Pentagon expands authority - Tribune-Review
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47397 222226 8
INDEXVol. 129 · No. 59
Eight sections70 pages
WEATHER 59 · 45Some sun and milder
today. Partly cloudytonight. Details, A2
© 2017
Automotive D6Bridge E2Business C6Classified D1
Crossword D3, E2Editorials A8Financial C7Local C1
Living E1Lotteries A2Movies E4Nation/World A4
Obituaries C2Real Estate F1Sports B1TV E4, Comics
$1.50PRICE MAY VARY OUTSIDEPRIMARY MARKETSUNDAY APRIL 2, 2017 $1.50PRICE MAY VARY OUTSIDE
PRIMARY MARKETSUNDAY APRIL 2, 2017
WIZARDS OF ODD Couple sells decorative items made of preserved animal parts E1WESTMORELAND EDITIONGET BREAKING NEWS AT TRIBLIVE.COM ... FOR AN EDGY TAKE, CHECK OUT UPGRUV.COM
SPECIAL SECTION · MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL PREVIEWS
////////////////////////////////////////////////////// SPECIAL SECTION MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL PREVIEW
Trib: When you started this job, how much of your plan for how to build and run the club was already in
place? And how much has it morphed over the years?
Huntington: A lot of it was conceptualized before
we came in the door. After talking with Bob (Nutting)
and Frank (Coonelly), we bought into the concept of let’s
see what the 2008 club could do. They’d done a nice
job (in 2007) and appeared to be ready to take the next
step forward. There were some established position
players, although most of them were approaching free
agency. There wasn’t much in the farm system other
than (Andrew) McCutchen, (Neil) Walker and Brad
Lincoln. We knew we were going to have to invest
heavily in the draft and in the international market. We
knew there needed to be some changeover in personnel
and some changes in systems and structures.
Unfortunately, 2008 did not go well. We were below
.500 at the trade deadline, so we made the decision
to move those veteran players who were nearing free
agency and go full force into talent-accumulation mode.
So much of that first year was about discovering
what was good and who was good and who could be
part of the future on and off the field. The next phase
was talent accumulation, then talent development,
then major league team maturation, then “Let’s
push this thing forward and figure out a way to win a
World Series.” So a lot (of the plan) was in place early.
We’ve evaluated and evolved over time, for sure. But
conceptually, a lot of it was in place as we walked in
the door. Maybe that’s part of the reason why Bob and
Frank offered me the position.
Around the time “hope and change” was becoming a hip political slogan, Neal Huntington brought those words
into the lexicon of the Pirates’ front office.
“We will systematically work to change the culture of this organization and to return it to a consistent winner
for the city of Pittsburgh,” Huntington said after being hired as general manager Sept. 25, 2007.
As Huntington begins his 10th season, his message remains the same.
There was a melancholia that shrouded the franchise for two decades — epitomized by the “Welcome to hell”
greeting a veteran Pirate once gave to a guy who had just been traded to the team. That sour mood was snapped by
three straight winning seasons from 201315.
Under Huntington, the Pirates have invested heavily in player development and have been at the leading edge of
analytics. The restocked farm system has been ranked the best in the game. Several of Huntington’s lieutenants
have been recruited for prominent roles with other clubs.
Yet, the 2013 wildcard win over the Cincinnati Reds is the Pirates’ only significant postseason victory of the
Huntington era. There remains work to be done.
At the outset of the 2017 season, Huntington looked back on his time with the Pirates during a oneonone with
TribuneReview beat writer Rob Biertempfel.
HOPE &CHANGE
by ROb bIERTEMPFEL
10 YEARS LATER, HUNTINGTON’S
MESSAGE REMAINS THE SAME
HUNTINGTON · 6
CHRISTOPHER HORNER | TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Q&A WITH PIRATES GM NEAL HUNTINGTONBASEBALL ’17 SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017
KEVIN GORMAN
Pirates’stars mustbounceback withvengeance
To explain how the
Pirates dropped 20
games in one season,
from 98 wins in 2015 to 78
last year, requires the ex
pertise of a baseball man.
Don’t look at me.
No, we’re talking about
someone who is invested
in changing the culture
of baseball in Pittsburgh,
someone who has promised
to field a team that can “con
tend for championships.”
Or, you know, just make
the playoffs as a wild card.
After two decades of los
ing baseball, we lowered our
standards enough to believe
Pirates owner Bob Nutting
wants to be a winner — even
if he doesn’t want to, you
know, pay for one.
But Nutting, who watched
the Pirates qualify for the
National League playoffs
three consecutive seasons
from 201315, has an interest
ing take on the 2016 Buccos:
“We ended up with the
season we did because the
team and organization
underperformed the level of
talent that we had,” Nutting
said. “I don’t think it was
nearly so much that we
didn’t have sufficient talent
to make the run. We had
some very good players who
did not perform up to the
expectations that we had.
I really think it’s far more
execution than what we had
put together.”So, it’s not that the Pirates
were pitching poorly, relying
too heavily on rookies in
the starting rotation. It’s
not that they let go of two
former firstround picks and
franchise building blocks
in Neil Walker and Pedro
Alvarez, whose replace
ments failed to match their
production.It’s that the very good
players didn’t do their
part, a suggestion that the
struggles fell squarely on
the shoulders of former
AllStars like Andrew
McCutchen, Gerrit Cole and
Josh Harrison.And you know what?
Nutting is right.
Of course, it’s all of those
things and much, much
more. The Pirates were
flawed, especially in com
parison to the World Series
champion Chicago Cubs.
But if the Pirates want
to return to winning ways,
if they want to compete for
the NL Central Division title
and a spot in the playoffs,
it’s going to require better
performances.McCutchen and Cole are
the other former first
rounders expected to be the
cornerstone players for the
Pirates. Their dropoffs last
season hurt tremendously,
so bounceback years are
necessary.McCutchen’s batting aver
age slipped from .317 in his
MVP season to .256 last year,
his strikeouts increased
by 42 and his stolen bases
decreased by 21.After being shopped in
the offseason, McCutchen is
GORMAN · 6
///////////////////////
»A breakdown of Huntington’s history of drafts and trades PAGE 7
»How the Pirates must improve to catch the Cubs PAGE 2
INSIDE
Pirates generalmanager Neal
Huntingtonsmiles as
he watchesbatting practice
at GeorgeSteinbrennerField before agame against
the Yankeeson March 5.
Pirates general manager Neal Huntington talks with
Josh Bell before a spring training game March 15 at
LECOM Park in Bradenton, Fla.
CHRISTOPHER HORNER | TRIBUNE-REVIEW
adno
=644
7845
Pirates fan Bo Brooke, 10, watches Gregory Polanco in the dugout during a gameagainst the Twins on Wednesday at Hammond Stadium in Fort Myers, Fla.
» Q&A WITH PIRATES GM NEAL HUNTINGTON» BREAKDOWN OF HUNTINGTON’S DRAFTS AND TRADES» HOW THE PIRATES MUST IMPROVE TO CATCH THE CUBS» WRITERS LOOK AT NL CENTRAL, OTHER DIVISIONS
PIRATES FEVER
CHRISTOPHER HORNER | TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Go online to view a gallery of Chris Horner’s spring training images at TribLive.com
FRESH OUTLOOK
Rick Erdelack’s lifelong love forthe rock band Genesis regularlytakes him on a road trip — fromPittsburgh to Greensburg to see thenext best thing.
When The Musical Box, a Genesistribute band, played last month atthe Palace Theatre, Erdelack turned
the event into a special occasion,dining at the Rialto restaurant andstaying the night at the Courtyardby Marriott off Route 30.
“The Palace is great, and we reallylike the town,” he said.
The historic West Otterman Streetvenue draws thousands of people toGreensburgeachyear.Andthemoneythey spend on tickets, meals, hotelroomsandmoreaddsup—tothetuneof $9 million injected into the localeconomy annually, according to theWestmoreland Cultural Trust’s mostrecent economic impact study.
The trust wants to see that economic impact grow.
“We do not think that we havetopped out by any stretch of theimagination,” said Michael Langer,president of the cultural trust thathas run the 101yearold theatersince 1990.
A 2014 study showed the theater’seconomic impact had increased bynearly $2 million since 2009, andLanger hopes to see a similar increase when the study is repeatedin 2019.
by JACOb TIERNEy
Region gets growing influx of tourism dollarsGreensburg’s focus on artssets it apart from other citiesits size, museum official says
TOURISM · A3
The PalaceTheatrecontributesabout$9 millionto theregion’seconomyeach year,accordingto localtourismofficials.
DAN SPEICHER | TRIBUNE-REVIEW
The Pirates are starting their2017 season with a road tripto Boston’s hallowed FenwayPark, and so will Greg Carder.
The Collier resident, 29, andhis 59yearold father will drivemore than nine hours Sundayto catch the first pitch Mondayat baseball’s oldest ballpark.Then they’ll come back homefor the first game of Carder’snew seasonticket package onSaturday to seats along thethirdbase line, with its viewsof the Pittsburgh skyline.
“Fenway Park is on the bucket list,” said Carder. “Your biggest hero growing up is alwaysyour dad, and I’m lucky to stillhave mine. ... I don’t ever want
by MATTHEW SANTONI
Promotions, eternaloptimism leave faithfulon edge of their seats
Bucs fanschampingat bit for’17 season
PIRATES · A3
MUDSLIDES WREAK HAVOC IN COLOMBIAResidents rescue a woman who was caught in a mudslide from heavy rains Saturdayin Mocoa, Colombia. The deluge, caused by the rise of the Mocoa River and threetributaries, came too quickly for many residents to seek safety. According to the RedCross, 400 people were injured and 220 are believed missing. Story, A6
AFP/GETTY IMAGES
WASHINGTON — Week by week,country by country, the Pentagon isquietly seizing more control over warfighting decisions, sending hundredsmore troops to war with little publicdebate and seeking greater authorityto battle extremists across the MiddleEast and Africa.
Last week it was Somalia, wherePresident Trump gave the U.S. military more authorityto conduct offensiveairstrikes on alQaidalinked terrorists. Thisweek it could be Yemen,where military leaderswant to provide morehelp for the UnitedArab Emirates’ battleagainst Iranianbackedrebels. Key decisionson Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan are looming,from ending troop number limits to looseningrules that guide commanders in the field.
The changes inTrump’s first two months in officeunderscore his willingness to let thePentagon manage its own daytodaycombat. Under the Obama administration, military leaders chafed aboutmicromanagement that included commanders needing approval for routinetactical decisions about targets andpersonnel moves.
But delegating more authority to thePentagon — and combat decisions tolowerlevel officers — carries its ownmilitary and political risks. Casualties,
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Trump’s delegation of powerto military a seismic shiftfrom Obama administration
Pentagonexpandsauthority
PENTAGON · A3
WASHINGTON — Thecrash of the House Republican health care bill may wellhave transformed an issue theparty has long used to bashDemocrats into the GOP’s ownpolitical nightmare.
Since former PresidentBarack Obama’s health careoverhaul was enacted in 2010,Republicans have blamedDemocrats for rising premiums and diminished choicesof insurers and doctors inmany markets. RepealingObama’s law has been a para
mount GOP campaign promise that helped them grab control of the House that year andthe Senate in 2014 and electedDonald Trump to the WhiteHouse in November.
Yet here they are, in full control of government but unableto deliver their pledge. Instead,they’re sweeping up debrisfrom a failed bill that partymoderates and conservativeshated, sparked a civil war between Trump and the hardline House Freedom Caucusand threatens to alienate GOPbase voters.
Many Republicans say theynow own the health care issue.
“If you say, ‘This is Obamacare; it’s failing,’ people cansay, ‘Well, we elected you to fixit,’ ” said Tom Davis, a formerRepublican congressman from
Virginia who headed the HouseGOP’s campaign committee.
“We have the House, the Senate, the White House,” saidDavid Winston, a GOP strategist who advises congressionalleaders. “People are going toexpect points on the board.”
Davis, Winston and othersnote that it’s a long way tothe November 2018 elections.That’s when Republicans willdefend their congressionalmajorities, so GOP successeson issues such as tax cuts andinfrastructure that affect theeconomy and jobs could overshadow their health care dud.
In addition, party leadershope to produce new healthcare legislation. It’s unclearhow they’d do that without
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Health care woes loom for GOPFailure to strike downObamacare may hauntmid-term elections
HEALTH CARE · A3
INSIDE»Venezuelareinstatescongress’legislativepowers. A4»$4.24Mverdict in Pa.gas drillingsuit tossed.A10»MoreNation &World news,A4-7, 10
A2 · SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017
On thin iceArctic sea icereached a recordlow wintertime
maximum for the thirdconsecutive year astemperatures aroundthe North Pole soared tothe warmest levels everrecorded during winter. “Ihave been looking at Arc-tic weather patterns for35 years and have neverseen anything close towhat we’ve experiencedthese past two winters,”U.S. National Snow andIce Data Center Direc-tor Mark Serreze saidin a release. Not only isthe extent of sea ice thesmallest ever measured,the ice itself is thinneras a result of the recordsummertime meltingso far this century. Thesea ice appeared toreach its greatest extenton March 7, covering arecord low of 5.57 millionsquare miles. That isdown 37,000 squaremiles from last winter’srecord low.
Antibiotic soilThe widespreaduse of antibiot-ics on livestock
to prevent rather thantreat disease is causingan adverse impact on soilmicrobes around farmswhere the antibiotics areused, researchers say. Ateam from Virginia Techexamined soil samplesfrom 11 U.S. dairy farmsand found the amount ofantibiotic resistance geneswas 200 times greaterin soil near manure pilescompared with soil fromelsewhere. The research-ers point out that soilmicrobes are important inclimate regulation, soil fer-tility and food production.The wholesale use of anti-biotics in agriculture couldthreaten those beneficialeffects, the team warns.
Yellow fever alertBrazil has launched a
mass vaccinationcampaign foryellow fever in its
southern states, wherethe disease has killedmore than 220 people as
well as countless numbersof howler monkeys. Largeportions of Brazilian rainforest in Minas Geraisstate are left without asingle monkey. “It wasjust silence, a sense ofemptiness,” University ofWisconsin anthropologistKaren Strier said aftervisiting the affectedregion. Scientists say theyare alarmed at the speedat which the mosquito-borne disease is spread-ing, jumping from onepatch of forest to another.
Disease detectorsResearchers say they have
found that blood-sucking flies canbe used to detect
emerging diseases inwild animals before thepathogens can spread tohumans. Franck Prugnolle,from France’s NationalCenter for ScientificResearch, followed up onearlier studies that foundDNA from animals andthe diseases they carryare preserved in the bloodmeals of flies. By examin-ing blood inside more
than 1,200central Africanflies, mainly tsetse flies,Prugnolle discovered theinsects had fed on 20different species, rangingfrom elephants and hipposto reptiles and birds. Healso found 18 previouslyunknown malaria parasitespecies in the blood.
EarthquakesA moderatequake damageda number of
homes in southwesternChina’s Yunnan province.• Earth movements werealso felt in the northeast-ern Indian state of Sikkim,northern Borneo and fromIndonesia’s Banda Sea toDarwin, Australia.
Historic eruptionRussia’s Kam-balny volcanoerupted at the
southern tip of theKamchatka Peninsula forthe first time since thereign of Catherine theGreat, almost 250 yearsago. Ash blew southwardtoward the Kuril Islands.
Tropical cyclonesParts of Austra-lia’s Queenslandcoast were
ravaged by Category 3Cyclone Debbie, whichmade landfall near Bowenafter lashing an islandoffshore with 161 mphwinds.• Cyclone Caleb formedbriefly south of Sumatra.
+115°Matam,Senegal
CalebDebbie
5.04.5
5.1
3.4
STEVE NEWMAN’S EARTHWEEK
The maximum extent ofArctic sea ice occurredMarch 7. Thinning iceis harming wildlife andindigenous people butmakes the Arctic moreaccessible to shippingand oil exploration.
NASA
Kambalny volcano lasterupted in 1769.
SIBERIAN TIMES
Cyclone Debbie struck the Queensland coast March 27.NASA
-95°Vostok,
Antarctica
DISTRIBUTED BY: ANDREWS MCMEEL SYNDICATION © MMXVII EARTH ENVIRONMENT SERVICE
KQV POLL
Saturday’s questionDo you agree with President
Trump that thecongressional in-vestigation into hiscampaign’s associa-tion with Russia is a
witch hunt?Yes: 2,618 (98 percent)No: 50 (2 percent)
Sunday’s questionTomorrow, the Pittsburgh Pirates
will begin their 135th season with agame at Fenway Park as they lookfor a fresh start after coming off a
disappointing 2016 season, whichthe team finished with a losingrecord, missing the playoffs for thefirst time in four years. Competingin the same division with last year’sWorld Series champion ChicagoCubs, it remains to be seen how our“battlingBuccos”will farethisyear.
How well do you think the Pirateswill do this season?
Make playoffs: 412-333-9190Winning season: 412-333-9192Losing season: 412-333-9194
Final results can be heard onKQV-AM (1410) at 6:58 p.m.
SnowfallYesterday ................................................ 0.0”Record ........................................ 2.6” in 1962Month to date ........................................ 0.0”Season to date .................................... 32.0”Normal season to date ....................... 40.0”
Good
Statistics for Southwestern Pennsylvania from Pa.Dept. of Environmental Protection.Yest. ......................... Good, Particulates
Today is not an AQI Action Day.
Today
Air Quality
Forecast Updated continuously at www.TribLIVE.com
Shown is today’s weather. Temperaturesare today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
HIGH LOW
Almanac
Temperatures
Precipitation
Regional forecast
ButlerBeaver
Kittanning
TarentumPittsburgh
Washington
WaynesburgConnellsville
Monessen
Greensburg
Somerset
Johnstown
Indiana
Baltimore
Harrisburg
Cumberland
State College
Philadelphia
Scranton
Allentown
Bradford
Erie
New Castle
Lake Erie forecast
9 a.m. 10 a.m. 11 a.m. Noon 1 p.m. 2 p.m. 3 p.m. 4 p.m. 5 p.m. 6 p.m. 7 p.m. 8 p.m. 9 p.m.
River Stages
Sun & Moon
Around the world
Relative humidity
Around the nation
As of 7 a.m. yesterday
2Example:
Winds 2 mphfrom the West
Allegheny
Monongahela
Loyalhanna Creek
F-falling M-missing R-rising S-stationary
Clinton L&D ...................................... 12.47 RC.W. Bill Young L&D ......................... 13.72 RFranklin ............................................... 8.40 FFreeport L&D ................................... 15.85 MNatrona L&D .................................... 12.82 RSharpsburg ....................................... 13.50 R
Charleroi ............................................ 17.40 RElizabeth ........................................... 14.60 R
Forecasts and graphics provided byAccuWeather, Inc. ©2017
U.S. extremes (For the 48 contiguous states)High ....................................95 at Zapata, TexasLow ............................ 17 at Squaw Valley, Calif.Wettest ..................... 2.93 at Plymouth, Mass.
TODAY TONIGHT MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY
Today Tomorrow
First QuarterApril 3
Full MoonApril 11
Last QuarterApril 19
New MoonApril 26
YoughioghenyConnellsville ....................................... 8.00 FSutersville ........................................... 9.70 R
Statistics for Pittsburgh through 5 p.m. yesterday.
High/low ................................................ 43/39Normal high/low................................... 56/35Year ago high/low................................. 68/45Record high .....................................83 (1986)Record low......................................... 11 (1923)
Yesterday .............................................. 0.23”Month to date ....................................... traceNormal month to date .......................... 0.11”Year to date ........................................ 10.02”Normal year to date ............................. 8.15”Last year to date .................................. 7.83”
Kingston ............................................ 4.69 MLatrobe ............................................... 7.87 M
w-weather, s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy,c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice
City H/L/W H/L/W City H/L/W H/L/WAlbuquerque 61/39/pc 68/42/pcAnchorage 45/30/pc 46/37/pcAtlanta 81/62/s 74/60/tBaltimore 63/43/s 64/55/rBillings 56/36/sh 48/31/rBoise 56/30/pc 50/29/pcBoston 47/33/pc 48/37/pcCharleston, S.C. 78/60/s 80/65/cCharleston, W.Va. 67/49/pc 71/56/rCharlotte 72/52/s 70/61/rChicago 61/46/r 55/45/rCincinnati 64/49/pc 68/52/rCleveland 60/46/pc 61/54/rDallas 71/56/t 78/59/sDenver 61/34/s 54/28/rDes Moines 57/48/r 60/44/rDetroit 61/44/s 56/48/rHonolulu 85/73/s 85/72/sHouston 78/61/t 84/60/sIndianapolis 62/50/pc 65/51/r
Kansas City, Mo. 61/51/sh 62/45/rLas Vegas 81/58/s 70/50/pcLos Angeles 76/54/s 68/53/pcMiami 87/75/pc 85/75/pcMinneapolis 56/41/r 57/40/cNew Orleans 81/70/t 81/61/tNew York City 58/42/s 55/48/pcOcean City, Md. 55/43/s 58/53/pcPhoenix 83/60/s 85/58/sSt. Louis 70/57/sh 66/53/rSalt Lake City 54/34/r 51/34/cSan Diego 70/57/pc 64/56/pcSan Francisco 68/50/pc 67/50/sSeattle 53/37/pc 53/40/pcWashington 65/48/s 67/58/r
Acapulco 85/72/s 85/72/sAmsterdam 59/40/pc 57/42/pcAthens 67/51/s 63/54/rBaghdad 78/54/s 73/54/pcBeijing 74/41/pc 78/50/pcBuenos Aires 75/63/r 77/62/pcCairo 75/58/c 79/58/sCalgary 40/24/c 41/20/pcCancun 87/76/s 87/77/pcDublin 55/42/pc 55/41/rFrankfurt 65/47/c 65/43/cJerusalem 58/46/sh 63/48/pcLima 80/71/pc 80/70/cLondon 61/42/pc 62/45/pcMadrid 65/37/s 67/41/sMexico City 82/47/s 82/49/sMontreal 47/27/pc 47/36/pcMoscow 52/35/r 43/33/rNew Delhi 100/71/pc 102/74/pcParis 63/44/pc 64/46/pcRio de Janeiro 84/70/sh 86/70/pcRome 62/46/t 68/45/shSan Juan 85/75/sh 82/74/shSeoul 59/37/s 63/39/sSydney 69/60/sh 69/61/shTokyo 53/44/c 58/46/sToronto 57/37/pc 52/43/cVienna 73/47/pc 68/46/tWarsaw 73/48/t 60/45/c
Today Tom. Today Tom.
Today Tom.
Milder today with partialsunshine; pleasant. Partlycloudy tonight. Turning cloudytomorrow with a little rain inthe afternoon.
60/4362/45
61/44
60/4561/47
61/43
62/4461/46
62/45
59/45
58/42
55/43
59/45
62/43
60/38
65/41 63/43
62/43
58/41
61/43
56/3853/37
53/41Wind from thewest‑southwest at 6‑12knots today. Seas lessthan a foot. Visibilitygenerally clear.
Some sun; pleasant andmilder Partly cloudy
Rain, thena couple of
showers
A bit ofafternoon rain
Mostly cloudyand milder Occasional rain
38 43 47 52 54 56 58 59 58 58 56 53 52
59 45 66/56 61/40 69/56 62/43
YesterdayHigh ..................................... 100% at 3 a.m.Low ....................................... 82% at 2 p.m.
Sunrise 7:00 a.m. 6:59 a.m.Sunset 7:44 p.m. 7:45 p.m.
Moonrise 11:21 a.m. 12:18 p.m.Moonset 1:07 a.m. 2:08 a.m.
915
59
14
SATURDAY, APRIL 1PennsylvaniaPick 2 Day: 10 Night: 23Pick 3 Day: 126 Night: 821Pick 4 Day: 6411 Night: 4092Pick 5 Day: 77211 Night: 72293Wild Ball Day: 5 Night: 4Treasure Hunt 7 8 19 21 30Cash 5 15 30 32 34 38
Treasure Hunt payoutMatches Winners Prize5 of 5 0 $04 of 5 55 $1003 of 5 1,319 $62 of 5 10,309 $1Today’s jackpot at least $30,000
Cash 5 payoutMatches Winners Prize5 of 5 2 $225,0004 of 5 102 $2183 of 5 2,732 $13.502 of 5 33,803 $1Today’s jackpot at least $125,000
PowerballDrawing Not availablePowerball/Powerplay Not available
FRIDAY, MARCH 31PennsylvaniaPick 2 Day: 69 Night: 89Pick 3 Day: 439 Night: 178Pick 4 Day: 3907 Night: 4747Pick 5 Day: 26395 Night: 60824Wild Ball Day: 1 Night: 5Treasure Hunt 1 5 13 19 27Cash 5 1 23 27 37 41Mega Millions 17 24 27 32 58Mega Ball/Megaplier 10 / 3
THURSDAY, MARCH 30PennsylvaniaPick 2 Day: 45 Night: 21Pick 3 Day: 702 Night: 999Pick 4 Day: 8722 Night: 5579Pick 5 Day: 68503 Night: 12001Wild Ball Day: 8 Night: 5Treasure Hunt 10 13 14 19 29
Cash 5 3 26 27 28 33Cash4Life 24 38 40 44 49Cash Ball 2Match 6 15 16 21 30 31 34
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 29PennsylvaniaPick 2 Day: 93 Night: 05Pick 3 Day: 744 Night: 459Pick 4 Day: 3671 Night: 9605Pick 5 Day: 43649 Night: 79948Wild Ball Day: 6 Night: 8Treasure Hunt 4 8 16 23 24Cash 5 11 18 26 36 37Powerball 8 15 31 36 62Powerball/Powerplay 11 / 3
TUESDAY, MARCH 28PennsylvaniaPick 2 Day: 22 Night: 19Pick 3 Day: 980 Night: 850Pick 4 Day: 0567 Night: 4523Pick 5 Day: 40594 Night: 77207Wild Ball Day: 9 Night: 5Treasure Hunt 1 7 12 14 26Cash 5 20 28 32 34 39Mega Millions 30 33 35 37 46Mega Ball/Megaplier 10 / 5
MONDAY, MARCH 27PennsylvaniaPick 2 Day: 15 Night: 53Pick 3 Day: 099 Night: 787Pick 4 Day: 4888 Night: 7054Pick 5 Day: 65207 Night: 41385Wild Ball Day: 2 Night: 2Treasure Hunt 6 8 17 25 30Cash 5 10 17 18 34 42Cash4Life 32 42 58 59 60Cash Ball 4Match 6 6 11 17 18 46 49
SUNDAY, MARCH 26PennsylvaniaPick 2 Day: 08 Night: 18Pick 3 Day: 702 Night: 583Pick 4 Day: 2891 Night: 0759Pick 5 Day: 07838 Night: 11950Wild Ball Day: 2 Night: 9Treasure Hunt 11 14 21 24 26Cash 5 7 26 32 35 40
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April 2, 2017
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MONTPELIER, Vt. — It was AprilFools’ Day, but it wasn’t a joke: Peo-ple across northern New Englandwoke up to a foot of heavy, wet snowon parts of the region Saturdayand conducted weekend business asmore fell throughout the day.
The storm caused power outagesand numerous highway accidents.By mid-afternoon, the number ofelectric customers without poweracross Vermont, New Hampshireand Maine had dropped to about
2,200 from overnight totals thatreached into the tens of thousands.The winter storm warning for Ver-mont and New Hampshire expiredbut remained in place for parts ofMaine until 8 p.m.
“This is Mother Nature’s idea ofan April Fools’ joke,” said meteorol-ogist Eric Schwibs of the NationalWeather Service in Gray, Maine.
But he said that although it’s dis-heartening to see snow so late inthe season, it’s not unusual. Winterhad already brought more snow
than normal to northern New Eng-land. Portland, Maine, recorded 84.4inches of snow, 2 feet above normalfor the city; Concord, N.H., had 73.8inches, about 15 inches above nor-mal.
Although the storm may have sentsome people back to bed, friendsfrom Massachusetts on a visit toMaine were reveling in the snow.
“If you live in New England, youhave to expect Mother Nature tokeep you on your toes,” said ErikLustgarten of Newburyport.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Snow blankets northern New England
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SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017 · A3
The Palace’s growth corresponds to an overall expansion of the tourism industry inWestmoreland County. Travelers here spent $772.4 millionin 2014, according to a studycommissioned by the stateDepartment of Communityand Economic Development.That’s up $30 million from theprior year.
In Greensburg, a focuson the arts has helped thecity grow its tourism base,said Judith Hansen O’Toole,director of the WestmorelandMuseum of American Art.
“The city is extraordinarilysupportive of the arts, and Idon’t think that’s somethingyou’ll find in many smalltowns in Pennsylvania. AndI think that makes a hugedifference for all of us,” shesaid.
The last economic impactstudy of the North Main Streetmuseum found a yearly impact of $3 million, but it wasperformed before a twoyear,$38 million expansion that wascompleted in 2015. Museum officials now estimate the impactat $4.5 million a year, though astudy will be done soon to geta more accurate figure, O’Toolesaid.
Bigger stars, more stagesThe Palace has grown in
economic stature by attract
ing more bigname nationalacts, Langer said.
Smaller shows attract localswho might eat or have drinksat downtown establishmentsbefore a concert. But notableperformers such as countrysinger Trace Adkins and comedian Lisa Lampanelli, bothof whom are scheduled to perform at the Palace next weekend, turn Greensburg into adestination. And that meansmore tourism dollars.
“People that come in thatsituation typically stay a couple of days. They eat all theirmeals out, they stay in a hotel,”Langer said. “And, as you canimagine, those people are morevaluable to the local economythan someone who comes andjust has dinner and a show.”
In 2001, the Palace hosted 73shows — 23 of which featurednational touring artists. In2015, it held 115 shows, and74 of those were nationallyknown.
The theater has attractedvisitors from numerous countries and almost every state,Langer said.
Greensburg has more cultural institutions than mostcities its size, O’Toole said.
The Greensburg Gardenand Civic Center, operatedby the cultural trust, hoststhe Westmoreland SymphonyOrchestra and the GreensburgCivic Theatre company. StageRight theater company holdsnumerous shows at the Palaceeach year. Seton Hill University opened its PerformingArts Center in 2009 in thedowntown arts corridor andadded an Arts Center in 2015.
Still, there’s no downtownhotel, and many storefrontsremain vacant.
“I know we have a problemwith storefronts being empty,but I think we’re still workingon that, and we’re going tocrack that,” O’Toole said.
The various cultural institutions sometimes have troublescheduling major events.There used to be a volunteerrun cultural council thatwould work with city organizations to make sure theirschedules didn’t conflict, but
it was disbanded as volunteers lost interest. Now, majorevents are sometimes scheduled on overlapping dates,competing with each other,O’Toole said.
Sustaining growthLike the Palace, other local
attractions are expanding tovie for a bigger share of tourist dollars, said Anna Weltz,Laurel Highlands Visitors Bureau spokeswoman.
Fort Ligonier began a$13 million expansion lastyear, and Laurel Mountain skiresort reopened in Decemberafter being closed for 11 years.
The largest category for trav
el spending in WestmorelandCounty is transportation,which reached $239.6 millionin 2014. That’s mostly becauseof the Arnold Palmer Regional Airport in Unity, where passengers more than quintupledfrom 2011 to 2015 after SpiritAirlines started offering direct flights to destinationssuch as Orlando.
The number of passengerspeaked at 355,910 in 2015 before dipping to 289,382 lastyear. It’s become easier forcounty residents to travel todistant locales and easier forvisitors to come here, said airport Executive Director GabeMonzo.
“We do it for Florida; theydo it for us,” he said. “Anairplane flies both ways, andthat’s good for everybody.”
Westmoreland, Somersetand Fayette counties are partof the Laurel Highlands region, where travelers spent acombined $1.8 billion in 2014— which ranked the regioneighth out of 11 across Pennsylvania, according to thestate tourism office. Updatedtourismrelated economicfigures are expected to be released in the next few months.
The state’s biggest touristdraws are the Philadelphia,Pittsburgh and Dutch CountryRoads regions, each of whichbrought in more than $7.5 billion in 2014.
But the local impactshouldn’t be underestimated,Weltz said. The state economic study shows tourismsupports almost 5,000 jobs inWestmoreland County — andalmost 12 percent of the jobsin the Laurel Highlands region.
The Palace will continueto expand as a cultural andeconomic force for the county,Langer said.
“I think it will continue toplay a major role. It has for awhile, and I think it will onlyget better,” he said.
Jacob Tierney is a Tribune-Review staffwriter. Reach him at 724-836-6646 or
Venue expansions give region’s economy a shot in the armTOURISM · FROM A1
Tourism dollarsTravelers spent $772.4
million in WestmorelandCounty in 2014, the mostrecent year for whichdata are available.
Here is a breakdown ofthat spending:• $239.6M, transportation• $165.7M, food andbeverage• $146M, retail• $138.6M, recreation• $82.5M, lodging
Source: PA Tourism Office
A $38 million expansion of the Westmoreland Museum ofAmerican Art was completed in 2015.
PATRICK CONNOLLY | TRIBUNE-REVIEW
to take it for granted, to spendthat time with someone you’relucky enough to have.”
Baseball’s opening day isalways one of optimism, and20 years of losing taught Pirates fans to be scholars of thesilver lining. Even if the players are largely the same groupthat had a disappointing 2016season and the Pirates’ division still looks tough, fans arelooking at a schedule chockfull of special events andgiveaways designed to lurethem to the ballpark and makethe experience of cheeringalongside strangers, friendsand family more memorable,regardless of the outcome onthe field.
“Attendance around thecountry is down in almost every sport. I think a lot of us are‘cocooning’ in our houses,”said Ronald Dick, an associateprofessor of sports marketing at Duquesne University.“Giveaways, promotions andconcerts can have an effect. ...The Pirates are very good atpromotions.”
Mike Gaffney, president ofWest Point Little League inGreensburg and Hempfield,said he would arrange fora group outing to fall on apromotional night so the kidswould come away with somememento or special memories.
“With the little kids andtheir parents, we like to planfor a fireworks night, a bobblehead night or a Tshirt night,where they’ll get somethingto remember, not just somerandom night,” Gaffney said.
Carder said he was sold ona package of weekend gametickets when the Pirates’ salesstaff gave him and his daughter, 7, a tour of PNC Park, including a chance to walk ontothe field and play with the
dugout phone to the bullpen.His first home game Saturdaywill be a bobblehead night,and he was looking forward toSunday “Kids Days” when hisdaughter could run the basesafter the game.
“I do the opener every yearwith friends for the last 15 to20 years,” said Tim Creamer,
43, of Southwest Greensburg.“We’re excited about it. ...There’s something of the littlekid in you on the first game ofevery year, hoping they’ll dowell this year.”
In addition to the friendsand coworkers he’d been tailgating with for years, Creamersaid he also tries to get to a few
games a year with his sonsand his father for some intergenerational bonding.
Because his father grew upas a Yankees fan, Creamersaid they are planning another outing during the seriesagainst the Yankees in lateApril, when the Pirates havelined up fireworks Friday, aTshirt giveaway Saturdayand a kids’ day Sunday. Hissons, ages 14 and 13, are oldenough to start following thegame and their favorite players more closely, so the gameis a greater part of the experience for them than it used tobe, he said.
Dick said many regularevents at the ballpark play offPittsburghers’ predilections:Activities for kids intendedto lure family gettogethers onSundays; a concert lineup usually rich with classic rock, popand country; and fireworksdisplays after almost everyFriday home game.
“I’ve never seen moreadults who are amazed byfireworks,” said Dick, a Philadelphia transplant. “They’reawesome fireworks, don’t getme wrong.”
While family traditions,giveaways or special eventsmight attract fans to the game,Dick said the team’s fortuneson the field will always createsome of the best fan experiences.
“When you win 20 lessgames than you did the yearbefore and fall back below .500,it’s going to have an effect(on attendance),” Dick said. “Iwas there (in 2013) that nightwe won the wildcard, whenJohnny Cueto dropped the balland Russell Martin hit twohome runs. ... It felt like anexorcism.”
Matthew Santoni is a Tribune-Reviewstaff writer. Reach him at 724-836-
6660 or [email protected].
Fireworks, bobbleheads add to charmPIRATES · FROM A1
Greg Carder and his father, Ron Carder, both of Collier, aremaking the trek to Fenway Park in Boston for the Pirates’season opener on Monday.
ANDREW RUSSELL | TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Fun for fansIn addition to regular events such as college nights, free
T-shirts and “pup nights,” the Pirates’ 2017 promotions include:• April 8 vs. Braves: Francisco Cervelli “That’s Amore”singing bobblehead• May 20 vs. Phillies: Bob Walk chair-tip bobblechair• May 26 vs. Mets: Postgame concert with Flo Rida• June 8 vs. Marlins: Star Wars Night• June 17 vs. Cubs: Jordy Mercer bobblehead• July 14 vs. Cardinals: Grateful Dead Night• July 18 vs. Brewers: Runners Night• Aug. 4 vs. Padres: Postgame concert with Chicago• Aug. 8 vs. Reds: Charlie Brown bobblehead• Aug. 17 vs. Cardinals: Faith Night• Aug. 19 vs. Cardinals: Gregory Polanco bobblehead• Sept. 22 vs. Cardinals: Law Enforcement Night• Sept. 26 vs. Orioles: Zombie Night• Zambelli Fireworks nights: April 21 vs. Yankees;May 5 vs. Brewers; May 19 vs. Phillies; June 9 vs. Marlins;June 30 vs. Giants; Aug. 18 vs. Cardinals; Sept. 1 vs. Reds;and Sept. 22 vs. Cardinals
of civilians and Americanservice members, may bethe biggest.
The deepening involvement in counterinsurgency battles, fromthe streetbystreet battlesbeing fought in Iraq toclandestine raids in Yemenand elsewhere, increasesthe chances of U.S. troopsdying. Such tragediescould raise the ire of theAmerican public and create political trouble withCongress at a time whenthe Trump administrationis trying to finish off theIslamic State group in Iraqand Syria and broaden efforts against similarly inclined groups.
Allowing lowerlevelcommanders to make moretimely airstrike decisionsin densely populated areas such as the streets ofMosul, Iraq, can result inmore civilian deaths. TheU.S. military is investigating several bombings inMosul in midMarch thatwitnesses say killed atleast 100 people. And it isconsidering new tacticsand precautions amid evidence suggesting extremists are smuggling civilians into buildings andthen baiting the U.S.ledcoalition into attacking.
Alice Hunt Friend, asenior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, cited
another concern: Militaryoperations becoming “divorced from overall foreign policy” could makecivilian leaders and themilitary vulnerable to runaway events.
“Political leaders canlose control of militarycampaigns,” she warned.
But top military leaderssay they need to be able toact more quickly againstenemies. And they’ve beenstaunchly supported byTrump, who has promisedto pursue Islamic extremists more aggressivelyand echoed the view ofPentagon leaders that theObama administration’stight control over militaryoperations limited effectiveness.
Explaining his requestfor more leeway in Somalia against alShabab militants, Gen. Thomas Waldhauser, head of U.S. AfricaCommand, told Congressthis month that more flexibility and “timeliness” indecisionmaking processwas necessary.
Approved by Trump onWednesday, it was hardlythe first military expansion.
The Defense Departmenthas quietly doubled thenumber of American forces in Syria. It has movedmilitary advisers closer tofront lines in Iraq, and ithas publicly made the casefor more troops in Afghanistan.
Delegation ofpower carriespolitical risksPENTAGON · FROM A1
compromising with Democrats, who have little motivation to pull Republicans outof the quicksand. That couldchange if Democrats decide adeal is better than gamblingon whether voters blame themand Obama’s law should premiums rise and the number ofinsurers decline significantly.
“They both have risk, andthat’s a recipe for ultimatelysome action to be taken,” saidMike Leavitt, Health secretary under President GeorgeW. Bush.
For now, there are ominoussigns for Republicans.
The Associated PressNORCCenter for Public Affairs Research poll last week foundstrong voter antipathy for howTrump is handling health careand for the sunken House GOP
bill. That included widespreadworry that people would losecoverage and opposition toits higher premiums for older people, smaller subsidiesfor lower earners and cuts inMedicaid aid for the poor.
Dangerously for Republicans, threatening to reducefederal health care aid speaksdirectly to voters in states thatbacked Trump. All 13 stateswith the highest proportion ofpeople getting federal subsidies for their insurance premiums voted for him in November, according to federal data.
Democrats view all that ascampaign ad fodder. SpeakerPaul Ryan, RWis., protectedmany Republicans by avertinga House vote on the doomedbill, but several dozen supported it in committees.
“Clearly, the Republicansown this,” said Rep. Ben Ray
Lujan, DN.M., who headsHouse Democrats’ campaignorganization. “We will continue to make sure that theAmerican people know abouttheir votes.”
GOP damage could comefrom another direction, too.
Failure to dismantleObama’s law could dampenturnout in next year’s congressional elections by votersdemoralized when Republicans fumbled their promisedrepeal. Brent Bozell, chairman of the conservative ForAmerica, said Friday it wouldbe “absolute suicide” for theGOP to stay on its current,unsuccessful course.
“Just saying, ‘Give us fourmore years and we’ll repeal it’is going to be very hard” to sellto voters, said Robert Blendon,professor at the HarvardSchool of Public Health.
Staying course could be ‘suicide’ for GOPHEALTH CARE · FROM A1
Vice President Mike Pencewill deliver the commencementaddress at Grove City Collegethis year, according to the campus newspaper.
The Grove City Collegianposted an email from collegePresident Paul McNulty to itsTwitter account, which saidPence accepted the college’sinvitation to deliver the commencement address May 20.
McNulty did not providespecifics about the arrangements but said the collegewill be working with the vice
president’s advance team inthe upcoming weeks and that“more information will beforthcoming.”
“We know that this day isa celebration of the accomplishments of our graduatingclass,” McNulty wrote. “Pleasepray that our efforts to organize and manage this event willresult in a wonderful lifetimememory for our graduates andtheir families.”
Grove City College is a private, Christian liberal artsschool in Mercer County thatserves about 2,500 students,according to its website.
TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Pence to make Grove City stop
AP
A4 · SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017
CARACAS, Venezuela —Venezuela’s president and su-preme court backed down Sat-urday from an unprecedentedmove to strip congress of itslegislative powers that sparkedwidespread charges that theSouth American country wasno longer a democracy.
President Nicolas Maduroasked the supreme court in alate-night speech to review aruling nullifying the branchof power that set off a stormof criticism from the opposi-tion and foreign governments.The court Saturday reinstatedcongress’ authority.
It was a rare instance of theembattled socialist presidentbacking away from a move toincrease his power. Oppositionleaders dismissed the reversalas too little too late. They saidthe clarification issued by thejudges only proved again thatMaduro controls the courtsand there is no longer a separa-tion of powers in Venezuela.
“The dire situation we’reliving through in Venezuelaremains the same. There isnothing to ‘clarify’ when itcomes to respecting the consti-tution,” moderate leader andformer presidential candidateHenrique Capriles said.
At the same time, critics cel-ebrated the reversal as proofthat cracks are beginning toshow in Maduro’s control of acountry spiraling into chaos,with his approval ratings dip-ping below 20 percent amid
the worsening economic andhumanitarian crisis.
Opposition leaders recast aplanned Saturday protest asan open air meeting. Hundredsjoined congress members in awealthyCaracasneighborhoodto celebrate the rare victory.
Later, soldiers fired tear gason activists who attempted tomarch on government officesdowntown and blocked theirpath with barricades and ar-mored cars. Some of protest-ers jumped atop the militaryvehicles and made triumphantgestures.
“It’s not clear exactly howwounded the government is.This is the first time since theopposition won the NationalAssembly in 2015 that theyhave managed to get the pres-ident to reverse a decision.So this is huge,” said JavierCorrales, who teaches LatinAmerican politics at AmherstCollege in Massachusetts.
The revision undoes most ofthe original court decision butwill allow Maduro to enter intojoint oil ventures without con-gressional approval. Supremecourt President Maikel More-no met with diplomats in themorning and warned that thecourt would not “remain pas-sive” in the face of attacks onthe country’s right to self-rule.
Maduro issued his instruc-tions to the court after anemergency meeting of the na-tional security council Fridaynight that was boycotted bycongress leaders. The three-hour meeting capped a dayin which Venezuela’s chiefprosecutor and longtime loyal-ist of the socialist revolutionlaunched by the late PresidentHugo Chavez broke with the
administrationand denouncedthe court ruling. Luisa Ortegasaid it was her “unavoidablehistorical duty” as the nation’stop judicial authority to decrywhat she called a “rupture” ofthe constitutional order.
That statement, and the in-ternal division it exposed forthe first time, may have beenthe most damaging moment.
“It was really perhaps thefirst sign of public dissentwithin the ranks. And it washuge that Maduro did nottrash her. Maduro must haverealized that Ortega was notacting alone,” Corrales said.
Small protests popped uparound the capital beginningat dawn Friday. Troops fromthe National Guard fired buck-shot and swung batons at stu-dents in front of the supremecourt, and journalists hadcameras seized.
As the country’s currency
hemorrhaged value and ana-lysts began to project the be-ginning of the end of 18 yearsof socialist rule, Maduro in-vited congress President Ju-lio Borges to speak with him.But Borges refused, breaking ayears-long streak in which theopposition ramps up pressureonly to diffuse it by coming tothe bargaining table, usuallyfruitlessly.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Venezuela reinstates authority of congressOutcry prompts rarereversal by embattledsocialist president
Gaby Arellano, deputy of the Venezuelan coalition ofopposition parties, clashes Saturday with national guardsduring a rally.
REUTERS
ASUNCION, Paraguay —President Horacio Cartesfired Paraguay’s interiorminister and top police offi-cial on Saturday followingthe killing of a young op-position party leader andviolent overnight clashessparked by a secret Senatevote for a constitutionalamendment to allow presi-dential re-election.
Dozens of people, includ-ing a police officer, werearrested Friday evening asprotesters broke throughpolice lines and entered thefirst floor of Paraguay’slegislature, setting fire topapers and furniture. Po-lice used water cannonsand rubber bullets to driveprotesters away from the
building while firefightersextinguished blazes inside.
Early Saturday, RodrigoQuintana, 25, was shot andkilled at the headquartersof the Authentic RadicalLiberal Party, a locationaway from where most ofthe protests took place.Anti-riot police, whoseheads and faces werecovered by helmets, hadstormed the oppositionheadquarters amid theprotests.
Before stepping down,police Cmdr. Crispulo So-telo said the police agentresponsible for Quintana’sdeath had been arrested.Later Saturday, Cartes an-nounced that he had ac-cepted the resignations ofSotelo and Interior Minis-ter Miguel Tadeo Rojas.
Presidents are limitedto a single five-year termin the country, which ishaunted by the 35-year ruleof Gen. Alfredo Stroessner.
Paraguay’s leaderfires 2 top officials
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Interior minister,police chief tossedafter capital clashes
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SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017 · A5
OKLAHOMA CITY — AcclaimedRussian poet Yevgeny A. Yevtush-enko, whose work focused on waratrocities and denounced anti-Sem-itism and tyrannical dictators, hasdied. He was 84.
Ginny Hensley, a spokeswomanfor Hillcrest Medical Center in theeastern Oklahoma city of Tulsa, con-firmed Yevtushenko’s death. RogerBlais, the provost at the Universityof Tulsa, where Yevtushenko wasa longtime faculty member, said hewas told Yevtushenko died Saturdaymorning.
Yevtushenko’s son, Yevgeny Y. Yev-tushenko, said his father died about11 a.m. and that doctors said he wassuffering from stage 4 cancer.
Yevtushenko gained notoriety in
the former Soviet Union while in his20s,withpoetrydenouncingJosef Sta-lin. He gained international acclaimas a young revolutionary with “BabiYar,” the unflinching 1961 poem thattold of the slaughter of nearly 34,000Jews by the Nazis and denouncedthe anti-Semitism that had spreadthroughout the Soviet Union.
At the height of his fame, Yevtush-enko read his works in packed soccerstadiums and arenas, including to acrowd of 200,000 in 1991 that came tolisten during a failed coup attempt inRussia. He also attracted large audi-ences on tours of the West.
With his tall, rangy body, chiseledvisage and declaratory style, he wasa compelling presence on stages whenreading his works.
“He’s more like a rock star thansome sort of bespectacled, quiet
poet,” said former University ofTulsa President Robert Donaldson,who specialized in Soviet policy dur-ing his academic years at Harvard.
Until “Babi Yar” was published, thehistory of the massacre was shroudedin the fog of the Cold War.
“I don’t call it political poetry; I callit human rights poetry, the poetrywhich defends human conscienceas the greatest spiritual value,”Yevtushenko, who had been splittinghis time between Oklahoma and Mos-cow, said during a 2007 interview withThe Associated Press at his home inTulsa.
Yevtushenko said he wrote thepoem after visiting the site of themass killings in Kiev, Ukraine, andsearching for something memorial-izing what happened there — a sign,a tombstone, some kind of historical
marker — but finding nothing.“I was so shocked. I was absolutely
shocked when I saw it, that peopledidn’t keep a memory about it,” hesaid.
It took him two hours to write the
poem that begins, “No monumentstands over Babi Yar. A drop sheeras a crude gravestone. I am afraid.”
Yevtushenko was born deep inSiberia in the town of Zima, a namethat translates to winter. He rose toprominence during Nikita Khrush-chev’s rule.
His poetry was outspoken and drewon the passion for poetry that is char-acteristic of Russia, where poetry ismore widely revered than in the West.Some considered it risky, though oth-ers said he was only a showpiece dis-sident whose public views never wentbeyond the limits of what officialswould permit.
Dissident exile poet Joseph Brod-sky was especially critical, saying,“He throws stones only in directionsthat are officially sanctioned andapproved.” Brodsky resigned fromthe American Academy of Arts andLetters when Yevtushenko was madean honorary member.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Acclaimed Russian poet Yevgeny Yevtushenko dies in OklahomaWorks took aim at Soviet atrocities under dictator Stalin, others
Russian poet Yevgeny Yevtushenkoarrives Jan. 20, 1972, at KennedyAirport in New York, for a four-week tour of the United States.
AP
BATH, Maine — Navalaviator Thomas Hudnerwatchedhelplesslyasafellowfighter pilot’s plane turnedintoadeathtrapafteracrashlanding behind enemy linesduring the Korean War. Theinjured pilot was pinned inthe cockpit, unable to escapefrom the burning plane.
Thelieutenantdidtheonlything he could to help: Hecrash-landed his own plane,climbed out and tried to savehis comrade, Ensign JesseBrown.
“What Tom did is one ofthe greatest feats of brav-ery in any war,” said AdamMakos, who wrote a bookabout the aviator titled,“Devotion.”
The 92-year-old Medal ofHonor recipient watchedSaturday as the future USSThomas Hudner was chris-tened during a snowstorm
Saturday at Bath Iron Worksin Maine.
The wet and cold specta-tors included Hudner’s wife,Georgea, one of the ship’ssponsors, their childrenand other family members.
B r o w n ’ sdaughterand twob r o t h -ers werealso there.Also onhand weretwo otherMedal ofH o n o rrecipients,along withM a r i n eCorps vet-erans whoc r e d i t e dnaval avia-tors for
saving their skin during theBattle of Chosin Reservoir,where both enemy bulletsand brutal cold claimed thelives of Marines.
“Withoutthefighterpilots,we wouldn’t be here today,”said John “Red” Parkinson,
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Ship’s namehonors aviator’sbid to save fellowPilot crashed duringKorean battle whencomrade was trapped
The future USS Thomas Hudner, a U.S. Navy destroyer named for Korean Warveteran Thomas Hudner, looms over the audience during a christening ceremonySaturday at Bath Iron Works in Bath, Maine.
AP
aMarinecorporalduringthebattle who commented thatSaturday’s snowy weatherseemed appropriate.
The ceremony celebratedheroism — and friendship.
Brown was the African-American son of sharecrop-pers in Mississippi whobecame the first black avia-tor in the U.S. Navy. Hudner,who’swhite,wasaU.S.NavalAcademy graduate and sonof a well-to-do grocery storeownerinMassachusetts.Thetwo squadron mates hit it off
despite their differences.Fletcher Brown, one of
Jesse’s brothers, said bothmen were driven and lovedto fly. “From what I knowabout Tom and what I knowabout Jesse, they were prob-ably two of a kind. The onlydifferenceisonewaswealthyand one was a cotton picker,”he said.
There was no happy end-ing, however.
Neither Hudner nor thecrew of a rescue helicoptercouldfreeBrowndespitetak-
ing an ax to the plane. Brownlost consciousness.
“An aviator is calculatingbynatureandallhehadtodowas look around to know hewasn’t coming home. That’swhen he glanced up at meand said his last words, ‘Justtell Daisy how much I loveher,’”Hudnersaidbeforetheevent, referencing Brown’swife.
Brown’s remains werenever found.
A Navy frigate was namedfor Brown in 1973.
Hudner
Brown
STOCKHOLM — Bob Dylanfinally has his hands on his NobelLiterature diploma and medal.
Klas Ostergren, a member of theSwedish Academy, said the 75-year-old American singer-songwriterreceived his award during a smallgathering Saturday afternoon at ahotel next to the conference centerwhere Dylan was performing a con-cert later that night.
Ostergren told The AssociatedPress that the ceremony was a small,intimate event in line with the sing-er’s wishes, with just academy mem-bers and a member of Dylan’s staffattending.
“It went very well indeed,” he said,describing Dylan as “a very nice,kind man.”
Other members of the academytold Swedish media that Dylanseemed pleased by the award.
During his show hours later,Dylan made no reference to theNobel award, simply performing aset blending old classics with tunesfrom his more recent albums.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Small ceremony passes prizeto controverial laureate
Songwriter Dylanfinally gets hishands on his Nobel
A
A6 · SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017
BOGOTA, Colombia — Anavalanche of water from threeoverflowing rivers sweptthrough a small city in Colom-bia while people slept, destroy-ing homes, sweeping away carsand killing at least 193 unsus-pecting residents.
The incident triggered byintense rains happened aboutmidnight in Mocoa, a provin-cial capital of about 40,000tucked between mountainsnear Colombia’s southern bor-der with Ecuador.
Muddy water and debrisquickly surged through thecity’s streets, toppling homes,ripping trees from their rootsand carrying them down-stream. Many of the residentsdid not have enough time toclimb on top of their roofs orseek refuge on higher ground.
According to the Red Cross,202 people were injured and220 were believed to be missing.President Juan Manuel Santosdeclared a state of emergencySaturday and said the deathtoll will likely rise but warnedagainst speculating how manypeople are dead.
Eduardo Vargas, 29, wasasleep with his wife and7-month-old baby when hewas awakened by the sound ofneighbors banging on his door.He quickly grabbed his familyand fled up a small mountainamid the cries of people inpanic.
“There was no time for any-thing,” he said.
Vargas and his family hud-dled with about two dozenother residents as rocks, treesand wooden planks rippedthrough their neighborhoodbelow. They waited there untildaylight, when members of themilitary helped them down.
When he reached the site ofhis home Saturday, he foundnothing but rocks and mud.
“Thank God we have our
lives,” he said.As rescuers assessed the
scope of the damage, many res-idents continued a desperatesearch for friends and relatives.
Oscar Londono tried in vainthroughout the night to reachhis wife’s parents, whose homeis along one of the flooded riv-ers. He decided it was too dan-gerous to try to reach themin the dark. So he called overand over by phone but got noanswer.
Once the sun began to rise,hestartedwalkingtowardtheirhouse but found the streets heusually takes missing.
When he reached the neigh-borhood where his in-laws livehe found “just mud and rocks.”Rescue workers with the mili-tary oriented him toward themountain, where he found hisrelatives camped with othersurvivors.
“Toknowtheywerealive,”hesaid,“itwasareunionof tears.”
Santos said at least 22 peoplewere seriously injured and be-ing airlifted to nearby cities,as the small regional hospitalin Mocoa struggled to cope.Herman Granados, an anes-thesiologist, said he workedthroughout the night on vic-tims, cleaning wounds. Hesaid the hospital doesn’t havea blood bank large enough todeal with the number of pa-tients and was quickly runningout of its supply.
Some of the hospital workerscame to help even while theirrelatives remained missing.
The Red Cross planned to setup a special unit in Mocoa tohelp relatives find loved ones.
Santos blamed climatechange for the avalanche, say-ingtherainfall inonenightwasalmost half the amount Mocoanormally receives in March.With the rainy season in muchof Colombia beginning, he saidauthorities need to redoubletheir efforts to prevent a simi-lar tragedy.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Rivers surge suddenly, kill scores in ColombiaFloodwaters precipitated by intenserains hit small city as residents sleep
The avalanche, triggered by intense rains, happened about midnight in Mocoa, a provincial capital of about 40,000.AP
Muddy water and debris toppled homes and trees.
SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017 · A7
WASHINGTON — Presi-dent Trump’s son-in-law anddaughter are holding ontoscores of real estate invest-ments — part of a portfolio ofat least $240 million in assets— while they serve in WhiteHouse jobs, according to newfinancial disclosures.
The revelations about JaredKushner and Ivanka Trumpwere part of a massive WhiteHouse release of financial dis-closure forms Friday night fordozensof itstopadministrationofficials.
Kushner, Trump’s senior ad-viser, resigned from some 260entitiesandsoldoff 58business-es or investments that lawyersidentified as posing potential
conflicts of interest, the docu-ments show.
But lawyers for Kushner andintheOfficeof theWhiteHouseCounsel, in consultation withthe Office of Government Eth-ics, determined that his realestate assets, many of them inNew York City, are unlikely topose the kinds of conflicts thatwould trigger a need to divest.
“The remaining conflicts,fromapracticalperspective,arepretty narrow and very man-ageable,” said Jamie Gorelick,anattorneywhohasbeenwork-ingontheethicsagreementsforKushner and Ivanka Trump.
Kushnerbegansellingoff themost problematic parts of hisportfolio shortly after Trumpwon the election, and some ofthose business deals predate
what is required to be capturedin the financial disclosureforms. For example, Kushnersold his stake in a Manhattanskyscraper to a trust his moth-er oversees. Kushner, IvankaTrump and their three minorchildrenhavenofinancialinter-est inthattrust,his lawyersaid.
Top officials in the TrumpWhite House tend to be farwealthier—andthereforemoreentangled in businesses thatcouldconflictwiththeirgovern-ment duties — than people inprevious administrations.
Trump’s chief strategist,Steve Bannon, disclosed assetsbetween$13millionand$56mil-lion, including his influentialpolitical consultancy, BannonStrategic Advisors Inc., worthas much as $25 million.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Trump advisers richer thanprevious White House officialsDivestitures of some conflicts of interest already resolved
IvankaTrumpand herhusband,JaredKushner,hold inexcessof $240million ofassets,according toa requiredfederaldisclosure.
REUTERS
One of the wealthiest mem-bers of the Trump administra-tion — aside from the billion-aire business owner presidenthimself — is Gary Cohn, wholeft a top position at GoldmanSachs to become Trump’s chiefeconomic adviser.
His disclosure shows he re-ceived at least $40 million inincome from Goldman Sachs-
related dividends, interest, sal-ary and bonuses, about halfof which was in some form ofstock compensation.
The financial disclosures— required by law to be madepublic — give a snapshot of theemployees’ finances as they en-tered the White House. What’snotbeingprovided:theOfficeofGovernmentEthicsagreements
with those employees on whatthey must do to avoid potentialconflicts of interest.
Those documents will not bedisclosed,White Houselawyerssaid, although the public willeventually have access to “cer-tificates of divestiture” issuedto employees who are seekingcapital gains tax deferrals forselling off certain assets.
WASHINGTON — The Sen-ate is headed for a tense show-down over President Trump’sSupreme Court nominee thatcould have far-reaching conse-quences for Congress, the highcourt and the nation.
Majority Leader Mitch Mc-Connell and his Republicansare determined to confirmJudge Neil Gorsuch within theweek. But to do so, they willlikely have to override Demo-cratic objections and unilater-ally change Senate rules so thatGorsuchcanbeconfirmedwithasimplemajorityinthe100-seatchamber, insteadof the60-voterthreshold.
Though it may seem arcane,the approach is known on Capi-tol Hill as the “nuclear option,”because it strikes at the heartof the Senate’s traditions ofbipartisanship and collegiality.
It would allow all future Su-preme Court nominees to beconfirmed without regard tothe objections of the minorityparty. And senators of both par-tiessaythatproceedingwiththerules change could ultimatelylead to complete eliminationof the minority party’s abilityto block legislation via filibus-ter, one of the few remainingmechanisms that force bipar-tisan cooperation in Congress.
“Once you go down this pathit’s awful easy just to keepgoing, and that is not a goodthing,” said Sen. Pat Roberts,R-Kan., a senior lawmaker.
Nevertheless, Republicansenators are fully prepared totake the step, blaming Demo-crats for forcing them into it bypreparing to filibuster a well-qualified nominee.
And Democrats are just asready to push the GOP to pullthe trigger, even as they arguethat McConnell and Republi-cans will have only themselvesto blame.
“He can prove that he cares
about the Senate by not chang-ing the rules,” Minority LeaderChuck Schumer of New YorktoldTheAssociatedPress,refer-ring to McConnell.
As of now, Gorsuch claimssupport from 54 senators —the 52 Republicans, along withtwo moderate Democrats whoare up for re-election in statesTrump won, Joe Manchin ofWest Virginia and Heidi Heit-kamp of North Dakota. One byone, most of the other Demo-crats have lined up against Gor-such, citing his rulings in favorof corporationsorhisvaguean-swers during his confirmationhearings. Though Democratsremain a handful shy of the 41votes that would be required tomount a filibuster and triggera rules change, it is the widelyexpected outcome.
“I remain very worried aboutour polarized politics and whatthe future will bring, since I’mcertain we will have a Senaterule change that will usher inmore extreme judges in the fu-ture,” Sen. Claire McCaskill,D.-Mo., said Friday as she be-came the latest Democrat toannounce plans to join the fili-buster against Gorsuch.
Gorsuch, 49, has served morethan a decade as a federal ap-peals court judge based in Den-ver. He is mild-mannered butdeeplyconservative,inthemoldof the justice he would replace,Antonin Scalia, who died inFebruary 2016.
McCaskill and other Dem-ocrats have pointed out thatwhile Gorsuch’s confirmationwon’t change the ideologicalbalance of a court that will belikely to split 5-4 on importantcases, that could be what hap-pens next as liberal justices agealong with Justice AnthonyKennedy, 80, who often acts asa swing vote.
Republicans argue that thefilibusterhasalmostneverbeenused against a Supreme Courtnominee and they are right;even Clarence Thomas got ontothe court without a filibuster,despite highly contentious con-firmation hearings over sexualharassment claims.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Senate heads forshowdown onSupreme CourtGOP appears preparedto use ‘nuclear option’to confirm Gorsuch
ndd
A8 · SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017
Silence dishearteningLETTERS
OPINION
LAWMAKERS’ ‘SLUSH FUND’
PETER MORICI
Its time has passedS tate lawmakers’ $118 million “reserve” could
help with Pennsylvania’s projected multibillion-dollar budget shortfall. Often called a “slush
fund,” it’s less than fully accountable to taxpayers.And lawmakers didn’t tap it during the
last, nine-month budget impasse, making itscontinuing existence even harder to justify.
Legislative leaders maintain that their reservebuttresses separation of powers, ensuring that
the Legislaturecan operate even ifa budget-battlinggovernor cuts offnormal funding.Yet during the lastimpasse, PennLivenotes, House andSenate Republicans
and Senate Democrats instead borrowed moneyand House Democrats instead got a Treasuryadvance, undercutting that rationale.
The reserve is audited annually by an outsidefirm hired by the Legislature. State AuditorGeneral Eugene DePasquale said he would loveto do an independent audit but can’t, telling ThePhiladelphia Inquirer “it would take a statute.”Essentially, the Legislature makes sure that onlyit audits its own “slush fund” — despite that fundconsisting of unspent taxpayer dollars from priorlegislative budgets.
Even if it’s accurate, self-accounting by theLegislature breeds suspicion. That suspicion wouldbe side stepped with implementation of Rock theCapital activist Eric Epstein’s idea: Return unspentlegislative money to the general fund, where itwould help close Pennsylvania’s yawning budgetgap. But if you think the Legislature’s going to OKthat voluntarily, perhaps you’d be interested inbuying Harrisburg’s Market Street Bridge.
Sunday popsThe Westmoreland County Republican
Committee endorsing county-office candidatesfor the first time is good news for voters. With 42.5percent of registered voters in a county whereDemocrats held a 2-to-1 advantage a decade ago, theGOP now can ensure two-party competition. Thatmeans more choices at the polls and greater ballot-box accountability for officeholders. It’s a sharpcontrast with Pittsburgh and Allegheny County,where Dems continue to dominate. But whicheverparty holds sway, one-party rule’s never healthy forthe body politic. … Regarding the “ransomware”cyber-attack on state Senate Democrats’ computersystem, Minority Leader Jay Costa, D-Forest Hills,told Philly.com last week what he told Trib editorsand reporters during a March 17 sit-down: Insteadof paying hackers ransom to unlock its data, hiscaucus has been using cellphones and laptops whileMicrosoft rebuilds its desktop computers — andwon’t need any additional money to repair thedamage. Seems that one way or the other, ransom-ware attacks end up being costly for their targets.… As if the political landscape wasn’t strangeenough already, The Oregonian reports that a “Port-land Anarchist Road Care” group patched a fewpotholes, per the group’s Facebook page, “to squashperceptions that anarchists only break windows andblock roads. … (A)narchists do not desire chaos, wedesire freedom and equality.” So now, anarchists arespinning themselves as constructive contributors tosociety. Time to scan the skies for flying pigs.
Entitlements & tough choicesPresident Donald Trump and
Republicans in Congress havea once-in-a-generation oppor-
tunity to dramatically roll back thefrontiers of government — but willlikely fall short because of theirlack of candor and finesse.
Steve Bannon’s “deconstructingthe administrative state” is greatfor rallying troops in an electoralcampaign. But it’s terrible politicswhen translated into a ham-handedbudget that slashes too much thatis worth preserving and avoidstough choices about entitlements.
Trump’s repeated promise to re-place ObamaCare with somethingbetter, less-expensive and terrificbecomes empty when juxtaposedagainst the American Health CareAct, which would have raisedinsurance costs for many low-income, rural and older citizens. Itwould have created new subsidiesfor families earning more than$98,400 a year, and offered little en-couragement to control the cost fordrugs and basic health services.
CNN profiling little old ladies
who would lose their Meals onWheels, and the CongressionalBudget Office finding that millionsof Americans would go withouthealth care coverage — not neces-sarily by choice but because theAHCA would have pushed premi-ums out of reach — are not prod-ucts of the media’s left-leaningbiases.
Democrats get elected by de-livering new and bigger entitle-ment programs, from Medicaidto ObamaCare — and by sendingto the states federal largess thatpermits governors and mayors todole out patronage without havingto tax to pay for them.
Entitlement programs oftenreward undeserving beneficiaries;for example, the millions of menages 25 to 54 who neither work norseek employment but can qualifyfor food stamps and free healthcare.
Republicans campaign to gener-ally scale back government butrarely take aim at federal largessthat benefits their particular con-stituents.
Without any changes in existingprograms, entitlement spendingand interest on the national debtwill consume virtually all federaltax revenue by 2027. Then Wash-ington will have to raise taxesto levels that absolutely cripplebusiness and growth, let wither themilitary and vital civilian servicesor impose draconian cuts on SocialSecurity and assistance to thetruly needy.
Entitlements and interest on thedebt already consume about two-thirds of the $4 trillion in federalspending, with defense and discre-tionary spending approximately
splitting the balance.Much of what the Environmen-
tal Protection Agency, Departmentof Education and other agenciesspend represents federal regula-tory overreach. However, slashingthe State Department, medicaland other research and develop-ment support is senseless whenthe nation faces challenges fromISIS, China’s growing power andescalating international economiccompetition.
The president’s budget shouldhave plainly stated that the nationcan no longer afford to subsidizethe indolent along with the trulyneedy while neglecting defense andhandicapping the legitimate civil-ian functions of a global power.
The Trump document fails toaddress the tough choice before thenation — expect less of govern-ment or the country will simply gobust.
Peter Morici is an economist and businessprofessor at the University of Maryland.
Entitlement spendingand interest on the na-tional debt will consumevirtually all federal taxrevenue by 2027.
The Legislaturemakes sure thatonly it audits its own“slush fund.”
WRITEUS
The Trib welcomes your letters. Limit themto 200 words; include full name, address andday/night phone. Letters subject to editing.
Mail: Letters to the Editor, Tribune-Review,622 Cabin Hill Drive, Greensburg, PA 15601Email: [email protected]
Iwanted to commenton the story “Ex-PennState President Graham
Spanier guilty of 1 countof child endangerment”(March 25 and TribLIVE).
I understand thereare legal reasons for nottestifying on one’s ownbehalf, but Spanier’s si-lence was disheartening.The ex-president of PennState University had theopportunity to “clearthe air” about decision-making with respect tothe Jerry Sandusky childsex-abuse scandal. Hechose instead to be silent— not taking the witnessstand — while two otherconvicted officials, TimCurley and Gary Schultz,offered testimony for theprosecution.
Both Spanier’s lack ofwords and his cold starespoke volumes to childsexual-abuse victimseverywhere — and notin a reassuring way. Thismay have been a legalmaneuver, but for a leaderof higher education to re-main silent showed eitherarrogance or fear — orperhaps a bit of both.
We may never knowthe entire truth of thisinexcusable chapter inPenn State history, butthese three convictions —
along with Sandusky’s —may hopefully help pavea smoother road for thevictims’ recovery process.
Nothing can changewhat happened, but itis clear that silence isnot the right path instopping and solvingthe child sexual-abuseepidemic in this countryand around the world.
George AulBelle Vernon
The writer is a 2008graduate of Penn State.
For a leader of higher education toremain silent showed either arroganceor fear — or perhaps a bit of both.
Wind rural boosterWind energy boosts rural American
economies in unmatched ways, althoughyou wouldn’t know that from Robert Bryce’scommentary “Realistic energy options: Theanswer isn’t blowing in the wind” (March 26and TribLIVE).
Ninety-nine percent of wind farms andtheir economic benefits go to rural areas, of-ten among the country’s lowest-income coun-ties. Farmers and ranchers get $245 million ayear in lease payments for hosting turbines,and wind has attracted more than $140 billionof private investment in the last decade.
The taxes that wind projects pay help ruraltowns fix roads, pay teachers and buy ambu-lances while reducing other citizens’ taxes.
And in Pennsylvania, thousands of work-ers have wind-related jobs, many at thestate’s 26 factories that build wind-relatedparts and materials.
“It’s helping us survive and maintainservices,” Iowa farmer Michael Nolte told aBloomberg reporter last year. A 2016 Pew pollfound 83 percent of Americans support morewind power.
That means Nolte’s view isn’t the excep-tion; it’s the rule.
Greg AlvarezWashington, D.C.
The writer is content manager for the AmericanWind Energy Association (awea.org).
Vouchers & growthSchool voucher systems
could meet local needs.There are over 2,000 jobs
(not minimum-wage jobs)not filled in the Pittsburgharea because the workforcedoes not have basic skills thatmanufacturing jobs need.
Many K-12 public schoolsare not teaching “the threeRs” and how to use them onthe level needed for trainingto function on the job. Howcan you fill the many newjobs needed in the futurewhen you can’t fill the pres-ent jobs?
Since many public schoolsare not doing the job usingour tax money, it should go tothe schools that are trying toteach these skills.
This lack of educationhampers job growth and man-ufacturing growth, which canslow economic growth.
Dave BastlManor
The writer is chairman of thePittsburgh chapter of the Society
of Manufacturing Engineers.
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The newest project bythe progressive leftis transgenderism.
Like their reinventions ofmarriage and family andsexuality, leftist human-nature redefiners arenow remaking gender intheir own image — manygenders. Many, many, manygenders.
To that end, I must warnthem: Be careful, liberals,because you don’t seem tohave given much thoughtabout the newest slipperyslope, the latest can ofworms you’re opening.Like the inherent problemof the redefinition of mar-riage, once you try to kickdown absolute standardsfor gender, you open thefloodgates to all sorts ofnovel reconfigurationsthat even the most “open-minded” liberals will beuncomfortable endorsing.
In the case of gender,consider the ideologicalcrazy house that is NewYork City, where cityemployees now have theoption of choosing froma minimum of 31 differ-ent gender identities. Incategorizing oneself, NewYork City employees arefree to fluidly fluctuateamong various male-female combinations andderivations. It’s a fasci-nating thing, really. Youcan change your genderidentity not merely onceor twice or a handful oftimes, but you can keepchanging it over and over,daily if you’d like, or evenhourly — and the govern-ment will legally supportyou in your whims andfancies.
Selections include notjust “transgender” but“pangender” and a myriadof other possibilities.There is also the PC-esquechoice, “Person of Trans-gender Experience.”
In responding to thisbiological madness, a cityofficial confirmed to TheDaily Caller that the pano-ply of gender identities areall protected by the city’santi-discrimination lawsand added that the currentlist posted online is “notexhaustive.”
Indeed, why would it beexhaustive? Like progres-sivism, transgenderism isin a state of constant evo-lution. New York’s merryliberals are generously al-lowing lots of room for yetnew gender forms that aperson is apparently free tocreate for himself, herselfor (better) oneself.
As for New York-basedbusinesses that do notaccommodate the “gen-der” choice, they risksix-figure fines under rulesestablished by the city’sCommission on HumanRights. In fact, if you darenot refer to a transgenderperson by his or her pre-ferred pronoun, regardlessof the person’s XX or XYchromosomal reality, thereare a bunch of angry NewYork progressives whowould fine you and shutyou down — in the nameof “tolerance” and “diver-sity,” of course.
Facebook lists moreoptions than New YorkCity does, and even thosegenerous options remain(inevitably) in a constantstate of flux. Facebook hasat various times in the lasttwo years listed 51 genderoptions, 53, 56, 58 and 71.The list, too, is fluid.
Of course, it is.I ask liberals in all seri-
ousness, and I want themto seriously consider ananswer: Which gender op-tions among the lists of 51,53, 56, 58 or 71 are invalid?Which are illegitimate?
Will you say? Can yousay? Who’s to say, eh?
And therein is theinherent problem. Onceyou begin messing withabsolutes, and everythingbecomes relative, theneverything and anything isdeemed possible.
Paul Kengor’s latest book is“Takedown: From Communists to
Progressives, How the Left HasSabotaged Family and Marriage.”
71 genderoptions:Oh, boy!
SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017 · A9
Answers:1) Tony Gwynn2) Tony Gwynn3) Tony Gwynn4) Garry Templeton (1979), Willie Wilson
(1980)5) Cal Ripken (.276)6) Ted Williams, Barry Bonds, Shoeless Joe
Jackson7) Roger Clemens (7), Randy Johnson (5),
Steve Carlton (4), Greg Maddux (4)8) Cy Young, Mordecai Brown, Ed Walsh,
Christy Mathewson, Sandy Koufax, GregMaddux and Clayton Kershaw
9) Mel Ott (1929), Eddie Mathews (1954),Bryce Harper (2015)
10) Mel Ott (1.084), Alex Rodriguez (1.045),Ted Williams (1.045)
11) Barry Bonds, Hank Aaron, Albert Pu-jols, David Ortiz
12) Tim Raines13) Stan Musial14) Dwight Gooden (1985, age 20)15) Dwight Gooden16) Nolan Arenado (89)17) Billy Wagner18) Hank Aaron19) Yu Darvish20) Jeff Bagwell21) Pedro Martinez, Nolan Ryan, Clayton
Kershaw22) Benito Santiago (34 games)23) Chuck Klein24) Ted Williams (.412)25) Mike Trout26) Don Newcombe, Justin Verlander27) Dave Stieb28) Mike Trout29) Ty Cobb, Mickey Mantle, Willie Mays,
Kirby Puckett, Ken Griffey Jr.30) Yogi Berra (71)Bonus answer: Jerry Coleman, of course.
George F. Will is a columnist forNewsweek and The Washington Post.
TRIB FILE PHOTO
Former Vice President Joe Biden takes selfies with the audience after an emotional speechagainst sexual assault on college campuses at the University of Pittsburgh’s PetersenEvents Center last April.
ACADEMIA’SSEXUAL ABUSEDYSFUNCTION
MALLARD FILLMORE
COMMENTARY
JOSEPH SABINOMISTICK
A fter all the big talk, allthe chest-thumping andfist-pumping, all the
promises and intimidation,Donald Trump’s “The Artof the Deal” has turned outto be the “The Art of theSchlemiel.”
“Schlemiel” does morethan just convenientlyrhyme with “deal.” It is alsoone of those singular wordsthat can replace an entireparagraph, describingsomeone who clumsily fails,a habitual bungler. Thingsrarely go his way.
And, so far, that describesTrump’s experience atgoverning. From his ill-conceived Muslim travelbans to his colossal failureto replace ObamaCare, andthe Russian quicksand fromwhich he cannot escape,Trump has bungled onething after another.
Behind it all is the com-mon misconception thatgovernment can be run likea business, and it wouldbe easier if that were true.Trump, once a powerfulCEO perched atop the corpo-rate pyramid, could rule byfiat in business. He usuallyhad to please no one buthimself and a small groupof directors and investors.
But government is differ-ent from business in manyways. And what works inTrump Tower is sure to failin the White House.
Not one of the three equalbranches of governmentprevails over the others,which must come as a shockto a former corporate CEO.Trump has already metmore than his match in Con-gress and the courts, mostlybecause he did not accountfor the Constitution.
Compromise, not requiredin business, is essential togovernment. As Colin Pow-ell said, “just as they didin Philadelphia when theywere writing the Constitu-tion, sooner or later, you’vegot to compromise. You’vegot to start making thecompromises that arrive ata consensus and move thecountry forward.”
Obvious efficiencies inbusiness, where profit is aproper goal, are often notpossible in government,where the rights and valuesof everyone must be takeninto account. Governmentmust serve all the people,not just those who are prof-itable to serve.
And in government, thereare no boardroom confi-dences or business secrets.Everything governmentdoes will eventually see thelight of day. Traditionaljournalists wield just oneof the microscopes underwhich government businessis conducted.
Statutes requiringtransparency and protect-ing whistleblowers havebecome ingrained in ourpublic culture. Social media,cellphone cameras andcomputer searches haveturned every citizen intoan investigative reporter. Ingovernment, everything ischallenged and opposed bysomeone.
Trump seemed to realizethe complexity of govern-ing, at least for a moment,during his brief run atrepealing ObamaCare.As if he had experienceda startling revelation, heexclaimed, “It’s an unbe-lievably complex subject.Nobody knew health carecould be so complicated.”
Well, all of it is complicat-ed. The budget, tax reform,infrastructure, immigra-tion, the environment, jobs,civil rights, education, hous-ing — they all need a seriousapproach. And Trump canget a good start on all of thisby permanently removinghis book “The Art of theDeal” from the White Houselibrary.
Joseph Sabino Mistick is a Pittsburghlawyer (joemistick.com).
Showinghe’s bungler
in chief
Play ball!Sportswriter: “You hit only two home runs all
last year and already you’ve hit seven this year(1969). What’s the difference?”
Reds outfielder Alex Johnson: “Five.”
WASHINGTON
See? Baseball numbers aren’t difficult. Butbe precise: As players say after a close play,“Close only counts in horseshoes and hand
grenades.” And don’t be discouraged if somequestions stump you. As Phillies manager Dan-ny Ozark said in 1976, “Even Napoleon had hisWatergate.” And as Brewers manager HarveyKuenn said after losing the 1982 World Series tothe Cardinals, “We’re going to hang our headshigh.” Now, name the player or players who:
1) Had 297 three-hit games and only one three-strikeout game.
2) Struck out only 23 times in 474 at batsagainst Hall of Fame pitchers.
3) Batted .415 in 94 at-bats against Greg Mad-dux.
4) Had at least 100 hits from both sides of theplate in a season.
5) Has the lowest career batting averageamong players with 3,000 hits.
6) Are the three players who each had an OPS(on-base percentage plus slugging percentage)above 1.000 in their final season.
7) Are the four pitchers with more than threeCy Young awards.
8) Are the seven starting pitchers with twoseasons with a sub-0.9 WHIP (walks and hits perinnings pitched).
9) Are the three hitters to have at least 40home runs and 100 walks in a season beforeturning 23.
10) Have the three best OPS seasons at age 20playing at least 100 games.
11) Are the four hitters with more than 500home runs and 600 doubles.
12) Has the best stolen-base percentage withat least 500 steals.
13) Was the Hall of Famer who won threeMVPs and finished second four times.
14) Was the youngest 20-game winner.15) Set the rookie record for strikeouts.16) Holds the record for most extra-base hits
by a third baseman in a single season.17) Among pitchers in the live ball era (post-
1920) with at least 900 innings, had the lowestopponents’ batting average and most strikeoutsper nine innings.
18) Is the only player in the top 10 all timein runs, hits, home runs, RBI, total bases andextra-base hits.
19) Is the pitcher with the most strikeouts inhis first 100 major league games.
20) Is the only first baseman to have 40 homeruns and 30 stolen bases in a season (he did ittwice).
21) Are the three pitchers with six seasonswith at least 200 strikeouts and no more than 175hits.
22) Had the longest hitting streak by a catcher.23) In 1930, hit .386, had 250 hits, hit 40 home
runs and drove in 170 but led the league in noneof these four categories.
24) Had a higher batting average than JoeDiMaggio’s .408 during DiMaggio’s 56-game hit-ting streak in 1941.
25) Was the MVP in two consecutive All-Stargames.
26) Were the two to win rookie of the year,MVP and Cy Young awards (not all in the sameseason).
27) Lost no-hitters with two outs in the ninthinning in consecutive games.
28) Is the only player to finish first or secondin MVP voting in his first five full seasons.
29) Are the five center fielders elected toCooperstown in their first year of eligibility.
30) Has the most World Series hits.Bonus question: Which broadcaster said,
“Ozzie Smith just made another play that I’venever seen anyone else make before, and I’veseen him make it more than anyone else everhas”? Hint: He also said, “There’s a fly ball todeep center field. Winfield is going back, back.He hits his head against the wall. It’s rollingtoward second base.”
In sexual assaults, some students are guilty until provedinnocent, according to K. C. Johnson & Stuart Taylor Jr.
After a wave of activism created a frenzy over campus sexual as-saults, the Obama administration twice rewrote federal rules gov-erning how allegations must be handled at colleges and universi-ties. In response to this movement, too many schools have adoptedprocedures that force accused students to turn to the courts for
any hope of justice.
A system in which accusedstudents get fair outcomesonly by bringing expensivelawsuits — a recourse thatmany cannot afford — is adeeply flawed one.
In particular, since 2011, when theDepartment of Education reinterpretedTitle IX to require that sexual assaultcases be judged by a “preponderance ofthe evidence” — a lower burden of proofthan is used in criminal cases — morethan 100 accused students have suedtheir schools. In most of these recentcases, the colleges have lost, as theyshould have.
Our examination of court recordsshows how the new mandates and proce-dures amount to a de facto presumptionof guilt. It also shows that colleges are atbest incapable of adjudicating allegedlycriminal conduct — and at worst hope-lessly biased.
The recent cases can be divided intotwo groups. In the first are colleges thatconsiderably broadened the definitionof sexual assault and, in some instances,applied the new definition to studentswho did not violate the rules in place atthe time of their alleged misconduct.
In 2015, Brown University broadenedits definition to treat as sexual assaultany “manipulation” that is followed bysex. The school then disciplined a malestudent for having violated this provi-sion in 2014. As a Rhode Island judge,William Smith, observed in 2016, thevague provision could make a rapist ofa male student who gave flowers to afemale student before the two studentshad consensual sex.
In another case that ultimately wentto court, Western New England Univer-sity found a student guilty of violating anew “affirmative consent” rule — whichdefines anything other than “a clear,knowing and voluntary consent to anysexual activity” as equivalent to a “no”— that the school had adopted six weeksafter his alleged misconduct.
‘Fairness’ for the accusedThe second group includes schools that
violated their procedures, which wereunfair to begin with. In one case, JamesMadison University allowed an accuserto provide an appeals board with newevidence without giving the accused achance to respond, even though he hadbeen found not guilty by his initial hear-ing panel. The appeals board overturnedthe original decision without checkingwhether the accuser’s new evidencemight be misleading or irrelevant. (Itwas both.) The finding was set aside inDecember 2016 by a district judge, Eliza-beth Dillon, who said that “no reason-able jury” could find the process fair.
That same month, an Oregon judge,Curtis Conover, found that the Universi-ty of Oregon had denied an accused stu-dent — who had passed four polygraphtests — a chance to counter the school’s
claim that inconsistencies in his accus-er’s story had resulted from trauma.
The most important of the recentdecisions came last July, from the 2ndCircuit Court of Appeals in New YorkCity. A three-judge panel made it easierfor accused students to prove that theircolleges’ disciplinary processes amountto discrimination against males and thusviolate Title IX. Even if the university inthe case was not motivated by anti-maleanimus, Judge Pierre Leval wrote forthe panel, a “university that adopts, eventemporarily, a policy of bias favoringone sex over the other in a disciplinarydispute, doing so in order to avoid li-ability or bad publicity, has practiced sexdiscrimination.”
Epidemic a mythCampus sexual assault is a serious
problem, and evidence suggests thatsome accusers have indeed been treatedunfairly by institutions in recent years,as many were in decades past. But theso-called epidemic is a myth. The bestavailable crime statistics, based onface-to-face surveys of a large numberof people at their homes by the Bureauof Justice Statistics, indicate that sexualassault dropped by more than half from1997 to 2013. Even if many victims arenot candid with bureau surveyors, assome analysts suggest, it would not affectthe validity of rape rate comparisonsfrom year to year.
The vast majority of schools westudied now use procedures that stackthe deck against accused students. Asystem in which accused students getfair outcomes only by bringing expensivelawsuits — a recourse that many cannotafford — is a deeply flawed one. Not onlyshould the Department of Educationscrap these federal mandates, but sexualassault allegations should be handledby the same police and prosecutors whodeal with all other serious crimes.
K.C. Johnson and Stuart Taylor Jr. are co-authors of “TheCampus Rape Frenzy: The Attack on Due Process atAmerica’s Universities.” They wrote this for the Los
Angeles Times.
Baseball numbers aren’tdifficult. But this quiz might be,
says George W. Will
A10 · SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017
A federal judge has thrown out a$4.24 million jury verdict against oneof the largest natural gas producers inPennsylvania and ordered a new trialin a lawsuit alleging Houston-basedCabot Oil & Gas Corp. contaminated
the well water of two families.U.S. Magistrate Judge Martin Carl-
son on Friday set aside the verdictreached a year ago by a jury in Scran-ton, saying the evidence presented bythe Dimock homeowners “was spare,sometimes contradictory, frequentlyrebutted by other scientific experttestimony, and relied in some measureupon tenuous inferences.”
Carlson also said the plaintiffs pre-sented no evidence that would justify
a multi-million dollar award.The judge, however, declined to de-
cide the case in favor of the companyand, instead, ordered a new trial. Hesaid that before any trial, the partiesshould have settlement discussionswith the aid of another judge.
Dimock was the scene of the mosthighly publicized case of methanecontamination to emerge from theearly days of Pennsylvania’s natural-gas drilling boom. Dozens of plaintiffs
settled with Cabot in 2012, but twofamiliesoptedtotaketheircasetotrial.
The rural community and its fightagainst fracking, a method used bydrilling companies to extract oil andgas from underground rock, also wasfeatured in the Emmy-winning 2010documentary “Gasland.”
Cabot hailed the judge’s Friday deci-sion, saying in a statement that it hadbeen confident that “once a thoroughreview of the overwhelming scientific
evidence and a full legal analysis ofthe conduct of the plaintiffs’ counselwas conducted, the flawsin theverdictwould be understood.”
Dimock residents first reportedin 2008 that water from their faucetsturned cloudy, foamy and discolored,and it smelled and tasted foul. Hom-eowners, all of whom had leased theirland to Cabot, said the water madethem sick with symptoms includingvomiting, dizziness and skin rashes.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
$4.24M verdict in Pennsylvania gas drilling lawsuit tossedNew trial ordered in lawsuitover well water contamination
NATION
GEORGIA
Repeat offendercharged with arsonin overpass fire
ATLANTA — A mancharged with arson Saturdayin the raging fire that col-lapsed part of Interstate 85north of downtown Atlantahas been arrested more thana dozen times, mostly ondrug charges.
Jail records show thatBasil Eleby has been ar-rested repeatedly since 1995.Accused of starting the firebelow the elevated highway,Eleby now faces charges offirst-degree arson and first-degree property damage.
Sophia Bruner and BarryThomas, both charged withcriminal trespass, were ar-rested along with Eleby onFriday.
“We believe they were to-gether when the fire was setand Eleby is the one who setthe fire,” Deputy InsuranceCommissioner Jay Florencesaid.
Florence would not discusshow the fire was started orwhy, saying those detailswould be released as theinvestigation progresses.
MARYLAND
Record-breaking coinauction fetches $106.7M
BALTIMORE — A rare1804 silver dollar fetchedalmost $3.3 million dollars inwhat officials say is a record-breaking coin collectionauction.
A five-part sale of the D.Brent Pogue coin collectionthat ended Friday netted a to-tal of almost $106.7 million.
The five auction eventswere held over the past twoyears by Stack’s Bowers Gal-leries of Santa Ana, Calif., inconjunction with Sotheby’sin Baltimore.
Friday’s final auctionyielded about $21.4 million,including the 1804 dollar, an1811 half cent that brought$998,750, and a 1793 Lib-erty Cap cent that sold for$940,000, making it the mostvaluable circulated cent eversold.
NEW YORK
Ford recalling 53,000trucks that can roll away
NEW YORK — Ford isrecalling 53,000 2017 F-250trucks because they can rollaway even when they areparked due to a manufactur-ing error.
Ford says drivers shoulduse the parking brake tomake sure that parked carsdon’t move.
Dealers will also replacethe defective part for free, butFord doesn’t have the replace-ment parts yet. It will notifyowners when the parts areavailable.
The recalled trucks have6.2-liter engines. They werebuilt at a Kentucky plantfrom October 2015 throughThursday and sold in NorthAmerica.
The company says it is notaware of accidents or inju-ries due to this defect.
FLORIDA
Buzz Aldrin to take flightwith the Thunderbirds
MELBOURNE — Astro-naut Buzz Aldrin will takeflight once again, this timewith the world-renownedThunderbirds at the Mel-bourne Air and Space Showin Florida on Sunday.
Aldrin was the second manon the moon, piloting theApollo 11 and following NeilArmstrong onto the lunarsurface in 1969. Now 87 yearsold, the retired Air Force col-onel will be the oldest personto fly with the Thunderbirds,known for their rigorousphysical requirements.
His flight comes as the AirForce celebrates its 70th year.
— Wire reports
LATROBE’S BUTLER, NORWIN’S GABAUERNAMED PLAYERS OF THE YEAR · B2
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIISECTION BSUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017
MONTREAL — Chad Kuhl is ingood company as he gets ready forhis first major league opening dayMonday at Fenway Park.
Kuhl, Jameson Taillon, Tyler Glas-now and Trevor Williams made theirmajor league debuts with the Pi-rates last season. Kuhl, Glasnow andTaillon now make up three-fifths ofthe starting rotation, and Williamsbreaks camp as a long reliever.
“It’s really awesome,” Kuhl saidafter his final spring training outingin a 6-4 loss to Toronto on Saturdayat Olympic Stadium. “These guys,you see them all the way up throughthe system. You saw (Steven) Braultand Glass from high-A on up, andTrevor coming in and having thatkind of special year last year actu-ally staying in the big leagues. So Iknow that’s something really specialfor all of us, and I’m really excited tosee how good we can do.”
Kuhl, who will start the finaleof the three-game series Thursday
by SEAN FARRELL
Kuhl likes beingpart of young gunsPirates starter on youthfulstaff: ‘It’s really awesome’
MLB PREVIEWSPECIAL SECTION»Q&A with Neal Huntington»Gorman: Pirates starsmust bounce back»What must the Bucs do tocatch the champion Cubs?»Plus: Divisional previews,writers’ poll and more» Inside: Glasnow refocusesafter earning No. 5 job B5
BRADENTON, Fla. — KimeraBartee never will forget the dayearly this spring when he packed hisbelongings for the drive across Bra-denton from Pirate City to LECOMPark. It signified that, for the firsttime as a coach, he’d advanced tothe major leagues.
“It was a little emotional,” Barteesaid a few weeks later, “to be honestwith you.”
For Joey Cora, being promotedto the big league staff was alsoemotional — but for a different rea-son.
This season will be Cora’s 10th asa major league coach, so his senti-ment isn’t so much associated withbeing part of MLB as it is with whatMLB team he’s joining.
“The difference here is becauseit’s the Pittsburgh Pirate, and be-ing Puerto Rican, that means a lot,”Cora said. “That’s different. It’s adifferent feeling because of RobertoClemente. He always will be the
by CHRIS ADAMSKI
Hard work ahead fornew Pirates coachesTeam was subpar in mostbaserunning stats last year
PIRATES · B5 COACHES · B5
afte
TERRIFIC 10 ALL-STARS
Kiski Area’sWoods leadsDenver ‘D’
Joe Woods never fretted abouthis coaching trajectory, even ashis work took him to nearly adozen stops in more than twodecades.
The North Vandergrift nativeand Kiski Area graduate keptplugging away as a defensivebacks coach, leading talentedsecondaries and working for andalongside some of the most well-
known coachesin college andthe NFL. Buthe never es-tablished a setgoal.
So when newDenver Broncoscoach VanceJoseph hiredWoods as defen-sive coordina-tor in Januaryto replace WadePhillips, Woodstook it in stride.
“My wholep r o c e s s i ncoaching hasbeen just tryto be the bestcoach you canbe at your po-sition,” said
Woods, 46, who previouslyserved as Broncos’ defensivebacks coach. “So my whole focus,my whole coaching career was tobe the best defensive back coachI could be, and then if I was af-forded an opportunity to becomea defensive coordinator, that’d bethe next step in my career.
“Basically 26 years later, theopportunity presented itself tome, and I didn’t feel like it wastoo long of a wait or it didn’t hap-pen fast enough. I felt like for me,at this point in my career, it wasthe right place and right team.”
A 1988 Kiski Area graduatewho played cornerback andsafety at Illinois State, Woodsbegan coaching at Division IIIMuskingum University in 1992.
Woods was all over the map formore than two decades. He spentone spring as linebackers coachat Northwestern State (La.) and
by DOUG GULASy
North Vandergrift nativebegan coaching in 1992at Division III program
WOODS · B3
“My wholeprocess incoaching hasbeen just tryto be the bestcoach you canbe at yourposition.”
JOE WOODSBRONCOS DEFENSIVE
COORDINATOR ANDKISKI AREA GRAD
In one sense, the Penguins’ goaltendingsituation this season has been rife withdrama.
Marc-Andre Fleury is a veteran cor-nerstone of the franchise, beloved bymuch of the fan base for his decade-plusof meritorious service to the black andgold. Matt Murray is the talented up-and-comer who put a Stanley Cup ring onhis finger before he celebrated his 23rdbirthday.
There’s only one net, and it’s not bigenough for the both of them.
See what happens next on As The PuckTurns.
Strip away the soap-opera style the-atrics, however, and one decidedly lesssexy storyline remains: The tandem ofMurray and Fleury has worked out prettywell for the Penguins this season.
“We believe we have the bestgoaltending tandem in the league,” coachMike Sullivan said.
Sullivan might be a bit biased toward
by JONATHAN bOMbULIE
Pens benefit, not suffer, from goalie mix
ABOVE AND UPPER LEFT: CHAZ PALLA | TRIBUNE-REVIEW; BELOW LEFT: AP
IT TAKES TWO
PENGUINS · B4
DUAL-POWEREDNHL teams with two goalies whohave won 18 or more games thisseason (through Friday):
Penguins: Matt Murray 29,Marc-Andre Fleury 18
Ducks: John Gibson 23,Jonathan Bernier 19
Blackhawks: Corey Crawford 32,Scott Darling 18
Senators: Craig Anderson 22,Michael Condon 19
Flames: Brian Elliott 26,Chad Johnson 18
FLEURY
MURRAY
Gonzaga’s Przemek Karnowski dunks between SouthCarolina’s Chris Silva (left) and Sindarius Thornwell in thesecond half. Karnowski had 13 points and five rebounds.
USA TODAY SPORTS
GLENDALE, Ariz. — Ni-gel Williams-Goss scored 23points, Gonzaga’s big mencombined for 27 and the Bull-dogs used some last-secondstrategy for a 77-73 victoryover South Carolina on Satur-day in a matchup of first-timeFinal Four teams.
The Bulldogs’ 7-footers, se-nior Przemek Karnowski and
freshman Zach Collins, tookcare of things on both endsof the court, combining for18 rebounds. Collins also hadsix blocks.
Gonzaga (37-1) will face thewinner between North Caroli-na and Oregon in the nationalchampionship game Mondaynight.
“To be playing the last gameof the year, that’s crazy cool,”Gonzaga coach Mark Fewsaid.
Williams-Goss missed a shotwith 12.7 seconds left, andSouth Carolina reboundedand called a timeout trailing
75-72. South Carolina passedthe ball around, and Gonzagafouled Sindarius Thornwellwith 3.5 seconds left. He madethe first and missed the sec-ond on purpose. Killian Til-lie rebounded for Gonzaga,was fouled and made two freethrows with 2.2 seconds left toseal the win.
“We had been practicing itall year, and we always wantto foul under 6 (seconds). Ithought the guys did a greatjob,” Few said. “Josh Perkinsdid a job being really patientand not fouling on the shot.The second part is you’ve gotto get the rebound, and that’swhat’s been difficult for us attimes. They executed great.”
Williams-Goss, a second-team All-American, led theBulldogs to a 14-point lead inthe second half but it disap-peared quickly as the Game-cocks (26-11) went on a 14-point
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Big men Karnowski,Collins combine for27 points, 18 rebounds
Zags hold off South Carolina to reach final
GONZAGA · B6
INSIDE, B6»SEC rivals Mississippi State,South Carolina to meet inwomen’s title game»Johnson’s transfer leavesLuther as lone experiencedreturner for Pitt
FINAL FOUR: GONZAGA 77, SOUTH CAROLINA 73
B2 · SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017
TERRIFIC 10 • 2017 GIRLS & BOYS BASKETBALL ALL-STARS
SIMON BEHRFRANKLIN REGIONAL6-5, SR., FORWARDTraditional post player (12 ppg,8 rpg) helped Panthers reachWPIAL, PIAA playoffs. Shot 63percent from field. Hit winningshot to upset Moon, 52-51, inPIAA first round.
JAKE BISSLATROBE6-2, SR., GUARDOne of WPIAL’s top pointguards guided high-scoringWildcats (76.3 ppg) to WPIAL6A quarters, PIAA first round.Averaged 13 points, 6.5 assists,5.5 rebounds and 2.5 steals.
BEN HERTZOGGREENSBURG C.C.6-2, SR., GUARDIntegral part of GreensburgCentral Catholic’s undefeatedregular season and postseasonrun to WPIAL 2A semifinalsand PIAA quarters. Averaged14.4 points, 5 rebounds,4 assists.
ANTHONYDELLEFEMINENORWIN6-2, SR., GUARDHigh-intensity guard ledKnights at 14.3 points pergame. Also provided 2.6assists, 2.5 rebounds and oftendrew opponents’ top defenders.
NEAL McDERMOTTGREENSBURG C.C.6-2, SR., GUARDHad breakthrough season forCenturions (25-1) with 19.4points, 6 rebounds, 3 assists,2 steals a game. Part of seniorgroup with 72 wins, threesection titles, 10 playoff wins.
MARVEL McGOWANGREENSBURG SALEM6-0, JR., GUARDAveraged 19.5 points and shot50 percent from field. Also putup 3.6 rebounds, 3 assists, 2.3steals. Had 34 points againstBlairsville, 32 against FranklinRegional.
TOMMY PISULASOUTHMORELAND6-2, SR., GUARDMt. Aloysius recruit returnedfrom knee injury to helpScotties reach WPIAL 3Aquarters. Had 1,043 points inthree seasons. Averaged 18.3points, 7.4 rebounds, 3.1 assists.
BRANDON STONESOUTHMORELAND6-11, JR., GUARD/FORWARDDivision I prospect led Scottiesto WPIAL quarterfinals for firsttime since 1987. Averaged 25.3points and 11.4 rebounds, andblocked 2.5 shots. Has 1,199career points.
MIKE POMPEIJEANNETTE6-0, SR., GUARDStreaky go-to scorer helpedlead Jayhawks (12-13) toWPIAL, PIAA 2A playoffs.Posted 16.9 points, 3.0 assists,1.5 steals. Finished with 1,023career points.
BEST WEST
by bILL bECKNER JR.
PHOTOS: STEPH CHAMBERS, SIDNEY DAVIS, CHRISTOPHER HORNER, CHAZ PALLA, CHRISTIAN TYLER RANDOLPH, KEN REABE JR., BARRY REEGER, MICHAEL SWENSEN, LOUIS B. RUEDIGER
AUSTIN BUTLERLATROBE, 6-4, SR., GUARD
Some call him “AB.” Others know him as “Buzz.”For this purpose, Austin Butler’s title remains
Westmoreland Tribune-Review Boys Basketball Playerof the Year.
The Latrobe senior repeats as the county’s top playerafter leading the WPIAL in scoring at 30 points pergame and propelling the Wildcats (19-5) to the WPIALClass 6A quarterfinals and a return trip to the PIAAplayoffs.
Senior Neal McDermott of Greensburg CentralCatholic and Southmoreland junior Brandon Stone alsowere considered for the honor.
Butler, known for his deep-range shooting, attackedthe basket more this season and presented defensivechallenges for every team he faced. The 6-foot-4 guardbroke the boys’ school scoring record and finished hiscareer with 1,905 points.
He also averaged 6.5 rebounds and 2.5 steals.The Holy Cross recruit no doubt will be remembered
as one of the best players — and all-around athletes —to come out of Latrobe.
How will Latrobe fans remember you?I think I left my mark. But I couldn’t have done it
without the best coach in the WPIAL, coach (Brad)Wetzel, and great teammates. I felt I did all I could.
How important was it to have your dad, Eric,as an assistant coach, and brother, Bryce, as ateammate?
It was a privilege and something I am veryappreciative of. My dad has always been my coach.Getting to pass it to my brother and have him score wassomething special.
Where do the nicknames come from?“AB” has kind of always been there but has died down
of late. “Buzz” started my sophomore year of football.
BRITTANYSTAWOVYGREENSBURG C.C.5-7, SR., GUARDLed Centurions to 17th straightplayoff trip and another deeprun. Averaged 15.2 points, 7.1rebounds, 5.1 steals, 4.7 assists.Scored 1,121 career points.
HALEY MOOREGREENSBURG C.C.5-8, SR., GUARDEmerged as scoring threat forCenturions (19-6), who reachedWPIAL Class 2A semifinals andPIAA second round. Put up 14.4points, 8.3 rebounds, 3.1 stealsand 2.4 assists a game.
MACKENZIE AUNKSTPENN-TRAFFORD5-7, JR., GUARDScrappy defender led Warriorsin scoring (9.5 ppg) and FGpercentage (47), and set schoolrecord for fewest turnovers by apoint guard — 5-to-1 assist-to-turnover ratio.
DANIELLEMcMASTERNORWIN5-8, SR., GUARD/FORWARDLone returning starter fromtwo-time WPIAL champs wassenior leader who averaged 13points, 4.0 steals, 2.0 assistsfor Knights (17-6).
OLIVIA PORTERSOUTHMORELAND5-8, SR., GUARDHad one of top all-aroundseasons in county: 20.8 points,4.2 rebounds, 4.5 steals, 2.2assists a game. Finished with1,353 career points, second onschool’s scoring list.
OLIVIA MILLERLIGONIER VALLEY5-9, SR., GUARD/FORWARDDo-it-all senior forwardaveraged 18.7 points, 10.3rebounds and was one ofbest players in District 6. Alsocontributed 2.6 steals and 1.6blocks for the Rams.
MEGAN KALLOCKGREENSBURG SALEM5-6, SO., GUARDScored 19.7 points per gamefor the Golden Lions (10-13),who made WPIAL 5A playoffs.Had three games of 30 or morepoints. Also 3.9 rebounds, 2.6steals, 2.4 assists.
ABI GABAUERNORWIN, 5-9, SR., GUARD/FORWARD
Before every game this season, after warmups, AbiGabauer dashed across the court to greet her father, Tim,for a pregame fist-bump.
“He always sits first row, in the middle,” said Gabauer, asenior at Norwin. “It meant so much to us as I continue tobuild my story.”
And what a story it has become for the WestmorelandTribune-Review Girls Basketball Player of the Year.
Gabauer missed her sophomore season with a torn ACLand saw minimal playing time last season on a team thatrepeated as WPIAL Quad-A champions.
And then, this season, “I came out of nowhere,” she said.An all-around player and scene-stealer, she helped
uphold program tradition as she assumed a leadership roleand guided the Knights (17-6) back to the WPIAL playoffsin the new 6A classification.
Laura Graytok of Latrobe, Greensburg Central Catholic’sBrittany Stawovy and Olivia Porter of Southmoreland alsowere considered for player of the year.
Gabauer led Norwin in scoring (15 ppg), rebounds (7 rpg)and 3-point percentage (35), and often was the bestdefender on the floor.
She has committed to Division II West Virginia Wesleyan.How will you be remembered at Norwin?For my determination and preparing myself to be a great
leader. Never expect anything.What did it mean to be around for the title runs?I really enjoyed being around those girls over the years.
They taught us so much, and I tried to present that to theyounger girls.
What is your favorite sport to play, other thanbasketball?
I always enjoyed volleyball, and I played softball. Wiffleball with my brother. I love to lift. I am always in the weightroom.
MICHELLE BURNSHEMPFIELD5-5, SR., GUARDHelped lead Hempfield (14-10)to WPIAL playoffs for 16thstraight season and PIAAplayoffs, in first season in Class6A. Slowed by a foot injury, putup 15.0 points, 5.0 assists.
LAURA GRAYTOKLATROBE5-7, JR., GUARDLed Westmoreland Countygirls in scoring at 21.6 ppgand averaged 3.5 rebounds,4.0 assists and 4.0 steals.Division I prospect has 1,037career points.
IN
CHRISTIAN TYLER RANDOLPH | TRIBUNE-REVIEW
SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017 · B3
WESTMORELANDSPORTS
HIGH SCHOOLSBASEBALLSaturday’s resultsRipken Experience tournament at MyrtleBeachCumberland Regional, NJ 12, Valley 2Deer Lakes 12, Cumberland 1, 5 inn.Hopewell 12, Valley 1Peters Township 8, Padua Franciscan, Oh. 5NonsectionEllwood City 2, Beaver 0Seneca Valley 1, Chartiers Valley 0Fort Cherry at West Allegheny, ppd.Shaler 4, Mt. Lebanon 1Shenango 13, Rochester 3
LACROSSEBOYSSaturday’s resultsNonsectionPenn-Trafford 12, South Fayette 6GIRLS
Saturday’s resultsNonsectionShaler 8, Latrobe 5RugbySaturday’s resultsNonconferenceKiski Valley 34, Central Catholic 31
SOFTBALLSaturday’s resultsRipken Experience tournament at PigeonForge, Tenn.Waynesburg 10, St. John Villa Academy,N.Y. 0Ripken Experience tournament at MyrtleBeachCambride Springs 6, Carmichaels 5Carmichaels 13, St. John Villa Academy,N.Y. 1Granville, Ohio 10, Burgettstown 0Lake Center Christian, Ohio 8, Upper St.Clair 4Nonsection
Belle Vernon 10, Ligonier Valley 0Chartiers Valley at Canon-McMillan, ppd.Ellwood City at Neshannock, ppd.Howland, Ohio at North Allegheny, ppd.Laurel Highlands at University (n)Mohawk at Hickory, ppdNew Brighton at Rochester, ppd.Seneca Valley 10, Montour 5Steel Valley 10, West Mifflin 9West Mifflin 15, Steel Valley 9Saturday’s summaryWPIALNonsection
Belle Vernon 10, Ligonier Valley 0Ligonier Valley ........................000-00—0-2-2Belle Vernon........................021-52—10-14-2WP: Bailey Parshall LP: Jane Garver 2B:LV: Lexie Petrof. BV: Kourtney Gavatorta,Alex Sokol, Jordan French. HR: BV: JordanFrench.
VOLLEYBALLBOYS
Saturday’s resultsDerry TournamentPreliminary roundNorth Alllegheny 1, Central Martinsburg 0Norwin 1, Montour 0Shaler 1, Latrobe 0Derry 1, Deer Lakes 0Beaver County Christian 1, Huntingdon 0Fox Chapel 1, Altoona 0Penn-Trafford 1, Penn Hills 0Pine-Richland 1, Forrest Hills 0QuarterfinalsNorth Allegheny 1, Norwin 0Shaler 1, Derry 0Beaver County Christian 1, Fox Chapel 0Penn-Trafford 1, Pine-Richland 0SemifinalsShaler 1, North Allegheny 0Penn-Trafford 1, Beaver County Christian 0FinalsPenn-Trafford 1, Shaler 0To report scores, call 1-888-748-8742.
RANKINGSBaseballClass 6ATeamRecord1. Pine-Richland 5-02. Norwin 2-03. Plum 3-04. Peters Township 4-05. Butler 1-1
Class 5A1. Latrobe 2-12. Montour 0-13. North Hills 5-04. West Allegheny 4-05. Franklin Regional 0-0
Class 4A1. Blackhawk 4-02. South Park 5-1
3. Knoch 0-14. South Fayette 1-05. Belle Vernon 2-1
Class 3A1. Riverside 2-12. Steel Valley 4-13. Avonworth 1-04. Mt. Pleasant 0-15. Burrell 1-2
Class 2A1. Serra Catholic 4-02. OLSH 3-03. Neshannock 2-24. California 2-15. Shenango 2-2
Class A1. Vincentian Academy 1-12. Greensburg C.C. 0-03. Sewickley Academy 1-04. Rochester 0-2
5. Jeannette 0-1
SoftballClass 6A1. Hempfield 3-02. Shaler 1-03. Canon-McMillan 0-04. Latrobe 1-15. Baldwin 2-1
Class 5A1. West Allegheny 1-02. Penn-Trafford 1-13. Franklin Regional 3-24. Thomas Jefferson 2-15. Moon 1-0
Class 4A1. Yough 2-12. Mt. Pleasant 0-03. Belle Vernon 4-04. Central Valley 1-0
5. Beaver 2-1
Class 3A1. Ellwood City 1-02. South Park 2-03. Deer Lakes 1-04. Freeport 3-05. Burrell 1-1
Class 2A1. Chartiers-Houston 5-02. Laurel 2-03. CW North Catholic 1-24. Shenango 2-05. Serra Catholic 0-1
Class A1. West Greene 4-02. Carmichaels 1-03. Leechburg 1-14. Monessen 2-05. Sewickley Academy 1-1
Sara Gargasz once was a figureskater, but after watching her broth-er participate in a youth hockeyprogram, she asked her dad if shecould try the sport, and she got per-mission.
When a team Katie Hill’s olderbrother Jonathan played for neededa goalie, she got equipment and be-came part of the team.
Mira Rolin wanted to play footballbut felt she was too short. So shetried dek hockey and eventuallymade her way to the ice.
The path to hockey was differentfor all three of them, but they allled to the same place: Steel CitySelects, a Pittsburgh-based girlshockey program.
As members of the Steel City Se-lects 19-and-under team, they hopeto bring home the program’s firstnational championship.
For the second consecutive year,Steel City Selects is sending threeteams — 19U, 16U and 14U — to theUSA Hockey Girls Tier II NationalChampionship from April 6-10 inTroy, Mich.
Twelve teams in each age groupparticipate at nationals.
All of the girls on the three SteelCity Selects teams are from WesternPennsylvania.
Hill is a Freeport grad and a fresh-man at Butler County CommunityCollege. Rolin is a junior at Latrobe,and Gargasz is a junior at SenecaValley. They have been to nationalsbefore and placed third two yearsago. With experience in their corner,they are hoping for more.
“We all work pretty well as a team,and each time we go back to nation-als, we are a little bit more mature,”Hill said. “All of us are real excitedto make a name for Steel City againat nationals.”
Gargasz and Rolin have been ona line with Jayda Mears all season,and it has produced results. Gargaszhas a team-high 48 goals. Mears has27 goals and 20 assists, and Rolin has10 goals and 21 assists.
The trio started playing together
in the summer during minicampand quickly built chemistry, whichis what they credit for the gaudynumbers.
“I have an amazing line I playwith, and we work for every goal as ateam,” Gargasz said. “Yeah, it showsthat I have a lot of goals, but mylinemates have a lot of assists, andthe assists are just as important.”
Rolin said, “All of us work so welltogether. We personally know eachother so well. We know each other’sstrengths and weaknesses, whichmakes working with each other somuch easier. It works out so nice-ly. We motivate each other, and weknow exactly where each other isgoing to be.”
Hill sports strong numbers ingoal with 10 shutouts, including apair at the Mid-Am District Cham-pionships on March 18-19 in Cleve-land, which the 19U team won toclinch its spot at nationals. She hasa 1.98 goals- against average and .929save percentage.
Steel City Selects president EileenGranata said interest in girls hockeycontinues to increase, and there areplans to add a 12U team next year.
“There are more opportunities outthere for girls now,” Granata said.“From a collegiate standpoint, theNCAA and the colleges have addeda good 20 to 30 teams in the U.S. forgirls hockey, and with the NWHLmaking its debut last year and hav-ing the All-Star game in (Cranberry)this year, even more girls are gettinginterested in hockey.”
When Hill and Gargasz startedplaying, there were not many girlsyouth teams. Both are excited to seethe upward trend for the sport.
“It’s exciting to have the girls hock-ey community growing,” Hill said.“When I was just starting out, thereweren’t really any 16U or 14U teams.So I was playing on a 19U team whenI was 9. I grew up playing on severalboys teams just to play on a teambecause there really wasn’t any girlsteams around. It’s cool to see all thegirls coming up and now there are12U, 14U, 16U and 19U teams.”
Steel City Selects’ 16U teamclinched its spot at nationals witha 9-0 win over the Cincinnati LadySabrehawks and a 3-0 win over theGilmour Gladiators. Goalie Madi-son Barker, who played for Indianain the PIHL Class A finals, had the
shutout against Gilmour and sharedthe shutout against Cincinnati withLindsey Scott, an Adams Townshipnative.
Several players on the 16U girlsexperienced nationals last year aspart of the 14U team and are lookingforward to another opportunity.
“It was a lot of fun. There werea lot of good hockey players therefrom around the nation,” said 16Udefenseman Amara Marrese, a fresh-man at South Fayette. “We got tomeet some new teams and got tomake new friends from differentplaces. The thing I’m most excitedfor this year is the competition. I’mlooking forward to playing someharder teams and trying to winsomething big.”
Marrese, 13, said the team looksup to Olivia Cindrich, who playedfor Carrick, which reached the PIHLDivision II finals this season.
“Our coach really didn’t assign acaptain. But as a team, we look atOlivia as our captain,” Marrese said.“She takes responsibility and makessure we do the right things and play-ing well as a team. She might nothave a ‘C’ on her jersey, but I like tothink of her as a captain.”
The 14U team is made up of allfirst-year players in the program.They received an automatic bid asthe only team out of the Mid-AmDistrict but have played top teamsin various tournaments, includingthe Nova Ice Dogs, its first opponentat nationals.
“It’s a really great opportunity forus,” said 14 U captain Kylie Vetere,an 8th grader from Bethel Park. “Ihope we can win a couple of games,and I can bond with the girls somemore.”
Vetere, 14, is a center, and her lineconsists of Naomi Caparelli, a Pitts-burgh native, and Isabelle Whiteof Seven Fields. Vetere has beenplaying hockey for three years andsometimes gets a surprised reactionfrom friends at school when she tellsthem what sport she plays.
“Most of the time they’re like‘You? You play hockey?’ Because I’mwearing a dress at school,” Veteresaid. “It’s just one transition from aclassic lady to an aggressive hockeyplayer.”
Jerin Steele is a freelance writer.
by JERIN STEELE
Girls hockey on the upswingWestern Pennsylvaniaprogram set to competein national tournament
Olivia Cindrich, a member of the Steel City Selects U16 team, played for Carrick, which reached the PIHLDivision II final.
SUBMITTED
AUGUSTA, Ga. — JordanSpieth might have found a newway to finish the front nine atthe Masters.
It was during a practiceround one year that Spiethreached the tee on the 460-yardninth hole and noticed anopening in the trees left ofthe tee. It was large enoughto consider going down thefirst fairway. He figures hehas tried this unconventionalroute a half-dozen times.
“In practice rounds andtimes I’ve just been messing
around, there’s ahole where you cango down 1, and itgets all the way to
the flat,” Spieth said. “Andthen the angle into the green,it’s just tier-tier-tier.”
He said this while choppinghis hand from left to right.From the ninth fairway, thetiers on the diagonal greenstack front to back. Spiethfigures if he can put his teeshot far enough down the firstfairway, it would be a straightshot over two bunkers.
So what’s the problem?“Obviously, if one person
does it, there will be a newtree there,” Spieth said witha laugh. “Every time I’ve triedit, when I’ve been with mem-bers, they’ve said, ‘Don’t letthe chairman see you.’ ”
The ninth hole at AugustaNational can be a pivotal partof the Masters’ final day. Theconventional way to play thehole is to drive to the bottom ofthe hill, a slight dogleg to theleft even as the terrain movesto the right. From there, ittypically is a short iron up thehill to a three-tiered green thatslopes sharply to the front.Two deep bunkers are to theleft of the green.
The contours are so severethat it is not unusual to seeplayers putt from 20 feet withtheir backs to the hole.
“I think the ninth hole is arelatively awkward golf hole,”six-time Masters championJack Nicklaus said. “It’s a dan-gerous little hole. It’s a scarylittle hole.”
And it’s where Tiger Woodsnearly missed the cut at Au-gusta National. It was 2003,with Woods going for an un-precedented third straightMasters, when he came toNo. 9 (his last hole of thesecond round) needing parto make the cut on the num-ber. He sprayed his drive tothe right, under a tree. Hehit a waist-high shot under abranch and into the left bun-ker, and then blasted out 3 feetabove the hole.
“That putt,” Woods said atthe time, “was either going inor going off the green.”
The ninth might also be thehole that ended Nick Faldo’scareer at the Masters. He re-ferred to the approach No. 9requires as a “classic Augustasecond shot.” It’s typically adownhill lie, with the ball be-low the player’s feet, mean-ing the contact must be clean.And it didn’t help when a newtee was built 30 yards back.Faldo’s last year playing theMasters was in 2006, and hecouldn’t get to the bottom ofthe hill.
“I sat on the hill with myboy, Matthew, on the bag,”Faldo said. “I said, ‘Matthew,I can’t hit this green. ... Andthat made my decision. I stoodon the ninth hole and said, ‘Ihaven’t got the game for thisgolf course anymore.’ ”
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Unusual layout makeshole pivotal in finalround of Masters
Augusta’s9th testsplayers
Three-time Masters winnerNick Faldo said struggles onthe ninth in 2006 told himhe no longer could competeat Augusta.
AP
eight years as Minnesota Vi-kings defensive backs coach.
“From when I started andwas a Division III coach atMuskingum all the way towhere I am right now, it’sall really been enjoyment be-cause I’m doing what I wantto do, what I love to do, andthat’s coach football,” Woodssaid. “From that standpoint,it hasn’t been anything whereI look back on my career asdrudgery. It was really moreof a learning experience ev-ery spot I was at.”
Woods can name-drop someof the most famous coachesin the country, from OhioState’s Urban Meyer — hisspecial teams coach at IllinoisState — to Notre Dame’s Bri-an Kelly, whom he worked forat Division II Grand ValleyState. He considers Steelerscoach Mike Tomlin, whom hecoached with in Tampa Bayand Minnesota, a close friend.
“All the different coachesI’ve encountered or workedwith throughout my careerall had an impact on who I amas coach,” Woods said.
Woods came to Denver in2015 and led the Broncos’ “NoFly Zone” secondary the pasttwo seasons. With Pro Bowlcornerbacks Chris HarrisJr. and Aqib Talib and ProBowl safeties Darian Stewartand T.J. Ward, Denver led theNFL in pass defense in 2015and ’16 — a run that includeda victory over the CarolinaPanthers in Super Bowl 50.
“Keeping Joe Woods as acoordinator was vital,” Jo-seph said in a January newsconference. “He was a guywho had opportunities totake other interviews, but hewanted to be here. I wanted toJoe here. Joe’s been a second-ary coach here for two years.They’ve been first in pass de-fense the past two years. Allfour (starting defensive backs)have made (at least) one ProBowl under Joe, so keepingthat system intact was veryimportant to our defensivesuccess moving forward.”
Woods said his biggest taskin his first season as defensivecoordinator is improving theBroncos’ run defense, whichranked 28th last season.
“The position coach al-ways has their position theylook over and manage, thatthey’re responsible for,” hesaid. “For me now, it’s just aresponsibility of me gettingthe whole defense to play ata high level. It really comesdown to making sure we’re onthe same page from a players’standpoint, just making surethose guys are doing theirjob, executing and playinghard. And then for me per-sonally, making sure from agame-plan standpoint thatI’m doing my best to put thoseguys in the right position.”
Woods returned to West-ern Pennsylvania last sum-mer, bringing a replica of theLombardi Trophy to KiskiArea High School. He callswinning the Super Bowl a“surreal experience,” one hehopes to have again.
“The pieces are here,” hesaid. “There’s some thingswe need to clean up. That’s aprocess you go through everyyear. But from our front toour linebackers to the second-ary, with the additions we’vemade in free agency and theadditions we’ll make in thedraft, we should be able toplay at the same level andeven play better than we havethe last two years.”
Doug Gulasy is a Tribune-Reviewstaff writer. Reach him at
[email protected] via Twitter @dgulasy_Trib.
Woodsleads ‘D’in DenverWOODS · FROM B1
Woods fileKiski Area graduate JoeWoods’ coaching timeline:1992: Muskingum (defensivebacks coach); 1993: EasternMichigan (grad assistant);1994: Northwestern State(linebackers coach); 1994-96: Grand Valley State (DBcoach); 1997: Kent State(DB coach); 1998-2000:Hofstra (DB coach); 2001-03: Western Michigan (DBcoach); 2004-05: TampaBay Buccaneers (DB coach);2006-13: Minnesota Vikings(DB coach); 2014: OaklandRaiders (DB coach); 2015-16:Denver Broncos (DB coach);2017: Denver Broncos(defensive coordinator)
»Moregolf B7
B4 · SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017
AROUNDTHE NHL
STANDINGSEASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division
W L OT Pts GF GAx-Montreal .............44 24 9 97 214 190Ottawa ...................41 26 9 91 197 199Boston....................42 30 6 90 225 205Toronto...................37 24 15 89 233 222Tampa Bay..............38 29 9 85 215 213Florida ....................33 34 11 77 201 227Buffalo....................32 33 12 76 193 221Detroit....................31 34 12 74 192 229Metropolitan Division
W L OT Pts GF GAx-Washington ........51 18 8 110 251 176x-Columbus ............49 20 8 106 237 177x-Penguins .............47 19 11 105 263 219x-N.Y. Rangers........46 26 6 98 248 210Carolina ..................35 27 14 84 202 214N.Y. Islanders .........36 29 12 84 224 235Philadelphia ...........37 32 8 82 206 225New Jersey ............27 36 14 68 175 226WESTERN CONFERENCECentral Division
W L OT Pts GF GAx-Chicago................50 21 7 107 237 199x-Minnesota...........45 25 8 98 249 199x-St. Louis..............42 28 7 91 215 203Nashville ................40 27 11 91 230 213Winnipeg................36 35 7 79 233 247Dallas .....................31 35 11 73 207 244Colorado .................21 53 3 45 152 259Pacific Division
W L OT Pts GF GAx-Anaheim..............42 23 12 96 206 190x-Edmonton ...........43 25 9 95 228 198x-San Jose..............43 28 7 93 210 194x-Calgary ................44 30 4 92 217 210Los Angeles............37 33 7 81 187 189Vancouver...............30 38 9 69 173 225Arizona...................28 41 9 65 188 250NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtimeloss. Top three teams in each division and two wildcards per conference advance to playoffs.x-clinched playoff spotRESULTS/SCHEDULEFriday’s gamesPenguins 4, N.Y. Rangers 3 (SO)N.Y. Islanders 2, New Jersey 1Chicago 3, Columbus 1Calgary 5, San Jose 2Colorado 2, St. Louis 1 (SO)Los Angeles 2, Vancouver 0Arizona 6, Washington 3Saturday’s gamesBoston 5, Florida 2Nashville 3, Minnesota 0Toronto at Detroit (n)New Jersey at Philadelphia (n)Dallas at Carolina (n)Montreal at Tampa Bay (n)Ottawa at Winnipeg (n)Anaheim at Edmonton (n)Today’s gamesBoston at Chicago, 12:30 p.m.N.Y. Islanders at Buffalo, 3 p.m.Nashville at St. Louis, 4 p.m.Carolina at Penguins, 5 p.m.Washington at Columbus, 6 p.m.Colorado at Minnesota, 6 p.m.Dallas at Tampa Bay, 6 p.m.San Jose at Vancouver, 7 p.m.Philadelphia at N.Y. Rangers, 7:30 p.m.Anaheim at Calgary, 9:30 p.m.Arizona at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.Monday’s gamesOttawa at Detroit, 7 p.m.Toronto at Buffalo, 7 p.m.Montreal at Florida, 7:30 p.m.
SUMMARIESSATURDAY’S GAMEBRUINS 5, PANTHERS 2Florida 0 2 0 — 2Boston 1 2 2 — 5First Period—1, Boston, Acciari 2, 17:03. Penalties—Jokinen, FLA, (high sticking), 4:08; Acciari, BOS,(hooking), 10:16; Sceviour, FLA, (tripping), 13:16.Second Period—2, Florida, Vanek 17 (Sceviour,Bjugstad), 1:38. 3, Boston, Bergeron 19 (Pastrnak,Chara), 7:56. 4, Florida, Jagr 16 (Marchessault,Yandle), 9:53 (pp). 5, Boston, Krejci 23, 14:30.Penalties—Carlo, BOS, (interference), 8:31;Marchand, BOS, (holding), 10:26; Petrovic, FLA,(roughing), 17:01.Third Period—6, Boston, Marchand 39 (Pastrnak,Spooner), 18:16 (pp). 7, Boston, Bergeron 20,19:48. Penalties—K.Miller, BOS, (interference),1:06; Vanek, FLA, (high sticking), 17:53.Shots on goal—Florida 3-10-13—26. Boston13-10-6—29.Power-play opportunities—Florida 1 of 4; Boston1 of 4.Goalies—Florida, Berra 0-4-0 (28 shots-24 saves).Boston, Rask 36-20-4 (26-24).A—17,565 (17,565). T—2:32. Referees—GordDwyer, Frederick L’Ecuyer. Linesmen—BradKovachik, Brian Murphy.
FRIDAY’S LATE GAMEPENGUINS 4, RANGERS 3 (SO)Penguins 0 2 1 0 — 4N.Y. Rangers 0 1 2 0 — 3Penguins won shootout 2-0.First Period—None. Penalties—Zibanejad, NYR,(high sticking), 16:15; Kreider, NYR, (tripping),18:37.Second Period—1, Penguins, Guentzel 12 (Kessel,Crosby), 0:39. 2, Penguins, Crosby 43 (Sheary,Hainsey), 10:46. 3, N.Y. Rangers, Holden 11, 19:33(pp). Penalties—Holden, NYR, (holding), 1:49;Streit, PIT, (tripping), 18:09.Third Period—4, Penguins, Rust 14 (Cole), 6:46.5, N.Y. Rangers, Nash 23 (Miller, Girardi), 8:50. 6,N.Y. Rangers, Kreider 27 (Holden, Miller), 19:48.Penalties—Schultz, PIT, (interference), 12:30.Overtime—None. Penalties—None.Shootout—Penguins 2 (Kessel G, Crosby G), N.Y.Rangers 0 (Zibanejad NG, Zuccarello NG).Shots on goal—Penguins 15-9-8-3—35. N.Y. Rangers8-12-10-3—33.Power-play opportunities—Penguins 0 of 3; N.Y.Rangers 1 of 2.Goalies—Penguins, Murray 29-10-4 (33 shots-30saves). N.Y. Rangers, Lundqvist 30-18-4 (35-32).A—18,006 (18,200). T—2:44. Referees—Eric Furlatt,Ghislain Hebert. Linesmen—Scott Cherrey, GregDevorski.
PENGUINS STATSPLAYER GP G A PTS +/-Sidney Crosby...............71 43 41 84 18Evgeni Malkin ..............62 33 39 72 18Phil Kessel....................77 22 44 66 3Conor Sheary................57 21 30 51 25Justin Schultz ..............74 12 36 48 26Patric Hornqvist...........66 19 22 41 16Kris Letang...................41 5 29 34 2Nick Bonino..................76 16 16 32 -7Matt Cullen ..................68 12 17 29 2Chris Kunitz..................71 9 20 29 0Bryan Rust ...................54 14 13 27 3Ian Cole.........................77 5 21 26 25Jake Guentzel ..............36 12 14 26 7Scott Wilson ................73 7 16 23 -2Carl Hagelin..................61 6 16 22 10Trevor Daley.................54 5 14 19 9Brian Dumoulin............66 0 13 13 0Tom Kuhnhackl.............52 4 9 13 6Eric Fehr .......................52 6 5 11 3Chad Ruhwedel ............31 2 6 8 6Olli Maatta...................54 1 6 7 17Mark Streit...................15 1 5 6 -1Cameron Gaunce ..........10 1 3 4 1Carter Rowney .............22 1 2 3 0Josh Archibald..............5 2 0 2 1Ron Hainsey.................11 0 2 2 4Tom Sestito..................11 0 2 2 2D Steve Oleksy.............11 0 1 1 2David Warsofsky..........7 0 1 1 -3Frank Corrado ...............2 0 0 0 -1Derrick Pouliot .............10 0 0 0 -4Oskar Sundqvist...........9 0 0 0 -3GOALTENDER GP AVG W L OT SO SV%Marc-Andre Fleury.......37 2.99 18 9 7 1 .911Matt Murray ................46 2.41 29 10 4 4 .922
CALENDARApril 9 — End of regular season.April 12 — Playoffs begin.May 28-June 3 — Draft combine, Buffalo, N.Y.June 14 — Last possible day for Stanley Cup finals
New York Islanderscenter John Tavaressuffered a lower-bodyinjury Friday against theNew Jersey Devils and isweek-to-week.
Two teammates hadto help the captain to thelocker room after he fellto the ice clutching theback of his left leg in thethird period.
— Wire report
Islanders’ Tavaresis week-to-week
FIRSTSID’S RAP SHEET
All of the attention given toSidney Crosby’s slash to thefinger of Ottawa’s Marc Methotand his spearing of Buffalo’sRyan O’Reilly earlier this monthput a different spin on a prettyclean season for the Penguins’captain, who is on pace to finishwith one of his lowest penaltytotals.
While Crosby critics mightclaim referee favoritism, the factremains that the center enteredthe season’s final five gameswith just 24 penalty minutes.
Crosby exceeded 40 penaltyminutes in each of his last threeseasons.
He has finished with fewerthan 30 penalty minutes onlytwice — in 2012-13, when he had16 in 36 games, and 2011-12,when he had 14 in 22 games.
If referees resist the urge towhistle Crosby for penaltiesthese days, they also avoid thetemptation to punish thosewho defend the star on the ice.Crosby has drawn 19 penalties,according to Corsica Hockey.
A plus-7 penalty differential(19 drawn, 12 taken) ranksbehind Crosby’s plus-10 (27drawn, 17 taken) in 2014-15, andit ties plus-7 seasons in 2012-13(15 drawn, eight taken) and2010-11 (20 drawn, 13 taken).
Long gone are the days whenhe inspired frequent foul callson opponents. In 53 games in2007-08, he took just 16 penal-ties and drew 44.
Last season, he had minus-two differential (18 drawn, 20taken).
—Bill West
SECONDBEATING THE BLOCKS
In the modern NHL, adefenseman who accurately canget his shots past a maze ofsticks, skates and defenders in-tent on blocking them generallyis more valuable than a bruiserwho can crank up 100-mphslappers.
Mark Streit is on the cuttingedge of that trend.
Coming into this weekend,Streit attempted 39 shots sincemoving from the Flyers to thePenguins in a trade-deadlinedeal. Twenty-two of them wereon net.
That’s a percentage of56.4, tops among the team’sdefensemen.
Trevor Daley (53.9) and KrisLetang (53.7) are also goodat getting shots through. IanCole (40.9) and Brian Dumoulin(43.2) are not.
“It’s hard to get pucks to thenet the way teams defend intoday’s game, with the layersof shot blockers,” coach MikeSullivan said.
“I think Mark’s one of thoseguys who has a knack for get-ting pucks down to the net andgives our guys the opportunityto create that next play.”
— Jonathan Bombulie
THIRDOL’ COLLEGE TRY
A bracket buster in NCAADivision I men’s hockey broughtsmiles to two Penguins anddisappointed three others lastweek.
Notre Dame, the alma materof Bryan Rust and Ian Cole, tookdown Hockey East conferencerival Massachusetts-Lowell inthe quarterfinals of the NCAATournament on March 26.
The Irish’s 3-2 win represent-ed a breakthrough against theRiver Hawks, who count ScottWilson, Ron Hainsey and ChadRuhwedel among their alumni.
Massachusetts-Lowell en-tered the game as a favoriteafter topping Notre Dame, 5-1,in the Hockey East champion-ship March 17.
The teams split their regular-season meetings.
Prior to this season, the Irishhad a 1-7-2 record against theRiver Hawks dating to 2013-14,their inaugural year as confer-ence rivals.
—Bill West
OVERTIMESIMILAR STREAKS
While the Penguins havequalified for the playoffs for 11straight seasons, the longestsuch streak in the NHL, theirminor league affiliate in Wilkes-Barre is in the midst of a similarrun.
The Baby Pens are on theverge of clinching their 15thstraight postseason berth, thelongest active streak in theAHL.
They’ve won at least oneplayoff round in 13 of the last 14seasons.
The one thing missing fromWilkes-Barre’s playoff resume isa championship. Dumoulin saidhe would like to see that changebefore popular 38-year-oldBaby Pens captain Tom Kosto-poulos retires.
— Jonathan Bombulie
THREEPERIODS
Written byJonathan Bombulie andBill West, “Three Periods”
is a weekly feature composed ofquick-hit thoughts and analysison the Penguins and the NHL.
his own guys, of course, but it’snot an outrageous claim.
As a team, the Penguins rankin the top 10 in the league insave percentage. They’re one offive NHL clubs with two goalieswho have won at least 18 games.They’re one of four teams with twogoalies who rank among the top 20in the league in high-danger savepercentage.
A case could be made thatthe goalie tandems for theBlackhawks, Rangers or Duckshave been better this season,but the Penguins pair is in theconversation.
“It’s been great for us,”goaltending coach Mike Balessaid. “Both guys have played reallywell. Both guys have had stretcheswhere they haven’t, but that’snormal. You can look around theleague, and even if it’s a tradition-al 1-2 set-up, that happens. That’sjust goaltending. Guys go throughcertain times of year when they’rebetter than others. It’s nice whenyou have two guys.”
There were a few stretches thisseason where having two guyswasn’t just nice for the Penguins.It was a necessity.
When Murray was out with abroken hand in October and a
lower-body injury in January,Fleury went 8-3-1. When Fleurywasn’t on top of his game through-out January and February, Murraywent 10-5-2.
The team avoided lengthyslumps because one goalie wasthere to pick up the other.
“At first, I thought it was a littlebit harder not playing every night,not being in net every night,”Fleury said. “It feels like it tookme a little bit to find ways to makesure I was sharp every night goingin. After that, it’s been going allright. We’re winning games. We’rebattling for the first spot in theleague.”
Given that Murray almostcertainly will be handed the ballto run with in the playoffs, andthat Fleury likely will move onafter this season because of theroster upheaval born of June’sexpansion draft, there’s a chanceSunday’s game with Carolina willbe Fleury’s final home start in aPenguins jersey.
The concept of having twogoaltenders who plausibly couldbe referred to as No. 1 on the depthchart, however, might be aroundmuch longer.
Former NHL goaltender BrianBoucher, an analyst for the NBCSports Network, said having twohigh-end goalies is more important
than it ever has been.“Here’s the thing,” Boucher said.
“It’s a hard league now. The parityin the league, night after night,the pressure that these goalies areunder, the margin for error is verysmall. It can wear on a goaltender.The physical aspect is difficult, thegames and the condensed sched-ule, but it’s the mental side forgoalies that’s really hard. Whenyou have another guy that can goin there and play games for you,it’s huge.
“To me, at the end of the day,having both Fleury and Murrayhere is a home run.”
Bales said also is easier thanever before to roster a pair of high-end goalies.
Thanks to better instruction anda new breed of goaltender thatbelieves working on the craft is anintegral part of the job, the depthof quality players at the positioncontinues to grow.
“If you go back 20 years ago, thegap between the No. 1 goalie in theleague and the No. 60 goalie wassignificant. Now, it’s not as big asit used to be,” Bales said. “You canafford to play the other guy moreand keep both guys fresh.”
Jonathan Bombulie is a Tribune-Review staffwriter. Reach him at [email protected] or
via Twitter at @BombulieTrib.
Dual goalies lift PensPENGUINS · FROM B1
Another of the Penguins’ tenuredmembers has ended up on the list ofthose injured with vague timetablesfor return.
Chris Kunitz missed Saturday’spractice at PPG Paints Arena with alower-body injury. The specifics of hiscondition, including when he mightrecover, remained unknown, coachMike Sullivan said. He said the veteranwinger underwent evaluation as hespoke.
Winger Josh Archibald, who hasappeared in five games this season,received another call-up from Wilkes-Barre/Scranton to replace Kunitz.
Kunitz adds to a collection of ail-ing Penguins that includes two othermembers of the 2009 Stanley Cupteam, Evgeni Malkin and Kris Letang,as well as more recent additions CarlHagelin, Trevor Daley and Olli Maatta.
The status of Letang, out sinceFeb. 25 with an undisclosed injury thatSullivan described as “complicated”earlier this season, continues to leavefans anxious. Malkin, out since March17 with an upper-body injury, undoubt-edly raises the Penguins’ level of talentto a new echelon, but Letang repre-sents a cog unlike any other on thedepth chart.
Earlier this week, Sullivan confirmedhis confidence in Letang’s chances ofreturning for the start of the playoffs.
“It holds true until somebody tellsus otherwise,” Sullivan said Saturday.“He’s obviously been going through arehab process. We’re hopeful that he’smaking progress. Until a course ofaction changes otherwise, that’s howwe see it. … The nature of his injuryis that it’s been a week-to-week thingthat they’re trying to manage. We’ll gofrom there.”
Ron Hainsey also missed the Pen-guins’ practice to take a maintenanceday, Sullivan said.
Bank and trustSidney Crosby made Henrik Lun-
dqvist his latest bank-shot victimwhen he slung a puck off of the NewYork netminder’s head and into the netfrom behind the goal line Friday.
A day later at practice, Crosby toldJake Guentzel he nearly sneaked abank shot off of Matt Murray andin. Guentzel, when asked if he mighttry that move, became one of severalPenguins to respond sheepishly.
“I don’t even ever think about that,”Guentzel said. “I just try to look forguys who are open. … Maybe I’ll prac-tice it to start and see what it’s like.Maybe just part of a drill, if a puckgoes behind the net, you just try tothrow it off and see what happens.”
The other member of that line,Conor Sheary, has considered bounc-ing a shot off other parts of a goalie,just never a head.
“I’ve done it definitely, even backto college, but I’m not sure I’ve everscored off of it,” Sheary said. “I canprobably count on two hands howmany times I’ve tried it.”
Bryan Rust and Tom Kuhnhackl saidthey’ve scored accidentally with bankshots in their careers. They considerintentional efforts too brazen for theirplaying styles.
“I guess it’s having the confidenceto be able to think you can hit thatplay,” Rust said. “Because if you shootfrom behind the net and miss, thepuck is more than likely going out ofthe zone and might go for an odd-manrush. … Once you see it go in once,you’re definitely a little more likely tokeep trying it.”
Added Kuhnhackl: “For me, it’dprobably take about 100 tries to getthat shot in.”
Untimely goalsThe New York Rangers became
the latest team to bury a shot in thefinal minute of a period against thePenguins when they scored with 27seconds left in the second and 12seconds remaining in regulation duringSaturday’s game.
Chicago scored with 55 and 16 sec-onds left in the first period Wednes-day. Philadelphia got a goal with 55seconds left in the first March 26. Andthe New York Islanders found the backof the net with five seconds left in themiddle period March 24.
Sullivan tied those mishaps to alarger talking point he has shared withthe Penguins in the past week: Theteam must simplify its game.
“There’s been different circum-stances surrounding (the goals), butthe common theme is that we have tohave a heightened awareness whenwe’re late in periods, that we’re thatmuch more diligent with our play bothwith and without the puck,” Sullivansaid. “This team, for the most part,has been very good about that area ofour game.”
Bill West is a Tribune-Review staff writer.Reach him at [email protected]
or via Twitter @BWest_Trib.
by bILL WEST
Kunitz joins lengthy list of injuredPENGUINS NOTEBOOK
Marc-Andre Fleury (left) has won 18 games this season, and Matt Murray has won 29.GETTY IMAGES
Chris Kunitz missed practice Saturday with a lower-body injury.AP
SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017 · B5
No. 1 guy in Puerto Rico, and thisorganization has meant so much forthe Latin American community andPuerto Rico that it’s a little burdenof responsibility. A little bit morethan usual.”
Cora and Bartee are two of threenew members of Clint Hurdle’s
coaching staff in2017, along withbench coach TomPrince. As two menwho literally stayon the field for ex-actly half of all 162games, Cora (third-base coach) andBartee (first-base
coach) will be the two in-uniformmen representing the Pirates on thegrass more than anyone.
Bartee and Cora replace NickLeyva and Rick Sofield, respectively,in their roles. And while their titlessuggest that waving and holdingrunners are their top professionalpriorities, the men have other tasksthat might not be as high-profile buttake up more of their time.
Cora, 51, is the infield coach af-ter spending 2016 as the Double-AAltoona Curve’s manager duringhis first year as part of the organiza-tion. Bartee, 44, is the outfield andbaserunning coach.
“The players talk about the 7-to-10,”Cora said, referring to 7 p.m. until10 p.m. “The fans see the 7-to-10,but they don’t see the before or theafter. And there’s a lot of before andafter.
“The part of the job to go out thereand coach a base? Yes, it is a big deal,obviously, but as far as physicallyexhausting or whatever? No. But thebefore, working with the infielders
and the position of the infielders, thestudying of the opponent and all thatstuff, that’s the real work.”
The auxiliary tasks of Cora andBartee in working with infieldersand outfielders have taken on extraimportance this spring because ofthe number of utility and super-utility players in camp and the num-ber of players moving to or learningnew positions.
“(Cora) is great. He’s intense, andhe’s really good what he does,” saidAdam Frazier, who started at all fourinfield positions during GrapefruitLeague play.
“He was an All-Star (1997), a first-round guy (1985) and played foreverin the big leagues (11 seasons). Soyou gotta listen. He’s helped me outand (fellow utilityman Phil Gosse-lin) and everybody else. Just around
the bag at second, using your feetand stuff like that. In the short timeI have been here with him I feellike I have gotten a lot better at eachspot.”
Bartee garners similar praisefrom players such as Frazier, JoseOsuna and John Jaso, none of whomconsiders outfield his natural posi-tion but will be expected to play itsome.
But while the work more behind-the-scenes is important, the fans’ire most likely will be directed at asent runner getting thrown out athome or a runner getting pickedoff a base.
And the 2016 Pirates were badrunning the bases. They ranked wellbelow MLB average in metrics suchas outs on the base paths, timesthrown out at home, extra bases
taken percentage, times picked offand times caught stealing.
No team in baseball last season,for example, advanced from first tothird on a single fewer times thanthe Pirates.
“When you’ve got guys that canrun the bases well and they are fast,you’ve got a chance to push the en-velope a little bit more,” Cora said,“so you do it.”
Bartee, who played six seasons inthe majors and stole 259 bases as aprofessional, said he views his pri-mary job during games as remindinghis baserunners of the obvious.
“Just so they can continue to slowtheir mind down and be ready to lettheir instincts play out as a player,”Bartee said. “I don’t want them tojust forget something that may seemreally, really simple to most people,but it changes when you’re betweenthe lines and the game is rolling andthe situation comes up, you mightjust forget the obvious.”
Although they are two of the “newguys” on the major league staff, Bar-tee and Cora entered spring trainingfamiliar with the other coaches.Bartee was hired as the Pirates mi-nor leagues outfield/baserunningcoordinator in 2008.
“I have a history with everyonehere with the exception of Joey, andwe clicked very well last year in theone year that I met him,” Barteesaid. “He was the guy that I watched(play) and loved … He’s teachingme something every day. On and offthe field.
“So the chemistry among all of usis there. It’s good to have, and I’mhaving fun with it.”
Chris Adamski is a Tribune-Review staff writer.Reach him at [email protected]
or via Twitter @C_AdamskiTrib.
New Pirates coaches have work cut outCOACHES · FROM B1
Baserunning blundersThe Pirates did not fare well on the basepaths and in baserunning metricsin 2016 — a phenomenon that likely cost base coaches Nick Leyva andRick Sofield their jobs.
Pirates rankSituation/statistic Pirates MLB avg. (of 30 teams)Outs on the bases 62 54 25th
Times out at home 21 16 T-26th
Extra bases taken percentage 35% 40% 28th
Runners 2+ bases from 1st on single 63 83 T-last
Runners scoring from first on double 32 34 19th
Times picked off 17 12 T-27th
Caught Stealing 45 33 T-26th
Stolen base percentage 71% 72% 13th
Run scored percentage* 30% 30% 12th
* TIMES ANY BASERUNNER EVENTUALLY SCORED A RUN; PIRATES WERE SLIGHTLY BELOW MLBAVERAGE (ABOVE NUMBERS ROUNDED)
Source: baseball-reference.com
Dexter Fowler is going tohave a bunch of old friends onhand for his debut with the St.Louis Cardinals.
The rivalry between theCardinals and Chicago Cubsbegins a new chapter in primetime Sunday. The Cubs are thenew kings of baseball, comingoff their first World Seriestitle since 1908, and the Car-dinals are trying to return tothe playoffs after missing theparty last year.
That would be more thanenough for an intriguingopening day, but then there’sFowler playing his first gamein St. Louis since he signedan $82.5 mil-lion, five-yearcontract withthe Cardi-nals duringfree agency.First up ishis old team,the same onehe helped toa historic championship inNovember.
“Playing against the Cubsis gonna be bittersweet. Obvi-ously, the last game I playedwas with them,” Fowler said.“(But) I’m excited to be in St.Louis and get started on thisside.”
Fowler spent two success-ful years in Chicago, drawingpraise for his presence in theclubhouse and his solid all-around play on the field. TheCubs won 97 games and madeit to the NL Championship Se-ries in his first year with theteam and won the franchise’sthird World Series champion-ship in November.
It looked as if Fowler was onhis way out of Chicago beforelast season, but he re-signedwith the Cubs in a surprisemove during spring training.The center fielder and leadoffhitter batted .276 with 13 hom-ers and a .393 on-base percent-age in 125 games, making theAll-Star team for the first time.
As far as the Game 1 reunionis concerned, don’t expect anyfrosty glares or awkward mo-ments — unless someone istrying to have a little fun withthe other side. Fowler jokedabout tackling Cubs sluggerAnthony Rizzo if he gets onfirst base, and Chicago man-ager Joe Maddon continuedto speak glowingly of Fowler’stime with the team — evenwhile he seemed to be prepar-ing himself for the sight ofFowler in a Cardinals uniform.
“But I’m happy for him. I’mhappy,” Maddon said. “Hetook a chance last year com-ing back to us on the contractthat he did. He nailed it, andhe deserves everything thathe’s getting right now.”
Albert Almora Jr., the sixthoverall pick in the 2012 draft,and veteran Jon Jay takeover for Fowler in center, oneof a precious few questionsfor the loaded Cubs headinginto their title defense. KyleSchwarber gets the first crackat replacing Fowler in leadoffslot, giving the Cubs an impos-ing top third of the lineupalong with NL MVP Kris Bry-ant and Rizzo. Jon Lester, whogets the ball on opening day,leads a deep pitching staff.
Maddon also thinks theteam will handle the mantleof defending champions justfine.
“I think our guys are readyto turn the page and move onto this year,” he said. “We’dlike to do it again. And thenalso not forgetting the previ-ous year. NLCS was prettysolid also. So that’s two yearsin a row we traveled deeplyinto the postseason.
“I don’t think we think thatway for the best way to de-scribe it. I’d be surprised if— that’s not saying we’re go-ing to kill it or somebody’s notgoing to beat us, that’s not mypoint. I just think we’re goingto go into it with the rightmindset.”
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Former Cubs OF linesup with Cards in opener
Fowlerset to faceex-mates
Today’sMLB openers• N.Y. Yankees (Tanaka)at Tampa Bay (Archer),1:10 p.m. (ESPN)• San Francisco(Bumgarner) at Arizona(Greinke), 4:10 p.m.(ESPN2)• Chicago Cubs (Lester)at St. Louis (Martinez),8:35 p.m. (ESPN)
at Boston, allowed four hitsand two earned runs in 22⁄3innings.
“At the end it was a littlesloppy, but I felt like I was justin a little bit of a rush in thestretch,” Kuhl said. “So I’ll goback and do some more workin the bullpen, but other thanthat, it felt good.”
He threw 13 of 23 pitchesfor strikes with one strikeoutand two walks.
“I thought he was woundup a little tight. He hur-ried through his delivery attimes,” Pirates manager ClintHurdle said. “The fight, thebattle, he was always evident.The preoccupation with menon base was a little different.So his walk-away, I think he’sgoing to have some things tounderstand that he can con-trol his adrenaline, he’s goingto maintain his delivery andhis friend’s a sinker.”
In five starts this spring,Kuhl allowed seven earnedruns in 142⁄3 innings for a4.30 ERA.
“You try to leave out all thenoise and what people aresaying, ‘Oh, you have a goodshot at this,’ ” Kuhl said. “AllI know is with talks. It was allgood. It was all positive stuff.So it made it that much easierto just kind of put my headdown and keep working andknow that good things wouldprobably happen.”
The two-game series drew atotal of 95,382 for the Pirates’first games in Montreal since2003.
“It’s unfortunate that it’sjust a short little in-and-outtrip, but it was really cool,”Kuhl said. “It was my firsttime out of the country, so itwas really cool.”
Hurdle said he believed the33-game spring schedule notonly had run its course butalso had served its purpose.
“That’s a full plate and a lotof work days,” Hurdle said.“So I’m happy with all thework, the energy, the competi-tion on the field, the attentionto small details, the groupcohesion, the team bonding,exercise.
“We put a lot of time and ef-fort into scheduling and coor-dinating this spring training,and I think we did a very goodjob of paying attention to theareas we needed to improveupon, getting the people thatare in competition opportu-nities to compete and thengetting the lineup out thereand the men out there thatare going to start the seasonand be the nucleus of thisclub playing and ready to goin health.”
Sean Farrell is a freelance writer.
Kuhl happywith roleon staffPIRATES · FROM B1
MONTREAL — After dealing withthe excitement of being named to thePirates’ starting rotation Friday, TylerGlasnow tried to focus on his finalspring outing.
Glasnow took the loss as the Piratesfell 6-4 to the Toronto Blue Jays atMontreal’s Olympic Stadium on Sat-urday. He entered in the fourth inningand walked Jarrod Saltalamacchia,who then advanced on a wild pitch,and Melvin Upton Jr. homered to left-center field.
Glasnow allowed six hits, including apair of doubles, and three earned runsin three innings.
“I felt good, just elevated a lot ofballs and left a lot of good count — like1-2 count curveballs — for hittablelocations,” Glasnow said. “So I’m nottoo worried. That’s usually not myproblem. Just today, I left the curveballhanging and got myself into trouble.”
Glasnow, who had five strikeouts,said he has learned how to moveforward after tough outings thisspring.
“The biggest thing for me, especiallythose starts, was not only feeling goodon the mound is important but learn-ing how to turn the page,” Glasnowsaid Friday after he was named to therotation. “And this spring especiallyit was easier for me when I had a badstart just because I had a better foun-dation of what I was doing out there.
“It was easier for me not to thinkabout it. I knew I could go out the nextstart and even the bad ones didn’t feelas bad as they did last year. So it washonestly like the bad starts were apositive for me this spring.”
Opening day vibeAndrew McCutchen was glad the
Pirates had an opportunity to playin front of major league-size crowds
at Olympic Stadium to get ready foropening day.
McCutchen was immersed in thatkind of atmosphere while helping theUnited States win the World BaseballClassic, and he said he believes thetwo-game series that drew 95,382can help his Pirates teammates make
the transition from spring training tofacing the Boston Red Sox on Mondayat Fenway Park.
“I played in the Classic, so that wasa transition in itself, but it’s good toget that kind of a game vibe beforeyou have to start the regular season,”McCutchen said.
The two games against Toronto atthe former home of the Expos werethe Pirates’ first games in Montrealsince June 23-25, 2003. The Pirates’road games against the Expos wereplayed in San Juan, Puerto Rico, in2004, the team’s last season in Mon-treal before being relocated to Wash-ington, D.C.
“It’s cool, a lot of history here,”McCutchen said. “I mean, it’s an oldballpark, so it’s nothing that I’m reallyused to. A lot of the ballparks we playin are a lot newer. It’s definitely differ-ent. It’s a fun place to play at.
“The fans seem to embrace thegames here and embrace the history,so it’s been a lot of fun the past dayor so.”
Tough turfAfter experiencing the turf surface
at Olympic Stadium, McCutchen had alot of sympathy for the wear and tearit dealt to Expos outfielders, includingHall of Famers Tim Raines and AndreDawson.
“If you’re a home team trying tosustain 81 games, that will take atoll on your body,” McCutchen said.“That’s why I have more respect forthe guys that did play here in the past,for Tim Raines and for those guys thatwere here. I could only imagine thesurfaces that they had to play on whenthey were here.
“I know myself, having to play onthis for a full season would definitelyput a toll on my body after a while.”
Sean Farrell is a freelance writer.
by SEAN FARRELL
Glasnow learns to move on
PIRATES NOTEBOOK
New No. 5 starter Tyler Glasnow allowed six hits and three runs in three innings Saturday against the Blue Jays.USA TODAY SPORTS
BLUE JAYS 6, PIRATES 4Pirates ab r h bi Toronto ab r h biJ.Mrcer ss 2 0 1 0 K.Pllar cf 2 1 1 0C.Tcker ss 3 1 1 0 Carrera cf 2 0 1 0S.Marte cf 2 0 0 0 Smt Jr. lf 1 0 0 0Frazier cf 1 1 1 1 Dnldson 3b 1 0 0 0Meadows cf 2 0 1 0 D.Brney pr 2 0 1 1McCtchn rf 1 1 0 0 C.Lopes pr 1 0 1 0Jo.Jaso rf 0 0 0 0 Morales 1b 2 0 1 1J.Lplow lf 1 0 0 0 G.Petit pr 3 0 0 0D.Ortiz ph 1 0 0 0 Tlwtzki ss 2 1 1 0D.Frese 3b 1 0 0 0 J.Smoak 1b 2 0 1 0Er.Wood 3b 3 0 1 1 R.Mrtin dh 1 0 1 0J.Osuna dh 3 0 0 0 R.Tllez pr 1 1 1 1M.Suchy ph 1 0 0 0 S.Parce lf 2 0 1 0Hrrison 2b 1 0 0 0 J.Davis cf 2 0 0 0E.Weiss pr 2 0 1 0 Stlmcch c 2 1 0 0Jo.Bell 1b 2 0 1 1 M.Ohlmn c 1 0 0 0A.Hnson lf 2 0 0 0 Upt Jr. rf 2 1 1 3Gsselin lf 2 0 1 0 Parmley rf 2 0 0 0Con.Joe rf 2 0 0 0 R.Goins 2b 2 0 0 0El.Diaz c 2 1 1 0 J.Elmre 3b 2 1 1 0Stllngs c 1 0 0 0Ch.Diaz ph 0 0 0 0Totals 35 4 9 3 Totals 356126Pirates 000 130 000 — 4Toronto 011 201 10x — 6E—Donaldson (2). DP—Pirates 1, Toronto 0. LOB—Pirates 9, Toronto 9. 2B—Tucker (1), Diaz (3),Carrera (3), Morales (4), Tulowitzki (4), Elmore(4). HR—Tellez (1), Upton Jr. (3). SB—Elmore(3). CS—Upton Jr. (2).Pirates IP H R ER BB SOKuhl ............................ 2 2⁄3 4 2 2 2 1Runzler .........................1⁄3 0 0 0 0 0Glasnow L, 1-2 ............. 3 6 3 3 1 5DuRapau....................... 1 1 1 1 0 3Kuchno.......................... 1 1 0 0 0 1Toronto IP H R ER BB SOLiriano ........................ 3 2⁄3 2 1 1 2 4Bolsinger ......................1⁄3 5 3 3 1 1Mayza........................... 1 0 0 0 0 1Stilson W, 1-0 .............. 1 0 0 0 0 1Gonzalez H, 1 ............... 1 0 0 0 0 1Isaacs H, 1.................... 1 1 0 0 0 1Shafer S, 1-1 ................ 1 1 0 0 1 2HBP—by—Kuhl (Martin), Liriano (Harrison).WP—Glasnow, Liriano, Bolsinger, Mayza, Shafer.Umpires—Home, Will Little; First, Clint Fagan;Second, Ryan Blakney; Third, Jordan Baker. T—3:25.A—52,202
Cora
Fowler
B6 · SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017
DALLAS — South Carolinaplayers watched from theirhotel and were shocked alongwith everyone else whenUConn’s record 111-game win-ning streak ended on a buzzer-beating shot by MississippiState’s Morgan William in thewomen’s national semifinals.
Their next reaction mighthave surprised some people:pride and joy, more than re-lief. The Gamecocks werehappy to have an SEC rivalin the NCAA championshipgame and another first-timeparticipant to boot.
“We’re proud an SEC schoolcould do it,” South Carolinaguard Kaela Davis said. “I feelfor (UConn) because for me,I couldn’t imagine the pres-sure kind of riding just withhaving all that on your back.At the same time, I’m proudthat it was an SEC school andproud of the way MississippiState played.”
The Gamecocks also werehappy for William, who tear-fully dedicated a 41-point per-formance in a regional finalwin over Baylor to her latestepfather before the overtimestunner against the four-timedefending champion Huskies.
Now, South Carolina hasto make sure the 5-foot-5 ju-nior doesn’t do it again inSunday’s final, while tryingto go 3 for 3 against the Bull-dogs this season. The first winwas during the regular seasonand the second for the SECTournament title.
“Morgan William is goingto make shots. She’s goingto make plays,” Gamecockscoach Dawn Staley said. “Ifwe can decrease the amountof time that those plays areeasy plays, I think it worksin our favor. But if she’s in agroove, and she’s playing asshe’s played over the past fivegames, it’s going to be a longnight for us.”
Mississippi State coach VicSchaefer is 0-8 against SouthCarolina in five seasons, butboth games this season wereclose. The Bulldogs lost bythree on the road, then hada lead before a four-pointfourth quarter in the SECTournament.
Now it’s a third consecutivegame against a top seed forthe second-seeded team out ofthe Oklahoma City Regional.
“We keep bringing up myhistory with South Carolina,so apparently the fact thatwe’ve never beat them is anissue today,” Schaefer said.“They’ve earned the right tobe here. We’ve come throughan incredibly tough region.”
Mississippi State is thefirst team to win consecu-tive overtime games in theNCAA Tournament, and theBulldogs are 3-1 in the extraperiod this season.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Women’s final isall-SEC matchupSouth Carolina beatMississippi State intwo previous meetings
Mississippi State players celebrate their victory over UConnin the national semifinals Friday.
GETTY IMAGES
STORRS, Conn. — UConnwill return to campus fromthe Final Four on Sunday forthe first time in five yearswithout a national champion-ship trophy.
But it’s not like Hall ofFame coach Geno Auriemmawill return with nothing. Histeam heads into next seasonwith a lot of talent and moreexperience.
Auriemma loses just onestarter, senior point guardSaniya Chong, from a teamthat won its first 36 gamesand completed an NCAA re-cord 111-game winning streakbefore losing to MississippiState, 66-64, in overtime Fri-day night in the nationalsemifinals.
“When we started Oct. 15 towhere we are today … thesekids were way older thanthey were supposed to be,”Auriemma said. “They shouldhave shown their age earlyon in the season, November,December, at some point. Wejust kept playing like older,older players, more matureplayers.”
They will be next season.First-team All-Americans
Katie Lou Samuelson andNapheesa Collier will be ju-niors. Gabby Williams, whomade the second team, andKia Nurse, who made a record22 3-point shots during theNCAA Tournament, will beseniors.
Crystal Dangerfield ,who shared point guardduties with Chong, will be asophomore.
“We’ll talk about it as ateam and make our minds upto have some changes made tocome back as a different team,a better team,” Dangerfieldsaid.
Azura Stevens, a 6-foot-6transfer from Duke, and 6-2Batouly Camara from Ken-tucky will be eligible to playafter sitting out this season.UConn has another top re-cruiting class led by 6-1 Me-gan Walker, the consensusnational high school playerof the year. That group alsoincludes 5-10 guard AndraEspinoza-Walker from NewYork, 6-foot wing Lexi Gordonfrom Texas and 5-10 guard Mi-kayla Coombs from Georgia.
The Huskies remained inDallas on Saturday. With noreason to practice, playersspent the day sightseeing, vis-iting with family and pickingup more individual awards.
Back in Storrs, there wasa sense of shock and disbe-lief at the student union oncampus as fans mulled overthe loss.
“I’m a little disappointed,but I think it kind of had tohappen at some point,” saidJennifer Casparino, a fresh-man. “Everyone was waitingto see how long the streakwould go. But I don’t expectthem to lose again any timesoon.”
The Huskies’ return usu-ally means a parade and aceremony inside the GampelPavilion basketball area. Butthe school had not announcedany plans for any welcome-home festivities Sunday.
“What I always say is thatthis school is cows and basket-ball, so people are definitelygoing to continue to supporttheir basketball team,” fresh-man Lily Edeen said.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
UConn women canstart another streakHuskies returning4 starters, bringingin top recruiting class
For better or worse — and it mightget worse before it gets better — coachKevin Stallings finally can put hisstamp on the Pitt basketball team.
After Pitt’s leading returning scorer,sophomore Cam Johnson, said he istransferring — the aftermath of athree-hour Friday night meeting withStallings — the program hit the wallwith a thud.
Pitt’s 2017-2018 team will be piecedtogether largely with senior-to-be RyanLuther and at least seven newcomers.
Johnson’s departure, first reportedSaturday by the Tribune-Review, im-pacts the program negatively on manylevels.
He started all 33 games this seasonand became one of the best three-pointshooters in the ACC (41.5 percent, fifthin the conference). Plus, Johnson com-bined academic success (3.9 GPA) withgood decision-making on the court,recording more than twice as manyassists (77) as turnovers (38).
Stallings, who was unavailable forcomment Saturday, wanted to buildhis team around Johnson. Instead,Johnson is graduating this month witha degree in communications and canplay immediately for his new school,with two years of eligibility remain-ing. Because he has fulfilled his obliga-tion to Pitt, there are no restrictions onwhere the Moon native can transfer.
“A lot of teams are interested,” John-son’s father, Gil, said Saturday night.
“I will know more when he gets hisrelease from Pitt on Monday.”
The elder Johnson, a former Pittplayer who attended the Friday meet-ing with Stallings, said their conversa-tion with the coach was cordial.
“He had no issues with coach Stall-ings at all,” Gil Johnson said. “Theyhad a plan for him. It was going to becentered around him. But there’s toomuch uncertainty there. He wants towin, and you’re going to have 8-10 newbodies.”
Johnson is one of nine players toleave the program since late in theseason, led by senior starters MichaelYoung, Jamel Artis, Sheldon Jeter and
Chris Jones. Three others join Johnsonas transfers, including Damon Wilsonand Corey Manigault, who barely weretrusted in Stallings’ rotation system.Guard Crisshawn Clark, who missedmost of the season with a knee injury,also announced plans to transfer.
To round out the roster overhaul,Stallings dismissed freshman JusticeKithcart late in the season for violatingteam rules. Kithcart was expected tohandle many of the point guard du-ties, but he ended up averaging only13.3 minutes, 1.3 points and 1.2 assists.
Stallings also lost the athletic direc-tor who hired him last year when ScottBarnes left for Oregon State.
He has kept busy amidst the ad-versity, restocking the roster withseven players who will need to helpimmediately.
But even that’s not enough. Stallingshas indicated there may be future sign-ings of transfers, graduate transfersand/or high school players.
The most experienced of the newfaces are shooting guards Troy Simonsand Jared Wilson-Frame. Simons wasthe second-leading scorer in NJCAADivision 1 (25.7 points per game) forPolk State (Fla.). Wilson-Frame (14.8)played at Northwest Florida State.
They are proven scorers against ju-nior college defenders. Stallings’ taskis to get them ready for the athleticismthey will face in the ACC, which putnine teams in the NCAA Tournamentthis year.
Kevin Gorman and Jerry DiPaola areTribune-Review staff writers. Reach Gorman at
[email protected] or via Twitter@KGorman_Trib. Reach DiPaola at
[email protected] or via Twitter @JDiPaola_Trib.
by JERRy DiPAOLAAnD KEVin GORMAn
Johnson to transfer from PittMoon native is ninth Panthersplayer to leave program sincelate in Stallings’ 1st season
Cameron Johnson started all 33games for Pitt this season. Hefinished fifth in the ACC in 3-pointshooting (41.5 percent).
CHAZ PALLA | TRIBUNE-REVIEW
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. — It became agame-night expectation for Ohio State,during the late 2000s.
ArchieMiller,anintense-but-relatableyoung Buckeyes assistant, was always
in charge of check-ing the updatedbox score duringtimeouts. Miller’sreaction becamepredictable.
“He was responsi-ble for points in tran-sition and countingdeflections. We hadgoals for those kindsof things,” said KyleMadsen, then a play-er at Ohio State. “Itbecame a joke be-tween us. He would
crumble (the box scores) up in disgustand throw them right back at the man-agers and step into the huddle and tell
us, ‘You guys have got to step it up!’ ”This was Archie Miller, at the time
no more than 30 years old. He some-times barely seemed older than theplayers he mentored as part of coachThad Matta’s staff.
He was tough but fair, intense butmotivating, blessed with the rare giftof being able to relate to and bring thebest out of players with a combinationof good cop and bad.
“He’s verypassionate. He’llget in yourface if he has to. He doesn’t hold any-thing back. Whatever needs to be said atthetime,he’ll sayit,” said DallasLauder-dale, another player on those Ohio Stateteams Miller served from 2007-09. “He’sable to identify with players and see thepotential they have so far beyond whatthey could themselves.”
Miller, 38, first broke into coachingas an intern under Herb Sendek, forwhom Miller played at N.C. State.
An undersized point guard (listed ata generous 5-foot-11 by N.C. State) whoplayed for his father, John, a legendaryhigh school coach at Blackhawk, Millerstill sits in the top 10 in numerouscareer lists in Raleigh. In his seniorseason, he helped lead the Wolfpackto the ACC tournament championship
game and the NCAA tournament.His time at Ohio State taught Miller
two enduring lessons he specificallyreferenced in his introductory newsconference Monday.
First, it exposed him to Indianabasketball up close for the first time.Miller became the Hoosiers’ coachlast month.
“My lasting impression here was nineyears ago, in coach (Tom) Crean’s firstyear, when things weren’t off to a goodstart. He had inherited something thatwasn’t very easy to take over,” Millersaid. “I remember being in here andfeeling the power of this building onthat team, and I left saying, ‘I wonderwhat it’s like in there when they’rereally good.’ I’ve always come back tothat.”
And his time under Matta changedhis approach to coaching.
Hard-working, demanding andtough. Outgoing, easygoing and friend-ly. Willing to treat every player thesame. Able to help them bridge the gapbetween potential and production, bybeing tough without being unfair. Ar-chie Miller’s players and former bossesall remember him much the same way.
That’s not by accident.
USA TODAY SPORTS
Indiana’s Miller intense, friendlyBlackhawk product earnedstellar coaching reputationat various Division I stops
run to grab a 67-65 lead with 7 minutes,6 seconds to play.
“When things got tough, we bandedtogether and pulled through,” Wil-liams-Goss said. “There was no wayI was going to come out of the game.This is the last two games of the sea-son. Now we’re 40 minutes from achampionship.”
Collins and Karnowksi then account-ed for the next seven points, includinga 3-pointer by Collins and a thunderingdunk by Karnowski.
Still, South Carolina wasn’t done.The seventh-seeded Gamecocks scoredfive straight to get within 74-72 withjust over 2 minutes left.
PJ Dozier led the Gamecocks with17 points, and Thornwell, the leadingscorer in the NCAA Tournament at
25.8 points per game, finished with 15on 4-for-12 shooting after a slow start.
Karnowski went down in the firsthalf after being poked in the righteye as he took a shot underneath thebasket. Karnowski, who said he wasbothered by some blurred vision, leftfor the last 5 minutes of the half, butCollins picked him up, finishing witheight points at halftime.
Gonzaga reaches NCAA title gameGONZAGA · FROM B1
Gonzaga’s Nigel Williams-Goss celebrates after the Bulldogs defeated South Carolina in their national semifinal.AP
NCAA women’schampionshipSouth Carolina (32-4)vs. Mississippi State(34-4)Time: Today, 6 p.m.TV: ESPNLine: South Carolinaby 3
sports.triblive.comSaturday’sOregon-NorthCarolina gameended too latefor this edition.Visit our websitefor coverage.
SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017 · B7
Two-time NBA scoring championTracy McGrady, Kansas coach BillSelf, former Chicago Bulls executiveJerry Krause and former UConn starRebecca Lobo are part of this year’sBasketball Hall of Fame class.
The Hall of Fame announced the11-person class Saturday.
Others in the class are Notre Damewomen’s coach Muffet McGraw, Texashigh school coach Robert Hughes,former NCAA executive Tom Jernstedt,Harlem Globetrotters player, ownerand CEO Mannie Jackson, formerGlobetrotters player Zack Clayton,former European star Nikos Galis andformer NBA and ABA star GeorgeMcGinnis.
College footballQuarterback Tommy Stuart, a Boise
State transfer, threw two touchdown
passes to Nahari Crawford inDuquesne’s annual spring scrimmage.
BaseballAdrian Beltre, who has been battling
tightness in his right calf, will go onthe disabled list to begin his 20thmajor league season, Texas Rangersmanager Jeff Banister said.
• New York Mets right-hander SethLugo is headed for the disabled list tobegin the season, sources told News-day, which would give Rafael Monterothe final remaining spot in the bullpen.
Pro footballThe San Francisco 49ers signed free
agent running back Tim Hightower.Last season with the New OrleansSaints, he had 133 carries for 548yards and four touchdowns. Headded 22 catches for 200 yards and atouchdown.
SoccerReduced to 10 men in the first half,
the Riverhounds couldn’t hold off oneof USL’s top teams of a season ago.Djiby Fall’s goal 10 minutes into thesecond half was the difference, and FCCincinnati handed the Riverhounds a1-0 defeat at Highmark Stadium.
The turning point came in the 42ndminute, when Riverhounds defenderGale Agbossoumonde was sent offwith his second yellow card after tak-ing down Cincinnati’s Andrew Wiede-man on a counter-attack, 50 yardsfrom goal.
The foul left the Riverhounds(0-1-1) playing down a man for nearly50 minutes.
GolfSung Kang maintained his lead at
the PGA Tour’s Houston Open after
shooting 1-under-par 71. Kang leadsRickie Fowler by three shots as he bidsfor a spot in next week’s Masters.
• Lexi Thompson shot her secondconsecutive 5-under 67 and takes atwo-shot lead into the final round ofthe LPGA’s first major of the season,the ANA Inspiration.
Suzann Pettersen is Thompson’sclosest pursuer (11-under), and InbeePark is among four players anothershot back at 10-under.
• Gene Sauers shot 9-under 63 tomove to 12-under and take a one-shotlead after the second round of theChampions Tour’s Mississippi GulfResort Classic.
Greensburg native Rocco Mediateshot even par to stand at 1-under forthe tournament.
College basketballNew Mexico fired basketball coach
Craig Neal after four years as headcoach and 10 overall with the Lobos.The move comes three weeks afterathletic director Paul Krebs gave Neala vote of confidence following theLobos’ loss in the Mountain WestConference quarterfinals.
TennisJohanna Konta won the biggest title
of her career when she beat CarolineWozniacki, 6-4, 6-3, in the final of theMiami Open.
Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal willmeet in the men’s final.
Auto racingChase Elliott grabbed the lead when
Christopher Bell wiggled with 17 lapsto go and held off teammate JohnnySauter to win the NASCAR truck raceat Martinsville Speedway.
STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS
McGrady, Self lead Basketball Hall of Fame Class of 2017IN BRIEF
ODDSBASEBALLTODAY’S GAMESFavorite Points (O/U) UnderdogYankees ......... -$110 (6.5)...............RAYSGiants............ -$130 (8.0) ........D’BACKSCubs............... -$125 (7.5)............ CARDS
BASKETBALLTODAY’S GAMESFavorite Points (O/U) UnderdogCeltics...............4.5 (NL) ............. KNICKSTHUNDER........5 (214.5) ........... HornetsBUCKS ........... 5.5 (196.5).......MavericksSPURS ............... 6 (NL).....................JazzGrizzlies ...........6.5 (NL) ............ LAKERSHEAT ...............4 (219.5) ...........NuggetsCAVALIERS.... 9.5 (213.5).............PacersHawks ..............4.5 (NL) .................NETSPELICANS........6 (208.5) ................ BullsRAPTORS........11 (212.5) ...............76ersWARRIORS.....10 (223.5) .......... WizardsRockets......... 11.5 (234.5)............. SUNS
COLLEGE BASKETBALLTODAY’S GAMESNCAA TournamentWomen’s finalFavorite Points (O/U) UnderdogS Carolina ........3 (132.0) ..Mississippi St
HOCKEYTODAY’S GAMESFavorite Points (O/U) UnderdogPENS........ -$180/+$160 (5.5)HurricanesHAWKS ...-$150/+$130 (5.5).......BruinsSABRES...-$130/+$110 (5.0)...IslandersCapitals .... -$120/even (5.0)....JACKETSLIGHTNING-$210/+$175 (5.5) .......StarsWILD........ -$280/+$240 (5.5) AvalancheBLUES...... -$140/+$120 (5.0)..PredatorsSharks ..... -$190/+$170 (5.0)..CANUCKSRANGERS -$155/+$135 (5.5)........FlyersFLAMES...-$125/+$105 (5.0)........DucksKINGS...... -$260/+$220 (5.0).....Coyotes
•••Home team in CAPITAL letters(O/U) = over-under
TRANSACTIONSSATURDAY’S MOVES
BASEBALLAMERICAN LEAGUEBOSTON RED SOX — Recalled OF SteveSelsky from Pawtucket (IL). SelectedRHP Ben Taylor to the active majorleague roster. Placed LHPs Roenis Elias,David Price, INF Josh Rutledge, andRHPs Carson Smith and Tyler Thornburgon the 10-day DL. Optioned INF MarcoHernandez to Pawtucket (IL).CHICAGO WHITE SOX — ReassignedRHP Zack Burdi, INF Everth Cabrera,INF Nicky Delmonico, INF Danny Hayes,OF Rymer Liriano and C Kevan Smithto minor-league camp. Assigned LHPGiovanni Soto to Charlotte (IL).HOUSTON ASTROS — Optioned RHPJames Hoyt to Fresno (PCL).LOS ANGELES ANGELS — ReassignedINF Dustin Ackley to minor league camp.Optioned RHP Mike Morin to Salt Lake(PCL).NEW YORK YANKEES — Optioned RHPChad Green to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre(IL). Acquired LHP Tyler Webb as a Rule5 Draft return from Pirates and assignedhim to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL).OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Placed RHPsChris Bassitt, Sonny Gray and DanielMengden, INF Joey Wendle and OF JakeSmolinksi on the 10-day DL, retroactiveto March 30. Reassigned RHPs SimonCastro and Cesar Valdez, C RyanLavarnway, INF Matt Chapman, and OFsJaff Decker and Chris Parmelee to theirminor league camp.TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Signed managerJohn Gibbons to a contract extensionthrough the 2019 season.NATIONAL LEAGUEARIZONA DIAMIONDBACKS — OptionedRHP Silvino Bracho to Reno (PCL).ATLANTA BRAVES — Assigned LHPKevin Chapman outright to Gwinnett(IL).COLORADO ROCKIES — Optioned OFJordan Patterson to Aubuquerque (PCL).LOS ANGELES DODGERS — Optioned3B Chris Taylor, LHP Julio Urias andOF Trayce Thompson to Oklahoma City(PCL).MILWAUKEE BREWERS — Placed RHPMatt Garza and C Andrew Susac on the10-day DL.PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES — DesignatedOF Tyler Goeddel for assignment.Selected the contract of 1B Brock Stassifrom Lehigh Valley (IL).SAN DIEGO PADRES — Optioned INFCory Spangenberg to El Paso (PCL).Designated LHP Keith Hessler forassignment. Placed LHPs BuddyBaumann and Christian Friedrich, RHPCarter Capps and OF Alex Dickerson onthe 10-day DL; Baumann, Friedrich andDickerson retroactive to Thursday, Cappsto Friday. Selected the contract of CHector Sanchez from El Paso.SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS — OptionedLHP Josh Osich, RHP Albert Suarezand OF Kelby Tomlinson to Sacramento(PCL).
FOOTBALLNFLSAN FRANCISCO 49ERS — Signed RBTim Hightower.CFLWINNIPEG BLUE BOMBERS —Announced the resignation of runningbacks coach Avon Cobourne.
HOCKEYNHLNEW YORK ISLANDERS — Recalled FConnor Jones from Bridgeport (AHL).AHLGRAND RAPIDS GRIFFINS — SignedF Tylor Spink to a professional tryoutagreement.ONTARIO REIGN — Returned D CraigWyszomirski to Manchester (ECHL).SPRINGFIELD THUNDERBIRDS —Assigned F Zac Lynch to Manchester(ECHL).ECHLECHL — Suspended Colorado F DarrylBootland one game.ALASKA ACES — Claimed D TimCampbell off waivers from Toledo.CINCINNATI CYCLONES — ClaimedD Tyler Elbrecht off waivers fromManchester (ECHL).FLORIDA EVERBLADES — Released DKyle Pereira.
COLLEGENEW MEXICO — Fired men’s basketballcoach Craig Neal.
TENNISSATURDAY’S MATCHESMIAMI OPENSinglesWomenChampionship• Johanna Konta (10), Britain, def.Caroline Wozniacki (12), Denmark,6-4, 6-3.
BASKETBALLNBAEASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division
W L Pct GBx-Boston.................49 27 .645 —x-Toronto ................46 30 .605 3New York................29 47 .382 20Philadelphia............28 48 .368 21Brooklyn .................17 59 .224 32Southeast Division
W L Pct GBz-Washington.........46 30 .605 —Atlanta ...................39 37 .513 7Miami .....................37 39 .487 9Charlotte ................35 41 .461 11Orlando...................27 50 .351 19.5Central Division
W L Pct GBz-Cleveland.............48 27 .640 —Milwaukee..............40 36 .526 8.5Chicago ...................37 39 .487 11.5Indiana ...................37 39 .487 11.5Detroit....................35 42 .455 14WESTERN CONFERENCESouthwest Division
W L Pct GBz-San Antonio ........58 17 .773 —x-Houston ..............51 25 .671 7.5Memphis ................42 34 .553 16.5New Orleans...........33 43 .434 25.5Dallas .....................31 44 .413 27Northwest Division
W L Pct GBx-Utah ....................47 29 .618 —x-Oklahoma City.....43 32 .573 3.5Portland..................37 38 .493 9.5Denver ....................35 40 .467 11.5Minnesota ..............30 44 .405 16Pacific Division
W L Pct GBz-Golden State .......62 14 .816 —x-L.A. Clippers........47 31 .603 16Sacramento ............29 47 .382 33Phoenix...................22 54 .289 40L.A. Lakers .............21 55 .276 41x-clinched playoff spotz-clinched divisionRESULTS/SCHEDULEFriday’s gamesCharlotte 122, Denver 114Toronto 111, Indiana 100Boston 117, Orlando 116Cleveland 122, Philadelphia 105Memphis 99, Dallas 90Milwaukee 108, Detroit 105 (OT)New Orleans 117, Sacramento 89New York 98, Miami 94San Antonio 100, Oklahoma City 95Utah 95, Washington 88Golden State 107, Houston 98Saturday’s gamesL.A. Clippers 115, L.A. Lakers 104Chicago 106, Atlanta 104Brooklyn 121, Orlando 111Sacramento at Minnesota (n)Phoenix at Portland (n)Today’s gamesBoston at New York, 1 p.m.Charlotte at Oklahoma City, 3 p.m.Dallas at Milwaukee, 3:30 p.m.Memphis at L.A. Lakers, 3:30 p.m.Utah at San Antonio, 3:30 p.m.Atlanta at Brooklyn, 6 p.m.Chicago at New Orleans, 6 p.m.Denver at Miami, 6 p.m.Indiana at Cleveland, 6 p.m.Philadelphia at Toronto, 6 p.m.Washington at Golden State, 8 p.m.Houston at Phoenix, 9 p.m.Monday’s gamesPortland at Minnesota, 7 p.m.NBA LEADERS — THROUGHMARCH 31Scoring
G FG FT PTS AVGWestbrook, OKC ...75 767 6742383 31.8Thomas, BOS........70 634 5522047 29.2Harden, HOU ........76 637 7022216 29.2Davis, NOR ...........72 733 5002003 27.8DeRozan, TOR.......69 676 5061891 27.4Cousins, NOR........70 629 5021886 26.9Lillard, POR ..........70 617 4421871 26.7James, CLE ...........69 676 3301800 26.1Leonard, SAN .......68 590 4491760 25.9Durant, GOL..........59 528 3261494 25.3Irving, CLE ............67 625 2741687 25.2Curry, GOL ............74 623 3091848 25.0Rebounding
G OFF DEF TOT AVGWhiteside, MIA....71 269 730 999 14.1Drummond, DET...76 323 7371060 13.9Jordan, LAC ..........76 278 7601038 13.7Howard, ATL.........69 284 608 892 12.9Gobert, UTA..........75 297 670 967 12.9
BASEBALLMLB SPRING TRAININGRESULTSSaturday’s gamesMiami 3, Detroit 2Toronto 6, Pirates 4Cincinnati 5, CIF 1Boston 4, Washington 4Texas 5, Kansas City 3Milwaukee 5, Chicago White Sox 4San Francisco 6, Oakland 3Seattle 1, Colorado 1L.A. Angels at L.A. Dodgers (n)End of Spring Training Season
MLB REGULAR SEASONSCHEDULEToday’s gamesAmerican LeagueN.Y. Yankees (Tanaka 0-0) at Tampa Bay(Archer 0-0), 1:10 p.m.National LeagueSan Francisco (Bumgarner 0-0) atArizona (Greinke 0-0), 4:10 p.m.Chicago Cubs (Lester 0-0) at St. Louis(Martïnez 0-0), 8:35 p.m.Monday’s gamesInterleaguePirates at Boston, 2:05 p.m.American LeagueToronto at Baltimore, 3:05 p.m.Detroit at Chicago White Sox, 4:10 p.m.Kansas City at Minnesota, 4:10 p.m.Cleveland at Texas, 7:05 p.m.Seattle at Houston, 8:10 p.m.L.A. Angels at Oakland, 10:05 p.m.National LeagueMiami at Washington, 1:05 p.m.Atlanta at N.Y. Mets, 1:10 p.m.Colorado at Milwaukee, 2:10 p.m.Philadelphia at Cincinnati, 4:10 p.m.San Diego at L.A. Dodgers, 4:10 p.m.
NOTICESOUTDOORSRIFLE LEAGUES• In the Pittsburgh and Suburban RifleLeague March 22, Allegheny (7-12)defeated Green Valley (10-9), 1,453-1,452; Frazier-Simplex (18-1) took downIrwin Post 228 (2-17), 1,480-1,388;and Dormont-Mt. Lebanon (16-3) won1,472-883 against Murrysville (4-15).Green Valley’s Logan Charles shot 299for the high score of the week. KatieFrye from Murrysville was the highjunior and lady with a 297, and Frazier-Simplex’s Jim Mounts shot 297 as thehigh senior.HUNTER SAFETY COURSESNote: All hunter safety courses requirepreregistration at www.pgc.state.pa.us.• Collier Sportsmen’s Association,Allegheny County, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. April 2.Class limit 60.• Rockwood American Legion, SomersetCounty, 6-9 p.m. April 4 and 6. Classlimit 60.• Murrysville Gun Club, WestmorelandCounty, 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. April 23. Classlimit 55.• Fairbank Rod and Gun Club, FayetteCounty, 8 a.m.-3 p.m. April 8. Classlimit 50.• Irwin Sportsmen’s Association,Westmoreland County, 8:30 a.m.-4 p.m.April 8. Class limit 40.• Youngwood Sportsmen’s Association,Westmoreland County, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.April 8. Class limit 50.
COLLEGESBASEBALLSaturday’s resultsBethany, W.Va. 2-4, Westminster 1-9Michigan 15, Penn State 2Pitt 9, Duke 8, 10 inn.St. Vincent 8-18, Geneva 7-4Seton Hill 2-0, Mercyhurst 0-4Slippery Rock 17-12, Pitt-Johnstown10-6Thiel 3-4, Grove City 1-3West Virginia 5, Oklahoma State 3
BASKETBALLMENNCAA TournamentFinal fourAt University of Phoenix StadiumGlendale, Ariz.National semifinalsSaturdayGonzaga 77, South Carolina 73North Carolina (31-7) vs. Oregon(33-5) (n)National championshipMondayGonzaga (37-1) vs. North Carolina-Oregon winner, TBAWOMENNCAA TournamentFinal fourAt DallasNational semifinalsFridaySouth Carolina 62, Stanford 53Mississippi State 66, UConn 64, OTNational championshipSundaySouth Carolina (32-4) vs. MississippiState (34-4), 6 p.m.
GOLFWOMEN’SSaturday’s resultsGrove City Invitational1. St. Vincent, 373; 2. Point Park, 401;3. Grove City, 427; 4. Clarion, 440; 5.Waynesburg, 650.
LACROSSEMEN’SSaturday’s resultsAlfred State 16, La Roche 7Robert Morris 13, St. Joseph’s 7St. Vincent 15, Mount St. Joseph 7Seton Hill 8, Roberts Wesleyan 4Thiel 15, Washington & Jefferson 14Transylvania 13, Westminster 8WOMEN’SSaturday’s resultsIUP 18, Shippensburg 5St. Vincent 18, Thomas More 7
SOFTBALLSaturday’s resultsFlorida State 12, Pitt 4Gannon 2-2, Seton Hill 1-0Indiana 6-2, Penn State 1-3Pitt-Johnstown 6-0, Lock Haven 2-4Thiel 10-2, Grove City 2-4Westminster 8-7, Geneva 0-2
TENNISMEN’SSaturday’s resultsGrove City 5, Thomas More 4Houghton 9, Geneva 0WOMEN’SSaturday’s resultsCalifornia, Pa. 6, Clarion 3Duke 7, Pitt 0
GOLFSATURDAY’S SCORESPGA TOURShell Houston Open — Third roundSung Kang ...............65-63-71 — 199-17Rickie Fowler...........64-71-67 — 202-14Russell Henley ........67-67-69 — 203-13Luke List..................68-71-65 — 204-12Rafael Campos ........69-71-68 — 208 -8Daniel Berger ..........70-67-71 — 208 -8Kyle Stanley ............66-71-71 — 208 -8Aaron Baddeley.......68-68-73 — 209 -7Hudson Swafford ....67-67-75 — 209 -7Jhonattan Vegas .....66-74-70 — 210 -6Michael Kim ............70-70-70 — 210 -6Andrew Loupe .........68-70-72 — 210 -6Danny Lee................69-69-72 — 210 -6Stewart Cink ...........66-71-73 — 210 -6Jason Dufner...........68-69-73 — 210 -6J.T. Poston...............70-71-70 — 211 -5Kevin Chappell.........72-71-68 — 211 -5Andy Sullivan ..........68-76-67 — 211 -5Justin Rose .............67-71-73 — 211 -5Zac Blair ..................69-67-75 — 211 -5Harold Varner III .....68-73-71 — 212 -4Robert Garrigus.......68-73-71 — 212 -4Michael Thompson..70-73-69 — 212 -4Jon Rahm ................71-72-69 — 212 -4Charley Hoffman.....71-72-69 — 212 -4Charles Howell III....70-71-72 — 213 -3Bernd Wiesberger ...70-71-72 — 213 -3Billy Horschel ..........68-73-72 — 213 -3Tom Hoge ................67-72-74 — 213 -3D.A. Points ..............68-71-74 — 213 -3Sam Saunders .........71-73-69 — 213 -3Geoff Ogilvy ............68-74-72 — 214 -2Peter Uihlein ...........71-71-72 — 214 -2Nick Taylor...............69-71-74 — 214 -2Patrick Cantlay........70-73-71 — 214 -2Chris Wood..............73-70-71 — 214 -2Keegan Bradley .......67-71-76 — 214 -2Angel Cabrera..........69-69-76 — 214 -2CHAMPIONS TOURMississippi Gulf Resort Classic —Second roundGene Sauers .....................69-63 — 132Miguel Angel Jimenez .....67-66 — 133Glen Day ...........................68-67 — 135Joe Durant........................66-69 — 135Rod Spittle .......................68-68 — 136Bernhard Langer ..............71-66 — 137Scott Dunlap ....................70-67 — 137Kenny Perry......................69-68 — 137Jay Haas...........................67-70 — 137Kirk Triplett......................72-66 — 138Kevin Sutherland .............71-67 — 138Scott McCarron ................73-65 — 138Paul Broadhurst ...............70-68 — 138Billy Mayfair.....................70-68 — 138DistrictRocco Mediate..................71-72 — 143LGPA TOURANA Inspiration — Second rounda-amateurLexi Thompson ............. 69-67 — 136 -8Michelle Wie ................ 68-69 — 137 -7Sung Hyun Park............ 68-69 — 137 -7So Yeon Ryu ................. 68-69 — 137 -7Suzann Pettersen......... 68-69 — 137 -7Ha Na Jang................... 70-68 — 138 -6Minjee Lee.................... 70-68 — 138 -6Nelly Korda................... 69-69 — 138 -6Inbee Park .................... 69-69 — 138 -6Cristie Kerr................... 67-71 — 138 -6Moriya Jutanugarn....... 69-70 — 139 -5Pornanong Phatlum ..... 72-68 — 140 -4Paula Creamer.............. 70-70 — 140 -4Candie Kung ................. 70-70 — 140 -4Lydia Ko........................ 70-70 — 140 -4Ariya Jutanugarn ......... 70-70 — 140 -4Charley Hull.................. 68-72 — 140 -4
Auto racingNASCAR CUP SERIES
2 p.m. STP 500. FS1NHRA
6 p.m. Denso Spark Plugs nationals. FS1
BaseballCOLLEGE
4 p.m. Arkansas at Alabama. SEC NetworkMLB
1 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Tampa Bay. ESPN4 p.m. San Francisco at Arizona. ESPN28:30 p.m. Chicago Cubs at St. Louis. ESPN
BasketballCOLLEGE WOMEN
6 p.m. NCAA championship, South Carolina vs.Mississippi State. ESPN
NBA1 p.m. Boston at N.Y. Knicks. WTAE-4, WATM-233:30 p.m. Utah at San Antonio. WTAE-4,
WATM-236 p.m. Denver at Miami. NBATV9 p.m. Houston at Phoenix. NBATV
Figure skatingISU
2 p.m. World championships, exhibition. NBCSN
GolfCHAMPIONS TOUR
3 p.m. Mississippi Gulf Resort Classic final round.GOLF
LPGA TOUR5 p.m. ANA Inspiration Major Championship final
round. GOLFPGA TOUR
1 p.m. Shell Houston Open final round. GOLF3 p.m. Shell Houston Open final round. WPXI-11,
WJAC-6, WTOV-9
HockeyNHL
12:30 p.m. Boston at Chicago. WPXI-11, WJAC-6,WTOV-9
5 p.m. Carolina at Penguins. Root Sports/105.9FM, Penguins Radio Network
7:30 p.m. Flyers at New York Rangers. NBCSN
LacrosseCOLLEGE MEN
7 p.m. Duke at North Carolina. ESPNU7 p.m. Ohio State at Penn State. Big Ten Network
SoccerBUNDESLIGA
9:30 a.m. Mainz at Ingolstadt. FS111:20 a.m. Wolfsburg at Leverkusen. FS2
ENGLISH PREMIER8:30 a.m. Middlesbrough at Swansea City.
NBCSN11 a.m. Manchester City at Arsenal. NBCSN
MLS9 p.m. New England at Portland. ESPN2
SoftballCOLLEGE
Noon Auburn at Georgia. SEC NetworkNoon Iowa at Purdue. Big Ten Network2 p.m. Kentucky at Mississippi. SEC Network2 p.m. Northwestern at Michigan. Big Ten
Network2 p.m. Notre Dame at Louisville. ESPNU7 p.m. Texas A&M at South Carolina. SEC
Network
TennisATP
1 p.m. Miami Open men’s final. ESPN2
SPORTS BROADCASTS
MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Jamie McMurrayhas become the “other” driver on Chip GanassiRacing’s two-car team.
The 40-year-old veteran, in his 15th seasonon NASCAR’s top circuit, hasn’t won in morethan four years. His teammate is 24-year-oldKyle Larson, the early points leader and oneof racing’s rising stars.
But McMurray is enjoying a resurgence withthree top-10 finishes in the first five races, goodfor sixth in the standings heading into Sun-day’s 500-lap race at Martinsville Speedway. It’sa track where McMurray has finished secondtwice but never won.
“Here and Sonoma are kind of the two tracksto me that every year that I look the most for-ward to going to because I feel like I’ve alwaysqualified really well at them, and I’ve raced re-ally well,” McMurray said Saturday. “Honestly,I really don’t feel like I’ve gotten the finishes Ideserved at those two tracks.”
His second-place finishes on the 0.526-mileoval came 11 years apart, and he came up shortagainst two of the best at Martinsville. JimmieJohnson beat him in 2004 and Jeff Gordon in’15. Both Hendrick Motorsports drivers havenine victories on the oldest and shortest trackon NASCAR’s top series.
McMurray will start sixth, his sixth top-10start in as many races this year. He alwayswatches the previous year’s race in prepara-tion, but he’s philosophical about how much hecan control. Gordon had probably a fifth-placecar when he won in 2015, McMurray said, butvariables come into play late in every race.
“I think we’ll have a chance to win,” he said.“Are the circumstances going to play out? Idon’t know, but in three weeks, we might gosomewhere and have the fifth-best car and wemight win there.”
The improvements in his team, McMurraysaid, have been three years in the making, orsince he started working with crew chief MattMcCall. Some changes in the offseason alsomade their midweek work more beneficial.
“We changed the structure of our weeklyprocedure at the shop on meetings. We changeda lot of things and tweaked on it, and I feelthat’s really helped our performance,” Mc-Murray said.
He even changed the day he comes into therace shop because he didn’t feel he was usinghis time “efficiently or effectively.”
The changes haven’t been sweeping, but “10little things that I feel have made a difference.”
A 117-race winless streak can cause whispersabout whether a driver’s best days are behindhim. McMurray doesn’t necessarily think run-ning well prolongs a driver’s career. But hiscurrent success makes him feel all the workis paying off.
“It just seems like every week we get a littlequicker in relation to the other cars on thetrack,” he said. “It’s so much fun to come everyweek when you can compete and run as wellas we have.”
When the time comes to walk away, McMur-ray has what he thinks is a clear picture ofhow it will go.
“I have every intention of being RickyRudd,” he said.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
McMurraystill confidenthe can compete
Jamie McMurray has three top-10 finishes inthe first five races this season.
AP
Ganassi driver off to solid start butstill winless in more than 4 years
B8 · SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017
Maybe you’ve heard Pennsylvania GameCommissioners approved hunting with semi-automatic rifles starting this fall for smallgame, predators and varmints but not forbig game.
But have you heard why?The people spoke. Namely, the older people.They won’t be around forever, so there’s a
good chance these rules won’t be, either.That’s what commissioners seem to think,
anyway.Late last year, lawmakers removed the
state’s prohibition on hunting with semiauto-matic rifles, opening the door for commission-ers to incorporate them into seasons. Initially,board members said they’d go slowly, likelyallowing them only in spots.
They changed direction in January.Agency staff looked at the safety record of
hunters using semiautomatics in other states,specifically those adjacent to Pennsylvaniaand those similar to it in terms of hunter den-sities. That work, commissioners said, showedsemiautomatics are no more or less dangerousin the woods than any other type of firearm.
So they gave preliminary approval to al-low semiautomatics for hunting all species,including big game such as deer, bears, tur-keys and elk.
The majority of hunters contacting thecommission since supported the idea.
As of this past week, about 850 people hadwritten in support of the proposal, comparedto 220 or so against, said Steve Smith, directorof the commission’s bureau of informationand education.
A random survey of licensed hunters pro-duced opposite results, though.
The commission sent a questionnaire to 4,000adult hunters, residents and non-residents,who had a license last fall, said Coren Jagnow,chief of the commission’s research and educa-tion division. Just more than 2,000 responded.
Fifty-five percent said they supported orstrongly supported the notion of allowingsemiautomatics for furbearers, she said, com-pared to 34 percent who opposed or stronglyopposed it. Eleven percent had no opinion.
Fifty-one percent were OK with usingthem for groundhogs, compared to 37 percentagainst, and 42 percent supported them forsmall game compared to 46 percent against.
The real difference came with big game.Jagnow said 28 percent of respondents
supported or strongly supported allowingsemiautos for big game hunting. But 64 per-cent opposed it, with 52 percent saying they
were strongly opposed.That convinced commissioners to back off.“We listened to the public,” said commission
president Brian Hoover of Delaware County.“We saw the survey. We saw what the num-
bers were,” agreed commissioner Tim Laytonof Somerset County. “It was pretty cut anddry at that point.”
So far, anyway.As of now, the rules say semiautomatic
rifles are legal for small game provided theyare .22 caliber or smaller. They’re allowed forgroundhogs and furbearers with no caliberrestriction.
There is no restriction on magazine capac-ity in any case.
Commissioners said they have no specificplans to reintroduce the idea of semiauto-matic rifles for big game.
That’s what some still want. The NationalRifle Association this past week emailedmembers urging them to contact the commis-sioners, asking them to change their mindsagain at their June meeting.
But commissioners said they think semi-autos may come to Pennsylvania big gameseasons eventually. They noted their surveyshowed opposition to hunting big game withsemiautomatics was strongly age-related.
“The older they get, the less likely they areto support it,” Jagnow agreed.
That hints at what’s perhaps to come,Layton said.
Some hunters surely will use semiautomat-ics for small game, coyotes and groundhogs,he said. If they do so safely, “that might be thebridge to using them for big game as peopleget more comfortable with them.”
“I don’t think the semiauto question is goingto go away,” Layton said. “I think it’s goingto be in the forefront for a while because ouryounger hunters, they’re used to that format ofrifle. They’re going to continue to request it.”
They’ve got some work to do, Daley said.Commissioners themselves largely were
opposed to semiautos for big game initially, hesaid. They changed their minds after comingto understand their safety record and otherbenefits, he added.
Some other hunters haven’t had that same“awakening,” though.
He suggested proponents of semiautos needto educate their fellow hunters so that theyget on board.
“There are a lot of benefits to them. Buta lot of hunters don’t understand that yet,”Daley said. “And if they don’t understand it,we’re not going to force it down their throats.”
Bob Frye is the Tribune-Review outdoors editor. Reach him at412-216-0193 or [email protected]. See other stories,
blogs, videos and more at everybodyadventures.com.
TIP OF THE WEEK It’s the chalk on a turkey box call that makes sound when the wooden pieces are rubbed together. It wears off over time and eventuallyneeds to be replaced. Do not to use school chalk. It has oils and will gum up the pores in the woods. Use call chalk, which is more like carpenter’s chalk.
LURE OFTHE WEEKAuthentX MoxiSugg. retail price: $3.99 for an eight-packCompany: B-Fish-N Tackle(customjigs.com/bfishn-tackle/)Lure type: Soft plastic swimbaitSizes and colors: Available in 3- and 4-inchmodels in 18 colorsTarget species: Walleyes, sauger, white bass,crappies, perch
Technique: These work best when outfittedwith a jig head and jigged in deep pools. Theyalso will work when put on a jig and swumover gravel or sand bottoms. Either way,the key to the bait’s attraction is its design.Deep ribs displace a lot of water and createvibration, while the body’s extra-soft mate-rial makes it react under water with even theslightest movement.Notable: Designed originally for river walleyeanglers, these lures catch other fish in otherconditions, too. They’re available in packs ofeight, 16, 64 and 96.
OUTDOORSby
BOB FRYE
by bOb FRyE
The rules of nowSome semiautos coming to Pa.’swoods this year, but what’s next?
Semiautomaticrifles are
now legal tohunt with in
Pennsylvania,at least for
some species.Hunters can usethem to pursue
small game,woodchucks
and predators.BOB FRYE | FOR THE TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Outdoors books worth a lookI f you’re a book nut like I
am, sometimes the nextbest thing to being out-
doors is reading about it.A good tale can inspire
you to get out more, tobetter appreciate each tripafield, even educate you onhow to enjoy a bit more suc-cess, sometimes all at once.
Three books I’ve seenrecently captured myattention.
• Keystone Fly Fishing(Headwaterbooks.com, $29.95, 586 pages,paperback).
The statewide fly fishingguide is a rather familiarvehicle. Countless havebeen written.
There are some uniquethings about this one thatmake it stand out, though.
For one thing, it’s not thework of one angler-author,but nine. For another,it’s not just about trout.There’s information onhow and where to catch ev-erything from smallmouthbass and northern pike tocarp and even bowfin.
“It’s not just a fly fishingguide or a trout guide.It’s a fishing guide,” saidLen Lichvar of SomersetCounty, a member of Penn-sylvania Fish and BoatCommission and one of thebook’s authors.
Included with the de-scriptions on each wateris information on access,
what flies and other gear touse and a little bit of whatit feels like to be there.There are maps, too, andphotos, most so stunninglybeautiful that they alonemake you want to pack upthe rod and go.
• Blood on the Leaves(Lyons Press, $16.95, 310pages, paperback).
There was a time, appar-ently, when shootings thatoccurred in the woods weretreated as just huntingaccidents. Investigationsoften were incomplete.
That’s changing.Written by three state
wildlife agency profes-sional hunting accidentinvestigators, this bookshows how modern situ-ations typically are morehandled like cases of CSIin the woods.
The book examines anumber of accidents —and some shootings not soaccidental — and explainshow officers determinedwho shot who and why. Thewho-done-its make somegood mystery reading.
The book will get youthinking safety before youpull that next trigger.
• Turkey Men (WildRiver Press, $49.95, 210pages, hardcover).
This one is for the diehardturkey hunter. Not just be-cause of the price — that’stypical of what hardback,full-color books go for — butbecause of the content.
It includes interviewswith six men, two of themnative Pennsylvanians, whoachieved what’s known asthe “U.S. Wild Turkey SuperSlam.” That involves killinga bird in the 49 states thathave turkeys (Alaska is theexception).
How rare is that? Ac-cording to author ThomasPero, 235 times more peoplehave climbed to the topof Mt. Everest than haverecorded a super slam.
There’s an introductionto each hunter, then hisstory, presented in a ques-tion-and-answer format.The effect is to hear eachone explain his adventuresin his own language.
It’s fascinating to seehow the men are differentand how, often, the same.
Bob Frye is the Tribune-Reviewoutdoors editor. Reach him at
412-216-0193 or [email protected] other stories, blogs, videos andmore at everybodyadventures.com.
5L
E
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIISUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017
SECTION C
An award-winning big game hunterwho founded the Greensburg-basedThree Rivers Dental Group is tangledin a federal court battle in Californiawith an international safari organiza-tion in an attempt to clear his name ina long-running scandal.
The Ninth Circuit Court of Appealsin California last month rejected a re-quest by Dr. Lawrence P. Rudolph, a lo-cal television pitchman for his dentalpractice, to dismiss a federal invasion-of-privacy lawsuit filed against him by
Safari Club Interna-tional and one of itsleaders.
Rudolph, 62 ,claims 300 big-gamespecies kills and nu-merous internation-al hunting awards.He was a Safari Clubmember for about 30
years and from 2009 to 2011 served aspresident of the sport hunting andwildlife conservation organizationwith more than 50,000 members and200 chapters worldwide.
But in 2012, club leaders voted himout and stripped him of his huntingawards over allegations that he usedhis title to commit adultery.
After Rudolph was expelled, he fileda defamation claim against club of-ficers in U.S. District Court in Pitts-burgh andlater inCasper, Wyo.,wherethe vote to oust him was taken. Bothcourts dismissed Rudolph’s claimsagainst specific club officers, but thelitigation in Pittsburgh is proceedingagainst the club.
In its California lawsuit, the cluballeges that Rudolph, its one-timechief communications officer, wasnegligent and damaged its reputation.The lawsuit seeks unspecified civildamages.
by PAUL PEIRCE
Big game hunter continues efforts to clear nameYouTube video at issue in damages claimbrought against ex-Safari Club president
Lawrence Rudolph and his late wife Bianca Finizio Rudolph wereaccomplished hunters and environmental philanthropists.
SUBMITTED
Rudolph
RUDOLPH · C5
State officials are askingPennsylvania’s congressionaldelegation to continue to funda key assistance program af-ter President Trump’s call forits elimination.
Trump has proposed elimi-nating funding the Low-In-come Home Energy Assis-tance Program, commonlyknown as LIHEAP.
Commissioners from thestate Public Utility Commis-sion sent letters to the con-gressional delegation seek-ing support for the safety netprogram. Gov. Tom Wolf hassought support for the pro-gram and has extended thedeadline to apply for assis-tance until Friday.
More than 11,000 house-holds in WestmorelandCounty use LIHEAP. It ranksas the fourth-highest countyin terms of households par-ticipating in LIHEAP behindPhiladelphia, Allegheny andLuzerne counties.
State officials say weatherand the local economy couldaccount for the high num-ber of applicants from West-moreland County. Householdsreceiving LIHEAP have in-comes below 150 percent ofthe federal poverty level.
The program helps 345,000Pennsylvanians, includingseniors, children and indi-viduals with disabilities, heattheir homes in the winter. It’savailable to homeowners andrenters, and the grant goes di-
rectly to the utility company,according to PUC.
The LIHEAP program hasenjoyed bipartisan supportin Washington and from stateofficials since its inception inthe early 1970s.
Additionally, PUC com-missioners pressed for sup-port for the WeatherizationAssistance Program (WAP).They say it has helped 1,500low-income homes increaseenergy efficiency and safety.WAP gives priority to the el-derly, those with a disability,families with children andhigh-energy users.
Kevin Zwick is a Tribune-Review staffwriter. Reach him at 724-850-2856 or
by KEVIN ZWICK
State officials push to save heating aidProgram Trump called to cut helps 345K Pennsylvanians
EASTER CHEERJase Harris, 3, of Vandergrift and Ty Thomas, 4, of Plum play together Saturdayduring the Easter Egg Hunt at Union Presbyterian Church in Murrysville. The eventincluded crafts, pizza and games.
JAN PAKLER | FOR THE TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Pennsylvanians will be allowed to use semiauto-matic rifles to hunt small game and furbearers as thestate becomes the last to end an outright ban on a classof firearms some sportsmen favor because it lets themtake a faster follow-up shot.
The change approved last week by the PennsylvaniaGame Commission will start with the 2017-18 huntingseason and does not allow sportsmen to take deer, tur-key and other big game with semiautomatic rifles. Theagency said a majority of hunters it surveyed opposedallowing semiautomatic rifles for big game.
The survey of more than 2,000 randomly sampledhunters from across the state showed “clear support”for allowing the firearms to be used to hunt smallgame — such as wild ducks, squirrels and rabbits —and for furbearers. Furbearers are animals, includingraccoons, foxes and skunks, that are trapped or valuedfor their fur.
Joe Misczak, owner of Misczak’s Hunting Suppliesin East Deer, called thechange “a good thing.”
“If you are huntingsomething that moves,you want a semiauto-matic,” he said. “Penn-sylvania is behind on alot of things; it’s abouttime they caught up onthis.”
Hunters who supportsemiautomatics say itallows them to respondquickly if they need to
take additional shots to kill game. They argue thatmanual-action firearms could allow an injured animalor bird to escape and suffer. Critics worry about safetyand whether quick-fire weapons are needed to hunt.
Semiautomatics are a class of firearms that utilizea cycle of mechanical operations to fire a round, ejectits casing and feed a new round into the weapon’schamber with each pull of the trigger. Manual fire-arms require the user to operate the action to feed newrounds after each shot, leading to a slower rate of fire.
The game commission’s changes were made afterthe state Legislature last year cleared the way for theagency to lift the ban on the use of semiautomaticrifles for hunting and Gov. Tom Wolf signed the billinto law.
The commission initially planned to allow semiau-tomatic rifles for hunting big game but pulled backafter hearing from hunters.
The agency said 62 percent of hunters it surveyeddid not support the use of semiautomatics duringbig game seasons. Of that 62 percent, 52 percent werestrongly opposed.
“We listened to our hunters,” President Commis-sioner Brian Hoover said.
Hunters hadhand in rulesadjustmentsby MATTHEW MEDSGER
Semiautomatics approvedfor small game, furbearers
CHANGES · C9
Chad Orozoski of Greensburg prepares to release the rainbow trout he caught Friday in the rain at Twin Lakes Park.KEN REABE JR. | FOR THE TRIBUNE-REVIEW
The mild winter is over, andit’s time for the next season.
For some, though, springisn’t the season that followswinter — it’s allergy season.
About one in 10 people arebothered by seasonal allergies,according to the Centers forDisease Control and Preven-tion.
A winter like this year’s,with multiple record-breakingwarm days and less-than-aver-age snowfall, may be good forthose who hate the cold.
But for those who sufferfrom seasonal allergies, it’s adouble-edged sword.
Dr. Michael Palumbo, ofPittsburgh-based Allergy andClinical Immunology Asso-ciates, said winter weatherhas a dramatic effect on theseverity and length of the ac-companying allergy season.
“In general, when we have amilder winter it leads to a lon-ger allergy season in spring,”he said.
But, Palumbo said, it canlead to a milder one.
“We already saw appreciablepollen counts in February,”Palumbo said. “This usuallyleads to a longer but moresteady pollen season withoutas many really severe days.”
Pollen.com, a website thatprovides localized pollen re-ports, forecasts very high lev-els of pollen in the region thisweekend.
With tissues in hand andbehind bloodshot eyes, AhmedAli, 28, of New Kensington-said his allergies already havekicked up.
“I think I’m allergic to, like,everything in Pennsylvania,”he said. “I swear, literally ev-
ery plant in this state is tryingto kill me right now. I just wakeup miserable.”
Palumbo says cabin fever,the feeling of having beencooped up indoors for too long,can be tough on allergy suf-fers.
“We can’t wait to throw thosewindows open in the spring toallow the warm breezes in, butthe pollen blows in on thosebreezes,” he said.
Palumbo recommends notopening windows until afterthe early morning hours,when pollen is most prevalent.
There are steps parents cantake to help protect their chil-dren.
“Kids who have significant
spring allergies need to starttaking their allergy medicinesbefore pollen season startsand daily through the sea-son,” Palumbo said. “Afterthey have been outside play-ing, they need to come in andwash their face and rinse theirhair thoroughly.”
Children with spring aller-gies should never go to sleepin the clothes that they woreoutdoors,” Palumbo said.
The worst part of springJust as allergies and spring
follow winter, so too does an-other season — pothole season.
But according to ValeriePeterson, a PennDOT spokes-woman, the winter hasn’t leftbehind quite as many potholesas it could have.
“We are continuing to fightpotholes every day, but wewould consider this to be aslightly milder pothole seasoncompared to last year,” shesaid.
by MATTHEW MEDSGER
Drawbacks to warmthAllergy sufferers, drivers brace for springtime pollen, potholes
Find a pothole?PennDOT wants to know.
Call: 1-800-FIX-ROAD (1-800-349-7623)Online: go to http://www.penndot.gov/ and then click onSubmit Roadway Feedback
SPRING · C9
“If you are huntingsomething that moves, youwant a semiautomatic.Pennsylvania is behind ona lot of things; it’s abouttime they caught up onthis.”
JOE MISCZAKOWNER OF MISCZAK’S HUNTING
SUPPLIES IN EAST DEER
C2 · SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017
Donald J. AstonYOUNGWOOD
Donald J. Aston, 76, ofYoungwood, died Thursday,March 30, 2017. He was bornMay 21, 1940, in Greensburg,a son of the late James “Pro”and Virginia Hayden Aston.Don was retired from Sterling-Lebanon Packaging. He wasa member of the TeamstersLocal Union 30 of Jeannette.He enjoyed camping andspending precious time withhis family. In addition to hisparents, he was predeceasedby two brothers, John andArthur Aston. He is survivedby his first love and wife of60 years, Margaret A. Har-baugh Aston; eight children,Donald (ex-wife, Mary Jane)Aston Jr., of New Mexico,Denise Clark, Donna Barn-hart, Margie Wiltrout, Larry(Chris) Aston, Bill (Tracy) As-ton, Tim (Michele) Aston andSteve Aston, all of Greens-burg; 18 grandchildren; and24 great-grandchildren. Hewill be greatly missed by allwho loved him. Family andfriends will be receivedfrom 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m.Sunday at BARNHART FU-NERAL HOME, 505 EastPittsburgh St., Greensburg.A funeral service will beheld at 11 a.m. Monday inthe funeral home. Inter-ment will follow in West-moreland County Memo-rial Park, Greensburg.For online condolences, visitBarnhartFuneralHome.com.
Marsha A.(Wawrzeniak)
BazylakNORTH VERSAILLES
Marsha Ann (Wawrzeniak)Bazylak, 74, of North Ver-sailles, passed away Friday,March 31, 2017, surrounded byher family, after successfullywinning the fight against lungcancer. She was born Sept. 7,1942, in Glassport. She was pre-ceded in death by her parents,Olga and Frank Wawrzeniak;stepfather, Stanley Wawrze-niak; sister, Francis Marie; andbrother, Francis. A graduate ofMontefiore Nursing School in
1963, Marshawas an oper-ating roomnurse for 42years at Mc-Keesport Hos-pital. She wasa member ofCorpus Chris-
ti Parish and a member of theEast Allegheny AARP, whereshe served as president. In ad-dition, she was an active mem-ber of the YMCA in Wilmerd-ing. Marsha was known as the“official neighborhood nurse”and enjoyed traveling, polkamusic/dancing, spending timewith her friends and watchingher grandchildren in their ac-tivities. Marsha is survived byher husband of 54 years, TomBazylak; daughters, Sue (Bob)Svec and Patty Colorito; grand-children, Tom, Heather, Bobbyand Ashley Svec, and Ava andDante Colorito; sister, Carol(Jim) Bradley; brother, Richard(Rose) Wawrzeniak; and sev-eral nieces and nephews. Inlieu of flowers, donations canbe made in Marsha’s memoryto the East Allegheny AARPc/o 1415 Greensburg Ave.,North Versailles, PA 15137 orthe Hillman Cancer Center,5115 Centre Ave., Pittsburgh,PA 15232. Marsha’s familywould like to thank the doctorsand nurses of the Hillman Can-cer Center, UPMC Shadyside,UPMCPresbyterianandUPMCMcKeesport (CCU and 3 Mans-field) for their excellent andcompassionate care that shereceived while in their care.Friends are welcome from 1to 8 p.m. Sunday, April 2, atthe GILBERT FUNERALHOME AND CREMATORYINC., 1638 Lincoln Way,White Oak, 412-672-6322,Troy J. Gilbert, director.Mass of Christian Burialwill be celebrated at 10 a.m.Monday, April 3, at CorpusChristi Parish, with the Rev.Steven M. Palsa officiating.Condolences may be madeat gilbertfuneralhomeandcrematory.com.
Jay N.R. BoydNORTH HUNTINGDON
Jay Neil Raymond Boyd, 46,of North Huntingdon, diedTuesday, March 28, 2017. Hewas the beloved father ofBryan Boyd; loving son ofWilliam (Linda) Boyd, andKaren Boyd; brother of Eric(Amanda) Boyd and Melissa(Chase) Kenderes. Funeralservices will be private.THOMAS L. NIED FUNERALHOME INC., 7441 WashingtonSt., Swissvale, is in chargeof arrangements. www.niedfuneralhome.com.
Thomas J. DentHARRISON CITY
Thomas J. Dent, 68, of Har-rison City, passed away Friday,March 31, 2017. He was bornMay 2, 1948, in Greensburg, ason of the late William A. Sr.,and Helen R. Duckworth Dent.Prior to his retirement, Tomwas a network engineer forUnisys Corp. in Bluebell. Tomenjoyed the outdoors and wasan avid fisherman. He is sur-vived by a daughter, HeatherTanyer, and husband, Vince,of Penn Township; grandchil-dren, Skye and Joseph Tanyer;brothers, William A. Dent Jr.,and wife, Daneen, of Trafford,and Robert Dent, and wife,Joyce, of Jeannette; nieces,Christine Elias, and husband,Mike, Lisa Dent, and BrandiBinakonsky, and husband, Jer-emy; nephews, Michael Dent,and wife, Jacqueline, andRobert Dent Jr.; and a godson,Jimmy Raby. Friends will bereceived from 2 to 4 and 6 to8 p.m. Monday in the JOHNV. GRAZIANO FUNERALHOME INC., 228 North 2ndSt., Jeannette. A blessingservice will take place at10 a.m. Tuesday in the fu-neral home chapel. A privateinterment will take placein Jeannette Catholic Cem-etery, Hempfield Township.
Patricia L. FullemGREENSBURG
Patricia L. Fullem, 87, ofGreensburg, died Thursday,March 30, 2017. She was bornAug. 3, 1929, in Greensburg, adaughter of the late Charlesand Ida Morgan Hamilton. Inadditiontoherparents,shewaspredeceased by her husband,Clyde E. Fullem Jr.; and aninfant sister, Shirley SelaineHamilton. She is survived bytwo sons, Edward C. Fullem,of Greensburg, and DerrickW. Fullem, of New Stanton;two daughters, Cindy J. (Ray)Resavy, of Youngwood, andLisa S. Dressler and fiance,Randy Page, of Hunker; sixgrandchildren, Michael (Lind-sey), Danielle (Todd), Nick,Austin, Brett and Lisa; fourgreat-grandchildren, Selaine,Keegan, Ashlyn and Brean-na; a brother, Charles (Joan)Hamilton, of Sun City West,Ariz.; her best friends, DeeDee and Mary Jane; and hercat, “Kitty.” There will be nopublic visitation or service.A private memorial servicewill be held at a later date.Should friends desire, memo-rial contributions may be madeto the Alzheimer’s Association,1100 Liberty Ave. Suite E 201,Pittsburgh, PA 15222. For on-line condolences, visit www.BarnhartFuneralHome.com.
Edward GrahamGREENSBURG
Edward Graham, 83, ofGreensburg, son of the lateEliza Jane Evans Graham andLawrence Graham, passedaway at his home, KildonanFarm, Thursday, March 30,2017. Ed was born March 26,
1934, in Win-nipeg, Cana-da. His farm-ing familymoved to thetown of Mich-igan, NorthDakota, whenhe was a boy.
He left North Dakota to servein the Army in Korea. Afterearning an honorable dis-charge in 1953, he attended col-lege, graduating from CornellUniversity with a degree inBusiness Economics. EdwardGraham wanted to be remem-bered as a stockman, plants-man and salesman. His firstcareer was as a salesman forCommerce Clearing House inthe greater Pittsburgh region.His work included providinglaw firms and certified publicaccountants with up-to-datelaw, tax and accounting books.In his second career, Ed becamea stockman. A lifelong connois-seur of sheep and cattle, heleased farmland in Torrancebefore purchasing the propertyin Greensburg, which he re-named Kildonan Farm afterthe area in Winnipeg where hewas born. He raised Anguscattle and English Dorsetsheep. He joined the Westmore-land Cattleman’s Associationand served as the Association’s
secretary for 25 years. In theearly 1990s, Ed began courtingHolly O’Donnell, a Pittsburghnative living in Mt. Pleasant.They were married in 1993. Thetwo honeymooned in the Ches-apeake Bay area, a region towhich they regularly returnedfor vacation and to visit thearea’s cattle farms. Ed was astudentof businessandpoliticswho read history and biogra-phy -- especially the history ofWorld War II and Nazi Germa-ny. An avid follower of currentaffairs and the stock market, heformed well-considered judg-ments of the world and heldforth with friends and neigh-bors. But while opinionated, hewas not one to force his opin-ions on others; he enjoyed agood debate as much as a goodjoke or story. Ed was a longtimemember of St. BartholomewParish church. Ed was preced-ed in death by his brothers,Lawrence, William and George.He is survived by his wife, Hol-ly; sister, Madeline Fryer; sis-ter-in-law, Mary GraceO’Donnell; and a loving family.This includes his nieces andnephews, Jami Camburn(Eric), Dennis Fryer (Bing),Edward Fryer, Anne Graham(Steve Egyhazi), Jennifer Gra-ham, Kate Graham (GordonMayer), Tim Graham (Liz),Laura Verheaghe (Andy) andtheir children, Lorin and Con-nor Camburn, Sean and NeilEgyhazi, Dennis, Caleb, andElizabeth Fryer, Josephine,Warren and Luvia Fryer, Han-nah, Sam and Joseph Graham,Max and Georgia Mayer, andTibult, Holden and Zoe Verhea-ghe.Relatives and friends are
invited to celebrate the lifeof Ed from 5 to 9 p.m. Tues-dayintheCLEMENTL.PAN-TALONE FUNERAL HOMEINC., 409 W. Pittsburgh St.,Greensburg, PA 15601, 724-837-0020. Parting prayerswill be held at 9:15 a.m.Wednesday in the funeralhome, followed by a 10 a.m.Funeral Mass to be celebrat-ed in St. BartholomewChurch, 2538 US-119, Crab-tree. Interment will followat Calvary Hill Cemetery.Ed’s family has entrusted hiscare to the Clement L. Panta-lone Funeral Home Inc. 409 W.Pittsburgh Street, Greensburg,PA 15601, 724-837-0020. To shareyour memories and photos, of-fer your condolences, or fordirections, please visit us atwww.pantalone.com, Natale N.Pantalone, supervisor.
Eva M.(Smith) Herold
NORTH HUNTINGDON
Eva M. (Smith) Herold, 95,of North Huntingdon, passedaway Saturday, April 1, 2017.She was born May 8, 1921, inIrwin, a daughter of the lateSamuel L. and Alma M. (Frye)Smith. She was a longtimemember of Holy Trinity Lu-theran Church in Irwin andwas a former member of thechurch choir. She worked as apersonnel manager for morethan 20 years at Telephone An-swering Service in Pittsburgh.She was an avid knitter andcollector of ceramics and wasa great Pittsburgh Pirates fan.In addition to her parents, shewas preceded in death by her
former husband, Edmund V.Herold; brothers, Louis “Buzz,”Bill and John Smith; and sis-ters, Betty Zahratka, JeanHeydorn, Nancy Cognasse andSandyKlaus.Sheissurvivedbyher daughter, Pamela J. (John)Watson, of North Huntingdon;grandchildren,Gretchen(Rich-ard) Ramage, of New Hamp-shire, Heidi (Michael) Dunn, ofAdamsburg, Mindy Watson, ofFlorida, and Erika (Britt) Den-ham, of Utah; great-grandchil-dren, Ian, Giovanni, Connor,Ryan and ZeAnna; sisters, Lau-ra Nicholas, of North Hunting-don,andCarol (Dennis)Tauber,of North Irwin; sister-in-law,Lynn Smith, of North Hunting-don; and numerous nieces andnephews. Friends and familywill be received from 6 to 8p.m. Monday and 2 to 4 and 6to 8 p.m. Tuesday at the WIL-LIAM SNYDER FUNERALHOME INC., 521 Main St.,Irwin, 724-863-1200. A fu-neral service will be held at11 a.m. Wednesday at HolyTrinity Lutheran Church,with the Rev. Clifton J. Suehrofficiating. Interment willfollow at Penn Lincoln Me-morial Park, North Hunt-ingdon. The family would liketo thank special friends, JulieMcNamara, hospice nurses,Mary and Erica, and the staffof Hempfield Manor for theirloving care. Memorial contri-butions can be made to theSalvation Army, Irwin ServiceUnit 551, 617 Main St., Irwin,PA 15642, Irwin, or the West-moreland County Food Bank atwww.westmorelandfoodbank.org. For online condolences,pleasevisitwww.snyderfuneralservices.com.
When Thomas Loughran ran aBaskin-Robbins ice cream shop inJohnstown, his most reliable employ-ees were his seven daughters — andsometimes their boyfriends.
His children remember him as aRenaissance man who dabbled ingolf, theater, handball, cooking, ten-nis and more.
“My dad lived the best life,” saidhis daughter Ann Cutrell. “He used tocall himself the idea man. He’d get anidea, he’d run with it, and then whenhe was done he was done.”
He wasn’t a runner, but his friendswere, which is why he helped foundthe Johnstown Marathon 42 yearsago.
He preferred time with his fam-ily and his hobbies to work, but hiscareer as an insurance adjuster and
ice cream shop pro-prietor supportedhis family and puthis children throughcollege.
T h o m a s H .Loughran of Ligoni-er, formerly of Swiss-vale and Johnstown,died Wednesday,
March 29, 2017. He was 84.He was the son of John J. “Speedo”
and Helen D. Loughran.He met his wife, Patricia, in el-
ementary school. They fell in lovewhile she was a student at Seton HillUniversity and he was a basketballstar at St. Vincent College.
“They have been married 60 years,and they were the model of a success-ful marriage,” said their daughterSharon Brown.
He was a Navy veteran who loved
making friends.“My dad had a large presence no
matter where he went. He was some-one who could never get enough at-tention,” Brown said.
After his retirement, he would win-ter in Florida and invite his fellowsnowbirds to celebrate his birthdays.
“He would throw his own birthdayparty and invite everyone in the com-plex to it, and make Coney Island hotdogs for them,” his daughter Berna-dette Cala said.
Mr. and Mrs. Loughran moved to Li-gonier about 10 years ago and quicklybecame beloved members of the com-munity, Cutrell said.
Mr. Loughran set aside time everyFriday evening to call all 20 of hisgrandchildren, to regale them withhis corny jokes, share advice andinvite them out for games of golf.
He is survived by his wife, Patricia
A (Robinson) Loughran; daughters,Kathryn Cala, of Export, Ann (Den-nis) Cutrell, of Ligonier, Bernadette(Michael) Cala, of Alexandria, Va.,Mary Jo (Maxine Kane) Loughran, ofPittsburgh, Sharon (Edward) Brown,of Monongahela, Sheila (Edward)Burgard, of Chapel Hill, N.C., andJenifer (Stuart) Selzer, of Charlotte,N.C.; 20 grandchildren; and sevengreat-grandchildren.
Friends will be received from 2 to 6p.m. Sunday at Snyder Funeral Home,402 E. Church St., Ligonier. A memo-rial Mass will be celebrated at 10 a.m.Monday in Holy Trinity CatholicChurch, Ligonier, with interment tofollow at the St. Vincent Mausoleum.
Memorial contributions may bemade to UNC Hospice.
Jacob Tierney is a Tribune-Review staff writer. Reachhim at 724-836-6646 or [email protected].
by JACOb TIERNEy
THOMAS H. LOUGHRAN · LIGONIER
Ice cream shop owner was ‘the idea man’
Loughran
Regional deaths An asterisk (*) after a name indicates that a full death notice appears in these pages. (F) after a residencedenotes “formerly.” Friends of the deceased are invited to sign the online guest book at www.TribLIVE.com.
WESTMORELAND COUNTYName, age Residence Funeral homeAston, Donald J., 76* Youngwood Barnhart, GreensburgBoyd, Jay N.R., 46* North Huntingdon Nied, SwissvaleCampi, Enrico P., 56 Greensburg Kepple-Graft, GreensburgDent, Thomas J., 68* Harrison City Graziano, JeannetteFullem, Patricia L., 87* Greensburg Barnhart, GreensburgGraham, Edward, 83* Greensburg Pantalone, GreensburgHerold, Eva M., 95* North Huntingdon Snyder, IrwinHildenbrand, Nancy A., 86* Shirley, North HuntingdonMatta, Lorraine M., 83* North Huntingdon Shirley, North HuntingdonPeer, Ronald C., 63* Level Green Dobrinick, Trafford
Petroy, Arlene J., 79* South Greensburg Bacha, GreensburgPieczynski, Alvin T., 80* Trafford Dobrinick, TraffordRossi, Dolores M., 85 Greensburg Bacha, GreensburgWashlack, Violet P., 90* Smithton Thompson-Marodi, Bentleyville
ALLEGHENY COUNTYName, age Residence Funeral homeBazylak, Marsha A., 74* North Versailles Gilbert, White Oak
INDIANA COUNTYName, age Residence Funeral homeWeinell, Grace E., 94 Blairsville Shoemaker, Blairsville
DEATH NOTICES
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SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017 · C3
Nancy A. HildenbrandNancy A. Hildenbrand, 86,
passed away Monday, Feb. 13,2017, at Shepherd of the Valleyin Howland, Ohio, after a shortillness. She was born Jan. 9,1931, in Irwin, a daughter of thelate William Albert and Elea-nor (Barner) Rain. Nancy wasa member of Howland UnitedMethodist Church. She wasa dedicated wife and motherto her children and embodiedthe values and spirit of a Prov-erbs 31 woman. She enjoyedquilting and was a member ofthe quilting guild in TrumbullCounty for many years. Nancyis survived by her daughters,Ellen A. Hildenbrand and BethJ. (Jose) Colon. She was pre-ceded in death by her husband,Harry Dean Hildenbrand; son,Michael S. Hildenbrand; and adaughter, Amy L. Hildenbrand.A memorial service will beheld at 11 a.m. Saturday,April 8, 2017, in the funeralhome chapel at the JAMESW. SHIRLEY FUNERALHOME, 176 Clay Pike, NorthHuntingdon. www.shirleyfuneralhome.com.
Lorraine M.(Auld) Matta
NORTH HUNTINGDON
Lorraine M. (Auld) Matta, 83,of North Huntingdon, passedaway Friday, March 31, 2017, atForbes Regional Hospital. Shewas born Nov. 12, 1933, in EastPittsburgh, a daughter of thelate James and Margaret Auld.She was a member of St. AgnesChurch, North Huntingdon,and a member of ChristianMothers. Prior to raising herfamily, Lorraine worked as alab assistant at WestinghouseResearch. She enjoyed playing
cards, trips tothe casinoand doing herdaily cross-word puzzles.Lorraine waspreceded indeath by herbeloved hus-
band, Richard Matta; son, Ron-ald Matta; and grandson, DavidHill. She is survived by hersons, Richard Matta and hiswife, Karen, of Potomac, Md.,and Lawrence Matta and hiswife, Stefanie, of Cypress, Tex-as; daughter, Lori Husok andher husband, Nicholas, ofNorth Huntingdon; daughter-in-law, Judy Matta, of NorthHuntingdon; 11 grandchildren,Stephen Matta, Kevin Matta,Lauren (Matta) Zhang, Katy(Hill) Hwang, Brian Hill, Jona-than Krohe, Allison Matta,Christopher Cervi, Tori Matta,Michael Matta and Emily Mat-ta; and five great-grandchil-dren. She also leaves behindmany nieces, nephews, great-nieces and nephews, brotherand sisters-in-law and dearfriends. Friends will be re-ceived from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8p.m. Monday at the JAMESW. SHIRLEY FUNERALHOME, 176 Clay Pike, NorthHuntingdon. A Mass ofChristian Burial will takeplace at 10 a.m. Tuesday inSt. Agnes Church, NorthHuntingdon. Interment willfollow in Penn Lincoln Me-morial Park.
Ronald C. PeerLEVEL GREEN
Ronald C. Peer, 63, of LevelGreen, passed away, ThursdayMarch 30, 2017, in Forbes Re-gional Hospital, Monroeville.Ron was born July 23, 1953, in
Pittsburgh,the son of thelate Delores( Fabyo n i c )Peer. Ron wasa finish car-penter bytrade and wasa member of
the Carpenters Union. Heworked for various companiesin the area and was very proudof his work. Ron is survived byhis children, Joshua N.“Moosk” Peer (Jamie) andDevin Peer; his grandchildren,Layla and Brody Peer; his sis-ter, Renee Findley (John), ofTrafford; his former wife, Kar-en Peer; his significant other,Melissa Geier, and the Died-erich family; his niece, KaitlynFindley; and great-nephew, Ka-leb Findley; along with manyaunts, uncles and cousins, niec-es, in-laws, and his dog, Bella.Family and friends will bereceived from 3 to 7 p.m.Sunday in the JOHN M. DO-BRINICK FUNERAL HOMEINC., 702 7th St. (State Rt.130), Trafford, 412-372-3111.A funeral liturgy will beheld at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday inthe funeral home, with Fa-ther David Nazimek officiat-ing. There will be no visita-tion or funeral servicesMonday, April 3. Intermentwill follow in the GrandviewCemetery, North Versailles.www.dobrinickfhinc.com.
Arlene J.(Fiaschetti) Petroy
SOUTH GREENSBURG
Arlene J. (Fiaschetti) Petroy,79, of South Greensburg, diedThursday,March30,2017, atherhome. She was born Sept. 12,1937, inGreensburg,adaughterof the late Pietro and Primina(Tomei) Fiaschetti. She was amember of St. Bruno RomanCatholicChurch,SouthGreens-burg, the Columbia LadiesLodge and past president of theRosary Altar Society of thechurch. Arlene filled her lifewith love, laughter and foodand surrounded herself withadoring family and countlessfriends. Knowing her was feel-ing her passion, excitementand joy for living. In addition
to her par-ents, she waspreceded indeath by herbrothers-in-law, EdwardNicola andJack Petroy;her sisters-in-
law, infant Vicky and Ginny(Petroy) Kloock and husband,Martin; and her mother andfather-in-law, Mary and JohnPetroy. She is survived by herhusband, Claude R. Petroy Sr.;their children, Claudia Narcisiand husband, Edward, of Ir-win, Christine “Tina” Petroy,of South Greensburg, CynthiaP. Smith and husband, Troy, ofMurrysville, Anthony R.Petroy, of Rolla, Mo., andClaude R. “Rick” Petroy Jr. andwife, Jamie, of Pittsburgh;eight-grandchildren, Aldo Nar-cisi, Alida Narcisi, ChristianPetroy, Olivia Petroy, FayePetroy, Romeo Petroy, CarmineKinsey and Sabine Kinsey; twostep-grandchildren, ZacharySmith and wife, Kaitlyn, andDylan Smith; her sister, ElideNicola, of Greensburg; herbrother, Lawrence Fiaschettiand wife, Barbara, of SouthGreensburg; her brothers-in-law, Vincent Petroy and wife,Donna, of Indiana, and the Rev.Dominic Petroy, OSB, of St.Vincent Archabbey; her sister-in-law, Rhonda Petroy, ofGreensburg; and several niecesand nephews. Friends will bereceived from 4 to 8 p.m.Sunday at the LEO M. BA-CHA FUNERAL HOME INC.,516 Stanton St., Greensburg.Prayers will begin at 9:30a.m. Monday in the funeralhome, followed by a funeralMass to be celebrated at 10a.m. in St. Bruno RomanCatholic Church, SouthGreensburg. Private en-tombment will be in Greens-burg Catholic CemeteryMausoleum. The Rosary Al-tar Society of St. Bruno Ro-man Catholic Church willpray the rosary at 3:30 p.m.Sunday in the funeral home.www.bachafh.com.
Alvin T. PieczynskiTRAFFORD
Alvin T.“Al” Pieczyn-ski, 80, ofT r a f f o r d ,passed awayFriday, March31, 2017, inForbes Re-
gional Hospital, Monroeville.Al was born Nov. 23, 1936, inPortVue, the son of the lateStephen and Bertha (Boczar)Pieczynski. Al was a retiredsenior research engineer forWestinghouse Electric. He wasa member of St. Nicholas Ser-bian Eastern Orthodox Churchin Monroeville and a veteranof the Army Reserves. He lovedthe outdoors, fishing and camp-ing. Al is survived by his lovingwife of 59 years, Anna (Jankov-ich) Pieczynski; his two sons,Alvin T. Pieczynski Jr. (June),of Oxford Mich., and David-Pieczynski (Beth), of ForsythGa.; his three grandchildren,Jordan, Ali and Heath Pieczyn-ski; and his two sisters, CaroleD’Ascenzo (Rocco), of River-dale, Ga., and MaryannDominik (Larry), of NorthHuntingdon. Family andfriends will be received from2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. Sundayin the JOHN M. DOBRINICKFUNERAL HOME INC., 7027th St. (State Rt. 130), Traf-ford, (412-372-3111). Funeralservices will be held at 10a.m. Monday in St. NicholasSerbian Eastern OrthodoxChurch, with the Very Rev.George Veselinovic officiat-ing. Everyone please meet atthe church. Interment willfollow in the GrandviewCemetery, North Versailles.Pomen services will be at 2p.m. Sunday in the funeralhome. www.dobrinickfhinc.com.
Violet P. WashlackSMITHTON
FORMERLY OF BENTLEYVILLE
Violet Patricia Washlack, 90,of Smithton, formerly of Bent-leyville, died peacefully Friday,March 31, 2017. She was bornJuly 20, 1926, in Bentleyville, adaughter of Bennie and NellieVilkelinte Puskavich. Violetwas employed in many posi-tions, some of which includedthe Mon Valley Catholic HighSchool and Uniontown Cater-ing. Violet was a lifelong mem-ber of St. Katharine DrexelParish in Bentleyville, havingbeen a founding member of theWomen’s Pierogi FundraisingCommittee and former Ave Ma-ria Parish Women’s Guild. Shewas also a member of the Bent-leyville Homemaker’s and the
Red Hatters.In her sparetime, Violetenjoyed cro-cheting, bak-ing and goingto the casinos.Most of all,Violet thor-
oughly enjoyed spending timewith her family. Surviving arethree children, Janet (Andy)Boris, of Smithton, with whomshe resided, Marjorie (Stan)Filip, of Pittsburgh, Charles(Sharon) Washlack Jr., of CoalCenter; eight grandchildren,Terri (Jim) Pajak, of Smith-ton, Dr. Paul Boris, of Smith-ton, Tammy (Kathy) Boris, ofShippensburg, Jeffrey andDarrin Filip, both of Pitts-burgh, Tara (Geoff) Barbanell,of Los Angeles, Calif., Chasand Jared Washlack, both ofBentleyville; great-grandchil-dren, Leah Boris, of Smithton,and Jones Barbanell, of LosAngeles, Calif.; sister-in-law,Susan Procasky, of Berea,Ohio; and many nieces andnephews, whom she loveddearly. Deceased is her hus-band, Charles; two sisters, Mil-dred Shoe and Nellie Seaman;and three brothers, Albert,Frank and Anthony Puskav-ich. Friends are welcomefrom 2 to 7 p.m. Sunday,April 2, 2017, at the THOMP-SON-MARODI FUNERALHOME INC., 809 Main St.,Bentleyville, 724-239-2255,where a prayer service willbe held at 1 p.m. Monday,April 3, 2017, followed by aMass of Christian Burial at1:30 p.m. at St. KatharineDrexel, Bentleyville Cam-pus (formerly Ave Maria),126 Church St., Bentleyville,with the Rev. Ronald CyktorJr., as celebrant. Intermentwill follow in St. Luke Cem-etery, Bentleyville. A recep-tion will follow at St. Kath-erine Drexel Hall. In lieu offlowers, memorials may bemade to St. Jude Children’sResearch Hospital, 501 St. JudePlace, Memphis, TN 3810-9959.Visit www.thompson-marodi.com to leave a condolence mes-sage, order flowers and sharephotos.
DEATH NOTICES
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William Coleman Jr.William Coleman Jr.,
who helped draft the land-mark 1954 legal case inwhich the Supreme Courtruled that segregation inpublic schools was illegaland who later became thecountry’s second blackCabinet officer afterPresident Gerald R. Fordnamed him Transporta-tion secretary, died Fridayat his home in Alexan-dria, Va. He was 96.
The cause was compli-cations from Alzheimer’sdisease, said a daughter,Lovida Hardin ColemanJr.
Throughout his longcareer, Coleman was oftenat the forefront of majorpublic events, legal battlesand significant social ad-vances. In 1948, he becamethe first black Americanto serve as a law clerk toa Supreme Court justice,and within two years hewas working alongsideThurgood Marshall of theNAACP’s Legal DefenseFund on major desegrega-tion cases.
In the 1960s, Colemanwas a staff lawyer forthe Warren Commission,investigating the assassi-nation of President JohnF. Kennedy. He defendedyoung civil rights activ-ists known as FreedomRiders and successfullyargued a Supreme Courtcase that helped elimi-nate prohibitions againstinterracial marriage.
A progressive Repub-lican, Coleman was anadviser to every presi-dent, Republican andDemocrat, from Dwight D.Eisenhower to George W.Bush.
Coleman began work-ing with Marshall onthe Brown case in 1950,coordinating researchefforts in 37 states. Ulti-mately, five cases — fromKansas, South Carolina,Virginia, Delaware andthe District of Columbia— collectively came to beknown as Brown v. Boardof Education. Colemanhelped write the legalbriefs, which formed thebasis of Marshall’s argu-ments before the SupremeCourt in December 1952and again a year later.
FrancineHughes Wilson
Francine HughesWilson, who was foundnot guilty by reason ofinsanity after setting herabusive ex-husband onfire as he slept in 1977, ahomicide dramatized inthe TV movie “The Burn-ing Bed” and that directednational attention towarddomestic violence, diedMarch 22 in Sheffield,Ala. She was 69.
Her family confirmedher death and said thecause was complicationsfrom pneumonia.
Four decades ago,Francine Hughes ofDansville, Mich., was acause celebre, the subjectof national news storiesdetailing the agony shehad endured during her13-year relationship withJames “Mickey” Hughesand the desperate lengthsto which she went to endit.
The case became atextbook example ofa condition expertsdubbed “battered-womansyndrome.” Feministsparsed Wilson’s success-ful “temporary insanity”defense, debating whetherthe verdict representeda victory or a defeat fortheir cause. Some menexpressed concern thather acquittal might inviteviolence among aggrievedwomen.
Thousands saw the 1984NBC-TV movie, based ona 1980 book by Faith Mc-Nulty, that starred FarrahFawcett as Wilson in oneof the actress’s most ac-claimed dramatic roles.
Julian StanczakJulian Stanczak, an
artist known worldwidefor his brightly colored,geometric Op art, hasdied. He was 88.
Stanczak died March25 at his home in theCleveland suburb ofSeven Hills, Ohio, saidDiane Rosenstein, whoseLos Angeles-based galleryrepresented Stanczak. Shesaid he died after a briefillness.
The Polish-born artist’swork is included in thecollections of more than80 museums. He becamemore widely known to thepublic through the 1965Museum of Modern Artexhibit “The ResponsiveEye.” He’d had his firstmajor solo exhibition ofhis “Optical Paintings”the year before.
During World War II,Stanczak was sent to aconcentration camp inSiberia. There, the right-handed Stanczak per-manently lost the use ofhis right arm and had tobecome left-handed. Afterescaping from the camp,he joined the Polish army-in-exile in Persia (nowIran) and then deserted it.
He later spent time in arefugee camp in Uganda.He began taking privateart lessons there andlearned to paint with hisleft hand.
In 1950, he moved toCleveland and found hisartistic home.
— Wire reports
DEATHS ELSEWHERE
C4 · SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017
DECISIONS OF YOUR JUDGES
The following is a partiallist of criminal cases handledby judges in the most recentterm of Westmoreland Countycriminal court. Some of thecases involve first-time offend-ers being enrolled in the Ac-celerated Rehabilitative Dis-position program. The ARDprogram does not require anadmission of guilt, but par-ticipants are placed into theprogram for up to two years.
Judge Rita D. Hathaway• D’El Mackey, 35, of Mon-
essen pleaded guilty to receiv-ing stolen property and wassentenced to probation for oneyear.
• Brandy Pierce, 36, ofCharleroi, charged with theftby unlawful taking and receiv-ing stolen property, was ac-cepted into the ARD programfor one year.
• Taryll Matthew Skaggs,40, of Smithton pleaded guiltyto retail theft and was sen-tenced to six to 23 months injail.
• Whitney W. Stack, 28, ofWexford pleaded guilty to use/possession of drug parapher-nalia and was sentenced totwo to 12 months in jail.
• Mark A. Schofield Jr., 22,of McKeesport pleaded guiltyto manufacture, delivery orpossession with intent to man-ufacture or deliver and wassentenced to 18 months to fouryears in jail.
• Lonzo Gardner, 59, ofMonessen pleaded guilty todriving under the influenceand was sentenced to 48 hoursto six months in jail. His li-cense was suspended for oneyear.
• Jason Michael Lowther,35, of Monessen pleaded guiltyto false reports and was sen-tenced to probation for twoyears.
• Ronald Conrad Jr., 28, ofCarmichaels pleaded guilty toretail theft and was sentencedto probation for six months.
•Reid Joseph Gadagno, 20,of Irwin pleaded guilty to driv-ing under the influence andwas sentenced to 72 hours tosix months in jail. To a sepa-rate charge of resisting ar-rest/other law enforcement,he pleaded guilty and was sen-tenced to probation for sixmonths.
• Nicole Renae Sachek, 29,of Washington pleaded guiltyto use/possession of drug par-aphernalia and was sentencedto probation for six months.
•Eric Daniel Arrigo, 33, ofBelle Vernon pleaded guilty touse/possession of drug para-phernalia and was sentencedto probation for one year. Toa separate charge of use/pos-session of drug parapherna-lia, he pleaded guilty and wassentenced to probation for oneyear. To a separate charge ofdriving under the influence,he pleaded guilty and wassentenced to five days to sixmonths in jail. To anothercharge of manufacture, deliv-ery or possession with intentto manufacture, he pleadedguilty and was sentenced tosix to 23 months in jail. Hislicense was suspended for oneyear.
• Stephen P. Greyshock,47, of Monongahela pleadedguilty to retail theft and con-spiracy and was sentenced toprobation for two years.
• James D. Robertson Jr.,66, of Aliquippa pleadedguilty to driving under theinfluence and was sentencedto 10 days to 24 months in jail.His license was suspended forone year.
• Joshua Alan Hernley, 26,of Everson pleaded guilty touse/possession of drug para-phernalia and was sentencedto probation for one year.
• Jason Coy Holbrook, 47,of Belle Vernon pleaded guiltyto use/possession of drug par-aphernalia and was sentencedto probation for one year.
• Michael Jer maineWortham Jr., 23, of Pittsburgh,charged with use/possessionof drug paraphernalia, wasaccepted into the probationwithout verdict program forone year.
• Douglas James Nagy,19, of Dunedin, Fla., pleadedguilty to simple assault andwas sentenced to probationfor one year.
• Adam Michael Hibbard,23, of Greensburg pleadedguilty to disorderly conductand was sentenced to proba-tion for one year.
• Julie M. Bowers, 53, ofWest Newton pleaded guiltyto driving under the influenceand was sentenced to proba-tion for six months.
• Stacy Lynn Greenawalt,31, of Fredericktown pleadedguilty to retail theft and wassentenced to probation for oneyear.
• Dennis Deliy, 66, of WestNewton pleaded guilty to driv-ing under the influence – sec-ond offense and was sentenced
to five days to six months injail. His license was suspend-ed for one year.
• Jacob Joseph Cramer, 26,of Belle Vernon pleaded guiltyto driving under the influenceand was sentenced to proba-tion for six months.
• William Huweart, 30, ofMonessen pleaded guilty tosimple assault and disorderlyconduct and was sentenced tointermediate punishment fortwo years with six months ofelectronic monitoring.
• Amanda Marie Rossi, 34,of Brownsville pleaded guiltyto retail theft and criminaltrespass and was sentenced toprobation for one year.
• Kelcie Rae Burkholder,22, of Latrobe, charged withuse/possession of drug para-phernalia, was accepted intothe probation without verdictprogram for six months.
• Dennis Jay Carini Jr., 32,of Belle Vernon, charged withuse/possession of drug para-phernalia, was accepted intothe probation without verdictprogram for six months.
•Kailey Crouse, 24, of Mon-essen pleaded guilty to use/possession of drug parapher-nalia and was sentenced toprobation for one year.
•Kenneth A. Keener, 34, ofArmburst pleaded guilty tofleeing or attempting to eludeofficer and was sentenced tointermediate punishment forfive years with 18 months ofelectronic monitoring. To aseparate charge of use/pos-session of drug parapherna-lia, he pleaded guilty and wassentenced to probation for oneyear. To the charge of resist-ing arrest/other law enforce-ment, he pleaded guilty andwas sentenced to probationfor two years.
• Timothy Donald Reese,50, of Alverton pleaded guiltyto burglary, theft by unlawfultaking and criminal mischiefand was sentenced to proba-tion for two years.
• Eric R. Armoroso, 24, ofBentleyville pleaded guilty touse/possession of drug para-phernalia and was sentencedto probation for six months.
• Tynan Noakes, 23, ofBrownsville pleaded guiltyto driving under the influ-ence and use/possession ofdrug paraphernalia and wassentenced to 72 hours to sixmonths in jail. His license wassuspended for one year.
•Dale Eugene Bungard, 46,of Luxor, charged with theftby unlawful taking, was ac-cepted into the ARD programfor one year.
• Scott R. Painter, 66, ofSmithton pleaded guilty totheft by unlawful taking andwas sentenced to probationfor one year.
• Von Shane Carlson, 50,of Scottdale pleaded guiltyto driving under the influ-ence and was sentenced tointermediate punishment forfive years with 180 days ofelectronic monitoring. To aseparate charge of use/pos-session of drug parapherna-lia, he pleaded guilty and wassentenced to probation for sixmonths. His license was sus-pended for 18 months.
• Jeremy Castrodad, 24, ofUniontown pleaded guilty touse/possession of drug para-phernalia and was sentencedto probation for one year. To aseparate charge of driving un-der the influence, he pleadedguilty and was sentenced to72 hours to six months in jail.His license was suspended forone year.
• Brian Leonard Ormsby,27, of Smithton was sentencedto probation for five years forthe charge of indecent assaultperson less than 13 years ofage. To a separate charge ofindecent assault person lessthan 13 years of age, he wassentenced to probation for fiveyears.
• Unique Howell, 24, ofMonessen, charged with sim-ple assault, was accepted intothe ARD program for one year.
• Julie Lynn Maynard, 31,of Washington pleaded guiltyto retail theft, theft by de-
ception and receiving stolenproperty and was sentenced toprobation for one year.
• Brandon Charles Craft,24, of Greensburg pleadedguilty to make repairs/sell/etc. offensive weapons andwas sentenced to probationfor one year. To a separatecharge of use/possession ofdrug paraphernalia, he plead-ed guilty and was sentenced toprobation for six months.
•Robin Ford, 47, of Donora,charged with retail theft, wasaccepted into the ARD pro-gram for six months.
•Angela Clark, 43, of Jean-nette pleaded guilty to posses-sion of a controlled substanceand was sentenced to proba-tion for one year. To a sepa-rate charge of use/possessionof drug paraphernalia, shepleaded guilty and was sen-tenced to probation for oneyear. To separate charges ofmanufacture, delivery or pos-session with intent to manu-facture or deliver, she pleadedguilty and was sentenced tointermediate punishment fortwo years with six months ofelectronic monitoring.
• John Dale Askey, 46, ofAlverton pleaded guilty tosimple assault and was sen-tenced to 10 days to 23 monthsin jail.
• Jennifer Lynn Burgman,40, of Belle Vernon, chargedwith statement under penalty,was accepted into the ARDprogram for one year. She wasordered not possess a firearm.
• Ricardo Perez-Perez,36, of Mt. Pleasant pleadedguilty to driving under theinfluence – second offense andwas sentenced to intermediatepunishment for six monthswith 60 days of electronicmonitoring. His license wassuspended for one year.
• Richard Griffith, 27, ofBrownsville pleaded guilty toretail theft and was sentencedto 60 days to 23 months in jail.To a separate charge of defi-ant trespass actual communi-cation, he pleaded guilty andwas sentenced to probationfor one year.
• Cydnee Robinson, 23,of Monessen, charged withcriminal attempt, was accept-ed into the ARD program fortwo years.
• John F. Gourn, 42, of Do-nora pleaded guilty to posses-sion of a controlled substanceand was sentenced to proba-tion for one year.
•Codey William Overly, 21,of Mt. Pleasant, charged withsimple assault and recklesslyendangering another person,was accepted into the ARDprogram for two years.
• Vernon Majors, 39, ofMonessen pleaded guilty toresisting arrest/other law en-forcement and possession of acontrolled substance and wassentenced to six to 23 months
in jail.
• Jair Deshawn Robinson,24, of Arona was sentenced tofour to 10 years in jail, for thecharges of person not to pos-sess use etc. firearm, firearmsare to be carried without alicense, manufacture, deliv-ery, or possession with intentto manufacture or deliver,possession of a controlledsubstance, use/possession ofdrug paraphernalia and pos-session of marijuana.
• Jeffrey L. Walters, 43, ofYukon pleaded guilty to driv-ing under the influence – sec-ond offense and was sentencedto intermediate punishmentfor six months with 60 daysof electronic monitoring. Hislicense was suspended for oneyear.
Judge MeaganBilik-DeFazio• Joseph Robert Taylor, 33,
of Mt. Pleasant pleaded guiltyto theft by deception and wassentenced to probation for oneyear.
• Jesse James Simms, 25,of Jeannette pleaded guilty touse/possession of drug para-phernalia and possession of acontrolled substance and wassentenced to probation for oneyear.
• Eric Ryan Achhammer,34, of Latrobe, charged withpossession of a controlled sub-stance, use/possession of drugparaphernalia and possessionof marijuana, was acceptedinto the probation without ver-dict program for six months.
• Deborah D. Deroche, 36,of Jacksonville, N.C., plead-ed guilty to retail theft andwas sentenced to 14 days to 23months in jail.
• Kathryn Noriene Jepsen,48, of Greensburg pleadedguilty to possession of a con-trolled substance by personnot registered and was sen-tenced to probation for oneyear. To a separate charge ofuse/possession of a drug para-phernalia, she also pleadedguilty and was sentenced toprobation for one year.
•Brooke Jeanette Pratt, 23,of Greensburg, charged withtheft by unlawful taking, re-ceiving stolen property andconspiracy, was accepted intothe ARD program for one year.
•Nicki A. Ross, 47, of Pennpleaded guilty to theft by un-lawful taking and receivingstolen property and was sen-tenced to probation for oneyear.
• Dennis Alan Pratt, 50, ofJeannette pleaded guilty toreceives advance payment forservices and fails to performand was sentenced to proba-tion for two years.
•Stanley Richard Ferry, 26,of Greensburg, charged withuse/possession of drug para-phernalia, was accepted intothe probation without verdict
program for six months.
• Stanimira Curran, 25, ofApollo, charged with fraudobtaining food stamps/assis-tance, was accepted into theARD program for two years.She was ordered to pay restitu-tion of $2,043.
• Daniel P. Spino, 52, ofGreensburg pleaded guilty todriving under the influenceand was sentenced to proba-tion for six months.
• Quincy Santon Miller, 42,of Greensburg pleaded guiltyto terroristic threats with in-tent to terrorize another andwas sentenced to probationfor one year.
•Michael Eric Garland, 58,of Johnstown pleaded guiltyto driving under the influenceand was sentenced to proba-tion for six months.
• Rachel Michelle Roland,19, of Hannastown, chargedwith use/possession of drugparaphernalia, was acceptedinto the probation withoutverdict program for one year.
• Jonathan Garrett Bair,21, of Export pleaded guiltyto driving under the influenceand was sentenced to inter-mediate punishment for sixmonths with 60 days of elec-tronic monitoring. His licensewas suspended for 12 months.
• Dorris Stripling, 59, ofPittsburgh pleaded guilty touse/possession of drug para-phernalia and was sentencedto probation for six months.
• Crystal Jean Frye, 20, ofNew Alexandria, charged withuse/possession of drug para-phernalia, was accepted intothe probation without verdictprogram for one year.
Judge John Driscoll•Amanda Lynn Rusiewicz,
23,of NatronaHeights,chargedwith use/possession of drugparaphernalia, was acceptedinto the probation without ver-dict program for six months.
• Gregory Robert Harris,32, of New Kensington plead-ed guilty to driving under theinfluence and was sentencedto intermediate punishmentfor five years with 12 monthsof electronic monitoring. Toa separate charge of manu-facture, delivery or possessionwith intent to manufacture ordeliver, he pleaded guilty andwas sentenced to intermediatepunishment for two years withone year of electronic monitor-ing.
• Cory Fredrick Phillippi,22, of Apollo pleaded guilty todriving under the influenceand was sentenced to 72 hoursto six months in jail. To a sepa-rate charge of possession of acontrolled substance, he plead-ed guilty and was sentencedto probation for one year. Hislicense was suspended for 12months.
•Carmella Schweiger, 54, ofTarentum, charged with retailtheft and conspiracy, was ac-cepted into the ARD programfor two years.
• Teresa Lynn Durham, 58,of Vandergrift pleaded guiltyto tampering with/fabricatephysical evidence and posses-sion of a controlled substanceand was sentenced to probationfor 12 months.
• April May Frey, 32, ofAliquippa pleaded guilty touse/possession of drug para-phernalia andwas sentenced toprobation for 12 months.
• Jason Geary, 43, of Leech-burg pleaded guilty to use/pos-session of drug paraphernaliaand was sentenced to probationfor one year.
• Candice Brooke Ansani,35, of Lower Burrell pleadedguilty to driving under the in-fluence and was sentenced to48 hours to six months in jail.Her license was suspended forone year.
• Susan Lynn Haddick, 59,of Pittsburgh pleaded guiltyto false identification to lawenforcement officer and wassentenced to probation for 12months.
• Michael P. Beer, 25, ofBrackenridge pleaded guilty toretail theft and was sentencedto probation for two years.
• Dominic Canonic, 31, ofLeechburg pleaded guilty tofleeing or attempting to eludeofficer and was sentenced to 63days to 23 months in jail.
• John C. Rager, 58, of Gr-acetonpleaded guilty todrivingunder the influence and wassentenced to probation for sixmonths.
•Elizabeth Ann King, 38, ofApollo, charged with statementunder penalty, was acceptedthe ARD program for threemonths.
SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017 · C5
NEWSMAKER
Nadene BruceNoteworthy: Bruce
was named OutstandingLifetimeVolunteerfor theWest-morelandCounty4-H pro-gram atits 2017
leader kickoff dinner.She was recognized fordemonstrating exempla-ry service to 4-H whilepromoting volunteerism.
Age: 53Residence: Washing-
ton TownshipFamily: Husband,
Douglas; four children,Natalie Evans, 33;Stephanie Kennedy, 30;Tyler, 26; and Erin, 20;four grandchildren
Education: Associatedegree in accounting
Background: Aformer 4-H member,Bruce has served as a4-H leader for 34 years,carrying on the traditionof her parents and activelongtime club leadersJim and Emma Dunmire.Bruce is a project leaderin the Beaver Run 4-HClub, helping youngmembers learn skills inareas such as nutrition,babysitting, crochet-ing and first aid. Sheserved on a regional 4-HLeaders SymposiumCommittee for morethan a decade. She helpsher father prepare the4-H exhibition buildingfor the annual West-moreland Fair, where sheis superintendent forspecial projects rangingfrom geology and for-estry displays to roboticsand LEGO creations.
In January 2000, shejoined the Kiski Valleychapter of Habitat forHumanity. She servesas treasurer of thenonprofit that buildsor renovates afford-able dwellings and putswoodworking abilitiesshe gained through4-H to use as a Habitatconstruction crew mem-ber. Making homemadejams is a favorite pursuitBruce picked up throughthe 4-H program andhas shared with youngerfamily members.
Quote: “You see thegrowth of knowledgeand skills of these chil-dren as they go throughthe years. I enjoy watch-ing these kids grow intoadults and learn thingsthat will help them intheir everyday lives.”
MARRIAGEAPPLICATIONSThe following mar-
riage licenses have beenobtained from the West-moreland County Regis-ter of Wills Office:
Casey Michael Breck-enridge and Amy DianaPalmer, both of LowerBurrell
Thomas Frank Rataicof Monroeville and DanaLauren Marietti of Van-dergrift
Michael Alfred Bed-dick and Donna LeeBozich, both of Herminie
Robert Joseph Schulzand Devon Lynn Parks,both of New Kensington
Lance Edward Morganand Merlyn Panoy Mu-lato, both of Delmont
Nathan Allen Kistlerand Emily CatherineCimino, both of Pitts-burgh
Kevin Patrick Maierand Jessica Dawn Brit-ton, both of New Kens-ington
Reginald Robert Littleand Coleen Ann Howard,both of Irwin
Michael Wayne Cre-gan of McKeesport andStacey Marie Bodnar ofTrafford
Joseph Aladino Bru-zda and Katelyn Debo-rah Karasack, both ofLatrobe
James Steven Syputand Johanna DawnCogley, both of LowerBurrell
Austin Eugene Toyand Nichole Marie Leya,both of Hyde Park
Justin Anthony Olivaand Caitlyn Marie Ha-zenstab, both of LowerBurrell
Ryan Francis Clark andTammy Lynn Crawford,both of Latrobe
Bradley John Bakerand Amber Nicole Adki-son, both of Latrobe
Gavin Scott Allen andBethani Amies Lodovico,both of Pittsburgh
David James Barryand Victoria Ann Puzak,both of Apollo
At issue is an allegation bythe late John Whipple, a formerclubpresident, that Rudolphin-vited him to a “friendly” lunchat a Los Angeles restaurant onFeb. 20, 2013, secretly video-taped their conversation andposted it on YouTube.
In his unsuccessful effort fordismissal of the invasion-of-privacy complaints, Rudolph’sattorneys did not deny hetaped the conversation, whichremains posted on the socialmedia site as “Safari Club In-ternational SCI president tellsthe truth on video - RudolphExonerated!!”
His attorneys maintain thesurreptitious recording “wasnot highly offensive because ittook place in a public restau-rant amongst adversaries inpending litigation.”
“As Whipple freely dis-cussed sensitive informationabout pending litigation be-tween himself and Rudolph,Rudolph insists there was nodeception,andthushisconductcannot possibly rise to the level
of highly offensive,” his attor-neys argued before the court,according to documents.
The taping incident andmore than five years of back-and-forth legal battles betweenRudolph and the club drew atongue-in-cheek ruling fromthe judicial panel in February.
“On appeal, Rudolph seeksto line up the perfect shot, ar-guing (the claims) must failbecause there can be no objec-tively reasonable expectationof confidentiality in a conver-sation that occurs in a publicplace,” the court wrote in its33-page opinion.
“Rudolph’s marksmanship,apparently on target in thetundra, here is wide of themark,” Judge Richard See-borg, U.S. District Judge forthe Northern District of Cal-ifornia, wrote in a decisionaffirming prior rulings thatthe damage lawsuit can moveforward.
Attorneys involved in thecase — Joseph J. Nardulli, ofIrvine, Calif., who representsJohn Whipple’s widow, Joan,and Kenneth M. Argentieri
of Duane Morris LLP in Pitts-burgh — said the plaintiffs andRudolph will continue pursu-ing the issues as they have fornearly four years.
As part of its recent ruling,the court said that despiteWhipple’s death in 2014, hiswidow can continue his dam-age claim.
“Cases sometimes can takeon a life of their own,” Nar-dulli told the Tribune-Review.“In this particular case, thereis very good counsel on bothsides making compelling ar-guments, and I feel it will con-tinue to be that way.
“We do see it as a very seri-ous matter, and it will contin-ue to be vigorously pursued,”Nardulli said. He declined todiscuss specifics of the case.
Argentieri said the Califor-nia litigation is “really only atits beginning.”
“This decision was only thatthe case can move forward onthe three remaining claims.Dr. Rudolph to this point hasbeen successful getting four ofthe original seven claims dis-missed and defeating a request
for a preliminary injunction(to have the YouTube videosremoved),” Argentieri said.
Argentieri said Rudolph is“very hopeful once the caseproceeds to trial that the judgewill find the claims that remainwithout merit.”
Both Rudolph and his latewife, Bianca Finizio Rudolph,were accomplished huntersand environmental philanthro-pists who donated generouslyto Safari Club-related charitiessince they joined in the 1980s.Bianca was the former presi-dent of the Pittsburgh chapter.
Bianca died Oct. 11 during asafari in Zambia.
An article in the Zambia Dai-ly Mail detailed the accidentalshooting death.
“A 57-year-old Americantourist has died in the KafueNational Park in Mumbwa af-ter she accidentally shot her-self in thechestwith a shotgun.
“Central Province commis-sioner of police Lombe Kamu-koshi said in an interview thatthe incident happened (Oct.11) around 07:00 hours. ... Ka-mukoshi said Bianca Rudolph
shot herself as she was packingher property.
“Officers rushed to the sceneafter a report of unnaturaldeath was made that an Ameri-can woman accidentally shotherself,” he said.
Contacted by the Tribune-Review, Finizio Rudolph’s rela-tives in the South Hills referredinquiries about her death toher husband, who did not re-spond to repeated phone mes-sages.
“I’ve tried to respect Dr. Ru-dolph’s privacy in that, butI can only imagine the per-sonal devastation he has beenthrough,” Argentieri said. Hedeclined further comment.
The Pittsburgh chapterrecently recognized FinizioRudolph’s conservation workwith the club in its quarterlynewsletter, Crosshairs, with aphotograph asking members toremember her work as chapterleader.
Paul Peirce is a Tribune-Review staffwriter. Reach him at 724-850-2860 or
Litigation ‘really only at its beginning’RUDOLPH · FROM C1
The following is a partiallist of criminal cases handledby judges in the most recentterm of Westmoreland Coun-ty criminal court. Some ofthe cases involve first-timeoffenders being enrolled inthe Accelerated Rehabilita-tive Disposition program.The ARD program does notrequire an admission of guilt,but participants are placedinto the program for up totwo years.
Judge ChristopherA. Feliciani• Amanda Leigh Taylor,
23, of Zelienople pleadedguilty to use/possession ofdrug paraphernalia and wassentenced to probation forone year.
• Kayla Lynn Brutout, 25,of North Huntington pleadedguilty to driving under theinfluence – second offenseand was sentenced to 30 daysto six months in jail. Her li-cense was suspended for oneyear. To a separate charge ofresisting arrest/other law en-forcement, she pleaded guiltyand was sentenced to proba-tion for one year.
• Bryan William Boyd,31, of North Huntingtonpleaded guilty to manufac-ture, delivery or possessionwith intent to manufactureor deliver and was sentencedto 30 days to 23 months injail. To a separate charge ofuse/possession of drug para-phernalia, he pleaded guiltyand was sentenced to proba-tion for one year. To a chargeof corruption of minors, healso pleaded guilty and wassentenced to probation forone year.
• Rebecca AngeliqueVokes, 24, of Rochesterpleaded guilty to retail theft,receiving stolen propertyand conspiracy and was sen-tenced to probation for twoyears.
• Daniel Edward Moffa,51, of Greensburg pleadedguilty to theft by unlawfultaking and was sentenced toprobation for one year.
• Christopher D. Yoest,41, of Etna pleaded guiltyto driving under the influ-ence – second offense and wassentenced to intermediatepunishment for six monthswith 40 days of electronicmonitoring. His license wassuspended for one year.
• Donald Lee Painter, 32,of Penn pleaded guilty toforgery and access deviceissued to another who didnot authorize use and wassentenced to probation forone year.
• John R. Voron, 56, ofCowansville pleaded guiltyto terroristic threats withintent to terrorize anotherand was sentenced to timeserved to 23 months in jail. Toa separate charge of harass-ment, he pleaded guilty andwas sentenced to probationfor one year.
• George E. Finny, 29,
of Manor pleaded guilty todisorderly conduct and wassentenced to probation forone year.
• Margaret Ann Owens,59, of Irwin pleaded guilty touse/possession of drug para-phernalia and was sentencedto probation for one year.
• Devin Raymone Naylor,24, of Pitcairn pleaded guiltyto use/possession of drugparaphernalia and was sen-tenced to probation for oneyear.
• Richard Lee Welsh, 24,of Trafford pleaded guilty totheft by deception and wassentenced to probation forone year. To separate chargesof robbery, conspiracy, theftby unlawful taking and re-ceiving stolen property, hepleaded guilty and was sen-tenced to nine to 23 months injail. To other charges of rob-bery, retail theft and simpleassault, he pleaded guilty andwas sentenced to nine to 23months in jail.
• Cody Dale Brown, 20, ofGreensburg pleaded guiltyto corruption of minors andwas sentenced to probationfor one year.
• Gregg William Wilson,57, of Herminie pleadedguilty to driving under theinfluence – third offense andwas sentenced to intermedi-ate punishment for two yearswith 120 days of electronicmonitoring. His license wassuspended for one year.
• Hollie Shadd, 31, of Her-minie pleaded guilty to use/possession of drug parapher-nalia and was sentenced toprobation for one year.
• Crystal Elizabeth Kem-per, 27, of Jeannette, chargedwith use/possession of drugparaphernalia, was accept-ed into the probation with-out verdict program for sixmonths.
•Eugene Dwight Ferri, 34,of Pittsburgh pleaded guiltyto possession of a controlledsubstance and was sentencedto probation for one year. Toa separate charge of use/possession of drug parapher-nalia, he pleaded guilty andwas sentenced to probationfor one year.
• Joshua James Lowans,21, of Jeannette pleadedguilty to use/possession ofdrug paraphernalia and wassentenced to probation forone year.
• Jason A. Williams, 44,of Export pleaded guilty tounauthorized use of motor/other vehicles and was sen-tenced to probation for sixmonths.
• James M. Server, 45, ofNew Alexandria pleadedguilty to retail theft and wassentenced to probation forone year.
• Dustin C. Good, 37, ofIrwin, charged with use/possession of drug para-phernalia and possession ofa controlled substance, wasaccepted into the probationwithout verdict program for
one year.
• Thomas Jake Lewis, 23,of Greensburg pleaded guiltyto criminal trespass and wassentenced to probation forthree years. To a separatecharge of criminal mischief,he pleaded guilty and wassentenced to probation forone year.
• Samantha Chew, 32, ofGreensburg pleaded guiltyto driving under the influ-ence and was sentenced to 48hours to six months in jail.To separate charges of reck-lessly endangering anotherperson and accident involv-ing death/injury, she pleadedguilty and was sentenced toprobation for one year. Herlicense was suspended forone year.
• Vernon Ramon Paul Do-swell, 61, of Pittsburgh plead-ed guilty to driving under theinfluence and was sentencedto probation for six months.
•Raymond D. PostlethwaitJr., 36, of Jeannette pleadedguilty to theft by deceptionand was sentenced to proba-tion for one year.
• Bishop Crystaloski, 20,of Jeannette pleaded guiltyto retail theft and was sen-tenced to probation for oneyear.
•Jennifer G. Lowery, 31, ofJeannette, charged with theftby deception, was acceptedinto the ARD program forone year.
• Angela Kay Sampson,31, of Mt. Pleasant pleadedguilty to terroristic threatswith intent to terrorize an-other and was sentenced tofive days to 23 months in jail.
• Aquala Shalan Deloach,29, of Pittsburgh pleadedguilty to possession of a con-trolled substance and wassentenced to probation forone year.
• Jolene Sue Crowell, 41,of Jeannette pleaded guilty totheft by deception and crim-inal attempt and was sen-tenced to probation for twoyears. To separate chargesof retail theft and receivingstolen property, she pleadedguilty and was sentenced toprobation for two years.
• Douglas Rhome, 31, ofMt. Pleasant pleaded guiltyto driving under the influ-ence and was sentenced tointermediate punishment fortwo years with 90 days ofelectronic monitoring. Hislicense was suspended forone year.
• Joseph R. Good, 31, ofWestmoreland City pleadedguilty to flight to avoid ap-prehension/trial/punish-ment and was sentenced totime served to 23 months injail. To a separate charge ofresisting arrest/other law en-forcement, he pleaded guiltyand was sentenced to proba-tion for one year.
• Joshua Vincent Piccar,25, of Greensburg pleadedguilty to retail theft and wassentenced to time served to23 months in jail. To sepa-rate charges of false identi-fication to law enforcementofficer and use/possessionof drug paraphernalia, hepleaded guilty and was sen-tenced to probation for oneyear.
• Jeremy Ryan Bogle, 27,of Jeannette pleaded guiltyto driving under the influ-ence and was sentenced to72 hours to six months injail. To separate charges ofretail theft and conspiracy,he pleaded guilty and wassentenced to time served to
23 months in jail. His licensewas suspended for one year.
•Kaleb Watt, 25, of Leech-burg pleaded guilty to en-dangering the welfare ofchildren and was sentencedto probation for seven years.
• Kashawn Goldsmith, 21,of Arnold pleaded guilty tocriminal trespass and wassentenced to nine to 23½months in jail. To a separatecharge of simple assault, hepleaded guilty and was sen-tenced to nine to 23½ monthsin jail.
• Justin David Colamari-no, 26, of Murrysville plead-ed guilty to use/possessionof drug paraphernalia andwas sentenced to probationfor six months.
• Brea Bernardi, 33, ofDerry pleaded guilty todriving under the influ-ence – third offense and wassentenced to intermediatepunishment for two yearswith 40 days of electronicmonitoring. Her license wassuspended for one year.
•Chad Eliard Foster, 23, ofGreensburg pleaded guilty tomanufacture, delivery or pos-session with intent to manu-facture or deliver, possessionof a controlled substance,use/possession of drug par-aphernalia and tamperingwith/fabricate physical evi-dence and was sentenced to11½ to 23 months in jail. To aseparate charge of receivingstolen property, he pleadedguilty and was sentenced toprobation for five years.
•Ozzy James Bowland, 33,of Jeannette pleaded guiltyto failure to verify address/be photographed and wassentenced to 24 to 48 monthsin jail.
• Tammie Lee Horst, 44,of Greensburg pleaded guiltyto failure to register withthe Pennsylvania State Policeand was sentenced to 24 to 48months in jail.
• Tina L. Albertson, 48,of Claridge pleaded guilty touse/possession of drug para-phernalia and was sentencedto probation for one year.
•David Ray Weaver Jr., 38,of Greensburg pleaded guiltyto driving under the influ-ence – second offense and wassentenced to intermediatepunishment for six monthswith 60 days of electronicmonitoring. His license wassuspended for one year.
• Thomas William Jen-sen, 41, of North Charleroipleaded guilty to driving un-der the influence and wassentenced to intermediatepunishment for five yearswith five months of electron-ic monitoring. His licensewas suspended for 18 months.
• Scott Gettins, 40, ofNorth Huntington pleadedguilty to possess weapon onschool property and was sen-tenced to probation for twoyears.
• Phenel Charles, 35, ofPhiladelphia pleaded guiltyto identity theft and was sen-tenced to probation for oneyear.
• Lael Brown, 34, of Mon-essen was sentenced to 21months to seven years in jailfor the charges of theft byunlawful taking, receivingstolen property and conspir-acy. To separate charges ofburglary, theft by unlawfultaking, receiving stolen prop-erty and criminal mischief,he pleaded guilty and wassentenced to four to 20 yearsin jail. He was ordered to payrestitution of $26,711.
• Thomas Andrews Jr.,58, of North Huntington,charged with access deviceused to obtain property/ser-vice, receiving stolen prop-erty and theft of property lostetc. by mistake, was acceptedinto the ARD program for sixmonths.
• Justin L. Camp, 35, ofGreensburg pleaded guiltyto use/possession of drugparaphernalia and was sen-tenced to probation for oneyear. To a separate chargeof use/possession of drugparaphernalia, he pleadedguilty and was sentenced toprobation for one year.
• David J. Lawless III, 29,of Adamsburg pleaded guiltyto driving under the influ-ence and was sentenced to10 days to 24 months in jail.His license was suspendedfor one year.
• Juanita Marie New-house, 44, of Greensburgpleaded guilty to conspiracyand was sentenced to proba-tion for one year.
• Michael Aaron Bennett,52, of Derry pleaded guilty tostatement under penalty andwas sentenced to probationfor one year. He was orderednot possess a firearm.
• Olivia Marie Goughler,29, of North Versailles,charged with use/possessionof drug paraphernalia, wasaccepted into the probationwithout verdict program for12 months.
• Ry a n M a t t h e wFrohnhofer, 29, of East McK-eesport pleaded guilty to use/possession of drug parapher-nalia and was sentenced toprobation for 12 months.
• Nathaniel Davis Cicco,21, of Munhall, charged withuse/possession of drug para-phernalia, was accepted intothe probation without verdictprogram for one year.
• Daniel Alan Barton, 53,of Jeannette pleaded guiltyto possession of a controlledsubstance and was sentencedto probation for one year.
•Thomas Houston Bell, 23,of Jeannette, charged withconspiracy, receiving stolenproperty and theft by decep-tion, was accepted into theARD program for one year.
•Bethany Nicole Maskow-itz, 32, of White Oak, chargedwith tampering with fabri-cate physical evidence andobstruction of administra-tion of law/other govern-ment function, was acceptedinto the ARD program for sixmonths.
•Michael Ryan Hoover, 25,of Pittsburgh, charged withdefiant trespass posted, bur-glary and criminal mischief,was accepted into the ARDprogram for one year.
• Steven R. Parson, 32, ofLyndora pleaded guilty totheft by deception and wassentenced to probation forone year.
• Andre Paul Hauk, 26, ofCoraopolis pleaded guilty touse/possession of drug para-phernalia and was sentencedto probation for one year.
• Frances Lee Bobnar, 55,of Jeannette pleaded guiltyto simple assault and harass-ment and was sentenced toprobation for two years.
•Branddon Danilchak, 29,of Donora pleaded guilty torobbery and aggravated as-sault and was sentenced to11½ to 23 months in jail, tobe followed by intermediatepunishment for two yearswith one year of electronicmonitoring.
DECISIONS OF YOUR JUDGES
SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIC6
NEW YORK — Wall Street has tem-pered its expectations for sweepingtax cuts in the wake of PresidentTrump’s stinging health care defeat,a move that could push investors toembrace cheaper global stocks afterthe heady rally of recent months.
The White House turned its atten-tion to an overhaul of the tax codeafter Republicans were forced lastmonth to pull legislation that wouldhave begun dismantling the Obamaadministration’s 2010 health care law.
Trump made tax cuts, including alowering of the rates paid by corpora-tions, a pillar of his 2016 presidentialcampaign. His Nov. 8 victory whettedthe appetite of business and investorswho saw passage of a tax bill as avirtual slam dunk.
But the Republican infighting thatdoomed the health care bill in theHouse of Representatives and theevaporation of the savings that itwas seen generating have made theendeavor more problematic.
“Now it appears some of the ini-tiatives in the tax bill will have tobe scaled back or even eliminated,”said Robert Willens, an independenttax analyst. “It clearly has to be lessambitious.”
Others are even less optimistic.“Getting corporate tax relief done
in 2017 has gone from a decent chanceto remote,” said Michael Purves,chief global strategist at Weeden &Co. “That’s a huge contributor topotential earnings.”
Economists at investment bankGoldman Sachs see “some downsiderisk” to their original expectation fora tax cut of about $1.75 trillion over10 years, though they still see a dealpassing.
Trump has said he wants to cutcorporate taxes from 35 percent to arange of 15 to 20 percent.
A watered-down version of his taxgoals could rattle the concern amongmoney managers that equities’ valu-ations are stretched.
Analysts expect S&P 500 profitgrowth of 11 percent this year, ac-cording to Thomson Reuters data— with many analysts not yet addinga tax cut into that estimate — a big in-crease over 1.4 percent growth in 2016.
“What (the health care bill’s fail-ure) does in my mind is further em-phasize the case for internationaland emerging market equities,” saidJack Ablin, chief investment officerat BMO Private Bank.
On a forward price-to-earnings ba-sis, the U.S. market is more expensivethan it has been in years when com-pared with the United Kingdom, Eu-rope and emerging markets. AgainstJapan, it is at its most expensive in atleast six months.
Investors in U.S. stocks are payingalmost $18 for every dollar expectedin earnings over the next 12 months,compared with just above $14 forstocks on the London, Tokyo andEuropean exchanges, and near $12 forthose on emerging market exchanges.
More upside is seen in Europeanmarkets this year. Reuters polls re-cently predicted a gain of less than3 percent in U.S. stocks between nowand the end of the year, versus a riseof 5 to 6 percent for the STOXX 600and Euro STOXX 50.
“Making an argument for Europeover the U.S. is very easy at thispoint,” said Matt Burdett, a portfoliomanager at Thornburg InvestmentManagement, which has $49 billionin assets under management.
Dave Wright, a co-portfolio man-ager of the Sierra Strategic Incomefund, which manages $2.3 billion inassets, said the U.S. market looks“substantially overvalued.”
Reflecting the growing appetite U.S.investors have for overseas assets, U.S.-based European stock funds attracted$636 million during the week endingMarch 22, the largest inflows sinceDecember 2015, according to Lipperdata. The four-week moving average ofinflows for these funds totaled $328 mil-lion in the latest week, the highestamount since January 2016. For thesame period, U.S.-based equity fundsposted net cash withdrawals of morethan $1 billion, Lipper data showed.
Still, investors are unlikely to bailout of equities based on the fate ofthe Trump tax plan alone.
“Whether or not they hit 20 percentcorporate tax rate or 25 percent isimmaterial when you look at the bigpicture,” said Jason Ware, chief in-vestment officer at Albion FinancialGroup.
REUTERS
U.S. stocksmay hingeon Trumptax plan
An Amazon worker loads groceries into a customer’s car at an AmazonFresh Pickup location in Seattle. The grocery pickupservice, currently open only to Amazon employees, eventually will be available to its Prime subscribers.
PHOTOS: AP
SEATTLE — Amazon.com’s latest experiment isa clear indication of whereit’s seeking a big chunk ofits future bread and butter:the massive world of groceryretail.
Last week, the e-commercegiant unveiled two grocerypickup spots in Seattle underthe AmazonFresh brand.
That’s the same outfit thatlaunched a decade ago todeliver groceries to custom-ers’ doorsteps in Seattle. Ithas since expanded to morethan 20 metropolitan areas,from Los Angeles to London,but has failed to make a ma-jor dent against establishedsupermarket chains, including archrivalWal-Mart.
Groceries — a $600 billion U.S. market —are a critical nut for Amazon to crack if it’sto unseat Wal-Mart as the world’s largest re-tailer. Analysts with Cowen & Co. called theAmerican grocery sector Amazon’s “big-gest potential source of revenue upside.”
Dubbed AmazonFresh Pickup, the loca-tions are designed for shoppers who maketheir purchases online and then select atime to pick them up. An Amazon employeeat the pickup site will bring the bags to theshopper’s car.
The locations have been the target of spec-ulation for months. Tech news site GeekWirefirst spotted construction at a location inAugust, but Amazon, even as it worked on thefacilities, remained mum on their purpose.
Amazon says that, for now, the locationsare in “beta” mode — that is, available toAmazon employees participating in a testprogram.
But when they open to the general public,they’ll be exclusively for members of Ama-zon’s $99-a-year Prime loyalty program.The company declined to specify when thatwould happen.
Unlike the AmazonFresh delivery ser-vice, which costs $14.99 a month, use of thepickup locations is free, with no minimumorder. Orders can be picked up two hoursafter purchase.
AmazonFresh members, however, willhave the special perk of being able to pickup their purchases in 15 minutes.
Amazon is not the first to come up withso-called “click and collect” grocery shop-ping. Supermarket chains from Texas’H-E-B to Kroger and Wal-Mart offer theservice. Yet Amazon may have an edge overits competitors because of the popularityof its smartphone app — about 30 millionAmericans use it on a monthly basis, saysCooper Smith, an analyst at L2, a businessintelligence consultancy.
“Clearly, this is a mo-bile play,” Smith said,targeted to “younger con-sumers, high-net-worthconsumers.”
“I wouldn’t be sur-prised if five years fromnow you have Amazonstores along the majormetropolitan areas alongthe coasts.”
The AmazonFreshPickup facilities are partof what seems to be amultipronged approachto unraveling the mys-tery of profitably sellinggroceries in the digitalage. That effort is besetby difficult logistics andby shoppers’ reluctanceto buy certain foods,
such as produce and meats, sight unseen.Brick-and-mortar stores play a big role
in this retail re-imagining. One prominentcomponent is the Amazon Go store, a pilotconvenience store that opened in Decemberin one of the company’s downtown Seattlehigh-rises. The 1,800-square-foot store hastechnology similar to that used in self-driving cars; shoppers can walk in, pickup a product from the shelf and walk outthe door without dealing with a cashier;the item is automatically charged to theiraccount.
Groceries are also part of a wider pushby Amazon into the physical world, a cam-paign in which Seattle serves as a stagingground. In 2015, the company opened itsfirst brick-and-mortar bookstore in the city.Recently, it announced what will be its 10thbookstore at another Seattle location. TheNew York Times reported that Amazon isalso pondering brick-and-mortar emporiafor appliances and furniture.
SEATTLE TIMES
GROCERIESON THE GO
Amazon to test food pickup locations in Seattle
Go north, retirees.Despite its harsh winter,
New Hampshire is the bestplace to retire, accordingto personal finance siteBankrate.com.
Colorado, Maine, Iowaand Minnesota round outits top five retirement des-tinations.
The chosen states offerthe best options in the fi-nancial and lifestyle catego-ries that matter to retirees.From most to least impor-tant, the categories were:cost of living, health carequality, crime, cultural vi-tality, weather, taxes, seniorcitizens’ well-being and the
prevalence of other seniors.New Hampshire ranked
in the top five in three ofthe categories — well-being(second-best), crime (third-lowest) and health carequality (fourth-best) — andgenerally performed well inother areas, except weather.
Nonretired U.S. adultsweresurveyednationallyforthe report, Bankrate says.
“What people think theywant in retirement may notend up being what servesthem best over the longrun,” Bankrate.com analystClaes Bell said. “It’s about alot more than sunny skies,beaches and golf courses.As you get older, practicalconsiderations like healthcare, taxes and proximity tofamily and friends becomemuch more important.”
Daydreaming about pack-ing up and heading to new
and strange destinations atretirement is still commoneven among young workers.About half of non-retiredU.S. adults would considermoving to a different cityor state when they retire,the study said. More than
half (58 percent) of millen-nials expressed their desireto move, while 46 percent ofGen Xers said the same.
But people’s desire toleave their professionaland familial ties to explorenew surroundings wanes as
they get closer to retirementage, the study found. Only37 percent of Baby Boomersand 12 percent of the SilentGeneration (1925-45) saidthey’d move to a new cityafter retirement.
Warm southern statessuchasArizona,FloridaandNevada are still popular des-tinations.Buttheydidn’tfareas well as the colder statescited in the report in severalimportant categories.
Florida ranked 17thamong the states, failing tocrack the top 10 in any ofthe categories except for theprevalence of other seniors.
Nevada was among theworst states to retire, rank-ing 44th. It has the nation’sworst health care qualityandthefourth-highestcrimerate, which outweighed itsfavorable weather and lowtaxes, the report said.
USA TODAY
Colder states top list of retirement destinations
The Connecticut River flows through Pittsburg, N.H.The state was named the best place to retire.
Health bill’s failure reducesinvestor expectations, whetsappetite for overseas equities
AP
N.H. ranked No. 1by those planningpost-career move
SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017 · C7
New York Stock Exchange
AAAR .30 33.63 -.39ABB Ltd .76e 23.40 +.12ABM .68 43.60 +.34AES Corp .48f 11.18 -.05AFLAC 1.72 72.42 +.43AGCO .56f 60.18 +.98AK Steel 7.19 +.03AMC Ent .80 31.45 +.60AMN Hlth 40.60 +2.10ARC Docu 3.45 -.30AT&T Inc 1.96 41.55 -.13A10 Ntwks 9.15 -.03AU Optron e 3.82 -.01Aarons .11 29.74 +1.03AbbottLab 1.06 44.41 -.32AbbVie 2.56 65.16 -.46AberFitc .80 11.93 +.62AcadiaRlt 1.04 30.06 -.01Accenture 2.31 119.88 +.90AccoBrds 13.15 +.15Actuant .04 26.35 +.45Acuity .52 204.00 +4.00AdaDvsEq .92e 13.75 +.15Adecaogro 11.46 -.31Adeptus 1.80 +.21Adient n .28p 72.67 +4.15AdvAuto .24 148.26 -1.47AdvDisp n 22.60 -.14AdvDrainS .24 21.90 +.45AdvSemi .25e 6.48 -.06AdvFood n .64 31.17 +.43Advansx n 27.32 +.79AdvCCvII .56 6.11 +.06AdvActBear 8.80 -.15Aecom 35.59 +1.49AegeanMP .08 12.05 +.60Aegon .29e 5.13 -.15AerCap 45.97 +1.40AerojetR 21.70 +.28Aetna 2.00f 127.55 +.78AffilMgrs 163.94 +5.08Agilent .53 52.87 -.08Agnico g .40 42.44 -1.39Agrium g 3.50 95.55 +1.63AirLease .30f 38.75 +.99AirProd 3.80f 135.29 +1.30Aircastle 1.04 24.13 +.72AlamosGld .02 8.03 -.15AlaskaAir 1.20f 92.22 -2.48Albemarle 1.28f 105.64 +1.19Alcoa Cp 34.40 +1.84Alere 39.73 +.60AlexREE 3.32 110.52 -.01Alibaba 107.83 -.21AllegTch 17.96 +.69Allegion .64f 75.70 +.65Allergan 238.92 +1.59Allete 2.14f 67.71 -.21AlliData .52p 249.00 +5.21AlliBGlbHi .97a 12.58 +.10AlliBern 1.81e 22.85 +1.15AlliantEg s 1.18 39.61 -.49AlliGlCvInc .78 6.76 +.25AlliGblCv2 .69 6.05 +.25AlliNFJDv 1.20 12.89 +.08AlldWldAsr 1.04 53.10 -.04AllisonTrn .60 36.06 +.80Allstate 1.48f 81.49 +.50AllyFincl .32p 20.33 +.37AlonUSA .60 12.19 +.07AlpGPPrp .60 5.72 +.12AlpTotDiv .69 8.26 +.11AlpsDvDog 1.40e 42.95 +.38AlpAlerMLP 1.35e12.71 +.16Alteryx n 15.63AltisResid .60 15.25 +.99Altria 2.44 71.42 -1.75Ambev .06e 5.76 +.15Ameren 1.76f 54.59 -1.60AMovilL .66e 14.17 +.05AmAssets 1.04f 41.84 -.08AmAxle 18.78 +.16AmCampus 1.68 47.59 -.48AEagleOut .50 14.03 +.18AEP 2.36 67.13 -.66AEqInvLf .24f 23.63 -.08AmExp 1.28 79.11 +.91AFnclGrp 1.25 95.42 +2.03AHm4Rent .20 22.96 -.42AmIntlGrp 1.28 62.43 +1.55AMidstrm 1.65 14.85 -.15AmTower 2.48f 121.54 +2.22AmWtrWks 1.50 77.77 +.68Amerigas 3.76 47.09 +1.62Ameriprise 3.00 129.68 +4.42AmeriBrgn 1.46 88.50 +1.94Ametek .36 54.08 +.66Ampco .36 14.05 +.10Amphenol .64f 71.17 +.20Amplify n 8.40 -.02Anadarko .20 62.00 +1.66AnglogldA 10.77 -.33ABInBev 3.19e 109.76 -1.10Annaly 1.20a 11.11 +.27AnteroMid 1.12f 33.16 -.38AnteroRes 1.00 22.81 +.32Anthem 2.60 165.38 +2.63Anworth .60 5.55 +.20Aon plc 1.32 118.69 +1.15Apache 1.00 51.39 +1.15AptInv 1.44f 44.35 -.39ApolloCRE 1.84 18.81 +.69ApolloGM 1.42e 24.32 +.92ApollG pfA 1.60 25.16 +.10AppHReit n 1.20 19.10 +.57Aptargrp 1.28 76.99 +.37AquaAm .74 32.15 +.30Aramark .41 36.87 +.30ArborRT .68f 8.38 +.34ArcelorMit 8.35 +.06ArchCoal 68.94 +4.17ArchDan 1.28f 46.04 +.46Archrock .48 12.40 +.30Arconic .15p 26.34 -.34ArcosDor 8.05 +.70ArdmoreSh .71e 8.05 +.25AresMgmt 1.12f 18.95 +.65AristaNetw 132.27 +.50ArlingAst 2.50 14.13 +.32ArmadaHof .76f 13.89 +.37ArmourR rs 3.39 22.71 +.59ArmstrWld 46.05 +1.25ArrowEl 73.41 +.39ArtisanPtr 2.80a 27.60 +.97AsburyA 60.10 -.55AshHPrm .64f 10.61 +.59AshfordHT .48 6.37 +.64Ashland 1.56 123.81 +1.96AspenIns .88 52.05 +.05AsscdBanc .48 24.40 +.90Assurant 2.12 95.67 +.61AssuredG .57f 37.11 +.26AstoriaF .16 20.51 +.24AstraZen s 1.40e 31.14 -.17AtHomGr n 15.16 -.45Athene n 49.99 -.93AtkoreInt n 26.28 +.74AtlPwr g .12 2.65 +.10ATMOS 1.80f 78.99 -1.15AtwoodOcn .30m 9.53 +.40AutoNatn 42.29 +.02Autohome 31.77 -.13Autoliv 2.32 102.26 +.58AutoZone 723.05 +1.89AvalonBay 5.68f183.60 -1.60Avangrid n 1.73 42.74 -.42AveryD 1.64f 80.60 +.99Avianca .10e 7.71 -.11Avista 1.43f 39.05 -.60Avnet .72f 45.76 +1.36Avon 4.40 +.14Axalta 32.20 +1.34AXIS Cap 1.52f 67.03 +.69Axovant n 14.94 +.03
BB&G Foods 1.86 40.25 +.07BB&T Cp 1.20 44.70 +.29BCE g 2.73 44.27 +.25BHP BillLt 2.48e 36.32 -.19BHPBil plc .64m 31.15 -.09BP PLC 2.38 34.52 +.74BP Pru 2.43e 20.10 +1.45BRF SA .40e 12.25 +.84BT Grp s .99e 20.09 -.27BWX Tech .36 47.60 +.08B&W Ent n 9.34 +.51BakrHu .68 59.82 +.83BallCorp .52 74.26 +.53BanColum 1.27e 39.87 +.83BancCalif .52 20.70 +.40BcBilVArg .42e 7.61 -.02BcoBrad s .43e 10.24 +.10BcoLatin 1.54 27.74 +.63BcoSantSA .23e 6.07 -.06BcoSBrasil .28e 8.82 -1.08BcSanChile 1.13e 25.08 +.26BcpSouth .50 30.25 +.85BkofAm .30f 23.59 +.47BkAm pfL 72.501195.06+13.19BkAm wtA 11.30 +.51BkAm wtB .92 -.05Bk of But n a 31.91 +.90BkHawaii 2.00f 82.36 +2.95BkMont g 3.52 74.79 +.53BkNYMel .68 47.23 +.98BkNova g 2.74 58.57 +1.01Bankrate 9.65 +.05
BankUtd .84 37.31 +1.91BiP Cocoa 26.00 -.47BarcBk prD 2.03 25.86 -.06Barclay .39e 11.24 -.02B iPVxST rs 15.79 -.98Bard 1.04f 248.54 -1.37B&N Ed n .15p 9.59 +.21BarnesNob .60 9.25 +.65Barracuda 23.11 +.07BarrickG .12f 18.99 -.22BasicEn n 33.36 +1.66Baxter s .52 51.86 -.16BaytexE g 3.42 +.28BeazerHm 12.13 +.41BectDck 2.92 183.44 -.43Belden .20 69.19 +1.89Bellatrix g .79 +.05Belmond 12.10 +.05Bemis 1.20f 48.86 +.11BenchElec 31.80 -.20Berkley .52 70.63 +.21BerkHa A 249850 -2451BerkH B 166.68 -1.98BerkHBcp .84f 36.05 +.95BerryPlas 48.57 +.43BestBuy 1.36f 49.15 +4.30BigLots 1.00f 48.68 +.52BBarrett 4.55 +.38BioAmber 2.32 +.17BioRadA 199.34 -1.07BitautoH 25.61 -.03BlkHillsCp 1.78f 66.47 +.26BlkStMin n 1.15f 16.51 -.06BlackRock 10.00f383.51 +9.10BlkCpHiY .84a 10.92 +.14BlkCrdAllo .97 13.16 +.17BlkDbtStr rs 11.52 +.09BlkEnhC&I 1.20 14.32 +.13BlkEEqDv .56 8.55 +.11BlkGlbOp 1.16 12.40 +.02BlkIntlG&I .59 5.79 +.02BlkRsCmdy .79 8.60 +.19BlkstGSOSt 1.26 15.84 +.07Blackstone 1.46 29.70 +.02BlkstnMtg 2.48f 30.96 +.76BlockHR .88 23.25 +.83BdwlkPpl .40 18.31 +.81Boeing 5.68f 176.86 +1.04BoiseCasc 26.70 +.10BonanzaCE 1.16 +.13BoozAllnH .68f 35.39 -.98BorgWarn .56f 41.79 +.51BostProp 3.00f 132.41 +.68BostonSci 24.87 +.55Box Inc n 16.31 -.06BoydGm 22.01 +1.40BradyCp .82f 38.65 +.35Brandyw .64 16.23 -.02Braskem .38e 20.35 +.10BrigStrat .56 22.45 +.68BrightHrz 72.49 +2.18Brinker 1.36 43.96 +1.20Brinks .40 53.45 +2.15BrMySq 1.56f 54.38 -1.51BristowGp .28 15.21 +1.98BrixmorP 1.04f 21.46 -.19BroadrdgF 1.32 67.95 +.19Brookdale 13.43 +1.33BrkfdAs g s .56f 36.46 +.51BrkfInfra s 1.74f 38.67 +.38BrwnBrn .54 41.72 -.89BrownFB s 46.18 -.91Brunswick .66f 61.20 -.26Buckeye 4.96f 68.56 +1.67Buckle 1.00e 18.60 +1.10Buenavent 12.04 -.45BungeLt 1.68 79.26 -.91BurlStrs 97.29 +2.49
CCAE Inc g .32 15.29 +.40CBIZ Inc 13.55 -.20CBL Asc 1.06 9.54 +.36CBRE GRE .60 7.47 +.10CBRE Grp 34.79 +.41CBS B .72 69.36 +2.46CEB Inc 1.65 78.60 -.20CF Inds s 1.20 29.35 +.17CGI g 47.93 +1.13CIT Grp .60 42.93 +1.57CMS Eng 1.33f 44.74 -.54CNA Fn 1.00a 44.17 +.78CNH Indl .12 9.64 -.05CNO Fincl .32 20.50 +.30CPFL Eng .40t 16.39 -.12CRH .74e 35.17 +.09CSRA n .40 29.29 -.14CST Brnds .19j 48.09 -.16CVR Engy 2.00 20.08 +.90CVR Ptrs .71e 4.65 -.02CVR Rfng 3.12e 9.45 +.35CVS Health 2.00f 78.50 +.01CYS Invest 1.00 7.95 +.27Cabelas 53.11 +6.76Cabot 1.20 59.91 +1.65CabotO&G .08 23.91 +.73CalAtlantic .16 37.45 +.70Caleres .28 26.42 -.23Calgon .20 14.60 +1.15CalifRes rs 15.04 +2.07CalifWtr .72f 35.85 +.80Calix 7.25 +.21CallGolf .04 11.07 -.10CallonPet 13.16 +1.29Calpine 11.05 +.25Cambrex 55.05 +4.60CamdenPT 3.00 80.46 -.66Cameco g .40 11.07 +.26CampSp 1.40 57.24 -.20CampWrl n .08p 32.24 +1.16CdaGoose n 15.96 +.32CIBC g 4.84 86.21 -.47CdnNR gs 1.18 73.93 +1.62CdnNRs gs .82 32.79 +.77CP Rwy g 1.64 146.92 +1.77Canon 31.27 -.02CantelMed .12f 80.10 +4.19CapOne 1.60 86.66 +2.86CapOne pfG 23.07 +.27CapSenL 14.06 +.75CapsteadM .84m 10.54 +.33CarboCer 13.04 +1.14CardnlHlth 1.80 81.55 +.77CareCPrp n 2.28 26.87 +1.49Care.com 12.51 +.84Carlisle 1.40f 106.41 -.07CarMax 59.22 -.38Carnival 1.40 58.91 +.31CarnUK 1.20 57.89 +.40CarpTech .72 37.30 +1.16Carters 1.32 89.80 +.12CastlightH 3.65 +.45Catalent 28.32 +.29CatchMTim .54f 11.52 +.33Caterpillar 3.08 92.76 +.61CatoCp 1.32 21.96 +.53CedarRlty .20 5.02 -.01Celadon .08 6.55 -.25Celanese 1.44 89.85 +.38Celestic g 14.53 +.21Cemex .29t 9.07 +.20Cemig pf .14e 3.29 +.05CenovusE .20 11.30 -1.31Centene s 71.26 +2.53CenterPnt 1.07 27.57 -.30CentElBr B 6.91 -.49CentElecBr 5.43 -.64CntryLink 2.16 23.57 +.81Cervecer .30e 25.27 +.47ChRvLab 89.95 +1.84ChathLTr 1.32 19.75 +.63CheetahM 10.74 -.76Chegg 8.44 +.30Chemours n .12 38.50 +4.35Chemtura 33.40 +.20CherHMtg 1.96 17.09 +.53ChesEng 5.94 +.72ChespkLdg 1.60 23.96 +.91Chevron 4.32f 107.37 -.62ChicB&I .28 30.75 +1.92Chicos .33f 14.20 +.13Chimera rs 2.00 20.18 +.61Chimer pfB 2.00 25.39 +.27ChiCBlood 6.66 +.45ChinaLife s .32e 15.33 -.28ChinaMble 1.87e 55.23 -.77ChinaUni .32e 13.47 +.03Chipotle 445.52+31.50ChoiceHtls .86f 62.60 +.27ChrisBnk 1.48 +.11ChubbLtd 2.76e 136.25 +.88ChungTel 1.57e 33.98 -.31ChurchDwt s .76f 49.87 -.35CIBER .40 +.07CienaCorp 23.61Cigna .04 146.49 +.67Cimarex .32 119.49 +2.84CinciBell rs 17.70 -.80Cinemark 1.08 44.34 +1.08Citigp pfN 1.97 26.65 +.02CgpVelLCrd 19.76 +2.83CgpVelICrd 26.76 -4.83Citigroup .64 59.82 +1.75Citigp wtA .15 +.00CitizFincl .40 34.55 +.04Civeo 2.99 +.31CleanHarb 55.62 +1.23ClearChan 6.05 +.04ClearEnFd 1.76f 16.73 +.44CliffsNRs 8.21 +.07
Clorox 3.20 134.83 -2.98CloudPeak 4.58 +.37ClubCorp .52 16.05 +.05Coach 1.35 41.33 +2.24CobaltIEn .53 +.12CocaCola 1.48f 42.44 +.32CocaCEur n .89e 37.69Coeur 8.08 +.22Cohen&Str 1.12f 39.97 +2.41CohStInfra 1.60 21.55 +.35CohStQIR .96 12.29 +.07Colfax 39.26 +1.85ColgPalm 1.60f 73.19 -.48ColNrthS n 12.91 +.16ColonyStar .88 33.95 +.47Col EMCns .30e 24.82 -.31ColumbPT .80m 22.25 +.30Comerica .92f 68.58 +1.35ComfrtS .28 36.65 +1.70CmclMtls .48 19.13 +1.03CmtyBkSy 1.28 54.98 +1.62CmtyHlt 8.87 -.67CBD-Pao .38e 19.20 -.43CompDivHd 1.44 16.60 +.20CompssMn 2.88f 67.85 +1.90CompSci s .56 69.01 +1.31ComstkRs rs 9.23 +.34ConAgra .80 40.34 -.13ConchoRes 128.34 +3.16Conduent n 16.78 +.97ConeMidst 1.09f 23.61 +2.61ConocoPhil 1.06f 49.87 +5.77ConsolEngy .04 16.78 +1.07ConEd 2.76f 77.66 -.75ConstellA 1.60 162.07 -1.99Constellm 6.50 +.30ContainStr 4.23 +.28ContlBldg 24.50 -1.05ContlRescs 45.42 +2.91Cnvrgys .36 21.15 +.69CooperCo .06 199.89 +.09CooperTire .42 44.35 +.95CopaHold 2.04 112.25 +3.11Copel .88e 10.31 -.26CoreLabs 2.20 115.52 +6.52Corecivic 1.68m 31.42 +.09CoreLogic 40.72 +1.56CoreSite 3.20 90.05 +1.98Corning .62f 27.00 -.41CorpOffP 1.10 33.10 -.09CorpOf pfL 1.84 25.23 +.09Cosan Ltd .26e 8.54 +.30Costamre .40 6.66 +.25Cotiviti n 41.63 +1.68Cott Cp .24 12.36 +.26Coty .50 18.13 -.34CousPrp .24 8.27 +.17CovantaH 1.00 15.70 +.75Crane 1.32 74.83 +2.45Credicp 2.19e 163.30 -.91CSVInvN rs 20.93 -.93CSVLgNG rs 20.75 +.71CredSuiss 1.21e 14.84 +.17CrescPtE g .28 10.82 +.04CrestEq rs 2.40e 26.25 +1.05CrwnCstle 3.80 94.45 +.77CrownHold 52.95 +.41CubeSmart 1.08 25.96 -.27CullenFr 2.16f 88.97 +3.45Cummins 4.10 151.20 +.43CurEuro 103.41 -1.24CurtisWrt .52 91.26 +.17CustomBcp 31.53 +.91
DDCP Mid 3.12 39.23 +1.91DCT IndlTr 1.16 48.12 +.66DDR Corp .76 12.53 -.21DHI Grp 3.95 -.30DHT Hldgs .58e 4.47 -.01DNP Selct .78 10.80 +.09DR Horton .32 33.31 +.09Drdgold .08f 4.91 -.09DST Sys 1.40f 122.50 +8.34DSW Inc .80 20.68 +1.41DTE 3.30f 102.11 -.06DanaInc .24 19.31 +1.12Danaher .56f 85.53 -.34DaqoNEn 18.77 -3.14Darden 2.24 83.67 +6.96DarlingIng 14.52 +.21DaVita Inc 67.97 +1.20DeVryEd .36 35.45 +2.25DeanFoods .36 19.66 +.61DeckrsOut 59.73 +3.45Deere 2.40 108.86 +.48Delek .60a 24.27 +.10DellTch n 64.08 +.71DelphiAuto 1.16 80.49 +1.59DeltaAir .81 45.96 -.04Deluxe 1.20 72.17 +1.04DenburyR 2.58 +.31DeutBk rt 2.36 +.23DeutschBk .83e 17.16 +.33DeutBCT5 pf 2.01 26.46 +.18DBXEafeEq 1.00e 29.59 +.20DBXJapnEq 2.26e 37.51 -.21DBXEurHgd 1.28e27.06 +.26DBXHvChiA 8.43e25.13 -.27DevonE .24 41.72 +2.92Diageo 3.23e 115.58 -.85DiamOffsh .50 16.71 +1.00DiamRk .50 11.15 +.38DianaShip 4.62 +.03DicksSptg .68f 48.66 +1.67Diebold .40 30.70 +1.40DigitalRlt 3.72f 106.39 +2.65DigitalGlb 32.75 +.40Dillards .28 52.24 +4.85DineEquity 3.88 54.42 +3.06DiploPhm 15.95 +1.16DxSPOGBr rs 16.14 -3.45DirDGlBr rs 31.06 +.36DxGlMBr rs 14.84 +.14DrxEMBll rs 73.67 -2.70DxBrzBull s 41.18 +1.00DxBiotBll rs 47.72 +1.23DxSPOGBl rs 71.50+11.62DirSPBear 9.06 -.21DxEnBear 11.37 -.72DxEMBear 17.35 +.60DxSCBear rs 18.04 -1.26DxFnBr rs 19.35 -.48DrGMBll s 6.46 -.15DxGBull s 8.99 -.22Dx30TBear 22.38 +.03DxFnBull s 44.40 +.95DxBiotBear 10.47 -.32DxSOXBr rs 7.46 -.16DxRsaBr rs 6.35 +.25DxChiBear s 12.11 +.67DxSOXBll s .01e 78.32 +1.69Dir30TrBul s 18.72 -.10DirxChiBull .07e 20.00 -1.27DrxSCBull .48e 105.77 +6.67DrxSPBull 126.35 +2.70DirxEnBull 31.70 +1.77Discover 1.20 68.39 +1.18Disney 1.56f 113.39 +1.25DrReddy .31e 40.15 +.47DolbyLab .56 52.41 +1.17DollarGen 1.00 69.73 +.25DomDmd g .40 12.63 -.09DomMidst 1.04f 31.95 +.50DomRescs 3.02f 77.57 -.69DomRes un 50.88 -.12Dominos 1.84f 184.30 +1.35Domtar g 1.66 36.52 -.46Donaldson .70 45.52 +.65DonlleyRR rs .56 12.11 +.39DonnlyFn n 19.29 -.43DorianLPG 10.53 +.53DoubIncSol 1.80a 20.07 +.29DEmmett .92 38.40 +.26Dover 1.76 80.35 +2.21DowChm 1.84 63.54 +.92DrPepSnap 2.32f 97.92 +.96DryHYSt .35 3.39 +.03Dril-Quip 54.55 +3.00DriveShack .48 4.15 +.09DuPont 1.52 80.33 +.73DuPFabros 2.00 49.59 +.79DukeEngy 3.42 82.01 -.98DukeRlty .76 26.27 +.10DunBrad 2.01f 107.94 +3.11Dycom 92.95 +3.04Dynegy 7.86 +.53DynexCap .72m 7.09 +.29
EE-TrAlerInf 1.88e 29.18 +.63ELF Inc n 28.80 +2.41EMCOR .32 62.95 +1.80ENI 2.12e 32.73 +.35EOG Rescs .67 97.55 +2.69EP Energy 4.75 +.38EPAM Sys 75.52 +2.25EPR Prop 3.84 73.63 +.99EQT Corp .12 61.10 +3.80EQT Mid 3.40f 76.90 +.49ETF Cyber 29.52 +.45EtfInfcMLP 2.08 11.18 +.20EagleMat .40 97.14 +.29EaglePtCr .80m 20.85 +1.40EastGvP n .96f 19.79 +.36Eastgrp 2.40 73.53 +.23EastChem 2.04f 80.80 +3.62EKodak 11.50 +.35Eaton 2.28 74.15 +1.31EatnVan 1.12 44.96 +.61EV EEq2 1.05 13.51 +.10
EVRiskMgd 1.12 9.08 -.02EV TxAG 1.23 15.67 +.19EV TxDiver 1.01 11.07 +.06EVTxMGlo .98 8.52 +.12EVTxGBW 1.17 10.91 +.12EVTxBWOp 1.33 15.21EclipseRs 2.54 +.17Ecolab 1.48 125.34 +1.51Ecopetrol 1.03e 9.32 +.27Edgewell 73.14 -.28EdisonInt 2.17 79.61 -.56EducRltTr 1.52 40.85 +.59EdwLfSci s 94.07 -1.52ElPasoEl 1.24 50.50 +.95EldorGld g .02e 3.41 +.27EliLilly 2.08f 84.11 -.07EllieMae 100.27 +2.13Embraer .18e 22.08 -.69EmergeES 2.68m 13.85 +1.98EmergBio 29.04 +.22EmersonEl 1.92 59.86 +1.29EmpStRTr .34 20.64 -.26EnLinkLP 1.56 18.30 +.86EnbrdgEM 2.33t 18.42 +.53EnbrdgEPt 2.33 19.00 +.87Enbridge 1.66f 41.84 +.94EnCana g .06 11.71 +1.16EndvSilv g 3.18 +.10Energen .08 54.44 +2.93Energizer n 1.10 55.75 +.06EgyTrEq s 1.14 19.73 +.83EngyTsfr 4.22 36.52 +.69Enerpls g .14e 8.05 +.57EnersisAm .35e 10.39 +.22EnerChile .16p 5.50 +.28EnerSys .70 78.94 +2.69Engility 28.94 +1.62EnLinkLLC 1.02 19.40 +1.05EnovaIntl 14.85 +1.10EnPro .88f 71.16 +7.59ENSCO .04 8.95 +.53Entergy 3.48 75.96 -.85EntProdPt 1.64 27.61 +.54Entravisn .13 6.20 +.10Envestnet 32.30 +.30EnvisnHl n 61.32 -2.93EnzoBio 8.37 -.06Equifax 1.56f 136.74 +.81EquityCmw 31.22 -.26EqtyLfPrp 1.95f 77.06 -.67EqtyRsd 2.16 62.22 -.72Eros Intl 10.30 -.05Essent 36.17 +1.16EssexPT 7.00f 231.53 -3.37EsteeLdr 1.36 84.79 -1.22EthanAl .76 30.65 +.90Etrac2xMtg 3.31e17.73 +.71Etr2xCEFd 2.88 17.44 +.43Euronav n 2.41e 7.90 -.10EverBank .24 19.48 +.01Evercore 1.24f 77.90 +.60EverestRe 5.00 233.81 +.41EveriHldgs 4.79 +.16EversrceE 1.90f 58.78 -1.23Evertec .40 15.90 +.15EvolentH n 22.30 +1.45Exar 13.01 +2.58ExcoRes .07p .62 +.10Exelon 1.31f 35.98 -.14Express 9.11 +.57ExtendStay .76 15.94 -.32Exterran n 31.45 +3.29ExtraSpce 3.12 74.39 -.65ExxonMbl 3.00 82.01 +.78
FFCB Fin 49.55 +2.60FMC Corp .66 69.59 +8.61FNBCp PA .48 14.87 +.33FS Invest .89 9.80 +.20FTI Cnslt 41.17 +1.08Fabrinet 42.03 -1.41FactsetR 2.00 164.91-11.82FairmSant 7.33 +.51FangHldg .20e 3.26 +.52Farmland .51 11.17 +.44FedExCp 1.60 195.15 +7.03FedRlty 3.92f 133.50 -1.30FedSignl .28 13.81 +.06FedInvst 1.00 26.34 +.84FelCor .24 7.51 +.06Ferrari n 74.36 +2.78Ferrellgs .40 6.00 -.06Ferro 15.19 +.49FiatChrys 10.93 +.12FibriaCelu .09e 9.14 +.25Fid&GtyLf .26 27.80 +.35FidEnergy .53e 19.63 +.51FidFinan .60e 35.15 +.41FidInfoTch .42e 41.15 +.43FidlNatFn 1.00f 38.94 +.39FNFV Grp 13.25 +.85FidNatInfo 1.16f 79.62 -.5058.com 35.39 -1.92FstAFin n 1.36 39.28 +.79FstBcpPR 5.65 +.20FstCash .76f 49.15 +3.80FstCwlth .32f 13.26 +.27FstData n 15.50 +.37FstHorizon .36f 18.50 +.32FstInRT .84f 26.63 +.36FMajSilv g 8.12 +.25FstPotom .40 10.28 +.27FstRepBk .64 93.81 +2.89FTEurSelDv 1.09e12.35 +.05FT PfdSec 1.02e 19.52 +.01FT LgShEq .16e 34.86 +.10FTDJInet 88.04 +1.06FT RNG .22e 24.47 +1.33FT Engy .33e 15.07 +.69FT Fincl .65e 27.70 +.40FT HlthCr 62.42 +.57FT IndPrd .16e 34.32 +.61FT Matls .37e 37.87 +.69FT Tech .13e 42.03 +.33FT Utils .67e 27.39 -.02FT NAEngy .93e 25.30 +.22FTMstrDv .79e 28.81 +.03FTrVLDv .57e 29.01 +.06FirstEngy 1.44 31.82 +.48Fitbit n 5.92 +.52500.com 13.41 +.64FlagstarB 28.19 +.85Fleetcor 151.43 -5.47FlxUpstNR 1.00e 29.45 +.11Flotek 12.79 +1.29FlowrsFds .64 19.41Flowserve .40m 48.42 +2.77Fluor .84 52.62 +1.18FEMSA .74e 88.52 -2.52FootLockr 1.24f 74.81 +2.22FordM .60a 11.64 +.02ForestCA .36f 21.78 -.05Forestar 13.65 +.80Fortis n 1.19 33.16 +.42Fortive n .28 60.22 +.91Fortress .32a 7.95 -.02FortunaSlv 5.20 +.18FBHmSec .72f 60.85 +.47ForumEn 20.70 +1.95FoundBld n 15.97 -.80FourCorP s .97 22.83 +.59FrancoN g .88f 65.51 +.93FrankCov 20.20 +4.15FrankRes .80 42.14 +1.08FranksIntl .30 10.57 +.57FrptMcM 13.36 +.55FDelMnt .60 59.23 +.92Frontlne rs .10 6.74 -.08FullerHB .56 51.56 +.36
GGATX 1.68f 60.96 +3.00GCP ApT n 32.65 -.30GGP Inc .88 23.18 +.07GMAC CpT 2.03 25.43 +.11GMS Inc n 35.04 +.49GNC .80 7.36 +.36GTT Comm 24.35 +.70GabDvInc 1.32 20.86 +.15GabelliET .64e 5.97 +.09Gain Cap .24f 8.33 +.20Gallaghr 1.56f 56.54 +.10GameStop 1.52f 22.55 +1.85Gannett n .64 8.38 +.20Gap .92 24.29 +1.02Gartner 107.99 -1.07GasLog .56 15.35 +.55GencoSh rs 12.50 +1.26Generac 37.28 -.03GnCable .72 17.95 +1.25GenDynam 3.36f187.20 -.32GenElec .96 29.80 +.08GenMills 1.92 59.01 -.15GenMotors 1.52 35.36 +.80Gener8M n 5.67 +.35Gensco 55.45 -.40GenesWyo 67.86 +2.69GenesisEn 2.84f 32.42 +.83GenesisHlt .12p 2.64 +.11GenieEn n .24 7.24 +1.32Genpact .24p 24.76 +.46GenuPrt 2.70f 92.41 -.43Genworth .44p 4.12 +.19GeoGrp 2.80f 46.37 +.40Gerdau .02e 3.45 -.10GettyRlty 1.12 25.27 +.13Gigamon 35.55 +1.10Gildan s .38f 27.04 +.88Glatfelter .52f 21.74 +.40Glaukos n 51.30 +1.01
GlaxoSKln 2.89e 42.16 -.15GlobNetL n .94 24.08 +.44GlobPay s .04 80.68 +2.26GlbShipLs .40 1.48 +.07GblXPortgl .23p 10.26 +.49GbXGreece .13e 7.96 +.27GblX MLP .90e 11.62 +.15GblXSupDv 1.42e 21.44 +.40GlbXLith rs 28.11 +1.00GbXUran rs 15.35 +.21GlobantSA 36.40 +.29GlobusMed 29.62 -.34GoDaddy n 37.90 +1.51GoldFLtd .02e 3.53 +.01Goldcrp g .24 14.59 -1.25GS BDC n 1.80 24.64 +.20GoldmanS 2.60 229.72 +1.31GS MLPEn .64 8.10 +.39vjGrace .84f 69.71 +1.22Graco 1.44f 94.14 +.57Graingr 4.88f 232.76 -6.77GrmPrTr rs .38 26.30 +.89GranaMon .25e 3.13 +.55GraniteC .52 50.19 +3.73GraphPkg .30 12.87 +.18GrayTelev 14.50 +.50GtPlainEn 1.10 29.22 +.31GrtWstBcp .68 42.41 +1.56GreenDot 33.36 +.58GreenbCos .84f 43.10 +1.35Greenhill 1.80 29.30 +.90Greif A 1.68 55.09 +.52Group1 .96f 74.08 +2.13GrubHub 32.89 -.78GpFnSnMx .30e 9.03 +.23GpSuprvi n 17.00 +1.06GpTelevisa 25.94 -.06Guess .90 11.15 +.47GugSPEW 1.31e 90.82 +1.01GugSPVal 1.18e 58.86 +.79GugEnhEq .96 8.08 +.08GugBlt22HY 1.27 25.31 +.34GugB21HY 1.27 24.99 +.22GugBlt22CB .58e 21.05GugB20HY 1.30e 24.64 +.19GugB19HY 1.22e 24.49 +.14GugB18HY 1.28e 25.33 +.10GugCpBd20 .61e 21.39 +.02GugBlt19CB .47e 21.23 +.01GugBlt18CB .40e 21.23 -.01GugBlt17CB .35e 22.62GugEShDur .65e 50.26 +.04Guidewire 56.33 +.86GulfMrkA .35
HHCA Hldg 88.99 +2.95HCP Inc 1.48 31.28 +.67HDFC Bk .37e 75.22 +2.37HFF Inc 1.80e 27.67 +1.01HNI Corp 1.10 46.09 +.75HP Inc .53f 17.88 +.65HRG Grp 19.32 +.31HSBC 1.50e 40.82 +.26Haemonet 40.57 +.98HalconRs n 7.70 +.78Hallibrtn .72 49.21 -.20HalyrdHlt 38.09 +.22HancFinOp 1.48 34.00 +.66Hanesbds s .60f 20.76 +.34HannArms 1.32f 20.20 +.81HanoverIns 2.00 90.06 +1.09HarleyD 1.45f 60.50 +.30HarmonyG 2.45 +.05HarrisCorp 2.12 111.27 +.38Harsco .20m 12.75 +.50HartfdFn .92 48.07 +.74HawaiiEl 1.24 33.31 -.37Headwatrs 23.48 -.05HlthcrRlty 1.20 32.50 +.57HlthcreTr 1.20 31.46 +.51HlthSouth .96 42.81 +1.06HeclaM .01e 5.29 +.23HelixEn 7.77 +.73HelmPayne 2.80f 66.57 +1.54Herbalife 58.14 +1.12HercHld n 48.89 +2.30HercTGC 1.24 15.13 +.32HeritageIns .24 12.77 +.42Hersha rs 1.12 18.79 +.29Hershey 2.47 109.25 +1.27HertzGl 17.54 +.09Hess 1.00f 48.21 +2.11HP Ent n .26 23.70 +.93Hexcel .44 54.55 +1.66Hi-Crush 17.35 +2.00HighwdPrp 1.76 49.13 -.41Hill Intl 4.15 -.75Hill-Rom .72f 70.60 +.47HillenInc .82 35.85 +.15HilltopH 27.47 +1.05HilGrVa n 28.66 -.19Hilton .15 58.46 +.15HollyEngy 2.43f 35.71 +1.78HollyFront 1.32 28.34 +1.69HomeDp 3.56f 146.83 -.88Honda .55e 30.26 -.52HonwllIntl 2.66 124.87 +.10HorMan 1.06 41.05 +1.25HorizGbl n 13.88 +.94Hormel s .68 34.63 +.11Hornbeck 4.43 +.38HostHotls .80a 18.66 +.81HoulihnL n .80f 34.45 +1.66HovnanE 2.27 +.01HubSpot 60.55HudBayM g .02 6.55 -.45HudsPacP 1.00f 34.64 +.23Humana 1.60f 206.14 -.73HuntgtnIng 2.40200.24 -4.69Huntsmn .50 24.54 +1.89Hyatt 53.98 +1.36
IIAMGld g 4.00 +.11ICICI Bk .16e 8.60 +.20IDT Cp .76 12.72 +.20ING .14e 15.09 +.17iShGold 12.01iShGSCI 14.82 +.39iSAstla 1.23e 22.61 +.44iShBrazil 1.03e 37.46 +.34iShCanada .60e 26.88 +.35iShEMU .95e 37.60 +.16iSFrance .68e 26.51 +.22iShGerm .51e 28.75 +.20iSh HK .49e 22.25 -.13iSh SKor .66e 61.87 -.60iShMexico .93e 51.17 -.39iSPacxJpn 2.08e 44.69 +.56iShSoAfr 1.37e 55.19 -5.18iShSpain 1.62e 30.41 +.10iSSwedn 1.40e 31.57 -.01iShSwitz .80e 31.98 -.09iShFrntr100 3.58e27.74 -.28iShWldMnV 1.47e77.13 -.25iSEMMnVol 1.42e53.50 -.31iShThai 2.08e 77.99 +.52iShChile .62e 43.56 +.18iShTurkey 1.10e 35.80 -.93iShSilver 17.25 +.44iShS&P100 1.92e104.70 +.68iShSPTUS s 54.03 +.52iShSelDiv 2.59e 91.10 +.58iShTIPS .43e 114.65 +.20iShChinaLC .76e 38.49 -.76iShTransp 1.70e 163.99 +3.25iSCorSP500 4.38e237.27+1.88iShUSAgBd 2.65e108.49 +.13iShEMkts .84e 39.39 -.42iShiBoxIG 3.87 117.91 +.19iShCorUSTr .33 25.05 +.02iShEMBd 5.27e 113.70 -.04iShIndones .38e 25.79 -.16iSSP500Gr 2.03e131.52 +1.02iSSPGlbEn 1.05e 33.20 +.64iSGblInfra 1.17e 42.32 +.29iShNANatR .85e 34.27 +.87iShUSAVal 1.49e 73.12 +1.04iShLatAm .67e 31.71 +.22iShUSAMo .81e 82.65 +.50iSSP500Val 2.14e104.04 +.76iShNMuBd 2.59 108.95 +.17iSh20 yrT 3.05 120.71 -.17iSh7-10yTB 1.96105.59 +.11iShIntSelDv 1.51e31.46 +.35iSh1-3yTB .52 84.52 +.03iS Eafe 1.70e 62.29 +.15iSRusMCV 1.59e 82.99 +1.17iSRusMCG 1.02e103.76 +.91iShRusMid 2.85e187.18 +2.11iSCorSPMid 1.89e171.22+2.56iShiBxHYB 5.09 87.78 +.95iShSft .12e 126.47 +1.33iShC&SRE 2.97e 99.75 +.54iShMBS 3.04e 106.55 +.17
iSR1KVal 2.41e 114.94 +.97iShPoland .79e 21.58 -.51iSMCGth 1.88e 190.91 +2.33iSR1KGr 1.45e 113.80 +1.06iSRus1K 2.36e 131.25 +1.10iSR2KVal 1.98e 118.16 +3.03iShIntCrBd 3.09 108.96 +.21iSh1-3CrBd 1.52 105.23 +.07iSR2KGr 1.36e 161.66 +3.04iShFltRtB .32 50.87 -.02iShR2K 1.77e 137.48 +2.99iSh3-7yTrB 1.78 123.05 +.17iShCorHiDv 2.90e 83.86 +.05iSCorUSVal s 50.48 +.41iSCorUSGr s 46.38 +.41iShChina 1.05e 49.93 -.65iShShtTrB .03e 110.34 +.06iShUSPfd 2.15a 38.70 +.24iSEafeMnV 1.77e 66.00 -.12iSRus3K 2.47e 139.90 +1.33iSUSAMinV .87e 47.72 +.01iShMCVal 2.16e 148.45 +2.70iShTelecm .68e 32.34 +.25iShTech 1.20e 135.17 +1.61iShREst 2.76e 78.49 +.75iShHmCnst .09e 31.98 +.29iShAerosp 1.31e 148.72 +1.50iShFinSv 1.21e 109.10 +1.25iShRegBks .61e 44.80 +.64iShFincls 1.45e 104.05 +.93iShBroker .65e 51.26 +.68iShUSEngy 1.14e 38.54 +.95iShCrSPS s 69.16 +1.50iShCorTInt 1.42e 54.75 -.15iShBasM 1.42e 89.14 +1.57iShCorEafe 1.55e 57.95 +.10iShEurope 1.19e 41.85 +.13iSMsciVal 1.87e 50.30 +.14iSSCVal 1.73e 138.65 +3.42iShEafeGr 1.37e 69.49 +.07iShSCGrth 1.41e 153.08 +2.85iStar 11.80 +.08ITT Inc .50 41.02 +1.76Idacorp 2.20 82.96 -.08IDEX 1.36f 93.51 +2.04ITW 2.60 132.47 +.35Imax Corp 34.00 +.05IndCDrillg 5.51 +.59IndoTel s .67 31.17 +.34Infosys .62e 15.80 +.13InfrREIT n 1.00 18.00 +.58IngerRd 1.60 81.32 +2.14Ingevity 60.85 -.15Ingredion 2.00f 120.43 -.15Inphi 48.82 +1.99Instructre n 23.40 -.60IntegerHl 40.20 -.50Intelsat 4.15 -.30InterXion 39.56 +.92IntcntlExc s 2.07e59.87 +.02IBM 5.60 174.14 +.31IntFlav 2.24 132.53 -.66IntlGmeT n .80 23.70 +.39IntPap 1.85f 50.78 -.03IntlSeaw n 19.12 -.73Interpublic .72f 24.57 +.41IntPotash 1.72 +.08Intrexon 19.82 +.68Invacare .05 11.90 +.72InvenSense 12.63 +.02InvDynCrd .90 12.23 -.12Invesco 1.12 30.63 +.53InvMtgCap 1.60 15.42 +.52InvMuOpTr .88 12.98 +.03InvSrInco .31 4.63 -.05InvRlEst .52 5.93 +.18Invitae n 11.06 +.66InvitHm n 21.83 +.25IronMtn 2.20 35.67 +.94iShItaly rs 25.74 +.13iShJapan rs 51.50 -.37iSMlasia rs 30.48 -.23iShSing rs 22.81 +.19iSTaiwn rs 33.23 -.44iSh UK rs 32.55 +.08iShCorEM 1.09e 47.79 -.50iShMgRE rs 45.29 +1.08iSh0-5HYCp 2.38 47.78 +.40iShCDivGr .65e 30.45 +.14iShCHEmu .64e 28.68 +.48iShCHGer .68e 27.83 +.54iShCorEur 1.18e 43.97 +.10iShRussia rs 32.12 -.53iSCHeafe .70e 27.52 +.18iShGbMM rs 28.08 -.04iShCHJpn .74e 28.03 -.17IsraelChm .27e 4.26 -.09ItauCorpb 2.48e 13.58 -.10ItauUnibH .32e 12.07 -.18
JJJill n 14.10 +1.14JPMorgCh 1.92 87.84 +.55JPMAlerian 2.29 32.30 +.69Jabil .32 28.92 +.18JacobsEng .15p 55.28 +1.15JaggedPk n 13.04 +.73JanusCap .44 13.20 +.47JeldWen n 32.85 +.28JinkoSolar 16.57 +.38JBeanTch .40 87.95 -.05JohnJn 3.20 124.55 -.93JohnContl n 1.08e42.12 +.90JonesEngy 2.55 +.25JonesLL .62f 111.45 +2.38JoyGlbl .04 28.25 +.06Jumei Intl 3.69 -.04JnprNtwk .40 27.83 +.01
KK12 19.15 +.50KAR Auct 1.28 43.67 +.20KB FnclGp 43.97 -1.39KB Home .10 19.88 +.27KBR Inc .32 15.03 +1.28KCG Hldg 17.83 -.11KKR 1.31e 18.23 +.06KT Corp 16.83 -.19Kadmon n 3.62 +.22KC Southn 1.32 85.76 +3.12KapStoneP .40 23.10 +.30KateSpade 23.23 +.04KA MLP 2.20 21.00 +1.10KeanGrp n 14.30 -.91Kellogg 2.08 72.61 -.39Kemet 12.00 +.28Kemper .96 39.90 +.90Kennamtl .80 39.23 +2.15KennWils .68f 22.20 +1.17KeyEngy 23.22 +1.68Keycorp .34 17.78 +.54Keysight 36.14 -.67KilroyR 1.50 72.08 -.16KimbClk 3.88f 131.63 -.82Kimco 1.02 22.09 -.49KindMorg .50 21.74 +.59KindrM wt .00 -.00KindredHlt .48 8.35 -.10Kinross g 3.51 +.12KirbyCp 70.55 +3.00KiteRlty 1.21 21.50 +.31KnightTr .24 31.35 +.30Knoll Inc .60 23.81 +.43Knowles 18.95 +.20Kohls 2.20f 39.81 +2.40Koppers 1.00 42.35 +1.05KoreaElc 20.73 -.32KornFer .40 31.49 +.65KosmosEn 6.66 +.77KratonCp 30.92 +2.80Kroger s .48 29.49 +.39KronosWw .60 16.43 +.76
LL Brands 2.40f 47.10 -.37L-3 Tch 2.80f 165.29 -1.63LCI Inds 2.00e 99.80 -.15LG Display 13.62 +.38LSB Inds 9.38 +.83LSC Com .25p 25.16 +1.21LTC Prp 2.28f 47.90 +.99LaQuinta 13.52 +.03LaZBoy .44 27.00 -.70LabCp 143.47 +1.47LadderCap 1.20 14.44 +.12LambWst n .75 42.06 -.61Lannett 22.35 +.90LaredoPet 14.60 +1.56LVSands 2.92f 57.07 +1.45LaSalleH 1.80 28.95 +.99Latam Air 12.67 -.03Lazard 1.52 45.99 +.98LearCorp 2.00f 141.58 +3.68Lee Ent 2.60LeggMason 1.28f 36.11 +1.40LeggPlat 1.36 50.32 +.23
LeidosHld 1.28a 51.14 -1.48LejuHldgs .20e 3.43 -.06LendingClb 5.49 +.29LennarA .16 51.19 +.15Lennox 1.72 167.30 -1.91LeucNatl .25 26.00 +.28Level3 57.22 +1.10LexRltyTr .70 9.98 -.04LbtyASE .52e 5.46 +.04LibtProp 1.60m 38.55 +.16LifeStorg 3.80 82.12 -2.05LincNat 1.16 65.45 +1.64Lindsay 1.16 88.12 +7.28LineCp n 38.46 +1.59LionsGat A 26.56 +.48LionsGat B 24.38 +.45LithiaMot 1.00 85.65 +.29LiveNatn 30.37 +.81LloydBkg .47a 3.40 -.06LockhdM 7.28 267.60 +.18Loews .25 46.77 +.73LaPac 24.82 +1.15Lowes 1.40 82.21LumberLiq 20.99 +2.39LyonBas A 3.40 91.19 +3.63
MM&T Bk 3.00f 154.73 -.24MBIA 8.47 +.35MDC 1.00 30.05 +.42MDU Res .77 27.37 +.20MFA Fncl .80 8.08 +.21MIN .42 4.31 +.02MMT .52 6.12 +.05MGIC Inv 10.13 +.18MGMGrPr n .65 27.05 +1.16MGM Rsts .39p 27.40 +1.69MPLX LP 2.06f 36.08 +.67MRC Glbl 18.33 +.47MSA Safety 1.28 70.69 +1.94MSC Ind 1.80 102.76 +2.34MSCI Inc 1.12 97.19 -.25MSG Netw 23.35 +.85Macerich 2.84 64.40 +.53MackCali .60 26.94 +.15Macquarie 5.24f 80.58 +.95Macys 1.51 29.64 +1.47MadSqGd n 199.71 +3.23MagellMid 3.42f 76.91 +.45Magna g s 1.10f 43.16 +.50MagnaChip 9.55 +.50MainStCap 2.22a 38.27 +1.07Mallinckdt 44.57 +1.48Manitowoc .08 5.70 +.05ManpwrGp 1.72 102.57 +2.65Manulife g .74 17.74 +.25MarathnO .20 15.80 +1.19MarathPt s 1.44 50.54 +1.67MarcusMill 24.58 +.92MarineMx 21.65 +.35MarshM 1.36 73.89 -.68MartMM 1.68 218.25+11.01Masco .40 33.99Masonite g 79.25 -.20Mastec 40.05 +2.00MasterCrd .88 112.47 +.49MatadorRs 23.79 +1.95Matson .72f 31.76 +1.17Maximus .18 62.20 +.25MaxLinear 28.05 +1.55McCorm 1.72f 97.55 -3.46McDrmInt 6.75 +.51McDnlds 3.76 129.61 +.27McKesson 1.12 148.26 +2.63McEwenM .01a 3.04 -.07MeadJohn 1.65 89.08 +.72Mechel pf 1.04Mechel rs 5.32 +.50Medequit n 11.21 +.36MedProp .96f 12.89 +.14MedleyCap .88 7.69 +.12Mednax 69.38 +.11Medtrnic 1.72 80.56 -.44Merck 1.88 63.54 +.36MercGn 2.49 60.99 +2.37Meredith 2.08f 64.60 +1.55Meritage 36.80 +.45Meritor 17.13 +.60Methode .36 45.60 +1.10MetLife 1.60 52.82 +.81MKors 38.11 +.55MidAApt 3.48 101.74 -.17MidcstEn 1.43 8.05 +.10MinTech .20 76.60 +1.75MitsuUFJ 6.34 -.11MizuhoFn 3.69 -.06MobileTele .88e 11.03 -.46Mobileye 61.40 +.62Modine 12.20 +1.20Moelis&Co .94a 38.50 +.90Mohawk 229.49 +2.47MolinaHlth 45.60 +.92MolsCoorB 1.64 95.71 -1.31MonRE .64 14.27 +.13MonogRes .30 9.97 +.12Monsanto 2.16 113.20 -.47Moodys 1.52f 112.04 -.43MorgStan .80 42.84 +.38MorgSt pfK 25.85 +.47MSEMDDbt .80m 7.58 -.05Mosaic 1.26f 29.18 +.43MotrlaSolu 1.88f 86.22 +2.55Mueller .40 34.23 +.92MuellerWat .16f 11.82 +.01Mulesft n 24.33 +1.80MultiPkg n 17.95 +.03MurphO 1.00 28.59 +2.83MurphUSA 73.42 +2.22
NNCI BldSy 17.15 +.95NCR Corp 45.68 +2.07NGL EnPt 1.56 22.60 +.90NQ Mobile 4.17 +.46NRG Egy .12 18.70 +.54NRG Yld A 1.00f 17.39 +.72NRG Yld C 1.04f 17.70 +.75Nabors .24 13.07 +.66NatBkHldg .28 32.50 +.69NatFuGas 1.62 59.62 +.22NatGrid 3.35e 63.48 -.06NtHlthInv 3.80f 72.63 +1.63NOilVarco .20 40.09 +1.63NatRetPrp 1.82 43.62 -.21NatlStor n .96 23.90 +.27Nationstar 15.76 +.81Nautilus 18.25 +.65NavigCons 22.86 +.37NavigatrH 13.75 -.05NaviosAcq .20 1.72 +.03Navios 1.87 +.18NaviosMar 1.27f 2.07 +.07Navistar 24.62 -.47NeffCorp 19.45 +1.80NeoPhoton 9.01 -.25NeuStar 33.15NevroCorp 93.70 +.02NJ Rscs s 1.02 39.60 +.40NewMedia 1.40 14.21 -.11NwMtnFin 1.36 14.90 +.10NewOriEd .40e 60.38 +1.43NewRelic 37.07 +.63NewResid 1.92f 16.98 +.38NewSenInv 1.04 10.20 +.45NY CmtyB .68 13.97 +.07NY REIT .46 9.69 +.08NY Times .16 14.40 +.15NewellRub .76 47.17 -.50NewfldExp 36.91 +3.41NewmtM .20 32.96 -.52NewpkRes 8.10 +.50NxtEraLP 1.37f 33.13 +.55NextEraEn 3.93f128.37 -4.43NiSource s .70 23.79 -.08Nielsen plc 1.24 41.31 +.03NikeB s .84 55.73 -.63NimbleStg 12.50 +.03NipponTT 42.84 -1.86NoahHldgs 25.38 -2.06NobleCorp .08 6.19 +.43NobleEngy .40 34.34 +1.52NokiaCp .30e 5.42 +.05NomadF n 11.45 +.31Nomura 6.27 -.22NordicAOff .18 1.10 -.05NordicAm 1.14e 8.18 +.25Nordstrm 1.48a 46.57 +4.62NorflkSo 2.44f 111.97 +1.31NoAtlDrl rs 1.69 +.23NoWestCp 2.10f 58.70 -.09NorthropG 3.60 237.84 +.96NStREur n .60 11.59 -.05NwstNG 1.88 59.10 -.25Novartis 2.75e 74.27 -.10NovoNord .96e 34.28 +.74NOW Inc 16.96 +.96
NuSkin 1.44f 55.54 +1.51Nucor 1.51 59.72 +.34NCADvA .91 14.41 +.13NvCredStr .62 8.69 -.06NuvDivA .85a 13.69 +.04NuvFloat .72 11.51 +.07NuvFltOp .76a 11.75 -.17NuvEnhMu 14.62 +.09NuvAmtFr .75a 13.36 +.16NuvMuVal .39a 9.78 +.14NvPfdInco .80 9.81 -.03NuvQPf2 .70 9.54 +.06NuvEqtP 1.00 13.25NuvSnIn .42 6.79 -.16
OOFG Bncp .24 11.80 +.91OGE Engy 1.21 34.98 -.71OM AsstM .32 15.12 +.56ONEGas 1.68f 67.60 -.10OaktreeC 2.32f 45.30 +.40OasisPet 14.26 +1.89OcciPet 3.04 63.36 +.53Oceaneerg .60 27.08 +2.06Och-Ziff .87e 2.26 -.04OcwenFn 5.47 +.66OilStates 33.15 +1.55OldRepub .76f 20.48 +.46Olin .80 32.87 +.10OmegaHlt 2.48f 32.99 +.61OmegaP .05p 20.05 +.80Omnicom 2.20 86.21 +1.88Omnova 9.90 +1.00OnAssign 48.53 +2.40OnDeckCap 5.04 +.42OneMain 24.85 +.17ONEOK 3.16 55.44 +2.34OneokPtrs 3.16 53.99 +2.20Oracle .60 44.61 -.04Orange .73e 15.54 -.27OrbitATK 1.28f 98.00 +.24OrchidIsl 1.68 9.99 +.04OrionECarb .72 20.50 +1.50OrionGpHl 7.47 +.19OrmatTc .28 57.08 +.43OshkoshCp .84f 68.59 +.74OsiskoGl n .16f 11.10 -.06OutfrontM 1.44f 26.55 +.26OverSh rs 3.86 -.17OwensMin 1.03f 34.60 +.51OwensCorn .80 61.37 +.13OwensIll 20.38 +.25OxfordInds 1.08 57.26 +.83
PPBF Engy 1.20 22.17 +1.39PG&E Cp 1.96 66.36 -1.01PGT Inc 10.75 +.30PHH Corp 12.73 +.38Pimc1-5Tip .25e 52.83 +.10Pim0-5HYCp 5.21e101.06+1.03PimShMat .82e 101.65 +.06PNC 2.20 120.24 +.84PNM Res .97 37.00 -.60POSCO 64.50 +2.46PPG s 1.60 105.08 +1.29PPL Corp 1.58f 37.39 -.21PVH Corp .15 103.47 +2.53PacifCstOil .26e 1.88 +.33PackAmer 2.52 91.62 +1.21PaloAltNet 112.68 +.91PampaEng 54.22 +1.88Pandora 11.81 -.04ParamtGp .38 16.21 +.10ParkHot n .43p 25.67 -.12ParkDrl 1.75 +.30ParkerHan 2.64f 160.32 +3.63Parkway n 19.89 +.87ParsleyEn 32.51 +2.04PartyCity n 14.05 +.20Patheon n 26.34 +.16PatriotN n 2.50e 2.82 +.21PaycomSft 57.51 +2.57Pearson .80e 8.48 +.48Pebblebrk 1.52 29.21 +1.47Pembina g 1.50 31.71 +.01PengthE g .04 1.00 -.10PennWst g 1.70 +.12Penney 6.16 +.59PennaRE .84 15.14 +.64PennyMac 1.88 17.75 +.82Penske 1.16f 46.81 +.82Pentair 1.38f 62.78 +2.06Penumbra n 83.45 +2.35PepsiCo 3.01 111.86 -.26PerfFood n 23.80 +.35PerkElm .28 58.06 +.54Perrigo .64f 66.39 -1.57PetrbrsA 9.22 +.57Petrobras 9.69 +.63Pfizer 1.28f 34.21 +.21Pharmerica 23.40 -.15PhilipMor 4.16 112.90 +1.11PhilipsNV .88e 32.11 +.21Phillips66 2.52 79.22 +1.95Phill66LP 2.23f 51.35 +1.12PhysRltTr .90 19.87 +.41PiedmOfc .84 21.38 -.10Pier 1 .28 7.16 +.29PimCpOp 1.56a 15.70 +.21PimDyCrd 1.97 21.44 +.35PimDyInco 2.65a 28.85 +.19PimcoHiI 1.24 8.70 +.09PinnaclFds 1.14f 57.87 -.01PinWst 2.62 83.38 -.74PionEnSvc 4.00PioNtrl .08 186.23 +5.36PiperJaf .31p 63.85 +.70PitnyBw .75 13.11 +.57PlainsAAP 2.20 31.61 +.31PlainsGP rs .55 31.26 +.23PlanetFit n 19.27 +.08PlatfmSpc 13.02 +.47PlyGem 19.70 +.30Polaris 2.32f 83.80 +.59PolyOne .54 34.09 +.83PortGE 1.28 44.42 -.49PostHldg 87.52 +3.06Potash .40 17.08 +.16PwshDB 15.21 +.30PS Engy 12.59 +.50PS Agri 19.78 -.22PS Oil 8.79 +.36PS BasMet 16.37 -.06PS USDBull 25.95 +.21PSS&PQlty .38e 27.37 +.05PSFinPf 1.11 18.66 +.07PS US1K 1.91e 102.47 +.99PS VarPfd 1.20 25.45 +.09PS SPX HiD 1.30 40.51 +.11PS SrLoan 1.01 23.26 +.06PS SP LwV .85 43.47 -.11PS SP HiB .49e 37.59 +1.13PShNatMu .87 25.03 +.03PSHYCpBd .84 18.81 +.13PwShPfd .86 14.82 +.08PShEMSov 1.50 29.06 -.07PSEmgMkt .49e 19.84 -.25PSIndia .12e 22.82 +.33PSS&PBW 1.07e 22.05 +.21Praxair 3.15f 118.60 +2.19PrecDrill .28 4.72 +.25PfdAptCm .88f 13.21 -.05Prestige 55.56 -.38Pretium g 10.71 -.43Primerica .76f 82.20 +1.85Primero g .55 -.02PrinFncl 1.80f 63.11 +.94ProLogis 1.76f 51.88 +.85ProPetr n 12.89 -.61ProShtDow 18.10 -.06PrUltDow s .79e 91.40 +.51PrUltQQQ s .09e107.26 +2.85ProUltSP s .40e 84.84 +1.30ProShtHY 24.04 -.30ProShtEM 22.09 +.24ProUltSEM 12.83 +.31ProUltO&G .46e 37.38 +1.80PrUltPR2K 124.16 +7.90ProUPD30 s .13e108.71 +.85ProUltR2K .19e 115.63 +4.99ProSht20Tr 23.46 +.01PUltSP500 s .21e 96.01 +2.12PUVixST rs 16.17 -2.05PrUCrude rs 19.02 +1.89ProVixST rs 13.17 -.80PrSUltNG rs 12.27 +.30ProShtVix 141.15 +7.33PrUShCrd s 36.57 -4.24ProUShEuro 26.39 +.62ProctGam 2.68 89.85 -.72ProgsvCp .69e 39.18 -.35ProShtQQQ 42.23 -.57ProShSP rs 34.49 -.26ProUShSP 13.45 -.23
PrUShDow 12.83 -.08PUShtQQQ 19.06 -.51PrShRs2K rs 47.63 -3.37PrUShD3 rs 35.13 -.34ProUShL20 39.13 +.04PrShR2K rs 47.59 -1.13PUShtR2K 22.37 -1.02PUShtSPX 17.15 -.42ProSPDvA 1.00e 56.21 +.06PrUShBrz s 13.59 -.28ProspBcsh 1.36f 69.71 +1.55ProtoLabs 51.10 +1.75ProvidFS .76f 25.85 +.60Prudentl 3.00f 106.68 +1.24Prud UK 1.49e 42.36 +.09PruShHiY 1.32 15.38 +.04PSEG 1.72f 44.35 -.80PubStrg 6.80 218.91 -4.00PulteGrp .36 23.55 +.06PureStrg n 9.83 -.07PMIIT .31 4.69 +.04PPrIT .31 5.27 +.01
Q-RQ2 Hldgs 34.85 -.45QEP Res .08 12.71 +.59QTS RltTr 1.56f 48.75 +.82QuadGrph 1.20 25.24 +1.77QuaCare 18.86 +.71QuantaSvc 37.11 +.98QntmDSS .87 +.03QstDiag 1.80 98.19 -.51QuintIMS 80.53 +2.54QuormHl n 5.44 -1.73QuotientTc 9.55 -.50RAIT Fin .36 3.20 +.31RH 46.26 +9.33RLJ LodgT 1.32 23.51 +1.48RPC .20 18.31 +1.10RPM 1.20 55.03 +1.00RSP Perm 41.43 +2.78RadianGrp .01 17.96 +.22RLauren 2.00 81.62 +2.38RamcoG .88 14.02 +.07RangeRs .08 29.10 +1.42RJamesFn .88f 76.26 +1.80RayAdvM .28 13.45 +1.00Rayonier 1.00 28.34 +.45Raytheon 3.19f 152.50 +1.48Realogy .27p 29.79 +.30RltyInco 2.53f 59.53 +.28RedHat 86.50 +3.54RedwdTr 1.12 16.61 +.32RegalBel .96 75.65 +3.04RegalEnt .88a 22.58 +.36RgcyCtrs 2.04f 66.39 -.72RegionsFn .26 14.53 +.30Regis Cp 11.72 -.14ReinsGrp 1.64f 126.98 +1.53RelStlAl 1.80f 80.02 +1.21RenaisRe 1.28f 144.65 -1.04RepubSvc 1.28f 62.81 +.64ResMed 1.32f 71.97 +.40ResolEn rs 40.40 +3.34ResoluteF 5.45 +.80ResCap rs .20 9.77 +.13RestBrnds .72f 55.74 +1.16RetailProp .66 14.42 +.02RevGp n .05p 27.57 -.27RexfordIR .58f 22.52 +.30Rexnord 23.08 +.34ReynAm s 2.04f 63.02 +.38RiceEngy 23.70 +2.44RiceMidstr 1.00f 25.22 +.30RingCentrl 28.30 +1.35RioTinto 2.27e 40.68 -.16RitchieBr .68 32.90 +.65RiteAid 4.25 -.32RoadrnTrn 6.87 +.58RobtHalf .96f 48.83 +.64RockwlAut 3.04 155.71 +2.46RockColl 1.32 97.16 +.33RogCm gs 1.57 44.22 +1.43Rollins s .46f 37.13 +1.07Roper 1.40f 206.49 -.01Rowan .40 15.58 +1.05RoyalBk g 3.48f 72.91 +.77RBScotlnd 6.07 +.10RylCarb 1.92 98.11 -.46RoyDShllB 3.76 55.83 +.54RoyDShllA 3.76 52.73 +.67Royce 1.20e 14.00 +.24RubiconPrj 5.89 +.31RubyTues 2.81 +.36Rudolph 22.40 +.40Ryder 1.76 75.44 +3.05RyersonH 12.60 +1.65RymanHP 3.00 61.83 +.80
SS&P Glbl 1.64f 130.74 +1.05SAP SE 1.31e 98.17 +.28SCANA 2.45f 65.35 -1.56SCE TrV n 27.08 +.32SK Tlcm 25.18 -.54SLGreen 3.10f 106.62 +.61SM Energy .10 24.02 +3.21SpdrDJIA 3.98e 206.34 +.59SpdrGold 118.72 -.14SpdrEuro50 1.18e36.35 +.20SpdrDJ RE 1.57e 47.08 +.15SpdrIntDiv 2.22e 38.08 +.15SpdMS xUS .81e 34.11 -.02SpdrIntRE 1.25e 37.40 +.02SP Mid 2.94e 312.42 +4.64S&P500ETF 4.13e235.74+1.88SpdrSenLn 1.96 47.54 +.14SpdrDblTac 1.17e 48.87 +.03SpdrBiot s .44e 69.34 +.62Spdr Div 3.80e 88.14 +.33SpdrHome .15e 37.23 +.46SpdrS&PBk .53e 42.98 +.97SpdrWilRE 2.90e 92.28 +.53SpdrIGFlt .20 30.73 +.04SpdrBarcCv 3.55e 48.10 +.57SpdrITBd .92 34.13 +.04SpdrShTHiY 1.58 27.96 +.18SpdrLehHY 2.30 36.93 +.39SpdrSTCpBd .40e 30.61 +.04SPLIntTB s 26.64 -.06SpdrLe1-3bll 45.71 -.01SpdrS&P RB .74e 54.61 +1.54SpdrRetl s .49e 42.24 +1.14SpdNuBMu s 47.92 +.11SpdrOGEx .73e 37.44 +2.23SpNuBST rs 48.44 +.06SpdrOGEq .49e 20.09 +1.13SpdrMetM .49e 30.42 +.79SPX Cp 24.25 +.90SPX Flow n 34.71 +2.20STMicro .40 15.46 -.42SABESP .39e 10.41 +.33SafeBulk .04 2.20 +.37StJoe 17.05Salesforce 82.49 +.88SallyBty 20.44 +.17SJuanB .36e 7.24 +.51SanchezEn 9.54 +.47SandRdgP .34e 2.90 -.10Sanofi 1.58e 45.25 +.62SantCUSA 13.32 +.36Sasol 1.41e 29.40 +1.03Schlmbrg 2.00 78.10 +1.14SchwUSMkt .96e 57.06 +.55SchwUSLgC .98e 56.27 +.45SchwLCGr .63e 60.48 +.60SchwLCVal 1.14e 49.68 +.32SchwMCap .59e 47.33 +.67SchUSSmC .76e 62.98 +1.31SchwEMkt .68e 23.97 -.32SchEMLgC .32e 26.43 -.25SchIntLgCo .47e 26.80 +.14SchUSSmCo .36e 34.71 +.70SchUSLgCo .54e 33.79 +.36SchwUSDiv 1.13e 44.58 +.20SchwIntEq .84e 29.87 +.06SchwAggBd 1.09 51.79 +.10SchwREIT .89e 40.78 +.25SchSTUSTr .35 50.46 +.02SchUSTips 55.53 +.13SchwIntSC .75e 31.33 +.14Schwab .32f 40.81 +.79SciApplic 1.24 74.40-11.69ScorpBlk rs 9.20 -.15ScorpioTk .04m 4.44 +.26Scotts 2.00 93.39 +.74ScrippsEW 1.03e 23.44 +.60SeabGld g 11.00 -1.05SeadrillLtd 1.65 +.25Seadrill .40 3.60 +.21SealAir .64 43.58 -1.09Seaspan 1.50 6.93 +.68SeaWorld .40m 18.27 +.14SelMedHld 13.35 +.85SemGroup 1.80 36.00 +2.90SemiMfg 6.28 -.29SempraEn 3.29f 110.50 -1.97SensataT 43.67 +1.46SequansC 2.75 +.10Seritage n 1.00 43.15 -.11ServiceCp .52 30.88 +.54ServiceMst 41.75 +2.07ServcNow 87.47 +2.66ShakeShk n 33.40 +1.06ShawCm g 1.18 20.72 +.31ShellMidst 1.11f 32.23 +.76Sherwin 3.40f 310.19 +.74ShipFin 1.80 14.70 +.40Shopify n 68.09 -.89Shutterstk 41.35 +.35SibanyeG .40e 8.81
SiderurNac .14e 2.92 -.21SignetJwlrs 1.04 69.27 +1.00SilvBayRT .56 21.47 -.02SilvrSpNet 11.29 +.73SilvWhtn g .28e 20.84 +.30SimonProp 7.00f172.03 +4.08SimpsnM .72 43.09 +1.15Siteone n 48.41 +1.56SixFlags 2.56f 59.49 +.88Skechers s 27.45 -1.42Smart&Fnl 12.10 +.45Smith&N .61e 30.93 -.16SmithAO s .56f 51.16 -.07Smucker 3.00f 131.08 -1.98SnapInc A n 22.53 -.21SnapOn 2.84f 168.67 +3.15SocQ&M .99e 34.37 +.78SonicAut .20 20.05 -.15SonocoP 1.48 52.92 -.40SonyCp 33.73 +1.52Sothebys .40 45.48 -1.03SoJerInd s 1.09f 35.65 +.20SthcrssEn 3.48 +.33SouthnCo 2.24 49.78 -.64SthnCopper .23e 35.89 -.66SwstAirl .40 53.76 +1.15SwtGas 1.98f 82.91 -.43SwstnEngy 8.17 +.61SpectraEP 2.76f 43.66 +1.38SpectrmB 1.68f 139.01 -1.56Spire 2.10 67.50 +.40SpiritAero .10 57.92 +1.45SpiritRltC .72 10.13 +.14Sprint 8.68 +.18SprottSilv 6.90 +.17SprottGold 10.22 -.05Square n 17.28 +.69STAG Indl 1.39 25.02 +.10StageStrs .60 2.59 +.61SP Matls .98e 52.41 +.75SP HlthC 1.01e 74.36 +.07SP CnSt 1.28e 54.58 -.12SP Consum 1.12e 87.95 +1.39SP Engy 2.04e 69.90 +1.34SPDR Fncl .46e 23.73 +.19SP Inds 1.12e 65.06 +.53SP Tech .78e 53.31 +.47SpdrRESel 31.60 +.25SP Util 1.55e 51.31 -.58StanBlkDk 2.32 132.87 +2.07StarwdPT 1.92 22.58 +.36StateStr 1.52 79.61 +2.78Statoil ASA .88e 17.18 +.20Steelcse .51f 16.75 -.07Steris plc 1.12f 69.46 +.83SterlingBc .28 23.70 +.10StifelFin 50.19 +1.93StillwtrM 17.27 -.13StoneMor 1.32 7.93 -1.30Stonerdg 18.14 -.07StoreCap 1.16 23.88 +.46Stryker 1.70 131.65 -.43SturmRug 1.96f 53.55 +1.65SubPpne 3.55 26.96 +.37SuffolkBcp .40 40.41 +.37SumitMitsu 7.25 -.27SummitHtl .65 15.98 +.61SumtMtls n .29t 24.71 +1.59SummitMP 2.30 24.00 +1.05SunCmts 2.68f 80.33 +.44SunLfFn g 1.68f 36.55 +.39SunCokeE 8.96 +.38Suncor g 1.28 30.75 +.23SunocoLP 3.30 24.17 -.20SunocoLog 2.08f 24.42 +.41SunstnHtl .20 15.33 +.64SunTrst 1.04 55.30 +.49SupEnrgy .32 14.26 +.82SuperiorInd 1.00f 25.35 -.22Supvalu 3.86 +.12SwiftTrans 20.54 +.80Synchrony .26 34.30 +.99Syngenta 2.33e 88.50 +.38Synnex 1.00 111.94 -5.00SynovusFn .60f 41.02 +1.54Sysco 1.32 51.92 -.89
TTAL Educ 106.57 +.20TCF Fncl .30f 17.02 +1.07TE Connect 1.48 74.55 +.23TIM Part .28e 15.98 -.41TJX 1.04 79.08 +.65TPG SpLnd 1.56 20.39 +.73TRC Cos 17.45 +6.60TableauA 49.55 +1.14TahoeRes .24 8.03 +.38TailorBr .72 14.94 +.26TaiwSemi .73e 32.84 +.03TallgrsEn 3.26f 53.20 +.93TangerFac 1.30a 32.77 +.26TargaRes 3.64 59.90 +3.21Target 2.40 55.19 +2.07TataMotors 35.65 -.09Taubmn 2.50f 66.02 +.99TaylorMH 21.32 +.05Team 27.05 +1.65Technip 32.50 +1.20TeckRes g .10m 21.90 +.80Teekay .22 9.15 -.03TeekLNG .56 17.55 +.50TeekOffsh .44 5.07 +.24TeekayTnk .21 2.05 +.04Tegna .56 25.62 +.09Teladoc n 25.00 -.45Teleflex 1.36 193.73 -1.14TelefBrasil .64e 14.85 -.10TelefEsp 1.03e 11.19 -.08TelData .62f 26.51 +1.17Telus gs 1.45 32.48 +.27TmpEMI .80a 11.23 -.01TmpGlb .30 6.65 +.03TempurSly 46.46 +2.36Tenaris .75e 34.14 +2.18TenetHlth 17.71 -.57Tenneco .25p 62.42 +.62Teradata 31.12 +.82Teradyn .28f 31.10 +.43Terex .32f 31.40 +1.40Ternium .90e 26.12 +.22TerrenoRlt .80 28.00 +.55Tesoro 2.20 81.06 +.78TesoroLog 3.64f 54.47 +1.62TetraTech 4.07 +.26TevaPhrm 1.36e 32.09 -.67Textainer .96 15.30 +1.50Textron .08 47.59 +1.44ThermoFis .60 153.60 -.44Thermon 20.84 +1.49ThirdPtRe 12.10 +.30ThomsonR 1.38f 43.23 -.52Thor Inds 1.32 96.13 -1.023D Sys 14.96 +.793M Co 4.70f 191.33 -.18Tidwtr 1.00 1.15 +.32TierREIT n .72 17.36 +.28Tiffany 1.80 95.30 -.08Tillys 9.02 +.37Time Inc .76 19.35TimeWarn 1.61 97.71 +.20Timken 1.04 45.20 +1.65TimknSteel 18.91 +1.31Titan Intl .02 10.34 +.72TollBros .08p 36.11 +.24TopBuild n 47.00 +1.26Torchmark .60f 77.04 +.60Toro Co s .70 62.46 +1.66TorDBk gs 2.40f 50.09 +1.41TortEnInf 2.62 34.89 +2.34Total SA 2.71e 50.42 +.69TotalSys .40 53.46 +1.65Toyota 108.62 -2.74TrCda g 2.50f 46.15 +.42TransUn n 38.35 +.65TransDigm 24.00220.16+10.12Transocn 12.45 +.19Travelers 2.68f 120.54 -.23Travelport .30 11.77 +.22TreeHseF 84.66 +.62Trex 69.39 -.80TriPointe 12.54 -.05TrianglCap 1.80 19.09 +.44TribMda A 1.00a 37.27 +.01TriNetGrp 28.90 +.47Trinity .44 26.55 +.68Trinseo SA 1.20 67.10 +2.20TritonInt n 1.80 25.79 +1.38TriumphGp .16 25.75 +1.95Tronox .18 18.45 +2.10TrueBlue 27.35 +.50Tsakos .20 4.79 +.06Tuppwre 2.72 62.72 +.58Turkcell 8.28 -.19TurqHillRs 3.07 +.04TutorPerini 31.80 +2.30Twilio n 28.87 -.32Twitter 14.95 -.19TwoHrbInv 1.00f 9.59 +.16TwoHrb pfA 2.03 26.14 +.44Tyson .90 61.71 -.86
UUBS Grp .80f 15.95 +.32UDR 1.24f 36.26 -.15UGI Corp .95 49.40 -.57US FdsHl n 27.98 +.58US Silica .25 47.99 +2.64USG 31.80 -1.32Ultrapar .43e 22.73 +.15UndrArm s 19.78 +.12
UnAr C wi 18.30 +.14UnilevNV 1.40e 49.68 -.58Unilever 1.40e 49.34 -.83UnionPac 2.42 105.92 +1.96Unisys 13.95 -.40Unit 24.16 +1.98UtdContl 70.64 +2.71UtdMicro .09e 1.93 -.05UPS B 3.32f 107.30 +2.25UtdRentals 125.05 +4.36US Bancrp 1.12 51.50 -.79US NGas 7.57 +.09US OilFd 10.64 +.55USSteel .20 33.81 +.99UtdTech 2.64 112.21 +.41UtdhlthGp 2.50 164.01 -.99Univar n 30.66 +1.25UnvslCp 2.12f 70.75 +1.50UnivHlthS .40 124.45 +2.56UnumGrp .80f 46.89 +1.10UrbnEdg n .80 26.30UrsBidA 1.04f 20.56 +.40
VVF Corp 1.68 54.97 +.91VaalcoE .92 +.09VailRsrt 4.21f 191.90 +5.43Vale SA .29e 9.50 +.20Vale SA pf .29e 8.98 +.21ValeantPh 11.03 +.28ValeroE 2.80f 66.29 +.51Validus 1.52f 56.39 +.26VlyNBcp .44 11.80 +.16Valmont 1.50 155.50 +5.53Valspar 1.48 110.94 -.06Valvoline n .05p 24.55 +.71VanEGold .12e 22.81 -.11VanE EMHi 1.57 24.66 +.11VanEHiYM 1.45 30.57 +.12VnEkRus .64e 20.67 -.28VEckPfSec 1.24e 20.07 +.10VanE FallA 1.63e 29.56 +.44VanE EMBd .98 18.51 -.19VanEIntMu .54 23.44 +.04VanEWMoat .42e 37.53 +.39VnEkSemi .63e 79.71 +.58VEckOilSvc .86e 30.81 +1.12VanE JrGld 35.98 -.22VanE Coal .37 13.83 +.02VnEk Viet .51e 14.02 +.08VangIntBd 2.17a 83.61 +.13VangSTBd 1.08e 79.72 +.09VangTotBd 2.06e 81.08 +.10VanHiDvY 2.10e 77.65 +.37VangEMI 1.13e 99.89 +1.90VangGrth 1.38e 121.66 +1.15VangLgCp 1.84e 108.09 +.88VangMidC 1.76e 139.24 +1.09VangSmCp 1.63e133.28 +2.65VangSCG 1.19e 140.67 +2.55VangSCV 1.96e 122.86 +2.53VangTSM 2.17e 121.32 +1.16VangValu 2.05e 95.37 +.69VangSP500 3.81e216.35+1.62VangMCVal 1.76e101.92+1.36VangREIT 3.08e 82.59 +.71VangDivAp 1.82e 89.94 -.08VangAllW 1.34e 47.83 -.03VangEmg 1.10e 39.72 -.49VangPacif 1.37e 63.28 -.07VangEur 1.71e 51.57 +.20VanMC400G 1.03e117.80+1.32VangFTSE 1.10e 39.30 +.10VangEngy 2.64e 96.71 +2.56VangFncl .90e 60.47 +.72VanHC Etf 1.62e137.82 +.44VangInfT 1.39e 135.63 +1.44Vantiv 64.12 +.70VarianMed 91.13 -.05VectorGp 1.60b 20.80 +.71Vectren 1.68f 58.61 +.27VedantaLtd .26e 17.17 +.93VeevaSys 51.28 +1.71Ventas 3.10 65.04 +1.21Vereit .55 8.49 +.13VeriFone 18.73 +.01VerizonCm 2.31 48.75 -.93Verso Cp 6.00 +.23Versum .05p 30.60 +.73VinceHldg 1.55 -.10Vipshop 13.34 -.46VirtusTRet .40 4.37 +.05Visa s .66 88.87 -.32VishayInt .25 16.45 +.30VistaOutd n 20.59 +.28Visteon s 97.95 +2.24VitaminSh 20.15 +1.05VivintSolar 2.80 +.10VMware 92.14 +.41VoceraCm 24.83 +1.21VolarisAv 13.94 +.68Vonage 6.32 +.10Vornado 2.84f 100.31 -.61VoyaFincl .04 37.96 +.51VoyaGlbDv .91 7.34 +.09VoyaPrRTr .29 5.41 -.08VulcanM 1.00f 120.48 +7.74
WW&T Off .40 2.77 -.03WEC Engy 2.08 60.63 -.45WEX Inc 103.50 +1.42WGL Hold 1.95 82.53 -.36WNS Hldg 28.61 -.14WP Carey 3.98f 62.22 +1.60WPX Engy 13.39 +1.05Wabash .06 20.69 +.21WABCO 117.42 +.92Wabtec .40 78.00 +2.14WaddellR 1.84 17.00 +.50WageWrks 72.30 -2.20WalMart 2.04f 72.08 +2.47WalkerDun 41.69 +.49WalterInv 1.08 +.35WashPrGp 1.00 8.69 +.54WREIT 1.20 31.28 +.16WasteCon .72 88.22 +2.21WsteMInc 1.70f 72.92 +.60Waters 156.31 +1.55Watsco 4.20 143.18 -1.64Wayfair 40.49 +2.12WeathfIntl 6.65 +.76WebsterFn 1.00 50.04 +.27WtWatch 15.57 +.64WeinRlt 1.54f 33.39 -.36Welbilt 19.63 +.58Wellcare 140.21 +.99WellsFargo 1.52 55.66 -.17WellsF pfX 24.58 +.15Welltower 3.49f 70.82 +1.15Welltwr pfI 3.25 63.12 +1.10WescoAir 11.40 +.05Wesco Intl 69.55 +1.75WestPhrm .52 81.61 +.58WestarEn 1.60f 54.27 -.06WstnAlliB 49.09 +1.44WAstEMkt .84 15.50 +.07WstAstHI2 .80 7.22 +.05WAHiInOp .43 5.04 +.02WstAstMtg 1.38e 9.77 +.28WstnGasPt 3.44f 60.45 +1.00WstnRefin 1.52 35.07 +.41WstRefLog 1.75f 25.45 +.55WstnUnion .70f 20.35 +.10WestlkChm .76 66.05 +1.41WestpacBk 1.52e 26.72 +.95WestRck 1.60f 52.03 -.37Weyerhsr 1.24 33.98 +.85Whrlpl 4.00 171.33 +1.33WhiteWave 56.15 +.55WhitingPet 9.46 +1.24WildhRs n 12.44 +1.04WileyJA 1.20 53.80 +1.61WLyonHm 20.62 +.15WmsCos 1.20f 29.59 +.90WillmsPtrs 3.40 40.83 +.75WmsSon 1.56f 53.62 +5.66Winnbgo .40 29.25 -.65Wipro .09e 10.23 +.07WT EurHdg 3.51e 62.81 +.78WTJpHedg 2.98e 50.62 -.13WT EmEq 1.80e 40.85 -.70WT India .22e 24.13 +.35WolvWW .24 24.97 +.11Workday 83.28 +.33WorldFuel .24 36.25 +1.11WldW Ent .48 22.22 +.27Worthgtn .80 45.09 -4.08Wyndham 2.00 84.29 +.06
X-Y-ZXL Grp .88f 39.86 +.03XPO Logis 47.89 +1.75XcelEngy 1.44f 44.45 -.32XeniaHtls n 1.10 17.07 +.76Xerox .25m 7.34 +.22Xylem .72f 50.22 +1.00YPF Soc .14e 24.28 +.50Yamana g .02 2.76 -.01Yelp 32.75 +.27Yirendai n 25.09 +.15YumBrnds 1.20 63.90 +.32Yum China 27.20 +1.06ZTO Exp n 13.09 +.42ZayoGrp 32.90 -.36Zendesk 28.04 +1.18ZimmerBio .96 122.11 +1.69ZoesKitchn 18.50 +1.46Zoetis .42f 53.37 -.48ZweigFd 1.01e 11.12 +.07
Total for week 15,608,768,369Week ago 16,547,675,627Year ago 17,137,621,090Two years ago 12,658,548,330
Monday 3,140,837,630Tuesday 3,248,274,146Wednesday 3,002,767,090Thursday 3,023,425,030Friday 3,193,464,473
NYSE volume highlightsDaily trading Historical comparisons
Div Last Chg Div Last Chg Div Last Chg Div Last Chg
Div Last Chg Div Last Chg Div Last Chg Div Last Chg
Div Last Chg Div Last Chg Div Last Chg
MARKETS
Closing prices for Friday, March 31, 2017
BkofAm 4327203 23.59 +.47ChesEng 2176973 5.94 +.72FordM 2044029 11.64 +.02GenElec 1664053 29.80 +.08SnapInc A n 1553192 22.53 -.21Vale SA 1347311 9.50 +.20FrptMcM 1308431 13.36 +.55Petrobras 1027170 9.69 +.63ArcelorMit 1019588 8.35 +.06Penney 1003727 6.16 +.59
Advanced. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2,374Declined. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 688Unchanged. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47Total Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3,109New Highs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 231New Lows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65Up Vol. . . . . . . . . . 12,370,989,047Down Vol. . . . . . . . 3,635,919,523Volume . . . . . . . . 15,608,768,369
TRC Cos 17.45 +6.60 +60.8Systemax 11.09 +3.89 +54.0TCF Fn wt 2.25 +.58 +34.8StageStrs 2.59 +.61 +30.8FrankCov 20.20 +4.15 +25.9RH 46.26 +9.33 +25.3Exar 13.01 +2.58 +24.7Comcst29 60.01 +11.54 +23.8GenieEn n 7.24 +1.32 +22.3GranaMon 3.13 +.55 +21.3
QuormHl n 5.44 -1.73 -24.1DxSPOGBr rs 16.14 -3.45 -17.6DrxNGBear rs25.76 -5.04 -16.4UBS 3xInvC 29.64 -5.61 -15.9CgpVelICrd 26.76 -4.83 -15.3Hill Intl 4.15 -.75 -15.3DaqoNEn 18.77 -3.14 -14.3StoneMor 7.93 -1.30 -14.1SciApplic 74.40 -11.69 -13.6DirCybSec 22.50 -3.53 -13.6
57.09 35.24 Crude Oil (bbl) 50.60 +2.63 -5.813.99 1.77 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.19 +.11 -14.34
1374.90 1125.20 Gold (oz) 1247.30 -.90 +8.4620.75 14.94 Silver (oz) 18.24 +.52 +14.43
9440.00 889.50 Platinum (oz) 948.20 -19.70 +5.172.96 2.02 Copper (lb) 2.65 +.02 +5.971.35 .94 Cattle (lb) 1.20 -.02 +.804.39 3.01 Corn (bu) 3.64 +.08 +3.48
12.09 8.96 Soybeans (bu) 9.46 -.30 -5.075.24 3.60 Wheat (bu) 4.26 +.02 +4.53
NYSE Nasdaq CommoditiesDiary Diary
Biggest gainers Biggest gainers
CellectB wt 2.48 +1.43+135.7CatalstB rs 9.43 +4.23 +81.3AkariTh rs 11.07 +4.57 +70.3Polarity rs 13.67 +5.15 +60.4PowerSolu lf 10.09 +3.76 +59.4ImprimisP 4.17 +1.35 +47.9Performnt 2.93 +.92 +45.8DiffusPh n 3.99 +1.17 +41.5Ominto n 13.80 +3.90 +39.4PranBio rs 3.13 +.86 +37.9
WinsFin 144.99-141.49 -49.4Foamix 4.95 -4.15 -45.6CryoPort rs 2.36 -1.17 -33.1PulseBio n 20.41 -9.93 -32.7HTG Mol h 6.92 -2.73 -28.3DarioHlth 3.01 -1.05 -25.9Proteos n 7.82 -2.57 -24.7Trovag un 2.28 -.74 -24.5ForwdPh 21.51 -6.24 -22.5EducDevel 6.75 -1.90 -21.9
Last Chg %ChgLast Chg %Chg
Biggest losers Biggest losersLast Chg %ChgLast Chg %Chg
Most activeVol 100s Last Chg
52-Week Wk YTDHigh Low Last Chg %Chg
52-Week Wk Wk YTD 12-moHigh Low Foreign Last Chg %Chg %Chg %Chg
52-Week Wk Wk YTD 12-moHigh Low Domestic Last Chg %Chg %Chg %Chg
British Pound .7977 -.0023 -.0165 +.0273 +.1019Canadian Dollar 1.3286 -.0095 -.0110 +.0168 +.0312Chinese Yuan 6.8918 +.0036 -.0071 +.2207 +.4437Euro .9359 +.0107 -.0070 +.0460 +.0577Hong Kong Dollar 7.7724 +.0057 +.0090 +.0165 +.0159Japanese Yen 111.29 +.49 -2.76 +9.88 -1.24Mexican Peso 18.7331 -.0680 -.8184 -.6548 +1.4482Swiss Franc 1.0004 +.0100 -.0086 +.0298 +.0401
Foreign ExchangeUS $ In 1-Wk 4-Wk 6-Mo 1-Yr
Currency Chg Chg Chg Chg
Advanced. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2,221Declined. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 795Unchanged. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84Total Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3,100New Highs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 273New Lows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112Up Vol. . . . . . . . . . . 6,506,486,346Down Vol. . . . . . . . 2,117,916,214Volume . . . . . . . . . 8,694,149,144
FrontierCm 2993469 2.14 +.05AMD 2434880 14.55 +.85MicronT 1502279 28.90 +.47DryShp rs 1255517 1.65 +.30Apple Inc 1253425 143.66 +3.02SiriusXM 892605 5.15 +.05Intel 890732 36.07 +.91Microsoft 872265 65.86 +.88Cisco 813097 33.80 -.28lululemn gs 780861 51.87 -11.82
Most activeVol 100s Last Chg 21,169.11 17,063.08 Dow Jones Industrials 20,663.22 -65.27 -.31 +4.56 +16.13
9,639.33 7,029.41 Dow Jones Transportation 9,116.51 -35.09 -.38 +.80 +15.58723.83 616.19 Dow Jones Utilities 697.28 +2.21 +.32 +5.71 +3.9111,688.45 9,918.72 NYSE Composite 11,492.85 -26.99 -.23 +3.94 +12.455,928.06 4,574.25 Nasdaq Composite 5,911.74 -2.60 -.04 +9.82 +20.291,063.33 883.20 S&P 100 1,046.06 -3.12 -.30 +5.51 +13.792,400.98 1,991.68 S&P 500 2,362.72 -5.34 -.23 +5.53 +13.991,761.08 1,409.53 S&P MidCap 1,719.65 +1.07 +.06 +3.56 +18.4725,008.97 20,583.79 Wilshire 5000 24,624.72 -32.47 -.13 +5.12 +15.421,414.82 1,073.46 Russell 2000 1,385.92 +3.58 +.26 +2.12 +24.00
Stock market indexes
518.88 409.95 Amsterdam 516.54 +.81 +.16 +6.91 +18.89
3,801.83 3,127.94 Brussels 3,817.02 +21.75 +.57 +5.84 +13.70
12,258.37 9,214.10 Frankfurt 12,312.87 +56.44 +.46 +7.25 +25.71
24,656.65 19,594.61 Hong Kong 24,111.59 -189.50 -.78 +9.60 +17.62
49,523.94 43,902.25 Mexico 48,541.56 -321.74 -.66 +6.35 +5.38
19,668.01 14,864.01 Nikkei 225 18,909.26 -153.96 -.81 -1.07 +16.98
C8 · SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017
Mutual funds
AMGYacktmanI d LB D 22.87 +.12 +14.2AQRMgdFtsStratI 9.23 -.02 -9.0American CenturyEqIncInv LV C 9.13 +.05 +17.1UltraInv LG B 38.22 +.46 +16.5American FundsAMCpA m LG C 28.85 +.24 +15.0AmrcnBalA m MA B 25.76 +.15 +11.2AmrcnHiIncA m HY A 10.40 +.09 +16.2AmrcnMutA m LV D 38.32 +.11 +15.2BdfAmrcA m CI D 12.80 +.01 +.9CptWldGrIncA mWS C 46.88 +.11 +14.1CptlIncBldrA m IH D 59.84 +.17 +7.7EuroPacGrA m FG A 49.30 +.04 +12.7FdmtlInvsA m LB A 57.88 +.69 +19.4GrfAmrcA m LG A 45.45 +.56 +20.3IncAmrcA m AL D 22.30 +.12 +11.3IntrmBdfAmrA mCS E 13.39 +.02InvCAmrcA m LB B 38.14 +.25 +17.5NewWldA m EM D 56.89 +.10 +14.7NwPrspctvA m WS B 38.69 +.20 +14.4SmCpWldA m WS A 49.86 +.50 +18.1TheNewEcoA m LG B 39.72 +.19 +16.5TxExBdA m MI A 12.80 +.02 +.1WAMtInvsA m LV D 42.53 +.22 +16.2BairdAggrgateBdInstl CI C 10.75 -.01 +1.5CorPlusBdInstl CI B 11.09 -.01 +2.8BlackRockEqDivInstl LV B 23.26 +.14 +19.2GlbAllcIncInstl IH B 19.10 +.07 +9.2GlbAllcIncInvA m IH C 18.98 +.07 +8.9GlbAllcIncInvC m IH C 17.25 +.06 +8.1HYBdInstl HY B 7.74 +.07 +15.1StrIncOppsIns NT C 9.90 +5.7DFAEmMktsCorEqIns EM B 19.73 -.13 +19.1EmMktsValInstl EM A 27.35 -.16 +25.7FvYrGlbFIIns IB C 10.91 -.03 +.2IntlCorEqIns FV A 12.52 +.01 +14.3IntlSmCoInstl FQ B 18.72 +.03 +14.2IntlSmCpValIns FA A 20.49 +.03 +17.3IntlValInstl FV A 17.70 -.02 +19.7OneYearFIInstl UB E 10.30 +.7RlEsttSecInstl SR B 34.60 +.11 +2.8TAUSCorEq2Instl MB B 16.22 +.17 +19.5USCorEq1Instl LB A 20.19 +.18 +18.9USCorEqIIInstl MB B 19.31 +.21 +19.7USLgCo LB B 18.37 +.07 +17.1USLgCpValInstl LV A 36.17 +.29 +22.9USSmCpInstl SB B 34.10 +.75 +22.5USSmCpValInstl SV C 36.87 +1.06 +23.9USTrgtedValIns SV B 24.01 +.58 +24.0DavisNYVentureA m LB A 31.83 +.51 +23.1Delaware InvestmentsValInstl LV D 20.21 +.12 +16.4Dodge & CoxBal MA A 105.05 -1.18 +20.5GlbStk WS A 12.83 +.10 +27.9Inc CI A 13.64 -.10 +4.4IntlStk FB A 41.65 +.17 +23.0Stk LV A 189.96 -.92 +28.6DoubleLineCorFII CI 10.87 +2.8TtlRetBdI CI 10.63 -.03 +1.5TtlRetBdN b CI 10.63 -.02 +1.2DreyfusPennsylvaniaA f MP B 16.07 +.02Eaton VanceGreaterIndiaB m EI C 27.45 +.63 +25.6EdgewoodGrInstl LG A 25.18 +.34 +21.7FPACrescent d MA A 33.71 +.20 +14.2FederatedGlbAllcA f IH D 18.21 +.04 +7.5GlbAllcB m IH E 17.78 +.07 +6.7GlbAllcC m IH D 17.72 +.07 +6.8HiIncBdA f HY C 7.59 +.07 +13.2HiIncBdB m HY C 7.58 +.07 +12.5
MidCpIdxSvc MB B 25.93 +.39 +20.3StratValDivIns LV E 6.18 -.03 +7.7Fidelity500IdxInstl LB B 83.09 +.68 +17.1500IdxInstlPrm LB B 83.09 +.67 +17.2500IdxPremium LB B 83.09 +.68 +17.1AdvNewInsightsA mLG B 28.39+.32 +16.2AdvNewInsightsI LG B 28.96 +.32 +16.5AsstMgr50% CA B 17.44 +.08 +9.8Bal MA A 23.23 +.21 +12.8BalK MA A 23.24 +.22 +12.9BlueChipGr LG A 75.32 +1.26 +19.1Contrafund LG B 107.68 +1.11 +15.6ContrafundK LG B 107.62 +1.11 +15.7CptlInc d HY B 10.01 +.06 +14.6DiversIntl FG D 35.95 +.05 +7.1DiversIntlK FG C 35.89 +.06 +7.2EmMkts EM A 17.86 -.12 +21.7EmMktsF EM A 17.91 -.12 +21.9EqInc LV B 58.58 +.34 +18.8ExtndMktIdxPr MB A 58.07 +1.12 +22.4Fidelity LG D 43.65 +.60 +13.4FltngRtHiInc d BL B 9.65 +.01 +9.4Frdm2020 TE A 15.70 +.06 +11.6Frdm2025 TG A 13.50 +.06 +12.5Frdm2030 TH A 16.72 +.09 +14.6Frdm2035 TI A 13.88 +.08 +16.1Frdm2040 TJ A 9.74 +.06 +16.1FrdmK2020 TE A 14.62 +.06 +11.7FrdmK2025 TG A 15.33 +.07 +12.5FrdmK2030 TH A 15.76 +.08 +14.7FrdmK2035 TI A 16.42 +.10 +16.2FrdmK2040 TJ A 16.45 +.10 +16.2FrdmK2045 TK A 16.94 +.10 +16.2FrdmK2050 TN A 17.07 +.09 +16.2GrCo LG A 150.84 +1.52 +24.0GrCoF LG A 14.74 +.14 +23.9GrCoK LG A 150.72 +1.53 +24.1GrInc LB A 34.13 +.32 +20.8IntlGrF FG C 14.03 -.04 +7.9IntlIdxPremium FB B 38.03 +.05 +12.1IntlValF FV D 9.72 +.04 +9.2InvmGradeBd CI B 11.16 +.01 +2.4InvmGradeBd CI A 7.83 +.01 +3.2InvmGradeBdF CI B 11.17 +.02 +2.5LowPricedStk MV E 51.61 +.61 +12.4LowPricedStkK MV E 51.58 +.62 +12.5Magellan LG C 97.22 +1.39 +14.4MegaCpStk LB A 18.12 +.19 +19.5OTC LG A 94.16 +1.87 +27.6Puritan MA B 21.70 +.18 +11.6SelBiotech SH A 201.53 +1.66 +23.4SelHC SH C 207.63 +1.70 +14.4StkSelorAllCp LG A 39.29 +.44 +19.6StratDivInc AL C 15.14 +.09 +13.1StratInc MU B 10.82 +.01 +8.1TtlBd CI A 10.59 +.02 +3.9TtlMktIdxF LB B 68.26 +.69 +18.1TtlMktIdxPrm LB B 68.26 +.70 +18.1USBdIdxInstlPrm CI D 11.52 +.01 +.3USBdIdxPremium CI E 11.52 +.01 +.3Val MV D 115.06 +1.59 +18.5First EagleGlbA m IH A 57.20 +.08 +12.7First InvestorsGovtA m GI 10.43 -1.9Franklin TempletonCATxFrIncA m MC A 7.38 +.02 +.7FdrTFIncA m ML A 12.01 +.01 +.2GlbBdA m IB A 12.47 +.10 +11.0GlbBdAdv IB A 12.43 +.11 +11.5Gr,IncA m WS A 24.97 +.12 +17.4GrA m LG B 82.91 +.58 +17.1IncA m CA A 2.36 +.02 +18.0IncAdv CA A 2.34 +.02 +17.8IncC m CA A 2.38 +.01 +16.7MutGlbDiscvA mWS A 31.91 +.26 +19.3MutGlbDiscvZ WS A 32.51 +.26 +19.6MutZ XM A 29.30 +.23 +19.7RisingDivsA m LB D 55.06 +.32 +14.3HarborCptlApprecInstl LG B 62.68 +.66 +15.8IntlInstl FB D 63.50 +.38 +8.4
Harding LoevnerIntlEqInstl d FG 19.61 +.07 +14.2INVESCOComStkA m LV A 24.03 +.32 +22.4DiversDivA m LV E 19.69 +.09 +11.3EqandIncA m MA A 10.77 +.09 +18.8PETxFrIncA m MP B 16.19 +.02 +.3JPMorganCorBdR6 CI D 11.53 -.02 +.6CorBdSel CI D 11.52 -.02 +.4HYSel HY C 7.42 +.04 +13.7MidCpValL MB D 37.84 +.37 +14.7USLgCpCorPlusSl LB A 30.11 +.33 +20.2JanusHYT HY C 8.49 +.05 +13.1John HancockDiscpValI LV B 20.12 +.22 +18.8DiscpValMCI MB B 22.39 +.26 +20.2MltmgrLsBal1 x MA B 14.87 +.05 +11.8MltmgrLsGr1 b AL B 15.56 +.11 +13.9LazardEMEqInstl EM A 17.62 -.31 +22.4Loomis SaylesBdInstl MU B 13.93 +.03 +9.3Lord AbbettShrtDurIncA m CS A 4.30 +3.5ShrtDurIncC m CS A 4.33 +2.8ShrtDurIncF b CS A 4.30 +3.6MFSInstlIntlEq FG 21.93 +.02 +10.6ValA m LV C 37.64 +.06 +16.7ValI LV C 37.83 +.03 +17.0Metropolitan WestTtlRetBdI CI 10.56 -.01 +1.0TtlRetBdM b CI 10.56 -.01 +.8TtlRetBdPlan CI 9.94 +1.1NorthernStkIdx LB 28.44 +.23 +17.1NuveenHYMuniBdI HM B 16.73 +.03 +1.7OakmarkEqAndIncInv MA A 31.68 +.27 +14.7IntlInv FB A 24.84 +.08 +21.7Inv LB A 75.46 +.93 +24.0Old WestburyLgCpStrats WS D 13.64 +.07 +11.2StratOpps IH B 7.75 +.02 +10.9OppenheimerDevelopingMktsYEM C 35.50 -.05 +15.5GlbA m WS A 82.50 +.60 +18.3IntlGrY FG E 37.35 +.22 +4.4PIMCOAlAstInstl TV 11.71 +.03 +13.5HYInstl HY 8.90 +.07 +12.5IncA m MU 12.24 +.02 +9.5IncC m MU 12.24 +.02 +8.7IncD b MU 12.24 +.02 +9.6IncInstl MU 12.24 +.02 +10.0IncP MU 12.24 +.02 +9.9InvmGrdCrpBdInsTW 10.34 +6.1ShrtTrmIns UB 9.83 +3.6TtlRetIns CI B 10.12 +.01 +2.4PRIMECAP OdysseyAgrsGr MG A 36.44 +.63 +25.7Gr LG A 31.25 +.34 +22.9Stk LB A 27.65 +.26 +20.7ParnassusCorEqInv x LB E 40.89 +.25 +12.3PrincipalDiversIntlIns FB 11.96 +.08 +10.1LgCpGrIIns LG 12.71 +.15 +14.8PrudentialJsnNatrlResA m SN B 36.20 +1.06 +23.3JsnNatrlResB m SN B 29.28 +.85 +22.4TtlRetBdZ CI A 14.23 +.01 +3.4PutnamEuropeEqB m ES C 23.45 +.12 +6.2SchwabSP500Idx LB B 36.50 +.29 +17.1Schwab1000Idx LB B 56.85 +.50 +17.1StewardSMCEnhIdxIndv bSB C 15.30 +.29 +21.5
MORNINGSTAR MUTUAL FUND FOOTNOTESb - Fee covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d -Deferred sales charge, or redemption fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple fees are charged, usually a marketingfee and either a sales or redemption fee. NA - not available. p- previous day?s net asset value. s - fund split shares duringthe week. x - fund paid a distribution during the week.
Rnk: Fund’s letter-grade rank is based on 12-month return,compared to other funds with the same objective. An “A” indi-cates a fund performed in the top 20 percent of its group; an“E” indicates the bottom 20 percent.
———MUTUAL FUND OBJECTIVES
U.S. Equity:LB: Large Blend, LG: Large Growth, LV: Large Value, MB:
Mid-Cap Blend, MG: Mid-Cap Growth, MV: Mid-Cap Value, SB:Small Blend, SG: Small Growth, SV: Small Value.
Sector Equity:CC: Consumer Defense, CD: Consumer Cyclical, EE: Equity
Energy, LP: Energy Limited Partnership, GR: Global Real Es-tate, ID: Industrials, MR: Miscellaneous Sector, SP: EquityPrecious Metals, SF: Financial, SC: Communications, SH:Health, SN: Natural Resources, SR: Real Estate, ST: Technol-ogy, SU: Utilities, XO: Infrastructure.
Allocation:AL: Allocation - 70-85% Equity, CA: Allocation - 30-50%
Equity, CV: Convertibles, IH: World Allocation, MA: Allocation- 50-70% Equity, RI: Target-Date Retirement, TA: Target-Date2000-2010, TD: Target-Date 2015, TE: Target-Date 2020, TG:Target-Date 2025, TH: Target-Date 2030, TI: Target-Date 2035,TJ: Target-Date 2040, TK: Target-Date 2045, TL: Target-Date2055, TN: Target-Date 2050, TV: Tactical Allocation, XM: Al-location - 85+% Equity, XQ: Target-Date 2060+, XY: Allocation- 15-30% Equity.
International Equity:CH: China Region, DP: Diversified Pacific/Asia, EI: India
Equity, EM: Diversified Emerging Markets, ES: Europe Stock,
FA: Foreign Small/Mid-Value, FB: Foreign Large-Blend, FG:Foreign Large-Growth, FQ: Foreign Small/Mid-Blend, FR:Foreign Small/Mid-Growth, FV: Foreign Large-Value, JS: JapanStock, LS: Latin America Stock, MQ: Miscellaneous Region, PJ:Pacific/Asia ex-Japan Stock, WS:
Alternative:AM: Multialternative, BM: Bear Market, CR: Multicur-
rency, FF: Managed Futures, FX: Single Currency, IC: Trad-ing-Inverse Commodities, IE: Trading-Inverse Equity, IS:Trading-Miscellaneous, LC: Trading-Leveraged Commodities,LE: Trading-Leveraged Equity, LO: Long-Short Equity, ND:Trading-Inverse Debt, NE: Market Neutral, VD: Trading-Lever-aged Debt, VO: Volatility, XR: Option Writing, XS: Long-ShortCredit.
Taxable Bond:BL: Bank Loan, CI: Intermediate-Term Bond, CL: Long-
Term Bond, CS: Short-Term Bond, EB: Emerging-Markets Bond,GI: Intermediate Government, GL: Long Government, GS:Short Government, HY: High-Yield Bond, IB: World Bond, IP:Inflation-Protected Bond, MU: Multisector Bond, NT: Nontra-ditional Bond, RR: Preferred Stock, TW: Corporate Bond, UB:Ultrashort Bond. VL: Stable Value, XP: Emerging-MarketsLocal-Currency Bond.
Municipal Bond:HM: High-Yield Muni, MI: Muni National Intermediate,
MJ: Muni New Jersey, ML: Muni National Long, MN: MuniNew York Intermediate, MO: Muni Ohio, MP: Muni Pennsylva-nia, MS: Muni National Short, MT: Muni Massachusetts, MY:Muni New York Long, SI: Muni Single State Intermediate, SL:Muni Single State Long, SM: Muni Minnesota, SS: Muni SingleState Short.
FOOTNOTES AND FUND OBJECTIVES
20 biggest funds
Vanguard 500IdxAdmrl . . . . . . . . LB. . . 195,224 . . . . . +0.1 . . . +17.1/B . . . +13.3/A . . . . NLVanguard TtlSMIdxAdmrl . . . . . . LB. . . 162,270 . . . . . +0.1 . . . +18.1/B . . . +13.1/A . . . . NLVanguard InsIdxIns . . . . . . . . . . . LB. . . 128,516 . . . . . +0.1 . . . +17.1/B . . . +13.3/A . . . . NLVanguard TtlSMIdxInv . . . . . . . . . LB. . . 110,696 . . . . . +0.1 . . . +18.0/B . . . +13.0/B . . . . NLVanguard TtInSIdxInv . . . . . . . . . FB. . . . 97,541 . . . . . +2.8 . . .+13.6/A . . . . +4.8/D . . . . NLVanguard InsIdxInsPlus . . . . . . . . LB. . . . 96,397 . . . . . +0.1 . . . +17.2/B . . . +13.3/A . . . . NLVanguard TtlSMIdxIns . . . . . . . . . LB. . . . 87,549 . . . . . +0.1 . . . +18.1/B . . . +13.1/A . . . . NLVanguard WlngtnAdmrl . . . . . . . . MA . . . 79,020 . . . . . -0.2 . . .+12.8/A . . . . +9.7/A . . . . NLAmerican Funds GrfAmrcA m . . . LG. . . . 78,283 . . . . . +1.0 . . .+20.3/A . . . +13.7/A . . . 5.75Fidelity Contrafund . . . . . . . . . . . LG. . . . 77,315 . . . . . +1.6 . . . +15.6/B . . . +12.5/B . . . . NLAmerican Funds IncAmrcA m . . . AL. . . . 75,992 . . . . . +0.2 . . . +11.3/D . . . . +9.0/B . . . 5.75Vanguard TtBMIdxAdmrl . . . . . . . CI . . . . 74,509 . . . . . -0.1 . . . . +0.4/D . . . . +2.3/D . . . . NLVanguard TtInSIdxInsPlus . . . . . . FB. . . . 72,994 . . . . . +2.8 . . .+13.7/A . . . . +4.9/C . . . . NLAmerican Funds CptlIncBldrA m IH . . . . 69,929 . . . . . +1.1 . . . . +7.7/D . . . . +7.2/A . . . 5.75Fidelity 500IdxPremium. . . . . . . . LB. . . . 66,054 . . . . . +0.1 . . . +17.1/B . . . +13.3/A . . . . NLDodge & Cox Stk. . . . . . . . . . . . . . LV . . . . 65,511 . . . . . -0.4 . . .+28.6/A . . . +15.2/A . . . . NLAmerican Funds InvCAmrcA m . . LB. . . . 60,646 . . . . . +0.5 . . . +17.5/B . . . +13.0/A . . . 5.75American Funds AmrcnBalA m. . MA . . . 57,703 . . . . . +0.3 . . . +11.2/B . . . . +9.9/A . . . 5.75Dodge & Cox IntlStk . . . . . . . . . . . FB. . . . 57,070 . . . . . +3.6 . . .+23.0/A . . . . +7.3/A . . . . NLAmerican Funds WAMtInvsA m LV . . . . 54,597 . . . . . -0.3 . . . +16.2/D . . . +12.6/A . . . 5.75
ObjAssets
($ Millions)4-wk% Ret
Total % Return/Rank12-mo 5-year % Load
% Load: Fund’s sales charge, expressed as a percentage of NAV. NL indicates a no-load fund.
T. Rowe PriceBlueChipGr LG A 80.17 +1.04 +18.0CptlAprc MA B 27.59 +.10 +11.7CptlOpp LB B 24.05 +.20 +17.4EMStk d EM B 35.59 -.28 +19.3EqIdx500 d LB B 63.48 +.29 +16.9EqInc LV B 32.41 +.19 +19.9GrStk LG A 59.18 +.78 +19.1HY d HY B 6.72 +.04 +14.8HlthSci SH C 65.73 +.54 +13.5InsLgCpGr LG A 32.37 +.47 +21.7IntlStk d FG A 16.83 +12.9IntlValEq d FV D 13.73 +9.1MdCpGr MG C 81.52 +.88 +15.5MdCpVal MV B 30.00 +.48 +20.6NewHorizons SG B 47.69 +.69 +23.8NewInc CI C 9.40 +.01 +1.2OverseasStk d FB B 9.82 +.02 +12.9Rtr2015 TD A 14.78 +.07 +9.7Rtr2020 TE A 21.43 +.11 +11.1Rtr2025 TG A 16.37 +.10 +12.3Rtr2030 TH A 23.90 +.14 +13.3Rtr2035 TI B 17.36 +.11 +14.2Rtr2040 TJ A 24.81 +.16 +14.9Rtr2045 TK B 16.72 +.12 +15.1RtrBal CA C 15.12 +.05 +7.7SmCpStk SG C 46.50 +.96 +22.9SmCpVal d SB A 45.72 +1.07 +26.6SpectrumInc MU C 12.55 +.02 +6.9Val LV D 35.32 +.20 +15.8TCWTtlRetBdI CI 9.90 -.01 +.3TIAA-CREFBdIdxIns CI E 10.75 +.01 +.1EqIdxIns LB B 17.54 +.17 +18.0IntlEqIdxIns FB B 17.84 +.03 +12.2ThriventSmCpStkA m SG 20.21 +.45 +31.5Tweedy, BrowneGlbVal d FV A 26.74 +.16 +15.5U.S. Global InvestorWldPrecMnral m SP A 6.70 +.02 +32.1Value LinePremGr b MG D 31.03 +.31 +12.5Vanguard500IdxAdmrl LB B 218.06 +1.78 +17.1500IdxInv LB B 218.05 +1.77 +17.0BalIdxAdmrl MA C 32.14 +.05 +10.7BalIdxIns MA C 32.14 +.05 +10.7CAIntTrmTEAdmrlMF B 11.62 +.01 -.3CptlOppAdmrl LG A 134.71 +1.32 +23.9DevMIdxAdmrl FB B 12.61 +.04 +12.7DevMIdxIns FB B 12.62 +.03 +12.7DivGrInv LB E 24.67 -.03 +10.7EMStkIdxAdmrl EM C 32.95 -.34 +17.6EngyAdmrl EE D 96.62 +2.22 +18.6EqIncAdmrl LV D 71.00 -.17 +15.9ExplorerAdmrl SG D 85.38 +1.52 +20.8ExtMktIdxAdmrl MB A 75.81 +1.45 +22.5ExtMktIdxIns MB A 75.81 +1.46 +22.5ExtMktIdxInsPls MB A 187.09 +3.60 +22.5GNMAAdmrl GI A 10.51 +.01 +.4GNMAInv GI A 10.51 +.01 +.3GrIdxAdmrl LG B 62.61 +.61 +15.9GrIdxIns LG B 62.62 +.62 +15.9HCAdmrl SH D 83.83 -1.98 +10.5HCInv SH D 198.76 -4.68 +10.4HYCorpAdmrl HY D 5.88 +.05 +11.2HYTEAdmrl MI A 11.09 +.02 +.7HiDivYldIdxInv LV D 30.76 +.16 +15.9InTrBdIdxAdmrl CI E 11.31 +.01 +.1InTrInvGrdAdmrl TW E 9.70 +.01 +1.7InTrTEAdmrl MI B 13.99 +.02InflPrtScAdmrl IP C 25.81 +.02 +1.5InflPrtScIns IP D 10.51 +1.4InsIdxIns LB B 215.13 +.73 +17.1InsIdxInsPlus LB B 215.15 +.72 +17.2InsTtlSMIInPls LB B 52.97 +.27 +18.1IntlGrAdmrl FG A 75.86 +.19 +17.1IntlGrInv FG A 23.87 +.06 +17.0IntlValInv FV B 34.31 +.06 +13.5LTInvmGrdAdmrl TW E 10.09 -.02 +2.4LTTEAdmrl ML B 11.43 +.01 +.1LfStrCnsrGrInv CA D 18.94 +6.8
LfStrGrInv AL C 30.48 +.16 +13.1
LfStrModGrInv MA C 25.20 +.11 +9.9
LtdTrmTEAdmrl MS B 10.92 +.01 +.4
MdCpIdxAdmrl MB C 172.45 +1.44 +16.7
MdCpIdxIns MB C 38.09 +.31 +16.7
MdCpIdxInsPlus MB C 187.87 +1.55 +16.8
MdCpValIdxAdmrlMV C 52.79 +.73 +19.5
MorganGrAdmrl LG C 82.50 +.86 +15.1
PrmCpAdmrl LG A 117.83 +.98 +22.3
PrmCpCorInv LG A 23.83 +.21 +21.2
PrmCpInv LG A 113.74 +.94 +22.2
REITIdxAdmrl SR B 117.14 +1.04 +3.1
REITIdxIns SR B 18.13 +.16 +3.1
STBdIdxAdmrl x CS D 10.44 +.4
STInvmGrdAdmrl xCS B 10.66 +1.9
STInvmGrdIns x CS B 10.66 +1.9
STInvmGrdInv x CS B 10.66 +1.8
STTEAdmrl MS A 15.77 +.7
STTrsAdmrl GS B 10.64 +.2
SeledValInv MV B 30.44 +.54 +21.5
SmCpGrIdxAdmrl SG D 49.49 +.94 +19.7
SmCpIdxAdmrl SB C 63.87 +1.28 +21.5
SmCpIdxIns SB C 63.87 +1.28 +21.5
SmCpIdxInsPlus SB C 184.35 +3.69 +21.5
SmCpValIdxAdmrlSV C 52.79 +1.11 +23.0
StarInv MA B 24.90 +.13 +11.4
StrEqInv MB A 33.35 +.73 +21.0
TrgtRtr2015Inv TD C 15.00 +.05 +7.7
TrgtRtr2020Inv TE B 29.42 +.12 +9.4
TrgtRtr2025Inv TG C 17.10 +.08 +10.7
TrgtRtr2030Inv TH C 30.69 +.15 +11.9
TrgtRtr2035Inv TI C 18.72 +.09 +13.0
TrgtRtr2040Inv TJ B 32.03 +.18 +14.3
TrgtRtr2045Inv TK C 20.06 +.11 +14.7
TrgtRtr2050Inv TN C 32.27 +.18 +14.7
TrgtRtrIncInv RI D 13.08 +5.4
TtBMIdxAdmrl CI D 10.68 +.01 +.4
TtBMIdxIns CI D 10.68 +.01 +.4
TtBMIdxInsPlus CI D 10.68 +.01 +.4
TtInBIdxAdmrl x IB C 21.61 +.04 +1.1
TtInBIdxIns x IB C 32.43 +.05 +1.2
TtInBIdxInv x IB C 10.81 +.02 +1.2
TtInSIdxAdmrl FB A 26.63 +.01 +13.7
TtInSIdxIns FB A 106.48 +.03 +13.7
TtInSIdxInsPlus FB A 106.49 +.02 +13.7
TtInSIdxInv FB A 15.92 +13.6
TtlSMIdxAdmrl LB B 59.06 +.60 +18.1
TtlSMIdxIns LB B 59.07 +.60 +18.1
TtlSMIdxInv LB B 59.04 +.60 +18.0
TxMgCptlAprAdmrLB B 120.62 +.61 +17.9
ValIdxAdmrl LV B 37.19 +.26 +18.7
ValIdxIns LV B 37.19 +.26 +18.7
WlngtnAdmrl MA A 69.35 -.14 +12.8
WlngtnInv MA A 40.16 -.07 +12.7
WlslyIncAdmrl CA D 62.64 -.34 +6.5
WlslyIncInv CA D 25.86 -.13 +6.4
WndsrAdmrl LV A 73.25 +.80 +21.6
WndsrIIAdmrl LV B 65.35 +.73 +18.7
WndsrIIInv LV B 36.83 +.42 +18.6
Western AssetCorPlusBdI CI 11.56 +.01 +4.2
Obj NAV 12-moRnk Chg % ret
Obj NAV 12-moRnk Chg % ret
Obj NAV 12-moRnk Chg % ret
Obj NAV 12-moRnk Chg % ret
Obj NAV 12-moRnk Chg % ret
Nasdaq
Bold stocks changed 10% or more in pric5% in daily listings). Underlined stocks rehigh or low during the week (or during th
———STOCK FOOTNOTES: cld - Issue
demption by company; d - New 52-weeformerly listed on the American ExchangMarketplace; g - Dividends and earnings- temporarily exempt from Nasdaq capitqualification; n - Stock was a new issue52-week high and low figures date onlytrading. pf - Preferred stock issue; pr - Prowes installments of purchase price; rt -at a specified price; s - Stock has splitwithin the last year; rs - stock has undesplit of at least 50 percent within the pasbe settled when the stock is issued; wd -- Warrant, allowing a purchase of a stock;un - Unit, including more than one secubankruptcy or receivership, or being rebankruptcy law. Appears in front of the n
DIVIDEND FOOTNOTES: a - Extrbut are not included; b - annual rate pludividend; e - amount declared or paid iCurrent annual rate, which was increasedend announcement; i - Sum of dividendsno regular rate; j - Sum of dividends paiddividend was omitted or deferred. k - Deca cumulative issue with dividends in arrearate, which was decreased by most recement; p - Initial dividend, annual rateshown; r - Declared or paid in precedingdividend; t - Paid in stock, approximate cbution date.
PE FOOTNOTES: q - Stock is a cloratio shown; cc - P/E exceeds 99; dd - Lo
VOLUME FOOTNOTES: x - Ex-dividay was the first day that the stock tradereceive a dividend. The price change is afact. y - Ex-dividend and sales in total stotal shares.
FOOTNOTES
Last Chg Last Chg Last Chg Last Chg Last Chg Last Chg Last Chg Last Chg Last Chg Last Chg
AACI Wwde 21.39 -.49AGNC Inv 19.89 +.34AMAG Ph 22.55 +.55AMC Net 58.68 +1.08ANI Ph h 49.51 +3.52ASML Hld 132.80 +.56AXT Inc 5.80 +.15Abiomed 125.20 +.31AcaciaC n 58.62 +1.93AcaciaTc 5.75 +.30AcadiaHlt 43.60 +1.67AcadiaPh 34.38 -.45Acceleron 26.47 -.31Accuray 4.75 -.05AcelRx 3.15 +.08AcetoCorp 15.81 +1.02Achaogen 25.23 +4.35Achillion 4.21 +.45AclarisTh n 29.82 -.71AcordaTh 21.00 -4.40ActivsBliz 49.86 +1.04Acxiom 28.47 +.53Adaptim n 5.51 +1.23AdobeSy 130.13 +2.43Adtran 20.75 -.35AduroBio n 10.75 +.60AdvAApp n 39.86 +.88AdvEnId 68.56 +2.11AdverumBi 2.70 +.05AdvisoryBd 46.80 +2.10Aegion 22.91 +.94AeriePhm 45.35 -.50AeviGeno 1.86 +.26AffimedNV 2.30 -.15AgileThera 3.21 +.25AgiosPhm 58.40 +3.13Aimmune n 21.73 -1.09AirMethod 43.00 -.20AirTrnsp 16.05 +.50AkamaiT 59.70 -3.93Akorn Inc 24.08 +1.33Alarm.cm n 30.74 -.31AlbnyMlc 14.03 +.82Alcobra 1.14AlderBioPh 20.80 -.55Alexion lf 121.24 +1.98AlignTech 114.71 +.84AlimeraSci 1.40 -.07Alkermes 58.50 -.38AllnceRes 21.65 +.50AllscriptH 12.68 +.70AlnylamP 51.25 -1.22Alphabet C 829.56+15.13Alphabet A 847.80+12.66Alphatc rs 2.33 +.14Altisrce n 36.80 +5.31AmTrstF h 18.46 +.30Amarin 3.20 +.01Amaya g 17.00 +.10Amazon 886.54+40.93AmbacFin 18.86 +1.14Ambarella 54.71 +.02Amdocs 60.99 -1.31Amedisys 51.09 +.37AmAirlines 42.30 +.57AmOutBr 19.81 +1.09AmerisBc 46.10 +1.70AmrSvFin 3.75 +.03Amgen 164.07 -1.67AmicusTh 7.13 -.11AmkorTch 11.59 +.64Amphastar 14.50 +.74Amyris .53 +.04AnalogDev 81.95 +.31AngiesList 5.70 +.05AngioDyn 17.35 +.38Ansys 106.87 +1.17AntheraP h .43 +.01ApolloInv 6.56 +.38Apple Inc 143.66 +3.02ApldMatl 38.90 -.07ApldOptoel 56.15 +1.13Approach 2.51 +.25Apptio n 11.73 -.06ArQule 1.06 -.08AralezPh 2.14 -.05AratanaTh 5.30 +.25ArbutusB g 3.25 +.05ArchCap 94.77 +1.56ArenaPhm 1.46AresCap 17.38 +.01ArgosTher .45 -.04Arotech 2.95 -.05ArrayBio 8.94 -.52ArrisIntl 26.45 -.17ArrowPhm 1.85 -.02AscenaRtl 4.26 +.46AspenTech 58.92 +1.65Astronics 31.73 +2.53AtaraBioth 20.55 -.20athenahlth 112.69 +4.09AtlanticaYd 20.96 -.52AtlasAir 55.45 +4.00Atlassian n 29.95 +.52AuriniaPh 7.34 -.68AurisMed .92 +.02
Autodesk 86.47 -.01AutoData 102.39 -.99AVEO Ph h .59 -.08Avexis n 76.03 +.89AvidTech 4.66 -.04AvisBudg 29.58 +1.11Axcelis rs 18.80 +2.50AxsomeT n 3.90 +.25
BB/E Aero 64.11 +.17BGC Ptrs 11.36 +.52BJsRest 40.40 +2.00BMC Stock 22.60 +.45Baidu 172.52 +4.26BallardPw 2.22 -.02BncpBnk lf 5.10 +.20BkOzarks 52.01 +2.36Baozun n 14.94 -.03Bazaarvce 4.30 +.05BeacnRfg 49.16 +.91BedBath 39.46 +1.17Belleroph n 1.49 +.11BellicumP 12.34 +.30BenefBncp 16.00 -.15Benefitfoc 27.95 +1.20Big 5Sprt 15.10 +.55BioTechne 101.65 -2.17Biocryst 8.40 -.39Biogen 273.42 -1.40BioMarin 87.78 +.41BioScrip 1.70 -.12BioTelem 28.95 +2.35Bioverativ 54.46 +4.16BlackBox 8.95 +.42BlackLin n 29.76 +.91BlkRkCap 7.55 +.24Blckbaud 76.67 +.53BlackBerry 7.75 +.68BlkhwkNet 40.60 +1.90BloominBr 19.73 +.42Blucora 17.30 -.20BlueBPet n 23.00 -.37BluebBio 90.90 +2.80BlueprtM n 39.99 -3.97BobEvans 64.87 +2.66BofI Hld s 26.13 -1.34Boingo 12.99 -.29Bojangles n 20.50 +.80BostPrv 16.40 +.60BttmlnT 23.65 -.27Brightcove 8.90 -.15BroadcLtd 218.96 -.01BroadSoft 40.20 -1.55BrcdeCm 12.48 -.04BrklneB 15.65 +.60BrooksAuto 22.40 +1.30BrukerCp 23.33 +.14BuffaloWW 152.75 +4.50BldrFstSrc 14.90 +.46
CCA Inc 31.72 -.14CBOE 81.07 +1.63CDK Globl 65.01 +.13CDW Corp 57.71 +.08CH Robins 77.29 -.18CME Grp 118.80 -1.08CSG Sys 37.81 +.66CSX 46.55 +.23CVB Fncl 22.09 +.79Cadence 31.40 -.21Cadiz h 15.05 +.30CaesarStne 36.25 +.80CaesarAcq 15.40 +.85CaesarsEnt 9.55 +.35Cal-Maine 36.80 -.55CalaCvHi 11.39 +.23CalaCvOp 11.00 +.24CalaGDyIn 7.80 +.08CalaStrTR 11.16 +.20CalAmp 16.79 +.35CalavoGr h 60.60 +1.90Calithera 11.55 +1.15Callidus 21.35 +.45CalumetSp 3.80CdnSolar 12.27 +1.12CapBkFin 43.40 +1.00CapProd 3.57 +.21CapFedFn 14.63 +.24CaraThera 18.39 +1.63Carbonite 20.30 +1.00CardiovSys 28.28 +.18Cardtronic 46.75 +1.29CareTrust 16.82 +1.03CareerEd 8.70 +.04CarlyleGp 15.95 +.30Carrizo 28.66 +1.76CarrolsRst 14.15 +.30CasellaW 14.11 +.35Caseys 112.25 +1.87Catabasis n 1.60 +.13CathayGen 37.68 +1.09Cavium 71.66 +.46Celgene 124.43 +1.05CelldexTh 3.61 +.28Cempra 3.75 -.35CntrStBks 25.90 +.99
CenGrdA lf 34.72 +.85CentAl 12.69 +.89CeragonN 3.27 -.17Cerner 58.85 +1.08Cerulean h .81 +.09CerusCp 4.45 +.35ChartInds 34.94 +1.88ChartCm n 327.32 +1.97ChkPoint 102.66 -.72Cheesecake 63.36 +2.25ChemFinl 51.15 +1.52ChildPlace 120.05 +1.55Chimerix 6.38 -.08CinnFin 72.27 +.39Cinedigm rs 1.55 +.20Cintas 126.54 +1.41Cirrus 60.69 +.63Cisco 33.80 -.28CitrixSy s 83.39 +.25CleanEngy 2.55 +.13ClearsBio n 7.94 +.88ClovisOnc 63.67 -6.65CoStar 207.22 -.52CogentC 43.05 +.65Cogint 4.65 +.35Cognex 83.95 +3.55CognizTch 59.52 +.90Coherent 205.64 +7.68CoherusBio 21.15 -.40Cohu 18.46 +1.22Collegium n 10.06 -1.25ColBnkg 38.99 +1.27ColuSprtw 58.75 +.89Comcast s 37.59 +.21CommScpe 41.71 +.49CmcBMO 56.16 +1.18CmclVehcl 6.77 +1.08CmtyHlt rt .01 +.00CommVlt 50.80 +1.70Comtech 14.74 +.19ConatusPh 5.77 +.95ConcertPh 17.06 -.34ConcrdInt g 1.63 +.03Conformis n 5.22 +.36Conns 8.75 +.45ConsolCom 23.42 +.18Control4 15.79 +.52Copart 61.93 +.61CorbusPhm 8.25 -.85CoreMrk s 31.19 +.35CorOnDem 38.89 -.02Costco 167.69 +1.67CoupaSft n 25.40 +1.52CowenGp rs 14.95 +1.75CrackerB 159.25 +2.76Cray Inc 21.90 +.85CreditAcc 199.41 +9.99CSVixSh rs 35.08 -4.48CSVixST rs 26.67 -1.63Cree Inc 26.73 -.40Criteo SA 49.99 -1.56Crocs 7.07 +.41CrssCtryHl 14.36 +.81Ctrip.com s 49.15 -.03Curis 2.78 -.18CyberArk 50.87 +2.09CypSemi 13.76 -.58CyrusOne 51.47 +1.27Cytokinetic 12.85 +.25CytomX n 17.27 -.52
DDXP Ent 37.87 +5.41DaveBuster 61.09 +.15DelFriscos 18.05 +.45Dentsply 62.44 +.09Depomed 12.55 -2.34Dermira 34.11 -.64Dest XL 2.85 +.25DexCom 84.73 +2.11DiambkEn 103.72 +3.99DianaCn h rs 1.30 -.20DicernaPh 3.40 +.77DimeCBc 20.30 +.50DiscCmA 29.09 +1.55DiscCmC 28.31 +1.24DishNetw h 63.49 +1.50DollarTree 78.46 +3.54DuluthH n 21.29 -1.47Dunkin 54.68 -1.30DurectCp 1.05 +.11
EE-Trade 34.89 +1.25eBay s 33.57 +.17EV Engy 1.48 -.07EagleBkS rs 5.69 +.09EaglePhm 82.94 +3.06EstWstBcp 51.61 +1.13EastVaBk 10.48 +.06Ebix Inc s 61.25 +.90EchoGLog 21.35 +.85EchoStar 56.95 +1.77EditasM n 22.32 +3.06EgaletCp 5.10 +.328x8 Inc 15.25 +.308Point3E n 13.57 +.79ElPolLoco 11.95 +.30
EldorRsts 18.93 +1.23ElectArts 89.52 +.17EFII 48.83 +2.00ElevenBio 2.20 +.19Emcore 9.00 +.40EnantaPh 30.80EncoreCap 30.80 +.40Endo Intl 11.16 +1.19Endocyte 2.57 +.36Endologix 7.24 +.31EndurIntl 7.85 -.05EnerNOC 6.00 +.65EnrgyRec 8.32 +.73Enphase 1.37 +.13EnsignGp s 18.80 +.45Entegris 23.40 +.65EntFinSv 42.40 +2.10Epizyme 17.15Equinix 400.37+12.28Ericsson 6.64 +.09ErieInd 122.70 +1.14Esperion 35.31 -3.63Essendant 15.15 +1.00Etsy n 10.63 +.75Euronet 85.52 +1.98Everbrdg n 20.53 +.48ExTrRobo 32.20 +.30Exelixis 21.67 +.76Expedia 126.17 -1.59ExpdIntl 56.49 +.67ExpScripts 65.91 +1.80ExtrOilGs n 18.55 +1.64ExtrmNet 7.51 +1.07Ezcorp 8.15 +.20
FF5 Netwks 142.57 -4.00FLIR Sys 36.28 +.22Facebook 142.05 +1.71Fastenal 51.50 +.74FateThera 4.55 -.22Ferrogl n 10.33 +.51FibroGen 24.65 -.15FiestaRst 24.20 +1.60FifthStFin 4.62 -.04FifthThird 25.40 +.65FinclEngin 43.55 +3.55Finisar 27.34 -1.02FinLine 14.23 +1.30FireEye 12.61 +.33FFnclOH 27.45 +.80FstFnBksh 40.10 +1.15FsHawaii n 29.92 +.26FMidBc 23.68 +.71FstNBC lf 4.00 +.10FstSolar 27.10 -1.21FTNDXTc 60.15 +.33FTEnhSht 59.97FT DWF5 24.04 +.20FTNsBk ef 25.97 +.37FT DWInt 19.12 -.01FTSenLoan 48.39 +.07FT NsdABA 50.62 +1.53Fiserv 115.31 -.63FiveBelow 43.31 +.69FivePrime 36.15 +.17Five9 16.46 -2.06Flex Ltd 16.80 +.17FlexionTh 26.91 -.36Foamix 4.95 -4.15FormFac 11.85 +.30Forterra n 19.50 +1.62Fortinet 38.35 +2.05Fossil Grp 17.45 +1.07Foster 12.50 -.05FndtnMed 32.25 -.65FoxFactory 28.70 +.20Francesca 15.35 -.60FredsInc 13.10 -.73FrontierCm 2.14 +.05FrontC pf 49.26 +2.03FuelCell rs 1.38 +.03FultonFncl 17.85 +.51
GG-III s 21.89 -1.03GW Pharm 120.94 -.23Gam&Lsr n 33.42 +1.10Garmin 51.11 +.01GenMark 12.82 -.58GenoceaB 6.09 +.50Gentex 21.33 +.36Gentherm 39.25 +2.50GeronCp 2.27 +.15GileadSci 67.92 +.41GlacierBc 33.93 +1.00GblBldT n 36.85 -2.30GluMobile 2.27 +.14Gogo 11.00 +.20GolLNGLtd 27.93 +.67GolLNGPt 22.34 +.49GoldenOc rs 7.65 +.03GolubCap 19.88 +.72Goodyear 36.00 +.06GoPro 8.70 +.40GovPrpIT 20.93 +.37GrCanyEd 71.61 +2.88GrLkDrge 4.00 -.30
GreenBncp 17.80 +.85GreenPlns 24.75 +1.90GrifolsSA s 18.88 +.83Groupon 3.93 -.06GpAeroCN 43.18 +.03GulfportE 17.19 +.96
HH&E Eqp 24.52 +.77HD Supply 41.13 +.80HMS Hldgs 20.33 +2.08HSN Inc 37.10 +.95HTG Mol h 6.92 -2.73HabitRest 17.70 +1.45HainCels lf 37.20 +.20Halozyme 12.96 -.57HamilLa n 18.67 -.36HancHld 45.55 +2.05Harmonic 5.95 +.05Hasbro 99.82 -.15HawHold 46.45 -2.00HlthCSvc 43.09 +.69HlthInsInn 16.00 +.45HealthEqty 42.45 +2.05HrtlndEx 20.05 +.13HSchein 169.97 -1.28Hibbett 29.50 +1.45HighpwrInt 3.95 +.40HimaxTch 9.12 -.16Hollysys 16.93 +.13Hologic 42.55 +.26HomeBcs s 27.07 +.42HomeStreet 27.95 +1.95HopeBcp 19.17 +.43HorizPhm 14.78 +.41Hortonwks 9.81 +.50HospPT 31.53 +.58HoughMH 10.15 +.70HubGroup 46.40 +.65HuntJB 91.74 +1.47HuntBncsh 13.39 +.28
IIAC Inter 73.72 +.98IdexxLab s 154.61 +.87IHS Mark 41.95 +1.62II-VI 36.05 -1.95ILG Inc 20.96 +1.59INC Resc h 45.85 +1.70IPG Photon 120.70 +1.67iRobot 66.14 +3.65iShEurFn 20.32 +.03iShAsiaexJ 62.94 -.37iShACWX 43.62iSh ACWI 63.26 +.18iShs SOX 136.89 +1.01iShNsdqBio 293.27 +3.21Iberiabnk 79.10 +3.26IchorHld n 19.83 +1.61Icon PLC 79.72 +.78IconixBrnd 7.52 +.47iKangHlth 14.60 -.09Illumina 170.64 +.06Immersn h 8.66 +.33ImunoGn 3.87 +.26Imunmd 6.47 -.41ImpaxLabs 12.65 +3.40Imperva 41.05 +.45Impinj n 30.27 +2.13Incyte 133.67 -5.97Infinera 10.23 -.62InfinityPh 3.23 -.07InfoSvcs 3.15 +.06InnerWkgs 9.96 +.49Innocoll 1.12 +.09Innoviva 13.83 +.98InotekPh n 2.00 +.20Inovalon n 12.60 +.85InovioPhm 6.62 +.57InsightEnt 41.09 -.11Insmed 17.51 +1.70Insulet 43.09 +.21InsysTher s 10.51 -.10IntegLfSc s 42.13 -.61IntgDv 23.67 +.08Intel 36.07 +.91Intellia n 14.09 +1.02InteractB 34.72 +.03InterceptP 113.10 -3.63InterDig 86.30 +1.20Interface 19.05 +.45Internap 3.72 -.08IntlBcsh 35.40 +1.13IntersENT 17.15 +.35IntraCellu 16.25 +1.49Intuit 115.99 -3.73IntSurg 766.47 +8.47Inventure 4.42 +.13InvestBncp 14.38 +.56InVivoTh rs 4.05 +.05IonisPhm 40.20 +1.22IridiumCm 9.65 +.75IronwdPh 17.06 -.08Itron 60.70 -2.25Ixia 19.65 +.05
Jj2Global 83.91 +.16JA Solar 6.54 +.82
JD.com 31.11 -.15JackHenry 93.10 -.23JackInBox 101.72 +1.54JkksPac 5.50 +.10Jamba 9.05 -.20JazzPhrm 145.13 +1.99JetBlue 20.61 +.67JounceTh n 21.99 -3.59JunoThera 22.19 +1.99
KK2M Grp 20.51 +1.21KCAP Fin 4.07 +.11KEYW Hld 9.44 -.30KLA Tnc 95.07 -.65KLX 44.70 +.95KVHInd 8.40 +.30KaiserAlu 79.90 +.07Karyophm 12.84 +2.36KearnyF s 15.05 +.10KitePharm 78.49 +1.65KopinCp 4.10 +.11KornitDig n 19.10 +1.10KraftHnz n 90.81 -.87KratosDef 7.78 -.23Kulicke 20.32 +.04
LLGI Homes 33.91 +2.00LKQ Corp 29.27 -.12LPL Fincl 39.83 +.43LamResrch 128.36 +.89LamarAdv 74.74 -.85Landstar 85.65 +2.05Lantheus n 12.50 +.60Lattice 6.92 -.12LaureatE n 14.27 +.93LegacyRes 2.29 +.35LegacyTxF 39.90 +.98LexiPhm rs 14.34 +.14LibBrdbdA 85.09 +.49LibBrdbdC 86.40 +.80LibExpA n 45.48 -.52LibtyGlobA 35.87 +.74LibtyGlobC 35.04 +.60LibGLiLA n 22.24 +.80LibGLiC n 23.04 +.79LibQVC A 20.02 +.58LibVentA 44.48 +1.06LibMSirA n 38.92 +.59LibMSirC n 38.78 +.60LibMCFor 34.15 +.44LibMAFor 32.70 +.65LibTripA A 14.10 +.20LifePtHlth 65.50 +3.45LigandPh 105.84 +1.06LimelghtN 2.58 +.13LincElec 86.86 +1.65LivaNova n 49.01 -1.41LivePrsn 6.85 +.10Logitech 31.87 +.18LogMeIn 97.50 +1.35LoxoOncol 42.08 -3.52lululemn gs 51.87-11.82Lumentm n 53.35 -.15Luminex 18.37 +.21LumosNtw 17.70 +.05
MMACOM 48.30 +3.33MB Fncl 42.82 +1.25MDC Pr gs 9.40MGE Engy 65.00 +2.10MKS Inst 68.75 +1.00MTGE Inv 16.75 +.55MacroGen 18.60 +.67Magal 7.52 +.17MaidenH 14.00 +.50MainSrce 32.93 +1.14MMyTrip 34.60 -2.00ManhAssc 52.05 +2.43MannKd rs 1.48 -.41MarinusPh 1.77 +.25MktAxess 187.49 -.21MarIntA 94.18 +.68MartinMid 20.00 +1.30MarvellTch 15.26 -.58Masimo 93.26 +.04Match n 16.33 +.45Mattel 25.61 +.45MatthInt 67.65 +2.20MaximIntg 44.96 -.27MazorRbt 29.77 +.90MedalFin 1.98 -.24MediCo 48.90 -1.79Medidata 57.69 +1.72Medpace n 29.85 +2.94MelcoCrwn 18.54 -.18Mellanox 50.95 -.35MemorialP .12 -.00MercadoL 211.47 +.76MercSys 39.05 +.44MeridBio 13.80 +.70MeritMed 28.90 +.18MerrimkP 3.08 +.07Methanx 46.90 +2.40Michaels 22.39 +.43Microchp 73.78 +.63MicronT 28.90 +.47
MicroSemi 51.53 -.06Microsoft 65.86 +.88Microvisn 2.49 -.04Middleby 136.45 +.12MillerHer 31.55 +.15Mimecast n 22.39 +.88Mindbody n 27.45 +.25MitelNet g 6.93 +.04MobileMini 30.50 +1.00MobileIron 4.35 -.05Momenta 13.35 -.20Momo 34.07 +.74Mondelez 43.08 -.53MoneyGrm 16.81 +.15MonPwSys 92.10 +.87MonroMuf 52.10 -.05MonstrBv s 46.17 -.77MtnPDia g 3.55 -.35Mylan NV 38.99 -1.97MyriadG 19.20 -.18
NNETgear 49.55 -1.90NIC Inc 20.20 -.20NICE Ltd 67.98 +.85NII Hldg n 1.30 +.20NMI Hldg h 11.40 +.35NN Inc 25.20 +1.00NXP Semi 103.50 +.51Nanomtr 30.46 +1.06NantKwst n 3.55 +.16Nasdaq 69.45 -.40Natera n 8.87 +.17NatlBevrg 84.53 +4.24NatCineM 12.63 +.09NatGenHld 23.76 +.91NatInstrm 32.56 +.53NatusMed 39.25 -.25Navient 14.76 +.77NektarTh 23.47 +1.05NeosTher n 7.20 +.20Neothetics 1.60 +.20NetApp 41.85 +.97NetEase 284.00 -4.98Netflix s 147.81 +5.79NtScout 37.95 +.70NeuroDerm 26.55 +.65Neurcrine 43.30 +1.32NewLink 24.10 +4.01NYMtgTr 6.17 +.05NewsCpA 13.00 +.45NewsCpB 13.50 +.55NewtekBsn 16.98 +.33NexstarM 70.15 +.35Noodles 5.75 +1.25Nordson 122.84 +.49NorTrst 86.58 +.83NwstBcsh 16.84 +.18NorwCruis 50.73 +.25NovaMeas 18.59 +1.78Novadaq g 7.79 -.02Novavax 1.28 +.02NovoCure n 8.10 +1.05NuVasive 74.68 -.17NuanceCm 17.31 +.63Nutanix n 18.77 -.73NutriSyst 55.50 +2.45Nvidia 108.93 +1.46NxStageMd 26.83 +.18
OOFS Cap 14.19 -.91OReillyAu 269.84 -1.92OceanRig .29 -.44OceraTher 1.31 +.06Oclaro 9.82 -.29OcularTher 9.28 +.01OfficeDpt 4.67 +.14OldDomFrt 85.57 +.84OldNBcp 17.35 +.65Ollies n 33.50 +1.05Omeros 15.12 +3.56Omnicell 40.65 +.80OnSmcnd 15.49 +.31OpenText s 34.01 +.01Ophthotech 3.66 +.13OpkoHlth 8.00 +.15OpusBank 20.15 +1.25OraSure 12.93 +.80Orbcomm 9.55 +.40Orbotch 32.25 +.15Orexign rs 3.44 -.54Organovo 3.18 +.15Orthofix 38.15 -1.54Otonomy 12.25 -.60OvaScience 1.87 +.16OxfordLn 11.13 +.46
PPC-Tel 7.12 +1.60PDC Engy 62.35 +.52PDL Bio 2.27 +.29PRA Grp 33.15 +.25PRA Hlth 65.23 +3.48PTC Inc 52.55 +.61PTC Thera 9.84 +1.32PacWstBc 53.26 +1.93Paccar 67.20 -.42PacBiosci 5.17 +.12
PacPreBc 38.55 +2.15PaciraPhm 45.60 -1.30PainTher h .89 +.03PanASlv 17.52 +.04PaneraBrd 261.87+12.39PapaJohns 80.04 +3.61PapaMurph 4.77 +.59ParatekPh 19.25 +3.40Parexel 63.11 +.76ParkStrlg 12.31 +.60PatrkInd s 70.90 +1.35PatternEn 20.13 +.13Patterson 45.23 +.75PattUTI 24.27 +.28Paychex 58.90 -2.72Paylocity 38.63 +3.61PayPal n 43.02 -.11Pegasyst 43.85 +2.03PnnNtGm 18.43 +.75PennantPk 8.14 +.35PenPkFR 13.94 +.26PeopUtdF 18.20 +.16Perficient 17.36PernixT rs 3.70 -.27PhotrIn 10.70 -.15PilgrimsP 22.51 +.25PinnclEnt 19.52 +.72PinnaclFn 66.45 +2.65PlayaHot n 10.50 +.30Pool Corp 119.33 +.40Popular 40.73 +2.04PortolaPh 39.19 +.75Potbelly 13.90 +.45Potlatch 45.70 +.95PwShs QQQ 132.38 +1.75Premier 31.83 +1.73Presidio n 15.48 +.88PriceTR 68.15 +.32Priceline 1779.97+26.86PrimoWtr 13.58 +.24Primoris 23.22 +.28PrivateB 59.37 +3.86PrUltBio s 48.26 +.96PrUltPQ s 88.21 +3.43PrognicsPh 9.44 -1.82ProgrsSoft 29.05 +1.02Proofpoint 74.36 +.99PShtQQQ rs 37.05 -1.49ProspctCap 9.04 +.05Proteos n 7.82 -2.57Prothena 55.79 +3.29pSivida 1.72 +.02Pulmatrix 3.49 -.05PumaBiotc 37.20 -2.50
QQIAGEN 28.97 +.04QIWI plc 17.15 +.62Qorvo 68.56 +.92Qualcom 57.34 +.42QualitySys 15.24 +.50Qualys 37.90 +2.20Quantenn n 20.83 -.10QuickLog h 1.78 -.14
RRPX Corp 12.00 -.01RadiusHlth 38.65 +.47Radware 16.16 +.01RamacoRs n 9.67 +.92Rambus 13.14 +.20Randgold 87.28 -1.79RavenInds 29.05 -.25RealIndust 2.85 +.20RealPage 34.90 +.05RedRobin 58.45 +3.85RedRkRs n 22.18 +.75Regenrn 387.51+14.51RegnxBio n 19.30 -.85RegulusTh 1.65 +.25Renasant 39.69 +.63RenewEn 10.45 +.50RentACt 8.87 +.07Replgn 35.20 +.56RepFBcp 8.30 +.35RetailOpp 21.03 -.09RetailMNot 8.10 +.15Retrophin 18.46 +1.07RevanceTh 20.80 +1.15RigelPh 3.31 +.18RocketFuel 5.36 +.61RockwllM 6.26 +.21RossStrs s 65.87 -.25RoyGld 70.05 +2.82RushEntA 33.08 +1.15RuthsHosp 20.05 +.25Ryanair 82.98 -.98
SS&T Bcp 34.60 +.99SBA Com 120.37 +2.08SEI Inv 50.44 +.09SLM Cp 12.10 +.41SORL 3.86 +.81SS&C Tch s 35.40 -.21SVB FnGp 186.09 +8.15SabraHltc 27.93 +.27SabreCorp 21.19 +.28SageThera 71.07 +8.58
SanderFm 103.84 +3.49SangTher 5.20 +1.10Sanmina 40.60 +.90SareptaTh 29.60 -.33Schnitzer 20.65 +.90Scholastc 42.57 -.14Schulmn 31.45 +.65SciClone lf 9.80 +.05SciGames 23.65 +2.00ScrippsNet 78.37 -.18SeacstBkg 23.98 +1.06SeagateT 45.93 +.69SearsHldgs 11.49 +2.99SeattGen 62.86 -.83SecWkA A n 9.50 -2.06SelCmfrt 24.79 +1.27SelIncREIT 25.79 +.33SelectvIns 47.15 +.35Semtech 33.80 -.55SenHous 20.25 +.14ServiFst s 36.38 +.77Shire 174.23 -1.00ShoeCarnvl 24.57 +.63ShoreTel 6.15 +.35Shutterfly 48.29 +1.55SierOnc g n 1.53 +.08SierraWr 26.55 -3.15SigmaDsg 6.25 +.30SignatBk 148.39 +3.65SilganHldg 59.36 -.28SilcnLab 73.55 +.70SilicnMotn 46.75 +2.00Slcnware 8.09 +.05SilvStd g 10.61 +.10Sina 72.12 -.95Sinclair 40.50 +.95SiriusXM 5.15 +.05SkyWest 34.25 -1.17SkywksSol 97.98 +.68SmartSnd n 16.25 +1.22SnydLance 40.31 +.46SodaStrm 48.43 +1.59SolarCap 22.61 +.79SolarEdg n 15.60 +1.90SonicCorp 25.36 +2.36Sonus rs 6.59 +.04SparkTh n 53.34 +.37SpartnMot 8.00 +.65SprtnNash 34.99 +1.23Spectranet 29.13 +1.18SpectPh 6.50 -.11SpiritAir 53.07 +2.37Splunk 62.29 +1.39SportsWhs 4.78 +.14Sprouts 23.12 +.54Stamps.cm 118.35 +1.35Staples 8.77 +.30StarBulk rs 11.88 +1.81Starbucks s 58.39 +1.58StlDynam 34.76 +1.03SteinMart s 3.01 +.38Stericycle 82.89 +.84SMadden 38.55 +.40StonegteBk 47.09 +1.37Stratasys 20.49 +1.30StudentTrn 5.86 +.17SucampoPh 11.00 +.40SunOpta 6.95 +.20SunPower 6.10 +.03Sunrun n 5.40 +.49SuperMicro 25.35 -.15Supernus 31.30 +1.35SykesEnt 29.40 +.43Symantec 30.68 +.21Synacor 4.15 +.60Synaptics 49.51 +.33Synchron 24.40 -1.54SynrgyPh 4.66 +.09Syneron 10.55 -.10Synopsys 72.13 +.98Syntel 16.83 +.45
TT-MobileUS 64.59 +.42TCP Cap 17.42 +.40TD Ameritr 38.86 +1.17TICC Cap 7.38 +.21TPI Co n 19.01 +2.55TTM Tch 16.13 +.23TakeTwo 59.27 +1.15TandemD 1.20 -.05Tarena 18.68 +.49TASER 22.79 +.29TechData h 93.90 +2.79Teligent 7.81 +.56TerraVia .73 +.02TerraFm lf 4.80 -.05TerrFmP lf 12.37 +.04Tesaro 153.87 -6.13Tesla Inc 278.30+15.14TetraTc 40.85 +.80Tetraphase 9.19 +1.08TxCapBsh 83.45 +3.20TexInst 80.56 -.03TexRdhse 44.53 +1.00TheravBio 36.82 +3.06TileShop 19.25 +.50TitanMach 15.34 +2.10
TivityHlth 29.10 +.95Tivo Cp 18.75 +.70TonixPh rs 4.67 +.68TowerSemi 23.05TowneBank 32.40 +1.13TractSupp 68.97 -.05TradDsk A n 37.25 +1.23TravelCtrs 6.10 +.30Trevena 3.67 +.12TriMas h 20.75 +.05Trimble 32.01 +.69TripAdvis 43.16 +.47Trivago n 13.03 +.85Tronc 13.92 +.21TrueCar 15.47 +.23TrstNY 7.85 +.05Trustmk 31.79 +.73TuesMrn 3.75 +.45TurtleBch .91 -.0721stCFoxA 32.39 +.8721stCFoxB 31.78 +.9021Vianet 5.49 +.042U 39.66 +2.00
UUMB Fn 75.31 +1.88Ubiquiti 50.26 -.41UltaBeauty 285.23 +3.70UltimSoft 195.21 +4.82UltraClean 16.87 +1.21Ultragenyx 67.78 -2.54Umpqua 17.74 +.63UBSI 42.25 +1.35UtdCmBks 27.69 +1.11UtdNtrlF 43.23 +.54UtdTherap 135.38 -4.67UnitGrp 25.85 +.91UnivDisp 86.10 +2.70UnvStainls 17.00 +1.85UrbanOut 23.76 +.82
VVCA Inc 91.50VEON 4.05 +.15VWR 28.20 +.89VandaPhm 14.00 -.45V exUSRE 53.26 -.37VanSTCpB 79.74 +.07VanMtgBSc 52.52 +.15VanLTCpB 89.90 +.12VanIntCpB 86.38 +.23VangSTInfl 49.47 +.09VanTIntBd 54.13 +.11VanTIntStk 49.68 -.05VarexImag 33.60 +2.59Varonis 31.80 +.85VeecoInst 29.85 +1.10VBradley 9.31 +.66Verastem 2.07 +.41VerintSys 43.38 +2.98Verisign 87.11 -.08Verisk 81.14 +1.43Versartis 21.35 +.25
VertxPhViaSatViacomBViaviViewRayVirtuFinVirtusaVitalTheVivusVodafon
WVS FnWalgBooWashFeWeb.comWebMDWeiboCoWendysWernerEWesbanWDigitaWestmrWstptFuWholeFoWillisTwWindstmWingstoWintrusWT USQWisdomWix.comWoodwaWrightMWynn
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YRC WwYY IncYahooYandex
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STOCKS IN THE NEWS
Changes announced in corporatedividends:Increased DividendsCity Holding .44 from .43Glacier Bancorp .21 from .20Mackinac Financial Corp .12 from
.10n- New dividend after splitg- Canadian fundsInitial DividendsClipper Realty .085RGC Resources n .145
West Marine Inc .05Other corporate news and listings:Stock Splits This WeekGafina ADR 1 for 13:483Stock Splits DeclaredCopart Inc DE 2 for 1 split
Acquisitions and MergersMinimum value $100 millionEndurance Specialty Holdings Ltd- SOMPO Holdings Inc (6.3B)Mentor Graphics Corp - Siemens(4.5B)
Surgical Care Affiliates Inc - Unit-edHealth Group Inc (2.3B)New Stock ListingsNYSEAlteryx IncNASDAQ Global and Global Select
MarketsG&K Services IncPopeyes Louisiana Kitchen IncCorporate Name ChangesHarris & Harris Group to1800 Degree Capital Corp
SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017 · C9
Potholes form when waterseeps into asphalt cracks andfreezes in the soil below. Thatloosens and lifts the asphalt.When the water thaws, a voidis left under the road surface.When a car passes over theroad, it breaks up and formsa pothole.
Amy Clark, 47, of Harrison,Allegheny County, said ne-gotiating potholes is part ofdriving in Pennsylvania.
“Sometimes it makes you
look like a drunk driver,swerving around all theseholes in the road; but you haveto,” she said.
Henry Fitz, WestmorelandCounty engineer, said evenin mild winters, a cycle offreezing and thawing can stillwreak havoc on roads.
Fitz said the mild wintercaused a number of freeze-thaw cycles — perfect for cre-ating potholes. Still, he said,“As far as the county roadsgo, we made out pretty well
this winter.”The mild winter was espe-
cially welcomed by towns likeNew Kensington, which de-pends in part on funds fromthe federal Community Devel-opment Block Grant programto repair roads. That programis scheduled for funding cutsin President Trump’s pro-posed federal budget.
City Clerk Dennis Scarpin-iti said those cuts could havea “dramatic effect” on roadresurfacing projects.
Peterson said the best wayto get through pothole seasonis to report bad state roadconditions to PennDOT.
“Motorists are an extensionof our eyes and ears,” shesaid.
Municipal or county roadrepair needs should be for-warded to the appropriateroads department.
Matthew Medsger is a Tribune-Reviewstaff writer. Reach him at 724-226-
4675 or [email protected].
Repeated thaws foster potholesSPRING · FROM C1
Hunters using semiauto-matic firearms during smallgame season will be limitedto loads .22-caliber and small-er, but those hunting wood-chuck or furbearers will beable to use semiautomaticsof any caliber.
This means that the AR-15,much in the news and ac-cording to the NRA currentlythe most popular rifle in thecountry, will be legal to carryfor hunting woodchucks andfurbearers.
Season and baglimits declared
The Board of Game Commis-sioners approved the seasonlengths and bag limits for the2017-2018 hunting season.
Hunting season is scheduledto begin July 1, with licenses
available for purchase in mid-June. After purchasing a gener-al hunting license, hunters willbe eligible to apply for antler-less deer licenses, sometimescalled doe tags, based on anas-yet unannounced staggeredtimeline.
That timeline will be detailedin the 2017-18 issue of Pennsyl-vania Hunting and TrappingDigest, which will be availableonline in the near future, gamecommission officials said.
The board has allocated804,000 antlerless deer licensesto be split among the state’s 23
Wildlife Management Units,an increase of 56,000 over lastyear’s hunting season.
Wildlife Management Unit2B, which covers most of Al-legheny County and part ofWestmoreland County, will re-ceive 60,000, the most licenseallocations in the state. Unit2D, which covers the rest of theAlle-Kiski Valley, will receive55,000.
Big year for bucksThe numbers for last year’s
deer harvest show a banneryear for Pennsylvania hunters.
Hunters harvested about333,000 deer in the 2016-2017season, anincreaseof 6percentover the 2015-2016 harvest ofabout 316,000.
About 150,000 of the harvest-ed deer were bucks, or maledeer, up 9 percent from the pre-vious season, and the largestharvest of bucks since 2002.
“This has been quite a yearfor Pennsylvania deer hunt-ing,” game commission Ex-ecutive Director R. MatthewHough said.
“Not only was there an in-creased deer harvest and a sig-nificantly higher buck harvest,I saw hundreds of photos fromhunters who took their buck-of-a-lifetime this past season,”he said.
Matthew Medsger is a Tribune-Reviewstaff writer. Reach him at 724-226-
4675 or [email protected].
Restrictions remain on semiautomaticsCHANGES · FROM C1
ON THE MOVE
The Braddock Trail Chapter of the Daughters of theAmerican Revolution recently honored the 2017 winners ofthe American History Essay Contest. The essay title was“Celebrating a Century: America’s National Parks.” The win-ning students were all from Verna Montessori School in Mt.Pleasant.
Fifth-grader Claire Miedel wrote about her trip to HawaiiVolcanoes National Park; sixth-grader BenjamineTinkeytold of his adventures while camping in Lake Clark NationalPark in Alaska; seventh-grader Eva Prestia described theplant and animal life at Yellowstone Park; and eighth-graderEmma Huber wrote about her trip to Great Smoky Moun-tains National Park. After reading their essays at the Marchmeeting, the students were awarded certificates and medalsby American history chairwoman Nancy Wood.
Lauren King of Greensburg and Eva Schall of Apollohave been accepted to Delaware Valley University.
Rebekah R. Musho of Latrobe, a graduate of St. Vin-cent College who earned a bachelor of sci-ence degree with highest honors in corpo-rate finance and accounting with a minorin economics in May 2016, was amongthe top 15 scorers whose combined scoreson all four sections of the Certified PublicAccountants (CPA) Exam were the high-est of all Pennsylvania exam takers lastyear, according to an announcement bythe National Association of State Boardsof Accountancy (NASBA).
She was the 2012 valedictorian of Ligonier Valley HighSchool and is the daughter of Darryl and Janet Musho. She
Claire Miedel, BenjamineTinkey, Eva Prestia andEmma Huber were essay contest winners.
SUBMITTED
Musho
“Not only was there an increased deer harvest and asignificantly higher buck harvest, I saw hundreds ofphotos from hunters who took their buck-of-a-lifetimethis past season.”
R. MATTHEW HOUGHGAME COMMISSION EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
C10 · SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017
BRIEFLY SPEAKING
Classes/programs•Basic computer classes
offered by Senior ComputerAssociates are planned forApril in Latrobe Center forActive Adults, 15 Ave. C.IPhone starts Monday, iPadclass starts Wednesday. Ses-sions meet from 9:15-11:15a.m. Fee: $20. Information:724-879-4461.
•California Universityof Pennsylvania alumnusRontez Miles, a safety for theNew York Jets, will be a guestspeaker at 6 p.m. Tuesday inCal U’s Keystone Hall, Room205, 250 University Drive. Thetalk is free and open to thepublic.
• “Everything But theKitchen Sink” is the themeof an art class for children,10 a.m.-noon Saturday inWestmoreland Museum ofAmerican Art, 221 N. MainSt., Greensburg. Cost: $20, or$15 for museum members.Registration: 724-837-1500 ext.110 or [email protected].
•Norwin Public Library,100 Caruthers Lane, NorthHuntingdon will hold itsannual meeting at 6:30 p.m.April 10 followed by pre-senter, Andy Blenko, whowill deliver his presentationof “In Search of Irwin TrainStation,” Reservations: 724-863-4700, ext. 6.
•The 2017 WestmorelandCounty Camp Cadet programis scheduled for July 16-21 atUniversity of Pittsburgh atGreensburg. Program is opento ages 12-15 who reside inthe Pennsylvania State PoliceTroop A area of Westmore-land County. SouthmorelandSchool District students mayapply. Applications due byMay 8 at westmorelandcampcadet.org. Information:724-832-3288.
•Adams MemorialLibrary, 1112 Ligonier St.,Latrobe, will present the fol-lowing programs:
— 6 p.m. Thursday, adultcraft, create decorative string
eggs. Cost: $5, which includes2 eggs.
— 6 p.m. April 19, foreignfilm night.
Reregistration: 724-539-1972.
•St. Vincent Gallery willpresent an exhibition featur-ing the work of four seniorart majors April 6-30 withopening reception 6-8 p.m.Thursday in the gallery, 300Fraser-Purchase Road, Unity.Regular gallery hours are1-4 p.m. Tuesdays throughSundays.
Fundraisers• A handbag blowout
sale is planned 7 a.m.-4 p.m.April 6-7 in WestmorelandHospital, 532 W. PittsburghSt., Greensburg. Designerhandbags, wallets, tote bags,briefcases and luggage willbe featured. Proceeds benefitauxiliary projects in supportof Excela Health.
• Pistols and purse bashis planned 6-10 p.m. Saturdayin Youngwood Fire Hall, 104S. Second St., Youngwood.Tickets: $30. Must be 21. Freefood, refreshments and beer.
Benefits Westmoreland Com-munity Action. Tickets: 724-834-1260 ext. 153 or [email protected]. orwestmorelandca.org.
Recycling• Electronic and house-
hold hazardous waste will becollected by Penn Township 9a.m.-1 p.m. Saturday in PennTownship Municipal Com-plex, 2001 Municipal Court.Pre-registration is requiredat 1-866-815-0016 or registeronline at ECSR.NET.
Special event•Unity Township Easter
Egg Hunt will be held rain orshine, 11 a.m. Saturday at thetownship municipal building,156 Beatty County Road. Chil-dren age 10 or younger areinvited to bring their baskets.Pre-registration is required:724-539-2546.
•Tenebrae concert hostedby Westmoreland ChoralSociety will begin at 7:30 p.m.Saturday in First Presbyte-rian Church of Greensburg,300 S. Main St. Tickets: $15and can be purchased atwestmorelandchoralsociety.com. Information: 724-610-1441.
•St. Vincent College Con-cert Series will feature mezzo-soprano Chrystal E. Williamsat 7 p.m. Saturday in the Rob-ert S. Carey Performing ArtsCenter., 300 Fraser-PurchaseRoad, Unity. Cost: $25. Tickets:724-805-2565 or concertseries.stvincent.edu.
•Meet Brig. Gen. USAF(Ret.) Charles M. Duke Jr.,Apollo 16 lunar module pilot,7 p.m. April 13 in RamadaGreensburg Hotel and Con-ference Center, 100 RamadaDrive, Hempfield. Advanceticket purchase required byFriday. Cost: $28 includesprogram and dinner. Tickets:724-689-3305 or 724-836-2975.
•Annual Night of Distinc-tion program is planned 5-9p.m. April 22 in SouthernAlleghenies Museum of Artat Ligonier Valley, off Route711 south of Ligonier. Cost:$95. Reservations required byApril 14 at 814-472-3920.
•Photography show byMaureen Elizabeth andhosted by Latrobe Art Centeris planned 6-8 p.m. Thursdaywith an opening reception inthe center, 819 Ligonier St.
Church events•Easter egg hunt is
planned 10 a.m.-noon,Saturday at Latrobe UnitedMethodist Church, 440 MainSt. Pictures with the Easterbunny, prizes and bouncehouse will be featured. Infor-mation: 724-537-8141.
•Trash and treasure saleis planned 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
Saturday in Trinity UnitedChurch of Christ, 139 N. MainSt., Greensburg.
•These bingos areplanned:
— 6:45 p.m. Wednesday, St.Barbara Church social hall,111 Raymaley Road, HarrisonCity. Doors open at 5 p.m.;kitchen will be open. Admis-sion: $27. Information: 724-744-7474 or 724-744-4584.
• 7:40 p.m. Friday, St. Bar-tholomew Church in MarianHall, Route 119, Crabtree.Doors open at 6 p.m. Admis-sion $35. Food and snacksavailable. Information: 724-834-0709 or 724-837-0197.
•These meals will beserved:
— 3-6 p.m., Saturday,meatloaf dinner and bakesale, Arona United MethodistChurch, Main Street. Cost:$7.50 or $4 for children 12 andunder.
— 4-7 p.m. Saturday, all-you-can-eat turkey dinner,Community Church of Hecla,537 Hecla Road, Southwest.Cost: $10, or $5 for ages 4-10.
Information: 724-396-8065 or724-244-2586
— 11 a.m.-1:30 p.m., April9, spaghetti dinner, SevenDolors Church, 102 Center St.,Yukon, hosted by the YouthMinistry. Cost: $7. Basket raf-fle and 50/50 will be available.Information: 724-722-3141.
— 8-11:30 a.m. April 9,French toast and ham break-fast, St. John the EvangelistChurch, 306 St. John Drive,Latrobe. Cost: $6, $4 forchildren under 12. Scrambledeggs will be available.
•Pierogies will be sold11 a.m.-2:30 p.m. Saturdayin St. Demetrius UkrainianCatholic Church, 1015 GaskillAve., Jeannette. Cost: $7.50per dozen, available fresh orfrozen.
Submissions from nonprofit or not-for-profit organizations for Briefly Speaking andClub News can be emailed to [email protected], faxed to 724-838-5171 ormailed to 622 Cabin Hill Drive, GreensburgPA15601-1657.Submissionsaredueatleasttwoweekspriortotheevent.Eachannounce-mentisprintedonce;thereisnofee.Informa-tion: 724-836-4970.
CLUB NEWS
Thursday• Hempfield Garden Club, 11 a.m., Christ United Method-
ist Church, 100 Lincoln St., Youngwood.• North Huntingdon AARP No. 3221, board members
will meet at 10:30 a.m., followed by social hour and refresh-ments at noon; Mack Hall at St. Elizabeth Seton Church,Leger Road, North Huntingdon; program: Mark Dalbow willtalk and answer questions about insurance.
• Greater Greensburg Civil War Round Table, doors openat 6:30 p.m., talk begins at 7 p.m., Westmoreland Bar As-sociation, North Main Street; speaker: Ken Williams onthe Battle of Cedar Mountain; refreshments will be served;information: 724-836-1099.
Friday• Business Women Connect, 1:30–3 p.m., Susanna’s
Church, 200 Stotler Road, Penn Hills. Reservations byWednesdayat 724-493-9695 or bwcpittsburgh.com.
Saturday• Braddock Trail Chapter of the Daughters of the Ameri-
can Revolution, noon, Chapter House, Church Street, Mt.Pleasant; officer and committee reports will be discussed.
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Carpenter
Lead CarpenterFull-time lead carpenter positions
available. Electrical and plumbingexp. desirable. Excellent wage,employer paid health ins., paidholidays, 401K w/employer contri-bution, paid vacation/sick time,bonus & incentive programs, den-tal ins. available. Must have validPA driver’s license. Call 724-805-4977.
12-Month SecretarySouth Butler County SDDetails & online application at:
www.southbutler.orgunder Employment/ EmploymentOpportunities. DEADLINE: April
7, 2017 at 4 p.m. EOE
BANK POSITIONSPart Time/Possibility Full Time
•TELLER•LOAN DEPARTMENT
Latrobe Area.724-539-9755 EOE
FORKLIFT OPERATORAn experienced forklift operator is
needed for a full time position atlocal concrete manufacturing
company. Extremely fast pacedenvironment. Able to lift heavyloads. Willing to work differentshifts and weekends. Send re-
sume or apply in person to:QUIKRETE® - Pittsburgh, 519Red Barn Lane, Latrobe, PA
15650.
Carol Harris Staffingis having an onsite recruit for
DICKS SPORTINGGOODS
DISTRIBUTION CENTER159 Painter Rd, Smithton, PA
On Monday, April 3rd,9-Noon & 3:30-5:00
Bring ID(s)Call today to get your name
on our list or stop by!724-925- 6106
Digital MarketingSpecialist
“More experienced candidateswill be considered, with title andsalary commensurate with expe-rience.” This is a full-time posi-tion available at Saint Vincent
College. Additional informationavailable at http://www.stvin-cent.edu/about/work-for-svc
EOE
DishwasherFull Time w/ Benefits
and Shift Differential Pay11:00am – 7:30pm
Call Denise724-853-8431 Ext.1424
Cook - Part Time18-25 hrs/wk. Must be avail. days,evenings, & Sat. Must be at least 18yrs old. Call Susan, 724-423-9540.
Delivery/WarehouseFull time. Must have clean driving
record. Apply within: WeissFurniture, 533 Depot St., Latrobe.
CNC MachinistNorth Versailles, PA
Bolttech Mannings is hiring ThirdShift (11:00pm – 7:00am, Sun.-Thurs.) Perks include Shift Pre-
mium and Benefits, includingHealthcare, Vacation, 401K,etc ** Signing and Retention
Bonus offered ** Machinists Re-sponsible for setting up, pro-
gramming and operatingmachine tools to produce highquality, precision parts on stateof the art 2 axis, 5 axis and twinturret twin Spindle machines. Ifyou are looking for career ad-
vancement and want to work fora great company this job is
for you. Email :[email protected]
or call 724-872-4873
CNC MILL &LATHE MACHINISTS
Advanced Carbide Grindingis seeking CNC Mill andLathe Machinists able to
operate and program.
Haas experience preferred. Possi-ble candidates must haveHS/GED and pass Drug Screen.Excellent company benefits of-fered. Experience will determinestarting wage.
Please send resume toellegge@
advancedcarbidegrinding.comor apply in person to
5369 Route 982, Derry, PA 15627
CLERICALFull time seasonal position,
$10/hr. SpringdalePool City 724-274-7863.
Food Service• SERVERS • BARTENDERS
• DISHWASHERS• EXPERIENCED CADDIES
• HOUSEKEEPER• PANTRY COOK
• PT & FT LINE COOKSExperience a plus.
Apply in person when available:WESTMORELANDCOUNTRY CLUB
7100 Mellon Rd., Export, PA
GeneralMetz Environmental Services at
Asbury Heightsis currently accepting applications
for full and part timeHOUSEKEEPERS
7 am - 3pm and rotating weekends.Benefits available after 60 days.Apply in person at 700 Bower HillRoad, Pittsburgh, PA 15243.
CLERICALLatrobe Area Company searching
for Full Time and Part Time Cleri-cal positions. Qualified applicantswill have strong computer skillsand keen eye for detail. Candi-dates must be willing to work allshifts including weekends. Sendresume to Trib Total Media, Box1582, 460 Rodi Rd, Pittsburgh,PA 15235. EOE/AA
CHEMISTS/LAB TECHS NEEDED
$11 - $15 / HourSpringdale &
Allison Park AreasDaylight Positions Available
Great Opportunity!Call Today! 724-335-6661
ASSEMBLY &OFFICE JOBS
Many Openings Available!4Customer Service
4Hard Hat Production4Office Cleaning4Machine Loaders
4Sandblasting & Grinding4Data & Order Entry
$10.00-$15.00/hrIrwin, Export, Trafford,Murrysville, Penn Hills,
Southside, & More!Call: 412-856-3666
Visit: www.chstaffing.com
Do work deadlines turn you into ahot mess? You have a lot of stressed-outcompany.
In a survey by CareerCast, a job searchportal, 30 percent of respondents said dead-lines are the biggest source of their workplacestress.
Deadline trauma is more common thanstress involved with being responsible forthe lives of others, the second most commonjob-driven stressor cited by 17 percent of therespondents, presumably those in healthcareprofessions.
Quick fixes for deadline anxieties, such asasking your boss for more time or more help,could be stressful themselves. Besides, “Thereisn’t much you can do about reducing stressif you are on the front lines and responsiblefor the lives of others aside from changingcareers,” said Kyle Kensing, an editor forCareerCast.
In fact, a startling 59 percent of the surveyrespondents said they would leave theirprofession for one that’s less stressful if theycould.
Not ready to leave your job for moreserene pastures? Make learning how to dealwith deadlines a top priority, for your ownwell-being — stress can undermine yourhealth — and to more effectively advance inyour career.
Learn to identify and counter procrasti-nating thoughts
When faced with a deadline, do you pro-crastinate? Your genes account for about halfthe problem. Procrastination and impulsivebehavior are genetically linked traits thatoverlap with our ability to manage goals,researchers have discovered.
Some people just procrastinate more thanothers and they are more likely to makerash decisions and act without thinking,said Daniel Gustavson, PhD., University ofCalifornia-San Diego.
“The fact is, procrastinators have troubleregulating emotions and may be swayed byirrational thoughts that pop up in the mo-ment,” Gustavson said. Getting distractedand losing track of work — perhaps blowingdeadlines — becomes an ingrained habit.
His advice: learn to be more mindful. Fol-lowing simple techniques to counter negativethoughts, a technique rooted in CognitiveBehavioral Therapy and often used to treatclinical depression and anxiety, can helpa procrastinator get out of the ditch, too,Gustavson said.
Just start it!When you find you feel as though you
want to procrastinate, take it as a mental cueto drop everything and put in 10 minutes on
the deadline work.“Most of the time, once a project is started,
it’s never as bad as we think it is,” said Timo-thy Pychyl, associate professor of psychol-ogy at Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada,and author of “Solving the ProcrastinationPuzzle.”
You might sail past 10 minutes and soonfind the project satisfyingly under way.
“Completing a small portion of a projectgenerates positive emotions that fuel motiva-tion and kick start us to keep going,” Pychylsaid.
Commit and make yourself accountablefor taking action
Setting a goal such as, “I’m going to workon that project later today,” is too vague.When is later? “Many of us have intentions,but they’re very weak,” Pychyl said.
To strengthen your intentions, vow totake certain concrete steps based on specificcues in your life: “In situation X, I will do
behavior Y, to achieve sub-goal Z.”“Write that down and own it,” Pychyl
said. “Research shows that people who makeimplementation intentions follow throughon their intentions.”
Manage distractions.Once you get started, try to limit distrac-
tions. Find a place where you work best — aquiet office or a bustling coffee shop, musicin the background or library-quiet. “Thinkcarefully about how to set up your environ-ment to succeed,” Pychyl said. “It’s easy toget distracted if it’s something you don’twant to do.”
Tackle important, creative tasks in themorning.
When you are fresh and rested, it is easierto command the willpower and self-controlit takes to tackle and keep focused on animposing task. “Willpower is a muscle,”Pychyl said. “We have a limited supply and itruns out.”
Take steps to motivate yourself, visualizingspecific reasons you will benefit when a proj-ect is done, say, and to avoid interruption —no Facebook until lunchtime, for example.
Never multitask.Be kind to yourself. “When you multitask
you are not actually focusing. You are notliving life to the fullest,” Pychyl said.
Write it all down.Productivity expert David Allen, author
of the bestselling “Getting Things Done,”advocates moving all projects out of yourmind and recording them externally, break-ing them down into actionable items.
The mind’s “reminder system” isn’t effi-cient enough to deliver the complex series ofnext steps and deadlines required to keep aproject moving forward on track, Allen said.
advertising
By Mary ConnorsCTW FeaTures
Conquer deadline stressWith a bit of work, you can tame the fear and
build skills needed to advance your career
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Project ManagerEstablished General Contractor,
Salaried Position, Benefits.Email: Leonsr@
arconcontracting.comor Fax: 724-339-8723
POLICE OFFICERCity of Latrobe
The City of Latrobe is acceptingapplications for testing to updatea Civil Service eligibility list andto fill the position of full time Po-lice Officer. An application pack-age and requirements may beobtained at the Latrobe City HallMunicipal building at 901 Jeffer-son Street, Latrobe, PA between8:00am and 4:00pm Mondaythrough Friday. All completed ap-plications required documenta-tion and a non-refundable free of($50.00) payable to the City ofLatrobe, must be filed byMonday April 10, 2017. All appli-cants must be Act 120 certifiedprior to applying.
JANITORIALPart Time and Full Time Janitorial
Position. Evening office cleaning,M - F, competitive wages. Mustpass drug and background check.Please Call: 724-216-7058
Lot AttendantImmediate opening for Auto detail-ing and general labor. Drivers li-cense a must. Apply in person,Contact Calvin at 724-295-2171.Devy Auto Park, Freeport, PA.
NOW HIRINGRide Mechanic & Plumbers
üYear round benefited positionüPay commensurate with exp.üTechnical/Mechanical exp. req.üExcellent BenefitsüIncreased summertime work
hours April-AugustApply at:
www.idlewild.com/employmentOr send resume & cover letter to:
Idlewild & SoakZoneAttn: James Singer
PO Box C • Ligonier, PA 15658Equal Opportunity Employer
MERCHANDISERSNeeded by greenhouse to service
national account in Greensburg &West Mifflin. Will train. Flexiblehours. Enjoy outdoor work. Start-ing pay $10/hr. 724-787-6186or email shane: snichols@
greencirclegrowers.com
Drivers Needed:Late Model Equipment.FlatbedOperation for Regional and LocalFlatbed and Dump Hauling. Part-time work is available. Must haveClear CDL, Min. 23 yrs. of age,Min. 2 years experience. Bene-fits available. ALSO need Ce-
ment Mixer Drivers with Class B.Call 724-639-9043 or
412-491-4767 or apply onlinewww.cticoordinators,com
& click on online apps.
Title ClerkExperience a must, part time with
flexible hours. Contact Carol atDevey Auto Park 724-295-2171
GROUNDS LABORERSFull & Part Time Seasonal.
Apply in person at:Latrobe Country Club
346 Arnold Palmer Dr., Latrobe.NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE.
ReceptionistF/T, Min. 2 yrs exp. computer liter-
ate, Word, Excel, and Scheduling.Organized with excellent phoneskills, positive and professional.Benefits avail. Wage based onexp. New Image Hair Clinic, NorthHuntingdon. Email resume to:[email protected]
Dismantler & YardPersonnel
Must have tools. Competitivewages and benefits available.
Apply in person:Marsh Auto Salvage885 Banning RoadDawson, PA 15428
PAINTER WANTEDImmediate Opening. $18-20/hr.
Must have exp. &transportation.
Call 412-901-2856
LINE COOKSFull & part time, day & eve. shifts.
Apply in person: TJ's Restaurant &Sports Lounge, New Stanton
724-925-9670
WATER TRUCK DRIVERFull time, clean CDL required.Competitive pay and benefits.
Call 724-539-8666.
Kennel AttendantPart Time, must be quick learner
and love animals. Poochies N.Huntington call 412-824-8440
Property Managerfor large apartment complex in
Greensburg, full benefits, expe-rienced only, 724-837-5015.
Maintenance WorkerSeasonal FT. Pay based on exp.
Victory Hill Golf Course,Elizabeth Twp. 412-384-7730
Golf CourseGrounds Crew
Seasonal grounds crew work atYoughiogheny Country Club,
drug screen required. CallBrightview Golf Maintenance
at 412-751-9312 or [email protected]
HousekeeperMust be high school graduate orequivalent. Hours 6am-2:30pm,
5 days per week.Contact Sister Mary McCauley
724-853-7948 ext 1473
Accounting ClerkThe Westmoreland-Fayette Work-
force Development Board is seek-ing an Accounting Clerk.Qualified candidate will work withthe accounting department in thefollowing areas: accountspayable, payroll, monthly recon-ciliations. Tests invoices for ac-curacy with contracts & purchaseorders. Enter invoices on ac-counting system and verifies dataentered prior to check prepara-tion. Reviews time sheets for ini-tial accuracy and accumulateshours by department. Performsdata entry of participant’s infor-mation by program. Candidatemust have Associate Degree inAccounting, with a minimum 1-year of experience in using com-puters, Excel & Word. Salary:$14/hour – Benefits, Pension.
Please send cover letter and re-sume to: Donna Casterwiler,Westmoreland-Fayette WDB,Business & Industry Center, 145Pavilion Lane, Youngwood, PA15697. Send cover letter and re-sume no later than April 10, 2017.
Auxiliary aids and services areavailable upon request to
individuals with disabilities.
Equal Opportunity Employer Program
PREVENTIONSPECIALIST
Distribution of Drug/ Alcohol/ Gam-bling Prevention Information inPublic Forums. Bachelor's inHuman Services or related fieldpreferred. Valid PA driver's licenserequired. 20-28 hours per week,$13.31/hr. Go to:www.westmorelandca.org
for job descriptionor send resume to: HR/PS
226 S Maple Ave Greensburg,PA 15601 by 4-7-17 EOE
GRASS CUTTERS &LANDSCAPERS
Experience preferred. Irwin area.40 hrs. week. Call 724-446-9772.
MACHINISTLatrobe Area Company now ac-
cepting applications for Full Timeand Part Time Machinists.Searching for experienced andentry level CNC machinists andmachine operators capable ofrunning equipment that includesbut not limited to; mills, lathes,saws, grinders and EDM. Candi-dates must be willing to work allshifts including weekends. All lev-els of machinists are encouragedto apply. Send resume to: TribTotal Media, Box 1583, 460Rodi Rd, Pittsburgh, PA 15235.EOE/AA.
GroundskeeperLatrobe Area Company accepting
applications for the position ofFull Time Groundskeeper. Re-sponsible for maintenance andupkeep of the grounds and land-scaping on a large business cam-pus. Must have a valid PADriver's License and able to worka flexible schedule often dictatedby the weather. Send resume to:Trib Total Media, Box 1584, 460Rodi Rd, Pittsburgh, PA 15235.EOE/AA.
MetallographerLatrobe Area Company now
accepting applications for an ex-perienced Metallographer. Candi-dates should have experience in alaboratory setting conducting mi-cohardness/hardness and variousother tests by utilizing cuttingedge technology. Candidatesmust be willing to work a flexibleschedule including partial week-ends. Send resume to Trib TotalMedia, Box 1585, 460 Rodi Rd,Pittsburgh, PA 15235. EOE/AA.
LABORERSSand Hill Berries of Mt. Pleasant,
PA requires 3 temp. F/T farmworkers, 5/1/17 to 11/1/17.$12.19/hr. Duties: pruning, weed-ing, picking of berries/small fruit,ltd. animal husbandry and generalfarmwork duties. Reqs.: 1/2month experience picking smallfruit. Other specific training pro-vided by employer. Persons withsevere bee allergies should notapply. Employer guarantees workhrs. equal to 3/4 of workdays forfull contract period. Alltools/eqmt./supplies provided toworkers at no cost. Housing pro-vided at no cost to all workers ifunable to return home each day.Transp. to worksite and subsis-tence expenses provided & paidby employer. Apply through the PACareerlink office in Youngwood at151 Pavillion Lane, 724.755.2330.Job order # 10853786
Property ManagerWANTED
Latrobe/Greensburg AreaSend resume to: P.O. Box 181,Latrobe, PA 15650
IDDCASEMANAGEMENT
CaseManagement Agency lookingfor responsible individuals inter-ested in professional employ-ment opportunities working with(ID) Intellectual Disabilities pop-ulation Currently interviewing &hiring for Supports CoordinatorSupervisor (Greensburg)- BA/BShuman service related, supervi-sory experience, 2-3 years casemanagement experience pre-ferred, knowledge of providernetwork & community resourcesystem. Please submit resumewith cover letter to
www.wcsi.org.
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DIVORCE$350 + Filing fees. Uncontested. 1
Count, Installments Available.Others services also. PA Attor-ney, Mt. Lebanon, 412-563-5000
avramrosen.com
$10,000.00-$100"Cash In A Flash"
Paid On All Good/ JunkCars,Trucks,SUVs
FREE TOWING & NOTARYLicensed Dealer
We Will BeatAny Competitors Price
By $25.
412-657-9522Press 1- to sell vehicle
Press 2 - to buy used tiresPress 3 -to buy used parts
At our fully stockedPick-A-Part Yard
rustyhookautosalvage.com
CLEANING, JANITORIALRESIDENTIAL, COMMERCIALINSURED/SINCE 1975WALLWASHING/RUGCLEANING724-861-9595 OR 412-823-4797MARIANNE
WHOLE HOUSE POINTINGChimney Restoration,
Brick/Block Work, RetainingWalls, Power Washing,
Concrete Work, FoundationRepairs, Excavation, French
Drains, Demolition Work.TD BRICKPOINTING, LLC
"Call Me If You Want The JobDone Right" 412-793-0679
Tony.....PA#032967
TONY BROADWAYPAVING & SEAL COATING.COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL,
INSURED - FREE ESTIMATESPA#005330 SENIOR DISCOUNTS
Local With 45Yrs Experience724-217-6544 OR 724-289-3306
TRI COUNTYCHIMNEY SERVICE
Specailizing In ChimneyLiners, Repairs, Raincaps,
Stone Work, Flashing Repair.Serving Westmoreland County
Over 32 Years. PA019645www.tricountychimney.net
Call 814-266-5367
LOVELL PAVINGSPRING SPECIALS!40+ Years - LOCAL
Residential/ CommercialOwner Supervised. Free Est.
Prompt Service.724-423-2952 / 412-825-50651-800-307-4432 (PA #7693)
$100-$10,000For Your Vehicle
NO GAMESNO GIMMICKSCALL US LAST
FOR THEMOST CA$H
MUST HAVE TITLESWe buy junk
and unwanted vehiclesCall or Text
412-398-8646www.towbyjoe.com
I'M LOOKING FOR CLIENTS whorequire P/T care. I will assist w/personal care, meal prep, light
housekeeping.Cell# 410-279-5173
ESCAJEDAMASONRY & CHIMNEY
Chimney Rebuilding,Whole/Partial House
Pointing, Brick Laying,FINANCING AVAILABLE!PA121244/ 412-760-4621www.escajedamasonry.com
"BEST SEAL" PAVINGBest Work for the Best Price.
Credit Cards accepted.PA054070. 724-331-8029
Asphalt Paving& Sealcoating
SPRING SPECIALSResidential & Commercial
Competitive PricingFree Estimates
Senior & Group DiscountsAll Work Guaranteed
PA 007749724-772-7455 • 724-283-8880
412-262-2216 • 1-800-257-6081
BORRASSOConstruction Co. LLC
ConcreteContractor
Versa-lok Walls,Concrete Driveways,
Walkways, Patios, Steps,Porches, Pool Decks,
Stamped/Colored Concrete,Sewer lines, Waterfalls
BorrassoConstruction.com
724-733-7859 ˜ PA17655
#1.$10,000 - $100
#2."A BETTERQUOTE YOUCAN TRUST"
BUYING ALL VEHICLESFree Towing. Free Notary.
SMALL & SONSTOWING
412-689-9981~Guaranteed Work~Free Estimates / PA009939REASONABLE RATES!Bryer Asphalt Paving
1-888-830-4549/724-640-2353www.bryerpaving.net
T & H PAVINGSPRING DISCOUNTS!
Serving PittsburghIncluding the
NORTH HILLS AREAPA#007266
1-800-641-9055412-281-9860
www.tandhpavingllc.com
BARONE Masonry / Concrete Nojob too small. Lowest prices guar-anteed. PA063911. 412-651-5330
$100-$8000Junk/Good Cars & Trucks.Free Towing & Notary.412-853-8276
www.hillautosalvage.comSelling Used Tires/Parts
412-723-2993
$10,000.00-$100A AUTO BUYER THAT
PAYS THE MOSTFor UNWANTED JUNK
CARS, TRUCKS, & VANSLICENSED DEALER
FREE TOWINGNO HIDDEN FEES
412-584-2481We Pay What We Say
**FOGGED OR BROKEN* * Insu-lated Windows and Patio DoorsRepaired. Free Estimates.PA#026526;
412-795-7233/ 1-800-452-7709ExpertGlassCompany.com
WHOLE HOUSE POINTINGChimney Restoration,
Brick/Block Work, RetainingWalls, Power Washing,
Concrete Work, FoundationRepairs, Excavation, French
Drains, Demolition Work.TD BRICKPOINTING, LLC
"Call Me If You Want The JobDone Right" 412-793-0679
Tony.....PA#032967
˜ASPHALT˜
PRO 1PAVINGResidentialCommercial
PavingSealing &
Line Striping724-694-8011
ALL ABANDONED AUTOSTrucks Worth Cash! 24 Hours!412-572-5126 or 412-431-0459.
ATTIS CONSTRUCTION INC.Driveways *Sidewalks*Patios *Steps *Floors
*Retaining Walls & MuchMore. 30 Yrs. Exp.
724-516-2420 PA119519NO DEPOSIT REQUIRED
ASPHALT / BLACKTOPwww.smithpaving.net
Sealing, Paving & CementWork. Servicing East of Pgh
Sr. Discounts. PA8829Elwood Smith
RD 3, Greensburg724-837-4696
LUFT'S ASPHALT PAVINGNew Installations / ResurfacingDriveways Sealed & Repaired
724-832-7579 / PA037800
Truck DriverCDL Class B. Local deliveries.N. Huntingdon company. $13/hr& paid vacation. 412-754-1236or [email protected]
aci Watson ConcreteDriveways• Sidewalks• Stamp•
Exposed Aggregate.Excavation• PA027316.Call 412-554-6232
A Proven Track RecordBlack Top, Seal Coat, Tar/Chip800-888-9833 All “ accepted
NOW HIRING!Hiring Residential,Rolloff
and Commercial Driversin Elizabeth and North
Huntingdon!
Join us for our HiringEvent!
On-Site Interviews:310 Leger Road,
North Huntingdon, PA15642
Thursday, April 6,8am-2pm
Walk-in's Welcome,Pre-Registration
Strongly Encouraged.
$1,000 Sign-On Bonus forExperienced Residential
Drivers!*$4,000 Sign-On Bonus forExperienced Commercial
Drivers!*
*Bonuses paid for Drivers hired inNorth Huntingdon with Waste In-dustry Experience!(Trash/Haul-
ing/Front-End Loader)
Requirements:21 Years or OlderClass A or B CDL
1+ Years Driving Experience
Competitive Pay, Great Benefits!
Call, text or apply online forimmediate consideration!
1-877-220-5627Text “WASTE”to 51893
to Learn Morejobs.wm.com
Equal Opportunity EmployerMinority/Female/Disability/Veteran
SHOWALTER SERVICES, LLCAsphalt Sealcoating & Line Strip-ing, Parking Lots & Driveways,Fully Insured, Free Estimates,PA130597, 724-953-5023
TriAxle Drivers$25/hour
Confidentiality guaranteed.CDL and applicable experience
required. EOE.SEND RESUME TO:Trib Total Media
460 Rodi Rd., Box 1587,Pittsburgh, PA 15235
BBUUSSIINNEESSSS && SSEERRVVIICCEESSBUSINESS & SERVICES
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To subscribe, call1-800-909-8742
SCOTT W. GRAY LANDSCAPINGWalls l Patios lExcavation
Free est/ Fully ins PA 024384724-224-5018 l 724-321-2788
DRIVEWAYS, SIDEWALKS. Wa-terproofing, Patios, Stone Walls,Brick Work. Over 40 years experi-ence. PA#023995. Tony 412-361-8009 or 412-343-1947
BILL'S ROOFINGNew Roofs, Repair, Slate Roofs.Soffit & Fascia, Gutters. Pointing.
LOW, LOW, PRICES!Free Estimates. PA023533.
(724)864-1326 or (724)-838-3290
MANGRETTALANDSCAPING LLC.
Weekly Lawn Maintenance, ShrubTrimming, Mulching, Reseeding,
Spring clean ups. Walls &Fencing. Fully Insured.
(412)583-0545 / PA015409
INSULATE NOW!Cellulose & Spray Foam
Attics, Sidewalls, Barns,Garage Ceilings, Metal Bldgs
Financing Avail -- PA#955Insured & Free Estimates
Now OfferingDumpster Rentals
BILL MEROLA CO.412-795-0357
merolacompany.com
FIRED?FORCED TO RETIRE?
Demoted?Denied your pension?
Sexually harassed at work?Laid off? Know your legal rights!Attorney Samuel Cordes
412-281-7991
GINNY'S INTERIOR PAINTING:Wallpapering, Stripping. Servicingareas East of Pittsburgh. PA19481
724-238-6978
Personal & BusinessReturns by AccountantCall Ken: 724-420-5281
PHOENIX SPECIALTYTree removal/ Brush chipping
Stump grindingLow Rates
Free Estimates. InsuredPA#069242
412-849-4904
A+ Rating with BBB for 17 years!
RODGERS ROOFING25 Year "NO LEAK" Warranty
New Roofs « Repairs « GuttersSoffit Fascia « Siding « PA011142Sr. Discounts! « 412-373-4695
www.rodgers-roofing.com
MATT MERTZPLUMBING INC
*$65 Main Sewer Cleaning*$65 Furnace Clean/ Check
*$25 Off NextPlumbing Service!Call 412-367-0815Insured/ PA033519Matt-Mertz-Plumbing.com
For Money Saving Coupons!*Some Restriction
REMODELING All Interior/ Exte-rior Roofs, Decks Addition,Game Rooms, Etc. SchrockConstruction. PA026735724-337-8908/724-882-3110.
M. ZOKAITES MASONRYAll types of masonry &Concrete Construction
Brick * Block * Chimney RepairFireplaces * Pointing
Retaining Walls * StoneGlass Block Windows
Fully insured. Free estimates.PA# 121063
724-980-6980
PLUM GLASS BLOCKGlass block windows, showers,
bars, etc. Full mortar joints. Chim-ney repair, brick and block work.33 years family owned and run.100% guaranteed! Call 412-795-3588. PA010547. plumglass-block.com.
˜ LONGARM QUILTING ˜Free Motion & Computerized
Great Rates / Fast TurnaroundCall Leslie at 724-757-0377
ALL TYPES OF FENCINGFree Estimates • Fully Insured724-309-8717 or 724-872-7421
MANACK FENCE CO.
HAULING/ CLEANOUTS Cleaning,yard & shrub work, some moving.Dependable, Insured. Call Rich724-872-0865 or 1-800-566-4167
Capozzi Floors/Walls/Tile/Carpet/Baths/Kitchens/Custom DesignsShowrm 724-837-8453 PA016892
www.capozziflooring.com
Amish ContractingRoofing, Framing, Siding, General
Contracting. Punxsutawney, PA. In-sured PA#129552 814-249-2016
DRIVEWAY STONE, River Rock,Top Soil, Fill. Free delivery.Call 724-787-5498
llJ M BUILDERSllRoofing - Shingles - Rubber,
Metal - Slate - BuildingRemodeling, Windows / Siding
Fully Insured (PA362) 40 Yrs Exp.Free Estimates. 724-537-3495
ROLAND PAINTING &RESTORATION CO.
Int/Ext., Power Washing, DecksCleaned & Sealed. Aluminum
Siding. Expert Kitchen CabinetsRefinishing. 55+ Years, Insured
724-689-2256, 724-691-0932PA047813
Accomplished Handyman:Remodeling Bathrooms &
Kitchens, Drywall, Flooring,Siding, Decks, Gutters,
Painting, Plumbing, Electrical,Heating/AC & MORE.
Insured • 34 Years Exp.724-396-3438 PA 044523
GRASS CUTTING/ResidentialReasonable Rates 724-217-6969
N Huntingdon/Penn Trafford Areas
J & D LAWNCAREAffordable & Quality Service
Insured. 724-461-4184
LAWN CAREAffordable, Reliable, Insured. La-
trobe, Derry & Unity Twp Areas. CallShawn 724-244-1836
GUARANTEED LOWESTPRICE! Will Beat All Competi-tors Pricing! Gas/ Water/ SewerLines. No Job Too Small! $75Drain Cleaning Special; Li-censed, Experienced, Honest,Insured. Accept Major CreditCards. PA031580. Call Ken AtCrystal Clear Plumbing412-526-6432 Or 724-991-9309
llJM BUILDERSllNow Sells & Installs
THERMO TWINWINDOWS
Experienced / Free EstimatesFully Insured (PA362)Phone: 724-537-3495
www.jmbuilderslatrobe.com
WALLPAPERING BY JANEWallpaper, Stripping, Interior Paint-ing. 23 Years Business (PA33479)
724-238-8170
AAA Quality PaintingExterior / Interior. Home RepairsHardwood Floors, Wood Working
Some Roofing, Good Quality Work35 Yrs in Business. PA41777
724-836-1125
RC ROOFING & CARPENTRYSPECIALIZING IN ALL
REPAIR WORKNEW ROOFS, GUTTERS, ETC.
No job too small; PA#12375430% Sr Citizen Discount
Free Estimates412-672-5682
TREE SPECIALISTTrimming, Stump Grinding, 15ys
Exp. Insured, Free Est, SR. Disc.JOHN'S TREE SERVICE
412-377-4641 ... PA#091645Will Beat Any Written Estimate!
A 1 LAWNCARE, Any SizeLawns. Fully Insured. FreeEstimates. 724-547-4222
C.SchwerLawn Care and LandscapeWeekly Lawncare, Mulching &More. Serving N. Huntingdon,
Greensburg, Penn Twp. &Surrounding Areas. Fully Insured.
Free Estimates. PA115054724-516-2596
ENERGY HEALERIt Has Worked On Anything Applied
To. PTSD, Skin Conditions,Tennis Elbow, General Pain, Clear-ing/Lightening, Allergies, Gout, In-
somnia, Thyroid, Neuropathy.724-493-6764
SCHULTHEIS CONSTRUCTIONAdditions,Decks, Masonry, Baths,Basements, Kitchens. 47 Years
Insured. PA23899. 724-689-9895
DICRISCIO LAWN CAREReliable and Reasonable
724-961-5923
GINO F. PELUSOAttorney at Law
724-339-8710724-837-1030
1-888-4PELUSOLower Burrell & Greensburg
www.AttorneyPeluso.com
• Bankruptcy Help• Wills & Estates• Auto Accidents• DUI Help• Family LawA Debt Relief Agencyhelping people file for
relief under theBankruptcy Code.
A 1 CLEAN UPAll types of hauling.
No job too big or small.Best prices in town!
724-335-0369
AJ CONSTRUCTION LLCRemodeling, flooring, basements,kitchens, bathrooms, decking.State licensed & insured. PA024686. 724-989-6790. FREEEstimates."We Add Value To YourHome". Like us on facebook ataj construction llc
MARK'S REMODELINGof NEW KENSINGTON
Decks, Windows, Doors, Siding,Gutters, Fascia, Gutter Cleaning,
Painting & Repairs. Free Est.724-334-0654 PA018716
ARNOLDHauling & Rental Clean Outs,
Trash & Garbage RemovalReasonable
724-212-3241
WEST INTERIOR SERVICESFurniture Repair & Refinishing,Kitchen Cabinet Refinishing,
Church Pew Refinishing. Free est.PA059279 • 724-224-2215
CORDWOODSplit Firewood Delivered
(1.5 cord minimum)All wood tumbled & screened
$135 Full Cord + Delivery724-628-9435 724-366-2850
« Brick - Block Chimney «Repair - Brick Pointing
Insured. PA042184BAUER 724-295-2651
HANDY MAN SERVICES:Decks, ceilings, walls, floors,
kitchens, baths. No job toosmall. Senior Citizen Discount.PA#040479
412-670-8703
JOHN'S ROOFING &SANDY'S WINDOW CO INC
Owens-Corning PreferredContractor w/ 50yr Non-proratedTranferrable Shingle Warranties.
Flat Roof Specialist.Windows, Siding, Gutters.724-539-8260 PA25501
JEFF ZILLWEGER LANDSCAPINGVersa-Lok/ Retaining Walls, Omni-
Stone/ Patios, Driveways, Side-walks, Tree Service. Insured.
PA#028318 • (412)486-8976
THE GLASS CITYStained GlassRestoration.
Supplies & Gift Shop.724-527-Citytheglasscity.com
PAINTING BY RONALD SAMUELExcellent References,
Residential & Commercial.724-787-5923 PA103940
HERB GREGGSUPPLIES
Topsoil And Supplies724-335-5982
ANY HOME REPAIRS, Decks,Bathrooms, Trim work, Flooring,Brick Repairs, Doors, Painting,Glass Block Windows, Small Jobs.Rowe Construction, Alle-Kiskiarea ... 724-679-4134 PA15845
TIMS GRASS CUTTINGSewickley & North Huntingdon
Affordable and Reliable, Fullyinsured. Call for great rates today.
724-757-6301
Cutting Grass- Once a weekSign-up now. Jnt, Gbg, Irwin areas
724-523-5850 / 724-244-5302
J.N. LAWN CARE Retaining walls,Patios, Sidewalks, French drains,Fertilizing. Fully Insured. Com-mercial-Residential. Free Esti-mates PA130818 412-735-1899
A-1 ADVANCED HAULINGAll Clean-Outs & Junk Removal.Free Estimates. 724-542-4132
TREE SERVICEREMOVAL / TRIMMING
STUMP GRINDING
FREE ESTIMATESFully Insured
FIREWOODAvailable For
Outside Burn Pits.
DAUGHERTYENTERPRISES, INC
PA021313.
(724) [email protected]
GARY'S ROOFINGRoof Repair Specialist PA005682New Roofs/Siding/Soffit/Fascia412-824-9330 or 724-864-5552
1-800-351-3520
A 1 Demolition &Excavating
* Tear Down * Land Clearing* Grading * Utility lines * Septic
PA036409 Call: 724-539-3792www.a1services4you.com
ATTIS CONSTRUCTION INC.*Retaining Walls, *Exca-vating, *Grading, *French
Drains, *Water Mitiga-tion. & Concrete Work.
724-516-2420 PA119519NO DEPOSIT REQUIRED
ATTIS CONSTRUCTION INC.*Excavating, *Grading,*French Drains, *Water
Mitigation. *All RetainingWalls & Concrete Work.
724-516-2420 PA119519NO DEPOSIT REQUIRED
TREE REMOVALStump Grinding & Tree Felling
Services. Tree Removal,Emergency Service.
Licensed & Insured. MikeZigarovich Tree Service.724-205-9288 PA101367
MURPHY'S TREE SERVICEFully Insured • Free Estimates724-836-6952. PA17456.
A-1 PLASTERING INC. PA005981Plastering, Drywall, PaintingNew Construction & Repairs
Insured 724-744-4259
uR. K. LAWN CAREuSpring Clean Up Special!
Complete Landscape Service,Mowing, Mulching, Tree ServiceFree Estimates / Fully Insured
724-217-0773 / PA045225
BARTONCONSTRUCTION« Decks« Retaining Walls« Additions & Garages« Concrete & Patios« Kitchens & Baths« Skid Steer Service
Fully Insured & RegisteredAccepting Credit Cards
Call David 724-610-6710PA088468
DAVE PIVIROTTO REMODEL-ING & PAINTING: Kitchens,baths, basements. Int/ extpainting. Commercial & resi-dential.Quality guaranteed! In-sured, free estimates.PA045558. 412-795-4836
DEFLORIA LAWNCAREProfessional Lawncare Services.
Free Estimates. PA130314Greensburg /Call 412-817-0548
KENS CONTRACTINGRoofing, Siding, Baths,
Kitchens, Plumbing,Electrical & Painting.
PA#048179Ken: 724-787-7566
JUNK BE GONE Unwanted Itemsloaded and removed. AnythingAccepted. Teardowns.724-468-3443 (PA10852)www.junkbegonepittsburgh.com
ELI'S METAL ROOFINGWe specialize in Metal Roofing
40 yr Warranty. 17 yrs in BusinessFree Estimates. Fully Insured.
Amish Owned814-845-7584 leave message
A-1 Interior & Exterior PaintingResident/ Com/ IndustrialAluminum/ Wood Siding
Insured - PA034367724-326-4801 - 412-384-6559
KMC PAINTING CO. 10% off all ex-terior jobs. Fully insured. Free esti-mates. PA#117033
412-779-8488Residential/ commercial
CONCRETE & MASONRYFOUNDATION REPAIRS
BOBCAT & BACKHOE SERVICEOver 25 Years in Business
Driveways, Sidewalks, Patios,Porches, Retaining Walls,
Chimneys, Brick, Block, StoneWork, Additions, Garages.
Interior & Exterior French Drains.Insured, Ref's, Free Estimates.
Michael Desiderato Contracting724-863-8282 • PA037327
FREE ESTIMATESSPRAGG CONSTRUCTION
15% OFF thru AprilNew & Old Construction, Roofing,Siding, Remodeling, Decks, Doors,
& Windows. Repairs all types.40 Years Experience
PA026169 ... 724-537-2270
AIDEFull/ part time. Apply at Rosebrook
Rt. 356, Sarver. 724-295-4300Truck Driver/
Full or Part TimeFlatbed, Covered Wagon,
Lowboy, ConestogaCurrent CDL Class
A two years experienceHome weekends/MidWeek-
Some dedicated runsExcellent Pay, Health Benefits,
Vacation and Holiday PayCall 724-726-0500
WEEKLY LAWN CARESpring Clean-up Available Now
Landscaping / Versalok WallsYear round property maintenance.
Free Estimates - Fully Insured724-834-3238 / 724-309-1256
PA LANDSCAPINGMowing, Lawn Repair, Dethatch-ing, Aerations, Cleanups, GuttersCleaned, Mulching, Paver Patios,
Walls, Concrete Work, FrenchDrains, Tree / Bucket Truck Service.
Call Mike now on my Cell724-244-0362
CLARK'STREE SERVICE, INC.
• Tree Trimming• Tree Removal• Stump Removal• Storm Damage• Free Estimates• Fully Insured• 60 and 75 ft. Bucket Trucks• 24/7 Emergency Service
www.ClarksTreePro.com724-539-2838
Liability andWorkers Compensation
PA 008131
GENE'S TREE &LANDSCAPING, LLC
Large/Small Tree Removal,Pruning/Topping, StumpGrinding, Land Clearing,
Bucket Truck Svc.Residential & Commercial
For all your TreeCare needsSr. Discounts. Free Est.
Fully Insured. Call Now!!!!724-719-1065 - PA092061
Caregiver NeededWest Deer,Non-smoker
724-265-5273
A-1 HAULING Attic, basement,garage, estate clean outs, down-sizing specialist.Prompt, depend-able, best price. All jobs areowner supervised. 724-216-3496
4 SeasonsLandscaping LLCSPRING into Savings Sale25% Discount (off labor)
Lawn Maintenance,Spring Clean ups, RetainingWalls. Masonry: Driveways,
Sidewalks. Pressure Washing.30+ yrs Exp. Fully insured.
Senior Discounts.For a Prompt & Free Estimate
Call: 724-697-5672 or412-525-1584. PA088993
A TO Z HOME IMPROVEMENTSRichard Wahoski ConstructionRoofing, Siding, Carpentry, Paint-ing, Complete Bathrooms, DrywallEtc. 30+ Years Ex. Quality WorkWith Reasonable Rates. Insured,Free Estimates. PA107599.724-691-6835
ENGINEERINGLatrobe Area Company now
accepting applications for Engi-neers. This position requires a 2or 4 year degree in Engineering,preferably in Materials Science,however all engineering disci-plines will be considered. A suc-cessful candidate will becustomer focused and able tothrive in a fast-paced environ-ment. Candidates must be willingto work a flexible schedule in-cluding weekends. Please sub-mit resume to: Trib TotalMedia, Box 1586, 460 RodiRoad, Pittsburgh, PA 15235.EOE/AA.
AFFORDABLE HAULING Cleanouts, garage, basements, es-tates, all clean ups. All jobsowner supervised. 724-925-7677
VINCE MACCARELLICONTRACTING
PA#059274 724-217-4495lInterior / Exterior DoorslKitchens / BathslInterior RemodelinglWindow InstallationslCustom Built-InslDecks
•EPA Certified & Insured•Free Estimates•Over 20 years experience
Suboxone/ SubutexTreatments Start at $70
Walk Ins WelcomeInsurance also accepted.
412-434-6700Bus - Misc Services
BBUUSSIINNEESSSS SS RR IICCEESSBUSINESS & SERVICES
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4-slide, Metal Stamping& Machining
185 Oberlin Rd.,Oberlin, OH 44074
Wednesday, April 5, 2017Doors Open at 8:00 am,Sale starts at 10:00 am
Inspection: Tuesday, April 4,9:00 am to 3:00 pm
See www.hartlandauctions.comfor more information
HartlandMachinery Auctioneers
PO Box 209,Portersville, PA 16051
724-368-9788 - 724-368-9839 [email protected]
OH Lic.# 57199465669
Urgent Care PhysicianFor our Urgent Care offices in
Indiana, PA & Blairsville, PA.Will provide continuing, episodicclinical care for individuals andfamilies who arrive at our urgentcare facilities. Will diagnose andtreat patients with acute andchronic illnesses and injuries.MD & completion of a Residencyin Family or Emergency Medi-cine. Must be board certified oreligible with the American Boardof Family or EM and eligible for aPA medical license.Send CV to Dr. Bruce Bush [email protected]
Indiana HealthcarePhysician Services
9 North 7th St, Suite 202Indiana, PA 15701
No J-1 or H-1B applicants.
APRIL ISAUCTIONEERS
MONTHIN PA AND NATION WIDE
The third Saturdayin April marks
A special day in the livesof Auctioneers!
National Auctioneers Day,April 15th
This special day is recognizedby auctioneers as a day to
reflect back on one ofhistory’s oldest professions
and celebratethe industry’s future
We at Trib Total Mediawould like to recognize
and thank you!
High Tech Sales JobsExp. in sales required. Looking for
20 exp. salespeople. Forwardresume: [email protected]
Farm & ConstructionEquipment Auction
Thursday April 6th @ 9 amLocation: 168 Quarrick Rd
Uniontown, PA 15401OVER 350 pieces of rollingstock: Farm & Compact Trac-tors, Construction Equipment:Skidsteers, Backhoes, CrawlerDozers, Crawler loaders, Exca-vators, Wheel Loaders, Trucksand Trailers, Over 300 Ag & In-dustrial attachments & more.EXPECTING OVER 800 LOTS!!!Online Bidding Available ---Lic. # PA-RH-194-L
For detailed listing call724-439-1621 or website @www.quarrickauction.com
Not responsible for accidentsor condition of items sold.Terms: cash, good check-
ID required.
COIN AUCTIONThurs., April 6, 6PMPreview begins at 5PM
at the Youngwood VFD HallYoungwood, PA
Note! New Location
See complete list & pictures atauctionzip.com or
JohnPSabotaAuctioneer.comJohn P. Sabota Auctioneer
AU3334 L ... Phone 724-925-7186Fax 724-925-1650
email [email protected]
adno
=645
2017
724.547.3552117 Meegan Ford Rd., Mt. Pleasant 15666
www.MeeganFord.com
MEEGAN
TOWN & COUNTRY FORD724.238.95773697 Rt. 711 North • Ligonier 15658
www.TownAndCountryLigonier.com
adno
=645
1127
LATROBE CHEVYLATROBE FORDRt. 981 & Rt. 30, Latrobe724-537-7723
M, T, Th 9–8 • W, F 9–5 • Sat. 9-4
adno
=645
1141
SOLOMONFORD
Rt. 40/43, Brownsville, PA724-785-5500
www.solomonauto.com adno
=645
1164
JEEP FORD
RAM
CHRYSLER
TOWINGAUTO REPAIR
BODY REPAIR
ALL THINGSALL THINGSAUTOAUTO
adno
=643
9669
_v2
INSURANCE
MAZDA
CHEVROLET
To advertise here call1-800-524-5700 x9332
adno
=6445499
ELIASAUTO BODY
1385 4th Ave. Arnold
724-335-2451
Auto BodyRepair & Towing
adno
=6445895HAWK
TOWING, INC.WHEEL-LIFT AND FLAT BED SERVICE
New Kensington, PA
724-335-8500
adno
=644
8026
AUTO SALVAGE
$10,000-$100“Cash In A Flash”
Paid On All Good/Junk Cars, Trucks, SUV’s
FREE TOWING & NOTARYLicensed DealerWe Will Beat
Any Competitors Price By $25.
412-657-9522Press 1- to sell vehicle
Press 2- to buy used tiresPress 3- to buy used parts
At our fully stocked Pick-A-Part Yardrustyhookautosalvage.com ad
no=6
4482
34
$100 - $10,000A Cash PayingVehicle BuyerAny ConditionBest PricesGuaranteed
Call or Text412-398-8646www.towbyjoe.com
adno
=6448400
MAKOWSKIINSURANCE2520-A Leechburg Rd.Lower Burrell, PA 15068
724-335-3213www.makowskiinsurance.com
724.482.1100630 Evans City Road • BUTLER
(Across from THE BUTLER FARM SHOW)www.BaglierMazda.com
THE ALL NEW
adno
=645
1116
HILLVIEW MOTORSCHRYSLER • JEEP • DODGERt. 30 East Greensburg
724-834-8440 • 800-686-4455www.hillviewmotors.com
adno
=645
1131
SCOTT C’S AUTO SERVICEWe Service All Makes & Models!
All major credit cards accepted.704 North Pittsburgh St. & Rt. 119, Connellsville
(next to McDonalds)
724-628-3044 adno
=645
1138
LATROBE CHEVYLATROBE FORDRt. 981 & Rt. 30, Latrobe724-537-7723
M, T, Th 9–8 • W, F 9–5 • Sat. 9-4
adno
=645
1143
LAUREL VALLEYCHRYSLER • DODGE • JEEP • RAM
Route 30 Latrobe724-539-5500
www.laurelvalleymotors.net
adno
=645
1148
LAUREL VALLEYCHRYSLER • DODGE • JEEP • RAM
Route 30 Latrobe724-539-5500
www.laurelvalleymotors.net
adno
=645
1150
SOLOMONCHRYSLER • JEEP • DODGERt. 40/43, Brownsville, PA
724-785-8000www.solomonauto.com ad
no=6
4511
63
SOLOMONCHRYSLER • JEEP • DODGERt. 21 & 88, Carmichaels, PA
724-966-2600www.solomonauto.com ad
no=6
4511
68
LATROBE CHEVYLATROBE FORDRt. 981 & Rt. 30, Latrobe724-537-7723
M, T, Th 9–8 • W, F 9–5 • Sat. 9-4ad
no=6
4511
76ad
no=6
4511
98
CARNES AUTO
— AAA TOWING —724-696-9029
State Inspection....... $27.50State Emission......... $27.50
New Stanton
adno
=645
1207
We Install What We Sell!
New & Used Auto Parts
724-226-1168
AUTOWRECKERS
EDUCATIONARMSTRONG SCHOOL
DISTRICTSchool Speech &
Language PathologistSubstitute
Anticipated long-term speech &language pathologist substituteposition available immediately.Please visit our website for more
details: www.asd.k12.pa.us;Departments tab; Human
Resources; Job Openings.Deadline: April 6, 2017. EOE
OPTOMETRICTECHNICIAN
Part time. Training will be provided.Send resume to: EyeWares, 6207Rt 30, Ste 1000, Greensburg, PA,15601. Fax 724-838-1505
Or apply in person.
Medical BillerMt. View Area.Full time Medical
Biller. Must have experiencewith all aspects of billing. Verifi-
cation, billing, payments andworking denials and collections.
Salary based on experience.Benefits to include 2 weeks pto
and paid holidays.Email resume to
OptometristWell established, solo privatepractice, (Greensburg area) isseeking part time associate. Look-ing for 10-20 hrs. per week pro-viding primary eye care, contactlens and emergency ocular serv-ices. Well equipped, single officelocation evening and Sat. morninghours required. Generous salaryoffered. Email all inquires or sendresume to: [email protected]
ESTATE AUCTIONApril 8 at 9:30 am
320 Coolspring-Jumonville Road,Hopwood, PA 15445
REAL ESTATE at 11 am: Frame 4Room 2 bedroom cottage. De-tached garage w/shed on 0.50 AcLot. PERSONAL PROPERTY IN-CLUDING: 1939 American Ban-tam Coupe; plus Bantam parts;1961 Cushman Motorcycle; 1955Bluebird Bus (storage) TOOLS;COLLECTIBLES; BICYCLES; GOCARTS; OLD SCOOTERS; MO-TORS: FIREWOOD; FURNI-TURE/ RELATED; COINS:
See photos/terms/directions/listingon website or call:
Rittenhouse Auction Co LLC(AY-2152) 724-438-0581
www.rittenhouseauction.com
R.N.1 full time position available forMH/ID intermediate care facilitylocated in the Belle Vernon area.Benefits include vacation days,personal days, paid birthday andinsurance including health, den-tal, vision and prescription andlife and disability. Call 724-244-1413 to schedule interview.E.O.E.
NOLTE MOTORS AUCTIONSat., April 8th @ 9am
171 South Jefferson St.,Kittanning, PA 16201
1972 Chevelle Project (307 Motor,Convertible, Auto), Shop Equip.and Parts Inventory, Technician &Service Manuals, Showroom andOffice Furnishings and EquipmentLunch Room Related ItemsVintage Items, LARGE SALE!
For Details Contact, QUIC-SALEwww.quic-sale.com
Mark E. Dixon III (724) 726-5462Realtor & Auctioneer; Lic. #2410
REAL ESTATEAUCTION
Tues., April 18th @ 6:00 pm13589 Hwy. Rt. 286 West of
Saltsburg, PAWELL KEPT 3 BEDROOM HOME
WITH LARGE GARAGE ONAPPROX. 2 ACRES.
Plan to inspect by appointment.For details, or contact:
QUIC-SALEwww.quic-sale.com
Mark E. Dixon III (724) 726-5462Realtor & Auctioneer; Lic. #2410
Huge SUPER SUNDAYAUCTION TODAY
Sun, April 2nd, 3pm. Prev 1pm5778 Kennedy Ave,EVFD Social Hall,Export, Pa 15632
New Quality Merchandise. Flatscreen TVs. Bicycles. Home &Household. Patio/gardens. Toys.Grills. Lawn mowers. Ceiling fans.So much more. See Website.Terms: Cash, Check w/ID, CC,10% BP, AS-IS, AU005319.Call Me @ 724-733-1109 or seeBillEvansAuctionService.com.Bill Evans, Auctioneer
ON-LINE BID NOW!!Restaurant/Bar
Equipment AuctionParkway Tavern Rt 22
Monroeville PAAuction ends April 6, @ 6:00pm
reedsauctionco.hibid.comANDERSON-REED
AUCTIONEERS724-327-3344 AY2074L
SEALED BID AUCTIONTues., April 11, 2017 @ 4pm
Commercial Warehouse IndustrialPlant Former LE Smith Glass
Factory, Liberty Ave.Mt Pleasant PA
billandersonauctioneer.comANDERSON-REED
AUCTIONEERS724-327-3344 AY2074L
ON-LINE ONLYMOVING AUCTION
BID NOW!!Furniture, Collectibles &
Household Items.327 Coleman Rd.,Monroeville, PA
Auction Ends onSat., April 8th @ 6:00 pm
reedsauctionco.hibid.comANDERSON-REED
AUCTIONEERS724-327-3344 AY2074L
IRMC is an independent 164 bedcommunity hospital its mission is
to improve the health andwell-being of our community
through the coordinated deliveryof high quality, cost effective and
compassionate care.
We are also currentlyaccepting applications
for the following positions:
>Full Time Pharmacist>Full Time RN in ED
(exp preferred)>Full Time and casual CRNA>PT RN in OB Unit>PT Pharmacy Tech>Casual Echo Tech>Casual Occupational Therapist>Casual Physical Therapy Aide>Temp summer groundskeeper>Casual Social Worker>Refer to our website for several
openings in our IT department
We offer a positive workplaceenvironment with opportunities for
recognition and involvement,competitive compensation and
excellent benefits.
For immediate consideration seefull job listings and apply online at
www.indianarmc.org
<<Equal Opportunity Employer>>
Nurse Aides/CNA'sPrivate Duty, Immediate Needs
•Mt. Pleasant Sat/Sun 9a-3p,5p-9p, E/O Friday 5p-9p
•Irwin Mon/Wed/Fri 3p-5p•Natrona Hgts M-F 3p-7p•Kittanning Sat/Sun 12p-8p
CALL TODAY!1-800-535-3747
RN/LPNPrivate Duty, Immediate Needs
•Leechburg Sun 7:30a-5:30p,Fri/Sat 10p-6a
•Penn Hills Thur/Fri/Sat 7p-7a•Penn Hills Fri 2:30p-7a
Call 1-800-535-3747
*EVENING AUCTION*SAT. APRIL 8 @ 3:00 P.M.
Chestnut Ridge Community Ctr1575 Rt 259, Ligonier Pa. 15658
Antiques, Collectibles, Old WinePress, Old Primitives, Old Toys,1998 Chrysler Van, Household,Furniture, & More!
Terms Cash – Pa. Check w/I.D. –Food – Parking.
NO BUYERS PREMIUM!auctionzip.com # 10537
HENDRICKAUCTION SALES
LARRY HENDRICK AU2486LPHONE 724-238-4734
WILLIAM STEHLEY AA019353hendrickauctionsales@
gmail.com
AAUUCCTTIIOONNSSAUCTIONS
D6- SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017 TRIBUNE-REVIEW
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BID NOTICE Public Notice ishereby given that the Pennsylva-nia Historical and Museum Com-mission at the State Museum ofPA, Bureau of Management Serv-ices, 300 North Street Room 529,Harrisburg PA, 17120, Attention:Trish Frey, will receive sealedbids with a minimum bid of$3,000 per year until Monday,April 10, 2017 by 2:00pm for thefollowing:
FOR LEASE at Bushy Run Battle-field Historic Site located atRoute 993, Jeannette, PA 15644(Westmoreland County): 40acres of farmland. The land is tobe used for agricultural purposesonly. Lease will run for a term ofthree years.
Inquiries shall be made to JaniceMullin at 717-783-9935. Pleasecontact Jesse Casale at BushyRun Battlefield at 724-527-5584ext. 105, Saturday-Wednesdayduring business hours to make anappointment to visit the site andto answer questions. Bids maybe faxed to 717-783-2807 oremailed to [email protected] orreceived by mail at the aboveHarrisburg address. Late bidswill not be considered.
6450726(3-29-17,4-2-17)
Good Life USA NeedsIndividuals to pass out hotel dis-counts cards. Willing to train. In-volves a fee. For more info.contact Ryan at 724-3931332 oremail: [email protected]
Teacher/CoordinatorThe Dr. Robert Ketterer Charter
School is hiring a Teacher/SpecialEducation Coordinator. Duties in-clude: Work in collaboration withregular teachers by providing sup-port, track and documentprogress, maintain files, adminis-ter pre/post tests, submit specialeducation reports, write, monitorand facilitate IEP recommenda-tions, etc. PA Instructional I Certi-fication in Special Education, K-12required. Act 33/34& FBI clear-ances required. Excellent benefitpackage. Please submit resumeto [email protected] ormail to 354 Main Street, Latrobe,PA 15650 or fax to 724 539-7060
EOE JCAHO accredited
FTE Transition Coor. AssistantSend resume to:
[email protected] Spectrum Charter School 4369Northern Pike, Monroeville, PA15146
There will be a meeting of theAvonworth Board of School Di-rectors Personnel Committee onMonday, April 3, 2017 at 6:00 PM.The Personnel Committee willmeet in the District Administrationboard Room, 258 Josephs Lane,Pgh., PA 15237.
Cindy S. F. DonovanBoard Secretary(6453819, 4/2/17)
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Detroit’s Big Three automakers proudly flaunt the goodold days of tire-smoking performance, and the Chal-lenger that leans heavily on a heritage that dates to 1970is a prime example. Not only does the coupe’s stylingreflect that era, but the retro-influenced interior doesalso, especially the“high sill”floor console reminiscentof those found on Challengers of old. The 3.6-liter V-6and 5.7-liter“Hemi”V-8 (standard with R/T trims) returnsunaltered, as does the 6.4-liter V-8 used to power theChallenger SRT. The outrageous 707-horsepower (and650 pound-feet of torque) Hellcat also returns at morethan twice the price of a base Challenger. Supplies ofthis model remain tight, but the wait might be worth it toobtain the most powerful mass-produced muscle carever made. An eight-speed automatic transmission isstandard in V-6 Challengers, and optional on all V-8s,which come standard with the six-speed manual. For2017, all Hemi-powered Challengers get an electroni-cally controlled“active exhaust system”that lets you andanyone near you know what’s under the hood.
Dodge ChallengerSpecifications
Base price (incl.destination): $28,000Type: Two-door coupeEngines (h.p.): 3.6-literV-6 (305); 5.7-liter V-8(375); 6.4-liter V-8(485); 6.2-liter V-8,supercharged (707)Transmissions:Eight-speed automatic;six-speed manualDrivetrain: Rear-wheel-driveBase MPG (city/highway/combined):19/30/23 (3.6)Base weight (lb.):3,8302017 Dodge Challenger
SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017 · D7TRIBUNE-REVIEW
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WANTED FREE Aluminum Cans.Any amount, Any time. To help
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MAUSOLEUM SPACE, PennLincoln Memorial Park, Rte 30,asking $2500 obo; 724-989-7621 leave message
Maytag Gas Dryerexcellent shape, $150.
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Westmoreland Co Memorial Park2 lots, B section, value $3890,asking $3000. 724-863-8913
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Lost from ManorPAThis is Sounder he is missingfrom Manor PA since March12th. We have been searchingfor him non-stop for the pastcouple weeks. He is a coon-houd about 50 pounds. If yousee him.Please call 724-972-3754. 724-972-3754
TWIN VALLEY, 2 LOTS w/WilbertVaults, Section A, Garden of thelast supper, Worth $2700. Willsell for $1700. 724-542-4030
FIREWOOD $195 PER FULLCORD (4'X8'X4'). PICK UP ORDELIVERY. FREE DELIVERY IN10 MILE RADIUS 724-382-4572
USED CD JUKE BOXES &CHERRY MASTERS, DRAW 80's
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STEELER SEAT LICENSESBlock of 10, Section 506, $3000each; 412-731-6401
HAMPSHIRE & BLUE BUTT 4 HShow pigs, excellent quality,ready early April. 814-445-7027
LIONEL TRAINS, Charlie Mac-Carthy Radio, Regina MusicPlayer w/disk, banks, poster bed,hutch cupboard. 724-989-1055.
HAVANESE PUPPIESHome Raised. AKC. Best HealthGuarantee. 412-218-3050
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PEKAPOO PUPS, CKCLoving, Playful, Guaranteed Health.
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JACK RUSSELL PUPS, CKCBlack & Tan and Chocolates, Rough
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GREENSBURG Moving Sale,512Buckingham Drive. Sat & Sun9am -2pm. Items, Living Furni-ture, Fridge, Bar, Gym Equip. Etc.Cash and Carry.
MMaapp AApppp CCooddee -- 66445533114444
ANTIQUE APPRAISALSBuying Antiques & Anything Old
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For 35 yrs 724-832-7388references-google John Mickinak
BROWNING CYNERGY O/U 12gauge, like new, full set of Sport-ing Tubes. $1700. 724-552-8219
STEELER SEAT LICENSES, 3seats in section 123, row L. Callfor more info; 724-335-4085
SHIH-TZU PUPS Available, Par-ents are AKC and on premises.Call 724-323-3124
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A x
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11 Caliber Mainstreet 64K, alloys,PW, PL, Cruise Sale $10,900
06 Impala LT, 116K, Insp., War-ranty, Good Condition Sale $5500
09 Mazda 6i Sport, 64K, PL, PW,Cruise, Tilt Clearance $8900
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Perryopolis 26th AnnualMotorcycle Swap Meet
April 8th, 9am-3pmPerryopolis Auto Auction Building
Rt. 513447 Pittsburgh Rd., 15473
Contact Len for information at724-309-1082
Vendors Welcome
MERCURY 96, SABLE, rust free,garaged, all power, 5 new tires &air. am/fm cass. well maintained,extra clean,$3200. 724-834-8356
CHRIS-CRAFT BOAT Completelyrestored and water ready 1956Chris-Craft 17 foot mahoganySportsman boat. Original with 95HP Hercules Model K inboard en-gine with a new single axle Load-rite trailer. Asking price $15,000OBO 724-548-7240
Caravelle I/O 19' 188hp w/trailer+ extras Cuddy Cabin, Maroon
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Ford 11, Escape#18872B, Limited, Leather,
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Jeep 14, CherokeeLatitude 4x4
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Only 65,000 Miles$5,995
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Auto ServicesAuto
Auto ServicesAuto
SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017 · D9TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Titled with the phonetic spellingfor cube, “Kyoob,” the exhibitioncurrently filling Society for Contem-porary Craft’s Satellite Gallery inthe lobby of the Steel Plaza T-Stationat One Mellon Center, Pittsburgh,features craft works that start withthat basic form in mind, but go some-where completely off the grid.
The exhibit was originally featuredin The Annex Gallery at Indiana Uni-versity of Pennsylvania. And, as inthat exhibit, here it features over 20original works represented by 17 art-ists from across the nation, Canada,Australia and the Netherlands.
The mediums used are as variedas the artists, and ranges from solidforms in sterling silver and steel tomalleable works in leather and wool.
For example, wanting to constructa perfect cube form in two contrast-ing ways, Dallae Kang of Northbor-ough, Mass., created two silver rings,“Solid Cube” and “Hollow Cube”with the former by filling up the in-side of it, and the latter by outliningthe outside of it. “That’s how “SolidCube” and “Hollow Cube” were cre-ated,” she says.
Bill Sirianni has responded tonumerous incidents in his 10 yearsas an EMT, using his training to helppeople who have suffered medicalemergencies or been injured in ac-cidents or fires.
On occasion, he finds himself help-ing four-footed patients as well.
Sirianni is on staff with Mt. Pleas-ant EMS. He also is a canine medic.
An animal lover who once owned ablack Labrador from a puppy to age17, he hopes to soon adopt a Germanshepherd.
“If I get one, I want to put itthrough training to be a search andrescue dog,” he says.
Sirianni, 29, completed a caninemedic course at WestmorelandCounty Community College severalyears ago.
His primary inspiration at the time,he says, was to be able to assist if theborough police department’s K-9 of-ficer ever was injured.
“But as I took the class, I thoughtthat this could be used for (any ani-mal),” Sirianni says.
by MARy PICKELS
Canine medics on front linesoffer aid to 4-legged patients
PET’SBESTFRIEND
by KURT SHAW
At thisexhibit,it’s hip tobe square
‘Kyoob’When: Through May 27. Opendaily 6 a.m.-midnightAdmission: FreeWhere: Society for ContemporaryCraft’s Satellite Gallery, 500 GrantSt. in the lobby of the Steel PlazaT-Station at One Mellon Center,PittsburghDetails: 412-261-7003 orcontemporarycraft.org
MEDICS · E3
EXHIBIT · E5
A pet oxygen mask can be a lifesaverin the event of a house fire.
TRIBUNE-REVIEW FILE
SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIISECTION E
EMBRACINGODDITIESMz. Jones’ Curiosities offers up the unusual
I t’s not your average love story: girl obsessed with natural oddities and funeral rites meets boy who’s worked as a fu-neral director. They marry, have a baby and start a business selling preserved animals and animal parts incorporatedinto jewelry and other decorative items.
“I tell people all the time, I’m a weirdo and I embrace it. It’s what I am, it’s what I do, and I love it,” says Brittney Jonesof Bovard, who runs Mz. Jones’ Curiosities with her husband, Neil Jones.
Check out mzjonescurios.com and you’ll find seahorse lockets, snakeskin earrings and pendants, butterfly jars, wholeanimals or just their organs in globes and jars. For the first-time shopper, there’s a $35 “Oddities Starter Box.”
“It’s not that we have a love of the macabre, necessarily, just an appreciation,” Neil says. “We’re such a death-averse cul-ture, but my background is in knowing that death is coming and knowing that it’s just a part of life.
“Doing this is not scary, it’s not gory — we appreciate these animals, we love animals. When they’re done using theirphysical bodies, we’ll take them and display them, as an appreciation of the life the animal had.”
by SHIRLEy MCMARLIN
Brittney and Neil Jones pose their son Tyler, and a selection of animal oddities, including a sheep heart, eye and brain, a ball python,vine snake, squid and Asian forest scorpion.
A bone wind chime hangs outside of the homeof Brittney and Neil Jones. Animals are ethicallysourced for their oddities business, Mz. Jones’Curiosities.
The couple pondered starting a busi-ness about a year ago, after son Tylerwas born. Brittney’s long commute toa Pittsburgh banking job seemed lesstenable with the baby at home.
The idea of combining her love ofcollecting and his mortuary scienceskills grew out of a couple of giftsBrittney received. About 10 years ago,a friend gave her a fetal pig in a jar andher first Mother’s Day gift from Neilwas a bat preserved in a shadow box.
“I couldn’t believe he spent $200 ona Mother’s Day gift, even though itwas my first Mother’s Day,” Brittneysays. “It was special, but that’s a lot ofmoney to spend.
“I decided to do some research,because I wanted to make stuff formyself and stuff for other people, andI thought we could do it for half theprice.”
Neil was enthusiastic aboutBrittney’s plan, but keeps his job withUPS while they grow the business.
“He has the preservation trainingand I am just one of those weirdos whohas studied all things dead and creepysince I knew those things existed,”Brittney explains on their website. “Icould stay home and take care of thebaby and still make a living for myself.So we did it.”
They now sell bats for $100.
The couple quickly point out thattheir specimens are ethically sourced.
“We don’t kill animals and we don’twant anyone to kill for us,” Neil says.“There’s only one thing that we everkilled to sell, and those were thehornets that built a nest outside of ourfront door. I wasn’t going to let themsting my little boy.
“We went on vacation with the familyto New Jersey and I’m walking along theshore, and I picked up one shell that wasabsolutely gorgeous and flipped it over.A little hermit crab popped out of it andI was like, ‘Oh, I really wanted that, butyou use it now. I can wait for it.’ ”
Many items come from biologicalsupply companies, like organs slatedfor dissection in science classes or owlpellets from which tiny rodent bonesare recovered. Breeders supply snakesthat have been euthanized because ofhealth issues.
The couple find other things andincreasingly are offered items by col-lectors who have seen their work.
They sell mostly online through theirwebsite and Facebook. They also set upat mall shows and venues like HorrorRealm and the upcoming Steel CityCon, April 7 to 9 at the MonroevilleConvention Center. June will find themat Sci-Fi Valley Con in Altoona and, in
ODDITIES · E5
PHOTOS: DAN SPEICHER | TRIBUNE-REVIEW
“There’s only one thing that we ever killed to sell, and those were the hornets that builta nest outside of our front door. I wasn’t going to let them sting my little boy.”
NEIL JONES · MZ. JONES CURIOSITIES
WHEN REGULAR PEOPLE TURN ODD
E2 · SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAMEby David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Unscramble these sixJumbles, one letter toeach square, to formsix ordinary words.
Now arrange the circled lettersto form the surprise answer, assuggested by the above cartoon.
PRINT YOUR ANSWER IN THE CIRCLES BELOW
©2017 Tribune Content Agency, LLCAll Rights Reserved.
BOLLAG
EVIDAC
THEKSC
PENLUG
DINDHE
TONCOT
Ch
eck
ou
tth
en
ew
,fr
ee
JUS
TJU
MB
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Actress Sharon Acker 82Actress Penelope Keith 77Actress Linda Hunt 72Singer Emmylou Harris 70Actor Sam Anderson 70Actress Pamela Reed 68Musician Dave Robinson 64Singer Buddy Jewell 56Actor Christopher Meloni 56Singer Keren Woodward 56
Singer Billy Dean 55Actor Clark Gregg 55Actress Jana Marie Hupp 53Musician Greg Camp 50Musician Tony Fredianelli 48Actress Roselyn Sanchez 44Singer Jill King 42Actor Pedro Pascal 42Actor Adam Rodriguez 42Actor Jeremy Garrett 41
BIRTHDAYS
BRIDGE
QUOTE CRYPTOGRAM
SUDOKU
CRYPTOQUIP
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Today is Sunday, April 2, the 92nd day of 2017. There are 273 daysleft in the year.
Highlights in historyIn 1792: Congress passed the Coinage Act, which authorized
establishment of the U.S. Mint.In 1800: Ludwig van Beethoven premiered his Symphony No. 1 in
C Major, Op. 21, in Vienna.In 1865: Confederate President Jefferson Davis and most of his
Cabinet fled the Confederate capital of Richmond, Virginia, becauseof advancing Union forces.
In 1917: President Woodrow Wilson asked Congress to declare waragainst Germany, saying, “The world must be made safe for democ-racy.” (Congress declared war four days later.)
In 1932: aviator Charles A. Lindbergh and John F. Condon wentto a cemetery in The Bronx, New York, where Condon turned over$50,000 to a man in exchange for Lindbergh’s kidnapped son. (Thechild, who was not returned, was found dead the following month.)
In 1942: Glenn Miller and his Orchestra recorded “American Pa-trol” at the RCA Victor studios in Hollywood.
In 1956: The soap operas “As the World Turns” and “The Edge ofNight” premiered on CBS-TV.
In 1968: The science-fiction film “2001: A Space Odyssey,” pro-duced and directed by Stanley Kubrick, had its world premiere inWashington, D.C.
In 1974: French President Georges Pompidou, 62, died in Paris.In 1982: several thousand troops from Argentina seized the dis-
puted Falkland Islands, located in the south Atlantic, from Britain.(Britain seized the islands back the following June.)
In 1986: four American passengers, including an 8-month-oldgirl, her mother and grandmother, were killed when a terrorist bombexploded aboard a TWA jetliner en route from Rome to Athens,Greece.
In 1992: mob boss John Gotti was convicted in New York ofmurder and racketeering; he was later sentenced to life, and died inprison.
In 2005: Pope John Paul II died in his Vatican apartment at age84.
Ten years ago: In its first case on climate change, the U.S. Su-preme Court, in Massachusetts v. Environmental Protection Agency,ruled 5-4 that carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases were airpollutants under the Clean Air Act. Florida won its second consecu-tive college basketball championship, beating Ohio State 84-75.
by JERALDINE SAUNDERS
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Drive and determina-tion are divine. Focus on achieving business and financialsecurity rather than pursuing romance in the week ahead.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Teamwork expeditestimely tasks. In the week ahead you can spread businessknow-how in a friendly, helpful way that earns pricelessappreciation.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Your faith in a betterfuture will be rewarded this week. You may be sur-rounded by negativity or doubts may briefly undermineyour confidence.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): The majority rules.When you are part of a group your individual opinionsmay not count for much when what is good for the larg-est part of the group is at stake.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You may easily distracted byfantasies and fancies in the week to come. Steer clear ofnew romantic entanglements in the next several days.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Use business strate-gies to upgrade your bank account. You can make moremoney this week by working with what you have thanwith what you don’t.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Focus on achieving financialfreedom. You don’t consider yourself a professional adviser,but someone might knock on your door and ask for advice.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You can be graciouswhen you have a guru. Hook up with helpful people whodemonstrate a talent for success in the week to come.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Detachment fromyour personal desires may be the answer. You may be toowrapped up in what you think should be done to considerother viewpoints.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You can become lostin a fog of wishful thinking in the week ahead. Don’t beginhome remodeling projects unless you have a plan.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Value cooperationand consideration. There is a tendency to be too com-petitive and aggressive as this week unfolds.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Think things throughthoroughly. The snap decisions you make now couldcause regret later.
IF APRIL 2 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY: The next four tosix weeks might be an ideal time to earn while you learn.A lucky streak might answer your fervent prayers. Exer-cise your mind as well as your body and you can makelong lasting improvements in both your health and yourcareer prospects.
Jeraldine Saunders is a Tribune Content Agency writer.
HOROSCOPES ALMANAC
Complete the gridso that every row,column and 3x3 boxcontains every digitfrom 1 to 9 inclusively.
ANSWERS TO TODAY’S PUZZLE
ANSWER TO TODAY’S CRYPTOQUIP
YESTERDAY’SANSWER
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SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017 · E3
Despite the challengesof technology, Weirand her books survive
Patty Weir has seen otherused book stores come andgo in the 29 years she’sowned Patty Weir’s Paper-backs in Greensburg. It’s al-ways been a tough business,she says, made tougher bythe advent of the Internetand e-readers.
Still, the Hempfield resi-dent says, “This is my life,and I don’t want to give itup.” Her goal is to celebrate30 years at her South MainStreet location on Jan. 2,2018. Then, she says, “What-ever’s meant to be will be.”
Question: Who’s buyingbooks nowadays?
Answer: I’d say it’s50/50 men and women. Theolder people don’t wantto hear about that Kindle,they want a book. Workingpeople in middle age seemlike they’re the ones whodon’t have time for a book— a Kindle is just easier forthem and their lifestyle. Butwe’re starting to get back alot of people who are find-ing out that, staring at thatbright screen, their eyes arebothering them, so they’reswitching back to books.
That’s a good sign thatbooks are not going to dieout. A Kindle is great forwhat it is, but it’s absolutelyhurt the book business.
Q: What are your cus-tomers reading?
A: People ask what’s mostpopular, but there isn’t re-ally any one thing. Every-body has their own thingthey love to read — mystery,fiction, every category.We’ve always carried everygenre because everybodyhas their special thing theylike.
For romance, NoraRoberts has always been abig one. Danielle Steele wasbig when I opened, but herbooks have died off. Backwhen I started, it was the(historical) romances, nowit’s the paranormal stuff —the vampires and such.
The Pattersons, theGrishams, are always big.Kids’ books and youngadult books still go well,too. That (market) has actu-ally gotten stronger.
Q: How did you getstarted in the business?
A: I was living in Floridawith my husband (in theearly 1980s) to take careof his family and a restau-rant. I always read and mydaughter always read, sowe’d go to all the used book-stores down there. We fellin love with one and we’dgo there every time we hada day off.
It was that family book-store that got me hookedon all of this, and when wemoved back up here, theowner of that store guidedme. A friend of mine ownedthis building at the timeand he said, “Patty, whydon’t you just rent a coupleof rooms and try it.” Thiswas Eddie’s Barber Shop,which everybody in townknew.
I told my husband I’d giveit six months. We startedout with two rooms, andI kept adding rooms andeventually bought the build-ing. When Eddie retired, Itook over the whole down-stairs.
Q: So you learned asyou went?
A: I learned a lot over theyears. I learned what not totake in. We tried textbooksone time, but that was a big,horrible mistake. We triedmusic CDs, but that didn’tpan out either.
A lot of things I used totake, like reference books,now people just get thatonline. I used to sell cook-books like crazy; I hardlytake them in anymore.Pinterest and things likethat took over.
Q: How did you buildup your original inven-tory?
A: I went to sales. I put anad in the paper for books,and people just startedbringing them in. Word ofmouth helped. The peoplekept bringing books in,and we kept growing andgrowing.
Q: I notice that yourstore doesn’t have thatold-book smell.
A: I’ve gone into usedbook stores and walkedright back out, becauseI didn’t want to touchanything or they had thatmusty smell. I try to becareful what I take in.
I won’t buy a book if it’snot in good condition. Iwon’t take any books thathave gotten wet, any booksthat have been in base-ments. I sell books that Iwould want to buy.
Q: With wall-to-walland floor-to-ceilingbooks, how do you trackwhat you have?
A: I keep it alphabeticaland in categories. I don’thave anything on a comput-er — the program for thatwas ridiculous, so I do it theold-fashioned way: you callme up and ask for a book,and I go back there and lookon the shelf. I pretty muchknow what I have and whatI don’t have.
Shirley McMarlin is a Tribune-Reviewstaff writer. Reach her at 724-836-
5750 or [email protected].
by SHIRLEy McMARLIN
INSIDE WESTMORELAND ARTS
Patty Weir has ownedPatty Weir’s Paperbacks inGreensburg for 29 years.
SHIRLEY MCMARLIN | TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Standing up to thinly veiled racism in the workplaceD ear Carolyn:
I am a middle-agewhite female who works
in a retail setting with col-leagues whose skin tones areevery color imaginable. Irespect my coworkers and theyrespect me.
Our company generally doeswhatever makes the customerhappy. But this is the South,and because I am white, otherwhite people think I am a safeplace for their coded racist re-marks. Yesterday, a customerremarked to me that she hadto move to a city up north be-cause, “when you have a verypale, blond, blue-eyed daugh-ter, you have to get her out of[our diversely populated city],if you know what I mean.”
It caught me completely off-guard, and she breezed awaybefore I could process whatshe said. I stood there with mymouth hanging open and justlet it happen. I looked at theface of the young girl I wasworking with, who has brownskin, and I was ashamed Ididn’t defend her.
I need my job, but this has tostop. I want to make a stand,but how can I confront covertracism on the company dime?
— Not at Liberty to SpeakI can’t wait for the day
when emboldened racistsrealize their moment is overand they need to slither backunder their rocks. (This ishardly about just the South.)
Until then, I suggest youhave some employment-friendly responses handy.“I beg your pardon?” forexample, is deceptively pow-erful. Feigned ignorance is awell-known expression of dis-gust — code for code — plus,forcing someone to repeattheir ugly words is encour-agement to rethink them.
A blank, “I’m afraid I don’tknow what you mean,” wouldhave worked here as well.Preparation is key, since be-ing gobsmacked renders thiswhole discussion moot.
If you’re not to the point ofquitting (but feeling out otherjobs, I hope), your prepara-tion can and should includeconsulting your supervisor.“Whatever makes the custom-er happy” does not translatesimplistically into “Ignorecustomers’ racist remarks.”For one thing, another cus-tomer could easily witness anemployee’s non-response tosuch a remark and choose toshop elsewhere.
And, a company willstruggle to serve customers ifits staff has poor morale andhigh turnover — a reasonablerisk if such dehumanizingexchanges are or becomecommon, and if you’reinstructed to look the otherway.
Dear Carolyn:Here’s the other side of
the story about the wife [in arecent column], whose hus-band keeps pressuring her tochange her hair color:
Wife keeps insisting thathusband get a haircut. Herefuses, or does so only grudg-ingly. His hair grows long andunruly and unattractive towife. Husband thinks wife is“controlling,” while wife feelsresentful because husbanddoesn’t care enough about herto practice normal grooming.
— AnonymousThis isn’t “the other side.”You have only one thing
you don’t find attractive, andhair-color guy has only onething he does. That meansthere’s much less of a powergrab in what you’re ask-ing. Plus, your question isabout grooming — meaning,presumably, your husband is
free to wear his hair any wayhe wants, and you’re merelyrequesting neatness.
Partners owe each other aneffort to be attractive, yes —but they also owe each otheran effort to see the beautyin each other’s results. Andpushing someone beyondtheir sense of self is not lov-ing, respectful or appropriate.
Obviously the standardsare highly individual — oneperson’s minimum on fit-ness, hair care and mirrortime could be another’s vainexcess. To know what’s fairto ask, you have to know andrespect the person you chose.Your husband’s stubbornnesscould be pushback againstyours.
Going outside these broadlimits is often, and oftenrightly, seen as hostile. Refus-ing basic fitness or self-care,refusing to say anything kindabout a partner’s appear-ance, refusing to back offon weight or facial hair orwhatever else — all can erodea couple’s fundamental trust.
That’s likely where thingshave gone wrong here. Youthink he’s negating you, hethinks you’re negating him,and you’ve both retreated inanger.
Since I’m not advisinghim, I can only suggest thatyou make the conciliatorygesture. Tell him you love[this], [this] and [this] abouthim. Say you’re absolutelyfine with it if he does [this],[that] or [the other thing]with his hair. Say you respectcompletely that these are hischoices to make and apolo-gize for putting him on thedefensive.
Admit that [ONE thing thatbothers you most] is merely apet peeve — just as [his peeveabout you] is something hegets stuck on that you accom-modate. There rarely isn’tone.
Say you’re asking him one
CAROLYN HAX
final time to consider thissingle gesture for you, andthen dropping it either way.
Then drop it either way. Ifhe refuses even at this point,then he accepts the conse-quence of choosing to repelhis wife. Much ado abouthair, yes, but the approachapplies to hair and just aboutanything else. Good luck.
Email Carolyn at [email protected],follow her on Facebook at www.facebook.com/carolyn.hax or chat with her online at
noon Eastern time each Friday at www.washingtonpost.com
Dr. HarveyBendix teachesthe caninemedic class atWestmorelandCountyCommunityCollege. Heis shown inhis NorwinVeterinaryHospital withEbby.
STEPH CHAMBERS|TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Dr. Harvey R. Bendix, op-erator of Norwin VeterinaryHospital, has taught a caninemedic course at WCCC forseveral years.
The four-hour class coversbasic first aid, includingCPR techniques, IV insertionand treatment of poisoning.Bendix sometimes travels toarea communities to teachgroups of first responders.He estimates hundreds ofpeople have completed theclass in recent years.
“It was originally designedto teach K-9 handlers. Wedecided to expand to firstresponders,” Bendix says.A medical background ishelpful, but not necessary, hesays.
“It’s not a course for some-one who says, ‘I love animals.’... You have to be able to seemedical trauma,” Bendixsays.
Sirianni says his encoun-ters with injured animalshave been few, with outcomesranging from good to devas-tating.
A pit bull puppy injured inan October accident in Bull-skin did not survive, despitenumerous attempts to help.The dog was traveling withthe driver of a tractor-trailerthat crashed. It sufferedsevere injuries.
A quick physical examdetermined the dog wasgoing into shock, Siriannisays. He and fellow EMT andcanine medic Jacob Kecktried to help the dog, who wastransported to Mt. Pleas-ant Animal Hospital andthen taken by ambulance toAVETS in Monroeville, where
she died.Sirianni
says he per-formed CPRon the dogand broughther backtwice in theambulance,as Keckdrove.
“I wasdoing chestcompres-sions andI had anoxygen maskon her. ... Shewas a cutelittle thing,”he says.
First responders are aware,Sirianni says, that manypeople consider their petsmembers of their families.Rescue workers also haveto prepare for an injuredor scared animal to bite orscratch out of fear.
“In that case, the dog washurt so badly it wasn’t tryingto bite anybody,” Siriannisays.
Keck, 18, says he took thecourse in an effort to enhancehis EMS knowledge.
“That was the first timeI’ve been on scene with ananimal so badly injured,” hesays.
A volunteer firefighter,Keck recently participatedin an effort to release a horsetrapped in mud for severalhours. Ultimately, a CountyAnimal Response Team, oftensummoned to help injured ortrapped farm animals, wasable to assist the horse.
The incident gave Keckthe opportunity to practiceanimal rescue skills, he says.
Equipment used to assistinjured animals is similar tothat used for humans, Kecksays, but often is smallerin size, comparable to whatmight be used for infants andchildren.
Also similar to children,animals must rely on thoseassisting them to determinetheir injuries.
“They can’t advocate whattheir problem is. You can’task them, ‘What’s wrong?’ ”Keck says.
Bendix’s students practicelifesaving skills on an ani-mal mannequin, includingmouth-to-snout resuscitation,splinting of broken limbs andinduced vomiting.
First responders learn tostock their ambulances orpersonal vehicles with sup-plies to immediately beginassisting animals.
According to the AmericanAnimal Hospital Association,one in four more pets wouldsurvive if it received evenone first-aid technique beforegetting emergency vet care.
Becky Lauffer, WCCCcoordinator of emergencymedical services and healthcare, continuing education,says students do not receivecertification beyond the at-tendance certificate Bendixprovides.
The Department of Health,oversight body for EMTs andparamedics, does not issuecontinuing education creditsfor the class as it appliesspecifically to animal care,she says.
Numerous area policeofficers, firefighters andveterinary technicians,EMTs, along with pet owners,groomers and animal day
care operators, have com-pleted canine medic trainingin recent years.
Mark Griffin, 71, of PennRun, Indiana County, aretired Pennsylvania StatePolice detective from theGreensburg barracks, tookBendix’s course after hebegan volunteering with theIndiana County HumaneSociety.
Although he’d never ownedpets — he has since adoptedcats and dogs — Griffinwanted to do something togive back, and found himselfwalking pit bulls.
“I learned what sweet dogsthey were. I saw a notice inthe newspaper (for the caninemedic class). I thought,since I’m walking the dogs,I should take this course incase something happens,” hesays.
Griffin says he oftenrecommends the course, andbelieves it would be benefi-cial to police officers workingpatrol.
“I was so impressed withhow knowledgeable and howthorough (Bendix) was,” hesays.
“The course highlights awide variety of emergencysituations a first respondermay encounter. ... There arethings they can do in thefield that may improve ananimal’s chance of survival,”Bendix says.
“In some cases, you arenot able to bring them back.But you are always rewardedwhen it works,” he says.
Mary Pickels is a Tribune-Review staffwriter. Reach her at 724-836-5401 or
Medics on front lines to aid 4-legged patientsMEDICS · FROM E1
Sirianni
Keck
E4 · SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017
SUNDAY EVENING APR. 2, 20176 PM 6:30 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 12 AM 12:30 1 AM 1:30 2 AM 2:30
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(N) (Live) Golf Central (N) (Live) Drive, Chip & Putt LPGA GolfGSN Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Baggage Baggage Divided Divided Newlywed NewlywedHALL (5:00) The Wedding March Love at First Bark (2017, Romance) Jana Kramer. When Calls the Heart (N) Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Frasier Frasier Frasier FrasierHGTV Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Beach Beach Caribbean Caribbean Island Life Island Life Hunters Hunters Int’l Caribbean Caribbean Island Life Island Life Hunters Hunters Int’lHIST Forged in Fire Forged in Fire Forged in Fire Sniper: Into the Kill Zone (N) (:03) Swamp People Forged in Fire (:04) Sniper: Into the Kill ZoneID Evil Lives Here Dateline on ID Dateline on ID Dateline on ID (N) Disappeared (N) Dateline on ID Dateline on ID Disappeared Dateline on IDLIFE Fatal Defense (2017) Ashley Scott, David Cade. Deadly Lessons (2017) Christie Ann Burson. (:02) The Wrong House (2016) Clare Kramer. (12:02) Deadly Lessons (2017) Christie Ann Burson. (:04) The Wrong HouseMTV Friends Friends Friends Friends ››› The Blind Side (2009, Drama) Sandra Bullock, Tim McGraw. ››› Freedom Writers (2007) Hilary Swank, Patrick Dempsey. Catfish: The TV Show CatfishNBCS Superboats NHL Live (N) (Live) NHL Hockey Philadelphia Flyers at New York Rangers. (Live) (:15) NHL Overtime (N) NHL Sunday Sports Sports Match of the Day Premier League Match of the Week (N)NGEO Generation X Generation X Wicked Tuna Wicked Tuna (N) Port Protection Alaska (N) Wicked Tuna Port Protection Alaska Life Below Zero Life Below ZeroNICK Nicky, Ricky Nicky, Ricky Game Henry Crashletes Jagger Full House Full House Full House Full House Friends Friends Friends (:33) Friends Nobodies Fresh Prince Fresh Prince Fresh PrinceOWN Undercover Boss Undercover Boss Greenleaf Greenleaf OWN Tonight! “Episode 2” Greenleaf Greenleaf OWN Tonight! “Episode 2” Undercover BossOXY Three Days to Live (N) Snapped “Patricia Olsen” Snapped Three Days to Live Snapped Snapped “Brynn Hartman” Snapped (:01) Three Days to Live (:02) Three Days to LivePCN PCN Tours PA Books On Issues On Issues PCN Evng On Issues PCN Evening - pcntv.com PA Public AffairsPCNC News PCNC PCNC News Business PCNC 8PM PCNC PCNC 9PM PCNC Best of NightTalk Paid Prog. PCNC 11 Paid Prog. Joint Relief The Final OJC PCNC 2AM PCNCROOT NHL Hockey: Hurricanes at Penguins Penguins In the Room Focused Bensinger Poker Night Heartland Poker Tour Penguins NHL Hockey Carolina Hurricanes at Pittsburgh Penguins. Fight Sports MMASPIKE Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue (N) Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar RescueSYFY ››› The Matrix Reloaded (2003) Keanu Reeves, Laurence Fishburne. ›› The Matrix Revolutions (2003) Keanu Reeves, Laurence Fishburne. ›› Resident Evil: Apocalypse (2004) Milla Jovovich. Thirst (2015)TBS (5:00) › Tammy (2014) Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang › Something Borrowed (2011) Ginnifer Goodwin. ›› Just Like Heaven (2005)TCM ›››› Shadow of a Doubt (1943) Teresa Wright. ››› The Manchurian Candidate (1962) Frank Sinatra. ››› The Mind Benders (1962) Dirk Bogarde. ›› The Circle (1925, Drama) ›››› The 400 BlowsTLC Long Island Medium Long Island Medium Long Island Medium (N) (:01) Long Lost Family (N) Who Do You (:04) Long Island Medium (12:04) Long Lost Family Who Do You (:04) Long Island MediumTNT (4:30) ››› Superman Returns (2006) Premiere. ››› Thor (2011) Chris Hemsworth. (DVS) (:15) ›› Man of Steel (2013, Action) Henry Cavill, Amy Adams. (DVS) Law & Order “Sheltered” Law & Order “Couples”TOON Powerpuff Teen Titans We Bare Gumball Brak Show Venture Rick, Morty Rick, Morty Amer. Dad Family Guy Family Guy Pretty Face Metal Super Rick, Morty Rick, Morty Amer. Dad Family GuyTRAVEL Food Paradise Food Paradise Food Paradise (N) Big Time RV Big Time RV Boat Buyers Boat Buyers Big Time RV Big Time RV Big Time RV Big Time RV Boat Buyers Boat Buyers Big Time RV Big Time RVTRUTV Pranks Imp. Jokers Carbonaro Carbonaro Carbonaro Carbonaro Carbonaro Carbonaro Carbonaro Carbonaro Upscale Upscale Carbonaro Carbonaro Carbonaro Carbonaro Carbonaro CarbonaroTVLAND Reba Reba Reba Reba Reba Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King King Nobodies Raymond Raymond Golden GirlsUSA Wrestlemania Kickoff Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Chrisley Chrisley Law & Order: SVUVH1 Hip Hop Sq. Hip Hop Sq. Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta Black Ink Crew Black Ink Crew ›› Space Jam (1996) Michael Jordan. Hip Hop Sq. Hip Hop Sq. Love & Hip Hop: AtlantaWE CSI: Miami “Extreme” CSI: Miami CSI: Miami “Dead Zone” CSI: Miami “Death Grip” CSI: Miami “Hard Time” CSI: Miami CSI: Miami CSI: Miami “Grand Prix” CSI: Miami “Big Brother”WGN-A Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Bones Bones Person of Interest Person of Interest
HBO (5:50) ›› Men in Black II (2002) (:20) Absolutely Fabulous: The Movie ‘R’ Big Little Lies (N) (:01) Girls Crashing (N) Last Week (:32) Big Little Lies Crashing (:05) Girls Last Week (:05) Big Little LiesMAX The Ring (:20) ›› Mechanic: Resurrection (2016) ›› The 33 (2015) Antonio Banderas. ‘PG-13’ (:10) ›› Jurassic World (2015) Chris Pratt. ‘PG-13’ (12:15) ›› Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials (2015) Dylan O’Brien. Death RaceSHOW Billions An anxious insider. Billions Axe negotiates. The Circus The Circus Homeland (N) Billions “Victory Lap” (N) Billions “Victory Lap” The Circus Homeland Billions “Victory Lap” HomelandSTARZ (5:58) The Missing (6:59) The Missing “1991” The Missing Black Sails “XXXVIII.” (:14) The Missing (:15) Black Sails “XXXVIII.” (:29) The Missing Black Sails “XXXVIII.” VerticalSTZENC The Rookie (:40) ›› For Love of the Game (1999) Kevin Costner. ‘PG-13’ ››› The Natural (1984, Drama) Robert Redford. ‘PG’ (:20) ››› Bull Durham (1988) ‘R’ (:11) ›› The Scout (1994) Albert Brooks. ‘PG-13’TMC (5:20) ››› Spy Kids (6:50) ›› Spy Game (2001) Robert Redford. ‘R’ ››› Bridge of Spies (2015) Tom Hanks, Alan Alda. ‘PG-13’ ›› The Presidio (1988) Sean Connery. (:10) ›› Sleeping With Other People (2015) ‘R’
MOVIES TALK NEWS KIDS SPORTS
CBS
ABC
NBC
FOX
52nd Academy of Coun-try Music Awards8 p.m. on CBS
Many of the genre’s top starsgather at Las Vegas’ T-MobileArena for the event honoringthose judged the best of thepast year’s country music art-ists, producers and writers.
The Walking Dead9 p.m. on AMC
This hit cable series has hadan erratic season that started
with the death of one of itsmost beloved characters, butratings suggest that disen-chanted fans are starting to getback on board as Rick (AndrewLincoln) and his posse takesteps to reclaim their own fatesagainst a monstrous adversary.
Chicago Justice9 p.m. on NBC
Time is of the essence forthe State’s Attorney’s office —and investigators Dawson and
Nagel (Jon Seda, Joelle Carter)in particular — after a pregnantwoman is murdered and herunborn child stolen in the newepisode “Double Helix.”
American Crime10 p.m. on ABC
Going his own way to get theanswers he needs, Luis (BenitoMartinez) finally discovers whathappened to his son in the new“Season Three: Episode Four.”Coy (Connor Jessup) comes up
with a way to change his des-tiny, or so he believes.
Feud: Bette and Joan10 p.m. on FX
The new episode “And theWinner Is... (The Oscars of1963)” takes place as the eventof the title approaches, withBette Davis (Susan Sarandon)appearing to be on track to wina third Academy Award as bestactress, shattering the existingrecord in that category.
BEST BETS
THEMOVIESThese movies are playingthrough April 6. For showtimes, call the individualtheater.
WESTMORELANDAMC WESTMORELAND 15Route 30 East/Westmoreland Mall, Greensburg,
724-834-1977Beauty and the Beast (PG); TheBoss Baby (PG); CHiPs (R); GetOut (R); Ghost in the Shell (PG-13);John Wick: Chapter 2 (R); Kong:Skull Island (PG-13); The LEGOBatman Movie (PG); Life (R); Lo-gan (R); Power Rangers (PG-13);The Shack (PG-13); Split (PG-13)
AMC CLASSIC DELMONT 12401 Vine St., Hollywood Square, Delmont, 724-
468-3555Beauty and the Beast (PG); TheBoss Baby (PG); CHiPs (R); GetOut (R); Ghost in the Shell (PG-13);Hidden Figures (PG); Kong: SkullIsland (PG-13); The LEGO BatmanMovie (PG); Life (R); Logan (R);Power Rangers (PG-13); The Shack(PG-13)
EASTCINEMARK MONROEVILLEMALL600 Monroeville Mall, Monroeville, 412-373-1794Beauty and the Beast (PG); TheBoss Baby (PG); CHiPs (R); GetOut (R); Ghost in the Shell (PG-13);Kong: Skull Island (PG-13); Life (R);Logan (R); North by Northwest(PG, April 2, 5); Power Rangers(PG-13); The Shack (PG-13)
PHOENIX BIG CINEMASNORTH VERSAILLES 181701 Lincoln Highway, North Versailles, 412-824-
9200Beauty and the Beast (PG); TheBoss Baby (PG); CHiPs (R); GetOut (R); Ghost in the Shell (PG-13);Kong: Skull Island (PG-13); TheLEGO Batman Movie (PG); Life (R);Logan (R); Power Rangers (PG-13);The Shack (PG-13); Split (PG-13)
PENN HILLS CINEMAS76 Federal Drive, Penn Hills, 412-243-1831Beauty and the Beast (PG); TheBoss Baby (PG); Get Out (R);Ghost in the Shell (PG-13); Kong:Skull Island (PG-13); Power Rang-ers (PG-13)
NORTHCINEMARK PITTSBURGH MILLS425 Pittsburgh Mills Circle, Frazer, 800-326-3264
ext. 2112Beauty and the Beast (PG); TheBelko Experiment (R); The BossBaby (PG); CHiPs (R); Get Out(R); Ghost in the Shell (PG-13);
Kong: Skull Island (PG-13); TheLast Word (R); Life (R); Logan (R);North by Northwest (PG, April 2,5); Power Rangers (PG-13); Wilson(R)
AMC CLASSIC SOUTH PIKE 10Route 356, Sarver, 724-295-2640Beauty and the Beast (PG); TheBoss Baby (PG); CHiPs (R); Ghostin the Shell (PG-13); Kong: SkullIsland (PG-13); The LEGO BatmanMovie (PG); Life (R); Logan (R);Power Rangers (PG-13); The Shack(PG-13);
WATERWORKS CINEMAS930 Freeport Road, near Aspinwall, 412-784-1402Beauty and the Beast (PG); TheBoss Baby (PG); Get Out (R);Ghost in the Shell (PG-13); Kong:Skull Island (PG-13); Life (R);Power Rangers (PG-13)
PITTSBURGH
MANOR THEATER1729 Murray Ave., Squirrel Hill, 412-422-7729Beauty and the Beast (PG); Ghostin the Shell (PG-13); Trainspot-ting (R, March 31 and April 1); T2:Trainspotting (R); The Zookeeper’sWife (PG-13)
HARRIS THEATER809 Liberty Ave., Pittsburgh, 412-682-4111The Blackcoat’s Daughter (R, April1-2); Wilson (R)
ROW HOUSE CINEMA4115 Butler St., Lawrenceville, 412-904-3225Theme: “Jean-Luc Godard”:Alphaville (NR); Breathless (NR);Contempt (NR); Pierrot le Fou(NR)
REGENT SQUARE1035 S. Braddock Ave., Regent Square, 412-682-
4111Personal Shopper (R)
SOUTHSIDE WORKS CINEMA425 Cinema Drive, South Side, 412-381-7335Beauty and the Beast (PG); TheBoss Baby (PG); CHiPs (R); GetOut (R); Ghost in the Shell (PG-13);Kong: Skull Island (PG-13); Life (R);Logan (R); Power Rangers (PG)
AMC LOEWS WATERFRONT 22300 W. Waterfront Drive, West Homestead,
412-462-6550Beauty and the Beast (PG); TheBelko Experiment (R); The BossBaby (PG); CHiPs (R); The Devo-tion of Suspect X (NR, Englishsubtitles); Get Out (R); Ghost inthe Shell (PG-13); Hidden Figures(PG); Kong: Skull Island (PG-13);The Last Word (R); The LEGO Bat-man Movie (PG); Life (R); Logan(R); Naam Shabana (NR, Englishsubtitles); Power Rangers (PG-13);The Shack (PG-13); Singin’ in theRain (NR, April 5); Song to Song(R); Wilson (R); The Zookeeper’sWife (PG-13)
From the North Hills to the national tour of ‘Cabaret’At the age of 5, little Leigh
Ann Larkin of Ross alreadyfelt the draw of Pittsburgh’srich variety of cultural at-tractions.
She took dance classesat Ross Elementary of theNorth Hills School District,was part of the local GoodVibrations performers, amember of the singing-danc-ing North Star Kids, and hadlead roles in musicals whilea student at North Hills HighSchool.
All have helped set thestage for her national tournow as Sally Bowles, thelead of Roundabout TheaterCompany’s “Cabaret.” Nextpit stop: Philadelphia’s Acad-emy of Music, April 4 to 9.(“Cabaret” played Pittsburghjust before Larkin assumedthe lead role.)
What really rang the bellfor Larkin as a youngsterwas Pittsburgh Musical The-ater. “I was in my junior yearat North Hills High when Ifound about them.
“I got really wonderfulprofessional training andencouragement there,” shesays, citing Ken Gargaro,Pittsburgh Musical The-ater’s now-retired founder, asinstrumental in getting hercareer on path. “He taughtme how to be professional.”
He was not alone. “FromAnnie,” she says of AnnieSnyder, director of North
Star Kids, “I learned how tohave stage presence.”
After spending a year atPoint Park University, shetransferred to and graduatedfrom the University of Cin-cinnati — College Conserva-tory of Music in 2002.
“I heard it had the bestmusical theater program inthe country, and that’s whatI wanted, the best school pos-sible,” says Larkin.
The actress/singer went onto take lead roles in Broad-way productions of “Gypsy”(Dainty June) — where shegot to act alongside her idol,Patti Lupone — and “A LittleNight Music” (Petra).
Which led to “Cabaret,”
the gritty incandescentKander and Ebb musical thatoffers a peek of the perverselifestyles of the WeimarRepublic demimonde, whichhelped set the stage for Na-zism creeping over Germany.
“I saw ‘Cabaret’ on Broad-way when I was a teen,”recalls Larkin of the TonyAward-winning revivalwhich starred NathashaRichardson and Alan Cum-ming in 1998.
“I didn’t quite get it then,”she concedes. “I couldn’tquite grasp the message.”
Now she says the show,which debuted more than50 years ago, “will never bedated. Its message just hits
you in the gut.”Being part of the hit, she
had wear some revealingcostumes on stage, all partthe “naught girly Sally.” Howhas that set with her father,Ed Wielgus, school boardpresident of North Hills?(Larkin is her stage name.)
“My father is so proud ofme,” she says. “He gets thebusiness I’m in.”
With all her success —including roles in “Bye ByeBirdie” at the Pittsburgh Civ-ic Light Opera and “Beautyand the Beast,” portrayingBelle — she will know she’sreached the pinnacle whenshe can wave the TerribleTowel at every home game ofthe Steelers. A diehard foot-ball fan and veritable patriotwhen it comes to cheering onthe Black and Gold, Larkinonce confessed that she willreally consider herself a suc-cess when she can afford tobuy season tickets and makespecial trips from wherevershe might be on stage towatch them play.
How’s she doing? “I’m onthe waiting list for seasontickets,” she says proudlywith a chuckle. “And I figureby the time they get to me,I’ll be able to afford them!”
Michael Elkin is a contributing writer forthe Tribune-Review and an award-
winning arts writer and playwright aswell as author of the novel, “I, 95.”
by MICHAEL ELKIN
Leigh Ann Larkin, a 1998 graduate of North Hills HighSchool and former resident of Ross, plays Sally Bowles inRoundabout Theater Company’s national tour production of“Cabaret.”
JOAN MARCUS | FOR THE TRIBUNE-REVIEW
SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017 · E5
Grey and Gold Terrain, 2015, Leather, 18K gold by BrookeMarks Swanson
Contribution, 2016, goat horn, sheep’s wool, silver by Andrea White
June and October, they’ll be at Oddmall:Emporium of the Weird in Akron, Ohio.
When they started, Brittney says sheexpected that most buyers would be“teenagers that were into the Goth sceneand morbid things, but surprisingly, wedon’t really have many customers likethat.”
“We were just at Horror Realm, and wethought, these are our target demograph-ic people; and then for whatever reason,we didn’t do as well as we hoped,” Neilsays. “So we said, OK, apparently thesearen’t our target demographic people,”
But women are. The couple was sur-prised to find that men tend to be moresqueamish than women when comingupon, say, a sheep’s brain in a globe.
They admit that some people disap-prove of what they do.
At one show, Brittney says, a womanstopped by their table and offered to prayfor them. People make comments onsocial media.
“We do giveaways every couple ofmonths on our Facebook page, just tokeep people engaged and to keep thingsmoving,” she says. “One man won a littlepair of pinky rats in a jar, and there werea lot of comments — this is disgusting,this is unethical, this is gross. That hurtsme, because they don’t know our story.We don’t kill anything and we don’t wantthings to die, but it happens.”
Controversy aside, there’s enoughinterest in oddities to keep Brittney busyin their basement workshop, where sheworks around Tyler’s schedule.
The business has grown to the pointthat they are getting referrals from previ-ous customers and are branching out intocustom creations. On the workbench noware pieces that will go into an engagementring.
“We connected with this guy and hisgirlfriend at a show we did last October,”Brittney says. “He messaged me and said,‘It’s time for me to get engaged, and I’dlove for you to make the ring.’ It’s a batskull, the tiniest little thing, on top ofa bed of amethyst chips, because that’sone of her favorite stones, and it’ll have aglass dome over the top to protect it.”
What kind of woman wears a bat skullengagement ring?
“A very special woman,” Neil says.“She absolutely loves bats,” Brittney
adds.
Shirley McMarlin is a Tribune-Review staff writer. Reachher at 724-836-5750 or [email protected].
Mz. Jones’offers upthe unusualODDITIES · FROM E1
“I like geometric forms,especially sphere and cube,”Kang says. “To me they areperfect in terms of balance andharmony. Balance and harmonyare two important values I liveby as an artist. A sphere lookssame no matter how you lookat it. A cube is consisted of sixsame/equal squares. A squareis, to me, also a perfect geomet-ric shape having same lengthwidth, and angle. So, I find acube more intriguing becauseit’s made up with perfectshapes.”
Conversely, Kathleen Jan-vier of Irving, Texas presentssmashed versions of the formwith “Squashed” and “Ajar.”Here electroformed coppercubes have been created anddeconstructed in a successfulattempt to create what Janvierdescribes as “imitations ofstrength inevitably betrayed.”
Then there is the work ofBrooke Marks-Swanson ofSouth Bend, Indiana. Herhand-crocheted leather brooch“Grey and Gold Terrain” is thefurthest from the cube form, yetstill alludes to it.
“I hand knit and weaveleather into cube forms, alongwith small precious elementsof recycled high karat gold,”explains the artist. “There isa softness and tactile qualityof the leather form due to myunique knitting fabrication ofthe material.”
Marks-Swanson says herwork is and has been abouta sense of place and her lovefor the Midwestern landscape.“Something I developed a deepconnection to while in gradu-ate school at the University ofIllinois, Champaign-Urbana,”she says.
Marks-Swanson is quickto point out that she did notmake this brooch specificallyfor Kyoob. “It fit the descrip-tion in the call for entry quitenicely,” she says. But rather, “itdescribes how man continuesto work tirelessly to groom andcontrol land, land that emergesin tidy divisions — a vista ofgeometry amidst the wild.”
Though most of the pieces
on display are by professionalartists, there are a few studentworks, which are real stand-outs.
Andrea White of ChippewaFalls, Wisc., is currently a stu-dent at University of Wiscon-sin-Stout, Menomonie, Wisc.,pursuing her BFA in metals andcontemporary art jewelry.
In making her piece “Con-tribution,” White says she wasthinking about building blocks.“I wanted to make a buildingblock that represented myMidwestern take on the typesof materials that are helpful,
not hurtful, to the climate crisisthat we are facing,” she says.
The sides of White’s buildingblock are made from goat hornfrom a friend’s farm wheregoats are milked for organicgoat cheese. The inside is filledwith sheep’s wool from Wash-ington state. White says thesterling silver structure thatcontains it all “elevates their(the goats) status.”
Also an undergraduatestudent of metals and con-temporary art jewelry at theUniversity of Wisconsin-Stout,Claire Kayser’s piece “WakingUp with Silver 12/613” com-mands attention for its unusualcombination of materials – abrass and silver box from whichfalls a silver-grey synthetic hairextension.
“My current work focuseson examining the substantialinfluence that media providesas societal pressure,” Kaysersays. “This type of pressuregravitates towards obsessivelydefining beauty, by means ofevaluating self-image, individu-ality, and value.”
In essence, Kayser is usingthe cube form as a metaphor forsociety’s pressures to “fit in.”
And as for the use of the sil-ver hair extension, well, Kaysersays it directly relates to hersister changing her hair colorto a silver-grey, “simply to keepup with the most recent trend.”
Kurt Shaw is the Tribune-Review art critic.
At this exhibit, it’s hip to be squareEXHIBIT · FROM E1
Hollow Cube, 2016, silver, 22Kbi-metal by Dallae Kang
SUBMITTED PHOTOS
Ajar, 2016, electroformedcopper, steel by KathleenJanvier
E6 · SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017
Want your shotat ‘Hamilton?’
The Pittsburgh CulturalTrust announced March 20that renewing season ticketholders will have first accessto buy tickets to see thesmash hit Broadway musical“Hamilton,” when it comesto Pittsburgh during the2018-19 season. We posed afew follow-up questions tothe Trust to help you preparefor when “Hamilton” perfor-mance dates and times areannounced.
Question: What is meantby “will have first accessto Hamilton?”
Answer: At this time,the only way to guaranteeseats to “Hamilton,” whichis scheduled to be part ofthe Pittsburgh CulturalTrust’s PNC Broadway inPittsburgh 2018-2019 season,is to subscribe to the 2017-18PNC Broadway in Pittsburghseason.
Q: Is it guaranteed thata renewing 2017-18 PNCBroadway season ticketholder will be able topurchase tickets to “Ham-ilton?”
A: 2017-18 PNC Broadwaysubscribers are guaranteedthe same number of seatsthat they have ordered intheir 2017-18 subscriptionpackage to “Hamilton’”when it comes to Pittsburghduring the 2018-19 season.
Q: Will there be a limiton the number of ticketseach season ticket holdermay purchase to see“Hamilton?”
A: At this time it has notbeen determined if subscrib-ers will be able to order addi-tional tickets to “Hamilton.”
Q: When will the date ofthe “Hamilton” shows andthe ticket prices likely beannounced?
A: Spring 2018.Q: How will people be
notified that they can pur-chase “Hamilton” tickets?
A: The PittsburghCultural Trust will notifyexisting subscribers throughdirect mail and email. ThePittsburgh Cultural Trustalso will send announcementinformation to the mediaand send information di-rectly to patrons through ouremail list and social mediachannels, which are free tojoin at trustarts.org.
Q: How much doesit cost to renew a PNCBroadway season ticket?
A: Current season ticketpackages range from $175 to
$630 per subscription seat,which includes tickets to sev-en performances. Packageprices vary from season toseason based upon the showsincluded on the season. 2018-2019 season pricing will bepublished in spring 2018.
Q: What are the sur-charges and fees thatpeople should be aware ofthat would be applied topurchasing a season ticketseries? To the “Hamilton”ticket?
A: There is a $10 handlingfee when ordering seasontickets to the 2017-18. Fees for2018-19 season events havenot yet been determined.
Q: Is there a deadline topurchase season ticketsfor the 2017-18 season?
A: Current season ticketholders have until May 15,2017, to secure their seats forthe 2017-18 season. Ordersreceived after this renewaldeadline will be offered bestavailable seating on a firstcome-first served basis. Any-one can order season ticketsnow through the first eventof the (2017-18) PNC Broad-way season, which is “Schoolof Rock” on Oct. 17, 2017, tobe a full season ticket holderand become eligible for guar-anteed seat renewal into the2018-19 season that includes“Hamilton.” Season ticketsare subject to availability.
Q: Why is “Hamilton”not included in the nor-mal package of showsthat comes with a seasonticket?
A. “Hamilton” may be apart of the 2018-19 seasonticket package or may be aBroadway special, whichwill be available as an op-tional added event. Detailswill be provided with the2018-19 PNC Broadway inPittsburgh season an-nouncement in spring 2018.
Q: How can you guaran-tee your tickets are real?
A: Official ticket sourcesfor Pittsburgh CulturalTrust events include: trust-arts.org; our subscriptionphone line, 412-456-1390;our box office phone line,412-456-4800; our group salesline, 412-471-6930, and thebox office at Theater Square,655 Penn Ave. (Downtown).Tickets purchased fromother sources, including un-authorized resale websites,may not be legitimate. Formore information aboutofficial ticket sources, visit:trustarts.org/be-safe
TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Daveed Diggs(left) and Lin-Manuel Mirandaof “Hamilton”performing atthe 2016 TonyAwards.AP
Visit Charleston in the spring
At The Restoration, guests can gather around thefireplace for complimentary wine and cheese each night.
You might have heard,oh, I don’t know, one ortwo thousand times, thatCharleston, S.C., has got itgoing on.
This historic port cityhas embedded itself at thetop of many a “best” list forgood reason. Its food, archi-tecture, culture and charmmake it an ideal getaway,especially in the spring.
Here’s where to stay andplay:
Spoleto Festival USACulture vultures have
been flocking to this state-side spin on the Festivalof Two Worlds in Spoleto,Italy, since 1977. For 17 daysin late spring, a dozenof Charleston’s theaters,churches and outdoor spac-es host operas, plays, danceproductions and concertsat the popular performingarts festival. Highlightsof this year’s installmentinclude a lavish productionof Tchaikovsky’s opera“Eugene Onegin” in therecently renovated Charles-ton Gaillard Center, jazzconcerts by Grammy andTony award-winner DeeDee Bridgewater, and Druidtheater company’s renditionof “Waiting for Godot.” Theshindig — featuring morethan 160 ticketed events — isMay 26 to June 11. Hotel andticket packages are avail-able at gospoleto.com.
Details: 843-579-3100 orspoletousa.org
The DewberryThis former federal office
building went from eyesoreto eye-catching, thanks todeep-pocketed developerJohn Dewberry, who sparedno expense in transformingthe boxy, seven-story struc-ture into a luxury hotel thatdebuted last year. A bastionof midcentury modern de-sign, the 155-room DewberryCharleston (think “MadMen”) is a disrupter in ahotel scene traditionallydominated by an antebel-lum aesthetic (think “GoneWith the Wind”). Vintagefurniture, bedding importedfrom Ireland and enoughmarble to build a mini TajMahal give the place a richfeel, but the vibe is decid-
edly unstuffy. The groundfloor’s sprawling LivingRoom is a welcoming spot tocamp out with your laptopand a cup of coffee, or sidleup to the brass bar for ahandcrafted cocktail likelymade by a mixologist with aformidable beard. The prop-erty sits across the streetfrom Marion Square, hometo the popular CharlestonFarmers Market, 8 a.m. to 2p.m. Saturdays as of April 8(charlestonfarmersmarket.com). Overnight rates startat $299. The hotel is at 334Meeting St.
Details: 843-558-8000 orthedewberrycharleston.com
SurfDon’t be surprised to find
clusters of people swarm-ing around the outside ofoyster bar 167 Raw. They’rewaiting for a table orcounter space to open up atthis bijou Nantucket Islandimport that doesn’t takereservations and is “as bigas a minute,” as one localput it. An ever-changing se-lection of expertly shuckedbivalves and ceviche drawsthe hungry masses, whoalso pack the place for theequally tasty tacos, ahi pokeand sandwiches. ClosedSundays. 289 E. Bay St.
Details: 843-579-4997 or167raw.com/charleston
And turfPork may be king in
South Carolina, but Texaspitmaster John Lewis givesbeef the royal treatmentat his bold entry into thecity’s barbecue scene. Aftermaking a name for himselfin Austin, he built his ownsmokers out of propanetanks and drove them to hisnew home in Charleston lastyear to open Lewis Barbe-cue in the up-and-comingHalf Mile North ‘hood.Ask a manager for a tourof the smokehouse beforesettling in at a picnic tableunder a shady oak tree withyour cafeteria tray full ofdecadent beef brisket, Texashot guts sausage and greenchile corn pudding. ClosedMondays. 464 N. Nassau St.
Details: 843-805-9500 orlewisbarbecue.com
The RestorationWith 54 spacious suites
spread across five buildings,The Restoration feels morelike a collection of pieds-a-terre than a downtownhotel. The intimate vibe ex-tends to the common areas,where guests gather in thelibrary for pre-dinner nosh-ing during the complimen-tary wine-and-cheese hournightly 5 to 6 p.m. A coupleof hours later, help yourselfto fresh-baked cookies andport. Continental breakfastgets delivered each morningto the rooms, all of whichhave kitchenettes — notthat you should be cooking
when surrounded by thismany great restaurants. Thedecor skews rustic-chic withsplashes of indigo, a nod towhat was once one of thestate’s biggest cash crops.The rooftop pool makes arelaxing spot for guests tosurvey The Holy City’s col-lection of church steeples— a view that also can behad by anyone who heads tothe upstairs restaurant andbar. Overnight rates start at$299. 75 Wentworth St.
Details: 877-221-7202 ortherestorationhotel.com
KayakThe Lowcountry has
no shortage of wildlife inand around its waters. Thebest way to take it all in isfrom the vantage point of akayak. “Charleston’s natu-ral wonders are often over-looked; there’s a lot moreto this place than food andhospitality,” said Chris Crol-ley, owner of Coastal Expe-ditions. The company runsa slew of kayak tours outof Shem Creek on the otherside of the iconic RavenelBridge in Mount Pleasant.Usually about three hourslong, the excursions are ledby knowledgeable guideseager to explain the area’secosystem while shepherd-ing paddlers past the creek’sworking shrimp trawlers tovarious points of interest.Some tours are tailored tobird nerds, while othersexplore Charleston Harborat sunset or stop at an islandto scout for ancient sharkteeth and fossils. On ourmellow paddle, we spotteda bald eagle, egrets, a greatblue heron and — best of all— Atlantic bottlenose dol-phins a stone’s throw fromour boats. Tours typicallycost about $65. No experi-ence necessary. 514 Mill St.,Mount Pleasant
Details: 843-884-7684 orcoastalexpeditions.com
Also worth noting•The 70th annual Fes-
tival of Houses & Gardensis your key to the privateresidences and green spacesof some of Charleston’sswankiest historic digs.March 16 to April 22. his-toriccharleston.org/festival
•Creative works thattell Charleston’s story areshowcased in the biggerand better Gibbes Museumof Art, which reopened lastyear after an 18-month reno-vation. gibbesmuseum.org
Lori Rackl is a Chicago Tribune staffwriter.
by LORI RACKL
Festival,food scenein full bloom
The succulent beef brisket at Lewis Barbecue is cooked inJohn Lewis’ custom-made smokers.
PHOTOS: TNS
The compact Raw 167 doesn’t take reservations and seatscan be hard to come by, but the food is worth the wait.
SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017 · E7
Sow seeds or buyfrom the nursery,that is the questionN ew vegetable garden-
ers are often confusedabout whether it’s
best to start their veggieplants from seed or buytransplants from a nursery.And, to make it even moreconfusing, what worksbest for one gardener maynot work the same way foranother.
To clarify this challeng-ing issue for folks who arefairly new to gardening,I’d like to offer some use-ful tips to help you decidewhich is the best methodfor starting the plants inyour vegetable patch.
Tip 1: Seed catalogs area wealth of information.Start your decision-makingprocess by reading the seedcatalog description of eachparticular crop you plan togrow (even if you don’t endup buying the seeds fromthe catalog).
Most seed companiesinclude growing advicefor each of the cropsthey sell seeds for. In thatinformation, you’ll oftenfind suggestions on how toget the plants started. Thegrowing information forany given crop might saysomething like, “sow seedsindoors under grow lightsfour to six weeks beforetransplanting outdoors” or“sow seeds directly into thegarden after the danger offrost has passed.” State-ments like these indicatethe best method for es-tablishing that particularplant in the garden.
If the catalog says theseeds can be sown directlyinto the garden, you can dojust that, unless of course,there’s a geographicalexception listed. Forexample, broccoli can bestarted from seed sowndirectly into the gardenin some climates, but herein Pennsylvania, sowingthe plants from seed maymean the weather will gettoo warm before you canharvest this cool-seasoncrop, causing the plantsto prematurely flower andlimiting your yields.
But, if a catalog de-scription notes that seedsshould be started indoorsunder grow lights and youdon’t have the ability to doso, then that’s typically agood plant to purchase as atransplant from your localnursery.
Tip 2: Timing is every-thing. Whether a particu-lar vegetable is best grownfrom seed or transplantalso has a lot to do with thetiming of its maturation.For vegetables that requirea long growing season andare sensitive to frost, start-ing the plants by directlysowing the seeds into thegarden is a bad idea. Therewon’t be enough timefor the plants to maturebetween the last frost ofspring and the first frostof fall.
For example, sowingseeds of tomatoes, peppers,and eggplants directlyinto the garden is not avery efficient way to growthese crops. Because thesewarm-season veggies arefrost sensitive, you’d haveto wait to sow the seedsinto the garden until themiddle of May, and by thetime the plants are matureenough to produce fruit,the threat of fall frost is onyour doorstep. That’s whythese plants are best plant-ed into the garden as fourto six-week-old transplants,either started indoorsunder lights or purchasedat a garden center.
There are a handfulof crops that are “on thefence” when it comes tothis timing issue. For ex-ample, melons, pumpkinsand winter squash are eas-ily started by sowing seedsdirectly into the garden inthe spring, after the dangerof frost has passed. But,many varieties of thesecrops have a long growingseason, meaning they maynot mature before coldweather returns in the
autumn. Which means thatif you want to grow thesecrops by seeding them di-rectly into the garden, youhave to be sure to choose avariety with a fast matura-tion (less than 90-100 days)so the plants have plentyof time to produce fruitsbefore the end of the grow-ing season arrives.
To overcome this, manygarden centers startmelon, pumpkin, andwinter squash seeds intheir greenhouses and sellthe transplants to consum-ers. These crops typicallydon’t like to be moved oncethey’ve started growing, sothey don’t always do wellwhen grown from thesetransplants. But, plant-ing these plants into thegarden instead of seeds,can help you get a jump onthe growing season. Tip3: Try it both ways andbe flexible. Sometimesyou just have to be will-ing to experiment to seewhich technique is bestfor each particular crop.In my own garden, I oftengrow the same crop fromseed and from transplants.For example, every springI sow several rows of let-tuce seeds directly intomy garden in late March.But, I also go to my localgarden center and buytwo four-packs of lettucetransplants to plant intomy garden. The trans-plants mature faster, givingme an early crop of lettuce;the plants I grew from seedwill then mature a fewweeks later, giving me asecond harvest.
Cucumbers are anothercrop that I often grow bothfrom seeds and trans-plants. Again, this allowsme to extend the harvestand grow several differ-ent varieties in my gardeneach year. The same goesfor beets, kale and Swisschard; sometimes I growthese crops from seed andsometimes I purchasenursery-grown trans-plants. And some years, Ido both!
The plants I always plantinto the garden as trans-plants are tomatoes, egg-plants, tomatillos, peppers,basil, broccoli, cauliflower,cabbage, Brussels sproutsand kohlrabi.
But on the flip side,there are several cropsthat I always grow fromseed sown directly into thegarden. On this list is sum-mer squash, radish, beans,peas, carrots, greens, corn,cucumbers, parsnips, spin-ach, and turnips.
Horticulturist Jessica Walliserco-hosts “The Organic Gardeners” at7 a.m. Sundays on KDKA Radio with
Doug Oster. She is the author ofseveral gardening books, including
“Attracting Beneficial Bugs to YourGarden: A Natural Approach to PestControl” and “Good Bug, Bad Bug.”
Her website is jessicawalliser.com.
Send your gardening or landscapingquestions to [email protected]
or The Good Earth, 622 Cabin HillDrive, Greensburg, PA 15601.
JESSICA WALLISERThe Good Earth
For vegetables that requirea long growing seasonand are sensitive to frost,starting the plants bydirectly sowing the seedsinto the garden is a badidea.
JESSICA WALLISER
Is there really a difference betweenflatbread pizza and regular pizza?
Flatbread tends to be a thinnercrust that’s formed in a more rectan-gular form and is topped with a moreinspired choice of toppings. You aremore likely to find them on the menuin gastropubs.
But pizza can be ordered in thincrust. Even your neighborhood pizzashops lists specialty gourmet pizzaswith their own ingenious combina-tions.
Flatbread pizza can also be foundwith crusts that go beyond yeast-raised dough. They can be made withnaan, an Indian flatbread, or pita, forexample.
Of course, we can also argue thatwonderful pizza can be made onFrench bread or English muffins.
But does it really matter?Pizza — flatbread, deep dish, thin
crust, stuffed crust — is loved by all.The only argument might be whatkind of sauce, topping and cheese toadd for the perfect finish.
Try your hand making these flat-bread pizzas with delicious options ina wide range of flavors.
Sally Quinn is a Tribune-Review contributing writer.
Flatbread Pizza CrustThis recipe comes from Fleis-
chman’s Yeast.While a pizza stone is preferred for
making flat bread, you can also use aheavy baking sheet. Preheat the bak-ing sheet in a 500-degree oven for 10minutes. Transfer rolled flat bread tohot baking sheet using the directionsabove for transferring the dough to apizza stone.1 to 1 1⁄2 cups all-purpose flour3⁄4 cup cake flour1 envelope Fleischmann’s Pizza Crust
Yeast OR Fleischmann’s RapidRiseYeast
2 teaspoons sugar1 teaspoon salt3⁄4 cup very warm water, 120-130 degrees
(If you don’t have a thermometer, watershould feel very warm to the touch.)
CornmealToppings
Preheat oven to 500 degrees. Placepizza stone on lowest rack in oven dur-ing preheating.
Combine 1 cup all-purpose flour,cake flour, undissolved yeast, sugarand salt in a bowl. Add water and mixuntil well blended, about 1 minute.Add additional flour, if needed, toform a soft dough.
Knead on a floured surface, addingadditional flour if necessary, untilsmooth and elastic, about 4 minutes.(To knead the dough, add just enoughflour to the dough and your hands tokeep the dough from sticking. Flattendough and fold it toward you. Usingthe heels of your hands, push thedough away with a rolling motion. Ro-tate dough a quarter turn and repeatthe “fold, push and turn” steps. Keep
kneading the dough until it is smoothand elastic. Use a little more flourif dough becomes too sticky, alwaysworking the flour into the ball of thedough.)
Divide dough into 8 equal sizeportions. Cover dough while workingwith individual portions. (If not us-ing Pizza Yeast, allow dough to rest for10 minutes.)
Roll 1 portion of dough on flouredsurface into a 12-inch-by-4-inch rect-angle. The dough should be extremelythin at this point.
Place flat bread on a well-flouredor cornmeal-dusted pizza peel, flatbaking sheet or the back side of a jellyroll pan. Parchment paper (not waxedpaper) also works. Make sure theflatbread moves freely.
Add desired toppings to the flat-bread.
To bake, slide the flatbread off thepizza peel or baking sheet onto thepreheated stone that is still in theoven. Use a long-handled spatula tohelp transfer the bread if needed.Bake 3 to 5 minutes or until flat breadis lightly browned.
When the flatbread is done, removeit from the oven with a pizza peel.You can also use a spatula or tongs togently transfer the flat bread to a cut-ting board, pizza pan or cookie sheetfor serving.
Repeat with remaining dough por-tions. Any unused dough can be storedin the freezer until later use; wrapeach portion individually in plasticwrap. Store up to 2 weeks in freezer.Thaw at room temperature about 20minutes or in refrigerator about 1hour.
Allow the oven to cool before remov-ing the pizza stone and follow the man-ufacturer’s directions for cleaning.
Makes 8 flatbreads
Topping ideasOnce you decide on the crust – your
own homemade dough; purchasedflatbread crust, such as naan or pita;or purchased dough — your flatbreadpizza can be topped to order.
Here are ways to experience thebest ingredients in terrific flavorcombinations. Adjust and experiment
to find your favorite.Sausage and Peppers: Brown
sweet or hot sausage and drain of fat.Spread crust with pizza sauce and topwith sausage and a mix of pickledsweet and hot peppers. Sprinkle withgrated mozzarella and Monterey Jackcheese. Bake.
Black and Blue: Caramelize thin-sliced onion in olive oil Brush crustwith olive oil. Top with onions andthin slices of ripe pears. Sprinkle withblue cheese and drizzle with balsamicvinegar and bake.
Tex-Mex: Cook ground meat withtaco seasoning and spread on crust.Top with sliced bell peppers andonions and tomatoes. Sprinkle withgrated cheddar cheese and bake. Be-fore serving, top with salsa and sourcream.
Camembert, Date and Pancetta:Cook pancetta or thick bacon in alarge skillet over medium-high heatfor about 3 minutes. Add thinly slicedshallots and cook about 5 minuteslonger or until caramelized. Drainon paper towels. Top flatbread withpancetta-shallots mixture, dot withpitted dates and thin wedges of Cam-embert cheese. Sprinkle with slicedalmonds and bake.
Grilled Cheese and Tomato:Spread dough with pizza sauce andtop with cheddar cheese.
Parmesan Rosemary: Mince garlicand add to olive oil in a small bowl.Brush dough with olive oil. Top withfresh chopped rosemary and freshlygrated parmesan cheese.
BLT: Cook bacon and break intobite-size pieces. Spread dough withpizza sauce, top with halved cherrytomatoes, bacon and blue cheesecrumbles. Bake. Serve with Romainesalad on the side.
Pulled Pork: Spread dough withbarbecue sauce, top with shreddedpulled pork, thinly sliced green onionsand grated fontina cheese. Bake. Servewith a side of cole slaw.
Porky Pineapple: Cook bacon anddrain on paper towels. Spread doughwith onion marmalade, top with well-drained pineapple slices, green onionsand sliced Camembert cheese. Bake.Top with toasted flaked sweetenedcoconut before serving.
by SALLy QUINN
Tasty crust topped with new flavor combinations
FLATBREADIS FANTASTIC
Try your hand at making flatbread pizza dough from scratch.
The Cubano sandwich gets a makeoverThe Cubano — a tradition-
al pressed sandwich layeredwith two (!) kinds of porkand gooey cheese, balancedby tangy pickles and mus-tard — gets a quick-and-easymakeover with this big-batchversion. Soft, squishy potatorolls replace the traditionalcrusty rolls for when youdon’t want to be panini-ingsandwiches to order. Instead,by using a heavy sheet panto press the sandwiches intocrispy, melty form, you canmake a dozen at a time with-out breaking a sweat.
Casey Barber is a writer for TheKitchn.com, a blog for people who love food and
home cooking.
Cubano Sheet Pan Sliders3 tablespoons yellow mustard1 tablespoon mayonnaise12 dinner roll-sized potato buns
(like Martin’s), sliced in half12 slices deli ham (about 1/2
pound)1/2 pound sliced roasted pork
shoulder, or un-sauced pulledpork
24 round dill pickle slices12 slices deli Swiss cheese
(about 1/2 pound)Oil for brushing the rolls
Preheat the oven to 400degrees. Line a 9-inch-by-13-inch rimmed baking sheetwith parchment paper.
Stir the mustard andmayonnaise together in abowl, then open each roll andspread the mustard mixtureon both sides. Line the rollsup on the prepared bakingsheet and fill each one withham, roast pork, pickles, andcheese. Fold the slices ofmeat and cheese over on eachother a few times as needed tomake them fit loosely withinthe bounds of each roll.
Close each roll and lightlybrush the tops with vegetableoil.
Place a second sheet of
parchment paper on thesliders, then top with a large,heavy baking sheet or adouble-burner griddle so thatthe sandwiches are presseddown. Place in the oven andbake for 10 minutes, until thecheese is completely meltedand the sandwiches aretoasty. Serve warm or at roomtemperature.
Recipe notes: The sand-wiches can be assembled upto 4 hours in advance. Coverthe sheet pan with plasticwrap and refrigerate untilready to bake on site. Orpress and bake the sandwich-es, then reheat in a 300-de-gree oven if desired.
Makes 12 sliders
by CASEY BARBER
E8 · SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017
A braised brisket recipe that’s perfect for any dinner partyLet’s get this out of the
way early: you don’t needa Passover brisket recipe,because you will never makeone that is better than yourgrandmother’s, and youwouldn’t even try.
But maybe you’re host-ing dinner for friends thathappens to look a little like aSeder, and you want a greatrecipe that will never everlive up to that other brisketyou love unconditionally(wink wink). Luckily, thisrecipe for Red Wine BraisedBrisket is perfect for any din-ner party, or weeknight, forthat matter.
Brisket comes from thebreast of a cow, and is usu-ally sold in one large pieceor broken down into twosmaller cuts, the flat and thepoint. It’s notoriously toughand you’ve likely had a piecethat is bone-dry and bland.But done right, the thing thatcan make a brisket undesir-able is really what makes itso good.
Brisket falls into a cat-egory of meats that shinewhen cooked low and slow.That can include smoking atlow temperatures, a leisurelyoven-roast, or a long andflavorful braise. Braising isa great choice because thecooking liquid imparts flavorinto an otherwise bland cutof meat.
The red wine in ourmarinade, which eventu-ally becomes your braisingliquid, works not just toflavor the brisket and sauce,but also to tenderize. Theacidity in wine breaks downproteins, so make sure togive it enough time to reallydo its work.
After braising, the bris-ket is rubbed in persillade,which is a very fancy wordto describe a very simplething. A mixture of choppedparsley, garlic, oil and otherseasonings, persillade canbe used to season or garnishalmost any dish. It is oftencombined with bread crumbs(or matzoh, in this case) andused as a crunchy, colorfulcoating for meat and fish.
By now, you’re probablystarving, and we haven’t
even told you the best thingabout this recipe. Not onlyis it delicious and amazing,but like most braises, thisbrisket is going to taste evenbetter if you make it aheadof time.
That means that on theday of your dinner, all youhave to do is gently reheatit, cover with the persillade(which you can also makeahead), and give it a quickbake to warm through.That’s basically 10 minutesof work, leaving you plentyof time to explain yourself toyour grandmother.
Red Wine Braised BrisketServings: 10Start to finish: 11 hours
15 minutes (Active time: 45minutes)
The key to the brisket isthe marinade, and a handyway to marinate it is to placethe meat in a large zipper-locked plastic bag. Pour in
the marinade, and seal thebag. Turn the bag a fewtimes to thoroughly coat themeat.3 to 4 pounds beef brisket, fat
trimmed2 cups dry red wine4 cloves garlic, chopped1 small onion, chopped2 carrots, chopped2 stalks celery, chopped1 teaspoon black peppercorns,
cracked1 teaspoon thyme leaves2 tablespoons vegetable oil1⁄4 cup tomato paste3 cups low-sodium beef stockPersillade (recipe follows)Roasted Cippolini Onions (recipe
follows)Place brisket in a sealable
plastic bag or in a large shal-low baking dish. In anotherbowl, combine wine, garlic,onion, carrots, celery, pep-percorns, and thyme. Pourmixture over brisket, cover(or seal). Turn the bag a fewtimes or stir the mixture tothoroughly coat the meat.Marinate in the refrigerator
for at least 8 hours.Preheat the oven to 350
degrees F. Remove the brisketfrom the marinade andpat dry with a paper towel.Reserve about half of themarinade. Pat beef dry.
In a large heavy-bottomedsaucepan or Dutch oven,heat the oil over high heatuntil wisps of smoke appear.Place dry brisket in pan andsear on all sides until goldenbrown, then transfer to aplate.
Reduce the heat to medium-low and pour off the fat. Addthe tomato paste and cook un-til the color deepens and ap-pears rusty, about 4 minutes.Add the reserved marinadeand use a wooden spoon toscrape any brown bits fromthe bottom of the pan.
Return the brisket to thepan and add stock (you maynot need all of the stock. Thebraising liquid should comeabout 1/3 of the way up thebrisket).
Bring to a simmer, cover,
and place in preheatedoven. Braise until meat istender, about 1 1/2 hours.(Test meat for doneness bypiercing with a roasting fork.If fork enters meat withoutresistance and brisket easilyslides off, the meat is done.)Transfer the brisket to afoil-lined baking sheet andset aside.
Skim any fat from thecooking liquid. Carefullytransfer the braising liquidto a blender and processuntil smooth. If remainingsauce is too thick, add addi-tional stock; if it is too thin,simmer over medium heatuntil it has reduced. Seasonwith salt and pepper, to tasteand set aside.
Sprinkle the persillade overthe cooked brisket and gentlypat down to adhere. Returnto the oven and bake until thepersillade is lightly goldenbrown, about 10 minutes.
Slice the brisket into thinslices and serve with thesauce and roasted vegetables.
PersilladeServings: 10
2 cups matzo meal1 cup flat-leaf parsley leaves,
finely chopped1 clove garlic, crushed1⁄2 cup olive oil
In a bowl, combine thematzo meal, parsley, garlic,and oil. Toss to combine andset aside until needed.
Roasted Cipollini OnionsServings: 10
2 tablespoons olive oil10 garlic cloves1 pound Cipollini onions, peeled1 teaspoon kosher salt1⁄2 teaspoon freshly ground
black pepper1⁄2 teaspoon chopped thyme
Preheat the oven to 375degrees F.
In a large bowl, combinethe oil, garlic, onions, salt,and pepper, and toss to coat.Spread on into a baking dishor roasting pan and coverwith foil.
Cook until the onions beginto soften, about 10 minutes.Remove the foil, stir the on-ions, and return to the oven.
Roast until the onions aretranslucent, very tender, andlightly browned around theedges, about 30 minutes.
Nutrition informationper serving of brisket: 332calories; 175 calories fromfat; 19 g fat (6 g saturated; 0 gtrans fats); 72 mg cholesterol;173 mg sodium; 5 g carbohy-drate; 1 g fiber; 2 g sugar; 28 gprotein.
Nutrition information perserving of persillade: 190calories; 98 calories fromfat; 11 g fat (1 g saturated; 0 gtrans fats); 0 mg cholesterol;6 mg sodium; 22 g carbohy-drate; 1 g fiber; 0 g sugar; 3 gprotein.
Nutrition informationper serving of the onions:48 calories; 24 calories fromfat; 3 g fat (0 g saturated; 0 gtrans fats); 0 mg cholesterol;193 mg sodium; 5 g carbohy-drate; 1 g fiber; 2 g sugar; 1 gprotein.
This article was provided to TheAssociated Press by The Culinary
Institute of America in Hyde Park, N.Y.
THE CULINARY INSTITUTE OF AMERICA
Red Wine Braised Brisket
AP
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1 & 2 Bedroom, Central Air, fullyequipped kitchens. Heated Pool.6 & 12 month leases available.
Call today!! 724-539-3224 EHO
LATROBE AREAWhitney South Townhouses &
Garden Apartments.2 bedrooms, 1-1/2 to 2 baths, fully
equipped kitchen, w/w, garage,central air, no pets.
724-423-6685
NEW KENSINGTON, Efficiency, 1room, furnished, eq kit, near bus/shopping, Includes all util, $350; Nopets. 724-472-4141
WILLIAMSBURGEAST APTS
1 & 2 Bdr's $460-$570+ElecIncludes Basic Cable.
No Pets!Conveniently Located NearWestmoreland Mall & Rt 30.
Call 724-853-8201
APT'S FOR RENTPITCAIRN
1-2 Bdr Apts $550-$650+Utils.Available April 1st4 Bdr $850+ Utils.
CLAIRTON2 Bdr House $650+ Utils.
With Equipped KitchenAll Section 8 Appropved.
LATROBE1- 2 Bdr $675-$850+
Electric Includes GasCall Paula 724-733-8006
Between 9am-5pmPhoenician Realty Group LLC
ALL HOMES OPEN SUNDAY!
IRWIN/PENGLYN, Spacious 2BR, Townhouse, Air, EquippedKitchen, 1 1/2 BA, Basement,Laundry Attachments, No Dogs,$700+ utilities. 724-523-3131
IRWIN/PENGLYN, Quality 2 BR,Townhouse, Appliances, Air,Garage, Balcony, Laundry, At-tachments, No Dogs, $800 + util-ities. 724-523-3131
YOUNGWOOD Large 1 bedroom,range & refrigerator, $550+ secu-rity & references. Includes heat,water & sewage. 412-601-4173
Latrobe, Holiday Acres, Acceptingapplications for 1,2,3 & 4 Bedroomsunits. Rent is income based.Call 724-539-7010.
LIGONIER, 2BR, residential area,w/w, updated equipped kitchen,on street parking avail., equippedlaundry on premises, backyardfor relaxing. Starting $610+ ele-cric. 412-459-0111x777
LIGONIER, 1 block from diamond,2nd floor, 3 bedroom, 1.5 bath,equipped kitchen, 1500 sqft,laundry area, off street parking,$900+ elec. 412-459-0111x777
UNITY TWP./NEAR AIRPORT,Split Level 3 BR, 2.5 BA, 120Whitfield Dr., Unique entry way,finished basement, gas FP, manyextras! $244,900. 412-600-4048.
VANDERGRIFTLarge 3 BR, 2 story, Equipped
kitchen & laundry. Section 8 ready.No pets. Call 724-568-2546
LATROBE AREARemodeled, 1& 2 bedroom
Section 8 acceptedCall: 724-875-0882
NORTH HUNTINGDONCompletely updated Townhouse,
2 BR, microwave, laundry hookups,central air, garage door opener$725+ utilities. Non smoking
premises, no pets. 724-331-3760
MT PLEASANT 3 Bedroom,newly remodeled, $595+ utilities,laundry hookups, no pets, quietresidential neighborhood.724-423-5888 Leave message.
NEW ALEXANDRIA 2 bedroom$550, water, sewage & trash in-cluded. Pets ok. Beautiful large
apartment. 724-454-7607
LATROBE $4951 bedroom, newly renovated,beautiful quiet neighborhood,
No pets. 724-454-7607
MCKEESPORT Christy Park Du-plex Large 2 BR, Updated, base-
ment with laundry hook-ups,detached garage, $550
Plus Utilities, Call (412) 915-0224
LATROBE, 1br, 1st floor, eat in kit w/stove, $435 plus util and sec dep.724-537-7761, 9am- 5pm
SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017 · F3TRIBUNE-REVIEW
HAWKSWORTH GARDENSMove in SPECIAL!
First Month FREEfor qualified applicants.
$100 Security Deposit2 Bedroom Apts.
NO APPLICATION FEEHeat, A/C & Electric
ALL Included!Off Street Parking
750 N. Main St. E-3, Greensburg724-837-4146
HUNTINGDON VILLAGEHUNKER, PA
Affordable HousingNow Taking Applications For 2
Bedroom Apt's Section 8-NOVOUCHER NEEDED! Includes:Water/ Trash/ Sewer.Credit/Criminal Checks. On Bus LineWestmoreland Transit. ForMore Info Call 724-696-4015
GREENSBURG Immaculate ParkLane Townhomes. Sale/ Lease.Quiet residential neighborhood.C/A, Gas fireplace, Fullyequipped kitchen, 2 car garage. 3BR, 2.5 BA, Tenant pays Gasheat & Elec. $1325/mo. No undergrads, No pets. 724-850-7768
GREENSBURG Townhome, 2bd, 1 1/2 bath, Equip Kit, AC,Large Garage, Laun. Hookup NoPets, Credit. $675 & Elec. 412-758-4338
GREENSBURG, Near Hospital,Nice 2 BR,2nd floor, air, equippedkitchen, laundry facility, no dogs,$615+ utilities. 724-523-3131
GREENSBURG In Town Living,3rd Fl. Efficiency, 1 Bedroom,EIK, w/Appliances, $500 Inc. All.No Pets, 724-834-8686
GREENSBURG/SOUTH, Small 1BR house. Stove, refrig, a/c.Clean. $650/mo + utilities. Petsextra. 724-836-0847
GREENSBURG SW 2 BR, 1 BA,kit, LR, laundry in basement, lg.front porch, $800 includes allutilities. 724-787-8129
SUBURBAN ESTATESNew 2 & 3 Bdr Homes
$700 To $950/Rent Or LTP/Criminal/Credit Check/Deposit.
Call 724-834-0931
ARNOLD/NEW KENSINGTONand VANDERGRIFT
2 & 3 bedroom.724-335-5550
PLEASANT UNITY, (2) 2br apts, nopets, $575 - $625. plus util, sec dep,credit check. 724-423-5591
JEANNETTE, 228 West VirginiaWay, 3br, fully equipped kitchen,2 ba, $750; Tenant pays electric.412-337-0690
Autumn BrookApt. Homes
1 & 2 Bedroom Garden Apts. 3 &4 bedroom townhouses. 1 & 2bedroom ADA Units. Utilities
included. Rent based onincome. Mon-Fri. 724-836-5260
NEW STANTON, 2 BR, kitchen,dining room, living room, bath,w/w, full dry basement, gas hotair, garage on level 1/2 acre,$650 + utilities. 724-925-2918
GREENSBURG- 2 Bedroomhouse, laundry area, 2 car garage,A/C $650+ security & some utilities.
724-640-6199
SCOTTDALE 1/2 duplex, 5 rooms,2BR, basement, 1/2 acre, w/w, a/c,newly painted, no pets, $575/month+ security, 724-863-9760
GREENSBURG 2BR townhouse,full bsmnt, laundry hookups, offstreet parking, no pets, non-smoking premises. $600+gas &elec. 724-834-8981
T
LATROBE/UNITY TWP . Updated,Clean 2 Br.Duplex, New Carpet,Paint, $550+ No Pets, Non Smok-ing Premise 724-834-8686
GREENSBURG Gorgeous 2 BRtownhouse, appliances, air, fire-place, deck, garage, No pets..$950+ 724-834-8686
DELMONT Farmette - 4 bedrooms, 3full baths, 1 partial bath, 10 acres, 3horse stable. Fireplace and air con-ditioned. $1,850 412-559-8256
MT PLEASANT, Spacious 3 BRHouse, 1.5 BA, detached garage,fenced yard, storage area, $725+ security deposit. No pets. Nonsmoking premise. 724-961-7334.
LATROBE Gorgeous 3 Bedroom,All Appliances, C/A, No Pets.Fenced Yard, 2 CoveredPorches, $900+ 724-834-8686
GREENSBURG Talbot Ave., 4 BR,1.5 BA, porch, hardwood floors,appliances, no pets, not hud ap-proved.$825 + util. 724-832-7820
LIGONIER: 1 BR Cottage, $480+security & utilities. 1 small pet OKwith non-refundable pet fee.724-995-8066
F4- SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017 TRIBUNE-REVIEW
SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017 · F5
The Tribune-Review publishes onlythose real estate transactionsvalued at $125,000 or more. RealEstate Transactions provided byRealSTATS, 1911 E. Carson St.,Pittsburgh, PA 15203; 412-381-3880
ALLEGHENYCOUNTYPITTSBURGH2ND WARD• James Wilson to Daniel Grealishat 320 Fort Duquesne Blvd. Unit10K for $280,000.• GT Equity Partn. LLC to JanineCalabro at 320 Fort Duquesne Blvd.Unit 17N for $247,400.• Lisa Hortensia Gonzales Park toCynthia Sutera and Angelo SuteraJr. at 320 Fort Duquesne Blvd. Unit4M for $240,000.4TH WARD• Kenneth Davis to Lisa andJoseph Mollica at 128 Craig St. NUnit 310 for $128,000.• Amera Andrawes trustee toMin Chen at 3618 Frazier St. for$200,000.• Mebdi Asheghi to Shiqi andWenyi Li at 3247 Kennett Squarefor $165,000.• Zdravco Dave Stoici trustee toRGB Blue LLC at 259 Semple St.for $375,000.7TH WARD• David Murch et al. to KSundaram at 5825 Fifth Ave. Unit111A for $235,000.• Olga Tereshko Serven Schreiberto Joseph and Jean Mientus at5523 Ellsworth Ave. for $128,500.8TH WARD• Marla Petersen to JosephReynolds at 8 Clarendon Place for$192,100.• Tait Streams Tomb to Zhao Langat 21 Hemingway St. for $343,000.9TH WARD• Barr Property Development Inc.to Zachary Smith at 86 44th St.for $435,000.• William Winczer to PartrickPalmer at 173D 45th St. for$210,000.• John McCauley to Kayleigh Lipkeat 169 Almond Way for $134,000.• Kevin McLean to Lacey Waltersat 4030 Willow St. for $182,500.10TH WARD• Velma Fayforvich et al. toKurt Dittmer at 926 53rd St. for$148,250.• Agnes Wong et al. to PatrickFunk at 4817 Kincaid St. for$130,000.• Steel Town Properties M2 LLC toJoseph Cameron at Wickliff St. for$298,900.11TH WARD• Lindel Hodge to EhaanProperties LLC at 609 N. St. ClairSt. for $125,000.• Barbara Doolittle to CartusFinancial Corp. at 1160 PortlandSt. and Bryant St. for $499,900.• Cartus Financial Corp. toBenjamin Dratch and Kerra Doyleat 1160 Portland St. and Bryant St.for $499,900.14TH WARD• Edward Bernstein to Mark andTonio Renee Anderson at 5100Fifth Ave. 409 for $210,000.• AMA Real Estate Enterprises2 LLC to James Taylor at 1309Beechwood Blvd. for $1,250,000.• Pascal Ripoche to ChunshengZhou at 5552 Darlington Road for$410,000.• Hugh Nicholas Jr. to EmilyRybinski Benish and Neil Benish at7549 Graymore Road for $370,000.• Maureen Langford to Stephanieand Jonathon Laurenza at 101Homestead St. for $183,900.• Regina Ketter to Edward andKara Mackinson Peters at 230Homestead St. for $131,500.• United Synagogues PennsylvaniaInc. to Pittsburgh ModernRestorations LLC at 2348 PittockSt. for $125,000.• Ambert Barnato et al. to Lee andSusan Segal at 7527 RosemaryRoad for $560,000.• Cartus Corp. LLC to StevenRockwell at 5810 Wilkins Ave. for$570,000.15TH WARD• Susan Barnhorst et al. toJonathan Livingston and Yi Cao at523 Bigelow St. for $198,500.17TH WARD• Kalamare LLC to Kalal HoldingsLLC at 2026 E. Carson St. for$1,600,000.• LRK Investment 1 LLC to PVGReal Estate LLC at 80 S. 15th St.for $163,000.19TH WARD• Carlton Hartman to MW ParkEnterprises LLC at 243 Augusta St.4 for $280,000.• Elise Pringle to Thomas LewisIII at 517 Clemesha Ave. for$128,000.• Melanie Miller Sweeney toStefanie Stitely at 154 Gaskell St.for $164,900.• Sergei Azarkhin to AlessandraCalhoun at 902 Gladys Ave. for$129,000.• Steven Kohman to MickeyGrabner at 153 LaBelle St. for$229,500.
• Elizabeth Maas to Cody andLaura Swedler at 2903 PioneerAve. for $152,500.20TH WARD• Michael Battaglia to PittsburghChartiers FDS 715092 LLC at 1205Chartiers Ave. for $241,750.• David Mazza to ChristopherStone at 2505 Winchester Drivefor $185,000.21ST WARD• Coralie Kartesz to Nicholas andKatie Seftas at 1421 PennsylvaniaAve. for $169,500.22ND WARD• Jonathan Terry to Sean PatrickConley and Emily Elizabeth Cole at1226 Buena Vista St. for $230,000.• Anna Rosenstein to WilliamAffif and Anna Horner at 607 N.Taylor Ave. for $244,698.26TH WARD• Barbara Kolling estate et al.to Benjamin Brewer and SarahFishbein at 107 Richey Ave. for$128,000.27TH WARD• Estate of Nancy Isenberg toDavid Friem at 1806 Termon Ave.for $163,000.ALEPPO• Allen Dufala to Kirby and DaniellWalker at 1002 Sewickley HeightsDrive for $212,000.ASPINWALL• Adam Haas to Richard andKatherine Holzworth at 221 ThirdSt. for $334,000.BELLEVUE• Mary Ann Hirsch to JulianneHirsch at 657-659 Maryland Ave.for $134,000.• Richard Czapko to Peter andPatricia Smith at 701 Means Ave.for $129,000.BETHEL PARK• RHO Enterprises LLC to JackieMitlo at 2110 Brady Place for$195,100.• Eric Langkamp to Ellen Feeney at1280 Cairn Drive for $217,000.• Cartus Financial Corp. to CharlesStewart and Brigid Hartnett at1008 Delfield Drive for $195,000.• Gertrude Scott to Harshit Sethat 1203 Lenox Drive for $133,000.• Mary Ellen Staab to JasonSmith at 4775 Prescott Drive for$190,000.• Jiyun Kim to Amanda Cavill andChristopher Hetrick at 1179 SneeDrive for $278,000.• James Nath to Christian Avila at3343 Sylvan Road for $174,100.CASTLE SHANNON• Nancy Ellen Hopkins to Ann andNeil Press at 916 LindenwoodDrive for $162,000.• Nicholas Lucking to Michelleand Vincent Rodgers at 1054Thornwood Drive for $125,000.COLLIER• Maronda Homes Inc. to RichardAlan and Emily Elizabeth Wymanat 133 Centennial Drive for$428,698.CORAOPOLIS• Kevin Lyons to Cory Peterson at1815 Montour St. for $161,000.CRAFTON• Thomas Stacy Jr. to Debra andDavid Lagamba at 302 Maxwell St.for $249,900.DORMONT• Kenneth York to Christopher andMarcia Buttlar at 2835 BroadwayAve. for $134,900.• Harry James to KRPDevelopment L.P. at 1545 GrandinAve. for $125,000.EDGEWOOD• Alice Marquardt to Mark VanReenen at 218 Oakview Ave. for$135,000.ELIZABETH TOWNSHIP• Ralph Stahley to TrailsideTreasures LLC at 1908 Donner St.for $162,000.• Bardan Partn. to BKG WarehouseLLC at 901 Hayden Blvd. for$200,000.EMSWORTH• MRL Assoc. LLC to MartinLazzaro estate of at 10 Walnut St.Unit 6 for $162,000.FOREST HILLS• Suzanne Cibotti to Allen Perry at604 Cascade Road for $139,000.FOX CHAPEL• Wallace Smith Jr. to PatriciaSmith at 200 Millview Drive for$448,000.FRANKLIN PARK• David Paulson to Jake and KellyJohnson at 1532 Brimfield Drivefor $575,000.• Michelle Imhoff Koval to PeterGeist and Alissa Adams at 2521Country Side Lane for $325,000.• Lawrence Larkin to Kiatikun andSha Luangkesorn at 2468 DogwoodDrive for $330,000.• Curt Conry to Julie Brennan andJustin Papciak at 1630 NormanDrive for $355,000.GREEN TREE• Richard DiPippaa to Laura Colditzet al. and Walter Anthony at 56School St. for $239,900.• Estate of Carol English Lopata toCaitlin Unger and Patrick JosephLucas at 105 Susan Drive for$155,000.HAMPTON• Estate of Regina Marie Genter toAlbert Genter IV at 4553 BucktailDrive for $159,000.• Steve Boggs to Cynthia Wingard
at 3139 Cheltenham Court for$129,900.• Estate of Mark O’Connor toAshley Catanese at 4443 LaurelOak Drive for $140,000.• Ann Barlow Cooke to Paula Millerat 2430 Mina Drive for $182,500.HARRISON• Targeted Real Estate ServicesLLC to Clayton Carrier and MollieWilliams Carrier at 1449 Sixth St.for $125,500.• Maronda Homes Inc. to Darreland Jamie Crowe at 123 AlleghenyDrive for $244,026.• Ashley Ballard Hicks to Keithand Jamie Bastine at 1518 CarlisleSt. for $143,685.INDIANA• Douglas Skura to Rafic Farah andGenevieve Attie at 111 CanvasbackRoad for $480,000.• Glenshaw Properties LLC toBlawnox Investment Group L.P. at3445 Harts Run Road for $300,000.JEFFERSON HILLS• Columbus Family Partn. LLPto Bernard Jason and ChristineJohnston at 221 Andrew Drive for$292,000.• NVR Inc. to Brian Lorson andPatricia Philiph at 342 GreeneDrive for $341,620.• Maronda Homes Inc. to GlennLabosco at 401 Lexie Way for$351,900.KENNEDY• Brian Strelick to Rebecca JeanMeeder and Zachary Lederman at90 Castle View Drive for $167,000.• Eleanor Wagner to VictoriaRasbach at 4032 Crabapple Drivefor $182,000.LIBERTY• Patricia DiMarco trustee toRobert Gasser at 2726 WashingtonBlvd. for $141,000.MARSHALL• NVR Inc. to John and JillianJochum at 416 Fairmont Drive for$293,795.• Celtic Capital LLC to Ian andMegan Wild at Northgate Drive for$221,540.• RT Partn. L.P. to BrennanBuilders Inc. at 170 Seneca Placefor $160,000.
MCCANDLESS• David Taynor to Yong Zhong Wuand Zhong Ai Li at 618 NordicaDrive for $212,000.• Sharon McMorran et al. to DavisFamily Trust November 6,2015 at2009 St. James Place for $175,000.• Daniel Stokes to Ronald andMildred Arnett at 1301 TowneCourt for $246,000.• Theodore Achladis to CharlesHuth and Kathryn O’Leary at10112 Woodbury Drive for$365,000.• Sandra Jennings to PrestonImperatore and Rae Lynn Wargoat 10138 Woodbury Drive for$341,000.• Daniel Babic to Andrew andKristin Patterson at 10142Woodbury Drive for $332,000.MONROEVILLE• Westview Development GroupLLC to Lisa and Thomas Johnson at404 Cottage Lane for $147,000.• Donald Vargo to Paul Chambersat 2143 Pendleton Drive for$213,000.MOON• Jong McGoogan to David andSandra Hess at 7045 BerringerCourt for $360,000.• Estate of Egle Muliolis to GeorgeBeidler and Mary Gerard at 306Blackstone Road for $240,000.• Cherrington Assoc. to PropertyVentures Ltd. at CherringtonParkway for $9,156,449.• First Hotel Investment Corp.to Property Ventures Ltd.at Cherrington Parkway for$3,362,455.• Property Ventures Ltd. to HUBProperties Trust at CherringtonParkway for $32,900,000.• Joseph Seibert to Matthew andAlecia Evans at 100 Olde ManorLane for $675,000.• NVR Inc. to Joshua and DonnMathianas at 355 Ranchero Drivefor $375,001.• Stephen Gertz trustee toElizabeth Kelly and StephenConover at 219 Springer Drive for$155,000.• Martin Louis Miller to MaryJoyce Lykens trustee at 3208Warwick Court for $237,000.MT. LEBANON• Anthony Sanchez to Jessica
Kaulakis and Daniel Smilowitz at214 Dell Ave. for $248,500.• Marcus Eitel to Benjamin andKatrina Thomas at 365 JonquilPlace for $192,000.• Steven Lammert trustee toDavid Brooks at 89 Ordale Blvd.for $239,900.• Principal Commerical LendingLLC to Alex and Allison Ferraro at823 Vermont Ave. for $307,000.• David Brooks to John and AimeeGirod at 151 Vernon Drive for$765,000.NEVILLE• Rick Weber to Kayla and BichriLee at 7210 Front River Road for$310,000.• Patricia McLaughlin to Robertand Elizabeth Matthews at 7111Vivianna St. for $263,000.NORTH FAYETTE• Robin Beers to Susan Kusichat 2211 Hawthorne Drive for$130,000.• Stephen Mendenhall to SIRVARelocation Properties LLC at 111Lilac Court for $278,100.• SIRVA Relocatioin PropertiesLLC to Sanatan Lamichhane at 111Lilac Court for $278,100.O’HARA• Francesco Vescio to Francis Kressat 19 Locust Drive for $160,000.OAKMONT• Delwood Homes Inc. to JosephGentile and Leslie Fitchwell at 226Third St. for $411,725.• Brooks & Blair WaterfrontProperties L.P. to Donald Shireyand Pamela Michalek Shirey at 28Allegheny Ave. for $374,343.OHIO• TOA Sewickley Ridge L.P. toMarilyn Holdren at 104 AmericanWay for $330,145.• Radu Pomirleanu to JeffreyBarnyak and Mary O’Donovanat 120 Rippling Brook Drive for$332,500.• Rajiv Anand to Aaron Donald andJaelynn Blakey at 234 WedgewoodDrive for $440,000.OSBORNE• Sarah Jezo to Matthew Hollowayand Sheila Fretwell at 1501 BeaverRoad for $153,000.
PENN HILLS• Carl Calhoun Jr. to CharlesMorgan at 148 Claymont Drive for$137,000.• Lars Hummel to Jared andCassandra Yeager at 6053Dewayne Drive for $134,900.• Antonia Scheidel to Luis GarinoIV and Bailey Commander at 115Earlwood Road for $169,900.PINE• Pine Development Co. to NVRInc. at 137 Minnock Drive for$140,000.PLEASANT HILLS• Roy Fowler to Lachi and LalDahal at 359 Cavan Drive for$168,500.• Sadie Derry to Norma McCortand Audrey Illene Kreider at 389Old Clairton Road for $203,300.RESERVE• Barnick 2007 Revocable Trust toEric Shiley at 221 Bernardi Drivefor $164,900.RICHLAND• Nicklaus Graczyk to Lucas andSarah McDonald at 221 CoreyDrive for $240,000.ROBINSON• Joseph Posch to Alfred Grilli IIand Theresa Grilli at 1 Ellen Drivefor $207,500.• Colleen Neville Tatum to BarryPintar at 1076 Silver Lane for$175,950.ROSS• Estate of Dorothy Saladiak toAnthony and Jan Ciccozzi at 258Amity Road for $208,000.• Linda Doppes to Eric Barndollarand Emily Stokes at 7007Bennington Woods Drive for$375,000.• Margaret Partridge to BrianMoffitt at 217 Kinvara Drive for$247,000.• Estate of Janet Lee Thornberryto Amitabh Tewari at 13 MapleCourt for $148,000.• Edward Metzger Jr. to MatthewRobert and Lisa Marie Mertz at124 Miller Road for $235,000.• Kiva Properties LLC to EastCrew Horizons LLC at 5307-5309Perrysville Road for $280,000.SCOTT• Alfonso Danzuso III toMelissa and Stephen Goda at 40Crosswinds Drive for $220,000.
• RT Partn. L.P. to Steven andAimee Scott at 760 Lindsay Roadfor $150,000.SHALER• Kevin Tatar to Quinten and FlorDe Abril Cameron at 214 AmherstRoad for $210,000.• Estate of James Werth toPatrick and Pamela Gauntner at2622 Clare St. for $174,000.• Estate of Mildred Jacob to Ralphand Kaci Galford at 2423 ClearviewDrive for $149,900.• Matthew Thompson to JanaeChristine Brookhart and AdamWiktorzewski at 200 E. PennviewAve. for $142,000.• Pinnacle Holdings LLC toNicholas Doney at 135 Lily Drivefor $178,000.• Estate of Nancy Goldstein toJoseph Glackin at 1820 ShalerDrive for $135,000.• Estate of Elizabeth Dague toDennis and Carrie Lane at 1305Sharpsburg Road for $156,000.SOUTH FAYETTE• Tram Homes South LLC to RileyDilworth and Rachel ChristianMonson at 4122 Battle Ridge Roadfor $224,900.• NVR Inc. to Michael and JenniferLudwig at 4528 Walnut RidgeCircle for $445,060.SOUTH PARK• B & B Rapid Property SolutionsLLC to Matthew and JessicaRebholz at 6206 Broad St. for$188,900.• 7 Star Ventures LLC to KevinMiklusko at 6486 Library Road for$1,256,000.SWISSVALE• Mark Connolly to ChristineGilchrist at 7322 Schoyer Ave. for$175,500.UPPER ST. CLAIR• Matthew Minerd to AngelenaSwank & Barnick 2007 Revocableat 2303 Engelwood Drive for$199,000.• Carrie Lynn Allman to Richardand Krista Lang at 2632Lindenwood Drive for $255,500.• Estate of Jerome Boring toMelissa and Richard Filek at 349Myrna Drive for $210,000.
• Leo Pancarii Jr. et al. to ThunderRoad Partn. LLC at 1880 PaintersRun Road for $195,500.• Keith Strain to Lewis RadonovichJr. and Krestin Radonovich at 1140Sky Ridge Drive for $357,000.• Corrine Smith to Bin Gao andQialan Lin at 526 Upper Road for$150,000.WEST DEER• Brennan Builders Inc. to Susanand Edward Marlier at 372Saddlebrook Road Unit 22A for$324,960.WHITEHALL• Douglas Sable to TiffanySolomon at 4547 Country ClubDrive for $220,000.• Howard Gardner to Randy andRobin Monroe at 4702 Doyle Roadfor $173,500.• Mark Schleicher Jr. to Jodi andJoseph Schleicher at 4789 GieseDrive for $200,000.WILKINS• Paul Osman Jr. to Robert andPamela Pasculle at 104 LarchwoodDrive for $126,750.
BEAVER COUNTYBEAVER• Judith Roberts to Lori andJeffrey Derbaum at 1094 TurnpikeSt. for $130,000.BRIGHTON• Marci Cole to Kara Nuzzo at 210Edgewood Drive for $169,500.• Kara Nuzzo to Brandon and KaraMichele at 2600 Tuscarawas Roadfor $146,500.CENTER• Charles Fettinger to Erinand James Tompkins at 110Heathcliffe Road for $324,900.• Erin Reed to Orreo Property Fund3 L.P. at 105 Katerina Drive for$130,500.CHIPPEWA• Eric Richardson to DennisWalton at 102 Waterslide Drivefor $273,000.DAUGHERTY• Richard Cantolina to Joseph andSally Antoon at 118 Main Ave. for$144,000.ECONOMY• John Gavula to Denise Marr at254 Dogwood Circle for $268,000.• David Bryant to Keith Gregory at109 Heath Drive for $235,000.
• Anthony Dipaolo to MichaelLudwig at 480 Sproat Ave. for$133,000.HARMONY• Estate of Paul Lewis to RichardRinehart at 969 Beverly Ave. for$185,000.HOPEWELL• Thomas Berger to ArmandoMarcantonio III at 1054 SweetBrier Drive for $273,000.NORTH SEWICKLEY• Isaco Jones to Brian andKatherine Reed at Foster Road for$325,000.
BUTLER COUNTYADAMS• Brennan Builders Inc. to JamesBatchen and Celine Wessel at5021-5022 Brahms Court for$481,560.• Kevin Kresinski to James GunstJr. at 1733 Constitution Blvd. for$539,000.• Daniel Steinmeyer to ConanShaw at 607 E. Village Green Blvd.for $230,000.• Fulton Development Co. L.P. toNVR Inc. at 102 Hollyberry Courtfor $125,232.• Robert Machin to ElaineNecopolous at 2042 JamestownCourt for $235,000.• Cheryll Anne Haas to Jonathanand Deana Dobosh at 5006Northfields Drive for $415,000.• Camp Trees Partn. L.P. to Joshuaand Stephanie Trembulak at 256Tamarack Drive for $5,506,555.• Michael Allison Colton to AlfredMoen at 303 Union Church Roadfor $253,500.• Li Tzu Tsao to Chang Chen at 312Village Drive for $340,000.BUFFALO• James Truszkowski to Angeloand Patricia DiCello at 113Clubhouse Drive for $255,000.BUTLER TOWNSHIP• Louis Swidzinski to AliciaDananay at 276 Crisswell Road for$155,000.• Michael Higgins to Butler EyeCare LLC at Evans City Road for$128,000.• Dexter Keibler to Joseph and
Courtney Behrens at 132 MapleGrove Drive for $280,000.• Lance Smith to Elizabeth Lantzat 30 Old Plank Road for $145,000.• Estate of Mercedes Wilson toJames and Diane McCauley at 167Sharon Drive for $165,000.• Richard Fulmer to StevenAnderson and Julie Ehrman at 111W. Rockenstein Ave. for $146,500.CRANBERRY• Upton L.P. to 2 Alps Ave LLC at 2Alps Ave. for $1,625,000.• William Salsgiver to Jeffrey andLori Vandiver at 558 Callery Roadfor $570,000.• Heather Lyn Humphreys toZachary Sell and Alycia Kerstetterat 558 Chaparral Drive for$271,000.• Thomas Burwell to Sarah Porterand Matthew Cantrell at 702 EsFarms Drive for $329,900.• SCI Dev Co. Inc. to ClaudiaMedica at Franklin Road for$173,400.• Patrick Sammons to George andKatie Miller at 208 Lafayette Drivefor $274,000.• John Scarfutti to MichelleKoval at 139 Lewisham Road for$241,500.• VC Woods Assoc. L.P. to LongtreeWay Assoc. LLC at Longtree Wayfor $800,000.• Alan Weinberg to Robert andDoris Schmitt at 513 PaddingtonLane for $390,000.• Park Place Marketing LLC to NVRInc. at Powell Road for $162,545.• Daniel Mayer Miller to DanielMilani Kerbauy at 104 StonefieldDrive for $380,000.LANCASTER• Jonathan Dillon to James andThong Champathong Martin at 211High Acres Road for $340,000.• Scenic Ridge Partners L.P. toGeorge and Karen Osan at 2212Southview Drive for $309,334.MUDDY CREEK• La Rae Scheidemantle to CalvinBrooks at 105 Sunset Ridge Roadfor $129,900.SEVEN FIELDS• Ronald Schmoll to As1 LLCat 445 Georgetown Court for$210,000.• Anthony Iezzi to Stone Financing
LLC at 811 Graywyck Drive for$352,500.• Stone Financing LLC to Jeffreyand Tonette Mollohan at 811Graywyck Drive for $352,500.• David Yochus to Paula Guido at209 Hillvue Drive for $180,000.SLIPPERY ROCK TOWNSHIP• Paul Suorsa to Daniel andTiffany L Suorsa at Route 108 for$160,000.ZELIENOPLE• Dwayne Chin to Sheri Christineand Matthew Joseph Contino at 59Marion Drive for $233,000.
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WESTMORELANDCOUNTYBELL• Joseph DePanicis Jr. to Kennethand JoEllen Bowman at 738Schultheis Drive for $200,000.DONEGAL TOWNSHIP• William Steele II to Matthewand Kimberly Miller at 274 DeerFern Drive for $210,000.EAST HUNTINGDON• Eric Swank to Lucy LorraineKing at Buckeye Tram Road for$175,000.EXPORT• Perry Calisti to Jenelle Calisti at6012 Calisti Drive for $135,000.• Perry Calisti to Jenelle Calisti at6012 Calisti Drive for $135,000.HEMPFIELD• Estate of Jacqueline Crowe toJames Brozick at 3 Alta Vita Drivefor $129,500.• Frank Rehak to Bradley and
Kaitlin Kosko at 1345 Denton St.for $163,000.• Andrew Dean to James andSharon Grady at 25 Erie Drive for$167,000.• PKJ Dream Homes LLC to EricJeffery Carroll at 72 FostervilleRoad for $196,000.• Eugene Carlson to Pasqualeand Kristin Gralluzzo at 1275Middletown Road for $175,000.• Eric Simon to Michael andMichelle Vitale at 403 StephanieCourt for $290,000.• William Rehrer to Jeffrey Cole at119 Turnpike Drive for $128,000.• George Silowash to Jason andAmber Poulich at 720 Yancey St.for $160,000.IRWIN• Chester Ludwicki to Timothy andRebecca Cerula at 1806 BarnebyCourt for $289,900.LATROBE• CR2 Realty LLC to JeffreyShafran Jr. and April Shafran at1725 Dailey Ave. for $190,000.LIGONIER TOWNSHIP• Ligonier Property Partn. LLC toKathy Wood at 129 Shaker Drivefor $235,000.LOWER BURRELL• Gary Beveridge to Lisa Antalik at3124 Algoquin Trail for $379,000.• John Kuzmirek to Jeffrey andStephanie Rovnak at 4114 JamesDrive for $255,000.MANOR• NVR Inc. to Ronald and RuthFricke at 371 Brandywine Drive for$395,565.MURRYSVILLE• Harvest Assoc. L.P. to Josephand Bernadette Szarmach at 4721Cooper Lane for $315,900.• Willard Smith to Eleanor JanePrengaman at 5708 Fisher Courtfor $137,000.• BIB Real Estate Co. LLC toSteven and Marianne Pinelli at4003 Grandvue Court for $165,000.• Emily Conners to MichaelNova and Maggie Pysnik at 6456Lindsey Lane for $163,000.• Anthony Thomas to ArchProperties LLC at 212 RainprintLane for $132,000.• Mary Beth Kellogg to JohnHumlan at 6941 Spring Valley Lanefor $129,900.NEW STANTON• Richard Flegal to UnknownBuyer at 123 Stratford Court for$225,000.NORTH HUNTINGDON• Marc Beck to Linda Phillips at11030 Bluebird Drive for $129,900.• Forlove Construction Inc.to Anthony Maroadi at 643Crestwood Drive for $149,900.• John Silverio to Alan Silverio andLeah McGhee at 1728 Diane MerleDrive for $140,000.• Lincoln Hills Realty Assoc. L.P. toCharles and Theresa Fettinger at7693 Natalie Lane for $459,900.• Jeffrey Parry to HahntownAutomotive LLC at 700 RobbinsStation Road for $160,000.PENN TOWNSHIP• Keith Hunter to John Dickun at14 Donna Drive for $175,000.• Paul Stambaugh Jr. to Michaeland Elicia Hooper at 27 PheasantRun Drive for $183,000.• Michael Balistreri to ConanFoster at 1003 Timber Ridge Courtfor $477,500.ROSTRAVER• Thomas Crockett to Richard andZoe Forsythe at 630 James Drivefor $200,500.SALEM• Jason Poulich to Ryan Fink at218 Patrick Lane for $142,000.SEWICKLEY TOWNSHIP• Bernhard Coneybeer to MichaelMarciniak at 142 Wendel Road for$137,000.UNITY• Stephen Kruska to Ian andHeather Hribal at 107 L and S Lanefor $220,000.• Tricia Mucci to Chad Firestone atRoute 130 for $258,850.• Louis DiBridge to Mary LouTownsend at 384 S. ShenandoahDrive for $229,000.• Mary Lou Townsend to JohnTownsend and Victoria LynnO’Barto at 1254 W. Fir Drive for$157,000.UPPER BURRELL• Charles Battaglia to EdwardLeroy and Jennifer Carey at 4091Seventh St. Road for $185,000.• Judith Pison to Noah and KendraValdez at 415 Chapeldale Drive for$227,000.VANDERGRIFT• Walter Carney to John andBarbara McDermott at 3429Garvers Ferry Road for $142,000.WASHINGTON• Melissa Adams to Brittany Hilland John Rotto at 2035 ValleyView Drive for $237,000.YOUNGSTOWN• Jeffrey Shafran Jr. to GregoryCoffman Jr. and Lindsay Coffmanat 2035 Atlantis Drive for$142,900.YOUNGWOOD• Terri Wolfinger to John McKeeland Audrey Boehme at 605 S. FifthSt. for $139,900.
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////////////////////////////////////////////////////// SPECIAL SECTION MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL PREVIEW
Trib: When you started this job, how much of your plan for how to build and run the club was already inplace? And how much has it morphed over the years?
Huntington: A lot of it was conceptualized beforewe came in the door. After talking with Bob (Nutting)and Frank (Coonelly), we bought into the concept of let’ssee what the 2008 club could do. They’d done a nicejob (in 2007) and appeared to be ready to take the nextstep forward. There were some established positionplayers, although most of them were approaching freeagency. There wasn’t much in the farm system otherthan (Andrew) McCutchen, (Neil) Walker and BradLincoln. We knew we were going to have to investheavily in the draft and in the international market. Weknew there needed to be some changeover in personneland some changes in systems and structures.
Unfortunately, 2008 did not go well. We were below.500 at the trade deadline, so we made the decisionto move those veteran players who were nearing freeagency and go full force into talent-accumulation mode.
So much of that first year was about discoveringwhat was good and who was good and who could bepart of the future on and off the field. The next phasewas talent accumulation, then talent development,then major league team maturation, then “Let’spush this thing forward and figure out a way to win aWorld Series.” So a lot (of the plan) was in place early.We’ve evaluated and evolved over time, for sure. Butconceptually, a lot of it was in place as we walked inthe door. Maybe that’s part of the reason why Bob andFrank offered me the position.
Around the time “hope and change” was becoming a hip political slogan, Neal Huntington brought those wordsinto the lexicon of the Pirates’ front office.
“We will systematically work to change the culture of this organization and to return it to a consistent winnerfor the city of Pittsburgh,” Huntington said after being hired as general manager Sept. 25, 2007.
As Huntington begins his 10th season, his message remains the same.There was a melancholia that shrouded the franchise for two decades — epitomized by the “Welcome to hell”
greeting a veteran Pirate once gave to a guy who had just been traded to the team. That sour mood was snapped bythree straight winning seasons from 2013-15.
Under Huntington, the Pirates have invested heavily in player development and have been at the leading edge ofanalytics. The restocked farm system has been ranked the best in the game. Several of Huntington’s lieutenantshave been recruited for prominent roles with other clubs.
Yet, the 2013 wild-card win over the Cincinnati Reds is the Pirates’ only significant postseason victory of theHuntington era. There remains work to be done.
At the outset of the 2017 season, Huntington looked back on his time with the Pirates during a one-on-one withTribune-Review beat writer Rob Biertempfel.
HOPE &CHANGE
by ROb bIERTEMPFEL
10 YEARS LATER, HUNTINGTON’SMESSAGE REMAINS THE SAME
HUNTINGTON · 6
CHRISTOPHER HORNER | TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Q&A WITH PIRATES GM NEAL HUNTINGTON
BASEBALL ’17 SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017
KEVIN GORMAN
Pirates’stars mustbounceback withvengeanceTo explain how the
Pirates dropped 20games in one season,
from 98 wins in 2015 to 78last year, requires the ex-pertise of a baseball man.
Don’t look at me.No, we’re talking about
someone who is investedin changing the cultureof baseball in Pittsburgh,someone who has promisedto field a team that can “con-tend for championships.”
Or, you know, just makethe playoffs as a wild card.
After two decades of los-ing baseball, we lowered ourstandards enough to believePirates owner Bob Nuttingwants to be a winner — evenif he doesn’t want to, youknow, pay for one.
But Nutting, who watchedthe Pirates qualify for theNational League playoffsthree consecutive seasonsfrom 2013-15, has an interest-ing take on the 2016 Buccos:
“We ended up with theseason we did because theteam and organizationunderperformed the level oftalent that we had,” Nuttingsaid. “I don’t think it wasnearly so much that wedidn’t have sufficient talentto make the run. We hadsome very good players whodid not perform up to theexpectations that we had.I really think it’s far moreexecution than what we hadput together.”
So, it’s not that the Pirateswere pitching poorly, relyingtoo heavily on rookies inthe starting rotation. It’snot that they let go of twoformer first-round picks andfranchise building blocksin Neil Walker and PedroAlvarez, whose replace-ments failed to match theirproduction.
It’s that the very goodplayers didn’t do theirpart, a suggestion that thestruggles fell squarely onthe shoulders of formerAll-Stars like AndrewMcCutchen, Gerrit Cole andJosh Harrison.
And you know what?Nutting is right.Of course, it’s all of those
things and much, muchmore. The Pirates wereflawed, especially in com-parison to the World Serieschampion Chicago Cubs.
But if the Pirates wantto return to winning ways,if they want to compete forthe NL Central Division titleand a spot in the playoffs,it’s going to require betterperformances.
McCutchen and Cole arethe other former first-rounders expected to be thecornerstone players for thePirates. Their dropoffs lastseason hurt tremendously,so bounce-back years arenecessary.
McCutchen’s batting aver-age slipped from .317 in hisMVP season to .256 last year,his strikeouts increasedby 42 and his stolen basesdecreased by 21.
After being shopped inthe offseason, McCutchen is
GORMAN · 6
///////////////////////
»A breakdown of Huntington’s history of drafts and trades PAGE 7»How the Pirates must improve to catch the Cubs PAGE 2INSIDE
Pirates generalmanager Neal
Huntingtonsmiles as
he watchesbatting practice
at GeorgeSteinbrenner
Field before agame against
the Yankeeson March 5.
Pirates general manager Neal Huntington talks withJosh Bell before a spring training game March 15 atLECOM Park in Bradenton, Fla.
CHRISTOPHER HORNER | TRIBUNE-REVIEW
2 · SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2
STARLING MARTE
CAREERBA OPS.292 .801
2016BA OPS.272 .793
START STRONG,FINISH STRONGER
During spring training lastyear, the players and coacheskept stressing the importanceof piling up early-seasonvictories. In 2015, the Pirateswon only 17 of their first 35games.
When they finished twogames out of first place in thedivision, the Pirates lookedback wistfully at those 18 lossesthat slipped away in April andMay.
The Pirates began last seasonwith 22 games against NLCentral teams and 13 againstnon-contenders Detroit,San Diego, Arizona andColorado. They squandered theopportunity by going 18-17.
Worse yet, the Piratesstaggered to the finish line,going 11-24. In that stretch, theywere swept at home by Miami,absorbed three losses againstthe Cubs to trigger an eight-game losing streak and wereswept by the Cardinals in theseason’s final weekend.
“You need to be peaking atthe end of the season,” pitcherChad Kuhl said. “That stretchin August and September iswhen you need to be playingyour best ball.”
Also, it would help if thePirates were better able to beatteams they should beat. Theywent 20-18 against the Reds andBrewers last season, which wasonly a modest improvementon their 17-21 mark vs. thosebottom-feeders in 2015.
“It’s good to get off to a hotstart,” Kuhl said. “But it’s alsoimportant to be consistent andplay good baseball the entireyear.”
MAKE MORE PLAYSThe Pirates ranked 27th
in the majors in defensiveefficiency, converting 68.3percent of balls in play intoouts.
The Cubs were first with asparkling 73.2 percent rate —the best mark in the majorssince the White Sox had a72.8 rate in 1991.
The Pirates made 111 errors(third most in majors) and
allowed 4.68 runs per game (theninth-highest average).
“We know we need toimprove on defense,” Hurdlesaid. “We’re trying to playfast but not hurry, and that’scarrying over into our game.They’re gifted athletes.Sometimes when they make itlook easy, it’s not.”
Being at the forefront ofutilizing defensive shiftshelped the Pirates boost theirdefensive efficiency rate fouryears ago. However, they’vetaken big step backward thepast two seasons.
“When we shift, it createsholes. It’s going to happen,”shortstop Jordy Mercer said.“If we can all move as a unitand all play our part, thepercentages are going to bethere. The biggest thing isbuying into it — and it’s hardto buy into it, trust me — andbelieve in it.”
During spring training, thePirates did more drills usingthe shift than they had the pastfew years. There also might besome different usages of theshift during the season undernew coach Joey Cora thanthere was under coach NickLeyva.
“We’re still going to shift, butI don’t know if we’ll be as crazyabout it as we’ve been the pastfew years,” Mercer said.
STAY HEALTHYAccording to research by
Stan Conte, the former head
of the Los Angeles Dodgersmedical department, MLB setrecords last season for totalplacements on the disabledlist (561), days lost on the DL(31,662) and dollars lost to DLstints (more than $670 million).
In terms of total days lost,the Pirates rank slightly betterthan the MLB average of thepast three seasons. Last year,they racked up 805 total dayson the DL, the seventh-lowesttotal in the majors.
However, the impact ofinjuries is not felt solely in thenumber of days missed.
Losing a slugger for 15 dayswould be a tougher blow fora team than being without a
long reliever for two months.Timing matters, too. A clusterof injuries, even for a few days,can be devastating.
Twenty-five percent of alltrips to the DL in the majorslast year were made by right-handed starting pitchers.
The Pirates were bit by thatbug in a bad way as Gerrit Coleand Jameson Taillon missedtime. Injuries wrecked Cole’sseason, but Taillon was notslowed by his DL stint and stillput together a solid year.
Cole (elbow), Chris Stewart(knee surgery), Elias Diaz(infected leg), A.J. Schugel(shoulder), Josh Harrison(groin strain) and StarlingMarte (lower back tightness)ended the season on the DL.Also, Neftali Feliz didn’t pitchafter Sept. 3 (although he neverwas placed on the DL) becauseof an arm injury that the teamnever explained.
ATTACK BULLPENSCompared to the 2015 season,
the Pirates last year producedfewer comeback wins (32 to 43),walkoff wins (11 to 4) and winsin their final at-bat (20 to 13).
They were 6-69 when trailingafter six innings, compared to7-50 in 2015. One reason is mostof the regular position playershad down years against reliefpitchers.
Relievers held NationalLeague batters to a .246 averageand a .717 OPS last season.
The Pirates hit .244 witha .712 OPS against reliefpitchers.
The role of bullpenshas taken on even greaterimportance the past fewseasons, with managersdispatching waves of hard-throwing relievers to blowaway batters in short-burstoutings.
The mark of an elite hitter isthe ability to succeed againstrelievers, when the batterusually loses the platoonadvantage and faces sharper,fresher arms.
Rob Biertempfel is a Tribune-Reviewstaff writer. Reach him
at [email protected] via Twitter @BiertempfelTrib.
Last season, the Pirates did not finish merely a few games out of first place in the NL Central standings. They were buried.The chasm between the Pirates and first-place Chicago Cubs was 301⁄2 games. It was the Pirates’ biggest division deficit since
2010, when the team amassed 105 losses and finished 34 games behind Cincinnati Reds.The Pirates were eliminated from the NL Central race Sept. 11. Sixteen days later, they were knocked out of the hunt for a
wild-card berth.The second NL wild-card spot went to the San Francisco Giants, who wound up 81⁄2 games ahead of the Pirates.“Everybody was trying to give everything they had. We just didn’t have enough,” manager Clint Hurdle said. “Sometimes,
the reality of just not being good enough can really infuse you for what you need to do better.”So what should the Pirates do better in 2017 to make up ground in the NL Central standings and NL wild-card chase?
BASEBALL ’17 CATCHING THE CUBS2017
CLOSING THE GAPPIRATES HAVE SEVERAL AREAS TO IMPROVE
IN PURSUIT OF CUBS, NL CENTRALby ROb bIERTEMPFEL
Pirates days spenton the disabled listIn terms of total days lost, thePirates rank slightly better thanthe MLB average of the pastthree seasons. Last year, theyracked up 805 total days on theDL, the seventh-lowest total inthe majors.
Source: Hardballtimes.com
’12
’13
’14
’15
’16
506
409
938
805
1,346
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Cubs Pirates
Being at the forefront of utilizing defensive shifts helped thePirates boost their defensive efficiency rate four years ago.However, they’ve taken big step backward the past two seasons.
TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Pirates defensive efficiency
Source: baseball-reference.com
60
70
65
55
75
67.1%30th
69.7%11th
69.4%11th
69.8%8th
68.4%25th
68.1%24th
67.8%29th
69.2%18th
70.6%4th
69.5%9th
67.9%26th
68.3%27th
68%22nd
73.2%1st
Performance againstrelief pitcher
FRANCISCO CERVELLI
CAREERBA OPS.293 .757
2016BA OPS.274 .684
JOHN JASO
CAREERBA OPS.256 .716
2016BA OPS.237 .703
JOSH HARRISON
CAREERBA OPS.286 .732
2016BA OPS.253 .625
JORDY MERCER
CAREERBA OPS.247 .663
2016BA OPS.260 .718
ANDREW MCCUTCHEN
CAREERBA OPS.283 .861
2016BA OPS.264 .777
GREGORY POLANCO
CAREERBA OPS.237 .683
2016BA OPS.251 .766
Source: baseball-reference.com
CYa
Y T
GGAL
UNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017 · 3
The Chicago Cubs are going to repeat as NL Central champs this year.The St. Louis Cardinals and (to a lesser degree) the Pirates made some moves
this past winter to shore up their rosters, but I don’t believe either club didenough to fully close the gap. The stuck-in-neutral Milwaukee Brewers andrebuilding Cincinnati Reds are a few seasons away from contending.
So, when the boss asked me to forecast the NL Central standings at the end of2017, it was easy to say:
Which NL Central teams will make the playoffs? Just the Cubs. (The rest of mypredicted postseason picks have a familiar ring to them: the Los Angeles Dodgers,San Francisco Giants, Washington Nationals and New York Mets.)
Who is the best overall position player in the NL Central? Starling Marte couldbe, if he ever puts a full season together. Until that breakthrough happens, thecrown belongs to Kris Bryant of the Cubs. What’s scary is, Bryant is still just25 and hasn’t even played 400 games in the majors yet. He’ll keep putting up eye-popping numbers for years.
The best pitcher in NL Central is Gerrit Cole ... when he’s healthy. The Piratesright-hander was good but a little dinged up in 2014, dominated in ’15, thenlurched through an injury-marred ’16. If that pattern holds, he’ll re-establishhimself as an ace this summer.
The most exciting player in the NL Central (in other words, the guy I’d pay towatch play) is Javier Baez. The Cubs second baseman caught everyone’s attentionlast October with a cluster of stunning performances in the NLCS. He is bit of aswashbuckler on the basepaths, has good power (although he needs to cut downon his whiffs) and is a stellar defender.
Will Pirates outfielder Andrew McCutchen bounce back from his career-worstseason? McCutchen’s numbers will be better than last year, when he batted .256with a .766 OPS and a minus-2.6 defensive WAR. Moving to right field should boosthis defensive numbers. The motivation of showing the front office it’s making amistake by trying to trade him could help McCutchen rediscover his swing.
But don’t take just my word on all this. Here’s how other baseball insiders —veteran national reporters and beat writers from around the NL Central — seethe division breaking down this season:
Predicted order of finish1. Cubs, 2. Cardinals, 3. Reds,4. Pirates, 5. Brewers
Playoff team(s)from NL CentralCubs
Best position playerBryant. The defending MVP is so lethalat the plate, and he plays two defensivepositions really well, too.
Best pitcherCubs right-hander Jake Arrieta
I’d pay to watchWith his speed, you never know whatthe Reds’ Billy Hamilton might do onthe bases — and there’s a chance itwill be something you’ve never seenbefore. Defensively, he is able to chasedown almost anything and make someamazing catches.
McCutchen comebackYes,especiallyif he’s lessworn outbecause heno longerplays incenterfield.
Predicted orderof finish
1. Cubs, 2. Cardinals,3. Pirates, 4. Brewers, 5. Reds
Playoff team(s)from NL CentralCubs
Best position playerIt’s hard to go against the reigning National League MVP, sogive it to Bryant, not just for his bat but his versatility in thefield. There are better hitters in the division (barely), betterfielders and more versatile players, but nobody comes closewhen combining the three.
Best pitcherI find it hard to pick against Arrieta, who can be so dominant.But I wouldn’t be surprised if Cardinals righty Carlos Martinezis the answer at the end of the season.
I’d pay to watchI think the most exciting play in baseball is the triple. I cravethat moment when you see a guy round second at full speedand decide if he’s going to third or not. With Hamilton, youget that will he/won’t he on what is a sure single for others,and he’ll turn it into a double — or you start wondering aboutan inside-the-park homer off the bat. Last year, he scoredfrom second on a passed ball. That’s excitement for me.
McCutchen comebackThat’s in the eye of the beholder. I don’t know that he’ll be anMVP candidate again, but I think he’s too good of a player tonot come back to some extent. I hope he does, for the sake ofbaseball fans.
Predicted order of finish1. Cubs, 2. Cardinals, 3. Pirates,4. Brewers, 5. Reds
Playoff team(s)from NL CentralCubs and Cardinals
Best position playerBryant. The power is a given.He also gets on base at closeto a .400 clip, and he’s madehimself into a solid defensive thirdbaseman. One of Bryant’s best attributes, for me, is his willingnessto bounce around the field and play wherever manager Joe Maddonneeds him on a given day. He’s a star player with a selfless teamethic. That takes him to a different level.
Best pitcherA lot of guys could be in this conversation, but I think you have to gowith Lester because of his track record of durability and big-gameperformance.
I’d pay to watchKyle Schwarber. This might seem a little nutty, but I’ve always hada fondness for stocky, nonathletic-looking guys who rake — goingback to John Kruk and Matt Stairs. Schwarber’s injury comebackin October showed what a special hitter he is. He’s an adventurein the field, but that unpredictability only contributes to hisentertainment value.
McCutchen comebackYes. Maybe he’s lost a step at age 30, but he logged an .810OPS in August followed up by an .886 OPS in September. Greatplayers respond after down years, and I’m sure McCutchen is supermotivated after all the criticism and the offseason trade rumors.The more he hears how much he’s “slipped,” the more dangeroushe becomes.
JERRY CRASNICKESPN.COM AND
BASEBALL AMERICA
BASEBALL ’17 WRITER’S POLL
NATIONAL WRITERS AND NL BEAT REPORTERS TAKEA CLOSER LOOK AT THE KEY ISSUES IN NL CENTRAL
BURNING QUESTIONS
by ROb bIERTEMPFEL
Predicted orderof finish
1. Cubs (by a widemargin),2. Cardinals,3. Pirates,4. Reds,5. Brewers
Playoff team(s) from NL CentralCubs and Cardinals. I think the Pirates willcontend for a spot, but they need a few things tofall their way — 30 starts (at least) by Cole, 130-plus games from Jung Ho Kang, and a return toform by Andrew McCutchen.
Best position playerBryant is a monster who will continue tobenefit from lineup protection in front of him(Schwarber) and behind him (Rizzo and BenZobrist).
Best pitcherLester, although the challenge will be differentfor him this year because he’ll be working withoutcatcher David Ross.
I’d pay to watchI know he’s not a dynamic offensive player, butI’ve always loved watching Reds outfielder BillyHamilton because of his incredible baserunningarrogance. Rickey Henderson was the lastplayer I’ve seen with that much confidence andbaserunning aptitude. I just hope he builds off hissecond half last season and generates a .320 orbetter on-base percentage.
McCutchen comebackYes, I think so. It never looked like he was anaging hitter who was overmatched, which issomething you see in declining players.It just looked like he was anxious and his timingwas off.
Predicted order of finish1. Cubs, 2. Cardinals, 3. Pirates,4. Reds, 5. Brewers
Playoff team(s) from NL CentralCubs
Best position playerWhat can’t Bryant do? Where can’the play? What award can’t he win?
Best pitcherI still think Cole, if healthy, has a Cy Young run in him.
I’d pay to watchWhen Schwarber arrives at home plate, I stop whatever I’m doingto watch. That’s telling me something.
McCutchen comebackYes. There is almost no precedent for a player this young to be inserious decline after being as good as McCutchen. I also expect himto be incredibly motivated. So 2+2 = Great
Predicted order of finish1. Cubs, 2 Cards, 3. Pirates,4. Brewers, 5. Reds
Playoff team(s)from NL CentralCubs and Cardinals
Best position playerBryant
Best pitcherLester
I’d pay to watchFor me, it’s still McCutchen.
McCutchen comebackCutch will bounce back tothe form he showed over hisfinal 50 games last season.He has figured out whatwas wrong with his swing,and he’s healthy.
Predicted orderof finish1. Cubs,2. Cardinals,3. Pirates,4. Brewers, 5. RedsPlayoff team(s)from NL CentralCubsBest positionplayerBryantBest pitcherLesterI’d pay to watchMarteMcCutchencomebackYes
Rob Biertempfel is a Tribune-Review staff writer. Reach him [email protected] or via Twitter @BiertempfelTrib.
Predicted order of finish1. Cubs, 2. Cardinals, 3. Pirates,4. Brewers, 5. Reds
Playoff team(s) from NL CentralCubs
Best position playerA lot of people would say Bryant, but I thinkCubs first baseman Anthony Rizzo is awizard in the field as well as the best clutchhitter on the team.
Best pitcherCubs left-hander Jon Lester. This is closebecause Jake Arrieta and Kyle Hendricksare right there with him.
I’d pay to watchI almost said Reds first baseman JoeyVotto because when he gets on one of hisoffensive rolls, he’s just a machine out there.But Baez has so much flair and talent, andhe can do things offensively and defensivelythat other players can’t do.
McCutchen comebackI think he will bounce back because he’s stillat an age where he should be in his prime,and now he won’t have to worry aboutcovering the cavernous center field in PNCPark. I always thought he had to be hurt lastyear because he didn’t look like himself.
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Executive chairman RonFowler said last year hedoesn’t expect the Padres tobe competitive for at leasttwo seasons. They havedecided on a long-term planto develop young players, adramatic shift from GM A.J.Preller’s wild shopping spreetwo offseasons ago. 1B WilMyers, the only holdoverfrom that win-now attemptthat failed, has become anAll-Star and the current faceof the franchise, althoughhe could soon be challengedfor that distinction bypromising youngsters likeC Austin Hedges and RFHunter Renfroe. The Padreswill experiment with usingChristian Bethancourt as acatcher, pitcher and outfielder.San Diego hasn’t hada winning seasonsince 2010 and hasn’tmade the playoffs sinceclaiming consecutive NLWest titles from2005-06.
After losing 98 and 94 gamesthe past two seasons whiletrading away the core of theirteam, the Reds are hoping tolevel off this year. They broughtin RH Drew Storen to stabilizean historically bad bullpen,which converted only 28of 53 save chances andgave up a major league-record 103 homers. Theinjury setbacks withAnthony DeSclafaniand Homer Baileyleave the rotation ina tough spot as theseason opens. CF BillyHamilton had his bestseason and reclaimedthe leadoff role lastyear. 1B Joey Vottoshowed he’s still oneof the league’s besthitters. Oft-injuredcatcher DevinMesoraco is hopingfor a part-timerole as he recoversfrom his second hipoperation.
The Dodgers are coming offtheir fourth consecutive NLWest title and a trip to theNL Championship Series,so they appear to be thebiggest threat to the Cubs’dominance. Having won theNL Rookie of the Year award,SS Corey Seager expects tobe ready for opening day afterbeing sidelined for most ofMarch with a strained oblique.The Dodgers succeeded inkeeping much of the rosterintact, including re-signingRH closer Kenley Jansen, 3BJustin Turner and LH RichHill. The outfield will be aplatoon situation involvingright-handed hitters YasielPuig, Trayce Thompsonand Scott Van Slyke andleft-handed hitters AndreEthier, Kike Hernandez, JocPederson and Andrew Toles.When healthy, the rotation isstrong, but several pitchers— including ace ClaytonKershaw — are coming offinjuries.
The Cubs are in great shapeas they try to becomebaseball’s first repeat WorldSeries winner since the NewYork Yankees won from1998 to 2000. LH MikeMontgomery likely will get afew starts to help keep LHBrett Anderson healthy andlessen the load on the restof the rotation. Chicago alsowill be cautious with LF KyleSchwarber and his powerfulleft-handed swing after hemissed most of last year aftermajor left knee surgery. RHWade Davis replaces AroldisChapman as the closer afterthe lefty signed with theYankees in free agency. The6-foot-5 Davis was limitedto 431⁄3 innings last yearwith the Royals because of aforearm injury, but RH HectorRondon and RH Koji Ueharaalso have closing experience.
Washington’s lineup isprobably as good as it everhas been, especially if RFBryce Harper and 1B RyanZimmerman bounce backfrom down years and SS TreaTurner comes even close toreplicating what he did asrunner-up for NL Rookie ofthe Year while learning a newposition, center field. Turnerwill be back at his naturalspot, shortstop, and the teamhopes CF Adam Eaton willprovide stability. Matt Wietersoffers pop from both sides asthe new catcher. If RH MaxScherzer and RH StephenStrasburg are healthy, therotation should be quite goodagain, maybe even strongenough to prevent bullpenquestions from having muchof a negative effect.
e Dodgers are coming off ti h i R
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Heading into spring training,the Rockies were a trendypick to make a run at theirfirst playoff berth since 2009.They signed manager BudBlack to a three-year dealto take over for Walt Weiss.They brought in formershortstop and outfielderIan Desmond to learn firstbase and bulked up theirshaky bullpen with RHGreg Holland and LH MikeDunn. They already hadone of the most formidablelineups in the league with 3BNolan Arenado, RF CarlosGonzalez, SS Trevor Story,CF Charlie Blackmon and2B D.J. LeMahieu. But thisspring they’ve been hit hardby injuries. Desmond hadsurgery on his broken lefthand and will miss severalweeks. LH Chris Rusin hasan oblique injury, outfielderDavid Dahl is dealing withinjured ribs and catcher TomMurphy could miss a monthwith a hairline fracture in hisright forearm.
Pittsburgh’s margin forerror is small if it wants torebound. RH Ivan Nova needsto sustain the momentumhe built after arriving in atrade-deadline deal with theYankees. The young armsbehind him in the rotationmust mature quickly, and RFAndrew McCutchen needsa quicker start than thesluggish first three monthsthat marked his disappointing2016 season. Gerrit Colereturning to the All-Star formhe showed in 2015 also wouldhelp.
Owner Jeffrey Loria is tryingto sell, and he approvedincreasing payroll by one-third to about $100 million,perhaps to make the teammore appealing to prospectivebuyers. But depth remainsa problem, and the minorleague system is thin,meaning injuries could sinkthe season. The Marlins facea challenge at third base,where Martin Prado will missopening day because of astrained right hamstring andcould be sidelined for severalweeks. 2B Dee Gordon, 1BJustin Bour and $325 millionslugger Giancarlo Stantonmissed significant playingtime last season, doomingMiami’s bid to make theplayoffs for the first timesince 2003. The daily lineupremains the same for thethird year in a row, and thegroup will get one last chanceto end the longest postseasondrought in the NL.
The Giants’ run of even-yearchampionships ended lastseason with the bullpenmeltdown against Chicago.But this squad has all theingredients to contend again.LH Madison Bumgarner andRH Johnny Cueto provideone of the best 1-2 punchesat the top of any rotationin the majors, and a fullseason from LH Matt Mooreafter he was acquired atthe trade deadline last yearfrom Tampa Bay makes SanFrancisco tougher. The lineupis deep, led by C Buster Poseyand SS Brandon Crawfordand key contributors likeRF Hunter Pence and 1BBrandon Belt. New closerMark Melancon has 98saves the past two seasons inPittsburgh and Washingtonto lead the majors.
The Cardinals — bolsteredby a mostly healthy rotationand the signing of OF DexterFowler away from Chicago— are expected to maketheir division rivals workfor everything they earn in2017. Fowler brings a newelement of athleticism toSt. Louis offensively and inthe field, and Mike Mathenyis counting on the centerfielder to aid what has beena largely station-to-stationapproach by the Cardinals,who were last in the NationalLeague in steals last season.The Cardinals missed thepostseason for the first timesince 2010, thanks in largepart to injuries that causedthe pitching staff’s ERA torise from a National League-best 2.94 in 2015 to 4.08 lastseason. St. Louis expects itsrotation to enter the seasonhealthy even with the loss ofhard-throwing rookie AlexReyes to elbow surgery earlyin spring training.
The Mets have thetalent to make a runfor a third consecutiveplayoff appearance. Everyexperienced regular besidesCF Curtis Granderson spenttime on the disabled list lastseason. The primary concernis the overall fitness of ayoung, gifted, fragile rotationled by RH Noah Syndergaard— the only established starterwho made it through thefull 2016 season. RH MattHarvey, RH Jacob deGrom,LH Stephen Matz and RHZack Wheeler are coming offsurgery. New York quicklyre-signed LF Yoenis Cespedeslast fall for $110 million overfour years. The Mets are106-74 with Cespedes in thelineup since August 2015.
The Diamondbacks canscore — they were fourth inthe NL last season with 752runs. The return of CF A.J.Pollock and RF David Peraltafrom injuries should make thelineup even more formidable,and 2B Brandon Drury couldhave a breakout year. 1B PaulGoldschmidt remains one ofthe game’s most dangeroussluggers. But the pitchingmust improve for this team tohave any hope of challengingthe Dodgers and Giants in theNL West. RH Zack Greinkebattled injuries throughouthis first season in Arizonaafter the Diamondbackssigned him to a six-year,$206.5 million contract.RH Shelby Miller was awfulafter Arizona gave up twotop prospects to acquire himfrom Atlanta.
General manager DavidStearns’ rebuilding projectappears to be on scheduleafter the team’s five-winimprovement last season.Slick-fielding SS OrlandoArcia is the first member ofMilwaukee’s potential futurecore to arrive in the majors,and top prospects includingoutfielder Lewis Brinson andleft-handed starter JoshHader could get looks bySeptember. For now, the topof the lineup looks intriguingwith speedy 2B JonathanVillar and OF Keon Broxtonlikely hitting ahead of LF RyanBraun and 1B Eric Thames.The pitching staff could bebolstered if Guerra and Daviescontinue to develop andNelson and Peralta reboundfor a full season. The bullpenis a bit more of a questionmark than in recent years.
After two straight seasonswith 90-plus losses, theBraves are talking boldlyabout contending for aplayoff spot. That might be abit of a stretch, but the teamhas improved over the pastyear. General manager JohnCoppolella deserves credit forspeeding up the rebuildingjob by making several one-sided trades, including a dealwith Arizona that landedSS Dansby Swanson andCF Ender Inciarte, as wellas acquiring OF Matt Kempfrom San Diego for nothingmore than taking on hismassive contract. The lineuppacks some punch withKemp sandwiched between1B Freddie Freeman and RFNick Markakis. Pitching willhold the key to how wellthe Braves fare this season,their first in new suburbanstadium, SunTrust Park,which replaces Turner Field.
After four straight losingseasons, the Phillies havemodest expectations. They’restill rebuilding and probablya year away from thinkingpostseason contention. Theteam added three veteransin LF Howie Kendrick, RFMichael Saunders and RHClay Buchholz who havepostseason experience andshould help Philadelphia wingames while holding down afew spots until some of theyoungsters are ready. Thestarting rotation is prettydeep, though it lacks a trueace, and the organization hasseveral pitching prospectsclose to being ready for themajors. A bunch of younghitters also are knocking onthe door and could get thecall to the big leagues thissummer.
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TEAMS LISTED IN BEAT WRITERROB BIERTEMPFEL’S PREDICTED
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The Twins ranked arespectable sixth in theAmerican League in totalbases and eighth in OPSdespite their abysmal recordlast year. CF Byron Buxton’ssparkling September, followinga second straight frustratingsummer, restored his and theclub’s confidence in the 2012second overall draft pick. 2BBrian Dozier probably hit hispower ceiling in 2016, but ifBuxton and 3B Migual Sanocan strike out less and get onbase more there’s the potentialin place for a productiveoffense. The resuscitation ofthe team with the worst recordin the majors last seasonmust begin with startingpitching that ranked30th out of 30 in wins(37), ERA (5.39) andstrikeouts (655).
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Texas won an AL-high 95 gameslast year and has taken thedivision title in both seasonsunder Jeff Banister. But overthe course of 162 games, theRangers outscored their oppo-nents by only eight runs in 2016.They lost the big bats of IanDesmond, Mitch Moreland andCarlos Beltran in the offseason.The return of 1B Mike Napolishould help. C Jonathan Lucroyand OF Carlos Gomez were bigacquisitions late last season.Adrian Beltre goes into his 20thmajor league season 58 hitsshy of 3,000, and Elvis Andrusis coming off his best offensiveyear. With a healthy Yu Darvishand Cole Hamels, the Rangersare set at the top of the rotation,and LH Marton Perez started 33games last season. If RH TysonRoss and/or RH Andrew Cashnercan contribute, the rotation willget a boost. Sam Dyson excelledas the closer last year, whileRH MAtt Bush and RH TonyBarnette established themselveswith strong performances as30-something rookies.
With perhaps the league’sdeepest pitching staff includingRH Corey Kluber, RH CarlosCarrasco and RH DannySalazar, the Indians are an ALfavorite and appear poisedto return to the World Series.Last year, they exceededexpectations and built a 3-1Series lead against the Cubsbefore losing three straight —including a dramatic Game 7 athome. This season, the Indianswill try to finish the job. Thereare injury concerns with LFMichael Brantley and 2B JasonKipnis, who won’t be ready forthe start of the season becauseof shoulder inflammation.3B Jose Ramirez could slideover to help fill in at secondbase. But the addition of DHEdwin Encarnacion finally givesCleveland the intimidating,middle-of-the-order sluggerthe club has coveted sincethe glory days of Jim Thome,Manny Ramirez and AlbertBelle.
It will take a while to get usedto life without David Ortiz,but Boston’s young core ofRF Mookie Betts, CF JackieBradley and SS Xander Bo-gaerts certainly puts the RedSox among the early favoritesin the American League. Howfar they go will depend uponhow well the new-look rota-tion performs, how 3B PabloSandoval looks after sittingout nearly all of last seasonand whether the lineupremains as potent withoutOrtiz’s game-changing left-handed bat. LH Chris Sale’saddition brings an instantboost to the pitching staff,giving them a powerful 1-2-3punch that includes RH RickPorcello and LH David Price,the 2012 AL Cy Young winnerwho has been injured most ofspring training.
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The Angels come off theworst season of manager MikeScioscia’s long tenure withhopes for a quick turnaround.CF Mike Trout is the center ofeverything after winning hissecond MVP award, and heintends to steal more bases.Despite salary constraintscaused by owner ArteMoreno’s free-spending past,GM Billy Eppler plugged twoholes by putting the athleticCameron Maybin in left field,with Ben Revere backing himup, and Orange County nativeDanny Espinosa at secondbase. The lineup appears to beimproved, and if the startingrotation stays healthy andpitches reasonably well, areturn to playoff contentionmight not be completely out ofthe question.
The Tigers have made nosecret of the fact they’ll needto cut costs soon, but they’vegenerally put off doing so. RHJustin Verlander, 1B MiguelCabrera and 2B Ian Kinslerare back, and Detroit is readyto make another bid for apostseason spot. Verlanderand Cabrera are still producinglike stars, and RH MichaelFulmer won Rookie of the Yearhonors last year. If the Tigersare going to take another stepforward, they’ll probably needRH Jordan Zimmermann andLH Daniel Norris to performwell after both dealt with injuryproblems a season ago.
With starting shortstop DidiGregorius expected to missthe first month of the sea-son with a shoulder injury,Ronald Torreyes figures tofill in. A team in transition,the Yankees plan to startthree young players in C GarySanchez, 1B Greg Bird and RFAaron Judge and await theemergence of top prospectsClint Frazier, Justus Sheffield,James Kaprielian and GleyberTorres. OF/DH Matt Hollidayshould provide more offensethan Alex Rodriguez didbefore his August release lastyear. After his hot start, San-chez cooled in late Septemberand must show he can adjustwhen pitchers pound his weakspot. Judge must cut downon his strikeouts and Birdneeds to establish himself asan everyday player after miss-ing all of 2016.
The Astros appear to haveall the pieces necessary tomake a deep postseason runand possibly contend for achampionship after narrowlymissing the playoffs lastseason following a 7-17 start.The already-powerful lineupled by last year’s AL battingchamp 2B Jose Altuve and2015 Rookie of the Year SSCarlos Correa got a boostwith the addition of sluggingveterans Carlos Beltran and3B Josh Reddick. A key forHouston will be for LH DallasKeuchel, the 2015 AL Cy YoungAward winner, to rebound froma disappointing and injury-shortened 2016 season to leadthe rotation. The Astros willalso look for more from RHLance McCullers after he wasslowed by injuries as well. Andthey’ll need RH Collin McHughand RH Charlie Morton toshore up the back of therotation if they hope to beatout Texas and Seattle for theAL West crown.
Royals GM Dayton Moorethinks his starting rotation isthe best it has been during histenure, even if just about everyspot is tenuous. He also thinksKansas City has more power atthe plate this year thanks to 3BMike Moustakas’ return froma torn ACL and the signing ofDH Brandon Moss. But thereare plenty of question marksup and down the lineup, not tomention on the pitching staff.LH Danny Duffy showed signsof blossoming into an ace latelast year, but is yet to put itall together for a full season.RH Jason Hammel wassigned after the tragic deathof RHP Yordano Ventura in acar accident in the DominicanRepublic.
After losing in the ALCS eachof the past two seasons,Toronto hopes to take thenext step in 2017. To get tothe Fall Classic, They will haveto overcome the loss of 1B/DH Edwin Encarnacion, theslugger who signed with ALchampion Cleveland. The BlueJays will hope for a bounce-back year from RF JoseBautista, hobbled by footand knee injuries last season,and a power boost from DHKendrys Morales as he movesinto hitter-friendly RogersCentre. Toronto has reason tofeel good about its rotation,arguably one of the strongestin the American League, butdoesn’t have much depthshould any of its projectedstarters go down with aninjury. Despite struggling forMexico in the World Base-ball Classic, the young RHRoberto Osuna is a depend-able anchor at the back of thebullpen.
The Mariners completed thesecond phase of their remodelthis past offseason. GM JerryDipoto wanted a lineup thatwas less reliant on the longball and better defensively inthe outfield. SS Jean Seguraand LF Jarrod Dyson legitimizethe top of the order and canbe speedy table-setters for 2BRobinson Cano, DH NelsonCruz and 3B Kyle Seager. Thekeys to scoring more will be 1BDanny Valencia and RF MitchHaniger. Their production willdetermine whether Seattleactually lengthened its lineupor it essentially ends at No.5. RHP Felix Hernandezappears determined torebound from last year’saverage performance, andLH Drew Smyly was a criticalwinter acquisition. Seattlehas the look of a team thatcould improve by a few wins,which might be enough toend baseball’s longest playoffdrought.
This season looks like lots oflosses and trades. LH JoseQuintana and 3B Todd Frazierlikely will be shipped out atsome point this season, andRH David Robertson alsocould be on the move in theright deal. The White Soxseem fully committed to amajor overhaul, and theyadded several prospects whenthey traded away Chris Saleand Adam Eaton over thewinter. The White Sox stillhave SS Tim Anderson, whowas impressive in his firstmajor league stint last year.1B Jose Abreu is going for hisfourth straight season of atleast 25 homers and 100 RBIs.
The Orioles intend to onceagain pound the oppositioninto submission, hopingtheir power-laden lineup isenough to overcome a ques-tionable starting rotation.That’s why Executive VPof Baseball Operations DanDuquette brought back DHMark Trumbo and paid heav-ily to retain 1B Chris Davisone year earlier. Five startershit at least 25 homers lastseason for a team that earneda playoff berth for the thirdtime in five years. The theoryis that the ascension of LFHyun Soo Kim to the leadoffspot and the acquisition of RFSeth Smith will improve theteam’s ability to put run-ners on base ahead of thoselong balls. If the starters cankeep the Orioles in the gamethrough six or seven innings,the formidable bullpen shouldbe able to finish up nicely.
The A’s are coming off asecond straight last-placefinish and the worst two-yearrun for the franchise since1978-79, before Billy Ball, theBash Brothers or Moneyball.After moving top players likeJosh Reddick, Rich Hill andCoco Crisp last season beforelosing them in free agency,this doesn’t appear to be theyear the A’s will vault back intocontention. The offense doeshave some power led by LFChris Davis and SS MarcusSemien, and the bullpenis pretty deep with severalformer closers available to setup RH closer Ryan Madson.But the rotation is mostly builton young promise behind thebanged-up RH Sonny Gray.
The Rays have missed theplayoffs in three consecutiveseasons, but a budget-mind-ed front office feels spendingmodestly in free agency tosign C Wilson Ramos and OFColby Rasmus, trading for OFMallex Smith and pitchingprospect RH Jose De Leon,and giving defensive whiz CFKevin Kiermaier a six-year,$53.5 million contract willhelp the club escape the ALEast cellar. A lingering ques-tion is whether Tampa Bayhas done enough to improvethe overall talent around teamleader 3B Evan Longoria, es-pecially since Ramos, SS MattDuffy Duffy and RH BradBoxberger figure to begin theseason on the disabled list.
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6 · SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017
Trib: When were you ablethat first week on the jobto really evaluate what youhad to work with, was thechallenge about what youexpected?
Huntington: About a week inwas when one of my counterpartstold me I’d have been better offtaking over an expansion franchisebecause we could have built fromscratch. (Laughs)
But, really, there were so manygood people in place. I probablywas overly critical when I walkedin the door. We also knew thereneeded to be wholesale changesin personnel areas and somestrategic areas — certainly, inthe analytics area. We needed topour resources into different placethan they’d been invested before.There were good people here, butwe knew we needed to add to thatgroup. We knew we needed tomake some tough changes.
The one regret I have about myentry is I was overly harsh andoverly critical. There were somethings I probably should have keptquiet. There were some areaswhere things were much worsethan I anticipated coming in andothers were it was better thananticipated.
Trib: How much resistancedid you get — maybemore from outside yourorganization than inside it— about your application ofadvanced analytics?
Huntington: Fortunatelyfor us, we had people who’dventured down that path before,and they had success. We workedreally hard to blend modern-day analytics and modern-daythought with some old-school,tried-and-true traditions. Thechallenge became truth overtradition and what worked in thepast may not work going forward,what we think is going to workgoing forward actually is not.Accurate self-evaluation and theability to take a step back andfigure out why something workedor didn’t work was important.
There were pioneers on theanalytics side of it before wejumped in. It’s interesting, that itif you’d asked most people whoknew me well when I took the job,they would have said I was morescouting-development oriented.Very quickly upon ramping upour analytics approach, I becameknown as an analytics guy. That’sa good thing, because we wantto be a balanced organization —strong old-school baseball, strongin scouting and development, butalso strong analytically. We believewe’re on the right path.
Trib: What was morechallenging: getting throughyour first amateur draft (whenyou took Pedro Alvarez in thefirst round) or learning theprocess of making trades andsigning free agents?
Huntington: One of the thingsthat was a challenge was so muchof the staff was inherited. Wemade a few changes in scoutingand in development, but primarilywe went with what already washere. It made for some challenges,
in terms of evaluating very quicklywhat type of evaluators andinstructors we had. There is noquestion that by year three of thedraft and year three of trading,we had a better comfort levelwith each of our evaluators andinstructors.
The mistakes are mine. I ownthem. But that’s been adviceI’ve given to new GMs — reallydig deep on your evaluatorsand instructors. Maximize theirstrengths. In hindsight, I don’tknow if we maximized that.
It was a combination of,that first draft, implementinga system we wanted on theamateur side — and, yes, it’sevolved over the years — but alsoon the pro side, implementinga system we wanted and thetypes of players we’re looking for,not having a really full, strongfoundation understanding of whatour evaluators and instructorsstrengths and challenges werebecause we inherited (them). Wetried to implement it very quicklyand we made some strides veryquickly. It didn’t got as well asothers. As we shifted into talent-accumulation mode full force, thatfirst and second trade deadlinesbecame important. We weren’tgiving up All-Star caliber players,but we were giving up goodmajor league players and we werehoping to bring back as muchas we could. In some cases, wesucceeded. In others, it didn’t gothe way we believed it was goingto go.
Trib: As MLB keepschanging the rulesfor the draft andfree agency, howdifficult is itto adapt andkeep the sameorganizationalphilosophy?
Huntington: Ourfirst four years, weinvested more in thedraft than anybody,and we doubled andtripled our international(free agent) budget. Itallowed us to bring ina lot of very goodplayers. We feltlike there weretimes wewere ableto get twofirst round-caliberplayersor twosecond- orthird-roundcaliberplayersbecause ofthe amountof moneywe investedin the draft.
The newsystemtook thataway. Thebetter teamyou are,the smalleryour (signingbonus) pool is,and it becomesthat much morechallenging.We’ve gone
from being able to spend not thetop of the international pool buta lot more than we had in thepast to the new rules changingthe amount we can spend. Now,we have some of the smallestbudgets in the international poolover the last three or four years.That’s become a challenge.
Even the old system got us.There were multiple picks … thatwe had drafted in the seventhround or the 18th round with theintent to sign for well above slot.Three years later, they came outas first- or second- or third-roundpicks. If we had (signed) them,we essentially would have addeda whole other draft. That was ourintent and our mindset. But thesystem got us. By the time wecould move forward with offerson those types of players, theyhad shifted their mindset andcommitted to go to college.
So, while the old system workedfor us, there also were some flawsthat worked against us. Then thenew system completely alteredhow you go about drafting playersand really put a limit on what youcan do. We respect why that wasdone. If more large-market clubshad figured out what the Red Soxand some of the small-marketteams had figured out, theyprobably would have exploitedtheir strengths over the smallmarkets anyway. So the systemprobably needed to be changed.
We’ve evolved. Teams do havesuccess finding players late inthe first, second, third and fourthrounds. We need to be that team.We need to be a team that has
success picking late in the draftbecause we want to be
picking late every year.
Trib: Your first trade camein December 2007, when yousent pitcher Salomon Torresto the Brewers. What did thatteach you about the tradeprocess?
Huntington: Our intent waspurely to create some money toallow us to attack some otherareas. We knew we were takingsome risk on the return becauseSalomon was coming off a not-great year and was owed whatat that time was a lot of moneyfor the role he was in. He was avery good major-league pitcher.The call … it’s one thing to watchsomeone else make the call to tella player he’s been traded, and it’sanother to make that call yourself.I’d made it as a farm director onoccasion to a prospect. But untilthen, I’d never called a majorleague player.
Salomon loved Pittsburgh, andhe was not happy that we tradedhim. His intent was to finish hiscareer in Pittsburgh, and he madethat very clear to me. It was a hardcall. You talk about an eye-openerthat players do get attached toteammates, fans and situations.He was very unhappy that wetraded him.
It’s one thing to tell a 21-year-oldthat you’ve traded him becausehe doesn’t really know about theworld yet and he might not havecreated relationships with a bunchof different people. But when youtrade a grown man and his family’sgot ties to the city from whichyou’ve traded him, it’s hard.
Trib: You’re signed through2017 with a club option fornext year. What’s left for youto do in Pittsburgh and wheredo you go from here?
Huntington: I love what Ido and the people that I get anopportunity I get to do it with.I love the challenges that areinherent in a small market. It’s theonly thing I’ve ever known.
In Montreal, we were a smallmarket and working in DaveDombrowski’s legacy, thenworking with Dan Duquette. Whata great learning opportunity.
When I moved to Cleveland,we were a large-revenue team,because local revenues drove theboat at the point in time, but weevolved quickly back into whatwe were, and that was a small-market team. To learn underMark Shapiro and learn with ChrisAntonetti was an outstanding
opportunity.My goal is to continue to
put us in a position to bring aWorld Series championshiphere as consistently andfrequently as we can.A huge part of my goalis also to help others to
reach their goals — to helppeople become major league
managers, farm directorsand scouting directors, minor
league coordinators and scoutingsupervisors. That’s as much whatfuels me as anything because ifwe do that, that process shouldcreate winning baseball inPittsburgh. I’m still challenged bythat every day.
Rob Biertempfel is a Tribune-Reviewstaff writer. Reach him at
[email protected] orvia Twitter @BiertempfelTrib.
moving to right field, against hiswishes. He vowed to USA Todayto have a “monster year, whetherit’s in Pittsburgh or somewhereelse.”
Here’s hoping it’s at PNC Park,that Cutch plays with a ven-geance and returns to All-Starform.
Cole won 10, 11 and 19 games inhis first three seasons but went7-10 with a 3.88 ERA last season.The Pirates need Cole to be theace of a young rotation that in-cludes Jameson Taillon and IvanNova, the kind they envisioinedupon drafting him No. 1 overallin 2011.
But it’s not just those two.The Pirates need catcher Fran-
cisco Cervelli to stay healthy andat least hit for average. They needrookie Josh Bell to prove he canmake the move to first base andprovide some power.
They need the Harrison of2014, when he hit .315 with 13home runs and possibly playmultiple positions, and shortstopJordy Mercer to hit better than.256.
The Pirates need Jung HoKang, denied a visa after histhird DUI in South Korea, toclean up his act off the field. IfKang returns this season — thePirates are optimistic he will —they need him to start at thirdand continue hitting home runs(21 last year and 36 over 229games) at the cleanup spot.
The Pirates need two-time GoldGlove winner Starling Marte tostay healthy, shine in center andhit double-digit home runs againafter smacking nine last year.
They need Gregory Polanco tomake a smooth transition to leftfield and finally live up to his bill-ing as the Next Big Thing.
The Pirates need David Freeseto fill in for Kang and for PhilGosselin and Adam Frazier toprovide bats off the bench toreplace Matt Joyce and SeanRodriguez.
The Pirates need their youngpitching staff to grow up quickly,their bullpen to become sharksand Tony Watson to show he canbe comfortable as the closer.
That’s a lot to ask, especiallywhen they didn’t break the bankto make major roster upgrades ormake his remaining cornerstoneplayers happy this past offseason.
But these are your Pirates,a ballclub one baseball man —Bottom-Line Bob Nutting — ex-pects to be a “very good baseballteam.”
This is the ship he’s built, sinkor swim, and it’s up to the playersto perform to his expectations,realistic or not.
Kevin Gorman is a Tribune-Review staff writer.Reach him at [email protected]
or via Twitter @KGorman_Trib.
Piratesneed toperformGORMAN · FROM 1
BASEBALL ’17 ON THE PIRATES
Q&A WITH PIRATES GMHUNTINGTON · FROM 1
Pirates generalmanager NealHuntington.
CHRISTOPHER HORNERTRIBUNE-REVIEW
NDAY, APRIL 2, 2017 · 7
SIGNIFICANTTRADES BY
HUNTINGTON2007
Dec. 7: SalomonTorres toBrewers forKevin Robertsand MarinoSalas.
This wasHuntington’sfirst trade. Torres was a starter,middle reliever and eventually apart-time closer over six seasonswith the Pirates. He notched 28saves for the Brewers in 2008,then retired. In 2008, Robertspitched at Double-A, and Salasput up an 8.47 ERA in 13 reliefoutings for the Pirates. Bothwere gone from the organizationby 2009.
2008July 26: Damaso Marteand Xavier Nady toYankees for Jeff Karstens,Daniel McCutchen, RossOhlendorf and JoseTabata.
Marte spent three seasonswith the Yankees and won aWorld Series ring in 2009. Nadyhung around the majors through2014 as a bench guy. Karstens,McCutchen and Ohlendorfcombined for 44 wins with thePirates. Tabata never lived up tohis hype and eventually becametoo much of a liability to keeparound.July 31: Jason Bay toBoston Red Sox for AndyLaRoche and Bryan Morris(from Dodgers) and CraigHansen and BrandonMoss (from Red Sox).
This three-team deal wasHuntington’s firstblockbuster. Bay hit.293 over the rest of2008 with the RedSox, then lost hisform. LaRoche wasgiven every opportunityto be the everyday thirdbaseman but failed.Moss didn’t discover his powerstroke until he joined the A’s in2012. Morris was a reliablereliever who ultimately became atrade chip.Aug. 21: Jose Bautistato the Blue Jays forRobinzon Diaz.
Bautista hit 265homers in nine seasonswith the Blue Jays.Diaz got 135 at-batsover two years withthe Pirates.
2009April 15: Minor leaguersHarvey Garcia and EricKrebs to the Dodgers forDelwyn Young.
Young had two mediocreseasons with the Pirates, thennever played again in the majors.June 3: Nate McLouthto the Braves for GorkysHernandez, Jeff Locke andCharlie Morton.
The best part of this deal forthe Pirates was it cleared the wayfor Andrew McCutchen to reachthe majors. Morton andLocke had some goodand bad stretchesbefore being sentaway.June 30: SeanBurnett andNyjer Morgan to
the Nationals for JoelHanrahan and LastingsMilledge.
Burnett became a decentr, and Morgan was a
eedy outfielder with anutgoing personality.
However, the Pirates wonhis deal simply because
Hanrahan became abig-time closer with82 saves over fourseasons.
July 22: Adam LaRocheto the Red Sox forArgenis Diaz and HunterStrickland.
LaRoche never becamthe slugger the Pirateshoped for but did finishsixth in the MVPvoting in 2012. Heretired after the ’15season. Stricklandbecame a keyreliever for theGiants, who claimedhim off waivers from the Piratesin 2013.July 29: Freddy Sanchezto the Giants for TimAlderson.
A former NL batting champ,Sanchez won a WorlSeries ring in 2010.Alderson nevermade it out of theminors.July 29: IanSnell and JackWilson tothe Marinersfor Brett Lorin, AaronPribanic, Nathan Adcok,Ronny Cedeno and JeffClement.
Neither team got much out ofthis deal. From a public relationsstandpoint, it was a clunker for
h Pi ates. Wilson was a fanorite. Cedeno often wasriticized for a lack ofocus, such as when he
wore the wrong jersey inhe 2010 season finale.uly 30: Tomorzelanny and
John Grabow to theCubs for Jose Ascanio,Josh Harrison and KevinHart.
Grabow was a solid relieverbut was out of the game by 2012.Harrison became a top-notchutilityman and last season was
th ryday secondeman.
2010July 31: JavierLopez to theGiants for JohnBowker and JoeMartinez.
At the time of thetrade, Lopez was one of the bestlefty relievers in the game. Hepitched in 68 games for theGiants in 2016. Bowker andMartinez are both out ofbaseball.July 31: Octavio Doteland cash to the Dodgersfor Andrew Lambo andJames McDonald.
Dotel’s four months inPittsburgh marked his finalstretch as a closer, although hepitched another three seasons.
bo and McDonaldere busts.Nov. 24: ZachDuke to theDiamondbacks forCesar Valdez.
Duke put up goodumbers over his first
five seasons. In 2012, hereinvented himself as a reliever.Valdez spent seven months in thePirates’ system before being soldto the Marlins.
2011July 30: Aaron Baker tothe Orioles for Derrek Lee.
The move was made with aneye toward getting a playoff spot.Although that bid failed, Leelived up to his end. He played thefinal 28 games of his career withthe Pirates and batted .337 withseven home runs.
201219: Exicardoyones and Diego
Moreno to theYankees for A.J.Burnett.
Huntington hasa right to be proudof this one. Burnettwore out his
welcome in New York, and thePirates got him for a pair oflow-level minor leaguers. Burnettstabilized the rotation and was apositive influence in theclubhouse.July 24: Colton Cain,
bie Grossman andudy Owens to theAstros for WandyRodriguez.
Although he won onlyof his 30 starts with the
Pirates, Rodriguez gavethe rotation a neededboost.
Dec. 26: Joel Hanrahanand Brock Holt to the RedSox for Ivan De Jesus,Mark Melancon, StolmyPimentel and Jerry Sands.
Hanrahan pitched in just ninegames for Boston beforesuffering career-ending arminjuries. Melancon quicklybecame a dominant closer.
2013Aug. 27: Dilson Herreraand Vic Black to the Metsfor Marlon Byrd, JohnBuck and cash.
Byrd and (to a lesser degree)Buck played roles in the team’spush toward its firstpostseason berth in 20years.Aug. 31: DukeWelker andAlex Presley tothe Twinsfor JustinMorneau.
Morneauwasn’t much help down thestretch (.260/.370/.312) andnever seemed to fit in theclubhouse.Dec. 2: Kyle Haynesto the Yankees forChris Stewart.
A great fit as the No. 2catcher, Stewarteventually wasrewarded with atwo-yearcontract.
2014June 27:Jason Grillito the Angelsfor Ernesto Frieri.
Another case ofaddition by subtraction.Grilli’s departure cleared theway for Melancon to becomethe full-time closer. Frieri wasreleased Sept. 2.Dec. 1: BuddyBorden to the
Rays for Sean Rodriguez.Borden is still in the Rays’
farm system. Rodriguez becamea solid super-utility player and hit16 homers last season.
2015Jan. 27: Travis Snider tothe Orioles for StephenTarpley and Steven Brault.
A no-lose move. Snidereventually was released andre-signed with the Pirates. Braultmade his big league debut thispast season. Tarpley later wasdealt to the Yankees for IvanNova.July 30: JaCoby Jonesto the Tigers for JoakimSoria.
Four months after the trade,Jones was suspended 50 gamesafter a failed drug test. Soriapitched well down the stretch asa setup reliever.July 31: Jose Tabata tothe Dodgers for MichaelMorse.
Double clunker.July 31: Adrian Sampsonto the Mariners for J.A.Happ.
This one worked out betterthan anyone could have imaginedat the time.Dec. 9: Neil Walker to theMets for Jon Niese.
In hindsight, Huntingtonadmitted he should have takenthe two minor leaguers the Metsoffered instead of Niese. Thenagain, salary dumps rarely workout well.Dec. 17: Trey Supak andKeon Broxton to theBrewers for Jason Rogers.
It seemed like a decent gambleat the time, but it has not workedout that way. Broxton started 58games, batted .242 and stole 23bases before breaking his wristlate last season. Rogers hit .080in 32 games, was dropped fromthe 40-man roster and no longerfits in the Pirates’ long-termplans.
2016Aug. 1: Reese McGuire,Harold Ramirez andFrancisco Liriano to the
Jays for Drewutchison.
Another salarydump, spurred byLiriano’s rapid decline.
There’s still timefor Hutchison todevelop into auseful starter.
Aug. 1: Stephen Tarpleyand Tito Polo to theYankees for Ivan Nova.
This year’s version of theHapp trade. Novablossomed with thePirates and in December
re-signed withthem on a
three-year,$26 million
contract.
HUNTINGTON’SDRAFTS SINCEBECOMING GM
2008First pick: Pedro Alvarez(second overall) signedfor a $6 million bonusafter a long, unpleasantnegotiation process.Alvarez hit 131 homers butwas just as (in)famous forhis feeble defensive skills.Best pick: SS JordyMercer (third roundhas been aneveryday playerthe past threeseasons. He is areliable (albeitnot flashy)defender witha career .257average and .691 OPS.Lost pick: Negotiationswith RHP TannerScheppers (second round)were strained from theoutset, and he did not sign.The Rangers took him inthe first round in 2009,and he’s had a ho-humcareer as a reliever.Others: SS Chased’Arnaud (fourth round),LHP Justin Wilson (fifth),OF Robbie Grossman(sixth), 3B Matt Hague(ninth).
2009First pick: C TonySanchez (fourthoverall) was takenahead of MikeLeake, A.J. Pollock,Shelby Millerand Mike Trout.Sanchez played in51 games with thePirates and hit .259.Best pick: 2B Brock Holt(ninth round) hit .292 in 24games as a rookie in 2012.That winter, he was part ofa six-player trade with theRed Sox that brought MarkMelancon to Pittsburgh.Lost pick: RHP Vic Black(first round, supplemental)was the compensationpick for the failure to signScheppers. Black pitchedin three games for thePirates, then was tradedwith Dilson Herrera to theMets for Marlon Byrd andJohn Buck.Wasted pick: RHP ZachVon Rosenberg (sixthround) got a $1.2 millionsigning bonus but neverclimbed higher thanHigh-A Bradenton.Others: RHP BrooksPounders (second round),RHP Phil Irwin (21st).
2010First pick: RHP JamesonTaillon (second overall)was the first pitchertaken in a classthat included DrewPomeranz, MattHarvey, Chris Sale,Aaron Sanchezand NoahSyndergaard.Best pick: Asa rookie last year, Taillonwent 5-4 with a 3.38 ERAin 18 starts.
Wasted pick: RHPStetson Allie (secondround) got a $2.25 millionbonus and was toutedas a power arm with bigupside. He went 0-3 witha 7.76 ERA in 17 minorleague starts before beingswitched to a positionplayer.Others: RHP NickKingham (fourth round),RHP Brandon Cumpton(ninth), RHP Jared Lakind
( d), RHP Caseydler (25th).
2011First pick: RHPGerrit Cole (firstoverall) made just38 starts in theminors beforebeing called up to
the Pirates. He already hasearned an All-Star bid andwill head the rotation thisseason.Most aggressivepick: OF Josh Bellwas lured from a freeride to the Universityof Texas by a $5million bonus, themost ever given to asecond-rounder.Lost pick: OF/INFTrea Turner (20th round)did not sign and insteadwent to N.C. State. ThePadres took him in the
round in 2014,d he’s nown emergingstandout with theNationals.Others: 1B AlexDickerson (thirdround), RHPColten Brewer
(fourth), RHP TylerGlasnow (fifth), RHP ClayHolmes (ninth).
2012First pick: RHP MarkAppel (eighth overall)turned down an $3.8million offer and wound upbeing the only unsignedfirst-rounder. Facingrestrictions on bonuses,the Pirates opted againstsweetening their offerFast-rising pick: SS MMoroff (16th round)made his big leaguedebut last July. Hecould be in line foranother callup at somepoint this year.Intriguing pick:3B Eric Wood (sixthround) blossomedlast summer at Double-AAltoona and had a powersurge in the Arizona FallLeague.Others: OF Barrett Barnes(first, supplemental), RHPAdrian Sampson (fifth),
ob Stallingseventh).
2013First pick: OFAustin Meadows
(ninth overall)has crushedminor
league pitching(.300/.368/.480) the pastfour years. He’ll begin thisseason at Triple-A Indy butshould reach Pittsburghby September.
Lost pick: C ReeseMcGuire (second round)was sent to the Blue Jayslast summer in the DrewHutchison trade.
F t ising pick:P Chad Kuhlined the
Pirates rotationn June andpitched wellnough (5-4,
4.20 ERA, 1.32WHIP) to earnfirst crack at the
No. 4 spot this year.Others: OF JaCoby Jones(third round), SS AdamFrazier (sixth round).
2014First pick: SS Cole Tucker(24th overall) missedmost of 2015 after havingshoulder surgery but cameback strong last season.Lost pick: RHPTrey Supak (second,supplemental) was traded,along with Keon Broxton,in December 2015 to theBrewers for Jason Rogers.Others: OF Connor Joe(first round, supplemental),RHP Mitch Keller (third),RHP Tyler Eppler (sixth),RHP Frank Duncan (13th).
2015First pick: SS KevinNewman (19th overall)is a big-time threat with
the bat, but someuts wonder ife eventually
will move tosecond or thirdbase.Others: 3BKe’BryanHayes (firstround,
supplemental), SS KevinKramer (second)
2016First pick: 3B Will Craig(22nd overall) was a bigbopper at Wake Forest (16HR, 32 extra-base hits in275 PA as a junior).Lost pick: LHP NickLodolo (first round,supplemental) did not sign.Others: RHP TravisMacGregor (second round),SS Stephen Alemais(third).
Rob Biertempfel is a Tribune-Review staff writer. Reach him at [email protected] or via Twitter @BiertempfelTrib.
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PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES, CHAZ PALLA, CHRISTOPHER HORNER
8 · SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2017
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A high-school athlete faces difficult decisions. › Obsessed (2009) Idris Elba, Beyoncé Knowles.BRAVO Housewives/Potomac Housewives/Potomac Housewives/Potomac Housewives/Potomac Housewives/Potomac Housewives/Potomac Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl.CMT (9:00) Hot 20 Countdown Sun Records ››› The Parent Trap (1998, Children’s) Lindsay Lohan, Dennis Quaid. ›› Tooth Fairy (2010) Dwayne Johnson, Ashley Judd.COM ’70s Show (:20) Tosh.0 (10:50) Tosh.0 (:20) Tosh.0 (11:50) Tosh.0 (:20) Tosh.0 (12:55) Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 ››› Dazed and Confused (1993) Jason London. (:40) Harold & Kumar Go to White CastleDISC The Last Alaskans Gold Rush: Parker’s Trail Buying Alaska Buying Alaska Buying Alaska Buying Alaska Buying Alaska Buying Alaska Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid Naked and AfraidDISNEY Friends-Heart. Lego Frozen Stuck/Middle K.C. Under. ›› Spy Kids 3: Game Over (2003) Bunk’d L&M:Cali Style K.C. Under. K.C. Under. K.C. Under. K.C. Under. K.C. Under. K.C. Under. K.C. Under.E! The Kardashians The Kardashians The Kardashians The Kardashians The Kardashians The Kardashians The Kardashians The KardashiansESPN SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter Baseball Ton. MLB Baseball New York Yankees at Tampa Bay Rays. (N) (Live) Baseball Tonight (N) Champ SpecialESPNC (9:30) 30 for 30 30 for 30 30 for 30 30 for 30 30 for 30 30 for 30ESPN2 Outside Lines Reporters Cheerleading Cheerleading ATP Tennis Miami Open, Men’s Final. From Miami. (N) (Live) E:60 MLB Baseball San Francisco Giants at Arizona Diamondbacks.EWTN Pro-Life At Home With Jim and Joy Holy Rosary Sunday Mass Churches In Concert The Berliner Philharmoniker. Divine Mercy Holy Rosary Lenten Catholics The Church Vincent FoyFOOD Trisha’s Sou. Pioneer Wo. Pioneer Wo. Farmhouse Giada-Home Brunch at The Kitchen Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Chopped Chopped JuniorFREEFM What-Number ››› Mean Girls (2004, Comedy) Lindsay Lohan. (:35) ›› You Again (2010) Kristen Bell. (:40) ››› My Best Friend’s Wedding (1997) Julia Roberts. (:45) What to Expect When You’re ExpectingFX (7:00) 2012 How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met ›› Transformers: Dark of the Moon (2011, Action) Shia LaBeouf, Josh Duhamel, John Turturro. ›› Transformers: Age of Extinction (2014) Mark Wahlberg.FYI Kitchen Nightmares “Peter’s” Kitchen Nightmares Good Spirits Cabin Flipping Vegas Flipping Vegas Flipping Vegas Flipping Vegas Tiny House NationGOLF (8:00) Drive, Chip & Putt (N) (Live) PGA Tour Golf Shell Houston Open, Final Round. (N) (Live) PGA Golf LPGA GolfGSN Deal or No Deal Deal or No Deal Chain Rea. Chain Rea. Chain Rea. Chain Rea. Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Idiotest Idiotest Divided DividedHALL Golden Girls Golden Girls Valentine Ever After (2016, Romance) Autumn Reeser. Summer Villa (2016) Victor Webster, Hilarie Burton. Love’s Complicated (2015) Holly Marie Combs. The Wedding March (2016)HGTV Property Brothers: Buying Property Brothers: Buying Home Town “Homecoming” Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or FlopHIST Weapons Changed World Crime Wave: 18 Months of Mayhem FBI formation. The Definitive Guide to the Mob Life in the American mafia. Forged in Fire “Kora Sword” Forged in Fire “The Cutlass” Forged in Fire “Khopesh”ID 48 Hours on ID 48 Hours on ID Murder Comes to Town Murder Comes to Town Murder Comes to Town Murder Chose Me Evil Lives Here “Not My Boy” Evil Lives HereLIFE ›› My Sister’s Keeper (2009, Drama) Cameron Diaz. ›› The Holiday (2006, Romance-Comedy) Cameron Diaz, Kate Winslet, Jude Law. ›› Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005, Action) Brad Pitt, Angelina Jolie, Vince Vaughn.MTV ››› Freedom Writers (2007) Hilary Swank, Patrick Dempsey. ››› The Blind Side (2009, Drama) Sandra Bullock, Tim McGraw, Quinton Aaron. ››› Pitch Perfect (2012) Anna Kendrick, Skylar Astin.NBCS EPL Soccer Premier English Premier League Soccer: Gunners vs Citizens Goal Zone Premier Figure Skating Reno Air Races (N) Timbersports (N) SuperboatsNGEO Unabomber: Secret History Challenger Disaster Tapes The Real Saddam Hussein Putin Takes Control Generation X Generation X Generation X Generation XNICK SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Bunsen Loud House Loud House Loud House SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Loud House Loud House Loud House Loud HouseOWN T.D. Jakes Super Soul Sunday T.D. Jakes T.D. Jakes Undercover Boss Undercover Boss Undercover Boss “Vivint” Undercover BossOXY Snapped Snapped Snapped Snapped Three Days to Live Three Days to Live Three Days to Live Three Days to LivePCN Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Best Pan Ever! PA Public Affairs SundayPCNC Paid Program Paid Program Sunday News Paid Program Paid Program Sunday News Paid Program Sunday News Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Business Paid Program Pittsburgh Now 5:30PM NewsROOT Paid Program Paid Program Friends Wild Charlie Moore Sled Head Destination Golf Life (N) UEFA Europa Bundesliga Soccer Inside Hockey Penguins NHL HockeySPIKE Truck Tech Detroit Muscle Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue “El Moronte!!” Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue “Tears for Beers”SYFY › Repo Men (2010, Science Fiction) Jude Law, Forest Whitaker. ›› Blade (1998, Horror) Wesley Snipes, Stephen Dorff. ››› The Matrix (1999, Science Fiction) Keanu Reeves, Laurence Fishburne.TBS Search Party Search Party Search Party Search Party Search Party Search Party Search Party Search Party Search Party Search Party ›› Liar Liar (1997) Jim Carrey, Maura Tierney. › Tammy (2014) (DVS)TCM ›› The Blue Gardenia (1953) Anne Baxter. ››› Call Northside 777 (1948) James Stewart. (:15) ›››› The Innocents (1961) Deborah Kerr. (:15) ›› Song of the Thin Man (1947) William Powell.TLC Four Weddings Four Weddings Say Yes to the Prom Say Yes Who Do You Think You Are? Who Do You Think You Are? Who Do You Think You Are? Who Do You Think You Are?TNT Law & Order (DVS) ›› Hulk (2003, Fantasy) Eric Bana, Jennifer Connelly. (DVS) ›› Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides (2011) Johnny Depp. (DVS) ››› Superman Returns (2006) Premiere.TOON Clarence We Bare Teen Titans Teen Titans Steven Universe Teen Titans Teen Titans Wrld, Gumball Wrld, Gumball Clarence We Bare Teen Titans Teen TitansTRAVEL Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum Delicious Delicious Delicious Delicious Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Bizarre Foods/Zimmern The Best Place to Be (N)TRUTV Greatest Ever Greatest Ever Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Hack My Life Hack My Life Hack My Life Game Show Inside Jokes Inside Jokes Inside Jokes Inside Jokes Court Pranks Court Pranks Upscale UpscaleTVLAND (:12) The Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Golden Girls Reba Reba Reba RebaUSA (9:00) ›› The Bucket List › Little Fockers (2010) Robert De Niro. (DVS) ››› Meet the Parents (2000) Robert De Niro, Ben Stiller. (DVS) ›› Meet the Fockers (2004) Robert De Niro, Ben Stiller. (DVS)VH1 › Big Daddy (1999, Comedy) Adam Sandler. ›› Space Jam (1996, Children’s) Michael Jordan. Hip Hop Sq. Hip Hop Sq. Black Ink Crew Black Ink Crew Black Ink CrewWE CSI: Miami “Dead Zone” CSI: Miami “Death Grip” CSI: Miami “Hard Time” CSI: Miami CSI: Miami CSI: Miami “Grand Prix” CSI: Miami “Big Brother” CSI: Miami “Bait”WGN-A Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops
HBO Ice Age: Collision Course (10:55) ›› Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice (2016) Ben Affleck. Real Time With Bill Maher VICE UConn: March › Gods of Egypt (2016) Nikolaj Coster-Waldau. Zookeeper’sMAX (9:45) ››› Minority Report (2002) Tom Cruise. (:15) ›› Waterworld (1995) Kevin Costner, Dennis Hopper. (:35) ›› Dragonfly (2002) Kevin Costner. (:20) ›› The Ring (2002) Naomi Watts.SHOW (9:00) Akeelah and the Bee Circus-Inside American Jihad (2017) Homeland “The Flag House” Billions Chuck faces scrutiny. Billions “Dead Cat Bounce” Billions “Optimal Play” Billions “The Oath”STARZ Superstar (:18) ››› Fargo (1996) Black Sails “XXXVII.” (12:55) The Missing (1:57) The Missing (2:58) The Missing (3:58) The Missing “Statice” (4:58) The MissingSTZENC (9:42) › Texas Rangers (:15) ››› The Jackie Robinson Story (:34) ››› A League of Their Own (1992) Tom Hanks. (:45) ›› Fever Pitch (2005) Drew Barrymore. ››› The Rookie (2002) Dennis Quaid.TMC (8:55) ›› Hidalgo (2004) (:15) ›› The Duff (2015) Mae Whitman. Bad Asses on the Bayou (2015) Danny Trejo. (:25) ›››› Hoop Dreams (1994) Profiles two Chicago NBA hopefuls from age 14 to 18. (:20) Spy Kids
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