Lawrence Journal-World 08-03-2015

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‘KU can feel intimidating’

Public budget hearing is Tuesday Draft emphasizes ‘services for people’ over structures, commissioners say By Peter Hancock Twitter: @LJWpqhancock

Richard Gwin/Journal-World Photo

STACY MENDEZ, DIRECTOR OF KANSAS UNIVERSITY’S College Assistance Migrant Program, left, and Ngondi Kamatuka, KU’s Center for Educational Opportunity Programs director, hope to enroll five CAMP students this fall. Three have signed up so far, Mendez said.

But grant to recruit migrant students aims to change that By Sara Shepherd Twitter: @saramarieshep

M

argarita Alely Nuñez Arroyo knows getting to Kansas University, much less staying there, isn’t easy for migrant students. Her parents did not go to college. When she

The odds for them to go to a four-year college (are) not good.” — Alely Nuñez Arroyo, third-year Kansas University student moved from California to Emporia in the middle of high school, following her father’s work, she knew

no one. And she’s been working to pay her way at KU, where she’s now in her third year.

“The money that the parents make is very low. The odds for them to go to a four-year college (are) not good,” Nuñez said. “To make a program that targets them, and to make them feel like they’re visible ... even when everything else is telling Please see KU, page 2A

Residents of Lawrence will have their chance to comment on the city’s proposed 2016 budget when the City Commission holds a public hearing on the budget Tuesday night. As it currently stands, the draft budget CITY calls for $207 million COMMISSION in total spending next year, a 9 perInside: A cent increase over breakdown this year’s budget. of the budget But the city will proposal, from not raise propproperty taxes erty taxes to pay to departmental for that spending spending. 5A increase. Instead, commissioners plan to spend down some cash balances. The budget also includes planned increases in water and sewer utility fees. On the spending side, the budget includes funding for city employee pay raises, including those already negotiated with unions representing Please see BUDGET, page 5A

Creating a new ‘climate’ for art

LAWRENCE ARTIST AND COMMUNITY ARTS EDUCATOR LORA JOST has created several public art projects in Lawrence and continues to create themebased mixedmedia pieces, such as this mosaic from her series “Sound the Climate Alarm.”

Lora Jost’s mixed-media work gets conversations started Only in Lawrence: A Monday feature highlighting behindthe-scenes stars and unsung heroes who make Lawrence a special place to live. To suggest someone for a feature, email news@ljworld.com. Put Only in Lawrence in the subject line.

By Conrad Swanson Twitter: @conrad_swanson

Lora Jost sits in Aimee’s Cafe on Massachusetts Street. She drains the last bit of tea from her steeping tea bag and sets the pouch directly on the table top.

Business Classified Comics Deaths

Low: 68

Today’s forecast, page 8A

Mike Yoder/ Journal-World Photo

Please see ART, page 2A

INSIDE

Thunderstorms

High: 92

Brushing hair from her face, she reviews her online portfolio on the bright screen of a small laptop computer. When asked why birds are so prevalent in her artwork, Jost looks over the top

5A 5C-9C 6A 2A

Events listings Horoscope Opinion Puzzles

8A, 2C Sports 10C Television 7A USA Today 10C

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

Vol.157/No.215 26 pages

Health Care Access There’s a new CEO at Lawrence’s Health Care Access. Beth Llewellyn is eager for the challenge. Page 3A

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Monday, August 3, 2015

LAWRENCE

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Art

DEATHS

“I try to work on issues that I feel passionate about, and I’m becoming more CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A passionate about working on climate change. Lately Journal-World obituary policy: of her glasses, situated at it’s been kind of topping For information about running obituaries, call the very end of her nose my interests, although it 832-7151. Obituaries run as submitted by funeral and replies, “They’re great hasn’t always,” she said. “I homes or the families of the deceased. metaphors.” never think of myself as For Jost, 50, one of the an environmentalist, but roles of an artist in this what’s interesting to me world is to stimulate a about climate is the way iana uSan yerS dialogue and bring attenthe issue is related to pretty tion to issues dear to one’s much everything under the Susan, age 57, passed away from breast cancer on heart. Birds, metaphors, sun, literally.” 7/22/15 in Lawrence, KS. For information please visit mosaics, scratchboard and Old friend, fellow artist http://facebook.com/dsusanmyers collages are just some of and frequent collaborator the tools of her trade. Dave Loewenstein said he Jost, a North Newton deeply admires Jost’s work. ucie eanne eannot arnes eymour native, was introduced to Loewenstein and Jost art at a young age, and she worked together on the Lucie Jeanne and her brother both grew 2006 book “Kansas Murals: “Jeannot” Barnes up to be artists. A Traveler’s Guide.” The Seymour, 84, Lawrence, “My mom was a prework took them across the Kansas, passed away on school teacher, but she alstate, researching, photoAugust 1, 2015 at Brandon ways had interesting things graphing and writing about Woods. An opportunity around for us to make stuff 90 public murals throughfor friends and family to with,” she said. “And my out. remember and celebrate dad was a musician. So The pair also collaborather is being planned for they never discouraged us ed with other community Saturday, 7 November with the arts; they always members on a 2010 project 2015, at the Smith Center. encouraged us.” titled “Save Our Schools” Jeannot was born Jost earned a bachelor’s aimed at keeping Cordley on 7 August 1930 in a two time runner up for degree from Bethel College and New York Elementary Pierrefonds, France, Employee of the Year at in North Newton and a schools open amid threats where her father, KU. Master of Fine Arts from of budget cuts. In the early 1960’s she the University of WisconRussell C. Barnes, a “We share a lot of correspondent for worked with members of sin at Madison. She moved points of views about the Detroit News and her the Lawrence Arts Guild to Lawrence with her world,” he said. “Using mother, Ruth Constance to establish the first Art husband in 1996. your art to amplify issues Ingalls Barnes, an in the Park. Since coming to town, dealing with social jusA prolific designer, Jost has been involved with tice, equity and conservaAtchison native, were she illustrated several issues ranging from public tion is something Lora living. She graduated books on Lawrence and school funding to historic feels very strongly about, from Birmingham KU. She also supported districts, agriculture to and we are the great benconversion of sustainability. (Michigan) High School the eficiaries of having her in and attended Western the Carnegie Library “I think artists are the community.” the Lawrence starting to wake up to the College for Women in into While Loewenstein said Miami, Ohio. She later Arts Center, actively idea that we’ve got maybe he doesn’t necessarily feel transferred to Monticello participated in activities something to say or should it’s an artist’s responsibility College in Alton, Illinois, with the Meadowlark have some responsibility to to call attention to social isto study sculpture under 4-H Club, volunteered bring the conversation into sues, he admits they have a at Lawrence Memorial the community,” she said. Hillis Arnold. platform well-suited to that Jeannot worked Hospital, served in the Most recently Jost has purpose. And Jost’s work behind been working with the professionally as a organization finds a fine balance on the Episcopal Lawrence Ecology Teams graphic designer for Trinity matter, he said. annual United in Sustainability almost 40 years. While Church’s “She’s an expert craftsworking in Kansas City, Ploughman’s Lunch and (LETUS) and the United person when it comes to first as a greeting card designed and produced States Department of Arts using her skills to commuartist for Hallmark and hand-crafted gifts for and Culture for a project nicate complex ideas and later for an international Trinity Treasures. make us think about them culminating this spring at Jeannot was a member Lawrence’s Percolator to engineering firm, she deeply,” he said. “She pulls met Todd Seymour. of Kappa Alpha Theta increase awareness about no punches, and her work Friends in climate change. They were married on sorority, doesn’t suffer from being February 9, 1957 and their Council, PEO and the Women’s daughter, Ann Ingalls University “Bunny” Seymour, was Club. students. It aims to recruit She is survived by born in Lawrence in and retain students who are her husband, Todd, September 1958. migratory or seasonal farmShe returned to Lawrence; her daughter, workers, or children of such KU to study sculpture Bunny Seymour (Tom CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A workers, enrolled in their under Elden Tefft and Bierlaagh) and grandson first year of undergraduate Bierlaagh of them they can’t or they completed her Bachelor’s Pieter studies. Maryland shouldn’t go, I think it’s a degree in Fine Arts in Bethesda, CAMP pays for about 1964 while working at the and Amsterdam, The wonderful program.” half of students’ tuition their Netherlands; and her KU Bookstore. A new program launchfreshman years, a small John James ing this fall, though it’s com- stipend to defray living She was Art Director brother, with the Office of Ingalls “Jamie” Barnes, of ing too late for Nuñez to expenses, a loaner laptop University Relations and California. participate, will help future computer and personal Online condolences KU students like her during coaching from university its predecessors from may be sent to www. their freshman years. 1967 to 1997. During staff, according to KU. Only her tenure with the warrenmcelwain.com KU announced last week U.S. citizens or permanent Please sign this that it received a five-year, University she designed residents are eligible, said a number of award- guestbook at Obituaries. $2 million U.S. Department CAMP director Stacy winning publications LJWorld.com. of Education grant to estab- Mendez. and was asked to do lish a Heartland College AsThe $2 million is enough the artwork for the sistance Migrant Program, to help 175 students over the Chancellor’s Christmas or CAMP. life of the grant across the cards. Jeannot was also KU CAMP, one of more four schools. than 40 such programs At least for now, only a nationwide, will be based at sliver of those will be at KU. KU but also serve students KU’s goal is to enroll SUNDAY CROSSWORD SOLUTION FOR AUG. 2 at three other Midwest five CAMP students this schools experienced in fall, and three freshmen are working with first-generasigned up so far, Mendez tion, low-income students: said. That’s partly why the Donnelly College in Kansas recruitment piece of the City, Kan.; Metropolitan program is important, espeCommunity College in cially for KU, Mendez said. Omaha, Neb.; and Western Migrant students often Iowa Tech Community are ethnic minorities or College in Sioux City, Iowa. even refugees, may not KU, within its Achievespeak English as their native ment and Assessment language, come from famiInstitute, already has a lies where no one went to Center for Educational Op- college, have had interruptportunity Programs, which ed schooling or don’t have has helped Nuñez and other money to pay for college. low-income students. Many probably don’t CAMP, however, is tarbelieve a big, four-year regeted specifically at migrant search institution like KU is

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L awrence J ournal -W orld overly political or too dogmatic. It is still beautiful and has a sense of wonder to it.” That sense of wonder or something left unsaid is just as important as anything else in an artist’s work, said Ben Ahlvers, exhibition program director for the Lawrence Arts Center. “That’s the kind of artwork I respond to. It doesn’t tell me everything, and it leaves things to be explored, and I think Lora does those things in beautiful ways,” he said. “She uses beautiful imagery and pieces, and in some cases there’s another layer of a conversation within the work, and I think that’s one of her strengths.” Sometimes, Jost said, artists never receive confirmation that their voices are heard. And quite often the overall message of a piece is left up to the interpretation of the viewer. But not every piece of Jost’s work is meant to carry a political message, she said. Rather, most of her portfolio fits into at least one of her three major interests. “I’m intrigued by whimsy, I’m intrigued by the day-to-day and I’m also intrigued by things that are more socially urgent,” Jost said. “And I feel those are three threads that have moved through my work over the years.” Calling Jost a dedicated mother, wife and community member, Ahlvers said part of the attraction to her work is that she’s constantly creating and staying in motion. “She’s a very active person and an active artist and she’s always making,” Ahlvers said. “Keeping your hands dirty is something I was taught in school by my professors. Keep making, keep working, and a lot will follow from that.” possible, Mendez said. “KU can feel intimidating, like it’s not a place for them.” But Mendez and Center for Educational Opportunity Programs director Ngondi Kamatuka say KU wants them here. “The mission of the University of Kansas is to educate Kansans and the world,” Kamatuka said. “It behooves the University of Kansas to open its doors to all the students from the global community.” In addition to tuition help, CAMP will arrange group activities, help find jobs and help identify future tuition funding sources and tutoring for participants, the program leaders said. The idea is to create a smaller community within the big campus to ensure participants feel they belong. “Access alone is not enough,” Kamatuka said. It’s now been many years ago, but Kamatuka himself came to the United States as a refugee from Namibia. He said first landing at a tiny school, Tabor College in Hillsboro, helped him segue into KU, where he earned a doctoral degree. Jumping into a big school without help, “I would have had difficulty navigating my new culture,” Kamatuka said. “I’m one of these students.”

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Lawrence&State

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/local l Monday, August 3, 2015 l 3A

Health Care Access gets new CEO

Fun and fancy free

KANSAS LEGISLATURE

Changes to budget will have wide impact

By Conrad Swanson Twitter: @conrad_swanson

There’s a new face at Lawrence’s Health Care Access and she’s eager for the challenge. After years away from her hometown of Lawrence, Beth Llewellyn took over this July as Health Care Access’ first CEO. She has more than 25 years of health care administration experience, most recently from Alegent Creighton Health in Omaha, Neb. “I’m excited to be here in this space of my career to come back and see if I can’t help these folks Llewellyn and make a difference in my home town,� she said. Health Care Access, 330 Maine St., is a clinic where doctors, nurses and health care professionals volunteer their time for those without health insurance or those who are under-insured. “It’s a place that is a health home for the medically indigent,� Llewellyn said. “And for people that don’t have access to Medicare or Medicaid.� Llewellyn said she’s still finding her footing

By John Hanna Associated Press

Richard Gwin/Journal-World Photo

SHANNON RASSMUSSEN AND HER 11-MONTH-OLD DAUGHTER Sophia enjoyed a day of Please see CEO, page 4A bubbles and swinging early Saturday morning at the Burroughs playground in East Lawrence.

Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback’s latest efforts to prevent a state budget deficit were assisted by a well-timed decision on health care funding from federal officials and better-than-expected news about teacher pensions. The Republican governor’s administration outlined $63 million in budget adjustments last week. The changes capture savings from lower-than-anticipated spending, book favorable revisions in cost estimates, shift fee dollars into the state’s main bank account and tap additional federal dollars. Brownback told The Associated Press he sought to bolster the budget in ways Kansas residents wouldn’t much notice. However, he’s facing some skepticism from a leading advocate of children’s programs and supporters of highway projects. Here is a look at the changes imposed by Brownback in the $15.4 billion budget for the fis-

cal year that began last month.

Lawmakers expected cuts The GOP-dominated Legislature counted on Brownback trimming $50 million as part of a larger plan to keep the budget balanced through June 2016, and they were pleased by his moves last week. The plan also included sales and cigarette tax increases that took effect last month. The state’s budget problems arose after Republican legislators slashed personal income taxes at Brownback’s urging in an effort to stimulate the economy. GOP lawmakers preserved past cuts in income tax rates and most of an income tax exemption granted in 2012 to 281,000 business owners and 53,000 farmers. Rescued by Obamacare? The biggest change to the budget is tying an additional $18 million in federal funds to cover Please see STATE, page 4A

Beat the bats: Seal your home and evict critters for a guano-free zone

B

ats are great when they are flying around the yard eating beetles, moths and other pesky insects, but things are not quite as copacetic when bats start hanging out inside your home. The good news is, evicting bats from a home or attic is easier than you might think. Step 1: A lone bat or two flying through the home does not indicate

Fix-It Chick

Linda Cottin an infestation. Bats inadvertently may fly down

an uncapped chimney or in an open door or window. They can slip through cracks or crevices as small as 3/8-inch wide in search of a roosting space. If a bat problem is suspected, exit the house at dusk and watch for bats leaving the home. An infestation of bats can often be identified by the accumulation of guano or urine near roosting areas or entry

sites. Thoroughly inspect the home for active and inactive entry points. Step 2: Once entry points have been identified, seal up all the secondary points that are not currently active. Caulk around windows and doors, seal around chimneys, cap pipes and cover vents with aluminum screening. Do not seal up active entry points.

Step 3: Most bats nest and raise babies between June and August. Wait until the chance of nesting babies has passed before proceeding. Create a simple exclusion device by hanging a swath of fiberglass screen over the entry point. Mount the screen by attaching it to a piece of wood above the hole. The screen should protrude 2 to 4 inches away from the

hole and hang 18 inches or so below the hole to allow bats a seemingly unobstructed exit point. Secure the sides of the screen to the building surface with duct tape or staples to create a funnel-like exit point for the bats. The bats should be able to exit the home freely by crawling past the screen, but they will Please see BATS, page 4A

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State CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

healthcare for children in working-class families. The state is using the federal dollars to cut its own spending. “The timing of this was pretty fortunate in that we were notified in the last couple of days of June,” Budget Director Shawn Sullivan told reporters during a Statehouse news conference. The increase in federal funding was authorized by the 2010 federal law overhauling health care championed by President Barack Obama, though

LAWRENCE • STATE

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dren won’t be affected by using the extra federal dollars to reduce the state’s spending. But the group has other concerns about funding for children’s programs, much of it financed with funds from states’ legal settlements with tobacco companies in the 1990s. Such spending peaked at $77 million during the state’s 2008 fiscal year and has declined since. Brownback and legislators have regularly shifted unspent tobacco settlement dollars into the state’s main bank account to help with budget problems. The latest such move is the shifting of $2.8 million in funds previously set aside but

Congress provided the dollars only this year. Brownback and other Republicans are strong critics of what they call “Obamacare,” and GOP conservatives have increased their political power in Kansas by running against the Democratic president. “It’s ironic,” said Senate Minority Leader Anthony Hensley, a Topeka Democrat, adding that Brownback has “spent the past five years blaming President Obama for everything.”

Advocacy group upset The advocacy group Kansas Action for Children was skeptical that health coverage for chil-

unspent for a program aimed at improving children’s reading skills. “It is clear Kansas children and families continue to foot the bill for an unsustainable tax plan,” Shannon Cotsoradis, the group’s president and CEO said in a statement.

Teacher pension costs Brownback’s budget changes capture more than $9 million in funds state agencies didn’t spend during the last fiscal year, which normally would carry over into the new fiscal year. Sullivan said the bulk of it — more than $7 million — is coming from the state Department of Education. He said state of-

L awrence J ournal -W orld ficials overestimated the cost of payments to the Kansas Public Employees Retirement System to cover teachers’ pensions during the previous fiscal year. “That money wasn’t spent,” he said.

Transportation savings In tough budget times, governors and legislators have so regularly diverted funds earmarked for highway projects that they’ve referred to the state Department of Transportation as “the Bank of KDOT.” The current budget already diverted $132 million from highway projects. To that, Brownback

is adding $8 million in savings from operations within the agency. Sullivan told reporters no highway projects would be affected. Transportation Secretary Mike King said the agency found efficiencies — and a mild winter reduced its need for salting and sanding roads. But Economic Lifelines, a group that advocates for comprehensive state transportation programs, responded with a statement that said, “Enough is enough.” “The continuation of these transfers expedites the deterioration of Kansas roads,” co-chairman Johnnie Koger said.

ON THE RECORD Marriages John Heleniak, 47, Lawrence and Nicole Hite, 41, Lawrence. Michael Brom, 45, Castle Rock, Colo., and Jessica Jenkins, 45, Castle Rock, Colo. Daryl Mellard, 65, Topeka and Patricia Bossert, 59, Topeka. Jason Havelka, 29, Eudora and Katie Schyler, 29, Eudora. Mitchell Henry, 24, Lawrence and Kaitlyn Porter, 23, Lawrence. Robert Wagner, 23, Lawrence and Caitlin Campbell, 24, Lawrence. Brittany Rhoades, 21, Lecompton and Ronald Kelley, 24, Lecompton. Liberti VanDiest, 37, Eudora and James Needham, 40, Eudora. George Faler, 31, Oskaloosa and Baileigh Kimsey, 28, Oskaloosa. Evangeline Sanfilippo, 25, Lawrence and Abhimanya Sandal, 27, Lawrence. Jacob Jung, 28, Webb City, Mo., and Mary Cottrell, 27, Webb City, Mo. Ariel Dowdle, 31, Lawrence and Matthew Miner, 40, Lawrence. Denton Estes, 23, Lawrence and Samantha Bohmann, 26, Lawrence.

Nicholas Sagaert, 26, Mentor, Ohio, and Bethany Saylor, Ogallala, Neb. Valerie Brunson, 53, Lawrence and Trace McGee, 51, Lawrence. Marie Clyatt, 34, Waco, Texas, and Theresa Larson, 32, Waco, Texas. Michael Kraft, 58, Lawrence and Gayle Patterson, 59, Lawrence. Wayne Frahm, 52, Topeka and Frederick Salazar, 52, Topeka.

Divorces James Dye, 34, New Century and Lacey Dye, 35, Eudora. Jose Sanchez, 42, Merriam and Michelle Sanchez, 38, Eudora. Richard Holub, 48, Lawrence and Christina Holub, 48, Lawrence. Brendon Butler, 31, Adrian, Mo., and Stacy Butler, 31, Eudora. Keo Vannavongsa, 52, Lawrence and Nouteang Vannavongsa, 48, Lawrence.

Bankruptcies Zachary Andrew Kern, 11936 W. 119th St., Apt. #144, Overland Park. Theron James White and Sharon Lee White, 216 E. 18th St., Lawrence.

Bats CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

Send us your photos: Got a fun pic of friends or family? Someone in your community you’d like to recognize? We’ll even publish your pets. Email your photos to friends@ljworld.com or mail them to Friends & Neighbors, P.O. Box 888, Lawrence, KS 66044.

CEO CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

in her new position and she’s looking to learn more about what HCA can offer in the future. For the time being, however, Llewellyn said she’s looking to strengthen some of the organization’s current programs. One of those is an inhouse wellness program created four years ago in partnership with Washburn University’s Department of Kinesiology. The “champion” of that partnership, Llewellyn said, is Washburn associate professor of kinesiology Park Lockwood. The wellness program is focused on just that, wellness, Lockwood said. The program, which is located in HCA’s basement, has already seen well more than 1,000 patients. “It’s something that’s more than just fitness. It’s exercise, fitness, nutrition, stress management, looking at certain illnesses and diseases and trying to put treatment programs together that can help people with obesity, Type 2 diabetes, hypertension and other things.” Through the years Washburn’s Kinesiology Department created a checklist of sorts that allows them to screen each patient quickly and understand his or her needs, Lockwood said. “(The wellness program) has served the population pretty well,” Lockwood said. “Despite up and down changes with staff at Health Care Access, wellness has been maintained.” Now that Llewellyn is CEO of the organization, Lockwood said he has high hopes for the ongoing partnership, calling her “very supportive of wellness.”

Contributed Photo

Little brown bat

not be able to fly back into the opening. Step 4: Make certain the device is working properly by watching

Another of HCA’s partnerships is with the Lawrence Community Shelter. “We have so many people here who do have health care needs,” said shelter case manager Sonya Robinson. “And we contact Health Care Access if they don’t have insurance.” On Tuesdays and Thursdays, the shelter organizes transportation for any of its guests with medical needs, Robinson said. They’re then brought to HCA for medical attention. HCA sees at least four people from the shelter each week, Robinson said. “It’s really providing for a need that we have,” she said. “A lot of people can get the help they need through HCA or their medication or a referral to a health care provider.” “I think it’s been going really well,” she added. “And I think that it helps that we coordinate with them to keep it organized.” Lawrence Memorial Hospital is another significant community partner for HCA, Llewellyn said. Among other things, the hospital provides ad-

ministrative spaces and shares its medical record system. That medical record system allows HCA to offer patients a bit of continuity and helps health professionals better understand their needs, Llewellen said. As time progresses, HCA will look to strengthen that bond between the two organizations. “I think we have an opportunity to keep learning and leveraging that electronic and medical record connectivity and an opportunity to improve further that patient medical record platform and how we’re using that as a basis to interact with others,” she said. With a potential expansion for Medicaid in Kansas, Llewellyn also said HCA may look into ways to continue serving patients who have found a health home at the organization. “We establish a relationship with people. This is their health home. And they get just enough better or worse or their circumstances change and they may become Medicaid eligible and they’d like to be able to stay with us,” she said.

Have you RSVP’d?

Looking for a fun way to stay connected and involved in your community?

Join the Retired & Senior Volunteer Program (RSVP) of Shawnee & Douglas Counties. Make new friends, help others and put your lifetime experiences to work!

Contact Carole or Virginia at RSVP@unitedwaytopeka.org or call 785-228-5124.

bats exit the home at night. Wait a few days to be sure all of the bats have left the premises. Remove the exclusion device and seal up the entrance points with appropriate patch-

ing materials. Unlike other invasive pests, bats will not chew or damage homes to get back inside. They will look for new entrance points, so be diligent about sealing up cracks

and crevices throughout the year. — Have a home improvement question for the Fix-It Chick? Email it to Linda Cottin at features@ljworld.com.

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BUSINESS

L awrence J ournal -W orld

?

ON THE By Rochelle Valverde

What’s your favorite piece of community art in Lawrence? Asked at the Lawrence Public Library

Garrett Flippin, warehouse worker, Lawrence “The mural in the alleyway near Seventh and Mass.�

Julie Holmberg, violin teacher, Lawrence “The sculpture in front of City Hall, the one that spins in the wind. It’s fascinating to me.�

| 5A

West Lawrence chop house has big plans

street Y Read more responses and add your thoughts at LJWorld.com

Monday, August 3, 2015

ou bet I’ve got a chop house on my mind, and it is not just because I’ve already spent a lot of time “helping� my 4-H kids wrangle their hogs at the Douglas County Fair. I’ve got news of a large expansion of a west Lawrence restaurant that specializes in steaks and chops. I briefly mentioned two weeks ago that I had heard the Six Mile Chop House and Tavern was expanding at its Sixth and Wakarusa location. Well, now I’ve got details, and they show the expansion will make it one of the larger restaurants in the city. Brad Ziegler, an owner of Six Mile, told me that he has struck a deal to take all 6,500 square feet of space that previously was occupied by Famous Dave’s BBQ. Six Mile currently occupies space that is adjacent to the former Famous Dave’s location. Ziegler said a big part of the expansion plan is for Six Mile to get into the banquet business. That means wedding receptions, corporate events, big birthday parties, and bon voyage parties for a certain pair of pigs. (Well, maybe that last one is a tiny niche.) “We want more room for private events and banquets,� Ziegler said. “We turn down a lot of events because we just don’t have the size.� That won’t be a problem following the

Town Talk

chops, lamb chops and other meaty entrees. Ziegler said the idea of a local steakhouse has been well-received by Lawrence diners. He said with the larger location he will try to attract a larger customer base by adding a few mid-range cuts of Angus steak in order to offer the option of a lower price point. clawhorn@ljworld.com But plans also call for expansion. Six Mile and the restaurant to keep its Famous Dave’s occupied selection of prime cuts space that originally of beef. The restaurant served as the Lawrence currently offers nine cuts location for the Hereford of prime beef ranging House. It was frequently from a 17-ounce Bone-In said that the Lawrence Cowboy Ribeye to the Hereford House was the traditional Kansas City largest restaurant in the Strip. Ziegler said a sigstate of Kansas, just in nificant expansion of the terms of square footage. restaurant’s wine list also Ziegler said the expan- is planned. sion will allow for a Ziegler hopes to have significant increase in the expansion — which general seating for diners for the moment is focusas well. ing just on the main floor “We don’t know the space, not the basement of the building — comfinal number yet, but pleted in October. But we’ll definitely double construction work hasn’t our capacity for dining,� yet begun. Ziegler said Ziegler said. he’s awaiting the necesPlans also call for an additional bar and lounge sary permits from City Hall. area to be added to the restaurant. But Ziegler l l l — who is a longtime bar The corner of 23rd and owner in Lawrence — said he’s not planning on O’Connell may be the latusing any of the space to est to try to lure retirees to Lawrence. Plans have create a large nightclub. been filed to build a 90“We’re just talking unit, independent senior about a casual place to living community near have a cocktail,� Ziegler the intersection. said. Olathe developer Dave What won’t change Rhodes has filed a plan much is the restaurant’s to develop about 9 acres menu. It will still have a heavy emphasis on steak, of vacant ground at 2101 with some seafood, pork Exchange Court, which is

Chad Lawhorn

Budget

just south of the 23rd and O’Connell intersection and on the west side of O’Connell Drive. I’ve put a call into Rhodes, but haven’t yet heard back. But the plans filed at City Hall describe the project as an independent living retirement community. It will be a sizable one at that. The proposal calls for 15 buildings with six living units per building. Each building will have four two-bedroom units and two one-bedroom units. The development also will include a 2,000-square-foot leasing office. We’ve previously reported that Rhodes had sought affordable housing tax credits to help finance the project. I haven’t gotten word on whether the project has received those tax credits, but I’m working to get that information. If the credits were received, that would mean that the project would be rent-controlled, and residents would have to meet certain guidelines. Rhodes previously has said the project would be limited to residents 55 years old and over. I’ll let you know when I hear more. He’s previously described the project as being about a $16 million investment. When we reported on the project in November, Rhodes said his development group owned five other affordable “garden/ ranch style apartment�

developments in Kansas, and also owned or managed about 350 conventional apartment units. The property already has the necessary zoning in place to allow for the development. City officials now need to approve a site plan for the project to proceed. It will be an interesting development to watch for a couple of reasons. One is that it continues a trend of Lawrence trying to become more of a destination for retirees. But the other reason is because the new living units could help spur additional commercial development at 23rd and O’Connell. The southeast corner of 23rd and O’Connell is zoned for commercial uses, but other than a Tractor Supply store, retail development hasn’t yet come to the corner. The general thought on why retail has been slow to develop there is that retailers want to see more homes in close proximity to the intersection. I’m not sure 90 new units will push the area over the top, but there’s also residential zoning just to the south of the retail area, and work to install roads and other infrastructure to accommodate future residential development has occurred on the site. — These are excerpts from Chad Lawhorn’s Town Talk column, which runs each weekday at LJWorld.com.

By the numbers: 2016 city budget draft

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

the Lawrence Police Department and Lawrence-Douglas County Fire Medical. It also includes $8.7 million for residential street and major street repairs, a $1.4 million increase over this year’s budget. “I think one of the things we’ve chosen to do is, we’re Ron Fox, putting people above product,� retired, Commissioner Matthew Herbert Lawrence said. “Previous commissions “The wood sculpture have made it their goal to build that was at the corner of structures: the library; Rock Eighth and Mass. It was Chalk Park. ... The focus of this intriguing for kids — you commission is on services for could spin it around. � people.� Vice Mayor Leslie Soden said she also supports the increased investment in public infrastructure, and she said she believes the salary adjustments for city employees, especially police and firefighters, are also vital. “That gets us more in line with our peer cities,� she said. “The problem we had was our employees would reach their maximum pay sooner than in other communities. For firefighters, that was eight, nine, Lane Blessum, maybe 10 years into their career. legal assistant, It’s risky for us to lose qualified Lawrence “The Lawrence Library, firefighters to other cities. We also lengthened the amount of actually — I think time it takes to reach that max.� the building itself The budget, as it was pubis beautiful. � lished, represents the maximum What would your answer amount of taxes the city can raise next year. Commissioners be? Go to ljworld.com/ onthestreet and share it. still have the option of lowering that amount before they give it final approval. After the public hearing, commissioners will vote on whether CORRECTIONS to approve the budget on first reading. A vote on final passage The Journal-World’s of the budget is scheduled for policy is to correct all next Aug. 11. significant errors that are In other business, the commisbrought to the editors’ sion will: attention, usually in this l Consider approving an upspace. If you believe we dated draft of the East Ninth have made such an error, Work Plan, as recommended by call (785) 832-7154, or the Citizen Advisory Commitemail news@ljworld.com.

Total mill levy: 31.474 mills, unchanged from 2015 Total budgeted spending: $206.7 million, up 9.9 percent from 2015 Budgeted spending levels of top city departments: l Utilities: $56.6 million l Public Works: $29.6 million l Police: $19.9 million l Fire & Medical: $15.7 million l Parks & Recreation: $11.7 million l Transit: $7.8 million l Library: $3.75 million l Tourism: $2.06 million

City property taxes for a $160,000 home: $579.12 Water and sewer rate increase: 6.8 percent for the average residential customer; 8.1 percent for commercial customer Average monthly rate increase for typical 6,000 gallon residential water user: $5.18 City employees: 810 full-time equivalents, up from 803 in 2015 and from 795 in 2014 Wage increases for government employees whose wages come from the general fund: $1.8 million

— Source: City of Lawrence; Journal-World Graphic

tee, and consider authorizing Interim City Manager Diane Stoddard to execute an agreement with the Lawrence Arts Center regarding the commitment of $50,000 from the Lawrence Arts Center toward the city’s service contract with el dorado inc. and establishing expectations for handling the agreements with artists regarding the project. l Conduct a public hearing to allow the owner of the property

at 1231 Pennsylvania St. to show cause why the enforcing officer should not be directed to raze and remove the unsafe and dangerous single-family house and accessory storage building and to remove accumulated debris scrap and storage from the exterior yard and front porch, and take appropriate action. l Consider issuing $10.669 million in temporary notes to finance various improvement projects.

l Consider issuing $1.75 million in general obligation bonds to pay for costs of 2014 street overlay projects, and $350,000 in general obligation bonds to pay the final costs of the Ninth Street reconstruction project. l And conduct a public hearing and vote on a resolution establishing a benefit district and authorizing intersection improvements at Sixth Street and Champion Lane.

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6A

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Monday, August 3, 2015

NON sEQUItUr

COMICS

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PLUGGErs

GArY BrOOKINs

fAMILY CIrCUs

PICKLEs hI AND LOIs

sCOtt ADAMs

ChrIs CAssAtt & GArY BrOOKINs

JErrY sCOtt & JIM BOrGMAN

PAtrICK MCDONNELL

ChrIs BrOwNE BABY BLUEs

DOONEsBUrY

ChArLEs M. sChULZ

DEAN YOUNG/JOhN MArshALL

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hAGAr thE hOrrIBLE

ChIP sANsOM/Art sANsOM

J.P. tOOMEY

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BLONDIE

BrIAN CrANE

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JIM DAVIs

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Off thE MArK

MOrt, GrEG & BrIAN wALKEr

PEANUts GArfIELD

BIL KEANE

GrEG BrOwNE/ChANCE wALKEr

BOrN LOsEr BEEtLE BAILEY

L awrence J ournal -W orld

GArrY trUDEAU

GEt fUZZY

JErrY sCOtt/rICK KIrKMAN

DArBY CONLEY


Opinion

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Monday, August 3, 2015

EDITORIALS

Time for action A new task force report identifies a practical strategy to bolster the state’s mental health system.

T

he bottom line of a task force report released last week is clear: The current Kansas mental health system “is stretched beyond its ability to provide the right care at the right time in the right place.” The Adult Continuum of Care Committee’s conclusions should be a call to action for state officials to address what the task force concluded is a potentially dangerous situation for the state. “The health and safety of our citizens, families and communities are at risk “in a system where we must desperately seek alternative placements in order to avoid unacceptable hospital census numbers,” the report said. The two state hospitals in Larned and Osawatomie have a capacity of 310 people. Construction at Osawatomie has reduced its capacity to 146 people and the combined capacity of the two hospitals to 250 people. That has left health providers scrambling to find other placements for people with serious mental illness. The hospitals have been forced to turn many patients away and, according to the report, have been under “increasing pressure to discharge patients more quickly to make room for more.” This is a risky situation when many of the individuals in question have been deemed by the courts to pose a danger to themselves or others. Clearly, the committee says, restoring Osawatomie to its intended population is a top priority, but other steps are needed to ease the demand on state hospitals. Those hospitals, it says, should primarily provide tertiary, longer term treatment for chronic mental illness rather than focus as much effort as they do now on providing broad safety net services. That means other facilities will have to provide that safety net for people in mental health crisis. Services like Evergreen House in Emporia and crisis stabilization programs in Topeka and Wichita are helping meet that need but the number of inpatient beds still is inadequate, according to the report. “Sustainable funding” for both the crisis programs and community mental health centers like Lawrence’s Bert Nash must be part of the equation, the report concludes. The community centers currently receive less than half as much state funding as they received in 2007 to serve uninsured clients, the report said. Just days after the release of this report, it was disappointing that the governor’s budget plans included a cut that will delay for six months — from January 2016 to July 2016 — the opening of a refurbished building at Larned State Hospital. The building will house patients in the state’s Sexual Predator Treatment Program, and state officials say they aren’t concerned about the delay, but given the current situation any move that potentially worsens crowding at state hospitals seems ill-advised. As part of its report, the Adult Continuum of Care Committee summarized the findings of several other special task forces over the last decade and noted that although earlier groups also had identified solutions to address overcrowding at state hospitals, “little action followed.” To its credit, the committee also volunteered to continue to meet so that it can oversee the implementation of its recommendations. It does little good to study a problem and identify solutions if those solutions are never implemented. The state’s mental health system needs help. The time for action is now. LAWRENCE

Journal-World

®

Established 1891

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

Dolph C. Simons Jr., Editor Chad Lawhorn, Managing Editor Kathleen Johnson, Advertising

Ann Gardner, Editorial Page Editor Ed Ciambrone, Production and

Manager

Distribution Director

THE WORLD COMPANY

Dolph C. Simons Jr., Chairman Dolph C. Simons III, Dan C. Simons, President, President, Newspapers Division

Digital Division

Scott Stanford, General Manager

7A

Video shows callous view of abortion Washington — Executives of Planned Parenthood’s federally subsidized meat markets — your tax dollars at work — lack the courage of their convictions. They should drop the pretense of conducting a complex moral calculus about the organs they harvest from the babies they kill. First came the video showing a salad-nibbling, winesipping Planned Parenthood official explaining how “I’m going to basically crush below, I’m gonna crush above” whatever organ (“heart, lung, liver”) is being harvested. Then the president of a Planned Parenthood chapter explained the happy side of harvesting: “For a lot of the women participating in the fetal tissue donation program, they’re having a procedure that may be a very difficult decision for them and this is a way for them to feel that something positive is coming from ... a very difficult time.” “Having a procedure” — stopping the beating of a human heart — can indeed be a difficult decision for the woman involved. But it never is difficult for Planned Parenthood’s abortionists administering the “procedure.” The abortion industry’s premise is: At no point in the gestation of a human infant does this living being have a trace of personhood that must be respected. Never does it have a moral standing superior to a tumor or a hamburger in the mother’s stomach. In 1973, the Supreme Court, simultaneously frivolous and

George Will

georgewill@washpost.com

We are wallowing in this moral swamp because the Supreme Court accelerated the desensitization of the nation by using words and categories about abortion the way infants use knives and forks — with gusto, but sloppily.” arrogant, discovered constitutional significance in the fact that the number nine is divisible by three. It decreed that the status of pre-born human life changes with pregnancy’s trimesters. (What would abortion law be if the number of months of gestation were a prime number — 7 or 11?) The court followed this preposterous assertion with faux humility, insisting it could not say when life begins. Then, swerving back to breathtaking vanity, it declared when “meaningful” life begins — “viability,” when the fetus “is potentially able” to survive outside the womb. When life begins is a scientific not a philosophic or theological question: Life

begins when the chromosomes of the sperm fuse with those of the ovum, forming a distinctive DNA complex that controls the new organism’s growth. Another video shows the craftsmanship of Planned Parenthood’s abortionists — tiny limbs and hands from dismembered babies. To the craftsmen, however, these fragments are considered mere organic stuff. People who proclaim themselves both pro-choice and appalled by the videos are flinching from the logic of their extremism. Cecile Richards, Planned Parenthood’s president, apologizes “for the tone” of her operatives’ chatter about crushing babies. But the tone flows from Planned Parenthood’s premise: Why be solemn about meat? Even partial-birth abortion is — must be — a sacrament in the Church of “Choice.” This sect knows that its entire edifice depends on not yielding an inch on its insistence that what an abortion kills never possesses a scintilla of moral significance. In partial-birth abortion, a near-term baby is pulled by the legs almost out of the birth canal, until the base of the skull is exposed so the abortionist can suck out its contents. During Senate debates on this procedure, three Democrats were asked: Suppose a baby’s head slips out of the birth canal — the baby is born — before the abortionist can kill it. Does the baby then

have a right to live? Two of the Democrats refused to answer. The third said the baby acquires a right to life when it leaves the hospital. The nonnegotiable tenet in today’s Democratic Party catechism is not opposition to the Keystone XL pipeline or support for a $15 minimum wage. These are evanescent fevers. As the decades roll by, the single unshakable commitment is opposition to any restriction on the right to inflict violence on pre-born babies. So today there is a limitless right to kill, and distribute fragments of, babies that intrauterine medicine can increasingly treat as patients. We are wallowing in this moral swamp because the Supreme Court accelerated the desensitization of the nation by using words and categories about abortion the way infants use knives and forks — with gusto, but sloppily. Because Planned Parenthood’s snout is deep in the federal trough, decent taxpayers find themselves complicit in the organization’s vileness. What kind of a government disdains the deepest convictions of citizens by forcing them to finance what they see in videos — Planned Parenthood operatives chattering about bloody human fragments? “Taxes,” said Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., “are what we pay for civilized society.” Today they finance barbarism. — George Will is a columnist for Washington Post Writers Group.

OLD HOME TOWN

100

From the Lawrence Daily Journal-World for Aug. 3, 1915: years “Lawrence people ago dug down in their IN 1915 wardrobes and pulled out last winter’s clothes this morning after the coolest night in weeks, and came down town smelling like moth balls and looking like scare crows — that is some of them. That comfort does come first with Americans is proved by the number of unpressed winter suits and out of style winter caps seen on the streets today.” — Compiled by Sarah St. John

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

Latin America also faces corruption During his trip to Africa last week, President Barack Obama gave a powerful speech asking the region’s long-entrenched leaders to end corruption, respect freedom of the press and stop changing the constitution to remain in power indefinitely. I wonder why he doesn’t make the same speech in Latin America. During a July 28 speech to the African Union at its headquarters in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, Obama told African leaders that “Nothing will unlock Africa’s economic potential more than ending the cancer of corruption.” “Corruption exists all over the world, including in the United States,” he added. “But here in Africa, corruption drains billions of dollars from economies that can’t afford to lose billions of dollars — that’s money that could be used to create jobs and build hospitals and schools.” After his call on countries to take actions against corruption, Obama spent much of his speech calling on governments to stop harassing independent media, and asking leaders not to stay in power indefinitely. Several of the African Union’s 54 membercountries have leaders who have been in power for a decade or longer. “We all know what the ingredients of real democ-

Andres Oppenheimer aoppenheimer@miamiherald.com

It was a phenomenal speech, which Obama should also make in Latin America. …He would just have to copy and paste it, and replace the word ‘Africa’ for ‘Latin America.’”

racy are: They include free and fair elections, but also freedom of speech and the press, freedom of assembly,” Obama said. “These rights are universal. They’re written into African constitutions.” “Yet at this very moment, these same freedoms are denied to many Africans,” he went on. “When journalists are put behind bars for doing their jobs, or activists are threatened as governments crack down on civil society, then you may have democracy in name, but not

in substance.” In what was the most daring part of his speech, Obama said that “Africa’s democratic progress is also at risk when leaders refuse to step aside when their terms end.” Mixing his stern message with humor, he reminded the audience that he is nearing the end of his second term, and that he loves his job, but that under the U.S. Constitution he can’t run again. “I actually think I’m a pretty good president. I think if I ran I could win,” he joked. “But I can’t. ... The law is the law. ... And no one person is above the law. Not even the president.” He concluded, “When a leader tries to change the rules in the middle of the game just to stay in office, it risks instability and strife. ... And sometimes you’ll hear leaders say, well, I’m the only person who can hold this nation together. If that’s true, then that leader has failed to truly build their nation.” My opinion: It was a phenomenal speech, which Obama should also make in Latin America. It would demand no extra work: He would just have to copy and paste it, and replace the word “Africa” for “Latin America.” In Latin America, just like in Africa, corruption is rampant, freedom of the press

is routinely repressed, and current or previous presidents of Venezuela, Bolivia, Ecuador, Nicaragua, Colombia and several other countries have in recent years changed their constitutions to remain in power — or allow their appointees to do it for them — indefinitely. Obama probably doesn’t dare make his African Union speech in Latin America because much more U.S. trade and investments are at stake there. Granted, if he told these things to Latin American leaders, the region’s populist demagogues would immediately accuse him of meddling in their internal affairs in order to allegedly pursue sinister “imperialist” plans. But after several years of corrupt leaders who hide behind nationalist demagoguery to justify their pursuit of absolute powers, many people in several Latin American autocracies want more rule of law, and more democracy. To stress his point, Obama would just need to repeat what he said in Africa: that countries don’t need strong leaders, but strong institutions. And that if a leader claims to be the only one who can hold his nation together, the leader has failed to truly build that nation. — Andres Oppenheimer is a Latin America correspondent for the Miami Herald.


|

8A

TODAY

WEATHER

.

Monday, August 3, 2015

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

Spring into action for disaster

FRIDAY

THURSDAY

An afternoon t-storm in spots

Not as hot with a thunderstorm

Mostly sunny and humid

A thunderstorm possible

Chance of a thunderstorm

High 92° Low 68° POP: 45%

High 83° Low 65° POP: 55%

High 85° Low 67° POP: 20%

High 84° Low 64° POP: 30%

High 83° Low 63° POP: 30%

Wind NE 3-6 mph

Wind SE 4-8 mph

Wind E 3-6 mph

Wind NE 4-8 mph

Wind ENE 4-8 mph

POP: Probability of Precipitation

Kearney 88/66

McCook 95/65 Oberlin 94/66

Clarinda 84/65

Lincoln 87/65

Grand Island 87/65

Beatrice 86/65

Concordia 92/67

Centerville 82/63

St. Joseph 87/67 Chillicothe 87/68

Sabetha 86/68

Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 91/72 89/70 Goodland Salina 96/70 Oakley Kansas City Topeka 92/61 98/69 91/67 93/70 Lawrence 89/69 Sedalia 92/68 Emporia Great Bend 92/72 95/69 93/67 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 94/71 89/64 Hutchinson 95/72 Garden City 96/69 87/65 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 93/71 94/72 92/66 87/66 94/73 95/73 Hays Russell 96/66 96/67

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

LAWRENCE ALMANAC

Through 8 p.m. Sunday.

Temperature High/low 93°/68° Normal high/low today 89°/68° Record high today 109° in 1918 Record low today 55° in 1974

Precipitation in inches 24 hours through 8 p.m. yest. 0.00 Month to date 0.00 Normal month to date 0.25 Year to date 27.00 Normal year to date 24.74

REGIONAL CITIES

Today Tue. Today Tue. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Independence 95 74 pc 85 72 t Atchison 89 69 pc 83 67 t Fort Riley 94 71 pc 81 67 t Belton 91 71 pc 83 68 t Olathe 90 70 pc 81 66 t Burlington 94 70 pc 84 68 t Osage Beach 91 71 s 88 69 t Coffeyville 95 73 pc 86 71 t Osage City 94 70 pc 83 67 t Concordia 92 67 pc 79 61 t Ottawa 94 69 pc 85 67 t Dodge City 89 64 pc 87 65 t Wichita 94 72 pc 85 69 t Holton 92 71 pc 84 67 t 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 Tue. 6:23 a.m. 6:24 a.m. 8:31 p.m. 8:30 p.m. 10:38 p.m. 11:16 p.m. 10:09 a.m. 11:18 a.m.

Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset Last

New

Aug 6

First

Full

Aug 14 Aug 22 Aug 29

Lake

Level (ft)

Clinton Perry Pomona

Discharge (cfs)

877.45 893.73 974.55

101 1500 100

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

Fronts Cold

INTERNATIONAL CITIES

Today Cities Hi Lo W Acapulco 91 79 t Amsterdam 84 62 pc Athens 93 78 s Baghdad 118 89 s Bangkok 90 79 c Beijing 83 68 r Berlin 88 66 s Brussels 88 63 pc Buenos Aires 65 46 pc Cairo 101 79 s Calgary 86 61 pc Dublin 65 54 pc Geneva 88 62 s Hong Kong 91 80 pc Jerusalem 96 76 t Kabul 84 59 pc London 75 57 pc Madrid 100 69 t Mexico City 76 55 t Montreal 80 62 t Moscow 72 51 pc New Delhi 92 82 pc Oslo 59 49 pc Paris 92 62 pc Rio de Janeiro 85 70 s Rome 89 71 s Seoul 86 77 t Singapore 85 77 t Stockholm 70 51 pc Sydney 63 43 s Tokyo 92 81 pc Toronto 81 59 t Vancouver 75 60 s Vienna 85 64 t Warsaw 88 65 s Winnipeg 70 49 pc

Hi 91 69 94 120 89 89 92 71 62 101 71 63 79 90 95 92 71 96 76 77 72 92 63 76 85 89 87 87 73 57 92 73 72 89 91 69

Tue. Lo W 80 t 57 t 77 s 90 s 78 sh 71 s 64 s 53 t 54 c 80 s 52 t 51 sh 60 t 80 pc 74 s 59 s 56 sh 68 s 55 t 58 pc 52 s 82 t 57 pc 55 pc 69 s 71 s 76 pc 78 sh 58 pc 42 s 81 s 54 sh 57 s 68 pc 67 s 49 s

Warm Stationary

Showers T-storms

7:30

Flurries

Snow

Ice

-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s National Summary: Today will be warm and more humid across much of the Northeast and the mid-Atlantic states with heavy thunderstorms in the afternoon. Dry air will spread out across the Midwest. Today Tue. Today Tue. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Memphis 97 77 pc 99 79 pc Albuquerque 88 65 s 91 65 s Miami 89 77 c 90 78 pc Anchorage 74 59 s 74 58 s Milwaukee 79 59 s 78 61 pc Atlanta 93 71 pc 95 74 s Minneapolis 79 58 s 78 60 pc Austin 98 74 s 98 74 s 96 72 pc 95 74 pc Baltimore 93 71 pc 90 65 pc Nashville New Orleans 94 77 pc 93 78 pc Birmingham 96 70 pc 98 74 s New York 90 75 s 88 71 pc Boise 89 63 s 93 66 t Omaha 85 67 pc 81 66 pc Boston 89 72 pc 85 69 c 85 73 t 91 74 t Buffalo 78 63 t 75 59 sh Orlando Philadelphia 92 76 pc 89 70 pc Cheyenne 81 55 t 83 54 t 110 86 s 110 88 s Chicago 82 61 s 83 62 pc Phoenix Pittsburgh 81 61 t 80 62 pc Cincinnati 87 61 pc 85 66 t Cleveland 80 60 t 79 61 pc Portland, ME 84 65 pc 82 62 c Portland, OR 86 60 pc 83 57 pc Dallas 99 79 s 98 81 s Reno 92 61 s 90 59 s Denver 87 59 t 89 58 t 92 74 pc 92 71 t Des Moines 84 66 pc 80 67 pc Richmond 86 59 s 83 57 s Detroit 83 60 pc 80 59 pc Sacramento St. Louis 91 74 pc 89 73 t El Paso 96 73 t 99 75 s Fairbanks 71 53 pc 78 59 pc Salt Lake City 84 65 t 90 69 pc 78 69 pc 79 70 pc Honolulu 90 77 pc 90 78 pc San Diego Houston 98 77 s 96 78 pc San Francisco 72 61 pc 73 60 pc 81 60 pc 80 58 pc Indianapolis 86 62 pc 83 66 pc Seattle Spokane 94 67 c 87 59 pc Kansas City 89 69 pc 81 66 t Tucson 103 77 s 105 78 s Las Vegas 106 79 s 105 81 s 97 75 s 90 76 t Little Rock 99 74 s 98 78 pc Tulsa 94 77 pc 91 72 pc Los Angeles 84 66 pc 86 67 pc Wash., DC National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: Death Valley, CA 117° Low: West Yellowstone, MT 37°

WEATHER HISTORY

WEATHER TRIVIA™

Q:

On Aug. 3, 1980, Dallas, Texas, had its 42nd consecutive day with temperatures at or above 100 degrees.

MONDAY Prime Time WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

Rain

Do storms become more or less frequent in the U.S. during August? Less frequent

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Precipitation

MOVIES 8 PM

8:30

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9:30

A:

LAKE LEVELS

As of 7 a.m. Sunday

KIDS

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$

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3

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62

62 Law & Order: SVU

4

4

4 So You Think You Can Dance (N)

FOX 4 at 9 PM (N)

Law & Order: SVU

5 Broke

NCIS: Los Angeles

Odd Cple Scorpion h

News

Inside

5

5

7

19

19 Antiques Roadshow Antiques Roadshow POV (N) h

9

9 Bachelor in

9

American Ninja Warrior “Orlando Finals”

D KTWU 11 A Q 12 B ` 13

After Paradise (N)

Bachelor in

After Paradise (N)

Odd Cple Scorpion h

Holly

Dish Nat. Rules

Rules

News

News

Seinfeld

News

Corden

Charlie Rose (N)

KSNT

Tonight Show

The Whispers (N)

News

Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline

Midsomer Murders

The Whispers (N)

News

World

Meyers

Business C. Rose

Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline

NCIS: Los Angeles

News

Scorpion h

Corden

Running Wild

News

Tonight Show

Meyers

41 38

41 American Ninja Warrior “Orlando Finals” 38 King/Hill King/Hill Minute Minute

Commun Commun Mother

29

29 Penn & Teller

News

ION KPXE 18

50

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Extraordinary

C I 14 KMCI 15 L KCWE 17

Whose?

TMZ (N)

Running Wild

Antiques Roadshow Antiques Roadshow Murder Broke

Mother

Fam Guy South Pk

Two Men Mod Fam Mod Fam Office

Criminal Minds

Criminal Minds

Criminal Minds

Criminal Minds

Wild

6 News

The

6 News

Office

Criminal Minds

Cable Channels WOW!6 6 WGN-A CITY

Kitchen

Pets

25

USD497 26

››› Bad Company (1972) Jeff Bridges.

Movie

Tower Cam/Weather

››› Casino Royale (2006) Daniel Craig. ››› Cowboy (1958) Glenn Ford. ››› Bad Company

307 239 Funny Home Videos Funny Home Videos Mother

THIS TV 19

Mother

City Bulletin Board, Commission Meetings

City Bulletin Board

School Board Information

School Board Information

ESPN 33 206 140 aMLB Baseball: Cubs at Pirates

Baseball Tonight

SportsCenter (N)

ESPN2 34 209 144 eCFL Football: Argonauts at Tiger-Cats

NFL Live (N)

E:60 Reports

Baseball Tonight

World Poker Tour

Cycling

FSM

36 672

UFC Reloaded The first women’s fight in UFC history. (N)

NBCSN 38 603 151 Hunter FNC

Hunting

Big Red: Racer

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

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

Blue

Blue

Rachel Maddow

SportsCenter (N)

Field Spo Premier

Blazers

Hannity (N)

The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File

Blue

Blue

Blue

Premier Pre Blue

The Last Word

All In With Chris

Blazers

American Greed Rachel Maddow

CNN

44 202 200 Anderson Cooper

Anderson Cooper

CNN Tonight

Anderson Cooper

Newsroom

TNT

45 245 138 Major Crimes

Major Crimes (N)

Murder in the First

Major Crimes

Murder in the First

USA

46 242 105 WWE Monday Night RAW (N) (Live)

A&E

47 265 118 The First 48

The First 48

TRUTV 48 246 204 truTV Top Funniest Jokers

Jokers

Tough Enough

Mr. Robot

The First 48

The First 48

The First 48

Jokers

truTV Top Funniest truTV Top Funniest

Friends

AMC

50 254 130 ›››› The Godfather, Part II (1974)

TBS

51 247 139 Fam Guy Fam Guy American American Fam Guy Fam Guy Conan (N)

BRAVO 52 237 129 Housewives/OC HIST

54 269 120 Pawn

first step of the daily donation processing. Intake volunteers will empty the donation bin once per week and examine and separate donations by category (e.g. fiction, nonfiction, children’s). The volunteers may work a flexible schedule and can donate as many or as few hours as they like during normal operating hours of the Lawrence Public Library. For more information, please contact Angela Thompson at athompson@lawrence. lib.ks.us or at 843-3833. l Just Food and its partners fight hunger in our community by increasing the availability of a variety of foods while reducing waste from discarded food. Just Food is in its busy season and is in need of drivers to make weekly trips for food pickup from grocery stores and eating establishments. The hours are 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Volunteers must have a valid driver’s license. If you are interested, please contact Jen Williams at operations@justfoodks.org or 856-7030. l The Boys & Girls Club of Lawrence provides before and after school programming to more than 1,400 children at 14 sites across Lawrence. The Boys & Girls Club is looking for volunteers to provide academic enrichment with elementary students during the upcoming school year via Power Hour, an educational program offered after school at the elementary schools throughout our community. The ideal Academic Enrichment Volunteer will enjoy spending time

The American Red Cross is recruiting new volunteers to serve on Disaster Action Teams (DAT) assisting residents in Douglas County and surrounding areas. Volunteers respond immediately to disasters such as fires, floods and tornadoes to assess the scope of damage and to meet with the affected family or families to determine their immediate disasterrelated needs and ensure those needs are met. Responsibilities for Disaster Action Team Members include: exhibiting a sensitivity to people’s needs in difficult situations, working objectively and compassionately with diverse individuals, maintaining confidentiality to protect clients served by the Red Cross, and working well in a team environment. Required Red Cross volunteer training is free. Minimum age requirement is 18 years, and volunteers must have reliable transportation. Please contact Jennifer Cacchio at 354-9244 or at jennifer.cacchio@redcross.org for further information. l The Friends of the Lawrence Public Library is a nonprofit organization that raises funds to support the library’s collections, programs and services. Friends of the Library is looking for volunteers to assist with two functions — scanning volunteers and intake volunteers. The scanning volunteers will check donated books for their value on Amazon. com. The intake volunteers facilitate the crucial

with small groups of students. The focus of your time will be to build lasting mentor relationships with the students and to encourage academic excellence. You will be able to help the students with their daily homework and play educational games. Exact program times are dependent upon the schedule of the school at which you volunteer. Please contact Hannah Odette at volunteer@ bgclk.org or 243-8781 for more information. l Big Brothers Big Sisters of Douglas County provides one-to-one relationships for children facing adversity. Are you looking to make a difference in the life of a young boy in our community? Big Brothers Big Sisters has more than 40 boys waiting for a one-on-one mentor. Are you a man at least 18 years old, married or have a family? Big Brothers Big Sisters is looking for a man to mentor a 6-year-old boy in Lawrence. This little guy is outgoing, friendly, adventurous, smart and very active. He needs a male role model who can keep up with his high energy level. His mother is also open to matching him with a Big Couple or Big Family. If you have a few hours a week to make a difference in his life, call Big Brothers Big Sisters today at 843-7359. Learn more about becoming a mentor at a BBBS Information Session held every Tuesday at 5:15 p.m. and every Wednesday at noon. — For more volunteer opportunities, please contact Shelly Hornbaker at the United Way Roger Hill Volunteer Center at 865-5030, ext. 301 or at volunteer@unitedwaydgco.org or go to www.volunteerdouglascounty.org.

DATEBOOK 3 TODAY

Ride, 6:30 p.m., Cycle Works, 2121 Kasold Drive. Lecompton City Council meeting, 7 p.m., Lecompton City Hall, 327 Elmore St., Lecompton. Baldwin City Council meeting, 7 p.m., Baldwin Public Library, 800 Seventh St., Baldwin.

Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 6 a.m., Lawrence High School, 1901 Louisiana St. Lawrence Public Library Book Van, 9-10 a.m., Prairie Commons, 5121 Congressional Circle. Lawrence Public Library Book Van, 10:3011:30 a.m., Presbyterian Manor, 1429 Kasold Drive. Lawrence Public Library Book Van, 1-2 p.m., Vermont Towers, 1101 Vermont St. Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 6 p.m., Lawrence High School, 1901 Louisiana St. Lawrence Bike Club’s Summer Fun Beginners’

BEST BETS WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

4 TUESDAY

Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 6 a.m., Lawrence High School, 1901 Louisiana St. Lawrence Brain Injury Support Group, 1-2:30 p.m., First United Methodist Church West Campus, 867 W. Hwy. 40. Lawrence Farmers’ Market, 4-6 p.m., parking lot at 824 New Hampshire St.

SPORTS 7:30

8 PM

8:30

Tech Drop-In, 5-6 p.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Big Brothers Big Sisters of Douglas County volunteer information session, 5:15 p.m., United Way Building, 2518 Ridge Court.

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. August 3, 2015

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Agency: American Red Cross Contact: Jennifer Cacchio at jennifer.cacchio@ redcross.org or at 785354-9244

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Network Channels

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Pawn

SYFY 55 244 122 Cabin-Woods

Making of the Mob

Housewives/OC

Odd

Pawn

Forged in Fire (N)

Pawn

I Still Know What You Did

Odd

Making of the Mob

The Godfather Office

Conan

Happens Housewives/OC

Odd

Forged in Fire

Pawn

Pawn

Joy Ride 3: Roadkill (2014, Suspense)

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

351 350 285 287 279 362 256

211 210 192 195 189 214 132

501 515 545 535 527

300 310 318 340 350

›‡ Identity Thief (2013, Comedy) Jason Bateman.

›‡ Identity Thief (2013, Comedy) Jason Bateman. South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk Archer Archer Daily Nightly At Mid. South Pk I Am Cait I Am Cait Stewarts-Ham. E! News (N) E! News Reba Reba Dog and Beth Dog and Beth Cops Cops Cops Cops West West West West West West West West West West Wel ››‡ Life (1999) Eddie Murphy, Martin Lawrence. DeSean Wendy Williams Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta (N) T.I.-Tiny Love, Hip Hop Love T.I.-Tiny Love, Hip Hop Bizarre Foods Bizarre Bizarre Bizarre Foods Bizarre Foods Bizarre Bizarre My Giant Life My Giant Life My Giant Life My Giant Life My Giant Life ››‡ 27 Dresses Devious Maids (N) UnREAL “Future” UnREAL “Future” Devious Maids Best Friends (2005) Megan Gallagher. Bad Blood (2015) Taylor Cole. Best Friends Cake Wars “Lego” Road Food Diners, Drive Diners Diners Road Food Tiny Tiny Tiny Tiny Hunters Hunt Intl Tiny Tiny Tiny Tiny Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Prince Prince Friends Friends Friends Gravity Gravity Wander Gravity Gravity Gravity Gravity Gravity Gravity Gravity Bunk’d Liv-Mad. Best Fr. Girl Dog Austin I Didn’t Jessie Good Good King/Hill King/Hill Burgers Cleve Rick American Family Guy Chicken Aqua Street Outlaws: Full Vegas Rat Rods (N) Cuban Chrome (N) Vegas Rat Rods Cuban Chrome The Fosters (N) Chasing Life (N) Becoming Us (N) The 700 Club Cinderella St. Yukon River Run Yukon River Run (N) Diggers Diggers Yukon River Run Diggers Diggers The Waltons Middle Middle Middle Middle Golden Golden Golden Golden To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced Love-Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King King Bless End Franklin Duplantis › The Omega Code (1999, Suspense) Osteen P. Stone The Journey Home News Rosary World Over Live Symbo Women Daily Mass - Olam ››› D.O.A. (1949) Edmond O’Brien. Bookmark ››› D.O.A. (1949) ››› D.O.A. (1949) Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Capitol Hill Capitol Hill Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Deadly Devotion Deadly Devotion Over My Over My Deadly Devotion Deadly Devotion Nazis: Evolution Evolution of Evil High Hitler Nazis: Evolution Evolution of Evil Dateline on OWN Dateline on OWN Dateline on OWN Dateline on OWN Dateline on OWN Weather Weather Fat Guys-Wd. Fat Guys-Wd. Fat Guys-Wd. Fat Guys-Wd. ››‡ Father Takes a Wife ››› Gold Diggers of 1935 ›››‡ Stage Door (1937) (DVS) ››› Get On Up

Toe Tag Parole: To Live True Detective The Ballers Horrible Strike Back ››‡ Bad Words (2013) ››‡ Disturbia (2007) Strike Back Ray Donovan Masters of Sex Ray Donovan Masters of Sex Alone in the Dark ›››‡ The Thin Red Line (1998, War) Sean Penn. ›‡ The Fan (1996) Robert De Niro. Last-Mohicans ››‡ Valkyrie (2008) Tom Cruise. ››‡ Blow (2001) Johnny Depp.


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USA TODAY — L awrence J ournal -W orld

IN MONEY

IN LIFE

Recession fears cloud outlook

TV ads allow new artists to sell themselves, too

08.03.15 GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOTO

WHAT’S HAPPENING

ONLINE

TODAY’S MUST-READS

DS

2016 ELECTION

Rootless candidates undermine role of the political hometown Several of this year’s presidential contenders are, in a sense, rootless — born and raised in a series of communiUSA TODAY ties without one they always call home. Lack of personal It has been 20 years since Bob ties could make it a challenge to connect with voters. Rick Hampson

ALEX WONG

uWe report as Planned Parenthood vote looms in the Senate. uWhich phone camera works best? We test top models uTravel photos: The beauty of America's national parks

L F

Dole ran for president as the small town boy who never forgot his roots in windblown Russell, Kan., where he worked in high school as a drugstore soda jerk and recovered from his wounds after World War II. Even after he went to Congress, he never changed his legal residence. Playing the hometown card is a bipartisan tradition. Candidates

GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOTO

uMade in Boston: Where to savor flavors only found in Beantown uReview: We shoot with Nikon’s flagship DSLR uGot some great photos at the weekend? Send ’em to Your Take

©

Controlled release

116

Detainees at Guantanamo Bay, down 52% since President Obama vowed 6 1/2 years ago to close it within a year

Source FactCheck.org TERRY BYRNE AND PAUL TRAP, USA TODAY

political card may be fading. This year’s crop of candidates is comparatively rootless. Some were born and raised in a series of communities, with no single one they always called home. Some come from places lacking that “hometown” feel — formless suburbs (like Hillary Clinton’s Park Ridge, Ill.) or big cities (like

v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

CALIFORNIA FIRE MAP

To find these items, go to onlinetoday.usatoday.com

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

as varied as Calvin Coolidge of Plymouth Notch, Vt., Jimmy Carter of Plains, Ga., and Bill Clinton — the Arkansan who campaigned as the son of “a place called Hope” — have tied themselves to one place where their character and values were formed. But to judge from the 2016 presidential field, the hometown

Donald Trump’s New York) — that don’t evoke the feel of Dole’s Russell. Meanwhile, other candidates — notably Mike Huckabee, also of Hope, Ark. — continue to play the hometown card like it’s a potential winner. These more rooted candidates are more like the country. Despite Americans’ reputation for mobility, 2013 census data indicates that more than two-thirds of native-born Americans live in

CALIFORNIA FIRE DOUBLES IN SIZE; THREATENS THOUSANDS

COOL STUFF

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.

AFP/GETTY IMAGES

12,000 people have fled the Rocky Fire near Clearlake Greg Toppo USA TODAY

A massive, fast-moving wildfire has destroyed at least 24 homes and threatens another 5,000 in a drought-stricken area about 100 miles north of San Francisco, authorities said Sunday. The so-called Rocky Fire was only about 5% contained by midday Sunday. It was just one of 21 large wildfires burning statewide, fire officials said. Fueled by triple-digit temperatures, single-digit humidity and erratic winds, the Rocky Fire more than doubled in size overnight. It grew from just more than 20,000 acres on Saturday to 47,000 acres on Sunday, said the California Department of Forest-

Idaho Ore. CALIFORNIA FIRE MAP 1 Idaho 2 Ore. 3 4 56 1 Nev. 8 2 7 3 910 4 5611 13 Nev. 8 12 9 7 1014 11 15 13 12 14 1617 15 Ariz. Calif. Pacific 18 1617 Ocean 19 20 Ariz. Calif.

1. Frog Fire 2. River Complex 1. Frog 3. Fern Fire Fire 2. River Complex 4. Humboldt Lightning Fires 3. Mad Fern Fire 5. River Complex 4. Fork Humboldt Lightning Fires 6. Complex 5. Mad River Complex 7. Mendocino Lightning Fires 6. Etsel Fork Complex 8. Fire 7. Mendocino 9. Swedes FireLightning Fires 8. Etsel Fire 10. Lowell Fire 9. Swedes Fire 11. Rocky Fire 10. Wragg Lowell Fire 12. Fire Pacific 11. Rocky Fire 13. Washington Fire 18 21 Ocean 0 100 19 N 20 12. Wragg Fire 14. Big Creek Fire Miles Mexico 13. Willow Washington 15. Fire Fire 21 0 100 N 14. Big Creek Fire 16. Advance Fire Sources Miles ESRI, CA. gov Mexico 15. Willow Fire 17. Cabin Fire USA TODAY 16. White Advance 18. FireFire Sources ESRI, CA. gov 17. Cabin Fire 19. Pines Fire USA TODAY 18. White 20. ScalesFire Fire ry and Fire Protection, known 19. Cutca Pines Fire 21. Fire widely as CalFire. 20. Scales Fire “The grass, the brush, the trees, 21. Cutca Fire fire originated The they are tinder-dry,” said CalFire mento.

spokesman Daniel Berlant. More than 12,000 people had been evacuated from the area around Clearlake, Calif., about 100 miles north of San Francisco and 100 miles northwest of Sacra-

Wednesday afternoon. California Gov. Jerry Brown declared a state of emergency and activated the California National Guard to help with disaster recovery.

NOAH BERGER, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY

Firefighter Carl Schwettmann, left, and a colleague survey the damage Sunday as the Rocky Fire burns near Clearlake, Calif.

Many of the California blazes were sparked by lightning, and more than 8,000 firefighters were working to battle the blazes. One firefighter was killed Thursday at the scene of a fire 100 miles south of the Oregon border. Engine Capt. David Ruhl, a South Dakota firefighter, was killed battling a fast-moving blaze that broke out in the Modoc National Forest. He was in a vehicle looking for ways to fight the blaze when officials lost contact with him. His body was recovered Friday. Part of a Black Hills National Forest firefighting team, Ruhl had been helping California firefighters since June. Contributing: KXTV-TV, Sacramento

Police identify suspected shooter in Memphis cop killing Bolton, 33, is third on duty killed since 2011 John Bacon USA TODAY

Tennessee police are searching for a 29-year-old convicted bank robber who has been charged with first-degree murder in a Memphis police officer’s shooting death during a traffic stop this weekend. Memphis Police Director Toney Armstrong told reporters Sunday that officer Sean Bolton apparently interrupted a drug

deal and that after “some type of physical altercation,” Bolton was shot and killed by a passenger in the car. Armstrong said an arrest warrant has been issued for Tremaine Wilbourn. Armstrong said the drug transaction in question amounted to “less than two grams of marijuana,” which constituted “a misdemeanor citation and a fine.” Holding up a photo of Wilbourn, Armstrong said, “I think it’s safe to say that when you look at this individual, you’re looking at a coward. ... You gun down, you murder a police officer for less than 2 grams of marijuana. You’ve literally destroyed a family. Look

WHBQ / AP

Emergency crews respond to a fatal police shooting in Memphis.

at the impact that that’s had on this department, this community, this city, for less than 2 grams of marijuana.” The U.S. Marshal’s office offered to help in the search of Wil-

“There is a theme that black lives matter. At the end of the day, we have to ask ourselves, do all lives matter?” Memphis Police Director Toney Armstrong, who is black

bourn, who is on supervised release after serving a federal sentence for robbery, Armstrong said. “There is a theme that black lives matter,” a sullen Armstrong,

who is black, said earlier. “At the end of the day, we have to ask ourselves, do all lives matter? … And this is just a reminder of how dangerous this job is.” Bolton, 33, was the third Memphis police officer killed since 2011. He joined the force in 2010, served a tour in Iraq and studied political science at the University of Memphis. In July 2011, Memphis officer Tim Warren was killed while responding to a shooting. In December 2012, officer Martoiya Lang was killed while serving a warrant. Contributing: Greg Toppo


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L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 2015

VOICES

A scary, but glorious, week off the grid Trevor Hughes USA TODAY

REYKJAVIK , ICELAND The little red icon on my phone stared back at me after an orgy of dings and vibrations: 1,078. I resented it and all that number represented. For a week, I’d totally disconnected from the Internet to trek with my father up and over glaciers, through river-carved canyons and across lava-sand wastelands. Now back in the world’s northernmost capital, I’d turned my iPhone back on to see the damage done. While the Facebook alerts, tweets and Snapchat messages had stacked up, it was the emails I was most worried about. It’s how my editors try to manage me, how sources connect me with information and how I keep updated on the latest news. After all, how often do we Americans ignore our phones for a whole day, let alone an entire week? Wander through a restaurant at lunch and watch as corporate drones wolf down salads, one hand scrolling and tapping. Even couples at dinner are apt to stare more at their screens than at their partners. And then there are the solo bar drinkers, obsessively Tindering and Matching in hotel lobbies between — and during — cold beers.

TREVOR HUGHES, USA TODAY

Iceland’s terrain may be rugged, but it has great cell service. The writer chose to disconnect. Before my trip, friends and coworkers seemed equally divided between the awesomeness of Iceland and the awesomeness of being totally disconnected. What does that tell us about how inseparable, how addicted, how utterly tied we are to that invisible Internet thread connecting us to the rest of the world? Several friends said they’d flat-out be unable to let go for so long. Heck, one of my editors said he couldn’t conceive of doing it even with a gun to his head. I don’t think he was joking. I wasn’t sure.

TREVOR HUGHES, USA TODAY

After a week of no Internet, more than a thousand emails await in the author’s inbox.

Smartphones and their virtually constant Internet connections have really only dominated my life for a decade. Before that, I’d go for hours without being hassled — sorry, I meant managed — by my editors. They simply trusted I’d do my job and get the story. But now? Gotta Tweet and Facebook and post photos and videos. I’m the kind of power user who drains phone batteries so often they’re worn within a year. So with more than a little trepidation I set up my out-ofoffice notifications, turned my

phone off, stowed it in my backpack and did my best to just “be.” No Facebook updates. No check-ins. No tweets or Instagrams of blue ice or volcanic vents. No fear of missing out for me. I didn’t yearn to learn about Donald Trump, the Greek monetary crisis or the California drought. Despite its rugged terrain, Iceland has great cellphone coverage. I chose not to sign up. Instead, I was present for every step through slushy snow, black dust and jagged lava cinders. I shot photos with my Sony camera and videos with my GoPro. I washed dishes, set up tents and made friends with Danes, Swedes, Finns and Norwegians. I caught up on my dad’s kayaking adventures, learned about Icelandic snowmobiles and watched steam rising from sulfur-stained cracks. My world narrowed to the dirt trail snaking ahead of us, the endless twilight filtering softly into the tent, new friends eating grilled lamb and locally caught fish. My conscious uncoupling from my phone? Glorious. My return from the wilderness: a little less so. Those 1,078 messages stared back at me as I stood on a windy street corner in Reykjavik, Wi-Fi from a nearby coffee shop pumping life back into my phone. I resolved to wait a little longer before logging in. Didn’t miss much. Had a great time with my dad. Hughes is a Denver-based correspondent for USA TODAY.

Small towns equal ‘heart of this nation’ v CONTINUED FROM 1B

the state where they were born — roughly the same as in 1960. But other candidates’ rootlessness also reflects something profound in the national experience, says Julian Zelizer, author of biographies of Lyndon Johnson and Jimmy Carter, and may resonate with middle class voters whose own lives have changed so much technologically and economically, if not geographically. These candidates’ rootlessness was born of family moves for business, politics or ministry: uJeb Bush was born in Midland, Texas; moved to Houston when he was 6; stayed behind to finish middle school when his father was elected to Congress and the family moved to Washington; and attended prep school in Andover, Mass. The family spent summers every year in Maine. Bush now lives in Coral Gables, Fla. uSen. Marco Rubio was born in Miami, moved to Las Vegas with his family when he was 8, and moved back to south Florida six years later. uGov. Scott Walker, a minister’s son, was born in Colorado Springs and moved to Plainfield, Iowa, when he was 2 and to Delavan, Wis., when he was 10. He lived in Wauwatosa, Wis., before moving into the Wisconsin governor’s mansion outside Madison. uCarly Fiorina was born in Austin and moved with her family to California when she a young child. Her family followed her law professor father’s career all over; she attended five different high schools in three nations and two states before going to college at Stanford. Fiorina now lives in Mason Neck, Va. uSen. Rand Paul was born in Pittsburgh, moved to Lake Jackson, Texas, when he was 5 and attended high school in the neighboring town of Clute. After college at Baylor, he attended Duke Medical School in Durham, N.C., and did a medical residency in Atlanta before moving in 1993 to Bowling Green, Ky. uSen. Ted Cruz was born in Calgary, raised in Katy, Texas, and attended high school in Houston before going to college in Princeton, N.J. Some 2016 candidates who did stay put in childhood moved so much or so far afterward as to render the original hometown connection tenuous. Sen. Bernie Sanders, for example, seems more a product of Burlington, Vt., where he moved in his 20s and made his political bones, than the Flatbush section of Brooklyn, where he was raised and entered college. And sometimes the childhood neighborhood has changed be-

1995 PHOTO BY CHARLIE RIEDEL

Norma Jean Steele and Gloria Nelson, Republican Bob Dole’s sisters, stand outside the family house in Russell, Kan. Russell became a staple of Dole’s campaign when he began his 1995 run. yond recognition. The Jewish Flatbush of Sanders’ youth is now populated by immigrants from the Caribbean, Africa and South Asia. Detroit’s Southwest side, African-American when Dr. Ben Carson lived there, is now largely Hispanic. Richard Norton Smith, a historian who’s directed several presidential museums and libraries, calls the president “the logical evolution” of a trend toward less geographically rooted national leaders. Born in Honolulu, Barack Obama moved to Indonesia with his mother and stepfather when he was six and lived for four years in Jakarta before returning to Hawaii for fifth grade. During college and law school he lived in southern California, New York City and Cambridge, Mass. He then settled in Chicago. ANOTHER MAN FROM HOPE

Some presidential hopefuls still grab their roots with both hands. Huckabee returned home this year to announce his candidacy. So did Lindsey Graham of Central, S.C.; Carson, the Baltimore surgeon who speaks often of his tough Detroit childhood; and Chris Christie, who held a rally at his high school in Livingston N.J. In a campaign video, Huckabee makes the connection between personal and national roots: “The worst thing that can happen is if we forget where we come from. Not only individually, but God help us if we ever forget where we come from as a country.” Sitting on his old porch, Huckabee says — punning shamelessly — “I hope I never forget where I come from. I hope I never forget this porch. I hope I never forget what it’s like to live in a neighbor-

RANDOLPH D. RUBIN VIA THE PETROLEUM MUSEUM

George W. Bush, right, is shown at 7 holding 10-monthold brother Jeb Bush. Jeb was born in Midland, Texas.

Candidates “don’t want to be viewed as carpetbaggers” when and where they finally settle down. William Frey, a Brookings Institution demographer

hood where neighbors know each other and care about each other.” William Frey, a demographer at the Brookings Institution, says the hometown card’s appeal may stem from the fact that politicians — most of whom have moved more than the average voter — “don’t want to be viewed as carpetbaggers” when and where they finally settle down. The political calculus: Few

things are as important as where you come from, and no place is better to come from than a tight neighborhood or small town — “the heart of this nation,” according to Thomas Dewey, the GOP nominee in 1944 and 1948. Dwight Eisenhower and Abilene, Kan., are a classic case of a symbiotic relationship between candidate and hometown. The general who had won the war in Europe declared, when he came back to visit in 1945, that “the proudest thing I can claim is that I am from Abilene.” When he decided to run for president seven years later, he came to Abilene to announce. Abilene gave Ike, a globetrotting career military officer, a rootedness that a peer such as Gen. Douglas MacArthur, born and raised on various Army posts, lacked. Ike gave Abilene, a former cow town with few prospects, a presidential library. Plains served a similar purpose for Jimmy Carter, according to Zelizer. At a time when the capital was tainted by the Watergate scandal, he says, “Plains put Carter as far out of Washington as you could get.” RUSSELL VS. HOPE

Sometimes, the need for a politically usable past overwhelms reality. Bill Clinton, for instance, only lived in Hope until he was 4, when his family moved to the far more worldly resort community of Hot Springs. Bob Dole always kept a home in Russell, voted there, and returned in 1995 to announce his presidential candidacy. Even though he had not lived in town for 35 years, Russell be-

came a staple of his stump speech. Dole talked of enduring dust storms, playing high school sports and his pride in his father, who missed one day of work in 40 years. But as Michael Lewis pointed out at the time in The New Republic, Dole stopped referring to Russell at the end of the campaign, when it was clear Bill Clinton was winning. On Election Day, Hope beat Russell; the latter never joined Abilene as a booming presidential hometown. Some day, such contests may seem quaint. Thomas Mallon, author of Dewey Defeats Truman, a novel set in Thomas Dewey’s hometown of Owosso, Mich., says it’s inevitable that “we’ll get more and more candidates who can’t be identified with any single place.” That will spell the death of the political hometown. “Reluctantly,” Mallon says, “we’ll let go of it.”

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.

An item in Wednesday’s In Brief misidentified the judge presiding over the New York prison seamstress’ court case. The judge’s name is Kevin Ryan. The movie Fantastic Four opens Friday. A story Sunday on page 1U gave the wrong day.

PRESIDENT AND PUBLISHER

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NATION/WORLD

Koch urges change to ‘trajectory’ of U.S. Rubio, Cruz, Bush address donors; Trump blasts event

Fredreka Schouten USA TODAY

DANA POINT, CALIF. Billionaire Charles Koch on Sunday invoked the American Revolution, the fight to end slavery and the civilrights movement as he exhorted the donors in his growing political policy empire to help him dismantle what he called the obstacles to a “truly free society.” “All of these movements struck a moral chord with the American people. They all sought to overcome an injustice,” Koch said to hundreds of donors gathered for his network’s annual summer seminar. “We, too, are seeking to right injustices that are holding our country back.”

He also painted a bleak picture of the state of the nation and laid out what he saw as the stakes for their efforts. “If we can just change the trajectory of this country from where it is headed — one of control, dependency, hopelessness and poverty — to one that moves toward this free society, the innovation, the improvement in the standard of living, the helping of the poor uplift themselves will be staggering,” he added. Koch’s comments came on the second day of a gathering that demonstrated the reach of his network: Some 450 wealthy conservatives descended on a luxury resort to talk strategy and discuss the network’s push to shape policy on issues, such as overhauling

USA TODAY

Charles Koch

the nation’s criminal-justice system. Earlier this year, Kochaligned donors set a budget of nearly $900 million ahead of the 2016 election. Three presidential contenders were slated to address the gathering Sunday at the St. Regis Monarch Beach resort. The first, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, drew applause as he discussed his rise as the son of working-class Cuban immigrants. “It’s hard to believe that 25 or 20 years ago my father worked at events like this as a bartender and now his son is running for president,” Rubio said. In an interview with Politico’s Mike Allen, Rubio said the Obama administration’s proposal to cut emissions from coal-burning plants was too cost-

Second American accused in lion kill

OBAMA PLAN CUTS MORE POWER-PLANT EMISSIONS

Pa. doctor could face charges in Zimbabwe John Bacon USA TODAY

The Clean Power Plan will require power plants to reduce carbon emissions by 32% from 2005 levels between now and 2030. LUKE SHARETT, BLOOMBERG

Climate change effort will face opposition David Jackson USA TODAY

The Obama administration is set to announce steeper-than-expected cuts in carbon pollution from power plants, part of a stepped-up push to emphasize climate change in the weeks ahead. The new Clean Power Plan — certain to be challenged in the courts and in the Republican Congress — will require power plants to reduce carbon emissions by 32% from 2005 levels between now and 2030. That’s a 9% increase from the rules as proposed a year ago, according to the White House. In a video announcing the revamped plan, Obama called it “the biggest, most important step

ALEX WONG, GETTY IMAGES

President Obama said climate change is causing rising sea levels, longer wildfires, and more destructive extreme weather events.

“Existing power plants can still dump unlimited amounts of harmful carbon pollutants into the air we breathe.” President Obama

we’ve ever taken to combat climate change.” The revamped rules will be formally released Monday, Obama said. The plan also calls for a faster transition to renewable energy sources by 2030. Obama plans to sell this and other climate change plans in a series of high-profile events over the next several months. He plans to address a National Clean Energy Summit in Nevada and will become the first president to visit the Arctic area of Alaska. Climate change will also be a major topic when Obama meets with Pope Francis at the White House in September. Later this year, Obama aides and government officials from other countries will negotiate the details of a global climate agreement. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and other Re-

publicans have said that Obama’s proposed emission cuts are unrealistic and will slow business growth and job creation. Members of the energy industry have announced plans to sue over the new emission cut rules, saying the administration lacks the legal authority to impose them. In his video, Obama said that climate change is causing hotter summers, rising sea levels, longer wildfires and more destructive extreme weather events, and is contributing to more asthma cases. The administration has moved in previous years to limit greenhouse gas emission for cars, trucks and heavy-duty vehicles. Yet, Obama said in the White House video, “existing power plants can still dump unlimited amounts of harmful carbon pollutants into the air we breathe.” Contributing: Jordan Joynt

IN BRIEF CANADIAN PM CALLS OCTOBER ELECTION

Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper on Sunday asked the governor general to dissolve Parliament in preparation for a historic general election Oct. 19. The 11-week election season will be among the longest in Canadian history. Harper, after meeting with Gov. Gen. David Johnston, said the campaign is an opportunity for the nation of 35 million to unify in the face of economic and security challenges — including the jihadist movement of the Islamic State. “This is no time for risky plans,” the leader of the Conservatives said. New Democratic Party leader Tom Mulcair said the economy will be the main issue. “Canadians have a clear choice: Four more years of Stephen Harper and the Conservatives or our #NDP plan for change,” Mulcair tweeted. — John Bacon

GAY PRIDE STABBING VICTIM MOURNED

land of Reunion, where a piece of a Boeing 777 wing flap was found on a beach in the town of Saint Andre on Wednesday. Flight 370 disappeared March 8, 2014, after taking off from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, bound for Beijing with 239 people aboard. The wing flap, suspected to be from Flight 370, is at a testing facility in Toulouse, France, where it will be inspected on Wednesday, the Paris prosecutor’s office said. ALSO ...

GALI TIBBON, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

People light candles during a gathering in downtown Jerusalem to mourn Shira Banki, 16, who died Sunday after being stabbed Thursday at the Jerusalem Gay Pride march. LATEST DEBRIS FOUND ON ISLAND NOT PART OF PLANE

An object found on an Indian Ocean island is not part of a plane

ly for average consumers. Two other candidates — Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and former Florida governor Jeb Bush — also received a warm reception. Cruz blasted what he called the “Washington cartel” that operates in Congress — even under a Republican-controlled Senate and said “data and facts” don’t support global warming. Bush, who has seen billionaire Donald Trump pass him in early polls, touted his credentials as a two-term governor. Not all of the hopefuls attended the invitation-only event, including Trump, who, in a tweet Sunday, suggested the candidates at the gathering were “puppets” there to “beg for money” from the Kochs.

door but a generic ladder that has nothing to do with missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, a Malaysian official said Sunday. The debris was found on the is-

uThousands of donors have contributed more than $400,000 to help fund search and rescue efforts for two boys who disappeared off the Florida coast July 24. The funds, coming through a GoFundMe page created by the families of Austin Stephanos and Perry Cohen, both 14, continue to roll in after the Coast Guard called off its search Friday.

Wildlife officials in Zimbabwe on Sunday accused a second American of killing a lion in an illegal hunt near an iconic game preserve. Jan Seski, a gynecological oncologist in Murrysville, Pa., shot a lion with a bow and arrow in April on land near Hwange National Park, Zimbabwe parks spokeswoman Caroilne Washaya Moyo said. Last week, a global outcry erupted amid news that Cecil, a beloved lion living in the park, had been lured out with bait, wounded with a crossbow and tracked for 40 hours before being fatally shot a month ago. Minnesota dentist Walter Palmer admitted hunting Cecil but said he worked with guides and had no idea that laws had been broken. Two residents of the southern African nation of 13 million people have been charged criminally in that case, and Zimbabwe officials said they will attempt to ex-

BRENT STAPELKAMP

Zimbabwe National Parks and Wildlife Management Authority says Jerico was not killed. This photo is said to show Jerico on Sunday.

tradite Palmer to face charges. Moyo also said Seski could face criminal charges for his April hunt. “The American conducted his hunt in an area where lion hunting is outlawed,” Moyo said. “The landowner who helped him with the hunt also did not have a quota for lion hunting.” Moyo said the landowner, Headman Sibanda, has been arrested. Seski did not immediately return calls from USA TODAY. On his medical website, Seski said he is the division director of gynecologic oncology at Allegheny General Hospital and medical director at the hospital’s Center for Bloodless Medicine. Ernest Hahn, a neighbor of Seski in a rural area near Pittsburgh, told the Associated Press that Seski posted no-trespassing signs, breaking a local tradition of people feeling free to cross property lines to hunt. After Cecil’s death, Zimbabwe officials on Saturday announced a ban on hunting of lions, leopards and elephants in areas outside Hwange. That same day, the Zimbabwe Conservation Task Force reported that Jericho, a lion seen taking care of Cecil’s cubs, had been killed. But Jericho was actually alive, and the Zimbabwe National Parks and Wildlife Management Authority released a photograph of Jericho taken Sunday morning.


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STATE-BY-STATE News from across the USA ALABAMA Huntsville: Auburn

University signed a Space Act Agreement with NASA to explore and advance the applications of 3-D printing, AL.com reported.

HIGHLIGHT: MICHIGAN

At these nuptials, Detroit is centerpiece

PENNSYLVANIA Pittsburgh: A

car crashed into a support column on an underpass here, killing two people.

ALASKA Fairbanks: Attorneys

met to discuss the appointment of a psychologist to evaluate Nathanial Kangas in preparation for his trial in November on charges that he killed two state troopers in Tanana last year, newsminer.com reported.

RHODE ISLAND Providence: Just over half of the faculty at Rhode Island’s three public colleges — about 1,500 people — teach part-time, according to a Providence Journal analysis of 2013 federal U.S. Department of Education data.

ARIZONA Phoenix: The PGA

Tour released its 2015-16 schedule, and the Waste Management Phoenix Open will be held Feb. 4-7 at the TPC Scottsdale, The Arizona Republic reported. That means once again, the tournament will fall on Super Bowl weekend.

ARKANSAS Jefferson County:

Sheriff’s deputies investigated after a jail riot involving 80 inmates caused thousands of dollars in damage, ArkansasOnline reported.

CALIFORNIA Sacramento: The

Department of Motor Vehicles is cracking down on drivers who improperly apply for disability parking placards so they can use specially marked parking spots, the Los Angeles Times reported.

MARK ADRIAN WRIGHT

In May 2014, Jason Umpleby and Martina Ross had wedding photos taken in Detroit against an old fire station near Ross’s alma mater, Holy Redeemer church and school. Patricia Montemurri Detroit Free Press

DETROIT For Jackie Wing and Mark Prindiville, their wedding scheduled for Oct. 1, 2016, will be about their love of each other — and Detroit history. The betrothed met four years ago at Central Michigan University in a history class. The chapters on falling in love came during extracurriculars, including a visit to a Detroit Tigers game at Comerica Park, where Downriver native Prindiville, 25, showed Lansing area-raised Wing, 24, some Motor City landmarks. On their wedding date, the couple will vow to be husband and wife at an automotive heritage site — the Ford Piquette

ceived her name — Adanna — last week. The name means “loving daughter to her father” in Swahili.

teenagers were charged with impersonating a high school teacher on Twitter and portraying her in a defamatory way, The News-Times reported.

of about 100 people gathered near the Cocoa Beach Pier during a candlelight vigil for two boys missing from their boat, Florida Today reported. Perry Cohen and Austin Stephanos, both 14, remain missing from a fishing trip that began in Jupiter.

GEORGIA Jekyll Island: An

injured sea turtle rescued on Tybee Island was treated at the Sea Turtle Center, the Savannah Morning News reported. Center staffers triaged the turtle, cleaning its wound and administering fluids and antibiotics. HAWAII Honolulu: A planned

rail line received $52.3 million in rail taxes during the quarter that ended June 30. That’s more than $8 million short of the amount that had been projected, The Honolulu Star-Advertiser reported. IDAHO Idaho Falls: The local

zoo welcomed a baby zebra, which was born July 17. The PostRegister reported the zebra re-

ILLINOIS Chicago: An 8-month-

old puppy was stolen at knife point from a transit rider, the Tribune reported.

INDIANA Indianapolis: Indian-

apolis Public Schools announced that it will sell the 11-acre former Coca-Cola bottling plant on Massachusetts Avenue, WXIN-TV reported.

IOWA Des Moines: Elevated E.

coli levels found in Gray’s Lake prompted officials to close off access to the public waterway Friday, The Register reported. This is the second time this year the threat of E. coli led to restricted activities at the park. KANSAS St. John: The U.S.

Board of Geographic Names officially changed the spelling of this small Stafford County town back to its original spelling. The Wichita Eagle reported the town was spelled St. John for nearly a century. But in the 1970s, the U.S. Postal Service inadvertently began spelling out Saint John. KENTUCKY Paducah: A newborn baby is alive and in stable condition at a local hospital after being discovered in a dumpster near an apartment complex in Paducah, The Paducah Sun reported. LOUISIANA Slidell: A ring of

ATM thieves active throughout the New Orleans area for more than a year was busted up by two arrests, Police Chief Randy Smith said, according to The TimesPicayune.

MAINE Cape Elizabeth: An autopsy will be conducted after a 39-year-old man died after from falling off a second-story balcony at his home, the Sun Journal reported. MARYLAND Odenton: Anne

Arundel County police say that for the second time in a month,

study at the University of Minnesota claims farm land in the U.S. Corn Belt is creating significantly more greenhouse gases than previously thought, KARE-TV reported. The study — published last week in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences — concludes that the amount of nitrous oxide being emitted from the central USA has been underestimated by about 40%. MISSISSIPPI Brookhaven: A

$2.3 million contract has been awarded for the second phase of construction for Lincoln County’s new baseball complex. Chancery Clerk Tillmon Bishop told The Daily Leader that the contract was awarded to Culbertson Contractors.

MISSOURI Columbia: The Uni-

versity of Missouri says it will give a 10% tuition discount to state students enrolled in a full degree program online, The Kansas City Star reported.

MONTANA Pryor: A Wyoming man told the FBI he pulled a gun on motorists who stopped to help him on the Crow Reservation, killing a couple and putting a bullet in the spine of their daughter, the Billings Gazette reported. NEBRASKA Lincoln: The University of Nebraska’s College of Law is sending its students to help military veterans with matters related to estate planning, giving law students practical experience while helping a population in need, the Lincoln Journal Star reported. NEVADA Las Vegas: Officials are gearing up for the arrival of NASA drones. The Las Vegas Sun reported that the state is in final negotiations to allow the space agency to test unmanned aerial vehicles in Nevada airspace. NEW HAMPSHIRE Milford:

Six-month-old Daylen Brickley became the first child in New Hampshire to get a newborn hunting and fishing license under

SOUTH CAROLINA Greenville:

Levonne Collins, 57, was charged with attempted murder and third-degree arson after deputies said she poured kerosene on her sister and tried to set her on fire after a disagreement, The Greenville News reported.

SOUTH DAKOTA Pierre: The

South Dakota State Historical Society is accepting applications for grants to fund large-scale restorations of historic properties. Applications for the Deadwood Fund are due Oct. 1. TENNESSEE Nashville: RCA

Studio A, a Music Row building that touched off a sweeping debate regarding the city’s music landmarks and overall preservation policy, has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places, The Tennessean reported. Activists fought to save the studio from demolition. TEXAS Dallas: A 7-year-old girl has raised more than $13,000 to thank a local hospital, KDFW-TV reported. Addie Bryan was born with Larsen Syndrome, a rare disorder that causes skeletal abnormalities. When she was 5 days old, Texas Scottish Rite Hospital for Children began working to rehabilitate Addie and correct her bones. She can now walk and run. UTAH Logan: The Board of Regents approved a move to make Utah State University the only school in the USA with a bachelor’s degree program for outdoor product design, the Herald-Journal reported. VERMONT Montpelier: Presi-

MINNESOTA St. Paul: A new

DELAWARE Dover: Dover Downs

FLORIDA Cocoa Beach: A crowd

a new state program, The Telegraph reported.

MICHIGAN Pontiac: A jury deliberated just two hours before convicting Jeffrey Maurer, 54, of Rochester Hills in the bludgeoning deaths of his elderly parents in January, the Detroit Free Press reported.

CONNECTICUT Danbury: Two

49-cent stamp has eight more months of life until the U.S. Postal Service has to roll the price back, The Washington Post reported. Stamp prices jumped 3 cents to 49 cents in January 2014, so the post office could recoup billions of dollars lost during the recession. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit ruled in June the rate hike should not become permanent.

two brothers from Odenton are missing, WUSA-TV reported. Benjamin Molina, 9, and Jacob Nathaniel Molina, 14, who were missing but found in July, ran away from their parent.

More and more couples want to get married in Detroit’s historic churches or hold their receptions in places as unique as the Belle Isle Casino or a turnof-the-century auto plant. They also want to use the city’s landscape — from the glorious to the gritty — as a backdrop for out-of-the-ordinary photo poses. At the Detroit Yacht Club on Belle Isle, catering director Nikki Charbonneau said the venue is “hard-pressed” to find an open Saturday in 2016. “They want cool Detroit areas,” said Charbonneau. “Every bride is saying, ‘We’re going for a Detroit theme.’ They’re not looking for those cookiecutter banquet halls. They want unique areas with great views of the city.”

Clark University here is considering starting a permanent fund to help students provide relief work at disaster sites around the world, the Telegram & Gazette reported.

rimer County health officials say a Loveland resident has been hospitalized with West Nile virus, and two Fort Collins residents who donated blood were found to have been carrying the disease, the Coloradoan reported. The blood was discarded.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: The

Avenue Plant where Henry Ford first manufactured the Model T. “We’re history nerds. We wanted someplace unique,” said Wing, a third-grade teacher in Morenci. “It’s the antique cars, the creakiness of the floors. The paint on the ceiling is peeling because it’s where cars were made 100 years ago,” said Wing. “Henry Ford’s office is on the second floor, and there are antique cars around because it’s a museum. “And the skyline of Detroit is all around us,” said Wing, “and it’s beautiful.” Forget about the suburban country club or the Caribbean beach civil ceremonies. After Destination Wedding, insert the word Detroit.

MASSACHUSETTS Worcester:

COLORADO Fort Collins: La-

said it eliminated 48 jobs over the last three months — twice the number the company planned to make just three months ago, The News Journal reported. The additional 24 job cuts resulted from a decline in business stemming from the casino’s recent decision to close table game operations during early weekday mornings, CEO Denis McGlynn said.

OREGON Portland: Mayor Charlie Hales was scheduled to be at the White House on Monday for a clean-power conference, The Oregonian reported.

NEW JERSEY Englewood: A shot of Johnnie Walker Blue Label and three Miller High Lifes a day for the past 70 years are what Agnes Fenton says helped her reach 110 years old, The (Bergen County) Record reported. NEW MEXICO Albuquerque:

Rail Runner train service was suspended last weekend due to flash flooding.

NEW YORK Albany: Five organi-

zations were picked last week to manufacture and dispense medical marijuana, the Gannett Albany bureau reported. The announcement comes as the state plans to make medical marijuana available for severely ill people, particularly children, by January. NORTH CAROLINA Raleigh: Former police officer Gentry Smith was named an ambassador and sworn in as director of the U.S. Department of State’s Office of Foreign Missions, which oversees foreign embassies and consulates in the USA and makes sure American diplomats receive fair treatment in other countries, The News & Observer reported. NORTH DAKOTA Bismarck:

Local communities and schools wanting to plant orchards can apply for financial help from the state Department of Agriculture. The deadline to apply is Oct. 23. OHIO Willard: A man who

became agitated about his nextdoor neighbor mowing her lawn at night shot her and then ran a power mower over her body, WKYC-TV reported.

OKLAHOMA Oklahoma City: Much of the state saw aboveaverage rainfall in July, The Oklahoman reported Coming on the heels of the second-wettest spring ever recorded, the extra rainfall has put the state on track to break a 58-year-old record for the most rain in a single year.

dent Obama has declared a major disaster in Addison and Chittenden counties and ordered federal aid to supplement state and local recovery efforts from a severe storm and flooding June 9.

VIRGINIA Hopewell: A Hopewell High School teacher resigned this week after students and parents began circulating photos and videos of her dancing in burlesque shows, the Richmond Times-Dispatch reported. The school district did not identify the teacher by name. WASHINGTON Joint Base

Lewis-McChord: A man was attacked by a bear here and suffered minor injuries, KOMO-TV reported.

WEST VIRGINIA Clendenin: The terrain of Sandy Brae Golf Club could trade its golf carts for grazing cattle if its owners choose to sell the property to Bob Hammack, owner of Mountaineer Fabricators, who would add 253.2 acres to the 1,200 acres he farms, the Charlotte Gazette-Mail reported. WISCONSIN Green Bay: City officials said they hope the launch of a safe driving campaign here will inspire others to take action to reduce speeding, the Green Bay Press-Gazette reported. WYOMING Grand Teton Na-

tional Park: The seasonal worker killed in a fire at an employee dormitory here was identified as Anthony Graviano, 28, the Jackson Hole News & Guide reported.

Compiled by Tim Wendel, Nicole Gill and Jonathan Briggs, with Carolyn Cerbin, Linda Dono, Micahel Gottschamer, Jaleesa Jones, Ben Sheffler and Nichelle Smith. Design by Karen Taylor. Graphics by Alejandro Gonzalez.


NEWS MONEY Wild rideSPORTS may persist on Wall Street LIFE AUTOS TRAVEL

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Adam Shell USA TODAY

More wild roller-coaster rides — and a chance for more summer stock swoons — is the financial forecast for August as Wall Street continues to eye potential headwinds such as coming interest rate hikes from the Federal Reserve and a still-wobbly stock market in China. Prepare for more wild price swings, say Wall Street money managers and investment strategists that USA TODAY contacted to get a sense of whether the long, hot, volatile summer in financial markets will wash ashore on trading desks in the dog days of August.

Wall Street was hit by waves of worry in July, with stocks gyrating sharply amid fears of a Greek financial meltdown and anxiety created by a massive price decline in shares of mainland China stocks that has erased nearly a third of the market’s value and raised fears of a global economic slowdown. U.S. growth clocked in at 2.3% in the second quarter, a tad below estimates but better than the weak 0.6% growth in the winter-affected first quarter. August hasn’t been a superbullish month for stocks, either, according to data from Bespoke Investment Group. In fact, it ranks last in monthly performance for the Dow in the past 20 years, posting an average loss of 1.1% and finishing up in August

only 55% of the time, according to Bespoke. Should investors expect more turbulence, despite an 11th-hour bailout deal for Greece in midJuly and waning fear that a China stock crash will infect the Chinese and global economy? “Most likely yes,” says Bob Doll, chief equity strategist at Nuveen Asset Management. “The uncertainties surrounding the Fed, continuing question marks about China, and the concerns regarding U.S. growth are likely to cause moves in both directions. Add to that the slower volumes of summer, and we could have continued volatility.” Despite the up-and-down price action in July, both the Dow (0.4%) and the broader Standard

& Poor’s 500 index (2.0%) finished July in the black. But the broad stock market still remains about 1% off its late May all-time high and is facing another headwind: above-average valuations. Add in the threat of coming rate hikes, and stocks have a lot to contend with. “Summer volatility will continue, unfortunately,” says Jack Ablin, chief investment officer at BMO Private Bank. “Many of the key drivers fueling stock market gains over the last several years are dissipating. Valuation is no longer compelling, ... (and) liquidity is slowly drying up.” He added, “Unless we get an upsurge in economic growth, I’m concerned that volatility will remain high.”

KINGS DOMINION

Despite the up-and-down price action in July, both the Dow and the broader Standard & Poor’s 500 index finished July in the black.

MONEYLINE GREEK STOCK MARKET WILL REOPEN MONDAY The Athens Stock Exchange is set to reopen Monday after being closed for more than a month during the country’s credit crisis. The government shut down the exchange June 29 to help prevent the country’s collapse. Traders expect the exchange to plunge by as much as 20% when trading resumes. Meanwhile, negotiations are ongoing with the European Union and International Monetary Fund on a third bailout measure of about $93 billion.

‘DARK SHADOW’ OF RECESSION STILL SPOOKS U.S.

KAREN BLEIER, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

AT&T WOOS CONSUMERS WITH DIRECTV BUNDLE Less than a week after acquiring DirecTV, AT&T is pitching a satellite TV-wireless bundle. New DirecTV or U-verse customers can pay less than $200 monthly for HD video and DVR service for up to four television receivers, plus unlimited talk and text for up to four lines, plus 10 Gigabytes of shared data. New DirecTV customers must sign a two-year contract; U-verse customers must sign a one-year contract. VERIZON, UNIONS AVOID STRIKE, WILL CONTINUE TALKS Negotiations continue between Verizon, the Communications Workers of America and the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers after the company’s collective-bargaining agreement with workers in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic expired at midnight Saturday. Union members will continue to work without a contract, but negotiators left Philadelphia and Rye, N.Y., where talks were ongoing. Union leaders told Verizon it would return when the company wanted “to engage in serious bargaining,” said Dennis Trainor, VP for CWA District One. FRIDAY MARKETS INDEX

CLOSE

Dow Jones industrials Dow for the week Nasdaq composite S&P 500 T-bond, 30-year yield T-note, 10-year yield Gold, oz. Comex Oil, light sweet crude Euro (dollars per euro) Yen per dollar

CHG

17,698.86 y 56.12 x 121.33 5128.28 y 0.50 2103.84 y 4.79 2.91% y 0.03 2.18% y 0.08 $1095.00 x 6.60 $46.81 y 1.71 $1.0970 x 0.0051 123.95 y 0.30

SOURCES USA TODAY RESEARCH, MARKETWATCH.COM

USA SNAPSHOTS©

Why do we save?

15%

say it’s the right thing to do

Note Third biggest reason, closely following ‘to pay-off debts’ and ‘retirement’ Source Capital One Bank ‘Challenge Your Savings’ survey of 2,000 adults JAE YANG AND KARL GELLES, USA TODAY

LUKE SHARETT, BLOOMBERG

Only 26% of those in the online survey expect conditions to be better a year from now — and 23% believe they’ll be worse.

Many Americans feel less optimistic Paul Davidson USA TODAY

Six years after the Great Recession ended, only about a quarter of Americans have a positive view of the U.S. economy and its prospects, though significantly more feel good about their personal financial situation, according to a new USA TODAY/Wells Fargo survey. The findings underscore that although perceptions have improved along with the economy, the scars of the downturn have left Americans warier and less optimistic about the future. “We’ve come a long way from two, three, four years ago, when people were completely shellshocked,” says Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics. But he adds, “I do think people are still cautious and haven’t really bought into the idea that this economy is performing well. The dark shadow of the recession continues to hang over the collective psyche.” Americans’ leery outlook, he says, could be a reason consumer spending has advanced but failed to take off despite significantly improved household finances. And it could influence voters’ choices in the 2016 presidential election. Twenty-seven percent of those surveyed rate the U.S. economy as good or very good, while an equal share say it’s poor or very poor. And only 26% expect conditions to be better a year from now, while 23% believe they’ll be worse, says the USA TODAY/ Wells Fargo Real Economy online survey of 3,533 U.S. adults done in early June. “Folks don’t see nearly as much opportunity with the economy today as they did in the past,” Wells Fargo Senior Economist Mark Vitner says. Their viewpoints, he adds, are likely influenced by their own employment situation. Their subdued appraisals are at least partly grounded in reality. The economy has grown by slightly more than 2% a year since the recovery began, a mod-

GLUM OUTLOOK OF ECONOMY For now, few Americans have positive views of other pillars of the economy, and Wells Fargo Senior Economist Mark Vitner says they’re at least partly accurate:

22% say the education system prepares a skilled workforce. Many Americans are bombarded with reports of employers’ inability to find skilled workers.

22% say they have the ability to have a financially secure retirement. A recent Federal Reserve survey found that 31% have no retirement savings or pension.

22%

say the U.S. has a reasonable cost of living. Although inflation has been low, apartment rents have risen sharply, and health care costs have soared for many people, Vitner says.

17%

say the U.S. has a strong middle class. The outsourcing of manufacturing jobs overseas and the decline of unions are among the factors that have diminished the middle class. Source: USA TODAY/Wells Fargo Real Economy online survey of 3,533 U.S. adults done in early June

HOW WE’RE FARING ON ECONOMIC ISSUES Percentage of people who say these are true in …

Their community

The U.S.

Healthy business climate 31% 20% Growing job market

32% 29%

Education system preparing skilled workers 32% 22% Strong middle class 17%

30%

Reasonable cost-of-living expenses 22% Ability to have a financially

est pace. Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen has cited a lingering hesitancy by banks to lend, businesses to invest and consumers to splurge in the wake of the recession’s hammer-blow. Kathy Staran, 56, of Bloomfield, Mich., was rocked by the real estate crash and recession. The construction manager and interior designer is still earning only about a tenth of her former income and lost her house to a short sale in 2012. She eats out less often and is selling her clothing and other possessions on eBay to make extra cash. She rates the national economy as very poor and her local Detroit Metro area economy as worse. “It’s hard not to be disillusioned when I struggle to make ends meet and pay my bills with much lower income than I previously had,” she says. Americans, however, are generally more upbeat about their communities. About half rate their local economies as good or

36%

very good, and only 14% have a secure retirement negative view. Twenty-eight per21% cent expect local conditions to be 22% better in a year, and just 13% are pessimistic. Few people living in poverty The results likely reflect a “lo25% cal bias” but also indicate that re8% spondents’ outlook on the national economy may be exag- Source USA TODAY/Wells Fargo survey gerated by the often-skeptical VERONICA BRAVO AND KRIS KINKADE, USA TODAY views they draw from the media, Zandi says. Their opinions of Zandi points to average annual their communities, meanwhile, are largely informed by local busi- wage gains that have stagnated at about 2% since the recovery beness activity. Survey participants were sur- gan in 2009. “Once we see real prisingly downbeat about key ele- wages rising in a significant way, ments of the economy, they’ll feel much better about evparticularly labor. Slightly fewer erything,” he says. than three in 10 believe there’s a Despite their restrained views growing job market or opportuni- of the economy, half of Americans ties for workers to advance, even feel good or very good about their though monthly payroll growth is financial situation. Lewej Whitelow, 28, a project averaging a solid 208,000 this year and hit a 15-year high of manager for a cloud-computing 260,000 in 2014. The unemploy- company, has notched two proment rate has fallen to a near- motions since switching jobs a year ago after getting none during normal 5.3% from 10% in 2009. The low jobless rate belies a la- a three-year tenure at a similar bor market that still isn’t firing on firm. He’s so optimistic that the all cylinders. “Lots of folks are Dallas resident plans to move to working in jobs (for which they’re New York and launch his own overqualified), they’re not work- technology company within a ing as many hours as they’d like year. “Even two years ago, I would and (many are) working part not have made that move,” he says. time,” Vitner says.


6B

L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 2015

TRAVEL

THE FUR IS FLYING Pilots can avoid ASK THE CAPTAIN

Pets, people clash in the skies

small talk if they want

Christopher Elliott Special for USA TODAY

John Cox

Special for USA TODAY

Colleen Kaczka is done with pets on planes and their “crybaby” owners. And with good reason. On a recent JetBlue flight from Newark to Orlando, an “emotional support” dog belonging to a first-class passenger defecated midflight. The stench filled the enON tire cabin and was alTRAVEL EVERY most unbearable to MONDAY Kaczka and her son, who suffers from asthma. “Airlines are enabling a bunch of selfish people who have no concern for the people around them,” says Kaczka, a teacher from South Plainfield, N.J. Perhaps. Confrontations between pets and passengers are at their worst now, during the dog days of summer. More pets are flying than ever, yet only half the respondents in a recent survey say animals belong in the passenger cabin of a commercial jet. But for every complaint like Kaczka’s, I get another from a pet owner or disabled person who claims the exact opposite — that travel companies, and in particular, airlines, are not accommodating enough when it comes to their furry friends. Consider what happened to Christine Killian and her family when they tried to fly from Pittsburgh to Los Angeles with Sam the cat recently. The Killians were relocating to California, and they’d done everything to ensure Sam was airworthy. They’d purchased a carrier, filled out all the necessary paperwork and ensured he hadn’t been fed before the trip. Still, Sam did what animals sometimes do – he went No. 2 just before takeoff. The airline ejected the cat and their entire family from the flight. “I was mortified,” said Killian, a stay-at-home mom. Eventually, the Killians flew to L.A. without Sam. The cat made the journey alone, using a pet transport, at a cost of $1,179. These stories raise a bigger question: In the absurd world of air travel, are pets more important than people? For Killian, the answer was obviously “no.” But her travel problems may be a backlash of sorts. It happened on US Airways, a carrier that is particularly sensitive to flying pets. It infamously, and disastrously, allowed an “emotional support” pig on one of its planes last year after promising it would never do so again. But many air travelers will experience what Kaczka did: an ani-

Question: What do pilots do throughout the main part of the flight when autopilot is on? Do they make small talk with the other pilot? Is that sometimes awkward if their personalities don’t mesh well? — Submitted by reader Chaim Answer: There are ongoing duties throughout the flight, such as navigation updates and radio calls from and to air-traffic control. Pilots are professionals, and adjusting to different personalities is a part of the job. If personalities don’t mesh well, then crewmembers keep the conversation to business matters. If there is a layover at a city, each can go their own way. My experience is that personality problems within a crew are rare. FLY_DRAGONFLY GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOTO

More than 2 million pets fly on the nation’s airlines each year. Some animals don’t use carriers.

HOW TO AVOID A MID-AIR CONFRONTATION uCall your airline. If you have a severe pet allergy, contact your airline. Carriers can make special arrangements to remove allergy-inducing materials from a flight with enough special notice or to let you move to another flight. uTake precautions. Travelers like Tinoco, who have a mild allergy, should always fly with a supply of Benadryl. If it’s more serious, don’t take off without a dose of epinephrine in your carry-on bag. uEnlist the crew. Flight attendants are trained to handle disagreements between passengers and other people’s pets. The sooner you say something, the more options they have. Best-case scenario: notifying the staff before your flight leaves. Once the doors close, their options are limited, particularly on a sold-out flight.

Many air travelers will experience an animal onboard that, for whatever reason, will be treated with the deference of an elite-level flier. mal that, for whatever reason, will be treated with the deference of an elite-level flier. There are several reasons for that. Federal regulations are permissive when it comes to “emotional support” animals, and protective of pets’ rights. For example, the government sets minimum standards when it comes to

an animal’s carrier size, while curiously not setting minimum legroom standards for human passengers. Airlines also charge hefty pet transportation fees – sometimes more than the human airfare – and are reluctant to lose the revenue. Finally, and maybe most important, our values are shifting as a society. Pets are no longer just afforded equal rights as people — in some instances, they’re treated better. Donna Tinoco, who works for an advertising agency in Orlando, was surprised when she found herself sitting across the aisle from a medium-size dog in the first-class cabin on a transcontinental flight recently. It was not

in a carrier and wasn’t a service animal. She says although she loves dogs, there’s a double standard. She wasn’t allowed to bring anything with nuts on the plane, because some passengers might be allergic to it. Yet Tinoco has a mild allergy to pet dander. “I was not thrilled to have a dog sitting next to me for six hours,” she says. Privately, airline executives will tell you that their hands are tied on this issue — that they’re being pushed in one direction by federal regulations and another by upset passengers. For its part, JetBlue offered Kaczka a $50 voucher for the “inconvenience.” But what airlines won’t admit is that the deciding factor in all this is the money. Often, pet owners have more money to spend than parents with asthmatic kids. So guess who gets to have their way? The solution lies with passengers. They have to ask themselves if taking Fido on vacation is important enough to affect the health of another passenger or decide whether creating a scene that could delay or divert the flight is worth their while. Here’s hoping they make the the right call. Christopher Elliott is a consumer advocate and editor at large for National Geographic Traveler.

Usually the scheduling system assigns a crew based on the bids of each pilot. Q: Do you get a choice to pick your co-pilot? Can you refuse to fly with one you find undesirable? — Mike M., Canton, Mich. A: At a large airline, usually not. Occasionally a captain and first officer will bid for the same set of flights because they enjoy flying together. Usually the scheduling system assigns a crew based on the bids of each pilot. Smaller airlines or corporate flight operations are more likely to have a crew paired up out of choice. Any pilot can refuse to fly with a pilot they believe is incapable of performing their duties. They will be asked to justify their decision. Q: What determines if there are two or three people in the cockpit? — Richard, Charlotte A: The certification of the airplane determines if two or three pilots are required. Older airplanes had systems that required significant manual control (electrical, pneumatic and hydraulic). More modern airplanes were able to automate the systems, allowing the elimination of the flight engineer (the third pilot). John Cox is a retired airline captain with US Airways and runs his own aviation safety consulting company, Safety Operating Systems.

Airports add local restaurants for fliers seeking unique fare Charisse Jones USA TODAY

Increasingly, travelers are able to grab a bite of the best fare a destination has to offer without setting foot out of the airport. From Florida’s Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International to Los Angeles International, a growing number of airports are opening outposts of popular local restaurants, unique stands that serve regional cuisine, and menus crafted by prominent local chefs. “The airport is really the doorstep of the community,” says Rick Blatstein, CEO of OTG, which develops, owns and operates restaurants in 11 airports. “And we think it’s important to connect with the local tastes, flavors ... really the whole local vibe.” Michael Lomonaco, of Manhattan’s Porter House restaurant, is the consulting chef at the Prime Tavern steakhouse in LaGuardia Airport’s Terminal D. Passengers passing through Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport can get a taste of southern barbecue at Mustard

Seed, which opened in February and smokes its own meat inside its airport location. Fliers can have breakfast all day long at Boise Airport’s Big City Coffee, an outpost of a popular local restaurant, or regional fare and local craft beers at Bardenay, another Idaho eatery with an airport outlet. And Los Angeles’ famous Farmers Market has opened a second location in LAX’s Terminal 5, incorporating local ingredients into airport bites. The trend of bringing local tastes into airports is largely in response to demand by Millennial travelers and other fliers for fresh food and unique dining experiences, even while they’re on the go. “This industry is evolving ... with the changing public palate,” says Kevin Kelly, president of the travel hospitality business for Delaware North, which manages more than 300 eateries and stores at more than 30 airports and travel portals around the world. In November, Delaware North helped introduce the popular Ca-

DELAWARE NORTH

Casavana has two sites at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood airport. savana Restaurant to Fort Lauderdale’s airport, where it now has two locations. It “is a reflection of the community,” Kelly says. “It’s Cuban cuisine. We’ve got croquettes, empanadas, and it’s been very well received. There are still national chains that could fill that need, but it seems that sense of com-

munity resonates strongly with the airport authorities and the traveling market.” Lazaro Garcia, Casavana’s president, says that besides catering to traveling locals and airport employees already familiar with his restaurants, the airport locations expose Casavana’s food and brand to throngs of tourists.

Though Casavana’s owners were used to delivering fast service in their local restaurants, many eateries have to adjust to the particular rhythms and restrictions that come with delivering food at an airport. “A street-side restaurant may have a 200-seat dining room, and we tend to shoehorn these things into much smaller spaces in airport settings,” Kelly said. Speed is also critical. “You’ve really only got half an hour to fill the order and let them enjoy the space, so the speed of service is also a non-traditional challenge that our street folks need to understand.” Kevin Shaw, a member of USA TODAY’s Road Warriors panel who is an information security consultant in Suffolk, Va., said that he really enjoys the unique offerings at Local Tavern in Philadelphia International Airport’s Terminal F. “I like that they have local beers and neat menu items like ... deviled eggs, a bacon appetizer and roasted Brussels sprouts I do not find elsewhere in my travels,” he says.


USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 2015

LIFELINE MAKING WAVES Dr. Dre is releasing his first album since 1999, and it’s not the muchanticipated ‘Detox.’ The rapper/ producer said on his Beats 1 radio show that he has scrapped that album and is instead putting out ‘Compton: A Soundtrack by Dr. Dre’ on iTunes and Apple Music Friday. Dre’s ‘Compton’ is inspired by his work on the N.W.A biopic ‘Straight Outta Compton,’ in theaters Aug. 14. The album’s guests include Ice Cube, Kendrick Lamar, Eminem and Snoop Dogg. ‘Compton’ is “going to be my grand finale,” Dre said. “The record is bananas.”

D DIPASUPIL, FILMMAGIC

IT’S YOUR BIRTHDAY WHO’S CELEBRATING TODAY?

SPORTS LIFE AUTOS MAKING NOISE (AND TRAVEL WAVES) IN TV ADS

7B

MUSIC

They’ve got to make a dime somehow. For as long as we can remember, major artists have been hawking everything from fast food to hotels to new cars in commercials. But the ones who truly stand to benefit are the up-and-comers, whose songs can reach new fans (Matt & Kim’s Daylight) or climb the charts (The Ting Tings’ Shut Up and Let Me Go) with the boost of national TV spots. USA TODAY’s Patrick Ryan rounds up seven rising acts who are singing — and selling — in ads this summer.

SOPHIE

ELLIPHANT

Lemonades

GET TO KNOW HER: No, you won’t

COMMERCIAL: McDonald’s

COMMERCIAL: Apple’s iPhone

GET TO KNOW HIM: Although

many have confused this fizzy electronic track for a ripoff of Amy Schumer’s NSFW viral hit Milk Milk Lemonade, Lemonade spilled onto the Internet last summer. A concoction of mysterious British beat-maker Sophie, the tune is taken off his two-song EP Lemonade / Hard, released last year. This past spring, he toured the U.S. and contributed production to Madonna’s Rebel Heart (on B - - - - I’m Madonna).

HALSEY COMMERCIAL: Taco Bell’s Bacon Club Chalupa GET TO KNOW HER: A cover of Tear For Fears’ bleak Mad

World isn’t typical fare for a Taco Bell commercial, but pop starlet Halsey pulls it off with smoky vocals. The neon-haired songstress is now supporting Imagine Dragons on their tour. Her debut album, Badlands, is due Aug. 28.

hear her voice in this 30-second spot, which uses the wonky hook of her Major Lazer collaboration Too Original. But check out the full song, and you’ll realize just how perfectly the Swedish singer is suited to dance-pop, having already collaborated with David Guetta (No Money No Love) and Lean On vocalist MØ (One More). In the similarly defiant spirit of Tove Lo and Charli XCX, Elliphant’s North American debut Living Life Golden is out Sept. 25.

GETTY IMAGES, FILMMAGIC, WIREIMAGE

Tony Bennett is 89. Michael Ealy is 42. Evangeline Lilly is 36.

PHASES

JUDAH & THE LION

JAMIE N COMMONS

GET TO KNOW THEM: Hulu sure

crunchy granola bars GET TO KNOW THEM: Not only does the Nashville natives’ catchy, banjo-strumming Kickin’ Da Leaves complement the ad’s great outdoors imagery, it’s the song they played for their biggest audience yet on Late Show With David Letterman this year. After releasing their first EP Sweet Tennessee in 2013, the folk-rock trio is working on a debut album, teaming with producer Dave Cobb (Jason Isbell), due next year.

GET TO KNOW HIM: Like the commercial he’s featured in, Jamie N Commons is “just getting started.” After landing TV spots for Netflix and Pitch Perfect 2 with X Ambassadors collaboration Jungle (themselves in a Jeep campaign), the British blues-rocker’s wailing Karma can be heard in Hyundai spots. As he works on his first album, the troubadour will next open for Catfish and the Bottlemen on their U.S. trek starting in September.

COMMERCIAL: Hulu

GETTY IMAGES FOR DIZZY FEET FOUNDATION

STYLE STAR Before taking the stage Saturday for a dance performance at the Dizzy Feet Foundation gala at Los Angeles’ Club Nokia, Jenna Dewan Tatum walked the red carpet in style. The dancer/ actress stunned in a white cutout dress by designer Cushnie et Ochs and had the perfect accessories: classy white pumps and attractive arm candy, husband Channing Tatum. Compiled by Carly Mallenbaum

USA SNAPSHOTS©

Jon Stewart’s No. 1 guest

19

Most guest stints on “The Daily Show With Jon Stewart,” by CNN’s Fareed Zakaria

Note As of July 27; does not include cameos; Brian Williams is runner-up with 16 Source Comedy Central TERRY BYRNE AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY

knows how to pick ’em. As Børns’ infectious Electric Love continues to soundtrack their frequent “You Know You Wanna” spots, the streaming service has selected a new indie-pop confection to ingrain itself into our heads. The hallmark of Hulu’s summer campaign, Phases’ ’80s-influenced I’m in Love With My Life also is the first single off the Los Angeles band’s debut For Life, out Sept. 18. After a handful of headlining shows next month, they’ll support the album on tour with The Mowgli’s and Lights this fall.

COMMERCIAL: Nature Valley’s

COMMERCIAL: Hyundai

HALSEY BY SARA BARLOW + STEPHEN SCHOFIELD; JUDAH AND THE LION BY JOSHUA BLACK WILKINS; PHASES BY VINCENT PERINI; JAMIE N COMMONS BY DOMINOE FARRIS-GILBERT; ISAKOV BY BRAD TORCHIA; ELLIPHANT BY MYRIAM SANTOS; SOPHIE BY MASHA MEL

GREGORY ALAN ISAKOV

COMMERCIAL: 2016 Subaru

Forester

GET TO KNOW HIM: Isakov’s

nostalgic, unassuming Time Will Tell goes with the car company’s misty-eyed ad as a father watches his daughter grow up before his eyes. The folk track comes off the Colorado-based singer/songwriter’s 2013 album The Weatherman, his most recent release. Set to open for Dave Matthews Band and Passenger this fall, Isakov is no stranger to TV crossovers: his songs have been in Suits and Californication, and a McDonald’s commercial.

MOVIES

‘Mission’ accomplished: $56 million and No. 1 As Cruise soars, ‘Vacation’ revival runs off the road Patrick Ryan

@PatRyanWrites USA TODAY

Secret agent Ethan Hunt still packs a punch. Mission: Impossible — Rogue Nation, the fifth installment in Tom Cruise’s death-defying spy franchise, scaled to the top of the box office with $56 million, according to tracking firm Rentrak. With $20.3 million Friday, Rogue Nation had the best opening day in the history of the series, which kicked off with 1996’s Mission: Impossible. The M:I films have raked in more than $2 billion worldwide, and there are plans for a sixth. Co-starring Simon Pegg and Jeremy Renner, the actionpacked Rogue Nation follows Ethan Hunt as he squares off against a terrorist organization known as the Syndicate with the

DAVID JAMES, PARAMOUNT PICTURES

Tom Cruise takes on a terrorist group in the latest Mission: Impossible, which had the franchise’s best opening day ever. help of mysterious femme fatale Ilsa Faust (Rebecca Ferguson). Along with the M:I brand recognition and good reviews, an aggressive promotional campaign from star Tom Cruise fueled Rogue Nation’s success. The actor impressed in a “Lip Sync Battle” with Jimmy Fallon on The Tonight Show and touted the film’s

aerial stunts in interviews. “You’ve really got to hand it to (him) — he treats the marketing like he treats his stunts. He goes all-out,” says Rentrak senior analyst Paul Dergarabedian. “Audiences love when they think actors can not only talk the talk but walk the walk.” Meanwhile, most moviegoers

opted not to Vacation with Ed Helms and Christina Applegate. The raunchy road-trip comedy, a revival of the 1983 film of the same name, sputtered with only $14.9 million for second place ($21.2 million since opening Wednesday). Vacation “started out pretty soft last week, and we thought it would build,” Dergarabedian says. “It was great counterprogramming, but Mission: Impossible just really dominated.” Rounding out the top five, AntMan continued to muscle forward with third place and $12.6 million, dropping a small 49% in its third week. Minions fell one spot to fourth and $12.2 million, and arcade-game-inspired Pixels logged $10.4 million for fifth. On the specialty-films front, awards hopeful The End of the Tour impressed with almost $127,000 in just four theaters. The film, which had the biggest opening of any Sundance Film Festival entry so far this year, stars Jason Segel as the late author David Foster Wallace. Final numbers are expected Monday.


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ALL EYES ON JUSTIN HOUSTON AS CHIEFS CAMP GETS UNDERWAY. 5C

Sports

C

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/sports l Monday, August 3, 2015

Self put to test by young Olathe campers By Gary Bedore gbedore@ljworld.com

Self

Olathe — Bill Self faced a firing squad in the form of 200 or so basketball campers who grilled Kansas University’s coach with an assortment of personal questions Sunday morning at Olathe South High.

How old are you? “Thirty-nine,” the coach said with a smile before adding, “Fifty-two. Old.” Is your house big? “I have no idea. It’s a normal house.” Are you rich? “I’ve would like to say I’m rich this way: I’ve got a great family. My family is healthy.

We have a lot of love in our house. I’d say pretty rich.” How long have you been a coach? “This is my 30th year of coaching — 23 years as a head coach.” Yes, believe it or not, Self this season begins Year No. 30 in college coaching. “I hope it’s memorable in

a good way,” said Self, who is beginning his 13th season as head coach at KU. “I’ve had some memorable years in bad ways, too. Hopefully it’s a very memorable year. The fact we got off to a good start in South Korea (winning gold medal at World University Games), I think, gives everybody a little bit

FRISBEE

Ultimately well

of confidence moving forward.” Self’s first job was as a grad assistant at KU in the 1985-86 Final Four season. “I fell in love with the place. I thought it was the best place in the world to coach, and it is,” Self said of Please see SELF, page 3C

LHS soccer hires locally ——

McCune tapped to coach Lion girls By Bobby Nightengale bnightengale@ljworld.com

John Young/Journal-World Photo

KANSAS UNIVERSITY GRADUATE STUDENT CLARE FRANTZ LAUNCHES A FRISBEE DOWNFIELD during a practice with her Ultimate Frisbee team, Wicked, Wednesday at Prairie Center Park in Olathe. Frantz, a Lawrence native, won gold with the U-23 United States Ultimate Frisbee Mixed World Championship Team last month in London.

KU’s Frantz rehabs, wins Worlds By Chris Duderstadt cduderstadt@ljworld.com

After being named to the United States’ U-23 Mixed Ultimate Frisbee national team in November of 2014, Clare Frantz felt that she was at the pinnacle of her career heading into the Kansas Bettys’ 2015 season. The Bettys, Kansas University’s women’s Ultimate Frisbee team, opened the season by winning the Florida Winter Classic in Orlando with a 5-1 record, but their one loss was particularly painful for Frantz. With the game against Florida State coming down to the ultimate point, Frantz

was open in the end zone with a catch t o win it for the Bettys. However, the disc was thrown behind Frantz, and as she tried to reach back for the disc, her leg remained planted. Just six months before Frantz was scheduled to compete for the national team in the world championships in London, she had torn the anterior cruciate ligament in her left knee. “I felt like I was at my peak when I tore it,” Frantz said. “I tore it at the very beginning of my college season, spring season in January. I knew I had already made the national team, and so I was, like, ‘I

have this date in July that I so many people on my side. It made the whole thing a lot have to be back for.’” easier, which was really nice, Road to recovery because I wouldn’t have been As Frantz went under the able to do it by myself.” knife for ACL replacement surgery on Feb. 2, the date Going for gold Once Frantz’ journey back she had on her mind was July 13: the first day of the world to the playing field was complete, she set out to win gold. championships. Frantz was able to rely on In what Frantz considered to be “arguably the hardest the experience of playing in thing I’ve ever done,” she the 2014 Women’s Div. I Colwent through an extensive lege Championships with rehab process in order to get the Bettys in Milwaukee to cleared exactly five months get acclimated to the world championships. following her surgery. “Definitely being at na“I did physical therapy twice a day every day and tionals helped me underthen just, like, stretching and stand a little bit more about everything else to get it ready Please see ULTIMATE, page 3C to go,” Frantz said. “I just had

Soccer has taken Matt McCune to plenty of places, including overseas. He has played collegiately and professionally, coached clinics and is a club director for the Vinland Valley Soccer Association. His next stop: Lawrence High. McCune was announced as the LHS girls soccer coach Friday. He replaces Justin Young, who stepped down in May after coaching the Lions for three McCune seasons. “I’m very excited. It’s an opportunity that I saw at the 6A level,” McCune said. “LHS has always had good quality in their athletics, and their facilities are great, and I really enjoy working at the facility that they have there. It’s a good spot for soccer, and I’m looking forward to it.” McCune, an eighth-grade history teacher at Baldwin Junior High, started the Vinland Valley Soccer Association in 1989 to save money for a soccer trip to Holland when he was in middle school. Now he uses Vinland Valley to help teach and coach youth players. “It’s kind of changed here and there throughout the years, and then recently it’s become more of a club with teams and stuff,” McCune said. “So I get to know all of the kids and train all of the kids and the coaches. “I coach a few teams as the head coach. I was kind of looking for something a little bit different, and the high school job showed up. It’ll be a challenge for me. I’m excited about it.” Please see SOCCER, page 3C

Royals fall to testy Toronto, 5-2 Toronto (ap) — Kansas City’s Edinson Volquez wasn’t interested in hearing any complaints the Blue Jays had about his inside pitches. Still, in a testy series finale, it was Toronto who ended up on top. Chris Colabello hit a tworun home run, R.A. Dickey threw seven shutout innings and the Blue Jays beat the Royals 5-2 on Sunday, taking three of four from the AL’s top team.

Both benches and bullpens emptied after Toronto reliever Aaron Sanchez was ejected for hitting Kansas City’s Alcides Escobar on the thigh in the eighth. It was the climax of a game-long spat that began when Volquez hit Josh Donaldson on the left shoulder in the first. Volquez didn’t mince words when asked whether Donaldson overreacted to being hit, and to a pair of later pitches that were up and in.

“He’s a little baby,” Volquez said. “He was crying like a baby.” Donaldson and Volquez traded stares and words as the Blue Jays slugger took a slow walk to first base after being hit. Home plate umpire Jim Wolf warned both dugouts. When Donaldson batted again in the third, Volquez missed high and inside with a pitch that sailed to the backstop. Blue Jays manager John Gibbons came out to

argue, but Volquez was not ejected. In the seventh, Royals reliever Ryan Madson hit Troy Tulowitzki on the right forearm, then threw high and inside to Donaldson, who stepped out and yelled at Wolf. Gibbons and on-deck hitter Jose Bautista Fred Thornhill/AP Photo stepped in to break up the argument, and Gibbons was KANSAS CITY’S ALCIDES ESCOBAR IS HELD BACK by coach Don Wakamatsu (22) as he gestures eventually ejected. After Donaldson struck toward Toronto pitcher Aaron Sanchez during a dust-up in the Royals’ 5-2 loss Sunday in Please see ROYALS, page 5C Toronto.


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Rio de Janeiro (ap) — The International Olympic Committee said Sunday it will order testing for disease-causing viruses in the sewage-polluted waters where athletes will compete in next year’s Rio de Janeiro Games. Before, the IOC and local Olympic organizers in Rio said they would only test for bacteria in the water, as Brazil and virtu-

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Kenseth steals victory at Pocono Long Pond, Pa. (ap) — Joey Logano was the first leader to fade, his tank empty with three laps left. Martin Truex Jr. struck E with two laps to go. Kyle Busch knew his Toyota was about out, too, and his shot at a fourth straight win tapped out on the last lap. One by one, fuel woes cost the contenders. But the pain at the pump for drivers pushing toward the finish line was the break Matt Kenseth needed to coast past them all in the final thrilling laps Sunday to win the NASCAR Sprint Cup race at Pocono Raceway. The 400-mile race came down to fuel and which cars had it — and which ones didn’t. “I couldn’t catch them anyway but I just wanted to get as close as I could in case they ran out,” Kenseth said. Once they ran out, Kenseth not only had enough left in the tank to win, he pulled off a celebratory burnout. Kenseth’s win continued the sensational summer run for Joe Gibbs Racing, making it five wins in the last six races. Busch, who had the other victories, failed in his bid to become the ninth driver since 1972 and the first since Jimmie Johnson in 2007 to win four straight Cup races. Busch had won three straight Cup races and four of five, swept the Xfinity and Cup races last weekend at Indianapolis and won the Truck Series event Saturday at Pocono. Busch remained outside the top 30 in points, the second marker he needs to hit to qualify for the Chase. “I wish I had saved a little more,” Busch said. “I wish I had known (Logano) was that far from making it. It’s a shame we couldn’t get it done.” With a win, Busch would have had the points needed to at least crack the top 30, though he’d have to stay there for the final five races before the 16-driver field is set for the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship. “We got greedy,” Busch said. “But that’s the position we’re in.” Truex was 19th, Logano 20th, and Busch 21st. “I was saving fuel just to cushion it,” Logano said. “I thought I was going to be good and then I started running out and knew we weren’t going to make it. We were so close. You are counting down the laps in your head thinking you are going to make it but just didn’t do it. “ Brad Keselowski was second, followed by Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Greg Biffle. Kenseth had the only position that mattered, winning for the second time this season and for the first time ever at Pocono. “I never thought I’d win at Pocono,” he said. Kenseth won the fuel gamble and survived a race that resembled a demolition derby: Cars, crews, walls, equipment, all took beatings over 400 miles.

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ally all nations only mandate “The WHO is saying they al Sailing Federation became TODAY such testing to determine the are recommending viral test- the first to break with the IOC’s safety of recreational waters. ing,” IOC medical director Dr. insistence on bacteria-only test- Baseball Time But after an Associated Press Richard Budgett told the AP. ing, saying it would do its own Cubs v. Pittsburgh 6 p.m. investigation published weteams; will various independent tests for viruses. AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: last Helmet“We’ve and teamalways logos for said the AFC sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. week revealed high counts of follow the expert advice, so “We’re going to find someTime viruses directly linked to human we will now be asking the ap- one who can do the testing for Cycling sewage in the Olympic waters, propriate authorities in Rio to us that can safely cover what we Tour of Utah 2 p.m. the IOC reversed course after follow the expert advice which need to know from a virus perbeing advised by the World is for viral testing. We have to spective as well as the bacteria CFL Football Time Health Organization (WHO) follow the best expert advice.” perspective,” said Peter Sowrey, Toronto v. Hamilton 6 p.m. that it should expand its testing. On Saturday, the Internation- chief executive of the ISAF.

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JOCKEY VICTOR ESPINOZA, RIGHT, ON TRIPLE CROWN WINNER AMERICAN PHAROAH, SMILES AS HE LOOKS BACK at jockey Kent Desormeaux on Keen Ice after American Pharoah won the Haskell Invitational on Sunday at Monmouth Park in Oceanport, New Jersey.

American Pharoah gets back to winning ways Oceanport, N.J. — American Pharoah flashed his speed in the stretch and easily won the $1.75 million Haskell Invitational on Sunday in his first race since sweeping the Triple Crown. With a record crowd of 60,983 cheering him on at Monmouth Park, American Pharoah came out of the final turn with a clear lead and cruised to a 21⁄4-length victory without any urging from jockey Victor Espinoza. American Pharoah won the Kentucky Derby, Preakness and Belmont Stakes to become the 12th Triple Crown winner, and first in 37 years. Following a 57-day break after the Belmont, the 3-year-old colt looked better than ever in winning his eighth consecutive race. Sent off at odds of 1-10, American Pharoah is the shortest price winner in Haskell history, returning $2.20 for a $2 win bet. He paid $2.10 to place and $2.10 to show. Keen Ice rallied for second at 18-1 odds, followed by Upstart, Competitive Edge, Top Clearance, Dontbetwithbruno and Mr. Jordan. The winning time for the 11⁄8-mile race was 1:47.95 — 95th hundreds of a second off the Haskell record. American Pharoah’s next start is now the biggest question in racing. There’s no answer yet, but options include the Travers at Saratoga on Aug. 29, the Pennsylvania Derby on Sept. 19, and the Awesome Again at Santa Anita on Sept. 26. “No clue,” American Pharoah owner Ahmed Zayat said when asked about his colt’s next race. “We’re going to enjoy this moment.” If all goes according to plan, American Pharoah will run his final race in the $5 million Breeders’ Cup Classic at Keeneland in Lexington, Kentucky on Oct. 31. And then, he’s headed down the road to the breeding shed at Coolmore’s Ashford Stud.

GOLF

Inbee Park British winner Turnberry, Scotland — Inbee Park rallied to win the Women’s British Open to become the seventh women to win four different major championships. The top-ranked South Korean player closed with a 7-under 65 at Turnberry for a threestroke victory over compatriot Jin Young Ko. Park finished at 12-under 276. Park, who has won six of the last 14 majors. The LPGA Tour has five majors, and Park hasn’t won the Evian Championship since it was given major status in 2013. She did win the French event in 2012. Louise Suggs, Mickey Wright, Pat Bradley, Juli Inkster, Karrie Webb and Annika Sorenstam also have won four different majors.

Fowler, who started the day a shot off the lead, made a birdie on the final hole to claim second, and David Lingmerth was third, but both had upand-down rounds. Fowler shot a 69 that featured seven birdies and five bogeys, and Lingmerth’s 69 included five birdies and three bogeys.

Perry defends 3M crown Blaine, Minn. — Kenny Perry successfully defended his 3M Championship title, shooting a 4-under 68 for a four-stroke victory over Bernhard Langer, Scott Dunlap and Kevin Sutherland. After shooting a 61 Saturday to take a fourstroke lead, the 54-year-ol Perry had six birdies and two bogeys in the final round to finish at 18-under 198. He became the first player to successfully defend a title in the tournament’s 23-year history, winning for the eighth time on the Champions Tour. Last year, Perry made a 15-foot birdie putt on the final hole to beat Langer by a stroke.

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Seattle rewards MLB Wagner Renton, Wash. — Bobby Wagner was patient to a point. The All-Pro middle linebacker was willing to sit back and let the Seattle Seahawks finish up their contract negotiations with Russell Wilson. But once Wilson’s payday was taken care of, Wagner wanted to know if his future was in Seattle or if he would go into the final year of his rookie contract with uncertainty. “I’m thankful for it. If I would have waited any longer I probably wouldn’t have been as patient,” Wagner said. “But you know it’s a crazy process and I’m glad it’s over.” Two days after expressing displeasure at not having an extension in hand, Wagner was basking Sunday at being the highest paid middle linebacker in football after signing a four-year extension worth a reported $43 million.

Bryant, ex-Jayhawk scrap

Oxnard, Calif. — Dez Bryant kept going after Dallas cornerback Tyler Patmon in a heated training camp skirmish that didn’t end until quarterback Tony Romo finally stepped in and calmed his star receiver. Bryant, who has a history of sideline antics that include screaming at coaches and teammates, threw something at Patmon and later appeared to take a swing at him after the two tangled during a play in 11-on-11 work late in the practice Sunday. The incident started when Patmon — who played at Kansas University before transferring to Oklahoma State — jarred Bryant’s helmet loose during a play and Bryant responded by yanking off Patmon’s helmet. Patmon threw Merritt takes PGA title a punch and backed away, and Bryant came Gainesville, Va. — Troy Merritt won the back with a wild left hook before teammates Quicken Loans National on Sunday for his first separated them. The Cowboys posted video of PGA Tour title, closing with a 4-under 67 for a the exchange on their website. three-stroke victory over Rickie Fowler. Tight end Jason Witten was among those The victory came a day after Merritt soared who couldn’t get Bryant to walk away. Romo to the lead with a tournament-record 61 at Rob- eventually came over and got Bryant to move ert Trent Jones Golf Club. The 29-year-old forto a different part of the sideline, while Patmon mer Boise State player won in his 96th career stood with players and other team personnel start on the tour, finishing at 18-under 266. nearby.

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THE QUOTE “If Pete Rose were a Buddhist, would he be banned for more than one lifetime?” — Scott Ostler of the San Francisco Chronicle

TODAY IN SPORTS 1949 — The National Basketball Association is formed by the merger of the National Basketball League and the Basketball Association of America. 1990 — The Professional Golfers Association Tour announces it will not hold tournaments at golf clubs that have all-white memberships or show any other signs of discrimination. 1996 — Andre Agassi, the Dream Team and the U.S. women’s 400-meter relay team win Olympic gold medals.

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KU likely to add walk-on from KCKCC By Gary Bedore gbedore@ljworld.com

Clay Young, a 6-foot-5 former Kansas City Kansas Community College and Lansing High forward, likely will be officially added to Kansas University’s basketball roster as a non-scholarship player this week, KU coach Bill Self told the

Self CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

KU, where he has compiled a 352-78 record with one national title, two Final Fours and 11 Big 12 regular-season crowns in his first 12 campaigns. His first actual job with a livable salary was at Oklahoma State in 198687. “I was 23 years old. The way I got the job is, I promised the head coach (Leonard Hamilton) the best player on campus would come out

Journal-World on Sun- 13, averaged 9.5 points day. a game off 38.4 percent Young, shooting in 12 games his a firstfreshman year at KCKCC. team AllHe hit 37.5 percent of his Kaw Valthrees and 72.5 percent ley League of his free throws and selection grabbed 5.6 rebounds per and honcontest. orable He played in just two m e n t i o n Young games last season, tearing Class 5A an anterior cruciate ligaall-state pick in 2012- ment in a victory over St.

Louis CC in mid November. He averaged 8.8 points off 49 percent shooting and grabbed 4.0 rebounds a game his senior year at Lansing High. He averaged 6.8 ppg off 43 percent shooting and 3.1 rebounds as a junior in high school, 5.3 ppg and 4.1 rpg as a sophomore and 4.0 ppg as a freshman.

Self said he would not make any comments about Young until after everything was official. KCKCC coach Kelley Newton commented about Young last season after he was injured: “He was an emotional and court leader for us. He could help guys on the floor while playing. But his future remains

bright. He’s a great young man, good student, hard worker. He’ll get a medical red shirt, so he’ll still have three years of college eligibility.” KU has two other walkons on the 16-player roster: guards Evan Manning and Tyler Self. Young will work with the bigs at KU.

and play and walk-on. He happened to be my best friend (Jay Davis). The only way I could get a job was promise he’d come out. When you are coaching somebody you used to go on double-dates with and hang out with, it’s a little different when you tell him what to do, and he tells you to go fly a kite.” Self coached at OSU until 1993, when he became head coach at Oral Roberts. Overall at stops at ORU, Tulsa, Illinois and KU, he has a record of 559-183. Out of 18 possible conference crowns, his teams have won 15, with

I think practices will be competitive. Truth of the matter is, we need Perry (Ellis), Wayne (Selden Jr.), Frank (Mason III) to play like all-league players, which I know they all are.”

in the entire NCAA body of presidents because he chaired the executive committee, which is a very powerful committee. I loved the chancellor. He was great to us. He was certainly great to me. It’s sad we lost him. I know he’d been struggling in his recent life with his health. Hopefully his family and everybody are doing as well as they possibly can.”

the Philadelphia 76ers was ticketed to be the guest, but recent injury problems prevented the 7-footer from attending. “I’d say the best two players I ever coached at KU were Joel and Andrew,” Self said in response to a camper’s question. “The best college player we’ve had since I’ve been at Kansas was a guy who played probably before you were born. That’d be Wayne Simien ... other than Jeff Graves,” he added with a smile, referring to the ex-Jayhawk big man from KC who was working the camp.

two seconds and a third. ORU was not in a conference in his four seasons at the Tulsa school. Of this year’s KU team, he said: “I think my first impression is, they really like each other. It sounds like coach-speak, but it’s true. I don’t know if we’ve ever had a team bond any better than what we did over in Korea, how unselfish we were with our thoughts and also our play. We didn’t have four of probably our top eight, nine guys with us (Brannen Greene, Devonté Graham, Cheick Diallo, Svi Mykhailiuk), so it’s going to be a fun team.

l

On Hemenway: Self on the death of former KU chancellor Robert Hemenway. “Chancellor Hemenway, obviously, was unbelievable to me. He hired me. He was very supportive of athletics,” Self said. “People here may not realize it ... he was probably the most powerful chancellor or president

l

No Embiid: Last year, Andrew Wiggins of the Minnesota Timberwolves was Self’s guest at his ProCamp event in Olathe. This year, Joel Embiid of

Soccer CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

John Young/Journal-World Photos

KANSAS GRADUATE STUDENT CLARE FRANTZ, RIGHT, PULLS DOWN A FRISBEE in front of teammate Laura Gehrt during a practice on Wednesday at Prairie Center Park in Olathe.

Ultimate CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

that higher level of play that I hadn’t really gotten the experience with my first year, so that really helped,” Frantz said. “Just playing, like, those really good teams, even some of the girls I played against at nationals were on my U-23 team then, so going from opponents to teammates was really unique. Just kind of fighting for that same goal after competing against each other so fiercely in college was definitely different.” Frantz and her teammates had no trouble on their way to winning the world championship, breezing through pool play with a record of 8-0 and recording 17-4 victories over Germany and Australia in the semifinal and title match. The Bettys standout had three goals and two assists over the span of the tournament. “It was pretty incredible,” Frantz said. “I had never competed internationally before, so it was really awesome to see all of the different cultures and people’s different styles of play and different jerseys, and just kind of the whole spirit that was associated with every country.”

All-around athlete Despite all of the success Frantz has had in Ultimate Frisbee, she has not played the sport competitively for long. Frantz graduated from KU in 2014 with degrees in Spanish and math, but did

CLARE FRANTZ LOOKS TO MAKE A PASS during a practice with her Ultimate Frisbee team, Wicked. not join the Bettys until her junior year. Since Frantz is pursuing a master’s degree in math education at KU, she still plans to use all five years of eligibility to play Ultimate Frisbee with the Bettys. “They have definitely taught me more than I could have ever asked for,” said Frantz of the Bettys. “The seniors on the team when I first joined, my coach Loren (Schieber), my boyfriend Brett (Hidaka) has coached now, too. I’ve had so many big Ultimate minds that have coached me through the Bettys that I’ve just learned so much more than I have through any other team. I definitely attribute the majority of my talent to the Bettys, because that’s definitely where I grown the most as a player.” Frantz did play in a few recreational Ultimate Frisbee leagues prior to joining the Bettys, but she credits her athletic career at Free State High for being able to learn the skills of the sport. The FSHS alumna played soccer and volleyball for the

Firebirds, as well as basketball in middle school. “Just being athletic and being coordinated and just things that you pick up from other sports, like conditioning from soccer or hand-eye coordination from basketball or volleyball or something like that,” Frantz said. “So if you’ve had previous sport experience, a lot of people come into Ultimate already knowing a little bit of how to pick it up because it’s just that athleticism that helps them along the way. From there, like for me, I don’t think of myself as too naturally athletic, but I work really hard.”

Frantz’ frisbee future While Ultimate Frisbee is a sport on the rise, there are not many options for those who are looking to compete professionally. The American Ultimate Disc League and Major League Ultimate are the only two professional leagues, but both consist of all-men’s teams. “Teaching is definitely the most stable option

right now, so it’s kind of what I have to pick, but if there were a professional option, I would consider it,” Frantz said. One of the things Frantz enjoyed the most of her world championship experience was being able to play with men on the mixed team as opposed to competing on the women’s team, which took silver in London. “Men bring a completely different element to the game. They’re so much faster,” Frantz said. “They can throw it so much farther. Then they’re just naturally more competitive also, so it really brings the quality of the game up even more.” As Frantz continues to celebrate her gold medal and the national team’s undefeated run in London, she also looks forward to taking what she has learned and sharing it with her Bettys teammates. Frantz missed the Bettys’ 2015 run back to the national tournament due to her knee injury, so she is focused on leading the team to a third consecutive trip and inspire her teammates and others along the way. “My recovery just wasn’t about me. The most important part about it was the support that I had,” Frantz said. “That’s what I attribute all of my ability to even be able to do it. Just for anyone else who is injured out there, they can do it, too. If I can do it, they can do it. For any other athletes, I don’t want people to get down about an injury because you can come back from it even stronger.”

McCune has lived in the Douglas County area since he was in the third grade. He played with a few professional clubs after playing at Ottawa University. “I think we were fortunate to have a really good pool of candidates,” LHS athletic director Bill DeWitt said. “Matt kind of emerged because he’s got a really nice soccer pedigree. He’s got a really nice soccer IQ. He’s also lived in the area his entire life, so this is his home. “He really loves the sport. He’s played it and coached it almost his entire life, and he does it because he loves the game. I think our girls will just be fortunate to have him.”

McCune will be the fifth Lions head coach in eight seasons. “It’s important to have somebody that’s tied to the community and has a real passion for soccer,” DeWitt said. “I think that’s demonstrated by coach McCune if you look at what he’s done with programs and working with youths and helping kids develop.” McCune said he doesn’t know any of the players but hopes to set up meetings once the school year begins. The Lions finished with a 4-13 record last season. “I’m excited that Lawrence High would give me the opportunity,” McCune said. “Hopefully we can work hard and have some success. Doesn’t always means that it’s wins as success. As long as, in my eyes, we’re doing something that’s correct.”

BRIEFLY

Nick Krug/Journal-World File Photo

LAWRENCE HIGH DEFENSIVE LINEMAN AMANI BLEDSOE (72) CELEBRATES A STOP against Shawnee Mission Northwest in this photo from Sept. 26, 2014, at LHS. Bledsoe has cut his list of potential college destinations to 10, including Kansas University.

Lions’ Bledsoe cuts list to 10 Lawrence High senior football standout Amani Bledsoe cut his list of potential college choices on Sunday. The 6-foot-5, 270-pound defensive end, ranked as the top recruit in Kansas and No. 131 nationally by Rivals.com, cut his list to 10 schools: Kansas University, Miami, Missouri, Nebraska, North Carolina State, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Oregon, TCU and UCLA. “I guess this condensed list is long overdue,” Bledsoe wrote on Twitter. “Trying to narrow the list down was very difficult because I have met and talked to numerous coaches and programs that have all impressed me.” Bledsoe plans to go on

official visits to Oregon and UCLA in September.

City’s Andrew sets swim record Lawrence native Michael Andrew set a meet record in the 100-meter backstroke at the 2015 Speedo Junior National Championships on Sunday at the Northside Aquatics Center in San Antonio, Texas. The 16-year-old Andrew won in 54.99 seconds, breaking the old meet record of 55.46 set in 2010 by Vlad Morozov. Andrew also broke a meet record in his win in the 100 butterfly on Saturday, breaking the national age-group record among 15-16-year-olds in 52.57 seconds. On Friday, he finished second in the 100 freestyle (50.21).


Lawrence Journal-World

Baseball

4C

LEAGUE STANDINGS AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division New York Baltimore Toronto Tampa Bay Boston

W 59 53 54 52 47

L 45 51 52 54 59

Pct .567 .510 .509 .491 .443

GB — 6 6 8 13

WCGB L10 — 6-4 1 7-3 1 6-4 3 4-6 8 5-5

Str W-1 L-1 W-1 W-1 L-1

Home Away 30-17 29-28 32-20 21-31 32-21 22-31 27-30 25-24 27-28 20-31

W 62 54 51 50 48

L 42 50 54 53 56

Pct .596 .519 .486 .485 .462

GB WCGB L10 — — 5-5 8 — 4-6 111⁄2 31⁄2 4-6 111⁄2 31⁄2 7-3 14 6 3-7

Str L-1 L-1 W-1 L-1 L-2

Home Away 34-18 28-24 34-22 20-28 25-27 26-27 25-24 25-29 20-32 28-24

W 60 55 51 48 47

L 46 49 53 58 59

Pct .566 .529 .490 .453 .443

GB — 4 8 12 13

Str Home Away W-2 38-18 22-28 L-6 32-21 23-28 W-1 20-29 31-24 W-1 22-31 26-27 W-2 23-31 24-28

Central Division Kansas City Minnesota Detroit Chicago Cleveland

West Division Houston Los Angeles Texas Seattle Oakland

WCGB L10 — 7-3 — 1-9 3 6-4 7 4-6 8 3-7

NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away Washington New York Atlanta Miami Philadelphia

54 55 47 43 41

49 50 58 62 65

.524 .524 .448 .410 .387

— — — 21⁄2 8 101⁄2 12 141⁄2 141⁄2 17

3-7 6-4 2-8 3-7 8-2

L-3 28-19 26-30 W-3 38-18 17-32 W-1 26-20 21-38 W-1 26-27 17-35 L-1 26-27 15-38

Central Division W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away St. Louis Pittsburgh Chicago Cincinnati Milwaukee

67 61 57 47 44

38 43 47 56 62

.638 — — .587 51⁄2 — .548 91⁄2 — .456 19 91⁄2 .415 231⁄2 14

6-4 7-3 6-4 5-5 2-8

W-1 40-16 27-22 W-1 35-17 26-26 W-5 27-24 30-23 L-1 27-24 20-32 L-5 20-33 24-29

West Division W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away Los Angeles San Francisco San Diego Arizona Colorado

60 57 51 50 44

45 47 54 53 59

.571 .548 .486 .485 .427

— — 21⁄2 — 9 61⁄2 9 61⁄2 15 121⁄2

7-3 7-3 7-3 7-3 4-6

W-4 37-18 23-27 L-1 30-23 27-24 L-1 24-25 27-29 L-2 26-27 24-26 L-1 24-27 20-32

SCOREBOARD AMERICAN LEAGUE Toronto 5, Kansas City 2 Detroit 6, Baltimore 1 Tampa Bay 4, Boston 3 Yankees 12, White Sox 3 Seattle 4, Minnesota 1, 11 innings Oakland 2, Cleveland 1, 10 innings

INTERLEAGUE Houston 4, Arizona 1 Texas 2, San Francisco 1 Dodgers 5, Angels 3, 10 innings NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburgh 3, Cincinnati 0 Miami 5, San Diego 2 Atlanta 6, Philadelphia 2 Cubs 4, Milwaukee 3 St. Louis 3, Colorado 2 Mets 5, Washington 2

UPCOMING American League

TODAY’S GAMES Minnesota (E.Santana 2-1) at Toronto (Price 9-4), 12:07 p.m. Houston (McCullers 5-3) at Texas (Lewis 11-4), 7:05 p.m. Tampa Bay (Karns 6-5) at Chicago White Sox (Quintana 6-9), 7:10 p.m. Baltimore (T.Wilson 1-1) at Oakland (Chavez 5-10), 9:05 p.m. Cleveland (Kluber 6-11) at L.A. Angels (Richards 10-8), 9:05 p.m. TUESDAY’S GAMES K.C. at Detroit, 6:08 p.m. Boston at Yankees, 6:05 p.m. Minnesota at Toronto, 6:07 p.m. Houston at Texas, 7:05 p.m. Tampa Bay at Chicago White Sox, 7:10 p.m. Baltimore at Oakland, 9:05 p.m. Cleveland at Angels, 9:05 p.m.

Interleague

TODAY’S GAME Seattle (Hernandez 12-6) at Colorado (Butler 3-7), 7:40 p.m. TUESDAY’S GAME Seattle at Colorado, 7:40 p.m.

National League

TODAY’S GAMES Arizona (Godley 2-0) at Washington (Fister 4-6), 6:05 p.m. Chicago Cubs (Lester 6-8) at Pittsburgh (Liriano 7-6), 6:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets (B.Colon 9-10) at Miami (Koehler 8-7), 6:10 p.m. San Francisco (M.Cain 2-2) at Atlanta (Foltynewicz 3-3), 6:10 p.m. San Diego (T.Ross 7-8) at Milwaukee (W.Peralta 2-5), 7:10 p.m. TUESDAY’S GAMES Arizona at Washington, 6:05 p.m. Cubs at Pittsburgh, 6:05 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at Philadelphia, 6:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets at Miami, 6:10 p.m. San Francisco at Atlanta, 6:10 p.m. St. Louis at Cincinnati, 6:10 p.m. San Diego at Milwaukee, 7:10 p.m.

LEAGUE LEADERS AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING-MiCabrera, Detroit, .350; Fielder, Texas, .329; Kipnis, Cleveland, .326; Bogaerts, Boston, .319; JIglesias, Detroit, .318; NCruz, Seattle, .317; Hosmer, Kansas City, .315. RBI-Donaldson, Toronto, 75; Teixeira, New York, 74; KMorales, Kansas City, 73; CDavis, Baltimore, 72; Bautista, Toronto, 71; JMartinez, Detroit, 71; Trout, Los Angeles, 67. HOME RUNS-Trout, Los Angeles, 32; Pujols, Los Angeles, 30; NCruz, Seattle, 29; JMartinez, Detroit, 29; Teixeira, New York, 29. PITCHING-McHugh, Houston, 13-5; Keuchel, Houston, 13-5; FHernandez, Seattle, 12-6; Eovaldi, New York, 11-2; Gray, Oakland, 11-4; Lewis, Texas, 11-4; Buehrle, Toronto, 11-5. SAVES-Perkins, Minnesota, 29; Britton, Baltimore, 27; Boxberger, Tampa Bay, 26; Street, Los Angeles, 25; Uehara, Boston, 23; Soria, Detroit, 23; GHolland, Kansas City, 23; AMiller, New York, 23.

NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTING-Goldschmidt, Arizona, .342; Harper, Washington, .331; DGordon, Miami, .330; GParra, Milwaukee, .328. RBI-Arenado, Colorado, 80; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 77; Posey, San Francisco, 70; Harper, Washington, 68; Frazier, Cincinnati, 67; Stanton, Miami, 67; McCutchen, Pittsburgh, 66. HOME RUNS-Harper, Washington, 29; Frazier, Cincinnati, 27; Stanton, Miami, 27; Arenado, Colorado, 26; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 22; Duda, New York, 21; AGonzalez, Los Angeles, 21; CaGonzalez, Colorado, 21; Pederson, Los Angeles, 21. PITCHING-GCole, Pittsburgh, 14-5; Wacha, St. Louis, 12-4; CMartinez, St. Louis, 11-4; Heston, San Francisco, 11-5; Bumgarner, San Francisco, 11-6; Arrieta, Chicago, 11-6. SAVES-Melancon, Pittsburgh, 33; Kimbrel, San Diego, 31; Rosenthal, St. Louis, 31; Storen, Washington, 29; Familia, New York, 28.

Monday, August 3, 2015

MAJOR-LEAGUE ROUNDUP

Dodgers take Freeway Series The Associated Press

Interleague Dodgers 5, Angels 4, 10 innings Los Angeles — Andre Ethier hit his second dramatic home run in three innings, a two-run shot in the 10th, and Howie Kendrick also homered to lead the Los Angeles Dodgers to a three-game Freeway Series sweep with a victory over the sputtering Los Angeles Angels on Sunday. Drew Rucinski (0-2) walked Adrian Gonzalez with one out in the 10th before Ethier deposited the rookie right-hander’s 1-1 pitch into the Angels’ bullpen in right field for his 12th homer and the Dodgers’ NL-leading 131st home run. Los Angeles (A) Los Angeles (N) ab r h bi ab r h bi Giavtll 2b 5 0 1 0 JRollns ss 5 1 2 0 Calhon rf 4 2 2 1 HKndrc 2b 5 1 2 2 Trout cf 5 0 0 0 AGnzlz 1b 3 1 0 0 Pujols 1b 4 0 1 1 Ethier rf-lf 5 2 2 3 DvMrp lf 3 0 0 0 Grandl c 3 0 1 0 Victorn ph-lf 1 0 1 0 Crwfrd lf 3 0 0 0 Aybar ss 4 1 1 0 Puig rf 1 0 0 0 Gillaspi 3b 4 0 1 0 Baez p 0 0 0 0 Iannett c 4 0 1 1 Callasp 3b 4 0 0 0 CrRsm p 1 0 0 0 Pedrsn cf 4 0 0 0 CRams p 0 0 0 0 Latos p 2 0 1 0 DeJess ph 1 0 0 0 Nicasio p 0 0 0 0 Cron ph 1 0 0 0 JiJhnsn p 0 0 0 0 Fthrstn ph 1 0 0 0 VnSlyk rf 1 0 1 0 Totals 38 3 8 3 Totals 36 5 9 5 Los Angeles (A) 000 001 011 0—3 Los Angeles (N) 002 000 010 2—5 One out when winning run scored. E-Grandal (2). DP-Los Angeles (A) 1. LOB-Los Angeles (A) 6, Los Angeles (N) 7. 2B-Calhoun (18), Iannetta (6), H.Kendrick (18). HR-Calhoun (14), H.Kendrick (9), Ethier 2 (12). SB-Giavotella (2), Aybar (8). IP H R ER BB SO Los Angeles (A) Cor.Rasmus 3 3 2 2 0 3 C.Ramos 1 1 0 0 0 2 J.Alvarez 2 2 0 0 1 3 Salas 1 0 0 0 0 0 J.Smith 1 1 1 1 1 0 Gott 1 1 0 0 0 1 1⁄3 Rucinski L,0-2 1 2 2 1 1 Los Angeles (N) Latos 6 4 1 1 1 1 Nicasio H,9 1 1 0 0 0 0 Ji.Johnson BS,5-14 1 1 1 1 0 2 2 Howell H,6 ⁄3 1 1 1 0 1 Baez W,4-2 BS,3-3 11⁄3 1 0 0 0 1 HBP-by Salas (Guerrero). T-3:19. A-52,116 (56,000).

Rangers 2, Giants 1 Arlington, Texas — Josh Hamilton hit a tworun homer, and Martin Perez allowed only two hits to earn his first win in his comeback from Tommy John surgery as Texas edged San Francisco. Perez (1-2) threw 81⁄3 innings, leaving after allowing a one-out, ninthinning double to Angel Pagan. San Francisco Texas ab r h bi ab r h bi Pagan cf 4 1 1 0 Odor 2b 4 0 1 0 Aoki lf 3 0 0 0 Choo rf 3 0 1 0 MDuffy 3b 4 0 1 0 Fielder dh 4 0 1 0 Posey c 4 0 1 1 Beltre 3b 3 0 1 0 Pence dh 4 0 0 0 Morlnd 1b 3 1 1 0 Belt 1b 3 0 0 0 JHmltn lf 4 1 1 2 Maxwll rf 3 0 1 0 Andrus ss 3 0 0 0 BCrwfr ss 3 0 0 0 LMartn cf 3 0 1 0 Adrianz 2b 3 0 0 0 Gimenz c 3 0 1 0 Totals 31 1 4 1 Totals 30 2 8 2 San Francisco 000 000 001—1 Texas 000 002 00x—2 E-Odor (12). DP-San Francisco 2, Texas 1. LOBSan Francisco 4, Texas 7. 2B-Pagan (14), Beltre (17), Gimenez (1). HR-J.Hamilton (5). IP H R ER BB SO San Francisco Leake L,9-6 61⁄3 8 2 2 2 5 2⁄3 Lopez 0 0 0 1 0 Romo 1 0 0 0 0 0 Texas M.Perez W,1-2 81⁄3 2 1 1 0 6 Diekman 0 0 0 0 1 0 2⁄3 S.Dyson S,1-1 2 0 0 0 0 T-2:19. A-22,234 (48,114).

Astros 4, D’backs 1 Houston — Collin McHugh threw seven solid innings, and Carlos Gomez delivered a tworun, go-ahead single as Houston beat Arizona. Evan Gattis added a solo home run in the fifth to give Houston the three-run lead. Arizona Houston ab r h bi ab r h bi Inciart cf 4 0 0 0 Altuve 2b 4 0 2 0 Tomas rf 4 0 0 0 CGomz cf 4 0 1 2 Gldsch dh 4 0 0 0 Correa ss 3 0 1 0 DPerlt lf 4 0 1 0 Gattis lf 4 1 1 1 WCastll c 4 1 2 0 ClRsms lf 0 0 0 0 JaLam 1b 4 0 2 1 Lowrie 3b 4 1 1 0 A.Hill 3b 4 0 1 0 MGnzlz 1b 2 0 0 0 Pnngtn 2b 3 0 1 0 Carter dh 1 1 0 1 Ahmed ss 4 0 2 0 JCastro c 4 1 2 0 Mrsnck rf 4 0 0 0 Totals 35 1 9 1 Totals 30 4 8 4 Arizona 010 000 000—1 Houston 010 210 00x—4 LOB-Arizona 8, Houston 9. 2B-W.Castillo (11), Ja.Lamb 2 (9), A.Hill (10), Pennington (3), Lowrie (5), J.Castro (13). HR-Gattis (17). SB-Altuve (28), C.Gomez (1). S-Ma.Gonzalez. SF-Carter. IP H R ER BB SO Arizona Ray L,3-6 5 7 4 4 3 5 Chafin 1 1 0 0 0 2 D.Hernandez 1 0 0 0 1 2 O.Perez 1 0 0 0 0 2 Houston McHugh W,13-5 7 8 1 1 1 6 Neshek H,24 1 0 0 0 0 2 Gregerson S,22-25 1 1 0 0 0 0 HBP-by Ray (Altuve). T-2:54. A-33,871 (41,574).

American League Yankees 12, White Sox 3 Chicago — Jacoby Ellsbury and Mark Teixeira

IP

H

R ER BB SO

homered against Jeff Sa- Cleveland 62⁄3 4 1 1 4 6 mardzija, and the New Bauer McAllister 11⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 York Yankees pounded B.Shaw 2⁄3 Allen L,1-3 2 1 1 0 1 the White Sox. Oakland Gray 7 4 1 1 4 7 Stephen Drew added Otero 1⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 three hits and four RBIs, Abad 11⁄3 0 0 0 0 2 1⁄3 1 0 0 0 0 helping the AL East-lead- Mujica Fe.Rodriguez W,2-1 1 1 0 0 1 2 WP-Gray, Fe.Rodriguez. ing Yankees close out a T-3:14. A-21,498 (35,067). 6-4 road trip — matching a season long. Ellsbury drove in three runs, and Tigers 6, Orioles 1 Didi Gregorius had two Baltimore — Daniel hits and two RBIs. Norris took a three-hitter into the eighth inning in New York Chicago ab r h bi ab r h bi his Detroit debut, J.D. Ellsury cf 3 1 1 3 Eaton cf 3 1 2 0 Martinez hit a three-run Gardnr lf 4 0 1 2 Saladin 3b 4 0 0 0 ARdrgz dh 3 0 0 0 Abreu dh 4 0 1 0 homer, and the Tigers beat Ackley ph-dh 1 0 0 0 MeCarr lf 4 0 2 1 Teixeir 1b 4 1 1 1 AvGarc rf 4 0 1 0 Baltimore to earn a split of B.Ryan ph-1b-3b 1 0 0 0 LaRoch 1b 3 0 1 0 the four-game series. BMcCn c-1b 5 1 1 0 GBckh ph 1 0 0 0 Beltran rf 2 1 0 0 AlRmrz ss 3 1 1 1 CYoung rf 2 0 0 0 CSnchz 2b 4 0 0 0 Headly 3b 3 3 2 0 Soto c 3 1 1 1 JMrphy ph-c 1 0 0 0 Gregrs ss 4 3 2 2 Drew 2b 5 2 3 4 Totals 38 12 11 12 Totals 33 3 9 3 New York 100 530 300—12 Chicago 000 001 200— 3 E-B.McCann (6), C.Sanchez (3). DP-New York 2. LOB-New York 6, Chicago 5. 2B-Headley (17), Drew (13), Eaton (17). 3B-Drew (1). HR-Ellsbury (4), Teixeira (29), Al.Ramirez (7), Soto (8). SB-Eaton (10). CS-Al.Ramirez (4). SF-Ellsbury. IP H R ER BB SO New York Nova W,4-3 6 5 1 1 2 7 2⁄3 Shreve 3 2 2 0 1 Pinder 11⁄3 1 0 0 0 1 A.Miller 1 0 0 0 0 0 Chicago Samardzija L,8-6 42⁄3 8 9 9 2 3 Carroll 41⁄3 3 3 2 2 6 HBP-by Samardzija (Gardner, Headley). T-3:09. A-38,840 (40,615).

Detroit Baltimore ab r h bi ab r h bi Gose cf 4 1 2 1 MMchd 3b 4 0 0 0 JIglesis ss 4 2 2 1 GParra lf 4 0 0 0 Kinsler 2b 3 1 2 1 A.Jones cf 4 0 0 0 VMrtnz dh 4 0 0 0 C.Davis 1b 2 1 1 1 JMrtnz rf 4 1 2 3 Wieters c 3 0 1 0 JMcCn c 4 0 0 0 JHardy ss 3 0 0 0 Cstllns 3b 4 0 0 0 Pareds dh 3 0 0 0 Romine 3b 0 0 0 0 Schoop 2b 3 0 2 0 Avila 1b 4 0 0 0 Reimld rf 3 0 0 0 RDavis lf 4 1 1 0 Totals 35 6 9 6 Totals 29 1 4 1 Detroit 300 030 000—6 Baltimore 000 100 000—1 E-Reimold (1). DP-Detroit 2, Baltimore 1. LOBDetroit 3, Baltimore 2. 2B-R.Davis (13). 3B-J.Iglesias (3). HR-J.Martinez (29), C.Davis (26). SB-Gose 2 (16). IP H R ER BB SO Detroit Da.Norris W,2-1 71⁄3 4 1 1 1 5 2⁄3 B.Rondon 0 0 0 0 0 A.Wilson 1 0 0 0 0 0 Baltimore U.Jimenez L,8-7 42⁄3 6 6 6 1 2 J.Rondon 31⁄3 3 0 0 0 1 Matusz 1 0 0 0 0 2 WP-J.Rondon. T-2:32. A-33,381 (45,971).

Mariners 4, Twins 1, 11 innings Minneapolis — Logan Morrison’s RBI double in National League the 11th inning broke a tie, and Austin Jackson added Cardinals 3, Rockies 2 a two-run double as SeatSt. Louis — Brandon tle outlasted Minnesota. Moss had his first big hit with St. Louis, a gameSeattle Minnesota ab r h bi ab r h bi ending single in the KMarte 2b 4 1 3 0 Dozier 2b 4 1 1 1 ninth inning, and Randal Seager 3b 4 1 0 0 Hicks cf 5 0 0 0 N.Cruz rf 5 1 2 1 Mauer 1b 5 0 1 0 Grichuk had a two-run Cano dh 4 0 1 0 Sano dh 4 0 0 0 Morrsn pr-dh-1b 1 1 1 1 Plouffe 3b 3 0 0 0 homer to lead the CardiS.Smith lf 4 0 0 0 Nunez pr-3b 0 0 0 0 nals to a win over ColoAJcksn cf 5 0 1 2 ERosar rf-lf 4 0 0 0 Trumo 1b 2 0 0 0 SRonsn lf 3 0 0 0 rado. Iwakm p 0 0 0 0 TrHntr ph-rf 1 0 0 0 Moss’ one-out hit to left CaSmth p 0 0 0 0 KSuzuk c 4 0 0 0 JMontr ph 1 0 1 0 EdEscr ss 4 0 2 0 off reliever Scott Oberg Zunino c 1 0 0 0 BMiller ss 5 0 0 0 (2-2) drove in Jason HeySucre c 3 0 0 0 ward, who doubled with Gutirrz ph 1 0 0 0 Rodney p 0 0 0 0 one out. Wlhlms p 0 0 0 0 Totals 40 4 9 4 Totals 37 1 4 1 Seattle 000 000 001 03—4 Minnesota 000 000 001 00—1 DP-Minnesota 2. LOB-Seattle 7, Minnesota 5. 2B-Morrison (8), J.Montero (2), Edu.Escobar 2 (15). HR-N.Cruz (29), Dozier (23). IP H R ER BB SO Seattle Iwakuma 82⁄3 3 1 1 1 8 1⁄3 Ca.Smith 0 0 0 0 1 Rodney W,4-4 1 0 0 0 1 1 Wilhelmsen S,2-2 1 1 0 0 0 1 Minnesota Pelfrey 8 4 0 0 1 3 Perkins 1 2 1 1 0 1 May 1 1 0 0 0 2 1⁄3 Jepsen L,2-6 0 2 2 2 1 Duensing 0 1 1 1 1 0 2⁄3 Fien 1 0 0 0 1 Duensing pitched to 2 batters in the 11th. WP-Jepsen. T-3:12. A-30,325 (39,021).

Rays 4. Red Sox 3 Boston — Asdrubal Cabrera had a game-tying RBI double and scored on James Loney’s single in the eighth inning, and Tampa Bay avoided a three-game sweep with a comeback victory over Boston. Tampa Bay Boston ab r h bi ab r h bi Guyer rf 3 1 1 1 B.Holt 2b 4 0 0 0 JButler dh 4 0 0 0 Bogarts ss 3 2 1 0 Jaso ph-dh 1 0 1 0 Ortiz dh 3 0 1 1 Longori 3b 4 1 1 0 HRmrz lf 4 1 2 1 Forsyth 2b 5 0 0 0 De Aza pr-lf 0 0 0 0 ACarer ss 4 2 2 1 Napoli 1b 4 0 1 1 Loney 1b 4 0 2 2 T.Shaw 3b 4 0 2 0 Mahtok lf 4 0 0 0 RCastll rf 4 0 0 0 Kiermr cf 4 0 1 0 Hanign c 3 0 1 0 Rivera c 2 0 1 0 Sandovl ph 1 0 0 0 Casali ph-c 1 0 0 0 BrdlyJr cf 3 0 0 0 Swihart ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 36 4 9 4 Totals 34 3 8 3 Tampa Bay 100 100 020—4 Boston 201 000 000—3 LOB-Tampa Bay 9, Boston 6. 2B-Jaso (7), Longoria (23), A.Cabrera (20), Loney (7), Ortiz (19), H.Ramirez (8). 3B-Kiermaier (11). HR-Guyer (5). SB-Bogaerts (7). IP H R ER BB SO Tampa Bay Odorizzi 6 7 3 3 1 5 2⁄3 Cedeno 0 0 0 0 1 1⁄3 Geltz W,2-4 0 0 0 0 0 McGee H,15 1 1 0 0 0 2 Boxberger S,26-28 1 0 0 0 0 3 Boston Miley 62⁄3 5 2 2 1 4 1⁄3 Ross Jr. H,6 0 0 0 1 1 Tazawa L,2-4 BS,3-3 1 3 2 2 0 1 Uehara 1 1 0 0 1 2 HBP-by Odorizzi (Bogaerts), by Ross Jr. (Casali). WP-Uehara. T-3:10. A-35,699 (37,221).

Athletics 2, Indians 1, 10 innings Oakland, Calif. — Mark Canha hit a two-out double in the 10th inning to drive in Sam Fuld and lift Oakland to a victory over Cleveland. Cleveland Oakland ab r h bi ab r h bi Chsnhll rf 3 1 1 0 Burns cf 4 0 1 1 Lindor ss 5 0 0 0 Fuld lf-rf 4 1 1 0 Brantly lf 3 0 1 0 Reddck rf 2 0 0 0 CSantn dh 4 0 1 0 Canha ph-lf 3 0 1 1 Sands 1b 3 0 1 1 BButler dh 4 0 1 0 Urshela 3b 4 0 0 0 I.Davis 1b 4 0 0 0 RPerez c 3 0 1 0 Lawrie 3b 4 0 1 0 Bourn cf 3 0 0 0 Phegly c 3 0 0 0 Aviles 2b 4 0 1 0 Vogt ph-c 1 0 0 0 Sogard 2b 3 1 1 0 Semien ss 3 0 1 0 Totals 32 1 6 1 Totals 35 2 7 2 Cleveland 100 000 000 0—1 Oakland 000 010 000 1—2 Two outs when winning run scored. DP-Cleveland 1, Oakland 3. LOB-Cleveland 7, Oakland 8. 2B-Canha (10). SF-Sands.

Colorado St. Louis ab r h bi ab r h bi Blckmn cf 3 0 1 0 MCrpnt 3b 4 0 0 0 Reyes ss 4 0 0 0 Pisctty lf 3 0 2 0 LeMahi 2b 3 1 1 0 Wong 2b 3 0 0 0 Arenad 3b 3 1 1 0 JhPerlt ss 4 0 0 0 KParkr lf 3 0 0 0 Heywrd rf 3 2 2 0 Oberg p 0 0 0 0 Grichk cf 4 1 2 2 Paulsn 1b 4 0 1 1 Rynlds 1b 3 0 1 0 Hundly c 4 0 0 0 Moss ph 1 0 1 1 BBarns rf 3 0 0 0 T.Cruz c 2 0 0 0 JMiller p 0 0 0 0 Molina ph-c 1 0 0 0 Betncrt p 0 0 0 0 JaiGrc p 2 0 0 0 CGnzlz rf 1 0 1 0 Cishek p 0 0 0 0 Flande p 2 0 0 0 Siegrist p 0 0 0 0 Stubbs rf-lf 2 0 0 0 Broxtn p 0 0 0 0 GGarci ph 1 0 1 0 Totals 32 2 5 1 Totals 31 3 9 3 Colorado 000 002 000—2 St. Louis 000 020 001—3 One out when winning run scored. DP-Colorado 3. LOB-Colorado 7, St. Louis 6. 2B-Paulsen (11), Ca.Gonzalez (19), Piscotty (4), Heyward (23). HR-Grichuk (12). SB-Blackmon 2 (29), Heyward (16). IP H R ER BB SO Colorado Flande 5 4 2 2 0 3 J.Miller 1 1 0 0 0 2 Betancourt 1 0 0 0 1 2 1 Oberg L,2-2 1 ⁄3 4 1 1 1 0 St. Louis Jai.Garcia 5 2 1 1 4 4 Cishek BS,5-8 1 2 1 1 0 0 Siegrist 1 0 0 0 0 1 Broxton 1 0 0 0 0 1 Rosenthal W,2-2 1 1 0 0 0 1 Jai.Garcia pitched to 1 batter in the 6th. HBP-by Flande (Wong). WP-Oberg, Cishek. T-3:16. A-44,743 (45,399).

San Diego Miami ab r h bi ab r h bi Venale cf 5 0 0 0 ISuzuki rf 4 1 1 0 Solarte 3b 3 0 2 0 Rojas 2b 4 1 2 1 Kemp rf 3 0 1 0 Yelich cf-lf 3 0 0 0 Upton lf 4 0 0 0 Dietrch lf 3 0 0 1 Alonso 1b 3 0 1 0 ARams p 0 0 0 0 DeNrrs c 4 1 1 0 Prado 3b 2 0 1 0 Gyorko 2b 4 0 0 0 Bour 1b 3 0 1 0 Amarst ss 4 1 2 2 Capps p 0 0 0 0 Shields p 2 0 0 0 Dunn p 0 0 0 0 Barmes ph 1 0 0 0 Gillespi cf 1 1 0 0 Qcknsh p 0 0 0 0 Mathis c 3 1 0 0 Rzpczy p 0 0 0 0 Hchvrr ss 4 1 2 3 Wallac ph 1 0 0 0 Frnndz p 1 0 0 0 McGeh ph-1b 1 0 0 0 Totals 34 2 7 2 Totals 29 5 7 5 San Diego 000 000 002—2 Miami 200 000 003—5 E-Bour (5). DP-San Diego 1, Miami 1. LOBSan Diego 8, Miami 5. 2B-I.Suzuki (2), Rojas (2). 3B-Amarista (3). HR-Amarista (3), Hechavarria (5). SB-Gillespie (3). CS-Rojas (1). S-Fernandez. SF-Dietrich. IP H R ER BB SO San Diego Shields 6 5 2 2 2 4 Quackenbush 1 1 0 0 0 0 Rzepczynski 1 0 0 0 0 2 1⁄3 Maurer L,7-4 1 3 3 2 0 Miami Fernandez 6 4 0 0 2 10 B.Morris H,6 1 0 0 0 0 0 1⁄3 Capps H,11 1 0 0 1 1 2⁄3 Dunn H,17 0 0 0 0 2 A.Ramos W,1-3 BS,5-22 1 2 2 2 0 2 T-3:05. A-25,228 (37,442).

Pirates 3, Reds 0 Cincinnati — Charlie Morton pitched five-hit ball for seven innings, Neil Walker hit a reviewaided home run, and Pittsburgh beat Cincinnati in a testy game in which benches cleared after AllStars Andrew McCutchen and Brandon Phillips were hit by pitches. Pittsburgh Cincinnati ab r h bi ab r h bi GPolnc rf 3 1 0 0 Phillips 2b 3 0 1 0 SMarte lf 4 0 1 2 Schmkr lf 4 0 1 0 McCtch cf 3 0 0 0 Frazier 3b 4 0 0 0 Kang ss-3b 4 0 0 0 Bruce rf 4 0 1 0 NWalkr 2b 4 1 1 1 Byrd cf 3 0 0 0 Cervelli c 4 0 0 0 Ju.Diaz p 0 0 0 0 PAlvrz 1b 3 0 0 0 BHmltn ph 1 0 0 0 Flormn ss 1 0 0 0 Brnhrt c 3 0 0 0 SRdrgz 3b-1b 3 1 1 0 Suarez ss 4 0 1 0 Ishikaw 1b 0 0 0 0 DJssJr 1b 4 0 2 0 Morton p 2 0 0 0 Sampsn p 1 0 0 0 Decker ph 0 0 0 0 Waldrp ph 1 0 0 0 Melncn p 0 0 0 0 Bourgs ph-cf 1 0 0 0 Totals 31 3 3 3 Totals 33 0 6 0 Pittsburgh 002 100 000—3 Cincinnati 000 000 000—0 E-Suarez (10). LOB-Pittsburgh 4, Cincinnati 8. 2B-S.Marte (19), S.Rodriguez (5), Bruce (26), Suarez (7). HR-N.Walker (10). IP H R ER BB SO Pittsburgh Morton W,7-4 7 5 0 0 0 7 Watson H,25 1 0 0 0 0 0 1⁄3 Melancon H,1 1 0 0 0 0 2⁄3 Soria S,1-1 0 0 0 0 0 Cincinnati Sampson L,0-1 5 3 3 3 1 6 Villarreal 3 0 0 0 1 2 Ju.Diaz 1 0 0 0 0 2 T-2:49. A-39,596 (42,319).

Cubs 4, Brewers 3 Milwaukee — Closer Hector Rondon nearly squandered a three-run lead, and Chicago Cubs rookie Kris Bryant got hurt in a win that completed a four-game sweep of Milwaukee. Chicago Milwaukee ab r h bi ab r h bi Fowler cf 5 1 1 0 Segura ss 4 0 0 0 Schwrr c 4 1 1 0 Lucroy c 4 0 0 0 Coghln lf 4 0 2 0 Braun rf 4 1 3 0 Rizzo 1b 4 0 0 1 Lind 1b 4 0 2 0 Bryant 3b 2 0 1 1 KDavis lf 4 0 0 0 JHerrr pr-3b 1 0 0 0 EHerrr 2b 4 2 1 1 Soler rf 4 1 1 0 SPetrsn cf 4 0 1 0 SCastro ss 3 0 1 0 HPerez 3b 4 0 1 2 Richrd p 3 0 1 1 Lohse p 1 0 0 0 JRussll p 1 0 0 0 Thrnrg p 1 0 0 0 ARussll 2b 4 1 1 1 Gennett ph 1 0 0 0 LSchfr ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 35 4 9 4 Totals 36 3 8 3 Chicago 110 110 000—4 Milwaukee 010 000 002—3 E-S.Castro (18). LOB-Chicago 7, Milwaukee 6. 2B-Richard (1), Braun 2 (19). HR-A.Russell (7). SB-Coghlan (10). CS-S.Castro (4). IP H R ER BB SO Chicago Richard W,2-0 6 5 1 1 0 3 J.Russell H,8 1 0 0 0 0 0 Strop H,17 1 0 0 0 0 2 H.Rondon S,16-19 1 3 2 1 0 1 Milwaukee Lohse L,5-13 41⁄3 9 4 4 1 3 Thornburg 12⁄3 0 0 0 1 2 Cotts 1 0 0 0 0 0 Jeffress 1 0 0 0 0 2 Fr.Rodriguez 1 0 0 0 0 2 HBP-by Lohse (Schwarber). WP-Richard. T-3:12. A-38,536 (41,900).

Braves 6, Phillies 2 Philadelphia — Jace Peterson had three hits, including a three-run home run, and Julio Teheran pitched seven strong innings to lead Atlanta to a victory over Mets 5, Nationals 2 Philadelphia. New York — Curtis Granderson, Daniel MurAtlanta Philadelphia ab r h bi ab r h bi phy and streaking Lucas Maybin cf 4 1 1 0 CHrndz 2b 5 1 1 0 Duda homered in a span EPerez rf 4 1 2 0 OHerrr cf 4 0 1 1 FFrmn 1b 5 0 0 0 Franco 3b 4 0 1 0 of five pitches, a sudden CJhnsn 3b 5 1 1 1 Howard 1b 4 1 2 0 JGoms lf 3 2 1 1 DBrwn rf 3 0 0 0 power strike that charged JPetrsn 2b 4 1 3 3 Galvis ss 3 0 2 0 up Citi Field and sent Lvrnwy c 4 0 2 1 Asche lf 3 0 1 1 DCastr ss 4 0 1 0 JGomz p 0 0 0 0 the New York Mets past Tehern p 3 0 0 0 Ruf ph 1 0 0 0 Washington for a threeCiriaco ph 1 0 0 0 LuGarc p 0 0 0 0 McKrh p 0 0 0 0 Rupp c 4 0 1 0 game sweep. Vizcain p 0 0 0 0 Morgan p 1 0 0 0 JrDnks ph 1 0 0 0 Noah Syndergaard (6 Francr lf 2 0 1 0 5) struck out nine over Totals 37 6 11 6 Totals 35 2 10 2 Atlanta 000 040 200—6 eight innings, and New Philadelphia 010 010 000—2 DP-Atlanta 1. LOB-Atlanta 8, Philadelphia 8. 2B-D. York pulled within perCastro (1), C.Hernandez (14), Howard (22). HR-J. centage points of firstPeterson (4). S-Galvis. IP H R ER BB SO place Washington in the Atlanta NL East. Teheran W,7-6 7 8 2 2 0 7 McKirahan 1 2 0 0 0 1 Vizcaino 1 0 0 0 0 1 Philadelphia Morgan L,2-3 5 7 4 4 3 1 De Fratus 12⁄3 2 2 2 0 0 J.Gomez 11⁄3 2 0 0 0 0 Lu.Garcia 1 0 0 0 0 2 HBP-by Teheran (D.Brown), by Morgan (E.Perez). WP-Morgan. Balk-Morgan. T-2:48. A-24,361 (43,651).

Marlins 5, Padres 2 Miami — Adeiny Hechavarria hit a threerun home run off Brandon Maurer with one out in the ninth inning, and Miami topped San Diego. It was the first career walkoff homer for Hechavarria, the Marlins’ No. 8 hitter.

Washington New York ab r h bi ab r h bi YEscor 3b 4 1 1 1 Grndrs rf 4 1 1 2 Rendon 2b 4 1 3 1 DnMrp 2b 4 1 2 1 Harper rf 4 0 1 0 Cespds cf-lf 4 1 1 0 Zmrmn 1b 4 0 0 0 Duda 1b 4 1 2 2 Werth lf 4 0 1 0 Uribe 3b 4 0 0 0 Dsmnd ss 3 0 1 0 KJhnsn lf 3 0 0 0 Rivero p 0 0 0 0 WFlors ph 1 0 1 0 CRonsn ph 1 0 0 0 Clipprd p 0 0 0 0 Loaton c 4 0 1 0 Plawck c 2 1 1 0 MTaylr cf 3 0 0 0 Syndrg p 2 0 0 0 Zmrmn p 2 0 0 0 Lagars cf 0 0 0 0 Espinos ss 1 0 0 0 Tejada ss 3 0 0 0 Totals 34 2 8 2 Totals 31 5 8 5 Washington 100 001 000—2 New York 005 000 00x—5 DP-New York 1. LOB-Washington 5, New York 5. 2B-Rendon (7), W.Flores (15). HR-Y.Escobar (6), Rendon (1), Granderson (17), Dan.Murphy (7), Duda (21). S-Syndergaard. IP H R ER BB SO Washington Zimmermann L,8-7 6 6 5 5 2 7 Rivero 2 2 0 0 0 2 New York Syndergaard W,6-5 8 7 2 2 0 9 Clippard S,1-1 1 1 0 0 0 0 T-2:42. A-35,374 (41,922).


SPORTS

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Monday, August 3, 2015

| 5C

SCOREBOARD NASCAR Sprint CupWindows 10 400

Sunday at Pocono Raceway Long Pond, Pa. Lap length: 2.5 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (7) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 160 laps, 119.2 rating, 47 points, $233,601. 2. (9) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 160, 104.6, 43, $205,166. 3. (10) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 160, 92.8, 42, $181,686. 4. (15) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 160, 88.6, 40, $134,375. 5. (25) Greg Biffle, Ford, 160, 91, 40, $139,908. 6. (12) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 160, 104.8, 38, $144,851. 7. (22) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 160, 80.6, 37, $125,323. 8. (19) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 160, 87.8, 36, $124,073. 9. (5) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 160, 83.5, 35, $116,279. 10. (8) Carl Edwards, Toyota, 160, 98.3, 34, $87,915. 11. (18) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 160, 83.5, 33, $94,440. 12. (27) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 160, 99.5, 33, $112,908. 13. (4) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 160, 91.2, 31, $120,611. 14. (29) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 160, 67.2, 0, $82,250. 15. (17) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 160, 76.8, 29, $111,541. 16. (20) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 160, 77.6, 29, $89,125. 17. (24) David Ragan, Toyota, 160, 78.8, 28, $107,539. 18. (21) Aric Almirola, Ford, 160, 68, 26, $116,956. 19. (13) Martin Truex Jr., Chevrolet, 160, 104.4, 26, $106,015. 20. (3) Joey Logano, Ford, 160, 128.7, 26, $128,853. 21. (1) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 159, 97.7, 24, $146,211. 22. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 159, 98.6, 23, $93,645. 23. (14) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 159, 69.5, 21, $110,670. 24. (31) Justin Allgaier, Chevrolet, 159, 62.2, 20, $102,528. 25. (28) Alex Bowman, Chevrolet, 159, 56.3, 19, $92,203. 26. (39) Michael Annett, Chevrolet, 159, 53, 18, $77,895. 27. (33) Cole Whitt, Ford, 159, 48.7, 17, $88,853. 28. (26) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 159, 62.8, 16, $92,092. 29. (36) Matt DiBenedetto, Toyota, 159, 44.3, 15, $75,895. 30. (35) J.J. Yeley, Toyota, 159, 45.3, 0, $75,745. 31. (32) Brett Moffitt, Ford, 158, 49.1, 13, $74,095. 32. (40) Travis Kvapil, Ford, 158, 36.8, 0, $73,920. 33. (37) David Gilliland, Ford, 158, 40, 11, $81,720. 34. (41) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet, 157, 32.8, 10, $73,520. 35. (38) Jeb Burton, Toyota, 157, 37.5, 9, $73,370. 36. (43) Timmy Hill, Ford, 156, 30.3, 0, $73,120. 37. (6) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 150, 93.5, 8, $90,931. 38. (42) Alex Kennedy, Chevrolet, 126, 30.8, 6, $68,102. 39. (30) Sam Hornish Jr., Ford, 123, 37.1, 5, $90,375. 40. (23) Trevor Bayne, Ford, overheating, 91, 45.8, 4, $104,605. 41. (34) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, accident, 27, 29.7, 3, $64,030. 42. (2) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, engine, 20, 48.8, 3, $104,855. 43. (16) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, accident, 3, 23.7, 1, $66,530.

Quicken Loans National

Sunday At Robert Trent Jones Golf Club Gainesville, Va. Purse: $6.7 million Yardage: 7,385; Par: 71 Final Troy Merritt (500), $1,206,000 70-68-61-67—266 Rickie Fowler (300), $723,600 67-65-68-69—269 David Lingmerth (190), $455,600 68-65-68-69—270 Jason Bohn (100), $242,875 67-67-67-71—272 Bill Haas (100), $242,875 67-71-64-70—272 Danny Lee (100), $242,875 67-67-69-69—272 Carl Pettersson (100), $242,875 70-68-64-70—272 Justin Rose (100), $242,875 66-71-65-70—272 Justin Thomas (100), $242,875 66-71-68-67—272 Ryo Ishikawa (75), $180,900 63-68-71-71—273 Chad Campbell (63), $147,400 68-70-69-67—274 Charles Howell III (63), $147,400 67-67-67-73—274 Whee Kim (63), $147,400 68-66-67-73—274 Steve Wheatcroft (63), $147,400 65-73-68-68—274 Brian Davis (55), $113,900 70-70-66-69—275 Greg Owen (55), $113,900 66-68-73-68—275 Ollie Schniederjans, $113,900 66-69-68-72—275 Kevin Chappell (52), $93,800 64-68-67-77—276 Jason Kokrak (52), $93,800 71-68-67-70—276 Tiger Woods (52), $93,800 68-66-74-68—276 Hudson Swafford (46), $61,193 68-72-67-70—277 Jimmy Walker (46), $61,193 71-63-73-70—277 Will Wilcox (46), $61,193 68-71-70-68—277 Brice Garnett (46), $61,193 69-65-72-71—277 Adam Hadwin (46), $61,193 67-70-69-71—277 Pat Perez (46), $61,193 67-67-72-71—277 John Peterson (46), $61,193 67-70-68-72—277 Andres Romero (46), $61,193 69-69-67-72—277 Cameron Tringale (46), $61,193 68-69-67-73—277 Jonas Blixt (37), $38,116 66-74-69-69—278 Ken Duke (37), $38,116 73-67-70-68—278 Jim Herman (37), $38,116 68-71-71-68—278 John Huh (37), $38,116 70-67-71-70—278 Carlos Ortiz (37), $38,116 71-69-72-66—278 K.J. Choi (37), $38,116 69-68-71-70—278 George McNeill (37), $38,116 71-68-69-70—278 Brendan Steele (37), $38,116 70-68-66-74—278 Vaughn Taylor (37), $38,116 70-70-64-74—278 Tony Finau (29), $26,130 71-67-69-72—279 James Hahn (29), $26,130 71-67-70-71—279 Tom Hoge (29), $26,130 69-70-70-70—279 Colt Knost (29), $26,130 71-67-68-73—279 Russell Knox (29), $26,130 69-67-71-72—279 Bryce Molder (29), $26,130 69-69-72-69—279

Mark Wilson (29), $26,130 68-69-71-71—279 Aaron Baddeley (23), $18,224 69-68-72-71—280 Ernie Els (23), $18,224 64-74-68-74—280 Harris English (23), $18,224 70-67-72-71—280 Retief Goosen (23), $18,224 63-73-71-73—280 Billy Hurley III (23), $18,224 70-70-72-68—280 Kyle Reifers (23), $18,224 71-67-70-72—280 Gonzalo Fdez-Castano (16), $15,467 66-71-69-75—281 Justin Leonard (16), $15,467 64-72-70-75—281 S.J. Park (16), $15,467 68-72-72-69—281 Jonathan Randolph (16), $15,467 69-68-70-74—281 Vijay Singh (16), $15,467 69-70-70-72—281 Nick Taylor (16), $15,467 68-69-72-72—281 Shawn Stefani (16), $15,467 71-67-68-75—281 Brendon de Jonge (12), $14,807 69-70-73-70—282 Michael Putnam (12), $14,807 71-66-75-70—282 Jonathan Byrd (10), $14,539 68-72-72-71—283 John Merrick (10), $14,539 72-68-69-74—283 Ricky Barnes (7), $14,137 69-68-69-78—284 J.J. Henry (7), $14,137 70-69-68-77—284 William McGirt (7), $14,137 69-69-75-71—284 Jeff Overton (7), $14,137 65-73-74-72—284 Steven Bowditch (3), $13,668 68-68-67-83—286 Mark Hubbard (3), $13,668 65-74-71-76—286 Patrick Rodgers, $13,668 66-72-73-75—286 Chesson Hadley (1), $13,400 69-71-74-73—287 Erik Compton (1), $13,266 70-69-72-77—288 Arjun Atwal (1), $13,065 66-71-76-76—289 Max Homa (1), $13,065 72-68-72-77—289 Nicholas Thompson (1), $12,864 70-69-79-74—292 Seung-Yul Noh (1), $12,730 68-72-76-77—293

Ricoh Women’s British Open Sunday at Turnberry Resort (Ailsa Course) Turnberry, Scotland Purse: $3 million Yardage: 6,410; Par: 72 Final a-amateur Inbee Park 69-73-69-65—276 Jin Young Ko 68-71-69-71—279 So Yeon Ryu 67-72-73-68—280 Lydia Ko 66-73-72-69—280 Suzann Pettersen 68-69-72-72—281 Teresa Lu 68-71-69-74—282 Anna Nordqvist 69-72-73-69—283 Mika Miyazato 68-72-70-73—283 Amy Boulden 71-74-68-71—284 Melissa Reid 73-70-69-72—284 Minjee Lee 69-72-70-73—284 Maria McBride 79-66-69-72—286 a-Luna Sobron 70-77-71-69—287 Cristie Kerr 66-77-73-71—287 Hyo Joo Kim 65-78-73-71—287 Yani Tseng 72-72-72-71—287 Mi Hyang Lee 70-75-74-69—288 Hannah Burke 74-72-71-71—288 Stacy Lewis 70-75-72-71—288 Lexi Thompson 71-75-70-72—288 Nanna Koerstz Madsen 70-78-76-65—289 Jung-Min Lee 70-75-76-68—289 Angela Stanford 69-78-73-69—289 Lee-Anne Pace 75-73-74-68—290 Shanshan Feng 71-74-76-69—290 Sun Young Yoo 71-73-74-72—290 Nicole Broch Larsen 69-74-70-77—290 Caroline Hedwall 73-74-75-69—291 Maria Balikoeva 73-73-75-70—291 Jenny Shin 71-74-76-70—291 Charley Hull 73-73-77-69—292 Ha Na Jang 71-75-77-69—292 In Gee Chun 72-76-71-73—292 Christina Kim 71-72-75-74—292 Jane Park 72-74-72-74—292 Gerina Piller 70-79-76-68—293 Sandra Gal 74-74-76-69—293 Marina Alex 73-74-76-70—293 Sakura Yokomine 72-77-73-71—293 Amy Yang 69-76-74-74—293 Marianne Skarpnord 71-74-73-75—293 Candie Kung 72-75-70-76—293 Lizette Salas 72-76-77-69—294 Gwladys Nocera 70-75-74-76—295 Florentyna Parker 68-77-74-76—295 Julieta Granada 70-74-71-80—295 Q Baek 67-82-75-72—296 Jennifer Song 71-74-76-75—296 Katie Burnett 68-81-71-76—296 Brittany Lincicome 75-74-77-71—297 Catriona Matthew 71-77-77-72—297 Azahara Munoz 68-78-79-72—297 Chella Choi 72-77-75-73—297 Holly Clyburn 76-73-75-73—297 Misuzu Narita 69-75-76-77—297 Austin Ernst 75-74-77-72—298 Jaye Marie Green 72-74-78-74—298 Danielle Kang 70-79-73-76—298 Stacey Keating 71-76-73-78—298 Alison Walshe 70-74-72-82—298 Brooke M. Henderson 73-75-79-72—299 Tiffany Joh 72-75-77-75—299 Na Yeon Choi 72-75-76-76—299 Xi Yu Lin 72-76-74-77—299 Kelly W Shon 70-76-74-79—299 Alena Sharp 72-77-77-74—300 Ashleigh Simon 72-77-76-75—300 Ssu-Chia Cheng 72-77-71-80—300 Mina Harigae 72-76-80-73—301 Wei-Ling Hsu 74-74-77-76—301 Carly Booth 72-77-79-74—302 a-Su-Hyun Oh 77-72-79-74—302 Nina Holleder 72-77-76-77—302

3M Championship

Sunday at TPC Twin Cities Blaine, Minn. Purse: $1.75 million Yardage: 7,114; Par: 72 Final Kenny Perry (263), $262,500 69-61-68—198 Bernhard Langer (128), $128,042 68-67-67—202 Kevin Sutherland (128), $128,042 69-65-68—202 Scott Dunlap (128), $128,042 67-67-68—202 Marco Dawson (83), $83,125 68-67-68—203 Tom Lehman (70), $70,000 64-71-69—204 Stephen Ames (49), $49,000 72-65-68—205 Mike Goodes (49), $49,000 69-68-68—205 Paul Goydos (49), $49,000 72-65-68—205 PH Horgan III (49), $49,000 67-69-69—205 Greg Kraft (49), $49,000 69-69-67—205 Kirk Triplett (49), $49,000 68-68-69—205 Tommy Armour III, $32,375 71-66-69—206 Frank Esposito, $32,375 71-66-69—206 Corey Pavin, $32,375 70-68-68—206 Wes Short, Jr., $32,375 70-68-68—206 Billy Andrade, $23,917 69-69-69—207 Guy Boros, $23,917 74-64-69—207 Lee Janzen, $23,917 75-66-66—207 Scott McCarron, $23,917 72-65-70—207 Scott Hoch, $23,917 68-68-71—207 Esteban Toledo, $23,917 69-67-71—207 Olin Browne, $17,938 70-73-65—208 David Frost, $17,938 70-70-68—208 John Huston, $17,938 69-68-71—208 Jeff Sluman, $17,938 68-70-70—208 Bart Bryant, $13,606 72-69-68—209 Brad Bryant, $13,606 70-69-70—209 Mark Calcavecchia, $13,606 71-70-68—209 Fred Funk, $13,606 72-69-68—209 Steve Pate, $13,606 71-69-69—209 Gene Sauers, $13,606 70-70-69—209 Hal Sutton, $13,606 69-71-69—209 Ian Woosnam, $13,606 72-68-69—209 Steve Elkington, $10,500 71-66-73—210

Larry Nelson, $10,500 74-66-70—210 Willie Wood, $10,500 70-70-70—210 Don Berry, $8,925 72-67-72—211 Mark Brooks, $8,925 72-70-69—211 John Cook, $8,925 71-66-74—211 Rod Spittle, $8,925 70-72-69—211 Duffy Waldorf, $8,925 70-70-71—211 Jay Don Blake, $6,825 72-68-72—212 Jose Coceres, $6,825 74-66-72—212 Gary Hallberg, $6,825 70-71-71—212 Steve Lowery, $6,825 72-66-74—212 Tom Pernice Jr., $6,825 73-67-72—212 Joey Sindelar, $6,825 73-69-70—212 Jerry Smith, $6,825 74-68-70—212 Roger Chapman, $4,638 71-71-71—213 Jeff Coston, $4,638 69-69-75—213 Joe Durant, $4,638 69-70-74—213 Blaine McCallister, $4,638 72-67-74—213 Loren Roberts, $4,638 70-72-71—213 Tom Watson, $4,638 74-67-72—213 Dan Forsman, $3,413 73-70-71—214 Bob Gilder, $3,413 75-69-70—214 John Harris, $3,413 76-65-73—214 John Inman, $3,413 75-71-68—214 Skip Kendall, $3,413 72-74-68—214 Grant Waite, $3,413 67-72-75—214 Scott Verplank, $2,800 79-69-67—215 Tom Byrum, $2,363 74-69-73—216 Wayne Levi, $2,363 76-68-72—216 Rocco Mediate, $2,363 70-67-79—216 Bobby Wadkins, $2,363 71-70-75—216 Jay Haas, $1,838 72-74-71—217 Chien Soon Lu, $1,838 74-68-75—217 Jay Delsing, $1,593 74-73-71—218 Larry Mize, $1,593 78-67-73—218 Carlos Franco, $1,330 76-72-71—219 Tom Jenkins, $1,330 76-73-70—219 Bob Tway, $1,330 76-73-70—219 Jeff Hart, $1,155 76-74-70—220 Scott Simpson, $1,085 73-75-73—221 Morris Hatalsky, $1,015 76-73-74—223

MLS

EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA D.C. United 12 7 5 41 33 26 New York 9 6 5 32 32 24 Columbus 8 8 7 31 36 38 New England 8 9 7 31 32 36 Toronto FC 8 8 4 28 32 34 Montreal 8 8 3 27 28 29 Orlando City 7 9 6 27 31 33 NYC FC 6 10 6 24 31 34 Philadelphia 6 13 4 22 29 40 Chicago 6 11 4 21 24 30 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Vancouver 12 8 3 39 30 22 FC Dallas 11 6 5 38 32 27 Los Angeles 10 7 7 37 39 29 Sporting KC 9 4 7 34 30 21 Portland 9 8 6 33 24 28 Seattle 10 11 2 32 25 24 Real Salt Lake 7 8 8 29 27 33 Houston 7 8 7 28 28 27 San Jose 7 9 5 26 22 27 Colorado 5 7 9 24 19 22 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Sunday’s Games San Jose 0, Portland 0, tie Chicago 2, FC Dallas 0 Wednesday, Aug. 5 Orlando City at Toronto FC, 7 p.m. New York at Montreal, 7 p.m. Friday, Aug. 7 Chicago at Portland, 10 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 8 Sporting KC at Toronto FC, 3 p.m. Philadelphia at Orlando City, 6:30 p.m. D.C. United at Montreal, 7 p.m. San Jose at Houston, 8 p.m. Columbus at Colorado, 8 p.m. Real Salt Lake at Vancouver, 9 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 9 Seattle at Los Angeles, 3 p.m. NYC FC at New York, 6 p.m.

WNBA

EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB New York 13 6 .684 — Washington 11 7 .611 1½ Chicago 12 8 .600 1½ Indiana 11 8 .579 2 Connecticut 9 9 .500 3½ Atlanta 7 13 .350 6½ WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB Minnesota 15 4 .789 — Phoenix 12 7 .632 3 Tulsa 10 10 .500 5½ San Antonio 6 14 .300 9½ Los Angeles 5 14 .263 10 Seattle 5 16 .238 11 Sunday’s Games Phoenix 71, Atlanta 68 New York 78, Seattle 62 Los Angeles 80, San Antonio 78 Chicago 71, Washington 68 Indiana 83, Connecticut 70 Today’s Games No games scheduled

BASEBALL American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Agreed to terms with Sean Bierman on a minor league contract. BOSTON RED SOX — Placed Rick Porcello on the 15-day DL. HOUSTON ASTROS — Optioned Vincent Velasquez to Corpus Christi. MINNESOTA TWINS — Placed Tommy Milone on the 15-day DL. Transferred Ryan Pressly to the 60-day DL. NEW YORK YANKEES — Placed Diego Moreno on the 15-day DL. Recalled Branden Pinder from Scranton/WilkesBarre. OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Optioned R.J. Alvarez to Nashville. Designated Eric O’Flaherty for assignment. Recalled Aaron Brooks from Nashville. Sent Taylor Thompson to Nashville for a rehab assignment. TAMPA BAY RAYS — Placed Steven Souza Jr. on the 15-day DL. Optioned Matt Moore to Durham. Recalled Mikie Mahtook from Durham. TEXAS RANGERS — Placed Tanner Scheppers on the 15-day DL. Recalled Phil Klein from Round Rock. TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Agreed to terms with Chris Smith and Ronald Concepcion on minor league contracts. National League CHICAGO CUBS — Designated Yoervis Medina and Taylor Teagarden for assignment. Recalled Clayton Richard from Iowa. Sent Miguel Montero to Tennessee for a rehab assignment. LOS ANGELES DODGERS — Optioned Yimi Garcia to Oklahoma City. MIAMI MARLINS — Optioned Tomas Telis to New Orleans. Recalled Adam Conley and Chris Reed from New Orleans. NEW YORK METS — Agreed to terms with Tim Stauffer on a minor league contract. Sent Erik Goeddel to St. Lucie for a rehab assignment. PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES — Sent Chase Utley to Lehigh Valley for a rehab assignment. American Association KANSAS CITY T-BONES — Signed INF Brent Peterson. FOOTBALL National Football League DALLAS COWBOYS — Waived/ injured LB Justin Jackson. Activated DE Jeremy Mincey from the reserve/ did not report list. DETROIT LIONS — Traded CB Mohammed Seisay to Seattle for an undisclosed 2016 draft pick. INDIANAPOLIS COLTS — Placed LB Robert Mathis and G Donald Thomas on the PUP list. NEW YORK GIANTS — Signed WR Derrick Johnson and DE Brad Bars. NEW YORK JETS — Signed WR Jarrod West. SEATTLE SEAHAWKS — Released DT Tony McDaniel. Signed LB Bobby Wagner to a four-year contract exten-

Andrew Carpenean/AP Photo

KANSAS CITY CHIEFS LINEBACKER JUSTIN HOUSTON ANSWERS QUESTIONS during trainingcamp practice Saturday in St. Joseph, Missouri.

Chiefs’ $101M man terrorizing QBs again St. Joseph, Mo. (ap) — The massive linebacker with the sweat-drenched biceps insists he never took a day off this offseason, even if he never showed up for one of the Kansas City Chiefs’ workouts. Early in training camp, it’s easy to believe him. With his familiar No. 50 stretched across his broad shoulders, Justin Houston has wasted no time in terrorizing quarterbacks again — even if they happened to be his own teammates. While the Chiefs worked out in only shells during the first couple of days, and hitting the QB is always taboo this time of year, more than once Houston could have easily leveled the boom. “I just made sure about being busy at all times,” said Houston, who often posted videos of his offseason workouts on social media while his representatives worked on a long-term contract. The deal was consummated just over a week ago, a six-year, $101 million pact. “I knew the guys here were working, and I knew the strength coaches were going to have these guys in shape,” Houston explained, “so I didn’t want to show up out of shape.

Royals CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

out, Bautista made it 3-0 with a double to center, and yelled at Madson as he ran to first. Donaldson and Volquez had to be restrained after Sanchez was ejected for hitting Escobar and both teams gathered around the mound. Gibbons and Colabello, who’d just been replaced for defense, both ran out to join the scrum. Wolf ejected both Sanchez and Blue Jays bench coach DeMarlo Hale. “Our guy loses a twoseamer and hits a guy in the knee when we’ve had four balls thrown at our neck the entire day and our guy gets ejected, it just doesn’t seem proper,” Donaldson said. The sellout crowd of 45,736 jeered Wolf after the umpires had cleared the field. “I don’t think he made a lot of the right decisions today,” Donaldson said of Wolf, who declined to speak with to a pool reporter following the game. Royals manager Ned Yost, meanwhile, praised the umpires for doing “a phenomenal job.” Volquez insisted he was simply following the scouting report by pitching inside to Donaldson and the Blue Jays, whose powerpacked lineup leads baseball with 561 runs. “That’s the scout-

Whenever I got that call, I wanted to make sure I was ready.” The Chiefs will certainly be counting on him. After piling up a franchise-record 22 sacks a year ago, Houston will have to anchor a defense that is already without two starters for Week 1, and that is getting older by the day. Defensive tackle Dontari Poe, so critical in tying up offensive linemen and giving Houston a clear path to the quarterback, will miss all of training camp and likely part of the season after surgery for a herniated disc. Poe is on campus at Missouri Western, but the 350-pounder is nowhere close to being ready to step onto the practice field. Then there’s cornerback Sean Smith, who’s suspended the first three games of the regular season for violating the league’s substance-abuse policy. It was Smith’s ability to lock down the opponent’s top wide receiver that often gave Houston time to get to the quarterback. “Instantly, it’s kind of like a bulls-eye on your head,” said fellow linebacker Tamba Hali, who was in a similar situation when he signed a big

BOX SCORE Kansas City AB R H BI BB SO Avg. A.Escobar ss 3 1 1 0 0 1 .279 Zobrist lf 3 1 1 2 1 0 .272 L.Cain cf 4 0 1 0 0 3 .314 Hosmer 1b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .315 K.Morales dh 3 0 1 0 1 0 .284 S.Perez c 4 0 0 0 0 2 .243 Rios rf 3 0 0 0 0 0 .241 Cuthbert 3b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .240 Infante 2b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .228 Totals 30 2 4 2 2 7 Toronto AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Tulowitzki ss 3 0 1 1 1 0 .353 Donaldson 3b 3 0 0 0 1 3 .291 Bautista rf 4 0 1 1 0 0 .237 Encarnacion dh 4 1 2 0 0 1 .244 Colabello 1b 3 1 1 2 0 2 .315 Smoak 1b 0 1 0 0 1 0 .228 Ru.Martin c 3 1 1 0 1 1 .264 Pillar cf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .267 Goins 2b 2 1 1 0 2 0 .223 Revere lf 2 0 0 1 0 0 .000 Totals 28 5 7 5 6 7 Kansas City 000 000 020—2 4 0 Toronto 000 200 12x—5 7 0 LOB-Kansas City 4, Toronto 9. 2B-Bautista (19). HR-Zobrist (9), off Osuna; Colabello (10), off Volquez. RBIs-Zobrist 2 (39), Tulowitzki (4), Bautista (71), Colabello 2 (41), Revere (1). SB-Tulowitzki (1). S-Revere. SF-Revere. Runners left in scoring position-Kansas City 1 (S.Perez); Toronto 5 (Goins, Encarnacion 3, Donaldson). RISP-Kansas City 0 for 1; Toronto 2 for 10. Runners moved up-Pillar. GIDP-S.Perez, Bautista. DP-Kansas City 1 (Cuthbert, Infante, Hosmer); Toronto 1 (Tulowitzki, Smoak). Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Volquez L, 10-6 6 4 2 2 3 4 105 3.20 1⁄3 1 1 1 0 0 3 2.45 F.Morales 2⁄3 1 0 0 0 2 18 2.28 Madson 2⁄3 1 2 2 3 0 25 2.14 K.Herrera 1⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 6 4.00 Hochevar Toronto IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Dickey W, 6-10 7 2 0 0 2 6 101 4.06 Aa.Snchez H, 22⁄3 0 1 1 0 0 7 3.44 Osuna S, 7-8 11⁄3 2 1 1 0 1 23 2.27 Inherited runners-scored-Madson 1-1, Hochevar 2-0, Osuna 1-1. HBP-by Madson (Tulowitzki), by Volquez (Donaldson), by Aa.Sanchez (A.Escobar). Umpires-Home, Jim Wolf; First, Toby Basner; Second, Angel Hernandez; Third, Scott Barry. T-3:02. A-45,736 (49,282).

ing report we’ve got, so you’ve got to throw up and in to him,” Volquez said. “He can’t take it. I don’t know why. He hit a lot of homers in the first couple of games and he was pimping everything he does. Somebody hits you, you’ve got to take it, because you’re pimping everything you do. “He got mad at everybody like he was Barry Bonds,” Volquez added. “He’s not Barry Bonds.

contract a few years ago. “Everybody is going to scrutinize everything you do. Twenty-two sacks? People think that’s easy to do, so if he even gets 12 or 14 sacks, people are going to scrutinize. But that’s hard to do.” Houston insists he can handle the weight of his massive contract, just as easily as he pushes up the countless plates he puts on the bench-press bar. It doesn’t matter that he will be double-teamed all season, or that the focus of opposing defenses will be squarely on him. “I’m going to continue to do what I do,” he said. “Be ready for every game, continue to stay focused and continue to work like I’ve been working. Nothing changes.” Chiefs owner Clark Hunt certainly hopes that’s the case. After all, he opened his checkbook to write the largest check in franchise history, one that will pay the 26-year-old Houston $52.5 million in guarantees. It is the second-richest contract for a defensive player in NFL history, trailing only the $114 million, six-year deal Ndamukong Suh landed from the Miami Dolphins this past offseason. “That’s part of today’s NFL,” Hunt said.

He’s got three years in the league.” Donaldson hit two home runs in the series but struck out three times in the finale. Toronto denied Volquez his third straight win and handed Kansas City its fourth loss in five games. Volquez (10-6) allowed two runs and four hits in six innings. Dickey said the Royals have become “used to pushing people around” in posting the AL’s best record so far. “So when they come onto the playground and there’s a kid that’s bigger than they are for a day, I think it probably (ticks) them off,” Dickey said. “And I can’t blame ‘em.” Roberto Osuna replaced Sanchez and allowed a two-run homer to Ben Zobrist, cutting it to 3-2. Toronto scored a pair of insurance runs in the bottom half after Kelvin Herrera walked the bases loaded. Ben Revere hit a sacrifice fly and Tulowitzki had an RBI single. Osuna finished in the ninth for his seventh save. Pitching on three days’ rest, Dickey (6-10) allowed just two hits, both singles, and walked two in winning his third straight start. Gibbons said Dickey was “as good as we’ve seen him.” Kansas City was among the opponents Dickey beat the last time he won three straight.


Monday, August 3, 2015

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L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD

Monday, August 3, 2015

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Thursday, January

1, 2015

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Mike - 785-766-6760 mdcraig@sbcglobal.net Stamped & Reg. Concrete, Patios, Walks, Driveways, Acid Staining & Overlays, Tear-Out & Replacement Jayhawk Concrete Inc. 785-979-5261

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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

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Serving KC over 40 years

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Lawn, Garden & Nursery

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Tree/Stump Removal Fredy’s Tree Service

Higgins Handyman

Craig Construction Co

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

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

Antiques-Classic

FREE RENEW

Ă– 32.2222 |ĉŽ ÄźĹ&#x;785.8 ڛĒäÄ’Ăš E YOUR PLAC Ä’Ĺ&#x; ÚĒğ ĉńŸAD: "2 4ĂŁne AĂ&#x;

SERVICES Antique/Estate Liquidation

om cars.lawrence.c

7 DAYS $19.95 28 DAYS $49.95

$11,495

TO PLACE AN AD:

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IN 28 DAYS? DOESN’T SELL AL!

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$12,994

Only $5,995

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2014 Nissan Versa

$15,787

SCHEDULE YOUR AD TODAY!

" 0z $- " " Ă—Ăź ÂŻ / $

&3L63 S Sport

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.

JackEllenaHonda.com

2005 KIA SPECTRA

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6B

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2012 Toyota Corolla S

2003 Saturn VUE

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Kia Cars

Stk#15M256B

2006 NISSAN MAXIMA SL

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

Volkswagen

888-631-6458

Toyota Cars

for merchandise

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Only $9,495

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Mercury

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

Painting

:LK;FNE U KI@DD<; U KFGG<; U JKLDG I<DFM8C 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 ;@F7D;AD 7JF7D;AD O K73DE O BAI7D I3E:;@9 O D7B3;DE ;@E;67 AGF O EF3;@ 675=E O I3>>B3B7D EFD;BB;@9 O 8D77 7EF;?3F7E Call or Text 913-401-9304

KansasTreeCare.com Trimming, removal, & stump 9D;@6;@9 4K %3ID7@57 >A53>E 7DF;8;76 4K $3@E3E D4AD;EFE Assoc. since 1997 N07 EB75;3>;L7 ;@ preservation & restoration� Ins. & Lic. visit online 785-843-TREE (8733)

Professional Tree Care

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

785-842-0094 jayhawkguttering.com

785-832-2222 classifieds@ljworld.com

Advertising that works for you!

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


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Monday, August 3, 2015

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

PLACE YOUR AD:

785.832.2222

classifieds@ljworld.com

A P P LY N O W

1233 AREA JOB OPENINGS! BOSTON FINANCIAL (DST) ............... *100

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

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

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

KU: STUDENT OPENINGS .................. 150

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

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

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

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

COMMUNITY RELATIONS/DAYCOM ........ 11

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

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

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

MARITZ CX ..................................... *30

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

MISCELLANEOUS ............................. *36

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.

FLEXIBLE SCHEDULES • BENEFITS • PAID TIME-OFF

PA R T T I M E T E L L E R Truity Credit Union is known for our strong long-term local presence in the Lawrence, KS community with three walk-in branches, and maintains a worldwide impact reaching 70,000 members via offices across a four state area and through our strong technology impact. We are proud to be part of America’s credit union movement where people really are worth more than money. Building relationships with our members in order to provide stellar service through products and services which will truly benefit the members’ lives, is of utmost importance in this position. Therefore, excellent communication and interpersonal skills are desired qualities. Benefits include: Annual bonus program; an excellent insurance program to include health, dental, vision, life, long term disability; incredible 401k matching plan; wellness incentive; vacation and holiday pay; educational assistance; and extensive training opportunities. *Note benefits vary for part-time positions.

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

AdministrativeProfessional

Banking

ROAD Maintenance

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

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

Job Seeker Tip “Thinking Right” When making a choice, think what will be the result in a week, a month or a year later. Really good decisions lead to really good results in the long run.

AUCTIONS

“You’ve got to play the tape all the way through!” (Sherman Tolbert)

DriversTransportation

Construction

In-Store Manager at the

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

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/

Lecompton township road department is taking applications for a motivated part-time employee. Must have class B CDL w good driving record. General knowledge of gravel road maintanance and quipment operation. Duties include hauling gravel, mowing, snow removal and equipment maintenance. Call the shop at 785-887-6836 for details. Drug screening required.

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

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

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

General

620-431-2820 x241 tshowalter@neosho.edu

Customer Service

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

Call today! 785-841-9999 DayCom

CNA & CMA Classes

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

620-431-2820

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

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

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.

785-832-7168

aerwine@ljworld.com

If you are interested in learning more about becoming a direct care professional at CLO and to fill out an application, please visit our website:

785-865-5520 www.clokan.org

General

General

Healthcare

$500 bonus if you can start this week. Must work well with hands. Cleaning hardwood tile laminate flooring. 40+ hours per week minimum. $500 to $700 a week to start. Must be 18 or older with clean background.

Certified Nurse Assistants (CNAs) Pioneer Ridge Health Care and Rehabilitation Center is hiring CNA’s to join our team of Health Care professionals.

785-749-9805

majicways76@gmail.com

Healthcare

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/care ers 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 Part-time Day/evening shift

Breathe Oxygen & Medical Supply is expanding in Lawrence and is seeking a motivated, self driven individual who is looking for a career with our growing company. Multiple F/T positions available for delivery, warehouse and office. Please apply in person at 2851 Iowa Street Lawrence, KS 66046

Hotel-Restaurant

FLOOR TECHS

Multiple F/T Positions!

Apply online at www.lawrencepres byterianmanor.org or in person at: 1429 Kasold Drug Test is required.

Dental Assistant

Interview TIP #1

Cake Decorator/Baker KU Memorial Unions Compensation: $11.74 plus excellent benefits! KU Dining Catering department. Full benefit package, paid holidays, vacation and sick time. Minimum of 1 year cake decorating experience, high volume bakery production preferable. Full job description and online application at:

union.ku.edu/jobs

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.

Full time opportunity in a busy family practice in Lawrence. Experience required. Mon-Thur, with occasional Fridays. Send resume to jrrobbinsdds@gmail.com

Learn a few things about the company before you interview. Decisions Determine Destiny

NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD:

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Classified Advertising Executive + Auction Enthusiast Contact Ariele today to promote your auction and make our audience your audience.

WORK THREE DAYS A WEEK, TAKE FOUR DAYS OFF! $9.50/HOUR

SUPPORT! TEACH! INSPIRE! ADVOCATE!

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

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

ARE YOU:

Special Notices Shelly’s Mop & Shine Cleaning Services 785-550-1705 shelly1434@gmail.com $15/ hour

785.832.2222

Business Announcements

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

620-431-2820 x241 tshowalter@neosho.edu

classifieds@ljworld.com

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.

SunflowerClassifieds.com

Love Auctions? Check out the Sunday / Wednesday editions of Lawrence Journal-World Classifieds section for all the details and the

BIGGEST SALES!


L awrence J ournal -W orld

Monday, August 3, 2015

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MERCHANDISE PETS

RENTALS REAL ESTATE

TO PLACE AN AD:

TO PLACE AN AD:

785.832.2222

Auction Calendar

AUCTIONS

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

Auction Calendar  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

FARM & EQUIP AUCTION LEAVENWORTH CO. KANSAS SAT, AUGUST 15th @ 10AM 31849 255th Street, Easton, KS 6602

RETRO & VINTAGE AUCTION Saturday, August 8, 10 am 408 Pearson Waverly, KS

FARM/HOME FARM EQUIPMENT & PERSONAL PROPERTY Sellers: Eugene & Eileen Kramer

Vintage furniture, Retro Kitchenware, glassware, Fiesta Ware, collectibles, etc! See web for pictures: www.ottoauctioneering.com

For information, contact Trisha Brauer, Agent/Auctioneer at (913) 481-8280 United Country Kansas City Auction & Realty www.AuctionKansasCity.com

Branden Otto, auctioneer 913-710-7111

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 Development Land Auction (NWQ of Wakarusa Dr. & W. 18th St) Auction Date & Location: Thurs, Aug 6 @ 1:30 PM Artera Event Gallery 2161 Quail Creek Dr. Lawrence, KS Cates Auction Real Estate Co. 877.781.1134 CatesAuction.com

FREE 2 Week AUCTION CALENDAR LISTING when you place your Auction or Estate Sale ad with us! Call our Classified Advertising Department for details! 785.832.2222 classifieds@ljworld.com

classifieds@ljworld.com Furniture

Furniture

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

Music-Stereo

Old Fashion Butcher Block 24X24in. Butcher Block w/ bottom shelf $100 785-550-4142 Rocker/Recliner Like new, never used ~ beautiful piece ~ must see ~ 100 785-550-4142

Vintage Tablet Chair, solid wood, Excellent condition. Study chair for small space. $60. 785-865-4215

Clothing Jacket Men’s classic black leather motorcycle jacket. Zippers, belt, snaps, pockets. A very classic style. $25 — (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

Pianos: Beautiful Story & Clark console or Baldwin Spinet, $550. Kimball Spinet, $500. Gulbranson Spinet, $450. And more! Prices include tuning & delivery. Call-785-832-9906

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

PETS Pets AKC Chocolate Lab Puppies, big, blocky ,farm raised with outstanding temprement. Shots and wormed . $500. Call 785-248-3189

for merchandise under $100 SunflowerClassifieds.com

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

Apartments Unfurnished

3 BR w/2 or 2.5 BA

785-550-7258

Cedarwood Apts

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

2411 Cedarwood Ave.

785-865-2505

Beautiful & Spacious 1 & 2 Bedrooms Start at $450/mo.

Building Lots

grandmanagement.net

* 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.

Townhomes

2BR with loft, 2 bath, 1 car garage, fenced yard, FP, 3719 Westland Pl. $790/mo. Avail. Aug. 1. 785-550-3427

——————————————

Houses

CALL TODAY (Monday - Friday)

785-843-1116

Farms-Acreage

DOWNTOWN LOFT Studio Apartments 600 sq. ft., $710/mo. 825 sq. ft., $880/mo. No pets allowed Call Today 785-841-6565

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

FREE ADS

SEEKING SUBLET Immediately!! 3100 Ousdahl 3BD w/ personal BA, walk in closet, full kitchen, W/D. Near KU, on bus route. 620-205-9372

2932 Kensington Rd Lawrence, KS

Townhomes

2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH FIRST MONTH FREE! 1 & 2 Bedroom Units in 4-plex, W/D hookups, Available Now! quiet, 2 blocks to KU. townhomes $500/ mnth. Small pet ok. Cooperative start at $446-$490/mnth. Available Immediately! Call - 785-979-0767 Water, trash, sewer paid. Back patio, CA, hardwood floors, full bsmnt., stove, refrig., w/d hookup, garbage disposal, reserved parking. On-site management & maintenance. 24 hr. emergency maintenance. 4 BEDROOM, 3 BATH Membership & Equity fee required. 785-842-2545 In excellent condition! (Equal Housing Opportunity) Near Free State HS & I70 pinetreetownhouses.com all modern appliancesmany extras! Lawncare provided. $1195 / mo. Available Now! Available Now!

Apartments Furnished

Health & Beauty Electric Wheelchair

Couch-Broyhill couch from non-smoking home seeks new home. $75 785-766-0733

Lawrence

classifieds@ljworld.com Duplexes

RENTALS

Large pillow style sofa Medium brown material $200.00. Item located on ground floor. 785-218-7205

For Sale: 1133-Jazzi Like BRAND NEW- Large size, $1500. Also for sale, hydraulic lift for car to carry chair- $100. NICE. Call 785-249-4084

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

MERCHANDISE

Ottoman Nice, clean, comfortable ottoman. Medium blue corduroy. 24 “ wide, 15” deep,12” tall. 785-842-4641 $5

REAL ESTATE

785.832.2222

2BR, 2 bath, fireplace, CA, W/D hookups, 2 car with opener. Easy access to I-70. Includes paid cable. Pet under 20 lbs. allowed Call 785-842-2575 www.princeton-place.com

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

Basehor

advanco@sunflower.com -

Fox Run Apartments

147.22 Acres

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.

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.

LAUREL GLEN APTS All Electric 1, 2 & 3 BR units. Some with W/D, Water & Trash Paid, Small Pet, Income Restrictions Apply 785-838-9559 EOH

Bill Fair & Co. (785)887-6900

SUNRISE VILLAGE & PLACE

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!!

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

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

PUBLIC NOTICES 785.832.2222

classifieds@ljworld.com

(First published in the or may be concerned. Lawrence Daily Journal World August 3, 2015) You are notified that a Petition has been filed in the IN THE DISTRICT COURT District Court of Douglas OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, County, Kansas, praying to KANSAS CIVIL foreclose a real estate DEPARTMENT mortgage on the following described real estate: U.S. Bank National Lot 9, Block 6, in SHADOW Association as successor RIDGE 5TH PLAT, a subdiby merger of U.S. Bank vision in the City of EuNational Association ND dora, Douglas County, Kansas, commonly known Plaintiff, as 305 Montrose Cove, Eudora, KS 66025 (the vs. “Property”) Thomas E. Harmon; Board of County Commissioners; and all those defendants Unknown spouse, if any, of who have not otherwise been served are required Thomas E. Harmon; John to plead to the Petition on Doe (Tenant/Occupant); or before the 14th day of Mary Doe September, 2015, in the (Tenant/Occupant), District Court of Douglas Defendants. County,Kansas. If you fail to plead, judgment and deCase No. 15CV251 cree will be entered in due course upon the Petition. Court Number: Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 60 NOTICE OF SUIT THE STATE OF KANSAS, to the above-named defendants and the unknown heirs, executors, administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors and assigns of any deceased defendants; the unknown spouses of any defendants; the unknown officers, successors, trustees, creditors and assigns of any defendants that are existing, dissolved or dormant corporations; the unknown executors, administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors, successors and assigns of any defendants that are or were partners or in partnership; the unknown guardians, conservators and trustees of any defendants that are minors or are under any legal disability; and the unknown heirs, executors, administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors and assigns of any person alleged to be deceased, and all other persons who are

NOTICE Pursuant to the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, 15 U.S.C. §1692c(b), no information concerning the collection of this debt may be given without the prior consent of the consumer given directly to the debt collector or the express permission of a court of competent jurisdiction. The debt collector is attempting to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose. Prepared By: SouthLaw, P.C. Kristen G. Stroehmann (KS #10551) 6363 College Blvd., Suite 100 Overland Park, KS 66211 (913) 663-7600 (913) 663-7899 (Fax) Attorneys for Plaintiff (179515) _______

District Court of Douglas County Kansas on July 22, 2015 to request a name change to Sandra Lynn Scherer. The Petition will be heard in the 7th Judicial District Court of Douglas County, 111 E. 11, Lawrence, KS on September 18, 2015 at 10:00 a.m. If you have any objection to the requested name change you are required to file a responsive pleading on or before September 18, 2015 or appear at the hearing to object in person. If you fail to act, judgment and order will be entered upon the Petition as requested by Petitioner. ________ (First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld August 3, 2015) OFFICIAL NOTICE Public Hearing for Special Use Permit TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN AND TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED: Notice is hereby given that at 6:00 p.m. on August 25, 2015, the City of De Soto Planning Commission, at the City Hall, 32905 West 84th Street, De Soto, Kansas, will consider the following: A Special Use Permit for a pole sign on property located as follows:

The west 155 feet of Lot 5, Block 1, Corridor 10 Commerce Park, a subdivision in the City of Desoto, Johnson County, Kansas. Subject property is generally located in the 34000 Block of Commerce Drive, approximately 1000 feet east of Lexington Avenue on the north side of Commerce Drive As provided in the Zoning Regulations the above Special Use Permit will be discussed and considered by the City of De Soto Planning Commission, and all persons interested in said matter will be heard at this time concerning their views and wishes; and any protest against any of the provisions of the proposed changes to the zoning district will be considered by the Commission. Property owners within 200-feet of such property described above, wanting to protest the proposed change will have fourteen days after the Planning Commission makes its recommendation regarding the requested rezoning to submit a protest petition to the Community Development Department. If a valid protest petition is filed prior to the deadline, the change shall only be approved by at least a 3/4-majority vote of the City Council. Protest petitions are available in the Community Development Department of the City of De Soto. ________

Lot 3, except the west 50 feet and except the south 210 feet of the east 150 feet thereof, Block 1, Corridor 10 Commerce Park, a (First published in the subdivision in the City of Lawrence Daily JournalDesoto, Johnson County, World August 3, 2015) Kansas, according to the recorded plat thereof, OFFICIAL NOTICE

Lot 4, except the south 210 feet of the west 35 feet thereof, Block 1, Corridor (First published in the 10 Commerce Park, a subLawrence Daily Journal- division in the City of Desoto, Johnson County, World August 3, 2015) Kansas, according to the Sandra Lynn Keller filed a recorded plat thereof, petition in the 7th Judicial

Public Hearing for Zoning District Change TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN AND TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED: Notice is hereby given that at 6:00 p.m. on August 25,

2015, the City of De Soto Planning Commission, at the City Hall, 32905 West 84th Street, De Soto, Kansas, will consider the following:

Regulations the above Special Use Permit will be discussed and considered by the City of De Soto Planning Commission, and all persons interested in said matter will be heard at this time concerning their views and wishes; and any protest against any of the provisions of the proposed changes to the zoning district will be considered by the Commission. Property owners within 200-feet of such property described above, wanting to protest the proposed change will have fourteen days after the Planning Commission makes its recommendation regarding the requested rezoning to submit a protest petition to the Community Development Department. If a valid protest petition is filed prior to the deadline, the change shall only be approved by at least a 3/4-majority vote of the City Council. Protest petitions are available in the Community Development Department of the City of De Soto. ________

District Change

Subject property is generally located in the 34000 TO WHOM IT MAY CON- Block of Commerce Drive, CERN AND TO ALL PER- approximately 1000 feet SONS INTERESTED: east of Lexington Avenue on the north side of ComNotice is hereby given that merce Drive. at 6:00 p.m. on August 25, 2015, the City of De Soto As provided in the Zoning Planning Commission, at Regulations the above the City Hall, 32905 West amendment will be dis84th Street, De Soto, Kan- cussed and considered by sas, will consider the fol- the City of De Soto Plannlowing: ing Commission, and all persons interested in said A zoning map revision matter will be heard at this from the “M-1” time concerning their Industrial-Light district to views and wishes; and any the “C-2” Business-General protest against any of the district for property lo- provisions of the proposed cated as follows: changes to the zoning district will be considered by Lot 3, except the west 50 the Commission. Property feet and except the south owners within 200-feet of 210 feet of the east 150 such property described feet thereof, Block 1, Corri- above, wanting to protest dor 10 Commerce Park, a the proposed change will subdivision in the City of have fourteen days after Desoto, Johnson County, the Planning Commission Kansas, according to the makes its recommendarecorded plat thereof, tion regarding the requested rezoning to subLot 4, except the south 210 mit a protest petition to feet of the west 35 feet the Community Developthereof, Block 1, Corridor ment Department. If a 10 Commerce Park, a sub- valid protest petition is division in the City of filed prior to the deadline, Desoto, Johnson County, the change shall only be (First published in the Kansas, according to the approved by at least a 3/4-majority vote of the Lawrence Daily recorded plat thereof, City Council. Protest petiJournal-World August 3, The west 155 feet of Lot 5, tions are available in the 2015) Block 1, Corridor 10 Com- Community Development merce Park, a subdivision Department of the City of OFFICIAL NOTICE in the City of Desoto, John- De Soto. son County, Kansas. ________ Public Hearing for Zoning

A Special Use Permit for an Electronic Variable Message Board sign on property located as follows: Lot 3, except the west 50 feet and except the south 210 feet of the east 150 feet thereof, Block 1, Corridor 10 Commerce Park, a subdivision in the City of Desoto, Johnson County, Kansas, according to the recorded plat thereof, Lot 4, except the south 210 feet of the west 35 feet thereof, Block 1, Corridor 10 Commerce Park, a subdivision in the City of Desoto, Johnson County, Kansas, according to the recorded plat thereof, The west 155 feet of Lot 5, Block 1, Corridor 10 Commerce Park, a subdivision in the City of Desoto, Johnson County, Kansas. Subject property is generally located in the 34000 Block of Commerce Drive, approximately 1000 feet east of Lexington Avenue on the north side of Commerce Drive. As provided in the Zoning

(First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal World August 4, 2015) PUBLIC NOTICE The Lawrence-Douglas County Housing Authority’s Draft MTW Annual Plan for 2016 and amendments to its Combined Administration/ACOP Plan (Admin/ACOP) will be available to the public for review and comment during a 30-day period beginning August 3, 2015 and ending at 4:00 pm September 3, 2015. During the public comment period, the Draft MTW Annual Plan and Amendments to the Admin/ACOP Plan will be available at http://www.ldcha.org/news/annual-plan.html, and printed copies of both will be available at the following locations: LDCHA Administration Offices LDCHA Resident Services Office Babcock Place Planning & Development Services County Clerk’s Office Lawrence Public Library

1600 Haskell Avenue 1600 Haskell Avenue, #187 1700 Massachusetts St. 1 Riverfront Plaza, Suite 1 1100 Massachusetts St. 707 Vermont St.

The public is invited to comment on each Plan in writing, delivered or mailed to Lawrence-Douglas County Housing Authority, 1600 Haskell Avenue, faxed to 842-9596, or emailed to housing@ldcha.org (please put PLAN in the subject line). Comments will be received up to 4:00 p.m. September 3, 2015. A public hearing on both Plans will be held September 3rd at 5:00 p.m. at Edgewood Homes Conference Room, 1600 Haskell Avenue.

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING SPECIALS OPEN HOUSES

RENTALS & REAL ESTATE

GARAGE SALES

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

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

CARS

SERVICE DIRECTORY

MERCHANDISE & PETS

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

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

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

ADVERTISE TODAY! Call 785.832.2222 or email classifieds@ljworld.com


|

Monday, August 3, 2015

.

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Son shouldn’t pay addict dad’s rent Dear Annie: Your answer to “Torn Son” was good, but not complete. He said he tries to help his father, who lost his job, but Dad spends money on alcohol and drugs. By suggesting that “Son” pay Dad’s rent and utilities directly, he is still indirectly giving Dad money. Any money supplied for Dad’s care allows him to spend his own on drugs and alcohol. Instead, when Dad gets food stamps, take him shopping for food. If he receives cash assistance, make sure he pays his rent and utilities the same day. Do not pay for anything until all of his money is used up. We learned this lesson the hard way. My nephew would frequently claim he had

Annie’s Mailbox

Marcy Sugar and Kathy Mitchell

anniesmailbox@comcast.net

no cash, so we’d buy his deodorant and shaving cream. When he said his food card was empty, we’d buy his groceries. Little did we know, he had the money, but he wanted us to buy these necessities so he could pay for alcohol. He drank himself to death the day after he got his monthly cash allowance. He was 29. — Missing My Nephew

A war film that’s more about music Genocide. The word evokes the idea of mass murder. But it’s also about the murder of a people, a culture, a way of life and historic traditions. In addition to untold human casualties, genocide targets language, dance, music and an attitude toward life. The “POV” (9 p.m., PBS, check local listings) documentary “Beats of the Antonov” profiles a culture and a people under assault. When South Sudan broke away from greater Sudan in 2011, the people living along the Blue Nile and in the Nuba Mountains were left on the wrong side of the border. They have come under increasing military attack from the Sudanese government in the north, organized under Sharia law. According to Insaf Awad, a refugee interviewed in the film, the government of Sudan has a sick fixation on a kind of Arab purity and wants to eradicate its own African roots. And that’s why the people of the Blue Nile go out of their way to embrace tribal traditions of music and dance, even in the face of aerial bombardment. The “Antonov” in the film’s title refers to the Russian-built bombers that frequently strafe the villages. People are seen emerging after a bombing raid from primitive shelters, which are nothing more than holes in the ground. Instead of appearing shattered, they are laughing and giddy. Levity is their natural reaction to survival. It’s a curious sight in a film about war. “Antonov” is as much about music as it is about a civil war nearly six decades old. Men are shown fashioning rababas, stringed instruments, out of junk metal. They amplify them with broken cassette players and other debris. The ongoing war has encouraged people to rediscover their cultural traditions. And this has made the Sudanese government even more determined to destroy them. Sharia law takes a dim view of music sung by men and women together, or the Sudanese genre of “Girls’ Music,” where women sing about their everyday lives. Tonight’s other highlights O The top 16 perform on “So You Think You Can Dance” (7 p.m., Fox). O April’s days as a single girl dwindle on “Chasing Life” (8 p.m., ABC Family). O Ed Helms goes “Running Wild With Bear Grylls” (9 p.m., NBC). O An old “friend” of Drill spills secrets on “The Whispers” (9 p.m., ABC). O Luciano searches for an heir on the season finale of “The Making of the Mob: New York” (9 p.m., AMC). O An unwanted visitor arrives on the season finale of “UnREAL” (9 p.m., Lifetime).

Dear Missing: How heartbreaking for your family. Since Dad was unemployed, we were not certain there was any money other than what the son was giving him. But you are right that addicts will buy drugs and alcohol before they will pay their rent. It can be difficult to say “no” when someone tells you they have no money for groceries, but you have pointed out the perils of assuming they are telling the truth. Dear Annie: I felt compelled when I read the letter from “Feeling Annoyed,” who asked how to tell her friend that her gum chewing was annoying. Many years ago, I carpooled with four other people. One day, one

JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS

For Monday, Aug. 3: This year you become much more verbal, but others often don’t get the gist of what you’re saying. Learn to clarify your ideas in terms that suit the person to whom you are speaking. You will relate best on a one-on-one level. If you are single, you are likely to attract someone from a very different background from yours. If you are attached, you might be surprised by how much the relationship flourishes. The stars show the kind of day you’ll have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult Aries (March 21-April 19) ++++ You would be welladvised to play it low-key. Tonight: The world is your oyster. Taurus (April 20-May 20) +++++ You might not be able to convince a key person of the rightness of your ideas just yet. Tonight: Make it early. Gemini (May 21-June 20) ++++ Assume responsibility when someone else refuses to. An element of fatigue runs through your day. Tonight: Catch up on news. Cancer (June 21-July 22) ++++ Your mind pushes past certain boundaries, and you’ll be able to detach. Tonight: Out till the wee hours. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) ++++ You will be part of a one-on-one conversation. A family member might be hesitant to get

of the riders snapped at me, “Sally, would you PLEASE stop smacking your gum -- it’s hurting my headache!” I never smacked my gum again. Sometimes the direct approach is the most effective. — Smackin’ Sally No More

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

jacquelinebigar.com

feedback. Tonight: Listen to some great music. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ++++ No matter what you do, you need to listen to your instincts. Follow through. Tonight: Where your friends are. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) +++ Tap into your enthusiasm and high energy. Understand that someone could be jealous and acting out. Tonight: Frolic into the night. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) +++++ Your mind keeps coming up with unusual and creative ideas. Decipher what will succeed. Tonight: Choose a stressbuster. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ++++ You will need to deal with stress on a personal level. Tonight: Your imagination proves to be a wonderful tool. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) +++++ You have a way of intuitively knowing what to do next. Lighten up. Tonight: Happily head home. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ++++ Deal with a money matter without causing yourself a problem. Tonight: Return calls. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) ++++ Be aware of your influence, but don’t run someone over just to get your way. Tonight: Your treat. — The astrological forecast should be read for entertainment only.

UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy E. Parker August 3, 2015

ACROSS 1 ___ A Sketch (classic toy) 5 Long-faced one 10 Jungle creatures 14 Old woman’s nursery rhyme home 15 Pro sports venue 16 ___ Major (constellation) 17 Arizona attraction 20 Pitching lineups 21 Cup part 22 Fury 23 Erie Canal mule 24 Civil rights target 27 Hardly an old pro 29 Actor M. ___ Walsh 32 “___ sells seashells ...” 33 Greyhound vehicle 36 Like possums and squirrels 38 It puts on coats 41 Pad with springs 42 CBS symbol 43 At ___ cost 44 Even if, briefly 46 Pre-college exams, for short 50 Fix potholes 52 Plumber’s pipe material (Abbr.)

55 Memorable time for historians 56 Suffix with “cyan” or “ox” 57 Young vegetable shoot 60 Some Australian growths 63 Fraction of a kilo 64 Utility bill information 65 Life-of-Riley state 66 De-squeaks 67 “Growing Pains” star Joanna 68 Fire, red and black insects DOWN 1 Cleverness of wit 2 The Big Bang, e.g. 3 Fastening pin 4 Mother of Ares 5 Puzo subject 6 Brooks Robinson, for years 7 Rounded hammer part 8 Draws to a close 9 Battle of Britain fighter (Abbr.) 10 Goldfinger’s first name 11 Building and its grounds

12 Count finish? 13 Parked oneself 18 Not his or hers 19 Art of public speaking 24 Jewish teacher (Var.) 25 Ayatollah predecessor 26 “Braveheart” star Gibson 28 A few words in passing? 30 Wet, spongy ground 31 Half a married couple 34 Come apart 35 Ancient upright stone 37 Regrets 38 Window part 39 Not ordinary 40 World record finish?

41 Vandalize 45 Question the validity of 47 Sea bordering Greece 48 Straightest, as an arrow 49 Mouths off to 51 One of two presidents 53 Arrangement containers 54 Old-style computer screen 57 Church nook 58 Celestial twinkler 59 Carpet layer’s calculation 60 Bigheadedness 61 Swiss canton 62 “That’s gross!”

PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER

8/2

© 2015 Universal Uclick www.upuzzles.com

WOOD YOU MIND? By Mary Jersey

8/3

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.

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

KILYS LEAGIO

ERREEV

Saturday’s

Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app

10C

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

(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: SHOVE SWIFT HIGHLY ANYHOW Answer: She just couldn’t decide if she was going to do the laundry. She was being — WISHY-WASHY

BECKER ON BRIDGE


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