Hastings Tribune Archive Page
Transcription
Hastings Tribune Archive Page
Husker hoops: NU men lose at Purdue. — Page B1 Moving on Bronco women knock off Briar Cliff to advance at GPAC tourney. Page B1 SERVING THE COMMUNITY FOR MORE THAN 100 YEARS 16 pages Thursday, Feb. 23, 2012 http://www.hastingstribune.com Home delivered 29 cents Newsstands 50 cents Tornado season arrives early SETH BORENSTEIN The Associated Press LAURA BEAHM/Tribune Second-graders Parker Spitz (left), Hayden Shuck and Lydia Fitzke take their turn meeting a lamb during a petting zoo that was part of National FFA Week Wednesday at Sandy Creek School. Making ag literacy elementary SANDY CREEK FFA Johanns, Smith say corporate tax cuts a start MEMBERS HOLD PETTING ZONE FOR ELEMENTARY STUDENTS TONY HERRMAN therrman@hastingstribune.com F AIRFIELD — Dozens of elementary students saw firsthand Wednesday afternoon where wool comes from, and that source greeted some of the children with a tongue. “Your blanket doesn’t lick you back, does it?” Sandy Creek senior Brett Peshek asked a group of giggling children petting one of the lambs he had at the school. Peshek, president of the Sandy Creek FFA club, was one of 14 chapter members helping with activities Wednesday organized as part of National FFA Week. Peshek stood in a pen with his pair of lambs inside of a Morton building behind the school. Please see AG/page A3 WASHINGTON — With the month of March looming, tornado chasers are already watching the Southeast as a nasty storm brews with the potential to spin off a batch of tornadoes. But if funnel clouds develop Thursday or Friday as some forecasters believe, they won’t be the first. This tornado season got an early and deadly start in late January when two people were killed by separate twisters in Alabama. Preliminary reports showed 95 tornadoes struck last month, compared with 16 in January during a particularly stormy 2011. The season usually starts in March and then ramps up for the next couple of months, but forecasting these storm seasons is even more imprecise than predicting hurricane seasons. Tornadoes are too small and too short-lived for scientists to make seasonal predictions. They don’t develop like blizzards and hurricanes, which are easier to project. Please see TORNADO/page A3 Staff and wire LAURA BEAHM/Tribune FFA member Caleb Schlick sits with Shetland ponies Princess and Riddick while Jacob Faapito (center) and Brandon Knight greet the ponies Wednesday afternoon at Sandy Creek School. Sen. Mike Johanns, R-Neb., and Third District Rep. Adrian Smith, R-Neb., both praised President Barack Obama’s corporate tax plan but questioned some of the details. The plan outlined Wednesday slashes the top corporate tax rate and ends breaks that let some companies pay little or nothing in taxes. In a news release Wednesday, Johanns said he’s glad to hear the Obama administration discuss lowering tax rates, but it shouldn’t be about Washington picking winners and losers based on political ideology. “We need to stop nipping at the edges of our nation’s tax code and start working on sensible, systemwide tax reform that helps get our economy firing on all cylinders again,” Johanns said. “Unfortunately, the president’s plan is long on Please see CORPORATE/page A3 Hastings woman suffering from lung cancer counts her blessings SHAY BURK sburk@hastingstribune.com Tribune archives In this July 28, 2011, file photo, Teri Hermann (center) is surrounded by her husband and four of their six children (clockwise from left) Steven, Anne, Russ, Pat and Matt at Adams County FairFest. There will be a benefit Sunday for Teri, who suffers from lung cancer. Most families wouldn’t come out with smiles on their faces after suffering the trials that Russ and Teri Hermann of rural Hastings and their six children have endured in the last year. In March 2011, Teri was diagnosed with Stage 3 lung cancer. Doctors upgraded her status to Stage 4 after the cancer also was found in her liver, diaphragm and lymph nodes. After a major surgery and months of treatment, most of the cancer was gone. But in September, a new lump was found on her liver, and Teri resumed her chemotherapy treatments. Lo: 25 Hi: 42 MINE EXPLOSION Art by Alex Cenerrero, 10, Alcott Elementary A benefit for Teri Hermann will be 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday at the Adams County Fairgrounds. Event will include free-will donation meal, silent auction, bake sale and entertainment provided by the Adams Central band and choir. Donations also can be made to “Teri Hermann Benefit” at any Five Points Bank in Hastings. A few weeks later, 10-year-old son Steven was injured in an ATV and car accident. Fifteen-year-old son Pat suffered tem- Please see HERMANN/page A3 Nation Weather Slight chance of flurries this evening and Friday. Teri Hermann benefit porary paralysis a few days later after dealing with the family tragedies. It took a few months of physical therapy and counseling, but Pat was walking again. He even made the varsity wrestling team at Adams Central before a shoulder injury took him out again. Now the family is waiting for a surgery that will come in the next few weeks for patriarch Russ, who needs a valve replacement in his heart. Through all of this, Teri still has a smile on her face. “You can look at both sides of it and on one side say, ‘Whoa, that’s a lot for one family to deal with,’ or you BECKLEY, W.Va. — West Virginia mine safety officials issued 253 violations in their investigation of the Upper Big Branch disaster and targeted two foremen, saying their failures may have exacerbated the explosion that killed 29 men. The violations are included in a report released Thursday by the state Office of Miners’ Health, Safety and Training. Officials planned an afternoon news conference to discuss the fourth and final report on the nation’s worst coal mining dis- Inside aster in four decades at Massey Energy’s mine near Montcoal. The report comes the day after federal prosecutors charged the mine’s former superintendent with fraud and signaled they are going after other Massey employees. The Associated Press Agri/Business Classified Comics Entertainment A7 B6 B4 B5 NASCAR Obituaries Opinion Public Notices B8 A2 A4 B3 VOL. 107, NO. 124 ©2012, THE SEATON PUBLISHING CO., INC. HASTINGS, NEBRASKA Page Two A2 Yesterday and Today Obituaries ISADORE ‘PETE’ H. STOETZEL Hastings resident Isadore "Pete" Henry Stoetzel, 85, died Tuesday, Feb. 21, 2012, in Lincoln. Services are 10:30 a.m. Saturday at Brand-Wilson Funeral Home chapel in Hastings. Burial will be at Steotzel Parkview Cemetery in Hastings, with military rites by the Hastings Military Group. Visitation is 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Friday with the family present from 6-8 p.m. at the funeral home. Memorials may be given to the family. Condolences may be sent to www.brandwilson.com *** Isadore "Pete" Henry Stoetzel was born Feb. 17 1927, to Henry J. and Anna Belle (Favinger) Stoetzel in Hays County, Neb. Pete started sports at a very young age, playing lots of softball in grade school. In 1942, Pete's family moved to Hastings, Neb., and Pete started school at Hastings Senior High School as a junior. He made the reserve or junior varsity teams in football and basketball, along with the American Legion baseball team. Pete played short stop, but later changed to third baseman. He graduated from Hastings High in 1943. Pete continued to play baseball for almost 30 years, either as a third baseman or in left field. A memorable experience was his chance to try out for the St. Louis Browns and the Phillies. He was assigned to play for the Yankees on their farm team in Nebraska. Pete played a lot of semi-pro baseball and led the National Independent League in batting average with a 384. He also had the most triples (six) and hit a home run 377 feet over the wall on Hastings Duncan Field. Pete served in the United States Army during World War II. He was stationed in Oakwood, Tenn., where he guarded the atomic bomb as a military policeman. In 1946, he was out of the Army and played ball for the NIL. Pete also went to Hastings College under the GI bill. Pete met Betty Svendgard on a blind date while he was in school and she was in nurse’s training. On their first date, they went to a softball game. However, as soon as Betty finished her nurse’s training in September 1948, they became serious and were married Nov. 26, 1948, in Blair, Neb., at the Danish Lutheran Church. Pete continued to play baseball until 1953, when he became a math teacher and moved to Duncan, Neb. The following year he started coaching and coached for 13 years. He taught school and coached in Benedict, Henderson and Callaway, Neb. Pete owned Stoetzel Sales and Construction for many years after retiring. Pete and Betty moved to Fort Collins, Colo.; moving back to Hastings, Neb., in February 2009, when Pete's failing health hospitalized him until he passed away in 2012. Pete enjoyed watching his children and grandchildren play sports. He was a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in Hastings, Neb. He is survived by his wife, Betty of Hastings, Neb.; six daughters, Susan Bartels of Alliance, Neb., Sherry Detamore of Giltner, Neb., Sheila Damon of Madison, Ala., Stephanie Hahn of Ft. Collins, Colo., Sandra Neimeyer of Florida, and Sharlene Stoetzel of Lincoln, Neb.; one son, Scott Stoetzel of Hastings, Neb.; 19 grandchildren; 24 great-grandchildren; and one son-in-law, Mark Myers of Hastings, Neb. He was preceded in death by his parents; a daughter, Sallie Myers; one grandson; and one brother. BETTY J. YEAGLEY Hastings resident Betty Jane (Stark) Yeagley, 89, died Monday, Feb. 20, 2012, at Good Samaritan SocietyHastings Village (Perkins Pavilion). Services are 3 p.m. Saturday at Saint Mark’s Episcopal Pro- Yeagley Cathedral Church in Hastings with the Rev. Catherine Scott officiating. Burial is at St. Mark’s columbarium. Book signing will be 12-9 p.m. with family present 6-8 p.m. Friday at Brand-Wilson Funeral Home in Hastings. In lieu of flowers, memorials may be given to Saint Mark’s Episcopal Pro-Cathedral Church, Mary Lanning Memorial HealthCare, Mary Lanning Memorial HealthCare Hospice, or Start Over Rover, all in Hastings. Condolences may be sent to www.brandwilson.com *** Betty was born May 14, 1922, to John and Verna (Anderson) Stark in Hastings, Neb. She attended public schools in Hastings, Neb. She married Marmion F. Yeagley on April 8, 1939, in Smith Center, Kan. She was a clerk at BrachThompson, and a cashier for the Hastings Public Schools lunch program at Hastings Junior High. She also had been a cook at Hastings College, and had worked at Acme Printing in Hastings, Neb. She was a wonderful wife, mother, grandmother, and homemaker. She was a member of the Saint Mark’s Episcopal ProCathedral Church in Hastings. She is survived by her husband, Marmion F. Sr. of Hastings, Neb.; one son, Marmion F. Jr. and wife Marsha of Kearney, Neb.; one daughter, Marmette Hegwood and husband John of Hastings, Neb.; seven grandchildren, Mike Hickman and wife Cindy of La Jolla, Calif., Alexandra Yeagley of Avon, Colo., Spencer Yeagley of New York, N.Y., Jacob Yeagley of San Francisco, Calif., Thad Hegwood and wife Rachel of Omaha, Neb., Karry Whitten and husband Gordon of Omaha, Neb., and Trista Frederick and husband Kai of Kansas City, Mo.; eight greatgrandchildren, Cameron and Carson Hickman of La Jolla, Calif., Lexi, Gabe and Gavin Whitten, and Ethan, Emerick and Eshton Hegwood, all of Omaha, Neb.; one niece, Barb Creasey and husband Don of Monroe, Wash.; and one nephew, John "Butch" Post and wife Elizabeth of Duvall, Wash.; and a very close circle of friends, the "Divine Nine"; and many dear cousins and other friends. She was preceded in death by her parents; infant brother, Wesley; her sister, Pearl Post and husband George; her nephew, George "Bud" Post and wife Wilma, all of of Seattle, Wash. WILLARD L. HINDS Davenport resident Willard L. Hinds, 83, died Tuesday, Feb. 21, 2012, at Lincoln. Services are 10:30 a.m. Saturday at the Church of Christ in Davenport with James Hinkle and Ron Shields officiating. Burial will be at Davenport City Cemetery. Visitation is 1-8 p.m. Friday at Urbauer-Price Funeral Home in Davenport. Memorials may be given to the Willard Hinds Memorial. Calendar HASTINGS u Nebraska Photography Symposium through Feb. 25 at the Hastings Museum, 1330 N. Burlington Ave. For more information, call 800-5084629. u Pitch, 1:30 p.m. at YWCA of Adams County, 604 N. St. Joseph Ave. For more information, call 402- 462-8821. u Bingo, 7 p.m. Friday at the VFW, 1053 S. Wabash Ave. u Alcoholics Anonymous, noon, 5:15, 7 (Hispanic group). u Crystal Meth Anonymous, 7:45-9 p.m. Friday, 521 S. St. Joseph Ave. u Narcotics Anonymous, 8 p.m. Friday, 401 N. Lincoln Ave. HASTINGS TRIBUNE Thursday, Feb. 23, 2012 Today is Thursday, Feb. 23, the 54th day of 2012. There are 312 days left in the year. School shooting MEMORY LANE TRIBLAND Sixty years ago: Hastings telephone operators began dialing long distance calls direct without assistance from intermediate operators. Fifty years ago: Joe DeMuth of Ayr, chairman of the Adams County Noxious Weed District, was re-elected to the board at the district’s annual meeting. Forty years ago: Harold Shiffler presented the Lord Mayor of Hastings, England, with an Adams County-Hastings silver centennial medallion during a reception for the Hastings College fine arts group that was visiting England. Thirty years ago: Mayor Bill Welton drafted a letter to Safeway Stores, asking the company to reconsider its decision to close the store in Hastings. Twenty years ago: In approving specifications for keno lottery in Hastings, the City Council opted for drop-ball machines in which numbered ping-pong balls float in the air rather than a computer-generated system. Ten years ago: Superintendent John Hakonson and Principal James Duval both announced their resignations from Blue Hill after accepting school administrative positions at other schools. One year ago: Von Wehrman, Nuckolls County emergency manager and weed superintendent, resigned during the Nuckolls County Board of Commissioners meeting. HIGHLIGHT IN HISTORY On Feb. 23, 1942, the first shelling of the U.S. mainland during World War II occurred as a Japanese submarine fired on an oil refinery near Santa Barbara, Calif., causing little damage. TODAY IN NEBRASKA In 1963, Ford Foundation announced a grant to University of Nebraska in amount of $297,500. In 1988, Supreme Court ruled, 8-0, the interior secretary had exceeded his authority in 1982 by consigning water from Oahe Reservoir in South Dakota to a proposed coal slurry pipeline from Wyoming to Gulf coast. ON THIS DATE In 1685, composer George Frideric Handel was born in Germany. In 1836, the siege of the Alamo began in San Antonio, Texas. In 1848, the sixth president of the United States, John Quincy Adams, died in Washington, D.C., at age 80. In 1861, President-elect Abraham Lincoln arrived secretly in Washington to take office, following word of a possible assassination plot in Baltimore. In 1870, Mississippi was readmitted to the Union. In 1927, President Calvin Coolidge signed a bill creating the Federal Radio Commission, forerunner of the Federal Communications Commission. In 1945, during World War II, U.S. Marines on Iwo Jima captured Mount Suribachi. In 1954, the first mass inoculation of children against polio with the Salk vaccine began in Pittsburgh. In 1965, film comedian Stan Laurel, 74, died in Santa Monica, Calif. In 1970, Guyana became a republic within the Commonwealth of Nations. In 1981, an attempted coup began in Spain as 200 members of the Civil Guard invaded Parliament, taking lawmakers LARRY STEAGALL, Kitsap Sun/AP An Armin Jahr Elementary School student talks with a police officer in front of the school Wednesday in Bremerton, Wash. Police say a gun brought to the school in a third-grader’s backpack discharged, apparently by accident, critically wounding an 8-year-old classmate. Investigators were trying to determine how the 9-year-old boy got the gun and why he brought it to school, a police spokesman said. At the end of Wednesday’s school day, a bullet went through the backpack and hit the little girl. Amina KocerBowman was in critical condition Wednesday night after surgery at Harborview Medical Center in Seattle, hospital spokeswoman Leila Gray said. hostage. (However, the attempt collapsed 18 hours later.) In 1992, the XVI Winter Olympic Games ended in Albertville, France. Ten years ago: Colombian presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt was kidnapped by a rebel group, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia. (She was rescued along with 14 other hostages in July 2008.) Penn State pole vaulter Kevin Dare, 19, died after landing on his head during the Big Ten indoor championships in Minneapolis. Five years ago: A Mississippi grand jury refused to bring any new charges in the 1955 slaying of Emmett Till, a black teenager who was beaten and shot after whistling at a white woman, declining to indict the woman, Carolyn Bryant Donham, for manslaughter. Democrat Tom Vilsack abandoned his bid for the presidency. Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport became the first in the United States to begin testing new Xray screening technology that could see through people’s clothes. Forty-six countries attending a conference in Oslo, Norway, agreed to push for a global treaty banning cluster bombs. One year ago: In a major policy reversal, the Obama administration said it would no longer defend the constitutionality of the Defense of Marriage Act, a federal law banning recognition of samesex marriage. TODAY IN SPORTS In 1988, the city of Chicago gave the Cubs baseball team permission to install lights at Wrigley Field and begin hosting night games. TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS Actor Peter Fonda is 72. Pro and College Football Hall of Famer Fred Biletnikoff is 69. Author John Sandford is 68. Singermusician Johnny Winter is 68. Countryrock musician Rusty Young is 66. Actress Patricia Richardson is 61. Rock musician Brad Whitford (Aerosmith) is 60. Singer Howard Jones is 57. Rock musician Michael Wilton (Queensryche) is 50. Country singer Dusty Drake is 48. Actress Kristin Davis is 47. Tennis player Helena Sukova is 47. Actor Marc Price is 44. Actress Niecy Nash is 42. Rock musician Jeff Beres (Sister Hazel) is 41. Country singer Steve Holy is 40. Rock musician Lasse Johansson (The Cardigans) is 39. Actress Kelly Macdonald is 36. Actress Emily Blunt is 29. Actor Aziz Ansari is 29. Actress Dakota Fanning is 18. QUOTE OF THE DAY “Men are more often bribed by their loyalties and ambitions than by money.” — Robert H. Jackson, U.S. Supreme Court Justice (1892-1954) FACT OF THE DAY A group of buzzards is called a “wake.” A group of finches is called a “charm.” NUMBER OF THE DAY 6,825 — American soldiers who died taking Iwo Jima in 1945. LUNAR LANDING Between new moon (Feb. 21) and first quarter (Feb. 29). Sources: The Associated Press, Newspaper Enterprise Assn. and World Almanac Education Group Tribland Adams County Judge Michael Offner Wednesday sentenced Haley L. Usrey, 25, of 4580 N. Pawnee Ave. to 179 days of probation, a $400 fine, a 60-day driver’s license revocation, alcohol education class, defensive driving class and victim impact panel for driving under the influence of alcohol on July 21, 2011. Usrey pleaded guilty Nov. 18, 2011, and prosecutors reduced the blood alcohol content on the charge and dropped charges of refusing a breath test and driving the wrong way on a one-way street. DUI is a Class W misdemeanor punishable by up to 60 days in jail and a $500 fine. Start Over Rover pet adoptions at Orscheln Farm & Home Saturday, February 25, 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. -Adv. Christopher E. Cherry of 600 N. Hastings Ave. No. 1 reported Tuesday that his gaming console and controller were taken at his residence. Garage sale Saturday; see Classifieds. -Adv. Eagles, Saturday, Bob Songster benefit and first annual chili cook-off to raise money for his medical expenses. -Adv. Adams County Judge Michael Offner Wednesday sentenced Jared R. Bunting, 33, of 902 E. Second St. No. 1 to one year of probation, a $400 fine, 60-day driver’s license revocation and a defensive driving class for driving under the influence of alcohol on May 14, 2011. Bunting pleaded no contest Dec. 1, 2011, and prosecutors reduced the charge from a second offense. DUI is a Class W misdemeanor punishable by up to 60 days in jail and a $500 fine. Concealed carry class Sunday, March 25. 402-984-5305. Adv. VFW bingo Friday, 7:00; $300 pig, 50 number bonanza. Meatloaf dinner. All welcome. -Adv. It was reported Tuesday that a gift card owned by Walmart, 3803 Osborne Drive West, was taken at the business. It was reported Monday that a vehicle mirror owned by Charles Brader of Glenvil was damaged at the 1900 block of West Home Street. Go Green and Recycle! Call for your Free 96-gallon cart, Woodward’s, 402-462-9252. Adv. Vehicles reportedly driven by Andy R. Quig of 2405 W. Sixth St. and Jebodiah E. Brant of 725 W. Second St. No. 200 collided Tuesday at First Street near Hastings Avenue. 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. It was reported Tuesday that a media player owned by Cameron C. W. Wilson of 821 S. Kansas Ave. was taken at 119 E. Paul St. Eagles, Friday, fish fry and dance to Swingin’ Country. Adv. Lotteries WINNING NUMBERS Wednesday Powerball . . . . .7-16-17-39-51-PB32 (Jackpot: $60 million) Kansas Pick 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . .6-0-6 Nebraska Pick 3 . . . . . . . . . . .2-4-2 MyDaY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4-29-87 Super Kansas Cash .3-15-19-27-29 (Super Cashball: 23) Nebraska Pick 5 . . . . . .3-6-8-15-25 Jackpot: $102,000 2by2 . . . . . . . . .Red 3-6, White 4-11 Hot Lotto . . . . . . . . . . .3-5-32-35-37 Hot Ball 14 Amanda L. Hinrichs of 119 E. Paul St. reported Tuesday that a gaming console and game were taken at her residence. DAV, Friday, all-you-can-eat fish fry; full menu. -Adv. Area funerals Friday uGeorge Crabtree, 87, of Geneva, 11 a.m. at Farmer & Son Funeral Home in Geneva. uMatt Johnson, 42, of Edgar, 2 p.m. at Williams Funeral Home in Edgar. Saturday uPenny Catlett, 61, of Hastings, 10 a.m. at First United Methodist Church in Hastings. uKeith Fricker, 96, of Smith Center, Kan., 3 p.m. at SimmonsRentschler Mortuary in Smith Center, Kan. uWillard Hinds, 83, of Davenport, 10:30 a.m. at the Church of Christ in Davenport. uSelma Portenier, 96, of Franklin, 10:30 a.m. at United Methodist Church in Franklin. uIsadore “Pete” Stoetzel, 85, of Hastings, 10:30 a.m. at BrandWilson Funeral Home chapel in Hastings. uEvelyn Wiedel, 86, of Hebron, 2 p.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Hebron. uBetty Yeagley, 89, of Hastings, 3 p.m. at St. Mark’s Episcopal Pro Cathedral Church in Hastings. HASTINGS TRIBUNE Thursday, Feb. 23, 2012 A3 Corporate: Johanns, Smith await details on Obama’s tax cuts Continued from page A1 campaign promises, scarce on key details and short on the presidential leadership we need to tackle the country’s most difficult problems.” Smith said he’s encouraged the president’s plan includes many of the same reform principles worked on by the House Ways and Means Committee, of which Smith is a member. “As with any proposal, the devil is in the details,” Smith said in a news release. “Notably, the president’s proposal does not focus on the need for fundamental reform of our tax code. A comprehensive approach is recognized by both parties as essential for future prosperity and remains an achievable goal. I look forward to reviewing the president’s plan in more detail and hope we can find common ground to move forward on both corporate and individual tax reform.” Cutting corporate tax rates and deleting loopholes is just what most economists prescribe for the tangled U.S. tax code. So why isn’t everyone cheering the plan Obama’s plan? Economists note the plan would upturn the playing field the administration says it wants to level. It would give manufacturers preferential treatment: Tax breaks would effectively cap their rate at 25 percent. Other companies would pay up to 28 percent. The current top corporate tax rate is 35 percent. Some say such varying rates can distort the economy by diverting investment into some industries and away from others that might pack a bigger economic punch. “The administration is not making sense,” says Martin Sullivan, contributing editor at publisher Tax Analysts. “The whole idea of corporate tax reform is to get rid of loopholes, and this plan is adding loopholes back in.” Other economists oppose a separate plank of the Obama plan: a minimum tax on for- eign earnings of U.S. multinational companies. No other country imposes such a tax on its companies, they note. U.S. businesses would face a competitive disadvantage. Facing resistance from Republicans and many businesses, Obama’s plan is in any case a longshot proposal so close to Election Day. “For anything that Obama recommends during an election year and with a divided Congress, the best one can say is, ‘Good luck,’” says Henry Aaron, senior fellow in economic studies at the Brookings Institution. “Those who stand to lose are really upset and will work hard to defeat it.” Just about everybody agrees something has to change. When Japan enacts a corporate tax cut in April, the United States will be left with the highest tax rate in the developed world. That puts the U.S. companies that actually pay the official corporate tax rate at a disadvantage against their foreign competitors. (Many U.S. companies effectively pay lower rates because of tax breaks.) The loophole-riddled U.S. tax code now benefits numerous industries over others. One tax break, for example, lets oil companies write off drilling costs immediately instead of over time, as most businesses must. In the end, different industries can pay far different effective rates. The Treasury Department says U.S. utility companies pay an average effective tax rate of 14 percent. By contrast, retailers pay an average 31 percent. The administration says the point of its tax plan is to make the system fairer and more efficient — not to squeeze more overall tax revenue from corporations. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner calls the current tax code “fundamentally unfair.” But the administration also needs to end some loopholes to help pay for a lower corporate tax rate. Ag: Sandy Creek observes FFA Week Continued from page A1 The petting zoo included Peshek’s lambs, a pair of rabbits, cattle, a horse, Shetland ponies and a dog. Other elementary activities included hearing stories from ag-oriented books, coloring pictures of livestock and planting tomato seeds. The elementary activities were meant to encourage ag literacy among the young students. Sandy Creek FFA sponsor Amy Tomlinson said a lot of children don’t understand the source of their food and natural materials. “You ask a young child where wool comes from, they’re going to tell you cotton,” she said. “Having our kids play an active role in ag literacy is important.” Other National FFA Week activities at the school included a presentation at the Sandy Creek Board of Education meeting Monday, teacher appreciation day Tuesday, Blue and Gold Pride Day today and Ag Olympics at the high school Friday. Vivian Cook brought a group of second-grade students from the Sandy Creek Elementary at Clay Center. The petting zoo was particularly good for her students. “Out of this group of seven kids, none of them live on a farm, so they never get close to farm animals,” she said. “It’s neat for them to have that experience, hands-on.” Later in the year she will obtain eggs from Peshek’s family farm to give her students another agricultural lesson. “We’re going to hatch the eggs, (the chicks are) going to stay with us for about four days and then they’ll go back to the farm,” she said. The second-graders will learn about the development hap- pening inside the eggs, and also after hatching. “So they see it doesn’t just happen in a day,” Cook said. Sandy Creek sophomore Jared Brockman shared the Morton building with Peshek. Brockman let students pet his rabbits: a mini rex named Buster and a lionhead named Brendan with a mane of puffy black fur. “It gets them to know animals better,” he said of the students. “Maybe they’ll have their parents get them an animal.” FFA chapter members stood with the other petting zoo animals outside, behind the school. Junior Caleb Schlick borrowed from a neighbor Princess and Riddick — a mother-andson pair of Shetland ponies that barely came up to Schlick’s knees. He guided the elementary students as they petted Princess and Riddick. “It’s kind of different to see because I’ve been around animals my whole life,” Schlick said. “It’s different to see they like animals. It’s just normal to me to be around animals.” BUTCH DILL/AP In this Jan. 23 file photo, residents walk around through the debris of their neighborhood after a tornado ripped through the Trussville, Ala., area. Tornado: High season ahead Continued from page A1 They pop in and pop out. The storms that give them birth may last only a few hours. Hurricanes and blizzards are lumbering beasts that spend days moving across the satellite maps. When a hurricane approaches, coastlines get days warning to evacuate. With a tornado, if the weather service can let people know 20 minutes in advance, it’s considered a victory. “The Joplin (Mo.) tornado (that killed 158 people last May) wasn’t violent until just about the time it got to the hospital,” said Harold Brooks, a research scientist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s National Severe Storms Laboratory, in Norman, Okla. “Even when you’re in the field, there are still times when you’re surprised by the intensity of the event and how quickly it started.” If a forecast for a hurricane or blizzard is off by a mile, it’s still bad weather. But a mile difference means no damage in a tornado, Brooks said: “It’s so much finer in time and space on the tornado, it does make it a harder problem.” It takes a piece of debris only a few seconds to fly around an entire tornado; it takes hours to circle a hurricane. But torna- does, though smaller, can have stronger winds. Since 1950, there have been 58 tornadoes in the United States with winds exceeding 200 mph; six last year alone. Only three hurricanes have made U.S. landfall with winds more than 155 mph. And forecasters are telling the Southeast and heartland to get ready again. “It looks like this week we’re moving into a slightly more active dynamic pattern,” said warning meteorologist Greg Carbin at the National Weather Service’s Storm Prediction Center, also in Norman, Okla. The percolating Southeastern storm is proof of exactly how hard meteorologists have it. On Tuesday evening, Carbin said, “We’re kind of expecting it to be a fairly significant event” and the storm center’s website had a small red swath for potential severe storms with tornadoes. By Wednesday morning, the storm center’s forecast was much less clear. While the storm looks bad with potential for tornadoes, one of the key ingredients — unstable upper level air — is not quite behaving as predicted. So that means forecasters have less an idea of when and where the bad weather and potential twisters will hit, said Corey Mead, a meteorologist at the center. By Wednesday afternoon, the storm prediction center massively expanded its Thursday watch area to include Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky, Tennessee, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, West Virginia and parts of Virginia, the Carolinas and most of Florida. “A lot of things have to come together at once to have a tornadic storm and the skill at forecasting all those things is near zero,” said Howard Bluestein, a professor at the University of Oklahoma. “They are definitely more unpredictable.” All this comes on the heels of one of the worst tornado years in U.S. history. Tornadoes in 2011 started the earliest ever — New Year’s Day — killing 550 people, injuring 5,400 and causing $10 billion in damage over the year, the most in U.S. history. The 2011 season had the most tornadoes in a single day and a single month on record. But if you ask tornado experts what that means for this year, they’ll answer that they just don’t know. Later this summer, meteorologists will meet in a special conference to try to figure out how to do that type of longer-term tornado prediction. And the National Weather Service is installing new radar for live forecasting, tracking and distinguishing of tornadoes. Those together mean that maybe in 2020 or so, meteorologists will be able to say watch out this season or relax a bit — but not just yet, Brooks said. A new study by Columbia University professor Michael Tippett points out potential factors — vertical wind shear, updraft and a type of rainfall — that might help for long-range tornado forecasts. Another factor is La Nina, the flip side of El Nino. It’s a cooling of the central Pacific Ocean. Scientists have noticed a correlation between strong La Ninas and active tornado seasons — including last year. But it’s not so simple or clear-cut, Tippett and others say. The current La Nina is weakening so much it shouldn’t be a factor this year, several experts said. The new radar, called dual polarization, allows meteorologists to see through rain and dark and be sure if high winds are a tornado. In the past, meteorologists had to wait for ground confirmation. This won’t help with long-term forecasts but could save lives in real-time because forecasters can be more certain in their warnings, said National Weather Service meteorologist Paul Schlatter. Hermann: Benefit for woman with cancer Continued from page A1 can say, ‘Look at the blessings that we’ve had.’ ” Teri said she believes her strong faith and the support of the community have kept her spirits up in the last year. In the days before the family left for Omaha for Teri’s surgery in July, a group of neighbors came by to see them off. They presented the Hermanns with a cooler full of candy for the kids and a gift-wrapped box containing $900. The cash covered the family’s costs while in Omaha. When the family returned to Hastings in time for the Adams County Fair just days after Teri’s surgery, they were presented with more than $1,000 raised by the county’s 4-H families. Teri said the stories are numerous, and so are the hundreds of thank you cards she has written in the last year. While parents and other adults have been generous, so have the friends of her children, Teri said. Last fall the Adams Central volleyball team held its annual Pink Out Night for cancer and gave a portion of the proceeds — more than $200 — to the Hermann family. “The coach wrote us this neat letter and said, “This is from the volleyball team and this is where they wanted the money to go,’ ” Teri said. One of the most shocking and surprising donations came from the students at St. Cecilia High School. While the Hermann children are students at Adams Central, the family attends St. Cecilia’s Catholic Church, and many St. Cecilia students know them. A group of students suggested that the funds they raise to wear jeans to school instead of uniforms on certain days go to the Hermanns. Teri said she was told the “jeans” fundraiser usually nets around $200. “But they sent a check for $664,” she said. “Isn’t that something? It’s just like, holy cow.” While she’s amazed by the outpouring of support, Teri said she still has a hard time accepting donations from others. “It’s a lot easier to give than it is to receive,” she said. “It’s just not easy. I do believe you have to accept those gifts because you’re allowing people to do something, if there’s a blessing in all of that. It’s allowing them to do something for a fellow human.” But despite her reservations, the funds are very much appreciated and needed. In 2011, Teri said the family spent an extra $13,000 out of pocket above a normal year’s expenses to cover the 10,000 miles of medical travel and medical bills. On top of Teri’s continuing medical expenses, the family’s already diminished income will be reduced further after Russ’ surgery when he is on medical leave. While he’ll still receive about 80 percent of his normal pay from ThermoKing, that income doesn’t include overtime pay or the money Russ makes on the side at his other part-time jobs. “But we’ll make it. We always have,” Teri said. “The Lord has always blessed us and he’ll continue to do such. “I’ve always said from the beginning, the minute I was diagnosed, I said, ‘The Lord’s got me in his hands. He’s always had me in his hands.’ Whatever is meant to be is meant to be. If I’m meant to be here, I’ll be here and if I’m not, I’m going to go — because I look forward to being with him someday, too, and getting ready to make a spot for the rest of the family.” Opinion A4 Restore prenatal coverage HASTINGS TRIBUNE Thursday, Feb. 23, 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. ” Lincoln Journal-Star Both a sense of compassion and hard-headed fiscal responsibility justify restoration of prenatal coverage for low-income women in Nebraska. Congratulations to the Legislature’s Health and Human Services Committee for advancing a bill to re-establish the coverage by July 1. A full legislative vote on this controversial issue is overdue. The bill, LB599, would implement new prenatal coverage under the Children’s Health Insurance Program. Until March 2010, prenatal coverage had been provided through Medicaid by designating the recipient as the unborn child. When federal officials learned of the policy, they said Nebraska could no longer provide coverage in that fashion. A band of state senators led by Sen. Kathy Campbell of Lincoln started efforts to restore the coverage almost immediately. They were opposed, however, by Gov. Dave Heineman, who said he did not want illegal immigrants to receive government aid. About half the women who lost coverage were illegal immigrants. Now, almost two years later, advocates of restoring the coverage are pushing ahead. Passage of the bill would provide prenatal coverage to an estimated 4,700 eligible women. An estimated 3,100 of those are thought to be in the country illegally. The reality is, obviously, that prenatal care benefits the unborn child. Even though the women may be in the country illegally, their children will be American citizens when born, and entitled to medical care. It’s amply demonstrated by medical statistics that prenatal care reduces the chance of complications during pregnancy. According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, “studies demonstrate that every dollar spent on prenatal care yields between $1.70 and $3.38 in savings.” A single premature birth can result in expenses exceeding $1 million. Ann Brookshire Sherer-Simpson, Bishop of the United Methodist Church Nebraska Conference, summarized the moral reasons for providing coverage in an open letter to those attending a candlelight vigil on the issue earlier this month. “Our concern is rooted in our understanding of God, who loves and values all persons regardless of their status as citizens, regardless of their race or national origin. “Even if the mother were in jail, we know we must care for her and her child. Any other behavior is cruel and short-sighted.” It’s hard to believe that opposition to illegal immigration could blind Nebraska’s elected officials to both basic morality and fiscal prudence. But if that’s the case, it’s time that voters knew who those elected officials are. U.S. House Adrian Smith 503 Cannon House Washington, D.C. 20515 (202) 225-6435 www.house.gov 908-912 W. Second St. Hastings, NE 68902 (USPS 237140) General Info: 402-462-2131 Circulation: 402-462-2131 Advertising: 402-461-1231 News: 402-461-1252 Want ads: 402-461-1241 Toll free: 800-742-6397 Move over, Martha, Fireball is in the house M artha, I deem thee Fireball. It’s a more appropriate name for a saucy young woman who recently celebrated her 20th birthday. She’s our youngest son’s girlfriend, and I’ve mentioned her before. She’s smart as a whip, fiendish on an ATV, and can swim through mud pits like an alligator — a skill we witnessed during an obstacle-ridden 5K race last fall. Until now she’s been called Martha (Stewart), because she can cook, bake, crochet, sew, and partyplan her namesake under the table, all while looking stellar in 5-inch heels. This girl is brains, brawn, and joyous oddball, and I wanted to do something special to commemorate her entry into a shiny new decade. But my chocolate cake can’t hold a candle to hers, and the super hero store was fresh out of capes. So I’m renaming her Fireball. As the sole woman in a family that includes Hunka Burnin’ Hubby, and our sons, Rocket and Magnet, I am often flummoxed by members of my gender. Even the Schlueterville setters are male. I can identify gear oil, antifreeze, motor oil, diesel fuel and nitro methane by smell, and can carry on a fairly intense conversation about NCAA basketball and NHRA drag racing. I have a piston signed Published daily except Sunday and holidays of Jan. 1, Memorial Day, July 4, Labor Day, Thanksgiving and Christmas. Periodicals postage paid at Hastings, Neb., POSTMASTER: Send changes to The Hastings Tribune, P.O. Box 788, Hastings, NE 68902. Subscription rates Adams, Clay, Nuckolls, Webster counties, Doniphan, Giltner: E-Z Pay $8 per month; $32 for three months; $55 for six months and $97 per year. Fillmore, Franklin, Kearney, Thayer counties: E-Z Pay $8.25 per month; $33 for three months; $57 for six months and $100 per year. For other rates, call 402-462-2131. Tribune on the Internet: http://www.hastingstribune.com; email: tribune@hastingstribune.com Magnet while she graduated high school, and watched her unpack girly, color-coordinated linens for her freshman dorm room on the same campus in 2010. She’s been around Schlueterville enough to see me at my worst, like the time my pipes exploded while making Thanksgiving dinner, leaving a pool of sludge under the sink and potato peels on my roof. She watched me turn 50, and organized an epic party to celebrate the event. She has witnessed me without makeup and wearing shorts that should have been incinerated long ago. She let me drag her to Art Chicks in Louisville, where we ate chicken salad and danced the Macarena. It’s a wonder she hasn’t run away screaming. And so Fireball is 20, halfway through her sophomore year in college, and well on her way to a brilliant medical career. She’s light years ahead of where I was at her age, and I’m happy to be her guinea pig should her inner Martha want to try a new recipe. She’s 30 years my junior, and has taught me that girls aren’t as mysterious as I once thought. Thanks, Fireball, and happy birthday. Tamera Schlueter of Hastings is a columnist for the Hastings Tribune. Reach her by email at stschlueter@windstream.net Contraception plan shows Obama’s hypocrisy P resident Barack Obama, in wrapping up a fact checker’s paradise of a State of the Union speech, said he went along with old Abe Lincoln: “Government should do for people only what they cannot do better by themselves, and no more.” That, I guess, is why he wants to give America’s richest women free contraception devices at the expense of premium hikes paid by people with incomes a fraction of theirs. It’s just one aspect of the birth-control boondoggle that the progressives haven’t bothered to mention. The tears practically roll down their faces as they tell us how abortions will be thwarted and women’s health preserved by this government mandate. What they do not say is that Obama’s plan robs from the relatively poor (and others) to give to the rich (and others) and was preceded by state and court mandates, by other federal programs and by so many contraceptive freebies from various groups that, if you don’t happen to have one, it’s because you ran for the woods when they were thrown at you. I am not saying it is a perfect contraceptive world, whatever that might be. I am sure it isn’t. It isn’t a perfect world in any respect. I am saying that one thing that makes it immeasurably less perfect is a federal interventionism that has reached a stage of preposterous overreach. It simply does not matter anymore if some- thing is unnecessary and a waste of money. The deed is done if it meets the following criteria: It violates the Constitution’s enumeration of federal powers, it probably won’t work, it is duplicative of other efforts, it allows our betters in Washington to furJay ther manage our lives and it Ambrose buys votes. The possibilities, as you can see, are endless, and the consequence has been debt that is the symbolic equivalent of a stick of dynamite in every home, for starters. The statist enthusiasms have also given us central planning that only occasionally gets things right — accidents happen — and regulations sufficient to hold back an otherwise eager economy and take away your right to purchase the light bulbs you like best. Wrongheaded regulations aren’t just billions of dollars thrown to the winds. They are tens of thousands of pages’ worth of unjustifiable and sometimes silly infringements on private choice, and if the one restricting the kinds of light bulbs available won’t deprive you of the most crucial or basic liberties, others will. That’s proved by the fact that the Justice Department has been unable to count the number of federally enacted criminal laws. If you can’t count them, you can’t know what they are. That means you just might be in jeopardy of imprisonment despite honor- able intentions. This fulmination is brought on by an E. J. Dionne column in The Washington Post. I have met Dionne. He is smart and nice, which doesn’t make him politically perceptive. In this column, he rambles on about Republican hypocrisy, wondering, for instance, why conservatives criticize entitlements at the same time they promise not to cut the Medicare and Social Security of the elderly. I admit to being prone to winces about half the time I listen to the GOP presidential candidates these days, but they have at least been more honest than Obama about entitlements. He devoted about 10 seconds to this crucial topic in his State of the Union message, and was among those castigating Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., for his means-tested reforms of a kind we must absolutely have if this government is not to shut down someday. Obama did give us some Medicare cuts, but made up for that by spending them in a new health-care program that adds another unaffordable entitlement to those we already have. The conservative objective is not to dismantle the entire federal apparatus but to end that kind of excess, free contraceptives included. The grand hypocrisy is a president who talks about people doing things for themselves when he doesn’t trust them in their own bedrooms. Jay Ambrose is a columnist living in Colorado. He can be reached at SpeaktoJay@aol.com. Voice of the People Management Darran Fowler, Publisher Amy Palser, Managing Editor Donald Kissler, Business Manager Deb Bunde, Director of Advertising Scott Carstens, Operations Manager Ryan Murken, Marketing Director by John Force, for goodness sake. Fireball stumbled into Schlueterville four years ago, after meeting Magnet on the lifeguard squad at the local water park. Hunka and I had instilled a “no serious girlfriends in high school” rule Tamera for our sons, and had a pretSchlueter ty good record going until Fireball entered the scene. Hunka and I took one look at this talented, lovely young woman, and our rule book went up in flames. My brain cramped in an attempt to make interesting conversation with her alien feminine presence. “What do you think of John Force’s chances of winning the funny car drags this year?” I asked. “How about those Jayhawks?” She laughed, gave me cake, and gained a fan. Fireball’s provided me with a valuable glimpse into the female world. I’ve seen her in prom and homecoming regalia, with sparkly hairdos that defy logic. She sat with us while Magnet graduated from high school in 2009, and tagged along when we moved him into the dorm at the University of NebraskaLincoln a few months later. We sat with GIVE BUSINESSES A CHANCE Loren Wehling’s letter about the situation at the old middle school hit a perfect bull’s-eye. I am one of a group of people trying to start a business at that location. We are not rebels. We are mothers and fathers, semi-retired people, school teachers, veterans, college students, friends and neighbors — 18 small business owners who saw an opportunity to go after our dreams of owning our own business at an affordable price. I was born and raised in Hastings. I was educated in the public school system, attended Central Nebraska Community College, and my son even graduated from Hastings College. When my sister and I were looking for a location for our business, we walked down the halls of our old school building and immediately decided, “This is where we want to be.” What a wonderful way to give back to the city and community that educated us. We not only will be contributing to the economic stability of Hastings, but will be offering services, education, art, health, dance, exercise and retail options. I am planning to open a boutique, My Sister’s Closet, in my old history classroom where I was taught my civil rights. I would love to see the halls of this beloved building bustling with people and becoming a useful part of the community again. The city of Hastings should be bending over backwards to help this project succeed and welcome new businesses. Electrical and mechanical permits have been issued, state inspections have been done. There are people in Hastings who want this project to fail for personal gain. I just want the citizens of Hastings to know who we are and what we are trying to bring to their city. We are just good, hard-working, God-fearing people who have a dream. We have a lot to offer the community. Please urge the city to work with us, not shut us out. Many years ago, Hastings citizens paid hard-earned tax dollars for this building. Do you want to pay taxes again for a wrecking ball to tear it down? Linda Bockerman-Kube Hastings Hastings/Region HASTINGS TRIBUNE Thursday, Feb. 23, 2012 Tribland five-day forecast Art by Alex Cenerrero, 10, Alcott Elementary WINDY TODAY High: 43 Low: 26 Wind: North 30-40 with gusts as high as 55 mph. BREEZY FRIDAY High: 43 Low: 21 Wind: Northwest 15-25 with gusts as high as 35 mph. BREEZY SATURDAY High: 50 Low: 38 Wind: South 20-25 mph iwht gusts as high as 35 mph. MOSTLY SUNNY SUNDAY High: 48 Low: 23 A5 Tribe seeks order to limit beer sales LEADERS ASK JUDGE TO RESTRICT WHITECLAY LIQUOR STORES GRANT SCHULTE The Associated Press LINCOLN — Leaders of a South Dakota American Indian tribe who are suing beer makers, distributors and retailers are now asking a judge to restrict alcohol sales in a tiny Nebraska town that borders their reservation. The Oglala Sioux Tribe added the request late last week to a federal lawsuit that seeks $500 million in damages for the alcohol-related problems on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. The tribe’s attorney, Tom White of Omaha, said he will argue that Nebraska officials have failed to enforce their own laws by allowing beer sales that far surpass the amount that can legally be consumed in the area. Alcohol is officially banned on Pine Ridge, a reservation the size of Connecticut in southwestern South Dakota. Nebraska state law prohibits drinking outside of the stores, and the nearest non-reservation town is more than 20 miles to the south. Yet the four beer retailers in Whiteclay, which has fewer than a dozen residents, sold the equivalent of nearly 5 million cans in 2010. “The defendants have failed to make reasonable efforts to ensure their products are distributed and sold in obedience to the laws of the state of Nebraska and the Oglala Sioux tribe,” White said Wednesday. The lawsuit says the tribe has “no adequate remedies to protect its federally granted rights” to protect its sovereignty and enforce its own alcohol ban. He pointed to statements by Attorney General Jon Bruning, the state’s top law enforcement officer, who has said shutting down the beer stores will not solve the problem. The lawsuit in U.S. District Court of Nebraska targets some of the world’s largest beer makers, as well as their distributors and the four stores in Whiteclay. Tribal leaders and activists blame the Whiteclay businesses for chronic alcohol abuse and bootlegging on the Pine Ridge. They say most Lawmakers to tackle cancer insurance MOSTLY SUNNY MONDAY High: 36 of the stores’ customers come from the reservation, which spans southwest South Dakota. The $500 million lawsuit seeks reimbursement for the cost of health care, social services and child rehabilitation caused by chronic alcoholism on the reservation, which encompasses some of the nation’s most impoverished counties. One in four children born on the reservation suffer from fetal alcohol syndrome or fetal alcohol spectrum disorder, and the average life expectancy is estimated between 45 and 52 years — the shortest in the North Hemisphere except for Haiti, according to the lawsuit. The average American life expectancy is 77.5 years. Please see BEER/page A6 Low: 22 Today’s weather records High: 75 in 1918 Low: -7 in 1910 GRANT SCHULTE The Associated Press u From 7 a.m. Feb. 22 to 7 a.m. Feb. 23 Local weather High Wednesday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .56 High in 2011 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .42 Overnight low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .35 Overnight low in 2011 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9 Precipitation last 24 hours . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .00 February precipitation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1.63 February 2011 precipitation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10 Year to date precipitation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1.77 Jan. to Feb. ’11 precipitation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1.10 Snowfall last 24 hours . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 February snowfall . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11.4 February 2011 snowfall . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.7 Season to date snowfall . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .22.50 Season to date snowfall 2010-11 . . . . . . . . . . . . .25.1 Local ANNUAL BLACK HISTORY BANQUET IS SATURDAY Brig. Gen. Randolph M. Scott will be the featured speaker at the 15th annual Black History Banquet Saturday. Randolph is the chief of staff at state headquarters for the Nebraska Air National Guard in Lincoln. The event, hosted by the Hastings African American Awareness Committee, starts at 3 p.m. at the Adams County Fairgrounds. Scott Committee President Barb Smith said the event also will feature gospel music by the Willie Harris Singers, the presentation of a humanitarian award and a comfort food buffet. Tickets and are available at the door. For more information, call Smith at 402-462-8176. Region HASTINGS NATIVE WINS AWARD Hastings native Lori Wilson, managing attorney of the Grand Island office of Legal Aid of Nebraska, has been named the 2012 winner of the Ruth Miller Award for Outstanding Advocacy. Wilson was nominated by her fellow attorneys. The honor is bestowed upon the best example of advocacy to clients, and demonstrates a commitment and dedication to providing quality representation to clients. “This is Legal Aid’s highest honor for service to low-income Nebraskans,” Dave Pantos, executive director of Legal Aid of Nebraska, said in a news release. “Lori Wilson has worked for decades as a fearless advocate. She truly exemplifies the best in a Legal Aid attorney.” State PROSTITUTION CASE SCOTTSBLUFF — A former Scottsbluff firefighter has been given 14 Saturdays in jail and two years of probation for soliciting prostitution. The Scottsbluff Star-Herald reports 42-yearold Paul Neideffer was sentenced Wednesday on the misdemeanor. He’d pleaded no contest. Neideffer also was ordered to perform 75 hours of community service. Charges stemmed from an Aug. 3 incident, which cost him his firefighter job. Prosecutors say a former employee of Neideffer’s painting business had been trying to collect about $280 Neideffer owed her. She contacted police after she received a text message from Neideffer that said he had her money but would double it if she performed a sex act. BOY, 7, WOUNDED IN SHOOTING OMAHA — A 7-year-old boy has been wounded during a shooting in northeast Omaha. Omaha television station KETV reports officers were dispatched after several calls about the shooting came in just before 8 a.m. Officers at the scene soon learned the boy had been taken to Creighton University Medical Center. Police spokesman Jake Bettin says the boy’s wound appeared to be minor. The Associated Press LAURA BEAHM/Tribune Hastings College students (from left) Kelli Van Meter, a junior from Alliance, Deann Duncan, a senior from Sterling, Colo., and Sarah Wolf, a sophomore from Hastings, were selected to perform with the Hastings Symphony Orchestra on Sunday. HSO welcomes young artists to stage HC STUDENTS TO JOIN HASTINGS SYMPHONY FOR SUNDAY CONCERT BETSY HERRMAN bherrman@hastingstribune.com T hree Hastings College student musicians will get an early taste of their chosen careers as they join the Hastings Symphony Orchestra on stage Sunday. The students are the winners of HSO’s biennial Young Artists Auditions and will perform with the orchestra in a 3 p.m. concert at the Masonic Center Auditorium, 411 N. Hastings Ave. The winners are senior Deann Duncan of Sterling, Colo., and sophomore Sarah Wolf of Hastings in a flute duet and junior soprano soloist Kelli Van Meter of Alliance. The annual event provides young musicians with an opportunity to perform a solo with the orchestra. The auditions and concert alternate between Nebraska high schools and Hastings College students. Students often prepare months in advance of the mid-January auditions. Duncan and Wolf will perform “Three Pieces for Two Flutes” by Gary Schockey. Van Meter will sing “Dove sono bei momenti” from Mozart’s “The Marriage of Figaro.” “I love the song and I get to play out on my emotions,” Van Meter said. “It’s a pretty wellknown opera, so to get to play with that has been really fun.” Duncan described the Schockey piece as unconventional and fun to play. “It’s a little outside the box,” Wolf said. “I was against learning it at first, but after being exposed to it, I loved it. “There’s just enough challenge in it to not make it boring, but it’s still attainable,” Duncan said. HSO conductor Byron Jensen said the caliber of musicianship at this year’s auditions was impressive. “Our panel of three judges spent nearly 45 minutes sequestered in a room reviewing the eight students who auditioned for a chance to perform with the HSO,” he said in a news release. “In the end, they chose these three students, citing their incredible musicianship, technical command of the voice or instrument and emotional connection to the music or audience.” All three women said they were thrilled to be chosen to perform. “I couldn’t believe it,” Van Meter said. “My jaw just dropped. I was kind of doing it just to get the experience of performing. I thought there were other experienced people who also deserved it, so I was very surprised and happy that I got it.” Van Meter said soloing with an orchestra is something most college performers don’t get to experience. Please see HSO/page A6 CASA gearing up for fundraising event WILL VRASPIR wvraspir@hastingstribune.com Seventh Stage Productions is performing a murder mystery theater on Saturday at the Hastings City Auditorium to raise money for the local Court-Appointed Special Advocates program. Named “The Wheel of Money,” the production will be based on a game show and encourage audience participation. Seventh Stage Productions is a local theater group that performs a variety of plays for non-profit groups, fundraisers or holiday parties. Doors open at 6 p.m. for the 6:30 p.m. dinner, with the show starting at 7:30 p.m. Wendy Keele, organizer of the event for CASA of South Central Nebraska, hopes to make the event into an annual fundraiser to replace several small fundraising events the organization had done in previous years. While the advocates volunteer their time, Keele said organizational costs are covered through fundraising efforts and grants. It costs about $2,400 per volunteer for training, continued education and supervision. About $1,000 is needed for each child per year in the program. Last year, 95 children in Adams, Clay and Nuckolls counties had a CASA. In 2011, the organization expanded to include Webster County. Seventeen children are still waiting for a CASA. CASA volunteers can be assigned by judges to child abuse and neglect cases to advocate for the needs and desires of a child. Please see CASA/page A6 Bill aims to redefine gun owners’ rights MICHAEL AVOK The Associated Press LINCOLN — Gun owners who legally transport and store weapons in their vehicles would have betterdefined property rights under a measure debated Wednesday in the Legislature’s Judiciary Committee. Legislative Bill 785 would provide clearer guidelines for the transportation and storage of firearms in vehicles in publicly accessible parking lots — common lots provided for both employees and customers — throughout the state. Sen. Mark Christensen of Imperial said many gun owners face inconsistent rules and actions by their employers. He and other bill supporters said people should be allowed to have permitted handguns and hunting guns carefully locked and stored in their vehicles and not be subjected to employer weapons bans. “I have had several Nebraskans contact me about trouble they had at work,” Christensen told the Judiciary Committee. Christensen also said his bill balances private property rights and the right to bear arms for law-abiding citizens. Sen. Brenda Council of Omaha quizzed supporters Wednesday on the broad language of the bill and its potential impact of workplace violence. Please see GUNS/page A6 LINCOLN — Insurance companies that cover cancer would have to treat chemotherapy pills the same as medication administered through an IV, under a bill set for a vote as early as Thursday in the Nebraska Legislature. The measure by Omaha Sen. Jeremy Nordquist seeks to address what supporters see as a disparity between how the two cancer treatments are classified: Insurance policies usually cover the cost of IV chemotherapy as a medical benefit, while oral medications are viewed as prescription drug benefits with much larger copayments. Nordquist said the idea for the bill came from his brother, an Omaha oncologist, who reported encounters with roughly half a dozen patients who could not afford the preferred cancer treatment in pill form. He pointed to a study by Milliman Inc., a national health care consulting firm, which found that the per-payer increase ranged from 5 cents to $1.50. “The cost isn’t significant,” Nordquist said. “It’s pennies per member, per month.” Fifteen states and the District of Columbia have adopted similar laws. Nordquist said the Nebraska bill is based on a Texas law signed by Gov. Rick Perry last year. Insurance and business advocates say cost differences, while small, would snowball over time and make it more difficult for small businesses and the self-employed to buy insurance. “It’s the aggregate effect,” Ron Sedlacek, a lobbyist for the Nebraska Chamber of Commerce and Industry, told a legislative committee this month. “The aggregate effect is going to increase those costs and drive employers out of a particular market.” Tessa Foreman of Lincoln had insurance that covered chemotherapy when she was diagnosed with rectal cancer in 2010, but her doctor’s recommendation for a pill-based treatment was denied. Instead, she underwent surgery to have a portable catheter inserted in her chest that delivered the drug directly into her bloodstream. Complications from the surgery required her to return to the hospital. The 48-year-old suffered from diarrhea and mouth sores that left her unable to eat for seven days at a time — symptoms she might have avoided with a pill. “I feel like if it were treated the same — as a medical benefit, rather than a prescription — it would have helped,” she said. Shelly Jackson of Lincoln took a second job, spent her life savings and drained her retirement account to cover the copayments for her son’s leukemia treatment, after he was diagnosed at 17. The first drug he needed required a $3,000-per-month copay, which did not apply to her Please see CANCER/page A6 Region/State A6 Local BLOOD DRIVES The American Red Cross is reminding communities that March is Red Cross Month. Call 800-733-2767 or visit redcrossblood.org to make an appointment to donate blood. Or, the following blood donation opportunities are available in Tribland March 1-15: Hastings u First Congregational Church, 2810 W. Seventh St.: March 8, noon to 6 p.m.; March 15, noon to 6 p.m. Roseland u Silver Lake High School, 9405 S. Lincoln Ave.: March 14, noon to 6 p.m. Geneva u St. Joseph Catholic Church, 815 E St.: March 2, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. State HASSEBROOK RUNNING OMAHA — Chuck Hassebrook, Democrats’ newly minted candidate for U.S. Senate, is taking an extended leave of absence from his job as executive director of the Center for Rural Affairs as he runs his campaign. The center is a grassroots nonprofit that advocates for rural communities, and Hassebrook has served as its director for nearly 35 years. On Monday, the center’s board granted Hassebrook a 10month leave to run for public office. The board named its assistant director, Brian Depew, as acting executive director. WATER JUG CASE GERING — A 28-year-old man accused of heaving a container of water at a judge has been arraigned on the new charges. Authorities say Philip Enriquez tossed the container at Judge James Worden on Jan. 30. Worden had just sentenced Enriquez to six months in jail for shoplifting. The container missed the judge, and Enriquez was wrestled to the floor and taken away after threatening the judge. The Associated Press HASTINGS TRIBUNE Thursday, Feb. 23, 2012 ‘Caylee’ legislation stalls in Iowa, other states MIKE GLOVER The Associated Press DES MOINES, Iowa — Lawmakers under pressure from constituents in the months after the Casey Anthony trial have found it’s not easy to toughen penalties for parents who don’t immediately report missing children. Seventeen states tried to pass “Caylee’s Law” legislation — named after Anthony’s 2-yearold daughter whose 2008 disappearance in Florida was not reported for a month — but many of these efforts have failed or stalled over concerns that proposed changes were too broad, and in some cases, not necessary. Iowa is the latest state to face difficulty trying to strengthen penalties involving how and when parents report missing children. Lawmakers on Wednesday rejected a bill that would have required parents to know their children were safe in any 24-hour period. A jury found Anthony not guilty in July in the death of her daughter, whose body was found in woods near her grandparents’ Orlando home six months after she was reported missing. The trial, which was shown on live television, captivated the country, and her acquittal triggered outrage among hundreds of thousands of people who posted about the case on social media sites. Lawmakers also heard from constituents who urged them to take action. “They saw what they thought was an injustice. We need to have some response,” said Iowa Rep. Julian Garrett, a Republican from Indianola. But passing legislation attempting to strengthen missing children’s laws has been difficult in many states. Only one, New Jersey, has put a new law on its books, said Rich Williams, a policy associate with the National Conference of State Legislature’s Criminal Justice Program. The Iowa legislative panel rejected the proposed law Wednesday after some questioned whether it was too vague. Marty Ryan, a lobbyist for the Iowa chapter of the Sacramento, Calif.-based Justice Reform Coalition, speculated that it would require parents to check in daily with children sent to summer camp. Rep. Jeff Kaufmann, who cosponsored the Iowa bill, acknowledged the measure needed work. “We clearly are moving too fast on this,” said Kaufmann, R-Wilton. By not approving the bill, the panel made it likely the proposal wouldn’t meet a legislative deadline and would be dropped for this session. Unlike the Iowa proposal, Williams said, most of the measures proposed in other statehouses require a parent to know a child is missing, avoiding the scenario of having to check on a child at camp. But he said many states have become stuck on determining the age in which the proposals should apply. In some cases, lawmakers have questioned whether stronger missing children laws are necessary. Nebraska state Sen. Tony Fulton said he was inspired by the Anthony case to introduce the bill that would increase penalties for concealing a death. But at a hearing in January, Sen. Burke Harr of Omaha called the proposal a “feel-good law” that would make little difference in most homicide cases, including those involving a parent accused of killing a child. “If you have enough to prove they dumped the body, you probably have enough to prove that, at a minimum, they’re an accessory after the fact and probably responsible for this crime,” Harr said. HSO: Three HC students chosen for young artist concert Continued from page A5 “It doesn’t happen very often at the college level,” Duncan said. “It’s great that they provide that opportunity for us.” “It’s such a blessing,” Wolf added. “It’s really fun pursuing your passions. It’s something I’ll remember for the rest of my life.” Said Duncan: “I’m loving the experience of doing this and relishing it.” The concert will conclude with a performance of Howard Hanson’s Symphony No. 2 “Romantic.” A Wahoo native, Hanson earned international acclaim as a composer, conductor and director of the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, N.Y. “Hanson’s ‘Romantic’ symphony is lush in harmony, resplendent in melody and certainly a favorite among concertgoers for its approachability,” Jensen said. “At 25 minutes in length, it is certainly a masterpiece that will endure for decades to come.” Tickets are available at the door. The ticket window opens at 2:15 p.m. For more information, call 402-4699396 or visit www.hastingssymphony.com. Duncan is the daughter of Timothy and Gwen Duncan of Sterling, Colo. Wolf is the daughter of Bob and Mary Wolf of Hastings, and Van Meter is the daughter of Kent and Carol Van Meter of Alliance. Guns: Bill would redefine owners’ rights Cancer: CASA: Fundraiser Chemo pills Saturday topic of bill Continued from page A5 Silent auctions will also be held through the evening, including handcrafted jewelry, homemade food and wine baskets. Tickets are still available and can be purchased at the CASA office or at the door on Saturday. Keele said advance notice would be appreciated to allow for preparations. For more information about CASA of South Central Nebraska, call 402-463-1030 or visit www.casaofscne.org. Continued from page A5 out-of-pocket maximum or coinsurance. Three months later, he was prescribed a second drug not covered by the plan that cost $7,600 a month. “In hindsight, to stand where I’m at now, I would have been better off to quit my job and go on welfare,” she said. “It’s short-sighted from a public perspective to ignore this. These patients are going to end up on public assistance, because there’s no other way. They’re going to end up on Medicare of Medicaid.” Continued from page A5 “This is bill is not a balance,” Council said. “It places the gun owner’s rights above the property owner’s.” Supporters said that if the bill passed, gun owner rights would indeed supersede the rights of an employer to ban weapons from a common parking lot. Ron Jensen, lobbyist for the National Rifle Association, said most people who have weapons use them responsibly, and that most incidents of workplace violence do not involve someone retrieving a gun from his or her car. “Those incidents get a lot of attention, but it’s a small percentage of homicides,” Jensen said. “If we prohibit having a gun in a vehicle, we detract from its usefulness in protection.” “I think what I have in my car is my business. It’s my property,” Jensen said. Beer: Tribe wants alcohol sales limited Continued from page A5 The lawsuit alleges that the beer makers and stores sold to Pine Ridge residents, knowing they would smuggle the alcohol into the reservation to drink or resell. Matthew Fletcher, a Michigan State University associate law professor who specializes in American Indian issues, said the suit offers a novel approach to a problem that has plagued the reservation for more than a century. But, Fletcher said, “my sense is, it doesn’t have much of a chance.” For years, Nebraska lawmakers have struggled to curb the problem, and are considering legisla- tion that would limit the types of alcohol sold in areas like Whiteclay. The measure would require local authorities to ask the state to designate the area an “alcohol impact zone.” The state liquor commission could then limit the hours that alcohol sellers are open, as well as ban the sale of certain products. Agri/Business Obama seeks online privacy protections HASTINGS TRIBUNE Thursday, Feb. 23, 2012 ANICK JESDANUN The Associated Press ELISE AMENDOLA/AP A house is for sale Monday in North Andover, Mass. Homes on the move SALES OF EXISTING HOUSES AT HIGHEST POINT IN NEARLY TWO YEARS DEREK KRAVITZ The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The housing market is flashing signs of health ahead of the spring-buying season. Sales of previously occupied homes are at their highest level since May 2010. More first-time buyers are making purchases. And the supply of homes fell last month to its lowest point in nearly seven years, which could push home prices higher. Sales have now risen nearly 13 percent over the past six months. While they are still well below the 6 million that economists equate with a healthy market, the gains have coincided with other changes in the market that suggest more sales are coming. “The trend is clearly upward,” said Ian Shepherdson, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics. The National Association of Realtors said Wednesday that re-sales increased 4.3 percent last month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.57 million. Single-family home sales rose 3.8 percent. And the number of first-time buyers, who are critical to a housing recovery, increased slightly to make up 33 percent of all sales. That’s still below 40 percent, which tends to signal a healthy market. One concern is the market is still saturated with homes at risk of foreclosure, which lower broader home prices. Those increased to make up 35 percent of sales. But the supply of homes on the market has plunged to 2.3 million, the lowest level since March 2005. At last month’s sales pace, it would take more than six months to clear those homes, consistent with a healthy housing market. Fewer homes on the market could help boost prices over time. Most economists said the January report was encouraging, especially when viewed with other recent positive housing data. Mortgage rates have never been lower. Homebuilders are slightly more hopeful because more people are saying they might be open to buying this year — and they responded in January to that interest by requesting more permits to construct singlefamily homes. “The rise in existing home sales in recent months adds to the indication from housing starts, building permits, and homebuilder sentiment that the sector has improved modestly since the middle of 2011,” said John Ryding, an economist at RDQ economics. Much of the optimism has come because hiring has picked up. More jobs are critical to a housing rebound. In January, employers added 243,000 net jobs — the most in nine months — and the unemployment rate fell to 8.3 percent, the lowest level in nearly three years. Analysts caution that the damage from the housing bust is deep and the industry is years away from fully recovering. Since the bubble burst, sales have slumped under the weight of foreclosures, tighter credit and falling prices. Many deals are also collapsing before they close. Onethird of Realtors say they’ve had at least one contract scuttled over the past four months. That’s up from 18 percent in September. Realtors say deals are collapsing for several reasons: Banks have declined mortgage applications. Home inspectors have found problems. Appraisals have come in lower than the bid. Or a buyer suffered a financial setback before the closing. Sales rose across the country in January. They rose on a seasonal basis by nearly 9 percent in the West, 3.5 percent in the South, 3.4 percent in the Northeast and 1 percent in the Midwest. Mortgage rate still below 4 percent THIRTY-YEAR FIXED NUMBER UP TO 3.87 DEREK KRAVITZ The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The average rate on the 30-year fixed mortgage jumped after standing pat for three straight weeks at record lows. But the rate stayed below 4 percent for the 12th straight week, keeping home-buying and refinancing attractive for those who can qualify. Mortgage buyer Freddie Mac said Thursday the rate on the 30-year loan rose to 3.95 percent. That’s up from last week’s rate of 3.87 percent, the lowest since long-term mortgages began in the 1950s. The average on the 15-year fixed mortgage rose to 3.19 percent from 3.16 percent. It hit a record low of 3.14 percent three weeks ago. So far, low rates have done little to help the housing market, which is slowly improving. Few people can qualify for the rates and many who can have already done so. The four-week average of home purchase applications dropped in late January and February while refinancing is mostly flat, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. Refinancing now makes more than 81 percent of mortgage activity. But the housing market is flashing signs of health ahead of the spring-buying season. Sales of previously occupied homes are at their highest level since May 2010. More first-time buyers are making purchases. And the supply of homes fell last month to its lowest point in nearly seven years, which could push home prices higher. The job market is also improving, which is critical to a housing rebound. In January, employers added 243,000 net jobs — the most in nine months — and the unemployment rate fell to 8.3 percent, the lowest level in nearly three years. Frank Nothaft, Freddie Mac’s chief economist, said the housing market is gradually starting to pick up. Still, home sales remain weak and it could take years for the market to fully return to health. To calculate the average rates, Freddie Mac surveys lenders across the country Monday through Wednesday of each week. The average rates don’t include extra fees, known as points, which most borrowers must pay to get the lowest rates. One point equals 1 percent of the loan amount. The average fees for the 30year and 15-year loans were unchanged at 0.8. For the five-year adjustable loan, the average rate fell to 2.80 percent from 2.82 percent, and the average fee fell to 0.7 from 0.8. The average on the one-year adjustable loan fell to 2.73 percent from 2.84 percent, and the average fee was unchanged at 0.6. Pop drinkers gaining new mid-calorie option The Associated Press NEW YORK — Pepsi hopes to win back drinkers with a compromise. Some people don’t like the calories in regular soda, but loathe the taste of diet. So, PepsiCo Inc. is rolling out “Pepsi Next,” a mid-calorie drink that’s half the calories of regular Pepsi at 60 calories per can. The cola, which is slated to hit store shelves nationally by the end of March, is Pepsi’s biggest product launch in years. It’s likely to revive the cola wars that had become flat in recent years as Coke, Pepsi and others failed to innovate. The drink is the latest attempt to stem declining soda sales as people increasingly move away from sugary drinks to water and other lower-calorie beverages because of health concerns. NEW YORK — The Obama administration is calling for stronger privacy protections for consumers as mobile gadgets, Internet services and other tools are able to do a better job of tracking what you do and where you go. Administration officials outlined a proposed “Consumer Privacy Bill of Rights” on Thursday and urged technology companies, consumer groups and others to jointly craft new protections. Such guidelines would initially be voluntary for companies, but those that agree to abide by them could be subject to sanctions for any violations. “As the Internet evolves, consumer trust is essential for the continued growth of the digital economy,” President Barack Obama said in a statement. “That’s why an online privacy Bill of Rights is so important. For businesses to succeed online, consumers must feel secure.” The effort comes as companies have found more sophisticated ways to collect and combine data on your interests and habits. Beginning next week, for instance, Google will start merging data it collects from email, video, social-networking and other services when you’re signed in with a Google account. The growing use of smartphones and tablet computers adds another dimension to the tracking. Location information can give service providers insights into where you spend your time and, if you have friends who use the same services, whom you tend to hang out with in person. Data collection can help companies improve and personalize services. It can also help advertisers fine-tune messages and reach the people most likely to buy their products and services — often without consumers even realizing it. That is why the administration is seeking more data protections for consumers in a report issued Thursday. How strong the protections will be ultimately depends on what rules parties can reach consensus on. The administration favored a multi-stakeholder approach that has hints of self-regulation because legislation to enable traditional regulation would take time. Last week, the Federal Trade Commission complained that software companies producing games and other mobile applications aren’t telling parents what personal information is being collected from kids and how companies are using it. Depending on how the guidelines are crafted, companies could be required to more prominently disclose when they collect such things as location, call logs and lists of friends — not just from kids, but everyone. The report is not intended to replace other efforts at offering privacy protections. Leading companies in mobile computing agreed Wednesday to require that mobile applications seeking to collect personal information forewarn users before their services are installed. The guidelines came as part of an agreement with California’s attorney general. A7 Markets Thursday’s noon local markets Corn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6.22 Soybeans . . . . . . . . . .12.17 Milo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5.95 Wheat . . . . . . . . . . . . .6.44 Stocks of local interest The following stocks of local interest were traded today: Last Chg. 118,850 +680 Berkshire Hathaway A 79.20 +.27 Berkshire Hathaway B 26.69 +.58 ConAgra 51.92 -.24 Eaton Corp. 40.61 -.22 Ingersoll Rand 23.10 +2.21 Level 3 100.70 +.04 McDonald’s 62.86 -.24 PepsiCo -.18 Tricon Global Restaurants 65.72 110.23 -1.85 Union Pacific 30.50 -.09 Wells Fargo 28.70 -.60 Williams Cos. 58.63 +.04 Wal-Mart State BERKSHIRE DIVESTS OF INSURANCE GROUP OMAHA — Billionaire Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. is selling its remaining stake in White Mountains Insurance Group for $45 million, and White Mountains plans to repurchase up to 1 million more shares at $500 apiece. White Mountains announced the deal with Berkshire and its offer to repurchase stock Thursday. The deal with Berkshire completes a separation that began in 2008 when Buffett’s company agreed to sell most of its 16.3 percent White Mountains stake for two insurance subsidiaries and $751 million. White Mountains is offering a premium over Wednesday’s closing price of $481.76 to repurchase 1 million shares at the same $500 price it paid for Berkshire’s 89,729 shares. White Mountains has cash to complete these moves after selling its Esurance auto insurance unit to Allstate last year for $1 billion. The Associated Press BUYERS MEET SELLERS Still Located inside Wal-Mart, but now between the vision center and customer service center! EVERYDAY IN THE CLASSIFIED PAGES OF THE TRIBUNE Shellac Nail Polish available. Da-Vi Nails Has Moved! il Na cial e Sp $ 00 5 off 402-463-5649 New Set Located Inside Wal-Mart Vital Signs Health Fair Saturday, March 24th • Sunday, March 25th 7 AM – 1 PM Each Day Pre-register online by 5 pm March 20th at www.mlmh.org and follow the links to the Vital Signs Health Fair Registration. *Walk-in registration at the Health Fair for the Blood Chemistry Analysis for an additional $5 fee. Blood Chemistry Test + Colon Cancer Screening Take Home Kit..$35.00 Blood Chemistry Test + Colon Cancer Screening Take Home Kit + PSA (if man age 50 or older).........$45.00 Blood Chemistry Test + Colon Cancer Screening Take Home Kit + A1c Diabetes Screening................$50.00 Blood Chemistry Test + Colon Cancer Screening Take Home Kit + PSA (if man age 50 or older) + A1c Diabetes Screening................$60.00 Bone Density Screening........................$10.00 Childhood Lead Poisoning Screening. . .$10.00 Childhood Vision Screening...................FREE Sleep Screening......................................FREE Spirometry Screening.............................FREE Thrive Healthy Habits Assessment.........FREE Height, Weight, Vision, Hearing.............FREE Medication Take-Back ...........................FREE Bring any old, outdated medications in original containers to be disposed of legally and in an environmentally friendly manner. The following places all have registration materials: • MLMH Rehabilitation - Medical Services Building, 7:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m., M-F • Hastings Chamber of Commerce, 301 S. Burlington Ave., 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m., M-F • Golden Friendship Center, 9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m., M-F For more information on the Vital Signs Health Fair, please call 402-460-5757. The Vital Signs Health Fair is a community event sponsored by: • Central Community College • Good Samaritan Society-Hastings Village • Mary Lanning Memorial Healthcare • South Heartland District Health Department • The National Association of Insurance and Financial Advisors Region/State A8 Region RELAY FOR LIFE SCHEDULE The American Cancer Society has released the dates of planned Relay for Life fundraising events planned in 47 communities across Nebraska this spring and summer. The Tribland county events in 2012 are: u June 1: Adams County (Hastings); Hamilton County (Aurora) u June 2: Webster County (Red Cloud) u June 8: Clay County (Sandy Creek School near Fairfield) u June 15: Hall County (Grand Island) u July 27: Thayer County (Deshler) u July 28: Fillmore County (Geneva) u Aug. 3: Kearney County (Minden) u Aug. 10: Harlan County (Alma) For more information, call 800-227-2345 or visit www.RelayForLife.org. State FIRM OWES STATE LINCOLN — A former Omaha counseling business has been fined $10,000 and told to reimburse the state of Nebraska for ineligible Medicaid claims. Lancaster County District Judge John Colborn ruled in a civil suit that the owner of Homebase Counseling & Consulting owes double damages of nearly $132,000 for the nearly $66,000 the company billed to the state. The state says company owner Justin Mickles Sr. submitted nearly 1,000 claims for mental health services provided by an unlicensed intern in 2006, and 2007. The Associated Press HASTINGS TRIBUNE Thursday, Feb. 23, 2012 Poacher suspected in shooting of snowy owl The Associated Press GREAT BEND, Kan. — Wildlife officials suspect a poacher intentionally shot a snowy owl last week at the Cheyenne Bottoms Wildlife Area near Great Bend. The owl was found last Thursday by Dan Witt, a Hoisington physician and wildlife photographer, about a half-mile from the Kansas Wetlands Education Center. The owl was taken to the Great Bend Raptor Center at the Brit Spaugh Zoo, where a veterinarian tried to save it by amputating a severely injured wing. But the owl died the next day, The Wichita Eagle reported. “No hunter has done this,” Brian Hanzlick, lead investigator and game warden for the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism, said Tuesday. “This was someone who literally violated the law. They knew exactly what they were shooting at when they pulled the trigger.” Hanzlick said authorities already have leads on the poacher’s identity. Snowy owls are not an endangered species but shooting them violates the Migratory Bird Treaty Act. A conviction carries a fine of up to $15,000, up to six months in jail or both. Hanzlick said the poacher could eventually have any hunting, fishing or trapping licenses revoked. More than 160 snowy owl sightings have been reported in Kansas since Nov. 16. In a normal year, only one or two reported sightings of the birds are reported. Wildlife experts say the birds are traveling farther south than normal this year because of a lack of food in the Arctic region. It was only a matter of time before one of the owls was shot, said Mark Robbins, collection manager of ornithology at the University of Kansas Biodiversity Institute. “It’s not surprising but it is disturbing,” he said. This past week, he picked up a dozen snowy owls that died in Nebraska. “There is already a very high mortality rate on these birds,” said Robbins, who said most of them won’t make it back to the Arctic in the spring. No testimony in conspiracy and witness tampering case WILL VRASPIR wvraspir@hastingstribune.com The case of a 29-year-old Hastings man accused of conspiracy and witness tampering was sent to the district court. Adams County Judge Michael Offner bound over the case against John A. Espino of 1215 N. Lexington Ave. after a follow-up preliminary hearing Thursday. The initial hearing was Jan. 19 by using affidavits, or sworn statements, instead of live testimony as evidence to bind the cases over to the district court. Despite defense attorney objections, Offner allowed the procedure and gave attorneys time to submit a summary of information from the affidavits that they believed could be clarified through cross-examination. Adams County Public Defender Art Toogood asked to cross-examine Hastings Police detective Allen Sedlak. Sedlak testified Thursday that he spoke with two witnesses who had been contacted by Espino to change their stories. Toogood argued that the conspiracy and three of the witness tampering cases should be dropped because there was no evidence that the family mem- bers who tried to get witnesses to change their stories made any kind of agreement. Offner disagreed and bound over Espino’s case. Each of Espino’s co-defendants have had their cases bound over to the district court. Alma Rosa Infante, 51, of 1611 W. Third St.; Irma Perez, 48, and Joshua L. Espino, 24, both of 1215 N. Lexington Ave.; and Jeremy M. Espino, 27, of Bellevue face charges of conspiracy and five counts of witness tampering. The charges were filed in connection to an Aug. 13, 2011, alleged assault by John against his then-pregnant girlfriend at 1232 N. Lexington Ave. She was treated and released at Mary Lanning Memorial HealthCare. Based on text messages and threats made to witnesses in the case, police believe the defendants conspired to convince the witnesses to not testify against John. Conspiracy is a Class 3 felony punishable by up to 20 years imprisonment and a $25,000 fine. Tampering with a witness is a Class 4 felony punishable by up to five years imprisonment and a $10,000 fine. Neb. lawmakers debate mandatory schooling until 18 GRANT SCHULTE The Associated Press LINCOLN — A Nebraska lawmaker argued Tuesday that his proposal to increase the minimum school dropout age to 18 would protect students’ long-term interests. The Legislature began debate on the bill that would require students to stay in school until they graduate, turn 18 or complete an educational program. The bill’s sponsor, Lexington Sen. John Wightman, said letting students drop out at 16 may have been acceptable 50 years ago, but now it severely limits a student’s job prospects. “The era in which a high school dropout can earn a living wage has ended in the United States,” he said. “Dropouts significantly diminish their chances to secure a good job and a promising future.” Nebraska increased its mandatory school attendance age from 16 to 18 in 2004, but the law includes an exception — students can drop out at 16 with permission from a parent or guardian. The Nebraska Council of School Administrators, the state Board of Education and the Nebraska Association of School Boards all support Wightman’s bill. Gov. Dave Heineman has also said state laws that allow students to drop out of school for farm work are outdated because of global competition and shifts in the economy. Education officials have said it’s rare for Nebraska minors to drop out of school for farm work, a reason cited in the past. State Sen. Greg Adams of York, a former high school teacher, has said he could “count on one hand” the number of those cases he has seen in his 31-year career. Sports HASTINGS TRIBUNE Thursday, Feb. 23, 2012 B1 HC women knock off Briar Cliff to advance down the stretch,” HC coach Jeff Dittman said of his team’s play Wednesday. “We are really playing well right now offensively. We had done that at times throughout the year, but we had never put it all together like we have right now. We’re taking good shots, we’re patient on offense and we’re putting the shots in. We had great balance with four scorers in double digits and that’s something we haven’t really had this year.” The Broncos struggled out of the gate Wednesday, falling into a 12-2 deficit with 13:40 left in the first half. Hastings had turned the ball over seven times up to that point. But Hastings rallied. The Broncos cut it to 25-23 with 6:25 left in the first half following a jumper by Laurel Zwiener. Briar Cliff, however, held on to the lead, staking a 38-32 advantage at halftime. Please see HC/page B3 Area teams going for district titles Lakers top Mavericks NO. 2 CONCORDIA UP NEXT FOR NO. 17 BRONCOS IN GPAC TOURNAMENT HASTINGS TRIBUNE sports@hastingstribune.com SIOUX CITY, Iowa — The Hastings College women’s basketball team posted another upset victory Wednesday, knocking off NAIA Division II No. 11 Briar Cliff 85-74 in the opening round of the postseason GPAC tournament. The Broncos followed up their blowout win over then-No. 4 Morningside on Saturday to end the regular season by traveling to Sioux City, Iowa, Wednesday to defeat fourthseeded Briar Cliff, avenging two previous losses to the Chargers this season. With the win, fifth-seeded Hastings advances to the GPAC semifinals Saturday at top-seeded and No. 2rated Concordia. Tipoff is 3 p.m. No. 5 Morningside, the No. 2 seed in the tournament, hosts No. 8 Northwestern, the third seed, in the other semifinal matchup Saturday. Saturday’s game for Hastings will mark the fourth meeting against a highly rated NAIA foe in 12 days — the Broncos fell to Concordia on Feb. 14, defeated Morningside Saturday and Briar Cliff Wednesday and will play Concordia again this weekend. “We made some really big plays I t’s a word that’s possibly posted in every locker room in Nebraska: State. Some high school programs are talented enough that getting to Lincoln is almost an afterthought. For other teams, like the Blue Hill girls basketball team, it’s a process. And that’s exactly how Mike the Bobcats, under head Zimmerman coach Tim Streff, have approached this season — one goal at a time. Now, Blue Hill (18-4) finds itself one game away from the state tournament. “We really focused on our conference this year and wanted to get back to winning that. We accomplished that and now we’re on to the second part of the goal, and that’s to reach the district finals,” Streff said. “Now it’s a one game tournament for us to get to state, and that’s exactly where we want to be.” At this time of the season, two things are certain. One, teams can only control what they can control. Blue Hill has done that by winning six consecutive Friday’s games featur- games. But also, ing Tribland teams the competition C1-1 DISTRICT will only continue At York to get tougher the Sandy Creek vs. Lincoln further a team Christian, 7 p.m. C1-5 DISTRICT advances. At Broken Bow The Bobcats will Minden vs. Valentine, 7 p.m. likely face their best C2-2 DISTRICT At Hastings High opponent yet, as Blue Hill vs. Centura, 7 p.m. they take on Class D2-3 DISTRICT C-2 No. 3 Centura At Minden Giltner vs. Litchfield, 7 p.m. (24-1) in the Class C-2, District 2 final at Hastings High Friday at 7 p.m. Streff said his team will have to be prepared for the Centurions’ outstanding guard play, led by Nebraska walk-on recruit Courtney Aitken. Their offense averages 51 points per contest. But it’s Centura’s defense that Blue Hill has to be concerned with. “They have a run-and-jump defense. We’ve seen some of that with St. Cecilia and Sandy Creek,” Streff said. “Going against a team like that, it’s about minimizing turnovers and getting good shot selection.” The Centurion defense gives up just fewer than 30 points per game. The Centurions have been able to hold opponents to fewer than 25 points six times this season. But that’s what you play the season for, to prepare for games like this. And Streff hopes that all the experience and practice his team has gone through will help. “I think we’ve learned a lot. We’re playing good ball right now and we’re pretty happy with where we’re at,” he said. “It’s just a process for us — getting better each week. I think this group of girls have done that each week. I see improvement in different areas — defense, shooting the ball and handling the ball. We are doing a good job of eliminating turnovers and that’s led to quite a few points.” Please see ZIMMERMAN/page B3 District finals LAURA BEAHM/Tribune Sandy Creek’s Ashlee Harms puts up a shot against Blue Hill’s Maci Coffey Jan. 19 at Sandy Creek. Blue Hill and Sandy Creek are both going for district titles Friday night, with Blue Hill playing Centura in the C2-2 District at Hastings High and Sandy Creek playing Lincoln Christian in the C1-1 District at York High School. Hummel’s 29 points lead Purdue past Nebraska CLIFF BRUNT The Associated Press WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. — Robbie Hummel didn’t take a shot for the first 8 minutes against Nebraska. But he let it rip the rest of the game. Hummel scored a seasonhigh 29 points to help the Boilermakers defeat Nebraska 83-65 on Wednesday night. The senior forward scored eight points in a 77-second span to push Purdue’s lead to 25-12 early, and the Boilermakers never led by fewer than seven after that flurry. Hummel made 10 of 18 field goals and 4 of 10 3-pointers while grabbing seven rebounds for the Boilermakers (18-10, 8-7 Big Ten), who won the first meeting between the schools since 1979. It was the second-highest point total of Hummel’s career. He was coming off a 24-point, 15-rebound effort against Michigan State, and he had scored 27 points two games before that against Northwestern. Hummel is averaging 24.8 points and 10.5 rebounds in his last four games and has located his shooting touch after struggling to find his way while recovering from ACL surgery on his right knee that caused him to miss last season. “I think it’s a combination of things,” Hummel said. “My knee is starting to feel better, and I’ve been able to practice more. I think it’s helped. I think making shots can be contagious, so once you see the ball go in a few times, it makes it easier to shoot the next.” Purdue coach Matt Painter said it’s more than just Hummel’s shot that has changed. “I think he’s quicker to the basketball,” Painter said. “I think he’s doing a little bit better in motion, and that allows him to let things come to him. He’s quicker to the ball on rebounds too.” D.J. Byrd scored 15 points after being suspended for Sunday’s game against Michigan State because he was arrested by Indiana State Police for public intoxication Feb. 17. He got a loud cheer when he entered the game, then a louder one when he drained a 3-pointer on his first shot. Byrd made 5 of 8 3-pointers and contributed several impressive hustle plays. He insisted that missing Sunday’s game gave him no extra motivation. “It’s just coming out and playing hard every single time,” he said. “Really, nothing different. Just still playing hard.” Please see NU/page B2 STEPHEN HAWKINS The Associated Press DALLAS — Andrew Bynum had a huge smile on his face after he grabbed a rebound of his own miss and got fouled on an attempted putback. Not long after making both those free throws that put the Los Angeles Lakers ahead to stay, Bynum was running after teammate Derek Fisher to give him a big hug following a 3-pointer. Bynum had 19 points and 14 rebounds, including several big plays in the final 5 1/2 minutes, as the Lakers hit the halfway point of their season with a 9691 victory over the defending NBA champion Dallas Mavericks on Wednesday night. “Andrew was great,” coach Mike Brown said. The free throws by Bynum broke an 82-all tie with 5:29 left and put the Lakers (20-13) ahead to stay after 13 ties and 10 lead changes. After the Mavericks failed to take advantage of a turnover by Kobe Bryant when Jason Terry gave it right back, Bynum was underneath the basket with the ball. But he instead passed it to Fisher in the left corner for a 3pointer. Bynum was smiling broadly when he chased down and hugged Fisher when Dallas called timeout. Fisher, whose driving short jumper with 3:41 left ended a 9-0 run and made it 89-82, had given Bynum a pep talk before the game. They were also thinking about the playoffs against Dallas last season. “We got swept last year, and it was on our minds,” Bynum said. There was also Bynum’s alleyoop dunk from Bryant with 1:05 left that stretched the lead to 9386. The Lakers then held on despite missing six consecutive free throws after that. Bryant missed two free throws with 37 seconds left. After Dirk Nowitzki’s tip-in got Dallas within 93-91, Pau Gasol was fouled and missed both of his free throws with 20 seconds left. “I’m a little overweight, I’m too young to have a heart attack,” Brown said after watching all those misses. But Matt Barnes grabbed the rebound after Gasol’s second miss and was quickly fouled himself. He ended the Lakers’ charity-line slump with two free throws. “That was big,” Fisher said. “The way last season ended, this game was big for a lot of us.” Gasol had 24 points for the Lakers, while Bryant and Fisher each had 15. Bryant shot 4 of 15 while being held 14 below his NBA-leading scoring average. BRENT DRINKUT, Journal & Courier/ AP Nebraska guard Bo Spencer (right) puts up a shot against Purdue guard Ryne Smith during their game Wednesday in West Lafayette, Ind. Scoreboard B2 Basketball NBA Standings EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct GB Philadelphia 20 14 .588 — New York 17 17 .500 3 Boston 15 17 .469 4 Toronto 10 23 .303 9 1/2 New Jersey 10 25 .286 10 1/2 Southeast Division W L Pct GB Miami 26 7 .788 — Orlando 22 12 .647 4 1/2 Atlanta 19 14 .576 7 Washington 7 26 .212 19 Charlotte 4 28 .125 21 1/2 Central Division W L Pct GB Chicago 27 8 .771 — Indiana 21 12 .636 5 Cleveland 13 18 .419 12 Milwaukee 13 20 .394 13 Detroit 11 24 .314 16 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct GB San Antonio 23 10 .697 — Dallas 21 13 .618 2 1/2 Houston 20 14 .588 3 1/2 Memphis 19 15 .559 4 1/2 New Orleans 8 25 .242 15 Northwest Division W L Pct GB Oklahoma City 26 7 .788 — Portland 18 16 .529 8 1/2 Denver 18 16 .529 8 1/2 Minnesota 17 17 .500 9 1/2 Utah 15 17 .469 10 1/2 Pacific Division W L Pct GB L.A. Clippers 20 11 .645 — L.A. Lakers 20 13 .606 1 Golden State 13 17 .433 6 1/2 Phoenix 14 20 .412 7 1/2 Sacramento 11 22 .333 10 Wednesday’s Games Oklahoma City 119, Boston 104 Indiana 102, Charlotte 88 New Orleans 89, Cleveland 84 Toronto 103, Detroit 93 Sacramento 115, Washington 107 Orlando 108, New Jersey 91 New York 99, Atlanta 82 Chicago 110, Milwaukee 91 Houston 93, Philadelphia 87 Minnesota 100, Utah 98 Golden State 106, Phoenix 104 L.A. Lakers 96, Dallas 91 L.A. Clippers 103, Denver 95 Thursday’s Games New York at Miami, 6 p.m. Orlando at Atlanta, 6:30 p.m. San Antonio at Denver, 8 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Oklahoma City, 8:30 p.m. NCAA Men’s Results Wednesday’s Games EAST Bloomsburg 80, East Stroudsburg 78, OT Boston U. 73, UMBC 52 CS Bakersfield 72, NJIT 70, OT Dayton 74, Duquesne 62 Delaware 76, Towson 69 Drexel 78, James Madison 61 Holy Cross 82, Army 51 Lafayette 84, Colgate 67 Lehigh 58, Navy 41 Maine 71, New Hampshire 58 Misericordia 76, FDU-Florham 73 NY Tech 60, Queens (NY) 58 Northeastern 85, George Mason 82, OT Ohio 88, Buffalo 77 Richmond 52, Saint Joseph’s 49 Scranton 82, Moravian 70 St. Bonaventure 89, Fordham 63 Syracuse 56, South Florida 48 Temple 80, La Salle 79, OT Wilkes 103, Eastern 98, OT SOUTH Carson-Newman 77, Lincoln Memorial 69 Catawba 87, Mars Hill 77 Charlotte 72, George Washington 62 Christian Brothers 91, New Orleans 71 High Point 98, Campbell 60 LSU 61, Georgia 53 Lander 74, Augusta St. 72 Longwood 85, Virginia-Wise 74 Marshall 66, Houston 58 Memphis 70, East Carolina 47 Morgan St. 91, Coppin St. 80 Nicholls St. 80, Cent. Arkansas 70 Old Dominion 65, Georgia St. 60, OT Sam Houston St. 50, Northwestern St. 37 Tennessee 73, Mississippi 60 Texas St. 62, SE Louisiana 61 Texas-Arlington 93, McNeese St. 89 The Citadel 62, Appalachian St. 51 Tusculum 70, Lenoir-Rhyne 54 VCU 63, UNC Wilmington 59 Vanderbilt 59, South Carolina 48 William & Mary 75, Hofstra 71 MIDWEST Akron 79, Bowling Green 68 Dordt 78, Concordia (Neb.) 57 Drake 78, S. Illinois 63 E. Michigan 48, N. Illinois 45 Hillsdale 84, Ferris St. 83, OT Indiana 75, NC Central 56 Indiana St. 59, Missouri St. 46 Iowa St. 72, Texas Tech 54 Marquette 82, Rutgers 65 Michigan St. 66, Minnesota 61 N. Iowa 64, Bradley 55 Notre Dame 71, West Virginia 44 Purdue 83, Nebraska 65 Toledo 72, Cent. Michigan 67 W. Michigan 78, Ball St. 61 Wichita St. 68, Illinois St. 55 SOUTHWEST Kansas 66, Texas A&M 58 Oklahoma 77, Oklahoma St. 64 Rice 83, UCF 74 SMU 64, Tulane 50 Stephen F. Austin 62, Lamar 52 Tarleton St. 67, Angelo St. 61 Texas A&M Commerce 75, Abilene Christian 72 UTEP 76, Southern Miss. 68, 2OT UTSA 86, Texas A&M-CC 82, OT E. Oregon 75, Corban 62 Oregon Tech 79, Coll. of Idaho 53 San Diego St. 67, Wyoming 58, OT TCU 65, Air Force 62 UC Riverside 63, CS Northridge 61 UNLV 75, Boise St. 58 Warner Pacific 82, S. Oregon 78, OT FAR WEST E. Oregon 75, Corban 62 Long Beach St. 70, UC Santa Barbara 58 Northwest U. 92, Concordia (Ore.) 83 Oregon Tech 79, Coll. of Idaho 53 San Diego St. 67, Wyoming 58, OT TCU 65, Air Force 62 UC Riverside 63, CS Northridge 61 UNLV 75, Boise St. 58 Warner Pacific 82, S. Oregon 78, OT TOURNAMENT Centennial Conference Tournament First Round Washington (Md.) 56, Johns Hopkins 53 Landmark Conference Tournament Semifinals Juniata 77, Susquehanna 58 Liberty League Semifinals Hobart 73, Union (NY) 53 MCC Tournament First Round Grace (Ind.) 76, Taylor 53 Indiana Wesleyan 74, Goshen 66 Marian, Ind. 72, Spring Arbor 52 St. Francis (Ind.) 67, Huntington 66 MIAA Tournament Semifinals Adrian 59, Trine 50 Hope 87, Calvin 80 MIAC Tournament Quarterfinals St. John’s (Minn.) 47, Augsburg 45 St. Olaf 77, Bethel (Minn.) 58 New Jersey Athletic Conference Semifinals William Paterson 72, Kean 56 UMAC Tournament Semifinals Bethany Lutheran 84, Minn.-Morris 75 Northwestern (Minn.) 79, St. Scholastica 72 WHAC Tournament Quarterfinals Aquinas 75, Indiana Tech 64 Concordia (Mich.) 79, Madonna 65 Lourdes 67, Cornerstone 58 Siena Heights 103, Davenport 65 WIAC Tournament First Round Wis.-La Crosse 57, Wis.-Platteville 56 Wis.-Stevens Pt. 62, Wis.-Superior 52 NCAA Women’s Results Wednesday’s Games EAST Albany (NY) 69, Binghamton 37 American U. 62, Bucknell 59 Army 65, Holy Cross 62 Bloomsburg 78, East Stroudsburg 63 Boston U. 61, UMBC 56 Catholic 47, Scranton 40 Colgate 69, Lafayette 60 Gwynedd Mercy 82, Marywood 78, 2OT Hartford 49, Stony Brook 42 Haverford 55, Ursinus 41 Kings (Pa.) 55, Eastern 53 La Salle 69, George Washington 47 Lehigh 57, Navy 48 Misericordia 62, DeSales 46 NY Tech 82, Queens (NY) 51 New Hampshire 65, Maine 53 St. Bonaventure 52, Fordham 45 Temple 75, Saint Joseph’s 65 UMass 68, Rhode Island 57 SOUTH Arkansas St. 56, W. Kentucky 53 Benedict 63, LeMoyne-Owen 51 Carson-Newman 68, Lincoln Memorial 62 Catawba 62, Mars Hill 60 Coppin St. 68, Morgan St. 62 FAU 41, South Alabama 40 Furman 72, Wofford 53 Lander 75, Augusta St. 68 Newberry 64, Brevard 59 Richmond 59, Duquesne 45 SC-Aiken 65, Francis Marion 63 Samford 58, Chattanooga 48 Tusculum 61, Lenoir-Rhyne 52, OT MIDWEST Cent. Michigan 73, N. Illinois 50 Dayton 83, Xavier 54 Ferris St. 61, Hillsdale 51 Kansas St. 53, Oklahoma St. 50 Kansas Wesleyan 65, McPherson 40 Miami (Ohio) 84, Akron 76 Ohio 60, Bowling Green 56 Saint Louis 70, Charlotte 69, OT Seattle 81, Chicago St. 45 W. Michigan 67, Ball St. 65 SOUTHWEST Abilene Christian 93, Texas A&M Commerce 55 Angelo St. 70, Tarleton St. 63 Cent. Arkansas 67, Nicholls St. 47 McNeese St. 70, Texas-Arlington 50 Sam Houston St. 80, Northwestern St. 64 Stephen F. Austin 61, Lamar 51 TCU 61, Air Force 31 Texas A&M-Kingsville 63, Texas Woman’s 58 Texas St. 67, SE Louisiana 63 UALR 52, North Texas 39 UTSA 72, Texas A&M-CC 58 FAR WEST Cal St.-Fullerton 66, UC Riverside 43 New Mexico 53, Colorado St. 45 San Jose St. 70, Nevada 63 UNLV 75, Boise St. 66 TOURNAMENT Appalachian Athletic Conference Quarterfinals Milligan 68, Bluefield 55 Tenn. Wesleyan 86, Columbia (SC) 63 Union (Ky.) 66, Reinhardt 63 Va. Intermont 75, Montreat 66 CUNY Athletic Conference Semifinals Baruch 74, Hunter 51 Brooklyn 64, Lehman 58 Northern Athletics Conference Quarterfinals Wis. Lutheran 74, Benedictine (Ill.) 56 Dominican (Ill.) 72, Marian (Wis.) 56 Milwaukee Engineering 59, Concordia (Ill.) 40 Concordia (Wis.) 56, Lakeland 44 UMAC Tournament Semifinals Martin Luther 69, Bethany Lutheran 60 Minn.-Morris 71, St. Scholastica 63 Girls District Tournaments B-5 DISTRICT At Kearney Tuesday, Feb. 21 Aurora 38, Hastings 37 Thursday, Feb. 23 Aurora vs. Holdrege, 6 p.m. Lexington vs. Northwest, 7:45 p.m. Friday, Feb. 24 Championship, 7 p.m. C1-1 DISTRICT At York Friday, Feb. 24 Sandy Creek vs. Lincoln Christian, 7 p.m. C1-5 DISTRICT At Broken Bow Friday, Feb. 24 Minden vs. Valentine, 7 p.m. C2-2 DISTRICT At Hastings High Friday, Feb. 24 Blue Hill vs. Centura, 7 p.m. D2-3 DISTRICT At Minden Friday, Feb. 24 Giltner vs. Litchfield, 7 p.m. Boys District Tournaments B-5 SUBDISTRICT At Kearney Saturday, Feb. 25 Cozad vs. Holdrege, 5 p.m. Hastings vs. Lexington, 6:45 p.m. Monday, Feb. 27 Cozad/Holdrege winner vs. Aurora, 6 p.m. Hastings/Lexington winner vs. Northwest, 7:45 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 28 Championship, 7 p.m. C1-2 SUBDISTRICT At Seward Monday, Feb. 20 Fairbury 60, Fillmore Central 32 Tuesday, Feb. 21 Fairbury 50, Milford 39 Wilber-Clatonia 58, Sandy Creek 38 Thursday, Feb. 23 Fairbury vs. Wilber-Clatonia, 7 p.m. C1-9 SUBDISTRICT At Hastings College Monday, Feb. 20 Carolina 60 23 26 11 57 WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division GP W L OT Pts Detroit 61 41 18 2 84 St. Louis 60 36 17 7 79 Nashville 60 35 19 6 76 Chicago 61 33 21 7 73 Columbus 60 18 35 7 43 Northwest Division GP W L OT Pts Vancouver 60 38 16 6 82 Calgary 60 28 23 9 65 Colorado 61 30 27 4 64 Minnesota 59 26 24 9 61 Edmonton 59 23 30 6 52 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts San Jose 58 31 20 7 69 Phoenix 60 30 21 9 69 Los Angeles 61 27 22 12 66 Dallas 60 30 26 4 64 Anaheim 60 25 25 10 60 Wednesday’s Games Ottawa 5, Washington 2 Boston 4, St. Louis 2 Colorado 4, Los Angeles 1 Thursday’s Games San Jose at Toronto, 6 p.m. Anaheim at Carolina, 6 p.m. Minnesota at Florida, 6:30 p.m. Vancouver at Detroit, 6:30 p.m. St. Louis at Nashville, 7 p.m. Tampa Bay at Winnipeg, 7:30 p.m. Dallas at Chicago, 7:30 p.m. Phoenix at Calgary, 8 p.m. Philadelphia at Edmonton, 8:30 p.m. Friday’s Games Vancouver at New Jersey, 6 p.m. N.Y. Rangers at N.Y. Islanders, 6 p.m. Montreal at Washington, 6 p.m. Colorado at Columbus, 6 p.m. Boston at Buffalo, 6:30 p.m. Minnesota at Dallas, 7:30 p.m. Hastings St. Cecilia 61, Gibbon 46 Tuesday, Feb. 21 Kearney Catholic 53, Adams Central 46, OT Minden 53, Hastings St. Cecilia 45 Thursday, Feb. 23 Kearney Catholic vs. Minden, 7 p.m. C2-3 SUBDISTRICT At Sandy Creek Tuesday, Feb. 21 Sutton 81, Superior 15 Thayer Central 62, Blue Hill 37 Thursday, Feb. 23 Sutton vs. Thayer Central, 7:45 p.m. C2-4 SUBDISTRICT At Aurora Monday, Feb. 20 Wood River 51, Centura 49 Tuesday, Feb. 21 Ravenna 106, Wood River 43 Shelton 41, Doniphan-Trumbull 30 Thursday, Feb. 23 Ravenna vs. Shelton, 7 p.m. D1-1 SUBDISTRICT At Wilber-Clatonia Tuesday, Feb. 21 Exeter/Milligan 64, Diller-Odell 46 Pawnee City 61, Friend 25 Thursday, Feb. 23 Exeter/Milligan vs. Pawnee City, 7 p.m. D1-2 SUBDISTRICT At York Monday, Feb. 20 Heartland 57, Harvard 40 Tuesday, Feb. 21 Bruning-Davenport/Shickley 49, Heartland 40 Deshler 49, McCool Junction 35 Thursday, Feb. 23 BDS vs. Deshler, 7:30 p.m. D1-9 SUBDISTRICT At Minden Monday, Feb. 20 Wilcox-Hildreth 45, Franklin 30 Tuesday, Feb. 21 Amherst 41, Litchfield 34 Kenesaw 62, Wilcox-Hildreth 50 Thursday, Feb. 23 Amherst vs. Kenesaw, 7 p.m. D2-7 SUBDISTRICT At St. Cecilia Monday, Feb. 20 Lawrence-Nelson 31, Red Cloud 21 Tuesday, Feb. 21 Giltner 44, Lawrence-Nelson 18 Heartland Lutheran 62, Silver Lake 43 Thursday, Feb. 23 Giltner vs. Heartland Lutheran, 7 p.m. GF 191 152 168 191 142 GA 141 121 155 179 198 GF 195 143 155 131 159 GA 147 161 169 154 178 GF 170 157 129 155 154 GA 148 151 135 167 171 Baseball Women’s Basketball Tourney Quarterfinals Wednesday, Feb. 22 No. 1 Concordia University 93, No. 8 Dakota Wesleyan University 63 No. 5 Hastings College 85, No. 4 Briar Cliff University 74 No. 3 Northwestern College 78, No. 6 Doane College 44 No. 2 Morningside College 83, No. 7 Mount Marty College 77 Semifinals Saturday, Feb. 25 Hastings at Briar Cliff, 3 p.m. Northwestern at Morningside, 3 p.m. Championship Tuesday, Feb. 28 Semifinal winners American League CLEVELAND INDIANS—Agreed to terms with INF Cristian Guzman on a minor league contract. DETROIT TIGERS—Agreed to terms with LHP Matt Hoffman, LHP Andy Oliver, LHP Adam Wilk, INF Hernan Perez and OF Andy Dirks on one-year contracts. KANSAS CITY ROYALS—Agreed to terms with RHP Louis Coleman and RHP Greg Holland one-year contracts. NEW YORK YANKEES—Agreed to terms with RHP David Aardsma on a one-year contract. Placed LHP Pedro Feliciano on the 60-day DL. TEXAS RANGERS—Named Tony Fernandez special assistant to the general manager. TORONTO BLUE JAYS—Agreed to terms with RHP Rick VandenHurk on a one-year contract. Placed RHP Alan Farina on the 60-day DL. National League CINCINNATI BENGALS—Named Jim McNally consultant. PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES—Promoted Marti Wolever to assistant general manager, amateur scouting. Hockey Men’s Basketball Dordt College 78, Concordia University 57 Midland University 58, Morningside College 57 Briar Cliff University 51, Nebraska Wesleyan University 41 Northwestern College 85, Mount Marty College 56 Baseball Doane College 24, Manhattan Christian College 7 Hockey National Hockey League CAROLINA HURRICANES—Agreed to terms with F Tuomo Ruutu on a four-year contract extension. Recalled G Mike Murphy from Charlotte (AHL). DALLAS STARS—Placed C Jake Dowell on injured reserve, retroactive to Feb. 21. Recalled F Matt Fraser from Texas (AHL). NASHVILLE PREDATORS—Reassigned F Chris Mueller to Milwaukee (AHL). NEW YORK ISLANDERS—Sent D Ty Wishart to Bridgeport (AHL). PHOENIX COYOTES—Acquired C Antoine Vermette from Columbus for G Curtis McElhinney, a 2012 second-round draft pick and a 2013 fifth-round draft pick. WASHINGTON CAPITALS—Recalled F Keith Aucoin from Hershey (AHL). Soccer NHL Standings GF 161 168 198 186 140 GA 118 162 181 160 176 GF 194 190 181 150 160 GA 134 185 184 176 167 GF 144 157 161 166 GA 162 175 173 197 Major League Soccer CHIVAS USA—Signed F Cesar Romero, MF Peter Vagenas and D Rauwsham McKenzie. MONTREAL IMPACT—Announced the retirement of D-MF Simon Gatti, who will coach the U14 team of the Impact Academy. PHILADELPHIA UNION—Signed D Sheanon Williams. Waived MF Nizar Khalfan. SPORTING KANSAS CITY—Signed MF Graham Zusi. Waived D Daneil Cyrus. VANCOUVER WHITECAPS—Signed D Greg Klazura. College NORTHEAST CONFERENCE—Promoted Kelly Webb to assistant commissioner for compliance and Ralph Ventre to director of communications and social media. CALIFORNIA—Named Ashwin Puri associate athletic director for sales, marketing and service. NEW MEXICO—Promoted Jeff Mills to defensive coordinator. Named Kevin Cosgrove inside lineback- NU: Purdue cruises past Nebraska 83-65 Continued from page B1 It was a much-needed win for the Boilermakers, who were reeling after their 76-62 loss to Michigan State. The Boilermakers were just as pleased with how they won. Purdue has been involved in several close games recently and was relieved to avoid one Wednesday. “We were talking about it on the bench, how it feels like it’s been forever since we’ve been able to take it easy at the end,” Hummel said. Bo Spencer scored 14 of his 19 points in the second half for Nebraska (12-14, 4-11), which has lost five of six. Hummel finished the first half with 18 points on 7-for-10 shooting as the Boilermakers led 47-30 at the break. Purdue shot 63 percent before the break and made 7 of 15 3-pointers. Nebraska shot 48 percent in the first half yet wasn’t close. The Boilermakers continued to roll in the second half, opening with a quick 8-3 run to extend their lead to 55-33. Purdue’s fans began leaving with just under 4 minutes to play, and the only remaining drama came when they booed Nebraska for continually fouling and sending Purdue to the free throw line with the game out of reach. Lewis Jackson had 13 points and five assists, Ryne Smith scored 12 points and made 4 of 8 3-pointers and Terone Johnson had 11 points and five rebounds. Purdue shot 55 percent and made 13 of 29 3-pointers. “They spread it out so well,” Nebraska coach Doc Sadler said. “When they’re making shots like they were making, they’re not going to lose many basketball games.” Painter said the Boilermakers were smart about the shots they took, which hasn’t always been the case. “Offensively, we did a good job of making the extra pass and knowing where the shooters were on the court,” he said. “I thought the guys did a good job of taking some rhythm shots and taking shots within the offense.” Painter said his team played as though it understood that it needs wins to build its NCAA tournament resume. A home loss to Nebraska could have done severe damage to Purdue’s chances. “I thought they came out and they were patiently aggressive,” Painter said. Former Virginia lacrosse player faces 26 years STEVE SZKOTAK The Associated Press CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — In a trial that revealed the lives of elite athletes at a top-notch school, a former University of Virginia lacrosse player faces 26 years in prison for the beating death of his former girlfriend amid a swirl of betrayal, distrust, anger and a culture of drinking. The prosecutor who meticulously and methodically constructed the case against George Huguely V in the May 3, 2010, beating death of Yeardley Love spoke glumly late Wednesday about a trial that put on display a much-diminished athlete and the horrific injuries he inflicted upon the young woman he professed to love. It played out before two families shattered by the experience. “There’s nothing to make good the terrible tragedy done to the Love family,” prosecutor Dave Chapman said under an umbrella in a drenching rain outside the courthouse. “We hope they feel some solace.” Jurors deliberated about nine hours before returning a verdict on the murder count, then recommended that Huguely serve 25 years. The maximum prison term for second-degree murder is 40 years. The 24-year-old defendant from Chevy Chase, Md., could have received a life term if convicted of first-degree murder. He also was found guilty of grand larceny, with the jury recommending one year in prison. Circuit Judge Edward Hogshire set an April court date for sentencing matters before formal sentencing, expected to be held in summer. He is not bound by the jury’s recommendations, but Virginia judges typically heed jurors’ wishes. Huguely was found not guilty of four other charges, including breaking and entering and burglary. Jurors could have returned lesser verdicts of involuntary or voluntary manslaughter. Huguely, pale and 30 or more pounds lighter from his playing days on U.Va.’s nationally recog- nized lacrosse team, cast his gaze downward during sentencing as Love’s mother and sister told jurors of their lives since Love’s death. Sharon Love tearfully testified that her daughter’s death was an “unbearable” tug on her life. “Every year that goes by I’d like to know what she’d be doing now,” she said. Love’s sister, Lexie, 28, described painful reminders of her kid sister’s absence. “A song will come on the radio and I’ll just burst out in tears,” she said, sobbing. Her sister’s death, she said, “left a large hole and nothing will fill it.” In a statement, the Love family said the passing of time has not eased the sorrow of her loss. “Our hearts burst with pride when we think of Yeardley’s accomplishments but our hearts melt when we remember her kindness and grace,” the Loves said in a statement. The defense did not present any witnesses at the sentencing hearing. Members of the Huguely family Tribland 158 181 Transactions GPAC EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts N.Y. Rangers 58 38 15 5 81 New Jersey 59 35 20 4 74 Philadelphia 59 33 19 7 73 Pittsburgh 60 34 21 5 73 N.Y. Islanders 60 25 27 8 58 Northeast Division GP W L OT Pts Boston 58 36 20 2 74 Ottawa 62 32 22 8 72 Toronto 60 29 24 7 65 Buffalo 60 26 27 7 59 Montreal 61 24 27 10 58 Southeast Division GP W L OT Pts Florida 58 27 20 11 65 Winnipeg 62 29 26 7 65 Washington 60 29 26 5 63 Tampa Bay 59 27 26 6 60 HASTINGS TRIBUNE Thursday, Feb. 23, 2012 declined to speak as they left the courthouse. “No person is the sum of the worst decision he ever made,” one of Huguely’s defense attorneys, Rhonda Quagliana, told jurors before they began deliberating his punishment. After comforting Huguely inside the courthouse, co-defense counsel Francis McQ. Lawrence said he was disappointed by the jury’s verdict but said he was proud to represent Huguely “in his fight for fairness over the last couple years.” “He has the support of his loving family,” Lawrence said, declining questions. “He’s displayed amazing resilience and courage.” He added. “I think those in the courthouse saw his remorse during various times during the trial.” The verdict was returned to a somber courtroom. Huguely stood ramrod straight in an ill-fitting jacket, flanked by his attorneys, and appeared stoic as the verdict was read. Some sobs could be heard among the Love and Huguely families. THURSDAY Area Schedule Prep boys basketball Prep girls basketball SUBDISTRICT tournaments (see left for Osborne at Smith Center Prep Wrestling complete schedules of Tribland teams) Smith Center at state tournament Osborne at Smith Center FRIDAY Area Schedule schedules of Tribland teams) Prep boys basketball Smith Center at Southern Cloud Osborne at Smith Center Prep Wrestling Smith Center at Southern Cloud Prep girls basketball Smith Center at state tournament District Finals (see left for complete TV/Radio broadcasts Thursday’s television AUTO RACING 9 a.m. ESPN2 — NASCAR, Nationwide Series, practice for Drive4COPD 300, at Daytona Beach, Fla. 11 a.m. SPEED — NASCAR, Truck Series, practice for NextEra Energy Resources 250, at Daytona Beach, Fla. 1 p.m. SPEED — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Duel at Daytona, at Daytona Beach, Fla. 5:30 p.m. SPEED — NASCAR, Truck Series, final practice for NextEra Energy Resources 250, at Daytona Beach, Fla. GOLF 9:30 a.m. TGC — LPGA, Women’s Champions, first round, at Singapore (same-day tape) 1 p.m. TGC — PGA Tour-WGC, Accenture Match Play Championship, second round matches, at Marana, Ariz. 5:30 p.m. TGC — PGA Tour, Mayakoba Classic, first round, at Playa del Carmen, Mexico (same-day tape) MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 6 p.m. ESPN — Duke at Florida St. ESPN2 — Alabama at Arkansas 8 p.m. ESPN — Louisville at Cincinnati ESPN2 — Wisconsin at Iowa 9:30 p.m. FSN — Stanford at Colorado 10 p.m. ESPN2 — BYU at Gonzaga NBA BASKETBALL 6 p.m. TNT — New York at Miami 8:30 p.m. TNT — L.A. Lakers at Oklahoma City WOMEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 5 p.m. BTN — Purdue at Michigan 7 p.m. BTN — Minnesota at Ohio State Thursday’s radio WOMEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 6 p.m. KHAS 1230 — Nebraska at Michigan State PREP BOYS BASKETBALL 7 p.m. KLIQ 94.5 — Minden vs. Kearney Catholic at C1-9 Subdistrict finals KXPN 1460, KICS 1550 — Kenesaw vs. Amherst at D1-9 Subdistrict finals 7:30 p.m. KRFS 103.9 — BruningDavenport/Shickley vs. Deshler Friday’s television AUTO RACING 10 a.m. SPEED — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, practice for Daytona 500, at Daytona Beach, Fla. 11:30 p.m. SPEED — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, practice for Daytona 500, at Daytona Beach, Fla. 1 p.m. ESPN2 — NASCAR, Nationwide Series, pole qualifying for Drive4COPD 300, at Daytona Beach, Fla. 3 p.m. SPEED — NASCAR, Truck Series, pole qualifying for NextEra Energy Resources 250, at Daytona Beach, Fla. 6:30 p.m. SPEED — NASCAR, Truck Series, NextEra Energy Resources 250, at Daytona Beach, Fla. BOXING 8 p.m. ESPN2 — Junior lightweights, Juan Carlos Burgos (28-1-0) vs. Cristobal Cruz (39-12-3), at Los Angeles GOLF 9:30 a.m. TGC — LPGA, Women’s Champions, second round, at Singapore (same-day tape) 1 p.m. TGC — PGA Tour-WGC, Accenture Match Play Championship, third round matches, at Marana, Ariz. 5:30 p.m. TGC — PGA Tour, Mayakoba Classic, second round, at Playa del Carmen, Mexico (same-day tape) MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 6 p.m. ESPN2 — Loyola (Md.) at Rider 8 p.m. ESPN — Marquette at West Virginia MEN’S COLLEGE HOCKEY 6:30 p.m. NBCSN — Boston U. at Vermont 9 p.m. NBCSN — North Dakota at Denver NBA BASKETBALL 8 p.m. TNT — Exhibition, Rising Stars Challenge, at Orlando, Fla. WOMEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 6:30 p.m. FSN — Baylor at Kansas Friday’s radio PREP GIRLS BASKETBALL 6:50 p.m. KKPR 98.9 — Centura vs. Blue Hill at C2-2 district finals 6:45 p.m. KLIQ 94.5 — Giltner vs. Litchfield at D24 district finals 7 p.m. KRFS 103.9 — Sandy Creek vs. Lincoln Christian USHL HOCKEY 6:45 p.m. KXPN 1460, KICS 1550 — Sioux Falls at Tri-City Local FLAMES SOFTBALL TRYOUT The Flames of Nebraska girls competitive softball team is holding tryouts at the Hastings Family YMCA Monday, March 5 and March 12. All sessions begin at 5:30 p.m. Players may try out for the 10-and-under team or the 16/18-andunder team. There also will be tryouts at the Kearney Sunrise Middle School Sunday and March 4 at 2:45 p.m. Nation DOLPHINS FANS LOBBY FOR MANNING JUPITER, Fla. — Miami Dolphins fans want the team to acquire Peyton Manning, and they’re using a billboard and website to campaign. The manningtomiami.com site is advertised on a billboard along an Interstate near the Dolphins’ complex. Under an image of Manning about to throw a pass in a Dolphins uniform, the sign reads “MANNING TO MIAMI.com.” The website encourages fans to fill out a form urging the Dolphins to bring Manning to Miami. A list of those supporting the campaign will be given to the Dolphins and Manning’s advisers, the site says. Manning has spent the past five months recovering from his third neck surgery in less than two years, and it’s unclear whether he’ll remain with the Indianapolis Colts. NO RIFT BETWEEN TEBOW, QUINN INDIANAPOLIS — Broncos coach John Fox says Brady Quinn’s apology to Tim Tebow shows the two have a close relationship Fox’s comments came Thursday at the NFL’s annual scouting combine in Indianapolis. Quinn reportedly said Tebow had a “lot of luck” and that the way Tebow expressed his faith didn’t seem humble to him. He later apologized. Fox say there is no rift between the two Denver quarterbacks. He says the two were good teammates and attributes the comments to getting “lost in translation.” Fox also believes the apology presents a more accurate portrayal of Quinn that the comments attributed to him. With only two quarterbacks on the roster, Fox says the team will look to add two more quarterbacks before training camp. BRAVES P HANSON BACK IN CAMP KISSIMMEE, Fla. — Atlanta Braves pitcher Tommy Hanson is back in camp after his concussion from a car wreck. Hanson said Thursday his headache is gone, but he’s still sore and bruised. The one-car accident happened while he was on the way to the first workout for pitchers and catchers. He hopes to be back on the field within a week and says he doesn’t expect the layoff to hamper his preparations for the season. The right-hander was injured Monday when a tire blew, sending his car careening down an embankment. He’s still a bit fuzzy about the details but says he may have hit his head on the roof of the vehicle. He was wearing his seatbelt, which left him with a bruise on his nonthrowing shoulder. The Associated Press Sports HASTINGS TRIBUNE Thursday, Feb. 23, 2012 B3 HC: Broncos advance Continued from page B1 Hastings trailed 52-47 after a bucket by HC’s Cami Bruckman with 12:51 left to play, then Briar Cliff expanded its lead to 59-47 with 10:49 left. That’s when the Broncos mounted their final rally. Hastings used an 8-0 run to pull to within 59-55 with 9:14 left in the game. The team inched closer at 65-63 following a pair of free throws by Sophia McDermott at the 5:09 mark, then took the lead 66-65 on a 3-pointer from Kayli Rageth with 4:30 left to play. Hastings didn’t trail again. Rageth hit another 3-pointer at the 3:28 mark, stretching the Bronco lead to 71-67, then McDermott hit a 3-pointer as HC led 7470. Melissa Thompson followed by stealing the ball away from a Charger defender on the rebound after Hastings missed a shot inside the paint and laying it in, giving the Broncos a 76-70 lead with 2:03 remaining. The Chargers hit a pair of free throws on the following possession, pulling to within four points, but then Hastings scored on backto-back possessions — layups by Brittney Wong and Rageth — to build an 80-72 lead with less than one minute remaining in the game. Hastings shot better than 64 percent from the field in the second half, scoring 53 points in the final 20 minutes to rally for the win. “To get 36 points out of two of our post players, that was huge. Melissa really moved well without the ball and Alicia (Statler) and everyone did a great job of finding her,” Dittman said. “We still turned the ball over a lot, but we were able to handle the pressure better and get some good shots. Kayli and Sophia hit some big 3s down the stretch.” Statler and Thompson scored 18 points apiece to lead Hastings. It was a season-high for Thompson, who tallied 12 of those points in the second half. Statler also added 13 rebounds to post her 15th double-double of the season. Rageth finished with 13 points and McDermott tallied 11 points and four assists in the win. The Broncos shot better than 51 percent from the field for the game but did turn the ball over 24 times in the contest. Briar Cliff hit on just 30 percent of its field goals in the second half and finished shooting 39 percent from the floor in the game. With the win, Hastings improved to 21-9 on the season. Briar Cliff fell to 22-9 overall. Despite the loss, the Chargers will likely earn an at-large bid into the NAIA national tournament, which begins March 7 in Sioux City, Iowa. “We’ve got another huge hurdle on Saturday, but we’ve been competitive with Concordia in our two previous meetings,” Dittman said. “They have done a great job defending us, holding us below 60 points in both games. We have to go back to work now because we’re going to face another physical, pressing team. But right now we’re happy. We’re playing well at the right time of the year.” LAURA BEAHM/Tribune Blue Hill’s Lexie Himmelberg (left) fights Sandy Creek’s Mikaela Shaw for a loose ball during their game Jan. 19 at Sandy Creek. Blue Hill and Sandy Creek are both going for district titles Friday night, with Blue Hill playing Centura in the C2-2 District at Hastings High and Sandy Creek playing Lincoln Christian in the C1-1 District at York High School. Zimmerman: Blue Hill one win from state Continued from page B1 The Bobcats know they’re the underdog going into the district final, but their goal is still intact. Now, it’s just a matter of going out there and grabbing it. That’s why basketball is fun this time of year, because teams play harder and with more incentive. “You would always like to have a shoe in. I would obviously like to be in the situation where we could either win or get a wild card,” Streff said. “But, the wild card is not an option and that’s not a problem. We’re going to go in fairly relaxed in this game. Obviously, they’re the favorite. I think the girls are looking forward to it.” ELSEWHERE AROUND TRIBLAND While their trips to state nearly are already locked up, both the Sandy Creek and Minden girls basketball teams still look to add a district title to their already impressive resumes. Minden (19-2), the top ranked team in Class C-1 by the Omaha World-Herald and the No. 2 team in the C-1 wild-card points standings, will travel to Broken Bow to take on Valentine (18-6) Friday at 7 p.m.. The Whippets should have a good idea of what they’re up against, as they have already beaten Valentine twice this season. The two teams first met back on Jan. 7 in Minden, where the Whippets handed the Badgers a 68-53 loss. They met again in the Southwest Conference tournament Jan. 28, where Minden came away with another doubledigit victory. No. 5 Sandy Creek will look to take the Class C-1, District 1 championship when it battles Lincoln Christian at York High School Friday at 7 p.m. The Cougars don’t have a wild-card berth guaranteed, but their chances look good if they were upset by Lincoln Christian (1013). Sandy Creek (19-2) currently sits third in the C-1 wild-card points standings. Unlike Minden, the Cougars haven’t seen their opponent yet this season. But there is reason for optimism in Fairfield, because Lincoln Christian doesn’t offer too much of a threat. The Crusaders have won two straight games in their subdistrict tournament to earn their trip to the district championship. But they’ve also suffered through a stretch this season where they won only two games out of nine. Lincoln Christian has faced a solid schedule, but so has Sandy Creek. The other Tribland team battling for a chance to get to state is Giltner (15-7). The Hornets are on a hot streak as of late, winning five games in a row to get to the Class D-2, District 4 championship against Litchfield at Minden High School Friday at 7 p.m. The Hornets should be the favorite in their first meeting against Litchfield (12-10), which also comes in on a win streak. But of the Trojan’s 12 wins this season, only two have been against teams with winning records. Mike Zimmerman is a Tribune sports writer. He can be reached at 402461-1271 or mzimmerman@hastingstribune.com. LAURA BEAHM/Tribune Minden’s Bailey Petersen puts up a shot against St. Cecilia in C1-9 Subdistricts final Feb. 16 at Lynn Farrell Arena. Public Notices NOTICE OF ORGANIZATION NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that B INVESTMENTS, L.L.C., was organized under the laws of the State of Nebraska, pursuant to a certificate of organization filed with the Nebraska Secretary of State on January 31, 2012. The company shall have a designated office located at 604 South Burlington, Hastings, Nebraska 68901. The purpose for which the company is organized is to engage in any lawful act or activities for which a limited liability company may be organized under the laws of the State of Nebraska. The company commenced its existence on January 31, 2012, and the period of duration is perpetual. The affairs of the limited liability company shall be conducted by its Managers. Glenn C. Selko, Organizer Julia L. McCoy, Organizer Richard L. Alexander, #16735 Law Office of Richard L. Alexander 322 North Minnesota Avenue P.O. Box 2064 Hastings, Nebraska 68902-2064 February 9, 16, 23, 2012 School Board Proceedings Kenesaw Public School The Kenesaw Board of Education was called into regular session at 7:00 p.m. on Monday, February 13, 2012. Action was taken on the following: -Approved the minutes of the January 9, 2012, regular meeting as amended. -Approved the Treasurerʼs Report. -Approved the February, 2012, Claims in the amount of $292,231.18. -Recognized Kenesaw Education Association as the bargaining unit for negotiations. -Tabled the mid-year status report on the School Improvement Plan. -Tabled the approval to purchase new computers with REAP Grant Funds. The next meeting is set for March 12, 2012, at 7:00 p.m. AS Central Services OCIO $ 443.80 Ask Supply Company 499.21 BCN Telecom, Inc. 52.02 Bemanʼs Appliance Service 247.31 Best Buy Business Advantage Account 359.96 Big G ACE 11368 346.34 Bill Nabower 145.00 Brandi Eiseman 16.87 Business World Products 491.29 Cengage Learning 50.50 Childrenʼs BOMC 12.48 Christine Osler 7.50 City of Hastings 91.00 ConServ Flag Company 40.58 Culligan of Hastings 35.05 Curt Tomasevicz 200.00 Dana F. Cole & Company, LLP 80.00 Dell Marketing LP 2,345.00 Educational Service Unit #9 19,516.48 Family Medical Center of Hastings 312.00 Notice of Meeting TAKE NOTICE: The Adams County Planning and Zoning Commission will be meeting in regular session Monday, March 5, 2012, at 6:00 p.m. Said meeting will be held in the Hastings City Council Chambers, 220 North Hastings Avenue, Hastings, Nebraska. An agenda is available at the Adams County Zoning office, 500 North Denver Avenue, Hastings, Nebraska. For non-English-speaking attendees wishing to arrange for a sign language or foreign language interpreter, please call or fax the County Attorneyʼs Office at Phone: 402-4617240 or Fax: 402-4617241. For hearing-impaired individuals or individuals with other special needs call or fax the County Clerkʼs Office at Phone: 402-461-7107, TTY: 402461-7166 or Fax: 402-4617185. When requesting an interpreter or services for the hearing impaired, please provide at least forty-eight (48) hours advance notice to allow time for making the accommodations. Judy Mignery Zoning Director February 23, 2012 GE Money Bank/Amazon 100.00 Glenwood Telephone 9.95 Hi-Line Motors 350.46 Industrial Health Services 42.40 J W Pepper 225.99 Jim Arrowood 90.00 Kelli Bauer 88.44 Ken Osler 7.50 Kenesaw Fire Department 100.00 Kenesaw Market 141.76 Kenesaw Motor Company 350.15 Kenesaw Public School 183,346.14 Kenesaw Public School 577.66 Krull Agency, Inc. 58,645.00 Matheson-Linweld 386.13 McFeelyʼs 166.10 Mid-West 3D Solutions, LLC 3,000.00 Nebraska Council of School Administrators 130.00 Nebraska Truck Center, Inc. 2,201.94 Nebraska U.C. Fund 3,649.00 Nebraska/Central Equipment, Inc. 168.82 OCE Imagistics 242.68 Pleasanton Public School 450.00 Pulver Plumbing & Radiant Heating 100.00 School Specialty, Inc. 34.12 SourceGas 4,625.30 Southern Power District 3,247.35 The Hastings Tribune 50.71 Tonya Anderson 25.25 Travis Dassinger 20.20 Uncle Nealʼs Country Convenience Store 2,095.99 UNK - Honor Band and Choral 16.60 Verizon Wireless 100.53 Village of Kenesaw 607.48 Windstream 200.14 Windstream 1,039.00 Zimmerman Printers 306.00 TOTAL $ 292,231.18 February 23, 2012 NOTICE OF ORGANIZATION NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that PRINT OLIVE EAST, L.L.C., a Nebraska Limited Liability Company, is organized under the laws of the State of Nebraska, with its registered office at 726 East Side Boulevard, Hastings, Nebraska 68901. The general nature of its business is to engage in and to do any lawful act concerning any and all lawful business, other than banking or insurance, for which a limited liability company may be organized under the laws of Nebraska; and for all other purposes authorized by law, to the same extent as natural persons might or could do. The limited liability company was formed on February 1, 2012, and having perpetual existence from that same date. Its affairs shall be conducted by the Members pursuant to an Operating Agreement duly adopted by the Company. Organizer: Jeri Schmidt Matthew D. Baack, #23868 Seiler & Parker, P.C., L.L.O. P.O. Box 1288 726 East Side Boulevard Hastings, Nebraska 68902-1288 Attorney at Law February 9, 16, 23, 2012 VILLAGE OF KENESAW PROCEEDINGS The Chairman and the Board of Trustees of the Village of Kenesaw, Nebraska, held a Special meeting on January 27, 2012 at 7:30 p.m. in the Community Room of the Village Office. The public was advised of the meeting as required and the Agenda was kept current. The following Board members were present: JR Pulver, Joe Heckenlively, Hank Edmondson, Ronda Ehly. Absent; Sarah Kroos. Also present: Kelli Knott, Clerk; Jeff Edmondson, Superintendent. Advanced notice of the meeting was posted. 1. The meeting was called to order at 7:30 p.m. 2. Notice of the Open Meetings Act Literature location was given. 3. Approved the Minutes of January 10, 2012. 4. Approved the resignation of Robert Giger. 5. Approved volunteer services for office. 6. Approved applicant recommendation for the position of Assistant Utility Superintendent. 7. Approved entry wage for new applicant and increase per certification acquired and the monthly stipend. 8. Meeting adjourned at 7:51 p.m. Kelli Knott Kenesaw Clerk/Treasurer February 23, 2012 Notice of Meeting The Hastings Public Library Board will meet Monday, February 27, 2012, at 4:30 p.m. in the Library. An agenda is available at the Library. February 23, 2012 Notice of Publication TO: STEVEN KREBSBACH You are hereby notified that on December 1, 2011, the Plaintiff, Credit Management Services, Inc., filed a Complaint in the County Court of Adams County, Nebraska, against you shown as Case Number CI 11-2206. The object and prayer of which is a judgment in the amount of $1,006.87, plus court costs, pre-judgment interest and attorney fees, if applicable. The Complaint prays that judgment be entered against you. You are hereby notified that you must answer the Complaint on or before March 24, 2012, at the County Court of Adams County, Hastings, Nebraska. DANA KAY FRIES #22411 JANE J. RICHARDSON #19833 TESSA P. HERMANSON #23179 JESSICA L.V. PISKORSKI #24243 BRADY W. KEITH #24305 SETH W. YOUNT #24762 P.O. Box 1512 Grand Island, Nebraska 68802 308-398-3801 Attorney for Plaintiff February 9, 16, 23, 2012 NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING TAKE NOTICE: The Adams County Planning and Zoning Commission will hold a Public Hearing starting at 6:15 p.m., Monday, March 5, 2012. Said Public Hearing is to hear testimony of support, opposition, criticism, suggestions or observations for: 1) Amendment to the Adams County Zoning Regulations creating definitions, regulations and provisions for the stockpiling and application of paunch manure and related materials. All Interested citizens may attend and be heard. The hearing will be held in the Hastings City Council Chambers, 220 North Hastings Avenue, Hastings, Nebraska. Further information and the Commissionʼs agenda are available at the Adams County Zoning office, 500 North Denver Avenue, Hastings, Nebraska. For non-English-speaking attendees wishing to arrange for a sign language or foreign language interpreter, please call or fax the County Attorneyʼs Office at Phone: 402-461-7240 or Fax: 402-461-7241. For hearing-impaired individuals or individuals with other special needs call or fax the County Clerkʼs Office at Phone: 402-461-7107, TTY: 402-461-7166 or Fax: 402-4617185. When requesting an interpreter or services for the hearing impaired, please provide at least forty-eight (48) hours advance notice to allow time for making the accommodations. Judy Mignery Zoning Director February 23, 2012 The Only Daily Newspaper That Reports Primarily The News Of Your Area. Comics B4 Crossword Astrograph I Couple can’t come to terms over bathroom battleground D EAR ABBY: My otherwise loving, honest, generous, kind and attentive husband of 10 years feels it’s his right to walk into the bathroom whenever he wants, even when I’m in there. He says it’s coincidence, but I think he does it intenDear Abby tionally. We don’t have locks — or even doors — to shut our master bathroom. We do have other bathrooms in the house. I have asked him repeatedly not to come in or to make some noise so I know he’s coming. He says he “forgets.” If I’m in the shower or bent over with my head upside down blow-drying my hair and turn around or look up and see another person, I get startled. My adrenaline pumps and I end up yelling at him. I’d prefer to get clean and pretty in peace. My husband thinks I’m overreacting. Am I? — BOTHERED IN THE BATHROOM DEAR BOTHERED: Feeling as strongly as you do, it’s surprising that you would move into a house in which the master bedroom and bath are set up this way. And yes, I do think you’re overreacting. However, you have a couple of options: The first would be for you to get clean and pretty in one of the other bathrooms. The second would be to start a remodeling project and have a door (or doors) to your master bath installed so your husband can knock before entering. * * * DEAR ABBY: I am married to a wonderful and unique man. Despite his privileged upbringing he is very down-to-earth. His parents’ affluence afforded him many opportunities and still does. Unfortunately, my in-laws are snobbish, selfabsorbed and competitive. They are critical of everyone — especially their grown son. They put him and each other down constantly. They cause scenes and can’t enjoy life. My husband is trying to be patient because he knows his parents aren’t going to change at their age. But they consume so much of our energy with their constant dramatic highs and lows. Any advice for dealing with drama queens (and kings)? They do love us and can be considerate. — LIVING IN THE REAL WORLD IN NEW JERSEY DEAR REAL: It may help you and your husband to understand that people who act the way your in-laws do are usually insecure on some basic level. They put others down to inflate their egos and reassure themselves that they’re “OK” by magnifying (or inventing) flaws in others. When your inlaws start to criticize, be pleasant and make a point of saying something positive about their target. It will short-circuit the rant. * * * DEAR ABBY: I’m a 40-yearold working mother raising a daughter who is the joy of my life. Once in a great while I’ll accept an invitation to go on a date and hire a baby sitter to watch my daughter. My question is, who should pay for the sitter? The man who asked me out or should I? I have yet to have a suitor offer to pay. Is that just the way it is, or are these men just cheap? — MOM ON A BUDGET DEAR MOM: Paying for your daughter’s sitter is YOUR responsibility. When you become involved in a steady relationship and the cost of a sitter becomes a financial burden, discuss it then with your boyfriend, who should be willing to share some of the cost. 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. United Media Q: I was watching a DVD of the movie “A River Runs Through It.” Where was the movie filmed? — V.A.D., Carson, Calif. A: “A River Runs Through It” is a film based on the Pulitzer-nominated short story collection by Norman Maclean. Robert Redford directed, produced and narrated the film. The movie tells the story of Norman and Paul Maclean (played by Craig Sheffer and Brad Pitt), sons of a Scottish Presbyterian minister growing up in turn-of-the-century Missoula, Mont. While the movie is set in Missoula and on the Blackfoot River, it was actually filmed in and around Livingston, Bozeman and Big Timber, Mont. Many of the fishing scenes were filmed in the Gallatin Canyon on the Gallatin River, south of Bozeman. The waterfall shown is Granite Falls in Wyoming. The church scenes were filmed in the Redeemer Lutheran Church in Livingston, Mont. Q: A few years back, my wife and I were traveling through the southwest United States when we noticed Snowflake, Ariz., on the map. The name conjured wintery scenes in our mind. Not so: It was pretty much a desert community with a confusing name. Can you tell us how the town got the name? — K.U., Silver Springs, Fla. A: Snowflake, Ariz., was founded in 1878 by Mormon pioneers and colonizers Erastus Snow and William Jordan Flake. Today, about 5,000 people call Snowflake home. Q: What is the origin of the phrase “hurts like the dickens”? — P.R.H., Bradbury, Calif. A: Surprisingly, this phrase has nothing to do with Charles Dickens. Dickens is used as a euphemism, specifically a minced oath, for the word “devil” or any other curse words. One of the earliest known uses of the phrase is in William Shakespeare’s “The Merry Wives of Windsor” (1600): “I cannot tell what the dick- By Leigh Rubin The Family Circus By Bil Keane FRIDAY, FEB. 24 n the year ahead, more opportunities might become available to you than in the past. As time passes, better situations and numerous quality chances to do something productive will become viable for you. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) — Because you’re feeling a little claustrophobic, you’re likely to need more elbowroom than usual in order to function effectively. Try to act independently without smacking anyone in the jaw. ARIES (March 21-April 19) — You should stop and take some time to straighten out an old matter that’s never been handled properly. Even if it doesn’t bother others, only you, it’s worth doing things right. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) — Although you might not seek or want it, you are destined to play a key role in a group endeavor. Because some members aren’t aware of what’s going on, they’ll welcome your input. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) — Don’t be surprised if you find yourself to be far more ambitious than usual. You might have to contend with some challenges, but you’ll win out if you use the big guns. CANCER (June 21-July 22) — If you are required to make a critical decision, trade on past experiences for a plan. By using the same techniques that were successful before, you’ll make the right choice. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) — Another avenue for material gains could come about through one of your newer relationships. The person in question likes what she or he sees in you, and wants to include you in something worth checking out. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Chances are you’ll automatically get involved in a partnership arrangement involving something that happens to be your strong suit. With your input, the results will turn out to be good. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) — No grass is going to grow under your feet. Because you’ll see what has to be done and know how to do it, you won’t hesitate to get crackin’. This is likely to turn out to be a very successful day. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) — With your popularity at a high point, it goes without saying that you’ll be well received wherever you go. Your presence will automatically brighten up any corner you walk into. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) — Take any opportunity you get to finalize an important development. Don’t leave anything up to chance or any loose threads hanging. You may not get another crack at it. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) — Rely on your splendid mental attributes and your innate logic, but don’t totally discount your intuitive perceptions. Each facet has a place in your reasoning, so use your gifts accordingly. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) — There’s an excellent chance that certain business matters will be less complicated now than they will be tomorrow. Don’t put off handling anything important. 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. Ask Mr. Know-It-All — ‘A River Runs Through’ Montana BY GARY CLOTHIER Rubes HASTINGS TRIBUNE Thursday, Feb. 23, 2012 ens his name is my husband had him of.” Q: When did the TV show “Card Sharks” debut? What can you tell me about two of the hosts, Jim Perry and Bob Eubanks? — L.R., Peoria, Ill. A: “Card Sharks” debuted in April 1978 on NBC. Jim Perry was born in 1933 in Camden, N.J. After graduating from the University of Pennsylvania, Perry became a singer, taking over for Eddie Fisher at Grossingers in the Catskill Mountains. He teamed up with Sid Caesar for several years as the straight man. He later became a popular game show host in Canada and the United States. He retired in 1990 and spends time with his wife of 52 years, June, in Florida and North Carolina. Robert “Bob” Eubanks was born in 1938. He became an incredibly popular television and radio personality, probably best known for hosting the show “The Newlywed Game.” In 2005, he received a lifetime achievement Emmy award. He continues to make guest appearances on TV. Garfield Zits By Jim Davis By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman Arts & Entertainment HASTINGS TRIBUNE Thursday, Feb. 23, 2012 J ust as I was sitting at my desk, preparing to write this column, a sudden squall started outside. A westerly wind picked up to, I’m guessing, 40 mph, and the rain came down in sheets. Luckily our vegetation is made to handle this, sometimes having to survive hurPhillip ricane-force Alder winds during the summer months. After 10 minutes or so, the wind died down again and the rain stopped. At the bridge table, you might walk into an unexpected storm: a bad trump break. In this deal, how should South play in six hearts when East shows up with all five outstanding trumps? West leads the diamond queen. Declarer wins with dummy’s ace and plays a heart to his jack, West discarding a diamond. North’s two-no-trump response would not meet with universal approval, but it had the huge advantage of telling South it was a slam deal, which two diamonds “waiting” would not have done. (Two aces opposite an unbalanced two-club opening equals a slam if a fit is found.) Since South has a club loser, he has to draw trumps without loss. But that requires taking two more finesses through East. How can declarer get to the board two more times? At trick three, South must lead a low spade to dummy’s 10. When the finesse wins (the sun is finally out), he takes a second heart finesse. South returns to dummy with a spade, finesses for a third time in trumps, cashes his top hearts, and claims 12 tricks: four spades, five hearts, one diamond and two clubs. North ´ A 10 4 ™532 ©A85 ®9742 West East ´J985 ´32 ™ -™Q8764 © Q J 10 9 2 ©K763 ® Q 10 6 5 ®J8 South ´KQ76 ™ A K J 10 9 ©4 ®AK3 Dealer: South Vulnerable: East-West South 2® 3™ 4 NT 6™ West Pass Pass Pass Pass North 2 NT 4™ 5™ Pass East Pass Pass Pass Pass Opening lead: © Q Phillip Alder is a columnist for Newspaper Enterprise Association. NewsMakers JUDGE TO LOHAN: KEEP UP GOOD A star for Aniston WORK LOS ANGELES — Lindsay Lohan drew praise Wednesday from a judge who said the actress was one court hearing away from putting a long-running drunken driving case behind her. “Ms. Lohan, you’re in the home stretch,” Superior Court Judge Stephanie Sautner told the actress. “The probation officer is pleased with your progress.” The former Disney star has progressed under strict probation guidelines imposed by Sautner last year, including weekly stints working at the morgue and therapy sessions. Lohan, 25, now has to work 14 days at the morgue and attend five therapy sessions before the judge ends her probation on a 2007 drunken driving case that has dogged Lohan for years. She is due back in court on March 29 for what could be her final court appearance if she stays out of trouble. Lohan would remain on informal probation for a case filed after she took a necklace without permission in January 2011 but would no longer have to report to a probation officer or appear in court for frequent updates. The model-actress is attempting a career comeback and is scheduled to host “Saturday Night Live” on March 3. “You seem to be getting your life back on track,” Sautner told her. SWEDEN’S CROWN PRINCESS GIVES BIRTH TO BABY GIRL STOCKHOLM — Sweden’s Crown Princess Victoria gave birth to her first child early Thursday, a baby girl who will be groomed to one day become the country’s queen. Victoria’s husband, Prince Daniel, said the girl, who is second in line to the Swedish throne, was born at 4:26 a.m. (0326 GMT) at the Karolinska University Hospital in Solna, a suburb of Stockholm. She was 20 inches long and weighed 7.23 pounds. “When I left the room the little princess was sleeping on her mother’s chest and they were looking very cozy,” an emotional Daniel told reporters. “The little daughter and the crown princess are doing very well.” Victoria, 34, is next in line to the throne held by her father, King Carl XVI Gustaf, since 1973. Sweden changed the constitution in 1980, three years after Victoria was born, to allow the eldest heir to inherit the throne, regardless of gender. Before that female heirs were excluded. Daniel said the king and Victoria’s mother, Queen Silvia, had been informed of the birth and “are very happy.” DUI CHARGES AGAINST STEELERS’ WARD DROPPED FRANKLIN SAYS HOUSTON’S MOTHER DECATUR, Ga. — Prosecutors have dropped DUI charges against Pittsburgh Steelers receiver and Dancing With the Stars winner Hines Ward. DeKalb County Prosecutor Sonja N. Brown said Wednesday that Ward pleaded guilty to reckless driving and was given a year on probation. She says he also was fined $2,000 and must do 80 hours of community service. He also must undergo alcohol evaluation. The 35-year-old Super Bowl XL MVP was arrested last year after he failed to maintain his lane and hit a curb. He failed several field sobriety tests and was booked into the DeKalb County jail and later released on bond. Ward used to be a primary receiving target but last season wasn’t used as much. He has two years remaining on his deal and has said he’s willing to restructure it to finish his career with Pittsburgh. NEW YORK — Aretha Franklin says Cissy Houston raised her daughter Whitney Houston well — and that an interview where Franklin said parents need to make sure children “leave home prepared” was taken out of context. Franklin released a statement Wednesday, four days after Houston’s funeral. She was expected to sing at the funeral in Newark, N.J., Houston’s hometown, but bowed out because of leg spasms she said she suffered after a concert at Radio City Music Hall the night before. She performed again at Radio City the night of Houston’s funeral, and paid tribute to Houston as “a very fine young lady.” In an interview about Houston on NBC’s “Today” show last week, Al Roker asked Franklin about Houston’s superstardom. Franklin said: “I think parents have to really talk to their children before they leave home ... (that they) leave home prepared, really. She left home with all the right things.” RAISED HER WELL QUEEN HONORS BONHAM CARTER CHRIS PIZZELLO/AP Actress Jennifer Aniston poses atop her new star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in Los Angeles Wednesday. ‘X FACTOR’ RUNNER-UP SIGNS TV, RECORD DEAL JOURNEY DRUMMER ORDERED TO ANGER MANAGEMENT LOS ANGELES — Rachel Crow was a tearful runner-up on “The X Factor,” but she’s a winner now. The 14-year-old singer has signed a series deal with the Nickelodeon channel and a recording contract with Sony’s Columbia Records-Syco. Nickelodeon said Wednesday its agreement with Crow includes development of a comedy series for the teenager. She’ll also have a recurring role in Nickelodeon’s new program, “Fred: The Show.” Crow’s recording deal puts her in business with “X Factor” creator Simon Cowell’s Syco enterprise. The big-voiced teenager made a dramatic exit from “X Factor” last December: Crow collapsed onstage after she was voted off by viewers. DALLAS, Ore. — Drummer Deen Castronovo from the rock group Journey was sentenced to 80 hours of community service in Oregon and ordered to attend anger-management classes for a domestic violence dispute. The Statesman Journal reported the sentence Wednesday based on court documents from a diversion agreement. The 47-year-old was arrested Jan. 20 after a dispute in West Salem with a woman and charged with recklessly endangering another person, interfering with making a police report, criminal mischief and harassment. The Statesman Journal reported the woman told police that Castronovo had accused her of cheating and they had broken up. LONDON — Actress Helena Bonham Carter, whose regal roles include the Red Queen in “Alice in Wonderland” and the mother of Queen Elizabeth II in “The King’s Speech,” has been honored by the British monarch for services to drama. Bonham Carter was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire, or CBE, by the queen at a Buckingham Palace ceremony. She was there with her husband, director Tim Burton, and children Billy Ray, 8, and Nell, 4. Her films range from costumes dramas such as “A Room With a View” to “Fight Club” and “Planet of the Apes.” She also played scheming witch Bellatrix Lestrange in the “Harry Potter” films. Renowned for her bohemian style sense, the 45-year-old attended the ceremony Wednesday in a red tartan patterned dress and miniature top hat. TBS RENEWS ‘CONAN’ FOR 2 MORE YEARS NEW YORK — Conan O’Brien’s got his desk job for at least two more years. TBS said Wednesday that its late-night host, who premiered with “Conan” in November 2010, has won an extension through April 2014. O’Brien says, “I’ll be taping episodes of ‘Conan’ well into the Ron Paul presidency.” He originally signed with TBS after a brief, tumultuous promotion to be host of NBC’s “Tonight” show. TBS says “Conan” has recently charted a third consecutive month of audience growth. During 2012, it is averaging 1.1 million viewers. “Conan” airs Monday through Thursday at 10 p.m. The Associated Press Appearing this week at . FEB H 25T FRY DADDY 402-460-6314 “ M y new w eig ht loss p rog ra m is a m a zing !” , RU TH OR E IV DR INE INY OUT D RR CA Doug Bolliger, Hastings Here are the other captions that did not win but are worth mentioning: “Wow — the power of beans!” Bar-B-Que & Beyond “I’ll worry about the gravity of the situation later.” Steaks, Burgers and Phillys along with our Bar-B-Que Open 7 days a week Now Serving Breakfast on Sat. & Sun. 9:30 a.m.-1 p.m. “My imaginary friend has to shed a few pounds.” 2215 N. Kansas Ave., Hastings • 402-460-4756 Located next to Xpress Mart See next Thursday’s Tribune for another cartoon caption contest. THIS WEEK AT THE PONY!!! Ronnie H ohlen, H asting s D ave D unn, Blue H ill O m a Tuck, Blue H ill MEMORIES MADE TO ORDER At every sports event covered by the Hastings Tribune we shoot hundreds of photos. Check and see if we have a photo of your favorite athlete by going to www.hastingstribune.com and clicking on the HTmedia logo. HT MEDIA WEBSTREAMING • VIDEO • SLIDESHOWS • PHOTOS 908 W. 2nd Street • 402-462-2131 Smoked-Roasted Prime Rib Buffet Friday & Saturday (5pm to 8pm) Queen King $1750 (one pass) $1425 (one pass) BREAKFAST Saturday & Sunday 9:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. $2 off Coupon Weather event at bridge table B5 $2 off $2.00 off Lunch/Dinner or Sandwich Combo Or scan with your smart at Pony Express Smokehouse Cafe phone to get the coupon one coupon per customer good 2-22 to 2-28 $2 off 2215 N. Kansas Ave., Hastings • 402-460-4756 Located next to Xpress Mart $2 off Nation/World B6 HASTINGS TRIBUNE Thursday, Feb. 23, 2012 Attacks across Iraq kill 55 Nation COPTER COLLISION KILLS 7 MARINES NEAR YUMA, ARIZ. SAN DIEGO — Seven Marines were killed in a collision of two helicopters near Yuma, Ariz., during night training exercises, the Marine Corps said Thursday. Lt. Maureen Dooley with Miramar Air Base in California said the service members with the 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing were based at Camp Pendleton north of San Diego. The crash around 8 p.m. Wednesday involved an AH-1W “Cobra” and UH-1 “Huey” helicopter, she said. The aircraft collided in a remote portion of the Yuma Training Range Complex. DAD WHO LET 9-YEAR-OLD DRIVE GETS PROBATION DETROIT — A Detroit-area man who allowed his 9-year-old daughter to drive him around because he had been drinking was sentenced to two years of probation Thursday. Shawn Weimer pleaded guilty in December to second-degree child abuse and allowing an unlicensed minor to operate a motor vehicle. The Associated Press QASSIM ABDUL-ZAHRA AND SAMEER N. YACOUB The Associated Press BAGHDAD — A rapid series of attacks spread over a wide swath of Iraq killed at least 55 people on Thursday, targeting mostly security forces in what Iraqi officials called “frantic attempts” by insurgents to show civilians that their country was doomed to violence for years to come. The apparently coordinated bombings and shootings unfolded over hours in the capital Baghdad — where most of the deaths occurred — and 11 other cities. They struck government offices, restaurants and one in the town of Musayyib hit close to a primary school. At least 225 people were wounded. If the insurgents’ goal was to show Iraqis how precarious their situation is, it appeared to be working. “What is happening today are not simple security violations — it is a huge security failure and disaster,” said Ahmed al-Tamimi, who was working at an Education Ministry office a block away from a restaurant that was bombed in the Shiite neighborhood of Kazimiyah in northern Baghdad. He described a hellish scene of human flesh and pools of blood at the restaurant. “We want to know: What were the thousands of policemen and soldiers in Baghdad doing today while the terrorists were roaming the city and spreading violence?” al-Tamimi said. It was the latest of a series of largescale attacks that insurgents have launched every few weeks since the last U.S. troops left Iraq in midDecember at the end of a nearly nine-year war. The Interior Ministry blamed alQaida insurgents for the violence. “These attacks are part of frantic attempts by the terrorist groups to show that the security situation in Iraq will not ever be stable,” the ministry said in a statement. “These attacks are part of al-Qaida efforts to deliver a message to its supporters that al-Qaida is still operating inside Iraq, and it has the ability to launch strikes inside the capital or other cities and towns.” No group immediately claimed responsibility for the latest attacks, but targeting security officials is a hallmark of al-Qaida. Such violence achieves two goals: undermining the public’s confidence in the ability of their policemen and soldiers to protect everyday citizens, and discouraging people from joining or helping the security forces. 2 Personal 4 FATHER LOOKING for biological daughter given up for adoption. Born 3-23-83 at Mary Lanning Hospital, Hastings, NE. Any information, call 308-325-0378. 4 Announcements MARCH MAYHEM: Adams County Fairgrounds, Saturday, March 10, 9-4. Over 30 vendors with great discounts. Food and drawings available. Your Community News Source. From sports stats to business news, the Hastings Tribune keeps you in the local loop. Call 402-4622131 to start your subscription today, or visit us online at hastingstribune. com Announcements VENDOR OPEN HOUSE Sunday, Feb. 26, 1-4 p.m. Trumbull Community Center. 31 gifts, Vault Denim, Jockey, Scentsy, Rendi Style and Culligan. Specials and Giveaways. For more information, call 402743-2289. PRE-SPRING FLING Open House Saturday, Feb. 25th 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Garden Cafe Courtyard Premier Designs Jewelry by Julie Brodrick Pampered Chef by Brenda Jones Thirty One by Jodi Baker Mary Kay by Heather Hartman Scentsy by Misti Bohlen Tupperware by Ruth Durre Lia Sophia by Ty Post T-L Irrigation Co. Worldwide Distributor and Manufacturer of irrigation equipment is hiring qualified individuals for all divisions plant wide. Fulltime, year-round employment. Benefits Include: Employee Medical & Dental Insurance Paid Vacation & Holidays Overtime Hours 401K Pension Plan Apply at T-L Irrigation Co. P.O. Box 1047 East Highway 6, Hastings, NE 402-462-4128 Pre-Employment Drug/Alcohol Test Required EOE/AAE 8 Happy Ads FROM HASTINGS, 6.8 miles south on Hwy 281, east side of road: Saturday 9-1. Power and hand tools: Sawzall, miter saw, table saw, etc., Ready Heater, Mr. Heater, household, camping gear, 2 Honda generators, log splitter. Brambleʼs Auto Sales Check our new website bramblesauto.com Bookkeeper • Parent/Child Conflicts • Divorce • Stress • Anxiety • Anger • Depression • Grief • Self-Esteem • Group Therapy • Self Empowerment Affordable, Confidential Counseling Now Accepting Appointments 215 S. Burlington (402) 463-6811 Cyndee Fintel, LIMHP, CPC www.generalcounseling.com Jessica Hunt, MS, PLMHP Pets & Animal Control HEARTLAND PET CONNECTION 1807 W. J, Hastings www.petfinder.com............402-462-PETS (7387) Automobiles 24 PAUL SPADY MOTORS www.spadyautos.com See our selection of FUEL ECONOMY cars at jacksonscarcorner.com Great Plains Chrysler Dodge 402-463-3104•N. Hwy 281 www.greatplainsdodge.com 22 26 29 Hoskins Auto Sales We Buy, Sell and Consign Highway 6/Hastings Ave. Hastings, 402-463-1466 For complete listing go to www.hoskinsautosales.com HAVE LIVESTOCK, farm equipment, or farm land for sale? Call 402-462-2131 to advertise your specialty; ask for Joyce. 36 Travel Trailers & Motor Homes See our truck selection at jacksonscarcorner.com Our comprehensive Internet news site is constantly updated to bring you the very latest events from around the community and around the world. Check local, national and international developments anytime with the click of a mouse, and keep a close eye on the world around you. www.hastingstribune.com Trucks NEW NEVILLE Grain Trailers Hi-Line Motors, Kenesaw 402-752-3498 www.hilinemotors.com 2-wheel Drive Pickups On-line, Anytime. Accessories/ Parts GOT GAS? We have used fuel tanks to put it in. McMurray Motors, 402462-6879 Hajnyʼs AUTO SALES 2004 CHEVY: 1/2-ton, extended cab, quad door, 4x4, Z71, all options. Very nice truck. Only $9,250. 402-463-2636 Sport Utility 2008 HONDA PILOT: leather, all options, 4X4. Special price.........$22,900 THE CAR LOT East Highway 6 1993 JAYCO Travel Trailer: One of a kind, clean. $5,925 2006 MONTANA 5th Wheel: 298 ORL. 3 glide outs. Local owner. $26,500. Many used 5th Wheels coming soon! Sell your unwanted item(s) in the Hastings Tribune Classifieds for quick results. Call 402-462-2131. Apply immediately because positions will be filled quickly! • Press Brake - 2nd shift • Warehouse/Forklift • Assembly • Maintenance Mechanic • Production - all shifts • Tube Mill Operator • Grinding • Class A CDL Driver • Welder Apply in person or online at application.advanceservices.com 213 S. Burlington Ave., Hastings 36 Travel Trailers & Motor Homes 2006 STARCRAFT Travel trailer: 29ʼ, bunkhouse model. Super slide. Super nice! Check out our used 5th wheels. TRANSPORTATION EQUIPMENT CO. 100 N. Laird, Hastings, NE 48 Business Opportunities GREAT BUSINESS Opportunity. Old Rayʼs Pizza, 202 W. 2nd location, now for rent. 1,290 sq. ft. Call Diane, 402-469-4777. 50 Employment Agencies IMMEDIATELY HIRING! Qualified People to fill the following: • Warehouse Manager • Tool & Dye Operator • Tube & Mill Operator • Press Brake Operator • Machine Operators • Maintenance • Warehouse Worker • Welders • Custodial *Full-Time Day and Evening Shifts APPLY AT: Associated Staffing, Inc. 1023 W. 2nd Street EOE Drug Testing and Background Checks May Be Required. Every day, the newspaper delivers a world of information to your door. From local, national and international news to entertainment and advertising, the newspaper keeps you connected to people, places and events that matter most to you. Weʼre proud to be your newspaper of choice, and we promise to continue to meet the very highest standards in reporting the news to you. NEED SOME CASH? Make extra cash delivering the Hastings Tribune six days a week. Flexible for after school or after work and great for all ages! Call the Tribune circulation department today at 402-461-1221 or 1-800-742-6397 for more information. Hastings Pizza LITTLE CAESAR’S ROGER’S INC. 1035 S. Burlington, Hastings...........402-463-1345 PAPA RAY’S PIZZA www.hastingstribune.com 908 W. 2nd St., Hastings.................402-462-2131 20 God-Centered Counseling with adults, teens, children and couples in a caring environment Carry Out and Delivery 314 N. Burlington Ave., Hastings. . . . .402-462-5220 HASTINGS TRIBUNE We accept cash, check or money order VISA, MASTERCARD, DISCOVER or AMERICAN EXPRESS. General Counseling, LLC Counselors-Human Relations Newspapers The Associated Press We reserve the right to reject, edit or reclassify any advertisement accepted by us for publication. NORTHSIDE AUTO We Buy Vehicles 16th/St. Joe 402-463-8008 northsideautoinc.net YELLOW PAGES Hastings, www.abcseamless.com. . .402-463-7580 Home Appliances & Electronics 1013 S. Burlington 402-462-2719 Adams County Senior Services is seeking an experienced Bookkepper to work 20 hours per week. This position requires at least one year of formal post secondary education in Bookkeeping/Accounting and two years of bookkeeping experience. Position requires accuracy and good computer skills with a preference given to persons with fund accounting and computerized systems experience. Apply or send resume to ACSS located at 509 South Bellevue Avenue (one block west of Wendy’s) in Hastings. Applications/Resumes will be accepted until 4:00 p.m. Monday, February 27th. ACSS is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer. ABC SEAMLESS SIDING, WINDOWS & GUTTERS Large Inventory, Wide Variety, Over 40 Years In Business www.naturalfoodproducts.net 707 W. State Street, Grand Island. . .308-382-0869 Deveny Motors Adams County Senior Services Contractors NATURAL FOOD PRODUCTS 2007 DODGE: 3/4, crew cab, diesel, 4x2.....$13,000 1999 FORD F-350: Super cab, diesel, high mileage, clean.......................$4,000 CALL 402-462-2131 to list your ad in classified. House Calls/ Free pickup and delivery 9 a.m.-9 p.m. daily 402-984-8001 or toll free 1-800-383-8141 Visa & Mastercard accepted. Health Foods Automobiles 1978 CHEVROLET Sport van for parts. Runs. Good transmission. New exhaust. New radiator. $350. 402-519-1958 or fourlleath er@yahoo.com Garage Sales Out of Town DEA ELECTRONICS Cyndee Fintel, LIMHP, Jessica Hunt, MS, PLMHP www.generalcounseling.com...........402-463-6811 20 ʻ05 Equinox LS: Red, AWD, 76,xxx miles. Sharp! $10,975.......Cash $10,575 220 West South Street 402-461-3161 Computer Repair GENERAL COUNSELING LLC Automobiles JUANITA SCOTT will be 85 years young on February 26, 2012 15 BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — The death toll in Argentina’s train accident is up to 50, including three children. Buenos Aires officials said Thursday that the bodies of seven men and five women remain unidentified in the city morgue. Wednesday’s hard stop of a commuter train at a downtown station also left nearly 500 people hospitalized, sending families on desperate searches around the Argentine capital to find their loved ones. The cause of Argentina’s deadliest train accident in decades is under investigation. Fax: 402-462-2156 20 Her family would like to honor her with a card shower. Cards may be sent to: 3280 W. 70th, Apt. #1 Hastings, NE 68901 ARGENTINE TRAIN CRASH TOLL AT 50 Open 8:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. Monday through Friday 8:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon Saturday Classified Ads 402-462-2131 World 2604 W. 2nd Street, Hastings..........402-463-1626 Multiple routes available, call for more information. Upholstery THE COVER UP UPHOLSTERY 204 N. Clay, Box 387, Harvard.........402-772-4031 To Purchase Advertising On This Page Contact 462-2131 2007 FORD EXPEDITION EDDIE BAUER 4X4 2008 HONDA PILOT EX-L 4X4 2011 FORD ESCAPE XLT 4X4 2010 FORD EXPLORER EDDIE BAUER 4X4 2009 TOYOTA HIGHLANDER 4X4 2010 FORD F150 SUPERCREW FX4 4X4 2011 FORD FLEX SEL AWD 2011 FORD EXPEDITION EL 4X4 • 5.4L V8 • Leather • Auto Temp Control • CD • Keyless Entry • 95,000 Miles • 3.5L V6 • Heated Leather Seats • Sunroof • New Tires • 66,000 Miles • Power Seat • CD • Keyless Entry • Full Power Options • Fantastic Fuel Economy • 13,000 Miles • V6 • Heated Leather Seats • SYNC • 3rd Row Seat • CD • Keyless Entry • 35,000 Miles • 3.5L V6 • Power Seat • CD • Keyless Entry • 3rd Row Seat • 33,000 Miles • 5.4L V8 • Trailer Tow • SYNC • New Tires • 46,000 Miles • Heated Leather Seats • SYNC • CD • Keyless Entry • 17,000 Miles • 5.4L V8 • Leather • SYNC • Sunroof • Auto Temp Control • CD • Keyless Entry • 13,000 Miles $18,995 $22,995 $22,995 $25,995 $26,995 $28,995 $29,995 $39,995 SKIP THE HASSLE. DEAL WITH THE OWNER HERE! KENESAW MOTOR CO. Make the Drive... You’ll be glad you did! Your Friendly Ford Dealer 752-3360 • 800-504-3147 Kenesaw, NE www.kenesawmotorco.com HASTINGS TRIBUNE Thursday, Feb. 23, 2012 50 Employment Agencies NOW HIRING ESSENTIAL PERSONNEL 402-462-4400 51 Professional PROGRAM COORDINATOR Developmental Service of Nebraska (DSN) is looking for a strong leader who is experienced in administering high quality services within the field of mental health and developmental disabilities. The Program Coordinator reports directly to the Area Director and is responsible for ensuring high quality living and vocational environments, habilitation and supports are provided to persons receiving residential and vocational services. Seeks out opportunities to coach and motivate Front Line Supervisors and Direct Support Professionals to ensure services provided are reflective of the DSN's Mission of supporting persons with mental health issues and/or developmental disabilities gain skills, knowledge, and experience to increasingly use and benefit from the resources and settings available to all citizens in the community. The candidate must have a bachelor's degree in social services, psychology, education, or a related field and 2 years of progressively responsible experience in the field of human services including supervising the work of others. Candidate must possess good verbal and written communication skills including spelling and grammar. This position is primarily Monday through Friday, with some evenings and rotating on-call weekends. Paid training available. Salary range $32,000 $40,000. If you are interested in applying for this position: Submit cover letter and resume by 2/29/2012 to: Jamie Bentz, PHR 1709 West 39th St. Kearney, NE 68845 jbentz@dsnonline.org fax: 308-237-9085 Please find out more about DSN, visit our website at: www.dsnon line.org EEO/ADA Compliant 53 Health Care BETHANY HOME in Minden Has been providing care for the Elderly since 1920. Will be accepting applications for the following positions: Health Care 2 p.m. - 10 p.m. MA or NA (Full- or Part-time) Dietary Dietary Assistant (Part-time) We offer a great starting wage $0.45 an hour pm shift differential $0.80 an hour night shift differential and a $1.00 an hour weekend differential Bethany Home 515 W. First Minden, NE or Contact Rhonda or Cassie for Health Care Nursing or Diana for Dietary, Phone 308-832-1594 EOE CHAIR-SIDE DENTAL Assistant: 2 days a week. Send resume to Sutton Dental Clinic, P.O. Box 594, Sutton, NE 68979. CHAMPION HOMES Parttime med aide. Every other weekend. 7-3 and 3-11 shift. Call 402-902-9694 B7 53 Health Care GOOD SAMARITAN Society-The Villa Assisted Living has immediate openings for a: Universal Worker Certified as a Nursing Assistant and Medication Aide with the 40-hour course. Every other weekend hours available for evening and night shifts. For more information, contact Crystal at 402-4603226. Applications are available online at www.good-sam.com E/O/E Drug Free Workplace MED Aid/CNA to work committed casual 10:30 p.m. to 6:30 a.m. and PRN 2:30 to 10:30 p.m. Pick up application at Edgewood Vista, 2400 West 12th Street, Hastings, NE. RN CONSULTANT needed. Please call 402-7564750, ask for Laurie or Melissa. 54 Office/Clerical ADAMS COUNTY Attorneyʼs Office is currently accepting applications for a receptionist/secretary. Responsibilities include answering phones, assisting the public and case file management. Personable manner, computer experience and good organizational skills required. $1,300 per month with benefits. Submit resume with cover letter and references by March 1, 2012, to Donna Fegler Daiss, P.O. Box 71, Hastings, NE 68902 BOOKKEEPER Adams County Senior Services is seeking an experienced Bookkeeper to work 20 hours per week. This position requires at least one year of formal post secondary education in Bookkeeping/Accounting and two years of bookkeeping experience. Position requires accuracy and good computer skills with a preference given to persons with fund accounting and computerized systems experience. Apply or send resume to ACSS located at 509 South Bellevue Avenue (one block west of Wendyʼs) in Hastings. Applications/Resumes will be accepted until 4:00 p.m. Monday, February 27th. ACSS is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer. ENERGY PIONEER Solutions is currently seeking a full-time customer relations specialist for our expanding company. Ideal candidate needs to possess a drive to succeed, be able to thrive in an exciting goal-oriented environment, and will need to demonstrate excellent customer relations skills. Needs to be enthusiastic, detail oriented and organized. Duties include requesting and collecting energy data, preparing and distributing reports, scheduling and coordinating customers and crews in our service locations. High school diploma a must, college degree preferred. 3 years clerical and computer experience, strong written and verbal communication skills, and must possess strong organizational skills. 40 hours/week with opportunities for overtime, Monday-Friday, 8-5. Competitive compensation. Apply to jennifer@energypio neersolutions.com 55 Sales SALES ASSOCIATE Tom Dinsdale is looking for a Sales Associate. Excellent atmosphere and benefits. Clean driving record required. Please apply at receptionistʼs desk. FULL-TIME/PART-TIME CMA/CNA DIETARY COOK Part Time DIETARY AIDE Part Time Apply at: Grandview Manor 148 Broad Street Campbell, NE 68932 Or call Amy 402-756-8701 EEO 56 Restaurant FOOD SERVICE: Parttime. Sodexo at Hastings College. Apply MondayFriday, 8:30-5. HACIENDA LOS CAPARALES is taking applications for wait staff. Must be over 19 years old. Apply in person at 817 E. South St., Hastings. 57 Technical & Trade DRAFTER WANTED for grain elevator and feed mill construction, proficient with AutoCAD. Call 402463-0591. FULL-TIME WELDERS needed. Minden Machine is a fast growing equipment manufacturer. Drug testing required. Apply at 1302 K Road, Minden, NE. SECOND SHIFT CNC Operator: Laser experience preferred, but not required. Minden Machine is a fast growing equipment manufacturer. Drug testing required. Apply at 1302 K Road, Minden, NE. 58 Ag Related POSITION FOR outside help at Aurora Co-op grain elevator. Experience a plus but not required. Canʼt be afraid of heights. Must have CDL or willing to get a CDL. Contact David at 402-772-3151 or apply in person, 108 N. Adams, Harvard. WAREHOUSE AND SERVICE ASSISTANT Inventory and facility maintenance, installation and servicing drip irrigation systems. Must maintain valid driverʼs license and insurability. Irrigation, farming, mechanical or computer experience a plus. Send resume to: aspaulding@eco-drip.com or Eco-Drip Irrigation, 155 W. Barrows Rd., Hastings, NE 68901. 59 Trucking AG PROCESSING, Inc. has openings for full-time truck drivers in Hastings, NE. AGP offers full-time drivers competitive pay, medical, dental and life insurance, paid vacation, 401K savings plan, company retirement, NEW equipment! Applicants must meet all DOT requirements, have a good driving record, and at least two years experience. Interested drivers may pick up an application at the Hastings Workforce Development office or call 402462-1867. TRUCK DRIVERS: Competitive wages, short or long haul, paid vacations, sick leave, health insurance, 401k, quarterly bonus. Will train if qualified. GEORGE BROS. INC., Sutton, NE 68979. 1-800228-4008. 60 General BIG G ACE is hiring for full-time and part-time positions. Retail experience is desired, but will train the right candidate. Willingness to work flexible hours including days, evenings, and weekends. Must have the ability to lift 50 pounds. Full-time position qualifies for benefits. Apply in person at Big G ACE, 3203 Osborne Drive West. Caring People Needed Friendly and cheerful people needed to provide companionship and home care for the elderly. Build a lasting relationship with seniors in our area. Home Instead Senior Care Apply online at 60 General HASTINGS PUBLIC SCHOOLS is accepting applications for the following position(s): NIGHT CUSTODIAN 4-hour position $7.50 – $9.00/hour Full time – 12 months/year – Hours are 4:00-8:00 p.m. Must pass physical and background check PARAEDUCATOR — Special Education - SH $7.25 - $8.70/hour 7 1/2 hours/day — 180 days/year Must pass background check Application can be made at hastingspublicschools.org under Employment Opportunities - Classified Application - or you can pick up an application at the Administration Building located at the following address Human Resources Office Hastings Public Schools 1924 West A Street Hastings, NE 68901 402-461-7502 EOE Closing date: Open until filled HEAD START Child and Family Development Program, Inc. Para-Professional - CDL Para-Professional with CDL or willing to get a CDL needed for the Adams County Early Learning Center. Full-time position, $8.30/hour, paid time off, benefits, 401K, and training opportunities are available. Bilingual applicants are highly encouraged to apply. Must have a minimum of a high school diploma or GED. Must have a CDL, or be willing to get a CDL. An Associate degree in Early Childhood Education is preferred. For more information, a job description, or an application, please call 402462-4187 ext. 107 or 1800-782-7850, stop by 123 Marian Rd or visit www.hshn.org Applications will only be accepted until 2-27-12 EOE is currently seeking a parttime kitchen manager (20 hours per week). Strong organizational skills required. Duties include: menu planning, kitchen organization, ability to supervise and delegate. Experience preferred. Applications available at 702 W. 14th Street, or email: AUTO GLASS EXPERTS. 25 years combined experience in glass replacement. Jeff Fitzke, Brent Vorderstrasse. 405 West J Street. 402-463-0025. 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. Electrical LYD ELECTRIC. Customer friendly pricing while providing service second to none. No job too small. 402-462-0844. Firewood FIREWOOD: Good hardwood mix. $100/load, $180/two loads. Very competitive pricing. Call Robert, 402-767-0700. Handyman HANDYMAN: Roofing, concrete, painting, home repairs, snow removal. Fully insured. 10 years experience. Reasonable. 462-2660, 460-6756. Home Improvement CHUCKʼS BUILDING AND REPAIR. Chuck Wiseman. No job too small. 402-7512443; cell, 402-984-2544. NEW IMAGE CONSTRUCTION: Warranted work. Home, commercial, tile flooring, kitchen, bath, additions, garages, siding, windows, doors, decks, fencing. Insured, references. 402-705-8369. PROFESSIONAL CERAMIC and stone tile installations, specializing in custom tile showers 402460-8453. List your ad. 402-462-2131. EXPERIENCED RN offering private 24-hour inhome nursing care. Competitive rates. References available. 402-469-0256. 70 Pets GRIFFIES, Shih Tzus, Yorkie, Maltese, Chihuahua pups. 402-469-0784. 77 Your WHIRLPOOL and TOSHIBA Dealer ROGERʼS, INC. 1035 S. Burlington 402-463-1345 86 Sporting Goods HANDGUN TRAINING class for concealed carry permit, February 25. Call Jim Price, 402-462-0103. 92 Health Care Supplies DISCOVER THE benefits of good nutrition, improve your health, boost your energy, control your weight, and enjoy life to the fullest. *Liver and Kidney Detoxification *Improvement of sexual well being *Improved memory and mental clarity *Reduction of Stress and more restful sleep *Significant relief from body aches and pains *Support for the elimination of parasites *Improved health and appearance of the skin *Massage anti-stress www.goherbalife.com/rosa maastrologa 402-519-3199 402-463-9183 96 61 Part Time Hastings Tribune has opening for carrier in Hastings Call Circulation. 402461-1221 or 1-800-7426397. Hastings Tribune has openings for carrier in Kenesaw. Call Circulation. 402-461-1221 or 1-800742-6397. Hastings Tribune has openings for carrier in Sutton. Call Circulation. 402-461-1221 or 1-800742-6397. Hastings Tribune is looking for motor route drivers to deliver the Hastings Tribune. Stop in for application or call Circulation 402-461-1221 or 1-800742-6397. Hastings Tribune is looking for a rural route driver in the Sutton area to deliver the Hastings Tribune. Call Circulation. 402-4611221 or 1-800-742-6397. Your Community. Your Newspaper. Subscribe today, and stay in the local loop Call 402462-2131 today! Junk removal JUNK HUNK. Junk removal service - garage, shed, attic, basement, yard. “Call the Hunk to haul your Junk!” Scott, 402-4634818. Painting DYCUS PAINTING. Prompt, courteous, professional service since 1980. Insured. Call for estimate. 402-463-7726, or mddy cus@inebraska.com Stump Removal STUMP AND Brush Removal: Clean up those ugly stumps and bushes. Free estimates. 402-4634769 or 402-460-0518. 100 Unfurnished Apartments SPACIOUS 3-BEDROOM: 1222 N. Baltimore. $525/ month plus gas and electric. References. No pets. Alton Jackson. 984-0881 EFFICIENCY: 1- and 2bedroom units for rent. Call Gateway Realty — 402-463-4563. gatewayr ealestate.com/hastings CHATEAU IMPERIAL Appliances Want To Buy Townhomes/Apartments Call 402-463-4111 2-BEDROOM: 2-bath, appliances furnished, washer/dryer hookups, offstreet parking. No pets/smoking. $550/$550. 402-461-1659. 914 S. HASTINGS: 3-Bedroom, new appliances, air, new carpet and paint. Coin operated laundry and hookups. No pets. $600 plus deposit. References. Call after 1 p.m. 402-9029694. AVAILABLE BY 3/10/12: Nice 2-bedroom, 1 1/2 bath 4-plex. West side location. Off-street parking. All kitchen appliances furnished, washer/dryer hookups. Small pet OK with extra deposit. $575/$575. 402-705-3351. FIRST MONTH Free at Riverview Apartments. 2-BEDROOM: Clean, updated, heat/water included. No smoking/pets. Starting at $765/month. 612-385-7770 LARGE DOWNTOWN Apartment: $500 plus security. 402-744-2093 before 5 p.m. 102 Duplexes For Rent NEWER washers, dryers, stoves and refrigerators. Working or not. 462-6330. 1-, 2-, 3-, 4-BEDROOM: Rent to own. Air, garage. $400-$850. 402-469-6635. 100 Unfurnished Apartments 103 Town Houses For Rent 1-2 Bedroom: No smoking or pets. Large, unique, clean. 460-6922 Photos at: cicadadwellings.com 1-BEDROOM: In Juniata. Air, appliances. No pets. References. $335. 402984-0881 1-BEDROOMS: Main and 2nd floors. No pets/smoking. References. 462-0594 2-BEDROOM: Appliances, laundry hookups, parking. No pets. $485. EMBASSY SQUARE, 402-462-4032. 3-BEDROOM: 2-bath. Most utilities paid. $550. 105 E. 14th. 460-9626. LARGE 3-BEDROOM TOWN HOME ONLY $550 1 1/2-bath, attached garage, washer/dryer hookups. THE MEADOWS, 364 Walden Circle, Hastings. Call 308-384-7874 Income and student restrictions apply. www.seldin.com Applications will be accepted until 5 p.m. 2/27/12 At Your Service Auto Glass In-Home Assisted Living info@crossroadsmission.com www.homeinstead.com/543 DISPATCH OPERATOR I (Hastings Utilities): looking for a reliable person with a strong attention to detail and the ability to monitor and troubleshoot power plant equipment. Requires driverʼs license and high school diploma or equivalent plus 3 years experience in the operation of steam production plant, ethanol plant or a degree in physics or related field. Personal computer experience required. Residency requirement-6 miles of city limits. 40 hours/week, shift work; $26.33-31.12/hour range, full benefits. Application testing Feb. 27March 2 in City of Hastings Personnel Office, 220 N. Hastings, Hastings, NE. Test may be started, without an appointment, between 8 am and 3:30 pm. www.cityofhastings.org/em ployment/job_openings.htm Contact Kim Still at 402461-2313 or kstill@cityof hastings.org with questions. EOE 64 SETTLE IN at the Townhouses of Hastings. We offer cozy 2- and 3-bedroom units with eat-in kitchen, 1 1/2 baths, lots of storage, off-street parking, rent and utility assistance available. Pick up application at 945 West H. 402-463-5953 104 Equal Housing Opportunity Houses For Rent 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. 2-BEDROOM: 2710 W. 7th, Hastings. $550 plus deposit. References and credit check required. 402469-3539. 2-BEDROOM: Remodeled, garage. Credit required. $650. 460-9626. 3- and 4-BEDROOM: 840 N. Kansas and 514 E. 7th. References. $775. 408248-1464, 402-461-0442. 3-BEDROOM: $550. Open house Saturday, Feb. 25, 12-4 p.m. 1523 N. Kansas. SMALL 2-BEDROOM home with garage in Kenesaw. No smoking/pets. 402-461-1030. 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. AVAILABLE NOW: Office suite at Depot Plaza, store front. Reasonable rates. Call Diane, 402-469-4777. LOW OVERHEAD business suites, 3-4 rooms, 2nd floor, elevator. $250325/month. Includes heat and air. Call 402-4691156, First and Hastings. NICE, SMALL office with bathroom. 645 S. Burlington. $325 plus electric. Alton Jackson 402-463-0688 108 Office Space Sudoku 108 Office Space 116 OFFICE SPACE for lease. Various sizes in Hastings. Excellent location in downtown area. 1/2 block from Courthouse. Utilities paid. Off-street parking. Call Lloyd at the Foote Building, 402-462-4215. OFFICE SPACE Single office, double office, up to 4 office suites available. Very nice. Conference and meeting room available. 402-461-4100. Landmark Center 109 Business Property Houses For Sale 118 Mobile Homes For Sale 25ʼx30ʼ, 25ʼx60ʼ heated shops, bath, 14ʼx14ʼ overhead door; 32x34ʼ shop. 462-0594, 402-541-2480. 2-SECTION Mobile Home located in great mobile home community. 1997 Redman. 3-bedroom, 2 baths. For more information, call 402-463-1958 or 402-705-0545. COMMERCIAL SPACE for rent. 1,386 sq. ft. Call Diane. 402-469-4777 COME SEE now newer 3bedroom. Will finance with tax return. 402-469-4777 JERRY SPADYʼS Body Shop for rent. Call Diane for details. 402-469-4777. 119 111 Storage/ Warehouse 2 WORKSHOPS available. 141 N. Laird. 25ʼx40ʼ and 25ʼx50ʼ. $275/$325. Heat, 110/220, 10ʼ door. Lease only. 402-902-9379. Residential Lots LOTS, MODEL Homes: 4 Subdivisions. Agent/owner, 402-461-1785. 120 Commercial Lots RV, BOAT, car storage. $1/foot. Call 402-469-4777 to reserve space. PRIME COMMERCIAL land on Burlington Avenue is ready for you to build your new office. Call Gateway Realty - 463-4561. 113 Lots For Rent 121 Hastings Campground: Open all year. RV spaces for rent. 402-462-5621 116 Houses For Sale 1324 N. SAUNDERS: 4bedroom, 2-bath, double garage, fenced yard. Storage. Kitchen, windows, front and patio doors new. Save now before listing. Less than $120,000. 402463-4466, 402-984-2738. 2-BEDROOM: Attached garage. Joyce Schlachter, Broker, 402-462-5794. BEAUTIFUL HOME: 2412 Lakeview Cove (Idlewilde). 5-bedroom, 3-bath, split level, 2 family rooms, sunroom, pool, lakefront, all updated. Under $325,000. 402-463-8800. 137 Hay/Seeds SMALL SQUARE grass hay bales, horse quality. Approximately 450 bales. 402-460-8252, Nelson. 138 Irrigation T&L 8-TOWER Pivot: 1996, automatic reverse, drops, 11.2x24 tires. Northeast of Clay Center. $24,000. 402-366-3558. 141 Services BACKHOE, TRENCHING, waterlines, electric lines, irrigation. 402-817-4279. Business Property COMMERCIAL BUILDING with office/warehouse, newer roof, updated furnace/central air. $119,000. Coldwell Banker Town & Country Realty, 463-4591. FOR SALE: Blue Hill Tavern. Serious inquiries only. 402-469-1831 130 Auction Sales Korky Lightner Auction New semi-load of merchandise. Every Monday, 5:30 p.m. 1940 West A. 402-469-0703. PARR AUCTION Dave Parr, associate, Gateway Realty. 756-6135 RANDY RUHTER, Auctioneer and Broker, 2837 W. Hwy. 6, Hastings, NE, 402-463-8565. 141 Services DISC ROLLING Sell, install, and roll disc blades. Jess Putnam Jr., Gibbon, NE. 866-297-5130 or 308-325-4608. 145 Farms for Sale 110 ACRES, 2 miles northwest of Sutton, pivot irrigation potential. North 110 acres of NW 1/4, 278-5, Clay County. Heng Farm Management. 402362-4493 To place your want ad for the Farmer's Corner call 402-462-2131 STATE WIDE STATE WIDE CLASSIFIEDS CLASSIFIEDS Reach the whole state of Nebraska with one easy call. 402-462-2131, Hastings Tribune ANCESTRY SEARCH. Everett Smith is searching for other relatives. Would like an e-mail if names Strelow, Baltzer, Roop or Howland were in your family. esapiary@msn.com. BANKRUPTCY: FREE initial consultation. Fast relief from creditors. Low rates. Statewide filing. No office appointment necessary. Call Steffens Law Office, 308-872-8327. steffensbankruptcylaw.com. We are a debt relief agency, which helps people file bankruptcy under the bankruptcy code. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING in over 170 newspapers. Reach thousands of readers for $210/ 25 word ad. Contact your local newspaper or call 1-800-3692850. AFFORDABLE PRESS Release service. Send your message to 175 newspapers across Nebraska for one low price! Call 1-800-369-2850 or www.nebpress.com for more details. NO RESERVE Auction. RSC Equipment Rental to sell heavy trucks, service trucks, pickups, trailers, lifts, and more to highest bidder, Feb. 24. Visit www.purplewave.com. CITY OF Ord, Nebraska, is accepting sealed bids until May 1 for a 1995 Altec/International 4x4 double bucket truck with 50� reach. Call 308-728-5791. 12X47 MOBILE Home, ‘71. Harlan Lake, needs to be moved. Completely remodeled; plumbing, kitchen, bathroom, new windows, patio door, central air, new sub flooring. $6,000/offer. Can be winterized in 10 minutes. E-mail hobackww@unk.edu or 308708-1770. MANY CHILDREN need a safe family. Can you help? Christian Heritage helps you become a successful foster parent. Please don’t wait. Contact Christian Heritage toll-free: 866-381KIDS (5437) or www.chne.org. AIRLINES ARE hiring. Train for hands on Aviation Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified. Job placement assistance. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance, 888896-8006. DIESEL TECHNICIAN needed. Heavy truck or diesel pickup experience preferred. Great pay and benefits. Quality Diesel, Inc., Grant, NE, 308-352-4135. CONCRETE CREW Supervisor: Immediate opening, fast growing construction company in Beatrice. Minimum 8 years concrete experience. Competitive wage based on experience. E-mail resume: iscmanager@hotmail.com. HIRING! CORRECTIONS Officers, $14.21/hr + benefits! Lincoln and Tecumseh. For details and to apply online, v i s i t www.corrections.nebraska.go v or call 402-471-2654. ADA Accommodations, 402-4325182. EOE/Vet J O U R N E Y M A N / LINEWORKER: Cozad BPW taking applications. Experience preferred. CDL license required. Underground, overhead systems. Associate degree needed. Send resume: Board of Public Works, PO Box 65, Cozad, NE 69130. S T R O B E L has MANUFACTURING immediate openings for qualified temporary and fulltime welders, assemblers with electrical experience, and fork truck driver. Pay based on experience. Competitive vacation, benefits, 401K. EEO employer. 308-548-2254, hwebb@clarks.net, 105 S. Green St., Clarks, NE 68628. WANTED: SELF-motivated individual to work in central Nebraska water, well business. Valid CDL, welding, mechanical skills. Preemployment drug testing. Average 50 hours week year round. Competitive wages, benefits. Serious inquiries only. Downey Well Co., Inc., PO Box 37, Merna, NE 68856, or call 308-643-2463. DRIVERS: COMPANY needs drivers with cargo vans/box trucks for regional & nationwide deliveries. Fulltime, part-time, weekends. Jobs@expressfamily.com. YOU GOT the drive, we have the direction. OTR Drivers, APU equipped pre-pass EZpass, pets/passenger policy. Newer equipment. 100% No Touch. 1-800-528-7825. WANT TO Buy: Junk vehicles & salvage iron. We clean up farms & ranches. We meet or beat all prices. 308-530-1563 or 308-530-1088. Sports B8 HASTINGS TRIBUNE Thursday, Feb. 23, 2012 Speedweeks in Daytona SPRINT CUP SERIES Wednesday, Feb. 22 Practice Sessions: 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm EST (SPEED) 2:30 pm - 4:00 pm EST (SPEED) Thursday, Feb. 23 Gatorade Duels: 2:00 pm EST (SPEED) 60 laps/150 miles each Friday, Feb. 24 Practice Sessions: 11:00 am - 12:00 pm EST (SPEED) 12:30 pm - 1:30 pm EST (SPEED) Saturday, Feb. 25 Happy Hour: 10:30 am - 12:00 pm EST (SPEED) Sunday, Feb. 26 The Daytona 500 RaceDay on SPEED (pre-race): 9:00 am EST (SPEED) NASCAR Pre-Race: 12:00 pm EST (FOX) The 54th Annual Daytona 500: 1:00 pm EST (FOX) Daytona 500 At A Glance: Track: Daytona International Speedway Location: Daytona Beach, Fla. Specs: 2.5-mile tri-oval; Banking/Turns: 31°; Banking/Tri-Oval: 18°; Banking/Backstretch: 3° Length: 500 miles/200 laps 2011 Winner: Trevor Bayne Qualifying Record: 210.364 mph (Bill Elliott, 1987) Race Record: 177.602 mph (Buddy Baker, 1980) Crew Chief’s Take: “Daytona typically conjures images of speed, but a winning racecar is one that handles well. Although the track won’t lose grip like it did on the old surface, it’s still a relatively narrow track, which will force drivers to mind their manners — whether they’re running in a pack or in two-car tandems. NASCAR’s rules discouraging two-car drafting may work for much of the race, but when it’s ‘money time,’ those guys will pair up, and the duo with the most momentum on the final lap will win the 500.” NATIONWIDE SERIES CAMPING WORLD TRUCK SERIES Race: Drive4COPD 300 Track: Daytona International Speedway When: Saturday, Feb. 25 TV: ESPN (12:00 pm EST) 2011 Winner: Tony Stewart Race: NextEra Energy Resources 250 Track: Daytona International Speedway When: Friday, Feb. 24 TV: SPEED (7:00 pm EST) 2011 Winner: Michael Waltrip Daytona International Speedway Fantasy Stall Four Turns CHANGES COMING? 1 MORE NASCAR Vice President of Competi- 2 3 4 tion, Robin Pemberton, intimated on Monday that tweaks to the Cup Series’ cars could be made throughout the week leading up to the Daytona 500. Many teams found their cars to be overheating (or near it) by the end of Saturday’s 187.5mile Bud Shootout. The Shootout was run at night in cooler temperatures, while Sunday’s forecast calls for 70-degree weather. The easiest fix to allow for engines to run cooler would be to expand the grill opening on the cars’ noses. STAR POWER The Nationwide Series race at Daytona, Saturday’s Drive4COPD 350, will have plenty of Cup talent to go along with NNS regulars such as Danica Patrick, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Elliot Sadler, Austin Dillon and Kenny Wallace. Sprint Cup regulars who are entered in the event are: Kurt Busch, Kyle Busch, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Denny Hamlin, Kasey Kahne, Brad Keselowski, Joey Logano, David Ragan and Tony Stewart. Keselowski is also entered in Friday’s Truck Series race. He’ll pilot his self-owned No. 19 Dodge Ram. INJECTING TECHNOLOGY The carburetor has been a staple of NASCAR engines since the sport debuted in 1949. However, beginning this season the Cup Series engines will shift to fuel injection, aligning the sport more closely with today’s technology. NASCAR, McLaren Electronic Systems and Freescale Semiconductors, Inc., which will partner with the sanctioning body to provide the components, claim the devices will be tamper-proof. While EFI will not bring any noticable on-track changes from a fan perspective, teams will focus on fuel mileage and efficiency. Crew chiefs, you’ve been dared. HISTORY ON HIS SIDE? Winning the pole for the Daytona 500 does not necessarily guarantee success in the race. The last driver to sweep the pole and the win was Dale Jarrett in 2000. Carl Edwards will look to break that trend on Sunday. Kyle Busch wins Shootout; Edwards on pole for 500 Busch edges out Stewart, Edwards beats teammate Biffle in qualifying By MATT TALIAFERRO Athlon Sports Racing Editor Kyle Busch won a crash-filled Budweiser Shootout on Saturday evening, kicking off Daytona Speedweeks in spectacular fashion. Busch’s .013-second win over Tony Stewart (right) was the closest finish in the Shootout’s 34-year history. En route to the win, Busch found himself completely sideways on two occasions, but was able to save his Toyota — itself a backup car rolled out after an accident in practice — each time. “I was trying to push (Ryan) Newman and hook up with him, then he was hooked up with whoever was in front of him,” Busch said of his final charge to the front. “I’m like, ‘All right, fine.’ The hole opened up behind Stewart. I ducked in behind there knowing he had a fast car, (and) pushed him. “We got up through there. He made the way to the outside and everything. Coming to the line — I’ve been in that situation in reverse before with Tony (and it) hadn’t ended up so well. This time it turned out all right. We made it past him and beat him to the line, so it was cool.” Busch earned nearly $200,000 for the victory. While the ending came down to Busch and Stewart teaming up in a tandem draft to separate from the field, the majority of the race witnessed “pack racing.” Fan displeasure with the two-car tandem drafts that had become the norm at Daytona and Talladega prompted NASCAR to make changes to the cars’ plate, grill and spoiler sizes as well as the max radi■ Chad Knaus (left), crew chief of Hendrick Motorsports’ No. 48 Chevy, is in hot water once again. NASCAR confiscated the “C-posts” of the 48 team’s Daytona 500 entry prior to technical inspection last Friday. The C-posts connect the roof of the car to the rear deck lid and quarterpanels. That area of the car is delicate in that air passes over and around the posts and onto the spoiler. By redirecting that air, substantial gains can be made in downforce, drag and speed. Car owner Rick Hendrick stated prior to the Bud Shootout on Saturday that the car had run ASP, Inc. ASP, Inc. Kyle Busch (18) slings past Tony Stewart as the two come to the finish of Saturday’s Budweiser Shootout at Daytona International Speedway. Looking at Checkers: Tough to say, as a winning driver appears to be whoever is running second on the final lap. As Kyle Busch demonstrated in Saturday’s Bud Shootout, drafting by the leader in the trioval is the key to victory. Tony Stewart will keep that in his memory bank, turning the tables on Sunday. Pretty Solid Pick: Plenty to choose from, among them Dale Earnhardt Jr., Kevin Harvick and Jeff Gordon. Good Sleeper Pick: Kurt Busch has never won a points-paying race at Daytona (although he’s been close), and he’s teamed up with the underfunded Phoenix Racing team. However, the Hendrick-supplied engines and chassis should be all Busch needs to excel. Runs on Seven Cylinders: Surprisingly, Brad Keselowski has a 26.8-place average finish in five Daytona points-paying starts. Insider Tip: Ford has shown a lot of torque exiting the turns, but that won’t be what wins this race. A smart driver on the plate tracks outweighs a fast car ... but not by much. Classic Moments ator pressure. The result was cars bunched together in three-wide packs. “It was definitely a lot more fun and you felt a lot more eager to be engaged in the race this way than in the two-car deal,” Stewart said. “I actually had fun racing at Daytona again which I haven’t had for a while, so I’m really, really appreciative to the work that NASCAR has done in the offseason and the test session and even after the test of the changes that they made to try to make it better for us out there.” Marcos Ambrose, Brad Keselowski and Deny Hamlin rounded out the top 5. An eight-car wreck with eight laps remaining resulted in Jeff Gordon on his roof. That incident, which also included Jimmie Johnson, AJ Allmendinger, Kurt Busch and Carl Edwards, sent the event into a greenwhite-checker finish. Busch and Ambrose were also involved, but continued after minimal repairs. “It was just getting down to the end of the race and it was time to go,” Gordon said. “Me and Jimmie were looking good there. We knew those guys were coming, and once Kyle got in front of me, I was just trying to in four restrictor plate races with the same roof and C-posts and that none had been altered. The car is the same one Jimmie Johnson drove in October’s Talladega event. An in-car feed prior to that race picked up audio of Knaus telling Johnson that, if he won, Johnson needed to “crack” the back of the car — meaning he needed to damage it. The car has never failed inspection, and even passed two trips to NASCAR’s Research and Development Center in 2011. NASCAR president Mike Helton keep Jimmie on me and trying to stay with Kyle. “Every time I got to Kyle’s bumper, he just started getting so sideways, like he was a lot tonight. And I thought he was going to wreck. I saw him start to spin, so I went wide, not knowing someone had gotten to my outside. That got me into those guys and into the wall and along for a ride.” Edwards on Pole Carl Edwards will lead the 43-car field to green in Sunday’s Daytona 500. Edwards topped Sunday’s qualifying session with a fast lap of 194.738 mph (46.216 seconds). Edwards nipped his Roush Fenway Racing teammate, Greg Biffle, by .155 seconds. Both are locked into the front row. It was Edwards’ first Daytona 500 pole. Positions 3-39 will be determined in Thursday’s Gatorade Duel races. Four additional spots will be awarded to the fastest qualifiers on Sunday that did not qualify via the Duels. The 43rd spot will likely go to a past champion, although if all former champions qualify in the Duels or on speed, the final spot will be awarded to the fifth-fastest Sunday qualifier not already in. said there is a “high likelihood” that Knaus will face penalties, though they would not come until after the Daytona 500. ■ The 2013 Bud Shootout will have a different look — although the look won’t be new, but old. Next season’s exhibition race will consist of the 2012 pole winners and past Shootout winners who have attempted at least one race in the 2012 season. This format was used from the premier race in 1979 (then known as the Busch Clash) until 2008. A convoluted system of Shootout inclusion muddied the waters from 2009-2012, when more emphasis was placed on awarding each manufacturer relatively equal representation. With a new car on the way next year that will place more attention to brand identity, NASCAR has gone back to a format that is fan-approved. “Fans have expressed their desire to see this event return to its original eligibility rules,” Steve O’Donnell, NASCAR senior vice president of racing operations, said. “We listened and decided it would be best to return to the eligibility rules of years past adding further meaning to pole qualifying for each NASCAR Sprint Cup race.” Daytona International Speedway Before there was Trevor Bayne, before there was Derrike Cope, there was Greg Sacks. Sacks scored one of the most unlikely wins in NASCAR’s Modern Era when he drove DiGard Racing’s R&D car to a win in the 1985 Pepsi Firecracker 400. The initial plan for the No. 10 team was to test new shock packages throughout the race. But when it was apparent that DiGard’s Chevy was racier than most, crew chief Gary Nelson made the decision to race for the win. And in a time and place when Bill Elliott’s No. 9 Thunderbird was all but unbeatable, that was quite a gamble. When Elliott ducked onto pit road for fuel with nine laps remaining, Sacks inherited the lead. However, with a faulty radio, he believed he was racing the lapped car of Terry Labonte for the win. Only after he got past Labonte on the final lap and pulled into Victory Lane did he realize differently. Highs & Lows TONY STEWART The reigning Sprint Cup champion had an equally victorious offseason. Stewart won the Indy Karting Classic in December, the Rumble in Fort Wayne indoor midget race on New Year’s Eve and the Winter Freeze at Screven Motor Speedway earlier this month. He was also named the National Motorsports Press Association’s 2011 Driver of the Year, Eastern Motorsport Press Association Driver of the Year and was named Driver of the Year by an exclusive panel of journalists and broadcasters. Stewart was also awarded the Mario Andretti Trophy as the SPEED Performer of the Year for 2011. SHOOTOUT POLE WINNERS On Saturday, Martin Truex Jr. continued a dubious streak for drivers starting first in the Bud Shootout: The point man hasn’t won the event since 1989, when the race was known as the Busch Clash. Starting positions for the race are determined by a blind draw, and the last man to cash in on the up-front position was Ken Schrader. Schrader led 15 of the 20 laps in ’89 en route to a three car-length victory.