HE’S THE MAN … But superhero’s more serious than campy in film rehash PREVIEW A7
COVERING THE BETTER PART OF KANSAS
THE HUTCHINSON NEWS XXXDAY,JUNE FRIDAY, XXXXXBER 14, 2013 XX, 2009
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City: Turn up heat on unsafe housing ■ Council voices view on
tougher efforts in session with Housing Commission. BY KEN STEPHENS The Hutchinson News kstephens@hutchnews.com
The Hutchinson City Council signaled its support for a more aggressive pro-
mously voiced their support for both tactics. The Housing Commission had asked the council to eliminate the unwritten requirement that the International Property Maintenance Code be enforced only upon receipt of a complaint from a citizen or neighbor. The Housing Commission had concluded that
gram of demolishing unsafe houses and allowing city staff to enforce code violations against the 500 “worst of the worst” houses, many of which are vacant or abandoned. No vote was taken during the joint study session with the Hutchinson Housing Commission, but the five council members unani-
the IPMC wasn’t working to improve the city’s housing stock because it had generated few actual complaints (30 in 2012). The commission had wanted the council to authorize the inspection department to initiate its own complaints. However, Mayor Bob Bush and City Council member Cindy Proett, who were on
business tried something for two years and it didn’t work, they’d take steps to correct it. “We need to look at other strategies to get this off ground zero,” she said. But Bush said that based on the results of an housing survey that drew 142
the council when the code was adopted in 2011 with the complaint-based proviso, weren’t willing to go that far. Proett was especially uneasy about reversing course on a promise the council made to the public just two years ago. Nancy Soldner, one of three new members of the council who took office in April, countered that if a
See HOUSING / A11
Drought still a presence as harvest starts
Barber – Grant
■ Lower test weights noted as farmers
begin cutting wheat in southern Kansas. BY AMY BICKEL The Hutchinson News abickel@hutchnews.com
The Kansas wheat harvest has Hutchinson begun, albeit slowDodge Barber City County ly, and without the fanfare of a Barber bumper crop. 281 County A few farmers began cutting in 160 Medicine southern Kansas Lodge Wednesday near the border town of 2 Kiowa in Barber County, which has KIOWA been hit hard by little rainfall this winter and spring. INSIDE This week’s soaring temA farmwife’s peratures, which surpassed perspective, 100 degrees in some places, help speed up maturity. A4 K A N S A“It S surprised me yesterBarton day,” said Steve Inslee, general County manager ofSalina OK Co-op Grain, about seeing Hutchinson the first trucks come across the scales in Kiowa. “But oh my goodness, it was ready.” The moisture content of the first load, he Barton County KANSAS
See WHEAT / A4
4 281
Finney County
183 160
Hutchinson
Coldwater
Dodge City
Comanche County
Finney County 23
Garden City
KANSAS Hutchinson
Dodge City
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Photos by Aaron Marineau/The Hutchinson News
Eloisa Tatum, whose brother Joe served in Vietnam, stands at the center of the traveling version of the Vietnam War Memorial wall, which will be stationed at Hutchinson’s VFW headquarters through Saturday. “It just makes you feel so good, so patriotic, to be here,” said Tatum.
Testament of honor KANSAS
KANSAS
Edwards County
Garden City
Hutchinson
Dodge City
Dodge City
50
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Kinsley
BY ANNA GRONEWOLD The Hutchinson News agronewold@hutchnews.com
Backer goes for the middle with new Kan. party 54 54
Clark County
34
Ashland
160
They greet each other with a kiss on the cheek one moment and a good-natured insult the next. Even when American Legion Post No. 68 KANSAS has a job to accomplish, the Ellsworth Salina County flavor in the air resembles that ofHutchinson a family reunion more than any sort of task force. 70 Thursday morning, Legion members156joined the effort to
400 assemble the American Veterans Traveling Tribute Memo283 54 rial Wall at Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 1361. As she steadied a wall panel on the field outside the VFW, Edie Griffin, the Post 68 auxiliary secretary – known as “Mom” at the Legion – said military service generates a special type of camaraderie. “You’ve got people from all walks of life,” said Griffin. “You don’t have all your clickity-cliques. Maybe you 25 wouldn’t interact otherwise, but Grant we’re all there for the same County
Hutchinson’s American Legion Commander Bruce Branson and Sgt. Gideon Cooper work to raise the American flag before the singing of the national anthem Thursday.
Ulysses
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Ellsworth
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BY MARY CLARKIN
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is hub of County tribute locally to those in military service.
Great Bend
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50
■ Vietnam vets wall replica Edwards
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“It’s a wall of misery. The community needs to see it.” K A N STom A SDearing Grant County
The Hutchinson News mclarkin@hutchnews.com Hutchinson Dodge
Hutchinson Garden City
City
Clark County Aaron Estabrook envisions a new political party in Kansas that rolls down the middle of the road. Early this year, Estabrook INSIDE filed political action committee finance papers for the ModWant to erate Party of Kansas. The start your fledging PAC opened with zero own party? money spent or raised. A11 The party’s social media presence is expanding, though, with nearly 700 people clicking “like” on its Facebook page. The website www.moderatekansas.com reveals the party has executive officers and a target: the 2014 elections. Estabrook told The News he hopes the
See PARTY / A11
2 dead, at least 360 homes destroyed in Colo. wildfire An AmeriCorps volunteer firefighter helps contain a spot fire in an evacuated area of forest, ranches and residences Thursday north of Colorado Springs, Colo. Brennan Linsley/AP
BY NICHOLAS RICCARDI Associated Press
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – A voracious wildfire driven in all directions by shifting winds has killed two people and destroyed at least 360 homes – a number that was likely to climb as the most destructive blaze in Colorado history burned for a third day through miles of tinder-dry woods, a sheriff said
Thursday. The destruction northeast of Colorado Springs has surpassed last June’s Waldo Canyon fire, which burned 347 homes, killed two people and caused $353 million in insurance claims just 15 miles to the southwest. The heavy losses were blamed in part on explosive population growth in areas
See FIRE / A5
INDEX: TV LISTINGS A9 BUSINESS B10 CLASSIFIEDS B7 COMICS B11 LOTTERIES A2 OBITUARIES A11 OPINION A10 CROSSWORD B8 SPORTS B1 WEATHER A6
INTERCEPTED LETTER Farmers seeing lower test weights as wheat harvest starts
Dear friends,
ALL-AREA BASEBALL, SOFTBALL TEAMS COMING THIS WEEKEND
We know your stores of hope will stay intact, rain or shine.
YEAR 141 NO. 346
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A2 Friday, June 14, 2013
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PAGE TWO DAILY PLANNER WANT MORE? Find the complete calendar online at hutchnews.com or scan this code to view it on your mobile device. ● Visit ScanLife.com on your mobile browser. ● Download the ScanLife App. ● Scan the code; view the calendar.
Have an event you’d like to add? Email it to calendar@hutchnews.com, call (620) 694-5700, ext. 331, or log on to hutchnews.com, click the event calendar and click “add your event.” Please submit events at least a week in advance.
THINGS TO DO TODAY EVENTS 11:30 a.m. Drum Sax Axe performs at Cool Beans at the Hutchinson Depot, 209 N. Walnut St. 2 p.m. Yoder Farmers’ Market, Main Street Community Pavilion, Yoder. 6:30 p.m. “ART” (a play by Yasmina Reza), at Depot Theater Company’s Homestead Theater, 201 E. Wyatt Earp Blvd., Dodge City. This play contains very strong language.
THINGS TO DO TOMORROW
7 p.m. Reno County Relay for Life, Gowans Stadium. (This event benefits the American Cancer Society.) Auditions for the play “Rumpelstiltskin,” Hutchinson Theatre Guild, 9 S. Main St. State Fair Promenaders Square Dance, Elmdale Community Center, 400 E. Ave. E. 7:30 p.m. “Hitchcock,” Fox Theatre, 18 E. First Ave.
EVENTS 7 a.m. 1st Annual Hutchinson School of Tae Kwon Do Run-off, Homebuilder’s Shelter in Carey Park. 7:30 a.m. Reno County Farmer’s Market, Farmer’s Market Pavilion, Second and Washington. 10 a.m. Farm at Yoder, one mile south of Yoder. For details, call (620) 465-2604. “A Big Family Welcome” marking Wal-Mart Neighborhood Market’s grand opening, 1106 S. Rock Road, Derby.
3 p.m. “Raise the Roof 2013” fun run/walk and music concert event, Hobart-Detter Field in Carey Park. 7:30 p.m. Concerts for the Cause, Avenue A Park. (The Space Between and Black Wall Monument are the featured bands.) “Hitchcock,” Fox Theatre, 18 E. First Ave. 8 p.m. Catfish and the Nightcrawlers in concert, The Wooden Nickel, 329 N. Van Buren St. 9 p.m. AJ Finney with Brannan Murphy, The Raz, 2803 N. Lorraine St.
State seizes Dannyboys for nonpayment of taxes ■ Popular barbecue’s owner
explains situation, promises to make return later to business. BY JOHN GREEN The Hutchinson News jgreen@hutchnews.com
State officials seized a downtown Hutchinson restaurant this week for nonpayment of taxes. The owner of Dannyboys Smokehouse, 307 N. Main St., however, pledged to return with another venture in the future. “I appreciate all our loyal customers,” said Dan Phillips, who
has operated the popular barbecue since 2006 and been in the restaurant business since he was 15. “I’m not done yet.” Phillips said the restaurant has struggled the past several years, following the downturn in the economy. While his first several years were quite successful, the struggles of the state and national economy cut deeply into family dining, as well as business lunches and catering, which have still not recovered. He tried for nearly three years to relocate within town, Phillips said, to 17th or 30th avenues, or to sell the business. He also looked at Wichita. But he continuously ran
Planning commission paves way for store BY KEN STEPHENS The Hutchinson News kstephens@hutchnews.com
The Hutchinson Planning Commission has approved rezoning several lots on the northwest corner of 11th Avenue and Main so that they can be redeveloped as a Family Dollar store. Most of the property already is vacant. A large single-family house stands on the northern most lot at 1111 N. Main. ES Development Midwest wants to buy the lots from their two current owners and demolish the 101-year-old house to clear the way for construction of an 8,320-square foot retail building, with parking on the east and south sides and on an existing parking lot to the west. Two houses that once occupied the parking lot to
the west and one house that stood on the corner of 11th and Main were demolished sometime before 1978. One more house facing Main was demolished sometime before 2001. The property is zoned C-1 Office Commercial District, as is property to the west, east and north, including a vacant medical building. Property to the south is zoned C-2 Neighborhood Commercial District and R-4 Residential Neighborhood Conservation District. The Planning Commission voted 7-0 on June 4 to recommend changing the zoning for the property to C-2, which would permit an indoor commercial retail business. The recommendation will go to the City Council for consideration of final approval on July 2.
GAO rejects Beechcraft’s protest of lost contract THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WICHITA – A federal agency has rejected Wichitabased Beechcraft’s protest of the award of an Air Force contract for light air support planes to Sierra Nevada Corp. and its Brazil-based partner, Embraer. Both companies issued statements Thursday announcing the decision by the Government Accountability Office. It’s the latest development in a highstakes competition that has
taken nearly three years with legal challenges from both sides. The contract for 20 planes for use in Afghanistan is worth more than $427 million. It could be worth as much as $1 billion, depending on future orders. Sierra Nevada and Embraer lauded the decision as a win for U.S. forces and allies in Afghanistan. But Beechcraft is calling for Congress to step in and limit the purchase to only the portion covered by the first delivery order.
into hurdles. “There’s a lot of traffic that goes by, but it’s not stopping,” he said of the Main Street location. Construction on the leased building – ongoing since September and which caused many to believe the restaurant was closed – didn’t help, he said, though he didn’t blame the building owner. Then the opening of two new restaurants by national food chains further split local dining dollars. He wasn’t quite ready to call it quits, but the seizure forced his decision. Kansas Department of Revenue agents and Reno County Sheriff ’s
officers seized the business assets on Monday, including bank accounts, on-site cash, business inventory and personal property belonging to Phillips and his wife, Karen. The couple owed $9,453 in state sales taxes, as well as personal federal taxes, Phillips said. The state will sell the restaurant’s assets through public auction. “Only after several unsuccessful attempts (to secure payment) does the department take the action of seizing assets,” noted Kansas Revenue Department spokeswoman Jeannine Koranda. “There’s so much out of your control,” Phillips said. “And only
so much you can do alone. You really can’t operate an independent business unless you have the support underneath.” “I don’t want to discourage anyone from trying to start their own, but it’s a challenge and very emotional,” he said. “Every day you’ve got to get up and kick yourself to keep going. It doesn’t matter who calls in sick or quits. But the pool of people with my drive is getting smaller.” “This is a challenge,” Phillips said. “I’ve seen it happen, but I’ve never been through it. I never thought it would happen. But it’s just another step. I have to remind myself I’ve accomplished a lot.”
BRIEFS Domestic violence report leads to Hutch man’s arrest Reno County Sheriff’s deputies arrested a Hutchinson man on suspicion of aggravated battery and child endangerment after a domestic violence report that the man struck a woman several times while holding their 11month old baby. According to Deputy Levi Blemanhourst, the female victim was hospitalized at Hutchinson Regional Medical Center shortly before 8 a.m. Wednesday with a concussion and injuries to her elbow. Jimmie Banks, 50, was arrested about an hour later in the 2700 block of North Waldron. He was booked in the Reno County Jail and later posted bond. He is scheduled for a first appearance on June 19.
Resident is still awaiting a mental evaluation A 25-year-old man remains in the Reno County jail more than a month after Judge Randall McEwen ordered he be evaluated for mental competency. Joseph Lewis, 25, made his first appearance May 8, when McEwen first ordered the evaluation, directing his appointed attorney to prepare the court order. He was set to appear again Thursday morning, but the evaluation still had not been completed. McEwen reordered the evaluation Thursday. Hutchinson police officers arrested Lewis shortly before midnight Jan. 29 on an aggravated battery charge. Lewis, who is identified in court records as homeless, was arrested at Second Avenue and Ford Street after allegedly assaulting a woman there, and taken to Reno County Jail. His bond is set at $5,000.
Current water issues to be topic June 19 meeting The Lower Arkansas Basin Advisory Committee will hold a meeting 9 a.m.
LOTTERIES Thursday’s numbers: Daily Pick 3: 3-4-4 2by2: Red: 12-19 White: 1-17
CORRECTION POLICY The News takes care with its reporting and editing, but sometimes errors occur. Corrections will be published here promptly. If you spot an error, please notify Mary Rintoul, managing editor, at (620) 694-5746 or email mrintoul@hutchnews.com.
June 19 in Hutchinson to discuss current water issues affecting the basin area, as well as the state. The meeting will be at the Water Treatment Center, 23rd and Severance. The State Water Plan update, committee nominations and ongoing drought will be the main focus of the meeting. The agenda and meeting materials are available at www.kwo.org or you may request copies by calling (785) 296-3185 or toll-free at (888) KAN-WATER (526-9283). If accommodations are needed for a person with disabilities, call (785) 296-3185 at least five working days prior to the meeting.
Interest expressed in open 119th House District seat DODGE CITY – Terry Jansen and Bud Estes are expressing interest in the 119th House District seat that Rep. Brian Weber, R-Dodge City, is relinquishing.
Published daily and Sunday 300 West 2nd Hutchinson, KS 67504-0190 Contact us for: Overall company operations and editorial page John D. Montgomery, editor and publisher News department Mary Rintoul, managing editor/news director Advertising sales and business marketing services Dave Gilchrist, regional advertising director Anita Stuckey, marketing solutions manager Jade Piros de Carvalho, LogicMaze (620) 860-4237 Newspaper delivery and digital subscriber service Sara Bass, circulation operations manager/audience director Accounting and human resources Rex Christner, business & HR director Newspaper production and commercial printing Gregg Beals, production director Information technology Nick Hemphill, prepress & IT manager Newspaper printing Mike Heim, press manager Newspaper packaging Jeremy Coen, packaging manager
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Scott Fisher, Ford County Republican Committee chairman, said four people in the House District have requested the names of the precinct committee members that will convene Tuesday in Dodge City to select Weber’s replacement. Fischer said Jansen and Estes allowed their names to be released.
Waldron Street reopens, but work will continue Waldron Street, which has been closed from the back of the Pic-Quik store at 30th Avenue to 33rd, will reopen in part today.
Access to homes from 3004 to 3208 N. Waldron will be allowed on the new street from the north at 33rd and Waldron only, but drivers are asked to be cautious because workers are still finishing driveways and sidewalks. Street improvements along Waldron in front of two houses at 3000 and 3002 N. Waldron are still in progress. The work is being done to accommodate larger traffic volume expected with the opening of a new Dillons Marketplace. – From staff reports
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LOCAL & STATE
‘Raise the Roof’ set to benefit Interfaith effort BY KRISTEN RODERICK The Hutchinson News kroderick@hutchnews.com
After years of putting roofs over people’s heads, Interfaith Housing Services needs help repairing its roof. A volunteer group has told the non-profit organization if funds for materials are provided, they will fix the roof, said Julia Westfahl, director of development at IHS. Runners and walkers can go away doused in color Saturday during “Raise the Roof,” a fundraiser that will raise money to repair the roof and benefit other IHS programs. “We always seem to be raising the roof for someone,” Westfahl said. Wear a white shirt, because there will be seven color stations that will spray watercolor paint on runners and walkers. The paint easily washes off, Westfahl said. The 5K walk/run will end with a hamburger and hot dog feed and inflatables for children near Hobart-Detter Field in Carey Park. Several organizations will have booths to help raise money, like the Hutchinson High
IF YOU GO When: 4 p.m. Saturday, registration starts at 3 p.m. Where: Hobart-Detter Field in Carey Park How much: The entire event (5K run/walk, concert and family events) is $40 for adults and $20 for children. The run/walk only is $30 for adults and $15 for children. Children under 5 are free, but T-shirts are $5. After party adults is $15 and children is $10. Family of four funpack for the entire event is $100. More info: Visit RaiseTheRoof2013Hutc h.eventbrite.com, follow facebook.com/InterfaithHousingServices on Facebook or call (620) 662-8370. School student council doing face painting and selling popcorn. Westfahl encourages participants to wear bright colors to the events – other than the walk/run.
The Brian Davis band will start at home plate on the field at 6:30 p.m. followed by a performance by country singer Jake Gill. If the weather cooperates, fireworks will end the fundraiser. IHS, an unaffiliated faithbased organization, has several programs that assist people with low to moderate incomes to meet their housing needs. The organization wants safe, affordable, accessible and quality housing for everyone. Programs include Kansas Weatherization Assistance, Homeowner Occupied Repair, First Time Home Ownership, Special Needs and Rental Program and a program that helps organize finances. “We thought about having an entire community event to give to the people in Hutchinson,” Westfahl said. The fundraiser will also head west on June 22, with the Dodge City event. It will be the same concept, with a colorful run/walk and Jake Gill will perform at home plate on a baseball diamond there. For more information, visit www.ihs-housing.org.
Still no sign of missing kayaker, but search and friends’ prayers continue BY TIM UNRUH Special to The News
KANOPOLIS RESERVOIR – A car pulled up to Sand Plum Campground after lunch on Thursday. The driver, Kiarra Skinner, and two other youngsters approached law enforcement workers for an update on the search for Derek Wheeler. Then Skinner walked down a steep hill to the lake’s edge, kneeled on the wet, sandy beach, and prayed. Wheeler, 18, her best friend since seventh grade at Lakewood Middle School, has been missing since early Tuesday morning, when he and two others who had been camping near the south shore of Kanopolis Reservoir set out in three kayaks. They were not wearing life jackets. The kayaks capsized. Two made it back to shore during the dark, windy night. Yells for help could be heard from shore, Skinner said, repeating what she’d heard from accounts of friends who had been camping together. Then the night went silent, except for the wind and waves. Search crews have been on the case since about 2:30 Tuesday morning. So has Skinner, who claimed that she hadn’t slept in three days, leaving the lake only to shower, change clothes and grab something to eat. “I just pray every second. I can’t sleep without him here. I get sick,” she said. “I just want him to come home.” Skinner and Wheeler graduated last month from Salina Central High School. Derek, “the guy with the prettiest smile,” she said, was working this summer at Son-
ic Drive-In, 310 S. Santa Fe, and planned a move to Kansas City this fall to attend Johnson County Community College. “I just want him to see it through, all that he’s been talking about doing,” Skinner said, sobbing. “Derek deserves to go back home with us and be OK,” she said. Rick Martin, the Kanopolis State Park manager, had little to report to Wheeler’s friends. The search was into its third day. A Kansas Highway Patrol search plane had flown over the lake twice. Searchers in boats were going back and forth. They have been dragging the lake and using sonar equipment. “We’re trying to get two cadaver dogs on the water,” said Tracy Ploutz, Ellsworth County sheriff. Canines with that specialized training are capable of locating, by scent, a drowning victim who is under the water. But the dogs won’t be available from the Kansas Search and Rescue Dog Association until Saturday, he said. Narrowing down a search location is difficult on the lake with more than 3,000 surface acres. The three left shore in a northwest direction, and the wind and current were pushing them to the northeast, Ploutz said. The night and lake were dark. Divers are an option, Martin said, but they may not be a good one. “The water’s so murky. Everything is by feel. There is no visual at all,” he said. “Unless you have a pinpoint location, it’s pretty futile.” Most of the lake’s 40-plus miles of shoreline has been
searched, said Levi Gantenbein, park ranger. “There’s really no reason to search where we haven’t, because of the wind,” Martin said. Derek’s friends have also joined in the search. “We’ve walked the entire perimeter of the lake, just screaming his name,” Skinner said. “Derek was everyone’s smile when it was hard. That’s why we’ve got to keep looking for him, because he’d be out here doing it for all of us. “I love him.” Skinner said she was invited to camp with the group, but had to work. She said there was no alcohol involved. “The whole motto this year was, ‘Turn up and have fun,’ ” Skinner said. “I think we’re going to turn down for a while.”
Friday, June 14, 2013 A3
A4 Friday, June 14, 2013
FROM PAGE ONE
Wheat in W. Kan. just isn’t worth harvesting BY MICHELE BOY Special to The News
Editor’s note: Hamilton County farmwife, photographer and writer Michele Boy will be chronicling this year’s wheat harvest for The News as she and her husband, Heath, bring in what is left of their droughtplagued wheat fields. Every June in Hamilton County, farmers are gearing up for wheat harvest. Combines are serviced, checked and greased. Wives make out their grocery lists and haul carts full of items at the grocery store. Children help prepare meals, drive pickups and grain carts to the field. Custom cutters come from all over the world, set up camp and ready their machines. The excitement fills the air, wondering what this year’s crop will make, and farmers drive through their wheat acres to check the berries. We make plans for what fields will be harvested first and what order we think the wheat will be ready. With mostly dryland farming and wheat as our main crop, the pressure is intense. “Is it ready yet?”
“Nope, not yet. Close, though. Hope there’s no hail.” “Gotta get it cut quick.” Sadly, this June is difBOY ferent. Instead of driving down the highway looking at beautiful fields of grain flowing in the wind, we see emptiness. Combines, grain carts and harvest trucks stay in the shed. Custom cutters are few. In fact, Highway 27 is normally packed with cutters coming up from the south. Instead, the highway is empty. Farmers’ heads hang low and the air is thick with disappointment. This wheat harvest is almost over before it gets started. The picture is bleak. Crop adjusters came out this year measuring 1 to 3 bushels in many fields. We had approximately 6 inches of rain since last June and plenty of wind. Piles of dirt lay where plants should be. And while some of us have acres of wheat to cut, it is too early to tell when. Normally wheat heads
Probation is granted in aggravated burglary case ■ It involved the theft of
$1,500 from dorm room of HCC basketball coach. BY KAYLA REGAN The Hutchinson News kregan@hutchnews.com
The Missouri man convicted in the 2011 aggravated burglary of a Hutchinson Community College basketball coach received probation during a sentencing hearing Thursday afternoon. FLAMMAJudge TrSHERMAN ish Rose gave Daniel T. Flamma-Sherman, 22, of Blue Springs, Mo., 36 months of probation and 24 months of parole should he not meet the terms of his probation. Flamma-Sherman pleaded no contest to the April 2011 burglary of HCC coach Steve Eck’s dorm room and expressed remorse for the crimes he committed. “I have a son. I haven’t been with him in a long time and it hurts my heart,” he told Rose, his voice cracking. Rose said Flamma-Sherman’s involvement in the armed robbery of a Kansas City, Mo., woman gave her pause to grant probation. However, she said she saw potential in his ability to grow. “You’re a very smart young man. You’ve been successful in life,” she told Flamma-Sherman. “You have the potential to be successful again.” Flamma-Sherman, who
The Hutchinson News
graduated from high school with a basketball scholarship, spent 10 months in jail in Jackson County, Mo., and said the experience was enough to turn his life around. “I’d just like to let you know that the things I’ve been doing the last three years are not the person I am… I’m not this animal,” he told Rose. “I can only imagine what would happen in prison.” Senior Assistant District Attorney Stephen Maxwell, who suggested FlammaSherman receive 57 months in the Kansas Department of Corrections, said his involvement in the Missouri armed robbery should be enough to sentence him to prison time. Rose, however, said she sentenced Flamma-Sherman to probation because he had support from his family, had cooperated with the state in the case and demonstrated remorse. Quantel Denson, a former HCC basketball player, received probation for his involvement in the burglary. Denson’s dorm room key was found on Flamma-Sherman and police found several phone calls between the two the day of the burglary. Eck spotted Flamma-Sherman stealing his work bag with $1,500 in it from a dorm room and chased him several blocks before retrieving the bag. An off-duty firefighter who was driving by stopped to help Eck and wrestled Flamma-Sherman to the ground. Eck previously testified that he was not affected by the burglary and didn’t want either defendant to serve jail time.
out in the beginning of May. It was Memorial weekend when ours started. We are not the only ones in this situation. One farmer noted of his family’s 4,000-acre farm, they only have an 80-acre plot left to harvest. And it most likely will never be cut. “Of the acres left to cut, we are hoping for 10 bushel per acre,” said Hamilton County farmer Jess Schwieterman. Approximately 153,000 acres of wheat was planted last fall and 4 to 7 bushel wheat is expected to cut of what is left for the combine. The wheat left is about 6 inches tall – not so easy to cut. And most of that will be cut back for seed wheat. Over 50 percent of insured acres are appraised out at zero or 1 bushel. Where historically about 2.5 million bushels is taken into the grain elevators, this year we just don’t know how much we’ll be able to bin this harvest. Stay tuned for more to come. To read more about the Boy family’s journey through a drought-plagued wheat harvest, as well as other Kansas agriculture news, visit www.kansas agland.com.
Wheat ●From Page A1 said, was 10.1 percent, meaning it was plenty dry to cut. “It’s still early,” he said. “The majority isn’t going to be cut until the first of next week. A few custom cutters are coming in Friday and Saturday, and once they get here, things will really get going.” He said the droughtplagued wheat has lower test weights, between 57 and 59 pounds a bushel. He expects test weights to come up as wheat harvest gets rolling early next week.
No. 1-grade wheat is 60 pounds or better. Millers like the wheat quality to be at least 58 pounds a bushel. Inslee said he is hopeful for the forecasted rain this weekend, although it would stop harvest for a few days. “We just need the water, we need the rain,” he said, adding that for this crop, “We just got hit with no rain early on, and that really hurt it.” Inslee said he estimates his territory will harvest only a third of a normal crop. On Wednesday, the Kansas Agricultural Statistics Service revised its production estimate for Kansas to 307.8 million bushels,
which is up 3 percent from last month’s forecast, thanks to rain in the eastern part of the state. However, this year’s crop is still down 21 percent from last year as the western half of the state remains in an extreme to exceptional drought, the highest rankings by the U.S. Drought Monitor. The agency reported Monday that nearly 50 percent of the state’s wheat crop is in poor to very poor condition. Just four percent is excellent. The 8.1 million wheat acres expected to be harvested this year remain unchanged from last month’s estimate, but it is down 11 percent from 2012.
The Hutchinson News
Fire ●From Page A1 with historically high fire risk. “I never in my wildest dreams imagined we’d be dealing a year later with a very similar circumstance,” said El Paso County Sheriff Terry Maketa, who drew audible gasps as he announced the number of homes lost to the blaze in Black Forest. The fire was 5 percent contained. Maketa said one person who was reported missing Wednesday was found safe, but crews on Thursday found the remains of two other people who appeared to be trying to flee. The victims were found in a garage in Black Forest. “The car doors were open as if they were loading or grabbing last-minute things,” Maketa said. Earlier in the day, residents were ordered to leave 1,000 homes in Colorado Springs. Thursday’s evacuation was the first within the city limits. About 38,000 other people living across roughly 70 square miles were already under orders to get out. Colorado’s second-largest city, with a population of 430,000, also asked residents of 2,000 more homes to be ready to evacuate. The streets became gridlocked with hundreds of cars while emergency vehicles raced by on shoulders. Gene Schwarz, 72, said he had never fully unpacked after last year’s fires. He and his neighbors wondered whether open space grassland to the north of them could be a barrier from the flames. “It doesn’t matter because a spark can fly over from anywhere,” said Schwarz. Hot, gusty winds fanned the 24-square-mile wildfire, sending it into new areas and back into places that had previously been spared. Even investigators sent in to determine the cause of the fire were pulled out for safety reasons. The Red Cross said more than 800 people stayed at shelters. Black Forest, where the blaze began, offers a case study in the challenges of tamping down wildfires in Colorado and across the West, especially with growing populations, rising temperatures and a historic drought. Developers describe Black Forest as the largest contiguous stretch of ponderosa pine in the United States – a thick, wide carpet of vegetation rolling down from the Rampart Range that thins out to the high grasslands of Colorado’s eastern plains. Once home to rural towns and summer cabins, it is now dotted with million-dollar homes and gated communities – the result of the state’s population boom over the past two decades. El Paso County, its economy driven largely by military and defense spending, saw double-digit growth in the last decade and is now Colorado’s largest county, with more than 637,000 people. “There’s so many more people living here in the last 30 years, you couldn’t believe it,” said Bruce Buksar, who has lived in Black Forest since 1981. Untold thousands of homes in Colorado’s heavily populated Front Range are at risk for fires, said Gregory Simon, an assistant professor of geography who studies urban wildfires at the University of ColoradoDenver. Many are built on windy mountain roads or cul-de-sacs – appealing to homebuyers seeking privacy but often hampering efforts to stamp out fire. Residents in the outdoor-loving state
FROM PAGE ONE
Group from HCC to help fight Colo. fires THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A 10-member contingent from Hutchinson Community College is heading west to help fight Colorado’s massive wildfire. KSNW-TV reports the group is made up of students, former students and instructors in the college’s fire science program. They expected to leave for the Colorado Springs area today. The group includes Jessica Peters, a Wichita resiare also attracted by the ability to hike from their backyards and have horses. “Unfortunately, these environments give the appearance of being peaceful, tranquil and bucolic and natural. But they belie the reality that they are combustible, volatile and at times dangerous,” Simon said. Nigel Thompson was drawn to Black Forest by the rural feel, privacy, lack of crime and space to raise a family. “A safe place for my kids to grow up, lots of room for them to run around,” said Thompson, a computer programmer who moved to a house on a 60-acre lot in 1997. Five years later, he took in evacuees from a devastating fire in the foothills to the northwest. That drove home the fact that his family was living in a tinderbox. Thompson cut down 20 pine trees to form a firebreak around his house, which he topped with fire-retardant roof tiles. He diligently cleared away brush, downed branches and pine cones, like many here do in community cleanups every spring. “It didn’t make a damn difference at the end of the day,” Thompson said Thursday. His home was incinerated Tuesday. “If you’re surrounded by people who haven’t done anything, it doesn’t matter what you do,” Thompson said. “It’s interesting that you can have a house in a forest and the building code doesn’t say anything about the roof design.” That’s what makes fire prevention so difficult, said Anne Walker of the Western Governors’ Association. “Local government has ultimate authority over where homes are placed,” she said. “You need to look at local ordinances and where homes are placed and what they’re made of.” El Paso County Commissioner Darryl Glenn said the commission has tried to ensure that new developments have brush clearance and easy emergency access. “Sometimes it’s just nature,” he said. “When you have a fire like this in a semi-arid environment, there’s not a lot you can do.” Maketa said firefighters were hampered by a matted layer of pine needles and grass fuel on the forest floor – fuel called “duff.” Spot fires below the trees can smolder for days and even weeks inside it, then blow up. Firefighters see dry matting, Maketa said, “and when you look 10 minutes later, it’s full of flames.” The military pitched in, manning roadblocks with Humvees, providing additional firefighters, plowing fire lines with bulldozers and flying two C-130 cargo planes and several helicopters to drop slurry and water. The aid came from nearby Fort Carson, the Air Force Academy, Peterson
dent and second-year student in the program. Peters said Thursday she knows the dangers but feels it’s an honor to have the chance to help. Her assignment will be to help an engine crew fighting the flames that have burned more than 15,000 acres of the Black Forest. Rodney Redlinger, an instructor in the Hutchinson college program, says it’s a good opportunity for students to find out if battling wildfires is what they really want to do. Air Force Base, Cheyenne Mountain Air Force Station, Buckley Air Force Base and the Colorado National Guard.
Friday, June 14, 2013 A5
A6 Friday, June 14, 2013 TODAY
The Hutchinson News
SAT.
SUN.
100/74 92/70 Sunny
MON.
TUE.
WED.
91/68
87/67
86/67
89/71
91/69
Mostly sunny
Mostly sunny
Mostly sunny
Mostly sunny
Sunny
Sunny
COLORADO Today, partly cloudy. A 10 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after noon. Tonight, partly cloudy, with a low around 61. Saturday, a 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after noon.
Denver
KANSAS Today, sunny and hot. Tonight, mostly clear, with a low around 74. Breezy, with a south wind 11 to 20 mph, with gusts as high as 28 mph. Saturday, a 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Kansas
82
79
Salina
Kansas City
82
83
Colorado
THU.
Dodge City 100 Hutchinson
St. Louis Pittsburg
93
79 Missouri
OKLAHOMA Today, sunny and hot. Tonight, mostly clear, with a low around 73. South wind 7 to 13 mph. Saturday, a 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Oklahoma City
94 Oklahoma
64 68 56 61 68 59 61 55
0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00
Tomorrow Hi Lo Otlk 65 Clr 81 58 Clr 79 55 Clr 86 60 PCldy 80 57 Rain 83 58 PCldy 77 52 PCldy 97 78 PCldy 83 56 PCldy 77 54 PCldy 85 76 Clr 95 76 PCldy 100 76 Clr 75 62 PCldy 81 63 Cldy 93 78 PCldy 82 58 Clr 92 73 PCldy 83 60 Clr 106 82 Clr 75 49 PCldy 90 66 PCldy 69 61 Cldy 66 52 Cldy 77 51 PCldy 82 61 Clr
National Temperature Extremes for Thursday High: 116 in Death Valley, Calif. Low: 25 in Truckee, Calif. and Bodie State Park, Calif.
Hutchinson almanac
National forecast Forecast highs for Friday, June 14
Cold
-10s
-0s
0s
10s
20s 30s 40s
Great Bend Hays Hill City Hutchinson Lawrence Liberal Manhattan Medicine Lodge
90 61 91 57 91 57 89 61 86 57 100 68 85 57 95 64
0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00
Hi Lo Prec.
Olathe Parsons Pratt Russell Salina Topeka Wichita Winfield
84 63 0.00 88 66 0.00 91 61 0.00 88 57 0.00 88 62 0.00 86 61 0.00 87 66 0.00 88 67 0.00
Moon phases
SUNRISE TOMORROW: 6:08 a.m. First
Full
Last
New
50s 60s
Warm Stationary
70s
80s
Cloudy
Pressure Low
High
90s 100s 110s
Daily rainfall (Yesterday 6:30 p.m.) 0.00” Normal daily rainfall 0.13” Rainfall month to date 0.66” 1.76” Normal for the month 15.44” Year to date 12.52” Normal for the year
45 IN 1902
June 16 June 23 June 30 July 8
Pt. Cloudy
Hutchinson precipitation
SUNSET TONIGHT: 8:55 p.m.
Record low for this date
Hi Lo Prec.
Sunny
Fronts
104 IN 1953
Yesterday as of 6:30 p.m.
Hi Lo Prec.
86 91 82 96 98 85 99 96
Today Hi Lo Otlk 68 Clr 87 76 61 Cldy 66 52 Rain 84 63 Clr 73 54 Clr 78 57 PCldy 70 56 PCldy 97 77 Clr 90 64 PCldy 75 56 PCldy 86 76 Clr 96 74 PCldy 99 77 Clr 77 62 PCldy 76 56 Cldy 93 77 PCldy 71 56 Cldy 93 72 PCldy 73 60 Cldy 107 82 Clr 71 54 Cldy 82 63 PCldy 68 62 Cldy 71 54 Clr 67 50 Cldy 76 63 Cldy
Record high for this date
Kansas temperatures Chanute Coffeyville Concordia Dodge City Elkhart Emporia Garden City Goodland
MISSOURI Today, mostly sunny, with a high near 82. East wind 3 to 5 mph. Tonight, a 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 1 a.m.
Atlanta Baltimore Boston Charlotte,N.C. Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Dallas-Ft Worth Denver Detroit Honolulu Houston Las Vegas Los Angeles Mpls-St Paul New Orleans New York City Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh St Louis San Diego San Francisco Seattle Washington,D.C.
Yesterday Hi Lo Prc 91 75 85 86 72 1.30 67 59 .30 92 73 .49 73 61 .15 80 79 .67 73 63 .64 98 75 94 53 79 62 1.72 85 73 96 74 101 81 76 61 79 58 92 75 66 64 .64 93 73 85 69 .46 106 85 71 65 1.01 85 70 66 60 67 52 70 53 .01 90 73 .02
This photo was taken by Barbara Caywood of Sterling. Submit your photo at hutchnews.com.
Note: Totals provided by the National Weather Service. NWS adjusts precipitation data regularly, meaning some totals can change significantly from day to day.
IF YOU GO Friday 8 a.m. – Opening ceremony 10 a.m. to noon – Police and fire departments ceremony 7 p.m. – Flag retirement ceremony by Boy Scouts (weather permitting) 8:30 p.m. – Closing ceremony Saturday 8 a.m. – Opening ceremony
Photos by Aaron Marineau/The Hutchinson News
Jack Hamby gets some help from his daughter, Jayden Rehlinder, 9, as he searches for the names of his friends from high school who lost their lives in the Vietnam War.
Wall ●From Page A1 reason.” The reason this weekend is the AVTT Cost of Freedom Tribute, which includes an 80 percent replica of Washington D.C.’s famous Vietnam Veterans Memorial wall. For Post 68, along with friends, family, volunteers and curious bystanders, the wall is an opportunity to honor thousands of heroes without visiting the East Coast. Griffin said the memorial is also a healing process for Vietnam veterans who were treated unfairly for taking part in a controversial war. “I think it’s closure for the veterans,” she said. “A lot were not treated very nicely. People would spit on them, yell nasty things.” But as Kevin Weatherly, AVTT CEO and Marine Corps veteran, unfurled a flag honoring 9/11 firefighters and EMTs, he said the memorial is also about breaking the tired cycle of veterans only receiving recognition from other vets. “This is for the community to come out and understand that the everyday life we get to live is because of these guys,” he said. “Not Washington, not the government; it’s these guys.”
Dane Hurt reads the names of those who lost their lives during the Vietnam War at the traveling version of the Vietnam Memorial Wall on Thursday. Weatherly encourages the public to interact with the hundreds of vets at the event. “If they don’t tell their story, it dies with them,” he said. “Learn about the sacrifices that the guys who came home made.” Dave Schoonover, VFW member, Legion Rider and Vietnam vet, said the weekend’s motto is “Honor, respect, remember.” Near the wall will be plaques honoring Reno County’s fallen: 18 from the Vietnam War, 14 from the Korean War, and four from the global War on Terror. “We’ve got a proud history here in Reno County, and the city of Hutchinson is really stepping up,” he said. But fearing too many
cooks in the kitchen, Phil Clark and Tom Dearing watched the wall’s assembly at a distance, sharing memories. Clark, a Legion member who served two tours in Vietnam, suddenly leaned on his friend’s shoulder and sighed. “What do you think when you look at that wall?” he asked Dearing, a 40-year Navy and Air Force veteran. “I think, ‘That’s a lot of heroes. A lot of heroes and a lot of heartache.’ ” Dearing considered the half-finished wall in front of him, squinting as if to distinguish his brother’s name from the 58,000 others. “It’s a wall of misery,” he said. “The community needs to see it.”
10 a.m. – Veterans honor ceremony 8 p.m. – Closing ceremony Sunday 8 a.m. – Opening ceremony 10 a.m. – Lineup for motorcycle honor ride (group photo) 5 p.m. – Closing ceremony 6 p.m. – Volunteers tear down wall
PREVIEW ‘MAN OF STEEL’ THE HUTCHINSON NEWS
WWW.HUTCHNEWS.COM
FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 2013
THE REEVE YEARS
Campy fun? This sober film needs some BY JAKE COYLE AP Entertainment Writer
It has been a black eye to Hollywood that throughout this, the unending and increasingly repetitive age of the superhero blockbuster, the comics’ most iconic son has eluded its grasp like a bird or, if you will, a plane. New hopes of box-office riches and franchise serials rest on Zac Snyder’s 3-D “Man of Steel,” the latest attempt to put Superman back into flight. But Snyder’s joyless film, laden as if composed of the stuff of its hero’s metallic nickname, has nothing soaring about it. Flying men in capes is grave business in Snyder’s solemn Superman. “Man of Steel,” an origin tale of the DC Comics hero, goes more than two hours before the slightest joke or smirk. This is not your Superman of red tights, phone-booth changes or fortresses of solitude, but one of Christ imagery, Krypton politics and spaceships. Who would want to have fun at the movies, anyway, when you could instead be taught a lesson about identity from a guy who can shoot laser beams out of his eyes? “Man of Steel” opens with the pains of childbirth, as Lara LorVan (Ayelet Zurer) and husband Jor-El (Russell Crowe) see the birth of Kal-El, the first naturally born child in years on Krypton. The planet – a giant bronze ball of pewter, as far as I can tell – is in apocalyptic tumult (the disaster film has gone intergalactic), and General Zod (Michael Shannon) attempts to take over power, fighting in bulky costumes with JorEl. His coup is thwarted (though not before killing Jor-El, who continues on in the film in an ObiWan-like presence), and he and his followers are locked away, frozen until Krypton’s implosion frees them. Baby Kal-El has been rocketed away with Krypton’s precious Codex, an energy-radiating skull. Kal-El rockets to Earth, setting up not a Midwest reprieve to the lengthy Krypton fallout, but a flash-forward to more explosions. Our next glimpse of Kal-El is as a young adult Clark Kent (the beefy Brit Henry Cavill) aboard a fishing vessel on stormy seas, where he – shirtless and aflame – saves the crew of a burning oil rig. At this point, your Codex may be spinning. Working from a script by “Blade” scribe David S. Goyer and a story by Goyer and “Dark Knight” director Christopher Nolan, Snyder has clearly sought to avoid some of the expected plotlines and rhythms of the familiar Superman tale. There’s a constant urge to push the story to greater scale, which will excite some fans but tire others.
5 TOP
IF YOU GO
JOR-EL
SUPERMAN YEAR: 1978 CAST: Christopher Reeve, Marlon Brando, Gene Hackman, Margot Kidder SUMMARY: An alien orphan is sent from his dying planet to Earth, where he grows up to become the greatest super-hero.
Rating: PG-13 for intense sequences of sci-fi violence, action and destruction, and for some language. Running time: 144 minutes. Show times: See local listings on A8. The film hops back and forth from Clark’s grown-up life and his Smallville, Kansas, upbringing with Jonathan (Kevin Costner) and Martha Kent (Diane Lane). Costner, back among the corn stalks, makes the strongest impression of the cast as a severe father urging Kent to hide his gifts. We’re meanwhile introduced to Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Lois Lane (Amy Adams), fresh off a stint embedded with the military for the Daily Planet. Adams, as she usually does, helps animate the film, as she plunges into a bulldog investigating of Clark and spars with her editor (Laurence Fishburne). Snyder brings to the film a sure hand for overly dramatic compositions that take after comic-strip panels. He has a clearly sincere reverence for the source material (originally created in 1938 by writer Jerry Siegel and artist Joe Shuster). And eager fans will likely thrall to the film’s many action set pieces, as Superman battles with Zod and his minions. There’s little creativity to the fight sequences, though. But Snyder doesn’t have the material or the inclination to make “Man of Steel” as thoughtprovoking as Nolan’s “Dark Knight” trilogy. Superman wrestles with his allegiance to humans or his home planet, but the quandaries of a superpowered man betwixt worlds don’t have any real resonance. The gravity that cloaks “Man of Steel” is merely an en vogue costume. While Snyder has succeeded in turning out a Superman that isn’t silly (not a small feat) and will likely lay enough of a bedrock for further sequels, it’s a missed opportunity – particularly with a bright cast of Shannon, Adams and Lane – for a more fun-loving spirit. Cavill’s performance is less memorable for his introspective brooding than for his six-pack. He’s handsome and capable, but one can’t help missing Christopher Reeve’s twinkle. The awkward acrobatics to modernize “Man of Steel” are most evident with its explanation of Superman’s shield. The “S’’ doesn’t stand for Superman, but is a Krypton glyph (an element first introduced in the original 1978 film) now defined as representing “hope.” But if “S’’ doesn’t stand for “Superman,” ‘‘Man of Steel” is the one with the identity issues.
PERRY WHITE SUPERMAN
LOIS LANE
CLARK KENT
TELEVISION
FILMS
1. NBA Finals on ABC (game 2) 2. NBA Finals on ABC (game 1) 3. The Voice (Monday) 4. America’s Got Talent 5. The Voice (Tuesday)
1. The Purge 2. Fast & Furious 6 3. Now You See Me 4. The Internship 5. Epic
SUPERMAN II YEAR: 1980 CAST: Christopher Reeve, Gene Hackman, Margot Kidder SUMMARY: Superman agrees to sacrifice his powers to marry Lois, unaware that three Kryptonian criminals are conquering Earth.
SUPERMAN III YEAR: 1983 CAST: Christopher Reeve, Richard Pryor, Margot Kidder SUMMARY: Synthetic kryptonite laced with tobacco tar splits Superman in two: good Clark Kent and bad Man of Steel.
SUPERMAN IV YEAR: 1987 CAST: Christopher Reeve, Gene Hackman, Jon Cryor SUMMARY: The Man of Steel crusades for nuclear disarmament and meets Nuclear Man. – Information courtesy of IMDB
HOT FIVE
TOP COUNTRY
TOP CHRISTIAN
TOP RENTALS
1. Blurred Lines, Robin Thicke 2. Can’t Hold Us, Macklemore & Ryan Lewis 3. Get Lucky, Daft Punk featuring Pharrell Williams 4. Mirrors, Justin Timberlake 5. Cruise, Florida Georgia Line feat. Nelly
1. Cruise, Florida Georgia Line 2. Boys ’Round Here, Blake Shelton 3. Wagon Wheel, Darius Rucker 4. Highway Don’t Care, Tim McGraw with Taylor Swift 5. Crash My Party, Luke Bryan
1. Hello, My Name Is, Matthew West 2. Whom Shall I Fear, Chris Tomlin 3. Every Good Thing, The Afters 4. Words, Hawk Nelson 5. Help Me Find It, Sidewalk Prophets
1. Finding Nemo 2. Django Unchained 3. Cloud Atlas 4. Oz the Great and Powerful 5. Silver Linings Playbook
B
A8 Friday, June 14, 2013
T MOVIE
STARRING
The Hutchinson News
PREVIEW ON THE SCREEN
RATING STARS
TIME
SUMMARY
MALL 8 SHOWTIMES
2:23
A young journalist is forced to confront his secret extraterrestrial heritage when Earth is invaded by members of his race.
Friday: 10:00am, 1:00, 4:10, 7:25, 10:30pm (3D) 12:00, 3:15, 6:30, 9:45pm Saturday: 10:00am, 1:00, 4:10, 7:25, 10:30pm (3D) 12:00, 3:15, 6:30, 9:45pm Sunday: 10:00am, 1:00, 4:10, 7:25, 10:30pm (3D) 12:00, 3:15, 6:30, 9:45pm
1:43
A teenager finds herself transported to a deep forest setting where a battle between the forces of good and the forces of evil is taking place.
Friday: 10:00am, 1:00, 4:00, 7:00, 9:30 pm Saturday: 10:00am, 1:00, 4:00, 7:00, 9:30 pm Sunday: 10:00am, 1:00, 4:00, 7:00, 9:30 pm
PG-13
2:10
Agent Luke Hobbs enlists Dominic Toretto and his team to bring down former Special Ops soldier Owen Shaw , leader of a unit specializing in vehicular warfare.
Friday: 10:10am, 1:10, 4:10, 7:10, 10:00pm Saturday: 10:10am, 1:10, 4:10, 7:10, 10:00pm Sunday: 10:10am, 1:10, 4:10, 7:10, 10:00pm
Vince Vaughn, Owen Wilson
PG-13
1:59
Two salesmen whose careers have been torpedoed by the digital age find their way into an internship at Google.
Friday: 10:20am, 1:20, 4:20, 7:20, 9:55pm Saturday: 10:20am, 1:20, 4:20, 7:20, 9:55pm Sunday: 10:20am, 1:20, 4:20, 7:20, 9:55pm
Now You See Me
Jesse Eisenberg, Mark Ruffalo, Woody Harrelson
PG-13
1:56
An FBI agent and an Interpol detective track a team of illusionists who pull off bank heists.
Friday: 10:10am, 1:10, 4:10, 7:10, 9:40pm Saturday: 10:10am, 1:10, 4:10, 7:10, 9:40pm Sunday: 10:10am, 1:10, 4:10, 7:10, 9:40pm
The Purge
Ethan Hawke, Lena Headey, Max Burkholder
R
1:25
A family is held hostage for harboring the target of a murderous syndicate during the Purge.
Friday: 10:30am, 1:30, 4:30, 7:30, 9:35pm Saturday: 10:30am, 1:30, 4:30, 7:30, 9:35pm Sunday: 10:30am, 1:30, 4:30, 7:30, 9:35pm
ThisistheEnd
James Franco, Jonah Hill, Seth Rogen
R
NA
1:47
While attending a party at James Franco's house, Seth Rogen, Jay Baruchel and many other celebrities are faced with the apocalypse.
Friday: 10:20am, 1:20, 4:20, 7:20, 9:50pm Saturday: 10:20am, 1:20, 4:20, 7:20, 9:50pm Sunday: 10:20am, 1:20, 4:20, 7:20, 9:50pm
Man of Steel (3D)
Henry Cavill, Amy Adams, Michael Shannon
PG-13
Epic
Colin Farrell, Josh Hutcherson, Beyoncé Knowles
PG
Fast&Furious 6
Vin Diesel, Dwayne Johnson, Paul Walker
The Internship
MOVIE
(OUT OF 5)
NA
NOW SHOWING AT THE KANSAS COSMOSPHERE'S CAREY DIGITAL DOME THEATER STARRING RATING STARS TIME SUMMARY
SHOWTIMES
Iron Man 3
Robert Downey Jr., Gwyneth Paltrow, Don Cheadle, Mickey Rourke
PG-13
2:10
When Tony Stark's world is torn apart by a formidable terrorist called the Mandarin, he starts an odyssey of rebuilding and retribution.
Friday: 6pm, 8:45pm Saturday: 6pm, 8:45pm Sunday: 6pm, 8:45pm
Kenya: Animal Kingdom
François Mantello, Dr. Elisabeth Mantello, Alexandra Body
NR
:45
Join two young Maasai warriors and discover the breathtaking diversity of the region’s natural fauna.
Friday: 12pm, 2pm, 4pm Saturday: 12pm, 2pm, 4pm Sunday: 2pm, 4pm
Titans of the Ice Age
Christopher Plummer
NR
:45
Experience an ancient world of ice, the dawn of our species, a time when man shared the tundra with majestic woolly beasts.
Friday : 11am, 1pm, 3pm, 5pm Saturday: 11am, 1pm, 3pm, 5pm Sunday: 1pm, 3pm
MOVIE Hitchcock
OTHER MOVIES YOU CAN SEE IN HUTCHINSON WHERE IT IS RATING STARS TIME SUMMARY Hutchinson Historic Fox Theatre
PG
(OUT OF 5)
1:38
SHOWTIMES
A love story between influential filmmaker Alfred Hitchcock and wife Alma Reville during the filming of Psycho in 1959.
Friday: 7:30pm Saturday: 7:30pm Sunday: 2:00pm
Expo reveals companion apps, other trends in gaming world BY DERRIK J. LANG AP Entertainment Writer
LOS ANGELES – From companion apps with the power to affect gameplay to racing games where players persistently speed across virtual roads, there’s several innovations on display at the Electronic Entertainment Expo this week that show off what designers are interested in when it comes to the next-generation of gaming
with Sony’s PlayStation 4 and Microsoft’s Xbox One: DYNAMIC DUOS: One screen hasn’t been enough for a while now, but game developers are taking secondscreen experiences to the next level with companion game apps for mobile devices that affect what’s happening on a TV. “Battlefield 4” turns tablets into command stations,” while “Tom Clancy’s The Division” employs them as drone con-
trols. “Project Spark” invites gamers to craft virtual worlds with the swipe of a finger, and then play through them on the Xbox One. TRACK RECORD: With next-gen consoles, sharing gaming clips will be as easy as hitting a button, especially in the case of the PS4. The controller for Sony’s nextgen console features a “share” button, while Microsoft has partnered with
the popular streaming service Twitch to allow users to quickly upload clips from the Xbox One. Nintendo is getting into the sharing act, too. “Mario Kart 8” players can upload racing clips to the online service for the Wii U. SHARE THE ROAD: If you like seamlessly racing against friends online, you’ll have three similar new games to shift between in the next generation: Ubisoft’s
“The Crew,” Electronic Arts’ “Need for Speed: Rivals” and Sony’s “DriveClub.” There are also sleek new installments in Microsoft’s “Forza MotorSport” and Sony’s “Grand Turismo” car enthusiast franchises. “Forza MotorSport 5” is adding a new feature that will mimics players’ driving styles and allow them to zoom offline. WHOLE NEW WORLDS: Move over, Liberty City. Step aside, Azeroth. There’s sev-
eral new virtual worlds coming to town that will harness next-generation computing power, like a zombie-ridden Los Angeles clone in “Dead Rising 3” and a cartoony metropolis in the over-the-top shooter “Sunset Overdrive.” A few familiar franchises are also adopting an openworld policy for the first time, including “Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain” and “The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt.”
The Hutchinson News
Friday, June 14, 2013 A9
ADVICE
Counseling is needed to end constant mistrust Today’s Birthday (06/14/13). What you learn this year broadens your perspective. Your networks open a whole new world. Socialize and explore. Careful nurturing grows accounts and resources as career creativity blossoms. Balance abundant work with exercise, healthy diet and meditative practices like good stories, art or music. Infuse with laughter. To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is a 7 — Roll up your sleeves.The workload is intense. You don’t have to talk about it. Get meticulous about routines and tasks, and get it done. Support your family with clean dishes and laundry. Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is a 6 — Let your partner take over. Relax into romance through most of tomorrow. Invest in your home and/or real estate. You’d like to be cuddled on the couch in your own sanctum. Take action for it. Gemini (May 21-June 20) — Today is an 8 — It’s an excellent time to launch a joint venture. Increase productivity. Grab a negotiating advantage. The gentle approach works best. Begin a two-day period of home improvement. Compare prices. Bonus: discover a treasure. Cancer (June 21-July 22) — Today is a 9 — Let your partner lead. Study new developments. Organize your words. You’re sharp as a tack. Make an important connection. Passion is only one part of the exchange. Take a step up. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is a 9 — Develop a mental picture of your ideal situation. Stick to your budget. Generate money. Display treasures for best dramatic effect, and have your rooms reflect comfort. Tend your garden. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is a 7 — Talk about what you want. Figure out a road map to get you there. You’re becoming more confident. You qualify for extra benefits. You’re extra hot. Wait to take assertive action. All ends well. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — Today is a 7 — Friends help you advance. Your dreams seem prophetic. Your imagination is on fire, making you even more interesting. This is not cheating. Use this potent medicinal blend to strengthen your systems. Wait to see what develops. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is a 7 — Your team comes to the rescue. Work closely together. Maximize group resources. Get the paperwork out so you can get paid. You’re in demand. Take one thing at a time, and relax. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is an 8 — Career matters demand your attention. There’s a beneficial development. Take on new responsibilities. Others look to you for guidance. Streamline your routines. Give thanks, appreciation and re-affirm a commitment to a partnership or project. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is a 7 — Pay back something owed. Take a trip over the next two days to soothe your wanderlust. There may be adventures involved. Friends look to you for advice. Provide emotional support and leadership. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is an 8 — Prepare to negotiate carefully. A close bond is developing. Follow the money trail. You’ll win through the efforts of others. You provide the imagination and big picture view.Work as a team. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is a 9 — Get ready to make your choices.You and your partner are on the move now. Review instructions again. Make an important connection. Listen graciously before taking action. Then play your best hand. (c)2013 bY NANCY BLACK DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Dear Annie: My husband and I have been together for five years. For the most part, we have a great relationship. The problem is, my husband is seven years older and had a few bad relationships before we got together. Because of this, he is always telling me I am a cheater and cannot be trusted. Annie, I haven’t done a single thing in my past or present to make him feel this way. It is a constant fight between us. I have suggested that maybe we should get counseling so we can work on this, but he hasn’t been willing. Is there anything else I can do to make this annoying part of our relationship go away? – Irritated Wife Dear Irritated: A person who constantly accuses the spouse of cheating when there is no cause is either cheating himself or too insecure to function in a healthy marriage. It is no way to live. First ask him to see his doctor and find out
Annie’s Mailbox
Kathy Mitchell, Marcy Sugar whether there is a medical reason for his behavior. Then stop “suggesting” and insist that your husband go with you for counseling. If he refuses, go on your own to decide whether this is something you can tolerate or alleviate. Dear Annie: Why do stores think that having sales associates accost you in every aisle will make you enjoy shopping? A simple “Hello, how may I help you?” is all we need. Following us around and asking all sorts of questions is annoying. Knowing this will happen every time I enter the store makes me want to shop elsewhere. People like to be acknowledged. They do not
ful,” a woman with anxiety about highway travel. She did not want counseling. You suggested relaxation techniques but didn’t specifically mention Tai Chi or Qigong classes, which are available at many community centers, fitness clubs, YMCAs and senior centers. I teach both Tai Chi and Qigong and have been practicing for more than 24 years. It was part of my personal “quit smoking” program in 1988. Tai Chi is “relaxation in motion.” It is a moving meditation that teaches one how to relax in action. It is the only exercise I know that does this. Qigong is a cousin of Tai Chi. These exercises can be done in private or in a park, alone or with a friend. You can share the activity with your spouse to learn how to relax together. They can be learned while seated for those who have difficulty standing. They can be enjoyed for a lifetime and help develop the mind, along
Dear Heloise: Unsightly yellow stains have appeared on the off-white vinyl tile in my bathroom where the rugs had been. I got rid of the rugs, but I cannot get rid of the stains. Do you know of a method or product I could use to eliminate these stains without ruining the finish on the floor? – Kathleen W. in Michigan Dear Kathleen: Sorry to say, Kathleen, there isn’t much you can do at this point. The rubber backing on the rugs is the culprit. Because vinyl and rubber don’t mix, it creates a reaction and causes the vinyl to actually turn yellow. Also, other things can react and cause stains. Be careful when placing items like flowerpots, rubber wheels, anything made of plastic, etc., on a vinyl floor. When buying rugs, look for tags labeled “nonstaining rubber backing,” or stay away from rubber-backed rugs on vinyl or linoleum
Hints from Heloise
Heloise floors, as experts recommend. – Heloise Dear Heloise: Here are a few travel tips I find helpful: ● Put your driver’s license (identity card) in a plastic cardholder, and wear it as a necklace so it’s easily available at the airport. ● After checking into a room, wipe down the TV remote control. ● Carry a small flashlight to be kept at bedside. ● Save those perfume paper strips that are in magazines and take them along rather than liquid. – A Helpful Reader in the USA Great hints! Thanks for the reminders. When you wipe down the remote, don’t forget to wipe the
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door handles and light switches, too! I use the hand sanitizer I carry in my purse. – Heloise Dear Heloise: Great hint about turning boxes inside out for mailing. Plastic mailing bags work the same way. If you are returning something you ordered, or are just mailing something else, you can turn the mailing bag inside out and tape your labels on the plain surface. – Bonita in Cleveland Dear Heloise: Here are some organizational hints I use when buying a new appliance: I keep a file of all my manuals. If the appliance has a serial number, I write it on the top of the owners manual. I also attach the receipt, warranty card and any other paperwork I was given upon purchase. That way, I have all the information I need if I must look something up or have it repaired. This has saved tons of hassle and frustration. – Craig in Indiana
divorce from Wendi Deng THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
LOS ANGELES – News Corp. CEO Rupert Murdoch has filed for divorce from Wendi Deng Murdoch, his wife since 1999, citing a breakdown in the relationship. The matter doesn’t alter the succession plan for the media company, which the 82-year-old founder controls through a family trust. Murdoch filed a one-page document Thursday indicating that he was opening a divorce case in New York State Supreme Court in Manhattan. A News Corp. spokesperson confirmed the filing. A sealed document with the filing says, “the relationship between the husband and wife has broken down irretrievably,” according to a person familiar with the matter, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the matter was personal. The couple are parents to two daughters, Grace and
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with better balance and coordination. Tai Chi and Qigong are dynamic, fun and relaxing, and yes, they relieve anxiety. – Caroline Dear Caroline: Thanks for the additional suggestions. We hope our interested readers will check out these activities. Dear Readers: Today is Flag Day and the 34th Annual Pause for the Pledge of Allegiance at 7 p.m. (Eastern time). For more information, log on to americanflagfoundation.org. Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254. To find out more about Annie’s Mailbox and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.
Rug’s backing leaves ugly stain Rupert Murdoch files for
FRIDAY EVENING 6 PM
like to be hounded. If I want to wander around and look, I don’t enjoy being bombarded by five salespeople asking me the same stuff over and over. A customer who wants help will ask for it. Otherwise, please leave us alone. Businesses should train their employees to treat people as valued customers, not idiots. – Toledo Dear Toledo: You make a valid argument, but we have to say, for every person who doesn’t want to be accosted, there are 10 who wish they could find a salesperson altogether. If the store employees work on commission, it would explain why they try so hard to make a sale to every customer. It usually suffices to say, “No, thank you. I’m just looking.” If not, feel free to register your complaint with the store manager and see whether it helps. Dear Annie: Not long ago, you printed a letter from “Too Clean, Too Fear-
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7 p.m. on * 10 Shark Tank New Jersey entrepreneur Rebecca Rescate, who found success with her CitiKitty toilet training system for cats, has a new product: an item that combines the comfort of a pillow with a favorite article of clothing. Also in this episode, Mark, Barbara, Robert, Daymond and Kevin hear pitches for a handheld cooler, an environmentally friendly dry-cleaning bag, and an alternative to chewing tobacco made from coffee grounds.
fans of the long-running show. Keillor’s folksy style masks a shrewd ability to capture the current spirit of the country at large, blended with humor and pathos. 8 p.m. on , 12 Hawaii Five-0 Insert “politics makes strange bedfellows” joke here. With an election about to take place, the governor (Richard T. Jones) asks McGarrett (Alex O’Loughlin) and the team to conduct a discreet investigation of a prostitute’s murder. Why
Seyfried) tries to convince others that the person who once kidnapped her has taken her sister (Emily Wickersham) in this 2012 suspense tale. Wes Bentley (“American Beauty”) plays the one police detective who appears to believe her, but she ultimately ends up fending for herself to save her sibling. The tense tale also features Jennifer Carpenter (“Dexter”), Michael Pare and Hunter Parrish (“Weeds”). 9 p.m. on , 12 Blue Bloods
Chloe, ages 11 and 9. The girls have no voting stake in the company, but they are beneficiaries of 8.7 million non-voting shares that are held in a trust. Wendi Deng Murdoch, 44, also has nonvoting shares. Murdoch controls nearly 40 percent of the voting shares of News Corp. through a separate family trust. He has four other children from two previous marriages, including three who have active roles within the company: James, Lachlan and Elisabeth. All four children, including Prudence, his child from his first marriage, have equal votes in electing trustees. That means that upon Murdoch’s death, his four eldest children will continue to have the most say in who controls News Corp. Rupert Murdoch’s lawyer, Ira Garr, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The divorce filing comes just a week before the company begins the process to split in two. One company will contain a publishing division and Australian TV assets. A separate company will house global TV and movie businesses. Born in China, Wendi Deng Murdoch is a Yale graduate who went on to work as a junior executive at News Corp.’s subsidiary Star TV in Hong Kong. Deng was introduced to Murdoch at a Hong Kong cocktail party in 1997. She left Star TV before marrying the media mogul in June 1999 aboard Murdoch’s private yacht. Wendi Deng Murdoch leapt into the spotlight during a July 2011 British parliamentary hearing into phone hacking by News Corp. newspapers. She jumped up to smack a protester who was throwing a cream pie at her husband.
Friday, June 14, 2013
GOREN BRIDGE
WITH TANNAH HIRSCH
©2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
PICK YOUR LEAD
Neither vulnerable. South deals.
NORTH ♠AQ953 ♥K64 ♦ A4 ♣ 10 5 3 WEST EAST ♠ 10 8 ♠KJ72 ♥Q983 ♥J752 ♦K862 ♦75 ♣KQ7 ♣A92 SOUTH ♠64 ♥ A 10 ♦ Q J 10 9 3 ♣J864
The bidding: SOUTH Pass 1NT
WEST NORTH EAST ♠ Pass 1♠ Pass Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead: Three of ♥
Here is another deal from Eddie Kantar’s award-winning series “Thinking Bridge.” South is not strong enough to respond two diamonds — a two-level response by a passed hand typically shows a five-card suit (no Weak Two opening) with 10-11 high-card points. After the one no trump response, North has no place to go. South figures to have no more than two spades (did not raise), so rebidding two spades hints of a death wish. One no trump is often the best contract on indifferent hands, especially when you don’t have to play them!
On opening lead, with a choice of two relatively equal-strength fourcard suits, lean toward the major. Opponents are more likely to hold concealed minor-suit length. Before playing to the first trick, declarer counts sure tricks. He has four — ace-king of hearts and the aces of spades and diamonds. Then declarer decides which suit to establish for the extra tricks needed. Here, it is a slam dunk to work with diamonds for three extra tricks. Diamonds are far stronger than spades, but there is another little problem — entries. When establishing a long suit in the weaker hand, there must be a return entry to that hand once the suit is established. The opening lead must be won in dummy (key play) and diamonds cleared by unblocking the diamond ace (high honor from the doubleton side) and continuing the suit until the king is driven out. With the ace of hearts still in the closed hand, South must take four diamonds, two hearts and the ace of spades. If South wins the opening lead in the closed hand and leads the queen of diamonds, or starts on spades, neither play should be admitted in public! (Tannah Hirsch welcomes readers’ responses sent in care of this newspaper or to Tribune Media Services Inc., 2010 Westridge Drive, Irving, TX 75038. E-mail responses may be sent to gorenbridge@aol.com.)
A10 Friday, June 14, 2013
The Hutchinson News
OPINION Editorial Board JOHN D. MONTGOMERY / Editor-Publisher MARY RINTOUL / Managing Editor JASON PROBST / News Editor PAT SANGIMINO / Sports Editor
EDITORIAL
Need more TE Stiff competition for grants shows demand for projects ome good community improvement projects in Kansas will S get done thanks to the federal Transportation Enhancement program. But the latest round of project awards showed much greater demand of projects than money available. The Kansas Department of Transportation awarded grants last week for 35 projects costing almost $18 million. But KDOT had received 91 applications requesting more than $63 million. Accordingly, Hutchinson and Reno County batted one-for-three in their project applications. Winning a grant was a $600,000 pedestrian-bicycle trail connecting from the city’s northeast trail to the new Plum Creek Elementary School under construction at 43rd Avenue and Severance. That will be a positive addition to the trail system, especially appropriate because of the new elementary school. However, two other worthy projects failed to make the cut in the competition for meager dollars. Those were a proposed extension of the downtown streetscape improvements from Third to Fifth avenues and a county proposal to create bike lanes on Old K-61 Highway between 43rd and 45th avenues. The downtown Hutchinson project would have advanced an attrac-
tive and successful streetscape improvement program, which over the past decade has beautified and helped energize economic development downtown but which stops short of completing the downtown district. The county, meanwhile, had come up with a cost-efficient way to build on to the city’s trail system with a connection at 43rd and provide safer bicycle access to Sand Hills State Park and Dillon Nature Center. The Transportation Enhancement (TE) program provides money for these kinds of community enhancement projects. The federal grant money must be matched by local dollars of 20 percent or more. Besides pedestrian-bicycle projects and downtown streetscape, which falls into the scenic-environmental category, TE grants go toward historic preservation, such as restoration of historic train depots or bridges. Naturally, the big money needs to go to transportation-critical building and improvement of roads, rail and airports. But over the years, the TE program has been the catalyst for some worthy quality-of-life local improvement projects. State and federal lawmakers and administrators need to consider whether this small slice of the transportation budget pie shouldn’t be made just a little bigger, in the process making our world just that much better.
Hutchinson News file photo
Jonathan Lane rides his bicycle along the trail near the Hutchinson Clinic during the Bike to Work event last May. A new trail will connect the city trails to the new Plum Creek Elementary School area.
WESTERN FRONT
Anti-Christian bias clear After having read the articles of Jennifer Voth, Hutchinson, and Beth Vannatta, Halstead, it is rather clear that the comments and thoughts of these ladies fall directly in the category of anguish and anger. Their philosophy of religion also fits neatly into what the Bible calls “In the last days.” In the last days, men will become lovers of self rather than lovers of God. In the last days, scoffers will come deriding the name of Christ and of them that follow Him. Yes, their thought pattern falls neatly into the last-days slippage of man into a cauldron of antiChristian bias. If these two ladies are married, do they not give loyalty and love to their spouse? If they hold certain beliefs dear to their hearts, do they not cling to them as a part of their character and ethos? Should the Christian believer not be afforded the same privilege when it comes to his devotion to God and His sovereignty? Why is it that when a believer lives true to his proclamation and demonstrates his dedication and love to God, he is considered a fanatic and fool? When you quote a troubled
ascetic (Blaise Pascal) as a source of wisdom, think again. When a fool says within his heart there is no God, and lives accordingly, then whose fool do you become? I would rather be considered a fool for God than a follower of man’s false follies. I do not agree with most of what Bob Layne says, but one thing I can concur with him is that America is indeed becoming less and less “one nation under God.” The philosophy of these ladies appears to support that premise. If you read the Bible and understand the history of the Jewish nation, you soon discover that their lowest times were when they abandoned their belief and dedication in God and went their own way. It was the saddest time in Jewish history. Their many years in captivity demonstrated that. We should learn from their errors – if we learn at all. I would suggest that the Bible should be read, at a minimum, for the lessons it presents about the abandonment of God by man. Perhaps history could be a teacher if one’s soul and spirit are not. RALPH VOGEL Inman
JOIN THE DISCUSSION The News encourages readers to share their opinions on this page and offers a number of ways to do so: (1) Write a letter to the Western Front on any topic. Send to The News at 300 W. Second Ave., Hutchinson, KS, 67504-0190; fax to (620) 662-4186 or e-mail to westernfront@hutchnews.com. Letters should be limited to 500 words. Poems, consumer complaints, business testimonials and group-written letters will not be accepted. Please sign your name and provide your address
and a phone number so we may call to verify the letter. We strive to publish letters within one week of verification. Western Front letters are subject to editing for space considerations and libel concerns. (2) Respond directly to a newspaper editorial by joining our online opinions blog. Go to www.hutchnews.com/editorialblogs and comment on any of our latest posts. A selection of constructive comments may be excerpted to go with opinions that are published in a later print edition of The News.
COLUMNISTS
The reality of relationship violence This week, a jury found Brett T. Seacat guilty of murdering his wife, Vashti. She was, by all accounts, a beautiful person who loved her family. Because of her husband’s actions, her children not only have lost their mother, but they’ll forever know their father as the man who killed their mom. It’s heartbreaking. The State vs. Brett T. Seacat trial has weighed heavily on the citizens on Kingman. Nationally, it was covered on the major networks and discussed by cable news pundits. Yet for all of the attention it has garnered, there still has been very little conversation about domestic violence – the prevalence in every community and the difficulties women (and men, as women are not exclusively victims) face trying to leave the perpetrators. It’s easy to think of this in the context of something rare that doesn’t happen often. And it’s true, here in Kansas we don’t often read of domestic violence murders. But just because it may not be daily headline news, doesn’t mean that relationship violence isn’t a reality in many households, no matter what part of the state you live. Spousal abuse, much like is often stated about alcoholism, isn’t exclusive to a certain population. “It” can happen to anyone, often without others suspecting. Sadly, silence is an unspoken code of victims. Those bearing the brunt of a physically and/or mentally abusive person rarely talk about what’s happening in their home, in part because they’re made to feel as if no one will listen to or believe them. Some do leave. And then they may go back. For anyone vested in supporting and trying to help someone leave an abusive relationship, seeing them return is a difficult thing. It’s hard to understand and
Community columnist
Jessica Lucas you may never. Just know your support is needed, and there are local resources with staff trained to address the issues faced by victims, including providing a safe environment away from the perpetrator. Since I started writing a column for this newspaper, I have written about this subject twice. Today marks the third time, and as in the times prior, I’m reprinting a list published in an Ann Landers column that I read in the newspaper when I was 13. It’s comprised of signals that can help determine if a mate or date is a potential (or actual) batterer. l Jealousy of your time with coworkers, friends and family. l Controlling behavior – controls your comings and goings and your money and insists on “helping” you make personal decisions. l Isolation – cuts you off from all supportive resources such as telephone, colleagues at work and close family members. l Blames others for his problems – unemployment, family quarrels ... everything is “your fault.” l Hypersensitivity – easily upset by annoyances that are a part of daily life, such as being asked to work overtime, criticism of any kind, being asked to help with chores or child care. l Cruelty to animals or children – insensitive to their pain and suffering, may tease and/or hurt children and animals. l “Playful” use of force in sex – may throw you down and hold you during sex. May start having sex
with you when you are sleeping or demand sex when you are ill or tired. l Verbal abuse – says cruel and hurtful things, degrades and humiliates you, wakes you up to verbally abuse you or doesn’t let you go to sleep. l Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde personality – sudden mood swings and unpredictable behavior ... one minute loving, the next minute angry and punitive. l Past history of battering – has hit others but has a list of excuses for having been “pushed over the edge.” l Threats of violence – says “I’ll slap you,” “I’ll kill you” or “I’ll break your neck.” l Breaking or striking objects – breaks your possessions, beats on the table with fists, throws objects near or at you or your children. l Uses force during an argument – holds you down or against a wall, pushes, shoves, slaps or kicks you. This type of behavior can easily escalate to choking, stabbing or shooting. If you’re reading and recognize you (or someone you love) are involved with a person exhibiting these behaviors, please seek help. Fear does not have to control your life. The local number for the Sexual Assault and Domestic Violence Center 24-hour crisis line is 6632522 and the toll-free number is (800) 701-3630. I strongly believe that as a society, we have to support victims: believe their stories; help them recognize their own self-worth; provide them with the resources to take control of their life again and live in a safe environment. Perhaps in doing this, we can start to make strides toward eliminating relationship violence forever. Jessica Lucas is a Hutchinson transplant. She can be reached at jessicajo@gmail.com.
Crisis of faith in government WASHINGTON – It is reassuring that in the midst of so much government dysfunction, the IRS has resolved the question of when and whether to tax tanning beds under the Affordable Care Act. Do not be concerned about that giddiness you feel. You are not having a nervous breakdown but are suffering a symptom commonly associated with recognition that the absurd has become the accepted norm – and that you are, in fact, alone. Indeed, the IRS’ tanning ruling comes in the nick of time. Amid incessantly breaking news – NSA surveillance, IRS political targeting, DOJ seizing, and CIA shrugging – Americans were beginning to feel that no one over the age of 12 was in charge. The finger-pointing and blame-shifting have been a feast of cannibalizing acronyms. “The CIA did it.” “IRS pleads the fifth.” “They’ve gone rogue in Cincinnati.” What? No DOJ to rehab? But the night is young. Lest you wilt from suspense, the tanning bed challenge has been resolved as follows: Obamacare, the concision of which even President Obama prefers to the name “Affordable Care Act,” calls for a 10 percent sales tax every time some pale face exposes himself to potentially harmful, cancer-causing rays, thus affecting everyone’s health insurance premiums. (Note to tanning bed businesses: Buhbye, now.) But, wait, there’s an exception: If such beds are offered as part of a gym or fitness center at no extra charge, no tax will be imposed. Note to citizens: If you have inferred from the preceding that “risky” behavior will result in higher taxes, you get a blue ribbon in dot-connecting. Please join the NSA. Despite the IRS’ impressive res-
Kathleen Parker olution of the tanning bed conundrum, one is struck by the unfortunate timing of its several displays of (a) incompetence and/or (b) ideologically driven harassment – just when the agency is charged with implementing and overseeing large swaths of Obamacare. As you doubtless recall from your careful reading of the health care legislation way back in 2009, the act includes at least 47 new tax provisions. Also, recall that the Supreme Court ruled in favor of the ACA’s individual mandate (you must buy insurance or else) by categorizing the mandate as a tax. Which is to say, the IRS has some big work ahead. No one seems to know how much, though running estimates are that thousands of new agents will be needed. In addition to deciding which organizations qualify for tax exempt status, as in the case of tea party and patriot organizations recently targeted for prolonged, special scrutiny, our nation’s revenuers will also be redefining “religious.” Determining whether a religious or charitable institution qualifies for tax-exempt status has always been part of the IRS’ dubious bailiwick, but Obamacare has upped the ante by requiring some religious affiliates to provide health care – such as contraception – that violates their conscience. Whatever one’s personal positions on reproductive matters, the historically higher standard of individual conscience has been scut-
tled by the Obama administration in deference to a universal health care plan that leaves the definition of religious organization and, therefore, conscience to a bureaucracy of accountants. Even if one were disinclined to care much about other people’s moral beliefs, there’s something disconcerting about the Conga Line detail determining what constitutes religious enough. Those deemed not truly religious will be denied conscience protections, as has already occurred. Among other consequences, many charitable organizations that have served society’s least fortunate will have to shutter their doors, inviting new legions to rely on taxpayer-funded social services. Or is this, indeed, the point? Dependency, after all, is a constituency with life tenure. Such concerns may seem remote, but freedom of conscience is fundamental to other freedoms we similarly take for granted. Obamacare largely dismisses such considerations and its punitive nature soon will be felt by more than those burdened by conscience. Come next January, as insurance rates climb and many businesses opt to pay government fines, sending their workers into government exchanges, all those people who believed, as promised, that they could keep the insurance they like will learn otherwise. Oops. At the center of these disappointments and revelations will be the nation’s new, expanded army of tax enforcers – this time examining not just your beliefs but your medical records. No worries. Once you’re medicated, the anxiety passes quickly. Eventually you will forget when everything wasn’t absurd. And you will never be alone again. Ever. Kathleen Parker’s email address is kathleenparker@washpost.com.
The Hutchinson News
DIRECTORY
Lena Ruth Rush
RENO COUNTY
ABBYVILLE – Lena Ruth Rush passed away June 11, 2013, at Hospice House, Hutchinson. She was born June 30, 1938, in Caldwell County, Ky., to Archie and Nora Oliver. In 1955, she married Francis “Jim” Lanning. They divorced in 1969. On RUSH March 31, 1972, she married Edward Rush at the First Baptist Church in Hutchinson, Kan. She owned and ran “Club Royal” for twenty years and Lena’s Supper Club for six years. Survivors include: husband, Ed Rush; brother, Willie C. Oliver of Hopkinsville, Ky.; sister, Virginia Hooks of Cadiz, Ky.; sons, Bobby Lanning and wife Tammy, Michael Lanning, all of Abbyville, Brian Lanning and wife Laurie of South Hutchinson; daughters, Deborah Lanning of Johnson City, Kan., Patricia “Trish” Abernathy and friend Russell Sonnema of Hutchinson; grandsons, Jeremy Lanning and wife Dyan of Hutchinson, Jordan Lanning of Wichita, Joshua Lanning and fiancee Emily of Hutchinson, Marcus Lanning and wife Anna of Nickerson, Tyler Lanning of South Hutchinson, Emmanuel Romans and Toby Lanning of Abbyville; granddaughters, Allena “Allie” Abernathy and Cherish Abernathy of Hutchinson; two great-grandsons and five great-granddaughters; brothers and sisters-in-law, Donald Rush of Pittsburgh, Pa., Janice Rush of Davenport, Okla., Ellen Mitzner of Abbyville, Helen and Bud Havercroft, Hutchinson, Beulah and Wiley VanHoose, Marian and Kenneth Rank, all of Abbyville, Vivian Ogburn and friend Johnny Steele of Hutchinson. Lena was preceded in death by her parents; brothers, Lorenzo “Mort” Oliver and wife Evelyn, Garnett Oliver; brothers-in-law, Billy Joe Hooks, Marvin Rush; sister-in-law, Katherine “Penny” Rush. Family requests casual dress for the funeral service at 10:30 a.m. Saturday, June 15, 2013, at Elliott Chapel, with Marian Rank and Judy Spore presiding. Burial will follow at Abbyville Cemetery. Visitation will be from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Friday with family present from 6 to 8 p.m. at Elliott Mortuary. Memorials may be made to Hospice House, in care of Elliott Mortuary, 1219 N. Main, Hutchinson, KS 67501. Please visit www.elliottmortuary.com to leave a condolence or remembrance for Lena’s family.
Beth Graber Hutchinson Lena Rush Abbyville
AROUND THE STATE Timothy Albertson Garden City Fannie Mae Dougherty Wagoner Alexciana Garcia Garden City Martin Huschka Garden City James Monroe Iuka Ronald Powell Wamego Fern Waechter Lakin Marie Wenger Moundridge
OUT OF STATE Doris Mae Decker Southaven, Miss. Randall Walters Harrisonville, Mo.
SPONSORED BY:
Fannie Mae Dougherty WAGONER – Fannie Mae Dougherty, 78, died June 8, 2013. She was born June 15, 1934, to Marvin and Nettie (Thornburgh) Benton. Survivors: sons and their wives, DOUGHERTY Doug (Helena) Fortner of Maine, McKay Fortner of Washington, Jay (Rebecca) Fortner of Virginia, Lonnie (Wilma) Fortner of Wagoner, and Kurtis (Dana) Montgomery of Kansas; daughter and son-in-law, Rebecca and John Benton of Texas; sisters, Brenda Casanova, Linda Daniel and Marsha Hill, all of Kansas; several grandchildren. Funeral was June 13, 2013, at Mallett Funeral Home, Wagoner. Interment in Ray Cemetery in Sequoyah State Park.
Marie Wenger MOUNDRIDGE – Marie Wenger, 92, passed away June 12, 2013. She was born Aug. 27, 1920, at Lehigh, Kan., to George and Helena (Ratzlaff) Mayeske. She married Clayton Wenger Nov. 9, 1941, at Fredonia, Kan. He passed away Dec. 14, 2008. She was a homemaker. Survivors include: son, Dale (Luerla) Wenger of Burrton; daughters, Sharon (Leonard) Giesbrecht of Glenn, Calif., Eileen (Dennis) Boeckner of DeRidder, La., Rose (Abe) Giesbrecht of Glenn, Calif., and Nancy (Radell) Koehn of Galva; 22 grandchildren and 73 greatgrandchildren; sisters, Anna Wiggers of Moundridge and Betty (Charles) Koehn of Canton. Funeral service will be at 10:30 a.m. Sunday at the Meridian Church of God in Christ, Mennonite, rural Hesston. Friends may call from 3 to 5 p.m. Saturday at the Moundridge Funeral Home and from 6 to 7:30 p.m. at the Meridian Church. Burial will be in the church cemetery. Memorial donations are suggested to the Moundridge Manor, in care of the funeral home.
Timothy W. Albertson GARDEN CITY – Timothy W. Albertson, 66, died June 11, 2013. He was born March 20, 1947, to Loyal and Olive Dyrdahl Albertson. Visitation noon to 7 p.m. and funeral 7 p.m. Saturday at Price and Sons Funeral Home, Garden City. Interment 10 a.m. Monday in Maple Hill Cemetery, Kansas City, Kan.
Friday, June 14, 2013 A11
OBITUARIES
Randall Lewis Walters HARRISONVILLE, Mo. – Randall Lewis Walters, 61, died June 9, 2013, in Harrisonville, Mo. He was born June 9, 1952, at Great Bend, the son of Lloyd Harold and Janis Armour (McDonald) Walters. He was a salesman. Survivors include: a son, Dustin Walters of Belton, Mo.; a daughter, April Walters of Peculiar, Mo.; and three brothers, Lance Walters of Great Bend, Greg Walters of Siloam Springs, Ark., and John Hill of Overland Park, Kan. Cremation has taken place. Bryant Funeral Home, Great Bend, is in charge of local arrangements.
Ronald J. Powell WAMEGO – Ronald J. “Cowman” Powell, 77, died June 2, 2013, at his home. Memorial service noon to 2:30 p.m. Saturday, June 22, 2013, at B&B Hall, 1040 W. Pawnee St., Wichita, KS 67213. Memorials to the Cancer Center of Kansas or Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks, in care of CampanellaEvans Mortuary, Wamego.
Martin H. Huschka GARDEN CITY – Martin H. Huschka, 93, died Thursday, June 13, 2013, at Garden Valley Retirement Village, Garden City. Funeral arrangements are pending and will be announced at a later date by Garnand Funeral Home, Garden City.
Alexciana M. Garcia GARDEN CITY – Alexciana Monroe Garcia, six months, died June 9, 2013. She was born Dec. 11, 2012, to Jesse Garcia and Kajleigh Collazo. Rosary 7 p.m. Sunday and funeral 10 a.m. Monday at St. Mary Catholic Church, Garden City. Visitation noon to 8 p.m. Saturday and noon to 5 p.m. Sunday at Garnand Funeral Home, Garden City.
Doris Mae Decker SOUTHAVEN, Miss. – Doris Mae Decker, 92, formerly of Galva, died Tuesday, June 11, 2013, at DeSoto Healthcare Center, Southaven, Miss. Funeral arrangements are pending and will be announced at a later date by Glidden-Ediger Funeral Home, McPherson.
James M. Monroe IUKA – James M. “Jim” Monroe, 73, died June 12, 2013. He was born Sept. 17, 1939, to James and Hazel (Collins) Monroe. He married Dovie Bale Dec. 21, 1958. She survives. Funeral 10:30 a.m. Monday at Iuka United Methodist Church. Visitation 6 to 8 p.m. Sunday at AyresCalbeck Mortuary, Pratt.
Fern G. Waechter LAKIN – Fern G. Waechter, 83, died Thursday, June 13, 2013, at High Plains Retirement Village, Lakin. Funeral arrangements are pending and will be announced at a later date by Garnand Funeral Home, Lakin.
Beth L. Graber Beth L. Graber, 77, passed away Thursday, June 13, 2013, at Hutchinson Regional Medical Center. Funeral arrangements are pending and will be announced at a later date by Old Mission-Heritage Funeral Home, Hutchinson.
OBITUARY POLICY The Hutchinson News publishes obituaries for residents of Kansas and former residents free of charge for the first 24 lines. There is a fee for additional information and photo. Flag emblems also can be added for a small fee. Obituaries should be written by families and submitted by mortuaries. Information about pricing can be obtained from the mortuary or by calling The News, (620) 694-5700, ext 370.
Housing ●From Page A1 responses, he thought the public would support more aggressive attempts to rid the city of the “worst of the worst,” focusing on vacant, abandoned and unsafe houses as identified by the police and fire departments, data from the Reno County Appraiser and confirmation by the inspection staff. Using data from the appraiser, city staff had compiled a list of 500 houses, some of which were candidates for demolition and some of which were just in need of significant repair. Some were already on the inspection department’s list of candidates for demolition, and some also are on lists of unsafe houses being compiled by the fire department. “That should keep you busy for a couple of years and we don’t have to worry about complaint, no complaint,” said Bush, who, like Proett, will leave the council in 2015, prohibited from running again by term limits. Proett said that concentrating on vacant and abandoned houses that are the
Party ●From Page A1 Moderate Party of Kansas can serve as a platform that brings moderate Republicans and Democrats together, “to find common ground in the face of extremism.” Ford County product Married and with two daughters, Estabrook lives in Manhattan and works for the Salvation Army as a case manager assisting homeless military veterans. He was reared near Fort Dodge, and describes his father as a “Bob Dole Republican.” The younger Estabrook voted for Republican George W. Bush in the 2000 and 2004 presidential elections. Majoring in political science at Kansas State University, Estabrook asked his state senator for an internship during the Kansas Legislature’s session. That senator was Tim Huelskamp, a fiscal and social conservative Republican from Fowler now serving in Congress. Over three sessions, Estabrook worked for Huelskamp. In 2006, Estabrook registered as a Democrat, citing the Iraqi war as one reason. Estabrook served in the U.S. Army and was deployed to Afghanistan. His infantry unit fought in southern Kandahar, against a repressive regime, he said. “Upon returning to Kansas in 2011, I could not believe the radical nature that conservatism had taken the shape of,” Estabrook wrote in an email response. “Our legislators were spending so much time restricting rights that it almost felt like they envied Afghans.” Estabrook ran for the Kansas House in November 2012, losing to Republican Tom Phillips in the Manhattan district. This spring, he sought and won a seat on the nonpartisan Manhattan-Ogden school board. Estabrook remains a registered Democrat, but other members on the Moderate Party’s team have Republican roots.
STARTING A POLITICAL PARTY Kansas statute spells out how to obtain political party recognition: ● The only method available is by petition. ● The petition must contain signatures of registered Kansas voters. The number needed is the equivalent of at least 2 percent of the total votes cast for all candidates running for governor in the last general election. Because of the 838,790 votes cast in that 2010 race when Gov. Sam Brownback was elected, a petition would need at least 16,766 valid signatures. ● Each page or set of pages with collected signatures must have an attached affidavit verifying that the circulator of those pages personally witnessed the signing by each person. The affidavit must be notarized. ● Each page must contain the names of registered voters of a single county. The overall petition must be grouped according to the counties where the petition was cirulcuted. ● The entire petition some social programs don’t work and need to be cut. But Hoheisel also believes government should “protect the most vulnerable amongst us,” he wrote in an email. He supports expanding background checks to cover gun purchases, giving a pathway to citizenship for illegal immigrants, and providing equal protection for gays. When former Republican presidential candidate Dole recently said the Republican Party needs to undergo repairs, Estabrook considered that reinforcement for what he has felt.
must be submitted at one time to the Kansas Secretary of State’s office. ● The deadline is noon June 1, prior to an August primary election in an even-numbered year. How to run as a thirdparty candidate: The state runs the political party primary process for Republicans and Democrats. For a third party to qualify for the primary, its candidate for governor must have polled at least 5 percent of the total votes cast in the most recent election. For example, the Libertarian candidate for governor in 2010 garnered less than 2.7 percent of the vote, so the Libertarian Party is not eligible to use the primary election process to select Libertarian candidates who will appear on the general election ballot. Minor party candidates, having received their nomination at the party’s convention, can go directly on the general election ballot. – By The News staff
Kansas GOP Nick Hoheisel, pursuing a political science degree at Wichita State University, is vice president of the Moderate Party of Kansas. He has also been a registered Republican since he turned 18 in 2004. The Moderate Party’s communications director, Dave Warren, Leawood, worked in Republican Gov. Bill Graves’ administration, Estabrook notes, and deputy communications director Kelly Schodorf, Wichita, is the daughter of former State Sen. Jean Schodorf. Sen. Schodorf was one of the moderate Republicans targeted by the conservative forces, and defeated in 2012. She has dropped her Republican affiliation. Hoheisel said he believes in small government, secure national borders, and the right for the concealed carry of handguns. He also thinks
“Slim” chance The Moderate Party of Kansas is a “different kind of beast,” said Kansas State University political science professor Joe Aistrup. Instead of trying to appeal to the right or left, he said, “it is trying to explicitly oc-
cupy the middle.” It probably has a “slim” chance, he said, noting the challenges to becoming an official party. Further, he said, gaining official recognition would not guarantee the third party would be able to line up candidates for various races and win at the ballot box. No registered Libertarian, for example, serves in the 165-member Kansas Legislature, Aistrup pointed out. The Koch brothers originally thought the Libertarian Party could be their vehicle for pursuing their political agenda and they were sorely disappointed not just in Kansas but nationally, Aistrup said. The Reform and the Americans Elect parties once enjoyed official status in Kansas, but lost it because their candidates did not receive the requisite number of votes to remain officially recognized, according to Kay Curtis, spokeswoman for Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach. Estabrook said Republicans view Moderate Party backers as Democrats, and Democrats consider the Moderate Party as unnecessary. Kansas Democrative Party spokesman Dakota Loomis said Kansas Democrats believe in the importance of education and in a fair tax system, and want good jobs at good wages. Loomis is aware those are the same things espoused by the Moderate Party of Kansas. For those Kansans who like that platform, Loomis said, “there is a party that exists – that’s the Kansas Democratic Party.” The News was unable to reach a spokesperson for the Kansas Republican Party.
“worst of the worst” should eliminate the fear people voiced two years ago about being “picked on by the city” for lesser violations of the property maintenance code that didn’t involve health and safety. Jon Daveline, who took his seat on the City Council in April along with new members Jade Piros de Carvalho and Nancy Soldner, said the process needs to be clearly communicated to the community to counteract the perception that “the government is threatening unfortunate property owners.” Bush also proposed that the city allocate $100,000 from its Economic Opportunity Fund for each of the next two years for demolishing unsafe structures. The city allocated $45,000 from other funds last year for demolitions, and City Manager John Deardoff had the same amount plugged into his tentative 2014 budget. It costs about $3,000 to $5,000 to demolish a house, and Building Official Trent Maxwell has to save some money back each year for emergency demolitions following house fires that leave a house in need of immediate demolition for public safety.
But generally the city plans for eight to 10 “scheduled” demolitions a year. The $100,000 would more that double that number, but based on an estimate that 200 houses need to be demolished, it wouldn’t eliminate the current inventory of unsafe houses within five years, as the Housing Commission had hoped. However, Bush said he saw the Economic Opportunity Funds as the only potential source of money for a more aggressive demolition program without increasing the mill levy. He also proposed committing the money for only two years because that’s how much time he and Proett have left on the City Council. “In two years, maybe we haven’t spent a lot of Economic Opportunity money and it’s working and the council will want to commit more money,” Bush said. Bush also asked the City Council to give some thought to whether they would support hiring an additional housing inspector. If they do, they’ll need to figure out where to come up with about $75,000 for salary, benefits and a city car to drive on
the job. Before the council expressed support for Bush’s other proposals, Maxwell presented a slideshow of about 30 vacant houses on the “worst of the worst” list compiled by the Appraiser. Maxwell said he was already aware of some, but not all, of the houses, of which he said about 10 were candidates for demolition. Many of the houses had holes in the roof, missing siding, boarded-up windows, and porches that were collapsing. “Every house that gets boarded up is a beacon for transients … and a beacon for criminal activity,” Maxwell said, noting that police officers say the houses often are used for using or dealing drugs. Maxwell called a house at 545 E. First Ave., a large two-story house with boarded-up and missing windows and a roof that’s starting to collapse, “one of the scariest I’ve been in.” Noting that two young people had recently purchased the house in hopes of fixing it up, Maxwell said, “I have a construction background and I wouldn’t touch this house, and they have no construction background.”
Obstacles in the road Kansas has only three recognized political parties: Republican, Democrat and Libertarian. To achieve that status, the Moderate Party must collect nearly 17,000 signatures on a carefully carried-out petition drive. Estabrook thinks it will be easier to build a database of supporters and then encourage them to attend events where the signatures could be gathered. June 1, 2014, would be the deadline for submitting the petition, in order for the Moderate Party to be a player in the 2014 election. “I’m not sure it’s possible in a year’s time, but it’s also not impossible,” Hoheisel said in an email. If they don’t get the signatures needed, they “will still fully support moderate candidates” in the 2014 election, Hoheisel said.
A12 Friday, June 14, 2013
The Hutchinson News
SPORTS THE HUTCHINSON NEWS
A PALL OVER ROCKIES
They lose at home to Washington, and Troy Tulowitzki, left, suffers a broken rib B3
WWW.HUTCHNEWS.COM
FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 2013
REV1TALIZED R0YALS
Dragons’ athletic director honored
They score in double digits for first time since May 13
BY THE NEWS STAFF
Hutchinson Community College athletic director Randy Stange was named one of the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics’ Under Armour Athletic Directors of the Year this week. Stange, a former HCC basketball player and basketball coach, was one of 28 athletic directors nationwide, from all levels of STANGE college athletics, to be honored at the NACDA’s annual convention in Florida. Stange was one of four junior college athletic directors to be honored. This past academic year, Hutchinson had one of its best athletic years ever. Five teams reached the Region 6 final – volleyball, soccer, football, women’s basketball and men’s basketball. The men’s track and field team also won the Region 6 title and placed fourth at the NJCAA national meet. The volleyball team won Region 6 after taking the Jayhawk West title. At the national tournament, the volleyball team became the first Region 6 team since 2009 to win a match. The men’s basketball team was ranked No. 1 for a few weeks, finished second in the Jayhawk West and won Region 6 for the first time since 1997. Women’s basketball was also ranked No. 1 for several weeks, won the Jayhawk West and Region 6, and placed third at the national tournament. The soccer team spent time ranked No. 1 and finished second in both the Jayhawk Conference and Region 6. The football team did so as well, and also won the Salt City Bowl. Eighteen HCC athletes were also named academic All-Americans this past year. Stange has been HCC athletic director since 1997.
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Photos by Chris O’Meara/Associated Press
Kansas City’s Elliot Johnson – a former Ray – follows the flight of his three-run homer off Tampa Bay starting pitcher Jeremy Hellickson in the sixth inning Thursday in St. Petersburg, Fla. Catching for the Rays is Jose Molina.
KC routs Rays, has 9-3 mark in June THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. – Elliot Johnson has some fond memories of his years with the Rays. None might have been sweeter than his return to Tampa Bay with the Kansas City Royals on Thursday night. Johnson had a three three-run homer for his second hit of an eight-run sixth inning, leading the
Royals 000 008 110 – 10 14 1 Rays 000 001 000 – 1 6 0
UP NEXT at Tampa Bay, 6:10 p.m. today TV: FSKC
surging Royals to a 10-1 victory over the Rays. “It’s hard to describe the first time back,” he said. “I
wish everyone would get a chance to understand what it’s like and it’s really hard even to put into words.” Traded to Kansas City by the Rays in February, Johnson led off the big inning with a single and chased Jeremy Hellickson (4-3) with his second homer of the season, both coming off Hellickson.
See ROYALS / B2
Hellickson reacts after he was taken out of the game against the Royals after giving up eight runs in the sixth inning.
US OPEN
All’s right with Lefty Mickelson’s 67 tops; rain-marred round to resume today BY DOUG FERGUSON AP Golf Writer
ARDMORE, Pa. – Even for Phil Mickelson, his path to the top of the leaderboard Thursday in the U.S. Open was unconventional. He traveled about 2,400 miles in the air and 7,000 yards on the ground. He took a short nap on his private jet from San Diego and another one during a rain delay when he found a secluded corner of the library room in the Merion clubhouse. He carried five wedges but no driver. Some 17 hours later, Mickelson had a 3-under 67 to match his best opening round in the U.S. Open. Mickelson returned from his daughter’s eighthgrade graduation about 3½ hours before his tee
NBA FINALS
Big 3 help Heat even series at 2
See OPEN / B2
BY BRIAN MAHONEY AP Basketball Writer
SAN ANTONIO – LeBron James was better as promised. Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh were the best they’ve been since the playoffs started. Riding big performances from their Big Three, the Miami Heat tied the NBA Finals with a 109-93 victory over the San Antonio Spurs on Thursday night in Game 4. James had 33 points and 11 rebounds after failing to break 20 points in any of the first three games of the series, and Wade scored 32 points, 11 more than his previous high this postseason. Bosh matched his playoff high with 20 points and grabbed 13 rebounds, he and Wade supplying the baskets that finally put the Spurs away for good midway through the fourth quarter. Just like they have for the last five months, the Heat bounced back from a loss with a victory – a lopsided one at that. They are 12-0 after losses since Jan. 10,
See NBA / B2
Charlie Riedel/Associated Press
Phil Mickelson reacts after his birdie putt on the ninth hole during Thursday’s first round of the U.S. Open at Merion Golf Club in Ardmore, Pa.
Gene J. Puskar/Associated Press
Tiger Woods watches his putt on the ninth hole.
Monarchs’ hot bats continue, but pitching falters again BY THE NEWS STAFF
The good news is that the Hutchinson Monarchs’ bats are beginning to heat up with the weather. The bad news is that so, too, are the opposition’s. On a night when the Monarchs
NEWTON 10 HUTCH 4 jumped to a 3-1 lead and collected nine hits, Newton jumped all over Devin Osbment in a 10-4 victory over visiting Hutchinson.
The 6-foot-4 right-hander was touched for seven runs and 10 hits in 2 2/3 innings of work. That erased Hutch scoring two runs in the first and another in the second inning, which staked the Monarchs to an early lead. “He left the ball up,” said Mon-
archs manager Deron McCue. “He was a little shaky, but he’ll get it.” Tyler Huffstickler and Cash Pechin worked the final five innings out of the pen. The Monarchs return to the field
See MONARCHS / B2
B2 Friday, June 14, 2013
The Hutchinson News
SPORTS
Open
NBA
●From Page B1
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time. He three-putted his first hole for a bogey and didn’t give back a shot the rest of the day at Merion, which proved plenty tough by yielding only one other round under par to the 78 players who completed the first round. Because of two rain delays, the first round won’t be completed until Friday morning. Mickelson won’t have to tee it up again for another 24 hours. Enough time to fly back to San Diego? “I don’t want to push it, no,” Mickelson said with a tired smile. Tiger Woods faced a tougher road. He appeared to hurt his left hand after trying to gouge out of the deep rough on the opening hole. He grimaced and shook his left wrist again after hitting a 5-wood out of the rough on the fifth hole. He already had three bogeys though five holes before starting to make up ground with a 50-foot birdie putt on the par-4 sixth hole. Woods, however, failed to take advantage on the short stretch of holes in the middle of the round, and he was shaking his hand again after shots out of the rough on the 10th and twice on the 11th. He was 2-over for his round and had a 4-foot par putt on the 11th when play was stopped for the day. “I’ve got a lot of holes to play tomorrow,” Woods said. “And, hopefully, I can play a little better than I did today.” Luke Donald was 4-under through 13 holes, making one last birdie before leaving the course. The first round was to resume at 7:15 a.m. Friday, and the forecast called for drier weather for the rest of the week. Masters champion Adam Scott, playing with Woods and Rory McIlroy, was 3-under through 11 holes, while defending U.S. Open champion Webb Simpson was 2under through eight holes. McIlroy was 1-under. Lee Westwood got the full Merion experience. He was 3under when his approach on the 12th hit the wicker basket – the signature at Merion, replacing traditional flags – and bounced off the green, leading to a double bogey. For Mickelson, this could be the start of yet another chance to win the major championship he wants so dearly. Or maybe he’s setting himself up for more heartache. He already has been a runner-up a record five times in the U.S. Open. “If I’m able – and I believe I will – if I’m able to ultimately win a U.S. Open, I would say that it’s great,” Mickelson said. “Because I will have had ... a win and five seconds. But if I never get that win, then it would be a bit heart-breaking.” Nicolas Colsaerts of Belgium, the only other player from the morning wave to break par, picked up birdies on the short seventh and eighth holes for a 69. Former Masters champion Charl Schwartzel, Tim Clark, Rickie Fowler, Jason Day and Jerry Kelly were the only others who at least matched par at 70. Clark and Kelly were at 2 under deep in their rounds until running into trouble, which isn’t hard to do in the U.S. Open, especially at Merion. Clark took a double bogey-bogey stretch in the middle of his back nine. Kelly was one shot behind Mickelson until a double bogey on the 18th hole. “It’s a lot tougher than they say it is,” Schwartzel said. It doesn’t take much – just two holes for Sergio Garcia, who found Merion far more daunting than the few wisecracks from the gallery. Garcia received mostly warm applause, with some barely audible boos from the grandstand when he started his round on No. 11. It was his first time competing in America since his public spat with Woods took a bad turn when he jokingly said he would have Woods over for dinner during the U.S. Open and serve fried chicken. “There were a couple here and there,” Garcia said about some jeers. “But I felt the people were very nice for the whole day. I think that almost all of them were behind me and that was nice to see.” They saw him hit his tee shot out of bounds on No. 14 right before the first rain delay, leading to double bogey. He hooked his next shot out of bounds and hit a bunker shot over the green on his way to a quadruple-bogey 8 at No. 15.
outscoring opponents by 19.8 points in the previous 11 victories. “Right now it’s a three-game series,” Wade said. “Two great ballclubs, we just want to come out again and play well.” Tim Duncan scored 20 points for the Spurs, who have one more game here on Sunday. They fell to 10-3 at home in finals games, failing to back up their 11377 victory in Game 3 that was the third-most lopsided game in the history of the championship series. James insisted he would be better after shooting 7 of 21 from the field with no free throws in that game, saying he was the star and it was his job to lead his team. But while James – and millions of critics worldwide – wanted to pile all the pressure on the league’s MVP, it was Wade on
Royals ●From Page B1 Johnson got his third hit of the game in the eighth inning and is 6 for 11 with four RBIs against his former team while batting .202 with three RBIs against every other team. “When they came into our place, I had a good series there,” Johnson said. “I wasn’t really playing that well, and Ned (Yost) gave me some opportunities to play against them. I picked it up and today played well again. It’s good to get them anyway you can, but it feels good to get them against them, of course. (Former Rays pitcher James) Shields said the
Monarchs ●From Page B1 today when they travel to Valley Center for a pair of games. The first game will be a nine-inning Walter Johnson League game,
Wednesday who said it was the Heat’s three All-Stars who had to lead them together, or there would be no championship. He was right. And now those championship hopes are right back on track. Tony Parker had 15 points and nine assists for the Spurs, who made a finalsrecord 16 3-pointers on Tuesday but got up only 16 attempts in this one. Gary Neal scored 13 points and Danny Green had 10, solid nights but nothing like when they combined for 13 3-pointers two nights earlier. The Heat guaranteed they will get at least one more game on their home floor. Game 6 will be Tuesday night, where they could have a chance to clinch a second straight championship. Wade, battling right knee pain throughout the spring, put it away for Miami early in the fourth. He followed a basket with a steal and dunk, pushing the lead to 90-81, and after he made an-
other jumper, Bosh scored the next six Heat points, taking the load off of James. The Heat switched their lineup, inserting Mike Miller, who made 10 of his 11 shots, going 9 of 10 on 3pointers, in the first three games of the series. They changed uniforms, too, switching from their road reds to their blacks. The only change they really needed was in the performances of their Big Three. James called it a “mustwin” and it probably was: No team has overcome a 3-1 deficit in the finals. And the way their three stars played, they couldn’t lose. The Heat blocked shots, made stops, and occasionally flopped, playing with renewed aggression after what coach Erik Spoelstra called a “miserable” day of watching and analyzing their passive performance from Tuesday. They still haven’t lost two in a row since Jan. 8 and 10.
Parker played through a strained right hamstring, shooting 7 of 16, but the Spurs couldn’t match the Heat’s speed. After the teams traded blowouts in the previous two games, momentum swung wildly in a first half that ended tied at 49. San Antonio raced to a quick 10-point lead, fell behind by 10 with 7 minutes left in the half, then finished with an 11-2 spurt sparked by reserve Boris Diaw. Bosh dove for a dunk that came just after the buzzer, Spurs owner Peter Holt waving it off from his seat along the sideline. James rocked back and forth during the national anthem, a bundle of energy ready to get going. It took a few minutes after the game started, but he began playing with the speed and power that makes him unguardable at his best, grabbing rebounds on defense and rushing the ball up the floor himself to get the Heat into their offense.
He and Wade combined to make 10 of 11 shots and score 21 points in the first quarter, helping the Heat erase their early 10-point deficit to go ahead 29-26. Spurs coach Gregg Popovich even lit into Duncan during an early secondquarter timeout with Miami on its way to a 41-31 advantage, but the Spurs had it back to even by the time the teams headed to the locker room. Fla. sports bar deck collapses, dozens in water – Authorities say an outdoor deck behind a popular Miami-area sports bar collapsed during the NBA Finals, sending dozens of patrons into the shallow waters of Biscayne Bay and critically injuring three people. The Miami Herald reported that the accident occurred around 9:45 p.m. at Shucker’s Bar & Grill as customers were watching the Heat play the Spurs. WSVN-TV reported that 24 people were injured.
same thing; he wishes he could pitch here.” “He gets fired up playing against these guys and he really helped us out today,” said Eric Hosmer, who homered off Jake Odorizzi in the seventh. Ervin Santana (5-5) gave up five hits and an unearned run in 7 2-3 innings. The Royals, who have won eight of nine and are 9-3 in June, set a franchise record by holding an opponent to three runs or fewer in a 12th straight game. “Everything is going our way right now so we have to keep that up,” Santana said. Hellickson lost for the first time since April 25, giving up eight runs on 10 hits in 5 2-3 innings. He retired 15 of the 16 Royals he faced in
the first five innings. “He was locating his fastball and his changeup really kept us off stride,” said Kansas City bench coach Chino Cadiha, who was acting manger while Yost attended his daughter’s wedding in Georgia. “I guess we figured it out in the sixth, and here we go.” Johnson led off the sixth inning of a scoreless game with his first hit. After Alcides Escobar’s double, Alex Gordon drove in the first run with Kansas City’s third straight hit. Three more singles and an RBI double by Miguel Tejada preceded Johnson’s homer to give the Royals an 8-0 lead. In all the Royals sent 11 men to the plate in the inning. “I just fell behind to El-
liot, the first batter of the inning, and just couldn’t stop it after that,” Hellickson said. “I’m pretty frustrated. It wasn’t a fun game. Eight runs, it’s unacceptable.” It was the Royals’ biggest inning of the season, exceeding the seven runs they scored in the third inning at Los Angeles on May 15. Gordon had two hits in raising his road batting average to .381, compared to .231 at home. The Royals scored their most runs since an 1`1-4 victory over the Angels in Los Angeles on May 13. NOTES: The Rays optioned Odorizzi to Triple-A Durham after the game and took pitcher Alex Cobb off the bereavement list. ... Tampa Bay LHP David Price (strained left triceps)
threw 54 pitches over three innings in a simulated game. The AL Cy Young Award winner could rejoin the rotation in late June or early July. ... Rays 3B Evan Longoria got his second break from playing on the artificial turf in five games, getting the start as the DH. Kelly Johnson made his first start this season at third in place of Longoria. ... RHP Nate Adcock, designated for assignment by the Royals on June 6, was claimed on waivers by Arizona. He was optioned to Triple-A Reno. ... Tampa Bay LHP Matt Moore (8-2) looks to stop a two-game skid, in which he allowed 15 runs, in tonight’s game with the Royals. RHP Luis Mendoza (1-3) will start for Kansas City.
while the nightcap will be a seven-inning non-league contest. Jake Jewell is expected to take the ball in the opener. It appears the bats are beginning to show some life, McCue said. After struggling through some earlyseason doldrums, the
Monarchs have begun to hit this week. They had their chances to get back into the contest on Thursday. The Monarchs loaded the bases in the seventh inning, but came away empty. In the eighth, they had runners on second
and third, but couldn’t get the hit. But at least they’re getting opportunities, McCue said. “That’s much better than getting three hits in a
game,” he said. “We’re putting the ball in play and getting some runners on base. Now we have to work on taking advantage of those scoring opportunities.”
The Hutchinson News
SPORTS
THURSDAY IN MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL This date in baseball June 14 1952 – Warren Spahn of the Boston Braves struck out 18 Cubs in a 3-1, 15-inning loss to Chicago. Spahn also homered. 1963 – Duke Snider hit his 400th career home run to highlight a 10-3 triumph by the New York Mets over the Cincinnati Reds at Crosley Field. 1965 – Jim Maloney struck out 18 and
no-hit the New York Mets for 10 innings, but Johnny Lewis’ leadoff home run in the 11th inning gave the Mets a 1-0 win. 1969 – Reggie Jackson knocked in 10 runs with two homers, a double and two singles in Oakland’s 21-7 win in Boston. 1974 – Nolan Ryan struck out 19 batters in 12 innings to give the California Angels a 4-3 win over the Boston Red Sox in 15 innings. Cecil Cooper of the Red Sox struck out six times.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
David Zalubowski/Associated Press
Washington pinch-hitter Roger Bernadina calls for time after colliding with Colorado second baseman DJ LeMahieu while reaching on a double in the eighth inning Thursday in Denver.
Wainwright leads Cardinals THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK – Adam Wainwright used to be a creature of routine leading up to each start. “Same sleeping shirt the night before,” the St. Louis Cardinals ace said. “I couldn’t wear blue jeans. I had to wear the color red. Are you kidding me? It was ridiculous. If I didn’t have any of that, or worse, if something was thrown off, then instantly I was thinking, ‘Oh, man, I’m in trouble.’ And that’s ridiculous. It has nothing to do with getting anyone out. I figured that out somewhere along the line.” With rain falling in the morning and clashing forecasts for the afternoon, Wainwright wasn’t sure whether he’d pitch at all Thursday. Cardinals manager Mike Matheny told him about 80 minutes before start time to get ready, so Wainwright shortened his pregame routine and then pitched seven scoreless innings to become the major leagues’ first 10game winner. In a classic pitching matchup, his 2-1 victory over the New York Mets sent Matt Harvey to his first loss of the season. “We had two Cy Young candidates going at each other,” said Matt Carpenter, who tripled in the go-ahead run in the third and preserved the lead with a spark-ling stop at
second base in the ninth. Wainwright (10-3) retired his first 11 batters before David Wright’s single and allowed four hits, struck out six and walked two – including an intentional pass that caused the Mets to pinch hit for Harvey in the seventh. He tied his career best by winning his fifth straight start, dropped his ERA to 2.18 and got his 1,000th strikeout when Wright was called out on a first-inning curveball. “It wasn’t much fun to be an offensive player today,” Wright said. Trevor Rosenthal pitched the eighth, and Edward Mujica allowed a long home run to Marlon Byrd with one out in the ninth. John Buck doubled and took third as Kirk Nieuwenhuis grounded to Carpenter, who made a diving backhand stop as he fell and threw to first for the out. Josh Satin fouled off two full-count pitches and swung over a splitter as Mujica remained perfect in 19 save chances. Nationals 5, Rockies 4 – Two balks, a pair of scary moments and an injury that could have a big impact on the Colorado Rockies’ surprising season. It added up to a costly loss for a team that has exceeded expectations. Shortstop Troy Tulowitzki and outfielders Carlos Gonzalez and Dexter Fowler suffered injuries and two balks
by Wilton Lopez opened the door for Washington’s win. Gonzalez and Fowler were hurt early and Tulowitzki left with a rib injury in the eighth. While the Rockies said X-rays on Gonzalez and Fowler were negative and listed both players as day to day, Tulowitzki’s injury could be more serious. He left Coors Field to have an MRI done on his ribs, which manager Walt Weiss said have been sore for “about a week.” “Just hope the MRI doesn’t show any damage and hopefully he’ll be day to day also,” Weiss said. But it was reported later Thursday that Tulowitzki has a broken rib and will be sidelined four to six weeks. Gonzalez was hit near the ankle by a foul ball while on deck in the first inning and exited with a bruised left foot. Fowler was hit on the right hand by a pitch from Ross Detwiler after squaring to bunt in the third. A team trainer looked at Fowler, and the center fielder stayed in for another inning. Cubs 6, Reds 5, 14 innings – Pinch-hitter Julio Borbon had a two-out RBI single in the 14th inning, helpin Chicago end Cincinnati’s record 12-game winning streak at Wrigley Field. Giants 10, Pirates 0 – Matt Cain allowed two hits over 6 2-3 innings.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
A’s outlast Yankees in 18 innings THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
OAKLAND, Calif. – Nate Freiman singled home the winning run in the 18th inning against Mariano Rivera, lifting the Oakland Athletics to a 3-2 victory over the New York Yankees on Thursday for a three-game sweep. John Jaso singled off Preston Claiborne (0-1) to start the rally. Freiman ended the 5-hour, 35-minute game on New York’s getaway day to Anaheim for a weekend series with the Angels. A day game after a night game turned into a night game after a day game. Moments before, Rivera issued just the 39th intentional walk of his 19-year career to Jed Lowrie. Oakland became the first American League team to play two 18-inning games in one season since the A’s and Washington did so in 1971. Blue Jays 3, Rangers 1 – Edwin Encarnacion hit a tiebreaking two-run double in the eighth inning. The slumping Rangers wasted another solid outing by Yu Darvish, who has made five consecutive starts without a victory. Neal Cotts (2-1) replaced Darvish to start the eighth, when Emilio Bonifacio reached on a throwing error by Gold Glove third baseman Adrian Beltre. Munenori Kawasaki had a sacrifice bunt before Tanner Scheppers, the second reliever, walked Jose Bautista before the double by Encarnacion.
Friday, June 14, 2013 B3
Esmil Rogers (2-2) allowed one run over seven innings, the same as Darvish, who struck out nine. Darvish has a 2.08 ERA over 34 2-3 innings his last five starts. Nelson Cruz homered for the Rangers, who have lost three in a row. Phillies 3, Twins 2 – Cliff Lee allowed two runs in seven strong innings, Ben Revere had four hits and scored the go-ahead run, and Philadel-
phia snapped a five-game losing streak. Revere slid home with nobody out in the eighth, scoring from third on Jimmy Rollins’ chopper. First baseman Justin Morneau was playing in, but his throw was too late to catch Revere – formerly of the Twins. Lee (8-2) gave up only one hit and faced the minimum number of batters through 6 1-3 innings before Joe Mauer walked.
Leffler recalled as friend, dad THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SWEDESBORO, N.J. – Tony Stewart remembered Jason Leffler as a friend, teammate and doting father to 5-year-old son Charlie Dean a day after the NASCAR driver was killed in a crash at a dirt track. “Jason Leffler was a great racer and an even better friend,” Stewart, the threetime NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion who was once a teammate LEFFLER of Leffler’s at Joe Gibbs Racing, said Thursday. “To not have him around to talk about whatever race one of us had just run, or were going to run, will be hard. My thoughts and prayers go out to his family, especially his son, Charlie, who Jason loved more than anything.” The 37-year-old Leffler, a two-time winner on the NASCAR Nationwide Series, died Wednesday night
after the crash in a heat race in a 410 Sprint Car event at Bridgeport Speedway, a 0.625mile, high-banked dirt oval about 15 miles southwest of Philadelphia. A spectator, 40-year-old Chris Taitt of West Deptford, said Leffler had been in second place, apart from other cars when his winged car slammed into a wall at the fourth turn. Taitt said the wing was “flattened like a pancake” and the seat appeared to be displaced. The sprint car event was the track’s highest profile event so far this year, with better-known drivers, more expensive tickets and a bigger prize – $7,000 – than the usual Friday and Saturday night events. Sprint car races can be dangerous for drivers and spectators, with many facilities lacking the SAFER barriers that are standard in NASCAR and IndyCar. Three drivers were killed last month in crashes on dirt tracks. Driver Josh Burton died of injuries sustained in a crash at Bloom-
ington Speedway in Indiana; and two drivers were killed in a race in Nevada. In March in California, two people were killed when a car careened off a dirt track and crashed on pit road. Leffler’s representative, Spire Sports, said funeral arrangements are being made. “Despite his many accomplishments, Jason still followed in the same footsteps of his heroes that would race anything, anytime. All Jason wanted to do was race. He was the life of every party and a true racer,” Spire said in a statement. “We will miss Jason dearly and know that his family appreciates all the thoughts and prayers.” Panther Racing Owner John Barnes, for whom Leffler raced in 2004 and ’05, said the racer had a “fierce competitive spirit and a devilish attitude. Jason was a small man with a huge right foot.” From Long Beach, Calif., Leffler made 423 starts in NASCAR’s three national series, winning the two Nationwide races and one Truck Series event.
B4 Friday, June 14, 2013
TV-RADIO-FYI Television AUTO RACING 10:30 a.m. SPEED — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, practice for Quicken Loans 400, at Brooklyn, Mich. 12 p.m. SPEED — NASCAR, Nationwide Series, practice for Alliance Truck Parts 250, at Brooklyn, Mich. 2:30 p.m. SPEED — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, pole qualifying for Quicken Loans 400, at Brooklyn, Mich. 4 p.m. SPEED — ARCA, Michigan ARCA 200, at Brooklyn, Mich. 6 p.m. NBCSN — IndyCar Series, qualifying for Milwaukee IndyFest, at West Allis, Wis. (same-day tape) BOXING 7 p.m. NBCSN — Heavyweights, Bryant Jennings (16-0-0) vs. Andrey Fedosov (24-2-0), at Bethlehem, Pa. 8 p.m. ESPN2 — Jundy Maraon (15-0-1) vs. Juan Carlos Payano (13-0-0) for vacant WBA Interim title, at West Orange, N.J. GOLF 7:30 a.m. ESPN — USGA, U.S. Open Championship, second round, part I, at Ardmore, Pa. 2 p.m. NBC — USGA, U.S. Open Championship, second round, at Ardmore, Pa. 4 p.m. ESPN — USGA, U.S. Open Championship, second round, part II, at Ardmore, Pa. MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 6 p.m. FSKC — Kansas City at Tampa Bay 6:30 p.m. MLB — Regional coverage, San Francisco at Atlanta or Milwaukee at Cincinnati
FYI Walter Johnson League baseball Hutchinson at Valley Center, 6 p.m.
BASEBALL American League East Division W L Pct GB 41 26 .612 — 37 29 .561 3½ 37 29 .561 3½ 35 31 .530 5½ 29 36 .446 11 Central Division W L Pct GB Detroit 36 28 .563 — Cleveland 32 33 .492 4½ Kansas City 31 33 .484 5 Minnesota 29 34 .460 6½ Chicago 28 35 .444 7½ West Division W L Pct GB Oakland 41 27 .603 — Texas 38 28 .576 2 Seattle 29 38 .433 11½ Los Angeles 28 38 .424 12 Houston 23 44 .343 17½ Wednesday’s Games L.A. Angels 9, Baltimore 5 Kansas City 3, Detroit 2, 10 innings Boston 2, Tampa Bay 1 Cleveland 5, Texas 2 Minnesota 4, Philadelphia 3 Toronto at Chicago, ppd., rain Oakland 5, N.Y. Yankees 2 Houston 6, Seattle 1 Thursday’s Games Oakland 3, N.Y. Yankees 2, 18 innings Boston at Baltimore, late Kansas City 10, Tampa Bay 1 Toronto 3, Texas 1 Philadelphia 3, Minnesota 2 Friday’s Games Boston (Dempster 4-6) at Baltimore (Tillman 6-2), 6:05 p.m. Washington (G.Gonzalez 3-3) at Cleveland (Masterson 8-5), 6:05 p.m. Kansas City (Mendoza 1-3) at Tampa Bay (M.Moore 8-2), 6:10 p.m. Toronto (Buehrle 2-4) at Texas (Grimm 5-4), 7:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Sale 5-4) at Houston (Bedard 1-3), 7:10 p.m. Detroit (Porcello 3-3) at Minnesota (Diamond 4-5), 7:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Pettitte 5-3) at L.A. Angels (C.Wilson 4-5), 9:05 p.m. Seattle (J.Saunders 4-6) at Oakland (Milone 65), 9:05 p.m. Saturday’s Games Boston at Baltimore, 3:05 p.m. Toronto at Texas, 3:05 p.m. Kansas City at Tampa Bay, 3:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Houston, 6:15 p.m. Detroit at Minnesota, 6:15 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at L.A. Angels, 6:15 p.m. Seattle at Oakland, 6:15 p.m. Washington at Cleveland, 6:15 p.m. Sunday’s Games Washington at Cleveland, 12:05 p.m. Boston at Baltimore, 12:35 p.m. Kansas City at Tampa Bay, 12:40 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Houston, 1:10 p.m. Detroit at Minnesota, 1:10 p.m. Toronto at Texas, 2:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at L.A. Angels, 2:35 p.m. Seattle at Oakland, 3:05 p.m. Boston Baltimore New York Tampa Bay Toronto
ROYALS 10, RAYS 1 Kansas City Tampa Bay ab r h bi ab r h bi AGordn lf 4 1 2 1 Joyce rf 4 0 2 0 Francr ph-rf1 0 0 0 Zobrist 2b 3 0 0 0 Hosmer 1b 4 1 1 1 RRorts 2b 1 0 0 0 S.Perez c 4 1 1 1 KJhnsn 3b 2 0 0 0 Kottars ph-c1 0 0 0 Longori dh 3 0 1 0 BButler dh 4 1 2 0 Loaton ph 1 0 0 0 Getz ph-dh 0 0 0 0 Loney 1b 2 0 0 0 L.Cain cf 5 1 1 0 Scott ph-1b 2 0 2 0 Lough rf-lf 5 1 2 2 DJnngs cf 4 0 0 0 MTejad 3b 4 1 1 1 Fuld lf 4 0 0 0 EJhnsn 2b 4 2 3 3 JMolin c 3 1 1 0 AEscor ss 4 1 1 0 YEscor ss 2 0 0 0 SRdrgz ss 1 0 0 0 Totals 40 1014 9 Totals 32 1 6 0 Kansas City 000 008 110—10 Tampa Bay 000 001 000— 1 E—M.Tejada (2). DP—Kansas City 2, Tampa Bay 1. LOB—Kansas City 5, Tampa Bay 6. 2B—L.Cain (15), M.Tejada (2), A.Escobar (9), Scott (3). HR—Hosmer (2), E.Johnson (2). IP H R ER BB SO Kansas City E.Santana W,5-5 72-3 5 1 0 0 3 J.Gutierrez 11-3 1 0 0 1 2 Tampa Bay Hellickson L,4-3 52-310 8 8 0 4 Odorizzi 31-3 4 2 2 2 4 HBP—by E.Santana (K.Johnson). WP— E.Santana, Hellickson, Odorizzi. T—3:05. A—11,398 (34,078).
BLUE JAYS 3, RANGERS 1 Toronto
Texas
ab r h bi ab r h bi MeCarr lf 4 0 1 1 Andrus ss 4 0 1 0 RDavis lf 0 0 0 0 DvMrp lf 3 0 0 0 Bautist rf 3 1 0 0 Brkmn dh 4 0 1 0 Encrnc 1b 3 0 1 2 Beltre 3b 4 0 1 0 Lind dh 4 0 0 0 Przyns c 4 0 0 0 ClRsms cf 4 0 0 0 N.Cruz rf 3 1 2 1 MIzturs 3b 4 0 1 0 McGns 1b 3 0 1 0 Arencii c 4 0 0 0 Profar 2b 3 0 0 0 Bonifac 2b 3 2 1 0 LMartn cf 2 0 0 0 Kawsk ss 1 0 0 0 Gentry cf 1 0 0 0 Totals 30 3 4 3 Totals 31 1 6 1 Toronto 001 000 020 — 3 Texas 010 000 000 — 1 E—Beltre (5). DP—Toronto 2, Texas 1. LOB— Toronto 4, Texas 4. 2B—Encarnacion (10), M.Izturis (6). HR—N.Cruz (16). SB—Bonifacio (8). S—Kawasaki. IP H R ER BB SO Toronto E.Rogers W,2-2 7 5 1 1 1 1 Delabar H,3 1 1 0 0 0 3 Janssen S,14-15 1 0 0 0 0 0 Texas Darvish 7 3 1 1 2 9 Cotts L,2-1 2-3 0 1 0 0 0 Scheppers 1-3 1 1 1 1 1 McClellan 1 0 0 0 0 1 T—2:36. A—32,013 (48,114).
ATHLETICS 3, YANKEES 2, 18 INNINGS, New York Oakland ab r h bi ab r h bi Gardnr cf 6 1 2 0 Jaso dh 7 2 2 0 J.Nix ss 5 0 1 0 S.Smith lf 8 0 3 1 Overay ph 1 0 0 0 Lowrie ss 6 0 1 0 Brignc ss 1 0 0 0 Dnldsn 3b 6 0 0 0 Cano 2b 6 1 3 2 Freimn 1b 2 0 1 1 Teixeir 1b 5 0 0 0 Moss 1b-3b 7 0 1 0 Hafner dh 8 0 0 0 Reddck rf 6 0 1 0 Youkils 3b 7 0 0 0 CYoung cf 4 1 0 0 V.Wells lf 8 0 0 0 Crisp ph-cf 2 0 2 0 ISuzuki rf 7 0 3 0 Sogard 2b 3 0 1 0 CStwrt c 6 0 1 0 Rosales ph-2b4 0 0 0 DNorrs c 7 0 0 1 Totals 60 210 2 Totals 62 312 3 New York 200 000 000 000 000 000—2 Oakland 002 000 000 000 000 001—3 One out when winning run scored.
The Hutchinson News
SCOREBOARD E—Blevins (1), Lowrie (8). DP—Oakland 2. LOB—New York 14, Oakland 12. 2B—Gardner (15), Cano 2 (14), S.Smith (15). HR—Cano (16). SB—I.Suzuki (6), C.Young (6), Sogard (6). CS—Sogard (2). S—J.Nix, C.Stewart. IP H R ER BB SO New York Kuroda 8 2 2 2 2 3 D.Robertson 1 2 0 0 0 3 Logan 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Kelley 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Warren 6 4 0 0 2 4 Claiborne L,0-1 1 1-3 2 1 1 0 1 Rivera 0 2 0 0 1 0 Oakland J.Parker 8 5 2 2 2 2 Balfour 1 0 0 0 0 1 Cook 1 1 0 0 0 1 Blevins 1 1 0 0 1 2 Neshek 1 1 0 0 1 2 Okajima 1-3 1 0 0 1 0 J.Chavez W,1-0 5 2-3 1 0 0 2 7 Rivera pitched to 3 batters in the 18th. HBP—by Blevins (Teixeira). WP—Warren. T—5:35. A—27,569 (35,067).
Hwkns p 0 0 0 0 Edgin p 0 0 0 0 Satin ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 34 210 2 Totals 34 1 7 1 St. Louis 001 000 010 — 2 New York 000 000 001 — 1 DP—New York 1. LOB—St. Louis 7, New York 8. 2B—Kozma (12), Buck (6). 3B— M.Carpenter (2). HR—Byrd (10). CS— M.Carpenter (2). S—Wainwright. IP H R ER BB SO St. Louis Wainwright W,10-3 7 4 0 0 2 6 Rosenthal H,16 1 1 0 0 0 1 Mujica S,19-19 1 2 1 1 0 1 New York Harvey L,5-1 7 5 1 1 1 7 Rice 2-3 2 1 1 0 0 Hawkins 1-3 2 0 0 0 0 Edgin 1 1 0 0 0 1 Umpires—Home, Chris Conroy; First, Hunter Wendelstedt; Second, Alan Porter; Third, Greg Gibson. T—2:43. A—25,471 (41,922).
LEAGUE LEADERS
San Francisco Pittsburgh ab r h bi ab r h bi GBlanc cf 5 2 3 2 Presley lf 4 0 0 0 BCrwfr ss 2 2 1 1 Snider rf 4 0 1 0 Posey c 5 2 3 2 McCtch cf 4 0 1 0 Quiroz c 1 0 0 0 GJones 1b 3 0 1 0 Pence rf 5 1 2 3 Walker 2b 2 0 0 0 Affeldt p 0 0 0 0 PAlvrz 3b 1 0 0 0 Belt 1b 4 0 1 0 McKnr c 3 0 0 0 AnTrrs lf 4 0 1 1 Mercer ss 3 0 0 0 Arias 3b 5 0 3 0 Morton p 1 0 0 0 Noonan 2b 5 3 2 0 Zagrsk p 0 0 0 0 M.Cain p 4 0 0 0 Inge ph 1 0 0 0 J.Lopez p 0 0 0 0 Reid p 0 0 0 0 Machi p 0 0 0 0 GSnchz ph 1 0 0 0 J.Perez ph-rf1 0 1 0 Mazzar p 0 0 0 0 Totals 41 1017 9 Totals 27 0 3 0 San Francisco 110 025 001—10 Pittsburgh 000 000 000— 0 E—Walker (4), McCutchen (2), P.Alvarez (12). DP—San Francisco 3, Pittsburgh 1. LOB—San Francisco 11, Pittsburgh 4. 2B— G.Blanco (9), Posey (16), Belt (14), Noonan (2), McCutchen (19). HR—Pence (11). SB— G.Blanco (7), Pence (13). SF—B.Crawford, An.Torres. IP H R ER BB SO San Francisco M.Cain W,5-3 62-3 2 0 0 2 3 J.Lopez 0 0 0 0 1 0 Machi 11-3 0 0 0 0 3 Affeldt 1 1 0 0 0 1 Pittsburgh Morton L,0-1 5 7 4 2 1 5 Zagurski 1 6 5 5 0 1 Reid 2 2 0 0 1 0 Mazzaro 1 2 1 1 0 1 J.Lopez pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. HBP—by M.Cain (Walker), by Morton (B.Crawford, B.Crawford, Belt). T—3:17. A—22,532 (38,362).
BATTING—MiCabrera, Detroit, .358; CDavis, Baltimore, .338; Mauer, Minnesota, .332; JhPeralta, Detroit, .329; Pedroia, Boston, .327; HKendrick, Los Angeles, .324; Loney, Tampa Bay, .318. RUNS—MiCabrera, Detroit, 51; AJones, Baltimore, 47; Trout, Los Angeles, 47; CDavis, Baltimore, 46; Longoria, Tampa Bay, 45; Pedroia, Boston, 45; Crisp, Oakland, 42; Machado, Baltimore, 42. RBI—MiCabrera, Detroit, 69; CDavis, Baltimore, 54; Encarnacion, Toronto, 53; Fielder, Detroit, 52; Napoli, Boston, 49; DOrtiz, Boston, 48; AJones, Baltimore, 45. HITS—MiCabrera, Detroit, 91; Machado, Baltimore, 90; Pedroia, Boston, 85; AJones, Baltimore, 83; HKendrick, Los Angeles, 82; Trout, Los Angeles, 80; CDavis, Baltimore, 79; Longoria, Tampa Bay, 79. DOUBLES—Machado, Baltimore, 28; CDavis, Baltimore, 21; Mauer, Minnesota, 20; Napoli, Boston, 20; Pedroia, Boston, 20; Trout, Los Angeles, 20; Donaldson, Oakland, 19; AJones, Baltimore, 19; Longoria, Tampa Bay, 19; Seager, Seattle, 19. TRIPLES—Ellsbury, Boston, 6; Trout, Los Angeles, 6; Gardner, New York, 4; LMartin, Texas, 4; Andrus, Texas, 3; Drew, Boston, 3; DeJennings, Tampa Bay, 3. HOME RUNS—CDavis, Baltimore, 21; MiCabrera, Detroit, 18; Encarnacion, Toronto, 18; ADunn, Chicago, 17; Cano, New York, 16; Bautista, Toronto, 15; NCruz, Texas, 15; Trumbo, Los Angeles, 15. STOLEN BASES—Ellsbury, Boston, 29; McLouth, Baltimore, 22; Andrus, Texas, 16; Kipnis, Cleveland, 14; Trout, Los Angeles, 14; Crisp, Oakland, 13; AlRamirez, Chicago, 13. PITCHING—Scherzer, Detroit, 9-0; Buchholz, Boston, 9-0; MMoore, Tampa Bay, 8-2; Colon, Oakland, 8-2; Verlander, Detroit, 8-4; Masterson, Cleveland, 8-5; 5 tied at 7. STRIKEOUTS—Darvish, Texas, 118; Scherzer, Detroit, 106; FHernandez, Seattle, 102; Verlander, Detroit, 101; AniSanchez, Detroit, 98; Masterson, Cleveland, 92; Shields, Kansas City, 90. SAVES—Rivera, New York, 23; JiJohnson, Baltimore, 23; Nathan, Texas, 20; AReed, Chicago, 19; Balfour, Oakland, 17; Wilhelmsen, Seattle, 16; Perkins, Minnesota, 15.
National League East Division W L Pct GB Atlanta 39 27 .591 — Washington 33 32 .508 5½ Philadelphia 32 35 .478 7½ New York 24 37 .393 12½ Miami 19 46 .292 19½ Central Division W L Pct GB St. Louis 43 23 .652 — Cincinnati 40 27 .597 3½ Pittsburgh 39 27 .591 4 Milwaukee 27 38 .415 15½ Chicago 26 38 .406 16 West Division W L Pct GB Arizona 37 29 .561 — San Francisco 34 31 .523 2½ Colorado 35 32 .522 2½ San Diego 32 34 .485 5 Los Angeles 28 37 .431 8½ Wednesday’s Games Cincinnati 2, Chicago Cubs 1 San Diego 5, Atlanta 3 Pittsburgh 12, San Francisco 8 Milwaukee 10, Miami 1 N.Y. Mets 5, St. Louis 1 Minnesota 4, Philadelphia 3 Washington 5, Colorado 1 Arizona 8, L.A. Dodgers 6, 12 innings Thursday’s Games St. Louis 2, N.Y. Mets 1 Chicago Cubs 6, Cincinnati 5, 14 innings Washington 5, Colorado 4 San Francisco 10, Pittsburgh 0 Philadelphia 3, Minnesota 2 Friday’s Games L.A. Dodgers (Fife 1-1) at Pittsburgh (Locke 5-1), 6:05 p.m. Washington (G.Gonzalez 3-3) at Cleveland (Masterson 8-5), 6:05 p.m. Chicago Cubs (E.Jackson 2-8) at N.Y. Mets (Marcum 0-7), 6:10 p.m. Milwaukee (Lohse 2-6) at Cincinnati (Arroyo 6-5), 6:10 p.m. St. Louis (Westbrook 2-1) at Miami (Fernandez 3-3), 6:10 p.m. San Francisco (Bumgarner 5-4) at Atlanta (Medlen 3-6), 6:30 p.m. Philadelphia (K.Kendrick 6-4) at Colorado (Nicasio 4-2), 7:40 p.m. Arizona (Cahill 3-7) at San Diego (Stults 5-5), 9:10 p.m. Saturday’s Games Chicago Cubs at N.Y. Mets, 12:10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at Pittsburgh, 3:05 p.m. San Francisco at Atlanta, 3:05 p.m. Milwaukee at Cincinnati, 3:10 p.m. Philadelphia at Colorado, 3:10 p.m. St. Louis at Miami, 3:10 p.m. Washington at Cleveland, 6:15 p.m. Arizona at San Diego, 9:10 p.m. Sunday’s Games Washington at Cleveland, 12:05 p.m. Chicago Cubs at N.Y. Mets, 12:10 p.m. Milwaukee at Cincinnati, 12:10 p.m. St. Louis at Miami, 12:10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at Pittsburgh, 12:35 p.m. Arizona at San Diego, 3:10 p.m. Philadelphia at Colorado, 3:10 p.m. San Francisco at Atlanta, 7:05 p.m.
NATIONALS 5, ROCKIES 4 Washington
Colorado
ab r h bi Span cf 5 0 0 0 Koerns lf 3 0 0 0 Stmmn p 0 0 0 0 Berndn ph-lf2 1 1 0 Zmrmn 3b 4 2 2 3 Werth rf 4 0 0 0 AdLRc 1b 3 0 0 0 Dsmnd ss 4 1 4 1 Rendon 2b 3 0 1 0 KSuzuk c 4 0 0 0 Detwilr p 2 1 1 0 Lmrdzz lf 1 0 0 0 XCeden p 0 0 0 0 Storen p 0 0 0 0 Marrer ph 1 0 0 0 RSorin p 0 0 0 0
ab r h bi Fowler cf 1 1 1 0 JHerrr lf-ss 3 0 1 0 Pachec 1b-lf 4 0 0 0 CGnzlz lf 0 0 0 0 Colvin ph-lf-cf4 0 1 1 Tlwtzk ss 3 1 1 0 Torreal ph-1b 1 0 0 0 Cuddyr rf 4 1 1 0 WRosr c 4 0 0 1 Arenad 3b 4 1 2 0 LeMahi 2b 4 0 1 0 Francis p 2 0 0 0 WLopez p 0 0 0 0 Chacin ph 0 0 0 0 Belisle p 0 0 0 0 Brothrs p 0 0 0 0 Helton ph 1 0 1 1 Chatwd pr 0 0 0 0 Totals 36 5 9 4 Totals 35 4 9 3 Washington 002 000 120 — 5 Colorado 100 200 001 — 4 E—Werth (1). DP—Washington 1. LOB— Washington 6, Colorado 6. 2B—Bernadina (4), Zimmerman (10), Fowler (12), Cuddyer (15), LeMahieu (6). HR—Zimmerman (7). SB— Desmond (6), LeMahieu (7). IP H R ER BB SO Washington Detwiler 5 6 3 3 0 2 Stammen W,4-2 2 1 0 0 1 1 X.Cedeno H,1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Storen H,9 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 R.Soriano S,17-20 1 2 1 1 0 2 Colorado Francis 6 5 2 2 0 8 W.Lopez BS,3-3 1 1 1 1 0 1 Belisle L,4-3 1 3 2 2 2 0 Brothers 1 0 0 0 0 0 HBP—by Detwiler (Fowler). WP—Belisle. Balk—W.Lopez 2. Umpires—Home, James Hoye; First, John Hirschbeck; Second, Bob Davidson; Third, Jim Reynolds. T—3:05. A—37,017 (50,398).
CARDINALS 2, METS 1 St. Louis
New York
ab r h bi MCrpnt 2b 4 0 2 1 Beltran rf 4 1 2 0 Hollidy lf 4 0 1 0 Rosnthl p 0 0 0 0 Mujica p 0 0 0 0 Craig 1b 4 0 2 1 YMolin c 3 0 0 0 Jay cf 4 0 0 0 Descals 3b 4 0 0 0 Kozma ss 4 1 3 0 Wnwrg p 1 0 0 0 SRonsn ph-lf2 0 0 0
Vldspn 2b Quntnll ss DWrght 3b DnMrp 1b Duda lf Byrd rf Buck c Cowgill pr Niwnhs cf Harvey p JuTrnr ph Rice p
ab r h bi 4 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 0 3 0 3 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 1 2 1 4 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
GIANTS 10, PIRATES 0
CUBS 6, REDS 5 14 innings Cincinnati Chicago ab r h bi ab r h bi Choo cf 5 2 1 1 DeJess cf 7 1 1 1 Cozart ss 7 1 2 0 SCastro ss 7 2 3 0 Votto 1b 6 0 1 2 Rizzo 1b 5 0 0 0 Phillips 2b 7 0 1 1 ASorin lf 7 0 2 1 Bruce rf 7 1 4 0 Schrhlt rf 5 3 2 0 Frazier 3b 3 0 1 0 Valuen 3b 6 0 1 1 Simon p 0 0 0 0 HRndn p 0 0 0 0 MParr p 0 0 0 0 Borbon ph 1 0 1 1 LeCure p 0 0 0 0 Castillo c 5 0 3 1 Hoover p 0 0 0 0 Barney 2b 6 0 2 1 DRonsn ph-lf3 0 0 0 Smrdzj p 2 0 0 0 Paul lf 5 0 0 0 Villanv p 0 0 0 0 Partch p 1 0 0 0 Sweeny ph 0 0 0 0 Broxtn p 0 0 0 0 Russell p 0 0 0 0 Mesorc c 5 1 2 1 DNavrr ph 1 0 0 0 Latos p 3 0 1 0 Gregg p 0 0 0 0 Hannhn 3b 3 0 0 0 Marml p 0 0 0 0 Hairstn ph 1 0 0 0 BParkr p 0 0 0 0 Ransm 3b 1 0 0 0 Totals 55 513 5 Totals 54 615 6 Cincinnati 020 021 000 000 00 —5 Chicago 100 111 010 000 01 —6 Two outs when winning run scored. E—Phillips (5), S.Castro 2 (9). DP—Cincinnati 1, Chicago 1. LOB—Cincinnati 13, Chicago 13. 2B—Bruce (21), S.Castro (15). 3B—Schierholtz 2 (2). HR—DeJesus (6). SB—Bruce (2), S.Castro 2 (5). IP H R ER BB SO Cincinnati Latos 6 8 4 4 1 4 Simon H,2 2-3 0 0 0 1 1 M.Parra H,4 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 LeCure BS,2-2 1 3 1 1 1 0 Hoover 1 1 0 0 1 1 Partch 4 1 0 0 0 4 Broxton L,2-2 2-3 2 1 1 1 1 Chicago Samardzija 6 10 5 5 4 6 Villanueva 1 0 0 0 1 0 Russell 1 0 0 0 0 1 Gregg 1 0 0 0 0 2 Marmol 1 1 0 0 0 3 B.Parker 2 1 0 0 0 3 H.Rondon W,1-0 2 1 0 0 0 4 HBP—by Partch (Castillo). WP—Latos. T—5:07. A—28,986 (41,019).
LEAGUE LEADERS BATTING—YMolina, St. Louis, .353; Tulowitzki, Colorado, .347; Segura, Milwaukee, .339; Scutaro, San Francisco, .332; MCarpenter, St. Louis, .327; CGomez, Milwaukee, .326; GParra, Arizona, .322. RUNS—CGonzalez, Colorado, 52; Votto, Cincinnati, 52; MCarpenter, St. Louis, 51; Choo, Cincinnati, 48; Holliday, St. Louis, 48; Fowler, Colorado, 47; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 44; JUpton, Atlanta, 44. RBI—Goldschmidt, Arizona, 59; Phillips, Cincinnati, 54; CGonzalez, Colorado, 52; Tulowitzki, Colorado, 51; Craig, St. Louis, 49; DBrown, Philadelphia, 48; Bruce, Cincinnati, 45. HITS—Segura, Milwaukee, 87; GParra, Arizona, 84; YMolina, St. Louis, 83; MCarpenter, St. Louis, 82; Votto, Cincinnati, 81; Craig, St. Louis, 79; ECabrera, San Diego, 78; CGomez, Milwaukee, 78. DOUBLES—Bruce, Cincinnati, 21; YMolina, St. Louis, 21; GParra, Arizona, 21; Pence, San Francisco, 20; MCarpenter, St. Louis, 19; DanMurphy, New York, 19; Desmond, Washington, 18; McCutchen, Pittsburgh, 18; Pollock, Arizona, 18; Rizzo, Chicago, 18. TRIPLES—CGomez, Milwaukee, 8; Segura, Milwaukee, 8; CGonzalez, Colorado, 6; Span, Washington, 6; Hechavarria, Miami, 5; ECabrera, San Diego, 4; Lucroy, Milwaukee, 4; DWright, New York, 4. HOME RUNS—DBrown, Philadelphia, 19; CGonzalez, Colorado, 18; Tulowitzki, Colorado, 16; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 15; JUpton, Atlanta, 15; PAlvarez, Pittsburgh, 14; Beltran, St. Louis, 14; Gattis, Atlanta, 14. STOLEN BASES—ECabrera, San Diego, 30; SMarte, Pittsburgh, 20; Segura, Milwaukee, 19; Pierre, Miami, 17; McCutchen, Pittsburgh, 15; Revere, Philadelphia, 14; CGomez, Milwaukee, 13. PITCHING—Wainwright, St. Louis, 10-3; Corbin, Arizona, 9-0; Zimmermann, Washington, 9-3; Lynn, St. Louis, 8-1; Marquis, San Diego, 8-2; Minor, Atlanta, 8-2; Lee, Philadelphia, 7-2; JDe La Rosa, Colorado, 7-4; SMiller, St. Louis, 7-4; Maholm, Atlanta, 7-5. STRIKEOUTS—Samardzija, Chicago, 104; Harvey, New York, 102; AJBurnett, Pittsburgh, 99; Wainwright, St. Louis, 97; Kershaw, Los Angeles, 96; SMiller, St. Louis, 91; Lee, Philadelphia, 83; HBailey, Cincinnati, 83. SAVES—Grilli, Pittsburgh, 23; Mujica, St. Louis, 19; Kimbrel, Atlanta, 18; Chapman, Cincinnati, 17; RSoriano, Washington, 17; Romo, San Francisco, 16; League, Los Angeles, 13.
Interleague PHILLIES 3, TWINS 2 Philadelphia Minnesota ab r h bi ab r h bi Revere cf 6 2 4 0 Carroll 3b 3 0 0 0 MYong 3b 5 0 2 1 CHrmn ph 1 0 0 0 Rollins ss 5 0 1 1 Mauer c 3 1 1 0 Howard 1b 5 0 3 1 Doumit rf 3 1 1 0 DBrwn lf 3 0 1 0 Parmel rf 1 0 0 0 DYong dh 5 0 1 0 Wlngh dh 3 0 0 0 L.Nix rf 5 0 2 0 Mornea 1b 3 0 1 2 Mayrry pr-rf0 0 0 0 Arcia lf 3 0 0 0 Galvis 2b 5 0 1 0 Thoms cf 3 0 0 0 Quinter c 3 0 0 0 Dozier 2b 3 0 0 0 Frndsn ph 1 1 1 0 EEscor ss 3 0 0 0 Lerud c 1 0 0 0 Totals 44 316 3 Totals 29 2 3 2 Philadelphia 100 000 020 — 3 Minnesota 000 000 200 — 2 E—Correia (1), E.Escobar (3). DP— Philadelphia 1, Minnesota 1. LOB— Philadelphia 16, Minnesota 1. 2B—Frandsen (5), Morneau (16). 3B—Revere (2). SB— Revere (15). IP H R ER BB SO Philadelphia Lee W,8-2 7 3 2 2 1 6 Mi.Adams H,6 1 0 0 0 0 1 Papelbon S,12-12 1 0 0 0 0 2 Minnesota Correia 5 8 1 1 1 6 Swarzak 2 4 0 0 0 1 Burton L,0-4 BS,3-5 1 3 2 2 1 1
Roenicke 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 Thielbar 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 PB—Mauer. T—2:54. A—28,519 (39,021).
NCAA NCAA COLLEGE WORLD SERIES At TD Ameritrade Park Omaha Omaha, Neb. Double Elimination x-if necessary Saturday, June 15 Game 1 — Mississippi State (48-18) vs. Oregon State (50-11), 2 p.m. Game 2 — Indiana (48-18) vs. Louisville (5112), 7 p.m. Sunday, June 16 Game 3 — North Carolina (57-10) vs. N.C. State (49-14), 2 p.m. Game 4 — UCLA (44-17) vs. LSU (57-9), 7 p.m. Monday, June 17 Game 5 — Game 1 loser vs. Game 2 loser, 2 p.m. Game 6 — Game 1 winner vs. Game 2 winner, 7 p.m. Tuesday, June 18 Game 7 — Game 3 loser vs. Game 4 loser, 2 p.m. Game 8 — Game 3 winner vs. Game 4 winner, 7 p.m. Wednesday, June 19 Game 9 — Game 5 winner vs. Game 6 loser, 7 p.m. Thursday, June 20 Game 10 — Game 7 winner vs. Game 8 loser, 7 p.m. Friday, June 21 Game 11 — Game 6 winner vs. Game 9 winner, 2 p.m. Game 12 — Game 8 winner vs. Game 10 winner, 7 p.m. Saturday, June 22 x-Game 13 — Game 6 winner vs. Game 9 winner, 2 p.m. x-Game 14 — Game 8 winner vs. Game 10 winner, 7 p.m. If only one game is necessary, it will start at 7:30 p.m. Championship Series (Best-of-3) Monday, June 24: Pairings TBA, 7 p.m. Tuesday, June 25: Pairings TBA, 7 p.m. x-Wednesday, June 26: Pairings TBA, 7 p.m.
BASKETBALL NBA NBA FINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) San Antonio 2, Miami 1 Thursday, June 6: San Antonio 92, Miami 88 Sunday, June 9: Miami 103, San Antonio 84 Tuesday, June 11: San Antonio 113, Miami 77 Thursday, June 13: Miami at San Antonio, 8 p.m. Sunday, June 16: Miami at San Antonio, 7 p.m. x-Tuesday, June 18: San Antonio at Miami, 8 p.m. x-Thursday, June 20: San Antonio at Miami, 8 p.m.
GOLF US Open Note: 82 golfers did not finish due to weather. At Merion Golf Club, East Course, Ardmore, Pa. Purse: TBA ($8 million in 2012) Yardage: 6,996; Par: 70 (36-34) (a-amatuer) Partial First Round Phil Mickelson 33-34—67 Nicolas Colsaerts 37-32—69 Charl Schwartzel 38-32—70 Tim Clark 38-32—70 Jerry Kelly 36-34—70 Rickie Fowler 35-35—70 Jason Day 36-34—70 Bubba Watson 37-34—71 Dustin Johnson 39-32—71 Steve Stricker 39-32—71 Justin Rose 36-35—71 George Coetzee 35-36—71 Charley Hoffman 36-35—71 John Huh 38-33—71 Ian Poulter 38-33—71 Scott Stallings 35-36—71 a-Kevin Phelan 37-34—71 Hunter Mahan 37-35—72 Stewart Cink 36-36—72 Shawn Stefani 35-37—72 Nicholas Thompson 37-35—72 Mike Weir 40-32—72 a-Cheng-Tsung Pan 38-34—72 Nick Watney 39-34—73 Paul Casey 38-35—73 Marcel Siem 39-34—73 Sergio Garcia 33-40—73 Padraig Harrington 36-37—73 Freddie Jacobson 36-37—73 a-Michael Kim 39-34—73 John Peterson 35-38—73 Chris Doak 37-36—73 Kevin Sutherland 38-35—73 Jaco Van Zyl 39-34—73 Ryan Nelson 37-36—73 Peter Hanson 39-35—74 Lucas Glover 38-36—74 Matt Kuchar 38-36—74 Brandt Snedeker 38-36—74 David Lingmerth 39-35—74 Martin Laird 38-36—74 Jason Dufner 38-36—74 Henrik Stenson 37-37—74 Simon Khan 38-36—74 Robert Karlsson 36-38—74 Jay Don Blake 39-35—74 Brandt Jobe 37-37—74 Randall Hutchison 37-37—74 Cliff Kresge 38-37—75 Aaron Baddeley 38-37—75 Louis Oosthuizen 38-37—75 Boo Weekley 39-36—75 Matteo Manassero 38-37—75 Ryan Palmer 37-38—75 Douglas Labelle II 38-37—75 Matt Weibring 38-37—75 John Hahn 40-35—75 Mackenzie Hughes 40-35—75 Ryan Yip 39-37—76 John Parry 39-37—76 Ted Potter Jr. 41-35—76 Hiroyuki Fujita 39-37—76 Michael Campbell 36-40—76 Wil Collins 40-36—76 Harold Varner III 39-37—76 Keegan Bradley 39-38—77 Bill Haas 41-36—77 Rory Sabbatini 39-38—77 Y.E. Yang 41-36—77 Rikard Karlberg 40-38—78 Yui Ueda 41-37—78 David Hearn 40-38—78 Geoffrey Sisk 43-35—78 Ryan Moore 42-37—79 Leaderboard SCORE THRU 1. Luke Donald -4 13 2. Phil Mickelson -3 F 2. Adam Scott -2 11 4. Webb Simpson -2 8 4. Matthew Goggin -2 6 4. Alistair Presnell -2 6 7. Nicolas Colsaerts -1 F 7. Lee Westwood -1 13 7. Estanislao Goya -1 11 7. Peter Hedblom -1 11 7. Chris Williams -1 10 7. Carl Pettersson -1 9 7. Steve Alker -1 6 7. Brandon Brown -1 4 7. Gabin Hall -1 5
U.S. OPEN TEE TIMES Today (a-amateur) Second Round First hole 8:45 a.m. — Justin Hicks, United States; David Howell, Englang; Brian Stuard, United States. 8:56 a.m. — Brendan Steele, United States; Estanislao Goya, Argentina; Peter Hedblom, England. 9:07 a.m. — Marc Leishman, Australia; John Senden, Australia; Marcus Fraser, Australia. 9:18 a.m. — Scott Langley, United States; aChris Williams, United States; Morgan Hoffmann, United States. 9:29 a.m. — Michael Thompson, United States; a-Michael Weaver, United States; Casey Wittenberg, United States. 9:40 a.m. — K.J. Choi, South Korea; Francesco Molinari, Italy; Carl Pettersson, Sweden. 9:51 a.m. — Scott Piercy, United States; Kevin Chappell, United States; Jamie Donaldson, Wales. 10:02 a.m. — Bo Van Pelt, United States; Kevin Streelman, United States; D.A. Points, United States. 10:13 a.m. — Branden Grace, South Africa; Sang-Moon Bae, South Korea; Russell Henley, United States. 10:24 a.m. — Hideki Matsuyama, Japan; Billy Horschel, United States; Jordan Spieth, United States. 10:35 a.m. — Mathew Goggin, Australia; Steven Alker, New Zealand; Alistair
Presnell, Australia. 10:46 a.m. — Matt Harmon, United States; aGavin Hall, United States; Bio Kim, South Korea. 10:57 a.m. — Zack Fischer, United States; Ryan Sullivan, United States; Brandon Crick, United States. 2:30 p.m. — Bubba Watson, United States, Dustin Johnson, United States, Nicolas Colsaerts, Belgium. 2:41 p.m. — Phil Mickelson, United States, Steve Stricker, United States, Keegan Bradley, United States. 2:52 p.m. — Matt Kuchar, United States; Justin Rose, England; Brandt Snedeker, United States. 3:03 p.m. — Louis Oosthuizen, South Africa; Charl Schwartzel, South Africa; Tim Clark, South Africa. 3:14 p.m. — Sergio Garcia, Spain; Stewart Cink, United States; Padraig Harrington, Ireland. 3:25 p.m. — Ian Poulter, England; Jason Dufner, United States; Boo Weekley, United States. 3:36 p.m. — Rickie Fowler, United States, Matteo Manassero, Italy, Jason Day, Australia. 3:47 p.m. — Y.E. Yang, South Korea; Freddie Jacobson, Sweden; Hiroyuki Fujita, Japan. 3:58 p.m. — Scott Stallings, United States; John Peterson, United States; Robert Karlsson, Sweden. 4:09 p.m. — Jay Don Blake, United States; Brandt Jobe, United States; Michael Campbell, New Zealand. 4:20 p.m. — David Hearn, Canada; Mike Weir; Jaco Van Zyl, South Africa. 4:31 p.m. — a-Kevin Phelan, Ireland; Wil Collins, United States; Harold Varner III. 4:42 p.m. — a-Cheng-Tsung Pan, Taiwan; Mackenzie Hughes, Canada; Geoffrey Sisk, United States. 11th hole 9:00 a.m. — David Toms, United States; Darren Clarke, Northern Ireland; Jose Maria Olazabal, Spain. 9:11 a.m. — Geoff Ogilvy, Australia; Angel Cabrera, Argentina; Paul Lawrie, Scotland. 9:22 a.m. — Luke Donald, England; Lee Westwood, England; Martin Kaymer, Germany. 9:33 a.m. — Jim Furyk, United States; Graeme McDowell, Northern Ireland; Zach Johnson, United States. 9:44 a.m. — Tiger Woods, United States; Rory McIlroy, Northern Ireland; Adam Scott, Australia. 9:55 a.m. — Thongchai Jaidee, Thailand; Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano, Spain; Thorbjorn Olesen, Denmark. 10:06 a.m. — Webb Simpson, United States; aSteven Fox, United States; Ernie Els, South Africa. 10:17 a.m. — Kyle Stanley; Joe Ogilvie, United States; Luke Guthrie, United States. 10:28 a.m.— Josh Teater, United States; Yoshinobu Tsukada, Japan; Eddie Pepperell, England. 10:39 a.m. — Edward Loar, United States; MortenOrum Madsen, Denmark; Jung-Gon Hwang, South Korea. 10:50 a.m. — a-Max Homa, United States; Russell Knox, Scotland; Matt Bettencourt, United States. 11:01 a.m. — Adam Hadwin, Canada; John Nieporte, United States; Jim Herman, United States. 11:12 a.m. — Brandon Brown, United States; a-Grayson Murray, United States; Jesse Smith, United States. 2:45 p.m. — Cliff Kresge, United States; Robert Tambellini, United States; Ryan Yip, United States. 2:56 p.m. — Rickard Karlberg, Sweden; Yui Ueda, Japan; John Parry, England. 3:07 p..m. — Nick Watney, United States; Peter Hanson, Sweden; Hunter Mahan, United States. 3:18 p.m. — Lucas Glover, United States; Paul Casey, England; Bill Haas, United States. 3:29 p.m. — Aaron Baddeley, United States; Rory Sabbatini, South Africa; David Lingmerth, Sweden. 3:40 p.m. — George Coetzee, South Africa, Martin Laird, Scotland; Marcel Siem, Germany. 3:51 p.m. — Jerry Kelly, United States; Charley Hoffman, United States; John Huh, United States. 4:02 p.m. — Henrik Stenson, Sweden; Ryan Moore, United States; Robert Garrigus, United States. 4:13 p.m. — Ryan Palmer, United States; Simon Khan, England; Ted Potter Jr., United States. 4:24 p.m. — Shawn Stefani, United States; aMichael Kim, United States; Nicholas Thompson, United States. 4:35 p.m. — Chris Doak, Scotland; Andrew Svoboda, United States, Doug LaBelle, United States. 4:46 p.m. — Kevin Sutherland, United States; Matt Weibring, United States; Randall Hutchison, United States. 4:57 p.m. — a-Cory McIlyea, United States; Ryan Nelson, United States; John Hahn, United States.
Jace Long Scott Dunlap James Nitties Hunter Haas Brice Garnett Wes Short, Jr. Tommy Cocha Scott Pinckney John Chin Roger Sloan D.J. Brigman Kent Jones Alex Aragon Reid Edstrom Justin Bardgett Tim Fleming Roland Thatcher Ryan Spears David Lipsky Donald Constable Andres Gonzales Philip Pettitt, Jr. Brad Adamonis Paul Haley II Shane Bertsch Josh Broadaway Richard Scott Nick Flanagan Benjamin Alvarado Ben Martin Ron Whittaker Michael Putnam Michael Letzig Jeff Klauk Andrew Loupe B.J. Staten Chesson Hadley Jim Renner Blayne Barber Tyrone Van Aswegen Lee Bedford Zack Miller Nate Smith Stephan Jaeger Jace Moore Woody Austin Brett Stegmaier Aron Price Skip Kendall Fernando Mechereffe Greg Bray Len Mattiace Miguel Angel Carballo Scott Gutschewski Hudson Johnson Jeffrey Kellen Brett Wetterich Matt Davidson Fran Quinn Todd Hamilton Arjun Atwal Trent Rommann Travis Woolf Danny Ellis Dae-Hyun Kim Brian Prouty Chad Collins Tim Kunick Marco Dawson Steve Friesen
36-35—71 34-38—72 36-36—72 37-35—72 35-37—72 38-34—72 39-33—72 36-36—72 38-34—72 36-36—72 38-34—72 37-35—72 36-36—72 37-35—72 39-33—72 38-34—72 39-34—73 37-36—73 40-33—73 37-36—73 38-35—73 38-35—73 36-37—73 36-37—73 39-34—73 35-38—73 35-38—73 38-35—73 36-37—73 36-37—73 36-37—73 34-39—73 35-38—73 36-37—73 36-37—73 35-38—73 37-36—73 37-36—73 37-36—73 36-38—74 36-38—74 36-38—74 36-38—74 38-36—74 34-40—74 38-36—74 40-34—74 34-40—74 36-38—74 38-36—74 38-36—74 36-39—75 39-36—75 42-33—75 38-37—75 38-37—75 36-39—75 36-39—75 40-35—75 37-38—75 38-37—75 38-37—75 35-40—75 38-38—76 40-37—77 38-39—77 40-37—77 40-39—79 40-39—79 43-36—79
HOCKEY NHL NHL STANLEY CUP FINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Chicago 1, Boston 0 Wednesday, June 12: Chicago 4, Boston 3, 3OT Saturday, June 15: Boston at Chicago, 7 p.m. Monday, June 17: Chicago at Boston, 7 p.m. Wednesday, June 19: Chicago at Boston, 7 p.m. x-Saturday, June 22: Boston at Chicago, 7 p.m. x-Monday, June 24: Chicago at Boston, 7 p.m. x-Wednesday, June 26: Boston at Chicago, 7 p.m. Late Wednesday
BLACKHAWKS 4, BRUINS 3, 3OT Boston 1 1 1 0 00—3 Chicago 0 1 2 0 01—4 First Period—1, Boston, Lucic 4 (Horton, Krejci), 13:11. Second Period—2, Boston, Lucic 5 (Krejci), :51. 3, Chicago, Saad 1 (Hossa), 3:08. Third Period—4, Boston, Bergeron 6 (Seguin, Lucic), 6:09 (pp). 5, Chicago, Bolland 1 (Shaw), 8:00. 6, Chicago, Oduya 3 (Kruger, Frolik), 12:14. First Overtime—None. Second Overtime—None. Third Overtime—7, Chicago, Shaw 5 (Bolland, Rozsival), 12:08. Shots on Goal—Boston 11-6-8-12-10-7—54. Chicago 8-16-15-8-10-6—63. Goalies—Boston, Rask. Chicago, Crawford. A—22,110 (19,717). T—4:38.
SOCCER
Web.com Tour
MLS
Air Capital Classic Scores Thursday,at Crestview Country Club, Wichita Purse: $650,000 Yardage: 6,959; Par: 71 (35-36) First Round Alex Prugh 32-31—63 Mike Lavery 32-33—65 Eric Axley 36-30—66 Jason Gore 32-34—66 Dustin Garza 34-32—66 Steve Wheatcroft 37-30—67 Alex Cejka 35-32—67 Aaron Goldberg 34-33—67 Byron Smith 31-36—67 Kyle Reifers 35-32—67 Adam Crawford 36-31—67 Nathan Tyler 36-31—67 Wes Roach 34-34—68 Bhavik Patel 35-33—68 David Gossett 38-30—68 Nathan Green 34-34—68 Matt Hill 34-34—68 Richard S. Johnson 33-35—68 Michael Connell 34-34—68 Alexandre Rocha 34-34—68 Sung Kang 34-34—68 Bronson La’Cassie 36-32—68 Kelly Kraft 34-34—68 Oscar Fraustro 34-34—68 Peter Malnati 35-33—68 Will Wilcox 37-32—69 Gavin Coles 34-35—69 Joe Durant 34-35—69 Dusty Fielding 35-34—69 Whee Kim 32-37—69 Nick Rousey 34-35—69 Danny Lee 35-34—69 Ariel Canete 35-34—69 Scott Parel 36-33—69 Michael Sims 34-35—69 Chris Thompson 35-34—69 Trent Whitekiller 36-33—69 Kevin Johnson 36-34—70 Guy Boros 34-36—70 Steven Bowditch 36-34—70 Rafael Echenique 32-38—70 Brian Duncan 34-36—70 Paul Claxton 35-35—70 Hudson Swafford 35-35—70 Kevin Kisner 35-35—70 Phillip Mollica 34-36—70 Chris Wilson 34-36—70 Scott Harrington 34-36—70 Ken Looper 35-35—70 Troy Merritt 36-34—70 Scott Sterling 35-35—70 Vince Covello 35-35—70 Heath Slocum 36-34—70 Cameron Beckman 37-33—70 Paul Stankowski 37-33—70 J.J. Killeen 37-33—70 Billy Hurley III 37-33—70 Andy Pope 34-36—70 Kevin Tway 34-36—70 Jamie Lovemark 36-35—71 Daniel Chopra 37-34—71 Joseph Bramlett 37-34—71 Kevin Foley 36-35—71 Sam Saunders 36-35—71 Peter Lonard 34-37—71 Todd Demsey 34-37—71 Ashley Hall 35-36—71 Joe Affrunti 36-35—71 Martin Piller 37-34—71 Matias O’Curry 37-34—71 Derek Fathauer 36-35—71 Nicholas Delio 37-34—71 Michael D. Smith 35-36—71 Jonathan Hodge 33-38—71 Patrick Sheehan 34-37—71 Brenden Pappas 37-34—71 Rob Oppenheim 39-32—71 Brad Elder 37-34—71 Andrew D. Putnam 34-37—71 Camilo Benedetti 35-36—71 Aaron Watkins 35-36—71 Tim Wilkinson 38-33—71 Clodomiro Carranza 38-33—71 Tom Hoge 35-36—71 Franklin Corpening 33-38—71 Si Woo Kim 34-37—71
EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Montreal 8 2 2 26 22 15 New York 7 5 4 25 23 19 Philadelphia 6 5 4 22 22 24 Houston 6 4 4 22 19 14 Sporting KC 6 5 4 22 18 13 New England 5 4 5 20 15 9 Columbus 4 5 5 17 16 16 Chicago 3 7 3 12 11 19 Toronto FC 1 7 5 8 12 19 D.C. 1 10 3 6 6 24 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA FC Dallas 8 2 4 28 23 17 Real Salt Lake 8 5 3 27 24 16 Portland 5 1 8 23 24 16 Seattle 6 4 3 21 19 15 Los Angeles 6 6 2 20 22 18 Colorado 5 4 5 20 15 12 Vancouver 4 5 4 16 18 20 San Jose 3 6 6 15 13 23 Chivas USA 3 8 2 11 13 26 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Wednesday’s Games Philadelphia 3, Columbus 0 Saturday’s Games New England 0, D.C. United 0, tie Chicago 2, Portland 2, tie Real Salt Lake 3, Los Angeles 1 Seattle FC 3, Vancouver 2 Saturday, June 15 FC Dallas at Portland, 4 p.m. Toronto FC at D.C. United, 6 p.m. Montreal at Columbus, 6:30 p.m. San Jose at Colorado, 8 p.m. New England at Vancouver, 9 p.m.
World Cup qualifying NORTH AND CENTRAL AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN FINAL ROUND Top three qualify Fourth-place team advances to playoff vs. Oceania winner GP W D L GF GA Pts United States 5 3 1 1 6 3 10 Costa Rica 5 2 2 1 5 3 8 Mexico 6 1 5 0 3 2 8 Honduras 5 2 1 2 6 6 7 Panama 5 1 3 0 5 5 6 Jamaica 6 0 2 4 2 8 2 Tuesday, June 4 At Kingston, Jamaica Jamaica 0, Mexico 1 Friday, June 7 At Kingston, Jamaica United States 2, Jamaica 1 At San Jose, Costa Rica Costa Rica 1, Honduras 0 At Panama City Panama 0, Mexico 0 Tuesday, June 11 At Mexico City Mexico 0, Costa Rica 0 At Tegucigalpa, Honduras Honduras 2, Jamaica 0 At Seattle United States 2, Panama 0 Tuesday, June 18 At Sandy, Utah United States vs. Honduras, 8:11 p.m. At San Jose, Costa Rica Costa Rica vs. Panama, 9 p.m.
TENNIS ATP World Tour AEGON CHAMPIONSHIPS RESULTS Thursday, At The Queen’s Club, London, Purse: $1.03 million (WT250), Surface: Grass-Outdoor Singles Second Round
Andy Murray (1), Britain, def. Nicolas Mahut, France, 6-3, 7-6 (4). Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (4), France, def. Edouard Roger-Vasselin, France, 6-3, 6-7 (2), 6-3. Feliciano Lopez, Spain, def. Julien Benneteau (11), France, 7-6 (5), 6-4. Igor Sijsling, Netherlands, def. Denis Istomin (14), Uzbekistan, 7-6 (4), 6-1. Third Round Tomas Berdych (2), Czech Republic, def. Grega Zemlja (16), Slovenia, 6-3, 6-4. Juan Martin del Potro (3), Argentina, def. Daniel Evans, Britain, 6-0, 6-3. Lleyton Hewitt, Australia, def. Sam Querrey (6), United States, 5-7, 6-3, 6-4. Denis Kudla, United States, def. Kenny De Schepper, France, 6-1, 6-3. Marin Cilic (5), Croatia, def. Feliciano Lopez, Spain, 4-6, 7-6 (5), 7-5. Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (4), France, def. Igor Sijsling, Netherlands, 7-5, 5-7, 6-3. Benjamin Becker, Germany, def. Alexandr Dolgopolov (7), Ukraine, 7-6 (5), 7-5. Andy Murray (1), Britain, def. Marinko Matosevic, Australia, 6-2, 6-2. Doubles First Round Viktor Troicki, Serbia, and Grega Zemlja, Slovenia, def. Oliver Marach, Austria, and Lukas Rosol, Czech Republic, 7-5, 7-6 (2). Guillermo Garcia-Lopez, Spain, and JohnPatrick Smith, Australia, def. Xavier Malisse, Belgium, and Rajeev Ram, United States, 6-7 (8), 6-3, 10-5. Benoit Paire and Edouard Roger-Vasselin, France, def. Thiemo de Bakker, and Igor Sijsling, Netherlands, 6-2, 7-5. Second Round Alexander Peya, Austria, and Bruno Soares (4), Brazil, def. Johan Brunstrom, Sweden, and Raven Klaasen, South Africa, 6-2, 6-2. Jamie Murray, Britain, and John Peers, Australia, def. Ivan Dodig, Croatia, and Marcelo Melo (7), Brazil, 7-5, 7-6 (2). Marin Cilic, Croatia, and Juan Martin del Potro, Argentina, def. Robert Lindstedt, Sweden, and Daniel Nestor (2), Canada, 6-3, 67 (5), 10-6. Mahesh Bhupathi and Rohan Bopanna (3), India, def. Nicolas Mahut and Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, France, walkover. Julien Benneteau, France, and Nenad Zimonjic (6), Serbia, def. Viktor Troicki, Serbia, and Grega Zemlja, Slovenia, 6-4, 6-3. Bob and Mike Bryan (1), United States, def. Guillermo Garcia-Lopez, Spain, and JohnPatrick Smith, Australia, 7-6 (2), 7-5. Colin Fleming, Britain, and Jonathan Marray (5), Britain, def. Benoit Paire, France, and Edouard Roger-Vasselin, France, 7-6 (4), 3-6, 10-6.
ETC. Transactions BASEBALL American League CLEVELAND INDIANS—Signed OF Silento Sayles and INF Paul Hendrix to minor league contracts. Signed LHP Clay Rapada to a minor league contract and assigned him to Columbus (IL). HOUSTON ASTROS—Signed 2B Tony Kemp, CF Jason Martin, SS Thomas Lindauer, LHP Albert Minnis, RHP William Chrismon, RHP Pat Christensen, LHP Randall Fant, RHP Zachary Morton and RHP Tyler Brunnemann to minor league contracts. NEW YORK YANKEES—Agreed to terms with 3B Eric Jagielo on a minor league contract. SEATTLE MARINERS—Sent C Brandon Bantz outright Tacoma (PCL). TAMPA BAY RAYS—Signed RHP Austin Pruitt, RHP Aaron Griffin, RHP Jaime Schultz, RHP Andrew Hanse, RHP Hunter Wood, RHP Cory Jordan and RHP D.J. Slaton, LHP Ben Griset, LHP Rick Teasley, INF Johnny Field, INF Patrick Blairn OF Julian Ridings and OF Jeremy Hadley. TORONTO BLUE JAYS—Signed RHP Patrick Murphy, LHP Evan Smith, LHP Daniel Lietz, RHP Conner Greene, C Garrett Custons, LHP Tim Mayza, INF Timothy Locastro, OF Johnathan Davis, C Danny Jansen, C Mike Reeves, OF Brendan Kalfus, OF Sean Hurley, INF Andrew Florides, RHP Garrett Pickens, INF-OF David Harris and RHP Brett Barber to minor league contracts. National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS—Claimed RHP Nate Adcock off waivers from Kansas City and optioned him to Reno (PCL). Sold the rights to RHP Warner Madrigal to the Chunichi Dragons of the Japan’s Central League. PITTSBURGH PIRATES—Activated RHP Charlie Morton from the 60 day DL. Placed RHP A.J. Burnett on the 15-day DL (retroactive to June 9). Released RHP Jose Contreras. WASHINGTON NATIONALS—Activated LHP Ross Detwiler from the 15-day DL. Optioned RHP Erik Davis to Syracuse (IL). American Association EL PASO DIABLOS—Signed RHP Anthony Smith. GRAND PRAIRIE AIR HOGS—Released RHP Cole Green and RHP Marshall Schuler. Can-Am League NEW JERSEY JACKALS—Released RHP David Filak. QUEBEC CAPITALES—Released OF Dany Deschamps. Frontier League EVANSVILLE OTTERS—Signed RHP Pat Goelz. Released RHP Mark Willinsky. FLORENCE FREEDOM—Signed RHP Chuck Weaver. FRONTIER GREYS—Acquired OF J.J. Muse from the El Paso (AA) for a player to be named. SCHAUMBURG BOOMERS—Acquired LHP Josh Renfro from Grand Prairie (AA) to complete a previous trade. Signed RHP Preston Hatcher. Released LHP Delvin Perez. WINDY CITY THUNDERBOLTS—Sold the contract of RHP Mike Recchia to Chicago (AL). Signed OF Nathan Pittman. FOOTBALL National Football League CHICAGO BEARS—Waived CB Maurice Jones. DENVER BRONCOS—Released RB Willis McGahee. Signed RB Montee Ball and CB Kayvon Webster. JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS—Waived DE Austen Lane and CB Trey Wilson. Signed CB Lionel Smith and P Ken Parrish. MIAMI DOLPHINS—Signed WR Joe Hastings and DT Tracy Robertson. Waived WR Courtney Gardner and FB Ina Liaina. OAKLAND RAIDERS—Signed LB Sio Moore. PHILADELPHIA EAGLES—Agreed to terms with QB Matt Barkley on a four-year contract. PITTSBURGH STEELERS—Signed QB Landry Jones to a four-year contract. ST. LOUIS RAMS—Signed WR Tavon Austin, LB Alec Ogletree, S T.J. McDonald, WR Stedman Bailey, OL Barrett Jones, CB Brandon McGee and RB Zac Stacy. TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS—Signed WR Derek Hagan. Waived WR Jheranie Boyd. TENNESSEE TITANS—Agreed to terms with WR Justin Hunter. HOCKEY National Hockey League DALLAS STARS—Signed D Kevin Connauton to a three-year contract through the 2015-16 season. MONTREAL CANADIENS—Signed D Davis Drewiske to a two-year contract extension through the 2014-15 season. PHOENIX COYOTES—Re-signed vice president of hockey operations and assistant general manager Brad Treliving to a multiyear contract extension. PITTSBURGH PENGUINS—Agreed to terms with C Evgeni Malkin on an eight-year contract extension. TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS—Signed RW Colton Orr to a two-year contract extension and G Drew MacIntyre to a one-year contract. American Hockey League SPRINGFIELD FALCONS—Re-signed RW Trent Vogelhuber to a one-year contract. SOCCER Major League Soccer TORONTO FC—Placed MF Terry Dunfield on waivers. North American Soccer League NEW YORK COSMOS—Signed MF Marcos Senna. National Women’s Soccer League CHICAGO RED STARS—Signed F Jen Hoy. COLLEGE BLOOMFIELD—Named David Caputo women’s basketball coach. ETSU—Named Laura Barry women’s assistant basketball coach. MOUNT OLIVE—Named Montel Jones men’s assistant basketball coach. NORTHWESTERN—Named Brian James men’s assistant basketball coach. OLD DOMINION—Named Trina Patterson women’s assistant basketball coach. UCONN—Announced the retirement of men’s assistant basketball coach George Blaney.
The Hutchinson News
Friday, June 14, 2013 B5
B6 Friday, June 14, 2013
The Hutchinson News
CLASSIFIED The Hutchinson News
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Help Wanted
Part-Time Help
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Inman USD 448 is accepting applications for the following part time position for the 2013-2014 school year: High School Head Volleyball Coach If you are interested, please submit your resume and 4 references to Donna Maurer, USD 448, PO Box 129, Inman, KS 67546 or dmaurer@usd448.com.
Help Wanted
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Accepting applications for an experienced Warehouseman/Shipping and Receiving position. We are looking for an individual with experience driving both sit down and stand up forklifts, basic computer skills and ability to run an RF barcode scanner. Dependable transportation and strong work history are a must. For interview call (620) 960-6701 or (620) 663-6565.
Accepting applications for the following full-time position:
Medical Assistant The position will assist the physician and physician assistants with providing orthopaedic care in a fast-paced environment. The practice utilizes electronic medical records; computer experience is required. Casting/Splinting experience preferred. The ability to maintain patient confidentiality at all times is a must. To be considered as a candidate please submit resume to: The Summit Attn: Human Resources 1818 E. 23rd Ave. Hutchinson, KS 67502 Email: hr@summitks.com Fax: 620-669-2394 www.summitks.com All employment advertisements in this newspaper are subject to the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, which makes it illegal to advertise “indicating any preference, limitation, specification, or discrimination, based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin,” except where such is a bona fide occupational qualification for employment. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising which is in violation of the law. Amendments, effective March 12, 1969, added ‘’handicap’’ and ‘’familial’’ status to discrimination categories. City of Lyons is accepting applications for Full Time Police Sergeant Education: High school diploma or G.E.D. required. Requires graduation from law enforcement training center (K.I.E.T.C. Certification) and 40 hours of continuing education training annually. Position Requirements: Two to Five years of Law enforcement experience is preferred. Must have a valid Kansas Driver’s License. Salary based on qualification. Applications can be picked up at Lyons City Hall, 217 East Avenue South. EOE
COMPTROLLER The McPherson, Kansas Board of Public Utilities (BPU) is seeking qualified candidates for the position of Comptroller. Bachelor degree in accounting with a current CPA license is required. Complete job posting and contact information may be viewed at www.mcpbpu.com Machinist Needed Experience preferred, Manual Lathe is used in shop Lyons, KS area, 620-257-5375
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Concrete worker and Finisher. Forming and layout experience preferred. Medical ins., paid holidays, paid vacations, retirement plan. Drug screen and physical required. Apply at, 506 N. Whiteside 620-663-1241 Do you have a job but would prefer a CAREER? We’ll train you in fire/water damage restoration. Some weekends & evenings required. Construction experience helpful. Paid vacations/holidays/health insurance. Apply 329 W. 5 or email resume to sales@lamunyon.com
Electrician Due to continued expansion, JACAM Chemical Co. 2013 LLC is looking for an Electrician. Any Electrician license is helpful; willing to provide on the job training valid towards an electrical license. Electrical responsibilities will include the ability to install, maintain and repair electrical wiring, equipment and fixtures; ensure that work is in accordance with relevant codes and also install or service office/plant lighting, intercom systems, or electrical control systems. Salary/Wage D.O.Q. Apply online at www.jacam.com JACAM Chemical Co. 2013, LLC is an EOE. Federal Equal Employment Opportunity Laws: Prohibit employment disbased on crimination race, color, religion, sex, or national origin. Also employment discrimination against qualified individuals with disabilities.
Fence Installer. Pay according to experience. Apply at 507 N Whiteside Rylko Fence Full Time experienced dental assistant needed. Certified training in supra gingival scaling preferred. Excellent benefit package. Please bring resume in person to: Dr. Todd Esau 1716 E 23rd Ave Hutchinson KS 67502 Help Wanted. Farmers Coop in Nickerson is looking for a yard laborer. Responsibilities include loading and unloading of fertilizer, maintenance, tire repair and assistance in all other departments. CDL a plus but not required. Competitive pay and excellent benefits. Please call 620-422-3207 or email your resume to : jschauf@nickcoop.com. I AM looking for a highly motivated individual with good communication skills. He/She must be a
self-starter with a positive attitude. First year income $35k plus, with unlimited upward mobility. You will be trained in all areas of my insurance business. 620-664-4628 or 620-665-1490 for an interview. Manufacturing !!! We are accepting applications for Manufacturing Assembly positions. Successful candidates will have at least one year assembly experience, able to read a tape measure, dependable transportation and a solid work history . For interview call (620) 960-6701. Manufacturing Welders!!! Accepting applications for Experienced Production Mig Welding Positions
and Robot Welder Positions. Must have reliable transportation and 2 years production welding experience For interview call (620) 960-6701 or (620) 663-6565. Needs self motivated person part-time for some cooking, running errands & cleaning. 316-201-8170 OPPORTUNITIES: Painting/Remodeling Maintenance/Repairs Must have transportation. Rane Management 14 East 2nd, Hutchinson
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Mid Kansas Seamless Guttering is looking to hire two hard working individuals for installation of seamless guttering. Must have a valid drivers license, pass drug screening, will train right individuals. Good pay with good benefits. Apply only in person at
511 North Main, Hutchinson.
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NOTICE: USD #496, Pawnee Heights, Rozel, KS is now accepting applications for a Head High School Volleyball Coach and an Asst. High School Volleyball Coach for the 2013-2014 school year. Contact USD #496, Box 98, Rozel, KS 67574 or call 620-527-4212 for an application. E.O.E. NOTICE: USD #496, Pawnee Heights, Rozel, KS is now accepting applications for a sixth grade teacher for the 2013-2014 school year with potential coaching positions available. Contact USD #496, Box 98, Rozel, KS 67574 or call 620-527-4212 for an application. E.O.E. Plastics Manufacturing!!!! We are accepting applications for Machine Operators at busy plastics manufacturing plant. We are looking for experienced extruder operators but will train the right candidates. Excellent opportunity for long term permanent work. Successful candidates will have the following skill set: Detail oriented, Strong work history, read a tape measure and dependable transportation. For interview call (620) 960-6701 or (620) 663-6565 you can also apply on line at
sunrisestaffingservices.com
Sales & Marketing Representative Join the sales and marketing team at Eagle Communications in Hutchinson. We offer a great work environment plus employee stock ownership to help you build for the future. Applicants to have great people skills and be able to help customers market their businesses to our listeners. Salary is negotiable. Hours are largely Monday through Friday with some Saturdays required throughout the year. Other skills include good handwriting, ability to communicate and preferred computer experience in Microsoft Word, Excel and Powerpoint. Send your resume to: Terry Drouhard, Eagle Communications P.O. Box 1036, Hutchinson Ks. 67504-1036. EOE Sales!!! Growing company seeking an Experienced Sales Professional to expand services to the Hutchinson/Newton area. Excellent career opportunity for someone with a Strong sales background and established work history. For interview call (620) 663-6565 or send resume to chris.ryan@sunrisestaffingservices.com
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694 -5704 800 -766 -5704 The Cooperative Grain and Supply Company in Bazine, Kansas is currently
accepting applications for an Experienced Elevator Superintendent. This position will be responsible for daily operations of a 900,000 bushel elevator, overseeing grain handling, storage procedures and safety programs. Competitive salary based on experience. Excellent benefit package. EOE. Apply in person at 107 North Main, Bazine, Ks., Phone: 785-398-2271 Wanted : A.S.A.P. TIG, MIG & STICK WELDER Must be qualified to weld stainless steel and aluminum material both in the field and in the shop. Benefits include: Vacations, Retirement, and Individual Health Insurance. Apply at: Dan Dee Air Inc. 8:00 - 4:00 ( M - F ) 639 W. 2nd Street Hutchinson, Ks. 67501 Phone: 620-663-4341
Construction
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Laborer and Carpenter positions available at Buhler Grade School and Buhler High School. Contact Ron with Coonrod & Associates Construction @ 316-648-4719.
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Drivers
REGIONAL DRIVER Bulk Cement Hauling, Home Weekends, Good Pay 620-899-4034
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Class A CDL Drivers Earn as much as $45-50,000/year + Full benefits! Home daily. 888-476-7359. www.neatruck.com/drivers/ksco
Class A CDL Truck Driver Needed for harvest crew. Must be willing to travel. Salary + room/board provided. Call John at 620-285-9388
Class A Owner Operators Home Daily, All Miles Paid + fuel @ 50+ c/mile on fuel card, paid every week. 888-391-0339 www.neatruck.com/ drivers/ksoo Experienced Oil Field Tank Truck Driver/Roustabout with valid CDL License. $16/Hr + Benefits. Apply at Resource Operations, 1190 8th Rd. Chase, KS Tues thru Thurs between 9am & 3pm or call 620-938-2982 to have an application mailed to you if qualified. Harvest business looking for a CDL Driver and a Grain Cart/Tractor Driver, with good driving records, June thru October, pay + room & board, 620-562-8453 or 785-499-3245 Looking for a CDL Driver. Local Deliveries, home every night, good benefits and competitive pay. If interested e-mail resume to craigz@bzbeeinc.com<mailto:craig z@bzbeeinc.com>, or mail to Calm Creek Carriers PO Box 556 Lyons KS 67554. Questions please call 620-257-2265. OVER THE ROAD TRUCK DRIVER
JACAM Chemical Co. 2013 LLC, located in Sterling, KS, is seeking applicants for an Over-the-Road driver. A CDL with HAZ-MAT and Tanker endorsements and air brake certification is required. Salary D.O.Q. Apply on-line at www.jacam.com JACAM is an EOE.
Medical Help
140
B&K MEDICAL OF HUTCHINSON IS LOOKING FOR A QUALIFIED FULLTIME RESPIRATORY THERAPIST OR QUALIFIED LPN TO FILL THE POSITION OF HELPING OUR PATIENTS WITH CPAP FITTINGS AND HOME OXYGEN. PLEASE STOP BY: 1517 N. LORRAINE FOR AN APPLICATION Full time/Part time CNA/CMA needed at Leisure Homestead at Stafford. Please contact Jennifer at (620)234-5208 or apply in person at 405 Grand, Stafford, KS
Immediate opening for:
Occupational Health Nurse/Safety & Wellness Coordinator •Lead first response team •Co -lead company wellness/safety initiative •Administer policies •Maintain OSHA reporting RN certification required Occupational health experience preferred
We are currently looking for a Preschool Teacher who has a Kansas teaching license for K-6 with an Early Childhood Endorsement. Contact Christina Graber at 620-345-2390 or email your application to
We provide a great working environment and competitive wages. You may send your resume to hrkks@kuhn.com or fax to 620-663 -2941. We also accept applications and resumes during regular business hours for those who wish to apply in person.
cradletocrayons@mtelco.net.
Friday, June 14, 2013
SUPPLEMENT YOUR INCOME? ¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿
Pay Off Those Extra Bills DELIVERY ROUTES AVAILABLE Please contact Monica at mmosqueda@hutchnews.com or call 620-694-5700 ext. 126 for the following areas: Canton, Galva City & Motor routes, & McPherson.
Help Wanted Accepting applications for an experienced Warehouseman/Shipping and Receiving position. We are looking for an individual with experience driving both sit down and stand up forklifts, basic computer skills and ability to run an RF barcode scanner. Dependable transportation and strong work history are a must. For interview call (620) 960-6701 or (620) 663-6565.
Accepting applications for the following full-time position:
Medical Assistant The position will assist the physician and physician assistants with providing orthopaedic care in a fast-paced environment. The practice utilizes electronic medical records; computer experience is required. Casting/Splinting experience preferred. The ability to maintain patient confidentiality at all times is a must. To be considered as a candidate please submit resume to: The Summit Attn: Human Resources 1818 E. 23rd Ave. Hutchinson, KS 67502 Email: hr@summitks.com Fax: 620-669-2394 www.summitks.com
Concrete worker and Finisher. Forming and layout experience preferred. Medical ins., paid holidays, paid vacations, retirement plan. Drug screen and physical required. Apply at, 506 N. Whiteside 620-663-1241 Do you have a job but would prefer a CAREER? We’ll train you in fire/water damage restoration. Some weekends & evenings required. Construction experience helpful. Paid vacations/holidays/health insurance. Apply 329 W. 5 or email resume to sales@lamunyon.com
Electrician Due to continued expansion, JACAM Chemical Co. 2013 LLC is looking for an Electrician. Any Electrician license is helpful; willing to provide on the job training valid towards an electrical license. Electrical responsibilities will include the ability to install, maintain and repair electrical wiring, equipment and fixtures; ensure that work is in accordance with relevant codes and also install or service office/plant lighting, intercom systems, or electrical control systems. Salary/Wage D.O.Q. Apply online at www.jacam.com JACAM Chemical Co. 2013, LLC is an EOE.
Manufacturing !!! We are accepting applications for Manufacturing Assembly positions. Successful candidates will have at least one year assembly experience, able to read a tape measure, dependable transportation and a solid work history . For interview call (620) 960-6701. Manufacturing Welders!!! Accepting applications for Experienced Production Mig Welding Positions
and Robot Welder Positions. Must have reliable transportation and 2 years production welding experience For interview call (620) 960-6701 or (620) 663-6565. NOTICE: USD #496, Pawnee Heights, Rozel, KS is now accepting applications for a Head High School Volleyball Coach and an Asst. High School Volleyball Coach for the 2013-2014 school year. Contact USD #496, Box 98, Rozel, KS 67574 or call 620-527-4212 for an application. E.O.E. NOTICE: USD #496, Pawnee Heights, Rozel, KS is now accepting applications for a sixth grade teacher for the 2013-2014 school year with potential coaching positions available. Contact USD #496, Box 98, Rozel, KS 67574 or call 620-527-4212 for an application. E.O.E. Plastics Manufacturing!!!! We are accepting applications for Machine Operators at busy plastics manufacturing plant. We are looking for experienced extruder operators but will train the right candidates. Excellent opportunity for long term permanent work. Successful candidates will have the following skill set: Detail oriented, Strong work history, read a tape measure and dependable transportation. For interview call (620) 960-6701 or (620) 663-6565 you can also apply on line at
sunrisestaffingservices.com
Sales!!! Growing company seeking an Experienced Sales Professional to expand services to the Hutchinson/Newton area. Excellent career opportunity for someone with a Strong sales background and established work history. For interview call (620) 663-6565 or send resume to chris.ryan@sunrisestaffingservices.com
Sales & Marketing Representative Join the sales and marketing team at Eagle Communications in Hutchinson. We offer a great work environment plus employee stock ownership to help you build for the future. Applicants to have great people skills and be able to help customers market their businesses to our listeners. Salary is negotiable. Hours are largely Monday through Friday with some Saturdays required throughout the year. Other skills include good handwriting, ability to communicate and preferred computer experience in Microsoft Word, Excel and Powerpoint. Send your resume to: Terry Drouhard, Eagle Communications P.O. Box 1036, Hutchinson Ks. 67504-1036. EOE The Cooperative Grain and Supply Company in Bazine, Kansas is currently
accepting applications for an Experienced Elevator Superintendent. This position will be responsible for daily operations of a 900,000 bushel elevator, overseeing grain handling, storage procedures and safety programs. Competitive salary based on experience. Excellent benefit package. EOE. Apply in person at 107 North Main, Bazine, Ks., Phone: 785-398-2271 Wanted : A.S.A.P. TIG, MIG & STICK WELDER Must be qualified to weld stainless steel and aluminum material both in the field and in the shop. Benefits include: Vacations, Retirement, and Individual Health Insurance. Apply at: Dan Dee Air Inc. 8:00 - 4:00 ( M - F ) 639 W. 2nd Street Hutchinson, Ks. 67501 Phone: 620-663-4341
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Contact R.T. at rtmiller@hutchnews.com or call 694-5700 ext. 133 for the following areas: Coldwater, Fowler, Liberal, Minneola, ®®®®®®®®®
Contact Pam at pmiller@hutchnews.com or call 694-5700 ext. 132 for the following areas: Leoti, Jetmore, & Spearville ®®®®®®®®®
Contact Heidi at hlambert@hutchnews.com or call 620-694-5700 ext. 121 for the following areas: Anthony & Sterling ®
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We Welcome route inquiries in all areas! For more information or to Subscribe to...
CALL: 620-694-5700 or 1-800 -766-3311 “Serving the Better Part of Kansas”
Fence Installer. Pay according to experience. Apply at 507 N Whiteside Rylko Fence Help Wanted. Farmers Coop in Nickerson is looking for a yard laborer. Responsibilities include loading and unloading of fertilizer, maintenance, tire repair and assistance in all other departments. CDL a plus but not required. Competitive pay and excellent benefits. Please call 620-422-3207 or email your resume to : jschauf@nickcoop.com. Machinist Needed Experience preferred, Manual Lathe is used in shop Lyons, KS area, 620-257-5375
OVER THE ROAD TRUCK DRIVER
JACAM Chemical Co. 2013 LLC, located in Sterling, KS, is seeking applicants for an Over-the-Road driver. A CDL with HAZ-MAT and Tanker endorsements and air brake certification is required. Salary D.O.Q. Apply on-line at www.jacam.com JACAM is an EOE.
Medical Help B&K MEDICAL OF HUTCHINSON IS LOOKING FOR A QUALIFIED FULLTIME RESPIRATORY THERAPIST OR QUALIFIED LPN TO FILL THE POSITION OF HELPING OUR PATIENTS WITH CPAP FITTINGS AND HOME OXYGEN. PLEASE STOP BY: 1517 N. LORRAINE FOR AN APPLICATION Full time/Part time CNA/CMA needed at Leisure Homestead at Stafford. Please contact Jennifer at (620)234-5208 or apply in person at 405 Grand, Stafford, KS Mercy Hospital, Moundridge is accepting applications for full time Night RN’s. Apply in person at: Mercy Hospital 218 E Pack Moundridge, KS Or call: Mimi Henson, RN, DON or Doyle Johnson, ADM at 620-345-6391
We are currently looking for a Preschool Teacher who has a Kansas teaching license for K-6 with an Early Childhood Endorsement. Contact Christina Graber at 620-345-2390 or email your application to
cradletocrayons@mtelco.net.
Drivers Class A CDL Truck Driver Needed for harvest crew. Must be willing to travel. Salary + room/board provided. Call John at 620-285-9388
COMPTROLLER The McPherson, Kansas Board of Public Utilities (BPU) is seeking qualified candidates for the position of Comptroller. Bachelor degree in accounting with a current CPA license is required. Complete job posting and contact information may be viewed at www.mcpbpu.com
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Contact Shawn at smears@hutchnews.com or call 620-694-5700 ext. 122 for the following areas:
Experienced Oil Field Tank Truck Driver/Roustabout with valid CDL License. $16/Hr + Benefits. Apply at Resource Operations, 1190 8th Rd. Chase, KS Tues thru Thurs between 9am & 3pm or call 620-938-2982 to have an application mailed to you if qualified.
Immediate opening for:
Occupational Health Nurse/Safety & Wellness Coordinator •Lead first response team •Co -lead company wellness/safety initiative •Administer policies •Maintain OSHA reporting
Nurse Practitioner Two practice opportunities are available. The first is a part time position in a small rural clinic where the practitioner will have considerable independence. A minimum of 6 months experience in primary care is required. Second, is a part time position in a unique practice setting where disease prevention and health promotion are emphasized. This practice focuses on therapeutic lifestyle changes and the treatment of obesity and its related conditions. No prior experience is required for this position. We will consider two qualified individuals for the part time positions or one practitioner interested in covering both settings. There is no weekend or on-call responsibility. Salary is competitive with a production bonus available. To learn more, contact: Greg Lindholm, MPH, PA Clinical Director NuVita 1345 N. Main McPherson, KS 67460 1-800-825-1615 Or e-mail your CV to: greg@nuvitaclinic.com
RN certification required Occupational health experience preferred RN or LPN - Part-time •Experience in LTC
We provide a great working environment and competitive wages. You may send your resume to hrkks@kuhn.com or fax to 620-663 -2941. We also accept applications and resumes during regular business hours for those who wish to apply in person.
•People skills required •Willingness to work in spiritual environment •1st shift every other weekend and PRN Look for application online or at facility 400 S. Buhler Rd, Buhler
www.sunshinemeadows.org
B8 Friday, June 14, 2013
Medical Help
CLASSIFIED
140 Medical Help
Mercy Hospital, Moundridge is accepting applications for full time Night RN’s. Apply in person at: Mercy Hospital 218 E Pack Moundridge, KS Or call: Mimi Henson, RN, DON or Doyle Johnson, ADM at 620-345-6391
140 Auctions
400 Appliances
uvuvuvuvuv RN or LPN - Part-time •Experience in LTC
•People skills required •Willingness to work in spiritual environment •1st shift every other weekend and PRN Look for application online or at facility 400 S. Buhler Rd, Buhler
www.sunshinemeadows.org
ADD PIZZAZZ TO YOUR CLASSIFIED AD! Use Our Ding Bat Options: ¬(lª¨©«_*Ù (many more to choose from)
Ask your Classified Advisor for details. 694-5704 / 800-766-5704 uvuvuvuvuv
Estate Sales
Nurse Practitioner Two practice opportunities are available. The first is a part time position in a small rural clinic where the practitioner will have considerable independence. A minimum of 6 months experience in primary care is required. Second, is a part time position in a unique practice setting where disease prevention and health promotion are emphasized. This practice focuses on therapeutic lifestyle changes and the treatment of obesity and its related conditions. No prior experience is required for this position. We will consider two qualified individuals for the part time positions or one practitioner interested in covering both settings. There is no weekend or on-call responsibility. Salary is competitive with a production bonus available. To learn more, contact: Greg Lindholm, MPH, PA Clinical Director NuVita 1345 N. Main McPherson, KS 67460 1-800-825-1615 Or e-mail your CV to: greg@nuvitaclinic.com
Coming Events
370
FLEA MARKET Kansas Coliseum-Wichita June 16 & Sept 29 State Fairgrounds-Hutch July 7 & Aug 4 9am–4pm. 620-663-5626 midamericafleamarkets.com
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ADD PIZZAZZ TO YOUR CLASSIFIED AD! Use Our Ding Bat Options: ¬(lª¨©«_*Ù (many more to choose from)
Ask your Classified Advisor for details. 694-5704 800-766-5704 uvuvuvuvu
415
Jantz Estate Sale 407 W. 24th, North Newton June 12-14, 9am – 5pm June 15, 9am-noon Furniture, kitchen items, some antiques, carpenter tools, stove, freezer and much more! For pictures see: estatesales.net LB Estate Sales
Boats/Accessories 450 2005 Bayliner Capri 205 Bowrider Ski Boat This is a very nice boat. 2005 Bayliner Capri 205 Bowrider. Has V6 195 Horse Mercury Inboard engine. It is 20 1/2 feet long with ski platform off rear of boat. Bimi top, trailer, ski and tubing accessories go with the boat. Boat seats are in excellent condition with no tearing. Boat has been stored, never out, when not in the water. Comes also with tarp to use when storing or pulling down the road. Stainless steel propeller. $14,250, 620-786-9997
461 Merchandise
REFRIGERATORS; Gas & Electric Ranges; Washer & Dryers; Freezers; 1212 W. 4th. 663 -3195
Lawn & Garden
465
QUALITY LAWN CARE Stump Grinding, Reasonable rates on Skid Steer work & Sprinkler Systems FREE ESTIMATES. 620-727-5777
Merchandise
480
SILAS IS Buying and Hauling running or not autos, trucks, and tractors. in any condition. Best Prices Paid!! 620-665-4040
480
5500w, Gas generator, New, $400 620-669-7227 new message
Pets For Sale New Gift Items/ Used Clothing/Original Artwork VanRaiser Fundraiser!!! College Age Group Raising Money for Handicap Accessible Van for local Church. 208 N Main. June 8 and June 22nd. 9am thru 5pm Negotiable 620-200-0343
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SELL YOUR STUFF FOR FREE ON...
The New On-Line Classified Site! It’s Fast, It’s Easy & It’s Convenient! All FREE ads must be placed on-line at hutchads.com or there will be a $5 setup fee. No business accounts. Private Party Only.
Home Furnishings 460
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BRAND NEW MATTRESS SETS Mattress and foundation. ONLY $139! 620-665-7625.
For vehicles, running or not, batteries & scrapmetal, 620-727-4203
Remodeling
Services
PAYING CASH
500
3 males, 1 female, Peke-Zu, $100/175; 3 male Teddy Bears, $100 each, 620-257-5606 AKC Registered Male Yorkie Puppy, Small, 8 weeks old, $750 620-697-4138
AKC English Bulldog EN GLI S H B UL LD OG P U P PI E S. Champion bloodlines. 2 males 4 fe785-472-5959 males. teresa.marieyahoo.com Master Hunter sired Lab Puppies. Lab pups ready now out of our AKC titled Master Hunter and guide dog. Dam is sired by a Field Champion. $500. 620-623-2265
FREE Pets
510
FREE- Kittens, Mixed colors, Litter box trained. 620-727-1330 To place an ad in the Business and Service Directory... Call The Hutchinson News at 694-5704 or Toll Free 1-800-766-5704
To place an ad in the Business and Service Directory... Call The Hutchinson News at 694-5704 or Toll Free 1-800-766-5704
Auto Repair/Service QUALITY BODY SHOP Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com
Concrete/Cement Folks Concrete Let us do your concrete. Get a good quality job done at the lowest price. We have over 22 years of experience and guarantee our work on sidewalks, patios, driveways, slabs.... Anything you need, we can do. We are insured, No job too big or small. Call us for free estimates & see the difference!!! 620-960-3644
Crafts/Hobbies Cottonwood Quilts 126 North Main, Hutchinson 620-662-2245 Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com
Handyman BLAIR SERVICES Mowing, Hauling Limbs, Gutter Cleaning, Power Washing, & etc. Call 620-663-8211.
Health Care GRENE VISION GROUP -EAST & WEST Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com
Home Improvement
Income Tax Service JUANITA’S TAX AND ACCOUNTING Hours Tuesday through Saturday, 10am to 6pm. 1819½ West 4th, Hutchinson. 620-665-5651
Lawn Care KH MOWING Residential or Commercial
Free Estimates Call 620-664-7541. QUALITY LAWN CARE Stump Grinding, Reasonable rates on Skid Steer work & Sprinkler Systems FREE ESTIMATES. 620-727-5777
Painting/Papering AKR Painting, Retired teacher, 30 years Experience, interior, exterior painting. Call Al Kolarik 620-899-1080
Folks Painting Looking for a quality job done? Folk’s Painting has over 30 years combined experience in Painting, Texturing or Faux Finish. We offer free estimates and competitive rates. We accept any job!! Call us today!! 620-960-3644
Pest Control ADVANCE TERMITE & PEST CONTROL Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com BELL PEST CONTROL State Licensed & Insured Free Estimates 620-663-4013
Plumbing Foundations & Decks, Porches & Fences, all types Roofing Metal or Shingles & Landscaping. Gutters & Tree’s Etc. U-NAME IT, WE DO IT!! Quality Work Done Cheaper than most. Serving Central Kansas.
Call NOW 620-204-0365 or 620-204-8456
PREFERRED PLUMBING 620-960-1448 Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com
Remodeling Penner Remodeling wF Interior/Exterior Fw Remodeling Since 1979. Arlan Penner 620-662-6957
SPANGLER CUSTOM BUILDING & REMODELING Help with all your projects. FREE Estimates. Ken Spangler, 663-7890
Schools/Education EARLY EDUCATION CENTER Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com
Services AMERICAN RED CROSS Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com BIG BROTHERS & BIG SISTERS Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA - CAMP KANZA Check us out at hutchmarketplace.com
ELMDALE WELLNESS CENTER Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com EMERGENCY ENERGY FUND Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com FIRST CALL FOR HELP Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com Floor Care. Are your Floors Dull or Dirty? Call Jim at 728-9619 for all your Carpet Cleaning & Waxing Needs. We Do All Types of Janitor Services. FOOD BANK OF RENO COUNTY Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com MEALS ON WHEELS Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com
GIRL SCOUT WHEATBELT COUNCIL Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com HEALTHY FAMILIES Hutchinson Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com INTERFAITH HOUSING SERVICES, INC. Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com KANSAS LEGAL SERVICES Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com NEW BEGINNINGS, INC Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com SALVATION ARMY Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com
SEXUAL ASSAULT & DOMESTIC VIOLENCE Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com SIGN SOURCE Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com THE VOLUNTEER CENTER Check us out at hutchmarketplace.com UNITED WAY Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com YMCA Check us out at: hutchmarketplace.com
Small Engine Repair Small Engine Repair, Reliable Work, Call For Quote, Great Rates!!
Equipment Link, 620-259-7902
Tree Removal/Trimming 37 Years Experience. Painting, Tree Trimming & removal. Senior Discount. All types of Hauling. 620-931-5431.
SMITH TREE SERVICE Tree trimming and tree spraying. 620-921-1098 or 620-921-1105
To Place An Ad in the Service Directory Call: 620-694-5704 or Toll Free 800-766 5704
The Hutchinson News
Friday, June 14, 2013 B9
The Hutchinson News
Garage Sales
410 Garage Sales
12 Wheatland Dr.: Saturday 7am-1pm, electronics, chairs, clothing, books, toys, games, dog house, carrier, scrapbooking, purses, No Early Sales 13 Paseo Place: HUGE MOVING SALE, Friday 4-8pm, Saturday 8am-1pm, Fridge, couch, Lots of furniture, Xmas decor,Ladies brand name clothes, Recumbent exercise bike. Vintage jewelry, household goods & yard decor, Cash ONLY, NO EARLY SALES!!!!!! 105 Kisiwa Village: Neighbor Sale in 100 & 200 blocks of Kisiwa Village Friday 8am-Noon and 4pm-7pm, Housewares, kid & adult clothing, 4 wheeler 110 Robert St: Friday 7am-6pm, Saturday 7am-12pm, jointer, radial arm saw, router stand, garage door opener, name brand purses & shoes, jewelry, gas scooter, movies, home decor & Lots of misc. 116 E 37th Ave: & 115 E 37th Ave, Fri. & Saturday 7am-?, Home decor, clothes(M-2X), Frankoma dishes, antiques, camping equip, TV’s , furniture, tools, sewing machine, patio set, purses, shoes, fire pit, bike, Lots of Misc. 117 W. 20th: Friday 4-7pm, Saturday 7-11am, ESTATE SALE, Boyd’s bears, decorative & holiday items, toys, an amp, books, On items not marked - make an offer 702 Columbia: Friday 4pm-7pm, Saturday 7am-12pm, Car carriers, crome wheels, lots of odds & ends.
410 Garage Sales
200 W. 7th: Friday 2pm-8pm, Saturday 8am-Noon MOVING SALE Furniture, household, children’s items, lots of miscellaneous. Priced to sell! 202 Kisiwa Parkway: Friday 4pm-7pm, Saturday 8am-12pm, dishwasher, tool box for truck, chandelier, furniture, home decor, old Star Wars toys, Christmas trees, plus size clothing mens/womens, baby clothes, & car seat, misc 300 N Waldron: Saturday 8am-?, MotherLoad!!!!
Computer software, video games, DVD’s, VHS tapes, music CD’s, laptop bags, A/C unit, power tools,office chairs 400 W 2nd: Friday 12pm-6pm, Saturday 7am-11am, Warehouse Sale, appliances, dinning table/buffet set, furniture, babyitems, maternity, dish sets, electronics, decor and much more 416 E 1st: Friday 10am-7pm, Saturday 8am-?, Kitchen, knick-knacks, home decor, books, clothes, lots of misc. 501 Idlewild: Saturday 8am-Noon, Boy & Girl Teen clothes, kitchen stuff, home & easter decor, purses, shoes, sheets/comforter, doggie steps & MISC!! 529 Howard: Saturday 6am-11am, Household goods, 2 freezers, camping & fishing equipment, misc. garage tools & Much More
410 Garage Sales
600 N Hendricks: Friday Noon-?, Saturday 9am-? Multi-Family Sale with lemonade stand, Washer & dryer, women’s & kids clothing,(all sizes), etc. 609 E 5th Ave., Saturday 8am-?, Lots of NEW and like new power tools, large & small related accessories, Bayliner boat, nice coke machine, oak furniture, tv’s, western saddle, ladies western wear, BB Chev Hot Rod parts, misc. 611 West 14th: Saturday 7am-3pm, Misc tools, building remodeling items, Bose lifestyle stereo, Mens sz 9 MBT shoes, Merrell boots, cast iron, stainless cookware, canning, sewing, arts crafts, new & used clothes.
CASH ONLY, No Early Sales 618 E 71st: Saturday 8am-2pm, MOVING SALE Boys clothes & toys, games, books, furniture, dresser, beds, dining table, welding table, tools, etc 706 Brookside Dr: Friday 10am-8pm & Saturday 8am-1pm. Huge Moving Sale, Little Bit of Everything. Everything Goes! 903 East 24th: Friday 7am-7pm, MULTI FAMILY Household items & Decor, purses, collectables, kids stuff, coolers, lawn chairs & bargains galore!!!!!! 904 W 22nd: Friday & Saturday 8am-? Fabulous Finds Sale!!! Start your shopping with a glass of ice cold lemonade, Shop our name brand clothing, craft tools, 100’s of Barbies & accessories, household, art, & LOTS MORE
410 Garage Sales
917 W 15th: Friday 2-7pm, Saturday 8am-6pm, LOTS TO SEE COME CHECK IT OUT 1000 W 24th: Friday Only!! 5:30pm-8:30pm, Antique childs desk, brand new engine stand, water skis, lg area rug, hiking back pack,
clothes, movies, & lots of misc 1004 Robert: (end of N Severence) Friday 10am-5pm, Multi-Family Sale 1005 Dundee Ct: Friday 4-8pm, Saturday 7am - ?, Lots of rubber stamps, scrapbook, large dog kennel, aquariums, hamster cage, Wii rock band, guitar hero, girls room 7 home decor, books, ball hitch, reciprocal saw, Bissell sweeper, metal sawhorses, log racks, insecticides, Toro lawn mower (needs work), old Red Jacket hand well pump, old match books, 15” TV, household, lots of other items, nice, clean, quality stuff 1005 W 19th: Friday 5-8pm, Saturday 7am-?, Girls twin bed, Princess tv, lots of other girl stuff, misc 1035 College Lane: Friday 12:00PM-8:00PM, Saturday 8:00AM-??? GARAGE SALE Lots of boys and girls clothing, plus-size clothing, household items and more! 1123 E 6th: (In the alley), Friday 9am-5:30pm, Saturday 8am-5:30pm, Size 18-24 Women’s clothing, baby furniture, misc & music books
410 Garage Sales
1124 W 11th: Behind fence, Huge Huge Sale, Friday, Saturday, Sunday 9am-?, Rain or Shine, Dolls, toys, post cards, pickup ladder rack, lots of jewelry, fishing stuff, tools, lots of nick-nacks, bicycles, old cans & bottles, dishes, household items, furniture, salt & peppers, Arkansas quartz crystal garden rocks, pictures & frames, too much to mention 1210 E. 27th: Friday 12pm -6pm. Mother of twins. boy clothes 3t-10, girls clothes 3t-12, cos tumes, kid vanity,outdoor toys, roller coaster, toys galore, mirror, end table, & oak table w/chairs 1218 E 10th: Friday & Saturday 8am-?, Prom dresses, Adult name brand clothing, purses, toddler
age toys, board games, dresser, IPOD stereo system 1227 East 3rd: Friday, 3pm-8pm, Saturday, 7am-? Multi Family Sale! China cabinet, trans. jack, Lincoln welder, shop tools, banjo, clothes, lots of misc. 1300 E 25th: Saturday 7am-?, 3 Family Sale
Highchair, kids clothes, records/albums, Liberty Falls Collectable Houses, furniture, under counter microwave
410 Garage Sales
2105 N. Main: Friday & Saturday 7am-?, 7 Family Sale, chicco stroller, toys, lawn equip., collectables, TV, football pads & helmet, Electrolux shampooer, Singer Sewing Machine, DVD’s 2203 North Monroe: Saturday 7am-11am, Retiring Teacher — Educational materials, organizers, furniture, household items, books, & Misc 2404 Old Ox Rd: Friday 1-8pm, Saturday 8am-2pm, HUGE GARAGE SALE! ANNUAL EBAY SALE. NEW STUFF,TEACHER SUPPLIES
410 Garage Sales
2601 N. Halstead: Friday Only, 8am-5pm, 3 FAMILY SALE, Baby girl NB-9mo clothes, baby items, Sentsy, Home Interior, Household items, ETC.!! 3101 N. Walnut: Farmington. Friday, June 14th, Noon - 7pm. “Antiques” clocks, Art, RR, old pedal cars, 10’ church pew, china hutch, Harvest table/5 leaves, tools, cool stuff! 3317 N Pershing St: Saturday 7am-12:30pm, little girls & women’s clothes, recliner, Sears self-propelled mower, used decking boards 2”x4”x16’(must take all), Quilting material & patterns, Lots of Misc.
2406 Old Ox Rd: Friday 1pm -?, Saturday 8am -12pm Huge 5 Family sale, name brand girls nb-12mon, boys nb-7, misses/jr 6-16, S-XL, mens m-2xl, kids bikes, bunk bed w/ desk, full size bed, front door, shower door, large dog crate, name brand purses, housewares,
3320 Clove Circle: take 32nd terrace off Plum or Severence, Saturday Only 7am-11am, hide a bed, recliners, hutch, jewelry, tv stand, old school desk
2501 Nevada: Friday & Saturday 8am-12pm, Boys clothes 2t-4t, adult clothing, toys, household items, tv’s, more!
ances, name brand clothing, Prairie Dunes misc. & MORE
1421 Hendricks: Saturday 9am-3pm. Multi-Family Sale, tins, Fridge, stove, furniture, wheels & tires, dishes, salt & pepper shakers, Avon, iron seats, misc.
2502 Rambler Road:Friday & Saturday 7am-7pm Sunday 10am-2pm MULTI-FAMILY SALE Appliances, tools, chopsaw, large sized clothing, furniture, books. Follow driveway to back of house.
2502 Brentwood: Saturday, June 15th from 8am to 12pm TWO FAMILY
3202 N. Severance: Friday 6pm-?, Saturday, 7am-?, clothes, shoes, pool table, lots more
3816 Spyglass: Saturday 8am-2pm, Dressers, desks, TV’s, VCR’s, Military misc, small appli-
4200 Quivira Dr: Friday 4pm-7pm, Saturday 8am -Noon, Sewing machine, microwave & stand, furniture, Scentsy,encyclopedias,
jewelry, cookbooks & more 4304 Pagoda: Friday 10am-7pm, Saturday 7am-Noon, Precious Moments Dolls, household items, furniture, baby items It all needs to go to a good home —- but not ours!!!!
410 Garage Sales
5602 Highland Dr. Friday 3pm-7pm, Saturday 8am-1pm, Large Highland Drive Sale, NE of 56th & Plum roundabout, 510 E Highland Dr. Nice Items
7904 W. 82nd: (5 miles w. of Hendricks on 82nd) 3 Family Estate Sale, Friday 5pm-8pm, Saturday 8am-12pm Furniture, tools, saws, truck tool box, sweepers, outdoor furniture, kids, bicycles & ride ons, misc & vintage items
ANNUAL NEIGHBOR HOOD GARAGE SALE 24 Families Friday 5pm-8pm Saturday 8am-noon Old Farm Estates, Barberry, Bramble Bush, Kent Place Participating homes have a list of addresses for each item:
Teen/kids/adult clothes, boys baseball mitt, Stihl edger, purses, new dog carrier, glasstop coffee table, queen waterbed, furniture, sleeper sofa, desk, GPS, karaoke machine, bistro set, toys, books, golf cart, vinyl fencing, kitchen items, electric hand and bench power tools, Oreck carpet cleaner, bunk beds with trundle, stroller, linens, Trek bike, mantel clocks, police patches, tools, Disney movies, scrapbook supplies, small appliances, knick-knacks, wheel chair,
office desk, TV, desk, dresser, household items, misc.
410
Out of town, 240 Fairview, Little River, Kansas: Thurs. 7am-7pm, Friday & Saturday 8am-5pm, Antique furniture, china, crystal, linens, household furniture & items, many vintage and collectables
B10 Friday, June 14, 2013
The Hutchinson News
BUSINESS THE MARKET IN REVIEW S&P 500 1,636.36
p
+23.84
NASDAQ 3,445.37
+44.94
p
DOW 15,176.08
STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST Name
Div Yld PE Last
AGCO .40 AT&T Inc 1.80 AbtLab s .56 AlcatelLuc ... Alcoa .12 Allergan .20 Altria 1.76 Anadarko .36 ArchDan .76 Ashland 1.36f BP PLC 2.16 BkofAm .04 BarrickG .80 BerkHa A ... Cal-Maine1.27e Caterpillar 2.40f CntryLink 2.16 Chevron 4.00f Citigroup .04 CityNC 1.00a CocaCola s1.12 ColgPalm s1.36f CmcBMO .90 ConAgra 1.00 ConocoPhil2.64 Costco 1.24f Deere 2.04 Dell Inc .32 DevonE .88 DomRescs 2.25 DukeEn rs 3.06 DukeRlty .68 Eaton 1.68 EqtyRsd 1.91e ExxonMbl 2.52f FordM .40 .76 GenElec GtPlainEn .87 HarleyD .84 HeclaM .04e Hospira ... JohnJn 2.64f KindME 5.20f
S&P 500 1,636.36
DOW 15,176.08
.70 5.00 1.50 ... 1.50 .20 4.90 .40 2.30 1.60 5.00 .30 4.00 ... 2.70 2.80 6.00 3.30 .10 1.60 2.80 2.30 2.10 2.90 4.30 1.10 2.40 2.40 1.60 4.00 4.50 4.40 2.60 3.40 2.80 2.60 3.20 3.80 1.60 1.10 ... 3.10 6.20
Chg
YTD %Chg
10.0 54.41 +1.08 +10.80 28.0 36.30 +.68 +7.70 10.0 36.70 +.26 +17.10 ... 1.84 +.08 +32.40 41.0 8.20 +.02 -5.50 35.0 101.53 +1.29 +10.70 17.0 35.76 +.16 +13.70 64.0 87.45 +1.57 +17.70 16.0 33.39 +.50 +21.90 ... 86.97 +1.50 +8.20 15.0 43.09 +.32 +3.50 31.0 13.21 +.15 +13.80 6.0 19.81 +.04 -43.40 19.0172604.00+3409.00+28.80 12.0 46.62 +.17 +15.90 12.0 85.14 +1.93 -5.00 25.0 35.93 +.54 -8.20 9.0 121.66 +1.69 +12.50 14.0 50.29 +.85 +27.10 21.0 61.98 +.82 +25.20 21.0 40.41 +.02 +11.50 24.0 58.46 +.30 +11.80 15.0 43.76 +.34 +24.80 23.0 34.19 +.40 +15.90 10.0 61.65 +.77 +6.30 24.0 110.88 +1.48 +12.30 11.0 85.60 +1.28 -.90 13.0 13.45 +.08 +32.60 ... 55.04 +.50 +5.80 50.0 56.40 +1.08 +8.90 20.0 67.49 +.90 +5.80 ... 15.58 +.29 +12.30 17.0 64.83 +1.31 +19.70 11.0 56.44 +1.69 -.40 9.0 91.33 +1.59 +5.50 11.0 15.58 +.21 +20.30 18.0 23.68 +.18 +12.80 15.0 22.74 +.42 +12.00 18.0 53.47 +1.02 +9.50 71.0 3.53 +.03 -39.50 ... 36.46 +1.21 +16.70 23.0 84.91 +1.17 +21.10 47.0 83.33 +1.22 +4.40
p
+23.84
p
+180.85
6-MO T-BILLS .08%
n
...
NEW YORK _ Spot nonferrous metal prices Thu. Aluminum -$0.8359 per lb., London Metal Exch. Copper -$3.2140 Cathode full plate, LME. Copper -$3.1850 N.Y. Merc spot Thu. Lead - $2133.00 metric ton, London Metal Exch. Zinc - $0.8314 per lb., London Metal Exch. Gold - $1385.00 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Gold - $1377.60 troy oz., NY Merc spot Thu. Silver - $21.585 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Silver - $21.582 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Thu. Platinum -$1462.00 troy oz., N.Y. (contract). Platinum -$1447.10 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Thu. n.q.-not quoted n.a.-not available r-revised
Low
Settle Chg.
COFFEE C (ICE) 37,500 lbs.- cents per lb. Jul 13
122.70
124.10 121.35 123.70 +.95
Sep 13 124.40
125.75 123.05 125.40 +.95
Dec 13 127.60
129.05 126.55 128.75 +.95
Mar 14 131.00
132.35 129.90 132.05 +.90
May 14 133.45
134.55 132.00 134.15 +1.05
Jul 14
136.25 134.00 136.10 +1.10
134.95
+34.70 +15.90 +12.10 +28.70 +17.00 +30.00 -37.70 +3.70 -27.50 +24.20 +14.70 +21.40 +4.40 +19.80 +16.00 +6.60 +34.40 +24.80 +6.70 +14.10 +18.70 +24.50 +29.10 +14.90 +7.30 +28.30 +19.80 +32.50 +24.80 +17.10 +13.30 +17.00 +9.90 +17.90 +19.80 +10.30 +25.60 +2.90 +9.60 +32.50 -34.20
NASDAQ 3,445.37
CRUDE OIL $96.69
+44.94
p
+.81
p
30-YR T-BONDS 3.32%
q
-.05
Open
High
Low
Settle Chg.
US TREASURY BONDS (CBOT) $100,000 prin- pts & 32nds of 100 pct Jun 13 139-30 141-01 139-25 140-23 + 30 Sep 13 138-26 140-14 138-22 139-23 + 31 Dec 13 138-05 138-27 137-16 138-13 + 29
Est. sales 565,083. Wed’s sales 441,756 Wed’s open int. 574,172, -6,481
COFFEE High
Chg
13.0 35.06 +.76 24.0 41.18 +.57 18.0 98.88 +.64 15.0 52.78 +1.17 23.0 47.90 +1.08 18.0 34.72 -.29 ... 5.88 +.19 13.0 58.70 +1.30 11.0 33.66 +.33 13.0 31.68 +.74 21.0 58.34 +1.14 17.0 93.04 +2.09 27.0 44.63 +1.31 21.0 81.98 -.13 16.0 29.08 +.65 21.0 116.69 +1.71 14.0 71.70 +.69 15.0 62.30 +.95 13.02700.00+28.09 ... 47.21 +2.14 18.0 35.29 +.69 24.0 34.08 +.40 ... 7.32 -.03 21.0 35.48 +.69 13.0 26.60 +.48 68.0 2.04 +.01 18.0 111.20 +2.17 16.0 25.71 +.29 18.0 156.95 +2.63 59.0 86.32 +.81 8.0 38.66 +.70 ... 50.64 +.74 15.0 75.00 +.16 28.0 31.55 +.39 12.0 40.94 +.67 13.0 31.58 +.52 16.0 127.82 +4.97 37.0 33.70 -.33 15.0 29.28 +.51 8.0 26.37 +.48 13.0 11.33 +.12
Div Yld PE Last 1.70 1.70 3.10 2.00 3.60 2.70 ... 1.70 4.20 .50 1.00 2.80 3.20 2.80 3.30 2.10 2.20 2.00 .10 ... 3.50 3.60 ... 3.20 .30 ... 2.30 .80 1.80 2.90 2.10 4.10 2.50 3.90 2.90 4.30 2.00 4.20 3.80 ... 2.30
Est. sales 57,523. Wed’s sales 79,062 Wed’s open int. 180,788, +551
CURRENCIES Australia (Dollar) Britain (Pound) Canada (Dollar) China (Yuan) Euro (Euro) Hong Kong (Dollar) Japan (Yen) Mexico (Peso) Russia (Ruble) Switzerlnd (Franc)
6-MO T-BILLS .08%
AGRICULTURE YTD %Chg
BONDS AND BILLS
METALS
Open
Name
Kroger .60 Lowes .72f McDnlds 3.08 Medtrnic 1.04 Merck 1.72 Microsoft .92 Molycorp ... Mosaic 1.00 NewmtM 1.40m NewsCpA .17 NobleEn s .56f OcciPet 2.56 ONEOK 1.44 PepsiCo 2.27f Pfizer .96 Praxair 2.40 Prudentl 1.60 Ryder 1.24 SbdCp 3.00 SearsHldgs ... SonocoP 1.24f SpectraEn 1.22 SprintNex ... TexInst 1.12 Textron .08 Theragen ... 3M Co 2.54 Tyson .20 UnionPac 2.76 UPS B 2.48 ValeroE .80b VerizonCm 2.06 WalMart 1.88 WeinRlt 1.22 WellsFargo1.20f WestarEn 1.36 Whrlpl 2.50f WmsCos 1.41f XcelEngy 1.12f Yahoo ... Yamana g .26
p
+180.85
1.0412 1.5697 1.0182 6.1352 .7493 7.7650 94.87 12.7404 31.9925 .9218
1.0541 1.5676 1.0211 6.1440 .7501 7.7646 95.71 12.8757 32.2246 .9222
Open
High
Low
683 691Ÿ 705 717 730Ÿ 735ß
687 694ß 708 722 731ß 738¿
675 683 696ß 711 721ß 728
685¿ 693ß 706ß 720ß 731 737Ÿ
652 575ß 538Ÿ 549¿ 555¿ 562¿
653 576Ÿ 539 549¿ 556 562¿
640¿ 565Ÿ 529 540 548¿ 554ß
643¿ 570¿ 535Ÿ 546¿ 554 560ß
+2¿ +2ß +1¿ +1ß +1ß +1¿
-7Ÿ -4¿ -2Ÿ -1ß -1Ÿ -1¿
Est. sales 608,338. Wed’s sales 353,467 Wed’s open int. 1,228,508, +11,108 OATS (CBOT) 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Jul 13 Sep 13 Dec 13 Mar 14 May 14 Jul 14
403 387¿ 381 385 388 397¿
410 394 387ß 387 389Ÿ 398ß
400 387Ÿ 378ß 385 388 397¿
408Ÿ 392 384¿ 387 389Ÿ 398ß
+5 +1ß +2 +1Ÿ +1Ÿ +1Ÿ
Est. sales 2,806. Wed’s sales 1,263 Wed’s open int. 10,166, +478 SOYBEANS (CBOT) 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Jul 13 Aug 13 Sep 13 Nov 13 Jan 14 Mar 14 May 14 Jul 14
1540 1444 1357Ÿ 1314¿ 1321 1325 1320ß 1327¿
1543¿ 1449 1361 1319 1323 1325 1320ß 1331
1506¿ 1421ß 1335 1288 1294Ÿ 1295 1296Ÿ 1304
1510Ÿ 1426ß 1341¿ 1300¿ 1306ß 1307 1308 1315¿
-30¿ -18¿ -17Ÿ -13ß -13ß -13ß -12ß -12
Est. sales 427,881. Wed’s sales 246,617 Wed’s open int. 614,253, +1,445 SOYBEAN OIL (CBOT) 60,000 lbs- cents per lb Jul 13 Aug 13 Sep 13 Oct 13 Dec 13 Jan 14
48.11 48.07 47.90 47.42 47.42 47.32
48.30 48.25 48.01 47.72 47.56 47.51
47.70 47.67 47.50 47.11 46.85 46.86
47.84 47.81 47.65 47.34 47.16 47.12
-.27 -.26 -.25 -.24 -.26 -.26
Est. sales 247,525. Wed’s sales 126,768 Wed’s open int. 366,284, -1,473 SOYBEAN MEAL (CBOT) 100 tons- dollars per ton Jul 13 Aug 13 Sep 13 Oct 13 Dec 13 Jan 14
461.60 430.10 411.00 394.90 390.00 392.20
463.70 432.10 412.50 394.90 393.00 392.20
451.00 422.00 402.40 383.50 380.90 382.50
452.60 424.60 405.50 388.00 386.50 387.90
-8.80 -5.00 -4.90 -4.30 -3.40 -3.30
Est. sales 229,918. Wed’s sales 128,960 Wed’s open int. 302,716, -2,645 COTTON 2 (ICE) 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Jul 13 Sep 13 Oct 13 Dec 13 Mar 14 May 14
89.75 88.06 87.59 87.52 87.35
91.82 90.13 89.28 88.95 88.75
88.43 88.06 86.43 86.48 86.55
91.72 89.15 90.13 89.15 88.88 88.68
Open
High
Low
-.05
q
CRUDE OIL $96.69
+.81
p
LOCAL GRAIN, MARKETS Settle Chg.
CATTLE (CME) 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb.
Est. sales 280,292. Wed’s sales 149,082 Wed’s open int. 422,120, +3,589 CORN (CBOT) 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Jul 13 Sep 13 Dec 13 Mar 14 May 14 Jul 14
n
30-YR T-BONDS 3.32%
LIVESTOCK
Settle Chg.
WHEAT (CBOT) 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Jul 13 Sep 13 Dec 13 Mar 14 May 14 Jul 14
...
+1.66 +1.08 +.82 +1.08 +1.29 +1.16
Est. sales 55,305. Wed’s sales 61,599 Wed’s open int. 190,205, +3,330
Jun 13 Aug 13 Oct 13 Dec 13 Feb 14 Apr 14 Jun 14
120.00 119.62 123.15 125.50 126.65 128.30 124.30
121.75 120.67 124.42 126.32 127.60 129.20 124.85
119.52 118.90 122.55 124.80 126.15 127.72 123.77
119.85 119.07 122.85 125.42 126.70 128.10 123.80
-.30 -.45 -.27 -.15 -.20 -.35 -1.00
Est. sales 2,664. Wed’s sales 44,583 Wed’s open int. 296,255, -785 FEEDER CATTLE (CME) 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Aug 13 Sep 13 Oct 13 Nov 13 Jan 14 Mar 14 Apr 14 May 14
145.60 147.75 149.70 151.45 151.90 151.75
146.12 147.80 149.70 151.45 151.90 151.75
144.82 147.25 149.00 150.60 151.00 151.75
145.47 147.75 149.35 151.22 151.05 151.75 152.00 153.25
-.45 -.17 -.40 -.30 -.87 -.50 ... ...
Est. sales 335. Wed’s sales 4,929 Wed’s open int. 32,334, +266 HOGS-Lean (CME) 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Jun 13 101.65 Jul 13 99.75 Aug 13 97.25 Oct 13 84.65 Dec 13 81.55 Feb 14 83.55 Apr 14 84.85 May 14 89.85 Jun 14 92.15 Jul 14
101.92 101.42 101.57 +.62 99.77 98.50 98.65 -.52 97.37 97.00 97.30 -.30 84.85 82.67 84.55 -.20 81.65 79.82 81.60 -.05 83.60 82.45 83.50 -.30 85.20 84.00 84.92 -.53 90.00 89.85 90.00 -.35 92.15 91.70 92.00 -.40 90.65 ...
Est. sales 18,937. Wed’s sales 81,322 Wed’s open int. 279,940, +1,579
(courtesy of ADM Grain, Hutchinson)
Truck Date Wheat Corn 06/06 7.53 7.18 7.50 7.21 06/07 7.41 7.05 06/10 06/11 7.45 NA 06/12 7.31 7.15 7.33 7.08 06/13 Prices One Year Ago 6.21 NA Garden City Co-op 6.94 7.04 06/13 Dodge City Co-op 06/13 6.84 6.93 Irsik/Doll Hutchinson 7.34 7.04 06/13 Plains 06/13 6.94 7.12 Leoti 6.92 6.99 06/13 Hays Midland Marketing 06/13 7.01 6.74 Kansas Ethanol Lyons (courtesy of TMA) 06/13 NA 6.93
Open
High
Low
Settle Chg.
NATURAL GAS (NYMX) 10,000 mm btu’s, $ per mm btu Jul 13
3.773
3.850
3.715
3.814 +.037
Aug 13
3.794
3.872
3.738
3.837 +.040
Sep 13
3.795
3.872
3.741
3.840 +.041
Est. sales 420,369. Wed’s sales 391,251 Wed’s open int. 1,437,079, +3,240 LIGHT SWEET CRUDE (NYMX) 1,000 bbl.- dollars per bbl. Jul 13
95.77
96.92
95.00
96.69 +.81
Aug 13
95.99
97.14
95.24
96.92 +.82
Sep 13
95.98
97.16
95.30
96.95 +.82
Est. sales 538,939. Wed’s sales 557,125 Wed’s open int. 1,822,792, +6,888 HEATING OIL (NYMX) 42,000 gal, cents per gal Jul 13
288.95
294.93 286.90 293.95 +4.43
Aug 13 289.07
294.99 287.25 294.04 +4.25
Sep 13 289.65
295.31 288.05 294.39 +3.96
Est. sales 169,325. Wed’s sales 115,229 Wed’s open int. 303,142, +2,295
Soybeans Milo 15.19 6.88 bu. 15.26 6.91 bu. 15.05 6.75 bu. 15.20 6.83 bu. 15.05 6.75 bu. 14.86 6.68 bu. 13.48 5.48 bu.
2x.5 Retail RKANSAS CITY WHEAT 14.57
6.44 bu.
15.01
6.36 bu.
NA
6.64 bu.
Open
Jul 13 Sep 13 Dec 13 Mar 14 May 14 Jul 14 Sep 14 Dec 14
14.47 6.44 bu. 14.57 6.43 bu. NA
High
Low
Settle Chg.
WINTER WHEAT (KCBT) 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel
14.57 6.39 bu.
6.63 bu.
NYSE
717ß 716¿
718¿ 723ß
710¿ 716¿
718¿ 723ß 741¿ 754¿ 763 767Ÿ 774ß 783ß
+2 +3 +2ß +3Ÿ +3¿ +3 +2¿ +2¿
Est. sales .... Wed’s sales 42,640 Wed’s open int. 133,708, -1,905
NASDAQ
AMEX
MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) Name
FUELS
Local Markets HUTCHINSON: (Courtesy of Cargill Grain) Wheat - $7.33 bu. Milo - $ 6.63 bu. Soybeans - $14.82 bu. Corn - $ 7.18 bu. New Crop Wheat - $7.33 bu. New Crop Milo - $ 5.10 bu. New Crop Soybean - $ 12.65 bu. New Crop Corn - $ 5.20 bu. HUTCHINSON: (Courtesy of ADM Grain Co.) Wheat - $7.33 bu. Corn - $7.08 bu. Milo - $ 6.68 bu. Soybeans- $14.86 bu. New Crop Wheat - $ 7.33 bu. New Corn Crop - $5.20 bu.
Daily grain price fluctuations
Vol (00)
Last
Chg
Name
Vol (00) Last Chg Name
Vol (00) Last Chg
S&P500ETF 1388076 164.21+2.46
CheniereEn
43224 27.73 +.35
SiriusXM
759662
iShEMkts
1035951 39.94 +.83
NwGold g
34344
6.82 +.09
Microsoft
440927 34.72 -.29
3.29 +.05
BkofAm
986658 13.21 +.15
AbdAsPac
22334
6.44 +.16
RschMotn
314934 14.42 +.86
SprintNex
753796
Rentech
19371
2.18 +.03
305571 23.73 -.04
BariPVix rs
691384 20.22 -.98
VantageDrl
17550
1.97 +.01
MicronT
290930 12.91 +.42
7.32 -.03
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name
Last Chg %Chg
Name
Gannett
26.60 +6.75 +34.0
Belo LIN TV GrayTelev ScrippsEW
Chg %Chg
NovaCopp
2.00
+.21 +11.7
Pixelwrks
4.30
13.77 +3.04 +28.3
PacBkrM g
2.77
+.28 +11.2
PingtanM h
7.00 +1.11 +18.8
13.87 +2.32 +20.1
InspMD n
2.54
+.19
+8.1
USMD n
65.79 +4.76
+7.8
XRS Corp
+5.1
Mannatech
6.39
+.95 +17.5
AdmRsc
15.10 +1.72 +12.9
IEC Elec
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) PhxNMda
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
Last
5.10
-.68 -11.8
PrUVxST rs 69.77 -7.48
-9.7
3.32
+.16
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name
Last
Chg %Chg +.72 +20.1
19.90 +2.90 +17.1 2.65
+.34 +14.7
11.89 +1.49 +14.3
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
DGSE
3.51
-.25
-6.6
SGOCO
ConsEP
2.01
-.12
-5.6
EricksnAC
2.41
-.61 -20.2
20.05 -4.31 -17.7
DB ShtUSD 14.01 -1.39
-9.0
Barnwell
3.35
-.17
-4.8
Kingtne rs
BarnesNob
19.44 -1.86
-8.7
LGL Grp
5.32
-.26
-4.7
HemisM n
13.74 -2.20 -13.8
Gigamon n
26.10 -2.37
-8.3
OrionEngy
2.28
-.09
-3.8
Marketo n
19.07 -2.89 -13.2
250 157 36 443 5 62
Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows
DIARY Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows
DIARY 2,648 461 68 3,177 73 357
Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows
2.30
-.41 -15.1
DIARY 1,868 587 103 2,558 81 41
COMMODITIES REVIEW
Prosecutors push for anti-phone theft measures BY MEGHAN BARR Associated Press
NEW YORK – Law enforcement officials nationwide are demanding the creation of a “kill switch” that would render smartphones inoperable after they are stolen, New York’s top prosecutor said Thursday in a clear warning to the world’s smartphone manufacturers. Citing statistics showing that 1 in 3 robberies nationwide involve the theft of a mobile phone, New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman announced the formation of a coalition of law enforcement agencies devoted to stamping out what he called an “epidem-
ic” of smartphone robberies. “All too often, these robberies turn violent,” said Schneiderman, who was joined at a news conference by San Francisco District Attorney George Gascon. “There are assaults. There are murders.” The coalition, which is called the Secure Our Smartphones Initiative and includes prosecutors, police, political officials and consumer advocates from more than a dozen states, will pressure smartphone companies and their shareholders to help dry up the secondary market in stolen phones. The announcement came on the same day Gascon and Schneiderman were scheduled to co-host a “Smart-
phone Summit” with representatives from major smartphone makers Apple Inc., Samsung Electronics Co., Google Inc. and Microsoft Corp. “We’re prepared to deepen our inquiry if that is appropriate,” Schneiderman said, though he would not elaborate on how far his office might go to ensure that manufacturers comply with the coalition’s demands. He likened the functionality of a “kill switch” to the ability for consumers to cancel a stolen credit card. The general public should not be forced to pay more for smartphones that have a “kill switch,” Schneiderman said. Apple said at a developers’ conference this week that
such a feature would be part of its iOS7 software to be released in the fall. Gascon and Schneiderman said in a statement they were appreciative of the gesture but would reserve judgment until they could “understand its actual functionality.” “Apple has been very vague as to what the system will do,” Gascon said at the news conference. “We’ve been led to believe that it is not a ‘kill switch.’” Gascon was particularly critical of Apple, saying that he had met with the company in January but was rebuffed by executives. “The industry has a moral and social obligation to fix this problem,” Gascon said.
To drive home their point about the danger of violent smartphone thefts, authorities introduced relatives of 23-year-old Megan Boken, who was shot and killed in St. Louis in 2012 by an assailant who was trying to steal her iPhone. Boken was chatting with her mother on the phone at the time, said her father, Paul Boken. “All of a sudden, the phone went blank,” he told reporters. “Megan never picked the phone up again.” In New York, police have coined the term “Apple-picking” to describe thefts of the popular iPhone and other mobile products, like iPads. Phone thefts comprise 40 per-
All of the Microsoft ministores are expected to be set up in about 600 Best Buy locations in the U.S. and Canada by early September, around the same time analysts expect a free update to Windows 8 to be released. The update, called Windows 8.1, is meant to reduce some of the confusion caused by a dramatic overhaul of the operating system that debuted amid much fanfare last October, only to get off to a tepid sales start. The alliance with Microsoft comes as Minneapolisbased Best Buy continues to battle the “showrooming” ef-
fect, the term for shoppers who browse in stores buy then buy items cheaper online. This has led to fears the big-box format is growing obsolete. But major electronics retailers are finding advantage in having a destination where trained sales staff can explain its products to shoppers. Best Buy Co. Inc. has similar store-within-stores for Apple, Samsung and Magnolia products. None of the previous ministores has been as ambitious as the Microsoft format, said Jason Bonfig, Best Buy’s vice president of merchant computing.
BRIEFS Gannett to buy TV station owner Belo for $1.5 billion NEW YORK – Gannett Co., the publisher of USA Today, is buying TV station owner Belo Corp. for about $1.5 billion. If approved, the allcash deal will make Gannett the fourth-largest broadcast group in the U.S. Gannett already owns television stations as well as dozens of newspapers. But the deal transforms Gannett from “a newspaper company with broadcast and digital assets to being a broadcast company with strong newspaper and digital assets,” said Ken Doctor, a media analyst with Outsell Inc. Under the agreement announced Thursday, Gannett will pay $13.75 per share for the Dallas-based TV station operator. That represents a 28 percent premium over Belo’s closing stock price on Wednesday. The acquisition nearly doubles Gannett’s portfolio of stations from 23 to 43, reaching nearly one-third of U.S. households. Gannett, based in McLean, Va., will own 21 stations in the country’s top 25 television markets. The company said the deal will give it access to what it said are some of the fastest-growing TV markets, including
Dallas, Houston, San Antonio and Austin, Texas, as well as Seattle and Portland, Ore.
Casey’s 4th-quarter results fall short of expectations ANKENY, Iowa – Casey’s General Stores Inc. reported a slight uptick in its fiscal fourth-quarter profit despite softer sales and heavy charges during the quarter. The Iowa-based convenience store operator earned $23.7 million, or 60 cents per share, for the quarter that ended April 30. That compared with $23.1 million, or 60 cents per share, last year. It had $3.5 million in charges during the quarter, which included write-downs for unrecoverable accounts and impairment charges for closed and under-performing stores. Revenue increased 3 percent to $1.81 billion from $1.75 billion. Analysts polled by FactSet, on average, were anticipating earnings of 62 cents per share on revenue of $1.83 billion. Casey’s Chairman and CEO Robert Myers said that a difficult cigarette environment and unfavorable weather hurt sales. But he noted that a new “fuel saver” program created in partnership with Hy-Vee grocery stores, as well as lower cigarette prices put
in place at the beginning of the year, have helped build some sales momentum that will continue into fiscal 2014. The company earned $110.6 million, or $2.86 per share, for the full fiscal year, versus $116.8 million, or $3.04 per share, last year. Revenue increased to $7.25 billion from $6.99 billion. Casey’s had 1,749 stores at the end of the fiscal year. It said it plans to build or acquire 70 to 105 stores in the coming year and replace 20 existing locations. Shares were volatile in aftermarket trading. The stock fell by more than 3 percent after the results were released, then regained that loss to add a penny to its regular trading close of $63.29.
Windows becomes latest Best Buy store-in-store NEW YORK – Microsoft has unveiled plans for “storewithin-a-store” sections in Best Buy stores, becoming the latest major consumer electronics maker to acknowledge advantages of the brick-and-mortar format. The sections will begin opening this month and offer Windows-based PCs, tablets, Xbox and accessories, as well as trained staff to explain Windows 8 to customers.
cent of all robberies in New York City, authorities say. Authorities are pushing for the industry to move ahead quickly with this new security-focused technology. By early next year, all smartphones should be equipped with the new protective software, Schneiderman said.
Friday, June 14, 2013 B11
The Hutchinson News
COMICS Zits
Beetle Bailey
Dilbert
Sudoku is a number-placing puzzle based on a 9x9 grid with several given numbers. The object is to place the numbers 1 to 9 in the empty squares so that each row, each column and each 3x3 box contains the same number only once. The difficulty level of the Conceptis Sudoku increases from Monday to Sunday.
Garfield
Hi and Lois
Tundra
Red and Rover
Blondie
Non Sequitur
Baby Blues
Pickles
Pearls Before Swine
Dustin
The Family Circus
Lockhorns THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.
AGEMO
Jumble puzzle magazines available at pennydellpuzzles.com/jumblemags
Rubes
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
©2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
LOYHL
NASEOS RADTIF A: Yesterday’s
Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
(Answers tomorrow) STOOD AFFIRM TOWARD Jumbles: CHORD Answer: When he ate dinner in his new recliner, he ate — COMFORT FOOD
B12 Friday, June 14, 2013
Pets Lost
CLASSIFIED
550 Farm Equipment
Lost Cat, neutered male, black & white in NE Hutch, missing since Sunday, 620-664-6377
620 Feed/Seed
600
Wanting to cash rent FSA or expiring crop acres in Cheney Reservoir water quality area, $60 & up, 1-5 years, 316-772-5057
Farm Equipment
620
SILAS IS Buying and Hauling running or not autos, trucks, and tractors. in any condition. Best Prices Paid!! 620-665-4040
85 GMC tandem truck cab & chassis, 8.0 diesel, 10 speed trans, 9000 actual miles, Very clean, $12,500, 620-243-4280 1688 Case IH Combine, with 3800 engine hours, Stradle duals, bin extentions, chaff spreader, with a 1010 30ft header, $46,000, 620-200-4412 1981 835 Versatile tractor, good rubber, $16,000 OBO 620-532-1737 1985 Case IH 1470 combine, 1 of 50 setup for flat land. Only 2,300 engine hours on DT466, 210 HP, approx 1900 hours on the machine. 12’ Econo mover with hydrolic cyl., 6’ rotary mower with new blades, 3 point. Ford, 3 point 6’ sicle mower, 3 1000 gal. Diesel Tanks, 620-388-4589 1994 9600 with Rigid Wheat Header, Rebuilt Hydro, Good older machine, $38,500, 785-452-5685 or 785-227-2578 1997 JD 930 header w/ pickup reel, shedded & nice, $7500; 4 wheel header trailer, $500 620-825-6051 2005 CIH, 30 ft rigid header, 620-243-2800
640 Domestic Auto
32’ Bushhog disk, Model 1450, In good condition, Field ready, $5000, Andale, 316-444-2598
24 Net wrapped, round bales, good alfalfa. No rain Wes 620-664-3006
Chaff spreader, made by Weco Manufacturing; JD pick-up attachment, both in excellent condition, 620-465-2208
Neufeldt Seed farms R2/STS soybeans Irrigated Dry land Double crop Channel seed dealer Call us today 620-921-5529
Excellent 1998 9610. 1857 Hours, Duals, Very Top Condition, Field Ready, Could Deliver 785-452-5685 785-227-2578
Farmer Wants
The Hutchinson News
Excellent 2005 9760 STS, Loaded 4WD Contour Master, Duals, Just Reconditioned, Very Nice Machine, Older Trade Considered, 785-452-5685 or 785-227-2578 Ford 800 Tractor, 6ft grass cutter, 6 ft blade, new auger with 12” drill, $5000, 620-463-2214 Ford 9N Tractor, $1,250; Ford 8N, $2,000; both have good tires and run good. 620-664-3314 Hesston 16 Wheel Hi-Cap rack, 1973 Ford LN 800, automatic with HARSH 400M mixer, digital scales. New clean grain elevator for JD 8820 part # AH 105850 Seeman Farms 620-285-5288
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We are buying damaged grain, Grainvacs available, 316-340-3203 Wheat Straw wanted to bale. Cash paid, or shares. Austin 620-793-2722
Livestock
650
ANGUS BULLS, Yearling & 2 year olds, Good disposition. Cheyenne Angus Farm. 620-786-0066
Game Leases
690
SEE OUR CLASSIFIEDS ONLINE AT www.hutchnews.com
JD 625 hydroflex flex head, Mint condition, $17,000, Can deliver, Lindsborg, KS 785-452-1967 JD 900 & 600 series, ridgid & flex heads for sale, all reconditioned & field ready, Fair prices, Lindsborg, KS, Delivery available, 785-452-1967
ENSZ HARVESTING Wheat acres wanted. JD equipment. 712-370-1348 or 620-960-3863 HARLEY’S FENCING and PASTURE CLEARING. Insured. Free estimates. Yoder, KS. 620-899 -4410.
ROUGHING CREW AVAILABLE. All Crops, We Pull Rye. Call 620-960-8250. WE BUILD Pasture Fence. Yoder Fence 620 -465-3446
SILAS IS Buying and Hauling running or not autos, trucks, and tractors. in any condition. Best Prices Paid!! 620-665-4040
uvuvuvuvuv
Fleetwood Enterprises, Inc. Pace Arrow,1991 33’ Class A, 2 Roof Air conditioners, Generator, Hydraulic Jacks, 43K Miles, More, $9,500.00 620-899-0041
Motorcycles
750
1986 Harley FXST Heritage Softtail, 1340 CC’s, 43K, Red/Cream, All original, garage kept, ready to ride, $11,000 OBO, Serious inquiries only, Call 620-727-5161 2005 HD Dyna Super Glide Custom, 1440 CC’s, Less than 16K miles, Very good conditon, Red, Lots of extras, Asking $8000, 620-663-9139 or 620-727-1699
ADD PIZZAZZ TO YOUR CLASSIFIED AD!
2008 Q Link Pegasus, 150cc, 5000K, $1000 OBO, Grant Davis, 620-897-7155
Use Our Ding Bat Options: ¬(lª¨©«_*Ù (many more to choose from)
Kawasaki vulcan 500 LTD, 2009 3100 miles, lot’s of extras. $4100 or best offer 620-200-3759
709
YAMAHA SALE AT DAN’S CYCLE Incentives up to $2250!!! Arctic Cat clearance, Kawasaki Summer Sale & 0% interest on Hustler Mowers, danscycle.com 620-327-5001
2006 International 9900I, Cummings ISX, 565hp. jake brake & cruise, 18 speed, 245 wheel base, LR24.5 tires, loaded 620-825-6051
1989 Cadillac Deville, brown, 145K, Burns no oil, good body & runs good $1900, 620-663-9432 1993 Ford Taurus Station wagon, Good School Car, Light blue, $600, 620-662-4343 1998 Chevy Silverado parts truck,excellent drive train, cab, box, good wheels & tires. Wes at 620-664-3006 2006 Ford Fusion SEL, leather, 71k miles, fuel efficient and taken care of call or text 620-446-0146 or 520-664-4063, $11,000 2007 Chrysler 300 Tour, 61K, heated leather seats, AC, full power, excellent condition in & out, $12800 620-662-8873 2008 Dodge Avenger, 90K, Great Condition, $8,100, Loan value is $10,000, 620-474-2774 2009 Honda Accord EX, 4 door, 53K, Loaded, $13,275 Clean, 316-640-3921 2010 Ford Fusion SEL, pearl white, 56K, Ford voice recognition, dual zone climate control, heated leather seats, 6 speed automatic, sport alloy wheels, 1 touch sun-roof, 22mpg city, 38 hwy, Sony sound radio, $12,950, 620-532-2068 Chrysler Sebring, 2001, 4-door, Silver, Well-maintained, Call 620-727-4900
PAYING CASH For vehicles, running or not, batteries & scrapmetal, 620-727-4203 Very clean, slick, 2005 Buick LeSabre, Custom, Less than 60K, 620-694-7357
2009 F350 XLT, 4x4 diesel, automatic, regular cab, power windows & locks, new tires, maintenence records, Cannonball bale bed, 96K, 1 owner, make offer, 316-772-6090
4 Wheel Drive
712
2007 F150 4x4, crew cab, very clean, runs & drives very good, 5.4 liter V8, bedliner, towing package, 68K, $18,675 OBO, 620-665-1444 or
620-259-8797 Leave Message
Trailers
720
5’ x 10’, ATV’s, 16 ‘ Utility, 18’ Car hauler, 20’ 7K Car hauler, 25’ 7K and 25’ Dually tandem & Enclosed. FTS Trailer Sales 124 N. Main, South Hutch 620-474-1001 LOOK AT 40 UNITS! Open or enclosed. 2021 East 4th. 620-663-6150 for size and cost.
RVs/Campers
ALL RENTAL or real estate property advertisements in this newspaper are subject to The Federal Housing Act of 1968, as amended, which makes it illegal to advertise any ‘’preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex or national origin, or an intention to make any discrimination.’’ This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising which is in violation of the law. effective Amendments, March 12, 1989, added ‘handicap’ and ‘familial’ status to discrimination categories. Exceptionally clean, move in ready, new a/c, water paid, $400/400 620 -474-1167
THE BOLDER THE BETTER! Use our bold options to bring more attention to your classified ad. Ask Your Classified Advisor for details.
694 -5704 800 -766 -5704
1992 Hitchhiker 2, 5th wheel, 30’, 16’ slide-out, New tires, new fridge $4150 OBO 620-200-0236
15 N Elm, 1 bedroom, stove & fridge furnished, water paid, $390/350, 620-200-7334
2004 Newmar Mountainaire 40ft., motorhome, 400hp Cummings, 2 slides, jake brake, aluminum wheels, king bed, 2-15m air conditioners w/heat pumps, bath 1/4, always garaged, 62K, $125,000. 620-792-4702
128 W 7th, large, very nice, 1 bedroom, appliances, water paid, $320/200, 620-474-0369
2005 River Canyon 5th Wheel, by Travel Supreme, 35’, 4 season with 3 slide outs, tinted thermal windows, excellent condition. $21,000. 620-397-2165.
Extra nice, 1 & 2 bedrooms, New appliances, washer/dryer hook -ups, dishwasher, carports available, 620 -665-0371 Nice 2 Bedroom Apt. kitchen includes stove & refrigerator, large living room, utilities included except electricity. $450month 620-662-7152 ROYAL APARTMENTS One half month free rent with 12 month lease. One and two bedrooms available. Remodeled, clean, new appliances, spacious. LEASE-DEPOSITNO PETS
¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬ Pool, Storm Shelter Balcony. 326 East 1st, Suite D 669-5008, After Hours669 -7777/ 669-7070 Unique properties for every budget. 1 & 2 bedroom apartments, duplexes & houses.No pets. See our properties at: www.ranemanagement.com
or contact us at: 620 -663-3341
822
908 E 17th, Apt D7, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, All Bills Paid, $675 620-664-5358/200-7785 1017 N Main, #6, Upstairs, Very nice 2 bedroom, appliances, Water Paid, NO Pets, $380/300, 474-0369 1410 N. Washington, Apt 4 2 bedroom , washer/dryer hook-ups, $450/$450. 620-664-5358 or 200-7785 2927 E 4th Ave. #1, 1 bedroom apartment, all bills paid, NO PETS, $375/300 620-664-6462
Lovely Brick Duplex Great Neighborhood, Privacy Patio, Underground Sprinkling, no pets/smoking 620-474-4663
Homes - Unfurn.
309 W 17th: $525/525, 2 bedroom, attached garage, fenced yard, fa/ca, basement, 620-664-4451,
The New On-Line Classified Site! It’s Fast, It’s Easy & It’s Convenient! All FREE ads must be placed on-line at hutchads.com or there will be a $5 setup fee. No business accounts. Private Party Only.
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THREE BEDROOM: 1219 North Washington: $575 + bills 216 East 7th: $650 + bills TWO BEDROOM: 306 West 16th: $725 + bills 812 N. Washington: $600 + bills 1601 Aurora: $850 + bills 527 West 6th: $425 + bills ONE BEDROOM: 429 East 17th: $400 + bills Non-refundable application fee $25. 510 East 17th, Suite G Winkie Tennant 620-663 -4471 or 620 -664-4949 windycityhutchinson.com
¬¬ ¬ 107 W. 14th ¬¬¬ Nice 3 bedroom, 1 bath, ground floor utilities, 13th & Main shopping area, $750/650. 620-662-1584 Available July 1st, 2, 3, & 4 bedroom homes from $600-800, all nice neighborhoods, clean, call for details 620-474-8601
Extra large storage building with overhead door, $500 per month, 620-665-4040 HUTCHINSON SELF STORAGE and DOWNTOWN STORAGE various sizes. 620 -663-3807
Investment Property 860 4th & Poplar, Retail/Office spaces for rent, $275/275; $225/225 620-200-2919
861
2 small office spaces, $200 or $300 a month, 620-694-9036 Extra large retail space with office, bathroom, heat & AC, show room floor, 2 overhead doors with fenced in storage, 620-665-4040
GREAT OPPORTUNITIES! We have one salon space open at the Bella Studio Salons North Pointe Center 2803 N. Lorraine Excellent Location, lots of parking. For more information call 620-662 -7152
Professional office space centrally located, interested phone 620-663-4000, Monday thru Friday, 8:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M.. Ask for Michelle or Tim
BUHLER: 311 S Wall, 2 bedroom, 1 bath. $500/$500 Call-620-664-7221 New 2 bedroom, 2 bath, all brick 2 car garage Duplex On W-29th, $1100.00 mo. Yard care included ………………………….. All brick 3 bed room Country living on West 43rd $825.00 per mo. ……………………… 3 bedroom. 1 ½ bath $725.00 mo. Would sell on land contract. All available July 1 Call 620 663-9539 ext. 209
Small 2 bedroom, 1 bath house, with big fenced in yard, in quiet neighborhood, NO Pets/Smoking, Need references, $500, 620-665-4040
Homes
Stunning ranch, #2 Fairway in the Highlands. Built in 2001 on two lots, 3,370 sf., 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, 620-899-5640. 1 Sunset Dr. 3 bedroom, 1 bath, Hardwood floors, Remodeled Bathroom, New Paint, Sprinklers on Well, New Carpet, New Gutters, Roof in 2011, Water Heater 2010, Wiley Schools, Corner Lot, Must See! Call 620-899-6593 for viewing. Will reciprocate with buyers agent. $78,000 1400 W 29th Ave, Brick, 2 bedroom, 2 bath Towne Home, Open floor plan with upgrades, 4 1/2 years old, 1 owner, $159,000. Can view photos on zillow.com or call 620-259-7597
2801 N Halstead St, Hutchinson 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath. One Story Bungalow. 1460 square feet. Partial Basement. Family room, living and dining room, laundry room. New carpet and roof December 2012, $87,500 call Kim (620)200-1098
900
508 Prairie Park Ln, Buhler 5 Bedroom. 3+ Bath. Built in 2007 in the Prairie Park development. 2800 square feet, custom cabinets, stainless steel appliances, gas fireplace, close to city park and pool. 229,000 (620) 899-1850
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ADD PIZZAZZ TO YOUR CLASSIFIED AD! Use Our Ding Bat Options: ¬(lª¨©«_*ê (many more to choose from)
Ask your Classified Advisor for details. 694 -5704 / 800-766-5704 uvuvuvuvu
USD 440 Halstead/Bentley Vocational Carpentry Program has a completed house that is available for purchase. House is built on site at school and buyer will be responsible to move and to build foundation. Flooring and HVAC is installed after the house is moved. For more information, please contact Tom Alstrom, Superintendent at 316/835-2641
Mobile Homes
851
523 N. Star, Clean 2 bedroom, Central h/a, Need references. No pets. $450/$400. 620-899-9381 3601 N. Halstead St. four bedroom, lease $1500/deposit $1000, plus bills, No amimals/smoking 620-665-5215
900
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831 Offices For Rent
2 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath, Nice Home in Nice Area, $1800 rent, (719) 529-0333
900 Homes
SELL YOUR STUFF FOR FREE ON...
Storage for Rent
1002B. E. 23rd, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, basement, no pets, $700/$700. 620-960-3624
Apartments - Furn. 820
831 Homes
3121 Belmont, Apt B, 1 Bedroom, Central H&A, $325/325, 620-474-0745
408 1/2 W 13th, 1 bedroom, 1 bath, $385 rent, 719-529-0333
740 Apartments - Unfurn.821
2005 KZ-Durango 5th Wheel, 27.5ft., Rear Kitchen, 2 Slides, Well Equipped, All Season, Large Storage Bay, Rear Hitch, $14,500, 620-474-9135
3117 Belmont, Apt D, 2 bedroom, central h/a, $425/425 620-474-0745
Duplexes
710
2000 GMC Sonoma, 4 cylinder, automatic, $2,500. 620-663-8906
694 -5704 800 -766 -5704
Custom hay hauling crew. We can pick up small square bales & stack them in your barn. Deweze Hay Monster, 620-286-9444
Domestic Trucks
Ask Your Classified Advisor for details.
30’ Hart Carter pickup reel, complete set of new fingers for R Series gleaner, $2000 785-731-6032
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740 Apartments - Unfurn.821 Homes - Unfurn.
2011 Tracer Ultra Lite by Prime Time, Model 195 Micro, 19’ self contained, never used, many extras, mini van towable, 620-669-9350
GMC Yukon Denali, 2007 one-owner, fully-loaded: electric running boards, DVD/navigation, sunroof, 139K miles, white, Bridgestone tires. Call 620-727-4900.
Use our bold options to bring more attention to your classified ad.
Build pasture fences, clear pastures, custom brush mowing, Veteran Owned & Operated, Fischer Bobcat Service, 620-770-9280
All FREE ads must be placed on-line at hutchads.com or there will be a $5 setup fee. No business accounts. Private Party Only.
700 SUVs
THE BOLDER THE BETTER!
2007 635 Hydra Flex, Low Acreage, $26,500, Would Trade For Good 925 or 930 Rigid Head, 785-452-5685 or 785-227-2578
The New On-Line Classified Site! It’s Fast, It’s Easy & It’s Convenient!
uvuvuvuvuv
Domestic Auto
JOHN DEER 643 Cornhead, in excellent condition, 620-672-8471
630
SELL YOUR STUFF FOR FREE ON...
Ask your Classified Advisor for details. 694-5704 / 800-766-5704
JD hydroflex 630 flexhead, reconditioned, field ready, $18,000, Lindsborg, KS, Delivery available, 785-452-19967
Farm Services
700 RVs/Campers
3313 Dartmouth 4 bedroom, 2 bath, Beautiful, recently remodeled home in great neighborhood. New kitchen, stainless steel appliances, tile and new carpet throughout. Huge multi purpose building in the back for extra storage, parking, or man cave. Energy efficient, move-in ready. More photos available at 3313dartmouth.com $174,900 (620) 200-6011
H H H H H Every open house at your fingertips. www.hutchareahomes.com
H H H H H Fair Housing Act Sale and Rental of Housing: No one may take any of the following actions based on race, color, national origin, religion, sex, familial status or handicap.
PATIO HOME 1420 Woodbridge Court, 2 bedrooms, 2 bath $135,000. 620-664-2210 PROPERTY FOR SALE
you finance or possible land contract, 721 W 6th, 2 bedroom, $37,000; 708 W 6th 2 bedroom, basement, central heat/air, $38,000 620-664-1758
910
Rent to own, 3 Bedroom, 1 Bath. Mobile homes fixer uppers. $300.00 per month 620-662-4965
Lots/Tracts
931
Highlands lots, buy one at 80% discount, (example $10,000 for $2000). 253-250-5042
Hutchinson KS. Very large residential lot, close to mall backs up to water, owner finance, only $100/mo. for only 60 months 620-532-1093
Editing All ads are subject to the approval of this paper, which reserves the right to edit, reject or properly classify any ad.
Please check your ad. Please read your ad on the first day. The News accepts responsibility for the first incorrect insertion and then only the extent of a corrected insertion or refund of the price paid.
694-5704
or outside Hutchinson
1-800-766-5704