Showdown over guns in schools - Hastings Tribune Archive Page
Transcription
Showdown over guns in schools - Hastings Tribune Archive Page
Subdistricts: Area teams kick off postseason play. — Page B1 Case reviewed Judge orders Jayson Garett to continue taking medication for bipolar disorder. Page A5 SERVING THE COMMUNITY FOR MORE THAN 100 YEARS 16 pages Wednesday, Feb. 16, 2011 http://www.hastingstribune.com Home delivered 29 cents Newsstands 50 cents Superintendent warns of ‘doomsday scenario’ HPS LOOKS AT CUTS, NEW REVENUE IN RESPONSE TO REDUCTION IN STATE AID CHARIS UBBEN cubben@hastingstribune.com The time has come for Hastings Public Schools to look carefully at what money it may receive for the 2011-2012 school year, and to decide how it will operate at that level. In the best-case scenario cur- rently on the table, Superintendent Craig Kautz told the Hastings Board of Education on Tuesday, the district will receive $1 million to $4 million less funding next year. HPS receives 52 percent of its revenue from the state aid formula and 32 percent from local property taxes. The local $1.32 tax rate per $100 of property valuation includes $1.13 for the general fund (the maximum $1.05 for general fund, plus 7.09 cents for the Early Retirement Incentive Program), the bond fund (14 cents for the new middle school and 5 cents for the upcoming renovation of Hastings High). The Legislature is considering bills that would give either $810 million or $845 million to schools for the coming school year. “The best legislative bill we have right now in the hopper is still an 11.1 percent decrease in state aid,” Kautz said. A crucial question is whether Education Jobs Funding from the federal government, of which Nebraska has received $59 million (HPS expects its share to be $713,217) will be swallowed up by the state to meet its aid obligation or will be given to schools in addition to state funds. “If used to get to $810 million or $845 million, we are in a doomsday scenario,” Kautz said. “Obviously, if that money is on top of the totals of these other funds, we get closer to having a manageable situation.” Even if the state pays out $845 million on top of the Education Jobs funds, that leaves a 4.9 percent decrease in aid to schools. Nebraska used federal stimulus dollars in its state aid calculation this year: The state itself paid out $810 million, then used federal stimulus dollars to reach a total of $950 million. Unfortunately, state aid numbers for the 2011-2012 school year won’t be certified until July 1, well past the May 15 deadline for teacher contracts. Property valuations, which create the basis for local property tax income, won’t be known until Aug. 15. Heineman applauds tax breaks BRENT McCOWN/ Tribune Brent Eigenberg is the school resource officer at Hastings High School and is the only person allowed to carry a gun in school. The Nebraska Legislature is considering allowing teachers, administrators and security personnel to also carry guns. JOSH FUNK The Associated Press Showdown over guns in schools LOCAL SUPERINTENDENTS SKEPTICAL OF 2 BILLS CHARIS UBBEN cubben@hastingstribune.com L ocal school officials are skeptical of two bills being debated by the Nebraska Legislature today that would allow certain people to carry guns in schools. Legislative Bill 516, introduced by Sen. Mark Christensen, would allow security personnel, administrators and teaching staff to carry concealed handguns in educational institutions. LB 618, introduced by Sen. Brad Ashford, would allow peace officers or other authorized law enforcement officers to carry firearms in school or at school events. Both were to be discussed by the Legislature’s Judiciary Committee beginning at 1:30 p.m. today. Currently, only law enforcement officers are allowed to bring guns onto a school campus. Hastings Public Schools has a full-time resource officer based at Hastings High School, who is a member of the Hastings Police Department and carries a gun. HPS Superintendent Craig Kautz told the Hastings Board of Education Tuesday that it is tragic that people are being violent in schools, but there are problems that bring them to the school that need to be addressed. He doesn’t believe adding guns to the school scenario is wise. “I worry about arming more and more people, and I also worry about a principal or a teacher with a sidearm strapped to them, and what kind of learning environment that would be,” he said. Please see GUNS/page A7 Not so fast with the fast food SHAY BURK sburk@hastingstribune.com BRENT McCOWN/Tribune A vehicle uses the drive-through at McDonald’s Feb. 4. While fast food is convenient, it often tends to be high in calories, fat, salt and cholesterol. When people think about fast food, speed, convenience and low cost all come to mind. Deeper consideration may lead a person to think about the health value, but most of the time, it’s the convenience that draws people to fast food. In this fast-paced world, getting food in a few minutes’ time that can be eaten in the car between stops is appealing for many. Sandy Stevens, the community health education coordinator with the South Heartland District Health Department in Hastings, said she agrees that the convenience of fast food is even appealing to her. “The problem with fast food is it’s not always good for you,” she said. “It’s got lots of calories. Lo: 38 Hi: 68 WOMAN’S ARM SEVERED Art by Rece Vaught, 10, Giltner Public School “ The problem with fast food is it’s not always good for you. It’s got lots of calories. It’s got lots of fat, lots of salt and lots of cholesterol. ” - Sandy Stevens It’s got lots of fat, lots of salt and lots of cholesterol.” All of those factors can lead a person to have high blood pressure, heart disease, become overweight and even have problems with liver function. Stevens shared that startling information with a group of about 20 adults and children during Family Fun Please see FAST/ page A7 LINCOLN — Tax breaks have succeeded in enticing more companies to invest in Nebraska since an incentive program was overhauled five years ago, Gov. Dave Heineman said Tuesday. Economic development officials joined Heineman at a news conference to celebrate the Nebraska Advantage program, which has received 251 applications since it began in January 2006. Last year was the busiest ever for the program with 55 applications. Those companies applied and promised to invest $357 million and create 3,800 jobs in return for tax breaks. “Without a program like Nebraska Advantage, you can’t compete,” Heineman said. Heineman said the state should avoid tax increases, if at all possible, because they hurt business. He singled out Illinois as an example of that. Last month, Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn approved increasing personal income tax from 3 percent to 5 percent and boosting the corporate tax rate from 4.8 percent to 7 percent. Heineman said other states have since been trying to recruit businesses from Illinois. “Every time you increase taxes, it’s a job killer,” he said. Officials with the Lincoln, Omaha and state Chambers of Commerce said interest in Nebraska’s incentives has increased significantly recently as the economy has improved. “We may not need to be ahead of everyone on incentives, but we need to be competitive,” said Marc LeBaron, CEO of Lincoln Industries, which does metal plating and finishing. He is a past chairman of the state chamber. Wendy Birdsall, president of the Lincoln Chamber, said the state’s incentive program has been successful with small and large companies. State officials say 33 of the applications came from financial or insurance companies, 34 came from renewable fuels or medical firms and 60 came from telecommunications or business service firms. More than half of the applications for tax breaks were for projects in either Lincoln or Omaha. Nation Weather Partly cloudy tonight. Becoming mostly sunny Thursday. Tuesday, Kautz presented the board with strategies for increasing revenue or decreasing expenditures, all based on the principles of protecting the classroom and direct classroom support to the highest degree possible, and of doing harm only when forced to because pre-emptive actions may be necessary to protect HPS from spending more than it will get this year. All are only possibilities, Kautz stressed. Nothing has been decided. Please see DOOMSDAY/page A7 CINCINNATI — A Cincinnati woman’s arm ripped off during a vehicle-towing accident has been reattached by surgery. Family members tell The Cincinnati Enquirer it’s unclear how much function 36-year-old Helen Foster will have in the arm after the accident on Monday. Friends were helping Foster tow her old minivan to a junkyard when a braided rope snapped, then recoiled violently and severed her arm at the elbow. Inside The relatives say the man towing the van with his pickup truck immediately ran for ice and towels while another friend called for help. Family members say their quick action likely saved Foster’s arm. The Associated Press Agri/Business Bridge Classified Comics B6 A8 B7 B5 Entertainment Obituaries Opinion Tribland A8 A2 A4 A2 VOL. 106, NO. 116 ©2011, THE SEATON PUBLISHING CO., INC. HASTINGS, NEBRASKA Page Two A2 HASTINGS TRIBUNE Wednesday, Feb. 16, 2011 Obituaries KATHERINE O. SWEET Hastings resident Katherine Olive Sweet, 104, died Sunday, Feb. 13, 2011, at Good Samaritan SocietyHastings Village (Perkins Pavilion). Services are 1:30 p.m. Friday at All Saints Sweet Chapel, Good Samaritan Society-Hastings Village with the Revs. Art Schakat and Charles Johnson officiating. Burial will be at Glenvil Cemetery in Glenvil. Visitation is 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Thursday with the family present 6-8 p.m. at Brand-Wilson Funeral Home in Hastings and one hour prior to services Friday at the chapel. Memorials may be given to the family. Condolences may be sent to www.brandwilson.com *** Katherine was born Jan. 26, 1907, to Charles and Zada (Conway) Orr in Burt County, Neb., on a farm southwest of Decatur, Neb. As an infant, she and her family moved to Ona- wa, Iowa. She attended country school near Tieville, Iowa. She married Clement Sweet on Feb. 15, 1928. They celebrated 80 years of marriage in 2008. Katherine and Clement lived on a farm near Decatur, Neb., later moving into town. In 1954, they moved to Fremont, Neb., then returned to Decatur in 1958, where they lived until moving to Hastings, Neb., to the Good Samaritan Society in 1987. In 2004, she and her husband moved to Perkins Pavilion, GSS. Clement passed away in June 2008. While living on the farm, Katherine was a homemaker, she raised chickens, always planted a large garden, and canned many vegetables. She is survived by two children, son, Philip Sweet and wife Evelyn; and daughter, Anita Willis, all of Hastings, Neb.; six grandchildren; 15 great-grandchildren; one greatgreat-grandchild; and many nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by her parents; her husband, Clement; two great-grandchildren; and three brothers, Ralph, Charles and Riley. JAN ZEIGLER Superior resident Jan Zeigler, 66, died Sunday, Feb. 13, 2011, at Lincoln. Services are 2 p.m. Thursday at MegruePrice Funeral Home chapel in Superior with Pastor Zeigler Becky Saddler officiating. Burial will be at Evergreen Cemetery at Superior. Visitation is until 8 p.m. today and 9 a.m. until service time Thursday at the funeral home. Memorials are suggested to Superior Volunteer Rescue Squad. Condolences may be sent to www.pricefuneralhomes.com *** Jan was born July 29, 1944, at Smith Center, Kan., to Wayne and Lucille (Grauerholz) Schoeni. She was preceded in death by her parents, Wayne and Lucille Schoeni; and a stepdaughter, Tricia Zeigler. She is survived by her husband, Bob of Superior; son, Brett Conaway of Smith Center, Kan.; daughters, Linley Voboril of Galva, Kan., and Leslie Hoge and husband Heath of Belleville, Kan.; stepchildren, Juliene Snyder and husband Scott of Lincoln, Neb., Jeanine Kintigh and husband Roger of Webber, Kan., Bryan Zeigler and wife Stacy of Topeka, Kan., Tony Warren and wife Angie of Hastings, Neb., Troy Warren of Pueblo West, Colo., and Eric Warren and wife Robin of Hastings, Neb.; grandchildren, Trevor Etie and son A.J. of Bedford, Texas, Cole and Haley Conaway of Smith Center, Kan., Ethan and Corbyn Voboril of Galva, Kan., Kole, Peyton, Riley Palmer, Kaitlyn and Chase Hoge of Belleville, Kan., Ashley and Danelle Snyder of Lincoln, Neb., Jason, Melissa, Gavin, Zach and Holley Kintigh of Lincoln, Neb., Bryce Kintigh of Wichita, Kan., Allison Kintigh of Manhattan, Kan., Macy, Lily and Hollyn Zeigler of Topeka, Kan.; sisters, Carole Thompson and husband Eldon of Superior, Neb., Rita Kleinschmidt and husband Lloyd of Agra, Kan., Cheryl Gibbs and husband Mark of Stilwell, Kan; and brother Arden Schoeni of Arlington, Texas; nieces; nephews; other relatives; and a host of friends. KENNETH ‘KENN’ OLE JOHNSON Wayne resident Kenneth “Kenn” Ole Johnson, 88, died Monday, Feb. 14, 2011, at Nebraska Veterans Home in Norfolk. Services are 10:30 a.m. Thursday at Grace Lutheran Church in Wayne. Burial will be at Pleasant Valley Cmetery at Verdigre, Neb. Visitation with family present is 5-8 p.m. today at Hasemann Funeral Home in Wayne. Memorials may be given to Nebraska Veterans Home in Norfolk. BENNIE J. SINDT Franklin resident Bennie Joe Sindt, 84, died Wednesday, Feb. 16, 2011, at Franklin County Memorial Hospital in Franklin. Services are pending with Hutchins Funeral Home in Franklin. HARRY D. CHRISMAN Hastings resident Harry D. Chrisman, 79, died Tuesday, Feb. 15, 2011, at Mary Lanning Memorial HealthCare in Hastings. Services are 1:30 p.m. Thursday at Brand-Wilson Funeral Home chapel Chrisman in Hastings with the Rev. Joel Remmers officiating. Private family burial will be at Parkview Cemetery in Hastings. Book signing is until 9 p.m. today with family present 6-7:30 p.m. at the funeral home. Memorials may be given to the family. Condolences may be sent to www.brandwilson.com *** Harry was born Oct. 23, 1931, to Frank and Lela (Nine) Chrisman in York County, Neb. During his early years, he helped on the family farm. In 1950, he went to work at the Naval Ammunition Depot in Hastings, Neb. He served in the United States Army from Feb. 26, 1952, to Nov. 25, 1953, during the Korean War Conflict. After returning, he resumed working for the Naval Ammunition Depot until 1957; he then started working at Dutton Lainson at the Cornhusker Press as a printer, retiring in May of 1997. He married Shirley Morris on Nov. 12, 1954, in Hastings, Neb. He is survived by his wife, Shirley of Hastings, Neb.; one daughter, Angie Thomas and husband Robert of Hastings, Neb.; and one sister, Audrey Gaver of McCook, Neb.; two grandchildren, Summer Crosby and fiancée Jason Kent, and Tyson Crosby and wife Megan; and one great-grandson, Hayden. He was preceded in death by his parents; and one sister, Irene Dorffler. HOWARD BIECK Giltner resident Howard Bieck, 88, died Tuesday, Feb. 15, 2011, at St. Francis Medical Center in Grand Island. Funeral services are 10:30 a.m. Friday at Harvard United Church of Bieck Christ. Pastor Dave Johnson will officiate. Burial will be at Harvard Cemetery. Visitation is 4-8 p.m. with the family greeting friends 5-7 p.m. Thursday at Higby-McQuiston Mortuary in Aurora. Condolences may be sent to www.higbymortuary.com *** Raymond "Howard" Bieck, the son of Floyd and Ruby (Schueler) Bieck, was born on a farm near Harvard, Neb., on July 17, 1922. He attended "Hart" rural school through the 8th grade and graduated from Harvard High School in 1940. Soon after graduating, Howard enlisted in the U.S. Army Air Corps Reserve during WW II, serving in the states and later in the reserves. Howard was united in marriage to Doris Ann Spath on Nov. 27, 1946, in Mankato, Kan. This union was blessed with three children, Neil, Earl and Nancy Ann. Howard farmed until his retirement. He loved his farming and animals. Howard was a member of the Harvard Church of Christ since his rural church united with them. He served on the U.C.C. Church Council. Howard was baptized and confirmed at the First Evangelical Church in rural Harvard. Howard was a past Master Mason of the Mason’s Lodge of Giltner, until he demitted out when they combined with the Phillips Lodge. Howard served on the Giltner School Board and Rural Fire Department. He was a devoted husband and loving father. Howard especially doted on his grandchildren and great-grandchildren and followed all their activities. He was preceded in death by his parents; three brothers, Clyde, Robert and Romaine; and three infant brothers, Gordon, Gerald and Vernon. Those left to cherish his memory are his wife, Doris of Giltner; three children, Neil (Nancy) Bieck of Aurora, Earl (Vickie) Bieck of Giltner and Nancy (Dave) Burson of Giltner; seven grandchildren, Travis (Stacy) Bieck of Giltner, Alena (Chris) Haun of Scottsbluff, Jessica (Matt) Gorr of Longmont, Colo., Courtney (Frank) Kimmel of Greenwood, Miss., Jennifer (Matt) Bebensee of Kearney, Trent Burson and Kassidi Burson, both of Giltner; eight great-grandchildren; and two sisters, Donna Davis of Hastings and Lois Plebanek of Fullerton. Joan Sutherland honored in London The Associated Press LONDON — The late opera star Joan Sutherland, regarded as one of the greatest opera singers of the twentieth century, was honored Tuesday at a special service at Westminster Abbey. The service of Thanksgiving drew about 2,000 admirers of the Australian-born soprano who died in Switzerland four months ago at the age of 83. Prince Charles and former Prime Minister John Major were among those paying their respects to Sutherland, known as “La Stupenda” because of the purity of her voice John Tooley, general director of the Royal Opera House for many years, praised Sutherland Mel Brooks comedy co-star dies at age 75 The Associated Press GRENADA HILLS, Calif. — Kenneth Mars, a Mel Brooks collaborator who played a Hitler-worshipping playwright in “The Producers” and an earnest police inspector with a malfunctioning artificial arm in “Young Frankenstein,” has died. He was 75. In a statement Monday, Mars family said the actor died Saturday of pancreatic cancer at his home in Grenada Hills. In Brooks’ 1968 romp “The Producers,” Mars co-starred as Franz Liebkind, a Nazi enthusiast whose play, “Springtime for Hitler,” is the basis for a scheme by two conniving showmen (Zero Mostel and Gene Wilder) to bilk investors by putting on a surefire Broadway flop. Brooks cast Mars again in 1974’s “Young Frankenstein” as the constable poking around the castle grounds on the trail of mad scientist Wilder’s monster. In both films, the Chicagoborn Mars demonstrated his talent for vocal farce, lending over-the-top German accents to the characters. Mars’ nearly 50-year career included a long list of voice credits, including “The Little Mermaid,” “The Jetsons” and the “The Land Before Time” movies and TV series. Among Mars’ other film credits were Woody Allen’s “Radio Days” and “Shadows and Fog” and Peter Bogdanovich’s “What’s Up, Doc.” for her lasting impact on audiences throughout the world. Sutherland first appeared at the Royal Opera House in 1952, but her international stature grew immeasurably after she made her Italian debut in the title role of Handel’s “Alcina” in Venice in 1960. “Joan was a superlative singer, possessed of a ravishingly beautiful voice: Pure, large, even throughout its wide range, flexible, warm and vibrant. She used it with consummate artistry to musical and dramatic ends,” he said. Despite her global fame, Tooley said, Sutherland remained a “supremely modest human being.” The service included music, prayers and readings. ANNIE M. JENSEN Former Clay Center resident Annie M. (Downs) Jensen, 81, died Monday, Feb. 14, 2011, at Sutton Community Home in Sutton. Services are 10:30 a.m. Jensen Friday at Sutton Memorial Chapel with the Rev. Del Klover officiating. Burial will be at Clay Center Cemetery in Clay Center. Visitation is 1-8 p.m. Thursday with family present 5:30-7:30 p.m. at the chapel. Memorials may be given to the family. *** Annie was born May 28, 1929, to Charles and Ida (Alexander) Downs in Loyal Valley, Texas. She lived all over the state of Texas; her father worked for the Department of Roads and Bridges. She graduated at the age of 16 from Llano High School in Llano, Texas. She attended two years at East Texas State College in Commerce, Texas. She married Alfred Wesley Jensen on June 4, 1947, in Springtown, Texas. They started their married life on a farm near Edgar, Neb. In 1951, they moved to the family farm near Clay Center, Neb. To this union, seven children were born, four sons and three daughters. In 1971, they moved into Clay Center, Neb. She moved to Lincoln, Neb., in 2000 to live with her daughter Mary. She had also lived in Wahoo, Neb., for several years before moving to Sutton in 2010. She was a member of Emmanuel United Methodist Church in Clay Center, Neb. She belonged to the United Methodist Women’s Organization, Mills-Schroder Post #87 American Legion Auxiliary of Clay Center, Neb., Adams County Petit Salon #486 of 8 and 40. For over 20 years, she was the American Red Cross Clay County Blood Program Chairman until she started a daycare in her home. Annie is survived by her children, Mary Contreras of Wahoo, Neb., Lee and wife Vicki Jensen of Central City, Neb., Leslie and wife Linda Jensen of Central City, Neb., Sheila and husband Mike Krause of Clay Center, Neb., Dean and wife Corinne Jensen of Glenvil, Neb., Diana Kotschwar of Kearney, Neb., Neil and wife Kathy Jensen of Blair, Neb.; 22 grandchildren; nine great-grandchildren; sister, Belle Burks of Round Rock, Texas; sister-inlaw, Ruby Carlson of Hastings, Neb.; sister-in-law and brotherin-law, Betty and Laverne Duensing of Lincoln, Neb.; and many nieces, nephews and friends. She was preceded in death by her husband; parents; brother, Charles Downs Jr.; sisters, Lila Gates and Katie McIntosh; brothers-in-law, Aubrey Gates, Dale McIntosh, Perry Burks, and Jim Carlson; and one great-grandson, Aidan Kotschwar. PAUL D. CROZIER Hastings resident Paul Dean Crozier, 65, died Monday, Feb. 14, 2011, at BryanLGH West in Lincoln as a result of a head injury. Services are 11 a.m. Saturday at First Presbyterian Church in Hastings with the Rev. Dr. William G. NottageTacey officiating. Private family burial will be at Parkview Cemetery in Hastings prior to the service. Visitation is 6-8 p.m. Thursday and Friday at Livingston-Butler-Volland Funeral Home in Hastings. In lieu of flowers, memorials may be given to the Salvation Army of Hastings and the Emergency Protective Service Shelter in Hastings. Condolences may be sent to www.lbvfh.com VERNON HARTMAN Hastings resident Vernon Hartman, 72, died Wednesday, Feb. 16, 2011, at Mary Lanning Memorial HealthCare in Hastings. Services are pending at Livingston-Butler-Volland Funeral Home & Cremation Center in Hastings. LLOYD DANA Fairfield resident Lloyd Dana, 78, died Tuesday, Feb. 15, 2011, at Mary Lanning Memorial HealthCare in Hastings. Services are pending at Livingston-Butler-Volland Funeral Home & Cremation Center in Hastings. Tribland Adams County Judge Robert Ide Tuesday sentenced Elizabeth M. Ramos, 27, of Grand Island to 90 days in jail, one year of probation, a $600 fine, two-year drivers license revocation, victim impact class and attitudinal dynamics class for a second offense of driving under the influence of alcohol on Sept. 24, 2010. Ramos pleaded guilty on Dec. 27, 2010, and prosecutors dropped charges of leaving the scene of an accident and driving under revocation. Second-offense DUI, with a blood alcohol content more than .15, is a Class 1 misdemeanor punishable by up to one year in jail and a $1,000 fine. H&R Block closed Thursday morning, 9:00 to noon, for funeral of Kurt Weseman. -Adv. It was reported Monday that the identity of David B. Brown of 1531 W. Boyce St. was taken and used at an unknown location. 2007 Chevy Silverado with regular cab, 27,000 miles, Bramble’s Auto Sales, 462-4849 -Adv. Vehicles reportedly driven by Chrisella C. Lewis of 723 S. Denver Ave. and Kerri E. Beale of Nelson collided Monday on Second Street near Lincoln 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. Tri-City Street Rods Auto Show, Fonner Park, Saturday and Sunday. 402-984-0881. Adv. Adams County District Judge Stephen Illingworth recently granted a decree of dissolution to the marriage of Christie Good and Alan Good, and Cynthia McGrath and Kenneth McGrath. Vern “Buzz” Hartman was part of the Hastings Grain Inspection family for 50 years. He was a conscientious employee, a loyal family man and a credit to the success of our company. We shall miss him. Adv. Melissa J. Utecht of 200 S. Cedar Ave. reported Monday that her vehicle was damaged at her residence. Godfather’s now open at Burlington Express Food Court. -Adv. It was reported Monday that items were shoplifted from Kmart, 3001 W. 12th St. No. 103. The value of items taken was $90. Other Page! Photos of interest...send to Hastings Tribune, Other Page, P.O. Box 788, Hastings 68902. Enclose selfaddressed, stamped envelope for return of picture. E-mail op@hastingstribune.com -Adv. Dr. Doug Hentzen, Hastings Internal Medicine, taking new patient appointments. 4632454. Referrals not necessary. Adv. Due to the freeze which occurred in the growing regions, Allen’s has a shortage of this week’s Roma tomatoes special. Sorry for the inconvenience. Adv. Hey, sports fans! You’ll find results of local and area games first at hastingstribune.com Adv. John Udesen of 602 E. Second St. reported Tuesday that his vehicle window was damaged at his residence. Robert D. Ramsey of 500 S. Garfield Ave. reported Monday that his front license plate was taken from his vehicle at his residence. A vehicle reportedly driven by Alan K. Owens of 24 Sara Drive Monday struck a parked vehicle owned by Pedro M. Gabriel of Harvard at 701 W. 12th St. DAV, Thursday, Pizza. 302 South Elm. All welcome. -Adv. Area funerals Thursday t Harry Chrisman, 79, of Hastings, 1:30 p.m. at Brand-Wilson Funeral Home chapel in Hastings. t Joan Cook, 68, of Deweese, 10:30 a.m. at Our Lady of Assumption Catholic Church in Deweese. t Elsie Mueller, 95, of Davenport, 1 p.m. at St. Peter Lutheran Church in Deshler. t Viola W. Post-Shubert, 77, of Fairfield, 10:30 a.m. at Williams Funeral Home chapel in Edgar. t Kurt Weseman, 40, 10:30 a.m. at Zion Lutheran Church in Hastings. t Jan Zeigler, 66, of Superior, 2 p.m. at Megrue-Price Funeral Home chapel in Superior. Friday t Howard Bieck, 88, of Giltner, 10:30 a.m. at United Church of Christ in Harvard. t Annie Jensen, 81, of Sutton, 10:30 a.m. at Sutton Memorial Chapel in Sutton. t Katherine Sweet, 104, of Hastings, 1:30 p.m. at All Saints Chapel, Good Samaritan Society in Hastings. Weather/World HASTINGS TRIBUNE Wednesday, Feb. 16, 2011 A3 Pricey jet engine tests budget cutters’ resolve ANDREW TAYLOR The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The Obama administration’s campaign against a costly alternative engine for the Pentagon’s nextgeneration fighter jet faces a critical vote in the GOP-controlled House, its fate to be decided by more than 90 freshmen lawmakers who previously haven’t had to choose sides between two major defense companies. The expected vote Wednesday comes as the House enters its second day of debate on a $1.2 trillion spending bill that would make deep cuts while wrapping up the unfin- ished business lawmakers inherited after last year’s collapse of the budget process. That includes $1.03 trillion for agency operating budgets that need annual approval by Congress and $158 billion for military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. The engine battle pits Obama and Defense Secretary Robert Gates — who say the engine would waste almost $3 billion over the next few years — against GOP leaders like House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, whose state is a chief beneficiary. The spending measure includes $450 million for the engine, which would be built by the General Electric Co. and Rolls-Royce in Ohio, Indiana and other states. On the other side are lawmakers from Connecticut, where the main F-35 fighter engine is built by Pratt & Whitney, as well as members from Florida, Texas and other states. The F-35 engine vote presents 87 GOP freshmen — infused with fervor to cut spending — with a dilemma: Vote with the Obama administration to cut spending now or side with supporters of the alternative engine, who argue that it would save money by injecting competition into the F-35 program, the costliest weapons program in Defense Department history. “We have to step forward, we have to cut back on areas, and this is an area that the secretary of defense said we need to cut back on,” freshman Rep. Bob Dold, R-Ill., said. The engine battle divides along regional rather than party lines, in contrast to the partisan warfare on the underlying bill, which sharply cuts domestic programs and foreign aid and earned a veto threat from the White House budget office and a warning from President Barack Obama against unwise cuts “that could endanger the recovery.” The House worked through the night into early Wednesday; debate on the bill is expected to take all week. A frosty reception awaits the bill in the Democratic-controlled Senate, which won’t take up its version until next month. So it’ll require passage of a separate short-term government funding bill by March 4 to prevent a government shutdown that neither side says it wants. The GOP bill, separate from the 2012 budget Obama Tribland five-day forecast Scottish deerhound America’s top dog Art by Rece Vaught, 10, Giltner Public School PARTLY CLOUDY TODAY High: 65 Low: 38 Wind: South 10-20 SUNNY THURSDAY High: 68 Low: 29 Wind: West 10-20 Partly cloudy Thursday night. PARTLY CLOUDY FRIDAY BEN WALKER The Associated Press High: 55 Low: 28 Partly cloudy at night. CLOUDY SATURDAY High: 55 Low: 32 Mostly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of rain and snow Saturday night. RAINY SUNDAY High: 45 Low: 30 Mostly cloudy and colder with a 20 percent chance of rain. Today’s weather records High: 69 in 1981 Low: -13 in 1979 Local weather u From 7 a.m. Feb. 15 to 7 a.m. Feb. 16 High Tuesday .............................................................64 High in 2010 ..............................................................31 Overnight low ............................................................39 Overnight low in 2010 ..............................................13 Precipitation last 24 hours ..................................... .00 February precipitation ............................................ .10 February 2010 precipitation.................................... .42 Year to date precipitation.......................................1.10 Year to date 2010 precipitation ............................ .74 Snowfall last 24 hours ........................................... .00 February snowfall.................................................. 1.70 February 2010 snowfall..........................................4.80 Season to date snowfall ......................................25.10 Season to date 2009-10 snowfall........................40.00 FRANK FRANKLIN II/AP Hickory, a Scottish deerhound, competes in the ring for best in show in the 135th Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show Tuesday at Madison Square Garden in New York. Hickory won the title. Protests spread to Libya The Associated Press CAIRO — Hundreds of Libyans calling for the government’s ouster clashed with security forces firing rubber bullets and water cannons early Wednesday in the country’s second-largest city as Egyptinspired unrest spread to the country long ruled by Moammar Gadhafi. The protest in Benghazi was triggered by the arrest Tuesday of a Libyan activist but quickly took on an anti-government tone, witnesses and activists said. The protest was relatively small in size, but it signaled anti-government activists have been emboldened by the recent unveiled on Monday, covers spending for the fiscal year that ends Sept. 30. The GOP legislation would make sweeping cuts to domestic programs ranging from education and science to agriculture and the Peace Corps. It slashes the Environmental Protection Agency, a favorite target of Republicans, by 29 percent from last year’s levels, and would eliminate federal funding for public broadcasting, the AmeriCorps national service program, police hiring grants and family planning programs unpopular with conservatives. wave of uprisings. Activists using Facebook and Twitter have called for nationwide demonstrations on Thursday to call for Gadhafi’s ouster, a constitution and comprehensive political and economic reforms. Tuesday’s demonstration began in front of the local security headquarters after Libyan troops raided the house of rights advocate Fathi Tarbel in Benghazi and took him away, according to a Switzerland-based activist Fathi al-Warfali. Tarbel was released after meeting with a powerful Libyan security official. NEW YORK — Hickory just might like the big-city life. A Scottish deerhound that loves to chase deer and rabbits on a 50-acre farm in Virginia did more than fine at Madison Square Garden this week, winning best in show at the Westminster Kennel Club on Tuesday night and the title of America’s top dog. “She’s not used to lights, camera and noise,” handler Angela Lloyd said. Whatever, Hickory will get a couple of Manhattan treats on Wednesday — steak at famed Sardi’s restaurant and a trip to the top of the Empire State Building. The 5-year-old Hickory became the first of her breed to capture the purple-and-gold ribbon and shiny silver bowl. By dog world standards, it was an upset. OK, maybe not quite as big as the Hickory Huskers winning the Indiana high school state basketball championship in the film “Hoosiers,” but quite a surprise nonetheless. “I think Hickory could feel my lead that I was excited and went with it,” Lloyd said. Judge Paolo Dondina of Italy thanked every person and dog inside the arena, then picked Hickory from a best-of-seven final show ring that truly sounded international — along with a Scottish deerhound, there was a Pekingese, Portuguese water dog, Chinese shar-pei, smooth fox terrier, bearded collie and black cocker spaniel. A couple of those pooches on the green carpet ring with Hickory were among the country’s top-rated show dogs. The 85-pound Hickory wasn’t on that list, though she wagged her long tail the most at the end after beating out a total of nearly 2,600 entries. Bahrain protesters put more pressure on rulers HADEEL AL-SHALCHI The Associated Press MANAMA, Bahrain — Protesters demanding sweeping political reforms from Bahrain’s rulers held their ground today in an Egypt-style occupation of the capital’s landmark square, staging a third day of demonstrations that have brought unprecedented pressure in one of Washington’s most strategic allies in the Gulf. Security forces have pulled back sharply — apparently on orders to ease tensions — after clashes that left at least two people dead and dozens injured. Police helicopters, however, flew low over a major funeral procession for one of the victims in which mourners called him a “martyr” and pledged more protests in the island nation — home to the U.S. Navy’s 5th Fleet. Thousands of people spent the night in a makeshift tent camp in Manama’s Pearl Square, which was swarmed by demonstrators a day earlier. One demonstrator used a bullhorn to urge protesters to remain until their demands are met, as the Arab wave for change takes hold in the Gulf. The protests began Monday as a cry for the country’s Sunni monarchy to loosen its grip, including hand-picking most top government posts, and open more opportunities for the country’s majority Shiites, who have long complained of being blocked from decision-making roles. But the uprising’s demands have steadily reached further. Many protesters are calling for the government to provide more jobs and better housing and free all political detainees. Increasingly, protesters are also chanting slogans to wipe away the entire ruling dynasty that has led Bahrain for more than 200 years. Opinion A4 Obama administration discovers Rosy Scenario HASTINGS TRIBUNE Wednesday, Feb. 16, 2011 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. ” Scripps Howard News Service President Barack Obama’s proposed 2012 federal budget is being criticized, mainly by Republicans, for being too cautious, especially on spending cuts. But, absent any action on the big entitlements, like Social Security and Medicare, the budget does lay out ambitious goals, a $1.1 trillion reduction in the deficit over the decade and $1.6 trillion in new revenues. However, for these good things to come to pass depends on optimistic economic assumptions that may be overly cheery. If these assumptions are borne out, the country will indeed be in great shape come 2015. Unemployment will drop from its current level of around 9 percent to 8.6 percent next year, 7.5 percent in 2013, 6.6 percent in 2014 and 5.9 percent, a level some economists consider close to full employment, in 2015. On economic growth, the Obama administration is more optimistic than most private forecasters. The president’s budget calls for the gross domestic product to grow 5.2 percent in 2012 and a robust 6.1 percent in each of the next two years before easing back to a still-healthy 5.6 percent in 2015. None of this growth will greatly affect inflation, according to the president’s projections. The Consumer Price Index, expected to end this year up 1.3 percent, will rise in gentle increments to 2 percent in 2014 and 2015. Growth will make it worthwhile to save again. The administration predicts the interest rate on 91-day Treasury bills, currently flat-lining around two-tenths of a percent, will be at 4 percent in 2015 and the 10-year Treasury note at 5 percent. Of course, presidential budgets are quickly forgotten, and only the most obsessive numbers wonks will remember in 2015 what the administration assumed in 2011. Area Nebraska Senators DISTRICT 32 Russ Karpisek, Wilber Room 1015, State Capitol, Lincoln, NE 68509(402) 471-2711 rkarpisek@leg.ne.gov DISTRICT 33 Dennis Utter, Hastings Room 1529, State Capitol, Lincoln, NE 68509 (402) 471-2712 dutter@leg.ne.gov DISTRICT 34 Annette Dubas, Fullerton Room 1018, State Capitol, Lincoln, NE 68509 (402) 471-2630 adubas@leg.ne.gov DISTRICT 37 Galen Hadley, Kearney Room 2104, State Capitol, Lincoln, NE 68509 (402) 471-2726 ghadley@leg.ne.gov DISTRICT 38 Tom Carlson, Holdrege Room 1022, State Capitol, Lincoln, NE 68509 (402) 471-2732 tcarlson@leg.ne.gov A dark shadow that cannot linger long W riting a personal column is an odd way to eke out a living. I know because I’ve been doing it, or trying, at least, for 20 years. Anna Quindlen, who wrote a personal column before moving to op-ed pieces, described it as “an emotional striptease.” Sometimes it can feel a little naked. But I like to believe, as personal as it may seem, I am writing not just about my own life, but life in general. I love hearing from readers who say they share in that belief. People often ask how I keep finding things to write about. It’s easy. If your job is to write about things that happen in life, you just have to stay alive and pay attention, and things will keep happening. I try to stay alive. I try to pay attention. And I wake up each day curious to see what will happen next. Sometimes they’re things I don’t want to happen, but they happen sooner or later to most of us, to some more than others. We can’t always choose what we get, good or bad. We can only choose what we do with it. That is the choice, isn’t it? What we do with what we’re given is the difference between being alive or just passing time. Recently I took a day off from writing to attend a memorial service for my father-inlaw, a man I fell in love with years before I married his son. To explain my absence, some newspapers noted that it was due to a death in the family. And once again, as in the past when I lost someone I loved -- my mother, my dad, my first husband, friends who died too young -- I Sharon began hearing from readers Randall around the country who wrote to offer their condolences and prayers and love. People are good. If you doubt it, try writing a personal column and see for yourself. We humans are incredibly human. As often as we screw things up, we also have a great capacity for caring. My father-in-law, a self-described “newspaperman,” was raised by a single mother, who scrubbed floors to buy cornmeal to make tortillas. As a boy, he delivered the newspaper for which he would one day become publisher. After high school, he joined the Navy, fought in World War II, finished college and married the girl of his dreams. His rise from paperboy to publisher to corporate executive is the kind of success story we all love to point to with pride and say, “Only in America.” But that is not why he was loved. He was loved because he loved. And because he had an uncanny ability to make you believe in yourself. At his memorial service, I met dozens of people who told me their stories of what he meant to them and how he had somehow made them feel important. I, of course, told them mine. I met him 11 years ago. He’d just had heart surgery, and I had just started dating his son. He sat up in his hospital bed, took my hands in his and said he’d been wanting to meet me for years. “I read the first column you ever wrote,” he said, “and I cut it out and sent it to (his son, who hadn’t known me at the time) with a note that said, ‘Read this woman, she’s a keeper!’ “ Five years later, I married his son on the condition that with every passing year, he would grow to be a little more like his dad. It’s not an easy promise to keep, but he’s trying. My husband concluded the perfect eulogy he delivered for his father with the last words his dad said to us: “Be good to each other.” Those are good words, don’t you think, both to sum up one life and begin moving forward with our own? To those of you who sent your kind wishes, please know we are grateful beyond all singing of it. Death casts a dark shadow that cannot linger long in the lovely light of a life well lived. Sharon Randall is an award-winning columnist. Her e-mail is randallbay@earthlink.net. Extremists drive out responsible politicians I 908-912 W. Second St. Hastings, NE 68902 (USPS 237-140) General Info: (402) 4622131 Circulation: (402) 4611221 Advertising: (402) 4611231 News: (402) 4611251 Want ads: (402) 4611241 Toll free: (800) 7426397 Management Darran Fowler, Publisher Stephen Hermann, Managing Editor Donald Kissler, Business Manager Deb Bunde, Director of Advertising Scott Carstens, Operations Manager Ryan Murken, Marketing Director 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 By carrier: $30.25 for three months; $52 for six months; and $91 per year. By motor route in surrounding areas: $33.25 for three months; $56.50 for six months and $97 per year. By mail in surrounding areas: $46 for three months; $81 for six months and $133.50 per year. Tribune on the Internet: http://www.hastingstribune.com; e-mail: tribune@hastingstribune.com don’t personally know Dick Wadhams, the Colorado Republican chairman whose decision not to run for re-election was based on having had enough of “the nuts” in his party who “are obsessed with seeing conspiracies around every corner.” But as one who has been writing about politics for more than 50 years, the first five of those in Denver, I can certainly empathize with his views. It has become increasingly difficult to make much sense out of the maelstrom of modern politics where rational thought is not only in short supply, those who offer it are the object of derision. Wadhams had the votes for another term according to press reports, but obviously was tired of those whom he said believed that moderation was a blight on conservatism and that all the GOP had to do was unite behind the Right. That may not be exactly how he put it, but that was the gist of it. Wadhams took the step after a Tea-Party candidate finished a poor last behind a Democrat and an Independent, who had been a centrist Republican, in last fall’s gubernatorial race, proving once again what my old friend and political mentor the late Bob Lee taught me about Colorado voters: They don’t buy into a lot of off-the-wall stuff. Bob held the GOP chair in the state during the early ‘60s and he was key to electing John Love to the governorship, ousting one of the most popular figures in the state’s history, Democratic incumbent Steve McNichols in 1962. While he worked for Barry Goldwater in 1964, he had no illusions about the conservative icon’s chances and in 1968, while working for Richard Nixon, he warned me that Nixon’s choice of Spiro Agnew might come Dan K. back to haunt him and that Thomasson he feared Nixon was loafing through the campaign. He, of course, was right about both. Vice President Hubert Humphrey nearly won despite Vietnam. Bob’s work as a consultant in New Jersey turning the state legislature into a Republican bastion was legendary and he did the same thing for the governorship of Florida, electing a Republican candidate who was trailing until Bob came on the scene and told him to go fishing while he pulled the campaign together. Bob Lee was a conservative. There’s no doubt about that. But he was a practical politician with a clear understanding that voters are never too far left or right. They may stray once in a while as they did in the last U.S. House election, but generally they don’t get far out of the main stream. That I think is the hurdle members of the tea party faction face in their insistence that any variation from their mantra calls for instant repudiation. While Bob and John Love weren’t always cordial — in fact they were downright hostile to one another at times — Bob was quick to realize Love’s charismatic appeal to voters. Love was, he told me once somewhat grudgingly, a good candidate. Knowing that difference is what made Bob and apparently Wadhams the kind of professionals that always have been the backbone of sound politics. These are the guys who realize that demanding unforgiving ideological purity can lead to electoral disaster. It’s my belief that Bob Lee would be enormously proud of Wadhams and just the opposite of those who forced Utah Sen. Bob Bennett out of office in November’s midterms and will now try to do the same to his fellow Republican colleague Orrin Hatch who recently was heckled at a Conservative Political Action Conference for his earlier support of the Wall Street bailout. Hatch has sensible old-line conservative credentials, the kind that allow for room to compromise on key issues. Republican Mike Lee who ousted Bennett won’t endorse him however even though Hatch said he probably was wrong to back the Street’s fiscal relief. The shame here is that the Wadhams of both parties are fading away when they are most needed. Listening to the cacophony of hate and stupidity aimed by radio talkers at the lowest common denominator in the electorate while driving recently, I suddenly remembered Bob’s last call to me. “It ain’t my game anymore,” he said. Dan K. Thomasson writes a column for Scripps Howard News Service. Region/State HASTINGS TRIBUNE Wednesday, Feb. 16, 2011 State K2 BANNED LINCOLN — Nebraska lawmakers have approved a bill to ban a class of chemicals used to make a substance that mimics the effects of marijuana — and is currently legal to possess and sell in the state. Lawmakers gave finalround approval to Omaha Sen. Beau McCoy’s measure (LB19) on Wednesday morning. The bill targets a substance often called “K2” or “spice” — a mixture of herbs and spices sprayed with a synthetic compound similar to the psychoactive ingredient in marijuana. Users smoke it in roll-up cigarettes or pipes, just like marijuana. McCoy and law enforcement officials say some K2 users have had seizures, and the drug has been blamed for the death last year of a central Iowa teenager. Some states have already banned the substance, including Kansas and Missouri. A5 Bills would limit abortion coverage JOSH FUNK The Associated Press LINCOLN — Nebraska could soon join five other states in restricting private health insurance coverage of abortions if lawmakers approve a measure scrutinized at a hearing Tuesday. That bill and another lessrestrictive one earned praise from representatives of the Nebraska Catholic Conference, Nebraska Right to Life, Family First and other groups. Only the ACLU Nebraska expressed opposition to the bills, which it said might be unconstitutional. Currently, five states prohibit abortion coverage in basic policies and require the payment of a separate additional premium if an individual wants the coverage. The states are Idaho, Kentucky, Missouri, North Dakota and Oklahoma. The bill put forward by Sen. Beau McCoy ,of Omaha, (LB22) would exclude abortion coverage from all private insurance policies sold in Nebraska. Abortion coverage would be allowed only with an optional rider paid for solely by the insured. Those restrictions would apply to all insurance, not just policies sold through a new health insurance exchange being set up under the new federal health care law. “Nebraskans who morally object to abortion should not be forced to pay for the procedure,” McCoy said. A bill submitted by Sen. Annette Dubas, of Fullerton, (LB132) would exclude abortion coverage only from policies obtained through the health insurance exchanges that states must set up to provide coverage beginning in 2014. Anti-abortion group Nebraska Right to Life, the state Catholic Conference and the Nebraska chapter of the Americans for Prosperity endorsed McCoy’s measure as the preferred option, but they also supported Dubas’ bill. Karen Bowling, associate director of the Nebraska Family Council, said people in the state care deeply about the abortion issue and most don’t want to help pay for the procedure. “(McCoy’s bill) would ensure that no Nebraskan would involuntarily fund abortion,” Bowling said. Garett asks state to stop medication MAN SHOT BELGRADE — A Minnesota man has been fatally shot in what officials say appears to be a case of self-defense in rural Nance County in central Nebraska. Television station KOLN/KGIN says Joseph Cameron, of Stacy, Minn., died early Monday morning near Belgrade. The sheriff’s office says Robert Dodds shot Cameron after Cameron kicked in the door of Dodd’s house and threatened him with a knife. The incident happened after Cameron left a bar in Belgrade with Dodds and a woman to check on cattle and then went to Dodd’s home. Deputies say an altercation took place between the men, and Dodd locked Cameron and the woman out of his house. Officials say the investigation is ongoing, but it appears to be a case of self-defense and no arrests were made. WILL VRASPIR wvraspir@hastingstribune.com CHECK FORGERY LINCOLN — A 50-year-old Lincoln man who altered a $1,995 check that was mistakenly mailed to his address has been given three months of probation. The Lincoln Journal Star says John Chavez pleaded guilty in December to forgery. Chavez was sentenced on Tuesday. The check was sent by the Norris High School Athletic Boosters to Culver’s Frozen Custard. But it was misaddressed to Chavez’s residence. Prosecutors say Chavez changed the name on the check, then cashed it in September. The Associated Press PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS/AP President Barack Obama presents the 2010 Medal of Freedom to Warren Buffett during a ceremony in the East Room of the White House in in Washington Tuesday. ‘Who we are as a people’ BUFFETT, 14 OTHERS GIVEN MEDAL OF FREEDOM DARLENE SUPERVILLE The Associated Press Calendar HASTINGS u Hastings Public Library Book Club, “Memory of Running” by Ron McLarty, 10 a.m. Thursday, second floor of library, 517 W. Fourth St. u “Summer of Love” film series, 7 p.m. Thursday at Hastings Public Library, 517 W. Fourth St. For movie titles, call 402-461-2346. u Al-Anon, noon Thursday, The Kensington, 233 N. Hastings Ave. u Alcoholics Anonymous, noon, 5:15, and 8 p.m., 521 S. St. Joseph Ave.; 7 p.m. (Women’s group), 907 S. Kansas Ave.; and 8 p.m., Faith Lutheran Church, 837 Chestnut Ave. Thursday. u Red Cross Bloodmobile, noon to 5:15 p.m. Thursday, First Congregational United Church of Christ. Make appointment at 1800-GIVE-LIFE. u Narcotics Anonymous, 6:30 p.m. Thursday, 422 N. Burlington Ave., rear entrance. u GriefShare, 7 p.m. Thursday, First St. Paul’s Lutheran Church Youth Center, 918 W. Fourth St. For more information, call 402463-1329. JUNIATA u Alcoholics Anonymous, 8 p.m. Thursday, United Methodist Church basement, 610 N. Adams Ave. Lotteries But attorney Alan Peterson said he believes the restrictions, especially the ones on private insurance in McCoy’s bill, would make it too difficult for women to get abortions in the state. “The barriers that can be put up to abortion by any state are limited,” said Peterson, who spoke on behalf of the ACLU. But McCoy and the supporters of his proposal disputed Peterson’s view that the bill might be unconstitutional. McCoy said he based his bill on a Missouri law that has been on the books since 1983. W ASHINGTON — President Barack Obama recognized one former president and 14 artists, athletes, civil rights activists, humanitarians and others Tuesday with the Presidential Medal of Freedom for contributions to society that he said speak to “who we are as a people.” This year’s recipients “reveal the best of who we are and who we aspire to be,” Obama said at a White House ceremony. The Presidential Medal of Freedom is the nation’s highest civilian honor. It is given in recognition of contributions to U.S. national security, world peace, culture or other significant public or private endeavors. Tuesday’s medals were the second set Obama has awarded. Some of the loudest applause was reserved for George H.W. Bush, the former Republican president who has devoted nearly 70 of his 86 years to public service, starting when he joined CAROLYN KASTER/AP President Barack Obama shakes hands with Warren Buffett after presenting him with a 2010 Presidential Medal of Freedom Tuesday during a ceremony in the East Room of the White House in Washington. the Navy on his 18th birthday. He served as a congressman from Texas, U.N. ambassador, Republican Party chairman, U.S. envoy to China, director of central intelligence, two terms as Please see MEDAL/page A6 A 33-year-old man found not guilty of murder by reason of insanity asked a district court judge to allow him to stop taking medication for his bipolar disorder Tuesday during an annual review of his case. Jayson Garett asked to discontinue his medications currently prescribed by staff at the Lincoln Regional Center. But Dr. Klaus Garett Hartmann, one of the psychiatrists working with Garett at LRC, recommended that Garett continue taking his medications, which serve as mood stabilizers to help moderate the manic highs and depressions associated with bipolar disorder. Adams County District Judge Terri Harder ordered that Hartmann’s treatment plan be continued, including the medication. The case is reviewed by the court once a year to determine if Garett’s bipolar illness is still dangerous and what his treatment plan should include. Garett was committed to the Lincoln Regional Center in June 2006, after killing 45-yearold Daryl Peed on March 27, 2004. Garett walked across town naked, which he believed made him invisible, and broke into Peed’s home at 609 Lexington Ave. Peed lived alone and was asleep on his couch wearing earplugs. Garett stabbed Peed 45 times — mostly with a 3.5inch serrated steak knife. After killing Peed, Garett went to sleep in Peed’s bed. When he woke up a few hours later, he reportedly put on Peed’s clothes and left the house, before being arrested by police for a prior incident. Peed’s body was found the following day. Investigators said the two men were strangers. Harder found Garett not guilty by reason of insanity on Jan. 20, 2006, based on reports from two psychiatrists that indicated Garett suffers from a bipolar disorder and was in a manic phase during the incident. Had he been convicted on all charges, he could have faced up to life in prison and $70,000 in fines. Residents of mobile home park trying to avoid eviction VILLAGE OF DONIPHAN ALLOWING TIME FOR PROBLEMS TO BE FIXED TONY HERRMAN WINNING NUMBERS therrman@hastingstribune.com Tuesday Kansas Pick 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . .7-7-4 2by2 . . . . . . . . . . . .R-10-11, W-8-25 Nebraska Pick 5 . . . 2-13-19-32-38 Jackpot: $74,000 MegaMillions . 17-18-24-35-39-Y-18 Megaplier: 4 Nebraska Pick 3 . . . . . . . . . . .0-7-2 MyDaY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11-15-84 DONIPHAN — When residents of the Doniphan Mobile Home Park learned they could be evicted from their homes because of the level of disrepair their neighborhood had fallen into, they formed a neighborhood association. Members of the Doniphan Village Board voted 5-0 during their regular meeting Monday to give the Doniphan Mobile Home Park a temporary operating license to fix problems identified during a Dec. 20, 2010, inspection. The park’s previous 12-month license had expired at the end of the year. The temporary license comes up for renewal June 1. The village will inspect the park again 40-60 days before that deadline. If the violations are fixed, yearlong licenses will begin to run June 1 to June 1. Will Martin, organizer of the neighborhood association, said the park has fallen into disrepair during the past 10 years. “You drive through, especially on the south side, it’s in pretty sad-looking shape,” he said. Before 2010, the Hall County building inspector did all inspections in Doniphan, including those at the mobile home park. When the county inspector retired, the village began performing its own inspections. Martin also said the Hall County Sheriff’s Office has been called several times to the park for a variety of reasons. Of the 41 trailers in the park, 36 are occupied, he said. Association members have come up with great ideas and concerns, Martin said. Although many of the trailers needed repairs, he said, there are also homeowners there who have done a good job taking care of their homes. Still, throughout the park, trash was piling up and many of the trailers were falling into disrepair to the point of needing to be condemned and removed. The situation was exacerbated when former owner Stu Schlatz sold the park in summer 2010 to Cedar Ridge, Colo.-based mobilehomeparkstore.com and owner Dave Reynolds. Please see EVICTION/page A6 Region/State A6 Local BPW TO MEET The Hastings Board of Public Works will learn more Thursday on a water contaminant made famous by the movie “Erin Brockovich.” Hexavalent chromium or chromium-6 was a contaminant that the Pacific Gas & Electric company had allowed to spread causing health problems for many residents in that area of California. Just recently chromium-6 has again come into the news as other places are now bringing up the issue of water contamination. With those stories in the news, the HU board requested a presentation on the issue of hexavalent chromium. The board meets 8 a.m. Thursday at HU, 1228 N. Denver Ave. During Thursday’s meeting, the board will also: u Consider approval of the Mutual Claim Release and Settlement Agreement with Arrowhead Indemnity Co. u Discuss credit card usage. u Discuss the policy on conference attendance. u Discuss the legislative changes to the Court of Industrial Relations and the procedure for establishing positions of the board. u Hear an update on the startup activities at Whelan Energy Center Unit Two. State CAUSE OF DEATH LINCOLN — The Lancaster County attorney says a 48-year-old Lincoln woman intentionally mixed liquor and a painkiller to commit suicide. The body of Tanya Kroeger was found Dec. 30 in her car in a Lincoln high school parking lot. Her family reported her missing on Dec. 27. County Attorney Joe Kelly, who acts as the county coroner, said Wednesday that “the manner of death was suicide.” Kelly says alcohol and the opiate painkiller were among the substances detected in Kroeger’s body. BREAST-FEEDING BILL LINCOLN — A proposal that would allow mothers to breast-feed in public view has gained first-round approval in the Nebraska Legislature. Lawmakers voted Tuesday to advance the bill (LB197) State Sen. Annette Dubas, of Fullerton, introduced. The proposal says simply that a mother “may breastfeed her child in any public or private location where the mother is otherwise authorized to be.” Similar measures have been introduced in the state since 2005, but had previously failed to advance from committee. SUICIDE BY CAR CRASH LINCOLN — Lincoln police say a man who died after he crashed his car into a concrete bridge pillar committed suicide. The Lincoln Journal Star says Tuesday that police reports indicate a handwritten note was found in a backpack in the car. An accident report says the car was likely moving fast, and no skid marks led to the point of impact. Twenty-seven-year-old Pedro Martinez, of Lincoln, died in the accident on Feb. 7. Police say his car left the road and hit the pillar under an overpass about 4 a.m. Railroad workers on a passing train saw the car on fire and called police. The Associated Press HASTINGS TRIBUNE Wednesday, Feb. 16, 2011 Eviction: Mobile home park residents have to clean up Continued from page A5 The village inspected the mobile home park Dec. 20, 2010, and sent a letter to manager Jessica LaCost and to mobilehomeparkstore.com ownership giving a Jan. 9 deadline to correct the 18 violations listed in the inspection. Martin said management never informed residents of that deadline. LaCost did not return a telephone message from the Tribune seeking comment for this story. Reynolds and MHPS district manager Jim Burget could not be reached. Martin and other concerned park residents attended the Jan. 17 Village Board meeting. That was when they learned of the violations and the fact that if the violations were not addressed then a permit would not be issued and the park would be shut down. “If the park is shut down, we have to move,” he said. Board members said during the Jan. 17 meeting they would postpone voting on the permit till the meeting Monday. In the meantime, Martin and other residents formed their community association, which met for the first time Jan. 28. During a cleanup day Saturday, members of the association fixed as many of the 18 violations listed in the village’s December letter as possible. Most park residents were more than willing to help each other fix problem areas there, Martin said. Whether it was replacing a door, windows or insulation, someone involved with the effort already had the parts needed to make the repairs. The village board has been helpful throughout the process, Martin said. About the only violations that association members have yet to address by the June 1 deadline, Martin said, is to paint a few sheds and make repairs to a trailer that is in par- ticularly bad shape. Dan Treat, village board member and former chairman, said Tuesday afternoon that the residents there have done a good job addressing violations and Village Board concerns. “The idea was to see what they fixed and they did a lot of it,” he said. “They didn’t do some of it. Obviously, painting is hard to do in January.” Martin moved into the park with his family in September 2009. His parents lived there for about 20 years when he was growing up. “It’s a little bit different, us as an association,” Martin said. “We have very little legal power to get anything done. It was a great, great park at one time, and it can still be that way.” The owner of the trailer in particularly bad shape told association members he didn’t want to fix his trailer. “He’s been a little bit lackadaisical, and we’ve been try- ing to motivate him,” Martin said. Much of that trailer’s siding is no longer present, exposing insulation and wires. “It’s in bad shape, and it needs to be fixed or hauled out of here,” Martin said. Neighborhood association members sent a letter to the MHPS headquarters, Dave Reynolds and LaCost informing them of the Dec. 21 letter from the village and asking for new management because the park residents didn’t believe LaCost had the tenants’ best interest at heart. Martin said LaCost told village board members that she did contact residents after the Dec. 20 inspection to inform them of the violations, but the residents did not listen to her. However, Martin said he was on the violations list because of motorcycles that were improperly stored on his property and LaCost never contacted him. He said he checked with other residents on the list who said LaCost did not contact them, either. Martin said the board may have unanimously approved the temporary permit, but some members expressed disappointment with the park management. LaCost, along with Burget, attended Monday’s Village Board meeting. Martin said Burget apologized to the board during the meeting and to Martin personally in a conversation before the meeting. MHPS ownership, Martin said, didn’t realize the situation in the park had reached the level it had. “It came across he was understanding and empathetic,” Martin said of Burget. “He was under the impression that we were crybaby tenets and just wanted to cause trouble. Then he realized we had legitimate concerns.” Medal: Buffett, 14 others honored by President Obama Continued from page A5 vice president and one term as the 41st president. “His life is a testament that public service is a noble calling,” Obama said. Bush’s wife, Barbara, and their children listened from the front row. “His humility and his decency reflect the very best of the American spirit. Those of you who know him, this is a gentleman.” Another robust round of applause went to Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga. Lewis was chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and helped organize the first sit-ins at lunch counters that refused to serve blacks. In 1965, he led a march for voting rights from Selma to Montgomery, Ala., and was nearly beaten to death along with others in what became known as “Bloody Sunday.” Obama said Lewis “knew that change could not wait for some other person or some other time.” Lewis speaks often and loudly in his booming voice on issues of justice and equality, and is known as the “conscience” of Congress. He told reporters later that the award was all the more special coming from Obama, the nation’s first black president. “If someone had told me that one day I would be standing in the White House and an African-American president would be presenting me the Medal of Freedom I would say, ‘Are you crazy? Are you out of your mind?’ ” Lewis said. “It’s just an impossible dream.” A particularly touching moment occurred during the presentation for Dr. Tom Little, an optometrist who was murdered by the Taliban last August in Afghanistan. His wife, Libby, accepted and Obama rubbed her back as a White House military aide read her husband’s medal citation. The other medal recipients are: u John H. Adams, co-founder of Natural Resources Defense Council u Maya Angelou, an author and poet who wrote and recited one of her works at former President Bill Clinton’s inauguration. u Warren Buffett, chairman and chief executive of Berkshire Hathaway. The famed investor is known as the “Oracle of Omaha” for a business savvy that has helped him become one of the world’s richest men. Buffett is also a philanthropist and a leader of an effort challenging the country’s wealthiest people to step up their charitable giving. u Jasper Johns, an artist whose work has dealt with themes of perception and identity. He is considered a major influence on pop, minimalist and conceptual art. u Gerda Weissmann Klein, Holocaust survivor and author who founded Citizenship Counts, an organization that teaches students to cherish being American citizens u Yo-Yo Ma, a world renowned cellist and 16-time Grammy award winner who is known for his interpretations of Bach and Beethoven. He played at Obama’s inauguration and at other White House events. u Sylvia Mendez, a civil rights activist of Mexican and Puerto Rican descent u Angela Merkel, the first woman and first East German to serve as chancellor of a unified Germany. She did not attend the ceremony, but Obama said she’d be paying him a visit soon. u Stan Musial, Hall of Fame baseball player who spent 22 seasons with the St. Louis Cardinals u Bill Russell, the former captain of the Boston Celtics and first black man to become an NBA head coach. u Jean Kennedy Smith, founder of VSA, a non-profit organization that promotes the artistic talents of people with disabilities u John J. Sweeney, president emeritus of the AFL-CIO President Harry S. Truman established the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1945 to recognize civilians for their efforts during World War II. President John F. Kennedy reinstated the medal in 1963 to honor distinguished service. Hastings High School honor roll The following students made the honor roll for the first semester at Hastings High School: A honor roll (3.5 and above) u Freshmen: Jorge Aguirre, Dakota Anderson, Teresa Arneson, Brooke Bailey, Kathleen Bartunek, Crystal Bauer, Nita Bohling, Cadee Brown, Angelica Carlini, Kiara Carson, Diana Chavez, Zachary Cook, Brittany Copley, April Crandell, Brenna Crawford, Malek Dalbik, Erika Diaz, Alyssa Dirks, Darian Ellenwood, Chandler Fielder, Cheyenne Fielder, Madisson Fincher, Jared Fischer, Demi Flores, Austin Glover, Wyatt Godtel, Matthew Hajny, Allison Halloran, Amelia Hancock, Kimberly Hansen, Karen Huynh, Tanner Johnson, Emily Karges, Amber Kelly, Spencer Kennedy, Ethan Kerr, Nicholas Knapp, Ian Kramer, Matthew Krueger, Morgan Krueger, Jenna Kulwicki, Sydney Landell, Christian Lomax, Lacey Lurz, Dennis Maar, Morgan Malone, Kyle Manthei, Daniel Marez, Thomas Masters, Nicole Mazour, Kyler Meredith, Pablo Morales, Blaine Myers, Brandon Oatman, Elizabeth Opperman, Morgan Parizek, Jacob Parker, Kaitlyn Pawloski, Tessa Pendergast, Hailey Peters, Joseph Peterson, Leah Peterson, Zackariah Peterson, Joseph Prickett, Alaethea Remmers, Cole Ridgway, Tristen Sadd, Abraham Sanchez, Nathanael Sass, Aiden Schneider, Shane Schultz, Nicholas Shaffer, Matthew Starkey, Jacob Steiner, Justine Steiner, Madison St. John, Madison Stokes, Shelby Stone, BUYERS MEET SELLERS EVERYDAY IN THE CLASSIFIED PAGES OF THE TRIBUNE Rachel Stroebel, Katia Tellez, Rachel Thomsen, Aaron Tillemans, Antonio Valle, Alexis VanBoening, Marika VanBrocklin, Jessica Zach u Sophomores: Katherine Amyot, Bradly Anderson, Katharina Anderson, Charles Babcock, Jordan Bank, Maureen Boyd, Shaylee Brown, Johnson Bui, Nicholas Burling, Rebekah Caubarrus, Cassandra Chandler, Bailey Christy, Jason Cushman, Mazen Dalbik, Tanner Davis, Deidra DeBoer, Cassandra Dycus, Mattie Eddleman, Sierra Edmisten, Erick Espinoza, Tuesday Frasier, John Funkey, Erika Garcia, Manuel Garcia, Melody Gnagy, Ezekiel Gollner, Mark Goodin, Elizabeth Hartman, Samantha Hemberger, Adam Heyen, Joshua Hinrichs, Haley Hughes, Sarah Jarmer, Brooke Jasch, Nathan Jensen, Lindsey Johnson, Samuel Johnson, Anthony Julian, Caitlin Kalvelage, Matthew Karloff, Emma Keele, Grace Kelly, Jacinda King, Kayla Kluver, Alex Kohout, Mariah Kothe, Tori Krueger, Jayden Langholz, James Lapka, Bethany Lehrling, Blaise Lemke, Cody Luce, Jessie Marcotte, Tyce Matthias, Maddison McConnaughhay, Levi McCoy, Elizabeth Montemayor, Ashley Mulligan, Bryan Nakashima-Pedroza, Felicia Nelson, Cody Newlun, Robert Pankratz, Tanner Peshek, Jenifer Peterson, Krynn Pettit, Karen Ramos, William Reimer, Meagan Reiners, Grace Rempp, Tyler Ripperger, Trevor Rosno, Daniel Rousseau, Michael Sadd, Elizabeth Schafer, Grahm Schneider, Jonah Schulz, Christian Schwab, Sean Selko, Helen Smith, Mason Spilinek, Elaine Streff, Alisnaydis Tomasen Vila, Landon Valle, Ricardo Villegas-Martinez, Dustin Warren, Scot Wescoat, Justice Whitten, Taylor Williams, Ann Wolf, Alyssa Ziemba u Juniors: Lindsey Aflague, Emily Anderson, Luis Apodaca, Alejandra Avila, Lauren Bartunek, Lauren Bliss, Brendan Bramman, Heiden Burbach, Kelsey Christensen, Dusty Consbruck, Ryan DeBoer, Lucas Fanning, Francis Ferrone, Marco Fielder, Matthew Geiger, Tressa Gloystein, Stephen Gnagy, Ryan Grealish, Mallory Guinan, Austin Gydesen, Trenton Halbmaier, Victoria Halloran, Anne Halsted, Vickie Hartman, Hailey Hemenway, Robbyn Kathman, Olivia Koester, Jaden Lacy, Casey Lammers, Jessica Martinez Burgos, Zoe Mays, Laykin McCoy, Brady Menke, Abrielle Meredith, Katilyn Michel, Breanna Neet, Ngoc Nguyen, Patrick Opperman, Hannah Panwitz, Amanda Patrick, Breanna Pendergast, Jessey Petersen, Kelli Poplau, Thomas Portwood, Tyler Prescott, Riley Roesener, Clayton Rosno, Emily Shuck, Tyler Staggs, Haley Stroud, Elizabeth Sullivan, Samantha Uden, Nicholas Valle, Jessi Vasquez, Julia Warrick, Kayd Welke, Zachary Witt, Alyson Wolfe, Emily Zysset u Seniors: Claire Adelson, Courtney Anderson, Elisabeth Arneson, Brittany Ballou, Lilian Barnes Garcia, Evan Beachly, Michael Beahm, Matthew Brooks, Kyle Brosnihan, Tayler Cartier, Connor Chance-Ossowski, Thomas Cooke, Taylor Craig, Caralynn Crandell, Taylor Crawford, Sean Davis, Mariah Deepe, Jaime DeTour, Gregory Dwyer, Jaimie Fast, Joseph Fox, Shayla Frakes, Vicenzo Frandoloso, Joel Fritz, Matthew Fry, Christopher Ganshert, Emily Gartner, Dylan Halbmaier, Shelbi Harris, Sheldon Howard, Michael Hull, Alison James, Brittany Johnson, Tessa Johnson, Cami Karnes, Alexander Keele, Marie Louise Keen, Brandon Knehans, Matthew Kramer, Abigail Kuntz, Jonathan Lainson, Aarika Lomax, Megan Lounsbury, Emanuel Maldonado, Josie Martin, Julie McCarthy, Marissa Mooney, Kyle Neugin, Phuong Nguyen, Stephanie Owens, Jourdan Parizek, Ashtin Pawloski, Matthew Peirce, Joel Philippi, Claire Phillips, Alexandra Rodriguez, Brady Rutt, Megan Rutt, Shawn Schiefelbein, Mikayla Schultz, Bradie Schulz, McKenzie Sealey, Dakota Soucie, Laura Sunderman, Hannah Thomas, Laura Tiepolt, Thien Truong, Lawrence Walker, Kelsey Willnerd, Jacob Winfrey, Halee Wright, Alejandro Zeballos Rieger B honor roll (3.0 to 3.499) u Freshmen: Lindsay Brooks, Gerardo Castillo, Wyatt Davis, Matthew Griffith, Ciara Jones, James Jones, Sheldon Kennedy, Ryan Kern, Dana Kleinjan, Jacob Konen, Nathan Mathes, Brendon Menke, Bao Johnny Nguyen, Riley Sadd, Brycen Shea, Hau Tran, Ashtyn VanDolah, Jami Warner u Sophomores: Dalton Anderson, Gabriell Bohrer, Cesshandra Davis, Samy De Leon Llamas, Ethan Dixon, Dylan Duncan, Eric Gawrych, Nicole Hamik, Krista Hamm, Tania Hernandez, Austin Heuertz, Casey Holling, Taylor Huynh, Kayli Johnson, Madison Jones, Paige Kennedy, Kelsey Kimminau, Austin Lamoree, Breanna Langenberg, Patricia Leyva, Mitchell Long, Fatima Lopez, Corey Luce, Alejandra Madrigal, Craig Marble, Carmen Morales, Taylor Musgrave, Dylan Nuss, Paola Ramirez, Stetsen Rempe, Brandon Roughton, Sierra Salazar, Shane Samuelson, Michael Shelton, Mariah Smith, Emily Tippin, Maria Wallace, Brandy Watson, Courtney Wright u Juniors: Kaylene Andersen, Zane Baldwin, Joee Beckman, Janelle Burtis, Jaden Crooks, Valerie Frazier, Lesley Gama, Georgina Garcia, Alberto Gonzalez Varela, Jennifer Greenleaf, Hayley Griess, Dustin Hagan Koci, Alexis Lamb, Danielle Lewis, Jasmine Lindstrom, Gianna Long, Alexander Najera, Sara Nimrod, Ramsey Oatman, Alex Olson, Daniela Oros, Aracely Peregrino, Kaitlynn Schmidt, Miranda Seamann, Brogen Shea, Briton Thomas, Adrian Torres, Rayelyn Warner, Nathan Williams, Samantha Woolen u Seniors: Heriberto Bautista Navarrete, Rebekah Bryan, DaniElle Caubarrus, Paige Dodson, Jerimiah Duncan, Jose Figueroa, Lyndsey Frank, James Hamik, Alyssa Harig, Olivia Harms, Daniel Hepler, Tanner Jones, Lindsey Leininger, Diana Licon, Shaunice Lyle, Amanda Marcotte, Nancy Nguyen, Tyler O’Callaghan, Kelsey Olson, Ashley Opbroek, Jeffrey Richardson, Tara Sadd, Kelsie Scoggins, Cristy Sheppard, Eric Smith, Matthew Stanley, Charlotte Stordal, Seth Walker HASTINGS TRIBUNE Wednesday, Feb. 16, 2011 Nation NURSING HOME A7 CBS News’ Logan recovering after ’brutal’ attack HOMICIDE EBENSBURG, Pa. — A 78year-old dementia patient in a nursing home killed a 70-yearold living on the same floor by bashing his head with a door, authorities said, but it’s unclear whether he will be charged with homicide. Ray Dunmyer Jr. was charged with aggravated assault and transferred to another facility. Officials at the Cambria Care Center in Ebensburg said they don’t know why Dunmyer attacked Thomas Shaw on Saturday even after staff tried to stop him, said Mark Fox, a spokesman for Grane Healthcare, which owns the facility. “Apparently, it all happened within a matter of moments,” Fox told the Altoona Mirror for today’s editions. “One second, he’s in the room visiting Mr. Shaw and the next, staff is screaming for help.” Two nurse’s aides discovered Shaw lying in a pool of his own blood and saw Dunmyer slamming a heavy wooden door against Shaw’s head, state police Trooper Kenneth Durbin said. The aides struggled to control Dunmyer, who hit one of the aides in the face and kicked the other in the back before they could subdue him, Durbin said. FROZEN KITTEN The owner of a hairless kitten that died after being shipped in the cargo hold of a Delta flight says the airline is only offering to refund her air fare plus $50. Snickers froze after flying to Connecticut from Utah last month. A door latch malfunctioned in 10-degree weather and it took nearly an hour to unload her. Heather Lombardi says Delta Air Lines initially told her she would get $2,900 for the cat and $290 for airfare, plus reimbursement for vet bills and even a freezer where she’s keeping Snickers until the ground thaws. Lombardi said Tuesday that Delta changed its offer to air fare plus 50 cents a pound, although there’s a $50 minimum. Delta spokesman Anthony L. Black describes the offer as a standard cargo reimbursement and says talks are ongoing. JUST IN TIME STALLINGS, N.C. — A North Carolina couple has claimed a $1 million lotto prize just a day before it expired. Raleigh Hill bought the Mega Millions ticket last summer. The state lottery agency said Hill and his wife claimed the prize Tuesday at the agency’s headquarters. Hill said he only realized a couple of weeks after the Aug. 20 drawing that his ticket matched all five white balls. He waited two or three more weeks to tell his wife, until she came home at the end of a bad day. Hill told the state lottery he hesitated to come in because of the attention. At one point, he lost track of the ticket before finding where he’d hidden it in a shoe box. After taxes, the couple received $680,000. Hill is a baggage handler and his wife, Erin Hill, works for the federal government. The Associated Press FRAZIER MOORE The Associated Press CBS News/AP In this Feb. 11 photo released by CBS, “60 Minutes” correspondent Lara Logan is shown covering the reaction in Cairo’s Tahrir Square the day Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak stepped down. CBS News says Logan was attacked Friday, and suffered a brutal beating and sexual assault. NEW YORK — CBS News correspondent Lara Logan was recovering in a U.S. hospital Tuesday from a sexual attack and beating she suffered while reporting on the tumultuous events in Cairo. Logan was in the city’s Tahrir Square on Friday after Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak stepped down when she, her team and their security “were surrounded by a dangerous element amidst the celebration,” CBS said in a statement Tuesday. The network described a mob of more than 200 people “whipped into a frenzy.” Separated from her crew in the crush of the violent pack, she suffered what CBS called “a brutal and sustained sexual assault and beating.” She was saved by a group of women and an estimated 20 Egyptian soldiers, the network said. The Associated Press does not name victims of a sexual assault unless the victim agrees to it. She reconnected with the CBS team and returned to the U.S. on Saturday. The scene last Friday in Tahrir Square — ground zero of 18 days of protests that brought down Mubarak — was primarily one of celebration — people wept, jumped for joy, cheered and hugged one another. Some soldiers stationed at the square ran into the crowd, and the protesters lifted them onto their shoulders. Other troops stayed at their posts, watching in awe. Doomsday: HPS looks at cuts, new revenue Continued from page A1 u Increase the number of participants eligible for the Early Retirement Incentive Program. The ERIP gives bonuses to experienced, highest-paid teachers who agree to retire early, then replaces them with younger, lower-paid teachers. This year, 12 teachers applied and five were funded for early retirement. u Seek a levy override to surpass the $1.05 general fund levy limitation. u Use contingency: HPS currently has a $2 million reserve. u Decrease line-item expenditures everywhere possible. u Hire less-experienced staff to replace staff leaving the district. u Freeze salaries and benefits where possible. u Reduce salaries and benefits where possible. u Strategically use furlough days: Some states have begun to require staff to take certain days off during the year, reducing the number of days in their contracts and therefore lowering their salary requirements. u Further defer maintenance on property: HPS has budgeted $350,000 this year to perform maintenance on its eight school campuses and other properties. u Eliminate programs. u Eliminate staff. Kautz said he would normally be presenting an overall program plan during this time of year, but has chosen to delay that plan until more is known about funding. “I think if we tried to get very specific right now, we would probably cause more scare, more panic than we should,” he said. Kautz will discuss this with the board again Monday at the regular monthly meeting at 7 p.m. in the City Building, 220 N. Hastings Ave. Action items Monday will include: u Respond to Nebraska Association of School Boards regarding Commission of Industrial Relations. u Approve $6,897 annual dues for Nebraska Association of School Boards. u Re-affirm policy manual. u Approve “Breakthrough” Continuous Improvement Model. u Approve Buildings and Sites projects list totaling $471,700, including $133,000 carried over from the previous year. u Create full-time special education at Hastings Middle School for the remainder of the 2010-2011 school year, and appoint Lacritia Spanel to that position. u Approve 2011-2012 and tentative 2012-2013 school calendar. Fast: ‘Convenient’ food often high in calories, fat Continued from page A1 Fitness night at the Children’s Rehab Clinic Tuesday. Stevens said as a health-conscious person, she still eats fast food every once in a while. She’s learned the rules to help her steer clear of the dangerously unhealthy foods. “If you can keep the calories under 300 and the fat under 10 grams, that’s a healthy choice for fast food,” she said. “That’s about the best you can do.” Stevens said there are a few simple rules people should keep in mind when going up to the counter at the local fast food restaurant. The first rule is “You decide what you want to eat.” “If it’s in a big glossy picture, you probably don’t want to eat it,” Stevens said. “Those things are almost always really high in calories and fat.” The most popular item on fast food restaurant menus are the french fries, which Stevens said restaurants push because they’re cheap and easy to make. “It’s a potato, oil and salt. That’s it,” she said. “They can sell you those super, super cheap and they’re not going to lose money on those. You don’t see them super sizing the hamburgers because it costs them more.” The next two rules go handin-hand, Stevens said. They are “Keep it simple” and “Watch those salads.” While salads oftentimes appear to be the healthiest thing on a fast food menu, Stevens said the dressings, the cheese and the fried chicken give them some of the highest calorie contents on the menu. Stevens said she still likes Wendy’s salads. She leaves off the cheese and uses her own fat-free dressing in place of the dressing the restaurant provides. The last rule is simple, “Know what you’re putting in your mouth.” “If you take in more calories than you burn off, you’re going to gain weight,” she said. “And if you burn off more calories than you take in, you’re going to lose weight. It’s as simple as that.” The problem is fast food menu items like french fries can impact your health. Stevens said a person would need to jog for 40 minutes to burn off the calories in a medium order of french fries. A 32-ounce Coke, Dr. Pepper, Pepsi, Mountain Dew or any other high sugar soda has the sugar content equivalent to a dozen Krispie Kream doughnuts. Stevens said there are healthy ways to eat fast. She said it takes a little more time to research the calorie and fat counts in foods before going to the restaurant. “If you have to eat fast food, there are some healthier ones out there,” she said. “You just have to know where to look.” Kris Koch, who regularly attends the Family Fun Fitness events, said she always enjoys learning something new and Tuesday’s discussion was definitely an eye-opener. “I really enjoyed it tonight,” she said. “I’m wishing I hadn’t eaten McDonald’s for dinner before this.” Family Fun Fitness programs are held 6:30 p.m. the third Tuesday of every month at the Children’s Rehab Clinic, 835 S. Burlington Suite 110, or the Hastings Family YMCA. The programs are free and open to the public. For more information, call the Children’s Rehab Clinic at 402-463-2077. Guns: Superintendents skeptical of allowing staff to be armed Continued from page A1 Kautz said that when Larry Thoren, chief of the Hastings Police Department, addressed the board about security measures, Thoren said people have a tendency to go from “apathy to hysteria.” “In my opinion, arming our teachers, our administrators, is a form of hysteria,” Kautz said. Kautz said he doubts it would lower the number of deaths in schools, but instead would make those carrying a gun the first targets. Considerable training would be required to prepare school staff for carrying a gun in school, and that would take considerable money. Plus, Kautz doesn’t believe many teachers would want to carry a gun. BRENT McCOWN/Tribune Brent Eigenberg, the school resource officer at Hastings High School, is the only person allowed to carry a gun in school. Board president Jessica Meeske said Tuesday that she isn’t in favor of school staff car- rying guns, but had spoken with Sen. Christensen about his bill. “His concern is that there are some school districts where you’ve got some very rural areas, where it could take the police to get there more than 20-30 minutes, and by that time, somebody could do a lot of damage,” Meeske said. At Adams Central, Superintendent Shawn Scott said he hopes the day never comes when schools will need to arm staff with guns just to hold classes. “Honestly, I don’t think that there’s a need to have them in a school right now,” he said. “In my opinion, this is sort of a knee-jerk reaction to what happened in Millard.” The legislative bills in question were introduced after Jan. 5, when Millard South High School student Robert Butler Jr. opened fire at his school, killing Assistant Principal Vicki Kaspar and seriously injuring Principal Curtis Case. Scott said the bills are well-intentioned, but unwise. “Too many things can go wrong to help something go right,” Scott said. Adams Central has no school resource officer, he said, and it hasn’t needed one. AC does have an officer at most varsity sporting events, and for other situations it calls the Adams County Sheriff. “The Adams County Sheriff’s Department works great with us, and if we call, they come right away,” Scott said. “We appreciate everything they do for us.” Arts & Entertainment A8 HASTINGS TRIBUNE Wednesday, Feb. 16, 2011 Sheen ready to work again LYNN ELBER The Associated Press JASON DECROW/AP In this Jan. 13 photo, cast members of the Broadway play “That Championship Season,” (from left) Jim Gaffigan, Chris Noth, Brian Cox (seated), Kiefer Sutherland and Jason Patric, pose for a portrait in New York. The men in black NOTH, SUTHERLAND, PATRIC, COX, GAFFIGAN LOSE EGOS MARK KENNEDY The Associated Press N EW YORK — With five very different actors teaming up for a play on Broadway about friendly rivalries, the discussion around a restaurant table naturally turns ruthless: Exactly who in the group is the weakest link? Is it Chris Noth? Jason Patric? Kiefer Sutherland? Brian Cox? Or maybe Jim Gaffigan? “Talk to us each separately,” says Noth, laughing. “I think we have to go on a daily basis,” jokes Patric. “I was going to say hourly,” Sutherland muses. “I would have said by the minute,” Cox says — not to be outdone. Those actor egos have apparently been dialed way down as the five prepare for the launch of a revival of “That Championship Season,” the Tony- and Pulitzer Prize-winning drama by Jason Miller that started previews Feb. 9. “You don’t do something like this, certainly coming from our backgrounds, with the idea that your ego is going to be nourished or exercised in some way,” says Patric. “It’s the opposite: It’s why you actually do it.” The plot centers on a group of former high school basketball stars who reunite at their coach’s Pennsylvania home 20 years after they won the state championship. The festive mood soon sours as the drinks kick in and old animosities flare up. “The play is so balanced,” says Sutherland. “We’re the weakest link.” Over lunch at the venerable theater-district hangout Sardi’s, the five gobble up steak tartar, cheddar burgers, Cobb salads and beef stew — with a side portion of trash talk. They tease Patric about his fluffy chest hair and the Scottish-born Cox about his homeland’s love of deepfried Mars bars, but it’s clear these unlikely five have become friends. There’s even talk of them taking a field trip to Scranton, Pa., to soak up the play’s setting. “The truth is, we hang out a lot,” says Patric. “It’s not forced — we do. It’s tough when you’re doing eight hours a day, mind and body, and we still go out and have drinks afterward.” Patric, star of “Sleepers” and “Narc,” has a deep connection to the piece: His father was the playwright. “That Championship Season” was only the second fulllength play Miller wrote and it became his most successful. He died in 2001. The play made its Broadway debut in 1972 starring Charles Durning, Richard A. Dysart, Walter McGinn, Michael McGuire and Paul Sorvino. A 1982 film version starred Robert Mitchum, Martin Sheen, Bruce Dern, Stacy Keach and Sorvino. Tony Award-winning director Gregory Mosher, who helmed the recent Broadway revival of “A View From the Bridge,” approached Patric with the idea of reviving his father’s work. The actor wasn’t sure he wanted to be in it, but decided to help. Mosher and Patric started by looking for someone to play the coach, the real anchor of the story. Cox, a Royal Shakespeare Company veteran, was at the top of their list. “He’s amazing,” says Patric. Then came Sutherland, a friend of Patric’s for decades ever since they starred in “The Lost Boys” in 1987. After eight years of “24,” Sutherland was ready for a change: “I wanted to get back to something that was going to be really challenging.” Noth, Mr. Big in “Sex and the City” and Detective Logan on “Law & Order,” was the next target. He and Patric hike and run together, and Patric was impressed while catching Noth star in “Farragut North” at the Geffen Playhouse in Los Angeles. The last piece of this puzzle was “My Boys” comedian Gaffigan, the only one who had to audition for the role. Each of the roles the younger men play — a drunk, a womanizing businessman, a wussy school teacher and an inept mayor — are juicy parts that any of the actors could play, but Sutherland is happy where the chips have fallen. “If you spent the rest of your life doing one production of this every three years and played every single role, it would be fantastic,” he says. “But in the balance of this cast, certainly I’ll speak for myself, I’m exactly where I should be.” To prepare for the play, Cox went to his first basketball game — Syracuse versus St. John at Madison Square Garden — and kept his attention focused on the coaches. The others are asked what they did to get ready. “I got drunk in Scranton,” Sutherland offers, smiling. LOS ANGELES — Charlie Sheen is off work from “Two and a Half Men” but still making jokes, including about when his top-rated sitcom might resume production. The CBS series went on hiatus last month after Sheen was briefly hospitalized following a 911 call in which a neighbor said the actor was intoxicated and in pain. In an interview on “The Dan Patrick Show,” which airs in syndication on radio and on Sheen satellite TV provider DirecTV, Sheen said he was prepared to get back on the set but those in charge of the series weren’t. “They said, ‘You get ready and we’ll get ready.’ And I got ready and went back and nobody’s there,” he said. “I’m here and I’m ready. They’re not. Bring it, you know?” Sheen said he tends to “unravel pretty quickly,” so suggested producers should put him to work now. Asked about when shooting would resume, he joked, “I believe August of 2014 at this pace. I don’t know, it’s supposed to be like the 28th or the 29th. That’s what it is! It’s the 29th in a non-leap year.” A spokesman for Sheen said previously he hoped to return to work by the end of February. CBS and producer Warner Bros. Television declined comment on when production might resume on the Monday night sitcom that has filmed only 16 of the season’s planned 24 episodes. The network and studio have expressed concern for the actor’s well-being. In the interview with former ESPN anchor Patrick, Sheen acknowledged that he’s had “some problems lately” and said staying away from crack cocaine is good advice unless a person can “manage it socially.” Asked if he could, Sheen replied, “Yeah, yeah, but that kinda blew up in my face ... like an exploding crack pipe.” He said he is sober now. Sheen’s publicist, Stan Rosenfield, initially cited the actor’s history of hernia problems when Sheen was hospitalized. He later said his client went into rehab, but he did not say why. Last week, a judge finalized Sheen’s divorce from Brooke Mueller Sheen. The judgment followed several tumultuous months for the actor, including a New York hospitalization that came after he was taken by police from a room at a luxury New York hotel that was left in shambles. Sheen signed a new two-year contract at the end of last season that makes him one of the highest-paid actors on prime-time television. Books NEIMAN MEMOIR COMING NEW YORK — As he nears his 90th birthday, artist and illustrator LeRoy Neiman is ready to put his story into words. Neiman is known for his Salvador Dali mustache and his colorful paintings of Muhammad Ali, Mickey Mantle and many other athletes. He has spent the past decade working on a memoir tentatively titled “Diary of a Passionate Observer.” His agent, Steve Ross of the Abrams Artists Agency, said Tuesday that Lyons Press will release the book next year. Neiman turns 90 in June. His friends and acquaintances have included not only sports stars, but Frank Sinatra, Dizzy Gillespie and Andy Warhol. The Associated Press When 9 is the number C. S. Lewis wrote, “Even in literature and art, no man who bothers about originality will ever be original: whereas if you simply try to tell the truth (without caring twopence how often it has been told before), you will, nine times out of 10, become original withPhillip out ever having Alder noticed it.” The winning play in today’s deal is not original, and will not work nearly as often as nine times out of 10. But when you have nothing else to guide you, following the advice of the mathematicians will hold you in good stead. How should South try to make three no-trump after West leads the spade queen? With nine points and no five-card suit, North raised to two no-trump to invite game. South, with 16 points and a five-card suit, had no hesitation in bidding game. (If you use two no-trump as a transfer response, you must invite game by first responding two clubs, then rebidding two no-trump, which would not promise a four-card major. There is one other wrinkle here. If the bidding starts one no-trump - two North ´652 ™K83 ©J74 ®AJ63 West East ´ Q J 10 9 8 ´743 ™762 ™ Q J 10 9 ©A92 © K 10 8 5 ® 10 9 ®Q4 South ´AK ™A54 ©Q63 ®K8752 Dealer: South Vulnerable: Neither South West 1 NT Pass 3 NT Pass North East 2 NT Pass Pass Pass Opening lead: ´ Q clubs - two hearts, the responder rebids two spades with four spades and game-invitational values. To rebid two no-trump denies a four-card major.) South has six top tricks: two spades, two hearts and two clubs. Since it is unlikely that declarer can establish a diamond trick, he should play for five club winners. The odds tables say that a 2-2 split is slightly more likely than a successful second-round finesse through West (a priori, it is 31.03 percent to 28.45 percent), so South should cash his club king, then play a club to dummy’s ace. Success! Phillip Alder is a columnist for Newspaper Enterprise Association. NewsMakers LADY GAGA GETS THE HBO CONCERT TREATMENT NEW YORK — Lady Gaga is bringing her spectacle to HBO. The network said Tuesday that it is taping two Lady Gaga shows in New York’s Madison Square Garden later this month for a concert special. The document of Gaga’s “Monster Ball” tour will be televised on May 7, two weeks before the singer is releasing a new disc. The woman who choreographed most of Lady Gaga’s videos, Lauriann Gibson, will direct the concert special. HBO says that Lady Gaga, who was carried into the Grammys Sunday in a giant egg, will put on some brand new moves for the special. Gaga’s latest album “The Fame Monster” won three Grammys. LOHAN ON LETTERMAN NEW YORK — CBS says Lindsay Lohan will present the Top Ten List on Thursday’s “Late Show with David Letterman.” The troubled actress will present the Top Ten List live via satellite from Los Angeles, CBS announced Tuesday. It marks her fifth appearance on the New York-based show, which she last visited in May 2007. Lohan’s problems have regularly put her in the news, most recently thanks to felony charges for the alleged theft of a $2,500 necklace from a jewelry store. Meanwhile, her travails have been a source of humor for Letterman. Last week he read the Top Ten Signs that “Lohan is out of control.” They included: “Friends worry that her shoplifting is getting in the way of her drinking.” NEIL BEGINS JAIL SENTENCE LAS VEGAS — Motley Crue singer Vince Neil has begun serving a 15-day jail sentence for his drunken driving conviction in Las Vegas. Las Vegas police said the 50-year-old rocker arrived at the Clark County Detention Center about 10:15 a.m. Tuesday. He was being housed separately from other inmates. Neil pleaded guilty in January to driving drunk last summer near the Las Vegas Strip. He was sentenced to 15 days in jail and 15 days on house arrest under a plea deal that spared him a trial. He was also fined $585. Neil could have faced up to six months in jail if convicted. TAYLOR STILL HOSPITALIZED LOS ANGELES — Heart trouble is keeping Elizabeth Taylor hospitalized in Los Angeles, but her publicist says the 78year-old actress is OK and has been visiting with family and friends. Taylor spokeswoman Sally Morrison said in a statement Tuesday that the twotime Oscar winner is comfortable at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center and “there has been steady improvement in her condition” since she was admitted last week. Taylor is being treated for symptoms of congestive heart failure, a condition she disclosed in November 2004. “Her medical team is gratified by her progress to date, and it is hoped and expected that this will continue over the next few days. For now, she will remain under their care in the hospital for continued monitoring,” Morrison said. “Friends and fans around the world should be reassured that Elizabeth Taylor is in good hands and receiving the best possible care from her skilled and dedicated doctors and nurses.” Morrison described Taylor’s condition as stable but offered no other details. The Associated Press WILD WEDNESDAY One Medium 12” Pizza w/Cheese & 1 Topping $ 50 4 Total Carryout ONLY! No Limit. HASTINGS 314 N. Burlington Ave. (next to Applause Video) 462-5220 Sports HASTINGS TRIBUNE Wednesday, Feb. 16, 2011 B1 STATE WRESTLING PREVIEW Injury doesn’t stop Hastings High’s Truong TIGER SENIOR HAS HIGH HOPES FOR STATE VINCE KUPPIG vkuppig@hastingstribune.com AMY ROH/Tribune Hastings High’s Thien Truong wrestles McCook’s Shane Buck earlier this season. Thien Truong thought his senior season was finished. It was the Hastings High wrestler’s first match of the season and his arm went numb. “I just couldn’t even move it,” Truong recalls. “I thought that was it then. I thought it was over. It was motionless, so I thought it was done.” But, after missing more than a month of wrestling while regaining feeling in his arm and eventually getting his strength back from the nerve-related injury, Truong now feels 100 percent. It’s just in time for the Class A state tournament, which begins Thursday at the Qwest Center in Omaha with firstround action at 9:30 a.m. “I think this is the best I’ve wrestled all year, with the injuries and stuff,” Truong says. “I just feel good. This is probably the best time for me right now.” Truong enters state as a district runner-up after injury defaulting in Saturday’s district championship against top-ranked Billy Leetch of Grand Island, not wrestling the title match because of precautionary reasons. While Truong has been unranked all season, the Tigers’ district featured three of the top four wrestlers at 152 pounds according to the Nebraska Scholastic Wrestling Coaches Association rat- Class A On the Web See hastingstribune.com throughout the tourney for complete coverage, including updated stories and results. ings. Truong defeated third-ranked Isaac Almquist of Kearney in the semifinals of districts. “It’s a great story in terms of perseverance and staying committed to something you truly enjoy,” HHS coach Brian Laux says. “From where he started to where he’s at now, I couldn’t be any prouder.” Truong enters state with an 11-1 record, having won 11 straight matches — an injury default does not count against one’s record. The lone loss came in his season-opening match when he ended up getting pinned after his arm went numb. Please see HHS/page B4 Defensive change lifts Superior ERIK BUDERUS ebuderus@hastingstribune.com F AIRFIELD — The Blue Hill girls basketball team tried to take Superior out of its comfort level Tuesday night during the semifinals of the Class C-2, Subdistrict 4 tournament at Sandy Creek. The Bobcats tried forcing the pace to speed things up and the team knocked down a handful of big 3-pointers to pull the Wildcats out of their usual zone defense and into a man-to-man. The defensive switch, however, worked more in favor of the Sutton cruises Wildcats. Superior used an past Cardinals. — Page B3 8-0 run to close the first half after switching out of its zone defense and another 8-2 run to open the third quarter to pull away from the Bobcats and post a 52-37 victory. The Bobcats managed just two points in nearly a seven-minute span against Superior’s man-to-man defense while the Wildcats turned a 21-18 lead into a 37-20 advantage with 4:55 left in the third quarter. “We can play a man defense. We like to play zone because it keeps us a little more fresh and we can press when we play our zone, so we like the zone,” Superior coach Nick Mumm said. “Blue Hill, they’re a good team, they’ve got some good guards, they’re well coached, and physical inside. We just didn’t play our best game.” Blue Hill coach Tim Streff felt his team was executing offensively — even when the Wildcats went to their man defense. The shots just didn’t fall. “I thought we executed offensively and got shots, we just didn’t knock them down. Kaitlin (Kumke) did a great job in the second quarter of bringing us back into the game and making them have to work. It was huge,” Streff said. “I thought we were able to run on many occasions, we just didn’t finish some shots. I thought we got out in transition and had shots there, we just missed a few.” Please see SUPERIOR/page B4 Inside BRENT McCOWN/Tribune Blue Hill’s Sara Alber (43) and Maci Coffey battle for a rebound with Superior’s Haley Gebers (13) and Sarah Wood (right) during their Class C-2, Subdistrict 4 tournament semifinal game Tuesday in Fairfield. GI Central Catholic too much for Adams Central VINCE KUPPIG vkuppig@hastingstribune.com The Adams Central girls basketball team fell into a 15-2 hole and never could fully recover, falling to Grand Island Central Catholic 52-29 in the semifinals of the Class C-1, Subdistrict 6 tournament Tuesday night at Hastings High. Adams Central battled back to get within four points late in the first half, but the Crusaders outscored Adams Central 25-8 in the second half. “We just didn’t keep moving, and they took away some of the back cuts,” AC coach Tim Marker said of the second half. “We just didn’t create enough on the offensive end to stay with them.” With the loss, Adams Central ended the season 7-14. The Class C-1 No. 9 Crusaders improved to 15-8 and will play St. Cecilia (17-4) in the subdistrict championship game Thursday night at 7:30 at HHS. Earlier this month, GICC knocked off St. Cecilia 45-37. “We should have confidence playing them knowing that we’ve played once and beat them,” GICC coach Andy Anspauch said of another meeting with the Hawkettes. “I don’t know that we’re going to go in thinking that just because beat them once that it’s automatic. But I don’t think we’ll be scared. I don’t have anybody on my team who is going to be scared to play them. We’d play them right now if they would let us.” On Tuesday night, Adams Central didn’t get off to the start it wanted — trailing 15-2 six minutes into the game. But the Patriots got within 10 points after one quarter and then got as close as 25-21 with a minute left in the first half following five straight points. “These girls have done a great job of doing that over the course of the year,” Marker said. “We’ve been down by that margin many times and have talked about how that early lead can be deceptive. We got back within 10 and they realized we were back in the game and had a chance. “They’ve battled back from that before. It’s just really difficult against a team like this.” Adams Central had a chance to get closer in the third quarter, as the Crusaders went more than five minutes without a point. But the Patriots were held scoreless even longer, as the score was stuck at 30-23. Please see AC/page B4 AMY ROH/Tribune St. Cecilia’s Libby Kissinger tries to steal the ball from Central City’s Paige Benner during their C1-6 Subdistrict semifinal game Tuesday at Hastings High. STC cruises past Bison, gets rematch VINCE KUPPIG vkuppig@hastingstribune.com The St. Cecilia girls basketball team took care of business Tuesday night. Now, the Hawkettes get their rematch against Grand Island Central Catholic. Class C-1 No. 5 St. Cecilia used runs of 13-0 and 18-0 in the first half to jump out to a 5012 halftime lead and cruise to an 83-32 win over Central City in the semifinals of the Class C-1, Subdistrict 6 tournament Tuesday evening at Hastings High. Please see STC/page B3 Unbeaten Sandy Creek stunned COUGARS HAVE WILD-CARD BERTH LOCKED UP HASTINGS TRIBUNE sports@hastingstribune.com WILBER — Class C-1 No. 2 Sandy Creek was dealt a major upset Tuesday night during the semifinals of the C1-2 subdistrict tournament at Wilber-Clatonia as the Cougars fell to Fairbury 53-44. It was the first loss of the season for the Cougars (21-1). The Jeffs held a slim 22-20 lead at halftime and held a two-point advantage entering the fourth quarter when the team was able to pull away down the stretch. Please see SC/page B3 AMY ROH/ Tribune Grand Island Central Catholic’s Liz McGowan snatches up a loose ball before Adams Central’s Emily Bonifas during their Class C-1, Subdistrict 6 semifinal game Tuesday at Hastings High. Scoreboard B2 Basketball NBA Standings EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct GB Boston 39 14 .736 — New York 27 26 .509 12 Philadelphia 26 29 .473 14 New Jersey 17 39 .304 23 1/2 Toronto 15 40 .273 25 Southeast Division W L Pct GB Miami 40 15 .727 — Atlanta 34 20 .630 5 1/2 Orlando 35 21 .625 5 1/2 Charlotte 24 32 .429 16 1/2 Washington 15 38 .283 24 Central Division W L Pct GB Chicago 37 16 .698 — Indiana 24 29 .453 13 Milwaukee 21 33 .389 16 1/2 Detroit 20 36 .357 18 1/2 Cleveland 9 46 .164 29 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct GB San Antonio 46 9 .836 — Dallas 38 16 .704 7 1/2 New Orleans 33 24 .579 14 Memphis 31 26 .544 16 Houston 26 30 .464 20 1/2 Northwest Division W L Pct GB Oklahoma City 35 19 .648 — Portland 31 24 .564 4 1/2 Denver 31 25 .554 5 Utah 31 25 .554 5 Minnesota 13 42 .236 22 1/2 Pacific Division W L Pct GB L.A. Lakers 38 18 .679 — Phoenix 27 26 .509 9 1/2 Golden State 25 29 .463 12 L.A. Clippers 20 35 .364 17 1/2 Sacramento 13 39 .250 23 Tuesday’s Games Miami 110, Indiana 103 Chicago 106, Charlotte 94 Memphis 102, Philadelphia 91 Oklahoma City 126, Sacramento 96 Phoenix 102, Utah 101 Golden State 102, New Orleans 89 Wednesday’s Games Washington at Orlando, 6 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Indiana St. at S. Illinois, 7:05 p.m. Illinois St. at Creighton, 7:05 p.m. Miami at Toronto, 6 p.m. New Jersey at Boston, 6:30 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Cleveland, 6:30 p.m. Indiana at Detroit, 6:30 p.m. Atlanta at New York, 6:30 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Minnesota, 7 p.m. Sacramento at Dallas, 7:30 p.m. Philadelphia at Houston, 7:30 p.m. Golden State at Utah, 8 p.m. Denver at Milwaukee, 8 p.m. New Orleans at Portland, 9 p.m. Thursday’s Games San Antonio at Chicago, 7 p.m. Dallas at Phoenix, 9:30 p.m. Prep Boys Results Bishop Neumann 66, Ashland-Greenwood 58 Boys Town 73, Plattsmouth 44 Elkhorn Mount Michael 80, Platteview 60 Fremont 52, Omaha Burke 34 Gretna 62, Omaha Skutt Catholic 40 Lincoln Pius X 63, Hastings 34 Lincoln Southwest 58, Omaha Northwest 45 Omaha Bryan 63, Papillion-LaVista South 46 Omaha Christian Academy 44, Concordia 39 Omaha Gross Catholic 65, Nebraska City 53 Ralston 63, Bennington 47 South Sioux City 61, Sioux City North, Iowa 55 Wahoo 69, North Bend Central 49 Men’s Big 12 Standings Conference All Games W L PCT W L PCT Texas 10 0 1.000 22 3 .880 Kansas 9 2 .818 24 2 .923 Texas A&M 6 4 .600 19 5 .792 Missouri 6 5 .545 20 6 .769 Baylor 6 5 .545 17 8 .680 Kansas St. 5 6 .455 17 9 .654 Colorado 5 6 .455 16 10 .615 Nebraska 4 6 .400 16 8 .667 Oklahoma St. 4 6 .400 16 8 .667 Oklahoma 4 6 .400 12 12 .500 Texas Tech 3 8 .273 11 15 .423 Iowa St. 1 9 .100 14 11 .560 Monday’s Games Kansas St. 84, Kansas 68 Tuesday’s Games Missouri 92, Texas Tech 84 Baylor 64, Wayland Baptist 50 Wednesday’s Games Iowa St. at Texas A&M, 7 p.m. Nebraska at Oklahoma, 8 p.m. Oklahoma St. at Texas, 8 p.m. Men’s MVC Standings Conference All Games W L PCT W L PCT Wichita St. 13 3 .813 22 5 .815 Missouri St. 13 3 .813 21 6 .778 N. Iowa 10 6 .625 19 9 .679 Indiana St. 9 6 .600 14 12 .538 Creighton 8 7 .533 16 11 .593 Evansville 8 8 .500 14 12 .538 Drake 6 10 .375 11 16 .407 S. Illinois 5 10 .333 11 15 .423 Illinois St 3 12 .200 11 15 .423 Bradley 3 13 .188 9 18 .333 Monday’s Games No games scheduled Tuesday’s Games N. Iowa 80, Bradley 70 Missouri St. 60, Drake 51 Wichita St. 80, Evansville 74 Prep Girls Results Gretna 53, Omaha Skutt Catholic 39 Lincoln North Star 51, Lincoln High 27 Lincoln Pius X 48, Lincoln East 36 Lincoln Southeast 69, Lincoln Northeast 60 Lincoln Southwest 69, Omaha Northwest 19 Maryville, Mo. 70, Nebraska City 21 Omaha Burke 52, Fremont 51 Omaha Central 80, Omaha South 28 Omaha Duchesne Academy 38, Omaha Gross Catholic 33 Papillion-LaVista South 70, Omaha Bryan 26 C1-1 Subdistrict Tournament Ashland-Greenwood 55, Syracuse 30 Falls City 50, Auburn 44, OT C1-2 Subdistrict Tournament Fairbury 53, Sandy Creek 44 Milford 50, Lincoln Lutheran 37 C1-3 Subdistrict Tournament Concordia 69, Omaha Roncalli 15 Fort Calhoun 54, Platteview 41 C1-4 Subdistrict Tournament Bishop Neumann 68, Arlington 24 Wahoo 77, Douglas County West 18 C1-5 Subdistrict Tournament Columbus Scotus 37, Columbus Lakeview 15 Raymond Central 31, Centennial 26 C1-6 Subdistrict Tournament Grand Island Central Catholic 52, Adams Central 29 Hastings St. Cecilia 83, Central City 32 C1-7 Subdistrict Tournament Tekamah-Herman 41, Logan View 31 Wayne 52, Wisner-Pilger 33 C1-8 Subdistrict Tournament Boone Central 58, Pierce 45 Norfolk Catholic 61, Battle Creek 43 C1-9 Subdistrict Tournament Centura 57, Kearney Catholic 51 Minden 79, Gibbon 36 C1-10 Subdistrict Tournament O'Neill 54, Ord 38 Valentine 65, Ainsworth 30 C1-11 Subdistrict Tournament Hershey 53, Broken Bow 24 Southern Valley 45, Cozad 42 C1-12 Subdistrict Tournament Chadron 43, Kimball 29 Gordon/Rushville 45, Mitchell 30 C2-1 Subdistrict Tournament Freeman 43, Johnson-Brock 26 Johnson County Central 56, Nebraska City Lourdes 48 C2-2 Subdistrict Tournament Elmwood-Murdock 43, Weeping Water 30 Lincoln Christian 48, Palmyra 43 C2-3 Subdistrict Tournament Friend 44, Southern 27 Thayer Central 54, Tri County 31 C2-4 Subdistrict Tournament Superior 52, Blue Hill 37 Sutton 71, Doniphan-Trumbull 19 C2-5 Subdistrict Tournament Omaha Brownell-Talbot 44, Archbishop Bergan 32 Yutan 49, Louisville 27 C2-6 Subdistrict Tournament Aquinas 56, East Butler 32 Shelby 49, Twin River 39 C2-7 Subdistrict Tournament Homer 74, Ponca 36 North Bend Central 61, Winnebago 28 C2-8 Subdistrict Tournament Hartington Cedar Catholic 48, Laurel-Concord 32 Lutheran High Northeast 66, Wakefield 31 C2-9 Subdistrict Tournament Crofton 67, Neligh-Oakdale 27 West Holt 55, Elgin/Pope John 47 C2-10 Subdistrict Tournament Ravenna 70, Burwell 20 Shelton 51, Arapahoe 41 C2-11 Subdistrict Tournament North Platte St. Patrick's 50, Perkins County 42 Southwest 65, Dundy County-Stratton 63 C2-12 Subdistrict Tournament Hemingford 45, Bridgeport 35 Morrill 56, Bayard 34 D1-1 Subdistrict Tournament Deshler 56, Bruning-Davenport/Shickley 45 Diller-Odell 59, Meridian 50 D1-2 Subdistrict Tournament Exeter/Milligan 56, Harvard 18 Osceola 37, High Plains Community 23 D1-3 Subdistrict Tournament Howells 62, Scribner-Snyder 21 West Point Central Catholic 66, Humphrey 43 D1-4 Subdistrict Tournament Bancroft-Rosalie 61, Omaha Nation 44 Pender 79, Walthill 25 D1-5 Subdistrict Tournament Emerson-Hubbard 37, Winside 27 HASTINGS TRIBUNE Wednesday, Feb. 16, 2011 Randolph 54, Hartington 33 D1-6 Subdistrict Tournament Bloomfield 58, Osmond 54 Newman Grove 38, Humphrey St. Francis 37 D1-7 Subdistrict Tournament Cedar Valley 48, Nebraska Christian 21 Palmer 40, Loup City 39 D1-8 Subdistrict Tournament CWC 52, Clearwater/Orchard 34 West Boyd 39, North Central 28 D1-9 Subdistrict Tournament Alma 56, Axtell 50 Kenesaw 43, Franklin 39 D1-10 Subdistrict Tournament Amherst 50, Overton 27 Elm Creek 44, Elwood 39 D1-11 Subdistrict Tournament Sandhills/Thedford 56, Cambridge 43 Sutherland 46, Maxwell 33 D1-12 Subdistrict Tournament Banner County 51, Garden County 31 Crawford 46, Creek Valley 19 D2-1 Subdistrict Tournament Lawrence-Nelson 26, Red Cloud 19 Sterling 41, Falls City Sacred Heart 39, OT D2-2 Subdistrict Tournament Dorchester 44, Nebraska Lutheran 41 Mead 42, Parkview Christian 12 D2-3 Subdistrict Tournament Clarkson 49, Dodge 35 Lindsay Holy Family 40, St. Edward 25 D2-4 Subdistrict Tournament Giltner 56, Hampton 44 Spalding/Spalding Academy 46, Heartland Lutheran 34 D2-5 Subdistrict Tournament Elkhorn Valley 44, Newcastle 34 Wynot 72, Santee 33 D2-6 Subdistrict Tournament Ewing 50, Lynch 41 St. Mary's 59, Stuart 46 D2-7 Subdistrict Tournament Loomis 59, Pleasanton 36 Wilcox-Hildreth 49, Sumner-Eddyville-Miller 48 D2-8 Subdistrict Tournament Ansley 59, Arcadia 39 North Loup Scotia 49, Sargent 40 D2-9 Subdistrict Tournament Brady 60, Medicine Valley 25 Eustis-Farnam 39, Anselmo-Merna 23 D2-10 Subdistrict Tournament Hitchcock County 45, Hayes Center 39 Wauneta-Palisade 52, Wallace 41 D2-11 Subdistrict Tournament Cody-Kilgore 42, Hyannis 17 Mullen 61, South Platte 23 D2-12 Subdistrict Tournament Hay Springs 39, Leyton 22 Sioux County 46, Potter-Dix 40 Coaches pick OU to win Big 12 baseball title ERIC OLSON The Associated Press OMAHA — Texas ran away with the Big 12 regular-season title by eight games last season, came within a win of going to the College World Series and has a team long on pitching and defense. Yet it’s Oklahoma that wears the favorite’s label this season, according to a vote of the coaches. The Sooners are loaded with seven returning everyday players, a lineup that features plenty of pop and an experienced pitching staff. The conference runners-up won 50 games last season, including one in Omaha at the CWS. Oklahoma coach Sunny Golloway said the Sooners better be ready for everyone’s best shot. He said it seems his program is getting more attention than it did even in 1995, when the Sooners were defending national champions. “There are a lot of distractions,” he said. “We need to get on the field and not forget what it’s all about.” Golloway, whose team is ranked no lower than No. 6 in national polls, benefited from a number of players turning down pro offers to return to school. Among them is Garrett Buechele, who led the Sooners with a .359 average, 17 homers and 65 RBIs. He committed only five errors at third base. First baseman Cameron Seitzer, like Buechele the son of a former major-leaguer, is among four other OU players to hit 10 or more homers. The Sooners also have proven pitching in Michael Rocha (8-2), Bobby Shore (10-5), Jack Mayfield (5-0) and closer Ryan Duke (3-2, 12 saves). Texas is picked second in the league and, like Oklahoma, a consensus Top 10 team nationally. Longhorns coach Augie Garrido will take runs any way he can get them after losing three players who accounted for 34 of the team’s 81 homers. Big 12 pitcher of the year Cole Green (11-2) and Taylor Jungmann (8-3) head the staff. Garrido’s biggest concern is finding a replacement for first-team All-America reliever Chance Ruffin (1.11 ERA in 64 innings). Garrido said he plans to run four pitchers in and out from the seventh to ninth innings. “That’s how we’re approaching it unless someone emerges like a Ruffin,” Garrido said. “We don’t have that exceptional attitude in one of the relievers and exceptional pitching skills in any one of our relievers.” Baylor returns solid experience throughout the lineup. One of the keys will be the development of Joey Hainsfurther at catcher, where he hasn’t played since high school. Texas A&M, despite losing two of its top three hitters, needs to improve offensively to take pressure off what figures to be a strong group of pitchers. The Aggies were last in the Big 12 in scoring. Kansas State returns Big 12 player of the year Nick Martini and five other everyday players. But the Wildcats have a big hole to fill at shortstop, and they need to find quality depth among the pitchers. Oklahoma State brings back allconference second baseman Davis Duren and four other everyday players who will be complemented by a strong recruiting class. The Cowboys hope Randy McCurry, who set the school saves record in 2009, can come back after missing last season after having Tommy John surgery. Texas Tech should have plenty of offense, but pitching is a major question after second-round draft pick Chad Bettis (Colorado) and fourth-rounder Bobby Doran (Houston) signed pro contracts. Nebraska, entering its last Big 12 season before heading to the Big Ten, hopes to make the conference tournament for the first time in three years. The Cornhuskers’ pitching staff will get a big boost if freshman Logan Ehlers is activated. The NCAA is looking into whether rules covering contract negotiations were violated after Toronto drafted him in the eighth round last year. Anderson pegs Ehlers as a weekend starter when, and if, he’s cleared. Kansas brings back weekend starters in T.J. Waiz, who has 20 career wins, and Tanner Poppe. Left fielder Jimmy Waters tied for the Big 12 lead with 34 RBIs in conference games. Missouri coach Tim Jamieson said he feels good about his team even though newcomers will fill roles all over the field. “If we’re the 10th-best team in the league,” he said, “it’s a pretty damn good league.” The coaches generally favor the new regulations governing bats, whose sweet spots have shrunk from about 22 inches to about 5. The bats are designed to mimic their wooden counterparts, with reduced exit speeds giving players more time to react and protect themselves. Coaches predict the toned-down bats will lead to shorter games, with fewer home runs and less scoring. “I literally think we have our game back,” Baylor coach Steve Smith said. “A lot of players of this generation don’t even know how to play the game. The bat has been so lively, you can make numerous mistakes running the bases and defensively and it can get covered up in a hurry. “The last 10-15 years, you sat in the dugout hoping your pitcher could miss the bat and you just waited until you hit one up in the wind and it went out.” Tribland roundups GIRLS BASKETBALL Lawrence-Nelson 26, Red Cloud 19 FAIRBURY — Lawrence-Nelson defeated Red Cloud 26-19 in the D2-1 subdistrict semifinals. Lawrence-Nelson was led by Kelsey Biltoft with 13 points. Teammate Kristin Drudik added five points while Natasha Wehrman finished with four points. Red Cloud was led by Taylor Neiman with eight points. Katie McCleary chipped in with four points. The Warriors end the season 14-9 overall while the Raiders (21-1) advanced to the subdistrict finals Thursday against Sterling. Red Cloud (14-9) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 0 8 7 — 19 Lawrence-Nelson (21-1) . . . . . . . .2 10 8 6 — 26 Lawrence-Nelson (26) Kelsey Biltoft 13, Kristin Drudik 5, Natasha Wehrman 4, Kasandra Fanning 2, Marissa Kovanda 2 Red Cloud (19) Taylor Neiman 8, Katie McCleary 4, Brittany Lewis 2, Hunter Bailey 2, Taylor Goos 2, McKayla Kucera 1 Minden 79, Gibbon 36 GRAND ISLAND — Minden defeated Gibbon 79-36 in the C1-9 subdistrict semifinals. Jamie Kissinger led Minden with 26 points. Teammate Brooke Kissinger added 19 points while Hallie Bauer finished with 15 points. The win lifts Minden into the subdistrict finals Thursday against Centura. Gibbon (10-10) . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6 7 10 15 — 36 Minden (20-1) . . . . . . . . . . . . . .23 19 16 21 — 79 Minden (79) Jamie Kissinger 26, Brooke Kissinger 19, Hallie Bauer 15, Mackenzie Miller 5, Bailey Petersen 5, Bailie Muller 4, Allison Hollinger 3, Emily Nelson 2 Gibbon (36) No other information available. Giltner 56, Hampton 44 CENTRAL CITY — Giltner defeated Hampton 56-44 in the D2-4 subdistrict semifinals. The Hornets were led by Abbey Preissler with 15 points. Teammates Jordan Bieck and Shayne Vaught added 10 points each. Darby Hinrichs and Dani Most finished with nine points each. Giltner will play Spalding/Spalding Academy in the subdistrict championship Thursday. Hampton (5-15) . . . . . . . . . . . . .11 7 12 14 — 44 Giltner (6-14) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14 15 15 11 — 56 Giltner (56) Abbey Preissler 15, Jordan Bieck 10, Shayne Vaught 10, Darby Hinrichs 9, Dani Most 9, Randi Janzen 2, Kady Lockmon 1 Hampton (44) T. Mason 10, K. Dahlke 7, D. Nolla 6, T. Vanhousen 5, K.Wochner 5, H. Baumsberger 5, H. Carlson 4, A. Nissen 2 Thayer Central 54, Tri County 31 GENEVA — Thayer Central defeated Tri County 54-31 in the semifinals of the C2-3 subdistrict tournament. Thayer Central was led by Cody Long with 15 points. Michaela Marsh added 14 points while Bridgette Baden finished with 11 points. Kinsey Tietjen chipped in with eight points. The Titans will play Friend Thursday in the subdistrict finals. Tri County (8-14) . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 6 9 12 — 31 Thayer Central (11-10) . . . . . . .15 11 12 16 — 54 Thayer Central (54) Cody Long 15, Michaela Marsh 14, Bridgette Baden 11, Kinsey Tietjen 8, Claire Timmerman 5, Claire Johnson 1 Tri County (31) Knust 6, Holtmeier 5, Hicks 4, Knapp 4, Staroscik 4, Weise 2, Meints 2, Bock 2 Kenesaw 43, Franklin 39 MINDEN — Kenesaw defeated Franklin 43-39 in the semifinals of the D1-9 subdistrict tournament. Kenesaw was led by Rebekah Uden with 15 points. McKaleigh Nilson finished with nine points while Cheyenne Bittfield added seven points. The Flyers were led by Taylor Dreher with 14 points. Teammate Kersha Kahrs finished with 13 points. The win lifts Kenesaw into the subdistrict finals Thursday against Alma. Franklin ends its season 6-16 overall. final quarter. Michaela Hinrichs led the Falcons with 18 points while Olivia Adam had 15 points and Morgan Farley finished with 10 points. The win lifts Wilcox-Hildreth (12-10) into the district finals Thursday against Loomis, a team the Falcons beat in the Fort Kearny Conference tournament earlier this season. Wilcox-Hildreth (12-10) . . . . . .13 10 13 13 — 49 SEM (12-8) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13 4 10 21 — 48 Wilcox-Hildreth (49) Michaela Hinrichs 18, Olivia Adam 15, Morgan Farley 10, Karen Paitz 4, Jessica Harms 2. Deshler 56, Bruning-Davenport/Shickley 45 DeWITT — Deshler defeated BruningDavenport/Deshler 56-45 in the semifinals of the D1-1 subdistrict tournament Tuesday. BDS was led by Shelby Garland’s 18 points and Erika Schroeder who had 10 points in the loss. BDS ends its season 16-8 overall while Deshler (12-8) advances to the subdistrict final Thursday against Diller-Odell. Deshler individual scoring information was not available. BDS (16-8) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10 13 16 6 — 45 Deshler (12-8) . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13 10 15 18 — 56 BDS (45) Shelby Garland 18, Kaitlyn Krupicka 3, Cynthia Mick 1, Caressa Reinsch 8, Erika Schroeder 10, Kalli Schroeder 5 Deshler (56) No more information available. Exeter-Milligan 56, Harvard 18, Wilcox-Hildreth 49, Sumner-Eddyville-Miller 48 UTICA — Exeter-Milligan advanced to the finals of the Class D-1, subdistrict 2 tournament with a 56-18 win over Harvard Tuesday at Centennial High School. Heather Pribyl led the Timberwolves with 20 points and nine rebounds. Megan Zwickl finished with 12 points. Kristan Pelotte led Harvard with eight points. Exeter-Milligan (22-1) will play Osceola in the subdistrict final Thursday while Harvard ends its season 8-13 overall. ELM CREEK — Wilcox-Hildreth edged Sumner-Eddyville-Miller 49-48 in the semifinals of the Class D-2, subdistrict 7 tournament Tuesday. The Falcons had to hold off a late SEM rally as they were outscored 21-13 in the Exeter-Milligan (22-1) . . . . . . . .14 7 21 14 — 56 Harvard (8-13) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 10 2 4 — 18 Exeter-Milligan (56) Heather Pribyl 20, Megan Zwickl 12, Kelsey Moore 5, Taylor Slezak 4, Jennifer Pribyl 4, Claire White 4, Jackie Luzum 3, Mariah Bigelow 2, Logan Zeleny 2 Harvard (18) Kristan Pelotte 8, Alison Engle 6, Michelle Hachtel 4 Franklin (6-16) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8 13 6 12 — 39 Kenesaw (9-10) . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5 13 16 9 — 43 Kenesaw (43) Rebekah Uden 15, Mckaleigh Nilson 9, Cheyenne Bittfield 7, Taylor Bittfield 6, Kelli Mack 4, Megan Blackford 2 Franklin (39) Taylor Dreher 14, Kersha Kahrs 13, Libby Johnson 5, Kelsey Randall 5, Bailey McKay 2 Smith Center 62, Rock Hills 31 SMITH CENTER, Kan. — Smith Center defeated Rock Hills 62-31 Tuesday. The Lady Red were led by Tangie Hileman with 16 points. Whitney St. Claire added 15 points while McKenzie Benoit finished with 12 points. Bethany Jeffery led the Grizzlies with 15 points. Teammates Regan Jeffery, Blair McMillan and Darica Bohnert finished with four points each. Rock Hills . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6 9 7 9 — 31 Smith Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12 14 19 17 — 62 Smith Center (62) Tangie Hileman 16, Whitney St. Claire 15, McKenzie Benoit 12, Sydney Benoit 5, Hallie McCall 5, Sara Timmons 4, Lucy VanderGiensen 4, Carley Ohmstede 1 Rock Hills (31) Bethany Jeffery 15, Regan Jeffery 4, Darica Bohnert 4, Blair McMillan 4, Haleigh Shadduck 2, Ashley Lawrence 2 BOYS BASKETBALL Lincoln Pius 63, Hastings 34 LINCOLN — The Hastings High boys basketball team fell to Lincoln Pius 63-34 Tuesday. Hastings was led by Kayd Welke with 10 points. Teammate Patrick Opperman finished with nine points while Tyler Ripperger added seven points. Hastings (4-15) . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14 6 10 4 — 34 Lincoln Pius (15-4) . . . . . . . . . .13 24 15 11 — 63 Lincoln Pius (63) Erich Nickman 18, Alex Heines 16, Jared Kolbush 9, Matt Powell 6, Trenton Royse 4, Alex Schleppenbach 3, Joey Werning 3, Nate Schlautman 2, Malcom Lancaster 2 Hastings (34) Kayd Welke 10, Patrick Opperman 9, Tyler Ripperger 7, Brady Menke 4, Ty Anderson 2, Trenton Halbmaier 2 Smith Center 45, Rock Hills 39 SMITH CENTER, Kan. — Smith Center defeated Rock Hills 45-39 Tuesday. Smith Center was led by Kale Terrill with 16 points. Payton Buckmaster finished with seven points while Nathan Cox and Grady Brooks finished with six points each. Rock Hills was led by Joe Zadina with 15 points. Teammate Travis Boyles finished with 13 points. Rock Hills . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11 12 10 6 — 39 Smith Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10 18 6 11 — 45 Smith Center (45) Kale Terrill 16, Payton Buckmaster 7, Nathan Cox 6, Grady Brooks 6, Alex Hobelmann 5, Trevor Overmiller 5 Rock Hills (39) Joe Zadina 15, Travis Boyles 13, Chance Colson 2, Jarrett Christie 2, Alex Smith 2, Cole Huncovsky 2, Wyatt Flinn 2, Zach Duffy 1 Tribland THURSDAY Prep girls basketball: St. Cecilia vs. GICC at C1-6 subdistrict at HHS ...................7:30 p.m. Prep wrestling: State tournament at Qwest Center in Omaha ...............................9:30 a.m. Area Schedules Prep boys basketball Exeter-Milligan vs. Osceola at D1-2 subDoniphan-Trumbull at Loup City district at Centennial Kenesaw vs. Alma at D1-9 subdistrict at Prep girls basketball Minden Minden vs. Centura at C1-9 subdistrict Lawrence-Nelson vs. Sterling at D2-1 at Grand Island Northwest subdistrict at Fairbury Thayer Central vs. Friend at C2-3 subGiltner vs. Spalding/Spalding Academy district at Fillmore Central at D2-4 subdistrict at Central City Sutton vs. Superior at C2-4 subdistrict Wilcox-Hildreth vs. Loomis at D2-7 subat Sandy Creek district at Elm Creek Deshler vs. Diller-Odell at D1-1 subdistrict at Tri County HTmedia broadcasts Friday’s live streaming PREP BOYS BASKETBALL 7:30 p.m. Wood River at Kenesaw Saturday’s live streaming PREP BOYS BASKETBALL 7:45 p.m. Hastings High at Adams Central Note: See www.hastingstribune.com and click on HTmedia for web streaming and video. NSAA rules prohibit the webstreaming of all high school postseason events. TV/Radio broadcasts Wednesday’s television AUTO RACING 9:30 a.m. SPEED — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, practice for Daytona 500, at Daytona Beach, Fla. 12:30 p.m. SPEED — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, practice for Daytona 500, at Daytona Beach, Fla. 3:30 p.m. SPEED — NASCAR, Truck Series, practice for NextEra Energy Resources 250, at Daytona Beach, Fla. MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 6 p.m. ESPN — Louisville at Cincinnati ESPN2 — Duke at Virginia 8 p.m. ESPN2 — Oklahoma St. at Texas 10 p.m. ESPN2 — Saint Mary’s, Calif. at San Diego NBA BASKETBALL 8 p.m. ESPN — Denver at Milwaukee NHL HOCKEY 7 p.m. VERSUS — Minnesota at Chicago Wednesday’s radio MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 8 p.m. KHAS 1230, KLIQ 94.5 — Nebraska at Oklahoma 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, pole qualifying for NextEra Energy Resources 250, at Daytona Beach, Fla. GOLF 8:30 a.m. TGC — European PGA Tour, Avantha Masters, first round, at New Delhi (sameday tape) 2 p.m. TGC — PGA Tour, Northern Trust Open, first round, at Pacific Palisades, Calif. MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 6 p.m. ESPN — Minnesota at Penn St. ESPN2 — Clemson at N.C. State 7:30 p.m. FSN — Washington St. at Arizona 8 p.m. ESPN — Alabama at LSU ESPN2 — DePaul at Providence 9:30 p.m. FSN — UCLA at Stanford NBA BASKETBALL 7 p.m. TNT — San Antonio at Chicago 9:30 p.m. TNT — Dallas at Phoenix Thursday’s radio PREP GIRLS BASKETBALL 7 p.m. KLIQ 94.5, KRFS 103.9 — Sutton vs. Superior, C2-4 subdistrict championship at Sandy Creek 7 p.m. KKPR 98.9 — Minden vs. Centura, C1-9 subdistrict championship at Grand Island Northwest 7:30 p.m. KHAS 1230 — St. Cecilia vs. GICC, C16 subdistrict championship at Hastings High PREP WRESTLING 10 a.m. 1230 KHAS, 98.9 KKPR — Hourly reports from the high school state wrestling tournament in Omaha. Pelini confirms to AP reorganization of staff ERIC OLSON The Associated Press LINCOLN — Nebraska coach Bo Pelini has confirmed the reorganization of his coaching staff, making Tim Beck his offensive coordinator and announcing three new assistants. Pelini told The Associated Press on Wednesday that he has hired Indiana assistant Corey Raymond to coach the secondary, Ohio assistant Ross Els to coach linebackers and Massachusetts prep school coach Rich Fisher to coach wide receivers. Pelini declined to say whether former offensive coordinator Shawn Watson and former receivers coach Ted Gilmore resigned or were fired. Pelini announced former secondary coach Marvin Sanders’ resignation for personal reasons in a statement two weeks ago. Beck, who had been running backs coach, will work with the quarterbacks as well as direct the offense. Ron Brown, who had been coaching tight ends, is now in charge of running backs. Pelini said he has one more position to fill but declined to name what the role would be. “I determined who I’m going to hire, but it’s not ready to be announced,” said Pelini, taking a break during a golf vacation in Palm Springs, Calif. Pelini’s staff shuffle has been in the works for weeks but the coach had not spoken publicly about the changes. Pelini would not confirm Raymond’s hiring until Wednesday, even though Indiana coach Kevin Wilson announced Feb. 2 that Raymond would be going to Nebraska. Several media outlets, citing unnamed sources, had reported the hirings of Els and Fisher. The university’s website on Tuesday listed Raymond, Els and Fisher as faculty members, but their names did not appear on the school’s athletic website. Pelini said the hiring paperwork wasn’t wrapped up until Tuesday, and that’s why he had not formally announced the new coaches. The Huskers, who move from the Big 12 to the Big Ten next season, finished 10-4 last season even though their offense failed to perform in the Big 12 championship game against Oklahoma and the Holiday Bowl against Washington. Watson and Gilmore were holdovers from the staff of Bill Callahan, who coached the Huskers from 2004-07. Beck, an original member of Pelini’s staff, has never called plays at the college level. He spent three years at Kansas before coming to Nebraska. He was the Jayhawks’ receivers coach and passgame coordinator in 2007, when the Todd Reesing-led offense averaged 43 points and 480 yards a game. Els, a Lincoln native, was Ohio’s linebackers coach for six years and special-teams coordinator for four. He replaces Mike Ekeler, who is now codefensive coordinator at Ohio. Raymond coached cornerbacks at Utah State for two years, then spent two months at Indiana before jumping to Nebraska. Fisher previously was head coach at The Rivers School in Weston, Mass. He also worked as a teaching golf professional. Brown coached Nebraska’s receivers under Tom Osborne and Frank Solich from 1987-2003 and returned to the staff to coach tight ends in 2008. It will be his first time working with running backs. Sports HASTINGS TRIBUNE Wednesday, Feb. 16, 2011 B3 AMY ROH/Tribune St. Cecilia’s Charise Farmer dribbles past Central City’s Chelsea Huston (left) and Katelyn Janky during their C1-6 Subdistrict semifinal game Tuesday at Hastings High. STC: Hawkettes take care of Bison BRENT McCOWN/Tribune Doniphan-Trumbull’s Kirsten Sullivan (31) and Sarah Dinan battle for a rebound with Sutton’s Jessica Osterhaus (44) and Maryah Calkins (22) during their C2-4 Subdistrict tournament semifinal game Tuesday in Fairfield. Fillies cruise past Cardinals, get rematch with Superior ERIK BUDERUS ebuderus@hastingstribune.com FAIRFIELD — The Sutton girls basketball team made sure not to overlook Tuesday’s subdistrict game against Doniphan-Trumbull for Thursday’s highly anticipated potential rematch with Superior. The Fillies took care of business Tuesday night, handing Doniphan-Trumbull a 71-19 defeat in the semifinals of the Class C-2, Subdistrict 4 tournament at Sandy Creek. The win, coupled with Superior’s win over Blue Hill, sets up the rematch Thursday for the subdistrict championship between the two Southern Nebraska Conference foes. That game will tipoff at 7 p.m. at Sandy Creek. Superior last handed Sutton a defeat in the semifinals of the SNC conference tournament a couple weeks ago and the Wildcats ended Sutton’s season a year ago with a victory in the subdistrict tournament. Sutton defeated the Wildcats in the season opener this year. “(D-T) ran some zones that Superior will too, so it was nice to get a look at that. But tonight we just wanted to come out and control what we could control,” Sutton coach Andy Gerlecz said. “We have a lot of respect for Superior and we’ll see how it goes Thursday. We need to play well and do some things a little bit better than we did in the conference. They wanted the game more than we did.” Said Sutton senior post player Claire Bergen: “During practice we’ve been continuously working and preparing for Thursday. Tonight, we wanted to play like it was Thursday. We treated their post players like we have to play on Thursday so we’ve just continuously been getting ready for Thursday. With them ending our season last year at subdistricts, then with them beating us in conference, it’s a big rivalry game. It’s a game we really want.” But before the Fillies could even think about the Wildcats, they first had to handle business Tuesday — which they did. Sutton led from wire-to-wire, jumping out to an 8-0 lead just 1:27 into the game and expanding that to 23-2 by the end of the first quarter. The Cardinals (4-17), who were coming off an upset victory Monday night over Heartland in the opening round of the tournament, were denied their upset bid Tuesday as the Class C-2 No. 7 Fillies (19-2) dominated in every facet of the game. Sutton held a commanding 4325 advantage in rebounding and forced the Cardinals into committing 25 turnovers in the contest. Doniphan-Trumbull was limited Continued from page B1 With the win, St. Cecilia (17-4) will play Grand Island Central Catholic (15-8) in the subdistrict championship game Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at HHS. Earlier this month, GICC knocked off St. Cecilia 45-37. “We’ve just got to bring a little more energy,” STC coach Jahn Kile said of the rematch with the Crusaders on Thursday. “The first time we came out a little flat and it seemed like we were running in sand. I think we’ll be ready. But that’s one thing we have to do, get ourselves ready.” Against Central City, the Hawkettes shot 70 percent (39-of-56) from the field and forced Central City (5-18) into committing 31 turnovers. A maximum 12 players scored for the St. Cecilia, including four in double figures. Lexi Schmidt led the way with 16 points on 8-of-9 shooting, while Charise Farmer added 12 points. Tessa Chalupa and Shanelle Farmer each finished with 10 points. “It was a good game for us,” Kile said. “We did some nice things. But as far as executing in the half-court, we still need to work on that and get better.” Central City actually scored first Tuesday. But St. Cecilia responded with a 7-0 run. After the Bison scored to get within 7-4, the Hawkettes used a 13-0 run — with the most of the points coming on layups in transition — over the next three minutes to take control of the game. St. Cecilia then outscored Central City 30-4 in the second quarter, shooting 14-of18 from the field in the second period. That included 18 unanswered points for the Hawkettes in a span of less than four minutes “We thought our pressure would hurt them, and it definitely did in the first half,” Kile said. “It was nice to play a lot of girls. We had everybody score, which I don’t think I’ve ever had a coach before. So that’s kind of nice.” Central City was led by Chelsea Huston with 16 points, while Megan Catlett added 10 points. St. Cecilia (17-4) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 30 17 16 — 83 Central City (5-18). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 4 4 12 — 32 St. Cecilia (83) Abby Jackson 2-2 0-0 6, Libby Kissinger 1-3 0-0 2, Charise Farmer 5-6 0-0 12, Lexi Schmidt 8-9 0-0 16, Tessa Chalupa 5-9 0-0 10, Shanelle Farmer 5-8 0-0 10, Morgan Nikkila 2-5 0-0 4, Jamie Williams 3-4 1-2 7, Sarah Goedert 4-5 0-0 8, Alyssa Schropp 1-2 0-0 2, Josie Jackson 1-1 0-0 2, Olivia Thomas 2-2 0-0 4, Team 39-56 1-2 83. Central City (32) Paige Benner 1-2 0-0 2, Megan Catlett 4-7 2-3 10, Samantha Hanquist 0-4 4-4 4, Jamie Harlow 0-2 0-0 0, Chelsea Huston 6-8 4-4 16, Mackenzie Melcher 0-1 00 0, Jordanne Speer 0-1 0-0 0, Tiffany Reimers 0-3 0-0 0, Emily Muench 0-3 0-0 0, Katelyn Janky 0-1 0-0 0, Courtney Tvrdy 0-0 0-0 0, Mikaela Wilshuser 0-0 0-0 0, Team 11-32 10-11 32. Three-point field goals — STC 4-9 (Jackson 2-2, Kissinger 0-1, C. Farmer 2-2, S. Farmer 0-2, Williams 0-1, Schropp 0-1). Rebounds — STC 21 (Schmidt 5), CC 19 (Catlett 6). Turnovers — STC 11, CC 31. Total fouls — STC 7, CC 1. Fouled out — none. Technicals — none. NU men improved but desperate for road win ERIC OLSON The Associated Press BRENT McCOWN/Tribune Sutton’s Jamie Van Kirk (12) shoots over Doniphan-Trumbull’s Kenzie Kloke (23) during during their C2-4 Subdistrict tournament semifinal game Tuesday in Fairfield. to just 9-for-42 shooting in the game (21 percent) while Sutton connected on half of its field goal attempts (30-for-60). The Cardinals were also dealt a blow when leading scorer Kirsten Sullivan left the game late in the second quarter with a hand injury and did not return. Bergen led a balanced Sutton scoring attack with 17 points. She also collected 10 rebounds. Jamie Van Kirk and Jessica Osterhaus tallied 14 points each. Osterhaus also finished with nine rebounds. Gerlecz said his team will be ready to play Thursday. “We need to finish our shots. Last time we played them, I think we were 15-of-50-something. They did a good job of defending us. They’re a matchup nightmare for people,” Gerlecz said of the rematch. “Offensive execution and transition will be a big key for us I think.” Freshman Kaylee Glover led the Cardinals with 10 points and four steals. No other Cardinal tallied more than three points in the game. The Cardinals graduate just one senior — Sarah Dinan — from this year’s team. “It was a good win for us Monday, the kids came out and played some really good defense and that transitioned into our offense so that helped out quite a bit,” D-T coach Bob Samuelson said. “We’re a young team, they went through a learning experience this year. If we stick together, we should have a pretty good team next year. They played a lot of rated teams and a lot of good C-1 teams this year.” Doniphan-Trumbull (4-17). . . . . . . . . . . . 2 4 7 6 — 19 Sutton (19-2). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 21 15 12 — 71 Doniphan-Trumbull (19) Katie Pfeiffer 0-5 0-0 0, Kayla Hinrichs 0-2 0-0 0, Mollie Kohmetscher 1-8 0-0 2, Kirsten Sullivan 1-5 0-0 2, Kaylee Glover 5-12 0-0 10, Jordyn Brummund 1-4 1-4 3, Sarah Dinan 0-1 0-0 0, Kenzie Kloke 1-5 0-0 2, Ashton Mazour 0-0 0-0 0, Emily Kier 00 0-0 0, Katie Kloke 0-0 0-0 0, Team 9-42 1-4 19. Sutton (71) Maria Van Kirk 3-6 2-2 8, Jamie Van Kirk 6-12 0-0 14, Vanessa Van Kirk 1-2 2-2 4, Claire Bergen 7-10 3-6 17, Jessica Osterhaus 6-9 2-2 14, Maryah Calkins 3-5 0-0 6, Ariel Lundstrom 1-6 0-0 2, Kelli Green 3-8 0-0 6, Lakyn Mau 0-1 0-0 0, Barbra Baker 0-0 0-0 0, Megan Simonsen 0-1 0-0 0, Team 30-60 9-12 71. Three-point field goals — SUT 2-14 (M. Van Kirk 0-3, J. Van Kirk 2-6, Lundstrom 0-2, Green 0-1, Mau 0-1, Simonsen 0-1), DT 0-5 (Hinrichs 0-1, Kohmetscher 0-1, Sullivan 0-3). Rebounds — SUT 43 (Bergen 10), DT 25 (Glover, Ken. Kloke 4). Turnovers — SUT 15, DT 25. Total fouls — SUT 8, DT 9. Fouled out — none. Technicals — none. LINCOLN — While fans ponder Nebraska’s postseason possibilities, coach Doc Sadler is concentrating on the short term. He just wants to win a road game. The Huskers (16-8, 4-6) head into Wednesday night’s visit to Oklahoma (1212, 4-6) with 13 straight Big 12 road losses. “If we’re going to be a team that wants to be considered a decent basketball team,” Sadler said, “you have to win on the road because that’s what separates the good teams and the OK teams.” Nebraska has been better than OK at home, winning 15 of 16 at the Devaney Sports Center. The only loss was 86-66 to Kansas, this week’s No. 1 team. The Huskers are No. 85 in this week’s RPI, a ranking that would have to rise significantly for them to merit consideration for their first NCAA bid in 13 years. They probably need to win two, if not all, of their three remaining road games — at OU, Iowa State and Colorado. That would be a major accomplishment for a team whose last Big 12 road win was at Baylor on March 7, 2009. Last season, the Huskers lost six of eight Big 12 road games by double digits. Three of the five this season have been by four points or less, including a 72-71 loss at Texas Tech decided at the buzzer. They also lost 63-60 at Kansas in a game they led by 10 points in the second half. “We’ve proven we can play well at home,” Sadler said. “I’m not saying we haven’t played well on the road. I think we have. Texas Tech, we had a chance to win but we didn’t. We have to win to maybe take another step.” The next step is to play in the postseason again. Nebraska hasn’t made the NCAA tournament since 1998 or the NIT since 2009. Even if the Huskers figure out how to win on the road, they still have challenges at home. Third-ranked Texas visits Saturday before Kansas State and No. 20 Missouri come calling. “I think it’s way too early to be talking about us being in the NCAA tournament,” Sadler said. “We have to win some games, and we have to win some road games. Hopefully at the end of the 16-game (Big 12) schedule, we’ll see where we play out. If we’ve won enough ball games, we’ll be rewarded for it.” SC: Unbeaten Cougars stunned by Fairbury at subdistrict tourney Continued from page B1 The Jeffs (12-10) hit 8-of-10 free throws in the fourth quarter to hold off any potential Cougar comeback. It is the second year in a row that the Cougars suffered a defeat in the semifinals of the subdistrict tournament. Last year, Blue Hill defeated Sandy Creek, but the Cougars rebounded and went on to capture the Class C-2 state championship. The Cougars have unofficially locked up one of the two wild card bids to the state tournament this year as they currently lead the Class C-1 points standings following Tuesday night’s games. However, nothing will become official until the conclusion of the district title games Feb. 25. Mikaela Shaw led the Cougars Tuesday with 20 points — but she was held score- less in the fourth quarter as the Cougars were outscored 15-8 in the final stanza. Ashlee Harms was the only Sandy Creek player to reach double digits in scoring as she finished with 12 points. Fresh off her 26-point performance in Monday’s win over Fillmore Central, Amanda Osborne scored 20 points to lead the Jeffs Tuesday. Kalee Cromer added 18 points — 13 of which came in the second half. Fairbury hit 15-of-20 free throws in the game while Sandy Creek was 3-for-5 from the charity stripe. Fairbury (12-10) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 10 16 15 — 53 Sandy Creek (21-1). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 8 16 8 — 44 Sandy Creek (44) Bailey Morris 4, Montana Hinrichs 2, Ashlee Harms 12, Keri Shaw 6, Mikaela Shaw 20. Fairbury (53) Jensen Cromer 7, Margaret Ehle 2, Kalee Cromer 18, Amanda Osborne 20, Paige Husa 6. Sports B4 HASTINGS TRIBUNE Wednesday, Feb 16, 2011 HHS: Injury can’t stop Tiger senior wrestler Continued from page B1 Looking at his draw for the state tournament, Truong likes his chances to make a run at state. The Nos. 1and 2-ranked wrestlers are both on the other side of the bracket. “I think it looks good,” Truong says. “I think I’m in a good position to hopefully make it to the finals. The bigger challenge is on the other side of the bracket. I have high hopes right now.” This will be the second straight year Truong is at state, as he went 1-2 at 145 pounds in Class B last year. He hopes that experience pays dividends. “I think that helps a lot,” he says. “I know what to expect now. I’ve been there before, so I know what to do and what I should be doing to get ready.” That Truong is a two-time state qualifier is something Truong never saw coming when he went out for wrestling as a sophomore after never competing in the sport before. Laux tried to get Truong join the wrestling team his freshman year, but he wasn’t sold on the sport. “I was just really bored as a freshman, so I figured I might as well try something,” Truong says. As a sophomore, Truong didn’t experience much success at all. “Back when I was a sophomore, I would have been happy to be on varsity,” he says. “I didn’t even letter my sophomore year. Everybody lettered. “Back then, it was just like a leisure sport. No one really expected anything out of me. I just did what I could.” But Truong kept with the sport, State Schedule At Qwest Center Omaha Thursday, Feb. 17 1st Session First round and quarterfinals (Class A, D), 9:30 a.m. 2nd Session First round and quarterfinals (Class B, C), 4:30 p.m. Friday, Feb. 18 3rd Session First- and second-round consolations (Class A, D), 9:30 a.m. 4th Session First- and second-round consolations (Class B, C), 9:30 a.m. 5th Session Semifinals and third-round consolations (all classes), 5 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 19 6th Session Consolation semifinals, third- and fifth-place matches (all classes), 9:30 a.m. Finals (all classes), 2:30 p.m. wrestling during that summer. That’s when he started to win some matches and he began to take the sport seriously. Then, as a junior last year, he fin- ished 24-16 while reaching the state tournament. This season began with high hopes. But in his first match of the year, in a dual against Seward back on Dec. 2, 2010, Truong suffered his bad stinger. “I don’t remember exactly what happened,” Truong says. “I just remember a really sharp pain and I couldn’t move it.” It was a lingering nerve injury from last year that also caused him problems in the fall during cross country season, but it had never been this bad. “It’s a nerve in my neck that runs down my shoulder,” Truong says “It just stings if I ever hit anything with it or irritate it somehow.” Truong returned for the Lincoln Public Schools Classic on Jan. 15, though he wrestled only half of those matches after he reaggravated the injury. He also missed part of the season with a concussion. “This year with all the injuries made me really nervous,” Truong says. “But I knew that somehow I was going to come back and make it state.” THE REST OF CLASS A Truong will be joined at state by junior teammate Christian Williams, who qualified at 285 pounds. Williams will wrestle unbeaten Brandon Yost of Millard West in the first round. “He’s had a nice season,” Laux said. “He’s a kid who was below .500 last season. He wrestled during the offseason and has improved his technique in most areas.” Tribland Class A state qualifiers Hastings High — Thien Truong (152), Chris Williamson (285) Superior: Defensive change helps Wildcats post win Continued from page B1 Superior jumped out to an early 174 lead in the game and led 19-6 after the first quarter. The Wildcats appeared ready to run away with the game. But Blue Hill had other ideas. Kumke helped spark a 12-2 Blue Hill run to open the second quarter, which pulled the Bobcats to within 21-18 with 3:19 left in the first half. All 12 of the points came on four 3pointers from Kumke. “We were a little frustrated in the second quarter when they were hitting those shots, we knew we had to go to a man defense,” Superior junior Haley Gebers said. “We had to stop the shooter. If we could do that, we knew we could win.” The Wildcats switched to the manto-man defense and closed the first half with the 8-0 run to take a 29-18 lead into the locker room at halftime. The team then continued with the momentum in the second half, jumping out to a 37-20 lead with 4:55 left in the third quarter. The Bobcats were never able to get any closer than 15 points the rest of the way. Class C-2 No. 6 Superior improved to 17-5 on the season with the win Tuesday while Blue Hill ended its season 10-10 overall. Sarah Wood led the Wildcats with 24 points, 11 rebounds and three blocks while Gebers contributed 18 points and 10 rebounds. Montana Hayes finished with four steals and two blocks to go along with two points and five rebounds. “It all starts and ends with Wood when you play against them. You’ve got to control her. She is by far the best post player I’ve seen in my 10 years of coaching girls,” Streff said. “For us, we wanted to get out in transition. I thought we were a little faster than them and could score before they set their defense up. But they’re a tough matchup for us and they do a good job with the personnel they have. We just missed too many shots.” The Bobcats were led by Kumke who had 14 points and four steals. Jordyn Atwater finished with eight points. Maci Coffey led the Bobcats with seven rebounds. It marked the final game in the careers of Blue Hill seniors Alissa Overy, Emily Harrifeld and Sara Alber. “We improved a lot from day one. We struggled early in the year, not wins and losses, but just in our execution of play. I thought we played really well tonight, so hopefully we can carry that into next year,” Streff said. “I’m pleased with 10 wins. The way it looked early in the year, I wasn’t sure if we could get there, but the girls, they found a way to win a lot of close games.” Superior’s win sets up a highly anticipated matchup Thursday for the subdistrict championship between two Southern Nebraska Conference foes — Superior and Sutton. The two teams have split their previous two meetings this year with Sutton winning on opening night and Superior knocking the Fillies out in the semifinals in the conference tournament a couple weeks ago. Thursday’s championship is set for tipoff at 7 p.m. “We still fought through everything, there were times we didn’t play as good tonight, but I promise you, we’ll be ready Thursday. The intensity will be up because it’s Sutton, we’ve played them twice, it’s the rub-match, they know what’s on the line, we’ll be here and be ready,” Mumm said. “We’ve got to get some outside shots and we’ve got to take care of the basketball. If we can take care of the ball and get some points from some other people... I know Montana struggled — but she said she’ll have her best game on Thursday — if we can get that kind of attitude from everybody and we can get somebody other than Sarah to score, we’ll be fine.” Said Gebers: “Our state tournament started about two weeks ago. We have to win every game to get through so we’ve got to give everything our all in order to try and make it to state. Thursday is going to be really exciting. Everybody has been talking about it all week. Sutton is going to be really hard, but we beat them once and everyone is confident that we can do that again.” Blue Hill (10-10) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 12 8 11 — 37 Superior (17-5) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 10 12 11 — 52 Superior (52) Sarah Wood 7-10 10-10 24, Haley Gebers 7-13 4-6 18, Heidi Wilt 210 0-0 6, Jett Mickelsen 0-2 2-4 2, Montana Hayes 1-9 0-2 2, Kayla Klatt 0-1 0-0 0, Susannah Headrick 0-0 0-0 0, Holly Bower 0-1 0-0 0, Korina Tinkham 0-0 0-0 0, Lyndsay Brown 0-0 0-2 0, Team 17-46 16-24 52. Blue Hill (37) Alissa Overy 0-2 0-0 0, Emily Harrifeld 2-8 0-0 4, Jordyn Atwater 2-9 4-4 8, Kaitklin Kumke 5-16 0-4 14, Sara Alber 1-7 0-0 2, Maci Coffey 13 0-0 2, Kelsey Karr 1-3 0-0 2, April Faimon 1-6 0-0 2, Lexie Himmelberg 0-0 0-0 0, Cheyann Lovett 1-1 0-0 3, Katie Ferris 0-0 0-0 0, Katie Schafer 0-1 0-0 0, Team 14-56 4-8 37. Three-point field goals — SUP 2-8 (Gebers 0-1, Wilt 2-7), BH 5-11 (Kumke 4-10, Lovett 1-1). Rebounds — SUP 39 (Wood 11), BH 39 (Coffey 7). Turnovers — SUP 18, BH 18. Total fouls — SUP 10, BH 21. Fouled out — none. Technicals — BH (bench). BRENT McCOWN/Tribunex Superior’s Sarah Wood (5) shoots over Blue Hill players during their game Tuesday in Fairfield. AC: Patriots can’t overcome slow start Continued from page B1 “There were a couple times where there were stretches where they were having trouble getting the ball where they wanted to and we had some opportunities that we didn’t finish,” Marker said “Those are key stretches. We just couldn’t put anything together at those times when they were struggling.” Adams Central managed just eight second-half points on 3of-20 shooting, as the Crusaders pulled away. “I thought we started the game really well,” Anspauch said. “We had great energy. We were communicating defensively. (Then) I think we got comfortable. We didn’t do the things for the second and third quarters that we did early in the first quarter to get that lead. “And coach Marker is a good coach. He had a good game plan from the standpoint of being real physical. I just thought he did a good job of slowing the game down, even though they weren’t stalling or anything.” Adams Central was led by senior Janessa Bohlen with eight points. Liz McGowan led GICC with 22 points, including 13 of the Crusaders’ 25 second-half points. GICC won despite hitting just 10-of-29 free throws. The Crusaders were 8-of-20 in the first half, as Adams Central committed 14 fouls in the first two quarters. The second half didn’t get any better, with Central Catholic making 2-of-9 at the charity stripe. “I think it goes back to why we got such a good start early — because we were focused and we were active. Once we missed a free throw or two, it became contagious,” Anspauch said. “Very rarely will I ever talk about shooting kinds of things to the kids during the game, but one of the things I talked about at halftime was that we’ve got to have somebody step up and make a couple early so the rest of the team sees that we can make one.” “It just shows you what a brilliant coach I am. We went 2-for-9 in the second half,” Anspauch added, with a laugh. Tuesday night marked the end of the career of five seniors for the Patriots. Marker credited those seniors with not allowing the Patriots to fold once they got down by 13 points early in the game. “Our seniors provide a lot of great leadership,” the AC coach said. “They’re the ones who give our younger kids the confidence that they can come back from those deficits. Our younger kids can learn from that and understand that they’re still in the game.” GICC (15-8) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 14 9 16 — 52 Adams Central (7-14) . . . . . . . . 7 10 4 4 — 29 Grand Island Central Catholic (52) Sarah Golka 0-2 0-0 0, Katie Brand 4-8 1-2 9, Maggie Stump 2-5 1-4 6, Liz McGowan 8-15 4-10 22, Jamie Partington 2-2 1-2 5, Erin Sorahan 1-1 3-4 6, Michaela Ostdiek 0-2 0-2 0, Kelsie Scheel 1-1 0-2 2, McKennz Kime 1-1 0-3 2, Kerrigan Anspauch 0-2 0-0 0, Jessica Wiens 0-0 0-0 0, Team 19-39 10-29 52. Adams Central (29) Janessa Bohlen 3-13 1-2 8, Emily Bonifas 1-2 0-0 2, Cheyenne Gottsch 3-8 0-0 6, Bailey Parr 0-1 1-2 1, Jessica Lindblad 0-2 0-0 0, Brianna Schuck 0-4 2-2 2, Leslie Pfeifer 0-3 2-2 2, Sydney Niemeyer 1-2 0-0 2, Kailey Rader 0-1 22 2, Sydney Bernasek 2-3 0-0 4, Team 10-39 8-9 29. Three-point field goals — GICC 4-9 (Brand 0-2, Stump 1-3, McGowan 2-3, Sorahan 1-1), AC 1-8 (Bohlen 1-3, Gottsch 0-2, Schuck 0-2, Bernasek 0-1). Rebounds — GICC 26 (Golka 6), AC 31 (Lindblad 5, Niemeyer 5). Turnovers — GICC 15, AC 21. Total fouls — GICC 10, AC 21. Fouled out — AC (Gottsch). Technicals — none. Pujols deadline passes with no deal TIM REYNOLDS The Associated Press JUPITER, Fla. — The deadline for Albert Pujols and the St. Louis Cardinals to reach a new contract agreement passed Wednesday with no new deal, making it likely the three-time MVP will test the free-agent market after the season. “We are greatly disappointed at this outcome,” Cardinals chairman William DeWitt Jr. said at a news conference. “We will revisit it again following the 2011 season, at which time we will again make every effort to keep him as a Cardinal.” Pujols, a nine-time All-Star, is the only player in major league history to hit 30 or more home runs each of his first 10 seasons — all with the Cardinals, the franchise he has said in the past he wants to remain with for the rest of his career. But the sides failed in recent months to reach common ground, raising the possibility the three-time NL MVP may be on the cusp of his final season in St. Louis. AMY ROH/Tribune Adams Central’s Janessa Bohlen shoots against Grand Island Central Catholic’s Katie Brand during their Class C-1, Subdistrict 6 semifinal game Tuesday at Hastings High. “We felt very good about the offer we made,” general manager John Mozeliak said. Pujols will make $16 million this season in his contract’s final year, with $4 million of the money deferred with no interest. Pujols said he doesn’t want to negotiate during spring training or the season. The Cardinals say they are open to talks. “It’s not as if he’s a free agent at this point,” Mozeliak said. St. Louis said it made an offer at the start of the year and then discussed possible modifications. “They were lengthy and in depth,” DeWitt said of the talks. The closest Pujols came to an appearance at camp Wednesday morning was a sighting of his black pickup with Missouri license plates in the parking lot of the team’s spring training complex. Pujols was not with the vehicle. The team expects him to arrive Thursday, and teammates say they can’t wait to see him. Comics HASTINGS TRIBUNE Wednesday, Feb. 16, 2011 Crossword Astrograph Rubes B5 By Leigh Rubin The Family Circus By Bil Keane THURSDAY, FEB. 17 S Aunt fears sexually active niece is headed for trouble D EAR ABBY: This is difficult to write. My sister reads her children’s text messages after they’re asleep. She bragged to me about how popular her daughter “Naomi” — my 14-yearold niece — is because she’s giving oral sex to the boys. Dear Abby My sister claims Naomi isn’t “having sex,” so she thinks it’s OK! I am shocked by her ignorance and terrified knowing that Naomi is putting herself at risk for STDs. My husband says if I confront Naomi it will drive her away, but I can’t remain silent and watch my niece ruin her life. What’s the point of reading your children’s text messages if you’re unwilling to stand up and be a parent? What can I do? — TERRIFIED FOR MY NIECE IN THE SOUTHWEST DEAR TERRIFIED: Your sister’s parenting skills are appalling. Her daughter isn’t “popular”; she is promiscuous — and her mother is allowing it. Do your niece a favor and talk to her, because oral sex IS sex, and she is putting herself at risk for a number of sexually transmitted diseases. The Sexuality Information and Education Council has a wealth of information resources and tools for addressing this important subject. Its website, www.familiesaretalking.org, helps with discussing sexuality-related issues and provides information for young people, parents and caregivers. Other reliable resources include Planned Parenthood’s www.teenwire.com and the American Social Health Association website, www.iwannaknow.org, which is also a safe place for teens to learn about sexual health. * * * DEAR ABBY: I was raised a Christian, but now that I am older I am questioning my faith. I consider myself an agnostic, borderline atheist. The problem is I am married and a father. I want to raise my children to be open-minded and tolerant, but I don’t know how I should go about it. How do I answer the question, “Is there a God?” when I myself am not sure? Have you any advice on the subject? — AGNOSTIC DAD IN SOUTH CAROLINA DEAR AGNOSTIC DAD: Many deeply spiritual people are agnostic. The way to raise open-minded, tolerant children is to talk to them about your values and model that behavior for them. Parents convey their values verbally and by demonstrating them. As to the question, “Is there a God?” you and your wife should discuss that question in advance so she can have some input and you can handle this together. * * * DEAR ABBY: My daughter-inlaw is eight weeks pregnant. The problem is, she carries the gene for cystic fibrosis. One of her siblings is a carrier and another has multiple sclerosis. I advised my son that it didn’t seem to be a good idea to get pregnant, but they both appear unconcerned about the repercussions. Should I mind my own business and hope for the best? Or should I be worried about the future health of their expected child? — WORRIED GRAMMATO-BE DEAR WORRIED: As a loving grandparent, you will always be concerned about your grandchildren’s welfare. What you should do is suggest that your son and daughter-in-law discuss their family medical histories with her OB/GYN and take their lead from the doctor. (If they haven’t already.) 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. ome important changes you’ve been trying to make for a long time could actually come through for you in the year ahead. However, it might take the help of others to make it happen, so do what you can to encourage cooperation. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Be especially cautious when with someone who is under a lot of stress. It wouldn’t take much to induce a breakdown from him/her over a seemingly inconsequential matter. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - There is a strong possibility that co-workers will currently be hard to please, not because of anything you’ll do or not do, but because of what is going on it their lives. Be tolerant. ARIES (March 21-April 19) - Although there might be a lot of peer pressure, you don’t have to go along with it. If you feel something isn’t right, go your own way, just like the song says. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - You should take reports of an unkind word from an associate with a nodule of Mrs. Dash. Your informant could be putting a spin on something that was not intended. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - A forceful personality might try to dominate the conversation by overriding what everybody else is trying to say. Without starting an argument, don’t put up with it. CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Your thinking cap might be slipping a bit when it comes to your material affairs. Keep it from totally falling off by moving as slowly as possible, so that you don’t lose it completely. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) The secret to quickly becoming unpopular is to be overly insistent about getting your own way. The people you’re with will make a swift exit and leave you standing alone. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Those unfinished projects or jobs you left hanging are likely to rear their unwelcome heads and keep you from doing what you really want to do. Let it be a lesson about completing what you start. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) - Don’t stand idly by watching another fumble for words to explain something about which you’re an expert. Jump in and help him/her out without stealing the person’s thunder. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - The interests of others might take precedence over your own, but remember, postponing what you want to do won’t hurt, but being selfishly demanding will. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) - Be on guard about making sure that you’re in control of your mouth at all times. Speaking without thinking could cause you to unintentionally say things to others that you shouldn’t. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) - Be gracious about not getting your way at all times, even if you think you’re more entitled to it than others. Let everybody have a turn at being able to call the shots. 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 ©2011 by NEA, Inc. Garfield By Jim Davis Frugal Living — Clean and freshen your microwave BY SARA NOEL United Media Microwaves get dirty and smelly. It can be a pain to keep clean if you don’t clean it immediately after splatters or spills. To clean your microwave with ease, simply add a microwave-safe bowl, a couple of tablespoons of lemon juice and 1 cup water (or 1/2 cup white distilled vinegar and 1/2 cup water). Cook on high for three to five minutes or until steam condenses. Wipe down with a cloth. The first reader shares another hint. Microwave cleaner and simmering potpourri: There are no measurements. Mix according to your liking: — crushed cinnamon — orange peel (I use my dehydrator for leftover peels, or dry on a cooling rack) — cloves — crushed bay leaves — optional allspice berries Add 2 tablespoons of mix to a small pot filled with water, let simmer on stove. When finished flush mix down garbage disposal for a nice clean scent. Add 1 tablespoon of mix to a bowl of water, microwave on high for about 3 minutes (keep an eye on the water so it doesn’t boil over), let sit for about 5 minutes, remove mix and wipe down microwave with a towel. The steam loosens all the splatters and leaves a nice, fresh smell. — Mel, Massachusetts Stained plastic: I use a mixture of about 1 part bleach to 3 parts water and keep it in a spray bottle. It is mild enough that it doesn’t make everything taste or smell like bleach, but it is great for stained plastic. It gets out grape juice, tea/coffee, tomato sauce and turmeric. — Contrary housewife, Kansas No-knead bread: I may very well not bother trying other basic white bread recipes for a bit because this was so easy and turned out perfect. 6-1/2 cups all-purpose flour 2 packets instant yeast 3 tablespoons sugar 1 tablespoon salt 3 cups warm water 2 tablespoons shortening butter No kneading necessary on this one, folks. Preheat oven 375 F. In large mixer bowl, combine 3-1/2 cups flour, yeast, sugar and salt. Mix well. Add warm water (125 F or so) and shortening to flour mixture. Blend at low speed until moistened. Beat 3 minutes at medium speed. By hand, gradually stir in remaining flour to make a stiff batter. Cover and allow to rise in a warm place until double, about 30 minutes. Stir down batter. Spread in greased 9inch-by-5-inch or 8-inch-by-4-inch bread pans. Cover and allow to rise until batter reaches tops of pans (about 20 to 30 minutes). Bake at 375 F for about 35 to 40 minutes, until golden brown. Remove from the pans and brush with butter. Allow to cool. Zits By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman Agri/Business B6 HASTINGS TRIBUNE Wednesday, Feb. 16, 2011 Iowa governor gets criticism for ‘double dip’ BRANSTAD GETTING EXECUTIVE PAY WHILE ALSO DRAWING $50K STATE PENSION RYAN J. FOLEY The Associated Press TONY TALBOT/AP Above: Eric Fitch holds a Magic Hat glass Jan. 26 in front of the digester building at the brewery in South Burlington, Vt. Below: A methane generator at Magic Hat brewery (left) is powered by a grain digester (rear). Recycling beer BREWERY WASTE TURNED INTO GAS, WHICH FUELS THE OPERATION JOHN CURRAN S The Associated Press OUTH BURLINGTON, Vt. — Before he started “saving the earth, one beer at a time,” all inventor Eric Fitch knew about home brewing was that it could make quite a mess. Once, he accidentally backed up the plumbing in his apartment building by dumping into his garbage disposal the spent grain left over from his India Pale Ale home brew. The oatmeal-looking gunk choked the pipes in his Cambridge, Mass., building, flooding the basement. These days, he’s doing something more constructive, fulfilling the dream of beer lovers everywhere by recycling the stuff: The MIT-trained mechanical engineer has invented a patented device that turns brewery waste into natural gas that’s used to fuel the brewing process. The anaerobic methane digester, installed last year at Magic Hat Brewing Co. in Vermont, extracts energy from the spent hops, barley and yeast left over from the brewing process — and it processes the plant’s wastewater. That saves the brewer on waste disposal and natural gas purchasing The 42-foot tall structure, which cost about $4 million to build, sits in the back parking lot of Magic Hat’s brewery, where it came online last summer. Fitch, 37, is CEO of PurposeEnergy, Inc., of Waltham, Mass., a renewable energy startup company whose lone product is the biphase orbicular bioreactor, which is 50 feet in diameter, holds 490,000 gallons of slurry and produces 200 cubic feet of biogas per minute. Brewers big and small have wrestled with waste issues since the dawn of beer-making. In recent years, they’ve turned to recycling — both as a costsaver and for environmental reasons. Anheuser-Busch, which makes Budweiser, uses a bio-energy recovery system in 10 of its 12 U.S. breweries to convert wastewater into natural gas that’s then used to fuel the brewing process. New Belgium Brewing Co. in Fort Collins, Colo., captures excess heat from cooling wort and funnels it beneath its loading dock so it doesn’t ice up in wintertime. The wort, the liquid made with malt and hot water, is fermented to make beer or ale. Coors’ breweries sell ethanol from their brewing process to refineries in Colorado. Some European breweries dry their spent grain and then burn it, using the heat and energy in their manufacturing process. Most operations dispose of their spent grain by selling it — or giving it away — to farmers, for use as cattle or animal feed. But PurposeEnergy says its digester is the first in the world to extract energy from the spent grain and then re-use it in the brewery, and all in one place. At Magic Hat, the big brown silo is located about 100 feet from the main complex. “Feeding it to cattle is pretty direct recycling, especially if you get steak back out of it,” said Julie Johnson, editor of All About Beer magazine. ”Carting it off as animal feed is pretty common. In this case, by closing the loop at the brewery, this is turning it into savings quite directly for Magic Hat.” After getting the idea in 2007, Fitch pilot tested it in Florida, taking spent grain from a Yuengling & Son brewery in Tampa, Fla., trucking it to a farm and putting it through a 400-gallon methane digester. That helped refine the design of the facility. Then he scouted New England breweries that might agree to a pilot project and got a bite from Magic Hat, which had been looking for ways to reduce its wastewater treatment bill. “Over the years, we looked at ways of reducing it, and the strain on South Burlington’s system, and we came up with ideas ranging from using women’s pantyhose to filter solids while flushing the brew kettle to having the spent grains hauled off to a local farm to be used for feed,” said Steve Hill, social networking manager for North American Breweries, which owns Magic Hat. “They (PurposeEnergy) laid out what we could save . and how the digester could benefit things from a ’green’ standpoint, and it was too good to pass up,” Hill said in an e-mail. Other than the plume of flame that rose up off the top of the silo — triggering a few panicky calls by neighbors to the fire department — it has succeeded. “There’s a lot of money to be saved, there’s a lot of strain to be taken off local wastewater systems,” according to Hill. ”The carbon footprint of a brewery is lessened a great deal when there’s a power company in their backyard.” Others are taking notice. “It’s something that’s definitely exciting for breweries to look at,” said Mark Wilson, brew master at Abita Brewing Co., in Abita Springs, La., who is at work on a handbook outlining environmentally friendly brewing operations for the Master Brewers Association of the Americas. Fitch, whose company’s slogan is “Saving the earth, one beer at a time,” has helped develop iPhone applications that allow him to control pumps and other operations within the digester. He says it can save brewers up to $2 per barrel in costs, a considerable savings for even a medium-sized operation like Magic Hat, which produces about 154,000 barrels of beer a year. More consumers pay post-holiday bills on time EILEEN AJ CONNELLY The Associated Press NEW YORK — Credit card users didn’t suffer a holiday hangover this year. The top six U.S. credit card issuers posted the lowest rates of default and late payments in two years on Tuesday, a strong sign that consumers had a handle on paying their bills in January. The improvements followed a return to credit card use during the holiday season, after consumers pocketed their plastic throughout the recession. Card networks all reported higher usage for the fourth quarter after two years of declines, and Federal Reserve figures show balances moved up slightly in December. Citibank reported the biggest improvement, with a default, or charge-off, rate of 7.49 percent of balances on an annualized basis in January, down from 8.34 percent in December. Payments that were 35 days or more late fell to 4.35 percent, from 4.44 percent. Like rivals Bank of America, Chase, American Express, Discover and Capital One, Citi’s numbers were the best seen in two years or more. The improvements in late payments, or delinquency rates, are a particularly positive sign. IOWA CITY, Iowa — Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad is collecting both a $130,000 salary as governor and a state pension worth more than $50,000 per year for earlier service — a legal practice, but one critics say is hypocritical given the governor’s plans to slash public spending and his calls for shared sacrifice. Branstad has been receiving pension payments that reflect his prior 26-year tenure as governor, lieutenant governor and state lawmaker since he was sworn in for a fifth term last month following a 12-year hiatus from state service, spokesman Tim Albrecht said Tuesday. The Republican’s salary will not reduce his retirement benefits, unlike other retired state workers under age 65 who return to service, because of a provision he signed into law as governor in 1992 that exempts retirees who return as elected officials from pension cuts. Albrecht said Branstad “made a significant personal sacrifice” by stepping down as president of Des Moines University to run for governor. The university position paid $357,000 in 2008, according to the school’s most recent tax filing. Albrecht said Branstad did not earn a salary in 2010 and paid for his own health insurance as he campaigned across the state. As for his decision to keep his pension, Albrecht said: “If somebody earns that income, they are entitled to it.” Critics concede that point. But a spokesman for the Democratic Party of Iowa and one top labor leader said Branstad is disingenuous for “double-dipping” as he moves forward with plans to lay off up to 1,500 employees, take away wage increases negotiated by his predecessor, and end universal preschool. “He’s asking for state employees to give up pay raises which are modest, at best, and to pay more for their insurance. I guess, Governor Branstad, where is your shared sacrifice?” said Danny Homan, president of the largest state employees union. “If you are a public servant, why are you even taking a salary as governor? Why aren’t you living off your already earned pension?” “At a time when Branstad is increasing the burden on Iowa families through unprecedented cuts to education, including eliminating universal preschool, receiving what amounts to two paychecks from the state is absolutely hypocritical,“ added Sam Roecker, the Democratic Party spokesman. More than 7,000 public workers were receiving both pensions and salaries as of June 30, 2010, according to the Iowa Public Employees’ Retirement System. Retired workers who return to public employment and are under age 65 have their monthly retirement earnings reduced by 50 cents for every dollar they earn over $30,000 under Iowa law. But elected officials were exempted from that reduction under a provision included in an overhaul of IPERS that was passed with broad support in the Legislature and signed into law by Branstad in April 1992, according to the Legislative Services Agency. Investor offers $7 billion to take Family Dollar private SARAH SKIDMORE The Associated Press PORTLAND, Ore. — Discount retailer Family Dollar Stores Inc. on Tuesday received a bid from activist investor Nelson Peltz’s firm to take the company private in a deal worth up to $7 billion. The Trian Fund is offering $55 to $60 per share for Family Dollar, according to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Shares of Family Dollar soared 25 percent, or $11.19, to $55.15 in extended trading Tuesday after the filing was made. Trian owns large stakes in a variety of major American businesses including upscale jeweler Tiffany’s & Co., food company H.J. Heinz Co. and fast-food chain Wendy’s/Arby’s Group Inc. It is already Family Dollar’s largest shareholder with about 8 percent of its shares. Paying $60 each for the Family Dollar shares it does not already own would cost Trian about $6.99 billion. Family Dollar, a discount retailer based in Matthews, N.C., confirmed late Tuesday that it received the offer. It said its board will review the proposal with its financial and legal advisors, Morgan Stanley and Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP. The company has more than 6,800 stores in 44 states and is one of the standout retailers in the post-recession economy. It benefited during the downturn from shoppers heading to its stores for bargains on everything from food to clothing. Family Dollar’s net income rose 23 percent to $358.1 million, or $2.62 per share, on revenue of $7.87 billion in its latest fiscal year. Last summer, Peltz disclosed that he was buying up shares of Family Dollar, saying the stock was undervalued. He said he met with senior management to discuss the company’s direction and attempts to boost shareholder value The Trian Fund bought up more Family Dollar shares in January. Markets Wednesday’s noon local markets Corn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6.42 Soybeans . . . . . . . . . .12.95 Milo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6.14 Wheat . . . . . . . . . . . . .8.21 Stocks of local interest The following stocks of local interest were traded today: Last Chg. 127,081 -429 Berkshire Hathaway A 84.72 -.26 Berkshire Hathaway B 22.57 +.16 ConAgra 110.73 +.84 Eaton Corp. Ingersoll Rand 47.00 -.36 Level 3 1.39 +.08 McDonald’s 76.03 -.12 PepsiCo 64.02 -.33 Tricon Global Restaurants 51.12 +.39 Union Pacific 97.62 -.37 Wells Fargo 32.83 -.85 Williams Cos. 27.79 +.76 Wal-Mart 54.76 -.19 HASTINGS TRIBUNE Wednesday, Feb. 16, 2011 B7 Classified Ads We accept cash, check or money order VISA, MASTERCARD, DISCOVER or AMERICAN EXPRESS. Deadlines for Classified Line Ads RUN DAY Open 7:45 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday We reserve the right to reject, edit or reclassify any advertisement accepted by us for publication. 402-461-1241 1 Card of Thanks 20 2005 PONTIAC Grand Am: 4-door, V-6, locally owned .....................$4,600 2005 CHEVY: 1-ton cargo van, many extras ....$6,500 3 In Memory Dennis Kelly 2/07/53-2/15/04 Automobiles 800-742-6397 Deveny Motors 1013 S. Burlington 402-462-2719 Hoskins Auto Sales The Broken Chain We little knew that morning, that God was going to call your name. In life we loved you dearly, in death we do the same. It broke our hearts to lose you, you did not go alone, for part of us went with you the day God called you home. You left us peaceful memories. Your love is still our guide, and though we cannot see you, you are always at our side. Our family chain is broken, and nothing seems the same; but as God calls us one by one, the chain will link again. Love always, Sheri, Angie, Justin Camry, Bryce, George, Kassie, Drake and Bella 9 Bundles Of Joy Itʼs A Boy! We Buy, Sell and Consign Highway 6/Hastings Ave. Hastings, NE 463-1466 For complete listing go to www.hoskinsautosales.com See our selection of FUEL ECONOMY cars at jacksonscarcorner.com Special of the Week ʻ08 Grand Caravan SXT: V6, copper, 32,xxx miles. $18,375. Cash......$16,475 Need New Tires?? Call Joel for Best Prices!! Call Bob, ASE Certified for your Mechanical Needs 220 West South Street 402-461-3161 WE PAY cash for junk vehicles. Free pick up. 402460-0000. YES! We will tow away unwanted vehicles. McMurray Motors, 462-6879. 22 2-wheel Drive Pickups Jaxon Ebner was born May 7, 2010, to Megan and Mitch Ebner of Holdrege, NE. Grandparents are Arlen and Melanie Gangwish, Herb and Marilyn Kirkover, Bruce and Char Ebner, and Teresa and John Gauthier. Greatgrandparents are Dennis and Charlotte Burr, Juta Kirkover, Treva Gangwish, and Dorothy Pfeiffer. 12 Garage Sales Northeast MOVING SALE 1330 N. COLORADO Hastings, NE Thursday, 9-7 Friday, 9-6 Antiques, collectibles, furniture, household (Fenton, Lenox, Snow Globes, banks, bells), much more. 20 Automobiles Brambleʼs Auto Sales Check our new website bramblesautosales.com See our truck selection at jacksonscarcorner.com 24 Sport Utility JEEP 2007 LIBERTY: 34,000 miles. Special .......$14,900 2006 GRAND Cherokee: Anniversary Edition, 47,000 miles ........$16,900 2005 LIBERTY Limited: 31,000 miles .........$13,900 2004 GRAND Cherokee: 80,000, sunroof.....$10,995 THE CAR LOT East Highway 6 36Travel Trailers & Motor Homes 2011 RV EXPO SHOW trades coming soon. ʻ96 Excel 26.5ML ʻ04 Hitchhiker 32-5WKTG ʻ04 Excel 30SKW ʻ08 Excel L33TKE ʻ04 Challenger 29.5RL These and more arriving daily. Stay tuned for more to come. HASTINGS MOTOR SALES DYKEMAN’S CAMPER PLACE Burlington and Highway 6 Call 463-1338 www.dykemanscamper.com 36Travel Trailers & Motor Homes 53 Health Care 60 TRANSPORTATION EQUIPMENT CO. RV sales and service. Check us out!! 100 N. Laird, Hastings, NE 402-463-4402 WANTED: FUN HAPPY PEOPLE Med Aide, parttime every other weekend 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. and possible various shifts. Inquire within at The Kensington, 233 N. Hastings Ave. No calls please. 38 Motorcycles & ATVs 56 2009 POLARIS Ranger 500: Soft cab. Sale .$7,990 2008 YAMAHA Rhino 700: Roof, windshield. Sale ........................$7,499 2007 POLARIS Sportsman 500X2: 600 miles. Sale ........................$5,899 PAUL SPADY MOTORS (402) 462-4105 45 Services Offered TOO BUSY, too old, too tired? Will do your housecleaning from top to bottom. Call Classical Cleaning Cousins at 402-9841079. No job too big. Restaurant FOOD SERVICE MANAGER VVS Canteen is seeking a Food Service Manager to direct cafeteria operations at the Swift Plant in Grand Island. A minimum of 3-5 years of food service management preferred. NO SUNDAYS OR HOLIDAYS. Competitive salary/benefit package. Must be self-driven, able to lead, attentive to detail and customer focused. Apply on line at vvscanteen.com 57 Technical & Trade GREAT BUSINESS Opportunity. Old Rayʼs Pizza, 202 W. 2nd location, now for rent. 1,290 sq. ft. Call Diane, 469-4777. WANTED FULL-TIME WELDER MINDEN MACHINE is a fast-growing equipment manufacturer. Drug testing is required. Apply at Minden Machine Shop, 1302 K Road, Minden, NE. 53 60 48 Business Opportunities Health Care EDGEWOOD VISTA, a 12-bed memory care facility in Hastings, Nebraska, is currently seeking CMA. Edgewood Vista is a progressive Assisted Living company which has built a strong reputation in providing home-like settings for seniors with a full range of care options. We provide competitive wages, benefits and a friendly work environment. Please send your resume and personal contact information by fax to 1-402-462-6828 or by email to lindaw@edge woodvista.com Learn more about Edgewood at www.edgewoodvista.com. EXPERIENCED HELP for disabled woman in her home. 463-3735. HELP WANTED Full-time/Part-time RN Full-Time/Part-time LPN Apply at: Grandview Manor 148 Broad Street Campbell, NE 68932 or call Stephanie, 402-756-8701 EEO PART-TIME med aide every other weekend, 3-11 p.m. Champion Homes. 902-9694. General AVON: Earn money Have fun, free web site No Door to Door Call 308-384-7198 BLASTER/PAINTER needed. No experience necessary. Hours, 8-4:30 Monday-Friday. Stop at 4530 E. Gunpowder Circle, Hastings, for application. 402-463-5771 NEBRASKA ALUMINUM CASTINGS has full-time openings available. TRIMMER and CNC OPERATOR. The starting wage is $10.15 per hour. $0.80 per hour night shift differential. SCHEDULE/BENEFITS: 1st shift (10 hour days-6 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.), and 2nd shift (Trimmer - 10 hour days-4:15 p.m. to 2:45 a.m.), (CNC Operator-10 hour days-4:30 p.m. to 3 a.m.). Regularly scheduled workdays are Monday through Thursday. Overtime scheduled on an as-needed basis. Previous manufacturing experience preferred. High School diploma or GED is required. Non-smoking environment. Benefits include paid holidays, health, dental, life and disability insurance, company matched 401K. Apply in person at Nebraska Aluminum Castings, Inc., 4280 East Hadco Road, Hastings, NE 68901 General Entry Level Positions $1,000 Hiring Bonus Full-time/permanent positions. Very flexible. No experience needed. *Customer Service *Manager Trainees *Assembly Newly expanded company Rapid Advancement Call 402-460-4787 For Interview Call Today — Start Tomorrow FULL-TIME ASSISTANT MANAGER needed at Ampride South. The right applicant must be detail oriented, organized, have strong communication skills, computer experience and the ability to lift 40 lbs. Competitive wage with benefits. Pick up application at Ampride South, 1410 West J St., Hastings. No phone calls please. Closing date: February 20. NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS Western Alternative Corrections, Inc. Facility Staff/Full Time Supervise Federal Offenders in residential setting. Must be 21, have good employment record and must pass background check. Competitive wages based on experience/education. Send/Complete application at 101 S. Hastings Ave., Hastings, NE 68901; or visit web site at www.bris tolrrc.com Closing date: 2/18/2011 THE HAVEN Home of Kenesaw, NE is now accepting applications for the following positions: •Certified Medication Aides •LPN •Dietary Assistant Applications available at The Haven Home, 100 West Elm, Kenesaw, NE. 61 RUN DAY 61 Part Time 77 WANTED: Housekeeper/ Driver. Must have valid driverʼs license, Social Security card. Duties include housecleaning, laundry, driving, shopping. 6-10 hours/week. $9/hour. 402224-4685 to apply. WE ARE looking for a great cook with an excellent work history. Must be reliable and enjoy cooking for senior citizens! Applicants must be able to read and follow a recipe prepared by our registered dietitian and pass background check. Part-time position. Apply in person at College View Assisted Living, 1100 N. 6th Ave., Hastings. 62 Child Care STAY-AT-HOME MOM has daycare openings. Fun, clean, learning environment. Affordable weekly or daily rates. Call Terrena, 402-705-3697. 70 Pets CHIHUAHUA PUPS: 3 male, ACA registered, shots. Long hair. $125. 402-519-0334. SHIH TZU, Yorkie puppies: Un/registered. 402469-0784. 77 Appliances SALVAGE OUTLET: New and reconditioned appliances $75 and up. 100% guarantee. Open 7 days, 10-6. Top dollars paid for working and non-working appliances. Bring into store, 1516 S. Locust. 308-398-1013. Appliances Your WHIRLPOOL and TOSHIBA Dealer ROGERʼS, INC. 1035 S. Burlington 463-1345 82 VENDORS WANTED Tri-City Flea Market and Antique Show, March 12, Fonner Park Exhibit Hall #1, Grand Island. Booth info, 402-525-6234. 89 Lawn & Garden HONDA LAWN Mower: Good Condition. $75. 402463-7133. 96 Want To Buy NEWER washers, dryers, stoves and refrigerators. Working or not. 462-6330. 100 Unfurnished Apartments 1-, 2- and 3-BEDROOM: $300-$550. Partial utilities. 461-0442, 408-248-1464. 1-, 2-BEDROOM: Appliances. No smoking/pets. $275-$375. 463-2917. 1-BEDROOM: Clean, unique. No smoking/pets. 460-6922 cicadadwellings.com 1-BEDROOM: Upstairs Stove/refrigerator furnished. $350/month. 460-8147 2-BEDROOM penthouse apartment at Depot Plaza. Mexican tile, fireplace, new carpet. 469-4777. 2-BEDROOM: Upstairs. All utilities paid. $400 deposit/rent. 463-0458. Sell your unwanted item(s) in the Hastings Tribune Classifieds for quick results. Call 461-1241. 2009 NISSA N FR O NTIER Part Time Hastings Tribune has openings for carriers in Superior. Call Circulation. 402-461-1221 or 1-800742-6397. Hajnyʼs AUTO SALES 2003 CAVALIER: 2-door, 4-cylinder, 5-speed, 66,000 miles, nice car. $3,850. 2005 PONTIAC Sunfire: 2door, 4-cylinder, automatic, full power. Only $3,650. 463-2636 CALL 461-1241 to list your ad in classified. Flight Instruction INSTRUCTION, FLIGHT reviews, aircraft rental. Local airport. Troy Thomas, 402-759-1269. Director of Nursing Services Bethany Home is a progressive, well established, multi-level facility including Assisted Living, and a Skilled Nursing facility. We are seeking an RN, to fill the position of DNS, who is flexible, has the ability to adapt to changing tasks throughout the day, knowledge of the state survey process and QA & A. This position will be responsible for overseeing the nursing department with the assistance of an ADNS. Our priority is providing the best possible resident care. We provide an excellent compensation package and our management style is based upon full, open communication. If you would like to explore a Director of Nursing Services opportunity with Bethany Home, please send or fax your resume in confidence to: Bethany Home, Attention: Bob Tank 515 West 1st Street, Minden, NE 68959 Fax: 308-832-0662 Gutters HYLDEN CONSTRUCTION. Gutters, siding, trim, windows, doors. Call Steve at 402-462-5439. Looking For A “New” Place To Live? There are some prime rental possibilities in our rental classifications 100113. Want to place your rental ad there? Call our Classified Department at 402-461-1241 or 1-800742-6397. All real estate advertising in the Fair Housing Act makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.” Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians; pregnant women and people securing custody of children under 18. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of discrimination, call HUD tollfree at 1 (800) 669-9777. The toll-free telephone number for the hearing impaired is 1 (800) 9279275. CALL 461-1241 to list your ad in classified. 2008 H O NDA A C C O R D A uto,C D , 35K M iles SALE SALE $14,999 STK #:3094 2006 C H R Y SLER 300 2005 FO R D F-150 XLT N avigation, Leather,M oonroof, O nly 29K M iles C rew C ab, V 8, 71K M iles SALE SALE $16,785 STK #:5585A $14,999 STK #:3163 Buick, Inc. Caring For Our Customers...Where Others Promise - We Deliver N. Hwy. 281 • Hastings, NE • 402-462-4105 www.spadyautos.com Jeram ie Benson Sales Manager At Your AUTO GLASS EXPERTS. 25 years combined experience in glass replacement. Jeff Fitzke, Brent Vorderstrasse. 405 West J Street. 402-463-0025. Equal Housing Opportunity C rew C ab, A uto, 37K M iles $18,995 STK #:3168 MEDICAL RECORDS SCANNER: We have an opening for a part-time scanner position in a team oriented atmosphere. Position is Monday through Friday, flexible day hours. Medical record experience desired. Please forward resume to Tracy at Hastings Surgical Center, 5803 Osborne Drive West, Hastings, NE 68901 or Fax: 402-462-5469. Auto Glass www.greatplainsdodge.com 3-BEDROOM: 2-bath. 105 E. 14th. Clean. Most utilities. $550. 460-9626. Antiques Service 463-3104•N. Highway 281 100 Unfurnished Apartments PRE-OWNED PRICE CUTS Sudoku Great Plains Chrysler Dodge DEADLINE Thursday . . . . . . . . . . 10 a.m. Wednesday Friday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 a.m. Thursday Saturday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 a.m. Friday If you find an error in your classified ad, please call us before the next day’s paper. The Tribune cannot be responsible for more than one incorrect insertion. Claims cannot be considered unless made within three days from the first date of publication. No allowances can be made when errors do not materially affect the value of the advertisement. Fax: 402-461-4657 Turning 80 turned out to be fun. Thanks to all for getting in touch. John Hajny DEADLINE Monday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Friday Tuesday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 a.m. Monday Wednesday. . . . . . . . . . . 10 a.m. Tuesday Handyman Keyboard Lessons HANDYMAN: Roofing, concrete, painting, home repairs, snow removal. Fully insured. 10 years experience. Reasonable. 462-2660, 460-6756. SCOTTIE FIX-IT. “Fixing the little things that need fixing”. Caring craftsmanship. Call Scott, 463-4818 Home Improvement CHUCKʼS BUILDING AND REPAIR. Chuck Wiseman. No job too small. 402-7512443; cell, 402-984-2544. Installations TECHNOLOGY INSTALLATIONS: TV Mounting. Complete Home Theater. Surround Sound. Media Sharing. 13 years experience. 816-504-7632. TechServHastings@gmail.com Junk Removal K en A dam G ettner Ellenw ood Sales Professional Up to 16 Words for 1 month ONLY 49.00 $ includes online Call 402-461-1241 for details Tax Preparation KEYBOARD LESSONS: Beginning in March for beginners. Please call Ms. Jo at 402-519-3492. Lawn/Garden Care LANDSCAPE THERAPY, L.L.C. Landscaping, lawn service, fall cleanup, snow removal. Free estimates. 402-460-0923. Painting DYCUS PAINTING. Prompt, courteous, professional service since 1980. Insured. Call for estimate. 463-7726, or mddycus@inebraska.com HONEY DOʼS PAINTING. Interior, exterior. 25 years experience. Free estimates. Tim Yurk, 402-7050601 or 463-7054. Snow Removal JUNK HUNK. Junk removal service - garage, shed, attic, basement, yard. “Call the Hunk to haul your Junk!” Scott, 402-4634818. Stephen W eber Sales Professional Sales Professional 8 YEARS Experience: Complete lawn service and snow removal. Power raking, aerating, mowing more. Omar, 402-4608305. Insurance & Realty. ANDREA FREY, CPA. Tax Preparation and Bookkeeping Services. 501 N. Webster (Hwy 281), Red Cloud, NE. 888-746-2242; or by appointment, 2727 W. 2nd St., Ste. 420, Hastings, NE. For more information about what services the Gary Thompson Agency has to offer, visit www.gtai.biz TAX RETURN Preparation. NORTHERN BOOKKEEPING. $7.00 per hour. Located at the corner of 2nd Street and Lincoln Avenue (800 West 2nd St.). Telephone: 402-4696086. Subscribe Today, call 461-1221 Windows WINDOWS, SIDING, Custom wraps, doors: high quality materials, insured, references, EPA lead renovator. 402-705-0542. Do You Want To Make More Money? Then Call Us! AT YOUR SERVICE ADS can help you advertise your business without a large investment! 16 words or less, everyday for one full month is only 49 $ $ 00 00 Classified Department 402-461-1241 • 800-742-6397 B8 HASTINGS TRIBUNE Wednesday, Feb. 16, 2011 100 Unfurnished Apartments 102 2- to 3-BEDROOM: With appliances, laundry hookups, parking. No pets. $385-$485. Embassy Square, 402-462-4032. 1-BEDROOM DUPLEX: $300 plus deposit. Kingswood Plaza. 463-1958. 2-BEDROOM: 1-bath, kitchen appliances. $515/ month. Garage available. No smoking/pets. 402461-4100. CHATEAU IMPERIAL 318 S. RHODE ISLAND: 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths. 2 bedrooms in basement, 2 bedrooms on second floor. Appliances, central air. Off-street parking. $840/ month. Deposit/references required. Call 463-4778, 984-3620, or 469-8002. 2-BEDROOM available at California Pine Apts. Spacious duplex with abundant space featuring washer/dryer hookups, central air, ceiling fans, large kitchen, off-street parking. Pet friendly (some restrictions). Call today, 402-462-5205. EHO www.perryreid.com/califor niapines LUXURY 2-bedroom, 2bath. All appliances, washer/dryer, deck. No pets. $635. Dan, 462-9003, 4633652 2- and 3-BEDROOM: FIRST MONTH FREE (on 2 bedrooms only) at Regency Apartments. These large apartments have controlled entry, complete kitchens, ample parking, on-site laundry and are locally managed. And you PAY ONLY ELECTRICITY! Pet friendly (some restrictions). Call for your tour today! 800-322-4781. www.perryreid.com/regen cyheights EHO 2-BEDROOM available at South Pine Apts. Spacious duplex with washer/dyer hookups, central air, ceiling fans, complete kitchens, lawn care and snow removal. Pet friendly (some restrictions). Call today, 402-462-5205. EHO www.perryreid.com/southpine VERY NICE: 2-bedroom, 1-bath, washer/dryer hookups, dishwasher. Recently updated. Off-street parking. $550/month. 104 E. 13th St. 984-1328. Furnished Apartments $159.95/WEEK RAINBOW MOTEL 463-2989; 402-926-6252 Breakfast, internet, HBO. Maid. Clean. Coin laundry. No credit/deposit. Near McDonaldʼs, 1000 W. “J”. 1-BEDROOM: 1411 W. 5th. Rent $235 plus electric. $175 deposit. No pets. 461-3161 or 462-9819. 102 1-BEDROOM: 1222 N. Lexington. Appliances, washer, dryer, off-street parking. No smoking. New paint and carpet. Available now. 402-469-2041. Duplexes For Rent Houses For Sale 121 2313 BATEMAN: 2-bedroom, finished basement. $94,000. 402-984-3396. 3-BEDROOM: 1.5-bath, garage, appliances. References. $695. 460-9626. LOOKING FOR great tenants to fill our 2- and 3bedroom town houses. If you are looking for a nice, clean, spacious place, stop by 945 West H to pick up an application for a future opening. No pets. 402-463-5953 711 LEISURE LANE: 4bedroom, 3-bath at Lake Hastings. Open floor plan. Main floor laundry. Fenced back yard, office, underground sprinklers. Reduced price $234,900. Open house 2/12, 1:302:30 or call 402-984-9194. 104 AFTER 40 years of this business being all our lives, it is time to slow down and put our bar and grill, Dickʼs Place, and our grocery store, Dickʼs Grocery, up for sale. Dickʼs Place and Dickʼs Grocery go together as a package and are a major part of Lawrence, NEʼs main street. Serious inquiries only. 402-756-7412. 123 Storage/ Warehouse WAREHOUSE BUILDING: 26,429 sq. ft. Reduced to $53,500. Coldwell Banker Town & Country Realty. 463-4591. 130 Auction Sales RANDY RUHTER, Auctioneer and Broker, 2837 W. Hwy. 6, Hastings, NE, 402-463-8565. PLACE YOUR Classified ad today. Call 461-1241, Tribune for fast, fast results. Legals 2-3-BEDROOM: No smoking/pets. References. $400-$450. 463-3096. 3-BEDROOM: 1 1/2 story, single garage. In Blue Hill. $495 rent, deposit. 4601560, leave message. 320 E. 2nd: 1-bedroom. $380/month, $380 deposit. 462-2660, 402-519-1728. 4-BEDROOM: 840 N. Kansas, $725; 3-bedroom, 835 N. Minnesota, $800. 461-0442, 408-248-1464. 108 Office Space LET US design and build a new home for you or see our existing homes and duplexes in Hastingsʼ finest areas. OFFICE SPACE for rent next to old Rayʼs Pizza, 1,386 sq. ft. 469-4777 OFFICE SPACE Single office, double office, up to 4 office suites available. Very nice. Conference and meeting room available. 461-4100. Landmark Center TOWNHOUSE: 2-bedroom, Joyce Schlachter, Broker, 462-5794. OFFICE SPACE: $150$250. 402-461-1785. 118 Mobile Homes For Sale Your Residential and Commercial Builder 2727 West 2nd - 461-4100 DOUBLE WIDE: Remodeled, underground swimming pool. Bonnavilla Plaza. Will finance. 469-4777. RARE OPPORTUNITY CROSIER PARK Professional Center 6,500 sq. ft. Office Suite coming available for lease Currently David & Assoc. For information call 402463-6229, 402-460-7229, or 402-660-4737. 109 Business Property Houses For Rent 1-BEDROOM: Well-maintained. Nice area. With appliances. Available now. 463-3589. Business Property 25ʼx30ʼ WORKSHOPS for rent: Electricity, water, bathroom. Free month rent with lease. Call 469-4777. 111 1-, 2-, 3-, 4-BEDROOM: Rent to own. Air, garage. $400-$850. 469-6635. 116 700 SHORESIDE COVE: 3+-bedrooms, 3 baths, Hastings Lake, fully-finished walk-out basement. Stainless steel appliances included, underground sprinklers, attached double garage, large deck, small storage shed. On cul-desac $185,000. Call 4622999 or 984-0253 1-BEDROOM: Appliances, private drive. No pets/ smoking. $340. 460-0869. 103 Town Houses For Rent Townhomes/Apartments Call 402-463-4111 101 Duplexes For Rent Storage/ Warehouse 24ʼx28ʼ STORAGE unit available for yearly lease, $1,404. 463-6891. Com pute r Re pa ir DE A E L E CTRO N ICS House Calls/Free pickup and delivery 9 a.m .-9 p.m .daily 402-984-8001 or tollfree 1-800-383-8141 Visa & M astercard accepted. Con tra c tors A BC S E A M L E S S S IDIN G , W IN DO W S & G U TTE RS Hastings,w w w .abcseam less.com ...402-463-7580 Coun s e lors -H um a n Re la tion s G E N E RA L CO U N S E L IN G L L C WILL FINANCE: 2008 16ʼx80ʼ 3-bedroom, 2-bath. Call Diane at 469-4777. 119 Residential Lots FOR SALE: 26 lots in new subdivision. 402-463-8565 or 402-751-2241. LARGE Lot in Juniata. Sewer/water to property line. $12,000. 751-2241 LOTS, MODEL Homes: 4 Subdivisions. Agent/owner, 402-461-1785. 120 Commercial Lots GOOD TRAFFIC corner for this commercial lot at 201 S. Lincoln. Call Gateway Realty - 463-4561. Notice of Meeting The Board of Education of the Hastings Public Schools, School District No. 18, Adams County, Nebraska, will hold a regular Board meeting on Monday, February 21, 2011, at 7:00 p.m. in the City Council Chambers, 220 North Hastings Avenue, Hastings, Nebraska. A current agenda for the meeting, will be available for public inspection at the Superintendent's Office, 1924 West A Street, Hastings, Nebraska, during regular business hours. Jeff Schneider, Secretary Board of Education February 16, 2011 Notice of Suit TO: Lisa R. Heath, 841 Avenue B, Bayard, Nebraska 69334, you are hereby notified that on March 31, 2010, Ford Motor Credit Company, LLC filed a suit against you in the Adams County Court at docket CI 10-565, the object in prayer of which was to secure a judgment against you in the amount of $2,253.57, together with court costs, interest and attorneyʼs fees as allowed by law. Unless you file your Answer with the Adams County Court on or before the 1st day of April, 2011, the Petition against you will be considered as true and judgment will be entered against you accordingly. By: Lee Law Offices Dennis P. Lee (16296) Kari Fisk Lee (24399) Patrick M. Lee (24418) P.O. Box 45947 Omaha, Nebraska 68145 Phone 402-334-8055 Fax 402-334-8072 Denny@leelawoffice.com February 9, 16, 23, March 2, 2011 YELLOW PAGES Your house is too important to trust just anyone. TRUST A PRO. • • • • • • • • S teel & Vinyl Replacem entD oors S unroom s S offit& Fascia Replacem entW indow s Lifetim e W arranty M aintenance Free Financing A vailable Trustw orthy S ervice Q uality W orkm anship H ASTIN G S 4 0 2 -4 6 3 -75 8 0 STATEW ID E 1-8 0 0 -8 2 5 -3 3 6 0 FR EE ESTIM ATES! Cyndee Fintel,LIM HP,Jessica Hunt,M S,PLM HP w w w .generalcounseling.com ...........402-463-6811 P RO FE S S IO N A L CO U N S E L IN G Reg Rhoads 208 S.Burlington Hastings..............402-461-4917 VA LU A B LE C O U PO N P e ts & A n im a l Con trol H E A RTL A N D P E T CO N N E CTIO N 1807 W .J Hastings w w w .petfinder.com ............402-462-P E TS (7387) P iz z a $ 00 On A n y L a rge or M e d ium S iz e L ITTL E CA E S A R’S OFF P IZZA P A P A RA Y’S P IZZA 1 W ith Coupon W hole W he a t or W hite Crus t COUPON EXPIRES 2-22-11 Ca sh o r Check O nly Coupon n otgood on h om e d e live ry On e c oupon pe rvis it. P AP A R AY ’S P IZZA 463-1626 • 2604 W es t 2n d S t. E quipm e n t Re n ta l N e w s pa pe rs H A S TIN G S TRIBU N E w w w .hastingstribune.com 908 W .2nd S t.Hastings..................402-462-2131 Notice of Organization of Ganatra Consulting, LLC Notice is hereby given that GANATRA CONSULTING, LLC, a Nebraska limited liability company, has been organized under the laws of the State of Nebraska. The registered agent and office is Carl P. Bowman, Esq., c/o Stinson Morrison Hecker LLP, 1299 Farnam Street, #1500, Omaha, Nebraska 68102. The general nature of the business is to do any lawful act concerning any and all lawful business for which a limited liability company may be formed and organized. The company commenced existence on January 25, 2011, and it shall have perpetual existence. The affairs of the company are to be conducted by one or more managers as prescribed by the Operating Agreement. February 16, 23, March 2, 2011 NOTICE OF ORGANIZATION of MALESKER AGENCY, L.L.C. A Nebraska Limited Liability Company Notice is hereby given that Malesker Agency, L.L.C., a Nebraska Limited Liability Company, has been organized under the laws of the State of Nebraska, with its registered office at 645 South Burlington Avenue, Hastings, Nebraska 68901. The registered agent at such address is Codie D. Malesker. The general nature of the business to be transacted by the limited liability company is to engage in and do any lawful act concerning any and all lawful business for which a limited liability company may be organized under the laws of the State of Nebraska, other than the business of being a financial institution. The affairs of the limited liability company shall be conducted by its Members until such time as their successor or successors are selected pursuant to the Operating Agreement. The private property of the Members shall not be subject to the payment of limited liability company debts to any extent whatsoever. This limited liability company came into existence on the 7th day of February, 2011, and has perpetual existence. DATED this 9th day of February, 2011. CODIE D. MALESKER, Member BRAD MONCRIEF, L.L.C. 1239 North Burlington Avenue, Suite 200 Hastings, Nebraska 68901 (402) 462-5353 February 16, 23, March 2, 2011 CALL 461-1241 to list your ad in classified. Legals Notice of Organization Energy Pioneer Solutions Insulation and Construction, LLC, with registered office at 500 Energy Plaza, 409 South 17th Street, Omaha, Nebraska 68102-2663, gives notice that it filed a Certificate of Organization with the Secretary of State on January 25, 2011. The period of duration of the company shall be perpetual, and the company may engage in any business or commercial activity for which a limited liability company may be organized. The management of the companyʼs affairs are to be conducted by the manager in accordance with the companyʼs Operating Agreement. February 2, 9, 16, 2011 NOTICE OF AMENDMENT TO THE ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION OF CHOCTAW CONSTRUCTION, INC. TO BE KNOWN AS MID-AMERICA PUMP & SUPPLY, INC. Notice is hereby given that Choctaw Construction, Inc. has filed an Amendment to the Articles of Incorporation under the Nebraska Business Corporation Act. The Articles of Amendment, filed with the Secretary of State on February 1, 2011, provide that the name of the corporation shall be changed to Mid-America Pump & Supply, Inc. Thomas R. Bramble, President Michael E. Sullivan, #14103 Sullivan, Shoemaker, Witt & Burns, P.C., L.L.O. Burlington Center, Suite 305 747 North Burlington Avenue Hastings, Nebraska 68901 (402) 462-0300 February 9, 16, 23, 2011 INVITATION TO BID CENTRAL COMMUNITY COLLEGE – HASTINGS, NEBRASKA ADAMS BUILDING ENERGY CONSERVATION MEASURES RETROFITS Central Community College will be modifying the HVAC system in the Adams Building at their Hastings Campus to a geothermal heat pump system. Work will include the installation of equipment purchased under a separate contract and assigned to the awarded contractor. Sealed bids will be received until 2:00 p.m., Thursday, February 24, 2011, at the office of Central Community College, Attn: Alicia Haussler, Purchasing Manager, 3134 West Highway 34, P.O. Box 4903, Grand Island, Nebraska 68802-4903, at which hour, or as soon as possible thereafter, the received bids will be publicly opened and considered for the furnishing of labor, materials and equipment necessary for the proper construction of said project. A Pre-Bid Conference will be held for potential Prime Bidders on Tuesday, February 15, 2011 at 11:00 a.m. at the Adams Building on the Hastings Campus of Central Community College. No tours will be scheduled before or after the date of the Pre-Bid Conference. BIDDING All bids will be for a single Prime Contract to complete the work in accordance with the Drawings and Specifications prepared by Farris Engineering, Inc., 11239 Chicago Circle, Omaha, Nebraska and bids will be received only upon the printed Proposal Forms furnished by the Engineer. Bid Security is required to be submitted with the bid proposal form. Make payable to Central Community College in the amount of 5% of the Lump Sum Bid Amount. Bid Security shall be of: cashiers check, certified check, or Bid Bond issued by a Surety licensed to conduct business in the State of Nebraska. Form of Bid Bond is AIA Document A310. DEPOSIT Bid Documents are on file at the following locations: •Farris Engineering, 11239 Chicago Circle, Omaha, Nebraska 68154-2634 •Farris Engineering, 818 ʻPʼ Street, Suite 100, Lincoln, Nebraska 68508 •Central Community College, East Highway 6, Hastings, Nebraska 68901 •Central Community College, Purchasing Department., 3134 West Highway 34, Grand Island, Nebraska 68802 *Hastings Builders Bureau, 301 South Burlington, Hastings, Nebraska 68901 •Grand Island Chamber of Commerce, 309 West 2nd Street, Grand Island, Nebraska 68801 •Omaha Builderʼs Exchange, 4255 South 94th Street, Omaha, Nebraska 68127-1223 •Lincoln Builders Bureau, 5910 South 58th, Suite C, Lincoln, Nebraska 68516, Phone: (402) 421-8332 Prime Contractors may obtain bidding documents from A& D Technical Supply Company, 4320 South 89th Street, Omaha, Nebraska 68127, (800) 228-2753, upon payment of $25 per set, which will be refunded in full if documents are returned within fifteen (15) days of the bid date. Payment is accepted in the form of check, payable to Farris Engineering, Inc. Bid documents are to be returned to Farris Engineering Inc., 11239 Chicago Circle, Omaha, Nebraska. All work is expected to commence by March 28, 2011 and to be substantially completed by July 25, 2011. Should the Owner elect to interview the three lowest bidders to ensure full understanding of the project requirements and scope of work, interviews will take place on Thursday, March 3, 2011. No bidder may withdraw their bid within 45 days after Receipt of the Bid. The Owner reserves the right to accept or reject any or all bids, to waive irregularities, to evaluate the bids and to accept the bid which best serves their interest. Alicia Haussler, Purchasing Manager, Central Community College February 9, 11, 16, 2011 RH IN O L IN IN G S O F H A S TIN G S A N D CU S TO M RIDE S BrubakerM otorS ports,Inc. 301 W .2nd S t.Hastings...................402-462-8581 U phols te ry TH E CO V E R U P U P H O L S TE RY 204 N.Clay,Box 387,Harvard.........402-772-4031 ADOPT A PET 729 EastPark S t.,Hastings............402-462-2311 ortollfree........................................800-262-1071 1035 S.Burlington Hastings............402-463-1345 PARR AUCTION Dave Parr, associate, Gateway Realty. 756-6135 Truc k E quipm e n t & A c c e s s orie s BE M A N ’S S A L E S & S E RV ICE , IN C RO G E R’S IN C. Legals 2604 W .2nd S treetHastings...........402-463-1626 1010 W estJ Hastings......................402-462-5332 H om e A pplia n c e s & E le c tron ic s Legals Carry Outand D elivery 314 N.Burlington Ave.Hastings......402-462-5220 S O U TH CE N TRA L BO BCA T H e a tin g, A ir Con d ition in g & A pplia n c e s 130 Auction Sales P UP P IE S S L A TE R & S P UD La b ra d o rR etriever M ix , La rge B a b y M a les , Sho ts , M ic ro Chipped . These and other pets are ready for adoption. Heartland Pet Connection, CA TTY L a BE L L E 1807 W estJ, D o m es tic M ed iu m Ha irM ix , M ed iu m 462-PETS Yo u ng Fem a le, M ic ro petfinder.com Chipped , Sho ts , “YOU G ET M ORE” SUPERSTO RE Ho u s e Tra ined . S ee us fora com plete line ofpetsupply needs. 1115 W es t2 nd Street To Pu rc ha s e Ad vertis ing O n This Pa ge Co nta c t4 6 2 -2 13 1 137 Hay/Seeds 141 BIG ROUND Bales of Hay for sale. Grass, alfalfa mix. 402-984-4703 FOR SALE: Good quality large round grass hay bales. 402-461-9153. HAVE AN abandoned well on your property? Call J2 WELL, 402-817-4279. HORSE QUALITY small square, wire tied, brome and prairie hay bales. No rain. 402-460-8252-Nelson 138 Irrigation IRRIGATION ENGINE Repair, gas and diesel. — Get Ready for spring Now! Hi-Line Motors, Kenesaw 402-752-3498 www.hilinemotors.com Services List your ad, call 461-1241! 143 Land For Rent ESTABLISHED VINEYARD for lease in Kearney County. 4 grape varieties. 308-830-0775, 402525-7866. HAVE LIVESTOCK, farm equipment, or farm land for sale? Call 461-1241 to advertise your specialty; ask for Joyce. To place your want ad for the Farmer's Corner call 461-1241 Legals NOTICE OF TRUSTEE`S SALE The following described property will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder on February 28, 2011, at 10:00 a.m. in the main lobby of the Adams County Courthouse, 500 West 4th Street, Hastings, Nebraska 68901: THE EAST HALF (E1/2) OF LOTS SIX (6) AND SEVEN (7), AND THE EAST FIVE (5) FEET OF THE WEST HALF (W1/2) OF SAID LOT SIX (6) AND SEVEN (7) ALL IN BLOCK ONE (1), OWEN`S SUBDIVISION OF LOT TEN (10) OF HAIRE`S SUBDIVISION OF A PART OF THE NE1/4 NW1/4 12-7N-10W, IN THE CITY OF HASTINGS, ADAMS COUNTY, NEBRASKA All subject to any and all: (1) real estate taxes, (2) special assessments, (3) easements, covenants, restrictions, ordinances, and resolutions of record which affect the property, and (4) unpaid water bills, (5) prior mortgages and trust deed of record and (6) ground leases of record. The purchaser is responsible for all fees or taxes. This sale is made without any warranties as to title or condition of the property. By: Erika Knapstein, Trustee, NSBA# 24088 Kozeny & McCubbin, L.C. 12400 Olive Boulevard., Suite 555 St. Louis, Missouri 63141 (314) 991-0255 Published in the Hastings Tribune K&M Filename: NEWALNOR THIS FIRM IS A DEBT COLLECTOR AND ANY INFORMATION WE OBTAIN FROM YOU WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. January 19, 26, February 2, 9, 16, 2011 REQUEST FOR BIDS State of Nebraska - Real Property Sale The State of Nebraska, Department of Administrative Services, State Building Division is requesting sealed bids for the purpose of selling property located in Adams County, Nebraska, which property borders to or lies near the Prairie Loft Center for Outdoor and Agricultural Learning site, and which will be sold "AS IS" by sealed bid. Property Address: Part of the Northeast Quarter of Section 16, and Part of the Northwest Quarter of Section 15, Township 7 North, Range 10 West, Adams County, Nebraska, Parcel A north boundary lies along the DLD Road and contains crop and pasture land and Parcel B east boundary lies along Nebraska State Spur 1C and contains pasture land. Property Legal Description: PARCEL "A" A PARCEL OF LAND LOCATED IN THE NORTHEAST QUARTER OF SECTION 16, TOWNSHIP 7 NORTH, RANGE 10 WEST OF THE SIXTH P.M., ADAMS COUNTY, NEBRASKA, BEING DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: REFERRING TO THE NORTHWEST CORNER OF THE NORTHEAST QUARTER OF SECTION 16; THENCE S00°38'51"W (ASSUMED BEARING) ON THE WEST LINE OF SAID NORTHEAST QUARTER, A DISTANCE OF 240.03 FEET TO THE SOUTH RIGHT OF WAY LINE OF DLD ROAD, AND THE POINT OF BEGINNING; THENCE S86°13'10"E ON SAID SOUTH RIGHT OF WAY LINE, A DISTANCE OF 935.96 FEET TO THE NORTHWEST CORNER OF RURAL RANCH ACRES SUBDIVISION; THENCE S01°02'27"W ON THE WEST LINE OF SAID RURAL RANCH ACRES SUBDIVISION, A DISTANCE OF 536.49 FEET; THENCE S28°45'14"E, CONTINUING ON SAID WEST LINE, A DISTANCE OF 654.80 FEET TO THE SOUTHWEST CORNER OF SAID RURAL RANCH ACRES SUBDIVISION; THENCE N88°23'26"W, A DISTANCE OF 1252.51 FEET TO THE WEST LINE OF SAID NORTHEAST QUARTER; THENCE N00°38'51"E ON SAID WEST LINE, A DISTANCE OF 1137.07 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING, CONTAINING 26.02 ACRES, MORE OR LESS. PARCEL "B" A PARCEL OF LAND LOCATED IN THE NORTHEAST QUARTER OF SECTION 16 AND THE NORTHWEST QUARTER OF SECTION 15, ALL IN TOWNSHIP 7 NORTH, RANGE 10 WEST OF THE SIXTH P.M., ADAMS COUNTY, NEBRASKA, BEING DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: REFERRING TO THE NORTHWEST CORNER OF THE NORTHEAST QUARTER OF SECTION 16; THENCE S00°38'51"W (ASSUMED BEARING) ON THE WEST LINE OF SAID NORTHEAST QUARTER, A DISTANCE OF 240.03 FEET TO THE SOUTH RIGHT OF WAY LINE OF DLD ROAD; THENCE S86°13'10"E ON SAID SOUTH RIGHT OF WAY LINE, A DISTANCE OF 935.96 FEET TO THE NORTHWEST CORNER OF RURAL RANCH ACRES SUBDIVISION; THENCE CONTINUING S86°13'10"E ON THE NORTH LINE OF SAID RURAL RANCH ACRES SUBDIVISION, A DISTANCE OF 428.63 FEET TO THE NORTHEAST CORNER OF SAID RURAL RANCH ACRES SUBDIVISION, AND THE POINT OF BEGINNING; THENCE CONTINUING S86°13'10"E ON SAID SOUTH RIGHT OF WAY LINE, A DISTANCE OF 1270.07 FEET TO THE EAST LINE OF SAID NORTHEAST QUARTER; THENCE S00°32'35"W ON SAID EAST LINE, A DISTANCE OF 17.79 FEET TO THE WEST RIGHT OF WAY LINE OF NEBRASKA STATE SPUR 1C, AS DESCRIBED AND RECORDED IN DEED BOOK 192, PAGE 155; THENCE S84°57'30"E ON SAID WEST RIGHT OF WAY LINE, A DISTANCE OF 423.88 FEET; THENCE S12°26'49"W, CONTINUING ON SAID WEST RIGHT OF WAY LINE, A DISTANCE OF 525.67 FEET; THENCE S19°16'59"W, CONTINUING ON SAID WEST RIGHT OF WAY LINE, A DISTANCE OF 501.70 FEET; THENCE N88°12'08"W, A DISTANCE OF 153.00 FEET TO SAID EAST LINE; THENCE N88°23'33"W, A DISTANCE OF 1310.85 FEET TO THE SOUTHEAST CORNER OF SAID RURAL RANCH ACRES SUBDIVISION; THENCE N01°52'43"E ON THE EAST LINE OF SAID RURAL RANCH ACRES SUBDIVISION, A DISTANCE OF 380.13 FEET; THENCE N89°03'18"E, CONTINUING ON SAID EAST LINE, A DISTANCE OF 18.86 FEET; THENCE N01°45'11"E, CONTINUING ON SAID EAST LINE, A DISTANCE OF 704.16 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING, CONTAINING 38.40 ACRES, MORE OR LESS. Bids must be identified as "Parcels A & B, Hastings, Nebraska" on the outside of the envelope. Mail bids to the attention of: Paula Sedlacek, VBEL Coordinator, AS/State Building Division, P.O. Box 98940, Lincoln, Nebraska 68509-8940, or deliver to 521 South 14th Street, The Executive Building, Suite 500, Lincoln, Nebraska 68508-2707. All bids must be received in the office of the State Building Division no later than 4:00 p.m., (CST), February 28, 2011, at which time they will be publicly opened in the office of the State Building Division. All questions relative to the sale of this property should be directed to Paula Sedlacek, VBEL Coordinator, State Building Division, (402) 471-0450 or (402) 4713191 (Main Number). The purchaser is responsible for all fees and taxes. This property will be sold "AS IS" without any warranties as to title or condition of the property. The State of Nebraska reserves the rights to accept or reject any or all proposals, wholly or in part, to waive any technicality in any proposal and to make awards in a manner deemed in the best interest of the State. February 16, 19, 2011