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COLLEGE FOOTBALL: With the season half over, here’s best performers. | 2B
Sports
The Paducah Sun | Tuesday, August 9, 2011 | paducahsun.com
Family
replaces
football for
McKeel
BY JOEY FOSKO
jfosko@paducahsun.com
Calloway County football
coach Josh McKeel wears
many hats. He’s also the
school’s assistant principal
and athletic director.
He’s shedding his most visible one to don the most important one.
“It’s time for me to be Daddy, like I’m supposed to be,”
said McKeel, who stepped
down as the Lakers’ coach after just completing his seventh
season with last Friday’s playoff loss at Franklin-Simpson.
“We had our second child on
July 15, the first day of practice, and my family has always
been able to work it out. I was
working for a great administration, but there comes a
time that you have to make
a decision about what’s most
important.
“I’ve always preached family, faith and football. After
seven years, it’s time to put
the famly where it’s supposed
to be.”
McKeel was 31-49 in seven
seasons as the Lakers’ head
coach, leading them to a district title and a berth in the
Class 4A semifinals in 2008.
That team included quarterback Casey Brockman, who
followed in his coach’s footsteps (McKeel was a multiPlease see MCKEEL | 3B
Section
B
Defense leads Racers in win
BY DUSTY LUTHY SHULL
dshull@paducahsun.com
MURRAY — If its defense can
be anywhere as intense as it was
Tuesday night, Murray State’s
men’s basketball team will play
some frustrated opponents this
season.
The Racers held Bethel University to 25 percent field goal
shooting, allowing the Wildcats
to connect on just 11 shots, in a
77-32 exhibition win at the CFSB
Center.
“It feels great to actually be able
to defend somebody else instead
of our own teammates,” Racer
guard Jewuan Long said. “It feels
like we’ve been doing this forever.
It gets old sometimes, but it feels
good to play somebody else.”
The Racers forced the Wildcats into 27 turnovers and gave
up just eight offensive rebounds
while grabbing 16 of their own.
The Racers led 34-13 at the half.
“I thought the energy was
good,” Racers head coach Steve
Prohm said. “It’s hard to sustain
the effort sometimes in games
like that over a 40-minute period. We went into the locker room
at halftime and said it’s 0-0, you
need to win this half by again, another 20 points.”
It was the first win for Prohm,
an assistant under former head
coach Billy Kennedy, at the CFSB
Center after coaching in exhibition games in Canada.
It was also the first time Racers
fans were able to get a good look
at the team’s newcomers. Prohm
started the experienced players
— Ed Daniel, Ivan Aska, Donte
Poole, Long and Isaiah Canaan
— and his first substitution came
eight minutes into the game, replacing four starters.
Junior Latreze Mushatt, who
DUSTY LUTHY SHULL I The Sun
Murray State guard Donte Poole sets up a play at the top of the key while being defended by Bethel
forward Caleb Hardy, a Carlisle County product, in the second half of the Racers’ 77-32 exhibition win
over the Wildcats.
sat out last year after transferring from Missouri-Kansas City,
showed some blue-collar skills,
leading the team with nine rebounds and scoring 12 points
while tallying two assists and a
steal. Freshman point guard Zay
Jackson led in assists with four,
had three turnovers, scored eight
points and had two steals.
“We just told the young guys,
just go out there and play defense
and know the things they do best
and don’t try to do things they
really can’t,” senior Ivan Aska
said. “We were talking to some of
the young guys before the game,
‘You’re going to be nervous, but
go out and play hard and you’ll be
all right.’”
Canaan led the Racers with 16
points and had three steals, Aska
had 10 points and five rebounds as well as three assists,
while Long had 11 points. Derek
Williams and Josh Swing led the
Wildcats with seven points each.
Carlisle County product Caleb
Please see MURRAY | 3B
Lawmaker wants probe of PSU case Tide deserves second shot
BY JOANN LOVIGLIO
Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA — A Pennsylvania lawmaker and former federal prosecutor is asking for an
investigation into whether Penn
State officials broke federal law
by not reporting sexual abuse allegations to proper authorities.
U.S. Rep. Patrick Meehan said
he’s asking Education Secretary
Arne Duncan to look into whether the university violated the
Clery Act, which requires colleges
and universities to prepare, publish and distribute an annual security report disclosing all criminal offenses reported to campus
security or local police.
“University officials are required to report suspected criminal offenses to campus security”
under the law, Meehan states in
the letter to Duncan.
The request stems from a child
sex-abuse scandal involving former Penn State football defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky,
who was arrested Saturday on
charges of molesting eight boys
over 15 years. A grand jury report alleges senior Penn State
officials failed to report abuse
allegations to police in 2002,
when a graduate assistant said
he told coach Joe Paterno that
Sandusky was abusing a boy in a
locker room shower.
Former Athletic Director Tim
Curley and former senior vice
president Gary Schultz were
charged with lying to the state
Associated Press
Alicia Archangel a senior at Penn State University protests in front
of Old Main on the university campus on Tuesday in State College,
Pa. Assistant Athletic Director Jeff Nelson announced Tuesday that
coach Joe Paterno’s weekly NCAA college football news conference
was canceled.
grand jury and failing to alert
police to the complaint about
Sandusky. Curley was put on administrative leave Sunday and
Schultz stepped down.
“The failure to report the incident in 2002 appears to violate
this law and breaks Penn State’s
own reporting methods for sexual abuse on campus,” said Meehan, who served as U.S. attorney
for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania before assuming his post
in Congress this year.
“Even more upsetting is the
SCOREBOARD
Buffalo 6, Winnipeg 5, OT
Florida 5, Toronto 1
Dallas 5, Washington 2
New Jersey 3, Carolina 2
Edmonton 3, Montreal 1
Detroit 5, Colorado 2
St. Louis 3, Chicago 0
Minnesota 3, Calgary 0
fact that had university officials
reported this to authorities, additional abuses could have been
prevented,” he said.
Meehan says he sent a letter
to Duncan on Tuesday requesting an investigation be opened.
The Department of Education is
responsible for Clery Act compliance, Meehan said.
The law is named for Jeanne
Clery, a 19-year-old Lehigh University student who was raped
and murdered by another student in her dorm room in 1986.
They can call us hicks. They
can make fun of our accents.
They can even accuse us, rightfully so, of having roots in the
Confederacy.
As full-fledged Southerners,
we make easy targets for people
in other parts of the country.
But they can’t make fun of our
college football.
So where do allegedly knowledgeable football fans get off
making fun of Saturday’s showdown between Alabama and
LSU, which had all the drama
and intrigue — and the appropriate level of on-field talent — of a
national championship game?
Sure, there were no touchdowns scored, with LSU prevailing 9-6 in overtime in a battle of
field goals.
Some — the unenlightened, I
like to call them — found it boring. But knowledgeable football
fans saw it for what it was, two
truly great teams playing great
defense.
Even CBS studio announcer
Tim Brando found a need to defend it, branding it as “big boy
football,” the kind that has helped
the Southeastern Conference win
the last five national championships.
And that leads us to the debate
as to what lies ahead for college
football — specifically, the discredited Bowl Championship Series — for the rest of the season.
LSU, if it wins out, will certainly be in the “national champion-
Joey Fosko
ship game” in January, in friendly
environs in nearby New Orleans.
Who is on track to join them there
remains a mystery, but the debate
rages between three (or maybe
four) other teams that remain unbeaten as the season turns into the
homestretch.
Oklahoma State? Perhaps, but
the Cowboys still have to beat their
bedlam brethren from Oklahoma.
And seriously, is a team that just
gave up 45 points to a Kansas State
squad that was blasted 58-17 by
Oklahoma really worthy of a spot
in the title game? I don’t care if
some misguided fans (the truly unenlightened, by the way) thought
Oklahoma
State’s
comeback
against Kansas State eclipsed the
goings-on in Tuscaloosa for pure
excitement, but that shows a shallow understanding of what wins.
The object is to win, not just meet
someone’s idea of exciting. And if
you weren’t excited by AlabamaLSU, you’re little more than a
corpse.
Stanford? Maybe. Quarterback
College Football
After the LSU-Alabama game the Pac-12 will
gets its moment to shine in the spotlight. Will
the upcoming game between No. 3 Stanford
and No. 6 Oregon have that level of hype, and
will it become a classic like previous great
games.
Page 3B
Please see LSU | 3B
CONTACT US
Sports................... 575-8665
sports@paducahsun.com
Joey Fosko ............ 575-8661
jfosko@paducahsun.com
Dusty Luthy Shull ... 575-8662
dshull@paducahsun.com
Morning Update
2B • Wednesday, November 9, 2011 • The Paducah Sun
Coming up
MURRAY
STATE
KENTUCKY
LOUISVILLE
FOOTBALL
Saturday
Austin Peay
at Murray
Time: 1 p.m.
TV: none
BASKETBALL
Friday
Harris-Stowe
at Murray
Time: 7:30
p.m.
TV: none
FOOTBALL
Saturday
Vanderbilt
at Nashville
Time: 11
a.m.
TV: WPSD-6
BASKETBALL
Friday
Marist
at Lexington
Time: 6 p.m.
TV: Sports
South
FOOTBALL
Saturday
Pittsburgh
at Louisville
Time: 11 a.m.
TV: none
BASKETBALL
Friday
Tenn.-Martin
at Louisville
Time: 6 p.m.
TV: none
On television
TODAY
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
7 p.m. – Miami, Ohio at Temple (ESPN)
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
6 p.m. – Lehigh at St. John’s (ESPN2)
8 – Duquesne at Arizona (ESPN2)
PRO HOCKEY
6:30 p.m. – Philadelphia at Tampa Bay (Versus)
9:30 – Nashville at Anaheim (Sports South)
GOLF
7 p.m. – PGA: Australian Open (TGC)
Midnight – Europe: Singapore Open (TGC)
THURSDAY
PRO FOOTBALL
7 p.m. – Oakland at San Diego (NFL)
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
6:30 p.m. – Ohio U. at Central Michigan (ESPNU)
7 – Virginia Tech at Georgia Tech (ESPN)
GOLF
3 p.m. – LPGA: Lorena Ochoa Invitational (TGC)
7 – PGA: Australian Open (TGC)
Midnight – Europe: Singapore Open (TGC)
HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL
9:30 p.m. – California: Westlake Village at St. Bonaventure (Sports South)
Local sports
TODAY
COLLEGE BASKETBALL – Bethel JV at Shawnee
(7:30 p.m.). SEC: Akron at Mississippi State.
THURSDAY
COLLEGE BASKETBALL – Women: LindenwoodBelleville at Mid-Continent (6 p.m.).
FRIDAY
HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL – Class A playoffs: Kentucky Country Day at Mayfield, Russellville at Louisville Holy Cross. Class 2A playoffs: Hancock County
at Murray, Butler County at Owensboro Catholic.
Class 3A playoffs: Monroe County at Paducah Tilghman, Fort Campbell at Edmonson County.
Class 4A playoffs: Owensboro at Lone Oak, Madisonville at Franklin-Simpson. Class 5A playoffs: Warren Central at Christian County, Greenwood at Bowling Green. Class 6A playoffs: Pleasure Ridge Park
at Henderson County, Louisville Seneca at Louisville
Butler.
COLLEGE BASKETBALL – Harris-Stowe at Murray State (7:30 p.m.), Marist at Kentucky (6 p.m.),
Tennessee-Martin at Louisville (6 p.m.), St. Joseph’s
at Western Kentucky (7 p.m.), Loyola-Chicago at Illinois (8 p.m.). Rotary Classic (at Bethel, Tenn): MidContinent vs. U.of the Cumberlands (4 p.m). SEC:
North Florida at Alabama, North Carolina-Greensboro at Tennessee, Jackson State at Florida, Western Carolina at South Carolina, Louisiana-Monroe at
Mississippi, McNeese State at Auburn, Wofford at
Georgia, South Carolina-Aiken at Arkansas, Oregon
at Vanderbilt. OVC: Eastern Illinois at Indiana State,
Tennessee Tech at Miami, Fla., Tennessee-Martin at
Louisville, Austin Peay at Middle Tennessee, Tennessee State at Saint Louis, Southeast Missouri at Missouri, Miles at Jacksonville State. Women: Evansville at Murray State (5:15 p.m.).
Purchase memos
The Rules: Please send your submissions for Purchase
sidelines to sports@paducahsun.com, or fax to 270-442-7859,
or mail to Sports, The Paducah Sun, Box 2300, Paducah, Ky.,
42003-2300.
BASKETBALL: The Nate’s Wish tournament for
boys’ and girls’ teams in grades 3-6 is Nov. 18-19 at
the Paducah Regional Sports Plex. The entry fee is
$125 per team, with each team guaranteed a minimum of three games. For more information, phone
Kent Guthrie at 804-0799. Proceeds from the tournament benefit cancer patients at Vanderbilt Children’s Hospital in Nashville.
Study shows lack
of diversity
Associated Press
ORLANDO, Fla. — A new study released Tuesday showed that the racial and
gender composition of people in key leadership positions at schools that compete
in the NCAA’s Football Bowl Subdivision
remains decisively white and male.
The report by The Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport at the University
of Central Florida said that 90 percent of
FBS presidents are white, along with 88
percent of athletic directors. Men comprise 81 and 95 percent of those positions,
respectively.
Diversity is also severely lacking among
the leadership at the various FBS conferences, where 100 percent of conference
commissioners are both white and male.
paducahsun.com
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Rodgers, Woodley worthy of awards
BY BARRY WILNER
Associated Press
Their work is only half completed, yet they deserve frontrunner status for this season’s
NFL awards. And yes, we know
how everything can change in
the next eight weeks.
For now, though, here’s the
who’s who of honorees for
2011.
OFFENSIVE
ROOKIE:
Cam Newton, QB, Carolina.
It’s hard — make that nearly impossible — to argue with
this choice. From his debut
right through the bye week,
the top overall draft pick has
surpassed early expectations.
Newton has been just as dynamic and creative as he was
in leading Auburn to the national championship, and he’s
made the Panthers relevant
again even if they are 2-6.
They are not an easy out for
any opponent.
Runners-up: Andy Dalton,
QB, Cincinnati; A.J. Green,
WR, Cincinnati; Doug Baldwin, WR, Seattle; Marcus
Gilbert, T, Pittsburgh; Stefan
Wisniewski, G, Oakland.
DEFENSIVE ROOKIE: Al-
don Smith, DE-LB, San Francisco.
Smith has been a force as a
pass rusher and solid in run
defense almost from the beginning of the season, and
really has stepped up the last
few weeks. He played end in
college, but the transition to
pass coverage has gone well,
too; of course, it helps having
star LB Patrick Willis nearby.
Oddly, Smith is not a starter
yet. Still, defensive coordinator Vic Fangio estimates
Smith is on the field more
than he is off it.
Runners-up: Chris Conte,
S, Chicago; Brooks Reed, LB,
Houston; Ryan Kerrigan, LB,
Washington; Von Miller, LB,
Denver; Patrick Peterson, CB,
Arizona.
OFFENSIVE PLAYER: Calvin Johnson, WR, Detroit.
“Megatron” to the Max best
describes what Johnson has
achieved in eight games: 11
TDs, joining Randy Moss as
the only players since the 1970
merger with 11 TD catches in
his team’s first eight games.
His combination of speed,
size, moves and moxie make
Johnson not only the most
dangerous receiver in the
league this year, but the most
impressive offensive player.
And the competition is fierce.
Johnson often draws double
coverage, yet has 47 catches
for 804 yards (17.1 per catch).
Many of those receptions are,
well, to say spectacular is an
understatement.
Runners-up: Aaron Rodgers, QB, Green Bay; Adrian
Peterson, RB, Minnesota;
Wes Welker, WR, New Eng-
land; Matt Forte, RB, Chicago; Fred Jackson, RB, Buffalo.
DEFENSIVE PLAYER: LaMarr Woodley, LB, Steelers.
Woodley is dealing with a
left hamstring problem, about
the only thing to slow him this
season. Forget James Harrison or Troy Polamalu, Woodley has been the best and most
influential player on the Steel
Curtain. It’s amazing how
Pittsburgh always seems to
find the perfect linebacker for
its system.
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The Paducah Sun • Wednesday, November 9, 2011 • 3B
An appreciation for Joe Frazier
BY TIM DAHLBERG
Associated Press
George
Foreman’s
crushing right uppercut
connected for the first
time in Round 1 and, suddenly, the heavyweight
champion of the world
was on the canvas. At
ringside, the shocking
sight sent Howard Cosell
into a frenzy.
“Down goes Frazah!
Down goes Frazah! Down
goes
Frazah!”
Cosell
screamed into his ABC
television microphone.
Across the ring, Foreman was thinking one
thing: Please don’t let Joe
Frazier get up.
“I saw him get up and
I said to myself ‘Oh boy,
he’s going to get me now,”
Foreman recalled Tuesday during a telephone interview. “You didn’t want
him getting up, and you
really didn’t want him getting up mad.”
Get up Frazier did, only
to go down again and
again. Six times in all before the bell could sound
to end the second round.
Yet there he was still,
out on his feet but still upright and ready for more.
Frazier wasn’t going to
surrender his heavyweight
title until the referee mercifully put an end to the
carnage in Jamaica.
“Joe Frazier wouldn’t
back away from King
Kong,” Foreman said.
“Joe Frazier was one
brave man.”
Associated Press
An old photograph and flowers have been placed at a makeshift memorial at the
former location of Joe Frazier’s gym on Tuesday in Philadelphia. Frazier died Monday
night after a brief battle with liver cancer at 67.
Brave enough to take on
the fearsome and much
bigger Foreman in a fight
he seemed destined to
lose. Brave enough to
hand Muhammad Ali his
first loss and then almost
fight to the death with him
in the Philippines.
But that’s what Frazier
was. An undersized warrior who didn’t know how
to back down. A fighter to
the core.
Understand that, and
you understood Joe Frazier.
He kept getting up when
Foreman knocked him
down. He kept trying to
fight Ali even though one
eye was swollen shut and
he couldn’t see out of the
other.
And he kept fighting for
his rightful place in history until his death Monday night in Philadelphia
at the age of 67.
“His pride and dignity
made him fight to the
end,” Don King said. “Joe
never forgave Muhammad
Ali for what he did to him,
but Joe Frazier proved
that he wasn’t only a great
fighter but a great man.”
I spent some time talking to Frazier earlier this
year as he reminisced
about his career and his
life. The 40th anniversary
of the Fight of the Century
was looming, and Frazier
was more than happy to
talk about a memorable
night long past.
No one in Madison
Square Garden that night,
it seemed, wanted him
to beat Muhammad Ali.
Not the fans who scraped
together enough money
to get a cheap seat in the
rafters, and certainly not
the celebrities and various
rogues of the night who
dressed in their finest to
parade around ringside
before the bout.
Stanford-Oregon generating plenty of hype
JOHN MARSHALL
Associated Press
PHOENIX — Alabama
and LSU played what had
been dubbed The Game
of the Century, a tag that
didn’t quite fit after the SEC
rivals traded field goals and
defensive stops.
A week later, the Pac-12
gets its shot in the spotlight.
Saturday’s game between
No. 3 Stanford and sixthranked Oregon may not
generate the same kind of
hype as LSU-Alabama, but
it has the potential to be
one of the greatest games
in a conference that’s had
its share over the years.
Will it become a classic
like the 1982 Big Game between Cal and Stanford?
That might be a stretch, but
with a spot in the inaugural
Pac-12 championship game
likely on the line, not to mention BCS bowl and national
title implications, it has the
potential to be a doozy.
So, to get you ready for the
big game — note the lowercase, for now — here’s a look
at some of the most memorable games during the various incarnations of the con-
ference along the West Coast.
■■■
Cal 25, Stanford 20,
Nov. 20, 1982. No list of
great games — anywhere
— is complete without “The
Play.” A nondescript game
heading in, the 1982 version
of the Big Game became an
instant classic when Cal used
five laterals and got through
the Stanford band to score
the winning touchdown on
the last play of the game. The
sheer madness of those laterals would have been enough
to vault this game to elite
status, but the band running
onto the field and the ensuing trombone-player takedown in the end zone made it
an all-time great. That Stanford still doesn’t recognize
Cal’s win — the Cardinal contend the final play was illegal
— adds to it even more.
■■■
USC 21, UCLA 20,
Nov. 18, 1967. Considered
to be among the greatest college football games of the
20th Century, this matchup
between two top-5 teams
is widely considered the
premier game in the longstanding rivalry between
MCKEEL: Playoff was highlight
CONTINUED FROM 1B
year starter at tight end
for the Racers) in signing
with Murray State. Brockman is now the Racers’
starting quarterback.
“I guess that was the
successful highlight of
things,” McKeel said. “We
lost 52-49 (at Bullitt East)
and when you lose a game
like that, you think ‘What
if?’ a lot. We were awfully
close to playing for a state
championship.”
The Lakers have struggled since then as the talent level dropped and the
team went 8-25 over the
last three seasons. The
Lakers just finished this
campaign with a 3-8 mark.
“If you look back on
the history of Calloway
County, it goes in cycles,”
McKeel said. “There have
been some up cycles and
down cycles. That’s part of
where the program is now.
We need to get it back up
again.
“There is some potential
here. We’ve got (quarterback) Tyler Greer coming
back and three of the five
pieces on the offensive
line will be back. We’ve
got a good freshman class
and some sophomores
that were in key spots.”
Even though he remains
the school’s athletic director, McKeel said he won’t
take an active role in the
search for a new coach.
And he won’t rule out a
return to coaching sometime in the future.
“I’m probably going to
step back from that and
leave it to (principal Brian) Wilmurth and a committee we’ll put together,”
McKeel said. “I’ll never
mark anything off the table for sure. I might look
at that someday. I’ll never
say never.”
Southern California neighbors. UCLA came into the
game ranked No. 1 and had
Heisman Trophy candidate
Gary Beban. USC was No.
4 and had its own Heisman
hopeful, running back O.J.
Simpson. Playing in the
AAWU Conference, a precursor to even the Pac-8, the
Bruins and Trojans played
an epic game that turned on
an electric 64-yard touchdown run by “The Juice” in
the fourth quarter. USC won
the game and, later, the national championship. Beban
went on to win the Heisman
in a somewhat controversial
vote for some drama after
the drama.
■■■
Oregon 56, Arizona
State 55 (2OT), Oct. 28,
2000. Oregon was undefeated and Arizona State was
having another strong season when these two equally
matched teams squared off.
They traded scoring plays
throughout the game until
the Sun Devils appeared to
have the upper hand. Trying to run out the clock leading 49-42, Arizona State
couldn’t — Mike Williams
fumbled, the Ducks recovered, Joey Harrington threw
his sixth TD pass to send the
game to overtime. The craziness ended, fittingly, on
a crazy play when Arizona
State coach Bruce Snyder
called for a fake extra point
try and Jeff Krohn’s pass attempt fell short.
■■■
Oregon State 0, Oregon 0, Nov. 19, 1983.
Dubbed the Toilet Bowl not
only because of the driving
rain in Eugene that day, but
because of the final score
of this Civil War. The game
featured four missed field
goals — two from less than
30 yards — five interceptions and six fumbles. With
neither team doing much of
anything in a rain that came
in sideways, fans reportedly
started a chant of “Bor-ing!”
at the end of the game. It
would go down as the last
scoreless tie in the history of
college football; in 1996, the
NCAA changed the rules to
allow for overtime. It may
not have been exciting, but
it was certainly memorable.
Besides, we just like saying
Toilet Bowl.
DUSTY LUTHY SHULL I The Sun
Murray State junior Stacy Wilson goes up for a fastbreak layup over Bethel’s Josh Swing in the second
half of the Racers’ 77-32 exhibition win over the Wildcats.
MURRAY: Bad shooting from free
throw line the worst for Racers
CONTINUED FROM 1B
Hardy started the game
and played 21 minutes,
but had only three rebounds and an assist.
Prohm said the next
few days before the Racers regular-season opener against Harris-Stowe
at 7:30 p.m. Friday will
be spent shoring up
transition and half-court
defense. And working on
free throws. The Racers
shot 5-of-16 from the charity stripe Tuesday.
“Maybe it was first-game
jitters, I really don’t know
what it was,” Long said.
“But we definitely got to
get in and work on our free
throws. It’s going to be a
major key down the stretch
in the conference. We got
to get in there and make
free throws, and I know
coach is going to stress
that.”
LSU: Les Miles would be honored
to face Alabama again this season
CONTINUED FROM 1B
Andrew Luck, a consensus projection as the No.
1 pick in next year’s NFL
draft, makes for an attractive calling card, but the
Cardinal (it’s singular, remember?) still has to get by
Oregon this weekend.
Boise State? Ah, how I
love the plucky Broncs and
their ability to drive the
BCS powers-that-be absolutely crazy, and their early-season win over Georgia
merits even more credence
if the Bulldogs win the
SEC East and press an unbeaten LSU in the league
championship game. But
does anyone really believe
that every domino will fall
in place to give them a shot
at the big time?
Houston? Well, let’s get
serious.
And that takes us back to
Alabama, who some insist
should remain out of the
debate.
Really? Are we so wed
to the concept that an undefeated team deserves a
spot in the title game that
we can dismiss out of hand
the Crimson Tide, which
just took the nation’s topranked team to overtime?
If so, we’re simply penalizing Alabama for its geography and the fact that the two
best teams in the country are
in the same division of the
same conference.
If LSU really is the nation’s
best team, and most everyone thinks they are, why can’t
Alabama — for argument’s
sake — be the second-best
team? And if the BCS’ true
mission is to deliver the best
two teams to the championship game, then why can’t
we see an LSU-Alabama rematch?
Seriously, does anyone really believe that Oklahoma
State would beat Alabama in
a neutral-site venue? Would
Stanford? Would Boise State
or Houston?
The answers, at least in this
corner, are no, doubtful, no
and heck, no.
Of course, a playoff would
solve the issue once and for
all, but that’s another column
for another time. For now, we
deal with reality.
LSU coach Les Miles said
it best, acknowledging in a
postgame interview that he
would be “honored” to face
Alabama again with the national championship on the
line.
Friday’s playoff
schedule
Class A
Russellville at Louisville
Holy Cross, 7 p.m.
Kentucky Country Day at
Mayfield, 7 p.m.
Class 2A
Butler County at Owensboro Catholic, 7 p.m.
Hancock County at Murray,
7:30 p.m.
Class 3A
Fort Campbell at Edmonson County, 7:30 p.m.
Monroe County at Paducah
Tilghman, 7:30 p.m.
Class 4A
Madisonville at FranklinSimpson, 7 p.m.
Owensboro at Lone Oak,
7:30 p.m.
Class 5A
Greenwood at Bowling
Green, 7:30 p.m.
Warren Central at Christian
County, 7 p.m.
Class 6A
Louisville Seneca at Louisville Butler, 6:30 p.m.
Pleasure Ridge Park at
Henderson County, 7 p.m.
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Sports
4B • Wednesday, November 9, 2011 • The Paducah Sun
Sports Briefs
Associated Press
Pearl to host hoops
radio show
NEW YORK — Former
Tennessee coach Bruce
Pearl will host a college
basketball show on satellite radio service SiriusXM.
Pearl was fired in March
after six seasons in the
wake of an NCAA investigation that culminated
with a three-year showcause penalty against
the coach. The sanction
makes it nearly impossible
for another school to hire
him during that time.
Famous for painting his
bare chest orange during
a Tennessee women’s
game, Pearl always figured
he’d wind up in broadcasting someday.
“I did always know that
at some point this coaching was going to end,” he
told The Associated Press
on Tuesday. “I just didn’t
think it was going to take
a break this quickly.”
Pearl will make his debut Nov. 14 and will host
a three-hour call-in show
twice a week starting in
January.
He wanted to stay
around basketball even if
he doesn’t coach again,
so Pearl and his agent let
broadcasters know he was
interested.
Ladies’ Classic
winner sells
LEXINGTON, Ky. — Royal
Delta, winner of the $2
million Breeders’ Cup
Ladies’ Classic on Friday,
sold Tuesday for $8.5 million, topping the second
session of Keeneland’s
November Breeding Stock
Sale.
Benjamin Leon Jr.,
owner of Besilu Stables,
purchased this year’s
likely 3-year-old filly champion and will keep her in
training for a 4-year-old
campaign.
The daughter of Empire
Maker was sold as part of
the dispersal of the late
Saud bin Khaled’s Palides
Investments. Trained by
Hall of Famer Bill Mott,
Royal Delta has earned
nearly $1.7 million with
five wins from eight starts.
Unrivaled Belle, winner of the 2010 Ladies’
Classic, sold for $2.8 million earlier in the day to
Betty Moran’s Brushwood
Stable. Breeding plans
have not been finalized for
the 5-year-old daughter of
Unbridled’s Song, who was
also conditioned by Mott.
“I feel our stable had a
lot to do with the development of her,” Mott said of
Royal Delta. “I have actually trained the mother and
the grandmother and the
rest of the family, so the
whole thing is special.”
Leon, a Florida health
care executive, said he
has not yet decided if
Royal Delta will stay in
Mott’s barn or be moved
to another trainer. Leon
has ties to Todd Pletcher,
another of the game’s top
trainers, since entering
the thoroughbred market
in recent years.
NBA union: No deal;
no fear of ultimatum
NEW YORK — NBA players made it clear Tuesday:
No deal.
No fear of Commissioner
David Stern’s ultimatum,
either.
“The current offer on the
table from the NBA is one
that we cannot accept,”
players’ association president Derek Fisher said.
Instead, the players said
they will ask for another
meeting with owners before Stern’s Wednesday
afternoon deadline — and
sound willing to agree to
a 50-50 split of revenues
under the right circumstances — in an attempt
to end the lockout and
save the season.
In an interview on
NBA TV, Stern said that
whether he agrees to
meet “would be guided by
the labor relations committee.”
NBA spokesman Mike
Bass said the league has
not yet heard from Hunter.
A month of the season
has already been lost,
and the NBA risks losing
fans without an agreement soon. Some already
appear to have forgotten: Blake Griffin, last
season’s rookie of the
year, stood around in the
lobby of a busy hotel off
Broadway and was rarely
approached by fans.
The league’s current
proposal calls for players
to receive between 49
percent and 51 percent of
basketball-related income,
though union officials argue it would be nearly impossible to get above 50.2
percent.
Oriole acquitted
in shooting death
SANTO DOMINGO,
Dominican Republic —
Baltimore Orioles reliever
Alfredo Simon has been
acquitted of an involuntary
manslaughter charge.
Defense attorney Dinora
Dilone said Simon was
acquitted Tuesday in the
New Year’s Eve shooting
death of 25-year-old Michel Castillo Almonte.
Dilone says experts testified that the fatal bullet
did not come from Simon’s
gun and that no witnesses
saw the pitcher fire his
weapon.
The victim’s family had
previously dropped a lawsuit against Simon, but
the public prosecutor still
pursued the case. It was
not clear whether the prosecutor planned to appeal.
Simon faced up to two
years in prison if convicted.
Jones’ 22 points lead UK romp
Associated Press
LEXINGTON, Ky. —
Terrence Jones scored 22
points for No. 2 Kentucky
and the Wildcats’ five
starters made their first
26 shots to lead the Wildcats to a 125-40 exhibition victory over Division
II Morehouse on Monday
night.
The Wildcats went
on separate runs of 100, 16-0 and 29-0 while
forcing Morehouse into
18 first-half turnovers to
take a 74-13 lead at halftime.
In one sequence, Marquis Teague flipped the
ball off the backboard
across the rim to Jones
for a dunk. Kentucky followed moments later with
four straight 3-pointers
before coach John Calipari pulled most of his
starters, who received a
standing ovation.
Kentucky’s
largest
margin of victory in a
game that counted is 77
against Georgia in 1956.
The Wildcats open their
season on Friday night
against Marist.
Freshman Kyle Wiltjer
scored 26 points, Anthony Davis 21, Doron Lamb
12, Teague 12, Darius
Associated Press
SYDNEY — Tiger Woods
says he received an apology from former caddie
Steve Williams over a racial
slur when the two met and
shook hands Tuesday.
“We talked this morning, we met face to face and
talked about it, talked it
through,” Woods said, ahead
of the Australian Open at
The Lakes Golf Club.
Williams’
disparaging
comment came during a
caddies’ awards party Friday in Shanghai.
“It was a wrong thing
to say, something that we
both acknowledge,” Woods
said. “He did apologize. It
was hurtful, certainly, but
life goes forward.”
Woods said it was not up
to him to call for sanctions
against Williams. The PGA
Tour and European Tour
have said no action would
be taken against Williams
for the comment.
“Stevie’s certainly not a
racist,” Woods said Tuesday. “There’s no doubt about
that. It was a comment that
shouldn’t have been made
and was certainly one that
he wished he didn’t make.”
He was asked how two
people so close together for
more than a decade — Williams was with Woods for
13 of his 14 majors over 13
years — could become so
distant so quickly. Woods
fired Williams in July.
Associated Press
Kentucky’s Darius Miller (right) pressures Morehouse’s Charles Decosta during the
second half of their NCAA college basketball exhibition game on Monday in Lexington,.
Miller 11 and Michael KiddGilchrist 11 for the Wildcats.
Eloy Vargas led Kentucky
with 12 rebounds.
The Wildcats, who shot
73 percent from the field,
turned 26 Morehouse turnovers into 49 points and out-
scored the Maroon Tigers
33-0 on fastbreak opportunities. Daniyal Faquir led
Morehouse with 11 points.
Barnes ready to be leader for Tar Heels
BY AARON BEARD
Associated Press
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. —
Harrison Barnes is considered the best player
on the top-ranked team
in the nation. This time
he’s ready for all the expectations that come
with those accolades.
The confident North
Carolina
sophomore
talks like a wily veteran
— far more at ease than
when big expectations
dogged him before he
had even played a game
for the Tar Heels.
Barnes can even joke a
bit about the bumpy start
to his college career.
“Obviously it wasn’t
to the level I wanted to
play,” Barnes said in an
interview with the The
Associated Press. “But
you just had to keep
working. It was finally
nice that everyone could
stop asking ‘What was
the problem?’ ... (But
) we’re doing the same
thing again this year. I
keep hearing ‘What happened last year?’”
What happened last
year was Barnes became
the first freshman named
preseason AP All-American and then stumbled
out the gate. But he rebounded,
eventually
adjusting to the college
game to lead the Tar
Heels to within one game
of another Final Four appearance.
Now — a preseason
Woods: Williams has apologized
BY DENNIS PASSA
paducahsun.com
“That’s a great question,
I don’t know that one,”
Woods said. “For me personally it was a tough decision to make to go in a
different direction in my
personal life, but as far as
personally, I don’t know
how it could have happened
the way it did. But it just did
and here we are.
“It’s just one of those
things where we’ll see
what time does and as we
all know, time does heal
wounds.”
Associated Press
North Carolina’s Harrison Barnes looks on during the
first half of an exhibition game in October against UNCPembroke in Chapel Hill, N.C. Barnes is still bothered
by the way North Carolina’s late-season surge faded a
game short of the Final Four.
All-American once again
— he’s stronger after adding about 15 pounds and
knows he’s likely already
endured the toughest times
of his college career. He
passed on the NBA draft
despite being a likely top10 pick, returning to a team
with all five starters back
and a No. 1 ranking head-
Serving the
area since
1956
ing into Friday’s opener
against Michigan State in
the Carrier Classic.
Many unchecked boxes
are still lingering from last
year on a to-do list for the
goal-driven Barnes.
“Not a lot of goals were
met, I’ll say that much,”
Barnes said with a chuckle.
“But it was good though,
because obviously it gives
me a lot of motivation for
this year.”
Barnes struggled with his
shot and turnovers early as
he adjusted to college before taking a huge leap in
mid-January. He averaged
11.8 points and shot 37 percent through the first 19
games, then averaged 19.7
points and shot 46 percent
in the last 18.
That, along with Kendall Marshall’s promotion
to starting point guard,
changed everything for a
team that looked lost after
a 20-point defeat at Georgia Tech. North Carolina
won 12 of 13 to chase down
Duke for the Atlantic Coast
Conference regular-season
title.
Along the way, Barnes
proved clutch with lastsecond 3-pointers to win
at Miami and Florida State.
He also had a freshman-record 40 points in the ACC
tournament against Clemson.
“He had a transition period like every other freshman,” Blue Devils forward
Ryan Kelly said. “Once he
figured it out, he became
a really good player. He’s
somebody you have to
gameplan around defensively.”
With Barnes’ stronger frame, Marshall said
Barnes is doing a better job
of catching the ball closer
to the basket, reducing the
amount of energy he expends while getting to his
spots.
Hitterman’s
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Metropolis, IL 62960
Big Wireless is a full service repair facility
with over 2,000 faceplates on display.
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Expires 12/26/11
Business
paducahsun.com
The Paducah Sun • Wednesday, November 9, 2011 • 5B
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E-Trade
eBay
EMC Cp
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EmersonEl
EmpDist
EngyTsfr
EricsnTel
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GATX
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45
24
25
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33
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8
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31
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GoldmanS
Goodyear
GrtBasG g
GreenMtC
Groupon n
HCA Hld n
Hallibrtn
HartfdFn
HeclaM
HercOffsh
Hertz
HewlettP
HollyFrt s
Hologic
HomeDp
HonwllIntl
HopFedBc
HostHotls
HudsCity
HumGen
HuntBnk
Huntsmn
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2.97 +.19
...
7.16 +.18
...
9.14
-.03
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I-J-K-L
IAMGld g
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iShGold
iShBraz
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iSh HK
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iShChina25
iSSP500
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ITT Cp s
ITW
IngerRd
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Inhibitex
Intel
IBM
IntFlav
IntlGame
IntPap
Interpublic
Invesco
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JDS Uniph
JPMorgCh
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JamesRiv
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Jefferies
JetBlue
JohnJn
JohnsnCtl
JnprNtwk
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KV PhmA
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Keycorp
Kimco
Kinross g
KodiakO g
Kohls
Kraft
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LennarA
LibtIntA h
LillyEli
Limited
LincNat
LizClaib
LloydBkg
LockhdM
Lowes
lululemn gs
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22.64
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42.03 +.49
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29.34 +.63
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M-N-O-P
MEMC
MFA Fncl
MGIC
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Macys
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MktVGold
MktVRus
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MetroPCS
MicronT
Microsoft
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NewellRub
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NewsCpB
NobleCorp
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60 36.00
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...
1.84 +.07
Today
Will costs take a toll at GM?
Potash s
15 49.14 +.51
Power-One
5
5.53 +.06
PS USDBull ... 21.59
-.10
PwShs QQQ ... 58.88 +.67
priceline
39 552.85 +43.85
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12 19.24 +.48
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Prudentl
7 54.48 +1.17
PulteGrp
...
5.98 +.24
November
Issue
Available
October 27
Q-R-S-T
Qualcom
QuantaSvc
QksilvRes
RF MicD
Rackspace
RadianGrp
Raytheon
RegionsFn
Renren n
RepubAir
RepubSvc
RschMotn
RioTinto
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Safeway
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SandRdge
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Schlmbrg
Schwab
SeagateT
SealAir
SemiHTr
Sequenom
SiderurNac
SignetJwlrs
SilvWhtn g
Sina
SiriusXM
SkywksSol
SouthnCo
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SpectraEn
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Tekelec
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TexInst
ThomCrk g
3M Co
TimeWarn
TollBros
Total SA
Transocn
Travelers
Triumph s
TycoIntl
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57.03
20.95
7.75
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44.88
3.40
45.74
4.38
5.30
4.34
27.94
18.83
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1.13
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121.59
173.53
165.08
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39.25
51.52
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76.83
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17.88
18.24
32.15
4.33
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45.93
36.39
86.94
1.75
21.13
43.96
8.47
42.10
29.67
2.89
35.70
33.99
31.56
39.55
72.82
13.61
34.06
26.51
35.40
3.34
15.29
44.36
41.74
12.33
49.81
33.03
7.64
20.18
30.58
8.01
17.52
1.53
28.10
12.93
14.52
7.61
53.05
39.99
11.11
19.88
4.51
5.16
14.45
29.18
41.66
31.55
7.01
81.83
35.28
19.43
52.70
51.74
59.03
56.00
46.94
+.11
-.07
+.06
+.11
+3.13
+.43
+.27
+.22
+.21
+1.65
+.25
-.06
+1.45
+.02
+4.52
+1.14
-1.45
+1.82
+1.62
+.36
+.47
+.58
+.58
+.33
+.28
+.35
-.30
-.06
+.16
+1.50
+.22
-.47
+.42
+.21
+.09
+.10
+3.24
-.71
+1.92
+.05
-.19
+.31
+.05
+.13
+.54
-.02
+.42
+.41
+.31
+.38
+1.17
+.25
+.38
+.30
+.23
+.32
+.40
+.13
+1.14
+.75
+.12
+.71
+.59
+1.45
+.15
+.40
+.07
+.22
-.07
+.05
-11.51
+.22
+1.10
-.18
+.14
+.07
+.20
+.15
+.29
-.06
+.02
-.38
+2.14
+.36
+1.33
+1.38
+.84
+.41
-1.00
+.47
U-V-W-X-Y-Z
UBS AG
US Airwy
UtdContl
UPS B
US Bancrp
US NGs rs
US OilFd
USSteel
UtdTech
UtdhlthGp
UnumGrp
UrbanOut
Vale SA
Vale SA pf
ValeroE
VangEmg
VerizonCm
VertxPh
ViacomB
VirgnMda h
Visa
VishayInt
Vodafone
VulcanM
WMS
WalMart
Walgrn
WarnerCh
WsteMInc
WeathfIntl
WellPoint
WellsFargo
Wendys Co
WDigital
WstnUnion
WetSeal
Weyerh
WmsCos
Windstrm
Wyndham
Xerox
Xilinx
YPF Soc
YRC rsh
Yahoo
Yamana g
YumBrnds
...
9
12
17
12
...
...
...
15
10
8
18
...
...
9
...
15
...
12
...
19
6
...
...
16
14
11
40
15
64
9
10
...
9
12
16
21
20
23
14
14
15
...
...
19
17
21
12.75
5.21
18.20
71.55
26.27
8.62
37.43
27.54
78.87
46.15
22.46
26.34
26.47
24.54
26.33
42.81
37.52
30.45
42.25
24.41
94.54
11.49
28.63
31.35
18.26
59.32
33.19
18.58
31.67
16.75
68.83
26.53
5.49
27.79
17.64
3.19
17.50
31.29
12.01
34.38
8.54
33.31
35.95
.05
15.97
16.31
55.63
+.33
-.18
-.54
+1.09
+.38
+.13
+.34
+.17
+.53
+.98
+.45
-.87
+.15
+.09
+.15
+.53
+.18
-2.77
+.19
+.13
+1.58
+.42
+.42
+1.04
-3.69
+1.38
+.05
+.53
+.02
+.08
+.73
+1.11
-.02
+.11
+.26
-.20
+.42
-.03
+.01
+.42
+.09
+.34
+4.23
+.28
-.12
+1.00
www.fourriversbusiness.com
Investor optimism
Investor Pulse
The number of individual investors who are bullish
about stocks has been as erratic as the market.
Bullish
again
60 percent
50
40
30
20
J
F
2011
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O N
Net investment in U.S. stock mutual funds
Individual investors are feeling better about
stocks after the market’s October comeback.
About 40 percent say they’re optimistic
about how stocks will do over the next six
months, according to a survey by the American Association of Individual Investors. In late
September, 25 percent of investors were bullish. The average since 1987 is 39 percent.
The S&P 500 hit its low point for the year on
Oct. 4, when it briefly went into bear market
territory. Since then, the index is up 19 percent. U.S. economic news has gotten better.
Europe has made progress on resolving its
debt crisis. The U.S. job market improved
slightly from July to October. And companies
are reporting strong earnings. Third-quarter
profits for the S&P 500 are expected to reach
a record $23.78 per share. That would be up 7
percent from the second quarter.
Investors are still pulling money out of stock
mutual funds, which they’ve been doing since
May. But the pace has slowed. Investors withdrew $3.2 billion during the week of Oct. 26,
down from $3.5 billion a week earlier and $5.8
billion two weeks earlier.
Investors are still pulling money out of stock mutual
funds, but not as much as they did during the summer.
$20 billion
10
0
-10
-20
-30
J
2011
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O*
*Through Oct. 26
The S&P 500
Stocks are doing better as worries about the economy
and government debt in the U.S. and Europe subside.
1,400
Tuesday’s close
1,275.92
1,300
+1.5%
1,200
Dec. 31, 2010
1,257.64
1,100
1,000
D J
’10 ’11
F
M
A
M
J
J
SOURCES: American Association of Individual Investors, Investment Company Institute, FactSet
A
S
O N
S. Choe, K. Girard • AP
INDEXES
52-Week
High
Low
12,876.00
5,627.85
459.94
8,718.25
2,490.51
2,887.75
1,370.58
14,562.01
868.57
10,404.49
3,950.66
381.99
6,414.89
1,941.99
2,298.89
1,074.77
11,208.42
601.71
Name
Net
Chg
Last
Dow Jones Industrials
Dow Jones Transportation
Dow Jones Utilities
NYSE Composite
Amex Index
Nasdaq Composite
S&P 500
Wilshire 5000
Russell 2000
12,170.18
4,968.89
454.94
7,671.91
2,339.89
2,727.49
1,275.92
13,421.86
755.27
Dow Jones industrials
12,320
Close: 12,170.18
Change: 101.79 (0.8%)
11,940
11,560
13,000
%Chg
+101.79
+59.03
+1.55
+81.48
+28.02
+32.24
+14.80
+151.71
+10.16
+.84
+1.20
+.34
+1.07
+1.21
+1.20
+1.17
+1.14
+1.36
YTD
%Chg
52-wk
%Chg
+5.12
-2.70
+12.33
-3.67
+5.96
+2.81
+1.45
+.46
-3.62
+7.26
+2.73
+11.92
-.39
+9.87
+6.42
+5.15
+4.71
+4.03
10 DAYS
12,500
12,000
11,500
11,000
10,500
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST
Name
AT&T Inc
AirProd
AEP
AmeriBrgn
Aon Corp
ATMOS
BB&T Cp
Comcast
CrackerB
Dillards
Dover
EnPro
FredsInc
FullerHB
GenCorp
Goodrich
Goodyear
HonwllIntl
Jabil
KimbClk
Kroger
Div
1.72
2.32
1.88f
.46f
.60
1.36
.64a
.45
1.00f
.20
1.26
...
.20
.30
...
1.16
...
1.49f
.32f
2.80
.46f
PE Last
15
29.46
15
87.53
10
39.20
16
39.58
18
48.30
16
35.40
15
24.19
16
22.76
13
45.34
16
55.37
14
56.31
16
34.62
16
12.32
13
22.52
...
5.04
26 122.75
32
14.28
14
54.65
12
21.01
17
70.88
12
23.25
YTD
Chg %Chg
+.02
+.3
+1.06
-3.8
-.09
+8.9
-.14 +16.0
+.88
+5.0
+.27 +13.5
+.58
-8.0
+.11
+4.1
-.21 -17.2
+.42 +45.9
+.22
-3.7
+.35 -16.7
+.12 -10.5
+.30
+9.7
...
-2.5
+.03 +39.4
+.08 +20.5
+.69
+2.8
+.30
+4.6
+.69 +12.4
+.17
+4.0
Name
Lowes
MeadWvco
MotrlaSol n
NiSource
OldNBcp
Penney
PilgrimsP
RadioShk
RegionsFn
SbdCp
SearsHldgs
Sherwin
TecumsehB
TecumsehA
Total SA
USEC
US Bancrp
WalMart
WestlkChm
Div
.56
1.00
.88
.92
.28
.80
...
.50f
.04
3.00a
...
1.46
...
...
2.38e
...
.50
1.46
.30f
PE Last
15
22.77
16
29.14
16
45.77
20
22.34
18
11.98
20
33.77
...
5.53
9
13.51
26
4.38
7 2135.00
...
77.61
19
86.72
...
5.00
...
5.26
...
52.70
...
1.86
12
26.27
14
59.32
8
40.15
YTD
Chg %Chg
+.46
-9.2
+.55 +11.4
-.01 +20.3
+.16 +26.8
+.24
+.8
+.33
+4.5
-.17 -22.0
+.48 -26.9
+.22 -37.4
+46.00
+7.2
+.95
+5.2
+.35
+3.5
+.41 -61.7
+.53 -59.7
+1.38
-1.5
-.02 -69.1
+.38
-2.6
+1.38 +10.0
+.81
-7.6
MARKET SUMMARY
NYSE
AMEX
NASDAQ
MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)
Name
Vol (00)
BkofAm
2117476
S&P500ETF2030418
SPDR Fncl 1124244
DrxFnBull 705634
iShR2K
680112
Last
Chg
Name
6.53
127.88
13.61
14.94
75.54
+.08
+1.62
+.25
+.77
+1.09
GrtBasG g
CheniereEn
NwGold g
GoldStr g
AvalRare n
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name
Last
KV PhmB
Dynegy
TorchEngy
BeazerHm
E-TrSPGld
Chg
2.05
3.76
4.97
2.36
70.00
%Chg
+.78
+.81
+.82
+.33
+9.00
+61.4
+27.5
+19.8
+16.3
+14.8
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name
Last
Lydall
WMS
LSB Inds
Nomura
ChiNBorun
Chg
9.28
18.26
34.41
3.22
3.88
%Chg
-1.90
-3.69
-6.09
-.45
-.50
-17.0
-16.8
-15.0
-12.3
-11.4
Vol (00)
$25.04
GM
$40
When General Motors releases its
third-quarter earnings, financial
30
analysts expect it to report a $1.6
’11
billion profit. That would be down
$34.19
from $2 billion a year earlier. Bar20
clays Capital analyst Brian JohnOperating
est.
son expects GM to say that its
EPS
results were affected by rising
$0.52 $0.96
commodities costs – the same
3Q ’10 3Q ’11
problem that sent Ford’s earnings
down during the quarter. GM is
Price-to-earnings ratio:
5
expected to report strong sales
based on past 12 months’ results
around the world, a good sign for
Source: FactSet
the economy.
2,250
786
86
3,122
74
15
3,866,999,036
Chg
65412 1.38
34606 10.91
34362 12.27
34113 2.21
33201 3.87
-.03
+.41
-.09
-.16
+.29
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name
Last
Procera rs
CPI Aero
eMagin
AlmadnM g
AvalRare n
14.20
12.80
4.60
2.96
3.87
Chg
%Chg
+2.37
+1.61
+.51
+.23
+.29
+20.0
+14.4
+12.5
+8.4
+8.1
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name
Last
WalterInv
EstnLtCap
Minefnd g
InvCapHld
BovieMed
DIARY
Advanced
Declined
Unchanged
Total issues
New Highs
New Lows
Volume
Last
22.76
2.25
14.50
4.25
2.28
Chg
%Chg
-2.89
-.25
-1.37
-.35
-.18
-11.3
-10.0
-8.6
-7.6
-7.3
Name
Vol (00)
SiriusXM
813922
PwShs QQQ 586216
Intel
539147
Cisco
493370
Microsoft
467483
Chg
1.75
58.88
24.75
18.31
27.16
+.05
+.67
+.47
+.30
+.36
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name
Last
SpanBd rsh
RepubAir
Sypris
McC&Sch
FuelTech
2.99
4.34
3.74
8.63
6.70
Chg
%Chg
+1.51 +102.0
+1.65 +61.3
+.89 +31.2
+1.86 +27.5
+1.27 +23.4
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name
Last
Targacept
ExideTc
LigandP rs
QuinStreet
AdeptTch
DIARY
Advanced
Declined
Unchanged
Total issues
New Highs
New Lows
Volume
Last
Chg
%Chg
7.61 -11.51
3.04 -1.44
12.00 -3.56
9.20 -1.90
2.84 -.54
-60.2
-32.1
-22.9
-17.1
-16.0
DIARY
272
176
37
485
7
3
87,673,490
Advanced
Declined
Unchanged
Total issues
New Highs
New Lows
Volume
1,838
712
100
2,650
50
50
1,815,446,571
YTD
Name
NAV Chg %Rtn
American Beacon
LgCpVlInv 18.33 +0.24 -1.1
American Cent
EqIncInv
7.24 +0.07 +2.2
GrowthInv 26.44 +0.26 +2.3
UltraInv
24.03 +0.24 +6.1
ValueInv
5.63 +0.07 -0.4
American Funds
AMCAPA m 19.29 +0.21 +2.8
BalA m
18.47 +0.14 +4.7
BondA m
12.56 -0.03 +6.0
CapIncBuA m49.77 +0.31 +2.5
CapWldBdA m20.95 +0.03 +5.3
CpWldGrIA m33.47 +0.34 -4.4
EurPacGrA m37.92 +0.35 -8.3
FnInvA m 36.27 +0.36 -0.2
GrthAmA m 30.01 +0.29 -1.4
HiIncA m
10.80 -0.01 +2.0
IncAmerA m 16.75 +0.09 +4.2
IntBdAmA m 13.63 -0.02 +3.4
InvCoAmA m27.70 +0.30 -0.2
MutualA m 25.84 +0.25 +3.9
NewEconA m25.02 +0.20 -1.2
NewPerspA m27.73 +0.29 -3.1
NwWrldA m 50.07 +0.30 -8.3
SmCpWldA m34.93 +0.30 -10.1
TaxEBdAmA m12.32 -0.01 +7.9
USGovSecA m14.60 -0.03 +6.7
WAMutInvA m28.47 +0.30 +6.4
Aquila
ChTxFKYA m10.68
+7.5
Artisan
Intl d
21.11 +0.19 -2.7
MdCpVal
21.64 +0.21 +7.8
MidCap
35.36 +0.27 +5.1
Baron
Growth b
53.23 +0.62 +3.9
Bernstein
DiversMui
14.59 -0.01 +5.0
IntDur
14.14 -0.04 +6.2
TxMIntl
13.69 +0.14 -13.0
BlackRock
Engy&ResA m37.38 +0.51 -4.9
EqDivA m 18.16 +0.19 +5.0
EqDivI
18.20 +0.19 +5.2
GlobAlcA m 19.28 +0.12
GlobAlcC m 17.95 +0.11 -0.6
GlobAlcI d 19.38 +0.12 +0.3
Calamos
GrowA m
52.46 +0.70 -1.7
Columbia
AcornIntZ
36.43 +0.16 -8.8
AcornZ
29.60 +0.29 -0.7
StLgCpGrZ 13.13 +0.19 +5.7
ValRestrZ
47.31 +0.52 -5.5
DFA
1YrFixInI x 10.35
+0.7
2YrGlbFII
10.24
+1.0
5YrGlbFII
11.34 -0.01 +5.4
EmMkCrEqI 19.03 +0.11 -13.0
EmMktValI 29.48 +0.21 -17.4
IntSmCapI 14.82 +0.09 -12.6
USCorEq2I 10.83 +0.14 -0.4
USLgValI
19.65 +0.24 -1.3
USSmValI 24.08 +0.35 -5.6
USSmallI
20.94 +0.28 -1.5
DWS-Scudder
GrIncS
16.74 +0.18 +3.4
Davis
NYVentA m 33.60 +0.50 -2.2
NYVentY
34.02 +0.50 -1.9
Delaware Invest
DiverIncA m 9.37 -0.02 +5.5
Dimensional Investme
IntCorEqI
9.88 +0.08 -10.3
IntlSCoI
15.21 +0.09 -10.0
IntlValuI
15.73 +0.14 -12.2
Dodge & Cox
Bal
68.85 +0.67 -0.2
Income
13.40 -0.04 +4.4
IntlStk
31.85 +0.31 -10.8
Stock
103.99 +1.42 -2.3
Dreyfus
Apprecia
40.90 +0.47 +7.1
Eaton Vance
LrgCpValA m 17.43 +0.22 -3.5
FMI
LgCap
15.69 +0.26 +3.5
FPA
Cres d
27.63 +0.28 +4.1
NewInc m 10.74
+2.1
Fairholme Funds
Fairhome d 27.23 +0.51 -23.5
Federated
ToRetIs
11.36 -0.03 +5.6
Fidelity
AstMgr50
15.41 +0.07 +1.3
Bal
18.58 +0.12 +3.3
BlChGrow 44.87 +0.44 +2.8
Canada d 53.43 +0.37 -8.1
CapApr
25.72 +0.25 +1.5
CapInc d
8.93 +0.01 -0.7
Contra
70.29 +0.71 +3.9
DiscEq
22.18 +0.22 -1.6
DivGrow
27.04 +0.31 -4.6
DivrIntl d
27.82 +0.32 -7.7
EqInc
41.72 +0.52 -4.4
EqInc II
17.27 +0.19 -4.1
FF2015
11.45 +0.05 +1.3
FF2035
11.22 +0.10 -1.8
FF2040
7.83 +0.07 -1.9
Fidelity
32.27 +0.32 +0.6
FltRtHiIn d
9.72 +0.01 +1.7
Free2010
13.72 +0.06 +1.3
Free2020
13.82 +0.08 +0.6
Free2025
11.44 +0.08 -0.3
Free2030
13.61 +0.10 -0.8
GNMA
11.85 -0.02 +6.9
GovtInc
10.81 -0.03 +6.8
GrowCo
87.82 +0.67 +5.6
GrowInc
18.32 +0.24 +1.3
HiInc d
8.74
+3.0
IntBond
10.86 -0.02 +5.6
IntMuniInc d 10.31
+6.0
IntlDisc d
29.84 +0.33 -9.7
InvGrdBd
7.69 -0.02 +7.0
LatinAm d 53.05 +0.52 -10.1
LowPriStk d 36.97 +0.31 +3.0
Magellan
66.04 +0.79 -7.7
MidCap d 27.60 +0.23 +0.6
MuniInc d 12.85 -0.01 +8.5
NewMktIn d 16.14 +0.03 +8.0
OTC
58.95 +0.73 +7.3
Puritan
18.06 +0.10 +2.2
Series100Idx 9.00 +0.11 +3.0
ShTmBond
8.51
+1.8
StratInc
11.17
+4.9
Tel&Util
17.15 +0.13 +9.8
TotalBd
10.96 -0.02 +6.7
USBdIdxInv 11.75 -0.03 +6.9
Value
65.60 +0.78 -4.5
Fidelity Advisor
NewInsA m 20.53 +0.20 +3.0
NewInsI
20.76 +0.19 +3.2
StratIncA m 12.49 +0.01 +4.7
Fidelity Select
Gold d
51.55 -0.30 +0.9
Fidelity Spartan
500IdxAdvtg 45.25 +0.55 +3.2
500IdxInstl 45.25 +0.55 NA
500IdxInv
45.25 +0.55 +3.2
ExtMktIdI d 37.17 +0.40 -1.4
IntlIdxIn d 32.35 +0.33 -7.7
TotMktIdAg d 37.20 +0.44 +2.4
TotMktIdI d 37.20 +0.45 +2.4
First Eagle
GlbA m
47.43 +0.30 +2.3
OverseasA m22.35 +0.06 -1.4
FrankTemp-Frank
Fed TF A m 12.00 -0.01+10.0
FrankTemp-Franklin
CA TF A m 7.00 -0.01 +8.7
HY TF A m 10.15
+10.2
Income A m 2.12 +0.02 +3.1
Income C m 2.14 +0.02 +2.6
IncomeAdv
2.10 +0.01 +2.8
NY TF A m 11.69 -0.02 +8.2
RisDv A m 34.87 +0.33 +6.1
US Gov A m 6.89 -0.01 +5.7
FrankTemp-Mutual
Discov A m 27.59 +0.28 -3.1
Discov Z
27.99 +0.28 -2.8
Shares A m 20.05 +0.22 -2.0
Shares Z
20.25 +0.22 -1.7
FrankTemp-Templeton
Fgn A m
6.48 +0.06 -7.2
GlBond A m 13.17 +0.02 +0.5
GlBond C m 13.20 +0.02 +0.2
GlBondAdv 13.14 +0.02 +0.8
Growth A m 17.26 +0.16 -3.0
World A m 14.55 +0.13 -2.0
Franklin Templeton
FndAllA m 10.22 +0.08 -0.8
GMO
EmgMktsVI 12.27 +0.08 -9.3
IntItVlIV
20.06 +0.16 -6.3
QuIII
21.98 +0.26 +11.0
QuVI
21.98 +0.26 +11.1
Goldman Sachs
HiYieldIs d
6.98 -0.01 +2.1
Harbor
Bond
12.23
+3.0
CapApInst 39.29 +0.42 +7.0
IntlInstl d
56.51 +0.83 -6.7
Hartford
CapAprA m 30.82 +0.33 -11.0
CpApHLSIA 39.30 +0.45 -7.2
DvGrHLSIA 19.67 +0.23 +1.0
Hussman
StratGrth d 12.47 -0.11 +1.5
INVESCO
CharterA m 16.72 +0.20 +3.4
ComstockA m15.44 +0.20 -0.8
EqIncomeA m 8.35 +0.07 -1.5
GrowIncA m 18.64 +0.24 -2.2
Ivy
AssetStrA m 24.66 +0.28 +1.0
AssetStrC m 23.82 +0.28 +0.4
JPMorgan
CoreBondA m11.86 -0.03 +6.5
CoreBondSelect11.85 -0.03 +6.7
HighYldSel
7.84 +0.01 +2.2
ShDurBndSel 11.00
+1.7
USLCpCrPS 20.66 +0.28
Janus
GlbLfScT d 24.24 -0.07 +4.3
OverseasT d 39.05 +0.14 -22.9
PerkinsMCVT22.64 +0.24 +0.3
John Hancock
LifBa1 b
12.75 +0.08 +0.1
LifGr1 b
12.62 +0.11 -1.7
Lazard
EmgMkEqtI d19.40 +0.18 -10.6
Legg Mason/Western
CrPlBdIns
11.11 -0.03 +6.2
Longleaf Partners
LongPart x 27.28 -0.35 -1.0
Loomis Sayles
BondI
14.38 +0.01 +5.3
BondR b
14.33 +0.02 +5.0
Lord Abbett
AffiliatA m 10.74 +0.14 -6.5
BondDebA m 7.70 +0.01 +3.8
ShDurIncA m 4.55
+2.7
ShDurIncC m 4.58
+2.1
MFS
TotRetA m 14.22 +0.11 +2.8
ValueA m 22.82 +0.29 +1.2
ValueI
22.93 +0.30 +1.4
Manning & Napier
WrldOppA
7.68 +0.06 -10.2
Matthews Asian
China d
25.98 -0.12 -11.5
India d
17.07
-20.6
Merger
Merger m 15.98 +0.02 +1.3
Metropolitan West
TotRetBdI
10.49
+5.2
TotRtBd b 10.49
+4.9
Morgan Stanley Instl
MdCpGrI
37.83 +0.27 +1.3
Natixis
InvBndY
12.33 -0.02 +6.0
StratIncA m 14.88 +0.05 +5.1
StratIncC m 14.96 +0.05 +4.4
Neuberger Berman
GenesisIs
49.48 +0.43 +7.7
Northern
HYFixInc d 7.08
+3.2
Oakmark
EqIncI
28.07 +0.23 +1.2
Intl I d
17.21 +0.04 -11.3
Oakmark I 42.83 +0.47 +3.7
Oberweis
ChinaOpp m 11.83 -0.04 -28.9
Old Westbury
GlbSmMdCp 14.55 +0.14 -4.2
Oppenheimer
DevMktA m 32.48 +0.16 -10.9
DevMktY
32.21 +0.16 -10.7
GlobA m
57.99 +0.63 -3.9
IntlBondA m 6.47 +0.03 +1.9
IntlBondY
6.46 +0.03 +1.9
MainStrA m 32.63 +0.42 +0.7
RocMuniA m 15.82 -0.02 +9.5
RochNtlMu m 6.82 -0.01 +9.9
StrIncA m
4.15 +0.01 +2.0
PIMCO
AllAssetI
12.19
+4.1
AllAuthIn
10.83 +0.03 +5.4
ComRlRStI
8.11 +0.03 -0.8
DivIncInst
11.40
+4.4
EMktCurI
10.30
-1.4
HiYldIs
9.05
+3.6
InvGrdIns
10.68 -0.03 +6.5
LowDrIs
10.36
+1.6
RERRStgC m 4.72 +0.02+24.6
RealRet
12.29 -0.06 +11.8
RealRtnA m 12.29 -0.06 +11.5
ShtTermIs
9.79
+0.3
TotRetA m 10.93
+3.0
TotRetAdm b 10.93
+3.2
TotRetC m 10.93
+2.4
TotRetIs
10.91 -0.02 +3.4
TotRetrnD b 10.93
+3.1
TotlRetnP
10.93
+3.3
Permanent
Portfolio
49.41 +0.25 +7.9
Pioneer
PioneerA m 39.84 +0.48 -2.0
Putnam
GrowIncA m 13.01 +0.17 -3.1
NewOpp
52.19
-0.1
Royce
PAMutInv d 11.54 +0.11 -0.9
PremierInv d 20.95 +0.19 +2.9
Schwab
1000Inv d 38.15 +0.45 +2.6
S&P500Sel d20.20 +0.25 +3.2
Scout
Interntl d
29.55 +0.32 -8.2
Sequoia
Sequoia
144.09 +1.51 +11.4
T Rowe Price
BlChpGr
40.51 +0.48 +6.2
CapApprec 21.08 +0.15 +3.8
EmMktStk d 31.59 +0.17 -10.5
EqIndex d 34.44 +0.42 +3.0
EqtyInc
23.32 +0.27 -0.2
GrowStk
33.38 +0.36 +3.8
HiYield d
6.52 -0.01 +2.4
IntlBnd d
10.28 +0.04 +5.6
IntlGrInc d 12.43 +0.09 -6.6
IntlStk d
13.41 +0.12 -5.8
LatinAm d 47.04 +0.41 -17.1
MidCapVa 23.14 +0.21 -2.4
MidCpGr
59.92 +0.58 +2.4
Bernanke and small business
Cisco earnings
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke will speak
at the Fed’s Conference on Small Business and Entrepreneurship. Small businesses have been unwilling to
hire because of the economy. So investors want to
hear if he has a
forecast for when
companies are
likely to start taking
on employees.
Small business
hiring has been a
factor in economic
recoveries – but
not this one.
Investors want to see if Cisco
System’s efforts to turn itself
around are working. The computer networking company is
restructuring and getting out of
businesses like its Flip video
camera operation. Investors also
want to know if Cisco is getting
back the government business it
lost during the debate over the
national debt during the
summer. Another concern: How
much did the slower economy
hurt business this summer?
$25
NewAsia d 18.18 +0.04 -5.2
NewEra
48.13 +0.66 -7.7
NewHoriz
36.26 +0.37 +8.3
NewIncome
OrseaStk d
9.71 -0.02 +5.4
7.88 +0.07 -5.5
R2015
12.12 +0.08 +1.9
R2025
12.16 +0.10 +1.0
R2035
12.27 +0.12 +0.3
Rtmt2010
15.71 +0.09 +2.4
Rtmt2020
16.68 +0.13 +1.5
Rtmt2030
17.39 +0.16 +0.6
Rtmt2040
17.45 +0.17 +0.2
ShTmBond
SmCpStk
4.83
SmCpVal d 36.38 +0.43 +0.7
SpecInc
12.44 +0.02 +4.3
Value
Templeton
23.30 +0.30 -0.2
InFEqSeS 18.63 +0.16 -6.8
Thornburg
IntlValA m
25.49 +0.17 -8.2
IntlValI d
26.06 +0.18 -7.9
Tweedy Browne
GlobVal d
Vanguard
22.58 +0.09 -5.2
500Adml
117.77 +1.44 +3.2
500Inv
117.75 +1.43 +3.1
AssetA
24.32 +0.15 +0.1
BalIdxAdm
22.02 +0.13 +4.8
BalIdxIns
22.02 +0.13 +4.8
CAITAdml
11.16
DivGr
15.38 +0.18 +8.0
EmMktIAdm d35.39 +0.20 -11.2
EnergyAdm d126.77 +2.04 +4.8
EnergyInv d 67.49 +1.09 +4.8
Explr
73.93 +0.69 +1.4
ExtdIdAdm
40.79 +0.45 -1.2
ExtdIdIst
40.79 +0.44 -1.1
FAWeUSIns d85.71 +0.85 -8.7
GNMA
11.13 -0.02 +6.5
GNMAAdml 11.13 -0.02 +6.6
GrthIdAdm
32.81 +0.38 +4.8
GrthIstId
32.81 +0.38 +4.8
HYCor d
5.70
+6.2
HYCorAdml d 5.70
+6.3
HltCrAdml d 56.14 +0.40 +9.5
HlthCare d 132.98 +0.94 +9.5
ITBondAdm 11.86 -0.05 +9.7
ITGradeAd
10.14 -0.03 +7.2
ITIGrade
10.14 -0.03 +7.1
ITrsyAdml
12.09 -0.03 +8.8
InfPrtAdm
28.24 -0.16+13.6
InfPrtI
11.50 -0.07+13.6
InflaPro
14.38 -0.08+13.6
InstIdxI
116.99 +1.43 +3.2
InstPlus
116.99 +1.42 +3.2
InstTStPl
28.88 +0.35 +2.6
IntlGr d
17.94 +0.22 -7.2
IntlGrAdm d 57.12 +0.68 -7.2
IntlStkIdxAdm d23.97+0.22 -9.0
IntlStkIdxI d 95.93 +0.90 -9.0
IntlStkIdxIPls d95.95 +0.90 -9.0
IntlVal d
29.16 +0.26 -9.3
LTGradeAd 10.31 -0.14+15.7
LTInvGr
10.31 -0.14+15.6
LifeCon
16.50 +0.04 +2.3
LifeGro
21.88 +0.18 -0.2
LifeMod
19.72 +0.10 +1.6
MidCp
20.45 +0.18 +0.7
MidCpAdml 92.93 +0.81 +0.8
MidCpIst
20.53 +0.18 +0.8
Morg
18.44 +0.20 +2.3
MuHYAdml
10.55 -0.01 +8.6
MuInt
13.78
+7.1
MuIntAdml
13.78
+7.2
MuLTAdml
11.15 -0.01 +8.4
MuLtdAdml
11.08
+2.7
MuShtAdml 15.90
+1.4
PrecMtls d
25.24 +0.10 -5.4
Prmcp d
66.46 +0.70 +1.0
PrmcpAdml d69.01 +0.73 +1.1
PrmcpCorI d 13.96 +0.15 +1.4
REITIdxAd d 82.82 +0.99 +8.3
STBond
10.68 -0.01 +2.9
STBondAdm 10.68 -0.01 +3.0
STBondSgl
10.68 -0.01 +3.0
STCor
10.69 -0.01 +2.0
STGradeAd 10.69 -0.01 +2.1
STsryAdml
10.83 -0.01 +2.1
SelValu d
19.19 +0.17 +2.3
SmCapIdx
34.47 +0.41 -0.8
SmCpIdAdm 34.54 +0.41 -0.7
SmCpIdIst
34.54 +0.41 -0.7
SmGthIdx
22.23 +0.26 +1.4
SmValIdx
15.52 +0.19 -3.0
Star
19.43 +0.10 +2.8
TgtRe2010
23.28 +0.06 +4.3
TgtRe2015
12.79 +0.06 +3.0
TgtRe2020
22.57 +0.13 +2.1
TgtRe2030
21.85 +0.17 +0.8
TgtRe2035
13.10 +0.12 +0.1
TgtRe2040
21.47 +0.20 -0.1
TgtRe2045
13.49 +0.13 -0.1
TgtRetInc
11.72
Tgtet2025
12.80 +0.09 +1.4
TotBdAdml
11.01 -0.04 +6.8
TotBdInst
+5.7
11.01 -0.04 +6.8
TotBdMkInv 11.01 -0.04 +6.7
TotBdMkSig 11.01 -0.04 +6.8
TotIntl d
14.33 +0.13 -9.1
TotStIAdm
31.91 +0.38 +2.5
TotStIIns
31.92 +0.38 +2.5
TotStISig
30.80 +0.36 +2.5
TotStIdx
31.90 +0.37 +2.4
WellsI
22.83 +0.03 +8.1
WellsIAdm
55.30 +0.06 +8.2
Welltn
31.56 +0.21 +3.7
WelltnAdm
54.51 +0.37 +3.8
WndsIIAdm 46.58 +0.54 +3.3
Wndsr
13.11 +0.18 -2.3
WndsrAdml 44.24 +0.60 -2.3
WndsrII
26.24 +0.30 +3.3
Waddell & Reed Adv
AccumA m
7.67 +0.08 +2.4
SciTechA m 10.26 +0.05 -1.3
Yacktman
Focused d
18.74 +0.20 +6.0
Yacktman d 17.55 +0.20 +6.1
CSCO
$18.31
’11
10 $24.26
Operating
EPS
+7.6
CapOpAdml d74.26 +0.77 -3.3
20
15
+1.5
34.79 +0.41 +1.0
$0.42
1Q ’11
Price-to-earnings ratio:
est.
$0.40
1Q ’12
16
based on past 12 months’ results
Dividend: $0.24 Div. Yield: 1.3%
Source: FactSet
6B • Wednesday, November 9, 2011 • The Paducah Sun
19tThH
A!nNnNuUaAlL
paducahsun.com
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