Garden City Telegram June 27, 2013

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TENNIS: Favorites fall in chaotic day at Wimbledon. PAGE A11

SHOWCASE: Finney County Museum features photo exhibit. PAGE A3 n - Sum t a S p

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THURSDAY, June 27, 2013

75 cents

Volume 84, No. 149

1 section

12 pages

Making plans for the weekend? Check the weather forecast at GCTelegram.com/Weather.

Supreme Court gives gay marriage historic boost WASHINGTON (AP) — In a historic day for gay rights, the Supreme Court gave the nation’s legally married gay couples equal federal footing with all other married Americans on Wednesday and also cleared the way for same-sex marriages to resume in California. In deciding its first cases on the issue, the high court did not issue the sweeping declaration sought by gay rights advocates that would have allowed same-sex couples to marry anywhere in the country. But in two rulings, both by bare 5-4 majorities,

the justices gave gay marriage supporters encouragement in confronting the nationwide patchwork of laws that outlaw such unions in roughly three dozen states. Gay-rights supporters cheered and hugged outside the court. Opponents said they mourned the rulings and vowed to keep up their fight. In the first of the narrow rulings in its final session of the term, the court wiped away part of a federal anti-gay marriage law, the Defense of Marriage Act, that has kept legally married same-sex couples from

Alleged gang member arrested in Texas

receiving tax, health and pension benefits that are otherwise available to married couples. Justice Anthony Kennedy, joined by the four liberal justices, said the purpose of the law was to impose a disadvantage and “a stigma upon all who enter into same-sex marriages made lawful by the unquestioned authority of the states.” President Barack Obama praised the court’s ruling against the federal marriage act, labeling the law “discrimination enshrined in law.”

“It treated loving, committed gay and lesbian couples as a separate and lesser class of people,” Obama said in a statement. “The Supreme Court has righted that wrong, and our country is better off for it.” House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said he was disappointed in the outcome of the federal marriage case and hoped states continue to define marriage as the union of a man and a woman. Boehner, as speaker, had stepped in as the main defender of the law before the court after the Obama administration declined to defend it.

By ANGIE HAFLICH

ahaflich@gctelegram.com

Another of the individuals identified in the Garden City Police Department’s investigation into alleged local gang activity, known as Operation Frontline, was arrested Saturday. According to police, Victor Guzman, Amarillo, Texas, was arrested in Amarillo by the Potter County, Texas, Sheriff’s Office on a Finney County warrant for allegations of aggravated battery and incitement to riot. Guzman was identified during Operation Frontline, which now has resulted in the arrests of 29 individuals, all believed to be associated with a local gang. Guzman is being held in the Potter County Jail until his extradition hearing, which will take place sometime next week in Potter County, according to Potter County Sheriff’s Deputy Ira Selman. Finney County Sheriff Kevin Bascue said that during that hearing, Guzman will either sign a waiver of extradition or refuse to do so. If he signs it, arrangements to transport him back to Garden City will be made, Bascue said. “If he refuses to (sign the waiver of) extradition, then the process to obtain a governor’s warrant will begin. Upon receipt of a governor’s warrant, we will make arrangements to transport him back to Garden City,” Bascue said. One other individual targeted as part of Operation Frontline, Joaquin Ceniceros of Ulysses, has not yet been located. He is wanted on an allegation of sale of cocaine. Anyone with information regarding Ceniceros’ whereabouts is encouraged to contact the GCPD at 2761300. Those wishing to remain anonymous may contact Crime Stoppers at 275-7807 or text GCTIP and tip information to 847411 (Tip411).

Yoga in the yard

FCEDC approves new business incentive policy By SCOTT AUST

saust@gctelegram.com

The Finney County Economic Development Corp. Board of Directors approved a new cash incentive policy on Wednesday that could be used to aid existing business expansions and new business recruitment. The policy would offer $1,000 for every quality job a company creates as part of an expansion or relocation to Finney County. The new policy is similar to the method that was used to aid TexOkKan in its relocation several years ago in which the company received cash for every new job created over a five-year period. The policy still must go to the Garden City Commission and Finney County Commission for approval. Money for incentives would come from the joint economic development fund that both the city and county contribute funds to each year, and would be limited by available funds. FCEDC board members indicated cash incentives See FCEDC, Page A5

Brad Nading/Telegram

Marisela Loza, 4, left, and her sister, Mariela, 6, as well as others attending a family yoga class, follow the direction of Carly Smith, foreground, during a stretching exercise outside the Finney County Public Library. Smith is the local library’s intra-library loan coordinator.

About 38,000 hay bales destroyed in fire By ANGIE HAFLICH

ahaflich@gctelegram.com

Becky Malewitz/Telegram

Fire and smoke rise from the hay bales burning in Moscow on May 30.

What’s Inside

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Annie’s Advice . . Classified . . . . . . . Comics . . . . . . . . . Lottery . . . . . . . . .

A5 A8 A7 A2

Obituaries . . . . . . A2 Opinion . . . . . . . . A4 State . . . . . . . . . . . A3 TV Listings . . . . . . A6 Weather . . . . . . . A12

A fire that started May 28 near Moscow and destroyed an estimated 38,000 hay bales has been out since June 5, but Abengoa Bioenergy personnel continue to spread the remaining hay out to check for hot spots. Stevens County Emergency Services Coordinator Rodney Kelling said that the Stevens County and Moscow fire departments turned the situation over

Market Prices Grain prices at the Garden City Co-op Wheat...........6.69 Corn..............7.25

Milo..............6.65 Soybeans....14.85

to Abengoa Bioenergy, the company that owns most of the hay bales, on June 5. Executive Vice President of Abengoa, Chris Standlee, said that Abengoa personnel have been working on the scene to ensure there are no more hot spots. “The fire is out. There are no flames, but what we’re doing is making sure we spread everything out really well and grate it out and make sure there are no hot spots or anything like that.

Schwieterman Inc. reported Chicago Live Cattle Futures: June Aug. Oct. High........... 121.87......122.42.....125.52 Low............ 120.87......121.07.....122.40 Stand......... 121.05......122.25.....125.40

It’s just kind of a long process. It’s a tough thing to do, but we’re going to be done with that in the next couple of days,” Standlee said. He said that when Abengoa personnel took over, there were some areas that were still smoldering. “That’s why we’re being real careful, to make sure that that’s going to be completely (out) and cooled down and that sort of See Moscow, Page A5

Weather Forecast Today, mostly sunny and hot, high 104, low 67. Friday, mostly sunny, high 100, low 67. Details on page A12.


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THURSDAY, June 27, 2013

For The Record

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Maxine Clark Jones, 96, died Sunday, June 23, 2013, at her home in Garden City. She was born Aug. 27, 1916, in Coldwater, to Marion and Estella Garten Bratcher. Mrs. Jones had been a resident of Pierceville since 1943 where she was a dedicated helpmate on the farm, driving trucks and cooking for harvest crews all while caring for her children. In 1959, she and her husband moved to Garden City, while continuing to farm. She was a member of Pierceville Federated Church and then the Garden City First United Methodist Church, Order of the Eastern Star and the Senior Center of Finney County. She belonged to the UMW and the Godmothers and also volunteered at St. Catherine Hospital and for Meals on Wheels. On July 23, 1933, she married Lester Clark in Ashland. He died Feb. 14, 1980, in Mesa, Ariz. On Aug. 5, 1983, she married Arthur V. Jones in Crested Butte, Colo. He died April 25, 2011, in Garden City. She also was preceded in death by a son, Terry Clark; two brothers, Laverne and Felton Bratcher; and a sister, Berniece White. Survivors include a daughter, Marian Mason of Garden City; a stepdaughter, Karen Walker and her husband John of Ingalls; two grandsons, Cole Mason of Garden City, and Phil Mason of Lindsey, Okla.; two granddaughters, Leah Kathman of Garden City, and Traci Martinez of Wichita; two stepgrandsons, Ty Walker of Garden City, and Travis Walker of Springfield, Mo.; two stepgranddaughters, Tamara Frescatore of Killeen, Texas, and Terra Simon of Pierceville; nine greatgrandchildren; and four great-great-grandchildren. Funeral will begin at 10:30 a.m. Friday at the First United Methodist Church in Garden City. Burial will be at Sunset Memorial Gardens Cemetery in Garden City. There will be no public calling times. Condolences may be sent at www.priceandsons.com. Memorials are suggested to the Senior Center of Finney County, in care of Price & Sons Funeral Home, 620 N. Main St., Garden City, KS 67846.

Evelyn Ladd, 84, of Garden City, died Saturday, June 22, 2013, at Garden Valley Retirement Village in Garden City. She was born Sept. 6, 1928, in Grand Rapids, Mich., to Claude and Mildred Genevieve G o u l d Trombley. On May 5, 1947, she married Ray E. Ladd in Garden City. He died Oct. 28, 2006. She also was preceded in death by her parents; a son, Kenneth Ladd; and two brothers, Fred Trombley and Charlie Trombley. A Garden City resident since the mid-1940s, Mrs. Ladd worked as an accountant at Brookover Feed Yard and at Renick’s Soda Shop, and as a bookkeeper for the family business, Ladd Services. She also worked at Lee Richardson Zoo and she retired in the 1990s as a veterinary technician from Swords and Smith Animal Hospital. Her love of taking care of animals led her to raise big cats at her home. She also enjoyed cross stitch. Survivors include a daughter, Deborah Guerrette of San Diego; a sister, Francisse Buckingham and her husband Sam of Prairie City, Iowa; two grandchildren; and one great-grandchild. Funeral will begin at 10:30 a.m. Friday at First Christian Church in Garden City. Burial will follow at Valley View Cemetery in Garden City. Visitation hours are 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. today at Garnand Funeral Home in Garden City. Condolences may be emailed to garnandfh@sbcglobal.net. Memorials are suggested to First Christian Church, in care of the funeral home, 412 N. Seventh St., Garden City, KS 67846.

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For mer longtime Garden City resident Rita Hendrickson-Sherman, 65, known as “Grandma Rita” to children e v e r y where, went to be with the Lord on June 18, 2013, in the home she shared with her daughter & son-in-law. She was surrounded by her children, sister & close family members. Rita was born Nov. 14, 1947, the second of four children to Harold and Lois Hendrickson in Garden City, Kansas. She attended school in Guymon, OK., and in 1965 she graduated from Dodge City High School and went on to study at the Women’s College of the University of Denver. She later married Richard Sherman. To this union, two children, Kimberly and Richard “Brandon,” were born. She was a member of The First United Methodist Church in Garden City, prior to moving to Wichita. She was a telephone operator for AT&T for 25 years. Rita was always willing and able to help anyone and everyone. She decorated cakes, enjoyed crocheting & sewing. Every baby in her life has “Grandma Rita” blankets. Rita is sadly missed by her children Kimberly (Barnett) and Bryan White of the home and Richard “Brandon” of Wichita; grandchildren Devin Barnett of Ponca City, OK., Tyler, Andrew and Abigail Barnett of the home, Harmony Sherman of Colorado, Gregory White and Brandy Lindahl of Wichita; great-grandchildren Christina, Hannah and Sean White of the home. Jaymie Ralston, Jayson & Aimee White of Udall, Kan., Rylen Barnett, Ponca City, Okla.; her sister Marsha Davis of Wichita; brother Alan and Vika Hendrickson of Las Vegas, NV., brother-in-law Jim Frantz of Westwood Lakes, CO..; Aunt June Hendrickson of Garden City, Kan.; and many nieces, nephews, great-nieces, great-nephews and many close friends. Rita was preceded in death by her parents and one sister, Linda. Memorial services will be held on Saturday, June 29th, 2013, 2 p.m. at Watson Reflection Pointe Funeral Home. E-condolences may be sent to http://www.watsonfuneral.com.

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• • • •

By RUTH CAMPBELL rcampbell@gcelegram.com

The Garden City Fire Department responded Wednesday afternoon to a bomb threat at the Tyson Fresh Meats plant near Holcomb, but found no signs of an explosive device during a search of the plant. “At this point, it’s a hoax,” Shelton said after firefighters had completed their search Wednesday afternoon. Firefighters responded shortly after 1 p.m. and were at the scene for about two hours. Shelton said a crew of five, a battalion chief and two vehicles were sent to provide support if needed. Finney County Undersheriff John Andrews said the sheriff’s office also responded to the threat, which was made via telephone. A search of the building was conducted by Tyson personnel and nothing was found. Three sheriff’s office units responded. Andrews said the all clear was given at about 3:45 p.m. The plant, which employs about 3,300 people, was in the midst of a shift change

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and was not evacuated, but Andrews said the employees coming on shift were not allowed in. Employees who were still working kept working, he said. Worth Sparkman, manager of public relations for Tyson in Springdale, Ark., said the company received word Wednesday afternoon of the bomb threat. “Since it was the beginning of shift change, many of our employees were already walking out of the plant. We prevented second shift employees from entering the facility. Law enforcement has since investigated and determined it is safe for us to continue operations,” Sparkman said in an email to The Telegram. Andrews said the sheriff’s office is still investigating another bomb threat against Tyson from about two months ago. Wednesday’s case will be investigated as an aggravated criminal threat, which is a level five person felony, he said. The sentencing guideline for a level five person felony could range from 31 months — with a misdemeanor or no record — to 34 months, he said.

Police Beat The following reports were taken from local law enforcement logs:

Garden City Police Department Arrests/ Citations June 19 Rebecca Ann Rocha, 33, 6120 E. Old Post Road, was arrested at 10 p.m. in the 500 block of East Kansas Avenue on a municipal warrant for failure to appear. Lisa Nugent, 36. 408 E. Hazel St., was cited and released at 3:39 p.m. at Dillon’s East, 1305 E. Kansas Ave., on an allegation of theft. June 14 Christoper Allen, 25, Dodge City, was arrested at 9:17 p.m. at the Law Enforcement Center on a municipal bench warrant.

Criminal Damage Monday

Between 10 a.m. Sunday and 5 p.m. Monday in the 2400 block of East Fulton Street, an unknown person damaged a window with a BBgun. Loss $900. Between 5 p.m. Friday and 8 a.m. Monday at Area Mental Health Center, 1111 E. Spruce St., an unknown person damaged a vehicle windshield. Loss $300 Saturday Between 7 p.m. Friday and 7 a.m. Saturday in the 1300 block of Kingsbury Road, an unknown person broke the victim’s vehicle window out. Estimated loss $300. Friday Between 8 p.m. Thursday and 7:30 a.m. Saturday in the 200 block of North Sixth Street, an unknown person damaged a vehicle. Estimated loss $100. Between 5:30 and 11:45 a.m. in the 2300 block of North Seventh Street, a known person damaged home windows. Estimated loss $500. 224708

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DIGHTON — Kaye C. Potter died Wednesday, June 26, 2013, at Garden Valley Retirement Village in Garden City. Boomhower Funeral Home of Dighton will announce arrangements.

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Roundup Briefs Corrections advisory board meeting set The next 25th Judicial District Community Corrections Advisory Board meeting has been scheduled for 5:30 p.m. today. The meeting will be held in the Community Corrections Conference Room, 601 N. Main St., Suite H. Items on the agenda are the fiscal year 2014 Kansas Department of Corrections grant funds, FY 2014 unexpended funds, third quarter outcomes, and policy revisions.

Commission to have special meeting today The Garden City Commission has scheduled a special meeting at 9 a.m. today in the commission chambers at the City Administrative Center, 301 N. Eighth St., to execute a closing certificate and tax compliance agreement needed by the Kansas Municipal Energy Agency for issuing $5 million in revenue bond Series 2013A, as part of the project to build an electric generating station in Garden City. Essentially, the documents will allow KMEA to sell the bonds to help finance the project, and the city’s approval will indicate it agrees with KMEA’s action, according to the city.

THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM

Region & State

THURSDAY, June 27, 2013

A3

Holcomb City Council to consider rezoning land Liquid cattle feed firm wants to start construction July 8. By SCOTT AUST

saust@gctelegram.com

The Holcomb City Council decided Wednesday to schedule a special city council meeting for 6:45 a.m. July 5 to consider rezoning currently un-zoned land near the corner of Main St. and Railroad Ave. to allow a liquid cattle feed company to begin construction. Agridyne, an Illinois-based company, wants to start work by July 8 on a distribution facility in Holcomb.

The company will ship its product in by rail to the site in Holcomb, offload it into a storage facility and then load it into trucks for distribution to its customers throughout the area. The company is working on a 15-year lease agreement with the railroad for a rail spur. Last week, the planning commission recommend against approving the zoning change, based on a question raised by a Holcomb resident about possible odor the facility might generate. Holcomb Mayor Gary Newman said Garden City’s planning and community development staff subsequently called several communities where Agridyne has similar facilities and none of the communities reported any complaints about odor.

Newman said the planning commission recommendation is not binding on the Holcomb council. The city can choose to override the planning commission recommendation at the special meeting next week. An estimated 10 to 15 temporary construction jobs and anywhere from six to 12 permanent jobs could be created by the company. In other business: • The council voted to spend $5,676 to purchase a teeter-totter, slipper slide and super dome jungle-gym type play apparatus for the city park from Nebraska-based company Bluegrass Playgrounds Inc. The equipment should be delivered within four weeks. Council member Brian Rupp said the new equipment will help

improve the park and could also lead to more people using it. “I think for the quality of life of Holcomb we can definitely get that to be an area for people to go out and enjoy a little bit more,” Rupp said. “The upgrades we’ve done by spraying, putting in additional sprinklers, and keeping it green have been a very big positive.” Newman noted the city put in a walking trail that has seen increased usage, and he expects putting more equipment in the park could have the same effect and lead to even more park improvements in time like added benches or maybe more gazebos. • The council approved the appointment of Riley Carey as a probationary firefighter Holcomb Community Fire Department.

Historical Society flea market coming up The Fourth Annual Finney County Historical Society Flea Market is set for 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. July 6 in Finnup Park, just south of the Finney County Museum. Last year’s flea market included nearly two dozen booths featuring candles, antiques, tools, artwork, unique apparel and more. Many will be back for 2013, along with first-time vendors. Members of the Finney County Historical Society, museum staff and volunteers also will stock the museum courtyard with donated goods for sale, such as furniture, housewares, bicycles, games, glassware and exercise equipment. Those interested in donating gently used items for the courtyard sale, or groups, organizations or individuals interested in renting their own booth spaces should call 272-3664. The fee for a 10-by-12 space is $30, and there are a few with electrical access for $40.

Music program slated The Garden City Fiddlers, Pickers and Singers will begin performing at 5 p.m. Saturday at the Senior Center of Finney County, 907 N. 10th St. The monthly program of oldstyle country music is free to the public. Anyone wishing to perform may sign in to take a turn in the rotation of musicians and singers. A carry-in supper will be served from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. (bring your favorite covered dish), followed by more music until 9 p.m. Admission is free to the public.

Southwest Community Duplicate bridge The Garden City Duplicate Bridge Club played a regular game Monday where an unusual increase in power hands appeared in the Howell movement. The first two boards produced five of the six slams for the evening. A total of 33 games bid and made saw nearly half in no-trump. Dorothy Bartlett and Virginia Enslow grabbed first place with a 60 percent game. Roberta Renick and Jon Craig took second place. Regular games begin at 7 p.m. Monday, 1:15 p.m. Tuesday and 2 p.m. Sunday at the Senior Center of Finney County, 907 N. 10th St., with all bridge players welcome. For partners, call Jon Kempton at 276-2876.

Courtesy photo

A sunset photograph by Shirley Creeden on display at the Finney County Museum.

Finney County Museum showcasing photo exhibit Display features images by motorcycle-riding photographer. By The Telegram Shirley Creeden’s 1,100-cc Yamaha V-Star Custom takes her all over the back roads of southwest Kansas, and beyond, where she uses her camera to capture images of barns, windmills, farmsteads, abandoned machinery, vehicles, sunflowers and sunsets. The Finney County Museum has just opened an exhibit featuring more than three dozen of Creeden’s photographs in the Front Door Gallery. Admission is free, and viewing hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday, as well as 1 to 5 p.m. Sundays. The museum also will host a public reception for the photographer from 5 to 7 p.m. July 9, and will include a brief program at about 5:30 p.m. “While I’m not a native of Kansas, my roots go deep here,” the motorcyclist and photographer said. “My grandparents settled in northeast Finney County in the 1930s, before moving to Garden City, and I’ve always harbored an admiration for the simple and honest life that many of the abandoned structures in the country represent.”

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Shirley Creeden’s 1,100-cc Yamaha V-Star Custom takes her all over the backroads of southwest Kansas and beyond, where she uses her camera to capture images of barns, windmills, farmsteads, abandoned machinery, vehicles, sunflowers and sunsets. The Finney County Museum has just opened an exhibit featuring more than three dozen of Creeden’s photographs in the Front Door Gallery. Admission is free and viewing hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 1 to 5 p.m. Sundays. The Front Door Gallery, which opened at the museum in May, is a small area designed to accommodate frequently-changing exhibits. “My love of motorcycles and traveling the back roads brought me to my hobby of photography,” she added. “Whenever I’m out on the road, I’m looking for a new picture, and I often travel back to my favorite spots to get the perfect shot.”

Born in Cherry Point, N.C., she relocated to the Garden City area in 1974 when her father, Clyde Simon, retired from the U.S. Marine Corps. She developed an interest in motorcycles after a 2006 visit with her brother, also a Marine, in Okinawa, and she

Weekend events feature horses, boxing and more By The Telegram

3.79

Courtesy photo

bought her first bike the following month. A member of High Plains Riders, she serves as a mathematics teacher at Charles O. Stones Intermediate Center. The Front Door Gallery, which opened at the museum in May, is a small area designed to accommodate frequently changing exhibits. The inaugural display featured items from the Mexican immigrant culture of southwest Kansas, and plans call for exhibits throughout the year of artwork, photography, hardware, hand crafts and other items representative of history and culture. Exhibits incorporate privatelyheld items, as well as artifacts from the museum’s collection. “We want to invite everyone to come out the evening of July 9 to meet Shirley Creeden, share some refreshments and enjoy her work,” said Steve Quakenbush, Finney County Historical Society executive director. In addition to the Front Door Gallery, museum exhibits include “Spirit of the Plains,” “Finney County Agriculture,” “Celebrate Kansas,” “Take Stock in Finney County,” “My Place in Time” and a period clothing dress up area styled like a room of the historic Windsor Hotel. The museum’s temporary gallery currently is featuring a community theater exhibit entitled “A Legacy of Directing and Design,” and the 1884-era William Fulton House is open 2 to 4 p.m. most Saturdays and Sundays.

Two horse-related events, boxing matches and a movie and concert at Stevens Park are a few of the things slated for this weekend. On Saturday, the Miles of Smiles Therapeutic Horseback Riding Program’s Annual Showcase 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 (freewill donation accepted). To make reservations, or for more information, call 260-9997. At 8 a.m. Saturday and Sunday, the Beef Empire Days Cutting Horse Competition will be featured at the Finney County Fairgrounds Horse Palace. The cutting horse show is sanctioned and approved by the National Cutting Horse Association and features contestants from Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, Colorado and Nebraska. Call Lee Ann Bates at

(620) 664-7230 for more information. • The Bad Boyz Boxing Club presents Boxing in the Garden at 7 p.m. Friday and Saturday at the Garden City High School gym. Tickets may be purchased from any club member or parent. Adults tickets are $15 (two-day pass) and seniors and students are $7.50 (two-day pass). For more information, call Robert Gonzales at (620) 521-2055. • The Garden City Family YMCA’s 12th Annual Fourth of July Follies will be 7 to 9 p.m. Saturday, featuring games, prizes, swimming, inflatables, free drinks and hot dogs and a giveaway of two firecracker bundles. For more information, call Krystal Richardson at 275-1199. • On Saturday, the Finney County Preservation Alliance is offering Windsor Hotel tours from 10 a.m. to noon. Tours, which will be offered on the last Saturday of each month, cost $5 for adults and are free for those 12 and younger. For more information, call 2754340.

• The weekly Stevens Park movie night and concert series continue on Saturday and Sunday. This week’s Silver Screen Saturday Nights movie is “Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure.” The movie is presented by Garden City Recreation Commission at dusk in Stevens Park as part of the fourth annual Silver Screen Saturday Nights. Movies are shown every Saturday during the summer. 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. For movie titles and future showings, visit www.gcrec. com. In the event of high winds or severe weather, movies will be rescheduled. Call 276-1202 for cancellation details. • The Stevens Park Concert Series continues at 7 p.m. Sunday, features solo guitarist/vocalist Al Miller. The Stevens Park Concert Series is sponsored by the GCRC and the city of Garden City. All concerts in this series are free

to the public. For a complete list of summer performers, visit the GCRC website at www.gcrec.com. • The Dylan Spencer Family Memorial Walk, Run, Roll is scheduled for Saturday at Lake Scott State Park north of Scott City. Proceeds from the event are going toward the Scott Community Walking Trail. The 10K will begin at 7 a.m., followed soon after by the start of the 5K. A Kids Fun Run will begin at 8:30 a.m. Strollers and wheelchairs are acceptable, but bikes, skateboards, skates, etc., are not allowed. Adult and kids’ pre-registration is $35 and can be completed online at www.walkrunrollscottcity.com. Adult registration is $45 on race day. Kids pre-registration is $15 and can be completed online at www.walkrunrollscottcity.com. Kids’ registration is $20 on race day. For more information, contact Suzanne Griffith at (620) 874-1363 or Nancy Goodman at (620) 8725693.


A4

Opinion

THURSDAY, June 27, 2013

THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM

COMMENTARY Dena Sattler, Editor/publisher

Bob Franken King Features Syndicate

denas@gctelegram.com

Our View

Teen success

Bipartisanship in short supply

Many young people find ways to make solid contributions.

I

T

eenagers often get a bad rap due to the unwelcome acts of some of their peers. While a number of teens do indeed get into trouble — missteps that often garner plenty of attention — it’s always heartwarming to see the good accomplished by so many others. Count an effort to raise funds for tornado victims What kind of community in Moore, service projects are best Okla., as one suited for teenagers? Add example. your comments at the end of the online version of this A group of editorial at GCTelegram. Garden City com/opinion. teens and young adults recently organized a benefit concert at Stevens Park to help Moore residents recover from a May tornado that devastated much of the community. The group raised more than $2,500 through the concert and other fundraising efforts. They planned to deliver the proceeds to Moore and volunteer to help with the cleanup. Young people involved in such projects have much to learn from the experience as they witness the plight of others less fortunate, and work toward ways to help out. Such valuable life lessons promise to benefit teens as they are on the brink of adulthood, and look to be tomorrow’s leaders. Of course, youth also contribute on the home front. Among the many notable efforts would be participation in the city’s Neighborhood Improvement Project (NIP), which has people of all ages picking up trash and aiding in other cleanup efforts around the community. The list could go on and on when it comes to positive pursuits taken on by youth eager to make a difference. Effective community service projects materialize as part of schoolbased assignments, such as recent Buff Projects from Garden City High School students and various group activities. Youngsters involved in scouting, 4H, church and other organizations and extracurricular activities also pursue many projects designed to make their community a better place to live. Teens learn meaningful lessons by participating in such endeavors. Perhaps the most important, when they contribute in their hometown, would be in discovering how important they can be to the success of their community. Such acts at home and beyond promise to pay off in many ways. At a time many teenagers are unfairly labeled as troublemakers, their positive contributions should never go unnoticed.

Today’s quotes “This editorial is the first of the moaning that will be going on for several years. ...” — Online remark selected by the editorial staff from comments at GCTelegram.com in response to an editorial criticizing a new tax plan in Kansas.

“My love of motorcycles and traveling the back roads brought me to my hobby of photography. Whenever I’m out on the road, I’m looking for a new picture, and I often travel back to my favorite spots to get the perfect shot.” — Motorcyclist and photographer Shirley Creeden, from a story in today’s edition on a new Front Door Gallery exhibit at the Finney County Historical Museum.

Letters policy The Telegram welcomes letters to the editor. Letters must be signed and include the writer’s address and phone number. All letters will be confirmed before publication.

Phone

Letters are subject to editing for libel and length, and must be 500 words or less.

Fax

Thank-you letters should be general in nature. Form letters, poems, consumer complaints or business testimonials will not be printed.

Write to:

Attn. Editor 310 N. Seventh St. Garden City, KS 67846

(620) 276-6862 Ext. 201

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Online

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Alito’s middle-school antics The most remarkable thing about the Supreme Court’s opinions announced Monday was not what the justices wrote or said. It was what Samuel Alito did. The associate justice, a George W. Bush appointee, read two opinions, both 5-4 decisions that split the court along its usual right-left divide. But Alito didn’t stop there. When Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg read her dissent from the bench, Alito visibly mocked his colleague. Ginsburg, the second woman to serve on the high court, was making her argument about how the majority opinion made it easier for sexual harassment to occur in the workplace when Alito, seated immediately to Ginsburg’s left, shook his head from side to side in disagreement, rolled his eyes and looked at the ceiling. His treatment of the 80-yearold Ginsburg, 17 years his elder and with 13 years more seniority, was a curious display of judicial temperament or, more accurately, judicial intemperance. Typically, justices state their differences in words — and Alito, as it happens, had just spoken several hundred of his own from the bench. But he frequently supplements words with middle-school gestures. Days earlier, I watched as he demonstrated his disdain for Elena Kagan and Sonia Sotomayor, the two other women on the court. Kagan, the newest justice, prefaced her reading of an opinion in a low-profile case by joking that it was “possibly not” the case the audience had come to hear. The audience responded with laughter, a few justices smiled — and Alito, seated at Kagan’s right elbow, glowered. Another time, Sotomayor, reading a little-watched case about water rights, joked that “every student in the audience is going to look up the word

COMMENTARY Dana Milbank

The Washington Post

‘preemption’ today.” Alito rolled his eyes and shook his head. Alito is best known for his antics at the 2010 State of the Union address, when President Obama criticized the Citizens United decision. While other justices remained expressionless, Alito adopted a sour look, shook his head “no” and appeared to mouth the words “not true.” At the various oral arguments I’ve watched over the past few years, Alito’s eye-rolling, head-shaking and other expressions of exasperation are a fairly common occurrence, most often when Sotomayor has the floor. Alito’s latest irritability came, ironically, on a day when the main headline about the court was comity: Justice Anthony Kennedy read an unexpectedly modest decision on affirmative action that left some racial preferences intact and commanded a 7-1 majority. Many in the audience expected bigger decisions, on same-sex marriage and voting rights (former justices John Paul Stevens and Alito’s predecessor, Sandra Day O’Connor, were both in the house), but those contentious issues were held for another day. Beyond the broad agreement on affirmative action, though, were three 5-4 decisions Monday, two read by Alito with a dry and clinical delivery. In the first, he announced that the court was rejecting a jury award for a woman who was disfigured and disabled by a drug that didn’t come with adequate warnings. Despite the “dreadful injuries,” Alito argued, siding with the drugmaker and throwing out an appellate-court ruling, “sympathy for respondent does not relieve us of the responsibility

of following the law.” The second case Alito read, one of two cases Monday limiting claims of workplace discrimination, rejected an African American woman’s complaints of a racially hostile work environment. Alito argued that the employer was not liable because, under Alito’s narrowed definition, the person doing the harassing did not qualify as the employee’s supervisor. Other conservative justices share Alito’s views but aren’t quite so dour in expression. Antonin Scalia is caustic and even incendiary, but often funny. Chief Justice John Roberts can be droll. On the other side, Kagan has tried to make the court more accessible to a lay audience by giving chatty lectures from the bench rather than reading from her written opinions, which also have been playful. In an opinion she wrote this month on a transportation case, she made reference to the 1980s song “867-5309/Jenny” by Tommy Tutone. Even Ginsburg, no comedienne, can be colloquial and accessible. In her dissents Monday, she noted that an employee can avoid a harassing co-worker by telling him to “buzz off,” and she argued that “the ball again lies in Congress’s court to correct this court’s wayward interpretations.” She also invoked the selfdeprecating quotation defining a legal mind as one that “can think about a thing inextricably attached to something else without thinking about the thing which it is attached to.” Ginsburg was tart, even acidic — but she confined her objections to words. That kind of judicial restraint would benefit her junior colleague.

Email Dana Milbank at danamilbank@ washpost.com.

As race preferences rumble on T

he entrenched regime of racial preferences in American academia is a fit subject for study by the nation’s top psychiatrists. It’s never OK to discriminate on the basis of race in American life, except when it is. Schools lionize the 1964 Civil Rights Act in their classrooms, and then violate it in their admissions offices. They will obfuscate, sneak around and lie, all to preserve their treasured preferences so they can make the admissions numbers look right — regardless of the consequences. This system is bad for the moral fiber of academic institutions, bad for the ideal of race blindness in America, and bad, the latest research suggests, for the minorities supposedly benefiting. It is good only for salving the guilty, race-obsessed consciences of university administrators and appeasing the PC gods and the usual interest groups. The Supreme Court decided to let the dinosaur keep roaming the Earth, although it tightened up the standards in its 7-1 ruling. The court said that racial discrimination is permissible in fostering educational diversity, but schools have to prove that such discrimination is narrowly tailored. In the majority opinion, Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote, “Strict scrutiny does not permit a court to accept a school’s assertion that its admissions process uses race in a permissible way without closely examining how the process works in practice.” No, it will require “a careful judicial inquiry.” In other words, the Supreme

Court has spoken: If you are wondering if a given school meets the Supreme Courtapproved standard, there’s an easy way to find out — sue and spend years trying to find out. The answer, by the way, will probably change the next time the Supreme Court deigns to hear the issue and come up with its latest exquisitely nuanced test. In the real world, there is little doubt that racial preferences are a failure. In their judicious book “Mismatch,” Richard Sander and Stuart Taylor Jr. catalog the twisted effect of preferences on schools beholden to them: “The pervasive secrecy that veils the operation and effects of racial preferences even from most academics has led to deception, ostracism of truth-tellers, lack of accountability, and an unwillingness to face awkward facts and undertake needed reforms.” All this dishonesty might be understandable if it served some larger good. It doesn’t. Race preferences ensure that students are accepted into schools where they will have trouble competing. This is the “mismatch” of Sander and Taylor’s title, and does no one any favors. “Large racial preferences backfire,” Sander and Taylor write, “against many and, perhaps, most recipients, to the point that they learn less and are likely to be less self-confi-

dent than had they gone to less competitive but still quite good schools.” They note that “even though blacks are more likely to enter college than are whites with similar backgrounds, they will usually get much lower grades, rank toward the bottom of the class and far more often drop out.” When racial preferences were ended in California by referendum in 1996, disaster was supposed to ensue. The New York Times reports that enrollment of blacks and Hispanics in the University of California system dipped slightly from 4 percent and 15 percent; now the numbers are 4 percent and 25 percent. The state university has begun to reach down into middle schools to find promising students — minority and nonminority alike — and work to ensure that they are betterprepared. This is affirmative action worthy of the name, based on improving students rather than checking a box. It has begun to dawn on liberals that preferences are a clumsy and ineffectual social tool. In a New York Times column titled “The Liberals Against Affirmative Action,” David Leonhardt notes research showing that preferences don’t really help the poor. “In effect,” he writes, “poor and middleincome students are rejected, while others with the same scores and grades — legacies, athletes and minorities, often from privileged backgrounds — are admitted.” Still, racial preferences rumble on, immune to logic or law. Email Rich Lowry at comments. lowry@nationalreview.com.

’ve been thinking for a while, which is always dangerous, about our ferocious budget-andspending battle. It has defied compromise. In addition to the ugly politics, another reason neither side has been willing to seek a middle ground is because both have valid arguments. It is true that the federal government cannot continue to overspend itself into a future of economic collapse. It is just as valid to believe that we cannot abandon the desperate needs of the young, the elderly, the poor, the ailing — to say nothing of whatever it takes to protect our citizens. We just can’t. So I keep on coming back to what would seem to be the obvious way out: We need to reach a bipartisan consensus on what the nation’s priorities are, what programs we want to fund and which ones we can shut down or at least scale back. After that, we can work on how to collect the revenue that pays for what’s left. There’s one major problem with the idea: It is clear that a bipartisan consensus is impossible. Short of a war or another attack, there seems to be nothing that will cause us to rally around a common good, largely because we can’t agree what that common good is. Our leaders, who are really just followers of their constituents’ darkest instincts and campaign contributors’ selfish interests, are afraid to look past the next election. So they represent the worst in us. Before you decide that’s too harsh, look at what just happened to the farm bill in the right-wing-controlled House of Representatives. One would think that if anything could bring everyone together, it would be our sustenance. But Republican extremists were not happy with reductions in the allocation for food stamps that already had been negotiated. They insisted on slashing even more. Apparently, poor people shouldn’t eat. Their cuts were so severe that Democrats couldn’t support the massive legislation, and down it went, leaving our entire agriculture system in a state of chaos. Anybody who thinks it will be any different when immigration reform hits the House or when deals must be struck to avoid sending the nation into default are Pollyannas at best, naive at worst. Set aside that discussion, and let’s move to another area where there is bipartisan consensus: government waste. Call me crazy, but I think it’s fairly safe to say that there are few — from wild-eyed lefties to those on the right-wing fringes — who would speak out in favor of squandering taxpayer money. So when the Government Accountability Office in April identified 162 examples of duplication or inefficiencies in programs that range from veterans’ job training to geographical data collection to higher-education financial aid to even catfish inspection, which fritter always tens of billions of dollars each year, one would think there would be a clamor for reform. Alas, no clamor, barely a murmur. And why would there be? Each of those redundant efforts is someone’s turf — not just agency turf, but that of various House and Senate committees that oversee those agencies. They translate to individual members’ campaign contributions from the affected special interests. So let’s put it this way: Eliminating duplication ain’t gonna happen. Much is being made of recent polls that show Congress — and by extension, all our politicians — considered the lowest of the low. The blame, however, should not really be aimed just at them. Our elected officials have one thing in common: We elect them. (Where else do you get such insight?) How sad it is that we’ve been worn down and simply accept the rampant, pervasive corruption and ineptitude. We’ve apparently concluded that they cannot be overcome. Sure they can. By us. If we don’t escape our defeatist apathy, then our democracy, which requires participation by an informed citizenry, will fail. If we could address our Founding Fathers, all we would have left to say is “nice try.” Emmy Award-winning reporter Bob Franken served as CNN’s Capitol Hill correspondent and as a Supreme Court and White House reporter. Distributed by King Features Syndicate Inc.


THE Garden City Telegram

THURSDAY, June 27, 2013

A5

Moscow: Fire out, Abengoa personnel checking for hot spots Continued from Page A1

thing,� Standlee said. Kelling said that the Stevens County and Moscow fire departments are continuing to monitor the situation. Standlee confirmed the number of hay bales lost in the fire at about 38,000. “That sounds about right,� Standlee said. “We probably lost about 16 big stacks, and each stack was about 1,100 tons — each one of those stacks is about one day’s production for us, so we lost about 16 days worth

of seed stock, is what it boils down to.� He said that the dollar figure of the loss for Abengoa is unknown at this time. “We’re working with our insurance company, but we don’t have any final numbers at this point,� he said. Preliminary findings from the Kansas Department of Emergency Management indicated that the fire was caused by lightning, but those reports have yet to be confirmed. “The cause is still undetermined and is under investigation,� Kevin Doel,

public information officer for the Kansas Fire Marshal’s Office, said in an email to The Telegram. “The total loss is over $2.5 million, which includes hay bales and hay sheds.� Most of the hay bales involved in the fire belonged to Abengoa, but Kelling said Cattle Empire lost one stack. Each stack consists of 2,500 to 3,000 bales. Once it is confirmed that there are no more hot spots, Standlee said, clean up of the site will begin. Officials from Cattle Empire could not be reached for comment.

Becky Malewitz/Telegram

Smoke from a large hay bale fire envelops the east side of Moscow on May 30.

FCEDC: Board approves new business cash incentive program Continued from Page A1

will allow the organization to use something besides a tax abatement to recruit new businesses, which is beneficial for those businesses that wouldn’t qualify for a tax abatement. “This incentive policy allows us to incentivize expansions of existing businesses that don’t necessarily have a huge capital investment that would qualify for a tax abatement,� Lona DuVall, FCEDC president, said. “It would also help with redevelopment of existing properties.� Board member Bob Kreutzer suggested defining what the FCEDC means by a “quality� job using a figure set at 1.5 times the current minimum wage in Kansas. Kreutzer said a minimum wage job in itself is not a quality job, but it is a sub-

jective number that can be used to set the quality job minimum level. “That would at least be a starting point. I think we have to have something in there that at least sets a benchmark,â€? he said. In other business: • The board approved creating a system to inventory potential industrial properties in the county that would help guide new industrial and business prospects to locations that best fit their utility, transportation and zoning needs. “It makes it very easy to go through the process. If someone tells us they need this much water or this much waste water, we can limit the sites we show them because we know exactly what would work for that type of use,â€? DuVall said. The proposed certified industrial site program needs to be approved

by the city and county commissions. Certification would involve filling out a couple of surveys about prospective properties, detailing things such as utilities, transportation access and current and future zoning. After all the information is compiled, it would be entered into a database that could be accessed through the FCEDC website. Kreutzer said the program may help property owners figure out how to market their property. “A lot of people may be in the situation where they have a piece of ground, but they don’t understand the importance of utilities and what the locations are, and the infrastructure,� he said. “This will give them an opportunity to maybe either invest or understand the rest of the costs associated with the development of their property.�

• A proposal to relocate to office space downtown is apparently still on the table, despite a board vote last month to reject the offer. Bruce Glass pitched the idea of renting space in the McCallister Building at 118 E. Laurel St. to the FCEDC, as well as the Finney County United Way and the Garden City Area Chamber of Commerce, but so far, none has agreed to move from offices located in the 1500 block of East Fulton Terrace. Glass and his wife, Beverly Schmitz Glass, executive director of Downtown Vision, are buying the building and renovating it into office space for Downtown Vision, which needs to move out of its current Main Street office at the Windsor Hotel due to an upcoming renovation project. The Glasses are looking to rent space in the building to other organizations.

FCEDC Chairman Tom Walker said Wednesday that a meeting was held Tuesday with Glass and representatives of the other groups, including the Finney County Convention and Visitors Bureau, which had not been approached initially about the move. Walker said one of the reasons FCEDC rejected the initial proposal was the board couldn’t justify paying an additional $7,800 more per year in rent for the downtown office space. But since then, plans were revised to reduce the FCEDC’s proposed space, which would reduce the overall rent to an additional $2,400 a year. The board made no commitment on Wednesday but indicated it is open to the possibility of relocating if the other organizations agree to move.

People online not always who they seem, even on Ancestry.com Dear Annie: A distant relative, whose family I had never heard of, contacted me on the Internet begging for family photos and history for her grandmother. Out of the goodness of my heart and at great expense, I took a week and sorted through ancient photos and family history, scanned and labeled the photos, and emailed them to her. However, when I later checked Ancestry. com, I saw those photos and family history online. I didn’t recognize any connection between her family and mine, although she insists there is one. Furthermore, our family is very private and has no interest in having our history and photographs published on the Internet for anyone to see. Last year, when my cousin had his identity stolen, the author-

ities said identity thieves often get information (like the mother’s maiden name) from genealogical websites. I wrote this woman a polite email and informed her of the identity theft and our family’s request that our privacy be respected. I asked that she remove the family photos and history from the site. She wrote back a scathing email, calling me “rude� and saying she did not have to be at my beck and call. She finally agreed to remove the information, but when I checked later, she had actually added more. This “cyber-bully’s� hateful words and total breach of trust have made me physically and emotionally ill. She is a manipulative, lying, exploitative, ungrateful, self-entitled, abusive witch. I went to great expense, time and work, giving her copies of

A handy lint brush hint Dear Heloise: I use a small, long lint brush, originally made to use in the dryer to clean out dust and lint, to clean under the bottom of my kitchen stove. You should have seen the crumbs that appeared on the br ush. The brush was long enough to grab nasty stuf f from underneath the stove, yet bushy enough to catch all the dirt and lint, plus a lot

of hair from my furry pet. — A.R., via email

Easy jar opening D e a r Heloise: I want to throw in my solution for opening a jar. I cut two rectangular pieces out of the palm and back of a latex glove. Use one to hold the top of the jar and one to hold the bottom of it. No problem opening jars anymore. — Carol in West Virginia

ANNIE’S MAILBOX KATHY MITCHELL MARCY SUGAR

treasured family photos so that her “Nana� would know where her father came from. Nana wrote to tell me she’d like to visit

her “newly discovered family.� I don’t want to see or hear from any of these evil people again. How can I stop her from posting our family photos online? — Bamboozled D e a r Bamboozled: We contacted ancestry.com and asked what you can do about removing the offending photos and history

from their website. They said to email customersolutions@ancestry.com, saying you did not intend for these photographs to be posted. Give as many details as possible, and they will try to resolve it. However, there are no guarantees. To some extent, you have already lost the battle, because these photos

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THURSDAY, June 27, 2013

the Garden City Telegram

Some straight talk about sun safety W

e should talk. Did you know your lifetime odds for developing skin cancer are a whopping 1 in 5? Treatment of non-melanoma skin cancers (melanoma is the most life-threatening form) jumped by almost 77 percent from 1992 to 2006. And even more startling: From 1970 to 2009, melanoma diagnosis increased by 800 percent in young women and 400 percent in young men. Thankfully, regularly using sunscreen can slash that risk. (And so can never, ever going anywhere near a tanning bed!) But with store shelves packed with hundreds of brands of sunscreens in all kinds of formulations, choosing the right one can be downright confusing. Here’s how to stay safe in the sun this summer: Step No. 1: Choose a sunscreen with minerals. We’re concerned about chemical sunscreens with active ingredients that are absorbed into the skin and, in small amounts, into the bloodstream. Some act as endocrine disruptors, mimicking hormones in the body. We don’t know yet what the health effects could be, so play it safe. Look for sunscreens that contain zinc

Michael Roizen, M.D. and Mehmet Oz, M.D.

King Features Syndicate

oxide, titanium dioxide or both. These finely crushed minerals work by reflecting and scattering the sun’s ultraviolet rays like a protective shield. (In contrast, other sunscreens absorb the sun’s rays, releasing the damaging energy as heat.) Our top choice is zinc oxide because it’s best at blocking both UV-A rays, which harm cells deep in the skin, and UV-B rays, which cause sunburn. Step No. 2: Avoid chalkylooking skin — go micronized. Like you, we prefer invisible protection over a thick white coating that’ll leave you looking like an extra from “Beach Blanket

Bingo.” So buy a sunscreen containing micronized zinc oxide that won’t leave you looking smeary. (There is some concern that nanoparticles of zinc oxide, and also of titanium dioxide, allow for absorption into the skin, making these potential body pollutants. We’ll keep you informed as data emerges.) Step No. 3: SPF 30 is all you need. Higher sun protection factors offer little extra shielding. Staying in the sun too long because you think you’re covered could lead to skin damage. Step No. 4: Use plenty — and re-apply. Most people skimp on sunscreen, missing out on full protection. The only protection your skin needs is an ounce (a shot glass worth) of SPF 30 micronized zinc oxide, spread thickly to cover all skin exposed when you’re wearing a bathing suit (it depends on your body size, natch!). Reapply — usually every two hours, or sooner if you’re swimming or sweating. Step No. 5: Dress to thwart the sun. Wear a long-sleeved shirt and pants when gardening, strolling or sitting by the pool or shore. Tightly woven, dyed fabrics block more rays than gauzy or white materials. But since those rarely give more protection than SPF 6, consider using sun-guard

Q: I’ve planted vegetables and herbs this year, but they’re getting kind of buggy. Are there safe pesticides I can use? — Claudia V., Boise, Idaho A: Pesticides are responsible for allowing farmers to grow huge quantities of crops for an ever-expanding population, but — and it’s a big but — we keep finding out they have all kinds of unintended side effects that damage bees (fewer bees, less pollination, fewer crops), disrupt hormone function in people, animals, fish and insects (affecting development of sperm, fertility and, some conjecture, sexual identity), cause behavior and cognitive problems (ADHD in children) and trigger cancer (such as leukemia). And they show up in breast milk; some studies find 60 percent or more of samples contain harmful chemicals. In addition, contamination of ground water by pesticides is a worldwide problem, and pesticides that are banned for use on agriculture in this country (and manufactured by U.S. companies) are routinely shipped overseas for use on vegetables that then are imported back into America. So for home gardeners, the smart move is to make your own natural pesticides.

2101 Labrador • $50,000

clothing with an ultraviolet protection factor (UPF) of 15 to 50. You also can wash sun protection into clothing with laundry additives containing the sunscreen Tinosorb. Step No. 6: Shade your face and peepers. Slap on a broad-brimmed hat and large sunglasses. These protect delicate facial skin (which deserves a dose of sunscreen year-round) and eyes; they take the brunt of sun exposure in all seasons. Step No. 7: Take vitamin D-3 and omega-3 DHA. It’s true that well-protected skin misses out on the sun exposure your body needs to produce vitamin D. But that’s no reason to go outdoors unprotected. A daily vitamin D-3 supplement assures you of a year-round supply of this important vitamin. The sun’s rays are too weak to make sufficient D year-round in the northern half of the U.S. and Canada, anyway. Aim for 1,000 IU of vitamin D-3 daily. Meanwhile, dig into salmon or wild trout twice a week, or get 900 mg of the omega-3 fatty acid DHA from a daily algal oil supplement. One reason sunshine harms skin is that it suppresses the immune system. A new report reveals omega3 DHA keeps immunity strong, even when you’re playing in the summer sun.

Sensitivity to gluten causes celiac disease

Natural pesticides: NSAIDS and vascular problems

Q&A

DEAR DR. ROACH: case, a blood test to deterI have several symptoms mine genetic risk for celiac of gluten intolerance. I’ve disease can be done, and if read that there are tests that is negative, then celito confirm celiac disease. ac disease is excluded. If Besides a blood test, one the test is positive, many test is a biopsy of tis- experts recommend a diet sue taken from the small with gluten followed by intestine. How repeat endosdoes the doctor copy and biopsy, retrieve such TO YOUR although some tissue? How GOOD HEALTH people might reliable are the prefer just to results of these stay on their tests after folgluten-free diet. lowing a glutenAfter a biopfree diet? — S.S. sy shows the Celiac discharacteristic ease, also changes, the called celiac Keith Roach, M.D. diagnosis of sprue, is caused North America Syndicate celiac sprue is by a sensitivity confirmed when to gliadin, a comsymptoms go ponent of gluten, which away with a gluten-free is found in wheat, barley, diet. It is not necessary to rye and oats. The major rebiopsy to show that the symptoms are weight loss, intestinal changes return diarrhea and abdominal to normal. distention and bloating. The diagnosis is usually Dr. Roach regrets that he made based on a combi- is unable to answer individnation of blood tests and ual letters, but will incora small-intestine biopsy, porate them in the column which is obtained via an whenever possible. Readers endoscopy of the stomach may email questions to and intestine. ToYourGoodHealth@med. Neither the blood tests cornell.edu or request an nor the biopsy is perfect. order form of available In people who have been health newsletters at P.O. on a strict gluten-free diet, Box 536475, Orlando, FL it is possible the antibody 32853-6475. Health newsletblood test and the biopsy ters may be ordered from return as normal. In this www.rbmamall.com.

with

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Some of our favorite home remedies: • Throw a kegger for slugs! Shallow plates of beer set out around plants (slugs love strawberries, corn, beans, lettuce … and beer) will distract and drown the plant-munching pests. • Go Italian: Bugs hate garlic and onions. Save all your skins and ends from cooking, throw in a hot pepper, and soak them in a bucket of water for 48 hours. Strain and spray to discourage thrips, aphids, grasshoppers and chewing and sucking insects. • Juice ‘em up: Use the peel of four organic lemons and their juice; steep in 1 gallon of hot water. (Some people add a teaspoon of natural soap.) Strain and spray to control aphids. • Counterattack: Plant radishes next to cucumbers to scare away beetles; rosemary, mint and thyme near cabbage to scare away cabbage worms. Let us know how your garden fares this year!

Becker’s Bridge

Did you know? with a spray foam insulation like the popular-selling, Icynene, can provide a complete air seal with optimal R-values, delivering up to 50% in MONTHLY ENERGY SAVINGS.

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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.

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. Single letters, short words and words using any apostrophe give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is by trial and error. C 2011 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

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(N) (Live) Royals Live (N) Big 12 Showcase World Poker Tour: Season 11 34 FSN Movie: ››› The Lost Boys (1987) (Jason Patric, Corey Haim) (s) (cc) Hit the Floor “Keep Away” (s) Movie: ››› Interview With the Vampire (1994, Horror) (Tom Cruise, Brad Pitt) (s) 35 VH1 Caso Cerrado: Edición Estelar (SS) Dama y Obrero (N) (s) (SS) La Patrona (N) (s) (SS) El Señor de los Cielos (N) (s) (SS) Al Rojo Vivo (N) Titulares y Más La Patrona (s) (SS) 37 TELE Trading Spouses: Meet New Mommy Wife Swap (s) (cc) Wife Swap (s) (cc) Wife Swap (s) (cc) Pretty Wicked Moms (cc) Wife Swap (s) (cc) 38 LIFE House Hunters (N) Hunters Int’l House Hunters Hunters Int’l Renovation Raiders (cc) Hunters Int’l House Hunters Rehab Addict Rehab Addict Renovation Raiders (N) (cc) 39 HGTV Chopped Chopped “Wheatgrass Roots” Chopped “Big Fish, Small Basket” Chopped “Belly Up” Food Network Star Chopped “Big Fish, Small Basket” 40 FOOD The First 48 “Love Kills; Justified” Intervention “Terry; Alissa” (cc) Intervention “Ryan” (N) (cc) Beyond Scared Straight (N) (cc) Beyond Scared Straight (cc) Intervention “Terry; Alissa” (cc) 41 A&E Naked and Afraid (s) (cc) Property Wars (s) Property Wars (s) Property Wars (s) Property Wars (s) Property Wars (N) Property Wars Property Wars (s) Property Wars (s) Property Wars (s) Property Wars 42 DISC Say Yes, Dress Say Yes, Dress Say Yes, Dress Say Yes, Dress Four Weddings “... and a Sting Ray” Four Weddings (N) (s) (cc) Four Weddings “... and a Sting Ray” Four Weddings (s) (cc) 43 TLC (3:05) Movie: Inglourious Basterds (s) Fight Master: Bellator MMA (s) (cc) iMPACT Wrestling (N) (s) (cc) Fight Master: Bellator MMA (s) (cc) Movie: ››› Scarface (1983) (s) (cc) 44 SPIKE Good Luck Charlie Jessie (s) (cc) A.N.T. 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(cc) Movie: ››‡ Princess Protection Program (2009) (cc) 45 DISN Full House (cc) The Nanny “Pilot” The Nanny (cc) Friends (cc) Friends (cc) Friends (s) (cc) Friends (s) (cc) Sam & Cat (cc) Figure It Out (N) Big Time Rush (N) Wendell & Vinnie Full House (cc) 46 NICK Movie: ›› Paul Blart: Mall Cop (2009) (Kevin James, Jayma Mays) The 700 Club (s) (cc) Fresh Prince Fresh Prince Movie: ›› Paul Blart: Mall Cop (2009) (Kevin James, Jayma Mays) 47 FAM ’Til Death (cc) ’Til Death (cc) Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens King of Queens The King of Queens “Tank Heaven” 48 TVLD Pawn Stars (cc) Pawn Stars (cc) Pawn Stars (cc) Pawn Stars (cc) Pawn Stars (N) Pawn Stars (N) Swamp People (N) (cc) Ice Road Truckers “Fear the Crack” Pawn Stars (cc) Pawn Stars (cc) 49 HIST Movie: Independence Day-saster (2013) (Ryan Merriman) (Premiere) Movie: Stonehenge Apocalypse (2010) (Misha Collins, Hill Harper) Movie: ›› Megafault (2009) (Brittany Murphy, Eriq La Salle) 50 SYFY Movie: ››› Robin and Marian (1976, Adventure) (Sean Connery) (cc) (5:30) Movie: Lady and the Bandit Movie: ››› A Bridge Too Far (1977) (Dirk Bogarde) An account of a disastrous 1944 Allied military operation. 54 TCM Showville “Fairfield, Iowa” (N) (cc) Small Town Small Town Movie: ››‡ Liar Liar (1997) (PG-13) (4:30) Liar Liar Movie: ››› O Brother, Where Art Thou? (2000) (George Clooney, John Turturro) (PG-13) (cc) 55 AMC The Blue Planet: Seas of Life (cc) The Blue Planet: Seas of Life (cc) The Blue Planet: Seas of Life (cc) The Blue Planet: Seas of Life (cc) The Blue Planet: Seas of Life (cc) The Blue Planet: Seas of Life (cc) 56 ANPL Movie: ››‡ Beauty Shop (2005) (Queen Latifah, Alicia Silverstone) (cc) The Wendy Williams Show (N) (cc) 106 & Park: Top Movie: ›‡ B.A.P.S (1997, Comedy) (Halle Berry, Martin Landau) (cc) 57 BET Chappelle’s Show Chappelle’s Show Tosh.0 (cc) Tosh.0 (cc) Kevin Hart: Laugh at My Pain (cc) Daily Show Colbert Report Tosh.0 (cc) Tosh.0 (cc) Colbert Report Daily Show 58 COM Keeping Up With the Kardashians Chelsea Lately (N) E! News Chelsea Lately E! News (N) Movie: ››‡ The Lake House (2006) (Keanu Reeves, Sandra Bullock) 59 E! Housewives/NJ The Real Housewives of New Jersey The Real Housewives of New Jersey Housewives/NJ Tabatha Takes Over (N) What Happens Tabatha Takes Over Million Dollar 61 BRAVO King of the Hill (s) King of the Hill (s) American Dad (s) American Dad (s) Family Guy “PTV” Family Guy (cc) NTSF:SD:SUV Pretty Face Regular Show Annoying Orange Incredible Crew Regular Show 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

Movie: ››› Prometheus (2012) (Noomi Rapace, Michael Fassbender) (s) (R) (cc) The Out List (N) (s) (cc) Veep “D.C.” (cc) Cathouse 2: Back in the Saddle (s) Family Tree (cc) True Blood (cc) (5:10) The Five-Year Engagement (R) Movie: ›› The Hangover Part II (2011) (Bradley Cooper) (s) (R) (cc) Movie: ›› Battleship (2012) (Taylor Kitsch) (s) (PG-13) (cc) Movie: Birthday Sex (2012) (NR) (cc) Movie: ›››‡ Brokeback Mountain (2005) (Heath Ledger, Jake Gyllenhaal) (s) (R) (cc) Polyamory Mr. Movie: Sexy Baby (2012) (s) (NR) (cc) Movie: ›› But I’m a Cheerleader (1999) (s) (R) (cc)


THE Garden City Telegram

THURSDAY, June 27, 2013

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Thursday June 27, 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 You might opt to say less and stay more centered as of late. Perhaps the best action to take is to be receptive to others’ inquiries. Though it is not natural for you to assume a passive role, it might be best. Understanding will evolve as a result. Tonight: Get some extra R and R. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHH Domestic matters could be problematic right now. You might even get into a quarrel with a family member if you are not careful. You seem to be more rigid than you have been in the past. Be ready to make a kind gesture in order to avoid a conflict. Tonight: Happy at home. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH Someone might be demanding more than you want to give. Realize what is driving you in certain areas of your life. Know what is going on within your circle of friends. Remember that you can’t control anyone besides yourself -- nor should you want to. Tonight: Your treat. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH You might be touched by recent exchanges between you and a loved one. Know that this feeling is allowing a suppressed emotion to emerge. You’ll need to deal with those feelings in order to prevent a strong reaction from occurring. Tonight: Let your imagination lead the way. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH You would be well-advised to relate to key individuals directly. Communication continues to be out of sync for you, and others as well. Tap into your creativity, and allow more space to confirm what you have just heard. Tonight: Dinner with a favorite person at a favorite place. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH You could be a lot more reflective than you have been in a while. Your wheels might be spinning in order to ensure that you have the responses you’ll need when it is impossible to make a prediction. Give up a need for control, and go with the flow. Tonight:

DAY IN THE STARS

BIZARRO

Jacquelline Bigar King Features

Defer to a partner. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHH Focus on a recent accomplishment. You often use flattery to get what you want. Be careful, as you won’t know what to do when someone reverses your technique and uses it on you. Worse yet, you might not even notice that it’s happening. Tonight: Get the job done. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH You might be confronted with a pressing issue. Understand that you’ll be able to pass right through it, no matter how many hurdles you already might have jumped over. A new friend could warm the cockles of your heart in the interim. Accept this with grace. Tonight: Have fun SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH You will see life with more openness because of the implications in a special relationship. The result of feeling so good in the company of this person could trigger more openness. Make a point to learn more about why people do certain things. Tonight: Togetherness is the theme. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH You’ll find the right words to compliment someone -- be sure to let him or her know how sincere you are. A compromise with a loved one seems inevitable. You also are able to identify with others, which will make you extremely popular. Tonight: At a favorite spot. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHH You could be overthinking a risk, and you might not be sure of which way to go. Realize that a decision needs to be made, but doing it to please someone else might not be enough. Value this person’s feedback, but know that ultimately, the decision will be yours. Tonight: Your treat. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHHH Be aware of what is happening beyond the obvious. Someone who is important to your daily life might be beaming, and his or her happiness will be contagious. Open up to this positive energy. You might have a sense of what is about to occur. Tonight: The world is your oyster.

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CLASSIFIEDS THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM Help Wanted Help Wanted

Help Wanted

TODAY’S NEW ADS Help Wanted

Autos

IRRIGATION SALES REPRESENTATIVE American Implement is currently seeking a qualified individual to fill the position of Zimmatic Irrigation Sales Representative. Responsibilities are to promote and sell our irrigation line of systems, parts and advanced irrigation solution products. Qualified candidates will have the ability to develop loyal customer relationships. Sales territory includes southwest Kansas and Colorado. Excellent communication and interpersonal skills are necessary. Three to five years! experience in sales and a background in agricultural or a related field are essential. American Implement offers competitive wages and an excellent benefits package, which includes life, health and supplemental insurance and 401(k) plan. Send cover letter and resume to Andy Smaltz, Location Manager, American Implement, Inc., 2718 West Oklahoma Avenue, Ulysses, Kansas, 67880 or call (800) 356-3460 or email andys@americanImplement.com.

2005 CHEVY Suburban LT. Loaded. Excellent vehicle at reasonable price. Call (620) 290-9691.

BARTENDER, EXPERIENCED COOK, & WAIT STAFF needed. Must be 18 years old or older. Apply in person Residential Rentals at TIME OUT SPORTS 2 BEDROOM, 1 Bath. CLUB 210 S Farmland Rd. $450 / $350. No pets. COMPANY LOOKING Call Kim @ (620) for a driver with CDL. 2 yrs experience needed. 640-1514. (620) 640-4489

Real Estate

107 Hampton Court Southwind 3 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath, 1500 sq.ft. up, 1500 sq.ft. down. Finished basement, hardwood floors, screened-in patio, 3 car garage, Cul-de-sac. $258,500. (620) 290-8254

108 Ryan Ave, Holcomb 5 bedroom, 2 bath, D/A garage, 1260 sq.ft., full finished basement, covered patio. Call to view (620) 805-2503, (620) 805-2809.

Public Services EMMANUEL UNION Free clothing & Household Items Available on Wed 10am - 6pm. 509 Chesterfield DR. All donations / non-perishable items gratefully accepted (620) 290-2616

GARDEN CITY 12 x 12 Al-Anon Family Groups (For families and friends of alcoholics/addicts) Thursday @ 7:00 pm. 116 Chestnut (A.A. Hall) Attention Parents: Does your day care provider have a license to watch children?. It!s the law that they do! Licensed daycare providers give positive discipline, enjoy working with children, and have been screened for any history of physical or sexual assault against children or substance abuse. Illegal care is against the law. Want to become licensed? Call Maggie Baker RN, child care Surveyor, Finney CO Health Department (620) 272-3600.

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Narcotics Anonymous (NA) Meetings. Monday & Saturday 7pm; SaturLost day Book Study 6pm. LOST! S M A L L St. Catherine Hospital purple/white paisley Classroom 1. [North enbag. Contains 2 knitting trance west of Emerprojects. Lost Sunday gency room — follow afternoon. Call Susan hall to 1st elevator go to LL exit elevator turn left at 620-805-2020. then right 1st room on LOST: BLACK MINIA- r i g h t . ] or call TURE Poodle. Wearing 620-899-5420. Children a pink collar with tags. welcome, parents are Answers to Molly & is responsible for their 4-5 lbs. Has breathing children. problems & requires special care. Lost in the WE ARE all created to Theron Place/Pats Dr. serve.! Come and join neighborhood. Reward the Volunteer Team at being offered! (620) St Catherine Hospital 640-4890 and enjoy giving back. For more information MISSING!! call 272-2522. 2 year old red & white Help Wanted female Austrailian Shepherd named NOW HIRING, a Tess. Lost from Towns Part-time Registered Riverview on March Nurse. Family Minis14th. Wearing a brown tries, a provider of collar, recently shaved. in-home supports for in$500 reward offered if dividuals needing assisfound or for valid infor- tance with everyday nemation leading to her cessities like, cooking, return/recovery. Call cleaning, etc. The sucLonnie or Justin at cessful applicant will (620) 260-7042. enjoy working independently in a team enPublic Services vironment, be creative, 12 STEP Group of Al- have strong communicaholics Anonymous cation skills, and prefmeets daily at 116 1/2 erably have experience E. Chestnut. Call working with people 272-5623. that are elderly or may DO YOU know some- have a disability. one who has committed Stop in to apply at, or suicide and need some- send your resume to: one to talk to? We!re Family Ministries, Inc. looking to start a sup- 606 N. Main St. port group for people Garden City, KS 67846 whose lives have been OR affected by suicide. For family.ministries@ymail more information, call .com Shawn at (620) 260-6858. Classifieds do the Shop The Classifieds! work!

CONSTRUCTION SALES Cleary Building Corp, is hiring a Building Sales Specialist at our Garden City location. Base salary plus bonus and a full benefits package including a company vehicle. Join a debt-free company with a 98.7% customer satisfaction rating. EOE/AA. Please apply online:

DIRECTOR OF NURSING SERVICES Hodgeman County Health Center is accepting applications for the above full-time position. This individual would direct the overall operation of our Acute Care Nursing Service Department to ensure that the highest degree of quality care is maintained. Requires as a minimum a RN with associate degree from an accredited college or university, 5 years nursing experience as RN in hospital or other related health care facility, and at least (6) months previous management experience. An application may be obtained from website: hchconline.org, print application, complete and fax to Human Resources (620-357-6120), or mail to: P.O. Box 310, Jetmore, KS 67854. If more information is needed, contact 620-357-8361.

IRRIGATION SALES REPRESENTATIVE American Implement is currently seeking a qualified individual to fill the position of Zimmatic Irrigation Sales Representative. Responsibilities are to promote and sell our irrigation line of systems, parts and advanced irrigation solution products. Qualified candidates will have the ability to develop loyal customer relationships. Sales territory includes southwest Kansas and Colorado. Excellent communication and interpersonal skills are necessary. Three to five years! experience in sales and a background in agricultural or a related field are essential. American Implement offers competitive wages and an excellent benefits package, which includes life, health and supplemental insurance and 401(k) plan. Send cover letter and resume to Andy Smaltz, Location Manager, American Implement, Inc., 2718 West Oklahoma Avenue, Ulysses, Kansas, 67880 or call (800) 356-3460 or email andys@americanImplement.com.

Help Wanted

KEARNY COUNTY HOSPITAL LAKIN, KANSAS

Payless Shoe Source now accepting applications for all leadership positions Apply online at — careersatpayless.com

The ideal RN candidate for this fulltime position is responsible for providing quality patient care in a critical assess hospital setting which provides OB, surgical services and ER services. Other duties include, but not limited to scheduling and managing staff; quality projects, manage EHR in this department and being a productive member of the facility’s management team.

PSI TRANSPORT is always looking for Good Company Livestock Haulers.! Competitive Pay, Life/Health/Dental Benefits paid in Full for Employees, Discounted for Family, 401K and Bonus Program Available.!Contact (785) 675-3477 for more information. SALES POSITION in the Ulysses, KS & Dumas, TX area. Center Pivot Systems, PVC Pipe, & other Ag related equipment. Paid employee medical, paid vacation, 401K pension plan, salary plus commission based on experience. Excellent opportunity for aggressive, self motivated person. Experience helpful, but will train the right person. Contact: Kevin Classen @ T-L Irrigation Co. L JCT. HWY 83 & 56, Sublette, KS. (620) 675-2253 or Mobile: (620) 353-0018 or pick up an application at your local T-L Irrigation stores. EOE/AAE

DRIVERS: TRAINING, Class A-CDL. Train and work for us! Professional and focused www.workforcleary buildingcorp.com training for your Class A-CDL. You choose beor stop in today! 2840 Schulman Ave Ste A tween Company Driver, Garden City KS 67846 Owner Operator, Lease (620)271-0359 Operator or Lease 224706 Trainer. (877) 369-7885 MID STATE Farmers www.centraltruckingCoop, Inc. is seeking BRUNGARDT drivingjobs.com applicants for a Full HOWER Ward Elliott & Pfeifer L.C. is seek- EXP. FLATBED Driv- Time Chemical Applicator.! The applicants ing CPA or CPA caners:! Regional opportu- must possess the foldidate with 3+ years nities now open with lowing:, a Class A CDL, experience for our plenty of freight & great 1A chemical applicator THE FINNEY County Garden City office. pay! 800-277-0212 or license, chemical appli- Farm Service Agency (FSA) is accepting apExperienced tax proprimeinc.com cator experience pre- plications for a tempofessional with strong FOR SALE!!! Special ferred, clean back- rary full-time Program tax background Gov't Programs for Mo- ground with no felonies, Technician position beneeded. Knowledge bile Homes $0 Down and a good driving re- ginning at a Grade 3 of agriculture or oil for Land Owners.! cord.! Mid State Farm- with promotion potential and gas taxation FREE Construction ers Coop, Inc. has com- to a Grade 7. Salary beneficial. Competitive salary and benefit Loans.! Basements, petitive wages and range is $24,933 to package. Please send Garages, Storm Shel- benefits.! Please send $50,431 depending on ters, etc. Used Homes resume to PO Box 195, knowledge and experiresume to Personnel $19,900-$69,900.! All Rush Center, KS 67575 ence. Application packCoordinator, 302 N. T y p e s or Call 785-372-4239 ets may be picked up at Fleming, Suite 6, Gar- C r e d i t den City, KS 67846 or Accepted.! Habla Espa- for an application EOE. the 2106 E Spruce, Garden City, KS benol!!! 866-858-6862 email to NOW HIRING for Lube tween 8:00 am and rogerb@bhcpa.com GARDEN CITY Vision Technician. Experience 4:30 pm Monday Source is now accept- preferred. Apply in per- through Friday. Applicaing resumes for an Op- son at Burtis Motors. tion deadline is 4:30 tician. Prefer someone • Self Motivated NOW HIRING! Truck pm, Monday, July 8th, with experience, but • Friendly Attitude Driving School Instruc- 2013. • Valid Driver’s License willing to train the right tors and Management. person. Bilingual in DRIVERS • 18 Yrs. or Older JOIN CRST's brand T R U C K Spanish a must. Apply APPLY IN PERSON new training school in wanted to haul boxed in person at 410 CamBETWEEN 9AM-11AM Cedar Rapids, Iowa! meat and general compus Dr, Garden City KS NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE Relocation assistance modities in the Midwest Excellent C a l l : region. General Pest Control p r o v i d e d . wages and benefits inhas an opening for a 866-397-7407; email: cluding non-taxable per full time Service Tech- mknoot@crst.com diem. CDL required. nician no experience Home once per week Outside Sales/ Cus705 W. Kansas • Garden City, KS necessary, will train the tomer Service Help plus weekends. Experiright person. Sales/ Wanted. Leading Office enced drivers are eligiService experience Products Dealer in SW ble for hiring bonus. beneficial EOE pre-emKansas is expanding C o n t act Larry at ployment & random their sales department. 800-835-0193 for dedrug screening reFT, sales experience tails. quired. Excellent beneGarnand Fine helpful, established terfits included. 15609 S Furniture is looking KINDSVATER ritory, self starter, good Hwy. 23, Cimarron, Ks for a full-time TRUCKING driving record, competi( 6 2 0 ) 8 5 5 7 7 6 8 o r delivery/setup person. DODGE CITY, KS tive salary and benefit 1-800-362-0124 Must have clean DL package. Send resume TRUCK DRIVING & strong work ethic. HEAVY EQUIPMENT or apply in person to: positions available. Top pay with benefits. Operator Career! 3 Office Solutions, Inc. Class A CDL required. Week Hands On Train- 1007 N 8th, Garden Apply at 2 years experience. City, KS, 67846. ing School. Bulldozers, 1401 E. Kansas Ave., Call (620) 275-5499. Backhoes, Excavators. Garden City. 224700 National Certifications. BIG HEADLINES Is it Junk? Or is it GET THE JOB DONE! Lifetime Job Placement Advertise the right way Retro Cool? Don’t ETHANOL PLANT OpAssistance. VA Benefits in the classifieds. think about it - Place erators – Pratt Energy an ad with us today! Eligible! is seeking candidates 1-866-362-6497 for ethanol plant opera(Published in the Garden City Telegram Thursday, June 27, 2013. tions with good work HELP WANTED ethic and teamwork Waitresses nights and ORDINANCE NO.399 skills. Process plant exweekends. Apply atperience or 2 years of Hannah!s Corner AN ORDINANCE ESTABLISHING COMPENSATION post-high school techni- Taylor Ave & Mary St. FOR THE CITY COUNCIL AND MAYOR FOR THE cal education desired. Garden City CITY OF SUBLETTE, KANSAS. Normal shift is 12 Local construction supBE IT ORDAINED BY THE GOVERNING BODY OF hours, 4 on/4 off. Send THE CITY OF SUBLETTE, KANSAS: resume to Pat Breeding plier needs salesperson for multiple product pbreeding@prattenWHEREAS, K.S.A. 15-204 requires all third class citlines. Bring resume to ergy.com ies to prescribe by Ordinance the salaries and comEric, 807 E. Fulton, pensation of its officer. Garden City. HELP US HELP YOU!

DELIVERY

Advertise in the classifieds.

www.gctelegram.com

(PUBLISHED IN THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM ON JUNE 27, 2013.)

WHEREAS, the City deems it necessary to establish compensation for the mayor and city council members. SECTION 1. COMPENSATION. Relations to the Mayor and City Council Members.

SUMMARY OF ORDINANCE NO. 400 On June 19, 2013, the governing body of the City of Sublette, Kansas passed an ordinance entitled: AN ORDINANCE AUTHORIZING AND PROVIDING FOR THE ISSUANCE OF GENERAL OBLIGATION REFUNDING & IMPROVEMENT BONDS, SERIES 2013B AND SERIES 2013C, OF THE CITY OF SUBLETTE, KANSAS; PROVIDING FOR THE LEVY AND COLLECTION OF AN ANNUAL TAX FOR THE PURPOSE OF PAYING THE PRINCIPAL OF AND INTEREST ON SAID BONDS AS THEY BECOME DUE; AUTHORIZING CERTAIN OTHER DOCUMENTS AND ACTIONS IN CONNECTION THEREWITH; AND MAKING CERTAIN COVENANTS WITH RESPECT THERETO. The Bonds approved by the Ordinance are being issued in the principal amount of $2,480,000, to finance certain internal improvements and refund previously issued general obligation bonds of the City, and constitute general obligations of the City payable as to both principal and interest, to the extent necessary, from ad valorem taxes which may be levied without limitation as to rate or amount upon all the taxable tangible property, real and personal, within the territorial limits of the City. A complete text of the Ordinance may be obtained or viewed free of charge at the office of the City Clerk, 103 S. Cody Street, P.O. Box 934, Sublette, Kansas 67877. A reproduction of the Ordinance is available for not less than 7 days following the publication date of this Summary at www.sublettekansas.com. This Summary is hereby certified to be legally accurate and sufficient pursuant to the laws of the State of Kansas.

In accordance with K.S.A. l5-204the Governing Body hereby establishes the rate of compensation at one hundred twenty-five dollars ($12S1 for each meeting attended by a city council member. Likewise, the mayor shall be paid compensation at one hundred twenty-five dollars ($125) for each meeting attended. Meeting shall be construed to include any regular monthly meeting as well as any special meeting called by the mayor. In order to for compensation to occur for a meeting, it shall be a minimum of one hour. Compensation shall be limited to at most three (3) meetings per month. In the event {more than three (3) meetings occur in one month, then there shall be no compensation for the fourth (4th) or subsequent meetings for that month. In order to qualify for payment, the mayor/council member must be present for the entirety of the meeting, from the time the mayor calls the meeting to order until the motion to adjourn is passed. The meeting must be at least one hour in length. This amount shall be calculated at the end of each month and paid during the month thereafter. SECTION 2. EFFECTIVE DATE. That this ordinance shall be in full force and effect from and after its publication once in the official newspaper. SECTION 3. PREVIOUS ORDINANCES, Any ordinances or parts thereof in conflict with this ordinance are hereby repealed. PASSED AND APPROVED BY THE GOVERNING BODY OF THE CITY OF SUBLETTE, KANSAS, AND THE MAYOR, THIS 3RD DAY OF JUNE, 2013. JERY BAILEY-MAYOR

DATED: June 24, 2013. City Attorney

ATTEST: JEANNIE TRIGG-CITY CLERK 224738

MED/SURG Supervisor

PARTNERS IN Excellence!OTR Drivers APU Equipped Pre-Pass EZ-pass passenger policy. 2012 & Newer equipment. 100% NO touch. Butler Transport 1-800-528-7825

212877

SALES POSITION in the Ulysses, KS & Dumas, TX area. Center Pivot Systems, PVC Pipe, & other Ag related equipment. Paid employee medical, paid vacation, 401K pension plan, salary plus commission based on experience. Excellent opportunity for aggressive, self motivated person. Experience helpful, but will train the right person. Contact: Kevin Classen @ T-L Irrigation Co. L JCT. HWY 83 & 56, Sublette, KS. (620) 675-2253 or Mobile: (620) 353-0018 or pick up an application at your local T-L Irrigation stores. EOE/AAE

ANTHONY, KANSAS is seeking Water/Wastewater Operator. High School Diploma/GED and valid driver's license required. Applications and complete job description: www.anthonykansas.or g. 620-842-5434. EOE. Open until filled.

THURSDAY, June 27, 2013 224719

A8

224737

Qualification will include but not limited to supervisory experience with 3+ years of RN acute care experience and a current RN license in Kansas. Applications may be picked up at the KCH Business Office or downloaded at www.kearnycountyhospital.com Contact: Sue Stingley, Director of Nursing Services 620-355-1388 or Donna Winright, human resource Director 620-355-1520

Competitive Wages Excellent Benefits Loan/Scholarship Group Health Insurance Pension Plan

EOE. Physical exam and drug testing required.

International Paper, The premier manufacturer of linerboard, medium, and corrugated packaging products is currectly hiring for the following positions:

Maintenance Technician Starting Pay $19.43 - $21.98 (Depending on Experience)

Successful candidates should posses the following: t 4USPOH FMFDUSJDBM CBDLHSPVOE JO NBOVGBDUVSJOH environment t 4USPOH NFDIBOJDBM TLJMMT BSF SFRVJSFE TVDI BT neumatics, hydraulics and welding. t "CJMJUZ UP XPSL WBSJPVT TIJGUT JODMVEJOH OJHIUT BOE weekends

Production Worker

Starting Pay $15.37 + Shift Differential (When Applicable)

Successful candidates should posses the following: t 5XP ZFBST PG XPSL FYQFSJFODF JO B NBOVGBDUVSJOH environment with at least one year with the same employer t .BOVGBDUVSJOH FYQFSJFODF DPSSVHBUFE JOEVTUSZ B plus. t "CJMJUZ UP XPSL WBSJPVT TIJGUT JODMVEJOH OJHIUT BOE weekends. All candidates must pass pre-employment screenings to be considered for a position. IP offers competitive benefits and wages. "DDFQUJOH BQQMJDBUJPOT M-F from 10:00 am - 4:00 pm at International Paper, 2502 East Hwy 50, Garden City, Ks 67846 & Garden City Workforce Center, 107 E. Spruce Streeet, Garden City, Ks 67846 Equal Employment Opportunity Employer M/F/D/V

224673

(Published in The Garden City Telegram this 27th, day of June, 2013.) ! ! RESOLUTION NO. 061913-03 ! A RESOLUTION ALLOWING FOR THE USE OF FIREWORKS WITHIN THE CITY OF SUBLETTE, HASKELL COUNTY, KANSAS; SETTING DATES AND TIMES FOR THE SAME AND REPEALING RESOLUTION 040113-01 IN PART. ! BE IT RESOLVED BY THE COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF SUBLETTE, KANSAS: ! Section 1. INTENT. This resolution is passed pursuant to Ordinance No. 380 section 6; in conjunction with Resolution No. 040113-01 which was passed on the 1st day of April, 2013 banning the use of fireworks in the City of Sublette, Kansas for 2013. Due to the change in weather conditions the city deems it advisable to allow the use of fireworks in the City of Sublette, Kansas on the days of July 3 and July 4 of 2013. Section 2. RESOLVED. Pursuant to Ordinance No. 380, section 6 and Resolution 040113-01 section 4, the Sublette City Council hereby allows the use of fireworks for July 3, 2013 from 8:00 am to 10:00 pm and on July 4, 2013 from 8:00 am to midnight. Fireworks shall not be used on any other days or outside the prescribed time contained herein. The term “Fireworks” shall include without limitation through enumeration: firecrackers, torpedoes, sparklers, Roman candles, skyrockets, pin wheels, cap or toy pistols (except not more than .25 grams of explosive mixture), canes, bombs, cannons or other like devises and all classes of fireworks that may be shot into the air or propelled over the ground by explosive discharges or any device using blank cartridges. Section 3. PENALTIES. Pursuant to Ordinance 380, any person, firm or corporation violating any provision of this resolution, shall, upon conviction thereof, be punished by a fine of not to exceed $500.00. Section 4. PUBLICATION. This resolution shall become effective upon publication in the official city newspaper. Section 5. CONFLICTING RESOLUTION. Any provisions of Resolution 040113-01 in conflict with this resolution are hereby repealed; all parts not in conflict remain in full force and effect. PASSED AND APPROVED by the Governing Body of the City of Sublette, Kansas, this 19th day of June, 2013. ATTEST: Mayor, Jery Bailey City Clerk, Jeannie Trigg 224739

End your search today Browse the classifieds


Garden City Telegram Help Wanted

Bargain Blowout

Autos

UNITED METHODIST Mexican American Ministries is accepting applications for a Coordinator for the Lifetime Smiles Program. This position is full-time during the calendar school year. Qualified candidates will be fluent in written and oral English and Spanish and be willing to work with people of various races, cultures and socio-economic groups to facilitate access to oral health services. High School Diploma or GED is required. Prior experience in the dental field/office setting a plus. Some travel, evening and weekends are required. Interested parties should send cover letter and resume to: UMMAM, Attention: Personnel, 712 St. John St, Garden City, KS, 67846 or to srussell@ummam.org.

BEAUTIFUL CHERRY ENTERTAINMENT CEN T ER , L AM P S, BAR STOOL, ANTIQUE ROCKING CHAIR AND MORE! Bargains Plus Consignment, 308 N. 7th, Garden City. Tuesday- Saturday 10am-4pm. www.gctbargains.com

2003 GMC Z71 pickup. Cargo cover and 101 Lakeview Court, 180,000 miles, extra sliding cargo divider. Cimarron clean, runs great, eve- Fits Nissan Xterra. 4 bedroom, 3 bath, rything works. $8000 Great for traveling. Ex3 car garage, granite OBO. (620) 277-8441. cellent condition. See countertops, wood at Bargains Plus Confloors, beautiful 2006 HONDA Accord CHEVY AVALANCHE signment, 308 N. 7th, landscaping. LX - V6, 4 Door, 76K 2003 Red 110K miles. Garden City. TuesdayClose to schools. Great Car in!Great 5.3L V8, 20" Chrome Saturday 10am-4pm. Quiet Neighborhood. Condition.!White w/Tan wheels, 2 new tires. www.gctbargains.com (620) 855-0460 Cloth Interior.!Asking C a l l or text (620) 357-4067 Trailers $9,900. Please call 620-805-9462 for pics. (620) 277-8070. Don"t $10,750 107 Hampton Court NEW UTILITY & cargo miss this deal! Southwind trailers . Big & Small! 224729 BIG L SALES , 1102 3 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath, 224730 East Fulton, Garden 1500 sq.ft. up, 1500 sq.ft. down. Finished City. basement, hardwood Residential Rentals floors, screened-in 2 bed, 2 bath duplex, patio, 3 car garage, 2006 DoDge fireplace, garage. $795/ Cul-de-sac. $258,500. 2005 PT Cruiser 5.9 4x4 Dually SLT $795. (620) 640-3838. (620) 290-8254 w/ CM Flatbed, 182K miles Touring One Owner, Only 17K miles 2 BEDROOM, 1 Bath. Asking $16,600 108 Ryan Ave, Holcomb www.harvestauto.com 210 S Farmland Rd. 5 bedroom, 2 bath, D/A $8,900 $450 / $350. No pets. garage, 1260 sq.ft., full www.harvestauto.com Call Kim @ (620) finished basement, cov640-1514. ered patio. Call to view 155 Harvest St. Luxury newly remod- (620) 805-2503, (620) 155 Harvest St. eled 2 bedroom apart- 805-2809. (behind Mia Rumba) ment. No pets. $900 / 1713 PEPPERWOOD (behind Mia Rumba) 620-275-5150 $900. (620) 510-2477. Ct. 4 bedroom, 2 bath, 620-275-5150 Motorcycles & ATVs Commercial Rentals 1548 sq ft home. $295,000 LOCAL TRUCK park- 02 HARLEY Wide 4375 E HWY 50 just (620) 640-2951 ing. Call 620-290-0582 Glide, purple. 22k east of Morton Building or 620-272-1892 miles. Priced under 50 X 50 W/ BATH2303 Lee book $7,500. 01 Harley ROOM , HOT WATER 3 bedroom, S/A garage, Selling your vehicle? Sportster, Candy Red. HEATER, 12 FT OVER fenced yard, almost finDid you know parking basement. your vehicle on city 12k miles. Lowered for HEAD DOOR, SMALL s h e d streets, right-of-ways lady rider. $4,500 OBO. OFFICE, INSULATED, $115,000. VERY NICE. Metz (620) 276-6299 and other public prop- 620-384-5377 Rentals LLC. ask for erty is prohibited in Garden City? The City 2006 HARLEY DAVID- DAVE 620-874-4043 of Garden City ordi- SON Fatboy Motorcy- FOR RENT: 40! x 123! nance No 86-2 (88) cle. Sunburst candy x 14! Warehouse/Shop states in part “No per- red. Only 6,622 miles. Building with offices, son shall park a vehicle Always garaged, Willie bathrooms, and 20! x upon any roadway for G. skull accessories, 13! D.S. door. 150 N Inthe principal purpose lots of chrome, leather dustrial Drive. (620) 2611 N. Coachman of: (a) Displaying such saddle bags & all origi- 275-6142 or (620) Well maintained home vehicle for sale (b) nal parts included. 640-4149 in nice NE neighborWashing, greasing or $ 1 0 , 5 0 0 . (620) hood. 5 bdrm, 3 bath. repairing such vehicle 640-1954. 3,057 sq. ft. Large except repairs necessikitchen, bedrooms, and tated by an emer- 2006 HONDA Goldfamily room. $208,000. wing, new tires, lots of gency�. Violations of Call 620-640-0455. See this ordinance May re- extras, only 9,200 www.forsalebyowner. $16,950! sult in a $40 fine and m i l e s , com for more info. 620-339-9634 court costs.

Pick up in the alley behind The Telegram 310 N. 7th Street Garden City

TRUCK DRIVER. End Dump experience a plus, loader experience a must. CDL required. Local hauls, home Wide variety of collectevery night. Call 620- able State dishes. Only $2 each! See at Bar272-4725. gains Plus ConsignMiscellaneous for Sale ment, 308 N. 7th, GarFOR SALE: 15,000 den City. TuesdayBTU 110V Frigidaire Saturday 10am-4pm. window air conditioner www.gctbargains.com with remote. $175. Call Pets 620-872-4054 FREE TO A GOOD Want to Buy HOME: 6 week old kitWANT TO BUY: Used tens. (620) 290-6969 Lawn Mower. Call (620) PUPPIES FOR SALE: 214-2898 AKC black & tan Wearing Apparel Daschunds.. (620) 290-2937 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.

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

Business Opportunities

FOR SALE! Women!s Fitness Center. Call Sonya @ 620-290-2517

Autos

Pickups & Trucks

Auto Parts & Services

2005 CHEVY Suburban LT. Loaded. Excellent vehicle at reasonable price. Call (620) 290-9691.

HArVesT AuTo L.L.C.

STAPP’S AUTO SALES Check us out at

HARVeST AUTo L.L.C.

2009 YAMAH TTR 230. Very clean stock bike, good tires. Good condition. $2100 OBO. (620) 335-0180.

www.stappsautosales.com

FOR SALE: 2009 Honda Shadow Spirit. Black, windshield, only TOYOTA SUPRA 2200 miles. Call Turbo 1989 6-cyl. or 5-spd. manual. White 6 2 0 - 2 9 0 - 7 0 8 0 needs work $1400 620-335-5515 OBO call or text 277 YFM200 Yamaha 4 5090 wheeler. Shaft drive, reverse, front & rear CALL TODAY racks, good tires, good Sold tomorrow! battery. $1200. (620) 355-6204 (620) 275-8500 214157

1996 F350 Utility truck. 220,000 miles. New tires. Good for someone in the electrical or construction field. $2500 OBO. (620) 937-0625

www.gctbargains.com

2000 FORD Windstar.. Call after 6pm. (620) 275-4245.

An addition to the family on the way? Check out our van and SUV classifieds.

2001 DODGE Grand Caravan ES. Fully loaded - all bells! VERY CLEAN! $4800 OBO. (620) 640-8611.

KanEquip, one of the largest Agricultural Dealerships in Kansas, is looking for an

&YQFSJFODFE 4FSWJDF 5FDIOJDJBO

for the Garden City, KS Dealership. The position offers a rewarding career path, with competitive wages and an excellent benefit package. To learn more about this great opportunity and to apply on line go to kanequip.com/employment. For more information about this Service Technician Position Contact Chris at 785-456-2083 Ext 192.

223395

X-Ray Technologist, Clinic

State Licensure Required. Candidate must have knowledge of X-Ray procedures and protocols. Candidate will be responsible for preparing patients for radiographic procedures, maintain required records including patient records, daily log reports and monthly reporting. Sandhill offers a competitive salary and benefits package! Email or fax resumes to the Office Manager at: kmunoz@sandhillorthopaedic.com or (620) 275-2687

224703

Come Join Our Team!

is looking for a

Licensed Plumber Adam’s Electric and Plumbing is now taking applications for a position open in the plumbing department. This position is for a licensed plumber. Competitive wages as well as full benefits and guaranteed 40 hours a week will go along with this job. Wage will be determined on experience. Must pass a drug test as well as have a current Kansas drivers license.

224602

224725

Real Estate 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 Classifieds Work!

Please email tsanders@adamsep.com or call (620) 672-7279, or stop by 606 N Main, Pratt, KS for any questions.

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.

Golden Plains Credit Union is currently seeking a qualified individual to fill a full time position as a Teller for the 9:45am-6:15pm shift. Previous Teller experience preferred. Strong customer service skills essential. Send cover letter and resume to — Vice President, HR Services Golden Plains Credit Union PO Box 459, Garden City, KS 67846 EOE

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.

OPTIMUS COMPS USA. Total Optimization only $150. Anti-virus, Malware, & Rootkit Removal & More. Call Scott at 290-8302. A+ Certified

Specializing

52877

In Interior Carpentry

Paramount

Carpentry

620-260-6600

WILLIAMS

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

MJT CONSTRUCTION

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

Call Tim at (620) 521-2181

Check out the classifieds!

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)

28090

• Tree Service • Snow Removal • Firewood

TELLER

Sandhill Orthopaedic & Sportsmedicine is hiring for Full-time and PRN X-Ray Technician(s) for our Clinic.

*/5&(3*5: t '*/"/$*"- 453&/(5) t 26"-*5: t 5&".803,

Established dealer group is looking for an Experienced Automotive Service Manager for their GMC/Buick dealership. GM experience preferred with experience in AutoSoft computer programs a plus. You must be a team player and be able to motivate a team of service advisors and technicians. This is a great opportunity. Great pay plan with health and many other benefits. Email your resume today to jwentling@buyggautos.com

Real Estate

Lowest Prices Free Estimates Licensed & Insured Workers Compensation

Troy Hawker, Owner Operator

33622

COMPLETE SET of Gre e n D e p r e s s i o n 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

Love seat in beautful condition $250. Couches $100-$200. Vintage, cool green sofa sleeper! See at Bargains Plus Consignment, 308 N. 7th, Garden City. TuesdayWARD!S GARDEN Saturday 10am-4pm. C afe is now hiring for www.gctbargains.com an experienced waitress. 7.25 hourly plus tips. Apply at Wards FREE! YOU HAUL! Garden Cafe. North WOOD PALLETS Hwy 83.

Drivers

A9

THURSDAY, June 27, 2013

271-0478 • (cell) 640-1605

224691

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

End your search today Get it here!

www.cattle-empire.net Click on employment opportunities hr@cattle-empire.net, or fax: (620) 649-2291 Equal opportunity employer M/F/D/V

224419

224240

Area Manager

Eastern Colorado Well Service

Irsik & Doll

Pen Riders Feed Mill Operator Beefland Feed Yard is now taking applications for Pen Riders and a Feed Mill Operator. Applicants should be reliable, hard working, and self motivated. Individual must have previous experience and knowledge. Competitive wages are offered with a full benefits package including: 401(k) with company match, profit sharing plan, 100% paid medical and dental insurance for employee, paid short/long term disability insurance, life insurance, paid vacation, sick leave, and career advancement opportunities. To apply for this outstanding opportunity, apply in person at Beefland, 12500 S Beefland Road, Garden City, KS, or call 620-275-2030 to schedule an appointment. Irsik & Doll is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

www.irsikanddoll.com

An exciting opportunity exists for an experienced and proven oilfield services manager to join our outstanding team in Ulysses, Kansas. The area manager will have broad responsibilities including; sales, new business development, staffing, fleet management, safety and fiscal responsibilities. The incumbent must have an active customer list within the geographic area (150 mile radius), great customer and employee relations skills and an unwavering commitment to safe operating practices and planned equipment maintenance. The applicant must possess excellent leadership and communication skills with the ability to work under pressure within a growing service business. Eastern Colorado Well Service provides oilfield services including work-over rigs, tool operators and fishing services. Salary Range: negotiable based on experience. Benefits include; quarterly bonus, 401K, disability and health insurance, truck allowance and vacations. Send resume to Eastern Colorado Well Service, 1400 W. 122nd Ave, Suite 120, Westminster, CO 80234 – Attention CEO. Alternatively you can send your resume to jobs@ecws1.com. 224722


A10

THURSDAY, June 27, 2013

the Garden City Telegram 4

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3308 YELLOWSTAR ST., Friday ONLY 9am-???. Toys, picture frames, pet items, dishes, upright freezer, lawn mower, flower pots, dishes, clothing, kids motorized vehicles.

1912 E. LABRADOR #3 Garage/Moving Sale! Everything must go! Furniture, clothes, kitchen items and much more! Friday 8-1

3 3601 WESTPORT Inside & Outside. Fri 9 - ?

Real Estate Career Shopping? Don!t Miss a day of The Telegram Classifieds!

1802 E Laurel Sat. 8:30 to 11:00 Great items! Come check it out!

409 N. 1ST. Friday 4-8pm. Everything must go! All items 50¢ or less!

2933 WINDMILL Dr. Infant to adult clothes, baby toys & equip, Wii Fit, books, misc. Fri 4 - 7. Sat 8 - 1

2109 N 6th. Mary Kay, Avon, Princess House, New & Used Clothes. Fri 10-? Sat 8-1

Real Estate 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.

1414 N 3rd. Kids clothes, some womens clothes, jogging strollers, 50cc 4-Wheeler, lots of household items - some brand new. Fri 9-? Sat 9-?

1108 KINGSBURY. Childrens up to Plus Size clothes, furniture, lots of misc. Fri 4-8

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Mobile Homes 1999 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, $17,000; 1998 2 bedroom, 2 bath, $15,000. Call (620) 276-6860.

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Bring more shoppers to your garage sale. Place your garage sale ad in The Telegram, 620-275-8500.

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Sports THE GARDEN CITY TELEGRAM

THURSDAY, June 27, 2013

GCTelegram.com/Sports

SWKPrepZone.com

A11

Pats’ Hernandez charged with murder

Associated Press

In this image taken from video, police escort Aaron Hernandez from his home in handcuffs Wednesday in Attleboro, Mass. Hernandez was taken from his home more than a week after a Boston semi-pro football player was found dead in an industrial park a mile from Hernandez’s house.

ATTLEBORO, Mass. (AP) — New England Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez was arrested Wednesday and charged with murder in the shooting death of a friend prosecutors say had angered the NFL player at a nightclub a few days earlier by talking to the wrong people. Hernandez, 23, was taken from his North Attleborough home in handcuffs just over a week after Boston semipro football player Odin Lloyd’s bullet-riddled body was found in an industrial park a mile away. Less than two hours after the arrest, the Patriots announced they had cut Hernandez. Lloyd was a 27-year-old athlete with the Boston Bandits who was dating the sister of Hernandez’s fian-

cee. He was shot multiple times on a secluded gravel road, authorities said. Hernandez “drove the victim to that remote spot, and then he orchestrated his execution,” prosecutor Bill McCauley said. “It is at bottom a circumstantial case. It is not a strong case,” his attorney, Michael Fee, said at a court hearing during which Hernandez was ordered held without bail on murder charges and five weapons counts. Lloyd’s family members cried and hugged as the prosecutor outlined the killing. Two were so overcome with emotion that they had to leave the courtroom. McCauley said the slaying stemmed from a night out at a Boston club on

June 14. He said Hernandez was upset about certain things, including that Lloyd had talked to some people Hernandez “had troubles with.” The prosecutor did not elaborate. On the night of June 16, Hernandez texted two friends from out of state and asked them to hurry back to Massachusetts. Surveillance footage from Hernandez’s home showed him leaving with a gun, and he told someone in the house that he was upset and couldn’t trust anyone anymore, the prosecutor said. The three men picked up Lloyd at his home around 2:30 a.m., according to authorities. As they drove around in their rented car, they discussed what happened at the nightclub, and

Lloyd started getting nervous, McCauley said. Lloyd texted his sister, “Did you see who I am with?” When she asked who, he answered, at 3:22 a.m., “NFL,” then, a minute later, he sent one final text: “Just so you know.” Within a few minutes, people working the overnight shift at the industrial park reported hearing gunshots, McCauley said. Surveillance video showed the car going into a remote area of the industrial park and emerging four minutes later, the prosecutor said. A short time later, Hernandez returned to his house, and he and one of the other men were seen on his home surveillance system holding guns, McCauley said.

Klein camp coming to Garden City By BRETT MARSHALL

bmarshall@gctelegram.com

Former Kansas State University quarterback Collin Klein will be conducting a two-day passing and receiving camp on July 17 and 18 at Buffalo Stadium, home of Garden City High School’s football team. Kansas State Sen. Garrett Love of Montezuma, a graduate and former quarterback at South Gray High School, has been instrumental in setting up a statewide series of camps that feature Klein, the 2012 Big 12 Player of the Year. “We’re really happy to be able to participate and hold the camp at the GCHS stadium,” said Buffaloes’ head coach Brian Hill. “Anytime you can get a person the caliber of a Collin Klein into town, it’s a great thing for the kids.” With corporate underwriting coming from WindRiver Grain, LLC, Commerce Bank, Conestoga Energy Partners, LLC, and Black Hills Energy, the camp tuition is low compared to other camps, Hill said. The only two-day camp on the statewide circuit costs $55 per person. The camp will run from 9 a.m. to noon both days for youths from third to eighth grade while the camp for high school players will be 1 to 4 p.m. Registration starts one hour prior to each camp’s start time. Klein established numerous school and conference records during his career at K-State. He’s the only player to have been chosen captain of the Wildcats for three seasons. He was a Heisman Trophy finalist last year and winner of the Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award. While at K-State, Klein amassed 4,724 career passing yards and 30 touchdown passes while running for 2,485 yards and scoring 56 TDs on the ground. In addition to Klein, the camp staff will consist of Doug Klein, Collin’s father and first football coach; Love, a four-year starter at South Gray and the recipient of the Kansas Wendy’s High School Heisman award; Dane Simoneau, a former high school and collegiate quarterback (Washburn University), who amassed more than 11,000 yards, a school record; Alex Melugin, who played at Dodge City Community College and then Friends, where he was the KCAC Conference Player of the Year; and Matt Farmer, an All-American wide receiver at the Air Force Academy. Go online to www.collinkleinpassingacademy. com for more details on the camp. Interested persons may email the camp at CKPassingAcademy@ gmail.com or call (620) 8694318.

Brad Nading/Telegram

Focusing on fundamentals

Jeff Boschee, right, who was a standout guard at the University of Kansas from 1998 to 2002, explains the next skills game to participants in a basketball camp for third- through sixth-graders Wednesday at the Garden City Family YMCA. More than 70 area youth participated in Boschee’s camp. A separate camp was held for seventh- through ninth-graders.

Favorites fall in chaotic day at Wimbledon Federer, women’s No. 3 Sharapova upset; Azarenka out due to injury. LONDON (AP) — It was already one of the most tumultuous days in Grand Slam tennis history, with seven players forced out by injuries, two of the top three seeded women eliminated and six former No. 1-ranked players leaving early. So what else could happen to make this a day like no other at Wimbledon? Here’s what: the world’s greatest grass-court player losing on his favorite Centre Court — the most famous stage in tennis — to a 116thranked qualifier who had never beaten a top-10 player. Seven-time champion Roger Federer was stunned by Sergiy Stakhovsky in the second round at the All England Club on Wednesday, his earliest loss in a Grand Slam tournament in 10 years. The Ukrainian outplayed Federer, serving and volleying his way to a 6-7 (5), 7-6 (5), 7-5, 7-6 (5) victory that stands out as one of the sport’s biggest upsets. “Magic,” Stakhovsky said. “I couldn’t play any better today.”

Associated Press

Roger Federer of Switzerland, back, looks to Sergiy Stakhovsky of Ukraine after losing to him in their men’s second round singles match Wednesday at Wimbledon. Federer’s loss ended his record streak of reaching at least the quarterfinals at 36 consecutive Grand Slam tournaments, a run that began at Wimbledon in 2004, shortly after a third-round exit at that year’s French Open. “It’s always a disappoint-

ment losing any match around the world, and particularly here,” Federer said. “I’ve had some great moments here, but also some tougher ones. Can’t have ‘em all. It was a tough loss today.” The result capped a chaotic day of injuries, walk-

overs, retirements and shocking results. Third-seeded Maria Sharapova, the 2004 champion, fell to a 131st-ranked qualifier. No. 2 Victoria Azarenka was among the seven injury withdrawals — believed to be a Grand Slam single-day record in the Open era. Federer became the seventh former No. 1 player to exit the championships on this one day. After only three days of play, five of the top 10 seeded women and four of the top 10 men are already out of the draw. Federer’s defeat was his earliest at the All England Club since a first-round loss in 2002 to 154th-ranked Mario Ancic. Stakhovsky is the lowest-ranked player to beat Federer at any event since then. It ended with Stakhovsky converting on his second match point, a 13-stroke rally that finished with Federer hitting a backhand wide. Stakhovsky fell onto his back in celebration. He later bowed to the crowd as Federer walked off the court with a quick wave. Federer’s defeat was the biggest shock on a day full of shocks. Earlier, third-seeded Sharapova, the 2004 Wimbledon champion, was stunned 6-3, 6-4 by 131stranked Michelle Larcher

de Brito of Portugal in the second round. Sharapova slipped and fell several times on the grass on Court 2 and received medical treatment from the trainer in the second set. It wasn’t serious enough to force Sharapova to quit, as so many others did Wednesday either by walkover or mid-match retirements. Among the players to drop out: Azarenka (walkover, right knee), men’s No. 6 Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (retirement, left knee), John Isner (retirement, left knee) and Darcis (walkover, right shoulder). Also out: 10th-seeded Marin Cilic (walkover, left knee); 2006 quarterfinalist Radek Stepanek (retirement, left hamstring); and Yaroslava Shvedova (walkover, right arm). The International Tennis Federation said the seven players forced out is believed to be the most in one day at any Grand Slam event in the 45 years of the Open era. “Very black day,” Cilic said about the spate of injury withdrawals. “The other days, other weeks, there were no pullouts. Everything just happened today.” See Tennis, Page A12


A12

THURSDAY, June 27, 2013

the Garden City Telegram

Scoreboard On Tap

Television

BASEBALL American League By The Associated Press East Division W L Pct GB Boston 47 33 .588 — New York 42 35 .545 3.5 Baltimore 43 36 .544 3.5 Tampa Bay 41 38 .519 5.5 Toronto 39 38 .506 6.5 Central Division W L Pct GB Detroit 42 34 .553 — Cleveland 40 37 .519 2.5 Kansas City 36 39 .480 5.5 Minnesota 34 40 .459 7 Chicago 32 43 .427 9.5 West Division W L Pct GB Texas 45 33 .577 — Oakland 46 34 .575 — Los Angeles 35 43 .449 10 Seattle 34 45 .430 11.5 Houston 30 49 .380 15.5 ——— Wednesday’s Games Toronto 3, Tampa Bay 0 Miami 5, Minnesota 3 Oakland 5, Cincinnati 0 Pittsburgh 4, Seattle 2 Boston 5, Colorado 3 Cleveland 4, Baltimore 3 Texas 8, N.Y. Yankees 5 L.A. Angels 7, Detroit 4 Kansas City 4, Atlanta 3, 10 innings N.Y. Mets 3, Chicago White Sox 0 Houston 4, St. Louis 3 Today’s Games Texas (D.Holland 5-4) at N.Y. Yankees (P.Hughes 3-6), 12:05 p.m. L.A. Angels (Weaver 1-4) at Detroit (Fister 6-5), 12:08 p.m. Cleveland (Kluber 6-4) at Baltimore (Mig.Gonzalez 5-3), 6:05 p.m. Toronto (Wang 1-0) at Boston (Lester 7-4), 6:10 p.m. Kansas City (Guthrie 7-5) at Minnesota (Deduno 3-2), 7:10 p.m. Friday’s Games Cleveland at Chicago White Sox, 4:10 p.m., 1st game N.Y. Yankees at Baltimore, 6:05 p.m. Detroit at Tampa Bay, 6:10 p.m. Toronto at Boston, 6:10 p.m. Cincinnati at Texas, 7:05 p.m. Kansas City at Minnesota, 7:10 p.m. L.A. Angels at Houston, 7:10 p.m. Cleveland at Chicago White Sox, 7:40 p.m., 2nd game St. Louis at Oakland, 9:05 p.m. Chicago Cubs at Seattle, 9:10 p.m. ——— National League By The Associated Press East Division W L Pct GB Atlanta 45 34 .570 — Washington 39 38 .506 5 Philadelphia 37 41 .474 7.5

Today

Pro Baseball — 7 p.m., FSN, Kansas City Royals at Minnesota Twins. Pro Soccer — 1:30 p.m., ESPN, Confederations Cup, Semifinal, teams TBA, from Fortaleza, Brazil. Pro Tennis — 6 a.m., ESPN2, Wimbledon Championships, Early round, Day 4, from Wimbledon, England. Women’s Pro Golf — 2 p.m., ESPN2, U.S. Women’s Open Championship, first round, from Southampton, N.Y.

Friday

Auto Racing — 6:30 p.m., ESPN, NASCAR Nationwide Series, Feed The Children 300, from Sparta, Ky. New York 31 43 .419 11.5 Miami 27 50 .351 17 Central Division W L Pct GB Pittsburgh 48 30 .615 — St. Louis 48 30 .615 — Cincinnati 45 34 .570 3.5 Chicago 32 44 .421 15 Milwaukee 32 44 .421 15 West Division W L Pct GB Arizona 41 36 .532 — San Diego 39 39 .500 2.5 Colorado 39 40 .494 3 San Francisco 38 39 .494 3 Los Angeles 34 42 .447 6.5 ——— Wednesday’s Games Miami 5, Minnesota 3 Oakland 5, Cincinnati 0 Pittsburgh 4, Seattle 2 Boston 5, Colorado 3 Washington 3, Arizona 2 Kansas City 4, Atlanta 3, 10 innings Chicago Cubs 5, Milwaukee 4 N.Y. Mets 3, Chicago White Sox 0 Houston 4, St. Louis 3 Philadelphia at San Diego, (n) San Francisco at L.A. Dodgers, (n) Today’s Games Chicago Cubs (Garza 2-1) at Milwaukee (W.Peralta 5-8), 1:10 p.m. Arizona (Corbin 9-0) at Washington (Strasburg 4-6), 3:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Hefner 2-6) at Colorado (Chatwood 4-1), 5:10 p.m. Philadelphia (Pettibone 3-3) at L.A. Dodgers (Greinke 4-2), 9:10 p.m. Friday’s Games Milwaukee at Pittsburgh, 6:05 p.m. San Diego at Miami, 6:10 p.m. Washington at N.Y. Mets, 6:10 p.m. Arizona at Atlanta, 6:30 p.m. Cincinnati at Texas, 7:05 p.m. San Francisco at Colorado, 7:40 p.m. St. Louis at Oakland, 9:05 p.m. Chicago Cubs at Seattle, 9:10 p.m. Philadelphia at L.A. Dodgers, 9:10 p.m.

Pro Baseball — 7 p.m., FSN, Kansas City Royals at Minnesota Twins; 9 p.m., WGN, Chicago Cubs at Seattle Mariners. Pro Boxing — 8 p.m., ESPN2, Friday Night Fights, Sergio Mora vs. Grzegorz Proksa, from Jacksonville, Fla. Pro Tennis — 6 a.m., ESPN, Wimbledon Championships, Early round, Day 5, from Wimbledon, England; 2 p.m., ESPN, Wimbledon Championships, Early round, Day 5, from Wimbledon, England. Women’s Pro Golf — 2 p.m., ESPN2, U.S. Women’s Open Championship, second round, from Southampton, N.Y. X Games — 11 a.m., ESPN2, Munich, from Munich, Germany.

TENNIS Wimbledon Results By The Associated Press Wednesday At The All England Lawn Tennis & Croquet Club London Purse: $34.9 million (Grand Slam) Surface: Grass-Outdoor Singles Men Second Round Lukasz Kubot, Poland, def. Steve Darcis, Belgium, walkover. Adrian Mannarino, France, def. John Isner (18), United States, 1-1 (0-15), retired. Viktor Troicki, Serbia, def. Andrey Kuznetsov, Russia, 6-4, 6-3, 6-4. Jerzy Janowicz (24), Poland, def. Radek Stepanek, Czech Republic, 6-2, 5-3, retired. Dustin Brown, Germany, def. Lleyton Hewitt, Australia, 6-4, 6-4, 6-7 (3), 6-2. Kenny de Schepper, France, def. Marin Cilic (10), Croatia, walkover. Benoit Paire (25), France, def. Stephane Robert, France, 6-4, 7-5, 6-4. Nicolas Almagro (15), Spain, def. Guillaume Rufin, France, 7-5, 6-7 (6), 6-3, 6-4. Fernando Verdasco, Spain, def. Julien Benneteau (31), France, 7-6 (1), 7-6 (4), 6-4. Ernests Gulbis, Latvia, def. Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (6), France, 3-6, 6-3, 6-3, retired. Mikhail Youzhny (20), Russia, def. Vasek Pospisil, Canada, 6-2, 6-7 (3), 7-6 (7), 3-6, 6-4. Tommy Robredo (32), Spain, def. Nicolas Mahut, France, 7-6 (3), 6-1, 7-6 (5). Andy Murray (2), Britain, def. Yen-hsun Lu, Taiwan, 6-3, 6-3, 7-5. Jurgen Melzer, Austria, def. Julian Reister, Germany, 3-6, 7-6 (2), 7-6 (5), 6-2.

KU coach Self reprimanded for NCAA outburst

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LAWRENCE (AP) — Kansas basketball Bill Self was publicly reprimanded by the NCAA and fined an undisclosed amount on Wednesday after damaging the scorer’s table during an NCAA tournament game in Kansas City. Self struck the table at the Sprint Center on March 24 during a third-round win

over North Carolina. Ron Wellman, the chair of the Division I men’s basketball committee, said in a statement that “Coach Self’s actions were out of line with the committee’s expectations that championship participants act in a manner that represents the highest standards of sportsmanship.�

The damage fell under NCAA guidelines that define misconduct as any “unsportsmanlike conduct, unprofessional behavior or breach of law, occurring from the time the championship field is announced through the end of the championship that discredits the event or intercollegiate athletics.�

Verbal confrontation lands WSU official in trouble

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WICHITA (AP) — Wichita State University’s senior associate athletics director has been reprimanded by the NCAA for getting into an argument with security at the Staples Center in Los Angeles during this year’s NCAA basketball tournament.

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will now move on. Sexton says Boatright immediately informed him and NCAA representatives about the incident, then went back to the security team to apologize for how he handled Wichita State’s team entrance to practice that day.

Saturday Baseball — TBA, Finney County Blues at Pratt Tournament; Finney County Bandits at Kansas City Freedom Festival Tournament. Boxing — 6 p.m., Bad Boyz Boxing Club, Boxing in the Garden, GCHS. Sunday Baseball — TBA, Finney County Blues at Pratt Tournament; Finney County Bandits at Kansas City Freedom Festival Tournament. Juan Monaco (22), Argentina, def. Rajeev Ram, United States, 5-7, 6-2, 6-4, 6-2. Sergiy Stakhovsky, Ukraine, def. Roger Federer (3), Switzerland, 6-7 (5), 7-6 (5), 7-5, 7-6 (5). Women Second Round Flavia Pennetta, Italy, def. Victoria Azarenka (2), Belarus, walkover. Alize Cornet (29), France, def. Hsieh Suwei, Taiwan, 6-3, 6-2. Carla Suarez Navarro (19), Spain, def. Mirjana Lucic-Baroni, Croatia, 1-6, 6-3, 6-3. Monica Puig, Puerto Rico, def. Silvia Soler-Espinosa, Spain, 6-2, 5-7, 6-4. Eugenie Bouchard, Canada, def. Ana Ivanovic (12), Serbia, 6-3, 6-3. Eva Birnerova, Czech Republic, def. Lesia Tsurenko, Ukraine, 6-3, 6-4. Petra Cetkovska, Czech Republic, def. Caroline Wozniacki (9), Denmark, 6-2, 6-2. Karin Knapp, Italy, def. Lucie Safarova (27), Czech Republic, 4-6, 6-4, 6-4. Petra Kvitova (8), Czech Republic, def. Yaroslava Shvedova, Kazakhstan, walkover. Ekaterina Makarova (25), Russia, def. Garbine Muguruza, Spain, 6-2, 6-7 (3), 6-4. Michelle Larcher de Brito, Portugal, def. Maria Sharapova (3), Russia, 6-3, 6-4. Sloane Stephens (17), United States, def. Andrea Petkovic, Germany, 7-6 (2), 2-6, 8-6. Kirsten Flipkens (20), Belgium, def. Bojana Jovanovski, Serbia, 6-4, 6-4. Vesna Dolonc, Serbia, def. Jelena Jankovic (16), Serbia, 7-5, 6-2. Marion Bartoli (15), France, def. Christina McHale, United States, 7-5, 6-4. Camila Giorgi, Italy, def. Sorana Cirstea (22), Romania, 7-6 (7), 7-6 (6).

Tennis: Favorites fall at Wimbledon Continued from Page A11

If that wasn’t enough, the tournament lost all those former No. 1 players: Sharapova, Azarenka, Caroline Wozniacki, Ana Ivanovic and Jelena Jankovic among the women, and Federer and Lleyton Hewitt among the men. There were a few moments of normality. Second-seeded Andy Murray advanced easily to the third round with a 6-3, 6-3, 7-5 victory over Yen-hsun Lu of Taiwan on Court 1. Murray served 11 aces and had 41 winners against only 14 unforced errors.

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Come celebrate Christ with us!

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The verbal confrontation between Darron Boatright and Staples Center security happened before Wichita State’s regional final game against LaSalle. Shocker Athletics Director Eric Sexton issued a statement Wednesday saying the school accepted the reprimand and

Friday Baseball — TBA, Finney County Blues at Pratt Tournament; Finney County Bandits at Kansas City Freedom Festival Tournament. Boxing — 7 p.m., Bad Boyz Boxing Club, Boxing in the Garden, GCHS.

Keeping a Nation in Motion

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