Lawrence Journal-World 04-12-2016

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TUESDAY • APRIL 12 • 2016

Company says it can retrofit HERE garage

BRINGING DOWN BURGE

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Project’s developer calls email sent to city ‘outrageous’ By Nikki Wentling Twitter: @nikkiwentling

Richard Gwin/Journal-World Photo

DEMOLITION WORK BEGINS AT THE BURGE UNION in Kansas University’s central district Monday. The 1979 Burge Union, 1601 Irving Hill Road, closed for good March 11. A replacement union is scheduled to be constructed in the area just south of the current building’s footprint. It’s one of several new buildings in KU’s $350 million Central District redevelopment plan. For more on the history of the building, go online to LJWorld.com/burge.

County zoning, codes report calls for improved consistency, fairness

By Elvyn Jones

Twitter: @ElvynJ

A county contractor licensing system and the development of policies and procedures that promote consistency and fairness were among the recommendations of a

three-month review Peters Group Inc. in into the county’s November. The conzoning and codes tract with the consuldepartment, which tant came after questhe Douglas County tions arose about the Commission will remany exemptions COUNTY ceive at its Wednesto county building COMMISSION codes given to a ruday meeting. County commisral Douglas County sioners authorized the project by Kansas Secretary $9,180 study from Austin of State Kris Kobach.

The Austin Peters Group report does not address how that application was handled, but does identify the “Kobach case” as behind the recognized need to identify reforms in the department. In completing the report, Please see COUNTY, page 2A

The company behind the United States’ first automated parking garage has reached out to the Lawrence City Commission, claiming it has the capability to take over the HERE Kansas garage and make it robotic, as originally intended. Roger Courtney, business development counsel for Florida-based Robotic Parking Systems Inc., said in an email Friday to commissioners and city staff that the company was “committed to trying to make the best of a bad situation for the HERE project.” Robotic Parking was one of several companies to which James Letchinger — a developer behind HERE — sought proposals in October, when it was discovered that its contracted automated parking company had filed

bankruptcy and wouldn’t finish the project. Letchinger called the email “mind-boggling” and “outrageous.” Courtney said in the email that Robotic Parking “take[s] issue” with statements made by Letchinger last week that no company could be relied upon to operate such a large garage. Letchinger told the City Commission that he had “spoken to every robotic garage operator that exists” and “not one of them could point to a robotic garage they’ve built in this country that has moved more than 30 cars.” At last week’s meeting, the City Commission approved a human valet system for the garage that would allow for 510 cars to be parked there. Of the 624 bedrooms, 548 can be filled by Aug. 1, before developers secure more parking. Please see PARKING, page 2A

Guard, 6 others accused in prison smuggling scheme Kansas City, Kan. (ap) — A guard at a Kansas lockup for federal detainees is among seven people accused of scheming to smuggle methamphetamines, synthetic marijuana and alcohol into the site, at times making the exchanges during drug-treatment programs and church services, a federal prosecutor alleged Monday. The charges announced by U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom

offer a glimpse inside the Leavenworth Detention Center where he said inmates talked of getting “blistered” — a slang term for high — on drugs and resembling “zombies.” The coveted contraband there was pricy, Grissom said, noting an inmate in one telephone conversation described how a pack of cigarettes fetched $150. The 1,126-bed lockup is run by the Corrections Corporation

and sneaking it into the lockup, with friends and relatives of the inmates helping move money from buyers to sellers by wire transfers and other means. Aiono and inmates Karl Carter, 41, and Stephen Rowlette, 35, are accused of conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine, along with 68-year-old David Bishop and Rowlette’s mother, 59-year-old Catherine Rowlette, both of Sedalia, Mo.

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of America, by contract with the Federal Bureau of Prisons, the Department of Homeland Security’s U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and the U.S. Marshals Service. It is separate from the federal prison in Leavenworth. Authorities allege the scheme revolved around Anthon Aiono, a 28-year-old guard who is accused of receiving the contraband from an outside supplier

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Aiono also is charged with separate felony counts of providing methamphetamine, synthetic marijuana and tobacco products to inmates. Carter and Steven Rowlette are charged with three counts apiece of possessing those items. Steven Rowlette’s wife, Alicia Tackett, 29, also is accused of illegally providing synthetic marijuana and tobacco as part of the scheme.

National arts leader visits Lawrence

Vol.158/No.103 28 pages

National Endowment for the Arts chair Jane Chu spent time working with young artists and meeting with local arts leaders Monday. Page 3A

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Tuesday, April 12, 2016

LAWRENCE

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DEATHS GARY LEE BOYD

AMOS A. "ANDRE" SANDERS

61, died at his home 4/10/2016. Cremation is planned with private family services at later date. barnettfamilyfh.com for a full obituary.

Graveside 11 am. Friday, Oak Hill Cemetery, Lawrence. He died Thursday at Stormont­Vail. The family will meet with friends Friday at 10 am until we leave for the cemetery. rumsey­yost.com

LEAH G. PUCKETT ARLYNE MCGAUGH Funeral Services for Arlyne McGaugh, 73, Lawrence, will be held at 2:00 p.m. Thursday, April 14, 2016 at Warren­ McElwain Mortuary in Lawrence, KS. Burial will follow at Oak Hill Cemetery. She passed away Saturday, April 9, 2016 at Olathe Hospice House in Olathe, KS. Arlyne was born December 14, 1942 in Kansas City, KS the daughter of Claude and Mabel (Leathers) Mather. She was a member of First Christian Church and was active in NSA (National Secretaries Association) where she was the Kansas Division President, President of the Kansas City, KS and Lawrence, KS Chapters and Vice­President of the Houston, TX Chapter. She was Co­President of the Lawrence High School Band Parents Association, President of the LINK Board (Lawrence Interdenominational Nutritional Kitchen) and was active in the Red Hat Society. Early in her career Arlyne worked for Brotherhood Bank, Macy’s in Kansas City and Foley’s in Houston, TX. She later worked for Barrand Eagan, which is now Mize Houser, and Retirement Management Company in administration. She married Everett W. McGaugh on July 10, 1965 in Kansas City, KS. He survives of the home. Other survivors include

two daughters, Karla and husband, Gene Vialle of Louisburg, KS; Tara and husband, Sheldon Shogrin of Lawrence, KS; two Izaak grandsons, Eli Workman and Workman of Lawrence, KS; one sister, Claudia Goldberg of Rolla, MO; two brothers, Mike and wife, Liz Mather of Baldwin City, KS; Rusty Mather of Lansing, KS; and sister­in­law, Robin Mather of Baldwin City, KS. The family will greet friends from 5:00 ­7:00 p.m. on Wednesday, April at Warren­ 13, 2016 McElwain Mortuary may be made in her name to LINK, First Christian Church or the American Heart Association and may be sent in care of Warren­McElwain Mortuary. Online condolences may be sent to www.warrenmcelwain.co m. this Please sign guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.

SARA RUTH DAVENPORT Graveside inurnment for Sara Ruth Bouton Wilson Davenport, 92, will be at 1 pm Thursday at Memorial Park Cemetery, Lawrence, KS. The family will receive friends from 6:30 to 8 pm Wednesday at Rumsey­Yost Funeral Home & Crematory. She passed away peacefully on April 9th, at home with her family by her side. The world is a better place because of the almost 93 years she lived on it. Those of us who were fortunate enough to have her influence on our lives are better because of the experience. Mrs. Davenport was born April 16, 1923, in Richland, Kan., the daughter of Harry and Elizabeth Lamb Bouton. She graduated from Liberty Memorial High School in 1940. She married Francis Wilson on January 19, 1941 in Lawrence. He died January 23,1973. She married Wayne Davenport on April 9, 1976, in Lawrence, and he preceded her in death on March 12, 2014. Survivors include one daughter Sharon Miller, Lawrence; one son Steven Wilson and wife Marcia, Perry; one stepdaughter­ in­law Linda Comstock, Knob Noster, MO; three grandchildren Elisa Edgar Loving Kay, Shannon Heston, and Haley Winfrey; 6 great grandchildren, Braxton Loving, Jessica Kay, Barrett and Harper Heston, Kennedy and Harrison Winfrey, four step­grandchildren,

Dwayne Comstock, Kyle Twogood, Jill Christian and Kim Twogood and 8 step­great grandchildren; two sisters, Joan Peavler, Topeka, and Lois Helm (Lee), Lawrence, and and several nieces nephews. She is preceded in death by her parents, and brothers, Darrell Edwin Bouton, son­in­law Frank Miller, stepdaughter, Jane Twogood and stepson Philip Comstock. She was a homemaker, babysitter, gardener, camper, seamstress and wonderful cook. She loved crocheting, doing crafts, playing cards and games with friends and family, attending grandchildren and great grandchildren’s activities, Jayhawk basketball and most of all, her family. The family suggests memorials made to Grace Hospice, or the American Heart Association, in care of the funeral home, 601 Indiana St., Lawrence, KS, 66044. Online condolences may be sent at rumsey­yost.com this Please sign guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.

Leah G. Ashe McBride Puckett passed away peacefully April 10, 2016 at the age of 91. She was born January 20, 1925 in Belmont, North Carolina, the daughter of James William Gibby and Florence Laney Gibby. She attended elementary and high school in Belmont, and Gardner­ Webb University in Boiling Spring, NC. In 1945, she married Wayne Ashe, a Baptist minister, and had one son, Steve, both of which later preceded her in death. An accomplished pianist, she worked as a piano teacher, organist, and church administrator at an insurance company. She later married Irvin McBride of Reidsville, NC, who preceded her in death in May, 1997. She moved to Lawrence, KS in 1992 to live near her son, Steve Ashe, a professor and curator of entomology at the University of Kansas, and his family. In Lawrence, she married Gene Puckett in July 1999, who survives

County CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

Austin Peters Group conducted focus groups, interviews and surveys with stakeholders (including contractors), researched best practices found in professional literature and reviewed policies and procedures of peer jurisdictions in Kansas, Colorado and Missouri. With that, the consultant proposed 25 steps the department take in the areas of responsiveness, best practices, and fairness and professionalism. Thirteen of those changes came under the heading of responsiveness. The county is encouraged throughout to work with peer counties and their professionals to establish policies that improve fairness and consistency. It was suggested the county establish a oneday “EZ” permit program for electrical, mechanical, plumbing and demolition permits; set new tighter timelines for the issuance of a number of permits; review use of online applications; and modify staffing to correspond with peak customer demand. The report also proposes the department start quarterly informational sessions with contractors and have followup workshops to improve understanding and relations. It was similarly recommended the department start “permitting 101” workshops for the general public. Among key findings in the report listed under the fairness heading is that the department should review each step of the building review, permitting and inspection process for consistency and clarity. It was further stated recordkeeping and documentation needed to be recorded in the county’s SmartGov system and record-keeping “needs to be consistently documented.” The county was encouraged to adopt a checklist system of peer counties with the same goal of increasing consistency. In the fairness category,

of the home, along with her grandson, Thomas Ashe, daughter­in­law, Aagje Ashe, her stepson, Randy Puckett, her Jana stepdaughter, Puckett, four step­ grandchildren, Caitlin, Chris, Ruth and Julia, and niece, Susan Keith. A memorial service will be held at Plymouth Congregational Church, Thursday, April 14, 11:00 a.m. Leah will be interred at KU’s Pioneer Cemetery in a private ceremony. In lieu of flowers, please make donations to Visiting Nurses, the KU Endowment’s Steve Ashe Memorial Fund, or a charity of your choice and may be sent in care of Warren­McElwain Mortuary. Online condolences may be sent to www.warrenmcelwain.co m. Please sign this guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.

it was recommended the county publish its methods of establishing permit fees to educate the public and “improve fairness and consistency;” implement a contractor licensing and registration program similar to that of the city of Lawrence; and create a plan review fee as used by peers. The report found that although staff was seen as highly qualified, there was a general belief more professionalism was needed in interactions with customers. It was suggested that area could be improved through more staff training; greater cross training for staff; monthly audits of plan reviews for quality control, professional attitude and documentation; and greater understanding and use of SmartGov software. The suggestions that the department initiate workshops and print guidebooks were among proposals in the best practices category. Each of the three categories concludes with a recommendation that staff review the finding and prioritize those that could be implemented in the next 12 months. The report found the department’s staff budget was adequate. However, it is often stated the proposed improvements could only be realized if the department were “fully staffed.” Douglas County Administrator Craig Weinaug said the department was down two staff members during part of the review process, before Sean Reid was hired as the new director of building and codes in December. Another staff position was held open with the expectation the report would give the county direction on how best to fill it, he said. The Douglas County Commission meets at 4 p.m. Wednesday at the Douglas County Courthouse, 1100 Massachusetts St. A full agenda for the meeting can be found at douglascountyks.org. — County reporter Elvyn Jones can be reached at 832-7166 or ejones@ljworld.com.

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Parking CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

The proposal from Robotic Parking was “completely inefficient,” Letchinger said. “They had no ability to give us any confidence they could perform whatsoever,” he said. “Of the 10 companies we looked at, they weren’t even in our top five. This is one of the most outrageous things I’ve seen a company do.” City Manager Tom Markus and Mayor Mike Amyx said the email was proof that developers had actively sought out other automated parking companies to take over the garage, as they said they had. Robotic Parking’s proposal was to retrofit the existing garage, built by Boomerang Systems Inc., to fit 342 cars. In HERE Kansas’ original plans, developers had said Boomerang’s system would allow for 577 spaces. “I’m a bit surprised that it was designed just to be able to accommodate the one robotic structure,” Amyx said of the existing garage at the HERE Kansas site. “It seems to me the company they chose to do the deal with designed it to only be able to have that company’s structure put in there.” Courtney said in the email that Robotic Parking was prepared to work with the city “immediately” to design the garage. He went on to say he regretted developers of HERE had chosen selected Boomerang initially, instead of “a company that did not have the proven track record that we have maintained.” Robotic Parking operated the first fully automated parking garage in the U.S. starting in 2002 in Hoboken, N.J. According to an article from The New York Times, the $12 million, 314-space garage dropped two cars several stories, once in 2004 and again in 2005. The Times reported in 2005 the garage was “malfunctioning” and the city had to pay claims to owners of approximately 40 cars that sustained damage. Robotic Parking has since said the problems with the Hoboken garage have been fixed, according to another Times article. Markus said he asked Letchinger to write a response to the email that will be shared with commissioners. Letchinger has said developers of HERE Kansas lost millions of dollars they had deposited to Boomerang Systems Inc. before it filed for bankruptcy. “As I wrote to the city: Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me,” Letchinger said. “We have a proven system we’re using. I don’t have to worry about it, and I can sleep at night knowing we’re going to park our cars.”

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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) MONDAY’S SUPER KANSAS CASH 1 5 6 9 13 (15) MONDAY’S KANSAS 2BY2 Red: 11 17; White: 8 9 MONDAY’S KANSAS PICK 3 (MIDDAY) 9 1 0 MONDAY’S KANSAS PICK 3 (EVENING) 2 6 0

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BIRTHS Rachel McNett, Lawrence, a girl, Monday Michael Weaver and Margaret Higgins, Lawrence, a boy, Monday

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Lawrence&State

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/local l Tuesday, April 12, 2016 l 3A

NEA chair visits with young artists

Providing own bus service could save school district money Lawrence Superintendent Rick Doll told the board at its meting Monday. “…It’s a The Lawrence school real pain, and so it is worth district could save money something. And I don’t by providing its own bus- know what that number is, ing, but administrators are you’d have to decide that.” recommending the district The district currently continue to rely on contracts with First an outside company Student for transfor student transportation services. portation. A cost analysis of The Lawrence student transportaschool board will tion services was have the ultimate done because the vote in the matter, SCHOOLS district’s five-year and the main quescontract with First tion is whether providing Student expires at the end busing is worth the trouble. of the school year. “I’ve run my own busPlease see BUSES, page 4A es in previous districts,” By Rochelle Valverde

Twitter: @RochelleVerde

Business dean would put ‘heart and soul’ Chu likes Lawrence’s ‘ability to collaborate’ into KU provost job Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photo

CHESNEY BUCK, AN ARTS TRAIN APPRENTICE ARTIST AT VAN GO INC., LEFT, DEMONSTRATES how to score and cut pieces of glass to National Endowment for the Arts chair Jane Chu, as the two worked on a piece of artwork Monday during Chu’s visit to Lawrence.

By Joanna Hlavacek Twitter: @HlavacekJoanna

National Endowment for the Arts chair Jane Chu ended her trip to Van Go Inc. by donning a pair of safety glasses and joining young artists in the creation of a piece of glass art. Monday’s stop at the nonprofit organization, which provides artsrelated job training to underserved teens and young adults, was part of a daylong visit to Lawrence, where the NEA head also toured the Lied Center and engaged in private talks with local arts leaders. “One of the things I really like that’s going on in Lawrence is the ability to collaborate,” Chu said

after learning how to cut and score colorful pieces of glass from a table of Van Go apprentice artists. “When you collaborate, you start moving away from the feeling that there’s a zero-sum game,” she said. “Lawrence has shown that they collaborate very, very well in different projects, and that’s a wonderful way to be.” Chu, who served as CEO and president of Kansas City’s Kauffman Center for Performing Arts before her appointment to the NEA in 2014, spent Monday morning watching Lawrence students participate in Third Grade Theatre Arts Day. The annual program, which provides district students with hands-on education

in everything from acting and movement to lighting and sound, is a joint effort between the Lied Center, Theatre Lawrence and the Lawrence Arts Center. Lawrence was selected for the NEA visit by the Kansas Creative Arts Industries Commission. Peter Jasso, KCAIC director, also attended the site tours. “People say art is transformative or that art saves lives, and I think this is a great example that it very clearly does that in a unique way,” he said, referring to Van Go. At Van Go’s East Lawrence headquarters, 19-year-old apprentice artist Emily Laughlin shared Please see ARTS, page 4A

“I want to do this, genuinely, because it transformed my life and my Kansas University family’s lives. If I get this School of Business Dean opportunity, all I can tell Neeli Bendapudi you is my heart pulled her father’s and soul will go 47-year-old KU into this job.” identification card Bendapudi was out of a pocket the first of three Monday and told provost candia standing-roomdates to give a only crowd in the public presentaAdams Alumni tion, in which she Center why she Bendapudi addressed, among wanted to be KU’s other things, the next provost. importance of “This is why KU means diversity, liberal arts, a lot to me,” Bendapudi Please see PROVOST, page 4A said, holding up the card. By Nikki Wentling

Twitter: @nikkiwentling

Is compromise a thing of the past?

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MARTIN FROST and TOM DAVIS Sunday,April 17 – 4 p.m. In a high-stakes election year with deep divisions along party lines, bipartisanship often feels like a thing of the past. Former Congressmen Tom Davis (R) and Martin Frost (D) will discuss why gridlock is more prominent than ever—and how it can be stopped.With 40 years of combined service in the U.S. House of Representatives, Davis and Frost are the authors of Partisan Divide: Congress in Crisis. This event will include a book sale and signing. DISCUSSION GROUPS A VIEW FROM THE BENCH: POLITICS AND PUBLIC POLICY Tuesday,April 12 – 4 p.m. Hon.Yvette Alexander Chief Judge of the Baton Rouge City Court

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Tuesday, April 12, 2016

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

EUDORA

City to negotiate plans for Nottingham site with KC developer By Elvyn Jones Twitter: @ElvynJ

On Monday, the Eudora City Commission chose to negotiate the redevelopment of the Nottingham Property with a Kansas City, Mo., real estate development firm with experience in highprofile projects on both sides of the state line. On a 3-0 vote, commissioners agreed to enter into negotiations with CBC Real Estate Group on an agreement about how the 15-acre Nottingham property will be developed. Commissioner Tim Bruce recused himself from the vote because of a possible conflict of interest, and Commissioner Jolene Born was absent. The decision was made with little comment from commissioners, who

approved the developer recommended by a selection committee that included City Manager Gary Ortiz, Assistant City Manager Barack Matite, city bond counselor Gary Anderson, city financial consultant Tom Kaleko and Commissioner Bruce. The committee interviewed representatives and reviewed applications from CBC and ONE80 Development LLC, the two firms that responded to a city request for proposals, which hit the streets in January. In relaying the recommendation, Eudora City Manager Gary Ortiz said CBC was “far more preferable” to the selection committee. The committee gave CBC the edge in experience, financial resources and adherence to the Nottingham guidelines developed with

Gov. Sam Brownback signed a bill Monday overhauling the Kansas juvenile justice system. A Johnson County program the changes are partly based on is serving as a model to divert lowrisk offenders from detention. The new system will keep more juvenile offenders in their homes while they participate in community-based programs that focus on anger management and other behavioral changes. A system overhaul will divert money from the construction and maintenance of

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

There are about 2,300 students enrolled for bus service, which includes 86 buses on 109 routes, according to the district report. Another five-year contract with First Student would be about $25.7 million, or an average of about $5.1 million per year. The district report found that it would cost the district about $4.9 million per year to provide the service itself.

Arts CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

her own story with the NEA leader as she led Chu and other visitors — including Jasso and Mary Kennedy, CEO of the Mid-America Arts Alliance — on a tour of the

Provost CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

student and employee retention, collaborating with other regents universities and making KU a “great place” to work, learn and invest. The names of the other provost candidates will be announced days before their visits, which are scheduled for later this month. The new provost and executive vice chancellor will replace

would be 10,000-squarefoot buildings with second-story apartments. Matite emphasized those drawings were conceptual and could, and likely would, be changed for a variety of reasons as the redevelopment agreement was negotiated. There is no timeline for completing the predevelopment agreement, which will spell out the responsibilities of the city and CBC, but the city stated in the RFP that the goal was to start construction in September. It is assumed the redevelopment agreement would include creation of a tax increment financing district. TIF district arrangements capture tax revenue generated from a property’s development to pay for a number of costs associated with its improvement,

including land acquisition, demolition and public and on-site improvements. By state statute, those tax revenues can include franchise fees and sales and property taxes. In order to have a hand in the development of its most important gateway, the city purchased the property from the Eudora school district, on which the closed Nottingham Elementary School and former district football stadium now stand, for $850,000. It then secured a four-year temporary note of about $1 million to cover the purchase price’s principal and interest. In other business, commissioners: l Approved a downtown grant request not to exceed $2,000 to the The Fork, 826 Main St. The restaurant’s owners were

BRIEFLY

Brownback signs juvenile justice bill, vetoes blight bill

Buses

community input to provide a vision for the site’s redevelopment, he said. According to CBC’s website, the firm offers services in development, development management, multi-unit development, property management and consulting. Among the projects CBC has been a part of through one or more of those services are Woodside Village in Westwood, the Men’s Warehouse development in Zona Rosa, the Liberty, Mo., Triangle project and Eisenhower Crossing in Lansing. A conceptual plan CBC provided the city shows a 30,000-square-foot anchor store on the southern portion of the property with four retail buildings to the north. The largest of those buildings would be 20,000 square feet, and three

jails to detention alternatives. The measure is in part a reaction to 2013 U.S. Department of Justice data showing that Kansas had the sixth-highest incarceration rate for young offenders in the nation. Juvenile arrests in Kansas declined by more than 50 percent from 2004 to 2013, although out-of-home placements in juvenile detention centers or group homes were only reduced by half that amount. Also Monday, Brownback vetoed a bill designed to make it easier for local communities to attack blight by taking over abandoned properties. The Republican governor cited property rights in his veto

message Monday to legislators. Brownback said the aim of the bill was laudable but said it “takes a step too far.” The bill would have changed the definition of abandoned property to include blighted real estate that has been unoccupied for a year. It would have allowed a district court to give a local government or nonprofit group possession.

Kobach says he advised Trump on immigration, Mexico wall Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach says he has advised GOP presidential candidate Donald

Trump on immigration issues, particularly on Trump’s call to force Mexico to pay for a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border. Trump has proposed cutting off money that Mexicans living in the U.S. send back to their homeland unless Mexico makes a one-time payment of $5 billion to $10 billion, which he said would help pay for the proposed wall. Kobach, who has built a national reputation for fighting illegal immigration, said the remittance plan is consistent with discussions he has had with Trump’s campaign. The Trump campaign didn’t respond to a request to elaborate on Kobach’s involvement, The Topeka Capital-Journal reported.

awarded a $3,000 grand in February to help with the costs of opening the restaurant but ran into unexpected expenses, which have also delayed its opening. Co-owner Matthew Houser said he expected the restaurant to open late this week. l Arrived at consensus after a workshop to go forward with the directional sign and light pole banner designs. The directional signs proposal will place wayfarer signs at key entrances and locations in Eudora. Although of different design depending on location, the signs would the share key “branding” elements of the Eudora logo and its black, blue and green color scheme. — County reporter Elvyn Jones can be reached at 832-7166 or ejones@ljworld.com.

Grissom to step down as US attorney for Kansas Barry Grissom announced Monday that he’s stepping down as U.S. attorney for Kansas to return to private practice in Kansas City, effective Friday. Grissom, 62, declined to name the law firm he will join, citing Justice Department policy, and downplayed speculation that he would now seek public office. “I don’t want to say never,” Grissom said. “If there came a time ... it would certainly be for the Senate seat that Sen. (Pat) Roberts holds now.” First Assistant U.S. Attorney Tom Beall will serve as acting U.S. attorney.

“Obviously, there can be, without a doubt, some savings,” said Administrative Services Director Ron May, who presented the report. “Not necessarily in the millions up front; it’s going to be small amounts over time.” Another advantage of the district providing its own busing is that about one-fifth of the yearly cost — such as money spent purchasing or maintaining buses — could come out of the district’s capital outlay fund, a tax-levied fund. If the district contracts out the service, all payment must

come from the district’s state-supported general fund. Doll said the advantage of being able to use capital outlay funds, thus freeing up money in the district’s general fund, could become a bigger factor if the district’s state funding is cut. “The advantage here is to get out of your general fund,” Doll said. “We don’t want to do buses — it’s a real pain — but if the financial situation just continues to get worse and worse, you might not have any choice.” May said the main

challenge for districts that provide their own busing is hiring, training and retaining drivers, because the position has high turnover. In addition, May said bus driver positions could potentially pull from the same pool of people who fill hard-to-fill positions in the district, such as janitorial and food services. The third option is to continue to contract with First Student, but have the district provide the facility and services involved in storing buses, which could save the district about $800,000 over the five-year contract

with First Student. The board will vote on whether to approve a renewal of the five-year contract with First Student at its next meeting. In other business, the board: l Approved a request to designate a portion of Clinton Park on the Lawrence Register of Historic Places. About one-third of Clinton Park is part of the Pinckney Elementary School grounds and is owned by the district, requiring the board’s approval for the designation. The remainder of the park is owned by the city.

l Reviewed a report on the district’s program to help special needs students transition to jobs after high school. The program, Project Search, has served about 50 students since its inception five years ago. Last year, the program’s graduates had a 100 percent employment rate, according to the report. The school board’s next meeting will be April 25 at the district offices, 110 McDonald Drive.

facility’s wood shop and kiln room. As a kid, Laughlin never felt validated at school, where her struggles in math and science classes led to struggles with selfdoubt. “And then I came here and I got to show off my real talent, and it’s just boosted my confidence so much,” she

told Chu, with Van Go director Lynne Green at her side. “It’s just awesome to see something you create go out into the world.” Now, Laughlin plans to pursue a career in art therapy — a trajectory she’d never imagined for herself before becoming involved with Van Go last September.

Just before leaving Van Go, Chu said she’d seen a bit of herself in the creative young people she’d met that day. Born in Oklahoma to Chinese-immigrant parents, Chu found a “soothing” form of expression in music growing up in Arkadelphia, Ark. She eventually earned bachelor’s

degrees in piano performance and music education from Ouachita Baptist University as well as master’s degrees in music and piano pedagogy from Southern Methodist University. “The arts allowed me to be able to express myself beyond just the use of linear conversation, and by doing that it opened a

world for me to belong,” she said. “I know that’s the case whether we’re at museums or on a stage or we’re developing glass pieces here — it’s tapping into our creativity and helping us bring out the best we can be.”

Jeff Vitter, who left KU in December to become chancellor at the University of Mississippi. Bendapudi holds a doctorate from KU, and besides serving as business dean since 2011, is an H.D. Price Professor of Business. She has taught at Texas A&M and The Ohio State University, and she has served as executive vice president and chief customer officer of Huntington National Bank. She was asked Monday to explain, in a 20-minute speech, how a provost

could foster an intellectually vibrant campus and advance the educational and research quality of KU. Bendapudi pointed to diverse voices as one quality that leads to an intellectually vibrant campus, saying, “We must seek them out and encourage them.” “Let’s be honest, folks, nobody is going to come here as a candidate and not say all these words,” Bendapudi said. “Who is going to come here and say, ‘I don’t believe in an intellectually vibrant

campus?’ Talk is cheap. “Within the business school, we’ve tried to create an environment where people know diverse perspectives are embraced.” Bendapudi went on to mention the forum the business school hosted in November to discuss issues of race and equality. Bendapudi had much of the crowd laughing and applauding throughout her speech and a question-and-answer period, including when she asked attendees to “please don’t hold the business savvy

against me.” Her experience in the private sector, she said, would “come in handy” when negotiating on behalf of KU with consultants and vendors. Bendapudi concluded Monday by listing three of her top priorities if she were to become provost: student retention, research and training, and telling KU’s academic story. KU’s provost is second in command for the Lawrence campus. Sara Rosen, senior vice provost for academic affairs,

has been serving as provost in an interim role since Jan. 1. The second provost candidate will present from 4 to 5 p.m. April 21 in Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. The third candidate will present from 4 to 5 p.m. April 25 in the Summerfield Room of the alumni center. Updates on the provost search are posted online at provostserach.ku.edu.

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

— Features reporter Joanna Hlavacek can be reached at 832-6388 or jhlavacek@ljworld.com.

— Reporter Nikki Wentling can be reached at 832-7144 or nwentling@ljworld.com.

SATURDAYS

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Opinion

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Tuesday, April 12, 2016

EDITORIALS

Enviable spot

5A

Sanders bid could have lasting impact By Doyle McManus Los Angeles Times

Lawrence and Douglas County are fortunate to be among the state’s fastest growing areas.

N

ew U.S. Census figures provide an interesting snapshot of the future of Kansas. Most disappointing among the figures that were the subject of a story in Sunday’s Journal-World was the news that Kansas’ population grew by only 2.1 percent, about half the 4.1 percent rate of the U.S. as a whole between 2010 and 2015. It’s hard to pinpoint the cause of the state’s lackluster growth, but the state’s sluggish economy, along with the negative attention that has been focused on Kansas policies concerning taxes, schools and certain social issues, may have had an impact. The winners and losers in the latest population figures should come as no surprise. With a 6.5 percent growth rate, Douglas County was second only to Johnson County, which saw 6.6 percent growth. The three other counties in the top five for population gains were Wyandotte, Sedgwick and Riley. In fact, growth in Douglas, Johnson and Wyandotte counties accounted for 84 percent of the state’s overall 2.1 percent growth. That means things aren’t looking great in the rest of the state. Four of the five counties with the largest population losses were in southeast Kansas: Montgomery, Cherokee, Labette and Allen. Those are counties where people might have guessed declines would occur, but the fifth county, Reno, was more surprising, given the fact that it neighbors Sedgwick County and has Hutchinson as its county seat. No western Kansas counties were listed among the top five, but those areas continue to struggle except for rare examples like Dodge City. The continuing shift of Kansas population from rural to urban areas poses some significant challenges. Many small towns will struggle simply to survive and maintain the schools, health care and other resources that contribute to an acceptable quality of life. For Douglas County, growth produces a different set of challenges. Now, more than ever, Douglas County needs to position itself to take advantage of the opportunities that come with being the home to the state’s flagship university and having the Kansas City metropolitan area as a neighbor. We need to leverage those opportunities not simply to build population but to expand jobs and investment in the community. Lawrence is in an enviable situation compared to much of the state. We need to work hard to capitalize on our good fortune.

Letters Policy

The Journal-World welcomes letters to the Public Forum. Letters should be 250 words or less, be of public interest and avoid namecalling and libelous language. The Journal-World reserves the right to edit letters, as long as viewpoints are not altered. By submitting letters, you grant the Journal-World 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 email to: letters@ljworld.com.

LAWRENCE

Journal-World

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Established 1891

What the Lawrence Journal-World stands for Accurate and fair news reporting. No mixing of editorial opinion with reporting of the news. l Safeguarding the rights of all citizens regardless of race, creed or economic stature. l Sympathy and understanding for all who are disadvantaged or oppressed. l Exposure of any dishonesty in public affairs. l Support of projects that make our community a better place to live. l l

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Bernie Sanders can still win the Democratic presidential nomination — but it’s going to take a miracle. Actually, several miracles. He’ll need to win the primary next week in New York, where polls show him running well behind Hillary Clinton. Then he’ll need to win most of the mid-Atlantic states, including Pennsylvania. And he’ll need to win big in California and New Jersey in June; small margins of victory won’t give him the number of delegates he needs to overtake Clinton’s substantial lead. That’s not a conspiracy; it’s just arithmetic. And that’s OK. This is a case where coming close will still count for something. From the beginning of his improbable run, Sanders has had two goals in mind. One was to become the Democratic nominee; the other was to build a grass-roots movement that could bring about a “political revolution” from the left. Sanders and his supporters haven’t given up on the first goal. But they’re also running his campaign with that second, longer-term goal firmly in mind.

The next step? Last week, a voter in New York asked the Vermont senator what he would do if he doesn’t win. Most candidates would have batted the query away. Sanders said: “That is a wonderful question.” “Obviously, our hope and expectation is that we are going to win,” he said on NBC’s “Today” show. “But that’s a fair question. We have brought out and seen so much excitement from young people … who want to make our country a better place.” If the nomination is lost, he said, “we will continue that revolution.” The first step — in the event of a loss — is using the convention as an organizing event for progressives. Some supporters have talked of an “inside-outside” strategy at the Philadelphia convention, with Sanders delegates pressing their case inside the hall while pro-Sanders demonstrators march outside.

If Clinton wins the nomination, Sanders has said he will endorse her and urge his supporters to vote for the Democratic ticket. But he will also try to turn his campaign into a more durable movement to move the Democratic Party to the left.”

They hope to get some of Sanders’ positions included in the Democratic Party platform, including planks on banning corporate donations to super PACs, renegotiating existing free trade agreements and breaking up the country’s biggest banks.

gues is tougher than Sanders’ proposal to break up the nation’s largest banks. (Sanders disagrees.) If Clinton wins the nomination, Sanders has said he will endorse her and urge his supporters to vote for the Democratic ticket. But he will also try to turn his campaign into a more durable movement to move the Democratic Party to the left. “This campaign is changing people’s lives and changing everyone’s idea of what’s possible,” Sanders’s top technologist, Zack Exley, told The Nation magazine. “No matter what happens, people are going to keep fighting for the political revolution that Bernie helped all of us start. What’s more, these organizing teams, structures, and processes won’t have to be reinvented. They will live on. … This revolution is only just getting started.” We’ve heard that song before. In 2004, insurgent candidate Howard Dean tried to turn his campaign into a progressive movement, Democracy for America, with negligible results. In 2008, President Obama’s campaign staff tried to remake their grass-roots network into something called Organizing for America, but that effort failed completely.

Effect already felt Clinton has already responded to the energy on her party’s left by tacking in Sanders’ direction on several issues. She now opposes President Obama’s proposed trade agreement with Asian countries, a pact she initially promoted. She also changed course to oppose the proposed Keystone XL oil pipeline from Canada to Texas, although she was never firmly in favor. And she has proposed stricter regulations on big Will movement live on? Could this time be differbanks and other financial institutions, a plan she ar- ent? Progressive organizers,

PUBLIC FORUM

Empowerment To the editor: There is much discussion in the media, schools and universities regarding banning flags, symbols and creating safe places, etc., because some are offended, claims of racism, fear of what they represent or for political correctness. By banning, what are we teaching our children? Isn’t one of the purposes of education to prepare our children to succeed in the real world professionally and in society? By banning, they are denied learning, which teaches dealing with disagreeable ideas or actions. The First Amendment doesn’t guarantee to be heard nor protects against offense. Democracy is messy! When our children walk off the schoolyard and our campuses, there are no “safe places” or bans on symbols. How well have we prepared them to deal with the real world? By banning and creating safe places we are actually empowering the offensive actor through media, school board hearings and university panels. Ironically, those actions do not make the problem go away; they actually magnify them and reinforce both student and education administrations’ weaknesses. These actions demonstrate the offenders have power over both the individual claiming offense and the education administrations that react defensively. It is time to take the power back! The objective of education is teaching critical thinking, not tolerate intolerance, debate issues and justify positions. Banning denies teaching,

an eternally optimistic cadre, say they think so. “This movement is here to stay,” argues Ben Wikler of MoveOn.org. “Sanders could turn out to be, for progressives, what (Barry) Goldwater was for conservatives in 1964. Goldwater lost, but he paved the way for Ronald Reagan 16 years later. We don’t want to wait that long.” Harold Meyerson, editor of the American Prospect, thinks they may be right, mainly because the economy’s failure to increase middle-class incomes has pushed so many voters — especially young voters — to look for new answers. He noted that a 2012 Gallup Poll found that 53 percent of Democrats said they had a positive view of socialism — and that was before Sanders ran for president. “Bernie Sanders’ campaign didn’t create a new America left,” Meyerson wrote recently. “It revealed it.” Even if their candidate falls short in the next few primaries, Sanders voters shouldn’t give up in despair. Their votes will still count, because the final score will matter — not only for this presidential campaign, but the next one. — Doyle McManus is a columnist for the Los Angeles Times. His email address is doyle. mcmanus@latimes.com.

OLD HOME TOWN

100

From the Lawrence Daily obliterates history and its truth. Real Journal-World for April 12, education teaches the unsavory and 1916: positive truths in history and that you “The movement to build a years can’t judge history by today’s morality. concrete road from Lawrence ago Our choice: Immature mind and to Tonganoxie received a decharacter or maturity of thought, inner IN 1916 cided impetus at a meeting strength, self-assurance, and equanimheld Saturday night in the Robity! inson school house northeast of Lawrence. The meeting was attended by Grant townDavid Reynolds, ship farmers interested in the construction Lawrence

Jail questions

of such a road. A committee was appointed at the meeting to make plans for a road district.... A telephone message from Tonganoxie today brought the news that the work has progressed so far in Tonganoxie and the country south to Douglas county that it is felt sure the hard surface road can be put through. A movement is on foot to build a similar road from Leavenworth to Tonganoxie, and the entire project when completed will give a hard surface road all the way from Lawrence to Leavenworth.” “The Junior Civic League was organized at the Woodlawn school in North Lawrence this morning with eighty-two members.... Meetings will be held once a month and the meetings will be devoted to the beautification of the city and the protection of bird life. Additional interest was given to the meeting this morning by the announcement that the Civic League will install a drinking fountain in North Lawrence. The announcement was received with great enthusiasm.” “Henry M. Payne, a prominent consulting engineer of New York City, was the principal speaker on the program of the first annual mining day program at the University today.”

To the editor: Black Lives Matter banners are starting to unfurl here in Douglas County, and some residents may wonder just how relevant they are to us in this medium-sized university city. Here is just one set of figures that apply: African-Americans represent 4.6 percent of the total Douglas County population, but, according to the most recent report from the Douglas County correctional facility, 21 percent of those booked into the jail were African-Americans. Even if half of them were residents of Topeka or Kansas City, booking the half that were Douglas County residents would mean they were incarcerated at twice the rate of white residents. This discrepancy is one of the issues that must be settled before we head to the polls to approve any jail expansion. Nobody I have discussed this with is against spending the mon— Compiled by Sarah St. John ey to improve our justice system and provide equitable outcomes for all, but we need answers to tough questions Read more Old Home Town at LJWorld. before we vote. com/news/lawrence/history/old_home_ Graham Kreicker, town. Lawrence


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WEATHER

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Tuesday, April 12, 2016

L awrence J ournal -W orld

DATEBOOK

Family Owned. Helping Families and Friends Honor Their Loved Ones for More Than 100 Years. Serving Douglas, Franklin and Osage Counties since 1898. Baldwin City, KS Ottawa, KS Overbrook, KS 712 Ninth Street 325 S. Hickory St 730 Western Heights Drive (785) 594-3644 (785) 242-3550 (785) 665-7141

TODAY

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

Plenty of sunshine

Partly sunny

Mostly sunny and pleasant

Pleasant with clouds and sun

Mostly cloudy, a shower; warm

High 63° Low 38° POP: 0%

High 70° Low 42° POP: 5%

High 73° Low 51° POP: 5%

High 74° Low 56° POP: 10%

High 75° Low 51° POP: 55%

Wind ESE 6-12 mph

Wind S 6-12 mph

Wind SSE 6-12 mph

Wind SSE 8-16 mph

Wind SSE 8-16 mph

POP: Probability of Precipitation

Kearney 66/40

McCook 70/38 Oberlin 68/40

Clarinda 60/37

Lincoln 67/39

Grand Island 66/39

Beatrice 64/40

Centerville 56/35

St. Joseph 62/35 Chillicothe 59/34

Sabetha 61/39

Concordia 65/39

Institute, 2350 Petefish Drive. Red Dog’s Dog Days James Gunn Book workout, 6 a.m., Commu- Launch: “Transgalactic: nity Building, 115 W. 11th A Novel,” 5:30-7 p.m., St. (11th and Vermont Jayhawk Ink Lounge, KU streets.) Bookstore, 1301 Jayhawk More Than a Dream: A Blvd. New Social Contract for Lawrence City Comthe 21st Century, 3:30 mission meeting, 5:45 p.m., Hall Center for the p.m., City Hall, 6 E. Sixth St. Humanities, 900 SunnyMaker Meet-Up, 6:30 side Ave. p.m., Lawrence Creates Coalition on HomeMakerspace, 512 E. Ninth less Concerns monthly St. meeting, 3:30-5 p.m., Don Williams, 6 p.m. Meeting Room C, Lawdoors, 7 p.m. show, rence Public Library, 707 Liberty Hall, 644 MassaVermont St. chusetts St. “A View from the Herbs study group, 7 Bench: Politics and p.m., Unitarian Fellowship, Public Policy” with 1263 North 1100 Road. Judge Joyce London Affordable community Ford, 4 p.m., Dole Spanish class, 7-8 p.m.,

12 TODAY

Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 61/42 59/38 Goodland Salina 67/37 Oakley Kansas City Topeka 66/38 67/39 65/41 63/38 Lawrence 61/38 Sedalia 63/38 Emporia Great Bend 60/39 64/38 66/38 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 62/41 63/38 Hutchinson 65/40 Garden City 67/40 64/37 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 62/39 66/42 62/40 65/40 64/41 65/42 Hays Russell 65/40 67/39

Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. Diverse Dialogues on Race and Culture presents Ebola: One Nurse’s Story, 7-8:30 p.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. KU Assistant Professor of Political Science Patrick Miller: “Red and Blue States of Mind,” 7:30 p.m., Dole Institute, 2350 Petefish Drive. Tuesday Concert Series: Marianne Carter & Darrell Lea, 7:30 p.m., Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St.

Find more event listings at ljworld.com/events.

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

LAWRENCE ALMANAC

Through 8 p.m. Monday.

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

61°/47° 64°/41° 88° in 1972 22° in 1940

Precipitation in inches 24 hours through 8 p.m. yest. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Normal year to date

0.00 0.12 1.30 2.89 6.40

REGIONAL CITIES

Today Wed. Today Wed. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Holton 64 39 s 72 46 pc Atchison 62 36 s 71 43 s Belton 61 40 s 68 44 pc Independence 61 39 s 69 44 pc 60 38 s 68 44 pc Burlington 64 40 s 70 44 pc Olathe Osage Beach 60 37 s 67 39 pc Coffeyville 65 42 s 70 43 c 64 38 s 72 44 pc Concordia 65 39 s 75 47 pc Osage City 63 38 s 70 42 pc Dodge City 63 38 pc 74 44 pc Ottawa 66 42 s 73 47 pc Fort Riley 67 38 s 76 48 pc Wichita Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

TRUSTWORTHY

NATIONAL FORECAST

FOR 100 YEARS

SUN & MOON

Today Wed. 6:48 a.m. 6:47 a.m. 7:55 p.m. 7:56 p.m. 11:15 a.m. 12:12 p.m. 12:55 a.m. 1:49 a.m.

First

Full

Last

New

Apr 13

Apr 22

Apr 29

May 6

LAKE LEVELS

As of 7 a.m. Monday Level (ft)

Discharge (cfs)

875.79 890.37 972.97

21 25 15

Cold

INTERNATIONAL CITIES

Today Cities Hi Lo W Acapulco 88 73 pc Amsterdam 61 46 t Athens 75 57 s Baghdad 84 63 pc Bangkok 104 83 s Beijing 67 44 pc Berlin 58 43 r Brussels 61 43 t Buenos Aires 70 61 c Cairo 75 63 s Calgary 67 40 c Dublin 55 39 pc Geneva 66 45 c Hong Kong 78 75 t Jerusalem 57 46 t Kabul 68 42 pc London 61 41 pc Madrid 56 45 r Mexico City 85 55 pc Montreal 47 29 pc Moscow 54 34 pc New Delhi 97 73 pc Oslo 55 36 s Paris 59 44 t Rio de Janeiro 90 77 s Rome 69 56 pc Seoul 69 50 pc Singapore 92 81 c Stockholm 55 33 s Sydney 72 62 sh Tokyo 57 54 pc Toronto 45 25 s Vancouver 56 42 sh Vienna 65 45 pc Warsaw 61 47 r Winnipeg 44 28 c

able to be relied on as honest or truthful.

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

Fronts

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016 Wed. Hi Lo W 87 72 pc 59 43 c 77 60 s 77 58 t 104 85 t 78 45 s 60 43 sh 62 44 c 70 57 r 77 63 pc 55 33 sh 54 40 pc 56 42 r 81 75 t 56 46 t 73 47 pc 62 43 pc 60 47 sh 85 55 pc 46 30 pc 58 46 pc 102 75 pc 53 39 pc 62 44 pc 89 78 s 72 51 pc 64 47 r 93 81 t 53 34 pc 73 62 sh 66 57 c 43 28 pc 57 41 c 69 52 t 62 45 pc 57 40 s

Precipitation

Warm Stationary

Showers T-storms

7:30

Rain

Flurries

Snow

Today Wed. Today Wed. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Memphis 67 48 c 70 55 c Albuquerque 60 42 c 72 47 s Miami 84 70 s 85 71 s Anchorage 48 34 pc 51 35 c Milwaukee 43 32 s 51 37 s Atlanta 68 56 r 64 52 r Minneapolis 49 39 pc 66 48 s Austin 77 60 c 72 54 t Nashville 65 41 c 71 53 pc Baltimore 59 37 r 59 36 s Birmingham 69 55 r 67 54 sh New Orleans 79 66 t 75 64 t New York 59 40 r 58 42 s Boise 66 47 pc 62 44 c Omaha 64 40 s 74 48 s Boston 56 39 r 50 38 s Orlando 86 64 pc 86 65 pc Buffalo 43 28 s 48 30 c Philadelphia 60 40 r 58 40 s Cheyenne 64 40 pc 69 41 s Phoenix 81 62 pc 84 63 s Chicago 47 32 s 58 38 s Pittsburgh 51 30 s 58 35 pc Cincinnati 55 35 s 62 40 s Cleveland 46 30 s 50 33 pc Portland, ME 55 34 r 52 35 s Portland, OR 59 47 sh 60 45 sh Dallas 70 54 c 70 52 c Reno 67 43 pc 64 40 pc Denver 68 42 pc 72 45 s Richmond 60 39 r 62 37 s Des Moines 59 37 s 69 44 s 70 49 pc 69 50 pc Detroit 48 32 s 49 34 pc Sacramento St. Louis 58 38 s 66 43 s El Paso 68 47 pc 78 54 s Fairbanks 48 27 pc 44 25 pc Salt Lake City 73 51 t 68 50 t 68 58 pc 68 59 pc Honolulu 84 71 pc 83 72 sh San Diego San Francisco 63 53 pc 64 53 pc Houston 80 60 c 71 58 r Seattle 58 46 sh 60 46 c Indianapolis 53 33 s 60 37 s 61 42 pc 57 39 pc Kansas City 61 38 s 69 44 pc Spokane Tucson 77 54 pc 83 56 s Las Vegas 78 60 pc 80 60 s Tulsa 69 47 s 69 47 c Little Rock 67 48 pc 66 49 c 60 41 r 61 42 s Los Angeles 71 57 pc 71 56 pc Wash., DC National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: Zapata, TX 95° Low: Hettinger, ND 6°

WEATHER HISTORY

WEATHER TRIVIA™

does a tornado warning mean? Q: What

The all-time measured wind speed record, a 231-mph gust, was set at Mt. Washington, N.H., on April 12, 1934.

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Hack

Hack

Hack

Hack

Jokers

Jokers

Detour

Conan

AMC

50 254 130 ››› Lethal Weapon (1987) Mel Gibson.

TBS

51 247 139 Big Bang Big Bang America’s Greatest Separation Anxiety

BRAVO 52 237 129 Real Housewives HIST

SportsCenter (N)

NFL Live (N)

Shark Tank

CNN

TRUTV 48 246 204 Jokers

Outsiders “All Hell”

City Bulletin Board

School Board Information Sports.

Towr

Outsiders “All Hell”

›› Monsignor (1982, Drama) Christopher Reeve.

City Bulletin Board, Commission Meetings

ESPN2 34 209 144 dCollege Basketball Year/Quarterback FSM

Kitchen

Outsiders “All Hell”

››› Agnes of God (1985, Drama) Jane Fonda.

ESPN 33 206 140 NFL

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LIFE

HOME

CAR

CEK INSURANCE

BUSINESS

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LIFE

HOME

CAR

BUSINESS

BEST BETS WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

SPORTS 7:30

8 PM

8:30

April 12, 2016 9 PM

9:30

10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

Cable Channels cont’d

Network Channels

M

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Ice

-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s National Summary: Rain will spread over most of the East Coast today with heavy thunderstorms in the Southeast. Rain will push into the Northwest as thunderstorms rattle the Rockies.

TUESDAY Prime Time WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

1

A tornado has been sighted, seek safe shelter immediately

Lake

Clinton Perry Pomona

trust wor thy adj.

A:

Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset

Real Housewives

›››‡ Lethal Weapon 2 (1989) Mel Gibson.

Happens Real Housewives

54 269 120 Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Forged in Fire (N)

SYFY 55 244 122 Cabin-Woods

Conan (N)

›› Freddy vs. Jason (2003)

Happens Real Housewives

Iron-Fire Iron-Fire Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars

›› Freddy vs. Jason (2003)

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 Secret Life of Walter Mitty (2013)

››‡ The Secret Life of Walter Mitty (2013) Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Not Safe Daily Nightly At Mid. This Is Total Divas Total Divas (N) L.A. Clippers Dance E! News (N) Last Man Last Man ››‡ Overboard (1987) Goldie Hawn, Kurt Russell. Last Man Reba Reba Log Log Log Log Log Log Log Log Log Log I Can Do Bad All By Myself Chasing Destiny (N) Chasing Destiny Wendy Williams Love, Hip Hop Behind The... ›› First Sunday (2008) Ice Cube. Love, Hip Hop Bizarre Foods Delicious Delicious Booze Traveler Bizarre Foods Delicious Delicious Jill & Jessa Jill & Jessa The Willis Family Jill & Jessa The Willis Family Dance Moms (N) Dance Moms (N) Movie Dance Moms Intervention Intervention 24 to Life (N) 24 to Life (N) Intervention Chopped Chopped Chopped (N) Chopped Chopped Fixer Upper Fixer Upper Hunters Hunt Intl Good Bones (N) Fixer Upper Thunder Paradise Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Friends Friends Spid. Wander Pickle Walk the Gravity Gravity Marvel’s Rebels Star-For. Wander Radio Rebel (2012) K.C. Best Fr. Girl Liv-Mad. Stuck Jessie Jessie King/Hill Burgers Burgers Cleve American American Fam Guy Fam Guy Chicken Aqua Deadliest Catch Deadliest Catch (N) The Last Alaskans Deadliest Catch The Last Alaskans Harry Potter-Phoenix Stitchers (N) The 700 Club The Perfect Man The Boonies Life Below Zero Life Below Zero Life Below Zero Life Below Zero Last Man Last Man Middle Middle Middle Middle Golden Golden Golden Golden River Monsters River Monsters: Unhooked River Monsters River Monsters Love-Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King King Trinity Everyday Prince Cornelius Praise the Lord War & Acts of Impact Mother Angelica News Rosary Threshold of Hope Cate Women Daily Mass - Olam Safari Safari Second Second Stanley Stanley Safari Safari Second Second Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Capitol Hill US House Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Capitol Hill Homicide Hntr Obsession: Dark See No Evil (N) Homicide Hntr Obsession: Dark Nuremberg Nuremberg Nuremberg Nuremberg Nuremberg Loving You Loving You Loving You Loving You Loving You Secret Earth Secret Earth Secret Earth 23.5 Degrees (N) Strangest Weather ››› Kings Row (1942) Ann Sheridan. ››‡ Juke Girl (1942) Ann Sheridan. The Main Event ››› Lucy (2014) ›››‡ Eastern Promises (2007)

››› Trainwreck (2015) Amy Schumer. ››› Maps to the Stars (2014) ››› Naked Lunch

Dice

Lies

Vinyl

Lies

Billions

››‡ Million Dollar Arm (2014) Never Kissed

Dice

Andrew Dice Clay

››› Bull Durham (1988) Kevin Costner.

Girlfriend Girlfriend Outlander

Blood

›› Entrapment Girlfriend Girlfriend ››› Still Alice


SECTION B

USA TODAY — L awrence J ournal -W orld

IN MONEY

IN LIFE

What Yahoo could do for ‘Daily Mail’

Costner carries scary look in ‘Criminal’ like he owns it

04.12.16 KAREN BLEIER, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

DAVE BENETT, WIREIMAGE

Executive orders used to set policy, fix grammar While they have the force of law, many deal with mundane matters Gregory Korte USA TODAY

President Obama, often criticized by Republicans for constitutional overreach for his use of executive orders to get around Congress, signed the WASHINGTON

NEWSLINE

IN NEWS

KENA BETANCUR, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

New York revived as battlefield by White House race It’s rare a primary has three candidates considered local favorites.

U.S. limits training in Ukraine so not to provoke Russia

Policy aimed at teaching defensive skills triggers criticism that it’s too cautious in the face of Putin aggression.

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

USA SNAPSHOTS©

Speedy service

HOW’S MY DRIVING?

Average severe driving incidents1 for every 1,000 miles driven by service vehicles 1 — Such as speeding over 80 mph, harsh braking, cornering Source Fleetmatics’ year-long analysis of 177,000 vehicles in U.S. used by such businesses as plumbers, contractors, etc. TERRY BYRNE AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY

254th executive order of his presidency Friday — allowing the Peace Corps to change its logo. In his seven years in office, he’s also used executive orders to change the name of the National Security Staff to the National Security Council staff, to allow the President’s Council on Physical Fitness and Sports to also consider the role of nutrition and to prohibit government employees from texting while driving. And, showing that executive orders can attend to even the

RON SACHS, GETTY IMAGES

President Obama signed the 254th executive order of his presidency on Friday.

smallest details, Obama signed an executive order in 2014 to correct a typographical error in a previous executive order — which governed the format of executive orders. Executive orders are often thought of as the most muscular form of presidential authority. And in some cases, they are. Executive orders can declare national emergencies, impose sanctions on other countries, set federal purchasing policies and dictate the working conditions for 3 million federal employees.

But more often than not, they deal with more mundane matters of bureaucracy. “Particularly since Bush, this notion that every executive order constitutes an imperial power grab by the president — it just doesn’t match up with the facts on the ground,” said William Howell, a University of Chicago professor and author of Politics Without Persuasion: The Politics of Direct Presidential Action. “It’s not all power grabs. A lot of it is v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

HEALTH OFFICIALS SAY ZIKA ‘SCARIER THAN WE THOUGHT’

Virus linked to more birth defects, much unknown Gregory Korte @gregorykorte USA TODAY

Public health officials said Monday that they’ve learned a lot more about Zika since the White House asked Congress for $1.9 billion to combat the mosquito-borne virus and are increasingly concerned about its potential impact on the U.S. “Most of what we’ve learned is not reassuring,” said Anne Schuchat, the principal deputy director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “Everything we look at with this virus seems to be a bit scarier than we initially thought.” She said the virus has been linked to a broader array of birth defects throughout a longer period of pregnancy, including premature birth and blindness in addition to the smaller brain size caused by microcephaly. The potential geographic range of the mosquitoes transmitting the virus also reaches farther northward, with the Aedes aegypti species present in all or part of 30 states. And it can be spread sexually, causing the CDC to update its guidance to couples. Researchers still don’t know how many babies of women infected with Zika will end up with birth defects, or what drugs and vaccines may be effective. “This is a very unusual virus that we can’t pretend to know everything about it that we need to know,” said Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. “I’m not an alarmist and most of you who know me know that I am not, but the more we learn about the neurological aspects, the more we look around and say this is very serious.” The assessment, delivered to reporters at the White House on Monday, comes the week after the White House informed Congress that it was moving more

HOW ZIKA VIRUS SPREADS Zika virus is spread by the bite of the Aedes aegypti mosquito, and possibly the Aedes albopictus. Where the mosquitoes can be found in the U.S.: Aedes aegypti mosquito areas

Aedes aegypti mosquito

Aedes albopictus mosquito areas

WHY THE CDC IS WORRIED

WASHINGTON

Puerto Rico

ZIKA VIRUS SYMPTOMS About 1 in 5 persons exposed to the Zika virus become ill. Symptoms are usually mild and can last a week. Most common symptoms:

Fever

Rash

Conjunctivitis (pink eye)

Joint pain

Source Centers for Disease Control and Prevention JANET LOEHRKE AND GEORGE PETRAS, USA TODAY

uSummer is approaching and mosquito eradication efforts and vaccine research may not be able to catch up. uThere are 346 cases of Zika confirmed in the continental U.S., all in people who had traveled to Zikaprone countries. Of those, 32 cases involved pregnant women, seven were sexually transmitted. uThe mosquitoes transmitting the virus, the Aedes aegypti, reaches 30 states in the United States. uIn Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands and American Samoa, the virus is now being transmitted locally.

SAUL LOEB, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

The CDC’s Anne Schuchat and Anthony Fauci of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases discuss Zika risk. than $510 million previously earmarked for Ebola prevention toward Zika prevention efforts. “We can’t just stop and wait for the money. If we don’t get the money the president has asked for, we’re not going to take it to the point we need,” Fauci said. “When the president asked for $1.9 billion, we needed $1.9 bil-

lion.” White House press secretary Josh Earnest said the warning “hopefully serves as motivation for members of Congress to pay attention to this important topic.” The CDC said Monday it would give $3.9 million in emergency Zika aid to Puerto Rico.

uThe virus has been linked to a broader array of birth defects, including premature birth and blindness in addition to the smaller brain size caused by microcephaly. MOSQUITO PHOTO BY AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Trump change of tune: ‘I like Marco, I like Kasich’ Says he might even tap them for Cabinet Mike James and Kirsten Powers USA TODAY

Donald Trump says his campaign is about to head in a more congenial direction — and he might even name some of his rivals to his Cabinet. “Yes. I like Marco Rubio. Yeah. I could,” Trump told USA TODAY about a possible spot in his administration. “There are people I

have in mind in terms of vice president. I just haven’t told anybody names. ... I do like Marco. I do like (John) Kasich. … I like (Scott) Walker actually in a lot of ways. ... There are people I like, but I don’t think they like me because I have hit them hard.” With his campaign for the presidency in full swing, Trump said that he is open to forging new alliances. In an interview in New York with USA TODAY columnist Kirsten Powers, Trump said his battles with Rubio and other GOP rivals were part of “the crazy business” of politics. Several, he says, have reached out to make

MAX SCHULTE, DEMOCRAT AND CHRONICLE

Donald Trump says he might name rivals to his Cabinet.

political peace with him. “People you see excoriating me on TV ... are calling my office wanting to get on the team,” Trump said. “I actually asked a

couple of them, ‘How can you do this after what you said?’ And they said, ‘No problem.’ ” Rubio and Trump engaged in some of the snarkiest back-andforth this campaign season. But Trump says he is willing to let it slide. “He made a mistake,” Trump said of Rubio. “He became Don Rickles for about four days, and then I became worse than Don Rickles.” Also Monday, Trump told Fox News that CIA Director John Brennan’s pledge not to allow waterboarding torture is “ridiculous.” His comments echo his Feb. 15 USA TODAY editorial in

which he spelled out his mission to use “enhanced interrogation techniques” against terrorists. Brennan has said he would not allow enhanced interrogation tactics, including waterboarding, even if a future president ordered it. In his editorial, Trump said he would “do whatever it takes” to protect the American people in the face of terrorism. “The enemy is cutting off the heads of Christians and drowning them in cages, and yet we are too politically correct to respond in kind,” Trump wrote. “I will do whatever it takes to protect and defend this nation and its people.”


2B

L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY TUESDAY, APRIL 12, 2016

Sen. Bernie Sanders speaks at a rally Friday in the Greenpoint neighborhood of Brooklyn in New York City.

ANDREW THEODORAKIS, GETTY IMAGES

Hillary Clinton arrives to talk with patrons Monday at the Jackson Diner in the Flushing neighborhood of the Queens borough of New York City.

NEW YORK RECLAIMS STATUS AS POLITICAL POWER BROKER Presidential candidates hope to parlay their ties to Empire State into wins Rick Hampson @rickhampson USA TODAY

NEW YORK Rarely has a presidential primary with so much national importance had so many local favorites as this state’s next week. It’s revived a once-lethal political battlefield that in recent decades had sunk into irrelevance. Bernie Sanders, who grew up in a small rent-controlled apartment in Brooklyn, left in search of opportunity, taking a New York attitude and accent with him. Donald Trump, raised in a wealthy enclave in Queens, stayed in the city but moved to Manhattan, transforming his family’s outer-borough real estate business into a global brand. Hillary Clinton, a middle-class product of suburban Chicago, is a carpetbagger — no great liability here — who came to start her ca-

“This race has returned presidential selection to New York, and we’re feeling pretty good about it.” Gerald Benjamin, State University of New York at New Paltz

reer in electoral politics. She bought a house in an expensive suburb and was elected to the U.S. Senate. Polls show Clinton with a solid lead over Sanders in the Democratic primary. Among the Republicans, Trump has a big advantage over Ohio Gov. John Kasich and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, who has been explaining what he meant by his crack about “New York values.” Until this election cycle, New

GARY HE, INSIDER IMAGES, VIA EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY

York’s once mighty political tradition had become known more for an afterthought of a primary and failed White House bids ( Gov. Nelson Rockefeller’s) or unrealized ones ( Gov. Mario Cuomo’s). Now, though, New York’s Democratic and GOP primary voters are poised to possibly choose the next president (and maybe both nominees) from their own ranks. “This race has returned presidential selection to New York, and we’re feeling pretty good about it,” says Gerald Benjamin, a Brooklyn native who teaches politics at the State University of New York at New Paltz. Ninety miles south, New York City is “200% focused” on the election, says Fred Siegel, who has advised former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani. “The circus has come to town!’ In years past, even if the race was still unsettled by the time of its primary, New York had to share center ring with other

states. But this year, the state has stood alone, with two big weeks separating it from the Wisconsin primary. The election’s importance has New Yorkers giddy. Especially, says Siegel, because both parties could have contested conventions as a result of what happens here. New York has lots of delegates (it’s still the fourth-most-populous state); campaign donors (it’s got Wall Street); and aggressive journalists. The latter make the primary a test — “like a ring of fire,” says John Zogby, a New York statebased pollster. Beating up on national candidates is a local tradition. In 1912, the comeback Republican candidacy of Theodore Roosevelt was critically damaged when he lost the state’s first primary. The presidential candidacies of Al Gore (1988), Jerry Brown (1992), and Pat Buchanan (1996), all died in New York.

Counting number of orders doesn’t tell the story der 11030, which governed the process for writing and approving executive orders. He dictated that the left margin on executive orders be from 1½ inches. When President George W. Bush updated that order in 2006, he reduced the margin to 1 inch, but left “inches” plural. And so when Obama updated the procedure again in 2014, the first thing he did was to change “1 inches” to “1 inch.”

v CONTINUED FROM 1B

clearly trivial stuff,” he said. That’s one reason why simply counting the number of executive orders issued by a president is a poor measure of how sweeping his use of executive power is. So while Obama has noted that he’s issuing fewer executive or-

“It’s not all power grabs. A lot of it is clearly trivial stuff.”

Corrections & Clarifications

William Howell, University of Chicago professor

ders than any president in 100 years, it’s debatable how many of those executive orders encroach on the power of Congress. “It is not so much the number of executive orders but executive orders that are in direct violation or in opposition to the intent of the Congress,” said Sen. Pat Roberts, R-Kan., in a debate over the closure of the Guantanamo Bay prison last year. To figure out how many executive orders are truly significant. Howell has looked at mentions of executive orders on the front page of The New York Times, in court decisions and the congressional record. He estimates that only 10% to 15% of executive orders have significant public policy implications — a proportion that’s increasing over time as presidents issue fewer executive orders overall. Most executive orders — perhaps 60%, according to a study by Bowdoin College professor Andrew Rudalevige — aren’t even written by the White House. “A lot of these orders are formulated in a department or in an inter-agency process, and they make their way up rather than down,” Rudalevige said. That appears to be the case with the executive order Obama signed Friday. Under a 1979 executive order by President Carter, the president alone has the authority “to adopt and alter an official seal or emblem of the

USA TODAY is committed to accuracy. To reach us, contact Standards Editor Brent Jones at 800-8727073 or e-mail accuracy@usatoday.com. Please indicate whether you’re responding to content online or in the newspaper.

CHIP SOMODEVILLA, GETTY IMAGES

Rosario Reyes, left, 36, and her son Victor Reyes, 7, attend a vigil over President Obama’s executive order on immigration in front of the Supreme Court on Dec. 11.

Highlights of the past year Not all executive orders are created equal. While they can be used to change significant federal policies — often going around Congress — executive orders are more routinely used for more mundane government business. In the last year, President Obama has signed: EO 13697, adding a career and technical education scholar to the Presidential Scholars Program. EO 13701, delegating to the U.S. Trade Representatives any reports to Congress required by the trade promotion authority legislation. EO 13704, formalizing the Presidential Innovation Fellows Program. EO 13708, renewing the charters of 40 different advisory committees, including

the Committee for the Preservation of the White House, the Good Neighbor Environmental Board, the San Juan Islands National Monument Advisory Committee. EO 13711, creating a second board to investigate a New Jersey railroad labor dispute. EO 13713, giving nonessential federal employees half a day off on Christmas Eve, 2015. SOURCE The Office of the Federal Register.

Peace Corps.” So unless Obama wanted to personally sign off on the new design, the Peace Corps needed to ask for the legal authority to do it themselves. In a report to Congress on Friday, the White House said the Peace Corps order would allow “more robust brand protection as the agency pursues communications and volunteer recruitment campaigns and future strategic partnerships.” Peace Corps press director Erin Durney said the agency was looking forward to making changes in the emblem in the future. Presidents use executive orders to make minor changes in policy only because the previous policy was set by executive order. One extreme example comes from the executive orders governing executive orders themselves. In 1961, President Kennedy signed Executive Or-

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USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld TUESDAY, APRIL 12, 2016

U.S. LIMITS TRAINING IN UKRAINE TO AVOID A RUSSIAN PROVOCATION Line blurs between offense, defense Jim Michaels @jimmichaels USA TODAY

The White House has boosted aid for Ukrainian forces battling Russian-backed separatists but limits training to mainly defensive tactics, triggering criticism the policy is too cautious to blunt President Vladimir Putin’s aggressive moves in the region. The United States recently turned down Ukraine’s request for sniper training for its armed forces because that is considered an offensive skill. The U.S. policy is aimed at teaching defensive skills in order to avoid escalating the conflict. U.S. officials said the distinction between defensive and offensive tactics makes little difference, since the training is focused on building basic soldier skills, which are similar for offensive and defensive operations. As a result U.S. trainers can teach nearly all the skills needed for small and mid-sized combat units despite the focus on defensive operations, commanders say. Such skills as patrolling, for example, are used defensively and offensively. “At the company and maybe even at the battalion level, there’s not really a big distinction between offensive and defensive things,” said Lt. Gen. Ben Hodges, commander of U.S. Army Europe. “What we’re trying to do is make sure the Ukrainians at the tactical level are as capable as they can be.” Some critics worry that the policy reflects an approach that won’t work against Putin’s expansionist policies. Rep. Duncan Hunter, R-Calif., and other Republican lawmakers have criticized the Obama administration for limiting aid to Ukraine’s military to “non-lethal” WASHINGTON

IRINA GORBASYOVA, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY

supplies, such as medical equipment, communications gear and radar. Yet the training has received less scrutiny. The United States has several hundred military trainers in Ukraine. U.S. training efforts began with Ukraine’s border forces and national guard, which are responsible for internal security, but recently expanded to Ukraine’s conventional forces. “If you’re there, why not train them in the way Ukrainians need to be trained to counteract the Russian offensive,” said Hunter, a member of the House Armed Services Committee who recently visited Ukraine. “How nice can you be while Putin takes over the world?” Such training limitations are not new. Many European countries in the U.S.-led coalition in Afghanistan, for example, had

IN BRIEF PROTEST FOR FALLEN COMRADES

“If you’re there, why not train them in the way Ukrainians need to be trained to counteract the Russian offensive.” Rep. Duncan Hunter, R-Calif.

limits on missions they could perform. During the war there, the U.S. military urged its European allies to lift the restrictions, called national caveats. In Ukraine, the situation is reversed. “There are some specific offensive tasks that we just don’t do,” said Col. Nick Ducich, commander of the multinational training group in Ukraine. He said U.S. trainers are not teaching Ukrainian troops how to establish an ambush, which is considered an exclusively offensive skill, in addition to avoiding sniper training. Canada and Lithuania, which also train Ukrainian forces, do not have similar restrictions. The Ukrainians face a formidable foe in the separatists in the eastern part of the country. Russia backs separatists with

Ukrainian servicemen practice with a drone during their training near Mariupol, Ukraine.

ammunition, weapons and advisers. Russia also has massed forces at the border at times and provided deadly fire support to the separatists, using drones as spotters for its artillery. Michael Carpenter, a deputy assistant Defense secretary, said the U.S. has to walk a line between helping Ukraine without provoking a Russian response. “The goal has been to help the Ukrainians be more effective in defending their territory without escalating the conflict,” he said. The United States is providing Ukraine’s military force with about $600 million in training and equipment. The equipment includes counter-artillery radar, night-vision goggles and other sophisticated hardware. “There is no other country that is doing even close to what we’re doing,” Carpenter said.

‘Sister Wives’ challenge to polygamy ban rejected Ruling overturns lower court that sided with Brown family Trevor Hughes @trevorhughes USA TODAY

ORLANDO SIERRA, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

A journalist crouches by mock coffins bearing portraits of fallen colleagues during a protest Monday in Tegucigalpa, Honduras. About 52 journalists and media workers have been murdered in the country during the past six years. BRITISH PM CAMERON IN EYE OF PANAMA PAPERS STORM

British Prime Minister David Cameron faced questions in Parliament over his personal taxes Monday, following the revelation that his father ran an offshore investment fund before he died. Cameron released a summary of his tax returns over the weekend, but opposition politicians demanded more answers and clarifications. Speaking in the House of Commons, Cameron said allegations over his family’s financial matters were “deeply hurtful and profoundly untrue.” Ian Cameron was identified as a client of Mossack Fonseca, a Panama law firm that specializes in registering offshore companies and is at the center of what is being called the biggest data leak in corporate history. — Kim Hjelmgaard TAIWAN-BORN U.S. NAVY OFFICER CHARGED AS SPY

A Navy officer born in Taiwan is accused of passing secrets to a foreign government, according to a charge sheet provided by the Navy and sources familiar with it. Lt. Cmdr. Edward Lin, who is assigned to the Norfolk-based Commander Patrol and Reconnaissance Group, is in pretrial confinement at the Navy’s brig in

Chesapeake, Va., facing a litany of charges. The charge sheet did not reveal the foreign government, but CBS and Fox News were among media outlets citing military sources who said the government was China. Lin faces multiple counts of espionage, communicating defense information and making false official statements. He is also charged with adultery and patronizing prostitutes, the charge sheet said. — David Larter, Navy Times

DENVER A federal appeals court rejected a challenge to Utah’s polygamy ban, dismissing on Monday a case brought by the family featured in the TLC reality show Sister Wives, which chronicles the life of a man with four spouses. Since Utah officials have declared they don’t prosecute polygamists in absence of any other crimes, the whole matter is “moot,” and should be dismissed entirely, the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals said. The Brown family, which includes Kody Brown, his four wives, Meri, Christine, Janelle and Robyn, and 17 children, sued state and local officials in 2011, seeking to overturn the ban. The family moved from Utah to Nevada to escape what they said was persecution by police and prosecutors. The family argues that

“The Brown family is obviously disappointed in the ruling but remains committed to this fight for the protections of religion, speech, and privacy in Utah.” Jonathan Turley, Brown family attorney

plural marriage is a key part of their faith. Kody Brown is legally married to one wife and “spiritually” married to the other three women, and they live as one family. The show has aired for six seasons on TLC. A lawyer for the Brown family said in a statement they will consider another appeal. A lower federal court had previously sided with the Browns, and ruled the state’s law banning polygamy un-

constitutional.The Denver-based appeals court decision overturns that ruling. “The Brown family is obviously disappointed in the ruling but remains committed to this fight for the protections of religion, speech, and privacy in Utah,” attorney Jonathan Turley wrote. “The underlying rights of religious freedom and free speech are certainly too great to abandon after prevailing below in this case.” Utah was founded in large part by Mormons seeking to practice their religion without interference from the government, and at the time, plural marriage was a key tenet of the faith. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints renounced polygamy as a condition of Utah becoming a state, and the practice has remained illegal ever since. Utah officials said they would only prosecute polygamists if they were suspected of committing other crimes, including coercion or fraud.

KERRY: VISIT TO HIROSHIMA ‘GUT-WRENCHING’

Secretary of State John Kerry said his “gut-wrenching” visit Monday to the Hiroshima site of the world’s first atomic bombing reinforces the goal to eliminate nuclear weapons and war itself. Kerry became the highestranking U.S. diplomat to visit the Hiroshima Peace Park, located at ground zero for the first of two atomic bombs dropped by the United States on Japanese cities near the end of World War II. Kerry’s visit came at the end of two days of talks in Hiroshima with foreign ministers from the Group of Seven leading nations about terrorism, the refugee crisis, nuclear disarmament and other issues. — Kirk Spitzer

GEORGE LANGE, AP/TLC

Kody Brown, center, poses with his wives, from left, Robyn, Christine, Meri and Janelle, in a promotional photo for the reality series, Sister Wives, which aired in March 2011 on TLC.


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L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY TUESDAY, APRIL 12, 2016

STATE-BY-STATE News from across the USA ALABAMA Fairhope: The Na-

tional Oceanic Atmospheric Administration’s Marine Fisheries Service estimates this year’s season for recreational red snapper fishing will be capped at “six to nine days,” U.S. Rep. Bradley Byrne told Al.com. This year’s limits are set to be revealed in coming weeks. Byrne, however, warned that they may be even lower than those prompting public protest in 2014 and 2015.

ALASKA Ketchikan: This year’s

salmon harvest is expected to catch about 161 million statewide, more than 100 million fewer than in 2015, the Ketchikan Daily News reported. ARIZONA Prescott: Police Chief Jerald Monahan is leaving for the same position at Yavapai College. ARKANSAS Quitman: The O.D.

Gunn Trade and Sale Barn here is among nine state properties nominated for the National Register of Historic Places this year, the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette reported. CALIFORNIA Rancho Palos Verdes: Authorities found the body of a diver who went missing off the Southern California coast. COLORADO Denver: Two peo-

ple died after a wrong-way rollover crash involving a Metro Taxi, KUSA-TV reported. CONNECTICUT Hartford: The state is once again banning the taking of Bluback herring and alewives from state inland and marine waters, continuing a prohibition that began in 2002 because of low populations, the Connecticut Post reported. DELAWARE Lewes: The Cape May-Lewes Ferry fleet is down to one operating vessel for most of the rest of April. Issues with the MV New Jersey’s hull were discovered during an underwater inspection, leaving only the MV Cape Henlopen available for the Delaware Bay crossings.

HIGHLIGHT: NEW MEXICO

Nursing photo fires up controversy

FLORIDA Tarpon Springs: A

17-year-old girl was rescued after she became separated from relatives while on a kayaking trip off the coast, the Tampa Bay Times reported. GEORGIA Acworth: A man was arrested in connection with a road rage shooting that left one person injured in north Georgia. HAWAII Wailuku: An affordable

LAS CRUCES

donors have paid $934,000 of the nearly $1.1 million legal tab racked up by three northern Iowa counties being sued by Des Moines Water Works over high nitrate levels — but county officials won’t identify all of them, The Des Moines Register reported. Lawyers for Sac, Buena Vista and Calhoun counties, responding to records requests from The Register, released heavily redacted checks, billing statements and other documents to keep private the names of those who have paid nearly 90% of the counties’ legal fees so far.

KANSAS Wichita: Friends Uni-

versity here is installing a 29panel, 9.5 kilowatt solar power array at the entrance of the Edmund Stanley Library, The Wichita Eagle reported. The $85,000 project is expected to be in use by early next week.

KENTUCKY Louisville: General

Electric’s Appliance Park is adding about 75 salaried positions before and after its expected sale to China-based Qingdao Haier Co. this summer, The CourierJournal reported.

IDAHO Boise: Temporary water

MAINE Sanford: The United

al Geospatial-Intelligence Agency is granting more time for public comment on a preliminary decision to build a $1.6 billion headquarters in Missouri instead of Illinois, the Belleville News-Democrat reported. People now have until May 2 to weigh in on the project. INDIANA Muncie: Local con-

tracting company Shroyer Brothers has sued local officials, claiming it has been shut out of demolition work in part because it didn’t hand over a portion of its income to the local Democratic Party, The Star-Press reported. IOWA Des Moines: Private

COURTESY TARA RUDY PHOTOGRAPHY VIA LAS CRUCES SUN-NEWS

A Las Cruces firefighter may face disciplinary action after a portrait of his wife breast-feeding their infant son while wearing his uniform surfaced on social media. feeding mothers in uniform, further suggested that the city and fire department are portraying themselves in an antibreast-feeding light. “They’re not supporting the normalizing of breast-feeding ... or supporting anyone coming in and breast-feeding in uniform,” she said. “It just seems like it’s a double standard. There’s fireman costumes for Halloween — and that’s OK? Or is it strictly because she was breast-feeding and that’s the problem?”

The photo gained national attention soon after it was posted in late February on Ruby’s business Facebook page, she said. By early March, she began to hear rumblings that officials were upset with the portrait. “In the last couple of weeks,” she said, “we realized that this is something they were seriously upset about to the point where they were trying to discipline him — and we don’t understand why.”

wheel and other forms of distracted driving. Republican Gov. Baker proclaimed April as Distracted Driving Awareness Month.

scheduled through Thursday.

MICHIGAN Lansing: An exhibit at the Library of Michigan seeks to show people how the blind adjust to the lack of sight, the Lansing State Journal reported. The free exhibit “Child in a Strange Country,” which runs until May 22, features a halfdozen stations equipped with hands-on tools like braille typing machines.

MISSISSIPPI Gallman: A man

District Attorney Geary Aycock says criminal warrants have been issued for 30 Ouachita Parish residents charged with illegally selling their food stamp benefits to three local grocery stores, The News-Star reported.

ILLINOIS Belleville: The Nation-

RHODE ISLAND Providence: Three city police officers were cleared of wrongdoing in the death of a 63-year-old man who was arrested after fighting with officers, the Providence Journal reported.

MINNESOTA Alberta Lea: Federal authorities have opened a criminal investigation after a bald eagle was found butchered like a game bird, the Pioneer Press reported. Killing or keeping an eagle or its parts is punishable by up to a year in prison and a fine of up to $100,000.

housing project is proposed in the rural region of Hana on eastern Maui. The Maui News reported that GTH Land Co. wants to build two dozen homes estimated to cost between $250,000 and $445,000 apiece. Habitat for Humanity will connect prospective homeowners with financing.

service was restored to several homes in the Boise foothills following concerns about unstable ground, KTVB-TV reported.

The Association of Pennsylvania State College and University Faculties, the union representing faculty and coaches at Pennsylvania’s 14 state-owned universities, says members have decided against a walkout before the academic year ends next month.

@carlopez_los Las Cruces Sun-News

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: Judge

Joan Davenport was charged with assaulting another judge, Sharon Goodie, at Judiciary Square in a dispute over entry to an office, The Washington Post reported.

PENNSYLVANIA State College:

Carlos Andres López

A firefighter is said to be under investigation after a portrait of his wife breast-feeding their infant son while wearing his uniform surfaced on social media last month, according to media reports. While details surrounding the Las Cruces firefighter’s fate remain unknown, he could face disciplinary action because of the photo, reported KFOX-TV, a media partner of the Las Cruces Sun-News. City and fire department officials said the matter is a pending personnel issue and declined to identify the firefighter involved or comment further. Meanwhile, the El Pasobased photographer who took the portrait said the controversy surrounding the issue is overshadowing its message. “The message is that you can be a full-time breast-feeding mom and work a full-time job and do both really well,” photographer Tara Ruby said, adding the firefighter’s wife was “standing as a model for all the moms that actually are firefighters that are breastfeeding.” Ruby, who has made a career out of photographing breast-

LOUISIANA Monroe: Assistant

States Navy Band Sea Chanters will perform here on Thursday. The group is the official chorus of the Navy, performing traditional choral music, including sea chanteys, opera, Broadway numbers, and contemporary music.

MARYLAND Eldersburg: Hutton Steier, 12, just brought home a $3,000 college scholarship for playing the computer game Minecraft, the Carroll County Times reported. Hutton and four other Maryland gamers won the second season of the Super League Gaming’s World Championship in Minecraft, beating out more than 450 teams from throughout the U.S. and Canada and almost 2,000 players, earning a $15,000 college scholarship split five ways. MASSACHUSETTS Boston: State and local police launched a crackdown on texting behind the

reported. The City Council in 2012 approved fees of $250 for a second false alarm and $500 for a third false alarm, but those fees haven’t been enforced.

who escaped from the Copiah County jail nearly a decade ago is back behind bars. Sidney Robert Benner was recaptured after investigators learned he was living in Knoxville, Tenn., WLBT-TV reported.

NEW JERSEY Keyport: A five-

alarm fire on West Front Street injured 41 firefighters and one civilian, Asbury Park Press reported. An estimated 200 firefighters responded to the blaze. None of the injuries were considered life-threatening.

NEW MEXICO Las Cruces: Dona Ana County Treasurer David Gutierrez is pleading not guilty to charges related to public corruption, the Las Cruces SunNews reported. Court records indicate that Gutierrez’s attorney filed a waiver of arraignment, allowing Gutierrez to formally plead not guilty. NEW YORK Buffalo: Two fire-

fighters are recovering from burns after battling a fire on Newton Street, WGRZ.com reported. Fire officials say a child in the home was playing with matches which started a box of clothes on fire and spread to the home.

MISSOURI Jefferson

City: Three people were charged in connection with a shooting in which bullets also hit a bus carrying local students, the Jefferson City NewsTribune reported.

MONTANA Billings: Regional

health care officials announced nearly $9 million in grants that will help patients in Montana, the Billings Gazette reported. A private trust announced says it will give a nearly $5 million for mobile training and simulation centers to train health professionals in rural areas and $4 million in grants to Billings Clinic’s Internal Medicine Residency program for rotations in rural areas. NEBRASKA Omaha: Claudio

Orsi, 93, received six medals more than 70 years after serving in combat during World War II, the Omaha World-Herald reported. He was a tail-gunner on a 10-man B-24 bomber crew. NEVADA Las Vegas: Nearly 40 vehicles were destroyed after a fire ripped through a local UHaul storage facility. Las Vegas Fire & Rescue officials say a man was trying to start his motorhome when it caught fire. NEW HAMPSHIRE Windham:

The New Hampshire Department of Transportation is doing night work associated with the construction of Interstate 93 northbound from the weigh station here to south of the Exit 4 interchange. The construction is

SOUTH CAROLINA Charleston: The last resident of a homeless camp under an interstate overpass is gone, The Post and Courier reported. Some former residents of the camp found homes and another 29 are staying temporarily in a warming shelter. SOUTH DAKOTA Sioux Falls: Lutheran Social Services is leading a $1.25 million fundraising campaign to help with a permanent home here, the Argus Leader reported. Funds raised will go toward purchasing and refurbishing Kilian Community College, with a cost of $5.4 million. TENNESSEE Nashville: The Nashville Metro Public Health Department is offering its 12th annual Backyard Inspection Day to help residents find out how to reduce the mosquito population. TEXAS Waco: A 70-year-old rancher was trampled to death by a cow he was apparently trying to load into a trailer to take to a veterinarian, the Waco TribuneHerald reported. UTAH Provo: Utah County officials approved an expansion of Snowbird Ski Resort that will add new chairlifts, zip lines and a gondola into American Fork Canyon, KSL-TV reported. VERMONT Essex: Alexander

Seagroves, 22, of Georgia led police on a pursuit through four Chittenden County towns on Saturday night before being arrested in Milton, Burlington Free Press reported. VIRGINIA Fairfax: Animal control officers are investigating the death of roughly two dozen birds near Avion Parkway and Lee Jackson Memorial Highway.

WASHINGTON Lynnwood: The

NORTH CAROLINA Kill Devil Hills: A small room inside the base of the Wright Brothers National Memorial will open weekly this summer, The Virginian-Pilot reported. Guides will talk about the monument’s history and where the Wright brothers proved in 1903 that machines could carry humans airborne. NORTH DAKOTA Bismarck:

School officials are looking into expanding Bismarck’s three public middle schools, the Bismarck Tribune reported. OHIO Sandusky: Cedar Point amusement park is auctioning off the first rides on its newest roller coaster, the Valravn, The Plain Dealer reported. The money raised from the auction will go to the LeBron James Family Foundation.

city’s contract with a trafficenforcement camera vendor expires in November and the city council will have to vote on whether to renew it, the reported. Lynnwood is the only city in Snohomish County to use cameras to catch traffic law violators. They’ve brought in $19.2 million since going live in 2007.

WEST VIRGINIA Charleston: Voters in Jefferson County will decide whether to allow restaurants and other businesses to serve alcohol on Sunday mornings, The Journal reported. The topic will be on the Nov. 8 general election ballot. WISCONSIN Madison: House

Speaker Paul Ryan is being challenged in the Republican primary by Delavan businessman Paul Nehlen, who says he once volunteered for the congressman but now feels betrayed, The PostCrescent reported.

WYOMING Laramie: Local

10 years after the disappearance of Colton Levi Clark, 9, his adoptive parents, James Rex Clark and Rebecca Clark, have been arrested and their property searched, The Oklahoman reported.

officials asked the tourism board to pay for the city’s health inspector amid projections for budget shortfalls, the Laramie Boomerang reported. Laramie’s environmental health specialist earns $60,000 per year. Benefits cost the city another $15,000 to $40,000 annually.

OREGON Bend: Police here say they’ll start enforcing false alarm fees after responding to more than 2,000 such alarms in each of the last two years, The Bulletin

Compiled by Tim Wendel, with Carolyn Cerbin, Linda Dono, Mike Gottschamer, Ben Sheffler, Mike B. Smith, Nichelle Smith and Matt Young. Design by Mallory Redinger. Graphics by Alejandro Gonzalez.

OKLAHOMA Wewoka: Nearly


USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld TUESDAY, APRIL 12, 2016

MONEYLINE OVERSTOCK.COM CEO TO TAKE MEDICAL LEAVE Overstock.com founder and CEO Patrick Byrne will take a medical leave of absence with no timetable on a return to the online retailer. In a statement Monday, Byrne says he was diagnosed with Stage IV HepatiOVERSTOCK.COM tis C, contracted Byrne more than 30 years ago in China “when a barefoot doctor sewed up a head wound under less-thanideal conditions. I have finished treatment and think I have it beat, but only time will tell,” Byrne said. Overstock.com says it is unknown whether Byrne will return.

SEAN M. HAFFEY, GETTY IMAGES

Hiding the light bar may make it easier to catch speeders by blending in with other traffic.

FORD OFFERS TO CONCEAL LIGHT BAR ON POLICE SUVS Ford Motor, one of the nation’s top sellers of police vehicles, has come up with a way to make it harder for speeders to realize there is a cop on their tail. Ford is offering to conceal the emergency lights that normally go on the roof of its Police Interceptor SUV — a rebranded Ford Explorer — inside the SUV’s interior, right behind the windshield. It fits inside, just under the SUV’s roof. Besides the blue or red emergency lights, it can also shine a spotlight forward like a conventional light bar. ANNALY CAPITAL ACQUIRES REIT FOR $1.5 BILLION Publicly traded real estate investment trust Annaly Capital Management reached a deal to acquire another REIT, Hatteras Financial, adding a stable of residential mortgage securities to its portfolio. Annaly said Monday it would acquire Hatteras in a cash-and-stock deal worth $1.5 billion. The deal values Hatteras shares at $15.85, or 24% higher than their two-month average price. The acquisition further diversifies Annaly’s REIT investments, including mortgage-backed securities, mortgage servicing and residential loans, the company said in a statement.

NEWS MONEY SPORTS UGLY ENERGY LIFE EARNINGS STARTING AUTOS TO SPREAD TRAVEL

5B

Goldman to pay $5B in mortgage settlement ANDREW GOMBERT, EPA

‘If they only knew ...’ about BAD QUARTER official BADwrote QUARTER investors FOR EARNINGS risks FORtoEARNINGS

Quarterly outlook outlook for for Quarterly S&P 500 500 industry industry sector sector S&P earnings in in Q1 Q1 2016: 2016: earnings

Profit declines that began in oil now extend to seven of 10 sectors in S&P 500

Matt Krantz l @mattkrantz l USA TODAY

I

t’s tempting to blame free-falling energy prices for crushing corporate profits. But energy is just one of many problem areas.

Seven of the 10 sectors in the Standard & Poor’s 500 — with materials, industrials and technology among the areas in addition to energy — are expected to post profit declines in the first quarter, S&P Global Market Intelligence says. Even excluding the hit from energy companies, S&P 500 companies overall are expected to post earnings in the first quarter that are 3.6% lower than a year earlier. Materials companies alone are predicted to post 19% lower profit during the quarter, which is the largest drop second only to energy companies. “You can’t just blame energy,” says Michael Farr, president of investment firm Farr, Miller & Washington. Seeing so many parts of the economy suffering year-over-year profit declines adds up to what’s expected to be an ugly couple of weeks for investors as companies report their bottom line. Corporate earnings are predicted to drop more than 8% in the first quarter, S&P Global says, a realization that sinks in now with Alcoa kicking off earnings reporting season Monday. That’s the biggest drop in profit since the second quarter of 2009 and would be the third consecutive quarterly decline. Energy companies are clearly the biggest part of the pain. The energy sector is expected to post 105% lower profit, which is the first time it will have posted a loss since S&P Global started collecting data. Nine of the 10 companies in the S&P 500 expected to post the largest drops in quarterly profit are in the energy sector. Analysts think EOG Resources, a Houston-based company that explores for oil and

Consumer Consumer discretionary discretionary

“Profits are coming down. It’s not going to be pleasant.” Michael Farr, president of investment firm Farr, Miller & Washington

natural gas, could report a loss of 80 cents a share during the quarter, which would be down dramatically from the 3 cents a share it earned in the same year-ago period. But materials companies are a big concern as well. The sector’s biggest drop in profit is seen coming from mining company Freeport-McMoRan, which analysts think will lose nearly 17 cents a share, an even steeper loss than the 6 cents a share it lost a year ago. Aluminum processor Alcoa, too, is expected to report a massive decline in profitability. Analysts expect the company to earn 3 cents a share on an adjusted basis, down 90% from the 28 cents a share it earned a year ago. Materials problems run deeper than just these companies: 18 of the 26 materials companies that reported adjusted profit last year are seen making less in the first quarter. Farr says the problem is many companies have already slashed costs to the bone, so it has become very difficult for them to keep more of every dollar of revenue than they already are. “Profits are coming down,” he says. “It’s not going to be pleasant.”

Telecom Telecom services services

Health Health care care

-1.09% -3.11%

Kevin McCoy outlook for Quarterly

@kmccoynyc S&P 500 industry sector USA TODAY

earnings in Q1 2016:

Goldman Sachs repeatedly identified risk signs in pools of mortgage-backed securities durConsumer ing the lead-up to the U.S. finandiscretionary cial crisis but didn’t disclose the issues to investors, according to filings in a newly-finalized $5.06 billion settlement anTelecom nounced Monday. The glimpse of the New Yorkservices based banking and investment giant’s internal review process came as Goldman Sachs acknowledged it marketed and sold tens ofHealth billions of dollars in residential mortgage-backed securities withcare out weeding out iffy loans as investors had been promised. “This resolution holds Goldman Sachs accountable for its serious misconduct in falsely Utilities Utilities Utilities assuring investors that securities it sold were backed by sound mortgages when it knew that they were full of mortgages that were likely to fail,” Acting Associate AttorneyConsumer General Stuart Consumer Consumer Delery said as the Department of staples staples staples Justice, state attorneys general and others detailed the agreement.

11.42%

11.42%

5.06%

5.06%

2.85%

2.85%

-1.09%

-3.11%

-6.11%

Financials-6.11% Financials

Financials

-6.18%

Information Information -6.18% Technology Technology

Information Technology JUSTIN LANE, EPA

Saying the company was “pleased to put these legacy matIndustrials Industrials ters behind us,”Industrials Goldman spokesman Michael DuVally said, “Since the financial crisis, we have taken significant steps to strengthen our culture, reinforce our commitment to our clients and enS&P S&P S&P sure our governance processes 500 500 are robust.” 500 The settlement terms, initially outlined by Goldman in January, call for the company to pay a $2.385 billion civil penalty and provide $1.8 billion in loan forMaterials Materials Materials giveness, loan modification and other relief to distressed borrowers and affected communities. The bank will pay $875 million to resolve civil claims by federal enEnergy Energy tities and states for disclosure Energy failures the settlement said occurred between 2005 and 2007. Federally-insured financial inSource S&PINDUSTRIAL Global Market Market Intelligence Source S&P Global Intelligence Source S&P Global Market Intelligence GEORGEPETRAS PETRASAND ANDKRIS KRISKINKADE, KINKADE,USA USATODAY TODAY GEORGE GEORGE stitutions PETRAS AND and KRIS KINKADE, USA TODAY DOW JONES AVG. other investors suffered billions of dollars in losses 17,750 as Goldman failed to tell all the -20.55 bank knew. 17,700 A statement of facts filed with the settlement said Goldman in 17,650 February 2006 discovered a 4:00 p.m. “glitch” that affected six loan 17,600 17,556 pools in a due diligence sample 17,550 involving mortgage lender Coun9:30 a.m. more staid information business- trywide Home Loans. AdditionalRoger Yu 17,500 17,577 es, including firms that provide ly, “Countrywide was struggling @RogerYu_ data analytics to industries, per- with staffing and workload isUSA TODAY MONDAY MARKETS form risk modeling and publish sues” that delayed production of INDEX CLOSE CHG missing documents requested by trade publications. Nasdaq composite 4833.40 y 17.29 A successful bid by the Daily “Daily Mail has more pieces to Goldman, the filing said. S&P 500 2041.99 y 5.61 Mail publisher for Yahoo’s Web Countrywide responded “they it than just the operation you see T- note, 10-year yield 1.72% unch. were too busy working on other assets would open the door to an (on its flag website),” Gillis says. Oil, light sweet crude $40.36 x 0.64 JOHN G. MABANGLO, EPA even bigger U.S. expansion by the Shares of Yahoo rose 1.1% trades to send cures and work Euro (dollars per euro) $1.1412 x 0.0015 Yen per dollar 107.94 y 0.39 British news conglomerate, best growth in the U.S. outstripping Monday to $36.48. In London, this trade” as the March 30 deadSOURCES USA TODAY RESEARCH, MARKETWATCH.COM line for closing the securities ofknown to online readers for its U.K. rates. It recently bought Daily Mail closed down 0.7%. fast churn of celebrity gossip, Elite Daily, a site focused on the Yahoo is considering selling its fering backed by the loan pools USA SNAPSHOTS© 18-34 age group, whose ad sales core Web business, which include neared, the filing said. However, crime and viral news stories. Buying up portals such as Ya- rose 211% in its most recently re- Yahoo News, Finance and Sports, Countrywide resolved some of hoo Sports or Finance would in- ported quarter. amid a shareholder revolt led by the problems before the closing. Bill Gates, again Days later, a Goldman mort“U.S. is our priority for growth activist hedge fund shop Starstantly provide the traffic, advertising technology and con- for Mail Online,” Stephen Wayne board Value. Starboard has gage department manager circuAfter topping the tent distribution platforms the Daintith, finance director for Dai- threatened to overthrow the lated a “very bullish” research world’s richest British publisher would need to ly Mail parent, Daily Mail & Gen- board of directors and replace report that recommended buying people list again Countrywide’s stock. The report double down on its expansion eral Trust, told investors in CEO Marissa Mayer. this year, he has ambitions, particularly in the U.S., January. While revenue growth unravels noted that the home lender’s topped the list for The success of DailyMail.com and market share is clipped by March 2006 loan origination volsays Colin Gillis, an analyst at and Elite Daily is behind recent more innovative competitors ume had exceeded forecasts, the BGC Financial. of With Yahoo, “you have a more discussions to join with other po- such as Google, Yahoo still owns settlement filing said. “If they only knew ... ” responglobal platform. One of the prob- tential bidders for Yahoo, Daily some of the most popular webthe past lems (with Yahoo) is that they Mail said Monday in an emailed sites, advertising technology and ded Goldman’s due diligence have a lot of traffic but they don’t statement. other intellectual property that chief, who had overseen the six own much content. They’re the “Discussions are at a very early could be morphed into other uses problematic loan pools. Investors weren’t told about front door.” stage, and there is no certainty by new investors. years The Daily Mail’s U.S. news op- that any transaction will take Yahoo previously set the dead- the issue involving Countrywide, Source Forbes eration has grown in traffic and place,” the company said. line for bids for April 11, but ex- which was later taken over by JAE YANG AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY Bank of America. ad revenues, with digital ad sales Daily Mail also owns other, tended it to April 18.

-105.3%

-7.83%

-7.83%

-8.14%

-8.14%

-18.85%

-18.85%

-105.3%

What a buyout of Yahoo would mean for ‘Daily Mail’

17 22


6B

L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY TUESDAY, APRIL 12, 2016

AMERICA’S MARKETS What to watch Adam Shell @adamshell USA TODAY

Corporate earnings reporting season is underway. And even though expectations already are low, Goldman Sachs says there are a trio of risks that could pressure stocks during the current earnings season. Sure, everybody knows profits for the Standard & Poor’s 500 stock index are seen contracting nearly 8% in the first quarter. But what worries David Kostin, head of the equity team at Goldman Sachs, is that profit expectations for the full year might still be too optimistic. Currently, Wall Street analysts are expecting the S&P 500 to post earnings growth of 1.6% for the full year. “But even that (tepid growth)

Facts about America’s investors who use SigFig tracking services:

seems more like a best-case scenario,” Kostin wrote in a report, adding Goldman believes fullyear earnings may tumble 9% led to the downside by financials and “further energy ... write downs.” Also worrisome: Kostin isn’t expecting CEOs to be overly optimistic about the second quarter in their post-report guidance to Wall Street. “Most firms will lower (earnings) guidance for the subsequent quarter leading to downward revisions to full-year (profit) forecasts,” he warned. Finally, the stock market will be hurt by the inability of companies to buy back their own shares during the earnings blackout period, he adds. “The only source of demand for shares is corporate repurchases,” Kostin wrote. “But more than 75% of S&P 500 firms are unable to execute discretionary buybacks until early May.”

DOW JONES

Alcoa (AA) was the most-bought stock in late March by SigFig users with more than 50% annual portfolio turnover.

-20.55

-5.61

INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE

CHANGE: -.1% YTD: +131.38 YTD % CHG: +.8%

CLOSE: 17,556.41 PREV. CLOSE: 17,576.96 RANGE: 17,555.90-17,731.63

NASDAQ

COMP

-17.29 CHANGE: -.4% YTD: -174.01 YTD % CHG: -3.5%

CLOSE: 4,833.40 PREV. CLOSE: 4,850.69 RANGE: 4,833.40-4,897.55

RUSSELL

-2.97

RUSSELL 2000 INDEX

CHANGE: -.3% YTD: -41.55 YTD % CHG: -3.7%

CLOSE: 1,094.34 PREV. CLOSE: 1,097.31 RANGE: 1,094.30-1,110.43

S&P 500’S BIGGEST GAINERS/LOSERS GAINERS

Price

$ Chg

YTD % Chg % Chg

Chesapeake Energy (CHK) Pledges almost everything as debt collateral.

4.50

+.74

+19.7 unch.

Newmont Mining (NEM) Shares up on higher gold prices.

31.11

+2.01

+6.9 +72.9

34.98

+1.75

+5.3

9.13

+.45

+5.2 +28.4

Williams Companies (WMB) 17.06 Extends winning streak as it receives positive note.

+.82

+5.0

Freeport-McMoRan (FCX) First-quarter result estimates raised.

9.76

+.43

+4.6 +44.2

Alcoa (AA) Nears 2016 high on earnings call Monday.

9.74

+.37

+3.9

-1.3

NRG Energy (NRG) Up another day since keeping buy rating.

13.11

+.44

+3.5

+11.4

16.83

+.49

+3.0

-3.4

Navient (NAVI) 12.15 Continues uptrend since quarterly dividend declaration.

+.33

+2.8

+6.1

Company (ticker symbol)

Southwestern Energy (SWN) Nears year’s high as it announces earnings call.

Company (ticker symbol)

-4.6

-33.6

YTD % Chg % Chg

Price

$ Chg

Endo International (ENDP) Shares down on weak Insys first-quarter sales.

26.03

-2.27

-8.0

-57.5

National Oilwell Varco (NOV) Shares dip as it cuts dividend.

27.32

-1.79

-6.1

-18.4

41.15

-2.39

-5.5

unch.

206.70

-8.57

-4.0

-25.3

Foot Locker (FL) 59.46 -2.45 Winning streak reaches 2016 bottom on ex-dividend day.

-4.0

-8.6

Valero Energy (VLO) Rating downgraded to neutral at Credit Suisse.

Under Armour (UA) Falls after growth concerns at Morgan Stanley. Alliance Data Systems (ADS) Dips ahead of March charge-off results.

AGGRESSIVE 71% or more in equities

5-day avg.: 6 month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:

5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:

-2.03 -8.88 AAPL AAPL AAPL

-2.32

-3.7

-14.1

61.15

-2.14

-3.4

-18.1

228.37

-7.63

-3.2

-26.9

Baker Hughes (BHI) 41.74 -1.37 Halliburton deal faces another hurdle, stock downgrades.

-3.2

-9.6

Mylan (MYL) Dips along with peers in weak sector.

-3.1

-15.7

45.56

-1.44

-2.89 -12.23 MSFT AAPL AAPL

POWERED BY SIGFIG

SOURCE: BLOOMBERG AND THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

4-WEEK TREND

The car rental company cut its revenue expectations for the year, sayPrice: $8.59 ing the market is suffering from Chg: -$1.11 excess capacity. Hertz said over% chg: -11.4% Day’s high/low: flow will likely moderate heading into the peak summer season. $9.30/$8.54

Norfolk Southern

Fund, ranked by size Vanguard 500Adml Vanguard TotStIAdm Vanguard InstIdxI Vanguard TotStIdx Vanguard InstPlus Vanguard TotIntl Fidelity Contra American Funds IncAmerA m American Funds GrthAmA m American Funds CapIncBuA m

ETF, ranked by volume Ticker Mkt Vect Gold Miners GDX Dir Dly Gold Bear3x DUST SPDR S&P500 ETF Tr SPY iShs Emerg Mkts EEM Barc iPath Vix ST VXX iShare Japan EWJ SPDR Financial XLF CS VS 2x Vix ShTm TVIX ProShs Ultra VIX ST UVXY US Oil Fund LP USO

Chg. -0.52 -0.15 -0.51 -0.14 -0.51 +0.04 -0.40 -0.02 -0.11 -0.04

Close 22.70 2.11 204.02 33.81 18.76 11.26 22.14 4.86 21.57 10.28

4wk 1 +1.1% +1.1% +1.1% +1.1% +1.1% unch. +1.6% +1.4% +1.6% +1.3%

YTD 1 +0.5% +0.1% +0.5% unch. +0.5% -1.2% -2.2% +2.7% -2.7% +3.6%

Chg. +1.26 -0.45 -0.48 +0.43 +0.30 -0.07 +0.09 +0.15 +0.65 +0.25

% Chg %YTD +5.9% +65.5% -17.6% -87.2% -0.2% +0.1% +1.3% +5.0% +1.6% -6.7% -0.6% -7.1% +0.4% -7.1% +3.2% -22.4% +3.1% -23.9% +2.5% -6.5%

INTEREST RATES

MORTGAGE RATES

Type Prime lending Federal funds 3 mo. T-bill 5 yr. T-note 10 yr. T-note

Type 30 yr. fixed 15 yr. fixed 1 yr. ARM 5/1 ARM

Close 6 mo ago 3.50% 3.25% 0.37% 0.13% 0.21% 0.01% 1.15% 1.40% 1.73% 2.09%

Close 6 mo ago 3.65% 3.90% 2.75% 2.89% 2.72% 2.60% 2.94% 3.12%

SOURCE: BANKRATE.COM

Commodities Close Prev. Cattle (lb.) 1.34 1.34 Corn (bushel) 3.57 3.62 Gold (troy oz.) 1,256.70 1,242.50 Hogs, lean (lb.) .66 .67 Natural Gas (Btu.) 1.91 1.99 Oil, heating (gal.) 1.21 1.20 Oil, lt. swt. crude (bar.) 40.36 39.72 Silver (troy oz.) 15.97 15.38 Soybeans (bushel) 9.28 9.17 Wheat (bushel) 4.47 4.60

Chg. unch. -0.05 +14.20 -0.01 -0.08 +0.01 +0.64 +0.59 +0.11 -0.13

% Chg. unch. -1.5% +1.1% -0.7% -3.9% +1.2% +1.6% +3.9% +1.3% -2.8%

% YTD -1.3% -0.6% +18.5% +11.0% -18.2% +10.4% +9.0% +16.0% +6.5% -4.8%

FOREIGN CURRENCIES Close .7024 1.2891 6.4618 .8763 107.94 17.6001

4/11/16

4-WEEK TREND

$79.28

4/11/16

$41.15 4/11/16

INVESTING ASK MATT

NAV 188.46 50.58 186.61 50.57 186.62 14.27 96.07 20.61 40.16 57.36

1 – CAPITAL GAINS AND DIVIDENDS REINVESTED

Prev. .7081 1.2993 6.4648 .8774 108.33 17.7906

6 mo. ago .6520 1.2946 6.3445 .8797 120.26 16.4360

Yr. ago .6826 1.2587 6.2061 .9429 120.19 15.1914

FOREIGN MARKETS Close 9,682.99 20,440.81 15,751.13 6,200.12 44,760.53

3/14/16

Morgan Stanley downgraded the $50 athletic apparel maker to underweight from equalweight and slashed its price target on the stock to $62 from $103 because of con- $40 3/14/16 cerns about falling market share.

Price: $41.15 Chg: -$2.39 % chg: -5.5% Day’s high/low: $43.47/$40.86

Country Frankfurt Hong Kong Japan (Nikkei) London Mexico City

$8

$8.59

4-WEEK TREND

Under Armour

Currency per dollar British pound Canadian dollar Chinese yuan Euro Japanese yen Mexican peso

$12

Canadian Pacific ended its nearly $30 billion takeover bid for Nor- $100 folk Southern — less than six months after it offered to buy the rival railroad — because there was $60 “no clear path” to a friendly deal. 3/14/16

Price: $79.28 Chg: -$2.21 % chg: -2.7% Day’s high/low: $81.18/$78.15

COMMODITIES

60.74

Allergan (AGN) Merger failed, hits 2016 low.

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Owens-Illinois (OI) Climbs as it reports consolidated earnings.

Mallinckrodt (MNK) Three consecutive losses evens April.

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-1.61 -5.06 AAPL AAPL AAPL

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Seagate Technology (STX) Shares rise on attractive dividend yield.

LOSERS

5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:

STORY STOCKS Hertz Global

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Goldman warns of earnings triple whammy

ALL THE MARKET ACTION IN REAL TIME. AMERICASMARKETS.USATODAY.COM

Prev. Change 9,622.26 +60.73 20,370.40 +70.41 15,821.52 -70.39 6,204.41 -4.29 44,859.49 -98.96

%Chg. +0.6% +0.4% -0.4% -0.1% -0.2%

YTD % -9.9% -6.7% -17.3% -0.7% +4.2%

SOURCES: MORNINGSTAR, DOW JONES INDEXES, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

IN-DEPTH MARKETS COVERAGE USATODAY.COM/MONEY

Investors get chance to gauge firms’ financials Q: Why does earnings season matter? Matt Krantz

mkrantz@usatoday.com USA TODAY

A: Stock investors only get a good look at companies’ financials four times a year. These data points are telling in many ways and among the best indicators investors get about how companies are performing. First-quarter earnings season kicked off Monday with the report from aluminum maker Alcoa, and that’s just the start. This week 15 companies in the Standard & Poor’s 500, including most of the big banks, are expected to report their results. Earnings season is important because it’s a rare opportunity for investors to size up how companies are doing relative to expectations. Wall Street analysts routinely forecast what companies are expected to earn in the quarter (and year), and investors pay close attention to how well management is tracking to those expectations. But it’s not just a short-term trading game during earnings season. Some management will provide guidance about what investors can expect in future quarters. Guidance from management is always important, but investors now will be paying close attention to see if things are going to improve with earnings growth in the back half of the year. Investors expect earnings to rise 4% in the third quarter and 9% in the fourth quarter.

Canadian Pacific halts takeover bid of Norfolk Southern Nathan Bomey @NathanBomey USA TODAY

Canadian Pacific Railway’s bid to acquire fellow rail giant Norfolk Southern came to an end following months of contentious back-and-forth squabbling and amid heightened scrutiny from the Obama administration on antitrust issues. Canadian Pacific said Monday that it would no longer pursue the takeover, which it had proposed publicly despite Norfolk Southern’s repeated rejections.

LUKE SHARRETT, BLOOMBERG

A Norfolk Southern train passes through Shelbyville, Ky. The deal had been under antitrust scrutiny.

It also withdrew a resolution that would have required Norfolk Southern shareholders to vote on whether to force deal talks.

“No further financial offers or overtures to meet with the NS board of directors are planned at this time,” Canadian Pacific said in a statement. Norfolk Southern had repeatedly asserted that a merger would draw intense regulatory scrutiny, saying there’s a good chance it would have been rejected. The company also questioned the value of Canadian Pacific’s offer and said it could perform well on its own. Norfolk Southern shares fell 2.7% to close Monday at $29.78, and Canadian Pacific shares rose 3.4% to close at $139.37.

The deal’s demise comes as the Obama administration has increased scrutiny of mergers in recent months, including the Treasury Department’s scuttling last week of the proposed PfizerAllergan pharmaceutical matchup and the Justice Department’s lawsuit to block the oilfield services merger of Halliburton and Baker Hughes. And late last week, the Justice Department said it opposed a voting-trust structure that Canadian Pacific had proposed to the Surface Transportation Board, which reviews proposed railroad mergers.

Under the proposal, Canadian Pacific would have acquired Norfolk Southern, Canadian Pacific’s stock would have been placed in trust and its current CEO would have become CEO of Norfolk Southern before an antitrust review could be completed, according to the Justice Department. The prospective deal’s demise marks a setback for activist investor and Canadian Railway shareholder Bill Ackman. Ackman publicly pushed for the deal and suggested that “pride” was preventing Norfolk Southern from giving the offer adequate consideration.


USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld TUESDAY, APRIL 12, 2016

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HOW WAS YOUR DAY? GOOD DAY LIONEL RICHIE Hello, Lionel Richie! The singer, who was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1994, will now receive the hall’s highest honor: the Johnny Mercer Award. The ceremony will take place June 9 at New York’s Marriott Marquis Hotel.

MARIO RUIZ, EPA

GOOD DAY ‘GILMORE GIRLS’ FANS Welcome back to Stars Hollow. On Monday, Netflix released photos of the fictional town as well as fans’ favorite ‘Gilmore Girls.’ The release marks the first look at the four-part reboot, which arrives later this year.

PHOTOS BY JACK ENGLISH

SAEED ADYANI, NETFLIX

STYLE STAR Who says black and white outfits are drab? Kate Middleton debunked that theory on Day 2 of her royal tour of India when she attended a New Delhi garden party in this Alice Temperley outfit, which features an embroidered chiffon crop top and matching ankle-length skirt. The Duchess of Cambridge was at the party to celebrate the queen’s 90th birthday.

SAMIR HUSSEIN, WIREIMAGE

IT’S YOUR BIRTHDAY WHO’S CELEBRATING TODAY?

Kevin Costner wears his scary ‘Criminal’ well

Even the money guys liked his look in the new movie Bryan Alexander USA TODAY

Kevin Costner knew he had found the right aggressive buzz cut after being shorn in his trailer the morning before starting work on the action thriller Criminal. But Costner received even more affirmation after emailing a picture from the London set to his wife, Christine Baumgartner, and 5-year-old daughter, Grace. “Christine wrote back: ‘What happened? Gracie wants to know if you’re beating people up in this movie,’ ” Costner recalls. “She profiled me.” Give that kid a scholarship to the FBI Academy, because Costner, 61, definitely takes a rare trip to the dark side as brain-damaged killer Jerico Stewart in Criminal (in theaters Friday). It’s evident in the hair. At first, there’s death-row Jerico, who appears with manacles and a shaggy mane and beard. Then there’s the buzz cut Jerico receives before an experimental procedure that places the memories of an assassinated CIA agent (Ryan Reynolds) into his brain,

JACK ENGLISH

Costner plays a shaggy death row inmate implanted with the memories of an assassinated CIA agent in Criminal. a government effort to glean information about a planned terrorist attack. The edgy look was a hot topic of debate on the set. Director Ariel Vromen wanted to go hard with the hair. Film financiers wanted the star to look like Kevin Costner and waited outside his trailer on haircut day to see how he would emerge. “In the movie financing world, there are a couple of funny rules. The leading man needs to have

hair, not shaved hair, and no facial hair,” Vromen says. “I said, ‘We’re going to shave him and keep the facial hair.’ ” But the financiers were pleased there was still some Costner on top. “Kevin looked like a Sons of Anarchy guest star,” Vromen says. “But leaving some hair there also makes him looks like a cool soccer player.” Costner kept the intimidating look under a hat when walking around London in his off-hours. “People would still look at me

like, ‘I feel like I know that scary guy,’ ” he says. “I don’t think you cosmetically try to look good but look right. There’s a difference.” Costner followed in spirit as he played the escaped, off-kilter Jerico, who growls and kills with the bloody wounds of his brain procedure showing on his skull. In one scene, a handcuffed Jerico pulls the metal off a luxury car door with his mouth to make a weapon. Coincidentally, Costner is also in theaters as Superman’s father and moral compass in Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice. “It is a bit schizophrenic,” Costner acknowledges. Further, his first Criminal scene involved assaulting Gal Gadot, who plays Wonder Woman in Batman v Superman. “We shook hands and I basically started taping her hands to a headboard,” Costner says. “I don’t play nice with her.” He was able to switch the troubled character off when he went home. (“I’m not a method actor, so I don’t carry that all night long.”) But his nasty ’do stayed with him, even when he flew back to Los Angeles and his family. “They have gotten used to Dad’s different looks, but that was a little hard on the kids,” Costner says. “I try to take the drama away and wear the sock hat. And I turn into a cat burglar right in front of their eyes.”

Groove through the ‘Hamilton’ book GETTY IMAGES

David Letterman is 69. Jennifer Morrison is 37. Saoirse Ronan is 22. Compiled by Jaleesa M. Jones

USA SNAPSHOTS©

Mobile movies

56%

of TV show/movie viewing among Millennials ages 19-25 is on devices other than a TV.

Source Deloitte Digital Democracy Survey, 10th Edition TERRY BYRNE AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY

Creator scripts the birth of smash Broadway musical

When Oscar Hammerstein II and Jerome Kern wrote Show Boat, the work that launched American musical theater as we know it, it surely BOOK never occurred to REVIEW them to publish a ELYSA book documenting GARDNER their achievement and reflecting on its social and cultural significance. That was then. Nearly 90 years and many groundbreaking musicals later, artists are expected to engage their fans through modern technology. No one has been savvier about this than Lin-Manuel Miranda, creator and star of the lavishly acclaimed Broadway smash Hamilton and now co-author of Hamilton: The Revolution (Grand Central, 288 pp., eeeg out of four). Co-author Jeremy McCarter — who knew Miranda in Hamilton’s earliest stages and served on the artistic staff of the Public Theater, where the musical was developed

MATTHEW MURPHY

Lin-Manuel Miranda is the musical’s creator and star.

and premiered — explains in his introduction that this companion volume chronicles “two revolutions. There’s the American Revolution of the 18th century,” and there’s that of Hamilton itself, “a musical that changes the way that Broadway sounds ... that lets us glimpse the new, more diverse America rushing our way.” Hyperbole? No. I used the word “revolutionary” in my review (as did others), a fair term for a show that seamlessly and exuberantly fuses two great

American forms of storytelling: hip-hop and musical theater. And indeed, both Miranda’s account of Caribbean-born founding father Alexander Hamilton’s unlikely rise and the production’s canny multiracial casting drive home that we are an ever-evolving nation of immigrants. All these factors are explored in the book, which includes Miranda’s dazzling libretto in full — doled out between essays that provide background on historical figures featured in the musical and the actors who play them, as well as Miranda’s invaluable creative team. Hamilton’s journey is detailed, cleverly, in the kind of typeface you would have spotted

on a broadsheet in colonial Williamsburg, with coffee-tableworthy photos taking us onstage and behind the scenes. There is pride, reverence and humor in accounts of the mutual admiration Miranda has established with cultural A-listers, from historian Ron Chernow — whose biography Alexander Hamilton inspired the musical — to Questlove and Stephen Sondheim, or “The God MC Sondheezy,” as Miranda calls him. One chapter documents Hamilton’s outreach to public schools, and includes a rap for marriage equality written by one student. Another famous Hamilton fan is mentioned several times. It’s noted that before Barack Obama became our first African-American president, he introduced himself, as a senator at the 2004 Democratic National Convention, “by telling his own story” — a reference to a prominent lyric and theme in the musical. No one could tell Hamilton’s story more comprehensively than the man who conceived it, and for that reason Revolution is a mustread for admirers — whether you’ve scored a ticket or not.


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YOUR HEALTH YOUR COMMUNITY YOUR STORY

Doctors say give these 7 supplements a try Associated Press

Boca Raton, Fla. — When it comes to vitamins and supplements, what are the best ones to consider? Can you take too much, and what happens if you do? Should your doctor know your vitamin intake? Can they really prevent certain diseases? As Americans search for key ingredients to living healthy and preventing disease, Dr. Louis Malinow, an internist and noted lipidologist in Baltimore, Md., said the simple answer may be in what patients lack in their daily diets. “Supplements simply

‘supplement.’ They are not a rescue from poor habits or a replacement for healthy eating. I prefer to sharp shoot with specific supplements rather than take a shotgun approach,” Malinow explained. Dr. Leslie Emhof, a Tallahassee, Fla.-based family practitioner and geriatrician, added: “Many supplements can interact with prescription medications, which is why it is so important to share any new supplements you are taking with your doctor. Try to do your best with diet and exercise first, and then add supplements to get even better.” Faced with an alphabet soup of options, which

The animal-based Omesupplements should you Probiotics Is your gut bacteria ga-3s are preferred bechoose and why? Here are Malinow’s and Emhof’s top healthy and strong enough? cause the body utilizes If you have taken antibiot- them more efficiently. seven recommendations: ics recently or suffer from They can help improve Vitamin D digestive disturbances, the heart disease, decrease Emhof calls this his No. right probiotic can help inflammation and may 1 supplement, and he tests keep bad bacteria in check. reduce the incidence of his patients annually for low In addition, they can also certain cancers. “I perlevels of D. “Unless you live possibly improve anxiety, sonally recommend krill on the equator, where the depression and immune oil over fish oil as it is absun is directly overhead, function. sorbed better,” Malinow you are likely vitamin D desaid. ficient,” he said. Vitamin D Omega-3 Fatty Acids These are healthy fats Vitamin B12 works more like a hormone Vitamin B12 is essenand affects every cell in the as opposed to trans fats. body. It has been shown to There are two types of tial for making proteins boost immune and nerve Omega-3s: animal-based and is a key factor in function, aid memory and (like fish oil, krill oil and the aging process. It is mental acuity and help with even grass-fed beef); and also very important for calcium absorption and plant-based (think flaxPlease see SEVEN, page 2C seeds and chia seeds). bone health.

The ‘poisons’ in my pantry

Mackenzie Clark/Journal-World Photos

The culprits: These are the foods health reporter Mackenzie Clark pulled from her kitchen because they contain trans fat; some clearly labeled, some not.

The day I discovered the truth about trans fats By Mackenzie Clark Twitter: @mclark_ljw

I

never understood why trans fats were so bad until I interviewed Dr. Michael Zabel, a cardiologist with Lawrence Memorial Hospital, back in February. If I had known what I would learn that day, I might have plugged my ears and made loud noises like an obnoxious child while Zabel told me about the horrors of trans fats. Like so many other harsh realities, it’s an inconvenient lesson to learn. But as he put it bluntly: “Trans fats are basically poison to our cardiovascular system.” Zabel said our bodies don’t have the enzymes they need to break down trans fats — “so they just get stuck in places in our body, and they cause inflammation and they

An example of the American Heart Association's seal of approval on a can of soup. The AHA only endorses foods that are truly, 100 percent trans fat-free. just wreak havoc.” As a comparison, people

who have lactose intolerance have a deficiency of an enyzme called lactase in their bodies, which means they can’t break down lactose and that’s why they have the symptoms they do, according to the National Institutes of Health. With trans fats, no humans have the enzymes needed to break them down, because they don’t exist. Kelsey Fortin, a health educator with Kansas University’s Watkins Health Services, explained that trans fats pack a “double-whammy,” lowering our “good” cholesterol (HDL) and raising our “bad” cholesterol (LDL) simultaneously. “There is no such thing as moderation with trans fat,” Zabel said. “Half a gram of trans fat is half a gram too much.” That truly opened my eyes, and I started paying a lot more attention to what I was

eating. Most of the food I had at home was trans fat-free, with some fairly obvious exceptions. I thought I was in the clear, but I was wrong. Fortunately, I use an app called My Fitness Pal to keep track of what I eat and make sure I’m staying nutritionally balanced. A few weeks into this lifestyle change, I noticed that I had consumed trans fats without knowing it, and I was furious. That was when I learned a tough lesson. Fortin said it’s an important one to note. “If a product has .5 grams or less of trans fat, companies do not have to advertise that on the food label,” she said, noting that .5 grams sounds like it’s not much, “... but if I’m eating more than one serving of that product, then it becomes significant.” Please see FATS, page 2C

Do white doctors understand black patients’ pain? By Melissa Healy Los Angeles Times

Does the blood of black people clot more readily than that of white people? Does a black person’s skin generally have more collagen — is it thicker — than a white person’s? Are black people better at detecting movement than white people, and do they age more slowly? If you are white and said yes — or even maybe — to any of the questions above, you are not alone in falling

prey to false beliefs about physiological differences between white and black people. A new study reveals that in a group of 222 white medical students, half judged as possibly, probably or definitely true at least one of 11 false beliefs about racial differences. Possibly swayed by false beliefs about biological differences between white and black people, some white medical students tend to rate the physical pain of a hypothetical African-American patient as less severe

than that of a white patient in the same circumstances, says a study published last week in the journal PNAS. That cascade of racebased assumptions is, in turn, linked to prescribing decisions that treat white patients’ pain more aggressively than that of black patients, the study concludes. The findings illuminate an often-observed disparity in the treatment of whites and blacks when it comes to treating pain: Research has long shown that in a wide range of medical

circumstances and across the age spectrum, black patients are less likely to get pain medications and, when they do, are prescribed less, than are white patients reporting the same conditions and pain levels. Research, of course, has clearly established that racial differences in disease rates exist. But while some genetic predispositions are under study, researchers tend to see social and economic differences, as well as racial disparities in health care access, as the most

significant contributors to differing health outcomes between black and white Americans. The white medical students who took part in the study ranged from first-year students to residents, who already have begun to treat patients. All attended the same large public university and completed their participation during class time. The study offered participants 15 statements about Please see PAIN, page 2C

Make a plan before you need it By Aynsley Anderson Sosinski Lawrence Memorial Hospital

Many of us take a lot of care and time planning important events in our lives, such as when to purchase a car or home, where we will travel for vacations and when we will retire. For many, however, planning stops when it comes to thinking about end of life. Yet if we don’t plan, or at least share our thoughts about our wants and concerns with our loved ones, difficult decisions may be left to them when they are not in the best place to make them. They may not even be aware of what you would have wanted. National Healthcare Decisions Day is Saturday. This day is marked annually to encourage people to express their wishes regarding healthcare, and to remind providers and facilities to respect those wishes, whatever they may be. The theme for 2016 is “It Always Seems Too Early, Until It’s Too Late.” To increase awareness of the importance of advance care planning, the LMH Palliative Care Team and the Lawrence Area Coalition to Honor End of Life Choices are presenting a free program, “Understanding Advance Directives: Do Your Loved Ones Know Your Choices?” at 6:30 p.m. April 20 at Lawrence Please see PLAN, page 2C

Planning tips l The Center for Practical Bioethics in Kansas City publishes a helpful workbook entitled “Caring Conversations.” This resource can help you and your family or friends through the process of advance care planning with an individualized focus. It is available free at their website, practicalbioethics.org, or by calling 800-3443829. l Lawrence Area Coalition to Honor End of Life Choices (lawrenceareachec.org) is another free resource that has information and documents to assist you. l Lawrence Memorial Hospital Care Coordination Department provides free documents and educational information. Materials can be found online at lmh. org/advancedirectives or they can be reached at 505-6149. l The free program “Understanding Advance Directives: Do Your Loved Ones Know Your Choices?” will be presented at 6:30 p.m. April 20 at LMH. Seating is limited so advance enrollment is requested and can be achieved by clicking Special Events at lmh.org/ events or by calling LMH ConnectCare at 505-5800. l The website for National Healthcare Decisions Day is nhdd.org.


2C

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Tuesday, April 12, 2016

Fats CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

That was my problem — I had more than one pancake. Fortin said labels are tricky because in order to be sure you’re not consuming trans fats, you need to check the ingredients for partially hydrogenated oils or hydrogenated oils. If you find them on the ingredients list, even if a product says it contains zero grams per serving, it does in fact contain trans fats that can start to add up fast. That’s especially true of really unhealthy products that list small serving sizes on the label. I was shocked and disappointed to look back at a box of Bisquick in my cabinet, which I’d checked for trans fat a mere few days prior, and see PHOs listed in the ingredients. According to the American Heart Association, trans fats are created in an industrial process that adds hydrogen to liquid vegetable oils to make them more solid, hence what you see on ingredients lists of foods that contain them: partially hydrogenated oils. Fortin said this process of hydrogenation cuts

. manufacturing costs for companies, and it makes foods taste better. It’s a winwin for manufacturers, but a major loss for consumers and public health. Now hunting down PHOs, the purge of my kitchen cabinets became more complicated and complex. I first eliminated some of the obvious suspects, and the things that had clearly labeled trans fats: the Bisquick that had let me down; the Hormel “Compleat” chicken alfredo that made me feel disgusting when I ate it, even before I learned about PHOs; and the Crisco shortening (which I had only used once for a recipe, anyway). Then I started digging a little bit deeper. Pillsbury Grands biscuits were another major letdown. I almost skipped over a couple of jars of Wyler’s beef and chicken bouillon, but I’m glad I didn’t. Its label bears the convenient “0” next to trans fat, but it lists PHOs as an ingredient (along with a number of other questionable substances). Similarly, I was surprised to see that an Italian-style breadcrumbs label lists partially hydrogenated vegetable oil. Perhaps equally surprising were some products I expected to contain trans fats that did not. I had some

L awrence J ournal -W orld Little Debbie’s Cosmic Brownies lying around, and pleasingly found no PHOs on their label. The same applied to all the cheeses I had at home, and even the processed sandwich meats. I nearly flew off the hinges when I read the label on my Jif peanut butter and saw “fully hydrogenated oils” in the ingredients list. Fortunately, fully hydrogenated oils on a label actually means they’re saturated fats, Fortin said. They’re certainly not good for you, but they don’t have the same harmful effects that trans fats do. “If we’re looking at fat overall, consumers should be trying to switch as much as they can to the monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fat as a healthier alternative,” Fortin said, noting that it is important to monitor how much saturated fat you’re consuming. It’s also important to note that some trans fats do occur in nature — they’re found in small amounts in some meat and milk products, mainly beef and lamb. However, Fortin said, those naturally occurring ones aren’t nearly the concern that their artificial, man-made counterparts are. Stick to lean cuts and limit your red meat intake to mitigate that problem. Here are some tips from

what I’ve learned through this experience: l If it’s too simple, there might be something wrong with it. This applies to cake and brownie mixes, premade biscuit doughs and crusts, and so much more. When possible, it’s better to make what you can from scratch. (In the case of the Bisquick, there’s a “Heart Smart” variety that I think tastes the same, and it’s much healthier.) l In general, foods with “Heart Healthy” stamps on the label are better choices — foods containing PHOs are not eligible for the AHA’s stamp of approval. The association has a 52page list of approved foods, which was updated as recently as last Monday, on its website, heart.org. l Dining out can be tricky. Restaurants that aren’t national chains usually don’t have full nutrition information available online. Fortin suggested sticking to healthier foods in general, such as grilled options instead of fried, and you can also ask what kind of oil is used in an establishment’s fryers. She said KU’s campus has switched to all trans fat-free fryers, for example. — WellCommons reporter Mackenzie Clark can be reached at 832-7198 or mclark@ljworld.com.

Pain CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

physiological differences that fall along race lines and asked them to rate whether the statements were either definitely, probably or possibly untrue or possibly, probably or definitely true. Four of those statements actually are true — that black people have denser, stronger bones than whites, are less likely than whites to contract spinal cord diseases such as multiple sclerosis, and are more likely to develop heart disease and to have a stroke. Among the false beliefs offered: that white people have larger brains and more efficient respiratory systems than black people; and that

compared with whites, black people have stronger immune systems, have a far more acute sense of smell, and are significantly more fertile. Led by University of Virginia social psychologist Kelly M. Hoffman, the researchers found that the more false beliefs about racial differences a medical student subscribed to, the more likely he or she was to judge a white person’s pain to be more severe than that of a black person. Embracing more false beliefs also predicted that a subject would correctly prescribe the level of pain relief recommended in the case of the white patient, but would underestimate the standard pain relief needed for the black patient’s reported level of pain.

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maintaining an adequate energy source for cells. “Deficiencies of B12 can be caused by many common drugs prescribed for heartburn or diabetes, including metformin, the most popular diabetes drug in the world, and antacids like Prilosec and Nexium,” Emhof explained.

us. It damages cells over time and is thought to be what causes many diseases later in life. CoQ10 is an antioxidant that helps our cells manufacture energy properly. Deficiency, especially with age or for those on statin-type cholesterol medication, often leads to muscle weakness or pain. If you are deficient in CoQ10 and have a heart attack, you have a higher chance of damaging more heart muscle — essentially a larger heart attack.

have among the lowest incidence of degenerative brain disease and pain from arthritis. Many associate this with diets high in turmeric (also known as curcuma longa or curcumin). A spice derived from a plant, turmeric is believed to have multiple anti-cancer properties.

Creatine Long a favorite of bodybuilders and athletes looking for short bursts of energy, creatine does a lot more. It donates energy to Turmeric muscle. It will not make Coenzyme Q10 Studies have shown your muscles bigger, but Oxidation is what ages that people from India will give you more power.

Plan

health care decisions for you if you can no longer make them for CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C yourself. This person may or may not be a family member or Memorial Hospital. close friend but should None of us know be someone who you when or if something can have open and may happen as we honest conversations face our life’s end. It is with as to your wants recommended that all and who you can trust adults ages 18 and over to carry out your have an advance direc- wishes. tives plan in place and A Healthcare Treatreview it annually. ment Directive is also Advance directives is a legal document that a term to describe two allows you to state pieces to end-of-life your wishes regarding care planning. The first the kind of health care is a Durable Power of treatments you may Attorney for Healthor may not want when care Decisions. This you cannot make or legal document is valid communicate these dein any state as long as it cisions yourself. These is signed and witnessed may include such in accordance with choices as mechanical state law. respiratory ventilation, A DPOAHC allows feeding and fluids, as you to name a person, well as others. known as an agent or Advance directives proxy, who can make is often used to refer to

living wills and other informal directives that some people lay out through personal letters or conversations. If you don’t know how to start the advance directives planning process, there are many helpful resources to assist you. Talk with an attorney, a clergy person, a physician or use many of the other helpful free resources available. Take some time to learn more about end-of-life choices, and to reflect on what you think might be important and meaningful to you at that time. — Aynsley Anderson Sosinski, MA, RN, is community education coordinator at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, a major sponsor of WellCommons. She is a Mayo Clinic Certified Wellness Coach. She can be reached at aynsley.anderson@lmh.org.

This can be important for anyone in rehab or physical therapy. Use creatine an hour or so before a workout or therapy for added endurance and potentially quicker recovery. “As we age, we lose the ability to produce energy inside each of our cells. This loss of energy production is common to diseases like Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s, and supplementation with creatine can increase energy production significantly. This leads to improved muscle strength in the elderly and cognitive improvement in some studies using large doses.

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

Dear Annie: I spent two hours on the phone yesterday with a friend who can talk nonstop and rarely requires a response. I have another friend like this, and it’s exhausting. I’ve seen letters in your column from other readers complaining about this, and you often suggest that the talkers might have a hearing problem. I disagree. These people joke about their “loud mouths,” have never complained of any hearing difficulties and seem to hear when they want to. One friend mentioned that she no longer has much of a social life, but I didn’t bother to tell her why. “Sally” pretends to be interested in me and my kids and will ask questions, but if my answer is longer than 15 seconds, she interrupts. And I have to yell over her to finish a sentence.

Annie’s Mailbox

Another possibility, of course, is self-involvement or perhaps a fear that they won’t remember what they intend to say if they don’t say it immediately. It is your choice to end the friendship over annoying behavMarcy Sugar and such ior. But how much Kathy Mitchell kinder it would be to anniesmailbox@comcast.net gently point out to Sally why this bothers you, I wonder if either of and to remind her when them will see themselves she does it again. What in this letter and at least do you have to lose? attempt to change. I’ve heard of “listening classDear Annie: I’d like es” that can teach people to provide a different how to actively listen. perspective for “I’d For now, I’ve got plenty Like My Wife Back of other friends who Please,” who has been care enough to listen, so married for 25 years and I’ve given up on the oth- his wife suddenly hates ers. — Middle Aged and him. He mentioned that Finally Waking Up she had been exercising quite a bit and had toDear Waking Up: tally changed her diet. Hearing problems are I was married for 28 only one possibility for years. My husband was those who, over time, controlling, abusive with begin to talk nonstop. our children and wouldn’t

Grim NBC drama too far-fetched Buried secrets loom large in the new series “Game of Silence” (9 p.m., NBC, TV-14). At first glance, Jackson Brooks (David Lyons) has it made. He’s getting married to a gorgeous fellow lawyer, Marina (Claire van der Boom), and about to join her as a partner in their elite firm. But old friends with a secret past re-enter his life and drag him back to horrific memories. Flashbacks reveal Jackson’s childhood on the slightly wrong side of the tracks of a small Texas town. There he and his gang rode their bikes, shot off fireworks and went swimming in a quarry. A moment of irresponsibility would send them to a juvenile detention facility — and provide “Game” with its grim catalyst. Not only would they be subject to violence and abuse by other inmates, but singled out for brutalization by guards and the warden himself. A quartercentury later, some of Jackson’s pals have taken vengeance on their old tormentors. Jackson the lawyer and friend must save them from prison, and Jackson, the hotshot Grisham-esque investigator, must follow a conspiracy of corruption all the way to the governor’s mansion. That is, if he can escape his own actions that he has kept secret from nearly everyone over the past 25 years. Filled with gruesome flashbacks, “Game of Silence” suffers from a plot that seems wildly far-fetched and completely predictable at the same time. l Reality television replaced the sitcom for many viewers. And it did so years ago. Jessica Simpson, Ozzy Osbourne and any number of “Real Housewives” were not professional actors or comedians, but people laughed at them nonetheless. So why can’t comedians get into the act? “Living With Funny” (8 p.m., Oxygen, TV-14) asks viewers to watch five emerging comedians negotiate life on the stage, on the road and at home with their spouses, girlfriends, or in one case, multiple girlfriends. The new Showtime comedy “Dice” takes a similar approach, but calls itself a scripted series. Here’s hoping “Living” offers more “Funny” than “Dice.” Tonight’s other highlights

l Guest-stars on “iZombie”

(CW, TV-14) include Ken Marino (7 p.m.) and Rob Thomas (8 p.m.). The second episode is the season finale. l The four-hour documentary “Jackie Robinson” (8 p.m., PBS, TV-PG, check local listings) concludes. l The pitches continue on “America’s Greatest Makers” (8 p.m., TBS). l Feedback from a focus group on “The Grinder” (8:30 p.m., Fox, TV-14).

JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS

For Tuesday, April 12: This year you express a willingness to be more responsive to your inner circle. You frequently can be found following some passionate interest. Your focus on family and home will be appreciated, allowing for your relationships to bond more tightly. If you are single, you could meet someone from your close circle of friends. If you are attached, the two of you might make a major purchase, buy a home or remodel your present abode. 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) HHH Stay as grounded as possible. You could be going through some dramatic changes. Tonight: Know when to call it a night. Taurus (April 20-May 20) HHHH You seem to have the right words as well as know when to act. Stay upbeat. Tonight: Ask for more of what you want. Gemini (May 21-June 20) HHH You might be best off accepting others’ stance and not being as challenging. Tonight: Pay bills. Cancer (June 21-July 22) HHHH You could be in a position where you might want to rethink a personal matter. Tonight: Be as creative as possible. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH You might want to see a personal matter from another perspective. Close your door. Tonight:

keep a job. As the kids left the nest, I realized that I was going to be living with this man for the rest of my life. It scared me to death. I couldn’t stand it any longer. I turned the corner and knew the marriage was finished. I’m sure my husband thought it was a sudden change, but it had been building for years. I’ve come to realize, as women, that we do what we have to do. We raise our kids, we go to work or stay home, whatever. But the bottom line is, when we are done, we’re done. And it sounds like she is done. To this day, my ex doesn’t think he ever did anything wrong. — Happily Ever After

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

jacquelinebigar.com

Screen calls; choose a favorite escape. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH Zero in on your priorities, and don’t allow a demanding personality to push you so hard. Tonight: Catch up on a friend’s news. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH Spending time with an older individual could be important, especially for this person. Tonight: Up late. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHHH Detach when you hit a difficult situation that you might consider annoying. Tonight: Reach out to a loved one at a distance. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH Work with a key person in your life and clear out a problem before it becomes more. Tonight: Visit with a loved one. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH You might be in a position where you see a friend or coworker in a new light. Tonight: Jump on another person’s idea. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHH You could have a problem that takes you to a new level of understanding. Tonight: Relax. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH You might surprise others with everything that you have to do. Listen to what is being shared. Tonight: Make a friendly exit. — The astrological forecast should be read for entertainment only.

UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD Universal

Crossword

Edited by Fred Piscop April 12, 2016

ACROSS 1 St. Paul’s recess 5 Cliffside debris 10 Chowder morsel 14 It may be furrowed or knitted 15 Capricious ideas 16 Move, in Realtor lingo 17 Low-fat, casually 18 Camel’s stopping place 19 “Go back,” on a PC 20 Psyche section 21 Spiny-shelled crustacean 23 Roaring success 25 Do penance 26 Wallcovering workers 31 “Me, Myself and __” (Carrey movie) 32 “Got it” 33 St. Paul’s seating 36 Celestial Seasonings products 37 Big exam 39 Clothier Strauss 40 Hairy Himalayan beast 41 Johnson of “Laugh-In” 42 Minimal amounts

43 Sidestroker’s leg movement 46 Modify to fit 49 Ignited anew 50 Where gains are equally balanced by losses (and a clue to this puzzle’s theme) 54 Short-lived craze 57 Lyft alternative 58 Islam branch 59 Dunce cap shape 60 Littlest litter member 61 Unforeseen difficulties 62 Half-inning threesome 63 Cockpit guesses, for short 64 Symbolic ceremonies 65 Arduous journey DOWN 1 Fit to serve 2 Prudish sort 3 In a way 4 Lea female 5 Nike’s logo 6 Dance with a three-step turn 7 Capitalist’s gamble 8 Disney’s boy detective 9 Old U.S. gas brand 10 Pie perimeters 11 Slowly, in music

12 Priscilla’s John 13 Julianne of “Still Alice” 21 Roast beef order 22 Like Hubbard’s cupboard 24 Department store department 26 Be sorry for 27 Neck of the woods 28 Dressed to the __ 29 Govt. property overseer 30 Sniggler’s quarry 33 Bite-size cake 34 Escape action, briefly 35 “Ring around the collar” brand 37 TGIF part (Abbr.)

38 Common possessive 39 Trickster in Norse myth 41 Gets off the fence 42 Capri or Wight 43 Is wearing 44 Oriole color 45 Shirking one’s duties 46 Clear sky color 47 Air for the first time 48 Where the action is 51 Cold War initials 52 Bond type, briefly 53 Swarming pest 55 __ up (pay one’s share) 56 Blotter’s spot 59 Cabin bed

PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER

4/11

© 2016 Universal Uclick www.upuzzles.com

HAND SHAPES By Victor Fleming

4/12

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

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

UNDOW ©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.

DIGYD GIMSAT

PICANT

Yesterday’s

BECKER ON BRIDGE

Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app

Annoying friend may not recognize her problems

| 3C

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

(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: WHEAT BRINK CANCEL BRIGHT Answer: She knew what two times two equaled and didn’t have to — THINK TWICE


4C

|

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

NON sEQUItUr

COMICS

. wILEY

PLUGGErs

GArY BrOOKINs

fAMILY CIrCUs

PICKLEs hI AND LOIs

sCOtt ADAMs

ChrIs CAssAtt & GArY BrOOKINs

JErrY sCOtt & JIM BOrGMAN

PAtrICK MCDONNELL

ChrIs BrOwNE BABY BLUEs

DOONEsBUrY

ChArLEs M. sChULZ

DEAN YOUNG/JOhN MArshALL

MUtts

hAGAr thE hOrrIBLE

ChIP sANsOM/Art sANsOM

J.P. tOOMEY

ZIts

BLONDIE

BrIAN CrANE

stEPhAN PAstIs

shOE

shErMAN’s LAGOON

MArK PArIsI

JIM DAVIs

DILBErt

PEArLs BEfOrE swINE

Off thE MArK

MOrt, GrEG & BrIAN wALKEr

PEANUts GArfIELD

BIL KEANE

GrEG BrOwNE/ChANCE wALKEr

BOrN LOsEr BEEtLE BAILEY

L awrence J ournal -W orld

GArrY trUDEAU

GEt fUZZY

JErrY sCOtt/rICK KIrKMAN

DArBY CONLEY


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Got him KANSAS BASKETBALL

Latest No. 1 like Wiggins No. 1 in his class. Slender. Explosive dunker. Best suited to play on the wing. In those ways, Josh Jackson is similar to former Kansas University one-and-done sensation Andrew Wiggins. It’s not a bad place to start for comparison purposes. Since Kansas looked to be the leader for Jackson, I started asking sharp basketball eyes not allowed to comment for publication on high school recruits what they thought of him as a prospect. “Great athlete, but not quite as freakishly athletic as Wiggins,” one said. “Wiggins was a better shooter, but Josh is a nastier competitor,” another said. “Wiggins is longer, even more explosive, a more pure shooter, but Jackson has a better handle, is a better passer, and you see his competitive nature take over when he’s playing defense. He really wants to shut down his man,” another said. “He cares more about being a complete player than most kids his age.” Wiggins measured 6-foot-8 in shoes with a 7-foot wingspan at the Nike Hoop Summit in 2013. Jackson measured 6-73⁄4 in shoes with a 6-93⁄4 reach. Wiggins weighed 197 pounds, Jackson 203. Wiggins earned first-team All-Big 12 and second-team Associated Press All-American honors as a freshman, distinctions sometimes glossed over by those who can’t shake the memory of his four-point farewell dud vs. Stanford in which he made one of six field goals. In the four games leading up to that, Wiggins averaged 28 points, 7.8 rebounds and made more field-goal attempts than he missed. Jackson, joining returning starters Frank Mason III, Devonté Graham and Landen Lucas, will be surrounded by more experience than was Wiggins. Beating out Arizona and Michigan State was a huge recruiting victory for Kansas given that both schools had a head start. Jackson played for Arizona’s Sean Miller on U19 Team USA. He grew up a fan of Michigan State coach Tom Izzo and had developed a relationship with Magic Johnson. Kudos to Bill Self’s longest-tenured assistant coach, Kurtis Townsend, lead recruiter on Wiggins and two years later on Jackson.

Jackson commits to Kansas

By Gary Bedore gbedore@ljworld.com

Matt Marton/AP Photo

WEST FORWARD JOSH JACKSON, FROM PROLIFIC PREP IN NAPA, CALIF., DUNKS against the East team during the McDonald’s All-America boys basketball game on March 30 in Chicago. The West beat the East 114-107.

Josh Jackson, the country’s No. 1-ranked high school basketball player who vowed to keep his impending college commitment low-key, delivered on his pledge at 7:34 p.m. on Monday. That’s when the 6-foot-7, 203-pound senior shooting guard from Prolific Prep in Napa, Calif., posted a rendering of himself wearing a Kansas University basketball jersey No. 11 on his j_josh11 Twitter account. Streaks of sunlight streamed through the windows of Allen Fieldhouse and sliced through KU’s five national championship banners with the words “Rock Chalk Jayhawk” at the top of the drawing. The words on Jackson’s short tweet read: “Next year I will be attending Kansas University,” with a blue and crimson heart and hashtag RCJH concluding the message. It ended a long day for fans of KU, plus fellow finalists Arizona and Michigan State, who knew only since Saturday that Jackson planned to tweet his decision sometime Monday. Jackson’s girfriend, future Michigan guard Kysre Gondrezick, who had 72 points in a game this season at Benton Harbor High and was voted Michigan “Miss Basketball 2016,” mercifully gave the Please see JACKSON, page 3D

LHS hands Pioneers first league loss By Bobby Nightengale bnightengale@ljworld.com

It was a matchup between two teams unbeaten in Sunflower League play, and Lawrence High’s baseball players did their best to make a statement against Leavenworth on Monday. The Lions had three pitchers combine for a three-hitter, and each hitter reached base at least once in a 6-1 victory at LHS. In the past two weeks, the Lions have transformed from a winless team to one at the top of the league standings. The Lions are tied with Shawnee Mission East with 4-0 league records.

“We’re minimizing our mistakes,” LHS coach Brad Stoll said. “We’re minimizing our free passes and our errors, and I think we’re getting rewarded for that. A pretty relentless effort from these guys, and it’s paying off.” LHS junior pitcher Gavin Greenwood has epitomized Lawrence’s turnaround this season. The Lions, who opened the year with an 0-3 record, have won their past three games and four of their past five. In Greenwood’s season debut, he was hit around by John Young/Journal-World Photo St. James Academy, paying the price for leaving pitches LAWRENCE HIGH’S REESE CARMONA (2) SLAPS HANDS with Devin Lauts after crossing home during the Lions’ 6-1 win against Leavenworth on Monday at Please see LIONS, page 3D Lawrence High.

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Sports 2

2D | LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD | TUESDAY, APRIL 12, 2016

COMING WEDNESDAY

TWO-DAY

• Coverage of prep swimming, tennis, softball and soccer • The latest on Kansas University athletics

SPORTS CALENDAR

AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE

KANSAS UNIVERSITY WEDNESDAY

EAST

NORTH • Baseball vs. Omaha, 6 p.m.

NCAA puts moratorium on new bowl games EAST

NORTH

FREE STATE HIGH TODAY WEST

SOUTH

The Associated Press

The NCAA is prohibiting the creation of new bowl games for the next three years after three teams with 5-7 records were needed to fill the record number of bowls last season. The NCAA’s football oversight committee last week recommended a three-year moratorium on sanctioning

BRIEFLY COLLEGE BASKETBALL

Terps’ Stone, Trimble declare for draft

new postseason games, and it was approved by the Division I Council. The oversight committee started a task force to study the Bowl Subdivision postseason after there were not enough six-win, bowl-eligible teams last season to fill the 40 games. The committee, led by Big 12 Commissioner Bob Bowlsby, will deliver a full set of recommendations on reforming the

SOUTH

postseason in June, including determining what should qualify as a deserving team and how a 5-7 team should be placed in a bowl if necessary. “Historical data of ‘deserving teams’ criteria showed that adding more bowls would cause the NCAA to have to dip into the alternate 5-7 teams, as it did last season,” Division I Council chairman and Northwestern ath-

letic director Jim Phillips told the AP in a text message. “The new postseason structure, when it is complete, will allow for existing and new bowls to compete for AL CENTRAL ‘deserving teams’ as that criteria is developed.” Three cities — Austin, Texas; Charleston, S.C.; and Myrtle Beach, S.C. — were in the proAL WEST cess of trying to gain approval for new bowl games.

• Girls swimming at Free State Invitational, 3:30 p.m. • Boys tennis vs. LHS, 3 p.m. • Softball at Shawnee Mission Northwest, 5:30 p.m. • Girls soccer at Olathe North, 7 p.m. WEDNESDAY • Boys tennis at Washburn Rural dual, 3:30 p.m.

AL EAST

BALTIMORE ORIOLES

BOSTON RED SOX

NEW YORK YANKEES

CHICAGO WHITE SOX

CLEVELAND INDIANS

DETROIT TIGERS

LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM

OAKLAND ATHLETICS

SEATTLE MARINERS

TAMPA BAY RAYS

TORONTO BLUE JAYS

MINNESOTA TWINS

KANSAS CITY ROYALS

LAWRENCE HIGH WEST TODAY TEXAS RANGERS

• Girls swimming at Free State SOUTH AL EAST p.m. These logos are provided to you for useWEST in anInvitational, editorial news context 3:30 only. MLB AL LOGOS 032712: 2012 American Other uses, including as a linking device on a Web site, or in an League team logos; stand-alone; various advertising or promotional piece, may violate this entity’s trademark or sizes; staff; ETA 4 p.m. • your Boys tennis AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA other intellectual property rights, and 5 mayp.m. violate agreement with AP.at Free State, 3 p.m. • Softball at Shawnee Mission AL EAST South, 5:30 p.m. AL CENTRAL STANDINGS The Associated Press • Girls soccer vs. Shawnee Mission West, 7 p.m. EASTERN CONFERENCE

NBA roundup

BOSTON RED SOX

BALTIMORE ORIOLES

NEW YORK YANKEES

TAMPA BAY RAYS

TORONTO BLUE JAYS

How former

Cavaliers 109, Hawks 94 Atlantic Division Jayhawks fared W L Pct GB Cleveland — LeBron James AL CENTRAL College Park, Md. — Maryy-Toronto 54 26 .675 — ROYALS scored 34 points in three quarx-Boston 47 34 .580 7½ Tarik Black, L.A. Lakers AL WEST land freshman center Diamond New York 32 49 .395 22½ ters, Kyrie Irving added 35, and TODAY Min: 11. Pts: 3. Reb: 3. Ast: 1. Stone will enter the NBA Draft Brooklyn 21 60 .259 33½ Cleveland clinched the top • at Houston, 7:10 p.m. Philadelphia 10 70 .125 44 and sign with an agent, while Southeast Division seed in the Eastern Conference WEDNESDAY Nick Collison, Oklahoma City sophomore point guard Melo W L Pct GB playoffs with a victory over At• at Houston, 7:10 p.m. Min: 12. Pts: 2. Reb:AL0.WEST Ast: 1. x-Atlanta 48 33 .593 — Trimble will declare but not hire lanta on Monday night. x-Miami 47 33 .588 ½ an agent, the school announced x-Charlotte 47 34 .580 1 James scored 19 in the third Drew Gooden, Washington Washington 40 41 .494 8 Monday. LOGOS Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA quarter and AFC onlyTEAM sat for four081312: of SPORTS ON TV Did not play (coach’s decision) Orlando 35 46 .432 13 5 p.m. The 6-foot-3 Trimble averaged Central Division the first 36 minutes as the Cavs a team-high 14.8 points and 4.9 W L Pct GB TODAY Kirk Hinrich, Atlanta ensured they’ll have homez-Cleveland 57 24 .704 — assists last season for the Terrax-Indiana 43 37 .538 13½ Min: 5. Pts: 0. Reb: 1. Ast: 1. court advantage until the NBA Baseball Time Net Cable pins, who went 27-9 and reached x-Detroit 43 37 .538 13½ Finals. Chicago 41 40 .506 16 AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. Arizona v. Dodgers 3 p.m. MLB 155,242 the NCAA Tournament regional Sasha Kaun, Cleveland Milwaukee 33 48 .407 24 semifinals for the first time since ATLANTA (94) K.C. v. Houston 7 p.m. FSN 36, 236 WESTERN CONFERENCE Min: 2. Pts: 0. Reb: 0. Ast: 0. Bazemore 8-15 2-2 23, Millsap 3-14 3-5 9, Southwest Division 2003. Trimble averaged 15.5 San Fran. v. Colorado 7 p.m. MLB 155,242 Horford 10-17 0-1 20, Teague 9-13 2-4 21, Korver W L Pct GB points over the last two seasons. 1-5 0-0 3, Sefolosha 0-1 0-0 0, Humphries 1-3 Ben McLemore, Sacramento y-San Antonio 65 15 .813 — 1-2 3, Hardaway Jr. 4-8 0-0 8, Schroder 2-8 0-1 x-Memphis 42 38 .525 23 Players who declare for the Min: 36. Pts: 14. Reb: 7. Ast: 1. Pro Basketball Time Net Cable 4, Scott 0-0 0-0 0, Muscala 1-3 0-0 3, Hinrich 0-0 x-Dallas 42 39 .519 23½ draft but do not hire an agent 0-0 0. Totals 39-87 8-15 94. Houston 40 41 .494 25½ Okla. City v. San Ant. 7 p.m. TNT 45, 245 CLEVELAND (109) have until May 25 to withdraw New Orleans 30 51 .370 35½ Markieff Morris, Washington James 13-16 5-5 34, Love 2-8 4-4 10, Thompson Memphis v. Clippers 9:30p.m. TNT 45, 245 Northwest Division and retain their college eligibilDid not play (inactive) 2-6 5-7 9, Irving 14-28 3-3 35, Smith 1-5 0-0 2, W L Pct GB Dellavedova 4-8 1-1 10, Jefferson 1-4 0-0 2, Frye ity. y-Oklahoma City 55 26 .679 — 2-5 0-0 5, Jones 0-0 0-0 0, McRae 1-3 0-0 2, Kaun Soccer Time Net Cable x-Portland 43 38 .531 12 Kelly Oubre Jr., Washington Stone was Maryland’s second- 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 40-83 18-20 109. Utah 40 41 .494 15 26 19 30 19— 94 Min: 29. Pts: 14. Reb: 6. Ast: 0. Champions League 1:30p.m. FS1 150,227 leading scorer last season, aver- Atlanta Denver 33 48 .407 22 Cleveland 22 29 39 19—109 Minnesota 28 53 .346 27 aging 12.5 points while leading 3-Point Goals-Atlanta 8-30 (Bazemore 5-8, Pacific Division Thomas Robinson, Brooklyn Muscala 1-1, Teague 1-2, Korver 1-4, Sefolosha the Terps in blocked shots (56) College Baseball Time Net Cable W L Pct GB 0-1, Millsap 0-3, Hardaway Jr. 0-3, Schroder Did not play (sore right knee) z-Golden State 72 9 .889 — and earning the Big Ten’s new0-4, Horford 0-4), Cleveland 11-29 (Irving 4-8, ORU v. Okla. St. 6 p.m. FCSA 144 x-L.A. Clippers 52 28 .650 19½ comer of the year award. He set James 3-4, Love 2-5, Dellavedova 1-3, Frye 1-4, Sacramento 33 48 .407 39 S. Carolina v. N. Caro. 6 p.m. SEC 157 Andrew Wiggins, Minnesota 0-2, Smith 0-3). Fouled Out-None. a school freshman scoring record Jefferson Phoenix 22 59 .272 50 Rebounds-Atlanta 47 (Horford 11), Cleveland Dallas Baptist v. TCU 6:20p.m. FCSC 145 Min: 27. Pts: 12. Reb: 1. Ast: 3. L.A. Lakers 16 65 .198 56 Dec. 30 with a 39-point game 53 (Love 14). Assists-Atlanta 23 (Teague 9), x-clinched playoff spot Cleveland 17 (James 6). Total Fouls-Atlanta against Penn State. y-clinched division BOSTON RED SOX

BALTIMORE ORIOLES

CHICAGO WHITE SOX

CHICAGO WHITE SOX

CLEVELAND INDIANS

CLEVELAND INDIANS

LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM

OAKLAND ATHLETICS

MLB AL LOGOS 032712: 2012 American League team logos; stand-alone; various sizes; staff; ETA 4 p.m.

LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM

OAKLAND ATHLETICS

MLB AL LOGOS 032712: 2012 American League team logos; stand-alone; various sizes; staff; ETA 4 p.m.

18, Cleveland 14. Technicals-Millsap. A-20,562 (20,562).

WOMEN’S BASKETBALL

Huskers lure coach from South Dakota

Hornets 114, Celtics 100 Boston — Jeremy Lin scored 19 of his 25 points in Charlotte’s big second quarter, carrying the Hornets. Kemba Walker scored 18 points, and Al Jefferson and Marvin Williams each had 16 for the Hornets, who are in a tight race with Boston and Miami in the Eastern Conference playoff chase.

Omaha, Neb. — Nebraska announced the hiring of South Dakota’s Amy Williams as its new women’s basketball coach Monday, less than a week after Connie Yori’s unexpected resignation. Williams, who will be introduced at a news conference CHARLOTTE (114) today, played at Nebraska from Batum 3-6 0-0 6, Williams 6-13 0-1 16, 1994-98 and will go back to Lin- Jefferson 8-11 0-0 16, Walker 6-15 4-5 18, Lee 2-6 0-0 5, Lin 7-14 10-10 25, Hawes 3-5 1-2 9, Daniels coln following a successful four 4-6 0-0 11, Kaminsky 2-5 3-4 8, Hansbrough 0-0 years with the Coyotes. 0-0 0, Harrison 0-0 0-0 0, Gutierrez 0-0 0-0 0. “What an honor to return home Totals 41-81 18-22 114. BOSTON (100) as the head women’s basketCrowder 1-4 0-0 2, Johnson 1-5 3-4 5, Sullinger ball coach at the University of 2-5 0-0 4, Thomas 6-13 4-7 17, Bradley 7-12 0-0 17, Turner 6-16 2-2 15, Smart 1-8 8-9 10, Olynyk Nebraska,” said Williams, 41. “I am 5-12 3-3 14, Jerebko 1-4 1-1 3, Rozier 0-2 2-2 2, eager to continue to build on the T.Zeller 0-2 0-0 0, Hunter 4-6 1-1 11, Young 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 34-89 24-29 100. rich tradition of my alma mater.” Charlotte 24 39 31 20—114 Athletic director Shawn Boston 28 13 31 28—100 3-Point Goals-Charlotte 14-32 (Williams 4-8, Eichorst moved swiftly to fill Daniels 3-4, Hawes 2-2, Walker 2-5, Lee 1-2, the vacancy created when Yori Kaminsky 1-2, Lin 1-6, Batum 0-3), Boston stepped down last Tuesday fol8-24 (Bradley 3-5, Hunter 2-3, Turner 1-1, 1-3, Olynyk 1-5, Rozier 0-1, Crowder lowing an in-house investigation Thomas 0-1, Sullinger 0-1, Johnson 0-1, Jerebko 0-1, into allegations she mistreated Smart 0-2). Fouled Out-None. Reboundsand overworked her players. Yori, Charlotte 52 (Jefferson 11), Boston 52 (Olynyk Assists-Charlotte 23 (Walker 6), Boston 17 who led the Cornhuskers to nine 11). (Sullinger 5). Total Fouls-Charlotte 20, Boston 17. Technicals-Thomas. A-18,624 (18,624). NCAA Tournaments in her 14 seasons at Nebraska, has denied Wizards 120, Nets 111 any wrongdoing. New York — Ramon Sessions Williams was 96-44 in four had 21 points and 12 assists, and years at South Dakota. Washington recovered after blowing all of its 20-0 lead to BASEBALL beat Brooklyn.

Tigers fan snares 5 fouls in 8 innings

Detroit — For most people, catching a foul ball at a major league game would be the thrill of a lifetime. On Monday, Bill Dugan almost got bored by the whole thing. In a performance that captivated a Comerica Park crowd that wasn’t much enjoying the Detroit Tigers’ 7-4 loss to the Pittsburgh Pirates, Dugan caught five foul balls in the first eight innings. Dugan, who gave all five to nearby kids, was sitting behind home plate, in an area normally used for fans in wheelchairs. With a small crowd on a chilly afternoon, he took advantage of the extra space to catch three pop-ups — all on the fly — and snare two ricochets off the facing of the press box. The 39-year-old said he’s caught more than 200 balls in his years as a Tigers fan, both in batting practice and games, but five was his record for a game. “I got four once in 2002 in a game against Seattle,” he said. “I actually have six today, but I got one of them in batting practice.”

HIGH SCHOOLS HUB:

WASHINGTON (120) Porter 3-5 2-2 10, Dudley 4-6 0-0 8, Gortat 5-7 1-2 11, Sessions 7-10 7-7 21, Thornton 7-15 3-3 19, Anderson 2-8 0-0 4, Hickson 6-10 3-6 15, Temple 3-5 2-2 11, Oubre Jr. 6-10 1-2 14, Eddie 3-13 0-0 7. Totals 46-89 19-24 120. BROOKLYN (111) Bogdanovic 8-13 1-1 20, McCullough 5-9 1-5 12, Sims 2-9 4-4 8, Larkin 9-13 0-2 20, Ellington 2-11 0-0 5, Sloan 4-7 0-0 9, Brown 3-11 0-0 6, Kilpatrick 6-15 3-5 17, Hollis-Jefferson 5-10 4-4 14. Totals 44-98 13-21 111. Washington 34 36 30 20—120 Brooklyn 28 41 29 13—111 3-Point Goals-Washington 9-25 (Temple 3-3, Porter 2-3, Thornton 2-6, Oubre Jr. 1-3, Eddie 1-6, Dudley 0-1, Sessions 0-1, Anderson 0-2), Brooklyn 10-31 (Bogdanovic 3-6, Larkin 2-4, Kilpatrick 2-7, Sloan 1-2, McCullough 1-2, Ellington 1-7, Brown 0-3). Fouled OutNone. Rebounds-Washington 57 (Thornton 8), Brooklyn 53 (Sims 8). Assists-Washington 27 (Sessions 12), Brooklyn 24 (Larkin 7). Total Fouls-Washington 18, Brooklyn 16. TechnicalsSessions, Brown. A-14,653 (17,732).

Magic 107, Bucks 98 Orlando, Fla. — Ersan Ilyasova scored 22 points and Mario Hezonja added 19 to help Orlando defeat Milwaukee. The victory allowed the Magic to close out the regular season strong at home where they won five of their final six games, including two straight to finish the year 23-18 at the Amway Center. Orlando concludes its season at Charlotte on Wednesday.

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Jeff Withey, Utah Min: 4. Pts: 2. Reb: 2. Ast: 0.

MILWAUKEE (98) Parker 8-17 1-2 17, Antetokounmpo 5-7 0-2 11, Monroe 9-15 5-6 23, Vaughn 1-6 1-2 3, Middleton 6-11 5-5 17, Ennis 5-6 0-0 10, Vasquez 3-7 0-0 8, Plumlee 2-4 0-0 4, Henson 2-5 1-2 5. Totals 41-78 13-19 98. ORLANDO (107) Fournier 5-13 2-2 13, Ilyasova 10-13 0-0 22, Dedmon 6-11 5-6 17, Payton 3-8 5-10 11, Hezonja 7-11 2-2 19, Smith 4-11 2-2 10, Watson 3-4 0-0 6, Marble 3-8 2-6 9, Nicholson 0-5 0-0 0. Totals 41-84 18-28 107. Milwaukee 22 22 29 25— 98 Orlando 32 26 27 22—107 3-Point Goals-Milwaukee 3-15 (Vasquez 2-5, Antetokounmpo 1-2, Parker 0-2, Middleton 0-2, Vaughn 0-4), Orlando 7-23 (Hezonja 3-6, Ilyasova 2-2, Marble 1-3, Fournier 1-6, Smith 0-1, Payton 0-2, Nicholson 0-3). ReboundsMilwaukee 50 (Plumlee 13), Orlando 46 (Dedmon 8). Assists-Milwaukee 18 (Middleton 7), Orlando 28 (Payton 11). Total FoulsMilwaukee 20, Orlando 15. A-18,374 (18,500).

Rockets 129, T’wolves 105 Minneapolis — James Harden scored 34 points, and Dwight Howard had 19 points and eight rebounds to keep Houston’s playoff hopes alive with a victory over Minnesota. HOUSTON (129) Ariza 8-11 2-2 21, Motiejunas 3-7 0-0 7, Howard 8-11 3-4 19, Beverley 3-7 4-6 11, Harden 12-21 5-7 34, Terry 2-6 0-0 6, J.Smith 3-6 2-2 11, Brewer 1-2 0-1 2, Capela 5-8 0-1 10, Goudelock 1-2 0-0 2, Te.Jones 1-2 0-0 2, Beasley 1-1 2-3 4, McDaniels 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 48-86 18-26 129. MINNESOTA (105) Wiggins 3-7 6-6 12, Dieng 4-8 5-6 13, Towns 6-15 0-0 12, Rubio 2-6 0-2 4, LaVine 8-14 2-2 21, Bjelica 3-7 4-4 11, G.Smith 0-0 0-0 0, Ty.Jones 1-5 0-0 2, Prince 0-1 0-0 0, Muhammad 9-13 4-7 23, Payne 2-6 3-6 7, Rudez 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 38-83 24-33 105. Houston 38 30 35 26—129 Minnesota 21 26 27 31—105 3-Point Goals-Houston 15-30 (Harden 5-7, Ariza 3-4, J.Smith 3-6, Terry 2-5, Motiejunas 1-2, Beverley 1-3, Goudelock 0-1, Brewer 0-1, McDaniels 0-1), Minnesota 5-21 (LaVine 3-7, Bjelica 1-3, Muhammad 1-3, Ty.Jones 0-1, Rudez 0-1, Payne 0-1, Rubio 0-2, Towns 0-3). Fouled Out-J.Smith. Rebounds-Houston 52 (Capela 10), Minnesota 48 (Bjelica 14). Assists-Houston 28 (Harden 6), Minnesota 25 (Rubio, Ty.Jones 5). Total Fouls-Houston 23, Minnesota 20. A-14,983 (19,356).

NEW YORK YANKEES

DETROIT TIGERS

KANSAS CITY ROYALS

DETROIT TIGERS

KANSAS CITY ROYALS

SEATTLE MARINERS

TORONTO BLUE JAYS

MINNESOTA TWINS

MINNESOTA TWINS

TEXAS RANGERS

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TEXAS RANGERS

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z-clinched conference Today’s Games New York at Indiana, 6 p.m. Philadelphia at Toronto, 6:30 p.m. Miami at Detroit, 6:30 p.m. Oklahoma City at San Antonio, 7 p.m. Memphis at L.A. Clippers, 9:30 p.m.

D-League Basketball Time Net Playoff game Playoff game

Cable

6 p.m. EPSNU 35, 235 8:30p.m. ESPNU 35, 235

WEDNESDAY Baseball

Time Net

Cable

Bulls 121, Pelicans 116 Miami v. Mets noon MLB 155,242 New Orleans — Jimmy But- Baltimore v. Boston 6 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 ler scored 12 of his 23 points in K.C. v. Houston 7 p.m. FSN 36, 236 the last six minutes. CHICAGO (121) Dunleavy 5-7 1-1 12, Mirotic 6-15 6-8 20, Felicio 6-8 4-4 16, Ju.Holiday 6-8 0-0 14, Butler 8-11 6-7 23, McDermott 4-10 2-2 10, Portis 5-7 2-2 13, Brooks 2-6 0-0 6, Snell 2-5 2-2 7. Totals 44-77 23-26 121. NEW ORLEANS (116) Babbitt 2-10 3-3 7, Cunningham 5-9 0-0 10, Asik 6-8 2-4 14, Douglas 8-13 2-2 21, Ennis 9-14 6-7 29, Frazier 6-15 7-9 20, Hamilton 5-10 2-3 15, Perkins 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 41-80 22-28 116. Chicago 27 26 36 32—121 New Orleans 29 33 26 28—116 3-Point Goals-Chicago 10-23 (Brooks 2-3, Ju.Holiday 2-3, Mirotic 2-7, Butler 1-1, Dunleavy 1-2, Portis 1-2, Snell 1-3, Felicio 0-1, McDermott 0-1), New Orleans 12-26 (Ennis 5-8, Douglas 3-6, Hamilton 3-6, Frazier 1-3, Cunningham 0-1, Babbitt 0-2). Fouled Out-None. ReboundsChicago 42 (Portis 8), New Orleans 39 (Asik 7). Assists-Chicago 29 (Butler 11), New Orleans 28 (Frazier 11). Total Fouls-Chicago 20, New Orleans 23. Technicals-Chicago defensive three second, New Orleans defensive three second. A-16,867 (16,867).

Pro Basketball

Time Net

Cable

Orlando v. Charlotte 7 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Utah v. Lakers 9:30p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Golf

Time Net

Cable

LPGA Lotte Champ.

6 p.m. Golf

156,289

Soccer

Time Net

Cable

Champions League Champions League Cry. Palace v. Everton K.C. v. Colorado

1:30p.m. FS1 150,227 1:30p.m. FS2 153 1:55p.m. NBCSP 38, 238 7 p.m. KMCI 15, 215

Pro Hockey

Time Net

Playoff game Playoff game Playoff game

6:30p.m. NBCSP 38, 238 7 p.m. USA 46, 246 9 p.m. NBCSP 38, 238

Cable

Mavericks 101, Jazz 92 Time Net Cable Salt Lake City — Dirk Nowit- College Softball zki scored 22, and Dallas clinched Texas v. Oklahoma 6 p.m. FCSC 145 the No. 7 spot in the Western Conference playoffs, leaving one remaining postseason slot. LATEST LINE DALLAS (101) Matthews 7-14 2-2 20, Nowitzki 7-12 4-4 22, Pachulia 2-5 1-2 5, Barea 2-11 0-0 5, Williams 9-16 3-3 23, Felton 3-9 4-5 10, Lee 1-3 2-2 4, Harris 0-2 1-2 1, Mejri 3-5 1-2 7, Anderson 2-4 0-0 4. Totals 36-81 18-22 101. UTAH (92) Hayward 11-21 3-4 26, Lyles 2-4 4-4 9, Gobert 0-1 2-4 2, Mack 8-14 0-0 18, Hood 1-11 3-4 6, Favors 5-11 1-2 11, Booker 4-5 0-0 9, Ingles 3-6 0-0 9, Neto 0-2 0-0 0, Burks 0-0 0-0 0, Withey 1-2 0-0 2. Totals 35-77 13-18 92. Dallas 22 28 21 30—101 Utah 20 26 18 28— 92 3-Point Goals-Dallas 11-32 (Nowitzki 4-7, Matthews 4-10, Williams 2-6, Barea 1-6, Harris 0-1, Anderson 0-2), Utah 9-33 (Ingles 3-6, Mack 2-7, Booker 1-1, Lyles 1-3, Hood 1-7, Hayward 1-9). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Dallas 52 (Nowitzki 11), Utah 44 (Gobert, Hayward, Lyles 6). Assists-Dallas 19 (Williams 6), Utah 21 (Hayward 4). Total Fouls-Dallas 15, Utah 16. Technicals-Nowitzki, Ingles. A-19,911 (19,911).

Thunder 112, Lakers 79 Oklahoma City — Kevin Durant scored 34 points, and Russell Westbrook had a triple-double by halftime to help Oklahoma beat Los Angeles in the final road game of Kobe Kings 105, Suns 101 Bryant’s 20-year career. Phoenix — Seth Curry had 20 L.A. LAKERS (79) Bryant 4-12 2-2 13, Randle 4-11 0-0 9, Hibbert points and tripled his previous 1-3 0-0 2, Russell 3-10 5-6 11, Clarkson 2-14 6-6 career best with 15 assists, and de11, Huertas 1-7 2-2 4, Black 1-2 1-2 3, Nance Jr. pleted Sacramento beat Phoenix. 0-0 0-0 0, World Peace 3-10 4-4 12, Sacre 3-7 5-6

11, Kelly 1-5 1-2 3. Totals 23-81 26-30 79. OKLAHOMA CITY (112) Durant 11-18 6-6 34, Ibaka 1-12 0-0 2, Adams 6-9 1-5 13, Westbrook 5-13 3-5 13, Roberson 3-4 0-0 7, Singler 3-4 0-2 8, Waiters 2-7 4-5 9, Kanter 0-2 2-4 2, Foye 4-9 0-0 8, Morrow 4-10 0-0 10, Collison 1-1 0-0 2, Payne 2-4 0-0 4, Huestis 0-3 0-0 0. Totals 42-96 16-27 112. L.A. Lakers 21 27 13 18— 79 Oklahoma City 27 31 31 23—112 3-Point Goals-L.A. Lakers 7-31 (Bryant 3-9, World Peace 2-6, Randle 1-2, Clarkson 1-9, Huertas 0-2, Russell 0-3), Oklahoma City 12-37 (Durant 6-11, Singler 2-2, Morrow 2-6, Roberson 1-2, Waiters 1-3, Foye 0-1, Payne 0-1, Huestis 0-1, Westbrook 0-5, Ibaka 0-5). ReboundsL.A. Lakers 56 (Randle 13), Oklahoma City 71 (Adams 15). Assists-L.A. Lakers 15 (Huertas 5), Oklahoma City 27 (Westbrook 14). Total FoulsL.A. Lakers 20, Oklahoma City 20. TechnicalsHuertas, Randle, Westbrook. Flagrant FoulsHibbert. A-18,203 (18,203).

TAMPA BAY RAYS

SACRAMENTO (105) Gay 6-13 2-4 15, Cauley-Stein 4-9 3-4 11, Koufos 8-14 3-7 19, Curry 8-14 1-2 20, McLemore 6-15 1-3 14, Acy 2-2 5-6 9, Anderson 4-8 2-2 10, Butler 3-8 0-0 7. Totals 41-83 17-28 105. PHOENIX (101) Tucker 6-11 2-3 15, Leuer 5-11 2-2 12, Len 7-18 2-4 16, Price 3-10 0-0 6, Booker 8-20 6-6 22, Teletovic 10-20 2-2 26, Jenkins 1-6 0-0 2, Budinger 0-1 0-0 0, Williams 1-3 0-0 2. Totals 41-100 14-17 101. Sacramento 26 30 31 18—105 Phoenix 22 27 23 29—101 3-Point Goals-Sacramento 6-17 (Curry 3-6, Butler 1-2, Gay 1-2, McLemore 1-4, Anderson 0-3), Phoenix 5-22 (Teletovic 4-10, Tucker 1-2, Price 0-2, Jenkins 0-3, Booker 0-5). Fouled Out-Len. Rebounds-Sacramento 55 (Koufos 8), Phoenix 60 (Len 12). Assists-Sacramento 25 (Curry 15), Phoenix 21 (Price 7). Total FoulsSacramento 19, Phoenix 25. A-17,288 (18,055).

MLB Favorite.................... Odds................. Underdog National League LA DODGERS....................... 7-8...............................Arizona WASHINGTON......................9-10...............................Atlanta San Diego.........................Even-6...............PHILADELPHIA NY METS...........................51⁄2-61⁄2..............................Miami San Francisco.................Even-6......................COLORADO American League TORONTO..........................Even-6....................NY Yankees Cleveland.........................51⁄2-61⁄2.................. TAMPA BAY BOSTON............................71⁄2-81⁄2......................Baltimore HOUSTON....................6-7...............Kansas City OAKLAND..........................Even-6........................LA Angels SEATTLE...........................51⁄2-61⁄2..............................Texas Interleague DETROIT............................51⁄2-61⁄2.................... Pittsburgh NBA Favorite.............. Points (O/U)........... Underdog 1 INDIANA.........................9 ⁄2 (199.5).................... New York DETROIT.......................... 21⁄2 (202).............................Miami TORONTO.........................12 (204)..................Philadelphia SAN ANTONIO............... 71⁄2 (205)........... Oklahoma City LA CLIPPERS..................81⁄2 (199)........................Memphis NHL PLAYOFFS Favorite............... Goals (O/U)........... Underdog Wednesday, April 13th. First Round-Best of Seven Series Game One TAMPA BAY................. Even-1⁄2 (5).........................Detroit PITTSBURGH................ Even-1⁄2 (5)...............NY Rangers ST. LOUIS...................... Even-1⁄2 (5).......................Chicago Thursday, April 14th. Game One WASHINGTON...................1⁄2-1 (5)..................Philadelphia FLORIDA........................ Even-1⁄2 (5)............. NY Islanders DALLAS......................... Even-1⁄2 (5)..................Minnesota LOS ANGELES.............. Even-1⁄2 (5).................... San Jose Friday, April 15th. Game One ANAHEIM...................... Even-1⁄2 (5).................... Nashville Home Team in CAPS (c) TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC

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LOCAL

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Jackson CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1D

fans a break in the early afternoon hours, tweeting the fact Josh would announce promptly at 7:30 p.m. Central time on Twitter. Jackson, who averaged 26.9 points, 13.1 rebounds and 6.3 assists his senior season at Prolific Prep and was named co-MVP of the recent McDonald’s All-America Game, was back in Napa, Calif., Monday and did not speak about his college choice. He told USA Today recently that the No. 1 factor in the school he would select was “trust.” “No. 1, I just want to be around people I can trust and who are going to push me to become better on and off the court,” he said. “Two is style of play. Each team plays pretty fast. I think that is where I’m best, when we are playing fast or in the open court, transition. Three ... I kind of already said it in the first one, to be under a coach who is going to push me and not just kiss my butt because I am who I am or they want me so bad. Push me to get better.” His new college coach, Bill Self, cannot comment about Jackson until he receives his signed letterof-intent or scholarship papers. The late signing period begins Wednesday. “I love coach Self,” Jackson told ESPN.com at the McDonald’s game. “I love the way he coaches his players. Pushes them, makes them better. When I took my official visit there, I got this real good feeling that they were all about family. You could really trust people there.” Jackson’s mom, Apples Jones, who played for Allen County CC in Iola and UTEP before joining the Navy for a time, spoke briefly to Rivals.com on Monday. “For myself, my goal was to find out which schools had his best interest and all I wanted to do was report back to Josh on what I found,” she said. “When I say ‘best interest,’ I’m talking for the long haul and as a person and not just a basketball player. He’s invested a lot in his future success, and I’ve

JOSH JACKSON ATTACHED AN ILLUSTRATION of how he might look in a Kansas uniform with his Twitter announcement Monday night. invested a lot in his future, and we wanted him to go somewhere that he felt he could continue on that road. “(Kansas) had the plan and roadmap and they laid it out for me,” Jones added. “I could see the future they had planned for Josh from his freshman year to his senior year. I could also see that they cared about him more as a person than as a basketball player.” Jackson — he helped Detroit Consortium win a state title his sophomore season before moving on to Prolific Prep as well as JustinSiena High (where he does his coursework) — is considered a certain one-and-done player. In fact, he’s already being listed as No. 1 pick in the 2017 Draft by espn. com. Jackson assuredly will move right into the starting perimeter slot of Wayne Selden Jr., who is off to the NBA Draft after three seasons at KU. “Josh is an absolute once-in-a-generation beast,” Prolific Prep founder Jeremy Russotti told the Journal-World on Monday in a phone interview. He was head coach during Jackson’s junior year and also worked with Jackson the summer prior to arriving in California. “Very few are cut from the same cloth as that kid. He’s such a strong competitor, teammate. He just cares about winning and

competing every possession. Off the court, he’s the sweetest, most polite, caring person around kids, adults. “On the court, it doesn’t matter if we’re playing pool or pingpong or basketball. He’s just a competitive freak,” Russotti added. “That’s what separates him from most kids. That’s what will drive him to be an NBA all star and above.” His head coach his senior season was Billy McKnight, who also raves about the athletic wing. “Josh contributes in every facet of the game,” McKnight told the J-W. “Offensively, he’s got great feel, is a fantastic passer, a freak in transition, and will make the SportsCenter Top-10 several times this year.” Those will assuredly come via plays on the offensive end. He’s known for good defense as well. “I played him at the 1-4 positions this year. Defensively, I adjusted our scheme this year because of Josh. We literally didn’t help off other players when Josh was guarding 1-on-1. He guarded 1-5 for us,” McKnight said. “He’s so quick off the ground. His ability to block shots and rebound will make a huge impact. “All that said, his greatest attribute is how competitive he is. He plays to win, and that’s all there is to it. He holds

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his teammates to an extremely high standard. Look no further than the McDonald’s game this year. It’s no coincidence that his team was competing to win that game (Jackson’s West team won, 114-107). That wasn’t a typical exhibition game. In the two practices leading up to that game, he made it clear he wouldn’t tolerate guys not defending. He literally changed that game. He’s one of the most competitive kids I’ve ever seen,” McKnight added. Jackson, who had seven points in Team USA’s 10167 win over World Select in Saturday’s Nike Hoop Summit, now is 20-0 in games played for USA Basketball-sponsored teams. He has won Under 17 and Under 19 age-group crowns in major international competition. Jackson averaged 12.1 points, 7.0 rebounds and 2.0 steals per game last summer for the gold-medal Under 19 team in Greece. “Playing for the national team is way different to anything else,” Jackson said recently to news. nike.com, expressing pride at playing for his country. “I’m representing everybody in America and that’s a wonderful thing to think about… It’s wild.” Jackson realizes he has come a long way in a short time, thanks to his mom, who taught him to play unselfishly and value winning above individual accomplishments. “My mom was a pretty good player and was offered tryouts in the WNBA,” Jackson said, “and a lot of other people in my family played — my dad, my uncles and both aunts played.” A big influence was his freshman coach at Detroit Consortium, Al Anderson, who died after Josh’s freshman campaign. “There were a lot of people who helped the team in my freshman year and sophomore year,” Jackson said. “My coach my freshman year I looked up to — he was really influential.” Of winning state in 2014, Jackson said: “That year was the first time my school ever won a state championship. Being part of that team, just playing in Detroit… It’s a basketball city, everybody there really likes basketball and our games were packed

with fans from everywhere, from all over Detroit — even people not from Detroit came. I enjoy proving people wrong all the time, and we did that when we won the championship.” He won the title for Anderson. “It was a really tough time,” Jackson told Nike of the period after Anderson’s death. “We had a lot of people in our school who just looked up to the basketball team so much. They kind of depended on us a lot. Basketball was the main sport at our school so we had to win it for our school and for our coach. I still think about coach Al every day.” l

Jackson described his game to nbadraft.net: “I’m a very athletic wing who can dribble, play really hard, play hard defense. A great passer. I think what separates me from everybody is how hard I compete and my will to win.” Asked if there’s anybody he patterns himself after, he said: “Not anyone in particular but I do watch a lot of college and NBA games, a lot of players, and when I’m watching each and every one of them I just try to take little pieces of each of them and try to add it into my game.” Jackson has plans on developing his game this summer. “I want to improve on my shooting and probably my ball handling a little bit,” he said. l

This, that: Jackson joins two big men who will join KU’s program for next season: McDonald’s AllAmerican Udoka Azubuike, a 6-11, 260 senior from Potter’s House in Jacksonville, Fla.,who is ranked No. 27 nationally by Rivals.com, and Mitch Lightfoot, 6-8, 210 senior from Gilbert Christian in Arizona, who is rated No. 118. KU has eight returning scholarship players on the roster (Frank Mason III, Lagerald Vick, Devonté Graham, Svi Mykhailiuk, Carlton Bragg, Dwight Coleby, Landen Lucas, Cheick Diallo), meaning two scholarship spots on the team remain open, more if any of the group of Diallo, Bragg, Mykhailiuk elect to turn pro. Diallo has put his name in the draft but not yet signed with an agent.

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up in the strike zone. His coaches and teammates attribute those mistake pitches to nerves. But since that first outing, Greenwood has only improved. Against Leavenworth (7-2, 3-1 in Sunflower League), he tossed three shutout innings, giving up only one hit. He received some help from his defense, including a diving catch in right field by junior Joe Harms and two double plays started by sophomore second baseman Andrew Stewart. The Lions (4-4, 4-0) found their offensive groove with a three-run second inning. Senior Daonte Lowery hit a leadoff double and scored on a double from junior designated hitter Jacob Unruh. After Harms drew a one-out walk, Unruh and Harms scored on a single to center by sophomore catcher Reese Carmona. “I’ve had the same approach all year. Just finally executed,” said Unruh, who went 2-for-3 with two doubles. In the third inning, senior outfielder Luke Padia, who recovered from a broken leg during football season, hit a RBI single, scoring senior third baseman Parker Kirkpatrick. During the three-game win streak, the Lions have drilled 36 hits and scored 20 runs. “I feel like our hitting has been a lot better,” Carmona said. “Everything has changed. Our practices have been harder.” Before Greenwood stepped on the mound, 6-foot sophomore righthander Ethan Taylor allowed only one hit across the first three innings — an RBI single in the second inning by Leavenworth senior Tommy Barnhouse, a Wichita State signee. Taylor struck out three, using strong command to paint the corners of the plate. “ET goes out there and he commands the pitch every time,” Unruh said. “He’s very good. Gavin, he does the same thing. They did a great job tonight.” Leavenworth 010 020 0 — 1 3 2 Lawrence 131 100 x — 6 10 2 W — Ethan Taylor, 2-0. L — Griffin Hancock. 2B — Daonte Lowery, Jacob Unruh 2, LHS. LHS highlights — Taylor, 3 IP, 1 H, 1 R, 0 BB, 3 K; Gavin Greenwood, 3 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 1 K; Reese Carmona, 2-for-3, 2 runs, RBI; Andrew Stewart, 2-for-3; Unruh, 2-for-3, RBI; Devin Lauts, 1-for-3, RBI, 1 IP.

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MAJOR-LEAGUE ROUNDUP

Orioles spoil Boston’s home opener The Associated Press

American League Orioles 9, Red Sox 7 Boston — Chris Davis hit a tiebreaking, threerun homer off new Boston closer Craig Kimbrel in the ninth inning and drove in five runs, carrying Baltimore past Boston on Monday in David Ortiz’s final home opener. Kimbrel (0-1), the AllStar reliever acquired in an offseason trade from San Diego, entered with the score 6-6. He walked Caleb Joseph with one out and Manny Machado with two outs, then gave up Davis’ home run to center on a 97 mph pitch. Mookie Betts homered off Zach Britton leading off the bottom half, and Boston had two on and no outs when Ortiz grounded into a double Elise Amendola/AP PHoto play. Britton then struck BALTIMORE’S RYAN FLAHERTY (3), ADAM JONES (10) AND JOEY RICKARD CELEBRATE their out Hanley Ramirez for 9-7 victory over the Red Sox on Monday in Boston. his third save. Baltimore Boston ab r h bi ab r h bi Rickrd cf-rf 4 1 1 0 Betts rf 5 2 3 2 Machd 3b 3 2 2 0 Pedroia 2b 5 1 2 0 C.Davis 1b 5 2 2 5 Bogarts ss 4 1 1 1 Trumo lf 5 1 1 3 Ortiz dh 5 0 2 1 A.Jones cf 0 0 0 0 HRmrz 1b 3 0 0 1 Wieters dh 4 0 0 0 T.Shaw 3b 2 0 0 0 JHardy ss 4 1 1 0 Young ph-lf 2 0 0 0 Schoop 2b 3 0 1 1 B.Holt lf-3b 2 2 0 0 Reimld rf 3 0 0 0 Swihart c 4 1 2 0 Flahrty ph-lf 1 0 0 0 BrdlyJr cf 4 0 1 2 Joseph c 3 2 1 0 Totals 35 9 9 9 Totals 36 7 11 7 Baltimore 005 001 003—9 201 001—7 Boston 300 E-Trumbo (1), Joseph (1). DP-Baltimore 2, Boston 1. LOB-Baltimore 4, Boston 7. 2B-Rickard (2), J.Hardy (2), Schoop (4), Ortiz (3), Bradley Jr. (1). HR-C.Davis (3), Trumbo (1), Betts (2). SB-T.Shaw (1), Bradley Jr. (1). SF-H.Ramirez. IP H R ER BB SO Baltimore Gallardo 5 7 5 5 1 3 McFarland BS,1-1 2⁄3 1 1 1 1 0 Givens 11⁄3 1 0 0 1 4 Brach W,2-0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Britton S,3-3 1 2 1 1 1 1 Boston Price 5 5 5 5 2 8 M.Barnes 1 2 1 1 0 1 Tazawa 1 1 0 0 0 2 Uehara 1 0 0 0 0 2 Kimbrel L,0-1 1 1 3 3 2 2 HBP-by Price (Machado). WP-Britton, Price 2, Tazawa. T-3:26. A-37,160 (37,497).

White Sox 4, Twins 1 Minneapolis — Austin Jackson hit a tworun, two-out single in the fourth inning, one pitch after just missing a grand slam, and Minnesota dropped to 0-7 with a loss in its home opener. It is the worst start for the franchise since the original Washington Senators lost their first 13 games in 1904, according to STATS. Jose Quintana (1-0) completed six smooth innings with one run allowed for the White Sox, who have won five of their first seven. Twins starter Kyle Gibson (0-2) was charged with one earned run over 52⁄3 innings. Chicago Minnesota ab r h bi ab r h bi Eaton rf 4 0 1 0 Dozier 2b 4 0 1 0 Rollins ss 4 0 1 0 Mauer 1b 4 0 1 0 Abreu 1b 3 1 0 0 Sano rf 3 1 0 0 Frazier 3b 5 1 2 1 Plouffe 3b 3 0 1 0 MeCarr lf 5 0 2 0 Park dh 3 0 0 0 Lawrie 2b 4 1 2 1 Nunez ph 1 0 0 0 AvGarc dh 4 1 0 0 Rosario lf 3 0 0 1 Navarr c 4 0 0 0 EEscor ss 4 0 2 0 AJcksn cf 4 0 1 2 KSuzuk c 3 0 0 0 Buxton cf 3 0 1 0 Totals 37 4 9 4 Totals 31 1 6 1 Chicago 010 200 001—4 100 000—1 Minnesota 000 E-E.Escobar (3). DP-Chicago 2. LOB-Chicago 12, Minnesota 6. 2B-Frazier (1), Plouffe (1). IP H R ER BB SO Chicago Quintana W,1-0 6 4 1 1 3 5 Albers H,3 1 2 0 0 0 0 1⁄3 Duke H,3 0 0 0 0 0 2 N.Jones H,3 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 Robertson S,3-3 1 0 0 0 0 1 Minnesota Gibson L,0-2 52⁄3 6 3 1 3 3 Pressly 21⁄3 2 0 0 1 2 May 1 1 1 1 1 2 HBP-by Gibson (Lawrie). WP-Quintana, Gibson. T-3:05. A-40,638 (38,871).

STANDINGS American League

East Division W L Pct GB Baltimore 6 0 1.000 — New York 3 2 .600 2½ Boston 3 3 .500 3 Toronto 3 4 .429 3½ Tampa Bay 2 4 .333 4 Central Division W L Pct GB Chicago 5 2 .714 — Kansas City 4 2 .667 ½ Detroit 3 2 .600 1 Cleveland 2 2 .500 1½ Minnesota 0 7 .000 5 West Division W L Pct GB Oakland 4 3 .571 — Houston 3 4 .429 1 Texas 3 4 .429 1 Los Angeles 2 4 .333 1½ Seattle 2 4 .333 1½ Monday’s Games Pittsburgh 7, Detroit 4 Baltimore 9, Boston 7 Chicago White Sox 4, Minnesota 1 Houston 8, Kansas City 2 L.A. Angels at Oakland, (n) Texas at Seattle, (n) Today’s Games Pittsburgh (Nicasio 1-0) at Detroit (An.Sanchez 1-0), 12:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Tanaka 0-0) at Toronto (Aa.Sanchez 0-0), 6:07 p.m. Baltimore (M.Wright 0-0) at Boston (Buchholz 0-0), 6:10 p.m. Cleveland (Kluber 0-1) at Tampa Bay (Moore 0-0), 6:10 p.m. Kansas City (Medlen 0-0) at Houston (Fiers 0-0), 7:10 p.m. L.A. Angels (Santiago 0-0) at Oakland (Graveman 0-1), 9:05 p.m. Texas (Holland 0-0) at Seattle (Miley 0-0), 9:10 p.m. Wednesday’s Games L.A. Angels at Oakland, 2:35 p.m. Texas at Seattle, 2:40 p.m. Detroit at Pittsburgh, 6:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Toronto, 6:07 p.m. Baltimore at Boston, 6:10 p.m. Cleveland at Tampa Bay, 6:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Minnesota, 7:10 p.m. Kansas City at Houston, 7:10 p.m.

National League Cubs 5, Reds 3 Chicago — Reds left-hander Brandon Finnegan pitched 62⁄3 hitless innings before allowing a single to David Ross, but Addison Russell hit a three-run home run while Chicago roughed up Cincinnati’s bullpen in the Cubs’ home opener. Ross’ single started a two-run rally, with Jason Heyward cutting the Cubs’ deficit to 3-2 with a bases-loaded single off Tony Cingrani. In the eighth, Cingrani (0-1) walked Ben Zobrist with one out and hit Jorge Soler. Russell then drove Jumbo Diaz’s first pitch out to left-center, whipping the packed

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National League

East Division W L Pct GB Washington 4 1 .800 — Miami 2 3 .400 2 New York 2 4 .333 2½ Philadelphia 2 5 .286 3 Atlanta 0 6 .000 4½ Central Division W L Pct GB Chicago 6 1 .857 — Cincinnati 5 2 .714 1 Pittsburgh 5 2 .714 1 St. Louis 4 3 .571 2 Milwaukee 3 4 .429 3 West Division W L Pct GB San Francisco 5 2 .714 — Los Angeles 4 3 .571 1 Colorado 3 3 .500 1½ San Diego 3 4 .429 2 Arizona 2 5 .286 3 Monday’s Games Pittsburgh 7, Detroit 4 San Diego 4, Philadelphia 3 St. Louis 10, Milwaukee 1 Washington 6, Atlanta 4 Miami 10, N.Y. Mets 3 Chicago Cubs 5, Cincinnati 3 Tuesday’s Games Pittsburgh (Nicasio 1-0) at Detroit (An.Sanchez 1-0), 12:10 p.m. Arizona (Corbin 0-1) at L.A. Dodgers (Maeda 1-0), 3:10 p.m. Atlanta (Chacin 0-0) at Washington (G.Gonzalez 0-0), 6:05 p.m. San Diego (Erlin 1-0) at Philadelphia (Morton 0-1), 6:05 p.m. Miami (Fernandez 0-1) at N.Y. Mets (Syndergaard 1-0), 6:10 p.m. San Francisco (Samardzija 0-0) at Colorado (Chatwood 1-0), 7:40 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Miami at N.Y. Mets, 12:10 p.m. Atlanta at Washington, 6:05 p.m. Detroit at Pittsburgh, 6:05 p.m. San Diego at Philadelphia, 6:05 p.m. Cincinnati at Chicago Cubs, 7:05 p.m. Milwaukee at St. Louis, 7:15 p.m. San Francisco at Colorado, 7:40 p.m. Arizona at L.A. Dodgers, 9:10 p.m.

crowd into a frenzy and sending the Cubs to their sixth victory in seven games, matching their best start since 1998. Jon Lester pitched six innings, allowing three runs and five hits. Adam Warren (1-0) worked a scoreless eighth for his first win as a Cub, and Hector Rondon struck out the side in the ninth for his second save in two chances. Cincinnati Cozart ss DJssJr ss Suarez 3b Votto 1b Phillips 2b Mesorc c Bruce rf Duvall lf Finngn p Cotham p Cingrn p Ju.Diaz p Scheler ph BHmltn cf Totals

Chicago ab ab r h bi 2 1 1 0 Fowler cf 3 2 0 0 0 Heywrd rf 4 4 0 0 0 Bryant 3b-lf 4 4 0 2 0 Rizzo 1b 3 4 1 1 1 Zobrist 2b 3 3 0 0 0 Soler lf 3 4 0 0 0 Rondon p 0 3 0 1 0 ARussll ss 3 3 0 1 1 D.Ross c 3 0 0 0 0 Lester p 0 0 0 0 0 Cahill p 0 0 0 0 0 Szczur ph 0 1 0 0 0 Warren p 0 3 1 1 1 Kawsk ph-3b 1 33 3 7 3 Totals 27

r 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 5

h bi 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 5

Cincinnati 101 100 000—3 000 23x—5 Chicago 000 E-Suarez (3). DP-Chicago 1. LOB-Cincinnati 5, Chicago 7. 2B-Duvall (3). HR-B.Hamilton (1), A.Russell (1). SB-Phillips (2). S-Lester. IP H R ER BB SO Cincinnati Finnegan 62⁄3 1 2 2 5 5 Cotham 0 0 0 0 1 0 Cingrani L,0-1 H,2 2⁄3 1 2 2 1 0 2⁄3 Ju.Diaz BS,1-1 1 1 1 0 0 Chicago Lester 6 5 3 3 2 5 Cahill 1 1 0 0 0 1 Warren W,1-0 1 1 0 0 0 0 Rondon S,2-2 1 0 0 0 0 3 Cotham pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. HBP-by Cingrani (Soler). WP-Finnegan, Cingrani. PB-Mesoraco. T-3:03. A-40,882 (41,268).

Padres 4, Phillies 3 Philadelphia — Alexi Amarista’s safety squeeze in the seventh scored the go-ahead run in Philadelphia’s home opener. Wil Myers hit a solo homer for the Padres, who benefited from a strange double play and two video reviews going their way. Kevin Quackenbush (1-0) struck out the only batter he faced, and Fernando Rodney pitched the ninth for his first save for the Padres. Aaron Nola (0-2) allowed four runs and six hits, striking out a careerbest nine in seven innings. San Diego Philadelphia ab r h bi ab r h bi Jay cf 4 0 1 1 Galvis ss 4 0 0 0 Spngnr 2b 3 0 0 1 CHrndz 2b 3 2 1 0 Kemp rf 4 0 0 0 OHerrr cf 4 0 2 1 Maurer p 0 0 0 0 Franco 3b 4 0 3 0 Rodney p 0 0 0 0 Howard 1b 2 0 0 0 Myers lf-1b 4 1 1 1 Ruf ph-1b 1 0 0 1 Wallac 1b 3 0 0 0 Rupp c 4 1 1 0 CVllnv p 0 0 0 0 CHuntr lf 3 0 0 0 Jnkwsk rf 0 0 0 0 Bourjos rf 3 0 1 1 DeNrrs c 4 1 1 0 Nola p 2 0 0 0 ARmrz ss 4 1 2 0 Burriss ph 1 0 0 0 Amarst 3b 2 1 1 1 JRussll p 0 0 0 0 Cashnr p 2 0 0 0 Hinojos p 0 0 0 0 Hand p 0 0 0 0 Qcknsh p 0 0 0 0 UptnJr ph-lf 1 0 0 0 Totals 31 4 6 4 Totals 31 3 8 3 San Diego 002 100 100—4 Philadelphia 000 111 000—3 DP-San Diego 3, Philadelphia 1. LOB-San Diego 3, Philadelphia 3. 2B-Jay (2), De.Norris (2), Rupp (2), Bourjos (3). 3B-C.Hernandez (1). HR-Myers (2). S-Amarista. SF-Ruf. IP H R ER BB SO San Diego Cashner 5 7 3 3 1 5 2⁄3 Hand BS,1-1 0 0 0 0 0 Quackenbush W,1-0 1⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 Ca.Villanueva H,1 1 0 0 0 0 2 Maurer H,1 1 0 0 0 0 1 Rodney S,1-1 1 1 0 0 0 0 Philadelphia Nola L,0-1 7 6 4 4 0 9 1⁄3 J.Russell 0 0 0 1 0 Hinojosa 12⁄3 0 0 0 1 0 Cashner pitched to 3 batters in the 6th. T-2:51. A-45,229 (43,651).

Cardinals 10, Brewers 1 St. Louis — Michael Wacha (1-0) allowed four hits in six scoreless innings, and St. Louis had

10 extra-base hits in its home opener. Jeremy Hazelbaker was 4-for-4 with a triple, double and sacrifice fly, lifting his average to .526, and fellow rookie Almedys Diaz had two doubles. Yadier Molina had three hits, two RBIs and an uncontested steal off Taylor Jungmann (0-1). Milwaukee St. Louis ab r h bi ab r h bi DoSntn rf 3 0 0 0 Carpntr 3b 4 1 2 2 Gennett 2b 4 0 2 0 Fryer c 1 1 1 0 Braun lf 3 0 2 0 Hazelkr lf 4 1 4 1 Niwnhs lf 0 0 0 0 Hollidy 1b 4 1 1 1 Lucroy c-1b 4 0 1 0 Adams 1b 1 0 1 1 Carter 1b 3 1 1 1 Pisctty rf 5 1 2 0 Maldnd c 1 0 0 0 Grichk cf 3 2 2 1 A.Hill 3b 3 0 0 0 Molina c 4 1 3 2 SFrmn p 0 0 0 0 Bowmn p 0 0 0 0 Torres p 0 0 0 0 Moss ph 1 0 0 0 Rivera ph 1 0 0 0 Lyons p 0 0 0 0 Villar ss 3 0 0 0 Wong 2b 4 0 0 1 Jngmn p 1 0 0 0 A.Diaz ss 5 2 3 1 Cravy p 0 0 0 0 Wacha p 3 0 0 0 RFlors ph 1 0 0 0 GGarci 3b 1 0 0 0 Capuan p 0 0 0 0 Walsh ph-3b 1 0 0 0 KBrxtn cf 4 0 0 0 Totals 32 1 6 1 Totals 40 10 19 10 Milwaukee 000 000 100— 1 St. Louis 324 000 10x—10 E-Carter (1). DP-Milwaukee 1, St. Louis 1. LOBMilwaukee 8, St. Louis 10. 2B-Hazelbaker (2), Holliday (3), Piscotty 2 (2), Grichuk (1), Molina (2), A.Diaz 2 (3). 3B-Carpenter (1), Hazelbaker (1). HR-Carter (3). SB-Molina (1). SF-Hazelbaker, Wong. IP H R ER BB SO Milwaukee Jungmann L,0-1 2 8 8 8 1 2 Cravy 2 4 1 1 0 1 Capuano 2 3 0 0 1 3 S.Freeman 1 3 1 1 0 1 Torres 1 1 0 0 0 0 St. Louis Wacha W,1-0 6 4 0 0 1 7 Bowman 2 2 1 1 1 1 Lyons 1 0 0 0 1 2 Jungmann pitched to 3 batters in the 3rd. HBP-by Bowman (Villar). Balk-Torres. T-3:00. A-47,608 (45,538).

Marlins 10, Mets 3 New York — Giancarlo Stanton homered to cap a seven-run second inning against Steven Matz, and Miami handed the touted rookie his first regularseason loss. Marcell Ozuna homered and doubled to break out of an early slump, and Adeiny Hechavarria had three RBIs from the No. 8 spot in the lineup. By the sixth inning, every Marlins starting position player had a hit and scored a run. Miami New York ab r h bi ab r h bi DGordn 2b 6 1 2 1 Grndrs rf 4 0 0 0 Ozuna cf 6 1 2 1 DWrght 3b 4 1 2 0 Yelich lf 5 1 2 2 Cespds cf 4 1 2 1 Stanton rf 4 2 1 2 Duda 1b 3 1 1 0 Breslw p 0 0 0 0 Reed p 0 0 0 0 Morris p 0 0 0 0 De Aza ph 1 0 0 0 Prado 3b 3 1 2 0 Famili p 0 0 0 0 CJhnsn 1b 3 2 2 0 Blevins p 0 0 0 0 Realmt c 5 1 3 1 NWalkr 2b 4 0 1 0 Hchvrr ss 4 1 1 3 Confort lf 2 0 1 0 Cosart p 2 0 0 0 Lagars ph-lf 1 0 0 0 Narvsn p 1 0 0 0 ACarer ss 2 0 0 1 McGwn p 0 0 0 0 Bastrd p 0 0 0 0 ISuzuki rf 1 0 0 0 Campll 1b 2 0 0 0 dArnad c 3 0 0 0 Matz p 0 0 0 0 Robles p 1 0 0 0 WFlors ss 3 0 0 0 Totals 40 10 15 10 Totals 34 3 7 2 Miami 071 002 000—10 New York 000 300 000— 3 E-D.Gordon (1). DP-Miami 1. LOB-Miami 10, New York 8. 2B-Ozuna (1), C.Johnson (1), D.Wright (3). HR-Ozuna (1), Stanton (2). SB-D.Gordon (1). S-Cosart. SF-Hechavarria. IP H R ER BB SO Miami Cosart 42⁄3 4 3 3 3 3 Narveson W,1-0 11⁄3 1 0 0 0 2 McGowan 1 1 0 0 1 2 Breslow 1 1 0 0 0 1 Morris 1 0 0 0 0 0 New York Matz L,0-1 12⁄3 6 7 7 2 1 Robles 21⁄3 4 1 1 1 3 Bastardo 11⁄3 4 2 2 1 2 Reed 12⁄3 0 0 0 0 4 Familia 1 0 0 0 1 0 Blevins 1 1 0 0 0 1 WP-Cosart 2. T-3:45. A-24,318 (41,922).

Nationals 6, Braves 4 Washington — Falling to 0-6 for the first time in nearly 30 years, Atlanta lost to Washington, which used Wilson Ramos’ four singles and two RBIs to help cover up a shaky start by Max Scherzer. Scherzer (1-0), pitching on a full week’s rest, won despite allowing two-run doubles to A.J. Pierzynski and Nick Markakis in the first two innings. The righty wound up going six innings and didn’t let Atlanta score again in front of a sparse crowd announced as 18,119. Ramos drove in the goahead run off Bud Norris (0-2) in the fifth, breaking a 4-all tie, and added insurance with an RBI single off Alexi Ogando in the seventh. Atlanta Washington ab r h bi ab r h bi MSmith cf 3 1 1 0 Taylor cf 5 1 2 0 Stubbs cf 1 0 1 0 Rendon 3b 5 0 1 0 Markks rf 4 0 2 2 Harper rf 3 1 0 0 FFrmn 1b 2 1 0 0 Zmrmn 1b 3 3 2 1 AdGarc 3b 4 1 2 0 DMrph 2b 4 1 2 2 Przyns c 4 0 1 2 Werth lf 2 0 0 0 Olivera lf 4 0 0 0 WRams c 4 0 4 2 Aybar ss 4 0 0 0 Espinos ss 3 0 0 1 Petersn 2b 4 1 1 0 Scherzr p 2 0 0 0 BNorrs p 0 0 0 0 Drew ph 1 0 0 0 Grilli p 0 0 0 0 Belisle p 0 0 0 0 KJhnsn ph 1 0 0 0 Rivero p 0 0 0 0 OFlhrt p 0 0 0 0 Treinen p 0 0 0 0 Ogando p 0 0 0 0 dnDkkr ph 1 0 0 0 GBckh ph 1 0 0 0 Papeln p 0 0 0 0 Totals 32 4 8 4 Totals 33 6 11 6 Atlanta 220 000 000—4 010 10x—6 Washington 301 E-Ad.Garcia (2). DP-Washington 1. LOB-Atlanta 5, Washington 10. 2B-Markakis 2 (6), Pierzynski (1), Zimmerman (2). HR-D.Murphy (2). SB-Taylor 2 (2), Harper 2 (3). CS-M.Smith (1). S-B.Norris. SF-Zimmerman, Espinosa. IP H R ER BB SO Atlanta B.Norris L,0-2 5 9 5 5 2 4 Grilli 1 0 0 0 0 1 2⁄3 O’Flaherty 0 1 1 1 1 Ogando 11⁄3 2 0 0 2 1 Washington Scherzer W,1-0 6 6 4 4 3 6 1⁄3 Belisle H,1 1 0 0 0 0 Rivero H,2 1 0 0 0 0 0 2⁄3 Treinen H,2 1 0 0 0 0 Papelbon S,4-4 1 0 0 0 0 0 T-3:05. A-18,119 (41,313).

Interleague Pirates 7, Tigers 4 Detroit — Gregory Polanco had two of Pittsburgh’s six doubles, and the Pirates chased Justin Verlander during the fifth inning. Verlander (0-1) allowed seven runs and 10 hits — five of them doubles — in 41⁄3 innings. Pittsburgh Detroit ab r h bi ab r h bi Jaso 1b 4 1 2 1 Kinsler 2b 4 0 0 0 Freese 3b 0 0 0 0 Upton lf 3 1 1 0 McCtch cf 5 0 1 0 MiCarr 1b 3 0 0 0 Joyce dh 4 1 2 1 VMrtnz dh 4 0 1 1 Morse ph-dh 1 0 0 0 JMrtnz rf 4 1 2 1 SMarte lf 5 1 2 0 Cstllns 3b 4 1 1 1 Cervelli c 4 1 3 1 JMcCn c 2 0 0 0 Polanc rf 5 1 3 1 Sltlmch c 2 0 0 0 JHrrsn 2b 3 2 2 0 TyCllns cf 3 0 0 0 SRdrgz 3b-1b 2 0 1 1 JIglesis ss 3 1 1 0 Mercer ss 3 0 1 2 Totals 36 7 17 7 Totals 32 4 6 3 Pittsburgh 121 120 000—7 012 000—4 Detroit 010 E-Mercer (2). DP-Pittsburgh 3, Detroit 4. LOBPittsburgh 8, Detroit 3. 2B-Jaso (3), Joyce (1), S.Marte (1), Polanco 2 (3), J.Harrison (1). HR-J. Martinez (1), Castellanos (1). CS-Joyce (1), Polanco (2). S-Mercer. SF-Jaso, Cervelli. IP H R ER BB SO Pittsburgh Niese W,1-0 6 5 4 3 1 5 N.Feliz H,3 1 0 0 0 0 1 Watson H,3 1 0 0 0 1 1 Melancon S,3-3 1 1 0 0 0 1 Detroit Verlander L,0-1 41⁄3 10 7 7 2 2 2⁄3 VerHagen 2 0 0 1 0 Kensing 2 3 0 0 0 0 Lowe 1 0 0 0 0 1 Ryan 1 2 0 0 0 0 WP-Niese. T-3:17. A-26,271 (41,297).

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

| 5D

BRIEFLY Firebirds down SM South, 3-0

Pat Sullivan/AP Photo

KANSAS CITY’S LORENZO CAIN SWINGS FOR A STRIKE against the Astros in the fourth inning of Houston’s 8-2 victory Monday in Houston.

Astros’ McHugh tames Kansas City bats, 8-2 Houston (ap) — After what happened in his first start this season, Collin McHugh felt much better when he got through the first inning on Monday night. “I was focused on getting through that first inning today,” McHugh said. “Once we got through that it was just kind of just go after them the rest of the game.” McHugh bounced back from the shortest start of his career by pitching seven scoreless innings and Colby Rasmus hit a two-run homer as the Houston Astros won their home opener over the Kansas City Royals, 8-2. McHugh (1-1) allowed eight hits and struck out four in his first start since he allowed six runs and walked two in one-third of an inning of a 16-6 loss to the New York Yankees. Houston manager A.J. Hinch didn’t have any doubt that McHugh would put his bad outing behind him. “He was exceptional, and he pitched with a purpose tonight,” Hinch

BOX SCORE Kansas City AB R H BI BB SO Avg. A.Escobar ss 5 0 2 0 0 0 .250 Moustakas 3b 5 0 0 0 0 0 .200 L.Cain cf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .190 Orlando cf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .375 Hosmer 1b 4 1 3 0 0 0 .318 K.Morales dh 4 1 1 2 0 1 .190 A.Gordon lf 4 0 2 0 0 2 .238 S.Perez c 3 0 0 0 0 0 .250 Butera c 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Infante 2b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .294 Fuentes rf 3 0 2 0 1 0 .231 Totals 37 2 11 2 1 5 Houston AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Altuve 2b 4 3 3 1 1 1 .286 Springer rf 5 0 2 1 0 0 .207 Correa ss 5 1 3 2 0 0 .357 Col.Rasmus lf 4 1 2 2 0 2 .333 a-Marisnick ph-lf 1 0 0 0 0 1 .000 White 1b 4 0 2 0 0 0 .545 C.Gomez cf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .200 Tucker dh 2 1 0 0 2 1 .333 Valbuena 3b 4 1 1 1 0 1 .261 J.Castro c 4 1 1 1 0 1 .100 Totals 37 8 14 8 3 8 Kansas City 000 000 020—2 11 0 Houston 300 301 01x—8 14 0 a-struck out for Col.Rasmus in the 8th. LOB-Kansas City 9, Houston 8. 2B-A.Gordon (1), Correa (2), White (3), Valbuena (2). 3B-Springer (1), J.Castro (1). HR-K.Morales (2), off Sipp; Col. Rasmus (3), off Young. RBIs-K.Morales 2 (5), Altuve (2), Springer (5), Correa 2 (6), Col.Rasmus 2 (6), Valbuena (3), J.Castro (1). SB-Altuve 2 (6). Runners left in scoring position-Kansas City 5 (S.Perez 2, Moustakas, L.Cain 2); Houston 6 (White, Correa, Valbuena 2, Col.Rasmus, Marisnick). RISPKansas City 0 for 5; Houston 5 for 15. Runners moved up-Springer. GIDP-Moustakas 2. DP-Houston 2 (White, Correa, McHugh), (Altuve, Correa, White). Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Young L, 0-2 42⁄3 9 6 6 2 4 101 7.45 Wang 21⁄3 4 1 1 0 3 40 2.70 D.Duffy 1 1 1 1 1 1 19 2.25 Houston IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA McHugh W, 1-1 7 8 0 0 1 4 102 6.14 Sipp 1 2 2 2 0 1 22 9.00 Fields 1 1 0 0 0 0 8 10.38 Inherited runners-scored-Wang 2-0. Umpires-Home, Adrian Johnson; First, Gary Cederstrom; Second, Eric Cooper; Third, Jim Wolf. T-2:59. A-43,332 (41,676).

said. “I am glad he made the adjustment from being a careful pitcher dancing around the strike

zone to attacking them with all of his pitches. He did a good job of setting the tone for our team and I thought it was important that we fed off that as a team.” Carlos Correa had three hits and two RBIs, Jose Altuve had three hits, and rookie Tyler White, who was named the American League player of the week earlier in the day, added a pair of hits for his fourth multihit game this year. Chris Young (0-2) allowed nine hits and six runs in 42⁄3 innings. The Astros jumped on him early and were up by a run in the first after an RBI double by Correa when Rasmus launched a towering shot to the second deck in right field to make it 3-0. “I feel bad digging the team into a hole like that, having to play from behind,” Young said. “But it’s a tough lineup.” Luis Valbuena had an RBI double, Jason Castro drove in a run with a triple and Altuve had a run-scoring single in the fourth to push the lead to 6-0.

Chiefs’ DeVito calls it quits Kansas City, Mo. (ap) — After nine years in the NFL, Chiefs defensive end Mike DeVito is calling it quits. The 31-year-old DeVito, who announced his retirement on Twitter on Monday, said his wife, Jessie, helped him reach the decision. “When I look at it, my wife was the biggest reason — she helped me break down the process and think it through,” said DeVito, who expressed interest in continuing his football career as recent-

ly as a month ago. “I do love the game of football and I’m thinking about all the guys I’ll miss and that locker room and the coaches. “But I have people here that will expect me to be here and be a father and be a husband and a leader of my family.” DeVito wants to believe he could have helped the Chiefs again as a rotational player, but at the end of the day, the combination of his age and the two concussions he suffered last year were enough

Lenexa — Senior righthander Hunter Gudde scattered five hits, struck out four and walked one in Free State High’s complete-game, 3-0 baseball victory over Shawnee Mission South on Monday at 3&2 Ballpark. Jaden Moore went 2-for3, and the Firebirds jumped to a 2-0 lead in the top of the first inning. Mikey Corbett, Bradley Collicott, Zion Bowlin and Kyle Abrahamson each had a hit. The Firebirds (7-1) will play St. James Academy Thursday in the River City Tournament at Hoglund Ballpark. Free State 200 100 0 — 3 6 1 SM South 000 000 0 — 0 5 1 W — Hunter Gudde. Free State highlight — Jaden Moore, 2-for-3.

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LHS golfers 7th, Free State 14th Kansas City, Mo. — Lawrence High finished seventh, and Free State was 14th among 18 teams at the Shawnee Mission East Invitational golf tournament Monday at Blue Hills Country Club. Blue Valley North won the team title with a 308 total over the par-72, 6,569-yard course. Lawrence High scored 345 and Free State 363. Cole Brungardt was the low individual for the Lions with an 81, good for a tie for 17th. Other Lawrence High scores: Dawson Dykes, 83, tie for 21st; Garrett Wildeman, 86, tie for 30th; and Ross Brungardt, 95, tie for 64th. Ty Stewart was the low Free State individual, shooting an 87, good for a tie for 34th. Other Free State scores: Edin Mehmedovic, 90, tie for 49th; Bailey Pfannenstiel, 92, tie for 57th; Justin Siler, 94, 63rd.

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2008 Ford Escape Limited 3.0L

2007 Ford Edge SEL Plus

$15,995

$12,495

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

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

2012 Ford F-150 XLT Stk#116T610

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

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2014 Ford Focus SE

2015 Ford Explorer XLT

Stk#PL2155

Stk#PL1938

$17,787

2015 Ford Fusion Titanium

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

2013 Ford Explorer XLT

2000 Ford Ranger XLT

Stk#PL2174

Stk#215T1065

$27,995

$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

w/ 4WD

Only $8,997 Call Coop at

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

2015 Ford Expedition Platinum Stk#PL2062

$47,999


L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

SPECIAL! 10 LINES & PHOTO

CARS TO PLACE AN AD: Ford Trucks

Honda Vans

| 7D

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

785.832.2222 Hyundai SUVs

Lincoln SUVs

2012 Hyundai Tucson Limited

2010 Lincoln Navigator

Stk#PL2148

Stk#116L517

classifieds@ljworld.com Mazda Cars

Nissan Crossovers

Toyota Cars

Toyota SUVs

2015 Mazda Mazda5 Sport

2015 Nissan Pathfinder SL

2012 Toyota Camry Hybrid XLE

2014 Ford E-250 Stk#PL2116

2013 Honda Civic LX

$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

GMC SUVs

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

Only $13,995

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

888-631-6458

$21,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

$15,994 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Jeep

$13,995

$29,999 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785.727.7116

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

Need to sell your car? Place your ad at classifieds.lawrence.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

Stk#215T1132A

Stk#115T1025

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Call Coop at

Stk#1PL1991

Stk#PL2134

$17,640

2010 Toyota 4Runner V6

$24,987 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Scion

Motorcycle-ATV

JackEllenaHonda.com

Mazda Crossovers Toyota 2014 Corolla LE Automatic, power equipment, ABS, low miles! Stk#14346A

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

2007 Honda Odyssey EX-L

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

Only $15,414 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Honda Cars

Jeep 2014 Patriot

Only $13,775 FWD Minivan, InteriorIvory w/Leather Seat Trim, 126k miles STK# G223B

Only $10,995

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

Kia Cars

2015 Lincoln Navigator Stk#PL2111

$54,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Call Coop at

888-631-6458

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

Mazda Cars

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

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

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

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

Only $10,415

Only $13,877

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

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

2014 Lincoln MKX

2014 Honda Civic LX

2012 Mazda Mazda3 i Grand Touring

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

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

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

$18,995

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

$28,999 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

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

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. $3,950 Please leave message when you call: 785-832-1175

classifieds.lawrence.com

Stk#115T1100

23rd & Alabama - 2829 Iowa

LairdNollerLawrence.com

REAL ESTATE

785.832.2222

Stk#316B259

$28,995

$12,987

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

START YOUR OWN

NEIGHBORHOOD!

2014 Mazda Mazda3 i Sport Stk#PL2152

$14,999

Buy great 4bd/3ba brick house & 5 acres with four neighboring tracts that can be built on or sold! 7 acres, 65 and 72 acres lots. First farm west of Lawrence on 40 highway.

Bill Fair & Company www.billfair.com

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

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Townhomes

800-887-6929

RENTALS

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 Call 785-842-2575 www.princeton-place.com

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

2013 Lincoln MKZ Hybrid

LAUREL GLEN APTS

2012 Mazda Mazda3 S

Stk#PL2128

All Electric

FIRST MONTH FREE! 1 & 2 Bedroom Units Available Now!

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

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.

785-841-6565

Membership & Equity fee Required. 785-842-2545 (Equal Housing Opportunity) pinetreetownhouses.com

785-865-2505

Call now! 785-841-8400

Stk#116M561

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

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

Duplexes

Only $11,997

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

Only $14,497

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

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.sunriseapartments.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

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

Place your ad at apartments.lawrence.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com

SUNRISE PLACE

EOH

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

Need an apartment?

NOW LEASING Spring - Fall

785-838-9559

Some with W/D, Water & Trash Paid, Small Pet, Income Restrictions Apply

$22,998

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

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

Office Space

grandmanagement.net

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!

1, 2 & 3 BR units

2013 Honda Civic EX

888-631-6458

DALE WILLEY

Townhomes

Lawrence

Apartments Unfurnished

Call Coop at

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

classifieds@ljworld.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

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

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

classifieds@ljworld.com

JackEllenaHonda.com

$15,739

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

RENTALS REAL ESTATE TO PLACE AN AD:

2013 Hyundai Veloster

2012 Hyundai Veloster w/Black

Stk#415T787C

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2012 Lincoln MKT EcoBoost

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

2002 Toyota Highlander

Nissan 2008 Altima

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

2004 Yamaha V-STAR

$1,595

Stk#PL2151

Only $11,415

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

888-631-6458

Nissan Cars

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

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785.727.7116

Only $8,997

Acreage-Lots

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

FWD

Stk#PL2127

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

Extremely sharp!!! Sedan, 126k miles STK# F690A

Toyota SUVs

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

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Call Coop at

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

2014 Subaru Forester 2.5i Premium PZEV

$15,495

Hyundai 2013 Elantra GLS

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

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Only $13,714

Hyundai Cars

$5,995

2010 Toyota Corolla LE

JackEllenaHonda.com

Stk#PL2149

888-631-6458

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

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

Lincoln Cars

Only $13,990

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

Stk#116M448

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

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

$22,987

$15,994

Kia 2012 Optima Ex

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

Honda 2009 Accord

Motorcycle

2015 Mazda CX-5 Touring Stk#PL2147

2008 Honda CBR 600

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

JackEllenaHonda.com

Stk#115T1128

$28,596

Only $13,977 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Stk#PL2143

Subaru SUVs

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

2013 Honda Pilot EX-L

2013 Scion tC Base

Call Coop at

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

2BR in a 4-plex

Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background?

grandmanagement.net

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

Equal Housing Opportunity. 785-865-2505

Call: 785-832-2222

apartments.lawrence.com

EXECUTIVE OFFICE 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

TUCKAWAY APARTMENTS

Tuckawayapartments.com 785-856-0432 TUCKAWAY AT BRIARWOOD

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

785-841-3339 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

RENTALS & REAL ESTATE SPECIAL! 10 LINES & PHOTO:

2 DAYS $50 7 DAYS $80 28 DAYS $280 + FREE PHOTO! ADVERTISE TODAY! CALL 832-2222 or email classifieds@ljworld.com

classifieds@ljworld.com


8D

|

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

.

L awrence J ournal -W orld

PLACE YOUR AD:

785.832.2222

classifieds@ljworld.com

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.

What’s Different at Brandon Woods? Experience true resident directed care!

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.

New Nursing Orientation Program!

F U L L T I M E M E M B E R C O N S U LTA N T

STOP BY AND FIND OUT! Meet our NEW Director of Nursing

Part Time Positions Available

• • • •

LPN CNA & CMA Laundry Aide Dietary Aides

Bi-weekly pay, direct deposit, Paid Time Off, Tuition Reimbursement & more! Apply in person.

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.

APPLY TODAY!

Brandon Woods at Alvamar Human Resources 1501 Inverness Drive Lawrence, KS 66047 TProchaska@5ssl.com Equal Opportunity Employer | Drug Free Workplace

www.Careers.TruityCU.org Truity Credit Union is an equal opportunity employer.

M M A YA Y

Wednesday,PMay - S2:30 R E S E N11, T E D12:30 BY JOB . L AW RPM ENCE.COM Wednesday, May 11, 2016Rec. • 12:30 - 2:30 •PM • East Lawrence Rec. Center, 1245 E. 15th St. East Lawrence Center 1245 East 15th Street • Lawrence

Meet, mingle & connect with local employers!

Meet, mingle & connect with great local employers with many job openings.

For more information or to reserve a booth for your business, contact Peter at: psteimle@ljworld.com.


L awrence J ournal -W orld

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

PLACE YOUR AD:

785.832.2222

| 9D

classifieds@ljworld.com

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!

Lawrence Presbyterian Manor

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 Shifts Available: Days/Evenings/Weekends

CHARGE NURSE

Pay up to $10.50/hour

Full time day shift

All Jobs are in Ottawa, KS!

MERCHANDISE PETS TO PLACE AN AD:

AUCTIONS Auction Calendar

SUPPORT! TEACH! INSPIRE! ADVOCATE! AdministrativeProfessional Assistant Needed

Office Assistant BG Consultants in Lawrence seeks a part-time Office Assistant for general support to staff and daily administrative operations. Duties include answering a multi-line phone system, filing, typing, and basic accounting. Must have basic computer skills and proficiency with MS Office applications. Email resume to careers@bgcons.com.

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.

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

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

Lots of antique glassware & china, etc. Antique & modern furniture, kitchen items, 2006 MERCURY GRAND MARQUIS. Much More.

WORK THREE DAYS A WEEK, TAKE FOUR DAYS OFF! $10/HOUR

Wischropp Auctions 785-828-4212 www.wischroppauctions.com

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:

AUCTION Thurs., April 21 at 5:30 pm 748 N. 100 Rd Baldwin City, KS

785-865-5520 www.clokan.org General

NOW HIRING

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

MULTIPLE POSITIONS!

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

AUCTION Sat., April 23, 10:30 AM 3034 Butler Rd RICHMOND, KS

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

General

Ground, Maintenance, Housekeeping, Reservation Desk, Rec Program. Must be able to work weekends & holidays, seasonal position. APPLY IN PERSON: Lawrence Jellystone Camprgound 1473 HWY 40 Lawrence, KS 66044

HIRING IMMEDIATELY! 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/em ployment Or come to: MV Transportation, Inc. 1260 Timberedge Road Lawrence, KS. EOE

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 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

Healthcare

Healthcare

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

www.KansasAuctions.net/elston

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

TIPS Suffering will make you

BETTER or BITTER

- Peter Steimle Decisions Determine Destiny

Send resume to: lupa205@sunflower.com

Need to sell your car? Place your ad at classifieds.lawrence.com or email classifieds@ljworld.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 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

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

913-369-8705

Management

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

785.832.2222

Auction Calendar PUBLIC AUCTION Saturday, April 23, 9:30 am American Legion Post 14 3408 W. 6th Street Lawrence, KS 66049

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

Bill & Photos online at: www.dandlauctions.com

Furniture

D & L Auctions 785-766-5630

Drop leaf Dinning Table w/ 2 leaves & pads, 8 chairs and matching large buffet. Plus 2 large oval & rectangular gold framed mirrors. Excellent condition. Asking $ 250.00 OBO Call 785-841-3261 Scotts lawn Spreader Scotts Lawn Spreader $20, 785-550-4142 Twin Mattress w/ box springs and Frame. Brand New - Never been used. $ 100.00 Call 785-749-5400

Lawn, Garden & Nursery

MERCHANDISE

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

Antiques 47 pieces of Forstoria American pattern, 2 Steiff Bears (circa 1980),

5 Hummel figurines, 11 pieces of Colleen Waterford.

Miscellaneous

81 Hwy 40

Best to Call: 785-887-3968

Collectibles LARGE CHRYSTAL VASE from Austria. 9” tall, 6.5” width at top. $30 Cash Only, 785-843-7205

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

785-832-9906 Lawrence

ESTATE/GARAGE SALE 12283 214TH Linwood Thu, Apr 14 & Fri., Apr 15 7:30 am-4:30 pm 7:30am-TBA (Sat.) All kinds of different things from dishes, glassware, buffet, antiques, china hutch, etc...etc...etc..

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

Lost-Found

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

Appliances Two ( Blue Rhino ) Gas Tanks Two BBQ Gas Tanks $25, 785-550-4142

Music-Stereo

PIANOS

Excellent offering of Collectibles, Coins, Jewelry, Glassware, Pottery, Quilts, Hummels, Banks, Toys, Primitives & More from Multiple Estates.

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

classifieds@ljworld.com Collectibles

Cargo Cover Mitsubishi Outlander Sport 20112015Genuine! Never used! $70 Cash Only, 785-843-7205 Cargo Liner Mat for Mitsubishi Outlander Sport 2011- 2015 Genuine! Rubber Bottom, Cloth top. USED, Good condition $25 Cash Only, 785-843-7205

classifieds.lawrence.com

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

classifieds@ljworld.com

NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD: Special Notices

PART TIME NURSE Wanted for busy medical office. Approximately 25 hrs. per week. Most holidays and all weekends off.

Vintage Truck & Vintage Equipment Farm Equipment/Salvage Misc. Salvage Seller: Ray H. Christian Estate Elston Auctions (785-594-0505) (785-218-7851) Pictures online!

You choose...and don’t blame me for hiring positive people—I’d rather work with a happy person any day.

RN Case Manager

1429 Kasold Dr. Lawrence KS 66049

Come work where you can really make a difference!

FLEXIBLE SCHEDULES • BENEFITS • PAID TIME-OFF

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:

OR IN PERSON AT

RN OR LPN

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!

ARE YOU:

APPLY ONLINE AT

www.lawrencepresbyterianmanor.org

785.832.2222

LOST & FOUND Lost Item

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 parkwoodlawrence@gmail.com

YOUR NEXT APARTMENT IS READY. FIND IT HERE.

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

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10D

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Tuesday, April 12, 2016

SPORTS/CLASSIFIED

.

L awrence J ournal -W orld

SCOREBOARD World Ranking

Through April 10 1. Jason Day AUS 12.52 2. Jordan Spieth USA 11.78 3. Rory McIlroy NIR 9.41 4. Bubba Watson USA 8.48 5. Rickie Fowler USA 7.75 6. Henrik Stenson SWE 7.70 7. Adam Scott AUS 7.15 8. Dustin Johnson USA 6.89 9. Danny Willett ENG 6.46 10. Justin Rose ENG 6.06 11. Patrick Reed USA 4.99 12. Louis Oosthuizen SAF 4.89 13. Hideki Matsuyama JPN 4.75 14. Branden Grace SAF 4.53 15. Brandt Snedeker USA 4.32 16. Sergio Garcia ESP 4.31 17. Zach Johnson USA 4.11 18. Brooks Koepka USA 4.07 19. Phil Mickelson USA 3.98 20. Charl Schwartzel SAF 3.88 21. J.B. Holmes USA 3.81 22. Jim Furyk USA 3.77 23. Kevin Kisner USA 3.75 24. Paul Casey ENG 3.66 25. Jimmy Walker USA 3.36 26. Byeong-Hun An KOR 3.18 27. Bill Haas USA 3.18 28. Matt Kuchar USA 3.17 29. Rafa Cabrera-Bello ESP 3.16 30. Kevin Na USA 3.10 31. Shane Lowry IRL 3.08 32. Andy Sullivan ENG 3.07 33. Marc Leishman AUS 3.02 34. Justin Thomas USA 2.92 35. Lee Westwood ENG 2.81 36. Emiliano Grillo ARG 2.83 37. Kiradech Aphibarnrat THA 2.80 38. Danny Lee NZL 2.76 39. Matthew Fitzpatrick ENG 2.75 40. Russell Knox SCO 2.73 41. Soren Kjeldsen DEN 2.73 42. Bernd Wiesberger AUT 2.68 43. Thongchai Jaidee THA 2.61 44. Ryan Moore USA 2.58 45. Daniel Berger USA 2.54 46. Billy Horschel USA 2.53 47. David Lingmerth SWE 2.49 48. Smylie Kaufman USA 2.48 49. Scott Piercy USA 2.44 50. Victor Dubuisson FRA 2.43 51. Chris Wood ENG 2.41 52. Anirban Lahiri IND 2.40 53. Jamie Donaldson WAL 2.34 54. Chris Kirk USA 2.31 55. Robert Streb USA 2.31 56. Martin Kaymer GER 2.29 57. Jaco Van Zyl SAF 2.27 58. Charley Hoffman USA 2.21 59. Thomas Pieters BEL 2.16 60. Patton Kizzire USA 2.16 61. Fabian Gomez ARG 2.10 62. Ian Poulter ENG 2.07 63. Jason Dufner USA 2.07 64. Marcus Fraser AUS 2.00

65. Matt Jones 66. Graeme McDowell 67. Thorbjorn Olesen 68. Jim Herman 69. Harris English 70. Gary Woodland 71. Jason Bohn 72. Kevin Chappell 73. Tony Finau 74. Ryan Palmer 75. K.T. Kim

AUS NIR DEN USA USA USA USA USA USA USA KOR

1.98 1.98 1.96 1.91 1.90 1.85 1.85 1.84 1.83 1.83 1.79

High School

SM EAST INVITATIONAL Monday at Blue Hills Country Club Par 72 Team Scores 1. Blue Valley North 308 2. SM East 315 3. St. Thomas Aquinas 324 4. Blue Valley Southwest 330 5. Blue Valley West 334 6. Olathe East 334 7. Lawrence 345 8. SM South 346 9. St. James Academy 346 10. Olathe Northwest 350 11. Christ Prep 355 12. Mill Valley 357 13. Olathe South 362 14. Free State 363 15. Washburn Rural 367 16. SM West 386 17. Leavenworth 425 18. SM North 466 Medalist Andy Spencer, SME

72

Lawrence Results 17T. Cole Brungardt 21T. Dawson Dykes 30T. Garrett Wildeman 64T. Ross Brungardt 78. Thomas Taber

81 83 86 95 105

Free State Results 34T. Ty Stewart 49T. Edin Mehmedovic 57T. Bailey Pfannenstiel 63. Justin Siler 80T. Cody Thompson

87 90 92 94 107

BASEBALL American League CHICAGO WHITE SOX — Reinstated OF Adam Eaton from paternity leave. Optioned RHP Michael Ynoa to Birmingham (SL). CLEVELAND INDIANS — Traded LHP Giovanni Soto to the Chicago Cubs for cash. DETROIT TIGERS — Sent LHP Daniel Norris to Lakeland (FSL) for a rehab assignment.

LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Claimed RHP Danny Reynolds off waivers from Houston and optioned him to Arkansas (TL). Optioned RHP A.J. Achter to Salt Lake (PCL). Selected the contract of LHP Greg Mahle from Salt Lake. OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Sent 2B Eric Sogard to Stockton (Cal) for a rehab assignment. National League ATLANTA BRAVES — Recalled OF Mallex Smith from Gwinnett (IL). Placed RHP Dan Winkler on 15-day DL. Designated RHP Jose Ramirez for assignment. Selected the contract of RHP Joel De La Cruz from Gwinnett (IL) and LHP Hunter Cervenka from Mississippi (SL). CHICAGO CUBS — Transferred C Kyle Schwarber from the 15- to the 60-day DL. Optioned LHP Giovanni Soto to Iowa (PCL). CINCINNATI REDS — Assigned 1B Brandon Allen outright to Louisville (IL). COLORADO ROCKIES — Sent RHP Jon Gray to Modesto to Modesto (Cal) for a rehab assignment. LOS ANGELES DODGERS — Optioned INF/OF Zach Walters, INF Micah Johnson and OF James Ramsey to Oklahoma City (PCL). Transferred RHP Josh Ravin and OF Andre Ethier from the 15- to the 60-day DL. NEW YORK METS — Sent LHP Josh Edgin to St. Lucie (FSL) for a rehab assignment. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES — Signed G Bryce Cotton for the remainder of the regular season. FOOTBALL National Football League ARIZONA CARDINALS — Named Adrian Wilson scout. KANSAS CITY CHIEFS — DE Mike DeVito announced his retirement. MINNESOTA VIKINGS — Re-signed LB Chad Greenway. NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS — Released RB Tyler Gaffney. NEW YORK GIANTS — Signed LB Kelvin Sheppard, RB Bobby Rainey and OT Byron Stingily. TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS — Signed WR Russell Shepard and DE Jacquies Smith. HOCKEY National Hockey League ARIZONA COYOTES — Fired general manager Don Maloney. Assigned Fs Laurent Dauphin and Eric Selleck, D Alex Grant and G Marek Langhamer to Springfield (AHL). CAROLINA HURRICANES — Reassigned D Ryan Murphy to Charlotte (AHL).

CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS — Recalled D David Rundblad from Rockford (AHL). Reassigned Fs Bryan Bickell and Dennis Rasmussen to Rockford. EDMONTON OILERS — Assigned G Laurent Brossoit and D Darnell Nurse, Jordan Oesterle and Griffin Reinhart to Bakersfield (AHL). NASHVILLE PREDATORS — Reassigned D Corey Potter and G Marek Mazanec to Milwaukee (AHL). Assigned F Anthony Richard to Milwaukee (AHL). NEW JERSEY DEVILS — Assigned Fs Joseph Blandisi, Reid Boucher and Pavel Zacha and D Damon Severson to Albany (AHL). Reassigned LW Ben Johnson from Albany to Adirondack (ECHL). WASHINGTON CAPITALS — Reassigned F Zach Sill to Hershey (AHL). WINNIPEG JETS — Agreed to terms with LW Kyle Connor on a three-year, two-way entry-level contract. COLLEGE GEORGE MASON — Named Jackie Campbell senior associate athletic director/senior women’s administrator. ILLINOIS STATE — Promoted Lisa Hayden to women’s associate head basketball coach. JAMES MADISON — Promoted Sean O’Regan to women’s basketball coach. NEBRASKA — Named Amy Williams women’s basketball coach. OAKLAND, MICHIGAN — Agreed to terms on a three-year contract extension with men’s basketball coach Greg Kampe. RUTGERS — Named Jay Young men’s assistant basketball coach. STANFORD — Named Jeff Wulbrun men’s assistant basketball coach. TEXAS A&M-KINGSVILLE — Named Gary Payne assistant volleyball coach. UTSA — Announced graduate QB Jared Johnson is transferring from Sam Houston State.

NHL Playoffs

FIRST ROUND (Best-of-7) (x-if necessary) Wednesday, April 13 Detroit at Tampa Bay, 6 p.m. N.Y. Rangers at Pittsburgh, 7 p.m. Chicago at St. Louis, 8:30 p.m. Thursday, April 14 Philadelphia at Washington, 6 p.m. N.Y. Islanders at Florida, 7 p.m. Minnesota at Dallas, 8:30 p.m. San Jose at Los Angeles, 9:30 p.m.

SERVICES TO PLACE AN AD: Antique/Estate Liquidation

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Carpentry

Cleaning

Concrete

Foundation Repair

Guttering Services

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

Decks & Fences

DECK BUILDER 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

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

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

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

BIGGEST SALES! classifieds@ljworld.com

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 NYC FC 1 1 3 6 7 7 Chicago 1 1 3 6 5 5 D.C. United 1 2 3 6 7 9 Toronto FC 1 2 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 Los Angeles 2 1 2 8 8 4 San Jose 2 1 2 8 7 7 Colorado 2 2 1 7 3 3 Vancouver 2 3 1 7 6 10 Houston 1 2 2 5 12 9 Portland 1 2 2 5 7 10 Seattle 1 3 1 4 4 6 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Wednesday, April 13 Colorado at Sporting Kansas City, 7:30 p.m. New York at San Jose, 9:30 p.m. FC Dallas at Portland, 9:30 p.m. Friday, April 15 Los Angeles at Houston, 6 p.m. Saturday, April 16 Toronto FC at D.C. United, 4 p.m. Montreal at Chicago, 4 p.m. New York City FC at Columbus, 6:30 p.m. New York at Colorado, 8 p.m.

MLB Fan Cost Index

Avg. Pct. Team Ticket FCI Chg. Boston $54.79 $360.66 2.8 N.Y. Yankees $51.55 $337.20 0.0 Chicago Cubs $51.33 $312.32 3.9 Philadelphia $41.50 $258.20 2.5 San Francisco $35.76 $255.04 5.8 St. Louis $35.24 $243.96 3.0 Houston $37.25 $242.00 9.9 Washington $36.59 $234.36 1.0 L.A. Dodgers $31.90 $234.10 6.9 Toronto $31.01 $231.76 11.3 Chicago White Sox $29.55 $229.50 10.2 N.Y. Mets $26.02 $223.56 1.8 LEAGUE AVERAGE $31.00 $219.53 3.7 Detroit $28.88 $214.52 0.7 Miami $28.31 $214.22 -4.7 Minnesota $33.28 $212.12 -7.5 L.A. Angels $32.70 $210.80 10.9 Seattle $28.75 $209.00 -1.4 Texas $23.64 $204.56 7.4 Kansas City $26.88 $202.52 -4.5 Oakland $24.46 $198.84 2.0 Pittsburgh $29.96 $195.84 11.3 Colorado $23.99 $193.96 -1.3 Milwaukee $26.32 $190.23 4.4 Baltimore $29.96 $183.34 12.2 San Diego $23.71 $182.82 19.1 Cleveland $25.61 $179.44 0.0 Atlanta $19.38 $178.02 2.3 Cincinnati $22.01 $166.54 0.0 Tampa Bay $21.04 $154.16 -2.2 Arizona $18.53 $132.10 4.1 FCI — Fan cost index is comprised of the price of four adult average-price tickets, two small draft beers, four small soft drinks, four regular-size hot dogs, parking for one car, two least expensive adult-sized adjustable caps. SOURCE: Team Marketing Report

High School

Monday at Washburn Rural JUNIOR VARSITY Lawrence High Results Doubles Spears-Edmonds third place, 2-1 Rossillion-Teska, 1-2 Johnson-Eakin fourth place, 1-2 Singles Ryan Logan 2-2, 10th place

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

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

MLS

Philadelphia at Seattle, 9 p.m. Vancouver at Real Salt Lake, 9 p.m. San Jose at Portland, 9:30 p.m. Sunday, April 17 New England at Orlando City, 2:30 p.m. Sporting Kansas City at FC Dallas, 6 p.m.

SPECIAL! 6 LINES

785.832.2222 Decks & Fences

Friday, April 15 Detroit at Tampa Bay, 6 p.m. N.Y. Islanders at Florida, 6:30 p.m. Chicago at St. Louis, 7 p.m. Nashville at Anaheim, 8:30 p.m. Saturday, April 16 N.Y. Rangers at Pittsburgh, 2 p.m. Philadelphia at Washington, 6 p.m. Minnesota at Dallas, 7 p.m. San Jose at Los Angeles, 9:30 p.m. Sunday, April 17 St. Louis at Chicago, 2 p.m. Tampa Bay at Detroit, 6 p.m. Florida at N.Y. Islanders, 7 p.m. Nashville at Anaheim, 9:30 p.m. Monday, April 18 Washington at Philadelphia, 6 p.m. Dallas at Minnesota, 7:30 p.m. Los Angeles at San Jose, 9:30 p.m. Tuesday, April 19 Tampa Bay at Detroit, 6 p.m. Pittsburgh at N.Y. Rangers, 6 p.m. St. Louis at Chicago, 8:30 p.m. Anaheim at Nashville, 8:30 p.m.

classifieds@ljworld.com 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

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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

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785-312-1917

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Lawn, Garden & Nursery

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

Quality Work Over 30 yrs. exp.

Call Lyndsey 913-422-7002

Advertising that works for you!

Lawrence

Interior/Exterior Painting

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PUBLIC NOTICES 785.832.2222 Lawrence (First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld April 12, 2016) Abandon Property Abandoned property of Sunny Boado and Henry Crow from 1735 W 19th Street E05 Lawrence, KS 66046: The Furniture and personal items will be disposed of 30 days from this notice. ________

legals@ljworld.com Lawrence

Lawrence

Lawrence

Lawrence

Lawrence

Lawrence

DIV 1

and if their demands are not thus exhibited, they shall be forever barred.

Association PLAINTIFF

any deceased defendants; the unknown spouses of any defendants; the unknown officers, successors, trustees, creditors and assigns of any defendants that are existing, dissolved or dormant corporations; the unknown executors, administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors, successors and assigns of any defendants that are or were partners or in partnership; the unknown guardians, conservators and trustees of any defendants that are minors or are under any legal disability; and the unknown heirs, executors, administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors and assigns of any person alleged to be deceased, and all other persons who are or may be concerned.

You are notified that a Petition has been filed in the District Court of Douglas County, Kansas, praying to foreclose a real estate mortgage on the following described real estate:

thence North 0 degrees 00’ 00” West 90.00 feet to the point of beginning, also known as the South 90 feet of the North half of Lot 30 and the West 15 feet of the South 90 feet of the North half of Lot 29, commonly known as 742 North 5th Street, Lawrence, KS 66044 (the “Property”)

(Proceeding Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 59) NOTICE TO CREDITORS

VS. Sharon Learned Petitioner

THE STATE OF KANSAS TO PREPARED BY: ALL PERSONS CONCERNED: DENTON LAW, L.L.C. By: /s/ Cheryl L. Denton You are notified that on Cheryl L. Denton - #14824 March 9, 2016, a petition 123 W. 8th Street, Suite 103 was filed in this Court by Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Sharon Learned, heir of (785) 424-7553 George R. Learned, de- (785) 670-8437 (facsimile) (First published in the ceased, requesting peti- cdenton@cheryldentonlaw.com Lawrence Daily Journal- tioner be appointed as ad- ATTORNEY FOR PETITIONER ministrator; petitioner be _______ World on March 29, 2016) granted Letters of Administration under the Kansas (First published in the IN THE DISTRICT COURT Simplified Estates Act. Lawrence Daily JournalOF DOUGLAS COUNTY, All creditors of the dece- World April 12, 2016) KANSAS dent are notified to exhibit In the Matter of the their demands against the IN THE DISTRICT COURT Estate of estate within four (4) OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, George R. Learned, months from the date of KANSAS deceased. the first publication of this notice, as provided by law, Federal National Mortgage Case No. 2016 PR 000041

Howard T. Hill, Jr. ; John Doe (Tenant/Occupant); Mary Doe (Tenant/Occupant); Unknown spouse, if any, of Howard T. Hill, Jr., DEFENDANTS Case No. 16CV110 Court Number: Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 60 NOTICE OF SUIT THE STATE OF KANSAS, to the above-named defendants and the unknown heirs, executors, administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors and assigns of

at the Commencing Northwest corner of Lot 30, in Addition No. 5, in that part of the City of known as Lawrence, North Lawrence, Douglas County, Kansas; thence South 0 Degrees 00’00” East 60.00 feet to the point of beginning, said point being on the West line of Lot 30; thence South 89 degrees 25’ 43” East 117.39 feet; thence South 00 degrees 01’ 39” West 90.03 feet; thence North 89 degrees 24’ 55” West 117.34 feet, said point of being on the West line of Lot 30;

U.S.C. §1692c(b), no information concerning the collection of this debt may be given without the prior consent of the consumer given directly to the debt collector or the express permission of a court of competent jurisdiction. The debt collector is attempting to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that and all those defendants purpose. who have not otherwise been served are required Prepared By: to plead to the Petition on SouthLaw, P.C. or before the 23rd day of Kristen G. Stroehmann May, 2016, in the District (KS #10551) Court of Douglas 13160 Foster, Suite 100 County,Kansas. If you fail Overland Park, to plead, judgment and de- KS 66213-2660 cree will be entered in due (913) 663-7600 course upon the Petition. (913) 663-7899 (Fax) Attorneys for Plaintiff NOTICE (189177) Pursuant to the Fair Debt _______ Collection Practices Act, 15


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