113 Lots For Rent
KINGSWOOD PLAZA
RV sites available
402-463-1958
116
Houses
For Sale
Painting
HONEY DOʼS PAINTING.
Interior, exterior. 25 years
experience. Free estimates. Tim Yurk, 402-7050601 or 402-463-7054.
INTERIOR / EXTERIOR
painting and staining, reasonable, insured. JOHNʼS
PAINTING. 462-9863 or
469-3192
Plumbing
FURROW
PLUMBING,
LLC. Reasonable rates.
25+ years experience. Licensed and insured. Free
estimates. 402-469-7071.
Stump Removal
STUMP AND Brush Removal: Clean up those
ugly stumps and bushes.
Free estimates. 402-4600518.
TREE STUMP Grinding:
Large or small, we grind
them all. Free estimates.
Call John, 402-705-7006.
Houses
For Sale
118 Mobile Homes
For Sale
2-BEDROOM:
1-bath
mobile home for SALE.
$6,000. Located at 32
Kingston Drive. (Option to
do purchase contract with
$2,500 down payment.)
Lot rent is $248 per
month (plus electric). Deposit is $248. Call 402463-1958 to schedule
showing.
COME SEE newer 3-bedroom. Will finance. 402469-4777
119
Residential
Lots
FOR SALE by owner:
Lake lot on north end of
Lake Hastings. Motivated
seller. 940-594-4409
LOTS, MODEL Homes: 4
Subdivisions. Agent/owner, 402-461-1785.
124
Recreation
Property
CABIN at HARLAN county Nebraska. Located in
Taylor Manor. Deeded lot.
402-469-9189.
130 Auction Sales
Houses
For Rent
HAVE AN abandoned well
on your property? Call
J2 WELL, 402-817-4279.
Appliances
EL PINO CONCRETE.
Residential/Commercial.
Specializing in flatwork,
tear out and replace foundation walls, stamped concrete. 720-238-1959/720496-5316
2-BEDROOM: $395-$495
Appliances, laundry hookups, parking. No pets.
EMBASSY SQUARE
402-462-4032
141
Service
Auto Glass
116
650 ANL Grain cart, 60”
tread, single tire, 42” rubber. Field ready. Call 402469-6771.
At Your
AUTO GLASS EXPERTS.
25 years combined experience in glass replacement.
Jeff Fitzke, Brent Vorderstrasse. 405 West J
Street. 402-463-0025.
105 Mobile Homes
For Rent
140
REGISTERED SHIH TZU
puppies: Gold/white, black.
Call/text 402-469-0784
77
100 Unfurnished
Apartments
2-BEDROOM: Fenced-in
yard, single-car garage.
910 E. 3rd St., Hastings,
NE. Call 402-469-1145.
RANDY RUHTER, Auctioneer and Broker, 2837
W. Hwy. 6, Hastings, NE,
402-463-8565.
MIHM
COLLECTOR TRACTORS, PARTS
AND ANTIQUES
AUCTION
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2012 • 10:00 A.AM.
CLAY COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS, CLAY CENTER,
NEBRASKA
This is the first in a series of auctions to disburse the
large collection of Bob & Doris Mihm.
The collectible tractors and other select items will be
available for on line bidding starting at 12:00 Noon.
Check our web site for details.
TRACTORS: JD 530 NF, S#5308273, 3 pt., Repaint,
very nice, runs; JD H, NF, S#6246, repaint, very nice,
runs; JD G, Un-styled, S#8326, repaint, nice, runs;
JD Un-styled, repaint S#422246; JD 60, Roll O Matic
front, Power Trol, very straight, runs, S#6017267; JD
60, NF, Cultivator lift shaft, S#6023516, very straight,
runs; JD A, S#471085, runs, Repaint, very nice; JD D,
S#152756, spoke front wheels, runs, very straight; JD
D, Styled, Repaint, S#177554, runs; JD DJD D, S#
177615, runs, straight; IH M Farmall gas, S#32344,
Power Steering.
COLLECTIBLE CAR: 1959 Ford Falcon, 4 dr., 6 cyl,
auto, only 4,436 actual miles
GAS ENGINES: JD 3 hp engine on cart, runs; Rock
Island 2 HP engine, S#A20230, runs; International LA
engine on cart, runs, S#LAA35648, 1-1 ½ HP; Rock
Island stationary engine on cart; Galloway small
engine on frame and modern cart, runs; Satley
Montgomery Ward engine, S#72283, 1 ½ HP, runs,
cart; Wisconsin 18-7 2 ½ hp upright engine on cart,
runs; Several Maytag engines; Cat Pony Engine for
DW 10.
EQUIPMENT & MISCELLANEOUS: JD 3 row lister
for D JD; JD 3 bottom plow on rubber, hyd.; JD 3
bottom plow, trip on steel; MH 3 bottom plow; JD
Loader for 530 tractor; Ford Ferguson fenders;
Fordson steel wheels; Fordson fenders; Pair rubber
wheels for Fordson; Extension rims for JD A; Assorted
rim lugs; Several magnetos, carburetors etc.; Model T
coils; 10 lbs. babbet; JD standing corn sheller; Ford 2
row 3 pt. cultivator; Single shank JD ripper on steel,
pull type; IH belt drive top hopper bur mill; Matching
JD men’s and lady’s bicycles; 2 JD A hoods; 36-38
JD A steel wheel w/lugs; JD A overdrive, complete;
Large JD dealership signs; Neon JD sign; Large JD
dealer ship sign; Hay for barn; A large selection of B&
S, Wisconsin and other single cylinder engines; JD A
gas tank; 600-16 3 rib tires; 13.6X38 tires; JD D block,
good; PTO and wagon seeders; Platform scale; New
and used tractor and equipment parts; Forge and
forge blowers; 12.4X36 & 38 tires; JD steel wheels w/
lugs; Several rolls belting; Walk behind plow; Several
pairs of good tractor rears; Buzz saw; Old jacks;
Barrel cart; Steam engine water pump; Steam engine
fly wheel; Mills; Wagon spring seat; JD fan shafts;
Jeep pedal car, rough; Lard kettle; Delaval Oil can;
Several good JD and other steering wheels.
FIREARMS (SELL AT APPROXIMATELY 12 NOON):
Ruger M77 Mark II, laminated wood w/Leopold
4X12X40 scope S#790-63163; 22-250 Varmint Sako
Action w/Tasco 3X9 scope, custom stock; Premier
Single Shot .22 Short & Long Rifle; Winchester Mod.
67A 22 single shot; British 303, adjustable sites
S#648; British 303 S#88222; Erma 22 cal. Single shot
S#5109; Interarms 22-250 Custo Stock, Tasco
3X9X40 scope, S# B85806; Ruger M77 25-06
Varmint, Leupold 4X12 Varmint XLT, S#77153206;
Browning 12 ga DU 1983, The Plains, S#0183;
Beretta 20 ga. Magnum, S#1841706E-1987 DU;
Beretta 12 ga. Auto, A390ST, S#P56934E; Marlin 12
ga. Bolt, 36” barrel, S#72402979; Beretta 12 Ga auto
1986 DU Mod A303, S#L52412E; Mosberg 12 Ga., 3”
Mod 500 AG, S#J223135; Browning BPS 10 Ga.,
Field Model, 28” 3 ½ chamber, S#17148NZ192;
Remington 870 Wingmaster 20 Ga., S#597648X;
British 303 Military, S#M471043; Plus lots of ammo.
All purchasers of firearms must present before
purchase, either a Nebraska Pistol Card, current
FFL or Concealed Carry permit. Absolutely no
exceptions.
This is only a partial listing of the huge selection of
items on this auction. Full details are available at our
web site, www.ruhterauction.com.
Tree Service
R&J TREE AND LAWN
LLC. Trimming, removals,
and iron injections. Call
Randy. 402-705-7334 after
3 p.m.
“The Auction Standard Since 1967”
2837 West Highway 6, Hastings, NE 68901
402-463-8565 • 402-362-4440
Email: [email protected]
Outdoors
B8
HASTINGS TRIBUNE
Wednesday, Sept. 12, 2012
State
FREE NEBRASKA POND
MANAGEMENT HANDBOOK
The Nebraska Pond Management handbook is intended to help owners of both new
and old ponds and those who plan to build a
pond, to maximize the fishing potential of
their pond. Information is provided on pond
construction, stocking, environmental modifications, management, and maintenance.
If after reading this handbook you still
have questions or would like to discuss any
topics in greater detail, contact the fisheries
or wildlife biologists at your area Nebraska
Game and Parks Commission district office,
or the Commissions Private Waters Specialist
in Lincoln. (appendix A in the handbook
provides a list of technical assistance
resources.)
The handbook is in PDF format for download and presented in an easy to read manner
with loads of valuable information.
NEW
CABINS READY
Reservations are being taken for new cabins
at Medicine Creek State Recreation Area.The
cabins are on the east side of the lake near
the Shady Bay Campground.
Each two-bedroom cabin is approximately
532 square feet has air conditioning, full
bathroom, furnished kitchen and a covered
deck overlooking the lake. Linens and utensils are provided. The cabins sleep four people.
The rate is $85 per night, plus tax. The cabins will be open for overnight guests through
Dec. 31, and then reopen on April 1, 2013.
Call the Nebraska Game and Parks
Reservation Call Center at 402-471-1414 to
reserve a cabin. Online reservations can also
be made. A park entry permit is required for
each vehicle entering the park. Visit the
Medicine Creek Web site at outdoornebraska.ne.gov/Parks/park_pages/Medicine_Creek/i
ndex.asp.
For more information, contact Game and
Parks’ Suzanne Ridder at 402-471-1623 email
[email protected].
Nebraska Game and Parks
WORK
PLANNED FOR
VALENTINE LAKES BOAT RAMPS
VALENTINE — The Nebraska Game and
Parks Commission says improvements will be
made to boat ramps in Valentine National
Wildlife Refuge.
The work will be done to ramps at
Hackberry, Clear, West Long and Pelican
lakes.
The work is expected to begin Tuesday and
be finished by early November.
Existing sites will be replaced with concrete
ramps extending into the lakes, and steel
docks will be added alongside the ramps. The
docks will accommodate changing water levels and allow anglers access to deeper water
adjacent to the shoreline.
All lakes, except Clear Lake, have other
boat ramps available for use during the ramp
project.
More information is available by calling
the refuge at 402-376-1889.
GERALD FORD BIRTH SITE
IN OMAHA IS RENOVATED
OMAHA — Renovations have been completed at the Gerald Ford birth site in Omaha.
Officials have planned a rededication ceremony that’s scheduled to begin at 7 p.m. on
Monday.
The project included new interpretive
exhibits, a renovated interpretive kiosk, accessibility improvements and renovation of the
Presidential Colonnade.
The birth site and gardens are owned and
maintained by the city of Omaha. This site
commemorates the Omaha birthplace of
Leslie King Jr., who later became Gerald R.
Ford Jr., the 38th U.S. president.
The birth site originally was dedicated in
1977.
LAURA BERNERO/Tribune
Brad Dykeman tests out some of the features of a trailer at Dykeman’s Campers Monday. Dykeman helps sell and maintain a variety
of campers and recreational vehicles and says that the sport is accessible to families of all ages and interests.
Out on the road in your own space
CAMPERS, RVS OFFER
PERFECT ESCAPE
LAURA BERNERO
[email protected]
A
ccording to Jim
Dykeman, it doesn’t
matter if you travel 10
miles or 1,000 miles
from home.
It doesn’t matter what size fish
you catch during a weekend at
the lake.
Nor does it matter if your skills
at the grill need a little bit of
work.
“If you take your kids to the
lake on a family camping trip,
they will remember that more so
than if they went to
Disneyland,” said the owner of
Dykeman’s Campers in Hastings.
“They’ll remember the steak their
old man burnt in the campfire
for years to come. And most of
all, they’ll remember the good
times they had on the trip.”
During the week, Jim and his
staff, including his sons Brad and
Wade, work with customers and
suppliers to find RVs, campers
and fifth-wheels that suit their
customers’ needs.
But, on the weekends, Jim and
his family like to get out of town
to go camping.
“I love to get outdoors, and
that helps me relate to customers,” Brad said.
The busiest season for camper
sales is in the spring and summer
when the sport is most popular.
Larger RVs and trailers are first
choices for couples that have
recently retired and want to take
long road trips.
Smaller fifth-wheels appeal to
young families — Jim calls them
“weekenders” — who want to
take quick trips and have to find
a trailer within their budget.
And many customers use their
campers for more than just
camping.
“You can use your recreational
vehicle for tailgate parties, spring
camping, football, baseball, family events,” Jim said. “There’s no
end to it.”
Maury Gartner, owner of
Transportation Equipment
Company in Hastings, sells used
trailers and campers, keeping a
variety of vehicles in the company lot at any one time.
Gartner said he recommends
locations in the Nebraska State
Park system for families who are
just getting into camping or who
are buying a trailer for the first
time. But Gartner also enjoys the
feeling of getting away from the
rush of big crowds.
“It’s so much nicer to be out
by yourself in the wide open. You
can go out in the early morning
and late evening and just soak it
all in. Plus you meet a lot of
good people,” he said.
Modern trailers can be customized in hundreds of ways to
meet the needs of the customer’s
budget and design ideas.
Amenities in some RVs include
ovens, full-size refrigerators, fireplaces, showers, TVs, and surround-sound speaker systems. At
Dykeman’s, buyers can customize
everything from the flooring and
cabinet wood to the curtains and
carpeting in their new trailer.
“It is a big investment, but in
the long run, you save a lot of
LAURA BERNERO/Tribune
Brad Dykeman goes over the latest features of a new trailer
parked at Dykeman’s Campers Monday. Dykeman sells and maintains a variety of campers and recreational vehicles on the lot.
money. It is better than paying
$100 or more a night to stay at a
hotel. Plus, in a camper, you
know where everything is and
you have your own space,” Brad
said.
Jim said Nebraska is a great
place to start camping because it
allows travelers to discover new
corners of the state and spend
quality time with family.
“I think you could camp in the
state of Nebraska weekend in and
weekend out and never see it all
because our state has so much to
offer,” he said. “No matter where
you go, this is just off the charts
a good time.”
The Associated Press
FALL CAMPING AT ITS BEST!
2008 COUGAR TOY HAULER
310SRX, 5th Wheel
2010 SPRINGDALE BY KEYSTONE
5th Wheel
$25,900 $16,800
2007 EXCEL 5TH WHEEL
E30RKO, 30 ft., We Sold It New.
This Trailer Is A Keeper.
2010 COACHMEN NORTHRIDGE 5TH WHEEL
340DBQ. This Unit Sleeps 10, Two Bathrooms.
We Sold It New. Kid Ready. This Is A Must See!
1999 LAYTON 5TH WHEEL
2006 MONTANA 5TH WHEEL
24 ft. Has Slideout, Great Camper For The
Upcoming Hunting Season Was: $ 8,995
NOW
2955RL, Going South?
This will work!
378SA Season’s Best Buy!
Like New!
$7,995 $23,250 $27,225
2011 SUNDANCE 5TH WHEEL
LITTLE GUY FIVE WIDE
3100ES. Local Trade, 3 Slidouts,
Great Floor Plan. This Unit Has All
The Toys. Price One New And Give
Us A Call. You May Be Surprised.
$43,140 $33,800
2008 OPENROAD 5TH WHEEL
Hunter’s Special. Was: $7,225
NOW
Hastings Motor Sales, Inc.
DYKEMAN’S CAMPER PLACE
$6,245
2013 COACHMAN CLIPPER
Bunkhouse. All The Toys. If You Need a Hunting
Cabin Down On The River It Will Hunt. Reg. $12,541
SALE
PRICE
$8,800
Sales • Service • Parts • Repair
Highway 6 & Burlington, Hastings, NE 68901
Phone (402) 463-1338
www.dykemanscamper.com