Garden City Telegram June 19, 2013

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TOP-RANKED: GCCC among nation’s top 50 community colleges. PAGE A3

HEAT ALIVE: Miami forces Game 7 with OT win over Spurs. PAGE B1

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 19, 2013

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Volume 84, No. 142

2 sections

14 pages

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CBO: 8 million to gain legal status in Senate bill WASHINGTON (AP) — About 8 million immigrants living unlawfully in the United States would gain legal status under sweeping legislation moving toward a vote in the Senate, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office said Tuesday, adding the bill would push federal deficits lower in each of the next two decades. In an assessment that drew cheers from the White House and other backers of the bill, Congress’ scorekeeping agency said the legislation would boost the overall

economy. It put deficit reduction at $197 billion across a decade, and $700 billion in the following 10 years if the bill became law. The White House quickly issued a statement after the report was released, saying it was “more proof that bipartisan commonsense immigration reform will be good for economic growth and deficit reduction.” Other supporters said the estimate would add to the momentum behind a measure that toughens border security at the same time it holds out the

hope of citizenship to millions who came to the United States illegally or overstayed their visas. The assessment came as the pace of activity increased at both ends of the Capitol on an issue that President Barack Obama has placed at the top of his domestic agenda. Challenged by protesters chanting “shame, shame,” House Republicans advanced legislation to crack down on immigrants living illegally in the United States, at the same time the Senate

lurched ahead on a dramatically different approach offering the hope of citizenship to the same millions. Republican Rep. Trey Gowdy of South Carolina said the bill moving through the House Judiciary Committee was part of a “step by step, increment by increment” approach to immigration, an issue that can pit Republican against Republican as much if not more than it divides the two political parties. See Immigration, Page A5

Wheatland U.S., Taliban to start talks on ending Afghan war raises water rates for G.C. KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — The Taliban and the U.S. said Tuesday they will hold talks on finding a political solution to ending nearly 12 years of war in Afghanistan, as the international coalition formally handed over control of the country’s security to the Afghan army and police. The Taliban met a key U.S. demand by pledging not to use Afghanistan as a base to threaten other countries, although the Americans said they must also denounce al-Qaida.

By SCOTT AUST

saust@gctelegram.com

Garden City water customers could face a $5 per month increase in a few months due to a water rate increase handed down to the city by Wheatland Electric Cooperative. The city pays Wheatland to treat water from Garden City’s wells through Wheatland’s reverse osmosis plant, and also buys about 3 million gallons per day of Wheatland’s water to blend with the water the city provides to customers. Mike Muirhead, public utilities director, told the Garden City Commission on Tuesday that Wheatland recently conducted a cost-of-service analysis of its water utility and decided the electric side of its business had been subsidizing the water side for some time. Wheatland now wants to end that subsidy. As a result, Wheatland is raising the rate Garden City is charged for water treated and water purchased by 39 percent effective Aug. 1, which will mean a $505,000 annual additional cost to the city. “The water fund cannot absorb a $505,000 annual increase,” Muirhead said. “Since Wheatland’s water utility isn’t governed by the KCC (Kansas Corporation Commission), they can basically do whatever they think is best for their business interest.” Passing the increase on to customers would mean about a $5.15 per month increase in the base water rate charged to the roughly 7,240 residential customers and about 1,000 commercial customers in Garden City. “I don’t mind a little increase, but a 39 percent increase is a little steep all at one time,” Mayor Dan Fankhauser said. The city signed the initial water supply and treatment agreement with Wheatland in 2001. Muirhead said the increase being passed on to the city is in the base charge, so it won’t fluctuate depending on use. To recover the cost, the city could tack on a fixed amount to everyone’s bill, or it could recover them with a per gallon rate in which people who use more water would pay more,

But President Barack Obama cautioned that the process won’t be quick or easy. He described the opening of a Taliban political office in the Gulf nation of Qatar as an “important first step toward reconciliation” between the Islamic militants and the government of Afghanistan, and predicted there will be bumps along the way. Obama, who was attending the G-8 summit in Northern Ireland, praised Afghan President Hamid Karzai for taking a courageous step by sending representatives to discuss peace with the Taliban.

“It’s good news. We’re very pleased with what has taken place,” U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said in Washington. British Prime Minister David Cameron, whose country has the second-largest contingent of troops in Afghanistan after the U.S., called opening the office “the right thing to do.” As the handover occurred, four U.S. troops were killed Tuesday at or near Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan, U.S. See Afghanistan, Page A5

Young artists

Becky Malewitz/Telegram

Sierra Chapman, 11, and Camelot Ferrera, 10, sketch on black paper during drawing class at Garden City Arts Tuesday afternoon. Tuesday’s drawing class is one of the activities featured in Garden City Arts ‘Artful Afternoons’ summer program running through Aug. 2. This year’s classes feature drawing on Tuesdays, painting Wednesdays and printmaking on Thursdays until June 21, photography from June 25 to July 12, mixed media from July 16 to Aug. 2, and sculpture classes every Friday.

See City, Page A5

Gun bill, new sports complex discussed at GCCC trustees meeting By ANGIE HAFLICH

ahaflich@gctelegram.com

Brad Nading/Telegram

Workers with Hellas Construction Inc. move gravel along the south end of the eventual track Tuesday at Garden City Community College’s football field/track construction project. The facility is located west of Tangeman Sports Complex.

What’s Inside

6

72472 00050

7

Annie’s Advice . . Classified . . . . . . . Comics . . . . . . . . . Police Blotter . . .

B3 B4 A7 A2

Obituaries . . . . . . Opinion . . . . . . . . State . . . . . . . . . . . TV Listings . . . . . . Weather . . . . . . . .

A2 A4 A3 B3 A8

The Garden City Community College Board of Trustees on Tuesday adopted a resolution exempting GCCC from requirements outlined in the recently passed Kansas gun bill, heard from opponents and proponents of a tobacco-free campus proposal, and approved a finance agreement for a multi-sport athletic facility. The board voted to adopt a resolution exempting GCCC from requirements outlined in the Kansas gun bill, HB 2052, that takes effect July 1. The exemption excludes the concealed carry of firearms into campus buildings

Market Prices Grain prices at the Garden City Co-op Wheat...........6.94 Corn..............7.33

Milo..............6.73 Soybeans....14.66

until Jan. 1, 2018. The resolution was passed on a 4-1 vote, with Trustee Steve Sterling opposing. Jeff Crist was absent. The new law modifies the Personal and Family Protection Act to allow the possession of firearms on some governmental property, including postsecondary educational institutions. The carrying of concealed handguns cannot be prohibited by these entities unless their facilities have adequate security measures at public entrances to ensure that no weapons are permitted into buildings. There must also be signs posted conspicuously in the buildings where firearms are not allowed. Additionally, the law allows licensed employees to

Schwieterman Inc. reported Chicago Live Cattle Futures: June Aug. Oct. High........... 119.87......119.67.....123.15 Low............ 119.12......118.57.....122.17 Stand......... 119.45......119.05.....122.60

carry concealed handguns at the workplace. The exemption period will be used by college staff to determine the college’s best interest in relation to the law and to research the implications of ensuring adequate security measures, such as acquiring, installing, operating and maintaining the security systems. GCCC must report the results of the comprehensive study to the Kansas Attorney General by July 1, 2016, according to Randy Grisell, college attorney. In other business, the Student Government Association presented its tobacco-free campus See GCCC, Page A5

Weather Forecast Today, partly cloudy, high 92, low 68. Thursday, sunny, high 101, low 70. Details on page A8.


WEDNESDAY, June 19, 2013

For The Record

Obituaries (USPS213-600) Published daily mornings except New Year’s Day, Martin Luther King Jr. Birthday, President’s Day, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Columbus Day, Veterans Day, Thanksgiving and Christmas, by The Telegram Publishing Co. Inc. at 310 N.7th Street, Garden City, KS 67846.

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Police Beat

Abbie Rupp

Russell Wilkerson

Abbie Mildred Rupp, 90, died Monday, June 17, 2013, at High Plains Retirement Village in Lakin. She was born Feb. 8, 1923, in La Crosse, to Jacob M. and Mary Heronema Herrman. A resident of Garden City since 1947, Mrs. Rupp was a homemaker. She was a member of St. Dominic Catholic Church of Garden City and the Altar Society. On Aug. 12, 1947, she married Paul V. Rupp in La Crosse. He survives. Other survivors include three sons, Daniel Rupp of Chino Hills, Calif., Ronald Rupp of Daytona Beach Shores, Fla., and Quintin Rupp of Cedar Park, Texas; four brothers, Paul Herrman of La Crosse, the Rev. Gilbert Herrman of Wichita, Ralph Herrman of Cañon City, Colo., and Edward Herrman of Tacoma, Wash.; four sisters, Esther Boxler of Wichita, Isabel Basgall and Ruth Risser, both of La Crosse, and Edna Mehl of Garden Grove, Calif.; three grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by a brother, Leonard Herrman; two sisters, Irene Raniszewski and Pauline Weber; and a grandson, Matthew Rupp. Vigil and rosary services will begin at 7 p.m. Thursday at St. Dominic Catholic Church in Garden City. Funeral Mass will begin at 10:30 a.m. Friday at the church. Burial will be at Sunset Memorial Gardens in Garden City. Visitation hours are noon to 5 p.m. Thursday at Price & Sons Funeral Home in Garden City. Memorials are suggested to the Knights of Columbus, in care of the funeral home, 620 N. Main St., Garden City, KS 67846.

MANTER — Russell Blake “Russ” Wilkerson, 37, of Manter, died recently in Manter. He was born Feb. 3, 1976, in Johnson City, to A l v i n E m e r y “Bud” and Donice Shirley Batterton Wilkerson. He graduated from Stanton County High School in 1994. Mr. Wilkerson farmed in the Manter area. Survivors include his mother, Donice Wilkerson of Johnson City; and two brothers, Bryce and Charles Wilkerson, both of Johnson City. He was preceded in death by his father and a brother, Clifford Lyle Wilkerson. Funeral will begin at 10 a.m. Friday at the United Methodist Church in Manter. Burial will follow at Stanton County Cemetery in Johnson City. Visitation hours are 2 to 8 p.m. Thursday at Garnand Funeral Home in Johnson City. Memorials are suggested to the United Methodist Church in Manter, in care of the funeral home, Box 715, Johnson City, KS 67855.

Terry Shields

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THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM

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Obituaries must be submitted by 9 p.m. Sunday through Friday for inclusion in the next day’s editions.

NSA director defends surveillance

WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. foiled a plot to bomb the New York Stock Exchange because of the sweeping surveillance programs at the heart of a debate over national security and personal privacy, officials said Tuesday at a rare open hearing on intelligence led by lawmakers sympathetic to the spying. The House Intelligence Committee hearing provided a venue for officials to defend the once-secret programs and did little probing of claims that the collection of people’s phone records and Internet usage has disrupted dozens of terrorist plots. Few details were volunteered. Army Gen. Keith Alexander, director of the National Security Agency, said the two recently disclosed programs — one that gathers U.S. phone records and another that is designed to track the use of U.S.-based Internet servers by foreigners with possible links to terrorism — are critical.

Kansas Lottery TOPEKA (AP) — These Kansas lotteries were drawn Tuesday: Daily Pick 3: 6-1-3 2 By 2: Red Balls: 8-23, White Balls: 2-12 Mega Millions: 6-17-3440-48, Mega Ball: 30 Megaplier: 2

The following reports were taken from local law enforcement logs:

Garden City Police Department Arrests/ Citations Sunday Roberto LopezHernandez, 27, 1509 Gibson St., was arrested at 5:32 p.m. in the 1000 block of Campus Drive on an allegation of no valid driver’s license. Joel Zamarripa, 46, Bristol, Colo., was arrested at 12:31 a.m. in the 400 block of Lake Avenue on allegations of possession of cocaine, possession of drug paraphernalia and a warrant out of Prowers County, Colo., for an allegation of assault. Joseph Christopher Avitua, 16, 2113 C St., was arrested at 3:53 p.m. in the 500 block of Thompson Street on allegations of possession of marijuana, felony possession of drug paraphernalia, misdemeanor possession of drug paraphernalia, possession of tobacco by a minor and driving while suspended and released to the Juvenile Detention Center. Andres HernandezLopez, 34, 1206 E. Chestnut St., Apt. 4, was cited and released at 8:33 p.m. in the 100 block of Anderson Road on an allegation of no valid driver’s license. Teresa Cisneros, 55, 613 N. Eighth St., was arrested at 8:11 p.m. in the 1200 block of North 10th Street on allegations of felony theft and felony interference with a law enforcement officer after taking items from Dollar General. Martin Ruiz, 2203 Reiff Road, No. 17, was arrested at 12:30 a.m. in the 400 block of Lake Drive on an allegation of criminal trespass and released to the JDC. Saturday Juana Rodriguez, 45, unknown address, was cited and released at 2:10 p.m. at El Remedio, 1005 E. Fulton St., on an allegation of furnishing alcohol to a minor. Alejandro Meza-Mena, 21, 301 E. Fair St., was cited and released at 1:54 p.m. at The Pantry, 501 E. Fulton St., on an allegation of furnishing alcohol to a minor. Alba Torres-Flores, 53, 506 Fleming St., was cited and released at 2:50 p.m. at EGV Liquor, 4003 E. Highway 50, on an allegation of furnishing alcohol to a minor. Norma RodriguezAlvarado, 38, 4101 E. U.S. Highway 50, No. 173, was cited and released at 4:15 p.m. at Mariscos Puerto Nuevo, 1107 Taylor Ave., on an allegation of furnishing alcohol to a minor. Martha Nogales-Aguirer, 31, 4101 E. U.S. Highway 50, No. 410, was cited and released at 5:10 p.m. at El Manantial Mexican Buffet, 519 W. Mary St., No. 111, on an allegation of furnishing alcohol to a minor. Yaniro Medrano, 34, 1116 N. 11th St., was cited and released at 3:27 p.m. at San

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released at 1:50 p.m. at 1111 W. Mary St., on an allegation of furnishing alcohol to a minor. Abigail Rivero, 19, 615 Airlinks Drive, was cited and released at 2:35 p.m. at Dillons, 1211 W. Buffalo Jones, on an allegation of furnishing alcohol to a minor. Christopher Avitua, 16, 2113 C St., was arrested at 11:59 p.m. in the 400 block of Lake Avenue on an allegation of criminal trespass and released to the JDC. Chassidy Ruvalcaba, 40, 707 E. Price St., was cited and released at 8:15 p.m. in the 700 block of East Price Street on an allegation of dog bite. Rodecious Jermaine McFarland, 30, 2808 N. Taylor Ave., No. 218, was cited and released at Menards, 1110 Lareu Road, on an allegation of theft by deception after picking up merchandise from the shelf and attempting to return it for cash at the service desk. Levi Jordan Huber, 27, 2616 C St., was arrested at 2:45 a.m. in the 2600 block of C Street on an allegation of driving under the influence. Nicholas Yeager, 19, Colorado Springs, was arrested at 9:58 a.m. at Garden City Community College, 801 Campus Drive, on a Colorado warrant. Friday Luis Haro, 22, 360 S. Farmland Road, was arrested at 6:30 p.m. at the Law Enforcement Center, 304 N. Ninth St., on a municipal warrant. Joseph Christopher Jame Avitua, 16, 1014 N. Fourth St., was cited and released at 9 p.m. in the 1900 block of East U.S. Highway 50 on an allegation of driving while suspended. Austin Alan Koester, 18, 507 Bancroft St., was cited and released at 7:32 p.m. in the 500 block of Bancroft Street on allegations of failure to stop at an accident involving damage, failing to give information and failure to report an accident. Craig Alan Jameson, 28, 414 N. Main St., was cited and released at 10:40 p.m. on an allegation of reckless driving.

Miracle-Ear

221390

Has Relocated

Under New Ownership Locally Owned

#1 Hearing “America’s Aid Choice For Over

Call today for an appointment!

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New Location 302 N. Fleming Suite 3 Garden City, Ks 67846 (620) 647-5096 224476

Fourth Annual Finney County Museum

FLE A MARKET

224084

Finney County Humane Society Bargain Festival 8 a.m. - 2 p.m.

Is offering a

FREE Parvo/Distemper Vaccination Clinic

Saturday June 22, 2013 from 2:00 PM to 4:00 PM.

This is the Second Clinic in a 3 Series Program.

Get ink on your fingers.

Antonio Restaurant, 1116 Taylor Ave., on an allegation of furnishing alcohol to a minor. Bernadino Ayala-Rios, 56, 306 N. 12th St., was cited and released at 3:40 p.m. at Rosie’s Goodtimes Bar, 212 W. Fulton St. B, on an allegation of furnishing alcohol to a minor. Joseph Smith, 28, 706 Antelope Drive, was cited and released at 5:35 p.m. at Garden Bowl, 1501 Taylor Ave., on an allegation of furnishing alcohol to a minor. Kandis Schilling, 47, 3061 Kathryn Drive, was cited and released at 2:14 p.m. at Sunrise Spirits, 3010 Lareu Road, on an allegation of furnishing alcohol to a minor. Angelina Lopez, 72, 2801 N. Eighth St., No. 21, was cited and released at 2:51 p.m. at Chihuahua Liquor, 1101 Taylor Ave., on an allegation of furnishing alcohol to a minor. Tiffany Hernandez, 20, 4101 E. U.S. Highway 50, No. 465, was cited and released at 2:35 p.m. at Dillons, 1305 E. Kansas Ave., on an allegation of furnishing alcohol to a minor. Amanda Brown, 34, 1318 Bancroft St., was cited and released at 2:18 p.m. at Discount Liquor, 713 E. Kansas Plaza, on an allegation of furnishing alcohol to a minor. Jodi Thomas, 37, 815 JC St., was cited and released at 2:04 p.m. at Third and Kansas Liquor, 601 E. Kansas Ave., on an allegation of furnishing alcohol to a minor. Sarah Ochoa, 27, 2707 Chainey St., was cited and released at 1:44 p.m. at The Pantry, 511 E. Kansas Ave., on an allegation of furnishing alcohol to a minor. Johnny Esquivel, 31, 2820 Terrace Place, was cited and released at 4:30 p.m. at El Zarape, 2501 E. Fulton St., on an allegation of furnishing alcohol to a minor. Jorge Rojas, 20, 4101 E. U.S. Highway 50, No. 351, was cited and released at 2:27 p.m. at Quicker Market, 4005 E. Highway 50, on an allegation of furnishing alcohol to a minor. Sharon Flynn, 67, 613 Sarah St., was cited and

A2

Puppies need a series of three shots to be fully vaccinated. Adult dogs just need one booster shot.

The 3rd Series on July 6

Abraham Lincoln

Saturday

July 6

Just south of the Museum in Finnup Park

The Original! Garden City’s first and established open market in Finnup Park.

Supported by: FINNEY COUNTY

VE CON

NTION & VISITORS BUREAU

Stay for lunch

On-site meals available, fresh off the grill!

First Christian Church Sunday Worship 10 a.m. 306 N. Seventh St., Garden City, KS

Come celebrate Christ with us!

• Jewelry • Memorabilia • Decor items • Dishes • Electronics • Furniture • Appliances • Cookware • Clocks • Gadgets • Games • Toys • Glassware • Ceramics • Holiday items

Lots of other goods too!

Free will donations accepted. Location: Garden City Animal Shelter 124 Fleming Street in the garage bay

I destroy my enemies when I make them my friends.

•Scentsy • Velata • Grace Adele • Crafts • Yard Art • Plants • Tupperware • Antiques • Collectibles • Artwork •CDs • Home items • Baked Goods • Primitives • Paintings

620-275-5411 www.fccgcks.org

224436

Finney County Historical Society 403 S. Fourth at Finnup Park • 620-272-3664 www.finneycounty.org

Finney County Museum


Roundup Briefs ‘The Muppet Movie’ to be shown Saturday The Garden City Recreation Commission will present “The Muppet Movie� at dusk on Saturday night in Stevens Park as part of the fourth annual Silver Screen Saturday Nights. Movies are shown every Saturday during the summer. Hi Plains Feed is the sponsor of this week’s movie. Popcorn and drinks will be available for $1 each. Proceeds will go toward helping send the GCRC summer musical youth to the Junior Theatre Festival in Atlanta. In the event of high winds or severe weather, movies will be rescheduled. Call 276-1202 for cancellation details.

Ham radio demo planned this weekend The Sandhills Amateur Radio Club of Southwest Kansas will demonstrate ham radio operation from noon on Saturday to noon on Sunday at Finnup Scout Park on N. Eighth Street and Thompson Street. The annual event is the climax of a week-long amateur radio week sponsored by American Radio Relay League, the national association for amateur radio. More than 30,000 amateur radio operators across the country participated in last year’s event. Over the weekend, hams will be demonstrating several modes including SSB, FM, digital to Morse code.

THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM

Region & State

WEDNESDAY, June 19, 2013

A3

GCCC among nation’s best on higher ed website By The Telegram Garden City Community College has been ranked as the No. 31 community college in the United States by TheBestSchools. org, a leading higher education/ career website. The selection of the top 50 two-year colleges was based on a comparison of several studies and ratings of community colleges, each with unique selection criteria, as well as the school’s reputation and a review of notable community colleges. The factors identified by TheBestSchools.org as especially significant to select the top community colleges were: • Sustained achievement outcomes: ongoing success in stu-

dent perseverance and completion of associate degrees and/or transfer to four-year colleges. • Learning outcomes: values and practices that actively engage students and require them to stretch academically, explore learning freely, and pursue a variety of educational experiences and areas of study. • Deployment outcomes: strong rates of employment, salaries and advancement for graduates matched with workplace skill needs. • Equitable outcomes: Policies and practices that result in student diversity and success among low-income students and underrepresented racial/ethnic groups (African American, Hispanic/

Latino and Native American). • Cost-to-value outcomes: Reasonable tuition costs, access to financial aid resources and an emphasis on minimizing postschool debt. “I really want to congratulate our faculty and our staff,â€? said Herbert Swender, GCCC president. “The eyes of the nation are on GCCC, not only for doing things right, but also for doing the right things.â€? “I have had the honor of serving previously at three other community colleges,â€? Swender said, “but I have never before been part of an institution that offers the range, the quality and the wealth of programs and services that you will find here.â€?

This year’s top 50 community colleges include institutions in 26 states. Other Kansas institutions making the list for 2013 are North Central Kansas Technical College and Independence Community College. The complete list of the 50 best community colleges may be viewed at The 50 Best Community Colleges in the United States article. TheBestSchools.org is an independent organization with no ties to any other educational institution. All of its editors are knowledgeable of the academic world, with some holding doctorates and having extensive experience in teaching, research and publishing at the university level.

Miles of Smiles riding showcase coming up The Miles of Smiles Therapeutic Horseback Riding Program’s Annual Showcase is set for June 29. The event will feature the program’s riders showcasing their skills beginning at 10 a.m. at the Miles of Smiles Arena, 901 W. Maple St. The show will be followed by a barbecue lunch (free-will donation accepted). To make reservations, or for more information, call 260-9997.

G.C. man elected state LULAC president Antonio Hernandez of Garden City was recently named deputy state director of the Kansas League of United Latin American Citizens during the 84th annual LULAC state conference in Topeka. Hernandez was raised in Leoti and attended Garden City Community College on an athletic scholarship. He has volunteered for Big Brothers Big Sisters, YWCA and Meals on Wheels. He is a member of the Garden City LULAC Council No. 11073. Hernandez is employed by O’Reilly Auto Parts as a store manager. LULAC is the largest and oldest Hispanic organization in the nation. It advances the economic condition, educational attainment, political influence, health and civil rights of Hispanic Americans through community-based programs operating at more than 900 LULAC councils nationwide.

3.99 3.69 3.80 Prices based on the most recent sampling of Garden City gas stations. Source: AAA Fuel Price Finder

1805 E. Mary St. 620-275-7440

Stephanie Bogner Assoc. Broker/Owner For Real Estate Help Call Me:

272-3209

Brad Nading/Telegram

A challenge to sink your teeth into

George Patterson, Pampa, Texas, works on changing out worn teeth on a combine header Tuesday at Garden City Community College for the upcoming wheat harvest. The work was part of a class in GCCC’s John Deere program.

Report: State K-12 spending short of requirements Information part of SBOE’s June agenda. TOPEKA (AP) — Kansas legislators didn’t authorize enough spending for schools, according to a state Department of Education report that says the budgets for the next two years are $650 million short of what the law requires. The report was included as part of the State Board of Education’s June meeting agenda, but discussion was omitted after additional time was devoted to academic standards. Deputy Commissioner of Education Dale Dennis’ report

shows the difference between what the state is required by law to spend on public schools and what was authorized for fiscal years 2014, which begins July 1, and again in 2015. Republican Gov. Sam Brownback signed the budget Saturday, locking in spending levels for the next two years. “However, the State Board of Education may submit additional requests above the amount approved by the Legislature and governor,� Dennis wrote in his memo. Agencies typically submit budget requests for the upcoming fiscal year each fall.

The governor then submits a budget proposal to legislators each January. However, Brownback sought a two-year budget to provide agencies with more stability and certainty in their operations. State statutes require base state aid per pupil, the benchmark for education funding, to be $4,492 per student in 2015. However, all funding levels are subject to legislative appropriation and the actual dollar amount is $3,852, an increase of $14 over the 2013 and 2014 amounts. To fund the law would require more than $430 million in additional state spending. Legislators also are required to reimburse schools for 92 percent

of the excess cost of providing special education services, a level that would require an additional $72 million in 2015. The figures have been known for some time and a district court has ordered legislators to make up the differences in spending. A three-judge panel in January sided with attorneys representing parents and school districts seeking increased education funding. Attorneys for the state argued that legislators did their best to protect education funding during the Great Recession and that cuts were mitigated by using federal funds and allowing school districts to tap reserve accounts.

Land Institute hires former Kansas agriculture secretary SALINA (AP) — Former Kansas Agriculture Secretary Josh Svaty has become a vice president of the Land Institute in Salina, which works to promote a new sustainable agriculture system that minimizes environmental damage. Svaty, 33, a farmer from Ellsworth County who also served in the Kansas Legislature, will work on public policy issues, promote the institute’s pursuit of natural systems agriculture and raise money, The Salina Journal reported. A native of Ellsworth County, Svaty served three full terms in the Kansas House. He resigned during his fourth term to take the

job as Kansas secretary of agriculture, a job he held from 2009 through 2011. Since then, he has been senior adviser to the administrator of the Region 7 office of the EPA, covering Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa, Missouri and nine tribal nations. Wes Jackson, the Institute’s founder and president, said Svaty can use his public service experience to further the Land Institute’s goals. “Josh has a good eye for problems and proposed solutions,� Jackson said. Svaty said he has grown to admire the Jackson and the Land Institute’s staff of 33 — including seven doctorate level scientists

PETS OF THE WEEK

— as they work to return farming to the way nature intended. “You spend your whole life fighting natural and unnatural forces. The Land Institute’s and Wes Jackson’s mindset is to find answers through nature rather than fighting against it,� Svaty said. The Land Institute’s many projects include developing perennial grains that are grown to mimic the prairie and require less fossil fuel, conserve soil and water and adapt to weather extremes in growing conditions caused by climate change, according to a Land Institute news release. Its budget for fiscal 2014 is $2.8 million, and total assets are $11.1 million.

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A4

Opinion

WEDNESDAY, June 19, 2013

Dena Sattler, Editor/publisher

THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM

Americans’ poor take on poverty

denas@gctelegram.com

Our View

Big lesson

By CHRIS SCHILLIG

I

Swimming event emphasizes the need for life-saving skill.

G

arden City’s Big Pool was part of a big record last year, and should accomplish the same this year. Nearly 60 swimmers and lifeguards descended on the popular venue Tuesday in a quest to eclipse the record set last year for Do you take part in water “The World’s activities locally or in the Largest area? Add your comments Swimming at the end of the online version of this editorial at Lesson.” GCTelegram.com/opinion. Last year, the Garden City pool was among more than 700 pools worldwide involved in a collective attempt to establish a new Guinness World Record. Local swimmers helped the worldwide team set the record when nearly 25,000 youngsters and adults joined simultaneously in swim lessons across the globe. Of course, the latest world-record attempt taking place in Garden City and beyond was more than just something fun to do on a spring day. Tuesday’s event also helped drive home the importance of learning how to swim and stay safe in the water. About 10 people die from unintentional drowning every day in the nation, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Of those, two are children age 14 or younger. Drowning is preventable, but remains the leading cause of injury-related death for children age 1 to 5. For older children and teens, it’s the second leading cause of death behind motor vehicle accidents. Children and adults come into contact with water in many ways, from bath tubs to swimming pools to lakes and other bodies of water. People of all ages need to be confident in and around the water. Just as we know to use seat belts and safety seats for youngsters while in motor vehicles, we also need to be equipped with the potentially life-saving skill of swimming. Tuesday’s event offered an opportunity to gain more swimming skills in a fun environment and in an unusual situation, considering another world record was at stake. Everyone who participated received a certificate for their part in the shot at the record. But that doesn’t mean anyone who didn’t join in Tuesday missed out on the most important element of the day — staying safe in the water. Swim lessons, after all, are available year-round at various recreational outlets. More people should take advantage.

Today’s quotes “As education continues to be cut, we will need more corrections funds. ...” — Online remark selected by the editorial staff from comments at GCTelegram.com in response to a story on the financial outlook for the Kansas Department of Corrections.

“I don’t mind a little increase, but a 39 percent increase is a little steep all at one time.” — Garden City Mayor Dan Fankhauser, from a story in today’s edition on Garden City Commission discussion of a possible increase in water rates in the city.

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Race to combat climate change T

he Mall has monuments to heroism, freedom and sacrifice. Pretty soon it will also have a monument to failure. Drive on 17th Street NW, just south of Constitution Avenue, and you’ll see concrete footings, a mound of dirt and jersey barriers — all part of an oft-delayed project to build a floodwall to protect downtown Washington from a rising Potomac River. The flood wall, and similar initiatives elsewhere, amount to tacit acknowledgments that the fight against climate change, the cause celebre of the environmental movement for more than a decade, has failed in its primary purpose. In the race to prevent disaster, it’s already too late. Among climate-change activists, the realization is spreading that the combination of political inaction on greenhouse gases, plentiful new petroleum supplies and accelerating changes in weather patterns means there is no escaping more life-altering floods, droughts and fires. Although ongoing efforts to reduce carbon emissions could mitigate even worse catastrophe, momentum has shifted in part to preparing for the inevitable consequences of a warmer planet. Perhaps the most vivid example of this came Tuesday afternoon, when New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg rolled out his $19.5 billion plan to “prepare for the impacts of a changing climate,” with proposals ranging from coastal levees to the protection of hospitals. Last year, Bloomberg cited climate change as his main reason for endorsing President Obama’s reelection, praising Obama’s “major steps to reduce our carbon consumption.” But speaking Tuesday from a Brooklyn greenhouse damaged last fall by Hurricane Sandy, Bloomberg addressed the inevitability that rising temperatures and sea levels would

COMMENTARY Dana Milbank

The Washington Post

bring even worse. “By mid-century, up to a quarter of all New York City’s land area, where 800,000 residents live today, will be in the flood plain,” he said, and “40 miles of our waterfront could see flooding on a regular basis just during normal high tides.” We no longer have the luxury of ideological debate, he said. “The bottom line is we can’t run the risk.” Andrew Light, a globalwarming specialist at the liberal Center for American Progress, explained to me the recent shift toward efforts to adapt to climate change rather than merely seeking to prevent it. “We’re starting to see very strong evidence of climaterelated extreme events happening sooner than we thought with only a 1-degree [Celsius] rise in temperature,” he said, “and a more refined science saying now that we will more than likely edge up to or cross the 2-degree threshold.” Climate activists had long sought to limit the temperature rise to 2 degrees, but this now seems both impractical and insufficient. “Our best-case scenario now is we could delay by a couple of decades the point at which we cross the threshold,” Light said. This means that cutting carbon emissions is still important but that it’s also time to prepare for what’s coming. Among the needed adaptations: floodwalls and expanded coastal wetlands, fortified subway systems, buried power lines, houses with detachable foundations, roads rebuilt on higher ground, droughtresistant crops and changes to hydroelectric facilities and nuclear power-plant cooling systems. States in the

Southwest may need pipelines and desalinization plants for drinking water. Low-lying and poorer parts of the world will have it much worse. But even in the United States, vast coastal areas — New Orleans, the Florida Keys and elsewhere along the Gulf of Mexico, North Carolina’s Outer Banks, parts of Long Island — eventually may need to be abandoned to higher seas. As a start toward depopulating those areas, the federal government may need to cut off disaster insurance. Obama created an “Interagency Climate Change Adaptation Task Force ” in 2009 to examine everything from agriculture to sewer system failures and public-health consequences, but much of the work remains theoretical. Bloomberg’s new plan, with 250 specific recommendations and a hefty price tag, puts climatechange adaptation into a more concrete realm. The businessman-mayor called it “a battle that may well define our future for generations to come” and outlined changes to building standards, telecommunications, transportation and a dozen other areas. “Waves that do reach our shore will find a strong line of coastal defenses, reinforced dunes and widened beaches, levees, floodwalls and bulkheads, and tide gates and surge barriers,” Bloomberg said. “New grade infrastructure will absorb water, it will divert it into higher-capacity sewers, and our critical systems will operate with less interruption throughout the storm and bounce back quicker if they do go down.” Bloomberg spoke confidently, as if he were a general laying out a military plan. But he was really talking about limiting casualties. Email Dana Milbank at danamilbank@washpost.com.

Leading from behind in Syria T

wo recent newspaper editorials illustrate the doublemindedness some feel about President Obama’s decision to provide small arms and ammunition to Syrian rebels. The Washington Post headlined an editorial: “No time for half-measures: Syria’s rebels need a robust intervention from the Obama administration.” The New York Times took a more realistic approach: “After Arming the Rebels, Then What? President Obama should be careful about being dragged into the brutal Syrian war.” I’m on the side of the Times. Some promote U.S. involvement in Syria for humanitarian reasons. That might be sufficient if the outcome advanced humanitarian concerns, but exchanging one tyrant for another is not a long-term solution. One Syrian rebel group has reportedly pledged allegiance to Osama bin Laden’s replacement, al-Qaida leader Sheik Ayman al-Zawahri. Deposing a mass murderer in favor of jihadists committed to “holy war” against America and the West is like choosing a firing squad over the guillotine. The Washington Post reported the murder of a 14-year-old boy by Syrian rebels. The boy’s crime? When he “was asked to bring one of his customers some coffee,” the Post writes, “he reportedly refused, saying, ‘Even if (Prophet) Mohammed comes back to life, I won’t.’” A group of Islamist rebels took this as an insult to Islam. Are these the rebels President Obama’s backing? The United States has a bad track record in the Middle East. President Jimmy Carter helped topple the shah of Iran. Now the shah’s replacements, in

COMMENTARY CAL THOMAS Tribune Media Services

concert with Hezbollah, writes ABC News, “have been helping the Syrian regime of President Bashar Assad...” Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei recently called Israel a “cancerous tumor” and vowed Iran’s support to any nation or group that attacks it. Iran is intent on acquiring nuclear weapons. The Independent newspaper in Britain reports that Iran has pledged to send 4,000 Iranian Revolutionary Guards to Syria to support President Assad. In Egypt, Mohamed Morsi, the Muslim Brotherhood candidate, won the last election after the U.S. supported the ouster of Hosni Mubarak. The outcome in Libya, following U.S. support of rebels opposed to Moammar Gadhafi, is unlikely to be pleasant should that nation’s draft constitution based on Sharia law be adopted. The Obama administration reportedly is ready to consider a U.N. request to resettle some Syrian refugees in the United States. “...part of an international effort that could bring thousands of Syrians to American cities and towns,” writes the Los Angeles Times. Can we be sure a number of them won’t be jihadists? For too long, American involvement in the Middle East has employed the wrong formula in the mistaken belief that we can change the thinking of radical Islamists. Many administrations have pressured Israel

in the misguided and unjustified hope that this would produce a change in outlook and a reset in religious fanaticism. It hasn’t. In fact, our “reach-out” efforts are seen as weakness in much of the Islamic world. Arab and Muslim peoples have been at war with other nations and each other for centuries. The two major factions of Islam — Sunni and Shia — are in constant conflict over which one is Prophet Mohammed’s legitimate heir. The “infidel” West can’t help settle any of this and is more likely to unite the warring factions against us, as it has in the past. Add to this a scenario that resembles the Cold War. Russia is “all-in,” supplying anti-ship cruise missiles to President Assad’s regime. Moscow, according to the Wall Street Journal, has deployed at least a dozen warships to patrol waters near the Russian naval base in the Syrian city of Tartus. President Obama’s token gesture of small arms and ammunition is the equivalent of dipping one’s toe in the Mediterranean Sea and calling it swimming. As in so many other instances, President Obama is, according to the Daily Telegraph, “leading from behind in Syria — and can’t see where he is going.” The president wants credit for withdrawing American forces from Iraq and Afghanistan, but with Syria he is involving the U.S. in another war that can’t be “won,” at least not in a way that will advance American interests. Email Cal Thomas at tmseditors@ tribune.com.

t was late, I was grumpy and the woman in front of me was buying cigarettes. I noticed the items in her cart: brand-name snacks, colas and frozen foods. I looked at how she dressed, considered the carton of cigarettes she requested and made a wager to myself that she would pay with government assistance. I was right. After she peeled off money from a roll of cash to cover the smokes, she produced a state-issued food card. Our eyes locked as she handed it to the cashier, and in that moment I became convinced she knew that a stranger had taken her measure, judged her life and found it wanting. I also knew that it wasn’t the first time. I was ashamed. Who am I to judge how others live? I’m the unworthy heir to a lifetime of luck and good timing, augmented by a strong work ethic that I never asked for, but that was granted me nonetheless. I grew up in a single-parent household where money was tight, but where my needs were met. I was fortunate to attend college. I’m lucky to have a teaching career that remains in demand and to have three employers whose checks make the mortgage and car payments. If any one in a long line of dominoes had fallen a different way, I could have found myself in that woman’s position: having food choices criticized by strangers, enduring cold stares when buying cigarettes that maybe aren’t even for her. I felt ashamed because I’d aligned myself, however briefly, with people who believe the poor must be punished. I was associating with those folks who say the government must drug-test welfare recipients and cut assistance payments to families whose children don’t make good grades. Many Americans who never imagined they’d find themselves on food stamps, living in subsidized housing or taking other forms of government assistance have swallowed their pride and accepted help. The Urban Institute notes that 51.4 percent of Americans will live in poverty before the age of 65. Those who haven’t, or haven’t yet, are in the minority. People in this country who work full-time for the minimum wage bring home an income well below the $19,530 poverty threshold for a family of three. Could they have made better career and financial choices? Possibly. But who among us hasn’t made an unwise decision and suffered later? We have a cockeyed view of poverty in America. Those who are poor, we believe, must live like saints, dress in hand-medowns, eat substandard food and accept any position, no matter how hazardous or demeaning. They shouldn’t have decent housing, smart phones, cable TV or brand-name clothing. They should live perfectly, with never a misstep or a bad habit. But show me the person who doesn’t indulge the occasional vice. Show me parents who don’t want to give their children the best, even if it means stretching a budget beyond the breaking point. If these are crimes, most of us are guilty. Yet we expect people in poverty to push forward constantly, never pausing to enjoy even the simplest pleasures, and yearning for the day when they can escape into the middle class. It’s not my place to judge if somebody on government assistance finds solace in the occasional cigarette or snack food. It’s not my place to monitor what they buy. It is my place to be grateful for what I have and what I’ve been able to do, and to help people who haven’t had similar good fortune. The next time I’m in line, I’ll look down at my feet, up at the lights or into my hands — anywhere besides at how someone pays for her order, which is none of my damn business. Chris Schillig is an English teacher in Alliance, Ohio. Distributed by www.otherwords.org.


THE Garden City Telegram

WEDNESDAY, June 19, 2013

A5

City: Wheatland Electric raises Garden City water rates Continued from Page A1

he said. Another option may be to adjust water rates factoring in the Wheatland expense, as well as a “more robust” capital improvement plan for dealing with some of the water main issues in the water system that have caused complaints about rusty water. “I’d like to see all options,” Commissioner Chris Law said.

“It would be good for the community to see everything.” Garden City produces and consumes 2.1 billion gallons of water per year, Muirhead said, water that is extremely hard. As demand grows, the city will need to do something to soften the water in some way, whether it is by continuing to contract with Wheatland or purchasing soft water somewhere else. “Long term, I think we need

to set a more strategic plan,” he said. In response to a question about buying out Wheatland’s reverse osmosis plant, Muirhead said Wheatland indicated it could be open to the idea, but the sale would be at a market rate. He said he doesn’t know at this point what the market rate cost would be to purchase a reverse osmosis plant. Commissioners asked

Muirhead to research potential options for dealing with the issue and present them at a future meeting. In other business Tuesday: • Commissioners approved an exemption in implementing a state law allowing people with concealed-carry permits to carry firearms into public buildings. The law goes into effect July 1, but allows cities and counties to get a six-month exemption until

Jan. 1, 2014, to allow time to prepare a security plan for public buildings and decide whether to seek a four-year exemption of the law for some or all public buildings. • Commissioners approved a waiver to city ordinance that prohibits discharging fireworks within the city limits to allow fireworks from July 3 through 5 between the hours of 10:30 a.m. and 10:30 p.m.

GCCC: Trustees discuss campus policies, financing for sports complex Continued from Page A1

proposal to trustees, but no action was taken. The proposal, in part, states that “Tobacco use is prohibited at all times in all areas of GCCC, including the following: enclosed facilities, outside property or grounds and any GCCC equipment, including vehicles.” The proposal outlines specific enforcement recommendations and increasingly harsh disciplinary actions for repeat offenders, including both students and employees. Suggested disciplinary actions gradually increase from first offense warnings to final offense actions that include expulsion for students and termination for employees. SGA President Brevan Woydziak said

the policy was modeled after Oklahoma State University’s policy with influence from other Kansas community college policies. He also said adherence to the policy would rely primarily upon self-enforcement. Linda Morgan, outgoing faculty senate president, said the faculty senate was not approached during the 2012-13 school year by SGA for input into the proposal, and she raised a number of concerns about the policy, shared by other faculty members. One of the concerns was that there are already state laws and city ordinances in place to deal with tobacco use on public property. “Both of those entities have a system in place to handle those violations, to handle appeals, and to handle those kinds of issues.

We don’t have a system on this campus, so if somebody did want to appeal, they would have nowhere to go. The harshness of some of the penalties that come down for students and employees, and for our visitors, are severe without having a method of (appealing),” Morgan said. Morgan offered recommendations, on behalf of faculty, to limit tobaccouse on campus to three or four designated areas less visible to the public, to provide appropriate depository devices or trash cans, to clearly designate signage, and to continue to provide information and programs on health issues concerning tobacco use. Douglass said the board was not prepared to vote on the policy. “We need more time to look over it and discuss it,”

she said. The trustees also approved a lease-purchase finance agreement with First Security Finance Inc., of Arkansas, in the amount of $2.6 million at an interest rate of 2.69 percent for a multi-sport athletic facility on Spruce Street. Semi-annual payments of $148,926.14 will be made from the general fund. Trustees approved a base bid of $2,260,340 from Hellas Sports Construction of Austin, Texas, in April, for making enhancements to the area, including replacement of the existing track with an eightlane collegiate track and the addition of a field for football and women’s soccer. In addition, the area will provide a venue for student intramural activities and will be open for the community to walk

and exercise during posted hours. In consent agenda action, trustees approved the addition of an “e-layer,” to the field and seating. The “e-layer” enhances safety and durability of the field. GCCC President Herbert Swender said the reason the layer wasn’t included in the original request for proposals is because it’s proprietary to the fields installed by Hellas. He said the “elayer” will deliver better drainage and add approximately three years of life to the field. The cost is $163,101.38. Trustee Bill Clifford said he was in favor of anything that promotes the safety of GCCC athletes. In addition, Swender requested the addition of comfortable seating at a cost of $77,633.50. He said

that the college has initiated a campaign for donations to offset the cost of the seating. The board also approved the hiring of the following personnel: Cole Dewey, Super Circuit/men’s basketball assistant coach; Doug Kelley, assistant cross country/track and field coach; Nick Salazar, head women’s basketball coach; and Harvey Sanders, head women’s volleyball coach. Trustees went into three separate closed sessions with Swender, Grisell and GCCC Executive Vice President Dee Wigner also present. No action was taken following the sessions. The next monthly meeting of the trustees is set for 6 p.m. July 9 in the Endowment Room of the Beth Tedrow Student Center.

Immigration: 8 million to gain legal status in Senate bill Continued from Page A1

California Democratic Rep. Zoe Lofgren predicted there would be “millions of American citizens taking to the street” in protest if Republicans pressed ahead with the bill. The measure permits state and local

authorities to enforce federal immigration laws and requires mandatory detention for anyone in the country illegally who is convicted of drunk driving. Despite the protests, approval by the committee was a foregone conclusion. The panel’s chairman, Rep.

Robert Goodlatte, R-Va., said future bills would require companies to make sure their employees are living in the United States legally, create a program for foreign farm workers who labor in the United States and enhance the ability of American firms to hire highly skilled workers

from overseas. Those steps and more are already rolled into one sweeping measure in the Senate, a bipartisan bill that Obama supports and that appears on track for a final Senate vote as early as July 4. The CBO said in its report and accompanying economic

analysis that the legislation would raise economic activity in each of the next two decades as millions of workers join the legal workforce paying taxes. Not all the forecast was as favorable, though. CBO said average wages would decline through 2025 as a result of the bill, and

that unemployment would go up slightly. One critic quickly seized on the impact on pay. “It’s going to raise unemployment and push down wages,” Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., said of the bill, a combination he said would hammer American workers.

Afghanistan: U.S., Taliban planning to start talks to end war Continued from Page A1

defense officials said. The officials said the four were killed by indirect fire, likely a mortar or rocket, but they had no other details. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to provide details on the deaths. Officials with the Obama administration said the office in the Qatari capital of Doha was the first step toward the ultimate U.S.-Afghan goal of a full Taliban renunciation of links with al-Qaida, the reason why America invaded the country on Oct. 7, 2001, shortly after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks against the United States. The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak on the record, said U.S. representatives will begin formal meetings with the Taliban in Qatar in a few days. The top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, Marine Gen. Joseph Dunford, said

the only way to end the war was through a political solution. “My perspective has always been that this war is going to have to end with political reconciliation, and so I frankly would be supportive of any positive movement in terms of reconciliation, particularly an Afghan-led and an Afghan-owned process that would bring reconciliation between the Afghan people and the Taliban in the context of the Afghan constitution,” he said. Dunford added that he was no longer responsible for the security of the country now that Afghan forces had taken the lead. “Last week I was responsible for security here in Afghanistan,” he said, adding that now it was Karzai’s job. “It’s not just a statement of intent — it’s a statement of fact.” The transition to Afghan-led security means U.S. and other foreign combat troops will not be directly carrying the fight to the

insurgency, but will advise and back up as needed with air support and medical evacuations. The handover paves the way for the departure of coalition forces — currently numbering about 100,000 troops from 48 countries, including 66,000 Americans. By the end of the year, the NATO force will be halved. At the end of 2014, all combat troops will have left and will replaced, if approved by the Afghan government, by a much smaller force that will only train and advise.

Obama has not yet said how many soldiers he will leave in Afghanistan along with NATO forces, but it is thought that it would be about 9,000 U.S. troops and about 6,000 from its allies. It is uncertain if the Afghan forces are good enough to fight the insurgents. The force numbered less than 40,000 six years ago and has grown to about 352,000 today. In some of the most restive parts of the country, it may still take a “few months” to hand over security completely to the

Afghans, Dunford said. The transition comes at a time when violence is at levels matching the worst in 12 years, further fueling some Afghans’ concerns that their forces aren’t ready.

THE QUIZ THE

EDUCATION PROGRAM

NEWSFACE:

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This Supreme Court justice wrote the majority ruling for Arizona v. Inter Tribal Council of Arizona, Inc., announced on Monday. This important decision struck down Arizona’s voter registration law, which requires proof of citizenship from people registering to vote in federal elections. Name this justice.

1. In a unanimous decision, the Supreme Court ruled that companies (CHOOSE ONE: may, may not) patent specific human genes.

(Corner of 1st & Spruce Street)

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The decision to open the Taliban office was a reversal of months of failed efforts to start peace talks while the militants intensified a campaign targeting urban centers and government installations.

(620) -275-5304

224333

2. Thousands of people were forced to evacuate their homes in Colorado because of the so-called ..?.. Fire, the most destructive fire in the state’s history. 3. The leaders of the powerful G-8 nations are set to begin meetings on Monday in (CHOOSE ONE: Ireland, Northern Ireland), with talks about the global economy and Syria high on the agenda. 4. Protesters in ..?.. clashed with riot police as they demonstrated against a rise in bus prices, while the country is spending huge amounts to host next year’s World Cup. 5. The Republican governor of ..?.., Brian Sandoval, vetoed legislation that would have required background checks on all gun sales in the state.

NEWSPLACE:

On Friday, the people of this nation went to the polls to choose a new president. The winner was moderate cleric Hassan Rouhani. Mr. Rouhani has promised to end international sanctions on the country and improve the struggling economy. He will take office in August. Name this nation.

?

6. The 94-year-old former president of South Africa, ..?.., remained in the hospital for treatment of a recurring lung infection, though his condition was said to be improving. 7. Whistleblower ..?.. is still in Hong Kong after admitting to leaking information on the U.S. government’s secret surveillance programs. 8. “..?..,” the newest Superman movie, was number one at the box office and hit a new record in sales for June openings. 9. Thirty-two-year-old Justin Rose won the ..?.. golf tournament. 10. Danny Green broke the record for 3-pointers in an NBA playoff series, leading ..?.. to a 3-2 lead over Miami. YOUR SCORE: 91 to 100 points TOP SCORE! 81 to 90 points Excellent

©Knowledge Unlimited, Inc. 6-17-13 71 to 80 points Good 61 to 70 points Fair

Answers in Classifieds


A6

WEDNESDAY, June 19, 2013

u o Y k n a h T

the Garden City Telegram

of Service

Dear Customers: Western State Bank is poised to celebrate our 40th Anniversary. We want to take this opportunity to thank each one of you who have chosen to do business with us over that time. It is important to us that our customers understand the fact that Western State Bank truly values the relationships we’ve developed with our customers. We understand that each customer has a unique set of financial needs and it’s our job to meet those needs by providing prompt, convenient and friendly service. We understand that you want to do business with your hometown lending institution filled with individuals who care about the success of those we serve, people like you. We view ourselves as more than a bank, we are a partner that helps you achieve your financial goals. As a thank you to our customers who have been here for all 40 years, and those of you who have joined more recently, we are hosting a come and go open house at our Main Bank in Garden City, 1500 E. Kansas Avenue, on Monday, June 24, 2013. Cake and punch will be served from 1:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. If possible, please plan to join us for our celebration. Even if you cannot make it to our event, please know that we truly appreciate that you have chosen to invest in our success over the years. Sincerely, Management & Staff

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Wednesday June 19, 2013 HAPPY BIRTHDAY The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH Once more you’ll encounter a depressed person in your life. You might not know what to do next. Investigate, and remain sure of yourself. A caring gesture could make all the difference to this individual; you understand what he or she is experiencing. Tonight: Dinner out. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHH You might be projecting your frustration more than you realize. Certain situations could draw in a new level of understanding. Reflect more -- not to prove that you are right, but rather to gain a greater perspective. Seriousness is in the air. Tonight: Let there be music. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH You’ll want to get a better understanding of a situation. Your sense of direction might not be realistic right now. You have great ideas; however, making them work could be a challenge. Be clear and direct in your dealings. Visualize more of what you want. Tonight: Dream on. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH Your resourcefulness comes to the rescue. A very unhappy child or loved one sees no way out of an emotional maze. You will help bring this person back to reality. You instinctively understand where he or she is coming from. Tonight: Remain sensitive to others. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHH You are very confident and optimistic. Listen to feedback from an important person in your life. You’ll discover the importance of change, as unexpected plans could be tossed your way. Remember that you like excitement. Tonight: Choose to go along with the moment. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH A discussion might be serious, but it will provoke an exchange of ideas and solutions. A partner or close associate could react in a most unexpected manner. Stay sure of yourself and realize how much excitement will be triggered by an event. Tonight:

DAY IN THE STARS

BIZARRO

Jacquelline Bigar King Features

Togetherness is the theme. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH Be aware of the costs of proceeding as you have. You just might be a little tired of playing the same old games. Switch gears or simply refuse to partake, if you want to change. Reach out to someone at a distance who means the world to you. Tonight: Balance your budget. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH You might come off too strong, as if you’re pushing others away. Know that they might not understand where you are coming from. A loved one gives you the benefit of the doubt. Discuss the ever-changing dynamic of this particular relationship. Tonight: As you like it. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHH Understand what is going on with a family member who might be sending you mixed messages. You would like to have more clarity. Understand what is motivating you as well. A financial decision could feel like extra pressure. Know your options. Tonight: Keep it quiet. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH Recognize what is happening with a child or loved one. Laughter surrounds a potentially difficult decision. Make an effort to explain to a friend what you are feeling; you might get some interesting feedback as a result. Acknowledge a change. Tonight: Where the action is. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)

HHHH Listen to a suggestion, but

know that it might be something that goes against your nature. You are quite clear as to what you want and expect. Communication could have a surprising tone, especially if it involves feelings. It might be hard to root out the issue. Tonight: Out late. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH Your great ideas might fall on deaf ears right now. Others won’t know what to say, even if they do hear one or two of them. Do what you need to do in order to pursue a goal. It could be starting to plan your vacation or making a special request. Tonight: Relax with a friend.

THE LOCKHORNS

CROSSWORD

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WEDNESDAY, June 19, 2013

the Garden City Telegram

Senior center to host Island Luau event J

oin us for an evening of good food and good music as we host an Island Luau. On the menu is roasted pork prepared by Webb’s Food Crew, potatoes, green beans, ambrosia salad, pineapple upside down cake and virgin pina coladas. Enjoy air-conditioned comfort with island decorations and music by Jimmy and Hazel Tancayo. The public is welcome anytime between 5:30 and 7 p.m. Thursday. The cost is $7 per person.

your physician or audiologist that you (or someone in your household) is hearing impaired. Applications should be completed by midAugust because this program ends Sept. 1. Don’t delay. Drop by the senior center for your application.

Free smoke detectors

Thanks for help

Assistive Technology of Kansas is offering a free program this summer for persons who are deaf or hearing impaired. ATK will provide and install free smoke detectors that flash and also ones that have bed shakers. Applications are available at the senior center, 907 N. 10th St., to apply for this wonderful opportunity. The application is short, requiring only name, address, phone number, etc., plus proof from

Many thanks to the volunteers from Cornerstone Church, RSVP volunteers, Jamie Hitchcock and Duane Riley who delivered Meals on Wheels last week. Are you interested in helping with Meals on Wheels? Substitute drivers are always needed. If you would like to help, call Patti at 272-3620 or 260-6282.

Scheduled activities Thursday, the TOPS Club

will meet at 9 a.m., followed by art class at 10 a.m. Gentle exercises start at 11 a.m. The Ambassador Singers practice at 1 p.m. Skip-Bo begins at 1 p.m. The Island Luau begins at 5:30 p.m. Yoga begins at 6:30 p.m. Friday the day begins with line dancing at 8:30 a.m. A nurse from St. Catherine Hospital will be here from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. Bridge starts at 12:45 p.m. Saturday has Prairie Land Food pick-up at noon. The pool room is open from 1 to 4 p.m. Sunday has duplicate bridge at 2 p.m. Monday begins with walking at 8:30 a.m. Double pinochle begins at 12:30 p.m. Duplicate bridge starts at 7 p.m. Tuesday has gentle exercises at 11 a.m. Pitch starts at 12:30 p.m. Bridge begins at 1:15 p.m. Bingo begins at 1:30 p.m. June 26 has line dancing at 8:30 a.m. Pinochle starts at 12:40 p.m. Completely Unraveled meets at 1 p.m.

The regular Wednesday night dance featuring the Moonshiners begins at 7:30 p.m. The recommended donation is $5.

Lunch menu Lunch is served at noon. Thursday: Pork roast with gravy, sweet potatoes, oriental vegetables, frosted lime gelatin, wheat roll. Friday: Spaghetti with meat sauce, green beans, salad, peach crisp, French bread. Monday: Swiss steak with tomato sauce, baked potato, carrots, ambrosia, wheat bread. Tuesday: Roast beef with gravy, parsley potatoes, steamed cabbage, bread pudding, muffin. June 26: Chicken and rice casserole, corn, winter mixed vegetables, lemon bars, wheat roll. Celebrating 35 years at the Senior Center of Finney County. Check out our website at www.seniorcenterfc.com.

Athletic facilities progressing at GCCC G

CCC will open its new football/soccer/track/ intramural activity facility in August. The facility was approved by the Garden City Community College Board of Trustees on April 23. This new collegiate sports facility will bring three Division I sports and one major activity (intramurals) to the main campus. The new facility will serve as a home for the Broncbusters. However, more importantly, it will serve as a quality venue for athletic practices. GCCC conducts more than 300 practices each year for soccer and football alone. In addition, the facility will serve as a site for students conditioning in the 13 Division I sports provided to students attend-

On Campus Herbert Swender President GCCC

ing GCCC. The close proximity to campus will make athletic practices and attending athletic events much more convenient and accessible for GCCC students. The facility also will benefit our non-student community members who may choose to enjoy the walking track during available posted hours. Enhancements to the facility are funded through GCCC general funds and student tuition and fees. One section will have 574

stadium seats, which include a 20-inch-wide molded seat with chair-back. A campaign identified as “Back the Busters� is under way to offset the cost of these comfortable seats. If you, your business or company is interested in contributing to this initiative, please call the GCCC athletic department at 276-9606. Your tax deductible stadium-style seating contribution can be made to “Back the Busters� for $150 per unit. The scope of the project includes removing the old existing track, removal of existing bleachers and site preparation for the new facility. The new facility will include an eight-lane, collegiate-style, synthetic polyurethane track. GCCC’s

track and field program, which was discontinued in 2007, is being reinstated to offer more opportunities for students attending GCCC. Recently, coach Ryan Turner was hired to lead the Broncbusters’ cross country and track and field program. Assisting coach Turner will be Doug Kelley. Memorial Stadium has served the college and community well. However, as GCCC expands its program offerings and grows enrollment, on-campus facilities will substantially help with logistics of providing access to students. See you Aug. 23 for our first home women’s soccer game, and on Aug. 24 for our first home football game. Go Busters!

Classtime Brief Area natives graduate from Newman University

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The Newman University spring and summer 2013 commencement ceremony was held May 11. The ceremony recognized graduates receiving degrees in the spring 2013 semester and candidates for degrees in the summer 2013 semester. Area graduates are as follows: Cimarron: Cynthia Davis*, master of science in education; Lisa Dow, mas-

ter of science in education. Deerfield: Rebecca Bird-Heiman*, master of science in education; Amy Calderon, master of science in education. Garden City: Dorelia Carrillo, bachelor of science; Mary Carrillo, master of science in education; Antonia Casados, master of science in education; Shaylin King, master of science in education; Lorena Madera*, master of science in education; Michelle Mead*, master of science in education; Linda Miller*, bachelor of arts; Julia Morales, master

of science in education; Jesyka Perez, master of science in education; Jessie Pinchon*, master of science in education; Luciana Ugaz, bachelor of arts. Hugoton: Sarah Kitzke*, master of science in education; Elvia Sanchez*, master of science in education. Kismet: Ryan Kisner, master of science in education. Moscow: Jace Moore, bachelor of arts. Ulysses: Cinda Wolf, bachelor of science. * Indicates summer graduate.

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Sports

OUT: Tar Heels eliminate LSU in Series. PAGE B2

EDGE: Bruins have 2-1 edge in NHL Final. PAGE B2

THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM

WEDNESDAY, June 19, 2013

GCTelegram.com/Sports

SWKPrepZone.com

B

TV deal will expand Jayhawks’ athletics coverage LAWRENCE (AP) — The University of Kansas has approved a deal for television rights to its athletic events that will vastly expand coverage and access to Jayhawks sports across Kansas and nationwide, according to officials involved in the deal. Kansas Athletics and IMG College, along with Time War ner Cable and Kansas City’s Metro Sports, announced Monday that beginning in the 2013-14 school year, Metro Sports will televise more than 50 live Kansas events on the revamped Jayhawk Network, along with 600 hours of programing such as pre- and postgame shows for Jayhawk football and men’s basketball games and a weekly magazine-style show. The deal also includes “Hawk Talk”

Miami rallies to win in OT; Game 7 set for Thursday. MIAMI (AP) — LeBron James shrugged off a poor start to get 32 points, 11 assists and 10 rebounds, Ray Allen hit a 3pointer with 5.2 seconds to play to force overtime and the Miami Heat staved off elimination with a 103-100 victory over the San Antonio Spurs in Game 6 of the NBA Finals on Tuesday night. James missed nine of his first 12 shots, but scored 16 points in the fourth to rally the Heat from a 10-point deficit. The Heat trailed 94-89 with 28 seconds to play, but James hit a 3 with 20 seconds to go and Allen drilled another to tie it. James’ layup with 1:43 to play in overtime gave the Heat a 101-100 lead, and Allen added two free throws to force Game 7, which is on Thursday night in Miami. The Spurs had one final chance down 103-100, but Chris Bosh blocked Danny Green’s 3pointer from the corner as time expired. Tim Duncan had 30 points and 17 rebounds in a performance straight out 2003. But he was scoreless in the fourth and overtime and the Spurs squandered a golden opportunity to close out the series and win their fifth championship. Mario Chalmers scored 20 points, Bosh had 10 points and 11 rebounds and Shane Battier hit three 3-pointers for the Heat, who trailed 75-65 after three quarters. James eschewed his trademark headband in the fourth quarter, then spearheaded the ferocious comeback. He scored six straight points for the Heat, then fed Chris Andersen, who made a free throw to pull the Heat within two at 82-80 with seven minutes to play. James then blocked a layup by Duncan and scored on the other end to tie it and Allen’s reverse layup gave the Heat an 84-82 lead with six minutes to go. The Heat led 89-86, but Tony Parker hit a step-back 3 and a layup to take back the lead. After Allen’s big shot from the corner sent the game into overtime, James scored on a layup for a 101-100 lead with 1 minute to go. The Spurs had a chance to take the lead in the closing seconds, but Manu Ginobili’s drive was thwarted and Allen hit two free throws. Bosh blocked Danny Green’s 3-pointer at the buzzer, and the defending champs lived to fight another day.

radio show simulcasts, a social-mediacentered show for fans, live coverage of news conferences, a “Jayhawk Rewind” highlight show, a quarterly “Jayhawk Legends” series and quarterly Kansas academic specials, The Lawrence Jour nalWorld reported. The live-game broadcasts on Metro Sports will be offered only to viewers in Kansas and the Kansas City metro area because of the Big 12 Conference’s television agreement with ESPN and Fox Sports, but most of the additional programing will be available to Time Warner’s

customers nationwide. “This is the backbone of providing Jayhawk fans with access to all of our sports in a way that they’ve never experienced before,” Athletic Director Sheahon Zenger said. During the next sports year, the Jayhawk Network will cover one football game, six men’s basketball games, as many as 16 women’s basketball games, nine volleyball matches, eight baseball games and up to 12 live softball, soc-

cer and track and field events. “This will extend the Jayhawk brand significantly while providing corporate partners with many new ways to support the Jayhawks and reach one of the most attractive and passionate fan bases in college sports,” said Jason Booker, general manager for Jayhawk IMG Sports Marketing. Kansas is the last Big 12 school to sign a contract for its Tier-3 television rights. Texas is affiliated with the ESPN-backed Longhorn Network; Baylor, Kansas State, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, TCU and Texas Tech have deals with Fox; and Iowa State and West Virginia have agreements with Mediacom and ROOT in their respective markets.

UCLA edges N.C. State

Heat hang on

Associated Press

San Antonio Spurs point guard Tony Parker drives to the basket during the first half Tuesday of Game 6 of the NBA Finals against the Miami Heat in Miami. Parker finished with 19 points on 6-for-23 shooting and eight assists and Kawhi Leonard had 22 points and 11 rebounds for San Antonio. Green, who broke the NBA Finals record for 3-pointers, had just three points on 1-for-7 shooting. After a vintage first three

quarters from Duncan had the Spurs steamrolling toward the championship, James delivered a vintage performance of his own in the fourth. Tentative and flustered through the first three, James went into full-on attack mode in the fourth to force a Game 7. It was the force-of-nature

showing that had been all too rare for James in these finals, but the Heat have never needed it more after Duncan took it to them the first 36 minutes. Duncan hit his first eight shots of the game, conjuring the dominant form that brought four titles to San Antonio between 1999 and 2007.

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Nick Vander Tuig scattered four hits over seven-plus innings and UCLA produced just enough offense to defeat North Carolina State 2-1 in the College World Series on Tuesday night. UCLA (46-17) moved within one victory of next week’s bestof-three finals. The Wolfpack (50-15) will play an elimination game against North Carolina on Thursday, the fifth meeting of the teams this season. UCLA used two walks, two singles and a wild pitch to scratch out a couple runs and go up 2-1 in the fifth. Two innings before, Vander Tuig tagged out a runner at the plate to keep the Wolfpack from adding to a 1-0 lead. Vander Tuig (13-4) retired 13 of 14 batters heading into the eighth inning. David Berg came on after Vander Tuig gave up a leadoff single to Bryan Adametz. Berg worked out of trouble in the eighth and earned his NCAA recordtying 23rd save. NC State starter Logan Jernigan (1-1) took the loss. UCLA opened the CWS with a 2-1 victory over LSU and now is 17-2 in one-run games. The Bruins’ four runs in two CWS games are the fewest by a team that won its first two games in Omaha in the metal-bat era. The previous record was six, by Eastern Michigan in 1976 and South Carolina in 1977. Arizona State scored three runs while winning its first two games in 1972, but that was in the wood-bat era. Metal bats were introduced in 1974. The Bruins’ reputation is as a pitching and defense team that grinds out runs any way it can. They lived up to it Sunday and did again Tuesday. Jernigan allowed two hits through four innings, but couldn’t get out of the fifth. Wolfpack coach Elliott Avent called on lefty Grant Sasser after Jernigan gave up a single and two walks to load the bases. Kevin Kramer delivered the tying single. With the bases still loaded, Sasser’s changeup bounced away from catcher Brent Austin, and Brenton Allen scored from third to put UCLA up 2-1.

Royals unable to hold early lead in 4-3 loss to Indians CLEVELAND (AP) — Michael Brantley’s sacrifice fly capped Cleveland’s three-run eighth inning, rallying the Indians to a 43 win over the Kansas City Royals on Tuesday night. Held to one run and three hits over seven innings by Ervin Santana, the Indians finally strung something together in the eighth off Kelvin Herrera (3-5) and Tim Collins. Michael Bourn and Jason Kipnis delivered RBI hits before Brantley drove in Mike Aviles with the go-ahead run. Cody Allen (2-0), whose throwing error in the eighth helped the Royals take a 3-1 lead, got the win. Vinnie Pestano gave up three singles and a walk in the ninth but held on for his second save. The Royals lost for just the third time in 14 games and missed a chance to move over .500 for the first time since May 18. They probably should have

tied it in the ninth when Alcides Escobar singled to right with one out and runners at first and second. But David Lough ran past third base coach Eddie Rodriguez’s stop sign, and got caught in a rundown between home and third. Lough got back to the bag safely, but Mike Moustakas was also there and was tagged out. It appeared Lough would have scored easily as right fielder Drew Stubbs’ throw was off target. Pestano settled down and got Eric Hosmer on a groundout with the bases loaded as the Indians got their 10th come-from-behind win. The Indians did next to nothing against Santana, but they pounced on Kansas City’s bullpen in the eighth. Ryan Raburn drew a leadoff walk from Herrera, moved up on a groundout and scored when Bourn slapped a single inside the

left-field line. Aviles followed with a single and Kipnis, who stranded seven runners in a 2-1 loss on Monday night, delivered an RBI double off Collins to tie it. The Royals walked Carlos Santana intentionally to load the bases and Brantley hit a fly ball to right, easily scoring Aviles. Before the comeback, the Indians were in danger of falling another game behind Kansas City in the AL Central. Santana deserved a better outcome. The right-hander made it look easy against an Indians lineup that was in a deep offensive funk. Santana, who pitched the only no-hitter in Progressive Field history in 2011 for the Angels, didn’t allow a runner to reach second base until the sixth and had Cleveland’s hitters guessing most of the night.

Associated Press

Kansas City Royals shortstop Alcides Escobar throws to first over Cleveland Indians’ Carlos Santana but too late to complete a double play on Michael Brantley in the seventh inning of Tuesday’s American League baseball game in Cleveland.


B2

Scoreboard

TUESDAY, June 19, 2013

AUTO RACING NASCAR Sprint Cup Money Leaders By The Associated Press Through June 16 1. Jimmie Johnson, $5,033,219 2. Kyle Busch, $3,270,882 3. Matt Kenseth, $3,180,250 4. Kevin Harvick, $3,044,272 5. Brad Keselowski, $3,025,239 6. Dale Earnhardt Jr., $2,952,308 7. Carl Edwards, $2,807,944 8. Tony Stewart, $2,635,999 9. Joey Logano, $2,575,839 10. Clint Bowyer, $2,537,958 11. Jeff Gordon, $2,519,803 12. Ryan Newman, $2,506,228 13. Kasey Kahne, $2,495,818 14. Greg Biffle, $2,478,824 15. Martin Truex Jr., $2,455,524 16. Ricky Stenhouse Jr., $2,435,083 17. Aric Almirola, $2,306,306 18. Kurt Busch, $2,261,198 19. Juan Pablo Montoya, $2,212,369 20. Jamie McMurray, $2,173,188 21. Mark Martin, $2,155,479 22. Paul Menard, $2,151,628 23. Marcos Ambrose, $2,125,993 24. David Ragan, $2,078,541 25. Denny Hamlin, $1,860,744 26. Casey Mears, $1,844,675 27. Jeff Burton, $1,805,618 28. David Gilliland, $1,780,334 29. Bobby Labonte, $1,773,044 30. Danica Patrick, $1,677,994 31. Travis Kvapil, $1,672,489 32. Dave Blaney, $1,643,378 33. David Reutimann, $1,609,345 34. J.J. Yeley, $1,542,563 35. Josh Wise, $1,451,158 36. Joe Nemechek, $1,307,269 37. David Stremme, $1,278,195 38. Michael McDowell, $1,232,096 39. Landon Cassill, $1,125,105 40. Regan Smith, $1,019,772 41. Scott Speed, $807,494 42. Trevor Bayne, $787,779 43. Austin Dillon, $763,556 44. Timmy Hill, $686,326 45. A J Allmendinger, $658,310 46. Mike Bliss, $600,178 47. Brian Vickers, $549,610 48. Terry Labonte, $523,777 49. Michael Waltrip, $465,184 50. Ken Schrader, $321,437 ——— NASCAR Nationwide Money Leaders By The Associated Press Through June 15 1. Kyle Busch, $540,525 2. Sam Hornish Jr., $500,549 3. Austin Dillon, $454,511 4. Trevor Bayne, $435,419 5. Regan Smith, $415,115 6. Elliott Sadler, $399,544 7. Kyle Larson, $399,440 8. Justin Allgaier, $383,897 9. Brian Vickers, $366,644 10. Parker Kligerman, $362,134 11. Alex Bowman, $357,729 12. Brian Scott, $352,169 13. Travis Pastrana, $321,469 14. Mike Bliss, $320,919 15. Nelson Piquet Jr., $318,884 16. Reed Sorenson, $315,159 17. Eric McClure, $309,449 18. Mike Wallace, $297,048 19. Joe Nemechek, $283,644 20. Blake Koch, $267,638 21. Jeremy Clements, $266,065 22. Brad Keselowski, $259,200 23. Hal Martin, $242,099 24. Jeffrey Earnhardt, $229,964 25. Johanna Long, $216,679 26. Juan Carlos Blum, $210,551 27. Dexter Stacey, $207,886 28. Jason White, $203,644 29. Robert Richardson Jr., $191,253 30. Josh Wise, $189,807 31. Jeff Green, $185,275 32. Jamie Dick, $184,251 33. Kasey Kahne, $172,910 34. Matt Kenseth, $148,455 35. Joey Logano, $146,355 36. Mike Harmon, $143,214 37. Michael Annett, $132,088 38. Landon Cassill, $128,705 39. Joey Gase, $126,321 40. Kevin Harvick, $124,720 41. Dale Earnhardt Jr., $122,775 42. Brad Sweet, $115,700 43. Tony Stewart, $109,220 44. J.J. Yeley, $92,488 45. Danny Efland, $91,858 46. Ty Dillon, $87,935 47. Kevin Swindell, $87,120 48. Scott Lagasse Jr., $86,518 49. Chris Buescher, $84,586 50. Daryl Harr, $77,116

BASEBALL American League By The Associated Press East Division W L Boston 44 29 Baltimore 41 31 New York 38 31 Tampa Bay 36 35 Toronto 34 36 Central Division W L

Pct GB .603 — .569 2.5 .551 4 .507 7 .486 8.5 Pct GB

Television

On Tap

Today

College Baseball — 7 p.m., ESPN, NCAA World Series, Game 9, Oregon State vs. Indiana, from Omaha, Neb. Pro Baseball — 6 p.m., ESPN2, Los Angeles Dodgers at New York Yankees; FSN, Kansas City Royals at Cleveland Indians. Pro Hockey — 7 p.m., NBC, Stanley Cup Finals, Game 4, Chicago Blackhawks at Boston Bruins. Pro Soccer — 1:30 p.m., ESPN, Confederations Cup, Brazil vs. Mexico, from Fortaleza, Brazil; 4:45 p.m., ESPN, Confederations Cup, Italy vs. Japan, from Recife, Brazil.

Detroit Cleveland Kansas City Minnesota Chicago West Division Oakland Texas Los Angeles Seattle Houston

39 35 34 31 29

30 35 35 36 39

.565 — .500 4.5 .493 5 .463 7 .426 9.5

W L Pct GB 43 30 .589 — 39 32 .549 3 31 39 .443 10.5 31 40 .437 11 27 45 .375 15.5 ——— Monday’s Games Kansas City 2, Cleveland 1 Toronto 2, Colorado 0 Detroit 5, Baltimore 1 Texas 8, Oakland 7 Chicago White Sox 4, Houston 2 L.A. Angels 11, Seattle 3 Tuesday’s Games Boston 5, Tampa Bay 1, 1st game Cleveland 4, Kansas City 3 L.A. Dodgers at New York, ppd., rain Toronto 8, Colorado 3 Baltimore 5, Detroit 2 Boston 3, Tampa Bay 1, 2nd game Oakland 6, Texas 2 Minnesota 7, Chicago White Sox 5 Houston 10, Milwaukee 1 Seattle at L.A. Angels, night Today’s Games Baltimore (Tillman 7-2) at Detroit (Porcello 4-3), 12:08 p.m. Kansas City (Mendoza 2-3) at Cleveland (Masterson 8-5), 6:05 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Fife 1-2) at N.Y. Yankees (Kuroda 6-5), 6:05 p.m. Colorado (Nicasio 4-2) at Toronto (Buehrle 3-4), 6:07 p.m. Tampa Bay (Hellickson 4-3) at Boston (Dempster 4-7), 6:10 p.m. Oakland (Milone 6-6) at Texas (Grimm 5-5), 7:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Sale 5-5) at Minnesota (Correia 5-4), 7:10 p.m. Milwaukee (Lohse 2-6) at Houston (Bedard 2-3), 7:10 p.m. Seattle (J.Saunders 5-6) at L.A. Angels (C.Wilson 5-5), 9:05 p.m. Thursday’s Games Chicago White Sox at Minnesota, 12:10 p.m. Oakland at Texas, 1:05 p.m. Milwaukee at Houston, 1:10 p.m. Tampa Bay at N.Y. Yankees, 6:05 p.m. Boston at Detroit, 6:08 p.m. Seattle at L.A. Angels, 9:05 p.m. ——— Indians 4, Royals 3 Kansas City Cleveland ab r h bi ab r AGordn lf 3 1 0 0 Bourn cf 4 1 Hosmer 1b 5 1 0 1 Aviles ss 4 1 S.Perez c 4 0 1 1 Kipnis 2b 4 0 BButler dh 2 0 0 0 CSantn c 2 0 L.Cain cf 4 0 1 0 Brantly lf 3 0 Lough rf 4 0 1 0 MrRynl 1b 4 0 Mostks 3b 4 0 2 0 Chsnhll 3b 3 0 Getz 2b 4 0 1 0 JMcDnl 3b 0 0 AEscor ss 3 1 1 0 Raburn dh 1 1 Stubbs rf 3 1 Totals 33 3 7 2 Totals 28 4

Kansas City Cleveland

h bi 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 6 4

002 000 010 — 3 000 001 03x — 4

E—Allen (1). DP—Kansas City 1, Cleveland 1. LOB— Kansas City 8, Cleveland 5. 2B—Kipnis (15). SB—Stubbs (7). SF—Brantley. IP H R ER BB SO Kansas City E.Santana 7 3 1 1 2 6 K.Herrera L,3-5 H,8 1/3 2 3 3 1 0 Collins BS,2-2 2/3 1 0 0 1 1 Cleveland U.Jimenez 5 2/3 2 2 2 4 4 Hagadone 1 1/3 1 0 0 0 0 Allen W,2-0 1 1 1 0 0 0 Pestano S,2-4 1 3 0 0 1 1 WP—U.Jimenez 2. Umpires—Home, Hunter Wendelstedt; First, Alan Porter; Second, Mike Estabrook; Third, Greg Gibson. T—2:52. A—14,853 (42,241).

——— National League By The Associated Press East Division W L Atlanta 42 30 Philadelphia 35 37 Washington 34 36 New York 27 40 Miami 22 47 Central Division W L St. Louis 45 26 Cincinnati 43 29 Pittsburgh 42 29 Chicago 29 40 Milwaukee 28 41 West Division W L Arizona 37 33 San Diego 36 34 Colorado 37 35

Pct GB .583 — .486 7 .486 7 .403 12.5 .319 18.5 Pct GB .634 — .597 2.5 .592 3 .420 15 .406 16 Pct GB .529 — .514 1 .514 1

Thursday

College Baseball — 7 p.m., ESPN, NCAA World Series, Game 10, Teams TBA, from Omaha, Neb. Pro Baseball — 7:05 p.m., WGN, Chicago Cubs at St. Louis Cardinals (joined in progress). Pro Basketball — 8 p.m., ABC, NBA Finals, Game 7, San Antonio Spurs at Miami Heat. Pro Soccer — 1:45 p.m., ESPN, Confederations Cup, Spain vs. Tahiti, from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; 4:45 p.m., ESPN, Confederations Cup, Nigeria vs. Uruguay, from Salvador, Brazil.

San Francisco Los Angeles

35 34 .507 1.5 29 39 .426 7 ——— Monday’s Games St. Louis 5, Chicago Cubs 2 Philadelphia 5, Washington 4 Toronto 2, Colorado 0 Atlanta 2, N.Y. Mets 1 Cincinnati 4, Pittsburgh 1 Miami 3, Arizona 2 San Diego 5, San Francisco 3, 13 innings Tuesday’s Games N.Y. Mets 4, Atlanta 3, 1st game Philadelphia 4, Washington 2 L.A. Dodgers at New York, ppd., rain Toronto 8, Colorado 3 N.Y. Mets 6, Atlanta 1, 2nd game Pittsburgh 4, Cincinnati 0 Houston 10, Milwaukee 1 Chicago Cubs 4, St. Louis 2 Miami at Arizona, night San Diego at San Francisco, night Today’s Games Miami (Fernandez 4-3) at Arizona (Cahill 3-8), 2:40 p.m. San Diego (Stults 6-5) at San Francisco (Bumgarner 6-4), 2:45 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Fife 1-2) at N.Y. Yankees (Kuroda 6-5), 6:05 p.m. Washington (G.Gonzalez 3-3) at Philadelphia (K.Kendrick 6-4), 6:05 p.m. Colorado (Nicasio 4-2) at Toronto (Buehrle 3-4), 6:07 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Marcum 0-8) at Atlanta (Medlen 3-7), 6:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (Locke 6-1) at Cincinnati (Arroyo 6-5), 6:10 p.m. Milwaukee (Lohse 2-6) at Houston (Bedard 2-3), 7:10 p.m. Chicago Cubs (E.Jackson 3-8) at St. Louis (Westbrook 2-2), 7:15 p.m. Thursday’s Games Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, 11:35 a.m. Milwaukee at Houston, 1:10 p.m. Colorado at Washington, 6:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets at Atlanta, 6:10 p.m. Chicago Cubs at St. Louis, 7:15 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at San Diego, 9:10 p.m. Miami at San Francisco, 9:15 p.m. ——— NCAA College World Series Glance By The Associated Press At TD Ameritrade Park Omaha Omaha, Neb. Double Elimination/x-if necessary Monday, June 17 Game 5 — Oregon State 11, Louisville 4 Game 6 — Mississippi State 5, Indiana 4 Tuesday, June 18 Game 7 — North Carolina 4, LSU 2 Game 8 — UCLA 2, North Carolina State 1 Wednesday, June 19 Game 9 — Oregon State (51-12) vs. Indiana (49-19), 7 p.m. Thursday, June 20 Game 10 — North Carolina (58-11) vs. North Carolina State (50-15), 7 p.m. Friday, June 21 Game 11 — Mississippi State (50-18) vs. Game 9 winner, 2 p.m. Game 12 — UCLA (46-17) vs. Game 10 winner, 7 p.m. Saturday, June 22 x-Game 13 — Game 6 winner vs. Game 9 winner, 2 p.m. x-Game 14 — Game 8 winner vs. Game 10 winner, 7 p.m. If only one game is necessary, it will start at 7:30 p.m. Championship Series (Best-of-3) Monday, June 24: Pairings TBA, 7 p.m. Tuesday, June 25: Pairings TBA, 7 p.m. x-Wednesday, June 26: Pairings TBA, 7 p.m. ——— Tuesday’s CWS Linescore By The Associated Press At Omaha, Neb. North Carolina 201 000 100 — 4 11 0 LSU 000 010 10x — 2 10 0 Thornton, McCue (8) and Holberton; Glenn, Bonvillain (3), Cotton (7) and Ross. HR—North Carolina, Holberton (12). W—Thornton, 12-1. L—Glenn, 7-3. Sv—McCue (2). UCLA 000 020 000 — 2 5 0 N.C. State 001 000 00x — 1 5 0 Vander Tuig, Berg (8) and Zeile; Jernigan, Sasser (5), Easley (8) and Austin. W— Vander Tuig, 13-4. L—Jernigan, 1-1. Sv—Berg (23).

BASKETBALL

NBA Playoff Glance By The Associated Press (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) NBA FINALS San Antonio 3, Miami 3 Thursday, June 6: San Antonio 92, Miami 88. Sunday, June 9: Miami 103, San Antonio 84 Tuesday, June 11: San Antonio 113, Miami 77 Thursday, June 13: Miami 109, San Antonio 93 Sunday, June 16: San Antonio 114, Miami 104 Tuesday, June 18: MIami 103, San Antonio 100 (OT) Thursday, June 20: San Antonio at Miami, 8 p.m. ——— Spurs-Heat, Box SAN ANTONIO (100) Ginobili 2-5 4-6 9, Leonard 9-14 3-4 22, Duncan 13-21 4-5 30, Parker 6-23 6-7 19, Green 1-7 0-0 3, Neal 2-7 0-0 5, Diaw 2-6 3-4 7, Splitter 2-2 1-2 5, Bonner 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 37-85 21-28 100. MIAMI (103) Miller 3-4 0-0 8, James 11-26 9-12 32, Bosh 5-12 0-1 10, Chalmers 7-11 2-2 20, Wade 6-15 2-2 14, Allen 3-8 2-2 9, Battier 3-4 0-0 9, Andersen 0-1 1-2 1. Totals 38-81 16-21 103. San Antonio 25 25 25 20 5 — 100 Miami 27 17 21 30 8 — 103 3-Point Goals—San Antonio 5-18 (Ginobili 1-3, Parker 1-3, Leonard 1-3, Neal 1-3, Green 1-5, Diaw 0-1), Miami 11-19 (Chalmers 4-5, Battier 3-4, Miller 2-2, Allen 1-3, James 1-5). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—San Antonio 58 (Duncan 17), Miami 45 (Bosh 11). Assists—San Antonio 13 (Parker 8), Miami 23 (James 11). Total Fouls—San Antonio 21, Miami 26. A—19,900 (19,600). ——— WNBA By The Associated Press EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB Atlanta 6 1 .857 — Washington 4 1 .800 1 Chicago 4 2 .667 1.5 New York 4 2 .667 1.5 Connecticut 2 5 .286 4 Indiana 1 5 .167 4.5 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB Minnesota 4 1 .800 — Los Angeles 3 2 .600 1 Phoenix 3 3 .500 1.5 Seattle 2 3 .400 2 San Antonio 2 4 .333 2.5 Tulsa 1 7 .125 4.5 ——— Monday’s Games No games scheduled Tuesday’s Games Washington at Seattle, night Today’s Games Minnesota at Phoenix, 9 p.m. Thursday’s Games Chicago at Tulsa, 11:30 a.m.

GOLF World Golf Ranking By The Associated Press Through June 16 1. Tiger Woods USA 2. Rory McIlroy NIr 3. Justin Rose Eng 4. Adam Scott Aus 5. Matt Kuchar USA 6. Phil Mickelson USA 7. Luke Donald Eng 8. Brandt Snedeker USA 9. Graeme McDowell NIr 10. Louis Oosthuizen SAf 11. Steve Stricker USA 12. Lee Westwood Eng 13. Charl Schwartzel SAf 14. Keegan Bradley USA 15. Sergio Garcia Esp 16. Jason Day Aus 17. Jason Dufner USA 18. Ian Poulter Eng 19. Bubba Watson USA 20. Ernie Els SAf 21. Webb Simpson USA 22. Hunter Mahan USA 23. Dustin Johnson USA 24. Peter Hanson Swe 25. Nick Watney USA 26. Bo Van Pelt USA 27. Matteo Manassero Ita 28. Jim Furyk USA 29. Bill Haas USA 30. Zach Johnson USA

13.06 9.52 8.19 7.35 6.69 6.17 6.07 5.97 5.59 5.28 5.21 5.07 4.97 4.84 4.81 4.50 4.40 4.39 4.36 4.32 4.29 4.22 4.09 3.68 3.57 3.51 3.49 3.37 3.30 3.22

Surprise Hossa scratch part of NHL injury culture BOSTON (AP) — Marian Hossa is one of the Chicago Blackhawks’ top scorers, with three game-winning goals already this postseason. And then, suddenly, he wasn’t in the lineup for a team that needed all the scoring it can get. Hossa’s surprise scratch from Game 3 of the Stanley Cup finals — and the one-word explanation, “upper,” for the part of his body that was injured — is part of a long-running cat-and-mouse game NHL teams play on the theory that any information about injuries is a competitive disadvantage. “I think that’s self-explanatory,” said Blackhawks coach Joel Quenneville, declining to explain why he declined to explain the secrecy surrounding Hossa’s injury. Tuukka Rask stopped 28 shots from the depleted Blackhawks to help the Bruins win 2-0 on Monday night and move two wins from their second Stanley Cup title in three seasons. Game 4 is Wednesday night in Boston before the series returns to Chicago for a fifth game. Hossa is expected to play in Game 4, Quenneville allowed, but only after making clear that “I’m not going to get exactly what the injury is or where it occurred.” “It’s sort of a secret society in the hockey world and in the injury world,” Blackhawks forward Dave Bolland said. “You don’t want other

THE Garden City Telegram

teams having any injury information at all.” Asked if he had seen Hossa or had a chance to talk to him, Bolland said, “I don’t know.” You don’t know if you’ve seen him or talked to him? “I don’t know if I’ve seen him,” Bolland repeated with a sly smile. Hossa’s mysterious injury may have been a turning point in Game 3, but it is hardly unusual in the secretive world of hockey injuries. Players and coaches say they just don’t talk about what’s hurting, partly because they don’t want to seem weak in a sport where they hit each other for a living. But mostly, they don’t want let the other team know where to aim. “If I’m going out to battle and I have an injury to any part of my body, I don’t want the other side to know what it is,” Bruins forward Shawn Thornton said. Injury information can also help the opponent strategize. Quenneville was so concerned about giving the Bruins advance notice of even a few minutes that he didn’t let substitute Ben Smith skate in the warmup even though there was a chance he would need to play. “I just didn’t want to tip our hand that there’s something going on,” the coach said. “Ben was ready. I knew he was doing everything,” Quenneville said.

“We were hopeful that Hoss was playing, and Ben was doing everything to get ready. He was ready.” It worked. “I’m still surprised,” Thornton said. “I don’t know what happened to him.” No hard feelings, Bruins coach Claude Julien said. After all, he would do — and has done — the same thing. “I respect that from other teams. When you’re playing against each other, you know exactly where everybody is coming from,” Julien said. “There’s times where you have to protect your players, and I understand it. I know it’s frustrating for you guys as media. You’re trying to share that information. The most important thing for us, we can take the heat for that, is protecting your players.” So, how to tell if an injury is minor? When a team actually admits it exists. “I’ll share one with you: Yesterday in a warmup, Zdeno Chara fell down, got a cut over the eye,” Julien said, making light of the mishap in the way that only a coach two wins from an NHL title will do. “I’ll let you know about that. That’s not a hidden injury. “If it’s something that doesn’t put your player in danger, I don’t see why you shouldn’t talk about it,” he said.

Thursday Baseball — TBD, Finney Co. Bandits at Winfield Tournament.

Golf — 8 a.m., Brookover Cup Match, The Golf Club at Southwind vs. Buffalo Dunes, at Buffalo Dunes.

Friday Baseball — TBD, Finney Co. Bandits at Winfield Tournament; Finney Co. Blues at Pueblo, Colo. Tournament.

Sunday Baseball — TBD, Finney Co. Bandits at Winfield Tournament; Finney Co. Blues at Pueblo, Colo. Tournament. Golf — 8 a.m., Brookover Cup Match, The Golf Club at Southwind vs. Buffalo Dunes, at The Golf Club at Southwind.

Saturday Baseball — TBD, Finney Co. Bandits at Winfield Tournament; Finney Co. Blues at Pueblo, Colo. Tournament.

31. Rickie Fowler USA 3.16 32. Branden Grace SAf 3.12 33. Henrik Stenson Swe 3.12 34. Billy Horschel USA 2.92 35. Martin Kaymer Ger 2.90 36. Thorbjorn Olesen Den 2.90 37. Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano Esp 2.87 38. Kevin Streelman USA 2.86 39. Jamie Donaldson Wal 2.77 40. Scott Piercy USA 2.76 41. Francesco Molinari Ita 2.75 42. Carl Pettersson Swe 2.74 43. Nicolas Colsaerts Bel 2.74 44. Robert Garrigus USA 2.62 45. Paul Lawrie Sco 2.61 46. David Lynn Eng 2.57 47. Michael Thompson USA 2.54 48. D.A. Points USA 2.47 49. Hideki Matsuyama Jpn 2.45 50. Tim Clark SAf 2.45 51. Ryan Moore USA 2.44 52. Russell Henley USA 2.42 53. Thongchai Jaidee Tha 2.41 54. Martin Laird Sco 2.36 55. Richard Sterne SAf 2.35 56. Boo Weekley USA 2.31 57. Fredrik Jacobson Swe 2.31 58. George Coetzee SAf 2.28 59. Marcel Siem Ger 2.24 60. Kyle Stanley USA 2.22 61. John Senden Aus 2.21 62. Marc Leishman Aus 2.20 63. Angel Cabrera Arg 2.20 64. Bernd Wiesberger Aut 2.19 65. Padraig Harrington Irl 2.16 66. Chris Wood Eng 2.14 67. Alexander Noren Swe 2.13 68. Mikko Ilonen Fin 2.10 69. Jimmy Walker USA 2.07 70. Charles Howell III USA 2.06 71. Luke Guthrie USA 2.06 72. Hiroyuki Fujita Jpn 2.04 73. Thomas Bjorn Den 2.02 74. Brendon de Jonge SAf 1.99 75. Marcus Fraser Aus 1.99 ——— 2013 Presidents Cup Standings By The Associated Press At Muirfield Village Golf Club Dublin, Ohio Oct. 3-6 Top 10 for each team qualify automatically plus two Captain’s picks: Through June 16 United States 1. Tiger Woods 17,983,017 2. Matt Kuchar 12,884,928 3. Brandt Snedeker 12,178,916 4. Phil Mickelson 11,266,989 5. Hunter Mahan 9,112,604 6. Keegan Bradley 8,459,456 7. Steve Stricker 7,970,313 8. Webb Simpson 7,775,590 9. Dustin Johnson 7,315,706 10. Bill Haas 6,972,617 11. Bubba Watson 6,824,249 12. Billy Horschel 6,717,806 13. Jason Dufner 6,695,292 14. Zach Johnson 6,300,591 15. Kevin Streelman 6,226,640 International 1. Adam Scott 2. Louis Oosthuizen 3. Charl Schwartzel 4. Jason Day 5. Ernie Els 6. Branden Grace 7. Hideki Matsuyama 8. Tim Clark 9. Thongchai Jaidee 10. Richard Sterne 11. George Coetzee 12. John Senden 13. Marc Leishman 14. Angel Cabrera 15. Hiroyuki Fujita

Aus SAf SAf Aus SAf SAf Jpn SAf Tha SAf SAf Aus Aus Arg Jpn

——— PGA Tour FedExCup Leaders By The Associated Press Through June 16 Rank Player Points 1. Tiger Woods 2,380 2. Matt Kuchar 1,964 3. Brandt Snedeker 1,528 4. Phil Mickelson 1,518 5. Billy Horschel 1,413 6. Justin Rose 1,301 7. Kevin Streelman 1,234 8. Boo Weekley 1,154 9. Jason Day 1,101 10. Adam Scott 999 11. Keegan Bradley 994 12. D.A. Points 985 13. Hunter Mahan 959 14. Charles Howell III 940 15. Russell Henley 935 16. Steve Stricker 918 17. Harris English 901 18. Webb Simpson 889 19. Dustin Johnson 887 20. Graeme McDowell 838 21. Jimmy Walker 812 22. Sang-Moon Bae 770 23. Scott Stallings 756

7.35 5.28 4.97 4.50 4.32 3.12 2.45 2.45 2.41 2.35 2.28 2.21 2.20 2.20 2.04

YTD Money $5,909,742 $4,393,265 $3,503,655 $3,417,984 $2,998,128 $2,921,290 $2,572,989 $2,307,509 $2,566,023 $2,356,511 $2,169,199 $2,151,022 $2,114,705 $1,739,000 $1,800,028 $2,187,146 $1,793,325 $1,806,261 $1,889,743 $1,910,654 $1,507,450 $1,604,762 $1,497,947

24. Bill Haas 25. Martin Laird 26. Chris Kirk 27. Michael Thompson 28. Charl Schwartzel 29. Brian Gay 30. John Merrick

755 750 745 733 726 712 710

——— LPGA Money Leaders By The Associated Press Through June 9 Trn 1. Inbee Park 11 2. Suzann Pettersen 11 3. Stacy Lewis 13 4. Beatriz Recari 12 5. Karrie Webb 11 6. Cristie Kerr 11 7. Jiyai Shin 11 8. I.K. Kim 11 9. So Yeon Ryu 11 10. Na Yeon Choi 11 11. Lizette Salas 12 12. Catriona Matthew 10 13. Jessica Korda 11 14. Anna Nordqvist 13 15. Shanshan Feng 9 16. Paula Creamer 11 17. Ilhee Lee 12 18. Pornanong Phatlum 13 19. Ai Miyazato 11 20. Caroline Hedwall 12 21. Hee Young Park 12 22. Yani Tseng 11 23. Jennifer Johnson 12 24. Chella Choi 13 25. Angela Stanford 12 26. Giulia Sergas 12 27. Carlota Ciganda 7 28. Morgan Pressel 11 29. Gerina Piller 12 30. Karine Icher 12 ———

$1,591,333 $1,647,282 $1,318,656 $1,516,253 $1,543,853 $1,251,629 $1,499,521

Money $1,221,827 $773,785 $745,129 $533,910 $496,512 $460,965 $447,887 $434,425 $408,221 $399,403 $393,236 $348,565 $334,375 $331,234 $329,746 $319,103 $316,648 $304,639 $293,889 $288,838 $275,344 $268,080 $267,953 $250,429 $245,982 $240,813 $204,508 $193,873 $190,327 $189,655

Champions Tour Statistics By The Associated Press Through June 9 Charles Schwab Cup 1, David Frost, 1,336 Points. 2, Bernhard Langer, 1,038. 3, John Cook, 795. 4, Kohki Idoki, 756. 5, Esteban Toledo, 734. 6, Russ Cochran, 732. 7, Fred Couples , 711. 8, Jay Haas, 701. 9, Kenny Perry, 617. 10, Michael Allen, 568. Scoring Average (Actual) 1, Fred Couples, 68.15. 2, Bernhard Langer, 69.38. 3, David Frost, 69.64. 4, Tom Lehman, 69.95. 5, John Cook, 70.00. 6, Russ Cochran, 70.07. 7, Jay Haas, 70.25. 8, Tom Pernice Jr., 70.38. 9, Michael Allen, 70.41. 10, Kenny Perry, 70.43.

HOCKEY NHL Stanley Cup Glance By The Associated Press STANLEY CUP FINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Boston 2, Chicago 1 Wednesday, June 12: Chicago 4, Boston 3, 3 OT Saturday, June 15: Boston 2, Chicago 1 (OT) Monday, June 17: Boston 2, Chicago 0 Wednesday, June 19: Chicago at Boston, 7 p.m. x-Saturday, June 22: Boston at Chicago, 7 p.m. x-Monday, June 24: Chicago at Boston, 7 p.m. x-Wednesday, June 26: Boston at Chicago, 7 p.m.

TRANSACTIONS Tuesday’s Sports Transactions By The Associated Press BASEBALL American League BOSTON RED SOX—Recalled RHP Alfredo Aceves from Pawtucket (IL). CLEVELAND INDIANS—Recalled 3B Lonnie Chisenhall from Columbus (IL). Optioned RHP Matt Langwell to the Columbus. NEW YORK YANKEES—Placed 1B Mark Teixeira on the 15-day DL. TEXAS RANGERS—Recalled LHP Joseph Ortiz and C Robinson Chirinos from Round Rock (PCL). Placed INF/OF Jeff Baker on 15-day DL, retroactive to June 13. Optioned Chris McGuiness to Round Rock. National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS—Signed RHP Braden Shipley to a minor league contract. ATLANTA BRAVES—Placed C Evan Gattis on the 15-day DL. Recalled INF Tyler Pastornicky from Gwinnett (IL).

Heels oust Tigers OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Home runs are few and far between at the College World Series these days, which made Brian Holberton’s first-inning shot all the more important for North Carolina. Holberton staked freshman starter Trent Thornton to a two-run lead before he even took the mound Tuesday, and No. 1 national seed Carolina went on to beat LSU 4-2 in an elimination game. “We certainly are happy to have survived this one,” Tar Heels coach Mike Fox said. “I thought the home run by Brian was really crucial for us, just kind of let the air out a little bit and let us play with a lead, something we seemed to haven’t done in a while.” The Tar Heels (58-11) play North Carolina State or UCLA in another elimination game Thursday. The No. 4-seeded Tigers (57-11) went 0-2 in their first CWS appearance since winning the 2009 national title. “We expected to come out here and play better

than we did,” LSU coach Paul Mainieri said. “Even though we didn’t play great, we lost a one-run game and a two-run game. We were in position to win the games. It wasn’t like we came out here and got blown out. We were right there and just couldn’t come through with the play here or hit here or a pitch there, and it stings a lot.” Carolina, which lost 8-1 to North Carolina State in its CWS opener, staved off elimination for the third time in the NCAA tournament and remains the only team in the country to not lose back-to-back games this season. The Tar Heels are outscoring opponents 85-30 after losses, and their 58 wins are a school record. Thornton (12-1) pitched a strong seven innings in his first start since March 27. The 6-foot, 170-pound righthander worked around two singles and three walks to hold the Tigers scoreless until the fifth and escaped trouble in the seventh thanks to a double play.


THE Garden City Telegram

Work toward a more equitable partnership ANNIE’S MAILBOX KATHY MITCHELL MARCY SUGAR

Maybe he’s afraid to grow up, maybe he’s too addicted to pot, maybe he’s simply a Peter Pan. Ask him to come with you for counseling so the two of you can work on a more equitable partnership. If he is unwilling or if nothing changes, there is no future here unless you want to spend the next several years mothering this grownup child. It’s a painful lesson to learn that love isn’t always enough to turn someone into marriage material. Dear Annie: My friend’s son married a lovely young woman whose only brother died a few years ago. The wife kept her maiden name after marriage for professional reasons. The couple is expecting their first child, and the wife would like to name the boy after her deceased brother, giving him her last name. Her reasoning is that it would ensure that

her family name is carried on. Her husband has male cousins who can carry on the family name, but she doesn’t. My friend is in shock. If her son agrees to this irrational request, she believes her family name stops there. In her mind, cousins do not count in carrying on one’s lineage. However, she doesn’t want to cause a family rift by openly and strongly opposing this possibility. Do you have any suggestions for her? — Friend of the Family Dear Friend: This is completely up to the couple, and your friend should try to stay out of it. Frankly, the wife has the stronger claim for carrying on a family name. It’s also possible that the couple will have other sons. And plenty of women object to the old-fashioned (and sexist) notion that only the boys count when it comes to lineage. We know your friend is hurt and disappointed, but if she wants a relationship with her son, his wife and their child, she needs to put this aside. Dear Annie: I shared the same frustration as “Troubled in High School,” the 16-year-old girl who can only think about boys,

drugs, alcohol, dating and grades. She wants her life to be exciting. I’d like to suggest she try participating in her school’s community service club. I was a member of my school’s “Key Club,” which is sponsored by the Kiwanis organization. It gave me the opportunity to focus on things outside of myself and my desires as a teenager and allowed me to put my energy into doing good. My friends who did drugs respected me enough to never offer me drugs. I hated that my parents were so strict, but now that I’m almost 30, I can appreciate that they molded me into an independent person who is confident in leading instead of following. There is nothing wrong with being a perfect little angel. I’m proud of that reputation. — Happy in Hawaii 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 Third St., Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.

Arthritis can take Marshmallow meld on different forms

Cooking odors Dear Heloise: I have a hint for when cooking broccoli, cabbage, Brussels sprouts and even poaching salmon. I rinse and trim a stalk of celery, cut it into thirds and add it to my liquids. It eliminates the cooking odors and does

not impart a celery flavor to what I am cooking. I don’t know how, but it really does work! — M.D., via email M a n y readers add different things to the water to avoid the odor, like lemon slices, but this is the first I’ve heard of celery! I tested this when cooking some fresh broccoli, and it did seem to help. And then there is my classic hint of setting a bowl of vinegar on the counter and turning the exhaust fan on while cooking odorous vegetables. Have you ever wondered what causes the odor? It’s the gas that is released as the vegetables are cooked. The longer the vegetables are cooked, the stronger the odor becomes, so, if you can, try less cooking time and see if there is less odor. — Heloise

6 4 9 7 8 4 9 8 2 6 9 6 9 4 8 1 3 2 6 8 3 5 4 7 1 5 Solution in next edition

Sudoku is a number-placing puzzle based on a 9x9 grid with several given number. The objext is to place the numbers 1to 9 in the empty squates so that each rowm each columb and each 3x3 box contains the same number only once. The difficulty level of the Conceptis Sudoku increase from Monday to Saturday.

Single letters, short words and words using any apostrophe give you clues to locating vowels.

a chemical-free way to prevent weed growth while still allowing air, oxygen and water to flow to and from the soil. Also, they can help the soil effectively maintain moisture during dry periods. 6:30

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9 8 2 7 9 6 6/19

Difficulty Level

Solution is by trial and error. C 2011 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. 224375

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The Cryptoquip is a substitution cipher in which one letter stands for another. If you think that X equals O, it will be O throughout the puzzle.

Did you know? Landscape fabrics are

107 Jenny, Holcomb • $105,000

By Dave Green

220674

DEAR DR. His physician ROACH: You has never suggestpublished an TO YOUR ed cold laser treatarticle in April GOOD HEALTH ments to him. discussing the From what I differences have read on the between osteoarInternet, they thritis and rheuseem to be an matoid arthrieffective, low-risk tis. How does treatment option. “de g enerative What’s your arthritis” differ Keith Roach, M.D. assessment of from the other North America Syndicate them? — R.H. two? — R.L. Whether D e g e n e r a t i v e laser treatment is arthritis is osteoar- effective depends on what thritis; it’s an old term that kind of arthritis your dates from a time when friend has. arthritis was thought to I discussed osteoarthribe caused by normal aging tis briefly in the previous processes and from “wear question, but it is much and tear” caused by exer- more common than rheucise. matoid arthritis, an autoThat is no longer immune disease in which accepted. For example, the immune system attacks runners are at no greater the joints (and sometimes risk for osteoarthritis of other important organs). the knee than non-runners. Osteoarthritis is more likeFurthermore, exercise is a ly to affect the back. valuable therapy for osteoLow-level laser therapy, arthritis, and stopping an also called cold laser, has exercise program leads to been studied in both rheumore pain and disability. matoid arthritis and osteoHowever, injuries clearly arthritis. In people with do contribute to the devel- rheumatoid arthritis of the opment of osteoarthritis. hand, the laser treatment Being overweight is the reduced pain and mornmost important modifiable ing stiffness, and improved factor for the development flexibility. In osteoarthritis, of osteoarthritis. the jury is still out; some DEAR DR. ROACH: I studies showed benefit, and have a good friend who has others showed none. arthritis in his hands and It does seem to be a safe lower back. treatment.

Dear Heloise: I bought a bag of miniature marshmallows, which I stored in the pantry. I opened them three weeks later to use, and they were all stuck together in one big blob. It was a sticky mess getting them separated to use in my dessert recipe. How can I avoid this problem? — Ruth F. in Ohio J u s t place them in a container with a tight-fitting lid, or in a freezer-safe plastic bag, and store in the freezer. Remove from the freezer and let the marshmallows warm to room temperature before using. If the marshmallows are stuck, pour a little confectioners’ (powdered) sugar or cornstarch in the bag and shake to coat. The marshmallows should just break apart. — Heloise

Becker’s Bridge

2013 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

Dear Annie: My sweet, kind 33-year-old college-educated husband has regressed into a teenager. He has always been a marijuana user, but a year ago, he befriended “Jake,” and now the two of them smoke marijuana daily. They spend their evenings riding skateboards, playing video games and hanging out with college kids. I would like to buy a house, have children and further my education. My husband says he wants the same things, but he always has an excuse for not saving money. We both have good jobs, and he promises to start putting money aside “next month.” It never happens. I know he won’t give up pot. He says he will get divorced before he quits smoking marijuana, and I knew that before we married. Am I wrong to put my foot down and expect him to grow up? Or do I need to lighten up and let him have his fun? — Feeling Like My Husband’s Mother Dear Feeling: You and your husband do not have compatible goals. He wants to be an irresponsible child while you do all the work. And so far, you have gone along with that.

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King of the Hill (s) American Dad (s) American Dad (s) NUMB3RS “Black Swan” (s) (cc) Law & Order: Criminal Intent (cc) Family Guy (cc) 3 KMTW-MNT Family Feud (cc) Family Feud (cc) NUMB3RS “Power” (s) (cc) Kansas News Big Bang Theory Two and Half Men Engagement The Office (cc) 30 Rock (s) (cc) 4 KSAS-FOX Two and Half Men Big Bang Theory MasterChef “Top 15 Compete; Top 14 Compete” (N) (s) (cc) (DVS) Arrow “Damaged” (s) (cc) Supernatural “Goodbye Stranger” (s) Eyewitness Extra (N) (s) (cc) TMZ (N) (s) (cc) Paid Program Paid Program Excused (s) (cc) 5 KSCW-CW How I Met/Mother Entertainment CSI: Crime Scene Investigation (s) Eyewitness News Late Show With David Letterman (N) Ferguson 6 KBSD-CBS Eyewitness News Inside Edition (N) The American Baking Competition Criminal Minds “The Silencer” (s) Nature (s) (cc) (DVS) NOVA “Extreme Cave Diving” (s) Cave People of the Himalaya (cc) BBC World News As Time Goes By Charlie Rose (N) (s) (cc) 7 KDCK-PBS PBS NewsHour (N) (s) (cc) KSN News at 10p The Tonight Show With Jay Leno (N) Jimmy Fallon 11 KSNG-NBC KSN News at 6p Wheel of Fortune 2013 Stanley Cup Final: Chicago Blackhawks at Boston Bruins. (N) (Live) (s) (cc) Family Tools (N) Modern Family (s) How to Live ABC’s The Lookout (N) (s) (cc) News Jimmy Kimmel Live (N) (s) (cc) Nightline (N) (cc) 13 KUPK-ABC KAKE News at Six Access Hollywood The Middle (s) CABLE CHANNELS America’s Funniest Home Videos (s) Engagement Engagement Engagement Engagement WGN News at Nine (N) (s) (cc) America’s Funniest Home Videos (s) Engagement Engagement 9 WGN-A Noticiero Con Joaquín López Dóriga Noticias por Adela La Rosa de Guadalupe (SS) El Chavo La Rosa de Guadalupe (SS) La Rosa de Guadalupe (SS) El Chavo 10 GALA Corazón Indomable (N) (SS) Porque el Amor Manda (N) (SS) Amores Verdaderos (N) (SS) Qué Bonito Amor (N) (SS) Impacto Extra Noticiero Uni Una Familia con Suerte (N) (SS) 15 UNI NCIS “Stakeout” (s) (cc) NCIS “Enemies Foreign” (cc) Royal Pains “Blythe Spirits” (N) Necessary Roughness (N) NCIS: Los Angeles “Lockup” (s) Royal Pains “Blythe Spirits” 28 USA Seinfeld (cc) Seinfeld (cc) Family Guy (cc) Family Guy (cc) Big Bang Theory Big Bang Theory Big Bang Theory Big Bang Theory Conan (cc) The Office (cc) Conan (cc) 29 TBS Castle “Fool Me Once” (cc) (DVS) Castle “When the Bough Breaks” (s) Franklin & Bash “Coffee and Cream” Franklin & Bash “Dead and Alive” (N) Franklin & Bash “Coffee and Cream” Franklin & Bash “Dead and Alive” 30 TNT Two and Half Men Two and Half Men Movie: ›› Just Go With It (2011) (Adam Sandler) A man’s careless lie spins out of control. Movie: ›› Just Go With It (2011) (Adam Sandler) A man’s careless lie spins out of control. 31 FX Soccer College Baseball: NCAA World Series, Game 9: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) (cc) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (cc) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (cc) 32 ESPN MLB Baseball: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) (cc) Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) (cc) SportsNation (N) SportsNation Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) (cc) 33 ESPN2 MLB Baseball: Kansas City Royals at Cleveland Indians. (N) (Live) MLB Baseball: Kansas City Royals at Cleveland Indians. UFC Unleashed (Joined in Progress) 34 FSN 40 Greatest Hip Hop Songs Behind the Music “LL Cool J” (cc) Couples Therapy (s) Couples Therapy “Opening Up” (N) Model Employee (N) (s) Couples Therapy “Opening Up” (s) 35 VH1 Caso Cerrado: Edición Estelar (SS) Pasión Prohibida (N) (s) (SS) La Patrona (N) (s) (SS) El Señor de los Cielos (N) (s) (SS) Al Rojo Vivo (N) Decisiones (SS) La Patrona (s) (SS) 37 TELE Unsolved Mysteries (cc) Unsolved Mysteries (cc) John Walsh Investigates: Abduction To Be Announced To Be Announced Unsolved Mysteries (cc) 38 LIFE Kitchen Cousins Kitchen Cousins Elbow Room (N) Elbow Room Property Brothers (cc) House Hunters Hunters Int’l Property Brothers (cc) Property Brothers (cc) 39 HGTV Restaurant: Impossible Restaurant: Impossible Restaurant: Impossible Restaurant Stakeout (N) Mystery Diners Mystery Diners Restaurant: Impossible 40 FOOD Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty “Aloha, Robertsons!” Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty 41 A&E MythBusters (s) (cc) Outrageous Acts of Science (N) (s) MythBusters “Duct Tape Canyon” (N) The Big Brain Theory: Pure Genius MythBusters “Duct Tape Canyon” (s) The Big Brain Theory: Pure Genius 42 DISC The Good Buy The Good Buy Breaking Amish: Brave New World- Toddlers & Tiaras (N) (s) (cc) The Good Buy The Good Buy Toddlers & Tiaras (s) (cc) The Good Buy The Good Buy 43 TLC Bellator 360 (s) Bellator MMA Live (N) (Live) (s) Fight Master: Bellator MMA (N) (cc) Fight Master: Bellator MMA (s) (cc) Bellator MMA Live (s) 44 SPIKE Sonny-Chance Dog With a Blog Good Luck Charlie Shake It Up! (cc) Austin & Ally (s) Movie: Lemonade Mouth (2011) (Bridgit Mendler, Adam Hicks) (s) (NR) (cc) Dog With a Blog Austin & Ally (s) Sonny-Chance 45 DISN Sam & Cat (cc) Figure It Out (N) Full House (cc) Full House (cc) Full House (cc) Full House (cc) The Nanny (cc) The Nanny (cc) The Nanny (cc) The Nanny (cc) George Lopez (s) George Lopez (s) 46 NICK Melissa & Joey Melissa & Joey Melissa & Joey Baby Daddy (N) Baby Daddy (cc) Melissa & Joey Twisted “Grief Is a Five-Letter Word” The 700 Club (s) (cc) Fresh Prince Fresh Prince 47 FAM M*A*S*H (cc) M*A*S*H (cc) Friends (s) (cc) Friends (s) (cc) Friends (s) (cc) Friends (s) (cc) Hot in Cleveland The Exes (N) The Soul Man (N) Hot in Cleveland The Exes (cc) The Soul Man 48 TVLD American Pickers (cc) American Pickers “Pinch Picker” Larry the Cable Guy Top Shot All-Stars “Crank Trigger” Top Shot All-Stars “Crank Trigger” American Pickers “Pinch Picker” 49 HIST Paranormal Witness “The Lost Boy” Ghost Hunters (s) (cc) Ghost Hunters (N) (s) (cc) Paranormal Witness (N) Ghost Hunters (s) (cc) Paranormal Witness 50 SYFY Movie: ››› Keeper of the Flame (1942, Drama) (Spencer Tracy) (cc) Movie: ››‡ No More Ladies (1935) (5:30) Movie: The Sign of the Ram Movie: ›››‡ Holiday (1938) (Katharine Hepburn, Cary Grant) (cc) 54 TCM Movie: Identity (R) CSI: Miami “Bang, Bang, Your Debt” Movie: ›››› Titanic (1997) (Leonardo DiCaprio, Kate Winslet) A woman falls for an artist aboard the ill-fated ship. (PG-13) (cc) 55 AMC Off the Hook Off the Hook Swamp’d! (cc) Swamp’d! (cc) Call-Wildman Call-Wildman Call-Wildman Call-Wildman Swamp’d! (cc) Swamp’d! (cc) Call-Wildman Call-Wildman 56 ANPL Husbands- Ho. Husbands- Ho. The Wendy Williams Show (N) (cc) 106 & Park: Top Nomination Movie: ››› Gridiron Gang (2006) (The Rock, Xzibit) A counselor turns juvenile criminals into football players. (cc) 57 BET Colbert Report Daily Show Futurama (cc) Futurama (cc) Futurama (cc) Futurama (cc) Futurama (N) (s) (cc) Daily Show Colbert Report Futurama (s) (cc) 58 COM Chelsea Lately E! News (N) Rihanna 777 (s) (cc) Keeping Up With the Kardashians The Soup (N) The Soup Investi Chelsea Lately (N) E! News 59 E! The Real Housewives of New Jersey The Real Housewives of New Jersey Million Dollar Listing New York (N) Chef Roblé & Co. (N) What Happens Million Dollar Listing New York Housewives/NJ 61 BRAVO Family Guy (cc) Robot Chicken China, IL Annoying Orange World of Gumball NinjaGo: Masters Teen Titans Go! King of the Hill (s) King of the Hill (s) American Dad (s) American Dad (s) Family Guy (cc) 63 TOON Little House on the Prairie (cc) Little House on the Prairie (cc) Frasier (s) (cc) Frasier (s) (cc) Frasier (s) (cc) Frasier (s) (cc) Frasier (s) (cc) Frasier (s) (cc) The Golden Girls The Golden Girls 217 HALL PREMIUM CHANNELS HBO MAX SHOW

(4:30) Contagion Movie: ››‡ American Reunion (2012) (Jason Biggs) (s) (R) (cc) Veep “Running” Sherlock Holmes-Game of Shadows Banshee “Pilot” (s) (cc) Banshee “The Rave” (s) (cc) (5:30) Movie: ››‡ People Like Us (2012) (Chris Pine) Movie: ››› Richard Pryor: Omit the Logic (2013) (NR)

True Blood “Who Are You, Really?” Real Time With Bill Maher (s) (cc) Family Tree (cc) ››› Magic Mike Movie: Obsession Banshee (s) (cc) Movie: ›› Deep Impact (1998) (Robert Duvall, Tea Leoni) (s) (PG-13) (cc) The Borgias “The Prince” (s) (cc) Gigolos (s) (cc) Movie: Big Money Rustlas (2010) (Violent J) (s) (R) (cc)


CLASSIFIEDS

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THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM Help Wanted Help Wanted

Help Wanted CLASS A CDL DRIVER WANTED

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

NOW HIRING, a Part-time Registered Nurse. Family Ministries, a provider of in-home supports for individuals needing assistance with everyday necessities like, cooking, cleaning, etc. The successful applicant will enjoy working independently in a team environment, be creative, have strong communication skills, and preferably have experience working with people that are elderly or may have a disability. Stop in to apply at, or send your resume to: Family Ministries, Inc. 606 N. Main St. Garden City, KS 67846 OR family.ministries@ymail .com

GARDEN CITY Vision Source is now accepting resumes for an Optician. Prefer someone with experience, but willing to train the right person. Bilingual in Spanish a must. Apply in person at 410 Campus Dr, Garden City KS

Special Notices

HOMESTEAD HEALTH & Rehabilitation is accepting applications for a dietary supervisor. Experience preferred but not required. Please call Grace at (620) 276-7643.

Motorcycles & ATVs

2006 HARLEY DAVIDSON Fatboy Motorcycle. Sunburst candy red. Only 6,622 miles. Always garaged, Willie G. skull accessories, lots of chrome, leather saddle bags & all original parts included. $10,500. (620) 640-1954.

JOHNSON SELF- Storage will dispose property stored by JANIE Public Services LAURELEZ on JuLY 1, WE ARE all created to 2013. serve.! Come and join the Volunteer Team at Lost St Catherine Hospital LOST! BLACK & and enjoy giving back. WHITE HUSKY. She is For more information 2 years old, fixed, 60#, call 272-2522. 1 blue eye, slipped out of collar. Missing since Help Wanted Saturday 06-08-13 from N O W HIRING, a Towns Rd & Raceway Part-time Registered DR area east of Garden Nurse. Family MinisCity. (620) 277-8090. tries, a provider of in-home supports for inMISSING!! dividuals needing assis2 year old red & white tance with everyday nefemale Austrailian cessities like, cooking, Shepherd named cleaning, etc. The sucTess. Lost from Towns cessful applicant will Riverview on March enjoy working inde14th. Wearing a brown pendently in a team encollar, recently shaved. vironment, be creative, $500 reward offered if have strong communifound or for valid inforcation skills, and prefmation leading to her erably have experience return/recovery. Call working with people Lonnie or Justin at that are elderly or may (620) 260-7042. have a disability. Public Services Stop in to apply at, or 12 STEP Group of Al- send your resume to: caholics Anonymous Family Ministries, Inc. meets daily at 116 1/2 606 N. Main St. E. Chestnut. Call Garden City, KS 67846 OR 272-5623. family.ministries@ymail EMMANUEL UNION .com

DELIVERY • Self Motivated • Friendly Attitude • Valid Driver’s License • 18 Yrs. or Older APPLY IN PERSON BETWEEN 9AM-11AM NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE

212877

TODAY’S NEW ADS

Animal Health International - Technologies is looking for a Class A CDL Driver to fill our Sales Support/Inventory Control position in Garden City, KS. Qualified applicants will have a Class A CDL, 2 years driving experience, a clean driving record, HazMat endorsement preferred but not required and high degree of attention to detail. This position also requires the ability to lift 60 lbs., enter sales documents and inventory into our computer system. We offer competitive pay with 401k and other benefits. If you would like to join our growing team and work for a solid company, please send your resume to Kirk.Brown@ animalhealth international.com.

705 W. Kansas • Garden City, KS

DRIVERS: TRAINING, Class A-CDL. Train and work for us! Professional and focused training for your Class A-CDL. You choose between Company Driver, Owner Operator, Lease Operator or Lease Trainer. (877) 369-7885 www.centraltruckingdrivingjobs.com Experienced equipment operators with CDL to work for utility construction company needed. Wage based on experience. Benefits package includes health/ dental/ life, 401K, paid holidays and vacation. Please call (620) 275-9433

FIBERGLASS TECHNICIANS

Palmer Manufacturing & Tank, Inc. is looking for experienced Fiberglass Technicians. Qualifications: 2-5 years of Fiberglass experience needed, dependable/ hard working person, willing to work night shift, ability to tolerate resign fumes, team player, safety focused, high school diploma/ GED, and be able to pass a Preemployment drug screen and background check. Come by and fill out an application M-F from 8am-5pm at 2814 W Jones Ave, Garden City, KS 67846. The company offers health insurance, life & disability insurance, vacation, holiday time, and a 401K plan.

Maintenance Technician! The Trails of Garden City has an immediate opening for an experienced Maintenance technician to join our property management team. Candidates must have a working knowledge of electrical, plumbing, carpentry, painting and dry wall repair. Must have reliable transportation. Bi-lingual English/Spanish helpful. Applicant must pass a background check, drug screen and have a valid driver!s license and auto insur213419 ance. Please apply in FT MAINTENANCE po- person between the sition. Experience with hours of 10:00am and light repair. Preventa- 2:00pm at 3501 N. tive maintenance pre- Campus Drive, Garden ferred, but not required. City, KS. Equal opporFor more information tunity employer. call Grace Evans at (620) 276-7643. Classifieds do the work!

Full-time Position Open for: MANUFACTURING/ DELIVERY OF BURIAL VAULTS

Benefits include:

• 40+ hours per week

• Paid holiday & vacation

• Health Insurance available • Uniforms provided

• Equal Opportunity Employer

• Retirement Plan after 2 Years Valid Driver’s License a must

Concrete Vaults, Inc. Apply by calling 1-800-362-1318 and we’ll send you an application.

212289

GARDEN CITY Vision HELP WANTED at Fitz Source is now accept- LLC, Mike!s Locker. 3547 Hwy 40, Oakely, ANTHONY, KANSAS is ing resumes for an OpKS 67748. Butcher, seeking Water/Waste- tician. Prefer someone wrapper, & processing. water Operator. High with experience, but (785) 672-9003 School Diploma/GED willing to train the right and valid drivers li- person. Bilingual in HOMESTEAD HEALTH cense required. Appli- Spanish a must. Apply & Rehabilitation is accations and complete in person at 410 Cam- cepting applications for GARDEN CITY 12 x 12 job d e s c r i p t i o n : pus Dr, Garden City KS a dietary supervisor. Al-Anon Family Groups www.anthonykansas.or Experience preferred (For families and HEAVY EQUIPMENT g. 620-842-5434. EOE. but not required. Please friends of alcoholics/adOperator Career! 3 Open until filled. call Grace at (620) dicts) Thursday @ 7:00 Week Hands On Trainpm. 116 Chestnut (A.A. ARE YOU ready to get ing School. Bulldozers, 276-7643. Hall) serious about your ca- Backhoes, Excavators. PARTNERS IN Excelreer and your earnings? National Certifications. lence OTR Drivers APU Attention Parents: Maybe you want a Lifetime Job Placement Equipped Pre-Pass Does your day care great job but don't have Assistance. VA Benefits EZ-pass passenger polprovider have a license the degree. Here's your Eligible! icy. 2012 & Newer to watch children?. It!s chance. You don't even 1-866-362-6497 equipment. 100% NO the law that they do! Lineed experience. !We'll touch. Butler Transport censed daycare providShop The Classifieds! 1-800-528-7825 provide paid profesers give positive discisional training and suppline, enjoy working port if you have a (Published in The Garden City Telegram June 10, 11, with children, and have proven work ethic, de- 12, 13, 14, 15, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21 and 22, 2013.) been screened for any sire to excel and good history of physical or Notice of Renewal to Kansas Water Pollution Control speaking skills. !We're sexual assault against Permit for a 62-year young Agricultural and Related Wastes children or substance award-winning specialty abuse. Illegal care is remodeler. We need Pursuant to public notification requirements included in against the law. Want assertive, energetic, Kansas Administrative Regulations (K.A.R.) 28-18-4 to become licensed? persuasive Lead Gen- and 28-18-15, this notification is to inform all potentially Call Maggie Baker RN, erators for our neigh- concerned parties that Deerfield Feeders; (620) child care Surveyor, borhood marketing 426-8611, plans to expand a livestock waste manageFinney CO Health Defacility to serve a beef operation and has submitteam in Garden City, ment ted a permit application to the Kansas Department of partment (620) Ks. This is an unlimited Health and Environment (KDHE). The facility is located 272-3600. growth opportunity. in Section 1 and 12, Township 24S, Range 35 W, in Narcotics Anonymous Business casual attire. Kearney County, Kansas, and Sections 6 and 7, Town(NA) Meetings. Monday No overnight travel. At- ship 24S, Range 34 W, in Finney County, Kansas. & Saturday 7pm; Satur- tractive bonus strucday Book Study 6pm. ture. Call Byron at KDHE is hereby requesting comments regarding the permit application and draft permit. KDHE will accept St. Catherine Hospital 620-275-2226. comments for a period of not less than 30 days from Classroom 1. [North enBARTENDER, EXPE- the date of this publication. The permit application and trance west of EmerRIENCED COOK, & draft permit (project reference Deerfield Feeders, A-UAKE-C001) may be reviewed at the KDHE Central gency room — follow WAIT STAFF needed. Office, Livestock Waste Management Section, 1000 hall to 1st elevator go to Must be 18 years old or SW Jackson Street, Suite 420, Topeka, KS LL exit elevator turn left older. Apply in person 66612-1367, (785) 296-6432; or the KDHE Southwest then right 1st room on at TIME OUT SPORTS District Office, 302 West McArtor, Dodge City, Kansas, right.] or call (620) 225-0596. Jeannine Riddle may be contacted at CLUB 620-899-5420. Children the KDHE Central Office to request copies of the docuwelcome, parents are COMPANY LOOKING ments, submit comments, or to speak with KDHE techresponsible for their for a driver with CDL. 2 nical support staff. Please reference the project name children. yrs experience needed. and registration number in any request or comment letter. Copy charges apply. (620) 640-4489 Free clothing & Household Items Available on Wed 10am - 6pm. 509 Chesterfield DR. All donations / non-perishable items gratefully accepted (620) 290-2616

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6/18

2013 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

EHM FENCING is looking for 1 laborer. $8.50/hr. (620) 287-4903

Find it in the Classifieds!

Deadlines! Publication: Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday

LOOKING FOR a Para Therapist (Transitional Living Specialist), helping those with head injuries reach a path to independence and daily life adjustment. Please contact TRUST HomeCare @ 316-683-7700 or via email @ info@trusthomecare.co m

Deadline Is:

2pm Tuesday 2pm Wednesday 11am Thursday 2pm Thursday

Classified Advertising

/ 4FWFOUI 4U t (BSEFO $JUZ ,4 Z Z ,4 FYU DMBTTJĂśFET!($5FMFH 5 5FMFH SBN DPN

WEDNESDAY, June 19, 2013

Help Wanted MARKET RESEARCH company seeks individuals to evaluate service at local establishments in Garden City. We are in specific need of people who own or have access to a Buick, Suzuki, GMC, Chevy, or Volvo. Apply FREE: www.bestmark.com or call 1-800-969-8477. MECHANIC NEEDED Dodge City Express/ Sallee Inc is looking for an experienced tractor/ trailer mechanic for our Garden City shop. Tools are required. We offer a great vacation package, 401K, and health insurance. If you would like to be a part of a fast growing, energetic company, please call Cary at (620) 640-1462. OPENINGS IN the food service & housekeeping department. Apply in person at St. Catherine Hospital cafeteria. POSITION AVAILABLE in swine finishing facility in Scott County. Good schedule and benefits. Call (620) 874-1017

American State Bank in Garden City currently has a part time teller position available for a motivated individual. This person will be responsible for various duties, including the handling of deposit transactions and providing excellent customer service. The successful candidate must have good computer and office machine skills, along with good communication skills. Banking experience will be a plus. Please apply at 1901 E. Mary St. in Garden City or call 620-271-0123. Equal Opportunity Employer.

224597

HELP US HELP YOU! Advertise in the classifieds.

Electrician’s Helper and Warehouse Assistant/Delivery Driver Empire Repair Services, LLC (an affiliate of Cattle Empire, LLC, one of the largest family owned commercial cattle feeding operations in the United States) is seeking the right candidate to fill the positions of: 1) Electrician’s Helper which would assist with the installation of conduit, wiring, and other electrical components. Experience is a plus, but willing to train. The successful candidate must possess a valid driver’s license, willingness to learn, and a positive attitude. 2.) Warehouse Assistant/Delivery Driver which will be responsible for receiving and delivering parts and chemicals, maintaining building/grounds, and assisting with inventory. CDL w/HAZMAT endorsement or ability to obtain both is required. We offer a competitive salary, health insurance, and 401K plan. Forward resume to: Empire Repair Services, LLC Human Resources 1174 Empire Circle Satanta, KS 67870

Equal opportunity employer M/F/D/V

Advertising Deadlines Classified Line & Garage Sale Ads

Publish Date Monday Tuesday Bargains Plus Wednesday Thursday La Semana Friday Saturday

Deadline Time \ Date 11am Friday 2pm Monday 2pm Thursday 2pm Tuesday 2pm Wednesday 11am Thursday 11am Thursday 2pm Thursday

Display Advertising

Display Ads are ads with art, logos, borders and pictures. Publish Date Deadline Time \ Date Monday 4pm Thursday Tuesday 4pm Friday Wednesday 4pm Monday Thursday 4pm Tuesday Friday Classifieds 9am Wednesday Friday News Pages 4pm Wednesday Saturday 10am Thursday

LEGAL NOTICES

www.cattle-empire.net Click on employment opportunities hr@cattle-empire.net, or fax: (620) 649-2291 224419

Radiologic Technologist Positions Available Scott County Hospital is seeking a two full time Radiologic Technologists to work M-F with rotating call. Qualifying candidates for one position will have their CT Certification, or experience is preferred, but will consider training the right person. MRI experience a plus, but not required. The second position, Mammography Certification or registry eligibility is required, ARDMS Certification or registry eligible is preferred, willing to train in CT. Scott County Hospital has been in their new facility just over one year. The Imaging Department has the following modalities: Diagnostic X-ray, CT, DEXA, Mammography, Nuclear Medicine, Sonography, and MRI-Mobile service. We are a progressive 25 bed Critical Access Hospital in Western Kansas. We offer competitive wages, great working environment, and excellent benefits. Pre-employment physical, alcohol/drug screening, immunization titer, physical health assessment and TB skin test required. Applications available through Human Resources, Scott County Hospital, 201 Albert Avenue, Scott City, KS 67871 or call 620.872.7772.

224590

Water Systems Resource Manager

Publish Date Deadline Time \ Date Monday 4pm Thursday Tuesday 4pm Friday Wednesday 4pm Monday Thursday 4pm Tuesday Friday 9am Wednesday Saturday 10am Thursday Saturday & Sunday are not working days. Lengthy notices may require additional working time. Please be advised: The Garden City Telegram is published daily Monday - Saturday; except for the following observed holidays: New Year’s Day, Martin Luther King Jr, Birthday, President’s Day, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Columbus Day, Veterans Day, Thanksgiving Day, Christmas Day. Holidays will advance deadlines one day. Submit copy and letters of instruction via email to legalnotices@gctelegram.com. Additionally, legal notices may be hand delivered to our office or mailed to Legal Advertising, Garden City Telegram, 310 N. 7th, PO Box 958, Garden City, KS 67846.

Please Note!

PLEASE READ your ad carefully the first day it appears and report any errors before the next edition deadline; errors should be reported immediately as The Garden City Telegram will be responsible for the first incorrect insertion only. Ads are subject to approval before publication; we may edit, refuse, reject, reclassify or cancel an ad at any time. ALL RENTAL or real estate property advertisements in this newspaper are subject to The Federal Housing Act of 1968, as amended, which makes it illegal to advertise any ''preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex or national origin, or an intention to make any discrimination.'' This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising which is in violation of the law. Amendments, effective March 12, 1989, added 'handicap' and 'familial' status to discrimination categories. ALL EMPLOYMENT advertisements in this newspaper are subject to the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, which makes it illegal to advertise "indicating any preference, limitation, specification, or discrimination, based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin," except where such is a bona fide occupational qualification for employment. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising which is in violation of the law. Amendments, effective March 12, 1969, added ''handicap'' and ''familial'' status to discrimination categories.

Prepayment is required.

The City of Garden City, Kansas is currently accepting applications for a Water Systems Resource Manager. The successful candidate will be responsible for efficient and effective water resource planning, water quality monitoring, water conservation and education programs and regulatory reporting. Must have experience operating a public water system, including the management of personnel, the assessment of capital and equipment needs, major project management, budget preparation, rate analysis, proven conflict resolution skills and the ability to interact and be productive in a cross disciplinary team environment. Please submit Letter of application including salary history, resume, and three work-related references in confidence to Human Resource Director, PO Box 998, Garden City, KS 67846; 620-276-1175 (phone); 620-276-1169 (fax); michelle.stegman@gardencityks.us (e-mail). For more information view recruitment profile at www.garden-city.org. Applications will be accepted until June 21, 2013. EOE

Part-Time Bank Teller

224075

We accept VISA or MASTERCARD over the phone. Checks may be mailed to Classified Advertising, Garden City Telegram, PO Box 958, Garden City, KS 67846 - your ad will start on receipt of payment. Cash, Checks and Credit Cards may also be accepted in our office.

The Garden City Telegram Classified Advertising Dept

310 N. 7th, Garden City, Kansas Monday - Friday 7:30am-5:30pm PH 620-276-6862 ext 501 Advertising FX 866-757-6842 classifieds@gctelegram.com Advertising Services Also Available At:

Bargains Plus Consignment

219736

308 N. 7th, Garden City, Kansas Tuesday- Saturday 10:00am-4:00pm PH 620-271-7484

Sell It In The Classifieds There’s lots (and houses) for sale in the classifieds.

The Garden City Telegram (620)276-6862, Press 3


THE Garden City Telegram Miscellaneous for Sale

RENEWAL BY Andersen, the fastest growing replacement window diPayless Shoe Source vision of Andersen Windows, is seeking Top now accepting Salespeople with a applications for all leadership positions proven track record of closing at 30%+.! We Apply online at — provide an Exclusive Incareersatpayless.com dustry Leading Product PSI TRANSPORT is al- and Sales Methodology ways looking for Good Training along with Company Livestock PRE-SET APPOINTHaulers.! Competitive MENTS in Western Pay, Life/Health/Dental Kansas. Our top perBenefits paid in Full for formers earn over Employees, Discounted $100,000 by selling for Family, 401K and America's Greatest and Bonus Program Avail- Most Trusted Brand. able.!Contact (785) !This is a full time op675-3477 for more in- portunity requiring your formation. ability to work days, PT BOOKKEEPER nights, and some weekneeded for local truck- ends. We provide the ing company. Call Deb- opportunity and you bie at (620) 271-3593 provide the ABILITY! Why waste your time at between 2-5pm only. a sales job when you SONIC EAST is now could have a real cahiring for evening car reer at Renewal by Anhops and cooks. Apply dersen. Call Byron at in person at 1313 E 620-275-2226. Kansas. ! TRUCK DRIVING positions available. Class A CDL required. 2 years experience. Call (620) 275-5499. Did you know that posting signs on utility poles and street signs, in street right-of-ways, or other public property is prohibited in Garden City. All such signs will be removed without notice! Your cooperation is greatly appreciated. The City of Garden City Ordinance No. 1858 www.gctelegram.com

SPEAKERS, CARPET, DISHWASHER Fullrange speakers w/18� subwoofers. $550 for all. 2 speakers with 12� woofers & horns. $120/pair. 13.5x30 ft. carpet piece w/pad. GE Dishwasher $50. Call Bob Artz (620) 874-4416 or Linda Artz (620) 214-1656. STORAGE CONTAINERS: 8x20 or 8x40. BIG L SALES , 620-276-3189

Wearing Apparel Wedding Gowns, Prom Dresses & QuinceaĂąera Dresses!

We currently have a wide variety of wedding and prom dresses! Come in and see our beautiful selection! We are now accepting formal gowns & dresses for consignment. Items must be freshly clean and in “ready-to-wear� condition.

Bargain Blowout

Bargain Blowout

B5

COMPLETE SET of Green Depression Glass, Tea Cart, Beautiful 8-seat Cherry wood table with mother of pearl inlaid design, lamps and more!!! See at Bargains Plus Consignment, 308 N. 7th, Garden City. Tuesday-Saturday 10am-4pm. www.gctbargains.com

Wide variety of collectable State plates. Only $2 each! See at Bargains Plus Consignment, 308 N. 7th, Garden City. TuesdaySaturday 10am-4pm. www.gctbargains.com

Pets FREE KITTENS TO give away to good home! Call (620)

Bargains Plus Consignment 308 N. 7th, Garden City Tue-Sat 10am-4pm.

Love seat in beautful condition $250. Couches $100-$200. Vintage, cool green STURDIBILT STORwww.gctbargains.com sofa sleeper! See at AGE SHEDS, all sizes. Bargains Plus ConsignBIG L SALES, 1102 Sporting Equipment ment, 308 N. 7th, GarEast Fulton, Garden SAVAGE MODEL 112 den City. TuesdayCity. 223 with heavy barrell Saturday 10am-4pm. & 3-9 scope & tripod. www.gctbargains.com MY NAME IS SAM. BARGAINS PLUS $400; Steoger model I!m a sweet gentleman CONSIGNMENT 2000 semiautomatic 12 looking for a soft lap 308 N. 7th ga. shotgun, $300, FREE! YOU HAUL! and a sunny window. Garden City. shoots 3� & 2 3/4� WOOD PALLETS I!m declawed in my Tuesday- Saturday loads; 22 Marlin semiPick up in the alley front paws and have 10am-4pm automaqtic & 3-9 behind The Telegram been neutered. This gctbargains.com scope, stainless model homebody is 9 years 310 N. 7th Street 6055 k. $200. (620) Household Items young and I still have Garden City 353-4315. lots of life in me. LookKENMORE SIDE-BY ing for a sweet and lov-SIDE refrigerator & Bargain Blowout Miscellaneous for Sale electric stove. $375 to- BEAUTIFUL CHERRY An addition to the fam- ing human to compli2 LIVING room chairs, gether. (620) 640-7326 ENTERTAINMENT ily on the way? Check ment my spunky attisofa, rocker recliner, C EN T ER , L AM P S, out our van and SUV tude. Free to great home — If interested in Sharp officer copier, of- Spl it out; get btr reslts. BAR STOOL, ANme, call 620-397-3756. fice desk chair. (620) Did you get that? TIQUE R O C K I N G classifieds. 275-7389. What we!re saying is... CHAIR AND MORE! Bargains Plus ConsignHOPPER?? GENIE?? 224358 Spell it out! And get ment, 308 N. 7th, GarWe have BOTH!! Call better results with your den City. Tuesday- Satus for monthly prices 10am-4pm. and comparisons. Infor- ad! Ads with fewer ab- u r d a y www.gctbargains.com breviations are easier mation, Upgrades, Full service, all from!your to read. Give AWAY - Ink BarLOCAL Retailer! rels. Pick up on the BIG HEADLINES Jay D's Satellite east side of The TeleGET THE JOB DONE! 800-952-9634 gram, 310 N. 7th, GarHealthy Community Mobilizer www.jaydsatellite.com Advertise the right way den City. in the classifieds. FINNEY COUNTY COMMUNITY HEALTH Classifieds Work! 224281 COALITION - is seeking a part time Healthy Community Mobilizer to coordinate the Live Well Finney County Grant Project. In partnership with Kansas Health Foundation and Western Kansas Community Foundation this is a part time position for the next 3 years averaging 15 hours per week. Salary is $20.00 per hour.

Service Directory Call the Classified Department to Advertise. 620-276-6862 ext. 501

GENERAL CONSTRUCTION Roofing, Siding, Framing Call (620) 390-9768 for estimates

J&H Upholstery Dining Room Chairs Tractor Seats, Motorcycle Seats & More! 3410 N. 8th, GC (620) 521-7073 LAWN RANGER Landscaping, Stone Edging, Planting, Mulch & Rock Laying, Shrub Trimming, Mowing & Fertilizing. Insured. Free Estimates. Call Alonzo 290-9406.

MJT CONSTRUCTION

Roofing, Siding, Remodeling, Windows, doors & concrete. Free estimates.

Call Tim at (620) 521-2181

NEXSTEP LAWN CARE

Full Service Mowing & Trimming Yard Clean-Up Vi / MC Accepted (620) 276-6699

51546

Help Wanted

Specializing

52877

In Interior Carpentry

Paramount

Carpentry

620-260-6600

WILLIAMS

General Construction & Repair Residential & Commercial Licensed & Insured (620) 640-2010

TheSHEET

221415

METAL Shop

AT HARVEST AUTO L.L.C.

Custom Sheet Metal Fabrication %VDUXPSL 'MBTIJOH r /P +PC 5PP 4NBMM 0S -BSHF

+VMJVT "QQFMIBOT t 155 Harvest St. (Behind Mia Rumba)

Job responsibilities include: coordinating activities of the Live Well Finney County Grant Project, setting up meetings, taking minutes, be familiar with the Safe Routes to School and Complete Street plans, provide training for Coalition members on these plans, maintain a website and Facebook page and work closely with staff of Finney County Community Health Coalition. Qualified applicants will have excellent people skills, computer skills, data management and reporting skills, enjoy pubic speaking and have the ability to work with City/County staff and community business leaders. 28090

224582

Perfect Family Home! 2 bedrooms up and 2 bedrooms down, family room down, 2 baths, ALL NEW FLOORING, APPLIANCES, hot water heater and updates.

EDUCATION AND EXPERIENCE REQUIREMENTS: Required: Associates Degree and/or 2-3 years experience with non-profit or social service work. Relevant volunteer experience may be substituted for work experience. Ability to work effectively with people of all social, economic, racial and cultural backgrounds, ability to maintain confidentiality and professional standards, ability to maintain an independent role with individuals and groups. Computer proficiency in WORD and EXCEL and strong records maintenance skills and organizational skills. Preferred: Bachelors Degree in City Planning, Social Service or health related field with human service coursework. Bilingual English/ Spanish, knowledge and experience with Power Point a plus.

• Tree Service • Snow Removal • Firewood Lowest Prices Free Estimates Licensed & Insured Workers Compensation

Troy Hawker, Owner Operator

33622

Help Wanted

WEDNESDAY, June 19, 2013

271-0478 • (cell) 640-1605

Please send resume to Verna Weber, 310 E. Walnut, Ste 202, Garden City, KS 67846, Email: fchd.vweber@gcnet.com. 620-765-1185. Deadline is June 24, 2013.

Priced to sell!

224507

Call 620-260-7367 for showing. 224573

POLICE DISPATCHER The Garden City Police Department is accepting applications for full-time POLICE DISPATCHERS (COMMUNICATOR). PRIMARY RESPONSIBILITIES include: Answering telephone and emergency 911 calls, dispatching police, fire and other emergency personnel, and recording pertinent information and computer entry. REQUIRED QUALIFICATIONS include: A high school diploma or GED, previous experience in communications, secretarial or working with the public preferred, must be a U.S. Citizen and a valid Kansas driver’s license required. Typing skills of 30 WPM is preferred. Personnel are assigned rotating shifts. SELECTION PROCESS: Includes typing test, written test, psychological eval., medical exam, oral board interview, background investigation, polygraph & urinalysis/drug screen. SALARY RANGE: $26,070 to $41,085 annually. Pay incentives are given for college, previous experience and bi-lingual skills. The City of Garden City offers an excellent benefit package, which includes family health insurance, vacation, sick leave and retirement benefits. A $1000.00 Sign On Bonus is being offered to all individuals hired as Police Dispatchers. A completed City application is required. Apply online at www.garden-city. org or at the City Administrative Center, 2nd Floor, 301 N. 8th St. Testing and Interviews will be conducted on an ongoing basis. For more information about the testing process and to apply online, please visit www.garden-city.org. EOE

224348

The Classifieds: Get it here


B6

WEDNESDAY, June 19, 2013

the Garden City Telegram

Farmers Services

Motorcycles & ATVs

Auto Parts & Services

Real Estate

Real Estate

Mobile Homes

Available for Wheat Harvest — 2 13,000 bu cone bottom bins with aeration fans. Near Friend, KS. Johnny Crist, (620) 272-1207.

02 HARLEY Wide Glide, purple. 22k miles. Priced under book $7,500. 01 Harley Sportster, Candy Red. 12k miles. Lowered for lady rider. $4,500 OBO. 620-384-5377

Cargo cover and sliding cargo divider. Fits Nissan Xterra. Great for traveling. Excellent condition. See at Bargains Plus Consignment, 308 N. 7th, Garden City. TuesdaySaturday 10am-4pm. www.gctbargains.com

1004 N 6th St. Beautiful 2 bedroom, 2 bath, stucco bungalow. Lovely kitchen with granite. New inside & out. English garden & koi pond. $149,500. (620) 275-7544

660 S. RANDY LANE 1729 sq ft, 4 bed, 2 bath geodestic home in horse friendly neighborhood. Lots of upgrades throughout the house. All kitchen appliances included! $128,000 Call Clint at (620) 290-5008 for info.

SPECIAL GOVT Programs for Mobile Homes $0 Down for Land Owners.! FREE Construction Loans.! Basements, Garages, Storm Shelters, etc. Used Homes $19,900-$69,900.! All Credit Types Accepted.! Habla Espanol!!! 866-858-6862

Farm Buildings

ASSORTED STEEL Bldgs Up to 50% off cost to put up. Erection 2001 APRILIA FALCO info available. Source# 1000, $4000. (620) Trailers 295-0723 18X 800-964-8335 NEW UTILITY & cargo trailers . Big & Small! Autos 2005 DYNA Wide Glide BIG L SALES , 1102 Harley Davidson. Black 2000 FORD Windstar.. East Fulton, Garden Call after 6pm. (620) Cherry. 88 cubic in. For City. more info call (620) 275-4245. Residential Rentals 640-2805. 2001 DODGE Grand 1 BEDROOM house, Caravan ES. Fully 2006 HARLEY DAVID- unfinsihed basment. loaded - all bells! VERY SON Fatboy Motorcy- Located in Ingalls. $550 CLEAN! $4800 OBO. cle. Sunburst candy / $550. No pets. (620) red. Only 6,622 miles. (620) 640-8611. Always garaged, Willie 272-2049. 2006 HONDA Accord G. skull accessories, 2 bed, 2 bath duplex, LX - V6, 4 Door, 76K lots of chrome, leather fireplace, garage. $795/ Great Car in!Great saddle bags & all origi- $795. (620) 640-3838. Condition.!White w/Tan nal parts included. Commercial Rentals Cloth Interior.!Asking $ 1 0 , 5 0 0 . (620) $9,900. Please call 640-1954. FOR RENT: 40! x 123! (620) 277-8070. Don"t x 14! Warehouse/Shop 2008 HONDA Goldwing Building with offices, miss this deal! GL. Over $2k in bathrooms, and 20! x LOCAL TRUCK park- add-ons. 27,500 miles. 13! D.S. door. 150 N Ining. Call 620-290-0582 Excellent condition. dustrial Drive. (620) or 620-272-1892 $16,900. Call (620) 275-6142 or (620) Selling your vehicle? 640-8319 for more in- 640-4149 Did you know parking formation. your vehicle on city 2009 YAMAH TTR 230. SHOP & office building. streets, right-of-ways Very clean stock bike, 923 Zerr Rd. $950 and other public prop- good tires. Good condi- month. 620- 276-2053. erty is prohibited in tion. $2100 OBO. (620) Garden City? The City 335-0180. of Garden City ordinance No 86-2 (88) FOR SALE: 2009 states in part “No per- Honda Shadow Spirit. son shall park a vehicle Black, windshield, only miles. Call upon any roadway for 2200 or the principal purpose 6 2 0 - 2 9 0 - 7 0 8 0 of: (a) Displaying such 620-335-5515 Real Estate vehicle for sale (b) 2303 Lee Washing, greasing or SELL YOUR 3 bedroom, S/A garage, repairing such vehicle CAR, BOAT or fenced yard, almost finexcept repairs necessiCYCLE shed basement. tated by an emerPlace an ad! $115,000. gency�. Violations of (620) 276-6299 this ordinance May re276-6862 x 1 sult in a $40 fine and court costs.

101 Lakeview Court, Cimarron 4 bedroom, 3 bath, 3 car garage, granite countertops, wood floors, beautiful landscaping. Close to schools. Quiet Neighborhood. (620) 855-0460 (620) 357-4067 1713 PEPPERWOOD Ct. 4 bedroom, 2 bath, 1548 sq ft home. $295,000 (620) 640-2951

2611 N. Coachman Well maintained home in nice NE neighborhood. 5 bdrm, 3 bath. 3,057 sq. ft. Large kitchen, bedrooms, and family room. $208,000. Call 620-640-0455. See www.forsalebyowner. com for more info. 2615 Coachman Ln 5 bed, 3.5 bath, 1690 Sq Ft, full fin basement, brick, open flr plan, lg fam rm, main flr laundry, covered patio, D/A garage, landscaped, walk to great schools, quiet NE neighborhood.. $235,000. Gus & Sandra Martinez, 620-272-7903. www.gctbargains.com

STAPP’S AUTO SALES

912 ANDERSON 3 bedroom, 2.25 bath.Nice, quiet neighborhood. 2 car garage. (620) 271-2225

203 E. Laurel, Garden City, 275-0284 www.HeritageRealty.biz Yo Si Hablo EspaĂąol

214995

Garage Sales MONSTER SALE Civic Center 1000 W Patterson Ulysses, KS Sat. June 22 10am-3pm Crafts • Baked Goods Garage Sale Items Anything Goes!

LAKIN — NICE 2800 sq.ft. home in the country on 66 acres near river. 4 bedroom, 3 bath, with D/ A garage. 40x60 shop, underground spring fed pond. Call (620) 355-7653 or (620) 271-3685.

2003 GMC Z71 pickup. 180,000 miles, extra clean, runs great, everything works. $8000 OBO. (620) 277-8441.

Securitas Security Services USA, Inc.

EOE M/F/D/V

No Calls to Make No Visits to Your Home, No Hassles! It’s Fast, Easy & Fun! We’ll sell your items and send you a check. Call 271-7484 for more information on adding your items, valued at $100 or more, to our

Mobile Homes 1999 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, $17,000; 1998 2 bedroom, 2 bath, $15,000. Call (620) 276-6860. BRUNGARDT HOWER Ward Elliott & Pfeifer L.C. is seeking CPA or CPA candidate with 3+ years experience for our Garden City office. Experienced tax professional with strong tax background needed. Knowledge of agriculture or oil and gas taxation beneficial. Competitive salary and benefit package. Please send resume to Personnel Coordinator, 302 N. Fleming, Suite 6, Garden City, KS 67846 or email to rogerb@bhcpa.com

Garden Valley Retirement Village is accepting applications for the following positions:

Pickups & Trucks

Go to www.SecuritasJobs.com Apply NOW – Online Anytime 24/7. Location: Select Wichita Kansas Call Diane at 800-794-0657

Need Money? SELL YOUR STUFF

MOVE IN READY!! 2401 N. Estes Court 4 bed, 2 bath, stainless steel appliances, sprinkler system, fenced yard, guttering.! $175,000 (620) 640-5716.

LLC

214157

Accepting applications for dependable candidates with demonstrated quality customer service skills for 2nd and 3rd shifts. Data entry skills and dispatch experience are a plus. Will train candidates who meet background screening requirements. Vacation, Insurance benefits and 401k

222439

Check us out at

www.stappsautosales.com

SECURITY OFFICERS For Holcomb, KS

Bargains Plus Consignments Store, or stop by 308 N. Seventh St. between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. Tuesday - Saturday. t -PDBUFE +VTU 4PVUI PG UIF (BSEFO $JUZ Telegram. t 0QFO BN QN t 5VFTEBZ 4BUVSEBZ t / 4FWFOUI 4U (BSEFO $JUZ ,T

XXX HDUCBSHBJOT DPN A Division of the

Activity Assistant - Part-Time RN/LPN CNA

Apply today and be a part of Garden Valley’s journey to success. Contact HR at 620-275-9651 or email your resume to brangel@gvrvhealth.com.

Motorcycles & ATVs

Garden Valley Retirement Village 1505 E. Spruce, Garden City, KS

224447

2001 HARLEY Davidson Fatboy. 88 cubic in. 10,800 actual miles. Includes helmet, cover, luggage, and battery charger. Dealer serviced. (620) 275-5903.

Check out the classifieds!

CAR & TRUCK SUPERCENTERS OVER 100 PRE-OWNED VEHICLES

in-stock!

2004 GMC Yukon Denali

1997 Mercury Grand Marquis

$

169

$

* 2010 Pontiac G6

$

634110 *$3,995 Selling Price, $800 Customer Cash or Trade Equity Down. 24 months @ 5% A.P.R., W.A.C.

Safety inspected

with our Seal of Confidence!

189

2011 Hyundai Sonata GLS

$

*

157813 *$12,959 Selling Price, $2,600 Customer Cash or Trade Equity Down. 72 months @ 3.25% A.P.R., W.A.C.

219

*

229

*

#213151 *$12,995 Selling Price, $2,600 Customer Cash or Trade Equity Down. 60 months @ 5.8% A.P.R., W.A.C.

Visit

156916 *$17,499 Selling Price, $3,500 Customer Cash or Trade Equity Down. 84 months @ 3.25% A.P.R., W.A.C.

BuyGGAuto.com!

Stock# Year, Make & Model

Stock# Year, Make & Model

Stock# Year, Make & Model

Stock# Year, Make & Model

Stock# Year, Make & Model

LUXURY 4 & 2 DOOR 149711 08 Buick Lucerne CXL 187462 08 Buick Lucerne CXL 120096 07 Buick Lucerne CXL 256925 06 Buick Lucerne CXL

083139 067158 063918 104404 075905 346231 271439 553183 029734 647074 202308

SMALL SPORT UTILITY 362554 12 Hyundai Tucson LTD FWD 693034 07 Jeep Liberty Sport 107913 07 Jeep Compass LTD FWD 061429 07 Honda CR-V EX FWD

206025 042451 114739 165766 563902 671417

LARGE 4WD TRUCKS 107519 11 GMC 1500 Denali CC 263881 10 GMC 1500 Denali CC 150211 09 GMC 2500 LB SLE CC 155225 09 GMC 2500 HD SLE LWB EC 122312 08 Chevy 2500HD LT CC E60787 08 Ford F350 XLT Leather CC 117561 07 GMC 3500 EC WT Classic Bale Bed 331380 06 GMC 1500 SLT Z71 CC C57382 06 Ford F150 King Ranch CC 569859 06 Honda Ridgeline RTL

FULL SIZE 4 DOOR 118567 11 Chevy Impala LT 252586 10 Chevy Impala LS 168197 09 Pontiac G8 GT 647653 08 Mercury Grand Marquis 625439 07 Dodge Magnum RT 180269 06 Chevy Impala LT 280890 03 Buick LeSabre Ltd MID SIZE 4 DOOR 379646 12 Chevy Malibu LT 298791 10 Buick LaCrosse CXS 206031 10 Buick LaCrosse CXS Touring 119745 10 Dodge Charger SXT 103015 09 Ford Fusion SE IMPORTS 167189 13 Hyundai Elantra Limited 313520 12 Hyundai Sonata LTD

11 Hyundai Sonata LTD 11 Hyundai Sonata SE 11 Hyundai Sonata SE 11 Hyundai Elantra GLS 11 Hyundai Sonata SE 10 Mazda 3 10 Mazda 3 07 Toyota Camry XLE 07 Misubishi Eclypse Spyder Conv 05 Mercedes-Benz C230 02 Subaru Legacy LTD GT AWD

COMPACT 4 DOOR 123005 12 Chevy Cruze LT 232039 09 Ford Focus SE COMPACT 2 DOOR 168248 05 Pontiac Grand Am GT VANS 415871 250468 187409 210502 219754 521305

12 Kia Sedona LX 10 Chrysler Town & Country Touring 08 Chevy 3500 Express EXT 08 Chevy Uplander LS 06 Chevy Uplander LT 03 Toyota Sienna XLE

404 S. 2nd Ave., Dodge City, KS CVZHHBVUPT DPN t 1-800-279-8653

SPORT UTILITY 279832 12 GMC Terrain SLT-1 FWD A89641 11 Ford Edge Ltd. FWD 183365 10 GMC Acadia SLT AWD 233456 10 GMC Terrain SLE FWD 318540 10 Mazda CX-7 AWD Touring 392522 10 Hyundai Santa Fe GLS FWD 198856 10 Acadia SLT FWD 154831 09 Buick Enclave CXL FWD 129249 09 GMC Envoy SLT 4WD 501414 09 Nissan X-Terra B01663 08 Ford Explorer EB AWD

08 Mazda CX-7 Sport FWD 08 Hyundai Veracruz LTD FWD 07 Hyundai Santa Fe Ltd AWD 06 Chevy Equinox LT FWD 05 Buick Rendezvous CXL FWD 05 Chrysler Pacifica Touring

LARGE SPORT UTILITY 210636 12 GMC Yukon XL Denali 262336 10 GMC Yukon Denali 111998 07 Chevy Tahoe LT 2WD 242741 02 Chevy Tahoe LS 2WD SMALL TRUCKS 158491 09 GMC Canyon SLE CC 2WD LARGE 2WD TRUCKS 203860 10 Chevy 1500 LS SWB 290874 10 GMC 1500 SLE EC B05564 10 Ford F150 SXT EC 104960 09 Chevy 1500 LT CC B74048 07 Ford F150 Lariat CC 127289 04 GMC 1500 SLT EC

BUDGET LOT SPECIAL! 275748 03 Buick LeSabre Ltd 280788 03 Cadillac DeVille 601198 03 Lincoln Town Car Sig Series 640500 00 Dodge Dakota Sport QC 2WD 186005 00 GMC Yukon SLT 4WD 109139 00 Dodge 1500 Laramie SLT EC WHOLESALE 555402 11 Chrysler 200 LTD Convertible 850085 05 Dodge 2500 HD SLT QC Flatbed 301294 97 Pontiac Grand Prix 4dr

OVER 120 USED

224462

CARS, TRUCKS, VANS & SUVS Over 120 years experience in sales & service

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