women’s basketball: no. 1 baylor runs away from kentucky...

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Tuesday’s scores Charlotte 92, Washington 76 Toronto 74, Indiana 72 New York 99, Orlando 89 Brooklyn 114, Cleveland 101 Portland 103, Sacramento 86 San Antonio at L.A. Lakers, (n) SCOREBOARD COLLEGE FOOTBALL Wounded Ducks Just as Oregon puts itself into position to play in the BCS National Championship game, the Ducks are beset by defensive injuries that may hurt the team down the stretch. Oregon coach Chilp Kelley hopes his offense can keep running away from its opponents. CONTACT US Page 3B Sports The Paducah Sun | Wednesday, November 14, 2012 | paducahsun.com Section B WOMEN’S BASKETBALL: No. 1 Baylor runs away from Kentucky. | 2B Sports................... 575-8665 [email protected] Joey Fosko ............ 575-8661 [email protected] Dusty Luthy Shull ...575-8662 [email protected] Three future Kentucky Wildcats will be on display at the Marshall County Hoop Fest, one reason ticket sales have been brisk. The possibility that two or three other players appearing in the Nov. 30-Dec. 1 event could end up playing at Kentucky has Mar- shall athletic director Jeff Stokes dreaming of the big-time atmo- sphere for which the Hoop Fest is known. “We may have a lot of big-time coaches here, especially with An- drew Wiggins re-classifying into the class of 2013,” Stokes said. “He’s going to be the best un- signed guy out there, and I think a lot of coaches are going to come to see him.” Stokes thinks there is a good possibility that Kentucky coach John Calipari makes an appear- ance, if not for Wiggins then pos- sibly to see two high-prole future ’Cats in twins Andrew and Aaron Harrison, who play for Travis High in Arlington, Texas. Their dual commitment to Kentucky caused a stir earlier this fall, and it also aided ticket sales. “I think we’ve sold more ad- vance tickets than we have before, maybe ever,” Stokes said. “We’ve already got 2,000 all-session tickets sold, and we have plenty more.” A change in the ticket format means that Marshall is only sell- ing tickets good for admission for all three sessions in advance, at $25 each. Single-session tickets won’t go on sale until the day of the event. As usual, the Hoop Fest will have a “star-studded” feel to it, Stokes said. Kentucky has a third commitment in the event in Bul- litt East star Derek Willis, a 6-9 swingman who led the Chargers past Marshall County en route to the state seminals in 2011. Wil- lis committed to Purdue later that spring, but later decided to re- open his recruitment and eventu- ally settled on Kentucky. Bullitt East will meet Hopkins- ville in a matchup of teams that could be ranked among the state’s top 10 teams in preseason polls. And the Harrisons-led Travis club will take on a pair of established Kentucky powers, Louisville Bal- lard and Madison Central. Perennial national power Oak Hill Academy will make its cus- tomary two appearances, taking on Chicago Curie (and 6-9 pow- er forward Cliff Alexander) and Memphis Southwind, who has star forward Jonathan Williams committed to Missouri. Wiggins, a 6-7 native of Canada, plays at Huntington Prep in Hun- tington, W.Va., and reportedly in- cludes Kentucky, North Carolina, Kansas, Ohio State, Florida State and Syracuse among his potential suitors. Huntington Prep will take on a pair of Memphis teams that have commitments to the Uni- versity of Memphis — Nick King, a 6-7 forward from East, and 6-8 forward Austin Nichols of Briar- crest. As usual, the Hoop Fest will have a strong local presence. Mar- shall’s boys and girls teams will each play twice, kicking off the Friday session against Massac County. On Saturday, the Lady Marshals meet Mount Carmel (Ill.) and high-scoring junior Tyra Buss, and the boys will take on Nashville, Tenn.,-area power Wil- son Central. Calloway County will take on Harrisburg, one of Illinois’ top small-school teams, and Graves County will meet traditional pow- er Warren Central. Stokes expects that Hoop Fest will have the usual cadre of vis- iting college coaches, naming Hoop Fest field features three future ’Cats BY JOEY FOSKO [email protected] Please see HOOP | 3B Nov. 30 Girls: Marshall County vs. Massac County, 4 p.m. Marshall County vs. Massac County, 5:30 p.m. Memphis East vs. Huntington Prep, 7 p.m. Chicago Curie vs. Oak Hill Academy, 8:30 p.m. Louisville Ballard vs. Richmond Travis, Texas, 10 p.m. Dec. 1 Girls: Marshall County vs. Mount Car- mel, Ill., 10 a.m. Graves County vs. Warren Central, 11:30 a.m. Calloway County vs. Harrisburg, Ill., 1 p.m. Hopkinsville vs. Bullitt East, 2:30 p.m. Marshall County vs. Wilson Central, Tenn., 4:30 p.m. Madison Central vs. Richmond Travis, 6 p.m. Memphis Southwind vs. Oak Hill Acad- emy, 7:30 p.m. Memphis Briarcrest vs. Huntington Prep, 9 p.m. When St. Louis and San Fran- cisco couldn’t produce a winner during 75 minutes of play, the complaints came from all corners of the NFL. Tie games, after all, aren’t much fun for the fans or the players, who nish just as unsatised as anyone else. “I never had to think about it until now, and I sure don’t like it,” Rams defensive end Chris Long said. “I think everybody on the eld would have liked to have gone back out and just settled it, but that’s where we are. That’s the rule right now, so it is what it is.” The Rams-49ers game Sunday nished at 24-all, the rst tie in four years and only the fth since 1990. So the rule right now that limits regular-season overtime to one period is likely to stay the same for a while. “It’s an occasional event. There is no real concern we need to change the system,” said NFL executive vice president of foot- ball operations Ray Anderson, who happened to attend Sun- day’s game in San Francisco and was also present for the Atlanta- Pittsburgh draw in 2002. The other recent occurrence was Nov. 16, 2008, when Philadelphia and Cincinnati played at 13 apiece. Eagles quarterback Donovan McNabb infamously acknowl- edged afterward he was unaware tie games were still possible. San Francisco safety Dashon Goldson said the same Sunday. “When I saw both sides walking onto the eld, I was like, ‘Where’s everybody going?’” Goldson said. “Did somebody quit? Forfeit?” Goldson, for the record, knew about the new wrinkle that now gives one team the chance to match if the other team gets the ball rst in overtime and makes a eld goal. (Touchdowns still im- mediately end the game.) “But I didn’t know there wouldn’t be a second overtime if nobody scored,” Goldson said. Now he does, due to a rare se- quence of events during the extra period that kept the two teams even. St. Louis-49ers tie unlikely to alter rule BY DAVE CAMPBELL Associated Press Please see TIE | 3B MANHATTAN, Kan. — Every week, the pressure on Collin Klein becomes a little more oppressive. The senior quarterback has No. 2 Kansas State atop the BCS standings with two games stand- ing in the way of likely playing for a national title. Klein’s the front- runner for the Heisman Trophy, the poster boy for the program and this week the cover boy for Sports Illustrated. It’s enough to make even the most ardent Bill Snyder disciple lose focus. Whenever that focus starts to wane or the spotlight shines so brightly that Klein can hardly see, the star player turns to his closest condant for a sympathetic ear. It happens to be his younger brother, Kyle. And he happens to be his team- mate. “I mean, no doubt about it, other than my wife, he’s my best friend,” Klein said during an interview with The Associated Press. “There’s obviously a busi- nesslike mentality for both of us when we’re on the eld, but it’s still totally a brotherly connection as well.” The truth is that they are rarely on the eld together. The elder Klein has become one of the biggest names in col- lege football, his face popping up everywhere. His younger brother is a backup wide receiver who redshirted last season, and who has yet to catch a pass during his freshman year with the Wildcats. But the bond that holds them together extends far enough be- yond the eld. Kyle is one of the rst people Collin seeks when he needs a sounding board. Their relationship takes the notion of a brotherhood in the locker room to a literal level, one that is rare in the high-stakes world of col- lege football, where scholarships aren’t handed out to the unde- serving. “It’s truly been a blessing when it worked out that he was able to come and play here,” Collin Klein said. “The times we’ve been able to share growing up in high school, and to be able to extend that into both our college careers, has been Kansas State’s QB Klein has confidant in brother, Kyle BY DAVE SKRETTA Associated Press Associated Press Kansas State quarterback Collin Klein (7) warms up before Satur- day’s against TCU in Fort Worth, Texas. The senior’s performance this season has the unbeaten Wildcats ranked No. 1 in the nation. Marshall County Hoop Fest schedule Please see KLEIN | 3B ATLANTA — Seth Curry scored 23 points and No. 9 Duke held off a furious comeback by No. 3 Ken- tucky, beating the defending na- tional champions 75-68 Tuesday night in the rst matchup between the storied programs since 2001. Duke (1-1) appeared to be in control, even with Mason Plumlee on the bench in foul trouble. The Blue Devils ripped off a 13-3 run, capped by Rasheed Sulaimon’s 3-pointer that made it 58-44 with 9 1 /2 minutes remaining. But Kentucky (1-1) wasn’t done, rallying like the defending champ even though this is essentially a whole new team. The Wildcats outscored Duke 17-6 over the next six minutes and actually had a chance to tie it. Julius Mays missed a 3-pointer with the Blue Devils clinging to a 64-61 lead. Curry made sure youthful Ken- tucky didn’t get any closer. He Blue Devils knock off Kentucky BY PAUL NEWBERRY Associated press Associated Press Duke forward Mason Plumlee (5) and forward Alex Murphy (12) block the shot of Kentucky forward Alex Poythress (22) during Tuesday’s Top 25 game at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta. Duke beat the Wildcats 75-68. Please see UK | B2

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Page 1: WOMEN’S BASKETBALL: No. 1 Baylor runs away from Kentucky ...matchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/1140/assets/GJDV… · Tuesday’s scores Charlotte 92, Washington 76 Toronto

Tuesday’s scoresCharlotte 92, Washington 76Toronto 74, Indiana 72New York 99, Orlando 89Brooklyn 114, Cleveland 101Portland 103, Sacramento 86San Antonio at L.A. Lakers, (n)

SCOREBOARD COLLEGE FOOTBALLWounded Ducks

Just as Oregon puts itself into position to play in the BCS National Championship game, the Ducks are beset by defensive injuries that may hurt the team down the stretch. Oregon coach Chilp Kelley hopes his offense can keep running away from its opponents.

CONTACT US

Page 3B

SportsThe Paducah Sun | Wednesday, November 14, 2012 | paducahsun.com Section B

WOMEN’S BASKETBALL: No. 1 Baylor runs away from Kentucky. | 2B

Sports [email protected]

Joey Fosko ............ [email protected]

Dusty Luthy Shull [email protected]

Three future Kentucky Wildcats will be on display at the Marshall County Hoop Fest, one reason ticket sales have been brisk.

The possibility that two or three other players appearing in the Nov. 30-Dec. 1 event could end up playing at Kentucky has Mar-shall athletic director Jeff Stokes dreaming of the big-time atmo-sphere for which the Hoop Fest is known.

“We may have a lot of big-time coaches here, especially with An-drew Wiggins re-classifying into the class of 2013,” Stokes said. “He’s going to be the best un-signed guy out there, and I think a lot of coaches are going to come to see him.”

Stokes thinks there is a good possibility that Kentucky coach John Calipari makes an appear-ance, if not for Wiggins then pos-sibly to see two high-profi le future

’Cats in twins Andrew and Aaron Harrison, who play for Travis High in Arlington, Texas. Their dual commitment to Kentucky caused a stir earlier this fall, and it also aided ticket sales.

“I think we’ve sold more ad-vance tickets than we have before, maybe ever,” Stokes said. “We’ve already got 2,000 all-session tickets sold, and we have plenty more.”

A change in the ticket format means that Marshall is only sell-ing tickets good for admission for all three sessions in advance, at $25 each. Single-session tickets won’t go on sale until the day of the event.

As usual, the Hoop Fest will have a “star-studded” feel to it, Stokes said. Kentucky has a third commitment in the event in Bul-litt East star Derek Willis, a 6-9 swingman who led the Chargers past Marshall County en route to the state semifi nals in 2011. Wil-

lis committed to Purdue later that spring, but later decided to re-open his recruitment and eventu-ally settled on Kentucky.

Bullitt East will meet Hopkins-ville in a matchup of teams that could be ranked among the state’s top 10 teams in preseason polls. And the Harrisons-led Travis club will take on a pair of established Kentucky powers, Louisville Bal-lard and Madison Central.

Perennial national power Oak Hill Academy will make its cus-tomary two appearances, taking on Chicago Curie (and 6-9 pow-er forward Cliff Alexander) and Memphis Southwind, who has star forward Jonathan Williams committed to Missouri.

Wiggins, a 6-7 native of Canada, plays at Huntington Prep in Hun-tington, W.Va., and reportedly in-cludes Kentucky, North Carolina, Kansas, Ohio State, Florida State and Syracuse among his potential suitors. Huntington Prep will take

on a pair of Memphis teams that have commitments to the Uni-versity of Memphis — Nick King, a 6-7 forward from East, and 6-8 forward Austin Nichols of Briar-crest.

As usual, the Hoop Fest will have a strong local presence. Mar-shall’s boys and girls teams will each play twice, kicking off the Friday session against Massac County. On Saturday, the Lady Marshals meet Mount Carmel (Ill.) and high-scoring junior Tyra Buss, and the boys will take on Nashville, Tenn.,-area power Wil-son Central.

Calloway County will take on Harrisburg, one of Illinois’ top small-school teams, and Graves County will meet traditional pow-er Warren Central.

Stokes expects that Hoop Fest will have the usual cadre of vis-iting college coaches, naming

Hoop Fest field features three future ’CatsBY JOEY FOSKO

[email protected]

Please see HOOP | 3B

Nov. 30Girls: Marshall County vs. Massac

County, 4 p.m.Marshall County vs. Massac County,

5:30 p.m.Memphis East vs. Huntington Prep, 7

p.m.Chicago Curie vs. Oak Hill Academy,

8:30 p.m.Louisville Ballard vs. Richmond Travis,

Texas, 10 p.m.Dec. 1

Girls: Marshall County vs. Mount Car-mel, Ill., 10 a.m.

Graves County vs. Warren Central, 11:30 a.m.

Calloway County vs. Harrisburg, Ill., 1 p.m.

Hopkinsville vs. Bullitt East, 2:30 p.m.Marshall County vs. Wilson Central,

Tenn., 4:30 p.m.Madison Central vs. Richmond Travis,

6 p.m.Memphis Southwind vs. Oak Hill Acad-

emy, 7:30 p.m.Memphis Briarcrest vs. Huntington

Prep, 9 p.m.

When St. Louis and San Fran-cisco couldn’t produce a winner during 75 minutes of play, the complaints came from all corners of the NFL.

Tie games, after all, aren’t much fun for the fans or the players, who fi nish just as unsatisfi ed as anyone else.

“I never had to think about it until now, and I sure don’t like it,” Rams defensive end Chris Long said. “I think everybody on the fi eld would have liked to have gone back out and just settled it, but that’s where we are. That’s the rule right now, so it is what it is.”

The Rams-49ers game Sunday fi nished at 24-all, the fi rst tie in four years and only the fi fth since 1990. So the rule right now that limits regular-season overtime to one period is likely to stay the same for a while.

“It’s an occasional event. There is no real concern we need to change the system,” said NFL executive vice president of foot-ball operations Ray Anderson, who happened to attend Sun-

day’s game in San Francisco and was also present for the Atlanta-Pittsburgh draw in 2002. The other recent occurrence was Nov. 16, 2008, when Philadelphia and Cincinnati played at 13 apiece.

Eagles quarterback Donovan McNabb infamously acknowl-edged afterward he was unaware tie games were still possible. San Francisco safety Dashon Goldson said the same Sunday.

“When I saw both sides walking onto the fi eld, I was like, ‘Where’s everybody going?’” Goldson said. “Did somebody quit? Forfeit?”

Goldson, for the record, knew about the new wrinkle that now gives one team the chance to match if the other team gets the ball fi rst in overtime and makes a fi eld goal. (Touchdowns still im-mediately end the game.)

“But I didn’t know there wouldn’t be a second overtime if nobody scored,” Goldson said.

Now he does, due to a rare se-quence of events during the extra period that kept the two teams even.

St. Louis-49ers tieunlikely to alter rule

BY DAVE CAMPBELLAssociated Press

Please see TIE | 3B

MANHATTAN, Kan. — Every week, the pressure on Collin Klein becomes a little more oppressive.

The senior quarterback has No. 2 Kansas State atop the BCS standings with two games stand-ing in the way of likely playing for a national title. Klein’s the front-runner for the Heisman Trophy, the poster boy for the program and this week the cover boy for Sports Illustrated.

It’s enough to make even the most ardent Bill Snyder disciple lose focus.

Whenever that focus starts to wane or the spotlight shines so brightly that Klein can hardly see, the star player turns to his closest confi dant for a sympathetic ear.

It happens to be his younger brother, Kyle.

And he happens to be his team-mate.

“I mean, no doubt about it, other than my wife, he’s my best friend,” Klein said during an interview with The Associated Press. “There’s obviously a busi-nesslike mentality for both of us when we’re on the fi eld, but it’s still totally a brotherly connection as well.”

The truth is that they are rarely on the fi eld together.

The elder Klein has become one of the biggest names in col-lege football, his face popping up everywhere. His younger brother is a backup wide receiver who redshirted last season, and who has yet to catch a pass during his

freshman year with the Wildcats.But the bond that holds them

together extends far enough be-yond the fi eld. Kyle is one of the fi rst people Collin seeks when he needs a sounding board. Their relationship takes the notion of a brotherhood in the locker room to a literal level, one that is rare in the high-stakes world of col-lege football, where scholarships aren’t handed out to the unde-serving.

“It’s truly been a blessing when it worked out that he was able to come and play here,” Collin Klein said. “The times we’ve been able to share growing up in high school, and to be able to extend that into both our college careers, has been

Kansas State’s QB Klein has confidant in brother, KyleBY DAVE SKRETTA

Associated Press

Associated Press

Kansas State quarterback Collin Klein (7) warms up before Satur-day’s against TCU in Fort Worth, Texas. The senior’s performance this season has the unbeaten Wildcats ranked No. 1 in the nation.

Marshall CountyHoop Fest schedule

Please see KLEIN | 3B

ATLANTA — Seth Curry scored 23 points and No. 9 Duke held off a furious comeback by No. 3 Ken-tucky, beating the defending na-tional champions 75-68 Tuesday night in the fi rst matchup between the storied programs since 2001.

Duke (1-1) appeared to be in control, even with Mason Plumlee on the bench in foul trouble. The Blue Devils ripped off a 13-3 run, capped by Rasheed Sulaimon’s 3-pointer that made it 58-44 with 9 1⁄2 minutes remaining.

But Kentucky (1-1) wasn’t done, rallying like the defending champ even though this is essentially a whole new team. The Wildcats outscored Duke 17-6 over the next six minutes and actually had a chance to tie it.

Julius Mays missed a 3-pointer with the Blue Devils clinging to a 64-61 lead.

Curry made sure youthful Ken-tucky didn’t get any closer. He

Blue Devilsknock offKentucky

BY PAUL NEWBERRYAssociated press

Associated Press

Duke forward Mason Plumlee (5) and forward Alex Murphy (12) block the shot of Kentucky forward Alex Poythress (22) during Tuesday’s Top 25 game at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta. Duke beat the Wildcats 75-68.

Please see UK | B2

Page 2: WOMEN’S BASKETBALL: No. 1 Baylor runs away from Kentucky ...matchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/1140/assets/GJDV… · Tuesday’s scores Charlotte 92, Washington 76 Toronto

THE FINE PRINT

On televisionTODAY

COLLEGE BASKETBALL (MEN)6 p.m. – Wisconsin at Florida (ESPN2)6 – St. Bonaventure at Cornell (NBC Sports)7 – Nebraska-Omaha at Texas Tech (FCS Pacifi c)

COLLEGE BASKETBALL (WOMEN)7 p.m. – Cincinnati at Ohio State (Big Ten)7 – UCLA at Oklahoma (FCS Central)

COLLEGE VOLLEYBALL5 p.m. – Baylor at Texas Christian (FCS Pacifi c)

THURSDAYPRO FOOTBALL

7 p.m. – Miami at Buffalo (NFL)COLLEGE FOOTBALL

6:30 p.m. – North Carolina at Virginia (ESPN)COLLEGE BASKETBALL (MEN)

9:30 a.m. – Oklahoma State vs. Akron (ESPNU)11:30 – Tennessee vs. North Carolina-Asheville

(ESPNU)2 p.m. – Baylor vs. Boston College (ESPNU)4 – N.C. State vs. Penn State (ESPN)4 – St. John’s at College of Charleston (ESPN)6 – Alabama vs. Oregon State (ESPN2)6 – Sam Houston State at Indiana (Big Ten)6:30 – Providence vs. Massachusetts (ESPNU)7 – Southern Mississippi at Georgia (Sports South)7 – SMU at Texas Christian (FCS Central)7 – Prairie View at Texas A&M (FCS Pacifi c)8 – Valparaiso at Nebraska (Big Ten)8:30 – Villanova vs. Purdue (ESPN2)9 – Texas-El Paso at Arizona (Sports South)

SOCCER1:30 p.m. – FA Cup: Burton Albion at Antricham

(Fox Soccer)COLLEGE VOLLEYBALL

6:30 p.m. – Idaho at New Mexico State (FCS At-lantic)

7 – North Dakota at Northern Arizona (FCS Pacifi c)

Local sportsTODAY

COLLEGE BASKETBALL – Shawnee at West Ken-tucky Tech (7 p.m.). SEC: Wisconsin at Florida. OVC: Western Illinois at SIU-Edwardsville, Fontbonne at Tennessee-Martin.

THURSDAYCOLLEGE BASKETBALL – Charleston Classic:

Murray State vs. Auburn (7 p.m.). Samford at Lou-isville (6 p.m.), Mid-Continent at Harris-Stowe (7 p.m.). SEC: North Carolina-Asheville at Tennessee, Oregon State at Alabama, Southern Mississippi at Georgia, Prairie View at Texas A&M. OVC: Alice Lloyd at Morehead State, Alabama A&M at Jacksonville State, McNeese State at Southeast Missouri, Ten-nessee State at Minnesota, Coastal Carolina at Tennessee Tech. Women: Murray State at James Madison (6 p.m.), Louisville at Austin Peay (7 p.m.).

Coming upFOOTBALLSaturdaySoutheastMissouriat Murray

Time: 1 p.m.TV: none

FOOTBALLSaturdaySamford

at LexingtonTime: 6:30

p.m.TV: CSS

FOOTBALLNov. 24

Connecticutat LouisvilleTime: TBATV: TBA

BASKETBALLThursdayAuburn

at Charleston, S.C.

Time: 7 p.m.TV: ESPN3

BASKETBALLFriday

Lafayetteat LexingtonTime: 6 p.m.TV: Sports

South

BASKETBALLThursdaySamford

at LouisvilleTime: 6 p.m.TV: ESPN3

MURRAYSTATE

KENTUCKY

LOUISVILLE

2B • Wednesday, November 14, 2012 • The Paducah Sun Morning Update paducahsun.com

schooled freshman guard Archie Goodwin on a drive that essentially clinched the win.

UKCONTINUED FROM 1B

Associated Press

Baylor’s Brittney Griner (42) attempts a shot under pressure from Kentucky’s Azia Bishop (50) and Brit-tany Henderson during Tuesday’s women’s game in Waco, Texas. Griner led all scoring with 27-points in the 85-51 Baylor win.

WACO, Texas — Even Baylor coach Kim Mulkey seemed surprised at how things went in what was supposed to be the defend-ing national champion’s fi rst real challenge.

Brittney Griner and the Lady Bears overwhelmed sixth-ranked Kentucky 85-51, never allowing the defending SEC champion to press the way it likes to do and winning their 42nd consecutive game. Baylor took control early, and 13 players got in the game.

“When you’re getting la-yups on the other end and you’re beating the press, that press is only good if you’re turning the ball over,” Mulkey said. “I just thought for the second game of the year, to do what we did, and do it comfortably, maybe I just need to sit down and not get so stressed out.”

After unfurling their 2012 national champion-ship banner high from the rafters at the Ferrell Center before the game, the Lady Bears (2-0) went on to build a 46-19 halftime lead. That

was against a team that re-turned four starters and is favored to win the SEC again.

Griner scored 27 points with eight rebounds, while Odyssey Sims added 18 points with six assists and four steals. Destiny Wil-liams had 14 points and 12 rebounds.

“We knew they press a lot, there was going to be pressure. Like coach said, I think we handled it well,” Griner said. “Now this game is over, it’s time to focus on Stanford, remember some from the Final Four, and now it’s time to get in the fi lm room.”

The Lady Bears head to Hawaii next, where they play fourth-ranked Stan-ford on Friday in the opener of the Rainbow Wahine Classic. That is a rematch of last season’s national semi-fi nal game Baylor won 59-47 in Denver.

A’dia Mathies, the reign-ing SEC player of the year, had 12 points on 3-of-18 shooting for Kentucky (1-1) while defended by Jordan Madden. Bria Goss had 11 points.

“I wish we had played better, I really wish we had, and I wish we had done a better job tonight, because I know a lot of people were excited about this game. And not just people rooting for Baylor and Kentucky,” coach Matthew Mitchell said.

“Those things are very disappointing. I cannot fo-cus on that. As the leader, we just have to react appro-priately and fi gure out what we need to do.”

Griner missed her fi rst two shots, and put Baylor up 13-8 when she fi nally scored on a layup 6½ min-utes into the game. That started a 2-minute span when the 6-foot-8 All-American scored 10 points, extending the lead to 23-13.

She then made 11 con-secutive fi eld goals before missing a short hook shot with just under 10 minutes left in the game. By that time Baylor led 69-33, and Griner was out of the game for good on the next time-out.

“Just getting in my groove,” Griner said of her quick turnaround.

No. 1 Baylor runs past KentuckyBY STEPHEN HAWKINS

Associated Press

No. 9 Duke 75, No. 3 Kentucky 68 FG FT RebDUKE Min M-A M-A O-T A PF PTSMas Plumlee 29 7-8 4-4 0-3 3 5 18Kelly 34 4-11 1-4 1-3 1 2 10Thornton 20 0-1 2-2 0-3 2 1 2Sulaimon 33 3-14 1-2 2-6 5 1 10Curry 34 7-14 6-6 1-3 1 0 23Cook 30 3-5 0-2 0-3 3 2 7Murphy 2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0Hairston 14 2-3 1-2 4-5 0 5 5Jefferson 4 0-1 0-0 1-1 1 1 0Totals 200 26-57 15-22 11-31 16 17 75

Percentages: FG .456, FT .682.3-Point Goals: 8-18, .444 (Curry 3-5, Su-

laimon 3-7, Cook 1-2, Kelly 1-3, Thornton 0-1).

Team Rebounds: 4.Blocked Shots: 6 (Kelly 3, Mas. Plumlee

2, Curry).Turnovers: 8 (Mas. Plumlee 5, Cook 2,

Thornton).Steals: 6 (Kelly 3, Thornton, Mas. Plum-

lee, Curry).Technical Fouls: None.

FG FT RebKENTUCKY Min M-A M-A O-T A PF PTSNoel 38 5-11 6-8 2-8 2 3 16Poythress 37 9-12 1-2 5-8 0 2 20Wiltjer 32 2-5 0-0 1-3 4 2 5Goodwin 37 5-12 5-8 1-6 4 4 16Mays 37 2-8 2-2 0-1 3 3 7Hood 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0Polson 12 0-0 0-0 0-1 0 3 0Cauley-Stein 6 2-3 0-1 0-0 0 3 4Totals 200 25-51 14-21 9-30 13 20 68

Percentages: FG .490, FT .667.3-Point Goals: 4-10, .400 (Wiltjer 1-2,

Poythress 1-2, Goodwin 1-2, Mays 1-4).Team Rebounds: 3.Blocked Shots: 4 (Noel 3, Goodwin).Turnovers: 13 (Mays 4, Goodwin 4,

Poythress 2, Cauley-Stein, Polson, Noel).Steals: 4 (Noel 4).Technical Fouls: None.

Duke 33 42 —75Kentucky 31 37 —68

Page 3: WOMEN’S BASKETBALL: No. 1 Baylor runs away from Kentucky ...matchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/1140/assets/GJDV… · Tuesday’s scores Charlotte 92, Washington 76 Toronto

The Rams had an 80-yard pass on the fi rst play negated by an illegal for-mation penalty. Then stal-wart David Akers missed a 41-yard fi eld goal for the 49ers. Rams kicker Greg Zuerlein made one from 53 yards, but that didn’t count because of a delay-of-game call. His next attempt from 58 yards was wide right.

By then, the anticlimactic ending seemed inevitable.

“Ties just don’t seem to make sense in football,” said Bengals left tackle Andrew Whitworth, who played in that previous draw in 2008. “There’s too much effort, too much sacrifi ce that goes into this game to end in a tie, that’s for sure.”

The 49ers (6-2-1) now have a hard-to-fi gure-out lead on the Seahawks (6-4) in the NFC West, which makes Sunday’s outcome all the more maddening.

“A division game? Oh, wow. I guess that could make it interesting at the end of the year,” Broncos wide receiver Eric Decker said.

Overtime was introduced at the college level in 1996, and there the teams trade possessions from the 25-yard line until there’s a win-ner. But the time when ties were permitted below the NFL was so long ago that current players never expe-rienced that.

Denver safety Rahim Moore dug deep in his memory bank to Pop War-ner ball to recall one.

“I believe we went triple overtime and we ended up winning and I don’t remem-ber how it all went down,” Moore said. “It was like the 90s, so I forget. Also, I would say it was in the rain.”

Even the NHL has abol-ished ties, using a pen-alty shot competition after scoreless overtimes in a

regular season game with mixed reviews. (Imagine the NFL switching to a punt-pass-kick contest to settle the score!)

“I would’ve loved to see a shootout,” Seattle coach Pete Carroll said, joking. “A couple of guys fi ring the ball at the goal posts. Anything to settle the thing.”

Uh, don’t count on that.Anderson said the NFL’s

competition committee will consider the overtime rules annually, but in a league where injuries are common the likelihood of a change is slim.

“To have these guys going into an additional overtime period or more, we would be taking on some risk we don’t think is prudent to take on,” Anderson said.

The NFL Players Associa-tion didn’t respond to a re-

quest for comment.Another factor working

against a change is game quality. With the promise of endless overtimes, if neces-sary to determine a winner, teams could be tempted to play conservatively down the stretch and bog a con-test down in safe runs and punts.

There’s also the stake the television networks have in this multi-billion-dollar business to consider. CBS and Fox already have to push back lucrative Sunday night shows if games run long during the afternoon. The possibility — even if it’s an improbability — of a three-overtime game, then, is not ideal for them even though they’d undoubtedly keep fans glued to their sets for more time in that sce-nario.

TIE

CONTINUED FROM 1B

paducahsun.com Sports The Paducah Sun • Wednesday, November 14, 2012 • 3B

Briefs

PITTSBURGH — Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger has a sprained right shoulder and his status for Sunday’s showdown with AFC North ri-val Baltimore is uncertain.

Coach Mike Tomlin said Tuesday that Roethlisberger is “questionable” and is waiting for more details on the quarterback’s condition. Roethlisberger left Mon-day night’s 16-13 overtime win over Kansas City in the third quarter after getting slammed to the ground by Chiefs linebackers Tamba Hali and Justin Houston.

Veteran backup Byron Leftwich filled in and com-pleted 7 of 14 passes for 73 yards. Leftwich’s last start came in 2009 while playing for the Atlanta Fal-cons.

Tomlin said safety Troy Polamalu remains doubtful with a right calf injury. Polamalu hasn’t played since a win over Philadelphia on Oct. 7.

Roethlisberger out with sprained shoulder

— Associated Press

MIAMI — The Miami Marlins’ spending spree a year ago didn’t work, so now they’re trying another payroll purge.

Rebranded in a new ballpark at the start of 2012, the Marlins were up to their old ways Tuesday, swap-ping stars for prospects. Miami traded shortstop Jose Reyes, left-hander Mark Buehrle and right-hander Josh Johnson to the Toronto Blue Jays as part of a blockbuster deal, a person familiar with the agree-ment said.

The person confirmed the trade to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the teams weren’t officially commenting. The person said the trade sent several of the Blue Jays’ top prospects to Miami.

The stunning agreement came less than a year after the Marlins added Reyes, Buehrle and closer Heath Bell in an uncharacteristic $191 million spend-ing binge as they moved into a new ballpark. The ac-quisitions raised high hopes, but the Marlins instead finished last in the NL East.

The latest paring of salary actually began in July, when the Marlins parted with former NL batting cham-pion Hanley Ramirez, second baseman Omar Infante and right-hander Anibal Sanchez, among others. Bell, the team’s high-profile bust, was traded to Arizona last month.

Source: Marlins trade 3 stars to Blue Jays

— Associated Press

NEW YORK — Davey Johnson of the Washington Na-tionals, and Bob Melvin of the Oakland Athletics were chosen as managers of the year on Tuesday after guiding their teams to huge turnaround seasons.

Melvin beat out Baltimore’s Buck Showalter for the AL honor in a close vote by a Baseball Writers’ Asso-ciation of America panel. Under Melvin, the A’s made a 20-game improvement, finished 94-68 and won the AL West.

Johnson was an easy choice for the NL prize after the Nationals — who had never enjoyed a winning year — posted the best record in the majors and made their first playoff appearance.

Johnson, who turns 70 in January, was honored for the second time. He was tabbed as the AL’s top man-ager in 1997, hours after he resigned from the Orioles in a feud with owner Peter Angelos.

Melvin also became a two-time winner, having been chosen in 2007 with Arizona. Melvin got 16 first-place votes. Showalter got the other 12 firsts, and Robin Ventura of the Chicago White Sox finished third.

The A’s were one of baseball’s biggest surprises this year, especially after trades and injuries wreaked havoc with the roster.

Johnson, Melvin picked as top managers

— Associated Press

The Oregon Ducks rarely, if ever, talk about injuries — even season-ending ones.

So it’s hard to say how de-pleted the AP’s No. 1 team is going into Saturday’s game against No. 14 Stanford. But it’s clear the Ducks have taken a hit, especially on de-fense.

The latest casualty is free safety Avery Patterson, who seriously injured his left knee in the second quarter of Oregon’s 59-17 victory at California last Saturday night.

Patterson was seen on the sidelines on crutches and in sweats following the game. Although there was no offi -cial word from the program, The Oregonian newspaper cited an unnamed source as saying Patterson was out for the season.

Patterson had taken over as starter for senior John Boyett, who was hurt early this season. Boyett played in the opener against Arkan-sas State, but was in street clothes the next week. Later he revealed to his hometown newspaper that he needed surgery to repair the patel-lar tendons in both knees. While the Ducks never for-mally announced Boyett’s injury, it ended his career at Oregon.

Sophomore James Scales replaced Patterson against Cal. Senior defensive line-men Dion Jordan (right

s h o u l d e r ) Isaac Rem-ington (foot) and Ricky H e i m u l i (right knee) were dressed on the side-lines in

Berkeley but did not play. As a result, the Ducks re-lied at times on three true freshmen — Arik Armstead, DeForest Buckner and Alex Balducci — on the defensive line.

Starting nose guard Wade Keliikipi never made the trip to Strawberry Canyon because of an undisclosed injury and was seen using crutches on Monday. De-fensive end Taylor Hart also hurt an ankle or foot against Cal and wore a boot.

The injuries tested coach Chip Kelly’s “next man in” philosophy.

“It’s part of college foot-ball,” Kelly said. “Can you handle it, or can you not handle it?”

The Ducks were already hurting in the secondary with sophomore backup cornerbacks Dior Mathis and Troy Hill absent against Cal for unclear reasons. The situation has become so se-rious that there was specula-tion this week that the Ducks might use wide receiver Ke-anon Lowe or even multi-purpose back De’Anthony Thomas on defense.

The move comes after USC used dynamic wide receiver

Marqise Lee on defense for a few snaps against Arizo-na State last weekend, and Washington played receiver Austin Seferian-Jenkins on defense against Utah.

Lowe played at safety at Jesuit High School in Port-land, and came to Oregon, in part, because he wanted to play offense. Thomas played on both sides of the ball at Crenshaw High School in Los Angeles.

The Ducks already moved redshirt freshman Koa Ka’ai, who had played at tight end this season, back to defen-sive end, which he played in high school.

The bright side in all of this for the Ducks is that even though they’ve had in-juries, their backups — and even third stringers — have had plenty of work this sea-son. In addition to Oregon’s practice of heavy player ro-tation on defense to wear down opponents, the Ducks often sat their starters after building up big leads.

Against the Golden Bears, the injuries were not limited to the defense. There were two major scares on offense.

Senior running back Ken-jon Barner left the game briefl y during the fi rst quar-ter after an apparent injury to his right thumb.Quarter-back Marcus Mariota also left the game after a hard fall injured his left shoulder late in the fi rst half, but returned and fi nished with 377 yards passing and six touchdowns.

Injuries test No. 1 DucksBY ANNE M. PETERSON

Associated Press

Louisville’s Rick Pitino and Indiana’s Tom Crean as possibilities.

“Sometimes, we just never know who is going to show up until the last min-

ute,” Stokes said. “But with the talent we have here, I’m thinking we’ll have several coming.”

Call Joey Fosko, a Paducah Sun sports writer, at 270-575-8661.

HOOP

CONTINUED FROM 1B

invaluable.”In a coincidence border-

ing on absurd, the Kleins are just one of four sets of brothers on the roster for the Wildcats (10-0, 7-0 Big 12), who play at Baylor on Saturday.

Senior Anthony Cantele, a Lou Groza Award semi-fi nalist, has been passing along his knowledge to Jack Cantele, a redshirt fresh-man kicker. Wide receiver Curry Sexton, a key contrib-utor on the Wildcats’ pro-lifi c offense, is the brother of Collin Sexton, a redshirt freshman. Senior lineback-er Jared Loomis’ brother, Evan Loomis, is also a wide receiver.

Snyder, the Wildcats’ longtime coach, said there isn’t necessarily rhyme or reason to the recruitment of brothers. It’s one of those quirks that just tend to hap-pen. But he also realizes the undeniable benefi ts to hav-ing siblings on the roster.

“Maybe there could be cantankerous relationships or close relationships, or the combination of both,” he said, “but regardless of

how you grow up, there’s a family affection that exists, where you truly care about each other. It’s a joy for them to have the opportu-nity to be together.”

That’s certainly true in the case of the Klein broth-ers from Loveland, Colo.

They were both home schooled, and that meant

endless hours spent to-gether. They have a lot of the same interests, a similar work ethic, hopes and de-sires. Kyle Klein admitted to being the more impulsive of the two, but there are far more similarities than dif-ferences.

They squabble, of course.“But I honestly can’t re-

member the last time,” said Kyle Klein, who even looks like his big brother. “We had a lot of playful fi ghts, wrestling in the backyard, but in terms of swinging at each other, I don’t remem-ber. It’s been a long time.”

It’s more likely that they’ll come out swinging in each other’s defense.

KLEINCONTINUED FROM 1B

(All games Friday, all times Cen-tral)

Class AMayfi eld at Kentucky Country

Day, 6:30 p.m.Frankfort at Beechwood, 6:30

p.m.Fairview at Pikeville, 6:30 p.m.Williamsburg at Hazard, 6:30

p.m.Class 2A

Murray at Caldwell County, 7 p.m.

Louisville DeSales at Glasgow, 7 p.m.

Walton-Verona at Newport Catholic, 6 p.m.

Danville at Somerset, 6:30 p.m.

Class 3ASouth Warren at Monroe Coun-

ty, 7 p.m.Louisville Central at Bell Coun-

ty, 6:30 p.m.Bourbon County at Mason

County, 6:30 p.m.Breathitt County at Belfry, 6:30

p.m.Class 4A

Owensboro at Warren East, 7 p.m.

Collins at Louisville Western, 6:30 p.m.

Covington Catholic at Fort Thomas Highlands, 6 p.m.

Boyle County at Lexington Catholic, 6:30 p.m.

Class 5AWarren Central at Bowling

Green, 7 p.m.Jeffersontown at John Hardin,

6:30 p.m.Cooper at Franklin County, 6:30

p.m.Pulaski County at Harlan Coun-

ty, 6:30 p.m.Class 6A

Louisville Eastern at Louisville Ballard, 6:30 p.m.

Louisville Butler at Pleasure Ridge Park, 6:30 p.m.

Louisville Trinity vs. Louisville St. Xavier, 6:30 p.m.

Simon Kenton at Scott County, 6:30 p.m.

State football quarterfinals

Kelly

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4B • Wednesday, November 14, 2012 • The Paducah Sun Business paducahsun.com

MARKET SUMMARY

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTERESTYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %ChgYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %Chg

13,661.72 11,231.56 Dow Industrials 12,756.18 -58.90 -.46 +4.41 +5.465,390.11 4,531.79 Dow Transportation 5,054.71 -3.76 -.07 +.70 +1.45

499.82 422.90 Dow Utilities 445.83 +1.83 +.41 -4.06 -.648,515.60 6,898.12 NYSE Composite 8,023.23 -30.83 -.38 +7.31 +6.852,509.57 2,102.29 NYSE MKT 2,373.79 -12.23 -.51 +4.19 +3.793,196.93 2,441.48 Nasdaq Composite 2,883.89 -20.37 -.70 +10.70 +7.361,474.51 1,158.66 S&P 500 1,374.53 -5.50 -.40 +9.30 +9.28

15,432.54 12,158.90 Wilshire 5000 14,370.70 -61.66 -.43 +8.95 +8.68868.50 666.16 Russell 2000 789.01 -4.75 -.60 +6.49 +6.18

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

AT&T Inc 1.80f 44 33.95 +.08 +12.3AirProd 2.56 17 80.54 +.59 -5.5AEP 1.88 13 41.34 +.07 +.1AmeriBrgn .84f 15 40.71 +.65 +9.5Aon plc .63 18 56.17 +.16 +20.0ATMOS 1.40f 14 34.23 +.05 +2.6BB&T Cp .80 11 27.45 -.25 +9.1Comcast .65 19 36.11 -.05 +52.3CrackerB 2.00f 14 63.00 +.25 +25.0Dillards .20 13 84.04 +1.18 +87.3Dover 1.40 12 60.75 +.32 +4.7EnPro ... 19 38.43 +.08 +16.5FredsInc .24 14 13.14 +.20 -9.9FullerHB .34 21 30.00 -.01 +29.8GenCorp ... ... 8.65 -.03 +62.6Goodyear ... 16 11.29 -.32 -20.3HonwllIntl 1.64f 21 61.24 -.20 +12.7Jabil .32 9 16.97 -.35 -13.7KimbClk 2.96 18 84.39 +.75 +14.7

Kroger .60f 23 24.77 +.01 +2.3Lowes .64 21 31.97 -.01 +26.0MeadWvco 1.00 30 29.42 -.16 +10.3MotrlaSolu 1.04 22 53.26 -.15 +15.1NiSource .96 24 24.01 -.01 +.8OldNBcp .36 11 11.14 -.35 -4.4Penney ... ... 17.40 -.57 -50.5PilgrimsP ... 9 6.11 +.03 +6.1RadioShk ... ... 2.06 -.06 -78.8RegionsFn .04 12 6.45 -.08 +50.0SbdCp ... 9 2230.00 +16.00 +9.5SearsHldgs .33t ... 59.90 -1.54 +88.5Sherwin 1.56 28 152.05 +2.99 +70.3TecumsehB ... 4 5.01 -.15 +12.6TecumsehA ... ... 4.97 +.02 +5.7Total SA 2.90e ... 47.65 -.45 -6.8USEC ... ... .58 -.01 -49.6US Bancrp .78 11 31.71 -.35 +17.2WalMart 1.59 15 71.81 -.67 +20.2WestlkChm .75f 16 76.13 -.75 +89.2

YOUR STOCKS YOUR FUNDS

A-B-C-DABB Ltd ... 17.99 -.23AES Corp dd 9.74 -.17AFLAC 8 50.03 +.19AK Steel dd 4.50 -.96AT&T Inc 44 33.95 +.08AbtLab 14 64.68 -.19AberFitc 16 31.18 -.16Abraxas dd 1.70 -.26Accenture 17 66.28 -.36ActivsBliz 14 10.72 -.05AdobeSy 21 32.54 -.16AMD dd 2.09 +.10AecomTch 8 18.87 -2.89Aetna 8 41.48 -.43Agilent 13 36.33 -.49AlcatelLuc ... 1.11 -.02Alcoa 52 8.31 -.12AllscriptH 23 12.32 +.06Allstate 7 38.09 -.46AlphaNRs dd 7.58 -.29AlpAlerMLP q 15.84 -.03AlteraCp lf 16 30.62 -.04Altria 15 31.18 +.08Amarin ... 11.24 +.29Amazon cc 226.60 +.13AMovilL 24 23.49ACapAgy 10 29.58 -.85AmCapLtd 3 11.58 -.05ACapMtg ... 23.15 -1.00AEagleOut 21 19.64 +.10AEP 13 41.34 +.07AmExp 13 54.74 -.78AmIntlGrp 2 31.35 -.63ARltyCT n ... 10.79 -.11AmeriBrgn 15 40.71 +.65Amgen 15 85.77 +.61Anadarko dd 70.24 -.51Annaly 10 14.46 -.41Anworth 8 5.64 -.11Apache 9 77.34 -1.23Apple Inc 12 542.90 +.07ApldMatl 12 10.48 -.15ArcelorMit cc 15.16 -.22ArchCoal dd 7.03 -.33ArchDan 16 24.89 -.19ArcosDor 20 10.94 -.69ArenaPhm dd 8.78 +.06AresCap 9 16.75 -.16ArmourRsd 82 6.59 -.28AssuredG 4 13.01 -.27Atmel 13 4.70 -.11AuRico g 16 8.02 -.10Autodesk 25 30.64 -.36AvanirPhm dd 2.35 -.19Avon 52 14.05 -.20BB&T Cp 11 27.45 -.25BP PLC 6 40.54 -.41Baidu 25 98.60 -6.00BakrHu 12 40.25 -.46BcoBrad pf ... 15.70 +.05BcoSantSA ... 7.03 +.11BcoSBrasil ... 6.86 +.05BkofAm 25 9.33 -.06BkNYMel 12 24.01 -.06BariPVix rs q 34.85 +.06BarrickG 8 35.29 -.59Baxter 16 65.95 +.89BeazerH rs dd 13.87 +.10BerkH B 15 85.87 +.60BestBuy dd 15.70 -.15BigLots 10 27.48 -1.43Boeing 13 73.36 -.33BostonSci dd 5.19 -.02BrMySq 28 31.87 -.07Broadcom 22 30.44 -.47BrcdeCm 19 5.43 -.04BrkfldOfPr 7 15.84 -.05CA Inc 11 22.20 +.11CBRE Grp 16 17.65 +.18CBS B 15 34.37 -.16CSX 11 19.90 -.06CVS Care 16 46.23 -.02CYS Invest 3 12.10 -.50CblvsnNY 16 14.24 -.22Calpine cc 16.73 -.21CampSp 15 36.58 +.81CdnNRs gs ... 27.70 -.18CapOne 10 57.31 -.51CapsteadM 7 11.54 -.37Carlisle 14 55.40 +.01CatalystPh dd .46 +.07Caterpillar 9 83.26 -1.92Celgene 21 74.40 -1.26Cemex ... 8.70 +.08Cemig pf s ... 11.20 +.03CenterPnt 21 19.96 -.20CntryLink 35 38.78 -.14Ceradyne 16 34.77 -.18CheniereEn dd 14.11 -.08ChesEng 5 17.39 +.16Chevron 9 105.28 -.65Chimera ... 2.70 -.07CienaCorp dd 14.17 -.54Cirrus 19 30.73 -.12Cisco 11 16.85 -.01Citigroup 11 36.16 -.26Citigp wtA ... .41 +.03CitrixSys 31 57.93 -1.36CleanEngy dd 12.26 +1.20Clearwire dd 2.22 +.01CliffsNRs 6 35.90 -.40Coach 15 54.14 -.59CocaCola s 19 36.16 +.08Comcast 19 36.11 -.05Comc spcl 19 35.03 -.08Comerica 12 28.38 -.23CmtyHlt 11 29.00 +.35Compuwre 24 8.75 +.02ConAgra 19 27.82 -.02ConocPhil s 7 55.35 -.29ConstellA 16 34.29 -.63Corning 9 11.16 -.11Costco 25 95.69 -.29Covidien 14 56.02 +.43CSVS2xVxS q 1.33 +.01CSVelIVSt q 16.65CreXus 10 12.35 -.08Crocs 8 12.61 +.20DR Horton 7 19.25 -.15Danaher 17 52.11 +.04DeanFds 24 17.01 +.08Deere 11 85.69 +.01Dell Inc 6 9.40 +.06DelphiAu n ... 32.19 -.27DeltaAir 4 10.21 -.09DenburyR 9 14.55 -.19Dndreon dd 4.19 -.12DevonE 34 53.70 -.24DicksSptg 24 50.97 +2.27DirecTV 12 48.54 +.37DrxFnBull q 100.41 -1.82DirSCBear q 17.39 +.29DirFnBear q 18.55 +.39DirDGldBll q 13.46 -.47DirxSCBull q 51.21 -.86Discover 9 41.18 +.02Disney 15 47.96 +.51DollarGen 18 46.60 -.11DollarTh 14 85.20 -.60DollarTr s 17 37.71 -.16DomRescs 21 50.21 +1.02Dover 12 60.75 +.32DowChm 22 28.83 +.04DrPepSnap 15 43.45 -.51DryShips dd 2.12 -.09DuPont 13 42.91 +.21DukeEn rs 17 62.01 +.56Dynavax dd 4.74 +.56

E-F-G-HE-Trade 33 8.00 -.13eBay 16 47.74 +.27EMC Cp 20 23.91 -.19Eaton 12 49.47 -.08EldorGld g 33 14.77 +.18ElectArts dd 12.98 -.04EmersonEl 19 49.91 -.43EmpDist 16 20.25 +.04EnCana g 20 20.74 -.04EntPrPt 19 50.75 +.43Ericsson ... 8.64 -.11ExcoRes dd 7.59 +.15Exelon 11 29.94 -.30Express 6 10.58 -.11ExpScripts 28 50.98 -.94ExxonMbl 11 86.47 -.85F5 Netwks 25 86.54 +.40Facebook n ... 19.86 -.21FedExCp 14 90.46 +.38FibriaCelu ... 9.91 +.31FidlNFin 10 23.12 +.13

NYSE

INDEXES

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

BkofAm 1165726 9.33 -.06S&P500ETF1108493 137.79 -.48WeathfIntl 589611 9.15 -1.73AMD 581162 2.09 +.10iShEMkts 529199 40.78 -.38

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)Name Last Chg %Chg

GreenbCos 16.73 +2.78 +19.9SunTr wtA 5.82 +.76 +15.0CSVLgNGs 35.90 +4.20 +13.2BiP GCrb 11.94 +1.38 +13.1HalconR rs 5.87 +.49 +9.1

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)Name Last Chg %Chg

52-Week Net YTD 52-wkHigh Low Name Last Chg %Chg %Chg %Chg

Hi-Crush n 15.00 -5.35 -26.3Kngswy rs 2.32 -.55 -19.1MBIA 6.81 -1.60 -19.0Tronox s 15.18 -3.54 -18.9AK Steel 4.50 -.96 -17.6

DIARYAdvanced 976Declined 2,066Unchanged 101Total issues 3,143New Highs 38New Lows 126

DIARYAdvanced 127Declined 301Unchanged 32Total issues 460New Highs 7New Lows 23

DIARYAdvanced 793Declined 1,662Unchanged 98Total issues 2,553New Highs 22New Lows 133

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)Name Last Chg %Chg

Protalix 5.31 +.43 +8.8Augusta g 2.76 +.16 +6.2Crexendo 2.15 +.12 +5.9Aerocntry 13.25 +.70 +5.6ComstkMn 2.28 +.10 +4.6

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)Name Last Chg %Chg

Servotr 7.20 -1.06 -12.8RareEle g 3.30 -.46 -12.2EntGmg rs 2.13 -.22 -9.4MGTCap rs 5.50 -.50 -8.3Gastar pfA 15.42 -1.28 -7.7

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)Name Last Chg %Chg

GoodTme 2.26 +.56 +32.9ChinHGS h 2.75 +.57 +26.1Pactera wi 8.25 +1.45 +21.2AmRailcar 31.16 +4.68 +17.7DiamndF hlf 20.43 +2.58 +14.5

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)Name Last Chg %Chg

CleanDsl 2.24 -.42 -15.8Cyclacel rs 4.63 -.65 -12.3NII Hldg 5.11 -.65 -11.3Inteliquent 2.64 -.32 -10.8NymoxPh 7.29 -.85 -10.5

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

NYSE MKT

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

Vringo 60620 3.62 -.03CheniereEn 27487 14.11 -.08Neuralstem 25797 1.04 +.12NA Pall g 24534 1.37 -.09Rentech 22153 2.66 -.08

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

NASDAQ

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

Microsoft 1222784 27.09 -.90SiriusXM 802323 2.79 +.01Facebook n 699861 19.86 -.21Cisco 594837 16.85 -.01Intel 553471 20.28 -.49

American CentEqIncInv 7.74 -0.02 +8.4GrowthInv 26.90 -0.07 +9.5UltraInv 25.12 -0.10 +9.6ValueInv 6.13 -0.03 +9.6American FundsAMCAPA m 20.78 -0.09+10.8BalA m 19.91 -0.04+10.9BondA m 12.98 -0.01 +5.8CapIncBuA m 51.91 -0.05 +8.4CapWldBdA m21.52 -0.02 +6.9CpWldGrIA m 35.53 -0.05+13.0EurPacGrA m 39.24 -0.06+11.6FnInvA m 39.23 -0.11+11.9GrthAmA m 32.96 -0.11+14.7HiIncA m 11.21 -0.02+12.0IncAmerA m 17.75 +8.9IntBdAmA m 13.79 -0.01 +2.7InvCoAmA m 29.80 -0.09+11.5MutualA m 27.73 -0.04 +9.1NewEconA m 27.96 -0.16+17.6NewPerspA m29.84 -0.04+14.1NwWrldA m 52.13 -0.13+13.0SmCpWldA m38.21 -0.18+15.2TaxEBdAmA m13.26 +0.01 +9.3USGovSecA m14.59 -0.01 +2.2WAMutInvA m30.46 -0.06 +9.0AquilaChTxFKYA m 11.11 +0.01 +5.4ArtisanIntl d 23.19 -0.04+16.9IntlVal d 28.89 +0.02+15.1MdCpVal 20.88 -0.03 +6.0MidCap 36.96 +0.02+12.2BernsteinDiversMui 14.98 +0.01 +3.7IntDur 14.29 -0.01 +5.6BlackRockEngy&ResA m27.37 -0.07 -15.1EqDivA m 19.34 -0.06 +8.1EqDivI 19.39 -0.05 +8.3GlobAlcA m 19.18 -0.05 +6.3GlobAlcC m 17.82 -0.05 +5.6GlobAlcI 19.29 -0.04 +6.6HiYldBdIs 7.94 -0.01+13.6Cohen & SteersRealty 66.17 -0.06+10.5ColumbiaAcornIntZ 39.55 -0.09+15.9AcornZ 30.21 -0.10+11.0DFA1YrFixInI 10.35 +0.92YrGlbFII 10.14 +1.05YrGlbFII 11.31 +4.7EmMkCrEqI 18.85 -0.14+10.8EmMktValI 27.92 -0.26 +8.9IntSmCapI 14.73 -0.09+10.3USCorEq1I 11.83 -0.05+11.1USCorEq2I 11.70 -0.05+11.6USLgValI 21.76 -0.11+15.1USSmValI 25.86 -0.13+12.1USSmallI 22.44 -0.11+10.1DWS-ScudderGrIncS 17.46 -0.05 +9.5DavisNYVentA m 35.02 -0.16 +7.8NYVentY 35.45 -0.16 +8.0Delaware InvestDiverIncA m 9.46 -0.01 +6.6Dimensional InvestmeIntCorEqI 9.84 -0.04 +8.8IntlSCoI 14.86 -0.09 +9.2IntlValuI 15.25 -0.09 +6.2Dodge & CoxBal 75.01 -0.32+13.2Income 13.94 -0.01 +7.8IntlStk 32.36 +10.7Stock 115.32 -0.67+15.0DoubleLineTotRetBdN b 11.39 +8.6DreyfusApprecia 42.99 -0.17 +7.3FMILgCap 16.60 -0.02+11.0FPACres d 28.20 -0.07 +6.2NewInc m 10.63 +2.1Fairholme FundsFairhome d 29.82 -0.60+28.8FederatedStrValI 4.92 +4.5ToRetIs 11.66 -0.01 +6.6FidelityAstMgr20 13.30 -0.01 +5.8AstMgr50 16.12 -0.03 +8.6Bal 19.76 -0.04+10.0BlChGrow 47.52 -0.11+12.0CapApr 28.82 +17.1CapInc d 9.32 -0.02+12.9Contra 75.19 -0.10+11.5DivGrow 28.94 -0.10+12.6DivrIntl d 28.67 -0.02+12.3EqInc 45.60 -0.23+12.6EqInc II 19.00 -0.07+11.0FF2015 11.78 -0.02 +8.1FF2035 11.59 -0.03+10.1FF2040 8.09 -0.02+10.1Fidelity 34.66 -0.12+11.9FltRtHiIn d 9.93 +5.9Free2010 14.10 -0.02 +7.9Free2020 14.23 -0.03 +8.8Free2025 11.81 -0.03 +9.5Free2030 14.05 -0.04 +9.7GNMA 11.77 -0.02 +2.7GovtInc 10.66 +3.0GrowCo 91.47 -0.18+13.1GrowInc 20.39 -0.10+13.4HiInc d 9.23 -0.02+12.2IntMuniInc d 10.74 +0.01 +5.4IntlDisc d 31.43 -0.01+13.8InvGrdBd 8.03 -0.01 +6.4LatinAm d 48.16 -0.14 -1.5LowPriStk d 38.09 -0.16+11.6Magellan 71.09 -0.22+13.1MidCap d 28.73 -0.09+10.0MuniInc d 13.68 +0.01 +8.3NewMktIn d 17.74 -0.04+17.0OTC 56.30 -0.28 +2.9Puritan 19.08 -0.05+10.6Series100Idx 9.87 -0.05+11.9ShTmBond 8.60 +2.2StratInc 11.39 -0.01 +9.1Tel&Util 18.13 +0.01 +6.3TotalBd 11.05 -0.01 +6.4USBdIdx 11.96 -0.01 +4.4USBdIdxInv 11.96 -0.01 +4.3Value 72.29 -0.36+13.9Fidelity AdvisorNewInsA m 21.92 -0.03+11.2NewInsI 22.23 -0.03+11.4StratIncA m 12.72 -0.01 +8.8Fidelity Spartan500IdxAdvtg 48.83 -0.18+11.4500IdxInstl 48.83 -0.18+11.4500IdxInv 48.82 -0.18+11.3ExtMktIdAg d 38.76 -0.20+10.6TotMktIdAg d 40.05 -0.16+11.2First EagleGlbA m 48.28 -0.12 +7.0OverseasA m 21.88 -0.02 +7.5ForumAbStratI 11.21 +0.01 +1.4FrankTemp-FrankFed TF A m 12.87 +0.01 +9.5FrankTemp-FranklinCA TF A m 7.59 +10.5HY TF A m 11.04 +11.5Income A m 2.17 +9.6Income C m 2.19 -0.01 +9.0IncomeAdv 2.15 -0.01 +9.8NY TF A m 12.26 +0.01 +7.2RisDv A m 36.77 -0.12 +5.7StrInc A m 10.67 -0.01+10.4US Gov A m 6.81 -0.01 +1.1FrankTemp-MutualDiscov A m 29.08 -0.11 +8.8Discov Z 29.51 -0.12 +9.1Shares A m 21.72 -0.10+10.4Shares Z 21.94 -0.10+10.7FrankTemp-TempletonGlBond A m 13.43 -0.02+12.3GlBond C m 13.46 -0.02+12.0GlBondAdv 13.39 -0.02+12.6Growth A m 18.43 +0.01+13.1World A m 15.31 -0.02+11.4GMOEmgMktsVI 11.12 +7.1IntItVlIV 19.68 -0.07 +5.3QuIII 22.58 -0.10 +8.3Goldman SachsHiYieldIs d 7.32 -0.02+12.9

Name P/E Last Chg

3,388,719,372Volume 66,334,490Volume 1,765,450,083Volume

12,000

12,400

12,800

13,200

13,600

14,000

M NJ J A S O

12,680

13,020

13,360Dow Jones industrialsClose: 12,756.18Change: -58.90 (-0.5%)

10 DAYS

HarborBond 13.05 +8.8CapApInst 40.60 -0.14+10.0IntlInstl d 58.38 -0.11+11.3IntlInv m 57.69 -0.10+10.9HartfordCapAprA m 32.26 -0.21+11.9CpApHLSIA 41.08 -0.23+10.5INVESCOComstockA m 16.89 -0.15+12.3EqIncomeA m 9.01 -0.03 +9.8GrowIncA m 20.29 -0.11+10.3HiYldMuA m 10.19 +0.01+13.9IvyAssetStrA m 24.95 -0.17+12.1AssetStrC m 24.10 -0.16+11.4JPMorganCoreBdUlt 12.17 +0.01 +5.5CoreBondA m12.17 +0.01 +5.1CoreBondSelect12.16 +0.01 +5.3HighYldSel 8.09 -0.01+12.1MidCpValI 27.63 -0.03+16.3ShDurBndSel 11.02 +0.01 +1.7USLCpCrPS 22.25 -0.13+12.7JanusGlbLfScT d 29.95 -0.09+20.3PerkinsMCVT 21.34 -0.08 +5.7John HancockLifBa1 b 13.28 -0.03+10.0LifGr1 b 13.13 -0.05+10.2LazardEmgMkEqtI d 19.01 -0.11+13.2Legg Mason/WesternCrPlBdIns 11.71 -0.01 +8.4Longleaf PartnersLongPart 25.78 +0.02+12.7Loomis SaylesBondI 15.01 -0.02+12.3BondR b 14.95 -0.02+12.0Lord AbbettAffiliatA m 11.51 -0.05+10.5BondDebA m 8.02 -0.02+10.7ShDurIncA m 4.65 +6.1ShDurIncC m 4.68 +5.5MFSIsIntlEq 17.89 +12.4ValueA m 24.67 -0.09+11.5ValueI 24.79 -0.08+11.8Manning & NapierWrldOppA 7.33 -0.03+10.6Matthews AsianChina d 22.41 -0.24 +4.2India d 17.29 +0.01+27.2MergerMerger b 15.80 +0.01 +1.3Metropolitan WestTotRetBdI 11.11 +11.0TotRtBd b 11.11 +10.8NatixisInvBndY 12.75 -0.01+10.9StratIncA m 15.19 -0.03 +9.9StratIncC m 15.27 -0.04 +9.1Neuberger BermanGenesisIs 49.25 -0.23 +6.1NorthernHYFixInc d 7.45 +12.5OakmarkEqIncI 28.71 -0.02 +6.1Intl I 18.99 +0.05+14.7Oakmark I 48.17 -0.15+15.5OberweisChinaOpp m 10.39 -0.12+19.4Old WestburyGlbSmMdCp 14.50 -0.06 +9.6LgCpStr 9.51 -0.03 +8.4OppenheimerDevMktA m 33.60 -0.32+14.6DevMktY 33.30 -0.31+14.9GlobA m 60.34 -0.13+11.7IntlBondA m 6.53 -0.01 +8.7IntlBondY 6.53 -0.01 +9.2IntlGrY 29.10 +0.01+14.0MainStrA m 36.01 -0.10+12.0RocMuniA m 17.14 +0.01+13.0RochNtlMu m 7.65 +0.01+18.3StrIncA m 4.32 +11.7PIMCOAAstAAutP 11.23 -0.02+14.6AllAssetI 12.65 -0.02+12.1AllAuthIn 11.24 -0.02+14.7ComRlRStI 6.80 +0.02 +6.4DivIncInst 12.24 -0.01+13.0EMktCurI 10.42 -0.02 +6.4EmMktsIns 12.36 -0.02+14.2HiYldIs 9.52 -0.02+11.8InvGrdIns 11.38 +14.1LowDrIs 10.64 -0.01 +5.7RERRStgC m 4.78 -0.01+23.1RealRet 12.72 -0.03 +9.7RealRtnA m 12.72 -0.03 +9.3ShtTermIs 9.91 +0.01 +3.3TotRetA m 11.60 -0.01 +9.3TotRetAdm b 11.60 -0.01 +9.5TotRetC m 11.60 -0.01 +8.6TotRetIs 11.60 -0.01 +9.7TotRetrnD b 11.60 -0.01 +9.4TotlRetnP 11.60 -0.01 +9.6PermanentPortfolio 48.71 -0.11 +5.7PrincipalLCGrIInst 9.85 -0.03+10.9PutnamGrowIncA m 14.19 +12.9NewOpp 55.81 -0.19+10.8RoycePAMutInv d 11.49 -0.05 +6.8PremierInv d 19.78 -0.05 +6.8Schwab1000Inv d 39.26 -0.15+11.0S&P500Sel d 21.79 -0.08+11.3ScoutInterntl d 31.10 -0.02+12.0SequoiaSequoia 161.91 +0.20+11.3T Rowe PriceBlChpGr 43.87 -0.12+13.5CapApprec 22.89 -0.05+11.0EmMktStk d 31.91 -0.24+11.9EqIndex d 37.13 -0.13+11.2EqtyInc 25.49 -0.11+12.3GrowStk 36.24 -0.07+13.9HealthSci 41.44 -0.07+27.1HiYield d 6.87 -0.01+12.4InsLgCpGr 18.00 -0.05+11.7IntlBnd d 10.09 +5.7IntlGrInc d 12.33 -0.05 +7.0IntlStk d 13.68 -0.06+11.3LatinAm d 39.80 +0.06 +2.5MidCapVa 24.30 -0.11+13.6MidCpGr 57.42 -0.06 +8.9NewAsia d 16.17 -0.12+16.2NewEra 41.81 -0.20 -0.6NewHoriz 34.12 -0.09+10.0

NewIncome 9.97 -0.01 +5.8OrseaStk d 8.07 -0.04+10.2R2015 12.73 -0.03 +9.9R2025 12.85 -0.05+11.0R2035 13.01 -0.05+11.6Rtmt2010 16.40 -0.04 +9.2Rtmt2020 17.59 -0.05+10.6Rtmt2030 18.43 -0.07+11.4Rtmt2040 18.50 -0.07+11.6ShTmBond 4.85 -0.01 +2.6SmCpStk 34.58 -0.19+10.7SmCpVal d 37.80 -0.15 +9.6SpecInc 12.94 -0.01 +8.7Value 25.47 -0.12+13.0TCWEmgIncI 9.28 -0.02+18.1TotRetBdI 10.30 +12.5TempletonInFEqSeS 18.68 +0.01 +9.8ThornburgIntlValA m 25.91 -0.05 +8.9IntlValI d 26.50 -0.05 +9.3Tweedy, BrowneGlobVal d 24.76 +0.06+13.3Vanguard500Adml 127.08 -0.47+11.4500Inv 127.07 -0.46+11.3BalIdxAdm 23.31 -0.05 +8.7BalIdxIns 23.31 -0.05 +8.7CAITAdml 11.84 +0.01 +7.2CapOpAdml 75.81 -0.25+11.2DivGr 16.25 -0.07 +6.6EmMktIAdm 34.19 -0.29 +9.3EnergyAdm 109.57 -0.73 -1.0EnergyInv 58.34 -0.39 -1.1EqIncAdml 49.34 -0.20 +9.9Explr 76.84 -0.30 +7.6ExtdIdAdm 43.59 -0.18+10.8ExtdIdIst 43.59 -0.18+10.8ExtdMktIdxIP 107.60 -0.44+10.8GNMA 10.99 +1.9GNMAAdml 10.99 +2.0GrthIdAdm 35.42 -0.09+12.5GrthIstId 35.42 -0.09+12.5HYCor 6.03 -0.01+12.0HYCorAdml 6.03 -0.01+12.1HltCrAdml 60.83 -0.21+12.1HlthCare 144.13 -0.49+12.1ITBondAdm 12.26 +0.01 +7.4ITGradeAd 10.52 +9.3ITIGrade 10.52 +9.2InfPrtAdm 29.53 +0.02 +7.6InfPrtI 12.03 +0.01 +7.6InflaPro 15.04 +0.01 +7.5InstIdxI 126.24 -0.47+11.4InstPlus 126.25 -0.47+11.4InstTStPl 31.08 -0.13+11.4IntlGr 18.16 -0.08+11.1IntlGrAdm 57.81 -0.27+11.2IntlStkIdxAdm 23.47 -0.10 +9.3IntlStkIdxI 93.85 -0.42 +9.3IntlStkIdxIPls 93.87 -0.42 +9.3IntlVal 29.22 -0.13 +9.7LTGradeAd 11.23 +0.01+14.1LTInvGr 11.23 +0.01+14.0LifeCon 17.09 -0.01 +7.1LifeGro 22.94 -0.07 +9.5LifeMod 20.58 -0.04 +8.3MidCapIdxIP 106.67 -0.23 +9.8MidCpAdml 97.89 -0.21 +9.8MidCpIst 21.63 -0.04 +9.9MidCpSgl 30.89 -0.07 +9.8Morg 19.23 -0.06+10.1MuHYAdml 11.37 +0.01 +9.7MuInt 14.50 +0.01 +6.2MuIntAdml 14.50 +0.01 +6.2MuLTAdml 11.91 +0.01 +8.6MuLtdAdml 11.20 +0.01 +2.1MuShtAdml 15.94 +1.1PrecMtls 16.21 -0.32 -13.7Prmcp 67.89 -0.27+10.0PrmcpAdml 70.48 -0.28+10.1PrmcpCorI 14.73 -0.05 +9.2REITIdxAd 90.09 -0.03+12.3STBondAdm 10.67 +2.0STBondSgl 10.67 +2.0STCor 10.89 +0.01 +4.4STGradeAd 10.89 +0.01 +4.5STIGradeI 10.89 +0.01 +4.5STsryAdml 10.79 +0.7SelValu 20.66 -0.03+11.1SmCpIdAdm 36.83 -0.19+10.3SmCpIdIst 36.83 -0.19+10.3Star 20.39 -0.05 +9.8TgtRe2010 24.19 -0.03 +7.8TgtRe2015 13.32 -0.02 +8.3TgtRe2020 23.56 -0.05 +8.6TgtRe2030 22.91 -0.07 +9.5TgtRe2035 13.75 -0.05 +9.9TgtRe2040 22.56 -0.08+10.0TgtRe2045 14.17 -0.05+10.1TgtRetInc 12.16 -0.01 +6.8Tgtet2025 13.39 -0.03 +9.1TotBdAdml 11.22 +0.01 +4.5TotBdInst 11.22 +0.01 +4.5TotBdMkInv 11.22 +0.01 +4.4TotBdMkSig 11.22 +0.01 +4.5TotIntl 14.03 -0.06 +9.2TotStIAdm 34.34 -0.14+11.3TotStIIns 34.34 -0.14+11.3TotStISig 33.14 -0.13+11.3TotStIdx 34.33 -0.13+11.2ValIdxIns 22.12 -0.12+10.2WellsI 24.40 -0.02 +9.0WellsIAdm 59.11 -0.05 +9.0Welltn 33.68 -0.10 +9.7WelltnAdm 58.17 -0.18 +9.8WndsIIAdm 50.59 -0.29+11.9Wndsr 14.36 -0.06+13.5WndsrAdml 48.45 -0.20+13.6WndsrII 28.50 -0.16+11.8VirtusEmgMktsIs 9.81 -0.02+13.6Waddell & Reed AdvAccumA m 7.87 -0.02 +7.1SciTechA m 10.76 -0.04+20.8YacktmanFocused d 19.93 -0.09 +6.7Yacktman d 18.54 -0.08 +7.2

YTDName NAV Chg %Rtn

FifthThird 9 14.00 -.23Finisar 20 11.40 -.83FstHorizon dd 9.16 -.11FstNiagara 29 7.34 -.21FstSolar dd 24.40 -1.03FordM 9 11.00 +.03ForestOil 10 6.48 -.16Fortinet 48 17.81 -.56FMCG 12 38.37 -.27FrontierCm 21 4.37 -.04Fusion-io dd 22.17 +.60GATX 16 41.56 +.36GT AdvTc 4 3.51 -.22GalenaBio dd 1.70 +.30GameStop 10 23.26 +.17Gannett 9 17.04 +.25Gap 19 33.69 +.19GenDynam 9 63.75 -.43GenElec 16 20.68 -.21GenMills 15 39.35 +.15GenMotors 9 24.82 -.44GenOn En dd 2.34 -.07Genworth 7 5.40 -.14Gerdau ... 8.72 -.11GileadSci 22 72.69 -1.24GlaxoSKln ... 42.81 -.22GluMobile dd 2.26 +.05Goldcrp g 24 42.81 -.58GoldmanS 11 116.47 -.77Goodyear 16 11.29 -.32GreenMtC 11 24.52 -.31GreenbCos 9 16.73 +2.78Groupon dd 2.63 -.06HCA Hldg 5 31.69 -.83HalconR rs dd 5.87 +.49Hallibrtn 9 30.39 -.26HartfdFn 7 20.55 -.34HltMgmt 9 7.95 -.07Heckmann dd 3.65 +.12HeclaM 53 5.81 -.07Hersha dd 4.36 -.10Hertz 14 14.72 +.02Hess 11 49.96 -.61HewlettP 5 13.14 -.27Hi-Crush n ... 15.00 -5.35HollyFront 5 41.36 +.49Hologic dd 20.25 -.14HomeDp 23 63.38 +2.22HonwllIntl 21 61.24 -.20HopFedBc 21 8.09 -.19HorizPhm ... 2.46 -.14HostHotls cc 14.38 +.13HovnanE dd 4.88 +.14HudsCity dd 7.94 -.17Humana 9 68.29 -.87HuntBncsh 11 6.09 -.08Huntsmn 8 16.59 -.11

I-J-K-LiShGold q 16.79 -.03iSAstla q 24.24 -.29iShBraz q 52.04 -.46iSh HK q 18.50 -.16iShJapn q 8.87 +.01iSh Kor q 57.13 -.55iSMalas q 14.81iShSing q 13.05 -.08iSTaiwn q 12.71 -.26iShSilver q 31.40 +.03iShChina25 q 35.98 -.57iSCorSP500 q 138.32 -.55iShCorTBd q 112.25 +.20iShEMkts q 40.78 -.38iShB20 T q 126.61 +.42iS Eafe q 52.50 -.26iShiBxHYB q 91.21 -.21iShR2K q 78.70 -.45iShREst q 62.68 -.20iShDJHm q 19.74 -.02IdenixPh dd 4.99 +.34IngerRd 19 46.09 +.16IngrmM 8 15.68 -.10Intel 9 20.28 -.49IBM 13 188.32 -.93IntlGame 15 12.99 -.19IntPap 17 34.36Interpublic 13 9.76 -.18Invesco 15 23.94 -.13InvMtgCap 7 19.21 -.94ItauUnibH ... 14.52 -.06JDS Uniph dd 10.95 -.21JPMorgCh 8 40.04 -.54Jabil 9 16.97 -.35Jaguar g dd .84 -.17JamesRiv dd 2.28 -.12JanusCap 13 7.97 -.27Jefferies 14 16.00 -.27JetBlue 11 5.28 -.05JohnJn 23 69.51 -.17JohnsnCtl 10 25.17 -.37JnprNtwk 27 17.35 -.44KB Home dd 14.51 -.16KLA Tnc 11 46.07 -1.53Keycorp 9 8.17 -.12Kimco 62 18.70 -.17KindMorg 47 32.24 -.29Kinross g dd 9.99 -.23KodiakO g 25 9.13 -.16Kohls 12 51.11 -.07KraftFGp n ... 43.96 +.02Kroger 23 24.77 +.01LPL Fincl 19 26.32 -1.67LSI Corp 32 6.70 +.02LVSands 19 42.51 -.95LeapFrog 9 7.77 +.33LennarA 13 36.21 -.17LeucNatl 10 20.75 -.39LibtyIntA 20 19.64 -.09LillyEli 13 47.14 -.67LincNat 36 23.26 -.18LinkedIn cc 99.26 +.26LinnEngy dd 38.74 +.64LockhdM 10 90.18 +.37LodgeNet h dd .14 -.04Lowes 21 31.97 -.01LyonBas A 14 50.06 -.59

M-N-O-PMBIA dd 6.81 -1.60MFA Fncl 9 7.77 -.23MGIC dd 1.55 -.08MGM Rsts dd 9.45 -.14Macys 12 39.08 +.38MagHRes dd 3.46 +.08MarathnO 12 30.16 -.07MktVGold q 49.48 -.56MV OilSv s q 37.18 -.36MktVRus q 26.65 -.66MarkWest 76 46.50 -3.19MarIntA 22 35.13 -.18MarshM 16 34.10 -.07MartMM 39 85.51 +.10MarvellT 10 7.56 -.22Masco dd 15.47 +.36Mattel 15 35.50 -.30McDrmInt 14 10.14 +.08McDnlds 16 84.64 -.24MeadJohn 25 67.70 +1.85Mechel ... 6.14 -.08Medtrnic 12 41.30 -.19Merck 20 43.68 -.34MetLife 9 31.47 -.57MetroPCS 9 10.16 +.11MKors n ... 51.01 +.43Microchp 27 30.13 -.22MicronT dd 5.74 +.18Microsoft 15 27.09 -.90MobileTele 30 17.46 +.49Molycorp dd 6.67 -.50Mondelez ... 25.74 -.22Monsanto 22 85.19 -.41MonstrWw 15 6.24 -.11MorgStan dd 16.52 -.25Mylan 16 26.15 +.12NII Hldg dd 5.11 -.65NRG Egy dd 19.67 -.54Nabors cc 13.41 -.06NOilVarco 13 70.73 -.06NektarTh dd 6.71 -.33NetApp 19 26.33 -.49Netflix 41 79.61 +1.42Neuralstem dd 1.04 +.12NY CmtyB 11 12.54 -.25NYMtgTr 5 5.90 -.35Newcastle 3 7.74 -.36NewmtM 13 47.19 -.52NewsCpA 22 24.14 -.15NobleCorp 17 35.40 -.29NokiaCp ... 2.69 -.02NorflkSo 11 58.51 +.45NA Pall g ... 1.37 -.09NorthropG 9 65.37 -.03Nvidia 15 11.83 -.09OcciPet 10 74.86 -1.67OfficeDpt dd 2.97 +.07

Omnicom 14 46.65 -.37OnSmcnd 68 6.15 -.05Oracle 15 30.02 -.28PDL Bio 6 7.80 -.03PNC 11 54.96 -1.35PPG 15 117.45 -.02PPL Corp 10 28.32 +.06PacEthan h dd .33 -.03Panasonic ... 4.84 -.07PattUTI 8 16.13 -.10PeabdyE 9 26.22 -.27Pengrth g ... 5.12 -.20PennWst g ... 10.58 +.15Penney dd 17.40 -.57PennyMac 8 23.51 -.94PeopUtdF 16 11.49 -.14PepsiCo 18 68.58 -.03PetrbrsA ... 19.56 -.25Petrobras ... 20.09 -.31Pfizer 14 24.05 -.06PhilipMor 17 84.42 -.56Phillips66 n ... 46.86 -.49PiperJaf dd 27.63 +.14PitnyBw 3 11.67 -.25Potash 14 38.75 -.33PS SrLoan ... 24.72 -.10PwShs QQQ q 62.98 -.44ProShtS&P q 35.50 +.10PrUltQQQ s q 51.09 -.65PrUShQQQ q 32.37 +.41ProUltSP q 55.90 -.35PrUPQQQ s q 46.41 -1.03PrUVxST rs q 27.66 +.06PrUltCrude q 26.21 -.25ProctGam 18 66.85 -.23ProgsvCp 15 22.21 -.05PrUShSP rs q 59.12 +.40PUSSP500 rs q 43.28 +.44PUShQQQ rs q 46.55 +.96ProspctCap ... 10.26 -.29Prudentl 15 50.93 -1.26PSEG 11 29.83 +.23PulteGrp 39 16.17 -.08

Q-R-S-TQualcom 18 62.13 +.51QntmDSS dd 1.40 +.06RF MicD dd 4.12RadianGrp dd 4.33 -.24RegionsFn 12 6.45 -.08RepubSvc 14 26.73 -.02RschMotn 5 8.40 -.41RiteAid dd 1.07 -.02RiverbedT 41 17.37 -.12RossStrs s 18 56.58 +1.39RymanHP 90 32.51 -.01SLM Cp 8 16.79 -.01SpdrDJIA q 127.53 -.51SpdrGold q 167.10 -.35S&P500ETF q 137.79 -.48SpdrHome q 25.30 +.01SpdrLehHY q 39.77 -.12SpdrLe1-3bll q 45.82SpdrS&P RB q 26.70 -.43SpdrRetl q 60.91 +.20SpdrOGEx q 51.41 -.01SpdrMetM q 42.65 -.84Safeway 8 16.28 -.38StJude 12 35.98 -.41Saks 24 9.92 +.04SanDisk 21 40.47 -.01SandRdge dd 5.60 +.21Schlmbrg 17 69.07 +.59Schwab 19 12.68 -.27SeadrillLtd 22 38.47 -.71SeagateT 4 27.93 -.11SealAir dd 17.20 +.43Sequenom dd 3.99 +.28SiderurNac ... 5.10 -.19SilvWhtn g 25 39.14 -.35SiriusXM 5 2.79 +.01SkywksSol 19 20.85 +.05Sonus dd 1.42 -.10SonyCp ... 10.77 +.12SouthnCo 17 42.95 +.37SwstAirl 18 9.03 -.04SwstnEngy dd 35.10 +1.14SpectraEn 16 27.21 -.02SprintNex dd 5.58 -.03SP Matls q 35.50 -.06SP HlthC q 39.22 -.15SP CnSt q 34.58 -.02SP Consum q 45.59 +.13SP Engy q 69.40 -.29SPDR Fncl q 15.42 -.11SP Inds q 36.27 -.10SP Tech q 28.06 -.14SP Util q 34.51 +.13StdPac 42 6.31 -.02Staples 9 11.25 +.16StarScient dd 2.05 +.19Starbucks 28 50.31 -.16StateStr 11 44.28 -.11StratHotels dd 6.09 +.13Stryker 14 52.68 -.37Suncor gs 9 32.48 -.89SunTrst 8 26.17 -.37SupEnrgy 9 19.06 -.49Symantec 11 17.79 -.17Synovus dd 2.23 -.03Sysco 16 29.96TD Ameritr 15 15.48 -.14TJX s 19 42.06 +1.09TaiwSemi ... 16.18 -.26TalismE g ... 11.41 +.25Target 14 62.09 +.11TenetHlt rs cc 26.14 -.43Tesoro 9 37.59 -.62TevaPhrm 11 39.48 -.72TexInst 19 29.38 -.13ThermoFis 21 61.19 +.563D Sys 61 41.68 -.493M Co 14 89.08 -.10TW Cable 16 91.13 -.41TimeWarn 16 44.61 -.04TitanMet 28 16.67 +.17TollBros 58 30.83Total SA ... 47.65 -.45TriQuint dd 4.68 +.04Tronox s ... 15.18 -3.54TwoHrbInv 9 10.42 -.43TycoIntl s ... 27.33 -.08Tyson 13 17.11 +.20

U-V-W-X-Y-ZUBS AG ... 15.14 -.15US Airwy 5 12.59 +.30UtdContl dd 20.94 -.10UPS B 18 71.86 -.44US Bancrp 11 31.71 -.35US NGs rs q 22.02 +1.01US OilFd q 31.41 -.18USSteel dd 21.31 -.22UtdTech 13 77.00 +.05UtdhlthGp 10 52.19 -.01UnumGrp 5 19.42 -.11Vale SA ... 17.70 -.28Vale SA pf ... 17.24 -.27ValeroE 8 29.22 -.24VangTotBd q 85.02 -.01VangEmg q 41.04 -.39Verisign 26 42.29 -.68VerizonCm 39 42.54 -.02ViacomB 14 48.82 -.28Visa 24 142.45 -.79Vivus dd 11.44 +.08Vodafone ... 25.69 -.70Vringo dd 3.62 -.03VulcanM dd 47.40 +.37WalMart 15 71.81 -.67Walgrn 13 32.54 -.22WalterEn 48 31.62 -1.08WarnerCh 10 11.95 +.35WsteMInc 16 31.55 -.26WeathfIntl ... 9.15 -1.73WellPoint 7 55.50 -.35WellsFargo 10 32.02 -.35Wendys Co 73 4.37 +.04WDigital 5 34.68 -.06WstnUnion 6 12.60 +.26Weyerhsr 45 26.30 -.13WmsCos 21 31.87 +.22Windstrm 36 8.23 -.21WT India q 18.03 -.10XcelEngy 14 26.25 +.14Xerox 7 6.42 +.09Xilinx 18 33.18 -.35Yahoo 5 17.85 +.34Yamana g 21 19.61 -.11YumBrnds 21 72.70 -.06ZaZaEngy dd 1.81 +.44ZionBcp 19 19.64 -.38Zynga n dd 2.11 +.01

Toda

y

Wholesale pricesEconomists expect that the producer price index rose slightly in October.

The index, due to be released by the Labor Depart-ment today, measures price changes before they reach the consumer. It’s been rising since August, when it increased 1.7 percent, the largest one-month jump in more than three years. Overall prices have been pushed higher by sharp increases in gasoline costs.

Improved earningsWall Street anticipates that PetSmart will report improved financial results for its fiscal third quarter today.

The pet products retailer has seen sales improve this year, driving its earnings 31 percent higher on an annual basis through the end of July. The company has forecast double-digit revenue growth for the year.

Positive momentumWilliams-Sonoma reached the midpoint of its fiscal year with earnings and revenue running ahead of the same time in 2011.

That gave the upscale home goods company strong momentum heading into its third quarter, prompting management to increase their full-year earnings forecast. Will Williams-Sonoma’s latest earnings, due out today, show it’s on track to deliver?

30

40

$50

3Q ’11

Operating EPS

3Q ’12

est.$0.41 $0.45

WSM $46.05

$38.11

’12

Price-earnings ratio: 20based on past 12 months’ results

Dividend: $0.88 Div. Yield: 1.9%Source: FactSet Source: FactSet

Producer price indexSeasonally adjusted month-to-month percent change

M J J A S O

est.0.20.2

-1.0%0.3

1.7

1.1

Apple stock has taken a beating since the launch of the iPhone 5. It has fallen 23 percent to $542.90, from an all-time closing high of $702.10 on Sept. 19, two days before the phone went on sale. This is happening even as Apple is shipping more new products than ever. In part, the price decline stems from the company’s warning that those new products, like the iPad Mini, provide lower profit margins because they’re expensive to produce. But that’s a short-term effect: once the production lines have warmed up, the costs will come down. There are other concerns, but Wall Street analysts haven’t been encouraging the sell-off. On the

contrary, many have raised their price targets since the stock peaked, and the average price target is $774.

In the bargain bin

Peter Svensson, Jenni Sohn • APSOURCE: FactSet

500

550

600

650

700

$750

May 1$582.13

Sept. 19$702.10

Nov. 13$542.90

Bear-market territory: Apple stock is down 23 percent from its most recent high on Sept. 19.

2012

cos

Apple (AAPL)Tuesday’s close: $542.90

52-WEEK RANGE$363 705

P/E ratio, last 12 mos.: 12P/E ratio, next 12 mos.: 11Market value: $511 billionQuarterly dividend: $2.65Dividend yield: 2.0%Avg. target price: $774

Avg. broker ratingSELL BUYHOLD

Bad Apple? Key concerns that are causing some Apple investors to sell:

Lower margins on new productsTax hike: some investors are selling because they have

big gains and want to avoid higher taxes next yearProducts after the iPad: uncertainty about what the

next buzzworthy product will be; fears that Apple has lost its edge

Increased competiton: key rival Samsung is gaining market share faster than Apple

M J J A S O N

Wheat CBOT5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushelDec 12 857.00 864.00 843.00 851.00 -6.00Mar 13 872.00 879.00 858.00 865.00 -6.00May 13 879.00 886.00 865.00 872.00 -6.00Jul 13 858.00 865.00 847.00 856.00 -4.00Est. Sales 307,166 Mon’s sales 186,268Mon’s open int.492,843 Chg. -10187.00Corn CBOT5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushelDec 12 717.00 725.00 710.00 723.00 +5.00Mar 13 721.00 730.00 714.00 726.00 +4.00May 13 718.00 727.00 711.00 722.00 +3.00Jul 13 709.00 716.00 701.00 711.00 +1.00Est. Sales 852,772 Mon’s sales 462,640Mon’s open int.1,303,510 Chg. +8053.00Oats CBOT5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushelDec 12 359.00 365.00 357.00 363.00 +4.00Mar 13 370.00 373.00 366.00 372.00 +4.00May 13 369.00 374.00 369.00 374.00 +7.00Jul 13 364.00 371.00 364.00 371.00 +7.00Est. Sales 1,992 Mon’s sales 982Mon’s open int.12,037 Chg. +2.00Soybean CBOT5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushelNov 12 1422.00 1427.00 1400.00 1427.00 +16.00Jan 13 1408.00 1417.00 1391.00 1408.00 +3.00Mar 13 1391.00 1403.00 1369.00 1385.00 -2.00May 13 1377.00 1390.00 1356.00 1372.00 -3.00Est. Sales 359,205 Mon’s sales 214,856Mon’s open int.605,171 Chg. +2019.00

COMMODITIESOpen High Low Settle Chg

CSI .50 18 31.50 +.50 +10.5

www.fourriversbusiness.com

Your.Regional.Business.Connection.

December IssuePublishes November 22nd

NOVEMBER 2012 www.fourriversbusiness.com

INSIDE• Purchase order fine

print could save you money on damages.

• Hope and Change: On political and business branding

• Challenger Learning Center celebrates 10 years of success

Woman of Achievement

Tammi Halvorson juggles business, teaching and training

Page 5: WOMEN’S BASKETBALL: No. 1 Baylor runs away from Kentucky ...matchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/1140/assets/GJDV… · Tuesday’s scores Charlotte 92, Washington 76 Toronto

paducahsun.com Business The Paducah Sun • Wednesday, November 14, 2012 • 5B

SAN FRANCISCO — Mi-crosoft CEO Steve Ballmer isn’t going to let anyone get in his way.

Not even his presumed heir apparent, who runs the software maker’s Win-dows empire, can stop Ballmer as he pushes the company in a new direc-tion.

That was the underlying message of a power strug-gle that led to the abrupt departure of Steven Sinof-sky, who oversaw the Win-dows operating system that has been the founda-tion of Microsoft’s success.

The fi ssure announced late Monday came less than three weeks after Sinofsky and Ballmer appeared on a stage in New York to hail the long-awaited release of Windows 8, a radical overhaul of the operating system. The Redmond, Wash.-based company de-signed it to make its prod-ucts more relevant in an age when more daily com-puting tasks are shifting from desktop and laptop machines to smartphones and tablet computers.

Microsoft Corp. didn’t elaborate on the reasons

behind the end of Sinof-sky’s 23-year career at the company. But all signs point to tensions boiling over as Ballmer tries to weave Microsoft’s prod-ucts more closely together so the technology is easily accessible whenever and wherever people want to work, play and communi-cate.

That’s a goal Micro-soft rivals Apple Inc. and

Google Inc. have been pursuing for the past few years, giving them a head start in a battle that’s im-mersing technology even deeper into people’s lives.

To achieve his objec-tives, Ballmer is trying to dismantle fi efdoms within Microsoft that date back to the 1990s when co-found-er Bill Gates ran the com-pany. According to indus-try analysts, Gates divided

the company into different engineering silos devoted to each of Microsoft’s key franchises — Windows, the Offi ce suite of software, on-line services and corporate servers. When Ballmer be-came CEO nearly 13 years ago, he inherited the struc-ture and even expanded it to include new divisions to house new products such as the Xbox 360 gaming console.

Windows chief leaves in struggleBY MICHAEL LIEDTKE

Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The federal government started the 2013 budget year with a $120 billion defi cit in Oc-tober, an indication that the nation is on a path to its fi fth straight $1 trillion-plus an-nual defi cit.

A soaring defi cit puts add-ed pressure on President Barack Obama and Con-gress to seek a budget deal in the coming weeks.

The Treasury Department said Tuesday that the Octo-ber defi cit — the gap be-tween the government’s tax revenue and its spending — was 22 percent higher than the same month last year.

Tax revenue increased 13 percent from the same month last year to $184.3 billion. But spending rose 16.4 percent to $304.3 bil-lion. Spending was held down last October by a quirk in the calendar: the fi rst day of the month fell on a Satur-day, so some benefi ts were paid in September 2011.

The defi cit, in simplest terms, is the amount of

money the government has to borrow when revenues fall short of expenses. The government ran a $1.1 tril-lion annual budget defi cit in the fi scal year that ended in September. That was lower than the previous year but still painfully high by his-torical standards.

Obama’s presidency has coincided with four straight $1 trillion-plus defi cits — the fi rst in history and a record he had to vigorously defend during his re-elec-tion campaign.

The size and scope of this year’s defi cit will largely de-pend on what happens with a package of tax increases and spending cuts set to take effect in January unless the White House and Con-gress reach a budget deal by then.

If the economy goes over the fi scal cliff, this year’s defi cit would shrink to $641 billion, according to the Congressional Budget Of-fi ce. But the CBO also warns that the economy would sink into recession in the fi rst half of 2013.

US government runs $120 billion deficitBY MARTIN CRUTSINGER

Associated Press

Associated Press

The Capitol’s lights glow Tuesday in Washington. The federal government started the 2013 budget year with a $120 billion deficit, an indication that the U.S. is on a path to its fifth straight $1 trillion-plus deficit.

Associated Press

Steven Sinofsky, then-president of the Microsoft Windows group, delivers his pre-sentation at the launch of Microsoft Windows 8 on Oct. 25 in New York. Microsoft shares slid more than 4 percent before the opening bell Tuesday after the software company revealed that Sinofsky was leaving.

The fate of a tax cred-it that advocates say is needed to maintain tens of thousands of wind energy jobs will be decided during high-stakes, last-minute negotiations between Pres-ident Obama and House Republicans over fi scal is-sues, offi cials said Tuesday.

The wind energy pro-duction tax credit is due to expire at the end of the year. Its extension stalled in Congress this summer amid fi erce opposition from some conservative House Republicans. The last chance to extend the measure is in the budget deal that will be cut be-tween Obama and Republi-cans in the lame duck ses-

sion of Congress.Backers of the credit

tried to ramp up pressure to extend the $12 billion break Tuesday with a tele-conference featuring sev-eral governors, who noted that uncertainty over its fate has led to thousands of job losses across the country. A study by a wind energy group found that 37,000 jobs would be lost if

the credit expires.The credit’s supporters

say the government has subsidized fossil fuels like oil for more than a century. Opponents argue it distorts the energy marketplace and leads to higher prices. The credit was fi rst signed by President George H.W. Bush and backed by a num-ber of prominent Republi-cans.

Governors call for renewing wind energy tax creditBY JEFF BARNARD AND

NICHOLAS RICCARDIAssociated Press

www.kubota.com©Kubota Tractor Corporation, 2012

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270-856-4355(Formerly Sanders Kubota)Jennifer and Linn

Harper, owners HWY 45 North • Mayfi eld, KY • 270-856-4355

See us today for expert service and tires backed by the Michelin Promise Plan™.

1 See MichelinMan.com for more details on the stop shorter benefits of specific MICHELIN® brand passenger and light truck tires.2 See redemption form at participating dealers for complete offer details. Offer expires 11/24/12. Void where prohibited. The MasterCard Reward Card cannot be reloaded with

additional funds, nor can it be used at an ATM (Automated Teller Machine). Terms and conditions apply and other fees may apply to Reward Cards. For complete terms and conditions see “The MasterCard Reward Card Cardholder Agreement” and fee schedule included in the card package. MasterCard Reward Cards are issued by U.S. Bank National Association, pursuant to a license from MasterCard International Incorporated. MasterCard is a registered trademark of MasterCard International Incorporated.

Copyright © 2012 Michelin North America, Inc. All rights reserved. The Michelin Man is a registered trademark owned by Michelin North America, Inc.

Buy any set of four new MICHELIN® brand passenger or light truck tires, and get a $70 MasterCard® Reward Card after rebate.2

NOVEMBER 1 – 24, 2012

Get a MICHELIN® tire that stops shorter1 and get a

MasterCard® Reward Card after rebate.2

MaMa tsterCard® RRewewararddd

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61

30

-40

46

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Shelby's Wheel & Tire Of Paducah929 Kentucky Ave (270) 443-9316

www.shelbyspaducah.comHours M-F 7:45am -5:00pm Sat 7:45- Noon "Ride with Confidence"929 KY Ave., Downtown Paducah443-9316

“RIDE with Confi dence”

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6B • Wednesday, November 14, 2012 • The Paducah Sun paducahsun.com

Barney’s Market

20 TH ANNIVERSARY