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FRIDAY • JULY 31 • 2015
Long-closed portion of 31st Street set to reopen on Wednesday
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key portion of 31st Street that has been closed for months as part of the South Lawrence Trafficway project will reopen soon. Kansas Department of Transportation officials have set Wednesday as the date to open the portion of 31st Street between Ousdahl Road and Haskell Avenue. In addition, the portion of Louisiana Street that is north of 31st Street is scheduled
to reopen on Aug. 19. The portion of Louisiana Street south of 31st Street is scheduled to open in late September. Both portions of Louisiana and 31st streets have been closed since June 2014. Both roads were part of the larger South Lawrence Trafficway project. Crews have relocated and completely rebuilt 31st Street. KDOT and
FAIRGROUNDS OF THE FUTURE
city officials said the scheduled opening of 31st Street on Wednesday will mean that portion of the project is “completely finished and open to all traffic.” Work on the South Lawrence Trafficway bypass project is expected to continue into 2016. — By Chad Lawhorn
$63M in budget changes unveiled ———
Brownback administration says state service should not directly be affected By Peter Hancock Twitter: @LJWpqhancock
Rendering courtesy of Douglas County
SHOWN HERE IS THE MOST RECENT RENDERING for Douglas County’s upcoming fairgrounds project. Drawn left to right at the rear of the photo is 19th Street, while Harper Street can be seen running perpendicular to 19th on the photo’s left side. The future Open Pavilion can be seen with a green roof at the top of the fairgrounds, just below the parking area. The derby arena, which will be refurbished and reoriented, can be seen just below the pavilion, and the future Meeting Hall can be seen with an orange roof on the photo’s left side.
‘Cool things’ on tap this time next year By Conrad Swanson Twitter: @conrad_swanson
This time next year the Douglas County Fairgrounds will likely be under construction for a renovation and expansion project that has long been in the works. On Wednesday afternoon, County commissioners unanimously approved Lawrence’s
See photos from this year’s fair on page 8A, plus a picture gallery and schedule of events online at LJWorld.com/fair15 Mar Lan construction as the Assistant County Administrator project’s construction manager. Sarah Plinsky. Among other things, Mar Lan The county hopes to break will determine project pricing ground on the project this fall, and manage subcontractors as Please see COUNTY, page 2A the work moves forward, said
Topeka — Gov. Sam Brownback’s administration unveiled nearly $63 million in general fund spending cuts and other savings, but said those budget changes should not have a direct effect on state services. “There are a couple things you could call pure cuts or reductions, but what we tried to do was to minimize the impact on services,” budget director Shawn Sullivan said. Kansas lawmakers made the cuts part of the tax and spending package they approved at the end of the 2015 session. Lawmakers Sullivan had assumed the administration would find at least $50 million in cuts or other savings, but gave the administration authority to cut as much as $100 million. Sullivan noted that the administration was not legally required to make the cuts. But not doing so would have left the state with a projected ending balance of just $17 million when the new fiscal year ends June 30, much lower than most officials are comfortable with. Please see BUDGET, page 2A
Dog survives shotgun attack, but leg must be amputated Lights & Sirens
Caitlin Doornbos cvdoornbos@ljworld.com
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good Samaritan called the Lawrence Humane Society around 9 a.m. Thursday about a wounded dog she’d found along U.S. Highway 24. “She told us she was bringing us a dog that had been hit by a car,” said Kate Meghji, Humane Society executive director. And from the looks of the wounded brindle pit bull mix, Humane Society
Business Classified Comics Deaths
Low: 67
Today’s forecast, page 8A
staff thought that was, indeed, the case. After all, Humane Society veterinarian Jennifer Stone had spent nearly all day Wednesday in surgery with another dog hit along Interstate 70. But once surgery began on the dog’s face, Stone found shotgun pellets. Lots of them. And then Stone found more pellets in the poor Please see DOG, page 2A
Richard Gwin/Journal-World Photo
INSIDE
Mostly sunny
High: 92
LAWRENCE HUMANE SOCIETY Executive Director Kate Meghji comforts Hope, a dog found Thursday morning along U.S. Highway 24 with gunshot wounds.
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School money worries Projections of enrollment increases over the next five years have district officials concerned about how to pay for it all. Page 3A
Vol.157/No.212 32 pages
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LAWRENCE • STATE
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Friday, July 31, 2015
DEATHS Journal-World obituary policy: For information about running obituaries, call 832-7151. Obituaries run as submitted by funeral homes or the families of the deceased.
Jerry ray Ishmael
Court upholds convictions in investment fraud case By Bill Draper Associated Press
Kansas City, Mo. — A federal appeals court panel has upheld the convictions of five people for bilking mostly poor arilyn ean ynch investors out of millions of dollars with promises Services for Marilyn, 78, Wichita, formerly of that they could become Lawrence are pending & will be announced by Warren- wealthy beyond their wildest dreams by spendMcElwain Mortuary. She died Thursday, July 30th. ing as little as $100. Petro America Corp. ohn uell aughtin r owner Isreal Owen Hawkins, 60, of Kansas John Buell Naughtin, Jr., died Wednesday, July 29th City, Kan., was convicted 2015 at his home in Lawrence, Kansas of pancreatic in May 2013 of conspiracy, securities fraud, aggracancer. vated currency structuring, money laundering and hi an hepard two counts of wire fraud and was sentenced to 30 A Celebration of Life has been planned at Arterra years in prison without parole. Four other top leadEvent Gallery on July 31, 2015, 3-6pm.
Jerry Ishmael, 71, beloved husband, caring father, devoted grandpa, left this world on July 25, 2015. Contact: gailishmael@att.net
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The cuts may also be important to the bond markets. The state is planning to issue $1 billion in pension obligation bonds, possibly by the middle of next month, to shore up the troubled Kansas Public Employees Retirement System. Sullivan said the administration wants to include the budget changes in a bond disclosure document that is planned for release today. The largest single reduction in state general fund spending, $17.7 million, will come from the State Children’s Health Insurance Program, a joint state and federal program that provides coverage to uninsured children in working families that earn too much to qualify for Medicaid. Sullivan said the cut was made possible because the federal government increased its
County CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
Plinsky said. Construction will likely carry through 2016, but the fairgrounds will remain open “as much as possible” during the process. “It’s not going to shut down the fair,” Plinsky said. “We’re hoping it can actually be a cool part of the fair, like, ‘look at all the progress we’ve made and all the cool things that are happening.’” Plans for the project began in 2007, but were ultimately delayed because of a nationwide economic recession, Plinsky said. In the past year, however, the county decided to take another look at the plans. Rough estimates for the construction work come in around $6.5 million, Plinsky said. That
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ers in Hawkins’ Missouribased company — Teresa Brown, Johnny Heurung, William Miller and Martin Roper — were convicted of conspiracy to commit fraud. A three-judge panel of the 8th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals said Wednesday that it found no reason to overturn any of the convictions. Hawkins founded Petro America in Kansas in 2007 and later moved its headquarters to Missouri, where he rented a “virtual office” in a high-rise near the Crown Center shopping mall in Kansas City. He started selling unregistered stock to investors — many of them poor, elderly churchgoers — in 2008 at a cost of $100 per
“
share of payment for the program. “This does not lead to any sort of expenditure reduction or any change in the program,” Sullivan said. He said the federal government recently increased its match rate, from about 70 percent to 92 percent as an incentive for states to increase the level of services they provide, up to the same level of services offered under Medicaid. But he said Kansas already offers similar levels of service, and therefore the increased federal match could be used to reduce state general fund expenditures in that program. Another major source of savings will come from sweeping about $9 million in funds that state agencies had carried over from last fiscal year. The biggest chunk of that, about $7 million, is money that was earmarked in the Department of Education for KPERS contributions for school district employees, the result of
budget officials over-estimating how much would be owed for pensions, based on the number of employees and their average salaries. Other major adjustments include: l $4 million from a program that draws down additional Medicaid reimbursement for hospitals. Sullivan said that program drew down $4 million more than expected last year. l $8 million from the Kansas Department of Transportation that resulted from “efficiencies” that were implemented last year in the agency’s operations. Sullivan said that cut will have no impact on the ongoing T-Works highway construction program. l $2.2 million from
the Department of Commerce, where expenditures from the Children’s Initiative Fund and Economic Development Initiative Fund were less than expected last year. That money will be moved into the state general fund. l And $2.8 million to be transferred from the Children’s Initiative Funding to the general fund because expenditures for the Lexia reading program were less than expected last year. A full list of the budget adjustments is available on the Division of Budget’s website, budget. ks.gov. With the budget adjustments announced Thursday, Sullivan said the projected ending balance for the general fund
money is included in the county’s Capital Improvement Plan. Plans for the grounds include demolishing two buildings, building two more and completely refurbishing the existing derby arena, Plinsky said. The biggest building will be built on the fairground’s north side, directly east of the indoor arena, Plinsky said. There, a 50,000 squarefoot concrete “Open Pavilion” will be erected. The pavilion will be open for spring, summer and fall, Plinsky said. During fair time it will be used to house animals, but in the offseason it could fit virtually any purpose. “Events, car shows, home shows,” she said. “Basically anything you’d want 50,000 square feet of space for.” Fairground buildings One and Two, located perpendicular to each other on the south side of the grounds, will then be
demolished and replaced with one square building, called the “Meeting Hall,” Plinsky said. The hall will be divided in half by a corridor, enabling the building to be used by two groups at a time. And finally, the existing derby area will be completely refurbished and redirected from its current north/south situation. “It will be reoriented to be east/west and become more of a horseshoe,” Plinsky said. “It will be built into the ground so it opens towards the east and Venture Park and will feature concrete seating and grass seating on the sides.” Work on the derby area will make the space easier to maintain and enable more events like tractor pulls and rodeos to take place, Plinsky said. Aside from expanding the grounds, the majority of the work can be considered “deferred maintenance and acces-
sibility improvements,” Plinsky said. “There are a lot of utilities that just need to be expanded and improved. A lot of utility work has not been done since the ’50s,” she said. “Most of the site is really not in compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act. This is a very public place with a lot of public events and I can’t get people in wheelchairs to most of the venues.” Having been involved with the project for over six years, County Commissioner Jim Flory said he is “absolutely pleased” with recent developments. “We’ve got a long way to go, but I’m very excited about seeing it progress,” he said. “It will be a great improvement for the entire community.” The project’s master plan can be found online at douglascountyks.org/ depts/administrative-services/fairgrounds-renovations-project.
We can’t cut income taxes, as we have done, without also reducing government spending.” — Senate President Susan Wagle, R-Wichita
mane Society is trying to find the dog’s owner. Meghji said the animal shelter does get several CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A stray animals from the area where the dog was pup’s torso. And then much longer,” Stone said. found, but this poor little on one of her hind legs. more in her leg. “She’s so lucky someone dog was “super friendly, As Stone began to The female dog, who’s clean the leg wounds, brought her in.” even if she was injured,” believed to be just 1 or 2 Stone said it was the she discovered that they when she first came in to years old, had apparently were worse than she’d first time she has rethe shelter. been shot numerous moved shotgun pellets thought. Miraculously, Do you know this dog? times, Meghji said. The from a live animal. Hope is expected to Anyone with information Humane Society is callThe Humane Society survive her trauma, but should call the sheriff’s ing her “Hope.” has filed a report with the office at 841-0007 or the her leg will have to be Stone spent five hours Douglas County Sheriff’s amputated, Meghji said. Humane Society at 843Thursday removing the Office, but, unfortunately, 6835. Judging by the nature metal bits from Hope’s the legality of shooting of her wounds, it ap– This is an excerpt from face, cheeks and body, dogs is a murky concept. peared Hope was shot Lights & Sirens, ljworld.com/ filling a bowl with pellets several days ago, Meghji Meghji said that if the dog said. It’s a wonder she lights-sirens, a public safety along the way. was attacking livestock in blog by reporter Caitlin Hope also had numer- made it as long as she did the country, it may have Doornbos. She can be reached without care. ous cuts and abrasions been the property owner’s at 832-7146 or “With the summer, she right to shoot it. all over her body and a cvdoornbos@ljworld.com. couple of serious wounds wouldn’t have fared well For now, the Hu-
The Humane Society has filed a report with the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office, but the legality of shooting dogs is a murky concept.
100,000 shares, promising them that “book value” of the stock would be $2 per share when the company went public. The company recruited investors through churches, whose pastors promoted Petro as a once-ina-lifetime opportunity to “share the blessing.” While Hawkins claimed his company had $284 billion in oil well and mining interests, he couldn’t afford an attorney and dismissed his public defender before trial, choosing instead to represent himself. The five were accused of selling $7.2 million worth of unregistered stock and targeting poor investors who weren’t qualified to purchase shares. is now about $78 million. Republican leaders in the Legislature generally praised the announcement. “We can’t cut income taxes, as we have done, without also reducing government spending,” Senate President Susan Wagle of Wichita said. “I applaud the administration and look forward to joining my colleagues in January to find more efficiencies and to further the cause of right sizing government, so that Kansans have more money in their pocket.” But House Democratic Leader Tom Burroughs said the state’s budget is still fundamentally out of balance, and he blamed Brownback for what he called “failed fiscal policies.” “Once again, the governor is relying on one-time funds and fee sweeps,” Burroughs, D-Kansas City, said. “For the state to return to firm financial footing, we need a responsibly balanced budget accompanied by sustainable revenue.”
BRIEFLY Hearing date set in Washburn prof death Girard — An October preliminary hearing date has been set for the Chanute man charged in the traffic death of a Washburn University professor who was struck and killed while riding her bike. The Topeka CapitalJournal reports the hearing for 37-year-old Todd M. Kidwell will be held Oct. 26 in the Crawford County District Court in Girard. He’s charged with second-degree reckless murder in the June 7 death of Glenda Taylor. Taylor was head of the Washburn University art department. She was riding in Crawford County when a pickup struck her while its driver tried to pass her. Kidwell is also charged with reckless driving, improper passing of a bicycle and driving left in a no-passing zone.
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LOTTERY WEDNESDAY’S POWERBALL 4 22 27 28 52 (35) TUESDAY’S MEGA MILLIONS 8 35 61 68 75 (15) WEDNESDAY’S HOT LOTTO SIZZLER 18 25 35 36 45 (1) WEDNESDAY’S SUPER KANSAS CASH 10 11 15 27 29 (11) THURSDAY’S KANSAS 2BY2 Red: 6 17; White: 19 23 THURSDAY’S KANSAS PICK 3 4 9 6
Kansas wheat —4 cents, $4.91 See more stocks and commodities in the USA Today section.
Exhibitors Needed
fall arts k crafts fest $65 for 10x10 outdoor space
Deadline:
Non-commercial and Wednesday concession vendors ONLY No jewelry or commercial kits August 26 accepted. Register online at 10 a.m.-5 p.m. LPRD.org/specialevents Sun. Aug. 30
South Park 1141 Mass. St.
For more information, contact Duane Peterson at 785-832-7940 or at dpeterson@lawrenceks.org
Lawrence&State
Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/local l Friday, July 31, 2015 l 3A
Housing market picking up speed
Woman found dead in home of man accused of raping two young girls I Police suspect no foul play in death
By Caitlin Doornbos
Twitter: @CaitlinDoornbos
A woman was found dead Thursday morning inside the home of a 39-year-old Lawrence man accused of raping two girls. Around 8:30 a.m., Lawrence police went to 1303
Delaware St. Lot 2, the address of the mobile home of William Joseph Ellis Jr. Inside, police found the body of a woman who appeared to be in her 30s, Lawrence police spokesman Sgt. Trent McKinley said.
Crime scene investigators and coroner scene investigators processed the scene Thursday morning. Foul play is not suspected at this point in the death investigation, McKinley said.
An autopsy on the body is scheduled for today. The woman’s identification will “likely be made during the coroner’s examination,” McKinley said. Please see WOMAN, page 5A
From the Archives THE “RISING SONS” ROCK ‘N’ ROLL BAND WAS A FEATURE ATTRACTION as the sixth annual Downtown Lawrence Sidewalk Sale drew to a close July 23, 1965. A member of the group is pictured as the crowd forms outside the Red Dog Inn at 642 Massachusetts St. (now Liberty Hall). Later, the show was moved inside when the crowd of dancers and spectators grew so large that traffic was impeded. Each week, usually on Thursday, the Journal-World runs an image from our archives chosen by chief photographer Mike Yoder that gives a glimpse into Lawrence’s past.
f you are looking to buy a home in Lawrence, you had better lace up those running shoes. Home sale statistics for the first half of 2015 show that buyers need to be ready to move to keep up with what is becoming a tight home market. For the first six months of the year, home sales in Lawrence are up nearly 20 percent, compared with the same period a year ago. But an emerging trend in the market is how quickly homes are selling. The days of you and your spouse or roomie having the time to debate whether this room or that room is big enough to house the chocolate fountain are coming to an end. (I’m assuming that is the big debate in your house, too.) The median number of days a home sits on the market before it sells is now down to 25. That’s down from 34 days at this point in
Town Talk
Chad Lawhorn clawhorn@ljworld.com
2014 and down from 47 days in 2013. The pace seems to be quickening as well. When you look at just the homes that sold in June, the median time those homes sat on the market before selling was 13 days. Wow. It takes us 14 days just to hear back from the architect on how much it will cost to strengthen the floors of the various closets we’ll use to house shoes. It is a crazy market if people are buying homes before knowing that cost. Please see HOUSING, page 5A
Increased enrollment has district officials worried about costs ger guarantee additional funding, said Rick Doll, superintendent of LawProjections of enroll- rence public schools. ment increases over the “It’s a huge concern benext five years cause if we grow for Lawrence and need more schools have teachers we have district officials to pay for those concerned about teachers out of how to pay for the same pot of those additional money,” Doll students. said. SCHOOLS Because of The district changes to the has seen a stable funding formula, which increase in students for recently switched from the past five years, and a per-pupil method to a that trend is projected to block grant system, adPlease see DISTRICT, page 5A ditional students no lonBy Rochelle Valverde
Twitter: @RochelleVerde
Journal-World Photo/ University Archives, Kenneth Spencer Research Library, KU
Reptile researchers flock to KU for conference Twitter: @saramarieshep
Peter Kleinhenz is not scared of the 6-foot-1inch Kansas bull snake coiling around his arm in a meeting room at The Oread hotel. He’s impressed. Kleinhenz, however, is a person who’s really into reptiles. And in that sense, the recent Southern Oregon University
master’s graduate is far from alone this weekend at Kansas University. He’s one of roughly 450 herpetologists from around the world attending the annual meeting of the Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles, which kicked off Thursday and runs through Sunday at KU. Attendees will participate in a number of
PRESENTS
By Sara Shepherd
academic sessions, symposia and tours. Those include talks by world-famous biologists such as KU alumnus and National Academy of Sciences member David Hillis of the University of Texas at Austin, snake expert Harry Greene of Cornell University, Madagascar explorer Miguel Vences of Technical University of Braunschweig (Ger-
many) and amphibian conservation advocate Tyrone Hayes of University of California, Berkeley. There are also several events open to the public. The public can see live Kansas reptiles on display at The Oread hotel each evening of the conference, take in Please see REPTILE, page 5A
Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photo
PETER KLEINHENZ, LEFT, from Southern Oregon University, holding a rough green snake, and Stephen Ressel, of Maine’s College of the Atlantic, holding a king snake, visit at the non-venomous reptile and amphibian exhibition Thursday at The Oread hotel.
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Mothers fight for control of wedding plans Dear Annie: Our daughter recently became engaged and we couldn’t be happier. She is our only child and is marrying a great guy. While we are excited about all of the planning for the big event, it appears that the groom’s mother, “Dolores,” is trying to take control. For nearly every detail that my daughter and I agree upon, Dolores steps in and wants to make changes. While I appreciate her enthusiasm, is this the way that things are supposed to be? She is putting my daughter in the middle and making the situation terribly uncomfortable, especially since the groom is in the military and the wedding won’t take place for another 18 months. I’m not sure how
spend wisely for this one-day celebration. Dolores has already married off a daughter. I’m only going to be the mother of the bride once in my life. Is it too much to ask that this day belong to me? How do I keep peace Marcy Sugar and with my daughter and Kathy Mitchell make this the day that anniesmailbox@comcast.net we have dreamed of without constant conflict with her motherlong this can go on be- in-law? — Once in My fore we have words. Life My husband and I have given the bridal Dear Once: These couple what we con- days, the bride’s famsidered to be a gener- ily doesn’t get to conous budget, but Dolo- trol every aspect of the res keeps offering to wedding. Grooms also pay for any additional get a say. And many expenses so she can families split the costs make it be the day right down the middle, she wants. While we giving each an equal can afford to give our voice in the planning. daughter more money This day does not for the wedding, we belong to you. Your would like them to daughter is the one
Annie’s Mailbox
‘Wet Hot’ indie camp on Netflix Can we be nostalgic for nostalgia itself? The new eightepisode comedy “Wet Hot American Summer: First Day of Camp” begins streaming on Netflix today. It is extremely impressive and entirely ephemeral. The 2001 indie comedy “Wet Hot American Summer” was rather remarkable for its cast of both known and up-and-coming talent, its abject silliness and the fact that just about nobody went to see it. A spoof of raunchy, lowbudget, comingof-age sex comedies from the early 1980s, “Wet Hot” more than succeeded in parodying the sensibilities of comedies made with a fraction of the budget of “Porky’s.” Perhaps that’s why it ended up becoming a minor cult hit seen primarily on DVD — mostly rented from the “old” Netflix model. Its cast at the time, too enormous to entirely appreciate here, included relatively wellknown performers David Hyde Pierce, Molly Shannon, Christopher Meloni, Paul Rudd and Michael Ian Black, as well as such emerging talents as Amy Poehler and Bradley Cooper. They’ve all returned for this prequel, along with many guest appearances, including Jon Hamm and John Slattery of “Mad Men” fame, Kristen Wiig, Chris Pine and others. Most of the cast members were too old to play camp counselors and staff in 2001. And that was half the fun. Now they are playing similar roles, but looking almost 15 years older. Some are “enhanced” by wigs, adding to the absurdity. If the sight of 40-somethings playing oversexed youth isn’t jarring enough, many of the gags are slow and understated and painfully obvious. This blends oddly with the strenuous overacting of the cast of unknowns playing the young campers. ‘‘Wet Hot” is best appreciated as a cast reunion. And you have to appreciate its goofy egalitarianism. After four Oscar nominations and starring roles in blockbusters like “Guardians of the Galaxy” and “The Hangover” franchise, you could imagine Bradley Cooper had bigger fish to fry. But he’s here, as is Paul Rudd, who’s starring in “Ant-Man,” the biggest movie in America at the moment. Tonight’s other highlights O A grim killing yields a strange suspect on “Defiance” (7 p.m., Syfy). O Candid cameras capture strangers mulling ethical dilemmas on “What Would You Do?” (8 p.m., ABC). O Young pianists compete on “Virtuosity: The Cliburn” (8 p.m., PBS, check local listings). O Mysterious memories on “Killjoys” (8 p.m., Syfy).
JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS
For Friday, July 31: This year you can identify with both sides of an argument. You often see the pros and cons of a situation. Instead of falling into one camp or the other, why not just look at how you can bring the two sides together? If you are single, your magnetism draws many people to you. If you are attached, you often do not see eye to eye with your sweetie. 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) +++++ A friend could trigger a lot of excitement with the full expectation of you joining in. Tonight: Happy at home. Taurus (April 20-May 20) ++++ You see a personal matter very differently from how a boss sees it. Don’t try to resolve this conflict. Tonight: Join friends for a fun happening. Gemini (May 21-June 20) +++++ Reach out to someone you care about. You might want to make plans to see each other soon. Tonight: Be careful about making plans. Cancer (June 21-July 22) ++++ You might be a lot more in touch with what you need from a certain situation than you realize. Tonight: Be ready for some tumultuous moments. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) ++++ Before you even can make a suggestion, others will
who decides how to handle her future mother-in-law and what compromises she is willing to make. For your sake, as well as hers, please take one step back and be as gracious and accommodating as possible. It’s a good lesson to teach your daughter. It may not be the wedding you dreamed of, but it could ease the way for your daughter to have the marriage she wants and a better relationship with her in-laws. Isn’t that what counts?
— Send questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or Annie’s Mailbox, P.O. Box 118190 Chicago, IL 60611.
jacquelinebigar.com
come forward with theirs. Tonight: Juggle your needs with someone else’s. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) +++ Today probably would be the perfect day to relax and ask for something you want. Curb any negativity. Tonight: Make yourself unavailable. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) +++++ You might want to reconsider the possibilities surrounding a personal situation. Tonight: Till the wee hours. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ++++ You have a lot of ground to cover, and many people seem to need your time. Tonight: Enjoy the moment. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ++++ You might know what to do with a difficult loved one, whereas others seem to flounder. Tonight: Take a walk. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) +++ It appears as though you might not be as secure about a situation. Tonight: Let someone else treat. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) +++++ The Full Moon accentuates what you have to offer. Tonight: Express your caring. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) +++++ How you set up a situation will be based on what you hear and not on what is really said. Tonight: Be mysterious. — The astrological forecast should be read for entertainment only.
UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy E. Parker July 31, 2015
ACROSS 1 Web journals 6 It’s better than never 11 “The ___ of All Fears” 14 Yawninducing 15 Convex molding 16 Bonanza find 17 The Rockettes, e.g. 19 Louse-to-be 20 Most edible, in a way 21 The FBI’s J. ___ Hoover 23 Get back on track 26 “Tommy” band 27 Acted badly? 28 More agile 30 ___-bodied 31 Fore-andaft-rigged vessel 32 Babysitter’s handful 35 Albanian currency 36 Common vacation souvenirs 38 Even, as a score 39 Robinson or Doubtfire 40 Lickety-split 41 Characteristic carrier 42 Lacking 46-Across 44 Medicine chest door, usually
46 Sound powers of mind 48 Cruel folks 49 American symbol 50 Enjoyed the water, in a way 52 Anger 53 Desi Arnaz and Duke Ellington 58 ___’easter (strong wind) 59 Depth charge target 60 Grassy plain 61 Half the width of ems 62 Bride’s gift of yore 63 ___ ease (relieve one’s mind) DOWN 1 U.K. network 2 “Well, ___-di-dah!” 3 Lennon’s wife 4 Infamous Spanish collar 5 Floodgate 6 Theater boxes 7 Bird of old Rome 8 Cause of civil action 9 Architect’s wing, often 10 Vitamin C source 11 Bruce Springsteen and Chuck Berry, e.g.
12 Heep of “David Copperfield” 13 Paris transportation 18 Chip veggie 22 Barely passing grade 23 Coin of the ___ 24 Fire remnant 25 Pete Seeger and Joan Baez, e.g. 26 Harnessrace pace 28 It’s a piece of cake 29 Dermatologist’s concern 31 Tian ___ Mountains 33 City north of Bismarck 34 Jury participants 36 Flavor savorer
37 Fix, in a way 41 Pancake accessory 43 Lacking value 44 One gender 45 Models of perfection 46 Angler’s net 47 Hank in the Baseball Hall of Fame 48 Full of fine sediment 50 Falling flakes 51 Jewish month 54 Blood classification syst. 55 “Dig in!” 56 Biochemistry abbr. 57 Drunkard
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MUSIC LESSON By Ella G. Rose
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THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.
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Friday, July 31, 2015
Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
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(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: FLOWN SLANT EMBARK COGNAC Answer: The family loved their new kitten. Everyone thought she was the — CAT’S MEOW
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ON THE
street
“
There is no one who is standing up for solar right now.” — Nate Waters, spokesman for the Alliance for Solar Choice much rates rise, but can be part of the second phase of the review involving details of new rate plans and a proposed utility-owned solar farm. “There is no one who is standing up for solar right now,” Nate Watters, spokesman for the
Housing
Jacklyn Williams, nursing assistant, Lawrence “Komodo dragon. It’s interesting because I don’t know if they’re venomous or they just have so much bacteria in their saliva.”
David Crane, student, Lawrence “A turtle.”
Jason Bruce, food service, Lawrence “Frilled dragons. I’ve had two of them.” What would your answer be? Go to ljworld.com/onthestreet and share it.
Woman CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A
Ellis was charged Monday with two counts of rape of a child under the age of 14. Douglas County District Judge Paula Martin said Monday that Ellis was accused of having sex with “two girls while they were in day care.” It was unclear whether the “day care” was a licensed facility or a more informal arrangement. Charging documents
HOSPITAL Births Aaron McClung and Abby Bird, Eudora, a boy, Wednesday. Jinnine and William Miller, Lawrence, a girl, Thursday. Heather and Michael Rossi, Perry, a girl, Thursday
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Solar group wants more input in Westar review
Topeka (ap) — The Kansas Corporation Commission issued a reBy Sylas May vised order Wednesday Read more responses and add allowing the Alliance for your thoughts at LJWorld.com Solar Choice, which represents solar businesses, be given partial access What’s your favorite to to proceedings over Toreptile? peka-based Westar Energy’s plan to raise rates Asked at the by $152 million. Lawrence Public Library KCC said WednesSee story, 3A day that the solar group cannot provide expert witnesses, testimony or evidence regarding how
Jerron Conner, student, Lawrence “Chameleon. The way it changes colors is amazing.”
Friday, July 31, 2015
national solar group, told The Topeka Capital-Journal. Kansas had 2.5 megawatts of solar capacity in 2014 — enough to power 340 homes — which ranked the state 43rd in the nation for installed solar capacity, according
new home is sitting on the market before it sells also has improved dramatically. The median now is CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A 76 days, down from 168 days in 2014. In all seriousness, it l One of the reasons has been a good year homes are moving quickly thus far for the Lawrence is because the inventory real estate market. Here’s of homes on the market is a look at some statistics tight. At the end of June, from the most recent re- there were 334 active listport from the Lawrence ings. That’s down more Board of Realtors: than 25 percent from 2014 l A total of 627 homes levels and down more have been sold through than 20 percent of 2013 June. That’s up almost 20 levels. It will be interestpercent from the same ing to see if builders see period a year ago. More those numbers as beimpressive is the 2015 ing tight enough to start totals are up about 12 per- increasing the number cent compared with the of new homes they are 2013 totals. Last year was a constructing each month. bit of a down year for the Whether that will happen local real estate market, is still an open question. but 2013 was a strong At the end of June, there year with more than 1,000 were 42 newly constructhomes sold that year. If ed homes on the market. the market stays on its That’s down from 49 new current pace, home sales homes in June 2014. l With a tighter marin 2015 could exceed 1,100. l Sales of newly ket, selling prices are constructed homes are starting to creep up. The showing some signs of median price of homes new momentum. A total sold thus far in 2015 is of 33 newly constructed $165,000. That’s up from homes have sold thus far $160,000 at the same in 2015. That’s up from 30 point in 2014. Whether during the same period a that is a sign of price year ago, but still down pressures in the market from 51 during the period or just a difference in the in 2013. More encouraging, type of houses that are though, is that 11 newly being sold this year isn’t constructed homes sold in clear. But it would stand June. That’s up from four to reason that overall newly constructed home home values will see sales in June 2014. The some appreciation, if the median number of days a market remains tight.
Reptile
District
es: using money from the district’s reserve fund, or shifting money away from other areas, Doll said. “You dig further into our reserve, which we are already doing, or you cut somewhere else so you can have the dollars to hire the teacher,” he said. The district’s enrollment for next year is projected at about 10,300 students, and does not count the 877 full-time students in the Lawrence Virtual School, which includes students from across the state, Doll said. As students enroll in the weeks leading up to the first day of school, officials will be paying attention. “We are watching our enrollment very closely, and making adjustments as we need to, even right down to the start of school,” Doll said.
continue, Doll said. The projections were part of a report, by the educational planning firm RSP & Associates, that was presented at Monday’s school board meeting. After a general decline in enrollment from 2000 to 2009 that saw around 700 students leave the district, the number of students increased by more than 600 from 2010 to 2014, according to the report. The report projects growth to slowly continue for the next five years, with an increase of more than 300 students in that time. With those projections and the new funding formula, Lawrence school
district officials are keeping a wary eye on enrollment numbers for the approaching school year. The report projected anywhere between 30 and 130 additional students to enroll, but the actual enrollment numbers won’t be known until Sept. 21, which is the official count day, Doll said. “In the past each of those students would have generated dollars that would have helped pay for the new teachers, but that’s not the case anymore, at least for the next two years,” Doll said, referencing the block grant system that will be in place for two years, during which time legislators have said they will put together a new funding formula. During that time frame, there are two ways to address enrollment increas-
indicate the alleged acts happened with a 7-year-old between Jan. 12, 2014, and last Friday, and with a 9-year-old between March 9, 2014, and last Friday. Prosecutors on Monday said that they believe they had a “strong case.” Ellis’ wife is listed in court documents as a witness for the prosecution. It is unclear at this point if her address is the same as Ellis’, though a neighbor on Thursday said he believed a man and a
woman lived in the residence. At his first appearance, Ellis was ordered not to have contact with any witnesses. When he asked if he could speak with his wife, he was denied. Ellis has been in the Douglas County Jail since his arrest Saturday on a $500,000 bond. If convicted, Ellis faces a “Hard 40,” or minimum 40 years in prison, for each count, according to prosecutors.
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A
Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow For 135 years, Marks Jewelers has meant quality, service and dependability. Marks Jewelers. Quality since 1880. 817 Mass. 843-4266
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A
multimedia presentations today and Sunday at the Kansas Union and tour new reptile exhibits at the KU Natural History Museum. Kleinhenz and friend Colin Guiley, a Southern Oregon undergrad, said they came to the conference to meet people in the herpetology field. They included the conference as a stop in a summer field trip across the United States. “We’re just trying to see the largest number of both birds and herps that we can,” Kleinhenz said, adding that he expected good “herp” spotting in Kansas. More senior herpetologists in town for the event, including retired University of Oklahoma professor Victor Hutchison, said they enjoyed catching up with old friends and seeing what’s currently going on in the field. Hutchison said KU was a notable place to convene. “It’s a very important collection,” he said, “and they have been dominant in herpetology for a number of years.” This annual meeting
to The Solar Energy Industries Association. Westar, which serves 700,000 customers in eastern Kansas communities, has proposed a rate increase for the average household of $13 per month. Westar has said it needs more revenue to pay for retrofitting its La Cygne coal-fired power plant, make improvements at Wolf Creek nuclear power plant and begin upgrading equipment to trim power outages.
Westar has also proposed a new billing structure allowing customers the option of taking a flat service charge or a plan based on the customer’s peak usage each month. Solar advocates say implementation of those options could undermine economic incentives to install solar panels because cost savings to customers could be delayed. The KCC’s ruling on the Westar plan is expected by October.
If you go The following events are free and open to the public. They’re happening in conjunction with the annual meeting of the Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles, Thursday through Sunday at Kansas University. • Exhibit of live, nonvenomous Kansas reptiles and amphibians, 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday through Sunday at Gathering Room 1 (level B1) in The Oread hotel, 1200 Oread Ave. • “Amphibians of the Appalachians,” multimedia show featuring photography and music, 9:30 p.m. to 11 was last held at KU in the mid 1990s, said Jen Humphrey, external affairs director for the KU Biodiversity Institute and Natural History Museum. This is a special year for herpetology at KU. It marks 100 years since renowned KU alumnus and professor Edward Taylor first published his research, in 1915. Taylor began what is now the fifth-largest amphibian and reptile collection in the world, according to KU. Today, KU’s collection includes
p.m. today at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union, 1301 Jayhawk Blvd. • “Herpetologists Past and Present,” multimedia show, 8 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Sunday at Woodruff Auditorium. • Two new herpetology-focused exhibitions — a display of live anole lizards and a display of student wildlife photography and field journals — at the KU Natural History Museum, Dyche Hall, 1345 Jayhawk Blvd. Museum hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday and noon to 4 p.m. Sunday. 340,000 specimens representing 5,000 species from 156 countries, including the largest collection of Kansas specimens in the state. This month, the Society for the Study of Reptiles and Amphibians will publish “Herpetology at Kansas: A Centennial History,” by professor emeritus and former KU herpetology curator William Duellman. — KU reporter Sara Shepherd can be reached at sshepherd@ljworld.com or 832-7187.
Nude man runs into downtown intersection Around 12:30 p.m. Thursday, a man stripped off his clothes at the intersection of 23rd and Massachusetts streets and darted into oncoming traffic, possibly looking for a truck to walk in front of, Lawrence police spokesman Sgt. Trent McKinley said. Witnesses said they believed the act was intentional. The man began to fight with the first responding officer, McKinley said, and an off-duty officer in the area came to the officer’s aid. The two of them were able to get the man out of the street and to safety, but they did have to deploy a Taser on the man to subdue him, they said. He was placed under “protective custody,”
handcuffed and taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital for treatment and a mental health evaluation, McKinley said. Based on witness statements, police are investigating the incident as a possible suicide attempt.
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Opinion
Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Friday, July 31, 2015
EDITORIALS
Recycling option Rural county residents soon will have a more convenient way to drop off recyclable materials.
C
ongratulations to Douglas County officials for moving forward on plans to provide increased recycling opportunities for rural residents. Lawrence, Baldwin City and Eudora all have curbside recycling service. After the curbside service was initiated in Lawrence, it no longer made sense to maintain the drop-off recycling center at Walmart on South Iowa Street. Without that center, rural residents had to bring their recyclables to bins at various parking-lot locations in Lawrence or simply throw them in the trash. This week, however, the Douglas County Commission approved a pilot program to set up drop-off recycling bins at several rural locations. Eileen Horn, the county’s sustainability coordinator, said Thursday that plans for the recycling locations still are evolving and advised county residents to consult the county’s sustainability website (douglascountyks.org/recycle) for the latest information. As originally planned, the city is moving forward on recycling sites at Stull United Methodist Church and Wakarusa Valley School. After hearing from residents in the southern part of the county, officials decided to move one recycling site from the Douglas County Public Works Facility on East 25th Street to the Vinland Fairgrounds. County officials also have heard from residents of Grant Township north of Lawrence and may consider adding another recycling site in that area, Horn said. The program will take the same recyclables as are accepted in Lawrence and materials don’t have to be sorted. The county plans to operate the recycling program for six months as a pilot then take a look at how much the service is being used and any problems that arise. The interest already being expressed in the location of drop-off sites appears to confirm the desire of county residents to make use of this additional service. It is to the county’s credit that it is trying to respond to that demand. Hopefully, the pilot will run smoothly and provide a popular and useful new service for rural county residents.
Christians fleeing from Mideast Washington — Christianity, whose presence in the Middle East predates Islam’s by 600 years, is about to be cleansed from the Middle East. Egyptian Copts may have found some respite under Abdel Fatah al-Sissi, but after their persecution under the previous Muslim Brotherhood government, they know how precarious their existence in 90 percent Muslim Egypt remains. Elsewhere, it’s much worse. Twenty-one Copts were beheaded by the Islamic State affiliate in Libya for the crime of being Christian. In those large swaths of Syria and Iraq where the Islamic State rules, the consequences for Christians are terrible — enslavement, exile, torture, massacre, crucifixion. Over the decades, many Middle Eastern Christians, seeing the rise of political Islam and the intensification of savage sectarian wars, have simply left. Lebanon’s Christians, once more than half the population, are now estimated at about a third. The number of Christians under Palestinian Authority rule in the West Bank has dwindled — in Bethlehem, for example, dropping by half. (The exception, of course, is Israel, where Christians, Arab and non-Arab, enjoy not just protection but civil rights. Their numbers are increasing. But that’s another story.) Most endangered are the
Charles Krauthammer letters@charleskrauthammer.com
“
Over the decades, many Middle Eastern Christians, seeing the rise of political Islam and the intensification of savage sectarian wars, have simply left.” Christians of Syria. Four years ago they numbered about 1.1 million. By now 700,000 have fled. Many of those remaining in country are caught either under radical Islamist rule or in the crossfire between factions. As the larger Christian world looks on passively, their future, like the future of Middle Eastern Christianity writ large, will be determined by Iran, Hezbollah, the Assad dynasty, the Islamic State, the Nusra Front, various other local factions and by regional powers seeking advantage. Meanwhile, on a more limited scale, there are things that can be done.
Three weeks ago, for example, 150 Syrian Christians were airlifted to refuge and safety in Poland. That’s the work of the Weidenfeld Safe Havens Fund. It provided the flight and will support the refugees for as long as 18 months as they try to remake their lives. The person behind all this is Lord George Weidenfeld: life peer, philanthropist, publisher (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, established 1949), Europeanist (founder of the Institute for Strategic Dialogue to promote classically liberal European values), proud public Jew (honorary vice president of the World Jewish Congress), lifelong Zionist (he once served as the chief of Cabinet to Israel’s first president, Chaim Weizmann) and, as he will delightedly tell you, the last person to fight a duel at the University of Vienna — with sabers, against a Nazi. (No one died.) Weidenfeld, now 95, once invoked Torschlusspanik, “a German phrase which roughly translates as the ‘panic before the closing of the doors,’” to explain why “I’m a man in a hurry.” Remarkably healthy and stunningly energetic (as distant cousins, we are often in touch), he appears nowhere near any exit doors. But he is aware of and deeply troubled by the doors closing in on a community in Syria largely abandoned by
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the world. In context, the scale of the initial rescue is tragically small. The objective is to rescue 2,000 families. Compared to the carnage in Syria wrought by the pitiless combatants — 230,000 dead, half the 22 million population driven from their homes — it’s a paltry sum. But these are real people who will be saved. And for Weidenfeld, that counts. Yet he has been criticized for rescuing just Christians. In fact, the U.S. government will not participate because the rescue doesn’t extend to Yazidis, Druze or Shiites. This comes under the heading of no good deed going unpunished. It’s a rather odd view that because he cannot do everything, he should be admonished for trying to do something And for him, it’s personal. In 1938, still a teenager, he was brought from Vienna to London where the Plymouth Brethren took him in and provided for him. He never forgot. He is trying to return the kindness, he explains, to repay the good that Christians did for him 77 years ago. In doing so, he is not just giving hope and a new life to 150 souls, soon to be thousands. He has struck a blow for something exceedingly rare: simple, willful righteousness. — Charles Krauthammer is a columnist for Washington Post Writers Group.
OLD HOME TOWN
100
Letters Policy
The Journal-World welcomes letters to the Public Forum. Letters should be 250 words or less, be of public interest and should avoid name-calling and libelous language. The Journal-World reserves the right to edit letters, as long as viewpoints are not altered. By submitting letters, you grant the Journal-World a nonexclusive license to publish, copy and distribute your work, while acknowledging that you are the author of the work. Letters must bear the name, address and telephone number of the writer. Letters may be submitted by mail to Box 888, Lawrence Ks. 66044 or by email to: letters@ljworld.com
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‘Complete streets’ promote health By Chris Tilden
In 2012, the city of Lawrence took a huge step forward by passing a “complete streets” policy. A complete street is designed to promote safety and convenience for all users. Often seen as a way to encourage walking and bicycling, a truly complete street enhances roadway safety and convenience for all users, including those in vehicles. Hundreds of cities around the country now have complete streets policies. L a w rence city engineers are now incorporating proven Tilden complete street design elements into nearly all street redesign projects. While there has been some community resistance to these designs, we should give fair and serious consideration to them. Complete street designs have the potential to make traveling safer and more convenient and to make Lawrence a more active, healthy community. Some of the more common complete street designs are roundabouts, bike lanes, reverse angle parking and lane reductions, often called road diets. Among current projects, roundabouts and lane reduction are being considered
YOUR TURN on sections of Kasold Drive and Bob Billings Parkway. The Federal Highway Administration has designated roundabouts and lane reductions as proven safety countermeasures because they: l dramatically reduce the number and severity of crashes (reduced by almost a half in some places), l decrease the number of excessive speeders, and l make it safer to walk across streets. Projects like lane reduction have been successful on roads with average daily automobile traffic as high as 25,000 cars without negatively affecting traffic flow. In comparison, Kasold Drive and Bob Billings Parkway generally carry less than 15,000 cars a day. Just as important as safety is the impact of complete streets on physical activity. Everyone in our community should have access to safe, well-maintained sidewalks and trails. They are an important source of transportation for many, including the approximately 5 percent of Lawrence families that do not own a vehicle. They also offer just about every resident the chance to be active. Research findings show people travel more on foot and bicycle in neighborhoods where roadways are safer and easy to navigate, and peo-
ple want to live in walkable communities. According to a Lawrence-Douglas County Health Department 2014 survey, 70 percent of elementary and middle school students want to walk or bike to school and most live within reasonable walking or biking distance. Twenty percent of elementary schoolchildren in Lawrence live less than a half mile from school, and more than 50 percent live within a mile. Still, only 14 percent of our elementary and middle school children walk or bike to school. In Lawrence, where we have a strong neighborhood school system, we can do better. In fact, we must. We live in an increasingly sedentary world where we are prematurely dying because we aren’t moving. A lack of physical activity is leading to increased incidence of heart disease, stroke, diabetes, some cancers and upper respiratory conditions. These diseases cause nearly 6 out of 10 deaths in Douglas County, and our children’s generation is the first ever expected to have shorter lives than their parents’ generation. There isn’t one simple solution to this problem, but it’s clear to me that creating a healthy built environment in Lawrence and Douglas County is a good place to start. — Chris Tilden is community health director for the LawrenceDouglas County Health Department
From the Lawrence Daily Journal-World for July 31, 1915: years “The seismoago graph at the UniIN 1915 versity has been moved from its former quarters in Fraser Hall to new quarters in Blake Hall. A cement block has been built in the floor of the building which connects the seismograph with the solid Oread limestone rock below. The machine is in better place here due to the fact that it is easier for the men in charge of it to keep in touch with it. If the new location proves satisfactory to the observers as the best place that can be obtained for the machine it will be left there and a place for the keeping of the apparatus that goes with it will be arranged. Correct time is received each day by the wireless and the record of the machine is taken by this.” “At a meeting of the township board of Grant township today at the home of Paul Laptad, north of town, the board granted a petition circulated by Mr. Rowe and signed by most of the farmers of the district, for drainage of the land under water in the township. The drainage ditches will be across the farms of Alfred Heck, Peter Stein and Jacob Hammig, and according to residents of the township these men are showing a large amount of public spirit by allowing their land to be ditched that the farms of others may be released from water. At present there is from four to six hundred acres inundated with surface water which has flowed after each of the heavy rains and has had no way to escape.” “Topeka. -- Motion pictures are to be used to fight disease in Kansas during the coming fall and winter, according to the announcement made from the office of Dr. S. J. Crumbine, secretary of the state board of health. It was asserted that pictures showing the sources of typhoid fever, tuberculosis, small pox, measles, and diphtheria, will be exhibited in every county. Proper personal hygiene and preventative methods also will be portrayed.” “Forest Savage lies very ill at his home, 1424 Connecticut street. Mr. Savage is one of the best known among the old settlers of Lawrence. He came here during the border war, in which he took part, and has the distinction of being the leader of the first band in Lawrence. He is an old ex-Union soldier, and is 87 years old.” — Compiled by Sarah St. John
Read more Old Home Town at LJWorld.com/news/lawrence/ history/old_home_town.
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TODAY
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
MONDAY
TUESDAY
Mostly sunny
Brilliant sunshine
Mostly sunny
Partly sunny and very warm
Pleasant with periods of sun
High 92° Low 67° POP: 10%
High 91° Low 69° POP: 10%
High 93° Low 69° POP: 5%
High 94° Low 69° POP: 10%
High 87° Low 68° POP: 10%
Wind WSW 3-6 mph
Wind SE 3-6 mph
Wind SSW 6-12 mph
Wind S 4-8 mph
Wind SE 6-12 mph
POP: Probability of Precipitation
Kearney 88/65
McCook 92/65 Oberlin 92/66
Clarinda 88/63
Lincoln 91/65
Grand Island 88/66
Beatrice 89/65
St. Joseph 89/67 Chillicothe 90/69
Sabetha 89/66
Concordia 91/67
Centerville 87/64
Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 92/71 92/70 Goodland Salina 93/68 Oakley Kansas City Topeka 91/62 95/69 92/67 92/68 Lawrence 89/69 Sedalia 92/67 Emporia Great Bend 92/70 93/68 91/65 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 91/70 87/63 Hutchinson 92/69 Garden City 93/68 87/64 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 90/67 91/71 88/67 84/67 91/68 90/69 Hays Russell 93/66 93/66
Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photos
COUSINS GUNNER ROBSON, 2, LEFT, AND KAMDEN ROBSON, 3, both of Lawrence, experience their first ride on a roller coaster Wednesday at the Douglas County Fair. At left, 80-pound EmmaKate Lang, 10, a Palmyra 4-H Club member, leads her 1,460 pound steer Hank around the livestock pen Thursday at the Douglas County Fair. Lang, followed by her father, Brian Lang, of Baldwin City, was practicing for today’s market beef competition. See more coverage of this year’s Douglas County Fair at LJWorld.com/fair15
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
LAWRENCE ALMANAC
Through 8 p.m. Thursday.
Temperature High/low 87°/61° Normal high/low today 89°/68° Record high today 104° in 1980 Record low today 53° in 2014
Precipitation in inches 24 hours through 8 p.m. yest. 0.00 Month to date 8.41 Normal month to date 4.03 Year to date 27.00 Normal year to date 24.38
REGIONAL CITIES
Today Sat. Today Sat. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Independence 91 70 pc 90 69 s Atchison 91 66 s 89 69 s Fort Riley 93 69 s 91 70 s Belton 91 71 s 88 71 s Olathe 90 68 s 88 69 s Burlington 92 70 pc 91 69 s Osage Beach 91 71 s 90 70 s Coffeyville 90 69 pc 89 69 s Osage City 94 70 s 92 71 s Concordia 91 67 s 88 68 s Ottawa 93 70 s 92 69 s Dodge City 87 63 t 85 64 t Wichita 91 71 pc 87 70 s Holton 93 69 s 91 71 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
SUN & MOON Today 6:20 a.m. 8:34 p.m. 8:38 p.m. 6:37 a.m.
Full
Last
July 31
Sat. 6:21 a.m. 8:33 p.m. 9:21 p.m. 7:47 a.m.
New
Aug 6
First
Aug 14 Aug 22
LAKE LEVELS
As of 7 a.m. Thursday Lake
Clinton Perry Pomona
Level (ft)
Discharge (cfs)
877.56 894.32 974.73
500 1500 100
Fronts Cold
INTERNATIONAL CITIES Hi 91 71 95 120 92 88 77 75 62 101 84 64 74 89 95 86 71 90 77 77 66 87 59 79 81 88 88 89 68 71 93 77 78 80 74 78
Sat. Lo W 79 t 53 pc 79 s 90 s 78 sh 75 pc 57 pc 50 pc 57 t 77 s 53 s 50 sh 59 sh 80 sh 76 s 62 pc 52 pc 68 s 54 t 60 t 55 sh 78 t 50 sh 54 pc 68 s 71 pc 75 t 79 t 53 sh 51 pc 80 s 58 t 59 s 62 pc 55 pc 55 s
Warm Stationary Showers T-storms
Æ
E
$
B
%
D
3
C ; A )
3
62
4
4
7:30
62 Bones h
4 MasterChef h
5
5
5 Elementary h
7
19
19 Wash
9
9 Shark Tank h
9
Review
D KTWU 11 A Q 12 B ` 13
Wash
Charlie
Shark Tank h Elementary h
Ice
Today Sat. Today Sat. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W 92 72 s 95 73 s Albuquerque 83 64 t 84 64 pc Memphis Miami 92 78 t 91 79 t Anchorage 71 57 s 72 57 s 86 63 s 84 66 s Atlanta 89 70 pc 90 71 pc Milwaukee Minneapolis 81 64 s 83 64 pc Austin 100 74 pc 98 71 s Nashville 91 68 s 92 65 s Baltimore 91 67 s 91 67 s New Orleans 92 78 t 94 78 pc Birmingham 91 68 s 92 70 s 90 74 s 90 72 s Boise 99 66 s 101 69 pc New York Omaha 90 67 s 88 67 pc Boston 90 69 s 86 69 s 88 74 t 88 74 t Buffalo 82 65 s 79 63 pc Orlando Philadelphia 90 72 s 92 73 s Cheyenne 84 56 pc 86 56 t Phoenix 108 88 t 107 87 pc Chicago 88 64 s 85 66 s Pittsburgh 84 66 s 82 64 pc Cincinnati 87 65 s 85 64 s Cleveland 86 66 s 82 63 pc Portland, ME 85 62 s 83 62 pc Dallas 98 78 t 98 78 pc Portland, OR 100 62 s 96 63 pc 95 67 pc 94 68 t Denver 90 60 t 91 62 pc Reno Richmond 90 68 s 92 70 s Des Moines 88 65 s 87 68 s Sacramento 95 63 pc 92 64 pc Detroit 88 64 s 84 63 s St. Louis 92 73 s 90 73 s El Paso 96 73 t 96 75 s Salt Lake City 94 64 s 95 68 s Fairbanks 71 55 pc 64 53 c 78 70 pc 77 69 pc Honolulu 91 79 s 90 78 pc San Diego San Francisco 73 61 pc 73 62 pc Houston 99 75 pc 99 75 s Seattle 93 61 s 90 61 pc Indianapolis 87 63 s 84 66 s Spokane 99 65 s 99 64 pc Kansas City 89 69 s 88 70 s Tucson 99 77 t 99 77 t Las Vegas 101 81 t 98 79 t Tulsa 88 72 pc 90 72 s Little Rock 92 69 s 95 72 s 92 75 s 93 74 s Los Angeles 83 67 pc 82 66 pc Wash., DC National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: Death Valley, CA 116° Low: West Yellowstone, MT 27°
WEATHER HISTORY
WEATHER TRIVIA™
Q:
The temperature at Duluth, Minn., reached an all-time high of 106 degrees on July 31, 1936.
8 PM
8:30
How much of the sun’s energy does the Earth reflect back into space?
9 PM
9:30
KIDS
Bones h
Gotham h Hawaii Five-0
News
Blue Bloods h
Masterpiece Mystery! What Would
Hawaii Five-0
Holly
Dish Nat. Rules
Rules
News
News
Seinfeld
News
Hawaii Five-0
Virtuosity -- The Cliburn Dateline NBC (N) 20/20 h
Virtuosity -- The Cliburn What Would
Inside
FOX 4 at 9 PM (N)
20/20 h
Vicious
Blue Bloods h
TMZ (N)
KSNT
Tonight Show
News
Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline
World
Business Charlie Rose (N)
News
Meyers
Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline
News
Hawaii Five-0
Corden
News
Tonight Show
Meyers
41 America’s Got Talent “Judge Cuts 3” 38 King/Hill King/Hill Minute Minute
Commun Commun Mother
29
29 Masters
Penn & Teller
News
ION KPXE 18
50
Law Order: CI
Law Order: CI
Law Order: CI
Law Order: CI
Clinton
Pets
6 News
Our
Turnpike Movie
6 News
Tower Cam/Weather
Mother
Mother
Mother
Mother
Mother
Mother
Dateline NBC (N)
Corden
Charlie Rose (N)
41 38
Mother
Fam Guy South Pk
Two Men Mod Fam Mod Fam Office
Office
Law Order: CI
Cable Channels WOW!6 6 WGN-A
307 239 Mother
THIS TV 19 CITY
25
USD497 26
Mother
›››› Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977), Teri Garr City Bulletin Board, Commission Meetings
Rules
Rules
Close Encounters of the Third Kind City Bulletin Board
School Board Information
ESPN 33 206 140 ››› Catching Hell (2011)
School Board Information Baseball Tonight
SportsCenter (N)
SportsCenter (N)
ESPN2 34 209 144 NFL Live (N) FSM
36 672
eCFL Football: Roughriders at Eskimos Baseball Tonight aMLB Baseball: Royals at Blue Jays Royals aMLB Baseball: Royals at Blue Jays UFC
NBCSN 38 603 151 NASCAR Mecum Auctions: Collector Cars and More “Harrisburg” Collectible cars go up for auction. FNC
39 360 205 The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File (N)
Hannity (N)
The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File
CNBC 40 355 208 American Greed
American Greed
American Greed (N) American Greed
American Greed
MSNBC 41 356 209 All In With Chris
Rachel Maddow
Lockup
Lockup “Wabash”
Lockup
CNN
44 202 200 Anderson Cooper
The Hunt
Death Row Stories
Crimes of Century
Crimes of Century
TNT
45 245 138 Cold Justice (N)
Cold Justice:
Cold Justice
Cold Justice:
Hawaii Five-0
USA
46 242 105 Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam NCIS: Los Angeles
A&E
47 265 118 Criminal Minds
TRUTV 48 246 204 World’s Dumbest... AMC TBS HIST
Criminal Minds
Criminal Minds
truTV Top Funniest Grown
50 254 130 ››‡ National Lampoon’s Vacation
Grown
Criminal Minds
Criminal Minds
Fame
World’s Dumbest...
›‡ Vegas Vacation (1997)
51 247 139 Fam Guy Fam Guy ››‡ Sherlock Holmes (2009) Robert Downey Jr..
BRAVO 52 237 129 Housewives/OC 54 269 120 Ancient Aliens
SYFY 55 244 122 Defiance (N)
BEST BETS
10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
C I 14 KMCI 15 L KCWE 17
Whose?
Lawrence Public Library Book Van, 9-10 a.m., Clinton Place, 2125 Clinton Parkway. East Ninth Artist Selection Panel: Artist Interviews, 9 a.m.-1 p.m., Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St. Lawrence Public Library Book Van, 10:3011:30 a.m., Wyndham Place, 2551 Crossgate Drive. Lawrence Public Library Book Van, 1-2 p.m., Peterson Acres, 2930 Peterson Road. Perry Lecompton Farmers’ Market, 4-6:30 p.m., U.S. Highway 24 and Ferguson Road (in FastTrax Parking Lot), Perry. Final Friday, 5-9 p.m., Downtown Lawrence and surrounding areas. Cottonwood, Inc. Retirement Art Show and Sale, 5-9 p.m., Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St. Fried Chicken Dinner, 5:30-7:30 p.m., Eagles Lodge, 1803 W. Sixth St.
WOW DTV DISH 7 PM
SPORTS 7:30
8 PM
8:30
DOUGLAS COUNTY FAIR BUILDINGS OPEN TO PUBLIC 10 a.m.-9 p.m. 8:30 a.m. Bucket Calf Show followed by PeeWee Bucket Calf Showmanship, & Beef Show, Community Building 1-10 p.m. Petting Zoo, Bldg 8 4-10 p.m. Pony Rides, Bldg 8 6 p.m. Bale Throwing Contest, Blacktop Area; co-sponsored by Douglas County Farm Bureau. Registration 5:30 p.m. 6-midnight Moore’s Greater Shows Carnival Open 7:30 p.m. Demolition Derby, Rodeo Arena
Submit your stuff: Don’t be shy — we want to publish your event. Submit your item for our calendar by emailing datebook@ljworld.com at least 48 hours before your event. Find more information about these events, and more event listings, at ljworld.com/ events. July 31, 2015
9 PM
9:30
10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
Cable Channels cont’d
America’s Got Talent “Judge Cuts 3”
8
Snow
MOVIES
Network Channels
M
Flurries
-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s National Summary: The Northeast and mid-Atlantic will be dry, less humid but still warm today as another round of locally heavy thunderstorms rattle the Desert Southwest. Record-challenging heat will bake the Northwest.
FRIDAY Prime Time WOW DTV DISH 7 PM
Rain
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+)
31 TODAY
Precipitation
Approximately 35 percent.
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015 Today Cities Hi Lo W Acapulco 90 78 t Amsterdam 66 51 pc Athens 98 81 s Baghdad 119 90 s Bangkok 92 80 r Beijing 83 74 r Berlin 67 48 pc Brussels 68 52 pc Buenos Aires 67 45 r Cairo 100 77 s Calgary 85 53 s Dublin 61 46 r Geneva 79 59 pc Hong Kong 90 80 pc Jerusalem 92 72 s Kabul 89 61 pc London 71 51 pc Madrid 89 64 t Mexico City 77 53 t Montreal 79 62 pc Moscow 70 57 pc New Delhi 89 78 t Oslo 57 48 c Paris 75 55 pc Rio de Janeiro 80 68 s Rome 86 70 s Seoul 87 75 pc Singapore 88 79 t Stockholm 66 52 c Sydney 68 48 s Tokyo 91 80 s Toronto 85 61 pc Vancouver 80 59 s Vienna 77 56 pc Warsaw 68 49 s Winnipeg 76 54 pc
DATEBOOK
Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for today.
A:
Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset
Carbon
National-European Sherlock Holmes-Game
Housewives/OC
››› Forgetting Sarah Marshall (2008), Mila Kunis
Ancient Aliens (N)
Missing in Alaska
Ancient Aliens
Ancient Aliens
Killjoys (N)
Dark Matter (N)
Defiance
Killjoys
Sarah M
FX 56 COM 58 E! 59 CMT 60 GAC 61 BET 64 VH1 66 TRV 67 TLC 68 LIFE 69 LMN 70 FOOD 72 HGTV 73 NICK 76 DISNXD 77 DISN 78 TOON 79 DSC 81 FAM 82 NGC 83 HALL 84 ANML 85 TVL 86 TBN 90 EWTN 91 RLTV 93 CSPAN2 95 CSPAN 96 ID 101 AHC 102 OWN 103 WEA 116 TCM 162 HBO MAX SHOW ENC STRZ
401 411 421 440 451
248 249 236 327 326 329 335 277 280 252 253 231 229 299 292 290 296 278 311 276 312 282 304 372 370
136 107 114 166 165 124 162 215 183 108 109 110 112 170 174 172 176 182 180 186 185 184 106 260 261
› That’s My Boy (2012) Adam Sandler, Andy Samberg.
351 350 285 287 279 362 256
211 210 192 195 189 214 132
› That’s My Boy (2012) Adam Sandler. Grandma’s Boy Futurama Futurama South Pk South Pk Archer Archer Very Harld 3D Total Divas Divas Soup Soup Brody E! News (N) Stewarts-Ham. Reba Reba Reba Reba “Red Alert” Reba Cops Cops Cops Cops Junk Junk Junk Junk Junk Junk Junk Junk Junk Junk ›› House Party 2 (1991) Game Nellyville Lip Sync DeSean Wendy Williams Breakfast Club ››‡ Footloose (1984, Drama) Kevin Bacon. ›››‡ Breakfast Club (1985) Mysteries-Museum My.- Monument Mysteries-Museum Mysteries-Museum My.- Monument What Not to Wear Love; Bride- St. Extreme I Do’s Love; Bride- St. Extreme I Do’s Bring It! (N) Bring It! (N) Atlanta Plastic (N) Atlanta Plastic Bring It! ›››‡ Winter’s Bone (2010, Drama) ››‡ Trust (2010) Clive Owen. Winter’s Bone Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Burgers Diners Diners Diners Diners Love It or List It Love It or List It Hunters Hunt Intl Hunters Hunt Intl Love It or List It SpongeBob Full H’se Full H’se Prince Prince Friends Friends Friends Dorae Dorae Dorae Ninja Ninja Doctor Who Lab Rats Gravity Rebels Descendants (2015) Dove Cameron. Bunk’d Best Fr. Jessie Liv-Mad. Girl I Didn’t King/Hill King/Hill Burgers Cleve Fam Guy Fam Guy Childrens Jesus Face Eric Alaskan Bush Alaskan Bush Treasure Quest Alaskan Bush Treasure Quest Coming ››› Pretty Woman (1990) Richard Gere. The 700 Club Princess Bride Science Science Science Science Diggers Diggers Science Science Diggers Diggers The Waltons Middle Middle Middle Middle Golden Golden Golden Golden To Be Announced Redwood Kings (N) Treehouse Masters Redwood Kings Treehouse Masters Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Bless Lindsey Harvest P. Stone Praise the Lord Price Fontaine Life on the Rock (N) News Rosary The Genesis Bridegrm Women Daily Mass - Olam ››‡ Second Chorus (1940) Bookmark Second Chorus Second Chorus Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Capitol Hill Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Capitol Hill Deadly Women Deadly Women Evil Evil Deadly Women Deadly Women World War II World War II World War II World War II World War II Neighbor Neighbor Neighbor Neighbor The Haves, Nots Neighbor Neighbor Neighbor Neighbor Storms Storms Tornado Alley Tornado Alley Tornado Alley Tornado Alley ››‡ Criss Cross (1948) ›››‡ Brute Force (1947) ›› Desperate (1947)
501 515 545 535 527
300 310 318 340 350
True Detective True Detective ›› Horrible Bosses 2 (2014) The Ballers Robo ››› Lucy (2014, Action) Strike Back (N) Strike Back Strike Back Masters of Sex ›››› Schindler’s List (1993) Liam Neeson. Auschwitz ››‡ Maleficent (2014) ››› Napoleon Dynamite (2004) ››‡ Quigley Down Under ››› Fury (2014) ›››‡ Foxcatcher (2014) Steve Carell. Power (iTV) Cove
G
SECTION B
USA TODAY — L awrence J ournal -W orld
IN MONEY
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07.31.15 EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY
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L F
High-speed police chases have killed thousands DEADLY CHASES
More than 11,500 people have been killed in police chases since 1979. The breakdown:
A vehicle burns after a high-speed pursuit that killed Jermaine Gibson in Palm Springs in 2011.
COOL STUFF DEADLY CHASES
GREAT AMERICAN STEAMBOAT COMPANY
uPlan ahead: Cruise will visit Mississippi River Xmas markets uWindow views: Take a unique worldwide photo tour uHow geniuses at MIT made your mayo easier to pour To find these items, go to onlinetoday.usatoday.com
This is an edition of USA TODAY provided for your local newspaper. An expanded version of USA TODAY is available at newsstands or by subscription, and at usatoday.com.
For the latest national sports coverage, go to sports.usatoday.com
USA SNAPSHOTS©
Your U.S. bucket list Only 52% of Americans have visited more than
10
states.. states
Source Travelocity survey of 1,000 adults TERRY BYRNE AND PAUL TRAP, USA TODAY
Bystanders and people riding in vehicles being pursued make up almost half the fatalities from accidents over more than three decades Thomas Frank USA TODAY
More than 5,000 bystanders and passengers have been killed in police car chases since 1979, and tens of thousands more were injured as officers repeatedly pursued drivers at high speeds and in hazardous conditions, often for minor infractions, a USA TODAY analysis shows. The bystanders and the passengers in chased cars account for nearly half of all people killed in police pursuits from 1979 through 2013, USA TODAY found. Most bystanders were
More than 11,500 people have been killed in police chases since 1979. The breakdown: Fleeing drivers 6,300
KEVIN THOMAS
killed in their own cars by a fleeing driver. Police across the USA chase tens of thousands of people each Non-violators 5,100 year — usually for traffic violations or misdemeanors — and Police 139 drivers often speed away reckNote Non-violators include both lessly. Recent cases show the danbystanders and passengers in cars fleeing police. ger of the long-standing police practice of chasing minor offenders. Ages of bystanders A 25-year-old New Jersey man who have been killed: was killed July 18 by a driver po982 lice chased for running a red light. Fleeing drivers 732 6,301 A 63-year-old Indianapolis 451 285 Non-violators 5,066 grandmother was killed June 7 by a driver police chased 4 miles for Police 139 shoplifting. 17 and 18-34 include 35-54 Note Non-violators both 55 and A 60-year-old federal worker under and passengers in cars older bystanders was killed March 19 near Washfleeing police. Note Bars represent bystanders only. ington by a driver police chased Source USA TODAY analysis of U.S. because his headlights were off. Department of Transportation records Ages of bystanders “The police shouldn’t have KARL GELLES, USA TODAY who have been killed: been chasing him. That was a big, crowded street,” said Evelyn Vi982 verette, 83, mother of federal 732
worker Charlie Viverette. “He wouldn’t have hit my son if the police hadn’t been chasing him.” Some police say drivers who flee are suspicious, and chasing them maintains law and order. “When crooks think they can do whatever they choose, that will just fester and foster more crimes,” said Milwaukee police union President Michael Crivello. Many in law enforcement, including the Justice Department, have recognized the danger of high-speed chases and urge officers to avoid or abort pursuits that endanger pedestrians, nearby motorists or themselves. At least 139 police have been killed in chases, federal records show. “A pursuit is probably the most unique and dangerous job law enforcement can do,” said Tulsa Police Maj. Travis Yates, who runs a pursuit-training academy. v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B
451
285
Debris ‘almost certainly’ from 777 But Malaysian official says he can’t confirm it’s from missing flight Jane Onyanga-Omara USA TODAY
Malaysia’s deputy transport minister on Thursday said it is “almost certain” that aircraft debris found off the coast of the Indian Ocean island of Reunion came from a Boeing 777 aircraft. Abdul Aziz Kaprawi told reporters that the country’s chief investigator told him the “flaperon” — part of a plane’s wing — was almost certainly from the same model of aircraft as Malaysia Airlines Flight 370. However, he told Malaysian publication The Star that the government could not confirm the debris was from MH370.
17 and under
18-34
35-54
55 and older
It Bars follows the bystanders discoveryonly. of the Note represent 6-foot-long part by people cleanSource USA TODAY analysis of U.S. Department of Transportation recordson ing a beach Wednesday Reunion. KARL GELLES, USA TODAY In a possibly related development, the same cleaning crew on Thursday found a suitcase with wheels near the same spot, the local newspaper, Le Journal de L’ile de la Reunion reports. The newspaper published a photo of the suitcase and quoted Johnny Begue, a member of the cleaning crew, as saying the piece of luggage was there Wednesday “but nobody really paid attention. ... We still see the closure of the bag still attached to a piece of rigid canvas.” As for the wing debris, Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak said it is too early to speculate whether it’s from MH370. In a statement, he said the debris will be shipped by French au-
LINFO.RE/ANTENNE RÉUNION VIA AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Remains of a suitcase was found near the plane debris.
thorities to Toulouse for examination. A Malaysian team is en route to the southern French city, while a second team is traveling to Reunion, he said. “The location is consistent
with the drift analysis provided to the Malaysian investigation team,” he added. “As soon as we have more information or any verification, we will make it public.” Australian Deputy Prime Minister Warren Truss on Thursday described the discovery as a “major lead” in the search for the aircraft, which disappeared after taking off from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, on March 8, 2014, with 239 people aboard. Truss, who has overseen the search for the Boeing 777 in the ocean 1,000 miles west of Perth, said it would “take some time” to come to a conclusion. The number BB670 — which he said is not a serial or registration number but could possibly be a maintenance number — found on the debris may help with identification.
Smaller Army having trouble meeting recruiting goals Tom Vanden Brook @tvandenbrook USA TODAY
The Army is nearly 14% short of the recruits it will need to fill its ranks, marking the first time in six years — and only the third in the past 20 — that it may fall short of its recruiting goal for the year. The Army’s top officer for recruiting, Maj. Gen. Jeffrey Snow, acknowledged in an interview with USA TODAY on Thursday the difficulties in attracting young men and women to the acWASHINGTON
tive-duty Army in an improving economy and the greater effort his recruiters are taking to find new soldiers. “It is a challenging mission, and we’re not going to get around that,” Snow said. “And there are indications that the economy is going to continue to improve.” Still, Snow, who took command this summer, expressed confidence that recruiters would hit the goal of 59,000 new recruits when the fiscal year ends Sept. 30. The shortfall in recruiting comes as the Army is planning to pare 40,000 soldiers over the next
CHIP SOMODEVILLA, GETTY IMAGES
“It is a challenging mission,” Maj. Gen. Jeffrey Snow says.
few years. Despite that reduction to 450,000, the Army still needs about 60,000 recruits a year to fill out combat and support units.
And recruiters are working harder just to get potential soldiers to meet with them. For the first 10 months of fiscal year 2015, recruiters made more than 415,000 appointments with young men and women interested in the Army. Those resulted in just over 50,000 signing up to serve. For the same period in 2014, they made 371,000 appointments and had signed up 52,000 soldiers. “We made more appointments,” Snow said. “We conducted more appointments. Yet there were fewer contracts achieved.” Meanwhile, the Air Force, Marine Corps and Navy all have
made 100% of their recruiting goals through May, according to the Defense Department. During the height of fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan, the services struggled to make their annual goals. Standards for recruits were lowered, and greater signing bonuses were handed out. In 2006, for example, it spent $1 billion on bonuses to recruit and retain soldiers. Bonuses and educational incentives, however, have decreased in recent years, Snow said. The Army paid out $117 million in 2014 compared with $235 million in 2013.
2B
L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY FRIDAY, JULY 31, 2015
Traffic violations often trigger pursuits v CONTINUED FROM 1B
The Justice Department called pursuits “the most dangerous of all ordinary police activities” in 1990 and urged police departments to adopt policies listing exactly when officers can and cannot pursue someone. “Far more police vehicle chases occur each year than police shootings,” the department said. Police chases have killed nearly as many people as justifiable police shootings, according to government figures, which may undercount shootings. Yet chases have escaped the national attention paid to other potentially lethal police tactics. Despite the Justice Department’s warning, the number of chase-related deaths in 2013 was higher than the number in 1990 — 322 compared with 317, according to records of the Department of Transportation’s National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), which analyzes all fatal motor-vehicle RYAN GARZA, DETROIT FREE PRESS crashes. Many police departments let Alisha Jackson is surrounded by neighbors during a vigil held to help families that had children officers make on-the-spot judg- injured during a high-speed chase in Detroit. Jackson’s children were hit while playing outside. ments about whether to chase based on their perception of a chases begin benignly, with an atdriver’s danger to the public. Offi- tempted traffic stop. And most cers continue to violate pursuit end quickly — 76% were over policies concerning when to within five minutes, according to avoid or stop a chase, police rec- records of tens of thousands of ords show. Federally funded high- chases in California. tech systems that would obviate California records of 63,500 chases, such as vehicle tracking chases from 2002 through 2014 devices, are undeveloped or rare- show that: ly used because of cost. uMore than 89% were for veThough cities such as Milwau- hicle-code violations, including kee and Orlando allow chases speeding, vehicle theft, reckless only of suspected violent felons, driving and 4,898 instances of a many departments let officers missing license plate or an exchase anyone if they decide the pired registration risk of letting someone go outuJust 5% were an attempt to weighs the risk of a pursuit. nab someone suspected of a vioAt least 11,506 people, includ- lent crime, usually assault or robbery; 168 sought a known ing 6,300 fleeing susmurder suspect pects, were killed in uNearly 1,000 were police chases from 1979 for safety violations that through 2013, the most recent year for which endangered a driver only, NHTSA records are availincluding 850 drivers not able. That’s an average of wearing a seat belt and 23 BRETT T. ROSEMAN FOR USA TODAY 329 a year — nearly one motorcycle riders not Jonathan Farris’ son Paul was killed in 2007 by a driver that person a day. wearing a helmet Those figures probably uIn 90 instances, po- crashed into the taxi he was riding in. understate the actual lice chased someone for USA TODAY death toll because the sured, they’ve had too much to driving too slowly drink,” said Milwaukee Police NHTSA uses police re- Travis Yates “We don’t know that INJURIES, CHASES DECLINE Chief Edward Flynn, who sharply ports to determine if a the person in that car is AFTER NEW RULE restricted his department’s purcrash was chase-related, and just speeding or just had a headsuits in 2010 after four bystandsome reports do not disclose that light out ... [or] if they had just Police-chase injuries have ers were killed in three months. a chase occurred. committed a felony,” said Joseph fallen in Milwaukee since 2010 Kansas, Michigan and Minne- Farrow, commissioner of the For more serious offenses such when police were restricted to sota state records all show more California Highway Patrol, which as stealing a vehicle, “the sancchasing only suspected felons: chase-related deaths than the chased 14,628 motorists from tions imposed by courts nationNHTSA shows for those states. 2007 through 2014, resulting in wide for merely stealing a car Number of chases “It’s an embarrassment,” said 4,052 crashes, 2,198 injuries and don’t justify anybody taking any Injuries in chases Geoffrey Alpert of the University 103 deaths. risk,” Flynn said. of South Carolina, a leading purThat’s a 28% crash rate and a On June 15, 2012, at 3:20 p.m., 273 suit expert. NHTSA records “are 15% injury rate. Austin police chased a driver in a 300 the only national database we “There’s no question that when stolen pickup at 90 to 95 mph onhave on these fatalities, and it’s you’re engaging in a chase, you’re to a highway and along a frontage been consistently wrong.” engaging in something that can 200 road lined with service stations and fast-food restaurants. At an The number of innocent by- turn out many ways, and many 91 standers killed is impossible to are bad outcomes,” said John Firintersection, the truck slammed 100 pinpoint because hundreds of the man of the International Associainto a Mitsubishi driven by James NHTSA’s records fail to show tion of Chiefs of Police. Williford, 32, killing him instant10 whether a victim was in a car fleely. Driver Reynaldo Hernandez Police often suspect fleeing 16 0 ing police or in a car that was convicted of murdering Wildrivers are wanted for a wasn’t involved in a liford and sentenced to 55 years. serious offense. And they 2002 2014 chase. The Austin police chief cleared dislike letting a violator Analyzing each fatal the two officers, saying they folget away. During a chase, Source USA TODAY analysis of Wisconsin state information crash, USA TODAY found lowed the policy of the departpolice can be overcome that at least 2,456 byment, which had been cracking by “a need to ‘win’ and KARL GELLES, USA TODAY standers were killed — almake the arrest,” which down on auto thefts. though the death toll blinds them to the danger Robert Mercuri said. Williford’s widow, Esther Secould be as high as 2,750 they are helping create, a “We don’t know who may be in oanes, blames officers for decid— and that 55% of those 2010 FBI Law Enforce- that vehicle,” Mercuri said. “It ing to chase a stolen car. “My killed were drivers fleeing ment Bulletin reported. husband,” she said, “was essencould have been Ted Bundy.” USA TODAY police. They ranged from When police in Beech Few drivers fleeing police are tially killed for a stolen vehicle.” armed-robbery suspects Edward “The moment the officer Grove, Ind., were called wanted felons, statistics and reto a 10-year-old boy Flynn June 8 at 8:07 a.m. about search show. Pennsylvania rec- crossed over the median with chased as he drove a pickup 85 a shoplifting from a Walmart, ords of 32,000 chases since 1997 lights and sirens and started the mph on a county road before hit- they pulled behind the suspect’s show that the most common pursuit, he (Hernandez) immediting a tree, killing himself and his car in a parking lot and flashed charges against fleeing drivers ately turned into one of those 7-year-old passenger. their emergency lights. Driver were theft — including stealing or criminals and suspects who Injuries are even harder to Matthew Edmonds allegedly sped illegally possessing the car they doesn’t care about anything,” said count because the NHTSA keeps off on a busy thoroughfare, and were driving — resisting arrest, Seoanes, executive director of records of only fatal crashes. police chased him for 4 miles un- underage drinking and misde- PursuitSAFETY, a non-profit Records from six states show til stopping because of the dan- meanor assault. group seeking to reduce chase-rethat 17,600 people were hurt in ger. Moments later, Edmonds A Justice Department-funded lated deaths. “Drivers, they don’t chases from 2004 through 2013 allegedly sped through an inter- 1998 study found after interview- care about anyone’s safety, and so — an average of 1,760 injuries a section and hit a pickup driven by ing fleeing drivers that 32% drove the burden falls on the police to year in those states, which make Donna Niblock, 63, killing her off because they were in a stolen protect the public.” up 24% of the U.S. population. and seriously injuring her daugh- car, 27% because they had a susAustin police declined to comThose numbers suggest that ter and grandson. pended driver’s license, 27% ment because of Seoanes’ pendchases nationwide may have inThe chase followed depart- wanted to avoid arrest and 21% ing lawsuit against them. jured 7,400 people a year — more ment guidelines, which allow because they were driving drunk. than 270,000 people since 1979. “high-risk” pursuits for drivers “Overwhelmingly, someone is HIGH-RISK CHASES INCLUDE The uncertainty about the suspected of property crimes, fleeing because they’ve got a mi- TEENS AND ICY ROADS death and injury tolls obscures Beech Grove Detective Capt. nor warrant, their car isn’t in- Chases are inherently dangerous the danger of police chases, said because of their speed, and police Jonathan Farris, who became an often compound the danger by advocate for pursuit safety after chasing drivers in hazardous his son Paul, 23, was killed in conditions. 2007 by a motorist being chased At least 3,440 people were for an illegal driving maneuver. killed in crashes when a driver “If the public understood the was fleeing at 25 mph or more number of pursuits that were goover the speed limit, NHTSA recing on and the number of people ords show. The actual death toll who were being injured or killed, from such high-speed chases is there would be a much better diaprobably much higher, but it’s not logue as to what types of crimes known because only half of should be pursued,” Farris said. NHTSA records show a fleeing driver’s speed and the speed limit. MINOR INFRACTIONS Most dangerous are chases on TRIGGER CHASES slippery roads and pursuits of inKEVIN THOMAS Although police camera footage experienced, risk-prone teenage often depicts the drama of squad A vehicle was wrecked in a high-speed pursuit that killed Cadrivers and of motorcyclists, who cars racing after motorists, most thedral City police officer Jermaine Gibson and injured two. have little crash protection.
In Michigan since 2004, 74% of motorcyclists fleeing police were killed, injured or possibly injured when they crashed, state records show. Just 18% of chased car drivers were killed, injured or possibly injured in a crash. Police departments routinely warn officers about hazardous road conditions and high-risk drivers. Some bar motorcycle cops from pursuits because of the danger if an officer crashes. Yet nearly one-third of the police-chase deaths involved one of those three high-risk factors, USA TODAY found. That includes 1,132 motorcyclists who were killed while being chased. More than half — 589 — were not wearing a helmet. “Most police departments don’t allow their motorcycles to be in pursuits, so why would you chase one?” said Alpert, the pursuit expert. “Motorcycle drivers are either going to get away or they’re going to get killed.” Michigan state police have chased 120 motorcyclists who crashed since 2004, state records show. State police Capt. Greg Zarotney said, “Keep in mind that a pursuit only occurs when a decision is made by a driver to flee.” MILWAUKEE POLICE OPPOSE LIMITS ON CHASES
Police departments that restrict chases have faced resistance from officers. In 2012, the Florida Highway Patrol stopped letting officers chase anyone and allowed pursuits only of suspected felons, drunken drivers and reckless drivers. The number of pursuits fell almost in half: from 697 in 2010-2011 to 374 in 2013-2014. Thirty-five percent of the pursuits in 2013 and 2014 violated the new chase restrictions, state reports show. Milwaukee police oppose Chief Flynn’s 2010 policy restricting chases to suspected violent felons and people who present “a clear and imminent threat to the safety of others.” “The crooks understand that this is our process,” said Michael Crivello, the police union president. “Criminals know their car is almost like their safe locker. They can keep drugs and guns in their safe locker.” Motor-vehicle thefts in Milwaukee spiked to 18 a day in 2014, from 12 a day in 2013. Flynn said car theft “became sport” among juveniles. “These kids were finding out, ‘Well, nothing happens to me.’ They had the prestige of being cool to their friends, the thrill of the danger and no consequences,” Flynn said, adding that 70% of cars stolen in the city are recovered. Dallas, Orlando and Phoenix have seen crime rates plummet since restricting chases. Many departments base their chase policies on a three-page model the International Association of Chiefs of Police wrote in 1996. The model stops short of the Justice Department recommendation to list the offenses and conditions such as time of day in which a chase is allowed. The model instead lists factors to consider such as road and weather conditions, traffic levels and the seriousness of a driver’s offense. Flynn restricted chases after four bystanders were killed over three months in 2009 and 2010. Immediately after the deaths, Flynn defended his officers, noting they followed department policy and had actually stopped their pursuits only to have the fleeing drivers continue speeding away and hit the bystanders. Fleeing drivers typically continue speeding for a minute or two after police stop their chases. “I thought to myself, it’s not enough that we have a policy that tells our officers to terminate pursuits when they become unsafe. That was the industry standard,” Flynn said. “I needed an extra line to stop the pursuit in the first place, not because the officers were driving recklessly, but because we can’t control the behavior for those who refuse to stop for police.” Corrections & Clarifications USA TODAY is committed to accuracy. To reach us, contact Standards Editor Brent Jones at 800-8727073 or e-mail accuracy@usatoday.com. Please indicate whether you’re responding to content online or in the newspaper.
Whitney Houston was found dead at the Beverly Hilton in February 2012. A 1B story in Tuesday’s edition misidentified the hotel where she died in Beverly Hills.
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USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld FRIDAY, JULY 31, 2015
NATION/WORLD HEALTH
CAMPAIGN 2016
1 IN 5 U.S. ADULTS HAVE A DISABILITY
Wisconsin’s Walker had own email controversy
CDC report also breaks down data by state for first time Jennifer Calfas USA TODAY
One in five American adults have at least one kind of disability, according to a report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released Thursday. The findings, from 2013 data, come days after the 25th anniversary of the implementation of the Americans with Disabilities Act. The researchers defined a dis-
ability as a self-reported difficulty in one or more of five areas: vision, cognition, mobility, self-care or independent living — which includes tasks such as buying groceries or driving a car. The study is also the first stateby-state analysis of Americans with disabilities from CDC. The report found Southern states often had higher percentages of people with disabilities. For example, in Alabama, Mississippi and Tennessee, 31.5%, 31.4% and 31.4%, respectively, of the state adult population has a disability. The percentage of Americans in Midwestern and Northern states were nearly half those from
“In order to understand and address their needs, we need to understand their diverse circumstances.” Elizabeth Courtney-Long, co-author on the CDC report
Southern states. In Minnesota and Alaska, 16.4% and 17.7%, respectively, reported a disability. The report also found adults who have lower education levels, lower income or are unemployed were more likely to have a disability. Broken down by race, the
study revealed African American and Hispanic Americans were more likely to have a disability than white Americans. Elizabeth Courtney-Long, a health scientist with CDC’s National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities and a co-author on the CDC report, said she believes the report will allow public health officials to understand the prevalence of Americans with disabilities — 53 million of them by this count. “In order to understand and address their needs, we need to understand their diverse circumstances,” she said. “This report provides a snapshot into that.”
CECIL’S DEATH CAUSES LARGE TOURISM DROP IN ZIMBABWE Lion lured from national park was killed by American Frank Chikowore
Special for USA TODAY HARARE , ZIMBABWE
The global outcry over the killing of Cecil the iconic lion has caused a drop in badly needed tourists to this impoverished African nation, government officials said Thursday. “Our tourism sector, which was booming, has recorded a significant drop in arrivals in the Hwange National Park, where Cecil was being kept,” Zimbabwe Tourism Authority chief Karikoga Kaseke said Thursday without giving exact figures. “The culprits have painted Zimbabwe with a dirty brush. We are now seen as people who do not promote and protect animal rights.” Kaseke said he would launch an investigation to make sure other illegal hunting wasn’t occurring in the nation’s parks. Emmanuel Fundira, president of Safari Operators Association of Zimbabwe, said foreign tourists in Zimbabwe were forecast to spend about $5 million in the final quarter of 2015. “Many international tourists that were set to visit the country to see Cecil have canceled their trips,” Fundira said. “This killing is a huge loss to our tourism sector that was contributing immensely to the national wealth.” Walter Palmer, 55, a Minnesota dentist, killed 13-year-old Cecil this month near the Hwange National Park on the Botswana border after paying two guides at least $50,000 to track and kill the big cat, according to the Zimbabwe Conservation Task Force. Palmer said he relied on his guides, Theo Bronkhorst and Honest Trymore Ndlovu, to make sure he hunted legally. Zimbabwean prosecutors claim Palmer
SHEK YU
“Many international tourists that were set to visit the country to see Cecil have canceled their trips.” Emmanuel Fundira, president of Safari Operators Association of Zimbabwe
and the guides lured Cecil out of the national park with bait, shot him with a crossbow, tracked the wounded animal for 40 hours, then shot him dead. The two guides appeared in court Wednesday. Bronkhorst was released on bail, and Ndlovu was released without charges. Zimbabwean Prosecutor General Johannes Tomana said it would be difficult to force Palmer to return to the country for trial. Cecil was part of a research program funded by the Oxford University in Britain. He wore a
EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY
Guides Honest Trymore Ndlovu and Theo Bronkhorst enter court Wednesday on allegations they lured the lion from Hwange National Park (top) to be killed by Walter Palmer. tracking collar, so conservationists could study lion longevity and personality characteristics. Farai Gambiza, 45, a Harare resident, canceled his October trip to Hwange National Park with his wife and children. “We have no reason to go there anymore because Cecil is dead,” Gambiza said. Patricia Muchekesi, 47, a government councilor near Hwange, said Cecil was beloved among Zimbabweans. “Cecil was a rare breed of a lion. Unlike other lions that we know to be dangerous,
Cecil was very friendly.” Conservationists fear Cecil’s death could lead to the deaths of other lions in his pride. “The saddest part of all is that ... the next lion in the hierarchy, Jericho, will most likely kill all Cecil’s cubs so that he can introduce his bloodline into the females,” said Zimbabwe Conservation Task Force Chairman Johnny Rodrigues. “This is the standard procedure for lions.” Contributing: Mihret Yohannes in Berlin
IN BRIEF FORMER VA. GOVERNOR JOINS GOP PRESIDENTIAL RACE
Former Virginia governor Jim Gilmore became the 17th Republican presidential candidate Thursday, making the announcement in a Web video. “Some may ask, ‘Why am I running?’ ” Gilmore says in the video, noting the large GOP field. “I’m a candidate for president because our current Washington leadership is guiding America on a path to decline, and I can reverse that decline,” he says. His entry into the race is no surprise. He told the Richmond Times-Dispatch in July that he would announce his candidacy the first week of August. Gilmore, 65, was elected governor in 1997, running on a platform of ending the car tax. Prior to that he served as the state’s attorney general. — Cooper Allen COP ACCUSED OF KILLING DRIVER RELEASED ON BOND
A former University of Cincinnati police officer charged with murder in the shooting death of a man he pulled over for a missing front license plate pleaded not
cial pieces of evidence was bodycamera video that contradicted the account of the incident that Tensing gave to investigators. — Kevin Grash, The Cincinnati Enquirer
A FESTIVE TIME IN FRANCE
GOP candidate calls for Clinton inquiry Madeleine Behr USA TODAY
MADISON, WIS . Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker last week denounced Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server during her time as secretary of State. Jay Heck, executive director for Common Cause Wisconsin, a non-partisan good government organization, found Walker’s statement “highly ironic.” “I was like, ‘Hello? Pot calling the kettle black,’ ” he said. Walker, who is running for the Republican presidential nomination, was Milwaukee County executive from 2002-10 when two of his staffers, Kelly Rindfleisch and Darlene Wink, were convicted of campaigning EPA on public time Clinton because of work they did for Walker’s successful 2010 gubernatorial bid and then-state representative Brett Davis’ campaign for lieutenant governor. GETTY IMAGES Records Walker show Walker’s staff used a sep“I was arate Wi-Fi syslike, tem, private ‘Hello? email accounts and different Pot laptops in his calling county office to the kettle correspond black.’ ” with campaign aides. Jay Heck, executive director In his statefor Common ment denouncCause Wisconsin ing Clinton, Walker raised the possibility that the former secretary of State had threatened national security and called for Attorney General Loretta Lynch to determine whether Clinton broke the law. Barry Burden, a political science professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, said Walker probably doesn’t find his statement about Clinton hypocritical because compromising national security is far different than campaign activities on public time. “I think the press release is more about him trying to get attention as a Republican candidate who will be tough on Hillary Clinton,” Burden said. Comparing Clinton’s situation to the case with Walker’s office is like comparing “apples and oranges,” former state attorney general Peg Lautenschlager, a Democrat, said. Walker’s case is just the opposite: private email system to do political work on government time, rather than a private server to do government work using personal resources, she said. “There is nothing iffy about this,” Lautenschlager said. “You can’t do political work on government time. Period, end of story.”
CONFEDERATE FLAGS PLACED OUTSIDE MLK’S CHURCH
GAIZKA IROZ, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Large-scale puppets make their way through the crowd Thursday during the 79th Bayonne summer festival in Biarritz. France’s largest festival ends its five-day run Aug. 2. guilty in court Thursday and was out of jail on bond less than eight hours later. Ray Tensing, 25, killed Samuel DuBose, 43, on July 19 as the unarmed black man delayed producing his driver’s license during the traffic stop near the university’s campus. Judge Megan
Shanahan of Hamilton County Common Pleas Court set Tensing’s bond at $1 million during the arraignment. On Wednesday, Tensing was charged with murder after a Hamilton County grand jury indicted him earlier in the week in the DuBose case. Among the cru-
Four Confederate flags were placed outside of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s church Thursday. Authorities said they are looking for two white men who were caught on surveillance video. Authorities have images of the men placing the flags outside Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, said Atlanta Police Chief George Turner. Local authorities are working with federal authorities and have not determined what charges might be levied, he said. They have not ruled out a hate crime, Turner said. An officer from the Atlanta FBI’s joint terrorism task force was on the scene “to better determine if any specific threats were received” and to provide support to Atlanta police, FBI Special Agent Steve Emmett said in an email. — WXIA-TV
PRESIDENT AND PUBLISHER
John Zidich
EDITOR IN CHIEF
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L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY FRIDAY, JULY 31, 2015
STATE-BY-STATE News from across the USA ALABAMA Birmingham: AL.com passed on an invitation to help the state conservation department celebrate the grand opening of its 11th community archery park Tuesday in Oak Mountain State Park.
ALASKA Fairbanks: Jim Johnsen was selected as the next University of Alaska president, nearly two months after emerging as the only finalist for the job, newsminer.com reported. ARIZONA Phoenix: The Arizona
Republic has parents covered, compiling a list of almost 80 attractions and activities to thrill birthday boys and girls. Options include Radical Reptile Fun, Build-a-Bear stores that will help kids make their own stuffed teddy and Fat Cats’ bowling and glowin-the-dark golf. ARKANSAS Blanchard Springs
Caverns: Escape that sun and take a cool trip underground, ArkansasOnline suggested. In the Cathedral Room of the spectacular Stone County cave complex, it’s 58 degrees. In this underground oasis, it’s an identical 58 degrees every day of the year.
CALIFORNIA Los Angeles: Dangerous rip currents prompted warnings at beaches after lifeguards rescued more than 400 people swept away by strong waves Tuesday, the Times reported. COLORADO Denver: Search dogs, search and rescue teams and volunteers scoured a mountainous area west of Antonito looking for a 19-year-old who left to go jogging on July 23 but never came back, KUSA-TV reported.
HIGHLIGHT: OHIO
Toxic algae threatens Lake Erie water again
nies bid on more than $1 million in work, the Star-Press reported. The quiet zone project is a central element of tens of millions of dollars being invested in improvements in downtown Muncie. IOWA Des Moines: A stolen
BMW traveling at high speeds flew off an exit ramp on I-80 Wednesday in Waukee and crashed into an auto auction lot, The Register reported.
past couple of weeks, journalists at NPR have debated whether to bleep out bad words in news broadcasts, The Washington Post reported.
FLORIDA MELBOURNE: A broken water pipe here created a geyserlike spout that sprayed about 6 million gallons of drinking water into the Indian River Lagoon during the past week, Florida Today reported. GEORGIA Atlanta: After a nine-
month search, evaluating candidates from across the country and overseas, the High Museum of Art chose Randall Suffolk to serve as the museum’s new director, the Journal-Constitution reported.
KANSAS Pittsburg: Investors
developing a state-owned gambling casino are seeking permission to build a four-story hotel, The Joplin Globe reported.
KENTUCKY Louisville: Out-
quiet zone program to lessen train horn noise downtown suffered a setback when no compa-
MINNESOTA St. Cloud: A “reverse 911 call” sent in the middle of the night to ask for the public’s help while police searched for a missing child left some residents angry or confused, the St. Cloud Times reported.
Missouri State University students will be housed in hotels when the semester begins next month, the Springfield NewsLeader reported. A $13 million renovation project of the Sunvilla Tower residence hall is taking longer than expected and not all of the floors will be ready when classes start Aug. 17. MONTANA Cascade: When Ashton Clinger launched osprey research in high school, she had no idea her findings would become part of a textbook someday. The Call of the Osprey by Dorothy Hinshaw Patent is part of the Scientists in the Field series. “You never think doing a science fair project will go this far,” Clinger told the Great Falls Tribune.
LOUISIANA New Orleans: Bond
NEBRASKA Lincoln: Forbes
was increased from $30,000 to $300,000 for Scot Riddick, 46, who is accused of threatening the life of a WDSU-TV reporter and saying he would burn down the studio headquarters of the station, The Times-Picayune reported. MAINE Whitefield: A woman
MARYLAND Salisbury: The arts
INDIANA Muncie: The city’s
A man who told authorities he wanted to reduce the number of dogs he owned is accused of strangling four of the 14, The (Port Huron) Times Herald reported.
dated equipment was overwhelmed by a fire stoked by hot-burning plastic appliance parts at a General Electric warehouse April 3, The Courier-Journal reported. Sprinklers and alarms didn’t activate properly, and fire crews found most GE hydrants were inoperable, investigators said.
IDAHO Boise: A driver led police
ILLINOIS Hillsboro: Federal regulators approved resumption of limited coal operations at the Deer Run Mine, which has been shut down since a fire in March, The State Journal-Register reported.
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration announced earlier this month that models show this summer could be one of the most severe for harmful algal blooms on western Lake Erie, the second-most severe behind a record-setting bloom in 2011. The major bloom prediction was prompted by heavy June rains, causing significant nutrient runoff into the lake basin. An agreement by Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder, Ohio Gov.
MISSOURI Springfield: Some
plan to again gather in hopes of stopping construction materials for a telescope atop Haleakala from making it to their destination, The Maui News reported ( on a 170-mile chase from Mountain Home to Baker City, Ore., the Idaho Statesman reported.
ROMAIN BLANQUART, DETROIT FREE PRESS
A severe outbreak of toxic algae is predicted to strike Lake Erie this summer, which could affect Toledo’s water supply.
Chief Freddie Cannon has resigned effective Friday, The Delta Democrat-Times reported. The City Council named Delando Wilson, who has been assistant chief since April 2014, as the next chief of police.
holding an essay contest to give away 47 acres of woodlands has abandoned the effort because she didn’t get enough entries. Martha Manchester has owned the land here since 1994 and she told the Kennebec Journal that she’ll refund the $100 entry fees.
HAWAII Wailuku: Protesters
SOUTH DAKOTA Sioux Falls: The Catholic Daughters of the Americas selected Sioux Falls as the site of the group’s 2018 national convention, KDLT-TV reported.
MISSISSIPPI Greenville: Police
81-year-old man was charged with public indecency, accused of performing a sex act with some shrubbery while naked, the Connecticut Post reported.
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: For the
The 38th Annual National Bikers Roundup is expected to draw more than 20,000 people from across the USA to Darlington Dragway on Aug. 5 to 9, The Florence Morning News reported.
Detroit Free Press
CONNECTICUT Stratford: An
DELAWARE Dover: More cuts are expected at Dover Downs after lawmakers ignored requests for additional financial aid before leaving Legislative Hall last month, The News Journal reported.
SOUTH CAROLINA Hartsville:
Keith Matheny CURTICE Scientists predict one of the most severe outbreaks yet this summer of toxic algae blooms on western Lake Erie — the type that last August disrupted the water supply of 400,000 people in Toledo and southeastern Michigan. And while the region’s drinking water is so far safe, acres of spreading green muck float around Toledo’s water intake pipe on Lake Erie yet again. A coalition of conservation groups and Ohio business, farming and government officials took to boats Wednesday, giving reporters and themselves a first-hand look at another summer of algae blooms already spreading on Lake Erie. “It’s a signal that our Great Lakes region is sliding backwards,” said Joel Brammeier, president of the non-profit Alliance for the Great Lakes. “If we lose clean drinking water, our region loses everything.” Toledo, however, has not experienced problems so far this summer with microcystis algae, which produces a toxin called microcystin that reached alarming levels and prompted a “do not drink or boil” water advisory over the first weekend of August last year. Scientists with the National
event, “Torches,” which was to be an annual October event to replace the now-defunct Salisbury Festival, is now suffering the same lack of support as its predecessor and has been canceled, the Daily Times reported.
MASSACHUSETTS Brockton:
The Enterprise reported that Temple Beth Emunah is selling its Torrey Street building and is in merger discussions with Temple Beth Am in Randolph.
MICHIGAN Moore Township:
RHODE ISLAND Pawtucket: A statue of the baby Jesus disappeared from the Pawtucket Soup Kitchen’s garden, the Valley Breeze reported.
John Kasich and Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne to reduce algae-causing pollutants by 40% by 2025 drew praise from environmentalists and policymakers Wednesday, as did laws passed in Ohio tightening agricultural fertilizer-spreading and other operations. But many called for more specifics on implementation to reach the goals talked about since last August. “Much more needs to be done,” said Ohio state Rep. Teresa Fedor, D-Toledo. of drought conditions following the fourth-wettest six months in state history, The Albuquerque Journal reported. Drought was present statewide in July 2014, with the prevalence of severe drought at 77% compared with 1% currently. NEW YORK Mount Vernon:
Attorney General Eric Schneiderman’s office is evaluating whether to get involved in the case of Raynette Turner, a mother of eight who died in a city police holding cell Monday, nearly 48 hours after her arrest on a shoplifting charge, The Journal News reported. How she died, and why the 42-year-old still was in custody remained unanswered.
NEW HAMPSHIRE Concord:
Gov. Hassan said National Guard recruiters shouldn’t be armed, but new security measures have been implemented. A letter to Hassan from 60 House members had called for the Guard to be armed, a response to the murders at recruiting facilities in Chattanooga, Tenn., earlier this month, the New Hampshire Union Leader reported.
NEW JERSEY Buena Vista:
Town leaders are trying to find a way to save a 235-year-old oak tree that stopped blooming normally earlier this year, The Daily Journal reported. NEW MEXICO Albuquerque:
More than 49% of the state is free
TEXAS Galveston: A new study
by the Risky Business Project, a bipartisan group of policymakers and company executives, predicts Texas will be one of the states most negatively impacted by climate change by the 2050’s if nothing is done. A 2-foot sea level rise in Galveston and the number of days per year exceeding 95 degrees more than doubling were among the findings, The Texas Tribune reported. UTAH Salt Lake City: A Summit County cold case was solved after 40 years, but the alleged killer won’t be getting prosecuted. The Salt Lake Tribune reported that an anonymous tipster, who came forward months ago, led authorities to conclude that George Toone had shot and killed William Ercanbrack on Oct. 28, 1976, but Toone died of natural causes 14 years ago in San Bernardino, Calif. VERMONT Montpelier: The Vermont Department of Labor announced Tuesday the seasonally adjusted statewide unemployment rate for June was 3.6%, unchanged from the state’s revised May rate and lower than June’s 5.3% national rate. The state’s unemployment rate was the fourth lowest in the USA.
NORTH CAROLINA Clayton: Anna Claire Aldridge, 4, will donate the money she makes selling lemonade Friday to the Ruff Creek Animal Rescue and Adoption Center, The News & Observer reported. NORTH DAKOTA Fargo: Seven of nine grassland bird species were displaced after wind turbines were built at sites in North Dakota and South Dakota, the Grand Forks Herald reported. OHIO Medina: A cable-TV re-
pairman found the badly decomposed body of a girl who would have turned 2 in October, and her father, Eric Warfel, was arrested in connection with her death, WKYC-TV reported.
VIRGINIA Blacksburg: Virginia Tech plans to introduce beer and wine sales in the indoor club seats at Lane Stadium this football season, the Richmond TimesDispatch reported. WASHINGTON Spokane: Three
goats were stabbed at a cityowned water well, KREM-TV reported. One of the animals was found dead.
ranked Lincoln 17th on its “2015 Best Places for Business and Careers,” the Lincoln Journal Star reported. That was down from sixth last year and the city’s lowest ranking since it was 18th in 2008. NEVADA Reno: Lake Tahoe’s first new campground in more than 20 years was proposed by developers earlier this week, the Reno Gazette-Journal reported.
TENNESSEE Clarksville: DeMarkus and Rawny Taylor’s 8year-old daughter was a key witness in the trial of her parents, accused of killing their 4-yearold, Arianna, The Leaf-Chronicle reported. The 8-year-old found Arianna dead in bed a day after she saw her father beat her sister; her parents did not call 911 until five hours later.
OKLAHOMA Pawhuska: A
bison herd at the Tallgrass Prairie Preserve is recovering after a disease killed dozens of the animals between 2013 and 2014. Roughly 100 bison died after being infected, the Tulsa World reported.
OREGON Salem: The Marion
County Board of Commissioners gave preliminary approval to an ordinance allowing backyard chickens in urban areas outside the city limits, The Statesman Journal reported. If adopted, the ordinance, which is expected to be approved, would become effective 90 days after the Aug. 12 second reading. PENNSYLVANIA Philadelphia:
The National Liberty Museum here is seeking nominations for the 10th annual Awards of Valor ceremony honoring living police officers, correctional officers and firefighters in the region.
WEST VIRGINIA Charleston: Syphilis diagnoses have increased 24-fold in the past four years, according to the state Department of Health and Human Resources. Loretta Haddy of the Bureau for Public Health said there have been 39 cases diagnosed this year, including clusters in Berkeley, Cabell, Monongalia and Wood Counties, the GazetteMail reported. WISCONSIN Sheboygan: Dorian
Torres, 19, has been sentenced to life in prison for the fatal bludgeoning of his father, Emilio, last January and then hiding the body for nearly a week inside their southside apartment, The Sheboygan Press reported.
WYOMING Casper: The mother
of an Army soldier arrested on a desertion warrant has pleaded guilty to harboring her son, KTWO-TV reported.
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 FRIDAY, JULY 31, 2015
MONEYLINE ‘ROLLING STONE’ EDITOR STEPPING DOWN Will Dana, managing editor of ‘Rolling Stone’ magazine, has decided it is “time to move on,” parent company Wenner Media announced Thursday. The publisher of the iconic culture magazine did not provide a reason for the leadership change and has not named a successor. Dana’s departure comes in the wake of the since-retracted December 2014 article Dana edited, “A rape on campus,” about an alleged gang rape at the hands of University of Virginia fraternity members. Dana declined to comment on whether the discredited story was a factor in the decision.
MICHAEL LOCCISANO
“Time to move on,” Will Dana says.
NEWS MONEY SPORTS Feds seek Supreme Court review of insider trading case LIFE AUTOS TRAVEL
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Justice Department’s request could change major ruling Kaja Whitehouse USA TODAY
A groundbreaking case that challenges the legal definition of insider trading is headed to the U.S. Supreme Court for possible review. The Department of Justice, in a petition backed by the U.S. Solicitor General Donald Verrilli Jr., has asked the highest court in the land to take a look at an appeals court ruling that, left to stand, would dramatically narrow what counts as illegal insider trading.
Whether the Suthony Chiasson and Diapreme Court will hear mondback portfolio the case — prosecuted manager Todd Newman. by Manhattan U.S. AtThe appeals court torney Preet Bharara — ruled that the governremains to be seen. But ment presented “no evithe outcome of this next dence that Newman and phase could dramaticalChiasson knew that they ly affect how insider were trading on informaGETTY IMAGES trading is prosecuted tion obtained from insidBharara across the nation. ers in violation of those In December, Bharara insiders’ fiduciary suffered a major setback in his in- duties.” sider trading crackdown when Under the ruling, a person the U.S. 2nd Circuit Court of Ap- must have direct knowledge of peals overturned the convictions the insider doling out the tips, of Level Global co-founder An- and know that he or she was
Cheap oil prompts Shell to cut 6,500 jobs
Trying to navigate cruel month for stocks can be tricky
30-YEAR MORTGAGE RATES BREAK 4% MARK Thirty-year fixed mortgage rates averaged 3.98% for the week, dropping six basis points after a roller coaster of financial and economic news on China, the Federal Reserve and the housing market. That’s according to the Primary Mortgage Market Survey, released Thursday by the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp., or Freddie Mac, a government-sponsored enterprise that purchases and securitizes home loans. The report marks the first time the average has ducked below 4% since early June, after trending low the first half of 2015. PROCTER & GAMBLE EARNINGS PLUMMET Procter & Gamble reported a $7 billion profit for its fiscal year ended June 30 — a 40% drop from the same period a year earlier. Sales decreased 5% to $76.3 billion — missing Wall Street forecasts. Closely watched organic sales, which exclude effects from foreign exchange, acquisitions or divestitures, increased 1%. The Cincinnati-based consumer products giant said results were marred by foreign exchange rates, which shaved total sales by 6%. The company also took a $2.1 billion charge as it changed its method for accounting for Venezuelan operations. Shares closed Thursday down 4% to $77.39.
DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVG. 17,850 17,800
-5.41
9:30 a.m.
17,751
17,750 17,700
4:00 p.m.
17,746
17,650 17,600
THURSDAY 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
5128.79 2108.63 2.26% $48.47 $1.0919 124.25
x 17.05 x 0.06 y 0.03 y 0.32 y 0.0090 x 0.39
SOURCES USA TODAY RESEARCH, MARKETWATCH.COM
USA SNAPSHOTS©
Happy 50th anniversary, Medicare!
Q.
Which Medicare benefit would you miss the most?
A.
Prescription drug coverage
Note Anniversary was July 30. Source UnitedHealthcare’s 2015 Medicare Made Clear Index survey of 1,000 Medicare beneficiaries JAE YANG AND PAUL TRAP, USA TODAY
breaking the law, to be convicted of insider trading. The court said the government must also prove that the tipper received some sort of benefit in exchange for the information provided. In its filing Thursday, the Justice Department challenged this viewpoint, saying the appeals court relied on a “novel test” that has “created a conflict with circuits.” “The effect of the new rule will be to hurt market participants, disadvantage scrupulous market analysts, and impair the government’s ability to protect the fairness and integrity of the securities markets,” the petition said.
Roger Yu
@RogerYu USA TODAY
STOCKS THAT DODGE AUGUST PAIN Matt Krantz @mattkrantz USA TODAY
Simply getting through August unscathed would please most investors. But there have been ways to thrive during a cruel month for stocks. There are 13 stocks in the Standard & Poor’s 500, including car parts seller Advance Auto Parts, entertainment giant 21st Century Fox and utility FirstEnergy, that consistently have beaten the August slows. Each have topped the S&P 500 each of the past five months of August, according to a USA TODAY analysis of data from S&P Capital IQ. Finding stocks that have actually performed well during the late summer isn’t easy. The S&P 500 has dropped an average of 2.4% during the past five Augusts — not exactly a ringing endorsement of the month. The market has dropped in four of the past five months of August. The exception was August 2014, when the market rose 3.8%. Longer term, August isn’t all that much better. It’s just one of four months that have posted average losses dating to 1950, says The Stock Trader’s Almanac. That’s why investors might want to know the types of stocks that have withstood the test of August the best. It’s a month that investors get decidedly defensive or focused on the last throes of summer. Not one of the consistent August winners hail from the volatile technology sector or the cyclical industrial sector. Of the 13 stocks to buck the August downturn, four are in the
consumer discretionary sector. Two of those are auto parts sellers, including Advance Auto Parts and O’Reilly Automotive. Analysts are rather bullish about O’Reilly’s profit during the third quarter. They’re calling for the company to deliver an adjusted third-quarter profit of $2.34 a share during the period, which would be the largest quarterly profit for it this year. Advance and O’Reilly have gained 4.1% and 1.6%, respectively, during the past five Augusts. Those gains won’t blow away most investors, but remember that August is just about not getting burned. It’s easier to see the connection with some of the other August winners, especially 21st Century Fox. Summer movies are on investors’ minds, and many might try to get into the shares to capitalize from any box-office scores. Fantastic Four is set for release Aug. 7, followed by Hitman: Agent 47 on Aug. 21. The movie-maker’s shares have risen 3.8% over the past five Augusts on average. But given August’s bad reputation with investors, it’s not surprising investors look to hunker down a bit. Three of the 13 best summer performers are utilities stocks, known for being stable and good dividend payers. Take FirstEnergy, which has gained 3.4% over the previous four Augusts. Here’s the part investors really like, though: a 4.4% current dividend yield. With income like that, investors are willing to put up with some August volatility. If August is any guide — it’s understandable for investors to brace for losses. But there are patterns that might give investors a hand getting through it.
S&P WINNERS These S&P stocks have consistently beaten the market in August over the past five years. Percentage gains from August averages: Advance Auto Parts
4.1%
21st Century Fox
3.8% FirstEnergy
3.4% Expedia
2.7%
Edwards Lifesciences
2.6%
Ecolab
2.2%
Exelon
1.8%
American Tower
1.8%
Dominion Resources
1.6%
O’Reilly Automotive
1.6%
Merck
1.1%
Mead Johnson Nutrition
1.0%
Assurant
0.5% Sources S&P Capital IQ, USA TODAY research GEORGE PETRAS, USA TODAY
Royal Dutch Shell (RDS.A) said Thursday that it will cut about 6,500 jobs and capital investment this year as it restructures and dumps some businesses to prepare for a “prolonged downturn” in oil prices. The Netherlands-based energy company’s cutbacks reflect tough times in the exploration and production end of the oil business, the so-called “upstream” side as opposed to refining and retailing. Big Oil, as it’s called when consumers are angry about high gas prices, is facing some big challenges. Shell also said its second-quarter net income fell 25% to $3.99 billion. Brent crude averaged about $62 a barrel during the period, down from $110 in the second quarter of 2014, the Associated Press reported. Operating costs will be cut by $4 billion and capital investment plans will be lowered by $7 billion this year, the company said. “Today’s oil price downturn could last for several years, and Shell’s planning assumptions reflect today’s market realities,” Royal Dutch Shell CEO Ben van Beurden said. “The company has to be resilient in today’s oil price environment, even though we see the potential for a return to a $70-$90 oil price band in the medium term.”
“Today’s oil price downturn could last for several years, and Shell’s planning assumptions reflect today’s market realities.” Ben van Beurden, Royal Dutch Shell CEO
Van Beurden told Bloomberg News that the job cuts were due to “a multiplicity of programs that we have going on throughout the company, focusing on bottom line improvements and ... restructuring and exiting businesses.” Shell isn’t alone. Other giants of the industry such as BP, Exxon Mobil, Chevron Texaco and Total, to name a few, are all feeling the pain of low oil prices. “They’ve cut back on capital expenditures,” said Tom Kloza of the Oil Price Information Service. The door is open to some big consolidations because some oil producers are so highly leveraged. One help to the big companies is that they are more fully integrated. While they may have trouble on the production end, they can still make money when it comes to refining oil. “As challenging as it has been upstream, it’s been wonderful downstream,” Kloza said. Downstream is industry terminology for refining and marketing.
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L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY FRIDAY, JULY 31, 2015
AMERICA’S MARKETS What to watch Adam Shell @adamshell USA TODAY
Lazy summer days? Not on Wall Street. Every weekend this summer investors have been on high alert due to a string of crises — most breaking over the weekend — that has upped the market temperature to a boiling point. The long, hot summer kicked off late on June 26 when Greece’s Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras shocked markets by saying Athens wouldn’t pay back money owed to the IMF by a key deadline, then made things worse by saying he was putting the country’s bailout up for a referendum vote. The Dow Jones industrial average plunged 350 points on June 29. Then over the July 4 weekend, Greece again set off market-relat-
Facts about America’s investors who use SigFig tracking services:
ed fireworks, as the nation voted ‘No’ that Sunday in the referendum, raising fears of a Greek exit from the eurozone. The Dow fell another 47 points on July 6. More hot news hit July 12 when Greece sealed an 85billion-euro bailout deal with its creditors. The Dow rallied 217 points July 13. The next week saw a slew of weak U.S. earnings spark a five-day losing streak for the Dow. Then China markets became the hottest story of the summer Monday, tumbling 8.5% while Wall Street was sleeping, sparking a 128-point Dow swoon. Well, here’s to Wall Street finally having a relaxing weekend. In the pipeline for Friday are earnings reports from oil giants Phillips 66, Chevron and Exxon. And a final look at July consumer confidence is unlikely to cause a market tantrum. Hopefully, this weekend will be free of crises.
DOW JONES
Fitbit (FIT) was the most popular stock among SigFig day traders in early July.
-5.41
+.06
INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE
CHANGE: unch. YTD: -77.09 YTD % CHG: -.4%
CLOSE: 17,745.98 PREV. CLOSE: 17,751.39 RANGE: 17,640.85-17,761.25
NASDAQ
COMP
+17.05
COMPOSITE
CHANGE: +.3% YTD: +392.73 YTD % CHG: +8.3%
CLOSE: 5,128.79 PREV. CLOSE: 5,111.74 RANGE: 5,070.62-5,135.65
+2.47
CLOSE: 2,108.63 PREV. CLOSE: 2,108.57 RANGE: 2,094.97-2,110.48
RUSSELL 2000 INDEX
CHANGE: +.2% YTD: +27.37 YTD % CHG: +2.3%
CLOSE: 1,232.07 PREV. CLOSE: 1,229.60 RANGE: 1,220.98-1,233.00
S&P 500’S BIGGEST GAINERS/LOSERS GAINERS
Company (ticker symbol)
Western Digital (WDC) Shares surge after fourth-quarter earnings.
$ Chg
86.44
+7.69
YTD % Chg % Chg
+9.8
-21.9
Wynn Resorts (WYNN) 104.12 +8.09 Sets opening date for second casino, shares rise.
+8.4 -30.0
Vertex Pharmaceuticals (VRTX) 135.46 Biogen’s favorite acquisition pick nears 2015 high.
+9.84
+7.8
+14.0
142.34 +8.20
+6.1
-1.3
WestRock (WRK) 62.83 +3.44 Earnings beat seen impressive, jumps pre-market.
+5.8
-.9
Mondelez (MDLZ) Tops revenue and earnings, boosts buyback.
45.27
+5.0 +24.6
Michael Kors (KORS) Shares gain on takeover speculation.
42.12
Sealed Air (SEE) Beats sales and boosts forecasts.
52.98
+2.38
+4.7 +24.9
Cablevision Systems (CVC) A top growth pick at Zacks.
28.05
+1.23
+4.6 +35.9
Dentsply (XRAY) Misses revenue but beats earnings.
56.06
+2.32
+4.3
Price
$ Chg
YTD % Chg % Chg
Qorvo (QRVO) 60.49 Tumbles after 2nd-quarter outlook, price target lowered.
-9.99
-14.2
-14.1
Whole Foods Market (WFM) 36.08 Drops after disappointing results and lowering forecast.
-4.74
-11.6
-28.4
Ensco (ESV) Beat earnings yet doesn’t make up early drop.
16.63
-1.37
-7.6
-44.5
L-3 Communications (LLL) Misses revenue and cuts earnings forecast.
114.75
-9.29
-7.5
-9.1
Range Resources (RRC) Share price falls on earnings miss.
39.85
-2.79
-6.5
-25.4
Marriott (MAR) Drops early after second-quarter results.
72.64
-4.36
-5.7
-6.9
Starwood Hotels & Resorts (HOT) InterContinental denies merger talks.
78.20
-4.45
-5.4
-3.5
11.84
-.66
-5.3
-49.3
Varian Medical Systems (VAR) Falls pre-market after third-quarter results.
86.00
-4.39
-4.9
-.6
BorgWarner (BWA) Misses earnings, revenue and cuts forecast.
49.85
-2.58
-4.9
-9.3
Air Products & Chemicals (APD) Gains after raising annual profit forecast.
LOSERS
Price
Company (ticker symbol)
Freeport-McMoRan (FCX) Commodities to have worst month since 2011.
+2.17
5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:
5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:
-1.31 -2.48 AAPL X WNS
MORE THAN 80% U.S. INVESTMENTS
5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:
5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:
-0.61 +2.15 AAPL RIG MSFT
-0.48 +1.37 AAPL AAPL NFLX
POWERED BY SIGFIG
4-WEEK TREND
The social media powerhouse reported second-quarter earnings $100 Price: $95.21 late Wednesday that beat estiChg: -$1.78 mates for profit, revenue and user % chg: -1.8% Day’s high/low: growth. The problem: Expenses $80 also grew more than expected. July 2 $95.81/$91.80
Whole Foods Market
Price: $36.08 Chg: -$4.74 % chg: -11.6% Day’s high/low: $36.70/$35.52
-43.9
+5.2
Chg. +0.02 +0.03 +0.03 +0.03 +0.03 +0.06 +0.15 +0.01 +0.07 -0.20
4wk 1 +2.3% +1.8% +1.7% +2.3% +2.3% +3.6% +2.3% +0.5% +1.3% -2.3%
YTD 1 +3.6% +3.7% +3.6% +3.6% +3.6% +8.9% +7.3% +0.1% +1.4% +1.5%
Ticker SPY UGAZ GDX UWTI EEM VXX NUGT IWM QQQ EWJ
Close 210.82 1.99 13.46 1.67 36.72 16.05 3.25 122.29 112.08 12.83
Chg. +0.05 -0.16 -0.51 -0.03 -0.37 -0.11 -0.35 +0.35 +0.53 +0.02
% Chg %YTD unch. +2.6% -7.4% -50.0% -3.7% -26.8% -1.8% -65.8% -1.0% -6.5% -0.7% -49.1% -9.7% -70.9% +0.3% +2.2% +0.5% +8.6% +0.2% +14.1%
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% 0.11% 0.05% 0.01% 1.62% 1.19% 2.26% 1.64%
Close 6 mo ago 3.93% 3.82% 3.03% 2.96% 2.65% 2.82% 3.32% 3.25%
SOURCE: BANKRATE.COM
COMMODITIES
SOURCE: BLOOMBERG AND THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Commodities Close Prev. Cattle (lb.) 1.45 1.45 Corn (bushel) 3.73 3.68 Gold (troy oz.) 1,088.40 1,092.70 Hogs, lean (lb.) .80 .80 Natural Gas (Btu.) 2.77 2.89 Oil, heating (gal.) 1.60 1.60 Oil, lt. swt. crude (bar.) 48.52 48.79 Silver (troy oz.) 14.79 14.73 Soybeans (bushel) 9.90 9.83 Wheat (bushel) 4.97 4.96
Chg. unch. +0.05 -4.30 unch. -0.12 unch. -0.27 +0.06 +0.07 +0.01
% Chg. unch. +1.5% -0.4% unch. -3.3% unch. -0.6% +0.6% +0.7% +0.1%
% YTD -12.4% -6.0% -8.1% -1.9% -4.2% -13.5% -8.9% -5.0% -2.9% -15.8%
FOREIGN CURRENCIES Currency per dollar British pound Canadian dollar Chinese yuan Euro Japanese yen Mexican peso
Close .6409 1.3002 6.2095 .9158 124.25 16.2959
Prev. .6403 1.2931 6.2086 .9083 123.86 16.2340
6 mo. ago .6640 1.2681 6.2495 .8855 117.53 14.9350
Yr. ago .5912 1.0902 6.1717 .7467 102.87 13.1493
FOREIGN MARKETS Country Frankfurt Hong Kong Japan (Nikkei) London Mexico City
Close 11,257.15 24,497.98 20,522.83 6,668.87 44,373.31
July 2
July 30
$60.49 July 30
INVESTING ASK MATT
NAV 194.78 53.02 53.00 192.89 192.90 105.65 45.78 21.28 59.39 42.73
1 – CAPITAL GAINS AND DIVIDENDS REINVESTED
ETF, ranked by volume SPDR S&P500 ETF Tr CS VelSh 3xLongNatGs Mkt Vect Gold Miners CS VelSh 3xLongCrude iShs Emerg Mkts Barc iPath Vix ST Dir Dly Gold Bull3x iShares Rus 2000 PowerShs QQQ Trust iShare Japan
$36.08
The chipmaker’s second-quarter $100 forecast fell short of Wall Street’s expectations. Qorvo was formed in January by the $1.55 billion combination of RF Micro Devices and $60 July 2 TriQuint Semiconductor.
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
July 30
4-WEEK TREND
TOP 10 MUTUAL FUNDS
+5.0
$50
Qorvo
Price: $60.49 Chg: -$9.99 % chg: -14.2% Day’s high/low: $62.35/$57.10
$95.21
4-WEEK TREND
The natural grocery store chain reported fiscal third-quarter earnings that missed expectations and $30 cut its outlook for the year.
TOP 10 EXCHANGE TRADED FUNDS +2.01
-0.89 -0.10 AAPL NBG ECPG
51% TO 80% U.S. INVESTMENTS
STORY STOCKS Facebook
RUSSELL
RUT
21% TO 50% U.S. INVESTMENTS
More than half a million investors nationwide with total assets of $200 billion manage their investment portfolios online with SigFig investment tracking service. Data on this page are based on SigFig analysis.
STANDARD & POOR'S
CHANGE: unch. YTD: +49.73 YTD % CHG: +2.4%
LESS THAN 20% U.S. INVESTMENTS
NOTE: INFORMATION PROVIDED BY SIGFIG IS STATISTICAL IN NATURE AND DOES NOT CONSTITUTE A RECOMMENDATION OF ANY STRATEGY OR SECURITY. VISIT SIGFIG.USATODAY.COM/DISCLOSE FOR ADDITIONAL DISCLOSURES AND INFORMATION.
POWERED BY SIGFIG
S&P 500
SPX
USA’s portfolio allocation by foreign investment Here’s how America’s individual investors are performing based on data from SigFig online investment tracking service:
MAJOR INDEXES DJIA
How we’re performing
DID YOU KNOW?
Investors seek relief from long, hot summer
ALL THE MARKET ACTION IN REAL TIME. AMERICASMARKETS.USATODAY.COM
Prev. Change 11,211.85 +45.30 24,619.45 -121.47 20,302.91 +219.92 6,631.00 +37.87 44,471.29 -97.98
%Chg. YTD % +0.4% +14.8% -0.5% +3.8% +1.1% +17.6% +0.6% +1.6% -0.2% +2.9%
SOURCES: MORNINGSTAR, DOW JONES INDEXES, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
IN-DEPTH MARKETS COVERAGE USATODAY.COM/MONEY
Analysts prove guarded about grocer’s future Q: Will Whole Foods come back? Matt Krantz
mkrantz@usatoday.com USA TODAY
A: Whole Foods used to be the grocery store others wanted to be and stock investors wanted to own. Neither is true now — and the road back will be tough and too trying for many investors. The organic food seller is undergoing the transition from a key player in a niche market to a middle-size contender in a crowded space. The company’s revenue growth over the past 12 onths has fallen to just 9% over the past 12 months — down dramatically from its nearly 16% growth at the same time in 2012. Investors have bailed on Whole Foods’ stock this year — sending it down 29% — as the company gets squeezed from both sides. Smaller players such as Sprouts Farmers Market are coming from a smaller base of revenue and can put up faster revenue growth. Larger grocers such as Kroger are able to add more organic foods and drive cost controls. Analysts are guarded about the stock, rating it a “hold.” Analysts are calling for revenue to rise 9% this year and 8.4% in 2016 — not returning to double-digit revenue growth until 2017, S&P Capital IQ says. The company’s profit and earnings miss in the second quarter doesn’t help. Analysts aren’t braced for disaster, either, saying the stock should be worth $41.19 a share in 18 months, up 15%.
Economy bounces back as GDP grows 2.3% in second quarter Paul Davidson @PDavidsonusat USA TODAY
The U.S. economy bounced back in the second quarter on stronger consumer spending, exports and home construction, and its performance in the first quarter wasn’t as feeble as initially believed. Gross domestic product — the value of goods and services produced in the U.S. — expanded at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 2.3% in the April-June period, the Commerce Department said Wednesday. Economists sur-
veyed by Bloomberg expected 2.5% growth. The government also revised up its estimate for the first quarter, turning a 0.2% contraction into 0.6% growth, mostly because of stronger business investment and federal government spending. The still-weak showing has been largely blamed on temporary factors such as rough weather and a West Coast ports slowdown. Many expect the economy to grow by a solid 3% at an annual rate in the second half of the year. But the government lowered estimates for 2011 to 2014, revealing that growth in that period was
somewhat weaker. The economy expanded by an average annual rate of 2%, below previous estimates of 2.3% The economy’s solid but not spectacular performance in the second quarter could help the Federal Reserve decide whether to raise interest rates for the first time in nearly a decade at its September meeting. “The second-quarter U.S. GDP data support the Fed’s more upbeat tone on economic conditions and suggests that the economy could cope with higher interest rates,” Capital Economics economist Steve Murphy says.
The report paints “a reassuringly bright picture of the health of the U.S. economy so far this year,” says Markit’s chief economist Chris Williamson, and raises “the odds of the Fed hiking interest rates in September.” Strong job and income growth and low gasoline prices prompted Americans to open their wallets in the second quarter as consumer spending increased 2.9%, up from 1.8% in the first quarter. Consumption represents about two thirds of economic activity. And exports jumped 5.3% after falling 6% previously. The strong dollar has hurt exports but its ef-
fects have eased. Snarled shipments from the port delays freed up in the spring, temporarily inflating total exports. Outlays for home construction also jumped 6.6% as tight housing supplies and resurgent sales coaxed builders into expanding inventories. But business investment overall fell 0.6%, as energy companies continued to scale back drilling amid low oil prices. Slower business stockpiling subtracted slightly from growth after adding to it in the first three months of the year. Federal government spending also fell modestly.
SPORTS LIFE AUTOS In theaters this weekend TRAVEL
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USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld FRIDAY, JULY 31, 2015
MOVIES
Compiled from reviews by USA TODAY film critics
Rating; the good and the bad
Ant-Man
eeeE
Plot: An ex-con (Paul Rudd) is recruited to take over the mantle of the shrinking superhero Ant-Man and pull off a large-scale heist. Director: Peyton Reed
1 hour, 57 minutes
Paper Towns
Rating: PG-13 Upside: Scenes with ants are some of most visually spectacular that Marvel has done Downside: Tonally, the movie is a mess
Plot: After reconnecting with his longtime crush (Cara Delevingne), a high school senior (Nat Wolff) goes on an epic road trip to find her when she disappears. Director: John Schreier
eeeE
eeeg
Plot: Five emotions in a little girl’s head have to deal with the tumult caused by the stresses of growing up. Director: Pete Docter
1 hour, 41 minutes
Pixels
Rating: PG Upside: A brilliantly crafted balance of joy and sadness Downside: Emotional heft might go over kids’ heads
Plot: A crew of washed-up video-game players are recruited to save the world when aliens attack under the guise of old 1980s arcade characters. Director: Chris Columbus
2 hours, 10 minutes
Southpaw
Rating: PG-13 Upside: Better dinos than ever Downside: The sequel lacks heart and wonder of the 1993 original
Plot: A boxing champ (Jake Gyllenhaal) loses his wife, daughter and entire life before finding a trainer (Forest Whitaker) to get him back on the comeback trail. Director: Antoine Fuqua
eeEE
eeeE
Plot: A dinosaur-filled theme park is thrown into chaos, and a behavioral researcher (Chris Pratt) has to save the day when a dangerous hybrid species gets loose. Director: Colin Trevorrow
egEE
Plot: Strippers, assemble! Channing Tatum and his ripped friends shed their clothes with gusto in this grin-inducing sequel, this time under the guise of a road trip to a stripper convention. Director: Gregory Jacobs
eeeE
1 hour, 55 minutes
Terminator Genisys
Rating: R Upside: Tatum and company get points for diversity and a host of strong new females Downside: ‘XXL’ is more than this sequel’s title — it’s how long the movie starts to feel after an hour
Plot: A soldier (Jai Courtney) is sent from the future to stop machines from destroying the world, but finds a timeline different than the one expected. Director: Alan Taylor
1 hour, 31 minutes
Trainwreck
Rating: PG Upside: Many of the sight gags are exercises in cuteness Downside: There can be too much of an adorable thing
Plot: A magazine writer (Amy Schumer) begins to rethink her immature, hedonistic life when she meets a nice, dateable interview subject (Bill Hader). Director: Judd Apatow
2 hours, 11 minutes
Vacation
Rating: PG-13 Upside: Cruise meets his action movie match in co-star Rebecca Ferguson Downside: Movie at times gets in the weeds with its own spycraft
Plot: The latest chapter in the comedy franchise takes a grown-up Rusty Griswold (Ed Helms) and his family on their own disaster-filled trip to Walley World. Directors: John Francis Daley, Jonathan Goldstein
WARNER BROS. PICTURES
Minions
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Plot: A trio of yellow henchmen scour the globe looking for their next boss, who comes in the form of a female supervillain (voiced by Sandra Bullock). Directors: Kyle Balda, Pierre Coffin
UNIVERSAL PICTURES/ILLUMINATION
Mission: Impossible — Rogue Nation
eeeE
Plot: American superspy Ethan Hunt (Tom Cruise) goes rogue to uncover a secret organization using terrorism to cause global chaos. Director: Christopher McQuarrie
2 hours, 3 minutes Rating: R Upside: Gyllenhaal and Whitaker turn in heavyweight performances Downside: It goes 12 rounds with pretty much every boxing-movie trope
egEE
2 hours, 5 minutes Rating: PG-13 Upside: Arnold Schwarzenegger continues to be the franchise’s best special effect Downside: The original time-travel conceit becomes convoluted and confusing
PARAMOUNT PICTURES
eeeE
2 hours, 4 minutes Rating: R Upside: Schumer brings hilarity and heartache to her role Downside: It could easily lose a half-hour of high jinks
UNIVERSAL PICTURES
PARAMOUNT PICTURES
eeEE
1 hour, 39 minutes Rating: R Upside: The little kids and celebrity cameos steal the movie Downside: Not nearly as subversive as it yearns to be
WARNER BROS. PICTURES
LIFELINE
MOVIES
THEY SAID WHAT? THE STARS’ BEST QUOTES “That’s the sort of stupid thing people say over and over again. People should speak out about what they care about. It’s OK to care about more things at once.” — Jimmy Kimmel on the backlash over the attention focused on an animal’s life — Cecil the lion’s — rather than a human life PAUL REDMOND, WIREIMAGE
HOW WAS YOUR DAY? GOOD DAY LUPITA NYONG’O The Academy Award-winning actress will make her New York stage debut this fall at the Public Theater in AFP/GETTY IMAGES ZimbabweanAmerican playwright and actress Danai Gurira’s ‘Eclipsed.’ The off-Broadway production, which marks the play’s New York premiere, casts Nyong’o as The Girl, whose arrival jars a community formed by the captive wives of a rebel officer. As a teenager, Nyong’o appeared in stage productions in Kenya. And she is an alumna of the Yale School of Drama. ‘Eclipsed’ is set to begin previews Sept. 29 and open Oct. 14.
©
He didn’t have a doctorate, either
Zero
Rating: PG-13 Upside: Pac-Man, Donkey Kong and other icons come to life like never before Downside: Wholly predictable and only for those needing a nostalgia trip
THE WEINSTEIN COMPANY
UNIVERSAL PICTURES
Magic Mike XXL
1 hour, 45 minutes
SONY PICTURES
DISNEY/PIXAR
Jurassic World
Rating: PG-13 Upside: A satisfying look at young unrequited romance and teenage bromances Downside: Delevingne is missed when she’s not on the screen
TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX
MARVEL
Inside Out
1 hour, 49 minutes
Offspring for Ted Geisel, though the author of Dr. Seuss’ ‘What Pet Should I Get?’ had plenty of pets
Source USA TODAY research TERRY BYRNE AND PAUL TRAP, USA TODAY
KEVIN MAZUR
GOOD DAY ZAYN MALIK The former One Direction member is striking out on his own. Malik, who announced his departure from the boy band in March, will release his debut solo album on RCA Records. He tweeted that he never gave fans an explanation for leaving One Direction because he was waiting “for this moment to be given the opportunity to show you who I really am! #realmusic.” Compiled by Cindy Clark
‘Mission’ is possible thanks to Tom Cruise ‘Rogue Nation’ rides on the star and his stunts Bryan Alexander @BryAlexand USA TODAY
Moments before Tom Cruise went airborne strapped to the side of an Airbus A400 for a daring Mission: Impossible stunt, director Christopher McQuarrie had a word with his superstar. “Tom shouted above the engine, ‘Remember, if it looks like I’m panicking, I’m acting. Don’t cut,’ ” McQuarrie recalls. “I did a stunned about-face, knowing there would be no distinction between (true) panic and his performance.” The dramatic stunt has been heralded as proof of what Cruise, 53, will do to push his career and Mission: Impossible — Rogue Nation (in theaters Friday) into another adrenaline-filled realm. “Name me one other actor in Hollywood who would do that stunt,” says Dave Karger, chief correspondent of the movie site Fandango.com. “You can’t. Because no one else would. Tom is superhuman that way.” It’s how Cruise has stayed on top of the Hollywood pyramid, with occasional dips, for 30 years. But it’s also the key to keeping the Mission: Impossible franchise excelling after nearly 20 years and four installments that have made more than $2 billion worldwide, according to Rentrak.
BO BRIDGES, PARAMOUNT
Speed demon Ethan Hunt (Cruise) wouldn’t be caught dead doing something uncool — like wearing a motorcycle helmet. Ever since Cruise dangled more than 1,700 feet above ground from the world’s tallest building, Dubai’s Burj Khalifa, for 2011’s Mission: Impossible — Ghost Protocol, filmmakers have sought to top that stunt. “The shadow of the Burj Khalifa loomed large for months,” says producer David Ellison. “We continually talked about how we’re going to top that.” The plane footage, motorcycle scenes raced without helmets, and an underwater sequence that required Cruise to hold his breath for six minutes all propel Mission: Impossible over the stunt bar raised by young audiences accustomed to seeing remarkable movie effects. Cruise has been marketing the film on the media circuit with stunts such as lip-syncing The Weeknd’s Can’t Feel My Face on The Tonight Show. The viral video
alone was enough to show how little attention people paid to potentially detrimental aspects of Cruise’s personal life, including his involvement in the Church of Scientology as depicted in the HBO documentary Going Clear. “Think of how many people saw Going Clear. A decent amount,” Karger says. “Now think of how many people saw the lip-sync challenge on (Jimmy) Fallon. Exponentially more.” All the factors are enough to drive the well-reviewed Rogue Nation (93% critical approval on review aggregate site RottenTomatoes.com) to a predicted cake walk at this weekend’s box office. Cruise has announced he’ll make a sixth Mission next summer. The challenge: He needs a new power stunt to beat the A400. “It’s always an incredibly tall task,” Ellison says. “But Tom Cruise always finds a way.”
PRICES EFFECTIVE EFFECTIVE FRIDAY JULY 31 - TUESDAY AUGUST 4, 2015
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BB
LAWRENCE Your area real estate resource
hometownlawrence.com
Advertising supplement
JULY 31, 2015
Navigating the Early Stages of Your Realtor Search By Liz WesLander
Hometown Lawrence
There is no shortage of choices when it comes to finding a realtor, and selecting the right one for you can be overwhelming. Here are some tips about how to navigate the early stages of your realtor search from Nicholas Lerner, a realtor at McGrew Real Estate and winner of the Best of Lawrence Best Realtor award for 2015. Many people start their realtor search by asking around for recommendations. According to the National Association of Realtors’ latest Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers, 40 percent of both buyers and sellers find their agent through word of mouth. While relying on recommendations from friends and family members is a great place to start, Lerner said it is important to ask the person recommending why he or she is referring the agent. Some
people simply recommend realtors who are friends or family members, Lerner said. A solid recommendation will come from someone who has worked with the agent in a home sale process. Once you have a solid recommendation, the next step is contacting the potential realtor. Lerner said that the number one complaint clients have about their agents is that they don’t communicate well or don’t communicate often enough, so paying attention to this initial point of contact is key. “This first attempt at communication is probably a good indicator of how efficient communication will continue throughout the process,” Lerner said. “Did the agent answer the call or did you have to leave a voicemail and wait for the agent to get back to you many hours
later? Did the agent respond to that first email within a few minutes, or did it take a day to for the agent to get back?” And while finding an agent who communicates with a timeliness that suits you is very important, so is finding an agent who can communicate in a style that suits you. “Are you the type of person who prefers to text and email, but your agent doesn’t respond to anything except a phone call?,” said Lerner. “A good agent will be a master of all communication channels. I even have some clients that Facebook Messenger is our primary mode of communication.” If the initial point of contact goes well, the next step with an agent should be an Initial Buyer Consultation (for a new buyer) or a Home Sale Consultation
Realtor Nicholas Lerner (right) of McGrew Real Estate helps families with buying and selling homes.
(for a potential seller). Lerner recommends that clients use this meeting to get to know the agent and make sure they are a good fit. “The home seller or buyer should view the agent as somebody interviewing for the job,” said Lerner. “Before anything
Showcase Homes
Offered by: Rachael Zimmerman 785.840.8421
OPEN SATURDAY 2:00 - 4:00
Offered by: Randy Barnes 785-760-2140
gets put in writing, this is a good way to feel everyone out and make sure they are ready to enter into an agency relationship.” — Liz Weslander writes about the Lawrence real estate market for Hometown Lawrence. Contact her at lizweslander@hotmail.com
OPEN SATURDAY, AUGUST 1, NOON - 2 PM
816 Justin Street NEW PRICE -- Now only $300,000! Priced under county appraisal! Awesome 4 bed/4 bath home in popular Westgate area that backs to creek/treed area -- close to schools, shopping and restaurants! Large kitchen features new SS appliances and granite countertops. Nice dining area PLUS formal dining as well. Gorgeous woodwork thruout. Large master suite with HUGE closet plus 3 secondary bedrooms and laundry on the 2nd level. 3 living areas and over 3,500 sq ft of living space. Finished walkout basement features a large media room, rec room, bonus room and bath. Seller added a fabulous multilevel deck! Sprinkler system! Stop by and check this one out today!!!
$300,000
601 Nottingham Rd Quality Construction, One Level Living & Quiet Neighborhood! Open living room with vaulted ceiling & fireplace, large eat-in kitchen with pantry, large master suite with jetted tub, 2 additional bedrooms & full bath. Enjoy the nice corner lot, fenced area in back, extended patio, sprinkler system & 3 car garage. Easy access to I-70.
MLS 137500
$212,900
Built for You Visit the New StephensRE.com
2BB
|
Friday, July 31, 2015
HOMETOWN LAWRENCE
.
785-856-0011 • 5040 Bob Billings Pkwy. Suite A OPEN SUNDAY 1:00 - 3:00 PM OPEN SUNDAY 1:00 - 3:00 PM
2705 W. 24TH TERR.
$104,900
2815 CRESTLINE DR. 281
Wagon Wheel Rd
Stone Meadows Dr
Brighton Cir
N
W 13th St
Bob Billings Pkwy
1604-1606 E. 21ST PL. 160
Gill Ave
$144,900
GRE INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY! 1604 has been totally redone this year! New GREAT carpet, paint, and tile. Move in ready! Live in 1604 and lease 1606. One owner/ investor built in 1983. Cul-de-sac location with single family homes. Large corner lot. Garages extended an extra 6 feet. Located close to Kennedy school, neighborhood Country Fair Swim Club pool, and great for K-10 commuters. MLS# 137299 Amy Robbins 785-331-9336 • amylrec@gmail.com
HOME SALES ARE UP!
AVERAGE SALE PRICE IS UP!
+20.6%
+1.8%
462
$196,452
Douglas County Fairgrounds
E 21st Terrace
Harper St
$169,900
W 30th St
Elmwood St
1428 STONE MEADOWS DR.
Crestline Dr
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
N
Harrison Ave
OPEN SUNDAY 1:00 - 3:00 PM
Lawrence Ave
FIR TIME OPEN! Great townhome for investment or ďŹ rst time FIRST buyer. Convenient location. Spacious bedrooms, one on the main level. Vaulted living room with ďŹ replace. Updated kitchen. All appliances stay including washer and dryer. New ooring throughout. Nice covered patio area looks onto fenced yard. MLS# 137453 Alan Campbell 785-760-0338 • alancampbell@sunower.com
TOWNHOME LIVING! Sharp 2 story townhome with gorgeous wood ooring on main level. Formal dining room with bay window plus eat in kitchen. Beautiful oak cabinetry throughout. All 3 bedrooms and laundry on 2nd oor. New carpet on 2nd level, new light ďŹ xtures, fresh new interior and exterior paint & new furnace. Partial unďŹ nished basement, 2 car garage, patio, deck and fenced back yard. Excellent location close to Quail Run School & McGrew Nature Trail. MLS# 137296 Amy Robbins 785-331-9336 • amylrec@gmail.com
LAWRENCE HOUSING MARKET QUICK STATS for 2015 THRU 06/01/15
$138,500
NEW PRICE! Great Candletree condo. Lots of updating including kitchen and baths baths, ooring and paint. Nice slate ďŹ replace in living room. Slate ooring in baths and kitchen. Lower level ďŹ nished area could be family room or non-conforming bedroom. Nice fenced patio backs to a large green space.All appliances stay including refrigerator and washer/dryer. 2 pools to Holcom Park Rec enjoy. Carefree living with exterior maintenance, snow Center removal and lawn care provided. MLS# 137086 N 27th St Cindy West 785-550-0522 • 52cwest@gmail.com 24th Terrace
L awrence J ournal -W orld
10
N
THINK YOU MAY NOT BE ABLE TO BUY A HOME?
THINK AGAIN!
Introducing Home Possible Advantage Loans
HOMES ARE SELLING FASTER!
LISTING INVENTORY IS DOWN!
-16.0%
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68
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A DETAILED REPORT IS AVAILABLE AT
 Â?Â?Â?Â?  Â?Â?Â?ÂÂ? Â? Â?€Â
www.LawrenceRealtor.com
Brought to you by:
Every market is different, call a Realtor ÂŽ today. www.LawrenceRealtor.com | 785-842-1843
OPEN SATURDAY 1:00 -3:00
1624 H Harper FIRST TIME OPEN! Cute, clean and charming 3 bedroom, one level home has an open floor plan. Very spacious yard and home includes new interior paint, new carpet and landscaping. Convenient to The University of Kansas and K-10 highway. Truly a move-in ready gem! $83,000 LINDSAY LANDIS
785-760-0802 WWW.LAWRENCEHOMEFINDER.COM OPPORTUNITY
Craving even more home information?
REALTORÂŽ proudly adhere to a Code of Ethics, assuring you of representation by a true professional. Ask if your agent is a REALTORÂŽ, a member of the National Association of REALTORSÂŽ. Make sure you check out www.HometownLawrence.com!
Every market is different, call a Realtor ÂŽ today. www.LawrenceRealtor.com | 785-842-1843
HOMETOWN LAWRENCE
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Friday, July 31, 2015
| 3BB
SATURDAY OPEN HOUSES 0
2:3
0-1
0 11:
$149,900
$154,900
0
-2:3
0 1:0
0
$212,900
2:0
00-
12:
$269,900
0
-2:3
0 1:0
$309,900
0
-2:3
0 1:0
2146 VERMONT ST
1701 E 29TH ST
601 NOTTINGHAM RD
4229 BRIARWOOD DR
4808 PALM VALLEY CT
• NEW LISTING in Centennial neighborhood • 1918 Vernacular Pyramidal on Vermont St. • 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, garage & basement • Wood floors & lovely front porch • Visual Tour: Tom-Harper.com
• NEW LISTING & 1st open house • One story w/ open floor plan & vaulted ceiling • New roof to be installed in Aug. • Fenced backyard • Near Prairie Park school, nature center & Mary’s Lake
ONE LEVEL LIVING & Quiet Neighborhood! Open living room with vaulted ceiling, eat-in kitchen with pantry, master suite with jetted tub, 2 additional bedrooms & full bath. Nice patio & 3 car garage.
NEW PRICE! Three plus BR cottage with southwest décor featuring 3BA, main level master, large kitchen/dining area, unfinished basement Cozy front porch, patio, & alley access to garage.
SO MUCH SPACE AT THIS PRICE! 5 bedroom, plus bonus room, 4 bathrooms, master on the main level, 2 car garage, concrete roof. Daylight basement, amazing cul-de-sac in the Alvamar neighborhood.
AMY HOPE 785-218-3534
MLS 137545
$376,900
0
-2:3
0 1:0
DANNY FREEMAN GRI, ABR, e-PRO 785-917-0558
MLS 137524
$399,900
0
-2:0
00 12:
RANDY BARNES 785-760-2140
MLS 137500
$399,900
0
-1:3
00 12:
IDA LEWIS 785-865-8699
MLS 137032
$484,900
0
-3:0
0 1:0
LIBBY GRADY 785-760-2530
MLS 137255
$499,000
0
-3:3
0 2:0
822 SILVER RAIN RD
4537 GROVE DR
5209 THORN TREE CT
5633 VILLA DR
1812 CASTLE PINE CT
JUST COMPLETED! Ranch home on corner lot. 3 bed on main level w/ 3 car garage. 3000 sq ft of finished living. Open floor plan, separate master suite. Hardwood floors. Covered patio. Sprinkler system
NEW PRICE! Spacious 5 Bdrm/5 Bath/3-car Garage Home on beautifully landscaped lot with in ground pool. Main level master, daylight basement, nice sized rooms. Desirable west side neighborhood.
HUGE 6 BR, 5 BATH, custom built home on quiet cul-de-sac, all in the Langston Hughes neighborhood. Quality construction, amazing cabinetry, family room, living room, DR, huge bedrooms, so much space.
WHAT A VIEW! All of your maintenance is taken care of and you can live on one level. Extra room downstairs for game parties and company. Three bedrooms on the main level with one more downstairs.
SUPER SHARP & FULLY UPDATED, 5 BR/4 Bath/3 Car, 3503 sq. feet, w/ master on main, theatre room, sun porch, multiple living areas, huge daylight basement w/bar, quiet cul-de-sac, A MUST SEE.
NEW CONSTRUCTION MLS 137160
JOHN HUNTINGTON JR. GRI MLS 136681 785-691-5565
JOY SLAVENS 785-423-1868
0
-1:3
$124,900
OLIVER M. MINNIS 785-550-7945
MLS 136502
:30
0-3
2:0
2604 BOND PL
OLIVER MINNIS 785-550-7945
MLS 137373
$369, 000
:00
0-3
1:0
1514 CROSSGATE DR
DONNA OLSON 785-760-1381
1970 E 850 RD, LECOMPTON
458 N 1500 RD AMAZING RURAL PROPERTY and large Custom Built Home on 11.6 acres w/pond, two out buildings, lots of opportunity with w/great space. Stull Rd, left on 500 E, right on N. 1500 Road.
IDA LEWIS 785-865-8699
MLS 136504
$249,900
$254,900
0
-2:0
30 12:
2108 PRAIRIE TERR
5201 BRANCHWOOD CT • CUL-DE-SAC LIVING with an HOA • Upgraded trim package with painted woodwork • Main level office with build ins • Concrete stamped private back patio • Come check this one out
:00
0-3
1:0
SECLUDED ENERGY EFFICIENT HOME with open floor plan. Wood and slate flooring throughout. 3BR, 3BA,all season room, loft overlooking great room, & full unfinished basement. Wooded lot, 24x24 shop. MLS 137332
BUYER & SELLER REPRESENTATION
AMAZING FUNCTIONAL SPACE w/ this ranch home, full finished walk out basement in an awesome neighborhood. Super sharp, updated, clean and well maintained. 2950 square feet, 4 BR/3 Bath, close to K-10.
$458,900
:00
0-3
1:0
LEE BETH DEVER 785-691-6879
MLS 136763
STEPHANIE A. HARRIS 785-979-5808 MLS 137407
JEAN COLLINS, GRI 785-766-0812
MLS 137465
0
-2:3
0 1:0
914 LAWRENCE AVE JUST LISTED 3 BR, 3 bath, rancher with partially finished Bsmt. New windows, patio door, kitchen appliances, and new carpet in basement. Fenced yard, near Sunset and West schools.
JENNIFER MYERS 785-393-4579
MLS 136997
$159,000
0
-3:0
0 1:0
• LOCATED IN A QUIET CUL-DE-SAC • Large backyard on a corner lot • 3 bedroom, 2 bedroom Ranch style plan • Beautiful stone fireplace in the living room • Hardwood floors throughout
$275,000
WELL CARED FOR & improved Reverse 1.5 Story townhome on terrific lot overlooking ACC #11 green. Impressive deck & paver patio enhance the entertainment or quiet time. A must see opportunity!
$152,000
0
-4:0
0 2:3
2611 JORDAN LANE NEW PRICE! Great value in this spacious townhome on corner lot in convenient SW location. Great floor plan with 3 BR, 2 1/2 Bath, 2 Car, & Large Master Suite. Fenced back yard. Stop by Saturday.
MLS 136975
SUNDAY OPEN HOUSES
YOUR HOME TEAM 00 12:
LEE BETH DEVER 785-691-6879
MLS 137234
MLS 137307
JENNIFER MYERS 785-393-4579
$475,000
726 LOUISIANA ST
LEE BETH DEVER 785-691-6879
A RARE FIND! Ready to be restored back to her original grandeur, this 1880’s 2 story sits majestically on an estate sized treasure- 3 lots in the heart of Old West Lawrence! A walk back in time!
MLS 137400
DONNA OLSON 785-760-1381
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
$181,500
$725,000
$185,000 StephensRE.com
StephensRE.com
3024 RIMROCK DR
• New listing & 1st open house • Sharp split level in Prairie Meadows neighborhood • 4 bedrooms, 3 baths & 2 car garage • Fabulous deck & patio w/ fenced backyard TOM HARPER • Visual Tour: Tom-Harper.com CRS, ABR, GRI, e-PRO 785-218-6351 MLS 137467
670 N 1505 RD
CUSTOM BUILT 4400 sq ft home. Hardwood floors, 4+ bedrooms, sunroom, 13.4 acres of white fence pastures, barn and stables, ponds, 2 outdoor patio areas, private drive, views and landscaping. . SCOT HOFFMAN 785-760-4356 MLS 136679
StephensRE.com
507 SANTA FE CT, BALDWIN CITY
• Three BR-Four Bath Home on Cul-de-Sac • Large Family Room in Basement • Fenced Back Yard • Hardwood Floors on Main Level • Granite Counter Tops - Like New Condition
ED PEARSON 785-760-1872
MLS 137225
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
$218,900
$365,000
$198,000
StephensRE.com
3603 BOULDER CT
• New listing in Westridge Heights • Sharp bi-level w/ bamboo flooring • Pride of ownership is present • Remarkable Zen garden & Koi pond TOM HARPER • Visual Tour: Tom-Harper.com CRS, ABR, GRI, e-PRO 785-218-6351 MLS 137362
StephensRE.com
756 E 500 RD, OVERBROOK
IMMACULATE! Walkout rancher on 10 acres, huge kitchen, tiled baths, 2160ft on main level, full basement, 42x63 Morton Bldg, Lawrence schools, all fenced horse stalls, pond, rural water, 3 car garage. SCOT HOFFMAN 785-760-4356 MLS 136212
StephensRE.com
309 AMES ST, BALDWIN CITY
Commercial Building w/Prime location on Highway 56 in Baldwin City. Formerly Service Station & most currently Bar & Grill- lots of potential for business opportunities! DEBBIE MORGAN, GRI 785-760-1357
MLS 136649
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
$224,900
$349,900
$224,900
StephensRE.com
1424 LAWRENCE AVE.
• New listing in Orchards Neighborhood • Sharp 1 1/2 story adjacent to Orchards golf course • Spectacular views in backyard on a 1/4 acre lot • Recently renovated kitchen TOM HARPER • Visual Tour: Tom-Harper.com CRS, ABR, GRI, e-PRO 785-218-6351 MLS 137424
StephensRE.com
4235 PAWNEE RD, PERRY
NEW LISTING! Updated property with 40 acres and guest home. 3 bedrooms, 3 car garage, wood floors and views everywhere, pond w/ dock, nature trails, great home, great property, great location! Call! SCOT HOFFMAN 785-760-4356 MLS 137439
Need To Showcase
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
Your Home?
$157,500 StephensRE.com
StephensRE.com
3417 TILLERMAN DR
FINE... one level living! New carpet, tile, interior paint, and all kitchen appliances!! 3 BR, 2 Ba, F/P, 2 car garage, located on fenced, treed lot! MOVE-IN-READY. Don’t miss this home! MARY LOU ROBERTS CRS, GRI, ASP 785-766-1228 MLS 137358
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT $319,900
Contact your local Hometown Lawrence representative
StephensRE.com
Allison Wilson 785-832-7248
1418 APPLEGATE CT
• New price- $157,500 on Applegate Court • Quality construction + recent renovation • HOA takes care of lawn + snow removal • Newer HVAC & roof • 1 mile west of KU TOM HARPER • Visual Tour: Tom-Harper.com CRS, ABR, GRI, e-PRO 785-218-6351 MLS 137133
or homes@ ljworld.com
hometown
LAWRENCE Your area real estate resource
hometownlawrence.com
1104 OAK TREE DR
CUSTOM BUILT! One owner. 3 story W/O home with 4BR, 4BA, 3 F/P, 2 Family Rooms, Library, outstanding kitchen, deck and patio, on fully landscaped, treed Lot! Home Warranty + $6,000 Seller Allowance. MARY LOU ROBERTS CRS, GRI, ASP 785-766-1228 MLS 137549
4BB
|
Friday, July 31, 2015
HOMETOWN LAWRENCE
.
Home & City Services
R EAL ESTATE
www.lawrenceks.org
832-3000
Fire & Medical Department www.lawrenceks.org/fire_medical 830-7000 Police Department
www.lawrenceks.org/police
830-7400
Department of Utilities
www.lawrenceks.org/utilities
832-7878
Lawrence Transit System
www.lawrencetransit.org
864-4644
Municipal Court
www.lawrenceks.org/legal
832-6190
Animal Control
832-7509
Parks and Recreation
www.lprd.org
Westar Energy
www.westarenergy.com
800-383-1183
Black Hills Energy (Gas)
www.blackhillsenergy.com
888-890-5554
832-3450
AUCTIONEERS Bill Fair Real Estate Auctions
887-6900
GUTTERING Jayhawk Guttering (A Division of Nieder Contracting, Inc.)
842-0094
HOME INSURANCE Kurt Goeser, State Farm Insurance
843-0003
Tom Pollard, Farmers Insurance
843-7511
Jamie Lowe, Prairie Land Insurance
856-3020
HOME REMODELING Natural Breeze Remodeling
749-1855
Terravest Custom Homes & Remodeling
691-6088
HOME SECURITY SYSTEMS Rueschhoff Locksmith & Security
843-2182
MORTGAGE MARKETPLACE LENDER
Capital City Bank 740 New Hampshire 4505A West 6th St 330-1200 6/15/2015
LOAN TYPE Conv. Jumbo
15-YR. FIXED & VARIATION
30-YR. FIXED
RATE/APR/POINTS
ARMs/EQUITY/ OTHER LOANS RATE/APR/POINTS
RATE/APR/POINTS
3.950% + 0 (4.047%) 60 day quote (credit score >= 740) Call For Rates (credit score >= 740)
3.250% + 0 (3.419%) 60 day quote (credit score >= 740)
3.250% + 0 (3.342%) Please Call
TRANSFERS
Tuesday, July 7, 2015 R&H BUILDERS, INC.TO JAMBOR, JACQUELINE S. 5734 CHIMNEY ROCKS CIR. LAWRENCE GARBER ENTERPRISES, INC.TO JAKE GARBER CONSTRUCTION, LLC 503 & 511 N. WREN DR. LAWRENCE BRUMLEY, BILLY, BRUMLEY, JULIE A.TO FERGUSON, SHARON A., MORGAN, DARRYL D. 4600 CHERRY HILLS DR. LAWRENCE KELLISON, JAMES R.TO GDW RENTALS, LLC 2727 HARRISON PL. LAWRENCE Wednesday, July 8, 2015 ROBNETT, KATHRINE, HANES, SETH TO GONZALEZ, CARMEN CRUZ DE CORDOBA, MELQUIADES G. 2520 RAWHIDE LN. LAWRENCE JONES, JOE B., JONES, NANCY A., JONES, CHRISTOPHER C.TO OLSEN, JORDAN D., OLSEN, KALIE S. 971 N. 100 RD. BALDWIN CITY LIANG, JENN-TAI, LIANG, HWA CHI TO HORNIK, LINDA M. TRUSTEE, HORNIK,THOMAS F.TRUSTEE 901 DEER RUN DR. LAWRENCE GARDNER FAMILY TRUST TO FIVE STAR QUALITY CARE-KS, LLC 1603 BRANDON WOODS CT. LAWRENCE FIVE STAR QUALITY CARE-KS, LLC TO MCKNIGHT, GERALD D., MCKNIGHT, BARBARA L., INGRAHAM,TERESA L., SCHROEDER, DEBORAH A. 1603 BRANDON WOODS CT. LAWRENCE HARRIS, QUINTIN A., HARRIS, JENNIFER S.TO BROWN, DUSTIN T., BRADLEY, MAREN F. 805 MISSISSIPPI ST. LAWRENCE BROWN, DUSTIN T., BRADLEY, MAREN F.TO KREBS, STEPHEN R., KREBS, ELLEN 1029 TENNESSEE ST. LAWRENCE TAYLOR, BONNIE M.,TAYLOR, ROY A.TO SANDERS, LILLIAN E., BROOKS, JACQUELINE M., BROOKS, CHARLES L. 2742 CHIPPERFIELD RD. LAWRENCE Thursday, July 9, 2015 JAKE GARBER CONSTRUCTION, LLC TO CELESTE, ANTHONY B., CELESTE, NICOLE R. 607 N. WREN DR. LAWRENCE U.S. BANK N.A.,TRUSTEE TO MOELLER, JEREMY, EMBERS, KARA M. 2624 KENSINGTON RD. LAWRENCE NORWOOD, KEN E.TO JOHNSTON, PAUL A. 668 N. 1851 DIAG RD. LECOMPTON MIESCHER-LERNER, JESSICA, LERNER, NICHOLAS TO ASCHENBRENNER, KAYSE E., ASCHENBRENNER, STEPHEN T. 1141 VERMONT ST. LAWRENCE HERSCHELL, LISA L.TO CARTER, MORGAN L. 931 CHRISTIE CT. LAWRENCE BROSS, NICHOLAS L., BROSS, ELIZABETH M.TO HOLCOMB, JEREMIAH E., HOLCOMB, MEGAN K. 1526 MAPLE ST. EUDORA PARTNERS IN GRACE, LLC TO BOWDEN COMPLETE CONSTRUCTION, LLC 936 LASALLE St. LAWRENCE FODE, KATHLEEN F.,TRUSTEE TO O’KONSKI, JAMES E., O’KONSKI, MARJORIE K. 1917 W. 3RD ST. LAWRENCE MARTIN, DIANNE W.TO HANNA, RYAN B., HANNA, RAMIE L. 272 N. 100 RD. OVERBROOK EWERT, ANTHONY D., EWERT, REBECCA L.TO PATTON, LAVONNE 3320 W. 8TH ST. LAWRENCE CHALENDER, RICHARD L., CHALENDER, DEBRA J.TO RICE, CHAD M., RICE, AMANDA M. 506 SIBLEY CT. BALDWIN CITY BURGEN, ANDREW, BURGEN, JILL TO FOSTER, JEFFREY, FOSTER, LINDSEY 727 E. 1485 RD. LAWRENCE
LAWRENCE: CITY SERVICES City of Lawrence
L awrence J ournal -W orld
FHA Fixed VA Fixed Up to 100% Refinance 80%
Call For Rates (credit score >= 660) Call For Rates (credit score >= 660 3.950% + 0 (4.047%) (credit score >= 740)
Friday, July 10, 2015 BALDWIN, STEVEN D., BALDWIN, JEAN A.TO DAVIS, CRAIG A., DAVIS,TAMMY R. 1414 N. 300 RD. BALDWIN CITY HASKELL, BRIAN L., HASKELL, BRETT C.TO BOWDEN, CHELSEA, JENDZA, CRAIG 501 SIERRA DR. LAWRENCE ROSAMOND, FRANCES G.,TRUSTEE TO AUTEN, JAMES F. 4022 OVERLAND DR. LAWRENCE UNDERWOOD, MICHAEL J., UNDERWOOD, JACQUE M.TO FLORY, DARREN, FLORY, CASEY 310 S. STRATTON CIR. EUDORA OLD, CASEY L., OLD, KARA TO BANNING, ROBERT F., BLUE-BANNING, MARTHA J. 1520 ST. ANDREWS DR. LAWRENCE KELLY, JOHN R.,TRUSTEE, KELLY, SUZANNE J.,TRUSTEE TO PRO, STEPHAN, PRO, JONI M. 1531 CRESCENT RD. LAWRENCE BARNETT, MICHAEL A., BARNETT, KATIE B.TO THOMPSON, KEVIN D., JONES-THOMPSON, CAROLYN E. 2408 MCKINLEY CT. LAWRENCE RASTOVIC,TODOR TO BETHARD, CARRIE 5107 VERONICA DR. LAWRENCE TRAMPOSH PROPERTIES, LLC TO MIESCHER-LERNER, JESSICA, LERNER, NICHOLAS 1620 INDIANA ST. LAWRENCE LANDGRAF, KEITH F., LANDGRAF, INGRID M.TO THAKUR, SRIRAM K. S. 1455 LEGENDS CIR. LAWRENCE GRAND BUILDERS, INC TO OLD, CASEY L., OLD, KARA J. 2608 LAZY BROOK LN. LAWRENCE BENEFICIAL FINANCIAL I, INC TO KACZOR, JOEL 3300 WESTRIDGE CT. LAWRENCE GRIMES, GREGORY D., GRIMES, ARDITH J.TO BURGEN, ANDREW J., BURGEN, JILL S. 1115 GROVE ST. BALDWIN CITY METCALF, SHELBY, METCALF, MATTHEW TO PAYNE, JARETT 205 SUMMERTREE LN. LAWRENCE JAKE GARBER CONSTRUCTION, LLC TO KRUG, KURT A., KRUG,TAMARA L. 603 N. WREN DR. LAWRENCE JOHNSTON, CHRISTOPHER J., JOHNSTON, JESSICA M. TO PENNEWELL, LUCILLE E. 2202 GENNESSEE CT. LAWRENCE Monday, July 13, 2015 KINDSFATHER,YVETTE TO GORDON, JESSICA M. 311 MINNESOTA ST. LAWRENCE GARBER ENTERPRISES, INC TO JOHNSTON, CHRISTOPHER J., JOHNSTON, JESSICA M. 512 DAYLILY DR. LAWRENCE SECRETARY OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT TO DEITZ, CARRIE L. 1504 W. 21ST.TER, LAWRENCE SALB HOMES, LLC TO HEIDRICH, MATTHEW J. GENTRY, MEGAN S., 838 SILVER RAIN RD. LAWRENCE MARKS, PAUL E., MARKS, NICOLE R.TO KELLY, ALEX R. 2717 PEBBLE LN. LAWRENCE SCHECHINGER, HEATH A., SCHECHINGER, SCOTT J.TO GAYLORD, SYDNEY, GAYLORD, BETH, GAYLORD,TIMOTHY 333 CALIFORNIA ST. LAWRENCE CORNERBANK N.A.TO SALB HOMES, LLC VACANT LAND 2250 LAKE POINT DR. LAWRENCE FALL CREEK FARMS DEVELOPMENT, INC TO WOODLAND, GARY L.,TRUSTEE 153 FALL CREEK DR. LAWRENCE POGGIO, JOHN P., POGGIO, ANNE F.TO PHILLIPS, LISA, PHILLIPS, STANLEY VACANT LOT - 4600 NICKLAUS DR. LAWRENCE SHOUP, COREY C.TO BROHAMMER, MARY C. 1313 SUNCHASE DR. LAWRENCE
Visit Mortgage Marketplace online at hometownlawrence.com
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION PREAPPROVALS -NO COSTS TO YOU. WE WORK VIA PHONE INTERVIEW, EMAIL OR IN PERSON. EASY FOR YOU! WE OFFER VA, FHA, USDA, CONSTRUCTION, 2nd Homes, REVERSE MORTGAGES, Jumbo and Conventional. Annual Percentage Rate(APR)based on loans amount of $100,000.00 (80%LTV)with a close date of the first of the month. APR’s may vary depending on the day of the month the loan closes. Rates quoted for 45 days lock time. Capital City Bank - Has 2 locations: 4505 West 6th St Suite A and 740 New Hampshire Diana Deutsch - 785/330-1220 direct Jeff Schuler - 785/330-1221 direct
20 Yr 5/1 ARM/7/1 ARM FHA* 30 Yr./15 Yr.
Please Call N/A
Loan Assumptions: ¹Primary Residence, Purchase Loan with a value of $125,000 and loan amount of $100,000, estimated monthly payment of $678.62 for 180 months. ²Primary Residence, Purchase Loan with a value of $125,000 and loan amount of $100,000, estimated monthly payment of $449.04 for 360 months. Real estate taxes and homeowners insurance could increase the monthly payment. Receive local servicing for the life of the loan on all conventional loans. Please call Mark Hernandez (NMLS#556689) at 785.749.9053 or apply online at www.capfed.com. APR = Annual Percentage Rate. *Registered with HUD as Capitol Federal® Savings Bank.
4.125% + 0 (4.196% APR) 3.250% + 0 (3.372% APR) 3.750% + 0 (5.296%/3.980% APR) Call for Rates Call for Rates
HP 97 Fixed Investor 20% Down
Call for Quotes Call for Quotes
*Rates for refinances may be higher *Save money with our “Biweekly Mortgage” program. *We service your loan after closing. Contact Tom Koenig at 785-838-1882, or TomK@centralnational.com. NMLS ID# 472917
Conv. FHA/VA Jumbo
4.000% + 0 (4.071%) 3.750% + 0 (4.864%) 4.000% + 0 (4.071%)
3.125% + 0 (3.285%)
5/1 ARM 7/1 ARM 10/1 ARM 7/1 Jumbo 10/1 Jumbo 20 Yr. Fixed 10 Yr. Fixed
3.000% + 0 (3.169%) 3.375% + 0 (3.330%) 3.625% + 0 (3.522%) 3.375% + 0 (3.464%) 3.625% + 0 (3.571% APR) 3.750% + 0 (3.848%) 2.875% + 0 (3.105%)
Central Bank of the Midwest 865-1000 7/28/15
Conv. Jumbo FHA VA
4.000% + 0 (4.096%) 4.125% + 0 (4.206%) 3.625% + 0 (4.510%) 3.750% + 0 (4.044%)
3.125% + 0 (3.270%) 3.500% + 0 (3.627%)
20 Yr.
3.750% + 0 (3.877%)
Fairway Mortgage Corp. 4104 W. 6th St., Ste. B 841-4434 5/05/2015
Conv. Jumbo
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FHA USDA/Rural Development
Call For Rates Call For Rates
4.125% + 0 (4.182%) 3.625% + 0 (4.815%)
3.250% + 0 (3.307%) Call
3/1 ARM 5/1 ARM 7/1 ARM 7/1 Jumbo
Call Call Call
Capitol Federal® Savings 1026 Westdale 749-9050 7/28/15
Conv. Jumbo
4.125% + 0 (4.178%) Please Call
Central National Bank 838-1882 7/14/15
Conv. FHA/VA Jumbo
Commerce Bank 865-4721 7/28/15
Conv.
First Assured Mortgage 856-LOAN (5626) 7/14/15 First State Bank & Trust 3901 W. 6th St. 312-6810 7/21/15 Great American Bank 3500 Clinton Parkway 838-9704 7/28/15 Landmark Bank 841-6677 6/8/2015
Meritrust Credit Union 856-7878 11/03/2014 Mid America Bank 4114 W 6th St. 841-8055 7/28/15 Pulaski Bank 3210 Mesa Way, Ste B 856-1450 7/28/15 Truity Credit Union 749-6804 3400 W. 6th 7/28/15 University National Bank 841-1988 7/28/15
FHA/VA
NOW IS THE TIME TO LOCK IN A GREAT LOW FIXED RATE! WHETHER YOU ARE BUYING, BUILDING OR REFINANCING. CALL ALLISA HURST @ 785-865-1085 FAX: 865-1025 EMAIL: Allisa.Hurst@centralbank.net Unbelievably LOW rates! Now is the time to purchase or refinance! Give us a call or email us for a FREE pre approval or refinance analysis. (Rates subject to change. Posted rates assume credit score > 740 and are for PURCHASE financing with 20% down payment. Refinance rates MAY be slightly higher) NMLS #2889
No up front fees! No application fee and no up front appraisal fee. Apply online at www. firstassuredmortgage.com or via phone at 785-856-5626.
Jumbo
Call
Conv. FHA/VA Jumbo
4.12% + 0 (4.317%) Call For Rates Call For Rates
3.25 + 0 (3.583%) Call For Rates Call For Rates
20 Yr. Conv. and USDA 3/1 ARM 5/1 ARM 7/1 ARM 7/1 Jumbo
Please Call Please Call Please Call Please Call Please Call Please Call Please Call
Conv. FHA/VA Jumbo
3.875% + 0 (3.931%) Call for Rate Call
3.000% + 0 (3.097%)
20 Yr. Fixed 10-Yr. Fixed
3.625% + 0 (3.702%) 2.875% + 0 (3.015%)
Free Same Day Pre-Approvals. Rates quoted on loan amounts of $125,000.00 or more, purchase, 45 day lock with a credit score of 740 and above. Rates subject to change without notice. Call us today for your lending needs! Bob Underwood at 785-856-9409, BUnderwood@greatambank.com Derek Bailey at 785-856-9418
Conv. Jumbo
4.000% + 0 (APR 4.043%)
3.125% + 0 (APR 3.199%)
Jumbo 5/1 ARM VA/FHA 30 Fixed 10/1 Jumbo
4.125% + 0 (APR 4.144%) 3.125% + 0 (APR 3.199%) 3.625% + 0 (APR 3.970/5.229%) 3.750% + 0 (APR 3.405%)
New, Landmark Lock and Shop, provides a safeguard while you shop for a home. Contact Brian McFall 785-841-7152. First time homebuyers you may be able to receive up to 4% of your loan amount in down payment assistance if you qualify. Landmark has FHA, Conventional and VA and RD loans. Closing costs vary from lender to lender, call Landmark and compare our costs and rates with any other lender. Rates are based on a loan of $120,000 or higher and a median credit score of 740 or above. Other rate and point options are available.
Conv. Jumbo
3.875 + 0 (4.116% APR) Please call 856-7878 ext 5037
3.125 + 0 (3.321% APR) Please call 856-7878 ext 5037
Please call 856-7878 ext 5037
97% Advantage Program: Please call for rates (credit score 660) 20 year: please call 15/30 Pricing options available
Conv. Jumbo
4.00% + 0 (4.217%) Call for Rates
3.375% + 0 (3.755%) Call for Rates
20 Yr. Fixed 30 Yr FHA 30 Yr VA 30 Yr USDA
3.625% + 0 (3.922%) 3.625% + 0 (4.869%) 3.750% + 0 (3.993%) 3.750% + 0 (4.664%)
Conv. Jumbo
4.000% + 0 (4.087%)
3.125 + 0 (3.265%)
FHA/VA/USDA
3.625% + 0
Conv. Jumbo
4.000% + 0 (4.031%) Please Call for Quote
Conv. Jumbo
3.985% + 0 (4.032%) Call for Rates
Call
Call
Call Carol at 785-865-4721 for free pre-approval and for more information on mortgages for residential and investment properties. Rates change daily. Rates quoted here on loan amounts of $160,000 to $417,000 with minimum required credit score. Email Mary Lauer at Mary.Lauer@commercebank.com
Call For Rates
THE DATA DISPLAYED BELOW IS FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY. THIS IS NOT AN ADVERTISEMENT FOR CREDIT AS DEFINED BY PARAGRAPH 226.24 OF REGULATION Z. CALL LENDER FOR APR. ARM-ADJUSTABLE RATE MORTGAGE; CAPS MAXIMUM PER ADJUSTMENTS & LIFETIME RATE ADJUSTMENT LTV-LOAN TO VALUE; JUMBO - ANY LOAN AMOUNT OVER $417,000. Email Jessica Wollesen at jessicaw@firststateks.com
Free Pre-approvals! Apply online or call Colette Wedan at 785-856-7878 ext 5037 for more info. Local Credit Union committed to giving you the smoothest closing! Local servicing for the life of the loan! Rates subject to change & are based on a Purchase loan, 20% down payment and 740 credit score. RATES ARE AMAZING! We offer a FREE,No Obligation Pre-Approval Letter. We are first time homebuyer specialists. Consider A USDA loan with NO down payment required! Great options on rental properties too. Call to have us analyze your refinance options. Free borrower education session ** Rates for refinance may vary. APR based on $125,000 purchase loan, 80% LTV and 760 credit score. MEMBER FDIC EQUAL HOUSING LENDER. NMLS#619730 ****
20 YR 30 YR
CALL TODAY or apply online for a no-obligation rate quote and fee estimate, to be pre(4.568/3.915/4.332% APR) approved, or to talk with a Mortgage Advisor about preparing for a future purchase. Pulaski 3.750% + 0 (3.945% APR) Bank provides loans for purchase, refinance, investment property, second homes, second mortgages/HELOCS and Bridge Loans! We provide options with little or no down payment, 4.375% + 0 (4.532% APR) and offer Financed Mortgage Insurance to keep your payment as low as possible. Rates shown are for a purchase transaction with a >740 credit score - refinance rates may vary.
3.250 + 0 (3.305%) Please Call
20 Yr. Conv. Conv. 97% 30 Yr Fixed Conv 30 Yr Fixed Rental HELOC
3.750% + 0 (3.835%) 4.125% + 0 (4.511% APR) 4.375% + 0 (4.416%) (as low as) 3.750% APR)
Contact Geoff Strole at 785-749-6804 or Geoff.Strole@TruityCU.org. Local Servicing. Free Pre-Qualifications within Minutes of Applying. Apply 24/7 at www.LawrenceMortgages.org. Rates quoted are for purchase transactions with a 740 or higher median credit score. Refinance rates may be slightly higher. Call or email for complete details and to obtain a no obligation quote! Equal Housing Lender. We are also proud to be an Approved Lender for the Tenants to Homeowners Program…Creating Permanently Affordable Workforce Housing in Lawrence! Check out complete details at: www.tenants-to-homeowners.org
3.147% + 0 (3.229%) Call for Rates
20 Year Fixed 10 Year Fixed 5/1 ARM 7/1 ARM
3.677% + 0 (3.742%) 2.920% + 0 (3.039%) Call for Rate Call for Rate
Free same-day approvals! Ask us about the new Fannie Mae 3% Down Loan Product - or, consider a refinance while rates are at an all-time low! Rates are subject to change and are based on a credit score of 740 and a loan amount of $100,000.00. Please call Joylynn Harlow (NMLS #409547) at 785-749-8732 for your custom quote. The University National Bank - NMLS #403070
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DUFFY GIVES UP THREE HOMERS IN 5-2 ROYALS LOSS. 3C
Sports
C
Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/sports l Friday, July 31, 2015
KANSAS FOOTBALL
Numbers crunch
Nick Krug/Journal-World File Photo
HEAD COACH DAVID BEATY AND THE KANSAS UNIVERSITY FOOTBALL TEAM CLOSE THEIR SPRING GAME by singing the KU Alma Mater. Beaty inherits a squad woefully short of numbers and one that is looking for walk-ons to fill the gaps.
Failed recruiting efforts leave Jayhawks short-handed By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com
It’s no secret that first-year head coach David Beaty and the Kansas University football program are dealing with a light deck heading into the 2015 season. Because of a number of past transactions that did not pan out — either because of eligibility, academics or attitude — the Jayhawks will open the upcoming season nearly an entire recruiting class short of the allowed number of 85 scholarship players. This news is nothing new, but it is arguably the biggest challenge facing Beaty and his staff, as they prepare to take on one of the toughest sched-
ules in the country with inexperienced players and very little depth. Because of the way the rules are set up, where programs can sign a maximum of 25 players in any given recruiting class, Beaty knows that getting the numbers up will not be something he can fix overnight. Asked last week at Big 12 media days in Dallas how he planned to go about getting back to a full deck, Beaty laid out a clear and concise plan. “You have small senior classes, which is gonna take a few years,” he began. “It’s gonna be another 25 (seniors) next year and then after that it’s gonna start scaling back to around 17 or 18 (seniors per class), which allows you to still sign 25 (in-
coming players) and now all of a sudden you get eight more and now you move it up. And then the next year you get eight more. And then you get up to 85. It’ll probably take us a couple of years to get there. We’ll see.” Various loopholes in the recruiting process allow for programs to add an extra player or two each year here and there — via blue shirts (counting forward), gray shirts (player walks on for fall semester and then starts on scholarship in the spring) or other one-time exemptions — but there are very few shortcuts to climbing out of such a big hole and Beaty knows he’ll have to get creative to survive. One such way he’s gone about that is through aggressively pursuing
walk-ons, particularly those in the state, who may be swayed to pass up lower-level scholarship offers by the opportunity to compete for playing time at KU. “We’ve got a lot of great players in that state that are going to other places,” Beaty said. “But they want to come to their university.” Because the process of recruiting walk-ons is so tricky — non-scholarship players must remain unrecruited and even so much as a phone call can make them ineligible — Beaty said landing talented walk-ons who could help KU, both in terms of depth and potentially in the regular Please see FOOTBALL, page 3C
Bolden schedules Duke visit, will still visit Kansas By Gary Bedore gbedore@ljworld.com
College basketball recruiting notebook. ... Texas high school power forward deluxe Marques Bolden, who attended last season’s Late Night in the Phog on an unofficial campus visit, will visit Duke officially Sept. 18-19, according to ESPN.com. Bolden, a 6-10, 240-pound senior from DeSoto High, tells Jayhawkslant.com he will definitely make an official visit to KU at a yet-tobe-determined date. Rivals. com’s No. 14-rated player in the Class of 2016 is also considering Kentucky, LSU, Baylor, SMU North Carolina, Louisville, Texas, N.C. State, Oklahoma and others. l Fox update: De’Aaron Fox, a 6-3 senior point guard from Cypress Lakes High in
Katy, Texas, who is ranked No. 9 nationally, picked up scholarship offers from Kentucky and North Carolina after scoring 35 points for Houston Hoops AAU in a win over Arizona Power Black in last week’s Las Vegas Classic. Fox is considering KU, UK, UNC, Arizona, Texas, Louisville, Baylor, Oklahoma State and others. “I really don’t want to give anything away because I’m cutting my list down to about six or seven in about two weeks or maybe less than two weeks,” Fox told Arizona.rivals.com. “I don’t want to say anything that puts anybody ahead of anybody, but they (Arizona Wildcats) have made it a priority to try and get me. “You don’t want to go somewhere expecting to be a one-and-done but that coach has never had a one-
and-done kid,” Fox added. “If it’s never happened in history there’s a small percent chance you can do it. That’s why everyone wants to go to Kentucky. They want to be a one-and-done. I watch that stuff. I really think about stuff. I analyze the game and analyze what the coach does and analyze what they’ve done the last 10 years and stuff like that. It’s great knowing what I’m coming into.” Fox, who averaged 16.8 points and 5.4 assists in summertime EYBL play, is definitely doing his homework. “Every school that’s going to be on my list they win,” he told Arizona.rivals.com. “The last three years every school on my list they’ve been at least a top-four team going into the NCAA tournament. They put guys into the league and I just want to
go to a great situation where I can excel and try to take my talents to the NBA.” Fox is planning on taking five official visits and announcing his choice sometime in December. “There’s a lot to like about Fox,” writes Ricky O’Donnell of SBnation.com. “At 6-4 with elite quickness and good instincts both scoring and facilitating, he likely projects as the best two-way point guard in the class. He grabbed 48 steals in 17 EYBL games (2.8 per game), leading the circuit in that category. It’s no wonder that Shaka Smart and Texas are all over him. This is the perfect point guard to the play the type of pressure defense by which Smart’s teams have always been deTEXAS BIG MAN MARQUES BOLDEN will visit make fined. “Offensively, there’s not an official visit to Duke University in September. Bolden, who attended Late Night in the Phog Please see HOOPS, page 3C last season, still plans an official visit to Kansas.
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2C | LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD | FRIDAY, JULY 31, 2015
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• The latest on Kansas University football and basketball • A report on the Kansas City Royals at Toronto SOUTH AL CENTRAL BOSTON RED SOX
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Gainesville, Va. (ap) — Tiger Woods took a conservative 3-wood off the first hole at the Quicken Loans National when many players were hitting driver. No matter — he still pull-hooked it into the gallery, hit his second shot into a greenside bunker and lipped out a 5-footer for par before slamming his putter against his bag. On the third hole, he missed the green well left and had to
SPORTING K.C. get up-and-down for bogey. A Retief Goosen and Ryo Ishika- a lot of key putts today. I ran SATURDAY three-putt on No. 4 left him 3 wa at Robert Trent Jones Golf them by the hole but I made over. Club. all the comebacks, and over• vs. Houston, 7:30 p.m. It was his final bogey of the Former Kansas University all I felt like I hit the ball well AL WEST AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmetgolfer and team logos for the AFC teams; sizes; staff; It ETA 5 p.m. day. Gary Woodland shotvarious enough tostand-alone; turn it around. was Woods got a fortunate de- a 1-under 70 and was tied for nice to actually turn it around.” SPORTS ON TV flection off a marshal left of 62nd place, seven strokes off Woods is the host of the the green on the par-5 fifth. He the lead. Quicken Loans National, which TODAY apologized, handed out an auWoods said it was the first he won in 2009 and 2012 at Time Net Cable tographed glove and made his time since the Masters in April Congressional in Maryland. Baseball K.C. v. Toronto 6 p.m. FSN 36, 236 first birdie. Then ran LOGOS off five081312: that Helmet he’s turned bad for round last of his 79stand-alone; PGA Tour AFChe TEAM and teama logos the AFCThe teams; various sizes; staff; ETA 5 p.m. birdies in six holes around the into a good one. victories was nearly two years Washington v. Mets 6 p.m. MLB 155,242 turn for a 3-under 68. That left “That’s what scoring is all ago, and he has plummeted to him five shots behind leaders about,” Woods said. “I made 266th in the world. Golf Time Net Cable LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM
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HIGH SCHOOLS HUB:
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Brady’s legacy tarnished It turns out, Tom Brady’s cellphone wasn’t the only thing that was destroyed. So, too, was any remaining shard of belief in his competitive integrity, every last piece blown to smithereens with 10,000 text messages and one giant lie. Does anybody still believe the NFL’s most celebrated player didn’t purposely deflate footballs in an attempt to gain an advantage during last season’s NFL playoffs? Does anybody still think his legacy should not include the word “cheater?” Brady was actually lucky Tuesday when the NFL upheld his four-game suspension. In the wake of the league’s accompanying revelation that Brady ordered the destruction of a cellphone that was one of the centerpieces of the investigation, he is fortunate Commissioner Roger Goodell didn’t double the penalty to eight games. Or more. If the NFL had been willing to take a big hit for the sake of fairness, the investigation could have been completed in a week last January and Brady never would have been allowed to play in — and win — the Super Bowl. But at least the right thing has finally happened, and Goodell showed he would not be intimidated by powerful New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft and an organization that has become the modern-day Raiders. As quickly as one can pound a cellphone with a hammer, the NFL Players Association announced it was going to appeal the suspension, and there is some thought that Brady will seek an injunction in federal court that will allow him to keep playing during the appeal process. That could really be a hoot. Can you imagine Brady playing most of the Patriots season and then forced out of the postseason if the appeal is lost? Brady is probably counting on the appeal taking several years, long enough for him to eventually disappear into retirement. And that’s fine. He might never miss a game. The NFL could lose the entire case. It doesn’t matter. By upholding the suspension of its most marketable player — Tom Brady jersey sales currently lead the league — the point has been made that cheaters will be punished, and that arrogant cheaters will be shown no mercy, and that Tom Brady is both. In the league statement upholding Brady’s suspension, Goodell said Brady “went beyond a mere failure to cooperate in the investigation and supported a finding that he had sought to hide evidence of his own participation in the scheme.” Hide. Scheme. The words paint a picture that even Tom Brady cannot destroy.
KANSAS CITY ROYALS
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DAVID PRICE DELIVERS FOR DETROIT against Tampa Bay on Tuesday in St. Petersburg, Florida. The Tigers traded Price to the Toronto Blue Jays on Thursday.
Blue Jays acquire Price from Tigers Detroit — Toronto acquired All-Star lefthander David Price from the Detroit Tigers on Thursday, the second major move in less than a week by the Blue Jays as they chase their first postseason appearance since 1993. After obtaining slugging shortstop Troy Tulowitzki from Colorado, the Blue Jays tried to shore up their rotation by adding Price, likely the top remaining starting pitcher on the market. Johnny Cueto was traded from Cincinnati to Kansas City, and Cole Hamels is headed from Philadelphia to Texas. The Blue Jays sent left-handers Daniel Norris, Matt Boyd and Jairo Labourt to the Tigers in the deal. Price can become a free agent after this season. Speaking in the Detroit clubhouse before the Tigers faced the Orioles in Baltimore, Price was excited about joining a contender — even if he did refer to the Blue Jays as “they” instead of “we.” “They’ve got a good thing going on right now in Toronto,” he said. “They’ve kind of been in this situation before and didn’t make these type of moves. It definitely shows you that they want to win right now. You have to respect that. You have to like it and that’s what you want to be a part of.” Toronto has scored more runs than any other team in the major leagues but still had a .500 record heading into Thursday night’s game against the Royals. The Blue Jays trailed Minnesota by two games for the AL’s second wild card and were seven behind the AL Eastleading New York Yankees. Now, however, the Blue Jays appear ripe to make a run.
Cardinals, who were in the market for an outfielder after seven-time All-Star Matt Holliday re-injured his right quadriceps on Wednesday. In exchange for Moss, who was in his first season with the Indians, the Indians received minor-league pitcher Rob Kaminsky, a firstround pick in 2013. Holliday is out again with the same injury that sidelined him for 31 games earlier this season.
Pirates acquire Soria Cincinnati — The Pittsburgh Pirates have made another move to upgrade their bullpen, acquiring right-hander Joakim Soria from the Detroit Tigers for a minor leaguer. Pittsburgh gave up infielder JaCoby Jones. They will have to make a move to create a roster spot when Soria joins the team, which opened a four-game series in Cincinnati on Thursday.
Royals ship Blanton to Bucs Kansas City, Mo. — The Royals have traded right-hander Joe Blanton to the Pittsburgh Pirates for cash considerations. Blanton, 34, was designated for assignment Tuesday, when Johnny Cueto reported to the Kansas City following his trade from Cincinnati. Blanton was 2-2 with a 3.89 ERA in four starts and 11 relief appearances this season. A former first-round draft pick, Blanton is 8791 in 11 major-league seasons.
Gomez traded to Astros
Houston — The Astros have added another bat to their lineup as they make a push for the postseason by acquiring two-time All-Star Dodgers deal for pitchers outfielder Carlos Gomez from the Milwaukee Atlanta — The first-place Los Angeles Brewers. Dodgers have bolstered their pitching staff, Houston, which also received right-hander acquiring Mat Latos from the Miami Marlins Mike Fiers in the deal, sent four prospects to and Alex Wood, Jim Johnson and Luis Avilan the Brewers: left-hander Josh Hader, rightfrom the Atlanta Braves in a 13-player deal. hander Adrian Houser and outfielders Brett The rebuilding Braves also gave up top infield Phillips and Domingo Santana. prospect Jose Peraza in Thursday’s trade, The 29-year-old Gomez is hitting .262 with paying a hefty price largely to land 30-yeareight homers and 43 RBIs in 74 games for the old Cuban infielder Hector Olivera at a steep Brewers this season. He is making $8 million discount. Atlanta also received left-handed this season and $9 million in 2016, then can reliever Paco Rodriguez and minor-league become a free agent. pitcher Zachary Bird from Los Angeles. Leading the NL West by a half-game, the COLLEGE FOOTBALL Dodgers obtained Latos and Wood for their rotation. Johnson and Avilan add bullpen depth. Ohio State suspends four Los Angeles also acquired first baseman MiChicago — Ohio State has suspended Allchael Morse from Miami and injured pitcher America defensive end Joey Bosa, receiver Bronson Arroyo from the Braves. Corey Smith and H-backs Jalin Marshall and Miami received three minor leaguers from Dontre Wilson for its opening game at Virginia the Dodgers and sent a draft pick to Atlanta. Tech. In a statement released about an hour before Indians send Moss to Cards Big Ten media days began Thursday, the Buckeyes said the players violated department of Cleveland — Brandon Moss was sorry to athletics policy. see close friend David Murphy traded earlier The defending national champions open the this week by the Cleveland Indians. season Labor Day night in Blacksburg, Virginia, Now he’s gone, too. against the only team to beat them last season. Moss was dealt Thursday to the St. Louis
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LATEST LINE MLB Favorite ................... Odds................ Underdog National League PHILADELPHIA ...............Even-6............................ Atlanta NY METS .........................51⁄2-61⁄2................. Washington Pittsburgh ......................Even-6.................... CINCINNATI MIAMI ................................Even-6...................... San Diego MILWAUKEE ....................Even-6............... Chicago Cubs ST. LOUIS ........................... 10-11.......................... Colorado American League BALTIMORE ....................71⁄2-81⁄2.......................... Detroit Kansas City . ...........Even-6............... TORONTO BOSTON . ..........................Even-6.................... Tampa Bay CHI WHITE SOX ..............Even-6................... NY Yankees MINNESOTA ....................Even-6............................ Seattle OAKLAND ........................51⁄2-61⁄2..................... Cleveland Interleague San Francisco .................. 7-8................................. TEXAS HOUSTON .......................51⁄2-61⁄2......................... Arizona LA DODGERS .................101⁄2-111⁄2................... LA Angels Home Team in CAPS (c) TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC
TODAY IN SPORTS 1930 — Lou Gehrig drives in eight runs with a grand slam and two doubles, and the New York Yankees outlast the Boston Red Sox 14-13. 1932 — Cleveland’s Municipal Stadium opens and Lefty Grove and the Philadelphia A’s beat the Indians, 1-0, before 76,979 fans. 1954 — Joe Adcock hits four homers and a double to give the Milwaukee Braves a 15-7 victory over Brooklyn. 1963 — The Cleveland Indians become the first American League club to hit four straight home runs and in an unlikely fashion. Number eight hitter Woody Held hits a two-out homer off Paul Foytack, pitcher Pedro Ramos follows with his second homer of the game, Tito Francona and Larry Brown’s first major-league homer finish the string. Foytack is the only major-league pitcher to give up four straight home runs.
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LOCAL
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Friday, July 31, 2015
| 3C
Jays bomb Duffy, Royals
Nick Krug/Journal-World File Photo
HEAD COACH DAVID BEATY AND HIS STAFF have spent recent months working to fill their squad with walk-ons.
Football CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C
rotation, was a complete team effort. “We did it with a finetoothed comb,” Beaty said of the process that began almost immediately and ended with KU capping the number of walk-ons it took because interest was so high. “We were very direct and we were very smart. It took an enormous amount of organization.” Football is full of wild success stories about former walk-ons becoming stars. And although he would take that outcome as many times as he could get it, Beaty is more interested in this first batch of walk-ons being solid rather than spectacular.
Hoops CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C
many point guards in the country who can match up with Fox when he’s feeling it. This was epitomized when he dropped 40 points — including 17 straight — at an EYBL stop in Houston earlier this year,” O’Donnell added. l Wiley update: Austin
“Most people have three deep, well there’s ghosts at three deep for us right now,” he admitted. “We have two deep, but we don’t have three deep. So for a walk-on, instead of being four or five right off the bat, you’re third.” While the list of walkons is long and remains fluid even throughout preseason camp, Beaty already has been impressed by what he has seen. “There’s probably two or three guys right now that are freshmen coming in that are walk-ons and what I see them doing in our strength and conditioning and our movement stuff that we can watch, I think they can help us,” he said. “And I think they can help us early, which is good because we don’t have enough numbers.”
Wiley, a 6-10 junior forward from Spain Park High in Birmingham, Alabama, has narrowed his choices to KU, Alabama, Auburn, Duke, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, LSU, Michigan State, Mississippi State, North Carolina, UAB and Vanderbilt. He made the announcement Tuesday on Twitter. Wiley averaged 19.0 points and 12.2 boards his junior season. He’s ranked No. 15 in the Class of 2017 by Rivals.com.
KU swimmer to compete at Worlds J-W Staff Reports
Kansas University backstroker Yulduz Kuchkarova will compete against top competition at the 2015 FINA World Championships next week in Kazan, Russia. The Tashkent, Uzbekistan, native will make her fourth appearance at the World Championships during the second day of swimming competition inside Kazan Arena on Monday. Kuchkarova is slated to compete in the 50- and 100-meter backstroke over a four-day span and could add the 200-meter swim to her program. Last year Kuchkarova recorded two of Kansas’ all-time fastest marks in the 100- and 200-yard backstroke and will be
looking to rewrite Jayhawk history in the 201516 collegiate season. “This is a big step toward international-level success,” Kansas head coach Clark Campbell said. “If you look at the four-year calendar for swimming, this is the second-most important meet behind the Olympics - it’s the best aquatic athletes in the entire world.” Kuchkarova will be one of seven Uzbekistani’s representing their home country during the 16-day event. She will swim her first race, the 100-meter backstroke, at 9:30 a.m. (in Kazan) Monday with the semifinals during the evening session. With a qualifying time, Kuchkarova would swim in the finals at 7:17 p.m., the following day.
1860s baseball card brings $179K New York (ap) — A circa 1860s Brooklyn Atlantics team baseball card that’s been in the same family for over 150 years has fetched over $179,000 at auction. The pre-Civil War baseball card was owned by Florence Sasso of Great Barrington, Massachusetts. It shows her great-greatuncle Archibald Mc-
Mahon, an outfielder for the squad, pictured with eight of his teammates in bib-style shirts and two gentlemen in suits. The card had a presale estimate of $50,000. The Atlantics were a founding member of the National Association of Base Ball Players — the sport’s first organized league.
Toronto (ap) — Kansas City’s Danny Duffy doesn’t often give up a lot of home runs. That changed against the Toronto Blue Jays. Dioner Navarro hit a two-run homer, Russell Martin and Josh Donaldson added solo shots and the Blue Jays beat Duffy and the Royals 5-2 on Thursday night. “I just didn’t make pitches when I needed to,” Duffy said. “They capitalized excellently on every single one of my mistakes.” Duffy (4-5) allowed five runs and six hits in six innings, losing for the first time since June 30, at Houston. “I’m better than that, I’m a lot better than I displayed tonight,” he said. The three home runs were one more than Duffy had surrendered in his four previous starts combined. “He gave up six hits but three of them resulted in four runs,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. The Blue Jays have homered in 12 consecutive games since the AllStar break, their longest streak of the season. “That’s what we do best,” Toronto manager John Gibbons said. Kansas City, which lost 12-1 at Cleveland on Wednesday, allowed three homers in consecutive games for the first time this season. “You make a mistake and they can hammer it a long way,” Yost said of the Blue Jays. “These guys are really good.” Toronto won its second straight hours after landing former Cy Young Award winner David Price in a deal with Detroit. Navarro and Price played together for three seasons in Tampa Bay, reaching the World Series in 2008, Price’s rookie campaign. “He knows what it
Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press via AP
ROYALS’ FIRST BASEMAN ERIC HOSMER BREAKS HIS BAT ON A SINGLE during the the first inning of the Blue Jays’ 5-2 win over Kansas City Thursday in Toronto. takes,” Navarro said of Price. “He’s been doing it for a long time. And I think he’s going to do nothing but good things for us.” Price was not with the Blue Jays on Thursday but is expected to join them Friday. Toronto has not said when Price will make his first start but Sunday is a possibility. The left-hander is the second major acquisition of the week by the Blue Jays, who landed shortstop Troy Tulowitzki on Tuesday. “I thought even before we made the moves we were a good team and we just got better,” Blue Jays starter Marco Estrada said. Estrada (8-6) allowed two runs and three hits in 5 2-3 innings. Estrada left after Lorenzo Cain’s two-out single in the sixth ended his run of 15 straight outs. Brett Cecil came on and retired Eric Hosmer. LaTroy Hawkins pitched the seventh, Aaron Sanchez worked the eighth and Roberto Osuna finished for his sixth save.
Kendrys Morales put the Royals in front with a two-run double in the first inning but Toronto answered in the bottom half on Jose Bautista’s sacrifice fly. Kevin Pillar reached on a bloop single to begin the second and Navarro followed with a drive to left. Martin extended the lead with a one-out drive in the third and Donaldson made it 5-2 with a second-deck blast in the fourth, his team-high 25th. Ben Zobrist made his debut with the Royals, batting sixth and starting in left field. Zobrist, who was acquired from Oakland on Tuesday, went 0 for 4, grounding out to end the game.
Orlando to Omaha Brazilian rookie OF Paulo Orlando was optioned to Triple-A Omaha to make room for Zobrist. Yost said the Royals decided to demote Orlando and keep 3B Cheslor Cuthbert on the roster because Cuthbert has played well at third base.
BOX SCORE Kansas City AB R H BI BB SO Avg. A.Escobar ss 4 0 0 0 0 1 .278 Moustakas 3b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .287 L.Cain cf 3 1 1 0 0 1 .313 Hosmer 1b 4 1 1 0 0 0 .315 K.Morales dh 4 0 1 2 0 0 .282 Zobrist lf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .264 S.Perez c 3 0 1 0 0 0 .248 Infante 2b 3 0 1 0 0 0 .236 J.Dyson rf 3 0 0 0 0 2 .239 Totals 32 2 5 2 0 6 Toronto AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Tulowitzki ss 3 1 0 0 0 2 .375 Donaldson 3b 3 1 2 1 1 0 .291 Bautista rf 3 0 0 1 0 0 .231 Colabello 1b 3 0 1 0 0 0 .312 Smoak 1b 0 0 0 0 1 0 .235 Ru.Martin dh 3 1 1 1 1 0 .263 Valencia lf 2 0 0 0 1 1 .296 Carrera lf 1 0 1 0 0 0 .268 Pillar cf 4 1 1 0 0 1 .271 D.Navarro c 2 1 1 2 2 0 .223 Goins 2b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .223 Totals 28 5 7 5 6 6 Kansas City 200 000 000—2 5 0 Toronto 121 100 00x—5 7 0 LOB-Kansas City 4, Toronto 7. 2B-K.Morales (27), Donaldson (26). HR-D.Navarro (3), off D.Duffy; Ru.Martin (15), off D.Duffy; Donaldson (25), off D.Duffy. RBIs-K.Morales 2 (70), Donaldson (69), Bautista (68), Ru.Martin (49), D.Navarro 2 (13). SF-Bautista. Runners left in scoring position-Kansas City 2 (Zobrist, J.Dyson); Toronto 3 (Valencia, Goins 2). RISP-Kansas City 1 for 3; Toronto 0 for 4. Runners moved up-Colabello. GIDP-Ru.Martin, Goins. DP-Kansas City 2 (A.Escobar, Infante, Hosmer), (Infante, A.Escobar, Hosmer). Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA D.Duffy L, 4-5 6 6 5 5 4 4 96 4.28 K.Herrera 1 0 0 0 0 0 15 1.85 Medlen 1 1 0 0 2 2 25 5.68 Toronto IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Estrada W, 8-6 52⁄3 3 2 2 0 3 93 3.53 1⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 3 4.01 Cecil H, 4 Hawkins H, 1 1 2 0 0 0 1 14 0.00 Aa.Sanchez H, 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 13 3.39 Osuna S, 6-7 1 0 0 0 0 0 6 2.18 Inherited runners-scored-Cecil 1-0. HBP-by D.Duffy (Tulowitzki), by Estrada (L.Cain). Umpires-Home, Chris Conroy; First, Angel Hernandez; Second, Scott Barry; Third, Jim Wolf. T-2:33. A-30,057 (49,282).
Larry Brown meets with NCAA By Brad Townsend The Dallas Morning News
Reached Thursday by The Dallas Morning News in the aftermath of a Wednesday-night Yahoo Sports report regarding his school’s June appearance before the NCAA Committee on Infraction, SMU coach Larry Brown reiterated there is little he and the school can say until the NCAA renders judgment. SMU acknowledged in January its basketball and golf programs were under NCAA investigation. A source said Thursday that SMU’s appearance before the NCAA Committee on Infractions occurred in mid-June. SMU’s appearance before the committee means the NCAA’s investigation is complete. The June hear-
ing was for SMU to respond to the findings of NCAA enforcement investigators. Typically, once a school appears before the Committee on Infractions, the committee takes six-to-eight weeks to render a judgment. If penalties are recommended, the school then would have 15 days in which to appeal. “I can’t comment about this ongoing NCAA investigation,” Brown told The News when reached by phone. “I won’t give the writer (Pat Forde) any credibility by doing that. It’s a process that we’re dealing with right now. I’m not going to comment on it. The university came out with a statement in January about it and I thought it was pretty specific.
“I’m confident we’re going to move on and continue to try to do the right thing.” According to the Yahoo Sports report, Brown faces a “lack of coach control” charge. NCAA enforcement officials, according to Yahoo, investigated whether a former secretary of Brown’s and former SMU assistant coach Ulric Maligi assisted guard Keith Frazier with coursework. Frazier was ruled academically ineligible in January, the same month in which Maligi took an indefinite leave of absence. Maligi now is the national scouting director for John Lucas Enterprises in Houston. A source said Thursday that Maligi’s leave of absence was a case of SMU self-imposing amid
the NCAA’s investigation. Wednesday’s Yahoo report inferred that Frazier’s being declared academically ineligible was linked to the NCAA investigation. A source said Thursday, however, that the NCAA investigation was focused on whether the secretary and Maligi assisted Frazier with an online course before he even enrolled at SMU — a course it turned out he didn’t even need, once his complete high school transcripts came in. The source said that when Frazier was declared ineligible in January, it was due to his grade-point average at SMU. Frazier, the source said, is currently enrolled in summer school and doing well.
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Lawrence Journal-World
Baseball
4C
LEAGUE STANDINGS AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division New York Baltimore Toronto Tampa Bay Boston
W 57 51 52 51 45
L 44 50 51 52 58
Pct .564 .505 .505 .495 .437
GB — 6 6 7 13
WCGB L10 — 7-3 2 5-5 2 6-4 3 4-6 9 3-7
Str Home Away L-2 30-17 27-27 L-1 30-19 21-31 W-2 30-20 22-31 L-1 27-30 24-22 W-1 25-27 20-31
W 61 53 50 49 47
L 40 48 52 51 54
Pct .604 .525 .490 .490 .465
GB WCGB L10 — — 6-4 8 — 3-7 111⁄2 31⁄2 4-6 111⁄2 31⁄2 7-3 14 6 3-7
Str Home Away L-2 34-18 27-22 W-1 33-20 20-28 W-2 25-27 25-25 L-1 24-22 25-29 W-2 20-32 27-22
W 58 55 49 46 45
L 45 46 52 57 58
Pct .563 .545 .485 .447 .437
GB — 2 8 12 13
Str Home Away W-3 36-17 22-28 L-3 32-21 23-25 W-2 18-28 31-24 L-4 22-31 24-26 L-2 21-30 24-28
Central Division Kansas City Minnesota Detroit Chicago Cleveland
West Division Houston Los Angeles Texas Seattle Oakland
WCGB L10 — 8-2 — 4-6 4 6-4 8 4-6 9 3-7
NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division Washington New York Atlanta Miami Philadelphia
W 54 52 46 42 39
L 46 50 56 60 64
Pct .540 .510 .451 .412 .379
GB WCGB L10 — — 5-5 3 41⁄2 4-6 9 101⁄2 3-7 13 141⁄2 4-6 161⁄2 18 8-2
Str Home Away W-2 28-19 26-27 L-2 35-18 17-32 L-4 26-20 20-36 L-2 25-25 17-35 W-1 24-26 15-38
W 65 59 54 46 44
L 37 42 47 54 59
Pct .637 .584 .535 .460 .427
GB WCGB L10 — — 7-3 51⁄2 — 6-4 101⁄2 2 5-5 18 91⁄2 5-5 211⁄2 13 3-7
Str Home Away W-1 38-15 27-22 L-1 35-17 24-25 W-2 27-24 27-23 W-3 26-22 20-32 L-2 20-30 24-29
W 57 56 49 49 43
L 45 45 51 53 57
Pct .559 .554 .490 .480 .430
GB — 1⁄2 7 8 13
Str Home Away W-1 34-18 23-27 W-1 30-23 26-22 W-5 26-27 23-24 W-2 24-25 25-28 L-2 24-27 19-30
Central Division St. Louis Pittsburgh Chicago Cincinnati Milwaukee
West Division Los Angeles San Francisco Arizona San Diego Colorado
WCGB L10 — 5-5 — 8-2 61⁄2 7-3 71⁄2 6-4 121⁄2 4-6
SCOREBOARD AMERICAN LEAGUE Toronto 5, Kansas City 2 Detroit 9, Baltimore 8 Boston 8, Chicago White Sox 2 Texas 7, N.Y. Yankees 6 Houston 3, L.A. Angels 0 Minnesota 9, Seattle 5 Cleveland 3, Oakland 1
NATIONAL LEAGUE San Diego 8, N.Y. Mets 7 Washington 1, Miami 0 Philadelphia 4, Atlanta 1 Cincinnati 15, Pittsburgh 5 St. Louis 9, Colorado 8 Chicago Cubs 5, Milwaukee 2
UPCOMING American League
TODAY’S GAMES Detroit (Farmer 0-2) at Baltimore (W.Chen 5-6), 6:05 p.m. Kansas City (Cueto 0-0) at Toronto (Hutchison 9-2), 6:07 p.m. Tampa Bay (E.Ramirez 8-4) at Boston (E.Rodriguez 6-3), 6:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 4-8) at Chicago White Sox (Rodon 4-3), 7:10 p.m. Seattle (T.Walker 7-7) at Minnesota (Milone 5-2), 7:10 p.m. Cleveland (Salazar 8-6) at Oakland (Graveman 6-7), 8:35 p.m. SATURDAY’S GAMES Kansas City at Toronto, 12:07 p.m. Tampa Bay at Boston, 12:35 p.m. Detroit at Baltimore, 6:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Chicago White Sox, 6:10 p.m. Seattle at Minnesota, 6:10 p.m. Cleveland at Oakland, 8:05 p.m.
National League
TODAY’S GAMES Atlanta (Wisler 5-1) at Philadelphia (Hamels 6-7), 6:05 p.m. Pittsburgh (Locke 5-6) at Cincinnati (Lorenzen 3-5), 6:10 p.m.
San Diego (Kennedy 6-9) at Miami (Phelps 4-7), 6:10 p.m. Washington (G.Gonzalez 8-4) at N.Y. Mets (Harvey 9-7), 6:10 p.m. Chicago Cubs (Hammel 5-5) at Milwaukee (Jungmann 5-2), 7:10 p.m. Colorado (K.Kendrick 4-11) at St. Louis (Wacha 11-4), 7:15 p.m. SATURDAY’S GAMES Atlanta at Philadelphia, 6:05 p.m. Chicago Cubs at Milwaukee, 6:10 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. Colorado at St. Louis, 6:15 p.m.
Interleague
TODAY’S GAMES San Francisco (Bumgarner 11-5) at Texas (N.Martinez 5-6), 7:05 p.m. Arizona (R.De La Rosa 8-5) at Houston (Feldman 4-5), 7:10 p.m. L.A. Angels (Santiago 7-4) at L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw 8-6), 9:10 p.m. SATURDAY’S GAMES L.A. Angels at L.A. Dodgers, 3:05 p.m. Arizona at Houston, 6:10 p.m. San Francisco at Texas, 7:05 p.m.
LEAGUE LEADERS AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING-MiCabrera, Detroit, .350; Kipnis, Cleveland, .333; Fielder, Texas, .330; JIglesias, Detroit, .318; Bogaerts, Boston, .316; Hosmer, Kansas City, .315; LCain, Kansas City, .313. RUNS-Trout, Los Angeles, 75; Dozier, Minnesota, 74; Gardner, New York, 72; Donaldson, Toronto, 71; Kipnis, Cleveland, 66; JMartinez, Detroit, 65; LCain, Kansas City, 64. RBI-KMorales, Kansas City, 70; CDavis, Baltimore, 69; Donaldson, Toronto, 69; Bautista, Toronto, 68. HITS-Kipnis, Cleveland, 131; Fielder, Texas, 126; NCruz, Seattle, 119; Bogaerts, Boston, 118. HOME RUNS-Trout, Los Angeles, 31; Pujols, Los Angeles, 30; JMartinez, Detroit, 27. PITCHING-Keuchel, Houston, 12-5; McHugh, Houston, 12-5; FHernandez, Seattle, 12-6; Gray, Oakland, 11-4; Lewis, Texas, 11-4.
NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTING-Goldschmidt, Arizona, .347; Harper, Washington, .335; DGordon, Miami, .334; GParra, Milwaukee, .328; LeMahieu, Colorado, .325; Posey, San Francisco, .325; YEscobar, Washington, .314. RUNS-Harper, Washington, 68; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 67; Pollock, Arizona, 67; Fowler, Chicago, 65. RBI-Arenado, Colorado, 78; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 77; Harper, Washington, 68. HITS-Goldschmidt, Arizona, 124; DGordon, Miami, 124; LeMahieu, Colorado, 118; Pollock, Arizona, 117. HOME RUNS-Harper, Washington, 29; Frazier, Cincinnati, 27; Stanton, Miami, 27. PITCHING-GCole, Pittsburgh, 14-4; Wacha, St. Louis, 11-4; CMartinez, St. Louis, 11-4; Heston, San Francisco, 11-5; Bumgarner, San Francisco, 11-5; Arrieta, Chicago, 11-6.
Friday, July 31, 2015
MAJOR-LEAGUE ROUNDUP
Upton powers Padres The Associated Press
National League Padres 8, Mets 7 New York — Justin Upton hit a three-run homer through a driving rain with two outs in the ninth inning, and San Diego stunned New York on Thursday as the Padres overcame a six-run deficit during a game delayed nearly four hours by two storms. With a darkening sky overhead, Jeurys Familia entered with a 7-5 lead and recorded two quick outs in the ninth before a torrential downpour stopped play. Frustrated, the Mets closer stood on the mound as the other players cleared the field. When play resumed 44 minutes later, Derrick Norris fell behind 0-2 before singling for his career-high fifth hit. Matt Kemp singled as the rain began again and Upton, in what could be his final at-bat with the Padres, sent the first pitch soaring to right-center for San Diego’s first lead. San Diego New York ab r h bi ab r h bi UptnJr cf 4 2 1 0 Grndrs rf 4 2 2 3 DeNrrs 1b-c 5 2 5 4 Tejada ss 5 0 1 1 Kemp rf 5 1 2 1 DnMrp 2b 4 0 2 1 Upton lf 5 1 1 3 Duda 1b 4 0 0 0 Solarte 3b 5 0 1 0 Uribe 3b 4 1 1 1 Gyorko 2b 4 0 2 0 Confort lf 3 1 0 0 Hedges c 2 0 0 0 Plawck c 4 1 1 0 Alonso ph-1b 2 1 1 0 Niese p 2 1 0 0 Barmes ss 2 0 0 0 Parnell p 0 0 0 0 Amarst ph-ss 2 0 0 0 Robles p 0 0 0 0 Cashnr p 2 0 0 0 Clipprd p 0 0 0 0 Kelley p 0 0 0 0 KJhnsn ph 1 0 0 0 Wallac ph 0 1 0 0 Famili p 0 0 0 0 Maurer p 0 0 0 0 Lagars cf 2 1 0 1 Mateo p 0 0 0 0 Almont ph 1 0 0 0 Kimrel p 0 0 0 0 Totals 39 8 13 8 Totals 33 7 7 7 San Diego 000 001 403—8 New York 100 033 000—7 E-Barmes (6), De.Norris (5). DP-New York 1. LOBSan Diego 6, New York 5. 2B-Gyorko (9), Alonso (12), Granderson (19), Dan.Murphy (18). HR-De.Norris (12), Upton (18), Granderson (16), Uribe (9). S-Niese. SF-Dan.Murphy, Lagares. IP H R ER BB SO San Diego Cashner 51⁄3 6 7 5 2 3 2⁄3 Kelley 1 0 0 1 0 Maurer 1 0 0 0 0 1 Mateo W,1-0 1 0 0 0 0 2 Kimbrel S,30-31 1 0 0 0 0 1 New York Niese 6 6 1 1 1 6 1⁄3 Parnell 2 3 3 1 0 2⁄3 Robles 1 1 1 0 0 Clippard H,1 1 1 0 0 0 0 Familia L,2-1 BS,5-32 1 3 3 3 0 0 T-2:46. A-35,604 (41,922).
Nationals 1, Marlins 0 Miami — Max Scherzer scattered three hits over seven innings, and Jonathan Papelbon earned his first save for Washington. Washington Miami ab r h bi ab r h bi Rendon 2b 4 0 0 0 DGordn 2b 3 0 0 0 YEscor 3b 4 0 0 0 ISuzuki rf 3 0 0 0 Harper rf 3 0 1 0 Yelich cf-lf 4 0 2 0 CRonsn lf 3 0 0 0 McGeh 1b 3 0 1 0 Werth ph-lf 1 0 0 0 Rojas pr 0 0 0 0 Zmrmn 1b 4 1 2 1 Dunn p 0 0 0 0 Dsmnd ss 4 0 0 0 ARams p 0 0 0 0 WRams c 4 0 0 0 Morse ph 1 0 0 0 MTaylr cf 2 0 2 0 Prado 3b 3 0 0 0 Scherzr p 2 0 0 0 Dietrch lf 1 0 0 0 Storen p 0 0 0 0 BMorrs p 0 0 0 0 Papeln p 0 0 0 0 Bour ph-1b 1 0 0 0 Hchvrr ss 3 0 0 0 Mathis c 2 0 0 0 Realmt ph-c 1 0 0 0 Haren p 1 0 0 0 Gillespi ph-cf 1 0 0 0 Totals 31 1 5 1 Totals 27 0 3 0 Washington 010 000 000—1 Miami 000 000 000—0 DP-Washington 2. LOB-Washington 6, Miami 4. 2B-Harper (24), Zimmerman (14). HR-Zimmerman (6). SB-M.Taylor (12), Yelich (10). S-Scherzer, D.Gordon. IP H R ER BB SO Washington Scherzer W,11-8 7 3 0 0 3 6 Storen H,1 1 0 0 0 0 2 Papelbon S,18-18 1 0 0 0 0 1 Miami Haren L,7-7 6 4 1 1 2 4 B.Morris 1 1 0 0 0 0 Dunn 1 0 0 0 0 1 A.Ramos 1 0 0 0 0 2 WP-Scherzer. T-2:38. A-30,068 (37,442).
Phillies 4, Braves 1 Philadelphia — Domonic Brown homered and Aaron Harang snapped his losing streak at eight starts, leading Philadelphia. Atlanta Philadelphia ab r h bi ab r h bi Markks rf 4 1 2 0 Revere lf 4 0 1 0 Maybin cf 5 0 2 0 CHrndz 2b 3 1 2 0 FFrmn 1b 5 0 1 0 Franco 3b 4 0 1 0 AdGarc lf 4 0 0 0 Howard 1b 3 0 1 1 Przyns c 4 0 2 1 OHerrr cf 4 1 1 0 CJhnsn 3b 4 0 1 0 Galvis ss 4 1 2 0 JPetrsn 2b 4 0 1 0 DBrwn rf 4 1 2 1 ASmns ss 4 0 1 0 Ruiz c 4 0 1 2 SMiller p 2 0 1 0 Harang p 2 0 1 0 Detwilr p 0 0 0 0 Araujo p 0 0 0 0 Brighm p 0 0 0 0 Asche ph 1 0 0 0 EPerez ph 1 0 1 0 JGomz p 0 0 0 0 LuGarc p 0 0 0 0 Giles p 0 0 0 0 Totals 37 1 12 1 Totals 33 4 12 4 Atlanta 001 000 000—1 Philadelphia 000 211 00x—4 DP-Atlanta 1, Philadelphia 1. LOB-Atlanta 12, Philadelphia 7. HR-D.Brown (1). SB-C.Hernandez (15). S-S.Miller, C.Hernandez. IP H R ER BB SO Atlanta S.Miller L,5-8 6 11 4 4 1 4 Detwiler 12⁄3 1 0 0 0 2 1⁄3 Brigham 0 0 0 0 0 Philadelphia Harang W,5-11 5 9 1 1 1 3 Araujo H,1 1 0 0 0 0 2 J.Gomez H,5 1 1 0 0 1 0 Lu.Garcia H,11 1 0 0 0 0 0 Giles S,2-5 1 2 0 0 0 2 T-2:59. A-21,706 (43,651).
Kathy Willens/AP Photo
AS RAIN FALLS, SAN DIEGO’S Justin Upton connects for a three-run, ninth-inning home run against the Mets on Thursday in New York. The Padres won, 9-8 Reds 15, Pirates 5 Cincinnati — Brandon Phillips hit a pair of threerun homers and drove in a career-high seven runs, powering the Reds to a victory that kept Pittsburgh winless in Cincinnati this season. Pittsburgh Cincinnati ab r h bi ab r h bi GPolnc rf 4 1 2 0 Phillips 2b 5 2 4 7 SMarte lf 4 1 2 0 Matths p 0 0 0 0 McCtch cf 5 2 3 1 Bourgs ph 0 0 0 1 ArRmr 3b 5 0 2 2 Sampsn p 0 0 0 0 Kang ss 2 0 0 0 Villarrl p 0 0 0 0 SRdrgz ph-ss 3 0 1 0 DJssJr 3b 5 2 3 0 Cervelli c 1 0 0 0 Votto 1b 4 3 3 0 Stewart ph-c 1 0 0 1 Byrd lf 6 1 3 3 PAlvrz 1b 3 1 1 1 Bruce rf 4 1 1 3 Bastrd p 0 0 0 0 Suarez ss 5 0 1 0 Caminr p 0 0 0 0 Brnhrt c 5 1 0 0 Decker ph-p 1 0 0 0 Holmrg p 3 1 1 0 NWalkr 2b 1 0 0 0 Schmkr ph-2b 1 1 1 0 Flormn ph-2b 2 0 0 0 BHmltn cf 5 3 2 1 Burnett p 1 0 0 0 Ishikaw 1b 2 0 0 0 Totals 35 5 11 5 Totals 43 15 19 15 Pittsburgh 010 001 300— 5 Cincinnati 301 163 10x—15 E-P.Alvarez (16). DP-Cincinnati 1. LOB-Pittsburgh 9, Cincinnati 13. 2B-G.Polanco (23), Ar.Ramirez (20), Votto (20), Byrd (10), Bruce (23). HR-P.Alvarez (15), Phillips 2 (7), Byrd (17). SB-Phillips 2 (13), B.Hamilton 2 (49). S-Burnett. SF-Stewart, Bruce. IP H R ER BB SO Pittsburgh Burnett L,8-5 41⁄3 10 8 7 2 4 D.Guerra 11⁄3 7 6 6 1 2 Bastardo 1 0 1 1 3 0 1⁄3 Caminero 0 0 0 0 0 Decker 1 2 0 0 0 0 Cincinnati Holmberg W,1-0 6 5 2 2 3 4 Mattheus 1 4 3 3 0 2 Sampson 1 0 0 0 0 2 Villarreal 1 2 0 0 0 0 HBP-by Burnett (Barnhart), by Bastardo (Bruce), by Mattheus (S.Marte). WP-D.Guerra, Bastardo. T-3:37. A-35,715 (42,319).
Cardinals 9, Rockies 8 St. Louis — Matt Carpenter hit a pair of home runs, and Greg Garcia’s bases-loaded walk capped a three-run rally in the ninth inning. Colorado St. Louis ab r h bi ab r h bi Blckmn cf 4 1 2 0 MCrpnt 3b-1b 5 4 4 4 Reyes ss 4 1 1 1 Grichk cf 4 1 1 0 CGnzlz rf 4 1 2 0 Wong 2b 4 1 2 1 Arenad 3b 5 0 1 1 JhPerlt ss 4 1 2 2 Dickrsn lf 3 0 1 1 Kozma pr 0 0 0 0 Betncrt p 0 0 0 0 Heywrd rf 4 0 2 1 Stubbs ph 1 0 1 0 Molina c 4 0 1 0 Fridrch p 0 0 0 0 Rynlds 1b 3 0 0 0 Descals ph 1 0 0 0 Cishek p 0 0 0 0 Kahnle p 0 0 0 0 Siegrist p 0 0 0 0 Logan p 0 0 0 0 Soclvch p 0 0 0 0 Axford p 0 0 0 0 GGarci ph-3b 1 0 0 1 LeMahi 2b 4 1 3 0 Pisctty lf 4 1 2 0 Paulsn 1b 3 0 0 0 CMrtnz p 2 1 0 0 Hundly c 5 2 2 2 Maness p 0 0 0 0 Rusin p 2 1 2 2 Moss ph-1b 2 0 0 0 BBarns ph-lf 3 1 1 0 Villanv p 0 0 0 0 Totals 39 8 16 7 Totals 37 9 14 9 Colorado 100 311 020—8 St. Louis 130 020 003—9 One out when winning run scored. E-Siegrist 2 (3), M.Carpenter (10). DP-St. Louis 3. LOB-Colorado 10, St. Louis 9. 2B-Blackmon (18), Arenado (26), Hundley (16), M.Carpenter (25), Grichuk (18), Piscotty (2). 3B-Heyward (2). HR-Hundley (8), Rusin (1), M.Carpenter 2 (12). SB-LeMahieu (13). CS-Blackmon 2 (10), Wong (6). S-Blackmon. SF-Reyes. IP H R ER BB SO Colorado Rusin 5 10 6 6 0 5 Betancourt 1 1 0 0 0 0 Friedrich 1 0 0 0 1 0 2 Kahnle H,9 ⁄3 0 0 0 1 0 1⁄3 Logan H,19 1 1 1 0 1 Axford L,3-5 BS,5-21 1⁄3 2 2 2 3 0 St. Louis C.Martinez 5 10 5 5 0 6 Maness BS,3-6 1 2 1 1 1 1 Cishek 1 1 0 0 1 1 1⁄3 Siegrist 2 2 2 0 0 2⁄3 Socolovich 0 0 0 0 0 Villanueva W,4-3 1 1 0 0 0 0 Logan pitched to 1 batter in the 9th. T-3:50. A-43,518 (45,399).
American League Tigers 9, Orioles 8 Baltimore — Yoenis Cespedes homered and drove in three runs, and the Detroit beat Baltimore. Mired in fourth place in the AL Central, Detroit dealt starter David Price to Toronto and closer Joakim Soria to Pittsburgh the day before the non-waiver trade deadline. Detroit Baltimore ab r h bi ab r h bi Kinsler 2b 5 1 3 1 MMchd 3b 5 1 1 1 JIglesis ss 5 3 3 0 Reimld lf 4 1 0 0 Cespds lf 5 2 3 3 A.Jones cf 3 3 1 2 VMrtnz dh 4 0 0 0 C.Davis rf 4 1 2 4 JMrtnz rf 5 0 2 3 Pareds dh 3 0 1 0 Cstllns 3b 2 1 0 0 Wieters dh 2 0 2 1 Avila 1b 1 0 0 0 Lough pr 0 0 0 0 JMcCn c 5 1 2 0 JHardy ss 5 0 1 0 Romine 1b-3b 3 0 1 0 Schoop 2b 4 1 1 0 RDavis cf 4 1 2 2 Parmel 1b 4 0 1 0 Gose cf 0 0 0 0 Joseph c 3 1 0 0 Totals 39 9 16 9 Totals 37 8 10 8 Detroit 200 502 000—9 Baltimore 000 202 310—8 DP-Baltimore 1. LOB-Detroit 7, Baltimore 7. 2B-J.Iglesias (15), J.Martinez 2 (18). 3B-R.Davis (8). HR-Cespedes (18), A.Jones (16), C.Davis (25). S-Romine. IP H R ER BB SO Detroit Simon W,10-6 52⁄3 2 4 4 3 1 Krol 0 1 0 0 0 0 Greene 1 3 3 3 1 2 B.Hardy 0 2 0 0 0 0 Alburquerque H,7 2⁄3 1 1 1 1 2 A.Wilson S,1-2 12⁄3 1 0 0 0 1 Baltimore Mi.Gonzalez L,9-7 31⁄3 10 5 5 1 1 B.Norris 22⁄3 6 4 4 2 2 Tom.Hunter 2 0 0 0 0 1 O’Day 1 0 0 0 0 2 Krol pitched to 1 batter in the 6th. B.Hardy pitched to 2 batters in the 7th. WP-A.Wilson. T-3:36. A-30,136 (45,971).
Seattle Minnesota ab r h bi ab r h bi AJcksn cf 4 2 2 2 Dozier 2b 4 1 1 1 Seager 3b 5 1 1 0 Hicks cf 4 2 3 1 N.Cruz rf 5 0 1 0 Mauer 1b 5 0 1 1 S.Smith lf 4 1 1 2 Sano 3b 4 1 1 0 Gutirrz dh 4 0 2 0 TrHntr rf 5 1 1 1 Trumo 1b 4 0 2 1 ERosar lf 5 3 3 3 BMiller ss 3 0 0 0 EdEscr dh 5 0 0 1 CTaylr 2b 4 1 1 0 KSuzuk c 4 0 1 0 Zunino c 4 0 1 0 JPolnc ss 3 1 2 1 Totals 37 5 11 5 Totals 39 9 13 9 Seattle 201 200 000—5 Minnesota 511 010 10x—9 E-Happ (2), J.Polanco (2). DP-Minnesota 1. LOB-Seattle 7, Minnesota 10. 2B_A.Jackson (13), Gutierrez (4), C.Taylor (3), Zunino (11), E.Rosario (13). 3B-E.Rosario (6). HR-A.Jackson (6), S.Smith (9), Dozier (22), Hicks (5), E.Rosario (5). SB-Hicks (9), J.Polanco (1). IP H R ER BB SO Seattle Happ L,4-6 31⁄3 9 7 6 1 2 Wilhelmsen 11⁄3 1 1 1 2 2 Beimel 11⁄3 1 0 0 0 0 D.Rollins 1 2 1 1 1 1 Lowe 1 0 0 0 0 1 Minnesota P.Hughes W,10-6 5 10 5 5 0 5 Fien H,11 2 0 0 0 0 1 May 1 1 0 0 1 2 Perkins 1 0 0 0 1 0 T-3:08. A-30,534 (39,021).
Rangers 7, Yankees 6 Arlington, Texas — Josh Hamilton delivered a game-ending RBI single with two outs in the ninth inning, and Texas beat AL East-leading New York. Hamilton also had a three-run homer for the Rangers, who scored the winning run after a wild ninth to split the fourgame series. Delino DeShields drew a leadoff walk in the ninth off Nick Goody (0-1), who was making his majorleague debut. Yankees closer Andrew Miller got Elvis Andrus out on a deep fly ball before DeShields became the second out when he was Red Sox 8, White Sox 2 hit on the foot by Leonys Boston — Xander Bo- Martin’s hard shot while gaerts and David Ortiz running the bases. each had three hits, and Boston beat Chris Sale New York Texas ab r h bi ab r h bi and the White Sox, snap- Ellsury cf 4 1 1 0 DShlds cf-lf 4 1 2 0 ping Chicago’s seven- Gardnr lf 4 0 0 1 Andrus ss 5 1 3 0 ARdrgz dh 4 0 1 0 Fielder 1b 4 0 0 1 game winning streak. CYoung pr-dh 0 0 0 0 LMartn pr-cf 1 1 1 0 4 3 3 2 Beltre 3b 3 0 0 0 Knuckleballer Steven Teixeir 1b c 5 2 2 2 JHmltn dh 4 1 2 4 Wright (4-4) pitched sev- BMcCn Beltran rf 4 0 1 0 Rua lf 3 1 2 1 Headly 3b 4 0 1 1 Morlnd ph-1b 1 0 0 0 en effective innings. Gregrs ss 3 0 1 0 Choo rf 3 1 1 1 Chicago Boston ab r h bi ab r h bi Eaton cf 3 1 2 0 B.Holt 2b 5 1 1 2 Saladin 3b 4 0 1 0 Bogarts ss 4 2 3 1 MeCarr lf 3 0 0 0 HRmrz lf 5 0 1 1 Abreu 1b 4 1 1 2 Ortiz dh 3 0 3 2 LaRoch dh 4 0 0 0 Napoli 1b 3 0 0 0 AlRmrz ss 4 0 2 0 RCastll rf 4 2 2 1 Shuck rf 4 0 1 0 Sandovl 3b 2 0 0 0 Flowrs c 3 0 0 0 Rutledg 3b 1 1 0 0 LeGarc ph 1 0 0 0 Swihart c 4 1 2 0 CSnchz 2b 4 0 0 0 BrdlyJr cf 3 1 1 1 Totals 34 2 7 2 Totals 34 8 13 8 Chicago 200 000 000—2 Boston 100 024 10x—8 LOB-Chicago 7, Boston 7. 2B-Al.Ramirez (20), Ortiz (18). HR-Abreu (17), R.Castillo (2). SB-Eaton (8), Bogaerts (5). SF-Bogaerts. IP H R ER BB SO Chicago Sale L,9-6 5 12 7 7 1 7 M.Albers 2 1 1 1 1 2 Da.Jennings 1 0 0 0 0 1 Boston S.Wright W,4-4 7 6 2 2 2 8 Ross Jr. 1 0 0 0 0 2 Tazawa 1 1 0 0 0 1 Sale pitched to 5 batters in the 6th. HBP-by Sale (Bradley Jr., Rutledge). WP-Sale. T-2:40. A-36,215 (37,673).
Astros 3, Angels 0 Houston — Jason CasCubs 5, Brewers 2 tro hit a three-run homer Milwaukee — Anthowith two outs in the ninth ny Rizzo hit a three-run inning to give Houston a homer with two out in victory and a three-game the eighth inning. sweep of Los Angeles. The win moves firstChicago Milwaukee ab r h bi ab r h bi place Houston two games Fowler cf 4 1 2 0 GParra cf 4 1 2 0 Schwrr lf-c 5 0 1 1 Lucroy c 4 1 1 1 ahead of the Angels in the Coghln 3b-lf 3 0 0 0 Braun rf 3 0 1 1 AL West. Denorfi ph-lf 2 0 0 0 Lind 1b 4 0 0 0 Rizzo 1b 4 1 3 3 KDavis lf 3 0 0 0 Soler rf 4 0 0 0 Gennett 2b 4 0 1 0 SCastro ss 4 1 1 0 Segura ss 4 0 0 0 D.Ross c 1 0 0 0 HPerez 3b 3 0 1 0 Soriano p 0 0 0 0 Nelson p 2 0 0 0 Strop p 0 0 0 0 SPetrsn ph 1 0 0 0 JHerrr ph 1 0 1 0 Jeffrss p 0 0 0 0 HRndn p 0 0 0 0 WSmith p 0 0 0 0 Arrieta p 1 0 0 0 Blazek p 0 0 0 0 Bryant ph-3b 1 0 0 1 ARussll 2b 4 2 1 0 Totals 34 5 9 5 Totals 32 2 6 2 Chicago 000 000 032—5 Milwaukee 002 000 000—2 E-Schwarber (3). LOB-Chicago 7, Milwaukee 6. 2B-Rizzo (26), Lucroy (12). HR-Rizzo (18). SB-G.Parra 2 (9), H.Perez (1). CS-Braun (2). S-Arrieta. SF-Bryant. IP H R ER BB SO Chicago Arrieta 6 5 2 2 3 6 Soriano W,2-0 1 1 0 0 0 1 Strop H,15 1 0 0 0 0 1 H.Rondon S,14-17 1 0 0 0 0 0 Milwaukee Nelson 7 2 0 0 3 8 Jeffress 0 2 2 2 0 0 W.Smith L,4-2 BS,4-4 2-3 1 1 1 0 1 Blazek 1 1-3 4 2 2 0 1 Jeffress pitched to 2 batters in the 8th. WP-Arrieta, Nelson, Blazek. T-3:07. A-36,306 (41,900).
Twins 9, Mariners 5 Minneapolis — Eddie Rosario finished a single shy of the cycle and drove in three runs to help Minnesota snap a four-game slide. Aaron Hicks and Brian Dozier also homered for the Twins, who had lost 10 of their previous 12 games. Phil Hughes (106) gave up five runs on 10 hits and struck out five in five innings and Joe Mauer extended his hitting streak to 11 games.
Los Angeles Houston ab r h bi ab r h bi Victorn lf 3 0 0 0 Altuve 2b 3 0 0 0 Calhon rf 4 0 1 0 Tucker lf 4 0 2 0 Trout cf 3 0 0 0 Correa ss 4 0 1 0 Pujols 1b 4 0 0 0 Valuen 1b 3 0 0 0 Aybar ss 4 0 1 0 Lowrie 3b 3 1 0 0 Cron dh 4 0 0 0 ClRsms rf 4 0 1 0 Iannett c 2 0 0 0 Carter dh 2 0 0 0 Giavtll 2b 3 0 1 0 MGnzlz ph-dh 2 1 1 0 Fthrstn 3b 2 0 0 0 JCastro c 4 1 1 3 Mrsnck cf 3 0 0 0 Totals 29 0 3 0 Totals 32 3 6 3 Los Angeles 000 000 000—0 Houston 000 000 003—3 Two outs when winning run scored. E-Aybar (10). DP-Los Angeles 1. LOB-Los Angeles 6, Houston 6. HR-J.Castro (8). S-Featherston. IP H R ER BB SO Los Angeles Shoemaker 7 3 0 0 1 7 J.Smith 1 1 0 0 0 0 2⁄3 J.Alvarez L,2-2 0 1 1 1 1 Salas 0 2 2 2 0 0 Houston Kazmir 72⁄3 3 0 0 3 5 1⁄3 Neshek 0 0 0 0 1 Gregerson W,4-1 1 0 0 0 0 1 HBP-by Shoemaker (Altuve). WP-Kazmir. T-3:02. A-27,598 (41,574).
Drew 2b 4 0 1 0 Rosales 2b 3 0 0 0 Odor ph-2b 1 0 0 0 Chirins c 3 1 1 0 Totals 36 6 11 6 Totals 35 7 12 7 New York 302 000 100—6 Texas 310 100 101—7 Two outs when winning run scored. DP-New York 3, Texas 1. LOB-New York 9, Texas 8. 3B-Ellsbury (1). HR-Teixeira 2 (26), B.McCann (16), J.Hamilton (4), Rua (4), Choo (13). SB-Andrus (11). SF-Gardner. IP H R ER BB SO New York Sabathia 5 9 5 5 1 3 Ju.Wilson 11⁄3 0 1 1 1 2 Betances BS,3-10 11⁄3 1 0 0 1 3 1⁄3 Goody L,0-1 0 1 1 1 1 2⁄3 A.Miller 2 0 0 1 0 Texas Gallardo 6 8 5 5 2 1 Kela 1 1 1 1 0 3 S.Freeman 1 2 0 0 1 1 Sh.Tolleson W,3-2 1 0 0 0 1 1 Sabathia pitched to 1 batter in the 6th. Goody pitched to 1 batter in the 9th. HBP-by Sabathia (Choo), by S.Freeman (Ellsbury). WP-Ju.Wilson. T-3:31. A-34,407 (48,114).
Indians 3, Athletics 1 Oakland, Calif. — Carlos Carrasco threw a twohitter, Carlos Santana hit a two-run homer, and Cleveland beat Oakland. Francisco Lindor had two hits for the Indians, who won their second straight following a sixgame losing streak. Josh Reddick doubled in a first-inning run for the A’s, who have lost six of their last seven. Cleveland Oakland ab r h bi ab r h bi Kipnis 2b 4 0 1 0 Burns cf 4 1 1 0 Lindor ss 4 1 2 0 Fuld lf 4 0 0 0 Brantly lf 4 1 1 0 Reddck rf 4 0 1 1 CSantn 1b 3 1 1 2 I.Davis 1b 3 0 0 0 YGoms c 3 0 0 0 Lawrie 3b 2 0 0 0 Chsnhll dh 3 0 0 0 Vogt c 3 0 0 0 Urshela 3b 3 0 1 0 BButler dh 3 0 0 0 Bourn cf 3 0 1 0 Sogard 2b 3 0 0 0 T.Holt rf 3 0 0 0 Semien ss 3 0 0 0 Totals 30 3 7 2 Totals 29 1 2 1 Cleveland 300 000 000—3 Oakland 100 000 000—1 E-Kipnis (5), Fuld (3), Vogt (5). DP-Cleveland 1, Oakland 1. LOB-Cleveland 1, Oakland 2. 2B-Brantley (30), Reddick (17). HR-C.Santana (12). SB-Lindor (2), Burns (21). CS-Kipnis (7), Urshela (1), Bourn (5). IP H R ER BB SO Cleveland Carrasco W,11-8 9 2 1 1 1 7 Oakland Bassitt L,0-4 7 6 3 3 1 6 1⁄3 R.Alvarez 1 0 0 0 0 Abad 12⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 T-2:15. A-13,173 (35,067).
Friday, July 31, 2015
CLASSIFIEDS
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
70 Peterson Rd
Folks Rd
17
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W 6th St
05
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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!!! Friday July 31 8 am to 5 pm Saturday August 1 8 am – 3 pm 2311 Manchester
Holiday , Salesman Samples, radios, clocks, Panasonic 5 CD stereo, glassware,baskets, vases, picture frames, CD’s and much more. 03
Moving-Garage Sale 2828 Meadow Dr. Fri, July 31 & Sat. Aug 1
7:00 am - 1:00 pm
Household & Decor items~ Tools ~ Collectibles; Red Wing, Watt, Royal Copley, Hull, Delft. Old mantle clock, Swift Milk Can, Banks, Shepard Hooks, Trellis, PR Sawhorses, Small Bike, Books, LP Albums, CDs, KU T-Shirts & Sweatshirts, Shoes, Belts, purses, children’s purses, clothing & much more. 08
3502 W. 8th Ct. FRI-SUN, JULY 31- AUG 2 8AM-3:30PM MOVING OUT OF STATEDUE TO HEALTH! 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!! 03
DOWNSIZING 2812 Wildflower Dr. Lawrence Friday, July 31 Saturday, August 1 8:00 am - 4:00 pm Mostly antiques; kitchen cabinet, pie safe, pump organ, seed dryer, herb drying rack, dresser, rockers, bin, chairs, table, cast iron bell, roll top desk, high chair, rugs, etc. 03
Gotta Go Sale! 1116 SOMERSET CIR.
Saturday, August 1st 8 am - 1pm Full and queen comforter sets, wicker bassinet, teen clothing, Pier 1 wicker chaise, dorm chair, backpacks, FSHS cheer uniforms, radio flyer wagon, toys, home decor, small TV/DVD player, miscellaneous goodies 05
10
TWO HOUSES GARAGE SALE
2512 & 2514 Crestline Pl Lawrence Sat, Aug 1. 8:00am to 2:00pm Near Dicks Sporting Goods and Holcom Park, Had so much fun the last time, we are going to have another one! Daughter is moving between places, so she has items to sell! More family members want to sell some stuff! So that means a lot more items! Beautiful full or queen headboard and footboard with bed frame, couch, coffee tables, wood TV armoire, old Kimball upright piano, oak nightstand, standing wood mirror, dresser, antique style chairs, table and chairs, office chair, wood shelf, food saver, wicker hamper and basket set, Miche purse sets (classic and mini sizes with lots of shells), assorted purses, men’s clothes, women’s clothes, kids clothes, bicycles, framed wall pictures, sunflower decorations, ceramic Longaberger items, and much more!!!!!!
Garage Sale 09 1905 Crossgate Dr Saturday Aug. 1st THREE FAMILY 8 AM to ? GARAGE SALE Nice office chair, antique Friday, July 31 dresser, antique radio, old and stamps, 50’s pop sheet Saturday, August 1 music, children’s games, 8 am - noon Children’s DVD’s, rug run1211 W 29th Court ner, ladders, lawn seeder, kitchen items, directors Four piece bedroom set chair, throw rugs, deck (black & green), china bench and much more. cabinet, glassware & barware, picture frames, Need to sell your car? coolers, wedding decoraPlace your ad at tions, children’s bible, sunflowerclassifieds.com misc kitchen supples, dirt or email devil hand vac, home declassifieds@ljworld.com cor, lots of misc!
15
16 N 1250 Rd
Lawrence 08
09
08
Haskell Ave
01
59
07
Louisiana St
GARAGE SALE LOCATOR Lawrence
40
24
Lawrence 10
Lawrence 16
808 Mississippi St Saturday, Aug 1
HUGE GARAGE SALE! 1909 E. 24th Terr
Lawrence 18
NEIGHBORHOOD GARAGE SALE Hutton Farms West Saturday, August 1 8 am - 1 pm
Lawrence 8am- 1pm Sat., Aug 1, 7am- 1 pm (Garage off the alley between Many things for athletes & Mississippi & Indianacrafters. Lots of golf balls & blue garage) (Located at NE corner Lawn furniture, baby items, clubs. Golf supplies. Tool of roundabout at Peterson Wheelbarcoffee table, Schwinn (*like boxes & tools. Rd & Monterey Way) new) bike trailer to pull chil- rows, LOTS of fabric; cross dren in. Kitchen items, elec- stitch patterns & kits, linens. tric fireplace, wood dining Chairs, recliner, vaccum, din- 18 Garage Sale room table. Antiques dishes ing room table & chairs, 4131 Doolittle Dr for cooking and eating on. beautiful bookcases, enter(Off 6th & Eldridge OR Rival deep fat fryer. Wood tainment center with glass Trail & Eldridge, turn on ward robe, rocking chair, shelves, photo albums, small appliances, kitchenwares, Seele Way, then Seele large electric yard vacuum, trees, decoraDrive and to Doolittle electric griddle, microwave, Christmas Drive) wicker loveseat and wicker tions, board games & books, chair (cheap!), walnut lots of misc. July 31 & Aug 1 dresser with mirror, large 7:30a - 4:00p 16 stained glass piece. Don’t Cabela’s heavy duty fireTLC ESTATE TAG SALE miss this garage sale! Everyplace tool set, Skill saw, 2717 Harper thing must go! Professional Choice (South on Haskell to 27th, east Trailer Door caddy large 11 6 blocks to Harper, Prairie size (never used), Estate Sale Park Center) Cabela’s mallard will coat 505 Sandpiper Dr. rack (new), one of a kind Saturday, August 1, hand painted children’s 7am - 1pm thinking chairs, painted Priced to sell deco conversation stools, small crocks, pierced earItems in garage and inside. Friday, July 31st, 8 am- 4pm rings, (3) bird cages, Electric range, tools, sofa, Saturday, Aug 1, 8 am - Noon chairs, bedroom set (5 Tools, Tools & MORE TOOLSpiece), kitchen table and hand & power! TORO WHEEL chairs, coffee table, comHORSE 16-44 HXL riding lawn puter table, kitchen items, mower, JOHN DEERE snow sewing supplies, golf balls, blower, LAWNBOY self- propatio table, mason jars, pelled lawn mower, MTD front kerosene heater, electric tine tiller, BLUEBIRD lawn space heaters, toaster comber, CRAFTSMAN 3.5 HP oven, electric drill, 8-track edger, tall wooden ladder, tapes, decorative glassNEW ENGLAND 20 G Partner ware, air compressor, cirrifle, Daisy BB gun, fishing cular saw, and much, poles, ramps, car jacks, HARmuch, more. LEY DAVIDSON mats, bird (First published in the baths, cement planters, Lawrence Daily Journal12 Queen bed set w/ triple World July 24, 2015) Big, Clean Sale dresser/ mirror/ nightstands, *DOWNSIZING* IN THE DISTRICT COURT CD player, radio, dining table OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, 612 Lincoln Ct w/ padded chairs, tables, KANSAS Fri., July 31 & Sat. Aug 1 lamps, LAZY BOY double reCIVIL DEPARTMENT cliner, single recliner, BEAU7:00 am - 2:00 pm TIFUL OAK ROLLTOP DESK, Collectibles, bed, stampBank of America, N.A. MAYTAG refrigerator, ing accessories & supPlaintiff, MAYTAG washer & dryer! plies, housewaresMen’s clothing (regular & all Something for vs. weather!) every room! CASH & CARRY! Kristi L. Cunningham, Zeke 13 M. Cunningham, Jane Doe, 17 Junker Jo Jr. Yard Sale Apartment Moving Sale John Doe, City of Law1119 Delaware St 550 Stoneridge Dr rence, Douglas County, Friday July 31st Apt C306 Kansas, and Secretary of Opens at 8 AM Wednesday, Thursday Housing and Urban DevelSaturday August 1st and Friday opment, et al., 8 AM to Noon 8 AM to 5 PM each day Defendants Mission style oak desk, Leather Couch, 2 Leather Case No. 15CV252 Immigrants trunk, cute recliners - one oversized, Court No. 3 cowboy boots, jewelry, bedroom set. farm table, several dress- Call for info: 785-393-4896 Title to Real Estate ers, primitive old coffee 17 Involved bin, antiques, furniture, AWESOME Pursuant to K.S.A. §60 stained glass window, old BACK TO SCHOOL SALE metal lawn chairs, cook 232 Earhart Circle NOTICE OF SUIT books, quilts, nice quality Lawrence purses, porch swing, and a Sat, Aug 1. 7am- 11am STATE OF KANSAS to the Grandfather clock. Old of paperback above named Defendants junk is now cute stuff, an Hundreds and hardcover books and The Unknown Heirs, adorable sale. from popular authors- executors, devisees, truseasy reader through teen tees, creditors, and asGarage Sale Deadline chapter book level! signs of any deceased deFor the weekly Teacher’s learning cen- fendants; the unknown community newspapers ters, activity books, tons spouses of any defendor to get the full of arts and crafts sup- ants; the unknown officWednesday- Saturday plies, including some ers, successors, trustees, run included in your artist-quality materials. creditors and assigns of package place your ad All items in excellent con- any defendants that are by 3:00PM on Monday dition and priced to sell!
Lawrence
Lawrence
Baldwin City
Garage Sale Children’s toys, books, GARAGE SALE YOU WON’T 1808 W 21st St new ironing board cover, WANT TO MISS! Fri. July 31st & porcelain Santa heads for 1118 N 300 RD HWY 56 Sat. Aug 1st crafts, new shower curBaldwin City 8AM-2PM tain, new shower caddy, (1.5 MI WEST OF THE 59-56 pivot point adjustable Avon products, RP800 pool JUNCTION ON HWY 56) Christmas tree stand for filter, books (hardback, Sat, Aug 1. 8AM - 2PM real evergreen trees, soft cover, & kids), cook wood / burlap magazine books and cooking magaFLAT SCREEN TV’S, WINDOWS 7 rack, decorative pillows, zines, kitchen ware, jigDELL LAPTOP, HP & CANNON dishes, cookbooks, new saw puzzles, toys, DVDs PRINTERS W/ SCANNER & FAX, sewn items (potholders, and VHS, nic nacs, XBOX STUFF, OTHER ELECTRONtable center pieces, etc.), clothes, kids lawn chairs, ICS, LIKE NEW ELECTRIC WASHmany VCR tapes, several tricycle, backyard ING MACH., JUNIOR CALLAWAY women’s Capri (size6-10), swing(needs cover), PS2 CLUBS, GOLF PRACTICE NET, lots of adult men’s cloth- games, TV & stand, figurDISC GOLF BASKETS, NERF ing (3x-3xlt), women’s ing, hamster cage and acGUNS,YOUTH BOW & ARROWS, clothing (small to XL), cessories, stuffed aniBOARD GAMES, PUZZLES, ANsome children’s clothing, mals, lots of mics. TIQUE STORE DISPLAY Coach purses, dinosaur HUGE Tool & Yard Sale COUNTER, OTHER SMALL ANrocker, Birki’s gardening TIQUES & ARCHITECTURAL SALThursday - Saturday shoes (38), lots of misc! VAGE, DECORATIVE CURTAIN 8 am - 5 pm Also other sales in the RODS, MISC. HOUSEHOLD & 1908 E 19th Lot E-105 neighborhood) Every tool imaginable, DECORATIVE ITEMS, BOOKS, Craftsman, Snap-On, axes, CHRISTMAS, PICTURE FRAMES, Garage Sale rakes, shovels, electric LANE CEDAR CHEST, SHELVES, power tools, hand tools, BOYS CLOTHES, TWIN GIRL 3412 Morning Dove Cir. fishing poles (some are CLOTHES SIZE 12-18 MO. LOTS FRIDAY MORNING ONLY old), collection of dolls, OF STUFF!! EVERYTHING IS 8 am - 10am American dolls, CLEAN -NO JUNK!! 785-331-8150. Washer/dryer combo, king Native size bed & box springs, TV blankets, comforters, a lot stands, baby changing ta- of nick knacks, knives. SunflowerClassifieds Have to see to believe. ble, bathroom sets
PUBLIC NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD:
785.832.2222
existing, dissolved or dormant corporations; the unknown executors, administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors, successors and assigns of any defendants that are or were partners or in partnership; and the unknown guardians, conservators and trustees of any defendants that are minors or are under any legal disability and all other person who are or may be concerned: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that a Petition for Mortgage Foreclosure has been filed in the District Court of Douglas County, Kansas by Bank of America, N.A., praying for foreclosure of
classifieds@ljworld.com
certain real property le- 2015. If you fail to plead, gally described as follows: judgment and decree will be entered in due course LOT 17, IN BLOCK 1, IN upon the request of plainPRAIRIE MEADOWS ES- tiff. TATES, AN ADDITION TO THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC AS SHOWN BY THE RECORDED PLAT THEREOF, IN By: DOUGLAS COUNTY, KAN- Chad R. Doornink, SAS. Tax I.D. NO. U16012BQ #23536 cdoornink@msfirm.com for a judgment against de- 8900 Indian Creek fendants and any other in- Parkway, Suite 180 terested parties and, un- Overland Park, KS 66210 less otherwise served by (913) 339-9132 personal or mail service of (913) 339-9045 (fax) summons, the time in which you have to plead to the Petition for Foreclosure in the District Court of Douglas County Kansas will expire on September 3,
PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED ON 9C
(First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal World July 31, 2015) NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE THE FOLLOWING VEHICLES HAVE BEEN IMPOUNDED BY THE LAWRENCE KANSAS POLICE DEPARTMENT AND WILL BE SOLD AT PUBLIC AUCTIONING IF THE OWNERS DO NO CLAIM THEM WITHIN TEN (10) DAYS OF THE DATE OF THE SECOND PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE. THE OWNERS OF THE VEHICLES ARE FINANCIALLY RESPONSIBLE FOR REMOVAL, STORAGE CHARGES AND PUBLICATION COSTS INCURRED BY THE CITY. YEAR
VEHICLE TYPE
SERIAL #
REGISTERED OWNER
1995 1994 1999
FORD DODG FORD
1FMDU34X3SUC19234 3B7HC16Z5RM565134 1FTYR10C11XUB89043
Connie Cowen Manuel Benito Garcia Jr. Tyler York
Diane Bucia, City Clerk City of Lawrence, KS July 27, 2015 ________
6C
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Friday, July 31, 2015
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L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD
SPECIAL!
10 LINES & PHOTO 7 DAYS $19.95 28 DAYS $49.95
DOESN’T SELL IN 28 DAYS?
FREE RENEWAL!
PLACE YOUR AD:
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
Chevrolet Cars
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 Chevrolet Vans
Ford Cars
USED CAR GIANT
2005 DODGE DAKOTA SLT 4X4
UCG PRICE
Stock #115L666B
Stock #P1895
$9,995
$9,995
2014 HARLEY-DAVIDSON STREET GLIDE
UCG PRICE
Stock #15M131B
$17,495
785-727-7151 23rd & Alabama, Lawrence www.lairdnollerlawrence.com Ford SUVs
Ford Trucks
GMC Trucks 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 Fusion SE Stk#P1799
Chrysler Cars
$14,995
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Honda Cars
Honda SUVs
1998 HONDA ACCORD LX
2012 HONDA PILOT EX-L NAVIGATION 4WD
2011 Ford Escape Stk#P1758A
$11,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
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
2003 GMC Sierra Chevrolet 2014 Sonic LT GM certified with 2 years of maintenance included, remote start, alloy wheels, cruise control, keyless remote, Stk#11670A only $13,814.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Buick Cars
4 x 2, long bed, with TOOL BOX (locks). Fleet work truck. Brand new Goodyear tires, dependable. AS IS: $1500 785-492-8766
2009 Chrysler 300 Touring Stk#P1734A
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
2014 Ford Fusion SE
2013 Ford Escape Titanium
Stk#P1793
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
$17,995
1993 Chevy Corvette Convertible. Auto, Red leather interior, Drop top in good condition, CD/ Cassette/ radio, New tires, Dual airbags, AC, cruise- power everything! Only 49K mi! Call or email for more details: 785-423-0037 bstoneback.we@gmail.com
Chevrolet Trucks
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
We Buy all Domestic cars, trucks, and suvs. Call Scott 785-727-7151
Stk#P1780
$19,995 Ford Cars
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Automatic, Great Car for First Time Driver, Great Gas Mileage, Wonderful Safety Ratings. Stk# F361A
Only $5,995 Call Thomas at
888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com
Honda Certified Pre-Owned Vehicle, 7 Year / 100,000 Mile Limited Powertrain Warranty. Stk# F197A
Only $24,950 Call Thomas at
888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com
Infiniti
$10,495
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Buick 2006 Lacrosse CXS V6, ABS, leather, heated seats, alloy wheels, power equipment. Stk#454901 Only $9,814.00
Stock #15L426B
UCG PRICE
2008 Chevy Express
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
TRANSPORTATION
UCG PRICE
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
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
$10,994
2009 HYUNDAI SONATA LIMITED
RV 2004 Cruiser 5th Wheel, 29Ft RK, 2 Slide Outs, Numerous Extras, Stored Inside Excellent Condition. $10,000. 913-544-3238
2009 MERCURY MARINER PREMIER
23rd & Alabama - 2829 Iowa
LairdNollerLawrence.com
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Honda Cars
Honda 2006 Accord EXL one owner, leather heated seats, sunroof, alloy wheels, loaded with equipment, Stk#158832 only $8744.00
2011 Infiniti G25X
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
$17,995
Honda SUVs
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Stk#P1756A
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Ford SUVs 2012 HONDA ACCORD EX-L
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2009 HONDA CR-V EX-L AWD
2013 Ford Focus Stk#P1831
$12,995 2003 Chevrolet Silverado, FOR SALE, Great Condition. 50,190 Miles. Call 785-764-4289
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
2012 Buick Regal GS
$25,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
$19,495
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Stk#P1811
Stk#14T754B
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
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Only $17,999
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Call Thomas at
888-631-6458
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
JackEllenaHonda.com
Cadillac
Dale Willey Automotive 2840 Iowa Street (785) 843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
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
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
4x4, Leather, Moonroof, Loaded, Low Miles, Well Maintained, Immaculate Condition. Stk# F349A
Call Thomas at
888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Stk#P1776
$22,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Jeep
2014 Ford Fusion Energi SE Luxury
2008 HONDA CIVIC LX
Stk#15T379A
2012 HONDA PILOT EX-L 4WD
$26,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
2012 Ford Escape Limited
2012 FORD EXPLORER
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Stk#15M303A
Stk#15T318A
$18,995
$21,995
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.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
2011 Infinity G37 X
Only $18,588
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Honda Certified Pre-Owned Vehicle, 7 Year / 100,00 Mile, Limited Powertrain Warranty. Stk# LF287A
$19,495
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Stk#15C520A
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
2013 Ford Edge Limited
2010 Ford Explorer Sport Trac XLT
888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com
Fuel Efficient, Automatic, Awesome Condition, Well Maintained, Safe and Reliable. Stk# F238B
Only $10,711 Call Thomas at
2014 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Sahara 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
888-631-6458
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
JackEllenaHonda.com
JackEllenaHonda.com
Stk#P1834
$30,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Friday, July 31, 2015
| 7C
SPECIAL!
10 LINES & PHOTO 7 DAYS $19.95 28 DAYS $49.95
DOESN’T SELL IN 28 DAYS?
FREE RENEWAL!
PLACE YOUR AD: Kia Cars
Lincoln SUVs
785.832.2222 Mercedes-Benz
Nissan Cars
classifieds@ljworld.com Nissan Cars
Saturn
Toyota Cars
2006 Toyota Camry LE
2005 KIA SPECTRA Great Mileage, Well Maintained, Awesome Value, Fuel Efficient. Stk# F347B
2012 Lincoln MKX AWD
Only $5,995
Stk#P1838
Call Thomas at
$24,495
888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com
Lincoln Cars
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
1985 Mercedes-Benz 300-Class 380SL
2012 Nissan Altima 2.5 SL
Stk#14C1164A Stk#P1775
$13,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Mercury
Mazda Cars
$13,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Nissan 2008 Altima SL fwd 3.5 V6 sunroof, heated leather seats, Bose sound, CD changer, Stk#554053 only $13,500.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background?
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
Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!! Call: 785-832-2222
2013 Toyota Camry LE Stk#P1841
$15,369 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2006 NISSAN MAXIMA SL
2009 Mercury Mariner Premier
2014 Nissan Versa
Stk#15L426B
Stk#14C1204A
$12,994
$10,996
$11,495
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!
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
Stk#P1823A
Stk#15C464A
$5,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD:
ANNOUNCEMENTS Special Notices Shelly’s Mop & Shine Cleaning Services 785-550-1705 shelly1434@gmail.com $15/ hour
785.832.2222
Business Announcements The Chiropractic Health Center of Lawrence Patient Records Records are now being held by and copies may be obtained from: Prairie Wellness Center. Dr. Whitney Ruthledge D.C. 1119 SW Gage Blvd Topeka, KS 66604. 785-272-3878.
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! Low Miles, Local Owner, Great Condition, All the Goodies, Loaded, Well Maintained. Stk# F200A
Only $10,995
Antique/Estate Liquidation
Carpet Cleaning
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renceKS @JobsLawings at the best for the latest open companies in Northeast Kansas!
785.832.2222 Decks & Fences
Auctioneers
Email: info@cmcarpetcleaning.com
web:www.cmcarpetcleaning.com Needing to place an ad? 785-832-2222
Concrete
BILL FAIR AND COMPANY REAL ESTATE AUCTIONS 785-887-6900 www.billfair.com
Carpentry
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
Driveways - stamped • Patios • Sidewalks • Parking Lots • Building Footings & Floors • All Concrete Repairs Free Estimates
Stamped & Reg. Concrete, Patios, Walks, Driveways, Acid Staining & Overlays, Tear-Out & Replacement Jayhawk Concrete Inc. 785-979-5261
Construction
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
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
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
FOUNDATION REPAIR Mudjacking, Waterproofing. We specialize in Basement Repair & Pressure Grouting. Level & Straighten Walls & Bracing on wall. BBB. Free Estimates Since 1962 Wagner’s 785-749-1696 www.foundationrepairks.com
Stk#15M256B
$10,995
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2013 Subaru Outback 2.5i Premium
$17,994 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
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Toyota 2008 Prius fwd, leather, alloy wheels, navigation, power equipment, Stk#184201 only $10,775.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Antiques-Classic 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
FREE ADS
for merchandise under $100 SunflowerClassifieds.com
SPECIAL! 6 LINES
1 Month $118.95 | 6 Months $91.95/mo. 12 Months $64.95/mo. + FREE LOGO!
classifieds@ljworld.com Foundation Repair
Guttering Services
JAYHAWK GUTTERING Seamless aluminum guttering. Many colors to choose from. Install, repair, screen, clean-out. Locally owned. Insured. Free estimates.
Home Improvements
Decks • Gazebos Siding • Fences • Additions Remodel • Weatherproofing Insured • 25 yrs exp. 785-550-5592
Foundation Repair
2007 Volkswagen GTI
Nissan Trucks
Stacked Deck
913-962-0798 Fast Service
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
JackEllenaHonda.com
785-842-0094
Serving KC over 40 years
$15,787
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
jayhawkguttering.com
Rich Black Top Soil No Chemicals Machine Pulverized Pickup or Delivery
Stk#15J512A
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Furniture
Mike - 785-766-6760 mdcraig@sbcglobal.net
2012 Toyota Corolla S
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
Full Remodels & Odd Jobs, Interior/Exterior Painting, Installation & Repair of:
Dirt-Manure-Mulch
CTi of Mid America Concrete Restoration & Resurfacing Driveways, Patios, Pool Decks & More CTiofMidAmerica.com 785-893-8110
Subaru
Call Thomas at
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
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
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Stk#P1815
Concrete
Call Thomas at
888-631-6458
Volkswagen
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
classifieds@ljworld.com
Family Owned & Operated 20 Yrs
CM Steam Carpet Cleaning $35/Rm. Upholstery, Residential, Apts, Hotel, Etc. 24/7 Local Owner 785-766-2821
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
888-631-6458
SERVICES TO PLACE AN AD:
Only $9,495
JackEllenaHonda.com
Stk#P1624B
$5,916 2011 Mazda3 S Sport
What an Awesome Car?? Low Miles, Fuel Efficient, Immaculate Condition, Great School Car Stk# F027B
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
2003 Saturn VUE
2003 Lincoln Town Car Cartier
Toyota Cars
Double 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
Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background? Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!! Call: 785-832-2222
Garage Doors
Higgins Handyman
Landscaping YARDBIRDS LANDSCAPING Father (retired) & Son Operation W/Experience & Top of the Line Machinery Call 785-766-1280
Lawn, Garden & Nursery
Call Lyndsey 913-422-7002
Plumbing RETIRED MASTER PLUMBER & Handyman needs small work. Bill Morgan 816-523-5703
Mowing...like Clockwork! Honest & Dependable Mow~Trim~Sweep Steve 785-393-9152 Lawrence Only
Tree/Stump Removal
Painting
Fredy’s Tree Service cutdown • trimmed • topped • stump removal Licensed & Insured. 20 yrs experience. 913-441-8641 913-244-7718
A. B. Painting & Repair Int/ext. Drywall, Siding, 30 plus yrs. Locally owned and operated. Call Al 785-331-6994 albeil@aol.com D&R Painting interior/exterior • 30+ years • power washing • repairs (inside & out) • stain decks • wallpaper stripping • free estimates Call or Text 913-401-9304
KansasTreeCare.com Trimming, removal, & stump grinding by Lawrence locals Certified by Kansas Arborists Assoc. since 1997 “We specialize in preservation & restoration” Ins. & Lic. visit online 785-843-TREE (8733)
Professional Tree Care
785-312-1917
Garage Doors • Openers • Service • Installation Call 785-842-5203 www.freestatedoors.com
Interior/Exterior Painting Quality Work Over 30 yrs. exp.
Golden Rule Lawncare Mowing & lawn cleanup Snow Removal Family owned & operated Call for Free Est. Insured. Eugene Yoder 785-224-9436
Interior/exterior painting, roofing, roof repairs, fence work, deck work, lawn care, siding, windows & doors. For 11+ years serving Douglas County & surrounding areas. Insured. Retired Carpenter, Deck Repairs, Home Repairs, Interior Wall Repair & House Painting, Doors, Wood Rot, Power wash 785-766-5285
Painting
Family Tradition Interior & Exterior Painting Carpentry/Wood Rot Senior Citizen Discount Ask for Ray 785-330-3459
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
8C
|
Friday, July 31, 2015
.
PLACE YOUR AD:
L awrence J ournal -W orld
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.
Healthcare
Customer Service
JOIN OUR TEAM! Position Seasonal Customer Service Representative No sales, collections or telemarketing Starting Salary: $12.95 per hour
NOW HIRING!
Customer Service Representatives When: Saturday, August 1, 9:00am–Noon Location: GDIT, General Dynamics Information Technology 3833 Greenway Drive, Lawrence, KS 66046 AND When: Wednesday, August 5, 9:00am–Noon Location: Lawrence Workforce Center 2920 Haskell Ave., Lawrence, KS 66046 AND When: Thursday, August 6, 1:00pm–5:00pm Location: GDIT, General Dynamics Information Technology 3833 Greenway Drive, Lawrence, KS 66046 AND When: Friday, August 7, 9:00am–Noon Location: Lawrence Workforce Center 2920 Haskell Ave., Lawrence, KS 66046 AND When: Saturday, August 8, 9:00am–Noon Location: GDIT, General Dynamics Information Technology 3833 Greenway Drive, Lawrence, KS 66046
APPLY ONLINE
• Full-time benefits • Various schedules available • 10% pay differential for: – Bilingual (Spanish) – Night Shift
• Paid training (no subject matter expertise required) • Gain experience working for a large, trusted and respected U.S. company
Requirements • 6 months of customer service experience (contact center preferred) • Intermediate computer navigation skills • Ability to type 20 wpm • Must be able to pass background investigation • Proof of education (HS Diploma, GED or above)
Job ID Number: Seasonal Full Time CSR Marketplace – 237970 Seasonal Part Time CSR Marketplace – 238127 General Dynamics Information Technology is an equal opportunity/ affirmative action employer, supporting employment of qualified minorities, females, disabled individuals and protected veterans.
Jobs.Lawrence.com
Call Center New Shift Open $10 hr + bonuses 40 hrs/wk, Full time $$ Weekly Pay! $$
It’s Fun! Outstanding pay Part-time work Be an independent contractor, Deliver every day, between 2-6 a.m. Reliable vehicle, driver’s license, insurance in your own name, and a phone required. Routes available in your area.
Call today! 785-841-9999 DayCom
Come on in & Apply!
CNA & CMA
645 New Hampshire 816-805-6780 jinsco@ljworld.com
Day/evening classes starting W/O 8-24 in Lawrence, Ottawa & Chanute.
620-431-2820 x241 tshowalter@neosho.edu
• Opportunity for advancement (promote from within)
www.gdit.com/csrjobs
AUCTIONS
Deliver Newspapers!
DriversTransportation
Banking
AdministrativeProfessional Financial Assistant For busy chiropractic clinic. Full-Time, permanent position. Apply in person MWF 8-4 pm. Advanced Chiropractic Services 1605 Wakarusa Dr.
In-Store Manager at the
MERC
Office Assistant BG Consultants in Lawrence seeks a part-time Office Assistant for general support to staff and daily administrative operations. Duties include answering a multi-line phone system, filing, typing, and basic accounting. Must have basic computer skills and proficiency with MS Office applications. Email resume to careers@bgcons.com.
Offline Captioning 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
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.
Building Maintenance
Custodian USD 232 in DeSoto is seeking a full-time custodian for the 2:30 pm-11:00 pm shift. $12.35/hr plus pd benefits. Apply online: http://desoto.school recruiter.net/
Hillcrest Wrecker & Garage is looking for full and part time tow truck drivers. Must be willing to work nights and weekends and live in Lawrence. DOT physical is required. Apply at 3700 Franklin Park Cir. 785-843-0052 hillcrestwrecker@aol.com EOE
Certified Nurse Assistants (CNAs) Pioneer Ridge Health Care and Rehabilitation Center is hiring CNA’s to join our team of Health Care professionals. We are looking for positive, compassionate individuals to provide quality care for our residents. You will be a valued member of our team at Pioneer-Ridge. If you are looking for a position that offers rewarding experiences and benefits such as tuition support, please apply online at: Midwest-health.com/ careers and select Pioneer Ridge. For more information call 785-749-2000 and indicate you are applying for a CNA position.
LPN Evening/night shift
CNA 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.
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.
L AW R E N C E J O U R N A L-WO R L D
CLASSIFIED A DV E RT I S I N G
Ariele Erwine
Classified Advertising Executive + Auction Enthusiast Contact Ariele today to promote your auction and make our audience your audience.
785-832-7168
aerwine@ljworld.com
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Friday, July 31, 2015
RENTALS REAL ESTATE TO PLACE AN AD:
REAL ESTATE
Duplexes
RENTALS
Lawrence
4 BEDROOM, 3 BATH
(785)887-6900
Open House Special!
• 1 Day - $50 • 2 Days - $75 • 28 Days - $280 Call 785-832-2222 to schedule your ad!
Now Leasing 2, 3 & 4 BR Townhomes for August 1st!
Pools, Tennis & Bball Courts, W/D, On KU Bus Route, Spacious Floorplan, Patios/Decks. Great locations: 660 Gateway Ct. 837 Michigan
Call now! 785-841-8400 www.sunriseapartments.com $200-$300 off August Rent Specials!!
——————————————
Houses
CALL TODAY (Monday - Friday)
785-843-1116
3 Bd/1 BA Home, SouthTownhomes east of Lawrence, easy access to K10, large tree shaded yard, no smoking, 2BR with loft, 2 bath, 1 car 1 small dog ok. Avail Aug 1. garage, fenced yard, FP, Renter pays utilities. 3719 Westland Pl. Call 785-838-9009-Leave # $790/mo. Avail. Aug. 1. 785-550-3427
DOWNTOWN LOFT Studio Apartments 600 sq. ft., $710/mo. 825 sq. ft., $880/mo. No pets allowed Call Today 785-841-6565
Basehor
advanco@sunflower.com 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
Fox Run Apartments Under new management. 1, 2 and 3 bedroom units with full sized W/D in each unit. Located adjacent to Free State High School with pool, clubhouse, exercise facility and garages. Starting at just $759. Call 785-843-4040 for details.
2BR, 2 bath, fireplace, CA, W/D hookups, 2 car with opener. Easy access to I-70. Includes paid cable. Pet under 20 lbs. allowed Call 785-842-2575 www.princeton-place.com
LAUREL GLEN APTS
147.22 Acres
Bill Fair & Co.
785-550-7258
* Near campus, bus stop * Laundries on site * Near stores, restaurants * Water & trash paid
Sarcoxie Lake / Linwood KS - nice level building lot w/ utilities, across from lake. Phoenix owner, must sell! STEAL IT at $14,500. Call John 602-863-1204.
A HOP, SKIP, & JUMP to ROCK CHALK PARK! First intersection west of K-10 & 6th Street at 800 Road. Frontage on three sides, beautiful secluded five bedroom Griffin built brick home, income producing cattle operation & rent house. This property promises to flourish with Lawrence’s westward expansion. $1.6MM.
SUNRISE VILLAGE & PLACE
In excellent condition! Near Free State HS & I70 all modern appliancesmany extras! Lawncare provided. $1195 / mo. Available Now!
Beautiful & Spacious 1 & 2 Bedrooms Start at $450/mo.
Building Lots
Farms-Acreage
Townhomes
Office Space Downtown Office Space Single offices, elevator & conference room, $500-$675. Call Donna or Lisa, 785-841-6565
Available Now! 3 BR w/2 or 2.5 BA
All Electric 1, 2 & 3 BR units. Some with W/D, Water & Trash Paid, Small Pet, Income Restrictions Apply 785-838-9559 EOH
W/D hookups, Fireplace, Major Appliances. Lawn Care & Dbl Car Garage!
785-865-2505
Duplexes
AUCTIONS
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
grandmanagement.net
FIRST MONTH FREE! 1 & 2 Bedroom Units 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH Available Now! in 4-plex, W/D hookups, townhomes quiet, 2 blocks to KU. Cooperative $500/ mnth. Small pet ok. start at $446-$490/mnth. Water, trash, sewer paid. Available Immediately! Back patio, CA, hardwood Call - 785-979-0767 floors, full bsmnt., stove, refrig., w/d hookup, garbage disposal, reserved parking. On-site manageDay/evening classes ment & maintenance. 24 starting W/O 8-24 in hr. emergency mainteLawrence, Ottawa & nance. Chanute. Membership & Equity fee 620-431-2820 x241 required. 785-842-2545 (Equal Housing Opportunity) tshowalter@neosho.edu pinetreetownhouses.com
CNA & CMA
RENTALS & REAL ESTATE SPECIAL! 10 LINES & PHOTO:
2 DAYS $50 7 DAYS $80 28 DAYS $280 + FREE PHOTO!
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
785.832.2222
Auction Calendar
Auction Calendar
2411 Cedarwood Ave.
2932 Kensington Rd Lawrence, KS
MERCHANDISE PETS TO PLACE AN AD:
Apartments Unfurnished Cedarwood Apts
4 BR. 3 BA. Custom built bi-level home near Prairie Park Elementary. Clean, new paint inside & out. Dining room plus eat-in kitchen. Master suite with large walk-in closet. (785)393-4080
classifieds@ljworld.com
785.832.2222
| 9C
Listed by Countrywide Realty, Inc Darrell Simnitt- 785.231.0374
Multi-Parcel Land & Home Auction Auction Date & Location: Friday, Aug 14th @ 1:00 pm Baldwin City Lodge 502 Ames St Baldwin City, KS Property Location: 1780 N. 375 Rd Baldwin City, KS 66006 160 Acres offered in 6 Tracts, 4 Bedroom, 2 Story Farm House Cates Auction Real Estate Co. 877.781.1134 CatesAuction.com 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
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
Vintage furniture, Retro Kitchenware, glassware, Fiesta Ware, collectibles, etc! See web for pictures: www.ottoauctioneering.com Branden Otto, auctioneer 913-710-7111
Furniture
MERCHANDISE
Old Fashion Butcher Block 24X24in. Butcher Block w/ bottom shelf $100 785-550-4142
Clothing
Music-Stereo
Jacket Men’s classic black leather motorcycle jacket. Zippers, belt, snaps, pockets. A very classic style. $25 — (785)842-4641
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
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
Sports-Fitness Equipment EVERLAST- Heavy Boxing Bag, Gloves & singlestation heavy bag stand, like new. $100 785-832-1332
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
TV-Video
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.
Television: Toshiba 19” tv with built in VCR. Color, remote, instruction book. Works fine $5 785-842-4641
Wooden Hutch 6ft tall X 42in W X 19in D ~ top doors & sides have glass ~ bottom cabinet has shelves $90 785-550-4142 Ottoman Nice, clean, comfortable ottoman. Medium blue corduroy. 24 “ wide, 15” deep,12” tall. 785-842-4641 $5
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
Rocker/Recliner Like new, never used ~ beautiful piece ~ must see ~ 100 785-550-4142
Teri Showalter x241 Tracy Rhine x262 tshowalter@neosho.edu or trhine@neosho.edu
GUN AUCTION
ADVERTISE YOUR AUCTION ~or~ ESTATE SALE HERE! Let our Classified Advertising Department help you with a classic liner or eye-catching display ad! All paid ads include 2 weeks FREE in our Auction Calendar! Call or email us TODAY! classifieds@ljworld.com 785.832.2222
Sunday, Aug 2, @ 1pm VFW Hall, 2806 N 155th St, Basehor, KS For full list & color pics: kansasauctions.net/sebree Sebree Auction LLC 816-223-9235
FREE ADS for merchandise
ADVERTISE TODAY!
under $100
CALL 832-2222 or email classifieds@ljworld.com
classifieds@ljworld.com
SunflowerClassifieds.com
PETS
Vintage Tablet Chair, solid wood, Excellent condition. Study chair for small space. $60. 785-865-4215
Pets
Wood Table 5’ X 3 ½’ with 18” leaf. Wood color top and black legs with four matching chairs. Very good condition. Asking $175 OBO Call 785-766-3023
AKC Chocolate Lab Puppies, big, blocky ,farm raised with outstanding temprement. Shots and wormed . $500. Call 785-248-3189
PUBLIC NOTICES 785.832.2222
PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED FROM 5C By: /s/ Tiffany T. Johnson Tiffany T. Johnson, #26544 tjohnson@msfirm.com Garrett M. Gasper, #25628
classifieds@ljworld.com
ggasper@msfirm.com Aaron M. Schuckman, #22251 aschuckman@msfirm.com 612 Spirit Dr. St. Louis, MO 63005 (636) 537-0110 (636) 537-0067 (fax)
MS 119282.342670 KJFC
(First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC IS World July 31, 2015) ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFOR- IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF MATION OBTAINED WILL DOUGLAS COUNTY, BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. _______
PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED ON 10C
ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFF
(First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal World July 31, 2015) STATE OF KANSAS Budget Form USD-A 2015-2016
USD# 491
NOTICE OF HEARING 2015-2016 BUDGET The governing body of Unified School District 491 will meet on the 13th day of August, 2015 at 6:30 PM, at 1310 Winchester Rd for the purpose of hearing and answering objections of taxpayers relating to the proposed use of all funds and the amount of tax to be levied. Detailed budget information (including budget profile) is available at District Office and will be available at this hearing. The Amount of 2015 Tax to be Levied and Expenditures (published below) establish the maximum limits of the 2015-2016 Budget. The “Est. Tax Rate” in the far right column, shown for comparative purposes, is subject to slight change depending on final assessed valuation. Code 99 Line OPERATING General Supplemental General (LOB) SPECIAL REVENUE Adult Education Adult Supplemental Education Bilingual Education Virtual Education Capital Outlay Driver Training Extraordinary School Program Food Service Professional Development Parent Education Program Summer School Special Education Vocational Education Special Liability Expense Fund School Retirement Extraordinary Growth Facilities Special Reserve Fund Federal Funds Gifts and Grants At Risk (4Yr Old) Cost of Living At Risk (K-12) Declining Enrollment KPERS Special Retirement Contribution Contingency Reserve Textbook & Student Material Revolving Activity Fund Tuition Reimbursement Fund DEBT SERVICE Bond and Interest #1 Bond and Interest #2 No-Fund Warrant Special Assessment Temporary Note COOPERATIVES** Special Education TOTAL USD EXPENDITURES Less: Transfers NET USD EXPENDITURES TOTAL USD TAXES LEVIED OTHER Historical Museum Public Library Board Public Library Board Employee Benefits Recreation Commission Rec Comm Emp Benefits & Spec Liab TOTAL OTHER TOTAL TAXES LEVIED Assessed Valuation - General Fund Assessed Valuation - All Other Funds Outstanding Indebtedness, July 1 General Obligation Bonds Capital Outlay Bonds Temporary Note No-Fund Warrant Lease Purchase Principal TOTAL USD DEBT
2013-2014 Actual 2014-2015 Actual PROPOSED BUDGET 2015-2016 Actual Actual Amount of Expenditures Actual Tax Expenditures Actual Tax Expenditures 2015 Tax to be Est. Tax (1) Rate* (2) (3) Rate* (4) (5) Levied (6) Rate* (7)
06 08
9,145,988 3,123,264
20.000 23.697
9,332,287 3,086,559
20.000 11.872
12,596,678 3,093,344
1,079,004 976,757
20.000 16.380
10 12 14 15 16 18 22 24 26 28 29 30 34 42 44 45 47 07 35 11 33 13 19 51 53 55 56 57
0 0 62,814 0 525,725 14,875 0 768,273 36,596 14,415 0 2,340,042 639,068 0 0 0 0 1,566,388 35,030 0 0 1,064,869 0 884,237 0 81,147 63,384 0
0.000
0 0 64,064 0 872,646 15,214 0 820,165 51,344 12,465 0 2,499,679 413,210 0 0 0 0 1,305,324 222,435 0 0 1,088,907 0 873,301 35,000 31,090 97,322 0
0.000
0 0 60,000 173,215 1,384,421 18,420 0 1,319,996 15,000 12,000 0 2,516,300 660,000 0 0 0
0
0.000
477,057
8.000
0 0 0
0.000 0.000 0.000
0
0.000
0
0.000
62 63 66 67 68
3,203,674 0 0 0 0
29.381 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000
3,772,242 0 0 0 0
28.289 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000
3,798,017 0 0 0 0
1,723,043 0 0 0 0
28.895 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000
78 100 105 110 115
0 23,569,789 3,717,748 19,852,041 4,190,901
75.076 xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx
0 24,593,254 3,213,550 21,379,704 3,833,728
68.161 xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx
0 27,852,128 7,285,572 20,566,556 4,255,861
4,255,861 xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx
73.275 xxxxx xxxxx xxxxx
80 82 83 84 86 120 125 128 130
0 0 0 0 0 0 4,190,901 $51,580,474 $57,218,616 2013 60,000,000 0 0 0 1,333,657 61,333,657
0 0 0 0 0 0
0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000
135 140 145 150 153 155
1.998
0.000 0.000 0.000
0.000 0.000
0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000
0 0 0 0 0 0 3,833,728 $52,016,866 $57,676,078 2014 59,600,000 0 0 0 1,139,623 60,739,623
8.000
0.000 0.000 0.000
0.000 0.000
0 110,054 0 0 1,000,000 0 1,094,683
0
0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000
0 0 0 0 0 0 4,255,861 $53,950,218 $59,632,081 2015 60,825,000 0 0 0 943,904 61,768,904
* Tax Rates are expressed in Mills ** Sponsoring District Only Eric Votaw President
Amy Shanks Clerk of the Board
First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal World July 31, 2015 STATE OF KANSAS Budget Form USD-A 2015-2016
USD# 497
NOTICE OF HEARING 2015-2016 BUDGET The governing body of Unified School District 497 will meet on the 10th day of August, 2015 at 7:00pm, at 110 McDonald Drive, Lawrence KS, for the purpose of hearing and answering objections of taxpayers relating to the proposed use of all funds and the amount of tax to be levied. Detailed budget information (including budget profile) is available at and will be available at this hearing. The Amount of 2015 Tax to be Levied and Expenditures (published below) establish the maximum limits of the 2015-2016 Budget. The "Est. Tax Rate" in the far right column, shown for comparative purposes, is subject to slight change depending on final assessed valuation. 2013-2014 Actual 2014-2015 Actual PROPOSED BUDGET 2015-2016 Est. Actual Actual Amount of Tax 2015 Actual Tax Actual Tax Rate* Tax to Expenditures Rate* Expenditures Rate* Code Expenditures be Levied 99 Line (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) OPERATING General 06 68,580,417 20.000 67,814,827 20.000 83,287,891 19,480,000 20.000 Supplemental General (LOB) 08 23,532,246 17.836 23,297,182 15.897 23,297,182 18,041,440 17.584 SPECIAL REVENUE Adult Education 10 369,775 0.249 363,184 0.494 700,000 102,600 0.100 Adult Supplemental Education 12 0 0 25,981 Bilingual Education 14 670,813 708,836 2,250,000 Virtual Education 15 5,626,694 4,893,204 6,000,000 Capital Outlay 16 14,809,351 7.972 10,107,873 7.902 17,535,000 8,208,000 8.000 Driver Training 18 37,453 39,599 105,000 Extraordinary School Program 22 0 0 0 Food Service 24 4,643,819 4,826,463 6,000,000 Professional Development 26 580,848 572,301 690,000 Parent Education Program 28 166,084 183,685 229,115 Summer School 29 16,845 22,752 222,549 Special Education 30 21,968,600 23,202,956 25,500,000 Vocational Education 34 1,759,735 2,028,327 2,500,000 Special Liability Expense Fund 42 0 0.000 0 0.000 0 0 0.000 School Retirement 44 0 0.000 0 0.000 0 0 0.000 Extraordinary Growth Facilities 45 0 0.000 0 0.000 0 0 0.000 Special Reserve Fund 47 10,144,933 10,816,486 Federal Funds 07 2,143,676 2,780,759 2,488,032 Gifts and Grants 35 263,011 379,907 1,317,884 At Risk (4Yr Old) 11 511,103 523,889 710,000 Cost of Living 33 1,290,500 1.192 1,290,500 1.185 1,609,073 1,501,798 1.464 At Risk (K-12) 13 5,745,637 4,847,974 5,000,000 Declining Enrollment 19 0 0.000 0 0.000 0 0 0.000 STATE OF KANSAS Budget Form USD-A 2015-2016
USD#
Code Fund—Continued 99 Line KPERS Special Retirement Contribution 51 Contingency Reserve 53 Textbook & Student Material Revolving 55 Activity Fund 56 Tuition Reimbursement Fund 57 DEBT SERVICE Bond and Interest #1 62 Bond and Interest #2 63 No-Fund Warrant 66 Special Assessment 67 Temporary Note 68 COOPERATIVES** Special Education 78 TOTAL USD EXPENDITURES 100 Less: Transfers 105 NET USD EXPENDITURES 110 TOTAL USD TAXES LEVIED 115 OTHER Historical Museum Public Library Board Public Library Board Employee Benefits Recreation Commission Rec Comm Emp Benefits & Spec Liab TOTAL OTHER TOTAL TAXES LEVIED Assessed Valuation - General Fund Assessed Valuation - All Other Funds Outstanding Indebtedness, July 1 General Obligation Bonds Capital Outlay Bonds Temporary Note No-Fund Warrant Lease Purchase Principal TOTAL USD DEBT s/ Vanessa Sanburn President
80 82 83 84 86 120 125 128 130 135 140 145 150 153 155
2013-2014 Actual Actual Actual Tax Expenditures Rate* (1) (2) 7,024,817 405,303 944,416 1,608,785 0
2014-2015 Actual Actual Actual Tax Expenditures Rate* (3) (4) 7,115,475 273,902 1,345,657 1,689,224 0
PROPOSED BUDGET 2015-2016 Amount of 2015 Tax to Expenditures be Levied (5) (6) 9,001,076
10.539 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000
10,797,475 0 0 83,952 0
10.208 0.000 0.000 0.066 0.000
12,598,745 0 0 260,000 0
0 183,311,840 42,713,426 140,598,414 56,334,035
57.788 xxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxx
0 180,006,389 39,331,681 140,674,708 55,404,042
55.752 xxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxx
0 201,327,528 50,057,933 151,269,595 57,805,124
0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000
Est. Tax Rate* (7)
0
10,399,290 0 0 67,689 0
0 0.000 0 0 0.000 0 0 0.000 0 0 0.000 0 0 0.000 0 0 0.000 0 56,334,035 55,404,042 $937,696,549 $957,231,832 $992,393,634 $1,011,671,408 2013 2014 57,115,000 85,775,000 0 0 0 0 0 0 8,189,056 10,162,843 65,304,056 95,937,843 * Tax Rates are expressed in Mills ** Sponsoring District Only
497
10,459,955 10.195 0 0.000 0 0.000 11,331 0.011 0 0.000
57,805,124 xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx
57.354 xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
0 0 0 0 0 0
0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000
0 0 0 0 0 0 57,805,124 $974,000,000 $1,026,000,000 2015 114,275,000 0 0 0 6,297,062 120,572,062 s/ Janice E Dunn Clerk of the Board
10C
|
Friday, July 31, 2015
SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS
.
L awrence J ournal -W orld
SCOREBOARD Coaches Top 25
The Amway Top 25 football coaches preseason poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, 2014 records, total points based on 25 points for first place through one point for 25th, and 2014 final ranking: Rec Pts Pvs 1. Ohio State (62) 14-1 1598 1 2. TCU (1) 12-1 1487 3 3. Alabama (1) 12-2 1452 4 4. Baylor 11-2 1365 8 5. Oregon 13-2 1260 2 6. Michigan State 11-2 1230 5 7. Auburn 8-5 1103 23 8. Florida State 13-1 1057 6 9. Georgia 10-3 1026 9 10. Southern California 9-4 1014 21 11. Notre Dame 8-5 883 NR 12. Clemson 10-3 838 15 13. LSU 8-5 727 NR 14. UCLA 10-3 697 10 15. Mississippi 9-4 668 19 16. Arizona State 10-3 577 14 17. Georgia Tech 11-3 573 7 18. Wisconsin 11-3 470 13 19. Oklahoma 8-5 407 NR 20. Arkansas 7-6 377 NR 21. Stanford 8-5 365 NR 22. Arizona 10-4 299 17 23. Missouri 11-3 229 11 24. Boise State 12-2 190 16 25. Tennessee 7-6 166 NR Others receiving votes: Mississippi State 164; Texas A&M 149; Oklahoma State 89; Virginia Tech 70; Utah 40; Kansas State 37; Louisville 27; Nebraska 27; Minnesota 25; Penn State 20; South Carolina 18; Miami (Fla.) 16; Texas 8; Illinois 7; Duke 6; Air Force 5; Louisiana Tech 5; Marshall 4; Utah State 4; Brigham Young 3; North Carolina State 3; West Virginia 3; Florida 2; Georgia Southern 2; North Carolina 2; Central Florida 1; Cincinnati 1; Kentucky 1; Maryland 1; Michigan 1; Washington 1.
Quicken Loans National
Thursday At Robert Trent Jones Golf Club Gainesville, Va. Purse: $6.7 million Yardage: 7,385; Par 71 (36-35) First Round a-denotes amateur Retief Goosen 32-31—63 Ryo Ishikawa 33-30—63 Justin Leonard 33-31—64 Kevin Chappell 33-31—64 Ernie Els 33-31—64 Steve Wheatcroft 33-32—65 Jeff Overton 31-34—65 Mark Hubbard 32-33—65 Andy Sullivan 31-34—65 Patrick Rodgers 32-34—66 Greg Owen 34-32—66 Jonas Blixt 32-34—66 Justin Rose 32-34—66 Justin Thomas 32-34—66 Gonzalo Fdez-Castano 34-32—66 Arjun Atwal 31-35—66 Ollie Schniederjans 32-34—66 Jason Bohn 33-34—67 Rickie Fowler 33-34—67 Danny Lee 34-33—67 Pat Perez 35-32—67 John Peterson 35-32—67 Adam Hadwin 33-34—67 Robert Allenby 35-32—67 Charles Howell III 35-32—67 Bill Haas 35-32—67 Jason Gore 34-34—68 Chad Campbell 33-35—68 Mark Wilson 33-35—68 Seung-Yul Noh 34-34—68 Jonathan Byrd 36-32—68 Cameron Tringale 34-34—68 Jim Herman 36-32—68 S.J. Park 33-35—68 Daniel Summerhays 35-33—68 Nick Taylor 34-34—68 Tiger Woods 37-31—68 David Lingmerth 35-33—68 Steven Bowditch 34-34—68 Hudson Swafford 33-35—68 Will Wilcox 34-34—68 Whee Kim 36-32—68 Bryce Molder 35-34—69 Andres Romero 36-33—69 Brice Garnett 37-32—69 Brendon de Jonge 34-35—69 Aaron Baddeley 34-35—69 Spencer Levin 34-35—69 Angel Cabrera 35-34—69 Ben Crane 32-37—69 Chesson Hadley 35-34—69 K.J. Choi 36-33—69 Jonathan Randolph 33-36—69 Tom Hoge 35-34—69 William McGirt 36-33—69 Ricky Barnes 35-34—69 Sean O’Hair 34-35—69 Russell Knox 35-34—69 Fabian Gomez 35-34—69 Vijay Singh 35-34—69 Cameron Percy 35-34—69 Steven Alker 35-35—70 Vaughn Taylor 34-36—70 Brian Davis 34-36—70 Billy Hurley III 33-37—70 Brendan Steele 34-36—70 Sangmoon Bae 34-36—70 Harris English 35-35—70 Carl Pettersson 35-35—70 J.J. Henry 34-36—70 Brian Stuard 37-33—70 Martin Flores 39-31—70 Troy Merritt 36-34—70 John Huh 33-37—70 Bo Van Pelt 35-35—70 Robert Garrigus 32-38—70
Driver Standings Through July 18 1. Juan Pablo Montoya, 445. 2. Graham Rahal, 403. 3. Scott Dixon, 397. 4. Helio Castroneves, 391. 5. Will Power, 390. 6. Sebastien Bourdais, 366. 7. Marco Andretti, 358. 8. Josef Newgarden, 352. 9. Tony Kanaan, 324. 10. Simon Pagenaud, 294. 11. Carlos Munoz, 281. 12. Ryan Hunter-Reay, 278. 13. Charlie Kimball, 275. 14. Takuma Sato, 240. 15. James Jakes, 213. 16. Gabby Chaves, 211. 17. Jack Hawksworth, 202. 18. Sage Karam, 172. 19. Luca Filippi, 161. 20. Stefano Coletti, 160.
HE’S STILL TOM TERRIFIC TO FANS
Charles Krupa/AP Photo
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS FANS WAIT FOR PRACTICE TO FINISH, WHILE SHOWING THEIR SUPPORT for quarterback Tom Brady, during the Patriots’ training camp Thursday in Foxborough, Massachusetts.
Nicholas Thompson Nick Watney Gary Woodland Martin Laird Erik Compton Michael Putnam Shawn Stefani Johnson Wagner Tony Finau Colt Knost Carlos Ortiz James Hahn Scott Pinckney Luke Guthrie Jason Kokrak Chad Collins George McNeill Jon Curran Jimmy Walker Kyle Reifers Alex Prugh Andres Gonzales Jhonattan Vegas John Merrick Max Homa Sam Saunders Camilo Villegas Daniel Berger Chris Stroud Ken Duke Blayne Barber a-Gunn Yang Tim Wilkinson Scott Langley Stewart Cink John Senden Stephen Gallacher Zac Blair Charlie Beljan Scott Brown D.A. Points Andrew Svoboda Daniel Chopra Michael Thompson
36-34—70 33-37—70 35-35—70 34-36—70 36-34—70 36-35—71 38-33—71 37-34—71 34-37—71 35-36—71 36-35—71 36-35—71 37-34—71 34-37—71 38-33—71 37-34—71 37-34—71 36-35—71 36-35—71 35-36—71 36-36—72 36-36—72 37-35—72 34-38—72 35-37—72 35-37—72 36-36—72 36-36—72 37-35—72 35-38—73 37-36—73 36-37—73 37-36—73 40-33—73 36-38—74 35-39—74 36-38—74 37-37—74 36-38—74 37-38—75 38-38—76 40-37—77 38-39—77 39-40—79
Gerina Piller Kelly W Shon a-Luna Sobron Alison Walshe Amy Boulden Paula Creamer Shanshan Feng Ha Na Jang Eun-Hee Ji Moriya Jutanugarn Kim Kaufman Stacey Keating Christina Kim Catriona Matthew Jenny Shin Marianne Skarpnord Jennifer Song Lexi Thompson Sun Young Yoo Yumiko Yoshida Rebecca Artis Minea Blomqvist Carly Booth Ssu-Chia Cheng Chella Choi Na Yeon Choi In Gee Chun Laura Davies Charlotte Ellis Jaye Marie Green Mina Harigae Nina Holleder Tiffany Joh Felicity Johnson Jessica Korda Candie Kung Xi Yu Lin Ai Miyazato Jane Park Lizette Salas Alena Sharp Ashleigh Simon Yani Tseng Sophie Walker Ayaka Watanabe Ursula Wikstrom Sakura Yokomine Marina Alex Maria Balikoeva Natalie Gulbis Caroline Hedwall Brooke M. Henderson Charley Hull Mi Jung Hur Alison Lee Emily K. Pedersen Melissa Reid Ritsuko Ryu Jenny Suh Kelly Tan Hannah Burke Carlota Ciganda Sandra Gal a-Kristen Gillman Georgia Hall Wei-Ling Hsu Karine Icher Vikki Laing Stephanie L Meadow Hee Young Park Morgan Pressel Mariajo Uribe Kylie Walker Beth Allen Lucie Andre Austin Ernst Sei Young Kim Brittany Lincicome Sydnee Michaels Haru Nomura Lee-Anne Pace Pornanong Phatlum Jade Schaeffer a-Linnea Strom a-Celine Boutier
Women’s British Open
Thursday At Trump Turnberry Ailsa Course Turnberry, Scotland Purse: $3 million Yardage: 6,410; Par: 72 (36-36) First Round a-amateur Hyo Joo Kim 33-32—65 Cristie Kerr 31-35—66 Lydia Ko 32-34—66 Q Baek 32-35—67 So Yeon Ryu 31-36—67 Katie Burnett 33-35—68 Jin Young Ko 33-35—68 Teresa Lu 34-34—68 Mika Miyazato 35-33—68 Azahara Munoz 35-33—68 Shiho Oyama 37-31—68 Florentyna Parker 34-34—68 Suzann Pettersen 36-32—68 Nicole Broch Larsen 36-33—69 Minjee Lee 33-36—69 Misuzu Narita 35-34—69 Anna Nordqvist 34-35—69 Inbee Park 35-34—69 Beatriz Recari 34-35—69 Klara Spilkova 36-33—69 Angela Stanford 38-31—69 Amy Yang 35-34—69 Julieta Granada 32-38—70 Juli Inkster 34-36—70 Danielle Kang 33-37—70 Nanna Koerstz Madsen 35-35—70 Jung-Min Lee 36-34—70 Mi Hyang Lee 35-35—70 Camilla Lennarth 36-34—70 Stacy Lewis 35-35—70 Mo Martin 36-34—70 Gwladys Nocera 36-34—70
37-33—70 34-36—70 34-36—70 37-33—70 38-33—71 40-31—71 34-37—71 36-35—71 35-36—71 35-36—71 36-35—71 37-34—71 36-35—71 36-35—71 34-37—71 33-38—71 35-36—71 35-36—71 36-35—71 36-35—71 36-36—72 39-33—72 37-35—72 40-32—72 35-37—72 34-38—72 38-34—72 37-35—72 35-37—72 37-35—72 33-39—72 35-37—72 36-36—72 36-36—72 39-33—72 35-37—72 37-35—72 36-36—72 39-33—72 35-37—72 37-35—72 38-34—72 37-35—72 35-37—72 37-35—72 35-37—72 36-36—72 35-38—73 39-34—73 38-35—73 38-35—73 39-34—73 37-36—73 37-36—73 37-36—73 39-34—73 35-38—73 37-36—73 37-36—73 37-36—73 35-39—74 36-38—74 35-39—74 38-36—74 35-39—74 37-37—74 35-39—74 38-36—74 39-35—74 39-35—74 39-35—74 37-37—74 39-35—74 40-35—75 41-34—75 38-37—75 37-38—75 36-39—75 39-36—75 39-36—75 39-36—75 40-35—75 39-36—75 40-35—75 36-40—76
Holly Clyburn Nicole Garcia a-Connie Jaffrey P.K. Kongkraphan Brittany Lang Ilhee Lee Meena Lee a-Pamela Pretswell Marion Ricordeau Dewi Claire Schreefel Michelle Wie Pernilla Lindberg a-Su-Hyun Oh Titiya Plucksataporn Isabelle Boineau Jacqui Concolino Ariya Jutanugarn Min Seo Kwak Rebecca Hudson Sarah Kemp Caroline Masson Maria McBride Paula Reto Anne-Lise Caudal Sally Watson Karrie Webb a-Chiara Mertens
39-37—76 40-36—76 40-36—76 38-38—76 38-38—76 40-36—76 39-37—76 39-37—76 34-42—76 38-38—76 37-39—76 41-36—77 38-39—77 41-36—77 40-38—78 41-37—78 40-38—78 36-42—78 42-37—79 40-39—79 37-42—79 43-36—79 44-35—79 42-38—80 42-38—80 45-35—80 45-37—82
NASCAR Sprint Cup
Feb. 14 x-Sprint Unlimited, Daytona Beach, Fla. (Matt Kenseth) Feb. 19 x-Budweiser Duel I, Daytona Beach, Fla. (Dale Earnhardt Jr.) Feb. 19 x-Budweiser Duel II, Daytona Beach, Fla. (Jimmie Johnson) Feb. 22 Daytona 500, Daytona Beach, Fla. (Joey Logano) March 1 Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500, Hampton, Ga. (Jimmie Johnson) March 8 Kobalt 400, Las Vegas (Kevin Harvick) March 15 CampingWorld.com 500, Avondale, Ariz. (Kevin Harvick) March 22 Auto Club 400, Fontana, Calif. (Brad Keselowski) March 29 STP 500, Ridgeway, Va. (Denny Hamlin) April 11 Duck Commander 500, Fort Worth, Texas (Jimmie Johnson) April 19 Food City 500, Bristol, Tenn. (Matt Kenseth) April 25 Toyota Owners 400, Richmond, Va. (Kurt Busch) May 3 GEICO 500 (Dale Earnhardt Jr.) May 9 SpongeBob SquarePants 400, Kansas City, Kan. (Jimmie Johnson) May 15 x-Sprint Showdown, Concord, N.C. (Greg Biffle and Clint Bowyer) May 16 x-All-Star Race, Concord, N.C. (Denny Hamlin) May 24 Coca-Cola 600, Concord, N.C. (Carl Edwards) May 31 FedEx 400, Dover, Del. (Jimmie Johnson) June 7 Axalta We Paint Winners 400, Long Pond, Pa. (Martin Truex Jr.) June 14 Quicken Loans 400, Brooklyn, Mich. (Kurt Busch) June 28 Toyota/Save Mart 350, Sonoma, Calif. (Kyle Busch) July 5 Coke Zero 400, Daytona Beach, Fla. (Dale Earnhardt Jr.) July 11 Quaker State 400, Sparta, Ky. (Kyle Busch) July 19 New Hampshire 301, Loudon (Kyle Busch) July 26 The Jeff Kyle 400 at the Brickyard, Indianapolis (Kyle Busch) Aug. 2 Pennsylvania 400, Long Pond Aug. 9 Cheez-It 355 at The Glen, Watkins Glen, N.Y.
Aug. 16 Pure Michigan 400, Brooklyn Aug. 22 IRWIN Tools Night Race, Bristol, Tenn. Sept. 6 Southern 500, Darlington, S.C. Sept. 12 Federated Auto Parts 400, Richmond, Va. Challenger Round Sept. 20 Chicagoland 400, Joliet, Ill. Sept. 27 SYLVANIA 300, Loudon, N.H. Oct. 4 AAA 400, Dover, Del. Contender Round Oct. 10 Bank of America 500, Concord, N.C. Oct. 18 Hollywood Casino 400, Kansas City, Kan. Oct. 25 Alabama 500, Talladega Eliminator Round Nov. 1 Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500, Martinsville, Va. Nov. 8 AAA Texas 500, Fort Worth Nov. 15 Quicken Loans Race for Heroes 500, Avondale, Ariz. Championship Round Nov. 22 Ford EcoBoost 400, Homestead, Fla. x-non-points race Driver Standings Through July 26 1. Kevin Harvick, 777. 2. Joey Logano, 708. 3. Dale Earnhardt Jr., 677. 4. Jimmie Johnson, 675. 5. Martin Truex Jr., 668. 6. Brad Keselowski, 638. 7. Matt Kenseth, 615. 8. Kurt Busch, 612. 9. Jamie McMurray, 602. 10. Denny Hamlin, 591. 11. Jeff Gordon, 575. 12. Ryan Newman, 563. 13. Paul Menard, 558. 14. Kasey Kahne, 558. 15. Clint Bowyer, 538. 16. Carl Edwards, 519. 17. Aric Almirola, 508. 18. Greg Biffle, 462. 19. Austin Dillon, 453. 20. Kyle Larson, 452.
IndyCar
March 29 Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, Fla. (Juan Pablo Montoya) April 12 Grand Prix of Louisiana, Avondale (James Hinchcliffe) April 19 Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach, Calif. (Scott Dixon) April 26 Honda Indy Grand Prix of Alabama, Birmingham (Josef Newgarden) May 9 Grand Prix of Indianapolis (Will Power) May 24 Indianapolis 500 (Juan Pablo Montoya) May 30 Chevrolet Indy Dual in Detroit Race 1 (Carlos Munoz) May 31 Chevrolet Indy Dual in Detroit Race 2 (Sebastien Bourdais) June 6 Firestone 600, Fort Worth, Texas (Scott Dixon) June 14 Honda Indy Toronto (Josef Newgarden) June 27 MAVTV 500, Fontana, Calif. (Graham Rahal) July 12 ABC Supply Wisconsin 250, West Allis (Sebastien Bourdais) July 18 Iowa Corn Indy 250, Newton (Ryan Hunter-Reay) Aug. 2 Honda Indy 200 at Mid-Ohio, Lexington Aug. 23 ABC Supply 500, Long Pond, Pa. Aug. 30 GoPro Grand Prix of Sonoma, Calif.
BASEBALL Major League Baseball OFFICE OF THE COMMISSIONER OF BASEBALL — Suspended Baltimore minor league SS Jared Breen (Delmarva-SAL) and RHP Nick Cunningham (Delmarva-SAL) 80 games each, after testing positive for a performance-enhancing substance in violation of the Minor League Drug Prevention and Treatment Program. American League BOSTON RED SOX — Designated OF Daniel Nava for assignment. Recalled RHP Jonathan Aro from Pawtucket (IL). Optioned LHP Tommy Layne to Pawtucket. HOUSTON ASTROS — Activated InF Jed Lowrie from the 60-day DL. Designated RHP Roberto Hernandez for assignment. KANSAS CITY ROYALS — Activated INF-OF Ben Zobrist. Optioned OF Paulo Orlando to Omaha (PCL). NEW YORK YANKEES — Placed RHP Michael Pineda on the 15-day DL. Recalled RHP Bryan Mitchell and RHP Nick Goody from Scranton/ Wilkes-Barre (IL). Optioned RHP Caleb Cotham to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. SEATTLE MARINERS — Acquired OF Ramon Flores and RHP Jose Ramirez from the New York Yankees for OF Dustin Ackley. Recalled 1B Jesus Montero from Tacoma (PCL). TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Acquired LHP David Price from Detroit for LHP Daniel Norris, LHP Matt Boyd and LHP Jairo Labourt. National League ATLANTA BRAVES — Acquired INF Hector Olivera, LHP Paco Rodriguez and RHP Zachary Bird from the Los Angeles Dodgers and Miami’s 2016 competitive balance draft lottery selection A for LHPs Luis Avilan and Alex Wood, RHPs Bronson Arroyo and Jim Johnson and INF Jose Peraza. CINCINNATI REDS — Recalled LHP David Holmberg and RHP Keyvius Sampson from Louisville (IL). Optioned C Kyle Skipworth to Pensacola (SL). Placed RHP Nate Adcock on the 15-day DL. MIAMI MARLINS — Acquired RHPs Kevin Guzman, Jeff Brigham and Victor Araujo from the Los Angeles Dodgers for RHP Mat Latos, 1B Michael Morse and cash considerations. PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Designated RHP Vance Worley for assignment. Activated RHP Joe Blanton. ST. LOUIS CARDINALS — Acquired OF-1B Brandon Moss from Cleveland for LHP Rob Kaminsky. Placed OF Matt Holliday on the 15-day DL. Recalled INF Greg Garcia from Memphis (PCL). Designated 1B Dan Johnson for assignment. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association NEW YORK KNICKS — Signed C Kristaps Porzingis and G Jerian Grant. FOOTBALL National Football League ATLANTA FALCONS — Placed OT Lamar Holmes on the PUP list. BUFFALO BILLS — Placed DE Mario Williams, K Dan Carpenter and CB Leodis McKelvin on the active/ non-football injury list and TE Chris Manhertz and CB Cam Thomas on the PUP list. CAROLINA PANTHERS — Signed WR Avius Capers and P Matt Wile. Waived CB Gary Peters. Placed De’Andre Presley and TE Brandon Williams on the PUP list and OT Jonathan Martin on the reserve/did not report list. CINCINNATI BENGALS — Signed WRs Desmond Lawrence and Greg Little. Waived WR Cobi Hamilton. Placed LB Ray Maualuga on the active/nonfootball injury list. CLEVELAND BROWNS — Placed LB Darius Eubanks, WR Marlon Moore and RB Glenn Winston on the active/ non-football injury list. DALLAS COWBOYS — Placed RB Darren McFadden and LB Rolando McClain on the PUP list and OL Chaz Green, LB Mark Nzeocha and C Shane McDermott on the active/non-football injury list. Announced the retirement of LB Keith Rivers. TENNESSEE TITANS — Agreed to terms with NT Isaako Aaitui. Placed NT Sammie Hill on PUP list and TE Dorin Dickerson on injured reserve.
PUBLIC NOTICES 785.832.2222
PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED FROM 9C KANSAS In the Matter of the Marriage of Vera Lee Kodaseet And George Allen Kodaseet
NOTICE OF SUIT to
You are notified that a Petition for Divorce was filed in the District Court of DOUGLAS County, Kansas asking that the person filing the divorce be granted a divorce and asking that the court make other orders in that divorce matter. You must file an answer to the Petition for Divorce with the court and provide a copy tothe filing spouse on or before September 24, 2015, which shall not be less than 41 days after first publication of this Notice of Suit, or the court will enter judgement against you on that Petition. /s/ Vera Lee Kodaseet Vera Lee Kodaseet,
Petitioner 1406 Pin Oak Dr. Lawrence, Kansas 66044 (785) 424-7765 ________
ALL CREDITORS of the decedent are notified to exhibit their demands against the Estate within four (4) months from the date of the first publication of this Notice, as pro(First published in the vided by law, and if their Lawrence Daily Journal demands are not so exhibWorld July 24, 2015) ited and filed, they shall IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS
Case No. 2015-DM-000569
The State of Kansas George Allen Kodaseet):
classifieds@ljworld.com
IN THE MATIER OF THE ESTATE OF HAROLD L. GALYARDT, Deceased Case No. 2015-PR-98 Div. No. 1 NOTICE TO CREDITORS PURSUANT TO THE KANSAS SIMPLIFIED ESTATES ACT (Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 59) TO ALL CERNED:
PERSONS
CON-
You are hereby notified that on July 17, 2015, a Petition for Issuance of Letters of Administration Pursuant to the Kansas Simplified Estates Act was filed in the District Court of Douglas County, Kansas by Rosie Williams, former guardian and conservator of the deceased.
be forever barred. /s/Rosie Williams ROSIE WILLIAMS, Petitioner Prepared and Approved by: /s/Ronald Schneider, #10386
Ronald Schneider, Attorney at Law, P.A. 900 Massahusetts, Suite 600 Lawrence, Kansas66044 Ph: (785) 841-2040 Fax:(785)851-0243 rxschneider@gmail.com.com Attorney for Petitioner ________
First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World July 31, 2015 NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING The governing body of Grant Township Douglas County will meet on August 10, 2015 at 7:00 p.m. at Grant Township Community Center - 1838 E 1600 Road, Lawrence KS 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 Dg Co Courthouse-Budget Office-1100 Massachusetts St, Lawrence KS 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. Prior Year Actual 2014
First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World July 31, 2015 NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING The governing body of Marion Township Douglas County will meet on August 10, 2015 at 6:30 p.m. at Marion Township Hall - 501 E 300 Road, Overbrook KS 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 Dg Co Courthouse - 1100 Massachusetts St, Lawrence KS 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. Prior Year Actual 2014
General Totals
Expenditures 318,113 318,113
Less: Transfers 60,000 Net Expenditure 258,113 Total Tax Levied 268,068 Assessed Valuation Township 11,551,210 Outstanding Indebtedness, 2013 Jan 1 0 G.O Bonds 0 Other Lease Purchase Principal 0 Total 0 *Tax rates are express in mills. Bernie Faust, Township Treasurer
Proposed Budget 2016 Current Year Estimate 2015 Actual Budget Amount of Tax Authority for 2014 Ad Expenditures Valorem Tax Rate* 23.745 437,505 296,252 23.745 437,505 296,252
Actual Tax Rate* Expenditures 23.207 351,000 23.207 351,000 30,000 321,000 281,430
0 437,505 xxxxxxxxxxx
11,852,349
12,577,484
2014 0 0 0 0
2015 0 0 0 0
Est. Tax Rate* 23.554 23.554
Fund Expenditures General 256,407 Totals 256,407 Less: Transfers 0 Net Expenditure 256,407 Total Tax Levied Assessed Valuation: Township Outstanding Indebtedness, Jan 1 G.O. Bonds Other Lease Purchase Principal Total
Current Year Estimate 2015
Actual Tax Rate* Expenditures 14.819 304,175 14.819 304,175 0 304,175
Proposed Budget 2016 Amount of 2015 Ad Actual Tax Budget Authority for Valorem Rate* Expenditures Tax 16.053 335,376 260,211 16.053 335,376 260,211 0 335,376
199,731
225,508
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13,477,741
14,047,709
14,413,779
2013
2014
Est. Tax Rate* 18.053 18.053
2015
0 0 16,125
0 0 0
0 0 0
16,125
0
0
*Tax rates are expressed in mills.
Notice of Vote In adopting the 2016 budget the governing body voted to increase property taxes in an amount greater than the amount levied for the 2015 budget, adjusted by the 2014 CPI for all urban consumers.
Barbara Higgins-Dover Treasurer
3 0
members voted in favor of the budget. members voted against the budget.
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