Lawrence Journal-World 07-17-2015

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FRIDAY • JULY 17 • 2015

New call center to add 333 jobs

FACES FINDS &

at the sidewalk sale

Brianne Martin, of Lawrence, with succulent plant, $5.

u Journal-World photos by Nick Krug u

Dylan Guthrie, Lawrence, and Megan Trinder, of Kansas City, Mo., with yo-yos, free.

Hires will more than offset recent losses By Sara Shepherd Twitter: @saramarieshep

Donika Wiley, of Lawrence, with sons Strayhorn, 5, left, and Maceo, 2, and sheet set, $50.

Jason Barr, of Lawrence, with Teva sandals and shirt, $45.

Martha Velasquez, of Lawrence, with a knit head scarf, sunglasses and a pair of shoes, $20.

Emily Johnson, Alyssa Waller, Gary Schmidt, Vera Petrovic and Raegan Anchors, all of Lawrence — and selfie stick, $15.

Aron Muci, of Lawrence, wearing new shoes, $68.

Zach and Lauren Adams, of Lawrence, with 6-month-old son, Franklin. Rattle and skirt, $15.

A national call center will open a facility in Lawrence’s I70 Business Center, creating 333 new jobs, the company announced Thursday. USA800’s new “Contact Center” We are will occupy 20,000 square excited feet, and the company will to make invest more Lawrence than $3.5 mil- our new lion, accord- home.” ing to a news release from the Lawrence — Tom Davis, chamber of USA800 CEO commerce. USA800 will move into space formerly used by the Rezolve Group, said Brady Pollington, economic development project manager for the Chamber. He said USA800’s capital investment would include improvements to the facility and its equipment. USA800 expects to begin advertising jobs and to start operations soon, hopefully in

Please see JOBS, page 2A

CONSTRUCTION

Stephanie Harris, of Lawrence, with candles, $6.

Jennifer Akers, left, of Eudora, with daughters Charlotte, 5, and Gillian, 3, and friend Lisa Sommer, of Madison, Neb. Two pairs of running shoes and two bags of cotton candy, $106.

Carla Hustead, left, of Edina, Mo., with friend Samantha Shelley, of Laplata, Mo., with two silver-plated bracelets, $20.

City on pace to smash building record By Chad Lawhorn Twitter: @clawhorn_ljw

Bret and Erin Brown, of Gardner, with baby onesies, $12.

Tayler Dietz and Anna-Marie Ortiz, both of Lawrence, with three books, an infinity scarf and a makeup bag, $12.

Jack and Rebecca Low, of Lawrence, and 21-monthold daughter, Eisley, with kid shirt, kitchen combo set and rules of basketball print, $27.

Despite the heat, Sidewalk Sale a big success. 3A

A building boom is underway in Lawrence, according to the latest figures from City Hall. A new report from City Hall shows that through June the city has issued building permits for $155.9 million worth of construction projects in Lawrence, which puts the city on pace to shatter its all-time construction mark of $175 million worth of projects in 2000. To put the 2015 Please see BUILDING, page 2A

INSIDE

Partly sunny Business Classified Comics Deaths

High: 95

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Today’s forecast, page 8A

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Lights & Sirens A Douglas County resident got a big surprise Wednesday when a large snake was found inside a Jacuzzi. Page 3A

Vol.157/No.198 36 pages


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Friday, July 17, 2015

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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.

ClariCe Darlene Broz From Lawrence, Kansas, passed away on July 16, 2015 at 2:30 pm at St. Luke’s Hospital in Kansas City, Missouri.

DaviD irelanD Carter Died Thursday, July 16, Celebration of Life Gathering, 3-5 pm Sunday, July 19 at 149 Pine Cone Dr. Cremation www.barnettfamilyfh.com

Charles leroy (ChuCk) Dixon Services for Chuck Dixon, 67, Lawrence, husband of M. Murphy Dixon, will be at a later date. He died Wednesday July 15, 2015,at his home. rumsey-yost.com

Dorothy Jane Korb Dorothy Jane Korb, 90, Tonganoxie, KS, passed away Wednesday, July 15, 2015 at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, Lawrence, KS. Funeral service will be 10 am Monday, July 20, 2015 at Sacred Heart Catholic Church, Tonganoxie. The family will receive friends 6-8 pm Sunday at Quisenberry Funeral Home, with a rosary being said at 7pm. Burial will be in Mt. Calvary Cemetery, Leavenworth, KS. Dorothy was born December 16, 1924 in Basehor, KS, the daughter of Jessie and Bernice (Tebbe) Warren. She was a member of the Sacred Heart Catholic Church, and the Sacred Heart Altar Society, 4-H leader for Friendship Valley and Reno Bobwhites, a founding charter member of The Friendship Valley Club, Tonganoxie Senior Citizens, and was a founding member of The Good Shepherd Thrift Shop. She was united in marriage August 26, 1943 in Tonganoxie, KS, to Clarence P. Korb, Sr. He

preceded her in death June 18, 1992. She proudly resided on the farm that was in the family for 102 years. She was also preceded in death by her sister, Ruth Noah, and brother, Lewis Warren. Survivors include; five sons, Clarence (Jane) Paul, Jr, Oskaloosa, KS, John (Cindy), Kitale, Kenya, Allen (Debbie), Tonganoxie, Richard (Kelly), Kearney, MO, Philip (Dolores), Valley Falls, KS; three daughters, Marie ( C l a r e n c e ) S h o c k l e y, Excelsior Springs, MO, Margaret (Russ) Ryan, Goodridge, MN, Nancy (John) Duncanson, Tonganoxie; one brother, George (Virginia) Warren, Tonganoxie; 20 grandchildren; 19 g re a t - g ra n d c h i l d re n ; and 4 great-great grandchildren, and many nieces, nephews, and cousins In lieu of flowers the family suggests memorials to The Good Shepherd Thrift Shop C/O Quisenberry Funeral Home. Please sign this guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.

Dorothy Mae McGreGor Services are pending for Dorothy M. McGregor, 96, Lawrence and will be announced by Warren-McElwain Mortuary. She died Thurs., July 16th

Shirley C. Wedd

LAWRENCE • STATE

BRIEFLY Ottawa man charged with child exploitation

with premeditated first-degree murder in the deaths of 20-year-old Andrew Stout and 31-year-old Steven White. A 35-year-old Ottawa man was Defense attorneys on Thursday gave charged with commercial sexual exploita- several reasons for seeking the postponetion of a child Thursday in Douglas County ment, including the resignation of Ron EvDistrict Court. ans as head of the death penalty defense The man was booked into the Douglas unit, a state-funded group that represents County Jail on suspicion of the charge just indigent defendants in capital cases. before noon Wednesday, according to the Timothy Frieden is now Flack’s lead jail’s booking logs. Douglas County sherdefense attorney. iff’s deputies arrested him from the Platte County, Mo., jail, the logs said. Confirmed mountain lion According to court documents, the man is accused of offering or giving “any- sightings increase in Kansas thing of value to procure, recruit, induce, Kansas City, Mo. — Reports of solicit or hire” a 17-year-old to engage in a confirmed mountain lion sightings have sexual act. increased over the past decade in Kansas The incident allegedly occurred in and Missouri, but experts say there are August 2014. Court documents did not no signs the animals are reproducing in indicate the town where the crime is either state. alleged to have occurred. The victim has Mountain lions — also known as pusince turned 18 years old. mas, panthers, catamounts and cougars Douglas County Judge Pro Tem James — were nearly wiped out in the U.S. in the George set the man’s bond at $45,000. early 1900s as hunting and a shortage of If he posts bail, he is forbidden from conprey drastically reduced their numbers. tacting the victim, witnesses or anyone But a century later, they are starting to reunder the age of 18. colonize in the Midwest, researchers said. He is scheduled to appear in court Almost all of the mountain lions conon Tuesday. He remains in the Douglas firmed in Kansas and Missouri since 1994 County Jail. were males coming from established populations in the Black Hills, Badlands Portion of East 11th and northwestern Nebraska, The Kansas City Star reported. Street to close today Female mountain lions are typically Because of a car accident early Thursreluctant to wander far from their mothday, Westar Energy has requested that ers, said Clay Nielsen, director of scienEast 11th Street be closed from Contific research for the Cougar Network, a necticut to Rhode Island streets today. nonprofit research group. Males aren’t so The closure will be effective from 9 a.m. inhibited. to 4 p.m., the city said in a news release There are no confirmed cases of Thursday. mountain lion attacks on livestock, pets or Jana Dawson, a Westar spokeswoman, people in Kansas or Missouri. said that on Thursday morning a car crashed into an electrical pole at the interWellsville students honored section of 11th and Rhode Island streets, in business competition damaging the pole. Westar employees were able to stabilize the pole on ThursWellsville — Three Wellsville High day, but plan to replace the pole today. School students placed well in competi“It takes several trucks, plus there are tive events during the Future Business a lot of electrical lines,” Dawson said, Leaders of America National Leadership “so from a public safety standpoint, it’s Conference. important to close the road.” The conference, which took place June Motorists and pedestrians in the area 27 through July 2 in Chicago, included are encouraged to use an alternate route 8,500 high school students from across during the closure. the United States. The conference included interviews, written projects and Flack murder trial presentations, as well as more than 55 business- and career-related competitive now postponed until 2016 events. Ottawa — The capital murder trial has The team of Ashtyn Rottinghaus, Hailey been postponed for a 30-year-old Kansas Watson and Tori Broers won first place man accused of killing four people. in the Kansas Partnership with Business The Topeka Capital-Journal reports event. The Wellsville FBLA chapter’s Local that Franklin County District Judge Eric Chapter Annual Business Report won first Godderz on Thursday granted a defense place, which included a $1,000 award for request postponing Kyle Trevor Flack’s the chapter. The Wellsville FBLA’s project murder trial from September 2015 to Feb. placed second at the Awards of Excellence 22, 2016. ceremony, which included a $100 award. Flack is charged with capital murder Rottinghaus also was elected this year’s in the 2013 slayings of 21-year-old Kaylie National FBLA Treasurer at the conferSmith Bailey, and her daughter, 18-month- ence. Rottinghaus is the first national old Lana-Leigh Bailey. He’s also charged FBLA officer from Wellsville.

Building CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

includes 42 new duplexes and three single-family homes in the development that is just north and west of Peterson Road and Kasold Drive. Both those projects are among the 10 largest that have gotten started thus far in 2015. Here’s a look at the top 10 list: l HERE @ Kansas apartment and retail building across the street from Memorial Stadium: $45 million. l Multistory apartment and office building at northeast corner of Ninth and New Hampshire: $18.7 million. l Wakarusa River sewage treatment plant buildings: $13.3 million. l Expansion of Pioneer Ridge retirement community near Harvard and Wakarusa: $12 million. l Pump station for Wakarusa sewage treatment plant: $7.5 million. l Hutton Farms expansion: $6.2 million. l Single-family home at 116 N. Wilderness Way:

numbers in further perArrangements for Shirley C. Wedd, 94 Lawrence spective, there have been will be announced by Rumsey-Yost Funeral Home. She only four years where $155 died Wednesday at Brandon Woods. rumsey-yost.com million in projects were constructed for the entire year, let alone in six months. Those big years and CEO Larry McElwere in 2013, 2006, 2000 wain said. “USA800 ofand 1996. fers a wide variety of emIn terms of the projects ployment opportunities CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A that are boosting this through a range of differyear’s totals, there were ent schedules, which is an two large developments the next couple of weeks, excellent acquisition for in June. The city issued Pollington said. the Lawrence economy.” a permit for $7.5 million The number of jobs USA800, which deworth of construction added by USA800 will scribes itself as the largwork on a new sewage cover those lost by two ex- est employee-owned call pump station for the city’s iting call centers, and then center in the nation, said new sewage treatment some, Pollington said. existing customer growth plant being constructed Lawrence is losing and several large new south of the Wakarusa roughly 200 call center contracts starting this fall River. The second-largest jobs with the recent clos- prompted the expansion, project of the month was ing of the Rezolve Group according to the Chamber. $6.2 million worth of call center at the I70 “We are excited to work that began on the Business Center and the make Lawrence our new expansion of the Hutupcoming closing of the home and have been imton Farms residential Results Companies call pressed by the state-ofcomplex in northwest center in the Riverfront the-art facilities offered at Lawrence. That project Plaza, expected in early the I70 Business Center, as August, Pollington said. well as the highly skilled The USA800 announce- and qualified workforce,” “ ment is a large deal for USA800 president and Lawrence, Pollington said. CEO Tom Davis said. ” “That’s a big number,” USA800 employs more . he said. “It’s a lot of jobs than 1,000 at its contact for any community, espe- center facilities in Kan“ ” cially when you consider sas City, Mo., and St. Jothat Lawrence is compet- esph, Mo., according to ing with Topeka, even the company’s website. Wichita and the Kansas USA800’s various servic“AN INTENSELY INTIMATE EXPERIENCE.” City metropolitan area.” es include sales, customer The Kansas City Area care and “multi-channel” “A STARTLING, HEARTBREAKING Development Council support such as web chats GLIMPSE OF AMY WINEHOUSE.” partnered with the Cham- and email, for industries ber and other regional including catalog, governorganizations to attract ment, health care, insurUSA800 to this area, ac- ance, online retail and cording to the Chamber. utilities. “We have experienced call center workers available for hire, and we’re — Reporter Sara Shepherd can be pleased with the additionFri, Sat, Mon-Thu: 1:30, al jobs for our local work- reached at sshepherd@ljworld.com or EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT LAWRENCE 4:20, 6:50 & 9:30 PM Liberty Hall 832-7187. force,” Chamber president Sun: 1:20, 4:00, 6:40 & 9:45 PM

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$2.7 million. l Renovation of the Phi Delta fraternity house near the KU campus: $2.6 million. l An addition onto the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity house near the KU campus: $2 million. l Addition to the Kansas River sewage treatment plant: $1.9 million. The latest report also showed a sign of increased activity in the city’s single-family home market, which has struggled to recover from the downturn earlier this decade. The city issued permits for 80 singlefamily permits during the first six months of the year. That is up from 45 permits during the same period a year ago. — Managing Editor Chad Lawhorn can be reached at 832-6362 or at clawhorn@ljworld.com.

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LOTTERY WEDNESDAY’S POWERBALL 11 39 46 52 54 (3) TUESDAY’S MEGA MILLIONS 19 24 30 35 72 (5) WEDNESDAY’S HOT LOTTO SIZZLER 13 33 36 38 41 (7) WEDNESDAY’S SUPER KANSAS CASH 5 10 16 21 26 (25) THURSDAY’S KANSAS 2BY2 Red: 8 17; White: 9 12 THURSDAY’S KANSAS PICK 3 0 0 7

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Lawrence&State

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/local l Friday, July 17, 2015 l 3A

‘The biggest sales day of the year’

Rumors of foster care changes worry judge ———

State denies plans to ban unmarried couples from taking in children By Peter Hancock Richard Gwin/Journal-World Photos

SHOPPERS PERUSE THE RACKS OUTSIDE OF SUNFLOWER OUTDOOR & BIKE SHOP, 804 Massachusetts St., Thursday morning during the Downtown Lawrence Sidewalk Sale. BELOW: Shoppers line up in front of Urban Outfitters, 1013 Massachusetts St.

Despite heat, Sidewalk Sale draws crowds

ing camp, all kinds of camps on campus. This is one about civic engagement and public service.” Ballard said the program is now in its 10th year. Each year, the Dole Institute

A Douglas County judge raised concern this week about unconfirmed reports that Gov. Sam Brownback’s administration is considering policy changes that would prohibit unmarried couples from becoming foster parents. But officials at the Kansas Department of Children and Families said no such change has yet been proposed, although the agency is conducting a comprehensive review of all the state’s foster care policies. Judge Peggy Kittel, who handles Child in Need of Care, or CINC, cases in Douglas County, voiced her concerns in a letter Wednesday to the regional director of DCF in Overland Park. “In the last several weeks, I have heard rumors that DCF is planning to change the criteria (or already has) for persons who seek to become foster parents for children in DCF custody,” Kittel wrote. “Specifically, I have heard that only married couples will be approved to foster children who are in DCF custody.” Such rumors began circulating among foster care advocates around

Please see DOLE, page 4A

Please see FOSTER, page 8A

By Rochelle Valverde Twitter: @RochelleVerde

As the city’s much-anticipated retail fest wound down Thursday, the overall verdict was a hot success. The 56th annual Downtown Lawrence Sidewalk Sale had a mix of weather and a slew of shoppers. Please see SALE, page 4A

Youth meet lawmakers at Dole Institute camp By Peter Hancock Twitter: @LJWpqhancock

Topeka — More than 60 high school students from across the state spent part of the day Thursday meeting with Kansas legislative leaders and touring the State-

house in Topeka as part of a summer program sponsored by the Dole Institute of Politics on the Kansas University campus. Rep. Barbara Ballard, DLawrence, who is associate director of the Dole Institute, said the Youth Civic Leader-

ship Institute is about developing the next generation of state and community leaders. “Part of this is a promotion of civic engagement, promoting of student involvement and public service,” Ballard said. “It’s just like how they have band camp, cheerlead-

Twitter: @LJWpqhancock

Sheriff’s deputies help remove snake from resident’s Jacuzzi Lights & Sirens

Caitlin Doornbos cvdoornbos@ljworld.com

W

Douglas County Sheriff’s Office/Contributed Photo

ednesday morning, a Douglas County resident had an experience nightmares are made of. No, not the bogeyman hiding under the bed. And no, not Freddy Krueger at the front door. In fact, it was

A DOUGLAS COUNTY RESIDENT called sheriff’s deputies Wednesday for help removing a large snake the resident found in a Jacuzzi. much, much worse. deputy responded to help. Someone found a The story reminded HUGE BLACK SNAKE in me of one of the more their Jacuzzi. The person unusual reports I’ve called the Douglas County Please see SNAKE, page 4A Sheriff’s office, and a

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*Allen Milton Blair, the son of Mark and Irma, was born 7 months after this proclamation was presented.


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Friday, July 17, 2015

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ON THE

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LAWRENCE • STATE

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Sale CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

Overcast skies and a cool breeze kept the temperature below 80 By McKenna Harford degrees for most of the Read more responses and add morning — a good start your thoughts at LJWorld.com for shoppers and merchants alike — but by midafternoon the heat What was index had surpassed 100 your first job? degrees. Consequently, Asked on the sale saw most of its Massachusetts Street thousands of shoppers in the morning, with crowds thinning out once the heat kicked in, said Sally Zogry, director of Downtown Lawrence Inc. “All in all, it’s been a very smooth sale, but we can’t control the weather; it’s summer in Kansas,” Zogry said, adding that businesses that also offered discounts inside tended to do better than those with only outdoor Richard Sitlington, fare. self-employed, In front of Sunflower Lawrence Outdoor & Bike Shop, “I had a job as a clerk in 804 Massachusetts St., Oklahoma.” backpacks and sleeping bags hung from a tree as people browsed through clothes, shoes and outdoor equipment on the sidewalk, which had been doubled in size by incorporating parking spaces in front of the store. Ashton Lambie, Sunflower sales staff, wore a tuxedo in lieu of the red staff Hayley Harris, case manager, Topeka “A concession stand person at a skating rink in Topeka.”

Snake CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

heard over the scanner in my years at the JournalWorld. About two years ago, I heard dispatchers call out to police something like: “RP (reporting party) states there’s a bat in her basement. RP is concerned the bat is going to Jason Riedl, auto-sound technician, Topeka “It was at Pizza Hut, in the kitchen.”

— Sally Zogry, director of Downtown Lawrence Inc. shirt as he played the accordion for shoppers. Lambie took a break from his music from time to time to announce details about sales over a megaphone. Sara Bilhimer, a manager at the outdoor shop, reported that morning sales were right on track with past years. Sunflower opened at 6 a.m. to a waiting crowd of a couple dozen people, Bilhimer said. “It’s the biggest sales day of the year for us,” she said. “That includes Christmas and Black Friday.” Meredith Chapple, of Lawrence, was shopping the sale for her first time and by 9 a.m. said she had stopped by about five stores. She leaned against a storefront with a couple of bags at her feet as she listened to a man playing a banjo nearby. “It’s really lively and entertaining,” she said, pointing to the nonprofit stands giving away free merchandise as well as to the musicians along Massachusetts Street. In addition to nonprofit stands, such as Douglas

County CASA, Kansas Public Radio and the Sunrise Project, pop-up food vendors added to the options for shoppers. At the US Bank Plaza at the corner of Ninth and Massachusetts streets, shoppers grabbed a bite at the La Familia stand, which sold breakfast burritos and tacos. Among those stopping for breakfast was Megan Griggs, who has been a Downtown Lawrence Inc. volunteer for the sale for the past three years. Griggs said she arrived downtown about 4:45 a.m. to find that some stores already had lines dozens of people long. “I do notice every year people tend to get here earlier and earlier,” she said. That was certainly the case at Arizona Trading Co., 736 Massachusetts St., which had a “fill a bag for $5” sale. Lindsay Schell, supervisor at Arizona, said the store opened a few minutes earlier than its planned time of 6 a.m. because people were waiting outside.

fly upstairs and bite her. RP requests police assistance to remove the bat from the basement.” That’s the one thing about law enforcement: You never know what your job duties might entail each day. I guess one deputy can add “snake wrangler” to his or her resume now. The sheriff’s office said that “the deputy was able to corral the black snake and release it back

out to its natural habitat. So, happy ending for all, thanks to the sheriff’s office. Now, if you don’t mind me, I’m going to check all the drains in my apartment for reptiles… l l l

Another terrifying animal experience this week didn’t have such a light-hearted resolution. Just after 6 p.m. Tuesday, Lawrence police responded to a report of

“It’s been really steady,” she said of the flow of shoppers. But by afternoon, the clouds had gone, making way for temperatures in the mid-90s with a heat index around 105 degrees, according to the National Weather Service. Offers of respite from the heat became increasingly popular — including five indoor cooling stations with free water, nonprofits handing out paper fans and food vendors selling frozen treats. Honey Bear Fruit Pops opened up around noon at the corner of Eighth and Massachusetts streets, selling homemade popsicles. “Once people start seeing popsicles, they seek us out,” said Teri Grunthaner, co-owner of Honey Bear, which uses local produce to create flavors such as blackberry rose and cucumber lemon mint. The sale went until sundown, and Zogry said she expected another wave of shoppers in the early evening, once people were off work and the temperature started to go down. Despite the July heat, Zogry said, it’s an engaging community gathering. “Overall, part of what’s fun about it is seeing folks you haven’t seen for a while,” she said.

Dole

a vicious animal in the 1100 block of West 22nd Street. A woman had been mowing her lawn when a neighbor’s dog attacked her, Lawrence police spokesman Sgt. Trent McKinley said. The boxer-pit bull mix escaped as one of its owners was “possibly putting the animal into a vehicle,” McKinley said. The woman sustained “significant injuries to her arm and head,” McKinley said, and

was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital for treatment. She was later released and was “at home resting” on Thursday, McKinley said. The owner caught the dog after the attack. The dog is now under quarantine at the Lawrence Humane Society. Police and animal control will forward their reports on the incident to prosecutors for a charging decision, McKinley said.

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selects about 60 to 65 students who will be seniors in the upcoming school year to take part. The students meet with community and political leaders at different levels of government to learn about the issues that inspired them to get involved in politics, and to talk about the issues that the students themselves are interested in. “The whole idea is to focus on these areas that they can use, after they graduate, in their communities, why it’s important, especially around history and government,” Ballard said. During their tour of the Statehouse, the students heard presentations from leaders and rank-and-file members of the House and Senate. Some were even allowed to sit at legislators’ desks on the House and Senate floor, something rarely allowed for visitors. Afterward, about 15 individual legislators met with the students in small groups for one-on-one conversations. This year’s Youth Civic Leadership Institute began Wednesday and will run through today.

SOUTHWEST MIDDLE SCHOOL PRINCIPAL’S LIST Southwest Middle School announced its Principal’s List for the second semester of the 2014-2015 school year. Students must have a semester GPA of at least 3.8 with no grade lower than a “B.” The school’s regular Honor Roll appeared in the July 12 Journal-World. Both lists can be found online at LJWorld.com/swms-sp2015.

Sixth grade Abdullah A. Ahmed Uguudei Amarbayasgalan I Baker C. Anderson Braiden Bangalan Ellie M. Bates Emily M. Bial Reaghan M. Bible Hadley E. Bird Zachary D. Bloch Peyton B. Bradley Elizabeth L. Brandt Jason C. Brown Austin R. Burenheide Miah J. Cheatham Emily M. Chester What would your answer Sarah Church be? Go to ljworld.com/ Shannon E. Clarke onthestreet and share it. Brock H. Cordova Ryder L. Crafton Nicholas J. Davies HOSPITAL Eila G. Deavours Sydney R. Delfelder Births Jackson C. Dooley Ryan Duan Brandon and Nicole Volz, Lawrence, a girl, Nicholas B. Edwards Wednesday. Gwendolyn N. Elo Ian and Hsiang-Feng Charles O. Elsten (Melody) Carroll, Lawrence, Olivia G. Ferguson a boy, Wednesday. Kaitlyn R. Fisher Christopher and Kaylee Johnston, Baldwin City, a Malea K. Flakus girl, Wednesday Gracie A. Flanagan Devin Stilley and Victoria A. Flores Samantha Simmons, Jenna C. Gaston Lawrence, a girl, Talia N. Gay Wednesday. Kate and Austin Connor M. Gellender Elser, Lawrence, a boy, Nora Gerami Wednesday. Yoav Gillath Anndrena S. Goldman CORRECTIONS Callie A. Goscha Aris T. Grady The Journal-World’s Reece W. Gray policy is to correct all Jacob Groves significant errors that are Lindsey E. Hefty brought to the editors’ Justin M. Hicks attention, usually in this Haris Hilger space. If you believe we Claire E. Howard have made such an error, Stephen Huan call 785-832-7154, or email Liliana Jackson-Rosen news@ljworld.com. Isabel G. Janssen Anna Beth Johnson SOUND OFF Emma L. Jones Sophia B. Kaufman If you have a question, call Thayu Kimori 832-7297 or send email to Benjamin N. King soundoff@ljworld.com. Brayden K. Kipp Dale Walker, research professor in early childhood development, Lawrence “Working with children with autism at a Saturday day program when they were first starting to diagnose and treat autism. It’s why I chose my field.”

All in all, it’s been a very smooth sale, but we can’t control the weather; it’s summer in Kansas.”

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Isabella A. Kirkwood Callan M. Knapp Payton A. Krug Jae-Hyun M. Lee Piper A. Leitch Joseph D. Leuschen Isabel C. Loney Samuel A. Mandigo Braxton McCullough Lauren E. McKinley Asa M. Morrison Ella J. Munsch Caroline R. Nagel Emma J. Nelson Joohye Oh John S. Oliverius Cecilia J. Paranjothi Bryn E. Perrins Davis H. Pickett Kate L. Pilakowski Nathan C. Pilakowski Aquinniah R. Raab Anthony C. Racy Zachary N. Razak Georgia B. Rea Allison N. Reed Hannah K. Riling Ryan S. Roberts Marissa B. Roggero Sara E. Roszak Olivia G. Ryan Krishi Sabarwal Jakob P. Scholz Benjamin S. Schrock Ian N. Snyder Joy K. Song Chloe M. Stafre Bennett C. Stallard Katherine O. Stallard Caleb Stelk Cameron O. Stewart Christopher T. Stone Keaton J. Stramberg Hannah Suh Alon Unz Keegan B. VanPelt Rylie R. Vardiman Carlos A. Vasquez Espinosa Tucker J. Wagner Spencer T. Ware Ryley P. Wheat Allison S. Wheatman Cole D. Wheeler Alec M. Wilson Jayden A. Wilson Jocelyn M. Wilson Dingding Ye Emily N. Zeller Tyler D. Zeller Dylan Z. Zheng

Seventh grade Alanoud A. Alabdulmunim Kathryn P. Allen Hajar S. Alshammri Ashlee R. Anderson Trevor E. Arellano Akil Asokan

Hannah Au Yeong Sivani D. Badrivenkata Tyler A. Bane Violet A. Bartle Jackson K. Benkelman Ethan R. Bentzinger Elena M. Bone Kaila D. Bradfield Tessa C. Brel Makenzie J. Brosa Chastain A. Buzhardt Grace M. Caldwell Brooklyn P. Carlson Avery M. Carroll Lana T. Chieu Hye Ri Cho Ryan L. Claycamp Jaylynn M. Columbus Carly E. Cooper Henry R. DeWitt Kathryn E. Diaz Ja’Brandion S. Douglas Madison R. Dudley Kasey A. Dunn Elijah E. Eklund Raizer A. Evans Louis A. Fincher Kyle O. Flachsbarth Kathryn N. Flynn Chloe E. Frazier Kirk S. Geery-Weis Madison K. Goeser Morgan E. Goeser Jackson M. Grant Jackson C. Gray-Nichols Hudson A. Hack Martha Hansen Avery T. Harrington Matthew T. Harrison Stephanie M. Hasiotis RayShaun X. Helm Nathan A. Herschell Haley M. Hippe Elijah V. Hite Keaton B. Hoy Spencer A. Hughes Christian Im Kiara A. Jadlow Cassidy P. Johnson Charles H. Johnson Brianna M. Keating Patrick J. Keating Haylee N. Kern Lilah A. Khan Colton A. Khatib Monica B. Kimmel Ainsley L. Krug Elaine M. Landers Katheryn G. Lawrence Eli J. Loney John C. Loos Ryan J. Lutz Lauren A. Malik Peyton M. Mallory Isabel Mann Thomas A. Martinez Mackenzie N. Mason Grace C. Mayhew Joshua A. Maynard

Jayce L. Meyer Mason B. Miller Sydnee M. Miller Sydney M. Monninger Chloe A. Myers Porter R. Neidow Ella R. Nobo Joy N. Nunoo Ashton G. O’Brien Kaileb R. Ordiway Ana P. Padilla-Macias Andrew S. Park Nirali N. Patel Anna E. Peard Sydney L. Phillips Allison F. Pittman Isaac R. Plumlee Jake T. Ponzer Mayson J. Quartlebaum Kari A. Rainbolt Nicholas V. Ray Jessica D. Reed Luke G. Richards Caleb P. Saripalli Ashlyn G. Schwarz Sage A. Scott Chloe Shi Hugh R. Sidabutar Olivia N. Slemmer Denton C. Smiley Abigail M. Solcher Mitchell R. Spriggs Abby A. Stancliffe Anasuya Subramaniam Laura J. Tang Sejal Thapa Madison A. Traughber Albert M. Vasquez Zachary D. Venters 1 Solomon I. Wakhungu Rheanne N. Walton Xavier M. Watson Christopher Wensel Elliott D. Whisenant Banner C. Williams Andrew J. Ybarra Ella E. Young

Eighth grade Nora K. Agah Jake A. Baker Sanders L. Barbee Jayden K. Berger Brenna N. Brown Mary-Esther A. Bush AllysSun A. Carper Anna T. Chieu Creighton R. Cordova Jared T. Cote Ashley N. Coup Drew S. Covington Morgan L. Crabtree Madelyn T. Dean Morgan D. Dunn Ryan C. Eisele Claire A. Feddema Ryan A. Flakus Hudson T. Flynn Ruth W. Gathunguri

Noah L. Ginsberg Owen A. Gonzales Cora K. Griffin Emily Guo Maria Hansen Shaya A. Haverkamp Ivy L. Herndon Josephine Hickerson Brittany L. Hoffman Grant A. Holmes Sarah A. Hood Lauren L. Hoppe Emma R. Howard Nayoung Im Emma R. Johnson Lauryn M. Jones Richa Joshi Jack C. Kallenberger Carson T. Katzfey Gabriel K. Kennard Nicole A. Knapp Walker E. Koberlein Christina Lee Justin J. Lee Sarah Lee Jacob D. Lehrman Sebastian Lepage Erin E. Liston Andrea I. Maack Doha W. Maaty Lauren A. Maceli Natalie M. Maceli Erin E. McClorey Trey Melvin Michael Mendoza Abby L. Monroe Quinlan S. Muller Andrew M. Nickols Rachel A. Nikolov Joshua C. Nuss David J. Obadare Oliver D. Pepin Rose K. Pilakowski Emily N. Raye Nathan D. Reid Christopher S. Ritter Sophia N. Rogers Anne F. Roszak Camden J. Ruckman Jarrod A. Saathoff Diana B. Salazar Hernandez Thea M. Scholz Ted Shi Shane Skwarlo Daniel C. Sola Dylan J. Sommer Hannah E. Stewart Annika R. Syverson Chloe K. Taylor Pierce W. ThomsenSaturday Andie R. Veeder Pamela K. Vue Jillian M. Wilson Emma G. Yackley Brandon K. Zeller Jacob S. Zenger Lucy Zuo


LAWRENCE

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Friday, July 17, 2015

| 5A

DATEBOOK

Larryville Life’s

Weekend Picks

17 TODAY

These event recommendations were taken from Larryville Life’s Weekend Picks blog, which appears each week on Lawrence.com. For more events, visit Lawrence.com/larryvillelife. Bummer album release show, 7 p.m. Saturday, Love Garden, 822 Massachusetts St. Olathe's Bummer has been making "rock and roll for the future cavemen of America" since 2012, and they'll be serving it up at Love Garden in an EP release party for "Spank." The EP is out this week via High Dive Records, which recently has provided a home to such Lawrence luminaries as Psychic Heat and Rooftop Vigilantes. Bummer is releasing the EP on vinyl, cassette and digitally, so choose your desired format and join them at the show. Gnarly Davidson open the festivities with their brand of "beer rock."

of musical oddness, or so we hear). The event itself kicks off at 6 p.m., and musical acts begin around 9 p.m.

“Sherlock’s Last Case” and “The Mousetrap,” today through Aug. 2 at KU’s University Theatre Looking for a few good mysteries but too lazy to pick up a book? Head to campus over the next few weekends and catch this summer’s offerings from the Kansas Repertory Theatre. This marks the second year of existence for the Kansas Rep, which is composed of a mixture of “professional actors, B.F.A. and M.F.A. actors Class of Astra, 6 p.m. Saturday, from nationally recognized training Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. programs, (and a) select group of KU One of the more intriguing/unusual students.” events of the weekend can be found These productions, which “share at the Bottleneck Saturday evening as the same casts but are distinguished “a collection of (Lawrence) creators” by designs, directorial concepts and calling themselves Class of Astra texts,” should combine to offer audihost a “pop-up event” combining the ences a good mix of the traditional culinary, the visual and the musical. (Agatha Christie’s “The Mousetrap” There are a whole host of “creis a staple of theater reputed to have ators” involved, among them Adam the longest initial run in theater histoLott (the visual!), Hank Charcuterie ry) and the modern (“Sherlock’s Last (the culinary!), and SUB URBAN (a Case” promises a modern update on mysterious new group providing a bit the venerable detective).

Sherlock Holmes, left, portrayed by Robert Brand, and Dr. Watson, portrayed by Michael Rapport, discuss clues during a dress rehearsal for the upcoming Kansas Repertory Theatre production of “Sherlock’s Last Case.” Journal-World File Photo

Lawrence Public Library Book Van, 9-10 a.m., Clinton Place, 2125 Clinton Parkway. Tenants to Homeowners Affordable Housing Conference, 9 a.m.-2:30 p.m., Carnegie Building, 200 W. Ninth St. (Public welcome.) Lawrence Public Library Book Van, 10:3011:30 a.m., Wyndham Place, 2551 Crossgate Drive. Bookworms & Waterbugs (ages 2 and up), 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Lawrence Public Library Book Van, 1-2 p.m., Peterson Acres, 2930 Peterson Road. Tween Club (ages 8-11), 3:30-5 p.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Perry Lecompton Farmers Market, 4-6:30 p.m., U.S. Highway 24 and Ferguson Road (in FastTrax Parking Lot), Perry. Bingo night, doors 5:30 p.m., refreshments 6 p.m., bingo starts 7 p.m., Eagles Lodge, 1803 W. Sixth St. Friday Night Dinner, 5:30-7:30 p.m., VFW, 1801 Massachusetts St. Dinner: Casseroles Galore, 5:30-7:30 p.m., Eagles Lodge, 1803 W. Sixth St. Opening reception: Steve Denny, 6:30-9 p.m., Lumberyard Arts Center, 718 High St., Baldwin City. Art Walk, 6:30-9 p.m., Lumberyard Arts Center, 718 High St., Baldwin City. Artist reception and gallery talk: Valerie Campos, 7 p.m., Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St. Summer Youth Theatre: “Science; BOOM!” 7 p.m., Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St. IIYM (International Institute for Young Musicians) Student Recital,

7:30 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall, 1530 Naismith Drive. Kansas Repertory Theatre: “Sherlock’s Last Case,” 7:30 p.m., Stage Too! Crafton-Preyer Theatre, 1530 Naismith Drive. SELLOUT! 10 p.m.close, Jazzhaus, 926 1/2 Massachusetts St.

18 SATURDAY

LMH Summer Spray 5K in Tonganoxie, 6:30-11:30 a.m., Family Medicine of Tonganoxie, 410 Woodfield Drive. Lawrence Farmers Market, 7-11 a.m., 824 New Hampshire St. Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 7 a.m. and 7:45 a.m., Lied Center, 1600 Stewart Drive. Lawrence Community Bike Ride, 8-11 a.m., Rotary Arboretum, 5100 W. 27th St. John Jervis, classical guitar, 8-11 a.m., Panera, 520 W. 23rd St. Yard Sale benefitting Heartland Community Health Center, 8 a.m.-1 p.m., Lawrence Medical Plaza, Sixth and Maine streets. Eudora Indoor Farmers Market, 9 a.m.-noon, Market On Main, 724 Main St., Eudora. Yard Waste Drop-Off and Compost/Woodchip Sale, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., Wood Recovery and Compost Facility, 1420 E. 11th St. Great Poetry Discussion, 2-3:30 p.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707

Vermont St. Saturday Afternoon Ragtime, 2-4 p.m., Watkins Community Museum, 1047 Massachusetts St. Summer Youth Theatre: “Science; BOOM!” 3 p.m., Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St. Americana Music Academy Saturday Jam, 3 p.m., Americana Music Academy, 1419 Massachusetts St. Magic Tree House Club (ages 5-8), 3:30-4:30 p.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Language Acquisition Preschool (LAP)’s 30th anniversary picnic, 5-7:30 p.m., Centennial Park, west of Ninth and Iowa streets. Headpin Challenge, 6-9 p.m., Royal Crest Lanes, 933 Iowa St. Lawrence Bridge Club, 6:30 p.m., Kaw Valley Bridge Center, 1025 N. 3rd St. (Partner required; first two visits free; call 760-4195 for more info.)

Submit your stuff: Don’t be shy — we want to publish your event. Submit your item for our calendar by emailing datebook@ljworld.com at least 48 hours before your event. Find more information about these events, and more event listings, at ljworld.com/ events.

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Friday, July 17, 2015

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

Man fixates on wife’s confession of infidelity Dear Annie: My wife and I have been married for 40 years. When we were first dating, my future wife unexpectedly set me aside to explore the possibilities of seeing another man. It was a difficult time for me. The other man was a mutual acquaintance, for whom I didn’t much care, which intensified my hurt. Within two months, they stopped seeing one another, and in due time, we started dating again, fell in love and married. Sounds good — and it has been. But I have one mental demon with which I struggle. About three decades ago, when casually chatting about our previous romantic interests, my wife revealed that when seeing the aforementioned man, they had sex. Since being made aware of it,

Annie’s Mailbox

Marcy Sugar and Kathy Mitchell

anniesmailbox@comcast.net

I can’t let it go. All of those painful memories were revived by her disclosure. My wife has been a wonderful friend, partner and parent and does not deserve my periodic fixation on something that was a tiny moment in time. Why can’t I, as she requests, just forget about it? How can I reconcile myself to it and downsize its largerthan-life status in my consciousness? — Living in the ’70s

Pointless ‘Quest’ seeks ratings gold Here’s a program that might be interesting. It could be worth watching. Maybe. It’s hard to get too much more excited about a show like “Treasure Quest: Snake Island” (9 p.m., Discovery). The whole point of the show is that there “could” be buried Incan gold located off the eastern coast of Brazil. Sort of like the ghosts that “might” be hiding in old hospitals, spooky houses or abandoned asylums profiled on hundreds of wasted hours of pointless television s h o w s aimed at the bored and gullible. Helmed by an expedition leader with the memorable name of Cork Graham, “Quest” will spend six episodes looking for the horde of Incan gold that’s been lost since 1524. That’s six hours. Geraldo Rivera spent only two hours looking for loot in “The Mystery of Al Capone’s Vaults,” a syndicated special from 1986. After weeks of teasers and two solid hours of suspense-building blather, Rivera and his viewers discovered nothing of value. But “Mystery” struck ratings gold, and a whole new era of bad television was born. O “Great Performances” combines a beloved TV favorite, a “Star Wars” legend and an acclaimed play in “Driving Miss Daisy” (8 p.m., PBS, check local listings). Angela Lansbury and James Earl Jones star in Alfred Uhry’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play, a meditation on race relations in 1940s and ’50s America as dramatized in the conversations between a 72-year-old widow (Lansbury) and her black chauffeur (Jones). O Finding humor in adversity is not new, but it is always surprising. The documentary “Tig,” streaming now on Netflix, profiles stand-up comic Tig Notaro. In the space of four months, she suffered a mysterious illness, lost her mother and received a cancer diagnosis. Her decision to persevere with her comedy career in the face of this news has electrified her live audiences, gone viral on social media and won her the enduring respect and affection of her peers. Many of her stand-up colleagues appear in this film. Tonight’s other highlights

O After an injury, a cheer-

leader (Bella Thorne) careens from painkillers to heroin in the 2015 cautionary tale “Perfect High” (7 p.m., Lifetime). O The crew loses control of the ship on “Killjoys” (8 p.m., Syfy). O Five looks deep within on “Dark Matter” (9 p.m., Syfy). O Michael Symon hosts “Burgers, Brew & ‘Que” (9:30 p.m., Food), premiering tonight.

Dear Living: It is not unusual to remember something disturbing and periodically think about it. But if you are doing this more than a few times a year and becoming fixated on it to the point where it is affecting other areas of your life, you might need professional help to put it aside. You’ve been holding in your resentment, jealousy and fears for 40 years and they are still eating at you. Please talk to a counselor so you can air your feelings to someone other than your wife and get help managing them. Your doctor can refer you. Dear Annie: I read the letter from “Had Enough,” the 68-yearold woman who was tired of her husband’s demand for sex. At about that same age, my wife told me that she really didn’t want

JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS

For Friday, July 17, 2015: This year you will be unusually buoyant. You have a lot of energy, and you’ll need to use it wisely in order to prevent yourself from becoming stressed out. If you are single, don’t jump right from one relationship to the next, or you could miss meeting the right person. If you are attached, the two of you will opt to spend more time together. 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) ++++ Allow a partner to express his or her feelings, even if it makes you uncomfortable. Tonight: Get into weekend mode. Taurus (April 20-May 20) +++ A family member who can be a bit dramatic will remind you why you tend to distance yourself from him or her. Tonight: Stay close to home. Gemini (May 21-June 20) ++++ Don’t just sit back and listen. You need to be an active leader in order to get others to listen to you. Tonight: Strut your stuff. Cancer (June 21-July 22) ++++ You have a way of affecting those close to you in a big way. You might be a bit self-indulgent. Tonight: Out on the town. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) ++++ You can’t help but smile as you see your efforts finally come to fruition. Tonight: Wish

to have sex. In a loving way, she said that she physically couldn’t put up with it anymore. I was hurt at the time and somewhat angry. But when I thought about it, I was also somewhat relieved, because in the few months prior, I felt my heart racing and was exhausted when making love. I obeyed my wife’s wishes and we stopped having sex. Then, several months later, I almost suffered a heart attack. I needed extensive heart surgery and it took me months to recover. To this day, I am grateful that my wife was the first to call it off. I might have been dead otherwise. — Ever So Thankful — Send questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or Annie’s Mailbox, P.O. Box 118190 Chicago, IL 60611.

jacquelinebigar.com

upon a star. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) +++ You probably will want to be left alone, as you feel you have so much to do in so little time. Tonight: Not to be found. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) +++++ A friendship will put a smile on your face. Don’t question what is happening. Tonight: What is stopping you? It’s the weekend! Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ++++ Respond to someone who is demanding and to whom you know you must answer. Tonight: A must show. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) +++++ You could be excited about an opportunity to take several days off. Tonight: Get past a self-imposed restriction. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) +++++ Deal with a partner directly. You are more likely to see the results you want. Tonight: Dinner out with a favorite person. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) +++++ You’ll have little choice but to defer to a loved one, and you will like the freedom you get when you do. Tonight: Which invitation will you accept? Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) ++++ You have a lot of ground to cover, many people to speak with and a lot of errands to finish. Tonight: Off to the gym. — The astrological forecast should be read for entertainment only.

UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy E. Parker July 17, 2015

ACROSS 1 Notable historic period 6 Legions 11 Degree in math 14 Hawaiian island 15 Burqa wearer’s deity, often 16 “And what have we here?” 17 Brain part 19 Big ___ Conference 20 Where a frog may be found? 21 Terrible twos, e.g. 23 Bands around the biceps 26 Oar steadiers 27 Bright and pleasant 28 Let out, as fishing line 30 Charged particles 31 Disparaging look 32 Rubblemaking stuff 35 Banned bug-killer 36 Not going anywhere 38 ___ polloi 39 Swell place? 40 Artist’s stand 41 Drudge 42 Swarming insect 7/17

44 Ludlum’s “The ___ Identity” 46 Nearly 48 Without wheels? 49 Natural talent 50 Acre’s acres? 52 Choose for membership 53 Payment on a payment plan 58 Dash lengths 59 Baseball’s “Ryan Express” 60 Fergie, formally 61 “Norma ___” (1979 film) 62 Loon relative 63 Foe DOWN 1 Character in a Christmas special, often 2 An eagle is two under this 3 Lennon’s wife 4 Saddle parts 5 Come-___ look 6 Signs of divinity 7 ___ podrida 8 Vegas machine 9 Bar bill 10 One leading the flock 11 Nuts

12 “We hold ___ truths ...” 13 Fine-tunes 18 Affectedly creative 22 Clod chopper 23 Litmus reddeners 24 ___ Island (state) 25 Senior moment, e.g. 26 Cheshire cat’s hangout 28 Available for occupation 29 “Ain’t Misbehavin’” star Carter 31 Back talk 33 High times? 34 Points at the dinner table 36 Battening down 37 Drawn tight

41 Large suitcase, perhaps 43 ___-Wan Kenobi 44 Canaanite deity 45 End of a threat 46 Behind 47 Andean animal 48 Construction site sight 50 Vacation destination 51 Attempt 54 Postal creed word 55 “... ___ he drove out of sight” 56 “Platoon” war, briefly 57 “___ will be done”

PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER

7/16

© 2015 Universal Uclick www.upuzzles.com

A HEIGHTENED CHALLENGE By Rob Lee

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

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

WENHI ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.

ASAIL FARDIA

FYMSIL Print your answer here: Yesterday’s

Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app

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

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6A

(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: YOUNG VOUCH UNEVEN HARDLY Answer: The affectionate pigeons were — LOVEY-DOVEY

BECKER ON BRIDGE


Opinion

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Friday, July 17, 2015

EDITORIALS

Assisting shelter The city and county did the right thing by giving the Lawrence Community Shelter $100,000.

Lawrence city and Douglas County commissioners made the right call this week in deciding to bail out the Lawrence Community Shelter with $100,000 in emergency assistance. The shelter serves the city’s homeless population. For taxpayers, the $100,000 is a smart investment. Without the shelter and its staff, it likely would cost taxpayers far more to serve the needs of the homeless. A number of factors have conspired to work against operation of the shelter. Most importantly, demand for services is on the rise. In January, a survey of the county’s homeless population counted 296 people, an increase of more than 25 percent since the previous survey was conducted in 2013. Leadership of the shelter also has been a problem. When current director Brian Blevins leaves July 20 for a new job in Kansas City, the shelter will be searching for its third director in the year since longtime director Loring Henderson retired. It was Henderson who lead the fundraising to build the $3.2 million, 15,000-squarefoot shelter near the Douglas County Jail. The new facility is nearly twice the size of the previous shelter. But since that capital campaign, the shelter has struggled to raise funds consistently, John Tacha, vice president of the shelter’s board, told city and county officials last week. And while funds are down, operating expenses at the shelter have increased by about $300,000 since the shelter moved from a 75-bed facility downtown to the new shelter, which has a capacity of 125 beds. Given the funding shortages, shelter leaders appeared before city and county commissioners seeking $200,000 to get through the end of the year without reducing staff. Douglas County commissioners agreed to provide $50,000 in emergency funding on the condition that the city provide matching funds. On Tuesday, Lawrence city commissioners did just that, providing up to $50,000 in emergency aid for the homeless shelter, provided the shelter’s board can raise an equal amount from private donors. Commissioners also agreed to pay a little more than $1,100 for the shelter’s board to send out mail solicitations to raise that private money. The emergency funding from the city and the county will ensure that the shelter’s doors stay open this year, and it was appropriate to require the shelter’s leadership to identify matching funds. In the homeless survey released in June, one of the concerns was the rise in homeless families and in fact, some 80 children were counted in the survey. Given such numbers, it’s important that government officials do all they can to keep the Lawrence Community Shelter staffed and operating.

OLD HOME TOWN

100

From the Lawrence Daily Journal-World for July 17, 1915: “When North Lawrence farmers and gardeners asked the City years Commissioners to cut the dike ago near the Union Pacific trestle IN 1915 and let the water out of the low ground and into the river, they took it for granted that the big stream would keep on falling. But in this way they made their error and when the Kaw started coming back up last night the water rushed through the opening in the dike and back into the old river bed on the other side. Now the residents of this section are threatened with a worse flood than ever. This morning at 10 o’clock the water was back over all the low country...” — Compiled by Sarah St. John

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

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W.C. Simons (1871-1952) Publisher, 1891-1944 Dolph Simons Sr. (1904-1989) Publisher, 1944-1962; Editor, 1950-1979

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THE WORLD COMPANY Dolph C. Simons Jr., Chairman

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7A

On to our next Iranian challenge Washington — The shrill Republican attacks on the Iran nuclear deal are an embarrassment. Most global leaders share President Obama’s view that the agreement is preferable to any realistic alternative. It’s a diplomatic achievement that reinforces U.S. leadership, rather than undermining it. The damage to America would come from knee-jerk congressional rejection of the pact. The GOP noise machine blasting the deal obscures the real question ahead, which is how to contain Iran’s meddling in the region. The right strategy is to present Tehran with a sharp choice: Either join serious negotiations to end the regional wars in Syria and Yemen, or face the prospect of much stiffer, U.S.-led resistance. Stopping Iran’s destabilizing behavior is the priority in the Middle East, as senior Israeli, Saudi and Emirati officials agree privately, whatever the public commotion about the nuclear deal. This essential task of confronting Tehran should be easier now that the Iranian nuclear program is capped for at least a decade. But Obama has to follow through on the regional front. Otherwise, Iran could extend its hegemony, which would harm the U.S and its allies. “The technical side (of the nuclear agreement) is solid, but that was always our secondary concern,” one senior Gulf Arab official told me.

David Ignatius

davidignatius@washpost.com

Building resistance to Tehran isn’t a money problem, but one of strategy and will.” “Our primary concern,” he said, is aggressive behavior in Syria, Yemen and elsewhere by the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, financed by an Iran that will be freed from sanctions. What’s the best way to confront Tehran on these regional issues? As with the nuclear problem, the right strategy is a combination of pressure (including possible military force) and diplomacy. Let’s start with military containment. This was the real theme of the Camp David meeting with Gulf Arab leaders in May. Though poohpoohed by commentators, the gathering produced a plan to improve arms transfers, special-forces training, joint military exercises and other measures to check Iran. Building resistance to Tehran isn’t a money problem, but one of strategy and will.

The Gulf Arab countries are already outspending Iran on defense by more than $100 billion annually. They just aren’t getting much bang for their buck. That should change with closer cooperation. Obama has had the “slows” in Syria, in part because he didn’t want to confront Iran’s proxy force there, the Lebanese Hezbollah militia, and risk blowing up the nuclear talks. But that excuse is now gone. The U.S. should squeeze President Bashar al-Assad harder. His hold is weakening. In southern Syria, moderate fighters trained by CIA and Jordanian intelligence officers have gained ground. The Jordanians talk of building a safe zone there, with a 21st-century version of “strategic hamlets.” In northern Syria, U.S. airstrikes have allowed Kurdish fighters to seize a strip along the Turkish border, and the Turks are deliberating whether to impose their own bordersecurity zone. As the U.S. has seen in the nuclear talks, such pressure tactics are valuable if they push Tehran and its friends toward diplomacy. This tipping point may be near in Syria. Moscow finally seems willing to discuss a brokered transition. Obama told New York Times columnist Tom Friedman that after talking recently with President Vladimir Putin, “I think they (the Russians) get a sense that the Assad regime is los-

ing a grip over greater and greater swaths of territory inside of Syria and that the prospects for a takeover or rout of the Syrian regime is not imminent but becomes a greater and greater threat by the day.” Obama spoke in his news conference Wednesday about including Iran in a diplomatic settlement in Syria. “We’re not going to solve the problems in Syria unless there’s buy-in from the Russians, the Iranians, the Turks, our Gulf partners. It’s too chaotic. ... Iran is one of those players, and I think that it’s important for them to be part of that conversation.” Will pressure convince Iran that its interests are served by diplomatic negotiations on Syria and Yemen? Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif said in April that he would welcome such talks. And Zarif has told Secretary of State John Kerry that Iran wants to play a different, less menacing role. But here’s the heart of the problem: Zarif doesn’t control Iran’s covert-action campaigns. They’re run by Gen. Qassem Suleimani, head of the Revolutionary Guard’s Quds Force. What will convince the hard-liners that it’s time to talk? Pressure, pressure, pressure ... and then diplomacy. This crucial process will be much easier with the nuclear file closed. —David Ignatius is with the Washington Post Writers Group.

PUBLIC FORUM

Lane danger

Defining Hillary Clinton When I listen to Hillary Clinton speak, as she did Monday at The New School in New York, outlining her “economic policy” should she become president, my first reaction was not to her lack of substance and the predictability of her party line about taxing the rich more and “income inequality,” but to how boring she is. I love definitions. They help focus the mind. But not everyone defines a word the same way. Dictionary.com defines “bore” in several ways, all of which fit Hillary Clinton. As a verb used with an object, it says, “to weary by dullness, tedious repetition…” As a noun it is defined as “a dull, tiresome, or uncongenial person; a cause of ennui or petty annoyance.” A June 2 CNN/ORC poll found that “A growing number of people say she is not honest and trustworthy (57 percent, up from 49 percent in March).” In an interview last week with CNN, Clinton defended herself against the public’s perception that she is not trustworthy, though when you have to attest to your integrity it reminds one of Richard Nixon’s “I am not a crook” claim during the Watergate scandal. In examining her statement earlier this month that Democratic presidents, like her husband, would have paid down the

national debt (she ignores the current one who has substantially increased it), Washington Post fact checker Glenn Kessler wrote, “It is certainly fair game for Hillary Clinton to compare the fiscal record of the Clinton administration

Cal Thomas tcaeditors@tribune.com

with the record of the George W. Bush administration (just as Republicans like to compare Jimmy Carter to Ronald Reagan). But she goes too far to suggest that a Democrat could have preserved the surpluses and paid down the national debt, when a good chunk of that supposed (Clinton) surplus was based on a forecasting error.” There is nothing she has accomplished that qualifies her to be president and much that ought to disqualify her. She is running primarily on her gender and the standard boilerplate Democratic Party mantra of bigger government, higher taxes and more regulations, which would result in less individual liberty. Clinton’s economic speech included a plan to

raise middle-class income. She wants to accomplish this with another hike in the minimum wage and by use of other manipulative government techniques. A better way would be to encourage people to make themselves more valuable to their employers by taking college classes, made possible by Pell grants, student loans, scholarships or help from nonprofits and churches, or advanced-training classes, often offered by employers, which would make them more marketable. Government might also help people secure higherpaying work in other cities and states by providing tax credits, or deductions, if they find a better job. Such a plan could also work to help the unemployed and underemployed find full-time work. People might then come to depend less on government and more on themselves, and that is not at the heart of Democratic Party ideology. Less reliance on government equals less reliance on and possibly fewer votes for Democrats, the party of big government. To employ a tennis term, Hillary Clinton has doublefaulted. She is both uninspiring and uninteresting. To mix sports metaphors, add boring and you’d have a hockey hat trick. —Cal Thomas is a columnist for the Tribune Content Agency.

To the editor: As a long-time bicyclist, I think bicycle lanes are dangerous, because they encourage bicyclists to ride in the street. Every time I have been hit, or nearly hit, by cars while I was riding in the street, and the cars bothered to stop, the drivers all said the same thing: “I didn’t see you.” When motorists pass a bike in the street, they have to slow down and drive over by the center line. They don’t like this. Scarcely a month passed on my bike without someone yelling, “Get off the road!” Motorists have thrown, and hit me with, rocks, chunks of ice, and cans. People advocate bike lanes because they think that will encourage motorists to share the road. But this presupposes that a) the motorist will see the bicyclist, and b) is willing to yield the right of way. By far the safest way to bike around town is on the sidewalk. Except for downtown, or where otherwise posted, riding on sidewalks is legal. Bicyclists will have fewer accidents if they ride on the sidewalks than if they ride in a bike lane, out in the street. Craig Voorhees Lawrence

Forget flags? To the editor: Celebrating the Fourth — or not! In Lawrence, Kansas, on the Fourth of July, 2015, by my most unscientific of calculations, an American flag flew, on average, one per city block. I’m 80 and tend to forget more often than I care to admit. I didn’t forget this one! What is everyone else’s excuse? Ron Burgess, Lawrence

Letters Policy

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


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Friday, July 17, 2015

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Upstart Republican outraising Huelskamp

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TODAY

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

MONDAY

TUESDAY

Partly sunny and very warm

Partly sunny and very warm

A strong p.m. t-storm in spots

Comfortable with clouds and sun

Mostly cloudy

High 95° Low 77° POP: 25%

High 94° Low 74° POP: 15%

High 89° Low 68° POP: 60%

High 86° Low 67° POP: 20%

High 87° Low 68° POP: 15%

Wind SSW 7-14 mph

Wind S 8-16 mph

Wind SSW 7-14 mph

Wind ESE 4-8 mph

Wind ESE 4-8 mph

POP: Probability of Precipitation

Kearney 96/68

McCook 100/66 Oberlin 99/67

Clarinda 94/75

Lincoln 98/75

Grand Island 96/70

Beatrice 96/75

Concordia 98/76

Centerville 91/74

St. Joseph 94/77 Chillicothe 94/77

Sabetha 94/74

Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 94/77 94/77 Salina 100/78 Oakley Kansas City Topeka 102/79 98/68 96/78 Lawrence 93/76 Sedalia 95/77 Emporia Great Bend 93/78 94/76 99/74 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 92/77 97/72 Hutchinson 93/76 Garden City 98/77 98/70 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 92/75 97/79 98/75 99/71 92/76 93/77 Hays Russell 102/73 101/74

Goodland 98/64

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

LAWRENCE ALMANAC

Through 8 p.m. Thursday.

Temperature High/low 93°/74° Normal high/low today 89°/69° Record high today 109° in 1934 Record low today 54° in 2009

Precipitation in inches 24 hours through 8 p.m. yest. 0.00 Month to date 6.45 Normal month to date 2.30 Year to date 25.04 Normal year to date 22.65

REGIONAL CITIES

Today Sat. Today Sat. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Atchison 96 76 s 94 75 pc Independence 94 77 pc 95 77 pc 100 78 s 100 77 s Belton 92 75 pc 92 76 pc Fort Riley Olathe 92 75 pc 91 73 pc Burlington 94 76 pc 95 75 s Coffeyville 93 77 pc 95 78 pc Osage Beach 93 75 pc 95 75 pc Osage City 96 77 pc 97 74 s Concordia 98 76 s 98 70 s Ottawa 95 76 pc 95 75 pc Dodge City 97 72 pc 100 70 s 97 79 pc 99 76 s Holton 98 77 s 96 75 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 Sat. 6:09 a.m. 6:09 a.m. 8:45 p.m. 8:44 p.m. 7:48 a.m. 8:45 a.m. 9:37 p.m. 10:11 p.m.

First

July 23

Full

Last

New

July 31

Aug 6

Aug 14

LAKE LEVELS

As of 7 a.m. Thursday Lake

Level (ft)

Clinton Perry Pomona

Discharge (cfs)

878.79 893.58 978.16

500 1000 15

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

Fronts Cold

INTERNATIONAL CITIES

Today Cities Hi Lo W Acapulco 91 76 pc Amsterdam 75 58 s Athens 90 74 s Baghdad 119 90 s Bangkok 92 80 t Beijing 86 70 t Berlin 89 65 t Brussels 79 56 s Buenos Aires 61 52 s Cairo 97 75 s Calgary 59 50 r Dublin 63 49 sh Geneva 98 68 pc Hong Kong 92 81 t Jerusalem 88 68 s Kabul 96 71 s London 74 55 pc Madrid 99 67 pc Mexico City 73 56 t Montreal 80 67 pc Moscow 69 52 pc New Delhi 91 78 t Oslo 60 52 pc Paris 86 62 s Rio de Janeiro 81 68 pc Rome 92 73 s Seoul 85 68 pc Singapore 89 79 t Stockholm 68 55 pc Sydney 56 46 r Tokyo 84 77 r Toronto 75 68 t Vancouver 74 58 s Vienna 92 68 pc Warsaw 81 59 pc Winnipeg 77 56 t

Hi 91 69 90 115 92 88 81 70 65 99 74 63 91 91 89 96 72 95 74 81 70 89 58 79 80 93 86 89 69 59 85 86 80 98 89 70

Sat. Lo W 77 t 56 pc 73 s 88 s 81 t 70 c 60 pc 52 s 48 s 75 s 55 c 50 sh 65 t 82 t 68 s 67 pc 54 pc 70 pc 56 t 65 r 50 r 77 t 50 pc 59 s 67 pc 72 s 69 pc 79 t 54 pc 46 sh 77 r 69 c 61 s 74 pc 61 t 56 t

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6 News

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25

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Mother

City Bulletin Board, Commission Meetings

School Board Information

ESPN2 34 209 144 2015 Pan American Games From Toronto. (N) (Live)

NFL Live

aMLB Baseball Kansas City Royals at Chicago White Sox. (Live) Royals

NBCSN 38 603 151 2015 Tour de France Stage 13. FNC

Parks

City Bulletin Board

School Board Information

SportsCenter (N)

36 672

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››‡ Mommie Dearest (1981) Faye Dunaway.

ESPN 33 206 140 g2015 Open Championship Best of the Second Round. FSM

Baseball Tonight Fame

Adventure Sports

39 360 205 The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File (N)

Hannity (N)

SportsCenter (N) Piece

Big 12

Tour de France

The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File

CNBC 40 355 208 American Greed

American Greed

American Greed (N) American Greed

American Greed

MSNBC 41 356 209 All In With Chris

Rachel Maddow

Lockup

Lockup

The Hunt

Death Row Stories

CNN

44 202 200 Anderson Cooper

Lockup

CNN Special Report The Hunt

TNT

45 245 138 ››‡ The Book of Eli (2010) Denzel Washington.

USA

46 242 105 Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Chrisley

A&E

47 265 118 Criminal Minds

TRUTV 48 246 204 Pawn AMC TBS

Pawn

HIST

››‡ The Book of Eli (2010) Denzel Washington.

Criminal Minds

Criminal Minds

Criminal Minds

Pawn

The Hustlers (N)

Pawn

Pawn

Pawn

Pawn

SYFY 55 244 122 Defiance (N)

Pawn

›››› The Dark Knight (2008) Christian Bale.

51 247 139 Fam Guy Fam Guy ›››‡ The Help (2011) Viola Davis, Emma Stone. (DVS) 54 269 120 Evidence

Chrisley

Criminal Minds

50 254 130 ›››› The Dark Knight (2008) Christian Bale.

BRAVO 52 237 129 Housewives/NYC

Marshall made to himself, and $2,700 came from a political action committee. Huelskamp raised $76,520 in the second quarter, with $40,020 coming from individual donors and $36,500 coming from political action committees. His campaign committee, Kansans for Huelskamp, had $666,040 on hand at the end of June. Fort Hays State University political science professor Chapman Rackaway said Marshall’s fundraising indicates he is taking his campaign seriously. “It’s not easy to impress me with this stuff, but I’m impressed,” Rackaway said.

Foster

What the problem is, when you narrowly define the family to look like Ward and June Cleaver of the 1950s, it rejects what we know CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A to be true of American families in the 21st January, when Brown- century.” back issued an executive reorganization order, shifting the job of licensing foster parents to DCF from the Department of Health and Environment. That order took effect July 1. Since then, DCF spokeswoman Theresa Freed said, the agency has begun a comprehensive review of all policies and regulations regarding foster care, but she said it is still too early to know what kind of policy changes will result from that review. “I couldn’t say it’s being contemplated,” Freed said of the rumored changes for foster care licensing. “The review process has only just begun. No policy changes have been passed or acted on.” In her letter, Kittel noted that a growing number of children are being placed in state custody in Kansas at a time when the state already suffers from a shortage of foster homes. “I have great concern that the implementation of any new policy of a marriage requirement such as the one rumored will further reduce the number of homes available at a time when the number of children in out of home placement is increasing,” she wrote.

— Rep. Jim Ward, D-Wichita Gina Meier-Hummel, executive director of The Shelter Inc. in Lawrence, a local agency that matches children with foster homes and operates a group home, said she has also heard rumors of a possible change in licensure policy, but she has heard nothing official from DCF. “I think we need to carefully evaluate anything that would limit the number of qualified foster homes that are available,” Meier-Hummel said. Rep. Jim Ward, of Wichita, the ranking Democrat on the House Health and Human Services Committee, said he is concerned about DCF’s ability to manage the foster care system already, and he fears any policy changes that would reduce the availability of foster homes. “You’ve got 6,500 kids in foster care. You’re at record levels and you’re still failing the job. Kids are dying,” Ward said, referring to recent news reports about Kansas children who have died while in the custody of the state’s foster care system. Ward said he and Rep. Ed Trimmer, D-Winfield, plan next week to ask the Legislative Post Audit Committee to conduct an audit of DCF to determine whether it’s following its own policies and guidelines for ensuring the safety of children in its custody.

A growing problem According to DCF statistics, 6,507 children were in the state’s foster care system in April of this year, a record high for the state. That included 131 children in Douglas County, also a record high. Those numbers fell slightly in May, to 6,492 statewide and 128 in Douglas County. On average, about half of all children in the foster care system in Kansas are placed in family-based foster homes. About one-third of them are placed with other relatives, and about 5 percent are placed in group homes.

BEST BETS

10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

Poirot

Whose?

Flashpoint h

Inside

FOX 4 at 9 PM (N)

Great Performances (N)

C I 14 KMCI 15 L KCWE 17

Flashpoint h

9:30

KIDS

Topeka (ap) — A central Kansas obstetrician trying to unseat U.S. Rep. Tim Huelskamp in Kansas’ sprawling 1st District more than doubled the incumbent’s fundraising between April and June, according to Federal Election Commission filings. Roger Marshall, a Great Bend Republican who along with Alan LaPolice is seeking the Republican nomination for Huelskamp’s seat, raised $184,580 for the quarter, with roughly $153,000 coming from individual contributors, The Topeka Capital-Journal reported. Of the remainder, $29,000 was from a loan

WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

Family dispute Since taking office in 2011, Brownback has been outspoken about his belief that children fare better when they are raised in households with a mother and father who are married. He has also advocated policies that encourage marriage, saying among other things that doing so

SPORTS 7:30

8 PM

8:30

would strengthen families and reduce childhood poverty rates. But Ward said he thinks Brownback’s emphasis on nuclear families is misplaced. “The concept that family is an important component to the strength of communities and states and countries is absolutely, universally agreed to,” Ward said. “What the problem is, when you narrowly define the family to look like Ward and June Cleaver of the 1950s, it rejects what we know to be true of American families in the 21st century. Instead of trying to stigmatize everything that doesn’t look like the stereotype of the ’50s, we should be trying to embrace and empower all kinds of families.” On July 7, following the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision legalizing samesex marriage nationwide, Brownback issued an executive order that some have suggested could open the door to discrimination against unmarried or same-sex couples who provide foster care and other social services for the state. The “Preservation and Protection of Religious Freedom” order specifically says that the state, “shall not take any discriminatory action against a religious organization, including those providing social services, wholly or partially on the basis that such organization declines or will decline to solemnize any marriage or to provide services, accommodations, facilities, goods, or privileges for a purpose related to the solemnization, formation, celebration or recognition of any marriage, based upon or consistent with a sincerely held religious belief or moral conviction.”

July 17, 2015 9 PM

9:30

10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

Cable Channels cont’d

7

Review

Ice

WEATHER TRIVIA™

Excessive rain hit north-central Pennsylvania in the early morning hours of July 17, 1942.

5 8

Snow

MOVIES

Network Channels

M

Flurries

Today Sat. Today Sat. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W 96 79 s 97 80 s Albuquerque 88 66 pc 88 65 pc Memphis 90 77 t 90 78 pc Anchorage 65 55 sh 68 54 sh Miami Milwaukee 87 68 c 88 72 pc Atlanta 92 75 t 95 76 t Minneapolis 88 71 s 89 63 t Austin 95 75 s 96 74 s Nashville 95 76 s 96 77 s Baltimore 84 72 pc 91 74 t New Orleans 93 78 t 94 79 s Birmingham 97 77 pc 97 77 t New York 82 70 s 86 77 t Boise 83 56 s 85 59 s 96 77 s 93 71 pc Boston 78 66 s 80 70 sh Omaha Orlando 89 74 t 88 74 t Buffalo 79 71 t 82 70 c 83 72 pc 92 76 t Cheyenne 84 54 pc 77 56 pc Philadelphia Phoenix 103 83 pc 90 78 t Chicago 88 74 t 92 73 s 85 73 pc 87 74 pc Cincinnati 89 73 c 91 73 pc Pittsburgh Cleveland 85 73 t 87 75 pc Portland, ME 75 62 s 76 64 r Portland, OR 85 61 pc 96 66 s Dallas 98 79 s 98 80 s 90 60 s 84 59 pc Denver 93 57 pc 88 59 pc Reno 87 72 pc 94 75 t Des Moines 94 77 s 91 72 pc Richmond 97 62 s 93 61 s Detroit 86 72 t 91 75 pc Sacramento 95 79 pc 97 78 s El Paso 98 73 pc 98 74 pc St. Louis Fairbanks 65 49 sh 54 47 sh Salt Lake City 87 64 s 80 62 c 77 69 pc 83 73 t Honolulu 91 77 c 89 76 pc San Diego San Francisco 75 60 pc 76 61 pc Houston 95 78 s 96 78 s Seattle 81 61 s 91 63 s Indianapolis 89 73 c 92 74 s 83 60 s 87 63 s Kansas City 93 76 pc 91 74 pc Spokane Tucson 94 75 t 88 72 t Las Vegas 104 82 s 95 76 t Tulsa 95 80 s 97 81 pc Little Rock 96 77 s 97 77 s Wash., DC 87 76 pc 93 79 t Los Angeles 81 63 pc 83 70 t National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: Death Valley, CA 115° Low: Saranac Lake, NY 34°

FRIDAY Prime Time WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

Rain

-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s National Summary: Storms will drench parts of Florida, the Rockies and deserts today. Clusters of storms are forecast to move eastward through the Midwest. Heat will continue to build over the South Central states.

The air temperature.

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Precipitation

A:

Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset

L awrence J ournal -W orld

››‡ Baby Mama (2008) Tina Fey.

Married Too?

››‡ Baby Mama (2008) Tina Fey.

Ancient Aliens

Ancient Aliens

Ancient Aliens

Evidence

Killjoys (N)

Dark Matter (N)

Defiance

Killjoys

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 FAM 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 HBO MAX SHOW ENC STRZ

401 411 421 440 451

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

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351 350 285 287 279 362 256

211 210 192 195 189 214 132

››‡ The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2 Key Key Futurama Futurama South Pk South Pk Archer Archer You Don’t Mess Botched Botched Soup Brody E! News (N) Soup Brody Reba Reba Morgan Spurlock Presents Freedom! The Josh Cops Cops Cops Junk Junk Junk Junk Junk Junk Junk Junk Junk Junk Movie Being Mary Jane Game Game Wendy Williams ››‡ Uncle Buck (1989) John Candy, Amy Madigan. ››› Point Break (1991, Action) Patrick Swayze. Mysteries-Museum My.- Monument Mysteries-Museum Mysteries-Museum My.- Monument What Not to Wear Love; Bride- St. Dare to Wear (N) Love; Bride- St. Dare to Wear ››‡ The Gabby Douglas Story (2014) Movie Gabby Douglas Not With My Daughter (2014) Sins of the Preacher (2013) Not Daughter Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Burgers Diners Diners Diners Diners Love It or List It Love It or List It Hunters H Hunt. Hunters Hunt Intl Love It or List It Kids’ Choice Sports 2015 Full H’se Prince Prince Friends Friends Friends Mighty Mighty Mighty Doctor Who Lab Rats Mighty Lab Rats Gravity Gravity Dog Girl Star-For. Penn Best Fr. K.C. Dog Girl Jessie I Didn’t King/Hill King/Hill Burgers Cleve Cleve American Fam Guy Fam Guy Childrens Eric Alaskan Bush Alaskan Bush Treasure Quest Alaskan Bush Treasure Quest KF ›››‡ Cars (2006, Comedy) Voices of Owen Wilson. The 700 Club Gnomeo-Juliet Brain Science Science Science Mission Pluto Science Science Mission Pluto The Waltons Middle Middle Middle Middle Golden Golden Golden Golden To Be Announced Redwood Kings (N) Treehouse Masters Redwood Kings Treehouse Masters Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Bless Lindsey Harvest P. Stone ››› Solomon and Sheba (1959) Price Fontaine Life on the Rock (N) News Rosary The Genesis Bridegrm Women Daily Mass - Olam Movie Bookmark Movie Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Capitol Hill Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Capitol Hill Deadly Women Deadly Women Evil Evil Deadly Women Deadly Women Apocalypse: WWI Apocalypse: WWI Apocalypse: WWI Apocalypse: WWI Apocalypse: WWI Neighbor Neighbor Neighbor Neighbor The Haves, Nots Neighbor Neighbor Neighbor Neighbor Storms Storms Tornado Alley Tornado Alley Tornado Alley Tornado Alley ››‡ Too Late for Tears (1949) The Strange Love of Martha Ivers 99 River Street

501 515 545 535 527

300 310 318 340 350

True Detective True Detective ››› Dawn of the Planet of the Apes The Ballers ›‡ Runner Runner ›› Reindeer Games (2000) Ben Affleck. Strike Back Strike Co-Ed Sex ›› Walking Tall (2004) sBoxing Antoine Douglas vs. Istvan Szili. (N) (Live) ›‡ Taxi (2004) Queen Latifah. ››› The Legend of Bagger Vance (2000) The Messengers ››‡ The Holiday The Rewrite (2014) Hugh Grant. Power (iTV) About Last Night


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USA TODAY — L awrence J ournal -W orld

IN MONEY

IN LIFE

Is F-150 price cut sign of trouble?

Netflix makes strides in major Emmy categories

07.17.15 GETTY IMAGES

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4 Marines slain in Tenn. shooting Gunman also killed; case probed as domestic terror Matt Slovin

The Tennessean

and Doug Stanglin USA TODAY

CHATTANOOGA , TENN.

A heavily armed attacker sprayed two military sites with gunfire Thursday, killing four U.S. Marines and

WHAT’S HAPPENING

ONLINE

wounding three other people. The attacker was also killed. The FBI identified the gunman as Mohammod Youssef Abdulazeez, 24. WRCB-TV reported that he was a naturalized U.S. citizen from Kuwait. U.S. Attorney Bill Killian said the attack was being investigated as possible “domestic terrorism.” The FBI cautioned that it was “premature to speculate on the motives of the shooter at this time.” U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch said the FBI will lead a national security investigation into

the shooting. dence that the shooter Hours after the first atknew any of the victims tack, at an all-branches personally, the officials recruiting center, law ofsaid. The officials were ficers with guns drawn not authorized to comswarmed a house they ment publicly. The Marine Corps said suspected was Abdulathe four Marines died at a zeez’s in Hixson, Tenn. Navy-Marine training site Authorities took away HANDOUT about 7 miles from the two women in handcuffs. Abdulazeez all-branches recruiting Two federal law enforcement officials said Thursday center. A fifth Marine was that it appeared the shooter acted wounded in the leg but not serialone, but investigators were still ously hurt at the training center. looking for any possible asso- A Chattanooga police officer was ciates. There is no immediate evi- wounded in the ankle, Mayor An-

USA TODAY INVESTIGATION

IGNORED KIT SOLVED HER RAPE AFTER 18 YEARS

TODAY’S MUST-READS

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DAVID GREEDY, GETTY IMAGES

uWe report as Clinton, Sanders and more press the flesh in Iowa u‘Detroit freezer mom’ sentenced for killing two children u Stories, photos as MLB returns from All-Star break To find these items, go to onlinetoday.usatoday.com

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

USA SNAPSHOTS©

2016 prediction? 8-point spread

32% of Americans would choose to play table tennis with Hillary Clinton over Donald Trump (24%)

Source STIGA Table Tennis/Harris Poll June 30-July 2 of 2,012 adults TERRY BYRNE AND BETHANY FEWELL, USA TODAY

COMPLETE COVERAGE See the complete investigation, including reporting from Gannett newspapers and TEGNA TV stations across the USA at rapekits.usatoday.com

Rape evidence neglected

Joanie Scheske returns to the site where she was left by her attacker after a sexual assault in 1991.

Evidence goes neglected; culprits go unpunished Steve Reilly

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

dy Berke said. “This is a nightmare for the city of the Chattanooga,” he said. President Obama called the attack “heartbreaking.” The gunman, who drove a silver Mustang convertible, first fired at an Armed Forces Career Center at a strip mall, then sped off. The shooter drove to the U.S. Naval Reserve Center on Amnicola Highway, where he fired into the offices. Authorities didn’t disclose whether the gunman was killed by officers or shot himself.

USA TODAY

Forensic evidence painstakingly collected after a sexual assault can identify suspects. It can corroborate survivors’ stories or exonerate the wrongly accused. Checked against DNA databases, it can help catch serial rapists before they attack again.

Consistency lacking in police policies on rape tests, 2B

KSDK

Yet a USA TODAY Media Network investigation identified more than 70,000 neglected rape kits in 1,000 police agencies across the country that were never tested. Among 18,000 police agencies nationwide, the untested kits could reach into the hundreds of thousands. “Every single one of those rape kits is a person and (their) family and friends,” said Joanie Scheske of St. Louis, whose rapist was identified 18 years after her attack through a DNA match with another long-neglected rape kit in a separate attack. The records, obtained by USA

TODAY and journalists for more than 75 Gannett newspapers and TEGNA TV stations, reveal widespread inconsistency in how police handle rape evidence from agency to agency and even officer to officer. Some departments test every rape kit. Others send as few as two in 10 to crime labs. Decisions often are left to the discretion of investigating officers. Decades of promises from politicians and more than $1 billion in federal funding have failed to fix the problems. The ongoing count shows the problem goes beyond high-profile rape-kit scandals in big cities

by finding hundreds of untested evidence kits in smaller-city police departments in places such as Muncie, Ind.; Visalia, Calif.; and Green Bay, Wis. The investigation prompted change, even before publication. State agencies and local police that didn’t know how many untested rape kits they held in storage decided to count. Several agencies, after questioning, sent rape kits to crime labs. In South Carolina, after legislative leaders were told of the findings, they began pursuing statewide standards defining when police should test rape evidence.

Study: Kids’ social skills key to success as adults Liz Szabo and Greg Toppo USA TODAY

Parents who want their kids to succeed have been known to play Mozart in the nursery and quiz their preschoolers with flash cards. A new study suggests these parents might want to go back to the basics by teaching children to share and take turns. Kindergartners with strong social and emotional skills were more likely than their peers to succeed academically and profes-

sionally, according to a 20-year study that followed more than 750 children until age 25. Youngsters whose kindergarten teachers gave them the highest scores on “social competence” were more likely than other kids to graduate high school on time, earn a college degree and hold full-time jobs. Social competence involves more than making friends, according to the study, published in the American Journal of Public Health. Teachers rated kids on the ability to cooperate, resolve conflicts, listen to others’ points of view, give sug-

gestions without being bossy and other skills. Kids with weaker social skills were more likely to develop substance abuse problems, be unemployed, get arrested, live in public housing or receive public assistance, according to the study, which included children from low-income neighborhoods in Nashville; Seattle; Durham, N.C.; and central Pennsylvania. Children with poor social skills in kindergarten are by no means a lost cause, pediatrician Dina Lieser said. The study provides a hopeful message because it’s pos-

sible to improve social skills throughout childhood, said Lieser, chairwoman of the American Academy of Pediatrics’ council on early childhood, who wasn’t involved in the study. A growing number of studies point to the importance of early childhood experiences in shaping the brain and later behavior. A 2011 study found that people who showed more self-control as preschoolers were healthier and wealthier by age 32, even after researchers considered influential factors such as IQ and social class.

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L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY FRIDAY, JULY 17, 2015

USA TODAY INVESTIGATION

Tens of thousands of rape kits untested Victims ask why evidence in assaults tucked away in storage

“The fact is that often rape kits are unsubmitted for testing because of a blame-the-victim mentality or because investigators mistrust the survivor’s story,” Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan told a U.S. Senate subcommittee in May. After more than 10,000 untested sexual assault kits were discovered in Detroit in 2008, a landmark study funded by the Justice Department exploring the causes of the failure to test evidence faulted police for “negative, victim-blaming beliefs.” “Rape survivors were often assumed to be prostitutes, and therefore, what had happened to them was considered to be their own fault,” researchers from Michigan State University wrote.

Steve Reilly USA TODAY

After 18 years without justice, Joanie Scheske believed the man who raped her would never be caught. Then, the St. Louis police called in 2009. Evidence in a separate, 8-year old sexual assault was finally tested and matched her attacker’s DNA. Rapist Mark Frisella, whose attack was so brutal Scheske still suffers from epilepsy, is serving 19 years in prison. “I had a really difficult time wrapping my head around why that rape kit was never tested,” Scheske said. A USA TODAY Media Network investigation has found similar evidence in tens of thousands of rape kits neglected by police around the country. Records obtained from more than 1,000 police departments identified at least 70,000 sexual assault kits containing evidence from reported rapes and other sexual offenses that were never sent to labs for testing. Despite its scope, the agency-by-agency count covers a fraction of the nation’s 18,000 police departments, suggesting the number of abandoned rape kits reaches into the hundreds of thousands. The kits contain forensic evidence collected from survivors in a painstaking and invasive process that can last four to six hours. Testing can yield DNA evidence that helps identify suspects, bolster prosecutions or in some cases exonerate the wrongly accused. The investigation found widespread inconsistency in how police handle rape evidence and failures at all levels of government to solve the problem. Records obtained from requests in all 50 states revealed: uMost states and most police agencies have no written guidelines for processing sex crime evidence. Decisions often are left to the discretion of investigating officers. Some agencies test every rape kit. Others send as few as two in 10 to crime labs. uMany thousands of untested kits are accumulating almost unnoticed at rural and smaller-city departments. uAlthough uploading offenders’ information into DNA databases can help identify serial predators who move across jurisdictions, police often treat rape kits as if the evidence is relevant only to a single assault. uAt least 50 law enforcement agencies — from Montgomery, Ala., to Reno, Nev. — have never counted untested rape kits in their evidence rooms. Most states haven’t undertaken an inventory. uThe U.S. Department of Justice is failing to comply with a 2013 law meant to get more evidence tested and set standards for processing rape kits. For rape survivors such as Scheske, the accumulation of untested evidence is more than abstract statistics. “Every single one of those rape kits is a person and family and friends,” she said. “It’s like a baby’s mobile: You touch one piece, and it moves all the others. It’s not just one person. Everyone that their sphere of influence touches is affected by what happens to a victim.”

DISCRETION QUESTION NO CONSISTENCY IN DECISION TO TEST OR STORE EVIDENCE

Debbie Smith of Williamsburg, Va., is one of thousands whose cases were solved by DNA analysis. After a masked man invaded her home in 1989 and raped her — threatening to come back and kill her if she told anyone — she lived in constant fear for more than six years. Smith remembers the day she was told a DNA match identified her attacker. He was already behind bars in Maryland for another crime. “It was the first time in those 6½ years that I took a deliberate breath. I wanted to breathe. I wanted to live.” The inconsistent analysis of rape kits persists even as compre-

FAILURE TO ACT WVEC

Debbie Smith, with her husband Rob, became an advocate for rape kit testing after her tragedy.

UNTESTED SEXUAL ASSAULT KITS A number of the nation’s largest law enforcement agencies have not tested tens of thousands of the sexual assault kits they booked into evidence in recent years. UNTESTED KITS

6,942

Memphis

6,663

Houston

5,266

Las Vegas

5,006

Indianapolis

4,140

Dallas

1,943

Jacksonville San Diego

1,830

Phoenix

1,782

Tucson

1,749

Milwaukee

1,615 0

1,000

3,000

5,000

7,000

Source: Agency and state figures obtained by USA TODAY as of early 2015 JIM SERGENT, USA TODAY

hensive testing in some cities — including New York, Cleveland and Detroit — has demonstrated the power of the previously unused evidence to identify assailants, confirm the accounts of sexual assault survivors or exonerate the wrongly accused. The results showed the discretion investigators have over whether to test rape kits has often been misused, said Sarah Haacke Byrd, managing director of the Joyful Heart Foundation, a group pushing for testing of all kits tied to reported sexual assaults. “Time and time again, we have seen that law enforcement frequently disbelieves victims when they’re seeking help from law enforcement,” she said. Mandatory testing “takes discretion out of the hands of law enforcement.”

COLD HITS TESTING EVIDENCE, EVEN YEARS LATER, IS RESOLVING RAPE CASES

It took more than a decade for Michael J. Brown to face justice for the rape of a school-age girl at a New York City apartment complex. On Aug. 6, 1993, Brown followed the girl inside a Queens apartment building. He placed his hand over her mouth and abducted her, taking her to the rooftop, where he raped her and knocked her unconscious with a brick, according to court records. The girl was taken to a hospital, where she was interviewed by police and a rape kit was prepared. For nine years, that evidence sat in a freezer among a trove of 16,000 untested rape kits held by the New York City Police Department. In prior decades, the evidence had little value unless new leads emerged. DNA technology advanced, and state and federal governments built offender databases. Police and policymakers saw value in analyzing the evidence. In the late 1990s, the NYPD spent $12 million to send every kit to a private lab for analysis. About 2,000 matched DNA in offender databases — “cold hits” as police call them. One of the matches: Michael Brown.

How sexual assault kit testing works Forensic tests of sexual assault evidence kits have been used to identify thousands of offenders since the 1990s. Here is how testing the evidence from a kit can help identify a suspect in sexual assault cases:

His DNA had been entered into the FBI’s Combined DNA Index System (CODIS) database after an unrelated crime in Maryland. The DNA match led to his indictment in 2003 for the New York girl’s rape. He was convicted in 2005. Other cities and states followed New York’s example and test all rape kits. New laws and changing attitudes have led to CODIS matches resulting in thousands of new investigations and hundreds of indictments — many involving serial offenders tied to sex crimes in different parts of the country. Testing by Cleveland-area prosecutors linked more than 200 alleged serial rapists to about 600 assaults. Statewide, Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine’s effort to collect and test rape kits has resulted in at least 2,285 CODIS hits. In Houston, analysis of about 6,600 untested rape kits resulted in about 850 matches, 29 prosecutions and six convictions. Since Colorado began requiring police statewide to submit rape kits for testing last year, more than 150 matches have been found. Still, many police agencies haven’t changed policies. Forty-four states have no law stipulating when police should test rape kits, and 34 states haven’t conducted a statewide inventory. “We need to have a full accounting for the state of what’s left, what hasn’t been tested, why it hasn’t been tested and just clear it up,” said New York State Assembly member Linda Rosenthal, a Democrat, who introduced legislation that would require an inventory. The bill has yet to make it out of committee. The state Department of Criminal Justice Services started a survey of 213 police agencies after questioning from USA TODAY.

REASONS WHY

HOSPITAL Sexual assault kit is assembled by collecting biological and other forensic evidence including blood, semen, saliva and loose hairs.

LAW ENFORCEMENT Investigators decide whether or not to forward the kit to a crime lab for testing.

CRIME LAB Analyzes and enters DNA into the Combined DNA Index System (CODIS). Alerts investigators of a match; otherwise, DNA remains in CODIS for future reference. ZACH WALKER, USA TODAY

WHY POLICE SAY THEY DON’T TEST EVERY KIT

Interviews with law enforcement officials and a review of case records reveal rape kit testing is often arbitrary and inconsistent between agencies and even within agencies. In Jackson, Tenn., records show contradictory reasons why rape kits were not tested. In some cases, the Jackson Police Department did not test evidence because the suspect’s identity was already known. In others, records show police decided not to test kits because there was “no known suspect,” even though testing the kits could help identify a suspect. Law enforcement officials said the most common reason kits are not tested is there is not a prosecutable case, usually because of a lack of cooperation from victims. That’s not a valid reason to jettison forensic evidence, said Mai Fernandez, executive director of the National Crime Victims Center in Washington. Some survivors may fear retaliation if they press charges. “The victim might not decide that they want to go forward with the case, but they might decide later on that they do,” Fernandez said. “Or if there’s enough circumstantial evidence, including the kit, a jurisdiction could decide to go forward without the victim.” Some government officials and researchers faulted police for a predisposition to doubt survivors’ stories.

CONGRESSIONAL FIX IGNORED

Many law enforcement officials are adamant in their defense of leaving some kits untested. At about $1,000 per kit, officials said, submitting a rape kit for testing unnecessarily could divert resources from other needs or delay testing of evidence in cases where the need is more urgent. “The kit itself isn’t always the best science or the best evidence to a case,” said Sgt. Trent Crump, spokesman for the Phoenix Police Department, which has accumulated 1,782 untested rape kits since 2000. A growing number of advocates push universal testing. “I think that in cities that have started testing all of their backlog, they’re finding enough patterns of serial rapists for the information to be really valuable in current cases as well as the ones that have been sitting on shelves for years,” said Scott Berkowitz, president of the Rape, Abuse and Incest National Network. Over the past decade, Congress appropriated about $1.2 billion to cut the nation’s backlog of DNA testing. In other terms: enough to test 1 million rape kits. In 2013, Congress passed the Sexual Assault Forensic Evidence Reporting Act, requiring threequarters of federal funding for sexual assault kits be used for testing or taking inventory. The law set up grants to help police pay for counting and testing. No grants have been awarded. A Justice Department steering committee met only once, in March 2014. Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, who authored the law, said that’s “completely unconscionable.” While federal action is stalled, changes in how rape evidence is treated fall to state and local officials. As more cold hits emerge, some law enforcement leaders have started to advocate for change. “They’ve had success stories with testing these kits,” said Col. Elmer Setting, who leads the New Castle Police Department in Delaware and supports mandatory testing. “It’s amazing how, (for) many of these sexual predators, we have their DNA and we never tested the kit. It doesn’t make any sense.” 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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7950 Jones Branch Dr., McLean, Va. 22108, 703-854-3400 Published by Gannett The local edition of USA TODAY is published daily in partnership with Gannett Newspapers Advertising: All advertising published in USA TODAY is subject to the current rate card; copies available from the advertising department. USA TODAY may in its sole discretion edit, classify, reject or cancel at any time any advertising submitted. National, Regional: 703-854-3400 Reprint permission, copies of articles, glossy reprints: www.GannettReprints.com or call 212-221-9595 USA TODAY is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes to other news services. USA TODAY, its logo and associated graphics are registered trademarks. All rights reserved.


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NATION/WORLD COLORADO THEATER SHOOTING

JAMES HOLMES GUILTY OF MURDER Jurors reject insanity argument; reading of verdicts lasts an hour Nicholas Penzenstadler, Doug Stanglin and Michael Winter USA TODAY

CENTENNIAL , COLO. Rejecting his insanity defense, a jury convicted James Holmes of first-degree murder and attempted murder Thursday for killing 12 people and wounding 70 others when he shot up a packed movie theater in a Denver suburb three years ago. The 27-year-old former University of Colorado neuroscience researcher could face the death penalty when he is sentenced for the carefully planned July 20, 2012, attack in Aurora. The first guilty verdict was announced at 4:15 p.m., MT (6:15 p.m. ET). Judge Carlos Samour Jr. finished reading the verdicts on

the 165 counts an hour attempted murder. later and then polled the Jarell Brooks, who also jurors individually. suffered a serious leg Wearing khakis and a wound when he shielded blue dress shirt, Holmes a mother and her two stood impassively, hands small children, stayed in his pockets, as Samour away from the courtroom repeatedly said “guilty” Thursday. But he said in as he read through the an email to USA TODAY, POOL PHOTO jury forms, which James Holmes “It sounds like they made stretched to 658 pages. a good decision.” Several jurors wiped “Hopefully we can tears from their pained faces as move on from it,” he said. Now a 21-year-old senior marthe judge began his litany. Families of the victims let out a keting major at Metropolitan tense, excited sigh as Samour read State University in Denver, the first guilty verdict. Some nod- Brooks was 17 the night he took one of Holmes’ steel-penetrating ded, cried and pumped fists. “We got him,” Sandy Phillips, bullets in the thigh. Learning to whose daughter Jessica Redfield walk again and live life fully have Ghawi died in the onslaught, said been arduous, he said. quietly to other families. The critical question for jurors Holmes’ parents sat silently in deliberating Holmes’ fate was the third row behind their son. whether they believed he was leHis mother wept and hung her gally sane the night he opened on head. an audience gathered to watch the Massaging his injured leg, Josh opening of the latest Batman Nolan choked back tears as Sa- movie, The Dark Knight Rises. mour called out his name associThe issue formed the final day ated with one of the 140 counts of of arguments before the jury be-

KILLINGS SINCE AURORA 387 people have died in mass killings since the movie theater shootings in Aurora, Colo., in July 2012: Mass killings: 78 Killings involving guns1: 63 People killed: 387 Those who were children: 119 KILLINGS THIS YEAR Mass killings: 15 People killed: 74 Those who were children: 13 1 — in some incidents, multiple types of weapons were used Source USA TODAY research GEORGE PETRAS, USA TODAY

gan deliberating Wednesday. Arapahoe County District Attorney George Brauchler dismissed the diagnoses and brain scans indicating that Holmes suffered from schizophrenia, saying they did not prove that his ability

to tell right from wrong was impaired, which is the legal standard. “He wasn’t insane,” the prosecutor said. In his final argument, however, defense attorney Dan King told jurors they “cannot divorce the mental illness from this case or from Mr. Holmes. Because the mental illness caused this to happen. Only the mental illness and nothing else.” During the trial, prosecutors played numerous hours of video recorded interviews conducted with Holmes by a court-appointed psychiatrist. In the recordings made nearly two years after the shootings, Holmes rarely showed any emotion or regret. Instead, he matterof-factly explained how he faked a phone call to duck outside as the previews rolled, put a clamp on the emergency exit to hold it open, and then returned a few minutes later as The Dark Knight Rises began playing. Contributing: Melanie Eversley

ELECTION 2016

$377M raised for 2016 races

Rule changes result in huge increase for this point in campaigns Fredreka Schouten USA TODAY

Obama visits prison to push justice plans SAUL LOEB, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

President takes steps for overhaul of criminal justice system, with bipartisan support

David Jackson and Susan Davis USA TODAY

P

resident Obama became the first president to visit a federal prison Thursday, going behind bars to talk to inmates and law enforcement officials about ways to overhaul the criminal justice system. As Obama called again for legislation to permit lighter sentences for non-violent drug offenders and other changes, there were more signs from Congress that some of his ideas are gaining bipartisan support. “We have to consider whether this is the smartest way for us to both control crime and rehabilitate individuals,” Obama said af-

ter a tour of the El Reno Federal Correctional Institute near Oklahoma City. After speaking with prison officials and inmates serving time for drug offenses, Obama said he is struck by how many people face years in prison because they made foolish, youthful mistakes — many of them similar to the kinds of mistakes he and others made as kids. “There but for the grace of God,” he said. “And that is something that we all have to think about.” Citing the overcrowded and violent conditions at too many prisons in the United States, Obama said the situation is “not normal. It’s not what happens in other countries. What is normal is teenagers doing stupid things. What is normal is young people who make

mistakes.” Obama’s prison trip — part of a week-long series of events designed to highlight criminal justice issues — came as the top House Republican added himself to the growing list of lawmakers who support new sentencing laws. “We’ve got a lot of people in prison, frankly, that really in my view really don’t need to be there,” said House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio. A series of proposals are pending in the Republican-run House and Senate. During his visit to El Reno, the president also called for improvements in prison quality, including crackdowns on overcrowding, gang violence, and sexual assaults. A crew from the documentary program Vice accompanied Obama as he toured the prison.

President Obama talks with correctional officer Ronald Warlick while touring an El Reno Federal Correctional Institution cellblock in El Reno, Okla., with Charles Samuels, Bureau of Prisons director.

IN BRIEF UNCERTAINTY OVER FUNDING THREATENS MOTORISTS

Americans face more traffic jams, car repairs and crumbling roads as states throughout the nation halt highway projects because of uncertainty over federal funding. Congress is moving to avert an immediate crisis by trying to pass a highway bill before the Highway Trust Fund runs out of money on July 31. But the House and Senate are unlikely to agree in the next two weeks on anything more than a short-term fix for a problem that states and road builders say desperately needs a long-term solution. Meanwhile, in the midst of the peak summer construction season, at least seven states have had to put road building on hold because they can’t count on federal dollars. States and local communities have been hard-pressed to carry out plans for major highway improvements because Congress has passed nothing but shortterm funding bills since 2009.

shooting in the town of Holly Hill was an isolated incident. — Joshua Cannon, WLTX-TV

LET IT SNOW, DOWN UNDER

INTERPOL ISSUES RED NOTICE FOR ESCAPED DRUG LORD

SAEED KHAN, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Snow falls Thursday while a mother and her son visit the Botanic Garden in Orange, a town in New South Wales, Australia. What would become the 35th four people — including two teenshort-term fix came Wednesday, agers — dead at a home 60 miles when the House voted 312-119 to northwest of Charleston. add $8 billion to the Highway The only survivor, identified as Trust Fund to keep it solvent un- an 8-year-old boy, was seriously til Dec. 18. — Erin Kelly wounded. He was taken to the Medical University of South Carolina, police in Orangeburg SHOOTER STILL ON LOOSE County said. AFTER 4 KILLED IN S.C. There was no immediate inforPolice in rural South Carolina mation on how the victims were are searching for the perpetrator related, but officials said they had of a “heinous” shooting that left evidence to indicate that the

Interpol has issued a red notice for Mexican drug lord Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, who escaped Saturday from a maximum security prison in Mexico. The International Police Organization says on its website the 58-year-old drug kingpin is wanted on U.S. federal charges for “conspiracy to import and possess cocaine with intent to distribute; money laundering; and criminal forfeiture (4 counts).” An Interpol “red notice” calls for the arrest of a wanted person for the purpose of “extradition or similar lawful action,” the website says. Guzman escaped over the weekend from the Altiplano federal prison, 50 miles outside Mexico City, through a mile-long tunnel dug under the prison and up to the shower in his cell. — Doug Stanglin

WASHINGTON A record $377 million has rained down on the presidential field in the opening months of the 2016 contest, with more than $6 out of every $10 raised on candidates’ behalf going to independent groups that face no contribution limits. The trend, dominated by Republicans, underscores how much recent changes to federal election rules, including court rulings allowing unlimited corporate contributions in elections, have rewritten the playbook of American campaigns. “We’ve never seen this level of fundraising at this stage in the process,” said Anthony Corrado, a campaign GETTY IMAGES finance expert Hillary Clinton leads individual at Colby College fundraising, at in Maine. $47.5 million. At this point in the 2012 election, only two candidatespecific PACs had emerged in the presidential race and had raised a combined $15 milAP lion, Corrado Jeb Bush’s super PAC is tops with said. In the first $103 million. six months of the current election cycle, supporters of former Florida governor Jeb Bush have stocked his super PAC with $103 million, putting him ahead of the GOP field and dwarfing the $11.4 million he raised for his own official campaign. Texas Sen. Ted Cruz has collected more than $14 million since entering the race in March. That’s overshadowed, however, by the family of four super PACs that has raised an additional $37 million to help Cruz. The narrative is different among Democrats. Hillary Clinton has collected $47.5 million since entering the race in April, outpacing even the outside groups set up to help advance her ambitions. Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders raised $15.2 million and outperformed Clinton among the grassroots donors needed over the long fundraising slog.

Contributing: Christopher Schnaars and Erin Raftery


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STATE-BY-STATE News from across the USA ALABAMA Luverne: Michelle

Russell is undergoing treatment after being bitten by a rabid bobcat, at first thinking it was a stray dog, the Greenville Advocate reported. When she went outside to bring her pets in, the bobcat hid then bolted from a drainage pipe and bit her arm; a neighbor shot and killed the bobcat, which later tested positive for rabies. ALASKA Ketchikan: Pastor

Peter Epler is going nude from the ankle down this month to raise money for Because International, a charity that makes $15 pairs of shoes for poor children in other countries, the Daily News reported.

ARIZONA Gilbert: Jesse Hughes

and his wife, MaLeisa, owners of the Green Acre dog boarding facility, who are accused of being responsible for the deaths of more than 20 dogs, plan to challenge a grand jury indictment, the Republic reported. ARKANSAS Bentonville: The

Scott Family Amazeum opened its doors to children and adults who could explore eight interactive exhibits, ArkansasOnline reported.

HIGHLIGHT: MISSOURI

Ferguson mayor to begin outreach effort Aamer Madhani USA TODAY

Weeks after Ferguson, Mo., activists fell 27 signatures short of forcing Mayor James Knowles to face a recall, the mayor says he is launching a door-to-door effort to touch base with city residents who considered his potential ouster. Knowles told USA TODAY that he and campaign volunteers have sifted through the petition signatures and that he will soon begin his outreach effort, perhaps as early as next week. The mayor faced ridicule from activists when he said in a television interview that his community had no racial divide shortly after unrest broke out in the St. Louis suburb last year following the shooting death of a black teenager by a white police officer. Backers of the recall also criticized Knowles for overseeing a city government that activists say was hostile to black residents long before the shooting death of Michael Brown, the unarmed teenager who was fatally shot after a confrontation with police officer Darren Wilson. “I’m hoping we can bridge some gaps because right now we’ve got to focus on how to bring people together,” seen drought conditions eliminate almost two-thirds of this year’s crops.

security video showed a woman who entered the staff lounge at the dental office of William Gilbert and made off with employees’ purses, wallets, phones and keys, The Sacramento Bee reported. bear entered a local pie shop through a window and helped itself to some baked goods, KUSA-TV reported. The owner of Colorado Cherry Co. said the bear ate 24 cherry pies and 14 apple pies. CONNECTICUT Milford: Rita’s,

with 17 locations in Connecticut, has decided to stop serving its frozen custard due to a nationwide egg shortage, the New Haven Register reported. Rita’s will transition from frozen custard to soft-serve ice cream. DELAWARE New Castle: Good Housekeeping has chosen this town south of Wilmington as one of its 50 Most Beautiful Small Towns in America, The News Journal reported. The town came in as No. 8. Sitka, Alaska, was first, followed by Sedona, Ariz., and Batesville, Ark. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: Be-

cause of financial management problems, the Federal Transit Administration put tight limits on Metro’s access to federal grant money, leaving the transit authority cash-strapped, The Washington Post reported. FLORIDA Melbourne: Harris

Corp. announced that it will keep its headquarters here, a relief to state and Brevard County officials who lobbied hard to keep the Fortune 500 company’s base there after its recent acquisition of McLean, Va.-based Exelis Inc., Florida Today reported. GEORGIA Chatham County:

Drop-off recycling centers will no longer accept glass, The Savannah Morning News reported. HAWAII Wailuku: The non-

profit Lanai Culture & Heritage Center began work to restore the Waiopae fish pond last month with the help from some 140 children and teens, The Maui News reported. The restoration project is a public-private partnership between the non-profit and landowner Pulama Lana’i. IDAHO Lewiston: The drought is killing wheat crops here and commissioners have declared a state of emergency. The Lewiston Tribune reported that some Clearwater County farmers have

burg: Dollar Tree Inc. said it is establishing distribution operations in the Upstate Corporate Park in Cherokee and Spartanburg counties, a $104.4 million investment expected to create 400 jobs over the next five years, The Greenville News reported.

SOUTH DAKOTA Sioux Falls: A man who walked away from the state penitentiary is the suspect in three Minnesota bank heists, the Argus Leader reported. Clint Eldeen escaped from the prison’s minimum-security wing. MICHAEL B. THOMAS, GETTY IMAGES

Ferguson Mayor James Knowles says he will soon meet with residents who signed a petition to recall him. Knowles said in a telephone interview. The group Ground Level Support gathered 1,787 signatures from registered voters in the city who backed the petition calling for the recall and 1,549 more that were thrown out by the St. Louis County Board of Election Commissioners for a variety of reasons. The group needed 1,814 valid signatures, or 15% of registered voters to trigger the recall. The activists earlier this month filed a lawsuit calling for a judge to order that the recall Church shooting has prompted calls for its removal. MASSACHUSETTS Worcester: A

MICHIGAN Detroit: A mom who

pleaded guilty to killing two of her four children and stuffing their bodies in her freezer will be sentenced Friday to life in prison without the possibility of parole, the Detroit Free Press reported.

COLORADO Lyons: A hungry

MINNESOTA Le Center: Many

lican Gov. Rauner signed a bill into law that allows the return of happy hour alcoholic drink specials, the Chicago Tribune reported.

pools in the Mankato area are operating at a loss, The Free Press reported. But pools here and in St. Peter haven’t made significant increases to their pool passes and fees to make up for the difference.

INDIANA Indianapolis: As

MISSISSIPPI Jackson: An 8-

ILLINOIS Springfield: Repub-

Indiana’s first regional Mormon temple opens in Carmel, Utahbased Tri-Grace Ministries said it will set up a tent across the street, the Indianapolis Star reported.

year-old boy missing since Sunday has been found safe and authorities have arrested two women who were with him, The Clarion-Ledger reported.

IOWA Des Moines: Iowa is a national leader in including sexual orientation and gender identity in school anti-bullying policies, according to a national report released Wednesday. But advocates for gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender students said more needs to be done to help students feel accepted and included, The Register reported.

MISSOURI Dexter: Fire investigators here still don’t know the cause of a fire that killed a 52year-old woman. The Dexter Daily Statesman reported that Lois Wells died in the house fire Monday.

KANSAS Topeka: The state has fined AT&T for overcharging the state’s Lifeline program for a third year in a row, The Wichita Eagle reported. KENTUCKY Frankfort: Two

Republicans lawmakers are sponsoring a House bill for the 2016 legislative session that would clear the way for county clerks to deny same-sex marriage licenses based on religious beliefs, The Courier-Journal reported. LOUISIANA New Orleans: Jon-

athan “Lloyd” Boover, 32, who spent 11 days in a City Park oak tree to protest the golf course being built on the site, was sentenced to 100 hours of community service, The Times-Picayune reported. MAINE Portland: Videoport, a

28-year-old movie rental store, will close in August and donate its 18,000-title DVD collection to the local library, the Portland Press Herald reported. MARYLAND Rockville: At a public hearing on Monday, the Rockville City Council will seek opinions on whether to remove a statue of a Confederate soldier near Montgomery County’s Red Brick Courthouse. WUSA-TV reports that the Emanuel AME

RHODE ISLAND Newport: The owners of the Twin River casino have completed their purchase of the Newport Grand slots parlor, The Newport Daily News reported. SOUTH CAROLINA Spartan-

man accused of dousing a cruiser in gasoline and setting it on fire outside a police station has been indicted, the Telegram & Gazette reported.

CALIFORNIA Granite Bay: A

homes, The (Johnstown) Tribune-Democrat reported.

MONTANA Hamilton: Two

people have been fined $9,450 for starting a wildfire last summer by shooting exploding targets in the Sapphire Mountains. The Ravalli Republic reported that fighting the 50-acre fire cost about $94,000. NEBRASKA Omaha: A two-block downtown tract here is to be transformed into a $50 million campus featuring a hotel, apartments, shops and a Kiewit international training facility, the Omaha World-Herald reported. NEVADA Sparks: The Sparks City Council has approved a $195,000 severance payment to settle a gender discrimination complaint filed by the city’s first female firefighter. Fire Capt. Ginny Sievert sued the city in 2012 alleging she was retaliated against following a dispute over a fellow firefighter’s failed attempt for a promotion, the Reno Gazette-Journal reported. NEW HAMPSHIRE

Derry: Derry and Chester have been chosen to participate in the Solar Up NH program, the Eagle-Tribune reported. NEW JERSEY

New Brunswick: Barnabas Health

be placed on the ballot. The plaintiffs claim that more than 28 signatures were invalidated because the election board found that they had “no signature” or a “wrong signature” when they were in fact valid. Ferguson’s city clerk and the election commission are named as defendants in the suit but have yet to file their response in St. Louis County Circuit Court. Knowles said that he was confident that the suit will be dismissed but that he doesn’t want to discount residents that signed the petition. plans to merge with Robert Wood Johnson Health System in a deal that would bring together two landmark hospitals and create New Jersey’s biggest health care system, the Asbury Park Press reported. NEW MEXICO Gallup: Two

former Cibola County officials are accused of ethics violations and using their positions for personal gain, The Gallup Independent reported.

NEW YORK Albany: Giving the

state’s attorney general authority to investigate and prosecute all police-involved killings will “harm the cause of justice,” according to the District Attorneys Association of the State of New York. The group, in its first public statement on Gov. Cuomo’s executive order from last week, criticized the action, calling it “gravely flawed,” Gannett’s Albany bureau reported.

NORTH CAROLINA Raleigh: An employee at the Walnut Creek Amphitheatre told an emergency dispatcher that three armed men burst into the business office, pointed guns at her and her coworkers’ heads, ordered them on the floor and stuffed a half-million dollars into backpacks before fleeing, The News & Observer reported. NORTH DAKOTA Fairmount: Water restrictions are in place here after a thunderstorm damaged the small town’s water tower, KFGO radio reported.

TENNESSEE Memphis: The National Civil Rights Museum will have a public visitation Friday for civil rights leader D’Army Bailey, The Commercial Appeal reported. The lawyer and judge, who helped preserve the Lorraine Motel where the Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated and turn it into the museum, died after a long battle with cancer. TEXAS Austin: Data shows fewer

people passing a computer-based GED exam in Texas, the Austin American-Statesman reported.

UTAH Provo: Firefighters were able to extinguish a blaze on “Y” Mountain. The Salt Lake Tribune reported that the fire was blamed on a Chinese lantern that had been launched into the air and drifted onto the mountain’s slope. VERMONT Town: Vermont has

begun collecting college money for all baby Vermonters — starting with a $25,000 gift from Subaru of New England. Under new legislation, Vermont Student Assistance Corp. will set aside $250 for post-secondary education for every child born to Vermont residents, or $500 for children born into families earning less than 250% of the federal poverty level, Burlington Free Press reported.

VIRGINIA Richmond: The Brandermill Community Association is stepping up pressure on the owners of abandoned properties in the 40-year-old Chesterfield County subdivision, the Times-Dispatch reported. WASHINGTON Verlot: The U.S.

Forest Service will get input from scientists and the public before reopening the Big Four Ice Caves after a California woman was killed when the cave partially collapsed, the Seattle Times reported.

WEST VIRGINIA Cross Lanes: A woman pleaded guilty to stealing packages and a Christmas wreath from a home last year, The Charleston Gazette reported. “It was a rash action,” Deborah Davis, 63, told Circuit Judge Joanna Tabit.

OHIO Lorain: Paul Pelton, 41, of Lorain, was arrested earlier this week after calling two teens injured in a fiery crash “idiots” as he opened the back door of their vehicle and recorded cellphone video of the incident rather than rendering aid, WKYC-TV reported. OKLAHOMA Tulsa: Dyer Memorial Chapel, a decades-old north Tulsa funeral home, has temporarily moved its office to a local church after a fire in June. Firefighters believe someone likely set the fire intentionally, the Tulsa World reported. OREGON Portland: More than

4 billion board feet of timber were harvested in the state last year, The Oregonian reported.

PENNSYLVANIA Shanks-

ville: As many as 200 property owners near the Flight 93 National Memorial in western Pennsylvania will be able to apply for federal funds to repair their

WISCONSIN Green Bay: Arriv-

ing ahead of schedule, replicas of two of Christopher Columbus’ ships, the Niña and the Pinta, docked Monday evening at Leicht Memorial Park after making the trip from Escanaba, Mich. The ships were open for self-guided tours, Green Bay Press-Gazette reported. WYOMING Casper: Hospitals

aren’t making enough in property taxes to cover bills that some patients leave unpaid. The Casper Star-Tribune reported that a legislative labor committee is studying uncompensated care.

Compiled by Tim Wendel, Nicole Gill and Jonathan Briggs, with Carolyn Cerbin, Linda Dono, Michael Gottschamer, Jaleesa Jones, Rachel Lang, Ben Sheffler and Nichelle Smith. Design by Mallory Redinger. Graphics by Alejandro Gonzalez.


USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld FRIDAY, JULY 17, 2015

MONEYLINE

NEWS MONEY SPORTS Greek banks on path to reopening LIFE AUTOS TRAVEL

5B

Confident it will be repaid, ECB boosts emergency funds

PAUL SAKUMA PHOTOGRAPHY

Netflix is based in Los Gatos, Calif.

AFTER STOCK SPLIT, NETFLIX HITS ANOTHER RECORD Netflix shares closed at a new high Thursday, up 18% to $115.81, adjusted for Tuesday’s 7-for-1 stock split. This follows another high closing price of $707.90 hit on Monday, the day before the split. The Los Gatos, Calif.-based online TV provider said it added more than 3.2 million new subscribers in its favorable Q2 earnings report on Wednesday. Adding to momentum: Several analysts raised their target price for Netflix, including Stifel Research and S&P Capital, both of which issued notes to Buy with a $128 target.

Kevin McCoy @kmccoynyc USA TODAY

Europe’s central bank boosted its emergency lending to Greek banks by 900 million euro or nearly $981.3 million Thursday, a move that could enable the beleaguered nation’s lending institutions to reopen. European Central Bank President Mario Draghi announced the decision during a news conference in Frankfurt, where he said adding additional funds to the more than 89 billion euro or nearly $97 billion previously

committed came in response to “positive” developments in Greece’s talks with creditors. Those updates included the vote by Greece’s parliament shortly before midnight to accept new austerity measures demanded by creditors as the prerequisite for receiving nearly $100 billion in the country’s third bailout in five years. Additionally, eurozone finance ministers meeting in Brussels on Thursday agreed in principle to give Greece a 7 billion euro or nearly $7.63 billion bridge loan from a European Union fund to keep the country solvent until a bailout is approved. EU states are expected to confirm the loan on Friday. “Things have changed now,” Draghi said. “We have substantially accommodated the Bank of Greece’s request.” “We know that there is a bor-

MARTIN LEISSL, BLOOMBERG

Mario Draghi, president of the European Central Bank, announces the decision Thursday in Frankfurt.

rowing concept that’s been elaborated, and it’s on its way to being approved,” he said. Greek banks have been closed since June 29 after an earlier ECB decision to freeze its Emergency Liquidity Assistance. The banks have since restricted ATM withdrawals to 60 euro a day.

ONE GIANT LEAP FOR WALL STREET LEON NEAL, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

AMAZON’S PRIME DAY EVENT WILL BE BACK Amazon has declared its Prime Day a success and says it will hold the 24-hour sale again next year. Prime Day surpassed Black Friday in terms of orders, which were up 18% over Black Friday 2014, the company said Thursday. It also said that customers ordered 34.4 million items — 398 items every second. “After yesterday’s results, we’ll definitely be doing this again,” Amazon Prime Vice President Greg Greeley said in a statement.

MARTIN E. KLIMEK, USA TODAY

GOOGLE SOARS AFTER HOURS Google shares climbed nearly 7% to $580.04 in after-hours trading just moments after it posted its second-quarter financial results. Google surprised investors with a better-thanexpected performance, earning $6.99 a share and beating Wall Street estimates of $6.70 a share.

Now that we’ve finally seen Pluto – some investors might DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVG. want to see whether they can grab a piece of space for themselves. 18,150 70.08 NASA and SpaceX don’t trade 18,100 on a stock exchange, but there are other ways to try to invest in in4:00 p.m. 18,050 terstellar exploration. 18,120 Elon Musk’s SpaceX is well18,000 9:30 a.m. known. It’s also a privately held 18,050 company. But there are at least 16 17,950 publicly traded ways to play vari17,900 ous aspects of space exploration, aerospace technology or related launch systems, including Aerojet THURSDAY MARKETS Rocketdyne, Orbital ATK and INDEX CLOSE CHG Nasdaq composite 5163.18 x 64.24 Boeing, just to name a few. 2124.29 x 16.89 S&P 500 Enthusiasm over space exploT- note, 10-year yield 2.35% unch. ration and launch systems has Oil, light sweet crude $50.87 y 0.54 certainly spread to Wall Street. A Euro (dollars per euro) $1.0875 y 0.0073 custom equal-weighted index of Yen per dollar 124.14 x 0.43 SOURCES USA TODAY RESEARCH, MARKETWATCH.COM the 16 moonshot shots is out of this world this year, rising 13.4%. That makes the Standard & USA SNAPSHOTS© Poor’s 500 roughly 2% gain this year look downright grounded. It’s important to note these Emailing companies are included because your doctor they’ve been named in company filings by key space companies, to be competitors in the industry. A third of U.S. patients That doesn’t mean they’re directcontact their doctors via ly involved in the Pluto missions. email and doctors get These companies make compomost emails between nents or systems that can be used 10 a.m. – 11 a.m., about in space or propulsion systems that could find applications if interest in exploration continues to of daily emails. grow. Some make products for flow control or lifts primarily used in other industries that also have applications in aerospace. These companies do have one thing in common. Analysts see Source Kaiser Permanente analysis upside in the shares of all of the JAE YANG AND PAUL TRAP, USA TODAY stocks (the only exception is Air-

9%

Chris Woodyard USA TODAY

There are at least 16 publicly traded ways to play various aspects of space exploration.

@mattkrantz USA TODAY

Ford slashes price of F-150 Company downplays ‘incentives,’ says it’s business as usual

Some investors are eager to reach for the stars

Matt Krantz

It was unclear Thursday how quickly Greek banks might reopen and when they might be able to resume normal activities. However, Draghi said the ECB was relatively certain Greece now would be able to make repayments on the billions it owes the International Monetary Fund and other creditors. “All my evidence leads me to believe we will be repaid, as well as the IMF,” he said. Draghi also rejected claims by critics that ECB’s prior refusal to approve additional emergency funding had roiled the alreadyshaken Greek economy. Characterizing such claims as “unfounded,” he said the central bank had provided needed liquidity. Separately, Draghi declined to discuss whether Greece should remain in the EU. “It is not up to the ECB to decide,” he said.

EXPLORATION SYSTEMS Symbol

YTD % ch.

Upside to target

7/15 close

KTOS BEAV

21.9% -5.6%

38.9% 22.4%

$6.12 $54.78

OA AIT

34.4% -12.5%

18.5% 16.8%

$73.41 $39.90

B

5.7%

12.5%

$39.12

AAR Rockwell Collins

AIR COL

10.3% 9.9%

13.5% 11.1%

$30.63 $92.82

Actuant Boeing

ATU BA

-15.7% 14.2%

8.9% 9.3%

$22.96 $148.49

Honeywell General Dynamics

HON GD

3.7% 7.9%

10.1% 7.2%

$103.57 $148.45

Aerojet Rocketdyne

AJRD

32.6%

5.1%

$24.27

Lockheed Martin Spirit AeroSystems

LMT SPR

4.7% 30.0%

4.7% 4.5%

$201.62 $55.94

NOC ENXTPA:AIR

15.2% 57.5%

0.6% n/a

$169.86 $65.12

Company

Kratos Defense B/E Aerospace Orbital ATK Applied Ind. Tech. Barnes

Northrop Grumman Airbus

SOURCES S&P CAPITAL IQ, USA TODAY

bus, only because there is no U.S. consensus estimate available). Not many industries have so much universal enthusiasm. Analysts are most bullish on Kratos Defense & Security, which is more of a play on war than on space exploration. The company has a business unit that focuses on unmanned systems. That includes sensors, avionics and electronic parts that find their way into aerospace systems. Shares are already up 22% this year to close Thursday at $6.12 a share. Analysts say this stock could be worth $8.50 a share in 18 months, which if correct, is 39% upside. Perhaps the best known and most direct way to play space exploration is Orbital ATK. Orbital touches the space and avionics

business with three of its business units: flight systems, defense systems and space systems. Orbital’s flight systems unit builds rockets for midsize space vehicles primarily to place satellites in orbit. Shares have been stellar, rising 34% this year. Despite that gain, analysts remain bullish. The stock, which closed at $73.41 Thursday, could be worth nearly 19% more in 18 months if the average analyst is correct, S&P Capital IQ says. Of course, it’s important to note that space exploration is risky business. Even Musk’s own SpaceX has had its fair share of costly mishaps. But just take a close look at those pictures of Pluto. Maybe you’ll find a way to profit the next time our telescopes whiz by.

In a move that sometimes spells sales trouble, Ford is offering discounts of up to $10,479 for its most important vehicle, the F-150 pickup. The discounts are featured this week on Ford’s website and vary by region. The highest discounts were found in places including Washington, D.C., but even pickup havens like California were seeing discounts of more than $7,000. The discounts appeared to apply to only the larger, more deluxe versions that often carry higher price tags. The discounting is unusual because the highly revised 2015 F-150 is relatively new in the market. The current version has an aluminum body to save weight, and thus fuel. Not only is the F-150 the nation’s best-selling vehicle, it is also considered one of the most profitable, at least compared to cars. But sales were down 8.9% last month, and at 55,171 in sales, F Series only outsold perennial No. 2 pickup Chevrolet Silverado by about 4,000 vehicles. Silverado gained 18.4% in sales for the month. Ford officials have blamed tight supplies for sales droop, but analysts aren’t so sure. “The truck hasn’t sold up to expectations ... and this may be a hint that in certain parts of the country, the issue might be more than supply,” says Akshay Anand, analyst at Kelley Blue Book.

“The truck hasn’t sold up to expectations ... and this may be a hint that in certain parts of the country, the issue might be more than supply.” Akshay Anand of Kelley Blue Book

The real development to watch for is whether Ford moves out the incentives nationwide, and if the price cuts are extended to lower trim levels. Ford is downplaying the discounts. It says the price cut, for instance, isn’t a lump sum, but a number of discounts bundled together — from different kinds of cash-back deals to incentives on upscale options packages. “Incentives and rebates are a normal part of our business,” says spokesman Mike Levine. “Some incentives encourage customers to purchase better-equipped trucks while others reward our customers for their loyalty or financing through Ford Credit.” He says Ford is spending less on incentives overall than a year ago. Plus, customers are paying about $44,100 per vehicle to add on more features and options, the highest ever for F-Series pickups.


6B

L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY FRIDAY, JULY 17, 2015

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

It has been all about the macro on Wall Street recently. But with the crisis surrounding the Greece debt drama starting to diminish now that Athens has agreed to a deal with creditors, and Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen’s twoday testimony on Capitol Hill now history, Wall Street will get back to what it does best on Friday: analyze incoming economic data to see what it says about the state of the economy, the outlook for Fed interest rate policy and the mood of the U.S. consumer. Wall Street gets fresh data Friday on June housing starts and consumer confidence, as well as an early look at the level of consumer confidence in early July. Economists are forecasting a

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

bounceback in June housing starts to a annualized pace of 1.12 million, after May’s 11% dip to 1.04 million, according to data from Choice Investment Management. The fresh reading on the June consumer price index will be watched closely, as the Fed is looking for an uptick in inflation as one of the key factors that plays into its rate-hike decisionmaking. Wall Street is forecasting the headline month over month inflation number to rise 0.3% in June, after a lower-than-expected 0.4% jump in May. Also set for release is the University of Michigan preliminary consumer sentiment index for July. Wall Street sees the index inching up to 96.5 after June’s final reading of 96.1. Consumer confidence has been trending higher and is at its best level since before the 2008 financial crisis.

+70.08

DOW JONES

+16.89

INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE

CHANGE: +.4% YTD: +297.18 YTD % CHG: +1.7%

COMP

+64.24 CHANGE: +1.3% YTD: +427.13 YTD % CHG: +9.0%

CLOSE: 18,120.25 PREV. CLOSE: 18,050.17 RANGE: 18,065.33-18,131.61

Among high-turnover SigFig investors, Vascular Biogenics (VBLT) was the most-sold stock in late June.

NASDAQ

+8.31

CLOSE: 5,163.18 PREV. CLOSE: 5,098.94 RANGE: 5,128.56-5,163.18

GAINERS

Company (ticker symbol)

+18.0 +137.3

Teco Energy (TE) Puts itself up for sale, rises.

+15.6

Citigroup (C) Profit beats estimates as it controls costs. Micron Technology (MU) Intel’s cloud demand comment gives boost. Google (GOOG) Profit tops estimates as it curbs costs. Valero Energy (VLO) Diversified refinery base to fuel growth.

21.48

+2.90

58.59

+2.13

19.61

+.72

579.85 +19.63

+5.2 +38.3 +3.8

+3.8 -44.0 +3.5

NAV 196.14 53.52 53.51 194.23 194.24 105.57 45.87 21.57 59.97 44.20

+2.15

+3.4

+16.9

Altria Group (MO) 52.91 Philip Morris R&D collaboration may lead to M&A.

+1.68

+3.3

+7.4

+1.11

+3.3

+15.1

$ Chg

261.23 -20.93

ETF, ranked by volume SPDR S&P500 ETF Tr CS VelSh 3xLongCrude Barc iPath Vix ST iShs Emerg Mkts SPDR Financial iShares Rus 2000 PowerShs QQQ Trust iShare Japan CS VelSh 3xLongNatGs iShares EAFE ETF

YTD % Chg % Chg

-7.4

-.7

4wk 1 +1.5% +1.1% +1.2% +1.5% +1.5% +3.0% +1.0% +0.3% +0.8% -0.5%

YTD 1 +4.3% +4.7% +4.6% +4.3% +4.3% +8.8% +7.5% +1.5% +2.4% +5.0%

Ticker SPY UWTI VXX EEM XLF IWM QQQ EWJ UGAZ EFA

Close 212.30 1.99 16.53 38.81 25.46 126.31 111.94 12.95 2.19 65.40

Chg. +1.69 -0.06 -1.17 +0.48 +0.25 +0.75 +1.56 +0.05 -0.08 +0.56

% Chg %YTD +0.8% +3.3% -2.9% -59.3% -6.6% -47.5% +1.3% -1.2% +1.0% +3.0% +0.6% +5.6% +1.4% +8.4% +0.4% +15.2% -3.5% -45.0% +0.9% +7.5%

INTEREST RATES

MORTGAGE RATES

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

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

Close 6 mo ago 3.25% 3.25% 0.13% 0.12% 0.01% 0.01% 1.66% 1.30% 2.35% 1.84%

Close 6 mo ago 4.17% 3.80% 3.16% 2.89% 2.65% 2.72% 3.09% 3.03%

SOURCE: BANKRATE.COM

COMMODITIES

Garmin (GRMN) Sinks after cutting annual earnings forecast.

43.10

-3.30

-7.1

-18.4

Delphi Automotive (DLPH) Share rating cut to equal weight at Barclays.

76.80

-3.92

-4.9

+5.6

PPG Industries (PPG) Falls sharply after second-quarter results.

111.82

-5.16

-4.4

-3.2

Harman International (HAR) 108.29 Hits lowest since January as it announces earnings call.

-4.65

-4.1

+1.5

KLA-Tencor (KLAC) Affected by Intel’s spending cut.

52.58

-2.18

-4.0

-25.2

Michael Kors (KORS) OTR downgrades on diminishing popularity.

41.25

-1.70

-4.0

-45.1

Consol Energy (CNX) 18.20 Dips another day as it cuts staff amid weak gas/coal.

-.73

-3.9

-46.2

BorgWarner (BWA) Rating cut to equal weight at Barclays.

51.80

-2.03

-3.8

-5.7

Applied Materials (AMAT) Shares slump following Intel spending cut.

17.87

-.70

-3.8

-28.3

Commodities Close Prev. Cattle (lb.) 1.47 1.47 Corn (bushel) 4.30 4.30 Gold (troy oz.) 1,143.80 1,147.20 Hogs, lean (lb.) .76 .80 Natural Gas (Btu.) 2.85 2.92 Oil, heating (gal.) 1.67 1.67 Oil, lt. swt. crude (bar.) 50.91 51.41 Silver (troy oz.) 14.96 15.03 Soybeans (bushel) 10.19 10.25 Wheat (bushel) 5.62 5.67

Chg. unch. unch. -3.40 -0.04 -0.07 unch. -0.50 -0.07 -0.06 -0.05

% Chg. unch. unch. -0.3% +0.9% -2.2% unch. -1.0% -0.4% -0.6% -0.8%

% YTD -11.6% +8.3% -3.4% -6.4% -1.2% -9.8% -4.4% -3.9% unch. -4.7%

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

Close .6407 1.2960 6.2105 .9196 124.14 15.8140

Prev. .6398 1.2930 6.2109 .9134 123.71 15.7958

6 mo. ago .6592 1.1962 6.2079 .8630 117.45 14.5712

Yr. ago .5836 1.0746 6.2044 .7395 101.71 12.9209

FOREIGN MARKETS Country Frankfurt Hong Kong Japan (Nikkei) London Mexico City

Close 11,716.76 25,162.78 20,600.12 6,796.45 45,344.90

Prev. Change 11,539.66 +177.10 25,055.76 +107.02 20,463.33 +136.79 6,753.75 +42.70 45,107.13 +237.77

%Chg. YTD % +1.5% +19.5% +0.4% +6.6% +0.7% +18.1% +0.6% +3.5% +0.5% +5.1%

SOURCES: MORNINGSTAR, DOW JONES INDEXES, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SOURCE: BLOOMBERG AND THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

$15

June 18

July 16

4-WEEK TREND

$211.18 July 16

$115.81

July 16

INVESTING ASK MATT Chg. +1.56 +0.39 +0.40 +1.55 +1.55 +0.89 +0.38 +0.09 +0.35 +0.23

1 – CAPITAL GAINS AND DIVIDENDS REINVESTED

+10.2

eBay (EBAY) 65.59 Quarterly results top estimates; will sell enterprise unit.

Price

POWERED BY SIGFIG

$21.15

$25

4-WEEK TREND

TOP 10 EXCHANGE TRADED FUNDS

34.76

-2.18 -0.53 AAPL AAPL ARIA

4-WEEK TREND

The video-streaming service set a $120 new high after the company late Price: $115.81 Wednesday reported second-quarChg: $17.68 ter earnings and said it added 3.28 % chg: 18.0% Day's high/low: million customers worldwide for a $80 June 18 $116.49/$107.68 total of more than 65 million. Fund, ranked by size Vanguard 500Adml Vanguard TotStIAdm Vanguard TotStIdx Vanguard InstIdxI Vanguard InstPlus Fidelity Contra American Funds GrthAmA m American Funds IncAmerA m American Funds CapIncBuA m Dodge & Cox IntlStk

+8.3

+3.5 +36.3

Sherwin-Williams (SHW) Drops after profit forecast cut.

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

-2.19 +0.26 AAPL AAPL TW

TOP 10 MUTUAL FUNDS 102.79 +5.08

+2.27

Company (ticker symbol)

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

Netflix

+4.8

67.46

Charles Schwab (SCHW) Shares climb following earnings beat.

MORE THAN 80% U.S. INVESTMENTS

The Wall Street bank said earnings tumbled in the three months end- $250 ed in June because of litigation costs that shaved $2.77 a share from what would’ve been a $4.75- $200 a-share second-quarter profit. June 18

Price: $211.18 Chg: -$1.78 % chg: -0.8% Day's high/low: $214.14/$209.32

YTD % Chg % Chg

Netflix (NFLX) 115.81 +17.68 Soars after subscriber report, especially internationally.

Tesoro (TSO) Early jump enough for new 2015 high.

LOSERS

$ Chg

-2.74 -0.78 AAPL FHCO PBR

51% TO 80% U.S. INVESTMENTS

Goldman Sachs

CLOSE: 1,272.83 PREV. CLOSE: 1,264.52 RANGE: 1,269.66-1,275.90

Price

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

-1.84 -2.99 AAPL PLUG EA

The discount retailer surged in its Chg: $5.15 first day of trading after selling % chg: 32.2% more than 8.9 million shares in an Day's high/low: IPO for $16 each. $22.99/$20.57

CLOSE: 2,124.29 PREV. CLOSE: 2,107.40 RANGE: 2,110.55-2,124.42

S&P 500’S BIGGEST GAINERS/LOSERS

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

STORY STOCKS Ollie’s Bargain Outlet Price: $21.15

RUSSELL 2000 INDEX

CHANGE: +.7% YTD: +68.14 YTD % CHG: +5.7%

21% TO 50% U.S. INVESTMENTS

More than half a million investors nationwide with total assets of $200 billion manage their investment portfolios online with SigFig investment tracking service. Data on this page are based on SigFig analysis.

RUSSELL

RUT

COMPOSITE

LESS THAN 20% U.S. INVESTMENTS

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GPS-maker Garmin seems to have lost its way Q: Can Garmin survive as smartphones take over? Matt Krantz

mkrantz@usatoday.com USA TODAY

A: Remember when your Garmin GPS was your best friend on the road? It’s most likely since been replaced by your smartphone. That’s one of the problems facing Garmin. Shares of the maker of navigation devices have been suffering as the company struggles to remain relevant as smartphones eat away at the need for dedicated equipment. Garmin’s shares have fallen by more than 20% over the past 12 months and more than 10% this year alone. The pain continued Thursday as investors reacted to Garmin’s lowered guidance for second-quarter revenue. The company expects revenue of up to $775 million during the quarter, short of the $772.5 million analysts were expecting. The company also took down guidance for quarterly profit to as low as $2.65 a share, down from the previously expected $3.10. Investors need to see if the company can cook up new products that can take on competitors that increasingly eat away share. Now the company’s fitness tracking segment is under attack by rivals like Fitbit. Analysts rate shares a “hold.” Profit in 2016 is expected to be $3.07 a share in 2016, which is 1% below 2014 profit. Still, analysts think this stock could be worth $48.23 a share in 18 months, up 12% from current levels.

One year after Yellen’s warning, biotech stocks still rising Adam Shell USA TODAY

A year ago, Fed chair Janet Yellen made waves when she warned of “substantially stretched” valuations in the biotech sector. Her market call was ill-timed. A popular biotech ETF is up more than 50% since then. At the time of Yellen’s warning, which occurred during last summer’s July 15 testimony before Congress, many Wall Street pros were taken aback by a central banker commenting so specifically on financial markets, even go-

ing so far to identify specific sectors of the market. Other pundits compared it to ex-Fed chairman Alan Greenspan’s famous “irrational exuberance” quote back in December 1996, when he first warned of stock market excesses. (The stock market, of course, did not peak back then until March 2000, or more than three years after Greenspan’s infamous warning.) Still others wondered aloud last summer why any investor would take investment advice from an economist like Yellen, as opposed to a professional money manager. (Yellen’s current two-day testi-

DREW ANGERER, BLOOMBERG

Janet Yellen, senators on Thursday.

mony on Capitol Hill ended Thursday and was far less focused on market valuation.) Last summer, however, Yellen did her best Greenspan imitation, using the phrase “substantially

stretched” to describe the overvaluation in small stocks in the biotech and social media space. Her commentary — a single sentence buried in a paragraph on page 20 of the Fed’s 55-page Monetary Policy Report — followed more general comments on market valuation that she said were “at levels not far above the historical averages.” But what caught investors’ attention and made waves last summer was the following passage: “Nevertheless, valuation metrics in some sectors do appear substantially stretched — particularly those for smaller firms in the so-

cial media and biotechnology industries, despite a notable downturn in equity prices for such firms early in the year.” Turns out her market call was early. Since the close of trading on July 15, 2014, most of the types of stocks Yellen warned about have kept climbing higher, with biotechs taking the lead. Indeed, in the past year, the iShares Nasdaq Biotechnology ETF (IBB) has rallied almost 55%. The small-cap Russell 2000 (RUT) stock index has climbed nearly 10%, and the Global X Social Media Index ETF (SOCL) has risen 3%.


SPORTS LIFE AUTOS In theaters this weekend TRAVEL

7B

USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld FRIDAY, JULY 17, 2015

MOVIES

Compiled from reviews by USA TODAY film critics

Rating; the good and the bad

Ant-Man

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Plot: An ex-con (Paul Rudd) is recruited to take over the mantle of the shrinking superhero Ant-Man and pull off a large-scale heist. Director: Peyton Reed

1 hour, 57 minutes

Minions

Rating: PG-13 Upside: Scenes with ants are some of most visually spectacular that Marvel has done Downside: Tonally, the movie is a mess

Plot: A trio of yellow henchmen scour the globe looking for their next boss, who comes in the form of a female supervillain (voiced by Sandra Bullock). Directors: Kyle Balda, Pierre Coffin

eegE

The Gallows

eeeE

1 hour, 21 minutes

Self/less

Rating: R Upside: Found-footage technique keeps viewers on edge the entire time Downside: While satisfying, the twist is wholly predictable

Plot: A wealthy businessman (Ben Kingsley) is dying of cancer and decides to place his consciousness in a young body (Ryan Reynolds), with mixed results. Director: Tarsem Singh

1 hour, 41 minutes

Spy

eeeg

Plot: Five emotions in a little girl’s head have to deal with the tumult caused by the stresses of growing up. Director: Pete Docter

Rating: PG Upside: A brilliantly crafted balance of joy and sadness Downside: Emotional heft might go over kids’ heads

Plot: A CIA analyst (Melissa McCarthy) is thrown into a life of being a superspy when one of her fellow agents is killed on a mission. Director: Paul Feig

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Rating: PG-13 Upside: The scientific process is fascinating, albeit fictional Downside: Lacks thrills and ultimately isn’t as interesting as its concept

eeeE

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Plot: A dinosaur-filled theme park is thrown into chaos, and a behavioral researcher (Chris Pratt) has to save the day when a dangerous hybrid species gets loose. Director: Colin Trevorrow

TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX

2 hours, 10 minutes

Ted 2

Rating: PG-13 Upside: Better dinos than ever Downside: The sequel lacks heart and wonder of the 1993 original

Plot: A foul-mouthed teddy bear (voice of Seth MacFarlane) and his human best pal (Mark Wahlberg) fight for the civil rights of the stuffed animal when he wants to adopt a child. Director: Seth MacFarlane

1 hour, 55 minutes

Terminator Genisys

Rating: R Upside: Tatum and company get points for diversity and a host of strong new females Downside: ‘XXL’ is more than this sequel’s title — it’s how long the movie starts to feel after an hour

Plot: A soldier (Jai Courtney) is sent from the future to stop machines from destroying the world, but finds a timeline different than the one expected. Director: Alan Taylor

1 hour, 44 minutes

Trainwreck

Rating: PG-13 Upside: Deftly balances heartache and humor Downside: Not enough of Cyler’s scene-stealing Earl

Plot: A magazine writer (Amy Schumer) begins to rethink her immature, hedonistic lifestyle when she meets a nice, dateable interview subject (Bill Hader). Director: Judd Apatow

eeEE

egEE

Plot: Strippers, assemble! Channing Tatum and his ripped friends shed their clothes with gusto in this grin-inducing sequel, this time under the guise of a road trip to a stripper convention. Director: Gregory Jacobs

DREAMWORKS ANIMATION

CLAUDETTE BARIUS, WARNER BROS. PICTURES

Me and Earl and the Dying Girl

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Plot: A teenager (Thomas Mann) and his best friend (RJ Cyler) befriend a girl (Olivia Cooke) dealing with a leukemia diagnosis. Director: Alfonso GomezRejon

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MAKING WAVES TLC apparently has had enough of the Duggars. The network has canceled the family’s ‘19 Kids and Counting’ reality TV show. The cancelation D DIPASUPIL, GETTY comes in the IMAGES FOR EXTRA wake of tabloid Josh Duggar revelations that Jim Bob and Michelle Duggar’s eldest son, Josh, had admitted to molesting five underage girls, including his own sisters, when he was a teenager and that his parents kept it secret. “After thoughtful consideration, TLC and the Duggar family have decided to not move forward with ‘19 Kids and Counting.’ The show will no longer appear on the air,” the network said in a statement on its website. “The recent attention around the Duggars has sparked a critical and important conversation about child protection.” The Duggars posted a statement on their website thanking TLC, the film crew and God. USA SNAPSHOTS©

Bingeing brings families closer

29%

of today’s families make a tradition of binge-watching favorite shows together.

Source TYLENOL’s #HowWeFamily survey March 12-19 of 1,678 adults TERRY BYRNE AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY

BROADWAY BOUND Rumer Willis will make her Broadway debut Aug. 18 as Roxie Hart in ‘Chicago.’ The ‘Dancing With the Stars’ champ will take over the role, currently being played by Brandy Norwood, through Oct. 11. Willis and Norwood follow a long line of celebrity Roxies, among them Rita Wilson, Marilu Henner, Brooke Shields and Lisa Rinna.

2 hours, 5 minutes Rating: PG-13 Upside: Arnold Schwarzenegger continues to be the franchise’s best special effect Downside: The original time-travel conceit becomes convoluted and confusing

MELINDA SUE GORDON, PARAMOUNT PICTURES

eeeE

2 hours, 4 minutes Rating: R Upside: Schumer brings hilarity and heartache to her role Downside: It could easily lose a half-hour of high jinks

UNIVERSAL PICTURES

ANNE MARIE FOX, TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX

LIFELINE

1 hour, 55 minutes Rating: R Upside: The hilarious bromance between a bear and his buddy Downside: Thin narrative simply connects an overlong string of comedy bits

UNIVERSAL PICTURES

Magic Mike XXL

2 hours Rating: R Upside: McCarthy and Jason Statham (as a macho agent) have hilarious chemistry Downside: Too long and also a bit violent for a comedy

DISNEY/PIXAR

Jurassic World

1 hour, 56 minutes

ALAN MARKFIELD, FOCUS FEATURES

WARNER BROS. PICTURES

Inside Out

Rating: PG Upside: Many of the sight gags are exercises in cuteness Downside: There can be too much of an adorable thing

UNIVERSAL PICTURES/ILLUMINATION

MARVEL

Plot: Four teenagers are locked in their high school with a supernatural force on the 20-year anniversary of an accidental death. Directors: Travis Cluff, Chris Lofing

1 hour, 31 minutes

TELEVISION

Netflix flexes some muscle with Emmy HBO still biggest, but sites are among the best Gary Levin

@GaryMLevin USA TODAY ADAM TAYLOR, ABC

IT’S YOUR BIRTHDAY WHO’S CELEBRATING TODAY?

Donald Sutherland is 80. David Hasselhoff is 63. Luke Bryan is 39. EPA, GETTY IMAGES

TWEET TALK STARS SOUND OFF ON TWITTER @ddlovato My allergies just flash mobbed my face @kelly_clarkson I got 2 see a private screening of Ricki & the Flash & it was AMAZING! Meryl can sing anything & Mamie Gummer’s character is my favorite! @JordanPeele Let’s bring back the word “yesteryear” Compiled by Cindy Clark

Streaming sites have been steadily encroaching on TV networks in attention and awards, and this year’s Emmy nominations, announced Thursday, continue that trend. Netflix, with 34 nominations, claimed more spots in the top series and acting categories, with Orange Is the New Black, House of Cards, Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, Bloodline and Grace and Frankie, and Amazon is already a favorite to win for Jeffrey Tambor’s performance in Transparent. Still, HBO remained the top contender with 126 nods, up from 99 last year, and its Game of Thrones had the most nominations of any program with 24. The Emmys increased to seven the number of comedy and drama series vying for top honors. Perennial winner Modern Family will face Veep, Louie, Transparent, Schmidt, Silicon Valley and the final season of Parks and Recreation. And Mad Men, also competing for the last time, joins Thrones, Cards, Orange, Downton Abbey, Homeland and Better Call Saul, a spinoff of Breaking Bad. Jon Hamm will try once more for his role as conflicted adman Don Draper in AMC’s Mad Men (he’s been nominated seven

ERIC LIEBOWITZ, NETFLIX

Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, starring Ellie Kemper, is one of several Netflix series making major inroads with the Emmys. PRIMETIME EMMY AWARDS FOX, SEPT. 20, 8 ET/PT

times, but never won), facing Saul’s Bob Odenkirk, Bloodline’s Kyle Chandler, Cards’ Kevin Spacey, Ray Donovan star Liev Schreiber and previous Newsroom winner Jeff Daniels. (If Hamm loses, he has another shot as guest actor in Kimmy Schmidt). Taraji P. Henson won a best-actress nomination for Fox’s smash hit Empire, against Viola Davis (How to Get Away With Murder), Claire Danes (Homeland), firsttimer Tatiana Maslany (Orphan

Black), Elisabeth Moss (Mad Men) and Robin Wright (Cards). But neither Henson’s show nor her co-star, Terrence Howard, were recognized. Nor were fourtime winner Jim Parsons and TV’s top comedy The Big Bang Theory, in a continued tilt away from big broadcasters. Orange has switched to the drama category, thanks to a rule change that makes most hourlong series ineligible as comedy contenders. And a new category, variety sketch series, aims to differentiate series such as Inside Amy Schumer and Saturday Night Live from late-night talk shows.


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hometownlawrence.com

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JULY 17, 2015

What homeowners should do when the power goes out Linda a. ditch

Hometown Lawrence

The world seems to stop when the power goes out — No humming appliances, yakking televisions or beeping electronic games. So much of our life is connected to electricity it is disconcerting when the connection is broken. Westar Energy’s Media Relations Manager Gina Penzig said power outages in the Lawrence division are down about 40 percent compared with the first half of 2014. This is primarily due to a quiet storm season and the implementation of ReliabiliTree, the program responsible for trimming trees along area power lines. “One of the common causes for outages so far this year has been wildlife, primarily squirrels,” Penzig wrote in an email. “When our crews respond to a wildlife-

related outage they will add wildlife protection to the affected equipment to help prevent future outages.” The hot weather also doesn’t help. When the temperature goes up, so does electrical use. This can put outage-causing stress on the system. “We work to prevent this by using infrared technology to look for weak spots in the system before the stress of summer,” she said. “We also can sometimes shift the load on the system to other circuits as needed, similar to a redirecting traffic if you have a street that is congested.” The first thing a homeowner should do when the power goes out is call the electric company. Westar encourages customers to keep the 1-800-LIGHT KS outage number by the telephone

or programmed into their cell phones. Don’t assume someone else will call. The more outage reports the company receives, the faster a cause can be determined. Customers may report and receive updates about power outages by signing up for Westar’s text or email service. A new mobile app, MyWestar, is available on the Apple Store and Google Play. The app allows you to manage your account and report and monitor power outages using the app. Next, turn off all your appliances, including the air conditioner, water heater, and water pump. Unplug televisions and computers. This keeps the circuits from overloading when the power is restored. Leave on one light to signal the power is back on.

ReliabiliTree is a Westar Energy program that keeps trees near power lines trimmed, reducing the risk of an outage.

Keep the doors to the refrigerator and freezer closed. Food in the refrigerator will stay safe for about four hours, and a full freezer of food will keep frozen for about 48 hours. To help keep the inside cool, close the curtains and blinds on the sunny side of the house. Also, keep the doors and windows closed until the indoor temperature equals the outside.

Plus drink plenty of water. Westar’s website, www. westarenergy.com, has additional information for dealing with power outages. Just click on the “Report and outage” tab. — Linda A. Ditch writes about real estate for Hometown Lawrence. Contact her at thompson.lindaa@gmail.com

Showcase Homes Offered by: Pam Bushouse 550.0716

OPEN SUNDAY 12:00 - 2:00

Offered by: Oliver Minnis 785.550.7945

OPEN SATURDAY, JULY 18, 12 - 1:30 PM

2220 Breckenridge Drive MOVE-IN READY! Wonderfully maintained townhome in great location. This corner unit has an extended yard that provides privacy and room for entertainment. Master on the main level. Lots of fresh interior paint, updated fixtures, appliances all stay. HOA provides exterior painting, lawn care, and snow removal. Close to Park and Ride, as well as shopping and bike path. Convenient access to Clinton Lake, dog park, walking trails. This townhome is a mustsee! MLS# 137301

$120,000

1514 Crossgate Dr Enjoy golf course living in this well maintained, reverse 1.5 story townhome on the #11 green at Alvamar Country Club. The beautiful deck and patio add outdoor living space. This floor plan includes spacious rooms, tall ceilings, two fireplaces and wood floors on the main level. HOA handles snow and lawn leaving more time for you to relax! MLS 137373

$275,000

Built for You Visit the New StephensRE.com


2BB

|

Friday, July 17, 2015

HOMETOWN LAWRENCE

.

L awrence J ournal -W orld

SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT

SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT

SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT

$425,000

$129,000

$325,000

StephensRE.com

1030 E 1901 RD, EUDORA

CUSTOM BUILT! 10 minutes from Lawrence! 4450 sq ft sunroom, screened porch, 2 family rooms, huge lower level, custom built, central vac, insta hot water, walkout, Pella windows, incredibly spacious! SCOT HOFFMAN 785-760-4356 MLS 136079

StephensRE.com

20 ACRES ON E 950 RD, LECOMPTON

58 ACRES ON E 1550 RD

20.22 ACRES just minutes from the K-10 Lecomption Turnpike Booth. A great hill top view plus rolling topography with 10 acres of timber.

$25,000 PRICE REDUCTION ON THIS 58 ACRES. Located southeast of Lawrence on a hard surface road. A great site for future homes with lots of brome grass and a view of Mt. Blue to the East. JOHN HUNTINGTON, JR, GRI 785-691-5565 MLS 134780

JOHN HUNTINGTON, JR., GRI 785-691-5565

MLS 135642

StephensRE.com

SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT

SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT

SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT

$129,500

$198,000

$365,000

StephensRE.com

699 E 1732 RD, BALDWIN CITY

NEW LISTING! Charming Cottage with 3 Bedrooms, 1 Bath in Rural Setting with many updates. New appliances, detached garage, fenced yard with white picket fence. Move-In Ready! DEBBIE MORGAN, GRI 785-760-1357 MLS 137333

StephensRE.com

309 AMES ST, BALDWIN CITY

756 E 500 RD, OVERBROOK

COMMERCIAL BUILDING w/Prime location on Highway 56 in Baldwin City. Formerly Service Station & most currently Bar & Grill. Lots of potential for business opportunities! DEBBIE MORGAN, GRI MLS 136649 785-760-1357

An Independently Owned and Operated Member of the Reece & Nichols Alliance, Inc 3801 W Sixth St., Lawrence, KS 66049 | 785.856.6200

817 PLEASANT ST, TONGANOXIE MLS 136836 PRICE RECENTLY REDUCED $159,000 OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY, JULY 18TH 10AM-1PM

Lovely Victorian home on a tree shaded corner lot. Restored and maintained to its original beauty. Great front porch and huge back deck area. Much of the woodwork is original to the home, including pocket doors and wood oors. Wonderful detached 2+ car garage, newer but made to look old and rustic. Don’t miss this wonderful piece of Tonganoxie history. Suzie Quisenberry

StephensRE.com

IMMACULATE! Lawrence schools! Walkout rancher, 10 acres, tiled baths, huge kitchen, full basement, 2160 ft on main level, 42x63 Morton Building, all fenced horse stalls, pond, rural water, 3 car garage. Must see! SCOT HOFFMAN 785-760-4356 MLS 136212

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HOMETOWN LAWRENCE

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Friday, July 17, 2015

| 3BB

SATURDAY OPEN HOUSES 0

$124,900

1:3

0-1

0 10:

:30

2611 JORDAN LN

:30

$229,900

0-1

0 12:

MLS 137423

:30

MLS 137080

$234,900

-11

:00

$249,900

610 PENNYCRESS DR

2108 PRAIRIE TERR

SHARP MONTEREY BLUFFS story & 1/2. 4 BR, 3 BA. Main level master plus BR/office. Covered East patio, fenced yard, 3 car garage. Come see Saturday or call Don.

AMAZING FUNCTIONAL SPACE w/ this ranch home, full finished walk out basement in an awesome neighborhood. Super sharp, updated, clean and well maintained. 2950 square feet, 4 BR/3 Bath, close to K-10.

:30

0-2

1:0

$309,900

:00

800 WHEATON DR

LIBBY GRADY 785-760-2530

VANESSA YUNGER 785-691-9099

MLS 136601

:30

$269,900

:00

1970 E 850 RD, LECOMPTON SECLUDED, ENERGY EFFICIENT HOME with open floor plan. Wood and slate flooring throughout. 3BR,3BA, all season room, loft overlooking great room, & full unfinished basement. Wooded lot, 24x24 shop. RANDY RUSSELL 785-331-7954

MLS 137332

JOY SLAVENS 785-423-1868

:30

$449,000

:00

:00

ARIELA UNZ 785-840-5037

796 E 1217 RD 1ST TIME OPEN! 1886 Vintage with new updates, original log beams provide the character, knotty pine floors that gleam, views, 2 acres of beautiful yard, close to town, huge shop with 2 levels of space. MLS 137048

$489,900

SCOT HOFFMAN 785-760-4356

:00

$510,000

0-3

1:0

5028 W 18TH ST

529 E 1700 RD, BALDWIN CITY

AMAZING HOME! Oversized kitchen, 2 dining areas, living room, office, mud room & laundry on the main. Master suite, 3 bedroom & 2 more full bath upstairs. Basement has family room & 5th bedroom. RANDY BARNES 785-760-2140

MLS 136662

$299,500

0-3

1:0

STEPHANIE A. HARRIS 785-979-5808

0-3

1:0

1008 OAK TREE DR QUAIL RUN neighborhood, amazing home w/ gorgeous park like setting, 3992 sq. feet, open plan, wood floors, granite in kitchen, family room/office/living room, large bedrooms, and walk out basement. MLS 136608

$278,000

GORGEOUS home on quiet street & great location, 3 BR/2 Bath, 3 Car garage, open plan, nice eat up bar, Four Season Room with dual fireplace to family room, fully updated, super sharp! A must see. MLS 136921

SHELLEY EZELL CHERI EZELL 550-4636/979-3302

BUYER & SELLER REPRESENTATION

0-2

1:0

720 E 1485 RD

4004 BELLFLOWER ST

IDA LEWIS 785-865-8699

0-3

1:0

$690,000

MLS 135586

MLS 136114

BOB KOCOUR 785-766-1234

4229 BRIARWOOD DR

$369,000

:00

0-4

2:0

NEW CONSTRUCTION MLS 137160

MLS 137032

:30

$376,900

GORGEOUS SETTING minutes South of town! All brick rancher, 5 bdrm, 5 bath, 2 car garage. Amazing quality inside & out! Great floorplan. 10+/-A,Woods, walking trails & extra shop/garage….a must see!!!

MLS 135842

0-2

:00

0-4

2:3

SCOT HOFFMAN 785-760-4356

MLS 137318

822 SILVER RAIN

NEW PRICE! Three plus BR cottage with southwest décor featuring 3BA, main level master, large kitchen/dining area, unfinished basement Cozy front porch, patio, & alley access to garage.

SHELLEY EZELL CHERI EZELL 550-4636/979-3302

OLIVER M. MINNIS 785-550-7945

JUST COMPLETED! Ranch home on corner lot. 3 bed on main level w/ 3 car garage. 3000 sq ft of finished living. Open floor plan, separate master suite. Hardwood floors. Covered patio. Sprinkler system.

:30

613 CHOUTEAU CT

1211 HACIENDA LN NEW LISTING! 1st Time Open! Huge lot, immaculate home, open, wood floors, great kitchen, large master, 3 car garage, deck, patio, landscaped everywhere. Tasteful home, not to be missed, come by!

801 WHEATON DR

NEW EXTERIOR PAINT! 5 bdrm, 4 bath home w/ bsmt & 2 car garage on quiet cul-de-sac. 3 living areas, dining room, eat in kitchen, wood floors, lg fenced yard w/ garden shed & lots more! Come see!!

1:0

$360,000

$289,000

BEAUTIFUL HARDWOOD FLOORS in this 4 Bdrm 3 Bth Rancher with Walkout finished basement. Gas stove top, Stainless Appliances, Lots of Cabinet space, Formal Dining and 3 car garage. Come see!

0-2

1:0

:00

0-3

1:0

1514 CROSSGATE DR

MLS 137373

MARY LOU ROBERTS 785-766-1228

MLS 137358

$275,000

SUNDAY OPEN HOUSES

$228,900

0-2

:30

3417 TILLERMAN DR

WELL CARED FOR & IMPROVED Reverse 1.5 Story townhome on terrific lot overlooking ACC #11 green. Impressive deck & paver patio enhance the entertainment or quiet time. A must see opportunity!

JOY SLAVENS 785-423-1868

0-1

0 12:

• Move in ready with new carpet and fresh paint throughout • Main level living with 4 bedrooms 3 baths and full finished basement • 3 Car garage with deck and fenced backyard

YOUR HOME TEAM 1:0

MLS 137407

$320,000

0-1

3 11:

4808 PALM VALLEY CT SO MUCH SPACE at this price! 5 bedroom, plus bonus room, 4 bathrooms, master on the main level, 2 car garage, concrete roof. Daylight basement, amazing cul-de-sac in the Alvamar neighborhood.

MLS 137255

DON MINNIS 785-550-7306

MLS 136602

:30

0-1

0 12:

$224,900

ONE OWNER RANCH HOME! Spacious 3 BR, 2 BA, with safe room. F/P, custom ceilings, NEW carpet, paint, ceramic tile and all appliances! Fenced rear yard w/ deck & 2 car garage. Don’t miss this one!

TOM HARPER CRS, ABR, GRI, E-PRO 785-218-6351

MLS 137362

2519 JASU DR

DON MINNIS 785-550-7306

:00

0-3

1:0

3603 BOULDER CT

WELL CARED FOR 4 Bedroom, Master on the main. Terrific floor plan with two main floor living areas and full unfinished basement. Quiet Setting, Screened Porch. Priced to sell!

MLS 137371

$218,900

• New listing in Westridge Heights • Sharp bi-level w/ bamboo flooring • Pride of ownership is present • Remarkable Zen garden & Koi pond • Visual Tour: Tom-Harper.com

VANESSA YUNGER 785-691-9099

0-2

3 12:

0

1:3

00-

12:

• PRICED TO SELL! • 3 bed 3 bath, finished basement w 4th non conforming bdrm • Granite counters, stainless appliances, new carpet & furnace • New roof, flagstone patio, deck and much more!

TOM HARPER CRS, ABR, GRI, E-PRO 785-218-6351

00 10:

$214,900

4901 JEFFERSON WAY

• New listing & 1st open house • Sharp mid-century ranch in Sunset Hills • 4 bedrooms, 2 baths & oak floors • Fabulous deck and wooded backyard • Visual Tour: Tom-Harper.com

OLIVER M. MINNIS 785-550-7945

:00

0-3

1:3

2415 HARVARD RD

NEW PRICE! Great value in this spacious townhome on corner lot in convenient SW location. Great floor plan with 3 BR, 2 1/2 Bath, 2 Car, & Large Master Suite. Fenced back yard. Stop by Saturday.

MLS 136502

$162,000

0-3

2:0

FIRST OPEN! Beauty, nature, privacy, and views abound at this 4 BR/5 BA home on appx. 9.8 acres. Updated eat-in kitchen + formal dining. Big rooms. Partially finished walk-out basement. A must see! MLS 137129

TOLAND HIPPE 785-393-8342

SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT

SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT

SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT

$725,000

$325,000

$264,900

StephensRE.com

670 N 1505 ROAD

4508 WINGED FOOT CT

INCREDIBLE! Custom Built 4400 sq ft Home, Hardwood floors. Douglas County’s premier property, 13.4 acres of white fence pastures, barn and stables, pond, 2 outdoor patio areas, Private drive and entrance. SCOT HOFFMAN 785-760-4356 MLS 136679

StephensRE.com

StephensRE.com

REDUCED PRICE to sell, unbelievable VALUE on quiet cul-de-sac across from Quail Run school. 3786 sq. feet, 4 BR/4 Bath, walk up basement, functional main level, office, DR, huge bedrooms, tons of storage. LEE BETH DEVER 785-691-6879 MLS 136136

5201 BRANCHWOOD CT

CUL-DE-SAC LIVING WITH HOA upgraded trim package with painted woodwork, main level office with build ins concrete stamped private back patio. Come check this one out! JENNIFER MYERS 785-393-4579 MLS 137307

SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT

SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT

SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT

$224,900

$458,900

$225,000

StephensRE.com

1424 LAWRENCE AVE

• New listing in Orchards Neighborhood • Sharp 1-1/2 story adjacent to Orchards golf course • Spectacular views in backyard on a 1/4 acre lot • Recently renovated kitchen TOM HARPER • Visual Tour: Tom-Harper.com 785-218-6351 MLS 137424

StephensRE.com

458 N. 1500 RD

GORGEOUS CUSTOM BUILT HOME on 11.6 acres w/pond and several outbuildings, full of character & charm. 3655 sq. ft., great kitchen, large bedrooms w/bonus space, basement, hot tub, very peaceful and gorgeous land. LEE BETH DEVER 785-691-6879 MLS 136504

StephensRE.com

4709 MCCORMICK ST

NEW PRICE! Updated Rancher with main level master suite, living room, dining, kitchen, 2nd bedroom & full bath. Finished walk-out basement with family room, 3rd & 4th bedroom, office & full bath. RANDY BARNES 785-760-2140 MLS 136968

SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT

SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT

SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT

$157,500

$499,000

$535,000

StephensRE.com

1418 APPLEGATE CT

• New price - $157,500 on Applegate Court • Quality construction & recent renovation • Newer HVAC & roof • HOA takes care of lawn & snow removal • 1 mile west of KU TOM HARPER • Visual Tour: Tom-Harper.com CRS, ABR, GRI, e-PRO 785-218-6351 MLS 137133

StephensRE.com

1812 CASTLE PINE CT

SUPER SHARP, fully updated, great functional space. Gorgeous wood floors, large family room open to kitchen, four seasons room, huge basement w/theatre room, bar, bedrooms, this is a MUST SEE. LEE BETH DEVER 785-691-6879 MLS 136763

StephensRE.com

244 EARHART CIR

PRAIRIE CRAFTSMAN HOME with granite, wood floors & beautiful trim. Master suite, 4 additional bedrooms, 4 baths, 3 living areas, dining, kitchen, breakfast area & screened porch. Neighborhood pool! RANDY BARNES 785-760-2140 MLS 135845


4BB

|

Friday, July 17, 2015

HOMETOWN LAWRENCE

.

OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY, JULY 18 1-3PM

OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY 2-4PM

L awrence J ournal -W orld

OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY, JULY 19 1-3PM

WALK TO CAMPUS

OPEN HOUSE

2710 27 10 LLarkspur arks kspur Co Courtt Move In Ready! Well maintained townhome in the Sunflower/Southwest school district. Open kitchen design with vaulted ceilings in the living room plus a gas fireplace. Large master bedroom with walk-in closet. Exterior repainted in 2013. HOA provides the yard maintenance, snow removal, sprinkler system maintenance provided. Relax on your patio and enjoy the neighborhood. Quick possession possible. Easy access to K10.

1307 W 21st Terrace 3 Bedroom / 1 Bath / 1 Garage Light and Bright / Move in Ready

$139,900

Laura@ChaneyRealty.com 785-766-7676 Text/Cell

CHANEY REALTY| 785-865-5000 See visual tour at www.ChaneyRealty.com

413 Sh Sharon C ourt rt 413 Court Brand new roof, large fenced backyard. Located in a low traffic cul-de-sac. Brick fireplace floor to ceiling. Home includes a Safe room, sun porch. Home warranty included. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car garage. Stop by Sunday or call Mark for a tour! $172,500

MLS#137229 • $88,000 OPEN HOUSE

MLS#137387 • $82,500

David Brown 785-979-8576

979-HOME(4663)

1127 Iowa St. Lawr ence, KS acr esr ealtylawr ence.com

Search all active listings in the Lawrence MLS. www.LawrenceHomebuyers.com

Office: 785-843-8566 Toll free: 1-800-684-6227

1510 Oak Hill Ave SUNDAY, JULY 19TH, 1-4 PM

MARK HESS

CALL MARK TO VIEW!

www.millermidyettre.com

1821 Alabama SATURDAY, JULY 18TH, 1-4 PM

Home & City Services

1031 Vermont St, Suite C, Lawrence, KS 66044 OPEN SATURDAY 12:002:00

LAWRENCE: CITY SERVICES

PRICE REDUCED

www.lawrenceks.org

City of Lawrence

832-3000

Fire & Medical Department www.lawrenceks.org/fire_medical 830-7000 1424 Acorn, Eudora

Cheryl Baldwin 423-1881 cheronent@aol.com

Don Schmidt 766-6268 donschmidtc21@aol.com

Story book charm!! 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Master has cozy fireplace. Hardwood floors, many updates. Complete w/milkman’s delivery door. Super cute! Close to Baker campus and school bus stop. MLS#136838 $117,900

Chapel St

Maple St

8th St

9th St

Elm St

SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT

715 Arizona St, Lawrence

Ramzi Zoughaib 785-331-5963 ramzi0415@ gmail.com Arizona St

40

9100 sq ft building lot w/26x40 energy efficient metal building w/ concrete floor. All new plumbing, sink, toilet, plumbed for shower. New electrical, AC + heat. New R-19 insulation throughout + new 18x12 insulated garage door. All new metal exterior & guttering. MLS# 137316 $59,900

204 Minnesota, Lawrence

SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT

Don Schmidt 766-6268 donschmidtc21@aol.com

832-7878

Lawrence Transit System

www.lawrencetransit.org

864-4644

Municipal Court

www.lawrenceks.org/legal

832-6190

Very nice energy efficient earth contact home. Four BR, 1 nonconforming, 3 BA on 5.78 acres on hard surface road. Tons of space for family gatherings in the open kitchen LR area with additional FR. Attached 2 car garage and 3 car detached garage for all your cars & projects. Comes with a beautiful pond. Come take a look. MLS#136963 $195,000

Animal Control

832-7509

Parks and Recreation

www.lprd.org

Westar Energy

www.westarenergy.com

800-383-1183

Black Hills Energy (Gas)

www.blackhillsenergy.com

888-890-5554

832-3450

887-6900

GUTTERING Jayhawk Guttering (A Division of Nieder Contracting, Inc.)

842-0094

Kurt Goeser, State Farm Insurance

843-0003

Tom Pollard, Farmers Insurance

843-7511

Jamie Lowe, Prairie Land Insurance

856-3020

Denise Breason 785-331-5502 twoneice@ aol.com

Natural Breeze Remodeling

749-1855

Terravest Custom Homes & Remodeling

691-6088

HOME SECURITY SYSTEMS

SE 45th St Wooding Rd

W 2nd St

www.lawrenceks.org/utilities

HOME REMODELING

7232 SE 53rd St, Tecumseh

Cheryl Baldwin 423-1881 cheronent@aol.com

Department of Utilities

HOME INSURANCE

SE Stubbs Rd

Move in ready! Large living room with hardwood floors. Tile floors in kitchen, dining area. Granite counter tops, updated backsplash. New windows. Screened in porch overlooks large tree covered fenced back yard. MLS# 136792 $114,200

830-7400

Bill Fair Real Estate Auctions Denise Breason 785-331-5502 twoneice@ aol.com

W 8th St

SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT

www.lawrenceks.org/police

AUCTIONEERS

909 Harland Ct, Perry

Kasold Dr

4 Bedroom, 3 bath in a great neighborhood, lot of mature trees & close to shopping. Lots of space for a growing family. Enclosed back porch. Hardwood floors throughout main level, new carpet in basement. MLS# 137059 $149,900

Don Schmidt 766-6268 donschmidtc21@aol.com

Police Department

Dearborn St

W 15th St

PRICE REDUCED

Cheryl Baldwin 423-1881 cheronent@aol.com

10th St

Fir St

E 14th St

Acorn St

Beautiful 1 1/2 story, large main level master, many updates, upgrades, very vaulted living room. Newer paint, carpet, tile, staircase, fireplace. Well maintained quiet location with 3 decks, loaded with perennials. MLS#137265 $194,900

405 Ninth St, Baldwin City

SE 53rd St

Craving even more home information?

Rueschhoff Locksmith & Security

Need To Showcase Your Home? Contact your local Hometown Lawrence representative

Allison Wilson 785-832-7248 or homes@ljworld.com

hometown

Make sure you check out www.HometownLawrence.com!

843-2182

LAWRENCE Your area real estate resource hometownlawrence.com


HOMETOWN LAWRENCE

L awrence J ournal -W orld

R EAL ESTATE

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

TRANSFERS

SPIKES, ANDREW T., SPIKES, AMY E.TO KUMAR, JERIPROLU J. A., KUMAR, KRISTOL A. 504 ROCKFENCE PL. LAWRENCE AMKRAUT, BRIAN P., AMKRAUT, FELICE L.TO STONE FINANCING, LLC 5002 INGE CT. LAWRENCE STONE FINANCING, LLC TO LEIKER, MICHAEL T., LEIKER, AMY M. 5002 INGE CT. LAWRENCE NEMCHOCK, PATRICIA L., NEMCHOCK, GARY TO YAZDANPARAST, NASRIN 5103 VERONICA DR. LAWRENCE ELLEN M. PAULSEN CHARITABLE REMAINDER TRUST TO BRITTINGHAM, KYLE, BRITTINGHAM, HEATHER 1500/1502 MASSACHUSETTS ST. LAWRENCE

TRAILRIDGE LIMITED PARTNERSHIP – NOLAN I TO COUNTRY CLUB 6TH, LLC 2500 W. 6TH ST. LAWRENCE KC LAWRENCE, LLC TO COUNTRY CLUB 6TH, LLC 2512 W. 6TH ST. LAWRENCE BROOKS, GRACE L. TO EVANS, GEORGE P., EVANS, JOYCE A. 3110 COTTAGE LN. LAWRENCE COMEAU, KAREN G., TRUSTEE TO ADAMSON, THOMAS M., ADAMSON, DIANE M. 307 DAKOTA ST. LAWRENCE SCHROCK, STEVEN D., TO GAY, DONALD A., GAY, JENNIFER L.

15-Year or 30-Year Terms

BROERS, DANIEL, BROERS, SHERRY TO WOLD, JIMMY T.C., KLOIBER, GERY K., JR TO MARTIN, RON, GAST, KRISTIE L., WOLD, JENNIFER L. 111 HILLSIDE DR. BALDWIN CITY FREEMAN, HANNAH L. 2406 ALABAMA ST., UNIT 4C LAWRENCE FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION TO FRANKLIN, TIMOTHY C. 818 ELM ST. BALDWIN CITY JONES, JASON P., JONES, KATHERYN C.TO THOMPSON,THOMAS P. 1816 MILLER DR. LAWRENCE

BAUMAN, ROBERT W., BAUMAN, JANET L. TO YOUNG, ADAM L., SHERIDAN-YOUNG, PATRICIA L. 4504 RANGE CT. LAWRENCE

Affordable Competitive Rates

WOODS, WILLIAM I., WOODS, DEANNA E. TO MARKHAM, KYLE

Wednesday, June 24, 2015

MARKHAM, KRISTEN B. 612 E. 582 RD. & VACANT LOT LAWRENCE

SHERIDAN, PATRICIA L., YOUNG, ADAM L. TO ELLIS, BRADLEY S., ELLIS, MARTHA S. 209 EISENHOWER DR. LAWRENCE

SHELITE, JIMMY R. TO SICKINGER, MICHAEL G., SICKINGER, VICTORIA B. 1617 IRVING CT. LAWRENCE

ESTATE OF MARTHA A. LEARNED TO HARLEY, SHARYN 731 ALABAMA ST. LAWRENCE

KAUL, SCOTT D., TRUSTEE TO VANRIETTE, GABRIEL E., PONTIOUS, JANET R. 604 BRENTWOOD DR. LAWRENCE

Pay-Off Sooner with Re-Fi Accelerator

CITIFINANCIAL SERVICING, LLC TO HOSEK, ALEXANDER 1013 W. 20TH ST. LAWRENCE

THURMAN, RYAN, THURMAN, KATIE TO KRZANOWSKY, ANDREW M., KRZANOWSKY, DYANA L. 4111 DOOLITTLE DR. BROSIUS, ELIZABETH A., CITA, JOHN R. TO DAVIS, MICHAEL H., LAWRENCE ERONAT-DAVIS, KRISTINA S.D. 205 E. 12TH ST. LAWRENCE Monday, June 29, 2015 SCHWIEN, RACHEL C. TO WILLETS, LAWRENCE, WILLETS, ELLEN 2735 GRAND CIR. LAWRENCE Thursday, June 25, 2015 GISH, LARRY D., GISH, MARGE E. TO SMITH, JENNIFER L. 2107 NEW HAMPSHIRE ST. LAWRENCE

Local Service, Local Support

SHARP, AMANDA G., SHARP, RANDALL A. TO ZEMANSKY, G.M., KROEKER, ELLEN R. 2913 W. 30TH ST. LAWRENCE

BETTS, MELANIE 3201 HUNTINGTON RD. LAWRENCE

FRY, E. KENT, FRY, DIANE L. TO CONKLIN, BLAKE V., CONKLIN, LARISA A. 4513 WINGED FOOT CT. LAWRENCE

HANSON, BRIAN R., REIFERT-HANSON, SARAH A. TO CRAIG, JOHN A. 1208 NEW JERSEY ST. LAWRENCE

FALL CREEK FARMS DEVELOPMENT, INC TO RIGGIN, DAVID W., RIGGIN, VIOLA A. 116 BRAMBLE BEND CT. LAWRENCE

NIEDER, JULIA A. TO KALDAHL, PAUL W., KALDAHL, MOLLY B. 1502 E. 18TH ST. LAWRENCE

Capital City Bank 740 New Hampshire 4505A West 6th St 330-1200 6/15/2015

Conv. Jumbo

15-YR. FIXED & VARIATION

30-YR. FIXED

Your Vision. Your Banking. Lawrence 865-1545 • envistacu.com

Federally insured by NCUA. Equal housing lender.

ARMs/EQUITY/ OTHER LOANS RATE/APR/POINTS

RATE/APR/POINTS

3.950% + 0 (4.047%) 60 day quote (credit score >= 740) Call For Rates (credit score >= 740)

3.250% + 0 (3.419%) 60 day quote (credit score >= 740)

Homes for starting out and homes for living out a dream. Homes for fixing up and homes for moving up. Homes for growing kids and homes for hosting the grandkids.

Envista. Kansans’ home for home loans.

MORTGAGE MARKETPLACE RATE/APR/POINTS

For Kansans, building a great life often starts with buying a great home. And when it comes to finding a home in Kansas, there are a lot of signs that can point the way.

But for saving money on your home loan and working with people you know and trust … there’s only one sign: Ours.

FOX, ALYSSA A. N., NEUMANN, JOHN H., NEUMANN, PATTI A. TO OELSCHLAGER, RODNEY 1400 QUINN CT. LAWRENCE

ALEXIOS, THOMAS S., TO MARTIN, ALAN L. RURAL

We’re Your Home For Home Loans.

There are all kinds of signs for great homes.

LOUPE, DAVIS P., LOUPE, PIPPA S. TO SHUMAKER, RYAN W. 5730 LONGLEAF DR. LAWRENCE

COFFMAN, DANNIEL N., TRUSTEE, COFFMAN, DONNA M., TRUSTEE TO WEINMANN, DENNIS L., II, WEINMANN, LANG, JORDAN M., LANG, MICHELLE L. TO TREEMANEEKARN, REBECCA M., BUCKLEY, GLEN R. 2010 MAPLE LN. LAWRENCE PORNTIDA 2412 ALISTER DR. LAWRENCE QUEEN, LEE A., QUEEN, LORI A. TO SHERRADEN, LUCAS EL-OSTAH, ALI R., EL-ACHKAR, DARWICHE TO WANG, XINKUN, 1012/1014 ALMA DR. LAWRENCE YU, HAN 4012 W. 26TH TER. LAWRENCE FARRIS, SANDRA J., FARRIS, EDWARD J. TO WRIGHT, ALAN KOCH, ROBERT TO STACY K. WENDLAND REVOCABLE TRUST, 1118 ELM ST. EUDORA PAULETTE M. SCHWERDT REVOCABLE TRUST VACANT LAND BAYER, ROBIN J. TO SOARING EAGLE, LLC 215 N. 6TH ST. RURAL BALDWIN CITY MOHR, ANTHONY P., MOHR, SHARI L. TO SCHELLER, LISA S., RENICK, MURRAY, RENICK, CRIS TO SANTILLAN, ANA E. 1444 SCHELLER, WALTER F. 2510 W. 9TH TER. LAWRENCE WESTBROOKE ST. LAWRENCE VANDIEST, JOHN G., VANDIEST, PATRICIA A. TO MOORE, Friday, June 26, 2015 GREGORY L. 1349 WESTBROOKE ST. LAWRENCE FIORE, JOHN A., FIORE, JENNIFER M. TO PLATE, RYAN J.D., LANGSTON HEIGHTS DEVELOPMENT, LLC TO BLUE TREE PLATE, REBECCA S. 1317 MULBERRY CT. EUDORA HOMES, LLC 6336 STEEPLE CHASE DR. LAWRENCE KANSAS UNIVERSITY ENDOWMENT ASSOCIATION TO INGLE, ZEHNER, TODD A., ZEHNER, CLAIRE D. TO PAUL, ROBERT W., STEVEN R. 309 E. 1100 RD. BALDWIN CITY PAUL, SHADOW S. 1620 W. 21ST TER. LAWRENCE GAY, DONALD A., GAY, JENNIFER L. TO KASS, HILARY K., KASS, SCHIPPERS, BRENT C., SCHIPPERS, SASHA TO BETTS, TORY DOUGLAS J. 5 WINONA AVE. LAWRENCE

LOAN TYPE

| 5BB

TEAGUE, JIMMY M., TEAGUE, PAULETTE C. TO KECK, NICOLE R. 3601 TILLERMAN DR. LAWRENCE

2812 HARRISON PL. LAWRENCE YORK, KEMPER, ERMELING, H. MARGUERITE, BAGGETT, JAMES N., KRUG, KURT A., KRUG, TAMARA L. TO DAVIS, PAUL T., DAVIS, ERMELING, LIZA ,HANSON, SUZANNA W.TO VAIL WAY, LLC 2213 STEPHANIE A. 1536 ALVAMAR DR. LAWRENCE VAIL WAY LAWRENCE WALTERS, JEROME, WALTERS, JULIE TO DOMINQUEZ, MAXIMO C., CORLISS, DAVID L., CORLISS, SARAH J. TO TATE, SHAMAYNE P., LOCKE, GABRIEL B. 3600 BOULDER CT. LAWRENCE DOMINQUEZ, ANGELINA C. 2600 PRINCE BLVD. LAWRENCE

LENDER

Friday, July 17, 2015

FHA Fixed VA Fixed Up to 100% Refinance 80%

Call For Rates (credit score >= 660) Call For Rates (credit score >= 660 3.950% + 0 (4.047%) (credit score >= 740)

Visit Mortgage Marketplace online at hometownlawrence.com

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION PREAPPROVALS -NO COSTS TO YOU. WE WORK VIA PHONE INTERVIEW, EMAIL OR IN PERSON. EASY FOR YOU! WE OFFER VA, FHA, USDA, CONSTRUCTION, 2nd Homes, REVERSE MORTGAGES, Jumbo and Conventional. Annual Percentage Rate(APR)based on loans amount of $100,000.00 (80%LTV)with a close date of the first of the month. APR’s may vary depending on the day of the month the loan closes. Rates quoted for 45 days lock time. Capital City Bank - Has 2 locations: 4505 West 6th St Suite A and 740 New Hampshire Diana Deutsch - 785/330-1220 direct Jeff Schuler - 785/330-1221 direct

Capitol Federal® Savings 1026 Westdale 749-9050 6/26/2015

Conv. Jumbo

4.000% + 0 (4.053%) Please Call

3.125% + 0 (3.217%) Please Call

20 Yr 5/1 ARM/7/1 ARM FHA* 30 Yr./15 Yr.

Please Call N/A

Loan Assumptions: ¹Primary Residence, Purchase Loan with a value of $125,000 and loan amount of $100,000, estimated monthly payment of $678.62 for 180 months. ²Primary Residence, Purchase Loan with a value of $125,000 and loan amount of $100,000, estimated monthly payment of $449.04 for 360 months. Real estate taxes and homeowners insurance could increase the monthly payment. Receive local servicing for the life of the loan on all conventional loans. Please call Mark Hernandez (NMLS#556689) at 785.749.9053 or apply online at www.capfed.com. APR = Annual Percentage Rate. *Registered with HUD as Capitol Federal® Savings Bank.

Central National Bank 838-1882 7/14/15

Conv. FHA/VA Jumbo

4.125% + 0 (4.196% APR) 3.750% + 0 (5.296%/3.980% APR) Call for Rates

3.250% + 0 (3.372% APR)

HP 97 Fixed Investor 20% Down

Call for Quotes Call for Quotes

*Rates for refinances may be higher *Save money with our “Biweekly Mortgage” program. *We service your loan after closing. Contact Tom Koenig at 785-838-1882, or TomK@centralnational.com. NMLS ID# 472917

Conv. FHA/VA Jumbo

4.125% + 0 (4.197%) 4.000% + 0 (5.138%) 4.250% + 0 (4.322%)

3.500% + 0 (3.625%)

5/1 ARM 7/1 ARM 10/1 ARM 7/1 Jumbo 10/1 Jumbo 20 Yr. Fixed 10 Yr. Fixed

3.000% + 0 (3.087% APR) 3.375% + 0 (3.263% APR) 3.625% + 0 (3.473% APR) 3.375% + 0 (3.397% APR) 3.625% + 0 (3.571% APR) 4.125% + 0 (4.224%) 3.000% + 0 (3.230%)

Central Bank of the Midwest 865-1000 7/14/15

Conv. Jumbo FHA VA

4.125% + 0 (4.223%) 4.250% + 0 (4.334%) 3.500 + 0 (4.386%) 3.750 + 0 (4.044%)

3.250% + 0 (3.399%) 3.500% + 0 (3.627%)

20 Yr.

3.875% + 0 (4.004%)

Fairway Mortgage Corp. 4104 W. 6th St., Ste. B 841-4434 5/05/2015

Conv. Jumbo

Call For Rates Call For Rates

Call For Rates Call For Rates

FHA USDA/Rural Development

Call For Rates Call For Rates

4.125% + 0 (4.182%) 3.625% + 0 (4.815%)

3.250% + 0 (3.307%) Call

3/1 ARM 5/1 ARM 7/1 ARM 7/1 Jumbo

Call Call Call

Commerce Bank 865-4721 7/14/15

Conv.

First Assured Mortgage 856-LOAN (5626) 7/14/15 First State Bank & Trust 3901 W. 6th St. 312-6810 7/14/15 Great American Bank 3500 Clinton Parkway 838-9704 6/30/2015 Landmark Bank 841-6677 6/8/2015

Meritrust Credit Union 856-7878 11/03/2014 Mid America Bank 4114 W 6th St. 841-8055 7/14/15 Pulaski Bank 3210 Mesa Way, Ste B 856-1450 6/26/2015 Truity Credit Union 749-6804 3400 W. 6th 7/14/15 University National Bank 841-1988 7/14/15

FHA/VA

Call for Rates

NOW IS THE TIME TO LOCK IN A GREAT LOW FIXED RATE! WHETHER YOU ARE BUYING, BUILDING OR REFINANCING. CALL ALLISA HURST @ 785-865-1085 FAX: 865-1025 EMAIL: Allisa.Hurst@centralbank.net Unbelievably LOW rates! Now is the time to purchase or refinance! Give us a call or email us for a FREE pre approval or refinance analysis. (Rates subject to change. Posted rates assume credit score > 740 and are for PURCHASE financing with 20% down payment. Refinance rates MAY be slightly higher) NMLS #2889

No up front fees! No application fee and no up front appraisal fee. Apply online at www. firstassuredmortgage.com or via phone at 785-856-5626.

Jumbo

Call

Conv. FHA/VA Jumbo

4.12% + 0 (4.317%) Call For Rates Call For Rates

3.25 + 0 (3.583%) Call For Rates Call For Rates

20 Yr. Conv. and USDA 3/1 ARM 5/1 ARM 7/1 ARM 7/1 Jumbo

Please Call Please Call Please Call Please Call Please Call Please Call Please Call

Conv. FHA/VA Jumbo

4.000% + 0 (4.181%) Call for Rate Call

3.125% + 0 (3.221%)

20 Yr. Fixed 10-Yr. Fixed

3.750% + 0 (3.952%) 2.875% + 0 (3.015%)

Free Same Day Pre-Approvals. Rates quoted on loan amounts of $125,000.00 or more, purchase, 45 day lock with a credit score of 740 and above. Rates subject to change without notice. Call us today for your lending needs! Bob Underwood at 785-856-9409, BUnderwood@greatambank.com Derek Bailey at 785-856-9418

Conv. Jumbo

4.000% + 0 (APR 4.043%)

3.125% + 0 (APR 3.199%)

Jumbo 5/1 ARM VA/FHA 30 Fixed 10/1 Jumbo

4.125% + 0 (APR 4.144%) 3.125% + 0 (APR 3.199%) 3.625% + 0 (APR 3.970/5.229%) 3.750% + 0 (APR 3.405%)

New, Landmark Lock and Shop, provides a safeguard while you shop for a home. Contact Brian McFall 785-841-7152. First time homebuyers you may be able to receive up to 4% of your loan amount in down payment assistance if you qualify. Landmark has FHA, Conventional and VA and RD loans. Closing costs vary from lender to lender, call Landmark and compare our costs and rates with any other lender. Rates are based on a loan of $120,000 or higher and a median credit score of 740 or above. Other rate and point options are available.

Conv. Jumbo

3.875 + 0 (4.116% APR) Please call 856-7878 ext 5037

3.125 + 0 (3.321% APR) Please call 856-7878 ext 5037

Please call 856-7878 ext 5037

97% Advantage Program: Please call for rates (credit score 660) 20 year: please call 15/30 Pricing options available

Conv. Jumbo

4.125% + 0 (4.344%) Call for Rates

3.375% + 0 (3.755%) Call for Rates

20 Yr. Fixed 30 Yr FHA 30 Yr VA 30 Yr USDA

3.750% + 0 (4.049%) 3.750% + 0 (4.490%) 3.750% + 0 (3.964%) 3.875% + 0 (4.091%)

Conv. Jumbo

4.000% + 0 (4.217%)

3.2500% + 0 (3.629%)

FHA/VA/USDA

3.500% + 0

Call

Call

Call Carol at 785-865-4721 for free pre-approval and for more information on mortgages for residential and investment properties. Rates change daily. Rates quoted here on loan amounts of $160,000 to $417,000 with minimum required credit score. Email Mary Lauer at Mary.Lauer@commercebank.com

Call

20 YR 30 YR

Call For Rates

(4.938/3.987/4.153% APR)

3.750% + 0 (3.945%

APR)

3.875% + 0 (4.151% APR)

THE DATA DISPLAYED BELOW IS FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY. THIS IS NOT AN ADVERTISEMENT FOR CREDIT AS DEFINED BY PARAGRAPH 226.24 OF REGULATION Z. CALL LENDER FOR APR. ARM-ADJUSTABLE RATE MORTGAGE; CAPS MAXIMUM PER ADJUSTMENTS & LIFETIME RATE ADJUSTMENT LTV-LOAN TO VALUE; JUMBO - ANY LOAN AMOUNT OVER $417,000. Email Jessica Wollesen at jessicaw@firststateks.com

Free Pre-approvals! Apply online or call Colette Wedan at 785-856-7878 ext 5037 for more info. Local Credit Union committed to giving you the smoothest closing! Local servicing for the life of the loan! Rates subject to change & are based on a Purchase loan, 20% down payment and 740 credit score. RATES ARE AMAZING! We offer a FREE,No Obligation Pre-Approval Letter. We are first time homebuyer specialists. Consider A USDA loan with NO down payment required! Great options on rental properties too. Call to have us analyze your refinance options. Free borrower education session ** Rates for refinance may vary. APR based on $125,000 purchase loan, 80% LTV and 760 credit score. MEMBER FDIC EQUAL HOUSING LENDER. NMLS#619730 ****

CALL TODAY or apply online for a no-obligation rate quote and fee estimate, to be preapproved, or to talk with a Mortgage Advisor about preparing for a future purchase. Pulaski Bank provides loans for purchase, refinance, investment property, second homes, second mortgages/HELOCS and Bridge Loans! We provide options with little or no down payment, and offer Financed Mortgage Insurance to keep your payment as low as possible. Rates shown are for a purchase transaction with a >740 credit score - refinance rates may vary.

Conv. Jumbo

4.125% + 0 (4.157%) Please Call for Quote

3.250 + 0 (3.305%) Please Call

20 Yr. Conv. Conv. 97% 30 Yr Fixed 30 Yr. Rental HELOC

3.875% + 0 (3.918%) 4.250% + 0 (4.637%) 4.375% + 0 (4.382% APR) (as low as) 3.750% + 0

Contact Geoff Strole at 785-749-6804 or Geoff.Strole@TruityCU.org. Local Servicing. Free Pre-Qualifications within Minutes of Applying. Apply 24/7 at www.LawrenceMortgages.org. Rates quoted are for purchase transactions with a 740 or higher median credit score. Refinance rates may be slightly higher. Call or email for complete details and to obtain a no obligation quote! Equal Housing Lender. We are also proud to be an Approved Lender for the Tenants to Homeowners Program…Creating Permanently Affordable Workforce Housing in Lawrence! Check out complete details at: www.tenants-to-homeowners.org

Conv. Jumbo

4.081% + 0 (4.128%) Call for Rates

3.197% + 0 (3.279%) Call for Rates

20 Year Fixed 10 Year Fixed 5/1 ARM 7/1 ARM

3.849% + 0 (3.914%) 2.975% + 0 (3.096%) Call for Rate Call for Rate

Free same-day approvals! Ask us about the new Fannie Mae 3% Down Loan Product - or, consider a refinance while rates are at an all-time low! Rates are subject to change and are based on a credit score of 740 and a loan amount of $100,000.00. Please call Joylynn Harlow (NMLS #409547) at 785-749-8732 for your custom quote. The University National Bank - NMLS #403070


6BB

|

Friday, July 17, 2015

NON sEQUItUr

COMICS

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This information is deemed reliable, but not guaranteed.

Toni McCalla

550-5206

Connie Friesen

766-3870

• 3 Bedroom, 3 Bath, Basement: N Price: $149,950 • Sqft.: 1489 • MLS# 136348

766-1598

• 4 Bedroom, 3 Bath, Basement: Y Price: $239,000 • Sqft.: 2493 • MLS# 136873

Becky Mondi

1580 El Dorado Drive

550-8029

• 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, Basement: Y Price: $389,900 • Sqft.: 2500 • MLS# 136321 VT# 3555864

4109 Harvard Road

Linda Randall

ONTRACT

UNDER C

550-8029

Thomas Howe

550-1169

• 4 Bedroom, 3 Bath, Basement: Y Price: $325,000 • Sqft.: 2200 • MLS# 137003

ONTRACT

UNDER C

2640 Union Road

Linda Randall

• 2 Bedroom, 3 Bath, Basement: Y Price: $449,000 • Sqft.: 3919 • MLS# 137222

ONTRACT

UNDER C

1907 Quail Run

Homes marked with the McGrew Gold Star have met the following criteria: Inspected by a certified home inspector, all required repairs or deficiencies corrected, cosmetically enhanced if advisable, priced competitively and provides a one year home warranty for the new buyer.

766-3870 760-2221

766-3870 760-2221

1117 West Hills Parkway

Connie Friesen Erin Morgan

• 5 Bedroom, 5 Bath, Basement: Y Price: $459,000 • Sqft.: 4381 • MLS# 137294

1025 Oak Tree Drive

Visit askmcgrew.com for a complete listing of the McGrew Gold Star Homes.

Connie Friesen Erin Morgan

• 2 Bedroom, 3 Bath, Basement: Y Price: $419,000 • Sqft.: 2757 • MLS# 137271

766-3870 760-2221

• 3 Bedroom, 4 Bath, Basement: Y Price: $439,900 • Sqft.: 3870 • MLS# 137324

Connie Friesen Erin Morgan

2104 Inverness

766-3870 760-2221

• 5 Bedroom, 4 Bath, Basement: Y Price: $545,000 • Sqft.: 3741 • MLS# 137100

O UNDER C

NTRACT

1119 Douglas Drive

311 N. Eaton Drive

Connie Friesen Erin Morgan

• 4 Bedroom, 5 Bath, Basement: Y Price: $545,000 • Sqft.: 4460 • MLS# 137122

4604 Cherry Hills Drive

McGrew Gold Star Homes

• 4 • McGrew Real Estate • 785.843.2055 • askmcgrew.com

1402 Church St, Ste. E • Eudora • KS • 66025 785.542.1112 • Fax 785.542.1164

Eudora

2 Lawrence Locations

1501 Kasold Dr • Lawrence • KS • 66047 4100 W 6th St • Lawrence • KS • 66049

4109 Harvard Road

785.843.2055

4604 Cherry Hills Drive

See Page 3

See Page 2

OPEN SATURDAY 1:30-3:30

Real Estate Leader

OPEN SATURDAY 12:00-2:00

The

JULY 18 & 19 2015


OPEN SUNDAY 1:00-3:00 Exceptional Home!

Michelle Hack

OPEN SUNDAY 1:30-3:30 Secluded South Location!!

Chris Schmid

766-3934

OPEN SUNDAY 1:00-3:00 Well Maintained Home!

David Harper

979-0288

OPEN SATURDAY 1:30-3:30 First Time Open!

Angel Nuzum

550-4331

331-7987

Janet Scott

OPEN SATURDAY 1:00-3:00 Great Floor Plan!

3 Bed, 2 Bath, Bsmt: No 1,847 Sqft MLS#136064 VT#3448609

$259,500

• Granite Kitchen Counters • Birch Floors • Master Suite With Safe Room • Covered Deck • Decked Attic Space

5617 Chimney Rocks Cir

4 Bed, 3 Bath, Bsmt: No 2,398 Sqft MLS#137402 VT#3636187

$274,900

• New Flooring on Main Level • Large Kitchen, Granite & Pantry • 4 Bedrooms w/an Office/Flex Space • Fully Fenced / Safe Room • Close to Shopping & K-10/I-70

5710 Silverstone Drive

5 Bed, 4 Bath, Bsmt: Yes 3,438 Sqft MLS#137154

$349,900

• Near Shopping & Restaurants • 5 Bedrooms, 4 Bathrooms • Walk-Out Basement • New 3D Composition Roof • Newer Exterior Paint, HVAC

1033 Moundridge Dr

6 Bed, 6 Bath, Bsmt: Yes 4,921 Sqft MLS#135730 VT#3515381

$549,000

• 3-Level Living • Huge Deck Overlooking Woods • Main Level Living with Spa Bath • Every Bedroom Has a Bath! • Walk-Out Basement w/ Bar

1119 Douglas Dr.

This information is deemed reliable, but not guaranteed.

760-1337

OPEN SATURDAY 1:30-3:30 Welcome Home! Gold Star

Erin Morgan

760-2221

OPEN SATURDAY 1:00-3:00 Daylight Rancher,Three Car Garage

Amy LeMert

979-9911

Randy LaRue

691-5057

OPEN SUNDAY 12:00-2:00 Elegant Townhouse

3 Bed, 2 Bath, Bsmt: No 1,847 Sqft MLS#136827 VT#3448609

$259,500

• New Construction • Stainless Appliances • Bamboo Flooring • Overlooking Rock Chalk Park • HOA - Lawn Care And Snow

5616 Chimney Rocks Cir

4 Bed, 3 Bath, Bsmt: Yes 2,265 Sqft MLS#137042

$299,900

• Spacious Open Floor Plan • Beautiful Kitchen • Main Level Study or Bedroom • Quiet Location Near Street’s End • Great Finished Daylight Basement

4003 Prairie Rose

4 Bed, 5 Bath, Bsmt: Yes 4,460 Sqft MLS#137122 VT#3623146

$545,000

• Beautiful Kitchen/Hearth Room • Warm and Inviting • Quality Upgrades Including Roof • Screened in Porch • Great Alvamar Neighborhood

4604 Cherry Hills Dr

5 Bed, 4 Bath, Bsmt: Yes 4,444 Sqft MLS#133636 VT#34237546

$624,750

• Beautiful Open Floor Plan • Spacious Master Suite • Covered Patio with Fireplace • Finished Basement with Bar • HOA and Community Pool

225 Landon Ct

• 2 • McGrew Real Estate • 785.843.2055 • askmcgrew.com 1735 Lake Alvamar Drive

Shown By Appointment

Sheila Santee

766-4410

The Reserve At Alvamar • Spacious, Comfortable Plan • Private MIL/Nanny Suite • Sauna & Many Amenities • Pool & Outdoor Entertaining • Exceptional Home & Location Price: $1,250,000 VT# 3583993

813 E. 661 Diagonal Road

OPEN SUNDAY 2:00-4:00 Just Listed / First Open

Deborah McMullen

766-6759

Chris Schmid

766-3934

OPEN SATURDAY 1:00-4:00 Great Campus Proximity!

7 Bed, 4 Bath, Bsmt: Yes 3,271 Sqft MLS#137293 VT#3635910

$269,950

• Master On Main Level • 7 Bedrooms Of Space • Large Private Deck • Renovated Interior • Guest Suite In Basement

2211 Willow Creek Lane

5 Bed, 3 Bath, Bsmt: Yes 2,548 Sqft MLS#137425 VT#03638366

$349,900

• Nestled on 5 Acres • Black Top Roads all the Way • Geothermal Heating System • Full Basement /2 Storm Shelters • Just Call Deborah 785-766-6759

6 Bedroom, 7 Bath, Basement: Yes 7,883 Sqft MLS# 136611

1376 Stonecreek Dr

Kim Clements

766-5837

OPEN SUNDAY 12:00-2:00 Beautiful 1.5 Story!

• Corner Lot/Side Entry Drive • Vaulted Ceilings • Granite/Hardwood Floors • Full Finished Basement • Eat in Kitchen & Formal Dining

$349,900

4 Bed, 4 Bath, Bsmt: Yes 2,850 Sqft MLS#137042

Have Questions?...

askmcgrew.com

1021 Summerfield Way

Shown By Appointment

Beautiful 2 Story Home

• 3 Living Areas/Formal Dining • Stainless Steel Appliances • Wood Floors on Main Level • Finished Basement • Fenced Backyard with Deck/Patio

1531 Powers St

3 Bed, 1 Bath, Bsmt: No 825 Sqft MLS#137372

$80,000

979-2748

Diane Kennedy

OPEN SUNDAY 1:00-3:00 Major Remodeling Done

• New Roof • New Siding • New HVAC • New Flooring • New Finishes

Price: $315,000 VT# 3566364

5 Bedroom, 4 Bath, Basement: Yes

3,184 Sqft MLS# 136497

312 Birch Lane

Deborah McMullen

766-6759

OPEN SUNDAY 11:30-1:30 Buy Now Rates Are Low!

• Well Cared for Townhome • New Carpet Throughout • Many Updates • Excellent Central Location • JUST CALL DEBORAH 785-766-6759

$109,000

3 Bed, 2 Bath, Bsmt: No 1,472 Sqft MLS#136487 VT#3566462

Judy Brynds 691-9414

askmcgrew.com • 785.843.2055 • McGrew Real Estate • 3 •

OPEN SATURDAY 11:00-1:00 Beautifully Updated Home

Judy Brynds

691-9414

OPEN SATURDAY 11:00-1:00 Master On The Main Floor!

Paige Ensminger

550-8180

Sheila Santee

766-4410

OPEN SATURDAY 12:00-2:00 New Price ~ Great Value!!

2 Bed, 2 Bath, Bsmt: No 1,228 Sqft MLS#137404

$116,900

• Open, Vaulted Plan • Main Level Living Offered • 2 Bedrooms, 2 Full Baths • Large Loft Upstairs • All Appliances Stay

4029 Crossgate Ct

3 Bed, 2 Bath, Bsmt: No 1,222 Sqft MLS#137386

$125,000

• Stainless Steal Appliances. • Family Friendly Floorplan. • Fenced in Backyard. • Great for Family or Investment • 2 Car Garage.

3404 Morning Dove Cir

3 Bed, 2 Bath, Bsmt: No 1,698 Sqft MLS#137383 VT#3634781

$155,000

• Great Cul-De-Sac Location • Open Living Floor Plan • Roomy Eat-in Kitchen • Large Lot with Fenced Backyard • Move in Ready

3717 Sunnybrook Ct

This information is deemed reliable, but not guaranteed.

4109 Harvard Rd

Toni McCalla

550-5206

OPEN SATURDAY 12:00-2:00 Exceptional Value

• Beautifully Maintained Home • Main Level Master & Laundry • Newer Granite, Flooring, Carpet, Fixtures, Siding, Roof • Stop by Sat. or Call for Appointment

$239,000

4 Bed, 3 Bath, Bsmt: Yes 2,493 Sqft MLS#136873

716 Belle Meade Place

Leslie Foust

979-1829

OPEN SATURDAY 1:00-3:00 First Time Open

• Total Makeover • New: Roof/HVAC/Fridge/Range • Beautiful Hardwood Floors • Large Family Room • Partial Finished Basement

$151,500

3 Bed, 2 Bath, Bsmt: Yes 1,596 Sqft MLS#137417

2220 Breckenridge Drive

Pam Bushouse

550-0716

OPEN SUNDAY 12:00-2:00 Don’t Miss This One!!!

• Super Nice Townhome!!! • Master on the Main Level • All Appliances (+W/D) Stay • Convenient Location • HOA and Move-In Ready!

$120,000

3 Bed, 2 Bath, Bsmt: No 1,454 Sqft MLS#137301 VT#3627971

Thank You Lawrence!

Best Real Estate Agency - 1st Place Best Realtor - Nicholas Lerner - 1st Place Best Realtor - Kimberly Williams - 4th Place


ROYALS SHOW LAST SEASON’S SUCCESS WAS NO FLUKE. 3C

Sports

C

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/sports l Friday, July 17, 2015

KANSAS WOMEN’S BASKETBALL

Tom Keegan tkeegan@ljworld.com

Will Self keep Kansas playing faster? Having innate ability to control situations that easily could spin chaotically out of control is one of the qualities that makes good coaches successful. Just force yourself to watch talented basketball players competing in pickup games. It doesn’t take long for those contests to turn into a series of break-away dunks. Very boring stuff, no matter how gravity-defying the dunks. Kansas University coach Bill Self is one of the best in the business at getting his athletes to play in concert and do what he wants. In other words, he knows how to control them. It’s surrendering control that generally doesn’t come as easily to successful coaches, which was why it was encouraging to hear Self talk about one of the many positives of his team’s trip to Gwangju, South Korea, from which the players brought home gold medals earned at the World University Games. “We probably played faster than anybody there, without question,” Self told reporters Wednesday night at Hoglund Ballpark, where at least a thousand showed up to welcome the team home. “I thought it was a positive. It made me trust guys to make plays for themselves, to play one-onone as opposed to try to run offense to score.” It takes mature players to earn Self’s trust and in Frank Mason, Wayne Selden and Perry Ellis, for starters, this team has plenty of it. Self also has the right personnel to push the pace. Mason is faster with the ball than most players are without it. In Gwangju, Nic Moore, on loan from SMU, had the speed to keep up with Mason. Once Devonte´ Graham heals from the quad injury that sidelined him from the World University Games, he’ll be the one keeping up with Mason. He’s up to it. The rebounders throwing outlet passes have equally attractive options in Mason and Graham. That hasn’t always been the case. Wayne Selden, now the No. 3 ballhandler, was the second in the starting lineup the past two seasons. The year before that, Travis Releford was the secondbest ballhandler among starters. Self’s two Final Four teams started a pair of combo guards, Russell Robinson and Mario Chalmers in 2008, Tyshawn Taylor and Elijah Johnson in 2012, but did not play at a fast tempo, in part because opponents had to use so much of the 35-second shot clock to get a shot off against such good man-to-man defense. KU’s great guards of the past didn’t have the chance to show how well they could play with a 24-second shot clock, as did the current team in international play.

Eye to the future

John Young/Journal-World Photo

KANSAS UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S BASKETBALL GUARD LAUREN ALDRIDGE, RIGHT, drives past Alabama’s Ashley Williams during a 2014 game in Allen Fieldhouse.

KU’s Aldridge sets sights on coaching By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com

Kansas University sophomore Lauren Aldridge is educated enough to know that Becky Hammon being named the head coach of the San Antonio Spurs summer-league team in Las Vegas is not the most groundbreaking moment in her sport’s history. Even still, Aldridge, a point guard who will play the final few seasons of her college career a few hundred feet from where James Naismith’s original rules of basketball will be housed, can’t help but wonder what such a move by someone of her gender could mean for the future of women in coaching at the highest level.

“I haven’t seen her coach a game yet,” the KU point guard said of Hammon. “But I do follow the story and what’s going on because I think it’s paving the way for people like me.” By people like her, Aldridge is talking about future coaches. She says today that she would be happy coaching any gender at any level. As she puts it, she just wants to continue to share and teach the game she has loved since the day she could walk. But a closer look at the sparkle in her eye or the way she leans forward when talking about coaching does not leave anything to the imagination. Aldridge, who started all 32 games last season as a true freshman and earned Big 12

All-Freshman honors, wants to be the next Becky Hammon. And she wants to prove to anyone who will take notice that she has what it takes to coach the best male basketball players on the planet. “I do think that the men’s game presents challenges and it is tougher to get your foot in the door,” Aldridge said. “I think it’s a different level. You have to know your stuff at that level.” Her father, Steve, a summer basketball coach himself, said the knowledge part of it will not be a challenge for his oldest daughter. “She’s a sponge,” Steve Aldridge said. “Her IQ is extremely high. And when she started mentioning coaching on the men’s side, I told her

you’re gonna have to know even more than you think you know, because you’ll have to prove you belong.” That’s all Aldridge needed to hear. And she’s been working toward that ever since. In many ways, her quest actually started way before that conversation ever took place. In third grade, the KU point guard routinely set her alarm for 6 a.m. so she could do ball-handling and shooting drills before school in her hometown of Marshfield, Missouri. No one suggested she do it. Her father did not demand that she practice around the clock. It all came from within. “I knew even then where I Please see ALDRIDGE, page 3C

Johnson tops Open; Woodland 7 back

David J. Phillip/AP Photo

DUSTIN JOHNSON DRIVES A BALL FROM THE FOURTH TEE during the first round of the British Open. Johnson led by Please see KEEGAN, page 3C one stroke after firing a 7-under 65 on Thursday in St. Andrews, Scotland.

St. Andrews, Scotland (ap) — Jordan Spieth played like he had a Grand Slam to win. Dustin Johnson played like he had a score to settle. The two main characters from Chambers Bay brought their games across eight time zones and an ocean Thursday and set the tone at St. Andrews for what could be another riveting battle at the British Open. Former Kansas University standout Gary Woodland opened with an even-par 72 and was tied for 64th, seven strokes back. Spieth quickly seized on his opportunity for a third straight major with six birdies in his first 11 holes, fought through a chilly wind on the inward nine and closed with a birdie for a 5-under 67 that put him two shots out of the lead. Please see OPEN, page 3C


SOUTH

Sports 2

2C | LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD | FRIDAY, JULY 17, 2015

WEST AL EAST

COMING SATURDAY

• Coverage of the Kansas City Royals as they resume play after the All-Star Break with a doubleheader vs. the Chicago White Sox AL CENTRAL SOUTH

| SPORTS WRAP |

COMMENTARY

Coaches flock to Jimmy Johnson By Dave Hyde

BOSTON RED SOX

BALTIMORE ORIOLES

AL EAST

CHICAGO WHITE SOX

NEW YORK YANKEES

HIGH SCHOOLS HUB:

SPORTS CALENDAR TAMPA BAY RAYS

DETROIT TIGERS

CLEVELAND INDIANS

BOSTON RED SOX

BALTIMORE ORIOLES

TODAY • at Chicago White Sox, 1:10 p.m. and 7:10 p.m. SATURDAY • at Chicago White Sox, 1:10 p.m.

OAKLAND ATHLETICS

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

NEW YORK YANKEES

TAMPA BAY RAYS

TORONTO BLUE JAYS

SPORTING K.C.

SEATTLE MARINERS

TEXAS RANGERS

SATURDAY • vs. Montreal, 7:30 p.m.

These logos are provided to you for use in an editorial news context only. DETROIT TIGERS KANSAS CITY ROYALS CLEVELAND INDIANS Other uses, including as a linking device on a Web site, or in an advertising or promotional piece, may violate this entity’s trademark or other intellectual property rights, and may violate your agreement with AP.

AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. AL various WEST

LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM

MINNESOTA TWINS

KANSAS CITY ROYALS

AL CENTRAL LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM

TORONTO BLUE JAYS

WEST ROYALS

AL WEST

OAKLAND ATHLETICS

TODAY TEXAS RANGERS

Baseball

Time

K.C. v. White Sox AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; K.C. ETAv.5White p.m.Sox Dodgers v. Wash. MLB AL LOGOS 032712: 2012 American League team logos; stand-alone; various sizes; staff; ETA 4 p.m.

MINNESOTA TWINS

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1 p.m. FSN 36, 236 7 p.m. FSN 36, 236 6 p.m. MLB 155,242

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How do sports’ smartest minds get smarter? Where can they test theories without tipping off competitors? One by one, day after day, they visit the current Yoda in his restaurant, or down a side road from there on his fiveacre compound in Tavernier, Fla. “It’s amazing how it’s mushroomed, every day it seems someone else is coming,” Jimmy Johnson says. Dolphins vice president of football operations Mike Tannenbaum took notes for two and a half hours last week in Johnson’s restaurant, The Big Chill, in the exact chair opposite Jimmy in which Florida International coach Ron Turner sat a few days earlier. And Arkansas’ Bret Bielema before him. San Antonio Spurs general manager R.C. Buford set up an easel in the cabana outside Johnson’s home with three outlined pages to discuss everything from dealing with an aging roster to hiring a coach. It was his second visit. “He’s been preparing three weeks for this meeting,” Buford’s assistant told Johnson. Ohio State’s Urban Meyer? He fished with Jimmy and picked his mind on life after football. New England’s Bill Belichick? He’s a regular, visiting about every other offseason since Jimmy retired from coaching in 1999 for a simple reason: Jimmy sat on the throne Belichick does. He grasps how uneasy lies that crown. “The first year Bill came, he wanted to talk about drafting players, evaluating talent,” Jimmy said. “He had all my draft picks on piece of paper. Some I didn’t remember. He said, ‘They didn’t make your team, but they made other teams.’ “The concern he had is he didn’t want to waste picks drafting players who couldn’t make his team. I said, ‘Those picks are worth money. If you don’t think the guy’s got a chance, trade the pick for a pick the following year.’ That’s what we talked about.” That’s a central philosophy of Belichick’s drafts. “The next time, he wanted to talk about contracts,” Jimmy said. “He had some to deal with. … One year it was assistant coaches. We talked about how with success the assistants become friends with the players. “I said how (Dallas running backs coach) Joe Brodsky loved Emmitt Smith so much he quit pushing him. He’d get all over the back-up. I’d say, ‘Joe, you’re not paying attention to the guy we need on Sunday.’ He said, ‘He’ll be fine, he’s a veteran.’ “I got mad at him, and that’s what I told Belichick. ‘You’ve got to be the hammer when you’ve had success.’ The assistant coaches aren’t going to be it anymore. It’s up to you to be the (jerk).” Jimmy laughed. “Bill’s been very good at that.” He keeps confidences on recent details. He’ll just say the Philadelphia Eagles’ Chip Kelly has called three times to discuss being both coach and personnel man. And Jimmy’s honest. He said it was more difficult with the Dolphins than Dallas because of free agency. He said he needed more in-season help finding bottom-roster players. “Everybody wants to know what you look for in a player, what you look for in an assistant coach, what you look for in a head coach — what characteristics were important for you,” he said.

TWO-DAY

Golf

Time

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British Open Marathon Classic Barbasol Champ. American Century

3 a.m. 1 p.m. 3 p.m. 5 p.m.

ESPN 33, 233 Golf 156,289 Golf 156,289 NBCSP 38, 238

Cycling

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7 a.m. NBCSP 38, 238

Auto Racing

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Laurent Cipriani/AP Photo

STAGE WINNER JOAQUIM RODRIGUEZ OF SPAIN CLIMBS TOWARDS PLATEAU DE BEILLE during the twelfth stage of the Tour de France Thursday. The stage covered 195 kilometers (121.2 miles) with started in Lannemezan and finished in Plateau de Beille, France.

Alps final major obstacle for Froome Plateau De Beille, France — One mountain range completed, one more to go. Only the Alps loom as the last major obstacle between Chris Froome and a second Tour de France victory in Paris. His rivals tried and failed to make the British rider and his super-strong Sky team wilt on the toughest — and last — day of climbing in the Pyrenees on Thursday, on Stage 12 won by Joaquim Rodriguez of Spain, who gritted his teeth in driving rain on the final climb for his second stage win. With those mountains that straddle France and Spain behind them, the opportunities for podium contenders to eat into Froome’s comfortable race lead are starting to run out. That might make them only more dangerous. They could take bigger risks, like speeding hell for leather on downhill roads, in hopes that Froome might crash, or gang up on him, as they sought to on Thursday’s steep final ascent. “There are only a certain amount of opportunities before we get to Paris,” Froome said. “We’ve just got to expect everything to be thrown at us.” But to get to the 2013 champion, Froome’s rivals must first get past his teammates. And that is a problem. The big budget of his Sky team has bought the best help money can buy, riders so strong they could lead other teams if they weren’t working for Froome. They ride hard at the front, controlling the race. They allow only those riders with no hope of victory in Paris — like Rodriguez — to escape up the road, because they’re chasing stage victories and other rewards, while Sky fixates on the big prize: Keeping Froome in the yellow jersey to the July 26 finish on the Champs-Elysees. Rodriguez was part of a group of 22 riders — none of them podium contenders — that broke away shortly after the start in Lannemezan, a Pyrenees town of 6,500 inhabitants. Rodriguez started the day 19th overall, trailing Froome by more than 20 minutes. His winning ride moved him up to 15th but, at 13:45 off the lead, he’s still not a podium threat. The handful of riders who are, Froome and his team watch like hawks. Alberto Contador, Nairo Quintana and Vincenzo Nibali, his biggest rivals before Froome crushed them on the first day in the Pyrenees, tried testing him on the final ascent, taking turns with bursts of acceleration. COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Big 12 media picks TCU Oklahoma City — TCU is the pick of the media to win the Big 12 Conference football championship. Oklahoma is picked to finish third in the poll released Wednesday while Oklahoma State is picked fourth. Baylor is picked to finish second. TCU received 32 of 42 first place votes while Baylor received the other ten. Texas is picked to finish fifth, followed by West Virginia; Kansas State; Texas Tech; Iowa State; and Kansas.

Freeze supports removing flag Hoover, Ala. — Mississippi football coach Hugh Freeze says he supports removing the Confederate battle emblem from the state flag. Freeze spoke Thursday before appearing at Southeastern Conference Media Days. He says that while he is “not a political figure” he believes “it’s time we move in a different direction and change the flag.” Freeze grew up in Mississippi and has “great appreciation” for people who have pride in the state’s heritage. But he adds “that symbol has been hijacked by some groups that mean ill will toward some people.” Debate about Mississippi’s flag and other Confederate symbols reignited after the June 17 massacre of nine worshippers at a black church in Charleston, South Carolina.

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Weis Indiana house for sale Granger, Ind. — The home of former Notre Dame football coach Charlie Weis is for sale at $2.35 million. The South Bend Tribune reports the Grangerarea home, northeast of South Bend and just south of the Michigan line, was built in 2006, one year into Weis’ five-year tenure as coach. Weis went 35-27 at his alma mater before being fired after the 2009 season. The 8,417-square-foot-home has six bedrooms and seven bathrooms. Listed by realtor Cressy and Everett, the home is billed as “an equestrian lover’s dream house.” The brick ranch home on 10 acres and also features a baseball field, in-ground pool, eight-car garage, horse stables and a heated indoor equestrian arena. Weis was fired at Kansas in September after posting a 6-22 record in his second head coaching stint. NBA

Clippers add Josh Smith Free-agent forward Josh Smith agreed Thursday to a one-year deal for the veteran minimum with the Clippers, said an NBA official who was not authorized to speak publicly on the matter. Smith will earn $1.5 million from the Clippers this season, the official said. But he’s due to earn $5.4 million a year over the next five years from Detroit via the NBA’s “stretch provision.” Smith, who was offered more money by several teams, was sold on his role with the Clippers by coach Doc Rivers, the official said. Smith averaged 12 points and six rebounds in 55 games last season with the Houston Rockets after he was picked up on waivers from Detroit. He played a key role in the Rockets coming back from a 3-1 series deficit against the Clippers in the Western Conference semifinals.

Saturday Night NBA in offing New York — ABC will add to its NBA coverage next season with the debut of a Saturday night game in January. “Saturday Night NBA on ABC” will begin Jan. 23 and be the first of eight games that will be televised at 7:30 p.m. through the end of the season. The network had previously aired Sunday doubleheaders and now will air one game Saturday night and one game Sunday. The schedule addition means ABC and ESPN will combine to broadcast NBA games four nights a week. ESPN televises doubleheaders on Wednesday and Friday nights during the season. ESPN announced the plans Thursday and says its “NBA Countdown” pregame show will air before the Saturday night games. SOCCER

Uruguay legend Ghiggia dies Montevideo, Uruguay — Alcides Edgardo Ghiggia, who scored the winning goal in the final game of the 1950 World Cup to give Uruguay a stunning 2-1 victory over Brazil — still recalled as Brazil’s greatest defeat — died on Thursday. He was 88. Ghiggia’s son, Arcadio, said his father died of a heart attack. Ghiggia scored the deciding goal 10 minutes from time with the game tied 1-1. It gave Uruguay its second World Cup title in a match Brazilians fully expected to win before about 200,000 fans at Rio’s Maracana stadium. Even a draw would have given Brazil the title. The loss is still known in Brazil as the “Maracanazo.” Ghiggia also set up the tying goal by Juan Schiaffino earlier in the second half. “Only three people have silenced the Maracana,” Ghiggia once said of the goal. “The Pope, Frank Sinatra and me.” He was the last surviving Uruguayan player from the match and, poignantly, he died on Thursday, the 65th anniversary of the game.

Net Cable

Sprint Cup qualifying 3:30p.m. NBCSP 38, 238 ARCA, Newton, Iowa 8 p.m. FS1 150,227 Pan American Games Time

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Women’s basketball, rhythmic gymnastics, swimming, volleyball, soccer 7 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234

SATURDAY Baseball

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Seattle v. Yankees K.C. v. White Sox Dodgers v. Wash. Boston v. Angels

noon 1 p.m. 3 p.m. 9 p.m.

MLB FSN FS1 MLB

Golf

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British Open Marathon Classic British Open replay American Century Barbasol Champ.

6 a.m. 1 p.m. 2 p.m. 2 p.m. 3 p.m.

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Cycling

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7 a.m. NBCSP 38, 238

Auto Racing

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155,242 36, 236 150,227 155,242

33, 233 156,289 9, 209 14, 214 156,289

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XFinity qualifying 10 a.m. NBCSP 38, 238 XFinity, Loudon, H.H. 3 p.m. NBCSP 38, 238 IndyCar, Newton, Iowa 7 p.m. NBCSP 38, 238 Boxing

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Frampton v. Gonzalez 3 p.m. CBS 5, 13, 205,213 Gold Cup Soccer

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Soccer

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Swimming, women’s basketball, volleyball, rhythmic gymnastics, soccer 6 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234

LATEST LINE MLB Favorite.................... Odds................. Underdog National League Miami..............................6 1/2-7 1/2...........PHILADELPHIA LA Dodgers...................5 1/2-6 1/2.............WASHINGTON Chicago Cubs..................Even-6......................... ATLANTA MILWAUKEE......................Even-6...................... Pittsburgh ST. LOUIS.............................. 6-7..............................NY Mets ARIZONA.........................5 1/2-6 1/2........... San Francisco SAN DIEGO........................... 6-7............................ Colorado American League NY YANKEES.................6 1/2-7 1/2......................... Seattle TORONTO.......................5 1/2-6 1/2.................Tampa Bay DETROIT.............................Even-6........................Baltimore CHI WHITE SOX (1)...Even-6............Kansas City Kansas City (2).... 5 1/2-6 1/2....CHI WHITE SOX HOUSTON.......................6 1/2-7 1/2............................Texas OAKLAND............................. 7-8..........................Minnesota LA ANGELS.....................5 1/2-6 1/2......................... Boston Interleague CINCINNATI.......................Even-6........................Cleveland Home Team in CAPS (c) TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC

TODAY IN SPORTS

2005 — Tiger Woods closes with a 2-under 70 to win the British Open at St. Andrews for his 10th career major. He wins by five shots, the largest margin in any major since Woods won by eight at St. Andrews five years ago. He joins Jack Nicklaus as the only players to win the career Grand Slam twice. 2011 — Japan stuns the United States in the Women’s World Cup final, winning 3-1 on penalty kicks after coming from behind twice in a 2-2 tie. Goalkeeper Ayumi Kaihori makes two brilliant saves in the shootout. 2011 — Darren Clarke gives Northern Ireland another major championship, winning the British Open by three strokes over Americans Dustin Johnson and Phil Mickelson. Clarke follows the path of younger countryman Rory McIlroy.

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SPORTS

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Friday, July 17, 2015

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Royals proving 2014 was no fluke Kansas City, Mo. (ap) — On a crisp, cool night last October, John Schuerholz walked through the gates of Kauffman Stadium. Every seat was full, bunting hung proudly from the railings. There was a buzz. It was all so familiar. “That’s what we used to have all the time,” he told The Associated Press, reflecting on the Royals’ improbable run to the World Series. “To see that back, and the banners over the plaza and all over the town, it was heartwarming. It really was.” Kansas City had once again become a baseball town. And if anybody thought that it was a fluke, a lucky run to a memorable autumn climax, the Roy-

als have done enough to prove them wrong: Seven players chosen to this week’s All-Star Game, a big lead in the AL Central, some of the best young talent in the game in their clubhouse. “I’m happy for the organization,” said Schuerholz, who was part of the initial front office when the franchise began in the late 1960s, then built another dynasty with the Atlanta Braves, where he still serves as the team’s president. “They deserve what they have,” he said, “but it took a lot of work to get there.” That work fell on the shoulders of Dayton Moore, one of Schuerholz’s top lieutenants in Atlanta. He turned down other general manager

openings, but the job in Kansas City resonated with Moore, who grew up in Wichita and rooted for the Royals as a kid. Over most of a decade, he tirelessly rebuilt their farm system. He poured money into scouting and player development. He established academies in the Caribbean and pushed boundaries of the status quo in search of players — retreads, hot prospects and virtual unknowns. None of that has changed with their recent success, either. The frugal franchise could not afford to keep staff ace James Shields when he hit free agency, so they allowed him to sign in San Diego. Moore then signed Edinson Volquez, Chris Young and

Kris Medlen to serve as replacements. None of them made headlines nationally — the signings were met with a collective, ‘Meh’ — but they have far exceeded expectations. Volquez has been the most dependable starter in the Kansas City rotation. Young has been perhaps the best. And Medlen is coming off his second Tommy John surgery but could give Kansas City a big secondhalf boost if he is even a fraction of the pitcher he once was. That’s just the starting rotation, too. Designated hitter Billy Butler became too expensive, so Moore signed Kendrys Morales, who has outplayed Butler in every way. Paulo Orlando may not be well known,

but he has helped Kansas City weather injuries and suspensions — including the latest, a potentially season-ending groin injury to star outfielder Alex Gordon. “I’m not really smart. I’m not. But I’m a believer in players,” Moore explained. “We knew those guys are winners. I can’t predict what their numbers will be, but everyone we bring in, we expect them to help us win.” Therein lies perhaps the biggest change in Kansas City: Winning is expected. No longer do fans turn up to waste away a lazy summer evening. No longer do they count the days until Arrowhead Stadium comes alive across the parking lot with the start of the NFL season.

“I’ll say I never dreamt of this. You just do everything you can each and every day to improve your organization,” Moore said. “But then again, in our business, accomplishments have no bearing on future success.” That is why Moore hardly reveled in last year’s success. Even during the World Series, he was tied up most days in meetings, breaking down his roster and potential acquisitions. In that respect, Moore is a lot like his manager. “It doesn’t really matter what we’ve done,” said Ned Yost, who served as the AL’s AllStar manager. “You’ve just got to keep your head down and keep plodding along.”

Aldridge

ment. I was like, ‘Wow, that’s why I did all this.’ I take pride in what I do and where I’m going and I don’t think I would choose to do it any other way.” Three years remain in Aldridge’s college — and playing — career. And although many students her age, no matter how close they are to graduation, still walk through life with that vague idea of “someday I want to be this or want to do that,” Aldrdige is way ahead of the game in that respect. “It is what I’m going to do,” she said of coaching in the men’s game. Added her father: “It may take her awhile and she’s not afraid to take the road less traveled, but with the kind of traits she has, there’s not a doubt in my mind she’ll be a men’s coach someday.” When she is, whether that’s 10, 20 or even 50 years down the road, Aldridge said she would not lose sight of the fact that she would have Hammon to thank. “She put her foot in the door for all the women following her and I just think that’s so cool,” Aldridge said. “She’s kind of like an idol to me. When you’re a kid playing, it’s ‘I want to work hard so I can play just like so and so.’ Now it’s ‘I want to work hard because I want to be just like Becky Hammon.’”

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

Jon Super/AP Photo

JORDAN SPIETH DRIVES FROM THE 10TH TEE DURING THE FIRST ROUND of the British Open. Spieth opened with a 5-under 67 and trailed by two strokes.

Open CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

Johnson, whose threeputt from 12 feet on the final hole cost him a shot at the U.S. Open, looked as daunting as ever. He simply overpowered the Old Course with such force that he hit wedge into 10 of the par 4s and had an eagle putt on another. With a pair of big par saves on the tough closing holes, he played bogey-free for a 65 and for at least a day made good on a warning he made earlier in the week. Asked about Spieth’s chances to sweep the four majors, Johnson said, “Well, I’m playing the next two so we’ll have to see.” This was hardly a twoman show. The six players who were one shot behind at 66 included former British Open champion Paul Lawrie and two-time U.S. Open champion Retief Goosen. Jason Day, coming off his scary bout with vertigo symptoms at the U.S. Open, was back on his feet and back in the hunt. Most impressive from that group were Zach Johnson and Danny Willett, who posted their scores as the temperature dropped and wind stiffened late in the afternoon. Spieth was joined at 67 by Louis Oosthuizen, the

last Open champion at St. Andrews. “If D.J. keeps driving it the way he is, then I’m going to have to play my best golf to have a chance,” Spieth said. The real test might come from the weather. Spieth and Johnson got a break by playing in the morning when St. Andrews was ripe for scoring — 10 of the top 12 scores came from that side of the draw. That didn’t help Tiger Woods, who hit into the Swilcan Burn on the opening hole, made only one birdie and shot 76. “Guys have been shooting good numbers,” said Woods, a two-time Open champion at St. Andrews. “Unfortunately I did not do that.” Instead, he was headed for a missed cut for the third time in his last four majors. The afternoon wave suffered in chill and wind so strong that Phil Mickelson hit driver and 3-wood and didn’t reach the 465-yard 13th hole. He said he had to hit 5-iron for his third shot on the par-5 14th. Johnson was pin-high with a 3-wood in the morning. Mickelson made only one bogey on the back nine and shot 70. He called the conditions “fun,” though his smile might not last if the morning group doesn’t face the same conditions. “We were at a significant disadvantage today,” Mickelson said. “And hopefully, if we’re able to play an entire day to-

morrow, it will even itself out.” The first 26 groups had an average score of 71.46. The last 26 groups averaged 72.62. Rickie Fowler, coming off a victory in the Scottish Open, said the final seven holes was “hanging on for dear life.” He made two bogeys, one eagle and 15 pars for a 72. The forecast was for rain early today and wind calming as it clears, followed by stronger gusts in the afternoon. Saturday could have gusts approaching 40 mph. Any duel between Spieth and Johnson is void of animosity. They played in the same group, and during one long wait on the 17th tee, they laughed and chatted as if this were an opening round at a regular PGA Tour event. “No chat about the U.S. Open at all, as I wouldn’t imagine there would be, other than talking about the differences in the course,” Spieth said. “But I enjoy playing with Dustin. I’ve played a lot of golf with him.” And he knows what to expect from golf’s most athletic figure. Johnson hit driver on all but three holes, leaving him wedges into the par 4s (except for three longer holes into a hurting wind on the back nine) and a 7-iron that Johnson stuck to 10 feet for eagle on the par-5 fifth hole. “I’m going to hit driver on every hole if I can,” Johnson said.

Spieth already has shown at the Masters and U.S. Open that power isn’t everything. And while he laid back on several holes — Johnson’s tee shots were on average 36 yards longer — Spieth can score. He birdied four of the first six holes with putts inside 12 feet and took a share of the lead with a 10-foot putt on the par3 11th. His lone mistake came in bunkers — a pot bunker in the 13th fairway he had to play out sideways, and the Road Hole bunker on the 17th. He blasted out to 6 feet and missed. “I’ve played enough golf with him to where I believe in my skill set, that I can still trump that crazy ability that he has,” Spieth said. “I expect when he stands on the tee it’s going to go up there miles and down the fairway. I also expect that I can birdie each hole when I stand on the tee — it just happens to be a different route.” Not many can appreciate the route Spieth is taking. Only five other players since 1934 have won the first two majors of the year. Only Ben Hogan has won the Masters, U.S. Open and British Open in the same year. No one has won all four. The key for Spieth in the first round was to stay close, and that’s what he did — not in driving distance, but by score, which ultimately is all that matters.

wanted to be headed in life,” Aldridge said. “And I was gonna do whatever it took to get there.” Added her father: “She is the most disciplined kid I’ve ever seen. It’s just kind of the person that she is and she’s always been that way. Whether it’s school, basketball, faith, it doesn’t matter. She’d kill herself and do whatever it takes to accomplish what she sets out to accomplish.” For now, Aldridge is well on her way to doing just that between the lines. Told for years that she was too small or slow to hold onto dreams of playing big-time Division I basketball, the 5-foot-7 point guard already has proven those doubters wrong by having a standout debut season with the Jayhawks. And although she said she sometimes struggles to maintain the balance between having fun playing the game and trying to learn every minute detail about it for her coaching future, Aldrdidge admits her hardwood road has been just about perfect thus far. “I often think about the first time I ran out of the tunnel at Kansas and I teared up,” she said. “I’ll never forget that mo-

Keegan CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

Watching how well his players handled the responsibility that comes with playing faster emboldened Self to say that he trusts them to work faster and more often without a script. It will take patience and the ability to trust his deep bench to stay with that plan. Statistics don’t show all, but Ken Pomeroy has some interesting ones. In the glossary on his kenpom.com website, Pomeroy defines adjusted tempo (AdjT) as “an estimate of the

tempo (possessions per 40 minutes) a team would have against the team that wants to play an average D-I tempo.” Counting backward, KU ranked 53rd, 93rd, 87th, 121st, 53rd, 99th, 82nd and 132nd. While the rest of the nation must adjust from having 35 seconds to get a shot off to 30, the length of the new college clock, KU will have six more seconds that it had overseas. If Kansas picks up the pace, that means more possessions per game, a factor that favors the favorite. Fewer possessions equates to a shorter game, giving the underdog a better shot at pulling off the upset.

Raiders blank Salina J-W Staff Reports

Hunter Gudde pitched a six-hit shutout, and the Lawrence Raiders defeated Salina, 6-0, in youth baseball Thursday night at Free State High. The Raiders built a quick five-run lead with three runs in the first inning and two in the second. “Hunter was just super on the mound again,” Raiders coach Brad Romme said. “At one point, he threw 12 consecutive

strikes. He was just super.” Nolan Prochaska, Brad Kincaid, Zak McAlister and Gudde each had two hits for the Raiders. The Raiders (15-15-2) will play Jefferson City at 7 p.m. Saturday at FSHS. Salina 000 000 0 — 0 6 0 Raiders 320 001 x — 6 9 1 W — Hunter Gudde (5-1). Raiders highlights: Gudde pitched complete game; Nolan Prochaska 2-for-4, 3B, 2 runs; Brad Kincaid 2-for2, RBI, 3 runs, 2 BBs; Gudde 2-for-4, RBI; Zak McAlister 2-for-4, RBI. Raiders record: 15-15-2. Next for Raiders: Saturday vs. Jefferson City, 7 p.m. at Free State.


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Friday, July 17, 2015

SPORTS

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Parity reigns —————

In a season where every team is equal, everyone has playoff chance By Ronald Blum AP Baseball Writer

New York — Clayton Kershaw looks around the major leagues and sees opponents convinced they can reach the playoffs. “It’s just a matter of everybody beating up on everybody,” the Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher said. “We want everybody to feel like they’re in it.” It’s the year of parity in the major leagues, when almost no one has managed to break a w a y from the pack or fall way behind. Kershaw, a threetime Cy Young Award winner and the Yost reigning NL MVP, has a won-lost record reflecting the parity — he’s 6-6. Every team in the American League reached the All-Star break with a .450 winning percentage or higher. It’s the first time an entire league did that since 1944, according to STATS, and many rosters that season were depleted of stars because of World War II. “It’s fantastic to see,” Pittsburgh pitcher Gerrit Cole said. “All the teams at .500 all think they’re going to finish over .500, and all the teams that are over .500, and even us, we’re always fretting, looking behind our back.” Boston headed to the All-Star break in last place yet just 61⁄2 games from first — only the second time since division play began in 1969 the AL East spread was that close. The first-tolast gap has been that narrow in any division just nine times overall in the expansion era, STATS said. “We’re at the bottom of the barrel right now, but we’re not that far out,” Red Sox All-Star Brock Holt said. “It’s just about going out and taking care of our business, and the standings will kind of take care of themselves towards the end of the year. Oakland has the worst record in the AL but at 41-50 is just 81⁄2 games behind the West-leading Los Angeles Angels. While last in the AL Cen-

Jeff Roberson/AP Photo

CLAYTON KERSHAW, OF THE LOS ANGELES DODGERS, THROWS during the fifth inning of the MLB All-Star baseball game Tuesday in Cincinnati. tral, the Chicago White Sox are 41-45 and only 51⁄2 games out for the AL’s second wild card. “We have an unbelievable level of competitive balance,” new baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred said. “When I look at the standings, I think we’re in for one heck of a ride in the second half of the season.” There is a little more spread in the NL, where the St. Louis Cardinals have the major leagues’ best record at 56-33 and Philadelphia owns the worst at 29-62. Other than the Phillies, Miami and Milwaukee, every team is within single-digit games back of a playoff berth. “It just shows that there’s not really that a monopoly of a franchise right now,” Baltimore closer Zach Britton said. Kansas City was 48-46 at the All-Star break last year, 61⁄2 games behind AL Central-leading Detroit and 21⁄2 back of Seattle for the league’s second wild card. By October, the Royals were one win shy of their first World Series title since 1985. Royals manager Ned Yost said the bunching gave his AL players extra incentive in the All-Star Game. “Everybody in that locker room is going to have a chance to continue to move forward and be playoff bound,” he said before the AL’s 6-3 victory. Toronto, Seattle and the Marlins are the only

teams that have not made the playoffs since 2005. Increased revenue sharing, the luxury tax on payrolls and restraints on amateur signing bonuses have helped more teams become competitive. While the Dodgers opened the season with a payroll of nearly $273 million for their 40-man roster, according to Major League Baseball’s calculations, there was a huge dropoff after that to the Yankees at $220 million and Boston at $187 million. Six teams were at $140 million to $175 million, seven at $120 million to $125 million, and six more above $100 million. “A lot of teams that are expected to win are learning that the revenues that they are making ... they’re actually going to have to spend some of those revenues to create the gap and not stay where they’re at, because teams are getting close to them,” agent Scott Boras said. All that crowding in the standings has its impact on talks as general managers approach July 31, the last day to deal players without passing them through waivers first. “It makes the trade deadline a lot harder, obviously,” Kershaw said. “Not as many teams think they’re out of it. It makes it tougher to get pieces, which means you’ve got to build your team earlier in the offseason, in my opinion.”

Serena withdraws in Sweden Bastad, Sweden (ap) — Serena Williams on Thursday made an unexpected withdrawal from the WTA clay event in southern Sweden, prior to facing a Czech No. 105 who has beaten her on the surface. Even tournament organizers had admitted this week they were somewhat surprised the world No. 1 honored her commitment by showing up to the event in the Swedish woodlands to play. Williams won an opening second-round match over Belgian qualifier Ysaline Bonaventure 6-2, 6-1. But the dream ended as the 33-year-old withdrew citing an old elbow injury just a few days after winning her sixth Wimbledon title at the weekend. Klara Koukalova had defeated Williams on

L awrence J ournal -W orld

SCOREBOARD British Open

Thursday At St. Andrews (Old Course) St. Andrews, Scotland Purse: $9.28 million Yardage: 7,297; Par: 72 (36-36) First Round (a-amateur) Dustin Johnson 31-34—65 Robert Streb 31-35—66 Retief Goosen 33-33—66 Paul Lawrie 31-35—66 Jason Day 33-33—66 Zach Johnson 31-35—66 Danny Willett 33-33—66 a-Jordan Niebrugge 33-34—67 Kevin Na 34-33—67 Charl Schwartzel 33-34—67 Jordan Spieth 31-36—67 Louis Oosthuizen 33-34—67 Greg Owen 33-35—68 Matt Jones 35-33—68 Luke Donald 32-36—68 David Howell 32-36—68 Marc Warren 32-36—68 a-Paul Dunne 32-37—69 David Lingmerth 29-40—69 a-Romain Langasque 35-34—69 Anirban Lahiri 33-36—69 Tommy Fleetwood 33-36—69 Branden Grace 33-36—69 Thomas Bjorn 32-38—70 Alexander Levy 33-37—70 Anthony Wall 33-37—70 Webb Simpson 33-37—70 a-Oliver Schniederjans 34-36—70 Sergio Garcia 34-36—70 Stewart Cink 34-36—70 Greg Chalmers 34-36—70 a-Paul Kinnear 31-39—70 Tyrrell Hatton 34-36—70 Marcel Siem 33-37—70 Steven Bowditch 33-37—70 Adam Scott 35-35—70 Phil Mickelson 35-35—70 Paul Casey 35-35—70 Marc Leishman 34-36—70 Rikard Karlbert 33-37—70 Graham DeLaet 34-37—71 Sandy Lyle 37-34—71 Ross Fisher 34-37—71 Ernie Els 35-36—71 Brendon Todd 32-39—71 Bubba Watson 34-37—71 Lee Westwood 33-38—71 Ryan Palmer 35-36—71 Kevin Kisner 33-38—71 Brooks Koepka 33-38—71 Scott Arnold 34-37—71 Cameron Tringale 31-40—71 Rafael Cabrera-Bello 31-40—71 John Daly 33-38—71 Geoff Ogilvy 32-39—71 Hiroyuki Fujita 34-37—71 Martin Kaymer 35-36—71 Matt Kuchar 35-36—71 Justin Rose 32-39—71 Harris English 34-37—71 a-Ashley Chesters 33-38—71 James Morrison 34-37—71 Brett Rumford 34-37—71 Russell Knox 35-37—72 Charley Hoffman 35-37—72 Hunter Mahan 32-40—72 Carl Pettersson 33-39—72 Graeme McDowell 36-36—72 Patrick Reed 37-35—72 Hideki Matsuyama 33-39—72 John Senden 35-37—72 David Duval 34-38—72 Eddie Pepperell 35-37—72 Ryan Fox 35-37—72 Richie Ramsay 34-38—72 Padraig Harrington 35-37—72 Bernd Wiesberger 34-38—72 Gary Woodland 33-39—72 Thongchai Jaidee 34-38—72 Francesco Molinari 35-37—72 Mark O’Meara 35-37—72 Jimmy Walker 33-39—72 Jamie Donaldson 35-37—72 Rickie Fowler 37-35—72 Andy Sullivan 34-38—72 Pelle Edberg 36-36—72 Brian Harman 34-39—73 Matt Every 37-36—73 Shane Lowry 36-37—73 Billy Horschel 35-38—73 Brandt Snedeker 35-38—73 J.B. Holmes 34-39—73 Shinji Tomimura 36-37—73 Ian Poulter 37-36—73 Darren Clarke 35-38—73 Matteo Manassero 33-40—73 David Lipsky 36-37—73 Danny Lee 36-37—73 Morgan Hoffmann 35-38—73 Jason Dufner 33-40—73 a-Gunn Yang 34-39—73 Stephen Gallacher 34-39—73 Henrik Stenson 35-38—73 Jim Furyk 35-38—73 Koumei Oda 32-41—73 Kiradech Aphibarnrat 37-36—73 Daniel Berger 32-41—73 Robert Dinwiddie 33-40—73 Todd Hamilton 37-37—74 Joost Luiten 36-38—74 Byeong-Hun An 36-38—74 Victor Dubuisson 35-39—74 Ben Curtis 36-38—74 David Hearn 35-39—74 Jonathan Moore 37-37—74 Scott Hend 36-38—74 Ben Martin 35-39—74 George Coetzee 34-40—74 Russell Henley 38-36—74 Bernhard Langer 33-41—74 Ryan Moore 36-38—74 Yuta Ikeda 34-40—74 Edoardo Molinari 35-39—74 Mark Young 35-39—74 a-Alister Balcombe 38-36—74 Marcus Fraser 36-38—74 James Hahn 37-38—75 Tadahiro Takayama 35-40—75 Mikko Ilonen 38-37—75 Adam Bland 37-38—75 Thomas Aiken 37-38—75 Jonas Blixt 36-39—75 Soren Kjeldsen 35-40—75 Miguel Angel Jimenez 35-40—75 Bill Haas 35-40—75 Tom Lehman 34-41—75 Keegan Bradley 37-38—75 Romain Wattel 35-40—75 Tom Watson 35-41—76 Tiger Woods 40-36—76 Raphael Jacquelin 37-39—76 Daniel Brooks 37-39—76 Pablo Larrazabal 38-38—76 Tom Gillis 36-40—76 Taichi Teshima 37-39—76 Rod Pampling 36-41—77 Gary Boyd 36-41—77 Scott Strange 34-43—77 Kevin Streelman 38-40—78 Justin Leonard 36-42—78 Jaco Van Zyl 35-44—79 Hiroshi Iwata 36-43—79 Mark Calcavecchia 34-46—80 Liang Wen-chong 38-42—80 a-Ben Taylor 37-45—82 Nick Faldo 41-42—83

er Bernard Tomic is facing resisting arrest charges after allegedly refusing to turn down loud music in his suite at a Miami Beach hotel. Miami Beach police say officers responded Wednesday to the W South Beach Hotel after Tomic would not comply with requests from hotel Tour de France security to lower the volPlateau De Beille, France (ap) — Results Thursday from the 195-kiloume. (121-mile) Stage 12 from The security personnel meter Lannemazen to Plateau de Beille of and police officers then the Tour de France: 1. Joaquim Rodriguez, Spain, told the 22-year-old Tom- Katusha Team, 5 hours, 40 minutes, ic he was being evicted, 14 seconds. 2. Jakob Fuglsang, Denmark, Astana but he refused to leave. Pro Team, 5:41:26. Tomic stayed in the 3. Romain Bardet, France, Ag2r La suite after being warned Mondiale, 5:42:03. 4. Gorka Izagirre Insausti, Spain, he was trespassing and Movistar Team, 5:44:48. 5. Louis Meintjes, South Africa, was then arrested on 5:44:52. misdemeanor charges of MTN-Qhubecka, 6. Jan Barta, Czech Republic, Boraresisting arrest without Argon 18, 5:46:01. 7. Romain Sicard, France, Team violence, and trespassing. Europcar, 5:46:17. Tomic arrested Court and jail records did 8. Mikael Cherel, France, Ag2r La Mondiale, 5:46:42. in Miami Beach not list an attorney for 9. Alejandro Valverde Belmonte, Australian tennis play- Tomic. Spain, Movistar Team, 5:47:00. clay in 2009 in Spain but trailed 4-1 in their career series. “Thank you for being so understanding. I always feel so much support here and hope I can come back,” the 2013 champion told Swedish TV. “I’m devastated,” she added. “When I was warming up in the morning I hurt my elbow as I had major problems with it previously. The doctors said it was best that I did not make it worse. I had the same problem at Roland Garros and Wimbledon.” Williams is due to play next month in California, Canada and Ohio before the Aug. 31 start of the U.S. Open.

10. Christopher Froome, England, Team Sky, 5:47:01. 11. Nairo Alexander Quintana Rojas, Colombia, Movistar Team, 5:47:01. 12. Thibaut Pinot, France, FDJ.fr, 5:47:01. 13. Tejay van Garderen, United States, BMC Racing Team, 5:47:01. 14. Alberto Contador, Spain, TinkoffSaxo, 5:47:01. 15. Pierre Rolland, France, Team Europcar, 5:47:01. 16. Vincenzo Nibali, Italy, Astana Pro Team, 5:47:01. 17. Geraint Thomas, Scotland, Team Sky, 5:47:01. 18. Robert Gesink, Netherlands, Lotto NL-Jumbo, 5:47:58. 19. Bauke Mollema, Netherlands, Trek Factory Racing, 5:47:58. 20. Samuel Sanchez Gonzalez, Spain, BMC Racing Team, 5:49:27. 21. Andrew Talansky, United States, Team Cannondale-Garmin, 5:50:00. 22. Tony Gallopin, France, Lotto Soudal, 5:50:00. 23. Warren Barguil, France, Team Giant Alpecin, 5:50:00. 24. Mathias Frank, Switzerland, IAM Cyling, 5:50:00. 25. Eduardo Sepulveda, Argentina, Bretagne-Seche Environment, 5:50:00. 26. Laurens Ten Dam, Netherlands, Lotto NL-Jumbo, 5:50:00. 27. Michal Kwiatkowski, Poland, Etixx-Quick Step, 5:51:49. 28. Alexis Vuillermoz, France, Ag2r La Mondiale, 5:52:01. 29. Richie Porte, Australia, Team Sky, 5:52:52. 30. Sep Vanmarcke, Belgium, Lotto NL-Jumbo, 5:52:52. 31. Ryder Hesjedal, Canada, Team Cannondale-Garmin, 5:53:01. 32. Serge Pauwels, Belgium, MTNQhubecka, 5:53:49. 33. Jonathan Castroviejo Nicolas, Spain, Movistar Team, 5:56:13. 34. Jarlinson Pantano, Colombia, IAM Cyling, 5:56:13. 35. Daniel Teklehaimanot, Eritrea, MTN-Qhubecka, 5:57:16. 36. Steve Morabito, Switzerland, FDJ.fr, 5:57:16. 37. Tiago Machado, Portugal, Katusha Team, 5:57:16. 38. Roman Kreuziger, Czech Republic, Tinkoff-Saxo, 5:57:16. 39. Michael Rogers, Australia, Tinkoff-Saxo, 5:57:16. 40. Nicolas Roche, Ireland, Team Sky, 5:57:16. 41. Rafal Majka, Poland, TinkoffSaxo, 5:57:16. 42. Alberto Losada Alguacil, Spain, Katusha Team, 5:57:16. 43. Lars Bak, Denmark, Lotto Soudal, 5:57:16. 44. Simon Geschke, Germany, Team Giant Alpecin, 5:58:30. 45. Thomas Voeckler, France, Team Europcar, 5:58:33. 46. Jerome Coppel, France, IAM Cyling, 5:59:52. 47. Steven Kruijswijk, Netherlands, Lotto NL-Jumbo, 5:59:52. 48. Luis Angel Mate Mardones, Spain, Cofidis, Solutions Credits, 5:59:52. 49. Emanuel Buchmann, Germany, Bora-Argon 18, 5:59:52. 50. Anthony Delaplace, France, Bretagne-Seche Environment, 5:59:52. 51. Sylvain Chavanel, France, IAM Cyling, 5:59:52. 52. Tanel Kangert, Estonia, Astana Pro Team, 6::21. 53. Haimar Zubeldia Agirre, Spain, Trek Factory Racing, 6:1:01. 54. Wilco Kelderman, Netherlands, Lotto NL-Jumbo, 6:1:01. 55. Bob Jungels, Luxembourg, Trek Factory Racing, 6:1:01. 56. Michael Schar, Switzerland, BMC Racing Team, 6:1:01. 57. Danilo Wyss, Switzerland, BMC Racing Team, 6:1:01. 58. Jan Bakelants, Belgium, Ag2r La Mondiale, 6:1:01. 59. Frederic Brun, France, BretagneSeche Environment, 6:1:01. 60. Kristijan Durasek, Croatia, Lampre-Merida, 6:1:01. 61. Bram Tankink, Netherlands, Lotto NL-Jumbo, 6:1:01. 62. Peter Kennaugh, England, Team Sky, 6:1:01. 63. Daniel Navarro Garcia, Spain, Cofidis, Solutions Credits, 6:2:00. 64. Winner Anacona Gomez, Colombia, Movistar Team, 6:3:20. 65. Daniel Martin, Ireland, Team Cannondale-Garmin, 6:3:23. 66. Jean-Christophe Peraud, France, Ag2r La Mondiale, 6:3:30. 67. Stephen Cummings, England, MTN-Qhubecka, 6:3:49. 68. Leopold Konig, Czech Republic, Team Sky, 6:4:42. 69. Thomas De Gendt, Belgium, Lotto Soudal, 6:6:01. 70. Lieuwe Westra, Netherlands, Astana Pro Team, 6:6:01. 71. Wouter Poels, Netherlands, Team Sky, 6:6:03. 72. Jeremy Roy, France, FDJ.fr, 6:6:03. 73. Georg Preidler, Austria, Team Giant Alpecin, 6:6:39. 74. Matthieu Ladagnous, France, FDJ.fr, 6:7:39. 75. Jose Herrada Lopez, Spain, Movistar Team, 6:7:46. 76. Ruben Plaza Molina, Spain, Lampre-Merida, 6:7:46. 77. Rohan Dennis, Australia, BMC Racing Team, 6:7:46. 78. Damiano Caruso, Italy, BMC Racing Team, 6:7:46. 79. Marcel Wyss, Switzerland, IAM Cyling, 6:10:38. 80. Martin Elmiger, Switzerland, IAM Cyling, 6:10:38. 81. Reto Hollenstein, Switzerland, IAM Cyling, 6:10:38. 82. Nicolas Edet, France, Cofidis, Solutions Credits, 6:10:38. 83. John Degenkolb, Germany, Team Giant Alpecin, 6:13:41. 84. Koen De Kort, Netherlands, Team Giant Alpecin, 6:13:41. 85. Brice Feillu, France, BretagneSeche Environment, 6:13:48. 86. Stef Clement, Netherlands, IAM Cyling, 6:13:48. 87. Gianpaolo Caruso, Italy, Katusha Team, 6:13:48. 88. Matteo Tosatto, Italy, TinkoffSaxo, 6:13:48. 89. Jens Debusschere, Belgium, Lotto Soudal, 6:13:48. 90. Adam Hansen, Australia, Lotto Soudal, 6:13:48. 91. Markel Irizar Arranburu, Spain, Trek Factory Racing, 6:13:48. 92. Armindo Fonseca, France, Bretagne-Seche Environment, 6:13:48. 93. Stijn Devolder, Belgium, Trek Factory Racing, 6:13:48. 94. Julien Simon, France, Cofidis, Solutions Credits, 6:13:48. 95. Roy Curvers, Netherlands, Team Giant Alpecin, 6:13:48. 96. Nelson Oliveira, Portugal, Lampre-Merida, 6:13:48. 97. Benoit Vaugrenard, France, FDJ. fr, 6:13:48. 98. Florian Senechal, France, Cofidis, Solutions Credits, 6:13:48. 99. Perrig Quemeneur, France, Team Europcar, 6:13:48. 100. Paul Martens, Germany, Lotto NL-Jumbo, 6:13:48. Overall Standings 1. Christopher Froome, England, Team Sky, 46 hours, 50 minutes, 32 seconds. 2. Tejay van Garderen, United States, BMC Racing Team, 46:53:24. 3. Nairo Alexander Quintana Rojas, Colombia, Movistar Team, 46:53:41. 4. Alejandro Valverde Belmonte, Spain, Movistar Team, 46:54:30. 5. Geraint Thomas, Scotland, Team Sky, 46:54:35. 6. Alberto Contador, Spain, TinkoffSaxo, 46:54:36.

7. Robert Gesink, Netherlands, Lotto NL-Jumbo, 46:56:04. 8. Tony Gallopin, France, Lotto Soudal, 46:58:04. 9. Vincenzo Nibali, Italy, Astana Pro Team, 46:58:19. 10. Bauke Mollema, Netherlands, Trek Factory Racing, 46:58:34. 11. Warren Barguil, France, Team Giant Alpecin, 47::15. 12. Mathias Frank, Switzerland, IAM Cyling, 47:2:57. 13. Samuel Sanchez Gonzalez, Spain, BMC Racing Team, 47:3:25. 14. Jakob Fuglsang, Denmark, Astana Pro Team, 47:4:05. 15. Joaquim Rodriguez, Spain, Katusha Team, 47:4:17. 16. Pierre Rolland, France, Team Europcar, 47:4:29. 17. Romain Bardet, France, Ag2r La Mondiale, 47:7:37. 18. Andrew Talansky, United States, Team Cannondale-Garmin, 47:10:04. 19. Gorka Izagirre Insausti, Spain, Movistar Team, 47:17:29. 20. Eduardo Sepulveda, Argentina, Bretagne-Seche Environment, 47:18:51. 21. Alexis Vuillermoz, France, Ag2r La Mondiale, 47:19:08. 22. Daniel Martin, Ireland, Team Cannondale-Garmin, 47:23:32. 23. Roman Kreuziger, Czech Republic, Tinkoff-Saxo, 47:23:51. 24. Thibaut Pinot, France, FDJ.fr, 47:25:13. 25. Michael Rogers, Australia, Tinkoff-Saxo, 47:25:20.

American League

East Division W L Pct GB New York 48 40 .545 — Tampa Bay 46 45 .505 3½ Baltimore 44 44 .500 4 Toronto 45 46 .495 4½ Boston 42 47 .472 6½ Central Division W L Pct GB Kansas City 52 34 .605 — Minnesota 49 40 .551 4½ Detroit 44 44 .500 9 Cleveland 42 46 .477 11 Chicago 41 45 .477 11 West Division W L Pct GB Los Angeles 48 40 .545 — Houston 49 42 .538 ½ Texas 42 46 .477 6 Seattle 41 48 .461 7½ Oakland 41 50 .451 8½ Thursday’s Games No games scheduled Today’s Games Kansas City (Volquez 8-4) at Chicago White Sox (Samardzija 6-4), 1:10 p.m., 1st game Seattle (Montgomery 4-3) at N.Y. Yankees (Tanaka 5-3), 6:05 p.m. Tampa Bay (Odorizzi 5-5) at Toronto (Hutchison 8-2), 6:07 p.m. Baltimore (U.Jimenez 7-4) at Detroit (An.Sanchez 8-7), 6:08 p.m. Cleveland (Bauer 8-5) at Cincinnati (Leake 6-5), 6:10 p.m. Kansas City (C.Young 7-5) at Chicago White Sox (Danks 4-8), 7:10 p.m., 2nd game Texas (M.Perez 0-0) at Houston (McHugh 9-5), 7:10 p.m. Boston (Miley 8-8) at L.A. Angels (C.Wilson 7-7), 9:05 p.m. Minnesota (E.Santana 0-0) at Oakland (Gray 10-3), 9:05 p.m. Saturday’s Games Seattle at N.Y. Yankees, 12:05 p.m. Tampa Bay at Toronto, 12:07 p.m. Kansas City at Chicago White Sox, 1:10 p.m. Baltimore at Detroit, 6:08 p.m. Cleveland at Cincinnati, 6:10 p.m. Texas at Houston, 6:10 p.m. Boston at L.A. Angels, 8:05 p.m. Minnesota at Oakland, 8:07 p.m.

National League

East Division W L Pct GB Washington 48 39 .552 — New York 47 42 .528 2 Atlanta 42 47 .472 7 Miami 38 51 .427 11 Philadelphia 29 62 .319 21 Central Division W L Pct GB St. Louis 56 33 .629 — Pittsburgh 53 35 .602 2½ Chicago 47 40 .540 8 Cincinnati 39 47 .453 15½ Milwaukee 38 52 .422 18½ West Division W L Pct GB Los Angeles 51 39 .567 — San Francisco 46 43 .517 4½ Arizona 42 45 .483 7½ San Diego 41 49 .456 10 Colorado 39 49 .443 11 Thursday’s Games No games scheduled Today’s Games L.A. Dodgers (Bolsinger 4-3) at Washington (Zimmermann 8-5), 7:05 p.m. Miami (Fernandez 2-0) at Philadelphia (Morgan 1-2), 7:05 p.m. Cleveland (Bauer 8-5) at Cincinnati (Leake 6-5), 7:10 p.m. Chicago Cubs (Hendricks 4-4) at Atlanta (Teheran 6-4), 7:35 p.m. Pittsburgh (Morton 6-2) at Milwaukee (Fiers 4-7), 8:10 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Syndergaard 4-4) at St. Louis (Lynn 6-5), 8:15 p.m. San Francisco (M.Cain 1-1) at Arizona (Ray 3-4), 9:40 p.m. Colorado (J.De La Rosa 6-3) at San Diego (Shields 7-3), 10:10 p.m. Saturday’s Games L.A. Dodgers at Washington, 4:05 p.m. Miami at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m. Chicago Cubs at Atlanta, 7:10 p.m. Cleveland at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m. Pittsburgh at Milwaukee, 7:10 p.m. N.Y. Mets at St. Louis, 7:15 p.m. San Francisco at Arizona, 8:10 p.m. Colorado at San Diego, 8:40 p.m.

BASEBALL Major League Baseball OFFICE OF THE COMMISSIONER OF BASEBALL — Suspended Boston minor league RHP Michael Kopech (Greenville-SAL) 50 games after testing positive for Oxilofrine, a stimulant in violation of the Minor League Drug Prevention and Treatment Program. National League ATLANTA BRAVES — Signed RHP Jason Frasor. PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Agreed to terms with LHP Brandon Waddell and OF Ryan Nagle on minor league contracts. SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS — Agreed to terms with SS Everth Cabrera on a minor league contract. WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Agreed to terms with OF Elvis Alvarado on a minor league contract. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association DALLAS MAVERICKS — Re-signed G J.J. Barea to a four-year contract. Announced the resignation of president and CEO Terdema Ussery. Named chief financial officer Floyd Jahner CEO. SACRAMENTO KINGS — Voided the contract of F Luc Mbah a Moute after he failed a team physical. COLLEGE CONFERENCE USA — Announced the resignation of commissioner Britton Banowsky to join the College Football Playoff. FOOTBALL BOWL ASSOCIATION — Named Doug Kelly director of communications.


Friday, July 17, 2015

CLASSIFIEDS

GARAGE SALES PLACE YOUR AD: 01

Lawrence

Lawrence

Garage/Bake Sale 3136 Tomahawk Dr Lawrence

New Craftsman Shop Vac New Solar Lights Wood Working Chimney Brush w/ Rods Wood Shutters Misc.

785.832.2222

03

Neighborhood 4 Family Sale

“ Getting a Divorce “ Garage Sale 4700 Carmel Pl Lawrence

Sat, Jul 18. 7:30am-2:00pm I’m getting rid of lots of things from my 6 year marrige. Very Cheap Prices. Toddler Bed, 2 Selectric typewriters with interchangeable font, Vintage Cash Register, computer equipment, kids books and toys, telescope and much more... 05

Cleaning Out Sale 2224 Killarney Ct Lawrence

Sat, Jul 18. 7am - 1pm Dishes, kitchen table w/6 chairs, women’s clothes, books, toys, high chair other misc. items

06

19th St

15th St / N 1400 Rd

14 E 23rd St

Lawrence 05

MOVING $ALE 3417 Seminole Dr Lawrence, KS Fri, July 17, 8am- 4pm Sat, July 18, 8am- 4pm

Lawrence assorted purses, sunflower decorations, framed wall pictures, ceramic Longaberger items, board games, and much more!!! Rain or shine!!! 08

Almost everything must go! King-size black platform bed, white dresser & bureau, gas grill, garage shelving, bookcases, desks, side tables, kitchen items, (glasses, bowls, plates, stemware, etc) women’s clothes, and accessories, & MORE! 07

2504 Crestline Pl Lawrence, KS

Fri, July 17 8am - 4 pm Sat, July 18, 8am- Noon

3 FAMILY SALE

HUGE MULTI-HOUSEHOLD GARAGE SALE 2512 Crestline Place Lawrence

Sports equipment, household items, small kitchen appliances, & toys. 08

GARAGE SALE 2503 W 24TH TER FRI. JULY 17TH & SAT. JULY 18TH 8AM TO 3PM Tools: Senco, Dewalt, Milwaukee, hand tools, drill bits, lazer level. Tons of books, organic gardening magazines. Lots of never used kitchen gadjets. Luggage, dishes, lamps, camping gear, TV, VCR, tapes. Several used 24’ abd 30’ hollow core doors with hinges and knobs. 08

Neighborhood Garage & Moving Sale! 3029 Rimrock Drive, Lawrence (other homes have sales also) July 17th & 18th, 7:30am to 1:30pm, (Possible time extended if needed) No Early Sales Shortened List Antique, vintage & modern items, aquarium, baby items, bedding, books, new catfish poles, cookbooks, china, dishes & glassware, Christmas decor & tree, clothes for all ages, drums, formal wear, gaming system, house plants, jewelry, housewares, fabrics, antique & modern furniture, king size mattress, twin bed, Jukebox; Vintage 448 Rock-Ola, lamps, linens, nick - knacks, paint, pictures, records, speakers, TV, toys, VHS tapes, new wrestling shoes. Treasures for All Ages! 11

HUGE GARAGE SALE!! 1112 W. 6th Street (In the Lawrence Medical Plaza parking lot)

Saturday & Sunday July 18th and 19th 8 am to 1pm

59

07

10

08

09

15

Haskell Ave

GARAGE SALE LOCATOR

Sat, Jul 18. 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Garage Sale 2513 Lazy Brook Lane 32” TV; large living room 5528 Chamney Ct Lawrence, KS chair; kitchen table and Lawrence, KS Saturday, 7/18, 7am-??? chairs; desktop printer/ copFriday, 7/17, 8 am- Noon ier combination; computer Sports equipment, craft Sat, 7/18, 8 am- Noon monitor; antique school items, kitchen items & desk; women’s clothing housewares, picture frames; ~Home decor GALORE!~ (sizes 6-18); complete Noah’s table lamps, coffee table, ark-themed baby room set Clocks, lamps, pictures, furni- queen bed frame & dresser ture, dishes, rugs, baskets, (picture, bumpers, window w/ mirror, plant stands, garvalences, onesie, mobile); bedding, books— YOU NAME den hoses. Board games, boys’ clothing (NB-12 mo.); IT! Many styles from the luggage, Hallmark ornababy items: towels, wash- Winfield House. Very nice ments, party lights, candles cloths, receiving blankets, things, you won’t want to & accessories, Hp Printers, floor mat; small Radio Flyer miss this one! computer flatscreen moniwagon; kid’s big wheel; Need an apartment? tor, adult women’s clothing stroller; toys; stuffed aniPlace your ad at sizes 8-12, girl’s clothing mals; kitchen items: coffee apartments.lawrence.com sizes 6-8 (some designer), pot, Magic Bullet, stand antique milk can. Some vinmixer, donut maker, bread 04 tage items, some new items, machine, George Forman Huge Garage Sale all gently used. SMOKE FREE grill, set of 12 juice classes 5711 Plymouth Drive HOME. (still in original box); hamLawrence 07 per; shower curtain; window Sat, Jul 18. 8am-2pm SATURDAY ONLY!!!! sheer (new); pictures/ posters; floor lamps; picture Flat screen TV, Natuzzi MULTI-FAMILY frames (all sizes); floating Leather swivel rocker reGARAGE SALE Power Wheels shelf; candles/ candle hold- cliner, 4106 W. 26th Terrace ers/ oil burners; decorative F-150, Radio Flyer steer Lawrence, KS centerpiece; desktop relaxa- and stroll tricycle, 2 Britax carseats, 7:30am - ? tion fountain (in original Roundabout box), wire rack; bulletin lawn mower, bar stools, Cannondale Men’s Bike, board; books; games; puz- riding toys, Little People Gamer Chair, XBox 360 zles; some wedding items; sets, large Little Tikes console, Games, Glass TV slide, Thomas the Train Stand, Graco Car Seat much more. Don’t miss it! wooden table, Thomas bases, Booster Seat, Toys, 02 the train deluxe set, nurs- Electric Snow shovel, Estate Sale ing scrubs, boy’s clothing Dresser and end table, size 3T-7/8 (Baby Gap, Floor lamp, Toddler mat1217 Lawrence Ave OshKosh, Carter, Old tress, VHS Disney movies, Lawrence Navy, Adidas, Nike, and Boys Youth clothing size Sat, Jul 18, 8 am - 12 pm KU), women’s clothing 5/6 to 10/12, Name brand Youth Girls Refrigerator, Ottoman, high (The North Face, White shoes, House Black Market, Gap, clothes, Men / Women / chair, Pack ‘N’ Play, Jewelry, Old Navy, Banana RepubJunior clothes, kitchen Elliptical, Home décor, CAbi Jeans $15 ea (NEW w/ tags), lic, Lululemon Athletica), and lots of household Scarves, Men’s KU Jackets & Men’s clothing (Adidas misc....MUCH more!!!! Coats (Medium), Luggage, and KU), tons of toys, 07 Glassware, Dishes, Tupper- games and puzzles. Garage Sale ware, Vintage jewelry 2716 Bluestem Ct (broaches & Brighton 04 Sat. July 18th & GARAGE SALE watches). Sun. July 19th 1508 Burning Tree Ct 8AM-2PM 02 July 17th & 18th Lots of stuff, couch, living GARAGE SALE 9AM- 2PM room chair, dining table Clothes, furniture, 2909 Stratford Rd w/ 4 chairs, dishware, pichouse decor. and Saturday 7/18 ture frames, adult women MUCH MORE! 7 AM clothes, teen clothes, 2003 (N of 15th, W of Crestline) Jeep Liberty, desk, inside 05 Vintage Pyrex tables, and MORE!!! Fine Glassware 08 Currier & Ives Sieve/Colander, Stand & Pestle Vintage Tupperware Coca Cola Pez Collection Lightning Rod Rein Separators Chairs Lamps Wall Art Home Decor Linens, Bedding Office Organizers School Supplies Mailing Tubes Crafting Step Stools New Sunbeam Vaporizer Pool Cues Tent/Cots/Coolers Camping Fishing Cast Iron Skillets Electric Drill Tools New Air Hammer Bottle Jacks

05

10

13

W Clinton Pkwy

Sat, Jul 18. 8 am to 12 noon Stroller, carseat, toddler girl clothing sizes 3-5, dining room chairs, ceiling fan, chandelier, blinds, curtain rod, lights, women’s and men’s clothing, shoes, toys, housewares, baking rack, pan rack, furniture, and much more!

04

Bob Billings

02

s Riv er

Massachusetts St

Rain or Shine! Quality 2-Family Garage Sale 3010 Riverview Road Lawrence

04

03

Kans a

Louisiana St

01

10

Garage Sale 4508 Oak Tree Ct., 66049 Lawrence

Boy baby clothes newborn to 2T, maternity work clothes size small, lots of books/DVD’s, kids toys, decorative items, holidays items, 7 1/2 Foot Christmas tree, coffee table, large rug, lamps, purses, fish tank equipment and many other misc. items. No early callers

40

W 6th St

03

Friday July 17 8-Noon Sat. July 18 8-Noon 608 Easy Court and 621 Easy Court

12

Iowa St

Fri, Jul 17 & Sat, Jul 18. 8am-5pm Home Décor, Kitchen items, Women’s shoes, Women’s clothing including plus-sizes (sizes M to XL and 16 to 22 - many LIKE NEW), Gently used purses, Fashion jewelry, Exercise equipment, DVDs & CDs, Multiple TV’s, Holiday décor, Animal cages Furniture: Table with 4 chairs, tall book case, microwave cart, twin mattress and box spring, desk chairs, DVD shelf, tall wood decorative shelves, 2 TV stands, & night stand

11

01

18

Kasold Dr

200 Summertree Ln Lawrence

17

40

24

Folks Rd

MULTI-FAMILY MOVING/GARAGE SALE

classifieds@ljworld.com

Peterson Rd

Wakarusa Dr

01

Up to 3 Days Only $24.95 FREE GARAGE SALE KIT!

70

Sat, Jul 18. 8am-12pm Eat homemade cookies while you shop! House- 03 hold items, misc. KU ~ Four Family ~ items, toys, children’s Garage Sale clothes, costumes, women’s 908 Andover Street shoes & clothes, lots of Lawrence women’s size 12 petite Fri, Jul 17, 7am- Noon slacks / jeans, kitchen Sat, Jul 18. 7am to 1:00 items, books & children’s books, lots of used piano Computer desk, toys, lots books, sheet music, of kitchen items, lots of movie DVDs, Nintendo knick knacks, clothes— boys clothes, games, fabric, kids’ bikes, some misses clothes - large sports equipment size up to 3 X clothes, sev01 eral dress coats, old decorative plates, glass, framed art work, golf clubs - both men’s and women’s, some Longaberger baskets, books Getting older so current authors, fabric time to DOWN SIZE both bolts and pieces, 628 Brentwood Dr ceiling fans. LOTS of miscellaneous items. This is Friday July17 and a big sale — something for Saturday July 18 everyone! 7:30-12:00 7 ft ficus tree, fax machine and cartridge, dressing mirror, exterior extension cords, 55-59 scale Chevrolet cars, curling irons, goose down queen comforter Rival cooker ,baskets, Easter and Christmas decoration and lights, dishes and pots and pans, puzzles, a lot misc stuff

SPECIAL! UNLIMITED LINES

16 N 1250 Rd

Lawrence

Lawrence

Lawrence

Baldwin City

MOVING AND SHOP SALE door bar stools, baskets, 18 Lawrence to the Council SATURDAY ONLY vintage pitcher, bowl set, Grove/Baldwin City Exit. 3908 Trail Rd July 18th, 8am-6pm 3 gal aluminum pans w/ Turn Right onto US Lawrence, KS (no early birds please) lids, tin signs, sliding 56/300th Rd. Immediate Friday ONLY, July 17 964 E 1587 RD glass double pane door Right onto E 1250th 7:30am- Noon complete with frame and (Cedar Wood Hills off Road then Left onto N screen, 3 section double Antique furniture which inN 1000 road) 400th Rd. pane picture window, including chain cludes 6 matching dining Tools double pane double hung saws, circular saws, anchairs, tables, cabinet. **Extra** windows, lace curtains, tique saws, pick up crane, Boating accessories; SevClean Start Soap Sales: vintage doilies, Bergman Kenworth sleeper materal boat covers & skis, life Laundry Detergent and 650, Four - P235/70R16 titress, fiber glass shower vests, prop, etc. Gardening More! res, New Pampered Chef, unit, 5 gal toilet, Lincoln supplies, crystal & silver outdoor Yahtzee dice w/ 225 Arc welder, diesel fuel dishes, bedding, cookbucket, PVC pipe (long), tank for pick up, 12V elecbooks, assorted electronOttawa KU, KSU, WSU T’s, dishes, tric pump, waste oil ics, 100 + cd’s, men’s suits wine glass rack, cloth burner heater, 500 gal & ladies clothing, indoor/ blinds, CD’s, tablecloths, storage tanks for waste outdoor painting supplies. curtains, king size quilt, oil, Milwaukee hammer 24 + wedding reception ta$.25 books, $.25 good drill, antique road grader ble centerpieces in aut-shirts, $.50 - $1 name and horse drawn plow, tumn tone colors— 12 of brand clothes: Chicos, misc John Deer B parts, these include battery powDowntown Coldwater Creek, Columoffice furniture, Cerwin ered branches, & 24 Third Saturday bia, Jones New York, EdVega surround sound church pew arrangements. Sat., July 18, 9am- 4pm die Bauer, American Easpeakers, house hold No early callers, please. Ottawa, KS gle, Old Navy, Gap: new items $1-3, toddler Rain or Shine! shoes still in boxes, swim clothes, inversion table, Come on down to suits, $.25 children’s sum- 18 treadmill, Precious MoOttawa’s Downtown Third ments nativity and turtle mer clothes, $1.00 good HUGE NEIGHBORHOOD Saturday! Get some deals jeans & slacks, baby and other collectibles. GARAGE SALE at the sidewalk sales, see clothes $.25, coats, runnSat. July 18th, 7AM-Until YARD SALE a FREE movie at America’s ing & work out clothes, (No early callers please) 329 E 19th St Oldest Cinema, watch and more. 912, 914, 915, 916, & 917 Sat. July 18, 2015 MAGIC, and enjoy $.50 Coke / bottled water if Gunnison Way 9AM-2PM LIVE MUSIC! you get thirsty.. Get hun- Infant and kid items: Kids NO EARLY CALLERS! gry? You are on your own. picnic table, stroller, toys, Everything from house and :) Known for my garage DVD’s, CDs, kids books, See You Saturday! kitchen to unusual, from sales and cheap prices. baby swing, sponge bob years of sale and auction The ULTIMATE Hope to see you Saturday. cubbies, clothing, home collecting. No parking on Multi-Family & Located north of Hallmark virtual learning books. 19th, so use Barker or 2nd Annual B.A.R.N. Cards, off River Ridge Lots of jewelry, lg jayLeonard. No early callers! Garage & Bake Sale Road. hawk, chain fencing, long July 16-18th, 9am-6pm 100% of money goes to computer table, duck dyn1858 Shawnee Rd, charity. asty bedding for twin bed, Baldwin City Ottawa (look for signs!) bedding for twin bed, lots Name brand clothing for 13 of decor, dong kennel, ALL, hunting, gardening, 1 Day Only Yard Sale porch glider, pillows, win2 FAMILY scrapbooking, furniture, dow curtains, heater, holi1125 New Jersey St DOWNSIZING SALE sports!, electronics, horse day items and much Lawrence 1225 N 400th Road tack, fencing, home decor more! Sat, Jul 18. 8am-2pm Baldwin City & essentials, kitchen & Lots of infant & preschool HORSE & RIDER bath goods, new bedding Thu, Jul 16, Fri, Jul 17 and toys, GREAT CONDITION!! -something for ALL! EQUIPMENT SALE Sat, Jul 18. 8am-4pm Gently worn boy’s clothes PLEASE NO EARLY BIRDS. **Easy to Find** 1421 Wagon Wheel Rd. & shoes infant -5 priced to **Follow The Signs!** Saturday, July 18 sell! House hold items, 8 am - 1 pm daybed frame, women’s Tonganoxie Exercise Equipment, Aussie saddle, clothing S-L & size 8.5 Leather Beds, Books, DVDs, Fold Dehner boots (size 9), shoes. Out Couch, 27” Flat Moving Sale Steffen Peters fleece Please no early callers & screen, Entertainment 2806 E. Sycamore St. dressage pad and other cash only. Center, Tonganoxie, KS dressage pads and accesJuniors/Women’s/Girls 14 Sat. July 18th sories, new winter blanClothing, Shoes, Toys, 7am- 3pm. YARD SALE! ket, turnout blankets, Kitchenware, Home DeHousehold items, furniRambo Rug (medium 2001 New Hampshire cor, Mary Kay, and ture, toys and boys clothes weight 78”), coolers, haltSt much more! size newbornsize 2. Cake ers, bridles, leg wraps, Lawrence decorating supplies and bell boots, splint boots, Directions: US 59 S from Sat, Jul 18. 8am-1pm pans. girths, heated buckets, Local junker is cleaning stock tank heater, saddle out basement. All kinds of rack, breeches, hoof goods offered, most of it gauge, lunge lines, side cheap. Many vintage reins, surcingle, clippers, items. Plus furniture and grooming supplies and some kid stuff. Neighbors much more. Also miscelmay be piling on. Fun sale! laneous household items Will be canceled if pouring such as toaster, crock pot rain. and vintage linen tablecloths with napkins. 16

Yard Sale 1729 Charise Ct Lawrence

Friday, July 17, 4pm - 8 pm Sat., July 18, 7 am - 2 pm

Includes gently used furniture, lighting fixtures and Oak Dining Table & Chairs, Sleeping Bags, Day Bed & other home furnishings. Proceeds benefit Heart- Linens, Old Suitcases, Picland Community Health ture Frames, Sewing Notions Sat, Jul 18. 8 am - 1:00pm Near Dicks Sporting Goods Center. General donations & Material, Craft Items, Large Toy Box/Bookshelf, and Holcom Park,Lots of accepted. Playpen, Children’s Items, items, including: wood TV 11 Thomas the Tank Engine armoire, large dresser Neighbor Garage Sale Rocking Train, “Little Tykes” with mirror and side Work Bench, Kitchen Items, Saturday, July 18 shelves, old Kimball up“South Seas” Community Sil9 am - 5 pm right piano, oak nightver Plate, Misc. Stainless, 1763 E. 1318 Rd stand, mauve accent chair, office chair, as- Lots of tools, 7” comfy Books, Old Postcards, Picnic sorted ottomans of differ- sofa, love seat, antiques, Basket, Women’s Clothes, Decorative Items, HO Model ent sizes, wood shelf, swivel rocker, antique small black dresser, Dell rocker, end table, coffee Train, Odds’n’Ends. *No Reasonable Offer printer/copier/scanner, table, floor lamp, antique Refused. Cash Only! wicker hamper and bas- school desk, Mikasa wine, ket set, toolbox, Stampin martini, & margarita Need to sell your car? Up small carry case, glasses, TV w/ built in Place your ad at men’s clothes, women’s VCR with 3 boxes of sunflowerclassifieds.com clothes, Miche purse videos $12, costume jewor email sets(classic and mini elry, pictures & frames, classifieds@ljworld.com sizes with lots of shells), bar stool, 2 swivel out-

ESTATE SALE ONE DAY ONLY July 18, 2015 8AM-3PM 2917 Sante Fe Ln. ANTIQUE furniture! Dressers, claw-foot tables, late 1800’s bed suite! Wide assortment of tools & Hardware. Sofa, chairs & lamps. Small kitchen appliances, pots & pans. Men’s clothing, coats $ shoes!!

HUGE SALE 2904 Wellman Road Lawrence Fri, Jul 17 and Sat, Jul 18. 7am-1pm HUGE SALE 4 miles NORTH of Midland Junction follow signs LOTS of household items, furniture, tools, exercise equipment, NIKE workout clothes, Wii, Wii games, Kawasaki KDX 250.

YOUR NEXT APARTMENT IS READY. FIND IT HERE.


6C

|

Friday, July 17, 2015

.

L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD

SPECIAL!

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

DOESN’T SELL IN 28 DAYS?

FREE RENEWAL!

PLACE YOUR AD: RECREATION

Chevrolet Cars

785.832.2222 Ford Cars

2005 DODGE DAKOTA SLT 4X4

Chevrolet 2012 Cruze LS, one owner, GM certified with 2yrs of maintenance included! This is a fantastic commuter car with room for a family and very affordable payments are available! Stk#17755B only $12,786.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

2009 Chevy 3500 Express AND 2008 Rockwood Forest trailer! 12 passenger van & Rockwood Forest River 26 ft. camping trailer combo. Both excellent condition. 59K mi on van & little use on trailer. Rear A/C, Power seats, cloth int., van has removeable seats, new tires on both. Trailer stored inside. Must see!! $28,000 (785)423-0037

TRANSPORTATION

USED CAR GIANT

Ford SUVs

RV 2004 Cruiser 5th Wheel, 29Ft RK, 2 Slide Outs, Numerous Extras, Stored Inside Excellent Condition. $10,000. 913-544-3238

classifieds@ljworld.com

2014 Ford Fusion Energi SE Luxury

2012 Ford Escape Limited

Stk#15T379A

Stk#15M303A

$26,995

$18,995

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 785-727-7151

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2009 MERCURY MARINER PREMIER

UCG PRICE

Stock #115L666B

$10,994

2009 HYUNDAI SONATA LIMITED

UCG PRICE Stock #15L426B

2014 HARLEY-DAVIDSON STREET GLIDE

UCG PRICE Stock #P1895

$9,995

$9,995

UCG PRICE

Stock #15M131B

$17,495

785-727-7151 Chevrolet 2014 Sonic LT GM certified with 2 years of maintenance included, remote start, alloy wheels, cruise control, keyless remote, Stk#11670A only $13,814.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

23rd & Alabama, Lawrence www.lairdnollerlawrence.com 2015 Ford Fusion Hybrid Titanium

Honda Cars

Honda Cars

2012 HONDA ACCORD EX-L

888-631-6458

Infiniti

Lincoln Cars

2011 Infiniti G25X

2003 Lincoln Town Car Cartier

Stk#P1756A

Stk#P1823A

$17,995

$5,995

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 785-727-7151

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2011 Ford Escape Stk#P1758A

Stk#P1818

Buick Cars

$26,995

Buick 2006 Lacrosse CXS V6, ABS, leather, heated seats, alloy wheels, power equipment. Stk#454901 Only $9,814.00

‘93 Chevy Corvette Convertible Auto, Red leather interior, Drop top in good condition, CD/ Cassette/ radio, New tires, Dual airbags, AC, cruise- power everything! Only 49K mi! Call or email for more details on this hot sports car: 785-423-0037 bstoneback.we@gmail.com

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

$11,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Honda Certified Pre-Owned Vehicle, 7 Year / 100,00 Mile, Limited Powertrain Warranty. Stk# LF287A

Chevrolet Trucks

Only $17,999 Call Thomas at

Stk#P1831

$19,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

2009 HONDA CR-V EX-L AWD

888-631-6458

2013 Ford Focus

Stk#15C520A

Honda SUVs

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

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

2012 Buick Regal GS

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

$12,995

Chevrolet 2012 Silverado W/T regular cab, topper, bed liner, cruise control, one owner, GM certified with 2 years maintenance included. Stk#12129A only $18,417.00

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

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

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

2013 Ford Escape Titanium

4x4, Leather, Moonroof, Loaded, Low Miles, Well Maintained, Immaculate Condition. Stk# F349A

$19,995

Only $18,588

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

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Lincoln SUVs

JackEllenaHonda.com

Stk#P1780

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Chrysler Cars

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

2011 Infinity G37 X Call Thomas at

888-631-6458 Honda 2006 Accord EXL one owner, leather heated seats, sunroof, alloy wheels, loaded with equipment, Stk#158832 only $8744.00

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2014 Ford Fusion SE

Cadillac 2009 Chrysler 300 Touring

Stk#P1793

Stk#P1734A

$17,995

$10,495

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

2013 Ford Edge Limited

Stk#P1838

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

2012 HONDA PILOT EX-L NAVIGATION 4WD

2012 Lincoln MKX AWD

$22,495

JackEllenaHonda.com

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

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Stk#P1776

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Jeep

1998 HONDA ACCORD LX

$24,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Mazda Cars

Stk#P1811

Cadillac 2004 Deville leather dual power seats, alloy wheels, power equipment, all of the luxury without the luxury price! Stk#322111 Only $6,814.00

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

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

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

Ford SUVs

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

$25,495

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

Automatic, Great Car for First Time Driver, Great Gas Mileage, Wonderful Safety Ratings. Stk# F361A

Only $5,995

Ford Cars

Call Thomas at

Cadillac Crossovers

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

Honda Certified Pre-Owned Vehicle, 7 Year / 100,000 Mile Limited Powertrain Warranty. Stk# F197A

2014 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Sahara

2011 Mazda3 S Sport

888-631-6458

Stk#P1834

$12,994

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

$30,995

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

Only $24,950 Call Thomas at

JackEllenaHonda.com

JackEllenaHonda.com

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

Stk#15C464A

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2005 CADILLAC SR5 AWD

2010 Ford Explorer Sport Trac XLT 2013 Ford Fusion SE

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

2012 FORD EXPLORER

Stk#14T754B Stk#15T318A

Stk#P1799

$19,495

2012 HONDA PILOT EX-L 4WD

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Mercedes-Benz

Kia Cars

2008 HONDA CIVIC LX

$21,995 $14,995

DVD Player, Loaded, Leather, Panoramic Sunroof, AWD Northstar V6, One of a Kind! Stk# F209A

Only $11,995 Call Thomas at

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

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

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

FREE ADS for merchandise

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

We Buy all Domestic cars, trucks, and suvs. Call Scott 785-727-7151

under $100 SunflowerClassifieds.com

JackEllenaHonda.com

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

23rd & Alabama - 2829 Iowa

LairdNollerLawrence.com

Honda Cars 2006 Honda Civic Hybrid 88090 miles, brown exterior, tan interior, automatic, new hybrid batteries, 17” wheels, excellent condition, seta@netscape.com. $2000. 316-269-4300

2005 KIA SPECTRA Fuel Efficient, Automatic, Awesome Condition, Well Maintained, Safe and Reliable. Stk# F238B

What a Value! Leather, Sunroof, Power Liftgate, 4WD, Local - One Owner, Priced Below Market! Stk# F341A

Great Mileage, Well Maintained, Awesome Value, Fuel Efficient. Stk# F347B

Only $10,711

Only $22,992

Only $5,995

Call Thomas at

Call Thomas at

Call Thomas at

888-631-6458

888-631-6458

888-631-6458

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

JackEllenaHonda.com

JackEllenaHonda.com

JackEllenaHonda.com

1985 Mercedes-Benz 300-Class 380SL Stk#14C1164A

$13,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com


L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD

Friday, July 17, 2015

CARS

RENTALS REAL ESTATE

TO PLACE AN AD: Mercury

785.832.2222

Nissan Cars

classiďŹ eds@ljworld.com Saturn

Toyota Cars

TO PLACE AN AD:

Apartments Unfurnished

REAL ESTATE

2411 Cedarwood Ave.

Open Houses 2006 NISSAN MAXIMA SL

Stk#15L426B

Saturn 2007 Aura XE Fwd, 4cyl, great gas mileage and room for the whole family! Stk#399782 Only $6,855.00

$10,996

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

2009 Mercury Mariner Premier

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Nissan Cars

Low Miles, Local Owner, Great Condition, All the Goodies, Loaded, Well Maintained. Stk# F200A

Subaru

Only $10,995

Stk#P1841

$15,369 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Call Thomas at

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

888-631-6458

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

Dale Willey Automotive 2840 Iowa Street (785) 843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

JackEllenaHonda.com 2004 Nissan Murano SL Pearl White Exterior Color, Cafe Latte Interior, 130,662 mi. A+ condition, sunroof. Only $3800. Call (913)802-3370

.J76GJ *JI768@ > Premium Stk#P1815

$17,994

2006 Toyota Camry LE

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

Nissan 2008 Altima SL fwd 3.5 V6 sunroof, heated leather seats, Bose sound, CD changer, Stk#554053 only $13,500.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

2013 Toyota Camry LE

Toyota Cars What an Awesome Car?? Low Miles, Fuel Efficient, Immaculate Condition, Great School Car Stk# F027B

$11,495

Only $9,495

2012 Nissan Altima 2.5 SL Stk#P1775

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Call Thomas at

888-631-6458 2012 Toyota Corolla S

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

Saturn

$15,787

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 785-727-7151

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Volkswagen

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

DOESN’T SELL IN 28 DAYS?

+FREE RENEWAL! ADVERTISE TODAY! CALL 832-2222 or email classifieds@ljworld.com

Baldwin City 308 Flame Way, Fire Tree, Baldwin City 5 BR. 3+ BA. Home for sale by owner. 3 car garage. Custom built walk out ranch to huge back yard in nice neighborhood. 2,300 square feet on main level with open floor plan. 1,800 sq. ft. fin-ished basement with full kitchen and central vac throughout home. Brand new carpet in great room. New 25 year roof. $295,000 785-640-5111

BILL FAIR AND COMPANY REAL ESTATE AUCTIONS 785-887-6900 www.billfair.com

advanco@sunflower.com

grandmanagement.net

-

Large 2BR, Near hospital. CA, off-st parking, on bus route, W/D hookups, no smoking. $550/mnth. Available Aug 1st. 785-550-7325

In excellent condition! Near Free State HS & I70 all modern appliancesmany extras! Lawncare provided. $1195 / mo. Available Now!

Email: info@cmcarpetcleaning.com

web:www.cmcarpetcleaning.com

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

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

Concrete

Construction

Decks & Fences

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

Stacked Deck :8@H S "6O:7DH .>9>C< S !:C8:H S 99>I>DCH -:BD9:A S 2:6I=:GEGDD;>C< $CHJG:9 S NGH :ME 785-550-5592

SERVICE DIRECTORY 6 LINE SPECIAL! 1 MONTH $118.95/mo. + FREE LOGO 6 MONTHS $91.95/mo. + FREE LOGO CALL 785-832-2222

DECK BUILDER Over 25 yrs. exp. Licensed & Insured. Decks, deck covers, pergolas, screened porches, & all types of repairs. Call 913-209-4055 for Free estimates or go to prodeckanddesign.com

785.832.2222

Downtown Office Space Single offices, elevator & conference room, $500-$675. Call Donna or Lisa, 785-841-6565 OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE Call Garber Property Management at 785-842-2475 for more information.

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

Special Notices

All Things Basementy! Basement Systems Inc. Call us for 6AA NDJG 76H:B:CI C::9H 26I:GEGDD;>C< !>C>H=>C< Structural Repairs, Humidity and Mold Control FREE ESTIMATES! Call 1-800-998-5574

AUTO INSURANCE STARTING AT $25/ MONTH! Call 877-929-9397

Call now to secure a super low rate on your Mortgage. Don’t wait for Rates to increase. Act Now! Call 1-888-859-9539 SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. Unable to work? Denied benefits? We Can Help! WIN or Pay Nothing! Contact Bill Gordon & Associates at 1-800-706-8742 to start your application today!

Foundation Repair

Foundation Repair

"6G6<: DDGH S *E:C:GH S .:GK>8: S $CHI6AA6I>DC Call 785-842-5203 www.freestatedoors.com

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

Found Pet/Animal CAT FOUND Black and white adult female cat, in Baldwin area. Declawed, well cared for. Call 816-868-2589.

Home Improvements

Lawn, Garden & Nursery

Full Remodels & Odd Jobs, Interior/Exterior Painting, Installation & Repair of:

Complete Lawn Care BDL>C< H=GJ7 IG>BB>C<

landscape. FREE ESTIMATES. All types of EXT. maintenance, gutter& roof cleaning Call 785-393-8034

Deck Drywall Siding Replacement Gutters Privacy Fencing Doors & Trim Commercial Build-out Build-to-suit services Fully Insured 22 yrs. experience

913-488-7320

Needing to place an ad? 785-832-2222

JAYHAWK GUTTERING

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

Mowing...like Clockwork! #DC:HI :E:C967A: Mow~Trim~Sweep Steve 785-393-9152 Lawrence Only

Painting A. B. Painting & Repair Int/ext. Drywall, Siding, 30 plus yrs. Locally owned and operated. Call Al 785-331-6994 albeil@aol.com D&R Painting >CI:G>DG :MI:G>DG S N:6GH S EDL:G L6H=>C< S G:E6>GH >CH>9: DJI S HI6>C 9:8@H S L6AAE6E:G HIG>EE>C< S ;G:: :HI>B6I:H Call or Text 913-401-9304

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

Tree/Stump Removal Fredy’s Tree Service >PO?JRI Y OMDHH@? Y OJKK@? Y NOPHK M@HJQ<G Licensed & Insured. 20 yrs experience. 913-441-8641 913-244-7718

KansasTreeCare.com Trimming, removal, & stump <G>C9>C< 7N '6LG:C8: AD86AH :GI>;>:9 7N &6CH6H G7DG>HIH Assoc. since 1997 R2: HE:8>6A>O: >C preservation & restoration� Ins. & Lic. visit online 785-843-TREE (8733)

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

Landscaping

785-842-0094 jayhawkguttering.com

FOUNDATION REPAIR

LOST & FOUND

classiďŹ eds@ljworld.com

Guttering Services

913-962-0798 Fast Service

classiďŹ eds@ljworld.com

Special Notices

Dirt-Manure-Mulch

Serving KC over 40 years

Decks & Fences

Office Space

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

Garage Doors

Rich Black Top Soil No Chemicals Machine Pulverized Pickup or Delivery Remodeling Specialist Handyman Services • 30 Yrs Exp Residential & Commercial 785.608.8159 rrodecap@yahoo.com

Lawrence

SPECIAL! 6 LINES

Craig Construction Co Driveways - stamped • Patios • Sidewalks • Parking Lots • Building Footings & Floors • All Concrete Repairs Free Estimates

2211 Ohio. 2 roommates needed to share 3bd house w/ fenced backyard and front porch. Each person will have own room). CA, washer/dryer & kitchen included. Garage availa$350/mo each. ble! Shared utilities. Available Aug. 1st. Please call Riley @ 785-383-7701

NOTICES

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

785.832.2222

CTi of Mid America Concrete Restoration & Resurfacing Driveways, Patios, Pool Decks & More CTiofMidAmerica.com 785-893-8110

Meadowbrook. Vaulted ceiling, large kitchen w/island, wood & tile, washer/dryer, enclosed patio, garage. On bus route. Pets ok. $1050/month. Available August 1st.

785-691-9800

SunflowerClassifieds

CM Steam Carpet Cleaning $35/Rm. Upholstery, Residential, Apts, Hotel, Etc. 24/7 Local Owner 785-766-2821

3 Bedroom - 3 Bath

LAUREL "LEN APTS

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Concrete

www.sunriseapartments.com $200-$300 off August Rent Specials!!

All Electric 1, 2 & 3 BR units. .DB: L>I= 2 26I:G Trash Paid, Small Pet, Income Restrictions Apply 785-838-9559 EOH

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

Carpet Cleaning

Call now! 785-841-8400

785-550-7258

$10,995

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

Pools, Tennis & Bball Courts, W/D, On KU Bus Route, Spacious Floorplan, Patios/Decks. Great locations: 660 Gateway Ct. 837 Michigan

4 BEDROOM, 3 BATH

$5,916

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

3 Bd/1 BA Home, Southeast of Lawrence, easy access to K10, large tree shaded yard, no smoking, 1 small dog ok. Avail Aug 1. Renter pays utilities. Call 785-838-9009-Leave #

Large 2BR, garage, deck, CH/CA, street level in fourplex. No Smoking. $650/mo. Avail. NOW! 913-593-8088

Now Leasing 2, 3 & 4 BR Townhomes for August 1st!

The Chiropractic Health Center of Lawrence Patient Records -:8DG9H 6G: CDL 7:>C< =:A9 7N 6C9 8DE>:H B6N 7: D7 I6>C:9 ;GDB +G6>G>: 2:AAC:HH :CI:G G 2=>IC:N -JI= A:9<: .2 "6<: Blvd Topeka, KS 66604. 785-272-3878.

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

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

Under new management. 1, 2 and 3 bedroom units with full sized W/D in each unit. Located adjacent to Free State High School with pool, clubhouse, exercise facility and garages. Starting at just $795. Call 785-843-4040 for details.

Stk#15M256B

Toyota 2008 Prius fwd, leather, alloy wheels, navigation, power equipment, Stk#184201 only $10,775.00

785-865-2505

Fox Run Apartments

Stk#P1624B

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

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

2 =DD@JEH !>G:EA68: Major Appliances. Lawn 6G: 7A 6G "6G6<:

Business Announcements

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

Available Now! 3 BR w/2 or 2.5 BA

Studio Apartments 600 sq. ft., $710/mo. 825 sq. ft., $880/mo. No pets allowed Call Today 785-841-6565

2007 Volkswagen "/$

Family Owned & Operated 20 Yrs

Carpentry

785-843-1116

SUNRISE VILLAGE & PLACE

Limestone wall bracing, floor straightening, foundation waterproofing, structural concrete repair and replacement Call 785-843-2700 or text 785-393-9924 Senior and Veteran Discounts

Auctioneers

CALL TODAY (Monday - Friday)

2003 Saturn VUE

TO PLACE AN AD:

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

——————————————

Houses 2BR, 2 bath, fireplace, CA, W/D hookups, 2 car with opener. Easy access to I-70. Includes paid cable. Pet under 20 lbs. allowed Call 785-842-2575 www.princeton-place.com

Duplexes

SERVICES Antique/Estate Liquidation

* Near campus, bus stop * Laundries on site * Near stores, restaurants * Water & trash paid

ANNOUNCEMENTS

10 LINES & PHOTO:

7 DAYS $19.95 28 DAYS $49.95

2, 3, 4, and 5 Bedroom Townhouses and Single Family Homes Available Now Through August 1st! $800-$2200 a month. Call Garber Property Management at 785-842-2475 for more info

Beautiful & Spacious 1 & 2 Bedrooms Start at $450/mo.

TO PLACE AN AD:

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

TRANSPORTATION SPECIAL!

2BR with loft, 2 bath, 1 car garage, fenced yard, FP, 3719 Westland Pl. $790/mo. Avail. Aug. 1. 785-550-3427

JackEllenaHonda.com

Stk#15J512A

$13,995

Townhomes

DOWNTOWN LOFT

Apartments Unfurnished

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Stk#14C1204A

Townhomes

RENTALS

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

2014 Nissan Versa

2633 Rawhide Lane, Lawrence, KS $124900 3 BR. 1 BA. Updated floor to ceiling! Large deck, fireplace, outdoor dining area, huge living room and fenced backyard make this an entertainer’s dream home. 4th non-conforming bedroom included. Open House July 19th 1:00 to 5:00 785-764-6697

classiďŹ eds@ljworld.com

785.832.2222

Cedarwood Apts

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

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

785-312-1917

YARDBIRDS LANDSCAPING Father (retired) & Son Operation W/Experience & Top of the Line Machinery Call 785-766-1280

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

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

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

Call Lyndsey 913-422-7002

Certified Arborists Tree Trimming Tree Removal Emergency Service Stump Grinding Insect & Disease Control Locally Owned & Operated Request Free Estimate Online Or Call 785-841-3055 STARTING or BUILDING a Business? 785-832-2222 classifieds@ljworld.com


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Friday, July 17, 2015

.

PLACE YOUR AD:

L awrence J ournal -W orld

785.832.2222

classifieds@ljworld.com

A P P LY N O W

718 AREA JOB OPENINGS! BERRY PLASTICS ............................. *30

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

MISCELLANEOUS ............................. *50

BOSTON FINANCIAL DATA SERVICES (DST) .. 100

GENERAL DYNAMICS ........................ 150

MV TRANSPORTATION ....................... *25

BRANDON WOODS ........................... *10

KU: STUDENT OPENINGS ................. 110

WESTAFF ........................................ *15

CLO .............................................. *12

KU: FACULTY/ACADEMIC/LECTURERS .... 79

VALEO ............................................. 30

COTTONWOOD................................... 24

KU: STAFF OPENINGS ......................... 62

DAYCOM .......................................... 11

LAWRENCE PRESBYTERIAN MANOR ....... *5

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

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

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

OUTPATIENT THERAPISTS AND CRISIS INTERVENTION THERAPISTS

JOIN OUR TEAM! Position Temporary Customer Service Representative I No sales, collections or telemarketing Starting Salary: $12.95 per hour

NOW HIRING!

Customer Service Representatives When: Saturday, July 18 Time: 9:00 AM to 12:00 PM Location: GDIT, 3833 Greenway Dr., Lawrence

AND

When: Tuesday, July 21 Time: 4:00 PM to 7:00 PM Location: GDIT, 3833 Greenway Dr., Lawrence

AND

When: Wednesday, July 22 Time: 2:00 PM to 4:30 PM Location: Lawrence Workforce Center, 2920 Haskell Ave, Lawrence

AND

When: Thursday, July 23 Time: 4:00 PM to 7:00 PM Location: GDIT, 3833 Greenway Dr., Lawrence

AND

When: Friday, July 24 Time: 9:00 AM to 12:00 PM Location: Lawrence Workforce Center, 2920 Haskell Ave, Lawrence

APPLY ONLINE

• Full and part-time benefits • Various schedules available • 10% pay differential for: – Bilingual (Spanish) – Night Shift

COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH CENTER

Outpatient therapy and crisis intervention for individual adults and children, couples, and families. Requires Kansas license or temporary license as a Qualified Mental Health Professional (QMHP). Social Workers, Psychologists, Professional Counselors, Marriage and Family Therapists, etc. All offices are National Health Service Corp tuition/loan repayment sites for those who qualify. Full time with benefits. EEO/AA Send Resumes to: Robert F. Chase, Executive Director, Southeast Kansas Mental Health Center, PO Box 807, Iola, KS, 66749. 620/365-8641 rchase@sekmhc.org and bstanley@sekmhc.org

• Opportunity for advancement (promote from within) • Paid training (no subject matter expertise required) • Gain experience working for a large, trusted and respected U.S. company

Deliver Newspapers!

Requirements • 6 months of customer service experience (contact center preferred) • Intermediate computer navigation skills • Ability to type 20 wpm • Must be able to pass background investigation • Proof of education (HS Diploma, GED or above)

www.gdit.com/csrjobs Job ID Number: Temporary P/T Marketplace: 235711 or Temporary F/T Medicare: 237218 General Dynamics Information Technology is an equal opportunity/ affirmative action employer, supporting employment of qualified minorities, females, disabled individuals and protected veterans.

Assistant to the City Administrator/Community Development Director The City of Baldwin City, KS is currently accepting applications/resumes for the position of Assistant to the City Administrator/ Community Development Director. Under supervision of the City Administrator, this position is responsible for planning, directing, managing and overseeing the functions of the Community Development Department, including Land Development, Comprehensive Planning, Zoning, Building and Code Enforcement, and Economic Development. Coordinates assigned activities with other City departments and outside agencies, and provides highly responsible and complex administrative support to the City Administrator, including conducting special projects directly assigned by the City Administrator. The employee will be responsible for the direct supervision of the City’s Building and Code Enforcement Officer. The employee must have a Bachelor’s Degree with major course work in Urban Planning, Public Administration, or a related field. Master’s Degree preferred. One to three years of increasingly responsible experience in local government and city planning. Other combinations of experience and education that meet minimum requirements may be considered. Pay range is $50,932 to $79,581 DOQ with an excellent benefits package. The City of Baldwin City does not have a City residency requirement. Offers of employment are conditional upon passing all appropriate screenings. A detailed job description can be requested by contacting bsmith@baldwincity.org. Please send cover letter and resume to City of Baldwin City, Attn: Finance Director, PO Box 86, Baldwin City, KS 66006. First review July 29, 2015. EOE

Manufacturing/Production 1st Shift (De Soto KS)

Starting at $11.00 hr + up! Full-time Jobs!! (Not Temporary)

Welders - Entry Level Production Assembly Sheet Metal Fabricator Electrical Harness Assembly 1st shift - 7:00 to 3:30 Overtime possible. Health Benefits Medical, Dental, Vision. Able to handle physical work, may include heavy lifting of at least 50 pounds Apply in person. 32050 W. 83rd Street. DeSoto, Kansas 66018 At 83rd and Kill Creek Rd. EOE Se habla Espanol Programmer Analyst IV at se2 in Topeka, Kansas Responsible for implementing, developing, modifying, troubleshooting, and testing/ evaluating software for internal and external financial areas using Oracle PeopleSoft, using PeopleSoft Financials modules; Account Payable and General Ledger including but not limited to the PeopleSoft functional, SQL Server, PS Admin, PeopleSoft technical nVision, SQR, PSQuery, App Engine, PeopleCode, and writing Stored Procedures. Analyze existing programs or formulate logic for new systems, devise logic procedures, prepare design documents, perform coding, and test/debug programs. Develop system implementation plans by working with management and staff at all level. Manage complex projects and direct day-to-day activities of others by providing recommendations in development, maintenance, and system standards. Coach and train team members as mentor/lead associate. Must have master’s degree in computer science/Engineering or related field plus 1 year of experience including developing solutions, using Oracle, PeopleSoft Financial technologies, current development tools, and controls; modern-day programming environments (e.g., SQL, PS Tools, App Engine/PeopleCode/PS Admin/nVision/PSQuery and migrations, patches and bundle implementation, schedule maintenance, Process Scheduler, Web & App Server and reboots); flat file loading procedures and development integration Services: SSIS; Agile Methodologies (SCRUM); and ability to provide coordination of technical issues. Please send resume by mail to Connie Reynolds, Senior Recruiter, se2, One Security Benefit Place, Topeka, KS 66636.

BusinessOpportunity

BusinessOpportunity

AIRLINE CAREERS Start Sell your structured settleHere - Get hands on train- ment or annuity payments ing as FAA certified Tech- for CASH NOW. You don’t nician fixing jets. Finan- have to wait for your fucial aid if qualified. Call ture payments any for free information Avia- longer! Call tion Institute of Mainte- 1-800-283-3601 nance 1-877-818-0783 www.FixJets.com

Find Jobs & More Jobs.Lawrence.com

It’s Fun! Outstanding pay Part-time work Be an independent contractor, Deliver every day, between 2-6 a.m. Reliable vehicle, driver’s license, insurance in your own name, and a phone required. Routes available in your area.

Come on in & Apply! 645 New Hampshire 816-805-6780 jinsco@ljworld.com

AdministrativeProfessional

AdvertisingMarketing

Receptionist Full time position in busy medical office. Monday thru Friday 8-5. Vacation and sick time and most holidays off. Please email resume to: lupa205@sunflower.com Need an apartment? Place your ad at apartments.lawrence.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com

Interview TIP #6

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

DO! Follow directions Be polite Turn off phone Decisions Determine Destiny

Data Base Assistant Fundraising and public relations firm seeking full-time Data Base assistant to work in team-oriented environment. Duties include database management for numerous clients and related clerical tasks. Requires strong organizational, communication, & computer skills. Must be dependable, detail oriented, self motivated, able to work independently, & handle multiple projects at the same time. Proficiency in Microsoft Word, Excel, Raiser’s Edge, & Adobe Acrobat preferred. Salary + benefits. Email resume & cover letter to:

employment@penn ingtonco.com


L awrence J ournal -W orld

Friday, July 17, 2015

PUBLIC NOTICES

JOBS TO PLACE AN AD: Construction

NCCER certified CRANE OPERATOR, CARPENTER, and LABORERS Crossland Heavy Contractors is seeking an experienced Crane Operator, Carpenter, and Laborers. Successful Crane Operator candidates must be NCCER certified on R/T hydraulic machine up to 80 ton. Candidates must be willing to travel and be highly motivated. Drug screen, physical and criminal background check required. We offer excellent pay and benefits including health, dental, 401k, holiday pay and educational opportunities to enhance your career. Applications can be completed online at: crosslandconstruction.com

Customer Service

785.832.2222

Customer Service

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

classifieds@ljworld.com General

HealthcareManagement

Call Center New Shift Open $10 hr + bonuses 40 hrs/wk, Full time $$ Weekly Pay! $$

Call today! 785-841-9999 DayCom

ADON Apartment Turnover Seeking cleaning assistants for PT & FT poCall Glisten sitions. Clean @ 785-749-2553

TIPS Suffering will make you

BETTER or BITTER You choose...and don’t blame me for hiring positive people—I’d rather work with a happy person any day. - Peter Steimle Decisions Determine Destiny

DriversTransportation

Front Desk Guest Service Representative

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

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

WORK WHILE KIDS ARE IN SCHOOL! Lawrence Public Schools Food Service department is accepting applications for employment. Full and part time positions are available ranging from 4 to 7 hours. If you would like a rewarding career putting your talents to work and sharing them with kids, please apply online today at www.usd497.org or come to 110 McDonald Dr. to apply online. EOE.

Job Seeker Tip “Thinking Right”

is good medicine.

When making a choice, think what will be the result in a week, a month or a year later. Really good decisions lead to really good results in the long run.

I liked working in an orange juice factory... ...but I just couldn’t concentrate.

“You’ve got to play the tape all the way through!” (Sherman Tolbert)

HUMOR

Lawrence Presbyterian Manor is seeking a Registered Nursing to work as the Assistant Director of Nursing. Must be available to work every other weekend and on call. Experience in management a plus. Apply online at www.lawrencepres byterianmanor.org or in person at: 1429 Kasold Drug Test is required.

Hotel-Restaurant

Cook Dietary Aide Server Competitive salary, excellent benefits program, including direct deposit, health, dental, vision insurance, 401(k) with profit sharing, paid time off, tuition reimbursement, excellent orientation program, and EAP. Brandon Woods at Alvamar 4720 Brandon Woods Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 TProchaska@5ssl.com EOE Drug Free Workplace

MERCHANDISE PETS TO PLACE AN AD:

785.832.2222

TAGGED ESTATE SALE 334 Woodland Circle (The Cottages) LAWRENCE, KS. 66049 LIVING ESTATE OF BARBARA COONROD JULY 18TH 8:00-5:00 One day only sale. Some very attractive products. Glass kitchen table, with four wrought iron chairs, trunks, chests, chairs, copier, rugs, dining room table, buffet, contemporary pie cupboard, decoys, art work, copper appointments, pottery, clocks, collection of mini kerosene lamps, lamps, plaid couch w/ pull out bed, twin bed mattresses, cedar chest, planters, Schwin exerciser, quilts, vacuum, pewter, coffee table, patio bench, storage cabinets, hand and power tools, mirror, Kenmore apartment freezer, antique reel projector (70 years old), Maytag washer/dryer, many clothing items, and much misc. Shown by John I. Hughes Certified Appraiser 785-979-1941

AUCTIONS Auction Calendar Estate Auction Sat., July 18 @ 9am 786 East 800 Rd, Lawrence, KS Skid-Loader, ATV, Tools, Collectibles, Firearms, Hunting, Fishing, Household, so much more! . DANNY CLOUSE ESTATE Elston Auctions 785-594-0505|785-218-7851 Visit web for pics & list: KansasAuctions.net/elston MOVING AUCTION Sunday, July 26th, 9:30 am 963 East 1338 Rd Lawrence KS JD Gator, Tractors, Skid-Steer, Equipment, Collectibles, Furniture, Household, Misc. Seller: Larry & Dinah O’Connor Elston Auctions 785-594-0505|785-218-7851 kansasauctions.net/elston Vehicles, Trailer, & Trencher Online Auction View web for list & pics: www.lindsayauctions.com Preview by appt on July 27 1011 E. 31st St Lawrence, KS Lindsay Auction SVC 913.441.1557 Need an apartment? Place your ad at apartments.lawrence.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com

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MERCHANDISE

classifieds@ljworld.com Furniture

Miscellaneous

2 upright maroon colored upholstered office chairs, $10 each. 1 black leather high back desk chair $25. 785-843-9223

FOR SALE 2 Igloo Dog Houses Large and medium. Best offer. 785-841-3947

Baker’s rack wrought iron baker’s rack with glass shelves $30.00 785-832-0910

For Sale: Large dog kennel with bed included. Like new. $50.00 Please call 393-0738

Black Metal Futon sofa Get CABLE TV, INTERNET & Bed. Full-size mattress PHONE with FREE HD. Strong frame. Used. Equipment and install for U-haul. $75 cash. under $3 a day! Call Now! 785-843-7205 855-752-8550 Old Fashion Butcher Block 24X24in. Butcher Block w/ bottom shelf $75 785-550-4142 Wooden Hutch 6ft tall X 42in W X 19in D ~ top doors & sides have glass ~ bottom cabinet has shelves $90 785-550-4142

Health & Beauty

Get The Big Deal from DirecTV! Act Now- $19.99/mo. Free 3-Months of HBO, Starz, SHOWTIME & CINEMAX FREE GENIE HD/DVR Upgrade! 2014 NFL Sunday Ticket Included with Select Packages. New Customers Only IV Support Holdings LLC- An authorized DirecTV Dealer Some exclusions apply - Call for details 1-800-897-4169 KILL BED BUGS! Buy Harris Bed Bug killer Complete Treatment Program/Kit. Harris Mattress Covers add Extra Protection! Available: ACE Hardware. Buy Online: homedepot.com

CPAP/BIPAP supplies at little or no cost from Allied Medical Supply Network! Fresh supplies Antique Rug beaters. $25 delivered right to your Call for details door. Insurance may 785-841-2381 cover all costs. KILL ROACHES! Buy Harris 800-902-9352 Roach Tablets. Eliminate Appliances Got Knee Pain? Back Pain? Bugs-Guaranteed.No Mess, Long Lasting. Shoulder Pain? Get a Odorless, pain-relieving brace -little or Available at For sale: Standard sized NO cost to you. Medicare Pa- Ace Hardware & The Home refrigerator. $50.00 Please tients Call Health Hotline Depot call 393-0738 Now! 1-800-900-5406

Antiques

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

Baby & Children Items

Household Misc. For Sale: Queen sized bed frame, mattress, box springs, including comforter, bed sheets and pillows. $50.00 Please call 393-0738

Fisher-Price Snugabunny Swivel sweeper swivel Cradle ‘N Swing for baby. sweeper with extra batPaid $150. Hardly used. tery. $30.00 785-832-0910 Sells $50 cash 785-843-7205

Computer-Camera For parts: LAPTOP COMPUTER: LENOVO W500, WINDOWS 7 PRO, LINUX UBUNTU 14.04 LTS $35 cash. 785-843-7206

Floor Coverings Find the Right Carpet, Flooring & Window Treatments. Ask about our 50% off specials & our Low Price Guarantee. Offer Expires Soon. Call now 1-888-906-1887

Miscellaneous Acorn Stairlifts. The AFFORDABLE solution to your stairs!** Limited time- $250 Off your Stairlift Purchase!** Buy Direct & Save. Please call 1-800-304-4489 for Free DVD and brochure.

Music-Stereo Pianos: Beautiful Story & Clark console or Baldwin Spinet, $550. Kimball Spinet, $500. Gulbranson Spinet, $450. And more! Prices include tuning & delivery. Call-785-832-9906

Sports-Fitness Equipment For Sale: Sears Pro-Form treadmill. Excellent condition. $100.00 Please call 393-0738

PETS

Advertise your product or service nationwide or by region in over 7 million Lost-Found households in North America’s best suburbs! Place your classified ad in FOUND: Male dog - 7/4 over 570 suburban news- near 1500 rd & 1000 rd. papers just like this one. Large black dog, older. Call Classified Avenue at Very gentle. Please call 888-486-2466 785-842-1560 to identify.

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

TO PLACE AN AD:

785.832.2222

(First published in the N77°14’11”W, 250.00 FEET); Lawrence Daily Journal THENCE S88°17’09”W, World July 17, 2015) 400.00 FEET; THENCE ALONG THE WEST LINE OF The Board of Commission- SECTION 10 N01°33’59”W, ers of the Lawrence- Doug- 586.76 FEET TO THE POINT las County Housing Au- OF BEGINNING, CONTAINthority will hold a special ING 9.99 ACRES ALL IN THE meeting to take public CITY OF LAWRENCE, DOUGcomment and discuss the LAS COUNTY, KANSAS. is acquisition of property on hereby changed from RSO Thursday, July 23, 2015, at (Single-Dwelling Residen5:30 pm at Babcock Place, tial) District to CN2 1700 Massachusetts Ave. (Neighborhood CommerThe public is invited to at- cial) District, as such distend. The meeting agenda trict is defined and preis at www.ldcha.org. scribed in Chapter 20 of _______ the Code of the City of Lawrence, Kansas, 2015 (First published in the Edition, and amendments Lawrence Daily Journal thereto. SECTION 2. The reWorld July 17, 2015) zoning granted in Section 1, supra, in addition to beIN THE DISTRICT COURT OF ing subject to the general DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS conditions established in DIVISION SIX Chapter 20 of the Code of the City of Lawrence, KanIN THE INTEREST OF: sas, 2015 Edition, as amended, is also subject C. H. to the following special DOB: 02/18 /2003, a male conditions: (a) The City Case No. 2014-JC-000063 Commission shall review S. H. and approve any site plan DOB: 05/19/2001, a female application prior to issuCase No. 2015-JC-000026 ance of a building permit on the subject property. TO: JEREMY HATTEMER (b) As part of any proNOTICE OF HEARING posed development, the (K.S.A. Chapter 38) extraordinary buffer yard along Inverness Drive shall COMES NOW the State of be limited to open space, Kansas, by and through landscaping, and counsel, Emily C. Haack, park-type amenities. (c) Assistant District Attorney, The following uses shall be and provides notice of a prohibited: (i) All uses hearing as follows: identified within the ResiA petition pertaining to dential Use Group the parental rights to the (including Household Livchild whose name appears ing and Group Living) as above has been filed in set forth at City of Lawthis Court requesting the rence, Kan., § 20-403 (July Court to find the child is a 1, 2015), as amended. (d) child in need of care as de- Notice to property owners, fined in the Kansas Code which is required for any for the Care of Children. If future site plan, shall exa child is adjudged to be a tend one thousand feet child in need of care and (1000 ft.) from the property the Court finds a parent to line of the subject propbe unfit, the Court may erty. SECTION 3. The permanently terminate “Official Zoning District that parent’s parental Map,” which is adopted rights. The Court may also and incorporated into the make other orders includ- City Code by reference at ing, but not limited to, re- City of Lawrence, Kan., quiring a parent to pay Code § 20-108 (January 1, child support. 2015), is hereby amended On Monday, August 3, by showing and reflecting 2015 at 1:30 p.m. each par- thereon the new zoning ent and any other person district classification for claiming legal custody of the subject property as dethe minor child is required scribed in more detail in to appear for an Adjudica- Section 1, supra. SECTION tion and Disposition Hear- 4. If any section, sentence, ing in Division 6 at the clause, or phrase of this Douglas County Law En- ordinance is found to be forcement and Judicial unconstitutional or is othCenter, 111 E 11th Street., erwise held invalid by any Lawrence, Kansas. Each court of competent jurisgrandparent is permitted diction, it shall not affect but not required to appear the validity of any remainwith or without counsel as ing parts of this ordinance. an interested party in the SECTION 5. This ordinance proceeding. Prior to the shall be in full force and proceeding, a parent, effect from and after its grandparent or any other passage and publication party to the proceeding as provided by law. may file a written re- PASSED by the Governing sponse to the pleading Body of the City of Lawwith the clerk of court. rence, Kansas, this 14th Each parent has the right day of July, 2015. to be represented by an attorney. A parent that is not APPROVED: financially able to hire an /s/Jeremy Farmer attorney may apply to the Jeremy Farmer court for a court appointed Mayor attorney. A request for a court appointed attorney ATTEST: should be made without /s/ Diane M. Bucia delay to: Clerk of the Dis- Diane M. Bucia trict Court; ATTN: Division Acting City Clerk 6; 111 East 11th Street; Lawrence Kansas Approved as to form and 66044-9202. Jody M. Meyer legality an attorney in Lawrence, /s/ Toni R. Wheeler Kansas, has been ap- Toni R. Wheeler pointed as guardian ad City Attorney litem for the child. ________ All parties are hereby notified that, pursuant to (First published in the K.S.A. 60-255, a default Lawrence Daily Journal judgment will be taken World July 17, 2015) against any parent who fails to appear in person ORDINANCE NO. 9099 or by counsel at the hearing. AN ORDINANCE AMENDING CHAPTER 17, OF THE CODE /s/Emily C Haack OF THE CITY OF LAWEMILY C HAACK, 23697 RENCE, KANSAS, 2015 EDIAssistant District Attorney TION AND AMENDMENTS Office of the District THERETO, RELATING TO NO Attorney PARKING. Douglas County Judicial Center BE IT ORDAINED BY THE 111 East 11th Street GOVERNING BODY OF THE Lawrence, KS 66044-2909 CITY OF LAWRENCE, KAN(785) 841-0211 SAS: SECTION I: From and FAX (785) 330-2850 after the effectiveness of ehaack@douglas-county.com this ordinance and the in________ stallation of appropriate traffic control devices, No (First published in the Parking is hereby estabLawrence Daily Journal lished along the south side World July 17, 2015) of 11th Street from Rhode Island Street, east 60 feet. ORDINANCE NO. 9128 SECTION II. The City Engineer is hereby directed to AN ORDINANCE OF THE amend the Schedule of No CITY OF LAWRENCE, KAN- Parking maintained by the SAS, REZONING APPROXI- Office of the City Engineer, MATELY 10 ACRES FROM to reflect the provisions of RSO (SINGLE-DWELLING Section I. PASSED by the RESIDENTIAL-OFFICE) DIS- Governing Body of the City TRICT TO CN2 of Lawrence, Kansas, this (NEIGHBORHOOD COM- 14th day of July, 2015. MERCIAL) DISTRICT AND AMENDING THE CITY’S APPROVED: “OFFICIAL ZONING DIS- /s/Jeremy Farmer TRICT MAP,” INCORPO- Jeremy Farmer RATED BY REFERENCE INTO Mayor THE CITY CODE AT CHAPTER 20, ARTICLE 1, SECTION ATTEST: 20-108 OF THE CODE OF /s/ Diane M. Bucia THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, Diane M. Bucia KANSAS, 2015 EDITION, Acting City Clerk AND AMENDMENTS THERETO. Approved as to form and BE IT ORDAINED BY THE GOVERNING BODY OF THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, KANSAS: SECTION 1. The base zoning district classification for the following legally described real property, situated in the City of Lawrence, Douglas County, Kansas, to-wit: COMMENCING AT THE NORTHWEST CORNER OF SECTION 10, TOWNSHIP 13 SOUTH, RANGE 19 EAST OF THE SIXTH PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN; THENCE ALONG THE NORTH LINE OF SECTION 10 N88°17’10”E, 722.05 FEET; THENCE S01°33’59”E, 684.68 FEET; THENCE ON A CURVE TO THE RIGHT WITH A RADIUS OF 500.00 FEET, AN ARC LENGTH OF 87.36 FEET, (CHORD OF SAID CURVE BEARS: N67°45’52”W, 87.25 FEET); THENCE ON A CURVE TO THE LEFT WITH A RADIUS OF 500.00 FEET, AN ARC LENGTH OF 252.68 FEET, (CHORD OF SAID CURVE BEARS:

legality /s/ Toni R. Wheeler Toni R. Wheeler City Attorney ________ (First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal World July 17, 2015) RESOLUTION NO. 7127 A RESOLUTION CALLING AND PROVIDING FOR THE GIVING OF NOTICE OF A PUBLIC HEARING ON THE ADVISABILITY OF THE MAKING OF CERTAIN INTERNAL IMPROVEMENTS IN THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, KANSAS, UNDER THE PROVISIONS OF K.S.A. 12-6a01 ET SEQ., AS AMENDED AND SUPPLEMENTED; AND PROVIDING FOR THE GIVING OF NOTICE OF SAID HEARING. WHEREAS, K.S.A. 12-6a01 et seq. (the “Act”) authorizes the governing body of any city to make or cause to be made municipal works or

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improvements which confer a special benefit upon property within a definable area of the city and the levying and collecting of special assessments upon property in the area deemed by the said governing body to be benefited by such improvements for special benefits conferred upon such property by any such improvements and to provide for the payment of all or any part of the costs of the improvements out of the proceeds of such special assessments; and WHEREAS, the Act provides that before any contract is let or any work is ordered or authorized for an improvement, the governing body shall by resolution direct and order a public hearing on the advisability of the improvement, and to give notice of the hearing by not less than two (2) publications in a newspaper, such publications to be a week apart and at least three (3) days shall elapse between the last publication and the hearing; and such notice shall be given as to (a) the time and place of the hearing; (b) the general nature of the proposed improvements; (c) the estimated or probable cost of the proposed improvements; (d) the extent of the proposed improvement district to be assessed for the cost of the proposed improvements; (e) the proposed method of assessment; and (f) the proposed apportionment of the cost between the improvement district and the city at large; and WHEREAS, the governing body of the City of Lawrence, Kansas (the “City”), hereby finds and determines it to be necessary to direct and order a public hearing on the advisability of a certain improvement in the City pursuant to the authority of the Act; and further to provide for the giving of notice of said hearing in the manner required by the Act. THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE GOVERNING BODY OF THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, KANSAS: Section 1. Public Hearing. It is hereby authorized, ordered and directed that the governing body of the City, shall hold a public hearing on the advisability of the following described improvements (the “Improvements”): The construction and installation of a traffic signal and the construction of certain curb and sidewalk improvements, all at the intersection of 6th Street and Champion Lane, including all preliminary engineering, inspection and design costs, costs of issuing bonds therefor, and any interest on temporary financing, all in accordance with City standards and specifications prepared or approved by the City Engineer. Such public hearing will be held on August 4, 2015, at 5:45 P.M., at 6 East 6th Street, Lawrence, Kansas 66044, under the authority of the Act. Section 2. Notice of Hearing. The City Clerk is hereby authorized, ordered and directed to give notice of said public hearing by publication of a Notice of Public Hearing substantially in the form attached hereto as Exhibit A two (2) times in the official City newspaper, such publications to be one (1) week apart, and the last publication to be at least three (3) days prior to the date of the hearing. ADOPTED by the governing body of the City on July 14, 2015. APPROVED: /s/Jeremy Farmer Jeremy Farmer Mayor ATTEST /s/Diane M. Bucia Diane M. Bucia Acting City Clerk ________ (First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal World July 17, 2015) ORDINANCE NO. 9129 AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, KANSAS, AMENDING CHAPTER I, ARTICLE 14, SECTION 1-1404, REPEALING EXISTING SECTION 1-1404, REPEALING EXISTING CHAPTER I, ARTICLE 18, AND ENACTING, IN ITS PLACE, CHAPTER I, ARTICLE 18 OF THE CODE OF THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, KANSAS, 2015 EDITION AND AMENDMENTS THERETO, PERTAINING TO THE AFFORDABLE HOUSING ADVISORY BOARD. BE IT ORDAINED BY THE GOVERNING BODY OF THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, KANSAS: SECTION 1. Section 1-1404 of the Code of the City of Lawrence, Kansas, 2015 Edition, and amendments thereto, is hereby amended and shall read as follows: 1-1404 SAME; BOARD DUTIES. The duties of the board shall be as follows. (Ord. 8501) (A) As part of the annual City Budget, the board shall review requests and make recommendations to the City Commission on the use of the following City resources: (1) Special Alcohol and Drug Abuse Funds, excluding the use of funds by City departments, using the criteria as outlined in Charter Ordinance No. 33; and (2) Resources in the City’s General Operating Fund for social service agencies. (B) Recommend to the City Commission such report-

ing requirements on the use of the City Funds as the Board determines appropriate. (C) Evaluate the use of City Funds by recipients and report to the City Commission on such findings and determinations as the Board determines appropriate. SECTION 2. Existing Chapter VI, Article 6, Section 6-108.17 of the Code of the City of Lawrence, Kansas, 2015 Edition, and amendments thereto, is hereby repealed in its entirety, it being the intent of the Governing Body that Section 1 of this Ordinance supersede it. SECTION 3. Existing Chapter I, Article 18, of the Code of the City of Lawrence, Kansas, 2015 Edition, and amendments thereto, is hereby repealed in its entirety, it being the intent of the Governing Body that Section 4 of this Ordinance supersede it. SECTION 4. Chapter I, Article 18, of the Code of the City of Lawrence, Kansas, 2015 Edition, and amendments thereto, is hereby enacted: ARTICLE 18. AFFORDABLE HOUSING ADVISORY BOARD 1-1801 PURPOSE. In order to advance the health, safety, and welfare of all residents of the City of Lawrence, it is the goal of the Governing Body that all persons in the community have access to affordable housing and supportive services necessary to maintain independent living with dignity. To those ends, the Governing Body hereby establishes the Affordable Housing Advisory Board to oversee and to make certain recommendations regarding the Affordable Housing Trust Fund. 1-1802 AFFORDABLE HOUSING ADVISORY BOARD; ESTABLISHMENT; MEMBERSHIP; TERMS OF OFFICE; APPOINTMENT OF CHAIR. (a) There is hereby established the Affordable Housing Advisory Board (“Board”). The Board shall be composed of not more than nine (9) persons. The Board will be composed of: (1) one representative of the City of Lawrence, Kansas, appointed by the Governing Body; (2) one representative of Douglas County, Kansas, appointed by the Board of County Commissioners of Douglas County, Kansas; (3) one representative of the Lawrence-Douglas County Housing Authority, or any successor in interest; (4) one representative of Family Promise of Lawrence, or any successor in interest; (5) one representative of Lawrence Habitat for Humanity, or any successor in interest; (6) one representative of Tenants to Homeowners, Inc., or any successor in interest; (7) one representative — who shall be a current or former resident of subsidized housing — of persons residing in subsidized housing, appointed by the Governing Body; (8) one representative of Justice Matters of Lawrence, or any successor in interest; and (9) one representative of the Lawrence Home Builders Association, or any successor in interest. (b) Members of the Board shall serve three (3) year terms, except when appointed to complete an unexpired term. As established by the bylaws, the terms of Board members shall be staggered so that no more than one-third of the Board’s terms shall expire each year. It is the intent of the Governing Body that there be no term limits on members serving on the Board. All members of the Board shall serve without compensation. (c) The Board shall elect annually a member of the Board to serve as Chair, who shall preside at meetings. 1-1803 SAME; BYLAWS AND MEETINGS. The Board shall adopt bylaws governing the procedures to be used by the Board. The bylaws shall establish specific duties and responsibilities of the Chair, the time and place for meetings, rules of order, and other rules governing procedures and operations of the Board, including procedures for amending the bylaws. 1-1804 SAME; CONFLICTS OF INTEREST All Board members shall by abstention refrain from participating in the decision-making process, including discussing and voting, on any item for which he or she, his or her employer, or the entity which he or she is representing appears before the Board and would receive direct financial benefit if the item was to be approved by the Governing Body. 1-1805 SAME; MINUTES. The Board shall prepare and approve minutes of its meetings and shall forward the same to the City Commission. 1-1806 SAME; OPEN MEETINGS AND OPEN RECORDS. All meetings of the Board shall be held in compliance with the Kansas Open Meetings Act and its records shall be subject to the Kansas Open Records Act. 1-1807 SAME; AFFORDABLE HOUSING TRUST FUND The name of the Housing Trust Fund is hereby changed to the Affordable Housing Trust Fund. The purpose of the Affordable Housing Trust Fund is to support the acquisition, rehabilitation, and development of affordable housing and supportive services so that all persons in the commu-

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PUBLIC NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD: PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED FROM 9C nity have access to independent living with dignity. 1-1808 SAME; BOARD DUTIES. The Board shall be an advisory board to the Governing Body on all matters relating to the City’s implementation and use of the Affordable Housing Trust Fund. The Board shall have the following purpose and duties: (a) To advise the Governing Body regarding issues affecting affordable housing and supportive services in the community. (b) To oversee and to facilitate the purpose of the Affordable Housing Trust Fund, which is to support the acquisition, rehabilitation, and development of affordable housing and supportive services so that all persons in the community have access to independent living with dignity; (c) To make recommendations to the Governing Body regarding the expenditure of money from the Affordable Housing Trust Fund in order to fund projects, as reviewed and approved by the Board, that are consistent with the purpose of the Affordable Housing Trust Fund; and (d) To make recommendations to the Governing Body regarding the cultivation and maintenance of steady and various streams of income to fund the Affordable Housing Trust Fund. However, the Board shall not apply for any grant without prior approval of the Governing Body; nor shall it accept any gift or donation without prior approval of the Governing Body. 1-1809 SAME; EXPENDITURE OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING TRUST FUND MONEY After the Governing Body has approved, for any project, the expenditure of money from the Affordable Housing Trust Fund, the Board shall distribute said

money to the Community Development Division of the Department of Planning and Development Services, which Department shall then disburse said money pursuant to the direction of the Governing Body and in accordance with the City’s purchasing policy. 1-1810 SAME; ANNUAL REPORT. The Board shall make annual reports to the Governing Body, no later than March 1 of each year, recounting Board activities of the preceding calendar year. Such reports shall, at a minimum, disclose all financial transactions involving monies raised and received by the Board, including gifts and donations, and all projects which the Board recommended and for which the Governing Body approved expenditures of money from the Affordable Housing Trust Fund. The annual report shall be filed with the City Clerk. SECTION 5. If any section, sentence, clause, or phrase of this ordinance 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 ordinance. SECTION 6. This ordinance shall take effect and be in full force and effect immediately following its adoption and publication as provided by law. PASSED by the Governing Body of the City of Lawrence, Kansas, this 14th day of July, 2015. APPROVED: /s/Jeremy Farmer Jeremy Farmer Mayor ATTEST: /s/ Diane M. Bucia Diane M. Bucia Acting City Clerk

785.832.2222 K.S.A. 10-116a to issue refunding revenue bonds of the City for the purpose of refunding the Refunded Bonds; and WHEREAS, in order to achieve interest cost savings through early redemption of the Refunded Bonds, to reduce debt service requirements of the City for certain years, and to provide an orderly plan of finance for the City, it has become desirable and in the best interest of the City and the System to refund the Refunded Bonds; and

WHEREAS, the City is authorized under the provisions of the Act, to issue and sell revenue bonds for the purpose of paying all or part of the cost of the acquisition, construction, reconstruction, alteration, repair, improvement, extension or enlargement of the System, provided that the principal of and interest on such revenue bonds shall be payable solely from the Net Revenues derived by the City from the operation of the System; and WHEREAS, the City heretofore issued and has Outstanding the Refunded Bonds and is authorized by

“Fiscal Year” means the twelve month period ending on December 31.

WHEREAS, the Issuer does not have Outstanding any System Indebtedness other than the Parity Bonds and the KDHE Loans; and WHEREAS, the Parity Resolution provides the City may issue Additional Bonds which constitute Parity Bonds upon the satisfaction of certain conditions; and

“Mayor” means the duly elected and acting Mayor or, in the Mayor’s absence, the duly appointed and/or elected Vice Mayor or Acting Mayor of the City.

WHEREAS, prior to or simultaneously with the issuance of the Series 2015-B Bonds, such terms and conditions will be satisfied.

“Net Revenues” means, for the period of determination, all Revenues less all Expenses.

NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAINED BY THE GOVERNING BODY OF THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, KANSAS, AS FOLLOWS: Section 1. Definitions of Words and Terms. In addition to words and terms defined elsewhere herein, the following words and terms in this Ordinance shall have the meanings hereinafter set forth. Unless the context shall otherwise indicate, words importing the singular number shall include the plural and vice versa, and words importing persons shall include firms, associations and corporations, including public bodies, as well as natural persons. “Act” means the Constitution and statutes of the State including K.S.A. 10-101 to 10-125, inclusive, K.S.A. 10-620 et seq., and K.S.A. 10-1201 et seq., all as amended and supplemented from time to time. “Additional Bonds” means any bonds secured by the Revenues hereafter issued pursuant to Article IX of the Bond Resolution and any other similar provision in any Parity Resolution. “Additional Obligations” means any leases or other obligations secured by the Revenues, other than Additional Bonds, hereafter issued pursuant to Article IX of the Bond Resolution and any other similar provision in any Parity Resolution. “BAB Interest Subsidy Payments” means payments to be received by the City from the U.S. Department of the Treasury under Code §§ 54AA(g) and 6431 in connection with the payments of interest on the Series 2009-A Bonds.

“Expenses” means all reasonable and necessary expenses of operation, maintenance and repair of the System and keeping the System in good repair and working order (other than interest paid on System Indebtedness and depreciation and amortization charges during the period of determination), determined in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, including without limiting the generality of the foregoing, current maintenance charges, expenses of reasonable upkeep and repairs, salaries, wages, employee’s health, hospitalization, pension and retirement benefits, costs of materials and supplies, paying agent fees and expenses, annual audits, periodic Consultant’s reports, properly allocated share of charges for insurance, the cost of purchased water, gas and power, if any, for System operation, obligations (other than for borrowed money or for rents payable under capital leases) incurred in the ordinary course of business, liabilities incurred by endorsement for collection or deposit of checks or drafts received in the ordinary course of business, short-term obligations incurred and payable within a particular Fiscal Year, other obligations or indebtedness incurred for the purpose of leasing (pursuant to a true or operating lease) equipment, fixtures, inventory or other personal property, and all other expenses incident to the operation of

“Ordinance” means this Ordinance authorizing the issuance of the Series 2015-B Bonds. “Outstanding” means: (a) when used with reference to Bonds, as of a particular date of determination, all Bonds theretofore, authenticated and delivered, except the following Bonds: (i) Bonds theretofore canceled by the paying agent for such Bonds or delivered to the paying agent for such Bonds for cancellation pursuant to the ordinance and resolution authorizing the issuance of such Bonds; (ii) Bonds deemed to be paid in accordance with the provisions of Section 1101 of the Bond Resolution or any similar provisions of any resolution applicable to any such Bonds; (iii) Bonds in exchange for or in lieu of which other Bonds have been authenticated and delivered under the applicable resolution authorizing such Bonds; (iv) Bonds, the principal or interest of which has been paid by a bond insurer; and (b) with respect to any System Indebtedness that is not a Bond, as of the date of determination, all such System Indebtedness theretofore issued or incurred by the Issuer, except to the extent the obligation to make payments on such System Indebtedness has been discharged in accordance with the terms of the instrument or instruments creating or evidencing such Indebtedness. “Parity Bonds” means the Outstanding Series 2005 Bonds, Series 2007 Bonds, Series 2008 Bonds, Series 2009-A Bonds, Series 2015 Bonds and any Additional Bonds hereafter issued pursuant to the Bond Resolution and standing on a parity and equality with the Series 2015-B Bonds with respect to the lien on the Net Revenues. “Parity Obligations” means any Additional Obligations hereafter issued or incurred pursuant to the Bond Resolution and standing on a parity and equality with the Parity Bonds with respect to the lien on the Net Revenues. “Parity Resolution” means the Series 2005 Resolution, the Series 2007 Resolution, the Series 2008 Resolution, the Series 2009-A Resolution, the Series 2015 Resolution the Bond Resolution and the ordinances and/or resolutions under which any Additional Bonds which constitute Parity Bonds are hereafter issued. “Refunded Bonds” means the Series 2005 Bonds maturing in the years 2015 to 2025, inclusive, in the aggregate principal amount of $12,720,000. “Refunded Bonds Resolution” means the ordinance and resolution which authorized the Refunded Bonds. “System Indebtedness” means collectively all Parity Bonds, all Parity Additional Obligations, all Additional Bonds, all Additional Obligations, all Junior Lien Obligations and all Subordinate Lien Bonds which are payable out of, or secured by an interest in, the Revenues. Section 2. Authorization of the Series 2015-B Bonds. There shall be issued and are hereby authorized and directed to be issued the Water and Sewage System Refunding Revenue Bonds, Series 2015-B, of the City in the aggregate principal amount of $[PRINCIPAL AMOUNT] for the purpose of providing funds to: (a) refund the Refunded Bonds; (b) pay costs of issuance of the Series 2015-B Bonds; and (c) make a deposit to the Series

2015-B Debt Service Reserve Account. Section 3. Security for the Series 2015-B Bonds. The Series 2015-B Bonds shall be special obligations of the City payable solely from, and secured as to the payment of principal and interest by a pledge of, the Net Revenues, and the City hereby pledges said Net Revenues to the payment of the principal of and interest on the Series 2015-B Bonds. The Series 2015-B Bonds shall not be or constitute a general obligation of the City, nor shall they constitute an indebtedness of the City within the meaning of any constitutional, statutory or charter provision, limitation or restriction, and the taxing power of the City is not pledged to the payment of the Series 2015-B Bonds, either as to principal or interest. The covenants and agreements of the City contained herein and in the Series 2015-B Bonds shall be for the equal benefit, protection and security of the legal owners of any or all of the Series 2015-B Bonds, all of which Series 2015-B Bonds shall be of equal rank and without preference or priority of one Bond over any other Bond in the application of the funds herein pledged to the payment of the principal of and the interest on the Series 2015-B Bonds, or otherwise, except as to rate of interest, date of maturity and right of prior redemption as provided in this Ordinance. The Series 2015-B Bonds shall stand on a parity and be equally and ratably secured with respect to the payment of principal and interest from the Net Revenues with any Parity Bonds. The Series 2015-B Bonds shall not have any priority with respect to the payment of principal or interest from said Net Revenues or otherwise over the Parity Bonds; and the Parity Bonds shall not have any priority with respect to the payment of principal or interest from said Net Revenues or otherwise over the Series 2015-B Bonds. Section 4. Terms, Details and Conditions of the Series 2015-B Bonds. The Series 2015-B Bonds shall be dated and bear interest, shall mature and be payable at such times, shall be in such forms, shall be subject to redemption and payment prior to the maturity thereof, and shall be issued and delivered in the manner prescribed and subject to the provisions, covenants and agreements set forth in the Bond Resolution. Section 5. Rate Covenant. The City will fix, establish, maintain and collect such rates, fees and charges for the use and services furnished by or through the System, including all repairs, alterations, extensions, reconstructions, enlargements or improvements thereto hereafter constructed or acquired by the City, as will produce Revenues sufficient to (a) pay Expenses; (b) pay the principal of and interest on the System Indebtedness as and when the same become due; and (c) provide reasonable and adequate reserves for the payment of the Parity Bonds and the interest thereon and for the protection and benefit of the System as provided in this Ordinance and the Bond Resolution. The Bond Resolution, Parity Resolutions and Parity Obligation Documents may establish requirements in excess of the requirements set forth herein. Section 6. Further Authority. The Mayor, Clerk and other City officials are hereby further authorized and directed to execute any and all documents and take such actions as they may deem necessary or advisable in order to carry out and perform the purposes of the Ordinance to make alterations, changes or additions in the foregoing agreements, statements, instruments and other documents herein approved, authorized and confirmed which they may approve and the execution or taking of such action shall be conclusive evidence of such necessity or advisability. Section 7. Governing Law. This Ordinance and the Series 2015-B Bonds shall be governed exclusively by and construed in accordance with the applicable laws of the State. Section 8. Effective Date. This Ordinance shall take effect and be in full force from and after its passage by the governing body of the City, approval by the Mayor and publication (or a summary thereof) in the official City newspaper. PASSED by the governing body of the City on July 14, 2015 and APPROVED AND SIGNED by the Mayor. (SEAL) Mayor ATTEST: Clerk ________

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INTRODUCING

WHEREAS, the City of Lawrence, Kansas (the “City”) is a city of the first class, duly created, organized and existing under the Constitution and laws of the State; and

the System, but shall exclude all general administrative expenses of the City not related to the operation of the System and transfers into the Debt Service Reserve Account and Depreciation and Emergency Account provided for in the Bond Resolution.

“KDHE Loans” means the Loan Agreement between the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, acting on behalf of the State of Kansas (KDHE”), and the City, effective as of November 29, 1999, as amended by a First Amendment to the Loan Agreement between KDHE and the City, effective as of August 11, 2000.

“Bond Resolution” means the resolution to be adopted by the governing body of the City prescribing the terms Approved as to form and and details of the Series 2015-B Bonds and making covenants with respect thereto. legality /s/ Toni R. Wheeler “Bonds” means the Series 2015-B Bonds and any AddiToni R. Wheeler tional Bonds. City Attorney ________ “City” means the City of Lawrence, Kansas. (First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal World “Clerk” means the duly appointed and acting Clerk of July 17, 2015) the City or, in the Clerk’s absence, the duly appointed Deputy, Assistant or Acting Clerk. ORDINANCE NO. 9131 AN ORDINANCE AUTHORIZING AND PROVIDING FOR THE ISSUANCE OF WATER AND SEWAGE SYSTEM REFUNDING REVENUE BONDS, SERIES 2015-B, OF THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, KANSAS; MAKING CERTAIN COVENANTS AND AGREEMENTS TO PROVIDE FOR THE PAYMENT AND SECURITY THEREOF AND AUTHORIZING CERTAIN OTHER DOCUMENTS AND ACTIONS IN CONNECTION THEREWITH.

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