Lawrence Journal-World 07-30-2015

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Plane debris believed to be part of Malaysia crash. 1B

Leeway Franks goes way beyond hot dogs. Going Out, 6A

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THURSDAY • JULY 30 • 2015

GOP blocks foster care audit for now

4SCHOOL RANKINGS

New report puts Kansas in 12th place W

e may not always know where the next check is coming from to fund it, but Kansas’ educational system is one of the better ones in the country — at least according to one new report. The study is from WalletHub, a financial website that does a lot of data crunching to create “best of” lists. The new study found Kansas has the 12th best “school system” in America. The report primarily looked at K-12, public schools, and examined metrics such as dropout rates, math

Increased scrutiny follows recent deaths, expectation of major changes in system

and reading scores, SAT scores, studentto-teacher ratios and other such measures. Kansas ranked just ahead of Iowa and just below Virginia. Kansas appeared to excel in a couple of categories in particular. Kansas had the third best pupil-to-teacher ratio in the country, and was tied for fourth in the “safest schools” category. That metric is based on data that tracks the number of students in ninth-12th grades who report being threatened or injured with a weapon on school property.

Other Kansas rankings:

8th 10th 10th 21st 25th 25th

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By Peter Hancock Twitter: @LJWpqhancock

Topeka — On a party-line vote, the Kansas Legislative Post Audit Committee on Wednesday declined to order an audit of the Kansas foster care system, despite the recent deaths of children who were either in state custody or in troubled homes. But the panel did agree to put the audit request on a waiting list, which means it could be authorized later this year or sometime after lawmakers reconvene in January for the 2016 session. Ward The decision came at a time when the Department of Children and Families, which manages the foster care program, is coming under increased public scrutiny because of the near-record number of children currently in the system and because of Trimmer continuing reports that the agency is preparing for major policy changes that could include barring gay and unwed couples from becoming foster parents. The request for an audit of the program came from two south-central Kansas legislators, Reps. Jim Ward of Wichita and Ed Trimmer of Winfield, both Democrats.

Top five overall:

for math test score

3 Massachusetts 3 Colorado 3 New Jersey 3 Wisconsin 3 Kentucky

for dropout rate

Bottom five:

for average SAT scores

3 Louisiana 3 Arizona 3 Nevada 3 District of Columbia 3 Alaska

for percentage of high school graduates who complete the ACT for bullying incident rates

Neighbors not already mentioned: Nebraska ranked No. 17, Missouri 28 and Oklahoma 33.

for reading test scores Note: A ranking of 1 is best; 51 is worst; D.C. counted

— By Chad Lawhorn

Please see FOSTER, page 8A

Stay or go? Area teachers face tough choices after KPERS change

The incredible, edible eggplant

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By Rochelle Valverde Twitter: @RochelleVerde

After 30 years of working as a teacher, Charlotte Anderson had reached the age eligible to retire and start taking benefits from the state pension plan she’s been paying into throughout her career. But SCHOOLS she didn’t think she could. Anderson said retiring completely would have meant she’d receive approximately $15,000 less per year. That wasn’t practical, so like many state employees, she planned to spend the first several years of her retirement working. “It’s difficult to save on a teacher’s salary.

Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photo

CHEF SIMON BATES OF THE BURGER STAND AT THE CASBAH DELIVERS his eggplant and lamb meatloaf to the judges during the Chefs Challenge on Wednesday at the Douglas County Fair. Bates won the contest that also featured eggplant dished made by chefs Brad Brown of Bird Dog Bar at The Oread and Vaughn Good of Hank Charcuterie.

n eggplant meatloaf created by Burger Stand chef Simon Bates reigned supreme at the Douglas County Fair’s Chefs Challenge on Wednesday night. Around 150 people attended the event and helped judge dishes made by three local chefs that each featured the too-often-overlooked eggplant and other locally sourced ingredients. “Everybody loved the food, and with the kind of heat we’ve been having, it was great to have such a wonderful summer night,” said Helen Schnoes, Douglas County food systems coordinator. Bates’ eggplant and lamb meatloaf with caponata ketchup, deviled tomatoes and potato salad with beets took home first prize. Bates was followed by Brad Brown of the Oread Hotel’s Bird Dog Bar and Vaughn Good of Hank Charcuterie, Schnoes said. Brown made a grilled Yukon Gold potato topped with arugula, chevre, charred tomato vinaigrette and eggplant caviar. Good’s dish featured a smoked pork shoulder with eggplant and chevre, tomato relish, local black-eyed peas and a housemade ricotta cheese. — Conrad Swanson

See more coverage of the Douglas County Fair at LJWorld.com/fair15

Please see RETIRING, page 2A

INSIDE

Less humid Business Classified Comics Deaths

High: 89

Low: 61

Today’s forecast, page 8A

2A 5C-9C 10C 2A

Events listings Horoscope Opinion Puzzles

6A, 2C Sports 4A Television 7A USA Today 4A

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

Police chase 1C-4C 8A, 2C 1B-8B

A high-speed police pursuit that began in Shawnee ended with three suspects in custody after a foot chase in Lawrence. Page 3A

Vol.157/No.211 26 pages


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Thursday, July 30, 2015

LAWRENCE

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BRIEFLY

DEATHS Journal-World obituary policy:

Bus route, schedule said. Those numbers may be in March 2013 when the with the system’s tex- county became one of five changes set to begin used pilot district courts in the ting service to learn when

Beginning in August, several Lawrence bus service routes will change, the city has announced in a press release. Here are the changes: hi an hepard • Route 5 is altering the way it serves East Hill BusiA Celebration of Life has been planned at Arterra ness Park. Event Gallery on July 31, 2015, 3-6pm. • Route 9 will serve Rock Chalk Park rather than Route 2. • Route 15 began runathryn ate eIgand ning in May to serve the technical training facilities Catheryn I. “Kate” often presented music at 31st and Haskell and the Weigand, 98, Emporia, workshops for inservice East Hills Business Park. Kansas, passed away sessions in nearby school • Route 29 will use a ‘B’ Monday, July 27, 2015 at districts. Kate was a schedule, to be used on the Emporia Presbyterian music adjudicator and Saturdays, class breaks Manor. oratorio soloist across and during the summer Cremation is planned. the state of Kansas. In semester. A memorial service will addition to her musical • Several minor adjustbe held at the Roberts- accomplishments, Kate ments were made to other Blue-Barnett Funeral was an avid bridge player routes and schedules. Home on Monday, and belonged to several New transit guides will August 3, 2015 at 2:00 P.M. clubs in Emporia. She be posted around towns at conducted by Charles read widely and was a grocery stores, City Hall, 6 Bradbury, First United loyal fan of the Kansas E. Sixth St., Lawrence PubMethodist Church. Jayhawk basketball team. lic Library, 707 Vermont Inurnment will be in the Catheryn Weigand St., at several locations Maplewood Cemetery, was preceded in death by across Kansas University Emporia. The family will her husband; her parents; campus and on all buses, receive friends at the her brothers, Claude the release said. funeral home the hour and Clark; and an infant A full guide and mobile before the service. grandson Joseph Vance app can also be found onCatheryn Irene Welch Day. She is survived line at lawrencetransit.org. was born on November by a niece, Carolyn In each updated transit 5, 1916, in Sterling, Dumm, Altamont, map, small numbers will Kansas, the daughter of Kansas, her children; appear next to each bus Charles Ira and Zulu May eight grandchildren- stop symbol, the release (Magers) Welch. She Andrew Day (Kim), graduated from Sterling Bartlesville, OK; Joel High School and The Day, Arkansas City, Kansas State Teachers KS; Kelly Day Stewart College, Emporia, (Terry), Wichita, KS, Kansas. Kimberly Weigand Klotz Kate married James (Damon), Florissant, CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A Joseph “Joe” Weigand MO, Robert Weigand on October 2, 1936, (Tanya), Columbia, MO; in Ellsworth, Kansas. Joseph Clements, James It would have allowed me They became parents Clements (Mindy), to save up more money of three children: Judith and Nicholas Clements for retirement, to have Day-Trenary (James), (Amanda), all of Wichita, some money built up, so Arkansas City, Kansas, KS and by fifteen great- that retirement could be more comfortable finanFrancis Joseph Weigand grandchildren. (Nancy), Florissant, Memorials are cially,” Anderson said, Missouri, and Kathie suggested for large print noting that her benefit Clements-Abel (David), books at the Emporia would have been about Wichita, Kansas. Public Library, library $3,000 per month. Anderson’s plans have Mrs. Weigand was of the First United a member of the First Methodist Church, since changed. The KanUnited Methodist Emporia, and to the sas Legislature recently Church, Emporia, where Weigand Scholarship made changes to rules she was a soloist in at Emporia State for the Kansas Public Retirement the church choir for University. Gifts may be Employees many years. She was a sent through the funeral System regarding worksecond grade teacher home, PO Box #175, ing retirees that apply to many state employees, at the William Allen Emporia, Kansas 66801. White School and later Condolences may including teachers. Under the new rules, became the Elementary be left for the family Music Supervisor for online at the funeral which apply immediately the Emporia Public home website; www. to licensed school professionals who retired Schools. Mrs. Weigand robertsblue.com gave private music Please sign this after April 1 of this year, lessons in Chanute, guestbook at Obituaries. once a working retiree reaches the earnings limit Lawrence, and Emporia. LJWorld.com. of $25,000, that person is Kate and her husband required to choose between receiving benefits from the KPERS retirement plan or continuing orothy ae c reGor to work, according to the Service for Dorothy McGregor will be held at 2 p.m. KPERS website. KPERS, which was creSat., Aug. 1st at Warren-McElwain Mortuary. VISO at 1 ated by the Kansas Legp.m. For more info. go to warrenmcelwain.com. islature in 1962, is a mandatory pension plan that is funded through emommy ackson r ployee salary deductions (plus annual interest) Funeral for Tommy Jackson, Jr., 63, Lawrence, will and state contributions. be 2 pm Fri. July 31, 2015, at Rumsey-Yost Funeral Home. Employees contribute 6 percent of their salary, Visitation Thurs. 6-7 pm. rumsey-yost.com and a benefit amount is determined at the time of retirement by multiplying their final average salary, a statutory rate of 1.75 or 1.85 percent and their years of service. For instance, for someone retiring after 30 years with a final salary of $40,000, the yearly benefit would be less than $25,000. The previous rules placed less restriction on teachers who worked while retired or returned Kansas City, Mo. (ap) the Kansas advisory to teaching after retire— The Kansas division committee and point out ment. The new legislaof a federal civil rights the success of the Kan- tion may lead to teachers commission will inves- sas photo ID law,” Ko- leaving the profession or tigate whether voter bach told The Associated the state, or discourage identification laws have Press late Wednesday af- retired teachers from reaffected turnout around ternoon. turning to work and helpthe state. Committee chair- ing to alleviate teacher The Kansas Commit- woman Elizabeth Kronk shortages, said Laurie tee of the U.S. Civil Rights said there is concern that Folsom, president of the Commission voted Tues- the law “disproportion- Lawrence Education Asday to hold hearings to de- ately impacts certain age sociation and a teacher at termine if turnout in some groups and certain racial Free State High School. communities has been categorizations.” “That’s where I think suppressed, KCUR-TV “It is fair to say the com- our kids really lose out, reported. The committee mittee has acknowledged when there are shortages also agreed to ask Kansas this is an area of contro- and there are changes Secretary of State Kris Ko- versy,” said Kronk, who is that mean that teachers bach, who strongly advo- also a law professor at the might not be able to come cated for the laws, to tes- University of Kansas. back after they retire,” tify at its hearings, which The state commit- Folsom said. are expected to take place tee can recommend that Anderson may be one early next year. the full U.S. Civil Rights of those teachers. After “My office would be Commission in Washing- the new rules were adhappy to appear before ton take up the case. opted, Anderson rescindFor information about running obituaries, call 832-7151. Obituaries run as submitted by funeral homes or the families of the deceased.

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Voter ID laws focus of civil rights committee

ljworld.com 645 New Hampshire St. (News Center) Lawrence, KS 66044 (785) 843-1000 • (800) 578-8748

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state to get the program.

Court Clerk’s office to expand hours

Rainfall adds to above-average total

The office of the Douglas County District Court Clerk will extend its hours beginning next week in light of the “efficiencies created” by the recent mandatory use of electronic filing in the district court, the office said in a news release Wednesday. Starting Monday, the court clerk’s office will be open from 8 a.m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Previously, the court clerk’s office was only open until 4 p.m. On Jan. 5, the Douglas County District Court began requiring all attorneys to use an electronic system to file new cases or documents in new and existing cases. In November, Chief District Judge Robert Fairchild became the first in the state to order that all court documents be filed electronically, Douglas County District Court Clerk Douglas Hamilton said last year. Douglas County first implemented the electronic court document filing system called eFlex

Lawrence saw nearly three-quarters of an inch of rain on Wednesday, said Audra Hennecke of the National Weather Service in Topeka. Between midnight and 10:30 p.m. around .74 inches fell over the area, Hennecke said. So far this month the city has seen 8.41 inches of rain. “The normal amount for this far through the month is 3.9 inches, so we’re 4.51 inches above normal for the month,” Hennecke said. Although more than twice the normal amount of precipitation has hit the area this July, Hennecke said it’s still several inches away from setting any records. Despite a recent abundance of rainfall, the rest of the week will likely be rain-free and less hot, Hennecke said. “We’re looking to be mostly dry (today) and Friday,” she said. “And the temps look to be fairly seasonal at about 90 degrees and slightly less humid than it has been.”

ed her retirement in favor of continuing to work for the Lawrence school district for at least another year, but after that, her plans are uncertain. “I based quite a few financial decisions on (the previous rules), so I really kind of got stuck,” said Anderson, who next year will work as the library media specialist at Lawrence High School, but said she is considering looking for a nonstate job or going to teach in a different state. “I have to readjust and figure out what’s best for my family,” she said.

been for the rule change, she probably would have chosen to stay teaching beyond that time. “I enjoy what I’m doing, and I think I’m good at it, but I had to make a Published daily by The World Company at Sixth and New decision,” Tallman said. Those decisions create Hampshire streets, Lawrence, KS Telephone: 843-1000; some staffing uncertainty 66044-0122. or toll-free (800) 578-8748. for Lawrence schools. Currently, there are 36 POSTMASTER: Send address working retirees in the changes to: Lawrence Journal-World, Lawrence school district, P.O. Box 888, Lawrence, KS said David Cunningham, 66044-0888 the district’s director of (USPS 306-520) Periodicals posthuman resources and leage paid at Lawrence, Kan. gal services. Member of Alliance for Audited Media “We don’t know what The Associated those employees will Member ofPress choose to do in two years or whether the Kansas Legislature will change the legislation again,” he noted. Facebook.com/LJWorld Although the new rules Twitter.com/LJWorld could potentially increase the number of teacher vacancies as the changes go into effect, Cunningham said, the district would address them. “We would post, inter- WEDNESDAY’S POWERBALL 4 22 27 28 52 (35) view and hire replacements for those posiTUESDAY’S MEGA tions,” he said. MILLIONS The new rules do make 8 35 61 68 75 (15) some exceptions for spe- WEDNESDAY’S HOT LOTTO cial education and certiSIZZLER 18 25 35 36 45 (1) fied “hard-to-fill” school positions. For instance, WEDNESDAY’S SUPER KANSAS CASH there is no earnings limit 10 11 15 27 29 (11) for three years as long as WEDNESDAY’S KANSAS the employer shows “on2BY2 going, documented reRed: 8 25; White: 3 14 cruitment efforts.” WEDNESDAY’S KANSAS While Folsom said the PICK 3 changes may only direct1 8 7 ly affect those teachers in the later phases of their careers, they will continue to be an issue as more teachers get closer to retirement. “It does affect a smaller segment of our teaching —10 cents, $4.96 community, but all of us are going to be there at See more stocks and some point,” she said.

‘Teachers are judged’ The new rules, however, don’t affect all state employees the same way. There will be no earnings limit for certain professions — a list that includes local elected officials and legislative staff. Other professions with no earnings limit are state hospital nurses, emergency substitute teachers and law enforcement officers employed by the Law Enforcement Training Center. The working-afterretirement rules do not affect judges or the Kansas Police and Firemen’s Retirement System. For Folsom, such differences in the application of the rules speak to a larger issue. What is considered fiscally responsible or financially savvy for other professions, Folsom said, is construed as somehow selfish when it’s a teacher. “I think that there’s a lot of professions where people’s skills are valued and they are able to retire and then go back and work in that same profession,” Folsom said. “I think teachers are judged for it in a way that other professions aren’t.” Looming choices For licensed school professionals who retired before April 1 of this year, there is what amounts to a two-year grace period. Those workers are temporarily grandfathered in until July 1, 2017, after which the new rules apply, requiring those teachers and administrators to choose between taking benefits and working. Joyce Tallman began receiving her KPERS benefit when she retired from the Baldwin City School District in 2008. Tallman, who began working for the Lawrence School District that same year, said that once the two-year grace period is up, she has chosen to retire completely. Tallman said that if it hadn’t

EDITORS Chad Lawhorn, managing editor 832-6362, clawhorn@ljworld.com Tom Keegan, sports editor 832-7147, tkeegan@ljworld.com Ann Gardner, editorial page editor 832-7153, agardner@ljworld.com Kathleen Johnson, advertising manager 832-7223, kjohnson@ljworld.com

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CALL US Let us know if you’ve got a story idea. Email news@ljworld.com or contact one of the following: Arts and entertainment:..................832-7189 City government:...............................832-6362 County government:....................... 832-7259 Courts and crime...............................832-7144 Datebook...............................................832-7190 Kansas University: ...........................832-7187 Lawrence schools: ...........................832-7259 Letters to the editor: .......................832-7153 Local news: ..........................................832-7154 Obituaries: ............................................832-7151 Photo reprints: ....................................832-7141 Society: ..................................................832-7151 Soundoff............................................... 832-7297 Sports:....................................................832-7147 SUBSCRIPTIONS : 832-7199 per month 7 days, M-S $18.25 3 days, F,S,S $11.73 Sun Only $7.39 Didn’t receive your paper? For billing, vacation or delivery questions, call 832-7199. Weekday: 6 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Weekends: 6 a.m.-10 a.m. In-town redelivery: 6 a.m.-10 a.m.

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— Reporter Rochelle Valverde can be reached at rvalverde@ljworld.com or 832-6314.

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Lawrence&State

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/local l Thursday, July 30, 2015 l 3A

Victim 3 arrested after police pursuit of alleged from Kansas City to Lawrence kidnapping speculates on motive By Caitlin Doornbos

Twitter: @CaitlinDoornbos

By Caitlin Doornbos Twitter: @CaitlinDoornbos

The victim of an alleged kidnapping and beating in June revealed in court Wednesday that prior to the alleged abuse she and one of the female defendants in the case considered themselves “married,” and that the motive for the abuse may have been related to the custody of the victim’s child. On June 19, Tabatha Jalayne Mallory, 25, of Lawrence, along with Christopher Cody Fast, 26, of Topeka, and Chelsea Rayne Adams, 23, of Edwardsville, were charged with aggravated kidnapping and aggravated battery in connection with the alleged three-day mental and physical abuse of their 22-yearold roommate, a mother of one. Anthony Wayne Thomas, 29, of Lawrence, was originally only charged with aggravated assault in connection with the incident, but prosecutor C.J. Rieg changed the charge to aggravated kidnapping and tacked on additional charges of aggravated battery and two counts of child endangerment. On Wednesday, a preliminary hearing was held in Douglas County District Court for Adams and Thomas. The victim

Richard Gwin/Journal-World Photos

LAWRENCE POLICE APPREHEND A MALE SUSPECT in the 500 block of Florida Street after a car chase from Kansas City, Kan., to Lawrence on Wednesday.

A FEMALE SUSPECT IS LED AWAY BY POLICE near the intersection of Sixth and Michigan streets.

ANOTHER MALE SUSPECT, WHO WAS SUBDUED BY POLICE using a Taser, is arrested Tuesday. See a video from Please see VICTIM, page 5A the scene with this story at LJWorld.com.

Three people are in custody after leading multiple Kansas law enforcement agencies on a high-speed vehicle chase from Kansas City, Kan., to Lawrence on Wednesday. The pursuit began when the Kansas Highway Patrol attempted to stop an aggravated burglary suspect in an allegedly stolen black Toyota SUV near 57th Street and Kansas Avenue in Kansas City, KHP Trooper Tiffany Bush said. The vehicle did not stop, and continued west onto U.S. Highway 24. The KHP followed the vehicle to Tonganoxie, but lost sight of it and the Tonganoxie Police Department took over the pursuit, McKinley said. Around 4:15 p.m., the KHP notified Lawrence police that the SUV was heading its way, McKinley said. The suspects came into North Lawrence on U.S. 24, continuing on to North Third Street, but Lawrence police had laid spike strips down at the intersection of Sixth and Vermont streets. The vehicle’s tires were punctured when the suspect drove over the spike strips, and it collided with another vehicle in the area, McKinley said. No one was believed to be injured in that crash. Please see PURSUIT, page 5A

Lawrence ranks No. 5 on Forbes’ small cities list ———

Report calls city’s labor force among most educated in U.S. By Chad Lawhorn Twitter: @clawhorn

Lawrence has landed on a prestigious list of best small communities for businesses and careers. Forbes magazine on Wednesday ranked Lawrence No. 5 on its 2015 list of Best Small Cities for Business and Careers. The magazine noted Lawrence’s highly educated workforce was a factor in the city being named to the list. The magazine called it “one of the most educated labor forces in the U.S.” with 50 percent of adults holding a college degree and 95 percent holding a high school diploma. The college degree ranking was third best among small metro areas, and the high school diploma percentage was second best in the country. The study examined 201 metro areas with populations below 260,500. Forbes looked at statistics related to crime, past and projected job growth,

Third Annual

cost of living, income growth, quality of life, education and several other factors. Lawrence was the only city in the region to make the top 5. The Village, Fla., took the top spot, while Lafayette, Ind., ranked No. 2, Sioux Falls, S.D., No. 3, and Bend, Ore., No. 4. In Kansas, Manhattan ranked No. 29 and Topeka ranked No. 125. Lawrence Chamber of commerce CEO Larry McElwain said it was great for Lawrence to be recognized by Forbes. With Kansas, Baker and Haskell universities, Douglas County obviously is rich with higher education graduates, but the Forbes ranking and stats about the local workforce are a reminder that other types of education are of great value, too, McElwain said. He said the soonto-open Peaslee Tech and Lawrence College and Career Center are steps to embrace that even more. Please see LIST, page 5A

Bridal Event SATURDAY, AUGUST

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Thursday, July 30, 2015

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

Facebook drama? Maybe you should grow up Dear Annie: Yesterday, I had an argument with my 85-year-old mother. She said I must be a lesbian because of my recent Facebook posts in support of all my gay friends and the Supreme Court decision upholding gay marriage. Specifically, I changed my photo so it was colored in beautiful rainbow shades. My mother was appalled that I was supporting “those people” and demanded that I change my picture. She said she was embarrassed and claimed that all of her friends were calling her to ask whether I was gay. This was a lie and she admitted it. Then she said she does not support gay people and I should support them in more private ways. I told her I am 50 years old, not 10, and these are my choices. If

Annie’s Mailbox

Marcy Sugar and Kathy Mitchell

anniesmailbox@comcast.net

she doesn’t like it, she doesn’t have to look at my Facebook page. I have never felt comfortable having my mother as a friend on Facebook. I want to un-friend her, but I’d feel guilty. She has always been this way, and frankly, I’m fed up. She has other friends and family on Facebook, so it’s not as though she’ll be out of the loop. What do you say? — New York Dear New York:

The truck driver who fell to earth The “30 for 30” (7 p.m., ESPN) documentary “Angry Sky: The Legend of Nick Piantanida” recalls an American original. During the height of the space race, Piantanida, a truck driver from New Jersey, had a dream to ride a balloon into space and free fall back to Earth for 17 minutes before parachuting to safety. With his wife behind him, he devoted his life and their savings to his impossible dream. Years before Evel Knievel turned his death-defying routine into a star-spangled media sideshow and a small fortune, Piantanida prepared for the plunge of a lifetime by creating his own one-man space program. Directed by Jeff Tremaine (“Jackass”), “Sky” was inspired by Craig Ryan’s book “Magnificent Failure.” Bill Simmons, the ESPN personality and sports columnist behind the “30 for 30” series, recently moved to HBO, where he will host a talk show covering sports and its intersection with popular culture. In the past few weeks, ESPN has also parted ways with its marquee personalities Keith Olbermann and Colin Cowherd.

The first kickoff of the NFL season may be some weeks away, but TV is already making way for preseason action and anticipation. Fans can catch up on news, interviews and prognostication on “Training Camp Primetime” (7 p.m., NFL Network), covering every team’s preseason drills. NBC will carry the annual preseason Hall of Fame Game on Aug. 9, the first “Sunday Night Football” game of the year. The Pittsburgh Steelers will face the Minnesota Vikings in the summer heat of Canton, Ohio. Two nights later, HBO’s documentary series “Hard Knocks” begins its coverage of one team’s training camp. This season, the Houston Texans will be under the media microscope.

Tonight’s other highlights

Marilyn hides her pregnancy on “The Astronaut Wives Club” (7 p.m., ABC).

“Mysteries at the Monument” (8 p.m., Travel) visits Ellis Island.

An abandoned bookstore becomes a crypt for a murdered teacher on “Bones” (8 p.m., Fox).

Blair’s less-than-cuddly side emerges on “Mistresses” (8 p.m., ABC).

A successful defense lawyer gets a little too familiar with his clients’ lifestyle on the reenactment drama “Untouchable” (8 p.m., ID). Think of it as a nonfiction (and non-comedy) version of “Better Call Saul.”

During a meteor shower, things feel safer “Under the Dome” (9 p.m., CBS).

There are kinder ways to deal with this rather than un-friending your 85-year-old mother. You can arrange your privacy settings on Facebook to limit what she sees and what she can post on your page. But truly, you are 50 years old and should know how to deal with your bigoted mother by now. Dear Annie: I’d like to respond to “Not Buying Narcolepsy,” who complained that her husband sleeps constantly. Many people associate narcolepsy with the way it appears on TV sitcoms, where people fall asleep midsentence. But the most common form of narcolepsy is excessive daytime sleepiness. A year ago, I could not sit down without falling asleep. I woke up sleepy and probably could have slept 12 hours a day and still manage to

JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS

For Thursday, July 30: This year you will work very hard to achieve your goals. Be careful, as you could spend a substantial amount of money attempting to reach them. If you are single, you could meet someone very exciting in the next few weeks. If you are attached, make special plans to enjoy yourselves as a couple in the next few weeks. The stars show the kind of day you’ll have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult Aries (March 21-April 19) You might try to avoid a conflict, but it is inevitable. Tonight: Think “weekend.” Taurus (April 20-May 20) You might see the big picture, but helping others see the same vision could be quite the challenge. Tonight: Accept all the attention you get. Gemini (May 21-June 20) You keep hitting the same wall, and can’t seem to get around it. Tonight: Decide to approach a situation in an entirely different way. Cancer (June 21-July 22) How you handle a personal matter could change greatly once you stop sitting on your anger. Tonight: Go along with a suggestion. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) Don’t be surprised if the anger gets to you. The issue will be how you direct it. Tonight: Choose a stressbuster.

fall asleep in my chair. Narcolepsy can be diagnosed by sleep studies and blood work. Since my diagnosis by a neurologist and finding the right medication, I have my life back. Dear Wide Awake: Narcolepsy isn’t simply about insufficient sleep. It’s a neurological disorder affecting the way the body regulates sleep-wake cycles. Information on narcolepsy is also available through the National Sleep Foundation (sleepfoundation.org). Anyone who is having problems staying awake should also speak to his or her physician and, if necessary, ask for a referral to a sleep clinic.

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

jacquelinebigar.com

Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You have a way about you that draws many people toward you. Tonight: Off to the gym. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Your playfulness will emerge and take you in a new direction. Others are likely to want to join you. Tonight: In weekend mode. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You could be in a situation where you are the only person communicating. Tonight: Get some extra R and R. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You might not understand what all the fuss is about until someone close to you launches into a tirade. Tonight: Let the party begin. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You might want to open up a conversation in the morning, but someone could receive that gesture the wrong way. Tonight: Accept a dinner invitation. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You could be in a situation where you don’t know how to complete or work through a problem. Tonight: All smiles. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) Use the morning to further an important cause. The more supporters you have, the better off you will be. Tonight: Get some zzz’s before your weekend starts. — The astrological forecast should be read for entertainment only.

UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy E. Parker July 30, 2015

ACROSS 1 “... to give her poor dog ___” 6 Peruvian capital 10 Places to be pampered 14 Kind of situation 15 Fifth and Sixth, in N.Y. 16 Verdi heroine 17 Filling out a resume is ... (Part 1) 19 Blood flow stoppage 20 “Tobacco Road” author Caldwell 21 Cookout flavoring 23 Belgrade native 25 Fall flower 26 Intentional celebrity mistreatment 30 One with a degree 33 Medicinal plant 34 Part 2 of 17-Across 40 Two-deck rummy 42 Rat fink 43 Part 3 of 17-Across 45 Contends 46 Harbinger 47 Intended 48 Joyful shout 52 Buffalo county 55 Stimulate, as memory 7/30

58 Stress marks 63 Kind of exam 64 Part 4 of 17-Across 66 Like some pizza orders 67 Radiate 68 Ghana’s capital 69 First family’s home 70 Becomes man and wife 71 Meadow grazers DOWN 1 Part of a large pot 2 Physics Nobel Prize winner 3 Is in debt 4 Shaving accident 5 Join the military 6 Light show light 7 “___ been to the mountaintop” 8 Work well together 9 Italian wine center 10 Potato containers 11 Kitchen light? 12 Think the world of 13 Man-goat of myth 18 “The loneliest number” 22 Small role by a big star

24 Tampa, for one 26 Threelegged event 27 Norwegian king 28 Steak sauce brand 29 Cook at high heat initially 31 Disoriented 32 Golden Rule word 34 What 2-Down studied 35 Everyone has one 36 Created a basket 37 Hip bones 38 Legal claim 39 For fear that 41 Rifle attachment 44 Georgiato-Maine direction

47 Sites that draw visitors 48 Scripted 49 Christmas story villain 50 Over 21 51 Wrinkleresistant fabric 53 Some are inflated 54 Common drink complement 56 Gush 57 Blood pigment 59 Engrave 60 Pleasant 61 Ripped 62 Rice Krispies sound 65 Free (of)

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(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: SPOIL EJECT SOCIAL ORNERY Answer: The forest of scissors had — “PAIR” TREES

BECKER ON BRIDGE


LAWRENCE • STATE

L awrence J ournal -W orld

?

ON THE

The boy who stares at goats

street By Sylas May

Read more responses and add your thoughts at LJWorld.com

What’s your favorite concession stand food? Asked on Massachusetts Street

See story, 6A

John Young/Journal-World Photo

CARSON PINE, 12, OF LAWRENCE, CALMS DOWN HIS GOAT, CLYDE, before showing him off in the Dairy Goat & Meat Goat Show at the Douglas County Fair on Tuesday. The fair continues today with the livestock judging contest, the antique tractor pull and a musical performance by Sellout from 7 to 10 p.m. For full schedule, visit LJWorld.com/fair15. Kelsey Borner, graduate student, Lawrence “Fried dough.”

East Ninth Project names finalists for art, design work By Joanna Hlavacek Twitter: @HlavacekJoanna

Ben Wertenberger, works at Sam’s Club, Olathe “Pretzels.”

Elizabeth Fehr, student, Lawrence “Hot dogs.”

Teresa McComb, nursing home administrator, Glade, Kan. “Snow cones.” What would your answer be? Go to ljworld.com/onthestreet and share it.

HOSPITAL Births Brett and Sarah Anderton, Lawrence, a girl, Wednesday. Caitlin and Robert Reed, Lawrence, a girl, Wednesday.

Victim CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

testified that between June 14 and June 16, Mallory, Adams and Fast beat her with fists, a spoon, a dog toy, metal pliers and a toy piano. The victim said that Fast and Adams were dating and visiting Adams’ sister, Mallory, and Mallory’s fiancé, Thomas, during the nearly three days of abuse. The victim also said that she and Mallory had a romantic relationship and considered each other “wives” until Mallory broke up with or “divorced” her in early June. The victim said that Mallory and Thomas wanted to adopt her 3-year-old son, which she speculated could have been a motive for the abuse. Part of the abuse, she said, involved the four forcing her to make

East Ninth Project officials announced the finalists for two of the project’s commissioned work opportunities during Wednesday evening’s Citizen Advisory Committee meeting at City Hall. Katherine Simmons, representing the Lawrence Cultural Arts Commission, shared the news along with images of each candidate’s work via a projector. The project’s call for artists attracted plenty of local interest as well as applicants from as far away as New York City and Tuscon, Ariz., she said. The two project categories each have six finalists, and they will now advance to the interview portion, slated for 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Friday at City Hall. A final decision should be reached the same day, said Porter Arneill, the city’s director of arts and culture. “This was the most

List CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

“I think it’s incumbent upon The Chamber to help create a whole array of jobs that help us with these highly educated workers, and that’s really what we’re doing,” McElwain said. “We’re trying to bring in different kinds of jobs, from the manufacturing to the bioscience to the call centers and all the things in between.” David Gaston, execua false confession to molesting her son on video and audio recordings. The victim said that Mallory told her that they would stop beating her if she agreed to “sign adoption papers” allowing Mallory and Thomas to adopt her son. The victim eventually left the home on the night of June 16 without her child. She said she had previously signed over “temporary custody” of her child to Thomas and Mallory before a notary, so she didn’t think she was allowed to take her child. After the victim testified, Rieg attempted to change Thomas’ charges to aggravated kidnapping, attempt to commit interference with parental custody, aiding and abetting aggravated battery, aggravated assault and two counts of child endangerment. She also wanted to change Adams’ charges to aggravated kidnapping, aiding and abetting aggra-

thorough artist-selection process I’ve ever witnessed. Every single letter of interest was read by the group together,” Arneill said of the selection panel’s day-long portfolio review earlier this week. “They really worked their tails off.” The East Ninth Artists category, which will ultimately choose up to four artists, drew eight applications. All East Ninth Artists finalists work and/ or live in Lawrence. They are: Meredith Moore, owner of Wonder Fair; Rachael Perry, artist and facilitator of Lawrence Inside Out; artist, designer and filmmaker John Sebelius; musician and social activist Zia; May Tveit, Kansas University associate professor of design; and Nick Carswell, Irish-born, Lawrencebased musician of the band Carswell and Hope. The second category, Integrated Artists, will select up to three artists. Its finalists are: Steven Johnson, of Lawrence, Christopher Janney, of

Boston; Jarret Mellenbruch of Kansas City; Derek Porter, of Kansas City, James Woodfill, of Kansas City; and Sheila Klein of Bow, Wash. The third commissioned opportunity, called Try it Out, drew only two applicants out of the desired six and has been put on hold for now. A little more than half of the 24 artists who applied to the project’s three commissioned opportunities reside within the Kansas City area. Also during Wednesday’s meeting, Citizen Advisory Committee members approved an amendment by City Leslie Soden to the East Ninth Project’s work plan that rejects any potential plans to turn Ninth Street into an “entertainment district.” The issue is scheduled be discussed at next week’s City Commission meeting. — Features reporter Joanna Hlavacek can be reached at jhlavacek@ljworld.com and 832-6388.

Lawrence is a great place to live and we do have a high percent of people with college degrees that live here and would love to stay here.” — David Gaston, executive director of the KU Career Center tive director of the Kansas University Career Center, said his office helps students develop their own job search plans and that many students do want to stay in this area. “Lawrence is a great place to live and we do have a high percent of vated battery, aiding and abetting attempt to commit interference with parental custody and criminal threat. Chief Douglas County District Judge Robert Fairchild said he would announce his decision on whether to bind the two over on the suggested charges at their next court date Aug. 14. Also on Wednesday, Mallory and Fast waived their preliminary hearings and entered pleas of not guilty to their charges. Rieg told Fairchild that she believed attorneys are “close to resolving this case,” but that if Fast and Mallory decide to take the case to trial, she would be requesting a preliminary hearing so she could try to tack on more charges to their cases, as well. Mallory and Fast are expected to appear next in court on Sept. 14, with Mallory’s jury trial scheduled to begin Sept. 16 and Fast’s on Sept. 23.

people with college degrees that live here and would love to stay here,” Gaston said. “I think that should be very enticing to businesses and companies that want to come to the area.” — Reporter Sara Shepherd contributed to this story.

Thursday, July 30, 2015

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BRIEFLY County approves rural recycling pilot

will be used to gauge countywide demand for the services. Around 10,000 residents The program will use in unincorporated Douglas recycling containers proCounty will have better vided by Honey Creek Disrecycling access through posal Inc., but because it is an upcoming pilot program not yet clear how often the approved Wednesday by containers will need to be the Douglas County Comemptied, annual costs may mission. range between $6,300 and The project, which will $18,900, Horn said. likely begin this fall, will establish three recycling LiveWell challenge drop-off locations in the county for residents who do promotes local food not benefit from Lawrence, LiveWell Lawrence Eudora or Baldwin City recychallenges residents to eat cling programs, said Eileen local for the month of AuHorn, the county’s sustaingust with the Farm Fresh ability coordinator. Challenge. The locations will be: LiveWell Lawrence, l Stull United Methodist in partnership with the Church, 251 North 1600 Douglas County Food Policy Road, Lecompton. Council, is asking county l Wakarusa Valley residents to meet the chalSchool, 1104 East 1000 lenge by buying, eating and Road, Lawrence. cooking with local foods. l Vinland Fairgrounds, Participants can also enter 1736 North 700 Road, to win prizes on the Farm Vinland. Fresh Challenge Facebook Previously the Dougpage. las County Public Works The challenge kicked off Facility, 3755 E. 25th St., in during the Chef’s ChalLawrence was slated to be lenge event on Wednesday one of the three drop-off at the Douglas County Fair, locations, but concerns and residents can sign up about residents in the during in-store events on southern part of Douglas Aug. 1. County led commissioners The Farm Fresh Chalto opt for the Vinland Fairlenge is a partnership grounds option instead. with local grocery stores, Because so many including both Hy-Vee locaresidents of unincorpotions, Checkers, The Merc, rated Douglas County are Baldwin City Market, Gene’s underserved with recycling Heartland Foods and Doorservices, the pilot program to-Door Organics.

Pursuit CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

Though its tires were deflating, the vehicle did not stop after the collision, instead turning on to Sixth Street and continuing west as police followed behind. McKinley said that the SUV was “traveling left of center into direct traffic,” causing a public safety concern. The tire deflation eventually made the vehicle uncontrollable, and it stopped on a curb in the westbound lane of Sixth Street near Michigan Street. All three suspects — one female and two males — then exited the vehicle and fled police on foot. Soon after, police found the female suspect near Anderson Rentals, 1312 W. Sixth St. Officers worked to secure a perimeter in the area, McKinley said, and began searching for the male suspects. After about 15 minutes, McKinley said, the remaining suspects were located — one in the second floor of a business office at 1414 W. Sixth St., and another near the back of a home in the 500 block of Florida Street. The man at the office building was taken into custody without incident. The suspect at the

Florida Street home was “uncooperative,” McKinley said, and an officer used a Taser to subdue him. In accordance with Lawrence Police Department policy, the suspect was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital as a precaution, but he appeared to be uninjured by the Taser. McKinley did not know whether a resident of the Florida Street house was home at the time of the incident; however, a woman approached McKinley after the arrests with a pair of sunglasses she allegedly found in her back yard. McKinley said that the three will not be booked into the Douglas County Jail, and instead would be taken to the Kansas City, Kan., area for prosecutorial review in Shawnee. Bush said the KHP assisted Shawnee police in bringing the three suspects and the allegedly stolen vehicle to the Shawnee Police Department on Wednesday evening. The names of the suspects were not released. – Reporter Caitlin Doornbos can be reached at 813-7146 or cvdoornbos@ ljworld.com.

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Thursday, July 30, 2015

Lawrence Journal-World

Going Out

Lawrence.com

A guide to what’s happening in Lawrence

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THE WHOLE HOG

At Leeway Franks, butcher takes all-natural approach to sausages, franks By Joanna Hlavacek

Twitter: @HlavacekJoanna

Lee Meisel first fell in love with sausages as a teenager growing up in rural North Dakota. It was in the midst of deer season one year that Meisel scored a job making sausages at a small butcher shop in his hometown of Mandan. There, he learned many of the techniques that he would later use as 715’s resident butcher. But what Meisel loved most, it turned out, was the people — the early risers who would come for their morning coffee, the groups of men who’d gather there to “shoot the (expletive)” and all the neighbors and friends who passed through the shop’s doors over the course of a day. “I really enjoyed working the counter and interacting with the customers,” Meisel recalls decades later from behind the counter of his newly opened sausage shop and restaurant, Leeway Franks, 935 Iowa St. The name, of course, is a play on his own, and also hints at Meisel’s newly acquired “ability to do my own thing.” The veteran butcher, who worked for three years at 715 before setting up shop at Leeway Franks earlier this month, says the store offers him a chance to do what he does best: make sausage. He’s taking a “no-fuss, straightforward” approach at Leeway Franks, where he and his staff — a “tight-knit crew” of friends and fellow foodindustry professionals Tim McGregor and Kathryn Lunte — are serving up all-natural, locally sourced sausages (no “hot dogs” here, Meisel stresses) all made in-house by Meisel. The 22-seat space, which is open 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday in the former Daylight Donuts space in the Hillcrest Shopping Center, calls to mind the classic — and sometimes offbeat — treats Meisel enjoyed as a kid, notably the concession stands he and his grandfather encoun-

Richard Gwin/Journal-World Photos

LEE MEISEL, BUTCHER AND OWNER OF LEEWAY FRANKS, MAKES HIS OWN SAUSAGES at the newly opened restaurant, 935 Iowa St. Leeway serves a variety of sausages, from an all-beef frankfurter to classic bratwursts, all made in-house by Meisel. Below, a Polish sausage and tater tots are pictured.

tered along lakes in Saskatchewan during their annual summertime fishing trips. French fries smothered in gravy became a favorite over the years, he says. “The idea is to have a personal-memory-driven story,” Meisel says of his vision for Leeway Franks. “I think sausage — and properly prepared sausage — can evoke a lot of memories.” For now, he’s sticking to the classics, with an emphasis on quality over quantity. Just about everything at Leeway Franks is made inhouse, from the all-beef frankfurters found in Meisel’s signature Classic Coney (a riff on Nathan’s Original Coney Island dog topped with brown mustard, sauteed onions and sauerkraut) to pork bratwursts and Polish sausages.

The menu also includes a breakfast sandwich (with sausage, of course) and a pork chop sandwich. Sides range from french fries to homemade tater tots — with the exception of the breakfast sandwich, which comes with Texas toast. Meisel says he’s started to integrate some daily specials (German-style currywurst and sweet Italian sausage, for example) and hopes to offer a kids’ menu down the line as well as a few wild-game selections like bison. But don’t expect to find a veggie dog or even a salad on the menu any time soon, he says. “We’re not going to be pretend to be something we’re not. I’m a butcher — not a chef,” says Meisel, who also teased the possibility of expanding into a drive-thru at some point. “I

don’t see there ever being microgreens on a sausage.” At Leeway Franks, sausages remain the star of the show. They’re made without fillers, and are wrapped in natural casings (i.e., intestines) that give each bite a little “snap,” Meisel says. He describes his shop as a “nose-to-tail” operation. Meisel breaks down whole hogs (which he sources, like Leeway Frank’s beef, from Kansas ranchers) inhouse, grinds the meat to make sausages and uses the bones to produce a stock for the gravy, which he pours over his freshcut french fries. It’s hard work, to be sure, and not exactly a common practice these days, but for Meisel, whose family boasts three generations of North Dakota cattle ranchers, it’s simply how things should be done. The approach has been a hit so far, as the restaurant has been so busy that Meisel has had trouble keeping up with customer demand for sausages in the first couple weeks of business. “It comes down to getting the highest-quality ingredients we can and preparing them as best we can,” Meisel says. “We want to get utility out of these animals and do them justice.” — Features reporter Joanna Hlavacek can be reached at jhlavacek@ ljworld.com and 832-6388.

STYLE SCOUT Kate Hartland Age: 20 Relationship status: Single Hometown: Phoenix Time in Lawrence: Two years Occupation: Student, blogger, employee at Urban Outfitters Dream job: I want Eva Chen’s job at Instagram (head of fashion partnerships). Whom do people say you look like? The girl from the Narnia movies (Anna Popplewell). Describe your style: A lot of black and white. I like to have something unique or different in every outfit. Fashion trends you love: Denim, colorful lipstick and no eye makeup Fashion trends you hate: Neon Fashion influences: Karissa Marie (on Instagram), and working at Urban really influences it. Favorite things about Lawrence? The food. And KU. What is your spirit animal? A dark alley. I was walking behind the Granada once and a door was open and I could hear someone playing and I just felt connected. Tell us a secret: I can never make it all the way through a series on Netflix. Clothing details: Dress, Arizona Trading Co., $9; purse, Urban Outfitters, $50; shoes, Urban Outfitters, $10; hat, Urban Outfitters, $40; necklace, Forever 21.

By McKenna Harford

Mark Maiden Age: 20 Relationship status: Hopeful Hometown: Overland Park Time in Lawrence: Since August 2013 Occupation: Desk assistant at KU’s Office of Multicultural Affairs Dream job: I want to be a contributing writer for the Web mag Everyday Feminism. Whom do people say you look like? Eraserhead Describe your style: Pretty neutral and thrifty. Kind of pretentious thrift-store. Fashion trends you love: Chambray, combat boots and the bandana. I love the bandana. Fashion trends you hate: Open-toed shoes. Fashion influences: Kasper G.V., who works at Henry’s, and my friend Claire Mersmann. Favorite things about Lawrence? I recently bought a bike and I love that I’m within biking distance of lonely country roads. What is your spirit animal? A peacock because the moment it flashes its plume, you know it’s intense and brightly colored, and I’m an intense presence too. Tell us a secret: I wear women’s socks. Clothing details: Shirt, ATC, $15; jeans, American Eagle, $30; shoes, Savers, $6; watch, Target, $20.

DATEBOOK 30 TODAY

Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 6 a.m., Lawrence High School, 1901 Louisiana St. American Red Cross Blood Drive, 11:45 a.m.6 p.m., Lied Center, 1600 Stewart Drive. Brown Bag Concert Series: Sideways Glance, noon-1 p.m., Library Lawn, 707 Vermont St. Tech Classes: eAudiobooks, 4-5 p.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Gaming with the Pro (6-12 graders), 4-5 p.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Cottin’s Hardware Farmers’ Market, 4-6:30 p.m., outside store at 1832 Massachusetts St. Dinner and Big Band music, 5:30 p.m., American Legion Post #14, 3408 W. Sixth St. Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 6 p.m., Lawrence High School, 1901 Louisiana St. Junkyard Jazz Band, 7 p.m., American Legion, 3408 W. Sixth St. Game Night, 7 p.m., VFW, 1801 Massachusetts St. Poetry Reading: Harryette Mullen and Meta DuEwa Jones, 7 p.m., The Raven Book Store, 6 E. Seventh St. Free English as a Second Language class, 7-8 p.m., Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. Affordable community Spanish class, 7-8 p.m., Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. Kansas Repertory Theatre: “Sherlock’s Last Case,” 7:30 p.m., Stage Too! Crafton-Preyer Theatre, 1530 Naismith Drive. Summer Reading Last Bash: Dinner and a Movie: “Despicable Me,” food available for purchase 7:30 p.m., entertainment 7:458:30 p.m., movie 9 p.m., Library Lawn, 707 Vermont St. Team trivia, 9 p.m., Johnny’s West, 721 Wakarusa Drive. Thursday Night Karaoke, 9 p.m., Wayne & Larry’s Sports Bar & Grill, 933 Iowa St.

31 FRIDAY

East Ninth Artist Selection Panel: Artist Interviews, 9 a.m.-1 p.m., Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St. Perry Lecompton Farmers’ Market, 4-6:30 p.m., U.S. Highway 24 and Ferguson Road (in FastTrax Parking Lot), Perry. Fried Chicken Dinner, 5:30-7:30 p.m., Eagles Lodge, 1803 W. Sixth St. Friday Night Dinner: AB’s Pasta Bar, 5:30-7 p.m., VFW, 1801 Massachusetts St. Opening reception: Jim Sallenbach and Lee Lojka, “Above and Below,” 6-8 p.m., Lumberyard Arts Center, 718 High St. Bingo night, doors 5:30 p.m., refreshments 6 p.m., bingo starts 7 p.m., Eagles Lodge, 1803 W. Sixth St. Lawrence Opera Theatre 2015 Season Kickoff, 7-8 p.m., Signs of Life, 722 Massachusetts St. Soda Fountains of Kansas and root beer floats! 7-9 p.m., Watkins Museum of History, 1047 Massachusetts St. Kansas Repertory Theatre: “The Mousetrap,” 7:30 p.m., William Inge Memorial Theatre, Murphy Hall, 1530 Naismith Drive. Blue Orleans, doors 8 p.m., show 9 p.m.-midnight, The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. (18+)


Opinion

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Thursday, July 30, 2015

Congress should reject Iran pact

EDITORIALS

True facts Using incomplete or incorrect ‘facts’ to make his points is damaging the credibility of the Kansas governor.

G

ov. Sam Brownback’s sloppy — or calculated — misuse of various figures to illustrate his administration’s successes is taking a toll on his credibility. Fortunately, political reporters are taking a harder look at the governor’s “facts” and shedding light on cherrypicked data and faulty comparisons. The latest instance was last week when the governor decided to defend his education policies by touting the “fact” that the average teacher salary in Kansas was significantly higher than the average in neighboring Missouri. Saying that “we need more facts in the education debate,” Brownback presented a chart showing that Kansas teachers earn an average of $7,060 per year more than Missouri teachers. Although a Brownback staffer defended the figures as an “apples to apples” comparison, reporters quickly found that was not the case. Not only were 2014-15 Kansas salary figures being compared to 2013-14 Missouri salaries, but, unlike the Missouri figures, the Kansas total included fringe benefits. A check with Missouri officials resulted in figures showing that the average salary for Kansas teachers is higher than for Missouri teachers but only by about $1,255 a year, not more than $7,000. Brownback’s office issued a statement later that day acknowledging the governor’s figures were wrong but said correct figures still “indicate Kansas teachers earn more per year than do Missouri teachers.” So there. (The Kansas Association of School Boards later released figures from the National Center for Education Statistics showing Kansas salaries actually were slightly below Missouri’s.) During the same press conference, Brownback also cited figures that showed Kansas had added 5,700 jobs in June and had 11,500 more jobs than in June 2014. When asked about an analysis by Governing Magazine that showed Kansas had added only 1,700 jobs since December 2014, Brownback quickly pivoted, calling the six-month figures “a snapshot” and putting the focus on private sector job growth. He told reporters his administration was not “cherrypicking” numbers to make the situation look better and pointed to a 1.1 percent increase in private sector jobs between June 2014 and June 2015. “This is what I told you I was going to do, what we ran on: private sector job growth.” The job numbers are a case where the figures Brownback is citing may not be wrong but could be misleading to the public. The same is true for the administration’s repeated contentions about increases in K-12 school funding when a large portion of that “increase” resulted from including the cost of payments to the teachers’ retirement fund in the funding total. It’s natural for any politician to try to pick the figures that make him or her look better. However, when the governor continues to tout self-serving “facts” that don’t fully and accurately reflect various situations, it makes it look like he doesn’t want Kansans to know the truth, and that’s not good.

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Washington — It came two days after the announcement of the nuclear agreement with Iran, yet little mention was made on July 16 of the 70th anniversary of the first nuclear explosion, near Alamogordo, N.M. The anniversary underscored that the agreement attempts to thwart proliferation of technology seven decades old. Nuclear-weapons technology has become markedly more sophisticated since 1945. But not so sophisticated that nations with sufficient money and determination cannot master or acquire it. Iran’s determination is probably related to America’s demonstration, in Iraq and Libya, of the perils of not having nuclear weapons. Critics who think more severe sanctions are achievable and would break Iran’s determination must answer this: When have sanctions caused a large nation to surrender what it considers a vital national security interest? Critics have, however, amply demonstrated two things: First, the agreement comprehensively abandons President Obama’s original goal of dismantling the infrastructure of its nuclear weapons program. Second, as the administration became more yielding with Iran, it became more dishonest with Americans. For example, John Kerry says we never sought “anywhere, anytime” inspections. But on April 6, Ben Rhodes, Obama’s deputy national security adviser, said the agreement would include “anywhere, anytime” inspections. Kerry’s co-negotiator, Wendy Sherman, breezily

George Will

georgewill@washpost.com

The best reason for rejecting the agreement is to rebuke Obama’s long record of aggressive disdain for Congress …” dismissed “anywhere, anytime” as “something that became popular rhetoric.” It “became”? This is disgraceful. Verification depends on U.S. intelligence capabilities, which failed in 2003 (Iraq’s supposed possession of WMD), in 1968 (North Vietnam’s Tet offensive) and in 1941 (Pearl Harbor). As Reuel Marc Gerecht says in “How Will We Know? The coming Iran intelligence failure” (The Weekly Standard, July 27), “The CIA has a nearly flawless record of failing to predict foreign countries’ going nuclear (Great Britain and France don’t count).” During the 1960 campaign, John Kennedy cited “indications” that by 1964 there would be “10, 15 or 20” nuclear powers. As president, he said that by 1975 there might be 15 or 20. Nonproliferation efforts have succeeded but cannot completely succeed forever. It is a law of arms control: Agreements are impossible

until they are unimportant. The U.S.-Soviet strategic arms control “process” was an arena of maneuvering for military advantage, until the Soviet Union died of anemia. Might the agreement with Iran buy sufficient time for Iran to undergo regime modification? Although Kerry speaks of the agreement “guaranteeing” that Iran will not become a nuclear power, it will. But what will Iran be like 15 years hence? Since 1972, U.S. policy toward China has been a worthy but disappointing two-part wager. One part is that involving China in world trade will temper its unruly international ambitions. The second is that economic growth, generated by the moral and institutional infrastructure of markets, will weaken the sinews of authoritarianism. The Obama administration’s comparable wager is that the Iranian regime will be subverted by domestic restiveness. The median age in Iran is 29.5 (in the United States, 37.7; in the European Union, 42.2). More than 60 percent of Iran’s university students, and approximately 70 percent of medical students, are women. Ferment is real. In 1951, Hannah Arendt, a refugee from Hitler’s Germany, argued bleakly (in “The Origins of Totalitarianism”) that tyrannies wielding modern instruments of social control (bureaucracies, mass communications) could achieve permanence by conscripting the citizenry’s consciousness, thereby suffocating social change. The 1956 Hungarian Revolu-

tion changed her mind: No government can control human nature or “all channels of communication.” Today’s technologies make nations, including Iran, porous to outside influences; intellectual autarky is impossible. The best that can be said for the Iran agreement is that by somewhat protracting Iran’s path to a weapon it buys time for constructive churning in Iran. Although this is a thin reed on which to lean hopes, the reed is as real as Iran’s nuclear ambitions are apparently nonnegotiable. The best reason for rejecting the agreement is to rebuke Obama’s long record of aggressive disdain for Congress — recess appointments when the Senate was not in recess, rewriting and circumventing statutes, etc. Obama’s intellectual pedigree runs to Woodrow Wilson, the first presidential disparager of the separation of powers. Like Wilson, Obama ignores the constitutional etiquette of respecting even rivalrous institutions. The Iran agreement should be a treaty; it should not have been submitted first to the U.N. as a studied insult to Congress. Wilson said that rejecting the Versailles Treaty would “break the heart of the world.” The Senate, no member of which had been invited to accompany Wilson to the Paris Peace Conference, proceeded to break his heart. Obama deserves a lesson in the cost of Wilsonian arrogance. Knowing little history, Obama makes bad history. — George Will is a columnist for Washington Post Writers Group.

Trump populism reminiscent of Chavez The conventional wisdom is that Republican presidential hopeful Donald Trump is a populist clown who won’t be able to set the Republican agenda or capture the Republican nomination, much less win the 2016 presidential election. But the conventional wisdom has often been wrong. Trump’s rise from a real estate mogul and reality show performer to the No. 1 Republican hopeful in the latest polls — he’s leading with 24 percent of vote, followed by Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker with 13 percent, and former

Andres Oppenheimer aoppenheimer@miamiherald.com

Both used the same campaign strategy of making outrageous statements on a daily basis to capture the headlines and place themselves at the center of the political stage.” Florida Gov. Jeb Bush with 12 percent, according to a Washington Post/ABC News poll — reminds me of the rise of the late Venezuelan populist leader Hugo Chavez. Like Trump, Venezuela’s anti-American demagogue was not taken seriously by many when he started his campaign in the late-1990s. Granted, Trump and Chavez come from opposite sides of the political spectrum. Trump is the epitome of capitalism, a billionaire who says “I’m rich,” claims to be worth $10 billion — although independent reports put his wealth at much less — and openly calls for

a more capitalist world. Chavez was an army officer who called for socialism. But both Trump and Chavez have a lot in common: They share the three key characteristics of populism. First, populists need to create an enemy, so that they can become leaders of a national cause. And if the enemy is foreign, so much the better. Trump has chosen Mexicans as the enemy, claiming that the United States is being invaded by a flood of undocumented Mexicans, which Mexico is allegedly exporting on purpose. Mexico is “sending people that have lots of problems, and they’re bringing those problems. They’re bringing drugs, they’re bringing crime,” Trump said. Never mind that such claims are wrong. In fact, not only are the vast majority of Mexican immigrants good, hard-working people, but illegal immigration from Mexico has fallen to record lows: from about 400,000 per year about a decade ago to 125,000 nowadays, according to the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey. But Mexico-bashing has become a cornerstone of Trump’s campaign. Nationalist populism seems to be working for him.

Second, populists constantly play the victimization game, claiming that they are about to be killed by the enemy at any time. As ridiculous as it sounds, Trump said last week during a visit to Laredo, Texas, that he was putting himself in “great danger” by traveling to that border city. But “I have to do it, I love this country” he added, with a touch of drama. Before his visit, he had told Fox News that “I may never see you again.” Never mind that Laredo is one of the safest cities in Texas, nor that Laredo’s murder, robbery and assault rates are lower than those of Trump’s hometown of New York City, according to statistics collected from police departments by the FBI, and cited July 23 by The Washington Post’s The Fix column. Third, most populists are ego-maniacs. We used to describe Chavez in this column as a “narcissist-Leninist” president, because his favorite word was “I.” In a speech on Jan. 15, 2011, Chavez used the word “I” 489 times. Trump doesn’t make fivehour-long speeches, like Chavez, but he managed to utter the word “I” 220 times during his 42-minute announcement speech on June 16. There is another thing

that Trump and Chavez have in common: Both used the same campaign strategy of making outrageous statements on a daily basis to capture the headlines and place themselves at the center of the political stage. After each of his tirades, Trump blasts the media for allegedly distorting his comments, which again generates a new round of headlines. That’s exactly how Chavez — without money or a political machine — won his first election in 1998. My opinion: In an ideal world, the media should ignore Trump, or put him in the entertainment section, as The Huffington Post has decided to do. But Trump is news, whether we like it or not, if nothing else because he has already climbed to the No. 1 spot among Republican hopefuls. He may not win the Republican nomination, but he is likely to set the Republican agenda, or — as Ross Perot did before — run as an independent and siphon away Republican votes in 2016. It’s time to take Trump seriously for what he is: a nationalist populist demagogue. Just like Chavez. — Andres Oppenheimer is a Latin America correspondent for the Miami Herald.


8A

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WEATHER

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Thursday, July 30, 2015

L awrence J ournal -W orld

A Rock Chalk sidewalk

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

TODAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

MONDAY

Partly sunny and less humid

Mostly sunny

Sunny and comfortable

Mostly sunny

Partly sunny and very warm

High 89° Low 61° POP: 25%

High 91° Low 66° POP: 15%

High 90° Low 68° POP: 5%

High 90° Low 69° POP: 25%

High 93° Low 70° POP: 15%

Wind SSE 3-6 mph

Wind WSW 3-6 mph

Wind S 3-6 mph

Wind SSW 4-8 mph

Wind S 4-8 mph

POP: Probability of Precipitation

McCook 90/64

Lincoln 91/66

Grand Island 88/66

Kearney 88/65

Oberlin 90/65

Clarinda 86/63

Beatrice 87/65

Concordia 87/65

Centerville 85/65

St. Joseph 87/62 Chillicothe 89/64

Sabetha 87/63

Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 89/68 89/66 Salina 89/63 Oakley Kansas City Topeka 89/66 88/66 89/63 Lawrence 87/64 Sedalia 89/61 Emporia Great Bend 89/67 87/65 86/66 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 87/65 86/64 Hutchinson 87/66 Garden City 88/67 84/64 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 87/68 86/69 85/67 86/67 88/69 87/69 Hays Russell 88/65 89/65

Goodland 89/62

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

LAWRENCE ALMANAC

Through 8 p.m. Wednesday.

Temperature High/low 86°/70° Normal high/low today 89°/68° Record high today 105° in 1980 Record low today 52° in 1971

Precipitation in inches 24 hours through 8 p.m. yest. 0.74 Month to date 8.41 Normal month to date 3.91 Year to date 27.00 Normal year to date 24.26 Today 6:19 a.m. 8:35 p.m. 7:52 p.m. 5:29 a.m.

Today Fri. Today Fri. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Independence 88 70 c 91 70 pc Atchison 89 61 s 91 66 s Fort Riley 88 65 pc 92 68 s Belton 87 66 pc 90 70 s 86 64 pc 88 68 s Burlington 87 65 pc 92 69 pc Olathe Coffeyville 87 69 c 87 67 pc Osage Beach 88 67 s 91 70 s Osage City 88 65 pc 93 69 s Concordia 87 65 s 90 65 s Ottawa 88 64 pc 93 68 s Dodge City 86 64 t 88 65 t Wichita 86 69 t 87 69 pc Holton 90 65 s 92 68 s Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

NATIONAL FORECAST

Last

July 31

Fri. 6:20 a.m. 8:34 p.m. 8:38 p.m. 6:37 a.m.

New

Aug 6

First

Aug 14 Aug 22

LAKE LEVELS

As of 7 a.m. Wednesday Lake

Clinton Perry Pomona

Level (ft)

Discharge (cfs)

877.66 894.34 974.79

500 1208 100

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 78 t Amsterdam 64 51 sh Athens 99 77 s Baghdad 122 89 s Bangkok 92 80 sh Beijing 86 74 t Berlin 67 50 pc Brussels 63 48 sh Buenos Aires 65 61 r Cairo 100 78 s Calgary 79 49 s Dublin 61 48 pc Geneva 74 51 pc Hong Kong 89 80 t Jerusalem 91 70 s Kabul 88 66 pc London 67 49 sh Madrid 94 67 s Mexico City 78 53 t Montreal 84 65 sh Moscow 73 56 c New Delhi 90 80 c Oslo 62 49 sh Paris 70 49 pc Rio de Janeiro 78 69 s Rome 86 71 s Seoul 89 76 t Singapore 89 79 t Stockholm 64 53 t Sydney 67 48 pc Tokyo 90 79 pc Toronto 86 61 s Vancouver 79 58 s Vienna 69 57 pc Warsaw 71 51 pc Winnipeg 78 57 pc

Hi 90 66 98 121 92 84 67 68 67 100 84 62 78 89 92 86 70 90 77 78 71 90 58 74 80 87 87 88 66 65 91 84 79 76 70 74

Fri. Lo W 79 t 52 pc 80 s 90 s 79 c 75 pc 49 pc 51 pc 46 r 77 s 53 s 47 r 59 pc 80 sh 67 s 62 s 52 pc 65 t 54 t 61 pc 57 pc 79 c 50 c 55 pc 68 s 70 s 76 t 79 t 52 c 48 s 80 s 60 pc 58 s 54 pc 49 s 54 pc

Warm Stationary Showers T-storms

Flurries

Snow

Ice

Today Fri. Today Fri. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Memphis 92 71 pc 93 72 s Albuquerque 83 64 t 85 65 t 92 77 t 90 78 t Anchorage 68 56 pc 70 57 pc Miami Milwaukee 86 65 s 86 63 s Atlanta 94 74 pc 89 69 t 84 66 s 81 61 s Austin 99 74 pc 100 75 pc Minneapolis Nashville 88 67 pc 90 66 s Baltimore 90 67 t 91 68 s New Orleans 94 79 pc 92 78 t Birmingham 94 71 pc 92 69 t New York 89 74 t 90 74 s Boise 94 62 s 99 66 s Omaha 90 69 s 90 64 s Boston 88 71 pc 90 69 s Orlando 89 74 t 88 74 t Buffalo 83 65 s 81 64 s 90 73 t 90 72 s Cheyenne 84 55 s 82 55 pc Philadelphia Phoenix 103 88 t 107 88 t Chicago 87 66 s 87 63 t Pittsburgh 87 65 pc 84 66 s Cincinnati 87 64 s 87 64 s Portland, ME 81 65 t 85 62 s Cleveland 85 65 s 85 65 s Portland, OR 101 64 s 99 64 s Dallas 102 81 pc 99 79 t Reno 98 66 s 97 67 pc Denver 89 60 pc 88 59 t Richmond 91 71 t 90 68 pc Des Moines 88 68 s 88 64 s Sacramento 101 66 s 96 65 pc Detroit 86 65 s 87 64 s St. Louis 90 70 s 92 72 s El Paso 96 73 t 95 73 t Fairbanks 71 52 sh 71 55 pc Salt Lake City 92 61 s 94 65 s San Diego 79 71 t 78 70 pc Honolulu 90 78 s 90 78 s Houston 99 79 pc 99 77 pc San Francisco 75 61 pc 74 61 pc Seattle 92 61 s 91 61 s Indianapolis 85 63 s 86 64 s Spokane 95 63 s 99 65 s Kansas City 87 64 pc 88 68 s Tucson 97 78 t 100 78 t Las Vegas 100 80 t 101 82 t Tulsa 92 73 pc 89 70 pc Little Rock 93 71 s 92 70 s 92 74 t 92 74 s Los Angeles 87 70 t 85 68 pc Wash., DC National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: Death Valley, CA 119° Low: West Yellowstone, MT 27°

WEATHER HISTORY

WEATHER TRIVIA™

is often worse, a hurricane or typhoon? Q: Which

Giant hailstones pelted Fort Collins, Colo., on July 30, 1979.

THURSDAY 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 are forecast to drench parts of the East, South and Southwest states today. Hot and humid air will hold in the South. As cooler air expands in the Midwest, a heat wave will build in the Northwest.

Pacific typhoons often reach greater intensities.

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Precipitation

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NBCSN 38 603 151 Mecum Auctions: Collector Cars FNC

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

CNBC 40 355 208 Shark Tank MSNBC 41 356 209 All In With Chris CNN

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City Bulletin Board, Commission Meetings

ESPN 33 206 140 30 for 30 (N) FSM

44 202 200 Anderson Cooper

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SportsCenter (N) Baseball Tonight

aMLB Baseball: Royals at Blue Jays

Mecum Dealmakers Global Rallycross

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45 245 138 ›››‡ The Help (2011) Viola Davis, Emma Stone. (DVS)

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46 242 105 Law & Order: SVU

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BEST BETS WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

SPORTS 7:30

8 PM

8:30

Shawnee, said there have been numerous audits in the past of the state foster care system, and none has resulted in significant changes. “It would be a lesson in futility,” she said. “I don’t know what the answer is, but I don’t think this is going to reveal anything that’s going to be substantive enough (to justify putting it ahead of other scheduled audits).” Trimmer said after the meeting that he was disappointed the committee did not approve the audit. He said he would try again in December when the Post Audit Committee meets again to set a schedule for audits next year. “I think there was reluctance by Republicans on the committee to look at any agencies in the current administration,” Trimmer said. Earlier this month, Douglas County District Judge Peggy Carr Kittel wrote to DCF, expressing concern about rumors she has heard that the agency is planning to change its policies so that only married couples can be licensed as foster parents, a move that could exclude single individuals or cohabiting couples. Others have suggested the agency is considering barring gay couples from being foster parents. DCF spokeswoman Theresa Freed said the agency is reviewing all of its foster care policies to determine if they are sufficient to ensure the safety of children. But she has not said whether the agency is considering a change to limit the program only to married couples. — Peter Hancock can be reached at 354-4222. Email him at phancock@ljworld.com.

July 30, 2015 9 PM

9:30

10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

Cable Channels cont’d

62 The Mentalist

8

They represent regions where two high-profile cases of children dying while in foster care have occurred. “In the last couple of years, I’ve been getting more and more and more concerns presented to me about supervision not being done, placements being changed fairly radically quickly and care plans not being followed through with,” Ward told the committee. “Not just by people whose children are involved in these cases, where you always have a high level of complaint,” he said, “but by providers and people who have worked the system, both inside the agency and outside the agency that have a lot of interaction with the cases, with the children, with the families.” One of the recent deaths occurred in July 2014: A 10-month-old girl in El Dorado died when her foster father left her in a hot car while he was smoking marijuana in the home of his drug dealer. He later pleaded guilty to involuntary manslaughter. And in December, a 10-year-old boy in Wellington was stabbed to death by his mother, a woman who reportedly had struggled with bipolar disorder. Trimmer said he believed that was a case in which child welfare officials should have known about potential danger to the boy’s welfare. “These are the most vulnerable, the weakest, and they have (been) victims,” Ward told the committee. “Remember, these children have already gone through crisis in their family.

10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

Network Channels

M

Foster

They’ve been physically abused, sexually abused, emotionally abused, or grossly neglected, or we wouldn’t be talking about them being in foster care.” Ward and Trimmer asked for an audit to look into two questions: whether DCF’s removal and reunification processes are adequate to ensure children’s safety and whether foster care contractors have sufficient capacity to provide necessary care. Governmental auditing in Kansas is done by the Legislative Division of Post Audit, an agency within the legislative branch of government. It works under the direction of the Post Audit Committee and has no independent authority to conduct audits unless they are approved by the committee. Republicans on the panel voted against launching an audit immediately, in part, they said, because the Department of Children and Families is already conducting its own review of the foster care system, including the qualifications it requires of foster parents. They also noted that an interim legislative committee will hold hearings this fall to review the foster care system and the qualifications it requires of foster parents. Sen. Julia Lynn, ROlathe, said DCF should not be the target of investigation because decisions about placing children in state custody are made by judges. “I am not quite sure that we’re at the point where this particular scope statement is ready to go forward because there are extraneous issues involved that are bigger than DCF,” she said. Rep. Peggy Mast, R-

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

REGIONAL CITIES

SUN & MOON Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset

Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photo

WORKERS INSTALL A NEW SIDEWALK RAILING WITH “ROCK CHALK JAYHAWK” lettering Tuesday on the Irving Hill Drive overpass across Iowa Street. The south side will have the famous KU cheer while the north side will read “University of Kansas.”

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401 411 421 440 451

››› Ted (2012, Comedy) Mark Wahlberg. ›‡ Grandma’s Boy (2006) ›‡ Big Daddy (1999) Adam Sandler.

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

351 350 285 287 279 362 256

211 210 192 195 189 214 132

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501 515 545 535 527

300 310 318 340 350

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Law enforcement carry a piece of debris from an aircraft found near the island of La Reunion in the French Indian Ocean. A U.S. official told the Associated Press that investigators have a “high degree of confidence” that the debris is of a wing component unique to the Boeing 777, the same model as the Malaysia Airlines plane that disappeared last year. Story IN NEWS PRESIDENTIAL COMMUTATIONS

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In a sign of its resilience, the Islamic State appears to have recruited fighters to offset 15,000 militants killed in a U.S.led airstrike campaign approaching its anniversary, U.S. military and intelligence estimates show. More than 5,500 airstrikes by a U.S.-led coalition in Iraq and Syria that began Aug. 8, 2014, have forced the Islamist group to disperse its fighters, making them less of a threat, according to the military estimates. A year ago, the CIA said it believed the Islamic State, also known as ISIL or ISIS, had from 20,000 to 31,500 fighters in Iraq and Syria. The estimate remains the same this year, said a U.S. intelligence official, who asked not to be named because he was not authorized to discuss the issue. The U.S.-led coalition confirmed the 15,000 figure but would not discuss it publicly. The deaths are tracked as part of daily battle damage assessments and coalition efforts to avoid civilian casualties. Aerial surveillance assesses the impact of airstrikes, including enemy casualties. One reason the military does not trumpet death estimates is lingering embarrassment from the Vietnam War, when the Pentagon announced daily enemy death figures as a sign of military progress. Those counts proved to be exaggerated and U.S. troops ultimately withdrew from Vietnam, having failed to defeat the army of communist North Vietnam. In the current conflict, the U.S. military has warned that death tolls are a poor measure of progress in the conflict. Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told U.S. troops in Iraq this month that battling the Islamic State will last for years and will involve countering its brutal ideology in addition to battlefield showdowns. Commanders said the daily air campaign, combined with successes by Iraqi and Kurdish ground forces, have weakened ISIL. “The tide of momentum has begun to creep against them,” said Brig. James Learmont, a British coalition official in Baghdad. He said there is evidence militants who try to desert are assassinated. Says Andrew Krepinevich, an analyst at the Center for Budgetary Assessments, of ISIL body counts: “They don’t show any signs of running out of people.” WASHINGTON

Gregory Korte 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.

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WASHINGTON One is a high school counselor. Two or three work in restaurants. Some can’t find a job. Others have slipped into obscurity. The Obama Eight, as they call themselves, don’t fit into easy categories, except for this: They were all convicted of drug crimes, and they were among the first to have their sentences commuted by President Obama. As Obama prepares to issue more commutations in the last months of his presidency — part of an aggressive attempt to use his pardon power to shorten long drug sentences — many of them say they feel the weight of criminal justice changes on their shoulders. If any one of them returns to prison, it could taint the clemency initiative and make it harder for other deserving inmates to be released, they say. They’ve become leading voices for leniency, especially for drug crimes. Last year, many of them came to Washington to lobby members of Congress and meet

NATHAN ARMES FOR USA TODAY

A new start outside prison

Billy Ray Wheelock among those whose stories are on 2B

with Pardon Attorney Deborah Leff, the Justice Department official whose job it is to make clemency recommendations to the president. After nearly three years without commuting a single sentence, Obama has issued 89 commutations as president. It’s a record that ranks as one of the “least merciful” in presidential history, said P.S. Ruckman Jr., a political scientist who blogs about the president’s pardon power.

Of the 89, one died shortly after her release, 47 have yet to be released, and 21 were released Tuesday. The 46 sentences Obama commuted this month won’t be completed until Nov. 10. (As recently as the Clinton administration, people whose sentences were commuted were released the same day.) The other 20 are free. The Obama Eight have been out the longest, most of them a little more than a year. In many ways, the challenges they face are not unlike anyone else released from prison after a long sentence: finding a job, reuniting with relatives, getting a driver’s license and adjusting to the speed of an Internet-driven world that barely existed when they were sent away. “They have won the lottery of commutation from the president,” said Julie Stewart of Families Against Mandatory Minimums, which has encouraged Obama to use his clemency power to shorten long sentences. “I think clemency is an unbelievably random act that is a huge gift when you get it, and an utter devastation when you’re denied.”

‘Unwarranted,’ lawyer says of Ohio officer’s indictment Ohio shooting video shows no struggle Sharon Coolidge, Kevin Grasha and Dan Horn The Cincinnati Enquirer

A University of Cincinnati police officer was indicted Wednesday on a murder charge for fatally shooting a black motorist during a traffic stop 10 days ago, but his lawyer called the charge “absolutely unwarranted.” It’s the first time a police officer in Cincinnati has been charged with murder for killing CINCINNATI

someone while on duty. largest of more than 20 cities and dozens of other Ray Tensing, 25, faces 15 years to life in prison if communities, reviewed evidence all day Monday he’s convicted, and the university’s police chief as part of a grand-jury investigation into the incidismissed Tensing from the force immediately. dent, which has put the city on edge and rekin“Murder is the purposeful killing of anothdled worries about the HAMILTON COUNTY JAIL sometimes strained relaer,” said Tensing’s lawyer, Officer Tensing Stewart Mathews. “There tionship between police wasn’t any purpose to kill this fel- and African Americans here. la.” He said he had expected his The University of Cincinnati client to be indicted but on lesser canceled classes Wednesday in charges in the death of Samuel anticipation of the announceDuBose, 43, of Cincinnati. ment. Ohio Highway Patrol The indictment came after 12 troopers arrived on campus by citizens who live in Hamilton late morning but no violence was County, where Cincinnati is the reported. A Black Lives Matter

“He should never have been a police officer. ... This is without question murder.” Joe Deters, Hamilton County (Ohio) prosecutor

rally in the rain downtown drew about 100 peaceful protesters. “He purposely killed him,” Hamilton County Prosecutor Joe Deters said of Tensing. “He should never have been a police officer. ... This is without question murder.”

Tensing stopped DuBose’s car July 19 in Cincinnati’s Mount Auburn neighborhood for having a missing front license plate. The officer’s body camera captured video that prosecutors say was crucial to the investigation. The video reviewed by The Cincinnati Enquirer indicates that DuBose was shot after a calm exchange. No violence or physical altercation was shown, and DuBose does not appear belligerent or aggressive toward Tensing. The incident turns violent when DuBose leans toward the passenger seat and turns his ignition key, starting the car. Tensing then fires the fatal shot.


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THE OBAMA EIGHT

‘I was buried. ... Now I have a new life’

They are among the first people to have their sentences for drug convictions commuted by President Obama. They’ve been out for about a year, facing the challenges and responsibilities of a new start outside confinement, and they want to set an example, so more prison doors swing open.

Ezell Gilbert

Stephanie George

Planned to drive a truck

Gilbert was 25 years old in 1997 when he was arrested for selling crack cocaine and marijuana out of his car in a Tampa housing project. Buyers would get in and out of his car to buy their drugs while his 5-year-old daughter sat in the back seat, prosecutors said. When police arrived, he tried to flee — without his daughter. Despite misgivings about the length of the mandatory minimum sentence, the judge gave Gilbert 24 years in prison. Then his case took a number HILLSBOROUGH of odd turns. He COUNTY SHERIFF appealed his sentence, arguing that his gun possession conviction wasn’t a violent crime, thus he couldn’t be labeled a “career violent offender.” His appeals were denied, then granted, then denied again. For 10 months beginning in 2010, he was released from prison, married his girlfriend and took on odd jobs before losing an appeal and being sent back to prison. His attorney, Allison Guagliardo, said Gilbert has declined interviews since being released. She told The Tampa Tribune when he was released in 2013 that he looked forward to being reunited with his wife, three daughters and newborn grandson and hoped to work as a truck driver after getting a commercial driving course in prison.

Clarence Aaron Denied by Bush

Clarence Aaron’s case did more to highlight problems in the pardon system than any other single case since President Clinton’s midnight pardons of 2001. An inspector general’s investigation found that Pardon Attorney Ronald Rodgers misrepresented key facts of the Aaron case to President George W. Bush. White House officials told The Washington Post that had they known the sentencing judge and prosecutor both supported Aaron’s application, they would FAMILY PHOTO have supported clemency. President Obama commuted Aaron’s sentence — five years after Bush denied it — and replaced Rodgers. “Do I have hard feelings? I don’t. I’m glad the situation came about, because it opened up a light for other people,” Aaron said. “More cases are now being reviewed.” Aaron said the publicity around his case has helped him to readjust to life after prison. He works at a restaurant and mentors middle-schoolers in his hometown of Mobile, Ala.

‘The girlfriend problem’

NATHAN ARMES FOR USA TODAY

Billy Ray Wheelock, second from right, and family members say a blessing over food served during a family reunion in Denver. In 2013, President Obama granted Wheelock clemency.

Billy Ray Wheelock Don’t shy away

As he was serving what was supposed to be a life sentence for drug trafficking, Billy Ray Wheelock met a woman online through a Muslim dating site. “She said one thing that won my heart completely. And this was even before I knew I would be released,” he said. “She visited me and she said, ‘Billy, if this is the life God chose for me, then even if you have a life sentence, I’m going to love you forever.’ ” Two months later, Wheelock

learned his sentence had been commuted. Two days after leaving a halfway house, they married. Wheelock studied restaurant management and heating and air conditioning while in prison. He said a disability has slowed him down — he injured his foot in a prison football league after winning seven straight championships — but he’s working on a number of ventures, from a book about his time in prison (working title:

Faith Without a Date), to motivational speaking and counseling prison inmates. He said a commutation should give job seekers a leg up. “What better reference can you give an employer?” he said. “In order for you to get executive clemency from the president, that means you have to be on your best behavior during the time you were in prison. “You shouldn’t shy away from where you’ve been. Use it as your weapon.”

Stephanie George was released from prison at 8 a.m. April 17, 2014. By 9 a.m., she was taking the state licensing exam to regain her cosmetology license. Before serving 17 years of a life sentence, George worked in her mom’s beauty shop and did hair out of her home. That’s where she was in 1996 when police raided her place and found 500 grams of cocaine. Because of her record selling smaller amounts of drugs — always for her drugdealing boyfriends — she received a life FAMILY PHOTO sentence. “She was a victim of what we call ‘the girlfriend problem,’ ” said Thomas Means, her Washington attorney. “There’s these cases and then there’s a billion others with very appealing facts that cry out to you, ‘This is an injustice.’ You just can’t take them all.” While she was in prison, she said, someone stole her identity to get a loan, and when the loan went into default, the bank was told she was dead. She works 25 hours a week at a buffet restaurant but has had trouble getting anything more. “I can honestly say I’ve probably filled out some 400 applications. I’ve had a lot of people calling me for interviews once they see my résumé,” she said. Once they ask her about her criminal conviction, “everything goes downhill from there.”

Helen A. Gray

Jason Hernandez

Ricky E. Patterson

Reynolds Wintersmith

When Helen Alexander Gray went to prison, her 18-year-old was left to watch over her 16year-old. By the time she got out, she was a great-grandmother. “They were by themselves,” she said. “They never spend a night without me. When they took me, they took everything from me. Then in 20 years, your children get grown and go about their business.” Gray denies she dealt drugs, but she got more time than her boyfriend and co-conspirator. “He qualified for the drug program,” she said, referring to a program that gives time off for drug treatment. “I never sold any drugs. I never smoked a cigarette, I didn’t drink beer. Never touched liquor.” In her clemency petition, she claimed sexual harassment by prison officials. She said she was delighted when President Obama visited a prison, and she hopes he can root out the problems in the system. The commutation hasn’t helped her find a job outside prison. In her petition, she said she wanted to work in a mortuary or a restaurant. “I need a job, and I want a job. I’m not going to lie. I have a convicted felony,” she said. “I want to come in your door straight and tell you from the get-go.”

President Obama granted Jason Hernandez his freedom in 2013, but he’s still not completely free. Obama commuted Hernandez’s sentence from life to 20 years. He was still short of those 20 years, so he spent a year in a halfway house and is serving home confinement until Aug. 11. He can drive to work or to the store, but he has to check in with the Bureau of Prisons each time. Hernandez isn’t complaining. “I have a FAMILY PHOTO smile on my face when I tell you my story. I was practically dead for 17 years. I felt like I was buried alive. And now I have a new life,” he said. Hernandez works at Cafe Momentum, a Dallas restaurant that gives on-the-job training to young offenders, as a supervisor and mentor. He’s worked as a welder on the side and even turned down a job as a paralegal. “It’s really not about the money. I learned the hard way that money’s not everything.” He said he suspects his early release is some kind of presidential experiment, to see if it works. “I kind of live my life like that.”

Unlike a full pardon — which restores all civil rights to someone convicted of a crime — the commutation of a sentence often comes with strings attached. For each of the Obama Eight, those strings came in the form of at least five years of court supervision. For Ricky Eugene Patterson, it was 10 years. Patterson had an exemplary prison history. Prison records show he earned “outstanding work reports,” maintained a healthy lifestyle and participated in religious services twice a week. He took classes in restaurant management. Over 18 years of his life sentence, he petitioned the court for a modification of his sentence seven times. Each time, it was rejected. Then in 2013, Obama commuted his sentence. Obama asked the court to modify his sentence by removing the supervision, arguing that he “has tried to live a productive life by holding steady employment while supporting himself.” Patterson did not return calls to his home or through his attorney or to a letter seeking comment. The government argues that the amount of cocaine he was caught with was “significant,” and it noted previous charges for drug trafficking, violating his probation and escaping from custody.

Obama’s commutation of Reynolds Wintersmith’s life sentence raised eyebrows because of his relationship to Deval Patrick, the Massachusetts governor and a close Obama ally. Patrick said he didn’t recall ever meeting his first cousin and wasn’t involved in the clemency process, The Boston Globe reported. The brief controversy over his release — and the 21 years in prison that preceded it — still weigh on Wintersmith. “There are some questions FAMILIES AGAINST I’m not going to MANDATORY MINIMUMS answer. This is my life you’re talking about,” he told a reporter. “I’m not living it over and over again. I don’t have to talk about the past any longer, because I’m in a better position now. “If you Google ‘Reynolds Wintersmith,’ the only thing that’s attached to my whole life is me getting out of a prison,” he said. “I still face certain perceptions. I need to work doubly hard to make sure I’m not misunderstood.” Wintersmith lives in Chicago, where the principal of a charter school for former high school dropouts gave him a job.

prevail,” Treasury Secretary Jack Lew told reporters Wednesday. “But I think the burden is also on us to make the case.” — David Jackson

CLIMB ON IN

Great-grandmother

‘Smile on my face’

Still on probation

‘A better position’

IN BRIEF OBAMA WORKS OVERTIME TO SELL IRAN NUCLEAR DEAL

It’s going to be hard for congressional opponents to derail the Iran nuclear agreement, but President Obama and aides are mounting an aggressive campaign for it anyway. Obama and other backers of the deal are busy making the case that it will deny Iran the ability to make nuclear weapons and remove the prospect of military confrontation with Tehran. In making its case, the Obama administration is facing a Republican-run Congress where leaders say the inspections system outlined in the agreement is leaky, and will give Iran room to cheat. While congressional Republicans have the numbers to force through a “resolution of disapproval” of the agreement, Obama would veto it — forcing opponents to round up a two-thirds majority vote to actually defeat the deal. “I’m confident that we can

tunnel terminal in the French port town of Calais on Tuesday night. On Monday, more than 2,000 migrants, desperate to reach England, tried to enter the terminal, causing delays for travelers. Local media reported that the dead man was of Sudanese origin and was hit by a truck. — Jane Onyanga-Omara

NEW TSA CHIEF PLANS TO CLOSE SECURITY LOOPHOLES

TSA will retrain every airport screener by the end of the September, the agency’s new chief told a House panel Wednesday. The effort comes after a report this year from the Department of Homeland Security’s inspector general that found screeners missed mock bombs and weapons in tests 67 of 70 times. Transportation Security Administrator Peter Neffenger said he met with the inspector general to learn how the failures happened. “My highest priority is to ensure solutions to the recent covert testing failures,” Neffenger said. “This is a huge concern, and it greatly disturbs me that we had that failure at the checkpoint.” — Bart Jansen

Corrections & Clarifications

MIGUEL RIOPA, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Living people are carried in coffins Wednesday during the annual La Fiesta de Santa Marta de Ribarteme resurrection ceremony in Las Nieves, Spain. The festival gives thanks for those who survived near-death experiences in the past year. MAN DIES AS MIGRANTS STORM FRANCE-U.K. TUNNEL

A man was killed as more than 1,000 migrants tried to storm the

tunnel that links Britain with France for the second successive night. At least 1,500 people are said to have tried to enter the Euro-

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.

A State-by-State item Tuesday misstated the location of a hologram rap concert shut down by police in Hammond, Ind. A story Tuesday about convicted spy Jonathan Pollard misstated his age. He’s 60.


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NATION/WORLD

Aircraft debris linked to MH370 Investigators have ‘confidence’ of connection Doug Stanglin and Bart Jansen USA TODAY

Aircraft debris found off the coast of Reunion Island in the Indian Ocean appears to belong to the same type of plane as Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, which vanished more than a year ago, a U.S. official told the Associated Press

on Wednesday. French aviation experts will examine an aircraft wing tip — possibly a flap — and other debris to determine whether it came from the Boeing 777-200ER, which disappeared after taking off from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, on March 8, 2014, bound for Beijing with 239 people aboard. No trace of the plane has been found,

despite months of searches. Investigators have a “high degree of confidence” that a photo of aircraft debris is of a wing component unique to the Boeing 777, said the official, who was not identified. The official says investigators — including a Boeing air safety investigator — have identified the YANNICK PITON, AFP/GETTY IMAGES component as a “flaperon” from Police carry a piece of debris from an unidentified aircraft found in the the trailing edge of a 777 wing, AP coastal area of Saint-Andre de la Reunion, in the east of the French Indian reported. Ocean island of La Reunion, on Wednesday.

AFGHAN INTEL AGENCY: TALIBAN LEADER DEAD ABIR SULTAN, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY

Jonathan Pollard’s wife, Esther, thanks God that her husband, Jonathan, is near the end of his incarceration in the USA.

Pollard backers target U.S. law Israelis want convicted spy to be able to move there Michele Chabin

Special for USA TODAY

Now that convicted spy Jonathan Pollard will soon be released from a U.S. prison, his ardent backers here are shifting their focus from seeking his freedom to overcoming a U.S. law that prevents him from moving to Israel for five years. After serving nearly 30 years, Pollard, 60, was granted parole from his life sentence starting Nov. 21. Parolees are required to get government permission for foreign travel for five years after their release. JERUSALEM

“Why won’t the U.S. government allow him to go to Israel? You’d think they would be happy to get rid of him.” Adina Mishkoff

Pollard, a U.S. naval analyst arrested in 1985 for giving classified military intelligence documents to Israel, was granted Israeli citizenship several years after his incarceration. His second wife, Esther Pollard, an American he married while serving his sentence, has repeatedly said her husband would like to move to Israel when he gets released from prison. That won’t happen, the White House said. “The president has no intention of altering the terms of Mr. Pollard’s parole,” Alistair Baskey, a spokesman for the White House’s National Security Council, said Tuesday. Baskey said Pollard committed “very serious crimes.” The White House stance has angered advocates of Pollard, who has had health problems. They have been lobbying for his release for 30 years at dozens of rallies in Israel and the United States and meetings with decision-makers in both countries “Pollard’s sentence was way over the top,” said Adina Mishkoff, an American-Israeli who lives outside Jerusalem. “Why won’t the U.S. government allow him to go to Israel? You’d think they would be happy to get rid of him.” Not all Israelis are waiting for Pollard to move to here. “Pollard is not an Israeli hero. That is a fabrication with roots in political interests,” wrote Nahum Barnea in Yedioth Ahronoth.

Mullah Omar’s 2013 death is announced as peace talks near

Paul Singer USA TODAY

Jane Onyanga-Omara and Katharine Lackey USA TODAY

A

fghanistan’s main intelligence agency said Wednesday that Mullah Mohammed Omar, the one-eyed, reclusive supreme leader of the Afghan Taliban, died more than two years ago. Abdul Hassib Seddiqi, the spokesman for Afghanistan’s National Directorate of Security, said Omar died in a Pakistani hospital near the city of Karachi in 2013. The Taliban — which has long denied rumors of Omar’s demise — had yet to issue a statement on the announcement. White House spokesman Eric Schultz said, “We do believe the reports of his death are credible,” but he declined to comment further. Possible successors include Mullah Akhtar Mansour, the acting head of the Taliban, and Omar’s son, Mohammad Yacoub, who has taken on a more prominent role in the organization, an unidentified official briefed by Taliban leadership told The Wall Street Journal. The lack of leadership does not seem to have weakened the Taliban’s operations over the past year, said Anthony Cordesman, an analyst with the Center for Strategic and International Studies. Taliban militants have launched attacks, attempting to capitalize on the drawdown of U.S. and coalition forces. It was unclear why Omar’s death was being confirmed days before the start of another round of peace talks between the Afghan government and the Taliban aimed at ending nearly 14 years of fighting. The Journal said divisions within the Taliban, particularly over the peace talks, and questions about who leads the group may have finally provoked the admission that Omar is dead. This month, the Taliban issued a message justifying the peace talks and attributed it to Omar to mark the Muslim festival of Eid al-Fitr. Omar’s leadership appeared to unify the Taliban, and confirmation of his death could complicate peace talks if members split on whether to continue their insurgency or enter into a ceasefire agreement. Omar may have been living in the cities of Quetta and Karachi in Pakistan since the Taliban was toppled by a U.S.-led invasion in Afghanistan in 2001, Afghan broadcaster TOLOnews reported. The United States toppled the regime for giving safe haven to alQaeda leader Osama bin Laden before the 9/11 attacks. The U.S. State Department put a $10 million bounty on Omar’s head. Pakistani newspaper The Express Tribune reported that a former Afghan Taliban minister and current leadership council member, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said Omar died from tuberculosis. The ex-minister said Omar’s son identified the body, which was buried in Afghanistan, the Tribune reported. Contributing: Jim Michaels

Rep. Fattah charged with conspiracy

EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY

This image purportedly shows the Afghan Taliban’s supreme leader, Mullah Mohammed Omar.

Where are the world’s other terror leaders? Jim Michaels l USA TODAY Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar’s death leaves only one other top terrorist with a connection to the 9/11 attacks — Ayman al-Zawahiri — who has a huge bounty on his head. Here are some of the most prominent terror leaders who remain at large: SIRAJUDDIN HAQQANI: $10 MILLION BOUNTY

Haqqani is the operational head of a militant group in Afghanistan that has been responsible for attacks on coalition and Afghan targets, including suicide bombings and kidnappings. The State Department named his network a terrorist organization in 2012.

AFP/GETTY IMAGES

AYMAN AL-ZAWAHIRI: $25 MILLION BOUNTY

Zawihiri was Osama bin Laden’s top adviser and assumed the job as leader of al-Qaeda after bin Laden’s death. The U.S. has indicted him in connection with the Aug. 7, 1998, bombings of U.S. embassies in Tanzania and Kenya that killed 224 people.

WASHINGTON Federal prosecutors announced criminal charges Wednesday against Rep. Chaka Fattah, D-Pa., alleging that the 11term Philadelphia congressman conspired with others to hide a $1 million loan from a wealthy donor to his unsuccessful 2007 campaign for mayor of Philadelphia. Fattah told reporters Wednesday that he has not been involved in any wrongdoing, but that he has not yet seen the indictment. “There is 2009 GETTY IMAGES Fattah: “A lot for a lot for us to us to digest.” digest,” he said, noting that the investigation has been going on for many years. The 29-count indictment alleges that Fattah arranged to have a non-profit organization that he founded and controlled pay back the loan using federal grant money and charitable donations. The indictment also alleges that Fattah agreed to help a campaign consultant pursue federal grant money to offset Fattah’s $130,000 debt to the consultant. Prosecutors also allege that Fattah used campaign funds to pay off his son’s student loan debt. “By misusing campaign funds, misappropriating government funds, accepting bribes and committing bank fraud, as alleged in the indictment, congressman Fattah and his co-conspirators have betrayed the public trust,” said U.S. Attorney Zane David Memeger of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. Last fall, Fattah’s political adviser, Thomas Lindenfeld, pleaded guilty to using his consulting firm to hide the $1 million loan. Fattah said he would recuse himself from his leadership position on the House Appropriations Committee, where he serves as the senior Democrat on a subcommittee overseeing the Justice Department budget. He also serves as chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation, and Rep. Jim Clyburn, D-S.C., told MSNBC he suspected Fattah would also step down from that position while the charges are pending. “I hope things come out well for him,” Clyburn said.

Contributing: Kevin Johnson

RAHAT DAR EPA

HAFIZ MOHAMMED SAEED: $10 MILLION BOUNTY

AFP/GETTY IMAGES

ABU BAKR AL-BAGHDADI: $10 MILLION BOUNTY

Al-Baghdadi is the leader of the Islamic State, a terror group that has taken over large swaths of Iraq and Syria and is quickly expanding its influence throughout the region. Al-Baghdadi got his start as a leader of al-Qaeda in Iraq. The Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL, split from al-Qaeda in 2013 and grew rapidly.

Saeed is a founder of the Pakistani Taliban, which seeks to establish radical Islamist rule over India and Pakistan. “Saeed is suspected of masterminding numerous terrorist attacks, including the 2008 Mumbai attacks, which resulted in the deaths of 166 people, including six American citizens,” according to the State Department.

YASIN AL-SURI: $10 MILLION BOUNTY

The U.S. government accuses Suri of being a top al-Qaeda facilitator based in Iran. He has helped facilitate the movement of militants into Syria and Western countries. Sources: State Department; USA TODAY research

PRESIDENT AND PUBLISHER

John Zidich

EDITOR IN CHIEF

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STATE-BY-STATE News from across the USA ALABAMA Dale County: Traw-

ick Redding, a former jail inmate, claims two correctional officers used a “deadly and venomous snake as a means of torture” two years ago, AL.com reported. Redding seeks compensatory damages as well as $3 million in punitive damages.

ALASKA Fairbanks: Higher

summer temperatures brought about a decline in white spruce growth in the interior and a corresponding increase in growth in the western part of the state, researcher Glenn Juday told newsminer.com. ARIZONA Scottsdale: Facing higher costs and lower sales, Z’Tejas filed for bankruptcy protection, planning to sell the business, which includes five restaurants, The Arizona Republic reported.

HIGHLIGHT: IOWA

Bird ban means magician will have to wing it Danielle Ferguson

wich: A man stabbed a neighbor after asking him to turn down the volume on his television, WPRITV reported.

SOUTH CAROLINA Columbia:

On Tuesday, Columbia Professional Baseball will announce the team name and the official logo for the New York Mets Single A affiliate moving into the city’s new stadium on Bull Street, WLTX-TV reported.

The Des Moines Register DES MOINES How much could the bird flu possibly affect a young magician’s magic act? Turns out, quite a bit. The Iowa Department of Agriculture and Live Stewardship in May canceled all live bird exhibitions from county fairs and the Iowa State Fair due to the avian influenza outbreak that’s stretched across the Midwest. Now a young magician set to perform in the Iowa State Fair Bill Riley Talent Search was told he wouldn’t be able to perform a major part of his act involving his two pet doves. Michael Osman, a 19-yearold magician from Des Moines, was told after performing at the Warren County Fair the doves weren’t allowed. And the doves are the stars of his show. “It’s a huge part of his act,” Bill Riley, founder of the talent search, said Tuesday night. “This young man is wildly talented.” Osman, who goes by Michael Oz as a stage name, said Tuesday night that he’s still hoping he’ll be able to use the doves, but he’s brainstorming other options if the bird barring holds. “Without them it takes out a big majority of the act,” Osman said. “I thought about using

RHODE ISLAND East Green-

SOUTH DAKOTA Pierre: John Clark was named the new publisher of the Capital Journal here. Clark comes from Delaware, Ohio, where he spent several years as a group publisher for Civitas Media.

MICHAEL OZ MAGIC, SPECIAL TO THE DES MOINES REGISTER

Magician Michael Osman was told he couldn’t use his pet doves in his act at the Iowa State Fair talent competition. fake birds or a rabbit or borrowing a rabbit from a friend. I also thought about poking fun at them for not letting me use my birds by using Dove shampoo.” He said he has also been practicing with fish, so that may be an option. Riley said he and Osman are following the Department of Agriculture’s guidelines. Riley tried to promptly warn Osman so he could find a replacement for the act. “I just feel bad for Michael,” Riley said. “He’s a tremendous

performer. He’ll take this negative and turn it into a positive. He’s worked way too hard to let this knock him down.” Riley said if Osman were to use props, Riley would inform the audience and the judges of the switch that had to be made. Osman isn’t the only one affected by the Department of Agriculture’s decision to remove the bird exhibits from the fair. Youths in FFA or 4-H who had planned on showing a rooster, hen or other poultry, were forced to pull their projects or use props, Riley said.

TENNESSEE Rockvale: GOP state Rep. Rick Womick wrote a letter earlier this week to all of the state’s 95 county clerks, telling them to ignore the recent Supreme Court decision upholding same-sex marriage, the (Murfreesboro) Daily News Journal reported. TEXAS Baytown: A minister

asleep in his church office earlier this week shot an intruder after hearing a disturbance, KHOU-TV reported. The pastor of The Church of New Beginnings, Benny Holmes, was at the church around 6:15 a.m. CT, grabbed a gun and ended up shooting Lee Marvin Blue, 27, whom police say was attempting to burglarize the church.

ARKANSAS Little Rock:

More than 47,000 private-option enrollees and other Medicaid recipients are set to lose their coverage as a result of a check of recipients’ incomes, Human Services Department spokesman Amy Webb said, according to ArkansasOnline.

CALIFORNIA San Francisco: Public Works crews painted buildings with a clear-coat sealant that, in theory, would splash back urine or any other liquid sprayed onto it, the Los Angeles Times reported. COLORADO Denver: Police will be giving out 500 gift cards good for a free pizza to people in Denver who are seen acting courteous, helping others and obeying the law, KUSA-TV reported. CONNECTICUT West Hartford:

Four people were arrested for using counterfeit money at food shops here, wfsb.com reported.

DELAWARE Dover: Gov. Markell unveiled a program to reduce the cost of buying a house in the state. The Delaware State Housing Authority will cover the mortgage insurance costs for new home buyers who cannot afford the 20% down payment at the time of settlement, The News Journal reported. Markell expects the program could save potential homeowners roughly $73 per month, or $876 per year, about the cost of a mortgage payment. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: Post

TV looked at the ingredients that go into a tattoo and the chemical reaction a body undergoes when getting inked.

FLORIDA Melbourne: The

Schmitt family and partners recovered $1 million worth of sunken Spanish gold coins and jewels last month off Florida’s Atlantic Coast, Florida Today reported. GEORGIA Dunwoody: The City Council voted to decommission weather alert systems in Dunwoody Park and Brook Run Park, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported. HAWAII Panaewa: The Department of Hawaiian Home Lands proposed a new subdivision that would make 80 agriculture lots here available to native Hawaiians, the Hawaii Tribune-Herald reported. IDAHO Stanley: The first sock-

eye salmon completed its 900mile migration to Redfish Lake Creek near here, the Idaho Statesman reported. Rivers with hotter than normal temperatures have

killed many salmon this summer in the Columbia River, including more than half of the sockeye heading up the Snake River to Idaho’s Stanley Basin. ILLINOIS Chicago: The Department of Public Health said more than twothirds of the state’s 73 known cases of mumps are in Champaign County, according to the Tribune. INDIANA Westfield: The Illinois

bank TBF has foreclosed on a trucking business owned by Westfield Mayor Andy Cook and his son Ben Cook, the Indianapolis Star reported. Court documents say Tradewinds Holding Co.’s 5-acre headquarters, along with 75 acres of adjacent land, will be auctioned Aug. 20 at a sheriff’s sale. IOWA Cherokee: Three land-

owners are suing the Iowa Utilities Board, questioning the board’s authority to grant eminent domain for construction of the proposed pipeline that would carry crude oil from North Dakota, The Des Moines Register reported.

KANSAS Topeka: State officials are reviewing foster care policies, the Topeka Capital-Journal reported.

amputated when he was 2, The Baltimore Sun reported.

TV reported.

MASSACHUSETTS Greenfield:

Belknap County delegation approved a $2.6 million bond for the Gunstock Mountain ski resort to build an alpine roller coaster, the Laconia Citizen reported.

Two people came to the rescue of a police officer who was in danger of drowning in a water-filled sinkhole, The Recorder reported

MICHIGAN Marysville: Higher Great Lakes water levels are eroding beaches, including Chrysler Beach, The (Port Huron) Times Herald reported. Since October 2013, water in the St. Clair River, which links Lake Michigan eventually with Lake Erie, has risen 34 inches, said Barry Kreiner, head of the Marysville Department of Public Works. MINNESOTA Bird Island: The

lead singer of the rock band Puddle of Mudd was arrested after authorities say he attempted to flee police going 100 mph while highly intoxicated, KARE-TV reported. MISSISSIPPI Olive Branch: A

16-year-old died when a riding mower flipped and landed on top of him in DeSoto County, The Commercial Appeal reported.

MISSOURI Springfield: Two

Missouri universities made a website’s list of the nation’s top 30 leisure pools on college campuses. The University of Missouri was ranked No. 2, while Missouri State University came in at No. 7, according to College Rank.

KENTUCKY Louisville: A Bul-

lead singer of a band whose pyrotechnics caused a fire that killed 100 people in Rhode Island is performing Aug. 15 at Harvest Hills Farm, the Sun Journal reported. Jack Russell was the lead singer for Great White in 2003 when the fire broke out at The Station night club in West Warwick, R.I.

MARYLAND Owings Mills: Earlier this month, doctors at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia performed the first-ever pediatric double hand transplant on Zion Harvey, an 8-year-old Maryland boy whose sepsisinfected hands and feet were

Firefighters rescued a Pennsylvania woman from a tree where she spent the night after seeking refuge from coyotes, the Asbury Park Press reported. April Lewis told authorities she climbed 15 feet up the tree, tied herself to it with a piece of her pant leg but couldn’t get down because her legs were too weak. NEW MEXICO Las Cruces: A group of investors and inventors plans trial runs of mechanized harvesting and de-stemming of the state’s green chile, the Las Cruces Sun-News reported. NEW YORK Spring Valley: The

MONTANA Big Sky: Snow fell above 9,000 feet at Big Sky Resort during a two-day storm Monday and Tuesday that broke rainfall records that stood for more than century across the state. The Bear Paw Mountains saw 3 to 4 inches of rain from the storm, the Great Falls Tribune reported. Great Falls dropped to 58 degrees, breaking a record set in 1949 of 69 degrees. NEBRASKA Beatrice: The Ponca Tribe of Nebraska will become the new owner of the 19.5-mile former railroad right-of-way between here and the Kansas state line, WOWT-TV reported. NEVADA Las Vegas: A 22-year-

old man was charged after an acquaintance says he stabbed him outside a local post office, KSNV-

UTAH Howell: Residents of Box Elder County may have felt a minor earthquake earlier this week, the Standard-Examiner reported. The University of Utah Earthquake Center confirmed the 0.9 magnitude earthquake that was detected around 3:30 p.m. on Monday. VERMONT Burlington: The

University of Vermont Medical Center unveiled the Glen and Rosemarie Wright Mother Baby Unit, which features 22 singlebed rooms with private bathrooms. Donors gave $3 million and the hospital kicked in the rest of the $15.8 million cost, Burlington Free Press reported.

East Ramapo school district overpaid two corporate law firms by $2 million for defense of a class-action civil rights suit between 2012 and 2014, according to a state judge, The Journal News reported.

VIRGINIA Richmond: Cosplaying Avengers, Assemble! Friday’s Wizard World Comic Con offers regular folks the opportunity to dress up as their favorite movie, cartoon or comics characters, the Times-Dispatch reported.

NORTH CAROLINA Raleigh: Citing the stresses of his day job and the demands of his family, Tony Tata resigned as state transportation secretary to focus on his side career of writing military action thrillers, The News & Observer reported.

WASHINGTON Seattle: Officials say a downtown cast-iron water main must be replaced after being damaged by the nearby Alaskan Way Viaduct tunnel replacement project, the Seattle Times reported. The quarter-mile main repair follows Western Avenue from Yesler Way to Spring Street.

A fifth case of E. coli possibly linked to the Red River Valley Fair was confirmed by the North Dakota Department of Health, inforum.com reported.

LOUISIANA Slidell: The St.

MAINE Mechanic Falls: The

NEW JERSEY Manchester:

NORTH DAKOTA West Fargo:

litt County grand jury has indicted Shepherdsville Mayor Scott Ellis on a misdemeanor charge of criminal solicitation to prostitution, The Courier-Journal reported.

Tammany Parish Sheriff’s Office sought the public’s help to identify two women accused of stealing $216.16 worth of groceries from a Winn Dixie. The precise price was available because the women scanned the items at checkout, The Times-Picayune reported.

NEW HAMPSHIRE Gilford: The

OHIO Gahanna: Joshua Newell, 35, who jumped a fence to pet cougars at the Columbus zoo, jokingly said, “Here, kitty” and moved closer when the animals seemed to respond, WBNS-TV reported. Newell faces a criminal trespassing charge. OKLAHOMA Vinita: A day care

center here closed after a mother reported her two sons were severely sunburned during an outing to a local splash pad, KOTV-TV reported.

OREGON Portland: Google

targeted 23 acres of land for a possible expansion of its data facility in The Dalles, The Oregonian reported.

PENNSYLVANIA State College:

A late-night fire damaged a Penn State classroom. The Centre Daily Times reported that flames were shooting out of a classroom window in the Hammond Building and black marks could be seen outside.

WEST VIRGINIA Charleston: Starting Monday, parents in Cabell, Kanawha and Putnam Counties will have access to free drug testing kits for their children through the pilot program “Give Me a Reason,” the GazetteMail reported. WISCONSIN Green Bay: The

Insurance Services Office awarded the Green Bay Metro Fire Department a No. 1 Public Protection Classification – the first time a Wisconsin department has been so honored, the Green Bay Press-Gazette reported.

WYOMING Casper: State wild-

life officials asked the public to report dead sage grouse so they can be tested for West Nile virus. The Casper Star-Tribune reported that during West Nile virus season the Wyoming Game and Fish Department will test dead grouse for the virus. West Nile virus is often fatal for the bird and has been reported in northeast Wyoming.

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


USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld THURSDAY, JULY 30, 2015

MONEYLINE ALIBABA INVESTS $1 BILLION IN CLOUD BUSINESS Alibaba says it will invest $1 billion into its cloud computing business, months after announcing a push into the U.S. with the opening of a data center in Silicon Valley. In a statement released CHINAFOTOPRESS Wednesday, Daniel Zhang Alibaba cites the surge in cloud-based revenue for Amazon, up 80% year-over-year. “Big data and cloud computing are at the heart of Alibaba Group’s strategy for the future,” said CEO Daniel Zhang in a statement. ANTHEM Q2 PROFIT RISES 18% Health insurance provider Anthem said Wednesday its second-quarter net income rose 18% to $859.1 million as health care costs and medical enrollment by new members surged. After adjusting for some items, earnings per share totaled $3.10, beating analysts’ estimate of $2.74. Shares closed up 0.7% to $155.27.

NEWS MONEY SPORTS LIFE AUTOS TRAVEL

5B

Earnings bust puts Yelp in free fall Levchin steps down as review site slashes full-year forecast Trisha Thadani @TrishaThadani USA TODAY

JUSTIN SULLIVAN

Facebook and CEO Mark Zuckerberg had warned that expenses would rise dramatically.

FACEBOOK’S COSTS LEAP; SHARES WAFFLE Shares go for a ride despite ‘solid’ earnings results essica Guynn USA TODAY

FACEBOOK Q2 HIGHLIGHTS Ad revenue Expenses Net income EPS

2014 $2.68B $1.52B $0.79 $0.30

2015 $3.83B $2.77B $0.72B $0.25

% ch. +43% +82% -9% -17%

SOURCE FACEBOOK

Facebook shares edged between gains and losses after-hours as executives spoke during a conference call about their Street-beating quarter, where sales and users — as well as expenses — grew. The Menlo Park, Calif.-based social network on Wednesday reported revenue jumped 39% to $4.04 billion in the second quarter, up from $2.91 billion a year ago. But expenses grew far faster. Total costs rose 82% from the same quarter a year ago. Net income fell 9.1% to $719 million, or 25 cents a share, compared with $791 million, or 30 cents a share, a year ago. Excluding certain expenses, Facebook said it would have earned 50 cents a share. AnaSAN

EVAN EILE, USA TODAY

GANNETT INCOME UP 2.3% After its spinoff from TEGNA last month, Gannett said Wednesday its second-quarter net income rose 2.3% from a year ago to $53.3 million. Revenue was down 8.7% to $727.1 million as advertising sales and circulation revenue fell. Shares of Gannett, which publishes USA TODAY, 92 other newspapers and their online properties in the new media company, closed up 0.3% Wednesday to $13.35. DELTA TO BUY STAKE IN CHINA EASTERN AIRLINES Delta Air Lines is paying $450 million for a stake in China Eastern Airlines, a move the carrier hopes will help it gain access to China’s burgeoning travel market. The investment will give Delta a 3.55% stake in Shanghai-based China Eastern. Each airline’s board must OK the deal. No timeline was given for when that might occur. If approved, Delta says the deal will boost connecting options for both companies.

FRANCISCO

lysts had expected adjusted earnings of 47 cents. Shares lost 2% after the report came out. They briefly turned higher during the 2 p.m. PT conference call before falling again on remarks from Chief Financial Officer Dave Wehner to expect slowing revenue growth for the rest of the year. Facebook warned investors earlier this year that costs and expenses would rise dramatically as it invests in long-term projects such as virtual reality, as well as in recruiting top engineers and building new data centers. Wehner did narrow Facebook’s guidance on expense rate growth for 2015 to 55%60% from 55%-65%. Investors are increasingly

Still a work in progress Jon Swartz

@jswartz USA TODAY

DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVG. 17,850 17,800

4:00 p.m.

121.12

17,751

17,750 17,700 17,650 17,600

9:30 a.m.

17,630

WEDNESDAY MARKETS INDEX

Nasdaq composite S&P 500 T- note, 10-year yield Oil, light sweet crude Euro (dollars per euro) Yen per dollar

CLOSE

CHG

5111.73 2108.57 2.29% $48.85 $1.1009 123.86

x 22.53 x 15.32 x 0.04 x 0.87 y 0.0045 x 0.24

SOURCES USA TODAY RESEARCH, MARKETWATCH.COM

USA SNAPSHOTS©

Average CD yields As of Wednesday: 6-month

This week Last week Year ago 0.16% 0.16% 0.15% 1-year

This week Last week Year ago 0.27% 0.27% 0.24% 21⁄2-year

This week Last week Year ago 0.45% 0.45% 0.37% 5-year

This week Last week Year ago 0.87% 0.87% 0.79% Find more interest rates at rates.usatoday.com. Source Bankrate.com JAE YANG AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY

scrutinizing the expenses of technology companies such as Facebook and Google, said S&P Capital IQ analyst Scott Kessler. “It seems like every quarter for Facebook the story has been the revenue performance was solid, (earning per share) exceeded estimates, but there are questions about reported or guided to expenses. People are worried about runaway, undisciplined, expenses and ultimately unsuccessful expenses,” Kessler said. “But here the proof is in the pudding. Facebook put up the growth numbers, and that is what ultimately people want to see.” “The Street must have been expecting something pretty outlandish to react as badly as it has, because this is a really solid set of results,” said Jan Dawson, chief analyst with Jackdaw Research. Shares (FB) closed up 2% to $97 in regular trading on Wednesday. Facebook announced its second-quarter results after the close of trading.

SAN FRANCISCO Today’s lesson in Silicon Valley lore: The pecking order can change awfully fast. Take Facebook, FIRST which reported TAKE earnings of 50 cents and a 39% jump in revenue to $4.04 billion on Wednesday. As is customary, the company beat Wall Street sales estimates. Facebook shares (FB), which ended the day up nearly 2% to $96.90 (close to a 52-week high) before earnings were announced, initially slid in afterhours trading. The social network is now worth a jaw-dropping $267.6 billion. That’s right, the same Facebook that stumbled out of the IPO gate in 2012 and, as recently as 2013, had a legion of doubters in Silicon Valley and on Wall Street. Today, it’s branching in multiple directions like an eight-armed digital octopus, the darling of the same business and investor community. Some suggest the 11-year-old company could have as much upside as Apple or Google. “Facebook is well positioned, executing well, and meeting or beating expectations,” says Brian Blau, research director at Gartner. Success in uber-competitive Silicon Valley often comes down to product cycles, acquisitions,

STEPHANIE TAYLOR, FOR USA TODAY

Facebook’s approach works, says Debra Aho Williamson.

charismatic leaders and luck. Facebook has that in spades — not to mention perceptive planning and a world-class operation run by Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg. The winning combination of a successful venture into the mobile market, a rejuvenated advertising model based on mobile and measurement tools, and a string of acquisitions that

Facebook’s merger strategy “shows wisdom and a high batting average.” Debra Aho Williamson, principal analyst at eMarketer

made Facebook a go-to destination (WhatsApp, Instagram) have made Facebook a model of efficiency and creativity. Facebook’s advertising wins have come at the expense of Twitter. While Zuckerberg & Co. have mopped up on mobile devices and desktop computers, Twitter — which has made some inroads in advertising — has had relatively little to tweet about, by comparison. By 2017, Facebook’s slice of

worldwide ad revenue will be $23.9 billion, up from $15.5 billion this year, according to eMarketer. Twitter will reach $4.1 billion in 2017, compared with $2.1 billion this year. Facebook’s display ad prowess has had a ripple-like effect on the tech industry: Besides its impact on Twitter, Facebook has intensified pressure on Google. Most consumers (51%) believe Facebook ads are more in line with their interests than those (17%) who said the same of YouTube, according to a study by Adobe Digital Index. Adobe Digital Index principal analyst Tamara Gaffney says Google has not kept pace with the way Facebook has sharpened its display ads. Facebook’s 1.2 billion users can click one button to share an ad; on YouTube, it’s clunky, she says. Video marketers, however, are unlikely to ditch YouTube, where videos on average receive more views and have a longer shelf life than those posted on Facebook. Facebook’s merger strategy, meanwhile, “shows wisdom and a high batting average,” says Debra Aho Williamson, principal analyst at eMarketer. “Facebook realized it needed to be more than one app,” Williamson says. Of course, Silicon Valley history can change quickly — from rags to riches and back — and Facebook is not immune. We should heed the words of Blau and others. Facebook is still a work in progress on several fronts: media, wearable devices and search. “(Facebook) is not yet at the same level as an Apple, Google, Microsoft or Amazon,” Blau says.

Yelp appears in need of some help. Shares of the online reviews site toppled 28% Wednesday after it reported grim second-quarter earnings Tuesday and said chairman Max Levchin is leaving. Yelp reported a second-quarter loss of $1.3 million (two cents a share) compared to the $2.7 million (four cents a share) profit that it registered in the same quarter a year ago, according to its earnings report released Tuesday. Due to lower sales headcount growth and the elimination of its brand-advertising product, the company slashed revenue guidance from $544 million to $500 million for the year, which is down from prior guidance of $574 million to $579 million.

LEVCHIN BY DAVID PAUL MORRIS, BLOOMBERG

“I am extremely proud of what Yelp has accomplished over the last 11 years.” Max Levchin, Yelp chairman since 2004

Meanwhile, the company announced that Levchin, co-founder of PayPal and an early investor in Yelp, has resigned from his position as chairman to pursue other interests, effective immediately. The company’s board has yet to appoint a new chairman but plans to consider the issue at its September meeting. “I am extremely proud of what Yelp has accomplished over the last 11 years and believe I leave it well-positioned to take advantage of the large local advertising market,” Levchin said in a statement Tuesday. Yelp publishes crowd-sourced reviews online and digitizes the age-old act of word-of-mouth recommendations for local businesses. People can access and write reviews for local businesses, ranging from boutiques to salons to restaurants. The company was founded in 2004 and has taken hold in major metros across 31 countries. The company said approximately 83 million visitors — up 22% from last year — have visited the site via mobile devices on a monthly average basis during the second quarter. Yelp said this quarter was the first time mobile traffic was higher than desktop, which saw about 79 million visitors on an average monthly basis. “Consumers are increasingly turning to apps when using their mobile phones, and we are excited about the growth we’ve seen in app usage, which accelerated to 51% year to year,” the company said. For the third quarter, Yelp expects revenue of $139 million to $142 million, which is below Wall Street estimates of $153 million. Still, CEO Jeremy Stoppelman offered some optimism during Tuesday’s earnings report. “We believe our rich content married with our highly differentiated local advertising product will position us well to capture a meaningful share of the large local market,” he said.


6B

L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY THURSDAY, JULY 30, 2015

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

As economic bounce-backs go, the first estimate on second-quarter growth set for release Thursday should help put fears to rest. It indeed looks like the early-year slowdown was nothing more than a pause caused by bad weather, fallout from a West Coast port strike and a super-strong U.S. dollar. The median estimate of economists is for growth of 2.5%, Capital Economics says. That’s not quite the 3% pace economists had hoped for heading into the year, but robust enough to put the early-year slump in the rear-view mirror. Since GDP growth is a backward-looking figure, it’s unlikely to have a major impact on the

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

Federal Reserve’s deliberations on when to start hiking shortterm interest rates. But a stronger number — say, in the 2.5% to 2.8% range — is important for stock investors who are looking for positive catalysts to keep propelling the market higher in the face of above-average valuations and coming Fed rate hikes. “The market is looking to confirm the economy is strengthening sufficient5-day enough avg.:to produce +X.XX the earnings6-month growthavg.: to warrant -X.XX higher shareLargest prices,” says Mark holding: XXXX Luschini, chief investment Most bought: strateXXXX gist at Janney. “Stocks Most sold: are roughXXXX ly 17 times forward earnings. While not egregiously valued, they’re clearly not cheap. Profit growth has to do the heavy lifting.” And if GDP comes in “closer to 2%, worries could creep in that the economy can’t get traction,” he says.

DOW JONES

$

$

The smallest-portfolio SigFig investors (less than $100K in assets) stocked up on Costco (COST) in early July.

+121.12

+15.32

INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE

CHANGE: +.7% YTD: -71.68 YTD % CHG: -.4%

COMP

+22.53 CHANGE: +.4% YTD: +375.68 YTD % CHG: +7.9%

CLOSE: 17,751.39 PREV. CLOSE: 17,630.27 RANGE: 17,629.20-17,776.78

NASDAQ

+5.00

CLOSE: 5,111.73 PREV. CLOSE: 5,089.20 RANGE: 5,080.04-5,117.84

CLOSE: 2,108.57 PREV. CLOSE: 2,093.25 RANGE: 2,094.15-2,110.60

RUSSELL 2000 INDEX

CHANGE: +.4% YTD: +24.90 YTD % CHG: +2.1%

CLOSE: 1,229.60 PREV. CLOSE: 1,224.60 RANGE: 1,220.93-1,232.34

S&P 500’S BIGGEST GAINERS/LOSERS GAINERS

Company (ticker symbol)

Price

YTD % Chg % Chg

Citrix Systems (CTXS) 75.27 +5.64 Surges after reaching settlement with fund manager.

+8.1

+18.0

Cerner (CERN) 73.40 Partnered with Leidos, wins multibillion-dollar contract.

+4.91

+7.2

+13.5

173.44 +10.10

+6.2

+17.7

Northrop Grumman (NOC) Beats earnings and raises forecast.

+2.16

+5.0

+2.1

ADT (ADT) Misses earnings but climbs on higher revenue.

34.48

+1.57

+4.8

-4.8

Anadarko Petroleum (APC) Advances another day after profit beat.

76.28 +3.43

+4.7

-7.5

+3.12

+4.7

-6.7

46.83 +2.05

+4.6 +37.9

Newfield Exploration (NFX) Rises as it announces new leadership.

32.88

+1.35

+4.3

+21.2

140.26 +5.65

+4.2

+7.0

Company (ticker symbol)

-1.34 -0.72 AAPL AAPL AAPL

MODERATE 51%-70% equities

AGGRESSIVE 71% or more in equities

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

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

-0.55 +1.04 AAPL AAPL FIT

+0.11 +2.58 AAPL PYPL FIT

POWERED BY SIGFIG

4-WEEK TREND

The cloud computing company, under pressure from a major $80 Price: $75.27 shareholder, Elliott Management, Chg: $5.64 shook up its top leadership and % chg: 8.1% Day’s high/low: said it was weighing the sale of $60 portions of the company. July 1 $76.70/$72.82

Yelp

The operator of consumer review website Yelp.com reported a sur- $50 prise loss and forecast disappointing revenue for the current quarter. The company also said $20 Chairman Max Levchin is leaving. July 1

Price: $25.06 Chg: -$8.45 % chg: -25.2% Day’s high/low: $25.50/$23.66

The social messaging service’s in- $40 terim CEO, Jack Dorsey, said during the company’s earnings call Tuesday that growth would not return soon and that a turnaround $30 July 1 would take “considerable” time.

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

NAV 194.76 52.99 52.97 192.86 192.87 105.59 45.63 21.27 59.32 42.95

YTD % Chg % Chg

Price

$ Chg

Consol Energy (CNX) Cuts dividend and postpones IPO.

16.68

-1.07

-6.0

-50.7

Level 3 Communications (LVLT) Misses revenue; growth to slow.

49.39

-3.11

-5.9

unch.

International Paper (IP) Reaches 2015 low on trailing revenue.

46.99

-1.74

-3.6

-12.3

Range Resources (RRC) Hits lowest since 2010 after earnings.

42.64

-1.31

-3.0

-20.2

Precision Castparts (PCP) 196.21 Turns July into losing month after lower earnings.

-5.16

-2.6

-18.5

Alexion Pharmaceuticals (ALXN) Loses momentum despite solid rating.

198.76

-4.79

-2.4

+7.4

Celgene (CELG) 132.14 Falls on prescription-drug price-control concerns.

-3.28

-2.4

+18.1

Rockwell Automation (ROK) Beats earnings, doesn’t make up early dip.

116.36

-2.87

-2.4

+4.6

Biogen (BIIB) Dips on price-control concerns.

313.34

-6.59

-2.1

-7.7

Henry Schein (HSIC) Misses revenue on foreign exchange.

146.54

-3.08

-2.1

+7.6

Ticker SPY UWTI EEM VXX NUGT GDX USO IWM FXI UGAZ

Close 210.77 1.70 37.09 16.16 3.60 13.97 16.24 121.94 41.27 2.15

4wk 1 +2.6% +2.0% +2.0% +2.6% +2.6% +4.1% +2.5% +0.3% +0.9% -2.1%

YTD 1 +3.6% +3.6% +3.6% +3.6% +3.6% +8.8% +6.9% +0.1% +1.3% +2.0%

Chg. +1.44 +0.11 +0.36 -0.33 +0.16 +0.28 +0.39 +0.34 +0.48 +0.09

% Chg +0.7% +6.9% +1.0% -2.0% +4.7% +2.0% +2.5% +0.3% +1.2% +4.4%

%YTD +2.5% -65.2% -5.6% -48.7% -67.7% -24.0% -20.2% +1.9% -0.8% -46.0%

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% 0.14% 0.12% 0.05% 0.01% 1.62% 1.28% 2.29% 1.75%

Close 6 mo ago 3.97% 3.83% 3.05% 2.94% 2.65% 2.85% 3.06% 3.24%

SOURCE: BANKRATE.COM

COMMODITIES

SOURCE: BLOOMBERG AND THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Commodities Close Prev. Cattle (lb.) 1.45 1.45 Corn (bushel) 3.68 3.75 Gold (troy oz.) 1,092.70 1,096.30 Hogs, lean (lb.) .80 .79 Natural Gas (Btu.) 2.89 2.82 Oil, heating (gal.) 1.60 1.60 Oil, lt. swt. crude (bar.) 48.79 47.98 Silver (troy oz.) 14.73 14.63 Soybeans (bushel) 9.83 9.75 Wheat (bushel) 4.96 5.11

Chg. unch. -0.07 -3.60 +0.01 +0.07 unch. +0.81 +0.10 +0.08 -0.15

% Chg. unch. -1.9% -0.3% +0.5% +2.3% unch. +1.7% +0.7% +0.9% -2.8%

% YTD -12.5% -7.4% -7.7% -1.7% -0.1% -13.5% -8.4% -5.3% -3.6% -15.9%

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

Close .6403 1.2931 6.2086 .9083 123.86 16.2340

Prev. .6411 1.2932 6.2097 .9046 123.62 16.2951

6 mo. ago .6643 1.2619 6.2485 .8840 118.40 14.8004

Yr. ago .5901 1.0854 6.1805 .7457 102.13 13.0639

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

Close 11,211.85 24,619.45 20,302.91 6,631.00 44,471.29

$25.06 July 29

$31.24

July 29

INVESTING ASK MATT Chg. +1.44 +0.38 +0.38 +1.43 +1.42 +0.75 +0.19 +0.13 +0.26 +0.33

1 – CAPITAL GAINS AND DIVIDENDS REINVESTED

ETF, ranked by volume SPDR S&P500 ETF Tr CS VelSh 3xLongCrude iShs Emerg Mkts Barc iPath Vix ST Dir Dly Gold Bull3x Mkt Vect Gold Miners US Oil Fund LP iShares Rus 2000 iShs China Large Cap CS VelSh 3xLongNatGs

July 29

4-WEEK TREND

Twitter

Price: $31.24 Chg: -$5.30 % chg: -14.5% Day’s high/low: $33.24/$31.06

$75.27

4-WEEK TREND

TOP 10 EXCHANGE TRADED FUNDS

Total System Services (TSS) Beats second-quarter earnings and revenue.

Stericycle (SRCL) Share rating upgraded to buy at Zacks.

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

-2.29 -1.51 AAPL AAPL YELP

TOP 10 MUTUAL FUNDS

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Investors like what they see in BDubs’ future Q: Why are Buffalo Wild Wings’ shares hot? Matt Krantz

mkrantz@usatoday.com USA TODAY

A: Investors often are criticized for simply reacting to whether a company beat or missed profit expectations. But that wasn’t the case with Buffalo Wild Wings on Wednesday. Shares of the hot wings restaurant chain jumped more than 10% Wednesday to roughly $193 a share — despite the fact the company missed second-quarter revenue and profit forecasts. Buffalo Wild Wings reported a quarterly profit of $1.12 a share during the quarter, which missed analysts’ forecasts by nearly 12%. Quarterly revenue of $429.7 million came in about 1% lower than expected. The company’s profit was hurt more than expected due to a surprisingly sharp jump — about 25% — in chicken wing prices. Investors simply chose to focus on the positives, namely the strong sales growth at stores open at least a year. That growth was 4.8% at stores owned by the company and 2% at those owned by franchisees. Future growth looks strong, too. Analysts are expecting the company to post an adjusted profit of $7.08 a share in 2016, which if correct, is nearly 26% growth, S&P Capital IQ says. All told, investors still think there’s upside, especially as the company looks to buy back a number of franchised locations.

Fed says labor market will dictate next interest rate hike Paul Davidson @PDavidsonusat USA TODAY

The Federal Reserve modestly upgraded its economic outlook Wednesday but did not signal whether it intends to raise interest rates in September for the first time in nearly a decade. Some economists said a more positive appraisal of the economy at least opens the door to an increase in the Fed’s benchmark rate in as little as seven weeks. In a statement after a two-day meeting, the Fed’s policymaking

KAREN BLEIER, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Federal Reserve policymakers left the benchmark rate near zero, where it has hovered since the 2008 financial crisis.

committee said it agreed to leave the fed funds rate near zero, as expected, where it has hovered since the 2008 financial crisis.

The Fed, however, upgraded its view of the labor market, saying it continued to improve, “with solid job gains and declining unemployment.” The statement added that “the housing sector has shown additional improvement” but that business investment and exports — hobbled by low energy prices and a strong dollar — “stayed soft.” In a subtle but noteworthy change, the central bank said it will raise rates when it has seen “some further improvement in the labor market.” The June statement simply referred to the need for “further improvement in

the labor market.” The tweak suggests the Fed may be closer to hiking rates because it “needs to see less by way of job creation … than it needed to see back in June,” RDQ Economics wrote in a note to clients. The more upbeat job outlook at least paves the way for a possible Fed move in September and suggests that economic reports over the next seven weeks will be key factors in its decision. To lift rates, the Fed also reiterated that it needs to be “reasonably confident” inflation will head toward its annual 2% target in the medium-term. That has been a

more elusive goal. With oil prices falling recently after rebounding earlier this year, the Fed removed its assertion from last month’s statement that “energy prices appear to have stabilized.” Fed Chair Janet Yellen told Congress this month the central bank plans to boost rates this year, assuming the labor market continues to advance. Monthly job growth has averaged a solid 208,000 in 2015, and the unemployment rate has fallen to 5.3% from 10% in 2009. But Yellen told lawmakers that wage growth and inflation remain subdued.


USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld THURSDAY, JULY 30, 2015

LIFELINE WHERE IN THE WORLD? NAY PYI TAW, MYANMAR Angelina Jolie is on a visit to Myanmar as part of her humanitarian work as a U.N. Refugee Agency special envoy. The trip started with a welcome to parliament from MyanMyanmar mar’s House Speaker, Nay Pyi Taw Shwe Mann.

SPORTS LIFE AUTOS SEGEL’S TRIP TRAVEL FROM

7B

MOVIES

MUPPET FAN TO TROUBLED GENIUS

“I know what it’s like to inhabit this body. It helps make you aware you are a little bit different.”

GETTY IMAGES

RUMOR PATROL Is Ben Affleck dating his children’s former nanny? An article in ‘Us Weekly’ says just that, claiming that newly single Affleck, recently split from Jennifer Garner, is romancing a nanny who worked for the former couple. The magazine quotes unnamed sources who say Affleck and the nanny flirted, communicated over text and e-mail and spent time together at his rental home after he and Garner announced their breakup. But Brooke Blumberg, a rep for the actor, strongly denies the allegations. “The story is full of lies,” she said in a statement. “You shouldn’t be able to hide behind ‘blind sources’ and attempt to destroy families going through a difficult time. It’s shameful. We are considering legal options.”

TODD PLITT, USA TODAY

IT’S YOUR BIRTHDAY WHO’S CELEBRATING TODAY?

TIMOTHY HIATT, GETTY IMAGES FOR EBERTFEST 2015

having this (book) resonate speaks so much to the writing’s universality.”

Bryan Alexander @BryAlexand USA TODAY

There were serious doubts when Jason Segel was cast as the tragic genius David Foster Wallace in The End of the Tour. Segel, 35, has made a career portraying affable, endearing personalities — from Gary, BFF to a muppet named Walter in The Muppets, to goofy Marshall in TV’s How I Met Your Mother. But in Tour (opens Friday in New York and Los Angeles), Segel steps up to the complex role of Infinite Jest author Wallace, who struggled with depression and killed himself in 2008 at age 46. The film depicts a five-day interview with Rolling Stone writer David Lipsky (Jesse Eisenberg). “We sometimes buckle when someone we know takes on a more dramatic role,” says Tour director James Ponsoldt. “Perhaps it shows the limits to our imagination.” The doubts have turned to accolades. The Hollywood Reporter calls Segel’s performance “heartbreaking.” Here’s how he made the transformation. EMPLOYING THE BANDANNA

Wallace’s unorthodox look is a significant discussion point in Tour. Segel couldn’t grow his hair

LISTENING TO THE TAPES

Author David Foster Wallace (Jason Segel) goes on a five-day touring interview with a Rolling Stone reporter. out while shooting Mother, so he relied on hair extensions. “You can take the bandanna, the long hair or those clothes, individually,” Segel says. When they all came together, “that’s when I felt really comfortable to walk out as David Foster Wallace.” The filmmakers took pains not to fixate on a physical imitation of the author. “We basically tried to get as accurate as possible without making it feel like an impression or a sketch,” Segel says. READING WALLACE’S WORK

The voluminous writings — espe-

A24

cially Wallace’s seminal 1,079page Infinite Jest — were key to understanding him. Segel, who wrote The Muppets and is working on The Lego Movie spinoff Billion Brick Race, started there. “It’s a massive undertaking as a reader. And that puts in perspective what a massive undertaking it was as a writer,” he says. Every week, he’d read 100 pages and discuss the work on Sunday with three friends in a book club. “It was one of the best experiences I have ever had,” he says. “To have four people with different life experiences and

Tour is adapted from Lipsky’s book Although Of Course You End Up Becoming Yourself: A Road Trip With David Foster Wallace. Lipsky recorded most of the discussion centering on the end of Wallace’s 1996 Infinite book tour. Segel dived into the audiotapes for context. “It was a really fun trip. You want to be in the back of that car, listening to these guys talking about serious issues and what’s on the radio.” There was also a video of Wallace’s Charlie Rose interview during that period. “I watched that video over and over and zeroed in on his speech patterns, the way he used his hands,” Segel says. UNDERSTANDING THE SIZE

At 6-foot-4, Segel related to Wallace’s athletic build. “He was such a big guy, too. There is a thing you do to equalize yourself to people, sort of hunch over, slumping. That really helped. “I know what it’s like to inhabit this body. It helps make you aware you are a little bit different. For somebody who just wants to be anonymous, that makes it difficult.”

TELEVISION

New perspective for ‘Daily Show’ USA TODAY; WIREIMAGE; GETTY IMAGES

Arnold Schwarzenegger is 68. Vivica A. Fox is 51. Hilary Swank is 41. Compiled by Cindy Clark

USA SNAPSHOTS©

Top music downloads Cheerleader

163,100

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152,500

She’s Kinda Hot

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Can’t Feel My Face

122,200

Fight Song

109,800

OMI

Fetty Wap feat. Monty 5 Seconds of Summer The Weeknd

Rachel Platten

Source Nielsen Music for week ending July 23. MAEVE MCDERMOTT AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY

Bill Keveney USA TODAY

BEVERLY HILLS Look for some cosmetic changes and a different point of view when Trevor Noah takes over as host of Comedy Central’s The Daily Show Sept. 28. But much of the subject matter will remain the same. “We’re obviously changing the sets, a tiny bit. We still want the show to be recognized as The Daily Show, because that’s what it still is,” Noah said Wednesday at the Television Critics Association. And five of Jon Stewart’s executive producers will remain. In a 65-minute performance in Santa Monica Tuesday night, the biracial Noah, 31, discussed his mom, his poor upbringing in Soweto, South Africa, and the “bestquality racism” practiced there while showcasing his dexterity with accents and such stand-up staples as airport security and terrorism. (He wondered why it’s so often associated with Muslims

and not the murderous acts committed by white American men.) “In terms of the content of the show, issues are not really changing in America and in the world, so it’s just a different angle. It’s my angle,” he says. “The show still has its voice, but it’s just I’m at the helm taking things in a slightly different direction. We’re still trying to get to the same end place.” In his routine, he hinted at the sensibility, if not the structure, he will bring to a comedic institution when he succeeds host Stewart, whose final show airs next week, on Sept. 28. Noah did not get into the kind of political humor that is a Stewart mainstay. However, speaking after the performance, he said the 2016 presidential race “will play a big part on the show.” Noah says he and Stewart, a white New Jersey native who is more than two decades older, have different perspectives. “If you look at issues in America right now, such as racial inequality, Jon and I come from a

totally different point of view.” Asked about the line between offending people and playing it too safe, Noah alludes to the controversy that arose after his Daily Show appointment about past tweets that some considered sexist and anti-Semitic. “Let me put this way. Let’s say with tweets, for instance. A person has 9,000 tweets and you think five of them were not to your taste,” he says. “What I’ve heard is you say is, this person has 8,995 tweets that weren’t offensive.” He continues: “I don’t strive to be offensive; it’s not who I am as person or as a performer. But you can never control what people find as offensive or not. When people get to know you, (they) know what the baseline is. One of the great things in getting to know my audience is my audience getting to know me.”

PETER YANG, COMEDY CENTRAL


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TOM BRADY VOWS TO FIGHT SUSPENSION. 2C

Sports

C

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/sports l Thursday, July 30, 2015

Bragg’s progress pleases Beaty By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com

While spring practices in April gave Kansas University football coach David Beaty and his new team an opportunity to say hello and work through some of the growing pains associated starting from scratch, it’s preseason camp where the most serious work will be done. Beaty illustrated that last week at Big 12 media days in Dallas when he was asked about the progress and development of red-shirt freshman Jacob Bragg, who arrived Bragg in Lawrence as one of the top centers in the 2015 class. “He’s a good player,” Beaty said of the 6-foot-4, 284-pound Nacogdoches, Texas, product. “I think he’s definitely gonna develop. The thing I like in him is I’ve seen him get tougher over the last seven months and he certainly needed that. Once he gets that, that guy could definitely help us.” With more experienced players ahead of him on KU’s offensive line and at least three other Jayhawks vying for spots on the depth chart at Bragg’s position, Beaty was asked if he thought the former fourstar prospect was still a year away from contributing and his answer emphasized the importance of the next five weeks. “I don’t know,” Beaty said. “He may be ready here in a month. But I wanna see more toughness out of him.” Beaty said he had been impressed by Bragg’s versatility thus far. Although he came to Kansas as a true center, Beaty said Bragg had shown enough ability and maturity to handle playing guard should the need arise. Beaty, who actually temporarily recruited Bragg to Texas A&M while still on the Aggies’ staff, cautioned against people forgetting about Bragg just because he did not play during his first year in Lawrence. “The thing about him is he’s a great example of perception versus reality,” Beaty said. “Was he good? You’re dang straight he was. But, man, it’s hard to play as a freshman on the offensive line. It’s difficult. Very few of ’em do it. (Former A&M standouts) Jake Matthews and Luke Joeckel were the only two I’ve ever seen and both of those guys were topfive picks.”

KANSAS CITY CHIEFS

Welcome back

Charlie Riedel/AP Photo

KANSAS CITY CHIEFS STRONG SAFETY ERIC BERRY PARTICIPATES in a drill during training camp Wednesday in St. Joseph, Missouri.

Chiefs’ Berry returns to field By Dave Skretta AP Sports Writer

St. Joseph, Mo. — There was a moment in the early stages of chemotherapy when Eric Berry was having breakfast with his father, and the enormity of what faced him was so great that he broke down and cried. For 30 minutes, one of the toughest players on the Kansas City Chiefs wept. Then, he resolved to beat cancer. Eight months later, Berry walked triumphantly onto the practice fields at Mis-

souri Western State University, joining rookies and select veterans Wednesday for the start of training camp. Six merciless rounds of draining, debilitating drugs had rid his body of Hodgkin’s lymphoma, but they had also stoked the passion that Berry still harbors for the game. “It’s been a roller coaster,” he said, “but I wouldn’t change it for the world.” Flanked by his father, James, and his mother, Carol, Berry spoke publicly for the first time since he was diagnosed with cancer last December. He recalled the ter-

ror that gripped him when the mass was first found in his chest, and the dark days that immediately followed. The days he didn’t want to get out of bed. The days he struggled to choke down food, all of it tasteless. The seemingly endless trips to the hospital for each round of treatment. “In the beginning it was hard, it really was,” James Berry said. “Those possibilities go through your mind — ‘What if he can’t play again?’ You think of those types of things, but then you kick those to the side. And when

you looked at Eric you said, ‘This guy is a fighter.’” Such a fighter that he chose to receive treatment through an IV rather than a PICC line, a semi-permanent catheter that would have prevented him from training. Between each round of chemo, Berry would squeeze in 10 to 12 workouts, sometimes struggling just to do five push-ups. But he never lost sight of an audacious goal: Be back with the Chiefs by the time their season opens Sept. 13 in Houston. Please see BERRY, page 9C

Cleveland’s Kluber cools Royals

Key August dates With preseason camp right around the corner, it’s time to circle a couple of key KU football dates for the upcoming month. The Jayhawks will report for camp on Aug. 5 and begin practice on Aug. 6. Twoa-day practices will begin Aug. 12. In addition, Fan Appreciation Day is set for 5:30 p.m. on Aug. 8, when fans will be allowed to attend an open practice and collect autographs from and pictures with their favorite KU players following the Tony Dejak/AP Photo practice. KU opens the 2015 season CLEVELAND PITCHER COREY KLUBER DELIVERS against Kansas City. Kluber tossed a complete game, and the Indians defeated the Royals, 12-1, on Wednesday in Please see FOOTBALL, page 9C Cleveland.

Cleveland (ap) — The Cleveland Indians found the perfect way to avoid a winless homestand. Corey Kluber took a shutout into the ninth, and rookie Francisco Lindor hit a three-run homer and had a career-high four RBIs in a 12-1 win over the Kansas City Royals on Wednesday. “We needed a day like today,” said manager Terry Francona, who was ejected in the fifth inning. “That’ll help us. Now we need to carry it over.” Michael Brantley, Yan Gomes and rookie Giovanny Urshela hit solo homers for the Indians, who had been outscored 37-10 in losing the first six games of the homestand. Michael Bourn was 4 for 5 as Cleveland had a season-high 18 hits. Four losses to the Chica-

go White Sox and two more to the Royals dropped the Indians to last place in the AL Central. “It was very important for us to get our confidence back,” Lindor said. “We’ll take the things we did the right way and try to do it again tomorrow.” Kluber (6-11) held Kansas City to five hits in his second complete game this year. The reigning Cy Young Award winner retired the first 12 batters before Eric Hosmer’s leadoff double in the fifth. Alex Rios’ RBI groundout in the ninth scored the Royals’ only run. Kluber, who struck out six and walked one, had been 0-3 against Kansas City this season. “I guess they’ve had success against me earlier in Please see ROYALS, page 9C


SOUTH

Sports 2

2C | LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD | THURSDAY, JULY 30, 2015

COMING FRIDAY

TWO-DAY

AL EAST

• The latest on Kansas University football and basketball • A report on the Royals’ series opener in Toronto BOSTON RED SOX

BALTIMORE ORIOLES

SPORTS CALENDAR NEW YORK YANKEES

TODAY • at Toronto, 6:07 p.m. FRIDAY • at Toronto, 6:07 p.m.

CHICAGO WHITE SOX

CLEVELAND INDIANS

DETROIT TIGERS

LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM

OAKLAND ATHLETICS

SEATTLE MARINERS

MINNESOTA TWINS

KANSAS CITY ROYALS

AL WEST

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Baseball AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. San Diego v. Mets K.C. v. Toronto Detroit v. Baltimore Springfield v. NW Ark. Golf

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155,242 36, 236 155,242 37, 226

MLB FSN MLB MS

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Women’s British Open 8 a.m. ESPN2 34, 234 Quicken Loans National 1:30p.m. Golf 156,289 Utah Championship 5:30p.m. Golf 156,289

Miami Herald

HIGH SCHOOLS HUB:

TORONTO BLUE JAYS

ROYALS

By Greg Cote

It is easy to imagine that at some point late last year, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell looked back upon a scandalized season — one fraught by the Ray Rice incident, that awful video and the league’s gross mishandling of the case — considered the publicrelations mess and thought to himself, “Well, at least it can’t get any worse than this.” Hmm. Maybe it can, after all. A controversy over slightly underinflated footballs never seems preposterously less important than when mentioned alongside domestic violence, an actual crime with a real victim, but this also is true: The hits keep coming. The NFL keeps getting its bell rung and seeing its almighty shield dented and dirtied. And now the 2015 season, on our doorstep with training camps opening this week, will likely begin under the embarrassing shadow of the NFL, its defending champion and arguably its single biggest star mired in litigation. We can’t know how a court case would turn out but we already know the outcome: Nobody wins. Both sides lose. No matter the court ruling, Goodell and the NFL just can’t seem to make it all about football again. And “Deflategate” is now permanently tattooed onto Tom Brady’s name and legacy, regardless of what happens from here. Tuesday’s development was big. The league rejected Brady’s appeal and affirmed his original four-game suspension — Goodell in effect saying, “I uphold my decision.” That wasn’t so surprising. The NFL determined that Brady ordered an assistant to destroy the cellphone he’d used around the time of Deflategate during last season’s playoffs, the phone containing some 10,000 texts. Brady claims he always destroys old cellphones when he gets new ones. Hmm again. Seems far likelier he meant to erase incriminating evidence. Now Brady is not done fighting and will appeal his four-game ban to the federal courts. (Imagine you are a federal judge, accustomed to handling cases involving terrorism and issues of grave national importance, and now across your bench comes the matter of underinflated footballs. Seriously!?) Brady fighting this would be noble to those in Greater Boston and the dwindling others who steadfastly see him as falsely accused and trying to clear his good name. This would be stupid to the rest of us. Brady needs to be a big boy, take his hard medicine and serve his suspension now, missing the first four games of the regular season. Nobody in his right mind thinks the action — infinitesimally underinflated footballs that had zero bearing on a game’s outcome — is anything more than a football misdemeanor worthy of a wrist slap. But somehow, Brady’s response to the charges has managed to make the whole thing seem felonious. For me, Brady continues to be a first-ballot Hall of Famer who should be seen, first, as a champion. But he has made sure “Deflategate” must be mentioned high in his career’s summary. It isn’t to him what Watergate was to Nixon. But it’s up there.

TAMPA BAY RAYS

AL CENTRAL

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COMMENTARY

Brady should accept defeat

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

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8 a.m. BTN

147,237

Auto Racing

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Sprint Cup qualifying 3:30p.m. NBCSP 38, 238

Stephan Savoia/AP Photo

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS OWNER ROBERT KRAFT, left, and coach Bill Belichick enter a room full of reporters Wednesday in Foxborough, Massachusetts, to address NFL commissioner Roger Goodell’s action upholding quarterback Tom Brady’s four-game suspension.

Brady plans to take NFL to court Foxborough, Mass. — Tom Brady took the fight over his “Deflategate” suspension to social media and federal court on Wednesday, and New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft backed the three-time Super Bowl MVP, saying “I was wrong to put my faith in the league.” One day after NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell rejected Brady’s appeal, the quarterback posted a 507-word statement on Facebook with his firmest denial yet, writing: “I did nothing wrong.” Kraft followed with an unscheduled address to the media gathered at Gillette Stadium for the opening of training camp and the team’s defense of its fourth Super Bowl championship. “It is completely incomprehensible to me that the league continues to take steps to disparage one of its all-time great players, and a man for whom I have the utmost respect,” the Patriots owner said. “I have come to the conclusion that this was never about doing what was fair and just.” Just before the courts closed in Minnesota, the NFL Players Association asked the court to overturn Brady’s four-game suspension — or at least put it on hold until the case can be heard. The union asked the court to throw out the suspension before Sept. 4; that would keep Brady from missing any practices before the Patriots’ Sept. 10 season-opener against the Pittsburgh Steelers. “We need to free him up for that first week,” union attorney Jeffrey Kessler told The Associated Press. “We don’t believe this discipline can ever be sustained.” The lawsuit argues that the NFL made up its rules as it went along and misapplied the ones that were already on the books. In an interview with the AP, Kessler called it “offensive” that the league accused Brady of destroying his cellphone to obstruct the investigation, a claim NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell made in upholding the suspension on Tuesday. “We believe they highlighted this issue solely to inflame the public, to suggest there is some secret information being withheld, and that’s wrong,” Kessler told the AP. “It’s an unfair character assassination of a player who has done nothing but be a model citizen for this league.” Brady defended the cellphone swap on Facebook. “To suggest that I destroyed a phone to avoid giving the NFL information it requested is completely wrong,” he said. “There is no ‘smoking gun’ and this controversy is manufactured to distract from the fact they have zero evidence of wrongdoing.” Brady was suspended four games and the Patriots were docked $1 million and two draft picks in May for what the league found was a scheme to provide improperly inflated footballs for the AFC championship game against the Indianapolis Colts. Investigator Ted Wells zeroed in on two equipment managers — one who called himself “The Deflator” — and said Brady was “at least generally aware” of the illegal deflation scheme.

LJWorld.com/highschool • Facebook.com/LJWorldpreps • Twitter.com/LJWpreps

SOCCER

MLS stars top Tottenham Commerce City, Colo. — Kaka scored on a penalty kick and set up David Villa’s goal minutes later in the first half to help the best players in Major League Soccer beat Tottenham Hotspur, 2-1, on a blustery Wednesday night. The MLS improved to 9-3-1 against international competition in its All-Star Game. Orlando City’s Kaka and Villa of New York City FC are the new “kids” in the league and did all right. Both made their MLS debuts this season and showed their skills in the first half before taking a seat on the bench. Harry Kane scored for the Spurs, who open the English Premier League against Manchester United on Aug. 8. Keeper Nick Rimando of Real Salt Lake had a sensational opening 45 minutes before turning things over to David Ousted. Ousted, who plays for Vancouver, preserved the lead in the 73rd minute when he made a sprawling save on a point-blank attempt by Josh Onomah. U.S. national team member DeAndre Yedlin entered the game for Tottenham early in the second half and had a good chance at a goal in the 83rd minute, but sent the ball flying over the crossbar.

BASEBALL

Sources: Texas to add Hamels Philadelphia — Two people familiar with the deal say the Philadelphia Phillies have agreed to trade ace left-hander Cole Hamels to the Texas Rangers for a package of prospects. Both people spoke to The Associated Press late Wednesday night on condition of anonymity because the trade has not been finalized. Hamels has a limited no-trade clause but does not have to approve a deal to the Rangers. Hamels would become the first pitcher in major-league history traded during a season immediately after throwing a no-hitter — he no-hit the Chicago Cubs on Saturday at Wrigley Field. The 2008 World Series MVP was an integral part of the greatest run in franchise history when the Phillies won five straight NL East titles, two pennants and one World Series from 2007-11. His trade follows Wednesday’s deal that sent closer Jonathan Papelbon to Washington.

PRO BASKETBALL

Milwaukee adds Copeland Milwaukee — The Bucks have signed free agent forward Chris Copeland, adding veteran depth to their young frontcourt. General manager John Hammond did not announce terms of the deal Wednesday. The 6-foot-8 Copeland played the last two seasons in Indiana, averaging 6.2 points and 2.2 rebounds in 50 games in 2014-15.

Special Olympics

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8 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234

Cable

LATEST LINE MLB Favorite ................... Odds................ Underdog National League Washington ....................... 7-8................................. MIAMI NY METS ..........................Even-6...................... San Diego Atlanta .............................Even-6.............. PHILADELPHIA Pittsburgh ......................Even-6.................... CINCINNATI ST. LOUIS .....................10 1/2-11 1/2................... Colorado Chicago Cubs .............5 1/2-6 1/2............... MILWAUKEE American League TORONTO ...................6-7.............. Kansas City BALTIMORE ..................6 1/2-7 1/2........................ Detroit Chi White Sox .............7 1/2-8 1/2...................... BOSTON NY Yankees .................5 1/2-6 1/2.......................... TEXAS HOUSTON ........................... 6-7......................... LA Angels MINNESOTA .................5 1/2-6 1/2........................ Seattle Cleveland ........................Even-6....................... OAKLAND Home Team in CAPS (c) TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC

ONLINE ONLY Check out ljworld.com and KUSports. com for online-only content from the Journal-World staff.

‘Hawks in the NBA

http://www2.kusports.com/weblogs/ hawks_nba/ A staff blog about former Jayhawks at the next level

All Eyes on KU

http://www2.kusports.com/weblogs/ all_eyes_ku/ We search the Internet for everything KU-related, so you don’t have to

Double-Chin Music

http://www2.kusports.com/weblogs/ double-chin-music/ Wit and wisdom from sports editor Tom Keegan

Tale of the Tait

http://www2.kusports.com/weblogs/ tale-tait/ Matt Tait’s blog about Kansas University football

E-MAIL US Tom Keegan, Andrew Hartsock, Sports Editor Managing Sports Editor tkeegan@ljworld.com ahartsock@ljworld.com Gary Bedore, Matt Tait, KU men’s basketball KU football gbedore@ljworld.com mtait@ljworld.com Benton Smith, Bobby Nightengale, KUSports.com High schools basmith@ljworld.com bnightengale@ljworld. com

TODAY IN SPORTS 1959 — Willie McCovey has four hits in four at-bats in his major-league debut, with the San Francisco Giants. His hits include two triples. 1968 — Washington’s Ron Hansen pulls off an unassisted triple play, but the Cleveland Indians still win, 10-1. 1980 — Houston pitcher J.R. Richard suffers a stroke during a workout at the Astrodome.

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Call 832-7147, email sportsdesk@ljworld.com or fax 843-4512


LOCAL

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Thursday, July 30, 2015

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KANSAS BASKETBALL

KU target Giles to play at Oak Hill ————

Forward has Kansas on his list of final five schools By Gary Bedore gbedore@ljworld.com

Kansas University recruiting target Harry Giles, a 6-foot-10, 220-pound senior power forward out of Wesleyan Christian Academy in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, has decided to play basketball for Oak Hill Academy this school year. “At this point I just really want to lock in on school and basketball at the highest level,” Giles told USA Today on Wednesday. “I feel like going to Oak Hill (in Mouth of Wilson, Virginia) will give me the chance to do both. I won’t have anything to do but be a better student and a better player.” Giles, who is ranked No. 2 in the recruiting class of 2016 by Rivals. com, averaged 23 points, 11 rebounds, three assists and two blocks his junior year.

He has a final list of KU, Duke, North Carolina, Wake Forest and Kentucky. He’s currently setting up visits to all five schools and plans on announcing his choice in October or November. “The tradition of the programs, the history of the players, the pride people have with those schools. They (former players) still represent them now. They still follow them,” Giles told CBSsports.com. “It’s a good position, how strong and proud people are to be part of (those programs). Ninety five percent of people that attended these schools, people are proud to have gone there,” Giles added. Duke is believed to be the leader following the commitment of St. Louis prep Jayson Tatum, a close friend of Giles. “People are going to say what they have to

say,” Giles said of the Duke rumors to CBSsports.com. “Every player has his own choice. They don’t know. They don’t have a clue. They’re just assuming.” Giles hasn’t let the attention affect his personality. “I’m just being me,” Giles told CBSsports. com. “I never rock the boat. I hate people that rock the boat, that like to be arrogant or cocky. I’ve caught myself doing that before and I say to myself, ‘Man, what are you doing?’ I’ve had to correct myself. I’ve told myself, ‘You’re not being yourself right now.’ I try to be appreciative because I’ve seen people who don’t have a lot of things. My parents, my grandparents — my grandfather, who works in construction. He’s worked his whole life. He worked hard for it. To see people have pride in every day, that they’re

struggling every day, bills are killing them, it just keeps me grounded, keeps me working hard. To hopefully make it easier (someday) for my immediate family ... they sacrificed for me and I want to give it back.” To read CBS’ feature on Giles go to the Web address http://ljw. bz/1Dc97nQ l Cliff’s pay: Details are beginning to emerge on the terms of the contract former KU forward Cliff Alexander has signed with the Portland Trail Blazers. Fred Katz of Bleacher Report and Fox Sports reports Alexander’s contract is partially guaranteed for $100,000 for the first year of a two-year deal. The second year is non-guaranteed. The 6-foot-8, 250-pound, 19-year-old Alexander, who was not selected in the 2015 NBA Draft, played for

the Brooklyn Nets during the Orlando and Las Vegas summer leagues. He averaged 6.2 points and 6.0 rebounds in five games in Orlando and 8.5 points and 6.7 boards in six games in Las Vegas. The Oregonian newspaper says “Alexander will have a chance to join a young front line that already includes 19-year old Noah Vonleh, Mason Plumlee (25 years old), Ed Davis (26) and Meyers Leonard (23).” “The one wildcard is Cliff Alexander,” writes Dave Deckard of Blazersedge.com. “On the surface, he’s similar to Luis Montero (recently signed to nonguaranteed contract). He only started playing basketball in eighth grade. He’s super young and crazy long. The problem is, if his scouting reports are accurate, he doesn’t have a very high ceiling. The best thing I’ve heard about him skill-wise is that while

his jump shot doesn’t go in much his form is good. Even for a center that’s a pretty low starting point. Energy bigs have a place in this league but they’re not going to change the course of a franchise. And they’re not someone you risk a locker room for.” l Arthur update: The Denver Post reports that former KU forward Darrell Arthur is close to resigning with the Nuggets. The 6-9 Arthur, who has played in Denver the past two seasons, has drawn interest from Detroit and Washington. He averaged 6.6 points and 2.9 rebounds for Denver last season. “As valuable as he was on the court, Arthur was also a rock in the locker room. It’s the Nuggets desire to have that kind of influence return to the team,” wrote Chris Dempsey of the Denver Post.

workout at 7 p.m. every Thursday. For information, call 785-393-0233.

or text Jason Robinson to schedule an individual tryout at 785-865-7338.

OUR TOWN SPORTS Ad Astra swimming: Ad Astra Area Aquatics invites your family to experience Lawrence’s only athlete-centered, coachdirected, parent-supported swim team. Tryouts are open, just contact coach Patrick at 785-331-6940 or coach Katie at 785-7667423 or visit the website at adastraareaaquatics.org. Come find out why AAAA is known in our area for its reliable staff and funfriendly-fast culture! l

Horseshoes anyone?: Anyone interested in pitching horseshoes is welcome at 7 p.m. every Thursday at Broken Arrow. Contact Wynne at 843-8450. l

Aquahawks openings: The Aquahawks are always accepting new members. The Aquahawks are a yearround USA Swimmingsponsored competitive swim team. The Aquahawks offer a swim lesson program and competitive swim team for all ages. The Aquahawks are coached by professional coaches with weekly practices geared toward a variety of skill levels. For information contact Andrew Schmidt at andrew.aquahawks@ gmail.com l

Cycling team: Join Team GP VeloTek (www. gpvelotek.com) to improve your road cycling. Open to youth and adults from beginners to advanced cyclists. Contact coach Jim Whittaker at 913.269. VELO or velotek@aol.com l

Next level lessons: Next Level Baseball Academy offers year-round private and semi-private baseball lessons ages 8-18. Locations in Lawrence, Big Springs and New Century. For information, email Duncanmatt32@yahoo.com or visit NextLevelBaseballAcademy.com

LET US KNOW Do you have a camp or a tournament or a sign-up session on tap? How about someone who turned in a noteworthy performance? We’d like you to tell us about it. Mail it to Our Town Sports, Journal-World, Box 888, Lawrence 66044, fax it to 785 8434512, e-mail to sportsdesk@ljworld.com or call 832-7147. 1025 N. Third Street, Suite 119. Youth age 8-20, all levels of experience, are invited to join. The Archery Center has a full-service pro shop with rental equipment available. For information, call Overton’s Archery Center at 8321654 or visit www.overtonsarcherycenter.com l

Group run: At 6 p.m. every Thursday, Garry Gribble’s Running Sports holds a group run from its store. It’s called “Mass Street Milers,” and all paces and ability levels are welcome. For information, call the store at 785-856-0434. l

Basketball basics: One-to-one instruction by Frank Kelly, for boys and girls of all ages. Fundamentals of shooting, passing, dribbling, defense and rebounding. Ten years coaching experiences. References. Cost: $25 per hour. For information, call 393-3162 or email lingofrank@gmail.com l

Baseball lessons: Hourly lessons. Grades K-12. All skill levels. Fundamentals of hitting, pitching, fielding, baserunning and other baseball-related skills. Have references. Call coach Dan at 785-7606161 (baseballknowhow@ weebly.com). l

Basketball lessons: FUNdamental softball: Gary Hammer offers Learn the proper mechanprivate and small group ics and techniques to play basketball lessons. Hamsoftball. Emphasis placed mer is the P.E. teacher and on fundamental instruction a coach at Veritas Christian teaching the aspects of School. Affordable prices pitching, catching, fielding, and excellent instruction! base-running and hitting. Contact Gary at gjhamCoach and team consulting mer@sunflower.com or available, too. For inforcall 785-841-1800. mation, contact LuAnn l Metsker at 785-331-9438 Yoga class: Free Yoga or dmgshowpig@aol.com Class at Garry Gribble’s l Running Sports (839 Archery club: The Mass.) every Sunday mornJunior Olympic Archery ing from 10 a.m. to 11 am. Development Club meets The practice is open to at 9 a.m. every Saturday in beginners and advanced the indoor target range at practitioners alike. Bring Overton’s Archery Center, a mat, towel, water bottle l

and wear comfortable athletic clothing. Any questions? Email Lauren at Ultralink369@gmail.com or call the store at 785856-0434.

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Phenix looking: The Lawrence Phenix Folks 12UB team is looking to add to its roster for the fall season. Our team is part of the Lawrence Phenix Orl ganization that has been in Basketball Academy: Reign Basketball Academy, operation for 30-plus years offering an opportunity LLC., offers year round elite level agility, speed and for girls to play competitive fastpitch softball. Our basketball training for all first year team is looking youth athletes, ages 5-18. for 4-5 players with 2004 PRICING: 4-Session Packbirthdays — specifically, age (1-hour each) for 5-12 one established pitcher is $140. 4-Session Packand players ready to play age for 13 & up is $200. 12B. Email phenixsoftball@ For more information, contact Rebekah Vann at gmail.com for questions or to set up an individual 785-766-3056 or reignbbacademy@gmail.com. For tryout. more information, go to l reignbasketballacademy. Lacrosse camp: A weebly.com. Join us on lacrosse camp for boys and Twitter @reignbbacademy, girls of all ages and experiYouTube and Facebook. ence levels, sponsored by com/reignbasketballacad- Lawrence All City Lacrosse emy. Club, will be 8 a.m.-noon on Aug. 5-7. Location: l Bishop Seabury Academy Bike ride: The Law(4120 Clinton Parkway). rence’s Bike Club’s SumCost: $120. Family pricing: mer Fun Beginners Bike Ride will be every Monday $95 each additional sibling. Guest coach Ryan Walthrough Aug. 31. Ride belace, head men’s lacrosse gins at 6:30 p.m. at Cycle Works, 2121 Kasold Dr. Ap- coach at Colorado School proximately 10 mph for 10 of Mines. Loaner sticks miles mostly on Lawrence provided for beginners. For information, contact Bike Path. Tech tips first Chuck Ozonoff at 785Monday of each month. 423-0100. To register go Helmet required, water to www.seaburyacademy. bottle recommended. org/athletics/lacrosse.cfm l Brandon Schneil der Golf: The inaugural Free State softball Brandon Schneider Golf camp: The 5 Tool Softball Tournament will tee off on School (grades 4-8) is Aug. 22 at Alvamar Golf taking applications for the and Country Club. Regissoftball camp that will be tration is open for singles, offered at Free State High pairs and foursomes. Cost this coming fall. The camp is $100 per person, which will be held on Sunday afincludes green fees, cart, ternoons Aug. 30 through range balls, dinner and a Sept. 20. For more inforgoodie bag. All proceeds mation, contact FSHS head from the tournament supsoftball coach Lee Ice at port Kansas women’s bas- ice@sunflower.com ketball and the Lawrence l Memorial Hospital Breast Youth football signCenter. Golf begins at 1 ups: Lawrence Youth Footp.m., with a shotgun start ball will have sign-up and of the four-person scramRegistration for grades 2-7 ble. Dinner will follow at 6 tackle football and K-1 flag p.m., and includes live and football from 6-8 p.m. on silent auctions. Throughout Aug. 5 and Aug. 12 at YSC the day, participants will (4911 W. 27th) on Field 3. get a chance to meet the Go to our Facebook page 2015-16 Kansas women’s for team contact informabasketball team and staff, tion. Contact a team you who will be on the course are interested through our cheering and visiting with Facebook page. Bring your the teams. For information, registration form with you visit www.kuwbbgolf.com. to sign-ups. Practices will start the first week of Aul Robinson Center court gust, with the first games availability: The Robinson on Sept. 13. Center at Kansas Univerl sity has courts available CrossFit youth workfor rent for basketball, outs: Jayhawker CrossFit volleyball, racquetball, soc- will host a barbell workcer, baseball, softball and shop from an elite Olympic other sports. For informalifting athlete who will be tion, contact Bernie Kish competing in the Olympic at 864-0703 or bkish@ Games. Also, we now ofku.edu. fer an introductory group

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U14 baseball seeking: A competitive U14 AA team is looking for two players. This team that will play in fall league 2015 and tournaments in the spring of 2016. Players cannot turn 15 before May 1st 2016. Contact baseball66@outlook.com for tryout details.

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Flag football: Coming this fall, Called To Greatness is offering a Flag Football Experience for upcoming second-sixth graders. When: Every Saturday Sept. 12-Oct. 17, 9-11 a.m. Where: YSC Lawrence Football Fields, southwest corner of complex, Fields 3 & 4 Cost: $75. For more l information and to register 14U Rebels looking: Kansas Rebels 14U baseball visit www.calledtogretness.com. If you have team conducting tryouts questions, contact footfor spring 2016 season. ball@calledtogreatness. Competitive tournament com team will play league lol cally and 6-8 tournaments. Golf volunteers: AlCoaching staff with 20 vamar Golf Course needs plus years of experience. volunteers for theWeb.com Contact Pat Karlin at kuqualifier on Monday, Aug. fireman@sbcglobal.net or 785-865-8682 to schedule 3. Volunteers are needed a tryout. to spot balls on both the l Members Course and the 11U Rebels tryout: The Championship Course. 11U Rebels competitive Alvamar will provide those baseball team will hold a helping with a coupon for tryout from 9-11 a.m., Aug. a round of golf for two in8 at YSC field No. 1. We cluding cart. If you can help are looking for pitchers or have questions, contact and great hitters. Email Paul Hooser phooser@ questions to Mark Kern at alvamar.com mkern@kerngroupinc.com l l 5 Tool Softball TryCross country: runLaw- outs: Tryouts for all rence is offering an eightpositions will be held at week fall cross country Free State High softball program for middle school field, 4700 Overland students, Aug. 17 – Oct 8. Drive, on Saturday, Aug. It will meet from 4:305:30 p.m. Monday through 8, 10 a.m. for ages 14U, Thursday at Broken Arrow noon for ages 12U, 2 p.m . for ages 18/16U, and on Park. Sign up by Aug 16. Sunday, Aug. 9, 1 p.m. for More info at: http://www. 12U and 14U, and 2 p.m. runlawrence.org/youthfor ages 16/18U. Questions running.html, or email: about the 5 Tool tryouts runLawrence@gmail.com or program can be sent l to 5toollawrence@gmail. 11U Lawrence Lightcom, or more informaning tryout: The Lawrence Lightning U11 basetion about the 5 Tool ball team will hold tryouts program can be found at Aug. 8 and Aug. 15 at http://5toolsoftball.org YSI No. 2 at 10a.m. State l champion baseball team Reign Academy: If you will play in DCABA league are looking for a youth and 6 tournaments. Please competitive sports teams, contact Clint Bradley at Reign Basketball Academy 785-550-5248 for more LLC is holding tryouts for information. team “PUSH THE ROCK” l 10U (3rd/4th grade) boys Inferno tryouts: 5 Tool on Aug. 15 from 11 a.m. -1 Inferno, a second-year p.m. at Grace Church (3312 14UB softball team, will Calvin Dr., Lawrence). hold tryouts from 10 a.m.There will also be tryouts noon on Aug. 1 at the Free for 14U (7th/8th grade) State High softball field, girls on Aug. 22 from 4700 Overland Drive. The team is looking for players 11 a.m.-1 p.m. at Grace Church. For more informaat all positions. If you are unable to attend and would tion and to reserve your spot at tryouts, please call still like to try out, there Director, Rebekah Vann will be an organizational at 785-766-3056 or send tryout for all the 5 Tool organization teams, includ- an email to reignbbacademy@gmail.com. You can ing Inferno, ages 12U, 14U and 16U-18U, from 10 a.m.- also check us out online at noon on Aug. 8. If unable to www.reignbasketballacadattend either one date, call emy.weebly.com


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Thursday, July 30, 2015

SPORTS

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MAJOR-LEAGUE ROUNDUP

Pittsburgh sweeps Minnesota ————

Vintage Verlander leads Tigers past Rays The Associated Press

Interleague Pirates 10, Twins 4 Minneapolis — Andrew McCutchen hit a home run and turned an RBI single into race around the bases while Minnesota made two errors in a five-run sixth inning, helping Francisco Liriano and Pittsburgh beat the Twins Wednesday for a two-game sweep. Jung Ho Kang homered for the second straight day for the Pirates, after going deep for the goahead run in the ninth the night before. McCutchen’s two-run, two-strike, two-out drive off Ervin Santana (2-1) in the fifth inning tied the game at 3, and the Twins unraveled in the sixth. Pittsburgh Minnesota ab r h bi ab r h bi GPolnc rf 2 0 0 0 Dozier 2b 4 1 1 0 Decker rf 2 1 0 0 Hicks cf 5 1 3 1 SMarte lf 4 1 1 1 Mauer 1b 5 1 1 0 McCtch cf 4 2 2 3 Sano dh 4 0 2 2 ArRmr 3b 5 0 2 0 ERosar rf 4 1 1 0 Flormn pr-ss 0 1 0 0 Nunez 3b 4 0 1 1 Kang ss-3b 5 1 3 1 EdEscr ss-lf 4 0 1 0 NWalkr 2b 5 1 2 0 KSuzuk c 4 0 1 0 PAlvrz dh 4 1 1 2 SRonsn lf 3 0 1 0 Cervelli c 4 1 2 0 JPolnc ph-ss 1 0 0 0 Ishikaw 1b 4 1 0 0 Totals 39 10 13 7 Totals 38 4 12 4 Pittsburgh 010 025 002—10 000 001— 4 Minnesota 012 E-Bastardo (1), S.Marte (2), E.Santana (1), Nunez (2), E.Rosario (5). DP-Minnesota 1. LOB-Pittsburgh 8, Minnesota 9. 2B-Ar.Ramirez (19), N.Walker (24), P.Alvarez (15), Cervelli (11), Dozier (28), Sano (6), S.Robinson (4). 3B-E.Rosario (5). HR-McCutchen (14), Kang (7). SB-S.Marte (20). SF-S.Marte. IP H R ER BB SO Pittsburgh Liriano W,7-6 5 2/3 10 3 2 0 4 Bastardo 2/3 0 0 0 2 2 J.Hughes H,17 2/3 0 0 0 0 1 Caminero 1 0 0 0 0 0 D.Guerra 1 2 1 1 0 2 Minnesota E.Santana L,2-1 5 2/3 8 8 6 4 3 Boyer 1 2 0 0 1 0 O’Rourke 2/3 0 0 0 0 2 Graham 1 2/3 3 2 2 0 0 WP-D.Guerra, E.Santana, Graham. T-3:29. A-37,273 (39,021).

Orioles 2, Braves 0 Baltimore — Chris Tillman took a three-hitter into the ninth inning, Jonathan Schoop and J.J. Hardy homered and Baltimore beat skidding Atlanta for a three-game sweep. Tillman (8-7) was lifted after giving up a twoout double to Cameron Maybin in the ninth. The right-hander had retired 13 straight batters to that point.

1 1 0

1 1 0

2 0 0

6 3 1

7 1 0

7 1 0

1 0 0

7 2 1

Blue Jays 8, Phillies 2 Toronto — Troy Tulowitzki homered and had three hits in his Blue Jays debut as Toronto beat Philadelphia. The five-time All-Star, who was acquired in a trade with the Colorado Rockies, went 3 for 5 with two doubles and three RBIs. He scored three times. Philadelphia Toronto ab r h bi ab r h bi Revere cf 4 1 1 0 Tlwtzk ss 5 3 3 3 Galvis ss 4 0 1 0 Dnldsn 3b 5 0 2 0 Franco 3b 3 0 1 0 Bautist dh 5 1 2 1 Howard dh 4 0 1 1 Colaell 1b 4 0 1 1 Francr lf 4 0 2 0 Smoak 1b 0 0 0 0 DBrwn rf 4 1 0 0 RuMrtn c 4 0 1 1 Ruiz c 4 0 0 0 Valenci lf 4 0 2 0 Ruf 1b 4 0 0 0 Carrer rf 3 1 2 0 ABlanc 2b 3 0 1 0 Pillar cf 3 1 1 1 Goins 2b 3 2 2 1 Totals 34 2 7 1 Totals 36 8 16 8 Philadelphia 000 000 110—2 023 10x—8 Toronto 002 E-De Fratus (2), Galvis (12), Ru.Martin (3), Valencia (1). DP-Philadelphia 2, Toronto 1. LOB-Philadelphia 6, Toronto 8. 2B-Francoeur (12), Tulowitzki 2 (2), Ru.Martin (19), Goins (9). HR-Tulowitzki (1). S-Carrera. SF-Colabello, Pillar. IP H R ER BB SO Philadelphia J.Williams L,3-8 4 2/3 10 4 4 0 1 De Fratus 2 1/3 6 4 4 1 2 Neris 1 0 0 0 0 1 Toronto Dickey W,5-10 8 7 2 0 1 4 Schultz 1 0 0 0 0 1 WP-Dickey 2. T-2:37. A-27,060 (49,282).

E-Koehler (3), Realmuto (3). DP-Miami 1. LOBWashington 4, Miami 6. 2B-Rendon (6), McGehee (10), I.Suzuki (1). 3B-Desmond (2). HR-Harper 2 (29), M.Taylor (9). SF-M.Taylor. IP H R ER BB SO Washington Fister W,4-6 6 4 2 2 1 4 Janssen H,7 1 0 0 0 0 0 Storen 1 0 0 0 0 2 Roark 1 1 0 0 1 1 Miami Koehler L,8-7 6 6 5 5 1 4 S.Dyson 2 3 2 2 0 3 Rienzo 1 0 0 0 1 1 HBP-by Fister (Dietrich, Bour). T-2:39. A-19,513 (37,442).

SCOREBOARD American League

East Division W L Pct GB New York 57 43 .570 — Baltimore 51 49 .510 6 Toronto 51 51 .500 7 Tampa Bay 51 52 .495 7½ Boston 44 58 .431 14 Central Division W L Pct GB Kansas City 61 39 .610 — Minnesota 52 48 .520 9 Chicago 49 50 .495 11½ Detroit 49 52 .485 12½ Cleveland 46 54 .460 15 West Division W L Pct GB Houston 57 45 .559 — Los Angeles 55 45 .550 1 Texas 48 52 .480 8 Seattle 46 56 .451 11 Oakland 45 56 .446 11½ Today’s Games Detroit (Simon 9-6) at Baltimore (Mi. Gonzalez 9-6), 6:05 p.m. Kansas City (D.Duffy 4-4) at Toronto (Estrada 7-6), 6:07 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Sale 9-5) at Boston (S.Wright 3-4), 6:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Pineda 9-7) at Texas (Gallardo 7-9), 7:05 p.m. L.A. Angels (Shoemaker 5-7) at Houston (Kazmir 6-5), 7:10 p.m. Seattle (Happ 4-5) at Minnesota (P.Hughes 9-6), 7:10 p.m. Cleveland (Carrasco 10-8) at Oakland (Bassitt 0-3), 9:05 p.m. Friday’s Games Detroit at Baltimore, 6:05 p.m. Kansas City at Toronto, 6:07 p.m. Tampa Bay at Boston, 6:10 p.m. San Francisco at Texas, 7:05 p.m. Arizona at Houston, 7:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Chicago White Sox, 7:10 p.m. Seattle at Minnesota, 7:10 p.m. Cleveland at Oakland, 8:35 p.m. L.A. Angels at L.A. Dodgers, 9:10 p.m.

Padres 7, Mets 3 New York — Justin Upton homered and drove in three runs and Yonder Alonso also connected as San Diego beat the New Atlanta Baltimore ab r h bi ab r h bi York Mets despite three Markks dh 4 0 1 0 MMchd 3b 4 0 2 0 long balls from Lucas Maybin cf 4 0 1 0 Pareds dh 4 0 1 0 FFrmn 1b 4 0 0 0 A.Jones cf 4 0 0 0 Duda. AdGarc lf 3 0 0 0 C.Davis rf 3 0 0 0 Przyns c 3 0 1 0 Wieters c 3 0 1 0 Duda hit the first of ASmns ss 3 0 1 0 JHardy ss 3 1 1 1 his home runs leading JPetrsn 2b 3 0 0 0 Reimld lf 2 0 0 0 EPerez rf 3 0 0 0 Flahrty 1b 3 0 0 0 off the second to end TyDCastr 3b 3 0 0 0 Parmel 1b 0 0 0 0 National League son Ross’ streak of starts Schoop 2b 2 1 1 1 Totals 30 0 4 0 Totals 28 2 6 2 without allowing one at Atlanta 000 000 000—0 Giants 5, Brewers 0 100 00x—2 Baltimore 001 16, a Padres record. Ross S an F rancisco — HuntE-Schoop (1). DP-Baltimore 2. LOB-Atlanta 3, (7-8) hadn’t given up a Baltimore 4. 2B-Maybin (12), Wieters (8). HR-J. er Pence doubled in Matt Hardy (7), Schoop (7). CS-Paredes (3). homer since April 28, a IP H R ER BB SO Duffy to break a scoreless Atlanta span of 100 innings. tie in the seventh inning Foltynewicz L,3-3 6 6 2 2 2 8 National League Aardsma 2 0 0 0 0 1 San New York and San Francisco held Diego ab r h bi East Division Baltimore ab r h bi W L Pct GB Tillman W,8-7 8 2/3 4 0 0 0 2 Venale cf-rf 5 2 2 1 Grndrs rf 2 0 0 0 on to beat Milwaukee. Washington 53 46 .535 — 3b 5 2 4 1 DnMrp 3b 4 0 0 0 Britton S,26-27 1/3 0 0 0 0 0 Pence also made two Solarte Kemp rf 3 0 1 1 Robles p 0 0 0 0 New York 52 49 .515 2 T-2:15. A-29,328 (45,971). p 0 0 0 0 KJhnsn 2b 3 0 0 0 Atlanta 46 55 .455 8 sparkling defensive plays Qcknsh Wallac ph 1 0 0 0 Duda 1b 3 3 3 3 Miami 42 59 .416 12 in the outfield as the Gi- Almont lf 0 0 0 0 Confort lf 4 0 0 0 Philadelphia 38 64 .373 16½ lf 4 1 2 3 Niwnhs cf 3 0 0 0 ants bounced back from Upton Central Division p 0 0 0 0 WFlors ss 3 0 1 0 American League their only loss on this six- Thayer W L Pct GB Mateo p 0 0 0 0 Tejada ph 1 0 0 0 St. Louis 64 37 .634 — 1b 5 1 2 1 Recker c 3 0 0 0 Tigers 2, Rays 1 game homestand to beat Alonso Pittsburgh 59 41 .590 4½ Gyorko 2b 4 0 2 0 B.Colon p 0 0 0 0 ss 5 0 0 0 ATorrs p 1 0 0 0 Chicago 53 47 .530 10½ St. Petersburg, Fla. — the Brewers for the fifth Amarst Hedges c 4 1 2 0 Lagars ph 1 0 0 0 Cincinnati 45 54 .455 18 Justin Verlander outlast- time in six games this T.Ross p 1 0 0 0 Parnell p 0 0 0 0 Milwaukee 44 58 .431 20½ UptnJr cf 1 0 0 0 Campll ph-3b 1 0 1 0 West Division ed Chris Archer for his season. Totals 38 7 15 7 Totals 29 3 5 3 W L Pct GB San Diego 222 001 000—7 first win this season and Milwaukee San Francisco Los Angeles 56 45 .554 — New York 010 001 001—3 ab r h bi ab r h bi San Francisco 56 45 .554 — Detroit avoided a three- GParra DP-San Diego 2, New York 1. LOB-San Diego lf 4 0 2 0 Aoki lf 4 0 1 0 49 51 .490 6½ 10, New York 4. 2B-Solarte 2 (21), Alonso (11). Arizona game sweep by beating Lucroy c 4 0 2 0 GBlanc cf 2 0 0 1 HR-Upton (17), Alonso (4), Duda 3 (18). SB-Venable San Diego 48 53 .475 8 Braun rf 4 0 0 0 MDuffy 3b 4 1 1 0 (7), Kemp (9), Amarista (4). CS-Granderson (3). S-T. Tampa Bay. Colorado 43 56 .434 12 Lind 1b 3 0 0 0 Pence rf 4 1 2 1 Ross 2. SF-Upton. Today’s Games 4 0 0 0 Belt 1b 3 1 1 0 Verlander (1-3), who CGomz cf IP H R ER BB SO San Diego (Cashner 4-10) at N.Y. 2b 3 0 0 0 BCrwfr ss 3 0 0 1 San Diego retired his first 14 bat- Gennett Mets (Niese 5-9), 11:10 a.m. KDavis ph 1 0 0 0 HSnchz c 4 1 1 0 T.Ross W,7-8 5 2 1 1 4 5 Segura ss 3 0 1 0 Adrianz 2b 3 1 1 2 Washington (Scherzer 10-8) at ters before Asdrubal HPerez 3b 3 0 0 0 Peavy p 1 0 1 0 Quackenbush 2 1 1 1 0 4 Miami (Haren 7-6), 11:10 a.m. Thayer 1 1 0 0 0 1 Cabrera homered on an Fiers p 1 0 0 0 Pagan ph 1 0 0 0 Atlanta (S.Miller 5-7) at Philadelphia Mateo 1 1 1 1 0 1 ph 1 0 1 0 Romo p 0 0 0 0 New York (Harang 4-11), 6:05 p.m. 0-1 pitch with two outs SPetrsn Totals 31 0 6 0 Totals 29 5 8 5 B.Colon L,9-10 2 1/3 10 6 6 0 1 Pittsburgh (Burnett 8-4) at 000 000 000—0 in the fifth, gave up one Milwaukee A.Torres 2 2/3 0 0 0 3 2 Cincinnati (Holmberg 0-0), 6:10 p.m. San Francisco 000 000 50x—5 Parnell 1 2 1 1 0 0 run, four hits and had 10 Colorado (Rusin 3-4) at St. Louis E-Lucroy (7). DP-Milwaukee 1, San Francisco Gilmartin 2 2 0 0 0 5 (C.Martinez 11-4), 6:15 p.m. 1. LOB-Milwaukee 6, San Francisco 5. 2B-Pence Robles strikeouts. 1 1 0 0 0 3 (11), H.Sanchez (3). SB-Lucroy (1), G.Blanco (6). Chicago Cubs (Arrieta 11-6) at

D’backs 8, Mariners 2 Seattle — Welington Detroit Tampa Bay ab r h bi ab r h bi Castillo homered twice Kinsler 2b 4 0 0 0 Jaso lf 3 0 0 0 off Seattle ace Felix Her- JIglesis ss 4 1 1 0 Guyer lf 1 0 0 0 lf 4 1 1 0 SouzJr rf 4 0 1 0 nandez, including a two- Cespds VMrtnz dh 4 0 0 0 Longori 3b 3 0 0 0 3 0 1 1 Loney 1b 3 0 1 0 run shot in the first in- JMrtnz rf Cstllns 3b 1 1 TBckh pr-2b 1 0 0 0 ning, and Arizona won Romine 3b 3 0 1 0 0 0 Forsyth 2b-1b 3 0 1 0 Avila 1b 3 0 0 0 ACarer ss 3 1 1 1 their its straight beating JMcCn c 3 0 0 0 Casali dh 3 0 0 0 the Mariners. Gose cf 3 0 0 0 Kiermr cf 3 0 0 0 Rivera c 2 0 0 0 Arizona completed its JButler ph 1 0 0 0 32 2 4 2 Totals 30 1 4 1 first sweep of Seattle and Totals 000 000 200—2 fifth this season thanks Detroit Tampa Bay 000 010 000—1 E-A.Cabrera (3). LOB-Detroit 4, Tampa Bay 3. Castillo’s two long balls. HR-A.Cabrera (6). CS-Souza Jr. (6). IP H R ER BB SO Castillo hit a two-run homer off Hernandez (12- Detroit Verlander W,1-3 8 4 1 1 0 10 S,23-26 1 0 0 0 0 2 6) as part of Arizona’s Soria Tampa Bay four-run first inning, then Archer L,9-8 7 3 2 0 0 11 1 0 0 0 0 0 added a solo shot leading Geltz Boxberger 1 1 0 0 1 1 HBP-by Soria (Longoria). off the fourth inning. He T-2:39. A-28,057 (31,042). became just the sixth player to homer twice in the same game off Hernandez. Astros 6, Angels 3 Houston — Rookie Arizona Seattle ab r h bi ab r h bi Lance McCullers pitched Inciart rf 5 2 2 0 AJcksn cf 4 1 1 0 seven solid innings and Pollock cf 5 2 3 1 Seager 3b 3 1 0 0 Gldsch 1b 5 1 2 2 N.Cruz rf 3 0 1 0 Preston Tucker and Jon DPerlt lf 5 0 1 2 Gutirrz lf 4 0 1 1 WCastll c 3 2 2 3 Trumo dh-1b 4 0 0 0 Singleton both homered JaLam 3b 5 0 1 0 BMiller 2b 4 0 2 1 to help Houston to a win Tomas dh 4 1 2 0 Morrsn 1b 3 0 0 0 Owings 2b 4 0 1 0 Nuno p 0 0 0 0 over the Los Angeles AnPnngtn ss 4 0 1 0 Rodney p 0 0 0 0 gels to regain first place Ackley ph 1 0 1 0 Sucre c 3 0 1 0 in the American League S.Smith ph 1 0 0 0 CTaylr ss 4 0 0 0 West. Totals 40 8 15 8 Totals 34 2 7 2 Houston also took the Arizona 400 100 210—8 100 010—2 Seattle 000 first game of the series E-Seager (12). DP-Seattle 2. LOB-Arizona 7, Seattle 7. 2B-Pollock (22), Tomas (17), A.Jackson to move ahead of the An(12), Gutierrez (3), Ackley (8), Sucre (1). 3B-D. gels, who came into town Peralta (8). HR-W.Castillo 2 (10). CS-Owings (3). IP H R ER BB SO leading the division. Arizona Corbin W,2-3 6 3 Reed 2 3 Collmenter 1 1 Seattle F.Hernandez L,12-6 6 2/3 12 Nuno 1 1/3 3 Rodney 1 0 HBP-by Rodney (W.Castillo). T-2:59. A-32,502 (47,574).

Chicago Boston ab r h bi ab r h bi Eaton cf 6 2 3 2 B.Holt 2b 4 0 2 0 Saladin 3b 4 1 1 0 Bogarts ss 4 1 1 0 MeCarr lf 6 2 3 1 HRmrz lf 4 0 0 0 Abreu 1b 4 0 1 1 Ortiz dh 3 0 0 0 LaRoch dh 4 0 1 1 Napoli 1b 3 1 2 2 AvGarc rf 5 1 1 0 RCastll rf 4 0 1 0 AlRmrz ss 5 2 2 1 Sandovl 3b 1 0 0 0 CSnchz 2b 5 1 3 1 Rutledg 3b 2 0 0 0 Flowrs c 5 0 2 1 Hanign c 4 0 1 0 BrdlyJr cf 3 0 0 0 Totals 44 9 17 8 Totals 32 2 7 2 Chicago 231 000 210—9 100 100—2 Boston 000 E-Eaton (5), Ogando (2), B.Holt (7). DP-Chicago 1. LOB-Chicago 12, Boston 6. 2B-Me.Cabrera (22), Al.Ramirez (19), C.Sanchez 2 (13), Napoli (16), R.Castillo (2), Hanigan (5). HR-Eaton (9), Al.Ramirez (5), Napoli (12). SB-Saladino (1). CS-Saladino (2). IP H R ER BB SO Chicago Quintana W,6-9 6 1/3 6 2 2 1 3 Putnam 1 2/3 1 0 0 0 2 D.Webb 1 0 0 0 2 2 Boston Porcello L,5-11 2 10 6 5 1 2 Breslow 3 0 0 0 1 3 Layne 2 3 2 2 1 2 Ogando 1 2 1 1 0 1 Uehara 1 2 0 0 0 2 Porcello pitched to 3 batters in the 3rd. HBP-by Porcello (LaRoche). T-3:42. A-37,104 (37,673).

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Los Angeles Houston ab r h bi ab r h bi DeJess cf 4 0 0 0 Altuve 2b 4 0 1 1 Calhon rf 4 0 0 0 Tucker lf 3 1 1 1 Pujols 1b 4 1 1 1 Correa ss 4 0 1 0 DvMrp lf 4 1 1 0 Gattis dh 4 1 1 0 Aybar ss 4 1 2 0 Valuen 3b 4 2 2 0 Cron dh 4 0 1 0 ClRsms rf 2 0 0 1 Gillaspi 3b 4 0 1 1 Conger c 3 1 1 1 Giavtll 2b 4 0 1 1 Singltn 1b 3 1 2 2 C.Perez c 4 0 2 0 Mrsnck cf 4 0 2 0 Totals 36 3 9 3 Totals 31 6 11 6 Los Angeles 010 000 002—3 Houston 000 021 12x—6 DP-Los Angeles 1. LOB-Los Angeles 6, Houston 6. 2B-Aybar (18), Cron (9), C.Perez (5), Valbuena (11), Marisnick (11). 3B-Gillaspie (2). HR-Pujols (30), Tucker (10), Singleton (1). SB-C.Perez (1). CS-Marisnick (5). SF-Col.Rasmus, Conger. IP H R ER BB SO Los Angeles Richards L,10-8 6 1/3 7 4 4 2 3 Gott 2/3 1 0 0 0 1 J.Alvarez 1 3 2 2 1 1 Houston McCullers W,5-3 7 5 1 1 0 5 Neshek H,23 1 0 0 0 0 1 Gregerson 1 4 2 2 0 1 WP-Richards, McCullers. T-2:50. A-31,272 (41,574).

White Sox 9, Red Sox 2 Boston — Adam Eaton opened the game with a home run, Jose Quintana pitched 6 1-3 solid innings and the Chicago White Sox beat Boston for their seventh straight win. Eaton and Melky Cabrera both had three hits, including RBI singles. Alexei Ramirez hit a solo homer for the White Sox, who built a 6-0 lead and chased Boston starter Rick Porcello in the third inning.

CS-Pence (1). S-Fiers. SF-G.Blanco, B.Crawford. IP H R ER BB Milwaukee Fiers L,5-9 6 4 2 2 1 W.Smith 1/3 3 3 3 0 Broxton 2/3 1 0 0 1 Knebel 1 0 0 0 1 San Francisco Peavy 6 4 0 0 0 Strickland W,1-1 1 0 0 0 1 Romo 1 2 0 0 0 Lopez 1 0 0 0 0 Fiers pitched to 2 batters in the 7th. WP-Strickland. T-3:02. A-42,352 (41,915).

SO 5 0 1 2 3 0 1 1

Cubs 3, Rockies 2 Chicago — Jon Lester struck out 14, one shy of his career high and the most for a Cubs pitcher in more than a decade, leading Chicago over Colorado. A day after he was acquired from Toronto, Jose Reyes was 1 for 3 with a walk and a stolen base in his Rockies’ debut. The four-time AllStar, obtained in a trade that sent Troy Tulowitzki to Toronto, batted second and singled in his first at-bat for Colorado, then was caught stealing. Colorado Chicago ab r h bi ab r h bi Blckmn cf 4 1 1 0 Fowler cf 2 2 1 1 Reyes ss 3 0 1 0 Schwrr lf 2 0 1 0 Arenad 3b 3 0 0 1 HRndn p 0 0 0 0 CGnzlz rf 3 1 1 1 Bryant 3b 4 0 0 0 LeMahi 2b 4 0 0 0 Rizzo 1b 4 1 1 2 Stubbs lf 3 0 0 0 Coghln rf 3 0 0 0 Paulsn 1b 3 0 1 0 ARussll ss 3 0 2 0 Hundly c 3 0 1 0 D.Ross c 3 0 1 0 EButlr p 1 0 0 0 Lester p 0 0 0 0 BBarns ph 1 0 0 0 Denorfi lf 0 0 0 0 McKnr ph 1 0 0 0 JHerrr 2b 3 0 0 0 Totals 29 2 5 2 Totals 24 3 6 3 Colorado 000 100 100—2 000 00x—3 Chicago 102 DP-Colorado 1, Chicago 1. LOB-Colorado 3, Chicago 5. HR-Ca.Gonzalez (21), Fowler (10), Rizzo (17). SB-Blackmon 2 (27), Reyes (1), Hundley (4). CS-Reyes (1), Fowler (6), Coghlan (2). S-Lester 3. SF-Arenado. IP H R ER BB SO Colorado E.Butler L,3-7 5 5 3 3 3 4 Laffey 2 1 0 0 1 1 Kahnle 1 0 0 0 1 1 Chicago Lester W,6-8 8 5 2 2 1 14 H.Rondon S,13-16 1 0 0 0 1 2 T-2:37. A-38,874 (40,929).

HBP-by Mateo (Nieuwenhuis). T-3:12. A-24,804 (41,922).

Reds 1, Cardinals 0 St. Louis — Jay Bruce homered in the second to back Anthony DeSclafani’s seven innings of three-hit ball, and Cincinnati shut out St. Louis for the second straight night. The Reds ended a nine- WNBA series losing streak in St. EASTERN CONFERENCE W Louis and have won con- New York 12 secutive games at Busch Washington 10 11 Stadium for the first time Chicago Indiana 10 since July 6 and Sept. 2, Connecticut 8 7 2011. It was the first time Atlanta CONFERENCE Cincinnati won consecu- WESTERN W 13 tive games in the same Minnesota Phoenix 10 series since June 2006. Tulsa 10 Cincinnati St. Louis ab r h bi ab r h bi Phillips 2b 4 0 0 0 Wong 2b 4 0 0 0 Votto 1b 3 0 0 0 MCrpnt 3b 2 0 1 0 Frazier 3b 4 0 0 0 Hollidy lf 1 0 0 0 Bruce rf 4 1 1 1 Rynlds 1b 3 0 0 0 Byrd lf 3 0 0 0 JhPerlt ss 3 0 0 0 Suarez ss 3 0 0 0 Heywrd rf 3 0 1 0 B.Pena c 2 0 0 0 Molina c 4 0 0 0 DeSclfn p 2 0 0 0 Grichk cf 3 0 1 0 Schmkr ph 1 0 0 0 Pisctty 1b-lf 3 0 1 0 Hoover p 0 0 0 0 Lackey p 1 0 0 0 BHmltn cf 3 0 1 0 Bourjos ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 29 1 2 1 Totals 28 0 4 0 Cincinnati 010 000 000—1 St. Louis 000 000 000—0 DP-Cincinnati 2. LOB-Cincinnati 3, St. Louis 6. 2B-M.Carpenter (24). HR-Bruce (17). SB-B.Hamilton (47). S-Lackey. IP H R ER BB SO Cincinnati DeSclafani W,6-7 7 3 0 0 3 3 Hoover H,9 1 1 0 0 0 1 A.Chapman S,21-22 1 0 0 0 0 2 St. Louis Lackey L,9-6 8 2 1 1 1 8 Siegrist 1 0 0 0 1 0 HBP-by DeSclafani (Jh.Peralta). T-2:18. A-42,334 (45,399).

Rangers 5, Yankees 2 Arlington, Texas — Colby Lewis went six innings for his 11th victory and Texas snapped a three-game losing streak with a win over the AL East-leading New York Yankees. Adrian Beltre had two Nationals 7, Marlins 2 hits and scored twice for Miami — Bryce Harper the Rangers, who won for blasted two home runs only the second time in into the upper deck and their last 14 home games. drove in four for Washing- New York Texas ab r h bi ab r h bi ton in a win over Miami. Ellsury cf 4 0 1 1 DShlds cf 3 0 1 1 Michael Taylor also Gardnr lf 3 0 0 0 LMartn cf 1 0 0 0 dh 4 0 1 0 Odor 2b 4 0 0 0 homered and drove in ARdrgz BMcCn c 4 0 1 0 Fielder dh 3 1 1 0 Beltran rf 4 1 1 1 Beltre 3b 4 2 2 0 two for Washington. 3b 4 0 1 0 Morlnd 1b 3 1 1 0 Doug Fister (4-6) Headly GJones 1b 4 0 0 0 JHmltn lf 4 1 2 2 ss 3 1 1 0 Andrus ss 4 0 0 0 picked up the win. allow- Gregrs Drew 2b 3 0 2 0 Choo rf 4 0 3 1 ing two runs and four hits Chirins c 3 0 1 0 Totals 33 2 8 2 Totals 33 5 11 4 in six innings. New York 020 000 000—2 Washington Rendon 2b YEscor 3b Werth lf Harper rf Zmrmn 1b Dsmnd ss MTaylr cf Loaton c Fister p TMoore ph Janssn p Storen p Totals Washington Miami

Miami ab ab r h bi 4 0 1 0 DGordn 2b 4 5 1 1 0 Prado 3b 4 4 1 1 0 Yelich cf-lf 4 4 3 3 4 Bour 1b 1 4 0 0 0 Realmt c 4 4 1 1 1 Dietrch lf 2 3 1 1 2 SDyson p 0 4 0 1 0 Rienzo p 0 2 0 0 0 McGeh ph 1 1 0 0 0 ISuzuki rf 4 0 0 0 0 Hchvrr ss 4 0 0 0 0 Koehler p 2 35 7 9 7 Totals 31 000 230 100 010

r h bi 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 2 5 2 020—7 000—2

Milwaukee (Nelson 8-9), 7:10 p.m. Friday’s Games Atlanta at Philadelphia, 6:05 p.m. Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, 6:10 p.m. San Diego at Miami, 6:10 p.m. Washington at N.Y. Mets, 6:10 p.m. San Francisco at Texas, 7:05 p.m. Arizona at Houston, 7:10 p.m. Chicago Cubs at Milwaukee, 7:10 p.m. Colorado at St. Louis, 7:15 p.m. L.A. Angels at L.A. Dodgers, 9:10 p.m.

Texas 030 010 10x—5 E-Headley (17), Gregorius (10), DeShields (3). DP-New York 1, Texas 2. LOB-New York 5, Texas 9. 2B-B.McCann (11), Chirinos (15). HR-Beltran (8). CS-Headley (2). S-Chirinos. IP H R ER BB SO New York Tanaka L,7-4 6 9 4 4 3 3 Shreve 1/3 0 1 0 1 1 Cotham 1 2/3 2 0 0 0 4 Texas Lewis W,11-4 6 7 2 2 0 5 Kela H,9 1 0 0 0 0 1 Scheppers H,12 1 1 0 0 0 0 Sh.Tolleson S,18-19 1 0 0 0 0 2 HBP-by Lewis (Gardner). T-3:09. A-31,658 (48,114).

L 6 6 7 8 8 11

Pct GB .667 — .625 1 .611 1 .556 2 .500 3 .389 5

L 4 7 8 12 14 14

Pct GB .765 — .588 3 .556 3½ .333 7½ .263 9 .176 10

San Antonio 6 Seattle 5 Los Angeles 3 Wednesday’s Games Washington 87, Seattle 74 Indiana 84, New York 72 Minnesota 82, Los Angeles 76 San Antonio 102, Atlanta 85 Today’s Game Phoenix at Tulsa, 7 p.m. Friday’s Games Seattle at Connecticut, 6 p.m. Washington at San Antonio, 7 p.m. Atlanta at Minnesota, 7 p.m. Los Angeles at Chicago, 7:30 p.m.

MLS

EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA D.C. United 11 7 5 38 27 22 Columbus 8 7 7 31 34 33 New York 8 6 5 29 29 23 Toronto FC 8 7 4 28 31 31 New England 7 9 7 28 29 35 Montreal 7 8 3 24 25 27 NYC FC 6 9 6 24 29 31 Orlando City 6 9 6 24 26 31 Philadelphia 6 12 4 22 28 37 Chicago 5 11 4 19 22 30 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA FC Dallas 11 5 5 38 32 25 Vancouver 11 8 3 36 27 22 Los Angeles 9 7 7 34 36 28 Sporting KC 9 4 6 33 29 20 Seattle 10 10 2 32 25 21 Portland 9 8 5 32 24 28 Real Salt Lake 7 7 8 29 23 27 Houston 7 8 6 27 27 26 San Jose 7 9 4 25 22 27 Colorado 5 6 9 24 18 19 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Wednesday’s Game MLS All-Stars 2, Tottenham Hotspur 1 Saturday’s Games Montreal at New York City FC, 1 p.m. Real Salt Lake at D.C. United, 6 p.m. New York at Philadelphia, 6 p.m. Columbus at Orlando City, 6:30 p.m. Toronto FC at New England, 6:30 p.m. Houston at Sporting KC, 7:30 p.m. Los Angeles at Colorado, 8 p.m. Vancouver at Seattle, 9 p.m. Sunday’s Games Portland at San Jose, 4 p.m. FC Dallas at Chicago, 6 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 5 Orlando City at Toronto FC, 7 p.m. New York at Montreal, 7 p.m. Friday, Aug. 7 Chicago at Portland, 10 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 8 Sporting KC at Toronto FC, 3 p.m. Philadelphia at Orlando City, 6:30 p.m. D.C. United at Montreal, 7 p.m. San Jose at Houston, 8 p.m. Columbus at Colorado, 8 p.m. Real Salt Lake at Vancouver, 9 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 9 Seattle at Los Angeles, 4 p.m. NYC FC at New York, 6 p.m.

BASEBALL Major League Baseball OFFICE OF THE COMMISSIONER OF BASEBALL — Suspended New York Yankees minor league (DSL) RHPs Anderson Acevedo, Anthoniris Santana and Carlos Santana 72 games each after testing positive for metabolites of Stanozolol, a performanceenhancing substance in violation of the Program. American League BOSTON RED SOX — Placed CF Mookie Betts on the seven-day DL. Recalled CF Jackie Bradley Jr. from Pawtucket (IL). Added INF Josh Rutledge to the major league roster. Designated INF Jemile Weeks for assignment. CHICAGO WHITE SOX — Placed INF Emilio Bonifacio on the 15-day DL. Recalled INF Leury Garcia from Charlotte (IL). CLEVELAND INDIANS — Recalled OF Tyler Holt from Columbus (IL). Acquired LHP Jayson Aquino from Pittsburgh for cash considerations and optioned to the Lynchburg (Carolina). LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Optioned OF Daniel Robertson to Salt Lake (PCL). Designated OF Efren Navarro for assignment. Activated OFs David Murphy and David DeJesus. MINNESOTA TWINS — Placed 3B Trevor Plouffe on the paternity list. Recalled INF Jorge Polanco from Rochester (IL). NEW YORK YANKEES — Selected the contract of RHP Caleb Cotham from Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL). Designated LHP Chris Capuano for assignment. TEXAS RANGERS — Recalled LHP Alex Claudio and RHP Jon Edwards from Round Rock (PCL). Optioned RHP Phil Klein to Round Rock. Designated LHP Wandy Rodriguez for assignment. TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Designated LHP Felix Doubront for assignment. National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS — Placed RHP Randall Delgado on the 15-day DL. Recalled RHP Addison Reed from Reno (PCL). CHICAGO CUBS — Placed RHP Neil Ramirez on the 15-day DL. Optioned RHP Dallas Beeler to Iowa (PCL). Recalled RHP Yoervis Medina from Iowa. Selected the contract of RHP Ben Rowen from Iowa. Designated INF-OF Mike Baxter for assignment. COLORADO ROCKIES — Optioned INF Cristhian Adames to Albuquerque (PCL). WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Optioned LHP Sammy Solis to Syracuse (IL). BASKETBALL National Basketball Association MILWAUKEE BUCKS — Signed F Chris Copeland. TORONTO RAPTORS — Named Jerry Stackhouse, Rex Kalamian and Andy Greer assistant coaches. Women’s National Basketball Association WNBA — Suspended San Antonio F Danielle Adams three games for an unspecified violation of the league’s anti-drug program. CYCLING International Cycling Union ICU — Suspended Italian team Androni Giocattoli-Sidermec from international races for 30 days, beginning Aug. 1, after Fabio Taborre and Davide Appollonio tested positive for doping. FOOTBALL National Football League ARIZONA CARDINALS — Placed TE Jermaine Gresham on the PUP list and TE Troy Niklas and LB Zack Wagenmann on the active/non-football injury list. Released CB Alfonzo Dennard. ATLANTA FALCONS — Signed OL DeMarcus Love. CHICAGO BEARS — Announced the retirement of G Chad Hamilton. CINCINNATI BENGALS — Placed WR James Wright on the injured reserve list. CLEVELAND BROWNS — Re-signed DB Landon Feichter. INDIANAPOLIS COLTS — Signed CB Raymon Taylor. JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS — Placed RB Storm Johnson on the active/nonfootball illness list. KANSAS CITY CHIEFS — Released RB Cyrus Gray. MIAMI DOLPHINS — Signed DT Calvin Barnett, WR Kai De La Cruz and OT Chris Martin. Waived DT Ellis McCarthy. Placed S Don Jones and WR DeVante Parker on the PUP list and TE Gerell Robinson on the active/ non-football injury list. NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS — Signed CB Tarell Brown. NEW YORK JETS — Placed G Willie Colon, RB Stevan Ridley and DL Kevin Vickerson on the PUP list. SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS— Activated RB Carlos Hyde from the the active/ non-football injury list. TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS — Signed CB Jude Adjei-Barimah, S Kimario McFadden and CB Al-Hajj Shabazz. Waived S Deshazor Everett and S Derrick Wells. TENNESSEE TITANS — Agreed to terms with TE Chase Coffman and RB David Fluellen. WASHINGTON REDSKINS — Agreed to terms with LB Ryan Kerrigan on a multiyear contract extension. HOCKEY National Hockey League ARIZONA COYOTES — Named Corey Schwab goaltending coach. NEW JERSEY DEVILS — Placed F Dainius Zubrus on unconditional waivers for the purpose of terminating his contract. MOTORSPORTS NASCAR — Suspended Premium Motorsports crew chief Scott Eggleston and car chief Kevin Eagle for this weekend’s Sprint Cup race at Pocono and placed both on probation through Dec. 31, because an unattached weight fell off the car driven by Timmy Hill during practice last weekend at Indianapolis. Fined Eggleston $25,000 and docked team owner Mike Curb 15 championship car owner points for the incident. SOCCER North American Soccer League NEW YORK COSMOS— Signed D Hunter Freeman to a contract extension. COLLEGE EASTERN COLLEGE ATHLETIC CONFERENCE — Accepted Mercy College as an associate member of the ECAC Division II Field Hockey League, beginning in the 2015-16 academic year. CHATTANOOGA — Named Troy Van Zile assistant athletic director for development. CLEMSON — Named Brian Yale volunteer assistant volleyball coach and Alexa Rand volleyball graduate director of operations. FURMAN — Named Mike Buddie athletic director. GEORGE MASON — Named Emma Thomson women’s assistant soccer coach. OKLAHOMA CHRISTIAN — Announced the school was approved for full NCAA Division II membership. RANDOLPH-MACON — Named Matt Tschetter assistant football coach and Kendall Adkin womens assistant lacrosse coach. SC AIKEN — Named Phil Disher assistant baseball coach.


Thursday, July 30, 2015

CLASSIFIEDS

SPECIAL!

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

FREE RENEWAL!

PLACE YOUR AD:

785.832.2222

classifieds@ljworld.com

Lawrence Premier Pre-Owned Sales, Collision and Mechanical Repair Car Center

RECREATION

Cadillac Crossovers

Boats-Water Craft 20’ 1973 Chrysler Cuddy Cab Boat with 318 Chrysler engine & tantam trailer, $2,400 or bring bid. 785-856-2299

2005 CADILLAC SR5 AWD

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

Only $11,995 LUND, Fishing boat 2005. 16 ft Deep V, 2004 50 hp Johnson motor, 24 volt Minn Kota 65# Power Drive trolling motor, swing away trailer tongue, new cover to fit, 2 on board chargers, live well with bait holder, rod locker, 2 pro butt seats, Lund sport track with 2 rod holders, new stainless steel prop.. $6500.00 (785)813-6707

Call Thomas at

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

Alek's alek's Auto auto SALE SALE SALE

2012 TOYOTA YARIS 60k...................................$7,750 2010 NISSAN VERSA 60k ..................................$7,900 2010 TOYOTA COROLLA LE, 55k .......................$9,950 2010 TOYOTA COROLLA LE, 56k .......................$9,950 2009 HONDA CIVIC 2D, LX, 73k ........................$8,500 2009 TOYOTA COROLLA LE, 109k .....................$7,500 2009 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY 51k .... $12,500 2008 MITSUBISHI ECLIPSE GT, V6, 51k ....... $11,500 2008 CHEVY COBALT LT, 105k...........................$6,950 2008 TOYOTA CAMRY LE, HYBRID, 58k......... $10,900 2007 HONDA CIVIC EX, 2D, 75k........................$7,900 2005 HYUNDAI ELANTRA 121k........................$3,900 2005 JEEP LIBERTY V6, 89k..............................$7,250 2004 TOYOTA COBRA GT, 32k..........................$7,500 1987 MERCEDES 560SL 44k........................... $17,500

ALL PRICES NEGOTIABLE!!!!

601 N. 2nd • Lawrence, KS 66044 785-766-4864 • 785-843-9300 • aleksauto.com

USED CAR GIANT

2005 DODGE DAKOTA SLT 4X4

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 23rd & Alabama, Lawrence www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Chevrolet Cars Chevrolet Vans

Ford Cars

Ford Cars

Ford SUVs

GMC Trucks

Honda Cars

2003 GMC Sierra 4 x 2, long bed, with TOOL BOX (locks). Fleet work truck. Brand new Goodyear tires, dependable. AS IS: $1500 785-492-8766

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

2008 Chevy Express 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

65,000 miles, excellent condition, Stabilitrak, 16 passenger van. New tires & brakes, A/C & Cruise. $13,000 OBO Call (785)423-5837 or (785) 841-8833

2013 Ford Focus

2014 Ford Fusion SE

Stk#P1831

Stk#P1793

Chrysler Cars

$12,995

$17,995

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!

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

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

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

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

Buick Cars

Chevrolet Trucks

2015 Ford Fusion Hybrid Titanium Stk#P1818

$26,995

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2013 Ford Edge Limited Stk#P1811

Cadillac

2014 Ford Fusion Energi SE Luxury

2013 Ford Escape Titanium Stk#P1780

$26,995

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

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

Stk#P1799

$11,995

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

TRANSPORTATION SPECIAL! 10 LINES & PHOTO:

7 DAYS $19.95 28 DAYS $49.95 ADVERTISE TODAY! CALL 832-2222 or email classifieds@ljworld.com

Honda SUVs

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

JackEllenaHonda.com

2009 HONDA CR-V EX-L AWD

1998 HONDA ACCORD LX

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

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

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

Only $5,995

2010 Ford Explorer Sport Trac XLT

Stk#P1818

Stk#14T754B

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

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

JackEllenaHonda.com

2012 HONDA PILOT EX-L NAVIGATION 4WD

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

Ford Trucks

2008 HONDA CIVIC LX

Honda Certified Pre-Owned Vehicle, 7 Year / 100,000 Mile Limited Powertrain Warranty. Stk# F197A Fuel Efficient, Automatic, Awesome Condition, Well Maintained, Safe and Reliable. Stk# F238B

Only $10,711 Call Thomas at

$26,995

$19,495

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

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

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

Call Thomas at

$21,995

GMC Trucks 2015 Ford Fusion Hybrid Titanium

Call Thomas at

888-631-6458 JackEllenaHonda.com

Stk#15T318A

2006 Ford F150 Extended cab, 4 Wheel drive, automatic, power windows in fair condition. 88,000 miles $ 10,500 OBO Call after 6 PM—785-542-2251

$14,995

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

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

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

2012 FORD EXPLORER

Stk#15T379A

2013 Ford Fusion SE

LairdNollerLawrence.com

Only $18,588

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

For sale: 1973 Chevy Silverado ½ ton custom deluxe/10 truck. Power steering, power brakes, air conditioning, and Four Wheel Drive. Been used as a farm truck. Starts and runs well. $1,495 OBO. 785-748-0678

Stk#P1758A

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

$19,995

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

888-631-6458

2003 Dodge Dakota

2003 Chevrolet Silverado, FOR SALE, Great Condition. 50,190 Miles. Call 785-764-4289

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

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!

Quad Cab, Auto, 4WD,V8. Power windows, doors, & locks. Tilt, cruise, bucket seats, am/fm with CD player, trailer hitch & bed cover. Very Clean. Only 91,900 mi. $8,945.00 OBO. Call: (785)393-0738

$19,495

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

$25,495

2011 Ford Escape

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Stk#15C520A

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

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

Ford Cars

23rd & Alabama - 2829 Iowa

Call Thomas at

$10,495

1993 Chevy Corvette

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

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

Only $17,999

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

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

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

Stk#P1734A

Dodge Trucks

2012 Buick Regal GS

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

2012 HONDA ACCORD EX-L

2009 Chrysler 300 Touring

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

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

$18,995

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

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

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: 785-423-0037 bstoneback.we@gmail.com

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

Stk#15M303A

Ford SUVs

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

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

Honda Cars 2012 Ford Escape Limited

888-631-6458 GMC 2011 Sierra Reg cab long box 4wd, one owner, power equipment, very nice! Stk#345291 only $15,814.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com Need to sell your car? Place your ad at sunflowerclassifieds.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com

Only $24,950 Call Thomas at

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

CNA & CMA Day/evening classes starting W/O 8-24 in Lawrence, Ottawa & Chanute.

620-431-2820 x241 tshowalter@neosho.edu


6C

|

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Thursday, July 30, 2015

L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD

CARS TO PLACE AN AD: Honda SUVs

Jeep

SPECIAL! 10 LINES & PHOTO 7 DAYS $19.95 | 28 DAYS $49.95 Doesn’t sell in 28 days? FREE RENEWAL!

785.832.2222 Lincoln SUVs

Mercury

classiďŹ eds@ljworld.com Nissan Cars

Saturn

Nissan 2008 Altima SL fwd 3.5 V6 sunroof, heated leather seats, Bose sound, CD changer, Stk#554053 only $13,500.00

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

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

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

Toyota Cars

Toyota Cars

2012 HONDA PILOT EX-L 4WD

2014 Jeep 3G6C<A:G Unlimited Sahara Stk#P1834 What a Value! Leather, Sunroof, Power Liftgate, 4WD, Local - One Owner, Priced Below Market! Stk# F341A

Only $22,992 Call Thomas at

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

2012 Lincoln )'4 3

2009 Mercury Mariner Premier Stk#15L426B

Stk#P1838

$10,996

$24,495

$30,995 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

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

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

Nissan Cars

Kia Cars

Stk#P1624B

$5,916

)6O96 S Sport

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

$12,994

Only $5,995

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

Call Thomas at

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

2012 Nissan Altima 2.5 SL Stk#P1775

$13,995

Stk#15C464A

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

$11,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

2003 Lincoln Town Car Cartier

1985 ):G8:9:H :CO 300-Class 380SL

Stk#P1823A

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

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Subaru

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

Only $9,495

Nissan Trucks

Call Thomas at

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

/J76GJ +JI768@ > Premium

$13,995

Nissan 2007 Frontier SE 4wd one owner, crew cab, bed liner, tow package, alloy wheels, power equipment, very nice! Stk#31679B1 Only $10,855.00

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

Only $10,995 Call Thomas at

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

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

TO PLACE AN AD: Carpet Cleaning

785.832.2222 Concrete

Decks & Fences

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

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

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

Needing to place an ad? 785-832-2222

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

Construction

Concrete

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

CTi of Mid America Concrete Restoration & Resurfacing Driveways, Patios, Pool Decks & More CTiofMidAmerica.com 785-893-8110 Driveways, Parking lots, Pavement Repair, Sidewalks, Garage Floors, Remove& Replacement Specialists Call 785-843-2700 or text 785-393-9924 Sr. & Veteran Discounts

SERVICE DIRECTORY 6 LINE SPECIAL! 1 MONTH $118.95/mo. + FREE LOGO 6 MONTHS $91.95/mo. + FREE LOGO 12 MONTHS $64.95/mo. + FREE LOGO CALL 785-832-2222

Decks & Fences

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

Stk#P1815

$17,994

See Your Ad Here!

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

2012 Toyota Corolla S

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Stk#15J512A

Foundation Repair

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

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

Guttering Services

:8@H R #6O:7DH />9>C< R ":C8:H R 99>I>DCH .:BD9:A R 3:6I=:GEGDD;>C< %CHJG:9 R NGH :ME 785-550-5592

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

- Doesn’t sell in 28 days? + FREE RENEWAL!

Call Today!

785-832-2222

Painting

YARDBIRDS LANDSCAPING Father (retired) & Son Operation W/Experience & Top of the Line Machinery Call 785-766-1280

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

Lawn, Garden & Nursery

Plumbing

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

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

Dou7le D Furniture Repair Cane, Wicker & Rush seating. Buy. Sell. Credit cards accepted.785-418-9868 or doubledfurniturerepair @gmail.com

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

913-488-7320

Garage Doors

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

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

Tree/Stump Removal

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 R N:6GH R EDL:G L6H=>C< R G:E6>GH >CH>9: DJI R HI6>C 9:8@H R L6AAE6E:G HIG>EE>C< R ;G:: :HI>B6I:H Call or Text 913-401-9304

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.

#6G6<: DDGH R +E:C:GH R /:GK>8: R %CHI6AA6I>DC Call 785-842-5203 www.freestatedoors.com

;ML<GOF W LJAEE=< W LGHH=< W KLMEH J=EGN9D 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 Q3: HE:8>6A>O: >C preservation & restoration� Ins. & Lic. visit online 785-843-TREE (8733)

Professional Tree Care

785-312-1917 Retired Carpenter, Deck Repairs, Home Repairs, Interior Wall Repair & House Painting, Doors, Wood Rot, Power wash 785-766-5285

Fredy’s Tree Service

A. B. Painting & Repair

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

Call Lyndsey 913-422-7002

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

Painting

Foundation Repair FOUNDATION REPAIR

7 Days - $19.95

Landscaping

Home Improvements

Stacked Deck

913-962-0798 Fast Service

Includes: 10 Lines of Text + Photo

28 Days - $49.95 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

785-842-0094

Serving KC over 40 years

Print + Online ~ SPECIAL PRICE ~

$15,787

jayhawkguttering.com

Rich Black Top Soil No Chemicals Machine Pulverized Pickup or Delivery

For sale: Janesville Antique Cutter (one-horse sleigh). Been barn stored for years. All original with eagle-head runners. Needs restoration. $650 OBO. 785-748-0678

classiďŹ eds@ljworld.com

Dirt-Manure-Mulch RAABS Construction A small construction company operating in Eastern Kansas that strives to provide customers with a quality product at a reasonable cost. Trim Carpentry,Remodel, Interior/Exterior Painting,Decks, Full line Onyx Collection dealer. Free Estimates. Ask for Rob.785-727-8601 RAABSConstruction@ gmail.com

Antiques-Classic

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

Email: info@cmcarpetcleaning.com

web:www.cmcarpetcleaning.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

SPECIAL! 6 LINES

Furniture

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

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

SELLING A VEHICLE?

Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background or Logo?

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

Craig Construction Co Family Owned & Operated 20 Yrs

JackEllenaHonda.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

SERVICES

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

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

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Mercedes-Benz

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

Carpentry

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

$5,995

Auctioneers

$10,995

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Lincoln Cars

2007 Volkswagen #0% Stk#15M256B

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

JackEllenaHonda.com

$22,495

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

Volkswagen

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

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Stk#14C1164A

Antique/Estate Liquidation

2006 Toyota Camry LE

2014 Nissan Versa

2006 NISSAN MAXIMA SL

Stk#P1776

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

2003 Saturn VUE

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

%C;>C>IN # 4

Toyota 2008 Prius fwd, leather, alloy wheels, navigation, power equipment, Stk#184201 only $10,775.00

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

2005 KIA SPECTRA

$17,995

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

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

Stk#14C1204A

Stk#P1756A

Stk#P1841

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Infiniti

%C;>C>I> # 4

2013 Toyota Camry LE

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

Review these businesses and more @ Marketplace.Lawrence.com

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


L awrence J ournal -W orld

Thursday, July 30, 2015

SPECIAL! UNLIMITED LINES

GARAGE SALES PLACE YOUR AD:

785.832.2222

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

classifieds@ljworld.com

Peterson Rd

Folks Rd

11

01

18

12

40

W 6th St

05

06

Kans as R iver

Massachusetts St

Bob Billings

02 Iowa St

04

03 Kasold Dr

Wakarusa Dr

10

10 19th St

13 15th St / N 1400 Rd

14 E 23rd St

W Clinton Pkwy

GARAGE SALE Don’t Miss This One! HUGE SALE!!!

10

Gotta Go Sale! 1116 SOMERSET CIR.

Lawrence

Lawrence 03

03

Lawrence 11

Estate Sale 505 Sandpiper Dr. Saturday, August 1, 7am - 1pm Priced to sell

05

3502 W. 8th Ct. FRI-SUN, JULY 31- AUG 2 8AM-3:30PM MOVING OUT OF STATEDUE TO HEALTH!

PUBLIC NOTICES 785.832.2222

Lawrence Can prove furniture will be sold no more than 1/2 price if that! Items in garage will be CHEAP, also used clothing. POSSIBLE DELIVERY!!

 DOWNSIZING  2812 Wildflower Dr. Lawrence

Saturday, August 1st 8 am - 1pm Friday, July 31 Friday July 31 Full and queen comforter Saturday, August 1 8 am to 5 pm sets, wicker bassinet, teen 8:00 am - 4:00 pm Saturday August 1 clothing, Pier 1 wicker Mostly antiques; kitchen 8 am – 3 pm chaise, dorm chair, back- cabinet, pie safe, pump 2311 Manchester packs, FSHS cheer uniforms, organ, seed dryer, herb radio flyer wagon, toys, drying rack, dresser, rockHoliday , Salesman Sam- home decor, small TV/DVD ers, bin, chairs, table, cast ples, radios, clocks, player, miscellaneous good- iron bell, roll top desk, Panasonic 5 CD stereo, ies high chair, rugs, etc. glassware,baskets, vases, picture frames, CD’s and SunflowerClassifieds much more.

TO PLACE AN AD:

15

16 N 1250 Rd

Lawrence 03

09

08

Haskell Ave

01

59

07

Louisiana St

GARAGE SALE LOCATOR Lawrence

40

24

70 17

| 7C

classifieds@ljworld.com

(First published in the certified to be legally acPursuant to K.S.A. §60 follows: Lawrence Daily Journal- curate and sufficient purNOTICE OF SUIT World July 30, 2015) suant to the laws of the LOT 19, IN BLOCK 9, IN UNIState of Kansas. VERSITY PLACE, AN ADDISUMMARY OF STATE OF KANSAS to the TION TO THE CITY OF LAWORDINANCE NO. 2381 DATED: July 16, 2015. above named Defendants RENCE, AS SHOWN BY THE and The Unknown Heirs, RECORDED PLAT THEREOF, On July 16, 2015, the gov- /s/ Patrick G. Reavey executors, devisees, trus- IN DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANerning body of the City of City Attorney tees, creditors, and as- SAS. Tax ID No. U03127 De Soto, Kansas passed an ________ signs of any deceased deordinance entitled: fendants; the unknown for a judgment against de(First published in the spouses of any defend- fendants and any other inAN ORDINANCE AUTHOR- Lawrence Daily Journal ants; the unknown offic- terested parties and, unIZING AND PROVIDING World July 30, 2015) ers, successors, trustees, less otherwise served by FOR THE ISSUANCE OF creditors and assigns of personal or mail service of GENERAL OBLIGATION IMany defendants that are summons, the time in IN THE DISTRICT COURT PROVEMENT BONDS, existing, dissolved or dor- which you have to plead to OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, SERIES 2015-B, OF THE mant corporations; the un- the Petition for ForecloKANSAS CITY OF DE SOTO, KANknown executors, adminis- sure in the District Court of CIVIL DEPARTMENT SAS; PROVIDING FOR THE trators, devisees, trustees, Douglas County Kansas LEVY AND COLLECTION OF creditors, successors and will expire on September 9, U.S. Bank National AN ANNUAL TAX FOR THE assigns of any defendants 2015. If you fail to plead, Association PURPOSE OF PAYING THE that are or were partners judgment and decree will Plaintiff, PRINCIPAL OF AND INTERor in partnership; and the be entered in due course EST ON SAID BONDS AS unknown guardians, con- upon the request of plainvs. THEY BECOME DUE; AUservators and trustees of tiff. THORIZING CERTAIN any defendants that are Robert V. Eye, Teri OTHER DOCUMENTS AND minors or are under any le- MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC Canfield-Eye, Jane Doe, ACTIONS IN CONNECTION gal disability and all other John Doe, Kansas THEREWITH; AND MAKING person who are or may be By: Department of Revenue, CERTAIN COVENANTS concerned: Chad R. Doornink, #23536 Mortgage Electronic WITH RESPECT THERETO. cdoornink@msfirm.com Registration Systems, Inc., YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED 8900 Indian Creek and Mortgage Investors The Series 2015-B Bonds that a Petition for Mort- Parkway, Suite 180 Corporation, et al., approved by the Ordigage Foreclosure has been Overland Park, KS 66210 Defendants nance are being issued in filed in the District Court of (913) 339-9132 the principal amount of Douglas County, Kansas by Case No. 15CV254 $1,765,000, to finance cerU.S. Bank National AssociCourt No. 4 tain internal improveation, praying for forecloments in the City and consure of certain real propTitle to Real Estate stitute general obligations erty legally described as Involved of the City payable as to both principal and interest, to the extent neces(First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal World July 30, 2015) sary, from ad valorem taxes which may be levied The following list of vehicles will be sold by Midwest Tow & Recovery at a sealed bid without limitation as to auction for tow, storage and auction fees on July 30, 2015 at 10am at 2401 Ponderosa rate or amount upon all Dr Lawrence, Ks, 66046. Bid cards are $20 each. the taxable tangible property, real and personal, 1G2AL15F977241382 2007 Pontiac Jones, Tiffani & within the territorial limits KU Credit Union of the City. A complete 1C3EJ56H7YN156276 2000 Chrysler Out of State text of the Ordinance may 1FMCU70E81UC02841 2001 Ford Out of State be obtained or viewed free 1FAFP53SXXG139298 1999 Ford Walker, Bradley & Loan Max of charge at the office of JHMED8351MS021707 1991 Honda Leflore, Rachel the City Clerk, 32905 W. 1G2NW52EX4M653349 2004 Pontiac Out of State 84th Street, De Soto, Kan- 1J4GW58S83C617739 2003 Jeep Out of State sas 66018. A reproduction 3C3EL45H8VT532405 1997 Chrysler Out of State of the Ordinance is availa- JT2AE95C2J3110747 1988 Toyota Hinnergargt, ble for not less than 7 days Nicholas following the publication RKRSA43A3DA115704 2013 Yamaha Emelio, date of this Summary at Suzanna www.desotoks.us. 1FAFP53291G241568 Linkous, Kelly & Richard & T’s Used Cars LLC 1HGCG2252YA024479 McPherson, Antuane & Nicanor-Salvador, Rhonda This Summary is hereby ________

PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED ON 9C

Garage Sale 1905 Crossgate Dr Saturday Aug. 1st 8 AM to ? Nice office chair, antique dresser, antique radio, old stamps, 50’s pop sheet music, children’s games, Children’s DVD’s, rug runner, ladders, lawn seeder, kitchen items, directors chair, throw rugs, deck bench and much more.

08

Moving-Garage Sale 2828 Meadow Dr.

Items in garage and inside. Electric range, tools, sofa, chairs, bedroom set (5 piece), kitchen table and chairs, coffee table, computer table, kitchen items, sewing supplies, golf balls, patio table, mason jars, kerosene heater, electric space heaters, toaster oven, electric drill, 8-track tapes, decorative glassware, air compressor, circular saw, and much, much, more. 12

Fri, July 31 & Sat. Aug 1

7:00 am - 1:00 pm

Big, Clean Sale *DOWNSIZING* 612 Lincoln Ct

Household & Decor items~ Fri., July 31 & Sat. Aug 1 Tools ~ Collectibles; 7:00 am - 2:00 pm Red Wing, Watt, Royal Copley, Hull, Delft. Old Collectibles, bed, stampmantle clock, Swift Milk ing accessories & supCan, Banks, Shepard plies, housewaresHooks, Trellis, PR SawSomething for horses, Small Bike, Books, every room! LP Albums, CDs, KU T-Shirts & Sweatshirts, 13 Junker Jo Jr. Yard Sale Shoes, Belts, purses, 1119 Delaware St children’s purses, clothFriday July 31st ing & much more. Opens at 8 AM Saturday August 1st 8 AM to Noon

CNA & CMA

Day/evening classes starting W/O 8-24 in Lawrence, Ottawa & Chanute.

620-431-2820 x241 tshowalter@neosho.edu 09

THREE FAMILY GARAGE SALE Friday, July 31 and Saturday, August 1 8 am - noon 1211 W 29th Court

Lawrence

Lawrence

mower, JOHN DEERE snow blower, LAWNBOY self- propelled lawn mower, MTD front tine tiller, BLUEBIRD lawn comber, CRAFTSMAN 3.5 HP edger, tall wooden ladder, NEW ENGLAND 20 G Partner rifle, Daisy BB gun, fishing poles, ramps, car jacks, HARLEY DAVIDSON mats, bird baths, cement planters, Queen bed set w/ triple dresser/ mirror/ nightstands, CD player, radio, dining table w/ padded chairs, tables, lamps, LAZY BOY double recliner, single recliner, BEAUTIFUL OAK ROLLTOP DESK, MAYTAG refrigerator, MAYTAG washer & dryer! Men’s clothing (regular & all weather!) CASH & CARRY!

clothing (small to XL), some children’s clothing, Coach purses, dinosaur rocker, Birki’s gardening shoes (38), lots of misc! Also other sales in the neighborhood)

HUGE GARAGE SALE! 1909 E. 24th Terr

NEIGHBORHOOD GARAGE SALE Hutton Farms West Saturday, August 1 8 am - 1 pm

(Located at NE corner of roundabout at Peterson Rd & Monterey Way)

Garage Sale 1808 W 21st St Fri. July 31st & Sat. Aug 1st 8AM-2PM Avon products, RP800 pool filter, books (hardback, 17 soft cover, & kids), cook Apartment Moving Sale books and cooking maga550 Stoneridge Dr zines, kitchen ware, jigApt C306 saw puzzles, toys, DVDs Wednesday, Thursday and VHS, nic nacs, and Friday clothes, kids lawn chairs, 8 AM to 5 PM each day backyard Leather Couch, 2 Leather tricycle, recliners - one oversized, swing(needs cover), PS2 games, TV & stand, figurbedroom set. ing, hamster cage and acCall for info: 785-393-4896 cessories, stuffed ani17 mals, lots of mics. AWESOME BACK TO SCHOOL SALE HUGE Tool & Yard Sale

232 Earhart Circle Lawrence

Sat, Aug 1. 7am- 11am Hundreds of paperback Mission style oak desk, and hardcover books Immigrants trunk, cute from popular authorscowboy boots, jewelry, easy reader through teen farm table, several dress- chapter book level! ers, primitive old coffee Teacher’s learning cenbin, antiques, furniture, ters, activity books, tons stained glass window, old of arts and crafts supmetal lawn chairs, cook plies, including some books, quilts, nice quality artist-quality materials. purses, porch swing, and a All items in excellent conGrandfather clock. Old dition and priced to sell! junk is now cute stuff, an 18 adorable sale. 16

18

Garage Sale 4131 Doolittle Dr

(Off 6th & Eldridge OR Trail & Eldridge, turn on Seele Way, then Seele Drive and to Doolittle Drive)

Thursday - Saturday 8 am - 5 pm 1908 E 19th Lot E-105 Every tool imaginable, Craftsman, Snap-On, axes, rakes, shovels, electric power tools, hand tools, fishing poles (some are old), collection of dolls, Native American dolls, blankets, comforters, a lot of nick knacks, knives. Have to see to believe.

Baldwin City GARAGE SALE YOU WON’T WANT TO MISS!

1118 N 300 RD HWY 56

Lawrence Four piece bedroom set Baldwin City Sat., Aug 1, 7am- 1 pm (black & green), china (1.5 MI WEST OF THE 59-56 Many things for athletes & cabinet, glassware & JUNCTION ON HWY 56) crafters. Lots of golf balls & July 31 & Aug 1 barware, picture frames, Sat, Aug 1. 8AM - 2PM clubs. Golf supplies. Tool 7:30a 4:00p coolers, wedding decoraboxes & tools. WheelbarCabela’s heavy duty fire- FLAT SCREEN TV’S, WINDOWS 7 tions, children’s bible, rows, LOTS of fabric; cross place tool set, Skill saw, DELL LAPTOP, HP & CANNON misc kitchen supples, dirt stitch patterns & kits, linens. Professional Choice PRINTERS W/ SCANNER & FAX, devil hand vac, home deChairs, recliner, vaccum, dinTrailer Door caddy large XBOX STUFF, OTHER ELECTRONcor, lots of misc! ing room table & chairs, size (never used), ICS, LIKE NEW ELECTRIC WASHbeautiful bookcases, enter10 Cabela’s mallard will coat ING MACH., JUNIOR CALLAWAY tainment center with glass rack (new), one of a kind - CLUBS, GOLF PRACTICE NET, 808 Mississippi St shelves, photo albums, small hand painted children’s DISC GOLF BASKETS, NERF Saturday, Aug 1 appliances, kitchenwares, thinking chairs, painted GUNS,YOUTH BOW & ARROWS, 8am- 1pm Christmas trees, decoradeco conversation stools, BOARD GAMES, PUZZLES, AN(Garage off the alley between tions, board games & books, small crocks, pierced ear- TIQUE Mississippi & IndianaSTORE DISPLAY lots of misc. rings, (3) bird cages, COUNTER, OTHER SMALL ANblue garage) Children’s toys, books, TIQUES & ARCHITECTURAL SALLawn furniture, baby items, 16 new ironing board cover, VAGE, DECORATIVE CURTAIN TLC ESTATE TAG SALE coffee table, Schwinn (*like porcelain Santa heads for RODS, MISC. HOUSEHOLD & 2717 Harper new) bike trailer to pull chilcrafts, new shower cur- DECORATIVE ITEMS, BOOKS, (South on Haskell to 27th, east dren in. Kitchen items, electain, new shower caddy, CHRISTMAS, PICTURE FRAMES, 6 blocks to Harper, Prairie tric fireplace, wood dining pivot point adjustable LANE CEDAR CHEST, SHELVES, Park Center) room table. Antiques dishes Christmas tree stand for BOYS CLOTHES, TWIN GIRL for cooking and eating on. real evergreen trees, CLOTHES SIZE 12-18 MO. LOTS Rival deep fat fryer. Wood wood / burlap magazine OF STUFF!! EVERYTHING IS ward robe, rocking chair, rack, decorative pillows, large electric yard vacuum, CLEAN -NO JUNK!! 785-331-8150. dishes, cookbooks, new electric griddle, microwave, sewn items (potholders, wicker loveseat and wicker Need to sell your car? Friday, July 31st, 8 am- 4pm table center pieces, etc.), chair (cheap!), walnut Saturday, Aug 1, 8 am - Noon many VCR tapes, several dresser with mirror, large Tools, Tools & MORE TOOLSCall 832-2222 women’s Capri (size6-10), stained glass piece. Don’t hand & power! TORO WHEEL or email lots of adult men’s clothmiss this garage sale! EveryHORSE 16-44 HXL riding lawn classifieds@ljworld.com ing (3x-3xlt), women’s thing must go!


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Thursday, July 30, 2015

L awrence J ournal -W orld

PLACE YOUR AD:

785.832.2222

classifieds@ljworld.com

A P P LY N O W

1200 AREA JOB OPENINGS! BOSTON FINANCIAL (DST) ............... *100

GENERAL DYNAMICS (GDIT) ............. *300

MV TRANSPORTATION ....................... *25

BRANDON WOODS ........................... *10

GREAT PLAINS DISTRIBUTION ............ *30

USA 800 ........................................ 300

CLO .............................................. *12

KU: STUDENT OPENINGS .................. 130

VALEO ............................................. 30

COMMUNITY RELATIONS/DAYCOM ........ 15

KU: FACULTY/ACADEMIC/LECTURERS .... 85

WESTAFF ........................................ *15

COTTONWOOD................................. *24

KU: STAFF OPENINGS ......................... 75

EZ GO STORES.................................. *5

MISCELLANEOUS ............................. *44

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.

AdministrativeProfessional

Deliver Newspapers!

CNA & CMA Classes

It’s Fun! Outstanding pay Part-time work

Day/evening starting W/O 8-24. In Lawrence, Ottawa, & Chanute.

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.

For information about Allied Health Courses call or email:

620-431-2820

Teri Showalter x241 Tracy Rhine x262 tshowalter@neosho.edu or trhine@neosho.edu

Come on in & Apply! 645 New Hampshire 816-805-6780 jinsco@ljworld.com

Banking

General Maintenance Technician needed for small apartment complex in Lawrence. Responsibilities: Prepares all market-ready apartments which may include painting, drywall, carpentry /repair, general repairs and housekeeping. Must be able to maintain and repair routine items including but not limited to plumbing, air conditioning, heating, appliance and electrical, scheduling, ordering and troubleshooting. Maintain grounds, common areas, building exteriors to keep them clean, free of trash, debris and other safety issues to ensure excellent curb appeal. Perform on-call emergency work as required. Provide superior customer service and represent the company in a professional manner at all times. Part Time - $16 / hr. Email resume to: classifieds@ljworld.com with “Box #1540” in the subject line.

Healthcare BusinessOpportunity

AdministrativeProfessional

AIRLINE CAREERS Office Assistant Start Here - Get hands on train- BG Consultants in Lawing as FAA certified Tech- rence seeks a part-time nician fixing jets. Finan- Office Assistant for gencial aid if qualified. Call eral support to staff and for free information Avia- daily administrative opertion Institute of Mainte- ations. Duties include annance 1-877-818-0783 swering a multi-line www.FixJets.com phone system, filing, typing, and basic accounting. Sell your structured settleMust have basic comment or annuity payments puter skills and profifor CASH NOW. You don’t ciency with MS Office aphave to wait for your fuplications. Email resume ture payments any to careers@bgcons.com. longer! Call 1-800-283-3601 Offline Captioning START A NEW CAREER in Graphic Arts, Healthcare, Business, Education or Information Tech. If you have a GED, call: 855-670-9765

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

Assistant Prepare captions for video productions. $13/hr. 30-40 hrs/wk, incl. some eves & wkds. Customer oriented, good listener with excellent spelling, grammar, punctuation and editing skills. Associates degree or equivalent. Good with MS Office. Please email Letter of Interest & résumé to admincs@captionsolutions.com

In-Store Manager at the

MERC Immediate opening for an In-Store Manager at The Merc Coop. Position manages the operations of a small branch, performs as a loan officer, member service rep. & business development officer. Qualifications needed: 2 to 5 yrs. Similar or related experience, time management skills, negotiating/problem solving skills, knowledge of teller functions, accuracy & efficiency. Requires flexible schedule incl. weekend hrs. Qualified individuals may apply at 23rd St. Branch, 1001 E. 23rd St., or fax resume to 913-599-4816 Attn: HR Dept.

Customer Service

Call Center Financial Assistant For busy chiropractic clinic. Full-Time, permanent position. Apply in person MWF 8-4 pm.

LPN Evening/night shift

CNA Part-time Day/evening shift Apply online at www.lawrencepres byterianmanor.org or in person at: 1429 Kasold Drug Test is required.

Part-Time Permanent Part Time Vet Assistant / Receptionist at busy veterinarians office. Experience a plus, but will train right applicant. Apply at The Animal Hospital. 701 Michigan.

New Shift Open $10 hr + bonuses 40 hrs/wk, Full time $$ Weekly Pay! $$

Call today! Jobs.Lawrence.com

ANNOUNCEMENTS

785.832.2222

Special Notices

All Things Basementy! Basement Systems Inc. Call us for all your basement needs! Waterproofing, Finishing, Special Notices Structural Repairs, Humidity and Mold Control FREE ESTICall now to secure a super MATES! Call 1-800-998-5574 low rate on your Mortgage. Don’t wait for Rates to increase. Act Now! Call Business 1-888-859-9539

classifieds@ljworld.com

YOUR NEXT APARTMENT IS READY.

Auction Calendar COIN AUCTION 485 LOTS!!! Saturday, Aug 1, 10 AM Preview 8:30 AM Downtown Ramada Inn Madison Ballroom 420 SE 6th Ave Topeka, KS 66607 See Web for Full list: tandaauction.com T & A Auction Services Todd Bauer: 620.245.1884  Consignment Auction  Every THURSDAY Eve! 1801 Guinotte Kansas City, MO 64120 Furniture, antiques, collectibles, vintage, coins, memorabilia... AND MORE! SEE WEB FOR DETAILS & PICS: atakc.com Andrew Turner Auctions 816.960.4664 Consignment Auction Monday, August 3, 6 PM 801 North Center Gardner, KS Several HUNDRED pieces of furniture, Recreation, Lumber, Garden, Jewelry, Antiques. See web for pics: StrickersAuction.com Jerry:913-707-1046 Ron:913-963-3800 Development Land Auction (NWQ of Wakarusa Dr. & W. 18th St) Auction Date & Location: Thurs, Aug 6 @ 1:30 PM Artera Event Gallery 2161 Quail Creek Dr. Lawrence, KS Cates Auction Real Estate Co. 877.781.1134 CatesAuction.com

FREE 2 Week AUCTION CALENDAR LISTING when you place your Auction or Estate Sale ad with us! Call our Classified Advertising Department for details! 785.832.2222 classifieds@ljworld.com Sunday, Aug 2, @ 1pm VFW Hall, 2806 N 155th St, Basehor, KS

Land & Personal Property AUCTION Saturday, Aug 1 560 NW 74th St Topeka, KS 81.45 acres in Shawnee Co. ALSO:Yanmar diesel tractor, bush hog, trailers, cattle panels, & MORE! See website for pics & details: simnittauction.com Simnitt Bros. Inc Listed by Countrywide Realty, Inc Darrell Simnitt- 785.231.0374

FIND IT HERE.

Announcements

SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. Unable to The Chiropractic Health work? Denied benefits? Center of Lawrence We Can Help! WIN or Pay Patient Records Nothing! Contact Bill GorRecords are now being held don & Associates at by and copies may be ob1-800-706-8742 to start tained from: Prairie Wellness your application today! Center. Dr. Whitney RuthAUTO INSURANCE START- ledge D.C. 1119 SW Gage ING AT $25/ MONTH! Call Blvd Topeka, KS 66604. 877-929-9397 785-272-3878.

AUCTIONS

For full list & color pics: kansasauctions.net/sebree Sebree Auction LLC 816-223-9235

NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD:

TO PLACE AN AD:

GUN AUCTION

785-841-9999 DayCom

Advanced Chiropractic Services 1605 Wakarusa Dr.

MERCHANDISE PETS

Search Amenities, Floorplans & More

View Apartments and Complex Features

Find Google Maps and Get Directions

Contact Property Management Directly

785.832.2222

Auction Calendar Online Auction Extensive collection of electrical supply & equipmentpreview on Aug. 4th at Monticello Auction Center, 4795 Frisbie Rd in Shawnee, KS. Bidding closes 8/5. LINDSAY AUCTION & REALTY SVC INC. 913.441.1557 www.lindseyauctions.com RETRO & VINTAGE AUCTION Saturday, August 8, 10 am 408 Pearson Waverly, KS Vintage furniture, Retro Kitchenware, glassware, Fiesta Ware, collectibles, etc! See web for pictures: www.ottoauctioneering.com Branden Otto, auctioneer 913-710-7111

FREE ADS for merchandise

under $100 SunflowerClassifieds.com

MERCHANDISE Clothing Jacket Men’s classic black leather motorcycle jacket. Zippers, belt, snaps, pockets. A very classic style. $25 — (785)842-4641

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

Furniture Arm Chair Classic ,tailored chair. Modified wing design. Upholstered in lovely cream fabric with tone on tone design. Very nice, clean, comfortable. $25 — (785)842-4641 Box Springs Full size box springs. New, never used, great condition. Some marks on blue fabric. Asking $45 cash. In Lawrence, KS. Call 785-727-1080

Charming Round Clawfoot Table, 1 leaf. Seats 4 without leaf, 6 with. Good condition, oak finish. (42” round without leaf. 1, 17” leaf. 30.5” tall)- $40 Call 530-413-8657

classifieds@ljworld.com Furniture

Coffee Table - Very nice Coffee table with lift top lid, espresso color. Used, but excellent like-new condition. Asking $45 or best offer. In Lawrence. Call 785-727-1080. Ottoman Nice, clean, comfortable ottoman. Medium blue corduroy. 24 “ wide, 15” deep,12” tall. 785-842-4641 $5 Twin Bed - One twin maple veneer bed. Includes head and foot board, bed frame, mattress, box springs, and slats. $70 785-842-4503

Health & Beauty CPAP/BIPAP supplies at little or no cost from Allied Medical Supply Network! Fresh supplies delivered right to your door. Insurance may cover all costs. 800-902-9352 Got Knee Pain? Back Pain? Shoulder Pain? Get a pain-relieving brace -little or NO cost to you. Medicare Patients Call Health Hotline Now! 1-800-900-5406

Household Misc. Electric clothes dryer - 220 volt Large capacity Excellent condition $75.00 785-865-8059

Lawn, Garden & Nursery 22” Craftsman Self-Propelled Mower— $75 each (Three available) Call 785-865-8059

Miscellaneous Get CABLE TV, INTERNET & PHONE with FREE HD. Equipment and install for under $3 a day! Call Now! 855-752-8550 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

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 EVERLAST- Heavy Boxing Bag, Gloves & singlestation heavy bag stand, like new. $100 785-832-1332

TV-Video Television: Toshiba 19” tv with built in VCR. Color, remote, instruction book. Works fine $5 785-842-4641

PETS Pets

AKC Chocolate Lab Puppies, big, blocky ,farm raised with outstanding Miscellaneous temprement. Shots and wormed . $500. Acorn Stairlifts. The AFFORD- Call 785-248-3189 ABLE solution to your stairs!** Limited time- $250 Thicker line? Off your Stairlift Purchase!** Bolder heading? Buy Direct & Save. Please Color background? call 1-800-304-4489 for Free DVD and brochure. Ask how to get these Advertise your product or service nationwide or by region in over 7 million households in North America’s best suburbs! Place your classified ad in over 570 suburban newspapers just like this one. Call Classified Avenue at 888-486-2466 KILL ROACHES! Buy Harris Roach Tablets. Eliminate Bugs-Guaranteed.No Mess, Odorless, Long Lasting. Available at Ace Hardware & The Home Depot 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

features in your ad TODAY!! Call: 785-832-2222

CNA & CMA Classes Day/evening starting W/O 8-24. In Lawrence, Ottawa, & Chanute. For information about Allied Health Courses call or email:

620-431-2820

Teri Showalter x241 Tracy Rhine x262 tshowalter@neosho.edu or trhine@neosho.edu


SPORTS

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Berry CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

“Everybody wants you to be strong in this situation,” Berry said, “but you can’t be strong every day. If you want to be mad today, be mad. If you want to be sad, be sad. But the thing is, don’t stay that way. Get it out of your system and go back to work.” Berry passed a battery of tests before he was cleared to practice late Tuesday, but it remains unclear when he’ll fully participate in practice. Chiefs trainer Rick Burkholder said Berry will be monitored constantly, especially during the early portion of camp. Veterans report Friday. The first full-squad workout is Saturday. “One of the things Eric and I talked about was just being honest with us about how you’re feeling out here,” coach Andy Reid said, “and sometimes that’s hard for a player to do, especially with his makeup. He’s been great with that up to

Football CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

at 11 a.m. on Sept. 5 against South Dakota State at Memorial Stadium.

Ex-Jayhawk honored Kyle Moore-Brown, who played defensive tackle at KU from 1990-

this point and I think that will continue through.” After all, he’s in a much better place than he was eight months ago. The three-time Pro Bowler first knew something was amiss in November, when he felt oddly out of breath after a couple of games. When things got worse during a game against Oakland, Berry was put through a series of tests that revealed a mass in his chest. The diagnosis was Hodgkin’s lymphoma, a treatable form of cancer that affects about 9,000 people in the U.S. each year. His treatment began Dec. 10 at Emory University’s Winship Cancer Institute, near his home in Atlanta. And it wasn’t easy: “It literally feels like you’re dying,” Berry recalled, “but you’re not really battling chemo, you’re battling yourself the whole time. It was me versus me.” The final round of treatment was May 13, followed by a month of recovery. “He tolerated chemotherapy extremely well,”

said Dr. Christopher R. Flowers, who directs the cancer institute’s lymphoma program. “He achieved a complete response to treatment.” On June 22, a follow-up PET scan showed Berry was cancer-free. The Chiefs had just finished their mandatory minicamp, so he headed to Florida, where he trained with teammates. Then last week, Berry headed back to Kansas City for another round of testing to make sure he was in football condition. “It was a battle, every day, to the point where I had to set goals to get out of bed,” he said. “But I had a great support system, between my mom and dad being in the trenches with me, day in and day out, making sure I had everything I needed.” The Chiefs are cautiously optimistic Berry will be ready for the regular season, and such a rapid return would not be without precedent: Reid said they looked at case studies involving other athletes, such as Mario Lemieux, in deciding how to proceed.

92, will be recognized as an Arena Football League Hall of Famer on Friday during the Arizona Rattlers’ game against the San Jose SaberCats. Moore-Brown, who helped the Jayhawks win the 1992 Aloha Bowl, enjoyed 15 seasons in the AFL, playing on both the offensive and defensive lines, winning two AFL championships and being

named to the All-Ironman team three times. He also set an AFL record by starting 236 consecutive games. “I never wanted to be average,” said MooreBrown in a news release. “I wanted to be the best and through hard work and overcoming adversity, God saw it fit for me to be placed in the Hall of Fame.”

Thursday, July 30, 2015

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Royals CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

the year being really aggressive,” Kluber said. “They have the best record in the league. They’ve been hot for a while.” Kansas City starter Jeremy Guthrie allowed three home runs — all in the sixth inning — and hit three batters, including Brantley in the fifth. Brantley got even with his home run, which he admired from the batter’s box before slowly trotting around the bases. Francona was ejected by plate umpire Tom Woodring after Brantley was hit in the leg. Francona was upset that Guthrie wasn’t ejected because Woodring had warned both benches after the Royals pitcher hit Jason Kipnis in the back in the second inning. Kipnis exchanged words with catcher Drew Butera as he walked to first base. Guthrie also hit Gomes with the bases loaded in the first. The issues between the teams began Monday when Indians pitcher Cody Anderson hit Jarrod Dyson, prompting a warning to both dugouts. The Royals, who had won 16 of 21, still had a good stay in Cleveland, acquiring ace pitcher Johnny Cueto and Ben Zobrist. “You’re going to have some highs and lows along the way, but the reality is we’ve got the second-best record in baseball (behind

Tony Dejak/AP Photo

CLEVELAND’S MICHAEL BRANTLEY, LEFT, and Carlos Santana celebrate after both scored on a hit by Brandon Moss. The Indians defeated the Kansas City Royals, 12-1, on Wednesday in Cleveland. St. Louis) at this point,” manager Ned Yost said. The Indians’ first-inning run gave them their first lead of the homestand. Cleveland hadn’t led since July 22 against Milwaukee, a stretch of 54 innings.

Getting the boot Francona’s discussion with Woodring didn’t last very long before the manager was ejected for the third time this season. “I didn’t think that was appropriate. I think they protect the younger umpires. If he’s old enough to throw me out, he’s old enough to listen to what I say,” Francona said. Trainer’s room Indians: OF Nick Swisher (sore left knee) will continue his minorleague rehab assignment during the team’s sixgame road trip. He’s been on the 15-day disabled list since June 14.

BOX SCORE Kansas City AB R H BI BB SO Avg. A.Escobar ss 4 0 0 0 0 0 .281 Moustakas 3b 4 0 1 0 0 2 .290 K.Morales dh 3 1 0 0 1 1 .282 Hosmer 1b 4 0 2 0 0 0 .315 Rios rf 4 0 0 1 0 1 .249 Infante 2b 3 0 2 0 0 1 .235 1-Cuthbert pr-2b 1 0 0 0 0 0 .316 Orlando lf 3 0 0 0 0 1 .237 Butera c 3 0 0 0 0 0 .182 J.Dyson cf 3 0 0 0 0 0 .244 Totals 32 1 5 1 1 6 Cleveland AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Kipnis 2b 5 2 3 1 0 0 .333 Lindor ss 5 1 2 4 0 1 .258 Brantley dh 4 2 2 1 0 1 .301 C.Santana 1b 3 1 1 0 2 0 .226 Moss rf 5 1 1 2 0 2 .217 Y.Gomes c 4 1 2 3 0 2 .230 Urshela 3b 5 1 2 1 0 0 .259 Bourn cf 5 2 4 0 0 0 .242 T.Holt lf 5 1 1 0 0 1 .125 Totals 41 12 18 12 2 7 Kansas City 000 000 001— 1 5 1 Cleveland 110 006 04x— 12 18 0 1-ran for Infante in the 7th. E-Moustakas (9). LOB-Kansas City 5, Cleveland 11. 2B-Hosmer 2 (21), Kipnis (31), C.Santana (19), Bourn (11). HR-Urshela (3), off Guthrie; Lindor (5), off Guthrie; Brantley (8), off Guthrie; Y.Gomes (5), off Hochevar. RBIs-Rios (16), Kipnis (39), Lindor 4 (19), Brantley (56), Moss 2 (50), Y.Gomes 3 (18), Urshela (10). SF-Lindor. Runners left in scoring position-Kansas City 2 (Butera, Cuthbert); Cleveland 6 (Urshela 2, Brantley, Lindor 3). RISP-Kansas City 1 for 6; Cleveland 3 for 12. Runners moved up-Rios. Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Guthrie L, 7-7 5 1-3 10 8 7 1 3 101 5.65 F.Morales 1 2-3 2 0 0 1 3 27 2.08 Hochevar 1 6 4 4 0 1 38 4.38 Cleveland IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Kluber W, 6-11 9 5 1 1 1 6 112 3.44 HBP-by Guthrie (Y.Gomes, Kipnis, Brantley). Umpires-Home, Tom Woodring; First, Eric Cooper; Second, Lance Barksdale; Third, Gary Cederstrom. T-2:55. A-19,767 (36,856).

PUBLIC NOTICES

RENTALS REAL ESTATE

TO PLACE AN AD:

TO PLACE AN AD:

PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED FROM 7C (913) 339-9045 (fax) By: /s/ Tiffany T. Johnson Tiffany T. Johnson, #26544 tjohnson@msfirm.com Garrett M. Gasper, #25628 ggasper@msfirm.com Aaron M. Schuckman, #22251 aschuckman@msfirm.com 612 Spirit Dr. St. Louis, MO 63005 (636) 537-0110 (636) 537-0067 (fax) ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFF MS 151037.304048 KJFC MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. ________

785.832.2222

You are notified that on July 2, 2015, a Petition was filed in this Court by Michelle Jane Wray, heir, devisee and legatee and Executor named in the “Last Will and Testament of William K. Wray,” deceased, dated March 1, 2001, requesting that the instrument attached thereto be admitted to probate and recorded as the Last Will and Testament of the decedent; and that Letters Testamentary under the Kansas Simplified Estates Act be issued to Michelle Jane Wray, Executor, to serve without bond. You are further advised under the provisions of the Kansas Simplified Estates Act the Court need not supervise administration of the Estate, and no notice of any action of the Estate, and no notice of any action of the Executor or other proceedings in the administration will be given, except for notice of final settlement of decedent’s estate.

(First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal You are further advised if World July 16, 2015) written objections to simplified administration are IN THE DISTRICT COURT filed with the Court, the OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, Court may order that suKANSAS pervised administration ensue. IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF You are required to file WILLIAM K. WRAY, your written defenses to Deceased the Petition on or before August 13, 2015, at 10:00 Case No.: 2015 PR 000093 a.m. in the District Court, in Douglas County, Kansas, NOTICE OF HEARING AND at which time and place NOTICE TO CREDITORS the cause will be heard. PURSUANT TO THE Should you fail to file your KANSAS SIMPLIFIED written defenses, judgESTATES ACT ment and decree will be entered in due course (Pursuant to K.S.A. upon the Petition. Chapter 59)

classifieds@ljworld.com

against the Estate within four months from the date of the first publication of this notice, as provided by law, and if their demands are not thus exhibited, they shall be forever barred. /s/Michelle Jane Wray MICHELLE JANE WRAY, Executor Prepared by: /s/Margaret Farley Margaret Farley #13974 Margaret Farley, Attorney at Law, P.A. 900 Massachusetts, Suite 600 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 (785) 842-2345 Telephone (785) 856-0243 Facsimile mannefarley@gmail.com Attorney for Plaintiff ________ (First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal World July 30, 2015) BEFORE THE STATE CORPORATION COMMISSION OF THE STATE OF KANSAS NOTICE OF FILING APPLICATION RE: Grand Mesa Operating Company, License #9855Application for an Enhanced Recovery Well to authorize the injection of produced and supply well water into the Squirrel Sand zone on the Creten #14-4I well, located in Douglas County, Kansas.

Mesa Operating Company - has filed an application to commence the input of produced and supply well water into the Squirrel Sand formation at the Creten #14-4I well, located 825 feet from the south section line and 990 feet from the west section line in the S/2 NE SW SW of Section 19, Township 14 South, Range 21 East, Douglas County, Kansas, with a maximum operating pressure of 525 psi and a maximum injection rate of 100 barrels per day. Any persons who object to or protest this application shall be required to file their objections or protests with the Conservation Division of the State Corporation Commission of the State of Kansas and a carbon copy to Grand Mesa Operating Company within thirty (30) days from the date of this publication. These protests shall be filed pursuant to Commission regulations and must state specific reasons why this application should not be granted. If no protests are received, this application may be granted through a summary proceeding. If valid protests are received, this matter will be set for hearing. All persons interested or concerned shall take notice of the foregoing and shall govern themselves accordingly.

Grand Mesa Operating Company Michael J. Reilly, President 1700 N. Waterfront Pkwy, Bldg 600 Wichita, KS 67206-5514 THE STATE OF KANSAS TO All creditors are notified to You, and each of you, are (316) 265-3000 exhibit their demands hereby notified that Grand ________ ALL PERSONS CONCERNED: TO: All Oil & Gas Producers, Unleased Mineral Interest Owners, Landowners and all persons whomever concerned.

First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal World July 30, 2015 NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING 2016 The governing body of City of Eudora will meet on August 10, 2015 at 7:00 PM at City Hall for the purpose of hearing and answering objections of taxpayers relating to the proposed use of all funds and the amount of ad valorem tax. Detailed budget information is available at City Hall and will be available at this hearing. BUDGET SUMMARY Proposed Budget 2016 Expenditures and Amount of 2015 Ad Valorem Tax establish the maximum limits of the 2016 budget. Estimated Tax Rate is subject to change depending on the final assessed valuation.

FUND General Debt Service Special Highway Solid Waste Utility Fund Electric Utility Fund Water Utility Fund Wastewater Utility Fund Storm Drain Utility Fund Non-Budgeted Funds-A Non-Budgeted Funds-B Totals Less: Transfers Net Expenditure Total Tax Levied Assessed Valuation Outstanding Indebtedness, January 1, G.O. Bonds Revenue Bonds Other Lease Purchase Principal Total

Prior Year Actual for 2014 Actual Expenditures Tax Rate * 2,875,789 23.185 522,846 7.911 60,166 381,796 4,733,107 1,089,804 1,013,231 58,269 779,135 11,514,143 720,473 10,793,670 1,218,747

31.096

Current Year Estimate for 2015 Actual Expenditures Tax Rate * 3,167,995 25.263 525,025 7.095 290,800 393,500 4,633,850 1,215,850 1,128,915 65,000

11,420,935 544,385 10,876,550 1,260,366

32.358

Proposed Budget Year for 2016 Budget Authority Amount of 2015 Estimate for Expenditures Ad Valorem Tax Tax Rate * 4,852,080 1,075,030 27.034 598,480 276,355 6.950 410,650 534,955 7,192,525 1,460,795 1,535,770 104,515

16,689,770 882,115 15,807,655 x

39,192,112

38,951,424

39,765,833

2013 4,100,000 0 5,389,401 15,279 9,504,680

2014 8,985,000 0 2,414,998 9,114 11,409,112

2015 8,365,000 0 2,284,915 125,821 10,775,736

*Tax rates are expressed in mills Renee Shackelford City Official Title: Budget Analyst/Treasurer

1,351,385

33.984

REAL ESTATE Lawrence

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Basehor

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3BR, 1BA, Country Home. Large yard & trees. Basehor/Linwood school district. W/D hookups, kitchen appliances supplied, CA/Heat. $900/mo +$900 dep. 913-484-8876

Office Space Downtown Office Space Single offices, elevator & conference room, $500-$675. Call Donna or Lisa, 785-841-6565

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