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Lexington Herald-Leader from Lexington, Kentucky • A5

Location:
Lexington, Kentucky
Issue Date:
Page:
A5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

FRIDAY MAY 4 2018 5ABusinessKENTUCKY.COM FACEBOOK.COM/KENTUCKYCOM TWITTER.COM/HERALDLEADER MARKETS 23,930.15 Dow Jones 2,629.73 500 12,392.50 NYSE 7,088.15 Nasdaq COMMODITIES $1,310.70 Gold $68.43 Crude oil NAME TKR LAST CHG AK Steel AKS 4.34 Inc 31.94 AMD AMD 10.93 Amazon AMZN1572.08 AEP AEP 69.24 Apple Inc AAPL 176.89 Ashland ASH 71.48 Cp BBT 52.45 BkofAm BAC 29.20 BrownFB 55.26 CSX CSX 59.09 CaesarsEnt CZR 11.70 ChrchllD CHDN 274.85 CocaCola KO 41.89 CmtyTrBc CTBI 48.25 Dillards DDS 74.06 Disney DIS 98.76 DukeEngy DUK 79.76 ExxonMbl XOM 76.54 FarmCB FFKT 50.35 FifthThird FITB 32.28 FordM 11.20 GnCable BGC 29.65 GenElec GE 13.93 Humana HUM 286.68 IngerRd IR 85.97 Intel INTC 52.28 IBM IBM 141.99 JPMorgCh JPM 107.24 KY FstFd KFFB 8.75 KindredHlt KND 8.95 Kroger KR 23.87 Macys 31.45 McClatch rsMNI 9.50 McDnlds MCD 160.08 MicronT MU 46.62 Microsoft MSFT 94.07 NXP Semi NXPI 92.36-10.36 Neovasc NVCN .04 NorflkSo NSC 140.94 PNC PNC 145.02 PPL Corp PPL 28.65 PapaJohns PZZA 59.20 PepsiCo PEP 97.60 ProctGam PG 71.36 RepBncp RBCAA 43.48 Sherwin SHW 370.25 Smucker SJM 111.41 SnapInc A nSNAP 10.97 Sypris SYPR 1.45 TempurSly TPX 45.70 TexInst TXN 103.60 3M Co MMM 195.68 Toyota TM 130.11 UPS UPS 109.81 US Bancrp USB 49.98 Valvoline VVV 20.95 Ventas VTR 52.53 VerizonCm VZ 47.84 WalMart WMT 86.23 Xerox rs XRX 28.31 YumBrnds YUM 82.67 CORN Open High Low Settle Chg 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel May 18 396 399.50 395 399.50 Jul 18 404.75 408.25 403.25 408 Sep 18 412.25 415.75 411 415.50 Dec 18 419.50 422.75 418 422.25 Mar 19 427 430.25 425.75 430 May 19 431.25 434.50 430.25 434.25 Jul 19 435 438.25 434 438 SOYBEANS Open High Low Settle Chg 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel May 181032.751043.251024.751043.25 Jul 18 10431055.50 10341053.25 Aug 181045.75 1058 1037.251056.25 Sep 18 1042.50 1054 1034.251052.25 Nov 181040.751051.751032.501049.50 Jan 19 1044.75 1055 1036.501053.50 Mar 19 10301037.501022.75 1037 CATTLE Open High Low Settle Chg 40,000 cents per lb. Jun 18 105.00 107.57 104.50 106.52 Aug 18 104.15 106.55 103.70 105.52 Oct 18 107.97 109.45 107.37 108.97 Dec 18 111.90 113.40 111.37 113.25 Feb 19 114.00 115.30 113.50 115.07 Apr 19 114.72 116.25 114.70 116.05 Jun 19 108.62 110.07 108.62 109.92 FEEDER CATTLE Open High Low Settle Chg 50,000 cents per lb. May 18 138.57 141.12 138.15 140.80 Aug 18 144.50 147.07 143.85 146.57 STOCKS CHICAGO BOARD OF TRADE CHICAGO MERCANTILE EXCHANGE CASH GRAIN Corn Soybeans Wheat Cent. Ky. 3.64-3.99 9.77- 10.03 4.95 Louisville 4.03 9.95 4.87-5.48 Ohio Val- ley 4.03-4.10 10.42- 10.54 CATTLE MARKETS All reports are markets.

Infor- mation is provided by Federal-State Mar- ket News Service. Price trends are com- pared with last sale. Stanford CATTLE Receipts 2,483 SLAUGHTER COWS Price trend steady Breakers 55-60 Boners 55-64 High Yield Lean 52-62 SLAUGHTER BULLS Price trend steady Yield grade 1-2 81-90 FEEDER STEERS (Medium No. 1) Price trend steady 200-300 lbs. 161-181 300-400 lbs.

165-193 400-500 lbs. 160-185 500-600 lbs. 150-170 600-700 lbs. 140-156 700-800 lbs. 134-148 800-900 lbs.

130-140 lbs. 130 HOLSTEINS (Large Frame No. 2) Price trend 300-400 lbs. 90 400-500 lbs. 91 500-600 lbs.

91 600-700 lbs. FEEDER HEIFERS (Medium No. 1) Price trend steady 200-300 lbs. 147-159 300-400 lbs. 140-159 400-500 lbs.

140-154 500-600 lbs. 130-145 600-700 lbs. 120-136 700-800 lbs. 120-136 800-900 lbs. 108 lbs.

100-103 PER HEAD STOCK COWS 750-990 COWS STOCK BULLS CALVES 250-380 KENTUCKY MARKETS A Crossroads IGA is coming to Citation Vil- lage, a new shopping center at the corner of Citation Boulevard and Leestown Road. Bowling Green-based Houchens Industries is building the grocery store, which is expected to open after the first of the year, said Jeff Grin- stead, division manager for Houchens. It's the first Houchens store in the Lexington area but Houchens is looking at other locations for more stores, he said. The approximately store also will have a Which Wich sandwich shop inside and gas pumps out front, Grinstead said. Which Wich is a new Texas-based sub fran- chise that specializes in sandwiches, he said.

Grinstead said the store will have groceries, dairy, fresh produce, fresh meat and lunchmeat as well as deli "grab and go" section with items such as chick- en and ribs, sandwiches made in house and salads. According to Hou- chens website, Cross- roads IGA stores "hy- bridize conventional grocery shopping with convenience, resulting in fuel, grocery items, fresh meats and produce, and take-home meal options for customers on the go." The concept is to offer groceries, convenience store items, fuel and a quick-service restaurant all in one, Grinstead said. "This is for fill-in or- ders," he said. "Instead of driving all the way back into town to Kroger or Walmart for a loaf of bread, this saves you time." The Citation Village development also is planned to have retail and a restaurant, according to Scott Davidson of Langley Properties, which owns the shopping center. The construction comes as another grocery, Lucky's Market, announced this week it is closing its Lexington store after less than two years.

Lucky's on South Broad- way is scheduled to close by the end of May, or as soon as everything is sold. Another grocery, Fresh Thyme Farmer's Market, closed last year after less than a year in Lexington. But other chains are looking at the small-store format: Target is putting a small-scale store near the University of Kentucky campus off of Limestone, and Laurel Grocery is developing another IGA store for the Romany Road area. Through the UK busi- ness college, Laurel re- cently surveyed people in the neighborhood about what they want in a Ro- many Road store. No designs have been re- leased for the site.

Crossroads IGA coming to development BY JANET PATTON Central Kentucky Central Kentucky HeartWalk Saturday, May 12, 2018 Registration 8 a.m. Walk begins at 9 a.m. Keeneland Race Course For more info, visit heart.org/centralkywalk or call 859.317.6885 local sponsors: brought to you locally by: BUSINESS Business Administration Public Accounting Risk Management Insurance STUDIES Child Development CRIMINAL JUSTICE Criminal Justice Corrections Juvenile Justice Justice, Policy Leadership Police Studies COMMUNICATIONSTUDIES Communication Studies EDUCATION Master of Arts in Teaching (MAT) Elementary Education (MAEd) Gifted Education (MAEd) Instructional Leadership (MAEd) Middle Grades Education (MAEd) Literacy P-12 (MAEd) School Media Librarian (MAEd) Special Education: DHH (MAEd) Special Education: IECE (MAEd) Special Education: LBD (MAEd) Ed. Admin. Supervision (EdS) GENERAL STUDIES General Studies GOVERNMENT Political Science Public Administration (MPA) PARALEGAL Paralegal Studies MEDICALCARE Paramedicine Emergency Services Admin.

FIRE Fire Protection Administration Fire, Arson Exp. Fire Protection Safety Engineering Technology NURSING RN-BSN MSN, Psych. Mental Health NP MSN, Rural Health Family NP Doctor of Nursing Practice OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY to OTD to OTD PSYCHOLOGY Psychology Industrial-Org. Psychology Homeland Security Occupational Safety Safety, Security Emerg. Mgmt.

SOCIALWORK Social Work (BSW) SPORTS Sport Management FORMAT 8-WEEK COURSES 6 START DATES TRANSFER YOURCREDITS and Fire, Arson Explosion Investigation include some on-campus, face-to-face instruction. Details on website. EASTERN KENTUCKY UNIVERSITYGETSTARTEDTODAY! Learn more at go.eku.edu/startnow or contact an advisor at 859-622-7626 put your life on hold to get your degree. Earn it APPLY FOR FREE MAY 4-7 NO PROMOCODE NECESSARY. UNDERGRAD STUDENTS ONLY.

Faced with the need to cut nearly $1 million from its budget, Kentucky Educational Television is eliminating its online campus of- ferings, long known as "distance learning." The online campus program has given middle and high school students around the state the abil- ity to take courses not offered in their home schools. In order to give students now enrolled the ability to finish their courses, the program will end June 30, said KET spokesman Todd Piccirilli. Courses offered in- cluded hard-to-get of- ferings such as German, Latin and physics. Enrollment in the program this academic year is 648 students. Eliminating the program saves KET $500,000 of the nearly $1 million it has to cut as the state budget is pared.

Online campus cur- rently serves schools in Kentucky and 12 other states, Piccirilli said. The majority (73 percent) are in Kentucky. The "distance learn- campus pro- gram has been in oper- ation for 30 years, Picciril- li said. The program has four permanent full-time employees who will lose their jobs, including two teachers, a classroom manager and a service director. Also losing jobs will be 14 part-time em- ployees, mostly tutors, and five contractors.

Other cuts will be made in the budgets of individual KET depart- ments totaling up to $300,000, Piccirilli said, and up to $200,000 will be saved by not filling the jobs of employees who leave or retire. KET distance learning program cut BY CHERYL TRUMAN.

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About Lexington Herald-Leader Archive

Pages Available:
2,726,081
Years Available:
1888-2024