Lawrence Journal-World 04-24-2016

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Patti LuPone’s

lessons from a life in showbiz A&E, 1D

Mystery surrounds killing spree in Ohio. 1B

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SUNDAY • APRIL 24 • 2016

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City’s OK needed for transit hub grant By Nikki Wentling Twitter: @nikkiwentling

PAINTING THE TOWN Photos by Nick Krug

Community members and friends of the Lawrence Intersection Repair group came together to paint a street mural during a “painting party” Saturday at the intersection of Tenth and New Jersey streets. The location was chosen so it can act as an introduction to East Lawrence. The mural, which is believed to be the first of its kind in the Midwest, was painted with traffic-marking paint mixed with hazelnut shells. Pictured at left, Monica Li, of Overland Park, works to fill in a star for the street mural.

See a photo gallery at LJWorld.com/streetmural42316

Local woman is top dancer at world’s largest powwow By Joanna Hlavacek • Twitter: @hlavacekjoanna

T

onia Hall still isn’t sure how she snagged the coveted role of Head Lady Dancer in this week’s 33rd annual Gathering of Nations, but she’s pretty sure positive thinking had something to do with it. On Friday, the Lawrence resident will lead the Grand Entry into the Albuquerque, N.M., arena known as The Pit, where more than 700 Native American tribes congregate each year at the world’s largest meeting of indigenous people. It’s a huge honor, says Hall, whose selection falls on the heels of a rela-

Looking out over what could be the future site of a transportation hub (a Kansas University parking lot filled with vehicles on a Friday afternoon), the president of the nearby University Place Neighborhood Association explained some of the questions neighbors have about CITY COMMISSION the project. They want to know what kind of noise and air quality the transit hub would produce; whether it would push traffic into University Place; and if the center, which would include multiple levels of parking, would be visible from their homes. Please see TRANSIT, page 7A

Funding next hurdle for mental health court By Elvyn Jones

tively “late start” in the Gathering of Nations dancing circuit. After placing in contests at the powwow — which attracts more than 700 tribes from across the U.S. and Canada, as well as 3,000 Native American traditional dancers — in 2013 and 2014, Hall’s luck seemingly run out at last year’s Gathering. After winning first place just two years before, Hall left the competition empty-handed. Not letting it defeat her, Hall sat with her sister at the top of The Pit and predicted her eventual return. Please see DANCER, page 8A

Twitter: @ElvynJ

As a Lawrence defense attorney, Christopher Coleman has learned there are many ways mentally ill individuals in need of treatment can land in the Douglas County Jail or before district court judges. He has had clients who stopped taking medications, had their medications become less effective, suffered bouts of post-traumatic stress syndrome or endured psychotic episodes. To illustrate the point, Coleman recounted the story of a client who appeared uninvited in a

Frank White Bull/Contributed Photo

Lawrence resident Tonia Hall has been named “Head Lady Dancer” at the Gathering of Nations this week in Albuquerque, N.M.

Please see COURT, page 2A

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Area residents learned the history — and dollar value — of some of their oldest and most interesting belongings during a special Know Your Antiques event Saturday. Page 3A

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Sunday, April 24, 2016

LAWRENCE • STATE

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DEATHS Journal-World obituary policy: For information about running obituaries, call 832-7151. Obituaries run as submitted by funeral homes or the families of the deceased.

WILMA REYNOLDS MESERAULL Wilma Reynolds Meseraull, age 96 died April 22, 2016. She was the daughter of Samuel Roy Reynolds and Marie Kluss Reynolds, born in Lawrence, KS December 12, 1919. She graduated from Wyandotte High School in 1938 and attended Kansas State University. Wilma was the receptionist for her father’s Chiropractic office in Kansas City, Kansas. Wilma married Samuel Paul Meseraull in January 9, 1943. In 1959, she and her husband Paul started Meseraull Printing in Lawrence Kansas. She was the church organist at Indian Hills Church of God (Bridge Point Community Church) for many years and was active in Beta Sigma Phi. She is survived by two sons: Steve Meseraull (Helen) and Clay Meseraull (Carolee), Lawrence, Kansas; adopted son Terry Jacobson, Lawrence. She is survived by five grandchildren: Shelly Stumpe, Doug Meseraull, Patty Hamel, Jeff Meseraull, and Kimberly is She Meseraull. survived by eight great grandchildren. She is also survived by a brother Don Reynolds (Phyllis) and sister­in­law Irene

Reynolds both of Lawrence. She is pre­ deceased by her parents, husband, brother Karl Reynolds and sister Arlene Shore (Ben). A Celebration of Life for Wilma E. Meseraull, will be held at 11:00 a.m. Saturday, April, 30, 2016 at Warren­McElwain Mortuary in Lawrence. Burial will follow at Memorial Park Cemetery. The family will greet friends one hour prior to the service on Saturday at the mortuary. Memorials may be made in her name to the Bridge Point Community Church and may be sent in care of the Warren­McElwain Mortuary. Online condolences may be sent to warrenmcelwain.com. this Please sign guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.

DEAN LEROY HATCH Services for Dean L. Hatch, 52, Lawrence, are pending and will be announced by Rumsey­Yost Funeral Home. He died April 23, 2016, at his home. rumsey­yost.com

CHESTER WILLIAM PROCTOR

Services for Chester William Proctor, 95, Lawrence, will be 10 a.m. Tuesday at Rumsey­Yost Funeral Home. Burial will be at Washington Creek Cemetery. Mr. Proctor died Thursday, April 21, 2016 at Lawrence Presbyterian Manor. He was born January 2, 1921, in Erie, Kansas, the son of John Benjamin and Kitty Culperna Meredith Proctor. He graduated from Erie High School in 1938. Mr. Proctor served in the U.S. Army from 1942­ 1944, during WWII, was a prisoner of war for 5 ½ months and was awarded the Purple Heart medal. After his time in the service he began working in Parsons, KS at Commercial Publishers, learning to be a book binder. He continued his training in Kansas City, MO. In 1967, he and his wife started their own business “Proctor Bindery” in the basement of their home and was successful in becoming a craftsman of the trade, he eventually retired in 2000. Mr. Proctor enjoyed woodworking, crossword puzzles, and was a very active member with the First Central Church of the Brethren in Kansas City. He was also on the worship committee at Lawrence Presbyterian

Manor. He married Lorene Margaret Meanor of Parsons, KS, on June 13, 1944, in Lebanon, PA. She survives of the home. Other survivors include a daughter, Roxane Fawl and husband Mike of Overbrook, KS; grandsons, Russell, Ben, Jonathan, and Matthew Fawl all of Overbrook; and 12 great grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his parents, an older brother Earl Proctor, and twin brother Lester Proctor. Friends may call from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday at the funeral home, where the family will receive them from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Monday. In lieu of flowers, the family suggests memorials to the Lawrence Presbyterian Manor’s Good Samaritan Fund, sent in care of the funeral home. Condolences may be sent at rumsey­yost.com. this Please sign guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.

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Supreme Court: State not liable for elderly woman’s death Topeka (ap) — The state is not liable for the death of an 83-yearold woman who died months after she was assaulted in her home by an escaped inmate, the Kansas Supreme Court has ruled. Christopher Zorn, an inmate at Norton Correctional Facility, walked away from the prison in 2008. He went to the home of Helen Keiswetter, assaulted her and locked her in a closet, according to court documents. Authorities said injuries sustained in the

Court CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

Lawrence home. Despite not knowing who lived in the residence, the client thought in his mind they wanted him there. “He thought it would make them happy. Instead it scared the heck out of them,” Coleman said. “He didn’t understand he did anything wrong. The mentally ill need services. We need to divert them away from the criminal justice system.” That fact is recognized in the three-pronged approach the Douglas County Commission has endorsed to improve the county’s criminal justice system. The approach, which the newly created Criminal Justice Coordinating Council will now review, would expand the Douglas County Jail with the addition of a number of pods to help segregate specific populations, including one dedicated for the inmates with mental illness, construct a mental health crisis intervention center and create a mental health court within Douglas County District Court. Although the two bricks-and-mortar parts of the trinity have received the most public attention, the mental health court has been integral in the county’s approach. Douglas County District Attorney Charles Branson said his office, the Douglas County District Court, Bert Nash Community Mental Heath, DCCCA and other agencies whose missions touch those with mental illness have been in discussion about the formation of a mental health court for more than a year. The work has progressed to the point that Branson’s office has authored a draft protocol of the court’s operation that is circulating among the other parties involved for feedback.

More diversions Some of the protocols build on initiatives his office, the sheriff’s department and courts already have started, Branson said. The process would involve pre-filing diversion agreements in appropriate incidents. Such filings would not create a criminal record for some individuals who come into contact with law enforcement while in the midst of a mental health crisis, Branson said.

assault led to her death months later. Zorn was later arrested in Denver and pleaded guilty to several charges, including aggravated robbery, aggravated escape from custody and aggravated battery, The Topeka Capital-Journal reported. Lower courts ruled the state wasn’t negligent in Zorn’s escape, and therefore wasn’t liable. Keiswetter’s heirs appealed to the Kansas Supreme Court, arguing Zorn was dangerous and that guards shouldn’t

Post-filing diversions also could be offered on selected types of cases. “That would be a little more like a normal case,” he said. “Maybe, we’d look at the person going through diversion and then dismiss charges.” Helping make decisions on inmate candidates for diversions are two evaluators Bert Nash was able to hire this year and assign to the jail thanks to a $199,000 grant from the Bureau of Justice Assistance, Branson said. Diversion would require an individual to complete a treatment program. Treatment and the case management of those treatment programs were at the heart of the proposed mental health court, said Margaret Severson, a Kansas University School of Social Welfare professor who has been a consultant on the county’s criminal justice system review. The goal is to devise treatment plans and arrange provider access for those with mental health issues who land in jail or come in contact with law enforcement, Severson said. A court services team and case management team would work with the individual, who would be required to keep the court apprised of progress. It’s still an unanswered question where the person responsible for coordinating case management would be housed, Branson said. Possibilities include Douglas County District Court, the District Attorney’s office or court services.

Will it work? Douglas County District Judge Sally Pokorny, who represented Douglas County District Court in mental health court discussions, said not all questions concerning the court could be answered before it was in operation. “These are fairly new, specialized courts,” she said. “The literature is not definitive yet on whether outcomes are better than regular courts.” The progress of individuals who appear before the court would to be monitored to determine if the added expense of the court was worthwhile, Pokorny said. If not, the county’s money could be better spent on other solutions, she said. Funding, particularly in regard to the position that would coordinate between the court and mental health case managers,

GENERAL MANAGER have left him unattended. Scott Stanford, In a unanimous rul832-7277, sstanford@ljworld.com ing Friday, the Kansas EDITORS Supreme Court rejected Chad Lawhorn, managing editor the family’s argument. 832-6362, clawhorn@ljworld.com The court cited the poTom Keegan, sports editor lice protection exception 832-7147, tkeegan@ljworld.com in the law, which was esAnn Gardner, editorial page editor tablished to protect cit832-7153, agardner@ljworld.com ies from lawsuits claiming police departments Kathleen Johnson, advertising manager 832-7223, kjohnson@ljworld.com should have sent more police cars to a crime OTHER CONTACTS scene or more fire trucks to a house fire. Ed Ciambrone: 832-7260 The high court said production and distribution director prison employees are Classified advertising: 832-2222 considered police and are or www.ljworld.com/classifieds granted similar protection from liability. CALL US

is the big hurdle remaining to getting the court up and running, Pokorny said. “The district attorney has come up with a plan to identify people eligible for a mental health court, and we know how the process would work legally,” she said. “The monetary issues haven’t been worked out. We can identify people with needs and set up the court, but if we don’t have somebody to help with the needs, we’re not going anywhere with the mental health court.”

Taxpayer funding Douglas County commissioners have broached the possibility of funding the mental health and other ongoing operational costs associated with the three-pronged approach as part of a referendum put before county voters to fund the jail expansion and construction of a crisis intervention center. That referendum is off the calendar for the November general election, and the County Commission is now working with a special election target date of spring 2017. County Commissioner Mike Gaughan said it wasn’t clear if ongoing expenses involved with the three-pronged approach could be a part of the referendum. Some staffing is in place as one of the two Bert Nash evaluators at the jail could be assigned part time to the mental health court, he said. Branson, Gaughan and Pokorny agree the mental health court could be launched before the jail expansion and crisis intervention center are completed, although all agreed it would function better with the other pieces in place. The critical need the crisis center would provide is hardto-find beds where those experiencing a mental health crisis could get treatment and recover. The next step is for the Criminal Justice Coordinating Council to nail down staffing needs and costs, Gaughan said. The County Commission would then have to budget the court’s operation, perhaps initially as a pilot program. “It seems to be the spirit of all the people participating that there are some things we can do now, even if we can’t have the full-blown program in place,” Gaughan said.

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LOTTERY SATURDAY’S POWERBALL 19 35 46 59 62 (13) FRIDAY’S MEGA MILLIONS 2 19 21 42 60 (13) SATURDAY’S HOT LOTTO SIZZLER 8 14 15 25 35 (5) SATURDAY’S SUPER KANSAS CASH 8 12 16 17 26 (23) SATURDAY’S KANSAS 2BY2 Red: 8 25; White: 8 19 SATURDAY’S KANSAS PICK 3 (MIDDAY) 3 0 2 SATURDAY’S KANSAS PICK 3 (EVENING) 1 1 4

BIRTHS Ryan and Amber Luckie, Lawrence, a girl, Saturday Emilee Stansell and Tony Thompson, Lecompton, a girl, Saturday Curtis Marks and Makayla Witt, Tonganoxie, a boy, Saturday

CORRECTIONS

The Journal-World’s policy is to correct all significant errors that are brought to the editors’ attention, usually in this space. If you believe we have made such an error, — County reporter Elvyn Jones can be call 785-832-7154, or email reached at 832-7166 news@ljworld.com. and ejones@ljworld.com.

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Lawrence&State

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/local l Sunday, April 24, 2016 l 3A

School board to hear plans for iPad rollout board will review a report on the district’s “Learning Forward/Future Ready” After the Lawrence plan to expand technolschool district pur- ogy in the district. The chased thousands report will address of iPads for next the steps taken to school year, more increase access to details about how technology for all the devices will be students, with an issued and put into emphasis on the use will soon be SCHOOLS upcoming iPad rollknown. out. At its meeting MonPlease see IPAD, page 4A day, the Lawrence school By Rochelle Valverde

Twitter: @RochelleVerde

John Young/Journal-World Photos

JIM BAGGETT, OWNER OF MASS STREET MUSIC, AND PATTI HAWKINS, OF LAWRENCE, discuss a Hill Country Harp brought in by Hawkins during an antique appraisal event at Watkins Museum, 1047 Massachusetts St., on Saturday afternoon. Hawkins learned the harp, which she received from her father, was made in the 1940s.

Experts shed light on antique treasures I haven’t seen anything a museum wouldn’t be interested in.”

U.S. aging official: Seniors, disabled need church outreach

— Barbara Brackman, who was evaluating textiles at the event

By Elvyn Jones

More than 100 items brought to Watkins appraisal event By Elvyn Jones Twitter: @ElvynJ

S

ally Davis’ eye for antiques was confirmed Saturday. As a 35-year member of the University Women’s Club Antique Group, Davis has had time to train her eye. Still, it wasn’t her expertise but the location depicted in a woodcut of a windmill that prompted her to buy the piece she brought to the Watkins Museum of History for evaluation. “I was in a Topeka antiques store,” Davis said. “I said, ‘That’s from Lawrence. I’ve got

to have that.’” Davis brought the woodcut Saturday to the Watkins Museum’s Know Your Antiques event, where fine arts experts Soodie Beasley and Dirk Soulis shared insights on the work of Kansas artist Margaret Whittemore, who died in 1983. “They said it was worth $500,” Davis said. “I paid $125 for it. That’s pretty good.”

That conversation sounds like the quick interviews that wrap up “Antiques Roadshow,” and the event’s format was much like that longrunning show. Area residents brought items for expert evaluation that they had found in their attics, ran across in antiques stores, cherished as part of collections or inherited.

DIRK SOULIS LOOKS OVER A SILVER CREAMER owned by Lawrence resident Jay Haugh. Soulis determined the creamer was probably made by Peter Please see ANTIQUES, page 4A Bateman in the late 1700s.

May National Senior Health and Fitness Day: The Fitness Crawl

Wed, May 25, 7 am-7 pm at various locations in Lawrence and Eudora Get ready for the 2nd annual Fitness Crawl. Try different fitness activities, get fitness and health screenings, and hear speaker Mia Austin talk about The Happiness Advantage. All ages welcome. Free. For a complete list, visit lmh.org, or call LMH Connect Care at (785) 505-5800.

LMH Performance and Wellness Center Classes

Join us at the LMH Performance and Wellness Center, Suite 100, Lawrence Parks and Recreation Sports Pavilion for these classes. They are free, unless otherwise noted. More information and registration at lmh.org.

Why Weight? Weight Management Small Group Instruction and Coaching

Mon, May 9-June 20, 6:30-8 pm (no meeting Monday 5/30) Join our weight management small group instruction and coaching program. No fad diets or other gimmicks, just sound research-based information about healthy eating, fitness and other successful weight

speaker at a seminar on disabilities and the faith community at Lawrence U.S. Assistant Sec- First United Methodist retary of Aging Kathy Church’s West Campus. Greenlee told a About the Lawrence gathphone call, ering Saturday Greenlee said that she called she asked her out her mother mother why she about inclusion wasn’t encourduring a phone aged while in call after she elementary and moved in 2009 high school to to Washington, Greenlee develop friendD.C. ships with Greenlee made the Please see AGING, page 4A remarks as the guest Twitter: @ElvynJ

Community Health Education Events loss strategies. Get support from other group members, a registered dietitian and a certified nurse wellness coach. Limited to 8 participants. $75.

Heel Bone Density Screening

Tues, May 10, 3-6 pm Make an appointment by calling (785) 505-5840 This quick and easy heel screening can indicate if further testing for osteoporosis is needed. Education provided. $15/person.

Wellness Friday Drop-in Discussion Fri, May 13, 9:30 am Topic: Tips for Managing Your Weight No registration needed.

Presented by: Tracy Hill, MS, APRN, NP-C, of Lawrence GI Consultants Each month, we bring you a three-course supper and a health seminar. Reservations required 24 hours in advance for meal and presentation. Space is limited. $5.50 for meal.

Look Good, Feel Better Wed, May 18, 5:30-7 pm This free workshop teaches non-medical beauty techniques to cancer patients to help manage appearance-related side effects of treatment. Call (785) 505-2807 to enroll.

Cholesterol and Glucose Screening

life or prevent further injury in children. Completion card issued. Meets KDHE child care licensing requirements. $50.

Pediatric First Aid/ CPR Renewal

Sat, May 21, 8 am-noon Recommended for child care providers and others, teaches basic skills that may save a

Mon, May 2 & 16, 4 pm (785) 505-3140.

Build Your Village – a Perinatal Support Group

Call (785) 505-3081 for dates. Sat, May 7, 9-11 am Meets KDHE child care licensBreastfeeding & New ing requirements for child care Parent Support Group providers with a current American Mon, May 2, 9, 16 & 23, Heart Association Pediatric 10-11:30 am First Aid card and a Heartsaver (No meeting on 5/30) CPR certification. $50. Weight checks available.

Get Fit

Aqua Fit

Recovering from surgery, have a chronic illness or decreased flexibility, strength, endurance or balance? This is the class for you. Sign up at lprd. org or (785) 832-SWIM!

Fri, May 20, 8-9:30 am Drop in for a lipid profile (full Cholesterol and cholesterol) and blood sugar Glucose Screening Jivin’ Joints (glucose) by finger stick. $20/ Sat, May 14, 8-9:30 am A certified Arthritis Foundation test (exact cash or check). Fasting Drop in for a lipid profile (full water exercise class. Sign up at 9-10 hours is recommended; cholesterol) and blood sugar lprd.org or (785) 832-SWIM! (glucose) by finger stick. $20/test water and necessary medications are okay. Please note: you may (exact cash or check). Fasting Balance for Life: a experience short wait times. 9-10 hours is recommended; Movement Class water and necessary medications Tyke Hyke with Tai Chi are okay. Please note: you may Sat, May 14, 9-10 am 4 different levels of balance experience short wait times. Help prepare prospective big classes with Tai Chi movements brothers-and-sister-to be, taught by registered physical therKeeping Our ages 3-6 years, for arrival apists. $60/8 sessions. Call (785) Community Healthy of a new baby. Children 505-2712 or (785) 505-3780. We offer screenings, classes must be accompanied by and instruction to help keep our an adult. $5/family. Free Support Groups community healthy. Registration All groups are free at LMH, requested, unless noted. Newborn Safety 325 Maine St. Call the Classes at LMH, unless othTues, May 5, 6-8:30 pm numbers provided for more erwise noted. Visit lmh.org for Learn about infant CPR and information. No registradetails or call 785-505-5800. choking; child passenger tion required, unless noted. safety; safe sleep; and Senior Supper safety issues. $25/perCancer Support Group and Seminar son or $40/couple. Wed, May 18, 5:30 pm Tues, May 17, Supper, 5 pm & No registration necessary. At Presentation: 6 pm Babycare Workshop LMH Oncology Center. (785) Topic: Colon Cancer Sun, May 22, 3-6 pm 505-2807 or liv.frost@lmh.org. Awareness and FAQ Bathing, diapering, cord care, sleeping, crying, Stroke Support Group nutrition and safety. $25/ Tues, May 17, 4 pm person. Partner is free. (785) 505-2712.

AHA Pediatric First Aid

Grief Support Group

Diabetes Education Group

Wed, May 11, 6 pm Topic: Diabetes and Oral Health Presented by: Marvin Heinbach, DDS. For more information call (785) 505-3062.

Better Breathers Club

Tues, May 10, 10-11 am Topic: Maintaining Respiratory Function.For those with chronic lung conditions. (785) 505-2850.

Online Courses

For details or to enroll, visit lmh.org or call 785-749-5800.

American Heart Association Heartsaver CPR

For adult, child and infant modules for childcare providers. An in-person skills check is required. $50.

Childbirth Preparation

Detailed pregnancy, birthing and postpartum information. $65.

To enroll or for information, call ConnectCare at (785) 505-5800 or visit lmh.org. Please note that advance enrollment is requested, unless otherwise noted.


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Sunday, April 24, 2016

iPad CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

Unequal access to technology was brought to the forefront after the district expanded its use of digital textbooks before ensuring that all students had access to computers and internet at home. More than 90 percent of students districtwide — or about 10,000 students — have one or more subjects that rely on a digital textbook. Currently, the only device checkout program is at the high school level, and students wishing to check out devices have consistently been met with waiting lists. Last month, the board approved a proposal to purchase 5,000 iPads for the district, and the devices will be distributed to teachers and students at the beginning of next school year. About half of the iPads will be for the middle school level, where every student will be issued a device. The remaining iPads will be distributed throughout the district, many going to teachers and to support

LAWRENCE

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More than 90 percent of students districtwide — or about 10,000 students — have one or more subjects that rely on a digital textbook.

additional blended learning classrooms. The board plans to discuss the purchase of devices for the high school level next school year. The lease-purchase agreement with Apple totals about $3.2 million and includes 5,000 iPads, 500 laptops, as well as other associated accessories and services. The cost of the agreement is being paid for from the district’s capital outlay budget. The proposal spurred a lengthy debate among administrators recommending the lease-purchase agreement and board members, and ultimately resulted in an uncommon mixed vote of 5-2. Much of the disagreement centered on whether iPads were the preferred device over laptops. Another report will provide the board information on the district’s education efforts to ensure responsible technology use. The

Aging CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

students with developmental disabilities. Her mother didn’t have an answer for why those friendships weren’t available, although she recalled in earlier times the developmentally disabled were “just there” and fully integrated in the lives of families and communities. That got to the heart of her question, Greenlee said. During her school days, the developmentally disabled weren’t “just there” anymore as it was the trend in education to

district’s “Digital Citizenship” program seeks to educate students, teachers and parents on appropriate use of school technology. Jerri Kemble, the district’s assistant superintendent of educational programs and technology, will present both reports to the board. In other business, the board will: l Meet in executive session to discuss negotiations regarding a property acquisition. l Review a report by Assistant Superintendent Kyle Hayden on the district’s leadership transition. Hayden will replace Superintendent Rick Doll, who will resign his position effective July 1. The school board will meet at 7 p.m. Monday at the district offices, 110 McDonald Drive. — K-12 education reporter Rochelle Valverde can be reached at 832-6314 or rvalverde@ljworld.com.

segregate the developmentally disabled in special education classrooms, she said. “We all lost from that segregation,” she said. “The students in the special education classes lost out from not getting to know us. I lost out from not getting to know them. I want to think all of us were losing out.” The approach has changed once again, and Greenlee is among the leaders advocating to help ensure that developmentally and physically disabled people and seniors are integrated into their communities. The Kansas University School of Law graduate and one-time secretary of the Kansas Department on Aging left Lawrence when President Barack Obama

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Antiques CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

Although Davis did receive a dollar value on her woodcut, most of those attending left with more knowledge of the history of their antiques rather than their value. Barbara Brackman, an author and former museum curator who was evaluating quilts and textiles, said she did sometimes provide insight into an object’s value through its rarity and other information. “I tell them if a museum might be interested,” she said. “I haven’t seen anything a museum wouldn’t be interested in.” She had to share the bad news to some that old doesn’t necessarily mean valuable, Brackman said. That was the case for a paisley shawl she saw that was machinemade more than 150 years ago. She also found rare items, such as a coverlet, which was one of only 18 surviving of its kind. It would have been “extremely valuable” before the market sunk in recent years, she said.

appointed her to her current position in 2009 with the blessing of then-U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, her old boss in Kansas. Greenlee has since added the title of administrator of the Administration for Community Living. Created at the urging of Greenlee and other disability advocates, the agency seeks to ensure seniors and people with disabilities live independently and fully participate in their communities. “Community living as a concept comes straight from the disability rights movement,” Greenlee said. “It’s compatible with aging. Globally, the goals of those with disabilities and aging are almost exactly the same.”

We don’t know when yet, but from the interest we know we will be having another show.” — Jeannette Blackmar, Watkins Museum board member Paul Gosal was prepared for disappointment regarding the Stainer violin he found in the attic of his Kansas City, Mo., home. It was, he said, made in the 1800s as a tribute to a master craftsman of the 1600s. “I saw on the ‘Roadshow’s’ online site that they are one of the things people think are valuable but aren’t,” he said. “I thought I’d bring it in and find out more about it. I don’t play the violin. Depending on what I find out, maybe I will learn.” The event enticed Watkins Museum employee Brittany Keegan to bring pieces from her collection of World War I trench art. It was a collection that would not be a conflict of interest because they are not materials the Watkins Museum collects, she said. Keegan said there are two kinds of trench art: Those that soldiers crafted during long hours in

For both groups, the keys to community living success are that people have meaningful daily lives, are safe and secure, live in community settings and not institutions, have healthy lifestyles, are engaged socially and spiritually, and are citizens able to advocate for their interests, Greenlee said. Church members had to think holistically to achieve those goals in their congregations by remembering the needs of all populations in all church activities, Greenlee said. “What is your ministry doing to reach out to the disabled?” she said. “It’s really about reaching the whole population and not being a burden to that. Don’t add it to the bottom of

the field between engagements, and those made by villagers living near the former battlefields and sold to visitors to the many war memorials. She, too, was hoping to learn more about a ring and small and large vases hammered from spent artillery shells, she said. Watkins Museum board member Jeannette Blackmar said 38 people had signed in to have the experts look at 116 different items with an hour left in the six-hour event. Items ran the gamut of the experts’ fields of jewelry, musical instruments, fine and decorative arts, Asian art and quilts and textiles, she said. “We do know we’re going to do it again,” she said. “We don’t know when yet, but from the interest we know we will be having another show.” — County reporter Elvyn Jones can be reached at 832-7166 or ejones@ljworld.com.

the list, because you’ll never get to the bottom of the list.” After Greenlee’s words, those attending the seminar broke into groups to discuss issues involving attitudes, facility access, mental health, transportation and hearing and sight disabilities. Ron Miller, a former Baptist minister in Iowa who is now a member of the First UMC in part because of its attention to accessibility, said the church received positive feedback from last year’s discussions. “We added more time for discussion,” he said. “That’s where people told us they really learned things.” — County reporter Elvyn Jones can be reached at 832-7166 or ejones@ljworld.com.


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Sunday, April 24, 2016

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Topeka man charged with using car to drag officer Topeka (ap) — A 24-year-old Topeka man faces charges accusing him of dragging a police officer during a traffic stop. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that Dyllon Alan Tucker is charged with aggravated kidnapping and other charges stemming

from the incident April 14. Authorities said the officer stopped an SUV driven by Tucker, who then assaulted the officer and drove away, dragging the officer who had her arm in the car. As she was pulled down the street, the officer opened fire and wounded Tucker.

The officer was treated at a hospital and released. The charges against Tucker were filed late Tuesday and became public Friday. It’s unclear whether Tucker has a lawyer. He is being held in the Shawnee County Jail on a $500,000 surety bond.

LAWRENCE CITY COMMISSION Agenda highlights • 5:45 p.m. Tuesday • City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets • WOW! Channel 25 • Meeting documents online at lawrenceks.org

City to decide on water, wastewater projects BOTTOM LINE Commissioners will decide on $61 million of water and wastewater projects for 2016 and 2017, and how they should be financed. The city’s capital investment master plan calls for $61 million in bonded water and wastewater projects in 2016 and 2017, including improvements to

water treatment plants, a new pump station and an assessment and rehabilitation of sanitary sewers. The utilities department is proposing paying for the improvements through issuing revenue bonds. About $3 million in cash could also go toward the projects.

OTHER BUSINESS Recognition and proclamations

• Recognition of the winners of the 2016 Fair Housing Poster Contest. • Proclaim the week of April 25 through 29, 2016 as Tree City USA Week and Friday as Arbor Day. • Proclaim the month of May 2016 as Bicycle Month.

Consent agenda

• Approve City Commission meeting minutes from April 19, 2016. • Receive minutes from various boards and commissions: Aviation Advisory Board meeting of Feb. 10, 2016 Bicycle Advisory Committee meeting of March 21, 2016 Public Health Board meeting of Feb. 15, 2016 Sustainability Advisory Board meetings of Jan. 13, 2016; Feb. 10, 2016; and March 9, 2016 • Approve all claims. The list of claims will be posted by the Finance Department on Monday prior to the meeting. • Approve licenses as recommended by the city clerk’s office. • Approve appointments as recommended by the mayor. • Bid and purchase items: a) Set bid date of May 3, 2016, for Bid No. B1619, Project No. PW1611, 19th Street and Ousdahl Road Intersection Improvements. b) Approve change orders Nos. 1 through 12 in the amount of $92,644.20 to Nowak Construction Inc. to complete the contract for the construction of the Maple Street Stormwater Pump Station (Project No. PW1133). c) Award Bid No. B1612, Project No. PW1604 — 2016 Microsurfacing, Patch, Overlay and Concrete Maintenance Program, to Sunflower Paving Inc. in the total amount of $1,963,428.90. d) Award bid for one (1) EE rated Electric Forklift for the Solid Waste Division to Sellers Equipment Co. in the net amount of $25,540.00. e) Approve sale of surplus equipment on Purple Wave Auctions. f) Award Bid No. B1611 to Lippert Mechanical Service Corporation in the amount of $56,500 for replacement of two HVAC units at the Kansas River Wastewater Treatment Plant. • Adopt on second and final reading the following ordinances: a) Ordinance No. 9210, authorizing the issuance of $7.8 million in industrial revenue bonds for the 800 New Hampshire Street Project. b) Ordinance No. 9224, establishing the final assessment for the Corpus Christi benefit district. • Approve a 24 month extension request for Site Plan SP-14-00037 for the Santa Fe Station located at 413 E. Seventh St. • Authorize the mayor to sign agreement with the Kansas Department of Transportation for the Federal Fund Exchange Program. • Authorize staff to advertise a request for proposals, RFP R1605, for Wastewater Flow Optimization Project UT1605. • Authorize the city manager to execute the memorandum of agreement with the Kansas University for the university’s participation in the construction cost of 19th Street Utilities Relocation Project UT1518. • Approve the Lawrence Cultural Arts Commission Community Arts Grants as recommended by the Lawrence Cultural Arts Commission. • Authorize application forms for outside agency funding for the 2017 budget. • Approve as “signs of community interest” a request from the Lawrence Home Builders Association to place signs at various locations from April 30 through May 8. • Authorize the mayor to sign

releases of mortgage for Paula J. Freed, 618 Saratoga Place, and Chester Schmitendorf, 2014 Hillview Road. Receive public comment of a general nature

Regular agenda

• Consider the first amendment to the cooperation agreement between the city of Lawrence and Kansas University in association with the KU Central District Development Project, generally consisting of student housing, parking, recreation and other ancillary uses located along and north of 19th Street between Iowa Street and Naismith Drive on the university’s main campus. ACTION: Approve the first amendment to the cooperation agreement between the city of Lawrence and Kansas University in association with the KU Central District Development Project, if appropriate. • Consider authorizing staff to submit a joint city of Lawrence/Kansas University TIGER Grant application for a multimodal facility to be located in Lot 90 of the KU campus. Consider authorizing the mayor to sign a letter of support and notice of local funding in an amount not to exceed $4 million, contingent on award of the grant. ACTION: Authorize staff to submit a joint city of Lawrence/Kansas University TIGER Grant application for a multimodal facility to be located in Lot 90 of the KU campus. Consider authorizing the mayor to sign a letter of support and notice of local funding in an amount not to exceed $4 million, if appropriate. • Consider a text amendment, TA-15-00346, to the City of Lawrence Land Development Code to add urban agriculture as a permitted use and establish standards. Initiated by City Commission on June 23, 2015. Adopt on first reading Ordinance No. 9206 for a text amendment (TA-15-00346) to the City of Lawrence Land Development Code to add urban agriculture as a permitted use and establish standards. (PC Item 4; approved 10-0 on Feb. 22, 2016.) ACTION: Approve the Urban Agriculture Text Amendment (TA-15-00346) and adopt on first reading Ordinance No. 9206, if appropriate. • Presentation on water quality in the city of Lawrence. ACTION: Receive report.

• Consider the following items related to utility system financing: a) Consider authorizing financing actions for 2016 and 2017 Utility Master Plan Projects: i) Consider adopting Resolution No. 7155, authorizing $61,000,000 of water and wastewater projects for 2016 and 2017 as identified in the utility master plan. ii) Consider adopting Resolution No. 7156, authorizing the issuance of, and setting the sale date of June 7 for, revenue bonds in the amount of $68,180,000 to finance the 2016 water and wastewater improvements, and refunding two revenue bonds, Series 2016-A. ACTION: Adopt Resolution No. 7155, authorizing $61,000,000 of water and wastewater projects for 2016 and 2017, and Resolution No. 7156, authorizing the issuance of, and setting the sale date of June 7 for, revenue bonds in the amount of $68,180,000, to finance the 2016 water and wastewater improvements, and refunding two revenue bonds, Series 2016-A, if appropriate. b) Consider authorizing actions to refund the city’s 2000 State of Kansas revolving loan: i) Consider adopting Resolution No. 7157, authorizing improvements to the water and sewage system of the city, in the amount of $44,773,720.20, and providing for the payment of the costs thereof. ii) Consider adopting Resolution No. 7158, establishing the maximum annual bonding amount for public improvements as $44,773,720.20, pursuant to Charter Ordinance No. 27. iii) Consider adopting Resolution No. 7159, authorizing the sale of general obligation refunding bonds, Series 2016-A. ACTION: Adopt Resolution No. 7157, authorizing improvements to the water and sewage system of the city, in the amount of $44,773,720.20; Resolution No. 7158, establishing the maximum annual bonding amount for public improvements as $44,773,720.20, pursuant to Charter Ordinance No. 27; and Resolution No. 7159, authorizing the sale of general obligation refunding bonds, Series 2016-A, if appropriate. • Discussion of mayoral terms.

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

Sunday, April 24, 2016

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| 7A

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LAWRENCE RESIDENT DEBARRE JOHNSON HELPS FISH SMITHSON, a Kansas University junior from Baltimore and a safety for the KU football team, find the proper voter registration form Saturday at a booth set up outside Watson’s Barber Shop, 925 Iowa St. Johnson and others are making an effort to increase the number of registered voters, particularly in the black community. She plans to organize more registration drives leading up to the November election. Jamie Penquite, massage therapist, Lawrence “Either my mother’s sewing machine, which is probably from 1968, or some jewelry. I buy a lot of vintage stuff.”

Transit CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

Steve Evans, a retired architect and the neighborhood’s president, said he initially heard negative feedback, but he wants the neighborhood to “wait and see.” “When you hear about something like this being adjacent to your neighborhood, you think it doesn’t sound good,” Evans said. “I think there’s people making a lot of assumptions now, but we really need to understand what this project is Neela Sandal, — then we can have some doctor, opinions about it.” Lawrence On Tuesday, Robert “My car. It’s about 14 Nugent, administrator of years old.” Lawrence Transit System, will ask the City Commission for permission to submit a grant application for the project to the U.S. Department of Transportation. With that, Nugent will need a letter of support signed by Mayor Mike Amyx and a commitment to provide the funding required to match the federal grant. The grant application is due April 29. Lois Schneider, “This is so they can take landlord, another look at it and also Lawrence so we can ask them for a “It’s a pendant from my letter of support and a figrandmother. Probably nancial commitment for about 100 years old.” the project,” Nugent said Current estimates put the transit hub, proposed for KU’s Lot 90, at $20 million. If awarded, a Transportation Investment Generating Economic Recovery (TIGER) grant would provide 80 percent, or $16 million. The hub, dubbed an intermodal facility comprising a parking deck, bicycle lockers and office space, would be constructed in partnership with KU. Sam Fields, Chancellor Bernadette insurance, Gray-Little has given her Lawrence approval to proceed with “It’s probably a Zippo the grant application, said lighter from 1979 or Danny Kaiser, associate di1980.” rector of KU Parking and What would your answer Transit. If the project were to win be? Go to LJWorld.com/ onthestreet and share it. a grant, an agreement would be established between the

city and KU to provide the $4 million match. In a memo to city leaders, Nugent said Lawrence Transit has more than $4 million in reserve funds that could be used for the match. The funds came from a 0.05 percent sales tax approved by voters in 2008. According to Nugent’s memo, a bus transfer facility would be located on the first floor, and up to four levels of parking would rise above it. The facility would be accessible from Schwegler Drive off Naismith Drive, and the project would include road improvements to ease traffic flow at 18th and Naismith. Besides the Lawrence Transit Center, it would serve KU on Wheels and the K-10 Connector. Renderings of the center are not yet public. Nugent said he’d like to provide more details to commissioners Tuesday than are currently available, such as the final cost estimates and the structure’s footprint. The new development, initially proposed for the northeast section of that parking lot, is now being considered for the southeast portion. It’s anticipated to cover less than half of Lot 90, Nugent’s memo states. If approved by the City Commission on Tuesday, after the grant is submitted, work will continue on environmental and traffic studies and detailed drawings. Nugent said Tuesday’s vote would not be a final decision on the location. The City Commission rejected a proposal last year to locate a transit hub at 21st Street and Stewart Avenue, and this new site, too, could still be denied. “I don’t think their vote will say, ‘This is where it’s going to be and we’re committed to it from now on,’” Nugent said. “It could happen somewhere down the line, the public, or even us, could say, ‘This is not where we want to do it.’ And we could withdraw the proposal for the grant.

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There’s a lot of public process.” The public process will continue Wednesday with an open meeting at Fire Station No. 5, 1911 Stewart Ave. On Thursday, the University Place Neighborhood will meet to discuss the project. University Place is bounded by 19th Street to the south, the KU campus to the north and Arkansas Street to the east. It runs as far west as Edgehill Road. The neighborhood surrounds Ambler Student Recreation Fitness Center, and just to the west of Ambler is Lot 90. “It’s important for us now is to really, fully understand what this project is and how it’s going to affect the neighborhood,” Evans said. “I think they’re really sincere that they want to hear what we think and involve us in the process. That, to me, is probably the most important thing.”

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8A

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Sunday, April 24, 2016

LAWRENCE

.

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Dancer

taken by tribal leaders to revitalize the Lakota language, which, thanks to years of genocide and assimilation, she says, is slowly dying off along with the older generation of native speakers. She earned her instructor credentials while still in college, and hopes to be teaching Lakota within a few years. “I want my girls and I to know our culture so that I can pass it on to my grandkids. That’s the only way we’re going to survive,” she says. “To know our language is a key to our culture. It’s a key to our songs, it’s a key to our dances, it’s a key to our ceremonies, and it’s a part of who we are.”

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

“I pointed down there to The Pit, which is way, way down there when you’re sitting up top, and I said, ‘I don’t know what I have to do to be Head Lady, but I’m going to be the Head Lady. I don’t know when they’re going to ask me, but it’s going to happen,’” Hall recalls. A few months later, after receiving an official offer via mail, the job was hers. “Putting it out in the universe and then getting that letter, I was like, ‘What? Seriously?’ That’s true — when you put things out into the universe and speak good words over yourself, good things can really become reality,” she says. “It’s not just a saying.” As Head Lady Dancer, Hall serves as a role model of sorts, representing her fellow female dancers at the Gathering, which convenes Thursday for three days of Native American dance, music, arts, crafts and food. The gig is just one of several filling Hall’s schedule this month — in addition to dancing professionally, the 27-yearold has built a successful career for herself as a stand-up comedian, with more than 100,000 Facebook followers and counting. Hall was on the road for a college gig in North Dakota when she spoke to the Journal-World last Wednesday, with a gala performance for a Native American business owners’ conference booked for the weekend. When she returns to Lawrence on Monday, she’ll have a little over 24 hours to celebrate her daughter’s birthday before the family packs up for New

Frank White Bull/Contributed Photo

LAWRENCE RESIDENT TONIA HALL HAS BEEN NAMED “HEAD LADY DANCER” at this month’s upcoming Gathering of Nations in Albuquerque, N.M. Hall, 27, was selected out of thousands of dancers for the honor, which entails leading the Grand Entry and representing her fellow female dancers at the powwow, which is regarded as the world’s largest gathering of Native American and indigenous people. Mexico on Wednesday. Comedy is primarily how she supports herself now, but Hall — who belongs to the Lakota, Dakota and Hidatsa tribes — didn’t always envision herself working in entertainment. Originally, the plan was to go into law enforcement. “I got my two-year (degree) in criminal justice because I had these high hopes of serving my community as a police officer,” says Hall, who was disillusioned after hearing “horror stories” from her criminal-investigator aunt. “I couldn’t look at myself in the mirror and say, ‘You could take someone down if they jumped on your back.’ I couldn’t see it, so I moved on to Native American studies.” Between earning her two degrees, Hall took up comedy and began volunteering on her North Dakota reservation. Word spread, and soon people were inviting her to perform at nearby schools, casinos and conferences. These days, gigs include motivational speaking engagements

for young people and speaking as an advocate against domestic violence, which she did last fall. Hall is serving her community, albeit through a different route than she’d imagined for herself years ago, she says. “Everyone has a calling, and mine is making people laugh, telling stories, making people feel good,” Hall says. Part of that is dance. Serving as Head Lady Dancer is the fulfillment of a long-held dream for Hall, who grew up in the powwow circuit.

Her mother taught her to dance when she was young, and she’s doing the same with her own daughters, 9-year-old Sapphire and 8-year-old Lahlee. Right now, the girls seem more interested in “running around with their friends” than the discipline and fanfare of competitive dance, but she hopes they’ll eventually find as much joy in it as she has over the years. Soon, Hall will be able to cross one item off her list of goals and replace it with another. Now that she’s received the Head Lady Dancer honor and is on her way to a suc-

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

Sunday, April 24, 2016

| 9A

the Lawrence Art Guild presents

Forecasters ask: How early is too early for warnings? By Seth Borenstein and Kelly P. Kissel Associated Press

Norman, Okla. — Meteorologists are finding something much tougher to forecast than a stormy atmosphere: the human mind. Forecasters at the federal Storm Prediction Center see a high chance of severe storms, with possible killer tornadoes, next Tuesday in Oklahoma, Kansas and Texas. Federal Emergency Management Agency chief Craig Fugate said the early heads-up helps disaster officials prepare, but what about you: Do you really need to worry — or even know about it — this far in advance? For all of their advances in the physical sciences, forecasters have yet to determine when advance warnings are most effective and how urgent their messages should be. They worry about the “cry wolf” syndrome, in which people may tune them out, and about people overreacting, especially with tornadoes. People have left much safer buildings and headed into their cars to flee, but cars are the last place you want to be in a tornado. And it’s not just tornadoes. Forecasters are still trying to understand why several people in Houston ignored the mantra “turn around, don’t drown” and died after driving onto flooded streets last week. After mastering physics, meteorologists must now master psychology. With people, “things change all the time. That makes studying humans infinitely harder than studying physical processes,” said Kim Klockow, a visiting scientist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s headquarters. “We are leaps and bounds ahead in physics.” Klockow has studied both meteorology and human behavior and was hired to help the federal government find the right mix of social and physical sciences in its warnings. There’s a test Tuesday.

sunday, may 1st

rain date: may 8th

AP File Photo

IN THIS MAY 31, 2013 FILE PHOTO, A TORNADO FORMS IN EL RENO, OKLA. Forecasters are finding that the human mind is more difficult to predict than a stormy atmosphere. As the nation’s midsection braces for bad weather Tuesday, researchers are still trying to determine when to raise a general alarm with the public, so warnings will be more effective. In guidance distributed Thursday to emergency managers and local forecasters, the Storm Prediction Center used the term “severe weather outbreak possible” — the earliest it has ever used that language ahead of potential severe weather, SPC spokeswoman Keli Pirtle said. Six days out, forecasters were 30 percent sure that severe storms will develop Tuesday in an area stretching roughly from Dallas to Wichita, including much of Oklahoma. Storms shift eastward Wednesday into parts of Arkansas and the mid-Mississippi River Valley. Subsequent forecasts have offered the same general prediction. “This far out, we cannot give specifics,” said Rick Smith, the warning coordination meteorologist for the National Weather Service in Norman. “We don’t even know for sure this is going to happen. We’re just in a heads-up phase.” Forecasts intended for the general public don’t use the term “outbreak.” Smith’s guidance to the public is to remember that it’s spring in the southern Plains, but it’s given in a way that won’t scare people. “Can they go out and buy a weather radio this weekend? Can you vacuum the spider webs out

of your storm shelter?” Smith asked. “It’s April. We’re in Oklahoma and Texas. We need to be doing this anyway.” In the past, forecasters often erred on the side of scaring people, figuring it is better to give them too much warning rather than not enough. But Klockow said, “We can’t always just hit the red button,” especially in the new social media world when things get amplified. Researchers have to explain the uncertainty involved, she said. At FEMA, the question is, “What do you do differently with this information?” Fugate said Friday. The disaster agency will start targeted social media messages reminding people to get prepared. That’s the message officials have in advance: Get prepared now. Smith conducted a webbased seminar for 150 emergency managers and others on Friday, looking ahead to Tuesday. The goal was to ensure that they were ready, such as by having gasoline in their chainsaws. At his office, he was charging portable computers and ensuring that they had the latest software for conducting damage surveys. Klockow is already warning people about this potential storm on her personal social media accounts: “I’m hitting the caution button.”

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ROADWORK Lawrence: l The south intersection of Rhode Island will be closed and East 11th Street will be reduced to one lane during the days for installation of new inlets and storm sewer pipe, along with a redesigned southwest corner, from Monday through May 13. l West Eighth Street, between Kentucky and Tennessee streets, will be closed for reconstruction through May 20. Temporary singlelane closures may occur on Tennessee and Kentucky streets, as well as sidewalk closures and detours. l The westbound lanes of Kansas Highway 10 have been shifted side-by-side next to the eastbound lanes between East 1900 and O’Connell roads to build the new westbound lanes. The shift will last through the fall. A 45 mph speed limit will be in place for the duration of the work. l The easternmost northbound lane of Iowa Street is closed between 34th and 35th streets as part of the South Lawrence Trafficway project. The lane will likely remain closed until May 20. l A bridge over the Wakarusa River on County Road 1055 just south of Lawrence is closed for repairs. The bridge, about 1.25 miles south of 31st Street, is expected to remain closed until May 6. l The intersection of Sixth and Walnut streets in North Lawrence is closed for installation of a storm sewer main associated with the Maple Street Stormwater

Pump Station project. l Vehicle access to the north outlet area at Clinton Dam is restricted beginning at the fisherman’s parking area east of the outlet until Nov. 1. Access to Mutt Run and the south outlet area will not be affected. l Traffic will be affected on Randall Road and Cynthia Street south of Harvard Road as city crews install a new waterline. The

project is expected to last until July 15. l The curbside northbound lane of Iowa Street between 25th and 27th streets will be closed for a water main repair. Brief closures between 27th and 31st streets are also planned during the project, which is expected to last until mid-June. —Staff Reports

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Sunday, April 24, 2016

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

Move Y our Tobacco settlement plan

banking forward

draws bipartisan criticism By John Hanna Associated Press

Topeka — Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback is facing strong bipartisan criticism over his proposal to use bonds backed by tobacco settlement funds to help plug shortterm budget gaps. The Republican governor wants to sell off the rights to collect part of Kansas’ annual payments from a national legal settlement in the 1990s between states and tobacco companies. A Brownback aide says that such a deal would generate a one-time cash payment of $158 million to the state. The governor outlined the plan last week as an alternative to delaying contributions to public employee pensions until July 2018 or making spending cuts that would include aid to public schools and health coverage for the poor and disabled. Shawn Sullivan, his budget director, described the tobaccofunds proposal as Brownback’s preferred option. But legislators in both parties see the plan as using long-term debt to fix budget problems over two fiscal years. Also, children’s advocates believe the proposal endangers programs that are now financed with tobacco settlement funds. “That’s a terrible idea,” said Sen. Dan Kerschen, a conservative Garden Plain Republican. Legislators must close shortfalls totaling $290 million in the current and next state budgets. They return Wednesday from an annual spring break to tackle budget issues. Sullivan said the governor prefers the tobaccofunds proposal to other alternatives because he views it as having the least detrimental effect

There’s no way to do this without removing the statutory protections.” — Shannon Cotsoradis, CEO of Kansas Action for Children

on state programs. Sullivan also said the deal would be structured so that children’s programs would still receive the tobacco funds they’re getting now. And while the chairmen of the House and Senate budget committees question whether the proposal can pass, they rejected criticism of it as risky or using debt to finance ongoing government programs. At least 18 states have used tobacco bonds, including California and New Jersey. Senate committee chairman Ty Masterson compared the result of such a proposal to a lump-sum payment that lottery jackpot winners often claim instead of annual payments. “There are a lot of those choices out there in the business world,” said Masterson, an Andover Republican. “It’s just a choice.” Brownback’s administration has been contemplating such a proposal at least since last fall. But its interest didn’t become public until last month, when the nonprofit advocacy group Kansas Action for Children disclosed it and criticized the idea during a legislative hearing. The group doesn’t trust Sullivan’s promises that funding for programs such as early childhood education from the tobacco settlement would be protected. The money is now deposited into a special, dedicated fund. “There’s no way to do this without removing the statutory protections,”

said Shannon Cotsoradis, the group’s CEO. Kansas expects to receive $59 million in settlement funds during its current fiscal year and another $58 million during the next fiscal year, which begins in July. Brownback is asking legislators to give him the legal authority to sell the rights to collect any of the annual payments above $42 million. Sullivan said the administration would set up a private corporation and sell the rights to collect the funds to “a banking-type entity.” The state would receive a lump-sum payment and the resulting bonds would not be a state debt, Sullivan said. The purchaser of the rights to the revenues would receive a premium of between 10 percent and 15 percent, Sullivan told lawmakers. The budget director said the purchaser would assume the risk that the annual payments would decline and not be enough to pay off the bonds. He and legislative researchers said they’re still working on the details of how the bonds would be issued. House Appropriations Committee Chairman Ron Ryckman Jr., an Olathe Republican, said: “I see it as cashing out an annuity early and taking a lump-sum payment.” But Rep. Mark Hutton, a Wichita Republican who serves on the House Appropriations Committee said the state shouldn’t “give away” a premium “just because we need the money now.” “It sounds to me like a payday loan,” he said.

HOW TO HELP

Workshop will demonstrate hardships of living in poverty Agency: United Way of Douglas County Contact: Lori Johns at impact@unitedwaydgco. org or 843-6626, ext. 357 Looking for a unique opportunity related to understanding and solving poverty in Douglas County? Volunteers are needed for a workshop, where participants will experience having to make hard choices when adequate time and money are not available to meet basic needs. Following scripted instructions by facilitators, volunteers will role-play a month in the lives of low-income individuals and families in Douglas County. Individuals ages 16 and up are welcome. Younger volunteers should be accompanied by an adult. Community partners ECKAN, Communities in Schools of Mid-America, Independence Inc., Lawrence-Douglas County Health Department and the United Way of Douglas County are collaborating to host this event. Join us June 9 at 1 p.m. at Free Methodist Church, 3001 Lawrence Ave. Reserve your spot now at volunteerdouglascounty.org.

course setup, registration and aid stations. Available positions start as early as 7 a.m., and cleanup will start at 3 p.m. Available positions have varying time slots depending upon the task. Volunteer orientations will be held the week of the event. To sign up, please complete a volunteer application form at lawrencehumane.org/get-involved/ volunteer. After completing your application, please email Taylor Bauer at volunteer@lawrencehumane.org.

Native plant sale The Grassland Heritage Foundation preserves tallgrass prairie in Northeast Kansas through education, stewardship and land protection. Support the foundation by volunteering to assist with the annual native plant sale on May 14. This is a large event, and volunteers are needed to help set up and tear down the event, help customers and restock plants. Two-hour shifts starting at 7 a.m. are available. No experience is necessary. For more inHumane Society 5K The Lawrence Humane formation, please contact Society is looking for en- Kim Bellemere at grassergetic, enthusiastic vol- landheritage@gmail.com. unteers to help with the second annual Paw Valley Join AmeriCorps United Way of DougFestival and 5K on Saturday, May 7. Tasks include las County is currently

recruiting for 19 full time AmeriCorps positions funded by the Kansas Volunteer Commission. United Way AmeriCorps members provide direct one-on-one or small group assistance to low-income adults who want to improve their health or find a job. Any prior training in professions involving helping others is a plus. Benefits include an education award of $5,775 after 1,700 hours of service, monthly living allowance, health insurance coverage and child care reimbursement. Informational sessions run through the end of April. Interviews will begin in May for positions that start Aug. 1. For more information, contact Linda Brandenburger at 843-6626, ext. 356, or at americorps@unitedwaydgco.org.

Food drive help Help Just Food Stamp Out Hunger by supporting the Postal Carriers food drive. This year the food drive will be May 14. In advance of the food drive, 30,000 bags and cards need to be stapled to distribute to mailboxes. Contact Jen Williams at operations@justfoodks.org or at 856-7030. — For more volunteer opportunities, go to volunteerdouglascounty.org or contact Shelly Hornbaker at the United Way Roger Hill Volunteer Center at 865-5030, ext. 301 or at volunteer@unitedwaydgco.org.

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Opinion

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Sunday, April 24, 2016

EDITORIALS

Desperate step Steps to securitize any part of the money Kansas receives from the national tobacco settlement would abolish the system that protects the use of that money for the children of Kansas.

H

aving facilitated a desperate budget situation in Kansas, the governor and state legislators now are considering desperate measures to raise new revenue. One of the most desperate is the possible destruction of the state’s system for receiving and distributing money from the national tobacco settlement to programs that benefit the children of Kansas. Money from the tobacco settlement — about $58 million each year — is received by the Kansas Endowment for Youth and then flows to the Children’s Initiative Fund. From there, it is distributed by the Kansas Children’s Cabinet to early childhood programs throughout the state. Those programs, including 11 in Douglas County, help detect health or developmental problems, give support to parents and families and provide other services to help children during their critical preschool years. The Children’s Cabinet carefully screens requests for funding and maintains a full accounting of how the tobacco dollars are spent. It’s a good system that ensures that money from the settlement goes to help Kansas children. That could all be dismantled by proposals that would use all or part of that money to support the sale of bonds to raise immediate funds to solve a shortterm state budget problem. The state would sell bonds in exchange for giving up all or part of its annual tobacco payments for about 30 years. An initial proposal to securitize all of the tobacco settlement money drew a cool response from state legislators, but, according to state children’s advocates, the governor’s latest proposal to use just a portion of the money to raise short-term cash may be gaining favor. Money left in the children’s fund after programs are funded each year routinely is swept into the state general fund, so securitizing just a portion of the funds seems to make some sense. The big problem is that, in order for the state to securitize even a small portion of the tobacco settlement money, it must change state statutes in a way that destroys the entire structure that ensures the tobacco money is dedicated for children’s program. Statutes currently require all the tobacco money to go directly to the Kansas Endowment for Youth, but Senate Bill 463 would redirect that money to the state general fund. It also would abolish not only the KEY fund but also the Children’s Initiative Fund. The Children’s Cabinet still would exist but would serve only as an adviser to the governor and the Legislature on spending for children’s programs. It’s no wonder that groups like Kansas Action for Children are concerned. Even if only a small portion of the tobacco money is securitized, it would be necessary to abolish the entire structure that protects the rest of that money for children’s programs in the state. Without that protection it’s hard to tell how those programs will fare when pitted against all the other demands on the state general fund. If the state takes this step, the entities formed to manage and be accountable for the tobacco settlement funds could be gone forever. That’s a long-term loss for the state that isn’t justified by any short-term revenue benefits. LAWRENCE

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11A

AGs seek to silence climate skeptics Washington — Authoritarianism, always latent in progressivism, is becoming explicit. Progressivism’s determination to regulate thought by regulating speech is apparent in the campaign by 16 states’ attorneys general and those of the District of Columbia and the Virgin Islands, none Republican, to criminalize skepticism about the supposedly “settled” conclusions of climate science. Four core tenets of progressivism are: First, history has a destination. Second, progressives uniquely discern it. (Barack Obama frequently declares things to be on or opposed to “the right side of history.”) Third, politics should be democratic but peripheral to governance, which is the responsibility of experts scientifically administering the regulatory state. Fourth, enlightened progressives should enforce limits on speech (witness IRS suppression of conservative advocacy groups) in order to prevent thinking unhelpful to history’s progressive unfolding. Progressivism is already enforced on campuses by restrictions on speech that might produce what progressives consider retrograde intellectual diversity. Now, from the so-called party of science, aka Democrats, comes a campaign to criminalize debate about science. “The debate is settled,” says Obama. “Climate change is a fact.” Indeed. The epithet “climate change deniers,” obviously coined to stigmatize skeptics as akin to Holocaust deniers, is designed to obscure some-

George Will

georgewill@washpost.com

America’s party of science seems eager to insulate its scientific theories from the possibility of refutation.” thing obvious: Of course the climate is changing; it never is not changing — neither before nor after the Medieval Warm Period (end of the 9th century to the 13th) and the Little Ice Age (1640s to 1690s), neither of which was caused by fossil fuels. Today, debatable questions include: To what extent is human activity contributing to climate change? Are climate change models, many of which have generated projections refuted by events, suddenly reliable enough to predict the trajectory of change? Is change necessarily ominous because today’s climate is necessarily optimum? Are the costs, in money expended and freedom curtailed, of combating climate change less than the cost of adapting to it? But these questions may not forever be debatable. The initial target of Democratic “scientific” silencers is ExxonMobil, which they hope to demonstrate mis-

led investors and the public about climate change. There is, however, no limiting principle to restrain unprincipled people from punishing research entities, advocacy groups and individuals. But it is difficult to establish what constitutes culpable “misleading” about climate science, of which a 2001 National Academy of Sciences report says: “Because there is considerable uncertainty in current understanding of how the climate system varies naturally and reacts to emissions of greenhouse gases and aerosols, current estimates of the magnitude of future warming should be regarded as tentative and subject to future adjustments (either upward or downward).” Did Al Gore “mislead” when he said seven years ago that computer modeling projected the Arctic to be ice-free during the summer in as few as five years? The attorney general of the Virgin Islands accuses ExxonMobil with criminal misrepresentation regarding climate change. This, even though before the U.S. government in 2009 first issued an endangerment finding regarding greenhouse gases, ExxonMobil favored a carbon tax to mitigate climate consequences of those gases. This grandstanding attorney general’s contribution to today’s gangster government is the use of law enforcement tools to pursue political goals — wielding prosecutorial weapons to chill debate, including subpoenaing private donor information from the Competitive Enterprise Institute, a Washington think tank.

The party of science, busy protecting science from scrutiny, has forgotten Karl Popper (1902-1994), the philosopher whose “The Open Society and Its Enemies” warned against people incapable of distinguishing between certainty and certitude. In his essay “Science as Falsification,” Popper explains why “the criterion of a scientific status of a theory is its falsifiability, or refutability, or testability.” America’s party of science seems eager to insulate its scientific theories from the possibility of refutation. The leader of the attorneys general, New York’s Eric Schneiderman, dismisses those who disagree with him as “morally vacant.” His moral content is apparent in his campaign to ban fantasy sports gambling because it competes with the gambling (state lottery, casinos, offtrack betting) that enriches his government. Then there is Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., who suggests using the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, written to fight organized crime, to criminalize what he calls the fossil fuel industry’s “climate denial apparatus.” The Justice Department, which has abetted the IRS cover-up of its criminal activity, has referred this idea to the FBI. These garden-variety authoritarians are eager to regulate us into conformity with the “settled” consensus du jour, whatever it is. But they are progressives, so it is for our own good. — George Will is a columnist for Washington Post Writers Group.

OLD HOME TOWN

100

From the Lawrence Daily Journal-World for April 24, 1916: years “The Lawrence ago barbers, who anIN 1916 nounced April 1 that a thin dime had been attached to the price of a haircut, making a grand total of thirty-five cents, issued a ukase today stating that the additional ten cents had been withdrawn from the haircut tariff and that from this time forward they will cut hair at the good old time price of two bits a throw. … Not all barbers stood firm behind the new price. Last week one shop announced that as its customers were laboring men who couldn’t stand the advance in price…” — Compiled by Sarah St. John

Race alone doesn’t explain Flint Dear white people: As you no doubt know, the water crisis in Flint, Mich., returned to the headlines last week with news that the state attorney general is charging three government officials for their alleged roles in the debacle. It makes this a convenient moment to deal with something that has irked me about the way this disaster is framed. Namely, the fact that people who look like you often get left out of it. Consider some of the headlines: “The Racist Roots of Flint’s Water Crisis” — Huffington Post “How A Racist System Has Poisoned The Water in Flint” — The Root “A Question of Environmental Racism” — The New York Times As has been reported repeatedly, Flint is a majority black city with a 41 percent poverty rate, so critics ask if the water would have been so blithely poisoned, and if it would have taken media so long to notice, had the victims been mostly white. It’s a sensible question, but whenever I hear it, I engage in a little thought experiment. I try to imagine what happened in Flint happening in Bowie, a city in Maryland where

Leonard Pitts Jr.

lpitts@miamiherald.com

You see, for as much as Flint is a story about how we treat people of color, it is also — I would say more so — a story about how we treat the poor, the way we render them invisible.” blacks outnumber whites, but the median household income is more than $100,000 a year and the poverty rate is about 3 percent. I can’t. Then I try to imagine it happening in Morgantown, W.Va., where whites outnumber blacks, the median household income is about $32,000 a year, and the poverty rate approaches 40 percent — and I find that I easily can. It helps that Bowie is a few minutes from Washington, D.C., while Morgantown is more than an hour from the nearest city of any size.

My point is neither that race carries no weight nor that it had no impact on what happened in Flint. No, my point is only that sometimes, race is more distraction than explanation. Indeed, that’s the story of our lives. To be white in America is to have been sold a bill of goods that there exists between you and people of color a gap of morality, behavior, intelligence and fundamental humanity. Forces of money and power have often used that perceived gap to con people like you into acting against their own self-interest. In the Civil War, white men too poor to own slaves died in grotesque numbers to protect the “right” of a few plutocrats to continue that despicable practice. In the Industrial Revolution, white workers agitating for a living wage were kept in line by the threat that their jobs would be given to “Negroes.” In the Depression, white families mired in poverty were mollified by signs reading “Whites Only.” You have to wonder what would happen if white people — particularly, those of modest means — ever saw that gap for the fiction it is? What if they ever realized you don’t need com-

mon color to reach common ground? What if all of us were less reflexive in using race as our prism, just because it’s handy? You see, for as much as Flint is a story about how we treat people of color, it is also — I would say more so — a story about how we treat the poor, the way we render them invisible. That was also the story of Hurricane Katrina. Remember news media’s shock at discovering there were Americans too poor to escape a killer storm? Granted, there is a discussion to be had about how poverty is constructed in this country; the black poverty rate is higher than any other with the exception of Native Americans, and that’s no coincidence. But it’s equally true that, once you are poor, the array of slights and indignities to which you are subjected is remarkably consistent across that racial gap. That fact should induce you — and all of us — to reconsider the de facto primacy we assign this arbitrary marker of identity. After all, 37 percent of the people in Flint are white. But that’s done nothing to make their water clean. — Leonard Pitts Jr. is a columnist for the Miami Herald.


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Sunday, April 24, 2016

L awrence J ournal -W orld

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8727


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

TM

by

Jack Challem

Gut Bacteria Essential for Normal Immune System Function

Inflammation increases vitamin B6 needs

Although some bacteria can be deadly, most of them are actually good for our health.

The use of vitamin B6 and other B vitamins in the treatment “The vast majority of our interactions with bacteria are symbiotic in nature, of arthritis and other inflammatory diseases goes back to at consisting of colonization by a complex and diverse microbiota that inhabit least the 1980s. In a study at the University of Bergen, Norway, researchers analyzed levels of pyridoxal-5-phosphate (PLP) humans for life,” wrote Sakis K. Mazmanian, PhD, and his colleagues in the journal Cell Host & Microbe.“Rather than causing inflammation, commensal and various inflammatory markers in 3,088 subjects. They found that chronic inflammation led to an increase in the microbes largely direct beneficial immune functions and often engender body’s breakdown of vitamin B6. The vitamin plays roles in health.” more than 100 enzymatic reactions, including the formation In a series of experiments with laboratory mice, Mazmanian showed just how of neurotransmitters. Ulvik A. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 2014:100: 250-255. crucial normal gut bacteria are for revving up the immune system to fight infections.

Gluten-free diet may prevent type-1 diabetes

In one of the experiments, Mazmanian compared mice born without gut bacteria to mice that had normal gut bacteria. The animals missing gut bacteria had fewer innate immune cells—the types of white blood cells that immediately go into action to fight infections.

Researchers at the Rigshospitalet in Copenhagen, Denmark, fed pregnant laboratory mice either a standard diet or a Next, Mazmanian exposed the mice to Listeria monocytogenes, a potentially gluten-free diet. The mice continued to eat their respective diets during lactation. The gluten-free diet resulted in deadly type of bacteria. The normal mice survived, but those lacking gut a significantly lower incidence of type-1 diabetes and bacteria died. Finally, the researchers gave antibiotics to the healthy mice, while at the same insulitis, the latter a prelude to diabetes. The gluten-free diet led to changes in the animals’ gut bacteria and a reduced time injecting them with L. monocytogenes. Antibiotics destroy both good inflammatory immune response. and pathogenic species of bacteria. The antibiotics reduced the ability of the Hansen CHF. Diabetes, 2014: doi 10.2337/db13-1612. mice to fight the infection.

Reference: Khosravi A, Yanez A, Price JG, et al. Gut microbiota promote hematopoiesis to control bacterial infection. Cell Host & Microbe, 2014;15:374-381.

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SECTION B

USA TODAY — L awrence J ournal -W orld

IN MONEY

IN LIFE

TaskRabbit CEO aims for diversity

New Oprah: Book-loving stars now on Instagram

04.24.16 STACY BROWN-PHILPOT BY TASKRABBIT

REESE WITHERSPOON BY JAMIE MCCARTHY, GETTY IMAGES FOR EIF

Feds again hack iPhone without Apple Justice Department withdraws request to force Apple’s help in drug case Kevin McCoy and Jon Swartz

@kmccoynyc; @jswartz USA TODAY

Government lawyers announced Friday night they had gained access to data on the iPhone of a New York City drug conspirator and abruptly ended their effort to force Apple to help bypass the phone’s password. The surprise news was similar to the outcome of the previous battle to compel the tech giant’s assistance in retrieving NEW YORK

data from the iPhone of San Bernardino terror attack shooter Syed Farook. The Department of Justice announcement came in a onepage letter to a Brooklyn federal court in a case focused on Jun Feng, a Queens, N.Y., defendant who pleaded guilty to methamphetamine conspiracy last year. Federal prosecutors sought access to the phone’s data in part as an effort to determine if others were involved in the alleged plot. Government lawyers wrote that a source they did not identify provided the password

to Feng’s iPhone, enabling investigators to key in the code by hand and access the unit’s data. Emily Pierce, Justice Department spokeswoman, said the government will no longer need Apple’s assistance. “As we have said previously, these cases have never been about setting a court precedent; they are about law enforcement’s ability and need to access evidence on devices pursuant to lawful court orders and search warrants,” Pierce said. “In this case, an individual provided the department with the passcode to the locked phone at issue in the Eastern District of New York. Because we now have access to the data we sought, we notified the court

JEWEL SAMAD, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

An anti-government protester rallies outside an Apple store in New York in February.

Metro areas see surge of rats

TODAY ON TV uABC’s This Week: Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders; Reince Priebus, Republican National Committee chairman; Charles Koch, chairman and chief executive of Koch Industries uNBC’s Meet the Press: Sanders; former senator Bob Graham, D-Fla. uCBS’ Face the Nation: Sanders; Republican presidential candidate John Kasich uCNN’s State of the Union: Sanders; Donald Trump Jr. uFox News Sunday: Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, chairwoman of the Democratic National Committee; Paul Manafort, adviser to Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump

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Unexpected spring showers

1 in 10

admit to leaving their windows open during a car wash.

Source Hankook Tire Gauge Index March 21-22 survey of 1,020 Americans TERRY BYRNE AND JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY

of this recent development and have withdrawn our request for assistance. This is an ongoing investigation and therefore we are not revealing the identity of the individual.” Apple declined to comment. Apple attorneys argued last week that the FBI improperly sought the company’s aid before exhausting all other means to bypass the built-in security code on the Apple-manufactured unit. The California-based tech giant’s legal team also contended the government misinterpreted provisions of the All Writs Act, the 1789 statute that Department of Justice lawyers cited as the legal basis for forcing Apple’s assistance.

Sanitation districts bump up efforts as complaints grow Aamer Madhani @AamerISmad USA TODAY

JESS GRIMM/CHILLICOTHE GAZETTE

Emotions ran high in Pike County, Ohio, on Friday after eight family members were found dead.

8 BODIES, 4 CRIME SCENES, 1 MYSTERY IN OHIO SPREE

Sadness, fear grip rural community, with family’s killer or killers on loose Sara Nealeigh and Doug Stanglin USA TODAY

PEEBLES , OHIO The young woman who found the first of eight victims of execution-style killings in rural Ohio sounded breathless and distraught as she told the 911 dispatcher of her grim discovery: There was “blood all over the house” and the bodies of her brother-in-law and a cousin looked as if someone “beat the hell out of them.”

The 911 calls to the Pike County Sheriff’s Office on Friday offered a chilling backdrop to the shooting deaths of eight members of one family — the Rhodens — that have left this small community 70 miles east of Cincinnati reeling. The initial frantic call, from a woman who identified herself as Bobby, came in at 7:49 a.m. Friday. Bobby, gasping for breath, told the dispatcher that the house on Union Mill Road in rural Pike County was locked but she had a key and had let herself in.

Bobby, who apparently stopped by each morning to feed the dogs and chickens, said she found the bodies of her brotherin-law and a cousin in the back bedrooms. “I think they are both dead,” she said, sobbing. “It looks like some(one) beat the crap out of them, and I came in and they were laying on the floor.” Pike County Sheriff Charles Reader released the names of the Rhoden family victims on Saturday after the bodies were transferred to the coroner’s office for autopsies. The victims were identified as Hannah Gilley, 20; Christopher Rhoden Sr., 40; v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

CHICAGO Some denizens of America’s great cities probably wouldn’t mind a visit from the Pied Piper right about now. Several major U.S. cities — including Boston, Chicago, New York and Washington, D.C. — have seen significant surges in rat complaints from their residents in recent months, according to city data reviewed by USA TODAY. Grousing about rats has long been city-dweller sport, but the long-tailed, sharp-toothed nuisances have now become so populous and so aggressive that some cities are getting creative in their efforts to stay ahead of rodents even as some frustrated city residents are increasingly taking matters into their own hands. In Chicago, which historically notches more rat complaints than any other city, residents’ re-

v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

RYAN CONNELLY HOLMES

A Chicago sanitation worker fills a rat burrow with poison.

N. Korea fires ballistic missile from sub, South says Flight reportedly lasted only minutes Doug Stanglin @dstanglin USA TODAY

North Korea fired what appeared to be a ballistic missile from a submarine toward the East Sea on Saturday, but the projectile sputtered and fell into the ocean after only a few minutes, the South’s Yonhap News Agency reported, quoting the South Korean military. The South Korean Joint Chiefs

of Staff said North Korea fired the missile about 6:30 p.m. local time, according to the Yonhap news agency, and that it flew for about 18 miles, well short of the minimum range of 180 miles for a submarine-launched ballistic missile. A South Korean government source said the missile’s engine ignited after it was fired from a 2,000-ton Sinpo-class submarine, Yonhap reported. The development comes amid reports in South Korean media that Pyongyang could be preparing for a nuclear test or the launch of another ballistic missile to mark the sixth anniversary of the Korean People’s Army on

KCNA, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un may be preparing another nuclear test.

Monday. Two weeks ago, the North failed in its launch of a Musudan intermediate-range ballistic missile from a mobile launcher to celebrate the birthday of Kim Il Sung, the country’s founder and grandfather of current leader Kim Jong Un. The South Korean newspaper Donga Ilbo quotesd unidentified South Korean military sources as saying North Korea appears to have completed all preparations for its fifth nuclear test. The most recent test took place in January and prompted strong sanctions against North Korea. A top U.S. diplomat for the

Asia-Pacific region said last week that a fifth test could prompt even harsher sanctions, including severely cutting off its access to hard currency. “Like a regimen of medicine, the dosage can be upped when the effects fall short of what’s required,” said Danny Russel, assistant secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs, according to Reuters. According to Japan’s Asahi Shimbun, the U.S., South Korea and Japan agreed last week in Seoul to push for the complete ban on crude oil exports to the North in retaliation if another nuclear test is launched.


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911 CALLS LEAD TO TRAIL OF CARNAGE v CONTINUED FROM 1B

Christopher Rhoden Jr., 16; Clarence “Frankie” Rhoden, 20; Dana Rhoden, 37; Gary Rhoden, 38; Hanna Rhoden, 19; and Kenneth Rhoden, 44. County officials said all of the victims had been shot in the head, some while in bed. Three children, including a 4-day-old, survived the ordeal. The carnage revealed itself slowly as sheriff’s deputies moved from home to home, drawn first by Bobby’s 911 call and then by the horrifying realization that the victims were killed at four locations in this otherwise serene farmland region. As word of the killings spread Friday, Donald Stone, like many other Pike County residents, decided to go check on his cousin Kenneth Rhoden, who lived a few miles away. His call to 911, measured and calm, brought equally grim news.

“I just found my cousin with a head shot wound.” Donald Stone, in his 911 call

“I just found my cousin with a head shot wound,” he said. Dispatcher: “ Is he all right?” Stone: “No ... no.” Local and state law enforcement officers have not offered a possible motive. Authorities said in a statement Saturday that investigators “worked through the night, talking to individuals, gathering information, and executing search warrants,” but had not made any arrests in the case. Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine said a person of interest detained for question Friday in Chillicothe, about 40 miles to the northeast, was just one of 30 people interviewed. A Cincinnati-area businessman, Jeff Ruby, offered a $25,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of the killer or killers. DeWine said evidence from the crime scenes suggests none of the dead committed suicide. If that finding holds up, he said, it would mean at least one suspect remains on the loose. “So obviously we have one person … who is armed and dangerous,” the attorney general said. “And there may be more than one. There may be two. There may be three. We just don’t know at this point.” He said every precaution would be taken to protect other members of the victims’ family. Nealeigh reports for the Chillicothe Gazette. Corrections & Clarifications 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.

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In Alaska, old ways meet modern life — when weather permits In rugged Wales, the state’s westernmost town, whales are plentiful and Siberia is close by Trevor Hughes @trevorhughes USA TODAY

WALES , ALASKA

The single-engine Cessna buzzes back down the gravel runway, clouds of snow swirling in its wake as it pops into the air, climbs aloft and circles around. Silence again descends upon one of the most remote villages in the United States. Life is hard here. People and animals struggle to stay warm, to find shelter, to eat. The relentless wind scours the snow, whipping flakes into unprotected eyes. Extremely bad weather often means there’s no connection with the outside world for days at a time. But the Internet usually works. And there’s fresh salad if you’re willing to pay the freight charge. Welcome to the westernmost town on the mainland United States, where native Inupiat traditions are increasingly clashing with the modern world, where schoolchildren watch LOL videos on YouTube but also learn to make kuspuks, traditional coverings for parkas. “Looking back, it’s just like you’re in a movie but living it,” says Clyde Oxereok, 57. A ninth-generation native of Wales, Oxereok has left Alaska twice: first on a high school trip to California, and again to attend basic training in Georgia. During the Cold War, Oxereok and other family members served in the Alaska Army National Guard in Wales, providing surveillance across the strait that polar bears today routinely cross. A Russian island is just 18 miles away; mainland Siberia is 50 miles off the coast.

Stepping from the plane into Wales feels a lot like stepping back in time, albeit with caveats. Most people lack running water inside their homes, which means they use “honey buckets” for toilets, carrying them outside to be emptied into a disposal lagoon. Hunters like Oxereok eat bowhead whale, walrus oil and reindeer. His trigger finger gets itchy whenever he sees a seal swimming in the icy ocean. HELICOPTER LIFELINE

On the other hand, as many as six planes a day land at that gravel airstrip, carrying in basically anything Amazon sells and you’re willing to pay for. That air lifeline is tenuous, though, and frays fast when the weather is bad. “Last year we ran out of toilet paper in the entire village. We didn’t see a helicopter for six weeks,” says Michael Potter, a teacher on the nearby island of Little Diomede, which is actually even closer to Russia than Wales. Students from Little Diomede last week were helicoptered into Wales for a basketball tournament. They stayed in Wales for a few days, sleeping in high school classrooms while they attended classes and awaited their ride back. “People don’t understand — this is not like going to the zoo or going to a camping trip into the Sierras,” Potter says. “Out here, it’s truly life and death. It’s not for the faint of heart. If you don’t look out for each other, people freeze to death.” YOUTUBE AND WHALE HUNTS

The Inupiat culture is based around shared values, and in Wales, extended families remain

A young boy checks a cellphone. Nearly everyone in the remote Alaskan town has a cellphone and access to the Internet.

Russia

Wales

Alaska Canada

Fairbanks Nome Anchorage

Bering Sea

Gulf of Alaska

Pacific Ocean

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close. Oxereok’s older brother often jokes that a kid misbehaving on one side of the tiny village will have angry and well-informed parents waiting at home. Oxereok says technology is

TREVOR HUGHES, USA TODAY

A patroller searches for signs of polar bears in the town dump outside Wales, Alaska. Climate change experts say faster-melting sea ice is causing polar bears to move onto land and seek out new food sources, like garbage. forcing the culture to change, and perhaps faster than anyone realizes. “You have to earn money to buy a cellphone, to pay the electric bill. People are more on a time constraint than when I was a kid,” he says. “In the last 10 years you could really see technology leap into our village.” And technology is everywhere. Most adults and kids carry cellphones. Parents joke about how Facebook keeps them connected with community members, even though they live amidst them. Kids watch cat videos on YouTube in the school library among stacks of books about the traditional Inupiat lifestyle. Terrin Magby, 26, was born on Little Diomede and grew up in Wales, but lived the past eight years in Anchorage. He returned to Wales for the lifestyle he thought he’d left behind, and for work, repairs snowmobiles and transports honey buckets to the lagoon. He’s hoping to go on his first whale hunt this spring. As the greenest member of the crew, he says, he’ll likely be stuck lighting cigarettes and handing sodas to the more experienced men. The young men of the village smile as they eagerly await the first whale hunt of the season. The Bering Strait is a chokepoint between the Pacific and the Arctic, which means large numbers of whales, seals, fish and birds flood through with the changing seasons. “I’m still trying to make my transition. It’s hard going being back from being a city boy to in the village. As a kid, you’re stuck here. This was all we knew,” said Magby, who’s never left Alaska. Still, he says, he wouldn’t have it any other way. Why? “The country. Just the country. That’s the easiest answer. I can get out and go anywhere I want to,” he said. “In Anchorage, I had to go to work every day. Here, there is no schedule.”

Hairy situation as rat complaints rise v CONTINUED FROM 1B

ports of rodent activity rose by about 70% in the first quarter of 2016 compared to the same period last year. With the city on pace to shatter the more than 41,000 complaints it received in 2012, Mayor Rahm Emanuel recently acknowledged in a radio interview that rats in the Windy City have become “a real problem.” After several years of a scaledback rodent patrol in Chicago, the Emanuel administration announced this month it will bolster the number of technicians searching for burrows and laying poison from 18 technicians to 28 by next month. The administration went on a community relations blitz, hanging doorknob leaflets that called on residents to do their part to eliminate food sources for rats by not overfilling dumpsters and cleaning up properly after their dogs. To further drive home the getting-tough-on-rats message, an ordinance recently introduced in Chicago’s city council makes it clear that homeowners who fail to keep their yards free of dog waste, garbage or other materials that attract rodents could be fined up to $500. The city also began requiring developers to include rat abatement plans as part of any new construction project. Separately, the Chicago Tran-

RYAN CONNELLY HOLMES FOR USA TODAY

A sign posted in Chicago’s Little Italy neighborhood warns residents of poison that was laid out in the area to target rats. sit Authority hopes to put an end to rat canoodling with a new bait that targets both male and female rat fertility. Rats reach sexual maturity within weeks after birth. “We are being very, very aggressive in how we bait, so we can get control of the rodent population before summer gets here,” said Charles Williams, Chicago’s streets and sanitation department commissioner. Boston touts itself as having one of the most innovative rat abatement programs in the country and historically gets fewer complaints than some of its bigger city counterparts. Still, complaints have nearly tripled in the first quarter of this year — a spike city officials there attribute to

last year’s launching of a 311 system that makes it easier for Bostonians to call or use a phone app to report rats and other nuisance complaints to city officials. The city’s Inspectional Service Department tapped researchers from Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to help launch a pilot program that uses dry ice to kill rats hiding in burrows in the city. The dry ice, made of solid carbon dioxide, can be packed into the burrows where it asphyxiates the rats. City officials say it proved effective during their first month of testing, and the method has the added bonus of being less of a danger to humans and other animals than setting out poison. And at about 50 cents per

pound, the initial testing suggests dry ice might be a cheaper instrument for killing rats than rat poison, said Inspectional Service Department Commissioner William “Buddy” Christopher Jr. Christopher said he’s “not extremely concerned” about the uptick thus far. “I think our aggressive, proactive stance is maintaining,” Christopher said. “Our staff stays on top of this. They’re constantly looking for new ways to deal with old problems.” Washington, D.C., last year could boast of a four-year decline in rat complaints, but now the city is on pace to ruin its good news streak. If complaints continue at the same rate, the city will likely surpass last year’s mark of 2,004. Through April 15, the District’s Department of Health tallied 699 complaints. The district’s Department of Health said mild winters have been good for rodents, but the department insisted it was primed for battle. “I can assure you that we are ready for them,” department spokesman Ivan Torres said in an email “The DOH is and will continue to strike hard.” In New York, which has seen complaints to its 311 system soar over the past five years, there has been no relief. Rat complaints jumped by 39% in the first quarter of 2016 compared to the same period last year.


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New $20 bill irks some in Jackson’s home state Pushing 7th president to back of bill is wrong, some Tennesseans say Michael Collins USA TODAY

As far as Sen. Lamar Alexander is concerned, Andrew Jackson and Harriet Tubman are both American heroes who have earned their places in history. Honoring one, he said, doesn’t mean tearing down the other. “United States history is not Andrew Jackson vs. Harriet Tubman,” the Tennessee Republican said. This week’s announcement that Jackson, a white slave owner from Tennessee, will be booted to the back of the $20 bill to make room for Tubman, a black anti-slavery activist, has left many in Jackson’s home state feeling that the change is as much a politically correct attempt to diminish Jackson’s legacy as it is to celebrate Tubman’s accomplishments. In his day, Old Hickory, as Jackson was fondly known, was considered a war hero and a populist fighting for the common man. But as the nation’s seventh president, he also had Native Americans torn from their land in a bloody campaign that came to be known as the Trail of Tears. Tubman, by contrast, was a former slave who helped scores of other slaves escape to freedom. She also worked as a union spy during the Civil War. In deciding to replace Jackson with Tubman on the front of the $20 bill, Treasury Secretary Jack Lew described the life of the Underground Railroad icon as an “incredible story of courage and commitment to equality” – one that “embodies the ideals of democracy that our nation celebrates.” But many Tennesseans saw the decision as an attack on the historical contributions of Jackson, a home-state hero. “Dismayed and disappointed WASHINGTON

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS

Anti-slavery activist Harriet Tubman will replace President Andrew Jackson, left, who was a slave owner. NATIONAL ARCHIVES would be two words we would use to describe the decision,” said Howard Kittell, president and CEO of the Andrew Jackson Foundation in Nashville. Kittell and other Tennesseans argue it’s unfair to judge Jackson’s views on slavery and his treatment of Native Americans in the early 1800s through a 21stcentury lens. Though it’s hard to imagine today, Jackson’s positions on those issues and others “fell within the mainstream of American thinking” at the time, Kittell said, and it’s important to evaluate him in that context. “We need to remember our history, and history is messy,” he said. “It’s not a straight line of progress. It’s complicated. You can’t tell history in soundbites for Jackson or (Thomas) Jefferson or anyone. Our historical figures were all human, and they had great strengths and weaknesses, just as we do, too.” Even among historians, Jackson has long been a polarizing figure, said Dan Feller, a history professor at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville and direc-

ON POLITICS Cooper Allen USA TODAY

Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton needed a win this week, and their home state did not let them down, as both front-runners coasted to victory in the New York primary. Top news from the world of politics:

L LEBANON DAILY NEWS VIA USA TODAY NETWORK

HANNITY, CRUZ TUSSLE OVER DELEGATE PROCESS Ted Cruz finished a distant third to Trump in Tuesday’s primary in New York, but in the battle for delegates at the state convention level, he’s had continual success in recent weeks. That was the focus of a question

Instead of basking in glow, city now bracing for trouble

rhetoric and hateful attacks on various communities as ... (an) acceptable part of political debate is something that we are standing up against,” said Rashad Robinson, Color of Change’s Deirdre Shesgreen executive director. USATODAY As a home-state senator, Portman can’t be a no-show in CleveWASHINGTON When the Republand, even though he faces his lican National Committee an- own tough re-election fight. nounced it would hold the GOP But Portman said he’s planconvention in Cleveland, Sen. ning to spend “very little” time Rob Portman was over the inside the convention hall. “Like, moon, saying it would allow very little,” he emphasized in an Ohio to showcase its swing-state interview Tuesday. “We’re doing our own thing,” status and energize Buckeye State Republicans to turn out for Portman said, touting his plans to hold a “mini-convention” outthe fall election. “This is all about winning in side the convention perimeter in 2016,” Portman declared in July downtown Cleveland. Portman’s campaign has re2014 after the RNC unveiled served the Cuyahoga Cleveland as the host Community College for city. “I’m going to stay two days during the conin close touch with the vention, and he plans to RNC and the host combring in a series of highmittee … to make sure profile speakers and we have a very successhold training sessions ful convention.” for his volunteers. He But what Portman will also devote part of envisioned as a Repubthe convention week, lican unity rally in his THE ENQUIRER which kicks off July 18, home state may instead be a rancorous free-for- Rob Portman to building a Habitat for Humanity house in all, with a pitched battle over the GOP nomination inside Cleveland. Portman said his sideshow in the convention walls and rowdy protests or even violence on the Cleveland was not an effort to separate himself from a possible streets outside. Several Republican senators Trump-Cruz-Kasich melee. “I had planned this stuff long facing difficult re-elections, including Arizona Sen. John before we knew it would be so McCain and Illinois Sen. Mark potentially contentious,” PortKirk, have said they will skip the man said. Matt Borges, chairman of the convention, perhaps fearing any association with a polarizing Ohio Republican Party, said the GOP nominee, whether that’s possibility of a contested conNew York businessman Donald vention will put Ohio in the spotlight even more than Trump or Texas Sen. Ted Cruz. Cleveland police, meanwhile, anticipated. “We’re going to have the most have ordered riot gear and extra handcuffs as the city braces for memorable, historic convention, demonstrations. And a civil with probably more eyeballs (for rights advocacy group called a convention) than in most of Color of Change is spearheading our lifetimes,” he said. “What a coalition to pressure corpora- better place to be than right in tions not to underwrite the con- the middle of it all.” vention with big donations. “Passing off Donald Trump’s Contributing: Fredreka Schouten

IN BRIEF posed to him by Fox News Network’s Sean Hannity earlier this week that led to a bit of a dust-up. Hannity asked the Texas senator to “explain to people what’s going on.” Cruz responded: “Sean, with all respect, that’s not what people care about,” and after more back-and-forth argued, “The only people asking this question are the hard-core Donald Trump supporters.” Hannity didn’t take kindly to that, firing back: “You gotta stop! Every time I have you on the air, and I ask a legitimate question, you try to throw this in my face,” adding that he was “sick of it.” Cruz then addressed his approach to acquiring delegates with more specificity, throwing in a few shots at Trump. The next day, Hannity addressed the dispute, saying Cruz has offered similar answers in past interviews and that he thought he’d “been more than fair to him.”

Donald Trump has spent a fortune on his campaign.

TRUMP INVESTMENT IN HIS 2016 BID TOPS $36 MILLION He’s boasted often that he’s self-funding, and the New York billionaire and GOP front-runner has indeed invested more than $36 million in his bid, loaning his campaign an additional $11.5 million last month, new campaign-finance reports show. However, the self-funding candidate isn’t exactly exclusively relying on his own fortune. The reports also reveal that, all told, a quarter of the funds Trump has brought in to date comes from other donors, including $2.7 million last month. That’s just a fraction, though, of what Democratic candidate Bernie Sanders raised in March. The Vermont senator took in $46 million during the month — and spent that much as well in his race against Hillary Clinton.

tor of The Papers of Andrew Jackson, a project that aims to collect and publish Jackson’s entire literary record. During his presidency, many people saw Jackson as a stalwart defender of the union and the savior of the American republic, Feller said. Others saw him as a tyrant bent on destroying the country. The debate over whether he deserves a place on the front of American paper currency is a discussion “not only about what happened in history, but how we ought to treat it, how we ought to recognize it, and what things we ought to honor – or not honor,” Feller said. “That debate, as long as it’s realistically based upon evidence, is healthy,” he said. For Tennesseans in Congress, however, there’s nothing to debate: Jackson belongs on the $20 bill. “Andrew Jackson was a great Tennessean and American, and I am extremely disappointed that this announcement appears to be as much an attack on his legacy as it is a celebration of Harriet Tubman,” said Republican Rep. Phil Roe.

For Cleveland, GOP convention not quite what it was expecting

THE JOURNAL NEWS VIA USA TODAY NETWORK

Hillary Clinton celebrates her win in New York on April 19.

CLINTON WELL-POSITIONED IN UPCOMING STATES After her decisive win over Bernie Sanders in New York, Hillary Clinton will be looking to build on her delegate lead in a quintet of primaries in the Northeast and mid-Atlantic on Tuesday. In at least two of those states, she appears to be in strong shape. A Monmouth University Poll out Wednesday showed Clinton leading Sanders 52% to 39% in Pennsylvania, the biggest prize among the five states voting with 189 pledged delegates at stake. In Maryland, which has the next largest delegate haul Tuesday, she leads by 25 points, according to Monmouth. Contributing: Fredreka Schouten and Josh Hafner, USA TODAY

NOT YOUR AVERAGE CONFESSION

AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Pope Francis offers confession to a young man Saturday in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican. Young faithful flocked to the Vatican during the Youth Jubilee. SUSPECT KILLS 5, HIMSELF IN 2 GEORGIA SHOOTINGS

A man suspected of killing five people in a pair of shootings Friday night in Georgia later died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound, police said. Wayne Anthony Hawes, 50, of Appling, shot himself in the head, according to a statement from Columbia County Capt. Andy Shedd. Authorities believe he unsuccessfully tried to set his house on fire before killing himself. Authorities had been searching for Hawes, who allegedly shot five people Friday night west of Augusta. Shedd said the incident stemmed from a domestic dispute and some of the victims are believed to be related to Hawes’ wife. — Steph Solis PRINCE CREMATED SATURDAY; PRIVATE CEREMONY HELD

Prince was cremated and celebrated afterward in a small, private service by a group of his “most beloved” family, friends and musicians, his publicist, Yvette Noel-Schure, said in a statement Saturday. The 57-year-old music superstar’s family and friends gathered “in a private, beautiful ceremony” to say a loving goodbye. She added that the "final storage" of his ashes would be a private affair

and that a "musical celebration of his life” would follow at a later date. “We ask for your blessings and prayers of comfort for his family and close friends at this time,” she concluded. — Bryan Alexander AUTHORITIES RECOVER LARGE CACHE OF STOLEN FIREWORKS

Federal authorities on Saturday said they recovered a large shipment of commercial-grade fireworks stolen from a CSX train traveling between Chicago and Detroit. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives spokeswoman Ginger Colbrun said the 30 cases of commercial fireworks were recovered based on a tip the agency received. Authorities have made no arrests, and the investigation is ongoing, she added. It is possible, Colbrun said Friday, that the material could have been taken during the train’s stop-over in Ohio. Authorities said it was not immediately clear why the shipment may have been targeted. The material could have represented a potential danger in the hands of inexperienced people, Colbrun said. In the past, fireworks have been cannibalized by some criminal suspects, including the Boston Marathon bombers, to

construct deadly explosives. — Kevin Johnson ARMY PROBING HUMVEES DROPPED FROM THE SKY

The 173rd Airborne Brigade is investigating what went wrong during an airborne drop that resulted in three Humvees free-falling to their destruction, as depicted in a widely shared online video. On April 11, the Army conducted a heavy drop and personnel airborne operation as part of exercise Saber Junction 16 at Hohenfels training area in Germany. About 150 supply bundles, vehicles, communications equipment and indirect weapons systems were dropped, according to Army spokesman Maj. Juan Martinez. But three Humvees slipped from their rigging as their parachutes deployed, plummeting hundreds of feet to the earth. Martinez said no one was hurt. “The specific malfunctions that occurred on this day are under investigation,” Martinez said in an email to Army Times. “There were multiple rehearsals and inspections of the equipment prior to mission execution. We cannot speculate on what went wrong until the investigation is complete.” — Kyle Jahner, Army Times


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Climate change hurts Vietnamese farmers In rice-producing Mekong Delta, problems from drought, development likely to worsen Thomas Maresca

Special for USA TODAY CAN THO, VIETNAM

Huynh Van Loi, 50, a farmer who spent most his life in the same small Mekong Delta district, has experienced good weather and bad, droughts and floods. But this year brought something he’d never seen. “The water is salty,” he said. “I’ve been living here since my childhood but this is the first time we’ve had salty water. All my crops were destroyed.” The worst drought in 90 years, rising sea levels and rampant development are causing a crisis in the Mekong Delta, known as Vietnam’s rice bowl. The delta is home to 20 million people and accounts for more than half of Vietnam’s rice and fruit production, 90% of its rice exports and 60% of fishery exports. But this year, paddy rice fields resemble parched desertscapes as farmers wait for a rainy season that is late to arrive. Small farmers such as Loi, who grows watermelons and orange trees about 40 miles from the South China Sea, have seen crop-ruining salinity intrude farther inland than ever before. The drought, caused by El Niño weather patterns, is hitting the entire region from Thailand to Cambodia to Vietnam’s central highlands. The impact is most acute here in the Mekong Delta, where the Mekong River ends its

2,700-mile journey from the Tibetan plateau through six Asian countries. A United Nations report released in March about the drought estimated that 393,000 acres of rice in Vietnam was already lost, with an additional 1.2 million acres likely to be damaged. Almost 1 million people lack water for daily consumption. The figures are alarming but could grow worse if weather extremes become more common in years to come. “This year is not a special case,” said Duong Van Ni, an environmental management professor at Can Tho University. “It will happen more in the future.” Ni said the rapid agricultural development that turned postwar Vietnam from a famine-stricken country into one of the world’s leading rice exporters has exacerbated the effects of climate change. “A long time ago, there were also typhoons, also saltwater intrusion, also drought,” Ni said. “But the impact was not as severe as now, because at that time the ecosystem wasn’t changed by humans. Now the system is already damaged: by canals, by dikes, by water management, by land use.” Then there are the dams. China has built seven hydropower dams on the upper Mekong, known locally as the Lancang, and plans to add 21 more. Laos and Cambodia intend to build 11 hydropower dams on the lower

PHOTOS BY THOMAS MARESCA FOR USA TODAY

Mekong, with two in Laos already under construction. China’s existing dams already hurt the Mekong, affecting water levels, water temperature and fish migration patterns. They also trap as much as 80% of the sediment that reaches them. The sediment is needed to fertilize downstream floodplains and protect against coastal erosion. “The biggest impact is the trapping of silt,” said Richard Cronin, director of the Southeast Asia program at the Stimson Center, a think tank in Washington, D.C. He said the silt is needed to replenish nutrients that wash away during monsoon season in the delta and southern Cambodia, as well as to sustain the delta against rising sea levels. Without the sediment, the lowlying delta is eroding and actually

Top: Farmer Huynh Van Loi’s crops were destroyed by drought and salinity intrusion this year. Above: Water levels have been at historic lows in Vietnam’s Mekong Delta.

sinking. Vietnam’s Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment estimated that a 1-meter rise in the sea level would submerge nearly 40% of the Mekong Delta and more than 20% of Ho Chi Minh City, a metropolis of 10 million people. Vietnam is introducing salt-resistant rice and increasing autumn and winter rice crop quotas to make up for this year’s shortfall. The Ministry of Agriculture and Development is seeking $4.5 billion from the government to build an irrigation system, and work is underway on a decadeslong plan to construct sea walls and dikes along the coast. “I find it difficult to be optimistic,” said Dan Spencer, associate professor of environmental studies at the University of Montana. “Like many poor nations, Vietnam generates very little of the climate change problem but suffers from the brunt of many of the effects.” Ni called the problem alarming. “I wonder if the situation of the Mekong basin, especially the Mekong River, should be upgraded as a global issue, as soon as possible,” he said. “It’s not isolated to six countries in Asia.” On a recent day, farmer Nguyen Tran Ngoc was digging a canal to try to irrigate some new crops: watermelon, flowers, squash, pumpkin and cabbage. He stopped growing rice because of the lack of water. He doesn’t know how much longer he can make a living from farming. “Worry or don’t worry, it’s all the same,” he said. “Change is coming and we can’t control it.”

In Nepal, a yearlong wait for quake aid

Families still live in shelters as government fails to deliver help Thomas Maresca

Special for USA TODAY KATHMANDU, NEPAL

Usha Pandey was dancing when the earthquake hit. She was at home with her younger sister and brother on a school holiday, listening to music and having fun. “As soon as the house started shaking, we ran outside,” Pandey, 19, said. “The house collapsed right afterward. We’re lucky to be alive. I still feel scared remembering it.” But the problems were just beginning. One year after the magnitude-7.8 earthquake devastated Nepal, killing nearly 9,000 people, the Pandey family still hasn’t moved back home. They’re living in a temporary shelter across the road from their damaged house, in the rugged hills of Nuwakot District, about 50 miles from Kathmandu. The family of five shares a cramped wooden shed with some unwelcome visitors. “There are scorpions,” said Usha’s mother Saraswoti, 40. “The other night, I saw a snake hanging down from the ceiling,” During the monsoon season, rain pours in through the tin roof. In the winter, they try to plug up drafts with hay and build bonfires outside. The only relief that reached the Pandey family was a tarp and some bulk rice and lentils. They haven’t received any rebuilding assistance from Nepal’s government, which has faced criticism at home and from international donors for its handling of one of the biggest natural disasters in its history. Although $4.1 billion in international aid has been pledged by donors, only a small fraction has been committed and disbursed. In the meantime, all over the earthquake-impacted zones, families are still living in temporary shelters — some 3 million people, according to aid group Save the Children. While initial relief efforts were fairly robust, red tape, political infighting and inefficiency have hobbled the rebuilding process. The Nepali parliament passed a new constitution in September 2015, which led to political tensions among the country’s diverse ethnic communities. Protesters at the Indian border began a blockade which lasted more than four months, causing severe shortages of fuel and other supplies across Nepal. The country also dragged its feet in establishing the Nepal Re-

PHOTOS BY THOMAS MARESCA FOR USA TODAY

A girl walks past a house damaged by last year’s magnitude-7.8 earthquake in Nepal.

The Pandey family has been living in a cramped shelter, along with scorpions and the occasional snake, since the earthquake.

“The government could have a much stronger sense of vigor, emergency and urgency.” Kenichi Yokoyama, Asian Development Bank

construction Authority, which began operations in January, more than seven months after the earthquake that damaged or destroyed more than 900,000 homes. Damage and losses are estimated at $7 billion. Kenichi Yokoyama, country director of the Asian Development Bank, which has pledged $200 million to the reconstruction efforts, said the government’s response has been sluggish. “The government could have a much stronger sense of vigor, emergency and urgency,” Yo-

koyama said. Yokoyama said many of Nepal’s problems in responding to the earthquake are systemic, due to a lack of technical capacity and infrastructure. Nepal is ranked as one of the least-developed countries by the United Nations. “We need to accept the reality that there is very significant capacity constraint, which needs to be addressed by providing sufficient technical assistance much beyond funding,” he said. While international donors such as ADB are still waiting for their funds to be used, aid groups on the ground like the Red Cross have been constrained by an inconsistent government process. “You often don’t know who is (making) the decisions,” said Max Santner, head of delegation for the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies in Nepal. “It is like negotiating against a rubber wall.” He said that before the earthquake, Nepal was already suffering from heavy pressure on its natural resources and from a government that has neglected development of the most basic social services, which have exacerbated the slow recovery. “In such an exceptional situation, I expected (the response) to be like this,” Santner said. “It is

not a surprise at all.” Complicating the rebuilding efforts is a social caste system and discrimination among the dozens of ethnicities in Nepal, according to a March report by Save the Children. “The earthquakes occurred in the context of deeply entrenched social hierarchy, and associated with that hierarchy, deeply entrenched social exclusion — with vulnerable and marginalized groups having suffered a history of discrimination due to caste, gender, ethnicity, religion, age, disability, language and/or geographical remoteness,” the report said. “We are very frustrated and very confused,” said Dev Bahadur Tamang, the shaman in the remote village of Dhadkharkh, where all 160 homes were destroyed. “Now the monsoon season is coming again and it will be impossible to rebuild.” Tamang said that many in the village still fear another earthquake and would like to relocate but have nowhere to go. They can only pray that aid will reach them eventually. “I hope after two or three years the village will come back to life,” Tamang said. “If we don’t have money, we will spend the rest of our lives in temporary shelters.”


USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld SUNDAY, APRIL 24, 2016

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Beth Belton @bethbelton USA TODAY

BUSINESS SURVEILLANCE TEAMSTERS GO RIDE-HAILING uIn a nutshell: A day after Uber announced a $100 million settlement with some drivers in California and Massachusetts, the Teamsters announced plans to form an association for workers in California’s ride-hailing industry, writes our Elizabeth Weise. uThe lowdown: The Teamsters said drivers had approached the transportation union seeking help with benefits, a dispute resolution procedure, legal and tax services, advocacy assistance and a stronger voice on the job. uThe upshot: “We think we’re the best vehicle for erecting this association concept, given our size and our diversity as a union,” said Rome Aloise, an international vice president with the California Teamsters. The structure of what such an association would look like is still unclear, Aloise said. Members would probably not join the actual union but would instead join an association, which could possibly be funded, though not controlled, by Uber.

NEWS MONEY SPORTS LIFE AUTOS TRAVEL

L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY SUNDAY, APRIL 24, 2016

BOOK EXCERPT

How Wall Street enabled Detroit’s collapse New book details the creative — and possibly illegal — deals that led to its bankruptcy

COURTESY OF NATHAN BOMEY

USA TODAY Money reporter Nathan Bomey’s book follows the trail of bad decisions that caused Detroit’s economy to crumble. Nathan Bomey l @NathanBomey l USA TODAY

ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

A person uses the Uber app.

ON THE FRONT BURNER COUPONS HELP CHIPOTLE Chipotle Mexican Grill has warned it will post a loss because of its food-safety problems, but when it reports quarterly earnings Tuesday, investors will be looking for signs that freebies are winning back customers. A survey conducted by investment bank Cowen & Co. during the first week of April showed that 41% of respondents who received a coupon visited Chipotle 3.8 times over the prior 30 days, compared with 1.4 times for the 59% who didn’t receive a coupon, according to a post in The Wall Street Journal. The poll covered more than 1,000 people who had eaten at a Chipotle in the past year. Brand perception of Chipotle among the coupon redeemers was higher than it was among those who didn’t receive coupons. USA SNAPSHOTS©

5 years from now

About

3 in 4 agree that they know what they want to be doing professionally then.

Source University of Phoenix School of Business survey of 1,097 adults JAE YANG AND PAUL TRAP, USA TODAY

In 2013-14, the city of Detroit’s financial implosion cast bondholders, pensioners and city residents against one another in the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history. USA TODAY Money reporter and former Detroit Free Press journalist Nathan Bomey’s new book, Detroit Resurrected: To Bankruptcy and Back, released Monday, tells the dramatic story of a great American city struggling to overcome $18 billion in debt. This excerpt, adapted from Detroit Resurrected with permission from New York-based W.W. Norton & Co., depicts the story behind a disastrous $1.4 billion debt deal that crushed Detroit’s budget.

W

ith variable-rate, no-down-payment mortgages being distributed to homeowners at a frothy pace in the 2000s, it’s not surprising that Wall Street rushed to lend money to what was arguably the nation’s most financially distressed city. Detroit was like a homeowner who couldn’t afford to pay. But that was irrelevant to the dealmakers. Their principal concern was not whether Detroit could afford the debt payments. Their concern was the city’s legal capacity to borrow. By 2004 — half a century after its population had started to plummet from a peak of nearly 2 million in the 1950s — Detroit was tapped out. Several years before his conviction on unrelated federal corruption charges, Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick wanted Detroit to borrow $1.4 billion to fund pensions — even though the city could legally borrow only another $600 million before hitting Michigan’s debt limits. This inconvenient fiscal reality spawned a legion of powerful lawyers and Wall Street advisers who collaborated to create a byzantine new structure that would make the deal possible. With the city unable to issue any more traditional bonds, Kilpatrick in November 2004 officially proposed creating two shell corporations to do the deal. He threatened thousands of layoffs unless City Council approved the

transaction. Despite the debt deal’s apparent sophistication, the concept was actually quite simple. Kilpatrick and the City Council took out a jumbo mortgage, gave the sparkling mansion — in this case, a pile of cash — to their politically connected friends and kept the debt obligation. It was a classic pass-through structure. The city would create new legal entities to issue the debt, making it appear like the shell corporations actually owed the payments. But in reality, the city would always be on the hook for the payments. If it smells like debt and looks like debt, it is debt. Two bond insurers — Financial Guaranty Insurance Company (FGIC) and a company that later became known as Syncora Holdings — wrapped the certificates in insurance that would pay out to bondholders in the event of default. By any measure, it was an inventive transaction. The cash raised through the deal was split between the city’s two pension funds. The so-called certificates of participation effectively promised debt holders a piece of Detroit’s cash flow — with fixed interest rates ranging from about 4% to 5% on $640 million of the certificates and a variable rate on the other $800 million. Variable-rate mortgages are typically viewed as a bad bet for a long-term deal because interest rates can rise over time. To ad-

dress this uncertainty, the city in the state of Michigan for this decided to lock in a steady inter- kind of deal.” est rate on the $800 million in Over the next several years, variable-rate certificates. To do Detroit’s budget continued to deso, it purchased interest-rate teriorate as the Great Recession swaps from global banks Merrill cratered the city’s economy, trigLynch and UBS, effectively ob- gering a tidal wave of foreclotaining a fixed rate on the trans- sures and demolishing property action and creating more values. In January 2009, the city’s predictability for the city budget. Aside from the fact that it was eroding finances prompted Stanprobably illegal, the transaction dard & Poor’s to downgrade De“made no financial sense,” said troit’s credit rating to junk status, Ken Buckfire, a Miller Buckfire triggering a default in the city’s swaps contracts. investment banker The default meant who years later the city owed a terhelped the city exmination payment to tract the deal from Merrill Lynch and its balance sheet UBS of anywhere during bankruptcy. from $300 million The city, Buckfire to $400 million. For said, should have aca broken city with a knowledged its ungeneral-fund budfunded pension get of about $1 bilcrisis and realized lion at the time, the that borrowing cash termination paywould not solve the ment was enough fundamental issue: to bankrupt DeThe city could not aftroit. ... ford the benefits it The city had promised. “This didn’t have Detroit was like searched for a revenue stream that to happen. It’s like a homeowner might make the you’re trying to dewho couldn’t problem go away. flect a comet. If you afford to pay. About a decade earget to it a billion miles away, you But that was lier, officials had welcomed three cadon’t have to do irrelevant to the sinos into the city: much to get it to dealmakers. the MGM Grand, miss the Earth. If you get to it 500,000 Greektown Casino miles away, it’s too late,” Buckfire and MotorCity Casino. A reliable, said. high-quality source of cash, gamAll three major ratings agen- bling taxes quickly became a crucies loved the deal. The insured cial source of income for the city certificates, in their estimation, government, topping property were bulletproof. Fitch, Standard taxes. Eventually the banks & Poor’s and Moody’s all set their agreed not to demand the termiinitial ratings on the insured nation payment from Detroit— COPs at a pristine AAA. On Wall cash they knew the city didn’t Street the deal earned plaudits. have. Instead, they accepted the Investment firm Robert W. Baird city’s pledge of its treasured casi& Co.’s public finance division no taxes as collateral on the practically saluted the dubious swaps. The tweak would later haunt foundation for the deal in a press release: “The challenge for Baird the city, jeopardizing its most imand the City of Detroit was to portant source of revenue. demonstrate the city’s clear authority to do the transaction, “Detroit Resurrected: To Bankruptcy even though there is no single and Back” releases Monday from W.W. Norton & Co. Bomey will speak Tuesday law that authorizes the transac- at a free event at the Detroit Institute tion and there was no precedent of Arts.

TaskRabbit joins CBC’s effort to boost tech diversity Jessica Guynn @jguynn USA TODAY

TaskRabbit is the first company to sign on to a Congressional Black Caucus initiative to boost recruitment of African Americans in tech. TaskRabbit released its diversity and inclusion plan Thursday, saying the hiring and retention of underrepresented groups is a priority at the San Francisco startup that offers on-demand help with chores. TaskRabbit’s plan calls for increasing the percentage of African-American employees to 13% from 11% in 2016 to reflect the SAN FRANCISCO

population of the United States. TaskRabbit became one of the rare Silicon Valley tech start-ups with an African-American CEO last week when Stacy BrownPhilpot was promoted to the top job after serving as the company’s chief operating officer. “I really liked that the Congressional Black Caucus had a timeline, a goal and a focus on transparency. I believe you accomplish what you measure,” Brown-Philpot told USA TODAY in an interview. The Congressional Black Caucus launched CBC TECH 2020 last May, bringing political pressure to bear on Silicon Valley’s track record on hiring and retention of African Americans.

TASKRABBIT

Stacy Brown-Philpot is TaskRabbit’s new chief executive.

During her three-year tenure at TaskRabbit, Brown-Philpot says she has grown ethnic diversity threefold and doubled the number of women. In one of her first official acts as CEO, BrownPhilpot says she’s formalizing those efforts. “We were going to go public with our numbers anyway, so it was a nice way to support what they were doing, especially their efforts to get tech companies to be transparent and accountable for what they are doing,” BrownPhilpot told USA TODAY in an interview. TaskRabbit has a higher percentage of African Americans than many tech companies. African Americans represent 2% or

less of the workforces at major tech companies in Silicon Valley, and little progress has been made despite increased investment of money and resources. Yet top universities turn out African-American and Latino computer science and computer engineering graduates at twice the rate that leading technology companies hire them, a USA TODAY analysis showed. And it’s not just computer science: Minorities are also sharply underrepresented in non-technical jobs such as sales and administration, according to USA TODAY research. TaskRabbit says it will add one more African-American employee this year for a total of eight.


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USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld SUNDAY, APRIL 24, 2016

PERSONAL FINANCE A Social Security loophole is now

BLOCKED Benefit-boosting strategy gone for anyone not 62 by Jan. 1 Robert Powell

Special for USA TODAY

CYBRAIN GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOTO

FOR MORE INFO not yet FRA). Plus, it set the clock ticking on another strategy: file and suspend. The paperwork for that strategy must be filed by April 29. THE BOTTOM LINE

So, what do you need to know and do about file and restrict, also known as deemed filing? uFocus on your birthdate. Under the new law, if you were born on Jan. 1, 1954, or earlier, you can still restrict the scope of your application to just spousal benefits once you reach FRA. And if you qualify, it’s still well worth considering this benefit booster.

“This strategy can give them tens of thousands of dollars in additional benefits,” says Elaine Floyd, director of retirement and life planning at Horsesmouth. “Spouses who are grandfathered under the old rules should definitely consider filing a restricted application for spousal benefits when they turn FRA.” If, however, your birthdate is Jan. 2, 1954, or later you’re out of luck. Once you file for one Social Security benefit — the one based on your earnings — you are “deemed” to have filed for the other benefit — the spousal benefit — as well. And once that happens, you automatically receive

uSocial Security has some publications on the subject: “What do the Recent Social Security Claiming Changes Mean for Me?” at www.ssa.gov/planners/retire/ claiming.html and “Retirement Planner: Suspending Retirement Benefit Payments” at www.ssa.gov/planners/retire/ suspend.html uContact Social Security at 800-772-1213 (TTY 800-3250778) to speak about your options. uCrunch your numbers using Financial Engines’ Social Security interactive planning tool at http://corp.financialengines.com/

GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOTO

Social Security claiming strategies are complicated, and those intricacies have offered some lucrative loopholes for savvy married couples. But if you turned 62 on or after Jan. 2, 2016, one of those loopholes — the restricted application — has closed. File and restrict, as the strategy is also known, lets a lowerearning spouse, say a wife, who is at full retirement age (currently 66) or older and is eligible for both retirement and spousal benefits, collect a spousal benefit based on her higher-earning retired husband’s record. Under the practice, the wife files for Social Security and then “restricts” her application to just spousal benefits. Meanwhile, her benefit grows because of something called delayed retirement credits, by up to 32% until she hits age 70. Under the old law, however, a spouse who was not yet full retirement age (FRA) who filed for benefits could not take advantage of the same loophole. A spouse not yet FRA who filed for benefits received the higher of two benefits. They could not restrict their application to spousal benefits and earn delayed retirement credits on their own benefits. The Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015, which President Obama signed into law last November, closed the loophole that let one group of spouses (those FRA and older) benefit from file and restrict and not the other (those

PETE THE PLANNER

BIG GOAL? TRY A ONE-WEEK FINANCIAL FAST

A tough spending diet can test your level of commitment Peter Dunn is an author, speaker and radio host. Have a question about money for Pete the Planner? Email him at AskPete@petetheplanner.com

Peter Dunn

Special for USA TODAY

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our financial achievements will only go as far as your willingness to sacrifice for them. I see people prove this point every day. Some people don’t try, some people do try, and some people alter the definition of try, based on their extraordinary effort. I don’t use the word “extraordinary” ham-handedly. There is ordinary, and then there is extra-ordinary. Each story of extraordinary effort I come across solidifies my assertion that extraordinary effort can bridge the gap — crossing your fingers cannot. Don’t be a finger-crosser.

ADMIRABLE EFFORTS

I have a friend whose No. 1 financial priority is sending his daughters to college. As a high school teacher, he knows that being able to save enough money in the time allotted is mathematically impossible. Therefore, he started a landscaping business on the side. He sacrifices his afternoons, his weekends and his summers in order to achieve his goal. He is fueled by purpose.

I know a couple who raised well more than $30,000 for an adoption, via a year-long scrimping and saving effort, which included a series of rummage sales, odd jobs and various other fundraisers. They were able to pay the fees to adopt their son with $0 borrowed. Thus, they could focus on parenting, not digging out of $30,000 in debt. I know a single mom who works three jobs to pay for her son’s private school tuition. She didn’t like the school system where she lived, so she decided to send her son to a private elementary school. Finger-crossing wouldn’t have done the job. If I’m being honest, I both love and slightly dislike all of these stories. I love them for obvious reasons, but I dislike them because they remove any excuses I might conjure up for why I’m not accomplishing my own goals. Why do some people go all out for their goals, while others don’t? After observing dozens of these scenarios over the last several years, I’ve come to the conclusion that it begins with math. The teacher-turned-landscaper did the math. He determined his daughters’ education will cost X. He then discovered he didn’t have the means to provide X. His extraordinary effort bridged the gap. I encourage you to do the math. A college education is X amount of dollars. Paying off student loans is Y amount of dollars. And the down payment on a home is Z

the higher of the two benefits. Going forward, you won’t be able to earn delayed retirement credits on your benefit while collecting a spousal benefit. uNew law doesn’t apply to survivor’s benefits. “Deemed filing doesn’t apply to widows and widowers,” says Andy Landis, author of Social Security: The Inside Story. “You can still file for only your own or only the widow (er)’s benefits, then switch to the other later. It’s a great planning opportunity if you’ve lost a spouse or even an ex-spouse.” The new law does, however, apply to divorced spouses. uExceptions to deemed filing. Deemed filing does not apply if you receive spouse’s benefits and are also entitled to disability, or if you are receiving spousal benefits because you are caring for the retired worker’s child, according to the Social Security Administration’s (SSA) website. uDon’t sweat it. For his part, Kurt Czarnowski, a principal with Czarnowski Consulting, says all the fuss over changes to the claiming strategies is no big deal. “The fundamentals haven’t changed, and, as I am fond of saying, good things still come to those who wait,” he says. “Because life expectancy is increasing, you are still likely to be better off by delaying the start of your Social Security benefits even if you are no longer able to take advantage of either of the claiming strategies that are going away. The strategies simply provided a financial incentive for one or both members of the couple to wait, but while the financial incentive may be going away, the benefits of waiting aren’t.” uWhy the change? Well, the financial benefits of the old law were significant, and to stay solvent, Social Security has to watch its bottom line. Plus, the change “preserves the fairness of the incentives to delay” taking Social Security based on one’s earning record, according to the SSA. Now, with the exception of spouses and divorced spouses born on Jan. 1, 1954, or earlier, the exact same laws are in place for those who file for benefits before, at or after FRA. Robert Powell is editor of Retirement Weekly and contributes regularly to The Wall Street Journal and MarketWatch. Got questions? Email Bob at rpowell@allthingsretirement.com.

amount of dollars. Do the math. Bridge the gap. I’m certainly not suggesting you aren’t trying. But I am suggesting you might not be doing what it takes to accomplish your financial goals. You can jump-start your extraordinary effort. I call it an “effort week.” Your goal during effort week is to cut your spending as far as possible, in order to feel the pain a bit. I believe most high school sports teams have a T-shirt with the phrase “Pain is temporary. Pride is forever.” Think of this week as a new exercise regimen. The first day of a new exercise program isn’t fun. It hurts. And the next day, you wake up sore, as though you just got finished riding all the horses. Some people drop out after the first day of pain. Others throw in the towel after the equestrian-inspired second day. THE FAST BEGINS

Sunday, go to the grocery store, fill up your car’s gas tank and take 20 minutes or so to think through the coming 168 hours. Can you possibly make it through the week without spending a dime? It’s amazing how many of the little things you don’t need get flushed out when the default is not spending money. An “effort week” can essentially reset your spending habits. You can sustain extraordinary effort over the course of one week. If you can’t, you certainly won’t make it two weeks, or one month, or five years. It’s stunningly easy to live a life you can’t afford. Nearly every television commercial, radio commercial and Web ad is encouraging you to do just that. Even banks are complicit in this counter-effort against your effort. If you believe the media programs our minds, then you’ll definitely believe you’re being programmed to make bad financial decisions. Ordinary effort cannot combat the messaging. Extraordinary effort can. What are you willing to do to accomplish the financial goals in your life? Whatever you’re willing to do, I urge you to stop crossing your fingers.


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Lost draft choice burdens Chiefs

KANSAS RELAYS

Right at home

By Dave Skretta AP Sports Writer

Kansas City, Mo. — In his first two drafts with the Chiefs, general manager John Dorsey had to work around not having secondround picks, which he had sent to San Francisco in a trade for quarterback Alex Smith. This year, he’ll be working without a third-round choice. The Chiefs were docked the pick as part of the penalties handed down by the NFL for tampering with free-agent wide receiver Jeremy Maclin, who ultimately signed with Kansas City prior to last season. They were also hit with a series of fines, but it’s the loss of draft picks, including a sixth-rounder next year, that really hurt. “It’s going to make sure that we try to hit those picks as we go along,” Dorsey said of his remaining choices. “Of course it will change a few things. You have to make sure that the diligent work you do is as good of work as you can possibly do, and that’s what we’re going to do.” The Chiefs appealed the penalties and successfully got their fine reduced. But the loss of draft picks, the most crippling sanctions ever handed down in a tampering case, were upheld by NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell. That third-round pick this year would have come in handy considering all the holes the Chiefs must fill. Even though they return many of their top playmakers from last year’s playoff team, they lost several to injury, retirement and free agency. Star linebacker Justin Houston could miss most of the season after having his ACL repaired this offseason. Safety Husain Abdullah and defensive tackle Mike Devito called it a career. Top cornerback Sean Smith and backup safety Tyvon Branch were among those who signed elsewhere. The Chiefs are still in need of a wide receiver to take the pressure off Maclin. They could use some bodies to shore up the secondary, too. Pass rushers are always at a premium, and depth on the offensive line would help. “I mean, it looks like it’s a deep draft to me,” said Chiefs coach Andy Reid, who has been sidelined by his own knee replacement surgery. “It seems just that there are some good football players in this draft at a lot of positions, which that’s not always the case.” First thing’s first: The Chiefs, who have the No. 28 overall pick, used their firstrounder last year on cornerback Marcus Peters — the league’s defensive rookie of the year — and a thirdround choice on nickel defender Steven Nelson. Wide receiver depth: There are few pass-catching standouts in this year’s class, which means Kansas City could find value in the second round. Someone like Ohio State’s Braxton Miller could stretch the field, while Tyler Boyd of Pittsburgh would provide the kind of big body that could help out in the red zone.

John Young/Journal-World Photo

KANSAS UNIVERSITY GRADUATE MICHAEL STIGLER CLEARS THE FINAL HURDLE IN FIRST PLACE as he competes in the men’s 400-meter hurdles during the Kansas Relays on Saturday at Rock Chalk Park.

Stigler reigns supreme in hurdles By Gary Bedore gbedore@ljworld.com

It seemed fitting that Michael Stigler’s quest for the 2016 Olympic Games started in earnest Saturday at the 2015 Kansas University graduate’s favorite home meet — the Kansas Relays. “For me to open up (the outdoor season) here kind of brought a little bit of different energy into my race because it’s my home crowd, and I wanted to per-

form well for everybody. I know they don’t get to watch me run in person all the time. For them to see my first race is a great feeling. I hope they enjoyed it. There’s more to come,” said Stigler, a 24-year-old Canyon, Texas, native, who won the 400 hurdles in 50.12. Now competing for adidas, Stigler finished well ahead of 33-year-old Drake assistant track coach LaRon Bennett (52.82), who like Stigler has a realistic chance of placing in

the top three at the Olympic Trials on July 1-10 in Eugene, Ore., and snare a spot in the Rio Games, which runs Aug. 5-21. Bennett, a three-time AllAmerican out of the University of Georgia, will be competing in his fourth Olympic Trials, Stigler his second. “Mike ... he is strong, and he is fearless,” Bennett said. “Us older guys, we rely on technique and execution. I think he’s been coached up well. He’s starting to run a lot

more confident, a lot more smooth. I’m proud of him. I give him encouragement all the time. He’s strong right now. I look forward to seeing him on the team, myself as well.” Bennett was hoping to defeat the hometown hero Saturday on a windy day at Rock Chalk Park. “I always try to see if I can sneak an ‘L’ under his column. I knew he was ready, Please see RELAYS, page 3C

Lions’ relay unit aiming higher By Bobby Nightengale bnightengale@ljworld.com

Lawrence High’s girls 4x400 relay — Sanders Barbee, Evann Seratte, Myah Yoder and Kyleigh Severa — didn’t run the time they were hoping for in their final race at the Kansas Relays on Saturday. But after a long weekend, that didn’t take away from their happiness at Rock Chalk Park. The Lions finished eighth in 4:13.53. They were without freshman Hannah Stewart, who ran the second leg of the relay in prelims when they finished in a season-best 4:01.03. LHS track and field coach Jack Hood wasn’t surprised by the time in prelims, but he wasn’t expecting it for at least another week. But it’s hard to find an event where the Lions have more pride and tradition, es-

on Saturday and ran the first leg. Yoder, who moved from first leg to third leg, noted their new order made it a little more difficult. “I think tradition has a lot to do with their expectations,” said Hood, who credited sprint coach Audrey Pope-Trowbridge. “They just don’t want to let each other down.” Baldwin High finished third in the 4x400 relay in 4:05.97 with Kyna Smith, Madeline Neufeld, Abby Ogle and Carlyn Cole. The Bulldogs were 4A state runner-up in the event last season and ran 4:01.04 in preRichard Gwin/Journal-World Photo lims. LAWRENCE HIGH’S MYAH YODER LEAVES THE BLOCKS in the girls “We’re really excited,” said sprint medley relay during the Kansas Relays on Saturday at Rock Neufeld, noting they are only Chalk Park. a few seconds away from the school record. “We have high pecially after winning three whole seven seconds,” Yoder expectations. All we want to straight Class 6A state titles. said. “We had two girls under do is get better.” “It was definitely surpris- 60 (seconds), so it was great.” Please see PREPS, page 3C ing because we dropped off a Barbee filled in for Stewart


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Curry expected to play today Houston — Stephen Curry is expected to play today in Game 4 of Golden State’s first-round series against Houston. Curry sprained his right ankle in the series opener and missed the last two games. Golden State won the first one without him, but Houston took Game 3 on Thursday night to cut the series deficit to 2-1. The Warriors officially listed him as probable, but coach Steve Kerr says he expects him to play. Curry participated in a 5-on-5 scrimmage in practice Saturday and says that if he doesn’t have any setbacks he “should be good” for today. He says the biggest thing was feeling like his ankle was stable when he tried to pivot or make moves to avoid defenders. He says: “I can deal with a little discomfort that comes along with it as long as it feels stable.”

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OKLAHOMA CITY FORWARD KEVIN DURANT (35) DRIVES against Dallas guard Wesley Matthews during the first Cleveland v. Detroit half of the Thunder’s 119-108 playoff win Saturday in team Dallas. AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. MLB AL LOGOS 032712: 2012 American League team logos; stand-alone; various sizes; staff; ETA 4 p.m.

OKC takes 3-1 lead on Mavs

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How former Jayhawks fared Cole Aldrich, L.A. Clippers Min: 13. Pts: 3. Reb: 7. Ast: 0. Cliff Alexander, Portland Did not play (inactive) Nick Collison, Oklahoma City Min: 11. Pts: 0. Reb: 1. Ast: 0. Paul Pierce, L.A. Clippers Min: 5. Pts: 1. Reb: 1. Ast: 0. OKLAHOMA CITY (119) Durant 7-20 4-8 19, Ibaka 7-11 1-1 16, Adams 5-7 4-6 14, Westbrook 7-19 8-12 25, Roberson 1-3 0-0 2, Waiters 4-5 3-3 12, Collison 0-1 0-0 0, Kanter 12-13 4-4 28, Foye 1-4 0-0 3, Morrow 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 44-83 24-34 119. DALLAS (108) Matthews 5-13 6-7 19, Nowitzki 12-21 3-3 27, Pachulia 4-4 1-1 9, Williams 0-0 0-0 0, Felton 9-16 0-0 19, Barea 0-7 0-0 0, Lee 3-5 0-0 6, Harris 4-5 1-2 12, Anderson 4-8 1-2 10, Mejri 2-2 2-2 6, Villanueva 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 43-83 14-17 108. Oklahoma City 33 24 32 30—119 Dallas 18 30 31 29—108 Three-Point Goals-Oklahoma City 7-16 (Westbrook 3-5, Waiters 1-1, Ibaka 1-3, Foye 1-3, Durant 1-4), Dallas 8-22 (Harris 3-3, Matthews 3-8, Anderson 1-3, Felton 1-4, Nowitzki 0-1, Barea 0-1, Villanueva 0-2). Rebounds-Oklahoma City 52 (Roberson, Adams 8), Dallas 40 (Nowitzki 8). AssistsOklahoma City 26 (Westbrook 15), Dallas 25 (Felton 11). Total Fouls-Oklahoma City 19, Dallas 27. Technicals-Ibaka, Westbrook, Mejri. Flagrant Fouls-Durant. Ejected-Durant. A-20,516 (19,200).

Pacers 100, Raptors 83 Indianapolis — George Hill and Ian Mahinmi each scored 22 points, Paul George added 19, and Indiana beat Toronto to tie the first-round playoff series at 2-2. Jonas Valanciunas led Toronto with 16 points, and Kyle Lowry and DeMarre Carroll each had 12. Indiana scored the first seven points, took control with a three-point spree late in the first quarter and led by as much as 25 points in the first half. Toronto, which never led or tied the score, cut it to 57-42 at halftime, but couldn’t got closer than 11 in the second half. Two days after one of their most embarrassing home games of the season, the Pacers played with passion and energy, shared the ball and defended. TORONTO (83) Carroll 4-9 0-0 12, Scola 0-5 1-2 1, Valanciunas 6-7 4-4 16, Lowry 4-12 4-6 12, DeRozan 4-15 0-0 8, Joseph 0-2 0-0 0, Patterson 2-5 3-4 8, Biyombo 1-1 3-8 5, Ross 2-9 2-2 7, Powell 3-5 2-2 10, Johnson 0-0 2-2 2, Thompson 1-1 0-0 2, Wright 0-3 0-0 0. Totals 27-74 21-30 83. INDIANA (100) George 6-16 6-7 19, Turner 2-13 0-0 4, Mahinmi 9-14 4-5 22, G.Hill 9-11 2-2 22, Ellis 3-7 0-0 7, S.Hill 2-4 1-2 7, Lawson 2-4 0-0 4, Stuckey 3-8 0-0 6, Miles 2-3 0-1 4, Allen 0-0 0-0 0, J.Hill 0-1 0-0 0, Robinson III 2-2 1-1 5, Young 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 40-85 14-18 100. Toronto 16 26 16 25— 83 Indiana 28 29 16 27—100 Three-Point Goals-Toronto 8-30 (Carroll 4-8, Powell 2-3, Patterson 1-4, Ross 1-4, DeRozan 0-2, Scola 0-4, Lowry 0-5), Indiana 6-16 (S.Hill 2-3, G.Hill 2-4, Ellis 1-2, George 1-4, Young 0-1, Stuckey 0-2). Fouled Out-Lowry. ReboundsToronto 56 (Biyombo 9), Indiana 49 (Mahinmi 10). Assists-Toronto 12 (Lowry 5), Indiana 24 (Mahinmi 5). Total Fouls-Toronto 20, Indiana 22. Technicals-Carroll, Patterson, Valanciunas, George. A-18,165 (18,165).

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Thunder 119, Mavericks 108 Dallas — Russell Westbrook had 25 points and 15 assists, and Oklahoma City beat Dallas on Saturday night, taking a commanding 3-1 lead in a testy first-round series that got quite a bit testier. Enes Kanter had his second straight playoff career high with 28 points on 12-of-13 shooting for the Thunder, who never trailed in two games NASCAR in Dallas after the Mavericks evened the series with a oneEarnhardt gets win point win in Oklahoma City in Richmond Xfinity following a 38-point loss in the opener. Richmond, Va. — Dale Kevin Durant scored 19 Earnhardt Jr. dominated all day points before he was ejected and regained the lead on a late in the final minute for a flarestart to win the NASCAR Xfingrant foul on Dallas’ Justin ity Series race at Richmond InterAnderson. national Raceway on Saturday, It was the last of several earning his 24th career victory in tense moments, and Dallas the series and first in more than team security had to make six years. sure Durant didn’t leave the The victory also capped off a court in front of the Maverlucrative few days for JR Motoricks bench. sports in which Earnhardt said Dirk Nowitzki had 27 points Unilever, the maker of Helland eight rebounds for the mann’s mayonnaise and a team Mavericks, who haven’t won partner since 2009, has signed a playoff series since winning on to sponsor the team’s Xfinity the 2011 NBA title. cars for 20 races in 2017-18. After Dallas coach Rick Car“To be able to come and win lisle called out Durant while a race in that car is incredible,” complaining during the off day Earnhardt said. It was his fourth over what he essentially said series win at Richmond. were dirty plays by the ThunEarnhardt built a lead of more der in Game 3, the teams had than 5 seconds as the first 125 a confrontation in front of the laps were run caution-free. When Oklahoma City bench early in a caution flew with 15 laps to go, the second quarter. he and the other 10 cars on the That flare-up started when lead lap headed for the pits, and Anthony Morrow, who was chaos ensued, causing the race sitting on the bench, refused to go nine extra laps. to give the ball to Salah Mejri after the Thunder threw it out of bounds. Dallas guard J.J. Barea conLATEST LINE fronted Morrow, a former Maverick who then shoved Barea. MLB Favorite.................... Odds................. Underdog Westbrook and Mejri ended up nose-to-nose in a shouting National League Chicago Cubs.................71⁄2-81⁄2...................CINCINNATI match before all the players NY Mets................................ 8-9............................ ATLANTA were separated by coaches and MILWAUKEE......................Even-6...................Philadelphia officials. SAN FRANCISCO..............Even-6................................Miami Westbrook and Mejri got LA Dodgers......................Even-6......................COLORADO ARIZONA............................Even-6...................... Pittsburgh double technicals, and the St. Louis............................Even-6......................SAN DIEGO Thunder were called for delay American League of game. NY YANKEES....................Even-6.....................Tampa Bay In the second half, WestTORONTO.........................61⁄2-71⁄2......................... Oakland brook appeared to shout an Cleveland............................. 6-7..............................DETROIT CHI WHITE SOX................... 6-7...................................Texas expletive toward the fans after KANSAS CITY..................61⁄2-71⁄2......................Baltimore getting tangled up with Mejri LA ANGELS.......................51⁄2-61⁄2........................... Seattle on a drive. Mejri, who left the HOUSTON.........................51⁄2-61⁄2........................... Boston game in the fourth quarter due Interleague WASHINGTON..................... 10-11.........................Minnesota to a right hip injury, was called for a foul. NBA PLAYOFFS And then came the foul on Favorite.............. Points (O/U)........... Underdog San Antonio leads series 3-0 Durant, whose swung his arm San Antonio.................... 13 (183)........................ MEMPHIS and hit Anderson in the head Golden St leads series 2-1 when the Dallas guard was Golden St........................ 9 (217.5)...................... HOUSTON driving along the baseline with Atlanta leads series 2-1 BOSTON.............................2 (204)............................Atlanta 50 seconds remaining. Just 30 Cleveland leads series 3-0 seconds later, Serge Ibaka got Cleveland......................61⁄2 (198.5).......................DETROIT a technical for throwing an elHome Team in CAPS bow at Charlie Villanueva. (c) TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC

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Barnes in position for first PGA win San Antonio — Ricky Barnes shot a 5-under 67 on Saturday to take a one-stroke lead in the Valero Texas Open in a bid for his first PGA Tour victory. Winless in 221 starts with a career-best runner-up finish in the 2009 U.S. Open, the 35-yearold Barnes had an 11-under 205 total at TPC San Antonio. He closed with a bogey after a wild drive near a cactus bush on the par-5 18th. Brendan Steele, the leader after each of the first two rounds, was second after a 72. Former world No. 1 Luke Donald and three-time tour winner Charley Hoffman were two strokes back. Donald, coming off a second-place tie last week in the RBC Heritage in South Carolina, shot a 68. Hoffman missed a 7-foot birdie putt on the last hole and settled for a 70.

• Boys golf at Topeka West Invitational, 1 p.m. • Boys tennis at Topeka Tournament, 9 a.m.

SCHEDULE FIRST ROUND (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Saturday, April 16 Indiana 100, Toronto 90 Golden State 104, Houston 78 Atlanta 102, Boston 101 Oklahoma City 108, Dallas 70 Sunday, April 17 Cleveland 106, Detroit 101 Miami 123, Charlotte 91 San Antonio 106, Memphis 74 L.A. Clippers 115, Portland 95 Monday, April 18 Toronto 98, Indiana 87 Dallas 85, Oklahoma City 84 Golden State 115, Houston 106 Tuesday, April 19 Atlanta 89, Boston 72 San Antonio 94, Memphis 68 Wednesday, April 20 Miami 115, Charlotte 103 Cleveland 107, Detroit 90 L.A. Clippers 102, Portland 81 Thursday, April 21 Oklahoma City 131, Dallas 102 Toronto 101, Indiana 85 Houston 97, Golden State 96, Golden State leads series 2-1 Friday, April 22 Cleveland 101, Detroit 91, Cleveland leads series 3-0 Boston 111, Atlanta 103, Atlanta leads series 2-1 San Antonio 96, Memphis 87, San Antonio leads series 3-0 Saturday, April 23 Indiana 100, Toronto 83, series tied 2-2 Charlotte 96, Miami 80, Miami leads series 2-1 Oklahoma City 119, Dallas 108, Oklahoma City leads series 3-1 Portland 96, L.A. Clippers 88, L.A. Clippers leads series 2-1 Today San Antonio at Memphis, noon Golden State at Houston, 2:30 p.m. Atlanta at Boston, 5 p.m. Cleveland at Detroit, 7:30 p.m. Monday, April 25 Miami at Charlotte, 6 p.m. Dallas at Oklahoma City, 7 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Portland, 9:30 p.m.

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scored 18 points, Kemba Walker had 17, and Charlotte beat Miami to snap a 12-game playoff losing streak and earn its first postseason victory in 14 years. Rookie Frank Kaminsky, who got the starting nod, scored eight of his 15 points during an 18-0 run in the third quarter that broke open a 53-all game. The Heat lead the series 2-1, with Game 4 set for Monday. Marvin Williams had 12 points and 14 rebounds for the Hornets. Luol Deng scored 19 points on five three-pointers, and Dwyane Wade added 17 for Miami. Hassan Whiteside had 13 points and 18 rebounds but battled foul trouble. MIAMI (80) Deng 6-12 2-4 19, J.Johnson 3-11 0-0 7, Whiteside 3-6 7-11 13, Dragic 4-13 3-4 11, Wade 7-20 3-3 17, Richardson 1-5 0-2 2, Winslow 1-7 2-4 4, Stoudemire 0-1 0-0 0, Weber 0-1 0-0 0, Wright 1-2 2-2 4, Green 1-1 0-0 3, McRoberts 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 27-79 19-30 80. CHARLOTTE (96) Williams 5-9 0-0 12, Kaminsky 5-12 5-5 15, Jefferson 5-11 0-0 10, Walker 4-19 8-8 17, Lee 3-11 2-2 8, Lin 7-16 2-3 18, Zeller 4-8 4-4 12, Hawes 1-2 0-0 2, Daniels 1-1 0-0 2, Hansbrough 0-0 0-0 0, Harrison 0-0 0-0 0, Lamb 0-1 0-0 0, Gutierrez 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 35-90 21-22 96. Miami 28 16 14 22—80 Charlotte 29 20 26 21—96 Three-Point Goals-Miami 7-22 (Deng 5-6, Green 1-1, J.Johnson 1-4, Wright 0-1, Dragic 0-3, Richardson 0-3, Winslow 0-4), Charlotte 5-18 (Williams 2-3, Lin 2-3, Walker 1-6, Hawes 0-1, Lee 0-2, Kaminsky 0-3). Rebounds-Miami 65 (Whiteside 18), Charlotte 54 (Williams 14). Assists-Miami 13 (Dragic 4), Charlotte 18 (Walker 7). Total Fouls-Miami 20, Charlotte 24. A-19,604 (19,077).

College Baseball

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Miss. St. v. LSU W.Va. v. Oklahoma Bradley v. Wich. St. TCU v. Okla. St. Auburn v. Mississippi Texas v. Texas Tech Indiana v. Mich. St.

noon noon 1 p.m. 1 p.m. 1 p.m. 2 p.m. 2 p.m.

ESPN2 34, 234 FCSC 145 TWCSC 37, 226 FCSA 144 SEC 157 FCS 146 BTN 147,237

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6:30p.m. NBCSP 38, 238 9 p.m. NBCSP 38, 238

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Tottenham v. W. Brom 1:55p.m. NBCSP 38, 238 College Softball

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TODAY IN SPORTS 1974 — Tampa, Fla. is awarded the NFL’s 27th franchise.

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KANSAS RELAYS

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Sunday, April 24, 2016

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Outside of the 4x400 relay, Severa took eighth place in the long jump, reaching 17 feet, 4 inches on her first leap. Severa, who has signed to compete for Wichita State next year, wants to become more consistent in the low-to-mid 18-feet range. “I couldn’t find the board this meet for some reason,” Severa said. “I mean, it’s pretty early in the season — maybe midseason. I still got time to fix it.” Free State High senior Ethan Donley, after narrowly finishing second in the 800 on Friday, took 11th place in the boys 1,600 meters. Like many other athletes, Donley was running on reserves in his final race of the weekend. “Especially after yesterday, I was just kind of gassed,” Donley said. “At the start of lap two, I tried to make a little bit of a move to get into a better position. I felt like it was a certain matter of time before I completely fell apart. I tried to get to the finish line before that happened.” Beyond his final race, Donley was proud of his weekend. He pushed himself to better times and said the competition at the meet is “harder than state.” “Most of the times were PRs and I was really excited about it,” Donley said. “I’m excited to see what I do next week at the Topeka Relays and going on.” Free State junior Emily Venters finished ninth in the girls 1,600 meters in 5:07.76. Venters’ run was only a few hours after she helped the Firebirds take fifth place in the sprint medley relay, alongside Cameryn Thomas, Alauna Hawkins and Chandler Wiggins. The Firebirds dropped more than 20 seconds in the event from last week.

Richard Gwin/Journal-World Photo

LAWRENCE HIGH’S KYLEIGH SEVERA SOARS THROUGH THE AIR DURING THE GIRLS LONG JUMP at the Kansas Relays on Saturday at Rock Chalk Park. Severa placed eighth in the event with a leap of 17 feet, 4 inches. In the field, LHS senior Amani Bledsoe finished eighth in the shot put with a throw of 52-5.5. It was a few feet short of his best throw this season and he scratched on his final four attempts. “He didn’t have a bad day,” Hood said. “He threw better than any of the other 6A shot putters in the meet. But it wasn’t where he wanted to be and certainly he was a little disappointed.” LHS senior Caroline Dykes was 10th in the girls high jump, clearing 5-2. Free State senior Simeon Windibiziri placed 13th in the boys Richard Gwin/Journal-World Photo javelin with a throw of Richard Gwin/Journal-World Photo FREE STATE’S EMILY VENTERS, LEFT, tries to run past 161-3, and Thomas was 11th in the girls long jump FREE STATE’S CAMERYN THOMAS takes off during the sprint Platte County’s Rebekah Geddes in the sprint medley relay at 16-11.5. Saturday at Rock Chalk Park. medley relay Saturday at Rock Chalk Park.

Relays CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

so ...” Bennett added, his voice trailing off. Stigler — he hopes to become the first Jayhawk male athlete to run in an Olympics since Charlie Gruber ran the 1,500 in 2004 — wasn’t about to be caught off guard Saturday. Not in front of about 5,000 fans, many who came specifically to see him run. “I feel there are kids in Lawrence who definitely look up to me. For them, I hope I am a hero and can continue to be there for them,” Stigler said. “At the end of the day my thing is just to influence other people just like the professionals before me did for me, to get me into the sport.” His time in Friday’s prelims (49.84) should be an Olympic Trials qualifying time, he indicated. “I didn’t celebrate at all,” Stigler said. “I know if I put my race together that qualifying for Trials will not be a problem. Definitely can’t celebrate. (I’ll) celebrate when I make the Olympic team. That’s where my mindset is right now.” l

John Young/Journal-World Photo

KANSAS UNIVERSITY’S CASEY BOWEN MAKES an approach in the men’s pole vault during the Kansas Relays on Saturday at Rock Chalk Park. both of them for bringing me here and bringing me to the level I am today. I love it here. The coaching staff is great. The school is great. Coach is always on you to work,” Livingston said. Livingston won the 2015 national junior college 800 title in 1:50.94. “It’s time, it’s definitely time,” Livingston said of qualifying for the Olympic Trials. “I’ve got to prepare myself mentally and physically.” Livingston was asked if there’s any special meaning behind his unique first name. “Honestly I don’t know,” he said, “but to me it means a ‘great man’ because I want to be a great man.’’

Livingston wins: KU’s Strymar Livingston, a 6-2 junior from Brooklyn, N.Y., won the 800 in a Rock Chalk Park facilityrecord 1:49.93. KU’s Matt Anyiwo was second in 1:54.09. Livingston is a transfer from Iowa Western Community College. “My coach at Iowa Western introduced me to Stanley Redwine (KU), l and he (Redwine) saw Adams a winner: KU’s me run (and recruited him). I want to thank Whitney Adams placed

John Young/Journal-World Photo

KANSAS UNIVERSITY’S WHITNEY ADAMS, LEFT, TAKES OFF at the start of the women’s 800-meter race during the Kansas Relays on Saturday at Rock Chalk Park. first in the 800 in 2:12.31. KU’s Hannah Dimmick and Dorie Dalzell were second and fourth in 2:13.26 and 2:14.87. “I’ve hit 2:05 this year. I want to break 2:03 and potentially move into the Trials over the summer,” said Adams, a 5-foot junior from St. Charles, Mo. “I have high hopes for myself and hope to execute those. It’s a big goal,” she added of the Trials and ultimately the Olympics. “I definitely have time. If I keep progressing the way I have been this year, it’s definitely in my eyesight.” Her strategy Saturday on a blustery day? “I tried to stay behind a tall person for a little while,” she said with a smile. “We train in worse wind. We are kind of used to this. It’s Kansas wind, but it definitely takes a toll on you when you are running.”

l

The MVPs: Former KU and Wyoming thrower Mason Finley earned Relays male MVP honors for winning Friday’s discus in a Relays-record 210-2. SM Northwest’s Molly Born was named female MVP for winning the 3,200 in a Relays-high-school-record-time of 10:28.16. l

Cooper sets record: KU’s Mitchell Cooper won the men’s discus Saturday in a school-record 205-3. The Queensland, Australia, junior’s final toss exceeded the 46-year old record previously held by Doug Knop (20310). “I was excited because I knew I already had the (victory). I just wanted to go for it. I talked to coach (Andy Kokhanovsky) before the throw and he was saying to focus on my technique, but I wanted to go for it. It paid off, but it wasn’t the

greatest technical throw. You had all the excitement, the fans cheering. It was really good,” Cooper said. “The next goal is to work on my consistency, trying to get my average up. I feel I am in a pretty good spot strengthwise, it’s the technique I need to work on. I’m not sure distance-wise what to go for because (62 meters) was my goal. The next goal would be 65 meters but it might be a bit early to be talking about that. I am just happy to be throwing well and I just want to keep going.”

Kelli McKenna, 1,500, 4:33.24; Shaylyn Stallbaumer, javelin, 167-5; Dylan Hodgson, steeplechase, 9:08.01; Courtney Coppinger, steeplechase, 10:58.72. Also, KU’s women’s 1,600 relay team of Adriana Newell, Sanni, Montgomery, Adams, 3:41.64; men’s 400 relay team of Jaron Hartley, Jaime Wilson, Alex Wilson, Ivan Henry, 40.26. l

NU rules: Nebraska won the men’s and women’s team quadrangular titles. NU’s women had 206 points, followed by KU 191, Colorado State 150, Rice 133. NU’s men l had 226 points, followed Saturday’s other KU by KU 219, CSU 164, Rice winners: Nick Meyer, 84. l pole vault, 17-7; Evan LanFinley fares well as des, 5,000, 14:21.57; Jaime Wilson, 200, 21.27; Zainab freshman: Colorado State Sanni, 200, 23.57; Sanni, freshman Rebecca Finley, 100, 11.38; Dasha Tsema, a Lawrence High grad, discus, 178-8; Curtis Ray, placed sixth in the discus long jump, 23-113⁄4; Nicole (154-6) and ninth in the Montgomery, 400, 54.86; shot put (39-8).


4C

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Sunday, April 24, 2016

BASEBALL

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

MAJOR-LEAGUE ROUNDUP

Nats pitchers strike out 18 Twins The Associated Press

Interleague Nationals 2, Twins 0 Washington — Tanner Roark struck out a career-high 15 and allowed only two hits over seven innings in a dominating performance that carried Washington past Minnesota on Saturday. Roark and a trio of relievers combined to fan 18, the most by Washington since its arrival from Montreal in 2005. Roark (2-2) twice struck out the side and fanned at least two in four other innings. It was only the second time in 52 career starts that the right-hander reached double digits in strikeouts — the other was on July 6, 2014, when he fanned 11 at San Diego. Minnesota Washington ab r h bi ab r h bi Dozier 2b 3 0 0 0 Heisey cf 4 0 0 0 Rosario lf 4 0 0 0 Treinen p 0 0 0 0 Mauer 1b 4 0 1 0 OPerez p 0 0 0 0 Sano 3b 3 0 0 0 Papeln p 0 0 0 0 Arcia rf 3 0 0 0 Rendon 3b 4 1 1 0 EEscor ss 4 0 0 0 Harper rf 4 1 2 0 Kepler cf 3 0 1 0 Zmrmn 1b 3 0 2 2 KSuzuk c 3 0 0 0 Drew 2b 4 0 0 0 PHughs p 2 0 0 0 Werth lf 3 0 0 0 JPolnc ph 0 0 0 0 WRams c 3 0 1 0 Fien p 0 0 0 0 Espinos ss 2 0 0 0 Roark p 2 0 0 0 dnDkkr ph-cf 1 0 1 0 Totals 29 0 2 0 Totals 30 2 7 2 Minnesota 000 000 000—0 000 00x—2 Washington 200 LOB-Minnesota 6, Washington 6. 2B-Kepler (2), Harper 2 (6). IP H R ER BB SO Minnesota P.Hughes L,1-3 7 6 2 2 2 2 Fien 1 1 0 0 0 2 Washington Roark W,2-2 7 2 0 0 3 15 1⁄3 Treinen H,4 0 0 0 1 1 2⁄3 O.Perez H,3 0 0 0 0 1 Papelbon S,7-8 1 0 0 0 0 1 T-2:39. A-35,974 (41,313).

American League Yankees 3, Rays 2 New York — Brett Gardner hit a solo home run with two outs in the bottom of the ninth to give New York a victory over Tampa Bay, spoiling the impressive majorleague debut of Rays top pitching prospect Blake Snell. Gardner singled home the tying run in the seventh and then connected on a 3-1 pitch from Erasmo Ramirez (4-1) two innings later, pointing toward the Yankees’ dugout as he trotted to first base and the ball soared into the second deck in right field. Andrew Miller (1-0) worked a scoreless inning for the win. Tampa Bay New York ab r h bi ab r h bi Forsyth 2b 4 0 0 0 Ellsury cf 4 0 1 0 Morrsn 1b 4 1 1 0 Gardnr lf 5 1 3 2 Longori dh 4 0 0 0 Beltran rf 3 1 0 0 Dickrsn rf 4 0 3 1 Teixeir 1b 4 0 1 0 DJnngs lf 3 0 0 0 ARdrgz dh 4 0 0 0 BMiller ss 3 0 0 0 BMcCn c 3 1 1 0 Pearce 3b 3 0 0 0 SCastro 2b 4 0 1 0 Kiermr cf 3 1 2 1 Headly 3b 3 0 0 0 Conger c 2 0 0 0 Gregrs ss 4 0 0 0 Casali c 1 0 0 0 Totals 31 2 6 2 Totals 34 3 7 2 Tampa Bay 000 110 000—2 New York 100 000 101—3 Two outs when winning run scored. E-Casali (2), B.Miller (2). DP-New York 1. LOB-Tampa Bay 3, New York 9. 2B-Morrison (1), Dickerson (5). HR-Kiermaier (2), Gardner (2). SB-Gardner (3). CS-Kiermaier (2). IP H R ER BB SO Tampa Bay Snell 5 2 1 1 1 6 Romero H,2 11⁄3 1 1 0 1 1 1⁄3 Cedeno BS,2-2 1 0 0 1 1 E.Ramirez L,4-1 2 3 1 1 0 1 New York Tanaka 7 5 2 2 1 7 Betances 1 0 0 0 0 2 A.Miller W,1-0 1 1 0 0 0 0 T-2:55. A-40,714 (49,469).

White Sox 4, STANDINGS Rangers 3, 11 innings Chicago — Slump- American League East Division ridden Jose Abreu hit an W L 11 5 RBI single with one out Baltimore 9 10 in the bottom of the 11th Toronto Boston 8 9 7 9 inning, leading Chicago New York Tampa Bay 7 10 over Texas. Central Division The White Sox won W L 12 6 for the fourth time in five Chicago Kansas City 11 6 games. Cleveland 8 7 Texas Chicago ab r h bi ab r h bi DShlds cf 4 0 1 0 Eaton rf 5 0 1 0 Mazara rf 5 0 1 0 Rollins ss 5 0 2 0 Beltre 3b 5 0 1 0 Abreu 1b 6 0 1 1 Fielder dh 5 0 0 0 Frazier 3b 5 1 1 1 Dsmnd lf 2 3 1 1 MeCarr lf 4 2 3 1 Morlnd 1b 5 0 0 0 Lawrie 2b 4 0 1 0 Alberto pr-1b 0 0 0 0 AvGarc dh 4 0 0 0 Andrus ss 4 0 1 2 Avila c 1 0 1 0 Odor 2b 4 0 2 0 Navarr c 1 0 1 1 Holady c 4 0 0 0 AJcksn cf 4 1 0 0 Totals 38 3 7 3 Totals 39 4 11 4 Texas 010 000 101 00—3 Chicago 010 000 020 01—4 One out when winning run scored. E-Navarro (1). DP-Texas 1, Chicago 1. LOB-Texas 7, Chicago 13. 3B-Andrus (2). HR-Desmond (2), Frazier (5), Me.Cabrera (2). SB-Desmond 2 (3), Odor (3). CS-Rollins (2). SF-Andrus. IP H R ER BB SO Texas Lewis 6 6 1 1 4 3 Barnette H,3 1 0 0 0 0 1 S.Dyson BS,1-1 1 3 2 2 1 0 Wilhelmsen 1 1 0 0 0 0 Klein 1 0 0 0 0 3 1 N.Martinez L,0-1 ⁄3 1 1 1 2 0 Chicago Rodon 62⁄3 2 2 2 2 7 Petricka 0 1 0 0 0 0 Duke 11⁄3 2 0 0 0 1 Robertson BS,1-7 1 1 1 1 1 2 N.Jones 1 1 0 0 0 1 Albers W,1-0 1 0 0 0 1 0 HBP-by S.Dyson (Av.Garcia), by N.Martinez (A.Jackson). T-3:57. A-20,182 (40,615).

Indians 10, Tigers 1 Detroit — Corey Kluber struck out 10 over eight impressive innings, and Yan Gomes homered and drove in five runs for Cleveland in the rout. Kluber (1-3) happily accepted the offensive output to earn his first win. Cleveland Detroit ab r h bi ab r h bi CSantn dh 5 0 2 1 Kinsler 2b 3 0 0 0 Kipnis 2b 4 1 2 0 Aviles 2b 1 0 0 0 Lindor ss 4 2 1 0 Upton lf 3 0 0 0 Napoli 1b 5 2 2 0 TyCllns lf 1 0 0 0 Gomes c 5 3 3 5 MiCarr 1b 3 0 0 0 JRmrz 3b 5 0 1 1 BWilsn c 0 0 0 0 Chsnhll rf 5 1 1 0 VMrtnz dh 3 0 0 0 RDavis lf 4 0 2 2 JMrtnz rf 3 0 1 0 Naquin cf 4 1 1 0 Cstllns 3b 3 0 0 0 Sltlmch c-1b 3 1 1 1 AnRmn ss 3 0 0 0 Gose cf 3 0 0 0 Totals 41 10 15 9 Totals 29 1 2 1 Cleveland 305 000 200—10 010 000— 1 Detroit 000 E-Napoli (2), Saltalamacchia (2). DP-Cleveland 1. LOB-Cleveland 6, Detroit 1. 2B-C.Santana (4), Gomes (3), R.Davis (3), Naquin (1). 3B-Chisenhall (1). HR-Gomes (2), Saltalamacchia (6). SB-Lindor (3), Jo.Ramirez (1). CS-R.Davis (3). IP H R ER BB SO Cleveland Kluber W,1-3 8 2 1 1 0 10 Otero 1 0 0 0 0 2 Detroit An.Sanchez L,2-2 21⁄3 9 7 6 1 2 Ryan 32⁄3 4 3 3 1 0 A.Wilson 12⁄3 2 0 0 0 1 B.Hardy 11⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 T-2:41. A-31,163 (41,297).

Blue Jays 9, A’s 3 Toronto — Troy Tulowitzki hit two solo home runs, Josh Donaldson added a threerun blast, and Toronto snapped Oakland’s sixgame winning streak. Oakland Toronto ab r h bi ab r h bi Burns cf 4 0 1 0 Carrer lf 5 3 4 0 Canha rf 4 1 1 1 Dnldsn 3b 4 2 3 4 Lowrie 2b 4 1 2 0 Bautist rf 3 0 0 2 Butler 1b 4 0 1 0 Encrnc dh 4 0 0 0 KDavis dh 3 1 0 0 Tlwtzk ss 4 2 3 2 Crisp lf 3 0 1 1 Smoak 1b 3 0 0 0 Semien ss 3 0 0 0 RMartn c 4 0 1 1 Phegly c 3 0 1 1 Goins 2b 4 0 0 0 Coghln 3b 3 0 0 0 Pillar cf 4 2 2 0 Totals 31 3 7 3 Totals 35 9 13 9 Oakland 100 100 100—3 Toronto 230 011 11x—9 E-Rzepczynski (1). DP-Oakland 1, Toronto 3. LOB-Oakland 3, Toronto 6. 2B-Carrera (2), Pillar (3). HR-Canha (3), Donaldson (7), Tulowitzki 2 (4). SB-Carrera (2). SF-Bautista. IP H R ER BB SO Oakland Bassitt L,0-1 5 9 6 6 2 5 Hendriks 2 2 2 2 0 3 Rzepczynski 1 2 1 0 0 1 Toronto Happ W,3-0 7 7 3 3 1 1 Floyd 2 0 0 0 0 2 HBP-by Hendriks (Donaldson), by Happ (K.Davis). WP-Bassitt. T-2:38 (Delay: 0:01). A-46,334 (49,282).

National League Pct GB .688 — .474 3½ .471 3½ .438 4 .412 4½

Pct GB .667 — .647 ½ .533 2½ 8 .500 3 13 .278 7

Detroit 8 Minnesota 5 West Division W L Pct GB Oakland 10 8 .556 — Texas 10 8 .556 — Seattle 8 9 .471 1½ Los Angeles 8 10 .444 2 Houston 6 12 .333 4 Saturday’s Games Washington 2, Minnesota 0 N.Y. Yankees 3, Tampa Bay 2 Toronto 9, Oakland 3 Cleveland 10, Detroit 1 Chicago White Sox 4, Texas 3, 11 innings Houston 8, Boston 3 Baltimore 8, Kansas City 3 L.A. Angels 4, Seattle 2 Today’s Games Tampa Bay (Smyly 0-2) at N.Y. Yankees (Pineda 1-1), 12:05 p.m. Oakland (Surkamp 0-1) at Toronto (Hutchison 0-0), 12:07 p.m. Cleveland (Carrasco 2-0) at Detroit (Greene 1-1), 12:10 p.m. Minnesota (Duffey 0-0) at Washington (Strasburg 3-0), 12:35 p.m. Texas (Holland 2-0) at Chicago White Sox (Latos 3-0), 1:10 p.m. Baltimore (M.Wright 1-1) at Kansas City (Ventura 1-0), 1:15 p.m. Seattle (Miley 0-2) at L.A. Angels (Shoemaker 1-2), 2:35 p.m. Boston (Owens 0-0) at Houston (Feldman 0-2), 7:05 p.m.

Astros 8, Red Sox 3 Houston — Colby Rasmus hit a tie-breaking grand slam in the fifth inning to lead Houston to a win that snapped a fourgame skid. Boston Houston ab r h bi ab r h bi Betts rf 5 1 1 0 Altuve 2b 5 2 3 1 Pedroia 2b 4 1 2 0 Springr rf 4 1 2 0 Ortiz dh 4 1 2 1 Correa ss 3 1 1 0 HRmrz 1b 3 0 0 0 ClRsms lf 4 1 2 5 T.Shaw 3b 4 0 1 0 Tucker dh 3 0 0 0 B.Holt ss-lf 3 0 1 1 Gattis ph-dh 2 0 0 0 Young lf 3 0 0 0 CGomz cf 4 0 0 0 Rutledg ph-ss 1 0 1 1 MGnzlz 1b 4 2 2 0 BrdlyJr cf 4 0 0 0 Valuen 3b 2 1 2 1 Vazquz c 4 0 1 0 JCastro c 4 0 0 1 Totals 35 3 9 3 Totals 35 8 12 8 Boston 100 001 010—3 040 03x—8 Houston 010 E-Fiers (1). LOB-Boston 8, Houston 9. 2B-Pedroia (4), Rutledge (3), Altuve 2 (7), Col.Rasmus (3), M.Gonzalez (3), Valbuena 2 (4). HR-Col.Rasmus (6). SF-B.Holt. IP H R ER BB SO Boston Buchholz L,0-2 52⁄3 6 5 5 1 6 1⁄3 Layne 0 0 0 1 1 1⁄3 No.Ramirez 2 0 0 1 0 Elias 12⁄3 4 3 3 2 1 Houston Fiers W,2-1 51⁄3 5 2 2 2 6 2⁄3 W.Harris H,2 0 0 0 0 0 Neshek H,3 1 1 0 0 0 1 Giles H,4 1 3 1 1 0 1 Fields 1 0 0 0 0 1 HBP-by Buchholz (Correa). T-3:28. A-40,232 (41,676).

Angels 4, Mariners 2 Anaheim, Calif. — Mike Trout drove in the tying and go-ahead runs with a home run against Felix Hernandez, and Los Angeles beat Seattle. Seattle Los Angeles ab r h bi ab r h bi Aoki lf 4 0 0 0 YEscor 3b 4 0 0 0 KMarte ss 4 0 1 0 Ortega lf 4 2 2 0 Cano 2b 3 0 0 0 Trout cf 3 1 2 2 Cruz dh 3 1 1 1 Pujols dh 3 0 0 0 Gutirrz rf 3 1 1 0 Calhon rf 4 0 1 1 S.Smith ph-rf 1 0 0 0 ASmns ss 4 0 0 0 KSeagr 3b 4 0 0 0 Pnngtn 2b 3 1 1 1 Iannett c 3 0 1 0 C.Perez c 3 0 0 0 D.Lee 1b 1 0 0 0 Choi 1b 2 0 1 0 Lind ph-1b 2 0 2 0 LMartn cf 3 0 0 1 Totals 31 2 6 2 Totals 30 4 7 4 Seattle 010 001 000—2 Los Angeles 001 002 01x—4 E-Zych (1). LOB-Seattle 7, Los Angeles 5. 2B-K. Marte (1), Gutierrez (2), Trout (4). HR-Cruz (4), Trout (3), Pennington (1). CS-Choi (1). SF-L.Martin. IP H R ER BB SO Seattle F.Hernandez L,1-2 7 5 3 3 2 4 2⁄3 Zych 1 1 1 1 2 1⁄3 Nuno 1 0 0 0 0 Los Angeles Santiago W,2-0 6 4 2 2 2 7 1⁄3 Morin H,3 0 0 0 0 0 2⁄3 Mahle H,4 1 0 0 0 0 J.Smith H,3 1 0 0 0 0 0 Street S,5-5 1 1 0 0 0 1 HBP-by J.Smith (Cano, Cruz). PB-C.Perez. T-2:46. A-41,058 (45,493).

East Division W L Pct GB Washington 13 4 .765 — New York 9 7 .563 3½ Philadelphia 9 9 .500 4½ Miami 5 11 .313 7½ Atlanta 4 13 .235 9 Central Division W L Pct GB Chicago 13 5 .722 — St. Louis 9 8 .529 3½ Cincinnati 9 9 .500 4 Pittsburgh 9 9 .500 4 Milwaukee 7 11 .389 6 West Division W L Pct GB Los Angeles 11 7 .611 — Colorado 9 8 .529 1½ Arizona 10 9 .526 1½ San Francisco 9 10 .474 2½ San Diego 7 11 .389 4 Saturday’s Games Washington 2, Minnesota 0 Cincinnati 13, Chicago Cubs 5 N.Y. Mets 8, Atlanta 2 Philadelphia 10, Milwaukee 6 L.A. Dodgers 4, Colorado 1 Arizona 7, Pittsburgh 1 St. Louis 11, San Diego 2 San Francisco 7, Miami 2 Today’s Games Chicago Cubs (Hammel 2-0) at Cincinnati (Simon 0-1), 12:10 p.m. Minnesota (Duffey 0-0) at Washington (Strasburg 3-0), 12:35 p.m. N.Y. Mets (deGrom 1-0) at Atlanta (Blair 0-0), 12:35 p.m. Philadelphia (Eickhoff 1-2) at Milwaukee (W.Peralta 0-3), 1:10 p.m. Miami (Conley 0-1) at San Francisco (M.Cain 0-2), 3:05 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (A.Wood 1-2) at Colorado (Lyles 1-1), 3:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (Liriano 1-1) at Arizona (Ray 1-0), 3:10 p.m. St. Louis (Leake 0-2) at San Diego (Rea 1-1), 3:40 p.m.

National League Reds 13, Cubs 5 Cincinnati — Eugenio Suarez and Adam Duvall hit three-run homers in the sixth inning as Cincinnati finally broke through against Chicago’s dominant pitching. A victory would have given the Cubs (13-5) their best start since 1907, the year they won the first of their back-to-back World Series titles. A four-homer splurge ended Chicago’s domination of its NL Central rival. Chicago Cincinnati ab r h bi ab r h bi Fowler cf 4 2 2 1 Cozart ss 5 2 2 0 Heywrd rf 4 1 2 1 DJssJr ss 0 0 0 0 Richrd p 0 0 0 0 Suarez 3b 4 3 3 4 Bryant lf 5 0 1 1 Votto 1b 5 1 2 2 Rizzo 1b 3 0 0 0 Phillips 2b 5 0 2 1 Szczur ph 1 0 0 0 Bruce rf 2 1 0 0 Zobrist 2b 4 0 1 1 Mesorc c 4 1 1 0 MMntr c 4 0 0 0 Duvall lf 4 1 1 3 J.Baez 3b 5 0 0 0 Scheler cf 3 1 1 1 ARussll ss 1 2 1 1 Cotham p 0 0 0 0 Lackey p 3 0 0 0 Cingrn p 0 1 0 0 Cahill p 0 0 0 0 Straily p 1 0 0 0 NRmrz p 0 0 0 0 B.Wood p 0 0 0 0 Soler ph-rf 1 0 0 0 T.Holt ph-cf 3 2 2 0 Totals 35 5 7 5 Totals 36 13 14 11 Chicago 010 020 200— 5 207 22x—13 Cincinnati 000 E-A.Russell 2 (3), Soler (1), Suarez (6). DP-Chicago 1, Cincinnati 1. LOB-Chicago 11, Cincinnati 3. 2B-Fowler 2 (9), Cozart (6), Phillips 2 (5). HR-A.Russell (2), Suarez (5), Votto (2), Duvall (2), Schebler (1). SB-Fowler (2), Heyward (3). IP H R ER BB SO Chicago Lackey L,3-1 52⁄3 7 6 6 1 5 1⁄3 Cahill 3 3 3 0 0 Ne.Ramirez 1 2 2 2 2 3 Richard 1 2 2 2 1 1 Cincinnati Straily 42⁄3 4 3 3 3 5 B.Wood W,2-0 11⁄3 0 0 0 2 0 Cotham 12⁄3 3 2 2 2 1 Cingrani 11⁄3 0 0 0 1 2 WP-Ne.Ramirez, Straily, Cotham. T-3:19. A-41,660 (42,319).

Mets 8, Braves 2 Atlanta — David Wright hit a two-run double, Steven Matz earned his second straight win, and New York stayed hot by beating Atlanta. Neil Walker and Asdrubal Cabrera hit backto-back home runs in the ninth against right-hander Ryan Weber.

New York Atlanta ab r h bi ab r h bi Grndrs rf 5 2 2 0 Markks rf 4 1 1 1 DWrght 3b 6 1 2 2 DCastr 2b 4 0 2 0 Confort lf 3 1 2 0 FFrmn 1b 4 0 2 1 Reed p 0 0 0 0 AdGarc 3b 4 0 1 0 Verrett p 0 0 0 0 Flowrs c 4 0 1 0 Duda 1b 4 0 0 1 Francr lf 4 0 2 0 NWalkr 2b 4 1 1 1 Aybar ss 4 0 0 0 ACarer ss 5 1 2 2 Stubbs cf 4 1 1 0 dArnad c 5 2 2 0 Chacin p 2 0 0 0 Lagars cf 5 0 2 1 Mrksry p 0 0 0 0 Matz p 2 0 1 0 Withrw p 0 0 0 0 Robles p 0 0 0 0 Petersn ph 1 0 0 0 De Aza ph-lf 2 0 1 0 Weber p 0 0 0 0 MSmith ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 41 8 15 7 Totals 36 2 10 2 New York 200 200 103—8 Atlanta 001 000 100—2 E-F.Freeman (2). DP-New York 1. LOB-New York 12, Atlanta 8. 2B-Granderson (4), D.Wright 2 (7), F.Freeman (2). 3B-Lagares (1). HR-N.Walker (7), A.Cabrera (1). SB-Conforto (1), Stubbs (3). S-Matz. SF-Duda. IP H R ER BB SO New York Matz W,2-1 61⁄3 9 2 2 0 8 2⁄3 Robles H,1 0 0 0 0 1 Reed H,3 1 1 0 0 0 1 Verrett 1 0 0 0 0 0 Atlanta Chacin L,0-1 52⁄3 7 4 3 2 5 2⁄3 Marksberry 1 1 1 0 1 2⁄3 Withrow 1 0 0 0 2 Weber 2 6 3 3 1 3 HBP-by Matz (Markakis), by Marksberry (Conforto). T-3:00. A-35,230 (49,586).

D’backs 7, Pirates 1 Phoenix — Chris Herrmann drove in four runs with a home run and double, Rubby De La Rosa gave up three hits over six-plus innings, and Arizona beat Pittsburgh. Pittsburgh Arizona ab r h bi ab r h bi Jaso 1b 4 0 1 0 Segura 2b 5 0 1 0 McCtch cf 3 0 0 0 JaLam 3b 4 0 0 0 Freese 3b 3 0 0 0 Gldsch 1b 2 1 1 0 SMarte lf 4 0 0 0 DPerlt rf 4 1 1 1 Cervelli c 3 0 0 0 Tomas lf 4 1 1 0 GPolnc rf 4 0 1 0 Ahmed ss 2 2 1 1 JHrrsn 2b 4 0 1 0 Owings cf 4 1 0 0 SRdrgz ss 3 1 1 1 Hrmnn c 3 1 2 4 Nicasio p 2 0 0 0 RDLRs p 2 0 0 0 Caminr p 0 0 0 0 Clipprd p 0 0 0 0 Joyce ph 0 0 0 0 Gosseln ph 1 0 0 0 Schugel p 0 0 0 0 Hudson p 0 0 0 0 Scahill p 0 0 0 0 WeksJr ph 1 0 0 0 Burgos p 0 0 0 0 Totals 30 1 4 1 Totals 32 7 7 6 Pittsburgh 010 000 000—1 000 05x—7 Arizona 011 E-Freese (3). LOB-Pittsburgh 6, Arizona 6. 2B-Jaso (6), Herrmann (2). HR-S.Rodriguez (3), D.Peralta (2), Herrmann (1). CS-G.Polanco (3). IP H R ER BB SO Pittsburgh Nicasio L,2-2 5 3 2 2 4 4 Caminero 1 0 0 0 1 1 Schugel 11⁄3 4 5 4 0 1 2⁄3 Scahill 0 0 0 0 1 Arizona R.De La Rosa W,2-3 6 3 1 1 1 6 Clippard H,2 1 1 0 0 1 0 Hudson H,3 1 0 0 0 0 1 Burgos 1 0 0 0 0 0 R.De La Rosa pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. HBP-by R.De La Rosa (McCutchen, Freese). PB-Herrmann. T-2:58. A-32,935 (48,519).

Phillies 10, Brewers 6 Milwaukee — Maikel Franco hit his third homer in two days. Philadelphia Milwaukee ab r h bi ab r h bi OHerrr cf 4 4 3 2 Villar ss 4 1 0 0 Galvis ss 5 1 0 0 Gennett 2b 5 1 2 0 Franco 3b 5 1 3 4 Braun lf 5 1 3 2 Howard 1b 4 1 1 1 Lucroy c 5 1 2 1 DHrndz p 0 0 0 0 Carter 1b 3 1 2 1 Burriss ph 1 0 0 0 Niwnhs cf 1 0 0 0 Hinojos p 0 0 0 0 DoSntn ph-rf 3 1 1 1 Araujo p 0 0 0 0 Walsh 3b 2 0 0 0 JGomz p 0 0 0 0 Presley rf-cf 4 0 0 0 Ruf lf 2 1 1 0 ChAndr p 1 0 0 0 ABaily p 0 0 0 0 Torres p 0 0 0 0 ABlanc 1b 2 0 0 0 RFlors ph 1 0 0 0 Ruiz c 5 1 2 1 Blazek p 0 0 0 0 Goeddl rf 4 0 2 1 Thrnrg p 0 0 0 0 Morton p 1 0 0 0 A.Hill ph 0 0 0 1 Orhltzr p 1 0 0 0 Jeffrss p 0 0 0 0 Lough lf 2 0 0 0 CHrndz 2b 3 1 1 1 Totals 39 10 13 10 Totals 34 6 10 6 Philadelphia 003 301 003—10 000 020— 6 Milwaukee 103 E-Gennett (3). DP-Milwaukee 1. LOB-Philadelphia 10, Milwaukee 7. 2B-C.Hernandez (2), Gennett (4), Carter (7). HR-O.Herrera (2), Franco (5), Braun (4), Carter (5). SB-O.Herrera 2 (4), Villar (2). CS-Do. Santana (2). S-Goeddel, Ch.Anderson. SF-A.Hill. IP H R ER BB SO Philadelphia Morton 1 3 1 1 0 3 Oberholtzer W,1-0 2 3 3 3 2 3 A.Bailey 2 1 0 0 1 2 D.Hernandez H,5 2 1 0 0 0 3 2⁄3 Hinojosa H,1 2 2 2 1 0 1 Araujo H,1 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 J.Gomez 1 0 0 0 0 1 Milwaukee Ch.Anderson L,1-2 4 8 6 6 4 2 Torres 2 2 1 1 0 4 Blazek 1 0 0 0 1 2 Thornburg 1 0 0 0 1 1 Jeffress 1 3 3 3 0 0 Oberholtzer pitched to 1 batter in the 4th. HBP-by Blazek (Lough). WP-Blazek. T-4:00. A-34,813 (41,900).

Cardinals 11, Padres 2 San Diego — Rookie Aledmys Diaz had his first five-hit game. St. Louis San Diego ab r h bi ab r h bi Wong 2b 3 0 0 0 Jay cf 3 0 1 0 Tejada ph 0 0 0 0 Jnkwsk ph 1 0 0 0 Hazelkr ph-lf 2 1 1 3 Myers 1b 4 1 1 0 Pisctty rf 5 2 3 1 Kemp rf 4 1 2 0 Hollidy lf 2 0 0 0 UptnJr lf 2 0 0 1 Oh p 0 0 0 0 Wallac 3b 2 0 0 0 JBrxtn p 0 0 0 0 Rosales 3b 1 0 0 0 Fryer ph-c 1 0 0 0 DeNrrs c 3 0 0 0 Moss 1b 4 2 1 0 ARmrz ss 3 0 0 1 Grichk cf 5 1 1 1 Weeks 2b 2 0 0 0 Molina c 2 2 1 0 CVllnv p 0 0 0 0 Adams ph 1 0 0 0 Perdm p 0 0 0 0 Bowmn p 0 0 0 0 Blash ph 1 0 1 0 Gyorko 3b-2b 5 1 3 3 CVargs p 1 0 0 0 A.Diaz ss 5 1 5 2 Qcknsh p 0 0 0 0 Wacha p 2 0 0 0 Hand p 0 0 0 0 Carpntr ph-3b 3 1 1 1 Pirela 2b 2 0 0 0 Totals 40 11 16 11 Totals 29 2 5 2 St. Louis 000 001 433—11 San Diego 100 001 000— 2 E-A.Diaz (5). DP-St. Louis 1, San Diego 2. LOBSt. Louis 7, San Diego 8. 2B-Piscotty (4), A.Diaz 2 (8), Kemp 2 (2). HR-Hazelbaker (4), Piscotty (3), Gyorko (3). CS-Piscotty (1). S-C.Vargas. SF-Upton Jr., A.Ramirez. IP H R ER BB SO St. Louis Wacha W,2-0 6 4 2 2 4 0 Oh H,2 1 0 0 0 0 3 J.Broxton 1 0 0 0 0 1 Bowman 1 1 0 0 0 0 San Diego C.Vargas 5 5 1 1 3 3 Quackenbush L,1-1 11⁄3 1 2 2 1 0 Hand BS,2-2 0 1 1 1 0 0 Ca.Villanueva 12⁄3 5 4 4 0 1 Perdomo 1 4 3 3 1 0 C.Vargas pitched to 2 batters in the 6th. Hand pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. HBP-by Wacha (Wallace). T-3:06. A-31,688 (40,162).

Dodgers 4, Rockies 1 Denver — Kenta Maeda held Colorado hitless into the sixth inning, and A.J. Ellis lined a two-run homer in Los Angeles’ win. Maeda (3-0) allowed three hits — all in the sixth — no runs and Giants 7, Marlins 2 struck out eight in 61⁄3 inSan Francisco — Jake nings as the right-hander Peavy pitched seven infrom Japan lowered his nings for his first win. ERA to 0.36. Los Angeles Colorado ab r h bi ab r h bi Utley 2b 5 0 3 1 Story ss 4 0 1 0 CSeagr ss 4 1 1 0 CGnzlz rf 4 0 1 0 Puig rf 5 0 1 0 Arenad 3b 4 0 1 0 AGnzlz 1b 5 0 1 1 Parra cf 3 0 0 0 Kndrck 3b 4 0 1 0 Estevez p 0 0 0 0 KHrndz lf 3 0 0 0 Rynlds ph 1 0 0 0 Pedrsn cf 3 1 1 0 JMiller p 0 0 0 0 Ellis c 4 2 2 2 Raburn lf 4 0 0 0 Maeda p 2 0 0 0 Paulsn 1b 3 1 1 0 Avilan p 0 0 0 0 Wolters c 4 0 0 0 Blanton p 0 0 0 0 Chatwd p 1 0 0 0 Grandl ph 1 0 0 0 Brgmn p 0 0 0 0 P.Baez p 0 0 0 0 Adams ph 1 0 0 0 Jansen p 0 0 0 0 BBarns cf 1 0 1 1 LeMahi 2b 3 0 1 0 Totals 36 4 10 4 Totals 33 1 6 1 Los Angeles 120 001 000—4 Colorado 000 000 100—1 E-C.Seager (3). LOB-Los Angeles 9, Colorado 6. 2B-Utley (5), Puig (2), B.Barnes (2). HR-Ellis (1). S-Maeda. IP H R ER BB SO Los Angeles Maeda W,3-0 61⁄3 3 0 0 1 8 1⁄3 Avilan 1 1 1 0 0 1⁄3 Blanton 1 0 0 0 0 P.Baez H,4 1 1 0 0 0 2 Jansen S,8-8 1 0 0 0 0 1 Colorado Chatwood L,2-2 4 6 3 3 2 4 Bergman 2 3 1 1 0 2 Estevez 2 0 0 0 1 2 J.Miller 1 1 0 0 0 0 T-3:09. A-42,179 (50,398).

Miami DGordn 2b Ozuna cf Yelich lf Stanton rf Bour 1b Dietrch 3b CJhnsn ph Hchvrr ss Mathis c Frnndz p Rojas ph Breslw p Morris p Ege p Totals

San Francisco ab r h bi ab 4 0 0 0 Span cf 5 4 0 1 1 Panik 2b 3 3 1 1 0 MDuffy 3b 4 4 0 0 0 Posey c 4 4 0 3 0 Belt 1b 1 3 0 1 1 Pence rf 4 1 0 0 0 BCrwfr ss 4 4 0 0 0 GBlanc lf 3 3 0 0 0 Peavy p 2 2 1 2 0 Tmlnsn ph 1 1 0 0 0 Strckln p 0 0 0 0 0 Pagan ph 0 0 0 0 0 Lopez p 0 0 0 0 0 Gearrin p 0 33 2 8 2 Totals 31

r h bi 0 2 0 1 2 1 1 3 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 2 0 0 1 2 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 13 7

Miami 001 001 000—2 San Francisco 200 200 21x—7 E-Belt (2). DP-Miami 2, San Francisco 2. LOBMiami 5, San Francisco 6. 2B-Dietrich (3), Pence (2). 3B-Ozuna (1), G.Blanco 2 (3). CS-Ozuna (1), Span 2 (3). SF-Belt, Pagan. IP H R ER BB SO Miami Fernandez L,1-2 6 7 4 4 3 5 1⁄3 Breslow 4 2 2 0 0 2⁄3 Morris 1 0 0 1 1 Ege 1 1 1 1 0 0 San Francisco Peavy W,1-1 7 7 2 2 1 4 Strickland 1 0 0 0 0 2 Lopez 0 1 0 0 0 0 Gearrin 1 0 0 0 0 0 Lopez pitched to 1 batter in the 9th. T-2:46. A-41,886 (41,915).

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SPORTS

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Kansas baseball drops twinbill Birmingham, Ala. — Kansas University’s baseball team lost a doubleheader at Stamford on Saturday when its bullpen broke down in both games. Solid in the middle innings of the first game, the KU bullpen gave up a walk-off double in the 10th inning of a 3-2 loss in the opener. Kansas took a five-run lead in the sixth inning of the second game, but the KU bullpen gave up back-to-back big innings as the Jayhawks dropped the nightcap, 13-9. Senior second baseman Colby Wright set up a six-run sixth inning for Stamford when he booted a routine ground ball that flipped the score on the Jayhawks. “That error definitely contributed to the inning,” head coach Ritch Price said. “You come out of the bullpen and the first guy singles and the next guy hits a ground ball. You have to make a play behind him. When you look at the end of the game, that play was crucial.” In the first game Saturday — which was the completion of Friday’s night’s schedule matchup that was postponed in the second inning due to a rainstorm — Kansas’ bullpen kept Samford in check. Relievers Hayden Edwards, Tyler Davis and Sam Gilbert combined to allow two runs through 72⁄3 innings, but the Jayhawks lost it in the 10th on a walk-off double. “That was one of the best performances by our bullpen all year,” Price said. “You couldn’t ask for anymore from Edwards, Davis and Gilbert than we got today. That is as good as those young men have pitched all year.” The teams will conclude their series with a single game at noon today. First Game (Completion of Friday night game) Kansas 000 000 020 0 — 2 9 1 Samford 010 100 000 1 — 3 5 2 W — Parker Curry, 4-1. L — Stephen Villines, 4-2. 2B — Joven Afenir, Colby Wright, KU; Frankie Navarrete, Samford. HR — Alex Lee, Samford. Kansas highlights — Afenir 2-for-5, R, RBI; TJ Martin 2-for-4; Tyler Davis 2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 2 K; Sam Gilbert 12⁄3 IP, 0 R, 0 H, 1 BB, 2 K. Second Game Kansas 302 202 000 — 9 6 1 Samford 112 006 30x — 13 12 2 W — Tanner Cunningham, 2-1. L — Blake Goldsberry, 0-6. 2B — Heath Quinn, Richard Greene, Samford. 3B — Michael Tinsley, Devin Foyle, KU. HR — Tommy Mirabelli, KU; Alex Lee 2, Quinn 2, Samford. Kansas highlights — Foyle 2-for-5, 5 RBI; Tinsley 2-for-3, 2 R, RBI; Colby Wright 1-for 4, 2 R, RBI.

Baylor softball upends KU, 3-2 Waco, Texas — Baylor rebounded from an early two-run deficit to upend Kansas University, 3-2, and clinch their Big 12 softball series on Saturday at Getterman Stadium. The 21st-ranked Bears improved to 38-12 overall, 9-4 in the Big 12. KU fell to 27-15, 4-4. Freshman Alexis Reid (3-6) took the completegame loss. She allowed three earned runs off nine hits over the full 62⁄3 innings. She struck out two and walked one. “This is a tough environment to come in as a freshman and face a ranked Baylor at their field,” KU coach Megan Smith said. “She fought, she battled and gave us an opportunity. It’s a great learning experience for her as she moves forward in her career.” Briana Evans had two of Kansas’ five hits. Chaley Brickey and Daniella Chavez each recorded an RBI without a hit — on a sacrifice fly and a fielder’schoice grounder. It was Brickey’s 151st career RBI — a school record. “Chaley is among good company up there and has been all season battling for the career RBI record,” Smith said. “Maddie Stein, Maggie Hull, Mariah Montgomery and Liz Kocon … all great players that I’ve had the privilege to coach here. Chaley is the best of the best, you know, she shows that every day she comes

Kansas 002 000 0 — 2 5 0 Baylor 002 000 1 — 3 9 0 W — Gia Rodoni, 4-1. L —Alexis Reid, 3-6. 2B — Jessie Scorggins, Baylor. Kansas highlights — Briana Evans 2-for-3, R; Chaley Brickey, Daniella Chavez each 0-for-2, RBI.

KU golfer Sakdee in 9th at Big 12 San Antonio — Kansas University junior Pornvipa Sakdee shot a secondround score of even-par 72 to keep herself among the top 10 at the Big 12 Women’s Golf Championship on Saturday at The Dominion Country Club. At even-par 144, Sakdee is tied for ninth. Sakdee placed fourth at last year’s Big 12 meet on the same course. “‘Faii’ (Sakdee) is very comfortable playing here. Her long game is one of her strengths, which is a benefit on this layout since it’s a tree-lined course with a couple of reachable par5s,” KU coach Erin O’Neil said. “Faii is also very competitive, and competing in a conference championship definitely gets her dialed in to win.” As a team, KU is ninth of nine teams at 598. Oklahoma State leads with 574. Kansas’ other scores: Yupaporn Kawinpakorn, tied for 12th, 145; Ariadna Fonseca Diaz, tied for 40th, 154; Pitsinee Winyarat, 43rd, 155; and Victoria Chandra, 44th, 156. TCU’s Sabina Pena leads at 140. The tournament will conclude today.

Kansas rowing picks up victory

Olathe — Emily Byers drove in two runs with a pair of doubles, and Free State High defeated Blue Valley North, 5-4, on Saturday in the Sunflower League Softball Festival. The Firebirds settled for a split of their two games when they fell to St. Thomas Aquinas, 13-0. Byers, Hailey Jump, Madison Norris and Mayah Daniels each had two hits for the Firebirds in their victory over BV North. FSHS went 1-3 in the tournament. “I would have loved to have gotten a split overall in the tournament,” FSHS coach Lee Ice said. The Firebirds (6-7) will host Olathe South on Tuesday. Free State 5, Blue Valley North 4 BV North 002 000 2 — 4 6 0 Free State 203 000 x — 5 11 3 W — Elizabeth Patton, 6-5. L — Russo. FSHS highlights — Hailey Jump 2-for-4, R; Madison Norris 2-for-4, R; Emily Byers 2-for-4, 2 RBIs, 2 2Bs; Mayah Daniels 2-for-3, RBI.

St. Thomas Aquinas 13, Free State 0 Aquinas 501 205 — 13 11 0 Free State 000 000 — 0 4 0 W — Taylor. L — Mayah Daniels, 0-2. FSHS highlight — Cali Byrn 1-for-2, 2B. FSHS record: 6-7. Next for FSHS: Tuesday vs. Olathe South.

ROYALS TEAM STATISTICS

College

Kansas Relays Saturday at Rock Chalk Park MEN Team scores: Nebraska 226, Kansas 219, Colorado State, Rice 84 Kansas Results Discus — 1. Mitchell Cooper, 205-3. 3. Nicolai Ceban, 190-3. 5. Brandon Lombardino, 172-7. 8. Philip Stand, 166-1. High jump — 5. Kai Shean, 6-9. 6. Joel Long, 6-7. 8. Lane Macari, 6-31⁄4. Long jump — 1. Curtis Ray, 23-113⁄4. 7. Matt Berkshire, 22-61⁄4. Shot put — 2. Ceban, 59-93⁄4. 7. Paul Golen, 54-2. 8. Kenny Boyer, 53-11⁄2. Javelin — 5. Tye Carter, 167-4. Pole vault — 1. Nick Meyer, 17-7. 2. Jake Albright, 17-7. 3. Hussain Alhizam, 17-3. 4. Greg Lupton, 17-3. 7. Nick Maestretti, 16-31⁄4. Triple jump — 2. Barden Adams, 50-43⁄4. 5. Ezekiel Welch, 47-13⁄4. 3,000 steeplechase — 1. Dylan Hodgson, 9:08.01. 3. Ben Burchstead, 9:15.92. 6. James Hampton, 9:44.59. 4X100 relay — 1. Hartley, J. Wilson, A. Wilson, Henry, 40.26. 1,500 — 4. Daniel Koech, 3:55.05. 6. Adel Yoonis, 4:01.09. 7. Bryce Richards, 4:02.16. 8. Brandon Bernal, 4:05.25. 100 hurdles — 5. Nick Giusti, 14.57. 6. Christian Hicks, 14.73. 400 — 3. Ivan Henry, 47.07. 4. Drew Matthews, 48.36. 100 — 2. Jaime Wilson, 10.44. 3. Jaron Hartley, 10.55. 800 — 1. Strymar Livingston, 1:49.93. 2. Matthew Anyiwo, 1:54.09. 400 hurdles — 5. Alex Wilson, 53.47. 6. Giusti, 54.42. 200 — 1. J. Wilson, 21.27. 2. Hartley, 21.35. 5,000 — 1. Evan Landes, 14:21.57. 2. Chris Melgares, 14:47.50. 5. Carson Vickroy, 15:15.62. 4X400 relay — 2. Henry, Hartley, J. Wilson, Livingston, 3:07.63. WOMEN Team scores: Nebraska 206, Kansas 191, Colorado State 150, Rice 133. Kansas Results Shot put — 4. Anastasiya Muchkayev, 49-31⁄2. 5. Dasha Tsema, 45-81⁄2. Javelin — 1. Shaylyn Stallbaumer, 167-5. Pole vault — 9. Laura Taylor, 11-81⁄2. 10. Morgan Griffiths, 11-81⁄2. Long jump — 7. Kelly McKee, 18-31⁄4. Discus — 1. Tsema, 178-8. 3. Daina Levy, 166-9. 5. Muchkayev, 160-11. High jump — 8. (tie) LaTyria Jefferson, Grace Pickell, 5-31⁄4. Triple jump — 4. McKee, 40-83⁄4. 6. Deanna Dougherty, 39-10. 7. Taryn Tempel, 38-71⁄2. 3,000 steeplechase — 1. Courtney Coppinger, 10:58.72. 4. Riley Cooney, 11:37.42. 4X100 relay — 3. Sanni, Montgomery, Thomas, Valentine, 46.41. 1,500 — 1. Kelli McKenna, 4:33.24. 5. Lydia Saggau, 4:34.33. 7. Nashia Baker, 4:39.45. 8. Malika Baker, 4:40.57. 400 — 1. Nicole Montgomery, 54.66. 3. Adriana Newell, 55.60. 100 — 1. Zainab Sanni, 11.36. 3. Tianna Valentine, 11.70. 800 — 1. Whitney Adams, 2:12.31. 2. Hannah Dimmick, 2:13.26. 4. Dorie Dalzell, 2:14.87. 400 hurdles — 5. Jessica Murray, 1:05.76. 200 — 1. Sanni, 23.57. 5. Newell, 24.29. 5,000 — 2. Sharon Lokedi, 16:51.17. 4. Emily Downey, 17:46.14. 5. Rachel Simon, 18:15.89. 7. Jennifer Angles, 18:42.69. 4X400 relay — 1. Newell, Sanni, Montgomery, Adams, 3:41.64.

Baraboo, Wis. — Kansas University’s rowing team won one race and placed second in nine others over the course of 12 races at the Big Ten/Big 12 High School Double Dual on Saturday at Kansas Relays Saturday at Rock Chalk Park Devil’s Lake State Park. LHS, FSHS, Area results The Kansas Second Var- Girls 1600 — 9. Emily Venters, FS, 5:07.76. sity Four highlighted the 4x100 Sunflower relay — 5. Kyna morning session, earning a Smith, Kylee Bremer, Madeline victory against No. 19 Iowa, Neufeld, Carlyn Cole, BHS, 50.69. 4x200 relay — 26. Destiny Downing, crossing the line in 8:06.9. Emma Barberena, Alauna Hawkins, “I think overall we had Chandler Wiggins, FS, 1:52.70. 4x400 — 3. Kyna Smith, good races today,” Kansas Madeline relay Neufeld, Abby Ogle, Carlyn coach Rob Catloth said. Cole, BHS, 4:05.97; 8. Sanders Barbee, Evann Seratte, Myah Yoder, Kyleigh “There are differences in LHS, 4:13.53. speed with top-level crews, Severa, 4x400 Sunflower relay — 5. Sierra Staatz, Corinn Searcy, Cami Timm, and one of our goals is to Mia Bond, Tongie, 4:18.39; 6. Cameryn get ourselves in that top Thomas, Destiny Downing, Alauna tier of crews.” Hawkins, Chandler Wiggins, FS, 4:20.07. The Jayhawks return 4x800 relay — 13. Addie Dick, Abby home next weekend for Ogle, Natalie Beiter, Madeline Neufeld, BHS, 9:58.38; 15. Ellie Wilson, Delaney their only home regatta Kemp, Isabella Hadden, Amber Akin, of the spring season, as MV, 10:00.73; 27. Emma Campbell, Kansas hosts Kansas State Emily Chambers, Sierra Staatz, Mia Bond, Tongie, 10:28.66. for the annual Sunflower Sprint medley relay — 5. Cameryn Showdown on Saturday in Thomas, Alauna Hawkins, Chandler Kansas City, Kan., at Wyan- Wiggins, Emily Venters, FS, 4:22.58; 11. Trinity Touchton, Corinn Searcy, dotte County Lake. Sierra Staatz, Mia Bond, Tongie,

FSHS softball splits pair

| 5C

SCOREBOARD

BRIEFLY out here. I am really proud of her and what she’s been able to accomplish. It’s definitely a special feat, especially amongst those players’ names that she passed.” The teams will conclude the series at noon today.

Sunday, April 24, 2016

4:32.89; 17. Myah Yoder, Marlee Coleman, Evann Seratte, Anna Dewitt, LHS, 4:41.75. Steeplechase — 14. Emily Chambers, Tongie, 8:59.43. Shot put — 4. Gabby Hopkins, MV, 41-7.75; 23. Hannah Walter, FS, 34-10.5. Long jump — 8. Kyleigh Severa, LHS, 17-4; 11. Cameryn Thomas, FS, 16-11.5. High jump — 6. Megan Eckman, MV, 5-04; 8. Morgan Thomas, MV, 5-04; 10. Caroline Dykes, LHS, 5-02. Boys 1600 — 12. Ethan Donley, FS, 4:26.62; 25. Derek Meeks, MV, 4:32.51; 26. Tanner Hockenbury, FS, 4:32.55; 36. Travis Hodge, DSoto, 4:53.87. 4x100 Sunflower relay — 6. Ronald White, Jordan Patrick, Tommy Jacobs, Bryce Torneden, FS, 44.01; 7. Exavior Jackson, Ethan Rodriguez, Sam Regier, Ray Mitchell, DSoto, 44.28. 4x400 Sunflower relay — 6. Nichalus Williams, JD Woods, Tristan Gillespie, Ben Otte, LHS, 3:33.56; 8. De Soto, 3:40.88. 4x800 relay — 15. Garret Fields, Jakob Coacher, Justin Grega, Thomas Hopkins, MV, 8:23.33; 17. George Letner, Parker Wilson, Jacob Bailey, Dakota Helm, BHS, 8:25.43; 25. Tanner Hockenbury, Jared Hicks, Will Benkelman, Ethan Donley, FS, 8:31.23; 36. Christian Selk, Sam Hubert, Kason Jackson, Travis Hodge, DSoto, 8:51.80. Sprint medley relay — DQ. JD Woods, J’Mony Bryant, Nichalus Williams, Ben Otte, LHS. Shot put — 8. Amani Bledsoe, LHS, 52-5.5; F. Brock Reed, Ottawa. Javelin — 12. Blake Eaton, MV, 161-3; 13. Simeon Windibiziri, FS, 161-3; 19. Trajen Smith, WV, 155-3. Pole vault — 16. Braeden Manley, Eudora, 13-00.

BASEBALL American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Placed RHP Yovani Gallardo on the 15-day DL. Activated LHP Brian Matusz from the 15-day DL. National League SAN DIEGO PADRES — Recalled RHP Cesar Vargas from San Antonio (Texas). Placed INF-OF Alexi Amarista on the 15-day DL, retroactive to April 20.

(Through Friday’s Game)

Batters

AVG

OBA

AB

R

H

2B

Butera Dyson Hosmer Moustakas Infante Perez Orlando Morales Escobar Cain Gordon Colon

.333 .500 .333 .429 .302 .343 .290 .343 .269 .278 .264 .298 .261 .261 .259 .308 .257 .284 .224 .328 .218 .317 .200 .273

3 12 63 62 52 53 23 58 70 58 55 10

0 1 7 8 6 7 2 6 6 10 7 0

1 4 19 18 14 14 6 15 18 13 12 2

0 0 3 5 5 4 0 4 1 0 2 0

Team Totals .261

Pitchers

.313

540 61

141 24

3B HR 0 0 1 6 0 3 0 2 0 2 1 0

0 1 5 9 2 11 1 8 5 7 4 0

1 2 4 5 1 3 0 4 3 9 8 1

0 0 10 7 10 11 6 14 10 18 22 2

0 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 4 2 1 0

0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 1 0 0

4

15

56

42

114

12

3

6

W

L

ERA

G

Davis Herrera Kennedy Volquez Gee Hochevar Medlen Ventura Wang Duffy Young Soria

1 0 2 3 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 1

0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 1

0.00 0.00 1.35 1.46 1.80 2.35 2.38 2.81 4.15 5.40 6.41 6.75

8 10 3 4 2 9 2 3 3 7 4 9

0 0 3 4 0 0 2 3 0 0 4 0

7 7.2 0 9.1 0 20.0 0 24.2 0 5.0 0 7.2 0 11.1 0 16.0 0 4.1 0 8.1 0 19.2 1 8.0

Team Totals

11

5

2.85

16

16

Valero Texas Open

Saturday At TPC San Antonio (Oaks Course) San Antonio Purse: $6.2 million Yardage: 7,435; Par: 72 Third Round a-amateur Ricky Barnes 68-70-67—205 Brendan Steele 64-70-72—206 Luke Donald 69-70-68—207 Charley Hoffman 66-71-70—207 Patrick Reed 65-73-70—208 Billy Horschel 70-72-67—209 Nick Taylor 75-68-66—209 Chad Collins 73-69-67—209 Padraig Harrington 70-71-68—209 Martin Piller 70-68-71—209 Jon Curran 70-68-71—209 Kevin Streelman 70-71-69—210 Aaron Baddeley 74-70-66—210 Ryan Palmer 68-70-72—210 Mark Wilson 69-69-72—210 Scott Langley 69-68-73—210 Chris Kirk 71-71-69—211 Luke List 71-72-68—211 Bryce Molder 70-71-70—211 Kevin Chappell 71-70-70—211 Harold Varner III 69-72-70—211 David Hearn 73-71-67—211 Brandt Snedeker 70-69-72—211 Stuart Appleby 67-70-74—211 Abraham Ancer 73-69-70—212 Rob Oppenheim 73-68-71—212 Shawn Stefani 72-69-71—212 Jason Gore 70-70-72—212 Dicky Pride 70-72-71—213 J.B. Holmes 72-70-71—213 Daniel Summerhays 72-70-71—213 Branden Grace 72-72-69—213 William McGirt 71-70-72—213 K.J. Choi 71-70-72—213 Kyle Stanley 73-68-72—213 Brice Garnett 73-71-69—213 Spencer Levin 69-70-74—213 Tim Wilkinson 73-71-69—213 Michael Kim 73-69-72—214 Keegan Bradley 71-71-72—214 Mark Hubbard 72-70-72—214 Whee Kim 72-70-72—214 Andrew Landry 70-73-71—214 Brian Harman 70-73-71—214 Matt Kuchar 71-73-70—214 Andres Romero 69-71-74—214 Zac Blair 70-70-74—214 Steve Flesch 68-76-70—214 Sung Kang 71-67-76—214 Peter Malnati 67-71-76—214 Zach Johnson 69-75-70—214 Scott Stallings 74-70-70—214 Roberto Castro 73-71-70—214 Tom Gillis 72-71-72—215 Greg Owen 74-69-72—215 Thomas Aiken 71-72-72—215 Cameron Tringale 71-70-74—215 Brian Stuard 73-69-73—215 Tom Hoge 76-68-71—215 Ben Crane 71-71-74—216 Kyle Reifers 71-71-74—216 Francesco Molinari 68-75-73—216 Wes Roach 72-71-73—216 Jerry Kelly 69-74-73—216 Curtis Reed 73-71-72—216 Brendon de Jonge 69-74-74—217 D.H. Lee 71-71-75—217 Matt Jones 69-74-74—217 John Merrick 70-74-73—217 Justin Leonard 73-71-73—217 D.A. Points 73-71-73—217

GS SV

Gaby Lopez Anna Nordqvist Nasa Hataoka Karine Icher Austin Ernst Ssu-Chia Cheng Lee Lopez Caroline Masson Julieta Granada Cristie Kerr Mariajo Uribe Katherine Kirk Mika Miyazato Mo Martin Amy Anderson Nontaya Srisawang Kim Kaufman Eun-Hee Ji Michelle Wie Kelly W Shon Tzu-Chi Lin Min Lee Wei-Ling Hsu Grace Na Cheyenne Woods Ashlan Ramsey Marina Alex Jaye Marie Green Jessica Korda Mina Harigae Hyo Joo Kim Sandra Changkija Lindy Duncan Amy Yang Pornanong Phatlum a-Ya-Chun Chang Alena Sharp Christel Boeljon

SO SB CS E

0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 0

BASKETBALL National Basketball Association NBA — Fined Boston G Marcus Smart $5,000 for violating the leagues anti-flopping rules during an April 22 game against Atlanta. HOCKEY National Hockey League LOS ANGELES KINGS — Assigned D Kevin Gravel to Ontario (AHL). COLLEGE MIAMI — Suspended RB Mark Walton indefinitely after he was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence.

RBI BB

IP

H

R

ER HR BB SO

1 6 13 19 4 5 8 12 7 9 24 10

0 0 3 4 1 2 4 5 2 5 14 6

0 0 3 4 1 2 3 5 2 5 14 6

0 0 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 4 1

8 142.0 118

46

45

11 62 146

73-74-72—219 73-74-72—219 73-73-73—219 71-68-80—219 73-74-73—220 73-73-74—220 72-74-74—220 72-74-74—220 70-75-75—220 71-73-76—220 71-73-76—220 70-74-76—220 73-70-77—220 76-72-73—221 72-76-73—221 72-76-73—221 71-77-73—221 70-78-73—221 73-73-75—221 76-69-76—221 72-73-76—221 71-74-76—221 69-75-77—221 74-74-74—222 73-75-74—222 73-75-74—222 72-76-74—222 72-73-77—222 72-73-77—222 76-72-75—223 73-75-75—223 72-75-76—223 73-73-77—223 72-71-80—223 76-72-76—224 71-77-76—224 73-74-77—224 67-75-82—224

College Women

Big 12 Championship Saturday at San Antonio Dominion Country Club Par 72, 6,333 yards Through Two Rounds Team Scores 1. Oklahoma State 2. Iowa State 3. Texas 4. TCU 5. Kansas State 6. Texas Tech Oklahoma 8. Baylor 9. Kansas Leader Sabina Pena, TCU Kansas Scores T9. Pornvipa Sakdee T12. Yupaporn Kawinpakorn T40. Ariadna Fonseca Diaz 43. Pitsinee Winyarat 44. Victoria Chandra

574 578 579 583 589 591 591 595 598 140 144 145 155 155 156

NHL Playoffs

Thursday, April 21 Pittsburgh 5, N.Y. Rangers 0 Tampa Bay 1, Detroit 0, Tampa Bay wins series 4-1 Anaheim 4, Nashville 1 Chicago 4, St. Louis 3, 2OT Friday, April 22 Philadelphia 2, Washington 0, Washington leads series 3-2 N.Y. Islanders 2, Florida 1, 2OT, N.Y. Islanders leads series 3-2 Minnesota 5, Dallas 4, OT, Dallas leads series 3-2 San Jose 6, Los Angeles 3, San Jose wins series 4-1 Saturday, April 23 Pittsburgh 6, N.Y. Rangers 3, Pittsburgh wins series 4-1 Anaheim 5, Nashville 2, Anaheim leads series 3-2 Chicago 6, St. Louis 3, series tied 3-3 Today Washington at Philadelphia, 11 a.m. Dallas at Minnesota, 2 p.m. Florida at N.Y. Islanders, 6 p.m. Monday, April 25 Chicago at St. Louis, TBA Anaheim at Nashville, TBA

5 8 2 13 5 21 8 22 4 3 1 10 8 11 12 17 1 4 3 8 8 20 5 9

25. (30) Travis Kvapil, Ford, 146, 0. 26. (32) Joey Gase, Chevrolet, 146, 15. 27. (31) Harrison Rhodes, Chevrolet, 146, 14. 28. (28) B.J. McLeod, Ford, 146, 13. 29. (33) Ryan Ellis, Chevrolet, 145, 12. 30. (37) Derrike Cope, Chevrolet, 144, 11. 31. (38) Timmy Hill, Dodge, 143, 0. 32. (36) Todd Peck, Ford, 143, 9. 33. (5) Matt Tifft, Toyota, accident, 135, 0. 34. (1) Erik Jones, Toyota, accident, 134, 8. 35. (4) Justin Allgaier, Chevrolet, accident, 134, 7. 36. (34) Mike Harmon, Dodge, accident, 123, 5. 37. (27) Jeff Green, Toyota, brakes, 104, 4. 38. (35) Carl Long, Dodge, brakes, 17, 3. 39. (39) Morgan Shepherd, Chevrolet, suspension, 12, 2. 40. (40) Josh Wise, Chevrolet, transmission, 7, 0. Race Statistics Average Speed of Race Winner: 93.623 mph. Time of Race: 1 hour, 11 minutes, 37 seconds. Margin of Victory: 0.266 seconds. Caution Flags: 2 for 20 laps. Lead Changes: 4 among 4 drivers. Lap Leaders: E.Jones 1-17; D.Earnhardt Jr. 18-129; B.Poole 130132; J.Allgaier 133; D.Earnhardt Jr. 134-149. Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led): D.Earnhardt Jr., 2 times for 128 laps; E.Jones, 1 time for 17 laps; B.Poole, 1 time for 3 laps; J.Allgaier, 1 time for 1 lap. Top 10 in Points: 1. D.Suarez, 279; 2. E.Sadler, 270; 3. T.Dillon, 260; 4. B.Jones, 249; 5. E.Jones, 244; 6. B.Gaughan, 242; 7. J.Allgaier, 241; 8. B.Poole, 212; 9. R.Reed, 210; 10. D.Wallace Jr., 201.

Toyota Owners 400 Lineup Lineup is based on practice times. Race today At Richmond International Raceway Richmond, Va. Lap length: .75 miles (Car number in parentheses) 1. (4) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet. 2. (22) Joey Logano, Ford. 3. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet. 4. (19) Carl Edwards, Toyota. 5. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota. 6. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford. 7. (41) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet. 8. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet. 9. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota. 10. (47) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet. 11. (3) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet. 12. (17) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford. 13. (20) Matt Kenseth, Toyota. 14. (31) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet. 15. (42) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet. 16. (88) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet. 17. (6) Trevor Bayne, Ford. 18. (14) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet. 19. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford. 20. (44) Brian Scott, Ford. 21. (10) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet. 22. (78) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota. 23. (24) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet. 24. (43) Aric Almirola, Ford. 25. (13) Casey Mears, Chevrolet. 26. (27) Paul Menard, Chevrolet. 27. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet. 28. (38) Landon Cassill, Ford. 29. (21) Ryan Blaney, Ford. 30. (23) David Ragan, Toyota. 31. (30) Josh Wise, Chevrolet. 32. (95) Michael McDowell, Chevrolet. 33. (34) Chris Buescher, Ford. 34. (7) Regan Smith, Chevrolet. 35. (55) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet. 36. (83) Matt DiBenedetto, Toyota. 37. (93) Ryan Ellis, Chevrolet. 38. (32) Jeffrey Earnhardt, Ford. 39. (15) Clint Bowyer, Chevrolet. 40. (46) Michael Annett, Chevrolet. 41. (98) Cole Whitt, Chevrolet.

Swinging Skirts Classic

Saturday At Lake Merced GC. Yards Daly City, Calif. Purse: $2 million Yardage: 6,507; Par: 72 Third Round a-denotes amateur Haru Nomura 65-70-71—206 Lee-Anne Pace 71-69-69—209 Na Yeon Choi 68-70-71—209 Brooke M. Henderson 71-71-69—211 Catriona Matthew 68-72-71—211 Gerina Piller 70-69-72—211 So Yeon Ryu 63-75-73—211 Lydia Ko 68-71-73—212 Minjee Lee 73-65-74—212 In Gee Chun 71-74-68—213 Mi Jung Hur 72-72-69—213 Tiffany Joh 70-73-70—213 Brittany Lang 69-70-74—213 Shanshan Feng 74-69-71—214 Ryann O’Toole 69-73-72—214 Julie Yang 72-68-74—214 Sakura Yokomine 73-72-70—215 Jenny Shin 72-73-70—215 Hee Young Park 74-70-71—215 Su Oh 70-71-74—215 Sadena A Parks 73-74-69—216 Chella Choi 73-73-70—216 Lexi Thompson 72-74-70—216 Morgan Pressel 72-71-73—216 Xi Yu Lin 67-75-74—216 Danielle Kang 69-72-75—216 Jodi Ewart Shadoff 73-73-71—217 Brittany Lincicome 71-74-72—217 Juli Inkster 74-74-70—218 Ariya Jutanugarn 71-74-73—218 Candie Kung 65-79-74—218 Christina Kim 72-71-75—218 Moriya Jutanugarn 69-74-75—218 Carlota Ciganda 74-68-76—218 Azahara Munoz 70-72-76—218 Kelly Tan 70-72-76—218 Angel Yin 70-71-77—218 Mi Hyang Lee 69-71-78—218 Stacy Lewis 72-76-71—219

ToyotaCare 250

Saturday At Richmond International Raceway Richmond, Va. Lap length: .75 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (3) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 149 laps, 0 points. 2. (2) Ty Dillon, Chevrolet, 149, 39. 3. (9) Elliott Sadler, Chevrolet, 149, 38. 4. (6) Daniel Suarez, Toyota, 149, 37. 5. (10) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 149, 0. 6. (17) Cole Custer, Chevrolet, 149, 0. 7. (15) Brendan Gaughan, Chevrolet, 149, 34. 8. (16) Blake Koch, Chevrolet, 149, 33. 9. (8) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 149, 0. 10. (7) Brennan Poole, Chevrolet, 149, 32. 11. (18) Ryan Reed, Ford, 149, 30. 12. (19) J.J. Yeley, Toyota, 149, 29. 13. (12) Justin Marks, Chevrolet, 149, 28. 14. (25) Dakoda Armstrong, Toyota, 149, 27. 15. (13) Brandon Jones, Chevrolet, 148, 26. 16. (11) Darrell Wallace Jr., Ford, 148, 25. 17. (22) Spencer Gallagher, Chevrolet, 148, 0. 18. (14) Ross Chastain, Chevrolet, 148, 23. 19. (21) Jeb Burton, Ford, 148, 22. 20. (26) Garrett Smithley, Chevrolet, 147, 21. 21. (20) Ryan Sieg, Chevrolet, 147, 20. 22. (23) Jeremy Clements, Chevrolet, 147, 19. 23. (24) Ryan Preece, Chevrolet, 146, 18. 24. (29) Ray Black Jr., Chevrolet, 146, 17.

MLS

EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Philadelphia 4 3 0 12 10 7 Montreal 4 3 0 12 10 8 Toronto FC 3 2 2 11 8 5 Orlando City 2 1 3 9 11 8 D.C. United 2 3 3 9 10 10 Columbus 2 3 2 8 7 9 New England 1 2 5 8 8 13 Chicago 1 2 3 6 6 7 NYC FC 1 3 3 6 9 12 New York 1 6 0 3 5 15 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA FC Dallas 5 1 2 17 15 10 Colorado 5 2 1 16 10 6 Real Salt Lake 4 0 2 14 10 6 Sporting KC 4 3 0 12 9 7 Los Angeles 3 1 2 11 12 5 San Jose 3 2 2 11 10 10 Portland 2 3 2 8 11 14 Seattle 2 4 1 7 7 10 Vancouver 2 4 1 7 6 11 Houston 1 4 2 5 13 14 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Saturday’s Games Philadelphia 2, New York City FC 0 Toronto FC 2, Montreal 0 D.C. United 3, New England 0 Columbus 1, Houston 0 Colorado 3, Seattle 1 FC Dallas at Vancouver, (n) Real Salt Lake at Los Angeles, (n) Today’s Games Sporting KC at San Jose, 2:30 p.m. Orlando City at New York, 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 27 Montreal at New York City FC, 6 p.m. Portland at New England, 6:30 p.m. Sporting Kansas City at Vancouver, 9:30 p.m.


|

6C

Sunday, April 24, 2016

SPORTS/WEATHER/TV

.

TODAY

MONDAY

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

Severe t-storms; damaging winds

Partly sunny, a t-storm in spots

Clouds and breaks of sun

Mostly cloudy, a t-storm; breezy

Partly sunny and nice

High 80° Low 61° POP: 60%

High 81° Low 57° POP: 40%

High 79° Low 59° POP: 25%

High 78° Low 47° POP: 50%

High 68° Low 49° POP: 20%

Wind S 12-25 mph

Wind SW 7-14 mph

Wind SE 7-14 mph

Wind S 10-20 mph

Wind WNW 8-16 mph

POP: Probability of Precipitation

McCook 75/44

Kearney 76/47

Oberlin 78/45

Clarinda 77/59

Lincoln 75/52

Grand Island 77/48

Beatrice 74/53

Concordia 78/51

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Centerville 78/61

St. Joseph 81/61 Chillicothe 80/63

Sabetha 78/59

Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 80/64 81/63 Salina 79/58 Oakley Kansas City Topeka 81/55 76/46 80/61 Lawrence 80/62 Sedalia 80/61 Emporia Great Bend 81/63 77/58 80/49 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 80/64 80/47 Hutchinson 80/63 Garden City 80/57 79/45 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 80/61 76/53 80/61 81/47 81/63 80/63 Hays Russell 81/46 81/48

Goodland 74/40

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

LAWRENCE ALMANAC

Through 7 p.m. Saturday.

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

81°/42° 67°/46° 90° in 2012 26° in 2013

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

0.00 1.13 2.96 3.90 8.06

Charlie Riedel/AP Photo

REGIONAL CITIES

Today Mon. Today Mon. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Holton 80 60 t 80 57 pc Atchison 80 61 t 81 56 c Independence 80 64 t 78 61 c Belton 78 61 t 77 62 c 78 62 t 77 59 c Burlington 79 62 t 78 61 pc Olathe Coffeyville 80 63 t 80 64 pc Osage Beach 81 61 pc 80 65 c 79 60 t 80 58 pc Concordia 78 51 t 76 51 pc Osage City 79 63 t 79 60 pc Dodge City 80 47 s 75 52 pc Ottawa 80 61 t 81 61 pc Fort Riley 79 57 t 80 57 pc Wichita Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

NATIONAL FORECAST

SUN & MOON

Today Mon. 6:31 a.m. 6:30 a.m. 8:07 p.m. 8:08 p.m. 10:29 p.m. 11:22 p.m. 8:13 a.m. 8:54 a.m.

New

Apr 29

May 6

First

Full

May 13 May 21

LAKE LEVELS

As of 7 a.m. Saturday Lake

Level (ft)

Clinton Perry Pomona

Discharge (cfs)

876.24 890.71 974.48

21 25 15

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

Fronts Cold

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

INTERNATIONAL CITIES

Today Cities Hi Lo W Acapulco 89 74 pc Amsterdam 48 39 sh Athens 75 59 pc Baghdad 99 73 pc Bangkok 100 85 s Beijing 80 59 pc Berlin 48 31 sh Brussels 47 36 sh Buenos Aires 68 47 c Cairo 100 72 s Calgary 51 34 sh Dublin 53 41 c Geneva 50 34 sh Hong Kong 82 73 t Jerusalem 81 66 s Kabul 70 41 s London 50 39 c Madrid 66 40 pc Mexico City 78 45 t Montreal 52 32 pc Moscow 55 45 pc New Delhi 103 69 s Oslo 46 31 pc Paris 50 35 sh Rio de Janeiro 90 76 s Rome 66 47 t Seoul 71 46 s Singapore 89 79 pc Stockholm 45 30 sh Sydney 71 60 pc Tokyo 64 56 r Toronto 51 37 pc Vancouver 55 42 r Vienna 52 37 pc Warsaw 53 33 r Winnipeg 52 32 pc

Hi 88 49 73 100 100 86 50 50 58 95 50 53 49 83 80 71 53 66 81 50 61 104 47 53 92 62 74 90 47 71 70 49 56 52 52 53

Mon. Lo W 73 pc 39 sh 58 s 73 pc 86 t 53 pc 36 sh 36 sh 44 sh 73 s 34 r 34 c 40 sh 75 t 62 pc 44 s 36 sh 42 s 47 pc 32 pc 51 c 74 s 32 sh 39 sh 79 pc 42 r 49 s 81 c 30 sh 60 s 59 pc 37 r 42 pc 33 sh 34 pc 31 pc

Precipitation

Warm Stationary Showers T-storms

7:30

Flurries

Snow

Ice

Today Mon. Today Mon. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Memphis 83 65 s 84 68 pc Albuquerque 72 45 s 75 42 s Miami 86 72 pc 83 70 sh Anchorage 53 41 pc 52 41 c 67 53 c 68 41 r Atlanta 80 61 s 81 62 pc Milwaukee 68 49 r 56 41 r Austin 79 65 c 86 69 pc Minneapolis 84 62 s 85 65 pc Baltimore 68 46 s 82 60 pc Nashville Birmingham 83 61 s 83 62 pc New Orleans 83 65 pc 83 69 pc 66 49 s 75 59 pc Boise 62 39 c 60 42 sh New York 76 54 t 74 48 c Boston 54 44 s 62 45 pc Omaha Orlando 86 65 s 83 64 pc Buffalo 59 44 pc 65 41 r 68 48 s 80 64 pc Cheyenne 58 35 pc 59 37 pc Philadelphia Phoenix 89 64 s 81 57 s Chicago 77 60 pc 76 46 t 71 48 s 82 62 pc Cincinnati 76 55 s 81 61 pc Pittsburgh Portland, ME 56 35 pc 55 36 r Cleveland 65 49 pc 77 56 c Dallas 79 66 pc 86 69 pc Portland, OR 56 41 sh 60 41 pc 61 38 sh 49 32 sh Denver 67 39 pc 70 39 pc Reno Richmond 71 47 s 81 62 s Des Moines 80 60 t 76 50 c Sacramento 72 48 pc 70 46 pc Detroit 65 47 pc 76 48 t St. Louis 83 64 s 84 67 c El Paso 87 62 s 86 60 s Salt Lake City 60 48 c 59 41 r Fairbanks 62 38 pc 63 38 c 73 62 pc 70 57 pc Honolulu 85 72 sh 85 71 sh San Diego Houston 78 65 c 84 69 pc San Francisco 64 50 pc 65 50 s 56 43 sh 58 44 pc Indianapolis 76 56 s 80 62 pc Seattle Spokane 61 36 c 63 41 pc Kansas City 80 62 t 79 58 c 86 61 s 82 51 s Las Vegas 80 59 pc 68 52 pc Tucson 81 65 pc 84 68 pc Little Rock 82 62 s 82 69 pc Tulsa 70 52 s 83 66 s Los Angeles 74 55 pc 70 53 pc Wash., DC National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: McAllen, TX 93° Low: Tuolumne Meadows, CA 16°

WEATHER HISTORY

WEATHER TRIVIA™

what temperature do most occur? Q: Attornadoes

On April 24, 1908, a series of tornadoes moving from Louisiana to Alabama took more than 300 lives.

SUNDAY Prime Time WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

Rain

-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s National Summary: Severe thunderstorms could produce damaging winds, hail and even tornadoes from Iowa to north-central Texas today. Meanwhile, steady rain will fall from Montana to the Great Lakes. The East will be dry.

75 percent occur when the temperature is between 65 and 84 Fahrenheit

Last

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307 239 Blue Bloods

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ESPN 33 206 140 aMLB Baseball Boston Red Sox at Houston Astros. (N) (Live)

SportsCenter (N) (Live)

SportCtr

ESPN2 34 209 144 Sports.

World of X Games

ESPN FC (N)

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World Poker Tour

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NBCSN 38 603 151 kNHL Hockey

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Fox Reporting

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CNBC 40 355 208 Undercover Boss

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MSNBC 41 356 209 Caught on Camera

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44 202 200 Anthony Bourd.

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45 245 138 Basket

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46 242 105 Law & Order: SVU

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47 265 118 Intervention

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50 254 130 Fear the Walking

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Gee solid in return, but Royals fall to O’s Kansas City, Mo. (ap) — Dillon Gee hadn’t pitched since April 16, in part because he was on paternity leave for the birth of his daughter. He was solid in relief of struggling starter Kris Medlen on Saturday night, but the Kansas City Royals still fell to the Baltimore Orioles 8-3. Gee allowed three hits, struck out five and walked none in 41⁄3 scoreless innings. It was the first hit that irked Gee — a two-run double to Mark Trumbo, who drove in four runs. Those runs went on Medlen’s ledger and gave the Orioles a 7-2 lead. “It frustrates me that I cashed in two of Medlen’s runs,” Gee said. “That’s still on my mind. That’s a whole different game if we can keep it five.” Trumbo’s oppositefield hit landed just inside the chalk. “Just good placement,” Gee said. “He didn’t hit it very well, just a little blooper down the rightfield line that barely squeaked in the line, but nonetheless it’s still frustrating” Chris Davis homered among his four hits, and Manny Machado extended his hitting streak to 16 games in the Orioles’ victory, while Tyler Wilson (1-0) won his first start this season. Davis, who led the majors with 47 home runs

BEST BETS WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

BOX SCORE Baltimore AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Rickard rf 5 1 1 0 0 0 .319 Machado 3b 5 1 2 1 0 1 .397 A.Jones cf 2 2 0 0 3 1 .200 C.Davis 1b 5 3 4 2 0 1 .246 Trumbo dh 5 0 3 4 0 1 .381 Wieters c 5 0 0 0 0 2 .238 J.Hardy ss 4 1 0 0 1 0 .259 Schoop 2b 4 0 2 0 0 1 .232 Kim lf 4 0 2 1 0 1 .500 1-Reimold pr-lf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .318 Totals 39 8 14 8 4 8 Kansas City AB R H BI BB SO Avg. A.Escobar ss 4 0 1 1 0 1 .257 Moustakas 3b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .273 L.Cain cf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .210 Hosmer 1b 4 0 1 0 0 0 .299 K.Morales dh 4 0 1 0 0 0 .258 A.Gordon lf 3 1 1 0 1 1 .224 S.Perez c 4 1 1 2 0 2 .263 Infante 2b 4 1 1 0 0 1 .268 J.Dyson rf 3 0 1 0 0 0 .333 Totals 34 3 7 3 1 6 Baltimore 021 400 001—8 14 1 Kansas City 020 010 000—3 7 0 1-ran for Kim in the 8th. E-C.Davis (2). LOB-Baltimore 8, Kansas City 5. 2B-Machado (8), Trumbo (3), Hosmer (4), Infante (6). HR-C.Davis (6), off Medlen; S.Perez (4), off T.Wilson. RBIs-Machado (11), C.Davis 2 (13), Trumbo 4 (15), Kim (1), A.Escobar (6), S.Perez 2 (13). CS-Machado (2). Runners left in scoring position-Baltimore 3 (Rickard, J.Hardy 2); Kansas City 4 (A.Gordon, Moustakas, Infante 2). RISP-Baltimore 5 for 10; Kansas City 2 for 7. Runners moved up-A.Jones, K.Morales. GIDPMoustakas. DP-Baltimore 1 (Schoop, J.Hardy, C.Davis). Baltimore IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA T.Wilson W, 1-0 5 6 3 3 0 2 70 2.77 1⁄3 1 0 0 1 0 16 0.00 Matusz Givens H, 4 11⁄3 0 0 0 0 2 19 3.00 Brach 21⁄3 0 0 0 0 2 27 0.79 Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Medlen L, 1-1 32⁄3 9 7 7 3 2 67 6.00 Gee 41⁄3 3 0 0 0 5 63 0.96 Wang 1 2 1 1 1 1 28 5.06 T.Wilson pitched to 1 batter in the 6th. Inherited runners-scored-Matusz 1-0, Givens 3-0, Gee 2-2. Umpires-Home, Laz Diaz; First, Cory Blaser; Second, Jeff Nelson; Third, Doug Eddings. T-3:04. A-39,900 (37,903).

last season, hit his sixth homer in the second inning and had an RBI single during the Orioles’ four-run fourth. He tied a career high for hits and hiked his average from .192 to .246. Davis hit Medlen’s first pitch out to lead off the second. “I wasn’t surprised at all,” Medlen said. “He

consistently hits 40-50 homers a year. He’s a good hitter, and I left a ball right over the plate, a fastball right down the middle.” Machado singled in his first at-bat and doubled in a run in the fourth. He is hitting an American League-leading .397. Medlen (1-1) allowed seven runs on nine hits and three walks in 32⁄3 innings. “In my experience in dealing with this a couple of times, you just turn the page and get over it pretty quickly,” Medlen said. “I’m fairly certain I was doing wrong mechanically and whatever else. Try to made adjustments in between. Try to bounce back.” Trumbo extended his hitting streak to eight games and has 10 RBIs in that time. He’s second in the AL behind Machado with a .381 average. Wilson had made three relief appearances this season. He went five-plus innings and allowed three runs and six hits, including Salvador Perez’s tworun homer in the second. The Royals loaded the bases in the sixth on Davis’ error, Kendrys Morales’ single and Alex Gordon’s walk. Rookie right-hander Mychal Givens, the third Orioles pitcher of the inning, struck out Perez and Omar Infante to end the inning.

SPORTS 7:30

8 PM

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April 24, 2016 9 PM

9:30

10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

Cable Channels cont’d

Network Channels

M

BALTIMORE’S JOEY RICKARD (23) CELEBRATES AFTER SCORING ON A DOUBLE hit by Manny Machado as Kansas City Royals starting pitcher Kris Medlen, right, walks back to the mound during the fourth inning of the Royals’ 8-3 loss Saturday in Kansas City, Mo.

54 269 120 American Pickers

SYFY 55 244 122 Freddy vs. Jason

American Pickers

American Pickers

››‡ Jeepers Creepers (2001)

Detour

Detour

Happens Shahs of Sunset Alone

Jokers Tallad Thicker

American Pickers

›› Drive Angry (2011) Nicolas Cage.

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

››‡ Snow White and the Huntsman (2012) Kristen Stewart.

351 350 285 287 279 362 256

211 210 192 195 189 214 132

››‡ Snow White and the Huntsman Jeff Dunham: All Jeff Dunham Jeff Dunham: All Jeff Dunham Jeff Dunham I Am Cait I Am Cait (N) I Am Cait The Kardashians The Kardashians Steve Austin’s Steve Austin’s Dude Ed Bass. Steve Austin’s Cops Cops Flea Flea Flea Flea Salvage Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Martin Martin Martin Martin Martin Martin Martin P. Popoff Paid Black Ink Crew Black Ink Crew ››› 8 Mile (2002) Eminem, Kim Basinger. Get Rich Food Paradise Declassified Declassified Mysteries-Museum Declassified Long Lost Family Who Do You Long Lost Family Who Do You Long Lost Family Doctor Foster Doctor Foster: A Woman Scorned (N) Doctor Foster: A Woman Scorned Zoe Gone (2014) Jean Louisa Kelly. Text to Kill (2015) Dina Meyer. Zoe Gone (2014) Guy’s Games Spring Baking Cutthroat Kitchen Cooks vs. Cons Spring Baking Lakefront Lakefront Carib Carib Island Island Hunters Hunters Carib Carib Nicky Game Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Friends Friends Lab Rats Lab Rats Lab Rats Walk the Walk the Phineas Gravity Wander Star-For. Pickle K.C. Liv-Mad. Stuck Best Fr. Bunk’d Back K.C. Liv-Mad. Austin Jessie King/Hill Cleve Cleve American Fam Guy Fam Guy Rick Chicken Pickles Venture Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid ›››‡ The Incredibles (2004) ›››› WALL-E (2008) Voices of Ben Burtt. Osteen Jeremiah The Story of God The Story of God Human Family Tree The Story of God Human Family Tree Appetite for Love Good Witch (N) Golden Golden Golden Golden Golden Golden How to Catch River Monsters Finding Bigfoot How to Catch River Monsters Reba Reba Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King King Osteen K. Shook Copeland Creflo D. ››› The Shoes of the Fisherman (1968, Drama) Cross Sunday Night Prime Symbo Rosary St. Catherine Angelica One Month Taste Taste Safari Second Polio Revisited Taste Taste Safari Second Louisa Sue Klebold Discus Louisa Baz Dreisinger Sue Klebold Q&A Question Time Road to the White Q & A Question Time Dateline on ID Dateline on ID (N) On the Case, Zahn Dateline on ID Dateline on ID Egypt: Beneath Myth Hunters Myth Hunters Egypt: Beneath Myth Hunters Undercover Boss Extreme Weight Loss “Ashley” Undercover Boss Weight Loss Tornado Alley Tornado Alley Tornado Alley Tornado Alley Tornado Alley ››› Yours, Mine and Ours (1968) ››› With Six You Get Eggroll (1968) Across-Sing.

HBO 401 MAX 411 SHOW 421 STZENC 440 STRZ 451

501 515 545 535 527

300 310 318 340 350

Lemonade Game of Thrones Rush Hr ››› Neighbors (2014) Dice Lies Lies Dice (N) ››› The Ghost and the Darkness Girlfriend Girlfriend Outlander

Silicon

Veep (N) Last

Game of Thrones Veep Bikini Super Lies Dice Dice Lies ›› Chappie (2015) ›››› The Shawshank Redemption (1994) Side Girlfriend Girlfriend › Paul Blart: Mall Cop 2 Outlan

››‡ Point of No Return (1993)


BEHIND THE LENS

Journal-World chief photographer Mike Yoder returns with pointers for phenomenal pictures. Page 6D

A&E Lawrence Journal-World

LJWorld.com

D

ARTS ENTERTAINMENT LIFESTYLE PEOPLE Sunday, April 24, 2016

Broadway actress Patti LuPone, known for her roles in such shows as “Gypsy” and “Evita,” will bring her new show, “Don’t Monkey with Broadway,” to the Lied Center at 7:30 p.m. Thursday.

Contributed Photo

IN CHARACTER Patti LuPone on lessons learned from a life in show business

By Joanna Hlavacek

O

l

riginally, Patti LuPone was slated to perform her popular, long-running concert “Coulda, Woulda, Shoulda” for Thursday’s gig at the Lied Center, which as of press time was still advertising the show under that name. But the Broadway star, she of “Evita,” “Gypsy” and the myriad showbiz honors, was quick to correct me — good naturedly, it should be said — during a phone interview last week on the eve of her 67th birthday. “Don’t Monkey with Broadway” is the name of her new production, which revisits classics by Rodgers & Hart, Stephen Sondheim, Leonard Bernstein and Irving Berlin,

Twitter: @HlavacekJoanna among others that ignited her Broadway dreams as a young girl growing up in Long Island. Enjoy the show, by all means, but don’t “monkey around” with your cellphone, or you might find it snatched away by LuPone herself, and not without a good lecturing. (Yes, that has actually happened on several occasions, and has since become the stuff of legend.) So, how did you go JH:  about curating the songs in the new show? Well, I got sick of PL:  singing the old ones, quite frankly (laughs). We’ve

done “Coulda, Woulda, Shoulda” for a very long time, and I was sick of these songs. So we thought, “OK, how

“(After ‘Evita,’) I had Peronistas and anti-Peronistas in my dressing room — people from Argentina that had escaped the Peron regime or that had just come to America, anti and pro, saying, “You had her to a T.” And they weren’t seeing me — they were seeing Evita Peron. It was a very, very controversial fame.” — Patti LuPone, Broadway actress

do we update the show without really changing the premise, which is basically singing Broadway showtunes?” And so I went back to my very beginning history of involvement in musical theater. It really goes all the way back to when I was quite young and discovered Broadway musicals.

JH:

I’d read somewhere that your

first production of “Gypsy,” one of the shows that later made you famous and earned you a Tony, didn’t go so well. Something about a fiasco with a live lamb onstage? I was part of a group PL:  called the Patio Players, and this was on Long

Island. There were kids in my high school obsessed with music. What they did in school

was not enough; they had to continue their obsession in the summertime. So they formed a little group called the Patio Players and they performed great big Broadway musicals on Cathy Sheldon’s patio. The second production I did with the Patio Players was “Gypsy,” and Cathy Sheldon was my Rose and I played the lead, Gypsy. Please see LUPONE, page 6D

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2D

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Sunday, April 24, 2016

A&E

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

DATEBOOK 24 TODAY

Second Annual Day of Creativity, all ages, noon-3 p.m., Jayhawk Blvd., KU Campus. Lecompton Community Pride Bridal Show, 1-4 p.m., 620 E. Woodson, Lecompton. LATTE Monthly Meeting, 2-4 p.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Doctor Who Themed Tea, 2-4 p.m., Castle Tea Room, 1307 Massachusetts St. (Tickets at https://www.showclix. com/event/doctorwhotea) Drop-In Tutoring (grades 6-12), 2-4 p.m., Teen Study Room, Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Poetry Fair, 2-6 p.m., Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St. Chocolate Fest (teens), 2:30-3:30 p.m., Lawrence Public Library Auditorium, 707 Vermont St. KU Jayhawk Motorsports car unveiling, 3 p.m., Liberty Hall, 644 Massachusetts St. Genre Book Club: Inspirational, 4-5 p.m., Meeting Room B, Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. VolunTeen Info Meeting (grades 7-12), 4:30-5 p.m., Lawrence Public Library Auditorium, 707 Vermont St. Concert: KU Collegium Musicum, 7:30 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall, 1530 Naismith Drive. Adam Lee / Tyler Gregory / Sky Smeed, 5-8 p.m., Replay Lounge, 946 Massachusetts St. Old Time Jam, Potluck and Barn Dance, all acoustic instruments, callers, and dancers welcome, potluck 6 p.m., dance 7-9 p.m., Centennial Park, 2124 W. Ninth St. VFW Sunday Brunch Buffet, 9 a.m.-3 p.m., VFW Post 852, 1801 Massachusetts St.

25 MONDAY

Lawrence Public Library Book Van, 9-10 a.m., Prairie Commons, 5121 Congressional Circle. Lawrence Public Library Book Van, 10:30-11:30 a.m., Presbyterian Manor, 1429 Kasold Drive. Lawrence Public Library

John Young/Journal-World File Photo

PRESIDENTIAL HISTORIAN AND FORMER DOLE INSTITUTE OF POLITICS DIRECTOR RICHARD NORTON SMITH will present a lecture on Adlai Stevenson and Barry Goldwater at 7 p.m. Monday at the Dole Institute, 2350 Petefish Drive, as part of the 2016 Presidential Lecture Series, “They Also Ran: America’s Would-Be Presidents.” Book Van, 1-2 p.m., Vermont Towers, 1101 Vermont St. Lecture: “The World the Children Made: Creating Mexican-American Roots in Kansas City,” 3:30-4:30 p.m., Hall Center for the Humanities, 900 Sunnyside Ave. Take Off Pounds Sensibly (TOPS), 5:30 p.m., 2712 Pebble Lane. 842-1516 for info. Casey James Prestwood & The Burning Angels / Rex Hobart & The Misery Boys, 6-9 p.m., Replay Lounge, 946 Massachusetts St. Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission, 6:30 p.m., City Hall, 6 E. Sixth St. Lawrence Bike Club’s Summer Fun Beginners’ Ride, 6:30 p.m., Cycle Works, 2121 Kasold Drive. Ripping Yarns, 6:30-8:30 p.m., Meeting Room B, Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Presidential historian Richard Norton Smith: “They Also Ran: America’s WouldBe Presidents: Influence in Defeat,” 7 p.m., Dole Institute, 2350 Petefish Drive. Lawrence Board of Education meeting, 7 p.m., school district headquarters, 110

McDonald Drive. Eudora City Commission meeting, 7 p.m., Eudora City Hall, 4 E. Seventh St. Jayhawk Audubon Society monthly program: “Wings over Weston: A Birding Festival in a Unique Niche,” 7:30 p.m., Trinity Lutheran Church Fellowship Hall, 1245 New Hampshire St. Lawrence Tango Dancers weekly práctica, 8-10 p.m., Signs of Life, 722 Massachusetts St.

session, 6-10 p.m., Slow Ride Roadhouse, 1350 N. Third St., no cover. Happy Hour Karaoke, 6-9 p.m., Replay Lounge, 946 Massachusetts St. Maker Meet-Up, 6:30 p.m., Lawrence Creates Makerspace, 512 E. Ninth St. Date Night: Free Screening and Discussion of Dr. John Gottman’s “Relationship Sound House,” 6:30-8 p.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Free English as a Second Language class, 7-8 p.m., Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. Affordable community Spanish class, 7-8 p.m., Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. Lawrence Motet Singers and Saxophonia Saxophone Quartet Spring Concert, 7:30 p.m., First United Methodist Church, 946 Vermont St. The Arcs, 7 p.m. doors, 8 p.m. show, Liberty Hall, 644 Massachusetts St. Gamer Night, 8 p.m., Burger Stand at the Casbah, 803 Massachusetts St., free.

27 WEDNESDAY

1 Million Cups presentation, 9-10 a.m., Cider Gallery, 810 Pennsylvania St. Lawrence Public Library Book Van, 9-10 a.m., Brandon Woods, 1501 Inverness Drive. Lawrence Public Library Book Van, 10:30-11:30 a.m., Arbor Court, 1510 St. Andrews Drive. 26 TUESDAY Big Brothers Big Sisters KU Women’s Chorale, of Douglas County volunteer Mariana Farah, director, noon, information, noon, United Way Kansas State Capitol Rotunda, Building, 2518 Ridge Court. 300 SW Tenth Ave., Topeka. Sexual Trauma and Abuse “A View from the Bench: Support Group, noon-1 p.m., Politics and Public Policy” The Sexual Trauma and Abuse with Judge Joyce London Care Center, 708 W. Ninth St. Ford, 4 p.m., Dole Institute, Lawrence Public Library 2350 Petefish Drive. Book Van, 1-2 p.m., Babcock Big Brothers Big Sisters Place, 1700 Massachusetts St. of Douglas County volunteer Sexual Trauma and Abuse information, 5:15 p.m., United Walking Group, 3-4 p.m., The Sexual Trauma and Abuse Way Building, 2518 Ridge Care Center, 708 W. Ninth St. Court. Douglas County CommisLawrence City Commission meeting, 5:45 p.m., City Hall, 6 sion meeting, 4 p.m., Douglas County Courthouse, 1100 MasE. Sixth St. sachusetts St. Lonnie Ray’s open jam

Peaslee Tech Fall 2016 Enrollment Session, 4-6 p.m., Peaslee Tech Center, 2920 Haskell Ave. Steak & Salmon Dinner, 5:30-7:30 p.m., Eagles Lodge, 1803 W. Sixth St. Wednesday Night Dinner, 6-8 p.m., Eagles Lodge,1803 W. Sixth St. Open Mic with host Tyler Gregory, 6-9 p.m., Replay Lounge, 946 Massachusetts St. American Legion Bingo, doors open 4:30 p.m., first games 6:45 p.m., snack bar 5-8 p.m., American Legion Post #14, 3408 W. Sixth St. Conroy’s Trivia, 7:30 p.m., Conroy’s Pub, 3115 W. Sixth St. Emerson String Quartet, 7:30 p.m., Lied Center, 1600 Stewart Drive. Free swing dancing lessons and dance, 8-11 p.m., Kansas Room in the Kansas Union, 1301 Jayhawk Blvd.

28 THURSDAY

Peaslee Tech Fall 2016 Enrollment Session, 4-6 p.m., Peaslee Technical Training Center, 2920 Haskell Ave. Dinner and Junkyard Jazz, 5:30 p.m., American Legion Post #14, 3408 W. Sixth St. Lecture: “30 Years (or 30,000): Seven Spectral Stories About Chernobyl,” 7-8 p.m., Malott Room, Kansas Union, 1301 Jayhawk Blvd. Free English as a Second Language class, 7-8 p.m., Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. Affordable community Spanish class, 7-8 p.m., Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. Lawrence Arts & Crafts, 7-9 p.m., Cafe area, Dillons, 1740 Massachusetts St. Patti LuPone: “Don’t Monkey With Broadway,” 7:30 p.m., Lied Center, 1600 Stewart Drive. Team trivia, 9 p.m., Johnny’s West, 721 Wakarusa Drive.

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


Books

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Sunday, April 24, 2016

3D

SHELF LIFE

BEST-SELLERS

Library series welcomes rocker Kim Gordon

I

’ll admit it. Up until about a month ago, I knew very little of musician Kim Gordon or her band, Sonic Youth. Yes, get your jaws off the floor. I know this makes me sound decidedly unhip. It all started when the planning committee for Lawrence Public Library’s 780s Series extended an invitation to Gordon to visit Lawrence as our special guest. This series, named for the Dewey decimal range for music, invites accomplished musicians to share the stories that influenced them. It is made possible through the Harrison Family Fund of the Douglas County Community Foundation, in partnership with Eleven

Productions and Kansas Public Radio. We were thrilled when Gordon agreed to visit Lawrence. She’ll be here on May 17, and KPR’s Laura Lorson will serve as the interviewer for the event. With the date firmly in place, I set out to learn more about Kim Gordon. The first thing I did was check out her 2015 autobiography, “Girl in a Band,” which I soon found to be an amazing adventure. Kim Gordon is oh-so-muchmore than a “girl in a band.” She can do anything. Gordon is a musician, artist, record producer,

male-dominated music world and has inspired scores of female musicians to boldly be themselves. The Lawrence Public “Girl in a Band” gives details Library’s 780s Series of Gordon’s childhood, family featuring special guest Kim history, making music, hanging Gordon will be 7:30 p.m. out with famous people (she May 17 at Liberty Hall, 644 does not care for Courtney Massachusetts St. Doors Love), and her marriage to and open at 6:30 p.m. General breakup with Sonic Youth coadmission seating will be founder Thurston Moore. available on a first-come, Among the surprises of her first-served basis. book is that Gordon’s father was a native Kansan, and her parents author, and fashion icon. She has met in Emporia where they were been called the godmother of college students. Gordon comes grunge for her role as co-founding from a long line of strong women, member of experimental underand that quality shines through. ground rock legends Sonic Youth, “Girl in a Band” is honest and and played with the band from intelligent and a great story. 1981 until its final show in 2011. Check it out at the library. As a member of Sonic Youth, — Kathleen Morgan is the DevelopGordon witnessed punk rock ment & Strategic Partnerships Director enter the music mainstream in at the Lawrence Public Library. the 1990s. She is a bright spot in a

If you go

BOOK REVIEW

Memoirist Burroughs’ ‘Lust and Wonder’ lacks usual humor

By Claude Peck Associated Press

Since breaking out in 2002 with “Running With Scissors,” Augusten Burroughs has kept the bestselling memoirs coming, tapping the bottomless market of those willing to buy tickets to someone else’s catastrophes. There may not be tons of people who experienced a childhood as scary as the one Burroughs depicts in “Scissors,” but the book turned family dysfunction into an extreme sport, and did so with a mordant sense of humor. It was a train wreck with clowns, and the hordes

couldn’t get enough. An NPR commentator cited the “excruciating hilarity” that helped “Scissors” find a big readership. “Lust & Wonder” has the same quality, minus the “hilarity.” Burroughs seems so smart and funny, so why did I find myself wanting to shout: “Just break up with the guy!” or “What’s so terrible about being single?”

The book’s primary focus is on a series of relationships, mostly ill-fated. Burroughs loves the idea of dating Mitch, who has published two novels, but the romance sours fast. For one thing, Mitch clears a high bar by proving to be more of a miserablist than Burroughs. Writing a comic novel about a TV shopping channel leads Burroughs to Christopher, a literary agent. Though attracted,

Burroughs rejects pursuit due to Christopher’s shortness and HIV-positive status. An online search nets handsome and “normal” Dennis. Despite Burroughs’ initial doubts, they transition into longterm couplehood, complete with dogs and a custom-built home in Massachusetts. Ten years and many therapy sessions later, Burroughs realizes that he and Dennis are over, a conclusion many readers will have drawn many pages earlier. The book ends on a refreshing note, complete with the faint promise of

authorial contentment. Given Burroughs’ statement that “it was tiring being me. I was tired of me,” we can only wish him luck.

Here are the best-sellers for the week that ended Sunday, April 17, compiled from nationwide data.

Hardcover Fiction 1. The Obsession. Nora Roberts. Berkley ($28) 2. As Time Goes By. Mary Higgins Clark. Simon & Schuster ($26.99) 3. The Nest. Cynthia D’Aprix Sweeney. Ecco ($26.99) 4. Fool Me Once. Harlan Coben. Dutton ($28) 5. Most Wanted. Lisa Scottoline. St. Martin’s ($27.99) 6. The 14th Colony. Steve Berry. Minotaur ($27.99) Hardcover Nonfiction 1. Hamilton. Miranda/ McCarter. Grand Central ($40) 2. The Rainbow Comes and Goes. Cooper/Vanderbilt. Harper ($27.99) 3. It’s All Easy. Gwyneth Paltrow. Grand Central Life & Style ($35) 4. When Breath Becomes Air. Paul Kalanithi. Random House ($25) 5. The Third Wave. Steve Case. Simon & Schuster ($26.95) 6. Dark Souls III Collector’s Edition. Prima Games ($39.99)

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APR 27

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Visiting Nurses and 105.9 KISS FM Present

Patti LuPone: Coulda, Woulda, Shoulda... played that part

Thursday

APR 28

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Sunday, April 24, 2016

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

Set ground rules with messy granddaughters Dear Annie: My husband and I spend winters in a three-bedroom condo in Florida. A month ago, our daughter and her two teenage girls visited. The girls share a bedroom with ample room for their clothes. But by end of the week, no clothes were in the drawers. Everything they had, dirty and clean, was on the floor. I thought this was disrespectful of our hospitality. When the older granddaughter was questioned about it, she said that she would have picked things up and put them away had she been at a friend’s house. So she knew better. Was I wrong to have expected them to have a reasonably clean room? — Wondering Grandma Dear Grandma: It’s

Annie’s Mailbox

Marcy Sugar and Kathy Mitchell

anniesmailbox@comcast.net

your house and these are your granddaughters. The next time the girls visit, tell them you expect them to keep their room reasonably tidy, because it is unfair of them to make you work so hard. Put a basket in their room for dirty clothes and say that you’d appreciate it if everything else is put away before they go to sleep. And don’t worry. They will still love you, Grandma. Dear Annie: I read

Is comedy ‘news’ really informative? Does comedy “news” expose injustice, corruption and dishonesty? Or merely allow an audience to dismiss it as a joke? The popularity and influence of Jon Stewart has been felt for most of the 21st century. His “disciples,” including Stephen Colbert, Samantha Bee and John Oliver, now have their own platforms. Have they been a force for advocacy and awareness? Or has their take on news merely allowed viewers to compartmentalize what used to be considered civic engagement as just another form of entertainment? CNN, arguably an outlet for real news, not comedy, introduces “United Shades of America” (9 p.m.), hosted by W. Kamau Bell. Folks may remember Bell from his series “Totally Biased” on FX. “Shades” features Bell inserting himself in strange situations to jump-start conversations about race, racism and the changing face of society. He visits with white supremacists, retirees in Florida, Inuits in Alaska and people living off the grid in Asheville, North Carolina. The first episode takes Bell and his comic approach to the heart of Ku Klux Klan country, where he offers a pretty glib take on the extremism of members’ rhetoric even while they are trying to create a “new” face for their white supremacy. His fish-out-of-water approach certainly makes for weird moments, but it’s hard to tell if “Shades” is providing insight, or merely offering a new platform for Bell’s comedy. Not to mention publicity for the KKK. O How does a comedy about politics compete with a real political scene that has begun to resemble reality television? Now in its fifth season, “Veep” (9:30 p.m., HBO, TV-MA) has never strived for realism. Far more farce than satire, it has always kept the slapstick front and center. As the season begins, President Selina Meyer (Julia Louis-Dreyfus) faces the electoral crisis of a tie vote. Urged to put her best face forward, she has broken out with a stress pimple unseen since adolescence. A wonderfully choreographed physical comedy, “Veep” keeps its scabrous dialogue going at a furious pace. But it’s not too proud to revolve around an oldfashioned zit joke. Tonight’s other highlights

O A threat assessment on

“Madam Secretary” (7 p.m., CBS, TV-14). O The three-night miniseries event “Rebellion” (7 p.m. Sundance, TV-14) recalls the 1916 Easter Rebellion in Ireland. O Jon Snow’s fate is revealed on the sixth season premiere of “Game of Thrones” (8 p.m., HBO, TV-MA).

the letters you printed from ‘‘The Ones Left Behind,’’ who said she received no help from her ex-husband, but now the kids suddenly want a relationship with him, and ‘‘Been There,’’ who said it was important to re-establish a relationship with Dad, but Mom became angry. My ex-wife was emotionally abusive and we divorced when my son was a year old. I dutifully paid child support and tried to be in my son’s life, but without warning, my ex moved away. For eight years, I couldn’t find them. One day, she called me out of the blue saying she couldn’t handle my son. He stayed with me that summer, but she took him back and moved away again in the fall, because she didn’t like how well we got along.

I could not track them down. I found my son on Facebook when he was 18. It made his mother extremely angry. He’s now 24, and we are still estranged because of the poison she fed him. Her hatred destroyed any possibility of a relationship with my child. Here’s what I say to all ex-wives: Make sure that the father supports your child, but also foster a good relationship between the child and the father. Your problems with your co-parent should not become your child’s problems. It only punishes the child. — Bitter But Still Hopeful

JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS

For Sunday, April 24: This year you break patterns and are able to relate a lot more closely to different individuals. You also gain confidence in your ability to judge situations and people. If you are single, you won’t settle for anything but an intimate relationship, yet you realize that this request might not be reasonable on the first few dates. If you are attached, you suddenly seem to be able to relate to your sweetie and get more of what you want. 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) +++++ You express a strong sense of direction, as you know what you want to achieve. Tonight: Read between the lines. Taurus (April 20-May 20) +++++ Be aware of the level of anger you might be swallowing in a tough conversation. Tonight: Love the moment. Gemini (May 21-June 20) ++++ You might want to handle a personal situation early on. Others will go along with your wishes. Tonight: Go along with someone else’s ideas. Cancer (June 21-July 22) +++ You might be exhausted from recent demands. Take some time to yourself. Tonight: Put your feet up and relax. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) ++++ You might want to understand what is happening

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

jacquelinebigar.com

behind the scenes with a child. Tonight: Let the good times roll! Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ++++ You’ll feel as if you have heard and done enough for a while. Opt for some downtime. Tonight: Order some Chinese food. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ++++ You could be tired and withdrawn. How you see a personal matter could change radically. Tonight: Return calls. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) +++ You could be in a situation where you want to be heard loud and clear. Tonight: Treat a friend to a movie. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) +++++ Read between the lines with a frustrated person, as he or she often has a great plan. Tonight: Make the most of the moment. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ++++ After a few intense days, don’t be surprised to find that you could be out of sorts. Tonight: Where your friends are. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) +++++ You could be in the mood to get out with your friends. Consider taking Monday off. Tonight: Cheer a friend on. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) +++ You are able to meet someone else’s demand, which could be good for you in the long run. Tonight: A must appearance.

UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD Universal Crossword Edited by Fred Piscop April 24, 2016

ACROSS 1 Diner seating area 6 Freudian topics 10 Wet blanket? 14 Lapis lazuli color 15 Church area 16 Brightly colored parrot 17 Ice cream shop stock 18 Fertile Crescent nation 19 Wilson of “Wedding Crashers” 20 Very rarely 23 Born, in bios 24 With 48-Across, Altoids alternative 25 Lab assistant of film 26 Wrestler’s surface 27 Lemony taste 29 Mythical flier 32 Assailed 35 Poor, as excuses go 36 Like some consequences 37 Zwieback, e.g. 40 Olden times 41 Sign for a fortune-teller 42 Airline seat selection 43 Classic Jaguar model 4/24

44 Colorful equine 45 Econ. yardstick 46 As follows 48 See 24-Across 49 Was in session 52 1978 Commodores hit 57 Loaf end 58 Leprechaun land 59 Hoops two-pointer 60 Russian range 61 Capital on the Tiber 62 Strong thread 63 Dummy 64 Fit of pique 65 McGregor, Connery et al, by birth DOWN 1 A bread-winner brings it home 2 Bluish 45-Down 3 Scale unit 4 Walnut, but not peanut 5 Pause 6 Computer of the ’40s 7 Attire 8 Track shape 9 Glittery, as a gown 10 Replay effect, briefly 11 “Sure thing!” 12 Lunch box treat since 1912

13 Pitcher Early in Cooperstown 21 Tiny criticism 22 Omelet need 26 Medieval war club 27 No longer available 28 Revival shout 30 Like the Sabin vaccine 31 Hand over 32 River of Hades 33 Furry “Star Wars” critter 34 Its depth is measured in auto inspections 35 Dalai __ 36 Plumbing problem 38 Fan club members

39 Booed decisions in sports 44 Feel regret for 45 One state of matter 47 Chat-starting word 48 Basic principle 49 Final authority 50 Of legal age 51 Pounds the keys 52 Sound of heavy impact 53 Medal awardee 54 Links choice 55 Classic Chevalier song 56 Not of the cloth

PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER

4/23

© 2016 Universal Uclick www.upuzzles.com

WHO’S COUNTING? By Victor Fleming

— The astrological forecast should be read for entertainment only.

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PUZZLES

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Sunday, April 24, 2016

| 5D

THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD 56 Southern Italian port 57 Lock combination? 59 Helmeted deity 60 Cravings 63 Sing loudly 67 Non-____ (modern ACROSS food label) 1 Kind of chip 68 *1990s-2000s HBO hit 6 Novelist Tillie who 71 A, in Amiens wrote “Tell Me a Riddle” 72 Feeling 11 1950s sci-fi terror, 74 “Chilean” fish with “the” 75 Typewriter type 15 Pro-baller-turned76 Family symbols commentator for N.B.A. 79 Mexican sauce on TNT 80 “Natural” way to 19 Upper reaches 20 Last method of death serve a roast in Agatha Christie’s “And 81 “Dance at Le Moulin de la Galette,” e.g. Then There Were None” 84 *Laos or Vietnam 21 Letter sign-off 88 Start to -matic 22 Modern movement 89 “Oh jeez, don’t look inits. 23 *1978 movie in which at me” 90 Sue Grafton’s Kevin Bacon made his “____ for Ricochet” film debut 91 Result of overexpo25 Minicar, say 27 Makeup for a “Wizard sure? 94 Where phone nos. of Oz” character? might be stored 28 Cooperate (with) 95 Burst through, as a 29 Didn’t exist barrier 30 Sufficient, in brief 100 Prefix meaning 32 *Having it made 118-Across 35 Deg. in the board101 *Sobriquet for room 38 Fails to brake in time ardent Boston fans 105 Tetra- plus two for, maybe 106 Superficially repair 40 “I see what you did 107 Things always kept there!” on hand? 41 Comments from a 109 Quick jump in the crossword kibitzer pool 43 It’s sold by the yard 110 Like some photog44 If all else fails raphy 47 Actor Morales 113 *Popular app that 48 *Progress preventer can view any of the 53 Some Vegas attracplaces named at the tions 55 Prophet whose name ends of the answers to the starred clues means “deliverance” EXPANDED WORLDVIEW By Howard Barkin Puzzles Edited by Will Shortz

115 Tippy-top 116 Disturbance 117 Bach composition 118 See 100-Across 119 Shock to the system 120 “____-Team” 121 Blackjack option 122 “Duck Dynasty” network DOWN 1 More likely to win a handwriting award 2 When many start the workday 3 Achebe who wrote “Things Fall Apart” 4 Designer line? 5 Like some medication 6 Available 7 Sarges’ superiors 8 March composer 9 Curves seen in sports car ads 10 Formerly 11 Instrument in a metalworker’s union? 12 Soloist? 13 Lose control at the buffet 14 Appear 15 Blind part 16 Elev. 17 Prez on a penny 18 15 mins. of an N.F.L. game 24 Rich Richie 26 Tolkien creatures 31 Purchase at an optometrist’s 33 Cry of pain 34 “Vamoose!” 35 Work well together 36 Seasoned pork sausage, informally 37 “No warranty” 39 Third-largest island

in Italy, after Sicily and Sardinia 42 “____ the Beat” (1982 Go-Go’s hit) 44 Broadly smiling 45 Gang in “Grease” with an automotive name 46 Reggae precursor 48 Fetches 49 See 112-Down 50 Deliver to, as a pickup line 51 Agile mountain climbers 52 Explorer’s grp. 53 Guitar bars 54 One way to sit by 58 Storklike waders 60 Dissuade 61 La saison chaude 62 P.I., in old slang 64 Board displaying the alphabet 65 Like some DVDexclusive releases 66 Mess with, as hair or siblings 68 What covers parts of 80-Down? 69 Poetic shades 70 L.A. locale 73 Cartoon Great Dane, informally 75 Coup d’état 77 Cable channel whose first initial stands for its founder 78 Drama that can go on for years 80 See 68-Down 81 Order in the court 82 Cabinet dept. 83 El ____ 85 The year 2510 86 Average 87 Thirty, en français

1

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111

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89 Thorough 92 River past Orsk 93 Meal 95 Mogul 96 Churned 97 Star of Hitchcock’s “The Birds” 98 Egressed 99 Nymph turned into a laurel

tree, in Greek myth 102 “Calvin and Hobbes” girl 103 Tennis situation after deuce 104 Border county of New York or Pennsylvania 106 “omg” or “lol,” say 108 Phantasy Star maker 110 Indian mausoleum opening?

109

111 N.Y.S.E. debut 112 With 49-Down, singer with the autobiography “It Wasn’t All Velvet” 113 Guys’ dates, informally 114 ____ Pacis (Roman monument)

UNITED FEATURE SUNDAY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1 Rot (2 wds.) 6 Tenant farm 11 Energize (2 wds.) 16 — measure 20 Party nibble 21 Sighed with delight 22 Chew the scenery 23 Valhalla host 24 “Whew!” feeling 25 Green drink 27 Auction shout 28 Found a roost 29 Basket willows 31 Makes a choice 32 Nitpicks 34 Kind of van 35 Heavy fliers 36 Band together 37 Fisherman’s fly 38 Whiff 40 Adherent 41 Saddle up 42 Try to impress 46 Say “ugh” 48 Candied items 49 British sailor 50 Atmosphere 51 Mortarboard 54 Helmsman’s dir. 55 Dallas cagers 56 James Earl — 57 Experienced 58 Wearing a cowl 60 Delight in 61 Break off 62 Garage jobs 63 Used poor judgment 64 Major conflicts 65 Has lots of status 66 Hindu rope-climbers 67 Envelope abbr. 68 Lucy Lawless role 69 Avian homes 70 He made a deal with

the devil 71 Ms. Shriver 72 Baja Ms. 73 Dictatorial 74 Ward off 75 Bear follower 78 Regions 80 Southpaw 81 Live by one’s — 82 Allot 83 Crabby 85 Long stories 86 Amiable 87 Stonehenge builders 88 Recurring melody 89 Tempus — 90 Fast-food drink 91 Reduces 92 Blissful abode 93 Get more mellow 94 Noted groundhog 95 Joey 96 — Paulo 97 PBS benefactor 98 Gas or electric — 99 Israel’s Golda 100 Usher’s beat 102 Keepsake 104 Baez or Rivers 105 Monastic title 106 Lie dormant 110 Strong — — ox 111 Truck floors 112 — voce 114 Whodunit name 115 Andre of tennis 118 Sheltered 119 Microscope lens 120 Meadow rodent 121 Search engine finds 122 Eagle, to NASA (2 wds.) 125 Guide 127 Sub — (secretly) 128 — nous 129 Loose garments

130 Frisky mammals 131 Troop truant 132 Gave, as an RX 133 Wire nails 134 Strapped for cash DOWN 1 Druid’s tongue 2 Surfing the net 3 Enticing 4 Orangutan 5 Clear the windshield 6 Most wily 7 Least typical 8 Windy City airport 9 — (come clean) 10 Gridiron stats 11 Show-biz mag 12 Returnable bottle 13 Fixes corn 14 Western tribe 15 Cosmetic samples 16 Flung 17 Turmoils 18 Fission source 19 They may be split 20 Studies all night 26 Reserves, as a table 30 Left Bank river 33 Heavy hydrogen discoverer 36 Zeroes in on 37 Less convincing 39 At bay 41 Scream and shout 42 Poker pair 43 Refuges (2 wds.) 44 Ship from Valdez 45 Push down 47 Et, for Hans 48 Ties up the phone 49 Can’t get enough of 51 Stingy 52 Ventricle neighbor 53 Trunk

55 Red giant in Cetus 56 Wharf 57 Bering Sea birds 59 Thieves’ hangout 60 Pre-Tina Turner 61 Brash 62 Praise to the skies 64 Rains on 65 Breaks 66 Groupies 68 Dentist’s photo (hyph.) 69 What Jack Sprat ate (2 wds.) 70 Wine and dine 72 Medieval laborer 73 Get going 74 Pay-stub acronym 76 Too-too 77 Fresco base 79 Curb 80 Bock cousin 81 Determination 82 Ground cover? 83 Shaman’s quest 84 Bronco-riding event 85 Custodian, briefly 86 Roulette color 87 Awaits carving, as a turkey 89 Get along (2 wds.) 90 Stubble site 91 Part of UCLA 93 Fixed a loose board 94 Green veggies 95 Lasso 98 Clutter 99 Internet hookup 100 Unaffected 101 Give a lift? 103 Liege’s subject 104 Yelled insults 105 Bumped illegally 107 Formed a gully 108 Fictional Queen

UNIVERSAL SUDOKU

See both puzzle SOLUTIONS in Monday’s paper. 109 Looks curiously 111 Traffic-jam noise 112 Cousteau invention 113 Synthetic fabric

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

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

115 Mystique 116 Raise veggies 117 Part of a.k.a. 118 Formic acid makers

119 Olfactory input 123 Famous numero 124 Moon, in verse 126 Dog days in Dijon

HIDATO

See answer next Sunday

©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.

GUTBED SIPEMO SAUYEN

Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app

KNOCLU

CENEMA RIMPRE

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

PRINT YOUR ANSWER IN THE CIRCLES BELOW

Solution and tips at sudoku.com.

Last week’s solution

See the JUMBLE answer on page 6D. Answer :

IMPOSE MENACE UNLOCK UNEASY PRIMER BUDGET Thanks to his fleet of garbage trucks, the business owner had —

DISPOSABLE INCOME

APRIL 24, 2016

Last week’s solution


6D

|

Sunday, April 24, 2016

A&E

.

BEHIND THE LENS

L awrence J ournal -W orld

By Mike Yoder

Prom photos in perspective

A

fter a short hiatus, we are bringing back our Behind the Lens column. To start, this will be a monthly photography feature in A&E with an emphasis on displaying images. We will spotlight a variety of subjects and tools, but the focus will be on the photograph and the creative process of imagemaking. We hope this feature will inspire your own photographic adventures. At Wellsville High School, student couples traditionally promenade down a oneblock section of Main Street before prom. To document the event, I mostly used a 50mm lens, a lens often overlooked by photographers. The lens neither captures a wide-angle of view nor zooms in tight on a distant subject. It simply captures subjects in a natural perspective, similarly to the way we see things with an unaided eye. If you are willing to move, walking toward or away from subjects, a 50mm “normal� lens is capable of capturing scenes both wide and near. — Journal-World chief photographer Mike Yoder can be reached at myoder@ljworld.com.

Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photos

ABOVE: WELLSVILLE HIGH SCHOOL JUNIORS DARYON WINTON AND CARA COONS wait for their turn to promenade down Main Street before the school prom April 16. Using a 50mm lens at a distance from the subjects still maintained a wide view of the scene.

WELLSVILLE HIGH SCHOOL JUNIORS LAUREN MCDANIEL AND TRAJEN SMITH walk through downtown. I moved closer to the couple with a 50mm lens to fill my frame in the same way that a telephoto lens would zoom in on the subject from a distance. More photos at LJWorld.com/whsprom.

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1D

We went to some rich estate, someplace out on Long Island, and they had sheep grazing on the way up the driveway to the mansion. We went up and we talked to the caretaker and they said, “Yes, of course you can have a lamb when they’re born.� Well, the lambs were born in the spring and we were doing this (the show) in the summer, and the lamb was a sheep by the time we got him. He was great in dress rehearsal under the huge spotlight, with me singing “Little Lamb� to this sheep. Come opening night, I sang “Little lamb, little lamb,� and it went off. Well, the sheep just got very nervous and started stomping all over the stage, and there was nothing I could do except let him go, and he ended up in the boys’ room. They caught him in the boys’ room, which was tiled, and this thing was bah-ing all the way through the show in the boys’ room. It was a riot. We loved it. So, did you JH:  glean any lessons on show business from that incident?

Oh, we gleaned PL:  lots of lessons on show business all through

junior high and high school because we had great teachers. They had a lot to say — not just about what might happen in a show, but they gave us really heady lessons about commitment and doing the best you can. I’m telling you, I just sang with the Northport High School (LuPone’s alma mater) choir last night in the show that we’re calling “Don’t Monkey With Broadway,� and the kids were unbelievable. These kids could hold pitch, they enunciat-

Patti LuPone will perform “Don’t Monkey With Broadway� at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Lied Center, 1600 Stewart Drive. Tickets start at $35 for adults and $19 for students, and can be purchased at lied.ku.edu or at the Lied Center ticket office. ed their words, they were a professional choir, and they’re high school kids. It was just very moving to see these kids who could be doing anything else, and they chose to do this. They chose to present themselves this way and they chose to be good at it. That’s pretty impressive in today’s world. Not a cellphone in sight, not a distraction in sight. That kind of JH:  professionalism is something we don’t nor-

theatrical events, because you’re trying to cast a spell for an audience and it’s difficult to cast that spell if the audience is distracted in any way, not just by phone. It breaks the spell. One of the bestJH:  known shows you starred in, “Evita� is

partly about pursuing fame. Was there a moment you realized you were famous? Well, no, because PL:  it was controversial fame. There were a lot

of people, in the theater community and just period, who were not happy that a fascist dictator’s wife, cozied up with the Nazi regime, was being glorified. So, that’s infamy — it’s not fame. I had Peronistas and anti-Peronistas in my dress ing room — people from Argentina that had escaped What happens to the rest? the Peron regime or that had just come to America,  Â? Â? Â?  anti and pro, saying, “You had her to a T.â€? And they  Â? weren’t seeing me — they WORD GAME Â? Â? Â?  ­Â€Â‚ ­  were seeing Evita Peron. THAT It bySCRAMBLED David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek was a very, very controverUnscramble these six Jumbles, letter to each square, sialone fame. to form six ordinary words.

­  Âƒ Â?

mally associate with millennials. It makes me think of your cameo on “Girls,â€? where Lena Dunham’s character is interviewing  Âƒ  Â?  ­ ƒ you and picks up her phone KNOCLU ‚ Â?Â? ƒ „ Â…  Â? ‚ † Â… ‡ Do you have mid-interview to answer any roles that a call from her boyfriend. „ and ‚ Â… Â…Â?Â? Â?Â…Â…Â?   Š2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC Reserved. youAll Rights haven’t played yet Was that a nod to your ‡ „ „ Â? ˆ Â?‡ Â? ˆ ƒ Â?  Â€ ‰­ ‰Â? GUTBED but would like to? views on cellphones in Â…Â? ƒ ƒ ŠÂ? ƒ ˆÂ?Â?Â?Â? ƒ ƒ Â… Â?ˆÂ?­ ƒ  Â‹­ Â?  theaters? No. I never think Â… „Œ ƒ Š Â?Â?…‡  Â‡ ÂƒÂŽ ­ „ SIPEMO No, not with that way because “Girls.â€? That’s I never get the roles I Â?  Â? Â? ­  how people interview wantSAUYEN to play, you know now. ... I’m not against what I mean? I audition ‘Â?­ ‚ ­ ƒ „ Â…  Â? ‚ † Â… ‡ phones. I have a phone; I for them and I don’t get ‡ Â… ­Â…  Â‰Â„ ‰  Â€ Â€ ­ Â? ‡Â?ƒ  Â‡  CENEMA use a phone. It depends on them, so there’s no reason † †‡ˆ Â… ‰ Â? Â… „ and ­ , three how you use that phone. to think that way. What’s  ÂŠ Â? Âƒ Â? ƒ  Â?  Â?  Â‡Â… ˆ Â’ ƒ ƒ You don’t pull it out at the exciting to me about my RIMPRE Now arrange the circled letters distraction of the audience. career is the surprise of it.  Â? Â? Â? ŠÂ? to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon. You don’t pull it out when I never know what’s comyou’re supposed to be ing next.PRINT YOUR ANSWER IN THE CIRCLES BELOW involved in anything, like a ‘Â? “ ”Â?  R. •Â? Â? — Features reporter piece of art in a museum or ‚ Â…Â… ‚ Â?‚ ƒ ‚ Â… Â?  Joanna Hlavacek can be reached at a concert or a ballet. jhlavacek@ljworld.com and 832-6388. ­ ƒ „ Â? „ ÂŽ Â… ‡ That’s the big question to me — why did you spend the money to get Events are free, open to the public and held at the Dole Institute of Politics there when you can’t get

away from your phone? I Answer : don’t know what’s going IMPOSE MENACE UNLOCK UNEASY PRIMER BUDGET on. It’s so alienating, you Thanks to his fleet of garbage know what I mean? ... It trucks, the business owner had — bothers me so much more DISPOSABLE Â?Â?  ­ Â? € in concerts than it does in APRIL 24, 2016 INCOME

JH: 

PL: 

PL: 

Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app

LuPone

If you go

ABOVE LEFT: KNOWN AS A “NORMAL� LENS, a 50mm focal length lens provides a natural perspective of subjects. Here I moved in tight for a close-up shot of a student’s tattoo. A wide-angle lens may have resulted in a slight distortion of the subject. ABOVE RIGHT: A couple head to the high school after promenading down Main Street.


Sunday, April 24, 2016

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Equal Opportunity Employer/Disability/Veteran DrugFree Workplace.

To apply, please contact: Paula McCra Golden LivingCenters – Kaw River 750 Blake Street, Edwardsville, KS 66111 T: 785-545-5384 http://np.goldenlivingjobs.com

Do you have excellent leadership and conflict resolution skills? Are you adept with Microsoft Office programs? Do you enjoy meeting new people? Do you work well independently and with others? If so, you are the kind of person we are looking for! We have an opening for a Topeka Area Manager who will office in Lawrence, with a great company that continues to grow. Pay is competitive and negotiable for the right candidate. Interested?

THEN FAX YOUR RESUME TO

620-251-2914 ASAP!


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PLACE YOUR AD:

L awrence J ournal -W orld

785.832.2222

classifieds@ljworld.com

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

Assistant to the Director

Grant Specialist

The University of Kansas seeks an Assistant to the Director to serve within the University Press of Kansas. APPLY AT: http://employment.ku.edu/staff/5914BR Review of applications will begin May 3, 2016 and continue until the position is filled.

Summer: Custodial, Maintenance & Landscaping

Office of Research is currently seeking a full time Grant Specialist. APPLY AT: http://employment.ku.edu/staff/5868BR Application deadline is May 2nd.

Sexual Assault Prevention Educator

The University of Kansas Facilities Services seeks Summer temporary help in custodial, maintenance and landscape areas. APPLY AT: http://employment.ku.edu Click Staff. Auto req ID 5818BR, 5855BR, 5875BR & 5933BR Could start as early as 5/13/16 & will end by 8/19/16.

Sexual Assault & Prevention Center is currently seeking a full time Sexual Assault Prevention Educator. APPLY AT: http://employment.ku.edu/staff/5861BR Application deadline is May 4th.

Grant Specialist

The University of Kansas seeks a Grant Specialist to serve within the Shared Service Center. APPLY AT: http://employment.ku.edu/staff/5869BR Review of applications begins April 25, 2016 (for best consideration); however, you may apply until midnight, April 27, 2016.

Research Contract Officer

Office of Research is currently seeking a full time Research Contract Officer. APPLY AT: http://employment.ku.edu/staff/5808BR Application deadline is May 4th.

For complete job descriptions & more information, visit:

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

Employer of

choice

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

Community Living Opportunities

BUSINESS & QUALITY ASSURANCE ANALYST II At an intermediate level of proficiency, this individual will work closely with business clients and other members of the development and testing team in an iterative, Agile software development environment to drive the requirements definition, clarification and prioritization as well as software testing and defect resolution. This position will also serve as a technical subject matter expert on supported applications and assist in the training of end users on developed applications.

QUALIFICATIONS College degree or equivalent is required. Two to three years of general financial experience comprising a combination of education and hands-on experience is preferred. (Experience may be in operational or information technology aspects of the financial sector). Fully competent professional with three to five years of similar or related professional experience in business analysis, quality assurance, or both. Intermediate understanding of Microsoft Office is required. Ability to think orderly, logically, and analytically and strong problem solving skills is required. Resourcefulness and creativity when researching new products and techniques. Familiarity with database querying methods is preferred. Familiarity with test automation concepts and tools is preferred. Experience with Agile development methods is preferred. Familiarity with some combination of database design, programming concepts and web development is preferred. Must be able to work and travel independently and use general office equipment. Must be goal-oriented and have a strong sense of team solidarity. In addition to a rewarding, team-oriented work environment, FHLBank Topeka offers opportunities for growth and development, an attractive benefit package including health and dental insurance, 401(k), short-term incentive plan and much more. To see a more detailed job summary and apply for this position, go to the Bank website at

www.fhl btopeka.com/careers EOE

jobs.lawrence.com

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

Teaching Counselors

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

Family Teachers

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

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


L awrence J ournal -W orld

Sunday, April 24, 2016

PLACE YOUR AD: Quiet introvert looking for someone who loves to read books really loud.

785.832.2222

| 3E

classifieds@ljworld.com

It takes a special person to become a Home Instead CAREGiver,SM not a special degree. Working with seniors in their homes can be challenging but, at the same time, tremendously rewarding. Enjoy training, support, flexible shifts that fit your life, and a job that nurtures the soul.

• No medical degree necessary • Training and support provided • Flexible shifts Want to join our growing team of amazing CAREGivers in Shawnee and/or Douglas County?

Development Specialist, Full-time

How to apply locally:

CNAs & HHAs encouraged to apply.

It is easy to apply online at: www.homeinstead. com/584 and then select “CAREERS” at the top of the page.

In as little as two weeks, you could be out Enhancing the lives of Aging Adults in our community! Each Home Instead Senior Care offers office is independently owned and operated 2013 Home Instead Inc.

CAREER S E I T I N U T OPPOR Coordinator, RN h rc ea es R y og ol Onc Registered Nurses rector-Total Rewards Di R H RN r, to na ordi Quality Outcomes Co reers

.LMH.org/ca w w w t a w o n Apply

The Development Specialist position supports Washburn University Foundation through professional, efficient and personalized service to donors, the public, and staff. This administrative position is an integral part of the Foundation donor relationship development and fundraising teams. This position continually requires demonstrated poise, tact, and diplomacy with the ability to handle sensitive and confidential information and situations. Duties include scheduling appointments for officers, managing calendars, arranging meetings and travel plans, and other special projects. High School Diploma or GED required; two years of college coursework or Associate’s Degree preferred. Three to five years experience in a related administrative assistant role required. In addition, the candidate must have strong writing skills, creative and strategic-thinking abilities, the ability to work independently and handle multiple deadlines. To apply: Please go to Creative Business Solutions at www.cbsks.com and select “Apply Now!” under “Jobs” to submit your resumé, cover letter and three professional references. EEO Employer

325 Maine Street • Lawrence, Kansas • 785-505-5000

FLEXIBLE SCHEDULES • BENEFITS • PAID TIME-OFF

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

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

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

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

Ground

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

SUPPORT! TEACH! INSPIRE! ADVOCATE!

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

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

785-865-5520 www.clokan.org

MEDIATE M I G N I LY! R I H

Build a Brighter Future for Your Patients and For You.

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

Pa i d At Golden LivingCenters – Lansing, our commitment to our nursing staff is substantial. It’s more than compensation and benefits; more than training and education. It’s giving our nursing staff the freedom and the opportunity to have real control over their careers. Join us and see what our commitment can mean to you.

New Wages!!! RNs / LPNs - Full-Time, 2pm – 10pm, 10pm – 6am; Weekend, 2pm – 10pm; PRN Shifts Available!

LCO ME

We offer flexible part-time schedules, 80% company paid employee health insurance for full time, career opportunities- MV promotes from within!

Current RN or LPN license in the state of Kansas required.

CNAs - Full-Time, 2pm – 10pm & 10pm – 6am; Weekend, 2pm – 10pm; PRN Shifts Available! Must be a CNA in good standing in Kansas.

Excellent Medical • Competitive Wages • PTO • 401(k) • Tuition Reimbursement

Equal Opportunity Employer/Disability/Veteran DrugFree Workplace.

jobs.lawrence.com

For more information contact: Aaron Bombardier Golden LivingCenters – Lansing 210 Plaza Dr., Lansing, KS 66043 T: 913-727-1284 E: aaron.bombardier@goldenliving.com Or apply online: np.goldenlivingjobs.com

MV Transportation, Inc. 1260 Timberedge Road, Lawrence, KS

APPLY ONLINE lawrencetransit.org/employment classifieds@ljworld.com


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L awrence J ournal -W orld

PUBLIC NOTICES

JOBS TO PLACE AN AD:

785.832.2222

Targeted Case Manager COF Training Services, Inc, a non-profit organization providing services and supports to disabled individuals, is seeking a full-time Targeted Case Manager. Applicants should have an interest in working with individuals with disabilities. A Bachelor’s degree from a four year college/ university is preferred; high school diploma/ GED required. One year of work experience with individuals with MR/DD is required along with a valid Kansas driver’s license and a good driving record. Knowledge of Excel and Microsoft Word software is also required. Must be able to work flexible schedules. Some travel is required. COF offers competitive wages and excellent benefits to include medical, dental and life insurance, paid time off and KPERS. Apply at 1516 N Davis Ave, Ottawa, KS 66067 Applications for this position accepted through May 6, 2016. Drug free workplace. Pre-employment and random drug/alcohol testing is required. Equal Opportunity Employer

Construction

DriversTransportation Class A & B Drivers

Laborer Works on construction projects performing general labor tasks such as demolition, loading/unloading, digging, and clean-up.

Qualified drivers. Home nightly. Pay based on yrs of exp plus Monthly bonus. Excellent benefits. Apply:

To apply, call:

or email: hr@mccowngordon.com

Customer Service

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

Frank Eye Center is seeking an energetic and self-motivated person interested in assisting doctors in an ophthalmic practice (eye care). This position is 32 hours per week with benefits. No weekends. Experience in ophthalmology, optometry, CNA or medical assisting preferred, but will train the right person. If you are interested, send resume to Frank Eye Center, 1401 S Main St, Ottawa KS 66067.

Interview TIP #5

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

Hillcrest Wrecker & Garage is looking for full and part time tow truck drivers & dispatcher. Must be willing to work nights and weekends and live in Lawrence. DOT physical is required. Apply at 3700 Franklin Park Cir. 785-843-0052 hillcrestwrecker@aol.com EOE

Look Neat Clean clothes No holes Modest Cover tats Remove piercings

Smell Clean Brush Teeth Shower w soap Clean clothes Deodorant Decisions Determine Destiny

Front Desk Guest Service Representative Must be able to multi-task office skills and deliver an excellent guest service experience. Apply in person at 3411 S. Iowa, Lawrence.

General

Admin Support II This position will perform clerical work in the Solid Waste Division of the Public Works Department, answering phones, data entry and other duties as assigned. Does require ability to work overtime as needed. Requirements include at least 1 yr of general office experience or accounting. Excellent communication and customer service skills needed. Must pass a data entry, 40wpm typing and Excel skills test prior to interview. $14.62 per hr. Must pass background ck, phy and drug screen. Apply by 5/4/16. www.LawrenceKS.org/jobs EOE M/F/D

Forester The Forester will lead, oversee and perform all tree maintenance activities on Right of Way such as pruning, trimming, removals, and stump grinding. Position requires the ability to operate and maintain specialized equipment including aerial bucket truck, chipper truck and chipper, stump cutter, chain saws and other power tools. Requires HS/GED w/technical training; 3-4 yrs exp and/or combination of education in arboriculture. CDL or ability to obtain w/in 6mo of hire is required. $18.34 per hour. Must pass post offer bk ground ck, post-offer phy and drg screening. Apply by 5/5/16. www.LawrenceKS.org/jobs EOE M/F/D

FULL-TIME PAINTER NEEDED FOR SUMMER WORK interior & exterior. Experience preferred. Apply at or send resume to: Meadowbrook Apts. 2601 Dover Square Lawrence, KS 66049

HIRING IMMEDIATELY! Farm & Ranch Vineyard Farm Worker Oskaloosa Aubrey Vineyards has a job opening working in the vineyard. You will be training, pruning, putting out bird netting, harvesting the grapes, & assisting with bottling. This is a good opportunity to become familiar with the wine industry. The right person will pay attention to instructions & detail, will be able to work outdoors in adverse weather, & will be able to work by themselves. This job is part time. If you are interested in applying, please send by email your resume, high school and/or college grade point averages and your salary requirements to jobs@aubreyvineyards.com

General Movers need Now

KCK 5620 Wolcott Dr. (913) 788-3165

816-423-2330

classiďŹ eds@ljworld.com

Drive for the Lawrence Transit System. Flexible part-time schedules, 80% company paid employee health insurance for full time. Career opportunities. Age 21+ w. good driving record. Paid Training. Apply online: lawrencetransit.org/ employment Or come to: MV Transportation, Inc. 1260 Timberedge Road Lawrence, KS. EOE

FULL-TIME GROUNDS KEEPER NEEDED FOR SUMMER WORK Apply at or send resume to: Meadowbrook Apts. 2601 Dover Square Lawrence, KS 66049

jobs.lawrence.com

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

Now Hiring! Raising Cane’s is now hiring cashiers and cooks for our new restaurant opening in Lawrence. We offer competitive wages, flexible schedules and holidays off! Apply by visiting: CaniacCareers.com or email: Canes224GM@Raisingcan es.com or apply in person Thur. 4/21 from 3pm-5pm Raising Cane’s 2435 Iowa St. Questions: Call 866-552-2637

in the music community. Experience in excel and computer savvy is a must. Candidates will be comfortable multitasking and working with clients. Resumes can be sent to BeautifulMusicVNShop@yahoo. com. Please call 785-856-8755 with further questions. BeautifulMusicVNShop@ yahoo.com

Interview TIP #5

Look Neat Clean clothes No holes Modest Cover tats Remove piercings

Smell Clean Brush Teeth Shower w soap Clean clothes Deodorant Decisions Determine Destiny

classifieds@ljworld.com

REAL ESTATE

785.832.2222 Duplexes

classiďŹ eds@ljworld.com Townhomes

Lawrence

2BR in a 4-plex

Real Estate Wanted Wanted: Ranch Home on NW Side of Lawrence 3B, 2B, Slab or Basement Please call 785-841-7635 Open House Special!

• 1 Day - $50 • 2 Days - $75 • 28 Days - $280 785-832-2222

Apartments Unfurnished LAUREL GLEN APTS All Electric

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

785-838-9559 EOH

Lawrence

(First published in the The 2016/2017 proposal Lawrence Daily Journal- will be reviewed and disWorld April 24, 2016) cussed at the hearing. All parents of eligible Native Indian Education Act American students and all Application Public Hearing other citizens are urged to Monday, April 25, 2016 attend. The recommendations made at the public A public hearing for the hearing will be incorpoLawrence Public Schools rated into the application Indian Education Title 7 which is submitted to grant application will be at Washington, D.C. 6:00 p.m. Monday, April 25, 2016 at the Title 7 Native Submitted by: American Student Services Office, Centennial Building, Jennifer Attocknie, 2145 Louisiana St., Law- Director rence, Kansas. This grant Title 7 Program application seeks continu- Native American Student ing federal funds author- Services ized under the 1988 Indian Lawrence Public Schools Education Act. ________ (First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal- World April 24, 2016) NOTICE OF PRIMARY ELECTION In compliance with K.S.A. 25-204, notice is hereby given that a Primary Election will be held on August 2, 2016. Candidates for following offices will be nominated by each political party for which has qualified to participate in the Primary Election:

IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, I hereto set my hand and cause to be affixed my official seal this 5th day of April, 2016. Jameson Shew Douglas County Clerk ________ (First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal- World April 23, 2016) ORDINANCE NO. 9220 - RESOLUTION NO. 16-09 A JOINT ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, KANSAS, AND RESOLUTION OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS, AMENDING HORIZON 2020, THE COMPREHENSIVE PLAN FOR THE CITY OF LAWRENCE AND UNINCORPORATED DOUGLAS COUNTY, “CHAPTER 7 - INDUSTRIAL AND EMPLOYMENT-RELATED LAND USE,� TO INCLUDE ADDITIONAL INDUSTRIAL LAND, AND “CHAPTER 14 - SPECIFIC PLANS,� TO REVISE THEREIN THE “K-10 AND FARMER’S TURNPIKE PLAN,� TO DESIGNATE, AS OFFICE/RESEARCH LAND USE, THE ADDITIONAL INDUSTRIAL LAND, BY ADOPTING AND INCORPORATING HEREIN BY REFERENCE “K-10 AND FARMER’S TURNPIKE PLAN, APRIL 2016 EDITION,� AS PREPARED AND PUBLISHED BY THE LAWRENCE-DOUGLAS COUNTY METROPOLITAN PLANNING OFFICE OF THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, KANSAS. WHEREAS the City of Lawrence, Kansas, and Douglas County, Kansas, in order to promote the public health, safety, morals, comfort, and general welfare and to conserve and to protect property values in the City and the County, are authorized by K.S.A. 12-741, et seq., to prepare, adopt, amend, extend, and execute a comprehensive plan; WHEREAS the City of Lawrence, Kansas, Douglas County, Kansas, and the Lawrence-Douglas County Metropolitan Planning Commission, in order to coordinate development in accordance with the present and future needs of the City and the County, to conserve the natural resources of the City and the County, to ensure efficient expenditures of public funds in the City and the County, and to promote the health safety, convenience, prosperity, and the general welfare of the residents of the City and the County, have adopted Horizon 2020, the Comprehensive Plan for the City of Lawrence and Unincorporated Douglas County; WHEREAS, on March 21, 2016, after giving lawful notice by publication in the official City newspaper, the Lawrence-Douglas County Metropolitan Planning Commission conducted a public hearing regarding a pro-

classifieds.lawrence.com

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

legals@ljworld.com Lawrence

Lawrence

posed amendment of Horizon 2020, the Comprehensive Plan for the City of Lawrence and Unincorporated Douglas County, as set forth in Planning Staff Report, CPA-14-00005, that would amend “Chapter 7 - Industrial and Employment Related Land Use,� to include additional industrial land, and that would amend “Chapter 14 - Specific Plans,� to revise therein the “K-10 and Farmer’s Turnpike Plan� to designate, as Office/Research Land Use, the additional industrial land; WHEREAS, on March 21, 2016, the Lawrence-Douglas County Metropolitan Planning Commission adopted Resolution No. PCR-16-00019, recommending to the Governing Bodies of the City of Lawrence, Kansas, and Douglas County, Kansas, that they amend Horizon 2020, the Comprehensive Plan for the City of Lawrence and Unincorporated Douglas County, as set forth in Planning Staff Report, CPA-14-00005, which would amend “Chapter 7 - Industrial and Employment-Related Land Use,� to include additional industrial land, and “Chapter 14 - Specific Plans,� to revise therein the “K-10 and Farmer’s Turnpike Plan� to designate, as Office/Research Land Use, the additional industrial land; and WHEREAS, a certified copy of the amendment to Horizon 2020, the Comprehensive Plan for the City of Lawrence and Unincorporated Douglas County, as set forth in Planning Staff Report CPA-14-00005 and as adopted by the Lawrence-Douglas County Metropolitan Planning Commission in Resolution No. PCR-16-00019, together with a written summary of the public hearings held on March 21, 2016, as well as the Planning Commission’s recommendation, have been forwarded to the Governing Bodies of the City of Lawrence, Kansas, and Douglas County, Kansas. NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAINED BY THE GOVERNING BODY OF THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, KANSAS, AND BE IT RESOLVED BY THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS: SECTION 1. The above-stated recitals are adopted and incorporated herein by reference and shall be as effective as if set forth in full. SECTION 2. The Governing Bodies of the City of Lawrence, Kansas, and Douglas County, Kansas, hereby find that the provisions of K.S.A. 12-743 and K.S.A. 12-747, governing the amendment of comprehensive plans, have been fully met regarding the consideration, approval, and adoption of the “Horizon 2020, the Comprehensive Plan for the City of Lawrence and Unincorporated Douglas County, April 2016 Edition�, which would amend “Chapter 7 - Industrial and Employment Related Land Use,� to include additional industrial land, and “Chapter 14 - Specific Plans,� to revise therein the “K-10 and Farmer’s Turnpike Plan� to designate, as Office/Research Land Use, the additional industrial land. SECTION 3. The Governing Bodies of the City of Lawrence, Kansas, and Douglas County, Kansas, hereby approve the recommendation of the Lawrence-Douglas County Metropolitan Planning Commission as memorialized at Resolution No. PCR-16-00019, and hereby amend “Chapter 7 - Industrial and Employment-Related Land Use,� and “Chapter 14 - Specific Plans, K-10 and Farmer’s Turnpike Plan,� of Horizon 2020, the Comprehensive Plan for the City of Lawrence and Unincorporated Douglas County, by adopting “Horizon 2020, the Comprehensive Plan for the City of Lawrence and Unincorporated Douglas County, April 2016 Edition� and by incorporating, by reference, that document into Horizon 2020, the Comprehensive Plan for the City of Lawrence and Unincorporated Douglas County. SECTION 4: “Horizon 2020, the Comprehensive Plan for the City of Lawrence and Unincorporated Douglas County, April 2016 Edition� as approved by Section 3, supra, is hereby adopted and incorporated herein by reference as if set forth in full. One copy of said “Horizon 2020, the Comprehensive Plan for the City of Lawrence and Unincorporated Douglas County, April 2016 Edition� shall be marked or stamped as “Official Copy as Adopted by Joint Ordinance No. 9220 and Resolution No. 16-09� and shall be filed, together with a copy of this joint ordinance and resolution, with the City Clerk. The City Clerk shall make the “Official Copy as Adopted by Joint Ordinance No. 9220 and Resolution No.16-09� open to the public and available for inspection at all reasonable office hours. One additional copy of the “Official Copy as Adopted by Joint Ordinance No. 9220 and Resolution No. 16-09� shall, at the cost of the City of Lawrence, Kansas, be made available to the Lawrence-Douglas County Metropolitan Planning Office of the City of Lawrence, Kansas. SECTION 5: “Horizon 2020, the Comprehensive Plan for the City of Lawrence and Unincorporated Douglas County, April 2016 Edition,� adopted by this joint ordinance and resolution, replaces existing “Chapter 7 Industrial and Employment Related Land Use� and “Chapter 14 - Specific Plans, K-10 and Farmer’s Turnpike Plan� of Horizon 2020, the Comprehensive Plan for the City of Lawrence and Unincorporated Douglas County, and amendments thereto, it being the intent of the Governing Bodies of the City of Lawrence, Kansas, and Douglas County, Kansas, that “Horizon 2020, the Comprehensive Plan for the City of Lawrence and Unincorporated Douglas County, April 2016 Edition� repeal and supersede the same. SECTION 6: If any section, sentence, clause, or phrase of this joint ordinance and resolution is found to be unconstitutional or is otherwise held invalid by any court of competent jurisdiction, it shall not affect the validity of any remaining parts of this joint ordinance and resolution. SECTION 7: This joint ordinance and resolution shall take effect and be in force after its passage and publication as provided by law. PASSED by the Governing Body of the City of Lawrence, Kansas, this 19th day of April, 2016. APPROVED: /s/Mike Amyx Mike Amyx, Mayor ATTEST: /s/ Brandon McGuire Brandon McGuire, Acting City Clerk Approved as to form and legality /s/ Toni R. Wheeler Toni R. Wheeler, City Attorney ADOPTED by the Board of County Commissioners of Douglas County, Kansas, this 20th day of April, 2016. /s/Jim Flory Jim Flory, Chair /s/Mike Gaughan Mike Gaughan, Commissioner /s/Nancy Thellman Nancy Thellman, Commissioner ATTEST: /s/Jameson D. Shew Jameson D. Shew, County Clerk _______

classifieds@ljworld.com

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Lawrence

785.832.2222

One candidate for United State Senate One candidate for United States Representative, 2nd District One candidate for State Senate, 2nd, 3rd & 19th Districts One candidate for State Representative, 10th, 42nd, 44th, 45th, 46th, 54th, Districts One candidate for Member, State Board of Education, 4th District One candidate for District Attorney, 7th District One candidate for County Commissioner 2nd & 3rd Districts One candidate for County Clerk Supervisor / Team One candidate for County Treasurer leader Full time, Start ASAP, One candidate for County Register of Deeds Need dependable, hard- One candidate for County Sheriff working self starter. One candidate for Township Trustee Clinton Township Management supervisor One candidate for Township Treasurer Clinton or foreman experience Township necessary. Must have One candidate for Township Trustee Eudora Township valid drivers licence, One candidate for Township Treasurer Eudora pass drug screen and Township background check, One candidate for Township Trustee Grant Township good driving record and One candidate for Township Treasurer Grant Township must have good leader- One candidate for Township Trustee Kanwaka ship skills. Must be will- Township ing to work along side One candidate for Township Treasurer Kanwaka and with movers / pack- Township ers. This position is One candidate for Township Trustee Lecompton physical as will as Township leader. Nice salary, paid One candidate for Township Treasurer Lecompton vacation, Bring refer- Township ences, resume. Apply in One candidate for Township Trustee Marion Township person only Profes- One candidate for Township Treasurer Marion sional Moving and Stor- Township age 3620 Thomas Ct. One candidate for Township Trustee Palmyra Township One candidate for Township Treasurer Palmyra Lawrence, KS 66046 Township One candidate for Township Trustee Wakarusa Township Retail One candidate for Township Treasurer Wakarusa Township One candidate for Township Trustee Willow Springs Violin Sales & Shop Township Management Beautiful Music Violin One candidate for Township Treasurer Willow Springs Shop is seeking a moti- Township vated and organized person with knowledge and The following officers will be elected in each political experience in orchestral party that has qualified to participate in the Primary family instruments and Election: environments. Preferred One Precinct Committeeman in each Precinct candidates will be active One Precinct Committeewoman in each Precinct

RENTALS REAL ESTATE TO PLACE AN AD:

TO PLACE AN AD:

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Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background or Logo? Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!! Call 785-832-2222

W/D hookups, Fireplace, Major Appliances. Lawn Care & Dbl Car Garage! Equal Housing Opportunity

785-865-2505 grandmanagement.net FIRST MONTH FREE! 1 & 2 Bedroom Units Available Now! Cooperative townhomes start at $446-$490/month. Water, trash, sewer paid. Back patio, CA, hardwood floors, full basmnt., stove, refrigeratpr, w/d hookup, garbage disposal, reserved parking. On-site management & maintenance. 24 hr emergency maintenance. Membership & Equity fee Required. 785-842-2545 (Equal Housing Opportunity) pinetreetownhouses.com

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

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

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Lawrence Humane Society

ADOPT-A-PET is back!

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View Pets for Adoption in the Classified Section of Saturday’s Journal-World.

Your business can sponsor a pet to be seen in this ad for as little as $35 per week! Contact 785-832-2222 or classiďŹ eds@ljworld.com for details!


L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD

Sunday, April 24, 2016

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SPECIAL!

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&DPSHUV 2008 Rockwood Signature Ultra Lite Trailer Model RLT8272S

USED CAR GIANT

)RUG &DUV

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

classifieds@ljworld.com

2012 FORD F-150 XLT

2015 FORD FUSION SE

2015 Ford Focus SE Chevrolet 2007 Trailblazer LS 4wd, V6 power seat, alloy wheels, tow package, power windows, cruise control. Stk#376951

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

&KHYUROHW 7UXFNV

2014 Ford Fiesta SE

UCG PRICE

Stk#PL2156 Stk#PL2137

$11,889

$14,495

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

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

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Stock #116T610

$25,995

2015 FORD FUSION TITANIUM

UCG PRICE

Stock #PL2170

2015 FORD EDGE SPORT

UCG PRICE

Stock #PL2119

$15,995

$18,565

UCG PRICE

Stock #PL2153

$34,499

785.727.7116 Used minimum times; been garaged since purchase. Includes: hide-a-bed couch w/air mattress, awning, Alum wheels, AC, slide out dinette, LCD TV, microwave, equalizer sway control hitch, & many features.

$15,000.00

2013 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 LTZ

785-221-2738/785-221-2445 mkstravel@netzero.com

Stk#215T279

TRANSPORTATION &DGLOODF &DUV

2014 Ford Focus SE

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

2013 Ford Focus SE

Stk#PL2102

$12,495 $31,996

23rd & Alabama, Lawrence www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

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

Stk#PL2160

)RUG &DUV

)RUG 689V

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

Stk#215T1014

$21,989

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2015 Ford Flex Limited

'DWVXQ &DUV

Stk#PL2188

'RGJH &DUV Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

&KHYUROHW &DUV

2014 Ford Focus SE

$11,994

2014 Ford Focus SE Stk#PL2171

$13,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785.727.7116

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

$29,987 Stk#PL2131

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2013 Dodge Dart Sedan Limited GT

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

888-631-6458

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

JackEllenaHonda.com

Stk#PL1938

$17,787 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

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

Only $13,997

Stk#216L122A

Call Coop at

$19,458

JackEllenaHonda.com

'RGJH 7UXFNV

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

2015 Ford Edge Sport

Stk#PL2116

Stk#PL2153

$23,498

Call Coop at

2010 Ford F-150 Lariat Stk#1PL2034

Stk#116C567

Stk#115C910

$15,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

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

$34,499 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

$22,987 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

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

)RUG 689V

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2008 Ford Escape Limited 3.0L

2015 Ford Expedition Platinum

Stk#215T1109

$11,994

888-631-6458

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

2014 Ford Fusion SE

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

2005 Dodge Dakota SLT

Only $13,497

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

)RUG 7UXFNV

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

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

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

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

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

2012 Chevrolet Cruze LTZ

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

$30,995

2014 Ford E-250

2013 Ford Fusion Titanium

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

Only $9,998

$27,995

Stk#115T1127

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

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

888-631-6458

2012 Ford F-150 King Ranch

Stk#PL2174 Lower price!!! 4WD SUV, 106k miles. STK# F803A

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

2012 Ford Mustang GT Premium

2014 CHEVROLET CAMARO 1LT

2013 Ford Explorer XLT

2011 Ford Escape XLT

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

2006 Cadillac XLR

)RUG 7UXFNV

$11,995

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

1970 Datsun 1600 STL 311 4 Speed Red Convertible w/ black hard top & roll bar. New tires. 44,000 miles. Asking $ 6850.00 Call 913-631-8445

)RUG 689V

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

2015 Ford Fusion Titanium Stk#PL2155

$19,504 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Stk#PL2062

2015 Ford Fusion SE Stk#PL2170

$15,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

Ford 2007 Expedition EL Eddie Bauer, leather heated & cooled seats, sunroof, alloy wheels, running boards, power lift gate, DVD, navigation & more! Stk#48656A1

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

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

w/ 4WD

Only $8,997

$47,999 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Call Coop at

888-631-6458

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785.727.7116

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2012 Ford F-150 XLT Stk#116T610

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

JackEllenaHonda.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

)RUG &DUV

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

2007 Ford Edge SEL Plus

2015 Ford Fusion Titanium Stk#PL2119

2015 Ford Mustang GT Premium

2015 Ford Explorer XLT Stk#PL2165

2015 Ford Explorer Limited Stk#PL2187

2000 Ford Ranger XLT 2014 Ford F-150 FX4 Stk#215T1065

Stk#116C458

Stk#115T1093

Chevrolet 2008 Malibu

Stk#1PL2064

2LT, heated seats, remote start, alloy wheels, power equipment, and more— without the high price!!! Stk#167441

$10,999

$18,565

$31,499

$29,986

$30,995

$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!

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!

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

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

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

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

$27,995

Only $7,555 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

classifieds.lawrence.com

classifieds@ljworld.com


6E

|

Sunday, April 24, 2016

.

L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD

SPECIAL! 10 LINES & PHOTO

CARS TO PLACE AN AD: GMC SUVs

HUMMER Cars

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

785.832.2222 Kia Cars

Mazda Cars

classifieds@ljworld.com Nissan Cars

Subaru SUVs

Toyota Cars

2013 Honda Civic LX

2010 Toyota Corolla LE Kia 2012 Optima Ex

GMC 2008 Acadia One owner, FWD, heated steering wheel, leather heated & cooled seats, sunroof, premium ride with the premium price! Stk#38349A1

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

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

Honda Cars

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

Only $13,995

Toyota SUVs

Only $13,714 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Lincoln Cars

2012 Mazda Mazda3 i Grand Touring Stk#PL2149

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

Nissan 2008 Altima 3.5 SE, V6, fwd, sunroof, power seat, alloy wheels, power equipment, very nice & affordable. Stk#197031

Stk#215T1132A Stk#PL2151

Only $11,415

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

$18,995

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

Nissan Crossovers

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

Call Coop at

2010 Toyota 4Runner V6

2014 Subaru Forester 2.5i Premium PZEV

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

FWD

$24,987

Only $8,997 Call Coop at

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

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

JackEllenaHonda.com

Toyota Cars

Toyota SUVs

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

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

Motorcycle-ATV

JackEllenaHonda.com

Hyundai Cars

2015 Nissan Pathfinder SL

2014 Lincoln MKX

2013 Honda Pilot EX-L

Stk#PL2127

2014 Mazda Mazda3 i Sport

$28,999

$28,596

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

2002 Toyota Highlander

$29,999

Stk#115T1128

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

Stk#115T1025

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! Hyundai 2013 Elantra GLS One owner, heated seats, traction control, power equipment, cruise control, alloy wheels, great commuter car, financing available. Stk#191682

Only $13,877

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

Stk#PL2152

$14,999 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!

2012 Toyota Camry Hybrid XLE Stk#1PL1991

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785.727.7116

$13,995

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

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

2012 Lincoln MKT EcoBoost

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

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

Scion

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

2008 Honda CBR 600 Motorcycle Stk#116M448

$5,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785.727.7116

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785.727.7116

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

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

Stk#115T1100 Honda 2009 Accord LX, fwd, one owner, power equipment, great gas mileage and dependable. Stk#489001

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

NEW PRICE:

Only $9,736 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

2013 Hyundai Veloster

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

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

Only $14,497

$12,987

Stk#116M561

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

$15,739 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

2012 Hyundai Veloster w/Black

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

2004 Yamaha V-STAR

V6, power seat, alloy wheels, power equipment, cruise control, very affordable! Stk#19849

Stk#PL2143

$15,994

Toyota 2014 Corolla LE

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

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

Stk#415T787C

$1,595

Only $10,655

Only $13,977 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

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

DALE WILLEY

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

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

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

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

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

Call Coop at

2013 Lincoln MKZ Hybrid Stk#PL2128

$22,998

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

Mazda Cars

NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD:

785.832.2222

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

ANNOUNCEMENTS

LOST & FOUND

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

Special Notices

Lost Item

classifieds@ljworld.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Lincoln SUVs

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2013 Scion tC Base 2012 Mazda Mazda3 S

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Stk#316B259

2013 Honda Civic EX

Toyota 2006 Highlander

$28,995

2015 Mazda Mazda5 Sport Stk#PL2134

Parkwood Day School

2014 Honda Civic LX

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

$15,994 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Only $11,997 Call Coop at Certified Pre-Owned, 21K miles, 7 Year/100,000 mile warranty, 150-pt. Mechanical Inspection. STK# G096A

Only $13,990

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

Stk#116L517

Hyundai SUVs

$21,995

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

2015 Mazda CX-5 Touring Stk#PL2147

Stk#PL2148

$22,987

$17,640

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

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

2015 Lincoln Navigator Stk#PL2111

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

$54,995

Call Coop at

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

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

Only $10,995

JackEllenaHonda.com

Enroll today! 785-856-0409 or

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

$50 Reward Rick Prentiss 913-669-8476

rp95@hotmail.com Need an apartment? Place your ad at apartments.lawrence.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com

We miss you Sun-Ray, you will live in our hearts forever!

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING SPECIALS

2012 Hyundai Tucson Limited

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

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

Visit our website: www.parkwooddayschool.org

Model Helicopter / Drone Near 219st & Green Road. Could be around Jarbalo.

Mazda Crossovers

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

Honda Vans

888-631-6458

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

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

888-631-6458

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

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

parkwoodlawrence@gmail.com

JackEllenaHonda.com

Call Coop at

2007 Honda Odyssey EX-L

2010 Lincoln Navigator

Lawrence NOW OPEN! Early education program offering highquality services for children 6 weeks to 6 years, including children with special needs.

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

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

23rd & Alabama - 2829 Iowa

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

LairdNollerLawrence.com

OPEN HOUSES 20 LINES: 1 DAY $50 • 2 DAYS $75 + FREE PHOTO!

RENTALS & REAL ESTATE 10 LINES: 2 DAYS $50 • 7 DAYS $80 • 28 DAYS $280 + FREE PHOTO!

SERVICE DIRECTORY 6 LINES: 1 MONTH $118.95 • 6 MONTHS $91.95/MO • 12 MONTHS $64.95/MO + FREE LOGO!

GARAGE SALES UNLIMITED LINES: UP TO 3 DAYS, ONLY $24.95 + FREE GARAGE SALE KIT!

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

MERCHANDISE & PETS 10 LINES & PHOTO: 7 DAYS $19.95 • 28 DAYS $49.95 DOESN’T SELL IN 28 DAYS? + FREE RENEWAL!

ADVERTISE TODAY!

Call 785.832.2222 or email classifieds@ljworld.com


L awrence J ournal -W orld

Sunday, April 24, 2016

SPECIAL!

MERCHANDISE PETS PLACE YOUR AD:

785.832.2222

| 7E

10 LINES & PHOTO 7 DAYS $19.95 28 DAYS $49.95

classifieds@ljworld.com

Online Auction: Formerly d.b.a. International Electrical Inc.

 IF YOU ARE INTO RENOVATION WORK, DO NOT MISS THIS OPPORTUNITY!! 

ESTATE AUCTION: Saturday, April 30th, 2016 10:00 A.M. 723 Church, Eudora, KS (From Casey’s North 2 Blocks! Watch For Signs!!)

Preview dates: Saturday, April 23 from 12-4, Wednesday, April 27 from 9-6, Monday, May 2 from 9-4 (also by appointment) Monticello Auction Center 4795 Frisbie Rd. Shawnee KS 66226 Bidding Closes on May 2 at 6pm TRAILERS • 2013 Intech splice trailer, • 2012 Hogg & Davis 4 reel power trailer, • 2007 EZ extendable pole trailer, • 2000 Belshe flatbed trailer, • 1994 Wells cargo enclosed trailer, • 2008 TSE reel trailer

EQUIPMENT • Cat skidloader approx. 500 hrs, • Cat mini excavator, • Case 580K backhoe, • Cat 963 trackloader, CONTAINERS • (4) – 40’ storage containers Conex, • (1) 20’ storage container Conex

DON’T WAIT - REGISTER NOW!

VEHICLES • 2011 Dodge 1500 pickup, • 2006 Dodge 1500 mega cab 4X4 92K, • 2012 Dodge 4500, 4 door, 4X4, flatbed, 41K diesel Laramie EO, • 2009 Ford F0150, • (3) 2006 Ford F-150, • 1989 Ford cable truck w/boom, • (10) other trucks range from 2003 and older

More info will be posted on www.lindsayauctions.com

LINDSAY AUCTION & REALTY SVC INC

913.441.1557 | LINDSAYAUCTIONS.COM | LINDSAYAUCTIONS.HIBID.COM/AUCTIONS/CURRENT

Truck/Wood Working Equipment: 1996 F150 XLT Ford truck, 5 sp. manual, One Owner; Honda Harmony II HRS216 push mower; 2000 plus Red brick (patio/old street/All cleaned ready for use!); limestone rocks; Craftsman 10” Radial Arm-Saw w/metal cabinet on wheels; Craftsman 12” Wood Lathe & 12” Bandsaw/Sander; Craftsman 17 in. 15 sp. ¾ hp. Drill Press; Craftsman Belt-Sander/Planer/Auto-Scroller Saw; DeWalt DW788 hvy. duty 20” Scroll Saw w/stand(New Never Used); Craftsman High Speed Steel lathe tools; Router; router table & bits; Fein shop vac.; Master Heat Guns; Stanley #45 plane; wood planes; protractor saw guide; Milwaukee sander/grinder; wood chisels/files; Clamps: wood/corner/c/bar/etc.; saws/hammers/wrenches/100’s of power & hand tools of ALL KINDS!! Most All Name Brands & Well Maintained!; shop tables/benches; hardware/nails/screws/etc.!; Electric Concrete Mixer; concrete tamper; Werner 32 ft. alum. ladder & others; Vintage Lumber & Hardware!: 100’s board feet of Vintage/Reclaimed lumber all kinds & styles; pedestals; mantles; doors; tongue groove; lattice fancy work; sconces; spindles for porches; furniture spindles; rough cut; bannister railing; molding; dimensional; MOST ALL VINTAGE & KEPT INSIDE from Weather Elements!! 100’s of pieces of Vintage Hardware of ALL STYLES!! Hinges; door hangers, strike plates, barn hardware, colonial, door knobs, bathroom porcelain hardware, fancy door knobs, locks, bathroom & lighting hardware; window weights & hardware; drapery/curtain hardware; screen door handles/sashes; Collectibles/Household/Misc.: 1900’s Schill Round Oak Parlor Wood Stove(Beautiful Piece!!); wooden porch swing; wooden toilet boxes; COOP metal sign; schools bells; Kellogg wooden phones; cast-iron bell stand; Black Beauty Axle Grease bucket; lanterns; primitive cabinets; kitchen décor; wood stains/paints; numerous items too many to mention! Auction Note: This will be the First of at least 3 Auctions, this Auction is mainly Leonard’s love of wood working and how he was a wood working enthusiast and was a MASTER OF WOODWORKING RENOVATION! Concessions: Happy Trails Chuckwagon Auctioneers: Mark Elston & Jason Flory

Elston Auctions: (785-594-0505) (785-218-7851) “Serving Your Auction Needs Since 1994”

Please visit us online for pictures: www.KansasAuctions.net/elston

PUBLIC AUCTION: SATURDAY, APRIL 30th, @ 9:00 AM South of Lawrence, KS 15m to JCT Hwy 56 & 59. 5m S. to Stafford Rd. or Centropolis Exit. W. 1.5 m to Louisiana, 3/4m South. (4339 Louisiana Rd.) **************************************************************************** CATERPILLARS & TRACTORS: D8, power-shift, good cond; D8 cable dozer; D7, Series E; D7 overhead gantry; Cat 13’ hydro blade; 11’ dozer blade; Case 2470; Case 1030; Case 870 w/loader; AC 7030 w/duals; NOT RUNNING: Case W 26 wheel loader; IH model 2755 earth mover; MH 44; JD B; Case 770; Co-op E3 tractor: 2 AC A’s w/belly mowers. TRUCKS & VEHICLES-32 TOTAL: GMC Brigadier, tandem dump truck; 1968 Chevy C 60, roll back bed; 1955 Chevy 5700; Studebaker 1/12 T w/well drill; 1987 Dakota-runs; 2003 Ram 1500 –runs; 3 Corvairs; 1964 &66 Ford F100’s; 1949? Chevy 3600: mid 30’s Chevy not complete; late 40’s Pontiac; 30’s? Plymouth; 1968? Delta 88’s; many other cars & pickups; 16’ tandem axle trailer-very good. MACHINERY: Bush Hog 2615L, rotary mower-like new; Gehl 12’, Caldwell 16’, & 4’ rotary mowers; Case 575 swather; Hesston 5800 big baler; Krause 3 pt, 12 shank chisel; IH 3pt, 15 ½’ vibra shank; JD 15’, Kewanee 18’, & other wheel disks; AC 6 & 8 row planters; Shaffer 15 disk, one way; 3 pt tree shear; IH 2-14 & 3-16 plows on steel; sev pcs of horse drawn equip; JD 4 sec rotary hoe; 3 pt bale movers; AC 414 snap coupler plow; Case 3 & 4-14 3 pt plows; M&M 8 disk, disk plow. TOOLS & MISC: Warner and Swasey 1A, (huge) metal lathe: other lathes; Lincoln 225 welder; Delta 12’ planer; 25,000w, 4400w and other generators; lg el saw mill w/blade; Stihl MS 290 –new in box chain saw & 026 & 029 chain saws; air comp; belt sander; drill bits up to 2 ½”; floor drill press; 20T jack; many power & hand tools; bench vises; lg anvil w/hardies; Rotella oil; sev 5 gal pails 303 oil; galv roofing; 12v Fimco sprayer; power washer; 300 gal fuel tanks; 250 & 450 gal poly tanks; 500 gal propane tank; lots of 1 & 2” lumber; 80+ joints of 1” pipe- good; other pipe up to 2 ¾”; 1000 & 3000 steel bins; 14- 30’ metal tresses; 4”x 4” x11’ metal sq beams; maintainer blade; 3-1/2 Hp New elec motors; Freon; lg fanning mill; Jeep eng; lg cable winch; GUNS & AMMO: US M1, 30 cal; GM, Inland Man. Division, 1943, #916-674 w/bandolero; US Remington #03A3, 30-06; US Rem #03A3 custom stock; British 303, stamped US property #92C1769 w flash guard; British #303 custom stock; 303 & 38 special ammo; 4600 rds of .22 long rifle; 300 lg pistol primers; reloading equip. COLLECTIBLES: Cross cut saws; wind generator; McCormick hit & miss eng; harpoon hay fork; draw knives; monkey wrenches; wood & steel planes; tube radios; phonograph; wood brass bound brace; spoke shaves; #45 Stanley plane; bucksaw; hand crank grinder; scale wts; platform scales; model T frames, 1 w/eng & trans; counter scales; brass & glass door knobs; windmill tower, head & fan; post drill. CATTLE EQUIPMENT: Circle work pen w/head gate; squeeze chute; 50+ corral panels; cattle panels; steel posts. SALVAGE: 100+ Ton incl, copper, alum, 125 + el motors 1Hp & up; 30+ mags; starters, alternators; Cat in pcs; Vehicles, mach, combines, very heavy 4 wh drive frame; 3 RR cars; box van; trailer house; 1000 & 2000 gal steel tanks; many riding mowers; engs & trans; Skyhawk ll airplane body; JD #95 & 4400 combines; 2 ditch witches; many car & lg batteries; IH R190 truck; Wisconsin engs. 7+ wagons of tools & misc GUNS SELL @ 12PM FOLLOWED BY DOZERS TRACTORS & HEAVY EQUIP. 2 RINGS ALL DAY. ONE RING WILL START ON SALVAGE & ONE RING ON WAGONS. Not responsible for accidents, lost or stolen items. Lunch available. TERMS: CASH, GOOD CHECKS, & CREDIT CARDS DEPENDING ON SERVICE L.A. (Art) Witham Jr. Estate, Howard Witham Adm. 785-255-4567

EDGECOMB AUCTIONS: 785-594-3507 evenings or 785-766-6074 from 10AM- 3PM www.kansasauctions.net/edgecomb or www.edgecombauctions.com

Auction Calendar

RJ’s SPRING COIN & CURRENCYAUCTION: Friday, April 29th, 6:00 PM 15767 S Topeka Avenue, Scranton, Kansas This auction with over 450 lots will feature (40) gold coins; 1803 & 1808 Half-Cent; 1833, 1840 (Small Date), 1843 (Petite, Small Letters), 1853, 1854 & 1857 (Small & Large Date) Large Cents; 1871 Two-Cent Piece; 1857 & 1858 Flying Eagle Cents; several key Indian Head Cents including the 1877, 1980-S & 1909-S; Lincoln Cents include 1909-S VDB (Graded VF25 by ANACS), 1914-D, 1922-D,1924-D & 1931-S; 1915-D & 1935-D Buffalo Nickels; 1830 & 1832 Capped Bust Half-Dimes; 1921 & 1921-D Mercury Dimes; 1875 & 1875-S Twenty-Cent Pieces; 1805 Draped Bust Half-Dollar; 1826 & 1832 Capped Bust Half-Dollars; 1847-O & 1860-O Seated Liberty Half-Dollars; 1897-O, 1897-S & 1905 Barber Half-Dollars; 1916, 1916-S, 1919, 1919-D,1919-S, 1920-S, 1921-S, & 1938-D Walking Liberty Halves; 1875-CC Trade Dollar; 1878-S, 1881-S & 1899 Morgan Dollars, and 1921 Peace Dollar along with rolls of 1922 & 1923 BU Peace Dollars. Carson City Silver Dollars include 1878, 1880, 1884, 1890 & 1891. Also included are tubes of 2014 & 2016 ASE Dollars; tube of 1-oz Buffalo silver rounds; uncirculated & proof ASE Dollars; mint & proof sets; rolls of Indian Head Cents; 1864 $5 & $10 Confederate Bank Notes; Civil War & Hard Times Tokens; Large Cents; silver rounds; several commemoratives; Series 1934A $500 Bill; 8-oz silver rounds; 60-oz silver round; Thomas Jefferson Coinage & Currency Set, and 2008 3-Coin Bald Eagle Set. We will also be selling a complete set of Indian Head Cents in individual lots. Auctioneer’s Note: Remember this is only a partial list. To bid on-line you must register first with Proxibid. You may either go to www.proxibid.com or use the link that can be found on our home page at www.rjsauctionservice.com If you have any questions please call 785-793-2500. RJ’s Auction Service is located 11 miles south of Topeka at the junction of Hwy 75 & 56. A buyer’s premium will be charged depending on the purchase price of each item you purchase and whether you are an in-house or an Internet bidder. Doors will open at 4:30 PM for pre-view.

AUCTIONS

Auction Calendar

ONLINE AUCTION Formerly d.b.a. International Electrical Inc. Preview dates: Sat., April 23, 12-4pm, Wed. April 27, 9-6, & Mon. May 2, 9-4pm (also by appointment) Monticello Auction Center 4795 Frisbie Rd. Shawnee KS 66226 Bidding closes May 2 at 6pm SEE WEBSITE FOR DETAILS www.lindsayauctions.com LINDSAY AUCTION & REALTY SERVICE INC. 913.441.1557 ESTATE AUCTION: Sat., May 7th, 9:30 A.M. 5001 S.E. Dupont Rd. Berryton, KS ATV, Zero Turn Mower, Trailers, Wood Working Equip.& Tools, Collectibles, Household, Misc. Seller: Mrs. Dallas (Linda) Burton Condition & Quality Is Outstanding On Everything! Auctioneers: Mark Elston & Jason Flory (785-594-0505)(785-218-7851) (785-979-2183) Online for pictures:

Call 785-832-2222 or email classifieds@ljworld.com

Auction Calendar

PUBLIC AUCTION SAT., APRIL 30th, @ 9 AM 4339 Louisiana Rd. BALDWIN, KS

ESTATE AUCTION SAT., APRIL 30, 10AM 723 Church St. Eudora, KS

« MOVING AUCTION « SAT., APRIL 30, 10 AM OVERBROOK FAIRGROUNDS OVERBROOK, KS (East Edge of Town)

CATERPILLARS & TRACTORS, TRUCKS & VEHICLES (32 TOTAL!), MACHINERY, TOOLS & MISC, GUNS & AMMO, COLLECTIBLES, CATTLE EQUIP., SALVAGE

Truck, wood working equip., vintage lumber & hardware, collectibles, household, misc. Leonard Hollmann Estate Auctioneers: Mark Elston & Jason Flory Elston Auctions 785-594-0505|785-218-7851

Kenmore washer & dryer, Chest Freezer, 74 Ford F-350 w/flatbed hoist, 92 Ford F-150 Pickup, 93 Polaris 350, 85 Yamaha 200, lots of nice antique & collectibles. MUCH MORE! Listing & Pics online at: www.wischroppauctions.com WISHCROPP AUCTIONS 785-828-4212 RJ’s SPRING COIN & CURRENCYAUCTION: Friday, April 29th, 6:00 PM 15767 S Topeka Avenue, Scranton, Kansas Over 450 lots—View web for list, details & pictures. Auctioneer’s Note: Bid online at www.proxibid.com or go to our homepage for link: www.rjsauctionservice.com 785-793-2500 for more info. Doors will open at 4:30 PM for pre-view.

EDGECOMB AUCTIONS: 785-594-3507| 785-766-6074 www.kansasauctions.net/edgecomb www.edgecombauctions.com

www.kansasauctions.net/elston

Furniture

MERCHANDISE

6 ft ladder like NEW ~ was $75 ~ asking $ 30 785-550-4142

STRICKER’S AUCTION MONDAY, MAY 2, 6 PM 801 NORTH CENTER GARDNER, KANSAS   

1965 Plymouth Fury 2 DR Hard Top, 2000 Honda Accord 2 Dr, ARGO 8X8 RESPONSE VEHICLE W/ SNOW PLOW, 2002 TIMBER WOLF 12 FT ENCLOSED TRAILER, DECK BOAT W/ 85HP JOHNSON, 16 FT ALUMINUM FISHING BOAT W/ 25 HP JOHNSON, 1995 HONDA 300 F OURTREX, KAWASAKI 220 FOUR WHEELER, RHINO 7FT FINISH MOWER, RHINO 6 FT MOWER, JD HAY WAGON, BOX BLADE, SIGNS, KC ROYALS PORTABLE CONCESSIONS, APROX 400 PC OF GOOD FURNITURE, LIVING ROOM, DINING ROOM, AND BED ROOM FURNITURE, 75 ANTIQUE ALLADIN LAMPS, LOTS OF CROCKS, LOTS OF TOOLS, LINCOLN 175 PLUS WIRE WELDER, NEW ARIENS 28 INCH SNOW BLOWER, 4 GENERATORS, AIR COMPRESSORS, LOTS OF CEILING T BAR, LOTS OF WHITE PLASTIC FENCE.

Antiques

Picnic Table & 4 Chairs

Very beautiful Picnic table & 4 chairs, in great condition. Was $325 ~ Asking $100 ( downsizing ) Must see!!!! Very comfortable! $100 (785)-550-4142 Upstairs at 928 Antiques & Collectibles 30% OFF Items Throughout the Store. Kitchen items, Farm Tools, Vintage Toys, Sewing & Quilting Accessories, Christmas Decorations, etc. The Etc. Shop 36th Anniversary Sale April 29 - May 1st Assorted Prices 30% OFF 928 Massachusetts 785-843-0611

Baby & Children Items Child Booster chairs 7”x14” custom decorated $20. 785-424-5628

Auctions

Health & Beauty READ IT BEFORE YOU NEED IT!

Marsha Henry Goff’s New book Everything I know about Medicine, I Learned on the Wrong Side of the Stethoscope is a practical, informative, entertaining guide to health care. At The Raven Bookstore & Amazon.com.

Machinery-Tools RAYMER SOCIETY

ART AUCTION Saturday, April 30th  1:30pm  Raymers, Sandzens, Prairie Printmakers, & other area artists.

FOR MORE INFO & PICTURES SEE WEB: STRICKERSAUCTION.COM JERRY (913) 707-1046 RON (913) 963-3800

 AUCTION  As we are moving out of town, auction as follows:

224 S. Main

SATURDAY, APRIL 30 10:00 AM

785-227-2217

OVERBROOK FAIRGROUNDS

www.lesterraymer.org

(East Edge of Town)

Lindsborg, KS

classifieds@ljworld.com

www.KansasAuctions.net/elston

Need to sell your car?

Auctions

Western Art & Works by Kansas Artists SATURDAY, April 30 at 11AM Held inside DSA Gallery. 30 mi. east of Kansas City in Lone Jack, MO. Paintings by R. Eastwood and others, Prints by Benton, Sandzen, Klossand others. Native American Prints and Books from the mid 19th Century include Bodmer, Catlin, etc. Navajo Weavings, Jewelry, and More. SUNDAY, May 1 includes more Paintings, 17th C. Furnirure, Ecclesiastical Items, Wave Crest Glass and More. www.DirkSoulisAuctions.com

OVERBROOK, KS

Kenmore High Eff. washer & dryer, Kenmore 18.1 Cu.Ft. Chest Freezer, 74 Ford F-350 w/flatbed hoist, 92 Ford F-150 Pickup, 93 Polaris 350 (as-is), 85 Yamaha 200, Baby’s Tall Rocking cradle, Several Marlow wood cuts, Round & Square oak tables, Oak side chairs, Ethan Allen maple dining table, Apt. Siz Hoosier cabinet, 4 pc. Bedroom Suite set (1970’s), Horse Clock (1950’s), Jerry Mahoney ventriloquist doll, several old quilts & MUCH MORE!

Large Auction w/ 2 Rings. Great variety to sell, something for everyone! Jim & Shirley Arnold, Sellers Listing & Pics online at: www.wischroppauctions.com WISHCROPP AUCTIONS 785-828-4212

Estate Sales ESTATE SALE 1642 Mississippi St Sat. April 30th 9am-5pm

Bonner Springs HUGE SALE!!! 15281 Prairie View Rd Bonner Springs, KS Just West of Bonner Springs off of Highway 32 Fri., Apr. 22 & Sat., Apr. 23 8 am - 6 pm Sunday, April 24 8am - 3 pm Nice CLEAN stuff at GREAT prices. ANTIQUE tools, TOYS, Kitchen, SPORTS memorabilia. HOUSEwares, CLOCKS, lamps, books, PICTURES and CHRISTMAS stuff. NECKLACES, EARRINGS, BRACELETS, WATCHES, collectibles, VINTAGE items. Too much to fit into the garage. New stuff added DAILY. Bundle and save FOLLOW THE BIG more! SIGNS WITH FLAGS !!!

PETS Pets

Stock Trailer

Wooden Dollhouse Your little princess will love this 4 ft. tall wooden dollhouse with an abundance of furniture, stairs, & elevator. $60.00( 913)417-7007

Bicycles-Mopeds Adult 26” bike- Girls speed, tan color...$39 Call 785-424-5628

GARAGE SALES

Selling cheap!

Compartments 9 foot each with 7 foot overhang. Good tires. Call for more info: 785-746-5268 or 785-214-1544

Miscellaneous

LAB MIX PUPPIES 2 Males & 2 Females

Cargo Cover Mitsubishi Outlander Sport 20112015Genuine! Never used! $70 Cash Only, 785-843-7205

8 weeks old, born 2/21/16. Have had shots & dewormed. Need Families! $50 each 785-542-1043

12

Child’s size bike- $30 Red and White Call 785-424-5628 Girls bike- 26” $ 39 Call 785-424-5628

Clothing For Sale- Vintage Clothes 1 Child’s Dress- $10 1 Woman’s Dress- $10 8 sundresses @ $ 5.00 each 5 Aprons @ $ 3.00 ea. 1 Halloween Apron- $10 Man’s Shirt- $5 High top shoes- $10 Handkerchief- $2 Linwood Area- 816-377-8928

Furniture Beautiful Coffee Table 41X23, lightwood, glass top frosted with running horses. Lower shelf under. Good condition. Paid over $200 new, asking $50. 785-691-6667

Music-Stereo

Care-ServicesSupplies

PIANOS

Welded Wire Dog Kennel

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

785-832-9906

Sports-Fitness Equipment

FREE 2 Week

For Sale: 2 pea coats 1 long black size large and 1 off white short with hood size medium. Both dry cleaned and in excellent condition. Please call 785-393-0738. $20.00 for both

AUCTION CALENDAR LISTING when you place your Auction or Estate Sale ad with us! Call our Classified Advertising Department for details! 785.832.2222

For Sale: Large Pro Yaktrax & medium Pro Yaktrax. Both new and in the box. Please call 785-393-0738. $15.00 for both

4’X8’X6’ w/tarp. In excellent condition. $150.00. Petmate Igloo doghouse, $50.00. iCrate 17”X23”. $35.00

(913)417-7007

Farm Products

Sumagreen Solution: A microbial solution to enhance soil health which increases plant health & production. $15 per 12 oz. for 1000 sq.ft. Call or text for more info: 785-760-0747

or Visit us on the web: www.sumagreen.com

STRICKER’S AUCTION MONDAY, MAY 2, 6 PM 801 NORTH CENTER GARDNER, KANSAS 1965 Plymouth Fury, 2000 Honda Accord , RESPONSE VEHICLE W/ SNOW PLOW, TIMBER WOLF TRAILER, 4WHEELER, MOWERS, JD HAY WAGON, FURNITURE, HOUSEHOLD, & MORE! PICTURES ON WEB: STRICKERSAUCTION.COM Western Art & Works by Kansas Artists SATURDAY, April 30 at 11AM Held inside DSA Gallery. 30 mi. east of Kansas City in Lone Jack, MO. www.DirkSoulisAuctions.com

LAWR ENC E JOUR NAL-WOR LD

CLASSIFIED A DV E RT I S I N G

Ariele Erwine Call Ariele today to advertise your auction! 785-832-7168

aerwine@ljworld.com


8E

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Sunday, April 24, 2016

.

L awrence J ournal -W orld

SERVICES TO PLACE AN AD: Antique/Estate Liquidation

Concrete

785.832.2222 Decks & Fences

Guttering Services

SPECIAL! 6 LINES

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

classifieds@ljworld.com Home Improvements

Lawn, Garden & Nursery

Lawn, Garden & Nursery

Painting Interior/Exterior Painting

Craig Construction Co Family Owned & Operated 20 Yrs

Driveways - stamped • Patios • Sidewalks • Parking Lots • Building Footings & Floors • All Concrete Repairs Free Estimates Downsizing - Moving? We’ve got a Custom Solution for You! Estate Tag Sales and Cleanup Services Armstrong Family Estate Services, LLC 785-383-0820 www.kansasestatesales.com

Seamless aluminum guttering.

Driveways, Parking lots, Pavement Repair, Sidewalks, Garage Floors, Remove& Replacement Specialists Call 785-843-2700 or text 785-393-9924 Sr. & Veteran Discounts

785-842-0094 jayhawkguttering.com

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

Dirt-Manure-Mulch

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

M A Cleaning Y

DECK BUILDER 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 STARTING or BUILDING a Business?

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

785-832-2222 classifieds@ljworld.com

Advertising that works for you!

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

913-962-0798 Fast Service

Foundation Repair FOUNDATION REPAIR 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

Mowing...like Clockwork! 7 or 14 Day Scheduling Honest & Dependable Mow~Trim~Sweep Steve 785-393-9152 Lawrence Only Lee’s Lawn Mowing ($25.00 and up) Courteous! Professional! Reliable! Lawrence & Surrounding Communities: 785-207-1225

Many colors to choose from. Install, repair, screen, clean-out. Locally owned. Insured. Free estimates.

Mike - 785-766-6760 mdcraig@sbcglobal.net

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

Carpentry

JAYHAWK GUTTERING

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

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

785-312-1917

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

913-488-7320

HOME BUILDERS Repair & Remodel. When you want it done right the first time. Home repairs, deck repairs, painting & more. 785-766-9883 Retired Carpenter, Deck Repairs, Home Repairs, Interior Wall Repair & House Painting, Doors, Wood Rot, Power wash and Tree Services. 785-766-5285

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

Call Lyndsey 913-422-7002

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

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

Home Improvements Higgins Handyman

Quality Work Over 30 yrs. exp.

Painting

Mike McCain’s Handyman Service

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

Tile Installation

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

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

Call 785-248-6410

Top Tier Tile, LLC Custom tile design installation services incl. showers, floors & backsplashes. (785)917-0996 topttile@gmail.com

Tree/Stump Removal

Lawn, Garden & Nursery

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

Needing to place an ad? 785-832-2222

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

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

Wednesday, May 11, 12:30 - 2:30

East Lawrence Rec. Center • 1245 East 15th Street • Lawrence Wednesday Meet, mingle & connect with local employers! May 11, 2016

M A Y

12:30 - 2:30 PM

For more information or to reserve a booth for your East business, Lawrence Rec. Center contact Peter at: psteimle@ljworld.com. 1245 East 15th Street P R E S E N T E D B Y J O B S . L AW R E N C E . C O M

FE AT U R I N G

J OB OPENING S Cleaning/ Maintenance: Custodians, Maintenance Grounds – Arborist, Housekeeper

Education: Head Elementary Principal, Coaches, Certified Teachers, Learning Coaches, Paraeducators

Customer Service: Customer Service Representatives

Food: Cook, Food Service Workers, Dining Room Manager

Driver: Bus Drivers

Healthcare: Medical Customer Service, Medical Staff Associate, CNAs, RNs, LPNs, Paramedic, School Nurse, Home Health Aides

Helping People: Social Worker, CAREGivers Installation/Service: Plumber Apprentice Office: Clerical Sales: Account Executive


April 24, 2016

MARKETPLACE

Hours

Contact Info

Coupons

Maps

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







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