Lawrence Journal-World 04-10-2016

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Census: Kansas population continues to shift

CALL OF THE

WILD

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Estimates: More people moving from rural areas into urban centers By Peter Hancock Twitter: @LJWpqhancock

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo

BAKER UNIVERSITY FIFTH-YEAR SENIOR MIKE STURM, BALDWIN CITY, STEADIES A SCOPE as he looks across a pool of water to spot a nest of shore birds during a Baker biology class trip with Scott Kimball, assistant professor of biology, back left, March 31 at the Baker Wetlands. The class, which has taken several trips to the Baker Wetlands throughout the semester, spent part of the morning observing various bird species and their nests at the wetlands. TOP PHOTO: Some waterfowl take off in flight at the wetlands.

Expanded Baker Wetlands a resource for wildlife, nature lovers By Elvyn Jones Twitter: @ElvynJ

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oud bullfrogs greeted Scott Kimball’s Baker University ornithology class on a recent morning at a Baker Wetlands viewing site. It was a good sign the

frogs were singing so loudly early in the morning in the marsh to the north of the viewing lot, Kimball said. They would soon be laying eggs, which would provide food for the growing number and diversity of birds living or visiting the wetlands.

It wasn’t at the frogs’ marsh that Kimball and six students trained their binoculars and three scopes, but at the pool of open water to the south. Soon, Kimball started pointing out and naming species for his students and explaining the differences between divers

and dapples and challenging them to identify a bird among the ducks. “That one is not a duck. What is it? That’s what you’re going to have to figure out,” he said before identifying the bird as a coot.

The state of Kansas has become significantly more urban in the last five years as the Kansas City and Lawrence metropolitan areas gained large numbers of new residents, mostly at the expense of smaller rural communities, according to the most recent U.S. Census Bureau estimates. From 2010 through 2015, those estimates show, the population of Kansas grew 2.1 percent, about half the rate of the United States as a whole, which grew 4.1 percent. But nearly all of that growth in Kansas can be attributed to just three counties — Johnson, Wyandotte and Douglas — which grew by a combined 4.9 percent. That accounted for 84 percent of all the net growth in the state over the five-year period.

Please see WETLANDS, page 7A

Please see CENSUS, page 6A

EPA cites no health violations in Lawrence’s water supply Utilities department working on quality report By Nikki Wentling Twitter: @nikkiwentling

During the drinking water crisis in Flint, Mich., USA Today found there were nearly 2,000 other water systems in the United States that tested for excessive levels of lead, and The Associated Press is reporting 18 water systems

in Kansas have exceeded the federal standard of lead levels. The city of Lawrence has remained off those lists. According to the Environmental Protection Agency’s Safe Drinking Water Information System, Lawrence hasn’t had a health-based violation at least in the past 10 years.

Arts&Entertainment 1D-6D Classified 1E-8E Deaths 2A Events listings 2C, 1D-3D

Low: 47

Today’s forecast, page 6C

Horoscope Opinion Puzzles Sports

18 water systems in Kansas show high lead samples Wichita (ap) — About 18 private and government water systems in mostly small towns or rural areas in Kansas have had reported lead levels in their water samples exceeding federal limits, according to Environmental Protection Agency records examined by The Associated Press. Please see LEAD, page 5A

Please see WATER, page 5A

INSIDE

Warm; a storm

High: 80

The city’s utilities department is arranging a presentation to the City Commission on Lawrence’s water quality, said Jeanette Klamm, a management analyst with the department. It will outline current lead-control practices and planned, future initiatives for keeping Lawrence’s water free

of contaminants. Klamm explained that in the water systems where lead is found, lead is leached from city or privately-owned pipes after it’s been treated. As is required of all water treatment plants, Lawrence adds chemical phosphates that coat the inside of pipes, protecting the water.

Great debaters

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Vol.158/No.101 40 pages

Meet two Kansas University students who went on a historic run last week at the National Debate Tournament. Page 3A

Join us at Facebook.com/LJWorld and Twitter.com/LJWorld

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Sunday, April 10, 2016

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

DEATHS BARBARA JEAN GRAMMER Graveside services for Barbara Jean Hiddleston Grammer, 75, Lawrence, will be 12:15 at Pleasant Hill Cemetery in south Lawrence. A visitation will be from 11 to noon at Rumsey­Yost Funeral Home. She died Wednesday April 6, 2016, at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Barbara was born March 18, 1941, in Pittsburg, KS, the daughter of Ralph and Dorothy Beard Hiddleston. She graduated from Vinland High School. She was a teacher’s aid at Woodlawn School, Data Clerk and Research assistant at KU and had a day care in her home for over 30 years. Barbara married Samuel F. “Fred” Grammer, June 6, 1959. He survives of the home.

Other survivors include Holly Siler, Lawrence, Larry Grammer, Ottawa; grandchildren Brandon Siler, Lawrence, Crista and Dreya Grammer, Ottawa; brother Bob Hiddleston, Lawrence; two sisters Sharon Bunce, Lecompton, Isse Bergstrom, Perry. She was preceded in death by her parents and an infant daughter in 1960 The family suggests contributions memorial made to the Barbara J. Grammer Memorial Fund, sent in care of the funeral home, 601 Indiana St. Lawrence, KS 66044. Online condolences sent at Rumsey­yost.com Please sign this guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.

JOHN F. ROONEY John F. Rooney passed away at the age of 78 on Saturday, April 2, 2016 at his home surrounded by family. John was born in Albany, NY on July 16, 1937. He was preceded in death by his parents; Jack Rooney & Evelyn Erdman, sister, Patricia Statile and ex­wife Carol Rooney. Survivors of the home include wife of 39 years, Mary B. Rooney. His children with Carol include, Lori Rooney of Lewisville, TX, Kathy Gobelet and husband Danny of Burns, WY and Christy Rooney Philips and husband Scott of Lewisville, TX. John and Mary’s children include, Lisa Rooney of Lawrence, KS, John M. Rooney and wife Trish of Shawnee Mission, KS, Patrick Rooney and wife Amy of Lawrence, KS and Sarah Adler and husband Benjamin of Eudora, KS.

John cherished all 17 of his grandchildren and 7 great­ grandchildren. John was proud of his dedication and commitment to Lawrence High School, staff and students whom he spoke about often. He retired in 2003 after 16 years of service, at which he achieved multiple and consecutive years of perfect attendance. John loved classic cars and trucks, watching WWE, UFC, sci­fi shows and movies. He also didn’t miss a Kansas Jayhawks basketball game on the TV. In honoring his wishes there will not be a service. In lieu of flowers, please send donations to, Visiting Nurses Hospice at: www.kansasvna.org Please sign this guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.

DR. REV. ROBERT G. MILLER Dr. Rev. Robert G. Miller passed into a place of peace on Friday April 1, 2016. Bob will be missed by his lovely bride Shirley (Dahlene VanGaasbeek), his daughters Beth (Miller) Newman, Judy (Miller) Best, Melanie (VanGaasbeek) McReynolds and Diane (VanGaasbeek) Lambie, his 10 grandchildren, 7 great­grandchildren, extended family, friends, students and faculty members who remember him with fondness and admiration. Bob was born 1934 to Jesse Edward and Marie Reese Miller of Elida, OH where he met his first wife (Carol McElderry). While in Methodist Theological School in Ohio (MTSO) he and his class­mates stood in the front row for Dr. King’s “I Have a Dream” speech. It was a turning point in his life. Bob earned his Masters in Sociology at University of Chicago. In 1971 he accepted a position at Baker University in Baldwin City, KS later returning to Chicago to receive his PhD (1974). He delighted in submerging himself in cultural diversity wherever he went. He shared this passion with his students at Baker University for over 30 years. Mentoring students became one of his greatest joys. After Carol passed in

1980 he met the second love of his life – Shirley In 1981. Bob and Shirley were blessed to travel the world for most of their time together including teaching assignments in Taiwan and England. They also traveled the state of Kansas as District Governor of the Lions Club. A celebration of his life will be held at the First United Methodist Church in Baldwin City, KS (11am Saturday May 21, 2016). Condolences may be sent to Mt. Moriah, Newcomer and Freeman Funeral Home, c/o Family of Dr. Rev. Robert G. Miller, 10507 Holmes Road, Kansas City, MO 64131 (extended bio at www.mtmoriah­ freeman.com or www.facebook.com/DrRo bertGMiller). In lieu of flowers, donations may be made in Dr. Miller’s name to Baker University. this Please sign guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.

JAMES VARDIMAN "JIM" OWENS A memorial celebration for James Vardiman Owens will be held at Plymouth Congregational Church at 11:00 on April 15th. Jim died on March 7th at the Pioneer Ridge Assisted Living facility. He was 100 years old. Jim Owens was born on November 4, 1915 to Sam and Effie Owens in Richland, a town 15 miles southwest of Lawrence that now lies beneath Clinton Lake. He spent most of his youth in Salina. Jim received an undergraduate degree from the University of Kansas in 1937 and a master’s degree in business from the University of Iowa in 1939. While attending KU, James Naismith was his instructor for a health class, during Dr. Naismith’s final year of teaching. It was also at KU that he met Laura Humphrey of Eskridge, and they were married in 1940 in Miami, Florida, where Jim worked for Pan American Airways. He continued his brief career with Pan Am in New York City, before moving to Lawrence in 1945, where he and Laura purchased and operated a florist business at 9th and Massachusetts and a greenhouse at 15th and New York. They eventually relocated Owens’ Flower Shop to its present location at 9th and Indiana. The couple sold the business in 1974. Laura Owens died in 2004, after 63 years of marriage. During a very busy life, Jim served on numerous boards and commissions, and remains the only person to have served as mayor of Lawrence (1964­ 1965), president of the board of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce (1966­1967) and president of the Lawrence Board of Education (1968­1969). He also served on the Lawrence Recreation Commission (1960­1964) and on the Lawrence Human Relations Commission during some turbulent times in the mid to late 1960s. Jim was a member of the Board of Directors of First National Bank of Lawrence for 25 years, Deacon and Moderator at Plymouth Congregational Church, a Lawrence Sesquicentennial Committee member, fundraiser for the Lawrence Arts Center and was a long­time member of the Lawrence Rotary Club.

Jim received many honors during his lifetime, including the Kiwanis Club’s Certificate of Recognition, Sertoma’s Service to Mankind award, Baker University’s Service Award and the Citizen of the Years award from the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce. He was named a Paul Harris Fellow by the Lawrence Rotary Club, and was inducted into the Lawrence Business Hall of Fame. Jim loved to travel, and was fortunate to have been able to visit many parts of this country, and the world. He was a good listener, truly enjoying with conversations everyone he met. He change, embraced including technological change, and was always eager to learn something new. Jim Owens enjoyed life, and will be missed by many. Jim is survived by two children: Martin (Kay) Owens of Lee’s Summit, Missouri and Laura (Bob) Schulte of Kansas City, He is also Missouri. survived by five grandchildren: Kelvin (Andrea) Owens of Springfield, Illinois; Angie (Brett) Gruetzmacher of Brookfield, Wisconsin; Abigail (Bryce) Crady of Westwood Hills, Kansas; Andrew (Meghan) Schulte of Washington, D.C.; Evan (Akiko) Schulte of Komatsu, Japan and seven great­grandchildren. Jim was preceded in death by his daughter, Justine. The family wishes to true express its to the appreciation management and staff of Pioneer Ridge Assisted Living for the support and kindness they showed to Jim. Memorial contributions may be made in Jim’s name to the Lawrence Humane Society and the Alzheimer’s Association sent in care of Rumsey­ Yost Funeral Home. Online condolences sent at rumsey­yost.com this Please sign guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.

MARGARET FLATTERY Margaret (Bunker) Flattery, age 90, of Lawrence, KS passed away peacefully on Fri., April 8, 2016 at Brandon Woods in Lawrence, KS. Visitation will be from 10 to 11 am, and the Funeral will be at 11 am, both on Wed., April 13, at the Edwardsville Christian Church in Edwardsville, KS with burial to follow in the Shawnee Mission Memory Gardens Cemetery in Shawnee, KS. Margaret was born March 6, 1926 on the family farm near Grant City, MO to Dale and Laura Davidson. She was the third of five children and graduated high school in 1943 at Sheridan, MO. Margaret left the farm with her sisters to help the war effort. She built tail section nacelles for B­25 bombers as a riveter at the Fairfax airport in downtown Kansas City. Later she was a bookkeeper for many years at W.R. Grace Seed Company. Margaret married Harly Bunker in 1944 and they took up residence in Bonner Springs, KS. Harley preceded her in death in 1998. She married Robert Flattery in 1970 and continued to live in Bonner Springs. Margaret moved to Brandon Woods, Lawrence, KS upon Robert’s death in 2013 to be near her family. She was a member of the Edwardsville Christian Church, Daughters of the American Revolution and

GRACE ELLEN HASKINS Grace Ellen Haskins, 82, Tonganoxie, Graveside service 11 am Wed, April 13, National Cemetery, Leavenworth, KS. Visitation 9­10 am Quisenberry Funeral Home, Tonganoxie.

LOTTERY SATURDAY’S POWERBALL 14 22 23 41 61 (9) FRIDAY’S MEGA MILLIONS 31 38 52 65 71 (15) SATURDAY’S HOT LOTTO SIZZLER 7 21 26 33 44 (11) SATURDAY’S SUPER KANSAS CASH 12 23 24 27 31 (5) SATURDAY’S KANSAS 2BY2 Red: 3 12; White: 2 17 SATURDAY’S KANSAS PICK 3 (MIDDAY) 4 9 4 SATURDAY’S KANSAS PICK 3 (EVENING) 5 3 2

Journal-World obituary policy:

Amanda Tune and Ethan Hammons, Lawrence, a boy, Friday

For information about running obituaries, call 832-7151. Obituaries run as submitted by funeral homes or the families of the deceased.

CORRECTIONS The Journal-World’s policy is to correct all significant errors that are brought to the editors’ attention, usually in this space. If you believe we Kobach dismisses voter fraud charge have made such an error, Topeka — One of the their 60s, were accused of call 785-832-7154, or email first voter fraud cases casting 2010 general elec- news@ljworld.com. Kansas Secretary of State tion ballots in both Kansas Kris Kobach filed after and Arkansas. Some of the being given prosecutorial counts involved advance authority has been disvoting ballots. missed days before it was Steven Gaedtke pleaded Facebook.com/LJWorld scheduled to go to trial. guilty in December to one Twitter.com/LJWorld The Kansas City Star misdemeanor count and reports the charge against paid the maximum $500 Olathe resident Betty fine. Two other counts Gaedtke was dropped on were dismissed. Friday. A jury trial was Kobach says Steven slated to begin Monday. Gaedtke signed the Gaedtke and her huscouple’s absentee ballots, band, Steven, who are in but his wife had not.

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the Wyandotte County Historical Society. Margaret was preceded in death by her brother Ralph Davidson and sister­in­law Joan Davidson of Sheridan, MO; sister Hazel Haney and brother­in­law Evart Haney of Independence, MO. She is survived by three sons David Bunker (Janis) of Lawrence, KS; Mark Bunker (Debra) of Parker, KS and William Flattery (Mie) of Bossier City LA and a daughter Jane Genett (Louis) of Denver, NC and grandchildren Heather Bunker (Ken Filsinger) of Lawrence, KS; Courtney O’Donnell (Geoff) of Davidson, NC; Matthew Genett (Kristen) of Matthews, NC and Michael Genett (Denise) of Cornelius NC; and seventeen great grandchildren. The family wished to express their gratitude and thank the staff at Woods at Brandon Alvamar and the Douglas County Visiting Nurses Hospice. In lieu of flowers the family suggests memorials in Margaret’s name to the Douglas County Visiting Nurses Association and may be sent in care of the Alden – Harrington Funeral Home 214 Oak St. Bonner Springs, KS 66012 Please sign this guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.

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Lawrence&State

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/local l Sunday, April 10, 2016 l 3A

STORIES OF HOPE

Earl Richardson/Special to the Journal-World

LIBERTY HALL VIDEO STORE MANAGER SARINA GEIST says her daughter, Georgia, encouraged her during her battle against breast cancer.

Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photo

THE KANSAS UNIVERSITY DEBATE TEAM OF FRESHMAN SION BELL, LEFT, AND SOPHOMORE QUARAM ROBINSON won second place in the National Debate Tournament, which had its national championship round Monday night in Binghamton, N.Y.

Liberty Hall store manager ‘pushed through’ treatment

By Katherine Dinsdale Special to the Journal-World

Sarina Geist is used to doing what needs to be done. As a single mom she not only brings home the bacon but also fries it up and washes the pan. “But the cancer diagnosis blindsided me,” she

NATIONAL DEBATE TOURNAMENT

A HISTORIC RUN

says. “Coping with that, continuing to work, and going through the treatment was a new level of doing what I had to do. I remember walking down the hallway at Lawrence Please see HOPE, page 4A

Debaters place 2nd, but rack up string of firsts Transition program for had to really push, special needs students “Wepush.” push, up for review Monday R By Sara Shepherd

Twitter: @saramarieshep

unners-up at the National Debate Tournament. A freshman and a sophomore — neither of them male, and one of them black. Who entered the tournament seeded only 17th. “It’s a phenomenal performance by two phenomenal students who went on a run that is historic,” Kansas University debate coach Scott Harris said. “It’s just kind of amazing.” KU debaters Quaram Robinson and Sion Bell arrived home Tuesday with a hefty traveling

But they pulled one together after realizing they were really on a roll. Just like the NCAA men’s basketball championship bracket, — Quaram Robinson, Kansas University low seeds at the National Debate debater Tournament don’t start out facing other low seeds. Brackets are organized so they face highertrophy, after four days of debate ranking teams first. culminating with Monday night’s “We had to really push, push, championship round in Bingpush,” Robinson said. “When we hamton, N.Y. kept winning we just kept looking Unlike most of the (largely at each other and being like, OK...” white male, senior-class and “...Let’s debate,” Bell said. higher-seeded) competitors Here’s more on Robinson, Bell at the tournament, Robinson and how they pulled off their feat. and Bell didn’t write thank-you Please see DEBATE, page 4A speeches in advance, they said.

trict has operated the program, Project Search, which provides training At its meeting Mon- for students ages 18-21. day, the Lawrence Since the proschool board will gram began in 2011, review a report on the district has partthe district’s pronered with Lawgram to help sperence Memorial cial needs students Hospital and Kansas transition to jobs SCHOOLS University to offer after high school. work experience. For the past five years, Please see PROGRAM, page 4A the Lawrence school dis-

By Rochelle Valverde

Twitter: @RochelleVerde

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Sunday, April 10, 2016

Hope

Stories of Hope

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

Memorial Hospital, reading the stories of survivors. One of them was about a woman diagnosed with cancer while pregnant with twins. “‘Wow,’” Geist says she thought. “‘At least I’m not pregnant with twins.” She found inspiration in that hallway. “I knew I had to get through to the other side of this situation. I knew I had to push through. I learned to ask for help and, sometimes, I waved the white flag.” Geist manages the video store at Liberty Hall, 646 Massachusetts St., and had been in that job about two years when one morning while getting dressed she happened to brush against a lump on her breast. She knew immediately it needed to be examined. The nurse practitioner she saw suggested she watch it a month. A month later, there was no change. Geist went to Health Care Access and was immediately referred to LMH South for a mammogram, which was provided through a Kansas Department of Health program, Early Detection Works. After the mammogram confirmed a mass in her breast, she underwent a biopsy. Three days later, at age 32, with no family history of breast cancer, Geist was diagnosed with stage 2 breast cancer. “I remember making a decision to just suck it up and do what I needed to do,” Geist says. She began chemotherapy in late August 2013. The tumor responded well to treatment and, by the end of the year, she was through with chemo. That New Year’s Eve, Geist was so wrung out

LAWRENCE • STATE

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This profile provided by the Lawrence Memorial Hospital Endowment Association is one in a series of 12 about area cancer heroes. These survivors’ stories and photographs hang in the hallway leading to the LMH Oncology Center, offering hope to patients being cared for at LMH Oncology and their families. For more in the series, visit WellCommons.com.

You can get to the other side of this. Treatment does end.” — Sarina Geist, cancer survivor

from the treatment that she could barely move, she says. “But I was sure partying in my head.” Soon she was ready for the next step in treatment, a lumpectomy. That was followed by 16 weeks of radiation. She finished treatment in April 2014. The fact that Geist is so young and that she is a single mom without extended family made going through such rigorous treatment extremely challenging, but a few helpers made all the difference. The most important helper and encourager was Geist’s daughter, Georgia, who’s now 14. “She’s actually an angel, with a very good head on her shoulders,” Geist says. “She was always very compassionate and caring, but during my treatment she found something inside herself that helped her go way above and beyond in helping me get through

this. We worked together, and she made sure I was OK.” Geist also found help from a six-week program at LMH for children with family members undergoing cancer treatment. Named in honor of Michelle Raney — who died in 2006 after battling cancer — CLIMB-ing With Michelle (the acronym stands for “Children’s Lives Include Moments of Bravery”) provides children ages 6 to 11 with a wide range of emotional help and age-appropriate information, as well as time with peers who are on similar journeys. CLIMB offered Georgia “time to be a kid,” Geist says, and although she was one of the older kids participating at the time, she enjoyed hanging out with the group and doing crafts once a week for a couple of months. Geist sometimes needed help with everyday activities, including making meals for herself and Georgia, going to the grocery store and driving to appointments. “My friends and coworkers all helped. I don’t know what I would do without them,” she recalls. Geist still attends meetings of the Young Survival Coalition, and she has advice for others starting the journey through cancer treatment. “You can get to the other side of this. Treatment does end,” she says. “For a while the cancer was all I thought about. I worried every day, but there comes a time when you put it behind you.” Geist and her daughter are glad to be moving on. “Georgia’s just doing great,” her mom says. “I don’t know if she’d be the same kid if we hadn’t gone through this. An experience like this has to change you for the better. It’s the only option, really.”

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Debate

How often they travel to tournaments: Two (sometimes more) weekends a month, coast CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A to coast. The competitive debate season lasts About Robinson: nearly the entire school Sophomore from Round year. Rock, Texas, majoring Who beat them in the in African-American National Debate Tourstudies. After graduation, nament championship: Robinson hopes to attend Harvard University. graduate school, either Who they beat to for African-American reach the championship: studies or law school. Teams from University About Bell: Freshman of Southern California, from Laurel, Md., major- George Mason Uniing in anthropology. Bell versity, University of hopes to eventually get California-Berkeley, a doctorate in biological Wake Forest Univeranthropology and work sity, Trinity University, for someplace like the Northwestern UniversiSmithsonian. ty, Emory University and This year’s debate University of Michigan. topic (or “resolution”): Milestone achieveThe United States should ments: Since National significantly reduce its Debate Tournament military presence in one rankings began in 1973, or more of the following: Robinson-Bell is the first the Arab states of the team not seeded in the Persian Gulf, the Greater top 16 to compete in a Horn of Africa, Northchampionship round, east Asia. according to KU. They Robinson-Bell’s deare only the second bate style: “You could team of two non-males call us critical debaters,” to debate in the final Robinson said, runround. And Robinson is ning arguments based the first black woman to in the literary field of ever compete in the final afro-pessimism. No, it’s round. They were the not what you would call sixth KU team to reach traditional. the championship debate.

What they think about that: “Wow,” said Bell, adding “awe” at partner Robinson being the first black woman in the championship. Robinson said she didn’t have much time to dwell on that midtournament, but it hit her afterward when she heard from younger black women on the high school debate circuit. “Their reactions sort of shaped mine,” she said. “It was awesome to feel like I carved a path.” On whether they’re staying together next year: Probably. That is, as long as both of them decide to debate again next year — and both are still weighing that. Whether they like next year’s topic, yet to be announced, will be a factor. So will their class schedules. Competitive debate is intense, and weekend travel makes it difficult to pull off any Monday or Friday classes. Plus, they said, it’s going to be hard to top what they achieved this year.

Program

Places. The property is part of the Pinckney Elementary School grounds and is owned by the district. The school board will meet at 7 p.m. Monday at the district offices, 110 McDonald Drive.

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

Both LMH and KU have a Project Search instructor and two job coaches to provide transition services. As part of the program, students complete internships in different settings to gain work experience. The goal of Project Search is to help special needs students learn vocational and daily-life skills so that they can live independently, and the report will summarize and evaluate the program. Kevin Har-

rell, director of student services, and Lori Stithem, assistant director of special education, will present the report to the board. In other business, the board will: l Meet in executive session to discuss negotiations regarding a property acquisition. l Review a report on student transportation services. The district’s five-year contract with First Student expires at the end of the school year, and a cost analysis has been conducted. l Review a request to designate a portion of Clinton Park on the Lawrence Register of Historic

— KU and higher ed reporter Sara Shepherd can be reached at sshepherd@ljworld.com or 832-7187.

— K-12 education reporter Rochelle Valverde can be reached at rvalverde@ ljworld.com or 832-6314.


LAWRENCE • STATE

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Lead CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

Those agencies are among the nearly 1,400 water systems serving 3.7 million Americans that have violated the federal lead standard at least once since Jan. 1, 2013, and are listed on the EPA’s Safe Drinking Water Information System. In Valley Center, a community of 5,654 people just north of Wichita, water testing in August showed three samples with lead exceeding the 15 parts per billion federal threshold, triggering notifications to customers. The samples ranged from a low of 19 parts per billion to 43 parts per billion, said Brent Holper, the city’s public works director. “We are trying to identify our problem areas,” Holper said, adding the city is doing additional testing in conjunction with state regulators to find out if there is a deeper problem. The city still has some lead “goosenecks,” the apparatus that connects the main lines to service lines, but also quite a few older homes, he said. Some of the high lead levels were found in homes that were not

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Kansas water systems with high lead level samples Here are the 18 Kansas water systems with lead level samples that have exceeded the 15 parts per billion (ppb) federal standard: • City of Morrill: Samples over limit since 2010: 3; highest 24 ppb • City of Ford: Samples over limit since 2010: 1; highest 22 ppb • City of Downs: Samples over limit since 2010 1; highest 38 ppb connected to those lead goosenecks, he said. Several water system operators in Kansas contacted by AP say the contamination showing up in their test samples is coming from lead pipes or other lead sources in older homes, not from their own distribution systems which use plastic pipes. “It’s a bit of a sore subject with me,” said Frank Parker, manager of the Sedgwick County Rural Water System No. 3 near Mulvane, which serves a rural population of about 5,290 people. On Feb. 26, the system sent out a letter to customers informing them that of the 20 samples collected for testing last summer, three exceeded

• Wheatland High School in Grainfield. Samples over limit since 2010: 2; highest 27.3 ppb • M and M Mobile Home Court in Chapman. Samples over limit since 2010: 2; highest 17.4 ppb • City of Schoenchen. Samples over limit since 2010: 2; highest 59.8 ppb • City of Holyrood. Samples over limit since 2010: 2; highest 24.8 ppb • Geary County Water the acceptable level for lead of 15 parts per billion. A few days after that letter was mailed, the results from another round of testing showed no violations of lead levels, Parker said. But because of state and federal regulations, he will now have to take 80 samples this year alone to monitor the situation, he said. “It is really not the water providers,” Parker said. “It’s what happens when it gets inside the home.” Jim Lloyd, who owns a small water system serving 176 people in Great Bend, blamed a leadtainted sample taken a few months ago from a water hydrant outside a home that he specu-

District 2. Samples over limit since 2010: 2; highest 38 ppb • Sundowner West Mobile Home Park in Salina. Samples over limit since 2010: 2; highest 647.2 ppb • Barton Hills Addition in Great Bend. Samples over limit since 2010: 1; highest 170.4 ppb • Country View Mobile Home Park in Hays. Samples over limit since 2010: 1; highest 20 ppb

• Norton County Rural Water District 1. Samples over limit since 2010: 1; highest 15.6 ppb • City of Speed. Samples over limit since 2010: 1; highest 20.6 ppb • City of South Hutchinson. Samples over limit since 2010: 1; highest 20.7 ppb • Reno County Rural Water District 3. Samples over limit since 2010: 1; highest 15.6 ppb

lates may have had a lead washer in it. When he resampled it inside the home, the result came back at a low 1.1 parts per billion, he said. Other systems’ officials were baffled as to why they showed up on the EPA list. In South Hutchinson, City Administrator Matt Stiles said that they have not had any high lead samples, notwithstanding the fact the city showed up on the EPA’s list when one sample tested of 20.7 parts per billion. Wheatland High School in the northwest Kansas town of Grainfield also disputed EPA listing, blaming its high sample on a miscalculation by state regulators.

• Sedgwick County Rural Water District 3. Samples over limit since 2010: 1; highest 19 ppb • City of Valley Center. Samples over limit since 2010: 1; highest 19 ppb • City of Wallace. Samples over limit since 2010: 1; highest 37.5 ppb — Source: The Environmental Protection Agency’s Safe Drinking Water Information System

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Those phosphates were found to be missing from Flint’s water. In the 1980s, when the U.S. passed laws banning the use of lead piping, Lawrence started a program through which it sought out lead service lines and replaced them, Klamm said. Service lines connect the water mains in the street to the meter. That program lasted for 10 years. During some of that time, it was still legal to use lead in soldering connections in the pipes. Klamm said she was unsure how many pipes were removed during that program. She said there has been some sampling done since the Flint crisis to find any remaining service lines that contained lead. In the U.S. communities where testing has shown elevated levels of lead, the contamination could be coming from homes that have lead content in their pipes or faucets, which are the

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RYAN RUBOW TAKES SAMPLES FROM THE VARIOUS TANKS at the Kaw River Water Treatment Plant on April 10, 2013. Lawrence hasn’t had a health-based violation at least in the past 10 years, according to the Environmental Protection Agency’s Safe Drinking Water Information System homeowners’ responsibility. In accordance with the Safe Drinking Water Act, Lawrence tests for lead and copper content in water directly from residents’ taps. A majority of Law-

rence’s water comes from the Kansas River and Clinton Reservoir, and a small amount is pulled from underground wells. The utilities department plans to distribute information to promote

awareness for water quality after its presentation to the City Commission later this month. — City Hall reporter Nikki Wentling can be reached at 832-7144 or nwentling@ljworld.com.

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Census CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

In Sedgwick County, the state’s second largest urban area, the population grew at a slower 2.7 percent rate, but that still added up to more than 13,000 new residents, or nearly 23 percent of the state’s total net growth. “I think this is not only Kansas, but probably nationwide,” said Steven Maynard-Moody, director of the Institute for Policy and Social Research at Kansas University. “Clearly the labor market has shifted to more urban- and suburbantype employment,” he said. “In Kansas, I suspect that’s primarily in service and technology areas. I guess there’s remaining some manufacturing, but there hasn’t been a big growth in manufacturing jobs.”

Kansas City housing market Johnson County had the single largest increase in population, according to the Census Bureau, adding nearly 36,000 new residents over five years, or 6.6 percent of its 2010 population. That has been reflected in a revival of the housing market throughout the Kansas City metropolitan area, which suffered substantially when the housing market bubble of the early 2000s burst in 2008. According to the Home Builders Association of Greater Kansas City, new home construction in the eight-county area around Kansas City grew 10 percent in 2015, and activity during the first two months of this year points toward continued growth. In Johnson County alone, permits were issued for construction of 302 new housing units during January and February, including both single-family and multifamily units. But Katie Walkley of the Home Builders Association of Greater Kansas City, said it’s still too early to say Johnson County is in the midst of another housing “boom.” “I wouldn’t say that we’ve reached that point yet,” she said. “Compared to the Missouri side, I wouldn’t say Johnson County is quite as recovered as it could be, but it’s definitely the best it’s been since the bust.” Rural decline That urban growth, however, came at the expense of many smaller rural communities, including Montgomery County in southeast Kansas, which lost 2,157 people since the 2010 census, or 6.1 percent of its population. Montgomery County, which had 35,471 people as of the 2010 census, is one of 14 Kansas coun-

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is the need for affordable housing, a perennial challenge in rural areas where the cost of building a new home often exceeds its 5 market value. But Knight said the 4 community tackled that 1 issue head-on with ad3 ditional public investment, taking advantage of state programs like Rural Housing Incentive Districts and the Neighborhood Redevelopment Act to finance construction of 9 10 affordable housing. Still, Ford County faces 2 another, even bigger challenge that could affect its prospects for continued growth: the decreasing 8 6 7 supply of water from the underground Ogallala Aquifer. Gary Johnson, president of the Dodge City Area Chamber of ComTop 5 population gains, 2010-15 Top 5 population losses, 2010-15 merce, said that’s the biggest worry in Ford 1) Johnson County: 35,980, 6.6% 6) Montgomery County: -2,157, -6.1% County because water is 2) Sedgwick County: 13,209, 2.7% 7) Cherokee County: -1,070, -5.0% the key to sustaining the farming and meat-pack3) Douglas County: 7,227, 6.5% 8) Labette County: -804, -3.7% ing industries, which still 4) Wyandotte County: 5,864, 3.7% 9) Reno County: -793, -1.2% account for much of the area’s economic base. 5) Riley County: 4,132, 5.8% 10) Allen County: -654, -4.9% “Needless to say, if we don’t raise the crops, and Kansas total estimated population gain: 58,523, 2.1% — Source: US Census Bureau you’ve got to ship them in from the Corn Belt to feed cattle, it’s just a big soon, a new water park. issue,” he said. “Nobody One of the things to think about is, at what point do rural comAnd more recently, really knows the answer.” munities no longer become sustainable places, especially for young Dodge City was chosen families. For instance, when you don’t have schools, when you don’t as one of four sites to Political implications have medical facilities, when you don’t have some basic services, Although population host a state-owned and operated casino, the Boot growth in Kansas has even if you like the rural lifestyle, it becomes relatively untenable.” Hill Casino and Resort, been slower than the nawhich has brought addi- tional average, it has been — Steven Maynard-Moody, director of the Institute for Policy and Social Research at Kansas University tional jobs, and additional steady enough so far to tourism-related revenue ensure that Kansas will continue to have four to the area. districts ties that lost 5 percent since then, he said, fed the key has been that Knight said those pub- congressional or more of its popula- into the decision last community’s ability to lic investments, especial- after the next decennial tion over the ensuing five fall to close the commu- diversify its economy be- ly in the “quality of life” census in 2020. Using the Census Buyears. nity hospital in Indepen- yond the agriculture and projects, have been the Andy Taylor, who dence, taking out another beef-packing industries key to economic develop- reau’s priority-based forpublishes the Montgom- 190 jobs. that have been its tradi- ment in any small com- mula, if congressional seats were apportioned ery County Chronicle, a munity. “Those are 190 fami- tional base. weekly newspaper based lies, and they’re good“We have wind energy “When you look at the today using the 2015 popin Independence, said paying positions: doctors, now. We have four wind economy across Kansas, ulation estimates, Kansas’ that area has had diffi- physicians, radiologists, farms, and we actually the two main factors that fourth seat would be the culty keeping residents, lab techs and nurses,” he have two more getting play in economic develop- 388th seat apportioned even among those who said. “They’re gone, and ready to start construc- ment are four-year univer- in the 435-member U.S. still work in the area. that’s going to be tough tion,” she said. “We’ve sities and four-lane high- House. But KU’s Maynard“I hear it at school to replace.” had two transmission line ways,” she said. “We are board meetings, of all Maynard-Moody said projects that have gone in the only quadrant of the Moody said the continuplaces, when the school that trend has long-term to take the energy from state that does not have ei- ing shift in population board talks about en- implications, both so- Spearville, Kan., up to ther. And so the hurdle to toward the two major urrollment especially,” he cially and politically, for Nebraska, and on over to overcome that is the fact ban centers around Kansaid. “People are more Kansas. Wichita as well.” that we had to say, ‘We’ve sas City and Wichita will mobile than they’ve ever That has also helped got to do this.’ If we’re make the state’s congres“One of the things to been, and they’re willing think about is, at what spur growth in other aren’t willing to invest in sional district map much to drive 30 or 40 miles point do rural commu- parts of the economy, ourselves, why would we different than it is today. to a job in Montgomery nities no longer become including small manufac- expect anybody to?” “We may end up with County, and then get back sustainable places, es- turing, she said. Going forward, howev- two congressional disin their car and drive to pecially for young fami“I’ve been doing eco- er, Dodge City still faces tricts sort of tightly Oklahoma or Parsons or lies,” he said. “For in- nomic development here a number of challenges. wrapped around the Pittsburg and live over stance, when you don’t for 25 years, and in the According to the cen- Kansas City metropolithere.” have schools, when you last five years I think sus estimates, much of tan area,” he said. “And Taylor attributes part don’t have medical fa- we’ve probably had more its population growth there’s got to be one huge expan- has been natural. Its birth one, I don’t know, maybe of the recent decline to cilities, when you don’t manufacturing the 2007 flood in Cof- have some basic services, sions than we did in the rate far exceeds the death from Topeka, west. “ feyville, which damaged even if you like the rural prior 20,” she said. And as that trend torate. But another maBut Knight said that jor source of population ward more urban concenan oil refinery, causing lifestyle, it becomes relagrowth wouldn’t have growth has been interna- tration continues nationwidespread contamina- tively untenable.” been possible if it hadn’t tional migration into the wide, Maynard-Moody tion and wiping out many been for some large pub- area, primarily for low- said, it is likely to have a homes that once stood in Dodge City bucks the lic investments that have paying jobs in the meat- profound impact on U.S. the Verdigris River val- trend Across the state in made Dodge City a more packing industry. ley. politics across the board. But the area has also southwest Kansas, Ford attractive place to live, “We talk a lot about red In the Dodge City suffered other economic County is a community especially for young fam- school district, where states and blue states, but setbacks, starting with that has so far bucked the ilies. more than 20 different in some ways, the sort of In 1997, voters there ap- languages are spoken, 82 culturally urban vs. culthe 1994 departure of the trend of rural decline. Similar in size to Mont- proved a half-cent sales percent of the students turally rural (nature of Arco Pipeline Co., which had been headquartered gomery County, it had tax, known locally as the receive free or reduced- states) may end up being in Independence, and 33,848 people in the 2010 “Why Not Dodge” initia- price meals, according to a little bit more of a definthe more recent decision census, but it has grown 2 tive, that has funded de- the Kansas State Depart- ing characteristic.” velopment of sports parks, ment of Education. by Amazon.com to close percent since then. Joann Knight, who a new civic center that its distribution facility in That kind of populaCoffeyville, eliminating heads the Dodge City- hosts concerts and other tion diversity presents — Statehouse reporter Peter Hancock can be reached at 354-4222 or Ford County Develop- entertainment, a motor several kinds of challengnearly 1,000 local jobs. phancock@ljworld.com. The steady decline ment Corporation, said sports facility and, coming es, not the least of which

Biggest estimated population gains and declines by county

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Wetlands

look at exhibits in the Discovery Center. It was a really good deal. professor Cal Cink will “Sixteen of the 25 studemonstrate bird banddents we had out there ing, scopes will be set said it was the best part up to view birds in the of the visit. Two said it wetlands, canoe trips will was the worst. I’ll take 16 be available, walks schedto 2 any time.” uled to view wildlife from The university plans the wetlands’ trails and a another wetlands-cenvariety of snakes, reptiles tered recruitment event and amphibians will be on April 30 with a BioBlitz. display for the children, Kropf said area high he said. school biology teach“It should be a fun and ers have been invited to education day for children visit the wetlands that and families,” he said. day with their best junior — Elvyn Jones students. They will then break into teams to catalog as many of the organisms living in the wetlands as possible. past because there was no way to count visitors Boyd said the BioBlitz before the center opened. would identify flora, fauBut Boyd does know the na, fungi and even collect number is exceeding samples of bacteria with expectations. petri dishes. “We were estimating The goal is not only to 1,000 visitors,” he said. catalog the diversity of “Numbers were down in wetlands’ life but also reJanuary, but we started having a lot of visitors with the mild weather in February.” That number counts only those who visit the Discovery Center. Boyd said he saw many more visiting the wetlands, some of whom are regular hikers, bikers or viewers. Baker University is adding to the number as it is taking advantage of the wetlands and Discovery Center as recruiting resources. Kevin Kropf, senior director of admissions, said when the university had a high school recruitment day April 2, it bused all 25 visiting juniors and seniors and their parents from the Baldwin City campus to the wetlands. “We have this amazing facility,” he said. “Students need to see this. We had our admissions visit with the students there. They were able to walk the trails, use scopes that were provided to spot birds and

Baker Wetlands Family Fun Day next weekend John McGrew firmly believes young people should get out from in front of TVs and computer screens to enjoy the outdoors. Rather than just preach that message, McGrew has worked to give Lawrence children options for what he call “nature deficit disorder.” He founded and is now chairman of the board of Outside for a Better Inside. McGrew said the organization decided to

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Coots aren’t the only thing getting discovered at the wetlands. Thousands of visitors — more than three times the number projected — have come to the new Baker Wetlands Discovery Center since the center’s opening in September. The number of people discovering that hundreds of acres of man-made wetlands have been built just southwest of 31st and Louisiana streets is growing each day. The growth of the wetlands was made possible through Baker’s agreement with the Kansas Department of Transportation to extend the South Lawrence Trafficway through the school’s wetlands property. In exchange for 58 acres of wetlands KDOT needed along 31st Street, KDOT agreed to develop another 410 acres of new wetlands and provide the $1.5 million to build the Baker University Wetlands Discovery Center. The enlarged wetlands has made the Baker property a greater resource for migrating and native birds. The viewing site on the newly realigned section of County Road 1055 and just south of the South Lawrence Trafficway was a good spot for bird watchers, Kimball said. “It’s an opportunity to see a lot of great birds without going on a big walk,” he said. “Walks are great, too. The trails give great access to the wetlands.” The new wetlands plus the existing wetlands total 927 wetland acres immediately south of Lawrence. The property

Sunday, April 10, 2016

take advantage of the availability of the Baker Wetlands Discovery Center to have its second annual Family Fun Day at the center. The free event will be from 9 a.m. to noon Saturday, April 16, at the Discovery Center, 1365 N. 1250 Road. Roger Boyd, director of natural areas for Baker University, said there are a number of events planned to connect children with nature. Baker emeritus biology

It’s important we use that resource as not a shiny new thing but have a commitment to research. If you’re thinking you want a master’s or Ph.D. in ecology, this is the kind of experience you have to have as an undergraduate.” — Kevin Kropf, senior director of admissions at Baker University is a unique resource for nature lovers because it provides multiple wildlife environments in a relatively small area, Kimball said. “There’s riparian areas along the river, forest, wet meadows, tall-grass prairie, marsh and some swamp,” he said. “We’re going to burn the grass soon. We’re hoping that will bring hawks from all over Kansas to feed. We should see a variety of hawks we don’t typically see in this part of the state.” “We do bimonthly bird counts,” Kimball said. “The number of species have almost doubled. Where we used to see about 40, we now have 70.” Roger Boyd, director of natural areas for Baker University, said there was a number of reasons for the increased number in bird species

and populations beyond the wetlands’ expansion. Improved water quality, the end of most onsite or nearby construction associated with the SLT and the replenishing of pools from the 2011-12 drought years were also factors, he said. There is little doubt, however, birds flocked to the newly opened areas. Kimball said he and others at Baker were amazed to see birds on new pools east of County Route 1055 that filled up rapidly with their completion last fall after a 3-inch rainfall. “The first day they were filled with birds,” he said. Birds are not the only visitors flocking to the wetlands. Boyd said the Discovery Center has had 3,500 visitors since it opened in September. He doesn’t know how that compares with years

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cruit some of the bright, young biology students to Baker and help build the school’s brand in ecology, Kropf said. “Ecology is not the No. 1 interest of many high school students, but for those who do have that interest, the fact we do have that out there and an endowment from the state for continuous research support for the wetlands is a tremendous asset,” he said. “It’s important we use that resource as not a shiny new thing but have a commitment to research. If you’re thinking you want a master’s or Ph.D. in ecology, this is the kind of experience you have to have as an undergraduate.” — County reporter Elvyn Jones can be reached at 832-7166 and ejones@ljworld.com.

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ROADWORK

FRIENDS AND NEIGHBORS

ON THE

street By Sylas May

Read more responses and add your thoughts at LJWorld.com

Do you drink filtered or unfiltered tap water? Asked on Massachusetts Street See story, 1A

Contributed Photo

DOUGLAS COUNTY CHILD ABUSE PREVENTION TASK FORCE MEMBERS AND VOLUNTEERS recently planted blue pinwheels at Lawrence City Hall in honor of Child Abuse Prevention Month. The pinwheels are a symbol of a safe and happy childhood, which all children deserve.

Lawrence: l The westbound lanes of Kansas Highway 10 will be shifted side-by-side next to the eastbound lanes between East 1900 Road and O’Connell Road to build the new westbound lanes, beginning Wednesday morning and lasting through the fall. l A bridge over the Wakarusa River on County Road 1055 just south of Lawrence is closed so repairs started last year can be completed. The bridge, about 1.25 miles south of 31st Street, is expected to remain closed until May 6. l The intersection of Sixth and Walnut streets in North Lawrence will be closed until mid-April,

weather permitting, for installation of a storm sewer main associated with the Maple Street Stormwater Pump Station project. l Michigan Street between Second and Fourth streets is currently restricted to one southbound lane for installation of a waterline. l Vehicle access to the north outlet area at Clinton Dam is restricted beginning at the fisherman’s parking area east of the outlet, until Nov. 1. Access to Mutt Run and the south outlet area will not be affected. l Traffic will be impacted on Randall Road and Cynthia Street south of Harvard Road as city crews work to install

a new waterline. The project will have temporary road closures and is expected to last until July 15. l The curbside northbound lane of Iowa Street between 25th and 27th streets will be closed for a water main repair. Brief closures between 27th and 31st streets are also planned during the project, which is expected to last until mid-June. l The easternmost northbound lane of Iowa Street is closed between 34th Street and North 1250 Road as part of the South Lawrence Trafficway project. The lane will likely remain closed until mid-April. —Staff Reports

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LAWRENCE CITY COMMISSION

Nick Strange, T-shirt maker, Agenda highlights •5:45 p.m. Tuesday • City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets • Lawrence WOW Channel 25 • Meeting documents online at lawrenceks.org “Unfiltered. I grew up on well water, and it never occurred to me that water needed to be filtered.”

5 events seek commissioners’ approval

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The City Commission will be asked to approve permits for five events: two fundraisers at Bullwinkles Bar, the Paw Valley Festival and 5K, the annual Downtown Lawrence Sidewalk Sale and the Kansas Half Marathon and 5K.

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BACKGROUND

Kim Crotchett, retail, Lawrence “Filtered. I use a Brita that goes on over the sink.”

Bullwinkles Bar is planning two fundraisers, one on April 21 to benefit Ballard Community Services and one on April 29 with proceeds going to the Folds of Honor Foundation. The April 21 event was intended to run until 2 a.m., but it was changed to 11 p.m. after the Lawrence Police Department reported there have been “noise issues” between Bullwinkles and

its neighbors. The 2016 Paw Valley Festival and 5K, which benefits the Lawrence Humane Society, is planned for May 7 from 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. at Watson Park and throughout Old West Lawrence. A permit is required to shut down Tennessee Street from Seventh Street to Eighth Street during that time. Downtown Lawrence Inc.’s annual sidewalk

sale is scheduled for July 21 from 5 a.m. to 9 p.m. A permit would give the event exclusive use of the sidewalks along Massachusetts Street from Sixth Street to 11th Street. Finally, commissioners will consider allowing organizers of the Kansas Half Marathon and 5K to close various streets downtown and throughout Lawrence from 6:30 a.m. to noon Nov. 6.

LLC for Sorrentino Investments LLC, property owner of record. • Approve a revised comprehensive plan amendment, CPA-14-00005, to Horizon 2020 Chapter 7: Industrial Land Use and Chapter 14: Specific Plans — K-10 & Farmer’s Turnpike Plan to revise the Future Land Use map. Submitted by B.G. Consultants Inc. Planning Commission recommended denial on June 23, 2014; City Commission returned to Planning Commission on December 8, 2015. The revised comprehensive plan amendment has been reduced in scope, retaining the request to reclassify approximately 13.5 acres from Residential/ Office to Office/Research but removing the request to include adjacent parcels for additional residential land use. Adopt on first reading Joint City Ordinance No. 9220/County Resolution for comprehensive plan amendment (CPA-1400005) to Horizon 2020 Chapter 7: Industrial Land Use and Chapter 14: Specific Plans — K-10 & Farmer’s Turnpike Plan to revise the Future Land Use map. (PC Item 6; approved 8-0 on March 21, 2016) • Accept dedications of easements and rights-of-way associated with final plat PF-15-00239 for The Links at Kansas, 1st Addition, a two-lot residential subdivision containing approximately 51.96 acres, located at 251 Queens Road. Submitted by Blew & Associates PA for Links at

Kansas and Links at Kansas Phase II, property owners of record. • Authorize staff to solicit proposals for the rehabilitation of the elevators in City Hall and include alternate bid pricing for security cameras, card readers, ceiling lighting and wall and floor covering upgrades. • Approve a street event temporary use of public rightof-way permit for the 2016 Paw Valley Festival and 5K on May 7, 2016 from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. • Approve a street event permit for the Kansas Half Marathon and 5K to close various streets downtown and throughout Lawrence from 6:30 a.m. to noon on November 6, 2016 and approve the donation of services from Lawrence-Douglas County Fire Medical and the Lawrence Police Department for this event. • Approve a street event permit for the Downtown Lawrence Inc. annual downtown sidewalk sale on July 21, 2016, from 5 a.m. to 9 p.m. Approve exclusive use of the public sidewalk adjacent to both sides of Massachusetts Street from Sixth Street to 11th Street on July 21, 2016, from 5 a.m. to 9 p.m. Receive public comment of a general nature No regular agenda Discuss future agenda items Discuss commission items Receive city manager’s report

OTHER BUSINESS Proclamations

Olivia Snyder, retail, Lawrence “I have a filter and I also have a bubbler. But when I go back home, I drink tap water, because it’s my childhood.”

Kevin Carder, software trainer, Eudora “Unfiltered, because it doesn’t need to be filtered. We don’t live in Mexico.”

What would your answer be? Go to LJWorld.com/ onthestreet and share it.

• Proclaim the week of April 10-16, 2016 as The Week of the Young Child. • Proclaim the week of April 10-16, 2016 as National Library Week.

Consent agenda

• Approve City Commission meeting minutes from March 29, 2016. • Receive minutes from boards and commissions: Parks and Recreation Advisory Board meeting of March 8, 2016 • Approve all claims. The list of claims will be posted by the Finance Department on Monday prior to the meeting. • Approve licenses as recommended by the city clerk’s office. • Adopt Joint City Resolution No. 7153/County Resolution, amending Resolution 1957 and repealing Joint City Resolution No. 6878/County Resolution No. 10-6, making miscellaneous changes regarding the Lawrence-Douglas County Health Board. • Approve a special event permit, SE-16-00099, for Bullwinkles fundraiser, April 21, 2016, located at 1344 Tennessee St. Submitted by Tom & Pete LLC for Sorrentino Investments LLC, property owner of record. • Approve a special event permit, SE-16-00113, for Bullwinkles fundraiser, April 29, 2016, located at 1344 Tennessee St. Submitted by Tom & Pete

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Opinion

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Sunday, April 10, 2016

EDITORIALS

Irresponsible path There are no good options when it comes to filling the state’s budget hole.

T

o give the state more “flexibility” as it considers how to close its ongoing budget gap, Gov. Sam Brownback announced Friday that he would delay a $92.6 million payment to the Kansas Public Employees Retirement System. Budget Director Shawn Sullivan said it hadn’t been decided whether to use some or all of the KPERS money to address what now is a $30 million revenue shortfall, but the governor wants to keep that option open. Much depends on new revenue estimates that are due out later this month. The situation could get better or worse during the last three months of the fiscal year, but recent history indicates the revenue gap is more likely to widen than to narrow. The KPERS decision is not without some cost to the state, which must pay 8 percent interest on the delayed payment and complete that payment no later than Oct. 1. It’s also not a particularly popular move with current and retired state employees. Officials say the action will have no impact on benefits for current retirees, but it aggravates ongoing concerns about the solvency of KPERS. The KPERS delay was one of several strategies that reportedly were — and may still be — under consideration to address the revenue shortfall, including additional funding “sweeps” from the Kansas Department of Transportation. Sen. Ty Masterson, chairman of the Senate Ways and Means Committee, said last week that taking more money from KDOT might be acceptable. “I think it’s because everybody concedes we have a great transportation system and if you were going to delay something, that’s where you would go,” he said. That probably is true to a point, but the state already has transferred $435 million from transportation funds for this year and nearly $1.2 billion since 2011. KDOT officials say they have been able to continue major construction projects in the state but have had to delay “preservation” work. Those delays may cost the state more over the long run because poorly maintained roads need to be rebuilt or undergo major repairs. Perhaps the least popular budget-balancing idea is to sell the state’s future income from tobacco settlement payments to raise short-term cash. Those payments are supposed to be dedicated to funding children’s programs in the state, but if the state sells all or part of that income on the bond market, it would have to find new sources of funding for children’s programs as well as money to pay off the bonds. None of these budget-balancing options is good, and yet, state officials refuse to reconsider the income tax cuts that have made it impossible for Kansas to fund its budget without mortgaging its future. It’s an unsustainable and irresponsible path that should concern Kansas voters as they go to the polls later this year.

Letters Policy

The Journal-World welcomes letters to the Public Forum. Letters should be 250 words or less, be of public interest and should avoid name-calling and libelous language. The JournalWorld reserves the right to edit letters, as long as viewpoints are not altered. By submitting letters, you grant the JournalWorld a nonexclusive license to publish, copy and distribute your work, while acknowledging that you are the author of the work. Letters must bear the name, address and telephone number of the writer. Letters may be submitted by mail to Box 888, Lawrence Ks. 66044 or by e-mail to: letters@ljworld.com.

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Princeton battlefield should be saved Princeton, N.J. — One of history’s most important battles happened here on a field you can walk across in less than half the 45 or so minutes the battle lasted. If George Washington’s audacity on Jan. 3, 1777, had not reversed the patriots’ retreat and routed the advancing British, the American Revolution might have been extinguished. Yet such is America’s neglect of some places that sustain its defining memories, the portion of the field over which Washington’s nation-saving charge passed is being bulldozed to make way for houses for faculty of the Institute for Advanced Study (IAS). To understand the gravity of this utterly unnecessary desecration, you must understand the astonishingly underestimated Battle of Princeton. In December 1776, the Revolution was failing. Britain had sent to America 36,000 troops — at that point, the largest European expeditionary force ever — to crush the rebellion before a French intervention on America’s behalf. Washington had been driven from Brooklyn Heights, then from Manhattan, then out of New York. The nation barely existed as he retreated across New Jersey, into Pennsylvania. But from there, on Christmas night, he crossed the Delaware River ice floes for a successful 45-minute (at most) attack on Britain’s Hessian mercenaries at Trenton. This was Washington’s first victory; he had not

George Will

georgewill@washpost.com

This ground, on which patriots’ blood puddled on that 20-degree morning, has been scandalously neglected by New Jersey.” been at Lexington, Concord or Bunker Hill. Trenton would, however, have been merely an evanescent triumph, were it not for what happened 10 days later. On Jan. 2, 1777, British Gen. Charles Cornwallis began marching 5,500 troops from Princeton to attack Washington’s slightly outnumbered forces at Trenton. Washington, leaving a few hundred soldiers to tend fires that tricked Cornwallis into thinking the patriot army was encamped, made a stealthy 14-mile night march to attack three British regiments remaining at Princeton. They collided on this field. The most lethal weapons in this war were bayonets. The British had them. Few Americans did, and they beat a panicked retreated from the advancing steel. By his personal bravery, Washington

reversed this and led a charge. An unusually tall man sitting on a large white horse, he was a clear target riding as close to British lines as first base is to home plate. Biographer Ron Chernow writes that, at Princeton, Washington was a “warrior in the antique sense. The eighteenth-century battlefield was a compact space, its cramped contours defined by the short range of muskets and bayonet charges, giving generals a chance to inspire by their immediate presence.” When the redcoats ran, the British aura of invincibility and the strategy of “securing territory and handing out pardons” (Chernow) were shattered. And the drift of American opinion toward defeatism halted. In his four-volume biography of Washington, James Thomas Flexner said: “The British historian George Trevelyan was to write concerning Trenton: ‘It may be doubted whether so small a number of men ever employed so short a space of time with greater and more lasting effects upon the history of the world.’ But such would not have been the result if Washington had not gone on to overwhelm Princeton.” This ground, on which patriots’ blood puddled on that 20-degree morning, has been scandalously neglected by New Jersey. Now it is being vandalized by the Institute for Advance Study, which has spurned a $4.5 million purchase offer — more than $1 million above the appraised

value — from the invaluable Civil War Trust, which is expanding its preservation activities to Revolutionary War sites. In today’s academia there are many scholars against scholarship, including historians hostile to history — postmodernists who think the past is merely a social construct reflecting the present’s preoccupations, or power structures, or something. They partake of academia’s preference for a multicultural future of diluted, if not extinguished, nationhood, and they dislike commemorating history made by white men with guns. The IAS engaged a historian who wrote a report clotted with today’s impenetrable academic patois. He says we should not “fetishize space,” and he drapes disparaging quotation marks around the words “hallowed ground.” The nation owes much to the IAS, which supported Albert Einstein, physicist Robert Oppenheimer and the diplomat and historian George F. Kennan. It is especially disheartening that a distinguished institution of scholars is indifferent to preserving a historic site that can nourish national identity. The battle to save this battlefield, one of the nation’s most significant and most neglected sites, is not yet lost. The government in today’s Trenton, and in the city named for the man who won the 1777 battle, should assist the Civil War Trust. — George Will is a columnist for Washington Post Writers Group.

OLD HOME TOWN

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From the Lawrence Daily Journal-World for April 10, 1916: “The years ‘Rock! Chalk!’ yell ago of the University IN 1916 of Kansas and the music of the ‘Crimson and the Blue,’ carried over mountain, plain and desert on tenuous copper wires, sounded in the ears of University alumni in Lawrence, New York and San Francisco Saturday night. The transcontinental reunion was a unique experience for alumni in the three cities. Chancellor Strong spoke here and his voice was heard at either end of the continent.” — Compiled by Sarah St. John

Read more Old Home Town at LJWorld.com/news/lawrence/ history/old_home_town.

Mississippi attacking wrong target A portrait of Mississippi. It has a lower percentage of high school graduates than almost any other state. It has an unemployment rate higher than almost any other state. Mississippi’s fourth-graders perform more poorly than any other children in the country in math. Also in reading. Its smoking rates are among the highest in the country. Along with West Virginia, it is the fattest state in the Union. It has the highest poverty rate and the lowest life expectancy. Small wonder 24/7 Wall Street, a content provider for Yahoo!, Time and USA Today, among others, has dubbed Mississippi the “worst state to live in.” All of which provides a certain pungent context for what happened last week as Gov. Phil Bryant signed into law a bill legalizing discrimination against LGBT people. It is dubbed the “Protecting Freedom of Conscience from Government Discrimination Act,” which is a cynical lie. The only thing it protects is those doing the discriminating. You want to refuse to rent to a lesbian couple? You’re covered. You want to refuse to hire a transgendered woman? Go for it.

Leonard Pitts Jr. lpitts@miamiherald.com

Rather, the point is simply this: Isn’t it interesting how reliably social division works as a distraction from things that ought to matter more?” You want to force your gay adopted son to undergo so-called conversion therapy? No problem. You want to kick an adulterous heterosexual out of your hardware store? Yep, the law says you can even do that. Indeed, it says that any gay, transgendered or adulterous individual whose behavior offends the “sincerely held religious beliefs or moral convictions” of a person, for-profit business, government employee or religious organization can be refused service. As if your sexual orienta-

tion or marital status were the business of the cashier ringing up your groceries or the barber trimming your hair. It is worth nothing that similar laws have been propounded in other states — Georgia, Indiana, Arkansas — only to be turned back under threat of boycott by Fortune 500 companies and professional sports teams doing business there. “The worst state to live in” was immune to that kind of pressure because it has no such teams or businesses. You’d think that would tell them something. You’d think it would suggest to Mississippi that it has more pressing concerns than salving the hurt feelings of some putative Christian who doesn’t want to bake a cake for Lester and Steve. But addressing those concerns would require serious thought, sustained effort, foresight, creativity and courage. It is easier just to scapegoat the gays. So the fattest, poorest, sickest state in the Union rails against LGBT people and adulterers and never mind that if every last one of them pulled up stakes tomorrow, Mississippi would still be the fattest, poorest, sickest state in the Union. The point is not that such

bigotry would be impossible in places that are healthier or wealthier. The point is not that such places are immune to it. Rather, the point is simply this: Isn’t it interesting how reliably social division works as a distraction from things that ought to matter more? After all, Mississippi just passed a law that 80 percent of its eighth-graders would struggle to read. If they graduate, those young people will look for work in a state with an unemployment rate significantly higher than the national average. But if one of those kids does manage to find work at the local doughnut shop, say, she will — until the law is struck down, at least — have the satisfaction of refusing service to some gay man, secure in the knowledge that the state that failed to educate her or give her a fighting chance in a complex world, now has her back. One feels sorrier for her than for the gay man. Her life will be hemmed by the fact of living it in a state that fights the future, that teaches her to deflect and distract, not resolve and engage. The gay man can buy doughnuts anywhere. — Leonard Pitts Jr. is a columnist for the Miami Herald.


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Sunday, April 10, 2016

LAWRENCE • STATE

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

HOW TO HELP

Doggy bag

Provide child care at parenting classes Agency: Success by 6 Contact: Rich Minder at docofamily2family@gmail. com or at 785-842-8719

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo

A PUG NAMED CHARLIE HITCHES A RIDE ON HIS OWNER TRICIA PROHASKA’S BACK as she scans the tables of plants, vegetables and other items on the opening day of the Downtown Lawrence Farmers’ Market on Saturday.

Year of odd weather paved way for southern Kansas wildfires Kansas City, Mo. (ap) — An unusually wet summer followed by an unusually dry winter created the ideal conditions for the wildfires that have been scorching parts of Oklahoma and Kansas. Grasslands were unusually lush by the end of last summer, but the parched winter months turned the vegetation into fuel for the recent wildfires that were fanned by unusually strong winds, said Mary Knapp, assis-

tant state climatologist at Kansas State University. “Do you want to make things burn?” asked Knapp. “We’ve got all the components for that. Let’s get things really, really wet and let them grow, and then once we’ve got all these fuels sitting out there, let’s dry them out to bone dry levels.” The fires have scorched hundreds of thousands of acres in the two states. The largest blaze was Kansas’ biggest ever and

one of the biggest east of the Rocky Mountains in the last two decades, said Oklahoma’s state climatologist, Gary McManus. “What happened was we were so wet we had a huge explosion in vegetative growth throughout the year,” McManus said. “When we got to the first of 2016, the rain went away and it got warmer than normal and windier than normal and all that vegetative growth that went dormant became fuel for wildfires.”

Success by 6 needs volunteers to assist with its parenting education classes by providing child care for children younger than 5 years of age while their parents are attending class. Two to three volunteers care for nine children from 5:30 to 8 p.m. at Centennial Adult Education Center, 2145 Louisiana St. Age-appropriate activities will be planned, and pizza will be provided to attendees. Volunteers are needed on Wednesday evenings through June 29 and also on the second Tuesday of each month. For more information, please contact Rich Minder at docofamily2family@gmail.com or 842-8719.

mances and other visual events for people with vision loss by serving as audio description volunteers. Volunteers will describe the visual elements of a performance, display, or event using succinct, colorful language. Audio-Reader works with the following performance venues: Theatre Lawrence, The Lied Center and Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Lawrence; Starlight Theatre, Kansas City Repertory Theatre and Carlsen Center in the Kansas City area; and Topeka Civic Theatre and Academy in Topeka. For more information, please contact Jen Nigro at jnigro@ku.edu or 864-4604.

Help March of Dimes The March of Dimes promotes healthy pregnancies and babies, Volunteers are needed to assist with the annual March for Babies Walk on April 30 at Watson Park, 727 Kentucky St. Help is needed with setup, covering different stations during the event and cleanup. Any time frame is appreciated. Please contact Stephanie Rasys at stephanier@centralnational.com or 838-1894 for more information.

Clean up a park Black Hills Energy’s mission of “Improving Life with Energy” includes opportunities to strengthen the communities it serves. Part of that effort includes an annual event to clean up local parks in observance of Earth Day. Black Hills Energy will hold a park cleanup event starting at Peterson Park, located at the intersection of Peterson Road and North Iowa Street, on April 22 at 2 p.m. Workers will move to Burcham Park at Second and Indiana streets at approximately 3 p.m. Please look for the Black Hills Energy tent and vehicles at the park locations. For more information, contact Canan Aker at canan. aker@blackhillscorp.com or 832-3937.

Describe plays Audio-Reader is a radio reading service for the blind and print-disabled of Kansas and western Missouri. Audio Reader is looking for volunteers to enhance theater perfor-

Landscaping work Tenants to Homeowners Inc. administers the Lawrence Community Housing Trust Program, which sells homes for $20,000-$50,000 below market value to families with low and moderate incomes. Tenants to Homeowners is building an aging in place senior community of 13 townhomes. Volunteers are needed to assist with cleaning up the construction site and landscaping the site. This will be an ongoing part-time need through the fall of 2016. The Cedarwood Senior Cottages are located just behind the United Way Center near the 2500 block of Cedarwood Avenue. For more information, please contact Tenants to Homeowners at 842-5494 or at cbryantth@gmail. com. Pack a snack Sunflower Elementary School needs assistance with its BackSnacks program, which provides snacks and a book for qualifying students to take home every Friday. A volunteer is needed every Friday from 10:15 to 11:45 a.m. for the remainder of the school year to help pack the BackSnacks bags and distribute them to students. For more information, please contact Reana Maliska at RMaliska@usd497.org. — For more volunteer opportunities, go to volunteerdouglascounty.org or contact Shelly Hornbaker at the United Way Roger Hill Volunteer Center at 865-5030, ext. 301, or at volunteer@unitedwaydgco.org.

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3

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The independent newsletter that reports vitamin, mineral, and food therapies.

Jack Challem

Fish and Fish Oils Greatly Reduce the Risk of Venous Thrombosis Eating a lot of fish or taking omega-3 fish oil supplements can significantly lower the risk of venous thrombosis, that is, the risk of developing blood clots in leg veins. Sigrid K. Brækkan, PhD, of the University of Tromsø, Norway, and her colleagues analyzed data from a study of 23,621 people who were age 25 to 97 years when the study began. They were followed up for an average of 16 years, unless they died. People who ate fish three or more times weekly were 22 percent less likely to develop venous thrombosis, compared with people who ate fish only once or twice a week. When people ate fish three or more times a week and also took fish oil capsules, their risk of venous thrombosis decreased by 48 percent. Reference: Hansen-Krone IJ, Enga KF, Sudduth-Klinger JM, et al. High fish plus fish oil intake is associated with slightly reduced risk of venous thromboembolism: the Tromsø study. Journal of Nutrition, 2014;144:861-867.

Vitamin D Supplement Benefits Patients with Heart Failure

with each beat. For example, an ejection fraction of 60 means that 60 percent of the blood in the heart’s left or right ventricle is pumped out. In people with heart failure, the ejection fraction is below 55, which is often referred to as a percentage. Some drugs, as well as coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10), can improve the ejection fraction of people with heart failure. Vitamin D levels are typically low in patients with heart failure, so Andrea Dalbeni, PhD, and his colleagues at the University of Verona, Italy, conducted a small study in which 23 chronic heart failure patients received vitamin D or placebos over six months. When the study began, all of the patients were deficient in the vitamin, with blood levels of vitamin D ranging from about 12 to 20 ng/mL. Vitamin D3 was administered as a single oral 600,000 IU dose, with additional 100,000 doses at the 10th and 20th week of the study. The doses averaged out to the equivalent of 4,000 IU daily. By the end of the six-month study, the patients receiving vitamin D had a 6.71 percent improvement in their ejection fraction, while those taking placebos had a 4.3 percent decrease. In addition, patients taking vitamin D had an average seven point decrease in their systolic blood pressure, from 129 to 122 mm Hg.

Reference: Dalbeni A, Scaturo G, Degan M, et al. Effects of six months of vitamin D supplementation in patients with heart failure: a randomized double-blind controlled trial. Nutrition, Metabolism & Cardiovascular Diseases, 2014: doi: 10.1016/j. numecd.2014.02.015.

Ejection fraction refers to the amount of blood the heart pumps

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SECTION B

USA TODAY — L awrence J ournal -W orld

IN MONEY

IN LIFE

New tool aims to fight racism

Humanity is at the heart of ‘The Jungle Book’

04.10.16 ROBERT HANASHIRO, USA TODAY

DISNEY

Terror suspect admits he is ‘man in hat’ 4th suspect in Belgian attack disposed of garments while fleeing, officials say

Brussels streets. “We confronted him with the USA TODAY video evidence prepared by our special unit,” the prosecutors’ Mohamed Abrini, one of four office said. “He had to admit it suspects charged Saturday with was him.” terrorist murder in the Abrini also told auBrussels attacks last thorities he dumped his month, confessed to becoat in a trash can as he ing the elusive “man in threaded his way the hat” seen in surveilthrough Brussels streets lance video shortly beand sold the infamous fore bombs went off at soft, floppy hat seen in Brussels Airport, Belthe videos. The attacks gian prosecutors said. at the airport and a The suspect, seen in downtown metro shortthat footage accompa- BELGIAN FEDERAL POLICE ly afterward on March nying two terrorists Mohamed 22 killed 32 people. who blew themselves Abrini, seen Abrini was arrested a up, also appeared on in 2015 day after authorities resurveillance video that leased several videos of showed him leaving the airport the suspect and appealed to the and making his way through public for information on his Doug Stanglin

STEPHANIE LECOCQ, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY

Belgian police search the Anderlecht district in Brussels after three suspects were arrested Friday. whereabouts. Abrini, Osama K., Herve B. M. and Bilal E. M. were all charged with participating in “terrorist murders” and the “activities of a

terrorist group” in connection with the attacks. One suspect, identified by Belgian media by his full name, Osama Krayem, is believed linked to

New website tracks safety of biolabs

TODAY ON TV uNBC’s Meet the Press: Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders; Paul Manafort, convention manager for Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump; New York Mayor Bill de Blasio uCBS’ Face the Nation: Sanders; Republican presidential candidate John Kasich uCNN’s State of the Union: Sanders; Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton uABC’s This Week: Sanders uFox News Sunday: President Obama

This is an edition of USA TODAY provided for your local newspaper. An expanded version of USA TODAY is available at newsstands or by subscription, and at usatoday.com.

For the latest national sports coverage, go to sports.usatoday.com

Public will see if problems resolved Alison Young USA TODAY

‘AMERICA FIRST’

SCOTT OLSON, GETTY IMAGES

Donald Trump loves old political slogans, even widely unpopular ones

Rick Hampson USA SNAPSHOTS©

USA TODAY

Tax fairness

In embracing “America First” as his guiding foreign policy philosophy, Donald Trump appropriated — spontaneously, it seems — one of the most denigrated political slogans of the last century, and one that evokes an isolationism Trump himself explicitly rejects. “It’s a rotten term that evokes the naive idiots, defeatists and pro-Nazis who wanted to appease Hitler and make friends with him” before World War II, says Susan Dunn, author of 1940: F.D.R., Willkie, Lindbergh, Hitler — The Election Amid the Storm. That said, she doesn’t think the

How Americans view the amount they pay in federal taxes:

36% Dissatisfied 61% Satisfied

Source Jan. 6-10 Gallup poll TERRY BYRNE AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY

the subway attack. Abrini was already the object of a massive European manhunt after the Nov. 13 terror attacks in Paris that left 130 people dead. The Belgian-Moroccan was seen on surveillance video driving another terror suspect, Salah Abdeslam, to Paris two days before that deadly rampage. Abdeslam was arrested by Belgian police four days before the Brussels terror attacks. Belgian broadcaster VRT reported Saturday that one of the latest suspects, identified as Bilal El Makhoukhi, was convicted last year in a trial in Antwerp for involvement in the radical group Sharia4Belgium. He was serving his sentence at home while outfitted with an electronic surveillance tag. El Makhoukhi went to Syria in 2012 but returned to Belgium after losing his leg while fighting with Islamist extremists, according to VRT.

AFP/GETTY IMAGES

After speechwriter Pat Buchanan suggested the term “silent majority,” President Nixon made it popular.

old phrase means much today. Trump’s use of an expression so dated and discredited reflects his willingness to dip into the past for catch phrases that, no matter their historical baggage, can still appeal to voters. During the Republican presidential campaign, Trump also has claimed to speak for “the silent majority,” a term coined in 1969 by Richard Nixon’s administration, and adopted Ronald Reagan’s 1980 campaign theme, “Make America great again.” Trump’s rhetoric, though derivative, is effective, says Jennifer Wingard, an expert on the subject who teaches at the University of Houston. v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

Federal lab regulators unveiled a website Friday to publicly track their progress improving oversight of safety and security at facilities working with bioterror pathogens such as anthrax and Ebola. The website shows numerous reforms “in progress,” including improved inspections and better biosafety guidance for lab operators. Officials at laboratory associations hailed the move as an example of improved transparency by lab regulators at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in the wake of a USA TODAY NETWORK investigation last year that uncovered serious incidents nationwide and revealed how pervasive secrecy obscures v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

CDC

Colonies of anthrax bacteria

Ex-speaker Hastert molested boy, 14, prosecutors say Faces up to 6 months in alleged bank plot Aamer Madhani @AamerISmad USA TODAY

Former speaker Dennis Hastert committed bank fraud in a plan to pay hush money to someone he is alleged to have sexually abused when the victim was 14 and in Hastert’s charge, federal prosecutors claimed in a court filing on Friday. Hastert, 74, pleaded guilty in October to one count of illegally CHICAGO

TANNEN MAURY, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY

Dennis Hastert leaves federal court in Chicago in 2015.

structuring bank withdrawals, but the new court filing lays out, for the first time, details of the wrongdoing that the former speaker is said to have committed while a wrestling coach and high school teacher in a small town outside of Chicago decades ago. Prosecutors allege that Hastert abused or had inappropriate contact with at least five male minors during his time at Yorkville High School, touching them in the “groin area and genitals” or having oral sex with them. The statutes of limitations have long passed on the alleged sexual misconduct. Hastert is facing up to six months in federal prison on

Hastert “made (his victims) feel alone, ashamed, guilty and devoid of dignity.” Prosecutor Steven Block, in court filing

an illegal bank structuring charge. He taught and coached at Yorkville for about 16 years before launching his political career in the early 1980s. The man, known in court papers as “Individual A” and whom Hastert agreed to pay off, said he was molested at a motel during an out-of-town team trip. Other former wrestlers who have come forward told prosecu-

tors Hastert touched them in the locker room at Yorkville High, after saying he would give them massages. Two of those wrestlers, who were ages 14 and 17, say Hastert performed sex acts on them. In his filing, prosecutor Steven Block accused Hastert of “stunning hypocrisy.” Hastert reflected in his 2004 memoirs on his days as a high school wrestling coach and offered, “There’s never sufficient reason to try to strip away another person’s dignity.” “Yet that is exactly what the defendant did to his victims. He made them feel alone, ashamed, guilty and devoid of dignity,” the prosecutor writes.


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Cop car accessory: ‘In God We Trust’ decal Scores of localities, especially in South, are embracing trend Sebastian Robertson

WFAA-TV, Dallas-Fort Worth FORNEY, TEXAS

City Council in this Dallas suburb approved a resolution last week to add “In God We Trust” decals to all cityowned vehicles. Jay Stinson, who owns Big Jay’s Signs and Shirtworks in this city of about 18,000 residents, said he will design and apply the decals for free. “No taxpayer is going to have to pay anything, and it shows what ‘In God We Trust’ stands for, and it’s a great, great thing,” said Stinson, who also lives here. Police cars with the motto aren’t violating the Constitution’s establishment clause, which prohibits government from “estab-

WFAA-TV, DALLAS-FORT WORTH

Big Jay’s Signs and Shirtworks in Forney, Texas, offers a variety of designs for the decals, which its owner will apply for free. lishing” a religion, according to a legal opinion that Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton issued in November. “Displaying ‘In God We Trust’ on police vehicles is a passive use of a motto steeped in our nation’s history that does not coerce citi-

zen approval or participation,” wrote Paxton, who also cited a 1984 Supreme Court ruling on city-sponsored Christmas displays that called the motto a constitutional reference to our religious heritage. Police departments across the

USA, including several in Texas, are affixing the phrase to their patrol cars. Among them in the last six months, according to local media, are the sheriff’s departments in Scott and Johnson counties in Arkansas, Walthall and Wayne counties in Mississippi, LeFlore County in Oklahoma, Union County in Tennessee and several agencies in Virginia. “History is on my side, the courts are on my side, the legislature is on my side, and I think certainly God is on my side as well,” York-Poquoson (Va.) Sheriff J.D. “Danny” Diggs said in January. Almost 250 law-enforcement offices have “In God We Trust” displayed on vehicles, according to the Original Motto Project, which wants to replace “In God We Trust” with E Pluribus Unum. That phrase translates as “Out of many, one,” and was on the seal of the United States when Congress adopted it in 1782.

Robert Ray of the Humanists of North Puget Sound in Mount Vernon, Wash., registered the Original Motto Project’s domain name in March 2015. “In God We Trust” first appeared on a 2-cent coin in 1864, according to the U.S. Mint. A 1955 law still in effect made the phrase mandatory on all U.S. currency, , and another law in 1956 made it the national motto. The Supreme Court has not heard a specific case on the motto. The atheist Freedom from Religion Foundation challenged the Childress Police Department in Texas when it began displaying the motto last August, a month after Harris County Deputy Darren Goforth was killed in an ambush at a suburban Houston gas station. Police Chief Adrian Garcia responded to co-founder Annie Laurie Gaylor with a one-sentence letter telling her to “go fly a kite.”

Wyo. win Pearl Harbor ended initial extends popularity of ‘America First’ Sanders’ v CONTINUED FROM 1B

An expression like “America First” sounds vaguely and reassuringly familiar, even if (or maybe because) “you can’t quite place it or know why you know it,” she says. Plus, “it has an emotional resonance, especially if you feel you’ve lost a job because of foreign competition: ‘I’m an American. I come first.’ ” Trump first used it in an interview last month with The New York Times. Asked whether his foreign policy philosophy could be described as “America First,” Trump said, “I like the expression. I am ‘America First.’ ” Judging from the interview transcript, “he just seemed to like the sound of it when he heard it,” says Jennifer Mercieca, a historian of U.S. political discourse who teaches at Texas A&M. The Times, she jokes, “should charge him for the idea.” The next day, Trump said on Fox News, “My policy is America First. It will always be America First.” THE NEW ‘SILENT MAJORITY’

Last summer Trump also looked to the past for what would become another of his refrains. “In the old days, they used to use a term, ‘the silent majority,’ ” he told an audience. “We have the silent majority back, folks.” That was the term (originally suggested by columnist Pat Buchanan when he was a White House speechwriter) that Nixon and Vice President Spiro Agnew used to describe conservative “middle America,” whose members didn’t burn draft cards or otherwise protest the Vietnam War. It helped them get re-elected by a landslide in 1972. But the phrase acquired a decidedly unfavorable odor after Nixon resigned in disgrace because of his role in the Watergate scandal cover-up. Asked by The Washington Post whether “silent majority” didn’t remind voters of a president with whom few politicians want to be associated, Trump said, “Nah. Nobody remembers that.” “Nobody thinks of Nixon,” he concluded. “I don’t think of Nixon when I think of the silent ma-

AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Charles Lindbergh helped popularize “America First,” but a radio speech in 1941 undermined the movement. jority. The silent majority today, they’re going to vote for Trump.” A similar calculation appears to have gone into Trump’s selection of the phrase for which he’s best known, “Make America great again.” Trump liked Reagan’s old slogan so much he applied for a trademark in 2012. And last year he said he resented it being used by rivals, including Scott Walker and Ted Cruz. (The latter spoke the magic words when he declared his candidacy.) “That’s my expression,” Trump told Fox News. “I’ve been using it all over the place. And I noticed that they’re all copying it now. Everybody’s using it. I was the first by a long shot.” Mercieca says Trump’s tendency to collect old campaign messages, rather than rely on speechwriters to come up with new ones, “is unusual, but that’s

part of his attraction. He’s not taking advice or consulting with anybody, he’s listening to himself. He’s his own best adviser.” But “the silent majority” and “Make America great again” were in the Political Rhetoric Hall of Fame when Trump found them. America First was not. IGNOMINIOUS ROOTS

In the late 1930s, most Americans wanted to stay out of war in Europe. After it began in fall 1939, some Yale students formed The America First Committee. Members included future Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart; future Yale President Kingman Brewster; future Peace Corps Director Sargent Shriver; and future President Gerald Ford (who later resigned for fear of being fired as an assistant coach on the football team). Soon, the establishment signed on.

The America First movement was amazingly diverse, ranging from principled isolationists to Nazi sympathizers. Its basic assumption was that America was protected by two oceans and its vast land mass, and that intervention in Europe would turn out no better than it had in World War I. The movement’s most prominent speaker was aviator Charles Lindbergh, who argued that German victory was inevitable and that U.S. intervention would pointlessly antagonize the victors. With thousands of members, America First was the largest anti-war group in U.S. history. But as the war went on, opinion slowly swung against isolationism. And the movement was crippled by a speech Lindbergh gave on Sept. 11, 1941, in which he complained about American Jews’ support for intervention, saying, “Their greatest danger to this country lies in their large ownership and influence in our motion pictures, our press, our radio and our government.” Japan’s attack on Pearl Harbor ended the movement. Three days later, the America First Committee’s board voted to disband. In the post-war era, which saw the establishment of the United Nations and NATO and the development of nuclear weapons and long-range missiles, the sentiments behind America First seemed even more obsolete. But they’ve never disappeared. Today, for Trump, American First sums up several notions: NATO is obsolete and America’s allies must shoulder more of their own defense; America’s trading partners must mend their ways or face higher tariffs; illegal immigration must be stopped. But the historian Adam Hochschild, who’s studied the preWorld War II period, says America First ignores a world in which the U.S. is “deeply enmeshed.” “Trump can no more successfully pretend we’re not involved than isolationists of the 1930s could,” he says. “How can we put ‘America First’ as far as climate change is concerned? Trump does not have the power to make rising ocean waters lap only at other countries’ shores.”

streak

Democratic socialist has beaten Clinton in 7 of last 8 contests Heidi M Przybyla USA TODAY

Sen. Bernie Sanders won Wyoming’s Democratic caucus Saturday as he looks to narrow Hillary Clinton’s sizable lead in delegates needed to clinch the Democratic Party’s nomination. A victory in the Cowboy State marks Sanders’ seventh in the past eight contests before a critical showdown April 19 in New York. With only 14 delegates at stake, the results won’t mean much in the grand delegate scheme, and Sanders has performed well in Western, rural states like Nebraska. In the Republican race, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz netted 13 GETTY IMAGES more delegates Sanders Saturday at Colorado’s state GOP convention, the Associated Press reported. Cruz already had locked up the support of 21 delegates and visited the state to try to complete the sweep. Sanders, of Vermont, released a statement earlier Saturday highlighting an estimated 1,088 pledged-delegate total. Clinton has 249 more delegates, according to Associated Press numbers, and 2,383 are needed to lock in the nomination. The Democratic Party does not award delegates on a winnertake-all basis, making it hard for Sanders to close the gap. His strategy rests on wooing superdelegates, party officials who have a vote at the convention and pick whom to support. According to the non-partisan Cook Political Report’s David Wasserman, Sanders has captured 46% of Democrats’ pledged delegates but only 42% of votes.

Reporting led to improved transparency v CONTINUED FROM 1B

failures by labs and regulators. But some community watchdogs said the CDC’s new online report card shows little action on the type of transparency the public needs the most: Details about violations and incidents at individual labs. Plans are moving forward, the site shows, to release anonymous, aggregate data about information such as numbers of incidents and enforcement actions in the previous year. “Non-lab specific information is of very little use to community members living around these labs who are trying to understand the safety performance of their local select agent laboratory,” said

Scott Yundt, staff attorney for Tri-Valley CAREs, a California group concerned about the safety of research at the federal government’s Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. Last fall, citing the USA TODAY NETWORK’s reporting, White House science and homeland security advisers called for information about research on potential bioterror pathogens and incidents in labs doing this work “be shared with the public, to the maximum extent possible.” It noted that keeping such information secret “has negligible security value” and pointed to incident information that has been voluntarily disclosed online for several years by the Galveston

National Laboratory in Texas. Dan Sosin, acting director of the CDC’s Division of Select Agents and Toxins, said the transparency benchmark on the new website “is obviously one clearly stimulated by the work (USA TODAY NETWORK reporters) have been doing to improve the transparency of this program.” Sosin said the report, scheduled to be made public in June, will provide tallies of the number of labs registered to work with select agents, the government’s term for bacteria, viruses and toxins that are regulated because they have the potential to be used as bioweapons. It will also provide counts of labs that have faced enforcement actions in

“Non-lab specific information is of very little use to community members living around these labs.” Scott Yundt, staff attorney for Tri-Valley CAREs

2015 and some general information about the type of safety or security issue that was involved. There will also be statistics about such things as security risk assessments, transfers of specimens and rankings of the most

commonly registered pathogens. The report, Sosin said, will give the public some sense of the low frequency of serious lab incidents and a general understanding of the kinds of issues found on inspections. “My hope is it will provide some reassurance,” he said. The USA TODAY NETWORK’s investigation revealed that over 100 labs working with potential bioterror pathogens faced secret federal sanctions for safety violations, yet regulators allowed them to keep experimenting while failing inspections. Despite federal officials’ efforts to keep secret the identities of the troubled labs, the project named names, revealing they included several prestigious institutions.


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Digital drug orders boost safety, but can lead to fatal errors Techsavvy hospitals still have ‘work to do’ in safeguarding electronic health records

LEAPFROG GROUP

Jayne O’Donnell USA TODAY

Hospitals’ use of digital medication orders have dramatically reduced the number of dangerous drug errors, but their computer systems still fail to flag 13% of potentially fatal mistakes, a report out last week shows. Medication errors are by far the most common mistakes made in hospitals — and hospital errors are the third-leading cause of death in the United States. Digital drug ordering is part of so-called “computerized physician order entry,” or CPOE, which was designed to address the problem. “These findings show the transition from pen and paper to electronic ordering and prescribing is making patients safer — with the systems flagging nearly 9 in 10 possible errors,” said Andrew Gettinger, a physician and chief safety officer in the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT in an email. “But the report also serves as an important reminder to clinicians and the health IT community broadly that there is more work to do when it comes to our top priority:

the health and safety of our patients.” Research released in 1999 found CPOE reduced serious medication errors by 88%. Ninety-seven percent of hospitals use CPOE, due in large part to the stimulus bill of 2009. To receive the money, CPOE is required — and must alert about errors — in the electronic health records that the Affordable Care Act pushed doctors and hospitals to use. Many doctors have complained the records are too costly, time-consuming and hard to use. Other critics have long charged that the systems lack the safeguards needed, such as to keep doctors from copying information from one chart to another either by mistake or to commit fraud. The new report by data analytics company Castlight Health and the hospital-rating organization Leapfrog Group, suggests they’re right. About 40% of the most common, serious errors overall weren’t caught. Electronic health records aren’t required to be accurate, notes Reed Gelzer, a physician and records expert who co-leads two international standards de-

ON POLITICS Cooper Allen

@coopallen USA TODAY

Bernie Sanders and Ted Cruz scored big wins in Wisconsin, ensuring that both the Democratic and Republican presidential races would stretch on through April and beyond. Top news from the world of politics: TRUMP’S UNFAVORABLE NUMBERS ON THE RISE Donald Trump remains the frontrunner in the GOP race, but an AP-GfK poll out last week shows that 69% of Americans have an unfavorable view of the New Yorker, up from 58% in February. To put that into perspective, 55% feel the same about Hillary Clinton and 59% have a negative impression of Cruz. Perhaps most alarming for Trump, 63% of respondents said they “definitely would not vote for” Trump, including 31% of Republicans. It could spell trouble for Trump should the Republican race head to a contested convention, when electability may weigh heavily on delegates.

ANDREW RENNEISEN, GETTY IMAGES

Clinton rides the No. 4 train in the Bronx on Thursday.

CLINTON, SANDERS SPAR OVER QUALIFICATIONS Hillary Clinton and Sanders have battled intensely for the Democratic nomination, but the campaign back-and-forth had remained mostly civil — at least when compared with their Republican rivals. Things grew more heated last week, with Sanders questioning whether Clinton, the front-runner, was

velopment work groups on records systems. Other studies have shown a substantial number of potentially harmful errors are caused by inaccurate or otherwise defective patient information in the records, notes Gelzer. He says that can occur when systems default to boilerplate information that doesn’t apply to a patient and doctors fail to notice, often because they “think it doesn’t matter.”

About 40% of the most common, serious errors overall weren’t caught in testing by Leapfrog Group and Castlight Health. For the new report, hospitals took a test with a set of what Leapfrog CEO Leah Binder calls dummy patients and dummy drug orders. After the hospitals’ systems filled these test orders, reports showed what happened

when they were filled, such as whether the system alerted that a mistake was about to be made. Scot Silverstein, a Philadelphia-area physician and former hospital chief medical informatics officer, was already a critic of electronic health records when his mother was seriously injured in 2010 because of them. He says she later died as a result of a critical heart medication being mistakenly stopped in a hospital due to electronic record problems. Silverstein, who now works as an independent expert witness in lawsuits, estimates there are dozens of lawsuits pending that involve medication errors. About a third of hospitals who took Leapfrog’s test did not score “fully implemented,” which means their systems didn’t alert doctors about harmful drug errors. Potentially more problematic: Just over half of hospitals don’t participate in Leapfrog’s survey, and several of those that do refuse to take the two-hour test that shows whether their systems would alert about errors. “It’s not a priority to them to make sure their system works, which is a problem from the patient’s point of view,” says Binder.

Leah Binder, CEO of the hospitalrating organization Leapfrog Group, says hospitals were tested using dummy patients and dummy drug orders — but over half of hospitals did not participate.

IN BRIEF qualified for the presidency. The dust-up began after Clinton jabbed at Sanders over a less-than-flawless interview the Vermont senator had with the New York Daily News editorial board in which he struggled to explain how he would break up big banks, one of his signature proposals. Clinton argued he “hadn’t done his homework.” Sanders fired back that he didn’t believe Clinton was “qualified if she is, through her super PAC, taking tens of millions of dollars in special interest funds.” Clinton dismissed the attack as “kind of a silly thing to say.” The Vermont senator later walked back the criticism during a Today show appearance Friday, saying “of course” Clinton was qualified.

BRYAN THOMAS, GETTY IMAGES

Cruz clarifies “New York values” Wednesday in the Bronx.

CRUZ GRAPPLES WITH ‘NEW YORK VALUES’ COMMENT The Texas senator blasted Trump earlier in the campaign for exemplifying “New York values.” Now, with the state’s April 19 primary looming large, he’s clarifying what he meant. “Everyone in New York and outside of New York knows exactly what I meant by that,” Cruz said on CNN. “And it is the liberal values of Democratic politicians who have been hammering the people of New York for decades.” Trump, who holds a big lead in polls in the state, is not about to let his rival off the hook. “I’ve got this guy standing over there talking about New York values with scorn on his face, with hatred of New York,” the real estate mogul told supporters on Long Island earlier in the week. Contributing: Josh Hafner and David Jackson

U.S. WARNS CITIZENS OF ‘THREATS’ IN TURKEY

The U.S. warned citizens of “credible threats” in tourist areas of Turkey on Saturday, urging people to exercise “extreme caution” if they are near such areas. The emergency message issued through the U.S. Consulate in Istanbul says public square and docks in Istanbul and Antalya, a resort destination in southwestern Turkey, are of particular concern. The memo did not provide any other details. It comes less than two weeks after the Pentagon ordered families of hundreds of U.S. military members to evacuate southern Turkey amid growing violence in the country. Recent attacks in Turkey include a Feb. 17 car bomb in the capital, Ankara, that killed at least 30 people, and a suicide bombing March 19 on a popular shopping street in Istanbul that killed five people, including two Americans. Overall, more than 200 people have been killed in six major bombings in the country since July, the Associated Press reported. — Katharine Lackey POSTAL SERVICE DROPPING MAIL PRICES SUNDAY

Mailing letters, postcards and parcels gets cheaper Sunday as the U.S. Postal Service drops its prices for the first time in 100 years. First-class letters will drop from 49 cents to 47 cents, and postcards from 35 cents to 34 cents. Stamp prices typically go up slightly every few years to keep pace with inflation, but for the past two years customers paid an “exigent surcharge” implemented to help the Postal Service survive the Great Recession. The Postal Regulatory Commission (PRC) ordered the Postal Service to roll back that temporary price hike, meaning customers will pay less going forward. “Given our precarious financial condition and ongoing business needs, the price reduction required by the PRC exacerbates our losses,” Postmaster General and CEO Megan Brennan said in a statement. Brennan previously called the rollback “irrational.”

A LITTLE LEVITY IN A WAR ZONE

AMER ALMOHIBANY, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Syrian children run with balloons past heavily damaged buildings in the neighbourhood of Jobar, on the eastern outskirts of the Syrian capital of Damascus, on Saturday. Postal Service managers ex- James said at an Air Force briefpressed displeasure, arguing the ing on March 7. — Oriana Pawlyk, mandated price reduction will Air Force Times add $2 billion in annual losses. — Trevor Hughes B-52S DEPLOYED TO BOMB ISLAMIC STATE

U.S. Air Force B-52 bombers arrived at Al Udeid Air Base, Qatar, on Saturday joining Operation Inherent Resolve, the American-led campaign against the Islamic State group. The deployment marks the first time the Air Force will use the Cold War-era warplanes — from Barksdale Air Force Base in Louisiana — in the fight against ISIL in Iraq and Syria. The service did not disclose the exact number of bombers it deployed. “The B-52 will provide the coalition continued precision and deliver desired airpower effects,” Lt. Gen. Charles Brown, commander of U.S. Air Forces Central Command and Combined Forces Air Component, said in a release. “As a multi-role platform, the B-52 offers diverse capabilities including delivery of precision weapons and the flexibility and endurance needed to support the combatant commander’s priorities and strengthen the coalition team.” “There have been recent infrastructure improvements that now allow the necessary support to deploy the B-52 in theater,” Air Force Secretary Deborah Lee

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‘WE DON’T WANT THEM’ Boko Haram’s female captives spurned on return home

Nigerian women beg near their refugee camp in Maiduguri, Nigeria — an area where Boko Haram terrorists are active. ALI ABARE ABUBAKAR, SPECIAL FOR USA TODAY

Ali Abare Abubakar Special for USA TODAY

MAIDUGURI , NIGERIA After three months of sexual abuse, Jummai Usman managed to escape the clutches of the Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram. But when she returned to her village of Bama last year, her loved ones shunned her. “I was treated as if I was also Boko Haram,” said Usman, 45, a mother of eight who now lives in a refugee camp here. “My relations, friends and neighbors were suspicious of me. I didn’t like the way people treated me back there, like they were suspecting I could lead the insurgents back to attack them. So I left.” Usman’s plight is increasingly common in Nigeria, according to a recent report by UNICEF and International Alert, a Londonbased charity that works to prevent violent conflict around the world. More than 2,000 women and girls abducted by Boko Haram since 2012 face mistrust and persecution when they eventually

return home, the report found. In its best-known abduction, Boko Haram seized more than 200 girls two years ago from a school in Chibok. Most are still missing. “These findings show a pressing need to do more to re-integrate those returning from captivity by Boko Haram,” said Kimairis Toogood, International Alert’s adviser in Nigeria. “Many of these girls already face lasting trauma of sexual violence and being separated from their families, so we must ensure they get all the support they need when they finally return.” The United Nations is appealing to the Nigerian government to help people like Usman reintegrate into society. “Issues of recovery and rehabilitation are very important. The future of Nigeria is at risk,” warned Maud de Boer-Buquicchio, the U.N.’s envoy on the sale of children, child prostitution and child pornography. Making Nigerians more welcoming of former captives won’t be easy. Boko Haram, which has

pledged allegiance to the Islamic State, has brainwashed some victims to fight with the terror group or become suicide bombers, the report said. As a result, some Nigerians fear that abductees might have been sent home to commit violence. According to UNICEF, women and girls staged 39 of Boko Haram’s 89 attacks last year. Some women whose attacks were foiled told authorities they had been abducted by the group. Female bombers have staged many attacks this year, too. Alhaji Musa Ngarnnam, 51, a resident of Ngarnnam, a suburb of Maiduguri, said those who return from Boko Haram camps are considered suspect and not welcome in the community. Victims of sexual abuse are often described as “Boko Haram wives” who are “annoba,” carriers of the Boko Haram ideology, Ngarnnam said. He feared the victims might radicalize others. “We can’t trust those returning from Boko Haram camps because we fear they have been indoctrinated,” Ngarnnam said. “We can’t

allow them back, because they may attack us when we least expect it.” Others fear that children born as a result of sexual abuse by the terror group carry “bad blood” that might lead them to become Islamic extremists when they grow up.

children of Boko Haram fathers,” Goni said. For Nana Kachalla, 22, the alienation after her harrowing captivity by Boko Haram has further traumatized her. Abducted three years ago, she recently escaped with the help of the Nigerian military.

“We can’t trust those returning from Boko Haram camps because we fear they have been indoctrinated.” Alhaji Musa Ngarnnam, 51, resident of a Madiuguri suburb

“Popular cultural beliefs about ‘bad blood’ and witchcraft, as well as the extent of the violence experienced by people at the hands of (Boko Haram) form the basis of this fear,” the report said. Babagana Goni, 30, who barely escaped Boko Haram’s onslaught when the militants took over the town of Bamain in 2013, worries the terrorists have impregnated their victims with a new generation of terrorists. “How can we accept them back? They are already carrying

“I wasn’t even allowed to enter my home,” Kachalla said. “They said I was Boko Haram, and they won’t allow me back.” Kachalla, who also lives in the refugee camp here, has tried to convince her family and friends that she had no choice. “I was picked by a leader of the Boko Haram ... to be his wife,” Kachalla said. “Some of the women got killed because they refused to give in to their demands. He threatened to kill me if I didn’t do what he said.”

Jordan fears Syrian refugees will stay 1.3 million who fled war are straining schools and water supplies, and promised aid is slow to arrive Michele Chabin

Special for USA TODAY ZAATARI REFUGEE CAMP, JOR DAN Mohammed Abu Khaled

KHALIL MAZRAAWI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

The U.N.-run Zaatari camp for Syrian refugees is northeast of the Jordanian capital of Amman. Me di t e Serarane an

dreams of the day he and his family can return home to Daraa, Syria, just 16 miles north of this sprawling camp. “I’m unemployed here. I sit all day and do nothing,” lamented Abu Khaled, 46, a former construction worker who has lived in a flimsy three-room structure with his wife, five children and three other relatives for nearly three years. Seated on a foam mattress that doubles as a sofa, Abu Khaled said a Feb. 27 cease-fire agreement in Syria “gives me hope that we may be able to move back to Daraa in the foreseeable future. We’re grateful to Jordan for taking us in, but we’re Syrian, not Jordanian.” The Jordanian government hopes just as fervently that Abu Khaled and his 1.3 million compatriots return home soon to ease the demands of providing shelter, education and jobs for all the Syrians who have fled to Jordan to escape their country’s five-year civil war. Without more international financial assistance, the refugees threaten Jordan’s stability and security, warned Adnan Sawaeer, a member of Jordan’s parliament. The government fears that some of the refugees may be Islamic State militants who plan to “create a messy situation in Jordan,” Sawaeer said. But the prospects of the refugees going back to Syria anytime soon appear dim, and Jordan fears a repeat of what happened when Palestinians fled to this country after Israel became a state in 1948 and again after the 1967 Six-Day War — and never left. More than 5 million Palestinian refugees and their descendants have lived for decades in this small nation, which has seen its population swell to 8 million be-

SYRIA

LEBANON Damascus

Daraa ISRAEL Amman

Zaatari refugee camp

JORDAN MICHELE CHABIN FOR USA TODAY

IRAQ

SAUDI ARABIA

N

100 miles

Mohammed Abu Khaled, a construction worker in Syria, says he is unemployed and dreams of returning home soon.

Source ESRI

cause of the influx of Syrians. Jordan also is a haven for tens of thousands of Iraqi refugees and African asylum seekers. “Even if peace breaks out tomorrow,” it could take up to 20 years for Syrians to return home because of the massive destruction in that war-torn country, said Khaled Shorman, director of

United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. Most live in cities and towns throughout Jordan. “There is competition for everything, and tensions are rising,” Shorman said. Food and housing prices have skyrocketed. Schools, which were already overcrowded, have 50 to 60 students per class

MASAR, a Jordanian non-profit group that focuses on democracy and conflict resolution. “Jordanians’ biggest fear is that what happened with the Palestinians will happen to the Syrians,” Shorman said. Fewer than 10% of the Syrian refugees are housed in refugee camps like this one run by the

VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY

in areas with high concentrations of refugees, and Jordan’s scant water supply is under strain, Shorman said. Political analyst Nabil Sharif said Jordanians are open-hearted, but disappointed by a lack of international help to handle all of the refugees. Donor nations pledged $11 billion at an aid conference in February, but most of that money, plus some of last year’s pledges, has yet to arrive. “There has been a lot of pledging and talking, but the help we receive has been limited,” Sharif said. At the wind-blown Zaatari camp — home to nearly 80,000 refugees — the Abu Khaled familly recalls the war and their escape with few possessions. “We were under heavy attack, shelling,” said Um Khaled, Mohammed’s sister-in-law. “We fled via the Iraqi border. People called it the Road of Death because of the number of people killed there.” When they arrived in Jordan three years ago, the children were “completely shell-shocked and refused to go to school,” but today they attend one of the camp’s makeshift U.N. schools, Um Khaled said. Several months ago, the family planted a couple of bushes outside their shelter. Um Khaled said one of the children’s favorite activities is watering the plants and watching them grow. They even protected the bushes by surrounding them with a bit of wire and red-and-white police tape. Dozens of refugees have opened small businesses in the center of the camp. Some sell fruit and vegetables; others sell clothes or repair bicycles. “These refugees are coming from an upper-middle-income country,” said camp spokesman Gavin David White. “They have the same skill sets as you and I. They are very entrepreneurial and creative.” But “a camp is not a durable solution,” White said. “Their priority is to go home, to Syria.”


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USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld SUNDAY, APRIL 10, 2016

Cole Myers, center, of McComb, Miss., protests Mississippi House Bill 1523 with hundreds of others during a rally at the Governor's Mansion on April 4.

Cancels new operations center in Charlotte Cost: $3.6 million Jobs: 400

Getty

Rock icon Bruce Springsteen canceled his April 10 concert in Greensboro, N.C., in protest of HB 2 in North Carolina. “Some things are more important than a rock show and this fight against prejudice and bigotry, which is happening as I write, is one of them,” he wrote on his website. Tickets will be refunded.

The NBA says it may block North Carolina from hosting the 2017 All-Star Game.

THE BILLS

Justin Sellers, The Clarion-Ledger, Jackson, Miss.

BANS & BOYCOTTS

Gov. Pat McCrory, R-N.C. Getty

North Carolina’s House Bill 2: The Public Facilities Privacy and Security Act The North Carolina General Assembly passed and Gov. Pat McCrory signed House Bill 2 on March 23. It went into effect April 1. What it does: The measure mandates bathroom choice be made by gender as specified on birth certificates. More than 130 companies have asked lawmakers to repeal the bill.

Reconsidering expansion plans in Raleigh/Durham Cost: $20 million Jobs: 52

NORTH CAROLINA, MISSISSIPPI BACKLASH

The CEO of the venture capital division says no investments should be made in North Carolina while the law is in effect.

In addition to public protests, corporations have canceled or are reconsidering expansion plans in North Carolina and Mississippi after those states passed legislation that was criticized as biased toward lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people. Some states and cities have enacted travel bans. A look at some of the reaction:

The entertainment company has canceled the filming of “Crushed,” a comedy series pilot in Charlotte. Production will move to Canada. Lionsgate will complete filming the musical “Dirty Dancing” in North Carolina.

TRAVEL BANS SUPPORT GAY RIGHTS Areas issuing non-essential travel bans to:

Miss.

Seattle

N.C.

Both

Boston

Getty

Gov. Phil Bryant, R-Miss.

Marketing firm reconsidering expansion plans in Charlotte Jobs: 500+

Portland

Mississippi’s House Bill 1523: Protecting Freedom of Conscience Government Discrimination Act

Chicago San Francisco

Gov. Phil Bryant signed the bill on April 5. It takes effect July 1. What it does: The measure shields individuals, organizations and businesses from prosecution for refusing to serve gay or transgender people, based on religious beliefs. This includes sale of products, hiring and firing, and selling or renting housing.

New York

Washington

Santa Fe

Stephen Schwartz, composer of “Wicked” and other musicals, is seeking to prohibit North Carolina theaters from producing or staging musical shows created by him and his collaborators. He’s urging others to do the same.

Atlanta

More than a dozen companies have asked for the bill to be repealed.

West Palm Beach

STATES RELY ON TRAVEL, TOURISM

Travel and tourism play a part in roughly 1 in 10 jobs in Mississippi and North Carolina. Tax revenue produced by each sector means that families pay less taxes each year. Economic breakdown:

Miss.

N.C. VISITORS

JOBS

Total (in millions)

Directly connected to tourism

21.6

84,345

52.5

289,055

Percentage from out of state

All tourism1

67%

115,025 60%

379,714

Business-related visitors 2

Tourism as percentage of all jobs1

10.4%

9.2%

1 — Includes jobs that indirectly benefit from tourism

8%

REVENUE State, local tax revenue from tourism

13%

2 — Visitors on business trips of all durations

VISITOR ORIGIN Highest percentages of out-of-state visitors

$630 million $3.0 billion

Per household tax relief $580 $816

14%

11%

8%

10.2%

6.7%

5.6%

La.

Ala.

Fla.

S.C.

Fla.

Va.

Sources Mississippi, North Carolina state reports; North Carolina data from calendar year 2013, Mississippi data from July 1, 2012, to June 30, 2013, the latest data available; USA TODAY research GEORGE PETRAS AND LINDA DONO, USA TODAY


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MONEYLINE

Beth Belton @bethbelton USA TODAY

BUSINESS SURVEILLANCE MORE SECURE IN A FLASH uIn a nutshell: Adobe Systems has issued an emergency security update for the Adobe Flash Player to stymie an attack that could impact Windows, Mac, Chrome OS and Linux users, writes our Ed Baig. The updates address “critical vulnerabilities that could potentially allow an attacker to take control of the affected system,” Adobe says. uThe upshot: The potential attack in question is known as “ransomware,” increasingly sophisticated software that can maliciously encrypt and disable everything on a computer until the owner forks over a ransom to the hackers. uThe lowdown: Adobe said it was aware of reports that such an attack “is being actively exploited on systems running Windows 10 and earlier with Flash Player version 20.0.0.306 and earlier.” The company urged people to install the latest Flash player as soon as possible. If you’re running the Chrome browser, Internet Explorer for Windows 8.1 or Windows 10 or the Edge browser on Windows 10, you’ll be updated to the latest version automatically.

JUSTIN SULLIVAN, GETTY IMAGES

ON THE FRONT BURNER FACEBOOK EASES AD RULES For the past few years, as advertisers spent more on sponsored content online, it was technically against the rules to post that content to Facebook unless part of a paid ad placement on the social network. But the site is changing its tune, according to The Wall Street Journal. Facebook will now allow branded content to appear in all forms, as long as a simple verification process is followed. USA SNAPSHOTS©

Hail-vulnerable state

Nebraska

has the highest percentage, 78%, of home insurance claims that are hail-related. Source Farmers Insurance JAE YANG AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY

NEWS MONEY SPORTS NEW TOOL LIFE AIMS TO FIGHT IN-YOUR-FACE AUTOS RACISM, SEXISM TRAVEL Marco della Cava @marcodellacava USA TODAY

V

PALO ALTO, CALIF.

irtual reality can bring us to the top of Mount Everest. But Stanford University researchers believe it can conquer a steeper challenge: racial and sexual discrimination. “Feeling prejudice by walking a mile in someone else’s shoes is what VR was made for,” says Jeremy Bailenson, director of Stanford University’s Virtual Human Interaction Lab. Its diversity training scenarios, which aim to engender empathy, have attracted interest from one large organization: the National Football League’s front office is getting ready to test it, executives from the league told USA TODAY. The lab’s demos are no game. One finds a Caucasian user represented by an African-American female avatar being harassed by a white avatar. Another transitions you from living in an apartment to homelessness. A landlord gives you minutes to select a few virtual possessions and beat it. The hope is that the immersive experience of virtual reality will succeed where other programs designed to help users confront their biases have come up short. Although a range of wellknown companies Bailenson declines to name publicly have trekked here to sample this work, the NFL’s emissaries are first to pilot a VR diversity program. “We think VR can deliver on real social issues that allow people to be better,” says Troy Vincent, executive vice president of football operations for the NFL. He experienced Bailenson’s work when he and NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell toured the lab last summer. The league’s image has been tarnished lately by reports that its accounting of player brain injuries hid the enormity of the problem. “We want to be known as the best place to work.” The Stanford lab’s existing VR software is available free to interested groups. The NFL will have to order any custom-built diversity VR sessions through Strivr, a company co-founded by Bailenson, former pro quarterback Trent Edwards and former Stanford assistant football coach Derek Belch. Strivr is already used by a number of pro and collegiate football teams to help train athletes through VR exercises. Although Bailenson has been dabbling with these diversity sce-

narios for more than a decade, his work is starting to get attention partly due to cost. Before, a company considering such a program would have to invest in militarygrade headsets that cost $10,000 and up. Today’s Oculus Rift and HTC Vive goggles ring in at around $700. But even more of a factor in the potential boom of VR diversity training is today’s spotlight on racial and gender biases, heightened of late by blacks being subjected to police brutality and female game developers enduring hateful online assaults by male counterparts. In the corporate world, diversity has become a mission, especially at tech companies. But despite new positions with titles such as head of inclusiveness and companywide diversity training meetings, employees continue to be overwhelmingly male and white. Why? One reason is that Fortune 500 companies and start-ups spend upward of $8 billion a year on diversity training that is largely ineffective and often counterproductive, says Frank Dobbin, a Harvard University sociology professor who has conducted numerous studies on diversity programs. “All lab studies show that you can change people’s attitudes for about 30 minutes after training,” he says. “But three to six months later, there’s either no change or a negative reaction because you’ve actually activated their bias.” Like many contacted for this article, Dobbin says VR diversity training is news to him. While he doesn’t dismiss its potential, he cautions that “if big companies are going to do this, they should go the extra mile and get a social scientist to study it first.” Some have. A group of European researchers conducted tests in 2014 that demonstrated how subjects exposed to VR experiments designed to make them develop associations with body parts with different skin tones scored higher on tests gauging empathy for other races. “Ownership of an outgroup body has been found to be associated with a significant reduction in implicit biases against that outgroup,” the researchers wrote in a 2015 article for Trends in

L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY SUNDAY, APRIL 10, 2016

Diversity training goes to the next level using VR, and the NFL is ready to tackle the experiment head-on

PHOTOS BY ELISE OGLE, STANFORD UNIVERSITY

In one Stanford VR demo, subjects are made to feel what it is like to be homeless, above, as the user is transported into the body of a woman riding the bus with few possessions. At left, the user becomes a black woman dealing with harassment from a white male avatar.

Jeremy Bailenson

USA TODAY

NFL’s Troy Vincent

“What we’re learning here is that experiencing hardship in VR is better than role playing.” Jeremy Bailenson, director of Stanford University’s Virtual Human Interaction Lab

Cognitive Science called “Changing Bodies, Changing Minds.” Paradigm CEO Joelle Emerson, who advises companies on being more inclusive, says VR diversity training would seem to hold potential to help employees develop empathy for colleagues with different backgrounds. But she remains skeptical of its ability to create long-term change. “It’s very different to have a few experiences through a simulation on a single day vs. a series of experiences over the course of your whole life,” she says. For Bailenson, the best proof VR can help us become more understanding is found in one of his lab’s empathy experiments. One group was asked to imagine what it was like to be colorblind, while another was subjected to the condition through virtual reality. The VR group wound up volunteering to help the blind at twice the rate. “I’m not saying, ‘Put on a VR goggle and you’ve solved racism,’ ” he says. “But I’m optimistic it can help.”

Money is only part of retirement formula Aim for at least 3.6 ‘core pursuits’ that make you happy — and stay socially connected Brian Stoffel The Motley Fool

Quick, tell me the first thing that comes to mind when I say the words “retirement” and “anxiety.” Take a second and jot it down. ... Done? Good. Based on years of writing on the topic, and multiple surveys that have been carried out by professionals far more knowledgeable than myself, I’d be willing to bet most responses have something to do with money or how you’ll be able to make ends meet in retirement. That’s what a survey by Merrill Lynch and AgeWave found. A full 38% of pre-retirees said that “what they would miss the most” in retirement was a “reliable income.” That was more than twice the second-place response. However, when those same surveys were given to those al-

ready in retirement, something different popped up as the top thing they missed about work: social connections. Here’s what the Merrill Lynch/AgeWave numbers looked like: uSocial connections: 34% uReliable income: 29% uHaving purpose and work goals: 19% uMental stimulation: 12% uEmployer health insurance: 7% If you step back and think about it, this should come as no surprise. We humans are social creatures, and it is through social connections that we find meaning. Between them, social connections and “having purpose” account for what over half of retirees say they miss most. So it’s important that today’s pre-retirees start taking the right steps now to ensure that they’ll be able to afford and enjoy their retirement.

WHAT RETIREES MISS MOST Once people retire, they miss the social interactions work presented more than the income it generated. Social connections

34%

Reliable income

29% Having purpose and work goals

19% Mental stimulation

12% Employer health insurance

7% Sources Merrill Lynch, AgeWave JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY

HOW TO PREPARE

Wes Moss, chief investment strategist for Capital Investment Advisors and host of the Money Matters radio show, has devoted his career to finding the answer

to such questions. In his book You Can Retire Earlier Than You Think, he offers some guidance. Moss highlights the importance of having what he calls “core pursuits” — activities that actively engage you, are intrinsically rewarding (we’re not talking about money here) and help give meaning to your life. You need not be a retiree to have core pursuits. In fact, our teenage years are largely defined by them. What Moss has found is that those who are happiest in retirement have an average of 3.6 core pursuits when they enter retirement. On average, those who are unhappy have less than two. And that last part — “when they enter retirement” — is key. It is a reminder that if we spend our 20s through our 60s with our heads buried in work and we neglect all that is around us — our relationships, our health, our spirituality, our interests, etc. — we are setting ourselves up to spend the last few decades of our lives unhappy. Just as someone who starts

saving for retirement at 60 is highly unlikely to reach their goals, if you wait until retirement to start exploring core pursuits, you’ll have a much harder time finding what you’re looking for. AND FOR THOSE STILL WORRIED ABOUT FINANCES

Moss has also done research on how much money the typical “happy” retired household has saved up compared with the “unhappy” ones. While it’s possible to retire happily on very little income, those who have a nest egg of about $450,000 or more tend to be the happiest. That’s not an enormous sum, especially considering that many personal-finance experts say you need to amass at least $1 million to retire in comfort. However, it seems that for many retirees, it’s enough to grant some financial security and pursue the activities they love. The Motley Fool is a USA TODAY content partner offering financial news, analysis and commentary.


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USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld SUNDAY, APRIL 10, 2016

PERSONAL FINANCE One increasingly popular way to make sure your eggs are in lots of baskets is to invest in a target-date fund, but many investors do it wrong.

SPREAD YOUR WEALTH

CONSIDER YOUR OPTIONS

BUILD YOUR OWN PORTFOLIO

If you know your risk tolerance, time horizon and investment goal, there’s no reason not to build your own portfolio. “Job one is to figure out your stock/bond split,” says William Bernstein, author of The Four Pillars of Investing. “After you’ve done that, you have to diversify your stock allocation between foreign and domestic; somewhere between 20/80 and 40/ 60 is fine for most folks.” According to Bernstein, the best, easiest and cheapest way to diversify those two holdings is with a low-expense total market index fund/ETF.

Robert Powell l Special for USA TODAY

T

he most oft-cited investing rule? Don’t put all your eggs in one basket. Or as investment professionals like to TARGET-DATE TARGET-RISK state: Diversify your assets. Diversifi- ALL-IN-ONE GLOBAL FUNDS FUNDS cation, experts say, will help you improve the Most U.S. investors have plenty One easy and increasingly popu- FUNDS Target-risk, or what some call risk-adjusted performance of your portfolio. of exposure to U.S. stocks and lar way, especially in 401(k) plans, lifestyle funds, offer you an easy bonds, says Mebane Faber, the to make sure your eggs are in lots way to diversify your portfolio And trust us, that’s a good thing. You want to chief investment officer at Cam- of baskets is to invest in a target- based on your risk tolerance, bria Investment Management date fund (TDF), or what some typically labeled “conservative,” own some investments that are going up and author of Global Asset Allo- call a life-cycle fund. “moderate” or “aggressive.” cation: A Survey of the World’s Top These funds offer you an easy According to the ICI, lifestyle when others are going down and vice versa. Asset Allocation Strategies. way to invest based on your ex- funds generally do not change But is there an easy way to diversify your “But they shouldn’t,” he says. pected year of retirement, or their asset allocations over time “In fact, the global market cap what investment professionals in a predetermined way as do portfolio in an age when there are tens of portfolio suggests that you often call your time horizon. In- TDFs. should have at least half of your vestment goals, risk tolerance If you use these funds, conthousands of investments from which to equity portfolio in foreign and time horizon are usually con- sider re-evaluating your risk tolstocks, and likewise a chunk in sidered when building a portfolio. erance over time and revisiting choose? The easy answer is yes.

HOT GROWTH Target-date and target-risk funds have gotten popular with investors seeking an easy path. Total net assets have ballooned. Target-date funds

Target-risk funds

$703

(in billions)

$600

$394

$400 $200

$44

$85

0 ’04

’05

’06

’07

’08

Source 2015 Investment Company Fact Book

’09

’10

’11

’12

’13

’14

foreign bonds ... but no one does, and that is called ‘homecountry bias.’ ” Others agree: “Don’t fear foreign,” says Christopher Sidoni, the chief investment officer at Gibson Capital. “Now is a good time for investors to revisit the breadth of their global equity diversification and rebalance.” One example to consider comes from Faber’s investment firm: Cambria Global Asset Allocation ETF (GAA). The fund gives you access to over 30,000 securities around the globe, including foreign assets and real assets like TIPS and commodities.

KARL GELLES, USA TODAY

TDFs typically invest in a mix of asset classes — stocks (equities), bonds (fixed-income) and cash — and the assets are automatically rebalanced to become more conservative over time. In essence, these funds are designed to help investors “avoid some of the most common investment mistakes,” according to the Investment Company Institute (ICI), the lobbying group for the mutual fund industry. What to consider before investing in TDFs? Don’t invest in other funds once you own a TDF. Doing so defeats the purpose of these funds. “When used properly, a target-date fund or a targetrisk fund is not a component of an investor’s portfolio, it is their portfolio,” says Sidoni.

Interest rates going nowhere fast @SpencerNerd NerdWallet

Despite the Federal Reserve’s increase to its key interest rate in December, the rates that banks are offering on savings accounts remain stuck near historic lows. So why haven’t they changed? With the economy on the mend from the recession, the Fed raised its benchmark interest rate for the first time since 2008, when it hit nearly zero. The rate determines how much interest banks charge each other to borrow money. Generally, when the Fed raises its rate, consumers see banks offer higher returns on savings accounts. But that’s not what’s happening. “We’re in an unusual environment now,” says economist James Chessen, pointing to the sluggish growth rate of bank loans, which usually fuel the increase in savings rates. A HOLDUP AT THE BANKS

Banks depend on deposits from consumer accounts to fund the lending that drives their profits. Banks raise savings rates to attract more people to open accounts — but only when loan demand is high.

This is why interest rates for regular savings accounts haven’t moved. In fact, the national average rate has been a measly 0.06% since 2014, according to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. website. Other types of savings accounts are similar. Money market deposit accounts, which tend to have higher rates and higher balance requirements, also have been stuck at an average national rate of 0.08% since 2014. And the rates on certificates of deposits — which require you to lock up money for set periods of time to receive higher rates than other savings accounts — have barely budged since December. And what about specific banks? NerdWallet took a closer look at its own data of the 10 biggest U.S. banks by deposit size and national presence and found

PHOTOS BY GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOTO

Generally, when the Fed raises its rate, consumers see banks offer higher returns on savings accounts. But that’s not what’s happening.

“The loan demand has been far less robust than the banking industry would like,” says Chessen, the chief economist at the American Bankers Association in Washington, D.C. “There are concerns that the U.S. economy is slowing a bit and there’s a lot of global risk,” he adds. “And that makes businesses a bit less interested in borrowing to expand.” FEW RATE CHANGES

Powell is editor of Retirement Weekly and contributes regularly to USA TODAY, The Wall Street Journal and MarketWatch. Got questions about money? Email Bob at rpowell@ allthingsretirement.com.

the same trend. None of the 10 changed regular savings or money market deposit rates between December and February. There were some small changes for CDs, but they were few and far between. Regardless, a slight bump in CD rates is in line with what one analyst sees as

Fed boosted rates in December, but it’s not helping savers yet Spencer Tierney

whether the target-risk fund you own still makes sense for you, or whether you might need a more conservative lifestyle fund.

GETTY IMAGES/HEMERA

HOW TO IMPROVE YOUR RATES

To get better returns on your money, you don’t have to wait for your bank to raise rates.

OPEN A HIGH-YIELD SAVINGS ACCOUNT.

To get returns of 0.75% or higher, shop around for a high-yield online savings account on comparison sites.

FOR NEW INVESTMENTS, CONSIDER SHORT-TERM TREASURYS.

Treasury securities, which are essentially IOUs from the government, are other places to grow your money at fixed interest rates that are comparable to high-yield savings rates. Guy Baker, financial adviser at Wealth Teams Solutions in Irvine, Calif., recommends them as a way to diversify your investment portfolio.

AUTOMATE YOUR SAVINGS.

Besides better rates, you can save effortlessly by setting up recurring transfers from checking to savings accounts at your bank. Or you can use online apps like Acorns and Digit that sync up with your bank account. These savings tools withdraw a few dollars or cents from it every few days and place the money into a separate savings or investment account.

a potential bank strategy. “The first banks to raise rates are likely to look at long-term CD rates as a way to lock in longerterm deposits,” explains Hank Israel, director of banking research firm Novantas in New York. WHAT IT WILL TAKE

For savings rates to grow, Israel said, both business and consumer loan growth rates have to hit roughly 8%. This is what happened in the last rising rate environment in the early to mid-2000s. Currently, they’re at 6% to 7% for business loan growth and 2% to 3% for consumer loan growth, he said. The Federal Reserve made no changes to its benchmark rate at its March meeting. The next time it’ll consider the rate is in late April. Tierney is a staff writer at NerdWallet, a personal finance website. Email: spencer@nerdwallet.com. NerdWallet is a USA TODAY content partner providing general news, commentary and coverage from around the Web. Its content is produced independently of USA TODAY.


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Sports

C

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/sports l Sunday, April 10, 2016

KANSAS FOOTBALL

Early to rise

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photos

WIDE RECEIVER LAQUVIONTE GONZALEZ (1) TEARS DOWN THE FIELD for a touchdown during Kansas University’s spring game Saturday at Memorial Stadium.

Transfer WR Gonzalez steals spring show By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com

The scoreboard following Saturday’s Kansas University spring football game at Memorial Stadium read 49-42 in favor of the White team. But in reality, only 24 points were scored. Four Matthew Wyman field goals — of 31, 28, 22 and 34 yards, all against no rush — and an eight-yard pass from Carter Stanley to Steven Sims Jr. in the second half accounted for nearly all

of the actual football points on a day the KU coaching staff put together an unusual scoring system that delivered points for everything from first downs to threeand-outs and even took away points for penalties. But by far the loudest play of the day belonged to junior transfer LaQuvionte Gonzalez, a wide receiver from Texas A&M who sat out all of 2015 and has been dying to get back on the field ever since. Gonzalez finished a day dominated by the KU de-

fense with 115 yards on six catches, including a 61-yard touchdown reception from Montell Cozart that displayed just how dangerous his speed can be. His performance started well before sunrise. Somewhere between 5 and 5:30 a.m., Gonzalez hopped out of bed and headed to the Anderson Family Football Complex. Quietly, ‘Quiv’ slipped out the door and headed toward Memorial Stadium. “I didn’t hear him,” said roommate and KU running

back Taylor Martin, who led KU’s seldom-used rushing attack on Saturday with 56 yards on 15 carries. Gonzalez chose to walk the 10-to-12-minute trip instead of hitching a ride and slipped into his game-day zone with the help of a song from rapper Meek Mill called “Panda (Remix).” The first of the players to set foot in the team facility, Gonzalez stretched, got dressed, got his ankles taped around 9 a.m., stretched again, ate breakfast at 10:30 and then attended a couple

of meetings before KU coach David Beaty “kind of cut us loose” for final individual preparations. For Gonazlez, who last played a real game on Sept. 20, 2014 — a 58-6 A&M victory over SMU — the chance to go through game prep even if just for a spring game provided even more life and bounce to a player who teammates and coaches say has to be turned down more than turned up. “That dude looked like Please see SPRING, page 4C

Spring ‘game’ time to practice truth-telling, too

INJURED KANSAS QUARTERBACK RYAN WILLIS (13) WATCHES from the sidelines as the rest of the QBs warm up prior to kickoff. For more photos, please visit www.kusports.com/kufball4916

The spring football event, which used to be but no longer is a game, also serves as a dress rehearsal for reporters who cover the Kansas University football program. That’s another way of saying it’s a day to practice writing the truth without being mean, no easy juggling act in recent seasons. Here goes: Quarterback Ryan Willis helped his chances Saturday of winning the starting job by the time the season-opener arrives Sept. 3 against Rhode Island, an FCS school

Tom Keegan tkeegan@ljworld.com

coming off a 1-10 season, by not doing anything to hurt his chances. Willis didn’t play, sidelined by a wrist injury he suffered playing basketball. Montell Cozart, the only

quarterback since Todd Reesing to start the seasonopener in back-to-back seasons, was praised by head coach David Beaty for his strong spring. Saturday, Beaty assured, was not an accurate indication of how the rest of the spring went for the Bishop Miege graduate. Cozart completed 10 of 19 passes for 115 yards, 61 of the yards on a slant that LaQuvionte “Speedy” Gonzalez turned into a touchdown. Please see KEEGAN, page 4C

Prep Jackson helps U.S. cruise at Hoop Summit By Gary Bedore gbedore@ljworld.com

Josh Jackson, the toprated high school basketball player in the country, scored seven points off 3-of-7 shooting and grabbed four rebounds as Team USA

clobbered the World Select team, 101-67, in Saturday’s Nike Hoop Summit in Portland. Jackson, a 6-foot-7 senior shooting guard from Prolific Prep in Napa, Calif., told reporters after the game he would announce for either

Kansas University, Michigan State or Arizona sometime Monday on Twitter. “I know where I’m going,” Jackson told USA Today. “I’m not doing TV or any streaming (online) or anything like that. I’ll just tweet it, but it will definitely be Monday.”

Terrance Ferguson, a 6-6 shooting guard from Dallas Advanced Prep who has a final list of KU, Arizona, Baylor, Maryland, North Carolina and N.C. State, scored 21 points off 7-of-11 threepoint shooting. He had 18 points the first half, hitting

six threes in less than four minutes. “I just had to put my hand in some ice when I went in the back,” Ferguson, the No. 12-rated player in the Class of 2016 according to Please see HOOPS, page 3C Jackson


EAST

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COMING MONDAY

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SPORTS CALENDAR

NORTH KANSAS UNIVERSITY TODAY • Tennis at Iowa State, 11 a.m. • Softball vs. Georgia Tech, 11:30 a.m. • Baseball vs. TCU, 1 p.m.

NBA roundup

BRIEFLY SOCCER

Sporting KC blanks Red Bulls

• Coverage of Kansas University baseball vs. TCU • The latest on Kansas University football and basketball

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Harrison, N.J. — Benny Feilhaber and Dominic Dwyer scored to help Sporting Kansas City beat the New York Red Bulls, 2-0, on Saturday night. Goalkeeper Tim Melia had six saves — including a diving stop of a penalty kick by Bradley Wright-Phillips — for his MLSleading third shutout for Sporting (4-1-0). Dwyer beat two New York defenders on the dribble, then slipped a pass to a streaking Graham Zusi, who crossed to Feilhaber for a far-post goal in the 17th minute. Dwyer spun around a defender and put away a left-footer, off a throw-in from Saal AbdulSalaam, from just outside the 6-yard box to make it 2-0 in the 60th. New York (1-4-0) outshot Sporting 22-7, including 10 by Wright-Phillips — the highest game total in MLS this season. The Red Bulls, who won the Supporters’ Shield last season, have been shut out in each of their four losses.

MONDAYWEST Warriors 100, Grizzlies 99 • Boys golf at SM East Invitational, Memphis, Tenn. — One re1 p.m. cord matched, one more to go AL EAST • Baseball at SM South, 4:30 p.m. for the Golden State Warriors. Draymond Green scored on SOUTH WEST a tip-in in with one minute left, LAWRENCE HIGH and the Warriors rallied from AL CENTRAL SOUTH WEST MONDAY 10 points down early in the AL EAST • Boys golf at SM East Invitational, fourth quarter and beat Memphis on Saturday night to tie at AL EAST 1 p.m. least one NBA record held by • Baseball vs. Leavenworth, 6 p.m. AL WEST the 1995-96 Michael Jordan-led Chicago Bulls. AL CENTRAL ROYALS Golden State now has 33 AL CENTRAL TODAY road wins, tying those Bulls, who went 33-8 away from Chi• vs. Minnesota, 1:15 p.m. cago. The Warriors (71-9) visit MONDAY the Spurs tonight,AFC and their AL WEST TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m.• at Houston, 7:10 p.m. Brandon Dill/AP Photo AL WEST next win will tie the Bulls’ NBA GOLDEN STATE’S STEPHEN CURRY, RIGHT, PASSES THE BALL past single-season record of 72 vicMemphis guard Xavier Munford. The Warriors defeated the Grizzlies, tories — but the Warriors have SPORTS ON TV 100-99, on Saturday night in Memphis, Tenn. lost 33 straight in San Antonio. TODAY Green finished with 23 points and grabbed 11 rebounds, Klay Baseball Time Net Cable STANDINGS How Thompson had 20 points, TEAM LOGOSSte081312:and Helmet and teamformer logos the teams; AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff;ETA ETA55 p.m. p.m. AFC TEAMAFC LOGOS 081312: Helmet team logos for thefor AFC various sizes; stand-alone; staff; Boston v. Toronto noon MLB 155,242 EASTERN CONFERENCE phen Curry 17 and Harrison Atlantic Division Jayhawks fared K.C. v. Minnesota 1 p.m. FSN 36, 236 Barnes 14 for the Warriors. W L Pct GB Yankees v. Detroit 7 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 y-Toronto 53 26 .671 — Memphis’ Lance Stephenson Cliff Alexander, Portland x-Boston 47 33 .588 6½ missed two shots in the final New York 32 48 .400 21½ Did not play (inactive). Golf Time Net Cable Brooklyn 21 58 .266 32 seconds on a drive and again Philadelphia 10 69 .127 43 on a flip toward the basket. OfMasters 1 p.m. CBS 5, 13, Southeast Division Nick Collison, Oklahoma City W L Pct GB BOXING ficials reviewed the play and 205,213 Did not play (coach’s decision). x-Atlanta 48 32 .600 — gave the ball to the Warriors x-Miami 46 33 .582 1½ Pacquiao wins with 0.8 seconds to finish off x-Charlotte 46 33 .582 1½ Soccer Time Net Cable Kirk Hinrich, Atlanta Washington 38 41 .481 9½ unanimous decision the comeback. Did not play (coach’s decision). Orlando 34 45 .430 13½ Sunderland v. Leicester 7:25a.m. NBCSP 38, 238 Matt Barnes scored 24 points Central Division Las Vegas — Manny PacSchalke v. B. Dortmund 8:30a.m. F S1 150,227 W L Pct GB and grabbed 15 rebounds for Sasha Kaun, Cleveland quiao may not be ready for y-Cleveland 56 24 .700 — Cologne v. B Lever. 10:20a.m. FS2 153 Memphis, Vince Carter added x-Detroit 43 37 .538 13 Did not play (coach’s decision). retirement just quite yet. Houston v. Seattle 3 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Indiana 42 37 .532 13½ 15 and Stephenson finished 13. Pacquiao returned from the Chicago 40 40 .500 16 L.A. v. Portland 8:30p.m. FS1 150,227 Zach Randolph had 12 but was Milwaukee 32 47 .405 23½ Ben McLemore, Sacramento biggest loss of his career with WESTERN CONFERENCE 6-of-19, part of Memphis shootMin: 17. Pts: 4. Reb: 1. Ast: 2. a bang Saturday night, knockSouthwest Division ing 39 percent. Women’s Soccer Time Net Cable W L Pct GB ing down Timothy Bradley Memphis didn’t make it easy y-San Antonio 65 14 .823 — U.S. v. Colombia 1 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Brandon Rush, Golden State twice on his way to a unanimous x-Memphis 42 38 .525 23½ in a game with 18 lead changes Min: 10. Pts: 0. Reb: 0. Ast: 0. Dallas 41 38 .519 24 12-round decision in their welterand 13 ties. The Warriors trailed Houston 38 41 .481 27 Tennis Time Net Cable weight showdown. New Orleans 30 50 .375 35½ 90-80 when they went on an Andrew Wiggins, Minnesota Pacquiao shook off the ring Northwest Division Volvo Car Open noon ESPN2 34, 234 18-7 run to take the lead back W L Pct GB Min: 32. Pts: 23. Reb: 3. Ast: 1. rust from a layoff of nearly a y-Oklahoma City 54 26 .675 — at 98-97 on a three-pointer by year after losing to Floyd Mayx-Portland 43 38 .531 11½ College Softball Time Net Cable Barnes with 1:40 left to set up a Utah 39 40 .494 14½ weather Jr. to beat Bradley for a Denver 33 47 .413 21 tense finish. Officials reviewed Michigan v. Nebraska noon BTN 147,237 second time in the rubber match which suffered its largest mar- Minnesota 28 52 .350 26 Green’s tip-in after it initially Oklahoma v. Baylor 2 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 Pacific Division between the two fighters. In gin of defeat at home this seawas ruled basket interference. W L Pct GB N.C. St. v. Fla. St. 3 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 doing so, the Senate candidate in son. z-Golden State 71 9 .888 — The Grizzlies already lost x-L.A. Clippers 51 28 .646 19½ his native Philippines showed he their first two games in this se- PHOENIX (121) Sacramento 32 48 .400 39 College Baseball Time Net Cable may have to reconsider his plans 22 58 .275 49 Tucker 1-5 4-4 7, Len 5-11 0-0 10, Chandler Phoenix ries this season losing by 50 at to retire and devote his full time 16 63 .203 54½ 4-6 5-6 13, Price 1-2 0-0 3, Booker 7-11 1-1 16, L.A. Lakers KU v. TCU replay 7 a.m. TWCSC 37, 226 Golden State and by 16 on this Teletovic 8-14 2-3 22, Goodwin 7-11 7-9 24, x-clinched playoff spot to politics. KU v. TCU 1 p.m. TWCSC 37, 226 y-clinched division court in November. This time, Williams 1-4 1-1 3, Jenkins 3-7 1-1 7, Budinger Pacquiao (58-6-2) knocked z-clinched conference 2-2 8, Leuer 3-7 2-4 8. Totals 43-83 25-31 121. Baylor v. Oklahoma 1 p.m. FCSC 145 they played without three start- 3-5 Saturday’s Games NEW ORLEANS (100) down Bradley (33-2-1) in the Okla. St. v. Texas Tech 1 p.m. FCS 146 Phoenix 121, New Orleans 100 ers from the squad that lost the Cunningham 5-11 3-5 13, Ajinca 2-9 0-0 4, seventh round, though Bradley Atlanta 118, Boston 107 Asik 0-1 0-0 0, Douglas 8-14 4-4 23, Ennis 8-16 Purdue v. Indiana 2 p.m. BTN 147,237 Western Conference semifinals 0-0 18, Perkins 0-2 1-2 1, Babbitt 7-16 3-3 17, Golden State 100, Memphis 99 seemed to have slipped. He left to Golden State last spring. KU v. TCU replay 8 p.m. TWCSC 37, 226 Chicago 105, Cleveland 102 Hamilton 4-12 4-4 13, Frazier 5-14 0-2 11. Totals no doubt in the ninth with a Sacramento 114, Oklahoma City 112 Memphis used an 18-5 run in 39-95 15-20 100. Minnesota 106, Portland 105 big left hand that sent Bradley Phoenix 32 23 30 36 — 121 the third quarter to take a 74-65 New Orleans 22 25 20 33 — 100 Today’s Games College Football Time Net Cable sprawling. Charlotte at Washington, 11 a.m. 3-Point Goals-Phoenix 10-25 (Teletovic 4-8, lead with 1:38 left on a threeKU spring game replay 10a.m. TWCSC 37, 226 The fight was scored 116-110 Dallas at L.A. Clippers, 2:30 p.m. 3-5, Price 1-2, Tucker 1-3, Booker 1-3, pointer by Xavier Munford, re- Goodwin L.A. Lakers at Houston, 2:30 p.m. Budinger 0-1, Jenkins 0-3), New Orleans 7-21 by all three ringside judges. The Utah at Denver, 4 p.m. cently signed for the rest of the (Douglas 3-6, Ennis 2-6, Frazier 1-3, Hamilton MONDAY Associated Press had it 117-110. Milwaukee at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. Cunningham 0-1, Babbitt 0-1). Fouled Outseason after his second 10-day 1-4, Orlando at Miami, 5 p.m. None. Rebounds-Phoenix 57 (Len 11), New In the final seconds, many in Baseball Time Net Cable Brooklyn at Indiana, 5 p.m. contract expired. The Griz- Orleans 50 (Babbitt 9). Assists-Phoenix 27 the crowd of 14,665 at the MGM Golden State at San Antonio, 6 p.m. 5), New Orleans 19 (Frazier 7). Total zlies led 78-67 at the end of the (Booker Pittsburgh v. Detroit noon MLB 155,242 Toronto at New York, 6:30 p.m. Fouls-Phoenix 25, New Orleans 26. TechnicalsGrand arena were on their feet quarter and led by as much as Perkins. A-16,932 (16,867). Miami v. Mets 6 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 chanting “Manny! Manny!” as 10 early in the fourth quarter. K.C. v. Houston 7 p.m. FSN 36, 236 Pacquiao tried to end the bout Hawks 118, Celtics 107 Bulls 105, Cavaliers 102 with a flourish. He never came GOLDEN STATE (100) Atlanta — Paul Millsap had H.Barnes 6-11 0-0 14, D.Green 10-14 1-2 23, Chicago — Jimmy Butler College Baseball close to finishing off Bradley, Time Net Cable Ezeli 3-4 3-3 9, Curry 7-22 0-0 17, Thompson a season-high 31 points and 16 though he was so far ahead on 7-16 4-4 20, Iguodala 2-4 0-0 5, Varejao 0-1 0-0 0, rebounds, Jeff Teague added 24 scored 21 points, rookie Cris- W. Forest v. N.C. St. 6 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 Barbosa 0-3 0-0 0, Livingston 2-4 2-2 6, Rush 0-1 tiano Felicio added a careerthe ringside scorecards that it points, and Atlanta beat Bos0-0 0, Speights 2-7 2-2 6, Clark 0-0 0-0 0. Totals high 16, and Chicago kept its didn’t matter. 39-87 12-13 100. ton. Kent Bazemore finished playoff hopes alive with a vicIf the fight was indeed the end MEMPHIS (99) with 21 points for Atlanta, Carter 6-12 2-2 15, M.Barnes 8-17 5-5 24, tory over LeBron James and of the 37-year-old Pacquiao’s Randolph 6-19 0-0 12, Farmar 1-4 0-0 3, which moved one game ahead THE QUOTE Cleveland. career, it was a remarkable one. Stephenson 6-13 0-0 13, Hairston 2-5 3-3 7, of Boston to take sole possesMunford 3-10 1-2 8, J.Green 1-8 5-6 7, Andersen Chicago took the lead with Aside from the loss to May“Federal agents set up a fake 2-4 2-2 6, Martin 2-4 0-0 4. Totals 37-96 18-20 99. sion of third place in the Easta 15-0 run early in the fourth weather last year he did little university — the University of Golden State 31 22 17 30 — 100 ern Conference. Memphis 28 22 28 21 — 99 quarter and hung for the win wrong in winning eight weight Northern New Jersey — to break With two regular-season 3-Point Goals-Golden State 10-36 (Curry 3-14, class titles in 21 years as a pro. H.Barnes 2-3, D.Green 2-5, Thompson 2-10, games left for both teams, the when JR Smith missed a threeup a ring that sold more than Iguodala 1-2, Barbosa 0-1, Rush 0-1), Memphis “As of now I am retired,” 1⁄2 games ahead pointer at the buzzer, prevent1,000 bogus non-immigrant Hawks moved 1 7-21 (M.Barnes 3-8, Carter 1-2, Stephenson ing Cleveland from clinching Pacquiao said. “I am going to 1-2, Munford 1-3, Farmar 1-3, Randolph 0-1, of Miami and Charlotte. student visas. The ruse was the No. 1 seed in the Eastern go home and think about it but Hairston 0-2). Fouled Out-None. Reboundsso convincing, insiders say, Golden State 53 (D.Green 11), Memphis 57 Conference. I want to be with my family. I (M.Barnes 15). Assists-Golden State 20 (Curry BOSTON (107) that eight SEC teams already Crowder 5-11 5-7 16, Johnson 6-8 2-2 14, want to serve the people.” 8), Memphis 19 (Carter, M.Barnes, Munford

COLLEGE HOCKEY

North Dakota takes NCAA title Tampa, Fla. — Drake Caggiula scored twice in the third period, and Brock Boeser had a goal and three assists to help North Dakota win its eighth NCAA hockey championship, 5-1 over top-seeded Quinnipiac on Saturday night. Cam Johnson had 32 saves for the Fighting Hawks (34-6-4). They won their first national title since 2000 to pull within one of Michigan for the record. Caggiula scored in each of North Dakota’s four tournament wins. He also had two goals in a 4-2 victory over Denver that sent the Fighting Hawks into the Frozen Four final for the 13th time. Quinnipiac (32-4-7) lost in the title game for the second time in four seasons. The Bobcats trailed 2-1 entering the third period, but their hopes for a first championship faded quickly when Caggiula beat goalie Michael Garteig twice in just over two minutes to break the game open before a crowd of 19,358.

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4). Total Fouls-Golden State 14, Memphis 16. A-18,119 (18,119).

Suns 121, Pelicans 100 New Orleans — Archie Goodwin scored 24 points and Mizra Teletovic added 22 points to lead Phoenix past New Orleans in a matchup of lottery-bound teams. The victory was the second straight for Phoenix (22-58), which snapped a seven-game losing streak on Thursday with a 124-115 win at Houston. Toney Douglas had 23 points to lead New Orleans (30-50),

Sullinger 2-7 0-0 4, Thomas 6-19 3-4 16, Bradley 6-17 1-2 15, Smart 7-12 1-2 19, Turner 5-10 0-0 11, Olynyk 1-2 3-4 6, Jerebko 0-2 0-0 0, Zeller 1-1 1-3 3, Rozier 0-0 0-0 0, Young 0-0 0-0 0, Hunter 1-1 0-0 3. Totals 40-90 16-24 107. ATLANTA (118) Bazemore 8-13 3-3 21, Millsap 13-22 0-0 31, Horford 5-13 0-0 12, Teague 9-15 3-3 24, Korver 2-4 0-0 5, Sefolosha 0-2 1-2 1, Hardaway Jr. 1-2 1-1 3, Humphries 1-2 1-2 3, Schroder 6-12 0-0 15, Scott 1-3 0-0 3. Totals 46-88 9-11 118. Boston 32 39 20 16 — 107 Atlanta 34 33 26 25 — 118 3-Point Goals-Boston 11-28 (Sm art 4-6, Bradley 2-7, Olynyk 1-1, Hunter 1-1, Turner 1-3, Thomas 1-4, Crowder 1-5, Jerebko 0-1), Atlanta 17-33 (Millsap 5-7, Schroder 3-4, Teague 3-5, Horford 2-5, Bazemore 2-6, Scott 1-2, Korver 1-3, Hardaway Jr. 0-1). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Boston 53 (Johnson 8), Atlanta 49 (Millsap 16). Assists-Boston 26 (Thomas 6), Atlanta 31 (Schroder, Teague 7). Total FoulsBoston 21, Atlanta 22. Technicals-Boston defensive three second. A-19,257 (18,729).

CLEVELAND (102) James 13-17 3-4 33, Love 6-17 4-5 20, Thompson 1-3 1-4 3, Irving 5-17 0-0 11, Smith 8-16 1-3 24, Dellavedova 1-6 0-0 3, Frye 2-6 0-0 6, Mozgov 0-0 2-2 2, Jefferson 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 36-83 11-18 102. CHICAGO (105) Dunleavy 2-7 1-1 6, Mirotic 5-11 0-0 13, Gasol 4-7 3-5 11, Rose 5-14 0-0 10, Butler 7-17 5-5 21, Portis 3-10 0-1 6, Felicio 7-7 2-2 16, Brooks 4-6 0-0 9, Holiday 1-6 5-5 7, McDermott 2-4 1-2 6. Totals 40-89 17-21 105. Cleveland 31 23 28 20 — 102 Chicago 27 25 27 26 — 105 3-Point Goals-Cleveland 19-40 (Smith 7-14, James 4-5, Love 4-9, Frye 2-5, Irving 1-2, Dellavedova 1-5), Chicago 8-25 (Mirotic 3-7, Butler 2-4, McDermott 1-1, Brooks 1-2, Dunleavy 1-5, Portis 0-1, Rose 0-2, Holiday 0-3). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Cleveland 52 (Love 13), Chicago 55 (Gasol 12). AssistsCleveland 24 (Irving 8), Chicago 19 (Butler 6). Total Fouls-Cleveland 18, Chicago 22. A-22,186 (20,917).

LATEST LINE MLB Favorite ................... Odds................ Underdog National League NY METS .............................11-13.................. Philadelphia Pittsburgh .....................51⁄2-61⁄2................ CINCINNATI WASHINGTON ................61⁄2-71⁄2........................... Miami St. Louis . ............................ 7-8.......................... ATLANTA SAN FRANCISCO ............... 6-7..................... LA Dodgers COLORADO ......................Even-6..................... San Diego Chicago Cubs ...............71⁄2-81⁄2...................... ARIZONA American League TORONTO ........................51⁄2-61⁄2......................... Boston BALTIMORE .....................Even-6................... Tampa Bay CHI WHITE SOX ................. 6-7........................ Cleveland KANSAS CITY .........61⁄2-71⁄2........... Minnesota

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LA ANGELS ......................Even-6.............................. Texas SEATTLE . ............................9-10........................... Oakland DETROIT ..........................51⁄2-61⁄2............... NY Yankees Interleague Houston .............................. 7-8..................... MILWAUKEE NBA Favorite ............. Points (O/U).......... Underdog Charlotte .....................51⁄2 (207.5).......... WASHINGTON HOUSTON ......................14 (212.5).................. LA Lakers LA CLIPPERS . .................3 (195)............................. Dallas Utah ..................................6 (192)......................... DENVER x-Milwaukee ................OFF (OFF).......... PHILADELPHIA y-INDIANA ....................OFF (OFF).................... Brooklyn MIAMI ..............................81⁄2 (210)...................... Orlando SAN ANTONIO ................5 (207)..................... Golden St

Toronto . ........................31⁄2 (195).................. NEW YORK x-Milwaukee Forward K. Middleton is doubtful. y-Indiana Guard P. George is questionable. NHL Favorite .............. Goals (O/U).......... Underdog NY ISLANDERS .........Even-1⁄2 (5.5)......... Philadelphia WASHINGTON ...........Even-1⁄2 (5.5)................ Anaheim ARENA FOOTBALL Favorite ............. Points (O/U).......... Underdog Monday Week 2 PHILADELPHIA ............91⁄2 (111.5).............. Jacksonville Home Team in CAPS (c) TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC

had them on next season’s nonconference football schedule.”

— Dwight Perry, in the Seattle Times

TODAY IN SPORTS 1949 — Sam Snead wins the Masters, beating Lloyd Mangrum and Johnny Bulla by three strokes. 1955 — Cary Middlecoff beats Ben Hogan by seven strokes to win the Masters. 1961 — South Africa’s Gary Player becomes the first foreign player to win the Masters, edging Arnold Palmer and Charley Coe by one stroke. 1977 — Tom Watson pulls away in the final four holes to beat Jack Nicklaus by two strokes in the Masters. 1988 — Scotland’s Sandy Lyle sinks a 12-foot birdie putt on the 18th hole for a one-shot victory in the Masters, becoming the first British player to win the tournament. 2005 — Tiger Woods wins the Masters with a spectacular finish of birdies and bogeys. Woods turns back a surprising challenge from Chris DiMarco with a 15-foot birdie putt on the first extra hole to capture his fourth green jacket.

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LOCAL

L awrence J ournal -W orld

BRIEFLY • KANSAS UNIVERSITY

Sunday, April 10, 2016

| 3C

Hoops CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

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KANSAS UNIVERSITY CATCHER MICHAEL TINSLEY TAGS OUT TCU junior Elliott Barzilli at home plate during the Jayhawks’ 8-0 loss Saturday at Hoglund Ballpark.

Kansas baseball blanked by TCU Kansas University managed just six hits and surrendered 13 in an 8-0 Big 12 baseball loss to No. 6-ranked TCU on Saturday at Hoglund Ballpark. KU’s Joe Maroney was thrown out at home to end the first inning to blunt the Jayhawks’ best scoring threat. “(TCU starter Dalton Horton) was pretty dominant. He completely shut us down offensively,” KU coach Ritch Price said. “He went out there like a freshman today, and we had a chance to score in the first and got thrown out at the dish. The kid made a great throw and a great tag. From that point on, Horton settled in and got better as the game went on.” Horton (5-0) allowed five hits over seven scoreless innings. Blake Weiman (1-3) took the loss after giving up four earned runs off nine hits over 52⁄3 innings. “Weiman was in trouble in every single inning but the first,” Price said. “The game could have gotten out of hand. How about the four-hit inning TCU had? We turned the fiveunassisted-two double play and limited it to one run, and at that point I thought we still had a chance. At the same time, we walked way too many guys and hit too many guys when you are facing a lineup as tough as that one. Before it was over they beat up the backend of our bullpen.” Joven Afenir was the only Jayhawk with more than one hit. He went 2-for-4. Kansas (12-17 overall, 2-5 Big 12) and TCU (23-7, 5-3) will play the rubber game in the series at 1 p.m. today. TCU 010 210 022 — 8 13 3 Kansas 000 000 000 — 0 6 2 W — Dalton Horton, 5-0. L — Blake Weiman, 1-3. 2B — Evan Skoug, Dane Steinhagen, Connor Wanhanen, TCU. Kansas highlight — Joven Afenin 2-for-4.

Kawinpakorn claims golf title Lubbock, Texas — Kansas University senior women’s golfer Yupaporn Kawinpakorn added a couple of school records to her résumé Saturday. Kawinpakorn won the Red Raider Invitational with a three-round scored of 7-under 209. That lowered her week-old school record for a 54-hole score and was her school-record fifth individual title of the season. “It’s been surreal watching ‘Mook’ (Kawinpakorn) perform like she has. I’m so grateful to have the opportunity to coach Kawinpakorn her and to count her as part of our family. It’s not every day you have a student-athlete who has a true passion for golf, and for life in general, combined with a work ethic unlike any I’ve seen,” 12th-year KU coach Erin

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KANSAS UNIVERSITY SENIOR CHALEY BRICKEY (12) SLIDES into home past Georgia Tech catcher Kaylee Eleebracht on Saturday afternoon at Arrocha Ballpark at Rock Chalk Park. O’Neil said. “I truly believe the best is yet to come for her.” Kawinpakorn held a 3-stroke lead heading into Saturday’s final round and held off runner-up Sarah Brown of Texas Tech by a stroke. “I’m speechless. This is unbelievable,” Kawinpakorn said. “I’ve dreamed of winning tournaments, but I never thought it would be this many in one season. All of my hard work is paying off and it feels good.” As a team, KU placed third with 881 strokes, trailing Texas Tech (867) and Purdue (880). Kansas’ Pornvipa Sakdee tied for seventh at 218, Victoria Chandra tied for 40th at 228, Ariadna Fonseca was 46th at 230, Pitsinee Winyarat tied for 64th at 237, and Kallie Gonzales tied for 69th at 239. KU will compete April 22-24 at the Big 12 Championships at Dominion Country Club in San Antonio.

but couldn’t string them together. We told the team to keep working and to just string some things together. We did that today in both games and I was excited to see our offense click today.” Alexis Reid (2-5) pitched a five-hitter against North Texas, and Andie Formby tossed a four-hitter against Georgia Tech. “Alexis and Andie had great days,” Smith said. “It helps when your offense gives you some breathing room, and both pitchers got to work with breathing room, but both threw extremely well today.” The Jayhawks will meet Georgia Tech at 11:30 a.m. today. Kansas 12, North Texas 2 North Texas 001 01 — 2 5 1 Kansas 010 65 — 12 9 0 W — Alexis Reid, 2-5. L — Jessica Elder, 12-7. 2B — Kelli Schkade, NT; Daniella Chavez, Harli Ridling, Lily Behrmann, KU. HR — Lauren Miller, NT. KU highlights — Ridling 2-for-2, 2 runs, RBI; Behrmann 2-for-2, 2 runs, RBI; Chavez 1-for-3, 4 RBIs; Brickey 1-for-3, run, 3 RBIs.

Rivals.com, joked to media as reported by USA Today. “I don’t even really want to touch this mic (in interview room). It’s still hot. I just had it going. The first few felt good, and I knew it was on. They just kept feeding me after that. I just said, ‘Throw it up!’ That was the plan, throw it up.” Future KU forward Udoka Azubuike had three points and two boards in nine minutes for the World Team. He was fouled hard by a pair of U.S. players in the first half and shaken up on that play, limiting his minutes. “Am fine. My hip was hurting me. (I) wanted to get back in the game but couldn’t, but I will be fine just need a little rest,” Azubuike said in a text to jayhawkslant.com. The 6-11, 270-pounder, who is ranked No. 27 in the Class of 2016 by Rivals.com, is expected to be able to play in Friday’s Jordan Brand Classic in Barklays Center in Brooklyn. No. 20-ranked Jarrett Allen, a 6-9 senior forward who has KU on his list of schools, had nine rebounds and nine points for the winners. DeAndre Ayton, the No. 1 rated player in the Class of 2017 who is considering KU and others, had eight points and seven boards for World Select. He’s a 7-footer from Hillcrest Academy in Phoenix, originally from Bahamas. The U.S. forced 29 turnovers and held the World Squad to 33.3 percent shooting, 3-of-19 from three. “Our whole motto this week was to come out and be very aggressive from the beginning, and I thought that the guys did an excellent job today at that to set the tone early,” said Team USA head coach L.J. Goolsby, who is coach of KC Run GMC’s youth basketball team. The U.S., which had dropped three of the last four games to the World squad, is 13-6 at the Hoop Summit. l

No date set: Ferguson was asked about his recruitment after the game. “I don’t have a due date right now, whenever it happens, it happens,” he said. He committed to Alabama in the fall but reopened his recruiting several weeks ago. Over the weekend he said he wanted to visit North Carolina, which has made a recent push. l

Wild questions: USA Today asked top recruit Jackson some wacky questions over the weekend: n Which coach on your list (Bill Self, Tom Izzo, Kansas 10, Georgia Tech 0 Sean Miller) would have Georgia Tech 000 00 — 0 4 1 Kansas 001 9x — 10 11 0 the best chance to be PresW — Andie Formby, 13-5. L — Jenna Goodrich, ident of the United States? 6-9. 2B — Chaley Brickey, KU; HR — Jessie Roane, KU. Kansas softball Josh: “Hmm, I think Bill KU highlights — Roane 2-for-3, run, 3 RBIs; Lily Self. Just when I look at Behrmann 2-for-2, 2 runs, RBI; Brickey 2-for-2, runs. sweeps pair him sometimes he looks Kansas University’s like a president. Also, the KU soccer softball team claimed a way he carries himself. pair of victories — 12-2 He’s a winner. He’s won takes friendly over North Texas and 10-0 12 straight Big 12 titles Tulsa, Okla. — Sopho- and we’ve got the best against Georgia Tech — more transfer Alex Schon Saturday at Arrocha country in the world, so weitzer had a goal and an we’d need a winner.” Ballpark. n You’re on a lifeboat assist as Kansas University An Arrocha Ballpark in the middle of the ocean record crowd of 1,240 saw beat Tulsa, 2-1, in a spring and you can only save one friendly on Saturday. the Jayhawks improve to of the three head coaches Junior Ashley Pankey 23-13. on your list; who’s getting “We could feel the ener- also had a goal for KU. pulled in?” “I was really happy gy and that helped us,” KU Josh: “(Laughs) Oh coach Megan Smith said. with how we played in “Today, I felt like everyone the first half today,” Kan- man! That’s tough man… was into the game and our sas coach Mark Francis You know what, I’m probably gonna have to go team fed off of that, which said. “We were all over was fun. It was a fun day to them in the first half and ahead and put Sean Miller on the lifeboat. Sean’s my were doing some really be out here because of so guy and, out of the three nice things on both ends many young girls. A lot of of the field. We came out coaches, I’ve probably those young girls want to got the best relationship be out on a college softball a little flat in the second with him. He coached me half, but, overall, I was field one day, so it’s a lot with U19 USA Basketball happy with the game of fun to see them in the today. I think the first two and I think just having stands cheering for us.” that experience with him Daniella Chavez drove matches of the spring is why. I can’t really say (vs. the Kansas Men’s in four runs against North Club Team and FC Kansas I have as close a relationTexas, and Jessie Roane City) really helped us and ship with the other two homered and drove in coaches, but I’m pretty three runs against Georgia have us in a good place as we move forward over sure they’re great people. Tech. For me, having this close “I’m really excited about the next few weeks.” relationship with Sean KU will host Iowa in an what we did today,” Smith said. “Yesterday, we had Miller; he would have to exhibition game Saturday a lot of good moments be the one to get saved.” at Rock Chalk Park.

Orlin Wagner/AP Photo

KANSAS CITY’S LORENZO CAIN (6) CELEBRATES with teammate Eric Hosmer after Cain’s solo home run in the fourth inning of the Royals’ 7-0 victory on Saturday in Kansas City, Mo.

Kennedy pitches K.C. past Twins Kansas City, Mo. (ap) — Ian Kennedy followed up an unimpressive spring with a strong regular-season debut with the Kansas City Royals. Kennedy pitched 62⁄3 scoreless innings, and the Royals hit their first three home runs of the season to beat the winless Minnesota Twins 7-0 Saturday night. “There was a little more added to it, coming to a new team that’s the defending world champs,” said Kennedy, who was 0-3 with a 6.30 in spring games. “You want to do well. It adds a little more to it in your first outing for them.” The Twins fell to 0-5 for the first time since the Washington Senators moved to Minnesota in 1961. Kennedy (1-0), signed by the Royals to a fiveyear $70 million contract in January, limited the Twins to five hits — including four singles, before being pulled after 109 pitches with two out in the seventh. He walked one and struck out seven. “This is the pitcher we signed,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “We don’t even look at spring training numbers. He was on top of his game.” Mike Moustakas and Lorenzo Cain hit successive home runs in the fourth for the first hits off Twins left-hander Tommy Milone, while Kendrys Morales homered in the sixth off Casey Fien. “Even those two home runs I felt were two pretty well-placed pitches,” Milone said. “Just good hitters. They were either waiting for it or good adjustments.” Milone (0-1) allowed four runs — two earned — and four hits in 42⁄3 innings. Twins shortstop Edu-

BOX SCORE Minnesota AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Dozier 2b 3 0 1 0 1 1 .176 Da.Santana cf 3 0 0 0 0 0 .167 Buxton cf 1 0 0 0 0 1 .133 Mauer 1b 4 0 1 0 0 2 .294 Plouffe 3b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .150 Arcia rf-lf 3 0 0 0 1 1 .000 Park dh 4 0 1 0 0 2 .231 E.Escobar ss 3 0 2 0 0 0 .444 b-Nunez ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Rosario lf 2 0 1 0 0 0 .200 a-Sano ph-rf 2 0 0 0 0 1 .133 K.Suzuki c 3 0 0 0 0 0 .154 Totals 33 0 7 0 2 9 Kansas City AB R H BI BB SO Avg. A.Escobar ss 5 0 1 1 0 0 .278 Moustakas 3b 5 1 2 2 0 1 .250 L.Cain cf 3 1 1 1 2 0 .231 Hosmer 1b 4 0 0 0 1 1 .214 K.Morales dh 4 1 1 1 0 3 .143 A.Gordon lf 3 0 0 0 1 2 .154 S.Perez c 3 2 1 0 1 0 .308 Infante 2b 4 1 1 0 0 1 .308 Orlando rf 4 1 3 1 0 0 .750 Totals 35 7 10 6 5 8 Minnesota 000 000 000—0 7 2 Kansas City 000 223 00x—7 10 0 a-flied out for Rosario in the 7th. b-grounded into a fielder’s choice for E.Escobar in the 9th. E-E.Escobar 2 (2). LOB-Minnesota 8, Kansas City 9. 2B-Rosario (2), S.Perez (1). 3B-A.Escobar (2). HR-Moustakas (1), off Milone; L.Cain (1), off Milone; K.Morales (1), off Fien. RBIs-A.Escobar (1), Moustakas 2 (2), L.Cain (1), K.Morales (2), Orlando (1). CS-E.Escobar (1). Runners left in scoring position-Minnesota 5 (Dozier, Sano 3, Plouffe); Kansas City 6 (Hosmer 4, Moustakas, S.Perez). RISP-Minnesota 0 for 5; Kansas City 4 for 12. Minnesota IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Milone L, 0-1 42⁄3 4 4 2 1 4 84 3.86 Fien 1 3 3 3 1 1 23 16.88 Tonkin 11⁄3 1 0 0 2 1 36 0.00 Perkins 1 2 0 0 1 2 27 0.00 Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Kennedy W, 1-0 62⁄3 5 0 0 1 7 109 0.00 D.Duffy 11⁄3 2 0 0 0 1 19 0.00 Wang 1 0 0 0 1 1 22 0.00 Inherited runners-scored-Fien 2-0, Tonkin 1-1, D.Duffy 2-0. WP-Perkins 2, Kennedy. Umpires-Home, D.J. Reyburn; First, John Hirschbeck; Second, Bill Welke; Third, Vic Carapazza. T-3:04. A-31,001 (37,903).

ardo Escobar committed two errors — one fielding and one throwing — leading to the two unearned runs in the fifth. “Everything went wrong that could,” Twins manager Paul Molitor said. “A decent start from Tommy and then the back-to-back homers. We were having trouble getting anything going offensively again. Then we made some mistakes in the field the next inning that kind of opened up the flood gates a little bit.” Paulo Orlando, who was making his first start of the season, had three hits, including an RBI single in the three-run sixth and scored on Alcides Escobar’s two-out triple.

BRIEFLY • PREPS FSHS softball slams SM South Overland Park — Dacia Starr and Kate Stanwix hit consecutive home runs in a 15-run second inning, Elizaberth Patton, Mayah Daniels and Erica Arensberg combined on a one-hitter, and Free State High’s softball team defeated Shawnee Mission South, 20-0, on Saturday. Starr went 4-for-4 with five RBIs, Stanwix was 3-for-3 with two RBIs, and Madison Norris was 2-for-2 with four RBIs. “We swung the bats extremely well today,” FSHS coach Lee Ice said. “Fourteen hits in three innings isn’t easy to do. And we hit the ball hard. Now we’ve got to hope that carries over to Shawnee Mission Northwest on Tuesday. The Firebirds (2-2) will be on the road Tuesday to face SM Northwest.

Free State 5(15)0 — 20 14 0 SM South 000 — 0 1 0 W — Elizabeth Patton, 2-2. L — Schultz. FSHS highlights — Dacia Starr 4-for-4, 5 RBIs, 3 runs, HR, 2 2Bs; Kate Stanwix 3-for-3, 2 RBIs, HR, 3B; Hailey Jump 2-for-2, 3 RBIs; Madison Norris 2-for-2, 4 RBIs, 2 2Bs; Cali Byrn 2-for-3, 3 RBIs.

Veritas blanks Sunrise twice Wichita — Zach Hill and Jackson Rau earned victories, and Veritas Christian’s baseball team shut out Sunrise Christian twice Saturday, 17-0 and 9-0. Hill also went 3-for-3 in the opener, and Rau drove in three runs in the second game for the Eagles, who improved to 8-1. Veritas 17, Sunrise 0 Veritas 3(12)2 — 17 12 1 Sunrise 000 — 0 1 4 W — Zach Hill, 1-1. Veritas highlights — Hill struck out 5, went 3-for-3, 2B; Weston Flory 2-for-3, 4 RBIs; P3yton Donohoe 2B, 3 RBIs.

Veritas 9, Sunrise 0 Veritas 101 07 — 9 5 1 Sunrise 000 00 — 0 3 5 W — Jackson Rau, 2-0. Veritas highlights — Rau 3 RBIs; Calvin Koch 2B, 2 RBIs. Veritas record — 8-1. Next for Veritas — Saturday vs. Plaza Heights Christian at Kansas City, Kan.


4C

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Sunday, April 10, 2016

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KU SPRING GAME

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Spring CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photos

KANSAS UNIVERSITY PLAYERS AND FANS LOWER THEIR HEADS DURING A MOMENT OF SILENCE for former player Brandon Bourbon at Saturday’s spring game at Memorial Stadium. Bourbon committed suicide and was found Friday.

NOTEBOOK

Jayhawks honor Bourbon Super Bowl 50 in February in Santa Clara, Calif. In all, 40 former players were listed on the alumi rosters, and several more filled the stands to support the program. For the second year in a row, 90-year-old Bryan Sperry stole the show by scoring a touchdown on a reception late in the alumni game.

By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com

Before the pom-poms waved, the band played and supporters of Kansas University football cheered on the 2016 team during Saturday’s annual spring game at Memorial Stadium, the crowd of 1,200 fans, along with the players and coaches on the field, kicked things off with a moment of silence for former KU running back Brandon Bourbon, who on Friday was found dead near his hometown of Potosi, Mo., after a sixday search. With Bourbon’s smiling face plastered on the Memorial Stadium video board, heads bowed and prayers went up for the 24-year-old former Jayhawk who committed suicide last week. KU coach David Beaty said the news of Bourbon’s passing came as a harsh blow to several players on his team, many of whom knew Bourbon well and stood next to him during his five-year career as a Jayhawk. And Beaty said he believed getting back to football proved to be therapeutic in a sense. “It’s been a rough 24 hours around here for our team because of Brandon Bourbon and the loss of one of our family members,” Beaty said. “There’s been some hard individual talks with those guys over the last 12 or 15 hours. Some of them haven’t gotten a lot of sleep. But that’s what it means to be a Jayhawk. They really, truly care about each other. There’s a bond there that it’s hard to describe. “I think it was a healing day because that’s what

KANSAS QUARTERBACK MONTELL COZART WEARS A TRIBUTE to former teammate Brandon Bourbon on a towel at his side. Brandon would have wanted us to do, is go out there and play Jayhawk football, so that was fun getting out there and getting that done.” Linebacker Joe Dineen, who played with Bourbon as a true freshman, agreed with Beaty and said it was good for him and his teammates to “get back to something familiar.” “His name echoes throughout the halls here as one of the genuine, good dudes that was on the team,” Dineen said of Bourbon. “It’s so sad to hear what happened.” With funeral arrangements still pending, Dineen said Beaty made it clear that the program would work with any players that wanted to attend Bourbon’s memorial services. Senior quarterback Montell Cozart on Saturday wrote the words “RIP 25” on his uniform towel, and Beaty made sure to

stress the creation of a GoFundMe account put together to support Bourbon’s family. “That GoFundMe account is GoFundMe.com, Brandon Bourbon Funeral Funds,” Beaty said. “And, if you would, just continue to mention that for us because I know the family is in need right now.”

Willis still sidelined Several starters did not play in the spring game, including quarterback Ryan Willis, who sat out because of a wrist injury. Cozart started in his place, and the depth at quarterback fell out like this behind him: No. 2 Keaton Perry, No. 3 Carter Stanley, No. 4 Deondre Ford. Willis’ absence was most notable in the lack of down-the-field throws and four interceptions tossed by the four KU QBs who did play. Beaty said last year’s

eight-game starter remains on pace to recover in time to compete this summer and into preseason camp. “He’s actually gone through a lot more than probably what people think because he’s actually healing pretty fast,” Beaty said. “He’s a tough kid. He’s taking snaps. He’s working inside with us, and on occasion he will go through plays. We won’t let him throw it, but he’ll go through plays and take us through his reads with his feet and his shoulders, so he’s getting a lot of work that way.”

Alumni action Former Kansas University cornerback Chris Harris kept his triumphant year going with his first victory as a head coach. Harris, who coached his alumni squad to victory over Darrell Stuckey’s crew, was a huge part of the Denver Broncos’ run to a win over Carolina in

Keegan CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

KANSAS QUARTERBACK CARTER STANLEY (9) HEAVES A PASS to a receiver.

Cozart threw three interceptions and two would-be interceptions that were dropped. Red-shirt freshman Carter Stanley (12-for-22, 117 yards, one touchdown, one interception) showed accuracy on short passes but showed a slow release and lacked zip on long throws. At its peak, the crowd count stood about 1,200. Many didn’t stay long enough to watch halftime, which featured

Making progress Although it was clear that Saturday’s spring game left plenty to be desired and highlighted many areas that the Jayhawks still need to improve, Beaty said his team had come a long way since this time last year. “Year one to year two, night and day in terms of just how we practice, how we look, how we’re conducting our business in spring,” he said. “They just got a little bit more maturity about them, which experience gives you, and really understanding kind of what we want, playing smarter. It’s been night and day in that regard.” This and that ... Frank Seurer Jr., a former quarterback turned safety, led the Kansas defense with eight tackles. He also tallied one of KU’s seven tackles for loss. Earlier in the day, his father, standout Kansas QB Frank Seurer Sr., threw passes during the alumni game. ... Colin Spencer, Hudson Hall, Cameron Rosser and newcomer Stephan Robinson all recorded interceptions in Saturday’s victory by the White team. ... Defensive ends Kellen Ash and Damani Mosby were credited with sacks.

burly linemen fielding punts from the Juggs machine. That sideshow triggered memories of always funny and frank Charles Barkley mocking KU’s football program for releasing a video of the players, in pads and helmets, shooting at a basketball hoop rolled onto the football field, playing a game of knockout. That video, made to wish the basketball team luck in the NCAA Tournament, drew far more attention to the football program than anything else from spring practices. In keeping with that theme of mixing fun and

a kid in a candy store this morning,” Beaty said. “I think he was here about 6 o’clock because he hadn’t played football in forever. He was so excited to get on that field, and he loves the game. ... He’s got some explosiveness that I don’t think we possessed last year. So it’s good to see him out there.” Beaty said the plan was to get Gonzalez seven to 10 touches and, factoring in his one kickoff return, he hit that number. The touchdown was a simple crossing pattern from left to right, and Cozart, the senior QB who suffered through what Beaty called one of his worst days this spring, hit him in stride about 10 yards down the field, allowing Gonzalez to take care of the rest. “I’m kind of a greedy player, and I’m trying to get to the end zone every play,” Gonzalez said. “I beat my man, kind of froze him a little bit and then took off. It felt good being able to show those people what I can do out there.” The Journal-World estimated a crowd of roughly 1,200 at Saturday’s spring game. Beaty said he was pleased with how things went. “We tried to keep everybody safe,” said Beaty, one year after watching potential starting quarterback Michael Cummings be lost for the season because of a fluke knee injury suffered during the spring game. “We walked out of there happy that we got great video to work from.” With two practices still on the docket this spring, going to work remains the focus for this team. Beaty, who said he lifted the idea for Saturday’s format from a couple of buddies, including Rice coach David Bailiff, said all of the statistics, highlights and lowlights produced on Saturday only matter if they contribute to the bottom line. “I’ll be honest with you guys, we didn’t care about the score (today),” Beaty said. “We just cared about the situations. ... We’re trying to put emphasis on how we get better and not just going through plays and getting through days. How do you get better?”

STATISTICS BLUE TEAM Offensive statistics Rushing — 42-125: Taylor Martin 15-56, James Sullivan 11-24, Michael Zunica 4-21, J.J. Jolaoso 6-18, Montell Cozart 1-5, Deondre Ford 1-3, Carter Stanley 1-1, Keaton Perry 3-(minus-3) Passing — 30-61-316 (four intercepted): Stanley 12-22-117 (1 intercepted), Cozart 10-19-137 (3 intercepted), Perry 4-11-23, Ford 4-9-39. Receiving — 30-316 (2 TDs): LaQuvionte Gonzalez 6-115 (1 TD), Keegan Brewer 5-49, Steven Sims 3-45 (1 TD), Austin Moses 2-22, Emmanuel Moore 2-21, Bobby Hartzog 2-18, Jace Sternberger 2-15, Taylor Martin 2-7, Tyler Patrick 2-4, Sullivan 2-2, Darious Crawley 1-10, Jeremiah Booker 1-8. Field goals — 4-for-6: Matthew Wyman made from 31, 28, 22, 34; missed from 49, 46. WHITE TEAM Defensive Statistics Total tackles — 63, 2 sacks, 7 TFLs: Leaders: Frank Seurer 8 (1 TFL), Colin Spencer 6 (1 TFL), Kellen Ash 5 (1 sack), Hudson Hall 5, Tyrone Miller 4, Greg Allen 4, Joe Dineen 4, Cameron Rosser 4, Courtney Arnick 4 (1.5 TFL). Interceptions — 4 for 38 yards: Spencer 1-18, Hall 1-20, Rosser 1-0, Stephan Robinson 1-0.

games with practicing football, Beaty had guest coaches Chris Harris of the Super Bowl champion Denver Broncos and Darrell Stuckey of the San Diego Chargers call plays for a stretch of Saturday’s public practice. Kansas, which had one scholarship running back healthy enough to participate Saturday, went 25-13 and won two bowl games in the three seasons Stuckey and Harris were teammates. These are not those days. The Jayhawks carry a 15-game losing streak into 2016 and have lost their last 38 games played outside of Lawrence.


SPORTS

L awrence J ournal -W orld

MAJOR-LEAGUE ROUNDUP

Velasquez, Phils get ‘W’ The Associated Press

National League Phillies 1, Mets 0 New York — Vince Velasquez struck out a career-high nine over six innings in his Philadelphia debut, Ryan Howard homered off Bartolo Colon, and the Phillies on Saturday got their first win this season. Velasquez (1-0), a 23-year-old right-hander acquired in the sevenplayer offseason deal that sent closer Ken Giles to Houston, struggled through a 26-pitch first inning but retired Neil Walker on an inning-ending flyout with two on. New York didn’t put two runners on in an inning after that. Philadelphia New York ab r h bi ab r h bi Galvis ss 4 0 0 0 Grndrs rf 3 0 0 0 CHrndz 2b 4 0 2 0 ACarer ss 4 0 2 0 OHerrr cf 4 0 1 0 Cespds cf 4 0 0 0 Franco 3b 4 0 1 0 Duda 1b 4 0 1 0 Howard 1b 4 1 1 1 NWalkr 2b 4 0 0 0 JGomz p 0 0 0 0 Confort lf 4 0 0 0 Rupp c 4 0 2 0 WFlors 3b 2 0 0 0 CHuntr lf 3 0 0 0 dArnad c 3 0 0 0 Bourjos rf 3 0 1 0 B.Colon p 2 0 0 0 Velasqz p 2 0 0 0 Robles p 0 0 0 0 Neris p 0 0 0 0 De Aza ph 0 0 0 0 Stumpf p 0 0 0 0 Bastrd p 0 0 0 0 Goeddl ph 1 0 0 0 Famili p 0 0 0 0 DHrndz p 0 0 0 0 Ruf 1b 0 0 0 0 Totals 33 1 8 1 Totals 30 0 3 0 Philadelphia 000 010 000—1 New York 000 000 000—0 DP—New York 1. LOB—Philadelphia 5, New York 7. 2B—Bourjos (2), A.Cabrera (1). HR—Howard (2). SB—De Aza (1). CS—C.Hernandez (2). IP H R ER BB SO Philadelphia Velasquez W,1-0 6 3 0 0 3 9 2⁄3 Neris H,1 0 0 0 1 1 1⁄3 Stumpf H,1 0 0 0 0 0 D.Hernandez H,2 1 0 0 0 0 2 J.Gomez S,1-1 1 0 0 0 0 0 New York B.Colon L,0-1 6 5 1 1 0 7 Robles 1 0 0 0 0 1 Bastardo 1 0 0 0 0 1 Familia 1 3 0 0 0 1 WP—Velasquez. T—2:44. A—37,083 (41,922).

Dodgers 3, Giants 2, 10 innings San Francisco — Madison Bumgarner hit another home run off Dodgers star Clayton Kershaw, but both aces were done by the time Charlie Culberson hit a go-ahead double in the 10th inning to lift Los Angeles over San Francisco. Bumgarner struck out eight, and Kershaw had five Ks in his eight innings for another impressive duel between the ace left-handers. Los Angeles San Francisco ab r h bi ab r h bi KHrndz 2b 3 1 2 0 Span cf 5 0 0 0 Utley ph-2b-3b 2 1 0 0 Pagan lf 4 0 1 0 Puig rf 4 0 1 0 Posey c 4 0 2 0 Turner 3b 4 0 1 0 Pence rf 3 0 0 0 Hatchr p 0 0 0 0 MDuffy 3b 4 0 0 0 Jansen p 0 0 0 0 Belt 1b 3 0 0 0 AGnzlz 1b 5 0 2 1 Tmlnsn 2b 3 0 0 0 VnSlyk lf 1 0 0 1 Panik ph-2b 1 0 0 0 Pedrsn pr-cf 1 0 0 0 Osich p 0 0 0 0 ABarns ph-c 2 0 0 0 Bmgrn p 2 1 1 1 Thmps cf-lf-cf 5 0 1 0 Romo p 0 0 0 0 Ellis c 3 0 0 0 GBlanc ph 1 0 0 0 CSeagr ph-ss 1 1 1 0 Lopez p 0 0 0 0 Culersn ss-lf 5 0 2 1 Strckln p 0 0 0 0 Kershw p 3 0 0 0 Casilla p 0 0 0 0 MJhnsn ph-2b 2 0 0 0 Kontos p 0 0 0 0 BCrwfr ss 1 0 0 0 Adrianz ss-2b 4 1 1 1 Totals 41 3 10 3 Totals 35 2 5 2 Los Angeles 001 000 001 1—3 San Francisco 010 010 000 0—2 E-M.Duffy (1). LOB-Los Angeles 13, San Francisco 5. 2B-K.Hernandez (1), A.Gonzalez (4), Thompson (2), C.Seager (3), Culberson 2 (2). HR-Bumgarner (1), Adrianza (1). SB-Posey (1). IP H R ER BB SO Los Angeles Kershaw 8 4 2 2 1 5 Hatcher W,1-0 1 1 0 0 1 3 Jansen S,2-2 1 0 0 0 0 1 San Francisco Bumgarner 6 6 1 1 1 8 Romo H,3 1 0 0 0 0 1 Lopez 0 1 0 0 0 0 Strickland H,1 1 0 0 0 1 2 Casilla BS,1-2 1 1 1 1 1 0 1⁄3 Kontos L,0-1 2 1 1 0 0 2⁄3 Osich 0 0 0 0 0 Lopez pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. HBP-by Casilla (Turner), by Bumgarner (Van Slyke). T-3:22. A-41,224 (41,915).

Reds 5, Pirates 1 Cincinnati — Eugenio Suarez drove in three runs with a single and a homer, and ace-by-default Raisel Iglesias made another solid start as Cincinnati handed Pittsburgh its first loss. Pittsburgh Cincinnati ab r h bi ab r h bi Jaso 1b 5 0 2 0 BHmltn cf 3 2 1 0 McCtch cf 4 0 1 0 Suarez 3b 3 3 2 3 Freese 3b 4 0 0 0 Votto 1b 3 0 2 0 SMarte lf 4 0 0 0 Phillips 2b 4 0 1 1 Cervelli c 3 1 3 0 Bruce rf 4 0 1 1 Polanc rf 3 0 2 0 Scheler lf 4 0 0 0 JHrrsn 2b 4 0 2 1 DJssJr ss 3 0 0 0 Mercer ss 4 0 0 0 Brnhrt c 3 0 0 0 Cole p 2 0 0 0 RIgless p 2 0 0 0 Caminr p 0 0 0 0 B.Wood p 0 0 0 0 Joyce ph 0 0 0 0 Mesorc ph 1 0 1 0 Lostein p 0 0 0 0 Cotham p 0 0 0 0 Morse ph 1 0 0 0 Hoover p 0 0 0 0 Totals 34 1 10 1 Totals 30 5 8 5 Pittsburgh 000 001 000—1 Cincinnati 200 010 20x—5 E-J.Harrison (1), B.Hamilton (1). DP-Pittsburgh 1, Cincinnati 3. LOB-Pittsburgh 9, Cincinnati 5. 2B-Jaso 2 (2), B.Hamilton (1). HR-Suarez (3). CS-Schebler (1). IP H R ER BB SO Pittsburgh Cole L,0-1 42⁄3 5 3 3 3 4 Caminero 11⁄3 1 0 0 0 1 Lobstein 2 2 2 2 1 1 Cincinnati R.Iglesias W,1-0 52⁄3 8 1 1 2 5 B.Wood H,1 11⁄3 1 0 0 1 1 Cotham 1 1 0 0 0 0 Hoover 1 0 0 0 0 1 T-3:00. A-22,799 (42,319).

Cubs 4, D’backs 2 Phoenix — Arizona ace Zack Greinke got off

STANDINGS American League

East Division W L Pct GB Baltimore 4 0 1.000 — Boston 3 1 .750 1 New York 3 2 .600 1½ Tampa Bay 2 3 .400 2½ Toronto 2 4 .333 3 Central Division W L Pct GB Detroit 3 1 .750 — Kansas City 3 1 .750 — Chicago 4 2 .667 — Cleveland 2 2 .500 1 Minnesota 0 5 .000 3½ West Division W L Pct GB Oakland 3 3 .500 — Texas 3 3 .500 — Houston 2 3 .400 ½ Seattle 2 3 .400 ½ Los Angeles 1 4 .200 1½ Saturday’s Games Boston 8, Toronto 4 N.Y. Yankees 8, Detroit 4 Chicago White Sox 7, Cleveland 3 Tampa Bay at Baltimore, ppd., rain Houston 6, Milwaukee 4 Kansas City 7, Minnesota 0 Texas 4, L.A. Angels 1 Oakland 6, Seattle 1 Today’s Games Boston (S.Wright 0-0) at Toronto (Estrada 0-0), 12:07 p.m. Tampa Bay (Odorizzi 0-0) at Baltimore (Worley 0-0), 12:35 p.m. Cleveland (Tomlin 0-0) at Chicago White Sox (Quintana 0-0), 1:10 p.m. Houston (Keuchel 1-0) at Milwaukee (Nelson 0-1), 1:10 p.m. Minnesota (Nolasco 0-0) at Kansas City (Volquez 1-0), 1:15 p.m. Texas (M.Perez 0-0) at L.A. Angels (Weaver 0-0), 2:35 p.m. Oakland (Bassitt 0-0) at Seattle (F.Hernandez 0-1), 3:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Tanaka 0-0) at Detroit (Verlander 0-0), 7:10 p.m.

National League

East Division W L Pct GB Washington 2 1 .667 — New York 2 2 .500 ½ Miami 1 2 .333 1 Philadelphia 1 4 .200 2 Atlanta 0 4 .000 2½ Central Division W L Pct GB Chicago 4 1 .800 — Cincinnati 4 1 .800 — Pittsburgh 4 1 .800 — Milwaukee 2 3 .400 2 St. Louis 2 3 .400 2 West Division W L Pct GB Los Angeles 4 2 .667 — San Francisco 4 2 .667 — Colorado 2 3 .400 1½ San Diego 2 3 .400 1½ Arizona 2 4 .333 2 Saturday’s Games Cincinnati 5, Pittsburgh 1 L.A. Dodgers 3, San Francisco 2, 10 innings Miami at Washington, ppd., cold weather Houston 6, Milwaukee 4 Philadelphia 1, N.Y. Mets 0 St. Louis 12, Atlanta 2 Chicago Cubs 4, Arizona 2 San Diego 16, Colorado 3 Today’s Games Philadelphia (Hellickson 0-0) at N.Y. Mets (Harvey 0-1), 12:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (Locke 0-0) at Cincinnati (Melville 0-0), 12:10 p.m. Miami (Koehler 0-0) at Washington (J.Ross 0-0), 12:35 p.m. St. Louis (Wainwright 0-1) at Atlanta (W.Perez 0-0), 12:35 p.m. Houston (Keuchel 1-0) at Milwaukee (Nelson 0-1), 1:10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Kazmir 1-0) at San Francisco (Cueto 1-0), 3:05 p.m. Chicago Cubs (Arrieta 1-0) at Arizona (S.Miller 0-0), 3:10 p.m. San Diego (Shields 0-1) at Colorado (Bettis 0-0), 3:10 p.m.

to a rough start and lost American League again, with Kris Bryant and Chicago beating the Yankees 8, Tigers 4 Diamondbacks. Detroit — CC Sabathia pitched into the seventh Chicago Arizona ab r h bi ab r h bi inning in his return for Fowler cf 4 1 1 0 Segura 2b 4 0 0 0 New York, and Alex RoHeywrd rf 4 1 1 0 Owings cf 4 1 1 0 Zobrist 2b 4 1 3 1 Gldsch 1b 4 0 0 0 driguez and Carlos BelRizzo 1b 3 1 1 1 DPerlt rf 4 1 1 0 Bryant 3b 4 0 2 1 WCastll c 3 0 0 0 tran homered in the cold Monter c 4 0 1 1 Tomas lf 3 0 0 0 to lift the Yankees past Soler lf 4 0 0 0 Drury 3b 3 0 2 1 Szczur lf 0 0 0 0 Greink p 1 0 0 0 Detroit. ARussll ss 4 0 0 0 Chafin p 0 0 0 0 Sabathia (1-0) allowed Hndrck p 3 0 1 0 Gosseln ph 1 0 0 0 Warren p 1 0 0 0 RDLRs p 0 0 0 0 three runs and four hits Rondon p 0 0 0 0 Ziegler p 0 0 0 0 Ahmed ss 3 0 0 0 in six-plus innings in his Totals 35 4 10 4 Totals 30 2 4 1 first start since missing Chicago 300 100 000—4 Arizona 000 100 100—2 the postseason last year E-Drury (1). DP-Arizona 2. LOB-Chicago 11, Arizona 3. 2B-Zobrist (2), Bryant 2 (3), Montero (1), while undergoing alcohol Drury (1). SB-Owings (1), D.Peralta (1). S-Greinke. rehabilitation. He retired SF-Montero. IP H R ER BB SO the first nine batters he Chicago faced and had only one Hendricks W,1-0 62⁄3 4 2 2 1 5 Warren H,1 11⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 really messy stretch, in Rondon S,1-1 1 0 0 0 0 2 Arizona the fourth. Rodriguez Greinke L,0-2 6 7 4 4 3 8 gave the Yankees a 1-0 Chafin 1 2 0 0 0 0 R.De La Rosa 1 0 0 0 0 2 lead in the first with his Ziegler 1 1 0 0 2 0 688th career homer, and HBP-by Ziegler (Heyward). WP-Hendricks. T-2:46. A-32,185 (48,519). Beltran hit a two-run shot in the fifth. Cardinals 12, Braves 2 New York Detroit ab r h bi ab r h bi Atlanta — Pitcher Ellsury cf 5 0 1 3 Kinsler 2b 4 1 1 1 Carlos Martinez drove in Gardnr lf 4 0 2 0 Upton lf 4 0 1 0 dh 4 1 1 1 MiCarr 1b 3 1 0 0 two runs, matching the ARdrgz Teixeir 1b 4 0 0 0 VMrtnz dh 3 0 0 0 4 3 2 0 JMrtnz rf 4 0 1 0 total he allowed in six in- BMcCn c rf 4 2 2 2 JMcCn c 4 0 1 2 nings, and St. Louis beat Beltran Hicks rf 1 0 0 0 JIglesis ss 4 1 2 0 SCastro 2b 4 1 2 0 Aviles 3b 4 1 1 0 Julio Teheran and win- Gregrs ss 4 0 1 2 Gose cf 2 0 0 0 less Atlanta. Torreys 3b 4 1 3 0 Cstllns ph 1 0 0 0 St. Louis Atlanta ab r h bi ab r h bi Carpntr 3b 3 1 2 1 Aybar ss 3 1 1 0 GGarci 3b 0 1 0 0 Markks rf 4 1 1 1 Hazelkr cf 4 1 1 1 FFrmn 1b 3 0 1 1 Hollidy lf 5 0 0 0 AdGarc 3b 4 0 0 0 Lyons p 0 0 0 0 Przyns c 4 0 0 0 Grichk ph 1 0 0 0 KJhnsn lf 3 0 0 0 Maness p 0 0 0 0 Stubbs cf 4 0 0 0 Moss 1b-lf 3 2 1 1 Petersn 2b 4 0 1 0 Pisctty rf 4 1 2 1 Tehern p 1 0 0 0 Molina c 5 0 1 1 Olivera ph 1 0 0 0 Fryer pr-c 1 1 1 1 Ogando p 0 0 0 0 Wong 2b 6 3 3 0 JRmrz p 0 0 0 0 A.Diaz ss 5 1 2 1 Francr ph 1 0 0 0 CMrtnz p 3 1 1 2 Gant p 0 0 0 0 Adams ph-1b 2 0 0 0 Grilli p 0 0 0 0 Vizcain p 0 0 0 0 Totals 42 12 14 9 Totals 32 2 4 2 St. Louis 021 220 122—12 Atlanta 002 000 000— 2 E-Carpenter (1), Adams (1), A.Diaz (2), Aybar (2), Markakis (1), Ad.Garcia (1). DP-St. Louis 2, Atlanta 1. LOB-St. Louis 14, Atlanta 6. 2B-Carpenter (1), Moss (2), Markakis (1). 3B-A.Diaz (1). SB-Hazelbaker (1). SF-Hazelbaker, Moss. IP H R ER BB SO St. Louis C.Martinez W,1-0 6 4 2 2 3 5 Lyons 2 0 0 0 0 1 Maness 1 0 0 0 0 1 Atlanta Teheran L,0-1 4 6 5 4 4 4 Ogando 2 2 2 1 1 0 J.Ramirez 1 2 1 1 1 1 Gant 1 3 2 2 0 3 2⁄3 Grilli 0 2 1 3 1 1⁄3 Vizcaino 1 0 0 0 0 WP-C.Martinez, Teheran 2, J.Ramirez. PB-Pierzynski. T-3:30. A-33,471 (49,586).

Padres 16, Rockies 3 Denver — Matt Kemp homered twice and drove in six runs, and San Diego ended Trevor Story’s home run streak. San Diego Colorado ab r h bi ab r h bi Jay cf 5 2 2 3 LeMahi 2b 5 1 2 0 UptnJr lf 5 2 2 0 Story ss 5 0 1 0 Kemp rf 5 2 3 6 CGnzlz rf 4 0 2 1 Hand p 0 0 0 0 Wolters ph 1 0 0 0 Bthncrt ph-c 1 0 1 1 Arenad 3b 3 1 0 0 Myers 1b 6 1 2 1 Rynlds 1b 4 1 1 0 Solarte 3b 1 0 1 0 Raburn lf 2 0 0 1 Rosales pr-3b 4 1 2 1 MCastr p 0 0 0 0 DeNrrs c 4 2 2 0 Blckmn ph 1 0 0 0 Perdm p 0 0 0 0 Qualls p 0 0 0 0 ARmrz ss 5 1 1 0 Logan p 0 0 0 0 Spngnr 2b 4 2 1 4 Hundly c 3 0 1 0 Pomrnz p 2 1 1 0 BBarns cf 4 0 1 0 Blash ph 1 1 1 0 JDLRs p 1 0 0 0 CVllnv p 1 0 0 0 Adams ph 0 0 0 0 Jnkwsk rf 0 1 0 0 Gurka p 0 0 0 0 Paulsn lf 2 0 0 0 Totals 44 16 19 16 Totals 35 3 8 2 San Diego 001 603 006—16 Colorado 000 200 100— 3 E-Spangenberg (2), Reynolds (1), Story (1). DP-Colorado 2. LOB-San Diego 7, Colorado 9. 2B-Jay (1), Blash (1), LeMahieu (2), Reynolds (1), Hundley (1), B.Barnes (1). HR-Kemp 2 (3), Myers (1), Spangenberg (1). CS-Upton Jr. (1). SF-Raburn. IP H R ER BB SO San Diego Pomeranz W,1-0 5 4 2 2 3 7 Ca.Villanueva 2 3 1 1 0 2 Hand 1 0 0 0 0 1 Perdomo 1 1 0 0 0 1 Colorado J.De La Rosa L,0-1 4 7 7 7 5 3 Gurka 2 6 3 3 0 0 M.Castro 2 0 0 0 0 4 1 Qualls ⁄3 3 3 2 0 0 2⁄3 Logan 3 3 2 1 1 WP-Pomeranz. T-3:24. A-35,177 (50,398).

Totals 38 8 14 8 Totals 33 4 7 3 New York 110 420 000—8 Detroit 000 200 200—4 E-Gardner (1). DP-New York 1, Detroit 1. LOBNew York 9, Detroit 6. 2B-Upton (3). 3B-Ellsbury (1). HR-A.Rodriguez (1), Beltran (2). SB-Gardner (1). CS-Gardner (1). SF-Gregorius. IP H R ER BB SO New York Sabathia W,1-0 6 4 3 3 4 3 2⁄3 Yates 2 1 1 0 1 1⁄3 Shreve 0 0 0 0 0 Betances 1 1 0 0 0 3 A.Miller 1 0 0 0 0 1 Detroit Pelfrey L,0-1 32⁄3 8 6 6 1 3 Farmer 21⁄3 4 2 2 1 4 Kensing 2 2 0 0 2 0 VerHagen 1 0 0 0 0 0 Sabathia pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. HBP-by Farmer (Gardner). WP-Sabathia, Yates, Pelfrey, Farmer. T-3:20. A-32,419 (41,297).

Red Sox 8, Blue Jays 4 Toronto — Dustin Pedroia had three hits and two RBIs, and Rick Porcello pitched six innings to win his season debut to lead Boston. Jose Bautista hit a pair of two-run home runs, his first two of the season, but the Blue Jays lost their fourth straight. Boston Toronto ab r h bi ab r h bi Betts rf 4 1 1 0 Pillar cf 4 0 0 0 Pedroia 2b 5 1 3 2 Dnldsn dh 4 2 2 0 Bogarts ss 4 2 1 1 Bautist rf 3 2 2 4 T.Shaw 1b 5 0 1 1 Encrnc 1b 4 0 1 0 HRmrz dh 5 1 1 2 Tlwtzk ss 4 0 1 0 Sandovl 3b 4 0 0 0 Carrer lf 3 0 0 0 B.Holt lf 5 1 1 0 Colaell ph-lf 1 0 0 0 RCastll cf 4 1 2 0 Goins 2b 3 0 0 0 Swihart c 2 1 1 1 RMartn ph 1 0 0 0 Barney 3b 4 0 1 0 Thole c 3 0 0 0 Smoak ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 38 8 11 7 Totals 35 4 7 4 Boston 003 131 000—8 Toronto 202 000 000—4 E-Sandoval (1), Dickey (1). LOB-Boston 8, Toronto 5. 2B-Pedroia (2), Bogaerts (2), T.Shaw (2), B.Holt (2), R.Castillo (1), Donaldson (1). 3B-H. Ramirez (1). HR-Bautista 2 (2). SB-Betts (1), Barney (2). SF-Swihart. IP H R ER BB SO Boston Porcello W,1-0 6 7 4 4 1 7 Uehara 1 0 0 0 0 1 Ross Jr. 2 0 0 0 0 2 Toronto Dickey L,1-1 5 8 7 6 2 9 Leon 2 2 1 1 1 2 Biagini 1 1 0 0 1 1 Osuna 1 0 0 0 0 1 WP-Dickey. PB-Thole 2. T-2:48. A-47,138 (49,282).

White Sox 7, Indians 3 Chicago — Avisail Garcia hit a three-run home run in the decisive seventh inning, ace Chris Sale overcame two home runs to stay unbeaten, and Chicago rallied past Cleveland.

Garcia, picked off first base a day earlier in a miserable home opener for the White Sox, went the opposite way off Bryan Shaw (0-1). Melky Cabrera’s nine-pitch RBI single a batter earlier put the White Sox ahead. Cleveland Chicago ab r h bi ab r h bi RDavis cf 4 0 0 0 AJcksn cf 5 1 1 0 Kipnis 2b 4 0 2 0 Rollins ss 5 1 1 0 Lindor ss 3 1 1 0 Saladin ss 0 0 0 0 Napoli 1b 4 1 1 2 Abreu 1b 2 1 2 1 CSantn dh 4 0 0 0 Frazier 3b 4 1 0 1 Gomes c 4 1 1 1 MeCarr lf 4 1 2 1 Uribe 3b 3 0 0 0 Lawrie 2b 4 0 1 0 JRmrz lf 4 0 2 0 AvGarc dh 4 2 2 3 Cowgill rf 3 0 0 0 Avila c 4 0 1 0 Shuck rf 3 0 0 0 Totals 33 3 7 3 Totals 35 7 10 6 Cleveland 000 002 100—3 Chicago 001 100 50x—7 E—Uribe (2), R.Davis (1), Co.Anderson (1), Lawrie (1). DP—Chicago 1. LOB—Cleveland 5, Chicago 7. 2B—Rollins (1). HR—Napoli (2), Gomes (1), Abreu (2), Av.Garcia (1). IP H R ER BB SO Cleveland Co.Anderson 6 6 2 2 2 2 B.Shaw L,0-1 BS,1-1 2⁄3 4 5 5 1 0 1⁄3 McAllister 0 0 0 0 1 Chamberlain 1 0 0 0 0 1 Chicago Sale W,2-0 7 6 3 3 2 6 Duke 0 1 0 0 0 0 Albers 2 0 0 0 0 3 Duke pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. WP—Co.Anderson 2. T—2:43. A—20,192 (40,615).

Rangers 4, Angels 1 Anaheim, Calif. — Adrian Beltre homered and doubled twice, leading Cole Hamels and Texas past the Angels. The Rangers, however, lost catcher Robinson Chirinos to a broken right forearm. He left in the middle of the game. Texas Los Angeles ab r h bi ab r h bi DShlds cf 4 1 1 0 YEscor 3b 2 1 1 0 Odor 2b 4 0 1 1 Gentry lf 2 0 1 0 Fielder dh 4 0 1 1 Nava ph 1 0 0 0 Beltre 3b 4 1 3 1 Trout cf 4 0 1 0 Morlnd 1b 4 0 1 0 Pujols dh 4 0 0 1 Dsmnd lf 4 0 0 0 Cron 1b 4 0 0 0 Andrus ss 4 1 1 0 Calhon rf 3 0 1 0 Rua rf 4 0 1 0 ASmns ss 3 0 1 0 Chirins c 2 0 0 0 C.Perez c 3 0 0 0 Holady c 2 1 1 1 Giavtll 2b 3 0 0 0 Totals 36 4 10 4 Totals 29 1 5 1 Texas 100 100 200—4 Los Angeles 100 000 000—1 E-Y.Escobar (3), Giavotella (1). DP-Texas 3, Los Angeles 1. LOB-Texas 6, Los Angeles 4. 2B-DeShields (1), Beltre 2 (2), Rua (1), Holaday (1), Trout (1). HR-Beltre (1). IP H R ER BB SO Texas Hamels W,2-0 6 4 1 1 3 4 Kela H,2 1 0 0 0 0 2 S.Dyson H,2 1 0 0 0 0 1 Tolleson S,2-3 1 1 0 0 0 0 Los Angeles 2 Richards L,0-2 6 ⁄3 8 4 2 1 6 1⁄3 J.Alvarez 1 0 0 0 1 Morin 1 1 0 0 0 0 Achter 1 0 0 0 0 1 WP-Richards. T-2:53. A-38,106 (45,493).

Athletics 6, Mariners 1 Seattle — Rich Hill struck out 10 batters over six innings to give Oakland’s overworked bullpen a break, Josh Reddick homered for the second straight game, and the Athletics beat Seattle. Oakland won the first two games of the weekend series between the AL West foes thanks largely to a stellar performance from Hill (1-1). Oakland Seattle ab r h bi ab r h bi Crisp cf 5 2 2 0 Aoki lf 4 0 1 0 Coghln lf 5 0 0 0 KMarte ss 3 0 0 0 Reddck rf 3 1 1 2 Cano 2b 4 0 1 0 Valenci 3b 4 2 2 1 Cruz dh 4 0 1 0 Vogt c 4 1 3 1 KSeagr 3b 3 0 0 0 Lowrie 2b 4 0 2 2 Iannett c 3 1 1 1 KDavis dh 4 0 1 0 Gutirrz rf 2 0 1 0 Alonso 1b 4 0 0 0 S.Smith ph-rf 2 0 0 0 Semien ss 4 0 0 0 Lee 1b 1 0 0 0 Lind ph-1b 1 0 0 0 LMartn cf 3 0 0 0 Totals 37 6 11 6 Totals 30 1 5 1 Oakland 200 021 010—6 Seattle 010 000 000—1 DP-Oakland 2. LOB-Oakland 5, Seattle 6. 2B-Valencia (1), Vogt 2 (2), Cano (1). HR-Reddick (2), Iannetta (1). SB-Crisp 2 (2). CS-Aoki (1). IP H R ER BB SO Oakland R.Hill W,1-1 6 5 1 1 1 10 Dull 1 0 0 0 0 2 Rzepczynski 2 0 0 0 1 0 Seattle Karns L,0-1 5 7 4 4 1 6 Zych 2 2 1 1 0 3 Nuno 1 2 1 1 0 1 Montgomery 1 0 0 0 0 1 HBP-by R.Hill (Lee, K.Marte). T-2:54. A-36,424 (47,943).

Interleague Astros 6, Brewers 4 Milwaukee — Colby Rasmus hit two home runs and a sacrifice fly to lead Houston past Milwaukee. Houston Milwaukee ab r h bi ab r h bi Altuve 2b 5 1 1 0 DoSntn rf 4 0 0 1 Springr rf 3 2 1 0 Gennett 2b 4 1 2 1 Correa ss 3 0 0 0 Braun lf 4 0 0 0 ClRsms lf 3 2 2 4 Lucroy c 3 0 1 0 White 1b 2 1 1 2 Carter 1b 4 0 0 0 CGomz cf 4 0 1 0 Niwnhs cf 4 1 1 1 Valuen 3b 4 0 1 0 A.Hill 3b 2 0 0 0 JCastro c 3 0 1 0 Boyer p 0 0 0 0 Fister p 1 0 0 0 RFlors ph 1 0 0 0 MDuffy ph 1 0 0 0 Cravy p 0 0 0 0 Neshek p 0 0 0 0 Capuan p 0 0 0 0 WHarrs p 0 0 0 0 Blazek p 0 0 0 0 Giles p 0 0 0 0 Walsh ph 1 0 0 0 MGnzlz ph 1 0 1 0 WPerlt p 1 0 0 0 Mrsnck pr 0 0 0 0 Rivera 3b 3 1 2 0 Grgrsn p 0 0 0 0 Villar ss 3 1 2 0 Totals 30 6 9 6 Totals 34 4 8 3 Houston 201 030 000—6 Milwaukee 001 021 000—4 E-Lucroy (2), Rivera (1). DP-Milwaukee 2. LOBHouston 4, Milwaukee 6. 2B-Lucroy (1), Rivera (1). HR-Col.Rasmus 2 (2), White (3), Gennett (3), Nieuwenhuis (1). SB-Altuve (3), Springer (1). S-Fister. SF-Col.Rasmus, White. IP H R ER BB SO Houston Fister W,1-0 5 5 3 3 2 6 Neshek H,1 1 1 1 1 0 2 W.Harris H,1 1 1 0 0 0 1 Giles H,2 1 0 0 0 0 1 Gregerson S,2-2 1 1 0 0 1 1 Milwaukee 1 W.Peralta L,0-2 4 ⁄3 7 6 6 4 4 Boyer 12⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 Cravy 12⁄3 1 0 0 0 1 2⁄3 Capuano 1 0 0 0 0 2⁄3 Blazek 0 0 0 0 0 T-3:10. A-28,127 (41,900).

Sunday, April 10, 2016

| 5C

SCOREBOARD Masters

Saturday At Augusta National Golf Club Augusta, Ga. Purse: TBA (Last year: $10 million) Yardage: 7,435; Par: 72 Third Round a-amateur Jordan Spieth 66-74-73—213 Smylie Kaufman 73-72-69—214 Bernhard Langer 72-73-70—215 Hideki Matsuyama 71-72-72—215 Jason Day 72-73-71—216 Dustin Johnson 73-71-72—216 Danny Willett 70-74-72—216 Lee Westwood 71-75-71—217 Soren Kjeldsen 69-74-74—217 Brandt Snedeker 71-72-74—217 Daniel Berger 73-71-74—218 Rory McIlroy 70-71-77—218 Justin Rose 69-77-73—219 Angel Cabrera 73-73-73—219 J.B. Holmes 72-73-74—219 Louis Oosthuizen 72-77-71—220 Matt Kuchar 75-73-72—220 Billy Horschel 70-77-73—220 Emiliano Grillo 71-75-74—220 Paul Casey 69-77-74—220 Jimmy Walker 71-75-74—220 Chris Wood 72-73-75—220 Bill Haas 75-74-72—221 Charley Hoffman 71-77-73—221 Matthew Fitzpatrick 71-76-74—221 Jamie Donaldson 74-72-75—221 Brooks Koepka 73-72-76—221 a-Bryson DeChambeau 72-72-77—221 Kiradech Aphibarnrat 72-72-77—221 Danny Lee 68-74-79—221 Scott Piercy 70-72-79—221 Rafa Cabrera-Bello 74-73-75—222 Davis Love III 73-73-76—222 Webb Simpson 77-72-74—223 Adam Scott 76-72-75—223 Harris English 74-73-76—223 Shane Lowry 68-76-79—223 Patrick Reed 76-73-75—224 Anirban Lahiri 76-73-75—224 Keegan Bradley 74-73-77—224 Bernd Wiesberger 73-72-79—224 Troy Merritt 74-71-79—224 Kevin Kisner 77-72-76—225 Victor Dubuisson 73-76-76—225 Henrik Stenson 72-75-78—225 Kevin Streelman 71-75-79—225 Sergio Garcia 69-75-81—225 Bubba Watson 75-75-76—226 Hunter Mahan 73-75-78—226 Justin Thomas 76-73-78—227 Larry Mize 76-73-78—227 Martin Kaymer 74-75-79—228 Thongchai Jaidee 72-76-81—229 Ian Poulter 69-78-82—229 Cameron Smith 74-73-82—229 a-Romain Langasque 74-73-83—230 Kevin Na 72-74-85—231

Masters Tee Times

At Augusta National Golf Club Augusta, Ga. All Times CDT a-amateur Today 8:45 a.m. — Kevin Na 8:55 a.m. — Cameron Smith, a-Romain Langasque 9:05 a.m. — Thongchai Jaidee, Ian Poulter 9:15 a.m. — Larry Mize, Martin Kaymer 9:25 a.m. — Hunter Mahan, Justin Thomas 9:35 a.m. — Sergio Garcia, Bubba Watson 9:45 a.m. — Henrik Stenson, Kevin Streelman 9:55 a.m. — Kevin Kisner, Victor Dubuisson 10:05 a.m. — Bernd Wiesberger, Troy Merritt 10:15 a.m. — Anirban Lahiri, Keegan Bradley 10:35 a.m. — Shane Lowry, Patrick Reed 10:45 a.m. — Adam Scott, Harris English 10:55 a.m. — Davis Love III, Web Simpson 11:05 a.m. — Scott Piercy, Rafael Cabrera-Bello 11:15 a.m. — Kiradech Aphibarnrat, Danny Lee 11:25 a.m. — Brooks Koepka, a-Bryson DeChambeau 11:35 a.m. — Matthew Fitzpatrick, Jamie Donaldson 11:45 a.m. — Bill Haas, Charley Hoffman 11:55 a.m. — Jimmy Walker, Chris Wood 12:05 p.m. — Emiliano Grillo, Paul Casey 12:25 p.m. — Matt Kuchar, Billy Horschel 12:35 p.m. — J.B. Holmes, Louis Oosthuizen 12:45 p.m. — Justin Rose, Angel Cabrera 12:55 p.m. — Daniel Berger, Rory McIlroy 1:05 p.m. — Brandt Snedeker, Soren Kjeldsen 1:15 p.m. — Danny Willett, Lee Westwood 1:25 p.m. — Jason Day, Dustin Johnson 1:35 p.m. — Bernhard Langer, Hideki Matsuyama 1:45 p.m. — Jordan Spieth, Smylie Kaufman

College Women

RED RAIDER INVITATIONAL Saturday in Lubbock, Texas The Rawls Course Par 72, 6,541 yards Team Scores 1. Texas Tech 2. Purdue 3. Kansas 4. Kansas State 5. Brigham Young Iowa 7. SMU 8. New Mexico 9. Colorado State 10. Texas State 11. New Mexico State 12. Cal Poly 13. Tulsa 14. North Texas Medalist Yupaporn Kawinpakorn, Kansas Other Kansas Scores T7. Pornvipa Sakdee T40. Victoria Chandra 46. Aridna Fonseca T64. Pitsinee Winyarat T69. Kallie Gonzales (ind.)

867 880 881 889 890 890 891 894 901 905 907 921 943 947 209 218 228 230 237 239

BASEBALL American League LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Selected the contract of RHP A.J. Achter from Salt Lake (PCL). Optioned RHP Cam Bedrosian to Salt Lake (PCL). OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Selected the contract of LHP Eric Surkamp from Nashville (IL). Optioned OF Andrew Lambo to Nashville. Transferred RHP R.J. Alvarez to the 60-day DL. Extended their player development contract with the Stockton (Cal) through the 2020 season. TEXAS RANGERS — Sent RHP Luke Jackson on injury rehab assignment to Round Rock (PCL). National League LOS ANGELES DODGERS — Placed OF Carl Crawford on the 15-day DL. Recalled INF Micah Johnson from Oklahoma City (PCL). SAN DIEGO PADRES — Activated LHP Brad Hand. Placed RHP Tyson Ross on the 15-day DL, retroactive to April 5. SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS — Agreed to terms with 1B Brandon Belt on a five-year contract from 2017-21.

COLLEGE BRADLEY — Named Andrea Gorski women’s basketball coach. MASSACHUSETTS — Named Tory Verdi women’s basketball coach. STONY BROOK — Named Jeff Boals men’s basketball coach.

MLS

EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Montreal 3 2 0 9 8 5 Philadelphia 3 2 0 9 7 5 Orlando City 2 1 2 8 9 6 New England 1 1 4 7 6 8 D.C. United 1 2 3 6 7 9 NYC FC 1 1 2 5 7 7 Toronto FC 1 2 2 5 5 5 Chicago 1 1 2 5 5 5 New York 1 4 0 3 4 11 Columbus 0 3 2 2 3 7 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Sporting KC 4 1 0 12 7 3 Real Salt Lake 3 0 2 11 9 6 FC Dallas 3 1 2 11 10 8 San Jose 2 1 2 8 7 7 Los Angeles 2 1 1 7 7 3 Colorado 2 2 1 7 3 3 Vancouver 2 3 1 7 6 10 Houston 1 2 1 4 11 8 Portland 1 2 1 4 6 9 Seattle 1 3 0 3 3 5 Saturday’s Games New England 1, Toronto FC 1, tie Montreal 2, Columbus 0 D.C. United 4, Vancouver 0 Sporting Kansas City 2, New York 0 FC Dallas 2, San Jose 2, tie Real Salt Lake 1, Colorado 0 Today’s Games Seattle at Houston, 3 p.m. Chicago at New York City FC, 6 p.m. Portland at Los Angeles, 8:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 13 Colorado at Sporting Kansas City, 7:30 p.m. FC Dallas at Portland, 9:30 p.m. New York at San Jose, 9:30 p.m.

High School

JUNIOR VARSITY Saturday at Olathe OLATHE NORTHWEST 7, LAWRENCE HIGH 2 OLATHE NORTHWEST 3, LAWRENCE HIGH 1 LHS highlight — Carter Shook cited for defensive play at shortstop. LHS record — 0-5. Next for LHS — Tuesday at Leavenworth. C TEAM Saturday at Olathe LAWRENCE HIGH 4, OLATHE NORTHWEST 2 W — Trey Hulse. LHS highlights — Hank Dobson 4 innings, allowed 3 hits, 1 run, 1-for4, RBI; Hulse 1-for-4, RBI; Payton Cummins 1-for-2; Jackson Hewins 2-for-3, 2B 2 RBIs; Colby Stumma 2-for3, 2B. OLATHE NORTHWEST 12, LAWRENCE HIGH 7 L — Cummings. LHS highlights — Garrett Romero 2-for-3, RBI; Hulse 1-for-3, 2B, RBI; Stumma 1-for-2, 2B, 2 RBIs; Logan Grose 1-for-2, 2B, RBI; Bryson Cummins 1-for-3, RBI; Preston Harris 1-for-2; Chris Ritter 1-for-3. LHS record — 2-3. Next for LHS — Tuesday at Leavenworth.

College

MESA CLASSIC Friday at Mesa, Ariz. Kansas Results MEN 100 — 11. Jaron Hartley, 10.90. 40. Curtis Ray, 11.44. 200 — 14. Jamie Wilson, 22.13. 16. Drew Matthews, 22.14. 18. Alex Wilson, 22.22 400 — 2. Stryman Livingston, 47.53. 800 — 2. Bryce Richards, 1:53.03. 3. Brandon Bernal, 1:53.88. 5. Adel Yoonis, 1:54.79. 9. Daniel Koech, 1:56.60. 110 hurdles — 4. Christian Hicks, 14;74. 9. Nick Giusti, 14:86. 4X100 relay — 2. Hartley, Matthews, Wilson, Henry, 40.59. Long jump — 14. Ezekial Welch, 6.68 meters (21 feet, 11 inches) Discus (invitational) — 6. Mitch Cooper, 58.75 (192-9). 8. Nicolai Ceban, 57.19 (187-7). Discus (open) — 3. Brandon Lombardino, 50.52 (165-9). 8. Paul Golen, 48.67 (159-8). 13. Kenny Boyer, 46.38 (152-2). 33. Dylan Poirier, 28-8 (94-6). Hammer throw (invitational) — 9. Mitch Cooper, 54.68 (179-5). Hammer throw (open) — 1. Lombardino, 53.40 (175-2). WOMEN 100 — 18. Megan Linder, 12.86 23. Morgan Lober, 13.01. 200 — 1. Zainab Sanni, 23.61. 11. Nicole Montgomery, 25.04. 13. Adriana Newell, 25.27. 30. Wumi Omare, 25.35. 400 — 7. Dorie Dalzell, 57.57. 12. Hannah Dimmick, 1:00.13. 800 — 3. Nashia Baker, 2:10.07. 5. Malika Baker, 2:13.31. 6. Jasmine Edwards, 2:13.45. 7. Lydia Saggau, 2:13.62. 400 hurdles — 5. Caroline Slattery, 1:03.17. 4X100 relay — 1. Cook, Montgomery, Sanni, Jefferson, 46.62. Long jump — 5. LaTyria Jefferson, 5.58 (18-33⁄4). 6. Kelly McKee, 5.55 (181 2 ⁄2). 11. Taryn Tempel, 5.32 (17-51⁄2). 15. Deanna Dougherty, 5.14 (16-101⁄2). Triple jump — 4. Tempel, 11.10 (36-5). Discus (invitational) — 6. Dasha Tsema, 53.89 (176-10). 10. Daina Levy, 53.16 (171-1). 12. Anastasiya Muchkayev, 48.50 (159-1). Hammer throw (invitational) —16. Tsema, 47.77 (156-9). Javelin — 1. Shaylyn Stallbaumer, 48.48 (159-1). 17. Talia Marquez, 29-93 (98-4). SUN ANGEL CLASSIC Friday at Tempe, Ariz. Kansas Results MEN Pole vault (open) — T4. Hussain Al Hizam, 4.90 (16-03⁄4). T14. Dylan Poirier, 4.60 (15-1). WOMEN Pole vault (open) — 1. Laura Taylor, 3.90 (12-91⁄2). Hammer throw (premier) — 3. Daina Levy, 65.36 (214-5).

NHL

Saturday’s Games Vancouver 4, Edmonton 3, SO Winnipeg 4, Los Angeles 3, SO Ottawa 6, Boston 1 N.Y. Rangers 3, Detroit 2 Philadelphia 3, Pittsburgh 1 Anaheim 5, Colorado 3 Montreal 5, Tampa Bay 2 Florida 5, Carolina 2 New Jersey 5, Toronto 1 Columbus 5, Chicago 4, OT Calgary 2, Minnesota 1 Buffalo 4, N.Y. Islanders 3, OT Washington 5, St. Louis 1 Dallas 3, Nashville 2 San Jose 1, Arizona 0 Today’s Games Philadelphia at N.Y. Islanders, 6 p.m. Anaheim at Washington, 6:30 p.m.


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Sunday, April 10, 2016

WEATHER/TV/SPORTS

.

TODAY

MONDAY

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

Warmer; a stray p.m. t-storm

Mostly cloudy and cooler

Sunny

Partly sunny

Beautiful with abundant sunshine

High 80° Low 47° POP: 45%

High 59° Low 31° POP: 20%

High 59° Low 37° POP: 5%

High 68° Low 41° POP: 10%

High 71° Low 46° POP: 10%

Wind SW 10-20 mph

Wind NE 8-16 mph

Wind ESE 6-12 mph

Wind SSE 6-12 mph

Wind SE 6-12 mph

POP: Probability of Precipitation

Kearney 64/38

McCook 69/37 Oberlin 70/40

Clarinda 66/39

Lincoln 68/38

Grand Island 63/36

Beatrice 70/41

St. Joseph 74/41 Chillicothe 70/43

Sabetha 71/42

Concordia 74/41

Centerville 64/38

Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 78/48 72/48 Goodland Salina 79/44 Oakley Kansas City Topeka 72/38 80/45 72/44 80/46 Lawrence 75/45 Sedalia 80/47 Emporia Great Bend 74/47 82/46 78/43 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 81/50 79/39 Hutchinson 82/48 Garden City 84/44 78/39 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 77/57 85/48 80/43 83/40 79/55 82/55 Hays Russell 75/41 75/42

Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.

LAWRENCE ALMANAC

Through 7 p.m. Saturday.

Temperature High/low Normal high/low today Record high today Record low today

63°/31° 63°/40° 93° in 1930 24° in 2003

Precipitation in inches 24 hours through 7 p.m. yest. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Normal year to date

0.00 0.11 1.05 2.88 6.15

REGIONAL CITIES

Today Mon. Today Mon. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W 77 45 pc 61 31 c Atchison 75 43 pc 60 30 pc Holton Independence 76 48 t 56 32 c Belton 77 47 t 55 32 c Olathe 77 47 t 57 32 c Burlington 83 48 t 56 31 r Osage Beach 76 49 t 52 33 r Coffeyville 82 55 t 60 35 r Osage City 82 47 t 59 31 r Concordia 74 41 pc 63 30 c 81 48 t 57 29 r Dodge City 79 39 pc 57 29 sh Ottawa Wichita 85 48 t 58 34 r Fort Riley 80 48 pc 62 31 c Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

NATIONAL FORECAST

SUN & MOON

Today Mon. 6:51 a.m. 6:50 a.m. 7:53 p.m. 7:54 p.m. 9:28 a.m. 10:20 a.m. 11:54 p.m. none

First

Full

Apr 13

Last

Apr 22

New

Apr 29

May 6

LAKE LEVELS

As of 7 a.m. Saturday Lake

Level (ft)

Clinton Perry Pomona

875.80 890.40 972.98

Discharge (cfs)

21 25 15

Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for today.

Fronts Cold

INTERNATIONAL CITIES

Today Cities Hi Lo W Acapulco 88 73 pc Amsterdam 57 47 pc Athens 70 52 t Baghdad 92 69 c Bangkok 101 81 s Beijing 67 35 s Berlin 53 41 pc Brussels 58 47 pc Buenos Aires 67 50 pc Cairo 92 71 s Calgary 49 30 pc Dublin 49 44 c Geneva 63 41 pc Hong Kong 82 74 sh Jerusalem 78 57 sh Kabul 56 40 r London 56 49 pc Madrid 56 42 t Mexico City 82 53 pc Montreal 35 28 pc Moscow 65 43 c New Delhi 101 72 pc Oslo 51 37 pc Paris 61 48 pc Rio de Janeiro 92 77 s Rome 65 47 pc Seoul 68 42 pc Singapore 93 81 pc Stockholm 53 32 pc Sydney 78 61 pc Tokyo 68 51 pc Toronto 32 29 sn Vancouver 61 45 s Vienna 54 44 r Warsaw 53 45 r Winnipeg 32 16 sn

Hi 87 63 71 89 102 62 59 66 66 89 63 52 64 80 75 64 59 56 84 46 54 99 52 61 91 67 66 93 52 74 58 48 58 61 54 29

Mon. Lo W 74 s 47 pc 55 sh 66 pc 83 s 45 s 45 pc 47 pc 52 pc 62 s 38 s 43 r 44 t 72 sh 50 s 40 s 45 pc 45 pc 55 s 35 sn 35 c 74 pc 34 pc 44 t 78 s 52 s 46 s 81 pc 33 pc 63 s 45 pc 28 r 46 c 43 pc 47 c 14 s

Warm Stationary Showers T-storms

7:30

Flurries

Snow

Ice

Today Mon. Today Mon. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W 77 62 pc 72 49 t Albuquerque 68 45 pc 65 43 pc Memphis 80 70 pc 83 72 s Anchorage 47 34 r 49 34 pc Miami 48 33 r 48 29 pc Atlanta 65 48 pc 77 59 pc Milwaukee Minneapolis 53 30 c 40 24 pc Austin 82 65 c 86 56 c Nashville 69 55 pc 72 48 sh Baltimore 50 39 s 68 55 c Birmingham 72 50 pc 76 62 sh New Orleans 78 66 s 79 68 pc 48 41 s 58 52 c Boise 76 48 pc 76 50 pc New York Omaha 65 37 t 58 27 s Boston 47 38 s 56 49 c Orlando 80 61 pc 83 61 s Buffalo 36 33 sn 49 32 r 50 39 s 63 56 c Cheyenne 53 34 sh 51 37 pc Philadelphia 66 57 t 75 59 pc Chicago 50 39 r 51 29 pc Phoenix Pittsburgh 48 44 pc 58 35 r Cincinnati 60 53 pc 56 36 r Portland, ME 45 30 s 50 43 c Cleveland 45 41 sf 52 32 r Portland, OR 68 45 pc 68 49 c Dallas 81 66 t 83 53 c 60 45 c 67 45 sh Denver 66 39 c 56 38 pc Reno Richmond 55 41 s 73 56 pc Des Moines 65 38 t 55 28 s Sacramento 64 49 c 70 51 c Detroit 42 38 sn 54 30 r St. Louis 69 49 t 55 36 r El Paso 76 52 pc 73 51 s Salt Lake City 67 47 sh 70 49 c Fairbanks 54 30 pc 54 30 s San Diego 68 59 sh 68 59 sh Honolulu 83 71 s 84 70 s San Francisco 64 53 c 65 53 c Houston 78 66 c 76 63 t Seattle 65 47 pc 63 48 c Indianapolis 57 47 sh 51 32 r Spokane 69 44 s 70 47 s Kansas City 75 45 t 60 31 c 67 51 t 75 53 pc Las Vegas 65 55 sh 68 56 sh Tucson Tulsa 84 62 t 66 40 r Little Rock 82 64 pc 74 50 t 54 44 s 70 58 sh Los Angeles 67 56 sh 67 55 sh Wash., DC National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: McAllen, TX 89° Low: Grand Marais, MN -11°

WEATHER HISTORY

WEATHER TRIVIA™

is the warmest it’s ever been on the Antarctic contiQ: What nent?

So much dust became airborne in Kansas and Iowa on April 10, 1935, that schools and highways closed.

SUNDAY Prime Time WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

Rain

-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s National Summary: The Northeast will end the weekend on a dry and cool note today, while rain, snow and a wintry mix spreads over the Great Lakes. Showers will overspread the Southwest.

53(F) at Hope Bay on March 23, 1946

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

Precipitation

MOVIES 8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

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Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset

KIDS

10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

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News

Elementary “All In”

Elementary (N)

KCTV5

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Masterpiece

Finding Your Roots Basel

5

5

5 Madam Secretary

7

19

19 Call the Midwife (N) Masterpiece

9

9 Once Upon a Time

Little Big Shots (N)

8 9

D KTWU 11 A Q 12 B ` 13

29

ION KPXE 18

50

41 38

Insider

Carmichl Crowded Dateline NBC (N) The Family (N)

Call the Midwife (N) Masterpiece

C I 14 KMCI 15 L KCWE 17

Outdoors Face the Nation (N) On

KSNT

Quantico “Care” (N) News Masterpiece

Seinfeld

Seinfeld

Blue Bloods h

Edition

The Good Wife

News

Two Men Big Bang

American Masters

Once Upon a Time

The Family (N)

Quantico “Care” (N) News

Castle h

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Elementary “All In”

Elementary (N)

News

Elementary

Rizzoli

News

Sound

Bensin

LK Re

Broke

Broke

Nichols

41 Little Big Shots (N) Carmichl Crowded Dateline NBC (N) 38 › Not Another Teen Movie (2001) Mike Mike

29 Castle h

Leverage h

Scandal h

Leverage h

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Bones

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Two Men Big Bang Mod Fam Rizzoli & Isles

Leverage h

Flashpoint h

Flashpoint h

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Mother

Mother

Mother

Cable Channels WOW!6 6 WGN-A CITY

Tower Cam/Weather Information

307 239 ››› Men of Honor (2000)

THIS TV 19 25

USD497 26

Underground

››› Godspell (1973) Victor Garber, David Haskell.

Mother

Mother

›››› Oliver! (1968) Ron Moody, Oliver Reed.

City Bulletin Board, Commission Meetings

City Bulletin Board

School Board Information

School Board Information

ESPN 33 206 140 aMLB Baseball New York Yankees at Detroit Tigers. (N) (Live)

SportsCenter (N) (Live)

ESPN2 34 209 144 Heroes of the Dorm (N) (Live)

Year/Quarterback

ESPN FC (N)

World Poker Tour

World Poker Tour

FSM

36 672

World Poker Tour

World Poker Tour

NBCSN 38 603 151 kNHL Hockey FNC

39 360 205 Fox Reporting

World Poker

NHL Overtime (N)

SportCtr

ZOlympic Trials Wrestling. (N Same-day Tape)

Stossel

Greg Gutfeld

Fox Reporting

FOX Report

CNBC 40 355 208 Undercover Boss

Undercover Boss

Undercover Boss

Blue

Blue

MSNBC 41 356 209 Caught on Camera

Caught on Camera

Lockup

Lockup

Lockup

Wonder List

Race for

Race for

CNN

Blue

Blue

44 202 200 Race for

Race for

TNT

45 245 138 ››‡ Now You See Me (2013)

››› Catch Me if You Can (2002) Leonardo DiCaprio.

USA

46 242 105 Law & Order: SVU

Law & Order: SVU

Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam

A&E

47 265 118 Intervention

Intervention

Intervention (N)

The First 48

Intervention

Jokers

Jokers

Snack

Those

TRUTV 48 246 204 Those AMC TBS

Those

50 254 130 Fear the Walking

Jokers

Fear the Walking

Jokers

Talking Dead (N)

Snack

Fear the Walking

Those

Fear the Walking

51 247 139 Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang ›› 50 First Dates (2004) Adam Sandler.

BRAVO 52 237 129 Housewives/Atl. HIST

THE MASTERS

Spieth falters late but keeps slim lead Augusta, Ga. (ap) — One round away from another green jacket, Jordan Spieth couldn’t help but look back. A victory in the Masters was starting to look inevitable Saturday when Spieth stood on the 17th tee with a four-shot lead. The wind that caused so much havoc had subsided. Rory McIlroy was out of the picture. Spieth had just made five big putts in a row, three of them for birdie. Two holes later, he found himself explaining what went wrong. Sure, he had the lead for the seventh straight round at Augusta National, but just barely. Two wild tee shots, two poor wedges and five putts at the end of an already wild ride left Spieth with only a one-shot lead. And it left the Masters up for grabs. “It was a really tough finish to go from holding a four-shot lead ... to where all of the sudden, now it’s anyone’s game,” Spieth said. “So it’s tough to swallow that. “ His biggest challenge? “Understand this is the position I wanted to be in after 54 holes,” he said, “and not think about the finish to today’s round.” A bogey and a double bogey gave Spieth a 1-over 73, one shot ahead of Masters rookie Smylie Kaufman. It also gave plenty of hope to a cast of challengers that include 58-year-old Bernhard Langer and Hideki Matsuyama of Japan, who were two shots behind. Looming three shots behind — that’s nothing at Augusta National — were world No. 1 Jason Day and Dustin Johnson. Eleven players were within five shots of the lead, and that even includes McIlroy, who didn’t make a birdie in his round of 77. “To be honest with you, I would be feeling a lot worse about myself if I hadn’t have just seen what Jordan did the last two holes,” McIlroy said. “I sort of take a bit of heart from that, that I’m still in this golf tournament.” That’s what gnawed at Spieth. He led by four shots after the third round a year ago and was able to protect the lead. With a forecast for less wind today, it could be a sprint to the green jacket filled with

BEST BETS WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

David J. Phillip/AP Photo

JORDAN SPIETH TEES OFF ON THE 12TH HOLE during the third round of the Masters on Saturday in Augusta, Ga. Spieth shot a 73 for a one-stroke lead entering the final round.

Jae C. Hong/AP Photo

BERNHARD LANGER TIPS HIS CAP after putting out on the 18th green Saturday. Langer fired a third-round 70 and was two strokes off the lead heading into today’s play. birdies, eagles and those Augusta National roars that have been largely swept away by three straight days of 25-mph gusts. “I know I have to shoot a significant under-par round tomorrow in order to win this tournament, when I could have played a different style of golf, like I did on Sunday last year,” he said. Kaufman, who qualified for the Masters by shooting 61 in the final round to win in Las Vegas, used to spend his summers playing junior golf against Spieth. He kept the stress to a minimum and rallied with three birdies over his last six holes for a 69. No one has won a green jacket on his first try since Fuzzy Zoeller in 1979. Maybe there’s one waiting for a 24-year-old named Smylie. “This place fits my eye pretty well,” Kaufman said. “I just enjoy playing, coming out every day. It’s Augusta National. It’s hard not to have some fun out there.” The biggest surprise was Langer, who won his second Masters in 1993 about three months

before Spieth was born. Playing alongside Day — and usually playing from some 60 yards behind him — Langer plodded his way around in the wind and ran off three birdies for a 70. On the 30-year anniversary of Jack Nicklaus becoming the oldest Masters champion at 46, Langer now has a chance to become the oldest winner of any major by 10 years. Julius Boros won the 1968 PGA Championship when he was 48. Can he really win? “I believe I can,” Langer said. Matsuyama, who won the Phoenix Open earlier this year, had a brief chance to tie Spieth until missing a birdie chance on the par-5 15th. Just like Spieth, he let the last few holes get away from him with bogeys on the 16th and 17th for a 72. He still was only two shots behind. Day (70) and Johnson (72) were at even-par 216, along with Danny Willett, the Englishman who wasn’t sure he was going to be able to play in his first Masters because his wife was pregnant. She gave birth last week.

SPORTS 7:30

8 PM

8:30

April 10, 2016 9 PM

9:30

10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

Cable Channels cont’d

Network Channels

M

L awrence J ournal -W orld

54 269 120 American Pickers

Shahs of Sunset (N) Housewives

Happens Housewives/Atl.

American Pickers

American Pickers

American Pickers

SYFY 55 244 122 ››‡ Oz the Great and Powerful (2013) James Franco.

Shahs

American Pickers

››‡ Batman Returns (1992)

FX 56 COM 58 E! 59 CMT 60 GAC 61 BET 64 VH1 66 TRV 67 TLC 68 LIFE 69 LMN 70 FOOD 72 HGTV 73 NICK 76 DISNXD 77 DISN 78 TOON 79 DSC 81 FREE 82 NGC 83 HALL 84 ANML 85 TVL 86 TBN 90 EWTN 91 RLTV 93 CSPAN2 95 CSPAN 96 ID 101 AHC 102 OWN 103 WEA 116 TCM 162

248 249 236 327 326 329 335 277 280 252 253 231 229 299 292 290 296 278 311 276 312 282 304 372 370

136 107 114 166 165 124 162 215 183 108 109 110 112 170 174 172 176 182 180 186 185 184 106 260 261

351 350 285 287 279 362 256

211 210 192 195 189 214 132

HBO 401 MAX 411 SHOW 421 STZENC 440 STRZ 451

501 515 545 535 527

300 310 318 340 350

››‡ The Heat (2013, Comedy) Sandra Bullock.

››‡ The Heat (2013, Comedy) Sandra Bullock. 2016 MTV Movie Awards (N) Nikki Glaser Kevin Hart: Seriously Funny Tosh.0 The Kardashians I Am Cait (N) I Am Cait The Kardashians The Kardashians Steve Austin’s Steve Austin’s Steve Austin’s Steve Austin’s Cops Cops Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea 2016 MTV Movie Awards (N) Chasing Destiny Payne Payne P. Popoff Paid 2016 MTV Movie Awards (N) Black Ink Crew Love, Hip Hop Deliver Us-Eva Food Paradise Mysteries-Museum Declassified Mysteries-Museum Mysteries-Museum Who Do You Who Do You Long Lost Family Who Do You Long Lost Family Stranger in the A Woman Scorned: Doctor Foster (N) Stranger in the House (2016) The Cheerleader Murders (2016) Fab Five: Texas Cheerleader Scandal Cheerleader Guy’s Games Spring Baking Cutthroat Kitchen Cutthroat Kitchen Spring Baking Beach Beach Carib Carib Island Island Hunters Hunt Intl Carib Carib Sophia & Rosie Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Friends Friends Gamer’s Gamer’s Gamer’s Gamer’s Walk the Phineas Gravity Wander Star-For. Pickle K.C. Liv-Mad. Stuck Bunk’d Back Girl K.C. Liv-Mad. Jessie Jessie King/Hill Cleve Cleve American Fam Guy Fam Guy Rick Chicken Pickles Venture Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid Forrest Gump ››› The Hunger Games (2012) Jennifer Lawrence. Osteen Jeremiah The Story of God The Story of God Sea Monsters (N) The Story of God Sea Monsters Valentine Ever Calls the Heart Golden Golden Golden Golden Golden Golden How to Catch River Monsters River Monsters How to Catch River Monsters 2016 MTV Movie Awards (N) Raymond Raymond King King King King Osteen K. Shook Copeland Creflo D. ››› The Passion of the Christ (2004, Drama) Solomon Sunday Night Prime Symbo Rosary Fr. Joe Walijewski Mother Angelica Sunday Mass Taste Taste Second Second Boomers 2.0 Taste Taste Second Second Eruption J.C. Watts Discus The Human Cost of Welfare J.C. Watts Q&A Capitol Hill Road to the White Q & A Capitol Hill Dateline on ID Unusual Suspects On the Case, Zahn Dateline on ID Unusual Suspects Civil War: Batl. Civil War: Batl. Civil War: Batl. Civil War: Batl. Civil War: Batl. Undercover Boss Extreme Weight Loss “Jacqui” Undercover Boss Weight Loss Strangest Weather Strangest Weather Strangest Weather So You Think So You Think ››› The Glass Slipper ››‡ The Slipper and the Rose (1976) ››› The Extra Girl ››› Lucy (2014) Vinyl (N) ›› Self/less (2015) Ryan Reynolds.

Girls (N)

Together Last

Vinyl

Together The Transporter Billions Lies Dice (N) Billions (N) Billions Lies Dice ›››› Rocky (1976) Sylvester Stallone. ››‡ Hang ’Em High (1968) iTV. John Carpenter Girlfriend Girlfriend Girlfriend Girlfriend Outlander Girlfriend Girlfriend Girlfriend Girlfriend

››‡ The Kingdom (2007) Jamie Foxx.


FOOD FOR THOUGHT Stumped on how to use your farmers market finds? Get inspired with a trip to the library. BOOKS, PAGE 6D

A&E Lawrence Journal-World

LJWorld.com

D

ARTS ENTERTAINMENT LIFESTYLE PEOPLE Sunday, April 10, 2016

The Lawrence Busker Festival will bring dozens of street performers to downtown May 27 through 29. John Young/JournalWorld File Photo

Richard Gwin/JournalWorld File Photo

The elaborate cars of Art Tougeau will return on May 27 and 28. Nick Krug/JournalWorld File Photo

Richard Gwin/ Journal-World File Photo

The Kansas Food Truck Festival will be back May 7.

John Young/ Journal-World File Photos

Get ready for fairs, food, funk and more By Joanna Hlavacek lll

Twitter: @HlavacekJoanna he Lawrence arts scene is warming up, too, right along with the spring temperatures. In our roundup we’ve included a few of the more intriguing events in music, theater, visual art and literature going on throughout this month and the next, but there’s always more to be found online at LJWorld.com/events.

The Changing Face of East Asia in Hollywood: A Film Festival on Perspective, Representation and Discrimination April 16-17, Lawrence Arts Center, free

you, there will also be free Japanese tea and sweets (courtesy of Lawrence’s Bimi Bakery) between screenings. Check out lawrenceartscenter.org for a full schedule.

Presented by Kansas University’s Center for East Asian Studies and the Lawrence Arts Center in partnership with The Confucius Institute of KU and the KU department of film and media studies, this two-day festival explores the portrayal of Asians in Hollywood from the industry’s early days up to the 21st century. If the timely discussion of diversity isn’t enough to hook

“The Crumbling,” presented by the Spencer Museum of Art 6 p.m. April 21, Liberty Hall, free general admission seating

lll

An apprentice librarian tries to save her city from crumbling around her in this live cinema opera by artist and composer Alexis Gideon, who performs the narration, dialogue and

music live onstage alongside stop-motion animation on the screen. The 21-minute performance — a “contemporary cautionary tale about the importance of words and symbols in a decaying culture,” according to Liberty Hall’s blurb — will be followed by a discussion with the artist. Doors open at 5:30 p.m., while the show starts at 6 p.m. lll

Benefit Art Auction 5:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. April 23, Lawrence Arts Center, $40 in advance, $50 at the door

its 35th year, is the primary funding source for the Lawrence Arts Center’s exhibitions program. Art lovers can bid on pieces — including those by featured artist Kris Kuksi, who counts Usher and Nike CEO Mark Parker among his famous fans — in the silent auction, which began last month and runs until 3 p.m. April 23, or during that evening’s live auction. To check out the pieces up for sale this year, visit the Lawrence Arts Center or lawrenceartscenter.org.

This annual shindig, now in

Please see GUIDE, page 3D

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2D

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Sunday, April 10, 2016

A&E

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

DATEBOOK American Conservatism: A Brief History,” 5:30 p.m., Summerfield Room, Adams Alumni Center, 1266 Oread Ave. Lawrence school board meeting, 7 p.m., school district headquarters, 110 McDonald Drive. Eudora City Commission meeting, 7 p.m., Eudora City Hall, 4 E. Seventh St. Te Deum Chamber Choir: Brahms’ German Requiem (in English), 7:30 p.m., Central United Methodist Church, 5144 Oak St., Kansas City, Mo. Lawrence Tango Dancers weekly práctica, 8-10 p.m., Signs of Life, 722 Massachusetts St. Karaoke Sammitch, 10 p.m., Replay Lounge, 946 Massachusetts St.

space, 512 E. Ninth St. Don Williams, 6 p.m. doors, VFW Sunday Brunch Buf7 p.m. show, Liberty Hall, 644 fet, 9 a.m.-3 p.m., VFW Post Massachusetts St. 852, 1801 Massachusetts St. Herbs study group, 7 p.m., English Country Dance, Unitarian Fellowship, 1263 lesson 1:30 p.m., dance 2-4:30 North 1100 Road. p.m., Unitarian Fellowship, Free English as a Second 1263 North 1100 Road. Language class, 7-8 p.m., River City Community Plymouth Congregational Players Youth Production: Church, 925 Vermont St. “Chaos in Camelot,” 2 p.m., Affordable community Hollywood Theater, 500 DelaSpanish class, 7-8 p.m., Plymware St., Leavenworth. outh Congregational Church, “A Streetcar Named De925 Vermont St. sire,” 2:30 p.m., Theatre LawDiverse Dialogues on Race rence, 4660 Bauer Farm Drive. and Culture presents Ebola: University Theatre: “Little One Nurse’s Story, 7-8:30 Women: The Broadway Musip.m., Lawrence Public Library, cal,” 2:30 p.m., Crafton-Preyer 707 Vermont St. Theatre, Murphy Hall, 1530 KU Assistant Professor Naismith Drive. of Political Science Patrick Te Deum Chamber Choir: Miller: “Red and Blue States Brahms’ German Requiem (in of Mind,” 7:30 p.m., Dole InstiEnglish), 3 p.m., Village Prestute, 2350 Petefish Drive. byterian Church, 6641 Mission 12 TUESDAY Tuesday Concert Series: Rd., Prairie Village. Red Dog’s Dog Days Marianne Carter & Darrell How Can We Work Togethworkout, 6 a.m., Community Lea, 7:30 p.m., Lawrence Arts er on Climate Change: Panel Building, 115 W. 11th St. Center, 940 New Hampshire St. Discussion, 3-5 p.m., Room More Than a Dream: A New Gamer Night, 8 p.m., Burger 110, Parker Hall, Haskell Indian Social Contract for the 21st Stand at the Casbah, 803 MasNations University, 155 Indian Century, 3:30 p.m., Hall Center sachusetts St., free. Ave. for the Humanities, 900 SunnyLawrence Coalition for side Ave. Peace and Justice, 3:30 p.m., 13 WEDNESDAY Coalition on Homeless Community Mercantile meeting Red Dog’s Dog Days workConcerns monthly meeting, room, 901 Iowa St. out, 6 a.m., Sports Pavilion 3:30-5 p.m., Meeting Room C, Irish Traditional Music Lawrence soccer field (lower Lawrence Public Library, 707 Session, 5:30-8 p.m., upstairs level), 100 Rock Chalk Lane. Vermont St. Henry’s on Eighth, 11 E. Eighth 1 Million Cups presenta“A View from the Bench: St. tion, 9-10 a.m., Cider Gallery, Politics and Public Policy” Brody Buster Band, 6-9 810 Pennsylvania St. with Judge Joyce London p.m., Replay Lounge, 946 MasBig Brothers Big Sisters Ford, 4 p.m., Dole Institute, sachusetts St. of Douglas County volunteer 2350 Petefish Drive. O.U.R.S. (Oldsters United information, noon, United Way Big Brothers Big Sisters for Responsible Service) of Douglas County volunteer Building, 2518 Ridge Court. dance, doors 5 p.m., potluck Community Conversainformation, 5:15 p.m., United 7:15-7:45 p.m., dance 6-9 p.m., tion with Lonnie G. Bunch, Way Building, 2518 Ridge Eagles Lodge, 1803 W. Sixth Director, National Museum of Court. St. James Gunn Book Launch: African American History and Smackdown! trivia, 7 p.m., Culture, 12:15-1 p.m., Seminar “Transgalactic: A Novel,” The Bottleneck, 737 New Room, Sabatini Multicultural Re5:30-7 p.m., Jayhawk Ink Hampshire St. source Center, 1299 Oread Ave. Lounge, KU Bookstore, 1301 Jennifer Nettles, 7 p.m., Douglas County CommisJayhawk Blvd. Lied Center, 1600 Stewart Lawrence City Commission sion meeting, 4 p.m., Douglas Drive. meeting, 5:45 p.m., City Hall, 6 County Courthouse, 1100 MasScotch Hollow, 10 p.m., sachusetts St. E. Sixth St. Replay Lounge, 946 MassaLecture: “The Challenge of Happy Hour Karaoke, 6-9 chusetts St. p.m., Replay Lounge, 946 Mas- Building a National Museum,” 6-7 p.m., The Commons, sachusetts St. Spooner Hall, 1340 Jayhawk Lonnie Ray’s open jam 11 MONDAY Blvd., KU Campus. session, 6-10 p.m., Slow Ride Take Off Pounds SensiBilly Ebeling’s One ManRoadhouse, 1350 N. Third St., bly (TOPS), 5:30 p.m., 2712 Band, 6-9 p.m., Jazz: A Louisino cover. Pebble Lane. 842-1516 for info. ana Kitchen, 1012 MassachuMaker Meet-Up, 6:30 p.m., “The Uneasy State of setts St. Lawrence Creates Maker-

10 TODAY

Open Mic with host Tyler Gregory, 6-9 p.m., Replay Lounge, 946 Massachusetts St. American Legion Bingo, doors open 4:30 p.m., first games 6:45 p.m., snack bar 5-8 p.m., American Legion Post #14, 3408 W. Sixth St. Lawrence Pedestrian Coalition Meeting, 7 p.m., Carnegie Building, 200 W. Ninth St. Conroy’s Trivia, 7:30 p.m., Conroy’s Pub, 3115 W. Sixth St. Free swing dancing lessons and dance, 8-11 p.m., Kansas Room in the Kansas Union, 1301 Jayhawk Blvd.

14 THURSDAY

Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 6 a.m., Community Building, 115 W. 11th St. William Allen White Day award ceremony, 3 p.m., Ballroom, Kansas Union, 1301 Jayhawk Blvd. Public welcome reception for eXplore Lawrence Executive Director Michael Davidson, 3-5 p.m., Jayhawk Room, Eldridge Hotel, 701 Massachusetts St. Cottin’s Hardware Farmers Market — Indoors, 4-6 p.m., Cottin’s Hardware and Rental, 1832 Massachusetts St. KU Youth Chorus rehearsal, 4:30 p.m., Room 328, Murphy Hall, 1530 Naismith Drive. Dinner and Junkyard Jazz, 5:30 p.m., American Legion Post #14, 3408 W. Sixth St. Lawrence Branch NAACP Regular Meetings, 6:30 p.m., United Way Building, 2518 Ridge Court. Good Time Comedy Open Mic and Showcase, 6:30-9 p.m., Replay Lounge, 946 Massachusetts St. Douglas County Heritage Grant Application Review, 7 p.m., Carnegie Building, 200 W. Ninth St. Mars Attacks! A Myths and Mayhem Film Event, 7 p.m., KU Natural History Museum, 1345 Jayhawk Blvd. Free English as a Second Language class, 7-8 p.m., Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. Affordable community Spanish class, 7-8 p.m., Plymouth Congregational Church,

925 Vermont St. Book Club Speed Dating, 7-8:30 p.m., Lawrence Public Library Auditorium, 707 Vermont St. Public meeting on Lawrence Parks and Recreation’s comprehensive master plan, 7-8:30 p.m., Legacy Room, Sports Pavilion Lawrence, 100 Rock Chalk Lane. Lawrence Arts & Crafts, 7-9 p.m., Cafe area, Dillons, 1740 Massachusetts St. Lecture: “Ghost Dances: Studio Ghibli’s Haunting Legacy,” 7:30-9 p.m., Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union, Jayhawk Blvd., KU Campus. “A Streetcar Named Desire,” 7:30 p.m., Theatre Lawrence, 4660 Bauer Farm Drive. Team trivia, 9 p.m., Johnny’s West, 721 Wakarusa Drive. Thursday Night Karaoke, 9 p.m., Wayne & Larry’s Sports Bar & Grill, 933 Iowa St.

15 FRIDAY

Seminar: Professor Martin Dickinson, KU Law School: “The Importance of Judges: The U.S. Supreme Court,” and Dan Watkins: “Proposals to Change the Kansas Supreme Court,” coffee 9:30 a.m., seminar 10 a.m., Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St. Mike Shurtz Trio featuring Erin Fox, 10:15-11:30 a.m., Signs of Life, 722 Massachusetts St. KU Security Conference: “Russia along NATO’s Borders,” 2-6 p.m., Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union, 1301 Jayhawk Blvd. Recording Latino/a Oral Histories, 4:30-7 p.m., Sound + Vision Studio, Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Bingo night, doors 5:30 p.m., refreshments 6 p.m., bingo starts 7 p.m., Eagles Lodge, 1803 W. Sixth St. Lawrence Schools Foundation’s 26th Annual Foundation Follies, 6 p.m., Liberty Hall, 644 Massachusetts St.

Find more information about these events, and more event listings, at ljworld.com/events.


A&E

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Sunday, April 10, 2016

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Guide CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1D

Edible Book Festival 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. April 23, Lawrence Public Library, free Once again, the library is encouraging readers to think outside the box — or, perhaps more appropriately, binding — with this wacky annual event, which displays edible works of art based on the form, title or content of a book. Call 843-3833 by 5 p.m. April 22 to register as a team or individual, or check out the finished creations and vote on a favorite. lll

Poetry Fair 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. April 24, Lawrence Arts Center, free Watch (or take a swing at, if you’re feeling showy) open-mic performances, discover new books and enjoy readings from Eric McHenry and Megan Kaminski at the Arts Center’s third annual celebration of all things poetic. The fair will also feature complimentary coffee and snacks, a cash bar, children’s poetry activities and plenty of socializing. Those interested in participating as poets are encouraged to register (email Elizabeth Schultz at eschultz@ ku.edu) by April 18.

Nick Krug/Journal-World File Photo

ABOVE: LEGENDARY FUNK MUSICIAN GEORGE CLINTON raises up the crowd as he performs with Parliament Funkadelic as part of the Free State Festival June 24, 2015, outside the Lawrence Arts Center. Clinton and his band will be returning to Lawrence April 30 to perform at The Granada Theater.

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The Arcs 8 p.m. April 26, Liberty Hall, $45 for balcony seating, $35 for general admission floor seating (in advance), $40 for general admission floor seating (day of show) The Arcs — the new side project from Dan Auerbach of The Black Keys — stop by Liberty Hall this spring with Mariachi Flor de Toloache, New York’s all-female mariachi band, in tow. “Yours, Dreamily,” The Arcs’ psychedelic debut album, has earned nearuniversal critical acclaim since dropping last fall. lll

Patti LuPone: “Coulda, Woulda, Shoulda… played that part” 7:30 p.m. April 28, Lied Center, $35-$50 for adults, $19-$26 for students/youth

LEFT: Lawrence artist Kris Kuksi, whose fans include Usher and Nike CEO Mark Parker, manipulates model kit pieces for one of his miniature works Feb. 18, 2015, at his North Lawrence studio. Kuksi’s work will be featured in the Lawrence Arts Center’s Benefit Art Auction April 23. Richard Gwin/ Journal-World File Photo

navigate life after their mother’s death. Her secret, uncovered by the siblings, could change everything Alejandro and Molly knew about themselves, their family and the history of hip-hop. lll

George Clinton and Parliament Funkadelic 8 p.m. April 30, Granada Theater, $32 in In her critically acclaimed concert, the famed advance, $35 day of the show Tony and Olivier Awardwinner performs songs Following his hugely from musicals that “she well-attended outdoor could have played, should show at last summer’s have played, did play and Free State Festival, the will play.” legendary funk musician That roster includes returns to Lawrence this “Hair,” “Bye Bye Birdie,” spring with his P-Funk “Funny Girl,” “West Side crew. Story” and “Peter Pan,” in Special guests Duncan addition to LuPone’s TonyBurnett & The Riot, out of winning performances in Kansas City, and Law“Evita” and “Gypsy.” rence’s own SUNU fill out lll the roster. Doors open at “Welcome to 7 p.m.; the show starts at Arroyo’s” 8 p.m April 29-May 5, KU’s lll William Inge Memorial B.o.B. Theatre at Murphy Hall, 8 p.m. May 4, Granada $15 for adults, $10 for Theater, $20 in advance, children, $14 for senior citizens and KU faculty/ $25 day of show staff, $15 (or $10 in adCertified-gold hip-hop vance) for KU students artist B.o.B. brings his Featuring two spinning genre-bending rhymes and unorthodox views on sciDJs serving as a Greek ence (the rapper drew atchorus, this coming-oftention earlier this year for age story by Kristoffer claiming the earth is flat) Diaz follows a pair of to the Granada in May. His siblings — Alejandro, a struggling bar owner, and latest album, “Psycadelik Molly, an emerging street artist with a penchant for tagging the local police precinct — as they

Thoughtz,” dropped via digital distribution last summer. Also performing: Atlanta-based rapper Scotty ATL and London Jae (who defines himself as “no genre” on Twitter). Doors open at 7 p.m.; the show starts at 8 p.m. lll

“Beauty and the Beast” 7:30 p.m. May 5, Lied Center, $45-$55 for adults, $35-$40 for students/youth Back by popular demand, the Broadway smash returns to the Lied Center stage this spring brimming with all the lavish sets and costumes, dazzling production numbers, and human actors as anthropomorphic household objects you and your inner Disney princess could ever dream of.

lineup of live entertainment. Attractions include street performers from the upcoming Lawrence Busker Festival, live music, a bouncy house and face painting for the kids, and an art sale at the nearby Cider Gallery. Visit the Kansas Food Truck Festival Facebook page for ticket info and more details. lll

Mayer Hawthorne 9 p.m. May 14, Granada Theater, $23 in advance, $25 day of the show Grammy-nominated neo-soul artist Mayer Hawthorne counts Smokey Robinson, Barry White and Curtis Mayfield among his influences. His new album, “Man About Town,” has earned generally positive

reviews for its throwback sound, eliciting comparisons to early Hall and Oates. Doors open at 8 p.m.; the show starts at 9 p.m. lll

Art Tougeau May 27-28, downtown Lawrence, free This year’s celebration of wacky wheeled contraptions kicks off with a preparade “pARTy” (featuring live music, food and drinks, and fun for all ages) from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. May 27 at the Lawrence Arts Center before the main event May 28. Participants can register their rides starting at 10 a.m., while the parade itself kicks off in front of the Arts Center at noon. For updates on the schedule, check out Art Tougeau on Facebook.

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Lawrence Busker Festival May 27-29, downtown Lawrence, free Like last year, Busker Fest and Art Tougeau have again joined forces to keep Lawrence weird this May. Recent renditions of the annual festival have included everything from oddball musicians and comedic magicians to sassy strongwomen and fire eaters. Check out lawrencebuskerfest.com for details. — Features reporter Joanna Hlavacek can be reached at jhlavacek@ljworld.com and 832-6388.

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Kansas Food Truck Festival 4 p.m. to 10 p.m. May 7, Warehouse Arts District in East Lawrence, $10 to enter

A musical about heartache, hope and everlasting love.

This one’s not exactly artsy, but we’re counting food as a creative pursuit. The third annual familyfriendly fest returns this May to the Warehouse Arts District with 26 food trucks and an expanded

Book By

Music By

Lyrics By

Allan Knee Jason Howland Mindi Dickstein Based On The Novel By

Louisa May Alcott

April 8, 9, 10*, 15, 16, 17*, 2016 | 7:30 p.m.*2:30 p.m. Crafton-Preyer Theatre | Murphy Hall, 1530 Naismith Dr.

L a w r e n c e ’s S u p p l i e r o f Wedding Attire! Place Your Celebration Announcements kansas.obituariesandcelebrations.com

Located at 731 Mass St. 785.840.4664 | www.JLynnBridal.com

Reserved seat tickets are on sale at the University Theatre Box Office, 785-864-3982, Lied Center Box Office, 785-864-ARTS; and online. Tickets are $20 for adults, $19 for senior citizens and KU faculty and staff, and $10 for children. KU Student tickets are $10 in advance, $15 at the door. Little Women is presented through special arrangement with Music Theatre International (MTI). All authorized performance materials are also supplied by MTI. 421 West 54th Street, New York, NY 10019. Phone: 212-5414684 Fax: 212-397-4684. www.MTIShows.com. Little Women is co-sponsored by the Ron King Agency, Inc.

www.KUTheatre.com


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Sunday, April 10, 2016

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Boyfriend’s caretaker obligations may be dealbreaker Dear Annie: I am a young lady in my 20s, and I think I’ve found the man I want to spend the rest of my life with. I want to start a family and build a life with him, but I don’t know how that’s going to happen. “Jonathan” takes care of his mother and father. They are on disability, even though they aren’t truly disabled. They don’t drive, but can do anything other people do. It’s just hard for them. His parents are wonderful people and I love them to death, but Jonathan drops everything to tend to them, whether it’s going to the grocery store or lending them money. It’s hard for me to think we could have a family of our own when he already has one, and it’s a big responsibility. Jonathan works hard every day and can nev-

Annie’s Mailbox

Marcy Sugar and Kathy Mitchell

anniesmailbox@comcast.net

er say no to his parents, and his father would give him plenty of attitude if he did. I would do anything for my parents, but when is it too much? — The Young Lady Dear Lady: Most people on disability have a reason, so when you say his parents are not “truly disabled,” you could be wrong. The things that are hard for them, along with their inability to drive, could make their lives more diffi-

Paranoia from across the pond The corrosive nature of suspicion looms large in the miniseries import “Doctor Foster: A Woman Scorned” (8 p.m., Lifetime, TV-14). “Foster” aired over five nights in the U.K., where it was a big hit. Lifetime will air it over three consecutive Sunday nights. Dr. Gemma Foster (Suranne Jones, “Coronation Street”) appears happy and prosperous -at first. Her handsome husband, Simon (Bertie Carvel, “Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell”), m a k e s her late for work with some wakeup passion. Her practice is thriving. Their son is bright and curious. Then she discovers a single strand of blond hair on Simon’s scarf and her world begins to unravel. Foster’s fears do not arrive all at once, but increase in a drip-by-drip fashion as seemingly innocent actions and remarks by Simon and members of their circle of friends take on ominous overtones. “Foster” does a good job of building an atmosphere of paranoia. Unfortunately, Lifetime decided to add “A Woman Scorned” to the show’s title, giving away a bit of the game and all but assuring us that her fears are not unfounded. O A half-hour scripted comedy that mirrors the structure of a reality show about a comic some haven’t thought of in decades, “Dice” (8:30 p.m., Showtime, TV-MA) stars Andrew Dice Clay as himself. Or, rather, a fictional view of himself as a semi-washed up figure living with his son and girlfriend on the fringes of Las Vegas, where every week he gets in and out of hot water over gambling debts or combative fans or detractors who cannot distinguish his vulgar stage persona from the real thing. How can you blame them? Neither can he. Great sitcoms end before you know it. Watching “Dice” can make 30 minutes transpire like several laughless hours. Tonight’s other highlights O A fairy princess faces a fateful choice in the new series “The Other Kingdom” (6 p.m., Nickelodeon, TV-G). O Scheduled on “60 Minutes” (6 p.m., CBS): A missing portion of the Congressional 911 Commission’s report that may link Saudi officials to the terror attacks; a glance at China’s growing film industry. O A terror leader’s illness offers a strategic advantage on “Madam Secretary” (7 p.m., CBS, TV-14). O Dwayne Johnson and Kevin Hart host the 2016 MTV Movie Awards (7 p.m., MTV, TV-14). O On two episodes of “Elementary” (CBS, TV-14): a questionable client (8 p.m.), a work of art (9 p.m.).

cult than you realize. And a man who takes such good care of his parents might make an excellent husband and father. However, if you think his parents are somehow scamming the system and taking advantage of their son, you might want to back away from this relationship. Jonathan is unlikely to curtail his level of responsibility and would resent you if you forced the issue. Dear Annie: “A Frustrated South Dakotan,” says he has epilepsy with “very minor seizures,” and is unhappy that his mother restricts his activities. Your recommendation of the Epilepsy Foundation website is excellent. There are a couple of points I would like to address: 1. States have regulations against people driving when they may have a sudden loss of

consciousness for any reason (seizures, narcolepsy, low blood sugar). If a person who knowingly has uncontrolled seizures causes an accident, he may be at risk for criminal charges. 2. Seizures often occur without warning, making some activities dangerous, including bathing or swimming without a close observer, being the only adult in charge of small children, etc. 3. If “Frustrated” had a seizure and fell, he could get frostbite in the winter or heatstroke in the summer. I suggest that “Frustrated” and his mom explore the EFA website, then draw up a contract they can both live with. — Dr. B.B., Neurologist

JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS

For Sunday, April 10: This year you become more available and open. You seem to be able to communicate with others clearly, and they with you. If you are single, enjoy dating until the cold weather arrives, as this is when you will meet someone who makes you stop in your tracks. If you are attached, the two of you need to break past self-imposed mental barriers. The stars show the kind of day you’ll have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult Aries (March 21-April 19) ++++ All the positive energy in the world might not be able to prevent a tiff from happening. Tonight: Let go of a misunderstanding. Taurus (April 20-May 20) ++++ You’ll have no choice but to walk away from a difficult situation with a partner. Tonight: Only what you want to do. Gemini (May 21-June 20) ++++ A loved one could be jealous, which you might realize when he or she goes on the warpath. Tonight: Follow your instincts. Cancer (June 21-July 22) +++ You could feel somewhat out of touch with others. You might need to pull back. Tonight: Know when to say “no.” Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) +++++ Emphasize what you want and expect from a friend; you actually might succeed. Tonight: Where the action is.

— Send questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or Annie’s Mailbox, P.O. Box 118190 Chicago, IL 60611.

jacquelinebigar.com

Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) +++ Pressure builds, as someone you look up to has some expectations that you might prefer not to meet. Tonight: Let a loved one have some space. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ++++ Deal with someone else directly. You might be surprised by what comes out as a result. Tonight: Togetherness. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ++++ You will be in the mood for a fast change, though it might involve a loved one. Tonight: Roll with the punches. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ++++ You might need to be ready for what could happen if you push a loved one too hard. Tonight: Let another person make a suggestion. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ++++ Call a close friend whom you don’t see often, as he or she seems to want to visit with you. Tonight: Get a head start on tomorrow. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ++++ You could be in a position where you might want to make some substantial changes. Tonight: Forget tomorrow. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) ++++ Honor a need for some personal time, even if an older relative seems disappointed. Tonight: Do not allow others to upset you.

UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD Universal Crossword Edited by Fred Piscop April 10, 2016

ACROSS 1 Ear-related 6 French military cap 10 Nonstick kitchen spray 13 Pipeunclogging brand 14 “Expletive deleted” sound 15 Air hero 16 Significant other 18 Inform on the mob 19 Outside the lab, say 20 Port near Gibraltar 22 AKC category 23 Soul singer Cooke 24 Online ’zine 26 Citrusflavored soda 31 Like pieces in a kit 35 Cyclotron bit 36 Art deco great 37 One to vie with 38 Come-__ (lures) 39 Edgar who painted ballerinas 40 Birthstone for many Libras 41 Female rabbit 42 Attacks from all sides 43 Publisher of authorfinanced books 4/10

46 Marine One rider (Abbr.) 47 Fleur-de-__ 48 Emissionsmonitoring org. 51 __ pork (Chinese dish) 54 Fortified Portuguese wines 56 Half a sawbuck 57 1962 hit for Bobby “Boris” Pickett 60 Senate vote 61 Oftenquoted line 62 Take a sip of 63 Curator’s concern 64 __-do-well 65 Lipstick mishap DOWN 1 Fess up to 2 Heavenly prefix 3 Like Seattle’s climate 4 Alamo capturer Santa __ 5 One in need of salvation 6 Abstract artist Paul 7 Extra-wide, on a shoebox 8 Dispenser candy 9 Emetic drug 10 Cowpoke’s pal 11 Trendy berry 12 French city on the Moselle

14 Myanmar, formerly 17 A bit less than a liter 21 Is in sync 24 Ids’ complements 25 All chess pieces (even the queen!) 27 San Fran gridder 28 Twist the arm of 29 ASAP, in the ER 30 Pianist Dame Myra __ 31 Alta. or Ont. 32 Co-host of Strahan 33 “Mrs. Bridge” author __ S. Connell 34 Muslim leader 38 Klutz’s cry 39 Napoleons, bombes, etc.

41 Henna rinse, e.g. 42 Oft-forgotten part of a 45 44 “The buck stops here” president 45 Tickle pink 48 Wipe away 49 Shells, but not BBs 50 “My Name is __ Lev” 51 Yucatan dweller 52 Riderequesting app 53 Do some ushering 54 Roman Cath. title 55 Mosque leader 58 “To a ...” poem 59 Dundee denial

PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER

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COMPRESSION By Fred Piscop

— The astrological forecast should be read for entertainment only.

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PUZZLES

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Sunday, April 10, 2016

| 5D

THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD 54 Carson who won the 2001 T. S. Eliot Prize for Poetry 55 “Come on … be daring” 57 Increases, with “to” ACROSS 59 “No worries” 1 ____-Town (sobriquet in many a Kanye West song) 62 Look from Scrooge 63 Sally 4 “To Kill a Mockingbird” 66 Tell theme 68 Bubbling 10 Get heavily (into) 14 Distinctive Harry Potter 70 24-note tune 71 Quattros and TTs feature 73 “I had nothing to do 18 Overactors 20 Hebrew for “my Lord” with it” 75 Olympic sprinting 21 Period for reflection champion Devers and recharging 77 “Oh, boo-hoo!” 23 With 113-Across, heard 79 Overly ingratiating but disregarded … or a 81 Senior project hint to interpreting the 85 Some Ivy Leaguers Across answers with 86 “Would you consider circled letters this suggestion?” 25 Gallant type 88 Nutritional figs. 26 “____ Dei” (prayer) 90 Roman statesman 27 Baldwin’s known as “the Censor” “30 Rock” co-star 91 Given the signal 28 Clean-air org. 92 Label for a suit? 29 Mayan food staple 93 Some Johnny Hart 30 Browser navigation panels aids 96 Not true? 31 Common query from 98 Outlaws one about to leave the 99 Out of control house 100 Comment to the not35 The left, informally yet-convinced 36 Meditate (on) 105 Mountain goat 37 Modern surgical aid 106 Politico with the auto38 Come-____ biography “An American 39 ____-surfing Son” 40 Show wear 107 The Engineers of the 41 Arcade-game sound N.C.A.A. 43 Nicknames 108 Disneyland’s Main 46 Indignant reply when someone withholds infor- Street, ____ 109 ____ rima (meter of mation Dante’s “Divine Comedy”) 49 Contract part 111 Former name for 53 P.M. after and before Syracuse athletes Churchill JUMPING TO CONCLUSIONS By Natan Last Edited by Will Shortz

113 See 23-Across 117 Rustic backyard plaything 118 Subject of 1972 negotiations with China 119 Part of a bloodline 120 Coins with fleurs-de-lis 121 Remnants 122 Famed Six Flags Great Adventure roller coaster 123 Talking-____ DOWN 1 ____ Pets (1980s fad) 2 “Just hold on” 3 2009 Grammy nominee with the lyric “But this ain’t SeaWorld, this is real as it gets” 4 Singer Carly ____ Jepsen 5 Nabokov heroine 6 Heart: Lat. 7 “Moments from now” 8 More grounded 9 June and July 10 Feminist issue in the workplace 11 Israeli leaders? 12 Helped the cause, say 13 Foe of Saruman, in Tolkien 14 Hearty entree 15 Director Michael 16 Company that passed Walmart in 2015 as the world’s largest retailer 17 Extends, in a way 19 Disinvites, e.g. 22 Mr. Noodle’s friend on “Sesame Street” 24 Tricky curve 31 Kapow! 32 2003 No. 1 hit for OutKast 33 Parts of Polynésie

34 Rig, e.g. 35 General of the Resistance in “The Force Awakens” 36 Doctrines 40 Awesome 41 Unlikely to be talked out of 42 Sight seers 44 Makes dim, as the 42-Down 45 Fifth-century pope who was the first to be called “the Great” 47 One waiting in “Waiting for Godot” 48 Sweaters, e.g. 50 Layer of the 42-Down 51 Slip (through) 52 Slips up 55 Duke Ellington’s “All ____ Soon” 56 Sacha Baron Cohen persona 58 Aphorisms 60 El ____ Real 61 Symbols on old manuscripts 63 Not for prudes 64 Energy field, of sorts 65 Tennyson work 67 Jabber 69 Post-menorah-lighting treats 72 Branded 74 Impeccably 76 “Rumor has it …” 78 Oscar ____, star of “Inside Llewyn Davis” 80 Facilities often referred to by their first letter 82 2010’s “California Gurls” or 1996’s “Macarena” 83 Goal of having no unread emails

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anchor 95 Outback maker 97 Loom 98 “Scram!” 99 Looks out for? 101 Dialogue 102 Calc figures 103 “And I ____ …”

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84 Lake Oahe locale: Abbr. 86 Actress Blanchett 87 ____ Viv, caretaker of the Fresh Prince of Bel-Air 89 Enter angrily 90 Glades 93 From memory 94 Former “CBS Evening News”

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104 Accustomed 105 “Were ____ hazard a guess …” 110 Lover of Aphrodite 112 Farm female 114 Brace 115 Laugh half 116 “Lux” composer

UNITED FEATURE SUNDAY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1 Be bratty (2 wds.) 6 Technical details 11 Creep forth 16 Poltergeist 21 Hotel offering 22 Lake rental 23 Plugged in 24 Cup fraction 25 Web-toed mammal 26 Oak, once 27 Rented, as a limo 28 Hydrox rivals 29 Ms. Peeples of TV 30 Mope 32 Pitcher’s hope (hyph.) 34 Like prime steak 36 Hole puncher 37 The real McCoy 39 Cancel a launch 40 Uno y dos 41 Jazzy Fitzgerald 42 Vane dir. 43 Rise above it all? 44 Tilt with a lance 46 Vertical 49 Spills the beans 50 Twinge 51 Grommet 55 Crew 56 Wets thoroughly 57 Female elephants 58 More festive 59 Ledger col. 60 Aquarium denizen 61 Urges 62 Key — pie 63 Herr in Madras 64 Trailblazers 66 Pretoria coin 67 Inventor — Geiger 68 Mo. expense 69 Dried off 70 Not all

71 Ant at a picnic 72 Photog — Adams 73 Earn 74 Copper “rust” 76 Dog show org. 77 Knight’s gloves 80 Wind catcher 81 Square pillar 82 Read carefully 86 Black Sea arm 87 Staffer 88 Tilly and Ryan 89 Accelerator 90 British inc. 91 Tijuana tot 92 Lipstick shades 93 Leading lady Ina — 94 Yang complement 95 Mr. Nimoy 97 Seine tributary 98 Black tea 99 Draw, as a graph 100 They have 8 legs 101 Per person 102 Raw rubber 103 Fumes 104 Symphony bigwig 106 Fix the roads 107 — Paulo, Brazil 108 Lows 111 Dry wines 112 Retina cells 113 File cabinet items 117 Prince Valiant’s son 118 Nile god 119 Avoid restaurants (2 wds.) 120 Gas tank status 121 Resin 122 Kid who rode Diablo 124 More than wants 126 Social mores 128 Lucky break 130 Weed killers 131 Fairy-tale hag

132 Closes in on 133 Nash of limericks 134 Free 135 Dryden work 136 Lingerie buy 137 Della or Pee Wee DOWN 1 “— — of sixpence...” 2 Dollface 3 Atlas or Prometheus 4 Sporty truck 5 Keep going 6 Clean a fish 7 Stuff the suitcase 8 U2 producer 9 Tobacco pipes 10 Mexicali matrons 11 Raj title 12 Gibe at 13 Hearing aid? 14 Floor decor (2 wds.) 15 Mantels 16 Encouraging word 17 Ben- — 18 Cager Shaq — 19 Mean look 20 Physicist Nikola — 31 Half of deux 33 Lean-to 35 Admires 38 SOS receivers 39 Quench 40 Freight units 41 Kassel’s river 43 Motorist’s woes 44 Vise grips 45 Fictional governess 46 Sphinx locale 47 Math term 48 Provide capital 49 Piece of lumber 50 Frog’s hangout 52 Tallies 53 Spooky

54 Quavering sound 56 Trapshooting 57 Long, long insect 58 After-dinner candy 60 Capriati foe 61 Patio view 62 Laird’s daughter 65 Beersheba’s locale 66 Steakhouse order 67 Whodunit suspect 68 Full-length 70 Seeger of folk music 71 Veep’s superior 72 Rubber city 74 Life in the Yucatan 75 Rock-band bookings 76 Condor’s abode 77 Ernest or Julio 78 Montezuma’s empire 79 Beckett no-show 80 Thoughtful 82 Fragrant perennial 83 Pizzazz 84 “Silas Marner” writer 85 Small hollows 87 Most blithe 88 Engage, as gear teeth 89 Bet acceptor 91 AutoZone rival 92 Wealthy, to Pablo 93 Sweater letters 96 — de plume 97 Boathouse items 98 Diesel, to the diesel 99 Cattle mover 101 Writers on glass 102 Indulgent 103 Get fooled (2 wds.) 105 Rap session? 106 Go bad 107 Our sun 108 Incan city — Picchu 109 Winter constellation 110 First sign

UNIVERSAL SUDOKU

See both puzzle SOLUTIONS in Monday’s paper. 116 Public tiff 118 False front 119 Best or Ferber 120 Model T maker

112 — Stengel 113 Too exacting 114 Shake off 115 Croupiers’ tools

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

Unscramble these six Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form six ordinary words.

123 Dernier — 125 Aurora, to Socrates 127 Possessed 129 Size above med.

HIDATO

See answer next Sunday

©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.

MECNIO PUXDEL SOURRC

Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app

THURCC

TULAWN CKROTE

Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

PRINT YOUR ANSWER IN THE CIRCLES BELOW

Last week’s solution

-

Solution and tips at sudoku.com.

See the JUMBLE answer on page 6D. Answer :

DUPLEX WALNUT CRUTCH CURSOR ROCKET INCOME His memory of the huge auto salvage yard he once owned was a —

“WRECKCOLLECTION”

APRIL 10, 2016

Last week’s solution


Books

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Sunday, April 10, 2016

VEGGING OUT

Cookbooks that put spring produce to work

F

or me, there’s no more-definite sign of spring’s arrival than the return of the Lawrence Farmer’s Market. Fresh local fruits, vegetables and more are once again available to all. When it comes to produce, the choices are actually pretty overwhelming. Those only with kitchen experience from the latest trend of GIF cooking — short and silent video recipes that typically involve bacon weaves — might feel a little lost. Even seasoned chefs might stop and ask themselves, “How the heck do I even use this kohlrabi?” We’ve all been there, staring down some kind of tuber or microgreen with uncertainty. Maybe you pick up that mystery vegetable anyway and improvise with steaming and frying until it seems done, or perhaps you give up and opt for a slab of ribs instead — which honestly sounds like a great idea — but it doesn’t have to be this way. The just-released “The Vegetable Butcher” is a comprehensive guide to choosing, preparing, and ultimately, eating all the different kinds of delicious vegetables in the world. Detailed instructions and vivid photographs demonstrate everything one needs to master julienned carrots, perfectlysliced leeks, et. al. Author Cara Mangini also includes a full suit of recipes for each veggie; her creative,

individualized approach brings out the best qualities each ingredient has to offer. And if you’re still worrying about that kohlrabi, check out her take on Kohlrabi Cheddar Strata. You may have heard about “The Food Lab: Better Cooking Through Science” by J. Kenji Lopez-Alt. The International Association of Culinary Professionals recently named it “Cookbook of the Year,” and there’s plenty of hype swirling around the book — and it’s totally justified. “The Food Lab” asks the questions that really matter, like how to make the objectively-best

way to explore new uses for ingredients both familiar and exotic. “Zahav: A World of Israeli Cooking,” one of my personal favorite cookbooks of the past year, is a tour-deforce of Mediterranean and Middle Eastern cooking. If you thought you knew hummus, think again. Author Michael Solomonov explains: “Israeli hummus is about the marriage of chickpeas and tehina. In fact, there are no other ingredients, just a dash of cumin.” Of course, there are myriad other styles of excellent hummus, all of which I need urgently. “Zahav” showcases the amazing results of proper ingredients and careful preparation. Other highlights include the lavish Persian Wedding Rice and shakshouka, a dish of eggs cooked scrambled in tomato sauce with feta and eggs using olive oil. exhaustive This is just a taste of the scientific latest and greatest; there are experimenalways hot new cookbooks tation. hitting the shelves. If humOld mus isn’t your thing, check out culinary myths are debunked, Rachael Ray’s latest, “Everyone and Lopez-Alt offers dazzling is Italian on Sunday,” which she glimpses of the future, such as calls “the single most important with his sous-vide imitating work of my life.” We have titles “beer cooler” steak process. The covering paleo, gluten-free, and vegan recipes, too. incredible wealth of fine-tuned Just remember that one of techniques make “The Food the most important tools in the Lab” an instant classic of modkitchen may not be your chef’s ern cooking. It’s funny, too. knife or your cast-iron skillet, Lopez-Alt’s spring vegetable risotto made easy is a great, and but your library card. seasonal, place to start. — Eli Hoelscher is a Readers Services Immersing your kitchen in a Assistant at Lawrence Public Library. specialized cuisine is another

Poetry and food — a match made in heaven

R

oses are red Violets are blue I like nutritious foods And so should you — A poem by seventhgraders Mykynzie Wright, Hailey Coon and Rylie Stellwagon, from “Food Poetry” by Topher Enneking and South Middle School students Did you know that April at Lawrence Public Library is both Healthy Food Month and Poetry Month? I’m not kidding. We are lucky enough to celebrate in one month fuel for both body and soul. In fact, the poetry of food is ubiquitous, transcending time, space, culture, socio-economics and more. Food is one of those universal connections that we have with every single living being on the planet. No wonder so many authors have

chosen to write the lyrical praises of that which nourishes us all. In “The Hungry Ear,” poet and editor Kevin Young has collected more than 150 food poems written by some of the most illustrious writers: Wendell Berry, Gertrude Stein, Sylvia Plath, Allen Ginsberg, Lucille Clifton, Pablo Neruda and the list goes on. From basic ingredients like salt, butter or peeled onions, to the experience of eating gumbo, enjoying a soda with friends, or standing in a food pantry line, the range of invocation on the nature of food and its place in our lives stands as the book’s single subject for literary elevation. We eat to live, but poetry exposes our rawest desire as humans to live in companionship with the people and food that

sustain us. As poet Joy Harjo expresses in the opening of “The Hungry Ear,” “The world begins at a kitchen table. No matter what, we must eat to live. ... Perhaps the world will end at the kitchen table, while we are laughing and crying, eating of the last sweet

bite.” As we measure our time by the moments that pass, it is inevitable that food will also mark our collective human experience entrenched in its mundanity and beauty. Last year we celebrated food and poetry by inviting local poet and teacher Topher Enneking and the students of South Middle School to write about their love of fruits and vegetables. We hosted their poetry at our first annual Nutrition Carnivale, sponsored by Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Were you there last year, when aerialists hung from the entry of the library and those middle school poets recited their lyrical works? Did you toss a bean bag or drink a bike-powered smoothie?

If not, prepare to be amazed when the Nutrition Carnivale returns for its second year, bigger and better than before, on April 23 from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. We will still host those amazing aerial acrobatics, activity tables and prizes, but this year we’ve added a few more surprises that can’t be missed! Enter to win the Edible Books contest and the Carnival Cuisine challenge, and make sure to grab a seat for the panel of local farmers who will talk about their experience in growing the healthy food that we Lawrencians enjoy so much. There’s something for everyone this year, so come one, come all to the greatest food show in Lawrence! — Gwen Geiger Wolfe is an Information Services Assistant at Lawrence Public Library.

BOOK REVIEW

A morbid, intriguing look at authors’ ‘Final Chapters’

By Pamela Miller Associated Press

A person’s life is always more important than his or her death — but no one reads an obituary or biography without wanting to know how the subject died. British-educated Texas writer Jim Bernhard gives a respectful nod to the understandable fascination most of us have with death in this collec-

tion of essays about the ends authors have come to. To his credit, he includes in each essay some of what the person in question said or wrote about death, giving us insight into his or her personal philosophies and fears. Some of his subjects: Aeschylus, killed by a turtle dropped on his head by a vulture; Thomas Aquinas, whose body was buried in France — except for his right

arm, buried at 41 of in Rome, and Addison’s his left arm, disease, or interred in maybe it Naples (Berwas lymnhard writes: phoma, or “ C a n o n possibly boized in 1323, vine tuberSt. Thomas culosis; Marnow rests in garet Fuller, pieces”); Sir drowned in Francis Baa shipwreck con, possibly with her poisoned by husband and raw chicken son; Thomas he was experiHardy, whose menting with preserv- ashes are in Westmining; Jane Austen, dead ster Abbey but whose

excised heart, meant to be buried next to his first wife in Dorset village, was possibly eaten by his cat; Sherwood Anderson, who died of sepsis after he swallowed a martini toothpick, and Thomas Merton, electrocuted by a fan after taking a shower. The book is an often morbid but sometimes merry reminder that all flesh is grass, no matter how talented or rich or famous the bones it cloaks.

BEST-SELLERS Here are the best-sellers for the week that ended Sunday, April 3, compiled from nationwide data.

Hardcover Fiction 1. Fool Me Once. Harlan Coben. Dutton ($28) 2. The Nest. Cynthia D’Aprix Sweeney. Ecco ($26.99) 3. Brush of Wings. Karen Kingsbury. S&S/Howard ($22.99) 4. Private Paris. Patterson/Sullivan. Little, Brown ($28) 5. Property of a Noblewoman. Danielle Steel. Delacorte ($28.95) 6. Journey to Munich. Jacqueline Winspear. Harper ($26.99) 7. The Summer Before the War. Helen Simonson. Random House ($28) 8. Off the Grid. C.J. Box. Putnam ($27) 9. The Gangster. Cussler/Scott. Putnam ($29) 10. No Safe Secret. Fern Michaels. Kensington ($21.95) Hardcover Nonfiction 1. On Fire. John O’Leary. S&S/North Star Way ($26) 2. When Breath Becomes Air. Paul Kalanithi. Random House ($25) 3. The Whole 30. Hartwig/Hartwig. HMH ($30) 4. Cravings. Chrissy Teigen. Clarkson Potter ($29.99) 5. Spark Joy. Marie Kondo. Ten Speed ($18.99) 6. Celebrate. Lauren Conrad. Morrow/Dey Street ($28.99) 7. Real Leadership. John Addison. McGraw-Hill Education ($25) 8. Eat Fat, Get Thin. Mark Hyman. Little, Brown ($28) 9. Smarter Faster Better. Charles Duhigg. Random House ($28) 10. Seven Brief Lessons on Physics. Carlo Rovelli. Riverhead ($18) Mass Market 1. Make Me. Lee Child. Dell ($9.99) 2. One a Rancher. Linda Lael Miller. Harlequin ($7.99) 3. Because of Miss Bridgerton. Julia Quinn. Avon ($7.99) 4. Finders Keepers. Stephen King. S&S/Pocket ($9.99) 5. Denim and Diamonds. Debbie Macomber. Harlequin ($6.99) 6. The Liar. Nora Roberts. Jove ($7.99) 7. Private India. Patterson/Sanghi. Hachette/ Vision ($9.99) 8. The Witness. Sandra Brown. Grand Central ($7.99) 9. Ten Guns from Texas. William W. Johnstone. Pinnacle ($7.99) 10. Country. Danielle Steel. Dell ($7.99)

THAT SCRAM Trade Paperback by David 1. Harry Potter Magical Unscramble these six Jumbles, Places Schoone letter&toCharacters. each square, to form ($15.99) six ordinary words. lastic 2.THURCC The Guilty. David Baldacci. Grand Central ($15.99) 3. Tribune Harry Potter Coloring ©2016 Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved. Book. Scholastic ($15.99) 4.MECNIO Country Cooking from a Redneck Kitchen. Francine Bryson. Clarkson Potter ($22) PUXDEL 5. Harry Potter Magical Creatures. Scholastic ($15.99) SOURRC 6. The Atonement. Beverly Lewis. Bethany House ($15.99) TULAWN 7. Dead Wake. Erik Larson. Broadway ($17) 8.CKROTE Lost Ocean. Johanna arrange Basford. Penguin ($16.95) Now to form the su 9. The Witness. Sandra suggested by Brown. Grand Central PRINT YOUR ANSWER IN THE CIRCLE ($14.99) “ 10. Tropical World. Millie Marotta. Sterling/Lark ($14.95) Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app

SHELF LIFE

-

6D

Answer : DUPLEX WALNUT CRUTCH CURSOR ROCKET INCOME His memory of the huge auto salvage yard he once owned was a —

“WRECKCOLLECTION”

A


Sunday, April 10, 2016

E jobs.lawrence.com

CLASSIFIEDS

Cyber Hiring Week! April 11-15 APPLY ONLINE www.mylocalmcds.com

PLACE YOUR AD:

785.832.2222

classifieds@ljworld.com

Or in person at any Lawrence restaurant including on theTurnpike

A P P LY N O W

552 AREA JOB OPENINGS! BRANDON WOODS ..................................... 10 OPENINGS

KU: STUDENT OPENINGS ........................... 139 OPENINGS

CLO ........................................................ 12 OPENINGS

LAWRENCE PRESBYTERIAN MANOR ................. 5 OPENINGS

EZ GO STORES............................................ 5 OPENINGS

MISCELLANEOUS ....................................... 34 OPENINGS

FEDEX ..................................................... 65 OPENINGS

MV TRANSPORTATION ................................. 20 OPENINGS

KU: FACULTY/ACADEMIC/LECTURERS ............ 93 OPENINGS

THE SHELTER, INC ..................................... 10 OPENINGS

KU: STAFF OPENINGS ................................. 79 OPENINGS

USA800, INC. ........................................... 80 OPENINGS

L E A R N M O R E AT J O B S . L AW R E N C E . C O M

AT T E N T I O N E M P L OY E R S !

Email your number of job openings to Peter at psteimle@ljworld.com. *Approximate number of job openings at the time of this printing.

Lecturer Openings Join KU’s academic community for the 2016-2017 academic year as a Lecturer to provide course instruction over a wide range of disciplines. Lecturer applications are being accepted for hundreds of job openings across 75 open pool postings in the following areas:

SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING

SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE, DESIGN & PLANNING

COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS & SCIENCES

WILLIAM ALLEN WHITE SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM & MASS COMMUNICATIONS

SCHOOL OF SOCIAL WELFARE

SCHOOL OF BUSINESS

SCHOOL OF EDUCATION

To search and apply for job openings visit employment.ku.edu using keyword Lecturer. Application deadline dates and teaching locations may vary as specified on individual posting announcements. KU is an EO/AAE. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex (including pregnancy), age, national origin, disability, genetic information or protected Veteran status.

The University of Kansas is committed to providing our employees with an enriching and dynamic work environment that encourages innovation, research, creativity and equal opportunity for learning, development and professional growth. KU strives to recruit, develop, retain and reward a dynamic workforce that shares our mission and core strategic values in research, teaching and service. Learn more at http://provost.ku.edu/strategic-plan

Administrative Assistant

Information andTelecommunication Technology Center seeks half-time Jayhawk Scholarship for Service Administrative Assistant to manage student records and assist with recruiting. APPLY AT: https://employment.ku.edu/staff/5477BR

Assistant Researcher

KU Institute for Life Span Studies seeks a Full-time Assistant Researcher. For more information see link below. APPLY AT: https://employment.ku.edu/staff/5806BR Deadline is 4/19/2016

Broadcast/Digital Sales Executive

Kansas Public Radio on KU’s Lawrence campus, seeks a seasoned sales executive. Base salary plus performance incentive pay. BA & relevant experience required. APPLY AT: https://employment.ku.edu/staff/5726BR Applications accepted until 4/24/16.

GRE Instructor

McNair Scholars Program seeks a GRE Instructor for program running 6/1 - 7/21. For more information see link below. APPLY AT: https://employment.ku.edu/staff/5813BR Review of applications begins 4/18/16.

For complete job descriptions & more information, visit:

employment.ku.edu

KU is an EO/AAE, full policy http://policy.ku.edu/IOA/nondiscrimination. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex (including pregnancy), age, national origin, disability, genetic information or protected Veteran status.


L AW R E NCE J O URNAL-WORLD

CLASSIFIED A DV ERTI SI NG

Contact our classified advertising specialists today to place your ad and get results.

“The most rewarding part of my job is helping my customers promote their homes or vehicles and make connections with readers who count on our newspaper and websites to be reliable sources for these purchases.”

Allison Wilson Classified Advertising Executive

RENTALS • HOMES • CARS 785-832-7248 awilson@ljworld.com

“I love the whole experience an auction offers; from the drive to the location, the hunt for treasure, to the bidding excitement! It’s an honor for me to help you and your sale gain exposure.”

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AUCTIONS 785-832-7168 aerwine@ljworld.com

“More than 4,000 job seekers per week visit Jobs.Lawrence.com! Add to that the newspapers in Lawrence, Baldwin, Tonganoxie, Shawnee, Bonner Springs and Basehor, and we reach more local job seekers than anyone else! With years of recruiting experience, a KU MBA and an extensive network, I can help you attract the qualified employees your organization needs today.”

Peter Steimle Classified Advertising Executive

EMPLOYMENT 785-832-7119 psteimle@ljworld.com

classifieds@ljworld.com | 785-832-2222


L awrence J ournal -W orld

Sunday, April 10, 2016

PLACE YOUR AD:

785.832.2222

Employer of

| 3E

classifieds@ljworld.com

Employer of

choice

choice

FHLBank Topeka’s products and services help our member banks provide affordable credit and support housing and community development efforts. We are accepting resumes for the position listed below.

FHLBank Topeka’s products and services help our member banks provide affordable credit and support housing and community development efforts. We are accepting resumes for the position listed below.

IT AUDIT INTERN

DIVERSITY AND INCLUSION ANALYST

Under direct supervision, the individual in this position performs assigned IA database maintenance/development and data query support. Work performed includes modification or development of Microsoft Access data queries to support audits; execution of IA’s monthly data load and balancing processes; and assisting with the project to convert IA’s consolidated audit database (CAD) back-end database from Microsoft Access to SQL. This position also works on special projects as assigned by IA management. Audit procedures assigned are of lesser to moderate complexity and require the exercise of some judgment.

The individual in this position provides assistance and research to support FHLBank’s diversity and inclusion program, specifically supporting the Office of Minority & Women Inclusion (OMWI) efforts and activities. The individual in this position provides support by coordinating and helping prepare FHLBank’s Annual OMWI report; supporting the development of the annual OMWI strategic plan; reporting to the Director of HR and OMWI on key diversity and inclusion trends; understanding and analyzing current local and federal diversity and inclusion regulations to ensure FHLBank’s compliance with all relevant regulations; tracking, analyzing and facilitating the distribution of internal diversity metrics to Senior Management; and attending local diversity and inclusion events and fairs while also assisting Human Resources’ recruiting efforts to diversify talent pipelines.

QUALIFICATIONS This is a year-round paid internship designed for a student to work while completing their degree.

4 year college degree and one to three years of similar or related experience is required.

QUALIFICATIONS

Demonstrated understanding of all HR & MWI related functions and practices and the various laws, rules and regulations specific to each. Previous HR experience is preferred.

Completion of at least sophomore year of college toward an undergraduate degree in computer science or equivalent work experience is required.

Strong analytical skills are required. Ability to perform detailed work in a timely manner with accuracy and thoroughness, in an environment with multiple distractions.

Knowledge of databases and query languages and the ability to work independently.

Excellent communication skills, verbal and written.

Strong written and verbal communication skills.

Excellent computer skills including database management and record keeping including MS Office products including Outlook, Word, Access, Excel, PowerPoint and SharePoint.

Microsoft Office including Word, Access, Excel, PowerPoint and Visio.

Good organization skills and the ability to multi-task.

Must be able to operate all types of general office equipment.

Ability to use general office equipment. Ability to work overtime if needed. Must be able to work and travel independently.

In addition to a rewarding, team-oriented work environment, FHLBank Topeka offers opportunities for growth and development, an attractive benefit package including health and dental insurance, 401(k), short-term incentive plan and much more. To see a more detailed job summary and apply for this position, go to FHLBank’s website at

In addition to a rewarding, team-oriented work environment, FHLBank Topeka offers opportunities for growth and development, an attractive benefit package including health and dental insurance, 401(k), short-term incentive plan and much more. To see a more detailed job summary and apply for this position, go to FHLBank’s website at

EOE

EOE

www.fhl btopeka.com/careers

www.fhl btopeka.com/careers

Think Fast. Think FedEx Ground. Interested in a fast-paced job with career advancement opportunities? Join the FedEx Ground team as a package handler.

Package Handlers - $10.70-$11.70/hr. to start Qualifications Must be at least 18 years of age Must be able to load, unload and sort packages, as well as perform other related duties All interested candidates must attend a sort observation at our facility prior to applying for the position.

IMMEDIATE OPENINGS Now offering weekly in-house job fairs, Mondays from 1:00 pm – 8:00 pm. WALK-INS WELCOME!

To schedule a sort observation, go to www.WatchASort.com 8000 Cole Parkway, Shawnee, KS 66227 • 913.441.7580 FedEx Ground is an equal opportunity / affirmative action employer (Minorities/Females/Disability/Veterans) committed to a diverse workforce.

Ground

Midland Group IT NETWORK ADMINISTRATOR The Midland Group is seeking a full time Network Administrator for its Corporate Headquarters in Lawrence, Kansas to implement, maintain, and support our growing network infrastructure. The ideal candidate will be able to deploy, configure, maintain and monitor all active network equipment in order to ensure smooth network operation.

RESPONSIBILITIES INCLUDE: • Fully support, configure, maintain and upgrade corporate customer’s networks and in house desktops, laptops, servers, and printers • Install and integrate new hardware and applications • Perform network maintenance and system upgrades including service packs, patches, hot fixes and security configurations • Support and administer third-party applications • Ensure network security and connectivity • Provide tech support for outlying field sites utilizing remote control tools • Monitor network performance (availability, utilization, throughput, and latency) and test for weaknesses • Set up user accounts, permissions and passwords • Provide Level-1/2 support and troubleshooting to resolve issues • Configure and implement network policies and procedures • Monitor system resource utilization, trending, and capacity planning • Specify system requirements and design solutions

Salary DOE with comprehensive benefits. See full job announcement at Jobs.Lawrence.com Recent IT graduates encouraged to apply.

Email resume and cover letter to careers@midlandgroup.com.

jobs.lawrence.com

Community Living Opportunities

is a non-profit organization dedicated to helping adults and children with severe developmental disabilities achieve personally satisfying and fulfilling lifestyles.

Teaching Counselors

Must be at least 19 years of age Have a high school diploma/GED Current valid driver’s license. Experience working with persons who have disabilities is a plus.

Family Teachers

Imagine that your career is to work with your partner to raise and care for your family, providing enriching and educational life experiences. Now imagine it includes a: 3-bedroom duplex in a great neighborhood with excellent schools Monthly food and utility allowance Company vehicle (while working) Salary of $42k-$45 per couple And, you’re able to work and care for your children! You’ll teach and support up to four people with developmental disabilities who live in separate, but attached duplexes, managing the home operations and budget. Want a good life for yourself and your family? This could be a terrific career and CLO is hiring couples with or without children. Lawrence & Kansas City Metro locations.

Learn more by visiting our website www.clokan.org, or call 785-865-5520 EOE classifieds@ljworld.com


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L awrence J ournal -W orld

PLACE YOUR AD:

785.832.2222

classifieds@ljworld.com

What’s Different at Brandon Woods?

Lawrence Presbyterian Manor

CHARGE NURSE

STOP BY AND FIND OUT! Meet our NEW Director of Nursing Experience true resident directed care! New Nursing Orientation Program! Part Time Positions Available

• • • •

APPLY ONLINE AT

www.lawrencepresbyterianmanor.org

OR IN PERSON AT 1429 Kasold Dr. Lawrence KS 66049

RN OR LPN

LPN CNA & CMA Laundry Aide Dietary Aides

Bi-weekly pay, direct deposit, Paid Time Off, Tuition Reimbursement & more! Apply in person. Brandon Woods at Alvamar Human Resources 1501 Inverness Drive Lawrence, KS 66047 TProchaska@5ssl.com

Full time day shift

Come work where you can really make a difference! Truity Credit Union is known for our strong long-term local presence in the Lawrence, KS community with three walk-in branches, and maintains a world-wide impact reaching 70,000 members via offices across a four state area and through our strong technology impact. We are proud to be part of America’s credit union movement where people really are worth more than money.

F U L L T I M E M E M B E R C O N S U LTA N T Building relationships with our members in order to provide stellar service through products and services which will truly benefit the members’ lives, is of utmost importance in this position. Therefore, excellent communication and interpersonal skills are desired qualities. Benefits include: Annual bonus program; an excellent insurance program to include health, dental, vision, life, long term disability; incredible 401k matching plan; wellness incentive; vacation and holiday pay; educational assistance; and extensive training opportunities. *Note: benefits vary for part-time positions.

Equal Opportunity Employer | Drug Free Workplace

Warehouse Associates Focus Workforces is currently seeking Warehouse Associates that can perform a variety of job duties and functions in a distribution center in Ottawa, KS! We are looking for candidates that possess the desire and the ability to work in a fast paced environment! If you are driven and ready for a new challenge, we want to interview YOU!

Currently Hiring For: Pickers | Order Selectors | Packers General Labor | Production Work | Special Projects All Jobs are in Ottawa, KS! All Shifts Available: Days/Evenings/Weekends

APPLY TODAY!

Pay up to $10.50/hour

www.Careers.TruityCU.org

Apply at: www.workatfocus.com In person at: 1529 N. Davis Rd. Ottawa, KS 66067 Call (785) 832-7000 to schedule a time to come in!

Truity Credit Union is an equal opportunity employer.

MEDIATE M I G N I LY! R I H

FLEXIBLE SCHEDULES • BENEFITS • PAID TIME-OFF

Hiring for Lawrence WAL and ng + Transit System 1 2 ra i n i WE K INS T LCO ME

Pa i d ARE YOU: 19 years or older? A high school graduate or GED? Qualified to drive a motor vehicle? Looking for a great, meaningful job? Help individuals with developmental disabilities, learn various life skills, lead a self directed life and participate in the community. Join the CLO family today:

SUPPORT! TEACH! INSPIRE! ADVOCATE!

Community Living Opportunities, a non-profit organization dedicated to helping adults and children with developmental disabilities is currently hiring Direct Support Professionals (DSP’s).

WORK THREE DAYS A WEEK, TAKE FOUR DAYS OFF! $10/HOUR If you are interested in learning more about becoming a direct care professional at CLO and to fill out an application, please visit our website:

785-865-5520 www.clokan.org

We offer flexible part-time schedules, 80% company paid employee health insurance for full time, career opportunities- MV promotes from within! MV Transportation, Inc. 1260 Timberedge Road, Lawrence, KS

APPLY ONLINE lawrencetransit.org/employment

WEATHERIZATION INSPECTOR I ECKAN Weatherization is looking for 2 self-motivated, full time Inspectors with home construction background and HVAC knowledge. Qualifications (include, but not limited to): High school diploma or equivalent. Valid Kansas driver’s license. Three years of construction background. Furnace and other combustible appliance knowledge. Capable of lifting up to 50 pounds or more. Computer knowledge. Willing to travel overnight for work or training. Must be certified, or able to be certified within three months of employment by ECKAN, through Kansas Housing Resources Corporation (KHRC) for weatherization home inspections. Must be able to communicate effectively both written and orally, and able to work well with elderly and low income clients. Resume and references are required. Deadline for completed applications is April 22, 2016. For a complete job description and printable application go to www.eckan.org, 785-242-7450, ext. 7100, Monday-Friday. EOE/MFVD

Assistant Public Works Director City of Baldwin City is seeking a qualified individual to fill the position of Assistant Public Works Director. This position has the potential for advancement into the Director position. This employee assists the Director of Public Works in supervising, planning, and organizing the activities of the Public Works Department including water, wastewater, parks, cemetery and street maintenance. This position provides technical and management support and assistance to the Director of Public Works. The Assistant Director of Public Works should possess excellent supervisory, organizational, communication, and public relations skills. Health, dental and vision benefits provided.

To view the complete job description and/or to apply go to: http://www.baldwincity.org/employment/ Application deadline: April 29, 2016. EOE

jobs.lawrence.com

classifieds@ljworld.com


L awrence J ournal -W orld

Sunday, April 10, 2016

PLACE YOUR AD: AdministrativeProfessional

DriversTransportation

Assistant Needed For busy chiropractic clinic. Full-Time, permanent position. Apply in person MWF 8-4 pm. Advanced Chiropractic Services 1605 Wakarusa Dr.

Computer-Software MANAGER, SOFTWARE ENGINEERING ARRIS Technology Inc. and/or its subsidiaries sks MANAGER, SOFTWARE ENGINEERING in Lawrence, KS – Manage, train and mentor the software engineering staff. Identify, plan, prioritize and schedule the software engineering tasks, review the technical products and define resources requirements. Job ID – BS+6 (16000242). Degree Computer Science, Engineering or rltd. To apply go to http://www.arris.com & search for Job ID. For’gn equiv deg accptd. EOE/Affirm Actn Emplyr.

DriversTransportation

CDL Class A Drivers Regional drivers wanted. No Chicago. 600 mile radius. 38CPM loaded & empty. Full benefits. Home weekly. APU’s, frig, new equipment, small reefer company. Average wages in 2015 were over $57,000. 402-332-2533, ext 240 www.harrisquality.com 1 year exp. required.

Taylor Oil Inc. 504 Main Wellsville, KS 785-883-2072

Interview TIP #2 Arrive 5 min early. Not 25 - Just 5. Decisions Determine Destiny

General

classifieds@ljworld.com Healthcare

NOW HIRING MULTIPLE POSITIONS!

Closing Date: April 29, 2016 $120,037 annual salary

CNAs $500 Sign-On Bonus Benefits Available Apply in person at 1010 East Street Tonganoxie, KS 66086

913-369-8705

Funny ‘bout Work Ted: How’s it going at the calendar factory? Bill: Badly! They fired me for taking one day off.

KANSAS BOARD OF REGENTS The Board of Regents invites nominations and applications for the Director for Adult Education.

APPLY IN PERSON: Lawrence Jellystone Camprgound 1473 HWY 40 Lawrence, KS 66044

A complete position description and instructions on how to apply for this position is available on http://www.kansas regents.org/about/board_ office/employment_ opportunities

HIRING IMMEDIATELY!

EOE

Supervisor / Team leader Full time, Start ASAP, Need dependable, hardworking self starter. Management supervisor or foreman experience necessary. Must have valid drivers licence, pass drug screen and background check, good driving record and must have good leadership skills. Must be willing to work along side and with movers / packers. This position is physical as will as leader. Nice salary, paid vacation, Bring references, resume. Apply in person only Professional Moving and Storage 3620 Thomas Ct. Lawrence, KS 66046

The Supreme Court of Kansas is accepting applications for the position of the Reporter of Decisions, a constitutional officer responsible for editing and publishing the opinions of the Kansas Supreme Court and the Kansas Court of Appeals. The Reporter reviews, edits, and annotates the rules of the Kansas Supreme Court and prepares them for publication, and plans and supervises the work of five attorney assistant editors and a legal secretary. The work involves highly technical editing of legal opinions and requires a thorough knowledge of legal writing, editing, and publishing. The successful applicant must be licensed to practice law in Kansas. For more information about the position and the application process, please see:

Hospice Home Care Positions Available

Case Manager Evenings Weekend RN FT or PT Sign-On Bonus! Be part of a nationally recognized health care organization! We are looking for compassionate people with strong teamwork and leadership skills to join our growing team.

http://www.kscourts.org/Court-Administration/ Job-Opportunities/job-opportunities.asp

The RN Weekend/Evening positions work as an integral part of the clinical interdisciplinary team where the primary responsibility is to provide services to patients in the community. You will be part of a very supportive team environment!

THE KANSAS JUDICIAL BRANCH IS AN EEO/AA EMPLOYER Ground, Maintenance, Housekeeping, Reservation Desk, Rec Program. Must be able to work weekends & holidays, seasonal position.

DIRECTOR FOR ADULT EDUCATION

The Supreme Court of the State of Kansas

Reporter of Decisions

Movers need Now Hiring now for summer season. Start now or May 15th. Apply now $11-$15 per hour depending on qualifications. Must be dependable, hard working, work well with others, Able to lift 100 pounds. Apply in person only. Must be 18 years of age and pass background check. Professional Moving and Storage 3620 Thomas Ct. Lawrence, KS 66046

General

Local Semi Driver Local deliveries Haz-Mat & CDL required.

785.832.2222

Drive for the Lawrence Transit System. Flexible part-time schedules, 80% company paid employee health insurance for full time. Career opportunities. Age 21+ w. good driving record. Paid Training. Apply online: lawrencetransit.org/ employment

Healthcare

RN Case Manager We are looking for a full time RN Case Manager for our Hospice Division. Must have at least one year of case management experience and have both a MO and KS RN license. Position will work Monday through Friday. Must have one year case management experience in Hospice, Kansas RN license, valid driver’s license and proof of auto insurance. Apply @ www.careersbyweb.com or email to: ksanders@interimteam.com

Or come to: MV Transportation, Inc. 1260 Timberedge Road Lawrence, KS. EOE YOUTH CARE WORKERS Full & Part Time positions for day & night shifts are available in our group homes in Lawrence & Topeka. Great pay; Benefits for Full time. Requirements: 21+, HS diploma or GED, DL & excellent driving record, pass KBI & CANIS checks. Contact HR at 785-267-5900 or Check our website: www.thevillagesinc.org EOE/AA

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Nurses LPN/RNs $1000 Sign-On Bonus Extra Incentives for IV Certified. Benefits Available Apply in person at 1010 East Street Tonganoxie, KS 66086

913-369-8705

New nurses receive extensive training and orientation from certified palliative care and hospice physicians and nurses. Exceptional physician - nurse relationships! Competitive salaries and benefits. Weekend and/or Evening shifts available.

Management

PART TIME NURSE Wanted for busy medical office. Approximately 25 hrs. per week. Most holidays and all weekends off. Send resume to: lupa205@sunflower.com

HealthcareManagement Health Facility Surveyor II (RN) The KS Dept of Health and Environment is seeking an individual to for the Topeka office to manage the Risk Management Program within the Health Facilities Program. Individual responsible for reviewing and approving the plans from medical care facilities across the state. Must be a licensed Registered Nurse in Kansas with three years of experience. Go online for details about this position (Req#183414) and how to apply at

www.jobs.ks.gov E.O.E.

Apply online at www.midlandcare.org EOE

Partnership Coordinator Freedom’s Frontier National Heritage Area seeks a Partnership and Incoming Grant Coordinator who will assist with partnership relations, communications, events, projects and incoming grants. Full job description is available at www.freedomsfrontier.org

PACE Site Manager

Interview TIP #6

Midland Care, a local, not-for-profit healthcare innovator is looking for a full time, Pace Site Manager.

Be Smart

This position will oversee and administer Program of All-inclusive Care for the Elderly (PACE) Center in Lawrence. PACE includes primary and preventive health services, day health center, home care, and transportation services.

JUST DON’T Bring pets Eat in our office Bring children Swear Lie Get angry Try to bribe us Be a pain (We’ve seen it all!)

Duties include ensuring compliance with CMS regulations and Kansas adult daycare regulations. Ideal candidates must be approved as a facility operator and have prior supervisory experience working with frail/elder populations.

DO!

Salaried. Monday-Friday.

Follow directions Be polite Turn off phone

Apply online at www.midlandcare.org EOE

Decisions Determine Destiny

jobs.lawrence.com

classifieds@ljworld.com

PUBLIC NOTICES

RENTALS REAL ESTATE

TO PLACE AN AD:

TO PLACE AN AD:

Lawrence Cox Communications and Cox Business The following channel changes will occur for Cox Communications and Cox Business customers. On or after May 11th, 2016. WGN America channel 3 will now be on channel 89 and will be available to all Digital Essential, El Mix, Economy and Economy Plus customers and a digital receiver or Cable CARD is required to view this channel. WGN America HD channel 2003 will now be on channel 2089 will be available to all Digital Essential, El Mix, Economy and Economy Plus customers and an HD digital receiver or Cable CARD is required to view this channel. Weatherscan channel 270 will no longer be available to our customers. NBC Universo HD channel 2304 will be available to all Latino Pak and Mix Pak customers and an HD digital receiver or Cable CARD is required to view this channel. Consumer-owned devices equipped with a CableCARD may require an advanced TV set top receiver or Tuning Adapter in order to receive all programming options offered by Cox Advanced TV.

785.832.2222 Lawrence

Structure: Red wood barn, flower shop Contractor Company Name: Sunflower Paving Jeff Engroff 1457 N 1823 Lawrence, KS 66044 jeff@sunflowerpaving.com 785-331-0000 ________ (First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld April 3, 2016) IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS In the Matter of the Estate of Lawrence W. Wilson, Deceased. Case No. 2016 PR 000052 Division 1 Proceeding Under K.S.A. Chapter 59 NOTICE OF HEARING The State of Kansas to all persons concerned: You are hereby notified that a petition has been filed in this court by Larry R. Wilson, an heir at law of Lawrence W. Wilson, deceased, praying for determination of descent of the following-described real property:

(First published in the A tract of land located in Southwest Quarter Lawrence Daily Journal- the (SW/4) of Section Seven World April 10, 2016) (7), Township Thirteen (13) South, Range Twenty-one DEMOLITION PERMIT (21) East of the 6th P.M., APPLICATION Douglas County, Kansas, Date: April 7, 2016 more particularly deSite Address: scribed as follows: Begin2103 W 28th Terrace ning at the Southwest CorApplicant Signature: ner of the Northeast QuarBrent Hoss ter (NE/4), of the SouthApril 7, 2016 west Quarter (SW/4); 785-856-7187 thence North 0 degrees, 32’ brent.hoss@briggsauto.com 34” East a distance of Property Owner: 337.21 feet, said point beRussell K. Briggs ing on the West line of the April 7, 2016 Northeast Quarter (NE/4) 785-565-5245 of the Southwest Quarter rbriggs2012@me.com (SW/4) and the South Brief Description of

legals@ljworld.com Lawrence

Lawrence

right-of-way line of K-10 Highway; thence South 77 degrees, 41’ 16” East a distance of 1,333.98 feet, said point being on the East line of the Southwest Quarter (SW/4) and the South right-of-way line of K-10 Highway; thence South 0 degrees, 34’ 44” West a distance of 57.77 feet, said point being the Southeast Corner of the Northeast Quarter (NE/4), of the Southwest Quarter (SW/4); thence North 89 degrees, 46’ 47” West a distance of 1,305.92 feet to the point of beginning, containing 5.92 acres more or less, subject to easements of record. And A tract of land located in the South Half (S/2) of Section Seven (7), Township Thirteen (13) South, Range Twenty-one (21) East of the 6th P.M., Douglas County, Kansas, more particularly described as follows: Beginning at the Southwest corner of Section Seven (7), thence North 0°10’15” East a distance of 1,910.25 feet, said point being on the West line of The Southwest Quarter (SW/4) and the South right-of-way line of K-10 Highway; thence along said right-of-way South 48°04’06” East a distance of 255.35 feet; thence South 85°43’06” East a distance of 1,066.97 feet; thence South 77°41’16” East a distance of 15.85 feet, said point being on the West line of the Northeast Quarter (NE/4) of the Southwest Quarter (SW/4) and the South right-of-way line of K-10 Highway, thence South 0°32’34” West a distance of 337.21 feet, said point being the Southwest corner of the Northeast Quarter (NE/4) of the Southwest Quarter (SW/4); thence South 89°46’47” West a distance of 1,305.92 feet, Said point being the Southeast corner of the Northeast Quarter (NE/4), of the

Southwest Quarter (SW/4); thence North 0°34’44” East a distance of 57.77 feet, said point being on the East line of the Southwest Quarter (SW/4) and the South right-of-way line of K-10 Highway; thence South 77°41’16” East a distance of 9.78 feet; thence South 77° 41’01” East a distance 970.24 feet, said point being on the South right-of-way line of K-10 Highway; thence South 0° 34’44” West a distance of 1,180.13 feet, said point being on the South line of the Southeast Quarter (SE/4); thence North 89°43’44” West a distance of 959.54 feet; said point being the Southeast corner of the Southwest Quarter (SW/4); thence North 89°43’18” West a distance of 2,564.48 feet to the point of beginning, containing 117.98 acres more or less, subject to public road right-of-way and easements of record, and all other property, real and personal, or interests therein, owned by the above-named decedent at the time of his death and be assigned pursuant to the laws of intestate succession. You are hereby required to file your written defenses to the petition on or before April 28, 2016, at 10:00 a.m., in said court in the City of Lawrence, in Douglas County, Kansas, at which time and place the cause will be heard. Should you fail to file your written defenses, judgment and decree will be entered in due course upon the petition.

classifieds.lawrence.com

Larry R. Wilson Petitioner Calvin J. Karlin - #09555 BARBER EMERSON, L.C. 1211 Massachusetts Street P.O. Box 667 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 (785) 843-6600 Telephone (785) 843-8405 Facsimile ckarlin@barberemerson.com Attorneys for Petitioner _______

RENTALS

785.832.2222 Townhomes

All Electric

1, 2 & 3 BR units Some with W/D, Water & Trash Paid, Small Pet, Income Restrictions Apply

785-838-9559

10277 Dickinson Rd. • Ozawkie, KS

SUNRISE PLACE

Call now! 785-841-8400 www.sunriseapartments.com

Duplexes

Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background?

2BR in a 4-plex

grandmanagement.net Equal Housing Opportunity. 785-865-2505

Townhomes

2BR, 2 bath, fireplace, CA, W/D hookups, 2 car with opener. Easy access to I-70. Includes paid cable. Pet under 20 lbs. allowed

Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!! Call 785-832-2222

3 BR w/2 or 2.5 BA W/D hookups, Fireplace, Major Appliances. Lawn Care & Dbl Car Garage! Equal Housing Opportunity

785-865-2505 grandmanagement.net

Lawrence

Call 785-842-2575 www.princeton-place.com FIRST MONTH FREE! 1 & 2 Bedroom Units Available Now! Cooperative townhomes start at $446-$490/month. Water, trash, sewer paid. Back patio, CA, hardwood floors, full basmnt., stove, refrigeratpr, w/d hookup, garbage disposal, reserved parking. On-site management & maintenance. 24 hr emergency maintenance. Membership & Equity fee Required. 785-842-2545 (Equal Housing Opportunity) pinetreetownhouses.com

OPEN HOUSE PREVIEW: Sunday, April 10, from 1:30-2:30 p.m.

Now Leasing 2 BR’s Close to Campus & Downtown Pool, On KU Bus Route, Spacious Floorplan, Patios/Decks. Great location: 837 Michigan CALL FOR SPECIALS!

EOH

New carpet, vinyl, cabinets, countertop. W/D is included.

REAL ESTATE AUCTION

Sun., April 17, 2016 • 1 p.m.

Apartments Unfurnished LAUREL GLEN APTS

classifieds@ljworld.com

 NOW LEASING  Spring - Fall TUCKAWAY APARTMENTS

Tuckawayapartments.com 785-856-0432 TUCKAWAY AT BRIARWOOD

Tuckawayatbriarwood.com HARPER SQUARE Harpersquareapartments.com HUTTON FARMS Huttonfarms.com

785-841-3339

Help yourself to this 3 bedroom/ 2bath manufactured home situated on 4.5 acres m/l in the Jefferson West School District. Located at the corner of K-92 Hwy. and Dickinson Road this property offers you a huge front yard, butler building with concrete floor, trees, safety shelter, and so much more. Information packets will be available at the open house previews. Come see this well located property for yourself. Partial terms: $5,000 in non-refundable earnest money. Closing to be on or before May 17, 2016. Prospective buyers must present a bank letter of credit in order to register for the auction, and conduct all due diligence prior to auction day. Full terms and conditions available at open house previews or by contacting auction company.

Heart of America Real Estate & Auction

Andy Conser, CAI-Auctioneer/Realtor Becky Wise, Broker 785-806-6921 785-863-3322 email: andy@ucheartofamerica.com Photos & info at www.ucnortheastkansas.com

Lawrence

Office Space

For Rent: Lovely town home, 3 BR, 2 Bath, 2 Car Garage, FP, all appliances. Near good schools. Backs to green space. 2732 Coralberry Ct $1050. Available NOW! Call 785-842-7073

EXECUTIVE OFFICE

Office Space Downtown Office Space Single offices, elevator & conference room, $725. Call Donna or Lisa

785-841-6565

Need an apartment? Place your ad at apartments.lawrence.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com

AVAILABLE at WEST LAWRENCE LOCATION $525/mo., Utilities included Conference Room, Fax Machine, Copier Available Contact Donna

785-841-6565

Advanco@sunflower.com

Offices for Rent Located in the Arts District at 741 New Jersey, Lawrence, Kansas 66044 In an old stone building, fully renovated with a tile entrance, hallway and handicapped accessible bathroom, two available offices, each 252 sq/ft. 785-979-6830


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L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD

SPECIAL!

10 LINES & PHOTO 7 DAYS $19.95 28 DAYS $49.95 DOESN’T SELL IN 28 DAYS? FREE RENEWAL!

PLACE YOUR AD: RECREATION

Chevrolet Cars

785.832.2222 Dodge Trucks

Campers

2012 FORD F-150 XLT

Won’t last long! Leather seats! FWD Sedan, 21K miles STK# F821C

Only $13,497

Model RLT8272S

Call Coop at

888-631-6458

2005 Dodge Dakota SLT

2014 Ford Focus SE

Stk#215T1109

Stk#PL2131

$11,994 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

JackEllenaHonda.com

Ford Cars

$11,994

UCG PRICE

Stock #116T610

$25,995

2015 FORD FUSION TITANIUM

UCG PRICE

Stock #PL2170

$15,995

2015 FORD EDGE SPORT

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785.727.7116

UCG PRICE

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Stock #PL2119

$18,565

UCG PRICE

Stock #PL2153

$34,499

785.727.7116 23rd & Alabama, Lawrence www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Chevrolet SUVs

2014 Ford Fiesta SE

$17,000.00 785-221-2738/785-221-2445 mkstravel@netzero.com

Ford Cars

Ford SUVs

Ford SUVs

2015 Ford Edge Sport

Ford 2007 Expedition

Ford Trucks

Stk#PL2137

RV

$11,889

2015 Ford Flex Limited Chevrolet 2007 Trailblazer

Holiday Rambler Vacationer Motor Home for sale. 2011, 30 ft. full side slide, auto awning, gas powered, under 21,000 miles, excellent condition, fully equipped, sleeps four, ice maker and generator. Private seller. $69,000, Interested parties only call: 785-424-7155 or 785-331-9214

2015 FORD FUSION SE

2012 Chevrolet Cruze LTZ

2008 Rockwood Signature Ultra Lite Trailer

Used minimum times; been garaged since purchase. Includes: hide-a-bed couch w/air mattress, awning, Alum wheels, AC, slide out dinette, LCD TV, microwave, equalizer sway control hitch, & many features.

USED CAR GIANT

Ford Cars

Boats-Water Craft 1992 Catalina 28 Sailboat Very good condition, well maintained, in slip at Clinton. Slip paid up for 2016. Wing keel, Yanmar diesel, walk through transom w/ swim ladder. New sails, barrier & bottom paint, batteries within the past 3 years. Great boat w/ stereo, cockpit cushions and dock box. $ 28,500 Call 785-826-0574

classifieds@ljworld.com

LS 4wd, V6 power seat, alloy wheels, tow package, power windows, cruise control. Stk#376951

Only $8,800 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Chevrolet Trucks

Stk#PL2188

$29,987

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

2015 Ford Fusion SE

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Stk#PL2170 Stk#PL2153

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

$15,995

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2007 Ford Crown Victoria LX Mileage is approx 107K; Leather seats Clean, one owner. $5100. 785-766-3876 jraehick@yahoo.com.

TRANSPORTATION

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

2013 Ford Focus SE Stk#PL2160

$34,499

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

EL Eddie Bauer, leather heated & cooled seats, sunroof, alloy wheels, running boards, power lift gate, DVD, navigation & more! Stk#48656A1

Only $11,814 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

2010 Ford F-150 Lariat Stk#1PL2034

$22,987 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

Buick Cars

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

$11,995 1985 Buick Riviera In excellent running condition. 147000 miles. Front wheel drive. Tinted windows. AC. New CD/radio and 4 speakers. 8 cylinder, 307. $4,600. 801-360-3698 pianotech@ku.edu

Cadillac Cars

2013 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 LTZ

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Stk#215T279

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

$31,996

Stk#PL2119

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Dodge Cars

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2015 Ford Explorer XLT Stk#PL2165

2014 Ford F-150 FX4

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

2014 Ford Focus SE

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Stk#PL2171 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

$29,986

$19,458

$18,565

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Stk#215T1014

2013 Ford Fusion Titanium Stk#216L122A

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2006 Cadillac XLR

2015 Ford Fusion Titanium

2008 Ford Escape Limited 3.0L

Interior Camel Leather-Trimmed, SUV, 120k miles STK# F205A

w/ 4WD

Only $8,997

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Call Coop at

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

888-631-6458

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

$13,995

Stk#115T1093

$27,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785.727.7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

JackEllenaHonda.com

$21,989 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

2013 Dodge Dart Sedan Limited GT

2015 Ford Mustang GT Premium Stk#116C458

2014 Ford Focus SE

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

FWD Sedan, Black Limited Leather Seats, 49k miles STK# G318A

Only $13,997 Call Coop at

888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

2014 CHEVROLET CAMARO 1LT

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

Chevrolet Cars

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

JackEllenaHonda.com

Stk#PL2102

$12,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2007 Ford Edge SEL Plus

2013 Ford Explorer XLT

$31,499

Stk#PL2174

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

$27,995

Stk#1PL2064

$10,999

2011 Ford Escape XLT

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785.727.7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Lower price!!! 4WD SUV, 106k miles. STK# F803A

Only $9,998

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Call Coop at

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

888-631-6458

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

JackEllenaHonda.com

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

Ford Trucks

2012 Ford F-150 XLT Stk#116T610

$25,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Ford Cars Stk#PL1938

$17,787

2012 Ford Mustang GT Premium

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Stk#116C567

2014 Ford Fusion SE

2015 Ford Fusion Titanium

Stk#115C910

Stk#PL2155

$14,495

$15,495

$19,504

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

23rd & Alabama - 2829 Iowa

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

LairdNollerLawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

2015 Ford Focus SE

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Stk#PL2156

We Buy all Domestic cars, trucks, and suvs. Call Scott 785.727.7116

classifieds.lawrence.com

$22,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

DALE WILLEY AUTOMOTIVE 2840 Iowa Street (785) 843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

2015 Ford Explorer Limited Stk#PL2187

2015 Ford Expedition Platinum

2000 Ford Ranger XLT Stk#215T1065

Stk#PL2062

$30,995

$47,999

$6,949

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785.727.7116

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

classifieds@ljworld.com


L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD

Sunday, April 10, 2016

SPECIAL! 10 LINES & PHOTO

CARS TO PLACE AN AD: Ford Trucks

Honda Cars

| 7E

7 Days $19.95 | 28 Days $49.95 Doesn’t sell in 28 days? FREE RENEWAL!

785.832.2222 Hyundai Cars

2014 Ford E-250

Lincoln Cars

classifieds@ljworld.com Mazda Cars

Nissan Cars

Subaru SUVs

Toyota SUVs

2012 Lincoln MKT EcoBoost

Stk#PL2116

2002 Toyota Highlander

Stk#115T1100

$23,498 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Honda 2009 Accord LX, fwd, one owner, power equipment, great gas mileage and dependable. Stk#489001

Only $10,415

Hyundai 2013 Elantra GLS One owner, heated seats, traction control, power equipment, cruise control, alloy wheels, great commuter car, financing available. Stk#191682

$28,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Honda Vans

Only $13,877 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

$15,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com

2013 Honda Civic LX

3.5 SE, V6, fwd, sunroof, power seat, alloy wheels, power equipment, very nice & affordable. Stk#197031

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

GMC SUVs

Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Nissan Crossovers

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

Toyota Cars

2010 Toyota 4Runner V6 Stk#215T1132A

2015 Nissan Pathfinder SL

Call Coop at

888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

$24,987

Stk#115T1025

2012 Toyota Camry Hybrid XLE

$29,999

Stk#1PL1991

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

$13,995

785-832-2222

$17,640 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Jeep

JackEllenaHonda.com

4-Cylinder. Front-Wheel Drive. 202,500 miles. Have all service records since purchase as Toyota-Certified used car in 2006. Clean, non-smoker vehicle. $4,350 OBO. Please leave message when you call: 785-832-1175

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

SELLING A MOTORCYCLE?

Find A Buyer Fast! CALL TODAY!

Stk#PL2148

Only $13,995

$18,995

Lincoln SUVs

2012 Hyundai Tucson Limited

7yr/1000,000 mile warranty, Interior: Black w/Cloth Seat Trim, 27k miles. STK# F798A

Stk#PL2151

Only $11,415

$30,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

2014 Subaru Forester 2.5i Premium PZEV

Nissan 2008 Altima

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

888-631-6458

Stk#115T1127

Stk#PL2149

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

Hyundai SUVs

2012 Ford F-150 King Ranch

2012 Mazda Mazda3 i Grand Touring

2010 Lincoln Navigator Stk#116L517

2012 Mazda Mazda3 S

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Renault

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785.727.7116

$21,995

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Motorcycle-ATV

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785.727.7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Move quickly!!! FWD Hatchback, 28k miles STK# G098A

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

GMC 2008 Acadia SLT AWD, leather heated seats, sunroof, remote start, alloy wheels, tow package, Bose sound, navigation & more! Stk#10039A1

Only $14,497

2007 Honda Odyssey EX-L

888-631-6458 One owner, low miles, A/C, cruise control, great finance terms available. Stk#559561

Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

FWD Minivan, InteriorIvory w/Leather Seat Trim, 126k miles STK# G223B

JackEllenaHonda.com

2015 Lincoln Navigator

Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Kia Cars Call Coop at 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

Hyundai Cars Mazda Cars

$28,596

Only $13,714

2013 Hyundai Veloster

Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Lincoln Cars

2014 Mazda Mazda3 i Sport Stk#PL2152

Stk#316B259

$14,999

$12,987

Stk#116M561

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

2014 Lincoln MKX

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2012 Hyundai Veloster w/Black

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

2015 Mazda Mazda5 Sport

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Stk#PL2134

$15,994

Amazing Vehicle, Great on gas!!! FWD Hatchback, 69K miles STK# G290A

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Only $11,997 Call Coop at

Only $13,990 Call Coop at

888-631-6458

888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com

Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background?

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!!

JackEllenaHonda.com

Call 785-832-2222

2013 Lincoln MKZ Hybrid

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Stk#PL2128

$22,998 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785.727.7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2010 Toyota Corolla LE

2004 Yamaha V-STAR

2015 Mazda CX-5 Touring

2013 Scion tC Base

Stk#PL2147

Stk#PL2143

$22,987

$15,994

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Stk#415T787C Extremely sharp!!! Sedan, 126k miles STK# F690A

FWD

$1,595

We Buy all Domestic cars, trucks, and suvs. Call Scott 785.727.7116

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

23rd & Alabama - 2829 Iowa

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

LairdNollerLawrence.com

Call Coop at

888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD:

ANNOUNCEMENTS

785.832.2222

Special Notices

Special Notices

LOST & FOUND

North Lawrence Improvement Association

Special Notices North Lawrence Neighborhood Clean UP Tuesday, April 12th

$28,999

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Certified Pre-Owned, 21K miles, 7 Year/100,000 mile warranty, 150-pt. Mechanical Inspection. STK# G096A

Scion

Stk#PL2127

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

2014 Honda Civic LX

Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Mazda Crossovers

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

$15,739

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

Only $13,977

Only $8,997

One owner, FWD, heated steering wheel, leather heated & cooled seats, sunroof, premium ride with the premium price! Stk#38349A1

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

2013 Honda Civic EX

$5,995

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Kia 2012 Optima Ex

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

Stk#116M448

Automatic, power equipment, ABS, low miles! Stk#14346A

$54,995

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

JackEllenaHonda.com

Stk#115T1128

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Has been in storage since 1976. This is a project car (not running) with slight body damage but very good interior. $1600 Call between noon and 4 pm: 785-438-9885

Stk#PL2111

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

888-631-6458

Motorcycle Toyota 2014 Corolla LE

Only $13,775

Only $10,995

2013 Honda Pilot EX-L

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

Jeep 2014 Patriot

Only $15,414

Honda Cars

Call Coop at

2008 Honda CBR 600

1969 RENAULT 10

Have discarded items at regular trash pick up site. Remove nails from boards, put broken glass in suitable containers & mark it. Tires will be picked up, no large truck or tractor tires please. No hazardous waste, paint or lawn chemicals. Bring limbs to parking lot behind Centenary United Methodist church at 4th & Elm during weekend. No Brush, Vines or leave bags. This will make wood mulch for North Lawrence residents. For Information: Call 785-842-7232

Friends Spring Book Sale Kentucky side of Library April 1-3 Friday, Saturday 10-6 Sunday. 12-4 Quality books All $2.00 or less

Monthly Meeting

Lost Item

Monday, Apr. 11, 7 pm Peace Menonite Church

LOST KEYS On heart shaped Blue caribeaner. Some keys are marked with colors. Please Call: 785-550-9289

615 Lincoln Street Guest speaker from ICL Plant in N. Lawrence, Ground water update/ operation, discuss large dryer replacement (big project).

All Welcome! Info: 785-842-7232

Parkwood Day School Lawrence NOW OPEN! Early education program offering highquality services for children 6 weeks to 6 years, including children with special needs. Visit our website: www.parkwooddayschool.org Enroll today! 785-856-0409 or

Lost Keys Reward $ 100.00 Lost Sat. 4/2 on Mass. St. Volkswagan key, Medtronic Insulin device, CVS card all on key ring. Pleas call if found. Call 913-777-8728 or email robelton@gmail.com

YOUR NEXT APARTMENT IS READY. FIND IT HERE.

parkwoodlawrence@gmail.com

Follow Us On Twitter!

renceKS @JobsLawings at the best for the latest open companies in Northeast Kansas!

Search Amenities, Floorplans & More

View Apartments and Complex Features

Find Google Maps and Get Directions

Contact Property Management Directly


8E

|

Sunday, April 10, 2016

.

L awrence J ournal -W orld

SPECIAL!

MERCHANDISE PETS PLACE YOUR AD:

785.832.2222

MOVING AUCTION Outstanding

AUCTIONS

3668 BUTLER RD • GRANTVILLE, KS

SATURDAY APRIL 16, 2016 10:00am SHARP!

Auction Calendar

AUCTIONEER’S NOTE: Mr. Eskridge is moving out of state and will offer the following at auction. NEARLY EVERYTHING IN THIS AUCTION IS IN EXCELLENT, WORKING CONDITION. If you want well cared for, quality equipment and merchandise…..do NOT miss this auction! TRACTORS, TRAILERS & FARM EQUIPMENT: Super clean2008-John Deere 4720 Diesel Tractor, 400 CK loader, clean Deluxe cab, wheel weights, front wheel assist, only 687 hours.; Excellent 1956 John Deere 420W restored tractor, engine overhauled, new paint, new tires, this was his show tractor; Land Pride 8’ three-point blade; 2009-Titan 24’ goose neck trailer, new fl oor, tandem axel, 10-ply tires, torsion bar springs, dove tail with ramps; Kaufman 16’ bumper hitch trailer w/2’ dove tail, a 7,500 lb. winch, tandem axel, good tires, w/ drop down loading ramps; 8’-bumper hitch trailer w/side boards; 6’ bumper hitch trailer with side rails & steel mesh fl oor; new 5’ X 8’ bumper hitch trailer, with side rails, steel mesh fl oor and drop down loading ramp; John Deere MX7 rotary 3-point mower, w/ the extra heavy double deck; quick attach 4’ forks; 3-point bale spear; 3-point quick hitch; 3-point post hole auger w/9” and 12” augers. ATV AND MOWERS: Artic Cat 300 ATV, 4 X 4, 2-speed rear end, front end winch, 1197 miles; 2013-John Deere LT180 Riding mower, AT, 42” deck, 239 hrs.; Lawn Boy push mower; Craftsman 5-HP rear-tine tiller; Murray pro tiller; SHOP EQUIPMENT & TOOLS: 14” Cummins cut off saw; Lincoln Arc Welder AC/ DC weld power 150/generator 4500W; Lincoln AC 225 arc welder; Acetylene torch w/bottles & cart; Ryobi 10” portable table saw; 16-speed HD drill press; extension cords; Hitachi C12RSH 12” sliding miter saw with stand; 6” pedestal bench grinder; Sears 7 ¼” circular saw; ¾” drive socket set; battery charger; air compressor; several drills; saw horses; hose caddy; adjustable roller stands; elec. start generator 120/220V; Delta Router w/table; Delta 4” belt/6” disc sander; Delta scroll saw; pipe cutters-threaders-dies; old primitive parts cabinet; framing gun; angle grinder; laser level; hammer drill; air tools; several NIB hand tools; like new Craftsman gas-engine leaf blower. HOUSEHOLD: 65” Black Leather couch; 2-Lazy Boy rocker recliners; three drawer cabinet; G E Profi le elect. dryer; G E Profi le dryer (both are 3- yrs. old); 2-yr. old E-machine desk top computer; Maple jewelry armoire; Sylvania 20” fl at screen TV; 46” roll top desk; 53” computer desk; ceramic heater; DVD/VCR player; crock pots; old green malt mixer; gas grill; 8’ picnic table; patio table and chairs; folding chairs. MISCELLANEOUS: Fishing poles; 20’ aluminum ext. ladder; yard seeder; wheel barrow; 7-four drawer fi le cabinets; canning jars; nice collection of 25 to 30 Tea Pots; John Deere model R tractor on canvas advertising piece; lawn chairs; 3” X 6’ pipe; 2-sets old saw horses; bridge planks; 2-cargo carriers that mount into a rear receiver. 2-new 13” tires and wheels. More to be discovered by auction time. Photos and pre-auction online absentee bidding at: www.ucnortheastkansas.com

Auction conducted by:

www.northeastkansasauctions.com

Elston Auctions (785-594-0505) (785-218-7851) Pictures online! www.KansasAuctions.net/elston

Auction: SUNDAY, APRIL 10, 10AM, 930 Laing St, Osage City, KS This is an outstanding offering of Antique & Collectible Glass & more from 2 local sellers. Very Partial List! Good selection of Nippon, Royal Haeger, Laughlin, Cranberry, Candlewick, Johnson Bros. Rose Medallion, Depression, Wedgewood & More. Old Toys, Tools, Quality Furniture!

— AUCTIONEERS — Andy Conser, CAI and Bill Conser 785-806-6921 or 785-863-3322 Email: andy@ucheartofamerica.com

Terms: Cash or bankable check. All items sold as-is with any faults. Statements made day of auction take precedence over advertising and previous statements. Full terms available on web site.

PUBLIC AUCTION: SATURDAY, APRIL 16, 2016 @ 9:00 AM 1177 N 800 RD, BALDWIN CITY, KS. 66006 (5M N OF JCT HWY 56 & 59 ON E 1250 Rd, 3/4m W, on N 800 Rd.) ********************************************************************** TRACTORS, MOWER & MACH: IH, F-12 on steel-runs; Farmall F-14, new rubber, good paint-runs; 2-IH Reg on steel; Ford 901, select o sp, frt loader, runs, needs trans work; Grasshopper #721, w/Kubota gas eng, big bagger, GI drive, 52” ; 2-F-12 frames; JD frt loader-Indus; 5-JD #5 mowers; JD # 301 fert spreader; 4 whl wagon gears; JD 2 row cult; spring tooth cult; JD Horse, 2 row planter; 8’ pull disk; JD 3 pt, 3-14 plow; 7’ 3 pt blade; Ferguson 3 pt, 3-14 plow; JD 3 pt, 9 coil shank cult; JD 6-7 2 row planter, w/fert & herb-good; JD 30’ elev; 5’ 3 pt rotary mower; Rhino 3pt 6” rotary mower; Dana Posi trac rear ends for Ditch Witch; Cat pull grader-on rubber; 48 “ rear tiller; 2 Snapper & NH 5-14 W/rear tiller riders; Sulky cult; 5 disk, 3 pt disk plow;3 sec harrow; tumble bug; many pcs of salvage mach & iron. TOOLS, LUMBER & MISC: ½ & ¾” sockets; impacts; chain saws; Forney welder; Ridgid #535 power pipe threader; RamCo RS 90P power hacksaw; Smith cutting torches; Lincoln 180 welders; Lincoln sp 130T wire welder; lg O2 bottle; floor drill press; too many to list hand & power tools; table, radial arm saws & jointer; Lumber; 6x6x8’ posts; 4x6-8-16’; 2x10 & 2x12-10-20’; cherry 1x12 & other lumber; oak & hedge lumber; bridge planks; 10x40’ wood bldg; 100 gal fuel tank w/el pump; ‘78-80 Freight Liner grill; semi ext mufflers & stacks; 3 metal bins; 5-32’ metal trusses; channel & angle iron; 16’ I beams; Surge milk or buckets; SS wash vat; 5 & 10 gal milk cans; Pride of the Farm hog feeders; galv & painted roofing tin; 700-40 tractor tires & tubs; 7.50-17 tires & whls; 10.00 R 20 tires & whls; 315/80 R 22.5 tires & whls, many pcs of salvage iron, copper; alum & mach. COLLECTIBLES: old 30” doll; lard press; milk jugs & carrier; cream can w/handle & lid; gas light; 5 gal glass jugs; crank telephone; hog scraper; Boyce Moto Meter; Hart Par wooden box, Kero head lamp w/pump, governor, radiator fins, & Rumbly oil pull fenders; red & black check printer; 2 dinner bells; wood boxes; corn sheller; well pulley; harpoon hay fork; tins; jab corm planter; ‘37 & up license plates; walking lister; Maytag rd & sq washers; 2 roping saddles-good & 2 old high back saddles; merry-go-rd & swing set from Lone Star school; Lone Star PO letter sort case; car lights; milk, platform & counter scales; lead pot & ladle; Hesibe? 188# anvil-good; buggy neck yokes; cast & iron seats; covered wagon bow; buzz saw blades; 4 old boat motors; F-14 eng-good; el cream sep; postal telegraph, Champion spark. Derby Oil signs; #3 crock churn; Green Brother & other 1906 & up pocket notebooks; many old post cards & Valentines; many other old papers, precrash stock cert; Waterloo Boy, KS Link Belt, Anchor Serum, & Mack w/ring watch fobs; ‘26 Maytag washer receipt & paper work; ‘52 Chevy PU parts; old Ford PU tailgate; school books, primers, other old books; flat top trunk; oak commode & fern stand; Kitchen Maid kitchen cab; Willow Springs preacher’s table; Damascus treadle mach; WWI Army tent; lap robe. TOYS & HOUSEHOLD: JD cast mules & wagon; JD R & 3010; Maxwell pull toy; Tonka Mighty Loader in box & concrete truck; 330+ 1980’s &90’s Liberty SpecCast, Ertil Die Cast, trucks, tractors; cars; banks, etc. new in box; (SEE PICS ON INTERNET). US pins & buttons; coin purses; fountain, bullet & adv. pens; White Mt el ice cream freezer *****TRACTORS, MOWER, & EQUIPMENT WILL SELL AT APPROX 1:00 PM***** THIS IS A VERY PARTIAL LISTING OF ITEMS. 2 RINGS ALL DAY, 8 WAGONS OF TOOLS & COLL. TERMS-CASH, CC, GOOD CHECK W/PHOTO ID. NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS, LOST OR STOLEN ITEMS KENNETH & NAOMI MARKLEY ESTATE- CONTACT JOE MARKLEY 785-760-1990 CONSIGNED: 1971 IH, #544, hydrostat, wide frt, low hours tractor; 2007 Ford E 150 cargo van, 4.6L, full power, almost new tires-very nice; 1979 Chevy C50, 350, 4 sp, hoist, 13’ 6”steel bed, w/grain sides; Simpson3000 psi, power washer, 2.4 gal/min, 4.5 Hp Honda overhead cam eng; Sportsman generator 7500w, el start, 13 Hp eng, gas or propane; Schumaker 180 amp, 220v, mig welder.

EDGECOMB AUCTIONS: (785)594-3507 evenings or (785)766-6074 after 10 AM www.kansasauctions.net/edgecomb www.edgecombauctions.com

SERVICES Antique/Estate Liquidation

Downsizing - Moving? We’ve got a Custom Solution for You! Estate Tag Sales and Cleanup Services Armstrong Family Estate Services, LLC 785-383-0820 www.kansasestatesales.com

Carpentry

Cleaning

Decks & Fences

Guttering Services

Concrete Stamped & Reg. Concrete, Patios, Walks, Driveways, Acid Staining & Overlays, Tear-Out & Replacement Jayhawk Concrete Inc. 785-979-5261

Stacked Deck Decks • Gazebos Siding • Fences • Additions Remodel • Weatherproofing Insured • 25 yrs exp. 785-550-5592

DECK BUILDER

Cleaning

Over 25 yrs. exp. Licensed & Insured. Decks, deck covers, pergolas, screened porches, & all types of repairs. Call 913-209-4055 prodeckanddesign@gmail.com

Free estimates or go to prodeckanddesign.com

JAYHAWK GUTTERING Seamless aluminum guttering. Many colors to choose from. Install, repair, screen, clean-out. Locally owned. Insured. Free estimates.

785-842-0094

jayhawkguttering.com

Dirt-Manure-Mulch

Decks & Fences

The Wood Doctor - Wood rot repair, fences, decks, doors & windows - built, repaired, or replaced & more! Bath/kitchen remodeled. Basement finished. 785-542-3633 • 816-591-6234

Foundation Repair Foundation & Masonry Specialist Water Prevention Systems for Basements, Sump Pumps, Foundation Supports & Repair & more. Call 785-221-3568

New York Housekeeping Accepting clients for weekly, bi-weekly, seasonal or special occasion cleaning. Excellent References. Beth - 785-766-6762

Rich Black Top Soil No Chemicals Machine Pulverized Pickup or Delivery Serving KC over 40 years

913-962-0798 Fast Service

Home Improvements Retired Carpenter, Deck Repairs, Home Repairs, Interior Wall Repair & House Painting, Doors, Wood Rot, Power wash and Tree Services. 785-766-5285

Foundation Repair FOUNDATION REPAIR

HOUSE CLEANER ADDING NEW CUSTOMERS Years of experience, References available, Insured. 785-748-9815 (local)

Love Auctions?

Check out the Sunday / Wednesday editions of Lawrence Journal-World Classified section for the

BIGGEST SALES! classifieds@ljworld.com

Mudjacking, Waterproofing. We specialize in Basement Repair & Pressure Grouting. Level & Straighten Walls & Bracing on wall. BBB. Free Estimates Since 1962 Wagner’s 785-749-1696 www.foundationrepairks.com

AUCTION Thurs., April 21 at 5:30 pm 748 N. 100 Rd Baldwin City, KS Vintage Truck & Vintage Equipment Farm Equipment/Salvage Misc. Salvage Seller: Ray H. Christian Estate

SELLER: MR. RAYMOND ESKRIDGE

7 DAYS $19.95 28 DAYS $49.95

classifieds@ljworld.com

(DIRECTIONS; K-4 HWY TO 39TH STREET; EAST TO BUTLER ROAD; SOUTH TO AUCTION) WATCH FOR AUCTION SIGNS.

NOTE: PRE-AUCTION ONLINE ABSENTEE BIDDING HAS BEGUN AT: www.ucnortheastkansas.com

10 LINES & PHOTO

WISCHROPP AUCTIONS785-828-4212 Pics & Full listing: www.wischroppauctions.com PUBLIC AUCTION SAT., APRIL 16, @ 9 AM 1177 N 800 RD BALDWIN CITY, KS. 66006

TRACTORS, MOWER & MACHINERY, TOOLS, LUMBER & MISC, COLLECTIBLES, TOYS & HOUSEHOLD, TRACTORS, MOWER, & ALSO MISC. CONSIGNED. EDGECOMB AUCTIONS (785)594-3507| (785)766-6074 www.kansasauctions.net/edgecomb

www.edgecombauctions.com

MOVING AUCTION Sat., April 16, 10 AM 3668 Butler Rd Grantville, KS —————————————Tractors, Trailers, Farm Equip., ATV & Mowers, Shop Equip. & Tools, Household, Misc. Photos & Pre-Auction: www.ucnortheastkansas.com Auctioneers: Andy Conser & Bill Conser 785-806-6921 | 785-863-3322 UNITED COUNTRY REAL ESTATE & HEART OF AMERICA REAL ESTATE & AUCTION REAL ESTATE AUCTION Sun. April 17, 1pm 10277 Dickinson Rd Ozawkie, KS Preview Sunday, April 10 1:30-2:30 —————————————3 bed 2.5 ba. on 4.5 acres. See terms & pics online: www.ucnortheastkansas.com Auctioneers: Andy Conser & Bill Conser 785-806-6921 | 785-863-3322 UNITED COUNTRY REAL ESTATE & HEART OF AMERICA REAL ESTATE & AUCTION

Estate Sales ESTATE SALE 1617 Alvamar Dr. Sat., April 16th 9:00-5:00 Mcguire: sofa, tables & king headboard, Oval table, dining table & chairs, china, Williamsburg sconce, mirror, glass table, rocker, sterling candle sticks, bronze candle sticks, silver tea pot, Chindia rug, Worcester blue and white gold rim dishes, sterling silver dessert set, patio furn ., leather sofa, 2 wing chairs, lamps, Harpers Weekly KS cover, KS. map 1860’s, silk and wool Kum rug ( Iran), twin bed, wicker stand, drop front desk, 4 drawer, 5 drawer and 6 drawer chests, king bed, Drury rug 10’X14’, oak bookcase, standing mirror, ART WORK: John Warmink, Dennis Pohl, Helaine Blumenfeld, Betty Curley, Frederick Cook, Charles Thornley, David Wilson, Roong, lots of misc.

Sale by Elvira

MERCHANDISE Antiques 47 pieces of Forstoria American pattern,

First Gear Motorcycle Jacket. Black size XL.Half zip mesh Pullover. Back,shoulder,elbow Armor. $60 785-842-4641

Collectibles

Music-Stereo

PIANOS • H.L. Phillips upright $650 • Cable Nelson Spinet $500 • Gulbranson Spinet - $450 Prices include tuning & delivery

785-832-9906

Coca-Cola Collectibles Show & Sale Saturday, April 23 9 AM-2 PM Holiday Inn Hotel 8787 Reeder Road Overland Park FREE ADMISSION

GARAGE SALES Lawrence

Food & Produce

ESTATE SALE 4700 Balmoral Drive Lawrence

VANILLA 1-Liter Bottle

Sat, Apr 9, 9am-4pm Sun, Apr 10. 1pm-4pm

Dark color, from Mexico. $8.00 (785) 550-6848

Furniture Twin Mattress w/ box springs and Frame. Brand New - Never been used. $ 100.00 Call 785-749-5400

Household Misc. Kitchenaid Countertop Oven New-Never Used. Power indicator, Function Control,Temp. Control, Toast Control. Includes tray, broiler pan with grill and 2 position rack. $75 785-842-4641

Home decor, quilting fabric and supplies, crochet and knitting supplies, glass bowls and plates, cooking and bakeware, bed, bath and kitchen linens, women’s clothing, shoes, hats, scarves, purses and jewelry, TV stand, small table and end table, padded hassock, electronics such as land phones, printer, DVD player, wireless router and lamps, garden supplies and misc. tools.

PETS

2 Steiff Bears (circa 1980),

5 Hummel figurines, 11 pieces of Colleen Waterford. 81 Hwy 40

Best to Call: 785-887-3968 REMODELING SALE Antiques & Vintage  203 W. 7th, Perry, KS Open 9 am - 5 pm daily Call first: 785-597-5752 Clearing out merchandise so we can paint & repair. Tons of pictures, mirrors, shelving curios & all merchandise will be 50% off O.B.O. No reasonable offers will be rejecetedWe need to clear up & clean out!

Lawn, Garden & Nursery POWER GARDEN TILLER FOR SALE DR Power Garden Tiller Tows behind mower, ATV or tractor. 3 ft wide, full control from driver’s seat w/ electric start. 900cc engine, used approx. 4 seasons. $1,250 (785)883-4320

Dainese Motorcycle Riding Pants. L/XL. Cordura, Gore-Tex. Removable thermal liner. Armor on thighs, knees. $75 785-842-4641 Dainese Motorcycle Riding Jacket L/XL. Cordura, Gore-Tex. Removable Thermal liner. Elbow, shoulder Armor. Highest Quality $100 785-842-4641

Pets Jack Russell/Rat Terrier Cross Puppies Shots and Wormed Call 785-424-0915 for Price and Pictures

Lost-Found

Miscellaneous Bowling Balls Hammer Black Widow Solid & Pearl $25.00 each Legand $50.00 All 15# 1 drill 785-979-0963

Clothing

NELSON Traveling Sprinkler travels 200 ft.& 13,500 sq.ft. Like New Perfect condition Original Box $40. 785-865-4215

Shoes KEEN’S H2, Sandals. Size 11, New in Box. Brown. $60. (785) 550-6848

LOST DOG, HELP! Jackson is a 10 year old English Bulldog that is dearly missed by his family. He is tan with a white neck and responds to his name. Please help us find him! We are offering a $1000 reward for his return. 785-608-5723, phil.ehret@mac.com Need to sell your car? Call 785-832-2222 or email classifieds@ljworld.com

SPECIAL! 6 LINES

1 Month $118.95 | 6 Months $91.95/mo. 12 Months 64.95/mo. + FREE LOGO! Home Improvements

Lawn, Garden & Nursery

AAA Home Improvements Int/Ext Repairs, Painting, Tree work & more. We do it all! 20 Yrs. Exp. w/ Ins. and local ref. Will beat all est. Call 785-917-9168

Golden Rule Lawncare Mowing & lawn cleanup Snow Removal Family owned & operated Call for Free Est. Insured. Eugene Yoder 785-224-9436

Full Remodels & Odd Jobs, Interior/Exterior Painting, Installation & Repair of: Deck Drywall Siding Replacement Gutters Privacy Fencing Doors & Trim Commercial Build-out Build-to-suit services Fully Insured 22 yrs. experience

913-488-7320

Mowing...like Clockwork! 7 or 14 Day Scheduling Honest & Dependable Mow~Trim~Sweep Steve 785-393-9152 Lawrence Only

IT’S

EASY!

Call: 785-832-2222 Fax: 785-832-7232 Email: classifieds@ljworld.com

Mike McCain’s Handyman Service

Painting

Higgins Handyman Interior/exterior painting, roofing, roof repairs, fence work, deck work, lawn care, siding, windows & doors. For 11+ years serving Douglas County & surrounding areas. Insured.

Plumbing RETIRED MASTER PLUMBER & Handyman needs small work. Bill Morgan 816-523-5703

Roofing BHI Roofing Company Up to $1500.00 off full roofs UP to 40% off roof repairs 15 Yr labor warranty Licensed & Insured. Free Est. 913-548-7585

Tree/Stump Removal Fredy’s Tree Service cutdown • trimmed • topped • stump removal Licensed & Insured. 20 yrs experience. 913-441-8641 913-244-7718

Complete Lawn Care, Rototilling, Hauling, Yard Clean-up, Apt. Clean outs, Misc odd jobs.

Call 785-248-6410

Family Tradition Interior & Exterior Painting Carpentry/Wood Rot Senior Citizen Discount Ask for Ray 785-330-3459

KansasTreeCare.com Trimming, removal, & stump grinding by Lawrence locals Certified by Kansas Arborists Assoc. since 1997 “We specialize in preservation & restoration” Ins. & Lic. visit online 785-843-TREE (8733)

STARTING or BUILDING a Business?

Homes Painted Small one story homes in Lawrence- power washed, prepped & painted $ 800 Call Bill 785-312-1176 bburlbaw@yahoo.com

Landscaping YARDBIRDS LANDSCAPING Tractor and Mowing Services. Yard to fields. Rototilling Call 785-766-1280

Lawn, Garden & Nursery

Placing an ad...

785-312-1917

HOME BUILDERS Repair & Remodel. When you want it done right the first time. Home repairs, deck repairs, painting & more. 785-766-9883

Clothing

MLS - MOWING FULL SERVICE Spring Cleanup, Aerating, Overticutting, Power Rake, Overseeding, Fertilizing. 24/7 Call 785-766-2821 (or text) mikelawnservice@gmail.com

Interior/Exterior Painting Quality Work Over 30 yrs. exp.

Call Lyndsey 913-422-7002

785-832-2222 classifieds@ljworld.com

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April 10, 2016

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All your favorite Lawrence businesses, together in one easy-to-use directory. Lawrence Marketplace.







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