040913 daily union

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Thatcher leaves legacy, divides

Blue Jays on a roll

Page 7A

Junction City

Sports

The Daily Union.

Volume 152, No. 83, 2 Sections, 16 pages, 7 Inserts

Tuesday

The DU

at a glance Wedding surprise

It was exactly one week ago. Call it divine providence, happenstance or just plain fate, but two people in love were able to be joined together in wedded bliss in a strange set of circumstances. To set the scene, four Junction City Little Theater volunteers met at the annex as usual on Tuesday around 4 p.m. That day, the task was to work on the historical files of the 62-year-old community theater. See page 3A

Manhattan doctor dies in plane crash TULSA, Okla. — The pilot and passenger who died in a singleengine plane crash near a Tulsa suburb were identified Monday by family members and colleagues, as federal investigators arrived at the site and began collecting evidence. The pilot in Sunday’s accident was identified by his twin brother Monday as retired gynecologist Ronald Marshall of Manhattan, Kan. Federal Aviation Administration records show the 1984 Mooney fixed-wing plane was registered to Marshall in DeWitt, Neb., where he owned farmland. The passenger was identified by colleagues Monday as Chris Gruber, development director for the college of veterinary medicine at Kansas State University, also in Manhattan. The aircraft had departed Tulsa around 5:50 p.m. Sunday en route to Manhattan. It crashed shortly after takeoff, plowing into a vacant house near Collinsville. See page 4A

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Hauling in the big one

Today’s forecast

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50 Cents • Junction City, Kansas

Milford Lake a gem for catfish anglers

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tefanie Stanley didn’t realize she had a monstrous blue catfish on the other end of her line until its thrashing tail broke Milford Lake’s choppy surface. “Holy moly,” Stanley said Saturday afternoon, describing her initial reaction when she and her husband, Robert Stanley, landed the 82-pound blue earlier in the day. The couple from Olathe was competing against about 30 other boats in the Catfish Chasers catch-and-release tournament. Tournament officials said they believed Stefanie’s fish to be a lake record. Though many anglers weighed in a handful of fish in the 30 to 40-pound range and numerous five-fish totals eclipsed the 100-pound mark, the Stanleys’ catch far outweighed the competition. As a crowd of more than 40 people watched t h e teams bring their fish to the scales, a rumor began to circulate — one of the upcoming boats had a 70 to 80-pound fish in its live well. The Stanleys did not disappoint the excited audience. Not only did they claim honors of hauling in the biggest fish of the tournament, but the Stanleys also finished the day in first place, overall, with a five-fish total of 155.3 pounds. Stefanie said the fish, which was caught on shad in about 10 feet of water, didn’t feel like a record-breaker. “It didn’t put up a fight or anything,” she said. “Not until it got to the boat.” Believe it or not, Stefanie’s fish won’t win her any bragging rights at home. Robert is the Kansas record-holder for a blue catfish. Last August, he hauled in a nearly 103-pound fish on the Kansas side of the Missouri River. The Stanleys must have a secret or two they aren’t telling anyone else about finding big blues. But they were pretty modest after their tournament-winning total. “I don’t know about ‘good at (catching blue catfish) but ...,’” Robert said, his words trailing off. “We try,” Stefanie said, finishing his sentence for him. While many anglers already know of the excellent fishing at Milford Lake, the largest lake in Kansas, the Stanleys’ success on Saturday has helped spread the word even further. Please see Catfish, 10A

Story and photos by Tim Weideman

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Top photo — Todd Clement, Tampa, holds a large blue catfish after it was removed from his boat’s live well. Above — Stefanie and Robert Stanley, both of Olathe, pose after weighing an 82-pound, lake record-breaking blue catfish. All competed Saturday at the Catfish Chasers Tournament on Milford Lake. View more photos at www.thedailyunion.net.

District to analyze bus costs, contracts B y C hase Jordan

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Tuesday, April 9, 2013

c.jordan@thedailyunion.net Geary County Board of Education members will take a second look at district transportation costs. During a previous meeting, board member Anwar Khoury made a request for district officials to write a request for proposals (RFP) for services to bus students. On Monday, Ron Walker, superintendent of Unified School District 475 Schools, said an RFP process would take about six or seven months to complete. The district currently contracts with Junction City Transportation and B&B Bussing. However before press time, school officials could not answer the total amount of money

spent on busing each year. During the meeting, board member Ferrell Miller said he did not want to go through with the RFP process because the bus companies already have made commitments to serve the district. He also said the process would be a burden on the district staff. Khoury responded. He said the board needs to R onald be stewards for the district W alker and taxpayers when it comes to finances. “It’s something we need to look into,” Khoury said about the busing contracts and Please see Busing, 10A

Meal prices to rise for 2013-14 school year, book fees to drop Board members approved to increase meal prices, but reduced textbook fees to compensate. The increase is an result of federal regulations and enforcing equity in pricing. An increase of 10 cents per meal for breakfast and lunch. Based on current fees, elementary lunches will be set at $2.45, $2.45 for middle school and $2.60 for high school students. The breakfast cost will be $1.60 across all levels and milk prices will remain the same. Before the meal increase was approved, board members approved to cut textbook rental fees in half.

City loses out on Dept. of Ag relocation B y T im Weideman

city.beat@thedailyunion.net Though it once showed interest in Junction City, the Kansas Department of Agriculture late last week announced the majority of its offices will move to Manhattan. The department will lease space in a new building to be constructed near the Kansas State University Foundation in the K-State Research Park, according to a Thursday press release from the city of Manhattan. The release stated the move will take place no later than June 30,

“They just came and looked at the building and put it in the mix of properties that they looked at. We really didn’t hear back from them after that.” Susan Jagerson JCACC EDC 2014. Junction City Are Chamber of Commerce leaders and city officials in June and September showed department site consultants the call center formerly occupied by Capgemini at 2031 Spring Valley Road. Chamber staff didn’t receive any

clear level of interest from the department after the consultants’ visits, so the site selection announcement came as news to them. “We just got that information that everyone else got at the same time,” JCACC Economic Development Specialist Susan Jagerson

said Friday. City leaders recently have amped up the search for a new occupant for the call center, which is owned by Spirit of ‘76, the financial arm of the Junction City-Geary County Economic Development Commission. Since 2007, Capgemini has made monthly rent payments, monthly equipment installments and an annual loan payment to Spirit, even though it no longer occupies the facility. Spirit uses the funds from the company to make bond payments to the city, which issued industrial Please see LOSE, 10A

For news updates throughout the day, visit www.thedailyunion.net


2A

The Daily Union. Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Weather

Online at thedailyunion.net

U.S. Cities

Top read on our website For 11 more photos of the Catfish Chasers Tournament visit our website

Temperatures indicate Monday’s high and overnight low to 7 p.m.

Tonight

Wednesday

Thursday

Low: Mid-30s Thunderstorms likely, NW winds 15 to 20 mph

High: Mid-40s Low: Upper 20s Cloudy

High: Upper 40s Low: Upper 20s Partly sunny

Today'sKansas Forecast forecast for today

City/Region High | Low temps

Forecast for Tuesday, April 9

MO.

NEB. Colby 43° | 36°

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Monstrous catfish caught at Milford Lake

A gigantic blue catfish was landed Saturday at Milford Lake, which also reeled in heavy traffic to our website. Robert and Stefanie Stanley of Olathe landed the 82.05-pound fish during the Catfish Chasers Tournament. The blue cat was called an unofficial lake record by event organizers and helped the Stanleys take first place overall in the tournament. A story on the giant fish was posted Saturday evening and it became the weekend’s most read story. An accompanying photo gallery also drew several hits on the website.

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Kansas City 72° | 63°

Salina 70° | 61°

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Lunch prices at USD 475 could rise

A story detailing potential increases in meal costs at USD 475 was the second most viewed story on thedailyunion.net over the weekend. According to the story, district officials suggested an increase of 10 cents per meal for breakfast and lunch, which would set prices at $2.45 for elementary and middle school lunches and $2.60 for high schoolers. Breakfast would cost $1.60 at all three levels. Officials are also looking at cutting a textbook rental fee to help offset some of the increased meal costs.

Liberal 63° | 46°

Topeka 73° | 64° Pittsburg 70° | 61°

Wichita 73° | 63°

OKLA.

© 2013 Wunderground.com

Daily weather record Cloudy

Precip to 7 a.m. Monday Partly April to date Cloudy Showers April average Year to date total Year to date average Sunday’s high Overnight low Temp. at 3 p.m. Monday Today’s sunrise Today’s sunset

Thunderstorms

Ice

Flurries

0.02 0.02 Snow 2.95 Rain 3.28 Weather Underground • AP 7.06 Water elevation 1,137.69 77 Conservation pool 1,144.40 42 Release 100 73 Water temp. 45 6:59 a.m. 7:59 p.m.

Milford Lake

National forecast

Forecast highs for Tuesday, April 9

Survey: JC employee salaries lagging

Junction City municipal workers are underpaid, according to a survey of surrounding and comparable cities. City Manager Gerry Vernon told commissioners that nearly $1 million is needed over the next three years to bring area salaries into line with comparable cities such as Dodge City and Garden City. The most pressing matter, according to Vernon, is to increase pay for firefighters, especially officers. Under a plan proposed by Vernon, the fire department would be allocated nearly $218,000 in 2014 for pay raises. A story on the compensation survey was posted Saturday morning and was the third most read item online over the weekend.

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Sunny

Pt. Cloudy

Cloudy

One dead, three hospitalized after Manhattan shooting

A shooting early Sunday morning at an apartment complex left one victim dead and three more injured. The Riley County Police Department responded to a west Manhattan apartment facility at 4:10 a.m. Sunday and discovered the grizzly scene. No other details were available Monday morning when a story was published on our website.

Fronts

Vote in our weekly poll Should Junction City spend nearly $1 million over the next three years to bring municipal salaries in line with comparable and surrounding cities? • Yes

Hi Lo Prc Otlk Albany,N.Y. 61 40 PCldy Albuquerque 78 49 Cldy Anchorage 18 11 .03 Snow Atlanta 78 56 Cldy Birmingham 80 58 Cldy Bismarck 32 31 .10 Cldy Boise 56 33 .01 Clr Boston 63 46 Clr Charlotte,N.C. 79 51 PCldy Chicago 64 40 .49 Rain Columbia,S.C. 83 53 PCldy Dallas-Ft Worth 75 65 Cldy Denver 71 35 Snow Detroit 69 37 .12 Rain El Paso 86 65 Clr Honolulu 85 73 Clr Jackson,Miss. 82 57 Cldy Kansas City 73 52 .85 Cldy Las Vegas 67 51 .03 PCldy Los Angeles 69 58 Clr Louisville 75 56 Cldy Miami Beach 82 68 PCldy Milwaukee 50 35 .57 Rain New Orleans 81 60 Cldy New York City 73 51 PCldy Oklahoma City 80 62 Cldy Phoenix 84 68 Cldy Rapid City 45 34 .06 Snow Reno 50 33 .03 Clr Salt Lake City 46 43 .59 Clr San Diego 61 58 Clr San Juan,P.R. 90 78 .02 PCldy Seattle 56 42 .18 Cldy Washington 80 53 PCldy National Temperature Extremes High Monday 99 at Laredo, Texas Low Monday 13 at Cut Bank, Mont. m — indicates missing information.

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90s 100s 110s

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Heavy Rain And Snow For West And Plains A strong storm will bring heavy rain, snow, and thunderstorms to the Great Basin eastward into the Mid-Mississpi Valley. Severe storms may form in areas from the Southern Plains into the MidMississippi Valley. Meanwhile, rain persists in the Ohio Valley. Weather Underground • AP

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Around JC The Daily Union. Tuesday, April 9, 2013

In brief Kindergarten Round-Up Informational meetings for parents and students who will enter kindergarten in August 2013. Students must turn five years old on or before Aug. 31, 2013. Please attend the meeting at your neighborhood school. • Custer Hill Elementary, Monday, April 29, 3:45 p.m. • Eisenhower Elementary, Tuesday, April 30, 5:30 p.m. • Fort Riley Elementary, Thursday, May 9, 5 p.m. • Franklin Elementary, Thursday, May 2, 5 p.m. • Grandview Elementary, Tuesday, April 23, 4 p.m. • Jefferson Elementary, Thursday, May 2, 5 p.m. • Lincoln Elementary, Thursday, April 11, 5:30 p.m. • Milford Elementary, Thursday, May 2, 6:30 p.m. • Morris Hill Elementary, Friday, April 12, 1:30 p.m. • Seitz Elementary, Thursday, April 25, 4 p.m. • Sheridan Elementary, Thursday, May 2, 5 p..m. • Spring Valley Elementary, Tuesday, May 7, 5:30 p.m. • Ware Elementary, Tuesday, April 23, 4 p.m. • Washington Elementary, Tuesday, May 7, 4:30 p.m. • Westwood Elementary, Tuesday, April 30, 4 p.m.

Community calendar Today

10 to 11 a.m. Bible study at Senior Citizens Center, 1025 S. Spring Valley Road 2 p.m. Doors open at the Junction City Fraternal Order of Eagles, 203 E. 10th St. 5 to 8 p.m. Junction City Fraternal Order of Eagles Aerie and Auxiliary kitchen is open with full meals 6:30 p.m. JC Fraternal Order of Eagles Aerie Bingo, 203 E. 10th St., open to public 7 p.m. Composite Squadron Civil Air Patrol, JC airport terminal, 540 Airport Road 7 p.m. Mystery Club, Learning to Swim by Sara Henry Library Corner 8 p.m. Alcoholics Anonymous, 119 W. Seventh St.

Wednesday

Special to the Daily Union

It was exactly one week ago. Call it divine providence, happenstance or just plain fate, but two people in love were able to be joined together in wedded bliss in a strange set of circumstances. To set the scene, four Junction City Little Theater volunteers met at the annex as usual on Tuesday around 4 p.m. That day, the task was to work on the historical files of the 62-year-old community theater. Known as the TaTas — short for Tuesdays at the annex — Sue Hornbaker, volunteer chair, Pat Stuckey, Mary Jane Riffel and Ramona Printz-Smith had just settled into work when Judge Steve Hornbaker, his son, Andy, and a friend walked in to borrow some costumes for the upcoming Pet Fair to be held in April. Just minutes later, an unknown couple — a man in an Army uniform, and a woman in pretty street clothes walked into the work room and stated, “We want to get married.” With mouths open, the group thought the idea over. Then, Judge Hornbaker stated, “Well, actually, I am a judge and could perform a wedding ceremony right here and now. Do you have a license?” After the soldier replied, “Yes, it’s in the car,” he

Photo submitted

Enjoying a surprise wedding at the Junction City Little Theater Annex last Tuesday were (from left) Pat Stuckey, Sue Hornbaker, Ramona Printz-Smith, the bride Carlie Malone, groom Jacob Carreon, Judge Steve Hornbaker and Mary Jane Riffel. promptly brought it in, delivered it to the judge and a wedding was duly performed. The groom gave his camera to Andy and PrintzSmith had hers as well, so the short ceremony was photographed in the main room of the Theater Annex. This is the same location as many funerals had taken place in the MassHinitt Funeral Home for many years and then being used as a church before the theater group bought the building for storage and workspace. After the “I do’s” wine was brought out and snack cookies were shared for a proper reception. Horn-

baker and Printz-Smith signed the license as the official witnesses. During the “reception,” the group of workers, costume “getters” and the couple became acquainted. That’s when all learned the groom, Jacob Carreon, is from San Antonio, Texas, and the bride, Carlie Malone, is from Paron, Ark. Both joined the Army last summer and met in fall in the barracks. Both stated it was definitely “love at first sight.” It was revealed that Carlie loves Jacob for his family values and that he wants an Army career. Jacob stated that one good

look at Carlie was all that was needed. “I knew that Carlie was the woman for me,” he said. The circumstances that brought them to the annex — they applied for their license Tuesday at the Geary County Courthouse. But there was no time on the schedule there for a wedding until the following day. The barracks quarters policy states they cannot be married and live there, so they are preparing to move into an apartment off post and definitely want to be married for that move. They were desperate to find a minister or someone

to marry them and seeing the First Baptist Church at the corner of 7th and Jefferson, they looked for an open door. Thinking the annex was part of the church, they entered that building and found the group working in their old clothes. The coincidence that Judge Hornbaker just happened to be there, for the first time every during theater work sessions, and the fact that the couple found the right circumstances to be joined together was truly fate. Needless to say, no “work” was accomplished by the theater volunteers, but all went home with an amazing story to tell.

‘Walk a Mile in her Shoes’

B y G er tie Williams

Special to the Daily Union The “It’s About Me” Breast Cancer Awareness Association is sponsoring its fourth annual “Walk A Mile In Her Shoes” Breast Cancer 5K Walk/Run to benefit Breast Cancer prevention and awareness. Walkers and runners will be wearing anything from their favorite running shoes to their wildest outfit. Men who participant in the event are strongly encouraged to be sponsored to walk in women’s high heels. It is not too late to get involved as a team or individual. The “It’s About Me” Breast Cncer Awareness Association has joined other organizations such as Susan G. Komen for the Cure, American Cancer Society and other organizations by working together with them to put an end to Breast Cancer. It is the mission to honor those who were diagnosed with Breast Cancer and to empower all women and men with equal information about early detection. Facts about Breast Cancer: There are several different types of breast cancer. According to American Cancer Society there are around 2.6 million breast cancer survivors in the United States of America. They also estimate in the United States in 2013: • 232,340 women will be diagnosed and 39,340 deaths.

• 2,240 men will be diagnosed and 410 deaths. In the state of Kansas they estimate for the women only: • 2,160 women will be diagnosed and 360 deaths. Breast Cancer is on the rise but deaths are declining. Here are some reasons why. • Staying at a healthy weight, being physically active, and limiting how much alcohol you drink can help reduce your risk of breast cancer. • Regular screening can often find breast cancer early when treatments are more likely to be successful. The “It’s About Me” Breast Cancer Awareness Association would like the general public to join in because when people participant in the “Walk A Mile In Her Shoes” that helps bring Breast Cancer awareness and prevention. Breast Cancer is the second leading cause of cancer death in women. In the past people were told this was a disease for older women but children, youth, young adults and men are being diagnosed with Breast Cancer. Please join us on May 4, 2013 at the Heritage Park, Junction City, from 8:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Registration is from 8:30 a.m. to 9:45 a.m at 10 a.m. the Walk/Run starts. Music provided by DJ Hicks Productions. Register before April 27 — $20 per Adults, $10

per child (5 years and under), $15 per child/ youth (6-17 years old). After April 27: $25 per Adults, $15 per child (5 years and under, $20 per child/youth (6-17) years old. The first 200 preregistered participants before April 27 deadline will receive a free T-Shirt. In addition there will be recognition to honor the Breast Cancer Survivors and refreshments. This year we are adding some new fun activities. There will be special prizes for Teams and Individuals: Best Shoes, Children’s Best Decorated Shoes, Best Outfit Theme, Men’s Best High Heels and Most Money Raised. Registration forms are located at the Central National Bank, Sunflower Bank, 1st National Bank, Landmark Bank, Millennium Bank, Commissary located at Fort Riley, Freddie Frozen Yogurt, Geary County Health Department, Manhattan Running Store in Manhattan, Hibbett in Junction City and Manhattan, Junction City Municipal Building, Curves, Public Library, Blessing Upon Blessing, CATO, Members of the Community Support Group, Kolling Pharmacy, YMCA, Mark’s Hair Salon, Salon Day Spa, Mane Thing, Headliners, Konza Prairie Health and Dental Clinic, Wig Shop, Elite Cuts, Foster Cuts, Ada Beauty Salon, Tango and iambcaa.org. Also registration forms available at the Junction City Municipal Building or the website at iambcaa.org.

First Graders Share Their Big Dreams through Song FORT RILEY — On Thursday, April 11, the Ware Elementary first grade students will be singing songs that answer the age old question, “what do I want to be when I grow up.” Music teachers, Mrs. Freedom Brass and Mrs. Susan Gillespie, have put together a first grade program that coincides with what the students are learning about in class — careers. The program is based on many Mother Goose nursery rhymes after the music teachers realized, “many of the stories about various occupations.” The program includes songs titled “Pat-aCake,” “Mosquito One, Mosquito Two,” Rub a Dub Dub,” “Mary, Mary, Quite Contrary,” Bate, Bate, Chocolate,” “Twinkle, Twinkle March,”

and “Hail to the Chief.” The students are going to dress up in clothes that reflect the occupation or job they want to have when they grow up. One of the first grade teachers will also be dressing up. Mrs. Kim Dressman will be Mother Goose for the program. Having the students dress in special outfits makes the program that much more exciting for them and the

audience. The program is a great way for the students to learn about the many different career paths they have before them. The students have been working on the program for many weeks now and are eager to share this fun program with friends and family at the 6:30 p.m. performance on Thursday, April 11 in the Ware Elementary auditorium.

The Daily Union (USPS 286-520) (ISSN #0745743X) is published Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday except July 4, Veterans Day, Thanksgiving Day, Christmas Day, and New Years Day by Montgomery Communications, Inc., 222 West Sixth St., Junction City, Ks. 66441. Periodicals postage paid at Junction City, Ks. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the Daily Union, P.O. Box 129, Junction City, Ks. 66441 The Daily Union is delivered by USPS to Junction City, Ft. Riley, Grandview Plaza, Milford, Chapman, Wakefield, Ogden, Herington, Woodbine, Dwight, White City and Alta Vista. Rates for local mail delivery are $10.00 per month, $30.00 for 3 months, $60.00 for 6 months, and $111.60 for 1 year. Other mail delivery rates are $16.00 per month, $48.00 for 3 months, $96.00 for 6 months and $192.00 for a year. No Paper? If you did not receive your newspaper, contact Customer Service 762-5000 between 9:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. (Mon-Fri).

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6:30 a.m. Alcoholics Anonymous, 119 W. Seventh St. 6:45 a.m. Breakfast Optimist Club, Stacy’s Restaurant, Grandview Plaza 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. Exercise at Senior Citizens Center Noon Noon Kiwanis meets at Kite’s, Sixth and Washington streets Noon Alcoholics Anonymous, 119 W. Seventh St. 12:15 p.m. Weight Watchers, Presbyterian Church 113 W. Fifth St. 2 p.m. Doors open at the Junction City Fraternal Order of Eagles, 203 E. 10th St. 1 to 4 p.m. Cards at Senior Citizens Center, 1025 S. Spring Valley Road 5:30 p.m. Weight Watchers, Presbyterian Church, 113 W. Fifth St. 6 to 7:45 p.m. AWANA Club, First Southern Baptist Church 6:30 p.m. Bingo at American Legion Post 45, Fourth and Franklin streets 7 p.m. LIFE Class: Check out nooks for E-Readers, tablets, media players, and other portable devices 7 p.m. LIFE Class: Reiki, Library Corner 8 p.m. Narcotics Anonymous, 119 W. Seventh St. 8 p.m. Alcoholics Anonymous, Presbyterian Church, 113 W. Fifth St. Senior Citizens Center errands to Fort Riley and Dillons Registration deadline for April 12 LIFE Class: Jewelry Making Basics, Dorothy Bramlage Public Library

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Wedding happenstance

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INTO THE FUTURE

Chapman, Kansas 67431 april 8, 2013 Closing prices

Wheat 7.10 +19-0

Soybeans 13.59 +16-2

Milo 6.03 +4-4

Corn 6.43 +4-4

Two locations to serve you Chapman 922-6505 Pearl 479-5870 1-800-491-2401 • alidapearl.com

A Card Shower is requested for

Charlene Gooldy

who will be celebrating her 80th birthday on April 14, 2013. Charlene, a 1951 graduate of JCHS, is the wife of the late Dick Gooldy. Their children will be hosting a reception in her honor at a later date.

Please address cards to: 502 N. Garfield, Junction City, Ks 66441


Around Kansas

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The Daily Union. Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Manhattan resident in Oklahoma plane crash identified B y Justin Juozapavicius

Associated Press TULSA, Okla. — The pilot and passenger who died in a singleengine plane crash near a Tulsa suburb were identified Monday by family members and colleagues, as federal investigators arrived at the site and began collecting evidence. The pilot in Sunday’s accident was identified by his twin brother Monday as retired gynecologist Ronald Marshall of Manhattan, Kan. Federal Aviation Administration records show the 1984 Mooney fixed-wing plane was registered to Marshall in DeWitt, Neb., where he owned farmland. The passenger was identified by colleagues Monday as Chris Gruber, development director for the college of veterinary medicine at Kansas State University, also in Manhattan. The aircraft had departed Tulsa around 5:50 p.m. Sunday en route to Manhattan. It crashed shortly after takeoff, plowing into a vacant house near Collinsville and sparking a small blaze that was quickly put out by

firefighters, according to the FAA. Nobody on the ground was injured, the agency said. An investigator with the National Transportation Safety Board arrived late Monday morning to begin processing the site. NTSB spokesman Eric Weiss said a preliminary report would be released within 10 days, but a fuller report wouldn’t be available for a year to 18 months. The FAA had reported Sunday that there were as many as three dead, but the Oklahoma Medical Examiner’s Office said it had only received two bodies as of Monday afternoon. Amy Elliott, a spokeswoman for the medical examiner’s office, said local authorities were still searching for more victims. A message left for Collinsville Police Chief Jimmie Richey wasn’t immediately returned Monday. Reached by The Associated Press at his deceased twin brother’s house Monday afternoon, Rod Marshall said he couldn’t comment. “It’s not a good time,” he said. “We’re planning a funeral here.”

Mike Simons • Tulsa World

In this Sunday, April 7, 2013 photo, as night falls, spectators try to get a view of the scene of a small plane crash near downtown Collinsville, Okla. The Federal Aviation Administration says local authorities have told the agency that as many as three were killed in the Sunday evening crash. Earlier Monday, Rod Marshall told the Omaha World-Herald newspaper that he and his brother met up in Tulsa to attend a gun show. The brothers had dinner after the show and both made their way home afterward — Ronald in

his plane and Rod in his car. Gruber had worked for Kansas State for more than eight years, said KSU spokeswoman Erinn Barcomb-Peterson. Ralph Richardson, the dean at KSU’s veterinary medicine college, said the department and

school were in mourning over “the public face of the veterinary college.” “We’re hurting,” Richardson said. “He will be forever missed, but he would have wanted us to keep on keeping on.”

Manhattan man facing charges in convenience store robbery B y D aily U nion S taf f

m.editor@thedailyunion.net TOPEKA — A man facing charges connected to a Manhattan gas station robbery pled guilty in court Monday, United States Attorney Barry Grissom said. Frank Joseph Hanson, 22, of Manhattan pleaded guilty to one count of brandishing a firearm during a crime of violence. In his plea, Hanson admitted on Feb. 6 he robbed Dara’s Fast Lane, a convenience store in Manhattan. In a related arson case, defendants Patrick Martin Scahill, 20, Manhattan and Virginia Amanda Griese, 19, Manhattan have scheduled change of plea hearings for 1:30 p.m. April 17 before Judge Julie A. Robinson in U.S. District Court in Topeka. The United States Attorney’s Office has

not yet stated how the robbery and arson cases are connected. In Hanson’s case, the Riley County Police Department received a report of a robbery at Dara’s Fast Lane at about 1:21 a.m. on Feb. 6. A masked man, armed with a small revolver, demanded money from the register. The robber also tried to force the clerk to use an ATM in the store to withdraw money from the clerk’s bank account. The robber left the store after the clerk swiped his card through the ATM and showed the robber how little money there was in the clerk’s account. Later that day at about 6 p.m., Riley County police responded to a report of someone firing a weapon at parked cars. When police contacted the residents, Dennis James Denzien and Patrick Martin Scahill, the officers smelled marijuana.

Police informed Denzien and Scahill they were going to obtain a warrant to search the residence. After obtaining a warrant, police entered the residence and found clothing matching the description from the robbery at Dara’s. Police obtained a second warrant and found a mask, gloves, a backpack and the firearm used in the robbery, an RG Industries Model RG14 .22 caliber revolver. Hanson is scheduled to be sentenced July 8. Co-defendant Dennis James Denzien is awaiting trial. Hanson faces a penalty of not less than seven years and not more than life and a fine up to $250,000. In the related arson case were indicted on one count of arson resulting in a death. The indictment alleges on Feb. 6 Scahill and Griese were responsible for a fire at

the Lee Crest Apartments, 820 Sunset Ave., in Manhattan. Vasanta Pallem, a 34-yearold postdoctoral researcher at Kansas State University who lived in the apartment complex, died as a result of the fire. Grissom commended the agencies involved in investigating the two cases including the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the Riley County Attorney’s Office, the Riley County Police Department, the Manhattan Fire Department, the Kansas State Fire Marshal’s Office, the Kansas Bureau of Investigations and the Pottawatomie County Sheriff’s Office. He also commended the attorneys who are prosecuting the cases including Assistant U.S. Attorney Jared Maag, Riley County Attorney Barry Wilkerson and Assistant Riley County Attorney Barry Disney.

Kansas’ conservation Area men facing felonies easement acres growing B y D aily U nion S taf f

m.editor@thedailyunion.net

B y M ichael P earce

The Wichita Eagle KINGMAN — On boyhood campouts, the property nourished Bill Johnson’s body. Fish for breakfast were caught in a crystalclear stream. Sweet-tasting spring water gushed from the ground. For decades since, the 240 acres in Kingman County has nourished Johnson’s soul. “I can have a bad week at work, then go out there and all of a sudden I’ve been rejuvenated,” Johnson said of the land his father bought before he was born. “I can’t remember when that place hasn’t been deep in my heart.” Now Johnson, 62, worries what will happen after he dies to the towering cottonwoods where wintering eagles roost, the spring-fed beaver ponds where waterfowl flock and the grasslands where the deer he loves to hunt thrive, The Wichita Eagle reported. “I’ve always felt like it’s been my job to take care of it,” Johnson said. “I don’t want somebody to go in there and develop things, or plowing everything up.” Jim Hoy and Jane Koger once had similar fears for the Flint Hills ranches that have been in their families for at least five generations. That changed after they placed those prairies under protective conservation easements, which are restrictions placed on deeds to prohibit most development for perpetuity. “Now it’s protected ... no construction, no oil development, no farming,” said Hoy of his land near Cassoday. “We think the Flint Hills are as sacred of a landscape as we’ll ever have in Kansas.”

Koger remembers the relief she felt the day she signed her easement several years ago. “Talk about resting in peace,” Koger said. “Now I know I’ll really be resting in peace.” For about the past 20 years several conservation organizations have been helping Kansas landowners enroll lands in protective conservation easements. Most ensure the land will stay in its current natural state, and could be protected from urban sprawl, utility lines, new roads, mining, farming and wind farms. Once enrolled, the restrictions stay with the deed forever, and are administered by the conservation group helping to enroll the easement. Rob Manes, Nature Conservancy of Kansas director, said conservation easements largely began as farmers in places like Pennsylvania and Maryland wanted to ensure their family farms never grew shopping malls or houses. Manes said helping set up easements in Kansas ranch country works well with the group’s goal of protecting critical habitats, like remnants of the tallgrass prairie. Manes said currently

there are about 120,000 acres under easement in Kansas, and that amount is steadily growing. And not all of their property needs to be enrolled. Hoy and Koger didn’t include small parcels in case some buildings, or houses, need to be constructed. Financial compensation packages are available to qualified landowners. Most attempt to pay all or part of the devaluation of the land’s value after the easement is put in place. Often the money comes from federal programs designed to protect grasslands, wetlands and ranchlands, said Mike Beam of Ranchland Trust of Kansas, a nonprofit group formed by the Kansas Livestock Association. Near Fort Riley, the Army has paid the easement costs on some enrolled grasslands that border the military land. Jerry Jost, Kansas Land Trust, said the military wants to ensure that development along its borders doesn’t impede training missions. “The real beauty is that the landowners know their land is going to stay undeveloped forever,” Beam said. “Perpetuity is a very long time.”

The United States Attorney’s Office Kansas District last week announced charges have been filed in federal court against two area men. A press release stated Tony Dennis, 26, of Grandview Plaza has been charged with one count of unlawful possession of a firearm after a felony conviction. The crime is alleged to have occurred Feb. 3 in Geary County. A Junction City police report stated officers responded to a call at 115 E. Pine Street at 3:24 a.m. that morning. Police arrested Dennis for aggravated assault and for a felon in possession of a firearm. If convicted, Dennis could face a maxi-

mum penalty of 10 years and a fine up to $250,000. The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives investigated. Assistant U.S. Attorney Duston Slinkard is prosecuting. Also indicted last week was Mark David Davis, 45, of Manhattan. Davis is charged with failing to register under the Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act. The crime is alleged to have occurred from April to November 2012 in Riley County. If convicted, Davis could face a maximum penalty of 10 years and a fine up to $250,000. The U.S. Marshals Service investigated. Assistant U.S. Attorney Christine Kenney is prosecuting.

Thank you to the residents of Junction City for re-electing me to be one of your city commissioners. I will continue to build a strong united Junction City community. I want to thank the other candidates for their positive spins on city engagements. I want to hear from you in boosting us all forward. Our degree of social connection is a critical factor for our happiness and an important determinant of life chances. It is very important to improve on our local facilities, our community image, and for people to get involved in local projects to improve our community. You can start by helping a neighbor, join a community project of help with a community event. Junction City is a special place because of the many people who choose to get involved. Thank you again for re-electing me to play a part in building a strong united Junction City.

“Let’s Continue to Move Forward”

Paid for by Jim Sands for City Commissioner

Junction City Voters.... I would like to

Thank You! I will do the best job possible to represent our community with professionalism and respect with common sense. Thanks to my family, friends, and campaign staff for the hard work and great strategies to get my message to the citizens of Junction City. I will work hard to communicate fair and informed decisions.

716 N. Washington • Junction City • 785.223.5999

It is time to move forward with fresh ideas. I am very pleased to be a part of this new commission. These individuals have the best interest of the community first and foremost. - Mick McCallister This message is paid for by the committee to elect MickMcCallister to City Commission. Dee Upshaw, Treasurer.


Opinion

The Daily Union. Official Geary County Newspaper Official City Newspaper Junction City • Grandview Plaza • Milford

John G. Montgomery Publisher Emeritus

Lisa Seiser Managing Editor

Tim Hobbs Publisher/Editor

Jacob Keehn Ad Services Director

The Daily Union. Tuesdsay, April 9, 2013

5A

Penny Nelson Office Manager

Grady Malsbury Press Supervisor Past Publishers John Montgomery, 1892-1936 Harry Montgomery, 1936-1952 John D. Montgomery, 1952-1973

To the Public

e propose to stand by the progressive “W movements which will benefit the condition of the people of these United States.”

John Montgomery and E.M. Gilbert Junction City Union July 28, 1888

Another view

On Equal Pay Day, let’s honor women B y L inda M eric

T

MCT

oday, April 9, is Equal Pay Day, and for the first time in many years, the weekly earnings gap is widening for all women. That’s why this year’s Equal Pay Day is even more important than usual. Pay discrimination is a real and persistent problem that continues to shortchange American women and their families. Women earn less than men in every state and region of the country. In real terms, women earned 77 cents for every dollar earned by men in 2011. For women of color the gap is even wider — African-American women earned only 69 cents and Latinas just 60 cents for every dollar earned by all men in 2011, according to the Institute for Women’s Policy Research. There are a number of reasons why a significant pay gap exists. First, women and people of color are overrepresented in undervalued and underpaid occupations such as child care and home health care and waiting tables. Second, there is outright discrimination. Even when working in male-dominated fields that pay more, such as engineering or computer programming, women often still earn less. Third, many working women are penalized financially for caregiving at home because they lack access to basic policies like paid sick days and family leave. When women are paid less than men, it hurts their families. Women lose hundreds of thousands of dollars or more over their careers. That means less money to make ends meet and achieve economic security for their loved ones. And since women make three-quarters of family-purchasing decisions, it means less money is spent in our local economies. Progress on closing the gap has slowed noticeably since the 1980s and early 1990s. Since 2001, the gender pay gap has narrowed by only about one percentage point. At this rate, it will take another 45 years for women to earn as much as men. To make real advances in closing the gap, we must strengthen enforcement of existing anti-discrimination laws and pass new laws that give women the tools they need to get the pay they deserve. One new law, the Healthy Families Act, would give workers the right to earn paid sick days. Another, the Paycheck Fairness Act, would close loopholes in our existing equal pay laws, prohibit retaliation against workers who ask about or share wage information, and empower women to better negotiate salary and benefit increases. This bill was introduced in 2009 and then again in 2010 only to be defeated by a minority of senators. It was reintroduced in the current Congress in January. This Equal Pay Day, let’s fight for fair public policies that value women’s work, honor their contributions to their families and spur a thriving economy.

L inda M eric is national executive director of

9to5, the nationwide membership organization of working women that was founded in 1973. She wrote this for Progressive Media Project, a source of liberal commentary on domestic and international issues; it is affiliated with The Progressive magazine.

About this page

The Opinion page of The Daily Union seeks to be a community forum of ideas. We believe that the civil exchange of ideas enables citizens to become better informed and to make decisions that will better our community. Our View editorials represent the opinion and institutional voice of The Daily Union. All other content on this page represents the opinions of others and does not necessarily represent the views of The Daily Union. Letters to the editor may be sent to The Daily Union. We prefer e-mail if possible, sent to m.editor@thedailyunion. net. You may also mail letters to the Editor, P.O. Box 129, Junction City, KS 66441. All letters must be fewer than 400 words and include a complete name, signature, address and phone number of the writer for verification purposes. The Daily Union reserves the right to edit letters for length. All decisions regarding letters, including whether a name withheld letter will be honored, length, editing and publication are at the discretion of the managing editor.

FROM THE STATEHOUSE

T

Union battle taking shape

he most relentless assault on labor unions in recent memory has been carried out during the main session of the Kansas Legislature. It is going to take more than a year — through next year’s Kansas House and gubernatorial elections — to see whether restrictions on the ability of unions to raise political action funds literally puts Democrats’ most reliable source of campaign money out of business. Besides the new law that prohibits public employers from allowing political action committee deductions from union member paychecks, the Legislature has stricken the ability of local units of government to demand that public construction project works are paid the prevailing wage ... which may well take money out of union members’ pockets. For conservative Republicans, it’s a win of massive proportions that isn’t being talked about much ... yet. Cutting off union campaign funds — not quite, but it requires a clumsier method of automatic checking account deductions, or maybe just writing the occasional check—means that it’s going to be tougher for union friends to be elected to policymaking office. And the prevailing wage argument

martin hawver Commentary played out as a battle between giant construction companies using lawmakers as chess pieces. That bill not only slaps down Democratic stronghold Wyandotte County which requires prevailing wage (usually the union wage rate, but sometimes a dab lower) be paid on local government-financed construction projects, but probably will mean a little less Democrat-aimed campaign money next election cycle. The upshot? Well, we’ll have to see what happens in campaigns next year, but predictably, there is going to be less money available for yard signs and palm cards and TV and radio ads for Democrats. Republicans at the polls next election cycle may be able to meet Gov. Sam Brownback’s challenge to eliminate all Democrats from the Legislature and hope that the Republicans who are elected are as philosophically conservative as he is.

Or, the effect of the anti-union legislation may be to shake the so far neglected moderate Republicans, who if they manage to get into office next cycle may not have any reliable Democratic voting base to cooperate with. That may spur moderate Republicans and Democrats to start erasing that strict R vs. D line, encouraging Democrats to support Republicans they can live with in the Statehouse, and Republicans to quit focusing on the “D” behind a candidate’s name on the ballot. Because, it seems, that the foot-inthe-door toward emasculating unions’ ability to raise funds for campaigns may strike moderate Republicans as close to what the conservative majority of their party has done to them. What will the shakeout be? It’s going to take an election cycle to tell, but the anti-union legislation may well turn out to be a turning point for Democrats and moderate Republicans in the Statehouse, or it could be the starting line for some new sort of political activity.

Syndicated by Hawver News Company LLC of Topeka; M artin H awver is publisher of Hawver’s Capitol Report — to learn more about this nonpartisan statewide political news service, visit the website at www. hawvernews.com.

ANOTHER VIEW

Think your animals are safe in backyard? Think again B y M ar tin M ersereau

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals

D

ogs have been disappearing in Idaho. One dog, named Bean, was found shot dead and left near a canal. A hiker found another dog in a canyon, covered with a sheet and apparently beaten to death. Two other dogs, Gauge and Mac, went missing and were later found shot to death on a neighbor’s property. Two dogs were believed to have been abducted from a fenced backyard. A small dog that was let outside to relieve himself hasn’t been seen since. Rumors are swirling that dozens of other missing dogs may have been abducted, shot or used as “bait” in dogfighting rings. If your animal companions are snoozing at your feet or curled up on your lap right now, good. But if they’re outside alone, don’t keep reading — go get them. As the Idaho residents whose dogs have disappeared or been killed have learned the hard way, leaving animals outdoors unattended — even for “just a minute” in a fenced yard — is irresponsible and an invitation to tragedy. We all want to believe that our neighborhoods are safe, but in my work, I have seen that every community is full of dangers for dogs and cats. Most of the 400-plus cruelty cases that PETA

receives weekly involve animals who were victimized while outside unsupervised. In Volusia County, Fla., for example, a cat who usually roamed the neighborhood at night was found one morning sliced in two. The front half of his body was in his owner’s backyard, and his intestines were in the front yard. Friendly cats and dogs are also the favored victims of bunchers — people who cruise neighborhoods, picking up animals in order to sell them to laboratories for experiments — and dogfighters looking for free “bait” to train dogs to attack. In Buchanan, Ga., two dogs that were kept outdoors on chains were believed to have been abducted by a neighbor and used as dogfighting “bait.” One dog was returned paralyzed, and the other was found dead on a neighbor’s lawn. It’s also not unusual for cruel neighbors with short fuses to take matters into their own hands. In Enola, Pa., a cat that was allowed to roam went missing. Five days later, the cat’s owner discovered him dead in her trash can. A neighbor had previously warned her that he was sick of her cat using his yard as a litter box. In Frenchtown Charter Township, Mich., a man pleaded no contest to attempted animal killing or torture for leaving out meat spiked with sharp objects to stop a neighbor’s dog from

coming onto his property. The dog, named Jinx, ate the meat and had to be euthanized because of his injuries. There is no excuse for harming animals — and animal abusers must be prosecuted — but people who leave their animal companions outdoors unattended share in the blame when their animals meet gruesome fates. Cruel people aren’t the only dangers lurking outdoors. Every day, animals are injured or killed in traffic, poisoned and attacked by other animals. Chained dogs are especially vulnerable because they have no way to escape from aggressive roaming animals. Just as responsible parents would never let their 2-year-old wander freely around the neighborhood, we shouldn’t leave our animals to take their chances outdoors, either. We can keep our animal companions safe by keeping them indoors and allowing them outdoors only on a harness and leash, under our constant, watchful eye. That way, we’ll never have to wonder whether our animals are safe, and we won’t ever be haunted by the regret of having allowed something terrible to happen because we failed to protect them.

M artin M ersereau is the director of PETA’s Emergency Response Team, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals.


Daily Record

6A

The Daily Union. Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Junction City Police Department The Junction City Police Department made 13 arrests and responded to 273 calls in the 72-hour period ending 6 a.m. Monday.

Friday

• 7:04 a.m. — Accident, 1112 Crest Hill Drive • 7:07 a.m. — Accident, Eighth and Adams • 12:13 p.m. — Disturbance, 426 E. Chestnut St. • 12:29 p.m. — Disturbance, 713 W. Eighth St. • 2:15 p.m. — Accident, 618 W. Sixth St. • 3:39 p.m. — Accident, 300 Lincoln School Drive • 4:57 p.m. — Disturbance, 1620 Westwood Blvd. • 6:43 p.m. — Domestic, 600 block of N. Washington St. • 6:51 p.m. — Accident, 600 N. Washington • 7:26 p.m. — Accident, 500 E. Chestnut St. • 8:13 p.m. — Accident, 209 W. Sixth St. • 10:52 p.m. — Disturbance, 713 S. Washington St.

Saturday

St.

• 1:52 a.m. — Disturbance, 130 W. Seventh

• 12:28 p.m. — Accident, 1000 block of W. Sixth St. • 2:12 p.m. — Disturbance, 602 N. Washington St. • 2:23 p.m. — Disturbance, 635 W. Ninth St. • 7:41 p.m. — Disturbance, 409 W. 14th St. • 9:11 p.m. — Accident, 1913 W. 17th St. • 10:03 p.m. — Disturbance, 820 Grant Ave. • 10:53 p.m. — Domestic, 1800 block of Caroline Ave.

Sunday

• 12:31 a.m. — Disturbance, 126 W. 16th St. • 1:46 a.m. — DUI, 600 N. Jefferson St. • 2:39 a.m. — Disturbance, 700 block of S. Eisenhower • 4:53 a.m. — Domestic, 600 block of S. Jefferson St. • 5:21 a.m. — Domestic, 200 block of Com-

Riley County Police Department The Riley County Police Department made 11 arrests and reported 74 incidents in the 72-hour period ending 6 a.m. Monday.

Aggravated Battery Firearm Saturday • 8:20 p.m. — 100 Manhattan Town Center, Manhattan • 10:04 p.m. — 100 block of S. Third St., Manhattan

Battery Saturday • 9:52 p.m. — 3032 Kimball Ave., Manhattan

Sunday • 1:23 a.m. — 1435 Anderson Ave., Manhattan • 5:52 p.m. — 323 N. Park St., Ogden • 7:26 p.m. — Poyntz Ave. and N. Delaware Ave., Manhattan • 11:40 p.m. — 515 Pierre St., Manhattan

mance Court • 8:13 a.m. — Domestic, 300 block of E. Ash St. • 11:35 a.m. — Disturbance, 126 W. 16th St. • 4:02 p.m. — Domestic, 900 block of Grant Ave. • 4:53 p.m. — Accident, 104 W. Fourth St. • 7:18 p.m. — Domestic, 2300 block of Wildcat Lane • 9:49 p.m. — Domestic, 800 block of Grant Ave.

Grandview Plaza Police Department The Grandview Plaza Police Department made four arrests and responded to 26 calls in the 48-hour period ending 12 a.m. Monday. A report for Friday was not received.

Saturday

• 10 a.m. — Accident, 101 Smokey Lane

Sunday

• 12:37 a.m. — Disturbance, 1021 Cannonview • 1:57 a.m. — Accident, 113 W. Flint Hills • 3:09 p.m. — Burglary, 913 Cannonview

Junction City Fire Department The Junction City Fire Department made eight transports and responded to 21 calls in the 72-hour period ending 8 a.m. Monday.

Friday

• 11:48 a.m. — Assist police department • 7:42 p.m. — Smell of smoke, 426 W. Third • 10:26 p.m. — Medical assist • 10:46 p.m. — Medical assist

Saturday

• 12:43 p.m. — Medical assist • 4:37 p.m. — Medical assist • 9:51 p.m. — Medical assist • 11:15 p.m. — Smell of gas, 114 W. 17th

Sunday

• 4:12 a.m. — Motor vehicle accident rescue, I-70 mile marker 316

Assault • 1:01 p.m. — 723 Allison Ave., Manhattan

Burglary Saturday • 2:13 p.m. — 200 Plymate Lane, Manhattan • 8:32 p.m. — 420 Colorado St., Manhattan

Geary County Detention Center The Geary County Detention Center booked the following individuals in the 48-hour period ending 7 a.m. Sunday. A report for Sunday was not received.

Friday

• 5:43 a.m. — Zachary Evans, outside warrant • 10:29 a.m. — Justice Kennedy, probation violation • 12:37 p.m. — Rachel Tripp, failure to appear • 1:11 p.m. — Porschea Bell, domestic battery • 1:12 p.m. — Mionica Williams, domestic battery • 4:47 p.m. — Christopher Harris, parole violation • 6:30 p.m. — Lisa Leighton, aggravated assault, criminal threat

Saturday

Sunday • 9:30 a.m. — 1535 Highland Drive, Manhattan • 10:03 a.m. — 1919 Platt St., Manhattan

• 12:18 a.m. — 3000 Tuttle Creek Blvd., Manhattan

Domestic Sunday • 12:08 p.m. — 700 block of Allison Ave., Manhattan

Saturday • 12:12 p.m. — 813 Fossilridge Drive, Manhattan

Sunday • 1:45 p.m. — 1733 W. Laramie St., Manhattan

DUI

Damage to Property Saturday • 8:18 a.m. — 920 Fremont St., Manhattan • 11:59 a.m. — 1112 Moro St., Manhattan • 3:08 p.m. — 616 Thurston St., Manhattan

a.m. Sunday at an apartment complex. Police reassured the public that there didn’t appear to be “any further danger.” Anyone with information was urged to call Manhattan/ Riley County Crime Stoppers. No other details were immediately released, including the name of the victim or the person who was arrested.

New Kansas district judge TOPEKA — Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback has named Faith Maughan to fill a vacancy in the 18th Judicial District in Sedgwick County. Maughan is currently a judge for the city of Colwich in south-central Kansas. Brownback announced Monday that she would fill the vacancy left by Judge Anthony Powell, who was appointed earlier this year to the Kansas Court of Appeals. Maughan earned her undergraduate and law degrees from Washburn University in Topeka. In addition to being a judge in Colwich she serves as city prosecutor for Maize, Park City and Cheney. She is also a captain in the U.S. Army Reserve and serves in the Judge Advocate General’s corps. The 18th Judicial District is based in Wichita and covers all of Sedgwick County. Kansas has 31 judicial districts.

• 12:25 p.m. — Tuttle Creek Blvd. and Ehler Road, Manhattan • 12:53 p.m. — Anderson Ave. and N. 14th St., Manhattan • 2:41 p.m. — N. Sixth St. and Humboldt St., Manhattan

Sunday

• 12:01 a.m. — 329 N. Noble St., Riley

Battery

MANHATTAN, — One person has been taken into custody after an early morning shooting in Manhattan left one person dead and three others hospitalized. The Riley County Police Department said the shooting happened around 4:10

• 5:11 p.m. — 1111 Vattier St., Manhattan • 8:30 p.m. — 2011 Todd Road, Manhattan

Monday

• 12:08 p.m. — 3000 Tuttle Creek Blvd., Manhattan • 1:22 p.m. — 2000 Leavenworth St., Manhattan

• 12:22 p.m. — 330 N. Seth Child Road, Manhattan • 3:49 p.m. — 601 Third Place, Manhattan • 6:41 p.m. — 433 Ninth St., Ogden

One dead, three hospitalized after shooting

• 2:27 a.m. — Dante Murillo, driving while suspended, driving without headlights • 2:48 a.m. — Marilyn Huston, driving while suspended, failure to stop at a stop sign • 2:58 a.m. — Jacob Binkley, DUI, speeding, driving left of center • 3:38 a.m. — Eazley Sauhi, DUI, speeding, failure to maintain lane • 4 a.m. — Robertson Toussaint, DUI, speeding

Saturday

Friday

GREAT BEND — A man charged with killing a Great Bend man and leaving his body in a roadside ditch will not go on trial until August. Thirty-one-year-old Jeffrey Wade Chapman of Great Bend was scheduled to go on trial this week for first-degree murder in the death of 25-year-old Damon Galyardt. The trial was delayed until Aug. 5 after new attorneys were appointed to represent Chapman. Chapman pleaded innocent in November. Hunters found Galyardt’s body in November 2011 in a roadside ditch southwest of Great Bend. Testimony during Chapman’s preliminary hearing in October indicated Chapman was angry because of the way Galyardt treated a woman with whom he was living.

Reports from the Geary County Sheriff’s Department were not received as of Monday afternoon.

Sunday

Larceny

Trial postponed in Great Bend homicide case

Geary County Sheriff’s Department

• 3:34 p.m. — 100 Manhattan Town Center, Manhattan

Sunday

Kansas crime briefs

• 5:39 a.m. — Medical assist • 7:45 a.m. — Medical assist • 11:45 a.m. — Medical assist

• 1:09 a.m. — N. Ninth St. and Bluemont Ave., Manhattan

Accident Friday • 7:20 a.m. — 2030 Pierre St., Manhattan • 3:37 p.m. — Todd Road and Jarvis Drive, Manhattan • 4:32 p.m. — Tuttle Creek Blvd. and Kimball Ave., Manhattan • 4:43 p.m. — N. 11th St. and Poyntz Ave., Manhattan • 5:46 p.m. — 500 block of N. 11th St., Manhattan

Saturday • 12:41 a.m. — 1200 block of Vattier St., Manhattan

• 4:16 p.m. — Eureka Drive and Wildcat Creek Road, Manhattan • 8:17 p.m. — Allen Road and Tuttle Creek Blvd., Manhattan

Sunday • 9:32 a.m. — 608 Moro St., Manhattan • 12:56 p.m. — N. Seth Child Road and Anderson Ave., Manhattan • 7:53 p.m. — Tuttle Creek Blvd. mile marker 192, Randolph

Prosecutors: Trio couldn’t keep up with K2 demand including conspiracy, mail fraud, smuggling, distributing misbranded drugs and conspiracy to commit money laundering, he said. Tom Bath, an Overland Park, Kan., attorney who represents Jonathan Sloan, noted state charges against his client over products sold at his Lawrence shop had been dismissed in the past. “We are in the process of

going through the indictment and will be pleading not guilty in court and challenging the allegations,” Bath said. Miller’s attorney said he couldn’t comment, and Grissom’s office did not know Thursday if Clark Sloan had obtained an attorney. None of the men have been taken into custody. Prosecutors said Miller

initially manufactured K2 in his garage before expanding to a warehouse in Oskaloosa, where he could produce 5 to 10 kilograms per night but still not come close to meeting worldwide demand. At one point, the men were bringing in $150,000 a week from K2 sales, prosecutors said, and made about $3.3 million overall from the sale of K2 and Que She.

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KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Demand for a synthetic marijuana concoction whipped up in an eastern Kansas warehouse became so strong that suppliers had a hard time filling orders, federal prosecutors said in a 64-page indictment charging three men with distributing misbranded drugs to customers around the globe. The indictment filed last week against Bradley Miller, 55, of Wichita; his brother, Clark Sloan, 54, of Tonganoxie; and Sloan’s son, Jonathan Sloan, 32, of Lawrence, details a cat-andmouse game between owners of a Lawrence herbal shop and state and federal

wildly popular because of its euphoric characteristics, relatively cheap cost and lack of banned substances that could be detected in drug tests. The compound used to make K2 was not illegal when the men first started selling the fake pot, Grissom said. But mislabeling drugs is a federal crime, and that spawned other charges against the men,

April MAdness • April MAdness • April MAdness

Associated Press

authorities trying to keep up with a rapidly evolving synthetic drug boom. “Cases like this are important because these are chemists making synthetic drugs and trying to stay ahead of state and federal laws,” U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom said Thursday. “You have a scenario in which a drug is in question, legislation is advanced to prohibit the drug, and chemists around the country are smart enough to stay ahead of the curve.” Miller introduced K2 as a product that could be sold at a Lawrence herb shop he co-owned, Persophone’s Journey, in early 2009 after coming back from a trip to China, prosecutors said. K2 was billed as a safe, legal alternative to marijuana and immediately became

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Obituaries

The Daily Union. Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Death notices Troy Gene Scroggins Troy Gene Scroggins, 80, passed away April 4, 2013, at a retirement home in Topeka. He grew up and attended schools in Salina and Junction City. The family received friends Monday, April 8 at the Bowser-Johnson Funeral Chapel, Topeka. The Funeral will be today, April 9, at 10 a.m. at the Capital City Community of God, 1191 SW 37th Street, Topeka.

Delores (Robideau) Allen Delores (Robideau) Allen, 81, Junction City area, died April 5, 2013. She was born on May 25, 1931. No services are pending and she will be cremated.

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Obituary William Herbert Spittles William (Bill) Herbert Spittles, a former resident of Junction City passed away April 5, 2013, at Mercy Regional Health Center in Manhattan, at the age of 88. Bill was born April 27, 1924, in the McDowell Creek Area at rural Junction City. His parents were Herbert C. and Lottie Marie Thomas Spittles. He attended a country grade school and graduated from Riley County High School with the Class of 1942. He worked in Junction City at Hoyle’s I.G.A. grocery store, Gerald’s Jewelry store, and he also was a car salesman. He enlisted into the U.S. Army Air

Corp. May 27, 1943 and served in Central Burma India until his discharge on Nov. 24, 1945. After his discharge, he sold Farmers Insurance until his retirement. He had lived at the Bicentennial Manor Apartments in Junction City. Golden Living Center in Wakefield and Stoneybrook Retirement Community in Manhattan. He was a member of St. Xavier’s Catholic Church, Knights of Columbus, American Legion and Eagles Lodge, all in Junction City. He is survived by one sister Iris E. Sanders of Junction City. He was preceded in death by one sister Lois M. Barton, and two brothers: Darrell J.

Spittles and Richard W. Spittles. The Funeral Mass will be held at St. Xavier’s Catholic Church in Junction City, on Wednesday, April 10, 2013 at 10 a.m. Father Al Brungardt will officiate. Burial will be at St. Mary’s Cemetery in Junction City. The Rosary will be recited at St. Xavier’s Catholic Church Tuesday evening, April 9, at 5:30 p.m. followed by visitation with the family. Memorials may be given to St. Xavier’s Catholic Church, Friends of the Animals, or the American Diabetes Association. Memorials may be sent in care of the Londeen Funeral Chapel, Box 429, Chapman, KS 67431.

IN THE NEWS

Thatcher, even in death, divides world opinion S hawn P ogatchnik

country. She saved our country,” Cameron said, Associated Press “and I believe she’ll go down as the greatest BritCombative and deterish peacetime prime minismined to get her way, Marter.” garet Thatcher divided In Washington, President opinion down the middle in Barack Obama said many life — and in death. Americans “will never forMany leaders lauded get her standing shoulder Thatcher for her steely to shoulder with President determination to modern(Ronald) Reagan, remindize Britain’s industrial ing the world that we are landscape, even at the cost not simply carried along by of strikes and riots, and to the currents of history. We stand beside the United can shape them with moral States as the west triconviction, unyielding umphed in the Cold War courage and iron will.” versus the Soviet Union. And former first lady Others saw a pitiless tyrant Nancy Reagan her husband who preferred conflict to and Thatcher “enjoyed a compromise. very special relationship” British Prime Minister driven by a common hatred David Cameron lauded his of Communism. “Ronnie 1980s predecessor as “a and Margaret were politigreat Briton,” but others cal soul mates,” she said in — particularly Europe’s a statement that lauded socialists who often clashed Thatcher’s “clear vision with her — were less enamand strong determination ored in their reactions to to stand up for her beliefs at the death Monday of the a time when so many were conservative icon. afraid to rock the boat.” Flags at Buckingham In Poland, Foreign MinisPalace, Parliament and ter Radoslaw Sikorski said across the United Kingdom his country should erect a were lowered to half-staff. statue of the British leader. Buckingham Palace said In a tweet he praised Queen Elizabeth II would Thatcher as “a fearless send a private message of champion of liberty, stood sympathy to the Thatcher up for captive nations, family. Government offihelped free world win the cials began preparations Cold War.” for a London funeral with Former Prime Minister military honors at St. Paul’s Tony Blair, who ousted the Cathedral next week, folConservalowed by a tive Party private crefrom power mation. seven years “The real thing about “As our a f t e r first woman Margaret Thatcher is Thatcher’s prime ministhat she didn’t just resignater, Margaret tion, conT h a t c h e r lead our country. She ceded that succeeded saved our country.” T h a t c h e r against all had been David Cameron the odds,” right to Cameron British Prime Minister challenge said in labor union Madrid. He power — cut short his the traditrip to Spain tional bedand canceled a visit to rock for Blair’s own Labour France to return to London Party. for the funeral prepara“Very few leaders get to tions. change not only the politi“The real thing about cal landscape of their counMargaret Thatcher is that try but of the world. Margashe didn’t just lead our ret was such a leader. Her

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British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher is applauded by Vice President George Bush, left, as House Speaker Thomas P. O’Neill, Jr. looks on in this file photo. Thatchers former spokesman, Tim Bell, said that the former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher had died Monday morning, April 8, 2013, of a stroke. global impact was vast,” said Blair, who credited Thatcher with being “immensely supportive” despite their opposing views on many issues. “You could not disrespect her character or her contribution to Britain’s national life,” Blair said. A subtly cooler breeze blew from across the English Channel, where many of the men who ran European governments in the 1980s expressed admiration for her toughness mixed with femininity — but not her European Union-bashing politics. European Commission President Manuel Barroso of Portugal called Thatcher “a circumspect yet engaged player in the European Union. She will be remembered for both her contri-

butions to, and her reserves about, our common project.” Former French President Valerie Giscard d’Estaing called her “a woman unique in history” with “an unwavering strength.” D’Estaing recalled her impressive entrance to one meeting of EU premiers in France, where all the men were in black tie. “She went out of her car and she wore a long dress, a gown for a sort of ball, and everybody was sort of surprised and impressed. All the other members were flattered to speak with her,” he recalled. Harsh criticism came from Northern Ireland and Argentina, where Thatcher’s reputation for unbending determination received early tests — when break-

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ing an Irish Republican Army prison hunger strike in 1981 that left 10 inmates dead, then leading Britain into a 1982 war to reclaim the Falkland Islands from Argentine invaders. Gerry Adams, leader of the Irish nationalist Sinn Fein party that gained strength from Thatcher’s confrontation with IRA prison demands, denounced her as a hypocrite who sanctioned secret talks with senior IRA figures yet refused any concessions in public. “Here in Ireland her espousal of old draconian, militaristic policies prolonged the war and caused great suffering. She embraced censorship, collusion and the killing of citizens by covert operations,” said Adams, whose party ultimately gained a share of power in Northern Ireland after the IRA ceased fire and Blair invited Sinn Fein to the negotiating table. Many other Irish politicians countered that Thatcher talked tough, but was more pragmatic in private — and dramatically demonstrated this by signing the Anglo-Irish Agreement of 1985 giving the Republic of Ireland a role in Northern Ireland for the first time. She struck the deal, infuriating the north’s Protestant majority, barely a year after the IRA tried to assassinate her in a hotel bombing. “She was presented as the Iron Lady, but she was open to change and she did change,” said Noel Dorr, one of Ireland’s senior dip-

lomats in the 1980s who had close personal dealings with Thatcher. Argentina’s government offered no official reaction, but scores of Argentines posted criticisms of her on Twitter, blaming her for the deaths of 649 Argentine troops during the South Atlantic conflict. Some 255 British military personnel and three Falkland Islanders also died. Falklands lawmaker Mike Summers said Thatcher was “one of very few political leaders who could have mounted the expedition she mounted in 1982 to restore our freedom, and from a Falkland Islands perspective she will be forever remembered for that.” Pop culture figures past and present sounded off, too. Arnold Schwarzenegger, the actor and former Republican governor of California, offered a Twitter tribute to Thatcher as “a visionary, a warrior and a oncein-a-lifetime leader who left the world better than she found it.” Others noted her inspirational role to women, even though Thatcher famously eschewed feminism and rarely promoted women herself. “Thinking of our 1st Lady of girl power, Margaret Thatcher, a green grocer’s daughter who taught me anything is possible,” tweeted a former member of the Spice Girls band, Geri Halliwell.

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The Daily Union. Tuesday, April 9, 2013

AROUND THE NATION

Obama says he’s ‘determined as ever’ for gun bill N edra P ickler

Associated Press HARTFORD, Conn. — With time running out on the chance to pass gun control legislation, President Barack Obama on Monday warned Congress not to use delaying tactics against tighter regulations and told families of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting victims that he’s “determined as ever” to honor their children with tougher laws. Obama’s gun control proposals have run into resistance on Capitol Hill, leaving their fate in doubt. Efforts by Senate Democrats to reach compromise with Republicans over expanding required federal background checks have yet to yield an agreement, and conservatives were promising to try blocking the Senate from even beginning debate on gun control legislation. “The day Newtown happened was the toughest day of my presidency,” Obama said. “But I’ve got to tell you, if we don’t respond to this, that’ll be a tough day for me too.” Some of the Sandy Hook families are making an attempt to push through the bill. Obama met with them privately before his speech at the University of Hartford Monday evening, then brought 11 family members back to Air Force One for the trip back to Washington. The relatives want to meet with senators who’ve yet to back the legislation to encourage their support in memory of their loved ones. “Nothing’s going to be more important in making sure that the Congress moves forward this week than hearing from them,” Obama said. His eyes teared as he described Nicole Hockley, who lost her

The conservatives said the Democratic measure would violate the Second Amendment right to bear arms, citing “history’s lesson that government cannot be in all places at all times, and history’s warning about the oppression of a government that tries.” Reid said, “The least Republicans owe the parents of those 20 little babies who were murdered at Sandy Hook is a thoughtful debate about whether stronger laws could have saved their little girls and boys.” Obama said the vote shouldn’t be about his legacy, but about the families in Newtown who haven’t Susan Walsh • AP Photo moved on to other matters. President Barack Obama looks at Nicole Hocklys and her husband Ian, right, after she introduced him “Newtown, we want you at the University of Hartford in Hartford, Conn., on Monday. The Hockley’s lost a child in the school to know that we’re here shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School. with you,” Obama said. “We will not walk away from the 6-year-old son, Dylan, say- to the children killed and lenge, as the nation’s mempromises we’ve made. We ing how she asks him every other victims of gun vio- ories of the shooting fade are as determined as ever night to come to her in her lence to allow an up-or- with time and the National to do what must be done. In dreams so she can see him down vote in the Senate. Rifle Association wages a fact, I’m here to ask you to campaign again. That would require 50 votes formidable help me show that we can “If there’s even one thing to pass, rather than a pro- against Obama’s proposals. get it done. We’re not for“I don’t care what the we can do to prevent a cedural maneuver some getting.” father from having to bury Republican senators are NRA says,” Malloy said A group of Sandy Hook his child, isn’t that worth threatening to require 60 while Obama was meeting families originally planned fighting for?” Obama votes, potentially sinking with the families. to travel to Washington earMajority Leader Harry asked. the legislation. lier on Monday, but the Obama’s speech was “Some back in Washing- Reid brought gun control White House offered to give interrupted repeatedly by ton are already floating the legislation to the Senate the families standing ovations from the idea that they may use floor on Mona ride so packed gymnasium. At one political stunts to prevent day, though they could point, the room erupted votes on any of these actual debate also attend “If there’s even one with chants of “We want a reforms. Think about that. did not begin. vote!” Audience members, They’re not just saying He took the thing we can do to Os pb ae me ac ’ hs after many wearing green rib- they’ll vote no on ideas that step prevent a father from before their bons in support of the vic- almost all Americans sup- receiving a having to bury his l o b b y i n g tims, were stomping their port. They’re saying they’ll letter from 13 push. The feet on the bleachers and do everything they can to conservative child, isn’t that worth W h i t e clapping their hands in uni- even prevent any votes on Re p u bl i c a n fighting for.” House lit these provisions. They’re s e n a t o r s son with the chant. up the steps saying your opinion doesn’t i n c l u d i n g President Barack Obama “This is not about me. of Air Mike This is not about politics. matter. And that’s not Sen. Force One Lee, R-Utah, This is about doing the right. with flood Obama rode to the speech saying they right thing for all the familights so use lies who are here who have with Connecticut Gov. Dan- would photographers and televibeen torn apart by gun vio- nel P. Malloy, who signed delaying tactics to try presion cameras could capture lence,” Obama said, his sweeping gun control legis- venting lawmakers from the image of Obama climbvoice rising with emotion lation into law Thursday beginning to consider the ing the plane’s steps with as he shook his finger in with the Sandy Hook fami- measure. Such a move takes the families at dusk. lies standing behind him. 60 votes to overcome, a difthe air. The families’ lobbying Obama argued that law- But legislation in Washing- ficult hurdle in the trip was organized by Sandy makers have an obligation ton faces a tougher chal- 100-member chamber.

Hook Promise, a nonprofit started by community members in the wake of the shooting. “The group is encouraging senators to come together around legislative proposals that will both save lives and respect the Second Amendment rights of law-abiding Americans,” the group said in a statement. With time running out on negotiations, the White House is making an allhands-on-deck push this week. Vice President Joe Biden and Attorney General Eric Holder planned to promote their plan at the White House on Tuesday with law enforcement officials. First lady Michelle Obama planned to wade into the debate Wednesday with a speech on youth violence in her hometown of Chicago. Organizing for Action, the grassroots group being formed out of Obama’s reelection campaign to support his agenda, said it was launching online ads Monday asking the public to urge their senators to support background checks. Gun control is divisive in Newtown, Conn., as in the rest of the country. Not all Sandy Hook families support gun control, and even those involved with the lobbying push organized by Sandy Hook Promise are not backing the assault weapons ban. But those families are asking lawmakers to expand background checks, increase penalties for gun trafficking and limit the size of magazines.

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House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wis., checks notes as he appears before the House Rules Committee to advance his party’s 2014 budget proposal, at the Capitol in Washington.

Recalled frozen food may have ended up in schools M ary C lare J alonick

Associated Press WASHINGTON — Hundreds of thousands of pounds of frozen food recalled amid an E. coli scare may have been served in schools, according to the company that manufactured the items. Buffalo, N.Y.-based Rich Products Corp. has over the past two weeks recalled 10 million pounds of frozen food items after 27 E. coli illnesses in 15 states were linked to their foods. Of that, the company estimates that about 3 million pounds may still be in the marketplace and approximately 300,000 pounds may have ended up in school lunchrooms, a company spokesman said. Dwight Gram of Rich Products said the main items shipped to schools were labeled as pizza dippers and pepperoni pizzatas. E. coli infection can cause mild diarrhea or more severe complications, including kidney damage. According to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 81 percent of the people who fell ill were under the age of 21. Nine people were hospitalized and two have developed hemolytic uremic syndrome, a type of kidney failure that can have lasting effects. The strain of E. coli linked to the Farm Rich brand products is rare, and some laboratories still can’t identify it. Because of that, the CDC said, many illnesses may not have been identified.

Health officials have so far directly linked the outbreak strain to two different Farm Rich brand products — frozen mini pizza slices and frozen chicken quesadillas. Samples of the strain of E. coli were collected from those products in the Texas and New York homes of two people who became ill. It’s not clear yet whether any illnesses are linked to foods shipped to the schools. Rich Products two weeks ago announced a voluntary recall of certain Farm Rich and Market Day brand products because of the possible E. coli contamination. Last week, the company expanded that recall to include everything made at its Waycross, Ga. plant — a total of 10 million pounds of food. Products manufactured at other plants weren’t affected. At least one school district has already warned parents that food served in its cafeterias was recalled because of possible E. coli contamination. A spokeswoman for Harford County, Md. schools said last week that Rich Products had notified the district that it had recalled its pepperoni pizzatas. Some of the food had already been served in cafeterias. Gram, the spokesman for Rich Products, said school foods may be safer than those purchased by individuals because they are more likely to be well cooked. Cooking items thoroughly can kill E. coli.

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The Daily Union. Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Screening loved ones for alcohol abuse Dear Annie: I wanted to share a bit of what it’s like to be the family member of a person who drinks too much. I know. I had more than 40 years of experience by the time I finally sought answers. I studied brainand addiction-related research to assess my loved one’s drinking patterns in order to protect myself from secondhand drinking. Secondhand drinking is a term to describe the impact on the person on the receiving end of another person’s drinking behaviors. These drinking patterns cause brain changes — especially in the areas of the brain responsible for judgment, memory, coordination, pleasure/reward and reasoning. And we don’t fully understand the physical and emotional consequences to the health of a family member or friend who repeatedly deals with SHD. These include anxiety, depression, stomach ailments, skin problems, obesity, sleep problems, difficulties at work or in school, migraines and more. April 11, 2013, is National Alcohol Screening Day (NASD). This year, I urge people who love someone who drinks too much to conduct an anonymous screening of their loved one’s drinking patterns. Screening for Mental Health has created a fantastic website, www.HowDoYouScore. org, where anyone can anonymously evaluate their own or a loved one’s drinking patterns through an online assessment. The website also provides information on treatment options and suggestions for what it would take to cut down on or stop drinking. This kind of anonymous screening allows you to understand what you are really dealing with: a drinking pattern that is changing their loved one’s brain and causing hurtful drinking behaviors. — Lisa Frederiksen, Author, Speaker, Consultant Dear Lisa: Thank you for sharing your story and emphasizing the importance of screening for alcoholism. Once again, those who wish to be screened can do so at howdoyouscore.org. Dear Annie: I have lupus and suffer terribly. Some days are better than others, but most include fatigue, pain or some other symptom. Yet, when friends greet me, they say, “How are you? You look good.” Rather than greet me this way, I would prefer they not

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Dennis the Menace

Marmaduke

Annie’s mailbox Kathy Mitchell Marcy Sugar

ask about my illness, because I haven’t felt well in 17 years. Could you please tell readers in this position to simply say, “It is so good to see you”? That way, I don’t feel obligated to speak about my current condition. — Sick and Tired of Being Sick and Tired Dear Sick: Your suggestion is a good one, and we hope people will keep it in mind. But we don’t believe these friends actually expect a rundown of your illness, nor are you obligated to talk about it. Greeting someone with, “How are you?” is generally rhetorical. You aren’t expected to respond other than to say, “Fine, thanks,” or some short variation. Because you haven’t truly been well for years, it stands to reason that you would take questions about your health more literally than intended. Dear Annie: Thank you for printing the letter from “Rocky Mount, Va.,” who thought dogs should be allowed at the funerals of masters who have died. To have a dog at a funeral privately, prior to the public gathering, is a good idea —probably for both humans and dogs. There is a famous painting by Sir Edwin Landseer (1802-1873) entitled “The Old Shepherd’s Chief Mourner,” depicting a pointer leaning against a casket with its head on top of the casket. It brings tears to my eyes anytime I even think of it. — Watertown, Wis.

Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to anniesmailbox@comcast. net, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.

Garfield

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Baby Blues

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Wizard of Id

Horoscope How do you make a wish? Some do it on birthday candles, others on stars. You could do it by throwing a penny into a well or while brushing a fallen eyelash from the cheek of a loved one. One of my personal favorites is to wish on the Aries new moon, a cosmic genie of sorts. Tonight is the pre-party, and it’s a perfect time to get your wishes in order! ARIES (March 21-April 19). You are wary of doing things that you expect the general public will find impressive, because you don’t seek attention or reputation. It’s more important that you quietly serve your key people. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). When you talk about what you’re doing, sometimes you don’t sound so enthusiastic. Are you more excited than your expressions suggest? If not, how can you drum up more enthusiasm? GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You can’t control how other people take your words. When what you say inspires an unintended consequence, you’ll suddenly find yourself on an interesting ride into the psyche of another. CANCER (June 22-July 22). The feeling that your options are limited brings on a self-fulfilling state and one that is far from the truth. When you are aware of the situation around you, you will have more options. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Sometimes it feels like you never, ever, ever get a break. Everyone seems too focused on what they want to consider your part. So instead of waiting around, give yourself the break you need. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Try to envision the long-term picture for

every decision you make today. Short-term gains may feed something shallow and immediate while starving a deeper part of you. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Those who have a reputation for being difficult may have cultivated that perception for a long time, but you’ll break through it with your kindness and attention to detail. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). You don’t mind if another person wants to take charge, unless the task has already been assigned to you. Just know that it’s only because you make it seem so fun that they can’t help but rush in. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Efficient interactions are preferred in business, but when it comes to your pleasure, things don’t have to be so buttoned up. Loose, lingering and meandering connections will bring you joy. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). The menacing creatures of the woods usually come with sounds to match their nature: roars, growls and the like. But in the civilized world, the ones to watch out for may coo with enticingly smooth tones. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You feel comfortable enough to take action in certain situations but not in others. Pushing to the edges of your comfort zone is favored today, but crossing into territory deep beyond them won’t help anyone, least of all you. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). There’s too much to be accomplished for you to abandon the plan, though you may decide to approach it differently — namely, with a smile. You are playful and fun, but you will stay on task all the same.

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The Daily Union. Tuesday, April 9, 2013

FROM PAGE ONE/LOCAL NEWS Catfish

Tim Weideman • The Daily Union

Continued from Page 1A

Rick Dykstra of the Geary County Convention and Visitors Bureau (CVB) posted pictures from the tournament on Facebook. As of 2:30 p.m. Monday, a photo of the Stanleys’ giant blue had more than 122,000 views, more than 1,600 shares and about 70 comments. The secret of quality blue catfish at Milford Lake, if it ever was one, is out of the bag. “This is going to do great things for Milford Lake fishing,” Dykstra said Monday. “It’s social media at its finest.” Though no other fish came close to 80 pounds, many other tournament anglers had successful days on the water. Very few

Andrew Melendy, Wichita, hoists a blue catfish from his boat’s live well Saturday at the Catfish Chasers Tournament on Milford Lake. View more photos at www.thedailyunion.net.

brought in fewer than five fish for the tournament’s weigh-in. Competitors traveled to Milford Lake from other parts of Kansas and also neighboring states, including Missouri, Oklahoma, Nebraska and Iowa. Dykstra said the anglers’ tales of fishing success will help the lake and the local economy. “These people not only had a great experience on Milford Lake, but they spent money in our area and they’re going to go back and tell their friends,” he said. By the way, the Stanleys successfully released their fish. It’s still out there, perhaps growing even bigger, waiting to cross paths with another angler.

Seeking community input for Flint Hills Frontiers B y D aily U nion

staf f

m.editor@thedailyunion.net Flint Hills Frontiers will host a series of meetings regarding the future of the area and is seeking input from community members. The first of three meetings is scheduled for April 22, Monday at 12th Street Community Center, 1002 W. 12th St. Registration and the serving of a meal is scheduled for 6 p.m. The meeting is set for 6:30 p.m. Covering a region of 19 counties in Kansas and Oklahoma, the purpose of Flint Hills Frontiers is to

Busing Continued from Page 1A

expenditures. Jobs and the economic problems were two concerns raised. Board member Tom Brungardt said he did not want “some outside company” coming in and taking away local business. “The people live, shop and work here,” Brungardt said about many of the employees. “They need to be treated well.” Board member Carolyn Gaston discussed the unemployment rate in Geary County and said it may be jeopardized more if local people lose their jobs. Board member Bob Hen-

Catfish Continued from Page 1A

revenue bonds to finance construction and equipment purchases. When Capgemini’s lease ends Dec. 31, 2014, the city will be left with $3.6 million in remaining bond payments. Though that money is part of the city’s long-term debt schedule, an occupant for the building would have helped lessen the blow. But that’s not how it worked out. Jagerson said interest in the call center appeared to drop off once site consultants wrapped up their visits. “They just came and looked at the building and put it in the mix of properties that they looked at,” she said. “We really didn’t hear back from them after that.” Junction City was competing with a number of other cities for the relocated office, which Manhattan’s press release stated will

give residents an opportunity to connect and explore what lies ahead. The Flint Hills Regional Council, will facilitate interest groups across the region to collect information and study possible strategies. Funding for the project is made possible by a grant of nearly $2 million from the Office of Sustainable Housing & Communities of the U.S. Department of Housing & Urban Development. According to the website, www.flinthillsfrontiers. org, “Participation will give you and your organization a voice in the outcomes, derson agreed. “These are our people and we don’t want to lose them,” Henderson said. Khoury said his attention is not to take jobs away and wants to use local drivers, but questioned if the district is receiving the best cost. Gaston requested an work session after district officials research districts similar in size, companies and the cost for busing services. “Before I vote on something like this, I would like to have a full consideration of what we’re voting on,” Gaston said. After further discussion, Gaston’s idea was unanimously approved. house up to 200 employees to allow for “the immediate need” and “potential future growth.” The department had several possible sites in mind, according to an article published last year in the Topeka Capital-Journal, including Manhattan, Topeka, Dodge City, Garden City and Great Bend. “Manhattan will welcome the department’s employees and families to our community,” Manhattan Mayor Loren Pepperd stated in the city’s press release. “This is a wonderful place to live and work, and the city looks forward to introducing staff to all that Manhattan and K-State have to offer.” The press release also stated the location will strengthen the department’s collaboration with the University and other nearby facilities, such as the National Bio- and AgroDefense Facility, the Biosecurity Research Institute and College of Veterinary Medicine.

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integrated part of the regional vision for increased health and vibrancy. Following the Junction City meeting, the next gathering is scheduled for April 23, Tuesday at the Down-

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EVENING COLLEGE

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8–WEEK TERM | June 10–August 2 Public Speaking I COMM 106 | 11523 Public Speaking II COMM 321 | 11537 Principles of Macroeconomics ECON 110 | 11371

Intermediate Macroeconomics ECON 510 | 11350

World History from 1450 HIST 112 | 11795

Earth through Time GEOL 102 | 11283

History of the United States to 1877 HIST 251 | 11796

Western Civilization: The Modern Era HIST 102 | 11794

College Algebra MATH 100 | 11383

I Introduction to Spreadsheet Application CIS 102 | 11347

Introduction to Database Application CIS 103 | 11348

General Calculus and Linear Algebra MATH 205 | 11391

2–WEEK OFFERINGS Introduction to Computing Systems, Information Search and Security CIS 101 | 11341

Introduction to Word Processing Application CIS 104 | 11332

FALL 2013 PREVIEW Accounting for Business Operations ACCTG 231

Principles of Microeconomics History of the Indians of ECON 120 North America HIST 537 Intermediate Accounting for Investing and Macroeconomics Business Law II Financing ECON 510 MANGT 392 ACCTG 241 Intermediate College Algebra Arabic I Microeconomics MATH 100 ARAB 181 ECON 520 Plane Trigonometry Arabic II Expository Writing II MATH 150 ARAB 182 ENGL 200 General Calculus and Linear Public Speaking I Introduction to Literature Algebra MATH 205 COMM 106 ENGL 251 Public Speaking II COMM 321

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History of the Occult and Witchcraft HIST 523

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regional goals.” Flint Hills Frontiers officials also believe that involvement may pave the way to increasing funding opportunities for a community, as it becomes a more

VISIT evening.k-state.edu 6963

Social Psychology PSYCH 535

Introduction to Sociology SOCIO 211 Global Problems SOCIO 363 Social Organization SOCIO 440 Business and Economic Statistics I STAT 350 Business and Economic Statistics II STAT 351


Sports

JCHS Track and Field results from Maize Invitational, 3B

The Daily Union, Tuesday, April 9, 2013

In brief Softball Registration

The Geary Co. girls softball association will hold its registration for the 2013 summer softball season on April 13 and 27 at Dillons on 618 W. 6th st. in Junction City from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Registration costs $40 and is open to players living in Geary Co. ranging in age from6 to 18-years-old. If you have any questions or would like more information, please contact Jeff Childs at jeff. childs@jcks.com

Junction City Wrestling

The Junction City Greco/freestyle wrestling team competed at the Ultimate Freestyle Championships in Blue Springs. Mo. last weekend. Jason Zook (cadet, heavyweight division), Jeryl Denton (Junior, 170-pound division) and Micah Felton (Junior, 180-pound division) each won the championship in their weight class.

JCHS’ Samu-el Cusack commits to Garden City

Morgan Samu-el Cusack committed to play football at Garden City Community College. Cusack won three letters in football during his time at JCHS.

Jays outlast Hays 1-0 to stay perfect

D aily U nion S taf f

That effort thwarted the scoring threat and the Blue Jays sports.beat@thedailyunion.net didn’t break, escaping Hays with the victory. HAYS — With a harsh wind “She looked like she had been gusting into the faces of the doing it for years,” Junction members of the Junction City City coach Drew Proctor said of girls soccer team, the his keeper. “So I’m really Blue Jays took up a proud of the way she defensive mindset. The played. She came up locals were trying to huge for us.” hold onto a 1-0 lead late Junction City began in the second half the game with the howlagainst Hays on Moning wind at its back. day. The Blue Jays wanted Hays won a late corto take advantage of the ner, and sent the kick early opportunity, L ily flying into the box to because the conditions try and redirect the ball T hornberg would not be conducive into the net for the when the tables turned equalizer. in the second half. However, senior goalkeeper “Rather than playing the ball Lily Thornberg rushed off her and keeping possession, like line and out-jumped a pack of we’re good at, and then looking Hays forwards to win the ball. to get forward, we had to just

fly people forward in the first half to try and get a goal,” Proctor said. Early in the game, senior Erika Goodwin won the ball back from a defender and played a perfect cross into the feet of junior Jessica Schellhase in the middle. Schellhase did what she does best, promptly whipping the ball it into the back of the Hays net to score the lone goal of the match. Proctor wanted his team to obtain a larger cushion, but his girls were unable to finish on any of their chances. At halftime, he told his team the remainder of the game would be survival of the fittest. Ethan Padway • The Daily Union “I asked the, ‘are we going to be able to survive this game or In this photo from a recent game, Emily Calvetti tries will we lay down?’” Proctor to win the ball against two Wichita Southeast players. Please see Soccer, 6B

No. 1 Survives

NCAAB

K-State F Adrian Diaz transferring

Associated Press

MLS

Sporting Kansas City blanks United 1-0

Chris O’Meara • The Associated Press

Louisville basketball players react after defeating Michigan during the second half of the NCAA Final Four tournament college basketball championship game Monday, April 8, 2013, in Atlanta. Louisville won 82-76.

No. 1 overall seed Louisville wins NCAA title B y PAUL NEWBERRY Associated Press ATLANTA — Rick Pitino capped the greatest week of his life with the prize he wanted most of all. Luke Hancock produced another huge game off the bench, scoring 22 points, and Pitino became the first coach to win national titles at two schools when relentless Louisville rallied from another 12-point deficit to beat Michigan 82-76 in the NCAA championship game Monday night. This title came on the same day Pitino was announced as a member of the latest Hall of Fame class, a couple of days after his horse won a big race

on the way to the Kentucky Derby, and a few more days after his son got the head coaching job at Minnesota. This was the best feeling of all. The Cardinals (35-5) lived up to their billing as the top overall seed in the tournament, though they sure had to work for it. Louisville trailed Wichita State by a dozen in the second half of the national semifinals, before rallying for a 72-68 victory. This time, they fell behind by 12 in the first half, though a stunning spurt at the end of the period wiped out the entire deficit. “I had the 13 toughest guys I’ve ever coached,” said Pitino, who plans to follow through on

a promise he made to his players if they won the title — by getting a tattoo. No one was tougher than Hancock, named the most outstanding player. He came off the bench to hit four straight 3-pointers after Michigan got a boost from an even more unlikely player. Freshman Spike Albrecht made four straight from beyond the arc, too, blowing by his career high before the break with 17 points. Coming in, Albrecht was averaging 1.8 points a game and had not scored more than seven all season. While Albrecht didn’t do Please see Champs, 6B

B y ALAN ESKEW

Dolphins looking to referendum on stadium plan

Associated Press

We want your news

The Daily Union wants your sports news from Geary, Riley, Dickinson, Morris, Clay and Wabaunsee counties. E-mail: sports.beat@thedailyunion.net

ATLANTA — There’s no way Wichita State is going to shock anybody next season. The gritty team from the Missouri Valley was picked to finish somewhere in the middle of the conference this year, a fairly safe guess considering the Shockers lost all of their starters from a team that earned a No. 5 seed to the NCAA tournament last season. But with an entirely new group running the show, coach Gregg Marshall’s crew slowly came together this season, picking up steam once they got healthy late in the year and getting on the kind of roll that Butler and VCU made famous before them. The result was Wichita State’s first trip to the Final Four since 1965. It ended with a blown second-half lead and a disheartening loss to Louisville on Saturday night, but with leading scorer Cleanthony Early and several other key contributors returning, it’s a good bet the Shockers will be tough again next season. It’s an even safer assumption that their opponents will be ready for them. “You know, it’s hard to lose your last game. Everyone does it except for three or four tournament winners,” Marshall said. Please see Shockers, 2B

John Bazemore • The Associated Press

Wichita State’s Carl Hall signs autographs after practice for their NCAA Final Four tournament college basketball semifinal game against Louisville, Friday, April 5, 2013, in Atlanta.

Santana strong as Royals win home opener

NFL

The Miami Dolphins say they’ve reached an agreement with the Miami-Dade county mayor to hold a referendum on a plan to use hotel taxes to help pay for a nearly $400 million upgrade to the team’s stadium. Public money would be used for about 30 percent of the project, which also requires approval by the Florida Legislature.

Wichita State already turns to promising future B y DAVE SKRETTA

Kansas State says sophomore forward Adrian Diaz has decided to transfer. Coach Bruce Weber said Monday he was disappointed, but Diaz expressed an interest in playing closer to his home in Miami. The 6-foot-10 Diaz averaged 2.9 points on 54.8 percent shooting with 1.9 rebounds in 49 career games from 2011-13. He has two years of eligibility remaining.

Claudio Bieler scored in the 89th minute, lifting Sporting Kansas City to a 1-0 victory over D.C. United on Friday. Jimmy Nielsen earned his league-leading fourth shutout for Sporting (3-1-2), which has not given up a goal in 429 consecutive minutes and ran its winning streak against D.C. to five matches. United (1-3-1) is winless in its past three and was shut out for the third time this year. Nielsen had to make just one save against D.C., which had more yellow cards than shots on goal. Soony Saad, who entered the game in the 83rd minute, set up Bieler’s late game-winner for his first assist of the season. Saad stole the ball from Marcos Sanchez in the left corner, then dribbled between Marcelo Saragosa’s legs at the end line before passing back to Bieler. Bieler struck a left-footed shot inside the right post for his fourth goal since joining Sporting this season from Ecuadorian side LDU Quito. The game had five cautions issued, three against United and two against Sporting.

B

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Royals fans waited almost all afternoon to see some offense. When their team finally built a rally, it came just in time to give Ervin Santana a much-deserved win. Santana pitched eight strong innings, Alcides Escobar doubled home the goahead run and Kansas City beat the Minnesota Twins 3-1 on Monday in its home opener. “Better later than never,” Santana said. “I know we are going to score runs.” Santana (1-1), acquired from the Los Angeles Angels on Oct. 31 for minor league left-hander Brandon Sisk, gave up a run and eight singles. He struck out seven, walked one and hit a batter with a pitch. Santana allowed only four hits after the first inning, when the Twins scored their Orlin Wagner • The Associated Press lone run. Kansas City Royals starting pitcher Ervin Santana (54) delivers to a “He really had his big slider working Minnesota Twins batter during the first inning of the Royals’ 2013 and he had a good fastball, too,” Royals home opener at Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City, Mo., Monday, manager Ned Yost said. “After the first April 8, 2013. The Royals beat the Twins 3-1 to improve to 4-3 on inning he really settled down. His slider the year. was phenomenal. He was able to throw it

at the back foot of their big sluggers and keep them off balance. Giving us eight strong innings was big.” Twins right-hander Kevin Correia (0-1) limited the Royals to five singles and no runs over the first seven innings before Lorenzo Cain doubled to right-center to open a three-run eighth. After Chris Getz’s sacrifice bunt moved Cain to third, Alex Gordon singled to tie the score. Escobar’s double scored Gordon and knocked Correia out of the game. Jared Burton gave up a run-scoring single to Billy Butler, who tied a club record with seven RBIs on Sunday in Philadelphia. “Correia did a good job getting us to hit on top of the ball and hitting ground balls,” Yost said. “In the eighth he got some pitches up and we were able to get some runs. These guys just keep plugging away. They have the confidence that they’re going to hit.” Correia took the loss after giving up three runs and eight hits in 7 1-3 innings. “I made a couple bad pitches,” he said. “I got behind on (Cain) and I didn’t want to walk him. I threw a middlish pitch that he Please see Royals, 6B


2B

The Daily Union. Tuesday, April 9, 2013

TV SportsWatch Today

MLB

5:30 p.m. MLB — Regional coverage, L.A. Dodgers at San Diego or Chicago White Sox at Washington (7 p.m. start) 7 p.m. WGN — Milwaukee at Chicago Cubs 9 p.m. MLB — Regional coverage, Oakland at L.A. Angels or Houston at Seattle

THE DAILY RECORD Boston 13, Toronto 0 Kansas City 9, Philadelphia 8 Minnesota 4, Baltimore 3 Cleveland 13, Tampa Bay 0 Oakland 9, Houston 3 Chicago White Sox 4, Seattle 3, 10 innings Texas 7, L.A. Angels 3

SOCCER

1:30 p.m. FSN — UEFA Champions League, quarterfinals, Malaga at Dortmund 7 p.m. FSN — UEFA Champions League, quarterfinals, Galatasaray vs. Real Madrid, at Istanbul (same-day tape) WOMEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 7:30 p.m. ESPN — NCAA Division I tournament, championship, Louisville vs. UConn winner, at New Orleans

MLB American League East Division W Boston 5 Baltimore 3 New York 3 Tampa Bay 3 Toronto 2

L 2 4 4 4 4

Pct GB .714 — .429 2 .429 2 .429 2 .333 2 1/2

Boston 3, Baltimore 1 N.Y. Yankees 11, Cleveland 6 Kansas City 3, Minnesota 1 Texas 5, Tampa Bay 4 Houston at Seattle, Late

W Chicago 4 Kansas City 4 Minnesota 4 Detroit 3 Cleveland 3

L 2 3 3 3 4

Pct .667 .571 .571 .500 .429 1

L 2 2 4 4 5

Pct .714 .714 .429 .333 2 .167 3

Wednesday’s Games Toronto at Detroit, 12:05 p.m. Tampa Bay at Texas, 1:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Washington, 6:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Cleveland, 6:05 p.m. Baltimore at Boston, 6:10 p.m. Minnesota at Kansas City, 7:10 p.m. Oakland at L.A. Angels, 9:05 p.m. Houston at Seattle, 9:10 p.m.

East Division

GB — 1/2 1/2 1 1/2

W Cincinnati 5 St. Louis 3 Chicago 2 Milwaukee 2 Pittsburgh 1

GB — — 2 1/2 1/2

L 2 4 5 5 5

GB — 1 1 1/2 4 5

Pct .714 .429 .286 .286 .167

Wednesday’s Games

NBA Atlantic Division

GB — 2 3 3 3 1/2

Sunday’s Games N.Y. Yankees 7, Detroit 0

W 5 5 4

L 1 1 2

Pct .833 .833 .667

Pct GB .658 — .579 6 .519 10 1/2 .408 19 .377 21 1/2

Southeast Division W z-Miami 60 x-Atlanta 42 Washington 29 Orlando 19 Charlotte 18

GB — — 1

L 16 36 48 59 59

W 48

L 29

Pct GB .789 — .538 19 .377 31 1/2 .244 42 .234 42 1/2 Pct .623

W x-Okla. City 56 x-Denver 53 Utah 41 Portland 33 Minnesota 29

bs & Shrub Roses nging Baskets

Crabgrass Preventer Vegetables, Groundcovers ns, Potatoes, Garlic awberries, Rhubarb

Pct GB .727 — .688 3 .526 15 1/2 .429 23 .382 26 1/2 Pct .662 .571 .519 .351 .299

GB — 7 11 24 28

Central Division GP W L OT Pts G F GA x-Chicago 38 29 5 4 62 1 28 83 St. Louis 37 21 14 2 44 1 06 98 Detroit 39 19 15 5 43 99 101 Columbus 39 16 16 7 39 91 104 Nashville 40 15 17 8 38 96 109

Northwest Division Vancouver Minnesota Edmonton Calgary Colorado

W L OT Pts G F GA 21 11 6 48 1 03 95 22 14 2 46 1 03 97 16 15 7 39 1 00 1 06 14 20 4 32 1 02 1 34 12 22 5 29 90 124

Pacific Division W L OT Pts G F GA 26 8 5 57 1 21 98 22 13 4 48 1 14 96 20 11 7 47 98 94 17 15 6 40 1 05 1 04 18 17 3 39 1 04 1 17

NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. x-clinched playoff spot

Detroit at Cleveland, 6 p.m. Atlanta at Philadelphia, 6 p.m. Milwaukee at Orlando, 6 p.m. Miami at Washington, 6 p.m. Brooklyn at Boston, 7 p.m. Phoenix at Dallas, 7:30 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Portland, 9 p.m. New Orleans at Sacramento, 9 p.m. Minnesota at L.A. Clippers, 9:30 p.m. San Antonio at Denver, 9:30 p.m.

Today’s Games Philadelphia at N.Y. Islanders, 6 p.m. Pittsburgh at Carolina, 6 p.m. San Jose at Columbus, 6 p.m. Washington at Montreal, 6:30 p.m. Ottawa at Tampa Bay, 6:30 p.m. Buffalo at Winnipeg, 7 p.m. St. Louis at Nashville, 7 p.m. Chicago at Minnesota, 7 p.m. Los Angeles at Dallas, 7:30 p.m.

NHL EASTERN CONFERENCE

Klinsmann open to staying with US after World Cup B y RONALD BLUM

OK, not quite. But as he stood on the sun-splashed 86th floor of the Empire State Building, he was 1,050 feet above ground level and had just led the U.S. to a snowy win over Costa Rica and a draw at Mexico that got David J. Phillip • The Associated Press the Americans’ World Cup Wichita State head coach Gregg Marshall and Wichita State’s qualifying campaign back on Tekele Cotton watch play against Louisville during the second track. half of a Final Four game Saturday, April 6, 2013, in Atlanta. He’s lived in Southern CaliLouisville won 72-68. fornia for 15 years, raising a son Armstead — whose poise was so crucial in March — and daughter with his Ameriwill be gone. Role players Ehimen Orukpe, Demetric can wife. Coaching the U.S. Williams and Kadeem Coleby will also move on with national team for the last 20 their lives. orticultural ervices months has been an ideal job, But there’s plenty back,o nledHwy. by 2 ofmiproduction E. of Mcoming anhattan 24 and he’s open to staying on after Early, the junior forward who made just about every the World Cup for the next four776-5764 M-Sat. 9-6 Sun. 12-6 power conference coach look silly for overlooking him year cycle — if the Americans hortservinc.com S ince 1970 coming out of junior college when he had 24 points and play well at the 2014 tourna10 rebounds against the Cardinals in the national semiment in Brazil. finals. “It all depends on results,” he Baker finished with 11 points and eight rebounds for said during an interview Friday the Shockers, Tekele Cotton — just a sophomore — had with The Associated Press. “I nine points, and VanVleet wound up playing 23 minutes want to be measured by the outin the Final Four. come of your work, and the All of them will be back, none of them sneaking up on outcome of your work is Brazil anybody. 2014. It also depends on how the “We’re still not satisfied,” Cotton said. “We’re going to team presents itself, how they come back next year, come at it again, and work hard play, what really happens in the during the summer and get better. We’ll get right back games.” here next year.” A member of Germany’s 1990

Garden Center

GP 38 38 38 38 39

GP Anaheim 39 Los Angeles 39 San Jose 38 Phoenix 38 Dallas 38

Wednesday’s Games

Shrubs & Shrub Roses Hanging Baskets

...time for Crabgrass Preventer... Annuals, Perennials, Vegetables, Groundcovers Asparagus, Onions, Potatoes, Garlic Cole Crops, Strawberries, Rhubarb S

W L OT Pts G F GA 20 17 2 42 1 17 1 10 19 19 2 40 98 120 16 20 2 34 99 121 16 20 2 34 1 21 1 14 13 20 6 32 96 132

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Shade, Flowering,Associated Press NEW YORK — Jurgen Klinsmann was at the top of the Evergreen & F ruit world.

H

W L OT Pts G F GA 25 8 5 55 1 20 91 25 9 4 54 1 08 81 22 13 4 48 1 21 1 09 19 13 6 44 94 85 16 17 6 38 1 05 1 18

Southeast Division

Today’s Games

GB —

GP 38 38 39 38 39

GP Washington 39 Winnipeg 40 Carolina 38 Tampa Bay 38 Florida 39

Cleveland at Indiana, 6 p.m. Washington at New York, 6:30 p.m. Philadelphia at Brooklyn, 6:30 p.m. Milwaukee at Miami, 6:30 p.m. Toronto at Chicago, 7 p.m. Phoenix at Houston, 7 p.m. Charlotte at Memphis, 7 p.m. Oklahoma City at Utah, 8 p.m. Minnesota at Golden State, 9:30 p.m. New Orleans at L.A. Lakers, 9:30 p.m.

Garden Center

World Cup championship team, Klinsmann coached his country to a third-place finish at home in the 2006 tournament. He quit four days later citing burnout and pretty much said “California here I come,” returning home for what became a role as U.S. coach in waiting. Klinsmann didn’t take the job then despite long talks with U.S. Soccer Federation President Sunil Gulati, who ultimately hired Bob Bradley to replace Bruce Arena. Klinsmann observed the American soccer scene, went back to Germany to coach Bayern Munich, was fired after less than a season and moved back to California. He consulted for Major League Soccer’s Toronto FC and worked as a commentator for ESPN at the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, where the U.S. was knocked out in the second round with an overtime loss to Ghana. Klinsmann could not shake the impression that he was the shadow U.S. coach. After the Americans played listlessly for long stretches during the 2011 CONCACAF Gold Cup, Gulati fired Bradley and signed Klinsmann to a contract through August 2014 with a $2.5 million annual base salary.

Marysville

p a o r D us

If you would like to remember a friend or relative through Weekly Birthday Corner Please Call...762-5000 or Mail $1.00, giving name and date to:

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Shade Trees Flowering Trees Fruit Trees Evergreen Trees

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Annuals, Perennials, Vegetables, Groundcovers Asparagus, Onions, Potatoes, Garlic For Your ConvenienCe Cole Crops, Strawberries, Rhubarb

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2 mi E. of M anhattan o n Hwy. 24

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L 21 24 37 44 47

Monday’s Games

TREES...

Shrubs & Shrub Roses Hanging Baskets

776-5764 M-Sat. 9-6 Sun. 12-6

Northeast Division Montreal Boston Toronto Ottawa Buffalo

No games scheduled

Shade, Flowering, Evergreen & Fruit

Horticultural Services

GB — 5 14 19 30

x-clinched playoff spot y-clinched division z-clinched conference

TREES...

...time for Crabgrass Preventer... Annuals, Perennials, Vegetables, Groundcovers Asparagus, Onions, Potatoes, Garlic Cole Crops, Strawberries, Rhubarb

Pct .740 .675 .558 .494 .351

Pacific Division

Continued from Page 1B

Evergreen Trees

L 20 25 34 39 50

W L y-L.A. Clippers 5 1 26 Golden State 4 4 33 L.A. Lakers 40 37 Sacramento 27 50 Phoenix 23 54

Shockers “This one is especially hard because of the run we went on. We set a school record for wins, in the Final Four for the second time in school history. “But we didn’t say, ‘Good bye,”’ Marshall said. “We didn’t say, ‘This is it.’ This is just the beginning. This is just a beginning for us. A lot of good players in that locker room, all they’re talking about right now is working hard this summer and getting better.” The Shockers’ tremendous run is sure to make Marshall a hot coaching candidate, but the former coach of Winthrop has said repeatedly that he’s happy in Wichita, and that it would take the right opportunity at just the right time to every pry him loose. Especially with the kind of momentum the Shockers are riding. They beat VCU early in the year, knocked off Creighton — the pride of the Valley most of the year — in a mid-season tilt at Koch Arena in Wichita, and then squeaked into the tourney as a No. 9 seed paired in the same region as Gonzaga, the No. 1 team in the AP Top 25 at the end of the regular season. The Shockers were never intimidated, though, and they proved the stage was never too big for them. They rolled through Pittsburgh, and then raised eyebrows when they busted brackets with a win over the ‘Zags. They headed to Los Angeles for the West Regional semifinals and took care of La Salle, and then held off Ohio State down the stretch to reach the Georgia Dome. It looked for a while as if their dream run would continue, too. Wichita State managed to take a 26-25 lead over Louisville at halftime, and extended it to 12 in the second half, only for the Cardinals’ intense full-court pressure to finally set in. The Shockers wound up losing 72-68, sending Louisville into the title game against Michigan. “We have to be appreciative and understand what it takes to get here,” said Fred VanVleet, who along with fellow freshman Ron Baker was critical to the Shockers’ postseason charge. “It’s a huge stepping-stone and something we can look back on and work for,” VanVleet said. “Guys that are coming back, now we have motivation for next year, because no matter what, we can sit back and say, ‘We didn’t make it.’ So that will be good motivation for us.” There will be pieces to replace, of course. There almost always is. The Shockers’ heart and soul, all-energy forward Carl Hall, will have graduated, and senior guard Malcolm

GP W L OT Pts G F GA x-Pittsburgh 39 29 10 0 58 1 27 95 N.Y. Rangers 39 19 16 4 42 96 94 N.Y. Islanders 3 9 19 16 4 42 1 13 1 19 New Jersey 39 15 14 10 40 92 106 Philadelphia 38 17 18 3 37 1 06 1 18

Northwest Division

Central Division y-Indiana

Atlantic Division

.553 5 1/2 .487 10 1/2 .333 22 1/2 .316 23 1/2

Southwest Division

Cincinnati at St. Louis, 12:45 p.m. Pittsburgh at Arizona, 2:40 p.m. Colorado at San Francisco, 2:45 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Washington, 6:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets at Philadelphia, 6:05 p.m. Atlanta at Miami, 6:10 p.m. Milwaukee at Chicago Cubs, 7:05 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at San Diego, 9:10 p.m.

L 26 32 37 45 48

34 39 52 52

W y-San Antonio 5 7 x-Memphis 52 Houston 43 Dallas 38 New Orleans 2 7

L.A. Dodgers (Beckett 0-1) at San Diego (Richard 0-1), 5:40 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Peavy 1-0) at Washington (G.Gonzalez 1-0), 6:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Gee 0-1) at Philadelphia (Lee 1-0), 6:05 p.m. Atlanta (Medlen 0-1) at Miami (LeBlanc 0-1), 6:10 p.m. Milwaukee (W.Peralta 0-1) at Chicago Cubs (Wood 1-0), 7:05 p.m. Cincinnati (Arroyo 1-0) at St. Louis (Lynn 0-0), 7:15 p.m. Pittsburgh (Ja.McDonald 0-1) at Arizona (McCarthy 0-0), 8:40 p.m. Colorado (Nicasio 1-0) at San Francisco (Lincecum 1-0), 9:15 p.m.

W x-New York 50 x-Brooklyn 44 x-Boston 40 Philadelphia 3 1 Toronto 29

West Division Arizona Colorado Los Angeles

rees, Flowering Trees

ees,

Pct .857 .714 .667 .286 .143

x-Chicago 42 x-Milwaukee 3 7 Detroit 26 Cleveland 24

WESTERN CONFERENCE

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Central Division

West Division W Oakland 5 Texas 5 Seattle 3 Los Angeles 2 Houston 1

Toronto (Morrow 0-0) at Detroit (A. Sanchez 0-0), 12:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Peavy 1-0) at Washington (G.Gonzalez 1-0), 6:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Pettitte 1-0) at Cleveland (Carrasco 0-0), 6:05 p.m. Tampa Bay (Ro.Hernandez 0-1) at Texas (Tepesch 0-0), 7:05 p.m. Minnesota (Pelfrey 1-0) at Kansas City (Guthrie 1-0), 7:10 p.m. Oakland (Parker 0-1) at L.A. Angels (C.Wilson 0-0), 9:05 p.m. Houston (Bedard 0-0) at Seattle (Maurer 0-1), 9:10 p.m.

L 1 2 2 5 6

2 4

Today’s Games

Today’s Games

W Atlanta 6 New York 5 Washington 4 Philadelphia 2 Miami 1

.500 .167

Milwaukee 7, Chicago Cubs 4 Cincinnati 13, St. Louis 4 N.Y. Mets 7, Philadelphia 2 Atlanta 2, Miami 0 Pittsburgh at Arizona, Late Colorado at San Francisco, Late

National League

Central Division

3 5

Monday’s Games

Monday’s Games

NHL

7 p.m. NBCSN — Chicago at Minnesota

San Francisco 3 San Diego 1

Birthday Corner will publish on Thursdays. Deadline: Tuesday, Noon.

776-5764 M-Sat. 9-6 Sun. 12-6

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cord. The exact legal descriptions of the real estate involved are available in the Court’s file or by requesting the same from Plaintiff’s The Daily Union. Tuesday, April 9, 2013 counsel this tax foreclosure action consists of sixty-seven (67) parcels with all of the properties are located in Sutter Highlands Subdivision, a replat of Falcon Meadows Addition, Unit One (1) to the City of Junction City, Geary County, Kansas

JCHS Track and Field Classifieds at Maize Invitational ur Declaration Junction City Results

1

V

Female

Score Name 4-08.00 Hamlin, Ajia 4-04.00 Gosha, Tyra

2

V

High Jump

Age Team Place Pts SR Jchs 4 FR Jchs 8

Male

V

High Jump

Public Notices

Female

V

Long Jump

Male

Case No. 12 CV 40 Division DJ5 BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF GEARY COUNTY, KANSAS, Plaintiff, vs. SUTTER HIGHLAND, LLC , and LARKIN CONSTRUCTION LLC, and the other defendants as named in the various causes of action, and the unknown heirs, executors, administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors and assigns of any deceased defendants; the unknown spouses of any defendants; the unknown officers, successors, trustees, creditors and assigns of any defendants that are existing, dissolved or dormant corporations; the unknown executors, administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors, successors and assigns of any defendants that are or were partners or in partnership; the unknown guardians, conservators and trustees of any defendants that are minors or are under any legal disability; and the unknown heirs, executors, administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors and assigns of any person alleged to be deceased. Defendants.

Long Jump

Score Name Age Team Place Pts 19-05.25 Wilson, Devonte JR Jchs 8 19-02.75 Green, Quendarious SO Jchs 18-04.75 James, Farres JR Jchs 17-08.25 Keith, Scott FR Jchs

7

V

Female

Triple Jump

Score Name 28-08.50 Hamlin, Ajia

Age Team Place Pts SR Jchs 8

9

Female

V

Shot Put

Score Name 33-00.50 Stokes, Kierra

Age Team Place Pts JR Jchs 2 8

10

Male

V

Shot Put

Score Name Age Team Place Pts 46-08.50 West, James SR Jchs 2 8 41-01.50 Jones, Demarrion JR Jchs 38-06.50 Moore, Charles SR Jchs 37-06.50 Crenshaw, Tyler Jchs

11

V

Female

Score Name 92-10.00 Stokes, Kierra

Discus

Age Team Place Pts JR Jchs 2 8

12 V Male

Discus

Score FOUL

Name Age Team Place Pts Moore, Charles SR Jchs

17

V

Score 17.66 17.84

Name Age Team Place Pts Davis, Raven SR Jchs 1 Humphreys, Myrissa FR Jchs 2

19

V

Score 13.27 13.28 13.43 13.50

Name Age Team Place Pts Kemp, Olivia JR Jchs Saroglou, Mona JR Jchs Kemp, Olivia JR Jchs 7 1 McFarthing, Asia JR Jchs

20

V

Score 10.93 11.12 11.48 11.72 12.98

Name Age Team Place Pts Cason, Immanuel JR Jchs 6 Cason, Immanuel JR Jchs James, Farres JR Jchs Green, Quendarious SO Jchs Mays, Trey JR Jchs

21

V

Score 5:42.54 6:19.26 6:20.84

Name Age Team Place Pts Bisio, Deisjambra FR Jchs 2 8 Sifentes, Autumn JR Jchs Waterman, Bri JR Jchs

22

V

Score 4:54.30 4:54.80 5:04.90

Name Age Team Place Pts Echevarria, Matt SR Jchs 2 8 Timmerman, Jack JR Jchs Lucas, Justin SR Jchs

23

V

Female

Female

100m

Sprint

Male 100m

Female

Sprint

1600m

Run

Run

Female

4x100m

Score Relay 52.16 A ‘Jchs’ 1) Asia McFarthing 3) Mona Saroglou

Place

Pts

24

Male

Relay

2) Olivia Kemp 4) Raven Davis

Score Relay DQ F A ‘Jchs’ 1) Farres James 3) Trey Mays

Place

25

Female

4x100m Relay Pts

2) Markeen Caine 4) Immanuel Cason

V

400m Sprint

Score Name Age Team Place Pts 1:05.45 F Butts, Tina SR Jchs 1:08.30 F Gosha, Tyra FR Jchs 1:11.20 F Kemp, Olivia JR Jchs

26

V

Score 52.46 56.03 57.25 1:01.56

Name Age Team Place Pts Caine, Markeen SR Jchs 3 6 Dunphy, Taylor SR Jchs Wilson, Devonte JR Jchs West, James SR Jchs

27

V

Score 50.00

Name Age Team Place Pts Humphreys, Myrissa FR Jchs 1

29

Female

Score 2:36.30 2:51.28 2:55.50 2:57.20

Name Age Team Place Pts Bisio, Deisjambra FR Jchs 3 6 Waterman, Bri JR Jchs Sifentes, Autumn JR Jchs Walsh, Emilia JR Jchs

30

V

Male 400m

Female

300m

Hurdles

800m

Male 800m

Run

31

Female

200m

Score 28.63 29.82 30.43 30.44

Name Age Team Place Pts Davis, Raven SR Jchs 2 8 Saroglou, Mona JR Jchs McFarthing, Asia JR Jchs Saroglou, Mona JR Jchs 6 1

32

Male

Score 24.40 24.50 24.70 26.2

Name Age Team Place Pts Mays, Trey JR Jchs 4 Cason, Immanuel JR Jchs 6 James, Farres JR Jchs 7 Green, Quendarious SO Jchs 19

Sprint

200m

Sprint

V Male 3200m

Run

Score Name Age Team Place Pts 10:50.58 Timmerman, Jack JR Jchs 4 11:14.00 Arneson, Nick FR Jchs

Male

Score Rnd 3:37.94 A ‘Jchs’ 1) Markeen Caine 3) Devonte Wilson

10

Run

Age Team Place Pts FR Jchs

36

3 6 8 10

Sprint

Score Name 2:14.46 Taylor, Isaiah

34

2

Male 1600m

V

NOTICE OF SUIT

Hurdles

100m

4

4x400m Relay Relay Place Pts 2 8 2) Isaiah Taylor 4) Taylor Dunphy

310

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF GEARY COUNTY, KANSAS (Pursuant to Chapter 60 and 79 of K.S.A.)

Score Name Age Team Place Pts 14-10.75 McFarthing, Asia JR Jchs 8 14-05.25 Saroglou, Mona JR Jchs 12-04.00 Hamlin, Ajia SR Jchs SCR Gosha, Tyra FR Jchs

6

FREEDOM Your Right To Know

Score Name Age Team Place Pts 6-00.00 Keith, Scott FR Jchs 2 8 5-10.00 Wilson, Devonte JR Jchs 4 4

5

O ce n e d n e p e of Ind

The State of Kansas to the defendants named below and to the unknown heirs, executors, administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors and assigns of any deceased defendants; the unknown spouses of any defendants; the unknown officers, successors, trustees, creditors and assigns of any defendants that are existing, dissolved or dormant corporations; the unknown executors, administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors, successors and assigns of any defendants that are or were partners or in partnership; the unknown guardians, conservators and trustees of any defendants that are minors or are under any legal disability; and the unknown heirs, executors, administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors and assigns of any person alleged to be deceased. You and each of you are hereby notified that a petition is now on file in the District Court of Geary County, Kansas, by the Board of County Commissioners of Geary County, Kansas, praying for a judgment against the real estate as described in each cause of action in said petition, for the amount of the unpaid taxes levied and assessed against said property for the years as specified in each individual cause of action, plus any unpaid taxes through the date of judgment and plus penalties and interest on said delinquent taxes and costs in the action, and for an Order of the Court directing the sale of said real estate at public auction in the manner as provided by law for the satisfaction of the unpaid taxes. You are notified that you are re quired to plead to said petition on or before the 23rd day of May, 2013 at 9:00 a.m., in the District Court of Geary County, Geary County Courthouse, Junction City, Kansas 66441. If you fail to plead, then judgment and decree will be entered in due course upon the petition and the property will be sold at public auction as provided by law and your rights in and to the said property will be terminated. You are also advised that you have rights of redemption to the real estate which may be exercised at any time prior to the day of the public auction of the property. The particular pieces of or parcels of real estate and the owners and lienholders upon whom service is being made by publication are listed below: Sutter Highlands LLC, notice sent by certified mail to last known ad dress: 1300 E State, #103, Eagle, ID 83616, but returned by U.S. Postal Service as “Building Vacant”. Further, the Kansas Secretary of State shows that this corporation was never authorized to do business in the State of Kansas. Description of property: Lot 1, Block 10, Cuddy’s Addition to Junction City, Geary County, Kansas. Larkin Construction, LLC, notice was sent by certified mail to last known address: 9910 Parkway Court, Leavenworth, KS 66048, but returned by U.S. Postal Service as undeliverable. Service was obtained on this defendant’s attorney of re cord. The exact legal descriptions of the real estate involved are available in the Court’s file or by requesting the same from Plaintiff’s counsel this tax foreclosure action consists of sixty-seven (67) parcels with all of the properties are located in Sutter Highlands Subdivision, a replat of Falcon Meadows Addition, Unit One (1) to the City of Junction City, Geary County, Kansas All real estate is located in Geary County, Kansas. Any defendant who

Public Notices

310

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF GEARY COUNTY, KANSAS CIVIL DEPARTMENT Case No. 11CV218 Court Number: GMAC Mortgage, LLC Plaintiff, vs. Brian W. Anderson and Gudrun Anderson, et al. Defendants. Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 60 Notice Of Sale Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued to me by the Clerk of the District Court of Geary County, Kansas, the undersigned Sheriff of Geary County, Kansas, will offer for sale at public auction and sell to the highest bidder for cash in hand, at the Front Door of the Courthouse at Junction City, Geary County, Kansas, on May 1, 2013, at 10:00 AM, the following real estate: A portion of Lot Fourteen (14), St. Mary's Addition, Unit No. Two (2) to Junction City, Geary County, Kansas and described as follows: Beginning at the most Southerly corner of said Lot Fourteen (14), said point also being on the Right-of-Way line of Bluestem Drive; thence N 65 degrees 23'43" W on the Southerly line of said Lot Fourteen (14) a distance of 148.67 feet to the Southwest comer of said Lot Fourteen (14); thence N 00 degrees 18'44" W on the West line of said Lot Fourteen (14) a distance of 68.29 feet to the Northwest corner of said Lot Fourteen (14); thence S 89 degrees 31'53" E on the North line of said Lot Fourteen (14) a distance of 57.25 feet; thence S 39 degrees 02'28" E on a party wall line and extensions thereof a distance of 144.89 feet to a point on said right-of-way line of Bluestem Drive; thence on said right-of-way line, on a curve to the left having a radius of 50.00 feet, a long chord bearing of S 37 degrees 02'40" W and a long chord distance of 21.53 feet, an arc distance of 21.70 feet to the point of beginning, commonly known as 1203 Bluestem Drive, Junction City, KS 66441 (the “Property”) to satisfy the judgment in the above-entitled case. The sale is to be made without appraisement and subject to the redemption period as provided by law, and further subject to the approval of the Court. For more information, visit www.Southlaw.com Tony Wolf, Sheriff Geary County, Kansas Prepared By: South & Associates, P.C. Megan Cello (KS # 24167) 6363 College Blvd., Suite 100 Overland Park, KS 66211 (913)663-7600 (913)663-7899 (Fax) Attorneys For Plaintiff (131001) A9719 4/9, 4/16, 4923 2013

Public Notices

which is more accurately described

310 as: Public Notices

All real estate is located in Geary County, Kansas. Any defendant who desires additional information may obtain a copy of the applicable pleadings by contacting the Clerk of the District Court, Geary County Courthouse, Junction City, KS 66441, or by contacting the attorney for the plaintiff as shown at the end of this publication. BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF GEARY COUNTY, KANSAS, Plaintiff, LLOYD R. GRAHAM, Deputy County Counselor, Pennell Office Building, Suite A, 801North Washington Street, Junction City, KS 66441, Telephone: 785-762-4343. A9804 4/2, 4/9, 4/16 2013

Public Notices

est and best bidder for cash in hand, the following described real property, to-wit: The following described lots, tracts or parcels of land, lying, being and situate in the County of Geary and State of Kansas, to-wit: Lot 12, Block 6, Cuddy's Addition to the City of Juction City, Geary County, Kansas.

310

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF GEARY COUNTY, KANSAS CIVIL COURT DEPARTMENT Case No. 12CV239 Court No. D05 K.S.A. Chapter 60 TITLE TO REAL ESTATE INVOLVED BENEFICIAL FINANCIAL I, INC. successor by merger to Beneficial Kansas, Inc., Plaintiff, v. THE ESTATE OF AMA A. HORTON, NOW DECEASED, et al., Defendants. NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE By virtue of an Order of Sale issued to me out of the said District Court in the above-entitled action, I will on Wednesday, the 1st day of May, 2013 at 10:00AM of said date at the Front door of the Courthouse in Geary County, Kansas, in the City of Junction City, Kansas, offer at public sale and sell to the highest and best bidder for cash in hand, the following described real property, to-wit: The following described lots, tracts or parcels of land, lying, being and situate in the County of Geary and State of Kansas, to-wit: Lot 12, Block 6, Cuddy's Addition to the City of Juction City, Geary County, Kansas. which is more accurately described as: Lot Twelve (12), Block Six (6), Cuddy's Addition to Junction City,

310

Lot Twelve (12), Block Six (6), Cuddy's Addition to Junction City, Geary County, Kansas. Commonly known as 826 W. 13th Street, Junction City, KS 66441. The above-described real estate is taken as the property of the defendants The Estate of Ama A. Horton, now deceased, et al. and is directed by said Order of Sale to be sold, and will be sold without ap praisement to satisfy said Order of Sale. Tony Wolf Sheriff of Geary County, Kansas

Horton, now deceased, et al. and is directed by said Order of Sale to be sold, and will be sold without ap praisement to satisfy said Order of Sale.

3B Tony Wolf Sheriff of Geary County, Kansas SUBMITTED BY: McNEARNEY, PITTENGER & ASSOCIATES, LLC Brandon T. Pittenger #20296 Public Notices 310 Teri L. Westbrook #23578 6800 College Blvd., Suite 400 P.O. Box 7410 Overland Park, KS 66207 (913) 323-4595, Ext. 185 FAX (913) 661-1747 Email: foreclosure@mcnearneylaw.com ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF NOTICE Pursuant to the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, 15 U.S.C. Section 1692c(b), no information concerning the collection of this debt may be given without the prior consent of the consumer given directly to the debt collector or the express permission of a court of competent jurisdiction. The debt collector is attempting to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that pur pose. A9812 4/9, 4/16, 4/23 2013

SUBMITTED BY: McNEARNEY, PITTENGER & ASSOCIATES, LLC Brandon T. Pittenger #20296 RELEASE DATE– Monday, April 8, 2013 Teri L. Westbrook #23578 6800 College Blvd., Suite 400 P.O. Box 7410 Overland Park, KS 66207 by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis (913) 323-4595,Edited Ext. 185 FAX ACROSS (913) 661-1747 DOWN 38 The Twins, at 48 Like a single1 Eva or Juan of 1 __ that be: Minneapolis’s performer show Email: authorities Argentina Target Field 49 Leads, as to a foreclosure@mcnearneylaw.com 2 Inventor Otis 6 “Taking you 39 “Born Free” lion seat ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF 3 Remington places” premium 40 Press for 52 Garçon’s

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

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RELEASE DATE– Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

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By Gail Grabowski and Bruce Venzke (c)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

04/09/13


Notice Of Sale

4B

Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued to me by the Clerk of the District Court of Geary County, Kansas, the undersigned Sheriff of Geary County, Kansas, will offer for sale at public auction and sell to the highest bidder for cash in hand, at the Front Door of the Courthouse at Junction City, Geary County, KanPublic Notices sas, on May 1, 2013, at 10:00310 AM, the following real estate: Lot 23, Block 3, McCluskey's Hill Addition, Unit No. 3 to Junction City, Geary County, Kansas, commonly known as 416 Navajo Drive, Junction City, KS 66441 (the “Property”) to satisfy the judgment in the above-entitled case. The sale is to be made without appraisement and subject to the redemption period as provided by law, and further subject to the approval of the Court. For more information, visit www.Southlaw.com Tony Wolf, Sheriff Geary County, Kansas

The Daily Union. Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Classifieds Public Notices

310

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF GEARY COUNTY, KANSAS In the Matter of the Estate of BURTON ROBERT LUSENHOP, Deceased Case No. 12 PR-84 NOTICE TO CREDITORS THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS CONCERNED: You are hereby notified that on March 19, 2013, a Petition for Probate of Will and Issuance of Letters Testamentary was filed in this Court by Central National Bank, one of, the co-executors named in the “Last Will and Testament of Burton Robert Lusenhop”, deceased, dated June 30, 2003, requesting the will filed in the estate be admitted to probate and record; petitioner and Robert E. Heinsohn be appointed as co-executors, without bond; and co-executors be granted Letters Testamentary. All creditors of the decedent are notified to exhibit their demands against the estate within the latter of four months from the date of first publication of notice under K.S.A. 59-2236 and amendments thereto, or if the identity of the creditor is known or reasonably ascertainable, 30 days after actual notice was given as provided by law, and if their demands are not thus exhibited, they shall be forever barred.

Prepared By: South & Associates, P.C. Kristen G. Stroehmann (KS # 10551) 6363 College Blvd., Suite 100 Overland Park, KS 66211 (913)663-7600 (913)663-7899 (Fax) Attorneys For Plaintiff (96752) A9818 4/9, 4/16, 4/23 2013

Public Notices

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF GEARY COUNTY, KANSAS. No. 13 PR 25. (Pursuant to Chapter 59 of K.S.A.) In the Matter of the Estate of CECIL CORONA RAMIREZ, JR., Deceased.

Central National Bank Robert E. Heinsohn Petitioners Victor A. Davis, Jr., SC #07399 WEARY DAVIS, L.C. 819 N. Washington Junction City, KS 66441 785-762-2210 Attorneys for Petitioner A9791 3/26, 4/2, 4/9 2013

Public Notices

310

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF GEARY COUNTY, KANSAS CIVIL DEPARTMENT Case No. 11CV205 Court Number: SunTrust Mortgage, Inc. Plaintiff, vs. Juan L. Watson, et al. Defendants. Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 60 Notice Of Sale Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued to me by the Clerk of the District Court of Geary County, Kansas, the undersigned Sheriff of Geary County, Kansas, will offer for sale at public auction and sell to the highest bidder for cash in hand, at the Front Door of the Courthouse at Junction City, Geary County, Kansas, on May 1, 2013, at 10:00 AM, the following real estate: Lot 23, Block 3, McCluskey's Hill Addition, Unit No. 3 to Junction City, Geary County, Kansas, commonly known as 416 Navajo Drive, Junction City, KS 66441 (the “Property”) to satisfy the judgment in the above-entitled case. The sale is to be made without appraisement and subject to the redemption period as provided by law, and further subject to the approval of the Court. For more information, visit www.Southlaw.com Tony Wolf, Sheriff Geary County, Kansas

310

First published in the Junction City Daily Union, April 9, 2013.

NOTICE OF HEARING THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS CONCERNED: You are notified that on April 4, 2013, a petition was filed in this Court by SHEILA I. RAMIREZ, surviving spouse and one of the heirs of CECIL CORONA RAMIREZ, JR., deceased, requesting Petitioner be appointed as Administrator of the Estate, and Petitioner be granted Letters of Administration. You are required to file your written defenses to the petition on or before May 6, 2013, at 1:30 p.m. in the District Court, Geary County Court house, 138 E. 8th Street, Junction City, Kansas, at which time and place the cause will be heard. Should you fail to file your written defenses, judgment and decree will be entered in due course upon the petition. SHEILA I. RAMIREZ, Petitioner CRAIG J. ALTENHOFEN of the law firm ALTENHOFEN & ALT, CHARTERED, 117-A W. 8th Street, P.O. Box 168, Junction City, KS 66441-0168, Telephone: 785-762-2100, Facsimile: 785-762-2291 and 417 Poyntz Ave, Manhattan, KS 66502, Telephone: 785-539-6634, Facsimile: 785-539-2617, Attorneys for Petitioner. A9817 4/9, 4/16, 4/23 2013

Prepared By: South & Associates, P.C. Kristen G. Stroehmann (KS # 10551) 6363 College Blvd., Suite 100 Overland Park, KS 66211 (913)663-7600 (913)663-7899 (Fax) Attorneys For Plaintiff (96752) A9818 4/9, 4/16, 4/23 2013

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Public Notices

310 Public Notices

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF GEARY COUNTY, KANSAS In the Matter of the Estate of IVA REBECCA GASSWINT, Deceased Case No. 13 PR-23 NOTICE OF HEARING AND NOTICE TO CREDITORS THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS CONCERNED: You are hereby notified that on March 29, 2013, a Petition was filed in this Court by John Gasswint and tom Woodward praying the petition be admitted to probate and record; petitioners be appointed as co-executors; and petitioners be granted Letters of Administration. You are required to file your written defenses thereto on or before April 29, 2013, at 1:30 o’clock p.m. in the District court, Junction City, Geary County, Kansas, at which time and place the cause will be heard. Should you fail therein, judgment and decree will be entered in due course upon the petition. All creditors of the decedent are notified to exhibit their demands against the estate within the latter of four months from the date of first publication of notice under K.S.A. 59-2236 and amendments thereto, or if the identity of the creditor is known or reasonably ascertainable, 30 days after actual notice was given as provided by law, and if their demands are not thus exhibited, they shall be forever barred. John Gasswint and Tom Woodward Petitioners Victor A. Davis, Jr. WEARY DAVIS, L.C. 819 N. Washington Junction City, KS 66441 785-762-2210 Attorneys for Petitioner A9811 4/2, 4/9, 4/16 2013

Public Notices

310

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF GEARY COUNTY, KANSAS Case No. 13CV14 Div. No. K.S.A. 60 Mortgage Foreclosure (Title to Real Estate Involved) Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, Plaintiff, vs. Verlin L Tarver [Deceased], et al., Defendants. NOTICE OF SUIT THE STATE OF KANSAS to: Unknown Heirs, Devisees, Legatees of Verlin L Tarver , Defendants, and all other persons who are or may be concerned: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED: That a Petition has been filed in the District Court of Geary County, Kansas, Case No. 13CV14 by Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, praying for foreclosure of a mortgage executed by Verlin L Tarver [Deceased] on 01/26/2006 and recorded in Book 164, Page 114 in the real estate records of Geary County, Kansas, related to the following property:

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The objective of the game is to fill all the EASY blank squares in a game with the correct numbers. There are three very simple constraints to follow. In a 9 by 9 square sudoku game: • Every row of 9 numbers must include all digits 1 through 9 in any order • Every column of 9 numbers must include all digits 1 through 9 in any order • Every 3 by 3 subsection of the 9 by 9 square must include all digits 1 through 9

Saturday's Answers

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THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED REAL ESTATE, SITUATED IN THE COUNTY OF GEARY, STATE OF KANSAS, TO WIT: LOTS TEN (10), ELEVEN (11), TWELVE (12), BLOCK FOUR (4), CLARKE`S PLATEAU ADDITION TO JUNCTION CITY, GEARY COUNTY, KANSAS. SHERIFF OF GEARY COUNTY, KANSAS Respectfully Submitted, By: Shawn Scharenborg, KS # 24542 Sara Knittel, KS # 23624 Kelli N. Breer, KS # 17851 Kozeny & McCubbin, L.C. (St. Louis Office) 12400 Olive Blvd., Suite 555 St. Louis, MO 63141 Phone: (314) 991-0255 Fax: (314) 567-8006 Email: sscharenborg@km-law.com Attorney for Plaintiff A9783 4/2, 4/9, 4/16 2013

Public Notices

8 HigH Profile Advertising

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Case No. 13CV79 Div. No. K.S.A. 60 Mortgage Foreclosure WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A. PLAINTIFF

NOTICE OF SUIT The State of Kansas to: JAMES W. CRANE II, A/K/A JAMES W. CRANE, A/K/A JAMES CRANE; JOHN DOE (REAL NAME UN KNOWN); MARY DOE (REAL NAME UNKNOWN); BANK OF AMERICA, N.A.; LUCILLE L. CRANE, A/K/A LUCILLE LILLIAN CRANE, (DE CEASED); BENEFICIAL KANSAS, INC., F/K/A BENEFICIAL MORT GAGE CO. OF KANSAS, INC., OR ITS SUCCESSORS IN INTEREST

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NOTICE OF SUIT THE STATE OF KANSAS TO: ALLISON D. RAE, and all other persons who are or may be concerned: You are hereby notified that a Petition for Divorce was filed on January 15, 2013, in the District Court of Geary County, Kansas by Jonathan Rae, which Petition was thereafter amended, praying for a divorce, division of property and in debtedness, and other related relief, and you are hereby required to plead to said Petition for Divorce on or before May 16, 2013, in said Court, at the Geary County Courthouse in Junction City, Kansas. If you fail to plead, judgment and decree will be entered in due course upon the Petition. Jonathan Rae, Petitioner

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Public Notices

3 8 7 1Classified 5 9 sPAce AvAilAble 2 1 Would you like your ad to appear in this spot? 5 1 Ads Call us now. First call gets it! 1 3 8 7 4 2 Rock! 762-5000 9 9 12 8 1 4 5

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Gavin Kent Fritz Case No. 2013-AD-13 NOTICE OF HEARING The State of Kansas to Allen Russell, putative biological father of Gavin Kent Fritz, minor child born March 16, 2013, at Mercy Regional Health Center, Manhattan, Kansas, to Elsa Fritz, and to all other persons who are concerned. You are hereby notified that a petition for adoption has been filed in the Probate Department of the District Court, Butler County, Kansas, by petitioners seeking to adopt the said child, and you are hereby required to plead to said petition on or before May 31, 2013, at 11 o’clock a.m. in said court at El Dorado, Kansas. Should you fail therein, judgment and decree will be entered in due course upon said petition. A9809 4/2, 4/9, 4/16 2013

Public Notices

310

First published in The Junction City Daily Union, April 2, 2013. NOTICE TO CREDITORS PURSUANT TO K.S.A. 58a-818 TO ALL PERSONS CONCERNED: You are notified that Roger D. Malarkey died on March 4, 2013. The decedent was the surviving Settlor of the Roger D. Malarkey and Martha Anna Malarkey Revocable Living Trust dated January 9, 2007. Craig J. Altenhofen serves as the Successor Trustee. The Successor Trustee has the power to pay the outstanding debts of the decedent from the Trust property upon receipt of proper proof of the debts. In accordance with K.S.A. 58a818, creditors of the decedent must present claims for such debts to the Successor Trustee in writing within the later of four (4) months from the date of the first publication of notice, or thirty (30) days after receipt of actual notice if the identity of the creditor is known or reasonably ascertainable by the Successor Trustee. If a creditor fails to present such claims to the Successor Trustee within such prescribed time periods, the creditor will be forever barred as against the Successor Trustee and the Trust property. Craig J. Altenhofen, Trustee of the Roger D. Malarkey and Martha Anna Malarkey Revocable Living Trust Dated January 9, 2007, 117-A W. 8th Street, Junction City, KS 66441. ALTENHOFEN & ALT, CHAR TERED, 117-A W. 8th Street, P.O. Box 168, Junction City, KS 66441, Telephone: 785-762-2100, Facsimile: 785-762-2291 and 417 Poyntz Ave, Manhattan, KS 66502, Tele phone: 785-539-6634, Facsimile: 785-539-2617, Attorneys for Successor Trustee. A9810 4/2, 4/9, 4/16 2013

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Abad Ruiz Jr & Jennifer Reave-Dausey - you have 30 days to remove your property from 231 W. 9th Street, Junction City. ADOPTION: A lifetime of love, security and happiness awaits your newborn. Expenses paid. Michelle and Kevin 1-855-882-2700 or michelleandkevinadopt@yahoo.com

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! 1994! Lincoln Continental!!! 1LNLM984XRY609474 !

Notice is hereby given that I, Jim A. Gross, Kansas resident and a provider of towing and recovery service as defined by law operated under the firm name of Gross Wrecker Service at Junction City, KS, will offer at public sale and will sell to the highest bidder for cash, with the purpose of satisfying the storage and towing fees, upon the above referenced vehicles.!! The same is sold as the property of one Jim A. Gross and affiliate does hereby reserve the right to bid upon said vehicles. A9822 4/9 2013

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Richard J. Peckham Attorney for Petitioners Supreme Court No. 10480 105 E. Rhondda Andover, KS 67002 316-733-2001

Personals

Public Auction ! Gross Wrecker Service 912 E. 7th Junction City, KS! 66441 Date:! April 12/2013 Time:! 9:00 am

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310

Cox Communications and Cox Business Cox Communications announces the following channel change. On or after Thursday, April 11, 2013, ESPN 3D will launch on channel 2180. A subscription to Cox TV Essential and Advanced TV Plus with HD or HD/DVR receiver rental and HDMI cable connected to 3DTV meeting HDMI 1.4 specifications (with compatible 3D glasses) required for viewing 3D programming.

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and the unknown heirs, executors, administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors, and assigns of such of the defendants as may be deceased; the unknown spouses of the defendants; the unknown officers, successors, trustees, creditors and assigns of such defendants as are existing, dissolved or dormant corporations; the You are hereby required to plead to unknown guardians and trustees of the Petition on or before May 14, such of the defendants as are minors 2013 in the court at Geary County, or are in anywise under legal disabilKansas. If you fail to plead, judg - ity; and all other persons who are or ment and decree will be entered in may be concerned: due course upon the petition. You are hereby notified that a petiNOTICE TO BORROWER: If you tion has been filed in the District wish to dispute the validity of all or Court of Geary County, Kansas, by any portion of this debt, or would like Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. for judgment the name and address of the original in the sum of $24,898.51, plus intercreditor, you must advise us in writ- est, costs and other relief; judgment ing within thirty (30) days of the first that plaintiff's lien is a first lien on the notice you receive from us. Other- said real property and sale of said wise, we will assume the entire debt property to satisfy the indebtedness, to be valid. This is an attempt to col- said property described as follows, to lect a debt, and any information ob- wit: tained will be used for that purpose. LOT 4, BLOCK 29, CUDDY'S ADDITION TO JUNCTION CITY, GEARY Respectfully Submitted, COUNTY, KANSAS Commonly By: known as 515 W. 10th Street, JuncKelli Breer, KS Ct. #17851 1 tion City, Kansas 66441 EASY KOZENY & MCCUBBIN, #L.C. Fairway Corporate Center 4220 Shawnee Mission Parkway, and you are hereby required to plead to said petition in said Court at JuncSuite 200B tion City, Kansas on or before the Fairway, KS 66205 Phone: (913) 677-0253/Fax: (913) 10th day of May, 2013. 831-6014 Should you fail therein judgment and email: kbreer@km-law.com decree will be entered in due course K&M File Code: TARVENOR upon said petition. This firm is a debt collector and any information we obtain from you will THIS IS AN ATTEMPT TO be used for that purpose. COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY I A9805 NFORMATION OBTAINED WILL 4/2, 4/9, 4/16 2013 BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE.

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In the Matter of the Marriage of: JONATHAN RAE, Petitioner, and ALLISON DELIGHT RAE, Respondent.

Public Notices

JAMES W. CRANE DEFENDANTS

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Case No. 13-DM-25

Richard A. Pinaire HOOVER, SCHERMERHORN, EDWARDS, PINAIRE & ROMBOLD 811 North Washington Street Junction City, KS 66441 (785) 238-3126 Attorneys for Petitioner A9808 4/ 2, 4/9, 4/16 2013

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF GEARY COUNTY, KANSAS

ALL THAT CERTAIN PARCEL OF LAND SITUATED IN THE CITY OF JUNCTION CITY, COUNTY OF GEARY AND STATE OF KANSAS, BEING KNOWN AND DESIG NATED AS LOT 14, BLOCK 5, LAWNDALE PLAZA ADDITION TO JUNCTION CITY, GEARY COUNTY, KANSAS.

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310 Public Notices

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF GEARY COUNTY, KANSAS Case No. 13 DM 216 In the Matter of the Marriage of Case No. 12CV246 Jason Bryce Gibson Division 4 and K.S.A. 60 Nicole Lynne Gibson Mortgage Foreclosure Notice of Suit (Title to Real Estate Involved) The State of Kansas to Nicole Lynn Gibson: E-Loan Inc., You are notified that a Petition for Plaintiff Divorce was filed in the District Court vs. of Geary County, Kansas asking that John Z Faust the person filing the divorce be AKA John Zachary Faust , et al., granted a divorce and asking that the Defendants. court make other orders in that divorce matter. You must file an anNOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE swer to the Petition for Divorce with Under and by virtue of an Order of the court and provide a copy to the Sale issued by the Clerk of the Dis- filing spouse on or before May 20, trict Court in and for the said County 2013, which shall not be less than 41 of Geary, State of Kansas, in a cer- days after first publication of this Notain cause in said Court Numbered tice of Suit, or the court will enter judgment against you on that peti12CV246 , wherein the parties above tion. named were respectively plaintiff and Jason Bryce Gibson defendant, and to me, the under - 5984-2 Gordon Pl. signed Sheriff of said County, di Fort Riley, KS 66442 rected, I will offer for sale at public A9821 auction and sell to the highest bidder 4/9, 4/16, 4/23 2013 for cash in hand at 10:00 AM, on 04/24/2013, at the front door of Public Notices 310 Geary County Courthouse, the folIN THE DISTRICT COURT OF lowing described real estate located GEARY COUNTY, KANSAS in the County of Geary, State of Kan(Pursuant to Chapter 60 of K.S.A.) sas, to wit:

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310 Public Notices

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF GEARY COUNTY, KANSAS

00021 ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS

City of Junction City, Kansas Owner 700 N. Jefferson St., P.O. Box 287 Junction City, Kansas 66441

ADOPTION: Educated, financially secure, affectionate married couple want to adopt a baby into a nurturing, warm, and loving environment. Expenses paid. Cindy and Adam. 1-800-860-7074

ADOPT : Lots of love, hugs & a secure life await your baby. Expenses pd. Kathryn & Brian, 1-866-664-1213 Adoption: Active Executive & Future Stay-Home Mom, Unconditional LOVE awaits miracle 1st baby. Expenses paid 1-888-919-1604 Steve&Norma

Announcements

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Separate sealed Bids for the Construction of 2013 Street Maintenance Junction City, Kansas – Concrete Patching will be received by The City of Junction City at the Municipal Building, 700 N Jefferson, Junction City, Kansas in the City Clerk’s Office until 10:00 a.m. on April 29, 2013.

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AIRLINES CAREERS - Become an Aviation Maintenance Tech. FAA approved training. Financial aid if qualified - Housing available. Job placement assistance. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance 888-248-7449.

ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from Home. *Medical, *Business, *Criminal Justice, *Hospitality. Job placement assistance. Computer and Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV 2 888-220-3977 authorized. #Call www.CenturaOnline.com CONCEALED CARRY CLASS Military & Spouses Eligible Saturday April 13th 8am-5pm Ed Augustine 785-223-1960 edaugustine@juno.com Farmers Market will meet on Thursday, April 11 at 7:00 pm at the Dorothy Bramlage Library.

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SHAPIRO & MOCK, LLC Attorneys for Plaintiff 6310 Lamar – Suite 235 Overland Park, KS 66202 (913)831-3000 Fax No. (913)831-3320 Our File No. 13-005707/dkb

A9787 3/26, 4/2, 4/9 2013

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Copies of the CONTRACT DOCUMENTS will be available by April 8, 2013 and may be examined at Kaw Valley Engineering, Inc., 2319 N. Jackson Street, Junction City, Kansas 66441 and, upon payment of $20.00 (non-refundable) for each set, obtained at Kaw Valley Engi neering, Inc., 2319 N. Jackson Street, Junction City, Kansas 66441. The OWNER reserves the right to reject any and all bids, and to waive any formalities in any bid. A9820 4/9 2013

Lost & Found

350

Found ring at Morris County Transfer Station. Call Ed 785-482-3518 or 785-307-2717 to describe and claim.

Business Services 360 HUD’S LAWN SERVICE Locally owned Residental & Commercial Low Rates, Insured & Reliable Service! 785-375-0075


The Daily Union. Tuesday, April 9, 2013

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Classifieds Business Services 360 Help Wanted

Help Wanted

370

CNA’s

CNA’s PT or PRN Various Shifts

Contact Jodi Nelson Golden Living, Wakefield 785-461-5417 EOE

Mustang Club Bartender, Waitress & Security Guard Wanted. Apply in person after 7:30 p.m. 1330 Grant Ave.

Customer Service Rep/Teller Astra Bank is a family-owned bank looking for employees who display excellence and commitment in all that they do! Astra Bank has an immediate opening for a Customer Service Rep/Teller at our Abilene, KS Location. The main focus of this position is to provide service to bank customers by conducting appropriate transactions and meeting the needs of customers by referring them to appropriate departments in the bank. The ideal candidate will be patient, cooperative, dependable, strives for perfection, possesses a steady nature, easygoing, friendly, will work to minimize and resolve conflicts, approachable and peaceful with people High school diploma or GED required. Teller experience preferred. Cash handling or sales experience preferred. Prior Customer Service experience. Astra Bank offers competitive pay. Benefits include Health Insurance, Incentive Compensation, Group Term Life Insurance, Profit Sharing and 401k Apply online at www.bankwithastra.com Astra Bank is an Equal Opportunity Employer

B&B BUSING Hiring bus drivers for daily routes. Experienced preferred •Alcohol and drug testing •Paid holidays •25 years old and older •$13.00/hour or more depending on expericence. •Raise after 90 days 2722 Gateway Court 238-8555 Call for apppointment EOE Cook Senior K-State’s Award Winning Residence Hall Food Service offers the opportunity to work full-time preparing quality food in a team environment. $10.68 ph plus possible $.40 ph shift differential. Benefits include tuition assistance, health/dental insurance, retirement plan, paid vacation, sick leave, and holidays. Information at http://www.ksu.edu/hr/employment/v ac.html or contact Division of Human Resources, Edwards Hall, KSU campus, telephone 785-532-6277. Deadline is 4/11/13. EOE/VPE. Background check required.

RN

PT 6a-6p every other weekend - FT 6p-6a Contact Jodi Nelson Golden Living, Wakefield 785-461-5417 EOE

Drivers: Inexperienced? Get on the Road to a Successful Career with CDL Training. Regional Training Locations. Train and WORK for Central Refrigerated (877) 369-7885 www.centraltruckdrivingjobs.com Exp. Flatbed Drivers:! Regional opportunities now open with plenty of freight & great pay! 800-277-0212 or primeinc.com Faith Technologies, a full service Electrical Contractor, is seeking Helpers and Specialty Systems Technicians for a project in Fort Riley, KS.! No experience is needed for Helpers!! Excellent wage and Benefits! EOE. We encourage women and minorities to apply.! Please contact Dawn Boucher at 913.541.4742 for more information or visit our website at www.faithtechnologies.com to complete an application.

370 Garage Sales

729 COUNTRYSIDE RD. MULTI-FAMILY! Jr. & adult clothing & shoes, K-State T-shirts, handicap & household items and lots more! Friday 3-8, Saturday 8-2. Sat. 13 April 9:00--3:00 1010 W. 8th, Apt 304 Furniture, household goods, lots of yarn and craft supplies, pictures, seasonal decorations.

Locally owned Security Company in the Junction City/Manhattan area is looking for a Computer Tech/Security System Installer. Needs knowledge of computer hardware/software issues and must have some IT experience. Please send resume to P.O. Box 343, Junction City, KS 66441.

Household Goods

Move-Out cleaners needed. Experienced, dynamic & energetic pre ferred. Call CONSIDER IT DONE at 785- 263-9871. P/T Event Specialists needed to demonstrate food/products in local retailers! Must have PC access. Great pay! Weekends req. Email Elizabeth Yambao at Elizabeth.yambao@asmnet.com Part-time Bartender/Waitress, must have experience. Must be 21. Apply in person at Tyme Out Lounge, Exit 299, I-70. 785-238-7638.

Full time Maint.. Tech needed at The Bluffs Apts. Benefits and discounted apt. included. Apply online at riverstoneres.com

PT Housekeeping needed at Homestead Motel. Apply in person at 1736 N. Washington.

Heavy Equipment Operator Career! 3 Week Hands On Training School. Bulldozers, Backhoes, Excavators. National Certifications. Lifetime Job Placement Assistance. VA Benefits Eligible! 1-866-362-6497

Russell County News seeking re porter with graphic design skills. Could lead to management position. Send resume to PO Box 513, Russell, KS 67665 or jack@mainstreetmedia.us

Now hiring CDL A and B drivers, laborers and packers. Prefer professional moving experience but will train the right people. Apply in person only. 906 N. Perry. We drug test. EOE

RV Parts and Accessories Salesperson. Full time, including some weekend hours. Customer service experience, inventory control and basic computer skills helpful. Send resume to Four Seasons RV Acres, 2502 Mink Rd. Abilene, KS 67410 or email salesl@4seasonsrv.com

If you are someone who enjoys making a difference enriching the lives of seniors while helping them maintain independence living in their own home; we have the perfect job for you. Comfort Keepers offers flexible hours and is looking for special team members who enjoy working overnights.! Experienced caregivers apply online!http://ck688.ersp.biz/employment! CNA optional. Handy’s Krispy Krunchy Restaurant will be opening soon. Looking for energetic, friendly and motivated crew members. Food service experience preferred but not necessary. Will involve lifting up to 70 pounds. Apply at any Handy’s location. Handy’s Krispy Krunchy Restaurant Looking for a new career? Are you energetic, upbeat and ready for a fresh start? Handy’s in Junction City Kansas is looking for someone to be a part of our management team to run our new Krispy Krunchy Chicken quick serve restaurant. We are looking for someone with experience in food service and management. You will need to be proficient in food preparation regulations as well as sanitation protocols and scheduling. Furthermore, we are looking for someone who enjoys working with the public and creates a positive work environment. Interested parties need to mail their resumes and salary requirements to: Handy’s 409 W 7th, Junction City, KS 66441. Handy’s is an equal opportunity employer.

Positions Needed Pool Attendant (with Lifeguard experience) Must be responsible, reliable, & knowledgeable.

Front Desk Attendants

Job requirements may include but are not limited to providing good customer & sales service, ability to multi-task, cleaning responsibilities & enjoy working with other people. Must be able to work nights.

510 Trucks

Enterprise Estates Nursing Center is taking applications for a LICENSED NURSE to fill a full-time position on the 2-10 pm shift. Kansas license must be current & in good standing. A passion to provide the best care to the clients we serve is a must. Apply in person at 602 Crestview Drive in Enterprise. Pre-employment drug screening required. EOE.

Sales/Support Staff Wanted in Junction City office. Contact the Kansas Cattlemen's Association for job description at cowsrus@kansascattlemen.com United Heating Cooling and Plumbing located in Junction City, KS has immediate openings for experienced HVAC installers. Great benefits and compensation. Contact at 816-838-0679. EOE United Heating Cooling and Plumbing has an immediate opening for an experienced plumber. Great benefits and compensation. Call Ryan at 816-838-0679. EOE

Misc For Sale

530

Lapidary Slab Saws: Model LS-12 Model FS-12 Lortone Inc. Model FS-6 Lortone Lap Eq. Model # 558 GENE - complete cabochon grinding and polishing unit with lamp and magnifier Call: 785-776-5392 785-410-4911

Auctions

550

Pets & Supplies

Farm Equipment

Garage Sales

Apply in person 1301 W 8th St, Junction City, KS

Lifeguards

The City of Ogden is accepting applications for Lifeguard for the 2013 Season. If you are 15 years of age or older the City will subsidize 50% of the cost of obtaining your Lifeguard and or/ WSI Certification provided you are selected. A background check and pre-employment drug-screening test may be conducted. Applications are available at the Ogden Community Center 220 Willow Street, Ogden, Kansas. Applications are due before NOON on April 12, 2013.

Bargains Galore! Free for 3 days... $100 or Less Merchandise Mail or Bring to: 222 W. 6th, Junction City, KS 66441 PHONE: 785-762-5000 Include name/address. Or submit online at www.thedailyunion.net

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Rooms, Apts. For Rent 740 128 E. 7th St. 1BR, $500, equal deposit, very clean, newly painted. No Pets, 785-761-3240 or 785-307-2119 1BDRM apt. Super Deal. Unfur nished. Very clean, good location, washer, dryer; water pd. Newly renovated. 785-375-3117. 1BR apartment, all bills paid, $650 Call 210-0777 or 202-2022 or 375-5376 .

Homestead Motel Daily Rate $2968 Weekly Rate $14841 1,2,3 Beds Available

785-238-2886 1736 N. Washington, J.C.

Office Hours: M-F: 8am-8pm Sat: 9am-4pm

Eagle Landing Town Homes

18th & Jackson • Exercise weight room • Playground • Laundry facility on site • 3 blocks from main gate

3 BEdroom Units

$895 1 yEar LEasE

590

Sporting Goods

610

GUN SHOW APRIL 13-14 SAT. 9-5 & SUN. 9-3 TOPEKA KANSAS EXPOCENTRE (19TH & TOPEKA BLVD) BUY-SELL-TRADE INFO: (563) 927-8176

RV’s, Campers

660

Automobiles

390

Business Prop. For Rent 730 Downtown retail store for rent. 624 N. Washington $550 rent. 785-223-7352

15’ Bass Boat w/70hp Yamaha motor w/cover. Inside storage during off season. $3,300 Call 785-238-6983

WANTED: Full-time Secretary. Must be 21yrs or older and have a high school diploma or GED. Starting pay $10.00/hr. Great benefits package! Position closes on April 29, 2013 at noon. Applications can be obtained at 820 N. Monroe, Junction City, KS. EOE WORK FROM ANYWHERE! !

Kid’s Korner

Call 573-619-3901 cmcsrr@gmail.com

580

Up to 30 lbs/ 30 days cash back rewards. 1 on 1 private coaching. Call 785-200-8882.

Christian Daycare has full-time openings now, ages 2 to 5. Loving Care & pre-school activities. Experienced. 762-2468. Licensed Daycare has openings for ages 12 mo. to 5 years. Quality care, excellent neighborhood, 25+ years experience. Call 785-410-6899 for more information.

to Lease Hunting Ground: Any size tract. Liability Insurance & References provided.

Loader, cab, heat air. Price $8200. Call or text 913-674-9640. wattsy55@juno.com.

Boats & Motors

680

Celebrating 28 years Thank you!

New & Used 1826 Tuttle Creek Blvd. Manhattan, Kansas

539-2565 800-848-2565

“Our Reputation is Your Guarantee”

238-1117 Sorry NO Pets!

2 BR 1 bath Apartment, CA/CH, trash/water paid. AVAILABLE April 1st. 785-375-4737 2 bedroom apt. tenant pays electric. Located 642 Goldenbelt Blvd. 238-5000 or 785-375-9056. Clean, nice 1br apt in quiet area. Fully carpeted, available now. NO PETS. 785-238-1340. One and two bedroom LOFT APARTMENTS on the corner of 3rd and Cedar in Abilene. If interested, please contact Darcy Hopkins, 785-827-9383. 2BR Apartment, $500mo plus de posit and utilities. 785-238-3126 or 785-375-5376

ore

Get m

y l i a D n o i Ullonw us on: o F

1 Bdr. Apt. No Pets, $600/month. Close to High School. 785-761-5018.

Mobile Homes For Rent 750 2-3BR, clean, nice. W/D hookups, C/A, large yards. 7 miles to Post. No Pets. 785-463-5321 2BR, clean, quiet. No Pets. $375mo/dep, plus utilities. 152 E Flinthills Blvd., Grandview Plaza. 785-238-5367 3BR, 2BA, W/D hookups. Very nice, clean, near Post, Lake, school, Park. No Pets. 785-463-5321

Houses For Rent

770

115 E. Elm, 2BR, full basement, huge back yard, fenced front yard. $725.00 equal security deposit. No Pets! 785-761-3240 or 785-307-2119 137 Sunset, 2BR, basement, garage, stove, refrigerator. No Pets. $700 785-762-5656 1775 W. 14th Place. 3BR, 2BA, jacuzzi tub, 2 car garage, new con struction. 785-761-3240 or 785-307-2119 2 to 4 BR Houses, $550 to $700. Apartment $450, water paid. Call for details 785-210-4757. 3) - 2BR $700, 3BR $800 Call 210-0777 or 202-2022 or 375-5376 2BR Duplex, large, clean. 4 blocks to Milford Lake. C/A, near Post. No Pets. 785-463-5321 2BR, 1Bath, W/D, all utilities paid. Rent $800, deposit $600. No Pets. 785-238-6890 2BR, corner lot, CA/CH, W/D hookup. No pets. Milford, clean, must see. 785-238-4222 3+ Bdr, 1 bath, $750/mo. + $750 deposit. Available Now. 205 E. 12th, Call 785-375-2916. 3BD/2BA Central Heat/Air. No Pets. No Smoking. Washer/Dryer hook-up available. 785-238-6887 3BR house (large). $800 rent/de posit. No pets. Located at 1739 N Jefferson. Call Charlie: 785-210-8535 3BR house for rent. Fenced back yard. W/D included. $700 month. 785-375-3983 3BR house, CA/CH. $700mo. 220 W 14th St. Call 785-375-9962 3br, 1 1/2 bath, garage, $850. 785-238-7718 or 785-761-7741. 4Bd, country home. Southeast of Chapman. Available April 1st. Call 785-587-0876. For Rent - 4BD/1BA older home 7 miles from JC on pavement. Available May 1st. Call 785-587-5731. 825 Cleary 4BR, 1Bath, No pets, available immediately. $710/rent. 785-210-7713 Area’s Best Homes For Rent Military Approved Mathis Lueker Property Management 831 W. 6th, Junction City 785-223-5505 Available now. 2 bedroom, 1 bath, CA/CH. No Pets, newly remodeled. $800 rent. 785-761-5018 Country Homes, minutes from Ft. Riley. 4BR and 3BR with 30X50 building. $1000 rent/deposit, references. 785-223-2713

Real Estate For Sale 780 1001 Highland Ridge Dr. in Manhattan for sale by owner. 4Bed, 2.5Bath, 1,897Sqft. Spacious yard, perks, and great energy efficiency. Open house Sundays 2pm-6pm. $220,000. (785)317-7957.

ook b e c a F er

Twitt

log on @

Jim Brandenburg Owner

www.thedailyunion.net Rooms, Apts. For Rent

$750

www.manhattanmotors.com Security
Deposit

Is

710

Wanting

560

Camper parking, large lots, lawns. Quiet area near post. 3 blocks to the lake. 785-463-5321

This is the future. Mobile business opportunity for those who don’t fit traditional molds. GREAT!income potential for go-getters. Wellness industry. Training provided. Contacts in China/India beneficial.! Call 785-263-3063 You got the drive, We have the Direction OTR Drivers APU Equipped Pre-Pass EZ-pass passenger policy. Newer equipment. 100% NO touch. 1-800-528-7825

Wanted to Rent

AUCTION 2-Day April 13-14 Manhattan, KS New Construction Materials, Police Used/Seized Items Kitchen Cabinets, Granite Countertops, Doors, Flooring; Vehicles, Equip ment, Jewelry; AND MORE! For more info visit TotallyAuction.com For Sale two registered mini Australian Shepherds. Blue merle, 8wks, males, first shots and wormed. $400.00 Call 785-375-8834. Happy Jack Skin Balm: Stops scratching & gnawing. Promotes healing & hair growth on dogs & cats suffering from grass & flea allergies without steroids! Orscheln Farm & Home. www.happyjackinc.com

690 Rooms, Apts. For Rent 740

1999 Ford F150 V-6, 5 speed. Can be seen 410 W. 9th. 238-2646 $2,000.00

520

Antique bedroom suite, 5 pieces $1,800. Entertainment center $100.00 or offer. 785-579-4302 or 785-239-4295 Portable Haier washer and Whirlpool dryer, 110 volt. $750.00 for both. Call 785-238-5745

$125
placed
to
hold
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apartment
 
 $125
payments
for
 
 the
first
5
months
 
 of
residency

EMPLOYMENT

Salina Tree Residential/Commercial Tree Trimming and Removal. Pasture & Lot clearing. Fully Insured. 785-827-2977.

370 Help Wanted

$750

 Security
Deposit
 $125
placed
to
hold
 the
apartment
 
 $125
payments
for
 
 the
first
5
months
 
 of
residency

740

~MOVE IN SPECIALS~ FREE 1 ST MONTH – 3 BEDROOM $750 Security Deposit ½ OFF 1 ST MONTH RENT – 2 BEDROOM

$125 placed to hold the apartment

OFF MOVE IN IF LEASE IS SIGNED 





 ~MOVE INON$200 SPECIALS~ $125 payments first 5 QUINTON monthsPOINT of residency THEfor DAYthe OF VISITING 








































































































 ST MONTH – 3 BEDROOM Discover a new, FREE 1~NEWLY
CONSTRUCTED~
 ~PET
FRIENDLY~
 ST exciting career ½ inOFF 1 ~APPLIANCES
INCLUDED~
 MONTH RENT – 2 BEDROOM

the Help Wanted ~CLOSE
TO
THE
PROXIMITY
 $200 





 OFF IN IF LEASE IS SIGNED 
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RILEY~
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OF
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2
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$875
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BEDROOM
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c l a s s i fHOOKUPS~
 ieds

JUNCTION
CITY
KS
66441
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ARE
OPEN
MONDAY
THROUGH
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KS
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BEDROOM
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 The Daily Union reserves the right toSUNDAY
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6B

The Daily Union. Tuesday, April 9, 2013

SPORTS

Soccer

Champs

Royals

Continued from Page 1B

Continued from Page 1B

Continued from Page 1B

said. “I challenged them to dig deep and find everything they had to battle in the second half and they came out and did just that.” Junction City switched to a more defensive 3-5-2 formation, and occasionally even went to a 4-5-1 to try and defend the lead. Hays kept trying to play the ball to the outside in order to then cross it into the box from the wing. But the Blue Jays were able E rika to survive the G oodwin Hays barrage. “We did a good job of keeping people in front of us and not giving away easy crosses,” Proctor said. “But Lily did a fantastic job of snagging the ball out of the air when she needed to.” Thornberg turned in her fifth clean sheet of the season, she has yet to surrender a goal this season, and the Blue Jays improved to 5-0 on the season. Junction City next plays at home against Emporia on Friday. Proctor said games against Emporia are always a battle. “I’m just really hoping we get out there and play better than we did today, soccer wise,” He said. “Survival of the fittest is good for a game but it’s hard on my nerves and I think I may have aged a couple of years with that game.”

got enough of to get it in the gap. The pitch to Gordon, I tried to throw a fastball and it ran back over the middle.” The Royals, who had the best spring training record in the majors, won their first home opener since 2008 when they beat the New York Yankees 5-2. “It means a lot,” Yost said. “Last year there was as much excitement, but we were down seven after three innings. We wanted to show our fans some exciting baseball. We wanted them to see in person what they have been reading about. We’re very happy to win the home opener in front of a sellout crowd.” Aaron Crow worked the ninth to earn his first save of the season and the third of his career — two against the Twins. His previous save came July 21 against Minnesota. The Royals, who have come from behind to win three straight games, have three saves from three different pitchers this season. Crow walked Chris Parmelee with one out, but coaxed Brian Dozier to bounce into a game-ending double play. “The decision was easy,” Yost said. “(Greg) Holland and (Kelvin) Herrera were unavailable. It’s too early in the season for them to be pitching three days in a row. Aaron’s an All-Star. I don’t like to say it, but he’s one of the big four we’ve got out there, with Holland and Herrera and (Tim) Collins. I’ve got confidence in any one of those four closing the game.” Joe Mauer scored on Ryan

Orlin Wagner • The Associated Press Kansas City Royals’ Lorenzo Cain (6) hits a double during the eighth inning against the Minnesota Twins at Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City, Mo., Monday, Doumit’s two-out single in the first for the only Minnesota run. It was the first time this season the Twins scored first after being outscored 9-1 in the first two innings during their first six games. The Twins bunched four singles in the first inning, but managed just the one run after Doumit ended the inning by being thrown out scrambling to get back to second base after Justin Morneau stopped at third on Trevor Plouffe’s single. NOTES: Mauer has 1,278 hits, passing Gary Gaetti for sixth place on Minnesota’s career list. Kirby Puckett is the franchise leader with 2,304. ... RHP Jeremy Guthrie, who starts Tuesday against the Twins, turned 34 on Monday. ... Chris Parmelee was thrown out trying to steal second base in the seventh inning.

much in the second half, Hancock finished what he started for Louisville. He buried another 3 from the corner with 3:20 remaining to give the Cardinals their biggest lead, 76-66. Michigan wouldn’t go away, but Hancock wrapped it up by making two free throws with 29 seconds left. While Pitino shrugged off any attempt to make this about him, there was no doubt the Cardinals wanted to win a national title for someone else — injured guard Kevin Ware. Watching again from his seat at the end of the Louisville bench, his injured right led propped up on a chair, Ware smiled and slapped hands with his teammates as they celebrated in the closing seconds, the victory coming just 30 miles from where he played his high school ball. Any pain he was feeling from that gruesome injury in the regional final, when he landed awkwardly, snapped his leg and was left writhing on the floor with the bone sticking through the skin, was long gone as he hobbled gingerly onto the court with the aid of crutches, backing in a sea of confetti and streamers. Louisville again came out wearing Ware’s No. 5 on the back of their warmup jerseys, which said “Ri5e to the Occasion” on the front. When the title belonged to the Cardinals, Ware put on a championship cap and got a big hug from Pitino. Then, they low-

ered the basket so the injured player could cut a strand out of the net. This one belonged to him as much as anyone on the court. “These are my brothers,” Ware said. “They got the job done. I’m so proud of them, so proud of them.” Peyton Siva added 18 points for the Cardinals, who closed the season on a 16-game winning streak, and Chane Behanan chipped in with 15 points and 12 rebounds as Louisville slowly but surely closed out the Wolverines (318). Michigan was in the title game for the first time since the Fab Five lost the second of two straight championship games in 1993. Players from that team, including Chris Webber, cheered on the latest group of young stars.

John Bazemore • The Associated Press Louisville players embrace after Louisville defeated Michigan in the NCAA basketball championship game Monday, in Atlanta.

Service Directory antiques

NEW HORIZON ANTIQUE CLOCKS A SUBSIDARY OF

New HORIzON PROPeRtIeS BILL SLAUGHteR, JR.

NHP INC.

MeMBeR NAwCC#0130016

BUSINeSS: 785-375-3467 BUY-SeLL-CLOCK RePAIR

AppliAnce RepAiR In-h appli ome an repai ce r

785.320.2116 www.eliterepairllc.com

Dirt ContraCtor & Demolition Harold Glessner

Dirt Contractor and demolition

Professional landscape design & installation Rain Bird sprinkler systems • Lawn mowing Landscape maintenance • Fertilizer programs

Dry Cleaning

Lawn Care

Max Cleaners Same day / Next day cleaning Available Expert Alterations

119 Grant Ave (785)223-6165

Gun Classes

Harper Law Offices

Concealed Carry Classes Ed Augustine - Certified Trainer Call for more information: 785-223-1960 edaugustine@juno.com

Divorce, Custody, net free Adoption 27 years of local experience in civil law military payment plan, M/C and VISA th 4 & Poyntz, Manh. 539-8100 or 238-1200

weed Control

La w n C a re

785-375-2842

Complete Lawn & Landscape Maint. • Fertilizing • Weed Control Overseeding • Spinkler Maintenance • Snow Removal Mowing • Landscape Clean-up • Locally Owned & Operated

LAWN CARE RB’s Lawn Mowing Mowing • Thatching • Fall Clean-up Leaf Removal

SNOW REMOVAL sidewalks, driveways Call Russ 238-3030 -or- 209-0656

LAWN CARE

HealtH

Auto SAleS

785-776-7799

Kenny Isaac (Owner)

2600 Auto Lane • Manhattan, KS 66502 michael.sanchez@briggsauto.com

785-223-3494 city, Ks kenisaac1@gmail.com

“Premium Quality...Wholesale Value” Junction

“Premium Quality...Wholesale Value”

“Premium Quality...Wholesale Value”

Automotive

“Premium Quality...Wholesale Value” Home Improvement “Premium Quality...Wholesale Value”

Dick EDwarDs auto Plaza Come see the Rock Bottom Team for all your automotive needs. Sales, Service, Parts and Body Work.

“Prem

FREE In-Home FREE In-Home alue” FREE In-Home Estimates VEstimates sale

785-783-0750 FREE In-Home 785-783-0750 785-783-0750 LocalEstimates Crews Serving Greater Topeka F ole

...Wh uality

Call for FREE Estimates!

mQ

Automotive

J&R A

Repairs

193

Automotive

Top

Call 785.307.8073

Insurance

coryell insurors, inc. All forms of insurance 120 W. Seventh

Office 238-5117

Auto RepAiR

Rose MuffleR House “Our Business is Exhausting”

2329 Sky-Vue Ln. • Manhattan, KS 66502 (785) 776-8955 • 1-800-439-8956

Landscaping

BLUEVILLE NURSERY, INC. Complete Landscape Service 4539 Anderson Manhattan, KS 66503 785-539-2671 www.bluevillenursery.com

1838 Old Highway 40 Junction City, KS 66441 Fax: 785-238-0774

www.aaselfstorageonline.com

785-238-3477

Storage

Aztec Storage Open 7 days a week All Sizes, RV & Boat, Competitive Prices (Discounts Offered) Security On Site.

Next to Manhattan Airport • 785-776-1111

2323 N. Jackson 785-762-2266 Email JBrown@ksbroadband.net

MOVING/HAULING Personal or Business. Senior/College/ Military Discounts

Low Rates 10’x20’ for $60 per month

Storage

237 W. Spruce • 785-762-4582

Propane Central Storage • Secure • Well Lit 2618 Central Dr., JC (785) 762-5160 (800) 362-6028 • Pre-pay & auto-debit discounts • 24 hr. access • New Lower RatesGive us a call • Military Discount • Deployment Specials • Various Sizes

PLUMBING & HEATING

ThrifT STore

210-0481

Tune-up

STORAGE

• Residential Units • Commercial Units • Climate Controlled Units

Storage

“P lue” RE FR COMPARE OUR RATES & SERVICE FTopeka le VaServing Greater R E E Topeka Local Local ServingGetChampion.com/Topeka Greater olesa Crews hCrews .W In-Ho E E In-HomE In-Home ality.. FREE In-Home Estimates m m Qu GetChampion.com/Topeka e iu 200 ” e e m E GetChampion.com/Topeka lu Local Crews Serving 1930 Es Ste. 5 stima EstimSW GreaterWestport TopekaL Dr. “Pre ates Jackson, Topeka KS 66603 le Va ates tes olesa ocal tCim LocaTopeka ...Wh LDr. o c uality 1930 Westport Ste. 5 GetChampion.com/Topeka a l r Q l e C m 785-236-0003 C w ©Champion®, 2013 r 1930 Westport Dr. Ste. 5 iu ews eSe rews G s “Prem rvinhag GServing Gre GeatC s Seer2013vtinCg G tC Topeka eh©Champion®, tDr. Topeka h im Ste. 5 G m a t r a e r s t a ©Champion®, 2013 p e m Local 1930 CrewssoWestport Serving Greater Topeka e a E mpio 19aptio r Tope ernT.c meTopeka 193n0.com 30 opoekaiotner.cToom p 1930 mIna-teH /Tope e/kTaopek ka W2013 Westk©Champion®, GetChampion.com/Topeka eREEsEti es/tTpopWeeksm t F m p a o a 0 o k e -H p a r o 5 E In er ToTpopa ort DTr.oSpt rt TDaorp. eSktet Dr. Ste. -07 3 utomotive omFRe EEsti-m7ate8s 1930 peinkga Great Dr. o k e 5 e T e a . e k Westport Ste. 5 r . 5 k p e a 5 t v a 0 o -H 5 GkrraeewaDrywall 5-0s 7 s Soeprekan.com/TPainting ©Cham Masonry ©Cham SLeorcvTinoaiplgneC.cg E. 8th Street FREE In 788a3 ©Cham pion®, om/aTmpioTopeka pion®, 2013 te. 5 ©Champion®, Porches rpizion tC l Crerweatam 2013 pion®, 2013 5 2013 e 7 c h l r. SProofing o L a Ste. ort13D a oG 5 G k i , 2013 . e Flooring Water h r g e ® c 8 C on in p D t pi v 20 t r e , 7 l Crews Se GSenp.comW/iTnestpo5r 0 Wes©tChpampion® ka ©Cham Stucco a Loca Champio1930 r. STtoe1p.9e3kStonework Brickwork Tope Foundation Repair D 13 n®, 20 Get – Brakes – Engine Professional Clean-up Tuck Pointing port D.W.N. t Champio Roofing s © e a Insured 0 W Licensed ek&

375 Grant Ave. 238-5114

785-307-1253

Moving/hauling

3 Men with a Truck & Trailer

785-783-0750 785 7857- 85-7 -783 783 83785-783-0750 -075-0750750 0 0 50 Home-RePAIR Plumbing & Heating 7 0 3 8 -7 Handyman Service 785 remiu

Fast & Friendly Service

Self Storage

“Prem “Prem ium Q ium Q uality uality uality ...Wh .. ...Wh Estimates olesale V .Wholesale Va olesale Value ” lue” alue”

ium Q

anDerSon Sewer & Drain Cleaning

Brown2B

Mowing, Trimming, Spring & Fall Clean Up

Sales Consultant

Sewer & Drain Cleaning

Storage

RELIABLE LAWN CARE

Michael Sanchez

806

238-2647

Roll off containers 785-238-6909 • 785-238-3716 • FAX 785-238-3780 in Business for 53 years

ATTORNEY

Sé Habla Español

Landscaping

(785) 761-5260 130 W. 9th

RV & Boat StoRage

Milford Lake Road RV & Boat Storage 304 S Milford Lake Road, (785) 761-0234

• Up to 42 Ft Coverage Capability • 24/7 aCCess • seCUrity FenCe • Well lit large lot • loCated Close to JC • loCally oWned & operated • reasonable Monthly rates • disCoUntedannUal rates

DAV

1505 North WashiNgtoN, JuNctioN city, Ks Help Us Keep Our Prices Low. Donate Your Gently Used Items. Store Hours Are Mon-Sat 9 AM - 5:30 PM Truck Is Available For Pick-Ups.

785-238-1430

Veterinarian

Animal Doctor

Veterinary Clinic Meet our friendly staff; we offer, exams, vaccinations, boarding, professional grooming, adoptions and now treating exotics.

511 S. Caroline Ave • 238 - 1510 www.animaldoctorks.com


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