Alternative care Leesburg woman stripped of Miss Florida title

31
FRANCISCO LINDOR CLOSING IN ON MLB ROSTER, SPORTS B1 COMPETITION: Firefighters and police officers go head-to-head in physical challenge , A3 WEAPONS: US plans to join global ban on land mines, A5 LEESBURG, FLORIDA Saturday, June 28, 2014 www.dailycommercial.com Vol. 138 No. 179 5 sections INDEX CLASSIFIED D1 COMICS E4 CROSSWORDS D1 DIVERSIONS E5 LEGALS D1 BUSINESS C5 NATION A5 OBITUARIES A4 SPORTS B1 VOICES A7 WORLD A6 TODAY’S WEATHER Detailed forecast on page A8. 94˚/77˚ Party sunny with a t-storm 50¢ AUSTIN FULLER | Staff Writer [email protected] A new $5 million urgent care center will open at Lees- burg Regional Medical Center on Tuesday, ac- cording to hospital of- ficials. “It should reduce ER wait times and we’re very excited about that, of course, be- cause nobody likes to wait in (an) emergen- cy room setting,” said Don Henderson, the president and CEO of Central Florida Health Alliance, which owns LRMC. Henderson said the 20,000-square-foot building, in addition to the general urgent care facility, will also house an employee health clinic, a pre-procedure testing center, an occupational medicine program and the Central Florida Health Alliance’s corporate headquarters. Henderson said there is an urgent care center in Tavares, which will be relocated to the new building because they want it adjacent to the hospital. “One, it’s easy to find, because if you can find the hospital you can find the urgent care center, but secondly, we wanted to also make it an alternative to going to the emergency department,” Henderson said. “So as the community begins to learn (about) the facility and the capabilities then they will be free to self- select and come over here instead of using the emergency room for minor illnesses.” He added they are committed to employ- ee health and well- ness. He said CFHA is self-insured, and over the long run, fixing solvable health prob- lems would lower pre- miums and those sav- ings would be passed to employees. Part of that includes a new track, Henderson said. A 0.3-mile well- ness track was recent- ly completed, accord- ing to Kathy Houser, administrative director of Marketing for CFHA. She said it is part of the commitment to have team members stay healthy. It will also be open to the commu- nity. Henderson added if someone could not im- mediately be seen by LEESBURG Leesburg Regional Medical Center gets new $5M urgent care facility PHOTOS BY BRETT LE BLANC / DAILY COMMERCIAL A ribbon-cutting ceremony was held on Friday to open the new urgent care facility at Leesburg Regional Medical Center in Leesburg. President and CEO of the Central Florida Health Alliance Don Henderson speaks during the ribbon-cutting ceremony on Friday. Alternative care SEE URGENT | A2 TOM MCNIFF | EXECUTIVE EDITOR [email protected] The Miss Florida Pageant on Friday stripped Leesburg native Elizabeth Fechtel of the crown she won six days earlier after it was discovered that organizers had incorrectly tabulated the contestants’ scores. Fechtel, a University of Flori- da student, was replaced by first runner-up Victoria Cowen of Panama City. Cowen, not Fech- tel, will go on to represent Flor- ida in the Miss America Pageant in September. Fechtel could not be reached for comment Friday. But in a statement to friends and family released to the media, the Fechtel family said it learned that Elizabeth had to forfeit the crown during a visit from Miss Florida Director Mary Sullivan Thursday night. “She told us that one of the judges had changed his mind while scoring first and second place the night of the pageant, and that in the last 15 seconds of the time allotted to vote, that he drew lines to reverse his first vote. He changed his vote from Elizabeth, to the first runner-up, Victoria Cowen. Therefore, Eliz- abeth is not the winner of the pageant, but first runner-up,” the statement reads. The family went on to call Cow- en a lovely woman and wished her success. They also asked for privacy so they could “process this information in light of the fact that in these last five days, Elizabeth has dropped out of college, as required, and re-ar- ranged her life to be Miss Florida instead of a UF college student, pursuing the title with vigor! We apologize for any plans you have made based on her being Miss Florida, as we have done so also. We appreciate you all sooooo much! This is a difficult letter to write today, but we know it will all work out!” Leesburg woman stripped of Miss Florida title PHOTO COURTESY OF MISS FLORIDA PAGEANT Leesburg native Elizabeth Fechtel, 20, is crowned Miss Florida at the state’s pageant on Sunday. SEE CROWN | A2 LIVI STANFORD | Staff Writer [email protected] A Florida Depart- ment of Transporta- tion review released Fri- day concluded there is a need for a traffic sig- nal at the intersection of U.S. Highway 27 and Margaux Drive/Saw- grass Bay Boulevard near Sawgrass Bay Ele- mentary School. Since the school opened in 2008, parents and officials asked that a traffic signal be installed in that intersection be- cause of difficulties en- tering and exiting Saw- grass Bay Boulevard. Lake County School Board Member Tod Howard said while many had pushed for the traffic signal for years, the FDOT said the numbers did not warrant it at the time. In 2010, a flashing sig- nal was added to the in- tersection. “We were concerned about safety,” said Rep. Larry Metz, R-Grove- land, who asked to have the intersection evalu- ated for a signal while serving on the Lake County School Board at the time. “It will help improve safety of the intersection and I am grateful they made the decision.” Howard added he was pleased the traffic sig- nal will finally be put in. “It should provide for RYAN LUCAS and SAMEER N. YACOUB Associated Press BAGHDAD — Iraq’s top Shiite cleric ratch- eted up the pressure Friday on lawmakers to agree on a prime min- ister before the new- ly elected parliament meets next week, try- ing to avert months of wrangling in the face of a Sunni insurgent blitz over huge tracts in the country’s north and west. The United States, meanwhile, started fly- ing armed drones over Baghdad to protect American civilians and newly deployed U.S. military forces in the capital. Less than three years after the last American troops left Iraq, Wash- ington has found it- self being pulled back in by the stunning of- fensive spearheaded by the al-Qaida break- away group, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Le- vant. The onslaught has triggered the worst cri- sis in Iraq since the U.S. withdrawal and sapped public — and interna- tional — confidence in Shiite Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. Many of al-Maliki’s former allies, and even key patron Iran, have begun exploring alternatives to replace him. But al-Maliki, who has governed the country since 2006, has proven to be a savvy and CLERMONT FDOT review gives green light for new traffic signal SEE SIGNAL | A2 Iraq’s top cleric urges quick deal on new PM SEE CLERIC | A2

Transcript of Alternative care Leesburg woman stripped of Miss Florida title

FRANCISCO LINDOR CLOSING IN ON MLB ROSTER, SPORTS B1

COMPETITION: Firefighters and police officers go head-to-head in physical challenge , A3

WEAPONS: US plans to join global ban on land mines, A5

LEESBURG, FLORIDA Saturday, June 28, 2014 www.dailycommercial.com

Vol. 138 No. 179

5 sections

INDEXCLASSIFIED D1COMICS E4CROSSWORDS D1

DIVERSIONS E5LEGALS D1BUSINESS C5NATION A5

OBITUARIES A4SPORTS B1VOICES A7WORLD A6

TODAY’S WEATHERDetailed forecast on page A8.

94˚/77˚Party sunny with a t-storm

50¢

AUSTIN FULLER | Staff [email protected]

A new $5 million urgent care center will open at Lees-

burg Regional Medical Center on Tuesday, ac-cording to hospital of-ficials.

“It should reduce ER wait times and we’re very excited about that, of course, be-cause nobody likes to wait in (an) emergen-cy room setting,” said Don Henderson, the president and CEO of Central Florida Health Alliance, which owns LRMC.

Henderson said the 20,000-square-foot building, in addition to the general urgent care facility, will also house an employee health clinic, a pre-procedure testing center, an occupational medicine program and the

Central Florida Health Alliance’s corporate headquarters.

Henderson said there is an urgent care center in Tavares, which will be relocated to the new building because they want it adjacent to the hospital.

“One, it’s easy to find, because if you can find the hospital you can find the

urgent care center, but secondly, we wanted to also make it an alternative to going to the emergency department,” Henderson said. “So as the community begins to learn (about) the facility and the capabilities then they will be free to self-select and come over here instead of using

the emergency room for minor illnesses.”

He added they are committed to employ-ee health and well-ness. He said CFHA is self-insured, and over the long run, fixing solvable health prob-lems would lower pre-miums and those sav-ings would be passed to employees. Part of that includes a new track, Henderson said.

A 0.3-mile well-ness track was recent-ly completed, accord-ing to Kathy Houser, administrative director of Marketing for CFHA. She said it is part of the commitment to have team members stay healthy. It will also be open to the commu-nity.

Henderson added if someone could not im-mediately be seen by

LEESBURG

Leesburg Regional Medical Center gets new $5M urgent care facility

PHOTOS BY BRETT LE BLANC / DAILY COMMERCIAL

A ribbon-cutting ceremony was held on Friday to open the new urgent care facility at Leesburg Regional Medical Center in Leesburg.

President and CEO of the Central Florida Health Alliance Don Henderson speaks during the ribbon-cutting ceremony on Friday.

Alternative care

SEE URGENT | A2

TOM MCNIFF | EXECUTIVE [email protected]

The Miss Florida Pageant on Friday stripped Leesburg native Elizabeth Fechtel of the crown she won six days earlier after it was discovered that organizers had incorrectly tabulated the contestants’ scores.

Fechtel, a University of Flori-da student, was replaced by first runner-up Victoria Cowen of Panama City. Cowen, not Fech-tel, will go on to represent Flor-ida in the Miss America Pageant in September.

Fechtel could not be reached for comment Friday. But in a statement to friends and family

released to the media, the Fechtel family said it learned that Elizabeth had to forfeit the crown during a visit from Miss Florida Director Mary Sullivan Thursday night.

“She told us that one of the judges had changed his mind while scoring first and second place the night of the pageant, and that in the last 15 seconds of the time allotted to vote, that he drew lines to reverse his first vote. He changed his vote from Elizabeth, to the first runner-up, Victoria Cowen. Therefore, Eliz-abeth is not the winner of the pageant, but first runner-up,” the statement reads.

The family went on to call Cow-en a lovely woman and wished her success. They also asked for privacy so they could “process this information in light of the fact that in these last five days, Elizabeth has dropped out of college, as required, and re-ar-ranged her life to be Miss Florida instead of a UF college student, pursuing the title with vigor! We apologize for any plans you have made based on her being Miss Florida, as we have done so also. We appreciate you all sooooo much! This is a difficult letter to write today, but we know it will all work out!”

Leesburg woman stripped of Miss Florida title

PHOTO COURTESY OF MISS FLORIDA PAGEANT

Leesburg native Elizabeth Fechtel, 20, is crowned Miss Florida at the state’s pageant on Sunday.SEE CROWN | A2

LIVI STANFORD | Staff [email protected]

A Florida Depart-ment of Transporta-tion review released Fri-day concluded there is a need for a traffic sig-nal at the intersection of U.S. Highway 27 and Margaux Drive/Saw-grass Bay Boulevard near Sawgrass Bay Ele-mentary School.

Since the school opened in 2008, parents and officials asked that a traffic signal be installed in that intersection be-cause of difficulties en-tering and exiting Saw-grass Bay Boulevard.

Lake County School Board Member Tod Howard said while many had pushed for

the traffic signal for years, the FDOT said the numbers did not warrant it at the time.

In 2010, a flashing sig-nal was added to the in-tersection.

“We were concerned about safety,” said Rep. Larry Metz, R-Grove-land, who asked to have the intersection evalu-ated for a signal while serving on the Lake County School Board at the time. “It will help improve safety of the intersection and I am grateful they made the decision.”

Howard added he was pleased the traffic sig-nal will finally be put in.

“It should provide for

RYAN LUCAS and SAMEER N. YACOUBAssociated Press

BAGHDAD — Iraq’s top Shiite cleric ratch-eted up the pressure Friday on lawmakers to agree on a prime min-ister before the new-ly elected parliament meets next week, try-ing to avert months of wrangling in the face of a Sunni insurgent blitz over huge tracts in the country’s north and west.

The United States, meanwhile, started fly-ing armed drones over Baghdad to protect American civilians and newly deployed U.S. military forces in the capital.

Less than three years after the last American

troops left Iraq, Wash-ington has found it-self being pulled back in by the stunning of-fensive spearheaded by the al-Qaida break-away group, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Le-vant. The onslaught has triggered the worst cri-sis in Iraq since the U.S. withdrawal and sapped public — and interna-tional — confidence in Shiite Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.

Many of al-Maliki’s former allies, and even key patron Iran, have begun exploring alternatives to replace him. But al-Maliki, who has governed the country since 2006, has proven to be a savvy and

CLERMONT

FDOT review gives green light for new traffic signal

SEE SIGNAL | A2

Iraq’s top cleric urges quick deal on new PM

SEE CLERIC | A2

A2 DAILY COMMERCIAL Saturday, June 28, 2014

hard-nosed politician, and so far he has shown no willingness to step aside.

Al-Maliki can claim to have a mandate. He per-sonally won the most votes in April elections, and his State of Law bloc won the most seats by far. But he failed to gain the majori-ty needed to govern alone, leaving him in need of al-lies to retain his post.

That has set the stage for what could be months of arduous coalition negotia-tions. After 2010 elections, it took Iraqi politicians nine months to agree on a new prime minister. Now, unlike four years ago, the territorial cohesion of Iraq is at stake.

Seizing on the sense of urgency, Iraq’s most pow-erful Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, called on the country’s politicians to agree on the next prime minister, parliament speaker and president by the time the new legislature meets on Tuesday, a cleric who rep-resents him told worship-pers in a sermon Friday in

the holy city of Karbala.Doing so would be a

“prelude to the political solution that everyone seeks at the present,” said the cleric, Abdul-Mahdi al-Karbalaie.

The reclusive al-Sistani, the most revered figure among Iraqi Shiites, rare-ly appears or speaks in public, instead delivering messages through other clerics or, less frequently, issuing edicts.

In Washington, the Obama administration backed al-Sistani’s call for

Iraqi leaders to agree on a new government “with-out delay.”

“It’s my understanding he was calling for a pro-cess that’s in line with the constitution, just to do it very quickly,” State De-partment spokeswoman Marie Harf told report-ers. “Which we certain-ly agree with because we think the situation is so serious that they need to move with urgency.”

Still, the probability that Iraq’s deeply divided political class can mend

its differences in the span of days is unlikely.

The United States and other world powers have pressed al-Maliki to reach out to the country’s Sun-ni and Kurdish minori-ties and have called for a more inclusive govern-ment that can address longstanding grievances. Al-Maliki has widely been accused of monopoliz-ing power and alienating Sunnis, and his failure to promote national recon-ciliation has been blamed for fueling Sunni anger.

a safe entrance and exit for parents and students,” he said. “It is not a safe in-tersection and is hard to get into the school.”

In a letter to Lake County Engineer Fred Schneider, the FDOT

specified “the conversion of the overhead flashing beacon to a fully operational traffic signal will improve overall safety of the

intersection, particularly during school arrival and dismissal times.”

The same letter states the FDOT intends to have the signal put in

place within the next 12 months, “possibly soon-er,” depending on signal contract funding.

Commissioner Sean Parks wrote in an email: “I am pleased that FDOT has studied this intersec-tion and found the sig-nal warranted. I will di-rect the county manager to work on installation as soon as possible.”

his or her physician, then that per-son could come to the urgent care center.

The funds for the new center were taken from the CFHA’s re-serves, Henderson said.

Dr. Gregory Krivonyak, the med-ical director for urgent care, occu-pational health and team member health, said the center is provid-ing an opportunity to lighten the load for the ER and is also in a lo-cation that is more convenient for citizens.

Krivonyak, a new hire who is board certified in occupational medicine, said they are building an occupational health program, and the new facility is excellent for that program.

“We’ll be doing pre-placement medical evaluations … we’ll be do-ing certified DOT exams ... we’ll be handling work injuries,” he said of the program.

Krivonyak said serious health concerns, such as chest pain or strokes would be directed to the emergency room, but minor illnesses and injuries, such as colds or cuts, could be treated at

the urgent care center.Steve Roth, the administrative

director for ambulatory opera-tions, said the center will be open 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. every day of the week.

The urgent care center in Tava-res will close Saturday night.

The groundbreaking for the cen-ter took place on Sept. 27 and con-struction was completed during the first week of June, according to Houser. She said an Informa-tion Technology building former-ly occupied the area and has since been moved off-site.

HOW TO REACH US

JUNE 27CASH 3 ...............................................5-3-0

Afternoon ..........................................7-2-5

PLAY 4 .............................................2-5-2-9Afternoon .......................................5-0-0-2

FLORIDALOTTERY

JUNE 26FANTASY 5 ........................... 9-11-15-28-30

THE NEWSPAPER OF CHOICE FOR LAKE AND SUMTER COUNTIES SINCE 1875

The Daily Commercial (ISSN 0896-1042) is published daily for $90.74 per year (plus Florida sales tax) by Halifax Media Group at 212 East Main Street, Leesburg, Florida. Periodicals postage is paid at the USPO, Leesburg, FL. POSTMASTER: Send all address changes to The Daily Commercial, P.O. Box 490007, Leesburg, FL 34749-0007. All material contained in this edition is property of The Daily Commercial and is protected under the copyright laws of the United States of America. Reproduction is forbidden without written consent from the publisher.

Call 352-787-0600 in Lake County or 877-702-0600 in Sumter County 6 a.m. to 10 a.m. Monday through Friday. Call 7 a.m. to 10 a.m. on Saturday and 7 to 10 a.m. on Sunday.

Call the Circulation Depart- ment 48 hours ahead to stop service.

365-8200In Sumter County: 877-702-0600

ADVERTISINGRetail ................... 365-8200Classified ............. 314-3278CIRCULATIONLake Co. ....... 352-787-0600Sumter Co. ... 877-702-0600Circulation Billing . 787-0600ACCOUNTING ...... 365-8216

MISSED YOUR NEWSPAPER?REDELIVERY NOT AVAILABLE IN

ALTOONA OR SUMTER

GOING ON VACATION

SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION: Call 352-787-0600 (Lake Co.) or 877-702-0600 (Sumter Co.) between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Prepayments for 3 months or more, mail to: Circulation Dept., The Daily Commercial, P.O. Box 490007, Leesburg, FL 34749-0007. Billed monthly at the rates shown.

The Daily Commercial promptly corrects errors of fact appearing in its pages. If you believe we have made an error, call the news department at 352-365-8250.

Home Delivery 3 Mos. Tax Total 6 Mos. Tax Total 1 Yr. Tax Total

Daily/Sunday 28.43 1.99 30.42 50.05 3.50 53.56 90.74 6.35 97.09

SUBSCRIPTION RATES

OUR COMMITMENT TO ACCURACY

STAFF INFORMATIONSTEVE SKAGGS, publisher352-365-8213........................... [email protected]

MARY MANNING-JACOBS, advertising director352-365-8287............... [email protected]

NEWSROOM CONTACTSTOM MCNIFF, executive editor352-365-8250............................... [email protected]

WHITNEY WILLARD, copy desk chief352-365-8258..........................whitney.willard@dailycommercial.com

PAUL RYAN, digital editor352-365-8270..................................paul.ryan@dailycommercial.com

TO REPORT LOCAL NEWSSCOTT CALLAHAN, news editor352-365-8203...........................scott.callahan@dailycommercial.com

REPORTERSLIVI STANFORD, county government, schools352-365-8257.............................. [email protected]

ROXANNE BROWN, South Lake County352-394-2183......................... [email protected]

MILLARD IVES, police and courts352-365-8262...................millard.ives@dailycommercial.comTHERESA CAMPBELL, Leesburg and The Villages352-365-8209.................theresa.campbell@dailycommercial.comAUSTIN FULLER, business news, Mount Dora, Eustis, Tavares352-365-8263.........................austin.fuller@dailycommercial.comLETTERS TO THE EDITOREmail submissions to [email protected]

SPORTS RESULTSSchools or coaches can report game results after 6 p.m. by call-ing 352-365-8268, or 352-365-8279. Submissions also can be emailed to [email protected] JOLLEY, sports editor352-365-8268................................ [email protected]

GOOD FOR YOU AND CELEBRATIONS ANNOUNCEMENTSEmail news about your awards and personal or professional mile-stones — along with a photo, if you desire -— to [email protected].

CALENDAREmail upcoming events to [email protected].

BRETT LE BLANC / DAILY COMMERCIAL

An office is shown in the new urgent care facility in the Leesburg Regional Medical Center.

URGENTFROM PAGE A1

“We’ll be doing pre-placement medical evaluations … we’ll be doing certified DOT exams ... we’ll be handling work injuries.”

Dr. Gregory Krivonyak, medical director for urgent care

CROWNFROM PAGE A1

Fechtel, 20, is no stranger to pageants. She received her first tiara as Miss Lees-burg in 2010, then was named Miss Or-lando’s Outstanding Teen and Miss Flor-ida’s Outstanding Teen. She won her first national title as Miss America’s Out-standing Teen for 2012, the sister pro-gram of the Miss America Organization.

The UF junior was crowned Miss Uni-versity of Florida at a pageant earlier this year, which earned her a spot in the Miss Florida Pageant and an $18,000 scholar-ship as the winner.

During early judging at the state pageant last week, Elizabeth also won the prelim-inary talent competition for her dance to Pharrell Williams’ song, “Happy.”

In an interview immediately after her pageant win Sunday, Fechtel said she felt “exhausted but great.”

“I’m going to be traveling the state all summer making appearances and will be home for just a few days before head-ing to Miami to begin preparations for Miss America,” she said then.

SIGNALFROM PAGE A1

“The conversion of the overhead flashing beacon to a fully operational traffic signal will improve overall safety of the intersection, particularly during school arrival and dismissal times.”

Florida Department of Transportation

AP FILE PHOTO

This image posted on a militant website on June 14 appears to show militants from the al-Qaida-inspired Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant with captured Iraqi soldiers wearing plain clothes after taking over a base in Tikrit, Iraq.

CLERICFROM PAGE A1

JEFF AMY and EMILY WAGSTER PETTUSAssociated Press

RIDGELAND, Miss. — A tea party official charged with conspiring to take photos of U.S. Sen. Thad Cochran’s wife inside a nursing home apparent-ly committed suicide Fri-day, police said, days af-ter Cochran won a nasty Republican primary.

The body of attorney Mark Mayfield was found Friday morning in the ga-rage of his two-story, brick home in a gated commu-nity outside Jackson. A gun was found nearby, Ridge-land Police Chief Jimmy Houston said. Houston says Mayfield had been shot, and a suicide note was found at the scene.

“Everything we see so far, this ap-pears to be a sui-cide,” Houston said.

Mayfield’s death came just days after tea party-backed state Sen. Chris McDaniel was defeated by Cochran in the Repub-lican Senate runoff. May-field had been a board member of the Central Mississippi Tea Party and had raised money for Mc-Daniel’s campaign.

Mayfield faced a con-spiracy charge, a felo-ny punishable by up to five years in prison and a $5,000 fine for a convic-tion, after allegations he and others conspired to take photos of 72-year-old

Rose Cochran at the nursing where she has lived since 2001. The photos were later used in an an-ti-Cochran political video posted brief-ly online during the

Republican primary.An additional weight

for Mayfield: Under Mis-sissippi court rules he could have lost his law li-cense if convicted and sentenced.

In a statement Friday, McDaniel, who has de-nied any connection to the photos, praised Mayfield.

“Regardless of recent al-legations made against his character, Mark Mayfield was a fine Christian man who was always respectful

and kind. He was one of the most polite and humble men I’ve ever met in pol-itics. He was a loving hus-band, father, a pillar of his community, and he will be missed. We are saddened by his loss, and we send our thoughts and prayers to his wife, his family and friends,” McDaniel said.

Janis Lane, president of the board of the Central Mississippi Tea Party, said she had not seen Mayfield since he was charged, but had been in contact with him by phone and through text messages. She said Mayfield’s integ-rity was important to him, and he sounded like he was feeling pressured by the investigation.

Tea party official in Cochran photos case dies

MAYFIELD

SEIZE THE DAY’SLOCAL AREA NEWS.

www.dailycommercial.com

Saturday, June 28, 2014 DAILY COMMERCIAL A3

Area Briefs

www.dailycommercial.com

LEESBURG

Police catch fleeing motorist with help of Taser

A fleeing Leesburg motorist who allegedly was driving on a suspend-ed license with drugs on him was captured Thursday night after a Lake County deputy rear-ended his vehicle and shot him with a Taser.

Demitrus A. Boyd, 30, was charged with fleeing and eluding, driving with a suspended license, resist-ing arrest and possession of a small amount of marijuana. Boyd was re-leased from the Lake County Jail after posting a $8,000 bond.

According to an arrest affidavit, deputies were on State Road 44 in Leesburg about 10:30 p.m. Thursday when they clocked Boyd’s vehicle trav-eling 69 in a 55 mph zone. Boyd re-portedly wouldn’t stop when pursued.

After almost losing control of the vehicle, Boyd suddenly slammed on the brakes and hopped out of the ve-hicle, causing the pursuing deputy to collide with the back of the vehicle.

The deputy chased Boyd and stunned him with his Taser to sub-due him. Deputies reportedly found marijuana on him.

No injuries were reported to the deputy.

DELAND

Woman allegedly tried to drink booze in grocery store

A woman accused of trying to drink alcohol in a DeLand grocery store Thursday was arrested on dis-orderly intoxication.

Rose Marie Flores, of DeLand, who was arrested earlier this month on the same charge, remained in the Lake County Jail Friday on no bond.

According to an arrest affida-vit, several bystanders at the Forest Hills Grocery on County Road 42 said Flores had been in the store try-ing to open alcoholic beverages and drink them. The affidavit added she refused to leave the store.

Flores allegedly cursed at bystand-ers as deputies asked her questions and was arrested.

MOUNT DORA

Overturned dump truck sends driver to hospital

A dump truck overturned Friday morning in Mount Dora, sending one person to the hospital.

The crash occurred about 7:30 a.m. at the intersection of County Road 448 and Sunset Court, near the fire station in Lake Jem.

The 43-year-old driver of the truck, Publio Junco Cubela, of Orlando, was taken to Florida Hospital Waterman with minor in-juries, according to Sgt. Kim Montes with the Florida Highway Patrol.

No other vehicles were involved and the crash remains under inves-tigation, Montes added.

The crash did cause a small fuel leak and Lake County Sheriff’s dep-uties rerouted the traffic before clearing the scene about 12:30 p.m.

BUSHNELL

UF Extension to offer beginner farmer workshop

The UF-IFAS Extension Service Sumter County is hosting a beginner farmer workshop providing essen-tial information on managing soils, fertilizer applications, irrigation sys-tem design, integrated pest man-agement and marketing, Tuesday evenings from 6 to 8 p.m., Tuesday, July 8, 15, 29 and Aug. 5 at the West Central Florida Agricultural Center.

Cost for the workshop series is $10.To RSVP, go to www.sumterbegin-

nerfarmer.eventbrite.com or call the Sumter County Extension Office at 352-793-2728.

State&RegionNEWS EDITOR SCOTT CALLAHAN n [email protected] n 352-365-8203

MILLARD K. IVES | Staff [email protected]

Lake County Sher-iff’s officials said Fri-day they have yet to recover a detec-tive’s issued firearm and badge that were stolen from her un-marked squad car at her home overnight Thursday.

According to an investigative report

released Friday, investigators found fresh pry marks on top of the passenger-side door of detective Amber Warren’s black Chevy Impala.

Fingerprints were lifted from the ve-hicle and deputies made futile searches through trash cans and questioned res-idents in the neigh-

borhood of her Grov-eland-area home.

But there has been no break in the case.

“It appears the sus-pect(s) used some type of burglary tools to make forced entry into the car,” said Lt. John Herrell, sheriff’s spokesman.

The detective’s de-partment laptop,

GROVELAND

Deputy’s gun and badge stolen from car

SUBMITTED PHOTO

A Lake County deputy’s issued firearm, badge and other items were stolen from her unmarked squad car parked in front of her residence.SEE STOLEN | A4

MILLARD K. IVES | Staff [email protected]

When the power goes out from a natural disaster or other prob-lem — amateur radio operators like to tout they come in as one of the last lines of reliable emer-gency communication.

This weekend, they will be put to the test.

Starting today, members of the Lake Amateur Radio Associ-ation will take part in an annu-al nationwide event called Field Day. It is an overnight campout to see who can contact the most ham stations in North America within a 24-hour period.

TAVARES

Ham operators prepare for field day competition

SEE RADIO | A4

ROXANNE BROWN | Staff [email protected]

The city of Clermont is host-ing its first-ever family movie night today in the gymnasium of the new Clermont Recreation & Arts Center.

The center will show “The Lego Movie.”

Doors open at 5 p.m. with a full slate of activities available for kids, city officials said. There will be face painting, crafts, martial arts demonstrations and a life-size Lego man on dis-play.

The movie will be shown at 7 p.m. and those wishing to stay are being asked to bring lawn chairs or blankets to sit on.

Pizza, popcorn and drinks will be available for purchase, but attendees may bring their

CLERMONT

First-ever family movie night at recreation center

SEE MOVIE | A4

KAREEM COPELAND and GARY FINEOUTAssociated Press

TALLAHASSEE — A member of the Florida Legislature arrested on a drunken driving charge was sentenced to six months of probation and subjected to alcohol tests under a plea deal agreed upon Thursday.

Rep. Dane Eagle, 31, was arrested in April after an officer spotted him driving erratically and he refused to be tested. The Cape Cor-al Republican refused to resign after his arrest.

Eagle, who was not in court for the hearing, pleaded no contest to a lesser charge of reckless

driving, according to the state attorney’s office.

Part of the deal requires Eagle to also perform 100 hours of community ser-vice as well as spending time in a program that counsels drivers.

Eagle will also have to subject himself to tests to see if he has been drinking.

“First, I want to again apologize to my constit-uents, family, and friends for the embarrassment this whole ordeal has caused,” Eagle said in a statement. “As I have maintained throughout, I did not drive under the influence. I did, however, exercise poor

judgment that night, and in my carelessness I drove recklessly. ... I take full re-sponsibility for my actions and accept the penalties for the reckless driving sanc-tion I have been issued.”

Eagle was arrested shortly before 2 a.m. after he pulled out of a Taco Bell about two miles from the state Capi-tol, Tallahassee police offi-cer David Keller said in his arrest report. Keller said he watched as Eagle tried to make a left turn from the parking lot and almost struck a concrete median in his path. Keller said Eagle then stopped at a red light, but went across the stripe

in the street. He then made a U-turn and almost hit the curb, the report says. Ea-gle then drove 45 mph in a 35 mph zone, struck a curb and ran a red light before he was stopped, police said.

Keller said he smelled al-cohol on Eagle’s breath and his eyes were bloodshot, but the state representa-tive denied drinking. He said that when he asked Ea-gle to walk back to his pa-trol car, he stumbled and fell against his SUV. Keller said that when he asked Ea-gle about the alcohol smell, the legislator again denied drinking and said it came from friends who were in the car earlier.

Lawmaker accepts deal after DUI arrest

ROXANNE BROWN | Staff [email protected]

The Clermont Police and Fire departments will continue their on-going quest to see who ranks highest when it comes to just about anything — be it sand-wich making, rowing, running, tug-of-war, cooking chili, basket-ball, etc.

In the past year, the two agencies have gone head-to-head in several genres, with the fire de-partment coming out on top each time.

According to Police Chief Chuck Broad-way, the department is determined to redeem itself, as participat-ing officers continue to prepare for the Bat-tle of the Fittest Com-petition, at 1 p.m. Sun-day at City Hall Park on Seventh and Montrose streets in downtown Clermont during this week’s Farmer’s Market and Shop the Shoppes

event.Fitness trainers from

CrossTrain of Clermont — a gym that many po-lice officers and fire-fighters train at — have

created a challenging fitness course and will lead the competition.

Broadway said no-body knows what types

CLERMONT

Firefighters and police to compete in exercise challenge

DAILY COMMERCIAL FILE PHOTOS

Lettuce flies at a hoagie-building contest between police officers and firefighters at the Wawa convenience store in Clermont.

Lt. Erik Strange of the Clermont Fire Department spices up his hoagie during a sandwich-making competition.

Department battle

SEE BATTLE | A4

A4 DAILY COMMERCIAL Saturday, June 28, 2014

identification and other items were also taken.

The black Impala was parked in front of her house at the time of the burglary. According to an investigative report, War-ren said she arrived home late Wednesday afternoon, came back out and noticed her purse on the floorboard and laptop inside and “secured” the vehi-

cle before leaving for a couple hours and coming back.

Warren said when she entered the vehicle about 8:15 a.m. Thursday, she noticed her purse and laptop missing.

This is at least the second such theft from a Lake sher-iff’s deputy within the past two years. In 2012, Lake County Chief Deputy Peyton Grinnell, second in command, had an AR15 semi-automatic rifle and a loaded 30-round magazine sto-len from his unmarked sheriff’s

truck parked in his Lady Lake garage.

Sheriff’s officials said Grin-nell’s daughter had left the ga-rage door up.

Those items were eventual-ly recovered and the suspects were arrested.

Detectives are asking any-one with information regarding Thursday’s theft to contact the Sheriff’s Office, or Central Flor-ida CRIMELINE at 1-800-423-TIPS, where they could be eligi-ble for a reward.

An amateur radio operator, often referred to as a ‘ham,’ is someone who uses equipment to engage in two-way personal communications with other am-ateur operators on radio frequen-cies assigned to the radio service.

One such ham is Strait Hollis, a Lake Amateur Radio Associa-tion member. He has a bumper sticker that reads “Amateur Radio When All Else Fails” on his truck.

“Heaven forbid that contact can’t be made with one of our hospitals or some other place during an emergency

situation,” said Hollis, who is helping to coordinate the event. “But when communication gets comprised, we’re the backup, we’re there to help.”

The event begins at noon at Lake Tech’s Institute of Pub-lic Safety, 12900 Lane Park Cut-off Road in Tavares. The compe-tition will be from 2 p.m. today through 2 p.m. Sunday.

The school’s parking lot and building during the weekend event is expected to be full of campers, radios, generators and solar power, as well as antennas, including one about 35 feet tall. Hollis said he expects seven am-ateur radio stations to show up at the event with up to about 30

ham operators participating.

The radio op-erator earns points for using solar and gen-erator power

and how far away and how many contacts they make. Hollis said while many will treat the event as a competition, the Field Day will highlight the many roles of amateur radio operators.

The public will be given an opportunity to operate a radio at the event.

While playing with their ra-dio equipment is a big hobby for amateur operators, many have used them on a more se-rious note, including preparing them as volunteers with Lake County’s Emergency Manage-ment. Hollis added members of the Lake Amateur Radio Associ-ation also have provided com-munication support for public events such as the Mount Dora bicycle festival and March of Dimes’ March for Babies.

“It’s a contest and they do keep points, but this allows us to test our emergency response capabilities,” said Hollis.

D002455

D002287

IN MEMORYOBITUARIES

Raymond S. BorowiczRaymond S. Boro-

wicz, 93, of Fruitland Park, FL, was born Oc-tober 2, 1920 in Buffa-lo, NY and passed away June 26, 2014. He was a Veteran of the US Navy and was an educator and baseball coach as well as a professional baseball player. From 1941-1942, he played shortstop and pitched in the New York Yankees organization. He lat-er taught and coached at Huntington High school in NY, coached at the University of Buf-falo, and served as a pitching coach for the Burlington Indians (Cleveland Indians). Lo-cally, Mr. Borowicz at-tended St. Paul’s Catho-lic Church in Leesburg. He enjoyed the out-doors and loved camp-ing. Survivors include: son Raymond “Skip” Jr.; daughters Judi (Bill) Cornish and Jan (Vinnie Romano); and grand-children Cate (Doug) and Rob Cornish. He was preceded in death by his first wife Julia in 1982, second wife Alda in 2013, son Robert, as well as 2 grandchildren. A visitation will be held at Beyers Funeral Home in Leesburg on Satur-day June 28, 2014 from 6:00 -7:00 PM with a Funeral Service to fol-low at 7PM. For those who wish and in lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the ASPCA or Our Lady of Victory, Lackawanna, N.Y. On-line condolences may be left at www.beyers-funeralhome.com. Ar-rangements entrusted to Beyers Funeral Home and Crematory, Lees-burg, FL.

Arthur F. ScholzMr. Arthur F. Scholz,

80 of Altoona, Flori-da passed away Tues-day, June 24, 2014. Born November 28, 1933 in Chicago, IL, he moved to Florida in 1979. He is survived by his wife of 36 years: Lucy “Tommy” Schloz; sister: Shirley John-stone, Streamwood, IL; Marge Hiliger, Pen-field, NY; 1 step-daugh-ter; 7 children; many grandchildren; many great-grandchildren and nieces and neph-ews. During his lifetime he was a plasterer, a po-liceman, a truck driv-er, and his favorite was a commercial nursery man growing cut flow-ers. He will be greatly missed by friends, fam-ily, and those he helped

in need. Services will be held 11:00 a.m. Mon-day, June 30, 2014 at Beyers Funeral Home in Umatilla with Pastor David Strem officiating. The family will receive friends Monday from 10:00 until service time at the funeral home. At the conclusion of the service the family will receive friends at the fu-neral home for fellow-ship and light refresh-ments. Burial will be for family at Lakeside Memory Gardens, Eus-tis. Online condolenc-es can be made at www.beyersfuneralhome.com. Beyers Funeral Home, Umatilla.

Elizabeth Rollins WinmillElizabeth Rollins Win-

mill (Tootsla), 91, Lees-burg, FL went to be with the Lord on June 20, 2014. She leaves to cherish her memory: Sisters, Dorothy Patrick & Barbara Teslik. Chil-dren, Douglas Rollins & (Ann), Dianne Darrow Simmons & (Chester), Keith Rollins & (Gay-le), and Eleanor New-ton. 6 Grandchildren, 6 Great-grandchil-dren, 1 nephew, 3 niec-es, 3 Grandnephews, 4 Grandnieces and a host of loving relatives and friends. She adored her family and all who knew her, loved her. She will be greatly missed by all. A private wake will be held by family at a later date. In lieu of flowers, please make donation to the Leesburg Food Bank.

Rosa Delsenia WrightRosa Delsenia Wright

was born April 6, 1933, in Leesburg, FL to her loving parents who pre-ceded her in death, Richard and Roberta Wright, Sr. She tran-sitioned from labor to reward on June 17, 2014. A Celebra-tion of Life will be held 11:00A.M., Saturday, June 28, 2014, at St. Luke Free Meth-odist Church, Hwy 44, Lisbon, FL, Rev. Na-thaniel James, Pas-tor. Public viewing will be held from 9:00A.M., until funeral time. Ar-rangements entrusted to Rocker-Cusack Mor-tuary, Leesburg, FL.

DEATH NOTICES

Thomas Cleary Holden, IIIThomas Cleary Hold-

en, III, 80, of Umatilla, died Wednesday June 25, 2014. Beyers Funer-al Home, Umatilla.

WRIGHT

STOLENFROM PAGE A3

RADIOFROM PAGE A3

MOVIEFROM PAGE A3

own snacks.“We are so excited. This

has gotten lots of buzz, and based on comments to the posting about the event on our Facebook page, there are 184 people who’ve said they’re com-ing and 23 that said may-be,” City Spokeswoman Doris Bloodsworth said. The center can hold up to 800 people.

“I think of things like this and I think of mem-ories being made and friendships being built,”

she said.Facilities manager Su-

zanne O’Shea said calls have been pouring into the facility from people asking for more infor-mation about the event.

“We hope it’s some-thing the community will really enjoy,” she said.

O’Shea said the city wants to offer free family movie nights throughout the year, possibly quarterly.

The next event is a little sooner, howev-er, with plans to show “Man of Steel” on Aug. 9 at the center.

For information, call 352-394-3500.

BATTLEFROM PAGE A3

of exercises or other things CrossTrain has set up for Sunday.

In addition, the event will benefit Clermont’s Real Life Church food pantry. Attendees are asked to donate a non-perishable food item to the pantry to help with its goal of feeding 500,000 fami-lies in and around the South Lake communi-ty this year.

“We always look for-ward to any competi-tive event against the fire department. It’s great camaraderie, it’s

usually always some-thing to do with great exercise, it’s always great fun but we’re looking to win this time,” Broadway said. “It’s a great cause too because we are com-peting for charity and would like the entire community to come root us all on and help out in whatever way they can so we can all help feed the people in our community who are hungry.”

According to Assis-tant Chief of Opera-tions Joe Silvestris, the team of firefighters competing on Sunday are excited and look-ing to win, though he said at the end of the

day, the most import-ant thing is building a strong relationship be-tween departments.

“It’s always great to work with the po-lice department in any friendly competition we participate in, and as far as us winning, I will just say that the physical fitness of our firefighters is instilled in them since the day they get hired,” Silves-tris joked. “But seri-ously, it’s all about us trying to build a good relationship between the police and fire de-partments ... It’s im-portant we know each other and know that we’re among friends coming together to

help each other in the best way we can to up-hold the highest stan-dard of public safety in our community. That’s what it’s all about.”

Betty Whittaker, the Farmers Market man-ager for Clermont, said the market will still take place as usu-al, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Montrose Street.

Local vegetable/fruit farmers, along with food and craft ven-dors, will be lined up on the street and most of the downtown shops and restaurants will be open.

Organizers said the public is welcome and encouraged to attend both events.

Associated Press

FORT LAUDERDALE — A former law part-ner of convicted Ponzi schemer Scott Roth-stein was sentenced to two and a half years in prison Friday for vi-olating federal cam-paign finance laws by funneling tens of thou-sands of dollars to the campaigns of John Mc-Cain and Charlie Crist.

U.S. District Judge James Cohn sentenced Russell Adler, 52, in Fort Lauderdale feder-al court. Adler pleaded

guilty in April to a sin-gle count of conspira-cy, which could have meant up to five years in prison.

According to prose-cutors, Adler was one of the orchestrators of an illegal scheme to bundle contributions from the Rothstein Rosenfeldt Adler law firm to Mc-Cain’s 2008 campaign for president and Crist’s run for the U.S. Senate. Crist, a former Repub-lican governor, lost the Senate race and now is running for governor again as a Democrat.

There is no evidence either campaign was aware of the illegal con-tributions. Crist later returned the contribu-tions, but the McCain campaign had already disbursed the money by the time the Roth-stein scam imploded in fall 2009.

Adler admitted as part of his plea agree-ment that the firm employees were lat-er reimbursed for their contributions, which violates campaign fi-nance law. Some checks were backdated

and had notations on them indicating they were for bonuses, ac-cording to court docu-ments.

The point of the fundraisers and cam-paign checks, court documents say, was to “increase the stature and apparent political power” of the law firm and to influence poli-ticians to steer govern-ment appointments and contracts to the once high-flying firm — which is now de-funct.

Ex-partner of Ponzi schemer gets 2 and a half years for finance violations

Associated Press

TAMPA — Florida de-tectives are heading to Louisiana to interview a missing teenage girl who was found traveling with a registered sex offender.

The two were found earlier last week after a sighting by a Louisiana truck stop cashier trig-gered a lengthy police chase where authorities threw down spike strips to blow out the tires on Steven Myers’ truck. Officials say Myers stabbed the 16-year-old girl and then himself

before being subdued.The teen wasn’t kid-

napped, but 41-year-old Myers had manip-ulated her to go with him, authorities said.

Hillsborough County sheriff’s detectives said Friday they will inter-view the teen, who suf-fers from mental illness, while she’s in the hospi-tal. The Associated Press is not identifying the girl or her family because of allegations that she was sexually assaulted.

Florida detectives also plan to charge My-ers with five counts of

using a cellphone to se-duce and solicit a minor child for sex. Myers is being held in Lafayette Parish jail and also fac-es charges that include attempted murder and unlawful sexual activity. It’s unclear when My-ers will be transferred from Louisiana to face charges in Florida.

Family and neighbors started social media campaigns, passed out fliers, and contacted the media after the girl went missing from her Tampa area home on June 11.

Authorities cornered

the pair at a Grosse Tete, Louisiana, truck stop and police say Myers led officers on a chase using a truck that was stolen in the Florida Panhandle.

Cpl. Paul Mouton of the Lafayette Police De-partment said the man got out of the truck with a knife, and officers sub-dued him with a stun gun and a police dog. Officers then got the girl out of the truck. Myers stabbed the girl, then himself, and was bitten by the police dog, police said.

Detectives head to Lousiana to interview missing teen

Saturday, June 28, 2014 DAILY COMMERCIAL A5

D004292

Today 12:00-3:00pm6279 Sunnyside Dr.,

Leesburg, FLExecutive home, 3/2.5/3 plus den,large private lanai, mature treeson one acre. 3 min. to LeesburgMedical Center.Directions: South on Hwy 441. turn right on Nichols to Sunnyside Dr. Go half mile, home on right

Ken Pyles, Host Realtor(352) 205-5486

[email protected]“Business by the Golden Rule”

R E A L T Y

D002868

Clermont’s NewestSeafood/Steakhouse!

Grand Opening July 4th weekend!

Aged Prime SteaksAlways Fresh Seafood

Open 7 daysLunch/Dinner ~ Sunday brunch

Live music Wed-Sun

794 W. Minneola Ave.

In Historic Downtown Clermont!

352-242-3800

WILDWOODCYCLERY

WD Plaza • 352-399-2983www.wildwoodcyclery.com

Bikes for Every Terain & BudgetSales • Service

D002794

352-253-0059

Visit

petlodgeandspa.com

In Leesburg, next to Home Depot

Discover why pet owners trustus for their boarding, day care

and grooming needs.

D002033

NEDRA PICKLERAssociated Press

WASHINGTON — After two decades of waffling, the Unit-ed States on Friday announced its intention to join an inter-national treaty banning land mines, without setting a time frame while working through possible complications on the Korean Peninsula.

Human rights advocates ap-plauded the progress, but said the Obama administration should immediately commit to a ban and begin destroying its stockpile, while Republi-cans accused the president of disregarding military leaders who wanted to maintain land mines in the U.S. arsenal.

The 15-year-old Ottawa Convention includes 161 nations that have signed on to prohibit the use, stockpiling, production and transfer of anti-personnel mines. President Bill Clinton had a goal of joining the treaty, but the Bush administration pulled back amid objections from military leaders. Obama

ordered up a review of the U.S. policy when he came to office five years ago, and a U.S. delegation announced the change in position Friday to a land mine conference in Maputo, Mozambique.

“We’re signaling our clear

aspiration to eventually accede to the Ottawa Convention,” White House press secretary Josh Earnest told reporters travelling with the president Friday.

Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said the United States

has no land mines current-ly deployed around the globe but maintains an active stockpile of just over 3 mil-lion. “They are all in inventory and that’s where they will stay,” Kirby said. He added that the stockpile will begin

to expire in about 10 years and be completely unusable in about 20 years.

Human rights advocates say all land mines being used in the Demilitarized Zone be-tween North and South Korea belong to South Korea, but the U.S. maintains a stockpile in South Korea in case of an invasion from the north.

Earnest said Friday’s an-nouncement did not indi-cate a reduced commitment to South Korea.

“This issue is going to re-quire some additional study and eventually we would like to find a way that we can, like I said, continue the robust defense in place of our allies in South Korea while eventu-ally attaining to the Ottawa Convention, “ Earnest said.

Physicians for Human Rights director of programs Widney Brown said the U.S. announcement is “a step in the right direction, but we re-main concerned about any-thing less than a full commit-ment to sign the Mine Ban Treaty as soon as possible.”

US plans to curb land mines, join global treaty

AP FILE PHOTO

Soldiers from the U.S. Army’s 720th Military Police Battalion watch as a mine sweeper look for weapons in a hole they dug during a raid on a farmland just outside Tikrit, Iraq.

ANDREW TAYLORAssociated Press

WASHINGTON — A fear of voting has gripped Democratic leaders in the Senate, slowing the chamber’s modest productivity this election season to a near halt.

With control of the Senate at risk in No-vember, leaders are going to remarkable lengths to protect en-dangered Democrats from casting tough votes and to deny Re-publicans legislative victories in the midst of the campaign. The phobia means even bi-partisan legislation to boost energy efficiency, manufacturing, sports-

men’s rights and more could be scuttled.

The Senate’s masters of process are finding a variety of ways to shut down debate.

Senate Majority Lead-er Harry Reid, D-Nev., now is requiring an elusive 60-vote super-majority to deal with amendments to spend-ing bills, instead of the usual simple majority, a step that makes it much more difficult to put po-litically sensitive mat-ters into contention. This was a flip from his approach to Obama ad-ministration nominees, when he decided most could be moved ahead with a straight majority instead of the 60 votes needed before.

Senate Democratic chiefs scared to vote

PETE YOSTAssociated Press

WASHINGTON — A federal appeals court ruled Friday in fa-vor of tour guides in the nation’s capital who challenged licensing regulations that require guides to pay the government $200 and to pass a 100-question multi-ple-choice exam.

The licensing requirement en-sures that prospective guides are who they say they are and have at least a minimal grasp of the city’s history and geography, the city has said in defending the rule.

But in a 3-0 decision on a free speech issue, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Co-lumbia Circuit said the city failed to present any evidence the problems it sought to thwart actually exist.

And the court said that even if the harms are real, there is no ev-idence the city’s exam require-ment is an appropriate antidote.

“The city has provided no con-vincing explanation as to why a more finely tailored regulato-ry scheme would not work,” ap-peals Judge Janice Rogers Brown wrote for the court.

The appeals judges noted that the multiple-choice questions fall into 14 categories: architecture; dates; government;

historical events; landmark buildings; locations; monuments and memorials; museums and art galleries; parks, gardens, zoos and aquariums; presidents; sculptures and statues; universities; pictures and regulations.

Operating as a paid tour guide in Washington without a license is punishable by up to 90 days in jail and a $300 fine.

Lawyers for tour guides To-nia Edwards and Bill Main

argued that the licensing require-ment was an unconstitutional re-striction on their First Amend-ment rights. Edwards and Main provide tours to small groups of people renting Segway scooters.

A federal judge had ruled in favor of the city, saying the re-quirement placed only inciden-tal burdens on speech that were no greater than necessary to fur-ther the District of Columbia’s substantial interest in promot-ing the tourism industry.

Court rules for Washington tour guides in free speech case

AP FILE PHOTO

Shows sunrise over, from left, the Capitol Dome, Washington Monument and Lincoln Memorial in Washington.

JAKE PEARSONAssociated Press

NEW YORK — In one case, a mentally ill New York City inmate hanged himself from a shower pipe on his third try in three days. During that stretch, orders to put him on 24-hour watch were apparent-ly ignored, along with a screening form that said he was “thinking about killing himself.”

Another inmate hanged himself with a bedsheet from an air vent in a solitary-con-finement cell after re-peatedly telling guards he was suicidal. The last time he said so, one of them replied, “If you have the balls, go ahead and do it.”

In yet another case, an inmate hanged him-self from a metal bed that he stood on end to create a scaffold, de-spite a year-old jail-house directive to weld all beds to the floor. The

directive was issued af-ter another mentally ill man committed suicide in exactly the same way.

Investigative docu-ments obtained by The Associated Press on the 11 suicides in New York City jails over the past five years show that in at least nine cases, safeguards designed to prevent inmates from harming themselves weren’t followed.

“Is there a procedure? Yes. Did they follow it? Absolutely not,” said a tearful John Giannotta,

whose 41-year-old son Gregory used a jail jumpsuit to hang him-self from an improperly exposed bathroom pipe last year even though he, too, was supposed to be on suicide watch. The psychiatrist’s order

wasn’t entered into the computer system until hours after his death.

“What did he need? He needed his medica-tion and follow-up care. He got nothing in jail.”

Communication breakdowns between mental health staff and guards, sloppy paper-work, inadequate men-tal health treatment and improper distribu-tion of medication were frequently cited by in-vestigators as factors in the deaths, according to the city and state docu-ments obtained by the AP via public records requests.

NYC jails neglected suicide precautions

SETH WENIG / AP

This aerial photo shows Riker’s Island jail, in New York.

A6 DAILY COMMERCIAL Saturday, June 28, 2014

ZEINA KARAMAssociated Press

BEIRUT — The Syrian reb-els that the U.S. now wants to support are in poor shape, on the retreat from the radical al-Qaida breakaway group that has swept over large parts of Iraq and Syria, with some rebels giving up the fight. It is not clear whether the new U.S. promise to arm them will make a difference.

Some, more hard-line Syri-an fighters are bending to the winds and joining the radicals.

The Obama administra-tion is seeking $500 million to train and arm what it calls “moderate” factions among the rebels, a far larger project than a quiet CIA-led effort in Jordan that has been train-ing a few hundreds fighters a month. But U.S. officials say it will take a year to get the new program fully underway. The U.S. also faces the diffi-cult task of what constitutes a “moderate” rebel in a move-ment dominated by Islamist ideologies.

Opposition activists com-plain that after long hesitating to arm the rebellion to topple Syrian President Bashar As-sad — their main goal — the United States is now enlist-ing them against the Islamic State out of its own interests. They have long argued that the group, which aims to cre-

ate a radical Islamic enclave bridging Syria and Iraq, was only able to gain such power in Syria because more mod-erate forces were not given in-ternational support.

“This decision is a year and a half too late,” said Ahmad Ramadan, a senior member of the Western-backed Syr-

ian National Coalition op-position group. “Had it not been for Obama’s hesitation all along, this wouldn’t be happening in Iraq today nor would there be this prolifer-ation of extremist factions in Syria,” he added.

Meeting with Syrian oppo-sition leader Ahmed al-Jarba

in the Saudi city of Jeddah on Friday, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry made clear the priority in helping the reb-els was to fight the Islamic State — with hopes that their battlefield successes in Syria could dilute their insurgen-cy’s power in Iraq.

The moderate opposi-tion in Syria “has the ability to be a very important play-er in pushing back against ISIL’s presence and to have them not just in Syria, but also in Iraq,” Kerry said. A se-nior State Department official traveling with Kerry later said the secretary did not mean to imply that Syrian rebels would actually cross the bor-der to fight in Iraq. The official was not authorized to brief reporters by name and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Al-Jarba, who leads a co-alition in exile that only has nominal authority over some rebels on the ground, wel-comed the aid, and appealed for more. But in Syria, oppo-sition activists were skeptical.

Syrian rebels buckling in face of jihadis

AP FILE PHOTO

Fighters from the al-Qaida linked Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant marching in Raqqa, Syria.

JOHN-THOR DAHLBURG and VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV

Associated Press

BRUSSELS — Over Russia’s objections, Ukraine’s new presi-dent on Friday signed a free-trade deal binding his country more close-ly to Western Europe, sealing the very agree-ment that triggered the bloodshed and politi-cal convulsions of the past seven months.

Russia, meanwhile, fended off for the time being a new, more crip-pling round of Western sanctions over its in-tervention in Ukraine, where a fragile cease-fire between gov-ernment forces and pro-Moscow separat-ists in the east expired Friday night but was extended by Ukrainian President Petro Poro-shenko for three more days.

“What a great day!” a beaming Poroshenko said in Brussels upon the signing of the eco-nomic agreement with the European Union. “Maybe the most im-portant day for my country after indepen-dence.”

Since it became independent in the 1991 Soviet collapse, Ukraine has been involved in a delicate

balancing act between Russia and the West. The Kremlin wants to keep Ukraine, the birthplace of Russian statehood and Russian Orthodox Christianity, in its orbit.

In November, under pressure from Moscow, Ukrainian President Vik-tor Yanuknovych spiked the EU pact, triggering huge protests that drove him from power. Mos-cow responded by an-nexing the mainly Rus-sian-speaking Crimean Peninsula in March, and pro-Russian separatists soon rose up in Ukraine’s eastern provinces.

While Friday’s sign-ing marked a defeat for Russian President Vladimir Putin, who has threatened to can-cel trade preferences for Ukraine, the Krem-lin made no imme-diate move to pun-ish its neighbor or the two other former Sovi-et republics that joined the pact, Moldova and Georgia.

Putin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Russia will take the necessary measures to protect its markets only when the agreement takes effect. That will take a few months.

Meanwhile, EU lead-ers decided not to im-mediately impose new sanctions on Russia for the uprising. But they warned that punitive measures have been drawn up and could be levied immediately.

And they gave Rus-sia and the rebels un-til Monday to take steps to ease the vi-olence, including re-leasing all captives, re-treating from border checkpoints, agreeing on a way to verify the cease-fire and launch-ing “substantial nego-tiations” on Poroshen-ko’s peace plan.

Ukraine signs trade deal with EU over Moscow’s objections

AP PHOTO

Ukraine’s President Petro Poroshenko, center, poses with European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso, left, and European Council President Herman Van Rompuy, right, during an EU Summit in Brussels on Friday.

SYLVIA HUIAssociated Press

LONDON — Before the fast, let there be a shopping feast.

From Harrods in Knightsbridge to the glit-tering diamond stores in Mayfair, London has long attracted big spenders. But every year around the holy month of Ramadan, which starts this week-end, a wave of spectac-ularly rich Middle East-ern shoppers arrives and takes retail therapy to a whole new level — com-plete with an entourage of bodyguards, chauf-feurs, and Gulf-registered Rolls-Royces and Ferraris flown in just for the occa-sion.

Retailers call the boost in business the Ramadan Rush: A hugely lucrative and fast-growing mar-ket driven by wealthy Ar-abs who travel to Britain to escape the desert heat and indulge in buying luxury gifts before fly-ing home for a month of fasting and increased re-ligious observance. An-other surge takes place during the Eid holiday, which marks the end of Ramadan.

The spike in shop-pers during the sum-mer months has been so regular and notice-able on London’s streets that some have jokingly dubbed the phenome-non the “Harrods Hajj,” after the traditional Is-lamic pilgrimage to the holy city of Mecca.

“London is the place in Europe where the Mid-dle Eastern visitor shops the most. It is almost

their second home,” said Gordon Clark, U.K. manager at Global Blue, the Switzerland-based retail research firm. The company estimates that pre-Ramadan sales last July jumped 60 percent compared with the pre-vious year.

Although tourists from the oil-rich United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Qatar make up only a small percent-age of total visits to Brit-ain compared with those from the U.S. and Eu-rope, they tend to be much more lavish spend-ers on average. Official figures show that Middle Eastern tourists ranked just 19th in terms of numbers of people last year, but came second in total spend — 888 million pounds ($1.5 billion).

The Kuwaitis are the biggest spenders, shelling out some 1,340 pounds ($2,275) per transaction last July, Clark said.

That corresponds with data from the London Luxury Quarter, a group that represents some of the highest-end busi-nesses in central London. It said the average spend from Middle Eastern shoppers last year came just behind the Chinese, its top customers.

Unsurprisingly, the best sellers are exclusive designer handbags and shoes, watches and jew-elry, though a Harrods spokeswoman said food gifts like luxury fruit bas-kets and extravagant-ly packaged dates and cocoa-dusted almonds also sell briskly.

Ramadan rush: Mega-rich shoppers descend on London

LEFTERIS PITARAKIS / AP

People walk around a shopping mall in west London on June 20.

GREG KELLERAssociated Press

PARIS — Before sunrise on June 28, 1914, a pack of cyclists set off from Paris on the 12th Tour de France. Hours lat-er, an Austrian archduke stepped out in Saraje-vo and was assassinated in the street, igniting the carnage of World War I.

Now, 100 years lat-er, cycling’s greatest race is paying special tribute to the millions who fought and died in what came to be known as the Great War. Sever-al stages of the famed Tour de France will run this year along the war’s

killing fields, trenches and fronts in northern France and Belgium.

The 1914 Tour was the last before a five-year suspension due to the war. Of the 145 rid-ers that day, 15 of them, including three Tour champions, would die in the fighting.

In all, an estimat-ed 45 cyclists who had raced in pre-war Tours were killed in the 1914-1918 war, according to cycling historian Jean-Paul Bourgier.

The Tour itself has a complicated history with the war. Its founder, Henri Desgrange, joined in the warmongering,

using his L’Auto news-paper to issue a lusty call for his countrymen “to go get those bastards.”

“When your rifle butt will be on their chest, they will ask you for for-giveness. Don’t let them trick you. Pull the trigger without pity,” Desgrange wrote, according to Gra-ham Healy’s book “The Shattered Peloton.”

After the war, Des-grange pledged to nev-er let a German rider compete in the Tour, a threat that was never carried out.

This year’s three-week Tour begins July 5 in Leeds, England, be-fore crossing the English

Channel three days lat-er. Riders and fans will have several occasions to pay homage to war vic-tims: Stages 5 through 10 largely trace the 400-mile (645-kilometer) long Western Front, from Ypres, Belgium, to the Swiss border near the northeastern French city of Mulhouse.

An estimated 5 mil-lion combatants died on this front during the war, the British govern-ment estimates. Most are still buried there in immaculately land-scaped military cem-eteries or under farm-ers’ fields in unmarked graves.

Tour de France marks World War I centennial along battlefields

Saturday, June 28, 2014 DAILY COMMERCIAL A7

YOUR EDITORIAL BOARDSTEVE SKAGGS ....................................... PUBLISHERTOM MCNIFF .................................. EXECUTIVE EDITORSCOTT CALLAHAN ................................. NEWS EDITORWHITNEY WILLARD .......................... COPY DESK CHIEFGENE PACKWOOD ..................... EDITORIAL CARTOONIST Voices www.dailycommercial.com

The newspaper of choice for Lake and Sumter counties since 1875

EDITORIALSEditorials are the consensus opinion of the editorial board, not

any individual. They are written by the editorial staff but are not signed. Local editorials are published Wednesday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

COLUMNSColumns are the opinion of the writer whose byline and

picture appears with them. They do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the newspaper, and are chosen to represent a diver-sity of views.

If you would like to submit a guest column on a local, state or national issue, email your submission to [email protected], or mail it to Voices, P.O. Box 490007, Leesburg, FL 34749-0007.

Guest columns should be limited to 550 words in length. The writer also must submit a recent photo to be published with the column, as well as a brief biographical sketch.

HAVE YOUR SAYThe Daily Commercial invites you

to write letters to the editor. Letters should be no longer than 350 words. They must be original, signed with the full name of the writer, and include the writer’s address and telephone number for verification. We reserve the right to edit for length. Letters also will be edited for grammar, clarity, taste and libel. We accept no more than two letters per month from the same writer. No open letters, form letters or copies of letters to third parties will be published. We do not publish unsigned letters. Submissions are not returned. We retain the right to archive and republish any material submitted for publication.

You can submit your letters by:Email (preferred) to:[email protected] regular mail to:VoicesP.O. Box 490007Leesburg, FL 34749-0007By fax to: 325-365-1951

C an you turn the world on with your smile? Can you take day a nothing day

and suddenly make it all seem worthwhile?

Have you already started sing-ing the theme song to “The Mary Tyler Moore Show” in your head? Out loud?

If you’re a woman around my age — defined as too old for work-study but too young for cremation — I’ll bet you have. You’ve been unable to resist belt-ing out “Love is all around, no need to waste it; you can have the town, why don’t you take it?”

Even as you’re reading, you’ve got one hand scrambling around in an old box of dry goods searching for a random tam-o’-shanter to toss into the air as you twirl decoratively and announce to the world that “You’re gonna make it after all!”

Let’s simply declare that the theme song for women our age is “We’re gonna make it after all.”

Actually, it might be the theme song for women and girls of all ages.

Perhaps, like me, you didn’t know that the lyrics had changed between 1970 and 1971, which were the show’s two first sea-sons: the opening season award-ed Mary only a tentative vote of confidence by saying “You might just make it after all” and then switched to the more life-affirm-ing, politically charged declara-tion of “gonna make it after all.”

And that’s just throwing down the feminist gauntlet, isn’t it? Mary Richards was always a trouble-maker. Remember how she acted at the funeral for Chuckles the Clown?

Even younger people are aware of the adventures faced by Mary Richards who, when the Peabody award-winning series began in 1970, was a 30-year-old single woman living in Minneapolis. “The Mary Tyler Moore Show” appeared in reruns on “Nick at Nite” in the ‘90s, as did Mary’s supernaturally attenuated

counterparts in “Bewitched” and “I Dream of Jeannie.” But those of us who came of age seeing Mary Richards morph out of the character of Laura Petrie from “The Dick Van Dyke Show” knew that we were watching something magical, if not actually paranormal.

Frustrated former modern dancer turned ornamental stay-at-home wife-and-mom Lau-ra Petrie was, from 1961 to 1966, given lines like, “You men don’t seem to realize that when a woman reaches a certain age, and is unmarried, every birthday becomes a milestone, and every milestone is a millstone.”

She had to fight for the right to have a bank account in her own name, arguing with her husband that, “Yes, Rob. I want some money that’s mine to spend on anything I want. It’s important

to me. I don’t want everything coming from you.”

Lest we imagine that she was suddenly channeling Virgin-ia Woolf’s argument that, for her own sanity and well-being, every woman needs a room of her own and an income of her own, Lau-ra’s husband is quick to point out that, “Either you get money from me or you get money from that which came from me.”

Even in 1962, this was not designed to promote a wom-an’s sense of equity and enfran-chisement. Plus the reason Lau-ra Petrie wanted her own bank account was to save up so she could buy her husband a swell birthday gift.

Money and age are just two examples of the “after alls” to which the MTM theme song re-fers.

It’s not only, “You’re gon-na make it in the big city even though you are single at 30, hav-ing been jilted by your fiance,” which was the show’s starting premise.

It’s also, “You’ll have your own apartment, your own job, your own successes and failures, your own friends and community en-tirely separate from an identity tied to the men in your life even though you will have men in your life.”

“After all” can mean anything from, you don’t have to follow the social script that insists on marriage and kids (but you can still have love) and after all, you can find a place in the world that matters to you and enjoy life fully.

There’s a lot of work left to do, since women are still earning 71 percent of men’s wages even af-ter figuring in age, race, hours and education (not that we’re bitter) but, after all, we’re gonna make it.

Hats off to that.

Gina Barreca is an English professor at the University of Connecticut, a feminist schol-ar who has written eight books, and a col-umnist for the Hartford Courant. She can be reached through her www.ginabarreca.com.

OTHERVOICES

GinaBarreca

MCCLATCHY-TRIBUNENEWS SERVICE

‘We’re gonna make it after all’

T hree teenage boys disappear without a trace, apparently while hitchhiking. If this happened somewhere in the Mid-

west, it would be an agonizing mystery and a police matter. Shift the incident to the Mid-east, and you have a far more complex and dangerous political drama.

Three Israeli students — a 19-year-old and two 16-year-olds, one of whom has dual Is-raeli-American citizenship — were last seen June 12 in the West Bank, heading home from school. They are believed to have been hitch-hiking, or tremping, a fairly common way for younger Jews to get around in the West Bank, though it’s recognized as risky.

No one has claimed responsibility for their disappearance, but Israeli officials, led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, say they know who abducted the teens: members of Hamas, the terrorist organization that sup-ports the Palestinian Authority unity govern-ment. Netanyahu says he has proof, but he has yet to share evidence with the public.

As part of an intensive search for the teens, Israeli forces unleashed a major military op-eration in the West Bank, targeting peo-ple and organizations connected to Hamas. There have been numerous raids. The mili-tary has detained more than 350 people.

The situation grows more tense by the day. Hamas won’t confirm or deny responsibility but has gloated, praised the abductions and made it clear that the recent rapprochement between Hamas and the Fatah party of Palestinian Au-thority President Mahmoud Abbas is fragile.

Abbas denounced the kidnapping — and Netanyahu said he appreciated that state-ment. But Abbas’ comments have stoked Pal-estinian anger that he seems to be capitulating to the Israeli show of force. Violent clashes be-tween Palestinians and Israelis have led to sev-eral deaths, including that of a Palestinian teen who was shot in the chest. The clashes have prompted worry that the apparent kidnapping could trigger a wider, more violent conflict.

Two months after the collapse of the last at-tempt at a U.S.-brokered peace plan, neither the Israelis nor Palestinians seem to have reason to restrain their animosity. With concern of an es-calation perhaps in mind, Israel reportedly has narrowed the focus of Operation Brother’s Keep-er, the search mission for the teens. The thought is that intelligence-gathering is more likely to break the case than a show of military force.

And still no word on the fate of the teens.Eyal Yifrah, Gilad Shaar and Naftali Fraenkel

disappeared outside Hebron near the Jewish settlement of Gush Etzion, in an area of the West Bank controlled by the Israeli military.

Kidnapping is especially wrenching for Is-rael, given the ordeal of an Israeli soldier who was held by Hamas for five years before he was exchanged in 2011 for more than 1,000 Pales-tinian prisoners. It’s possible the teens’ abduc-tors have another such exchange in mind.

If the kidnapping turns out to have Hamas fingerprints, Abbas will have to swear off his new unity partners ... or forfeit his credibility in the eyes of the rest of the world.

Distributed by MCT Information Services.

AVOICE

Kidnapping mystery on the West Bank

Classic DOONESBURY 1975

If you’re a woman around my age — defined as too old for work-study but too young for cremation — I’ll bet you have. You’ve been unable to resist belting out “Love is all around, no need to waste it; you can have the town,

why don’t you take it?” Even as you’re reading, you’ve got one hand scrambling around in an old box of

dry goods searching for a random tam-o’-shanter to

toss into the air as you twirl decoratively and announce to the world that “You’re gonna make it after all!”

A8 DAILY COMMERCIAL Saturday, June 28, 2014

D003532

2004 SUZUKI KATANA

Only$3,400

2005 YAMAHA V STAR 650

Only$3,995

2012 HONDA SHADOW 750

Only$6,200

352-330-0047 • 9807 N. Hwy 301, Wildwood • See Our Inventory at www.luckyucycles.com

CyclesCycles

FINANCE • LEASEBUY HERE PAY HERE

• Huge Selection of New &Pre-owned Bikes

• Friendly, KnowledgeableSales Staff

• Quality Parts & Expert Service• $50/Hour Labor Rate• Consignments WelcomeSALES • ACCESSORIES • SERVICE

D003453

1997 HARLEY-DAVIDSON 883 H$3,900

2003 TRIUMPHSPEEDMASTER$3,700

2003 HARLEY-DAVIDSONULTRA CLASSIC$9,500

SPORTS EDITOR FRANK JOLLEY 352-365-8268Sports

[email protected]

B1DAILY COMMERCIAL

Saturday, June 28, 2014

www.dailycommercial.com

NFL: Does ‘Johnny Football’ party too much? / B5

PAUL SANCYA / AP

Former Montverde Academy baseball standout Francisco Lindor makes a play for the Cleveland Indians in February during spring training in Goodyear, Ariz. Lindor is expected by many to make his major-league debut later this season.

FRANK JOLLEY | Staff [email protected]

Lake County might soon have another major leaguer.

Former Montverde Acade-my standout Francisco Lin-dor is considered a virtual lock to be called up in Sep-tember by the Cleveland In-dians for what likely will be an opportunity to earn a starting role with club in 2015.

Cleveland’s current start-ing shortstop, Asdrubal Cabrera is expected to be-

come a free agent this win-ter, the Indians will be on the lookout for a replacement. The Indians have been grooming Lindor, the eighth pick in the 2011 First-Year Player Draft, as the club’s shortstop of the future.

After starting spring train-ing with Cleveland, where he hit .267 with one home run and four RBIs, Lindor was shipped to Double-A Akron and produced a solid first half. Lindor hit .283 with six homers and 43 RBIs for the

RubberDucks and earned his third-consecutive trip to the All-Star Futures game, which will be played on July 13 at Target Field in Minne-apolis.

The game will be televised on MLB Network.

Lindor’s participation in the Futures Game, how-ever, was put in doubt on Wednesday when a sharp ground ball took a errant hop and hit him squarely in the face. He immediately fell

SANG TAN / AP

Venus Williams returns to Petra Kvitova during women’s singles play on Friday at the All England Lawn Tennis Championships in Wimbledon, London.

DENNIS PASSAAssociated Press

LONDON — A year that started with anoth-er Grand Slam title for Li Na has turned into a major disappointment.

On a day when top-seeded Novak Djokovic had a nas-ty fall late in his third-round match Friday and five-time champi-

on Venus Williams lost, Australian Open cham-pion Li was eliminated 7-6 (5), 7-6 (5) by Bar-bora Zahlavova Stryco-va in the first major up-set at Wimbledon.

At the French Open, where she won her first Grand Slam in 2011, Li was beaten by Kristina Mladenovic of France in the first round. The

second-seeded Li looked out of sorts for most of the Court 1 match Friday and failed to convert a set point in the second set.

Williams lost 5-7, 7-6 (2), 7-5 to 2011 Wimble-don winner Petra Kvi-tova. The length of the match was no surprise — the sixth-seeded Kvi-tova, who broke No. 30

Williams for the first time in the last game of the 2 hour, 30-min-ute match, had won three of the four pre-vious matches and all had gone to three sets.

Djokovic overcame a hard fall in the third set to advance to the fourth round with a 6-4, 6-2, 6-4 Centre

Venus Williams out at Wimbledon

ZACHARY HANKLESpecial to the Daily Commercial

WINTER GARDEN — The Leesburg Lightning might be finding their game in time for final month of the season.

The Lightning scored four runs in the third in-ning on Friday and add-ed solo runs in the eighth and ninth innings for a 6-4 win against the Win-ter Garden Squeeze at Win-ter Garden West Or-ange High School.

The Lightning got on the board first in the third inning after Andrew Miller laced a lead-off double. Dillon Coo-per plated Miller with a double to center field. Shea Pierce then dou-bled to score Cooper from second. Two more runs scored when start-ing pitcher Brett Jones, who was also the Light-ning’s designated hit-ter, singled, putting the Lightning up 4-0.

The Squeeze got a run in the bottom of the fourth inning on a sacri-fice fly from Daniel Por-

tales to make it 4-1.The Squeeze scored

two runs in the sixth in-ning to make it 4-3. The first run of the inning came on a wild pitch and then Matt McLean scored on a single by Zak Felix.

In the eighth inning, Pierce scored to make it 5-3.

The Squeeze scored in the bot-tom of the eighth in-ning when Damon Haecker hit a solo home run to make it 5-4.

Brad An-tchak ex-

tended for the lead for the Lightning in the ninth when he ham-mered a home run to left field for Leesburg’s final run of the game.

Frankie Romano pitched a scoreless ninth inning for the Lightning to earn the save.

Jones got the win and had two RBIs. Miller and Pierce has two hits apiece for the Light-ning.

Corey Tufts took the loss for the Squeeze.

MVA’s Lindor on the cusp of the major leagues

GARRY JONES / AP

Jimmie Johnson, left, talks with crew chief Chip Knaus, right, before the start of practice on Friday at Kentucky Speedway in Sparta, Ky.

GARY B. GRAVESAssociated Press

SPARTA, Ky. — NASCAR drivers won’t be shocked if Kentucky Speedway’s fourth Sprint Cup Series race yields a repeat win-ner or new face spray-ing champagne in victo-ry lane.

Either scenario could happen with past win-

ners Kyle Bush and Brad Keselowski trying to strengthen their bids for more success in today’s 400-miler by running companion series races this weekend. Defend-ing race champion Matt Kenseth, meanwhile, seeks to repeat the magic and earn his first win this season.

Kenseth said Friday he isn’t sure if past success carries over at a track like Kentucky, but “it certain-ly gives you more confi-dence when you come back and you’ve won somewhere.”

Then there is reigning series champion Jimmie Johnson, points leader Jeff Gordon, Kurt Busch

and Martin Truex Jr., who have posted multiple top 10s on the 1.5-mile-track and aim to finally close the deal. All are hungry to find the right setup, timing and luck to solve the tough, bumpy track.

“I like (Kentucky) be-cause it’s a challenging race track and I like a good

Past winners, contenders aim to solve bumpy track at Kentucky Speedway

SEE NASCAR | B2

SEE TENNIS | B2

SEE LINDOR | B2

Lightning outlast Squeeze

B2 DAILY COMMERCIAL Saturday, June 28, 2014

SUN mon tues wed thurs fri SatLeesburg Lightning

June 22-28DelandHOME5pm

SanfordHOME7pm

SanfordAWAY7pm

SanfordAWAY7pm

Winter GardenAWAY7pm

Winter GardenAWAY7pm D

001442

AUTO RACINGNASCAR

Sprint CupQuaker State 400

After Friday qualifying; race todayAt Kentucky Speedway

Sparta, Ky.Lap length: 1.5 miles

(Car number in parentheses)1. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 188.791 mph.2. (22) Joey Logano, Ford, 187.175.3. (24) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 186.832.4. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 186.374.5. (4) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 186.104.6. (42) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 186.034.7. (31) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 186.014.8. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 185.957.9. (41) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 185.95.10. (10) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 185.803.11. (15) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 185.414.12. (27) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 185.096.13. (14) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 185.854.14. (20) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 185.714.15. (47) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 185.503.16. (3) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 185.344.17. (55) Brian Vickers, Toyota, 185.096.18. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 185.052.19. (78) Martin Truex Jr., Chevrolet, 184.761.20. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 184.464.21. (17) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 184.307.22. (43) Aric Almirola, Ford, 184.3.23. (99) Carl Edwards, Ford, 184.106.24. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford, 183.138.25. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 183.661.26. (13) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 183.424.27. (9) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 183.163.28. (51) Justin Allgaier, Chevrolet, 182.815.29. (88) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 182.803.30. (26) Cole Whitt, Toyota, 182.778.31. (36) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet, 181.916.32. (7) Michael Annett, Chevrolet, 181.464.33. (23) Alex Bowman, Toyota, 181.287.34. (98) Josh Wise, Chevrolet, 181.196.35. (32) Travis Kvapil, Ford, 180.421.36. (34) David Ragan, Ford, 179.7.37. (40) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, Owner Points.38. (33) David Stremme, Chevrolet, Owner Points.39. (83) Ryan Truex, Toyota, Owner Points.40. (66) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, Owner Points.41. (38) David Gilliland, Ford, Owner Points.42. (93) Mike Bliss, Toyota, Owner Points.

BASKETBALLNBA Draft Selections

Late ThursdayAt Barclays Center, Brooklyn, N.Y.

First Round1. Cleveland, Andrew Wiggins, g, Kansas.2. Milwaukee, Jabari Parker, f, Duke.3. Philadelphia, Joel Embiid, c, Kansas.4. Orlando, Aaron Gordon, f, Arizona.5. Utah, Dante Exum, g, Australia.6. Boston, Marcus Smart, g, Oklahoma State.7. L.A. Lakers, Julius Randle, f, Kentucky.8. Sacramento, Nik Stauskas, g, Michigan.9. Charlotte (from Detroit), Noah Vonleh, c-f, Indiana.10. a-Philadelphia (from New Orleans), Elfrid Payton, g, Lou-isiana-Lafayette.11. b-Denver, Doug McDermott, f, Creighton.12. a-Orlando (from New York via Denver), Dario Saric, f, Cibona (Croatia).13. Minnesota, Zach LaVine, g, UCLA.14. Phoenix, T.J. Warren, f, NC State.15. Atlanta, Adreian Payne, f, Michigan State.16. b-Chicago (from Charlotte), Jusuf Nurkic, c, Cedevita (Croatia).17. Boston (from Brooklyn), James Young, g, Kentucky.18. Phoenix (from Washington), Tyler Ennis, g, Syracuse.19. b-Chicago, Gary Harris, g, Michigan State.20. Toronto, Bruno Caboclo, f, Pinheiros (Brazil).21. Oklahoma City (from Dallas via Houston and L.A. Lak-ers), Mitch McGary, f, Michigan.22. Memphis, Jordan Adams, g, UCLA.23. Utah (from Golden State), Rodney Hood, f, Duke.24. c-Charlotte (from Portland), Shabazz Napier, g, UConn.25. Houston, Clint Capela, f, Chalon (France).26. c-Miami, P.J. Hairston, g, North Carolina/Texas (NBADL).27. Phoenix (from Indiana), Bogdan Bogdanovic, g, Parti-zan (Serbia).28. L.A. Clippers, C.J. Wilcox, g, Washington.29. Oklahoma City, Josh Huestis, f, Stanford.30. San Antonio, Kyle Anderson, g, UCLA.

Second Round31. Milwaukee, Damien Inglis, f, Roanne (France).32. Philadelphia, K.J. McDaniels, f, Clemson.33. Cleveland (from Orlando), Joe Harris, g, Virginia.34. New York (from Boston through Dallas), Cleanthony Early, f, Wichita State.35. e-Utah, Jarnell Stokes, f, Tennessee.36. Milwaukee (from L.A. Lakers via Minnesota and Phoe-nix), Johnny O’Bryant III, f, LSU.37. Toronto (from Sacramento), DeAndre Daniels, f, UConn.38. Detroit, Spencer Dinwiddie, g, Colorado.39. Philadelphia (from Cleveland), Jerami Grant, f, Syr-acuse.40. Minnesota (from New Orleans), Glenn Robinson III, f, Michigan.41. Denver, Nikola Jokic, f, Mega Vizura (Serbia).42. Houston (from New York), Nick Johnson, g, Arizona.

43. Atlanta, Walter Tavares, c, Gran Canarias (Spain).44. d-Minnesota, Markel Brown, g, Oklahoma State.45. Charlotte, Dwight Powell, f, Stanford.46. f-Washington, Jordan Clarkson, g, Missouri.47. g-Philadelphia (from Brooklyn via Dallas and Boston), Russ Smith, g, Louisville.48. h-Milwaukee (from Toronto via Phoenix), Lamar Patter-son, g, Pittsburgh.49. Chicago, Cameron Bairstow, c, New Mexico.50. Phoenix, Alec Brown, c, Green Bay.51. New York (from Dallas), Thanasis Antetokounmpo, f, Delaware (NBADL).52. Philadelphia (from Memphis via Cleveland), Vasilije Micic, g, Mega Vizura (Serbia).53. i-Minnesota (from Golden State), Alessandro Gentile, f, EA7 Armani (Italy).54. Philadelphia (from Houston via Milwaukee), Nemanja Dangubic, f, Mega Vizura (Serbia).55. c-Miami, Semaj Christon, g, Xavier.56. j-Denver (from Portland), Roy Devyn Marble, f, Iowa.57. k-Indiana, Louis Labeyrie, f, Paris-Levallois (France).58. San Antonio (from L.A. Clippers via New Orleans), Jor-dan McRae, g, Tennessee.59. Toronto (from Oklahoma City via New York), Xavier Thames, g, San Diego State.60. San Antonio, Cory Jefferson, f, Baylor.

Proposed Tradesa-Philadelphia and Orlando traded the rights to selected players.b-Denver and Chicago traded the rights to selected players.c-Charlotte and Miami traded the rights to selected players.d-Minnesota traded rights to Brooklyn for $1 million.e-Utah traded rights to Memphis for a 2016 second-round draft pick.f-Washington traded rights to L.A. Lakers for cash consid-erations.g-Philadelphia traded rights to New Orleans for G Pierre Jackson.h-Milwaukee traded rights to Atlanta for a future sec-ond-round draft pick.i-Minnesota traded rights to Houston for cash consider-ations.j-Denver traded rights and G Evan Fournier to Orlando for G Arron Afflalo.k-Indiana traded rights to New York for cash considerations.

SOCCERWorld Cup

SECOND ROUNDSaturday, June 28

Game 49At Belo Horizonte, Brazil

Brazil vs. Chile, NoonGame 50

At Rio de JaneiroColombia vs. Uruguay, 4 p.m.

Sunday, June 29Game 51

At Fortaleza, BrazilNetherlands vs. Mexico, Noon

Game 52At Recife, Brazil

Costa Rica vs. Greece, 4 p.m.Monday, June 30

Game 53At Brasilia, Brazil

France vs. Nigeria, NoonGame 54

At Porto Alegre, BrazilGermany vs. Algeria, 4 p.m.

Tuesday, July 1Game 55

At Sao PauloArgentina vs. Switzerland, Noon

Game 56At Salvador, Brazil

Belgium vs. United States, 4 p.m.

TENNISWimbledon

FridayAt The All England Lawn Tennis & Croquet Club

LondonPurse: $42.5 million (Grand Slam)

Surface: Grass-OutdoorSingles

MenSecond Round

Feliciano Lopez (19), Spain, def. Ante Pavic, Croatia, 6-4, 7-6 (4), 7-5.Santiago Giraldo, Colombia, def. Marcel Granollers (30), Spain, 4-6, 7-6 (2), 1-6, 6-1, 7-5.Jerzy Janowicz (15), Poland, def. Lleyton Hewitt, Australia, 7-5, 6-4, 6-7 (7), 4-6, 6-3.

Third RoundKevin Anderson (20), South Africa, def. Fabio Fognini (16), Italy, 4-6, 6-4, 2-6, 6-2, 6-1.Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (14), France, def. Jimmy Wang, Taiwan, 6-2, 6-2, 7-5.Novak Djokovic (1), Serbia, def. Gilles Simon, France, 6-4, 6-2, 6-4.Leonardo Mayer, Argentina, def. Andrey Kuznetsov, Russia, 6-4, 7-6 (1), 6-3.Jeremy Chardy, France, def. Sergiy Stakhovsky, Ukraine, 6-3, 6-7 (4), 6-3, 6-0.Grigor Dimitrov (11), Bulgaria, def. Alexandr Dolgopolov (21), Ukraine, 6-7 (3), 6-4, 2-6, 6-4, 6-1.Andy Murray (3), Britain, def. Roberto Bautista Agut (27),

Spain, 6-2, 6-3, 6-2.Marin Cilic (26), Croatia, def. Tomas Berdych (6), Czech Re-public, 7-6 (5), 6-4, 7-6 (6).

WomenSecond Round

Simona Halep (3), Romania, def. Lesia Tsurenko, Ukraine, 6-3, 4-6, 6-4.Belinda Bencic, Switzerland, def. Victoria Duval, United States, 6-4, 7-5.

Third RoundCaroline Wozniacki (16), Denmark, def. Ana Konjuh, Cro-atia, 6-3, 6-0.Ekaterina Makarova (22), Russia, def. Caroline Garcia, France, 7-5, 6-3.Barbora Zahlavova Strycova, Czech Republic, def. Li Na (2), China, 7-6 (5), 7-6 (5).Peng Shuai, China, def. Lauren Davis, United States, 0-6, 6-3, 6-3.Tereza Smitkova, Czech Republic, def. Bojana Jovanovski, Serbia, 4-6, 7-6 (5), 10-8.Lucie Safarova (23), Czech Republic, def. Dominika Cibulkova (10), Slovakia, 6-4, 6-2.Agnieszka Radwanska (4), Poland, def. Michelle Larcher de Brito, Portugal, 6-2, 6-0.Petra Kvitova (6), Czech Republic, def. Venus Williams (30), United States, 5-7, 7-6 (2), 7-5.

GOLFPGA Tour

Quicken Loans National Friday

At Congressional Country ClubBethesda, Md.

Purse: $6.5 millionYardage: 7,569; Par 71

Second RoundMarc Leishman 70-66 — 136Oliver Goss 70-66 — 136Ricky Barnes 67-69 — 136Patrick Reed 68-68 — 136Hudson Swafford 69-68 — 137Stuart Appleby 70-67 — 137Morgan Hoffmann 70-68 — 138Freddie Jacobson 67-71 — 138Billy Horschel 70-68 — 138George McNeill 69-69 — 138Justin Rose 74-65 — 139Brendon de Jonge 71-68 — 139Russell Knox 73-67 — 140Brendan Steele 74-66 — 140Retief Goosen 69-71 — 140Matt Every 71-69 — 140Bill Haas 68-72 — 140Peter Hanson 72-68 — 140Ben Martin 72-68 — 140Brandt Snedeker 70-70 — 140K.J. Choi 69-72 — 141Michael Putnam 69-72 — 141Cameron Tringale 70-71 — 141Tim Wilkinson 70-71 — 141Carl Pettersson 72-69 — 141Erik Compton 68-73 — 141Shawn Stefani 74-68 — 142Jason Bohn 71-71 — 142Geoff Ogilvy 70-72 — 142Bo Van Pelt 71-71 — 142Richard H. Lee 74-68 — 142Patrick Rodgers 73-69 — 142Tyrone Van Aswegen 68-74 — 142Brady Watt 71-71 — 142Daniel Summerhays 70-72 — 142Davis Love III 72-70 — 142Brendon Todd 72-70 — 142Andres Romero 70-72 — 142Billy Hurley III 69-73 — 142Kevin Kisner 75-68 — 143Spencer Levin 69-74 — 143J.J. Henry 74-69 — 143Stewart Cink 74-69 — 143Roberto Castro 71-72 — 143Robert Garrigus 73-70 — 143Kevin Chappell 71-72 — 143Andrew Svoboda 71-72 — 143Seung-Yul Noh 73-70 — 143Gary Woodland 72-71 — 143Sean O’Hair 73-71 — 144Ben Curtis 75-69 — 144Hunter Mahan 71-73 — 144Charles Howell III 71-73 — 144Scott Brown 72-72 — 144Charley Hoffman 72-72 — 144Heath Slocum 72-72 — 144John Rollins 72-72 — 144Nick Watney 69-75 — 144John Huh 72-72 — 144J.B. Holmes 72-72 — 144Jordan Spieth 74-70 — 144Steven Bowditch 73-71 — 144D.H. Lee 73-71 — 144Ryan Palmer 73-71 — 144Greg Chalmers 66-78 — 144Andrew Loupe 74-70 — 144James Driscoll 71-74 — 145Robert Streb 74-71 — 145Trevor Immelman 74-71 — 145Scott Stallings 75-70 — 145Angel Cabrera 71-74 — 145Rory Sabbatini 71-74 — 145Brian Davis 72-73 — 145John Merrick 74-71 — 145Webb Simpson 72-73 — 145

Champions TourSenior Players Championship

FridayAt Fox Chapel Golf Club

PittsburghPurse: $2.7 million

Yardage: 6,696; Par: 70Second Round

Bernhard Langer 65-64 — 129Doug Garwood 64-67 — 131Bill Glasson 67-64 — 131John Riegger 68-64 — 132Michael Allen 68-64 — 132Joe Durant 64-68 — 132Mark McNulty 66-66 — 132Peter Fowler 65-68 — 133Kenny Perry 70-63 — 133Mark Brooks 66-67 — 133Mark O’Meara 67-66 — 133Loren Roberts 68-66 — 134Marco Dawson 66-68 — 134Larry Mize 65-69 — 134Corey Pavin 65-69 — 134John Cook 69-66 — 135Barry Lane 66-69 — 135Bart Bryant 65-70 — 135David Frost 64-71 — 135Tommy Armour III 66-70 — 136Wes Short, Jr. 65-71 — 136Bobby Clampett 67-69 — 136Steve Pate 65-71 — 136Olin Browne 65-71 — 136Brad Bryant 67-69 — 136Russ Cochran 70-66 — 136Jeff Sluman 69-67 — 136Tom Lehman 67-69 — 136Steve Jones 72-65 — 137Esteban Toledo 71-66 — 137Rocco Mediate 67-70 — 137Jeff Brehaut 70-68 — 138John Inman 70-68 — 138Billy Andrade 67-71 — 138Dan Forsman 69-69 — 138Wayne Levi 71-67 — 138Colin Montgomerie 69-69 — 138Mark Calcavecchia 70-68 — 138Bruce Vaughan 71-68 — 139Bob Gilder 70-69 — 139Jay Haas 69-70 — 139Dick Mast 69-70 — 139Tom Byrum 69-70 — 139

LPGA TourNW Arkansas Championship

FridayAt Pinnacle Country Club

Rogers, Ark.Purse: $2 million

Yardage: 6,375; Par 71 (36-35)First Round

a-denotes amateurAlena Sharp 32-33 — 65Alejandra Llaneza 33-33 — 66Michelle Wie 35-31 — 66Paz Echeverria 33-34 — 67Shanshan Feng 33-34 — 67Caroline Hedwall 35-32 — 67Emma Jandel 35-32 — 67Moriya Jutanugarn 32-35 — 67Ji Young Oh 34-33 — 67Pornanong Phatlum 34-33 — 67Gerina Piller 34-33 — 67Jennifer Rosales 35-32 — 67So Yeon Ryu 34-33 — 67Na Yeon Choi 35-33 — 68Victoria Elizabeth 35-33 — 68Jessica Korda 34-34 — 68Mo Martin 35-33 — 68Azahara Munoz 33-35 — 68Lee-Anne Pace 33-35 — 68Suzann Pettersen 35-33 — 68Jenny Shin 35-33 — 68Karin Sjodin 35-33 — 68Angela Stanford 34-34 — 68Line Vedel 35-33 — 68Christel Boeljon 35-34 — 69Dori Carter 35-34 — 69Silvia Cavalleri 34-35 — 69Moira Dunn 36-33 — 69Jodi Ewart Shadoff 35-34 — 69Hee-Won Han 36-33 — 69Juli Inkster 35-34 — 69Jennifer Johnson 33-36 — 69Jimin Kang 34-35 — 69Stacey Keating 34-35 — 69Cristie Kerr 36-33 — 69Lydia Ko 35-34 — 69Catriona Matthew 36-33 — 69Haru Nomura 34-35 — 69Hee Young Park 35-34 — 69Inbee Park 34-35 — 69Dewi Claire Schreefel 35-34 — 69Amy Yang 35-34 — 69Chella Choi 35-35 — 70Irene Coe 37-33 — 70Mina Harigae 35-35 — 70Hannah Jun Medlock 34-36 — 70Sue Kim 34-36 — 70Katherine Kirk 33-37 — 70Candie Kung 36-34 — 70

TV2DAYATHLETICS

4 p.m.NBC — U.S. Outdoor Championships, at Sacramento, Calif.

AUTO RACING2 p.m.

NBCSN — IndyCar, qualifying for Grand Prix of Houston3 p.m.

NBCSN — IndyCar, Grand Prix of Houston, race 18 p.m.

ESPN2 — NHRA, qualifying for Route 66 Nationals, at Joliet, Ill.7:30 p.m.

TNT — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Quaker State 400, at Sparta, Ky.

GOLF7:30 a.m.

TGC — European PGA Tour, BMW International Open, third round, at Cologne, Germany

1 p.m.TGC — PGA Tour, Quicken Loans National, third round, at Bethesda, Md.

3 p.m.CBS — PGA Tour, Quicken Loans National, third round, at Bethesda, Md.TGC — Champions Tour, SENIOR PLAYERS Championship, third round, at Pittsburgh

5 p.m.TGC — LPGA, NW Arkansas Championship, second round, at Rogers, Ark.

7 p.m.TGC — Web.com Tour, United Leasing Championship, third round, at Newburgh, Ind.

HORSE RACING7 p.m.

NBCSN — Thoroughbreds, The Gold Cup at Santa Anita, at Arcadia, Calif.

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL1 p.m.

MLB — Chicago White Sox at TorontoWGN — Washington at Chicago Cubs

4 p.m.SUN — Tampa Bay at BaltimoreFS-Florida — Oakland at MiamiFS1 — Minnesota at Texas

7 p.m.FOX — Boston at N.Y. Yankees

10 p.m.MLB — Cincinnati at S.F

SOCCER11:30 a.m.

ABC — FIFA, World Cup, round of 16, Brazil vs. Chile, at Belo Horizonte, Brazil

3:30 p.m.ABC — FIFA, World Cup, round of 16, Colombia vs. Uruguay, at Rio de Janeiro

10:30 p.m.NBCSN — MLS, Los Angeles at San Jose

TENNIS8 a.m.

ESPN — Wimbledon, third round, at London

SCOREBOARD

FCSL STANDINGS W L .Pct GB Sanford 11 7 .611 -

Winter Garden 11 8 .579 .5

Winter Park 11 8 .579 .5

Leesburg 8 7 .533 1.5

DeLand 6 11 .353 4.5

College Park 5 11 .313 5

FRIDAY’S GAMESLeesburg 6, Winter Garden 4DeLand at WInter Park, ccd., rain

College Park at Sanford, late

TODAY’S GAMESLeesburg at Winter Garden, (DH) 4 p.m.WInter Park at DeLand , 7 p.m.

Sanford at College Park, 7 p.m.

challenge,” said Gordon, who was eighth last year. “Our cars have been good here the last few times, so if I feel like we have a shot at winning I usually like that track.”

Johnson dominated last June’s race, leading 182 laps, and was poised to overtake Kenseth on a late restart before a spin racing four-wide run dropped him from second to ninth. Kenseth’s went on to his fourth win of the season despite taking fuel only on his last stop.

Johnson said he has changed his restart procedure to deal with the guessing games. And with a spar-kling Kentucky record highlight-ed by three top-five starts includ-ing the 2012 pole and three top-10 finishes, the six-time Cup cham-pion believes he’s due to break through.

BUMPY RIDE

Kentucky Speedway has hyped its rough surface in TV ads and some drivers believe it might be the circuit’s roughest. “It’s defi-nitely a jolt, because you’re hitting concrete every time you through holes on the front stretch,” said rookie Austin Dillon, who has two Nationwide Series wins at the track. “I just try to get the car to turn through ‘em.”

NASCAR FROM PAGE B1

Court win over Gilles Si-mon. Leading 3-2 in the third set and with Simon serving, Djokovic lunged for a forehand shot and fell hard to the grass, rolling over and grabbing his up-per left arm and grimacing in pain.

But after taking a med-ical timeout and receiv-ing treatment by a train-er, he recovered to play out the final four games of the

match, breaking Simon’s serve in the final game, his seventh break in the match.

Djokovic will next play Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, who beat Jimmy Wang of Tai-wan 6-2, 6-2, 7-5, in the fourth round on Monday.

“There is two days off, I’m going to try to recov-er and get ready,” Djokov-ic said.

Zahlavova Strycova called her win over Li the biggest of her career. Li won the first of her two Grand Slam titles at the

French Open in 2011 and had reached the quarter-finals at Wimbledon three times.

The Czech player thought she had won the match and went to the net to shake Li’s hand after a forehand was called out. But Li challenged the call and the ball was ruled in, continuing the match — until Li double-faulted on match point.

In other matches, No. 4 seed Agnieszka Radwans-ka beat Michelle Larch-er de Brito of Portugal 6-2, 6-0 and French Open final-

ist Simona Halep and for-mer No. 1 Caroline Wozni-acki advanced earlier after rain delayed the start of play for about 30 minutes.

Halep, who lost the Ro-land Garros final to Ma-ria Sharapova, had a 6-3, 4-6, 6-4 win over Lesia Tsu-renko of Ukraine in a sec-ond-round match.

Wozniacki moved into the fourth round follow-ing a 6-3, 6-0 win over Ana Konjuh of Croatia and Peng Shuai of China did the same after beat-ing American Lauren Da-vis 0-6, 6-3, 6-3.

TENNIS FROM PAGE B1

to the ground, but eventu-ally walked off the field on his own after being tended to by trainers.

A towel was held in front of his face as he left the field, indicating he was bleeding. A post-game examination deter-mined Lindor did not suf-fer a concussion, but was diagnosed with a small, non-displaced nasal frac-ture.

He is expected to return to the lineup in seven to 10 days, which could allow him to play in the minor league Midsummer Clas-sic.

Lindor started the 2013 season at Single-A Car-

olina and was promoted to Akron after the Futures game. In 21 games, he hit .289 with one home run and 14 runs scored.

He was shut down late in the season with a lower back injury.

Lindor played for Ma-honing Valley in the New York-Penn League — a short-season league — in 2011 and spent the 2012 season with Lake Coun-ty in the Single-A Midwest League.

Before he earns an pos-sible promotion to the majors, Lindor could be promoted to Triple-A fol-lowing this year’s Futures game, although Indians officials have not yet indi-cated if — or when — that move will be made.

Lindor piqued the in-terest of Indians manag-

er Terry Francona during spring training. After the club announced that Lin-dor was being sent to the it’s Minor League, Fran-cona said he was pleased with the prospect’s effort during his stint with Cleve-land.

“He’s just a good play-er,” Francona said. “We tell the kids when they’re here they can eat seeds and have a coke or they can be ready to play and he was ready to play whenever he was in there. There’s still a lot of room for growth with Francisco and that’s excit-ing for us.”

Another scenario that could create an oppor-tunity for Lindor to get called up before Septem-ber would be if the Indians fall out of the pennant race

in the American League’s Central Division. If that were to happen prior to the trade deadline on July 31, Cabrera could get traded and the Indians could con-sider speeding up their de-velopment plan for Lindor.

Cleveland entered Fri-day with a 38-40 record, six games behind division leaders Detroit and 3 1/2 games back in the Wild Card race.

Former Umatilla catcher Jonathan Lucroy current-ly is the only player from Lake and Sumter counties in the major leagues. Lu-croy is the starting catcher for the Milwaukee Brewers.

Lucroy began play on Friday tied for second in the National League with a .328 batting average. He has eight homers and 40 RBIs.

LINDOR FROM PAGE B1

Saturday, June 28, 2014 DAILY COMMERCIAL B3

SOCCER

EDDIE PELLSAssociated Press

DENVER — Never mind that there were dozens of TV sets at the bar, many turned to pro wrestling, poker and bowling to provide background noise ear-ly one weekend morn-ing. Jon Forget walked in, asked the bartend-er to change one set to soccer and got laughed out of the joint.

Fast forward almost two decades and there’s no room to sit at the bar Forget runs these days. His concept for a soccer pub near down-town Denver is taking off, and a new genera-tion of American-born soccer fans piled in by the hundreds Thursday to watch the U.S. ad-vance to the World Cup knockout round despite a 1-0 loss to Germany.

Forget’s success at the 3-year-old Three Lions pub is a micro-cosm of what’s hap-pening around Amer-ica during the World Cup. Social media num-bers are strong, TV rat-ings are setting records and, other than Brazil, no country’s fans have bought more tickets to the games than those from the United States.

All this in a country that long fought against soccer’s global intrigue, even though the num-ber of American kids playing the game has been rising slowly for decades.

“Over the past 25-30

years, you’ve seen peo-ple come over here from around the world and they know the game and they start influenc-ing Americans,” Forget said. “This generation has the proper training, a lot more have played at a high level. They un-derstand the game. It’s not boring to them.”

In fact, just the oppo-site.

Merritt Paulson, who owns the MLS Port-land Timbers franchise that regularly sells out its 21,000-seat stadi-um, calls the burgeon-ing group of 20-some-thing soccer fans, many of whom took their high school passion into rec-reational adult leagues, the “on-demand gener-ation.”

“They want what they want, when they want it and how they want it,” Paulson said. “It’s that shorter attention span. The fact that soccer games are two hours, start to finish, win, lose or draw, with very con-densed action, fits very well into the psycho-graphics of those folks.”

In the U.S., soccer is a youth-driven sport; about 70 percent of “core” soccer players — those who play 26 or more times a year — are ages 6-17, according to the most recent num-bers from the Sports and Fitness Industry Association.

These days, instead of leaving the game af-ter high school, that age group is graduating into

the most vocal segment of fans.

Of the 3.1 million tweets about the U.S. vs. Ghana game earli-er this month, 53 per-cent of them came from people 18-34, accord-ing to Nielsen Social. And 69 percent of peo-ple checking in on their Facebook accounts from host cities in Brazil were in that age group.

Networks and spon-sors covet younger viewers, which helps ex-plain ESPN’s decision to go all-in on World Cup telecasts; every game has been televised live since 1998. The U.S.-Portugal game last Sunday drew 24.7 mil-lion viewers — the most ESPN has ever garnered for an event not involv-

ing American football.Tapping into a pop-

ulous that has become more ethnically di-verse, the number of U.S networks televis-ing soccer grew from 11 to 21 and program-ming hours rose from 2,600 to 3,890 over the last four years — a 43 percent increase that matched the increase in TV advertising spend-ing (from $266 million to $378 million), ac-cording to Nielsen. NBC Sports televises Premier League games, Fox has the UEFA Champions League and takes over the World Cup telecasts starting in 2018.

All in all, it’s a much different landscape from three decades ago, when the only regular soccer programming in America was the reli-able PBS stalwart, “Soc-cer Made In Germany.”

“For decades, there was this wariness about soccer within U.S. cul-ture and wariness that affected people at the top,” said Jay Coakley, a professor who exam-ines sports’ role in soci-ety. “Now, that wariness is disappearing. Peo-ple at the top are see-ing soccer as a means of marketing their own in-terests.”

Video games, fan-tasy leagues, high-light shows, the steady stream of Ronaldo, Mes-si and other stars, both on the field and in ad-vertisements, keep the sport in touch with the American mainstream

in a way it hasn’t been before.

“Walking down the street now, you see kids wearing Manches-ter United jerseys and Chelsea Football Club jerseys and Barcelona, and I didn’t even know what those were as a kid,” said Mike Helfand, a 42-year-old Chicago attorney who has trav-eled the globe watching U.S. teams play.

Though America’s major league, the MLS, has work to do to bring its level up to the Eu-ropean leagues, the league’s steady expan-sion, improving talent level and fan-friend-ly pricing will keep the sport on the radar after the World Cup ends.

Since 2010, the num-ber of adults attending a big-time soccer match in the United States has increased by 87 percent.

The farther the U.S. goes in this year’s World Cup, the higher than number could rise over the next four years.

All of which has For-get looking to expand his soccer-pub busi-ness.

“I’ve had people come to the pub be-cause a friend dragged them down here,” he said. “They’ll spend two hours watching a game and they’ll walk out the door and say, ‘I’m com-ing back next week.’ It can be a defining mo-ment for people. It’s very, very different than what we’ve been used to here in America.”

Sport gets boost in US from young fans

ED ANDRIESKI / AP

United States soccer fans wave a U.S. flag at Three Lions sports bar in Denver on Thursday as they Team USA play Germany at the 2014 World Cup in Brazil.

RAF CASERTAssociated Press

MOGI DAS CRUZES, Brazil — Despite a per-fect record coming into the World Cup second round against the Unit-ed States, a recurring groin injury to Vincent Kompany has cast a pall over the Belgian cam-paign.

Any other player would have been rela-tively easy to replace. Yet in Kompany, Bel-gium coach Marc Wil-mots has the essence of the qualities that got Belgium to the World Cup in the first place. Skills, power, vision and leadership.

“We will do all within our powers to make sure he comes back at 100 percent,” Wilmots said Friday, acknowledging it was based more on hope than medical ev-idence. The coach said it was “impossible to say now” whether the Manchester City cap-

tain would be ready to play against the physi-cally imposing Ameri-cans next Tuesday.

Making matters worse for Wilmots, the back-up rightback Anthony Vanden Borre was di-agnosed with a cracked left fibula after he was tackled late in Thurs-day’s 1-0 win over South Korea and will miss the rest of the World Cup.

Bad as that may be, it would not compare to a Kompany no-show.

Wilmots considers him his “right-hand man” on the pitch, a proven winner earning two of the last three Pre-mier League titles.

Kompany strained his left groin in the last five minutes during the opening 2-1 victory against Algeria.

He, and Belgium, sur-vived that game, and af-ter a three-day layoff, he was excellent again during a 1-0 victory over Russia, which probably

places him along Thia-go Silva as the best cen-tral defenders in the World Cup so far.

It made the shock worse when Kompany had to pull out after half an hour during the last

training session ahead of Thursday’s 1-0 win over South Korea.

“It will be day by day and that is why I don’t think about a lineup now. We will have to see after the last training

session,” said Wilmots.Kompany is not one

to give up easily. During the World Cup qualifier against Serbia he played on with a broken nose and eye socket and a slight concussion.

He grew up on the rough, small city square pitches of Brussels, the son of a father who had escaped the dictator-ship of Congo’s Mobutu Sese Seko. It gave him mental strength which has made him come back from injury time and again.

“He wants to play this World Cup so bad-ly,” Wilmots said. “Oth-ers can replace him, but when we talk about leadership, he is an add-ed value.”

It would be too much to call Kompany tal-ismanic for Belgium, since Wilmots has set up a strong defensive line that can survive with-out him. During qual-ifying, the Red Devils

won three away games without him and drew an inconsequential fi-nal home game.

But the South Korea game here did lay bare how important he is. Goalie Thibaut Cour-tois barely had to make saves in the first two games, yet with Kom-pany gone against the weakest opponent of Group H, he had to pull off several good saves to keep a clean sheet.

The problem is that Wilmots is running thin on defenders. Thomas Vermaelen and Laurent Ciman are also on the injury list.

Tuesday’s match against the United States is widely expect-ed to be a fierce phys-ical battle, where all players will have to be in top shape to last the full game.

“We don’t have the right to be at only 80 percent for a sec-ond-round game,” said Wilmots.

Kompany uncertain to make US game at World Cup

LEE JIN-MAN / AP

Belgium national soccer team player Vincent Kompany dribbles during practice on Wednesday at Itaquerao Stadium in Sao Paulo, Brazil.

JANIE MCCAULEYAssociated Press

SAO PAULO — U.S. midfielder Jermaine Jones has a broken nose after Thursday’s game against Germany, but remains available to play in the round of 16 against Belgium on Tuesday in Salvador.

U.S. Soccer Feder-ation spokesman Mi-chael Kammarman said Friday that Jones and fellow midfield-

er Alejandro Be-doya each were checked on the field for concus-sion symptoms during the 1-0 loss at Recife fol-lowing their sec-ond-half collision, and three more times since then. There were no is-sues for either player so far.

The team arrived back to its Sao Paulo hotel at 11 p.m. Thursday night,

and Bedoya and Jones were exam-ined again Friday morning.

Jones won’t wear a protec-tive mask and the fracture hasn’t

caused discoloration in the area.

“I don’t remember re-ally what happened. I went for a header,” Jones said. “The feeling was that it was broken.”

Kammarman add-

ed that Jones’ injury doesn’t appear serious, as there is no visible bruising of the like for-ward Clint Dempsey had when he broke his nose in the Ghana game.

“He looks unaffected. You can’t even see any discoloration,” Kam-marman said. “So it appears to be a minor fracture. He is fine, he’s available to play.”

Forward Jozy Alti-

dore’s status for the knockout stage re-mains unclear, though he is making positive progress since strain-ing his left hamstring in the first half of the Americans’ opening win against Ghana on June 16. He ran at a good pace around the field without any signs of pain under sunny skies at Sao Paulo Fu-tebol Clube on Friday morning and did some

stretching on the side-line with the assistance of the training staff. He has run several times now without further problems.

“We are very optimis-tic. Every day is a big step forward with Jozy,” coach Jurgen Klins-mann said. “It’s 11 days now and it’s looking better every day, so we are optimistic we have him being a part of the Belgium game.”

US midfielder Jermaine Jones has broken nose, as expected

JONES

B4 DAILY COMMERCIAL Saturday, June 28, 2014

Box scores and results for games ending after 10 p.m. will appear in our next edition.

AMERICAN LEAGUEEAST

W L PCT GB WCGB L10 STR HOME AWAYToronto 45 36 .556 — — 4-6 W-1 23-18 22-18Baltimore 41 37 .526 2½ ½ 6-4 L-1 18-19 23-18New York 40 37 .519 3 1 5-5 W-1 17-18 23-19Boston 36 43 .456 8 6 5-5 W-1 20-19 16-24Tampa Bay 33 48 .407 12 10 5-5 W-2 19-25 14-23

CENTRAL W L PCT GB WCGB L10 STR HOME AWAYDetroit 43 32 .573 — — 7-3 W-7 19-19 24-13Kansas City 40 38 .513 4½ 1½ 4-6 L-2 19-21 21-17Cleveland 38 40 .487 6½ 3½ 5-5 W-1 23-15 15-25Minnesota 36 41 .468 8 5 4-6 L-3 19-17 17-24Chicago 36 44 .450 9½ 6½ 3-7 L-2 21-18 15-26

WEST W L PCT GB WCGB L10 STR HOME AWAYOakland 48 30 .615 — — 7-3 W-1 24-15 24-15Los Angeles 44 33 .571 3½ — 7-3 W-6 26-14 18-19Seattle 42 37 .532 6½ — 7-3 L-1 19-21 23-16Texas 35 43 .449 13 6½ 1-9 L-8 16-22 19-21Houston 34 46 .425 15 8½ 2-8 W-1 18-22 16-24

NATIONAL LEAGUEEAST

W L PCT GB WCGB L10 STR HOME AWAYWashington 41 38 .519 — — 5-5 L-3 23-17 18-21Atlanta 40 38 .513 ½ 2 4-6 L-1 20-18 20-20Miami 39 40 .494 2 3½ 4-6 L-1 25-18 14-22Philadelphia 36 42 .462 4½ 6 6-4 W-1 18-23 18-19New York 36 43 .456 5 6½ 5-5 L-2 17-21 19-22

CENTRAL W L PCT GB WCGB L10 STR HOME AWAYMilwaukee 49 32 .605 — — 7-3 W-2 22-17 27-15St. Louis 43 37 .538 5½ — 5-5 L-1 23-17 20-20Cincinnati 40 38 .513 7½ 2 7-3 W-2 19-18 21-20Pittsburgh 40 39 .506 8 2½ 6-4 W-1 22-18 18-21Chicago 34 44 .436 13½ 8 5-5 W-2 19-18 15-26

WEST W L PCT GB WCGB L10 STR HOME AWAYSan Francisco 46 33 .582 — — 3-7 L-1 24-18 22-15Los Angeles 45 36 .556 2 — 8-2 W-3 19-20 26-16Colorado 35 44 .443 11 7½ 1-9 L-2 20-19 15-25San Diego 34 45 .430 12 8½ 5-5 L-1 19-21 15-24Arizona 33 48 .407 14 10½ 4-6 L-1 15-30 18-18

THURSDAY’S GAMESHouston 6, Atlanta 1

L.A. Angels 6, Minnesota 4Toronto 7, Chicago White Sox 0

Detroit 6, Texas 0

THURSDAY’S GAMESHouston 6, Atlanta 1

Philadelphia 5, Miami 3, 14 inningsPittsburgh 5, N.Y. Mets 2

Chicago Cubs 5, Washington 3Milwaukee 7, Colorado 4

L.A. Dodgers 1, St. Louis 0Cincinnati 3, San Francisco 1

FRIDAY’S GAMESTampa Bay 5, Baltimore 2, 1st game

Boston at N.Y. Yankees, lateTampa Bay at Baltimore, 2nd game, late

Chicago White Sox at Toronto, lateOakland at Miami, late

Minnesota at Texas, lateDetroit at Houston, late

L.A. Angels at Kansas City, lateCleveland at Seattle, late

FRIDAY’S GAMESChicago Cubs 7, Washington 2

Atlanta at Philadelphia, lateN.Y. Mets at Pittsburgh, late

Oakland at Miami, lateColorado at Milwaukee, lateArizona at San Diego, late

St. Louis at L.A. Dodgers, lateCincinnati at San Francisco, late

PAUL BEATY / AP

Chicago Cubs’ John Baker watches his three-run double during the seventh inning of Friday’s game against Washington at Wrigley Field in Chicago.

TODAY’S GAMESChicago White Sox (Sale 6-1) at Toronto (Stroman 4-2), 1:07 p.m.L.A. Angels (Skaggs 4-4) at Kansas City (Ventura 5-6), 2:10 p.m.

Minnesota (P.Hughes 8-3) at Texas (Darvish 7-4), 4:05 p.m.Tampa Bay (Bedard 3-5) at Baltimore (W.Chen 7-2), 4:05 p.m.

Detroit (Scherzer 9-3) at Houston (Keuchel 8-5), 4:10 p.m.Oakland (Milone 5-3) at Miami (Eovaldi 5-3), 4:10 p.m.

Boston (Lester 8-7) at N.Y. Yankees (Tanaka 11-2), 7:15 p.m.Cleveland (Tomlin 4-5) at Seattle (Elias 7-5), 10:10 p.m.

TODAY’S GAMESWashington (G.Gonzalez 4-4) at Chicago Cubs (Beeler 0-0), 1:05 p.m., 1st gameAtlanta (E.Santana 5-5) at Philadelphia (R.Hernandez 3-6), 2:05 p.m., 1st game

N.Y. Mets (Niese 4-4) at Pittsburgh (Cole 6-3), 4:05 p.m.Colorado (Chacin 1-6) at Milwaukee (Garza 4-5), 4:10 p.m.

Oakland (Milone 5-3) at Miami (Eovaldi 5-3), 4:10 p.m.Atlanta (Hale 2-2) at Philadelphia (O’Sullivan 0-0), 7:15 p.m., 2nd game

St. Louis (Lynn 8-5) at L.A. Dodgers (Greinke 9-4), 7:15 p.m.Washington (Treinen 0-3) at Chicago Cubs (Samardzija 2-6), 7:15 p.m., 2nd game

Cincinnati (Simon 10-3) at San Francisco (M.Cain 1-6), 10:05 p.m.Arizona (Collmenter 6-4) at San Diego (Stults 2-10), 10:10 p.m.

AMERICAN LEAGUE LEADERSBATTING: Altuve, Houston, .334; VMartinez, Detroit, .333; MiCabrera, Detroit, .325; Beltre, Texas, .325; Brantley, Cleveland, .325; Cano, Seattle, .324.RUNS: Dozier, Minnesota, 60; Donaldson, Oakland, 55; Bautista, Toronto, 54; Encarnacion, Toronto, 54; Kinsler, Detroit, 54; Brantley, Cleveland, 53; MeCabrera, Toronto, 52; Trout, Los Angeles, 52.RBI: MiCabrera, Detroit, 64; NCruz, Baltimore, 64; En-carnacion, Toronto, 64; JAbreu, Chicago, 61; Trout, Los Angeles, 58; Moss, Oakland, 57; Donaldson, Oakland, 56.HITS: Altuve, Houston, 107; MeCabrera, Toronto, 101; Markakis, Baltimore, 97; AJones, Baltimore, 95; Kinsler, Detroit, 95; VMartinez, Detroit, 95; MiCabrera, Detroit, 94; Cano, Seattle, 94.DOUBLES: MiCabrera, Detroit, 28; Kinsler, Detroit, 24; Altuve, Houston, 23; Pedroia, Boston, 23; EEscobar, Minnesota, 22; Plouffe, Minnesota, 22; Cespedes, Oak-land, 21; AGordon, Kansas City, 21; Hosmer, Kansas City, 21; Trout, Los Angeles, 21.HOME RUNS: NCruz, Baltimore, 24; Encarnacion, To-ronto, 24; JAbreu, Chicago, 23; VMartinez, Detroit, 20; Donaldson, Oakland, 18; Moss, Oakland, 18; Ortiz, Bos-ton, 18.STOLEN BASES: Altuve, Houston, 30; RDavis, Detroit, 21; Ellsbury, New York, 21; Andrus, Texas, 18; AEscobar, Kansas City, 18; LMartin, Texas, 17; Reyes, Toronto, 16.PITCHING: Tanaka, New York, 11-2; Porcello, Detroit, 10-4; Buehrle, Toronto, 10-4; FHernandez, Seattle, 9-2; Ka-zmir, Oakland, 9-3; Scherzer, Detroit, 9-3; 9 tied at 8.ERA: Tanaka, New York, 2.11; FHernandez, Seattle, 2.24; Buehrle, Toronto, 2.52; Darvish, Texas, 2.62; ASanchez, Detroit, 2.64; Kazmir, Oakland, 2.66; JChavez, Oakland, 2.71.STRIKEOUTS: Price, Tampa Bay, 144; FHernandez, Seat-tle, 128; Kluber, Cleveland, 122; Scherzer, Detroit, 119; Tanaka, New York, 119; Darvish, Texas, 118.SAVES: Holland, Kansas City, 22; Rodney, Seattle, 21; Perkins, Minnesota, 19; DavRobertson, New York, 18; Nathan, Detroit, 16; Uehara, Boston, 16; Soria, Texas, 15.

NATIONAL LEAGUE LEADERSBATTING: Tulowitzki, Colorado, .352; MaAdams, St. Louis, .328; Lucroy, Milwaukee, .328; AMcCutchen, Pittsburgh, .315; Gennett, Milwaukee, .311; CGomez, Milwaukee, .311; Stanton, Miami, .310.RUNS: Tulowitzki, Colorado, 61; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 57; Pence, San Francisco, 57; Stanton, Miami, 55; Rizzo, Chicago, 53.RBI: Stanton, Miami, 59; Morneau, Colorado, 57; Gold-schmidt, Arizona, 53; Howard, Philadelphia, 50; AdGon-zalez, Los Angeles, 48; AMcCutchen, Pittsburgh, 48.HITS: DanMurphy, New York, 95; Lucroy, Milwaukee, 94; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 93; AMcCutchen, Pittsburgh, 93; McGehee, Miami, 93; Pence, San Francisco, 93.DOUBLES: Goldschmidt, Arizona, 28; Lucroy, Milwau-kee, 26; Span, Washington, 25; Utley, Philadelphia, 24; SCastro, Chicago, 23; AMcCutchen, Pittsburgh, 23; FFreeman, Atlanta, 22.HOME RUNS: Stanton, Miami, 21; Tulowitzki, Colorado, 18; Frazier, Cincinnati, 17; Rizzo, Chicago, 17; Gattis, At-lanta, 16; JUpton, Atlanta, 16; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 15.STOLEN BASES: DGordon, Los Angeles, 40; BHamilton, Cincinnati, 32; Revere, Philadelphia, 21; SMarte, Pitts-burgh, 18; EYoung, New York, 18; Blackmon, Colorado, 15; Segura, Milwaukee, 14.PITCHING: Simon, Cincinnati, 10-3; Wainwright, St. Louis, 10-4; Lohse, Milwaukee, 9-2; Ryu, Los Angeles, 9-3; Bumgarner, San Francisco, 9-4; Greinke, Los Ange-les, 9-4; WPeralta, Milwaukee, 9-5.ERA: Cueto, Cincinnati, 1.86; Wainwright, St. Louis, 2.01; Beckett, Los Angeles, 2.11; HAlvarez, Miami, 2.32; Teheran, Atlanta, 2.41; Samardzija, Chicago, 2.53; Hudson, San Francisco, 2.62.STRIKEOUTS: Strasburg, Washington, 123; Cueto, Cin-cinnati, 119; Kennedy, San Diego, 111; Bumgarner, San Francisco, 111; Wainwright, St. Louis, 105; Greinke, Los Angeles, 101; Samardzija, Chicago, 97.SAVES: FrRodriguez, Milwaukee, 26; Jansen, Los Ange-les, 24; Rosenthal, St. Louis, 23; Kimbrel, Atlanta, 22; Romo, San Francisco, 22; Street, San Diego, 20; Papel-bon, Philadelphia, 18; RSoriano, Washington, 18; Cis-hek, Miami, 18.

Rays 5, Orioles 2First Game

Tampa Bay Baltimore ab r h bi ab r h biDJnngs cf 5 0 0 0 Markks rf 3 1 1 0Kiermr rf 5 0 1 0 Pearce lf 3 0 0 0Zobrist ss 3 0 1 0 A.Jones cf 4 0 0 0Longori 3b 3 0 0 0 C.Davis 1b 2 0 0 1Loney 1b 3 1 0 0 N.Cruz dh 4 0 0 0Guyer lf 3 2 3 1 JHardy ss 4 0 0 0Joyce dh 3 2 2 2 Machd 3b 3 1 2 1SRdrgz 2b 4 0 1 1 Schoop 2b 3 0 0 0JMolin c 4 0 1 1 CJosph c 3 0 0 0Totals 33 5 9 5 Totals 29 2 3 2Tampa Bay 020 102 000 — 5Baltimore 100 000 100 — 2E–Longoria (6). DP–Tampa Bay 2, Baltimore 1. LOB–Tampa Bay 6, Baltimore 4. 2B–Guyer 3 (7), Joyce (16). HR–Machado (5). CS–Kiermaier (2), Guyer (1). IP H R ER BB SOTampa Bay Colome W,1-0 5 2/3 2 1 1 4 3Boxberger 1 1/3 1 1 1 0 4Balfour H,3 1 0 0 0 0 0McGee S,2-3 1 0 0 0 0 2Baltimore Gausman L,3-2 5 7 5 5 4 1Meek 2 1 0 0 0 2Brach 2 1 0 0 0 4Gausman pitched to 2 batters in the 6th.HBP–by Gausman (Guyer). WP–Colome 2, Gausman.Umpires–Home, Tony Randazzo; First, Gabe Morales; Second, Jim Wolf; Third, Brian Gorman.T–3:14. A–15,614 (45,971).

Cubs 7, Nationals 2Washington Chicago ab r h bi ab r h biSpan cf 4 0 0 0 Sweeny rf 5 0 2 2Rendon 3b 4 0 2 0 Ruggin cf 5 1 2 0Werth rf 4 0 0 0 Rizzo 1b 5 0 1 0LaRoch 1b 4 2 2 1 SCastro ss 3 1 0 0Zmrmn lf 4 0 1 1 Valuen 3b 3 2 1 0WRams c 3 0 1 0 Coghln lf 4 2 2 0Dsmnd ss 3 0 0 0 JoBakr c 3 1 3 4Espinos 2b 3 0 0 0 Barney 2b 4 0 1 1Roark p 2 0 0 0 Hamml p 3 0 1 0Blevins p 0 0 0 0 Schlittr p 0 0 0 0Barrett p 0 0 0 0 Wrght p 0 0 0 0Frndsn ph 1 0 1 0 Schrhlt ph 1 0 0 0T.Hill p 0 0 0 0 Grimm p 0 0 0 0Totals 32 2 7 2 Totals 36 7 13 7Washington 010 100 000 — 2Chicago 020 200 30x — 7DP–Washington 1, Chicago 1. LOB–Washington 4, Chicago 8. 2B–Zimmerman (11), Ruggiano (7),

Valbuena (20), Jo.Baker (3). HR–LaRoche (10). CS–Rendon (1). IP H R ER BB SOWashington Roark L,7-5 6 10 4 4 1 2Blevins 2/3 2 3 3 2 1Barrett 1/3 0 0 0 0 1T.Hill 1 1 0 0 0 0Chicago Hammel W,7-5 6 1/3 5 2 2 1 6Schlitter H,11 2/3 0 0 0 0 0W.Wright 1 2 0 0 0 1Grimm 1 0 0 0 0 0WP–Blevins, Hammel.Umpires–Home, Mike Estabrook; First, Jerry Layne; Second, Hunter Wendelstedt; Third, Mike DiMuro.T–2:49. A–30,683 (41,072).

Late Thursday Reds 3, Giants 1

Cincinnati San Francisco ab r h bi ab r h biBHmltn cf 3 0 1 0 Blanco cf 4 0 1 0Frazier 3b 4 0 2 0 Pence rf 4 0 1 0Votto 1b 4 0 0 0 Posey c 3 0 2 0Mesorc c 4 0 0 0 Sandovl 3b 4 0 0 0Phillips 2b 4 1 2 1 Colvin lf 3 0 0 0Bruce rf 4 2 3 0 Morse ph 1 0 0 0Ludwck lf 4 0 1 1 Duvall 1b 4 1 1 1AChpm p 0 0 0 0 BCrwfr ss 3 0 0 0Cozart ss 4 0 1 1 Panik 2b 3 0 0 0Leake p 3 0 0 0 Vglsng p 1 0 0 0Schmkr ph-lf 1 0 0 0 Arias ph 1 0 0 0 Machi p 0 0 0 0 JGutrrz p 0 0 0 0 HSnchz ph 1 0 0 0 Casilla p 0 0 0 0Totals 35 3 10 3 Totals 32 1 5 1Cincinnati 000 010 200 — 3San Francisco 000 000 100 — 1E–Posey (4), Panik (3). DP–San Francisco 1. LOB–Cincinnati 6, San Francisco 5. 2B–Bruce 2 (17), Cozart (13), Posey 2 (12). 3B–Pence (4). HR–Phillips (6), Duvall (1). SB–B.Hamilton (32), Frazier (10). S–B.Hamilton. IP H R ER BB SOCincinnati Leake W,6-6 8 4 1 1 1 12A.Chapman S,15-16 1 1 0 0 0 1San Francisco Vogelsong L,5-4 6 5 1 1 0 7Machi 1 3 2 2 0 1J.Gutierrez 1 2 0 0 0 1Casilla 1 0 0 0 0 1Umpires–Home, Pat Hoberg; First, Jeff Kellogg; Sec-ond, Dan Bellino; Third, D.J. Reyburn.T–2:46. A–41,156 (41,915).

Dodgers 1, Cardinals 0St. Louis Los Angeles ab r h bi ab r h biMCrpnt 3b 4 0 1 0 DGordn 2b 3 0 1 0Hollidy lf 4 0 0 0 Puig rf 4 0 0 0MAdms 1b 3 0 1 0 AdGnzl 1b 3 0 0 0Bourjos pr 0 0 0 0 Kemp lf 3 0 0 0JhPerlt ss 4 0 1 0 Ethier cf 3 0 0 0YMolin c 2 0 0 0 Uribe 3b 3 1 1 0Craig rf 3 0 1 0 Butera c 2 0 0 0Jay cf 3 0 1 0 Rojas ss 3 0 2 0M.Ellis 2b 3 0 0 0 Beckett p 2 0 0 0Wnwrg p 3 0 0 0 BWilsn p 0 0 0 0 JuTrnr ph 1 0 1 1 Jansen p 0 0 0 0Totals 29 0 5 0 Totals 27 1 5 1St. Louis 000 000 000 — 0Los Angeles 000 000 01x — 1DP–St. Louis 1, Los Angeles 1. LOB–St. Louis 4, Los Angeles 4. 2B–Craig (16). CS–Bourjos (2). S–Butera. IP H R ER BB SOSt. Louis Wainwright L,10-4 8 5 1 1 1 7Los Angeles Beckett 7 4 0 0 2 4B.Wilson W,1-2 1 0 0 0 0 2Jansen S,24-27 1 1 0 0 0 1WP–Wainwright.Umpires–Home, Vic Carapazza; First, Bill Miller; Sec-ond, Mike Everitt; Third, Chad Fairchild.T–2:32. A–48,624 (56,000).

Brewers 7, Rockies 4Colorado Milwaukee ab r h bi ab r h biBlckmn rf 5 0 1 0 RWeks 2b 5 2 3 1Stubbs cf 4 0 1 0 FrRdrg p 0 0 0 0Mornea 1b 5 1 2 0 Braun rf 3 2 2 0Tlwtzk ss 2 1 1 0 Lucroy c 5 0 1 1Dickrsn lf 4 1 1 0 CGomz cf 4 0 1 0Rosario c 2 0 0 0 ArRmr 3b 3 1 2 2McKnr c 1 0 1 0 KDavis lf 3 0 1 1RWhelr 3b 4 1 2 4 MrRynl 1b 4 1 1 0LeMahi 2b 4 0 1 0 Segura ss 3 0 0 0Fridrch p 2 0 0 0 WPerlt p 2 0 0 0Scahill p 0 0 0 0 Overay ph 0 0 0 0Rutledg ph 1 0 0 0 Wooten p 0 0 0 0Belisle p 0 0 0 0 WSmith p 0 0 0 0Barnes ph 1 0 0 0 Kintzlr p 0 0 0 0Kahnle p 0 0 0 0 Gennett ph-2b 1 1 1 2Totals 35 4 10 4 Totals 33 7 12 7Colorado 000 400 000 — 4Milwaukee 300 020 02x — 7E–K.Davis (2). DP–Colorado 1, Milwaukee 1. LOB–Colorado 8, Milwaukee 8. 2B–Morneau (19), McK-enry (5), R.Weeks (7). HR–R.Wheeler (2), R.Weeks

(3), Ar.Ramirez (11), Gennett (6). SB–LeMahieu (8), Braun (8), C.Gomez (13). CS–Stubbs (1). S–Segura. SF–K.Davis. IP H R ER BB SOColorado Friedrich L,0-2 4 9 5 5 1 8Scahill 2 0 0 0 2 1Belisle 1 1 0 0 0 0Kahnle 1 2 2 2 1 0Milwaukee W.Peralta W,9-5 6 8 4 4 2 7Wooten H,10 1/3 1 0 0 1 0W.Smith H,19 2/3 0 0 0 1 2Kintzler H,8 1 1 0 0 0 1Fr.Rodriguez S,26-28 1 0 0 0 0 0Friedrich pitched to 3 batters in the 5th.WP–Friedrich. PB–McKenry, Rosario.Umpires–Home, Tripp Gibson; First, Dale Scott; Sec-ond, Dan Iassogna; Third, CB Bucknor.T–3:50. A–27,056 (41,900).

Phillies 5, Marlins 3, 14 inningsMiami Philadelphia ab r h bi ab r h biMrsnck cf 6 0 1 0 Revere cf 6 1 3 0Lucas ss-lf 6 0 1 0 Rollins ss 6 1 1 0Stanton rf 4 1 2 1 Utley 2b 7 2 3 3McGeh 3b 5 0 1 0 Howard 1b 6 0 2 0Ozuna lf 5 1 1 1 Byrd rf 5 0 1 0Hatchr p 1 0 0 0 Asche 3b 6 0 2 0JeBakr 1b 3 0 0 0 Ruiz c 4 0 0 1GJones ph-1b 3 0 1 0 Mayrry lf 2 0 0 0Sltlmch c 5 1 1 1 DBrwn ph-lf 4 1 1 0Solano 2b-ss 6 0 1 0 Hamels p 2 0 0 0Koehler p 2 0 0 0 GwynJ ph 0 0 0 0Morris p 0 0 0 0 Diekmn p 0 0 0 0RJhnsn ph 1 0 0 0 Papeln p 0 0 0 0MDunn p 0 0 0 0 CHrndz ph 1 0 0 0Gregg p 0 0 0 0 Bastrd p 0 0 0 0Bour ph 1 0 0 0 Giles p 0 0 0 0ARams p 0 0 0 0 RCeden ph 1 0 0 0Dietrch 2b 1 0 0 0 Hollnds p 0 0 0 0 DeFrts p 1 0 0 0Totals 49 3 9 3 Totals 51 5 13 4Miami 001 100 100 000 00 — 3Philadelphia 000 110 100 000 02 — 5No outs when winning run scored.E–Je.Baker (3). DP–Philadelphia 2. LOB–Miami 8, Philadelphia 13. 2B–G.Jones (17). HR–Stanton (21), Ozuna (13), Saltalamacchia (7), Utley (6). SB–Maris-nick (5), Revere (21). S–Gwynn Jr.. SF–Ruiz. IP H R ER BB SOMiami Koehler 6 7 2 2 0 6Morris BS,4-4 1 1 1 0 0 0M.Dunn 1 0 0 0 0 3Gregg 1 0 0 0 0 1

A.Ramos 1 2/3 1 0 0 3 1Hatcher L,0-1 2 1/3 4 2 2 0 2Philadelphia Hamels 7 6 3 3 0 7Diekman 1 1 0 0 2 1Papelbon 1 0 0 0 0 2Bastardo 1 0 0 0 0 1Giles 1 0 0 0 1 0Hollands 1 1 0 0 0 0De Fratus W,2-0 2 1 0 0 1 1Hatcher pitched to 2 batters in the 14th.HBP–by A.Ramos (Ruiz). WP–A.Ramos, Diekman.Umpires–Home, Brian Gorman; First, Tony Randazzo; Second, David Rackley; Third, Jim Wolf.T–4:41. A–34,168 (43,651).

Cubs 5, Nationals 3Washington Chicago ab r h bi ab r h biSpan cf 4 1 2 2 Sweeny lf 4 1 0 0Rendon 3b 4 0 1 1 Ruggin rf-cf 4 1 2 2Werth rf 3 0 1 0 Rizzo 1b 4 1 3 0LaRoch 1b 4 0 1 0 SCastro ss 4 1 1 2Zmrmn lf 3 0 1 0 Valuen 3b 4 0 1 0Dsmnd ss 4 0 0 0 Castillo c 3 0 1 1WRams c 3 1 2 0 Lake cf 0 0 0 0Espinos 2b 2 1 0 0 Schrhlt rf 3 0 0 0Fister p 2 0 0 0 Barney 2b 3 1 1 0Stmmn p 0 0 0 0 T.Wood p 2 0 0 0 NRmrz p 0 0 0 0 Coghln ph 0 0 0 0 Strop p 0 0 0 0 HRndn p 0 0 0 0Totals 29 3 8 3 Totals 31 5 9 5Washington 000 001 200 — 3Chicago 000 300 20x — 5DP–Washington 1, Chicago 3. LOB–Washington 5, Chicago 3. 2B–Span 2 (25), Zimmerman (10), Ruggiano (6), Rizzo (13), Barney (8). 3B–Valbuena (2). S–Fister. IP H R ER BB SOWashington Fister 6 7 3 3 0 1Stammen L,0-3 2 2 2 2 1 1Chicago T.Wood 6 2/3 7 3 3 5 4N.Ramirez W,1-1 1/3 0 0 0 0 0Strop H,8 1 1 0 0 0 0H.Rondon S,9-11 1 0 0 0 0 1WP–Fister.Umpires–Home, Mike DiMuro; First, Mike Estabrook; Second, Jerry Layne; Third, Hunter Wendelstedt.T–2:41. A–28,867 (41,072).

This Date In BaseballJune 28

1907 — Twelve Washington baserunners stole

against catcher Branch Rickey as the Senators de-feated the New York Yankees 16-5.1910 — Joe Tinker of the Chicago Cubs became the first major leaguer to steal home twice in the same game, an 11-1 win over Cincinnati.1919 — Carl Mays of Boston pitched two complete games against the New York Yankees. The Red Sox won the first game 2-0 and lost the nightcap 4-1.1949 — Joe DiMaggio played his first series of the year after a bone spur operation and hit .455, with four home runs and nine RBIs, as the New York Yan-kees swept Boston at Fenway Park.1970 — Pittsburgh swept the Chicago Cubs 3-2 and 4-1 in the Pirates’ final games at Forbes Field.1984 — Dwight Evans of the Boston Red Sox com-pleted the cycle with a three-run 11th-inning homer to beat the Seattle Mariners 9-6.1986 — Phil Niekro of the Cleveland Indians and Don Sutton of the California Angels became the first 300-game winners to start against each other in this century. Neither Niekro nor Sutton got a decision as the Angels scored six runs in the bottom of the eighth to win 9-3.1987 — Mark McGwire homered twice to tie a major league record with five homers over two games, and Steve Ontiveros pitched a two-hitter as the Oakland Athletics beat the Cleveland Indians 10-0.1994 — Matt Williams tied Willie Stargell’s 1971 NL record for home runs before July with his 28th in San Francisco’s 7-4 loss to Los Angeles.2004 — David Bell became the first Philadelphia Phillies player in almost nine years to hit for the cy-cle as the Phillies beat Montreal 14-6.2007 — Frank Thomas hit his 500th home run to become the 21st major leaguer to reach the career mark. Thomas hit a three-run shot in the first inning, connecting against Minnesota’s Carlos Silva.2007 — Craig Biggio became the 27th player in major league history to get 3,000 hits in Houston’s 8-5 11-inning victory over Colorado. Biggio singled to center field in the seventh inning for the milestone hit and was thrown out trying to stretch the play into a double. The 41-year-old finished 5-for-6 with an RBI and a run scored.2008 — Jered Weaver and Jose Arredondo combined to no-hit the Los Angeles Dodgers, but the Angels lost 1-0. It was the fifth game in the majors since 1900 in which the winning team didn’t get a hit, and first since Boston’s Matt Young lost one in 1992.2009 — Mariano Rivera earned his 500th save, be-coming the second reliever to reach the milestone, and the New York Yankees beat the Mets 4-2 for a Subway Series sweep. Rivera got four outs, securing the Yankees’ victory. Rivera even contributed offen-sively by drawing a bases-loaded walk from Francisco Rodriguez in the ninth for his first career RBI. It was the third regular-season plate appearance for the 39-year-old closer — and second in five days.

Saturday, June 28, 2014 DAILY COMMERCIAL B5

D003564

Monday June 30th at 5pm

D003638

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE

TOM WITHERSAssociated Press

BEREA, Ohio — John-ny’s gonna play and Johnny’s gonna party.

Tired of scrutiny about how he spends his weekends away from football and drained by the spotlight that fol-lows him, Browns rook-ie quarterback Johnny Manziel said he has no plans to tone down his lifestyle.

“I don’t think I’m do-ing anything wrong,” he said.

Speaking at a PLAY 60 event with other AFC rookies, Manziel said he’s been bothered by recent criticism about his behavior.

Since being drafted by the Browns in the first round in May, Manziel’s weekend adventures — hanging out poolside with Patriots tight end Rob Gronkowski in Las Vegas, photographed on a swan raft while drinking champagne, shown in a video talking into a stack of money as if it were a phone — have added to the leg-end of Johnny Football.

Manziel understands it may not be a good look, but he’s not a par-ty animal.

“I’m going out,” he said. “Everybody goes

out on the weekends and enjoys their life and lives their life. And just for them, they don’t have people that when they walk into a place pull out their phones and all they want to do is follow me around and record everything. My situation is unique and different and now more than ever I’ve seen that it’s an every weekend thing wherever I’m at — whether it’s in Cleve-land on a weekend, or in Dallas or anywhere on a

weekend, people want to record what I’m do-ing because they think it’s a story.

“Everybody goes out and has fun. Everybody goes out and does that and I’m not doing any-thing that’s putting my-self in a harmful situa-tion.”

In the past few days, Hall of Famers Emmitt Smith, Joe Montana and Warren Moon have all said Manziel should focus on his playing ca-reer, and it might help if

he curtailed some of the other stuff.

Manziel respects the opinions of the leg-ends, but says some of the media reports about him have been distort-ed.

“Just what’s getting out on social media doesn’t mean that’s all I’m doing in my life,” he said. “Just my week-ends aren’t what I’m do-ing, seven days a week. That’s two days out of the week and there’s five to six other days when

I’m here at this build-ing going through my playbook and working out just like every other rookie, so nothing that I’m doing on the week-ends is affecting my job.”

Manziel spent the morning throwing touchdown passes to wide-eyed youngsters, who were thrilled to be around him. Man-ziel greeted each with a high-five or hand-shake and “What’s up?” As they put the kids through some drills, the Browns’ other rookies enjoyed giving Manziel a hard time about his celebrity.

“Which one of us is Johnny Manziel?” line-backer Chris Kirksey asked one group.

Manziel said the end-less attention on him has made things tough-er for teammates, who have been asked for their take on all things Johnny.

“They’re tired of that,” he said. “They’re tired of the hype. I’m tired of it as well. I want to wake up one week and not have my name go-ing through something and I’m working on get-ting better at that. But if I want to go home and spend time with my friends or go out on my

weekends, I absolute-ly have the right to do that.”

Browns coach Mike Pettine has said the team will not intervene with Manziel — or any of Cleveland’s players — as long as they’re not involved in criminal ac-tivity and it’s not affect-ing their work.

Manziel said the Browns have not told him to “cool it.”

“I’m not going to change who I am for anybody,” he said. “I’m growing up and con-tinuing to learn from my mistakes and trying not to make the same ones over and over again, but am I going to live in a shell or am I just going to hide from everybody and not do anything?

“I’m very committed to football. I’m commit-ted to my job, but on the weekends, I’m going to enjoy my time off. We deserve it. We work hard here. I am going to en-joy my time off. I’m very about football and very about my job, which doesn’t get reported or won’t get reported, but I am going to enjoy my time off.

“That’s I think what everybody else does and that’s what I should do.”

Manziel: ‘I don’t think I’m doing anything wrong’

AARON JOSEFCZYK / AP

Cleveland’s Johnny Manziel gets a hug from a young girl during a Play 60 youth event at the Browns practice facility on Friday in Berea, Ohio. The AFC rookies took part in the NFL’s annual Rookie Symposium.

BARRY WILNERAssociated Press

EAST RUTHER-FORD, N.J. — Four doz-en women snap selfies in the New York Giants locker room. They ex-amine the pros’ helmets and shoulder pads, then head to the field house to do drills.

The women all are football moms, and they’re learning about tackling techniques, hy-dration, training and equipment care, all de-signed to keep their sons playing the game safely.

The clinics are part of an initiative by the NFL and USA Football, which governs the sport, to demonstrate the ben-efits of the Heads Up Football program. They could soon become a regular part of the cal-endar. The Falcons and Vikings also have held events this month, the Cardinals will do so in July, and 10 other teams are planning such ses-sions.

The idea is simple: making parents feel se-cure about their chil-dren playing the sport.

“Football has become the poster child for con-cussions,” says Chris Golic, whose husband, Mike, played eight sea-sons in the NFL as a de-

fensive lineman, and whose two sons played at Notre Dame. “But it’s a sport that gives a fami-ly so much, and has giv-en my family so much. We want to reach out and say that the sky is not falling, that there are changes happening to make the game safer.”

That’s being done in a hands-on way for the mothers. They break a sweat as they learn the five positions in Heads Up Football that keep the head and neck out of tackling: the break-down; the buzz; the hit; the shoot; and the rip.

While the drills are accompanied ear-ly on by lots of chatter and laughs, the wom-en get serious once USA Football master trainer Vince Digaetano, an as-sistant coach at SUNY Maritime in New York, orders them into action. Explaining is one thing, Digaetano says, but ac-tually performing the drills pays off far more.

“I felt silly at first, like a kid learning,” said Dori Toth of Metuchen, New Jersey, “but at the same time, I felt I was getting it. I understand why they do it step by step. I like doing it like that.”

Another mom, Dena Muller of New York, was so reluctant to allow

her son, Gus Muamba, to play football that it took more than two years before she signed him up for the Harlem Jets. Muller now echoes the message Chris Gol-ic presents to parents who have doubts about football — or any sport, for that matter: “You can’t protect your kids from everything in life, but you can try to keep them safe in everything they do, and keep sup-porting them in chasing

their dream.”Muamba’s dream has

been to play for his lo-cal league, and his mom says the opportunity has done wonders for her son healthwise, so-cially and in the class-room.

“I finally signed him up, still reluctant,” she said of Gus, now 12. “And it was amazing to see the change in my son — although after two weeks, he almost wanted to quit because

he had never worked so hard. I told him, ‘No way. You chose to do this.’

“He lost 12 pounds in the first few weeks of conditioning, and got into very good shape.

There is such an is-sue with weight among young people in Ameri-ca, and this was great to see.

“It was football two hours a day, three times a week. It was real-ly valuable. He had an outlet for all his physical energy. He’d had a prob-lem focusing in school, but after he began foot-ball, his teachers asked me: ‘What’s up with Gus, he seems so focused on his work now?’

“I said, ‘I think it’s the Harlem Jets.’”

Heads Up Football was developed by USA Football in 2012 and launched nationwide last year. It has had al-most instant success, and USA Football ex-pects it to reach 5,500 youth organizations, covering 900,000 play-ers and 150,000 coach-es, in the 2014 season. That’s more than half the youth groups over-seeing local football in America.

Moms of youth players get football cram courseD004295

Saturday, JULY 12th

$2700(regular $3499)

5368 Lake Griffin Road • Lady Lake, Florida • 32159

Join our e-mail club today!

JOHN RAOUX / AP

NFL Foundation Chair Charlotte Jones Anderson, right, speaks during a news conference to support the growth of youth football as NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, left, listens at the NFL annual meeting in Orlando in March. The inherent dangers of such a physical sport certainly contribute to the decrease in players in leagues registered with USA Football, the governing body in this country.

B6 DAILY COMMERCIAL Saturday, June 28, 2014

D003088

Large Selection of Quality Pre-Owned Vehicles UNDER $10,000!1 Year No ChargeMaintenanceWith Purchase Of Any Pre-Owned Vehicle!

2003 HUMMER H2STK#14967B AUTOMATIC

NOW $19,993

LEASE FOR

$139FOR 36 MONTHS WITH$2,800 DOWN, PLUSTAX AND TAG.

LEASE FOR

$229FOR 36 MONTHS WITH

$3,300 DOWN, PLUSTAX AND TAG.

BUY IT FOR

$23,995STOCK #14826, REDBACK UP CAMERA,PARK ASSIST, 17” WHEELS,PLUS TAX, TAG, DEALER FEE

BUY IT FOR

$19,898STOCK #14990

8.4 U CONNECT SCREEN,NAV, SIRIUS RADIO, PLUS

TAX, TAG, DEALER FEE

BRAND NEW 2014 RAM CREW CAB 1500

BRAND NEW 2014 JEEP CHEROKEE

BRAND NEW 2015CHRYSLER 200 LIMITED

BRAND NEW 2014DODGE DART

2011 EQUINOXSTK#TA4458AAUTOMATIC

$19,141*

2012 CHEVY SILVERADOSTK#TA4463AUTOMATIC

$27,991*

2013 DODGE CHALLENGER COUPESTK#TA4504AUTOMATIC

$31,996*

2012 RAM 1500STK#TA4427AUTOMATIC

$28,991*

2013 BMW X3STK#14875AAUTOMATIC

$33,061*

2011 FORD F250STK#14783AAUTOMATIC

$38,999*

2011 KIA SORENTOSTK#14794AAUTOMATIC

$16,661*

2012 TRAVERSESTK#TA4461AUTOMATIC

$23,491*

2009 DODGE AVENGERSTK#TA4486AUTOMATIC

$23,999*

2011 GMC ACADIASTK#141090AAUTOMATIC

$24,886*

2013 KIA FORTE SXSTK#14885AAUTOMATIC

$17,331*

2011 MINI COOPER SSTK#14783Z

MANUAL 4 CYL ENGINE 98

$17,899*

2012 CHEVROLET IMPALASTK#TA4456AUTOMATIC

$17,996*

2012 TOYOTA CAMRY SEDANSTK#14681AAUTOMATIC

$18,466*

2013 CHRYSLER 300STK#TA4473AUTOMATIC

$22,722*

2013 PRIUS VSTK#14240AAUTOMATIC

$21,991*

2011 JEEP WRANGLER SPORTSTK#TA4505AUTOMATIC

$24,466*

*All Prices plus tax, tag and $599 dealer fee. Must take delivery from stock inventory. All other offers and ad prices are excluded. see dealer for details. trade-in must be tiled to purchaser. photos are for illustrational purposes only. The daily commercial andbill bryan dodge jeep ram is not responsible for typographical errors. Chrysler capital cash involved W>A.C. **$2,800 cash down at exception plus dealer fee and taxes.

877-841-24063401 US highway 441/27 • Fruitland ParkMon - Thurs: 9am-8pm • Friday: 9am - 7pm • Saturday: 9am - 6pm • Sunday: 12pm - 5 pm

www.BillBryanChrysler.com

2014 PROMASTERSTK#14407. V6, 19MPG, DON’T MISS IT! WAS $36,610

NOW $29,999

2008 FORD MUSTANG SHELBY GT350STK#14588Z

MANUAL 5 SPEED

$23,995*

Y ogi Berra had a unique way with life. And words. Sportswriters

began listing his malaprop-isms, also called Yogi-isms, such as, “It ain’t over till it’s over,” and “This is like déjà vu all over again.”

He’s credited with dozens more that he likely never said.

Be that as it may, his idio-syncratic adages often in-cluded homespun wisdom, Berra-style. I’ve found that many make good object les-sons for Bible study.

For instance, Yogi alleged-ly said, “You give 100 percent in the first half of the game, and if that isn’t enough in the second half you give what’s left.”

Though not a graceful ath-lete, Yogi was the type of player who got everything out of his natural ability. He also knew you couldn’t give more than 100 percent.

But coaches and athletes love to talk about giving 110 percent.

We know what they mean but it isn’t accurate. Or as Yogi supposedly said, “In theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice there is.”

Once when asked if first baseman Don Mattingly had exceeded expectations for the season, Berra replied, “I’d say he’s done more than that.”

Jesus said something like Yogi when teaching His disci-ples about love. They were fa-miliar with the concept of lov-ing their friends and hating their enemies. Jesus turned their world upside down in Matthew 5:38-41: “You have heard that it was said, ‘An eye for an eye and a tooth for a

tooth.’ But I say to you, do not resist the one who is evil. But if anyone slaps you on the right cheek, turn to him the other also. And if anyone would sue you and take your tunic, let him have your cloak as well. And if anyone forc-es you to go one mile, go with him two miles.”

In theory it’s a lot easier than in practice. We’re sup-posed to allow our enemy not only to slap us but to turn our other cheek to him. We’re told if we are sued for some cloth-ing to give our cloak as well. And in their days, if a Roman soldiers forced bystanders to carry a load for a mile, which they were entitled to do since Rome occupied Israel, Jesus told them to go an extra mile.

Practically speaking, I don’t spend much time around my enemies, at least if I can help it. But I think we can take Yogi’s and Jesus’s sayings and apply them in a practical way with our fami-ly, friends, church members

and co-workers.If we are to go the extra

mile for our enemies, how much further should we be willing to go for our families?

Should we simply exceed expectations, or as Yogi said of Mattingly, should we do more than that?

Honestly, I find myself in cruise control throughout much of my life. It is so easy to come home, sit down in front of the TV and veg all night long. There is so much to do that it’s hard picking a starting point. It’s time for me to put the theory into practice. To do more than ex-ceed expectations. To go the extra mile. To give 100 per-cent and then give what’s left.

We’re not left to our own devices. God gives Christians the Holy Spirit. And it’s not just a one-time occurrence. We’re told in several plac-es the disciples were filled with the Holy Spirit and then filled again later.

In my understanding, the Holy Spirit isn’t something to hoard, He’s someone to use. It’s use it or lose it, kind of like those days in the des-ert when the Israelites gath-ered their manna every day but the Sabbath. On the day before the Sabbath they re-ceived a double portion of manna, enough for Friday and Saturday.

But early on, some gath-ered more manna than needed and the next day, not a Sabbath day, the manna was crawling with maggots.

We are given the portion of the Holy Spirit we need for any and all situations.

Let us be like Mattingly and do more than exceed ex-pectations. Let us live grace-filled, Spirit-filled lives, where we continually receive and pour our grace and Spir-it onto others.

Rick Reed is a columnist who lives in Mount Dora. To reach him, call 383-1458 or email [email protected].

FaithforLifewww.dailycommercial.com352-365-8203 n [email protected]

C1DAILY COMMERCIAL

Saturday, June 28, 2014

JULY 6

FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH WELCOMES NEW PAS-TOR WITH RECEPTION: At 12:15 p.m., at the church, 439 E. Fifth Ave., in Mount Dora. Rev. Kim Uchimura will preach in services at 8:15, 9:30 and 11 a.m. Go to www.mtdorafumc.org for information.

VACATION BIBLE SCHOOL AT SILVER LAKE COMMUNITY CHURCH: July 6-10. Bible learning activities, music, games and a mission proj-ect for kids in India, from 6 to 8:45 p.m., ages 3-11 years, at the church, 34030 Radio Road in Leesburg. Call 352-742-0648 or go to www.silver-lakeecc.org to register.

JULY 7

FAIRWAY CHRISTIAN CHURCH SINGLES FELLOWSHIP: At 11:30 a.m., Luigino’s Restaurant at Spanish Springs, in Lady Lake. Sign-up at the HUB or call the church, 259 Avenida Los Angelos, The Villages, at 352-259-9305.

JULY 19

UPWARD SPORTS GAME DAY CLINIC AND TAILGATE PARTY AT EMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH: Clinic for flag football and cheerleading for K-5th grade from 9 a.m. to noon at the Ca-nal Street field across from Pat Thomas Stadium in Lees-burg. Tailgate party at 12:30 p.m. at the church, 1710 U.S. Highway 441 in Leesburg. Free food, inflatables, face painting, classic car how and Christian music. To register, call 352-323-1588 or email [email protected].

JULY 21

‘GATEWAY TO GALILEE’ VACA-TION BIBLE SCHOOL: Through Friday from 9 a.m. to noon, for age 3 through 5th grade, First United Methodist Church, 439 E. Fifth Ave., in Mount Dora. Register at www.mtdorafumc.org/children.

JULY 23

VACATION BIBLE SCHOOL AT CENTRAL BAPTIST CHURCH: “Hungry Games” for age 4 through 6th grade, at the church, 104 Perkins St., in Leesburg, today through July 27. Call 352-787-3966 to reg-ister or for information.

To place an item on the calen-dar, send an email to [email protected].

CHURCH CALENDAR

RICK REED

REFLECTIONS

With the Holy Spirit’s help, we can exceed expectations

NICOLE WINFIELDAssociated Press

VATICAN CITY — The Vatican conceded Thurs-day that most Catholics re-ject its teachings on sex and contraception as intrusive and irrelevant and officials pledged not to “close our eyes to anything” when it opens a two-year debate on some of the thorniest issues facing the church.

Core church doctrine on the nature of marriage, sex-uality, abortion and divorce isn’t expected to change as a result of the debate that opens in October. But Pope Francis is well aware that the church has lost much of its relevance and credibili-ty in today’s secular world and he is seeking to redirect his ministers to offer fam-ilies, and even gays in civ-il unions, a “new language” that is welcoming and re-sponds to their needs.

The Vatican on Thursday issued the working docu-ment for the synod discus-sions, which in itself marked a sharp change from past practice: The Vatican sent out a 39-point question-naire seeking input from or-dinary Catholics around the

world about their under-standing of, and adherence to, the church’s teaching on sexuality, homosexuali-ty, contraception, marriage and divorce.

Thousands of ordinary Catholics, clergy and aca-demics responded, provid-ing the Vatican with an un-precedented compilation of grass-root data to guide the discussion. Usually, such working papers are com-piled by bishops alone.

The responses, which were summarized in the working document, were brutally honest.

“A vast majority” of re-sponses stressed that “the moral evaluation of the dif-ferent methods of birth con-trol is commonly perceived today as an intrusion in the intimate life of the cou-ple and an encroachment on the autonomy of con-science,” the document

said.“Many responses recom-

mend that for many Cath-olics the concept of ‘re-sponsible parenthood’ encompasses the shared re-sponsibility in conscience to choose the most appro-priate method of birth con-trol.”

Confronted with such a reality, Vatican officials were asked at a press conference if the church might actu-ally change its position to align itself with the practice of most of its faithful rath-er than hold onto teachings that so many Catholics re-ject.

Based on Francis’ own wishes to open the discus-sion at all, deliberate for so long and canvass ordinary Catholics for their input, “We will not close our eyes to anything,” said Monsi-gnor Bruno Forte, a meeting organizer. “These problems

will be considered.”That said, the document

makes clear the value of the church’s core doctrine.

It laments that the me-dia and its own priests have failed to communicate the “positive” aspects of the Vati-can’s key document banning artificial contraception, the 1968 encyclical Humanae Vitae. And it stresses that what is needed is better pas-toral outreach and a “new language” to communicate the complete vision of mar-riage and family life that the church espouses.

“Some observations in-ferred that the clergy some-times feel so unsuited and ill-prepared to treat issues regarding sexuality, fertili-ty and procreation that they often choose to remain si-lent,” the document said.

The officials presenting the report were asked what advice about sexuality, mat-rimony and the ups and downs of raising children a group of celibate men could offer Catholics when they themselves had chosen not to have sex, marry or have families.

Cardinal Lorenzo

Vatican: Many Catholics ignore teachings on sex, contraception

ALESSANDRA TARANTINO / AP

Pope Francis waves as he is driven through the crowd during his weekly general audience in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican, on Wednesday.

Pope Francis is well aware that the church has lost much of its relevance and credibility in today’s secular world and he is seeking to

redirect his ministers to offer families, and even gays in civil unions, a “new language” that is

welcoming and responds to their needs.

SEE VATICAN | C3

C2 DAILY COMMERCIAL Saturday, June 28, 2014

D001408

KIA of LEESBURG9039 US HWY 441 • LEESBURG

352-365-1228

Come visit our new location!

www.KiaofLeesburg.com

The Charlotte MayfieldAssisted Living

Retirement Community460 Newell Hill Rd., Leesburg

352-365-6011Assisted Living, Independent Living, Day Stay Residency

Combining Independence with Personal Care for over 40 yearsLicense # AL 7389

1127 W. Main St., LeesburgJohn W. Snyder, President

Dunstan & Son Plumbing Co., Inc.PLUMBING REPAIR & REMODELING

Est. 1922 CF C057100

(352) 787-4771

For informationon listing

your churchon this pagecall the

Classified Dept.at

352-314-3278

A Time To Reflect

Genesis Psalm Romans Matthew22:1-14 13 6:12-23 10:40-42

ClermontLiberty Baptist Church

11043 True Life Way, Clermont352-394-0708

Senior Pastor Chris JohnsonSun. Svc. 10:40am, Family Prayer Svc. 6:00pm

Unashamed Students Service 6:00pmSun. Bible Fellowship 9:30amWed. Bible Study 6:30pm,Kids 4 Truth Clubs 6:30pm

Groups for all ages, Nursery provided all serviceswww.lbcclermont.org

EustisFirst United Methodist

Church of Eustis“A Place where You Matter”600 S. Grove Street, Eustis

352-357-5830Senior Pastor Beth FarabeeCoffee and Fellowship 9:00amContemporary Worship 9:30amTraditional Worship 11:00am

Life Without Limits Ministries150 E. Barnes Avenue, Eustis

352-399-2913Bishop Robert DixonSunday School 9:00am

Sunday Worship Service 10:00amWednesday Family Bible Study 7:00pm

www.lifewithout-limits.com

St. Thomas Episcopal Church317 S. Mary St., Eustis (corner S. Mary & Lemon St.)

352-357-4358Rev. John W. Lipscomb III, Rector

Sunday Holy Eucharist Services8:00am & 10:30am

Adult Sunday School 9:20am,Children’s Chapel

Thurs. Holy Eucharist & Healing Service10:00am

www.stthomaseustis.com

Unitarian UniversalistCongregation of Lake County

Eustis Woman’s Club Building227 North Center Street, Eustis

352-728-1631Sunday Adult Discussion Group 9:45am

Sunday Celebration of Life Service 11:00amFacebook: www.facebook.com/UUlakeco

Website:www.lakecountyuu.orgEmail: [email protected]

Fruitland ParkHoly Trinity Episcopal Church2201 Spring Lake Road, Fruitland Park

352-787-1500Father Ted Koelln

Sunday Service 8:00am, 10:00amWednesday Healing Service 11:30am

www.holytrinityfp.com

LIFE Church Assembly of God04001 Picciola Rd., Fruitland Park

352-787-7962Pastor Rick Welborne

Sunday Deaf Impaired 10:00amSunday Evening 6:00pm

Wednesday Prayer and Youth Service 7:00pmSunday School 9:00am

Wednesday Bible Study 7:00pm

Pilgrims’ United Church ofChrist (UCC)

509 County Road 468, Fruitland Parkwww.pucc.info

352-365-2662 or [email protected]. Ronal K.F. Nicholas, OSL, Pastor

Rev. Camille F. Gianaris, Pastoral AssistantInclusive • ProgressiveSunday Worship 10:00am

Contact us or visit our website for more info

GrovelandMt. Olive Missionary

Baptist Church15641 Stucky Loop, Stucky (West of Mascotte)

352-429-3888Rev. Clarence L. Southall-PastorSunday Worship Service 11:00am

Sunday School 9:30amBible Study-Wednesday 7:00pm

Youth Bible Study-Wednesday 7:00pm

Zion Lutheran Church (ELCA)547 S. Main Ave., Groveland

352-429-2960Pastor Ken Stoyer

Sunday Worship Service 11:00amAdult Sunday School 9:30am

Leesburg

Leesburg

Bethany Lutheran Church1334 Griffin Road, Leesburg

352-787-7275Sunday Service 9:30am

Wednesday Bible Study 10:00amSunday Bible Study 8:30am

Emmanuel Baptist Churchof Leesburg

1710 U.S. Hwy. 441 E., Leesburg352-323-1588

Pastor Jeff CarneySunday Celebration Service 10:30am

Wednesday Men’s Prayer Breakfast 8:00amWednesday Praise & Prayer 6:30pm

Sunday Bible Study 9:15amWednesday Epic Youth Ministry 6:30pm

www.EmmanuelFL.com

First Baptist Leesburg220 N. 13th St., Leesburg

352-787-1005Sunday Service 8:15am, 9:30am

& 10:45amSunday Bible Study 8:15am,

9:30am & 10:45amWednesday Night Activities 6:00pm

www.fbcleesburg.org

First Church of Christ,Scientist, Leesburg

13th & Line St., Leesburg352-787-1921

Sunday Service 10:30amSunday School 10:30am

Wednesday School 3:30pm

First Presbyterian Curchof Leesburg

200 S. Lone Oak Dr., Leesburg352-787-5687

Sunday Service 10:00pmSunday School 8:45am

www.firstpresleesburg.org“Disciples Making Disciples”

Gloria Dei Lutheran Church130 S. Lone Oak Drive, Leesburg

352-787-3223Sunday Worship October-April

8:00am & 10:30amSunday Worship May-September

9:15amChristian Education October-April

9:15amwww.gloriadeielca.net

Lakes and HillsCovenant Church

Rev. Ken Folmsbee, PhD, PastorWorship Service 10:15am

Bible Study 9:00am@Women’s Club of Leesburg700 S. 9th Street, Leesburg

Church Office106 S. Palm Ave., Howie-in-the-Hills

352-552-0052www.lakeshillscovenantchurch.org

Legacy Community ChurchLocated at Lake Square Mall, Leesburg

(suite 331 next to JCPenney)Pastor Theo Bob-352-250-0156

Pastor Buddy Walker-352-978-0509Spanish Pastor Luis Fuentes-352-552-1357

Sunday Worship Service 9:30amLegacy is a multicultural, multiracial,

generational, Christian Churchwww.legacycic.org

St. Paul RomanCatholic Church

(In union with the Roman Catholic Diocese ofOrlando & The Vatican)

1330 Sunshine Avenue, LeesburgWeekday Masses M-F 8:30am

Sacrament of PenanceSaturday 2:30-3:30pm (or by appointment)Saturday Masses 4:00 & 7:00pm (Spanish)

Sunday Masses 7:00, 9:00, 11:00am, 12:30pmOffice Hours M-F 8:00-12:00, 1:00-4:00

Seventh Day Adventist508 S. Lone Oak Dr., Leesburg

352-326-4109Worship Service 9:30am

Sabbath School Service 11:00amWednesday Prayer Meeting 7:00pm

Solid Rock Evangelical FellowshipEvangelical Presbyterian Church

Leesburg Community Building109 E. Dixie Avenue, Leesburg

352-431-3944Rev. Dr. John LodgeSunday Service 9:30amSunday School 10:45amwww.solidrockef.com

The Healing Place1012 W Main Street, Leesburg

352-617-0569Facilitator: Phyllis Gilbert

Sunday Service and Kids Club 11:00amWednesday Bible Study and

Kids Club 6:00pm(Nursey open for all services)

“Come as you are and leave different!”

MinneolaNew Life Presbyterian

Church, PCA18237 E. Apshawa Road, Minneola

Music Ministries352-241-8181

Sunday School 9:30amSunday Worship 10:45am

MountDoraCongregational Church650 N. Donnelly St., Mount Dora

352-383-2285Rev. Dr. Richard Don

Sunday 11:00am(Communion 1st Sunday of the month)Monday Bible Study 9:00am & 6:00pm

130 yrs. of service

First Presbyterian Churchof Mount Dora

222 W. 6th Avenue at Alexander, Mt. Dora352-383-9132

Combined Summer Worship 10:00amEvery Sunday June 8th-August 31st

www.fpcmtdora.org

St. Philip Lutheran Church1050 Boyd Drive, Mt. Dora

352-383-5402Pastor Rev. Dr. Johan Bergh

Sunday Service 9:30am(Childcare Provided)Fellowship 10:45am

www.stphiliplc.com

OkahumpkaCorpus Christi Episcopal

Church3430 County Road 470, Okahumpka

352-787-8430Sunday Rite II Eucharist Service 9:00am

Rite I Eucharist Service 11:30amFellowship following 9:00am service

and before 11:30am serviceThursday Morning Prayer 9:30am

www.corpuschristiepiscopal.org

TavaresAll Saint’s Roman Catholic

Chapel11433 U.S. 441, River Plaza #11, Tavares

407-391-8678352-385-3880

Sunday Latin Mass 8:00am & 10:00am

First Baptist Church of Tavares124 N. Joanna Avenue, Tavares

352-343-7131Sunday Contemporary Service 8:30am

Sunday Traditional Service11:00am & 6:00pm

Sunday Bible Study (all ages) 10:00amWednesday Fellowship Meal 5:00pmWednesday Life University 6:15pmWednesday Prayer Service 6:15pm

“Providing direction for all generations”www.fbctavares.com

Tavares First UnitedMethodist Church (UMC)Corner of Old 441 & SR 19, Tavares

352-343-2761Pastor John Barham

Traditional Service 9:00am (Sanctuary)Contemporary Cafe-Style 10:30am

(Activity Center)Inquirer’s Adult Sunday School 10:15am

Treehouse Kids Church 10:45amwww.fumctavares.com

WebsterLighthouse Foundation

Ministries International INC.11282 SR 471, Webster

352-793-2631Pastor Patricia T. Burnham

Sunday Services 9:00am & 6:00pmThursday Night 7:00pm

3rd Saturday Food Basket Give-A-Waywww.lighthousefoundationministries.org

Linden Church of God4309 CR 772, WebsterPastor Doyle D. Glass

Sunday Morning Worship 10:30amSunday Evening Worship 6:00pm

Sunday School 9:45amWednesday Night (Family Training Hour) 7:00pm

WildwoodGreater Piney GroveBaptist Church, Inc.112 Huey Street, Wildwood

352-748-1695Rev. Danny L. McKenzie, Pastor

Sunday School 9:15amMorning Worship 10:30amWednesday Night 6:30pm

“Join us this Sunday for a relevantmessage, great music and friendlypeople who are just like you.”

[email protected]

Saturday, June 28, 2014 DAILY COMMERCIAL C3

Baldisseri, who is orga-nizing the synod, said many lay Catholics were consulted in the prepa-ration of the working document, and the Vat-ican spokesman noted that there was “ample representation” of the laity at Thursday’s press conference: a married couple celebrating their 25th anniversary joined the six clerics on the po-dium.

The document itself, though, acknowledged that the church had a credibility problem.

“Responses from al-most every part of the world frequently re-fer to the sexual scan-dals within the church (pedophilia in partic-ular) and in general, to a negative experience with the clergy and oth-er persons,” it said. “Sex scandals significant-ly weaken the church’s moral credibility.”

The document doesn’t recommend changing church teaching on key hot-button issues like its opposition to gay marriage.

But citing Francis’ fre-quent call for the church to be more merciful and less judgmental, it rec-ommends new pastoral guidelines to confront the increasing reali-ty of legal recognition for same-sex unions, stressing that gays must be treated with dignity, respect and spared dis-crimination.

“The episcopal con-ferences amply demon-strate that they are try-ing to find a balance between the church’s teaching on the fam-ily and a respectful, non-judgmental atti-tude toward people liv-ing in such unions,” it said. It distinguished between gays who are “discreet” in their life-style and those who ac-

tively, “often aggressive-ly” call attention to their unions.

“The great chal-lenge will be to devel-op a ministry which can maintain the prop-er balance between ac-cepting persons in a spirit of compassion and gradually guiding them to authentic hu-man and Christian ma-turity,” it said.

And it suggests ways to improve and expe-dite the church’s cum-bersome and expensive annulment process to enable Catholics who divorce and remar-ry to receive the sacra-ments. Currently, such divorced and civilly re-married Catholics can-not receive communion because the church thinks they are essen-tially living in sin and committing adultery.

The document sug-gested creating more marriage tribunals in parts of the world where they don’t exist to handle annulment requests, removing the time-consuming auto-matic appeals or shift-ing to an administra-tive, rather than judicial process altogether.

Francis has spoken out about the need for a merciful approach to the divorce-remarried issue, but it remains un-clear how far he is will-ing to go to welcome these Catholics into ful-ly participating in the sacramental life of the church.

Finally, the Vatican noted that the threats to the family come from everywhere, including social media, with fam-ily members spend-ing more time checking their smart phones and maintaining virtual re-lationships than with one another.

“The responses con-sistently mention how even a family’s leisure time is hijacked by these instruments,” it said.

VATICAN FROM PAGE C1

RUSSELL CONTRERASAssociated Press

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — The Archdiocese of Santa Fe announced Wednesday it is exploring sainthood for an Italian-born nun who chal-lenged Billy the Kid, calmed angry mobs and helped open New Mexico territory hospi-tals and schools.

Archbishop Michael Shee-han said he has received per-mission from the Vatican to open the “Sainthood Cause” for Sister Blandina Segale, an educator and social worker who worked in Ohio, Colora-do and New Mexico.

It’s the first time in New Mexico’s 400-year histo-ry with the Roman Catholic Church that a decree open-ing the cause of beatifica-tion and canonization has been declared, church offi-cials said.

“There are other holy peo-ple who have worked here,” said Allen Sanchez, president and CEO for CHI St. Joseph’s Children in Albuquerque, a social service agency Segale founded. “But this would be a saint (who) started institu-tions in New Mexico that are still in operation.”

Segale, a nun with the Sis-ters of Charity of Cincinna-ti, came to Trinidad, Colo., in 1877 to teach poor chil-dren and was later trans-ferred to Santa Fe, where she co-founded public and Cath-olic schools. During her time in New Mexico, she worked with the poor, the sick and immigrants. She also advo-

cated on behalf of Hispan-ics and Native Americans who were losing their land to swindlers.

Her encounters with Old West outlaws later became the stuff of legend and were the subject of an episode of the CBS series “Death Val-ley Days.” The episode, called “The Fastest Nun in the West,”

focused on her efforts to save a man from a lynch mob.

But her encounters with Billy the Kid remain among her most popular and well-known Western frontier ad-ventures.

According to one sto-ry, she received a tip that The Kid was coming to her town to scalp the four doc-

tors who had refused to treat his friend’s gunshot wound. Segale nursed the friend to health, and when Billy came

to Trinidad, Colo., to thank her, she asked him to aban-don his violent plan. He agreed.

Another story says The Kid and his gang attempted to rob a covered wagon travel-ing on the frontier. But when the famous outlaw looked in-side, he saw Segale.

“He just tipped his hat,” said Sheehan, the archbish-op. “And left.”

Many of the tales she wrote in letters to her sister later became the book, “At the End of the Santa Fe Trail.”

“She was just amazing,” said Victoria Marie Forde of the Sisters of Charity of Cin-cinnati. “It’s tough to live up to her example.”

Segale found St. Joseph’s Hospital in Albuquerque be-fore returning to Cincinna-ti in 1897 to start Santa Maria Institute, which served re-cent immigrants.

Her work resonates today, with poverty, immigration and child care still high-pro-file issues, Sanchez said.

Officials say it could take years — possibly a century — before Segale becomes a saint. The Vatican has to in-vestigate her work and moni-tor for any related “miracles.”

Those miracles could come in the form of healings, assis-tance to recent Central Amer-ican immigrant children de-tained at the U.S. border or some other unexplained oc-currences after devotees pray to her, Sanchez said.

“She’s going to have to keep working,” Sanchez said. “She’s not done.”

‘Fastest Nun in the West’ on path for sainthood

RUSSELL CONTRERAS / AP

Archbishop Michael Sheehan talks to reporters Wednesday at St. Joseph Community Health in Albuquerque during an announcement the Archdiocese of Santa Fe is exploring sainthood for Sister Blandina Segale.

PALACE OF THE GOVERNORS / AP

Sister Blandina Segale co-founded the first hospitals and schools in New Mexico.

Segale, a nun with the Sisters of Charity of Cincinnati, came to Trinidad, Colo., in 1877 to

teach poor children and was later transferred to Santa Fe, where she co-founded public and Catholic

schools. During her time in New Mexico, she worked with the poor, the sick and immigrants. She also advocated on behalf of Hispanics and Native Americans who were losing their land to swindlers.

MARYCLAIRE DALE AND MICHAEL RUBINKAMAssociated Press

PHILADELPHIA — A Pennsyl-vania pastor who broke church law by presiding over his son’s same-sex wedding ceremony and then became an outspo-ken activist for gay rights can re-turn to the pulpit after a United Methodist Church appeals pan-el on Tuesday overturned a de-cision to defrock him.

The nine-person panel or-dered the church to restore Frank Schaefer’s pastoral cre-dentials, saying the jury that convicted him last year erred when fashioning his punish-ment.

“I’ve devoted my life to this church, to serving this church, and to be restored and to be able to call myself a reverend again and to speak with this voice means so much to me,” an exultant Schaefer told The Asso-ciated Press, adding he intends to work for gay rights “with an even stronger voice from within the United Methodist Church.”

The church suspended Schae-fer, of Lebanon, Pennsylvania, for officiating his son’s 2007 wedding, then defrocked him when he refused to promise to uphold the Methodist law book “in its entirety,” including its ban on clergy performing same-sex marriages.

Schaefer appealed, arguing the decision was wrong because it was based on an assumption he would break church law in the future.

The appeals panel, which met in Linthicum, Maryland, last week to hear the case, upheld a 30-day suspension that Schae-fer has already served and said he should get back pay dating to when the suspension ended in December.

Bishop Peggy Johnson of the church’s eastern Pennsylvania conference said Tuesday she will abide by the panel’s deci-sion and return him to active service.

The ruling can be appealed to the Methodist church’s high-est court. The pastor who pros-ecuted Schaefer, the Rev. Chris-topher Fisher, said he has not made a decision about an ap-peal.

“I’m still in prayerful consid-eration about that,” said Fisher, calling Tuesday’s decision “not entirely unexpected.”

At a news conference in Phil-adelphia, Schaefer said he ex-pects to take a job with the Methodist church in California, a liberal bastion where there is presumably little chance he would be punished for defying church doctrine on homosexu-ality.

The issue of gay marriage has long roiled the United Meth-odist Church, the nation’s sec-ond-largest Protestant denomi-nation. Hundreds of Methodist ministers have publicly reject-ed church policies that allow gay members but ban “self-avowed practicing homosexu-als” from becoming clergy and forbid ministers from perform-ing same-sex marriages.

Traditionalists say clergy have no right to break church law just because they disagree with it. Some conservative pastors are calling for a breakup of the de-nomination, which has 12 mil-lion members worldwide, say-ing the split over gay marriage is irreconcilable.

Schaefer said Tuesday’s de-cision “signals a major change within the United Methodist Church, for sure.”

The appeals panel, howev-er, suggested it was not making a broader statement about the

church’s position on homosexu-ality but based its decision sole-ly on the facts of Schaefer’s case.

The jury’s punishment was il-legal under church law, the ap-peals panel concluded, writing in its decision that “revoking his credentials cannot be squared with the well-established prin-ciple that our clergy can only be punished for what they have been convicted of doing in the past, not for what they may or may not do in the future.”

The decision also noted that Schaefer’s son had asked him to perform the wedding; that the ceremony was small and pri-vate, held not in a Methodist church but in a Massachusetts restaurant; and that Schaefer did not publicize the wedding until a member of his congre-gation learned of it and filed the complaint in April 2013.

“The committee notes that, in another case involving different facts, a majority of its members might well have concluded that a different penalty better serves the cause of achieving a just res-olution,” the panel said, add-ing that some of its members wanted a longer suspension for Schaefer.

Schaefer, 52, said he expects the decision to stand.

“The church is changing,” he said, “and that is good news for everybody.”

Pastor defrocked over gay wedding is reinstated

MATT ROURKE / AP

United Methodist pastor Frank Schaefer, right, hugs the Rev. David Wesley Brown after a news conference Tuesday at First United Methodist Church of Germantown in Philadelphia.

C4 DAILY COMMERCIAL Saturday, June 28, 2014

PsychicServices

A/CServices

Blinds Svcs.

BathtubRefinishing

ContractorServices

Door & LockServices

ApplianceRepair

Garage DoorServices

HomeImprovement

IrrigationServices

SprinklerRepairs

Timers, Valves, Heads, Leaks, etc.(352) 787-9001

That’s all we do. Since 1979Native, 4th Generation

5% OffAny Svc.under$1,000

$150 OffAny Svc.$2,000 ormore

$75 OffAny Svc.$1,000 ormore

LawnMaintenance, Hardscape, Patios,RetainingWalls, Maint., SoddingLeesburg 536-3708

LandscapingServices

All Lawnand TreeCare

ServiceNatural Land

Clearing (Goats)“BEST PRICES” • Free Est.

352-460-7186

Pet GroomingServices

LegalServices

PaintingServices

Shower DoorsService

EnclosureScreening

WindowServices

HandymanServices

BOYDSYou call it, We haul it!

352-460-7186

Grading,Loading, etc.

MarineServices

Affordable HomeRepair, LLC

Interior/Exterior Painting• Free Pressure Washing with all

Exterior Paints.Driveways and DecksNO JOB TOO BIG OR SMALL • Lic/InsCall Pat 352-551-6073

ElectricalServices

RoofingServices

To have your Professional Service listed here, pleasecontact the Classified Department at (352) 314-3278.

TreeService

PlumbingServices

LandClearing Services

BrocksLAWN SERVICE

352-242-7864

MowingTrimming

Mulching

• All-Rescreens • Screen Room&Pool Enclosures •Window Rescreens•Vinyl Siding • Gutters • All AluminumRepair

407-413-6130

Danny’s Lawn Care Service“Quality Service from the Ground Up”

Mowing, Edging, TrimmingFREE ESTIMATES

No job too large or small

352-455-6679

HaulingServices

Call Duane Goodwin(352) 787-9001

Tractor WorkBush Hogging, Rototilling,

Front-end Work,Prepare Garden Beds

HAULING!YOU FILL OR I FILL!Clean out & Tear out!Land Clearing! Bob Cat Avail.ALL PRO CLEAN UPS INC.

352-267-4790Lic. Ins.

ConcreteServices

J.C.C. Bobcat & Tree Svc. Inc.Land Clearing/Excavating

Fill Dirt/ClayHauling/Debris Removal

Stump GrindingDemolition/Grading/ Driveways

Owner Operator

352-455-7608

LawnServices

J.C.C. Bobcat & Tree Svc. Inc.Residential/Commercial

Trimming/RemovalPalms/Hedges/Stump GrindingDebris removal/Hauling

Fill Dirt/Clay/Grading/DrivewaysLic/Ins • Insurance Work • 24 Hrs.

352-455-7608

HOPKINSCONCRETE CREATIONS

LIC. INS.

LANDSCAPE - CURBING - STONE WALLS - HARDSCAPECON/PAVERS PATIOS - PALMS - PLANTS - ROCKS & MULCH

Email:[email protected]

HOPKINSCONCRETE CREATIONS

LIC. INS.

LANDSCAPE - CURBING - STONE WALLS - HARDSCAPECON/PAVERS PATIOS - PALMS - PLANTS - ROCKS & MULCH

Email:[email protected]

• Pressure Washing • Painting• Flooring • Carpet • Clean Outs• Clean Ups • Hauling • Licensed352-787-7056

HomeImprovement

D00

1406

Saturday, June 28, 2014 DAILY COMMERCIAL C5

MATTHEW CRAFTAssociated Press

NEW YORK — Sum-mertime settled into Wall Street on Friday as ma-jor stock indexes drifted slightly higher going into the weekend. The listless day of trading left the stock market with a tiny loss for the week, its sec-ond this month.

A handful of corpo-rate results drove trad-ing in some big names. Warnings of weaker earnings pushed Du-Pont down, while stron-ger results pushed Nike up. But the overall mar-ket was essentially flat.

“The fact is, it’s the summer, and there isn’t much happening,” said Jack Ablin, chief invest-ment officer at BMO Pri-vate Bank in Chicago.

That could change quickly. Turmoil in the Middle East could easily rattle U.S. markets, es-pecially if the fighting in Iraq drives oil prices too high, Ablin said. Ris-ing tensions between Ukraine and Russia also remain a concern.

“The risk in the sum-mer typically isn’t finan-cial, it’s political,” he said. “This summer it’s geopo-litical: Iraq and Ukraine.”

The Standard & Poor’s 500 index edged up 3.74 points, or 0.2 percent,

to close at 1,960.96. The most widely used bench-mark for stock funds lost 1.91 points for the week, a loss of 0.1 percent.

The Dow Jones in-dustrial average rose 5.71 points, less than 0.1 percent, to close at 16,851.84, while the Nasdaq composite rose 18.88 points, or 0.4 per-cent, to 4,397.93.

Many investors have been waiting for the market to take a break from its long climb. The S&P 500 has gained 5.8 percent in three months and reached its latest all-time high on June 20, one week ago.

In Friday trading, Mi-cheals Companies made a minor gain in its return to the stock market. Bain Capital and the Black-stone Group, two pri-vate equity firms, bought the operator of arts and crafts stores in 2006 and returned it to investors in a $472 million initial public offering.

D003343

CURRENCIESDollar vs. Exchange Pvs Rate DayYYen 101.40 101.69Euro $1.3645 $1.3607Pound $1.7021 $1.7024Swiss franc 0.8912 0.8939Canadian dollar 1.0662 1.0687Mexican peso 12.9707 13.0178

[email protected] n 352-365-8263

DOW JONES16,851.84

+5.71

NASDAQ4,397.93

+18.88

S&P 5001,960.96

+3.74

GOLD1,320.00

+3.00

SILVER21.08

-0.031

CRUDE OIL105.74

-0.10

T-NOTE 10-year2.53

+0.01A A A B ABA

www.dailycommercial.com

ANNE D’INNOCENZIOAP Retail Writer

NEW YORK — Mi-chaels had a tepid re-turn to the stock market Friday, its shares go-ing back and forth be-tween small gains and declines.

The arts and crafts store operator’s shares closed up 2 cents to $17.02 in trading on the Nasdaq, after falling as much as 2 percent earlier.

The lackluster re-sponse shows investors are wary of retailing and the fragmented $30 bil-lion arts and crafts in-dustry. The last IPO from a major retailer was The Container Store Group Inc., which made its de-but in November. Its shares have fallen 20 percent since then and closed at $29 Friday.

The IPO comes amid a market rush. It’s the third-busiest week for IPOs since 2000, ac-cording to IPO invest-ment adviser Renais-sance Capital.

Michaels Cos. Inc., which also runs the Aaron Brothers chain, priced an initial pub-lic offering of 27.8 mil-lion shares at $17 each, at the low end of its pre-dicted range.

The Irving, Texas, com-pany raised $472 million from the offering.

Private equity firms Bain Capital LLC and The Blackstone Group LP bought Michaels in a $6 billion leveraged

buyout in 2006.Michaels’ IPO was de-

layed two years after its then-CEO John Menzer resigned after a stroke.

Michaels, which was in a sweet spot during the Great Recession when homemade goods gained new currency as people tried to save money, has faced in-creasingly tough com-petition. That’s com-ing from discounters — Wal-Mart Stores Inc., for example, recently brought back its fabric offerings — and online

king Amazon.com.Michaels has been

late to the online par-ty, launching its e-com-merce business only this year.

In an interview with The Associated Press

on Friday, Chuck Ru-bin, who was appoint-ed CEO of Michaels in March 2013, dismissed the market’s response. He said he’s focusing on long-term opportuni-ties, and that investors will be rewarded.

“This is a marathon, not a sprint,” he added.

ADRIAN SAINZAssociated Press

MEMPHIS, Tenn. — A Tennes-see center that has portable pow-er generators, pressurized wa-ter pumps and other heavy-duty equipment that could be deliv-ered to nuclear plants hit by a natural disaster or other extreme event, such as the tsunami in Ja-pan, officially opened during a ceremony Friday.

Officials with nuclear power companies, the Nuclear Regula-tory Commission and the Ten-nessee Valley Authority attended the ribbon-cutting at the Mem-phis Regional Response Center.

The facility, along with an identical center that has opened in Phoenix, is part of an effort by the nuclear industry to possess the ability to fly in the equip-ment to try to avert a meltdown. The warehouse is minutes from Memphis International Airport, where FedEx planes could be quickly loaded with the equip-ment for deployment.

The response centers are part of a plan being developed to meet new rules that emerged after the 2011 tsunami struck the Fukushima Dai-ichi nu-clear plant in Japan, flooding its emergency equipment and causing nuclear meltdowns that sent radiation into the environ-ment. The effort, called FLEX, is the nuclear industry’s meth-od for meeting new U.S. Nucle-ar Regulatory Commission rules

that will force 65 U.S. plants to get extra emergency equipment on site and store it protectively.

The equipment in the Memphis and Phoenix facilities is viewed as a kind of rescue cavalry for the plants’ backup systems and their on-site emergency equipment. Together, the centers represent a $400 million investment from companies operating 100 reactors nationwide, officials said.

Memphis and Phoenix were chosen for their central loca-tions and proximity to the na-tion’s nuclear plants, officials said. The TVA operates three nu-clear plants within a day’s drive of the Memphis hub.

Michael Pacilio, president of

nuclear reactor operator Exelon Nuclear, said members of the U.S. nuclear power industry met with officials in Japan and toured the Fukushima facility to learn what equipment would best fit their needs. Three years of de-sign and planning went into the two facilities, Pacilio said.

Along with high and low-pres-sure cooling water pumps and power generators, the equipment also includes fuel pumps, emer-gency lighting towers, water treat-ment equipment, and electrical distribution cabinets. There’s also a tank that holds boron, which is pumped into a reactor to absorb neutrons and safely shut down a reactor that is at a critical stage.

Michaels store has tepid return to public markets

BEBETO MATTHEWS / AP

Michaels Stores CEO Chuck Rubin stands outside the NASDAQ exchange after the start of trading Friday in New York.

Stocks notch tiny gains, but still end week lower

Memphis center to help in case of nuclear disaster

ADRIAN SAINZ / AP

Tennessee Valley Authority executive vice president Joe Grimes, left, and president Michael Pacilio cut a ribbon at a ceremony unveiling the new Memphis Regional Response Center on Friday in Memphis, Tenn.

The Market In Review

A-B-CABB Ltd .78e 22.95 +.15ACE Ltd 2.54e 103.39 -.01ADT Corp .80 34.69 +.21AES Corp .20 u15.53 +.08AFLAC 1.48 62.72 +.09AGCO .44 56.09 -.02AK Steel ... 7.91 +.16AMN Hlth ... 12.36 +.31AOL ... 39.48 +.80A10 Nwks n ... 12.43 -.17AVG Tech ... 19.80 -.21Aarons .08 u35.61 +.51AbbottLab .88 40.54 -.08AbbVie 1.68 u56.79 +.28AberFitc .80 43.04 +.73AbdAsPac .42 6.22 +.01Accenture 1.86e 81.35 -.18AccessMid 2.30f 63.01 +.22AccoBrds ... 6.35 +.09Actavis ... 223.27 -.82ActiniumP ... 6.92 -.14Actuant .04 34.64 +.79Acuity .52 136.31 -.82AMD ... 4.11 +.08AdvSemi .18e 6.51 +.07AecomTch ... 31.56 -.39Aerohive n ... 8.17 -.44Aeropostl ... 3.55 +.13Aetna .90 81.77 -.28AffilMgrs ... 202.45 +1.90Agilent .53 57.50 -.19Agnico g .32 37.63 +.35Agrium g 3.00 91.89 -.25AirLease .12 38.18 -.40AirProd 3.08 128.61 +.55Aircastle .80 17.99 +.28Airgas 2.20f 109.95 +.93AlaskaAir 1.00 95.38 +.84Albemarle 1.10 71.85 +.78AlcatelLuc .18e 3.61 +.01Alcoa .12 14.93 -.01AllegTch .72 44.58 +.30Allegion n .32 55.58 -.74Allergan .20u173.95 +3.40Allete 1.96 50.96 +.66AlldNevG ... 3.82 +.08AlldWldA s .90f 37.65 -.11AllisonTrn .48 30.85 -.16Allstate 1.12 58.69 +.14AllyFin n ... 24.19 -.50AlonUSA .24 12.67 -.32AlphaNRs ... 3.72 -.02AlpAlerMLP1.09e u18.92 +.05AltisResid 1.20e 26.38 -.22Altria 1.92 41.82 -.08AmberRd n ... 16.58 +.03Ambev n .22e 7.02 -.07Ameren 1.60 40.61 +.14AMovilL .34e 20.69 +1.00AmApparel ... .97 +.22AmAxle ... 18.88 +.03AmEagE rs ... 5.90 -.08AEagleOut .50 11.55 +.06AEP 2.00 u55.33 +.33AEqInvLf .18f 24.38 -.11AFnclGrp .88a 59.10 -.18AHm4Rnt n .20 17.84 -.01AmIntlGrp .50 54.61 -.28AResidPrp ... 18.79 -.23AmTower 1.36f 89.02 +.39AVangrd .20e d12.76 ...AmWtrWks 1.24f u49.03 +.24Ameriprise 2.32fu119.81 +.66AmeriBrgn .94 72.87 +.15Ametek .36f 52.92 +.10AmpioPhm ... 8.31 +.35Anadarko 1.08f 109.50 +.41AnglogldA ... 16.76 -.11ABInBev 2.82e 114.87 +.76Annaly 1.25e 11.42 -.04AnteroRs n ... 64.81 +.24Anworth .48e 5.17 -.01Aon plc 1.00f 90.39 +.42Apache 1.00 99.76 +.07AptInv 1.04 u32.54 +.30ApolloCRE 1.60 16.40 +.01ApolloGM 4.25e 27.72 +.77AquaAm s .61 25.85 +.41Aramark n .30 25.91 +.41ArborRT .52 6.77 -.25ArcelorMit .20 14.81 -.09Arcelor 16 1.50 22.44 -.04ArchCoal .04m 3.57 -.09ArchDan .96 43.82 -.11ArdmoreS n .40 13.68 -.38AresCmcl 1.00 12.43 -.04ArmourRsd .60 4.33 +.04ArmstrWld ... 57.50 -.32ArrowEl ... 60.32 +.60ArtisanPtr 2.20a 56.10 -.23AshHPr wi .20 17.05 -.05AshfordHT .48 11.51 +.37Ashland 1.36 107.85 -.31Assurant 1.08f 65.59 -.58AssuredG .44 24.78 -.25AstoriaF .16 13.56 +.15AstraZen 2.80e 74.10 -.03AthlonEn n ... 47.01 +1.26AtlPwr g .40 3.92 +.21AtlasRes 2.32 20.24 -.02AtwoodOcn ... 51.83 -.17AuRico g .08m 4.31 +.02AveryD 1.40f 51.48 +.07AvivREIT 1.44 28.38 -.13Avnet .60 43.71 -.03Avon .24 14.51 +.04Axiall .64 47.09 +1.21AXIS Cap 1.08 44.07 -.25B2gold g ... 2.86 -.04BB&T Cp .96f 39.29 +.27BHP BillLt 2.36e 68.89 +.26BP PLC 2.28 52.60 -.15BP Pru 9.84e 98.90 -.90BPZ Res ... 3.08 -.03BRF SA .19e 24.20 +.34BabckWil .40 32.00 -.08BakrHu .68f 73.96 +.86BallCorp .52 u62.99 +.70BalticTrdg .07e 5.81 -.29BcBilVArg .50e 12.81 ...BcoBrad pf .44e 14.74 -.17BcoSantSA .82e 10.36 -.11BcoSBrasil .93e 6.87 -.05BcSanChile1.02e 26.67 -.01BkofAm .04 15.33 -.08BkNYMel .68f 36.23 +.37Bankrate ... 17.62 -.02BankUtd .84 33.50 -.47Barclay .41e 14.84 +.29BarVixMdT ... 12.78 ...B iPVix rs ... 28.86 -.25Bard .88f 144.23 -.29BarnesNob ... 23.42 +.14Barnes .44 38.86 +.64BarrickG .20 18.02 +.01BasicEnSv ... 28.32 +.51Baxter 2.08f 72.83 -.40BeazerHm ... 20.88 +.53Belden .20 u78.83 +1.46Bemis 1.08 40.74 +.18Berkley .44f 46.07 +.38BerkH B ... 127.32 +.22BerryPlas ... 25.51 -.06BestBuy .76f 31.04 +.72

BigLots .68 u46.17 +1.88BBarrett ... 26.65 -.78BioMedR 1.00 21.94 +.30BioTime ... 3.07 -.02Blackstone 1.39e 33.46 +.28BlockHR .80 33.45 +.14Blount ... 14.10 +.56BlueLinx ... 1.47 +.19Blyth .10m 8.12 +.63BdwlkPpl .40 18.83 +.17Boeing 2.92 128.54 +.52BoiseCasc ... 28.81 -.38BonanzaCE ... 56.66 -1.41BoozAllnH .44f 20.93 -.57BorgWrn s .50 65.36 +.30BostProp 2.60a 118.53 +1.22BostonSci ... 12.76 +.13BoydGm ... 12.00 -.08Brandyw .60 15.61 +.36BrightHrz ... u43.49 +.03Brinker .96 49.34 -1.15BrMySq 1.44 49.05 -.50Brixmor n .80 23.04 +.04Brookdale ... 33.67 +.01BrkfldAs g .64m 43.95 +.69BrkfldPrp 1.00 20.70 -.05Brunswick .40 42.19 +.30Buenavent .02e 11.46 +.13BldBear ... 12.54 -.88BungeLt 1.36f 76.22 +.60BurlStrs n ... 31.03 +.02C&J Engy ... 33.28 +.46CBIZ Inc ... 8.90 -.05CBL Asc .98 18.94 +.15CBRE Grp ... u31.99 +.18CBS A .48 61.19 -.79CBS B .48 61.23 -.76CBS Outd n 1.48 33.45 -1.70CF Inds 4.00 240.27 -1.21CHC Grp n ... 8.47 +.41CIT Grp .40 46.17 +.88CLECO 1.60f u58.68 +.10CMS Eng 1.08 u30.91 +.11CNH Indl ... 10.22 -.07CNO Fincl .24 17.77 -.08CST Brnds .25 34.13 -.34CSX .64f 30.77 +.12CVR Rfng 3.08e 24.78 -.27CVS Care 1.10 75.72 +.18CYS Invest 1.28 8.85 +.01Cabelas ... 61.52 +.92CblvsnNY .60 17.76 +.18CabotOG s .08 34.20 +.11CalDive ... d1.31 ...Calix ... 8.11 +.21CallGolf .04 8.25 +.28CallonPet ... 11.34 +.27Calpine ... 23.63 +.12CAMAC s ... .72 +.05Cameco g .40 19.57 +.29Cameron ... 67.22 +.19CampSp 1.25 45.67 +.41CampusCC .66 8.69 +.07CdnNR gs 1.00 u64.32 +.04CdnNRs gs .90 45.72 +.37CapOne 1.20 83.01 +.52CapsteadM1.30e 13.13 +.06CarboCer 1.20u149.94 +4.68CardnlHlth 1.37f 69.16 +.27CareFusion ... 44.29 -.05CarMax ... 51.88 +.31Carnival 1.00 37.94 -.05Castlight n ... 15.12 +.03Caterpillar 2.80f 108.78 +.26CedarF 2.80 52.95 -.05CedarRlty .20 6.23 +.18CelSci rs ... 1.29 +.14Celanese 1.00f 64.06 +.66Cemex .52t 13.22 +.02Cemig pf s .58e 8.15 +.01CenovusE 1.06f u32.27 +.27Centene ... 74.80 -.03CenterPnt .95 25.36 +.20CenElBras .18e 2.93 -.05CntryLink 2.16 35.78 -.38Cenveo ... 3.77 +.17ChambStPr .50 8.08 +.06ChannAdv ... 26.59 +.15Cheetah n ... 21.24 -.94Chegg n ... 7.29 +.03Chemtura ... 25.99 +.36CheniereEn ... u69.95 +.72ChesEng .35 30.40 -.12Chevron 4.28f 130.36 -.56ChicB&I .28 67.97 +.11Chicos .30 16.90 +.56Chimera .36a 3.16 -.02ChiMYWnd ... 3.40 -.03Chubb 2.00 92.22 +.07ChurchDwt 1.24 69.49 +.09CienaCorp ... 21.52 -.07Cigna .04 u91.92 +.57Cimarex .64 142.80 +.22CinciBell ... 3.89 +.03Cinemark 1.00 u35.00 +.38Citigroup .04 47.14 -.09Civeo n ... 26.01 +.56ClearChan .56e 8.29 +.09CliffsNRs .60 14.67 -.35Clorox 2.96f 91.70 +.58CloudPeak ... 18.34 +.07Coach 1.35 34.47 +.13CobaltIEn ... 18.09 +.22CocaCE 1.00 u47.92 +.28Coeur ... 8.97 +.02Colfax ... 74.34 +.60ColgPalm 1.44 68.43 +.53ColonyFncl 1.44f u23.34 +.26ColumPT n 1.20 26.03 -.45Comerica .80f 50.17 -.05CmclMtls .48 17.36 -.73CmwREIT ... 26.48 -.21CmtyBkSy 1.12 36.16 -.01CmtyHlt ... 45.65 +1.50CompSci .92f 62.96 -.22ComstkRs .50 28.37 +.38Con-Way .40 u50.46 +.69ConAgra 1.00 29.63 +.66ConchoRes ... 142.04 +2.86ConocoPhil 2.76 86.00 +.04ConsolEngy .25 46.04 -.35ConEd 2.52 57.55 +.27ConstellA ... 87.98 -.12Constellm ... u32.07 -.32ContainSt n ... 29.00 -.41Cnvrgys .28f 21.27 +.27CooperTire .42 29.87 +.64CooperStd ... 66.20 -1.06CoreLabs 2.00 166.00 +4.75CoreLogic ... 29.83 -.19CorEngyInf .52f 7.45 -.07Corning .40 22.00 +.25CorpOffP 1.10 28.03 +.33CorrectnCp 2.04 33.67 +.13Cosan Ltd .30e 13.76 +.22Coty .20 16.84 +.02Coupons n ... 26.46 -.54CousPrp .30 u12.33 +.06Covance ... 83.74 -1.64CovantaH 1.00f 20.51 +.20Covidien 1.28 90.43 -.75CSVInvNG ... 3.14 +.05CSVLgNGs ... 22.56 -.34CredSuiss .79e 28.54 +.25CrstwdMid 1.64 21.99 +.24CrwnCstle 1.40 74.24 -.07CrownHold ... 49.40 -.09

CubeSmart .52 18.50 +.38Cummins 2.50 154.65 -.37Cvent n ... 29.19 +.13Cyan ... 3.96 -.03

D-E-FDCT Indl .28 u8.24 +.09DDR Corp .62 17.72 +.31DHT Hldgs .08 7.02 -.05DNP Selct .78 10.49 -.04DR Horton .15 23.83 -.05DSW Inc s .75 27.89 +.29DTE 2.76f 77.74 ...DanaHldg .20 u24.12 +.11Danaher .40 79.19 +.09DarlingIng ... 20.92 +.26DaVitaH s ... u72.95 +1.34DeanFds rs .28 17.78 +.34DeckrsOut ... 86.03 +1.70Deere 2.40f 90.82 +.41Delek .60a 28.56 -1.15DelphiAuto 1.00 68.50 +.34DeltaAir .36f 39.33 +.03DemndMda ... 4.82 +.22Demandw ... 67.84 +1.17DenburyR .25 18.50 +.01DeutschBk 1.02e 35.55 +.04DevonE .96 u79.50 +.90Diageo 3.09e 126.18 +1.88DiaOffs .50a 49.55 +1.36DiamRsts n ... u22.63 -.68DiamRk .41 u13.00 +.29DicksSptg .50 45.99 +.41Diebold 1.15 39.40 +.32DigitalRlt 3.32 58.40 +.71DigitalGlb ... 27.88 +.31DirSPBr rs ... 25.92 -.15DxGldBll rs ... 43.77 -.05DrxFnBear ... 17.81 -.14DxEMBear ... 31.80 -.24DrxSCBear ... 14.14 -.28DirGMBear ... 13.80 +.60DirGMnBull ... 24.57 -1.18DrxEMBull ... 31.18 +.24DrxFnBull ... 99.58 +.79DirDGdBr s ... 17.63 ...DrxSCBull 1.19e 80.30 +1.59DrxSPBull ... 76.09 +.38Discover .96f 61.98 +.21DolbyLab ... 42.18 +.01DollarGen ... 57.19 -4.49DomRescs 2.40 70.82 -.31Domtar g s 1.50f 43.40 +.11Donaldson .66f 42.35 +.39DoralFn rs ... 4.53 -.02DorLPG n ... 23.09 -.37DEmmett .80 28.42 +.37Dover 1.50 89.87 +.25DowChm 1.48 51.61 -.51DrPepSnap 1.64 58.25 -.35DuPont 1.80 65.44 -2.26DukeEngy 3.12 73.70 +.53DukeRlty .68 18.19 +.24Dynegy ... 34.51 +.07DynexCap 1.00 8.78 +.09E-CDang ... 12.83 -.25E-House .20e 8.95 +.05EMC Cp .46f 26.43 +.29EOG Res s .50 115.84 +.42EP Engy n ... u22.62 +.84EPAM Sys ... 43.55 -.42EQT Corp .12 107.02 -.99EastChem 1.40 87.41 +.29EKodak n ... 25.50 +.32Eaton 1.96 77.26 +.29EatnVan .88 37.79 +.26EVTxMGlo .98 10.29 +.03Ecolab 1.10 108.63 +1.37EdisonInt 1.42 57.37 -.23EducRlty .44 10.70 +.13EdwLfSci ... u87.86 +1.95ElPasoPpl 2.60 36.15 -.01EldorGld g .06e 7.56 +.43EllingtRM 2.20 16.81 +.12EmeraldO ... 7.59 +.28Emeritus ... 32.01 +.17EmersonEl 1.72 66.92 +.19EmpStR n .34 16.63 +.13EmpIca ... 7.92 -.08Emulex ... 5.43 +.14EnLinkLP 1.44 31.43 +.63EnbrdgEPt 2.17 u36.67 +.52Enbridge 1.40 47.44 +.22EnCana g .28 23.62 -.29EndvrIntl ... 1.39 -.08EndvSilv g ... 5.28 -.08Energen .60 88.79 +.34EngyTEq s 1.44f 58.41 +.42EngyTsfr 3.74f 57.61 +.17Enerpls g 1.08 u24.81 +.05ENSCO 3.00 55.35 +.74Entergy 3.32 81.18 +.32EntPrPt 2.84f u77.90 +.40Entravisn .10a 6.26 +.18Envestnet ... u49.30 -.34EnvisnH n ... 35.68 -.27EnzoBio ... 4.90 -.04EqtyOne .88 23.58 +.08EqtyRsd 2.00 u63.53 +.57Eros Intl n ... 15.16 -.14Essent n ... 20.29 -.33EsteeLdr .80 74.71 +.11EverBank .12 20.17 -.28Evertec .40 24.29 -.15EverydyH n ... 17.83 -.14ExcelTrst .70 13.25 +.19ExcoRes .20 5.84 +.18Exelis .41 16.94 -.03Exelon 1.24 36.29 +.18Express ... 16.78 +.14ExtraSpce 1.88f 53.35 +.13ExxonMbl 2.76f 101.21 -.82FMC Corp .60 70.82 -.18FMC Tech ... 60.25 -.01FNBCp PA .48 12.73 +.02FS Invest n .89a 10.50 +.06FTI Cnslt ... 36.70 -.56FXCM .24 14.85 ...Fabrinet ... 20.56 -.21FactsetR 1.56fu119.88 +2.11FamilyDlr 1.24 66.84 -1.16FedExCp .80f 151.41 -.09FelCor .08 u10.59 +.34Ferrellgs 2.00 27.35 +.02Ferro ... 12.58 +.28FibriaCelu ... 9.89 -.17Fibrocell ... 3.99 +.19FidlNFin .72 33.07 +.33FidNatInfo .96 54.81 +.1458.com n ... 54.90 +2.68FstAFin n .96f 27.60 -.01FstBcpPR ... 5.50 +.03FstCwlth .28 9.18 +.10FstHorizon .20 11.94 +.11FMajSilv g ... 10.54 -.01FstMarb rs ... 4.67 +.42FstRepBk .56f 54.52 -.61FirstEngy 1.44 33.99 -.20FleetMatic ... 33.25 -.55Fleetcor ... 133.66 +2.09Flotek ... 31.58 -.08FlowrsFds .48f 20.69 -.03Flowserve .64 73.79 -1.86Fluor .84 76.88 +.46FootLockr .88 u50.62 +1.30FordM .50 17.28 +.08

ForestCA ... 20.08 -.01ForestLab ... 99.77 -.19ForestOil ... 2.30 -.02FBHmSec .48 39.55 +.46ForumEn ... u36.26 -.02FrankRes s .48 57.60 +.15FMCG 1.25 36.07 +.37Freescale ... 23.39 +.09Frontline ... 2.94 +.06FullerHB .48f 48.87 +1.43Fusion-io ... 11.34 +.01

G-H-IGFI Grp .20 3.30 -.02GNC .64 33.86 -.01GTT Comm ... 9.85 -.27Gain Cap .20 7.77 -.20Gallaghr 1.44 46.40 +.04GameStop 1.32 40.35 -.22Gannett .80 30.75 +.23Gap .88 41.23 +.25GasLog .48 u31.65 -.13GastarExp ... 8.55 +.04Generac 5.00e 49.52 +.45GnCable .72 25.33 +.27GenDynam 2.48 117.50 +.52GenGrPrp .60 23.56 +.14GenMoly ... 1.10 +.05GenMotors 1.20 36.62 -.28GenesWyo ... 103.77 -.38GenieEn n ... 7.46 +.05Genpact ... 17.39 +.16GenuPrt 2.30 87.38 +.92Genworth ... 17.32 +.01GeoGrp 2.28 35.51 +.31Gerdau .15e 5.94 -.19GiantInter .65e u11.85 +.04Gigamon ... 19.30 +.58GlaxoSKln 2.56e 53.78 +.11GlimchRt .40 10.80 +.05GblBrCopp .15 16.92 -.04GlobalCash ... 8.84 +.15Globalstar ... 4.20 -.08GlobusMed ... 24.09 -.19GolLinhas ... 5.59 -.01GoldFLtd .02e 3.60 ...GoldResrc .12 5.00 +.10Goldcrp g .60 27.62 ...GoldStr g ... .56 -.02GoldmanS 2.20 166.78 -1.23GoodrPet ... 27.46 +.14GovPrpIT 1.72 25.48 +.09vjGrace ... 93.69 -.46GrafTech ... 10.39 +.18GramrcyP .14 5.99 +.16GranTrra g ... 7.93 +.21GraphPkg ... 11.61 +.01GrayTelev ... 12.79 +.23GtPlainEn .92 26.90 +.21GreenbCos ... 57.09 -.92GrubHub n ... 34.20 -.45GpFnSnMx .96e 13.27 +.14GpTelevisa .14e 34.58 -.36Guess .90 27.50 +.43Guidewire ... 40.69 +.43H&Q Hlt 2.01e 26.13 -.37HCA Hldg ... 55.43 -.33HCP Inc 2.18 41.31 -.09HDFC Bk .35e 46.42 +.19HSBC 2.45e 50.95 +.09Haemonet ... 35.62 +1.27HalconRes ... u7.14 +.10Hallibrtn .60 70.47 +.92Hanesbrds 1.20 u98.25 +.22Harbinger ... 12.73 -.21HarleyD 1.10 69.40 +.19Harman 1.20 107.84 -.45HarmonyG ... 2.92 -.02Harsco .82 26.98 -.42HarteHnk .34 7.22 +.04HartfdFn .60 35.66 -.17HarvNRes ... 4.86 -.20HatterasF 2.05e 19.65 -.21HawaiiEl 1.24 25.41 +.45Headwatrs ... 13.68 +.58HltCrREIT 3.18 62.63 -.27HlthcrRlty 1.20 25.38 +.19HlthcreTr .57 11.98 -.03HealthNet ... u41.84 +1.17HeclaM .01e 3.38 -.04HelixEn ... 26.17 +.40HelmPayne 2.75f 115.48 +.13Hemisphrx ... .32 -.01Herbalife ... 65.14 +.90HercTGC 1.24 16.14 +.18HeritIns n ... 14.60 -.39Hersha .24 u6.74 +.22Hershey 1.94 96.92 +.36Hertz ... 27.98 -.08Hess 1.00 98.29 +.70HewlettP .64 33.91 ...Hexcel ... 41.14 +.62Hi-Crush 2.10f u62.52 +.87HighwdPrp 1.70 42.08 +.30Hill Intl ... 6.00 -.32Hill-Rom .61 41.53 +.05HillenInc .79 32.38 +.18Hillshire .70 u62.00 -.02Hilton n ... 22.81 -.05HollyFront 1.28f 44.38 -1.10HonwllIntl 1.80 93.26 +.20Hormel .80 49.05 +.46Hospira ... 50.88 -.87HospPT 1.96f 30.29 +.45HostHotls .60f 22.21 +.25HovnanE ... 5.30 +.29Humana 1.12f 127.41 -.39Huntsmn .50 28.00 +.16Hyatt ... 61.09 +.07IAMGld g ... 4.04 +.03ICICI Bk .77e 48.78 +.13IGI Labs ... 5.00 -.31IMS Hlth n ... u25.45 +.24ING ... 14.13 +.10ION Geoph ... 4.23 +.05iShGold ... 12.75 ...iSAstla .99e 26.43 ...iShBrazil 1.55e 48.11 -.17iShCanada .62e 32.12 +.26iShEMU .94e 42.32 -.04iShGerm .63e 31.22 +.13iSh HK .72e 20.95 +.13iShItaly .34e 17.41 -.04iShJapan .17e 11.98 -.03iSh SKor .90e 64.97 +.11iShMexico 1.09e 67.47 +.23iShSing .45e 13.59 -.01iSTaiwn .26e u15.71 +.10iSh UK 1.26e 20.85 +.06iShSilver ... 20.17 -.07iShSelDiv 2.29e 76.77 +.19iShChinaLC .71e 37.21 +.08iSCorSP5003.55e 197.26 +.60iShUSAgBd2.45e 109.39 ...iShEMkts .71e 43.35 +.10iShiBoxIG 4.18e 119.37 -.02iShEMBd 5.31e 115.56 +.01iSh20 yrT 3.40e 113.24 -.17iSh7-10yTB2.26e 103.50 ...iShIntSelDv1.86e 39.99 +.10iSh1-3yTB .23e 84.55 +.02iS Eafe 2.23e 68.31 +.04iShiBxHYB 5.91e 95.28 ...iShMtgRE 1.80e 12.63 +.01iSR1KVal 1.90e 101.25 +.08iSR1KGr 1.17e u90.87 +.28

iSR2KVal 1.82e 102.88 +.60iSR2KGr .99e 137.86 +.94iShR2K 1.45e 118.34 +.79iShUSPfd 2.55e u39.91 +.06iShREst 2.56e 71.85 +.43iShHmCnst .06e 24.65 +.23iShCrSPSm1.21e 111.69 +.87iShEurope 1.54e 48.55 +.06iStar ... 14.99 +.26ITC Hold s .57 36.27 -.15ITT Corp .44 u48.21 +.36ITT Ed ... 16.62 -.10Idacorp 1.72 57.00 -.13ITW 1.68 88.55 +.60Imation ... 3.40 +.13ImmunoCll ... 1.15 +.02ImperHldg ... 6.68 +.34Imperva ... 24.78 +1.12Infoblox ... 13.17 +.15Infosys 1.04e 53.71 +1.06IngerRd 1.00 62.70 +.13IngrmM ... 28.80 -.39Ingredion 1.68 75.28 -.05InovioPh rs ... 10.73 +.44IntegrysE 2.72 u70.92 +.69Intelsat ... 18.66 -.40IntcntlExch 2.60 187.93 -1.32IntlGame .44 16.13 +.24IntPap 1.40 49.05 +.30Interpublic .38 19.53 +.13IntPotash ... 16.66 +.40Intrexon n ... 25.23 -.17InvenSense ... 21.99 ...Invesco 1.00f 37.74 +.42InvMtgCap 2.00e 17.38 +.06InvTech ... 16.58 +.29InvRlEst .52 9.16 +.16IronMtn 1.08 34.81 -.93IsoRay ... 3.18 +.02ItauUnibH .51r 14.53 -.06

J-K-LJMP Grp .20f 6.85 +.14JPMorgCh 1.60f 57.53 +.14JPMAlerian 2.32 52.07 +.27Jabil .32 20.91 +.06JacobsEng ... 53.55 +.21JanusCap .32f 12.60 -.09Jarden ... 58.59 +.39JavelinMtg 1.80 13.72 +.31JinkoSolar ... 29.73 -.63JohnJn 2.80f 104.99 -.66JohnsnCtl .88 50.07 +.04JournalCm ... 8.83 +.22JoyGlbl .80f 61.89 +.49Jumei n ... 26.60 +.06JnprNtwk ... 24.47 +.23K12 ... 24.32 -1.30KAR Auct 1.00 31.72 -.05KB Home .10 18.69 +.81KBR Inc .32 23.84 +.33KCG Hld n ... 11.77 +.27KKR 1.56e 24.20 +.33KC Southn 1.12 106.08 -.27KapStone s ... 33.34 +.32KateSpade ... 38.13 -.49Kellogg 1.84 64.96 +.14Kemper .96 36.85 +.25KennWils .36 26.58 +.13KeyEngy ... 8.94 +.13Keycorp .26f 14.40 +.06KimbClk 3.36 111.37 +.52Kimco .90 22.99 +.11KindME 5.52f 81.30 -.13KindMorg 1.68f 36.04 +.04KindredHlt .48 23.39 +.29KingDEn n ... 17.85 +.87Kinross g ... 4.03 -.13KiteRlty .26 6.08 +.01Knowles n ... 30.54 -.11KodiakO g ... 14.45 +.31Kohls 1.56 53.23 +.21KosmosEn ... 11.21 +.10KratonPP ... 22.05 +.14Kroger .66 49.92 +.53KronosWw .60 15.61 -.19L Brands 1.36a 58.47 +1.18L-3 Com 2.40 121.19 -.06LIN Media ... 27.65 +.64LaQuinta n ... u18.82 -.19LaZBoy .24 23.25 -.11LabCp ... 101.72 +1.34LadThalFn ... 3.11 +.14Lannett ... 48.42 +.50LaredoPet ... 30.74 +.35LVSands 2.00 75.92 -.83LaSalleH 1.50f 35.77 +.23Lazard 1.20 50.45 +.17LeapFrog ... 7.40 +.08LearCorp .80 88.31 -.23Lee Ent ... 4.39 -.01LeggPlat 1.20 34.12 +.10LeidosHld 1.28 38.00 +.15LennarA .16 41.59 +.27LeucNatl .25 26.14 -.09Level3 ... 43.99 +.34LexRltyTr .68f 11.02 -.10Lexmark 1.44f 47.76 +.77LiberMed .12 3.56 -.45LbtyASE .39e 6.00 -.03LibtProp 1.90 37.69 +.32LifeTFit ... 48.58 +.68LifeLock ... 13.85 -.61LightInBox ... 6.42 +1.31LillyEli 1.96 u63.10 +.06LincNat .72f 51.48 -.09LinkedIn ... 166.76 -.01LionsGt g .20 28.40 +.20LiveNatn ... 24.14 -.08LloydBkg ... 5.17 -.04LockhdM 5.32 162.70 +.65

Loews .25 43.80 +.15Lorillard 2.46 61.50 -.11LaPac ... 14.98 +.24Lubys ... 5.29 +.24LumberLiq ... 75.11 -.80LyonBas A 2.80f 96.87 -1.63

M-N-0M&T Bk 2.80 124.12 +.30MBIA ... 11.49 -.25MDC 1.00 30.14 +.59MDU Res .71 34.62 +.46MFA Fncl .80 8.19 +.04MGIC Inv ... 9.31 +.07MGM Rsts ... 26.41 -.31MRC Glbl ... 28.06 -.03MSCI Inc ... 45.20 +.74MVC Cap .54 12.63 +.35MackCali .60m 21.81 +.21Macys 1.25f 58.67 +.60MagHRes ... 8.31 +.03MainStCap 1.98a 32.51 +.31Mallinck n ... 78.15 +1.01Manitowoc .08 32.93 +3.22Manulife g .52 19.87 +.12MarathnO .76 39.44 -.19MarathPet 1.68 79.40 -1.53MarinSoft ... 11.80 +.19MVJrGld rs ... 40.54 -.74MktVGold .19e 25.98 +.03MV OilSvc .54e u57.34 +.53MV Semi .66e 49.13 +.16MktVRus .74e 26.76 +.15MktV Agri 1.04e 55.01 -.01MkVHiYM 1.78e 30.28 -.12MarkWest 3.48f 71.31 +.67MarriotVac ... 57.89 +.23MarshM 1.12f 51.88 +.04MartMM 1.60 132.23 +2.10Masco .36f 22.21 +.08Masonite gn ... 55.72 -.40MastThera ... .67 -.02Mastec ... 29.92 +.87MasterCd s .44 73.40 +.63MatadorRs ... 28.45 +.19Maximus s .18 42.91 +.56McClatchy ... 5.69 +.27McCorm 1.48 71.57 +1.30McDrmInt ... 8.00 -.02McDnlds 3.24 101.46 -.05McGrwH 1.20 83.20 +.49McKesson .96 188.92 +.83McEwenM ... 2.76 -.13MeadJohn 1.50 92.67 +.27MeadWvco1.00a u44.27 +.07Mechel ... 2.18 +.09MediaGen ... 20.45 +.41MedProp .84 13.23 +.08MedleyCap 1.48 13.03 +.07Medtrnic 1.22f 64.12 -.54MensW .72 54.67 -.49Merck 1.76 57.53 -1.00Meritor ... 13.00 +.23MerL pfD 1.75 25.80 -.01MerL pfE 1.78 25.96 -.02MerL pfF 1.82 25.96 -.06Methode .36 u36.79 -.89MetLife 1.40f 55.55 -.14MKors ... 90.00 -.12MidAApt 2.92 73.18 +.88MidstsPet ... 7.40 +.20MdwGold g ... .84 +.01MillenMda ... 4.68 +.19MitsuUFJ ... 6.08 -.01MobileTele ... 19.73 -.30Model N ... 11.24 -.18Moelis n ... 33.20 -1.35Mohawk ... 136.88 +1.05MolinaHlth ... 44.58 +.05MolsCoorB 1.48 74.40 +.19Molycorp ... 2.52 ...MonRE .60 9.87 +.14Monsanto 1.72 125.00 -1.18MonstrWw ... 6.57 +.02Montpelr .50 31.96 +.47Moodys 1.12 87.91 +.92MorgStan .40f 31.55 -.34MorgSt pfF ... 27.15 -.06Mosaic 1.00 49.70 -.26MotrlaSolu 1.24 66.78 +.22MuellerWat .07 8.66 +.33MurphO 1.25b 66.68 +.53NCI BldSy ... 19.05 +.19NCR Corp ... 34.44 +.82NQ Mobile ... d6.07 -.30NRG Egy .56f 37.05 +.38Nabors .16 28.91 -.09NanoViric ... 4.34 -.12NatBkHldg .20 20.40 +.83NBGreece ... 3.63 -.10NatFuGas 1.54f u76.91 -.16NOilVarco 1.84f 82.63 +1.68NatRetPrp 1.62 37.22 +.18NavideaBio ... 1.48 +.02NaviosAcq .20 3.70 ...Navios .24 9.93 -.11NeoPhoton ... 4.15 +.33NetSuite ... 86.22 +.86Neuralstem ... 4.17 -.27NeuStar ... 25.48 -.21NwGold g ... 6.27 -.12NwMedia n ... 13.66 +.03NwMtnFin 1.36 14.89 +.31NewResid .70a 6.28 -.02NY CmtyB 1.00 15.96 +.07NY REIT n .46 11.30 -.17Newcastle .40b 4.79 -.05NewellRub .68f 30.91 +.01NewfldExp ... 43.53 -.13NewmtM .10m 25.19 +.12NewpkRes ... 12.39 +.32

NxEraLP n ... 32.00 ...NextE pfO 2.14 64.60 +.00NiSource 1.04f 39.23 -.16NielsenNV 1.00f u48.42 +.14NikeB .96 77.68 +.82NimbleSt n ... 30.03 +.26NobleCorp 1.50 33.25 +.28NobleEngy .72f 77.42 -.71NokiaCp .51e 7.61 -.07NorandaAl .04 3.46 -.05NordicAm .92f 9.56 +.01Nordstrm 1.32 67.99 +.36NorflkSo 2.16 101.65 +.01NA Pall g ... .31 -.04NAtlDrll n .47e 10.50 +.12NthStAs wi ... 18.80 ...NoestUt 1.57 46.86 +.09NthnO&G ... 16.35 +.05NorthropG 2.80f 120.67 +.27NStarRlt 1.00 17.64 +.56NStarRlt wi ... 17.10 ...NovaGld g ... 4.07 -.06Novartis 2.72e 90.38 +.19NOW Inc n ... u36.83 -.36NuSkin 1.38 73.81 +.03Nucor 1.48 49.09 -.76NustarEn 4.38 u61.92 +.53NvCredStr .52 9.28 -.04OGE Egy s .90 38.67 +.31ONEGas n 1.12 u37.76 -.28OasisPet ... 54.84 +1.66OcciPet 2.88 102.21 -.43Och-Ziff 1.74e 13.57 +.24OcwenFn ... 36.94 +.13OfficeDpt ... 5.62 +.01Oi SA C .14e .94 -.04Oi SA .14e .87 -.05OilStates ... 62.86 -.22OldRepub .73 16.45 -.07Olin .80 26.81 -.01OmegaHlt 2.00f 37.04 +.48Omnicom 2.00f 71.75 +.40OnAssign ... 35.93 +.29ONEOK 2.24f 67.52 -.10OpkoHlth ... 9.10 +.22Opower n ... 18.82 -.01Oracle .48 40.53 +.38Orange 1.10e 15.88 -.02OrbitalSci ... 29.90 -.46Orbitz ... 8.86 +.05Organovo ... 8.60 +.40OrientEH ... 14.43 +.36OshkoshCp .60 55.65 +.45OwensMin 1.00 34.59 -.49OwensCorn .64 38.93 +.02OwensIll ... 34.73 +.17OwensRM n .20 19.30 -.24

P-Q-RPBF Engy 1.20 27.01 -.98PG&E Cp 1.82 47.53 +.33PHH Corp ... 23.25 +.11PNC 1.92f 89.31 +.63PNM Res .74 28.90 -.11PPG 2.68f 204.05 +1.47PPL Corp 1.49 35.19 +.43PVH Corp .15 117.50 +.95PackAmer 1.60 71.19 +.25PaloAltNet ... 81.21 +.33Pandora ... 29.30 +.36ParaG&S ... .93 -.03ParkDrl ... 6.62 +.06ParkerHan 1.92 125.63 -.02Parkwy .75 20.92 +.21ParsleyE n ... 23.73 -.19PaycomS n ... 13.98 -.74PeabdyE .34 16.44 -.06Pengrth g .48 7.16 +.04PennVa ... 16.71 +.18PennWst g .56 9.72 -.03Penney ... 8.95 +.21PennyMac 2.36 21.91 -.16Penske .76f 48.79 +1.62Pentair 1.00 72.76 -.41PepBoy ... 11.52 +.38PepcoHold 1.08 27.40 +.09Perrigo .42 145.97 -2.93PetChina 5.16e 126.24 -.04PetrbrsA .85e 15.65 -.11Petrobras .46e 14.63 -.17PtroqstE ... u7.50 +.34Pfizer 1.04 29.67 +.08PhilipMor 3.76 84.85 -1.64PhilipsNV 1.10e 30.47 +.12Phillips66 2.00f 81.49 -.61PhysRltT n .90 14.50 +.26PiedmOfc .80 19.14 +.35Pier 1 .24 15.32 +.04PinnclEnt ... 25.20 -.06PinnaclFds .84 32.92 -.29PinWst 2.27 56.48 +.17PionEnSvc ... u17.14 -.14PioNtrl .08 226.29 -1.87PitnyBw .75 27.97 +.30PlainsAAP 2.52f u59.52 +.23PlainsGP n .70f 31.45 ...PlatfmSp n ... u27.31 -1.39

PlumCrk 1.76 45.32 +.31PolyOne .32 41.46 +.95Polypore ... 48.00 +.27PortGE 1.12f u34.34 +.22PortglTel .14e 3.70 -.18PostHldg ... 50.19 +1.15Potash 1.40 37.94 +.03PwshDB ... 26.74 -.05PS SrLoan .99e 24.83 -.01PwShPfd .90e 14.61 +.04PShEMSov 1.27e 29.18 +.01PSIndia .13e 21.47 +.26PowerSec ... 9.58 -.20Praxair 2.60 131.90 +.87PrecCastpt .12 254.36 +1.93PrecDrill .24 13.97 +.02Primerica .48 47.71 +.14Primero g ... 7.84 +.10PrinFncl 1.28f 50.27 -.10ProLogis 1.32 41.18 +.08ProShtS&P ... 23.36 -.05ProUltQQQ .18eu113.24 +.94ProUltSP .29e 115.88 +.46ProUShD30 ... 26.27 -.04ProShtR2K ... 16.12 -.08ProSht20Tr ... 28.89 +.05PUltSP500 .11e 115.04 +.64PUVixST rs ... 27.19 -.45ProVixSTF ... 19.26 -.15ProctGam 2.57f 79.02 +.40ProgsvCp 1.00e 25.26 +.05ProUShSP ... 25.41 -.09PrUShDow ... 25.51 ...PUShQQQ rs ... d50.15 -.41ProUShL20 ... 61.13 +.23PUSR2K rs ... 43.31 -.61PShtR2K rs ... 36.01 -.76PUShSPX rs ... 47.48 -.31ProspBcsh .96 62.75 +.40ProtLife .96f 69.40 -.05ProtoLabs ... 81.03 -1.61Provectus ... .87 -.02Prudentl 2.12 88.99 -.15PSEG 1.48 40.27 +.36PubStrg 5.60 172.17 +2.82PulteGrp .20 20.08 +.23PumaBiotc ... 62.50 +1.79Q2 Hldgs n ... 14.12 -.71QEP Res .08 u34.43 +.72Qihoo360 ... 91.12 -.85QuantaSvc ... 34.76 +.39QntmDSS ... 1.16 -.03QstDiag 1.32 58.82 +.50Questar .76f 24.65 ...QksilvRes ... 2.58 -.05Quiksilvr ... 3.54 -.04QuintTrn ... 51.92 -.36RLJ LodgT .88 u28.93 +.52RPM .96 45.85 +.26RSP Per n ... 32.30 +1.23Rackspace ... 33.63 -2.65RadianGrp .01 14.97 -.15RadioShk ... .97 +.04RallySoft ... 10.68 +.18RLauren 1.80 160.42 +3.34RangeRs .16 85.95 -.68RayAdM wi ... 36.93 -.07Rayonier 1.96 48.53 +.69Raytheon 2.42 94.40 +.32Realogy ... 36.25 -.39RltyInco 2.19 44.22 +.29RedHat ... 55.16 -.17RedwdTr 1.12 19.63 -.01RegalEnt .88 u21.37 +.10RegncyEn 1.92f 31.81 -.06RegionsFn .20f 10.67 -.01Regis Cp ... 14.05 +.21ReneSola ... 2.90 -.04Renren ... 3.32 -.01RepubSvc 1.04 u38.13 +.66ResMed 1.00 52.46 +.62ResoluteEn ... 8.40 +.10ResoluteF ... 16.89 +.27ResrceCap .80 5.62 -.02RestorHdw ... u92.37 +1.13RetailProp .66 15.23 +.03RexAmRes ... 71.31 -1.30RexahnPh ... .87 +.02RexfrdIR n .48 14.21 -.09Rexnord ... 28.41 -.18ReynAmer 2.68 60.46 +.04RiceEngy n ... 30.48 +.83RingCent n ... 15.05 +.06RingEngy ... 16.90 -.48RioTinto 1.94e 53.43 -.36RiteAid ... 7.18 -.11RoadrnTrn ... 28.00 +.49RobtHalf .72 47.93 +.52RockTen 1.40 104.04 -.24RockColl 1.20 78.24 -.08RockwdH 1.80 76.26 +.85RosettaStn ... 9.62 +.05Roundys ... 5.47 +.14RouseProp .68 17.20 +.25Rowan .40 31.60 +.01RylCarb 1.00 55.80 -.24RoyDShllB 3.76f 87.09 +.64RoyDShllA 3.76f 82.23 +.13Rubicon g ... 1.45 -.02RubiconP n ... 13.26 -1.11RubyTues ... 7.58 +.31RuckusW ... 11.99 +.23Ryland .12 39.20 +.15RymanHP 2.20 48.51 +.48

S-T-USCANA 2.10 53.37 +.20SK Tlcm ... 25.62 -.88SLGreen 2.00 109.32 +.32SM Energy .10 83.15 +.18SpdrDJIA 3.58e 168.17 +.09SpdrGold ... 126.66 -.07SpdrEuro501.28e 43.31 +.06SP Mid 2.33e 259.45 +1.45S&P500ETF3.58e 195.82 +.38Spdr Div 2.92e 76.49 +.27SpdrHome .13e 32.52 +.17SpdrShTHiY1.55e 30.94 -.01SpdrLehHY2.91e 41.75 +.01SpdrS&P RB.60e 40.33 +.15SpdrRetl .63e 86.55 +.48SpdrOGEx .50e 81.70 +.38SpdrMetM .51e 41.94 -.01STMicro .40 9.00 -.02STR Hldgs ... d1.29 +.07SABESP .31e 10.83 ...SafeBulk .24 9.32 -.02Safeway .92f 34.29 +.16StJoe ... 25.17 -.02StJude 1.08 69.54 -.37Salesforce ... 57.38 +.21SallyBty ... 25.08 +.31SamsO&G ... .44 -.01

SanchezEn ... 37.12 -.01SandRdge ... 7.12 +.04SandstG g ... 6.68 -.10Sanofi 1.91e 53.31 +.34SantCUSA n.15p 19.60 +.16Schlmbrg 1.60u117.80 +1.68Schwab .24 27.14 +.29SciApplic n 1.12 44.85 -.66ScorpioB n ... 8.81 +.08ScorpioTk .36f 10.02 +.04ScrippsNet .80 80.37 -.47SeadrillLtd 4.00f 39.43 +.25Seadrill 2.03f 33.00 +.05SealAir .52 34.70 +.23SeaWorld .84f 28.00 -.38SelIncREIT 1.92f 29.60 +.31SelMedHld .40 15.41 +.02SempraEn 2.64 104.03 +.17SenHous 1.56 24.21 ...SensataT ... u46.44 +.50ServiceCp .32 u20.80 +.28ServiceM n ... u18.75 +.80ServcNow ... 61.40 -.23SevSevE wi ... 23.75 -.81ShawCm g 1.10f u25.47 +.82Shutterstk ... 83.34 -1.28SibanyeG .43e 10.84 +.05SiderurNac .36e 4.28 -.07SilvBayRT .12 16.25 -.36SilverBull ... .31 +.01SilvrSpNet ... 13.05 -.27SilvWhtn g .33e 25.89 +.07SilvrcpM g .02 2.02 -.03SimonProp 5.20f 167.06 +1.27Smucker 2.32 106.05 +.57SonyCp .25e 16.76 -.05Sothebys .40a 41.48 +1.61SouFun s .20e 9.72 +.03SouthnCo 2.10f 45.06 +.25SthnCopper .46e 29.75 +.04SwstAirl .24f 27.14 +.08SwstnEngy ... 44.98 -.33Spansion ... 20.87 +.07SparkNet ... 5.89 +.56SpectraEn 1.34 u42.50 +.21SpectrmB 1.20 u85.50 +1.60SpiritAero ... 33.99 +.36SpiritRC n .66 11.35 +.05Springlf n ... 25.64 -.11Sprint n ... 8.51 +.10STAG Indl 1.32f 24.12 +.14StageStrs .56f 18.25 -.21SP Matls .93e 49.47 -.16SP HlthC .85e 61.07 -.16SP CnSt 1.11e 44.66 +.08SP Consum .86e 66.77 +.16SP Engy 1.68e 100.02 ...SPDR Fncl .35e 22.76 +.09SP Inds .94e 54.29 +.13SP Tech .66e 38.34 +.23SP Util 1.47e 43.91 +.17StdPac ... 8.50 +.10StanBlkDk 2.00 88.04 +.78StarwdHtl 1.40a 81.08 +.18StarwdPT 1.92 23.59 +.01StarWay n ... 26.32 -.49StateStr 1.20f 66.82 -.55Statoil ASA 1.14e 31.06 +.11Steelcse .42f 15.52 -.25StellusCap 1.36a 14.71 +.18SterlingBc .28 11.96 -.03StillwtrM ... 17.05 +.14StoneEngy ... 45.78 +.27StrPathC n ... 10.21 +.43StratHotels ... 11.65 -.03Stryker 1.22 83.97 -.64SumitMitsu ... 8.50 -.02SummitHtl .45 10.60 +.04SunCokeE ... 21.32 +.76Suncor gs .92 42.68 +.24SunEdison ... u22.87 +.41SunocoL s 1.39f 46.65 +.24SunstnHtl .20 14.81 +.02SupEnrgy .32 36.00 -.11Supvalu ... 8.08 +.15SwftEng ... 12.70 +.11SwiftTrans ... 24.84 -.16SymetraF .40 22.93 +.24SynergyRs ... 13.12 -.25Synovus rs .28 24.42 +.06Sysco 1.16 37.85 +.25T-MobileUS ... 33.28 ...TCP Intl n ... d10.18 -.25TCW Strat .29 5.51 -.00TD Ameritr .48a 31.31 +.09TE Connect 1.16f 61.94 +.76TIM Part .39e 29.54 -.62TJX .70 52.77 -.05TPG SpL n 1.52 19.06 +.34TRC Cos ... 5.50 +.55TRWAuto ... u89.19 +.15TableauA ... 70.00 -.64TaiwSemi .50e 21.28 +.26TalismE g .27 10.59 -.01Taminco ... u23.10 +.01TangerFac .96f 35.01 +.07TargaRes 2.59f 137.08 -1.05Target 2.08f 58.12 +.25Taseko ... 2.47 +.17TataMotors .18e 38.67 -.47TeckRes g .90 22.40 +.24Teekay 1.27 61.84 -.41Teledyne ... 97.01 +.81TelefBrasil .76e 20.39 -.05TelData .54 26.00 +.20TempurSly ... 59.23 +.32Tenaris .86e 46.95 +.26TenetHlth ... 46.91 +.28Tenneco ... 65.88 +.13Teradata ... 40.51 -.61Teradyn .24 19.45 +.17Terex .20 41.11 +1.16Tesoro 1.00 59.60 -.34TevaPhrm 1.34e 52.83 +.38Textron .08 38.81 +.76Textura ... 23.52 +.63TherapMD ... 4.75 -.19ThermoFis .60 118.30 -1.00ThirdPtR n ... 15.29 -.08ThomCrk g ... 2.91 +.01ThomsonR 1.32 36.32 +.26Thor Inds .92a 56.06 -.233D Sys ... 59.07 +1.123M Co 3.42 143.69 -.04Tiffany 1.52f 100.51 +.53Time n ... 24.25 -.14TW Cable 3.00u147.84 +1.24TimeWarn 1.27b 69.74 +.34Timken 1.00 67.32 +.10Titan Intl .02 16.52 +.67TollBros ... 36.51 +.05TorDBk gs 1.88 u51.36 +.59TotalSys .40 31.45 +.29

TowerIntl ... u36.33 +.41TrnsEntx rs ... 5.36 +.24TrsatlPt rs ... 11.08 -.15Transocn 3.00f 44.53 +.41Travelers 2.20f 93.92 -.49TremorVid ... 4.65 -.06Trex s ... 29.99 +.46TriPointe ... 15.33 -.20TrianglCap 2.16a 28.10 -.12TriangPet ... 11.72 +.03TrinaSolar ... 12.59 -.10TriNet n ... 23.64 -.38Trinity s .40f u43.08 +.06Tronox 1.00 27.01 -.37Trulia ... 47.48 +2.20TurqHillRs ... 3.27 +.0422ndCentry ... 3.42 -.07Twitter n ... 40.93 -.51TwoHrbInv 1.06e u10.77 +.09TycoIntl .72 45.38 -.25Tyson .30 37.44 +.41UBS AG .16e 18.34 -.13UDR 1.04 u28.64 +.17UQM Tech ... 2.34 +.11US Silica .50 53.87 -.17USG ... 29.87 +.30UltraPt g ... 29.23 +.04UndArmr s ... 59.49 +.32UnilevNV 1.48e 43.45 -.22UnionPac s 1.82 99.64 +.07UtdContl ... 41.49 -.02UPS B 2.68 102.71 +.07UtdRentals ... 104.89 -.39US Bancrp .98f 43.36 +.30US NGas ... 24.40 -.11US OilFd ... 38.98 +.01USSteel .20 26.02 -.08UtdTech 2.36 116.58 +.83UtdhlthGp 1.50f 82.00 -.29UnivHlthS .20 95.00 -.94Univ Insur .53e 12.82 -.35UnumGrp .58 35.01 -.02Ur-Energy ... 1.08 +.02UraniumEn ... 1.65 -.06

V-W-X-Y-ZVF Corp s 1.05 62.72 +.29VaalcoE ... 7.16 +.32Vale SA .84e 13.29 -.15Vale SA pf .72e 11.93 -.13ValeantPh ... 128.85 +2.35ValeroE 1.00 51.67 -.60Valhi .08m 6.29 +.28VlyNBcp .44 10.01 +.03VangSTBd 1.10e 80.30 +.03VangTotBd 2.17e 82.15 ...VangTSM 1.88e 101.73 +.27VangValu 1.79e 81.04 +.06VanSP500 rs3.31e 179.48 +.31VangREIT 2.73e 75.02 +.57VangDivAp 1.49e 77.90 +.15VangAllW 1.62e 52.23 +.08VangEmg 1.11e 43.20 +.11VangEur 2.31e 59.95 +.15VangFTSE 1.33e 42.54 +.08VantageDrl ... 1.87 -.03Vantiv ... 33.33 +.01VarianMed ... 83.85 -.15VectorGp 1.60 20.98 +.28VeevaSys n ... 24.83 +.62Ventas 2.90 64.14 +.32VeriFone ... 36.48 +.22VerizonCm 2.12 49.32 +.11ViolinM n ... 4.48 +.11Vipshop ... 188.55 +6.56VirnetX ... 17.98 +.07Visa 1.60 209.28 +.32VishayInt .24 15.22 +.09VMware ... 97.01 -.70Vonage ... 3.76 -.04Vornado 2.92 107.35 +1.48Voxeljet n ... 19.63 +.95VoyaFincl .04 36.32 -.18VulcanM .20 63.90 +.87WP Carey 3.60f 64.31 +.07WPX Engy ... 23.08 +.09Wabash ... 14.09 -.38WABCO ... 107.80 -1.03WaddellR 1.36 62.01 +.17WageWrks ... 48.43 -.68Walgrn 1.26 74.10 -.13WalterEn .04 5.49 -.28WashPrm n ... 18.52 -.43WasteConn .46 u48.14 +.33WsteMInc 1.50 44.84 +.40WausauPap .12 10.79 +.28WeathfIntl ... 22.60 -.07WebsterFn .80f 31.66 +.30WtWatch ... 20.54 -.13WellPoint 1.75 107.55 -.57WellsFargo 1.40f 52.90 +.53WescoAir ... 19.83 -.37WestarEn 1.40 u37.90 +.15WstAstMtg 4.59e 14.19 -.04WstnRefin 1.04 38.38 -.27WstnUnion .50 17.25 +.25Weyerhsr .88 u32.58 -.12Whrlpl 3.00f 138.46 +.35WhiteWave ... 32.33 +.10WhitingPet ... 78.82 +.40WidePoint ... 1.82 +.12WLyonHm ... 30.40 +.69WmsCos 1.70f 58.56 +.46WmsPtrs 3.62f 54.00 +.27WmsSon 1.32 u71.87 +1.02Winnbgo ... 24.30 +.45WinthRT .65 15.32 ...Wipro .13e 11.84 +.38WiscEngy 1.56 46.79 +.14WTJpHedg1.54e 49.16 -.36WT India .15e 22.29 +.09Workday ... 88.85 +.39WldW Ent .48 11.59 +.03Worthgtn .72f 43.85 +1.48Wyndham 1.40 75.62 +.21XL Grp .64 32.56 +.02XPO Logis ... 28.49 +.13XcelEngy 1.20 31.87 +.14Xylem .51 39.25 +.12YPF Soc .15e 33.14 -.40Yamana g .15 8.05 -.06Yelp ... 77.28 +.38YingliGrn ... 3.78 +.07YoukuTud ... 23.19 +.24YumBrnds 1.48 81.91 +.19YuMe n ... 5.87 -.08ZBB En rs ... 1.69 -.05Zendesk n ... 17.16 -.52Zimmer .88 104.35 -.77ZoesKitch n ... 33.95 -.55Zoetis .29 32.38 +.14

Stocks in bold changed 5% or more in price from the previous day.Stock Footnotes: g - Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h - Does not meet continued-listing standards. lf - Late filing with SEC.n - Stock was a new issue in the last year. The 52-week high and low figures date only from the beginning of trading. pf - Preferred stockissue. rs - Stock has undergone a reverse stock split of at least 50% within the past year. s - Stock has split by at least 20 percent within thelast year. vj - Company in bankruptcy or receivership, or being reorganized under the bankruptcy law. Appears in front of the name.Dividend Footnotes: a - Extra dividends were paid, but are not included. b - Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e - Amountdeclared or paid in last 12 months. f - Current annual rate, which was increased by most recent dividend announcement. i - Sum of divi-dends paid after stock split, no regular rate. j - Sum of dividends paid this year. Most recent dividend was omitted or deferred. k - Declaredor paid this year, a cumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividendannouncement. p - Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r - Declared or paid in preceding 12 months plus stock dividend.t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distribution date. PE Footnotes: q - Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc -P/E exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last 12 months. Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.

Name Div Last Chg

New York Stock Exchange

All about jobsU.S. employers have been hiring at a healthy pace since February.

Did the trend continue in June? Find out Thursday, when the Labor Department reports its latest monthly tally of hiring. Employers added 217,000 jobs in May, the fourth consecutive month of gains above 200,000. The job gains have helped keep push the national unemployment rate to 6.3 percent, the lowest in more than five years.

Housing bellwetherEconomists predict that U.S. construction spending increased in May from the previous month.

That would make it the fourth straight increase after severe winter weather pushed spending on homebuilding and nonresiden-tial construction down in January. Construction spending rose in April to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $953.5 billion, the strongest performance since March 2009. The Commerce Department reports its latest figures Tuesday.

Gaining momentumThe Commerce Department reports May factory orders Wednesday.

Companies have been placing more orders to U.S. factories, adding to evidence that manufacturing is regaining momen-tum after a harsh winter. A surge in demand for military hardware contributed to a 0.7 percent increase in April. Factory orders have risen on a monthly basis this year after declining in December and January.

Nonfarm payrolls, in thousandsMonthly change

Source: FactSet

100

150

200

250

J F M A M J

205est.

Source: FactSet

Construction spendingmonthly percent change

D J F M A M

est.0.4

-0.5

2.1%

0.40.6

0.2

’13 ’14

Tod

ay

1,700

1,750

1,800

1,850

1,900

1,950

2,000

JJ F M A M

1,920

1,960

2,000 S&P 500Close: 1,960.96Change: 3.74 (0.2%)

10 DAYS

15,200

15,600

16,000

16,400

16,800

17,200

JJ F M A M

16,720

16,860

17,000 Dow Jones industrialsClose: 16,851.84Change: 5.71 (flat)

10 DAYS

Advanced 2086Declined 1042New Highs 213New Lows 11

Vol. (in mil.) 3,456Pvs. Volume 2,731

2,4611,5251685

9817931

NYSE NASD

DOW 16862.73 16773.84 16851.84 +5.71 +0.03% +1.66%DOW Trans. 8175.52 8124.18 8175.52 +25.55 +0.31% +10.47%DOW Util. 572.70 567.97 571.71 +1.72 +0.30% +16.54%NYSE Comp. 10976.93 10929.77 10974.42 +24.97 +0.23% +5.52%NASDAQ 4398.85 4371.60 4397.93 +18.88 +0.43% +5.30%S&P 500 1961.47 1952.18 1960.96 +3.74 +0.19% +6.09%S&P 400 1427.03 1416.35 1426.55 +7.30 +0.51% +6.26%Wilshire 5000 20852.77 20755.47 20846.00 +56.62 +0.27% +5.78%Russell 2000 1189.50 1175.02 1189.50 +8.79 +0.74% +2.22%

HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. %CHG. YTDStocksRecap

AT&T Inc T 31.74 8 36.86 35.41 +.15 +0.4 s t s +0.7 +5.0 11 1.84Advance Auto Parts AAP 78.91 0 133.92 133.48 +2.95 +2.3 s s s +20.6 +64.0 22 0.24Amer Express AXP 71.47 0 96.04 94.93 +.63 +0.7 t s s +4.6 +28.8 19 1.04fAutoNation Inc AN 41.89 0 59.48 59.13 ... ... t s s +19.0 +38.5 19 ...Brown & Brown BRO 27.76 4 35.13 30.48 +.03 +0.1 t s t -2.9 -1.6 21 0.40CocaCola Co KO 36.83 0 42.05 42.19 +.16 +0.4 s s s +2.1 +7.1 23 1.22fComcast Corp A CMCSA 39.33 0 55.28 54.13 +.53 +1.0 s s s +4.2 +35.4 20 0.90Darden Rest DRI 44.78 2 54.89 46.66 -.23 -0.5 t t t -14.2 -0.9 22 2.20Disney DIS 60.41 0 85.86 85.30 +.85 +1.0 s s s +11.6 +35.0 22 0.86fGen Electric GE 22.76 7 28.09 26.43 +.14 +0.5 t t s -5.7 +16.7 20 0.88General Mills GIS 46.70 7 55.64 52.31 +.28 +0.5 t t s +4.8 +11.4 18 1.64Harris Corp HRS 47.69 9 79.32 75.98 +.47 +0.6 s t s +8.8 +58.0 18 1.68Home Depot HD 72.21 9 83.20 81.13 +.38 +0.5 s s s -1.5 +9.0 21 1.88IBM IBM 172.19 4 200.94 181.71 +1.34 +0.7 s t t -3.1 -5.4 12 4.40fLowes Cos LOW 38.87 7 52.08 47.42 +.22 +0.5 s s t -4.3 +18.2 21 0.92fNY Times NYT 10.17 8 17.37 15.24 +.24 +1.6 t s t -4.0 +39.4 38 0.16NextEra Energy NEE 77.21 0 101.88 101.60 +.20 +0.2 s s s +18.7 +30.5 22 2.90PepsiCo PEP 77.01 9 90.24 88.76 +.15 +0.2 t s s +7.0 +11.9 20 2.62fSuntrust Bks STI 30.17 0 41.26 40.22 +.06 +0.1 t s s +9.3 +29.7 14 0.80fTECO Energy TE 16.12 0 18.45 18.34 +.10 +0.5 s s s +6.4 +12.5 19 0.88WalMart Strs WMT 71.51 4 81.37 75.34 +.43 +0.6 t t t -4.3 +2.4 15 1.92fXerox Corp XRX 8.85 9 13.01 12.51 +.17 +1.4 s s s +2.8 +40.6 13 0.25

52-WK RANGE CLOSE YTD 1YR NAME TICKER LO HI CLOSE CHG %CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN P/E DIV

Stocks of Local Interest

C6 DAILY COMMERCIAL Saturday, June 28, 2014

Saturday, June 28, 2014 DAILY COMMERCIAL C7

Brown Cap MgmtSmCo Is b 72.67 +.66 +26.4BuffaloFlexibInc d 14.96 +.02 +13.1SmallCap d 35.62 +.25 +15.3CG Capital MarketsLgCapGro 21.90 +.06 +27.7LgCapVal 13.30 +.02 +22.4CGMFocus 39.92 +.06 +16.5CRMMdCpVlIns 36.22 +.08 +22.7CalamosGrIncA m 34.82 +.07 +18.7GrowA m 48.14 +.16 +28.6MktNeuI 12.98 +.01 +6.2MktNuInA m 13.11 ... +5.9CalvertEquityA m 49.53 +.16 +22.3CausewayIntlVlIns d 16.47 +.02 +21.7Cohen & SteersCSPSI 13.83 ... +12.1Realty 73.40 +.50 +13.7RealtyIns 47.60 +.33 +13.9ColumbiaAcornA m 35.73 +.18 +20.5AcornIntZ 48.60 +.01 +22.4AcornZ 37.36 +.19 +20.9CAModA m 11.96 +.01 +13.6CAModAgrA m 13.10+.02 +15.9CntrnCoreA m 21.75 +.04 +24.5CntrnCoreZ 21.88 +.04 +24.8ComInfoA m 57.07 +.24 +31.5DivIncA m 19.26 +.03 +17.4DivIncZ 19.27 +.04 +17.7DivOppA m 10.81 +.01 +19.8DivrEqInA m 14.63 +.02 +22.0IncOppA m 10.28 ... +10.4IntmBdA m 9.22 ... +4.5IntmMuniBdZ 10.75 +.01 +5.8LgCpGrowA m 35.25+.11 +25.2LgCrQuantA m 8.99 +.02 +24.8MdCapIdxZ 15.82 +.08 +24.2MdCpValZ 18.30 +.06 +29.8SIIncZ 9.98 ... +1.3ShrTrmMuniBdZ 10.48 ... +1.4SmCapIdxZ 23.47 +.17 +24.3StLgCpGrA m 17.57 +.02 +31.3StLgCpGrZ 17.84 +.02 +31.7TaxExmptA m 13.84 -.01 +6.5ValRestrZ 51.98 +.11 +24.7ConstellationSndsSelGrI 18.07 +.01 +31.1SndsSelGrII 17.64 +.01 +30.7Credit SuisseComStrInstl 7.77 -.03 +7.9CullenHiDivEqI x 17.61 -.03 +20.0DFA1YrFixInI 10.32 ... +0.42YrGlbFII 10.00 +.01 +0.65YearGovI 10.68 +.01 +1.35YrGlbFII 10.99 +.01 +2.8EmMkCrEqI 20.72 +.02 +16.4EmMktValI 29.30 ... +16.1EmMtSmCpI 22.05 +.06 +16.0EmgMktI 27.44 +.02 +16.4GlAl6040I 16.14 +.03 +16.4GlEqInst 18.94 +.05 +25.0GlblRlEstSecsI 10.28 +.06 +15.2InfPrtScI 12.02 ... +4.8IntCorEqI 13.30 +.02 +26.7IntGovFII 12.54 +.01 +2.9IntRlEstI 5.71 +.02 +19.6IntSmCapI 21.85 +.04 +35.3IntlSCoI 20.31 +.02 +30.5IntlValu3 17.78 +.03 +27.1IntlValuI 20.20 +.03 +26.8ItmTExtQI 10.78 ... +6.7LgCapIntI 23.27 +.04 +23.4RelEstScI 30.31 +.23 +12.6STEtdQltI 10.87 +.01 +2.5STMuniBdI 10.22 ... +1.1TAUSCrE2I 14.15 +.05 +25.6TAWexUSCE 10.74 +.02 +23.8TMIntlVal 16.59 +.03 +26.4TMMkWVal 25.10 +.05 +26.6TMUSEq 21.39 +.05 +24.5TMUSTarVal 33.92 +.16 +27.3TMUSmCp 37.27 +.25 +24.3USCorEq1I 17.52 +.05 +25.7USCorEq2I 17.30 +.06 +25.7USLgCo 15.47 +.03 +24.0USLgVal3 25.23 +.03 +27.4USLgValI 33.65 +.03 +27.2USMicroI 20.28 +.15 +24.6USSmValI 36.80 +.22 +25.5USSmallI 31.74 +.23 +24.4USTgtValInst 23.86 +.12 +27.5USVecEqI 17.21 +.07 +26.4DWS-ScudderEqDivB m 45.04 +.04 +19.2GNMAS 14.55 +.01 +5.3GrIncS 24.43 +.07 +26.6MgdMuniA m 9.26 ... +7.0MgdMuniS 9.27 ... +7.2SP500IRew 27.94 ... +24.4TechB m 15.05 +.04 +25.0DavisNYVentA m 43.36 +.19 +21.5NYVentC m 41.32 +.19 +20.6NYVentY 43.93 +.19 +21.8Delaware InvestDiverIncA m 9.16 ... +7.2OpFixIncI 9.66 ... +4.7USGrowIs 26.25 +.08 +28.0ValueI 17.51 +.01 +23.3Diamond HillLngShortI 23.78 +.03 +15.4Dodge & CoxBal 102.65 +.31 +21.1GlbStock 12.46 +.03 +29.8Income 13.88 ... +6.7IntlStk 46.29 +.05 +29.1Stock 178.67 +.80 +27.8DoubleLineCrFxdIncI 11.05 ... +6.0TotRetBdN b 11.02 ... +4.6DreyfusAppreciaInv 55.87 +.07 +20.9BasSP500 40.34 +.07 +23.9FdInc 12.28 +.03 +24.8IntlStkI 15.96 +.02 +12.2MidCapIdx 39.22 +.20 +24.0MuniBd 11.69 ... +6.3SP500Idx 52.22 +.10 +23.5SmCapIdx 30.42 +.22 +24.3DriehausActiveInc 10.73 -.01 +2.5EmMktGr d 33.65 +.07 +13.7Eaton VanceACSmCpI 24.84 +.13 +18.2AtCpSmCpA m 23.07+.12+18.0FloatRateA m 9.46 ... +3.9FltRtAdvA m 11.15 ... +5.0FltgRtI 9.15 ... +4.2GlbMacroI x 9.31 -.03 +0.7IncBosA m 6.16 ... +11.0IncBosI 6.16 ... +11.3

LrgCpValA m 25.67 +.02 +22.5LrgCpValI 25.72 ... +23.6NatlMuniA m 9.72 +.01 +8.6FMILgCap 22.59 +.07 +21.9FPACres d 34.63 +.04 +15.7NewInc d 10.31 ... +1.6Fairholme FundsFairhome d 42.41 -.11 +27.5FederatedEqIncB m 25.10 +.04 +22.5InstHiYIn d 10.41 -.01 +11.4KaufmanA m 6.42 +.04 +27.3KaufmanR m 6.42 +.03 +27.0MuniUShIS 10.04 ... +0.9MuniUltA m 10.04 ... +0.5StrValA x 6.34 -.02 +23.2StrValI x 6.36 -.02 +23.4ToRetIs 11.14 ... +6.0UltraIs 9.18 ... +1.4FidelityAstMgr20 13.71 +.01 +8.1AstMgr50 18.38 +.02 +15.3Bal 24.03 +.03 +19.4Bal K 24.03 +.03 +19.5BlChGrow 67.79 +.23 +30.1BlChGrowK 67.88 +.23 +31.8CAMuInc d 12.83 ... +7.0Canada d 64.28 +.53 +24.8CapApr 37.70 +.07 +25.4CapInc d 10.22 ... +15.2Contra 99.31 +.30 +25.3ContraK 99.29 +.30 +25.4ConvSec 33.07 -.03 +20.0CpApprctK 37.77 +.07 +25.6DivGrow 37.73 +.10 +25.6DivGrowK 37.72 +.10 +25.8DivrIntl d 37.92 +.09 +22.3DivrIntlK d 37.87 +.08 +22.5EmgMkt d 25.57 +.01 +16.7EqInc 62.75 +.17 +19.9EqInc II 26.17 +.05 +20.5EqIncK 62.74 +.17 +20.1Europe d 40.29 +.13 +24.4ExpMulNat d 25.32 +.05 +19.0FF2015 12.85 +.01 +13.5FF2035 13.57 +.03 +19.4FF2040 9.57 +.02 +19.6Fidelity 45.44 +.17 +23.2FltRtHiIn d 9.99 ... +4.6FocStk 20.77 +.02 +28.9FourInOne 37.64 +.07 +20.9Fr2045 10.76 +.02 +20.0Fr2050 10.81 +.02 +20.0FrdmK2010 13.56 +.02 +12.7FrdmK2015 13.89 +.02 +13.7FrdmK2020 14.54 +.02 +14.6FrdmK2025 15.15 +.02 +17.0FrdmK2030 15.51 +.03 +18.3FrdmK2035 15.96 +.03 +19.6FrdmK2040 16.01 +.03 +19.8FrdmK2045 16.41 +.03 +20.1FrdmK2050 16.51 +.03 +20.2FrdmKInc 11.99 +.01 +7.5Free2010 15.69 +.02 +12.6Free2020 15.67 +.02 +14.5Free2025 13.42 +.02 +16.8Free2030 16.50 +.03 +18.0FreeInc 11.74 +.01 +7.5GNMA 11.56 ... +5.0GexUSIdx 12.89 +.02 +21.4GovtInc 10.40 ... +3.0GrStr d 30.13 +.05 +25.6GrowCo 126.75 +.29 +29.4GrowInc 29.49 +.07 +22.2GrthCmpK 126.64 +.29 +29.5HiInc d 9.51 ... +10.6Indepndnc 40.12 +.13 +37.4InfProtBd 12.47 ... +4.1IntBond 10.98 ... +3.6IntMuniInc d 10.47 ... +4.9IntlDisc d 40.98 +.07 +20.1IntlSmCp 16.42 ... +23.7IntlSmCpF 16.47 ... +24.0InvGrdBd 7.91 ... +5.4LargeCap 28.04 +.06 +27.2LevCoSt d 46.29 +.06 +24.5LowPrStkK d 51.73 +.18 +22.1LowPriStk d 51.74 +.18 +21.9MAMuInc d 12.29 +.01 +6.2Magellan 92.50 +.23 +28.2MagellanK 92.40 +.23 +28.4MdCpVal d 24.02 +.08 +27.1MeCpSto 16.44 +.03 +23.5MidCap d 39.31 +.13 +27.1MidCapK d 39.32 +.13 +27.3MuniInc d 13.31 +.01 +7.0NYMuInc d 13.38 ... +6.8NewMille 41.92 +.11 +27.2NewMktIn d 16.85 +.01 +12.7OTC 82.52 +.19 +34.1OTCK 83.26 +.19 +34.3Overseas d 41.66 +.11 +23.4Puritan 22.50 +.05 +20.1PuritanK 22.49 +.05 +20.2RealInv d 37.43 +.30 +12.3RelEstInc d 11.94 +.02 +9.6SASEqF 14.79 +.02 +26.6SCOppF 13.81 +.07 +21.0SEMF 18.59 -.03 +21.8SInvGrBdF 11.42 ... +5.0STBdF 8.60 ... +1.7STMIdxF d 57.68 +.15 +24.4Series100Idx 12.80 +.03 +22.2SersEmgMkts 18.53 -.03 +21.5SesAl-SctrEqt 14.79 +.02 +26.4SesInmGrdBd 11.42 ... +5.0ShTmBond 8.61 ... +1.6SmCapDisc d 30.97 +.16 +22.5SmCapStk d 19.81 +.10 +23.1SmCpOpp 13.73 +.07 +20.8SmCpVal d 20.71 +.14 +21.5StkSelec 38.55 +.29 +28.1StrDivInc 15.14 +.03 +17.4StratInc 11.28 ... +8.8TaxFrB d 11.51 ... +7.2TotalBd 10.74 ... +5.8USBdIdx 11.65 ... +4.2USBdIdx 11.65 ... +4.2USBdIdxF 11.65 ... +4.3USBdIdxInv 11.65 ... +4.1ValK 112.96 +.47 +27.6Value 112.83 +.47 +27.4Worldwid d 25.51 +.03 +24.8Fidelity AdvisorAstMgr70 21.70 +.04 +19.6CapDevO 16.44 +.04 +26.4DivStk 24.71 +.07 +26.7EmMktIncI d 14.42 ... +12.4FltRateA m 10.00 ... +4.3FltRateI d 9.98 ... +4.6Fr2020A m 13.74 +.02 +14.1Fr2025A m 13.57 +.03 +16.4Fr2030A m 14.51 +.03 +17.4HlthCrC m 32.13 +.02 +47.8LeverA m 57.04 +.07 +24.2NewInsA m 27.86 +.07 +25.7NewInsC m 25.78 +.07 +24.8NewInsI 28.36 +.07 +26.0

NewInsT m 27.32 +.07 +25.4StSlctSmCp d 26.83 +.13 +22.1StratIncA m 12.59 ... +8.6StratIncC m 12.56 ... +7.8StratIncI 12.76 +.01 +8.9Fidelity SelectBiotech d 200.01 +.75 +41.0Chemical d 152.30 -.48 +29.2Electron d 77.29 +.13 +45.3Energy d 61.62 -.02 +30.2HealtCar d 207.14 +.12 +49.5Industr d 33.11 +.18 +26.9MedEqSys d 38.25 +.07 +35.9Pharm d 20.99 -.01 +38.3SoftwCom d 117.48 +.74 +31.2Tech d 120.69 +.49 +30.8Fidelity Spartan500IdxAdvtg 69.85 +.13 +24.1500IdxAdvtgInst 69.86+.14+24.1500IdxInstl 69.86 +.14 +24.1500IdxInv 69.84 +.13 +24.0ExtMktIdAg d 55.59 +.29 +25.9ExtMktIdI d 55.59 +.29 +26.7IntlIdxAdg d 42.30 +.06 +22.9IntlIdxAdvtgIns d 42.31+.07 +22.6IntlIdxIn d 42.30 +.07 +23.2IntlIdxInst d 42.31 +.07 +22.6TotMktIdAg d 57.68 +.15 +24.3TotMktIdI d 57.67 +.15 +25.3Fidelity®LtdTermMuniInc d 10.74+.01 +2.7SerBlueChipGr 11.36 +.04 NASerBlueChipGrF 11.37+.04 NASeriesGrowthCo 11.23+.02 NASeriesGrowthCoF 11.24+.02 NAFirst EagleGlbA m 56.85 +.03 +18.2OverseasA m 24.66 -.04 +18.6First InvestorsGrowIncA m 22.98 +.06 +23.4ForumAbStratI 11.11 -.01 -1.7FrankTemp-FrankFed TF A m 12.35 ... +6.6FedIntA m 12.30 -.01 +5.0FrankTemp-FranklinBalA m 12.08 +.02 +17.2CA TF A m 7.37 ... +7.6CAInTF A m 12.78 ... +8.1EqInA m 23.93 +.07 +21.3FLRtDAAdv 9.19 ... +4.4FlRtDAccA m 9.19 ... +4.1FlxCpGr A m 57.65 +.26 +28.4GrowthA m 69.83 +.29 +26.2HY TF A m 10.41 -.01 +6.4HighIncA m 2.16 ... +12.7HighIncAd 2.16 ... +12.9Income C m 2.61 ... +19.3IncomeA m 2.58 ... +19.7IncomeAdv 2.56 ... +19.5IncomeR6 2.56 ... +19.6InsTF A m 12.29 ... +6.6NY TF A m 11.61 -.01 +4.7RisDivAdv 50.53 +.08 +19.2RisDv C m 49.79 +.08 +18.0RisDvA m 50.57 +.08 +18.9SmMdCpGrA m 42.97+.16+25.8StrIncA m 10.71 ... +7.9Strinc C m 10.70 -.01 +7.5TotalRetA m 10.14 -.01 +6.2USGovA m 6.54 ... +3.5Utils A m 17.28 +.06 +21.5FrankTemp-MutualDiscov C m 34.84 +.05 +19.5Discov Z 35.84 +.04 +20.6DiscovA m 35.27 +.04 +20.3Euro Z 24.90 -.01 +19.4QuestA m 19.31 +.04 +20.6QuestZ 19.53 +.03 +20.9Shares Z 30.58 +.05 +22.5SharesA m 30.30 +.05 +22.1SharesR6 30.59 +.05 +22.7FrankTemp-TempletonDvMk A m 23.00 +.03 +9.0Fgn A m 8.62 +.02 +26.9Frgn Adv 8.52 +.02 +27.2GlBond C m 13.39 ... +7.2GlBondA m 13.36 ... +7.6GlBondAdv 13.31 ... +7.8GlBondR6 13.31 ... +8.0GrowthA m 26.29 +.05 +25.5GrowthR6 26.32 +.05 +26.0WorldA m 20.29 +.05 +24.1Franklin TempletonFdrInm-TT/FIcAd 12.33 ... +5.2FndAllA m 14.24 +.02 +22.1FndAllC m 14.04 +.01 +21.2HYldTFInA 10.45 -.01 +6.5ModAllcA m 16.13 ... +15.8Franklin Templeton IGlTlRtA m 13.62 ... +7.8GlTlRtAdv 13.63 -.01 +8.1GEElfunTr 58.42 +.17 +24.0ElfunTxE 11.83 ... +5.6IsIntlEq d 13.25 +.03 +17.3S&SInc 11.64 ... +5.9S&SUSEq 58.75 +.08 +24.8GMOAABdIV 25.28 ... +3.6EmgDbtIV d 10.78 ... +17.2EmgMktsVI d 11.27 +.01 +14.9IntIVlIII 27.80 +.03 +31.1IntItVlIV 27.76 +.02 +31.1QuIII 26.42 +.05 +17.3QuIV 26.44 +.04 +17.3QuVI 26.43 +.05 +17.3USCorEqVI 18.17 +.03 +18.0USTrsy 25.00 ... +0.1GabelliAssetAAA m 68.58 +.25 +22.6EqIncomeAAA m 29.81+.07 +21.0SmCpGrAAA m 50.01+.28+21.9GatewayGatewayA m 29.47 +.03 +6.9Goldman SachsGrOppIs 31.87 +.10 +24.4HiYdMunIs d 9.23 -.01 +7.5HiYieldIs d 7.29 -.01 +11.9MidCapVaA m 47.70+.14 +23.9MidCpVaIs 48.17 +.14 +24.3ShDuTFIs 10.57 -.02 +1.5SmCpValIs 59.44 +.36 +26.0HarborBond 12.25 ... +4.8CapApInst 59.13 +.14 +30.6CapAprInv b 58.04 +.13 +30.1HiYBdInst d 11.08 ... +11.3IntlAdm b 73.48 +.08 +20.6IntlInstl 74.08 +.09 +20.9IntlInv b 73.23 +.08 +20.5Harding LoevnerEmgMkts d 52.26 ... +22.1IntlEq d 18.65 ... +19.6HartfordBalHLSIA 26.56 ... +17.3BalIncA m 13.74 ... +14.7BalIncC m 13.59 ... +13.9CapApr C m 42.72 ... +26.1CapAprA m 48.85 ... +27.0

CapAprI 48.94 ... +27.5CapAprY 53.40 ... +27.5CpApHLSIA 62.72 ... +26.1DivGrowA m 26.64 ... +23.3DivGrowI 26.54 ... +23.6DivGthY 27.07 ... +23.8DvGrHLSIA 29.24 ... +24.1EqIncA m 19.08 ... +20.8FloatRtA m 9.05 ... +5.3FloatRtC m 9.03 ... +4.4FloatRtI 9.06 ... +5.6GrOppA m 42.00 ... +27.7GrOppI 42.99 ... +28.0MdCpHLSIA 41.80 ... +32.7MidCapA m 27.62 ... +31.7StkHLSIA 60.32 ... +18.8TRBdHLSIA 11.89 ... +7.1HeartlandValuePlus m 37.53 +.33 +27.3HendersonIntlOppA m 27.12 +.05 +21.8HennessyGsUtlIdxInv 31.06 +.08 +31.8Hotchkis & WileyMidCpValI 45.05 +.19 +27.5INVESCOBalAlocA m 12.57 -.01 +12.6BalAlocC m 12.15 -.01 +11.8BalAlocY 12.71 -.01 +13.0CharterA m 23.60 +.06 +22.3ComstockA m 25.15 +.06 +22.2DivDivA m 18.09 +.03 +20.4DivDivInv b 18.08 +.02 +20.5EqIncomeA m 11.21 ... +17.4EqIncomeC m 11.05+.01 +16.5EqWSP500A m 47.66+.11 +26.0GrowIncA m 28.67 +.03 +21.1HiYldMuA m 9.74 -.01 +8.4IntlGrA m 35.80 +.09 +23.2IntlGrI 36.34 +.09 +23.6MidCapGrA m 39.36+.18 +27.4MuniIncA m 13.52 ... +6.9SmCapValA m 23.45+.17 +30.6Summit b 18.14 +.05 +29.0IVAIntlI d 17.96 ... +15.0WorldwideA m 18.72 ... +15.8WorldwideC m 18.54 ... +14.9WorldwideI d 18.74 ... +16.0IvyAssetStrA m 31.83 ... +20.0AssetStrC m 30.86 ... +19.2AssetStrY b 31.89 ... +20.0AsstStrgI 32.12 ... +20.3HiIncA m 8.76 ... +11.5HiIncC m 8.76 ... +10.7HighIncI 8.76 ... +11.7LtdTmBdA m 10.95 ... +2.1MdCpGrA m 24.02 +.07 +21.9MdCpGrthI 25.22 +.08 +22.3ScTechA m 54.84 +.14 +32.9JPMorganCoreBdUlt 11.75 ... +3.8CoreBondA m 11.74 ... +3.4CoreBondSelect 11.73 ... +3.6DiscEqUlt 23.94 +.03 +26.0EqIncA m 13.69 +.02 +21.0EqIncSelect 13.88 +.02 +21.2FIntlVaIs 15.53 +.02 +19.4HighYldSel 8.21 ... +11.0HighYldUl 8.20 ... +10.9IntmdTFIs 11.11 ... +4.9IntrAmerS 37.61 +.14 +26.2InvBalA m 15.28 +.02 +14.0InvConGrA m 13.02 +.01 +10.0InvConGrC m 12.96 +.01 +9.4InvGrInA m 17.13 +.03 +17.1InvGrowA m 19.60 +.04 +21.6LgCapGrA m 32.48 +.08 +24.9LgCapGrSelect 32.51+.08 +25.1MdCpGrSel 37.55 +.14 +23.1MidCapVal m 37.20 +.14 +22.9MidCpValI 37.93 +.14 +23.4MorBacSeU 11.40 ... +3.7SelMidCap 45.03 +.15 +27.8ShDurBndSel 10.92 ... +1.1ShtDurBdU 10.92 ... +1.3SmRt2020I 18.76 +.02 +15.0SmRt2030I 19.52 +.04 +18.9SmRt2040I 20.07 +.05 +20.8TxAwRRetI 10.25 +.01 +5.1USEquit 14.97 +.01 +25.8USEquityI 15.00 +.02 +26.1USLCpCrPS 29.74 +.02 +26.7ValAdvA m 29.15 +.07 +21.9ValAdvI 29.32 +.07 +22.5ValAdvSel 29.27 +.07 +22.2James AdvantageGoldRainA x 25.25 -.04 +14.1JanusBalT 31.34 ... +16.1Gr&IncT 47.25 ... +22.0HiYldT 9.41 -.01 +12.3OverseasT 38.22 -.11 +22.0PerkinsMCVT 24.99 +.08 +19.5RsrchT 46.21 +.14 +27.1ShTmBdT 3.08 ... +2.7T 42.95 +.12 +24.2TwentyT 64.99 +.10 +26.1JensenQualtyGrI 38.44 +.10 +19.0QualtyGrJ b 38.44 +.11 +18.7John HancockClasValI 25.72 +.01 +21.0DisValMdCpA m 18.78+.06 +27.3DisValMdCpI 19.39 +.06 +27.6DiscValA m 19.39 +.04 +21.1DiscValI 18.90 +.04 +21.4EmMkVlNAV 10.86 ... +14.9GAbRSI 11.18 ... +4.7IICpApNAV 17.65 +.03 +30.3IIInVaNAV 18.21 +.03 +26.9IIToRtNAV 13.89 ... +4.6LgCpEqA m 38.50 +.06 +22.6LifAg1 b 16.75 +.04 +23.0LifBa1 b 16.02 +.02 +16.5LifBaA m 16.09 +.02 +16.1LifCo1 b 14.21 +.01 +9.1LifGr1 b 16.88 +.03 +20.1LifMo1 b 14.89 +.01 +12.7KeeleySmCapVal m 39.40 +.22 +20.0LaudusInMktMstS d 24.62 +.03 +20.6USLCGr d 18.75 +.10 +26.5LazardEmgMkEqInst d 20.31-.03 +20.1EmgMktEqOpen m 20.80-.04+19.8IntlStEqInst d 15.31 +.04 +23.0Legg MasonCBAggressGrthA m 203.45+.36 +33.4CBAggressGrthI 219.88+.39 +33.9CBAllCapValueA m 17.31+.02 +20.1CBAppreciatA m 20.29+.04 +20.0CBEquityInc1 x 19.30-.04 +19.3CBEquityIncA x 19.29-.03 +18.9CBSmallCapGrI 29.15+.19 +21.0ValueC m 62.49 +.11 +27.1WACorePlusBdFI b 11.61-.01 +6.6WACorePlusBdI 11.62-.01 +6.9

WACorePlusBdIS 11.61-.01 +7.0WAManagedMuniA m 16.69+.01+6.8Longleaf PartnersIntl 18.15 ... +22.1LongPart 35.95 +.05 +27.5SmCap 35.44 +.12 +23.3Loomis SaylesBdInstl 15.91 +.01 +12.2BdR b 15.84 +.01 +11.9GlbBdInstl 16.72 +.02 +6.9Lord AbbettAffiliatA x 16.40 -.04 +21.5BondDebA m 8.39 ... +12.0BondDebC m 8.42 ... +11.4CalibrdDivA x 16.26 -.03 +20.9DevGrowI 28.67 +.19 +27.1FdmtlEqtyA m 15.74 +.05 +19.3FltRateF b 9.48 ... +5.3FltgRateA m 9.49 ... +5.1FltgRateC m 9.50 ... +4.4HiYldI 8.10 ... +13.8MABalOppA x 12.99 -.03 +17.6NatlTaxFA m 11.15 ... +6.4ShDurIncA m 4.56 ... +3.9ShDurIncC m 4.58 ... +2.9ShDurIncF b 4.55 ... +3.7ShDurIncI 4.55 ... +3.8TaxFreeA m 10.76 ... +5.5ValOppA m 22.02 +.05 +24.4MFSBondA m 14.13 -.01 +7.5GrAllocA m 18.77 +.03 +17.6GrowA m 66.97 +.07 +25.5GrowI 70.02 +.07 +25.8IntDivA m 17.07 +.04 +17.0IntlNDisA m 29.60 +.07 +19.1IntlNDisI 30.44 +.08 +19.4IntlValA m 35.40 +.10 +19.1IsIntlEq 23.05 +.04 +19.2MAInvA m 28.86 +.07 +22.5MAInvGrA m 23.92 +.09 +22.4MAInvI 28.25 +.07 +22.8ModAllocA m 16.99 +.02 +14.4MuHiIncA f 7.96 ... +7.8ResIntlI 18.94 +.02 +17.7ResearchA m 38.57 +.06 +21.6TotRetA m 18.35 +.01 +15.3UtilA m 24.04 +.05 +28.1ValueA m 34.37 +.03 +20.9ValueI 34.53 +.03 +21.2MainStayHiYldCorA x 6.13 -.04 +9.8IntlI 36.98 +.07 +20.4LgCapGrA m 10.35 +.01 +26.1MAPI 47.24 +.06 +21.5Mktfield 17.85 +.01 +4.2MktfldA m 17.78 ... +3.9S&PIdxI 45.77 +.09 +23.7SelEqI x 51.00 -.08 +18.9Mairs & PowerGrthInv x 114.97 -.17 +23.4Manning & NapierWrldOppA 9.49 +.03 +19.5Matthews AsianDivInv d 16.24 +.04 +11.7GrInc d 19.68 +.02 +9.0PacTiger d 27.32 +.01 +17.5MergerInvCl b 16.49 ... +6.4MeridianMeridnGr d 37.75 +.21 +16.8Metropolitan WestLowDurBd b 8.83 ... +2.2LowDurBdI 8.84 ... +2.5TotRetBdI 10.83 -.01 +5.8TotRtBd b 10.84 ... +5.7Morgan StanleyGrA m 38.55 +.15 +35.3IntlEqA m 17.42 +.04 +18.4IntlEqI d 17.66 +.05 +18.8MdCpGrA m 43.09 +.19 +19.2MdCpGrI 45.11 +.21 +19.6Munder FundsMdCpCrGrY 45.01 +.18 +21.9Mutual SeriesBeacon Z 18.10 +.02 +21.8NationsLgCpIxZ 38.09 +.08 +23.9NationwideIntlIdxI 8.82 +.01 +22.7S&P500Is 15.08 +.03 +24.0NatixisLSInvBdA m 12.49 +.02 +10.3LSInvBdC m 12.37 +.01 +9.4LSInvBdY 12.50 +.02 +10.6LSStratIncA m 17.26 +.02 +15.2LSStratIncC m 17.37+.02 +14.4Neuberger BermanGenesisInstl 62.15 +.36 +21.8GenesisInv 41.86 +.24 +21.6GenesisR6 62.17 +.36 +21.9GenesisTr 64.72 +.37 +21.5HIncBdInst 9.57 ... +11.9LgShrtIn 12.96 +.02 +10.2NicholasNichol 65.35 +.33 +28.6NorthernBdIndx 10.67 -.01 +4.2EmMktsEq d 11.86 ... +16.0FixedIn 10.40 -.01 +6.4GlbREIdx d 9.96 +.04 +12.7HYFixInc d 7.70 -.01 +12.1IntTaxE 10.58 ... +5.2IntlIndex d 12.91 +.02 +22.7MMIntlEq d 11.34 +.02 +19.6Mlt-Mngr Emrg M d 20.00+.02 +17.5SmCapVal 21.64 +.14 +23.2StkIdx 24.27 +.05 +24.0NuveenHiYldMunA m 16.85 -.01 +11.7HiYldMunC m 16.83 -.02 +11.1HiYldMunI 16.85 -.01 +11.9IntMunBdI 9.21 +.01 +5.7LtdTmMunI 11.09 ... +3.4RlEstSecI 23.27 +.19 +14.1Oak AssociatesPinOakEq 49.36 +.26 +26.4RedOakTec 15.82 +.07 +28.0WhiteOak 58.46 +.19 +18.9OakmarkEqIncI 34.26 +.09 +21.5GlSelI 17.24 +.01 +22.5Global I 31.59 +.11 +23.5Intl I 26.80 +.06 +20.0IntlSmCpI d 18.00 -.01 +24.1Oakmark I 68.31 +.17 +27.4Select I 44.49 +.10 +32.6Old WestburyGlbOppo 8.23 ... +12.4GlbSmMdCp 17.43 +.03 +20.0LgCpStr 13.14 +.04 +24.2OppenheimerActAllocA m 12.39 ... +20.0CapApA m 63.37 ... +26.4CapIncA m 9.95 ... +10.8DevMktA m 40.16 +.10 +20.3DevMktY 39.73 +.10 +20.7DevMktsC m 38.14 +.10 +19.5EqIncA m 33.61 +.11 +22.7EquityA m 13.17 +.04 +24.4

GlobA m 82.30 +.18 +22.5GlobOpprA m 41.56 +.14 +24.7GlobY 82.45 +.18 +22.8IntlBondA m 6.19 ... +5.2IntlBondY 6.19 ... +5.5IntlDivA m 15.14 ... +21.8IntlGrY 38.98 +.14 +19.8IntlGrowA m 39.12 +.14 +19.5MainSSMCA m 33.22+.12 +27.1MainStrA m 51.44 +.17 +25.0RisDivA m 20.65 +.07 +19.8RisDivY 21.17 +.06 +20.0SrFltRatA m 8.42 +.01 +5.4SrFltRatC m 8.43 +.01 +4.7StrIncA m 4.22 ... +6.9Oppenheimer RochesteFdMuniA m 15.18 -.05 +0.7LmtTmMunA m 14.31-.03 +2.1LtdTmNY m 3.13 -.02 -0.5RochHYMA m 7.08 -.02 +6.9OsterweisOsterStrInc d 11.98 ... +7.4PIMCOAAstAAutP 10.39 ... +8.3AllAssetA m 12.76 ... +11.0AllAssetC m 12.72 +.01 +10.2AllAssetI 12.75 +.01 +11.6AllAuthA m 10.39 ... +7.9AllAuthC m 10.39 ... +7.1AllAuthIn 10.39 ... +8.4CmPlsStrI 11.65 ... +15.8CmPlsStrP 11.59 ... +15.7ComRlRStI 6.11 -.02 +11.7CrdtAbsRtInstl 10.78 ... +5.2DivIncInst 11.97 ... +9.9EMFdIdPLARSTIns 10.52...+24.0EMInfBdIs 11.73 -.01 +9.5EMktCurI 10.39 ... +4.1EmMktsIns 11.36 -.01 +10.6EmgLclBdI 9.71 +.02 +4.0FdmtlAdvAbsRtI 3.91 ... +4.1FloatIncI 9.01 ... +8.2ForBdInstl 10.90 ... +7.5ForBondI 10.65 +.02 +10.5GlbAdvInst 11.59 +.01 +8.8HgYdSpIns 11.15 ... +12.0HiYldIs 9.78 ... +10.3IFdIdPlARStI 12.94 +.01 +32.7Income P 12.73 ... +10.1IncomeA m 12.73 ... +9.8IncomeC m 12.73 ... +9.1IncomeD b 12.73 ... +9.9IncomeInl 12.73 ... +10.2InvGrdIns 10.71 -.01 +8.2LgDrTRtnI 11.50 -.01 +11.4LgTmCrdIn 12.78 -.02 +14.9LowDrA m 10.38 ... +2.8LowDrIs 10.38 ... +3.1LowDurD b 10.38 ... +2.8LowDurP 10.38 ... +3.0ModDurIs 10.73 ... +4.1RealRet 11.62 ... +5.7RealRtnA m 11.62 ... +5.3RlEstStRetI 4.78 ... +21.2ShTermAdm b 9.90 ... +1.7ShtTermIs 9.90 ... +1.9SnrFltRtInstl d 10.25 ... +4.2StkPlARShStrIn 2.56 -.01 -17.1ToRtIIIIs 9.62 +.01 +4.4ToRtIIIs 10.43 ... +4.3TotRetA m 10.97 +.01 +4.5TotRetAdm b 10.97 +.01 +4.6TotRetC m 10.97 +.01 +3.7TotRetIs 10.97 +.01 +4.9TotRetR b 10.97 +.01 +4.2TotRetrnD b 10.97 +.01 +4.6TotlRetnP 10.97 +.01 +4.8UnconstrBdIns 11.31 ... +1.5UnconstrBdP 11.31 ... +1.4WwdFdAdvARStrIn 10.01... +4.0PRIMECAP OdysseyAggGr 32.13 +.10 +32.1Growth 25.19 +.05 +22.9Stock 22.75 +.06 +23.5ParametricEmgMktInstl 15.92 +.02 +16.9TxMgEMInstl d 52.30+.04 +17.5ParnassusCoreEqInv 39.62 +.18 +27.2Pax WorldBal b 25.08 +.03 +16.2PermanentPortfolio 45.32 +.07 +12.1PioneerCoreEqA m 16.55 +.04 +23.2PioneerA m 41.61 +.11 +24.2StratIncA m 11.13 ... +7.2StratIncY 11.13 ... +7.6PrincipalBdMtgInst 10.99 -.01 +5.6DivIntI 12.48 +.04 +21.8HiYldA m 7.94 ... +11.4HiYldII 10.77 ... +11.4L/T2020I 14.92 +.03 +16.3L/T2030I 15.18 +.03 +18.4L/T2040I 15.68 +.03 +20.2L/T2050I 15.22 +.04 +21.3LCGrIInst 13.09 +.05 +25.2LCIIIInst 15.42 +.02 +21.4LgCGrInst 11.39 +.03 +25.1LgCSP500I 13.87 +.03 +23.9LgCValI 13.79 +.03 +24.0MidCapA m 21.42 +.07 +23.5PrSecInst 10.52 ... +10.4SAMBalA m 16.39 +.04 +16.0SAMConGrA m 18.79+.05+19.4SCGrIInst 14.15 +.06 +22.4SCValIII 14.33 +.09 +25.1PrudentialGblRealEstZ 24.65 +.11 +14.8JenMCGrA m 40.11 +.04 +20.4Prudential InvestmenGovtIncA m 9.59 ... +3.2HiYieldA m 5.86 ... +11.5JenMidCapGrZ 41.87+.04 +20.7MuniHIncA m 10.06 -.01 +7.7NaturResA m 57.98 +.24 +33.1ShTmCoBdA m 11.36 ... +3.4SmallCoZ 30.37 +.11 +24.6TotRetBdZ 14.42 ... +7.5UtilityA m 17.14 +.07 +36.8PutnamCpSpctrmA m 38.00 +.06 +28.8CpSpctrmC m 37.28+.06 +27.8CpSpctrmY 38.17 +.06 +29.1DivrInA m 7.98 ... +8.2EqIncomeA m 21.95 +.01 +23.1EqSpctrmA m 44.45 +.10 +32.2EqSpctrmY 44.78 +.11 +32.5GrowIncA m 21.40 +.03 +25.9InvestorA m 20.98 +.06 +27.1MultiCapGrA m 81.32+.21+30.4VoyagerA m 33.23 +.05 +34.8RidgeWorthLgCpVaEqI 17.94 +.03 +25.1

MdCpVlEqI 14.94 +.07 +26.9USGovBndI 10.12 ... +0.5RoycePAMutInv d 14.95 +.10 +22.9PremierInv d 23.59 +.14 +26.2SpecEqInv d 24.96 +.25 +14.6TotRetInv d 16.79 +.11 +20.3RussellEmgMktsS 19.20 -.02 +16.8GlRelEstS 40.34 +.15 +14.7GlbEqtyS 11.84 +.03 +20.3ItlDvMktS 38.32 +.07 +23.0StratBdS 11.21 ... +4.6RydexBiotechIv 72.59 +.19 +40.1InvOTC2xH b 26.26 -.23 -47.5SEIIdxSP500E d 53.01 +.10 +23.8IntlEq A d 10.47 +.01 +21.2IsCrFxIA d 11.50 -.01 +5.3IsHiYdBdA d 7.94 ... +10.6IsItlEmMA d 11.25 -.01 +14.9IsLrgGrA d 33.84 +.13 +23.8IsLrgValA d 25.95 +.05 +25.0IsMgTxMgA d 19.62 +.04 +24.8Schwab1000Inv d 52.06 +.12 +24.2CoreEq d 24.68 +.07 +25.4DivEqSel d 19.00 +.01 +22.2FUSLgCInl d 15.21 +.02 +23.4IntlIndex d 20.79 +.03 +22.6S&P500Sel d 30.90 +.06 +24.0SmCapIdx d 28.39 +.21 +22.9TotStkMSl d 35.97 +.10 +24.4ScoutInterntl 37.71 +.09 +14.0MidCap 18.72 +.04 +24.9UnconBd 11.66 +.01 +0.4SelectedAmerShS b 52.75 +.22 +21.9American D 52.80 +.23 +22.3SentinelCmnStkA m 44.76 +.08 +19.7SequoiaSequoia 223.09+1.34 +18.5Sound ShoreInv 52.30 +.08 +29.4SpectraSpectra A m 18.48 +.06 +28.9State FarmBalanced 65.44 +.10 +15.0Growth 72.76 +.15 +21.0SteelPathMLPAlpA m 13.60 +.05 +19.5MLPAlpY 13.77 +.05 +19.8MLPIncA m 11.56 +.05 +12.1MLPSel40Y 13.63 +.04 +18.3SunAmericaFocDvStrC m 17.27 ... +14.0T Rowe PriceBalanced 24.13 +.03 +18.4BlChpGAdv b 66.08 ... +29.2BlChpGr 66.48 ... +29.5CapApprec 27.41 ... +18.3DivGrow 35.27 +.04 +20.5EmMktBd d 13.26 ... +10.3EmMktStk d 34.48 ... +14.0EqIndex d 52.85 +.10 +23.8EqtyInc 34.48 +.08 +20.1EqtyIncAd b 34.33 ... +20.4EurStock d 21.91 ... +27.6GNMA 9.65 ... +4.0GrStkAdv b 53.13 ... +27.5GrowInc 31.11 +.01 +23.5GrowStk 53.87 ... +27.8HealthSci 64.00 ... +39.6HiYield d 7.34 ... +12.7InSmCpStk 20.99 ... +23.8InsLgCpGr 28.15 ... +31.4InstlFlRt d 10.29 ... +5.4InstlHiYl d 9.99 ... +13.1InstlLgCV 20.25 ... +23.6IntlBnd d 9.86 ... +7.9IntlDisc d 58.43 ... +23.8IntlGrInc d 16.37 ... +24.0IntlStk d 17.16 ... +20.6MDTaxFBd 10.82 ... +6.2MediaTele 71.38 ... +28.6MidCapE 43.11 ... +26.4MidCapVa 32.75 ... +26.6MidCpGr 77.03 ... +25.7NewAmGro 45.20 ... +27.3NewAsia d 17.34 ... +17.1NewEra 50.61 ... +30.1NewHoriz 47.40 ... +26.9NewIncome 9.57 ... +5.0OrseaStk d 10.50 ... +22.1PerStrBal 23.94 ... +19.1PerStrGr 32.10 ... +22.1R2015 15.08 ... +16.2R2025 16.23 ... +19.9R2035 17.20 ... +22.3Real d 24.62 +.19 +14.7Ret2020R b 21.17 ... +17.6Ret2050 13.80 ... +23.0RetInc 15.35 ... +11.6Rtmt2010 18.74 ... +14.1Rtmt2020 21.51 ... +18.2Rtmt2030 23.88 ... +21.3Rtmt2040 24.75 ... +23.1Rtmt2045 16.50 ... +23.0SciTech 41.72 ... +34.7ShTmBond 4.80 ... +1.7SmCpStk 46.12 ... +22.7SmCpVal d 51.09 ... +19.9SmCpValAd m 50.67 ... +19.5SpecGrow 25.30 ... +24.6SpecInc 13.19 ... +8.9SumMuInt 11.86 ... +5.8TaxFHiYld d 11.71 ... +8.4TaxFInc 10.28 ... +6.9TaxFShInt 5.67 ... +2.7TrRt2020Ad b 21.35 ... +17.9TrRt2030Ad b 23.69 ... +21.0TrRt2030R b 23.52 ... +20.8TrRt2040Ad b 24.55 ... +22.8TrRt2040R b 24.39 ... +22.4Value 36.82 ... +26.7T.RoweReaAsset d 12.21 ... +23.6TCWEmgIncI 8.83 ... +8.3SelEqI 25.73 +.07 +23.9TotRetBdI 10.28 ... +6.0TotRetBdN b 10.60 ... +5.7TIAA-CREFBdIdxInst 10.82 -.01 +4.2BdPIns 10.74 ... +6.3BondIn 10.56 ... +6.2ELCGrIxI 11.77 +.04 +24.4ELCVlIxI 11.03 ... +23.2EqIx 15.09 +.04 +24.6Gr&IncIn x 12.70 +.01 +26.1HYlIns d 10.48 ... +11.4InfL x 11.67 -.15 +4.2

IntlE d 20.13 +.03 +23.0IntlEqIn d 11.99 +.01 +22.5LCVal 18.62 +.02 +22.2LgCGIdx 20.18 +.06 +26.2LgCVIdx 17.61 +.02 +23.2LgGrIns 15.71 +.05 +28.7Life2040I 11.30 +.03 +21.7MidValIn 24.89 +.09 +25.7MidValRmt 24.74 +.08 +25.3SCEq d 19.56 +.12 +24.3SPIndxIn 22.13 +.04 +24.0TargetSmCapVal 28.03 +.16 +22.9TempletonInFEqSeS 23.51 +.06 +21.7Third AvenueFCrtInst d 12.08 +.01 +20.4RealEsVal d 31.86 +.05 +21.7Value d 61.75 +.16 +20.0ThompsonBond 11.92 ... +6.3ThornburgIncBldA m 21.96 +.04 +17.1IncBldC m 21.95 +.04 +16.3IntlValA m 30.36 +.08 +11.2IntlValI 30.97 +.08 +11.6LtdTMuA m 14.55 ... +3.2LtdTMul 14.55 ... +3.5ThriventLgCapStkA m 27.95 +.02 +23.6TocquevilleDlfld m 39.79 +.10 +23.4TouchstoneSdCapInGr 22.61 +.01 +31.4TransamericaAstAlMdGrC m 15.08+.02 +15.5Tweedy, BrowneGlobVal d 27.82 +.01 +16.5U.S. Global InvestorGld&Prec m 7.53 +.06 +19.3GlobRes m 10.27 +.09 +19.2WrldPrcMnr m 7.28 +.06 +28.2USAACorstnModAgrsv 26.47+.06+15.3GrowInc 22.98 +.03 +26.7HYOpp d 9.01 ... +12.1Income 13.34 +.01 +6.2IncomeStk 18.15 +.03 +22.1IntermBd 10.99 ... +6.7Intl 31.22 +.06 +18.7S&P500M 27.94 ... +24.3ShTmBond 9.25 ... +2.5TaxEInt 13.52 +.01 +5.5TaxELgTm 13.68 +.01 +7.4TaxEShTm 10.72 ... +1.5Value 20.56 +.05 +22.3VALIC Co IMdCpIdx 28.24 +.15 +24.1StockIdx 35.36 +.07 +23.7Vanguard500Adml 180.89 +.36 +24.1500Inv 180.89 +.35 +23.9500Sgnl 149.42 +.29 +24.1A-WexUSIdxAdm 32.43+.06 +21.8BalIdx 28.82 +.05 +16.0BalIdxAdm 28.82 +.05 +16.1BalIdxIns 28.82 +.04 +16.1BalIdxSig 28.51 +.04 +16.1BdMktInstPls 10.82 ... +4.3CAITAdml 11.69 +.01 +7.2CALTAdml 11.88 +.01 +8.7CapOp 50.63 +.07 +28.9CapOpAdml 116.94 +.17 +29.0CapVal 15.99 +.02 +30.9Convrt 14.44 +.02 +16.9DevMktIdxAdm 13.65+.02 +22.9DevMktIdxInstl 13.67 +.02 +23.0DivAppIdxInv 31.16 +.06 +19.3DivEqInv 32.50 +.09 +25.2DivGr 22.12 +.05 +18.9EmMkInsId 27.25 +.01 +15.6EmMktIAdm 35.83 ... +15.5EmMktStkIdxIP 90.65 +.02 +15.6EmerMktIdInv 27.29 +.01 +15.3EnergyAdm 143.64 -.04 +30.2EnergyInv 76.52 -.02 +30.1EqInc 31.61 +.05 +21.0EqIncAdml 66.25 +.10 +21.1EurIdxAdm 74.88 +.20 +28.4ExMktIdSig 56.99 +.30 +26.2ExplAdml 98.15 +.48 +24.6Explr 105.47 +.52 +24.4ExtdIdAdm 66.32 +.35 +26.2ExtdIdIst 66.32 +.35 +26.3ExtdMktIdxIP 163.68 +.86 +26.3ExtndIdx 66.29 +.35 +26.1FAWeUSIns 102.78 +.17 +21.8GNMA 10.73 ... +5.0GNMAAdml 10.73 ... +5.1GlbEq 24.95 +.09 +24.4GrIncAdml 68.64 +.14 +24.3GroInc 42.05 +.09 +24.2GrowthIdx 50.87 +.17 +27.4GrthIdAdm 50.86 +.17 +27.6GrthIstId 50.86 +.17 +27.6GrthIstSg 47.10 +.16 +27.6HYCor 6.17 ... +10.5HYCorAdml 6.17 ... +10.6HltCrAdml 86.61 -.19 +35.9HlthCare 205.29 -.46 +35.9ITBond 11.46 ... +4.9ITBondAdm 11.46 ... +5.0ITGradeAd 9.94 ... +6.3ITIGrade 9.94 ... +6.2ITrsyAdml 11.30 +.01 +2.1InfPrtAdm 26.71 ... +4.6InfPrtI 10.88 ... +4.6InflaPro 13.60 -.01 +4.4InstIdxI 179.72 +.35 +24.1InstPlus 179.73 +.35 +24.1InstTStId 44.88 +.12 +24.7InstTStPl 44.89 +.12 +24.7IntlExpIn 19.60 +.04 +28.7IntlGr 23.87 +.07 +24.4IntlGrAdm 75.94 +.20 +24.5IntlStkIdxAdm 29.06 +.05 +22.3IntlStkIdxI 116.21 +.19 +22.3IntlStkIdxIPls 116.23 +.20 +22.3IntlStkIdxISgn 34.86 +.06 +22.3IntlVal 39.16 +.06 +25.0ItBdIdxSl 11.46 ... +5.0L/TBdIdxInstlPl 13.59 -.03 +11.0LTBond 13.59 -.03 +10.9LTGradeAd 10.46 -.02 +13.0LTInvGr 10.46 -.02 +12.9LTsryAdml 12.02 -.02 +6.2LgBdIdxIs 13.59 -.03 +11.0LgCpIdxAdm 45.46 +.09 +24.4LifeCon 18.75 +.01 +11.9LifeGro 28.97 +.04 +19.8LifeInc 14.81 ... +8.1LifeMod 24.13 +.02 +15.8MdCpGrIdxAdm 41.35+.14+23.1MdCpValIdxAdm 44.94+.12 +27.9MdPDisGr 19.28 +.02 +16.5

MidCapGr 25.73 +.09 +21.7MidCapIdxIP 159.75 +.48 +25.6MidCp 32.29 +.09 +25.3MidCpAdml 146.62 +.44 +25.6MidCpIst 32.39 +.10 +25.6MidCpSgl 46.27 +.14 +25.6Morg 26.72 +.08 +24.9MorgAdml 82.85 +.26 +25.1MuHYAdml 11.08 ... +7.5MuInt 14.14 ... +5.8MuIntAdml 14.14 ... +5.9MuLTAdml 11.57 ... +7.7MuLtd 11.08 +.01 +2.4MuLtdAdml 11.08 +.01 +2.5MuSht 15.87 ... +1.0MuShtAdml 15.87 ... +1.1NJLTAdml 12.12 +.01 +7.5NYLTAdml 11.61 +.01 +7.6PALTAdml 11.52 ... +7.3PacIdxAdm 76.83 -.05 +14.5PrecMtls 11.56 -.01 +11.9Prmcp 101.54 +.15 +30.1PrmcpAdml 105.33 +.16 +30.2PrmcpCorI 21.41 +.05 +28.0REITIdx 24.91 +.18 +12.8REITIdxAd 106.28 +.78 +12.9REITIdxInst 16.45 +.12 +12.9REITIdxSg 28.37 +.21 +12.9S/TBdIdxInstl 10.53 ... +1.7S/TBdIdxInstlPl 10.53 ... +1.7STBond 10.53 ... +1.6STBondAdm 10.53 ... +1.7STBondSgl 10.53 ... +1.7STCor 10.77 ... +3.2STFedAdml 10.75 ... +1.3STGradeAd 10.77 ... +3.3STIGradeI 10.77 ... +3.3STsryAdml 10.70 ... +0.8SelValu 30.29 +.09 +29.2ShTmInfPtScIxIn 25.13+.01 +2.2ShTmInfPtScIxIv 25.09 ... +2.1SmCapIdx 55.85 +.31 +25.6SmCapIdxIP 161.43 +.92 +25.8SmCpGrIdxAdm 44.59+.26+23.6SmCpIdAdm 55.92 +.32 +25.8SmCpIdIst 55.92 +.32 +25.8SmCpIndxSgnl 50.38+.29 +25.8SmCpValIdxAdm 45.17+.24 +27.6SmGthIdx 35.64 +.21 +23.4SmGthIst 35.71 +.21 +23.6SmValIdx 25.19 +.14 +27.5SmVlIdIst 25.25 +.14 +27.7Star 25.10 +.04 +18.2StratgcEq 32.70 +.15 +31.2TgtRe2010 26.79 +.01 +11.6TgtRe2015 15.54 +.02 +14.4TgtRe2020 28.61 +.03 +16.2TgtRe2030 29.27 +.04 +19.2TgtRe2035 18.02 +.03 +20.7TgtRe2040 30.09 +.06 +21.7TgtRe2045 18.87 +.03 +21.8TgtRe2050 29.95 +.05 +21.8TgtRe2055 32.26 +.06 +21.8TgtRetInc 12.93 ... +9.6Tgtet2025 16.65 +.02 +17.7TlIntlBdIdxAdm 20.53 ... +5.7TlIntlBdIdxInst 30.80 -.01 +5.7TlIntlBdIdxInv 10.26 -.01 +5.6TotBdAdml 10.82 ... +4.3TotBdInst 10.82 ... +4.3TotBdMkInv 10.82 ... +4.2TotBdMkSig 10.82 ... +4.3TotIntl 17.38 +.03 +22.2TotStIAdm 49.50 +.13 +24.6TotStIIns 49.51 +.13 +24.7TotStISig 47.77 +.12 +24.6TotStIdx 49.48 +.12 +24.5TxMBalAdm 26.10 +.03 +14.9TxMCapAdm 100.47 +.27 +25.5TxMSCAdm 44.81 +.34 +24.6USGro 30.31 +.09 +28.8USGroAdml 78.49 +.24 +29.0ValIdxAdm 31.61 +.03 +21.9ValIdxIns 31.60 +.02 +21.9ValIdxSig 32.89 +.03 +21.9ValueIdx 31.61 +.03 +21.7VdHiDivIx 26.28 +.05 +20.4WellsI 25.91 ... +11.8WellsIAdm 62.76 -.01 +11.8Welltn 39.91 +.03 +17.0WelltnAdm 68.93 +.06 +17.1WndsIIAdm 69.49 +.14 +22.1Wndsr 21.97 +.05 +25.5WndsrAdml 74.10 +.15 +25.6WndsrII 39.16 +.07 +22.1ex-USIdxIP 108.83 +.17 +21.8VirtusEmgMktsIs 10.32 +.03 +9.7MulSStA m 4.92 ... +5.3MulSStC b 4.98 ... +5.0VoyaCorpLdrsTrustB ... ... +19.7GlobalRealEstA m 20.38+.09+15.3Waddell & Reed AdvAssetStrA m 11.66 ... +20.4CoreInv A m 7.72 -.01 +27.2HiIncA m 7.74 ... +12.2NewCncptA m 12.05+.04 +22.2SciTechA m 16.72 +.05 +34.4WasatchIntlGr d 28.53 +.03 +15.0L/SInv d 16.92 +.04 +13.7SmCapGr d 52.22 +.31 +15.8Wells FargoAstAlllcA f 14.73 ... +14.1AstAlllcC m 14.20 ... +13.4EmgMktEqA f 21.81 -.01 +10.8GrI 55.56 +.02 +21.4GrowInv 50.77 +.02 +20.8GrowthAdm 53.79 +.02 +21.2PrmLrgCoGrA f 14.70+.01+24.7STMuBdInv 10.01 ... +1.5ShTmBdInv 8.83 ... +1.8UlSTMInA f 4.82 ... +0.3UlSTMInI 4.82 ... +0.7WestwoodIncOppI x 14.73 -.03 +12.2William BlairInslIntlG 17.90 +.04 +20.1IntlGrI d 27.66 +.07 +20.2World FundsEpGloEqShYI x 20.83-.21 +23.3

AMGMgrsBondSvc 28.46 +.02 +8.5YacktmanSvc d 24.67+.06+14.5YkmFcsInst d 26.40 +.06 +14.0YkmFcsSvc d 26.37 +.06 +13.9AQRDivArbtI 11.05 +.01 +2.0MaFtStrI 10.01 -.01 0.0MlStrAltI 9.77 -.04 +1.9AcadianEmgMkts d 19.54 +.03 +13.5Advisors’ Inner CrclEGrthIns 20.18 +.14 +31.9AkreAkrFocRet m 21.73 +.09 +22.2Alger GroupCapApInsI 28.24 +.10 +29.5Alliance BernsteinHighIncA m 9.65 ... +11.0HighIncAdv 9.66 ... +11.2HighIncC m 9.76 ... +10.2AllianzGINFJAllCpVaA m 17.12+.02+23.2NFJAllCpValIns 17.20+.02 +23.5NFJSmCVIs 37.34 +.18 +24.3NFJSmCVlA m 35.13+.17 +23.8AmanaGrowth b 33.98 +.07 +23.3Income b 46.00 +.11 +22.0American BeaconLgCpVlInv 29.36 +.05 +23.2LgCpVlIs 31.01 +.05 +23.6SmCapInst 28.34 +.19 +25.1American CenturyDivBdInstl 10.83 ... +4.5DivBdInv 10.83 ... +4.3EqGrowInv 32.77 +.09 +24.6EqIncA m 9.18 +.02 +15.2EqIncInv 9.18 +.02 +15.5HeritInv 26.49 +.05 +21.9InTTxFBIns 11.40 ... +3.8InTTxFBInv 11.39 ... +3.5IncGrInv 38.54 +.06 +24.4InfAdjI 12.00 ... +4.3IntlGrInv d 13.84 +.03 +20.0InvGrInstl 35.05 +.06 +25.0InvGrInv 34.65 +.06 +24.8MdCpValInv 17.22 +.06 +23.9NTDvsfBdInstl 10.85 -.01 +4.2SelectInv 58.27 +.19 +25.3UltraInv 35.47 +.10 +29.0ValueInv 8.86 +.01 +21.9American FundsAMCAPA m 28.78 +.09 +30.4BalA m 25.40 +.02 +16.8BondA m 12.78 ... +5.0CapIncBuA m 61.14 +.11 +16.8CapWldBdA m 21.06+.02 +8.0CpWldGrIA m 47.50 +.13 +23.3EurPacGrA m 50.73 +.19 +22.4FnInvA m 53.95 +.13 +22.8GlbBalA m 31.82 +.07 +18.7GrthAmA m 45.51 +.10 +26.4HiIncA m 11.58 -.01 +10.8HiIncMuA m 15.26 ... +8.2IncAmerA m 21.74 +.02 +17.5IntBdAmA m 13.57 ... +2.2IntlGrInA m 36.52 +.12 +23.1InvCoAmA m 39.43 +.07 +27.1LtdTmTxEA m 16.11 ... +3.5MutualA m 36.70 +.08 +20.7NewEconA m 39.79 +.13 +30.2NewPerspA m 38.81+.08 +21.3NwWrldA m 61.81 +.13 +18.5STBdFdA m 10.02 ... +1.0SmCpWldA m 51.03 +.13 +21.9TaxEBdAmA m 12.94 ... +6.4USGovSecA m 13.94 ... +3.0WAMutInvA m 41.69 +.10 +22.2ArbitrageArbitragI d 12.99 ... +2.4ArielApprecInv b 57.71 +.26 +25.6ArielInv b 77.20 +.45 +28.8Artio GlobalGlobHiYldI x 10.30 -.05 +12.3ArtisanIntl d 31.37 +.09 +21.6IntlI d 31.59 +.09 +21.9IntlVal d 38.98 +.06 +26.9IntlValI d 39.12 +.06 +27.2MdCpVal 28.13 +.07 +20.4MidCap 48.55 +.10 +24.0MidCapI 50.88 +.12 +24.3SmCapVal 18.90 +.20 +14.6Aston FundsMidCapI 49.32 +.14 +30.7MidCapN b 48.48 +.13 +30.3MtgClGrI 29.36 +.06 +18.7MtgClGrN b 29.18 +.06 +18.4BBHBrdMktFxI x 10.37 -.01 +2.2CoreSelN d 22.56 +.09 +17.8BNY MellonEmgMkts 10.53 -.01 +18.4MidCpMuStrM 15.27 +.04 +24.8NtlIntM 13.66 -.01 +4.5BairdAggrInst 10.73 -.01 +5.7CrPlBInst 11.10 -.01 +6.1ShTmBdIns 9.73 ... +2.4BaronAsset b 64.51 +.30 +25.0GrInstl 73.50 +.29 +20.0Growth b 72.66 +.29 +19.7SmCap b 35.32 +.13 +21.6SmCpInstl 35.80 +.13 +21.9BernsteinDiversMui 14.49 -.01 +3.4IntDur 13.77 ... +5.4IntlPort 17.08 +.04 +20.9TxMIntl 17.16 +.04 +21.0BerwynIncome x 14.44 -.07 +14.5BlackRockBasicValA m 32.77 +.05 +24.6BasicValI 33.05 +.04 +24.9CapAppInA m 27.49+.13 +24.1EqDivA m 25.31 +.02 +18.0EqDivI 25.37 +.01 +18.3EquitDivC m 24.70 +.02 +17.2FltRtlIncI 10.54 ... +5.6GlLSCrI 10.99 ... +5.2GlLSCrIvA m 10.97 ... +4.9GlobAlcA m 22.07 +.01 +13.6GlobAlcC m 20.38 +.01 +12.8GlobAlcI 22.20 +.01 +13.9HiYldBdIs 8.45 +.01 +14.0HiYldInvA m 8.45 +.01 +13.7HthScOpA m 45.56 -.04 +33.1LowDurIvA m 9.80 ... +3.0NatMuniA m 10.88 ... +7.0NatMuniI 10.88 +.01 +7.2StIncInvA m 10.37 ... +6.0StrIncIns 10.37 ... +6.4Brown AdvisoryGrEqInv d 19.06 +.13 +17.4

A-B-CAMC Net ... 60.12 -.39AcadiaPh ... 22.41 -.40Accelern n ... 34.47 -.31Achillion ... 7.74 +.10AcornEngy ... 2.42 +.13ActivsBliz .20f u21.92 +.12AdobeSy ... 72.00 -.85Adtran .36 22.49 +.46AdventSft s .52 32.68 -.15AgiosPh n ... 45.91 +1.91AkamaiT ... 61.01 -.02AkebiaTh n ... 28.59 -.47Akorn ... u31.71 +1.01Alexion ... 157.60 -2.54AlignTech ... 56.32 +1.19Alkermes ... 50.94 +.84AllscriptH ... 16.09 +.64AlnylamP ... 62.23 -1.96Alphatec ... 1.44 +.06AlteraCp lf .60 34.49 ...Altisrce n ... 114.29 +.29Amarin ... 1.69 +.02Amazon ... 324.57 -1.12Ambarella ... 31.11 +.07Amdocs .62 46.30 -.13Amedisys ... 17.46 +4.01AmAirl n ... 44.00 -.55ACapAgy 2.75e 23.32 -.02AmCapLtd ... 15.22 +.27ACapMtg 2.65e 20.02 +.08ARCapH n .68 10.78 -.08ARltCapPr 1.00 12.50 +.05AmSupr ... 1.53 +.07Amgen 2.44 118.59 -.55AmicusTh ... 3.03 +.09AmkorTch ... 10.88 -.13Amsurg ... 45.36 -.44Anadigc ... d.85 -.19AnalogDev 1.48 53.50 -.05AngiesList ... 11.95 -.03Ansys ... 75.31 +1.26ApolloEdu ... 31.06 -.02ApolloInv .80 8.56 +.13Apple Inc s 1.88f 91.98 +1.08ApldMatl .40 22.40 -.02ApldOpto n ... 22.92 +.24ArQule ... 1.46 +.04AratanaTh ... 14.91 -.07ArenaPhm ... 5.85 +.02AresCap 1.52a 17.67 +.20AriadP ... 6.37 -.01ArrayBio ... 4.25 -.02Arris ... 32.20 -.05ArrowRsh ... 14.35 +.13ArubaNet ... 17.78 +.02AscenaRtl ... 16.87 +.01AspenTech ... 46.20 +.71AsscdBanc .36 18.12 +.10athenahlth ... 127.09 -1.50Atmel ... 9.27 +.10Autodesk ... 56.40 +.15AutoData 1.92 79.48 +.37Auxilium ... 21.26 +.57AvagoTch 1.16f 70.94 -.02AvanirPhm ... 5.56 +.16AVEO Ph ... 1.72 +.08AviatNetw ... 1.25 +.03AvisBudg ... 59.04 +.36Aware 1.75e 6.50 +.82B/E Aero ... 91.95 -.23BGC Ptrs .48 7.50 -.12Baidu ... 184.96 +1.25

BallardPw ... 4.16 +.03BncFstOK 1.24 62.15 +.14BkOzarks s .46 33.48 +.13Bazaarvce ... 7.96 +.07BebeStrs .10 3.15 +.02BedBath ... 57.45 +.75Biocryst ... 12.52 +.09BiogenIdc ... 318.13 -.50BioMarin ... 62.83 +.14BioScrip ... 8.19 -.04BioTelem ... 7.12 -.39BlkRKelso .84m 9.21 +.10BlackBerry ... 9.78 -.14BloominBr ... 22.61 -.03BluebBio ... 39.41 -.77BodyCentrl ... 1.00 -.01Broadcom .48 36.86 -.13BrcdeCm .14 9.23 -.04BrooksAuto .32 10.33 +.41BrukerCp ... 24.07 -.11CA Inc 1.00 28.55 -.09CDW Corp .17 31.68 -.37CH Robins 1.40 63.80 +.07CIM CTr rs .88 21.69 -.90CME Grp 1.88 70.42 -.08CTC Media .70 11.05 +.01CVB Fncl .40 16.05 -.20Cadence ... u17.34 -.05CaesarAc n ... 12.10 -.11Caesars ... 17.67 -.05CdnSolar ... 29.79 ...CapProd .93 u11.56 +.37CapSwst s .20 36.22 +.32CapFedFn .30a 12.19 +.17CpstnTurb ... 1.51 ...CareerEd ... 4.93 -.03Carrizo ... 67.88 +.74CascadeM ... 13.27 -.25Catamaran ... 44.15 -.25Cavium ... 49.32 +.89Celgene s ... 86.80 +.18CelldexTh ... 16.62 -.13CntrStBks .04 11.06 -.03CEurMed ... 2.82 +.09Cerner s ... 51.27 -.43CharterCm ...u154.84 +2.84Chimerix ... 22.34 -.33Cinedigm ... 2.65 ...Cintas .77f 63.02 +.37Cirrus ... 22.94 -.16Cisco .76 24.70 +.05CitrixSys ... 64.20 -.16CleanEngy ... 11.59 +.19Clearfield ... 17.23 -1.30CliftonBcp .24 12.65 -.03ClovisOnc ... 42.53 +.97CoStar ... 157.02 -1.16CognizTc s ... 49.30 -.09Comc spcl .90 u53.72 +.41CommScp n ... 23.26 -.03Compuwre .50 9.97 +.01ConatusP n ... 8.38 +.36ConsolWtr .30 11.63 +.26Control4 n ... 19.37 -.32CorinthC ... d.28 -.02CorOnDem ... 45.97 -.02Costco 1.42 115.49 -.15Courier .84 14.08 +.94CowenGp ... 4.29 +.05Cree Inc ... 48.48 -.05Crocs ... 14.82 +.22Ctrip.com ... 60.78 -.89CubistPh ... 69.30 -.99CumMed ... 6.60 +.07Curis ... 1.67 +.01

Cutera ... 10.25 +.68CypSemi .44 10.65 +.15

D-E-FDealertrk ... 44.95 -.41DelFriscos ... 27.63 -.28dELIAs h ... .80 -.05Dndreon ... 2.37 +.07DescSys ... 14.00 +.40DexCom ... 39.65 -.75DiambkEn ... 88.69 -.60DirecTV ... 84.61 -.49DiscComA ... 74.06 +1.17DishNetw h ... u65.64 +1.88DixieGrp ... 10.58 -.44DollarTree ... 53.35 -.31DonlleyRR 1.04 16.65 +.62DotHillSys ... 4.41 -.18DragonW g ... 1.93 +.24DryShips ... 3.22 -.03Dunkin .92 46.31 +.38DurectCp ... 1.72 +.15DyaxCp ... 9.96 +1.11E-Trade ... 21.21 +.25eBay ... 50.08 +.61EarthLink .20 3.72 +.078x8 Inc ... 7.91 +.13ElbitImg h ... .18 -.00ElectArts ... 35.89 -.38ElizArden ... 22.22 -.19EmpirRsts ... 7.06 -.66Endo Intl ... 70.34 -.32Endocyte ... 6.55 -.01EndurInt n ... 15.22 +.07EnrgyRec ... 5.48 +.04EngyXXI .48 23.46 +.20Entegris ... 13.51 +.18EntropCom ... 3.23 -.04Equinix ... 210.11 +1.44Ericsson .46e 12.04 +.04EveryWr h ... 1.38 +.04Exelixis ... 3.47 -.07Expedia .60 78.95 +1.94ExpdIntl .64f 44.11 +.02ExpScripts ... 69.60 +.76ExtrmNet ... 4.26 -.02F5 Netwks ... 111.11 +3.95Facebook ... 67.60 +.47FairchldS ... 15.45 -.10FedMogul ... 20.32 -.11FedNatHld .12 24.26 -1.23FidusInvst 1.52a 20.10 -.34FifthStFin 1.00 9.80 +.20FifthThird .52f 21.26 -.03Finisar ... 19.70 +.03FinLine .32 u29.56 +.41FireEye n ... 38.92 +.02FFnclOH .60a 17.10 +.05FstNBCBk ... 33.72 +.42FstNiagara .32 8.70 +.05FstSolar ... 71.40 -.07FstMerit .64 19.77 +.28Fiserv s ... 60.38 -.24FiveBelow ... 39.84 +.26FivePrim n ... 15.34 ...Five9 n ... 6.70 -.03Flextrn ... 11.20 +.09ForbEnSv ... 4.52 +.04Fortinet ... u24.73 +.33FosterWhl .40e 34.11 +.15FndtnMd n ... 26.08 +.82Francesca ... 14.70 +.21FreshMkt ... 33.62 -.18FrontierCm .40 5.73 -.01FuelCellE ... 2.42 ...

FultonFncl .32 12.38 +.12

G-H-IGSI Tech ... 5.65 +.12GT AdvTc ... 18.26 -.23GTx Inc ... 1.37 +.03Gaiam ... 7.70 -.48Gam&Lsr n 2.08 33.23 +.20Garmin 1.92 60.59 +1.36Gentherm ... 43.72 +.94GeronCp ... 2.97 -.01Gevo ... .84 -.05Gibraltar ... 15.30 -1.31GileadSci ... 82.94 +.76GladstnCap .84 9.96 -.04GladstInv .72a 7.38 +.04GluMobile ... 4.67 +.22Gogo ... 18.97 +.15GolLNGLtd 1.80 59.60 +.25GolubCap 1.28 17.97 +.17Goodyear .20 27.75 +.44Google A ... 585.69 +.92Google C n ... 577.24 +1.24GoPro n ... u35.76 +4.42Gordmans3.60e 4.24 +.24GreenPlns .16 u32.32 -.30Groupon ... 6.68 -.04GulfportE ... 63.00 -.15HD Supply ... 28.03 -.02HMS Hldgs ... 19.97 +.35HainCel ... 85.95 -.08Halozyme ... 9.93 -.01HancHld .96 35.34 +.28HansenMed ... 1.23 -.09HanwhaSol ... 2.75 +.04Hardinge .08 11.67 +.18Harmonic ... 7.45 +.07HrvrdBio ... 4.27 +.34HawHold ... 13.89 +.03HrtlndEx .08 21.03 +.10HercOffsh ... 4.00 ...HimaxTch .27e 6.80 +.05Hologic ... 25.58 +.07HomeBcsh .30 32.87 -.37HomeAway ... 34.46 -.39HorizPhm ... 15.96 +.48HoughMH n ... 19.12 -.19HudsCity .16 9.86 -.03HuntJB .80 73.48 -.04HuntBncsh .20 9.56 -.02HutchT ... 2.07 +.07IAC Inter .96 68.95 -.33IdexxLabs ... 133.71 -.46iSh ACWI 1.29e 60.22 +.12iShNsdqBio .39e 256.73 +.35Icon PLC ... 46.30 +.14IconixBr ... 42.75 +.08IdenixPh ... 24.12 +.13Illumina ... 172.70 +1.72ImunoGn ... 11.91 +.12Incyte ... 55.52 -.47IndBkMI .24 12.81 -.83Infinera ... 9.55 +.30Informat ... 35.68 -.19InfoSvcs ... 4.80 -.34InnerWkgs ... 8.46 +.27InnovSolu ... 6.99 +.40Insmed ... 19.51 +.19Insulet ... 39.53 +.73IntgDv ... 15.25 +.11Intel .90 30.93 +.15InterceptP ... 242.49 +3.07Interface .12 18.89 +.19Intermolec ... 2.51 +.31InterMune ... 44.00 -.03

Nasdaq National Market

Mutual Funds

Intersil .48 15.00 -.09IntervestB .20 7.43 +.04Intevac ... 8.15 -.24IntraCell n ... 17.15 -.24Intuit .76 81.32 +.36IntSurg ... 423.40+12.61InvBncp s ... 11.06 +.04IridiumCm ... 8.28 +.09IronwdPh ... u15.50 +.09Isis ... 35.44 -.94

J-K-LJA Solar ... 10.71 -.02JD.com n ... 28.01 -.29JDS Uniph ... 12.35 -.04JkksPac ... 8.02 +.22JazzPhrm ... 146.00 -3.74JetBlue ... u10.88 +.30KCAP Fin 1.00 8.50 +.18KLA Tnc 1.80 70.97 +1.01KaloBios ... 2.35 +.12KandiTech ... 13.65 +.58Karyoph n ... 45.55 +2.15KeurigGM 1.00 125.25 +4.87KiOR ... .39 -.06Kofax n ... 8.60 -.14KraftFGp 2.10 59.66 +.36LDR Hld n ... 24.78 -.78LKQ Corp ... 26.65 +.33LPL Fincl .96 49.10 -.39LamResrch .72 66.95 +.45LamarAdv 3.32 52.94 +.67Lattice ... 8.18 +.25LexiPhrm ... 1.62 +.03LibGlobA s ... 43.92 +.39LibGlobC s ... 42.20 +.26LibtyIntA ... 29.09 -.03LifePtH ... 62.56 -.05

LincEdSv .28 4.18 +.35LinearTch 1.08 46.68 -.11LinnEngy 2.90 31.89 +.23LinnCo 2.90 30.51 +.18Lionbrdg ... 5.99 +.13LiquidHld n ... 1.78 +.08lululemn gs ... 40.42 -.07

M-N-0MCG Cap .28m 3.78 +.06MacroGn n ... 22.24 -.40MSG h ... 61.87 +1.50ManhAsc s ... 34.40 +.12MannKd ... 10.00 -.58Marketo ... 29.67 +.57Markit n ... 26.98 ...MarIntA .80f u63.98 -.01MarvellT .24 14.18 -.17Mattel 1.52 39.33 +.11MattsonT ... 2.05 -.06MaximIntg 1.04 33.91 ...MaxwellT ... 15.02 -.18MedalFin .96f 12.28 +.35MedAssets ... 22.17 -.37MedicActn ... u13.80 +.10Medivation ... 77.77 +.03MelcoCrwn .47e 35.26 -.05MemRsD n ... 24.01 -.54MeritMed ... 15.20 +.35MerrimkP ... 7.32 +.06Methanx 1.00f 62.03 +1.01Michaels n ... 17.02 ...Microchp 1.42f 48.66 +.22MicronT ... 31.51 -.49MicrosSys ... 67.72 ...Microsoft 1.12 u42.25 +.53Middleby s ... 80.24 -1.12MillerHer .56 30.69 +.98

MobileMini .68 47.81 -.71MokoSoc n ... 7.70 ...Mondelez .56 37.30 -.33MoneyGrm ... 14.38 -.38MonstrBev ... 69.25 -.62MoSys ... 3.14 +.15MotorcarP ... 23.30 ...Mylan ... 51.51 -.36MyriadG ... 38.81 +1.60NGP Cap .64 6.19 -.08NII Hldg h ... .60 -.05NMI Hld n ... 11.00 -.14NPS Phm ... 33.18 +.30NXP Semi ... 65.01 +1.12NanoString ... 14.25 -.63Nanosphere ... 1.65 +.07NasdOMX .60f 38.24 +.22NatGenH n .04 17.09 -.20NatPenn .40 10.63 +.09Navient n .60 u17.84 +.17NektarTh ... 12.84 -.15NetApp .66f 35.48 -.30Netflix ... 442.08 +2.47Neurcrine ... 14.85 -.01NYMtgTr 1.08 7.84 ...NewLead rs ... d.28 -.22Newport ... 17.95 -.27NewsCpA n ... 17.98 -.04NewsCpB n ... 17.55 +.01NexstarB .60 49.94 +1.50NorwCruis ... 31.45 -.54Novavax ... 4.62 -.08NuanceCm ... 18.66 -.13Nvidia .34 18.38 +.02Oclaro ... 2.15 -.15OldDomFrt ... 62.76 -.29OmniVisn ... 21.87 +.01OnSmcnd ... 9.09 +.08

Oncothyr ... 3.25 -.10OpenTable ... 104.01 -.19Orexigen ... 5.97 ...

P-Q-RPC-Tel .16 7.74 +.19PDC Engy ... 62.27 -1.26PDL Bio .60 9.66 +.06PGT Inc ... 8.57 -.14PLX Tch ... 6.48 +.01PMC Sra ... 7.54 +.07PMFG ... 4.97 +.10PTC Inc ... 38.42 +.21PTC Thera ... 27.50 +.72PacWstBc 1.00 42.31 -.38Paccar .88f 62.90 -.40PacBiosci ... 6.12 -.21PaciraPhm ... u91.01 +2.51PainThera ... 5.47 -.59PanASlv .50 15.01 -.17Parexel ... 52.71 -.41PatternE n 1.29f 32.34 +.06Patterson .80 39.93 -.19PattUTI .40 34.60 +.19Paychex 1.40 41.21 -.05PnnNGm ... 11.89 -.10PennantPk 1.12 11.49 +.08PenPkFR 1.08 14.23 +.21PeopUtdF .66f 15.14 +.07Performnt ... 10.00 +.01PernixTh h ... u9.00 -.17PetSmart .78 60.97 +.48Pharmacyc ... 88.48 +.47PhibroAH n ... 20.72 -1.04PilgrimsP ... u26.83 +1.28Polycom ... 12.46 +.10PortolaPh ... 29.19 +.71Potbelly n ... 15.64 -.11PwShs QQQ1.30e u93.75 +.41PrivateB .04 29.16 -.02PrUPQQQ s .01e u74.23 +.73PrognicsPh ... 4.23 +.09ProgrsSoft ... 24.12 +1.88Proofpoint ... 36.81 +.11PShtQQQ rs ... d43.30 -.60ProspctCap 1.32 10.52 +.03Prothena ... 22.30 ...QIAGEN ... 24.49 +.19QlikTech ... 22.29 -.21Qlogic ... 10.05 +.24Qualcom 1.68f 78.99 +.22QualitySys .70 16.17 +.03Questcor 1.20 91.27 +1.08QuickLog ... 4.94 ...Qunar n ... 27.79 +2.73RF MicD ... 9.36 -.13RMG Netw ... 2.15 -.14RPX Corp ... 17.47 +.17RadNet ... 6.68 -.33RadiSys ... 3.29 +.16Receptos ... 40.43 +.28Regenrn ... 277.29 -2.51Relypsa n ... 24.40 +.44RenewEn ... 11.50 +.07RepFBcp ... 4.97 -.25RetailOpp .64 15.84 +.03RetailNot n ... 26.62 -.48Retrophin ... 12.01 +.20RichrdElec .24 9.96 -.03RockCrPh ... .61 -.03RocketF n ... 30.07 +.29RosettaR ... 53.87 +.23RossStrs .80 65.80 -.21

S-T-USBA Com ... 101.64 +1.84SEI Inv .44 32.24 +.26SFX Ent n ... 7.63 -.04SLM Cp ... 8.35 +.09SS&C Tech ... 43.77 -.04SabreCp n ... 20.27 +.68SalixPhm ... 122.81 -1.16SanDisk 1.20f 102.74 +.10SangBio ... 14.94 -.46Sanmina ... 22.82 +.16Sanofi rt ... .49 +.00SareptaTh ... 30.17 +.08SciGames ... 11.05 -.17SeagateT 1.72 56.92 +.21SearsHldgs ... 38.16 +.03SeattGen ... 38.88 -.22SelCmfrt ... 20.31 +.30Senomyx ... 8.50 -.40Sequenom ... 3.93 +.15SvcSource ... 5.63 +.32Shire .60eu234.98 +.69SigaTech h ... 2.65 -.01SigmaDsg ... 4.64 +.28SignatBk ... 125.87 +.24SilcnLab ... 48.85 +.24Slcnware .23e 8.12 -.11SilvStd g ... 8.40 -.06Sina ... 47.86 -.29Sinclair .60 34.62 +.98SiriusXM ... 3.43 -.03SkywksSol .44 46.06 -.30SmithWes ... 14.39 -.23SodaStrm ... d33.34 -1.04SolarCap 1.60 21.42 +.22SolarSCap 1.41 16.88 +.01SolarCity ... 70.87 +.07Solazyme ... 11.88 +.09SonicCorp ... 22.16 -.49Sonus ... 3.56 ...SpectPh ... 8.01 +.07SpiritAir ... 63.00 +.55Splunk ... 54.58 +.62SportsW n ... 7.88 -.27Sprouts n ... 32.54 -.29Staples .48 10.75 -.17Starbucks 1.04 77.94 -.12Starz A ... 29.37 +.28StlDynam .46 17.77 -.01SMadden s ... 33.83 +.28Stratasys ... 112.14 +3.01SunPower ... u41.06 +.45SuperMicro ... 24.69 -.76Supernus ... 10.85 +.21support.cm ... 2.46 +.08SusqBnc .32 10.52 +.23Symantec .60 22.77 +.23Synaptics ... 89.38 +.66Synchron ... 33.80 -.35SynrgyPh ... 4.03 +.09SyntaPhm ... 4.05 -.06SynthesEn ... 1.95 +.14TCP Cap 1.44a 18.22 -.09TGC Inds ... 5.14 +.54THL Credit 1.36a 14.12 +.08TICC Cap 1.16 9.90 +.17tw telecom ... 40.33 +.26TakeTwo ... 22.38 +.61Tarena n ... 12.21 -1.74Targacept ... 4.28 +.11Tecumseh ... d4.80 +.25TlCmSys ... 3.32 +.14TeslaMot ... 239.06 +3.46TexInst 1.20 47.76 -.03TexRdhse .60 26.07 -.35

TheraBio n ... 33.93 -.03Theravnce ... 30.10 +.17TibcoSft ... 19.96 +.23TileShop ... 15.38 -.38TiVo Inc ... 12.93 +.39Tornier ... 23.76 +.32TowerGp lf ... 2.03 -.01TownSprts .64a 6.60 +.35TractSup s .64f 60.21 -.64TradeStRsd .38 7.07 -.60TrimbleN ... 37.10 +.05TripAdvis ...u110.21 +2.34TriQuint ... 15.44 -.26TriStCap ... 14.20 -.05TrueCar n ... 13.29 +.1521stCFoxA .25 35.25 +.1021stCFoxB .25 34.34 +.122U n ... 15.47 -.99UTiWrldwd .06 10.12 +.12Ubiquiti ... 44.59 -.23UltaSalon ... 92.09 +.76Umpqua .60 17.90 +.20Unilife ... 2.87 +.03UtdOnln rs .60 10.38 -.02UtdTherap ... 89.45 +1.42UnivDisp ... 31.51 +2.33UrbanOut ... 33.74 -.09

V-W-X-Y-ZVCA Inc ... 35.40 +.21VeecoInst ... 36.83 +2.16Verisign ... 48.76 -1.97Verisk ... 59.67 +.52VertxPh ... 93.77 +.60ViacomA 1.32f 86.37 +.93ViacomB 1.32f 86.37 +.94Vical ... 1.18 +.02VimpelCm .45e 8.51 -.05VitesseS ... 3.26 -.17Vivus ... 5.22 +.15Vodafone 1.82e 33.43 +.24WarrenRs ... u6.03 +.18WashFed .44f 22.70 +.03WaterstnF .20 11.44 -.11Web.com ... 29.22 +.10WebMD ... 48.54 -.59Wendys Co .20 8.61 +.04WestCorp .90 26.78 -.36WestellT ... 2.29 +.02WDigital 1.60f 92.90 +1.01WestfldFn .24a 7.30 +.21WstptInn g ... 17.62 +.33WetSeal ... .91 +.05WholeFood .48 38.70 -.21Windstrm 1.00 9.86 +.04WisdomTr ... 11.99 +.30Woodward .32 50.07 +.89WrightM ... 31.09 -.80Wynn 5.00 206.89 -1.15XOMA ... 4.65 +.06Xilinx 1.16f 46.91 +.08Xoom ... 26.08 +.34Xunlei n ... 15.09 -.05YRC Wwde ... 28.13 +.86Yahoo ... 34.25 +.59Yandex ... 35.16 +.13Yongye ... 6.88 -.01Zagg ... 4.86 +.17ZeltiqAes ... 15.75 -.42Zillow ... 138.87 +.83ZionsBcp .16 29.64 -.13Zogenix ... 2.02 +.03Zulily n ... 38.70 -1.60Zynga h ... 3.23 +.04

12-moName NAV Chg %Rtn

Name Div Last Chg

Mutual Fund Footnotes: b - Fee covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption fee. f - frontload (sales charges). m - Multiple fees are charged, usually a marketing fee and either a sales or redemption fee. NA - not available. p - pre-vious day´s net asset value. s - fund split shares during the week. x - fund paid a distribution during the week.Source: Morningstar and the Associated Press.

C8 DAILY COMMERCIAL Saturday, June 28, 2014

D00

2871

D00

2871

7-YEAR/100,000 MILE LIMITEDWARRANTY*172-POINT INSPECTIONROADSIDE ASSISTANCE

NEW WINDSHIELD WIPER BLADESAT DELIVERYFULL FUEL TANK AT DELIVERYOIL/FILTER CHANGE AT DELIVERY

QUALITYCHECKEDCertified Pre-Owned

CERTIFIED PRE-OWNED VEHICLESAS LOW AS 1.9% APR FINANCING - 100,000 MILE WARRANTY

2010 HYUNDAISONATA GLS

WAS $12,900NOW

$10,180

2007 PONTIACG6

WAS $11,800NOW

$10,7002010 TOYOTACOROLLA LE

WAS $15,700NOW

$13,920

2012 FORDESCAPEWAS $17,200

NOW$14,740

2010 LINCOLNMKZ

WAS $20,200NOW

$14,920

2012 FORDFUSIONWAS $18,600

NOW$15,420

2013 HYUNDAIELANTRAWAS $18,400

NOW$15,680

2010 HONDAACCORD EX

WAS $19,400NOW

$16,580

2004 TOYOTATACOMAWAS $11,500

NOW$10,740

2013 FORDC-MAX

WAS $26,700NOW

$19,480

2010 TOYOTAVENZA

WAS $20,900NOW

$19,700

2013 TOYOTARAV4 LEWAS $25,300

NOW$22,860

2011 FORDFLEX

WAS $25,600NOW

$23,280

2013 NISSANPATHFINDER S

WAS $28,900NOW

$23,920

2010 FORD F-150PLATINUMWAS $26,900

NOW$24,860

2014 FORDESCAPE TITANIUM

WAS $28,400NOW

$25,230

2011 LEXUSRX 350

WAS $29,600NOW

$26,8102008 FORD F-350 FX-4

CREW CAB, LONG BED, DIESELWAS $32,700

NOW$30,860

2011 CHEVY CAMARO SSONLY 2,000 MILES

WAS $34,700NOW

$30,000

2011 ACURARL

WAS $32,200NOW

$30,240

2014 FORDEXPEDITION EL XLT

WAS $40,500NOW

$36,7101101 E. Hwy. 50 Clermont, FL Highway 50, Just East of 27

STORE HOURS: M-F 8AM-8PM • SAT 9AM-6PM SUN NOON-6PMSERVICE HOURS: M-F 7:30AM-5:30PM • SAT 8AM-2PM

All prices are plus tax tag title and $599 dealer fee. All new car sale prices are after $3000 cash down or trade equity. All pmts are36 mo leases 10500 per year and include $3000 cash down. Photos are for illustrative purposes only, dealer and newspaper are notresponsible for typographical errors. Some prices may require FMCC financing or trade assistance, see dealer for details. Prices areonly good for date of publication. Thank you for reading the fine print, smart customers always do.

TOLL FREE 800-313-9787 Se Habla Español

2014 FIESTAstarting at $10,500

or $500 &

0% up to 60 mo

drive for $169** per month

2014 TAURUSstarting at $18,300

or $1,250 &

0% up to 60 mo

drive for $219** per month

2014 FOCUSstarting at $12,900

or $1,000 &

0% up to 60 mo

drive for $189** per month

2014 FUSIONstarting at $16,500

or $1,000 &

0% up to 60 mo

drive for $179** per month

2014 MUSTANGstarting at $16,900

or $2,000 &

0% up to 60 mo

drive for $209** per month

2014 ESCAPEstarting at $17,800

or $1,000 &

0% up to 60 mo

drive for $249** per month

2014 EXPLORERstarting at $23,900or 0% up to 60 mo

drive for $229** per month

2014 FLEXstarting at $23,900

or $1,000 &

0% up to 60 mo

drive for $259** per month

2014 F-150starting at $20,600

or $750 &

0% up to 60 mo

drive for $259** per month

2014 Edgestarting at $23,300

or $1,000 &

0% up to 60 mo

drive for $229** per month

96 HOUR SALETHIS FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY & MONDAY!

• NO REASONABLE OFFERS WILL BE REFUSED. • UP TO 110% OFF BOOK VALUE FOR YOUR TRADE. • 0.0% UP TO 60 MO NO PAYMENTS FOR UP TO 90 DAYS.

2003 FORDCROWN VICTORIA

WAS $8,720NOW

$7,300

2008 BUICKLACROSSE CXL

WAS $14,700NOW

$13,810

2012 FORDFOCUS

WAS $17,500NOW

$15,800

2014 FORDMUSTANG GT

WAS $31,400NOW

$29,200

Saturday, June 28, 2014 DAILY COMMERCIAL D1DAY, MONTH XX, YEAR DAILY COMMERCIAL XX

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 5THJUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FORLAKE COUNTY, FLORIDACIVIL DIVISION

CASE NO.: 2010 CA 002128

U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION,AS TRUS TEE ON BEHALF OF GSAAHOME EQUITY TRUST 2007-1,Plaintiff,

vs.

DENETH K SHIVER; CINDY SHIVER;UNKNOWN TENANT(S); IN POSSES-SION OF THE SUBJECT PROPERTY,Defendants.

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant toa Final Judgment of Foreclosuredated the 22 day of April, 2014, anden tered in Case No. 2010 CA002128 of the Cir cuit Court of the5TH Judi cial Cir cuit in and for LakeCounty, Flor ida, wherein U.S. BANK,NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUS-TEE FOR THE HOLDERS OF THE GSAAHOME EQ UITY TRUST 2007-1, AS-SET-BACKED CERTIFI CATES, SERIES2007-1 is the Plaintiff and DENETH KSHIVER CINDY SHIVER; and UN-KNOWN TEN ANT(S) N/K/A RAY-MOND JOR DAN IN POSSESSION OFTHE SUB JECT PROP ERTY are defend-ants. The Clerk of this Court will sellto the high est and best bidder forcash at THE LOBBY ON THE FIRSTFLOOR OF THE COURT HOUSE AT 550W. MAIN STREET,11:00 a.m. on the28 day of August 2014, the followingde scribed prop erty as set forth in saidFinal Judg ment, to wit:

LOT 1 AND THE WEST 10 FEET OFLOT 2, AND THAT PART OF THE EAST1/2 OF DANVERS STREET, NOW VA-CATED, LYING WEST OF AND ADJA-CENT TO SAID LOT 1, MORNINGVIEWSUB DIVISION, ACCORDING TO THEPLAT THEREOF, RECORDED IN PLATBOOK 5, PAGE 51, OF THE PUBLICRECORDS OF LAKE COUNTY, FLOR-IDA.

ANY PERSON CLAIMING AN INTER-EST IN THE SURPLUS FROM THESALE, IF ANY, OTHER THAN THEPROPERTY OWNER AS OF THE DATEOF THE LIS PENDENS MUST FILE ACLAIM WITHIN 60 DAYS AFTER THESALE

If you are a person with a disabilitywho needs any accommodation in or-der to participate in this proceeding,you are entitled, at no cost to you, tothe provision of certain assistance.Please contact the ADA Coordinatorat the Of fice of the Trial Court Admin-istrator, 550 West Main Street, PostOffice Box 7800, Tavares, Florida,32778, Telephone: (352) 253-1604,within two (2) working days of yourreceipt of this Notice. If you are hear-ing or voice impaired, call1-800-955-8771.

Dated this 23 day of April, 2014

Neil KellyClerk Of The Circuit CourtBy: /s/S. HOLEWINSKIDeputy Clerk

Choice Legal Group, P.A.1800 NW 49th Street, Suite 120Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33309Telephone: (954) 453-0365Facsimile: (954) 771-6052Toll Free: 1-800-441-2438

Ad No: 10015556June 21, 2014 & June 28, 2014

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR LAKECOUNTY, FLORIDA

PROBATE DIVISIONFILE NO. 2014 CP 815IN RE: ESTATE OFGORDON PAUL NOWELL,Deceased,

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

The administration of the estate ofGordon Paul Nowell, deceased whosedate of death was May 7, 2014, ispending in the Circuit Court for LakeCounty, Florida, Probate Division, theaddress of which is 550 W. MainStreet, Ta vares, Florida, 32778. Thenames and addresses of the per sonalrepresentative and the personal rep-re sentative's at torney are set forthbe low.

All creditors of the decedent andother persons having claims or de-mands against decedent's estate onwhom a copy of this notice requiredto be served must file their claims witthis court WITHIN THE LATE OF 3MON THS AF TER THE TIME OF THEFIRST PUBLICA TION OF THIS NO TICEOR 30 DAYS AFTER THE DATE OFSERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICEON THEM.

All other creditors of the decedentand other persons having claims ordemands against de cedents estatemust file their claims with this courtWITHIN 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATEOF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THISNOTICE. ALL CLAIMS NOT FILEDWITHIN THE TIME PERIODS SETFORTH IN SECTION 733.702 OF THEFLOR IDA PROBATE CODE WILL BEFOREVER BAR RED. NOTWITHSTAND-ING THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTHABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2)YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECE-DENTS DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED.

The date of the first publication ofthis notice is June 21, 2014.

Attorney for Personal Representative:K. Wade Boyette, Jr. , EsquireAttorney for Personal RepresentativeFlorida Bar No. 0977111BOYETTE, CUMMINS, & NAILOS, PLLC1635 E. Highway 50, Suite 300Clermont, FL 34711Telephone 352-394-2103Fax: 353-394-2105Email [email protected]

Personal Representative:Gary Wayne Barnardc/o K. Wade Boyette, Jr., Esquire1635 E. Highway %0, Suite 300Clermont, FL 34711

Ad No: 10015576June 21, 2014 & June 28, 2014

CROSSWORD PUZZLE

D2 DAILY COMMERCIAL Saturday, June 28, 2014DAY, MONTH XX, YEAR DAILY COMMERCIAL XX

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINGCOMPREHENSIVE PLAN

AMENDMENTLOCAL PLANNING AGENCY AND

TRANSMITTAL HEARINGS

On Tuesday, July 8, 2014 at 6:45p.m. or as soon thereafter aspossible, the Local Planning Agency(LPA) will hold a public hearing atthe Town Hall Au di torium locatedat 17404 Sixth Street, Montverde,Florida to make a recom mendationto Town Council concern ing theadop tion Ordi nance No. 2014-11,a com prehensive plan amendment.On Tues day, July 8 2014 at 7:00p.m. or as soon thereaf ter aspossible, the Town Council will holda public hearing at the Town HallAuditorium located at 17404 SixthStreet, Montverde, Flor ida toconsider the recommendation of theLPA and transmittal of Ordi nanceNo. 2014-11 to the Depart ment ofEco nomic Op portunity. The ti tle ofthe ordinance is as follows:

ORDINANCE 2014-11

AN ORDINANCE OF THE TOWNCOUN CIL OF THE TOWN OFMONTVERDE, LAKE COUNTY,FLORIDA, AMENDING THE TOWN OFMONTVERDE'S COM PREHENSIVEPLAN PUR SUANT TO 163.3184,FLORIDA STATUTES, BY INCLUDINGAN ECONOMIC PROSPER ITY ELE-MENT; PROVIDING DATA ANDANALYSES TO SUPPORT THEECONOMIC PROSPERITY ELEMENT;AU THOR IZING THE MAYOR TOAMEND SAID COMPRE HENSIVEPLAN; RE PEALING ALL ORDI-NANCES IN CON FLICT HEREWITH;PROVIDING FOR SEV ER ABILITY;PROVIDING FOR AN EFFEC TIVEDATE; AND PROVIDING FOR THEFORWARD ING OF THIS OR DI NANCETO THE STATE OF FLORIDA DEPART-MENT OF ECONOMIC OP POR TUNITY.

Interested parties may appear atthe LPA an d/or Town Council publicmeeting and be heard with respectto the proposed plan amendment.Per sons with disabilities needingassistance to participate in thisproceeding should contact the TownClerk at least 48 hours before themeetings at 407-469-2681.

This ordinance is available at theTown Clerk's Office, at Town Halllocated at 17105 Porter Avenue,Montverde, Florida, for inspectionon Monday through Fri day, from8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Persons are advised that if they de-cide to ap peal any decision made atthis meeting, they will need a recordof the proceeding, and for such pur-poses, they may need to ensure thata verbatim record of the proceedingis made which includes the testi-mony and evidence upon which theappeal is based, per Section286.0105, Flor ida Statutes.

Mary Gillis, Town ClerkTown of Montverde

Ad No: 10016221June 28, 2014

IN THE COUNTY COURT IN ANDFOR LAKE COUNTY, FLORIDA

COUNTY CIVIL DIVI SIONCase No.: 14CC1378SUMMER BAY PARTNERSHIP,a Florida general partnership,Plaintiff,vs.DARRYL T. ALSTON and GLORIA J. AL-STON, et al, Defendant(s). NOTICE OF ACTIONCount 7 DAVID J DAVIES and CAROLA. DAVIES YOU ARE NOTIFIED that anaction to foreclose a mortgage on thefollow ing-described property, in LakeCounty, Florida: Timeshare PeriodWeek (W)6 in Con dominium Unit No.206-103 of Sum mer Bay Resort Con-dominium II, ac cording to the Decla-ration of Condo minium thereof re-corded in Official Records Book1582, page 1253, Pub lic Records ofLake County, Florida, as amended.has been filed against you, and youare required to serve a copy of yourwritten defenses, if any, to Plaintiff'sattorney, Paul M. Caldwell, whose ad-dress is, P.O. Box 120069, Clermont,Florida 34712-0069, [email protected] on or before thirty(30) days from the first date of pub li-cation, and to file the original withthe Clerk of this Court either beforeservice on Plaintiff's at torney or im-mediately thereafter; otherwise a de-fault will be entered against you forthe relief demanded in the Com-plaint.DATED on June 20, 2014.NEIL KELLY,Clerk of the CourtL. MikellAs Deputy Clerk

Ad No: 10016063June 28, 2014 & July 05, 2014

IN THE COUNTY COURT IN ANDFOR LAKE COUNTY, FLORIDA

COUNTY CIVIL DIVI SIONCase No.:14CC1219SUMMER BAY PARTNERSHIP,a Florida general partnership,Plaintiff,vs.PAUL ANDRE ABRAMS, et al, Defendant(s). NOTICE OF ACTIONCount 10 GEORGE PIERCE COOK andLORRAINE DOLORES COOKYOU ARE NOTIFIED that an action toforeclose a mortgage on thefollowing-described property, in LakeCounty, Florida: Timeshare PeriodWeek (W)46 in Condominium UnitNo. 201-101 of at Summer BayResort Condominium I, according tothe Declaration of Con dominiumthereof recorded in Official RecordsBook 1582, page 1119, Pub licRecords of Lake County, Florida, asamended. has been filed against you,and you are required to serve a copyof your written defenses, if any, toPlaintiff's attorney, Ross E. Payne,whose address is, P.O. Box 120069,Clermont, FL 34712-0069,[email protected] on orbefore thirty (30) days from the firstdate of publi cation, and to file theoriginal with the Clerk of this Courteither before service on Plaintiff'sattorney or im mediately thereafter;oth er wise a de fault will be enteredagainst you for the relief demandedin the Com plaint.DATED on this 20th day of June,2014.NEIL KELLY,Clerk of the CourtL.Mikell As Deputy Clerk

Ad No: 10016060June 28, 2014 & July 05, 2014

IN THE COUNTY COURT IN AND FOR LAKE COUNTY, FLORIDA

COUNTY CIVIL DIVISIONCase No.: 14CC1352SUMMER BAY PARTNERSHIP,a Florida general partnership,Plaintiff,vs.FELICIA CHAUTE ANDERSON et alDefendant(s).

NOTICE OF SALE PURSUANT TOF.S. CHAPTER 45

NOTICE IS GIVEN, that pursu ant to aFinal Judgment of Foreclo sure in thecaptioned matter dated Jun 19,2014, I will sell to the highest bidderfor cash at the front door of the LakeCounty Courthouse, 550 West MainStreet, Tavares, Florida 32778, at11:00 AM on Jul 24, 2014, thefollowing-described property, all ofwhich are in SUMMER BAY RE SORTCONDOMINIUM I, according to theAmended and Restat edDeclaration ofCondominium thereof recorded inOfficial Records Book 1582, page1119, Public Rec ords of Lake County,Florida, as amended. Count 2 AGNESLOFTON BYRD and WILLIAM VIRGILBYRD Timeshare Period Week (W)11in Condominium Unit No. 201-202

Count 3 TROY A. MCMANUS and EL-LEN PATRICIA MCMANUS TimesharePeriod Week (O)25 in Con dominiumUnit No. 203-201

Count 4 MICHAEL LEE MINCEY andJANET MINCEY Timeshare PeriodWeek (O)6 in Con dominium Unit No.203-206

Count 5 JOHNATHON D. OSBORN andMAGALY L. PALOMINO TimesharePeriod Week (W)33 in CondominiumUnit No. 202-101

Count 6 WILSON A. QUINTERO and DP. SANCHEZ-LOTERO TimesharePeriod Week (O)3 in Con dominiumUnit No. 208-102

Count 7 MATTHEW THOMAS RIVARDTimeshare Period Week (E)37 inCondominium Unit No. 202-101

Count 9 DAVID SINCLAIR WORRELLand LILLIE MAE JAMESTimeshare Period Week (O)6 inCondominium Unit No. 201-105DATED Jun 19, 2014Ross E. PayneResort Law Firm, P.A.Post Office Box 120069Clermont, Fl, 34712-0069Telephone: 352-242-2670Primar:[email protected]:[email protected] for Plain tiffNEIL KELLYClerk of the CourtBy: L. MikkelDeputy Clerk

Ad No: 10016058June 28, 2014 & July 05, 2014

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIFTHJUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR

LAKE COUNTY, FLORIDA

CASE NO. 2010 CA 003390

US BANK, N.A. SUCCESSOR BYMERGER TO THE LEADER MORTGAGECOMPANYPlaintiff,

vs.

LARHONDA D. MCCRARY; UNKNOWNSPOUSE OF LARHONDA D. MCCRARY;UNKNOWN TEN ANT 1; UNKNOWNTENANT 2; AND ALL UN KNOWN PARTIES CLAIMING BY, THROUGH,UN DER, OR AGAINST THE ABOVENAMED DEFENDANT(s), WHO(IS/ARE) NOT KNOWN TO BE DEADOR ALIVE, WHETHER SAID UNKNOWNPARTIES CLAIM AS HEIRS, DEVISEES,GRANTEES, AS SIGNEES, LIENORS,CREDITORS, TRUSTEES, SPOUSES,OR OTHER CLAIMANTS; FLORIDAHOUSING FINANCE CORPORATION;INSIGHT CREDIT UNION F/K/A IN-SIGHT FINANCIAL CREDIT UNION;LAKESIDE AT TAVARES ASSOCI A-TION, INC.Defendants,

NOTICE OF SALE

Notice is hereby given that, pursuantto the Summary Final Judgment ofForeclosure en tered on MAY 08,2014 in this cause, in the Cir cuitCourt of Lake County, Florida theclerk shall sell the property situatedin Lake County, Flor ida, described as:

LOT 91, LAKESIDE AT TAVARES 1STADDITION, ACCORDING TO THE PLATTHEREOF AS RE CORDED IN PLATBOOK 40, PAGE 7, PUBLIC RECORDSOF LAKE COUNTY, FLORIDA

a/k/a 3821 MEADOW GREEN DRIVE,TAVARES, FL 32778-9495

at public sale, to the highest and bestbidder, for cash, inside the front door,of the Lake County Courthouse, 550W. Main Street, First Floor, Ta vares,FL 32778 on July 15, 2014 beginningat 11:00 a.m.

If you are a person claiming a right tofunds re maining after the sale, youmust file a claim with the clerk nolater that 60 days after the sale. Ifyou fail to file a claim, you will not been titled to any remaining funds.

Dated this 9 day of MAY, 2014.

NEILKELLYClerk of the Circuit CourtBy: /s/A. THIGPENDeputy Clerk

Plaintiff's AttorneyDOUGLAS C. ZAHM, P.A.12425 28TH STREET NORTH,SUITE 200ST. PETERSBURG, FL [email protected] NO. (727) 539-1094

If you are a person with a disabilitywho needs an accommodation in or-der to participate in a proceeding, youare entitled, at no cost to you, theprovision of certain assistance.Please con tact the ADA Coordinatorat the Office of the Trial Court Admin-istrator, Lake County Court house;Post Office Box 7800/550 W. MainStreet, Tavares, Florida 32778, Tele-phone: (352) 253-1604, at leastseven (7) days before your scheduledcourt appearance, or immedi atelyupon receiving this notification if thetime before the scheduled appear-ance is less than seven (7) days. Ifyou are hearing or voice im paired,call 771.

Ad No: 10015683June 21, 2014 & June 28, 2014

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIFTHJUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR

LAKE COUNTY, FLORIDA

CASE NO. 2010 CA 003390

US BANK, N.A. SUCCESSOR BYMERGER TO THE LEADER MORTGAGECOMPANYPlaintiff,

vs.

LARHONDA D. MCCRARY; UNKNOWNSPOUSE OF LARHONDA D. MCCRARY;UNKNOWN TEN ANT 1; UNKNOWNTENANT 2; AND ALL UN KNOWN PARTIES CLAIMING BY, THROUGH,UN DER, OR AGAINST THE ABOVENAMED DEFENDANT(s), WHO(IS/ARE) NOT KNOWN TO BE DEADOR ALIVE, WHETHER SAID UNKNOWNPARTIES CLAIM AS HEIRS, DEVISEES,GRANTEES, AS SIGNEES, LIENORS,CREDITORS, TRUSTEES, SPOUSES,OR OTHER CLAIMANTS; FLORIDAHOUSING FINANCE CORPORATION;INSIGHT CREDIT UNION F/K/A IN-SIGHT FINANCIAL CREDIT UNION;LAKESIDE AT TAVARES ASSOCI A-TION, INC.Defendants,

NOTICE OF SALE

Notice is hereby given that, pursuantto the Summary Final Judgment ofForeclosure en tered on MAY 08,2014 in this cause, in the Cir cuitCourt of Lake County, Florida theclerk shall sell the property situatedin Lake County, Flor ida, described as:

LOT 91, LAKESIDE AT TAVARES 1STADDITION, ACCORDING TO THE PLATTHEREOF AS RE CORDED IN PLATBOOK 40, PAGE 7, PUBLIC RECORDSOF LAKE COUNTY, FLORIDA

a/k/a 3821 MEADOW GREEN DRIVE,TAVARES, FL 32778-9495

at public sale, to the highest and bestbidder, for cash, inside the front door,of the Lake County Courthouse, 550W. Main Street, First Floor, Ta vares,FL 32778 on July 15, 2014 beginningat 11:00 a.m.

If you are a person claiming a right tofunds re maining after the sale, youmust file a claim with the clerk nolater that 60 days after the sale. Ifyou fail to file a claim, you will not been titled to any remaining funds.

Dated this 9 day of MAY, 2014.

NEILKELLYClerk of the Circuit CourtBy: /s/A. THIGPENDeputy Clerk

Plaintiff's AttorneyDOUGLAS C. ZAHM, P.A.12425 28TH STREET NORTH,SUITE 200ST. PETERSBURG, FL [email protected] NO. (727) 539-1094

If you are a person with a disabilitywho needs an accommodation in or-der to participate in a proceeding, youare entitled, at no cost to you, theprovision of certain assistance.Please con tact the ADA Coordinatorat the Office of the Trial Court Admin-istrator, Lake County Court house;Post Office Box 7800/550 W. MainStreet, Tavares, Florida 32778, Tele-phone: (352) 253-1604, at leastseven (7) days before your scheduledcourt appearance, or immedi atelyupon receiving this notification if thetime before the scheduled appear-ance is less than seven (7) days. Ifyou are hearing or voice im paired,call 771.

Ad No: 10015683June 21, 2014 & June 28, 2014

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIFTHJUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR

LAKE COUNTY, FLORIDACIVIL DIVI SION

Case No. 2012 CA 000917

BANK OF AMERICA, N.A., SUCCES-SOR BY MERGER TO BAC HOMELOANS SERVICING, LP F/K/A COUN-TRYWIDE HOME LOANS SERVICING,LP,Plaintiff,

vs.

JEFFREY M. YODER; TAMMY J. PUL-LEN A/K/A TAMMY J. YODER; UN-KNOWN TENANT #1; UNKNOWN TEN-ANT #2; ALL OTHER UNKNOWN PAR-TIES CLAIMING INTERESTS BY,THROUGH, UNDER, AND AGAINST ANAMED DEFENDANT(S) WHO ARENOT KNOWN TO BE DEAD OR ALIVE,WHETHER SAME UNKNOWN PARTIESMAY CLAIM AN INTEREST ASSPOUSES, HEIRS, DEVISEES, GRANT-EES, OR OTHER CLAIMANTS,Defendants,

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant toFinal Judgment dated June 9, 2014en tered in Civil Case No.: 2012 CA000917 of the Cir cuit Court of theFifth Judi cial Cir cuit in and for LakeCounty, Flor ida, wherein BANK OFAMERICA, N.A., SUCCESSOR BYMERGER TO BAC HOME LOANS SERV-ICING, LP F/K/A COUNTRYWIDEHOME LOANS SERVICING, LP, isPlaintiff, and JEFFREY M. YODER;TAMMY J. PULLEN A/K/A TAMMY J.YODER; UNKNOWN TENANT #1; UN-KNOWN TENANT #2; ALL OTHER UN-KNOWN PARTIES CLAIMING INTER-ESTS BY, THROUGH, UNDER, ANDAGAINST A NAMED DEFENDANT(S)WHO ARE NOT KNOWN TO BE DEADOR ALIVE, WHETHER SAME UN-KNOWN PARTIES MAY CLAIM AN IN-TEREST AS SPOUSES, HEIRS, DEVI-SEES, GRANTEES, OR OTHER CLAIM-ANTS, are Defendant(S).

NEIL KELLY, the Clerk of Court shallsell to the highest bidder for cash at11:00 a.m., at the first floor near theinformation desk, Lake County Court-house, 550 West Main Street, Ta-vares, FL 32778 on the day of AUG13, 2014 the fol low ing de scribed realprop erty as set forth in said FinalSum mary Judg ment, to wit:

THE NORTH 1/2 OF THE WEST355.00 FEET OF THE SOUTHEAST 1/4OF THE NORTHEAST 1/4 OF SECTION33, TOWNSHIP 21 SOUTH, RANGE 25EAST, LAKE COUNTY, FLORIDA, SUB-JECT TO AN EASEMENT OF INGRESSAND EGRESS OVER THE SOUTH50.00 FEET OF THE NORTH 475.00FEET OF THE EAST 50.00 FEET OFTHE WEST 355.00 FEET OF THESOUTHEAST 1/4 OF THE NORTHEAST1/4 OF SECTION 33, TOGETHER WITHAN EASEMENT FOR INGRESS ANDEGRESS OVER THE SOUTH 50.00FEET OF THE NORTH 475.00 FEET OFTHE SOUTH EAST 1/4 OF THE NORTH-EAST 1/4 SECTION 33, TOWNSHIP21 SOUTH, RANGE 25 EAST, LAKECOUNTY, FLORIDA, LESS THE WEST355.00 FEET THEREOF; TOWNSHIP21 SOUTH RANGE 25 EAST, LAKECOUNTY, FLORIDA.

The property is located at the StreetAddress of : 8800 Desousa Court,Groveland, FL 34736.

If you are person claiming a right tofunds remaining after the sale, youmust file a claim with the clerk nolater than 60 days after the sale. Ifyou fail to file a claim you will not beentitled to any remaining funds. After60 days, only the owner of record asof the date of the lis pendens mayclaim the surplus.

WITNESS my hand and the seal of thecourt on June 12, 2014,NEIL KELLYCLERK OF THE COURTBy; /s/D. NEALDeputy Clerk

Attorney for Plaintiff:Elizabeth R. Wellborn, P.A.350 Jim Moran Blvd, Suite 100Deerfield Beach, FL 33442Telephone: (954) 354-3544Facsimile: (954) 354-3545

IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE AMERI-CANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT, If youare a person with a disability whoneeds any accommodation in orderto participate in this proceeding, youare entitled, at no cost to you, to theprovision of certain assistance.Please contact the ADA Coordinator,Nicole Berg at (352) 253-1604 atleast 7 days before your scheduledcourt appearance, or immediatelyupon receiving your notification if thetime before the scheduled appear-ance is less than 7 days; if you arehearing or voice impaired, call 711..

Ad No: 10015656June 21, 2014 & June 28, 2014

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIFTHJUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR

LAKE COUNTY, FLORIDACIVIL DIVI SION

Case No. 2012 CA 000917

BANK OF AMERICA, N.A., SUCCES-SOR BY MERGER TO BAC HOMELOANS SERVICING, LP F/K/A COUN-TRYWIDE HOME LOANS SERVICING,LP,Plaintiff,

vs.

JEFFREY M. YODER; TAMMY J. PUL-LEN A/K/A TAMMY J. YODER; UN-KNOWN TENANT #1; UNKNOWN TEN-ANT #2; ALL OTHER UNKNOWN PAR-TIES CLAIMING INTERESTS BY,THROUGH, UNDER, AND AGAINST ANAMED DEFENDANT(S) WHO ARENOT KNOWN TO BE DEAD OR ALIVE,WHETHER SAME UNKNOWN PARTIESMAY CLAIM AN INTEREST ASSPOUSES, HEIRS, DEVISEES, GRANT-EES, OR OTHER CLAIMANTS,Defendants,

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant toFinal Judgment dated June 9, 2014en tered in Civil Case No.: 2012 CA000917 of the Cir cuit Court of theFifth Judi cial Cir cuit in and for LakeCounty, Flor ida, wherein BANK OFAMERICA, N.A., SUCCESSOR BYMERGER TO BAC HOME LOANS SERV-ICING, LP F/K/A COUNTRYWIDEHOME LOANS SERVICING, LP, isPlaintiff, and JEFFREY M. YODER;TAMMY J. PULLEN A/K/A TAMMY J.YODER; UNKNOWN TENANT #1; UN-KNOWN TENANT #2; ALL OTHER UN-KNOWN PARTIES CLAIMING INTER-ESTS BY, THROUGH, UNDER, ANDAGAINST A NAMED DEFENDANT(S)WHO ARE NOT KNOWN TO BE DEADOR ALIVE, WHETHER SAME UN-KNOWN PARTIES MAY CLAIM AN IN-TEREST AS SPOUSES, HEIRS, DEVI-SEES, GRANTEES, OR OTHER CLAIM-ANTS, are Defendant(S).

NEIL KELLY, the Clerk of Court shallsell to the highest bidder for cash at11:00 a.m., at the first floor near theinformation desk, Lake County Court-house, 550 West Main Street, Ta-vares, FL 32778 on the day of AUG13, 2014 the fol low ing de scribed realprop erty as set forth in said FinalSum mary Judg ment, to wit:

THE NORTH 1/2 OF THE WEST355.00 FEET OF THE SOUTHEAST 1/4OF THE NORTHEAST 1/4 OF SECTION33, TOWNSHIP 21 SOUTH, RANGE 25EAST, LAKE COUNTY, FLORIDA, SUB-JECT TO AN EASEMENT OF INGRESSAND EGRESS OVER THE SOUTH50.00 FEET OF THE NORTH 475.00FEET OF THE EAST 50.00 FEET OFTHE WEST 355.00 FEET OF THESOUTHEAST 1/4 OF THE NORTHEAST1/4 OF SECTION 33, TOGETHER WITHAN EASEMENT FOR INGRESS ANDEGRESS OVER THE SOUTH 50.00FEET OF THE NORTH 475.00 FEET OFTHE SOUTH EAST 1/4 OF THE NORTH-EAST 1/4 SECTION 33, TOWNSHIP21 SOUTH, RANGE 25 EAST, LAKECOUNTY, FLORIDA, LESS THE WEST355.00 FEET THEREOF; TOWNSHIP21 SOUTH RANGE 25 EAST, LAKECOUNTY, FLORIDA.

The property is located at the StreetAddress of : 8800 Desousa Court,Groveland, FL 34736.

If you are person claiming a right tofunds remaining after the sale, youmust file a claim with the clerk nolater than 60 days after the sale. Ifyou fail to file a claim you will not beentitled to any remaining funds. After60 days, only the owner of record asof the date of the lis pendens mayclaim the surplus.

WITNESS my hand and the seal of thecourt on June 12, 2014,NEIL KELLYCLERK OF THE COURTBy; /s/D. NEALDeputy Clerk

Attorney for Plaintiff:Elizabeth R. Wellborn, P.A.350 Jim Moran Blvd, Suite 100Deerfield Beach, FL 33442Telephone: (954) 354-3544Facsimile: (954) 354-3545

IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE AMERI-CANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT, If youare a person with a disability whoneeds any accommodation in orderto participate in this proceeding, youare entitled, at no cost to you, to theprovision of certain assistance.Please contact the ADA Coordinator,Nicole Berg at (352) 253-1604 atleast 7 days before your scheduledcourt appearance, or immediatelyupon receiving your notification if thetime before the scheduled appear-ance is less than 7 days; if you arehearing or voice impaired, call 711..

Ad No: 10015656June 21, 2014 & June 28, 2014

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIFTHJUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR LAKE

COUNTY, FLORIDA CIVIL ACTION

CASE NO: 35 2010 CA 002223

JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, NATIONALASSOCIA TION SUCCESSOR BYMERGER TO CHASE HOME FINANCE,LLC,PLAINTIFF

vs.

RAJIGADOO, DIANAND, et. al.,DEFENDANTS

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant toan Order or Final Judgment entered inCase No.35 2010 CA 002223 of theCir cuit Court of the 5th Judi cial Circuitin and for LAKE County, Florida,wherein, JPMORGAN CHASE BANK,NATIONAL ASSOCIATION SUCCESSOR BY MERGER TO CHASE HOME FI-NANCE, LLC, Plaintiff and,RAJIGADOO, DIANAND, et. al, are De-fendants. I will sell to the highest bid-der for cash at, in the first floor lobbyin the Lake County Courthouse, 550West Main St., Ta vares, FL 32778, atthe hour of 11:00 a.m. on the day ofAUG 14, 2014 the fol lowing de-scribed prop erty:

LOT 4, CHELSEA PARC, ACCORDINGTO THE PLAT THEREOF, AS RE-CORDED IN PLAT BOOK 37, PAGE 34,OF THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF LAKECOUNTY, FLORIDA.

PROPERTY ADDRESS: 5641 WIND-SONG OAK DRIVE, LEESBURG, FL34748

Any person claiming an interest in thesurplus from the sale, if any, otherthan the property owner as of thedate of the lis pendens must file aclaim within 60 days after the sale.

DATED this 13 day of June, 2014.

Neil KellyClerk of the CourtBy:/s/D. NEALDeputy Clerk

If you are a person with a disabilitywho needs an accommodation inorder to participate in a proceeding,you are en titled, at no cost to you, theprovision of certain assistance.Please contact the Clerk of theCourt's disability Coordinator at theOffice of the Trial Court Administra-tor, Lake County Court house; PostOffice Box 7800/550 W. Main Street,Tavares, Florida 32778, Telephone:(352) 253-1604, at least seven (7)days before your scheduled court ap-pearance, or immediately upon re-ceiving this notification if the time be-fore the scheduled ap pearance is lessthan seven (7) days. If you are hear-ing or voice impaired, call 771.

Ad No: 10015651June 21, 2014 & June 28, 2014

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIFTHJUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR LAKE

COUNTY, FLORIDA, CIVIL ACTION

CASE NO. 2012 CA 000733

PNC BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION,SUCCESSOR BY MERGER TONATIONAL CITY MORTGAGE CO.,A SUB SIDIARY OF NATIONAL CITYBANK OF INDIANAPLAINTIFF

vs.

GEORGE T. KUYKENDALL, et. al.,Defendant(s)

NOTICE OF SALE

Notice is hereby given that, pursuantto a Final Judgment dated June 10,2014, en tered in Civil Case Num ber2012 CA 000733 in the Circuit Courtfor Lake County, Florida, wherein PNCBANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, SUC-CESSOR BY MERGER TO NATIONALCITY MORTGAGE CO., A SUBSIDIARYOF NATIONAL CITY BANK OF INDIANAis the Plaintiff, and GEORGE T.KUYKENDALL, et. al., are the Defend-ants, Lake County Clerk of Court willsell the property situated in LakeCounty, Florida, described as:

LOT 129, CRANE'S LANDING PHASEII, ACCORDING TO THE PLATTHEREOF AS RECORDED IN PLATBOOK 42, PAGES 96 AND 97, OF THEPUBLIC RECORDS OF LAKE COUNTY,FLORIDAat public sale, to the highest bidder,for cash, at in the Lobby of the LakeCounty Courthouse, 550 West MainStreet, Tavares, FL 32778 at 11:00AM, on the day of AUG 14, 2014 Anyper son claim ing an in ter est in the sur-plus from the sale, if any, other thanthe property owners as of the date ofthe lis pend ens must file a claimwithin 60 days after the sale.

Dated: June 13, 2014NEIL KELLYLake County Clerk of CourtCLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURTBy: /s/D. NEAL

If you are a person with a disabilitywho needs an accommodation in or-der to participate in a proceeding, youare entitled, at no cost to you, theprovision of certain assistance.Please contact the ADA Coordinatorat the Office of the Trial Court Admin-istrator, Lake County Courthouse;Post Office Box 7800/550 W. MainStreet, Tavares, Florida 32778,Telephone: (352) 253-1604, at leastseven (7) days before your scheduledcourt appearance, or immediatelyupon receiving this notification if thetime before the scheduled appear-ance is less than seven (7) days. Ifyou are hearing or voice impaired,call 771.

Si vous êtes une personne handi-capée qui a besoin d'un logementafin de participer à une instance,vous avez le droit, sans frais pourvous, la mise à disposition de cer-taines aides. S'il vous plaît communi-quer avec le coordonnateur ADA aubureau de l'administrateur du tribunalde première instance, le Centre judici-aire du comté de Lake, Post OfficeBox 7800/550 W. Main Street, Ta-vares, Floride, 32778, Téléphone:(352) 253-1604, au moins sept (7 )jours avant votre comparution devantle tribunal prévue, ou dès réceptionde cette notification, si le tempsavant l'apparition programmée estinférieure à sept (7) jours. Si vousêtes malentendant ou la voix altérée,appeler 771.

Si ou se yon moun ki gen andikap kibezwen yon akomodasyon yo nan lòdyo patisipe nan yon pwosè dapèl, ougen dwa, san sa pa koute ou, dis-pozisyon pou asistans a sèten. Tanprikontakte Kowòdinatè ADA nan BiwoAdministratè a Tribinal Trial, LakeCounty Jidisyè Center, Post Office Box7800/550 W. Main Street, Tavares,Florid, 32778, telefòn: (352)253-1604, nan omwen sèt (7 ) jouanvan pwograme konparèt nantribinal ou an, oswa imedyatman apreyo resevwa avi sa si tan an anvanaparans ki pwograme gen mwenspase sèt (7) jou. Si w ap tande oswaki gen pwoblèm vwa, rele 771.

Si usted es una persona con una dis-capacidad que necesita unalojamiento con el fin de participaren una audiencia, usted tienederecho, sin costo alguno para usted,el suministro de determinadaasistencia. Por favor, póngase en con-tacto con el coordinador de ADA en laOficina del Administrador del Juzgadode Primera Instancia del Centro Judi-cial del Condado de Lake, Post OfficeBox 7800/550 W. Main Street, Ta-vares, Florida, 32778, Teléfono: (352)253-1604, por lo menos siete (7 )días antes de su comparecencia anteel tribunal programada, oinmediatamente después de recibir lanotificación, si el tiempo antes de lacomparecencia prevista es inferior asiete (7) días. Si usted estáescuchando o la voz intoxicado, llameal 771.

Ad No: 10015650June 21, 2014 & June 28, 2014

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIFTHJUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR LAKE

COUNTY, FLORIDA, CIVIL ACTION

CASE NO. 2012 CA 000733

PNC BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION,SUCCESSOR BY MERGER TONATIONAL CITY MORTGAGE CO.,A SUB SIDIARY OF NATIONAL CITYBANK OF INDIANAPLAINTIFF

vs.

GEORGE T. KUYKENDALL, et. al.,Defendant(s)

NOTICE OF SALE

Notice is hereby given that, pursuantto a Final Judgment dated June 10,2014, en tered in Civil Case Num ber2012 CA 000733 in the Circuit Courtfor Lake County, Florida, wherein PNCBANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, SUC-CESSOR BY MERGER TO NATIONALCITY MORTGAGE CO., A SUBSIDIARYOF NATIONAL CITY BANK OF INDIANAis the Plaintiff, and GEORGE T.KUYKENDALL, et. al., are the Defend-ants, Lake County Clerk of Court willsell the property situated in LakeCounty, Florida, described as:

LOT 129, CRANE'S LANDING PHASEII, ACCORDING TO THE PLATTHEREOF AS RECORDED IN PLATBOOK 42, PAGES 96 AND 97, OF THEPUBLIC RECORDS OF LAKE COUNTY,FLORIDAat public sale, to the highest bidder,for cash, at in the Lobby of the LakeCounty Courthouse, 550 West MainStreet, Tavares, FL 32778 at 11:00AM, on the day of AUG 14, 2014 Anyper son claim ing an in ter est in the sur-plus from the sale, if any, other thanthe property owners as of the date ofthe lis pend ens must file a claimwithin 60 days after the sale.

Dated: June 13, 2014NEIL KELLYLake County Clerk of CourtCLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURTBy: /s/D. NEAL

If you are a person with a disabilitywho needs an accommodation in or-der to participate in a proceeding, youare entitled, at no cost to you, theprovision of certain assistance.Please contact the ADA Coordinatorat the Office of the Trial Court Admin-istrator, Lake County Courthouse;Post Office Box 7800/550 W. MainStreet, Tavares, Florida 32778,Telephone: (352) 253-1604, at leastseven (7) days before your scheduledcourt appearance, or immediatelyupon receiving this notification if thetime before the scheduled appear-ance is less than seven (7) days. Ifyou are hearing or voice impaired,call 771.

Si vous êtes une personne handi-capée qui a besoin d'un logementafin de participer à une instance,vous avez le droit, sans frais pourvous, la mise à disposition de cer-taines aides. S'il vous plaît communi-quer avec le coordonnateur ADA aubureau de l'administrateur du tribunalde première instance, le Centre judici-aire du comté de Lake, Post OfficeBox 7800/550 W. Main Street, Ta-vares, Floride, 32778, Téléphone:(352) 253-1604, au moins sept (7 )jours avant votre comparution devantle tribunal prévue, ou dès réceptionde cette notification, si le tempsavant l'apparition programmée estinférieure à sept (7) jours. Si vousêtes malentendant ou la voix altérée,appeler 771.

Si ou se yon moun ki gen andikap kibezwen yon akomodasyon yo nan lòdyo patisipe nan yon pwosè dapèl, ougen dwa, san sa pa koute ou, dis-pozisyon pou asistans a sèten. Tanprikontakte Kowòdinatè ADA nan BiwoAdministratè a Tribinal Trial, LakeCounty Jidisyè Center, Post Office Box7800/550 W. Main Street, Tavares,Florid, 32778, telefòn: (352)253-1604, nan omwen sèt (7 ) jouanvan pwograme konparèt nantribinal ou an, oswa imedyatman apreyo resevwa avi sa si tan an anvanaparans ki pwograme gen mwenspase sèt (7) jou. Si w ap tande oswaki gen pwoblèm vwa, rele 771.

Si usted es una persona con una dis-capacidad que necesita unalojamiento con el fin de participaren una audiencia, usted tienederecho, sin costo alguno para usted,el suministro de determinadaasistencia. Por favor, póngase en con-tacto con el coordinador de ADA en laOficina del Administrador del Juzgadode Primera Instancia del Centro Judi-cial del Condado de Lake, Post OfficeBox 7800/550 W. Main Street, Ta-vares, Florida, 32778, Teléfono: (352)253-1604, por lo menos siete (7 )días antes de su comparecencia anteel tribunal programada, oinmediatamente después de recibir lanotificación, si el tiempo antes de lacomparecencia prevista es inferior asiete (7) días. Si usted estáescuchando o la voz intoxicado, llameal 771.

Ad No: 10015650June 21, 2014 & June 28, 2014

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIFTHJUDICIAL CIRCUIT

IN AND FOR LAKE COUNTY, FLORIDACIVIL ACTION

CASE NO.: 35-2011-CA-000157DIVISION:

WELLS FARGO BANK, NA,Plaintiff,

vs.

THE UNKNOWN HEIRS, DEVI SEES,GRANT EES, AS SIGNEES, LIENORS,CREDI TORS, TRUSTEES, OR OTHERCLAIM ANTS CLAIMING BY,THROUGH,U NDER, OR AGAINST JEFFENOCHS A/K/A JEF FREY A . ENOCHSA/K/A JEFFREY ALAN ENOCHS,DECEASED , et al,Defendant(s).

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuantto a Final Judgment of Mort gageFore closure dated June 9, 2014and en tered in Case No.35-2011-CA-000157 of the Cir cuitCourt of the FIFTH Judicial Cir cuit inand for LAKE County, Flor ida whereinWELLS FARGO BANK, NA is the Plain-tiff and THE UNKNOWN HEIRS, DEVI-SEES, GRANTEES, AS SIGNEES,LIENORS, CREDITORS, TRUSTEES, OROTHER CLAIMANTS CLAIMING BY,THROUGH,UNDER, OR AGAINST JEFFENOCHS A/K/A JEF FREY A . ENOCHSA/K/A JEFFREY ALAN ENOCHS, DE-CEASED; JENNIFER MARIE ENOCHS,AS AN HEIR TO THE ESTATE OF JEFFENOCHS A/K/A JEF FREY A. ENOCHSA/K/A JEFFREY ALAN ENOCHS, DE-CEASED; ANY AND ALL UNKNOWNPARTIES CLAIMING BY, THROUGH,UNDER, AND AGAINST THE HEREINNAMED INDIVIDUAL DEFENDANT(S)WHO ARE NOT KNOWN TO BE DEADOR ALIVE, WHETHER SAID UNKNOWNPARTIES MAY CLAIM AN INTERESTAS SPOUSES, HEIRS, DEVISEES,GRANTEES, OR OTHER CLAIMANTS;GREATER HILLS HOMEOWNERS' AS-SOCIATION, INC.; STATE OF FLORIDA; LAKE COUNTY CLERK OF CIRCUITCOURT; LAKE COUNTY; are the De-fendants, The Clerk of the Court willsell to the highest and best bidder forcash at ON THE FIRST FLOOR OF THELAKE COUNTY COURTHOUSE, 550WEST MAIN STREET, TAVARES,FLORIDA 32778 at 11:00AM, on theday of AUG 13, 2014 the followingde scribed prop erty as set forth in saidFinal Judg ment:

LOT 928, GREATER HILLS, PHASE 9,ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF,AS RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 40,PAGES 25 AND 26, OF THE PUBLICRECORDS OF LAKE COUNTY, FLOR-IDA.

A/K/A 14641 INDIAN RIDGE TRAIL,CLERMONT, FL 34711

Any person claiming an inter est in thesurplus from the sale, if any, otherthan the property owner as of thedate of the Lis Pendens must file aclaim within sixty (60) days af ter thesale.

WITNESS MY HAND and the seal ofthis Court on June 12, 2014Neil KellyClerk of the Circuit CourtBy: /S/ D. NEALDeputy Clerk

Ronald R Wolfe & Associates, P.L.P.O. Box 25018Tampa, Florida 33622-5018

See Americans with Disabilities ActIf you are a person with a disabilitywho needs any accommodation in or-der to participate in a proceeding, youare entitled, at no cost to you, theprovision of certain assistance.Please contact the ADA Coordinatorfor the Courts below at least 7 daysbefore your scheduled court appear-ance, or immediately upon receivingyour notification if the time beforethe scheduled appearance is lessthan 7 days; if you are hearing orvoice impaired, call 711. Pleasecontact: Nicole Berg, Phone #(352) 253-1604

Ad No: 10015642June 21, 2014 & June 28, 2014

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIFTHJUDICIAL CIRCUIT

IN AND FOR LAKE COUNTY, FLORIDACIVIL ACTION

CASE NO.: 35-2011-CA-000157DIVISION:

WELLS FARGO BANK, NA,Plaintiff,

vs.

THE UNKNOWN HEIRS, DEVI SEES,GRANT EES, AS SIGNEES, LIENORS,CREDI TORS, TRUSTEES, OR OTHERCLAIM ANTS CLAIMING BY,THROUGH,U NDER, OR AGAINST JEFFENOCHS A/K/A JEF FREY A . ENOCHSA/K/A JEFFREY ALAN ENOCHS,DECEASED , et al,Defendant(s).

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuantto a Final Judgment of Mort gageFore closure dated June 9, 2014and en tered in Case No.35-2011-CA-000157 of the Cir cuitCourt of the FIFTH Judicial Cir cuit inand for LAKE County, Flor ida whereinWELLS FARGO BANK, NA is the Plain-tiff and THE UNKNOWN HEIRS, DEVI-SEES, GRANTEES, AS SIGNEES,LIENORS, CREDITORS, TRUSTEES, OROTHER CLAIMANTS CLAIMING BY,THROUGH,UNDER, OR AGAINST JEFFENOCHS A/K/A JEF FREY A . ENOCHSA/K/A JEFFREY ALAN ENOCHS, DE-CEASED; JENNIFER MARIE ENOCHS,AS AN HEIR TO THE ESTATE OF JEFFENOCHS A/K/A JEF FREY A. ENOCHSA/K/A JEFFREY ALAN ENOCHS, DE-CEASED; ANY AND ALL UNKNOWNPARTIES CLAIMING BY, THROUGH,UNDER, AND AGAINST THE HEREINNAMED INDIVIDUAL DEFENDANT(S)WHO ARE NOT KNOWN TO BE DEADOR ALIVE, WHETHER SAID UNKNOWNPARTIES MAY CLAIM AN INTERESTAS SPOUSES, HEIRS, DEVISEES,GRANTEES, OR OTHER CLAIMANTS;GREATER HILLS HOMEOWNERS' AS-SOCIATION, INC.; STATE OF FLORIDA; LAKE COUNTY CLERK OF CIRCUITCOURT; LAKE COUNTY; are the De-fendants, The Clerk of the Court willsell to the highest and best bidder forcash at ON THE FIRST FLOOR OF THELAKE COUNTY COURTHOUSE, 550WEST MAIN STREET, TAVARES,FLORIDA 32778 at 11:00AM, on theday of AUG 13, 2014 the followingde scribed prop erty as set forth in saidFinal Judg ment:

LOT 928, GREATER HILLS, PHASE 9,ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF,AS RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 40,PAGES 25 AND 26, OF THE PUBLICRECORDS OF LAKE COUNTY, FLOR-IDA.

A/K/A 14641 INDIAN RIDGE TRAIL,CLERMONT, FL 34711

Any person claiming an inter est in thesurplus from the sale, if any, otherthan the property owner as of thedate of the Lis Pendens must file aclaim within sixty (60) days af ter thesale.

WITNESS MY HAND and the seal ofthis Court on June 12, 2014Neil KellyClerk of the Circuit CourtBy: /S/ D. NEALDeputy Clerk

Ronald R Wolfe & Associates, P.L.P.O. Box 25018Tampa, Florida 33622-5018

See Americans with Disabilities ActIf you are a person with a disabilitywho needs any accommodation in or-der to participate in a proceeding, youare entitled, at no cost to you, theprovision of certain assistance.Please contact the ADA Coordinatorfor the Courts below at least 7 daysbefore your scheduled court appear-ance, or immediately upon receivingyour notification if the time beforethe scheduled appearance is lessthan 7 days; if you are hearing orvoice impaired, call 711. Pleasecontact: Nicole Berg, Phone #(352) 253-1604

Ad No: 10015642June 21, 2014 & June 28, 2014

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIFTHJUDICIAL CIRCUIT

IN AND FOR LAKE COUNTY, FLORIDACIVIL ACTION

CASE NO.: 35-2013-CA-001814DIVISION: 4

SUNTRUST MORTGAGE, INC.,Plaintiff,

vs.

THE UNKNOWN HEIRS, DEVISEES,GRANTEES, ASSIGNEES, LIENORS,CREDITORS, TRUSTEES, OR OTHERCLAIMANTS CLAIMING BY,THROUGH,UNDER, OR AGAINSTBARBARA C. WILLIAMS A/K/ABARBARA CHRISTINE WILLIAMSA/K/A BAR BARA WILLIAMS,DECEASED , et al,Defendant(s).

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuantto a Final Judgment of Mort gageForeclosure dated June 12, 2014and en tered in Case No.35-2013-CA-001814 of the Cir cuitCourt of the FIFTH Judicial Cir cuit inand for LAKE County, Flor ida whereinSUNTRUST MORTGAGE, INC. is thePlaintiff and THE UN KNOWN HEIRS,DEVISEES, GRANT EES, AS SIGNEES,LIENORS, CREDI TORS, TRUSTEES, OROTHER CLAIM ANTS CLAIMING BY,THROUGH,U NDER, OR AGAINST BAR-BARA C. WIL LIAMS A/K/A BARBARACHRISTINE WIL LIAMS A/K/A BAR-BARA WIL LIAMS, DECEASED;BRENDA STAF FORD A/K/A BRENDAM. STOCKER, AS AN HEIR OF THE ES-TATE OF BAR BARA C. WILLIAMSA/K/A BARBARA CHRIS TINE WIL-LIAMS A/K/A BAR BARA WILLIAMS,DECEASED; DONNA WHEELING, ASAN HEIR OF THE ES TATE OF BAR-BARA C. WILLIAMS A/K/A BARBARACHRISTINE WIL LIAMS A/K/A BAR-BARA WILLIAMS, DECEASED; SUSANCRAVER, AS AN HEIR OF THE ESTATEOF BARBARA C. WILLIAMS A/K/ABARBARA CHRIS TINE WILLIAMSA/K/A BARBARA WILLIAMS, DE-CEASED; LORETTA LYNN LOPEZ, ASAN HEIR OF THE ES TATE OF BAR-BARA C. WILLIAMS A/K/A BARBARACHRISTINE WIL LIAMS A/K/A BAR-BARA WILLIAMS, DECEASED;CHARLES ROBERT WIL LIAMS, IIIA/K/A CHARLES WILLIAMS A/K/ACHARLES WILLIAMS, JR., A/K/ACHARLES WILLIAMS, SR., A/K/ACHARLES R. WILLIAMS, III , AS ANHEIR OF THE ESTATE OF BAR BARA C.WILLIAMS A/K/A BARBARA CHRIS-TINE WILLIAMS A/K/A BAR BARAWILLIAMS, DECEASED; PAUL O. DOW,JR., AS AN HEIR OF THE ES TATE OFBARBARA C. WILLIAMS A/K/A BAR-BARA CHRISTINE WIL LIAMS A/K/ABARBARA WILLIAMS, DECEASED;DEBBIE PRESTON, AS AN HEIR OFTHE ESTATE OF BARBARA C. WIL-LIAMS A/K/A BARBARA CHRIS TINEWILLIAMS A/K/A BARBARA WIL-LIAMS, DECEASED; BRENDA STAF-FORD A/K/A BRENDA M. STOCKER,AS A PERSONAL REPRE SENTAIVE OFTHE ESTATE OF BAR BARA C. WIL-LIAMS A/K/A BARBARA CHRISTINEWILLIAMS A/K/A BAR BARA WIL-LIAMS, DECEASED; ANY AND ALL UN-KNOWN PARTIES CLAIM ING BY,THROUGH, UNDER, AND AGAINSTTHE HEREIN NAMED INDI VIDUAL DE-FENDANT(S) WHO ARE NOT KNOWNTO BE DEAD OR ALIVE, WHETHERSAID UNKNOWN PARTIES MAYCLAIM AN INTEREST AS SPOUSES,HEIRS, DEVISEES, GRANT EES, OROTHER CLAIMANTS; SCOT TISH HIGH-LANDS CONDOMINIUM AS SOCIATION,INC.; CHRYSLER FINAN CIAL COM-PANY, LLC A CORPORA TION, AS SUC-CESSOR IN INTEREST TO CHRYSLERFINANCIAL CORPORA TION; STATE OFFLORIDA DEPART MENT OF REVENUECHILD SUPPORT ENFORCEMENT;LAKE COUNTY; LAKE COUNTY CLERKOF CIRCUIT COURT; STATE OF FLOR-IDA DEPART MENT OF REVENUECHILD SUPPORT ENFOREMENTPROGRAM O/B/O NI COLE ROLLINS;STATE OF FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OFREVENUE CHILD SUPPORT EN-FOREMENT PROGRAM O/B/OBRITTNEY N. REDDICK; are theDefendants, The Clerk of the Courtwill sell to the highest and best bidderfor cash at ON THE FIRST FLOOR OFTHE LAKE COUNTY COURTHOUSE,550 WEST MAIN STREET, TAVARES,FLOR IDA 32778 at 11:00AM, onthe 29th day of July, 2014, the fol-low ing de scribed prop erty as set forthin said Final Judgment:

CONDOMINIUM UNIT 32A, SCOTTISHHIGHLANDS, A CONDOMINIUM, ASRECORDED IN DECLARATION OFCONDOMINIUM, IN OFFICIAL REC-ORDS BOOK 768, PAGES 1856THROUGH 2013, AND AMENDED INCERTIFICATE RECORDED IN OFFICIALRECORDS BOOK 835, PAGE 944 ANDCERTIFICATE RECORDED IN OFFICIALRECORDS BOOK 836, PAGE 2305,AND AMENDMENTS THERETO, ANDPLAT RECORDED IN CONDOMINIUMBOOK 1, PAGE 84, PUBLIC RECORDSOF LAKE COUNTY, FLORIDA, AND A1/650 INTEREST IN COMMON ELE-MENTS.

TOGETHER WITH AN UNDIVIDEDINTEREST IN THE COMMONELEMENTS APPURTENANT THERETOAS SET FORTH IN SAID DECLARATION

A/K/A 32 ABERDEEN CIR CLE,LEESBURG, FL 34788

Any person claiming an interest in thesurplus from the sale, if any, otherthan the property owner as of thedate of the Lis Pendens must file aclaim within sixty (60) days after thesale.

WITNESS MY HAND and the seal ofthis Court on June 13, 2014.Neil KellyClerk of the Circuit CourtBy:/S/H. SIEDDeputy Clerk

Ronald R Wolfe & Associ ates, P.L.P.O. Box 25018Tampa, Florida 33622-5018

See Americans with Disabilities ActIf you are a person with a disabilitywho needs any accommodation in or-der to participate in a proceeding, youare entitled, at no cost to you, theprovision of certain assistance.Please contact the ADA Coordinatorfor the Courts below at least 7 daysbefore your scheduled court appear-ance, or immediately upon receivingyour notification if the time beforethe scheduled appearance is lessthan 7 days; if you are hearing orvoice impaired, call 711. Pleasecontact: Nicole Berg, Phone # (352) 253-1604

Ad No: 10015641June 21, 2014 & June 28, 2014

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 5THJUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FORLAKE COUNTY, FLORIDACIVIL DIVISION

CASE NO.: 2010 CA 002128

U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION,AS TRUS TEE ON BEHALF OF GSAAHOME EQUITY TRUST 2007-1,Plaintiff,

vs.

DENETH K SHIVER; CINDY SHIVER;UNKNOWN TENANT(S); IN POSSES-SION OF THE SUBJECT PROPERTY,Defendants.

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant toa Final Judgment of Foreclosuredated the 22 day of April, 2014, anden tered in Case No. 2010 CA002128 of the Cir cuit Court of the5TH Judi cial Cir cuit in and for LakeCounty, Flor ida, wherein U.S. BANK,NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUS-TEE FOR THE HOLDERS OF THE GSAAHOME EQ UITY TRUST 2007-1, AS-SET-BACKED CERTIFI CATES, SERIES2007-1 is the Plaintiff and DENETH KSHIVER CINDY SHIVER; and UN-KNOWN TEN ANT(S) N/K/A RAY-MOND JOR DAN IN POSSESSION OFTHE SUB JECT PROP ERTY are defend-ants. The Clerk of this Court will sellto the high est and best bidder forcash at THE LOBBY ON THE FIRSTFLOOR OF THE COURT HOUSE AT 550W. MAIN STREET,11:00 a.m. on the28 day of August 2014, the followingde scribed prop erty as set forth in saidFinal Judg ment, to wit:

LOT 1 AND THE WEST 10 FEET OFLOT 2, AND THAT PART OF THE EAST1/2 OF DANVERS STREET, NOW VA-CATED, LYING WEST OF AND ADJA-CENT TO SAID LOT 1, MORNINGVIEWSUB DIVISION, ACCORDING TO THEPLAT THEREOF, RECORDED IN PLATBOOK 5, PAGE 51, OF THE PUBLICRECORDS OF LAKE COUNTY, FLOR-IDA.

ANY PERSON CLAIMING AN INTER-EST IN THE SURPLUS FROM THESALE, IF ANY, OTHER THAN THEPROPERTY OWNER AS OF THE DATEOF THE LIS PENDENS MUST FILE ACLAIM WITHIN 60 DAYS AFTER THESALE

If you are a person with a disabilitywho needs any accommodation in or-der to participate in this proceeding,you are entitled, at no cost to you, tothe provision of certain assistance.Please contact the ADA Coordinatorat the Of fice of the Trial Court Admin-istrator, 550 West Main Street, PostOffice Box 7800, Tavares, Florida,32778, Telephone: (352) 253-1604,within two (2) working days of yourreceipt of this Notice. If you are hear-ing or voice impaired, call1-800-955-8771.

Dated this 23 day of April, 2014

Neil KellyClerk Of The Circuit CourtBy: /s/S. HOLEWINSKIDeputy Clerk

Choice Legal Group, P.A.1800 NW 49th Street, Suite 120Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33309Telephone: (954) 453-0365Facsimile: (954) 771-6052Toll Free: 1-800-441-2438

Ad No: 10015556June 21, 2014 & June 28, 2014

Saturday, June 28, 2014 DAILY COMMERCIAL D3DAY, MONTH XX, YEAR DAILY COMMERCIAL XX

TAVARES$595/mo. Furn.352-343-7780

riverestwaterfrontresort.com

LEESBURG - SPANISH VILLAGE1ST MO. FREE!

Pool, great location!Furn. Efficiency, incl.

util. & cable. $700/mo.2/1 apt. $600/mo.

Furn. $700/mo. + util.352-728-5555

FRUITLAND PARKTWIN PALMS MARINA

1 & 2 br. Mobiles newly renovatedfully fur nished. All utilities in cluded.Weekly & Monthly rates. No DepositSmall dogs allowed. Old Florida FishCamp with Convenience Store onprop erty.

Call 352-787-4514

MEDICAL RECEPTIONIST/MEDICAL ASSISTANT

Busy practice in The Villages. Experi-ence work ing in a clinical office en-vi ronment in a support role. Goodwork environment.

Email resume to:[email protected]

or fax to: 888-456-7964

MEDICAL BILLER Needed for Clermont.Fax: 352-394-6446 or

Email: [email protected]

MA, LPN, RN, PARAMEDIC, EMT, X-RAY TECH. or CHIROPRACTIC ASST.

Needed for Busy Urgent Care.Email to:

medicalbillingtoday@ yahoo.com

FRONT DESKFor busy Urgent Care. Computer

ori ented, typing skills a must.Pro fes sional appearance.

Fax resume to: 352-315-1703

DIETARY AIDE/COOK - FTEXP. PREFERRED

SPLIT SHIFT/WKNDSAPPLY IN PERSON

8:30AM - 3PM, M - FLAKE EUSTIS CARE CENTER

411 W. WOODWARD AVENUEEUSTIS, FL 32726, DFWP/EOE

CNA’s & HHA’s - Hrly.& Live-in.LOVING CARE - Mon. - Fri.

Call: 352-728-3100

2990

CNA FT 7-3, & 3-11CNA PT WEEKENDS

APPLY IN PERSON M-F 8AM-3PMLAKE EUSTIS CARE CENTER

411 W. WOOD WARD AVENUEEUSTIS, FL DFWP/EOE

ROOFERS EXPERIENCEDSTART TODAY!

Apply at SACK ROOFING INC.308 Oak Street, Suite A, Lady Lake,

FL 32159. Call 352-430-2773

PARTS COUNTER PERSONPosition available at Plaza Cadillac.General Motors, Reynolds & Reyn-olds experience preferred. Willing totrain. Benefits available. EOE

Apply in per son at: 8893 US Hwy. 441,

Leesburg, FL 34788 orEmail to Mark Carter at:

[email protected]

METAL BUILDING ASSEMBLERF/T, exp'd., Familiar w/roofs &sheet metal work. Must have

relia ble trans portation.Call 352-748-5680

DFWP

MECHANIC NEEDEDMust have exp. & own tools.

WILDWOOD AUTOCall 352-748-1716

HEAVY EQUIPMENT MECHANICFOR LOCAL CONSTRUCTION CO.Must have 10 yrs. exp. & currentDriver's Lic. Call 352-365-0006

CONSTRUCTION:•LABORERS w/valid license and•DRIVERS, w/CDL Class A or BPositions avail., be able to travel inthe S.E. U. S., paid per diem, (1week out). Ben e fits pkg. DFWP/EOE

352-383-3159 Ext. [email protected]

COMMERCIAL TRUCK TIRE MANExp'd for day shift/wknds. Good

pay. Call 352-748-0027

CERTIFIED SERVICE TECHNICIANwanted for busy family owned Chev-rolet Deal ership. Excellent work en-viron ment and great hours. Top dol-lar pay for CORVETTE Certifica tion.Flat rate per hour pay at an ex-tremely busy shop. No shortage ofwork here.

Please contact Service Manager Gary Sparks at (352) 787-6888

CABINET MAKERCLERMONT 352-217-1554

Bailey Industries is seeking an expe-ri enced in-house cabinet designer.Must have design experience, pref-era bly with 20/20 or ProKitchen.Must be able to read blueprints andwork in a fast-paced environment.Benefits package available.EOE/Drug-Free work place.

Email re sume to:[email protected] orfax to 352-326-9188

SERVICE PLUMBERMust be experienced in all phases ofcommer cial & residential plumb ing.

Call 352-728-6053

TAXI DRIVER F/TCall 352-431-9913

QUALIFIED CDL A DRIVERS2 YEARS EXPERIENCE (GOOD MVR)

No touch freight, assignedequipment, great driver support,

weekly pay, direct dep., health ins,paid holidays & vacation.

Call for more details.800-456-2336 X 114

DRIVERSUPS Contractor needs Drivers req. 1yr. OTR, Class A CDL, 23 yrs oldHazmat 100% no touch.

Call 352-408-5870 [email protected]

DELIVERY PERSONNELOffice equip ment dealer seeking areliable per son to deliver equipmentand sup plies, as sist in inventory con-trol & light bldg maintenance. Musthave a neat ap pearance, good com-mu nication skills, able to follow writ-ten/oral di rections, and be insura-ble. Must be able to safely operatea box truck. Heavy lifting is re quired.Please do not respond if you can'tpass a drug test, driver's licensecheck and back ground check. Monday through Fri day 8am-5pm

Apply in person:M-F from 9am-12pm at:

2854 West Main Street, Leesburg

SALES POSITION F/TNo exp. necessary. Make up to$120K/yr. Full benefit pkg., 401K,medical +. Family owned business,future advancement.

Apply in Person at:Advantage Chrysler Dodge18211 U.S. HWY., Mt. Dora

LEASING CONSULTANT

at Veranda Apts, Mt. Dora. Profes-sional w/1 yr. sales exp. $11hr,(Apt. In dus try exp. pays more).Monthly Commission and Bonus op-por tu nities. FT & Wknds. Healthben efits, paid va cation & sick, dis-count on rent availa ble.

Apply at 155 Ve randa Way orFax (813) 636-8863

EOE/Dru g/Smoke Free Work Place

BOAT SALES ASSOCIATEBoating & Sales Exp. needed.

Sal ary, commission plus benefits.Email resume to:

[email protected]/EOE

NAIL TECH F/T OR P/TMust have Florida Licence.

Call 352-315-9474 or352-217-0501

PROPERTY MANAGER

in Lady Lake, Wildwood and The Vil-lages area. Or ganized & asser tiveleader. Must have 2yrs PropertyManagement exp. Salary negotiablew/exp. + monthly bonus opportu-nity. Health bene fits, paid vacation& sick, dis count on rent availa ble.

E-mail re sume [email protected], or

Fax to (813) 636-8863EOE/DRUG FREE WORK PLACE

HEAD OF SCHOOLHoly Trinity Epis co pal School, Fruit-land Park is ac cept ing applica tionsfor the position of Head of School.Minimum re quire ments : Master ofEducation Flor ida Teaching Cer tifi-cate. De sired: Ex perience as aschool prin ci pal.

Send resume to:[email protected]

NO LATER THAN July 7, 2014

SERVICE SPECIALIST - TELLERPinellas Plaza Office

H.S. Diploma/GED req, customerservice, bank exp & cash handling

pre ferred. Receives & pays outmoney, and keeps records of money

& negotia ble instruments.Apply Online: www.cbtfl.com

Or in person:1603 SW 19th Ave., Ocala, FL

HR-Dept. M-F 9am-4pmEOE/VET/Disability

Bailey Industries is hiring for ware-house man agement. Warehouse &man agement experi ence pre ferred.Full-time position with bene fit pack-ages available. Fast-paced environ-ment. EOE and drug-free workplace.

Email resume to: HR@ba ileyind.com

fax to 352-326-9188or apply in per son at:

1107 Thomas Ave, Lees burg FL

HYGIENIST - FRUITLAND PARK1 to 3 days per week.

Call 352-314-2729

DENTAL ASSISTANT F/TLady Lake office

Mon-Fri; Expd or just out of DentalAs sistant School

Fax resume to (352) 205-8448

WAREHOUSE MATERIAL HANDLERF/T w/benefits/401k.

•Pull orders for delivery or pickup.•Load, unload, verify walk-in orders & deliveries before shipment.•Load & unload vendor & common carrier vehicles.•General forklift maintenance and re port maintenance necessities.•Track & monitor inventory levels.•Keep warehouse organized and clean.•Additional duties & responsibilities as required or assigned.

Call 352-742-1520

WAREHOUSE LOADERSLocal food distribution companyseeks quali fied candidates to joinour team. Must be avail able to workany shift including nights and week-ends. The Flor ida Supply Chain Cen-ter for Domino's Pizza is locatednear the junction of U.S. 27 andState Road 19 in South LakeCounty. We offer competitive payand bene fits with an opportunity forcareer growth.

Interested candidatesshould ap ply

on-line at ca reers.do minos.comEqual Opportunity Employer

Drug Free Workplace

SCHOOL BUSDRIVERS NEEDEDTraining provided.

Lake County Schools,Transporta tion

352-728-2561 orApply online:

www.lake.k12.fl.us

IF $150-$200 WOULD HELP YOUHandout free newspapers at differ-ent loca tions in our delivery area.20-25 hrs./wk. Hours + commis-sion. Good for college stu dents &re tirees. Will train & the right per-

son. Must be clean cut & not afraidto talk. Sales ex perience a plus.

Call Joseph 813-484-3766 orEd 352-217-9937

BREAKDOWN/PARTS CLERKLooking for someone who has theability to multi-task, has great com-mu ni cation skills, and basic com-puter exp. Must have legible handwriting, and be able take directionsand follow them. Previous parts orroadcall exp. a real plus. Knowledgeof semi-tractor/trailer re pairs. Thisposition is full time with the pos si-bility of overtime. Paid vacation,paid holidays and health insur ance. Starting wage $13 per hour.

Email resume to:[email protected]

2255 GENERAL

EMPLOYMENT

PUBLISHER’S NOTICEFederal and State laws prohibit employment advertising expressing a discriminatory preference on the basis of race, age, sex, color, national origin, religion, handicap or material status. The Star Banner/Gainesville Sun will not knowingly accept advertisement for employment which is in violation of the law.

Employment AdvertisingStandards of Acceptance

Employment Classifi cations are intended to announce bona fi de employment offers only. Employment advertising must disclose the specifi c nature of the work being offered. Some employment categories may charge fees. If any advertiser does not comply with these standards, please notify a Classifi ed Sales Representative at 732-9565 or 372-4222.

marital

AGRICULTURAL RESEARCHRESEARCH TECHNICIAN

needed for Syn Tech Re search, Inc.in Sum ter/Lake County, FL. Must beavail. to work 8am to 6pm Mo n-Fri& sometimes Sat. Outside fieldwork re quired. Duties would in cludeas sisting w/vegetable & citrus re-search trials. Horticulture back-ground, 2 yrs. pre vious work exp.,tractor oper at ing abili ties, com puterskills & farm equipment knowl edgepre ferred.Call Teddy at (352) 449-9149

or email me [email protected]

if in terested.

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINGCOMPREHENSIVE PLAN

AMENDMENTLOCAL PLANNING AGENCY AND

TRANSMITTAL HEARINGS

On Tuesday, July 8, 2014 at 6:45p.m. or as soon thereafter aspossible, the Local Planning Agency(LPA) will hold a public hearing atthe Town Hall Au di torium locatedat 17404 Sixth Street, Montverde,Florida to make a recom mendationto Town Council concern ing theadop tion Ordi nance No. 2014-11,a com prehensive plan amendment.On Tues day, July 8 2014 at 7:00p.m. or as soon thereaf ter aspossible, the Town Council will holda public hearing at the Town HallAuditorium located at 17404 SixthStreet, Montverde, Flor ida toconsider the recommendation of theLPA and transmittal of Ordi nanceNo. 2014-11 to the Depart ment ofEco nomic Op portunity. The ti tle ofthe ordinance is as follows:

ORDINANCE 2014-11

AN ORDINANCE OF THE TOWNCOUN CIL OF THE TOWN OFMONTVERDE, LAKE COUNTY,FLORIDA, AMENDING THE TOWN OFMONTVERDE'S COM PREHENSIVEPLAN PUR SUANT TO 163.3184,FLORIDA STATUTES, BY INCLUDINGAN ECONOMIC PROSPER ITY ELE-MENT; PROVIDING DATA ANDANALYSES TO SUPPORT THEECONOMIC PROSPERITY ELEMENT;AU THOR IZING THE MAYOR TOAMEND SAID COMPRE HENSIVEPLAN; RE PEALING ALL ORDI-NANCES IN CON FLICT HEREWITH;PROVIDING FOR SEV ER ABILITY;PROVIDING FOR AN EFFEC TIVEDATE; AND PROVIDING FOR THEFORWARD ING OF THIS OR DI NANCETO THE STATE OF FLORIDA DEPART-MENT OF ECONOMIC OP POR TUNITY.

Interested parties may appear atthe LPA an d/or Town Council publicmeeting and be heard with respectto the proposed plan amendment.Per sons with disabilities needingassistance to participate in thisproceeding should contact the TownClerk at least 48 hours before themeetings at 407-469-2681.

This ordinance is available at theTown Clerk's Office, at Town Halllocated at 17105 Porter Avenue,Montverde, Florida, for inspectionon Monday through Fri day, from8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Persons are advised that if they de-cide to ap peal any decision made atthis meeting, they will need a recordof the proceeding, and for such pur-poses, they may need to ensure thata verbatim record of the proceedingis made which includes the testi-mony and evidence upon which theappeal is based, per Section286.0105, Flor ida Statutes.

Mary Gillis, Town ClerkTown of Montverde

Ad No: 10016221June 28, 2014

Has your job become extinct?

8626 U.S. Hwy 441 ~ Leesburg, FL 34788Next to Leesburg International Airport

352.435.6131SHOPFAMILYFURNITURE.COM

Mon-Fri 9-6, Sat 10-6, Sun 12-5

SAVE ON THE BRAND NAMES YOU KNOW AND TRUST

D002335

We'll Pay YourSales Tax!

24-Month Interest-Free Financing*

Open 10-5 Friday, 4th of July* minimum amount financed $999, 25% deposit required

E1DAILY COMMERCIAL

Saturday, June 28, 2014

POISON IVY: How to treat a reaction / E3www.dailycommercial.com

Home&Garden352-365-8203 n [email protected]

A s the summer weath-er sets in with high temperatures and dai-

ly rain, the gardens love it — mostly. If you have poorly adapted plants, they may be suffering from our heat, hu-midity and disease pressure.

Celosia, coleus, calibra-choa, torenia and ornamen-tal pepper plants are great for color and will hold out well in our climate. It is too hot to start herbs from seeds now, but mint and sweet marjoram may take over the garden during the summer.

By mid-month it will be time to start tomato, egg-plant and pepper seeds for

August plantings. Sweet po-tato, okra and Southern peas are the main vegetables that can handle the heat right now though.

If you want a break from weeding, consider growing a cover crop or solarizing the beds for the summer. These processes can take four to six weeks, and then you can return to beds ready for a great fall garden.

Solarization uses the heat of the sun to kill off weed seeds, nematodes and other garden pests. It is important to start with moist soil that is clear of plant material and ready to plant (all compost and other amendments have been added).

Spread heavy clear plas-tic over the soil and tuck it in around the edges to get a good tight fit. A second lay-er of plastic with a dead air space between the layers will be even more effective be-cause it will insulate the hot soil and provide a more con-stant high temperature. The

Cover crops can help keep weeds at bay in a summer garden

SUBMITTED PHOTO

Calibrachoa look like little petunias but are much more heat tolerant.

MARY CAROL GARRITYMCT

What are some of your favorite summer mem-ories? Mine was my first — and last — attempt to be a beauty queen. One Fourth of July, our tiny country club in Atchi-son, Kan., held a beau-ty pageant for little girls. Even then I was into props, so I borrowed the neighbor’s poodle, slipped on my plastic high heels and sashayed around the pool for the judges. I lost. To a pret-ty little girl with long blonde hair. Not sur-prising, since one of my favorite summer games was to play cowgirl and roam the neighborhood — our ranch.

There is so much nostalgia layered into summer, isn’t there? Independence Day fire-works, watermelon and fireflies. This summer, salute those sunny, lazy days of your youth and celebrate a bit of Ameri-cana by using red, white and blue in your decor. Here’s how.

ACCENT WITH A POP OF RED, WHITE AND BLUEWhen we think about

decorating with Amer-ica’s colors, we often imagine a stars-and-

stripes filled country look, right? Here’s my challenge to you: Tip that stereotype-filled apple cart over and ex-periment with all the glorious ways you can present red, white and blue together in your decor. Try a blue rug and a red and white striped sofa, which ap-plaud these glorious colors, but make them fresh and new.

The secret for stretch-ing our beloved color palette out of its well-worn groove is to also toss in a bouquet of unexpected colors, by adding this paisley pil-low in coral, citron and turquoise.

Big clocks are huge this summer. And my heart hammers hard for this lovely red rimmed time piece. Using art-work like this, that fea-tures just a tiny band of red, is an ideal way to poke in subtle touch-es of our patriotic color scheme.

Create a fabulous table display of red, white and blue. Create a display that’s vibrant with energy by using a wide mix of objects in the tableau. Try a mix that pulls in divergent

Celebrate the summer with red, white and blue

MCT PHOTO

This summer, salute those sunny, lazy days of your youth and celebrate a bit of Americana by using red, white and blue in your decor.

VIRGINIA A. SMITHMCT

Since we last visit-ed John and Gretchen Coyle’s idyllic bayfront home in Beach Hav-en, N.J., a lot has hap-pened. In a word: San-dy.

The killer storm of October 2012 swamped the first floor with sand, salt water, muck and mold. It roughed up the bicycles, fridge and freezer in the garage; destroyed the charm-ing little beach, dunes and deck; and whip-sawed a naturalistic garden lovingly tended for more than three de-cades.

“Sandy just plucked it all up. Everything was gone,” says Gretchen, 74, an author and free-lance writer who has lived in this village-like pocket of Long Beach Island with John, 73, since 1980.

No one could say it hasn’t been a tough 19 months for them.

Gretchen still gets emotional occasionally and flinches when the municipal fire whis-tle goes off. But she and John, a commer-cial landlord, under-

stand that their pain, real and lingering as it is, is different from oth-ers’ at the Shore — peo-ple whose homes were destroyed or remain uninhabitable, whose

lives were irrevocably upended in ways that mock talk of recovery.

“We are very, very lucky,” Gretchen says.

The first floor of the Coyle house has been rebuilt. The mold that would not die, that triggered acute asth-ma in Gretchen, is gone. The new win-dows and cedar shake roof and shingles in-stalled just before San-dy hit made it through intact, and though the second-floor addition that had been under-way was wrecked, it’s now completed.

It’s quite another sto-ry for the couple’s pri-vate beach, dunes, deck and garden, which be-fore the storm was a popular stop on local garden tours.

While losing long-lived evergreens and perennials, favorite fruit trees and vines may not rank up there with losing a home, for

Regrowing a gardenJohn and Gretchen Coyle rebuild in the wake of Hurricane Sandy

PHOTOS BY MICHAEL BRYANT / MCT

ABOVE: Gretchen Coyle stands before the playhouse that is on the side of her home for her grandchildren and a pathway to the bay. BELOW: Coyle uses old red wagons to hold the pots that contain the herbs in her garden.

SEE CROPS | E2

SEE SUMMER | E2

SEE GARDEN | E3

JUANITA POPENOE

LAKE COUNTY EXTENSION

E2 DAILY COMMERCIAL Saturday, June 28, 2014

87 and 93 octanes available plus...Diesel, Race Gas, Lubes and Oils

21901 US Hwy. 441(near Hwy. 46 overpass)

Mount Dora

Monday - Friday7:30am - 5:30pm

Saturday 8am-12pm

383-0922 D003633 D003633

9945 SE Hwy. 42, Summerfield

42 42

27/441SUM

MERFIELD

OCALA

THE VILLAGES

1229 14th St., Leesburg

27/441 LEESBURG

FRUITLANDPARK

441

HOURSMon-Sat8 to 6Sunday9 to 5

• Useable Clothing • Accessories • Shoes • Jewelery• Books • Household Items • Furniture • Linens• Seasonal Items • Decorations • Tools • Kitchen Wares

WENEED

AND ALL KINDS OF USEABLE SURPLUS

D002364

space between the lay-ers may be maintained by plastic pipe or wood.

Leave the plastic on for six weeks and when you are ready, remove and start planting with-out disturbing the soil. Alternatively, you could plant some cover crops that will provide a thick stand quickly to shade out weeds.

When you are ready to plant your garden, kill the cover crop and leave the remains as mulch or incorporate to in-crease organic matter. The cover crop can be killed with herbicide, or you can roll and crimp to break the stems right at the soil line to kill some crops without the use of chemicals. Poten-tial cover crops include

sunhemp, cow peas and sorghum-sudan.

On July 5, the gar-dens will be closed for the holiday weekend, and we will not have a First Saturday in the Gardens. Programs this month will cover cook-ing, finances and 4-H leader training.

On July 24 we will

have a program on Summer Slow Cook-er Meals from 5:30-7:30 p.m. with tech-nique demonstration and tasting. Slow cook-ers aren’t just for winter soups and stews; learn how you can come home to a cool kitchen and a hot meal. Regis-tration is required and costs $15.

If you are interested in finances, on July 29 we have a webinar, Com-paring Mutual Funds and Exchange Traded Funds, from 12-1 p.m. You can discover the differences and bene-fits of the fund types, in-cluding potential risks and rewards, how they may fit your financial goals, tax efficiency, purchasing and expense and fee differences.

If you are thinking about becoming a new 4-H Leader, or want to learn how to become a better one, plan to at-tend this informative class on July 19 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. The program is free, but registration is required.

Juanita Popenoe is the di-rector of the UF/IFAS Lake County Extension office and Environmental Horti-culture Production Agent III. Email: [email protected].

CROPS FROM PAGE E1

SUBMITTED PHOTO

Single layer solarization and sunhemp cover crop demonstrate ways to control weeds over the summer.

shapes, sizes and patterns, which are knit together by repeating our color scheme.

Does your home have a color pal-ette that doesn’t currently include red, white and blue? No worries! Dot in this color triad using a few accents. You wouldn’t think this pri-mary color pair would work so well with, say an emerald and pumpkin scheme, but it does.

SET THE TABLE FOR SUMMER

I think summer tables should be fun and casual, simple to execute. And pulling in red, white and blue through your dishes, table linens and serving pieces is an easy way to give your table an instant sum-mer feel. When you are planning a

summer picnic or backyard barbe-cue, our color combo is as natural as corn on the cob and apple pie. To me, they say “summer.”

Pick out some serving pieces that look fun and fresh in red, white or blue. Then, fill those glasses with lemonade or ice tea.

Your table linens and glasses can help carry out your patriotic col-or palette. I’m crazy about red and white gingham topped cups, in-spired by Grandma’s Mason jars, which were always filled with de-licious pickles and jams, loving-ly made from summer veggies and fruits.

I love using those patriot-ic-themed dishes paired with wicker chargers, or fun summer placemats and napkins. They are just so happy!

Want a more romantic feel to your red, white and blue display? Mix our proud trio with its softer shades of pink and pale blue.

SUMMER FROM PAGE E1

AMY WILSONMCT

There was that time Arlene Spielman finagled to buy an 8-by-9 foot rug — Hermes or-ange, mind you. She knew ex-actly whose house this be-longed in. But if this customer didn’t want it, hey, she had others. She rolled it up and put it in her Astrovan. On her way to her store, she drove to the customer’s house, and, well, you know how this story ends: The rug never got to her store.

And that’s the fastest sale Spielman, former flight at-tendant, former wallpaper saleswoman, consignment queen and peddler extraor-dinaire, ever made.

Spielman, who is the one who thinks of herself as a ped-dler because of her long-ago Astrovan, curates a vast store of furniture and decorative objects “for her friends” in a tucked-up corner of Newport Beach, Calif. Because, real-ly, she buys what she likes — even that time she lost her mind and bought the “cra-zy ’50s housewife safety pin baskets” — and resells it, for others, in her lush, overfull and treasure-filled store.

Which is to say, there are furniture consignment shops, and then there is Spiel-man’s Cannery Exchange.

Consignment shopping is the great undiscovered coun-try of furniture shopping. Be-cause it can be a barren waste-land of bad vinyl records and doilies or it can be Cannery Exchange. Here, you’ll find a 19th century decorative San-tos, probably once displayed in a niche in a church, par-tially surrounded by candles lit by prayerful worshipers, for $800, near a 7-foot-tall, 54-inch-wide 1937 French Kina Lillet poster, while close

by a pair of chocolate-brown signed Michael Taylor chairs, down-filled, all-nail-head-with-cowhide-sides, original-ly $8,000 apiece, are priced at a mere $3,000.

The best consignment dealers actually cultivate a

clientele of designers and collectors who like to change out their stashes, mix up their palettes and just redo occasionally, says Spielman. (She admits to doing it her-self.) That way, not only does the inventory in the store

change almost daily because buys are made daily, but be-cause there’s a lot of arrang-ing and rearranging to show-case different pieces.

Spielman herself started out in a large house, with five kids, and downsized to a cot-tage. Now she just recycles the furnishings to freshen up the look because, you know, you only live once.

Maureen Leaman, who works with Spielman, chimes in: “We all like each other’s stuff ....”

Spielman: “If we don’t, that’s OK. My clients are my friends. They can’t hurt my feelings.”

Leaman says she’s noticed that furniture consumers are just plain getting smart-er these days. Nobody wants their home to look like the ones in the popular catalogs because “then it will look like everybody else’s. You come in

here, you get something that nobody else has and it looks like you’ve had it for years and years.”

She adds that the shop has regulars, like once a month. And some come in every day. So as not to miss a thing.

And Spielman remembers the customer who came in and bought a full-length black rab-bit Alaskan fur coat for a three-day winter trip to New York. A bargain at twice the price.

Even better, consignment is green. “Not one tree died to get into my store,” Spielman says. Someone else’s origi-nally, maybe, but hers is the great recycling of furniture life and furniture lore.

Spielman says she’ll tell the specific story and history of the piece you want, if she knows it. Otherwise, she’ll tell you what she knows about sil-ver, the era, the designer.

And Spielman, like a lot of consignment dealers, deals. You say the art deco lamp, intertwined with two sil-ver cranes, with the Murano glass that’s priced at $1,200 sounds high? She could be talked into a mere grand.

“I didn’t buy these things to keep them,” she says. “We’re not a storage unit.”

Leaman says the store is even a place for guilt to be laid to rest. Like the time a family didn’t know what to do with some magnificent furniture that their mother had but they didn’t want. It had a wonderful story that dated back to Palm Springs, Calif., and Mexican heritage. But someone else dearly loved the furniture and the story, and the folks at Can-nery Exchange passed that on to the original family’s owners.

“That was everything to them,” Leaman says. “Histo-ry was passed along with the price.”

Consignment shop sells furniture and history

CONSIGNMENT TIPSA few ideas for getting the most out of your consignment shopping experience:

■ Don’t go if you don’t find age, a little patina and minor wear to be charming. Some things are pristine. Some things look like they’re 100 years old because they are.

■ If you don’t see something you want, ask. It could be hidden be-hind the signed Depression tramp art that you didn’t know was valuable.

■ Don’t be afraid to ask if the dealer can do better on the price. No one will be shocked or insulted. If they can, they will. If they can’t, they’ll say so.

■ If the price is high, ask if you can make a deposit. There are not more in stock.

■ If the item is large, like a rug or a chandelier, ask if you can take it home “on memo.” Many stores will allow you to try it out and see if it works, allowing you to return it for full refund if not happy.

EUGENE GARCIA / MCT

Arlene Spielman, owner of the Cannery Exchange consignment store in Newport Beach, Calif., has a wide range of unique home decor and furniture in her store.

Saturday, June 28, 2014 DAILY COMMERCIAL E3

THE LIFE YOU’VE WAITED YOUR WHOLE LIFE FOR!Something for Everyone!! Let Us Find Your Dream Home!

SEASONAL & LONGTERM RENTALS

AVAILABLE

OFFICE HOURS MON-SAT: 9-5 • SUN: BY APPT.25327 US Hwy. 27 Ste. 202, Leesburg, Fl. 34748

(352) 326-3626 ~ (800) 234-7654www.PALREALTY.net

D004515

START LIVING THE LIFE!OTTER CREEK GOLFCOURSE FRONTAGE!Custom 3/2, great room& nook, extended lanai& garage. CUL-DE-SAC

LOCATION!Very low 200’s #1623

OTTER CREEK GOLFCOURSE FRONTAGE!Custom 3/2, great room& nook, extended lanai& garage. CUL-DE-SAC

LOCATION!Very low 200’s #1623

D003434

352.357.9964D002748

• Largest inventory of Landscape trees andplants in Lake County

• We beat the big box prices and standbehind what we sell

• We stock very large mature palms, oaks,maples, etc. and install what we sell

• Bulk soils, mulches, and stone

• We have hard to find plants you won’tfind elsewhere

• Full landscape, design,and installation

• Wide selection ofbeautiful ceramicpots in various sizes

4200 Hwy 19-AMount Dora 32757

Hours: Mon-Fri 8-5 • Sat 9-4 • Sun 10-3www.YardStopGardenCenter.com

D002748

lifelong gardeners like Gretchen, this brings its own sadness, one com-pounded by other, more vital Sandy losses.

This garden was hard-won.

Over many years, Gretchen and John tamed the tangle of weeds, poison ivy and wild vines that blocked access to the water. They built those sand dunes and covered them with plugs of American dune grass. They made love-ly walking paths and raised beds.

Anyway, a garden is more than plants. And to the Coyles it was — is — a big part of the joy they experience liv-ing here. So it has been for their three children and seven grandchil-dren, too.

The two-acre proper-ty, which Gretchen calls Little Beach Farm, sits on Sunset Point, a spot of land that juts out into Little Egg Harbor Bay. On sunny days, the At-lantic City skyline is right there.

But not today. It’s 58 degrees, cloudy and rainy, a time for fleece and sweatshirts, and — if we’d been smart — boots instead of san-dals.

As we walk around the garden, one of us shivering, it’s clear that Gretchen is betwixt and between. Almost two years after Sandy, she’s still waiting to see what comes up or leafs out, what’s lost forever, what’s stuck in neutral.

Last summer, some

damage was obvious. Gone were the rose-mary and thyme, ar-borvitae and pine trees, rosa rugosas, hollies and bayberries, beach plums, raspberries, a few yuccas and lilacs, a peach tree, and a cou-ple of figs that were sen-timental favorites.

Survivors included grapes, climbing roses, wisteria, trumpet vine and clematis, and this spring they’re robust, just as before. The pear and nectarine trees, and the hydrangeas, still look iffy. The apple tree whose fruit filled Gretchen’s famous pies?

Terrible.The ferns that float-

ed away are coming up elsewhere on the prop-erty. Wild beach peas, inkberries and black-berries are coming back, while new arriv-als yellow clover and Queen Anne’s lace are thriving. It’s all fine with Gretchen, who pre-fers a relaxed and natu-ral-looking garden.

This second post-San-dy spring, she and Tuck-erton, N.J., landscaper Dawson Smith, a fam-ily friend for almost 50 years, are adding mush-room soil and leaf com-post to the still salt-stressed garden. They’re planting old favorites like daisies and black-eyed Susans and, as Smith says, “the bullet-proofs — juniper, juni-per, juniper.”

Soon, the beach will get attention, too.

Says Gretchen: “John and I are determined to bring it all back natural-ly,” a statement that no doubt includes a once-grand garden destined to return to the tour.

GARDEN FROM PAGE E1

MICHAEL BRYANT / MCT

At John and Gretchen Coyles’ 250-foot-long beach after Sandy, the dunes are flattened, and about 5 feet of sloping shoreline was washed away.

MAUREEN GILMERMCT

“It’s just a tract house,” my mother used to say about the houses in Los Angeles built during the boom after World War II. We lived in one of those tract houses so I know them in-timately. Some were rather spe-cial because the architects who designed them were exploring new materials, natural light and the potential for indoor-out-door living. These are the ones we consider mid-century mod-ern design, and they’re all the rage for retro styling that brings out these great features in the way intended by the original ar-chitects.

One element in our house and many others were room dividers built with a metal lined plant-er along the top. In virtually ev-ery vintage photo I’ve seen, they are all planted with mother in law tongues, Sanseveria trifas-ciata. Why did architects choose this plant? Because the func-tion of these forms was to create a semitransparent glimpse of the room beyond through slots between upstanding sword shaped leaves. More impor-tantly, this plant grows in less light than most houseplants so they’re hard to kill. That is why sanseveria became the signa-ture plant of this era despite its previous popularity in dark Vic-torian drawing rooms.

Sanseveria is an African suc-culent that goes a long time

without water. These two factors make it the most adaptable and low maintenance of all house plants. I have seen Sanseveria in habitat of southern Africa in the dry season. After every bit of green had vanished, sword shaped blades of grey green stood in the barren ground, still viable despite months without moisture.

Sanseveria is much like iris in growth habit. Each plant ris-es from thick but shallow grow-ing rhizomes that look similar to ginger root in size and col-or. The rhizomes travel, sending up new sprouts as they spread out to form large colonies like water iris. These rhizomes are so powerful they can disfigure

and even break through a thick black plastic nursery pot.

This species is grouped among the hard leaf types which share a thick coating and interior suc-culent tissues, both for drought resistance. The soft leaf rainfor-est types may prove far less re-silient under drought stress and just don’t look the same.

These 1950s plants quickly outgrew their tidy linear con-tainers. At this point they were dug and divided by breaking the rhizome into shorter segments, each with at least one growing point. Allow the cut or break points to callus off in open air before replanting to prevent soil born organisms from stimulat-ing rot in the rhizome.

Yardsmart: Mother-in-law’s tongue

MAUREEN GILMER

This beautiful use of sanseveria in Florida shows how well it stands up to droughty conditions, but it will not tolerate frost.

JOE LAMP’LMCT

The first time I had a reaction to poi-son ivy, it was severe. So bad in fact, I end-ed up driving my-self to the emergen-cy room at 2 a.m. I’ve never been so miser-able. They treated me with a steroid shot, a prescription and or-ders to make fre-quent applications of a drying agent until it went away. If you’ve had a reaction, you know what I’m talking about.

IF YOU SUSPECT EXPOSUREIf you suspect ex-

posure, the oil can be removed from your skin if caught in time. The earlier you can cleanse the exposed area of urushiol (the active chemical that causes the reaction), the better chance you have of avoiding an outbreak. But you better act fast. Uru-shiol can penetrate the skin in as little as five minutes.

As soon as possi-

ble, rinse your body thoroughly with water only. Then shower with soap and water. Clothes should be washed im-mediately in hot wa-ter and any tools, shoes or equipment should be cleaned as well with rubbing alcohol. Be careful when handling these items and wear

gloves that can be dis-posed of after use.

ONCE YOU GET THE RASHThe first signs of an

outbreak occur about

four to 48 hours after exposure. Redness of the skin and swelling are the first symptoms, then comes the blister-ing and itching. Severe cases, which include in-fection on more than 30 percent of the body or rashes on the face or genitals, are treated with oral prescription steroids. Otherwise, there are several over-the-counter products that are designed to re-lieve itching and dry up the oozing blisters.

Some of the most common, readily avail-able aids for treating the symptoms include corticosteroid creams such as hydrocortisone, Calamine lotion and antihistamines such as Benadryl. With a con-sistent treatment re-gime, the rash will typ-ically clear up in about a week. Untreated, it will usually clear up on its own in about two to three weeks.

What to do if you have a reaction to poison ivy

MCT PHOTO

Vining poison ivy can be removed manually — just make sure you have on protective gloves and clothing that will cover as much skin as possible.

E4 DAILY COMMERCIAL Saturday, June 28, 2014

CLASSICPEANUTS

Comics www.dailycommercial.com

HEATHCLIFFDENNIS THE MENACE FAMILY CIRCUS

LUANN

MOTHER GOOSE & GRIMM

BEETLE BAILEY

ZITS

GARFIELD

FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE

B.C.

ROSE IS ROSE

DILBERT

SHOE

PICKLES

PHANTOM

BLONDIE

BABY BLUES

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

SNUFFY SMITH

Saturday, June 28, 2014 DAILY COMMERCIAL E5

Sharkys Vac n Sew700 N. Main St. Wildwood, Fl 34785

[email protected]

“Ask Al”I was asked recently by a customer about what needles she

should buy for her sewing machine and when should they bechanged. Over the last 48 years I have repaired thousands ofsewing machines and have seen a lot of people with manydifferent ideas on needles. But I have found that no matter whatsomeone says, it’s the person with experience that I listen tobecause the saying, “The proof is in the pudding”, has beentime tested.I have found that although manufacturers may tell you to

change the needle after making three garments, you are theone to be the judge of that. Now don’t get me wrong, I believe inbeing smart but I also am a penny pincher, if you will. There area lot of factors that go into choosing the correct needle, fromthe manufacturer, the size for the job and the price to name afew. Of course, I first look at the fabric and decide which sizeto use. The finer the fabric the smaller the size and the heavierthe fabric the larger the needle, that’s a mute point but let’s talkabout the quality of needles.It has been my experience that Schmetz or Organ needles are

the best needles to buy. Although Schmetz needles are madein Germany and are excellent quality needles, I mean comeon BMW and Mercedes, but I still recommend Organ needles.They are made in Japan and are equal quality and my best partis that I can get twice as many for the same price as others!Remember I pinch pennies. And always remember, if you hit apin while sewing and hear a klunck sound then that means thetip of the needle is flat and not sharp any more and you shoulddefinitely change the needle. I like the opportunity to buy twiceas many needles for the same price then I can change them asneeded without worrying about wasting money.If you buy a Mercedes or BMW you wouldn’t or shouldn’t

worry about spending too much money on it. In so saying, ifyou spend thousands or hundreds on a good sewing machineyou shouldn’t worry about having to change a needle becauseof the cost. A bent or dull needle can cause it to break andthat can lead to having your sewing machine knocked out oftiming and you think a needle costs a lot! Well, you get the“POINT”... Anyway that’s my story and I can tell it anyway Iwant to. Until next week... Sew What! Happy Sewing!

Needles

D003745

www.dailycommercial.com

Diversions352-365-8208 n [email protected]

BRIDGE

How to play: Fill in the blank squares with the numbers 1 through 9 so that each horizontal row, vertical column and nine-square sub-grid contains no repeated numbers.

Puzzles range in difficulty from one to six stars.

The solution to today’s puz-zle will be in tomorrow’s paper.

YESTERDAY’S SOLUTION

Today is Saturday, June 28, the 179th day of 2014. There are 186 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlights in His-tory:

On June 28, 1914, Arch-

duke Franz Ferdinand of Austria and his wife, Sophie, were assassinated in Saraje-vo (sah-ruh-YAY’-voh) by Serb nationalist Gavrilo Princip — the event which sparked World War I.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Saturday, June 28, 2014:

This year you will be more dynamic than you’ve been in the past. Your personal life will take priority. Some of you will be in a position to buy a new home after July. You are likely to see a pay raise head your way this year. If you are single, oth-ers find you to be extremely attractive. You have to sort out who you would enjoy re-lating to and who offers you what you need. If you are at-tached, the two of you enjoy your life together more and more if you remember to be more sensitive to each oth-er. Re-enact one of your first dates together in order to add more romance to the mix. A fellow CANCER is as temperamental as you are!

ARIES (March 21-April 19) You might want to un-derstand more of what trig-gers excitement and un-predictability in your life. If you enjoy this element of the unexpected in your life, then do not worry about it. Your stability comes forth in these situations.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) If someone repeatedly seeks the same response, understand that he or she

is testing you. You’ll gain unexpected insights, though you could be quite frustrat-ed by this situation. A new beginning becomes possi-ble later on.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You might consider an alternative approach to a situation, especially as you see what is happening on a different level. A child or new friend could become quite rebellious. Try to main-tain a more centered, quiet approach with this person.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) You could feel tired and pushed to the max. Just the same, you seem to be more stable than you normally are. You have the ability to be direct in how you han-dle situations and people. A family member could be on the warpath.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Know when you need to move in a new direction; however, keep your thoughts to yourself for now. You might want to accomplish a lot on your own. If an irate friend or loved one shows up, stay cool. Nothing will be gained by getting angry.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You could be more con-fused than you realize. You

suddenly might be able to turn a situation around, no matter how unsure you are about your choices. You know what is acceptable, and you won’t opt for any-thing less.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Tension builds to a new level, where you easi-ly could feel like a firecrack-er. Be conservative with your funds, no matter how great an idea might seem. Remain optimistic about a decision you have yet to make. Just give yourself time.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Take news with a grain of salt. You might feel very upbeat right now, and that will encourage a positive re-sponse. Check out the de-tails and facts of a situa-tion before you give the OK. Be as clear as possible with others.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You might want to see a situation evolve to where you can relate on

a one-on-one level with a friend. You could be low on energy, yet your intuition will tell you to act anyway. You might be amazed at how good you feel once you make a move.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Defer to oth-ers, and try to get a better sense of direction. The un-expected might occur with a partner, whether you like it or not. A disagreement could evolve out of the blue with someone who is essen-tial to your community in-volvement.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You might want to lis-ten to feedback from some-one who is far more serious than you are. You could dis-agree, but this person will enlighten you about other styles and ways of handling a situation. Consider a trip in the near future.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) You could discover that someone has been holding back and not sharing some of his or her negative feel-ings. You might be the re-cipient of the sum total. Be diplomatic, and back away, for now. Have a discussion once the waters are calm.

HOROSCOPES

TODAY IN HISTORY

DEAR ABBY: I’m 17 and a junior in high school. My family has recently been hit with hard times. We lost our home and are living in a motel, and I am struggling with depres-sion. I haven’t attend-ed school since last September. However, I am feeling well enough to the point where I’d like to start attending school again.

I would be willing to take more than six pe-riods and, if necessary, I would be willing to attend summer school. I want to graduate from high school, but I don’t know if that’s possible.

My mother has nev-er been OK with any decisions I have made, so I don’t know how to tell her. I don’t want to disappoint her, but I do want to do this. Any advice you are will-ing to give would be appreciated! — ANONY-

MOUS GIRLDEAR GIRL: You are

clearly an intelligent young woman, and your determination to finish school is some-thing that should be supported by all of the adults in your life. If possible, go back to the school you were at-tending and talk with a counselor or the prin-cipal about your fam-ily’s circumstanc-es — including your struggle with depres-sion. Whether you can resume studies at your former school may de-pend upon whether the motel you’re stay-ing in is within the dis-trict. But a counselor should be able to help you to transfer if that becomes necessary.

I wish you the best of luck. Your mother should be proud of you because I certainly am.

DEAR ABBY: I am preg-nant with my third child. There has been

a large gap between baby No. 2 and baby No. 3. With my second child, my husband and I were just starting out and used hand-me-downs. But now we are established and can purchase items to suit our preferences.

Many well-mean-ing family members and friends have start-ed inundating us with hand-me-downs (some ask first; others are just dropping things off). I really don’t want any of these items. Howev-er, I don’t want to seem ungrateful or rude be-cause the well-wish-ers seem so excited to give me these things. The way I was raised, I have a hard time turn-ing down offers such as

these. How do I kindly tell these people I don’t want their hand-me-downs? — CONFLICTED IN PHILLY

DEAR CONFLICT-ED: Thank the do-nors warmly for their thoughtfulness and generosity, and say you already have all the things you need for the new baby. It is not nec-essary to allude to the fact they are “hand-me-downs.” If the per-son insists on giving them to you anyway, donate them to a char-ity such as a home-less shelter. (Warning: To avoid possible hurt feelings, do NOT in-clude them in a yard sale.)

Dear Abby is written by Abi-gail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was found-ed by her mother, Pauline Phil-lips. Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Family’s hard times knock teen off track for diploma

JEANNE PHILLIPS

DEAR ABBY

JACQUELINE BIGARBIGAR’S STARS

E6 DAILY COMMERCIAL Saturday, June 28, 2014

JENKINS BUYS CARS Get A Check For Your Vehicle In 30 minutes Or Less!*

Schedule an Appointment Today! 1-844-228-1065*Required documents needed. See Dealer for Details.

2014 HYUNDAITUCSON

$19,995∆

BUYFOR

UnmistakableAt First Glance

UPTO 35M

PG*

#83402

2014 HYUNDAISANTA FE

Capability,Say Hello To Agility

UPTO 23M

PG*

#62423

2014 HYUNDAIGENESIS COUPE

Inspired By Enthusiasts.

UPTO 30M

PG*

#C0303

2014 HYUNDAIGENESIS

Knocking Pricier Premium CarsOff Their Pedestals.

UPTO 25M

PG*

#80422

$269†

LEASEFOR

36MONTHLEASE

permonth36mo lease

†$399$29,495 ∆

orBUY FOR

LEASE FOR

$299†

LEASEFOR

36MONTHLEASE

#83402 #62423 #80422#C0303

UPTO 38M

PG*

#45413

GET $4000 CASH BACKSee dealer for details.

CASH BACKCASH BACKCASH BACKCASH BACKCASH BACKCASH BACKCASH BACKCASH BACKNO PAYMENTS

UNTILAUG.**

$4000$4000$4000$4000$400072 MONTHS

AVAILABLE ◊72727272FORUPTOO%

APR per month36mo lease

†$149 $14,995∆orBUY FORLEASE FOR

2014 HYUNDAIELANTRA

Elantra named2012 NORTH AMERICANCAR OF THE YEAR.1

RoadsideAssistance• 5-yearUnlimitedCoverage• Towing, Battery jump-starts,Flat Tire Changes &More!

STAR RATINGH H H H H

2014 HYUNDAIVELOSTER

Designed To Look Like NothingElse On The Road

UPTO 37M

PG*

#P0303

$179†

LEASEFOR

36MONTHLEASE

#P0303

2014 HYUNDAIACCENT

Subcompact?Think Again!

UPTO 37M

PG*

#16403#16403

2014 HYUNDAISONATA UP

TO 35MPG*

#27403

$199†

LEASEFOR

36MONTHLEASE

#27403

Large-Car Space ForMidsize Money

permonth36mo lease

†$129$12,995 ∆

orBUY FOR

LEASE FOR

Certified Pre-Owned10-year, 100,000-mile Powertrain Limited Warranty*

Comprehensive 150-point InspectionComplimentary CARFAX® Vehicle History Report10-year, Unlimited Mileage Roadside Assistance*90 Days of No-Charge Sirius XMTM Satellite Radio

10-year, 100,000-mile Powertrain Limited Warranty*Comprehensive 150-point Inspection

Complimentary CARFAX® Vehicle History Report10-year, Unlimited Mileage Roadside Assistance*90 Days of No-Charge Sirius XM

Prices StartingAs Low As

$12,995*12,995

*From original in-service date and zero miles. Prices are plus tax, tag & title. 2012 Hyundai Accent, STK#O8267A, $12,995. See dealer for details.

Rows & Rows ofPRE-OWNEDVEHICLES

9145 So. Hwy 441 (Across From The Airport)SALES: SERVICE:MON-FRI 9 am-9 pm, SAT 9 am-8 pm

SUN Noon - 6 pmMON-FRI 7:00 am-6:00 pmSAT 8 am-5 pm

HABLAMOS

ESPAÑOL

For the BestPrice Text

JENKINS5 to 35555

JENKINS5

JENKINS HYUNDAI of Leesburg1-800-HYUNDAI or 1-855-347-1709

(1-800-498-6324)

All prices are plus tax, tag, title and are before any dealer installed options and include all variable manufacturer rebates & incentives. ∆Buy for is with $0 down deposit. † Lease down payment requirement: 2014 Elantra - $4,199, 2014 Veloster - $2,199, 2014 Sonata - $2,199, 2014 Genesis Coupe - $2,698, 2014 Genesis - $3,999,2014 Santa Fe -$3,499, 2014 Accent - $3,699. Photos are for illustration purposes only. Advertised vehicles subject to prior sale. Programs subject to change without notice. Must finance through Hyundai Motor Finances. Programs apply to new vehicle purchases. See dealer for complete details. 1: 2012 Elantra name North AmericanCar of the Year. Source; www.northamericancaroftheyear.org. ◊ On select 2013 and 2014 model vehicles. Some restrictions may apply. See dealer for complete details. * Expected range for most drivers, your actual mileage may vary depending on how you drive & maintain your vehicle. Source; US Federal Government EPA. ** Seedealer for details.

Free Vehicle History Report • Certified Quality Multi-Point InspectionAvailable 5 Year / 100,000 Mile Warranty* • Low Payments

• Low Rates • Guaranteed Credit Approval**Great Selection ofQuality Pre-Owned Vehicles$8,014

$8,224

$8,615

$8,794

$8,995

$9,494

$9,534

$9,995

$11,044

2004 TOYOTA CAMRY

2008 NISSAN VERSA

2009 HYUNDAI ACCENT

2006 CHRYSLER SEBRING

2008 VOLKSWAGEN NEW BEETLE

2008 CHRYSLER SEBRING

2008 DODGE AVENGER

2007 TOYOTA AVALON

2011 FORD FOCUS

L12680A…………………………………………

LPV0101A………………………………………

L12610A…………………………………………

LT12971B………………………………………

L12691A…………………………………………

PL2049A…………………………………………

L13210A…………………………………………

L12838A…………………………………………

L12822A…………………………………………

2007 HYUNDAI AZERA

2007 HYUNDAI SANTA FE

2010 CHEVROLET COBALT

2010 CHEVROLET COBALT

2010 HYUNDAI ELANTRA

2012 HYUNDAI ACCENT

2010 KIA OPTIMA

2008 HYUNDAI SANTA FE

$11,084

$11,934

$12,294

$12,347

$12,404

$12,584

$12,774

$12,784

L13032A………………………………………

L13035A………………………………………

L12813A………………………………………

L12935A………………………………………

LT13238A……………………………………

L12776A………………………………………

L12764A………………………………………

L12267A………………………………………

$12,804

$13,624

$13,684

$13,774

$13,934

$13,994

$13,994

$13,994

2012 HYUNDAI ACCENT

2012 HYUNDAI ACCENT

2008 HYUNDAI SANTA FE

2010 HONDA CR-V

2009 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN

2009 HYUNDAI SONATA

2008 HYUNDAI SANTA FE

2012 HYUNDAI ELANTRA

L12493A………………………………………

L13108A………………………………………

L13052A………………………………………

L12732A………………………………………

L13068A1………………………………………

L12880A………………………………………

L12386B………………………………………

L12623A………………………………………

2012 VOLKSWAGEN JETTA

2011 HYUNDAI SONATA

2011 KIA OPTIMA

2013 HYUNDAI ELANTRA

2011 HYUNDAI SONATA

2013 HYUNDAI ELANTRA

2013 HYUNDAI ELANTRA

2011 HYUNDAI SONATA

LPV0108……………………………………………

L11985B……………………………………………

PL2020C……………………………………………

L12675A……………………………………………

L12869A……………………………………………

L12499A……………………………………………

L12631A……………………………………………

L12707A……………………………………………

$14,114

$14,304

$14,924

$14,934

$14,944

$14,994

$15,174

$15,294Thank you for reading this. All prices are plus tax, tag, title and before any dealer installed options and include all available manufacturer rebates & incentives. All prices are

after $1,000 cash and/or trade equity. Cannot be combined with any other advertised offers. Vehicles are subject to prior sale. See dealer for complete details.

ww

w.J

en

ki

ns

Hy

un

da

iO

fL

ee

sb

ur

g.c

om

J E N K I N S H Y U N D A I O F L E E S B U R G

D003100